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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, LIVINQ-STON 00., MICH., THURSDAY, QGT. 86,1906, H&amp;M MM**""!&#13;
*•¥-••&#13;
0' •&#13;
We have a thoroughly equipped&#13;
machine shop and are in position&#13;
4Q do fanr repairing promptly and&#13;
at reasonable price*. ..— * ._:,&#13;
m&#13;
EnglM and Utht&#13;
Work a 8p*el«lty&#13;
C/:&#13;
^ -&#13;
: * • •&#13;
8harp Edge&#13;
Grinding Done&#13;
»^iW* v S ^ ^¢^^^1¾¾%¾¾¾¾ SB-MMI J ^ ^ P I % I M W ^ I M W ^^VlW^wWSw^^™^&#13;
*Awm f o r t o A&amp;aUo* Co. fctt. &gt;tatAV\VO&amp;UV&#13;
That Carnival&#13;
As the (bird ot November draws&#13;
sear we are again reminded that the&#13;
M. &amp; Society are then to open their&#13;
second annual carnival, No pains&#13;
will be spared t6 make Ibis s pleasant&#13;
and profitable event to all concerned.&#13;
On Friday evening. NOT. 3« the ladies&#13;
will bold their Tea from 5 o'clock&#13;
nntil all are served. On the following&#13;
evening there will be a chicken supper&#13;
sneh as our grandmothers used to&#13;
serve. That toothsome chicken, with&#13;
those peerless soowy biscuit, swim&#13;
ming with such delicious gravy, sll,&#13;
we assure you will taste as good as&#13;
those did that mother used to make.&#13;
While 70U listen to sweet strains of&#13;
music you can consult the Delphian&#13;
Oracle and hear your past and learn&#13;
your iuture destiny.&#13;
AT. £. Church Notes.&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
HOWELL, aiUtt*&#13;
OIFrMlnirwTSierl&#13;
v^,*-&#13;
1 are coming&#13;
in from mill and factory. Yon will&#13;
find this a good store to bay underwear,&#13;
hosiery, gloves and mittens,&#13;
toques, fascinators, outing flannels,&#13;
and the many items necessary to be&#13;
comfortable whea the cold weather&#13;
comes. Our lines of Holiday goods&#13;
are coming in and we will have by far&#13;
the best assortment ever shown by us.&#13;
Dolls, books, games, celluoid goods,&#13;
comb and brush sets, collar and cuff&#13;
sets, etc China, toys of every description.&#13;
Visit us when you come to&#13;
Howell, every clerk will welcome you.&#13;
Our method is to give big value for the&#13;
money, as we find it pays to do so.&#13;
We aell for cash only and can sell&#13;
cheaper than the stores selling on&#13;
redit.&#13;
E A. BOWMAN.&#13;
The Busy Store.&#13;
• r a n d River S i . Opposite Court House.&#13;
Howell Mich.&#13;
UOCAb N6WS.&#13;
Hi&#13;
•'•ft'1"&#13;
W'&#13;
Ji&#13;
*Lliri*I • •"• *&#13;
pBP^'ji'"&#13;
1 ii'-'-iMg"" mm*'&#13;
Sunday October 29&#13;
MORNING SERVICE&#13;
at 10:30&#13;
EVENING SERVICE&#13;
At 7:30&#13;
Under auspices of Young Men's Club&#13;
and Young Ladies1 Guild.&#13;
'"Jpssica's F irst Prayer."&#13;
Full musical progrtm _^&#13;
Admission free&#13;
The general public welcome&#13;
-PLous-28-forPastor. _&#13;
MGYRIG BELLS&#13;
MKUHG1AT0RS&#13;
Private Telepbaaes&#13;
XNT1 HUMMERS&#13;
I can install Electric Re\ls in vour house;&#13;
they wver fail u&gt; ring, and require no&#13;
attention.&#13;
Have your Barn and Mouse&#13;
connected by Bell or Telephone.&#13;
It is not a modern&#13;
tnxtfry but a necessity. . .&#13;
mlt the oracle&#13;
at the carnival.&#13;
Look this" psper over carefolly as&#13;
there is reading on every page.&#13;
0. V. Van Winkle and son Kirk, delivered&#13;
a fine bunch of fat cattle here&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Mrs, F. L. Andrews visited her&#13;
sister-in-law, Mrs. David Stoddard, at&#13;
Oak Grove, Friday last.&#13;
New advertisers this week—Jackson&#13;
&amp; Cad well, page 8; Dr. Leroy Lewis&#13;
and Martyn the photographer, page 5,&#13;
Mrs. G. A. Staler has gone to Ypsi*&#13;
lanti to keep house for her son Cecil,&#13;
who is attending college there, for the&#13;
winter.fc&#13;
Everett Burchiel of Toledo has been&#13;
spending the past week with his pareats&#13;
here. He has been ill and is taking&#13;
a vacation.&#13;
Mrs. G. W. Dennis or Leslie and&#13;
Mr. D. W. Dennis of Portland Ore.&#13;
were the guests of MIRS Lillian Boyle&#13;
the first ol the week.&#13;
St. Mary's society tnve teen holding&#13;
40 hcurs devotion this week. Rev.&#13;
Fr. Comer lord has been assisted by&#13;
several neighboring priests.&#13;
A large invoice of printing was&#13;
done at this office this week for a firm&#13;
iu Flint who recognize our ablity to&#13;
do good work at reasonable prices.&#13;
The Electric furniture Polish Co. ot&#13;
Flint is doing a rushing business.&#13;
G, A.Sigler formerly our furniture&#13;
dealer at Pinckney. is at the head of&#13;
the institution.&#13;
We are in receipt of the program of&#13;
the 45th annual convention of the&#13;
Michigan State Sunday School association&#13;
to be held at Traverse City, Nov.&#13;
14,15,16. It is an excellent program&#13;
with many noted speakers and worker?.&#13;
There das been no school so tar.this&#13;
week owm* to theeold a*&gt;d the—boiler&#13;
not being in place. The Grand Trunk&#13;
has i^een playinu foot-ball witb the&#13;
boiler and fir some reason b^st known&#13;
to themselves have failed to leave it at&#13;
1 Pinckney. It laid in the yards at&#13;
I Detroit a few days and when the M.&#13;
; A. L. finally did aet it last Friday,&#13;
i they carried it to Jackson by mistake&#13;
and although friegbt leaves there each&#13;
j momirg it did not arrive until Tues&#13;
day. It looks to us as tbongb the&#13;
school board "had a good case of damage&#13;
against the road.&#13;
iFUTBAMuro HAjarae tisn*&#13;
V'•-VVT1cjof--V-tv —&#13;
tf|fiftt»tflwiiirilwl&amp;aipfi»ii1rt&#13;
For fnHbe* tntermation call by Lyn-&#13;
WIS phone, or address&#13;
• &gt; - *&#13;
&lt; • « .&#13;
6LEHM6ARDNER&#13;
Too Putnam and Hamburg Farmers&#13;
Club tneots Saturday with Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. G. W. Only for dinner— b ing&#13;
lap-boards and dishes.. The following&#13;
is the program;&#13;
Song, Club&#13;
• Reading, Flota Hull&#13;
Recitation, Fern Hendee&#13;
Reading, Mrs* P. WTCooiway&#13;
Song, FapnieSwrnrthout&#13;
Bssdiag, Mas VanFleet&#13;
Beading, Mrs. B. W.Kennedy.&#13;
The pastor and family were much&#13;
pleased to meet witb so many of the&#13;
members and friends of the church on&#13;
WArjntM»y eganing.. A goodiy namber&#13;
were out considering the state of&#13;
the weather, among whom was the&#13;
pastor of the Con regational church&#13;
who thus showed bis brotherly spirit,&#13;
Too pastor teels welt in spite of the&#13;
"pounding" received and extends&#13;
thanka to all concerned. Come again.&#13;
Our evening service is not as well&#13;
supported as it should be. It should&#13;
be made a service of evangelistic powder.&#13;
The pastor earnestly requests all&#13;
members and triends to help. Revival&#13;
fires must be kindled. Bring in the&#13;
fuel and let us seek theudivine fire'\&#13;
Glad to see so many of our older&#13;
people in the Sunday schools. Tia&#13;
just as it should be. Let more attend,&#13;
Our "Young Peoples Society" is getting&#13;
in shape tor an active campaign.&#13;
An inter esting and well attended consultation&#13;
meeting was held Sunday&#13;
evening.&#13;
Class meeting session was a season&#13;
of blessing. Quite a number of voung&#13;
people being present. We expect a&#13;
larger and yet larger attendance.&#13;
Bro. Andrews Sr. will lead next&#13;
Sabbath and will be ready under God&#13;
to do what he can to belp.&#13;
Bro. Briggs has done good service&#13;
in the last two meetings.&#13;
The pastor appreciates the importance&#13;
of masic as a part uf the service&#13;
of God and is deeply thankful for the&#13;
presence of a cboir. Let us magnify&#13;
this agency for good and see what a&#13;
force for righteousness we can make&#13;
ot it.&#13;
Bro Tapper is in earnest and has&#13;
the support of others equally so.&#13;
The first quarterly conference will&#13;
be held in the church Saturday alter*&#13;
noon at 2:30. We wish to see a good&#13;
representation of the official membership.&#13;
Let all be out if possible. The&#13;
following are official members:&#13;
E. W. Kennedy, F. L.«Andrews, H.&#13;
Mowers, Willis Tnpper, H. G. Briggs*&#13;
Fred "H smmingway, Ed. ~Ba"r t, D" ~H.&#13;
F. Sigler, Frank Peters, Leal H. Sig*&#13;
ler, Carrie Towle, Libbie Burt, Nina&#13;
Davis, Elizabeth GiLhrist, sirs. ft. E.&#13;
Finch, Mary Van Fleet, Fred Burgess,&#13;
MoniabDinkle and EtU Bland.&#13;
Do not forget the prayer service on&#13;
Thursday evening. "They that wait&#13;
upon the Lord shall have their strength&#13;
renewed.,, Let us meet and pray tor&#13;
revival and be revivtd.&#13;
New Postoffice Building&#13;
Ground was broken tuis week on&#13;
tbe lot adjoining the Exchange Bank,&#13;
for a building to be used as a post office-&#13;
Post master Swartbout being obliired&#13;
to vacate the present building and&#13;
there not being a place to move into&#13;
has purchased the shove lot and will&#13;
construct a one story boi dim? 24x86&#13;
and will fit itnrV especially for offios&#13;
&gt; use.&#13;
The location is very&#13;
are glad to note that&#13;
last reuognised the w&#13;
for a good postottos&#13;
be much apnTsoiatsd&#13;
I * Hi IM H i I ' I I P 11II—T—•»*•»»*—I- * •&#13;
Just Received *€••.&#13;
m*t&#13;
&amp; . * &gt; •&#13;
A Fine Line of the Newest M&#13;
and Latest Novels, Finely&#13;
Botmd and suitable&#13;
l$$P£*;.i •XM&#13;
i~^ -*i*-«m '1w&#13;
m&#13;
Gift Books&#13;
Call and s e e i h e m&#13;
im *r , v . ,»l&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
Congregational Church. Alike Bnen of the U. ot M. was&#13;
home over Sunday.&#13;
si. A. Davis and wife go to Chicago&#13;
this week for a visit.&#13;
Wm. Miller spent'SKanjrwtttnnir&#13;
sister near WebbefVille. / : ¾&#13;
Fish are still biting, maybe lw»llJ&#13;
:W.&#13;
The attendance at services last Snnday&#13;
was very encouraging. _At^ both&#13;
services several visitors were present&#13;
from a distance whom we were glad&#13;
to welcome. A male voice choir led&#13;
the praises at evening service. Tne&#13;
members of the Y. M. C. and Young&#13;
Ladies Guild were out in good numbers.&#13;
The pastor will arrange the&#13;
evening services with a special regard&#13;
to the interests of the young people and&#13;
urges them to continue ezteniing him&#13;
their much needed co-operation.&#13;
The pastor's instruction class lor&#13;
young men and women jueets Sunday !&#13;
at 11:80 and includes in the member•! T a e President is pleased that so&#13;
ship some of the foremost and bright- j m a n v members were in attendane at&#13;
est of our youths, The pastor&#13;
u&lt;m&#13;
catch a whale at the carnival.&#13;
The frost got here last Friday night&#13;
Oct. 20, good and proper.&#13;
Ice cream and-popcorn, articles useful&#13;
and ornamental will be found at&#13;
the M. E. C .rnival, Nov. 3 and 4.&#13;
« %&#13;
I S :&#13;
•&gt;&gt;.«!•. - -: \m-&#13;
Young Mens Club&#13;
HAai&amp;-&#13;
will&#13;
begin this week a generel visitation of&#13;
the families iu the parish but will&#13;
give part of the time to North flamburg.&#13;
Notice the services announced&#13;
for next Sunday elsewhere in the)&#13;
DISPATCH.&#13;
Comtortable char.h, well heated and&#13;
lighted, p easant people, go?d music,&#13;
plain preaching and open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
• # * ' .&#13;
A Pounding&#13;
On Wednesday evening last, although&#13;
the weather was very bad,&#13;
about 60 people wended tleir way to&#13;
the M. E. parsonage and proceeded to&#13;
welcome the pastor, R. A. Emerick,&#13;
and tamily to our village. While bis&#13;
own members were in the majority&#13;
every church was well represented and&#13;
a very pleasant evening was spent.&#13;
Nearly all who went carried some of&#13;
the necessary things of life and the&#13;
dining table and surroundings were&#13;
well laden with sugar, coffee, butter,&#13;
flour, etc , etc., as a gentle reminder&#13;
that the people had been there and it is&#13;
unnecessary to add that the pastor&#13;
and family feel they are welcome.&#13;
church last Sunday evening. A&#13;
special meeting of interest to the club&#13;
will be held at church next&#13;
evening at 7 o'clock. AH&#13;
are urged to attend. ^&#13;
What would happen in any^&amp;wlS^^N1^***&#13;
churches were,abolished? There are&#13;
those who feel themselves nnder no&#13;
debt to the religious institions. They&#13;
forget her who is the mother at whose&#13;
breast all have nursed, they forgot&#13;
that whatever other debt they owe her&#13;
she is a police force in their midst and&#13;
makes their homes safer and their property&#13;
more valuable. What man&#13;
would wish to invest money in a town&#13;
where his children could never rind&#13;
thfe'r way to a Sunday school or&#13;
church. Pres.&#13;
Young Ladies' Build&#13;
Next regular meeting Monday, Oct.&#13;
10, at the home of Miss Mabel Sigler,&#13;
at 7:30. Halloween entertainment.&#13;
The program will include -'The&#13;
Bean Bag Test1' and "The Vesper&#13;
Rite" with musical selections and&#13;
events appropriate of unusual interest.&#13;
All members of the Guild and young;&#13;
men of the chorch are invited tt attend.&#13;
;&amp;y&#13;
. C**55-:"&#13;
,m&#13;
• * %&#13;
US&#13;
I im ' • « &gt; • -&#13;
"This Stove Furnishes at least 1,000&#13;
more radiating surface than any other Base&#13;
C « g |&#13;
ntral and, ws&#13;
e has at&#13;
Pinckney&#13;
It Will&#13;
r&#13;
E*t&#13;
v.a&#13;
W*' &gt; % •&#13;
ygtkM; V '0"'&#13;
S * , * ^ ' ^&#13;
f ^.¾&#13;
;?&amp;.?-&#13;
Teeple Hardware Go +• ' *"'^:-^-,&#13;
*$i.&#13;
•;tt-,.&#13;
.i'^&gt;:&#13;
W&#13;
1 * -&#13;
kv.i&#13;
%&#13;
ny •if'AI'tMt&#13;
1 i*&gt;:*^!&amp;4 T^jfW^ ••tjvu £:&lt;*•• -£*!'. iiL. ^nsm? • • • * •&#13;
' * • ' • .»* .im.' -ST*&#13;
• * . . « . •&#13;
?V&#13;
- - ^ ; v -&#13;
&gt;&#13;
• A&#13;
: « TMtaMna&#13;
MNCK»EY,&#13;
'Jokes, come from heaven/' says jerome&#13;
K. Jerome. "That Is/the good&#13;
ones do.&#13;
In Cleveland the other day a -woman&#13;
was indicted for-squelching a man.&#13;
8he did It with her automobile.&#13;
^ s * mmtm&#13;
JPlUNE L. Airwawv Putt&#13;
MICHIQAK&#13;
Boston's former mayor, Mr. Quincy,&#13;
will wed Miss Honey. The preserving&#13;
of love's sweetness ought to be asst*~-&#13;
ed.&#13;
*M'*" •*v;&#13;
% &amp;&#13;
&amp;*!%*&#13;
No wonder Hungary wants to break&#13;
, away from Austria. All Vienna's BO-&#13;
^.jrtety women smoke large, black, /**.&#13;
S M * ^&#13;
itJi^t- •fr&#13;
tSf&#13;
F*.&#13;
^ft&#13;
It remained for Punch to remarl&#13;
that the Mlkasa showed its disgust&#13;
with the peace terms by committing&#13;
fcartkari.&#13;
A new |10 counterfeit bill has made&#13;
fte appearance. Be careful, if you get&#13;
it, not to try to work it off on the&#13;
poor butcher.&#13;
Abdul Hamid has paid one of his&#13;
debts promptly, as a British cruiser&#13;
was at hand to guarantee the correctness&#13;
of the bill.&#13;
THE STORM ON THtftAJCES&#13;
WAS FIERCE, AND THE&#13;
LOSS GREAT.&#13;
*&#13;
TWINTY-TWO UiVBS WCRC L08?.&#13;
SlXTCKrl VS88BL8 WgfeS TOTALLY&#13;
WRECKED AND&#13;
THIRTEEN DAMAGED.&#13;
The Ton nags Comparison With the&#13;
Big Freighters Is Ramarksblt—&#13;
The Insurance on Most of the&#13;
Wrecks Had Expired.&#13;
T£a entire chain of lakes was swept&#13;
by terrific gales endheavy seas Thnreday&#13;
afternoon, Thursday night and&#13;
Friday and dispatches from tnemahy&#13;
lake ports show that damages will be&#13;
heavy. The weather bureau reports&#13;
that the big storm which raged for IS&#13;
hours over the lakes, started in the&#13;
southwest, but that the gale increased&#13;
heavily Thursday evening after the&#13;
storm center had reached the Great&#13;
Lakes. Green Bay, Wis., on Lake&#13;
Michigan, was the storm center Thursday&#13;
night, with the whid blowing 52&#13;
miles an hour. Cleveland wasn't very&#13;
far behind with a southwesterly wind&#13;
of 44 miles an hour swirling over the&#13;
city and that portion of Lake Erie in&#13;
the vicinity. Early Friday morning it&#13;
increased to 70 miles.&#13;
The storm was over all the lakes&#13;
and in exposed places on the water&#13;
probably reached a much greater velocity&#13;
than could be reported from the&#13;
weather bureau stations. Lakes Huron&#13;
-*en« m«st-^a-tiway-=from h e m e t o -ta&amp; Superior wero^aa. badly stojrjQk&#13;
iii» »' •*••*••«•»&#13;
Tb# able foreign correspondent&#13;
knows a sensation when he sees one.&#13;
He cables that a Frenchman has been&#13;
wounded in a duel.&#13;
If amassing wealth is not a completely&#13;
satisfying life job Uncle Russell&#13;
Sage would be glad to have Mr.&#13;
Rockefeller tell what is.&#13;
hear the news," says a cynical phflos&#13;
opher. This is not calculated to make&#13;
home popular with women.&#13;
As to James J. Pappatheodorokou&#13;
mountourgeototolous, he must be the&#13;
one referred to in the song. "There's&#13;
a Name That's Never Spoken."&#13;
Andrew Lang says there are in the&#13;
English language sixty words foi&#13;
which no rhymes can be found. This&#13;
is encouraging, as far as it goes. •&#13;
• The alleged Pat Crowe, alleged kid&#13;
caper, threatens to.mp.k-e troubjc for&#13;
somebody. We have a presentlmenJ&#13;
that he intends to .go. on the stage.&#13;
Bubonic plague has appeared again&#13;
but; this time in Africa. It is reallj&#13;
surprising what a hard time it has t(&#13;
get a landing in places where peoph&#13;
wash.&#13;
* Doesn't it make you sad to. thin*&#13;
that somewhere in this wide world i&#13;
tnrkey is fattening himself up so at&#13;
ty adorn your dinner table on Thank*&#13;
gjfvirjg day?&#13;
• '• King Peter of Servia has, sent hit&#13;
son to,St. Petersburg to leafn to be t&#13;
soldier. Peter must be one of thos&lt;&#13;
who think that the world has had its&#13;
last'great war. ,&#13;
lashed as the other bodies of water.&#13;
The wind began to diminish after&#13;
nightfall.&#13;
In the wake of the fierce storm are&#13;
strewn wrecked vessels from one end&#13;
of the chain of lakes to the other,&#13;
and under the waters the bodies of&#13;
twenty-one sailors and one woman are&#13;
buried. Included in the list of boats&#13;
accounted total losses are twenty-nine&#13;
craft, and the number wrenched and&#13;
battered and temporarily thrown aside&#13;
is almost beyond counting. Most striking&#13;
in the storm is the fact that with&#13;
one exception, the steel tug Perry,&#13;
all the vessels to meet destruction&#13;
were wooden craft.. Curiously enough,&#13;
the Perry was making her trial trip.&#13;
The total tonnage of the sixteen&#13;
boats reckoned total wrecks is about&#13;
9,685. This is less than that of any&#13;
one of a number of tho great steel&#13;
freighters being turned out of lake&#13;
shipyards with such frequency the&#13;
past season. Almost without exception,&#13;
the wrecked vessels were without&#13;
insurance other than fire. Underwriters&#13;
think that $450,000 will cover&#13;
the entire amount of damage done to&#13;
lake shipping from the great storm.&#13;
They are hardest hit by the cargoes&#13;
jyt the Mlnnedosa and Siberia, whoe&gt;e&#13;
pramluma.—will- prnhaftly aggregate&#13;
$1*0,000.&#13;
y&#13;
French savants say "kissing is un&#13;
safe." You bet it is. We know a mar&#13;
who kissed- a girl and immediatelj&#13;
bound himself to pay her board fo&gt;&#13;
the rest of her life.&#13;
A fashion writer tells in one of tht&#13;
New York papers how old dresses car&#13;
'•be made^tdldoft Jfke new. Now w&lt;&#13;
know how New York manages to pu'&#13;
tip such a showy front.-&#13;
There was a fight in the Austriar&#13;
, reichsrath the other day because&#13;
Baron Sternberg threw a glass o'&#13;
water at Herr Wolff. Herr Wolf&#13;
doubtless belongs to the anarchistic&#13;
group.&#13;
King Edward is trying to make cro&#13;
quet fashionable and has become qufti&#13;
an expert at it. In a few years w«&#13;
shall hear of Edward sitting in a cor&#13;
ner playing checkers' with tb&lt;&#13;
seneschal.&#13;
Dr. Dillon Bronson speaks for th«&#13;
man of years, who has reached "sym&#13;
metry and sanity" in business. Prob&#13;
ably to avoid any offer of a jchjt de&#13;
bate with Dr. Osier, Dr. Bronsoi&#13;
avoids flgu^STI&#13;
tapj. ^&#13;
A Chicago couple announces tha&#13;
they want to name their new babj&#13;
Prudentia, if nobody objects. I&#13;
you have any objections v o interpose&#13;
speak up promptly, or elc* forevej&#13;
after hold your peace.&#13;
:i Another knockout for Osier. Twc&#13;
** men, both past seventy, fighting w» due&#13;
y with knives in a New Jersey poor&#13;
t&gt; house. Only men in the prima of theii&#13;
,; youthful passions fight duels. The Os&#13;
'\ lerites always arbitrate.&#13;
-',* " • _.&#13;
V Mildred Stolto, a New York actress&#13;
Is untng for $6,000 damages because&#13;
straet oar conductor damaged fcei&#13;
mple. We have always wonderejd io&#13;
' what lay the fascination oxarcis&#13;
\t!&#13;
M*CHK$AN-3iTEM&amp; -&#13;
- . ' ' • ' - ' ' ' ' • - * * * ' * ~ • • ' - A : * » . * Kx-Gov. Bttaa has Jrfose^ a land&#13;
In Wyoming by which a he makes a&#13;
profit saJd to ba c i S T ^ $m0&lt;fe/&#13;
' Puillhi a gun towards him musaie&#13;
first whiSi a^ickhtatina U-a boA cost&#13;
Roy Oubin, aged 17; qfMenomlnaa, ona&#13;
arm. * ' w "*t&#13;
The farm resjdaaoe of William&#13;
Welsh, vof. Dalta^ jOaniar; was burned&#13;
Tuesday- Lo#a, $t,000; insurance,.&#13;
$1,100. .&#13;
Leas than 60 per cent of the children&#13;
of school age are attending public&#13;
school in Berrien: count?. Offtcers will&#13;
round up the truants,&#13;
The game warden of Calhoun county&#13;
will be paid 50 cents a day by the supervisors.&#13;
Sheriff Turner gets 40 cents&#13;
a day for prisoners' board.&#13;
The mangled body of Herman&#13;
Schauer, of Maybee, was found on.the&#13;
D., f. ft I. tracks in that town. He&#13;
was 40 years old and unmarried.&#13;
Twenty-five collage presidents have&#13;
agreed to be present at the inauguration&#13;
of President Lancaster as the&#13;
head of Olivet college October 25.&#13;
Castor beans and resin to the valuu&#13;
of $3,530, *u&gt; have been used in the&#13;
manufacture of sticky fly paper, ware&#13;
destroyed in a fire at Grand Rapids.&#13;
Port Huron will have its first eaperlence&#13;
with voting machines at the&#13;
election next, month. The machines&#13;
were purchased at a cost of $350 each.&#13;
J. L. Vincent, who has charge of&#13;
the elevator in Standish, was caught&#13;
in a shaft in the elevator and internally&#13;
injured. It is thought he cannot&#13;
recover.&#13;
v The board of supervisors at Mason&#13;
has Increased Lansing's equalized valuation&#13;
from 34 to 40 per cent of the&#13;
entire county, on account of the city's&#13;
growth.&#13;
A copperhead snake, seven feet&#13;
long, was killed by Motorman James&#13;
Fritz. The reptilewas found coiled&#13;
up on the sidewalk on Lincoln avenue,&#13;
Ann Arbor.&#13;
William Southard, once a wealthy&#13;
w1i©l«sa4e=^4e^i^4aater^ whil^^&#13;
cated fell down the back stairs of a.&#13;
Bay City resort and broke his neck,&#13;
dying instantly.&#13;
The Pinkertons have identified as&#13;
Matt Kennedy the body of the criminal&#13;
shot while escaping at West Berkley,&#13;
Cal., alias "Kid" McMunn, a notorious&#13;
Detroit crook.&#13;
A lawyer of Grand Rapids has discovered&#13;
an apparently forgotten statute&#13;
of Michigan declaring all bowling&#13;
alleys or kindred games In which balls&#13;
and pins are used, illegal.&#13;
Gov. Warner has issued a requisition&#13;
on the governor of Colorado for&#13;
Harry G. Reed, who is wanted in Detroit&#13;
for embezzlement of railroad&#13;
tickets from the Wabash.&#13;
Thos. H. Ferris, of Cheboygan, convicted&#13;
in the federal court at Bay City&#13;
of attempting to pass counterfeit&#13;
money, was sentenced to six months&#13;
in the Detroit house of correction.&#13;
The baby daughter of Samuel Druce,&#13;
&amp; farmer near Copemish, pulled the&#13;
spread off a stand and with it some&#13;
medicine in tablet form. She ate the&#13;
tablets and died in half an hour.'&#13;
The trial of Mrs. Belle Fellows and&#13;
Charles Tinker on a charge of having&#13;
poisoned Charles Fellows at Manton&#13;
' was agar&#13;
GREATEST LEOAL Bi&#13;
v THE WORLD EVER SAW&#13;
IS FORESHADOWED.&#13;
THI 184MB, IMftVftANCE FRAUDS.&#13;
- Entire Train Demolished.&#13;
An entire freight train was demolished,&#13;
Engineer Ed. Miller was instantly&#13;
killed and Brakeman Roy&#13;
Kimball was fatally scalded in a rear'&#13;
end collision ,at Shepherd Saturday&#13;
morning. Two Ann Arbor extra&#13;
freights were southbound, both heav-.&#13;
ily laden. No. 17 stopped at Shepherd&#13;
to discharge some freight. The station&#13;
Is near a curve and the train was&#13;
not in view of No. 19 until it dashed&#13;
around the curve at full speed, crashed&#13;
into the standing train with such&#13;
lorce that eve"ry car was wrecked and&#13;
ditched. Fortunately there was no&#13;
One in the way car of No. 17. The&#13;
dead and injured men were both on&#13;
the engine of No. 19, the fireman of&#13;
which -i? practically unhurt.&#13;
Two Were Killed. . ...•&#13;
( JTO men were killed and six fatally&#13;
Injured in an accident on the sew&#13;
Boyne City, Qaylord &amp; Alpena railroad&#13;
near Elmlra Saturday. A piece of&#13;
track caved in under a heavy jsngint.&#13;
and eight of the Polish laborers working&#13;
nearby were crushed under it as&#13;
It rotted down the embankment. The&#13;
engineer and fireman escaped unhurt.&#13;
CUNLIFFI BUHNtD THE Bid&#13;
BILL8 HE TOOK FROM THE&#13;
s EXPRESS COMPANY. "&#13;
•r;he TerHflo SMfsatlw Procaaa *-.$)*&#13;
Pinkertone. Broke Him Do*i|&#13;
Completely and Ha Disclosed&#13;
Where Money Was Hid.&#13;
sea 3B 953 SS#'&#13;
&lt;•" ^ , £ 1 4rf*st £wtday Hun'sra. ^ &gt;&#13;
Prosecutor Covert announce* thai, th*&#13;
;«£'&#13;
but&#13;
provisions o*&#13;
Soadftyhun&#13;
he en*or*edi;to&#13;
sportsmen : m&#13;
The Seeley raw&#13;
rests-can be made&#13;
any constable, de&#13;
ofllcer, or deputy,&#13;
the request of tha&#13;
erty trespassed upon*&#13;
warraaU are. required, any; trespass&#13;
foutfa with a ffutp of dog being su '&#13;
to asrest. ^*hf possession at a dor&#13;
gun is prima, fade evidence of gu&#13;
The prosecutor will Instruct all offloe&#13;
of the county to* enforce- the law&#13;
the letter*&#13;
law regarding:&#13;
eou«y w t ^&#13;
letter. Detroit&#13;
tejrdus as over&#13;
.irpp|*- w«re»&#13;
&gt;vides ^hatarit&#13;
warrant by&#13;
or ether&#13;
.warden, upon.&#13;
of the prop-'&#13;
Io "John Doe"&#13;
i.,'.&#13;
«&#13;
. ^&#13;
*r&#13;
U. 8. Court Cases.&#13;
The United States court opened its&#13;
regular semi-annual session in Bay&#13;
City Tuesday morning. F. H. Ferris, of&#13;
Cheboygan, alleged counterfeiter; Jas.&#13;
E. Dudley, former postmaster of Harrison,&#13;
charged with embezzling postal&#13;
funds, and A. W. Bennett, ofvffiawaa,&#13;
charged with timber trespass, will be&#13;
tried.&#13;
Other cases are those against Chrfs&#13;
Vashaw, of St. Louis, charged with&#13;
making- false affidavits in a land pension&#13;
case; a case of alleged theft of&#13;
money from letters against Daniel Abbey,&#13;
formerly chief clerk in the postoffice&#13;
at Flint; and a civil case against&#13;
Frank Marvin, postmaster at Turner,&#13;
for the recovery of the value of stamps&#13;
alleged by him to have been burned.&#13;
-• r&#13;
1 . — »&#13;
Oov. Warner on Friday reviewed the&#13;
militia of the Saginaw valley and&#13;
was banqueted in the evening,&#13;
On top of the beginning scarcity of&#13;
cars the Bay City coal'mines are suf.&#13;
fering now from a decided scarcity&#13;
of men, and 1,900 men, Jt Js&gt; oUtnled,&#13;
can be given Immediate employment&#13;
in tho mines of tho Saginaw vajley.&#13;
tone «** &gt;••;• ^$*$MW&amp;'---- "• tf/tfawBBjBlfc&#13;
they will be examined October 26&#13;
Woodbridge N. Ferris, of Big Rapids,&#13;
will not again be a Candidate for governor.&#13;
So asserts John F. Bible, exmayor&#13;
of Ionia, who was a candidate&#13;
for lieutenant-governor on the Ferris&#13;
ticket.&#13;
There wiJJ be only one-third of a potato&#13;
crop this year In Monroe county.&#13;
As a result prices are advancing. Potatoes&#13;
are readily gobbled up at 75&#13;
cents a bushel. Apples also are very&#13;
scarce.&#13;
Miss Bertha Boyles, only daughter&#13;
of Mr. aha - Trs. Wm, Boyles, of Charlotte,&#13;
goes' to Butte, Mont., to be married&#13;
to Fred A. Clark, a Lansing man&#13;
who went west two years ago to look&#13;
after mining interests.&#13;
A gun exploded in the hands of Jackris&#13;
Turenirai while he was hunting in&#13;
Keweenaw county. It blew off one of&#13;
his hands, but his'life was saved by a&#13;
watch In his pocket which deflected&#13;
the charge from his side.&#13;
Marquis Ito has arranged a reception,&#13;
dinner and state function in honor&#13;
of William J. Bryan, now in Japan,&#13;
for October 17, in Toklo. The same day.&#13;
Mr. Bryan will address the Japan-American&#13;
society, at which Count Okuma&#13;
will preside. -TThirty&#13;
Years for Assault.&#13;
Waterloo, 111., special: Wm. Bade,&#13;
iged 24, a farm laborer of Mitchie,&#13;
was sentenced by a jury to thirty&#13;
years' imprisonment for attacking&#13;
Christine Jansen, aged 16, while she&#13;
was going hbme alone from a picnic.&#13;
The investigation of Insurance scandals&#13;
by the New York legislature is to&#13;
be followed by the most gigantic fct&#13;
gal battle the world has ever seen.&#13;
Millionaire grafters, whose united for&#13;
tunes run into the billions,, will, 11&#13;
plans do not miscarry, be defendants&#13;
in suits brought by the attorney-gen^&#13;
eral and by the district Attorney to&#13;
force them to disgorge the vast, sums&#13;
stolen from the minions of premium&#13;
payers. Millionaire perjurers will face&#13;
indictment for falsely testifying before&#13;
the .investigating committee while uu:&#13;
der oath. Multi-millionaires will, It&#13;
is believed, be compelled to fight desperately&#13;
to keep out of jail for crimes&#13;
committed in the name of high&#13;
finance.&#13;
Only one thing can save these frockcoated&#13;
grafters-jKho have been plundering&#13;
the widows and orphans and&#13;
that is the failure of the attorney-general's&#13;
office or the office of the district&#13;
attorney to do their duty. Both&#13;
officials hive ilTeaTaT'rndicatetheleftHy&#13;
that their offices are ready when the&#13;
investigation closes to begin the fight&#13;
which will go down in history as a \&#13;
battle of Titans of the legal profession&#13;
and the greatest court trial of&#13;
money powers of the country^&#13;
The crimes with which the grafters&#13;
of fortunes from insurance funds may&#13;
be charged are: Grand larceny, perjury,&#13;
forgery, embezzlement and&#13;
fraud.&#13;
•All of these crimes have been testified&#13;
to, or have been shown clearly&#13;
in the testimony produced as the sessions&#13;
of the investigating committee.&#13;
It will be on these charges that the&#13;
multi-millionaires, the powers of Wall&#13;
street and the financial destinies ot&#13;
the country may be tried-&#13;
- * %•** V&#13;
Honor Dead Frefleh Explorer.&#13;
Marseilles cablegram: The body of&#13;
Count De Brazza, the explorer who&#13;
died Sept. li at Dakar, Senegambia,&#13;
arrived here on the steamer Alpes and&#13;
was landed with impressive honors.&#13;
TwoateaMtn.lpnla or a fine of $250&#13;
was what.it cost Lewis B. Fox, a&#13;
BrooKfield farmer, in the Eaton county&#13;
cenrt, for,/peppej*ing his neighbor, Geo.&#13;
Tulip, in the leg with a shotgun. It&#13;
was'the result efwnelghborhood quarrel.&#13;
-.-.J: .-. /.-' * ,7 '&#13;
A street car on the St. Johns-line&#13;
j * Fridav crashpd„in|o4 a hack in&#13;
which Mrs. Ida Wood, of Bellevuft an&#13;
aged woman, was riding'.'She wae^sertously&#13;
injured and her conditio* is&#13;
'alarming. Abner Jones, the 4nvfcr,&#13;
suffered a dislocated thoulde&gt; . a n *&#13;
other Injuries. _ ^r&#13;
Burned the .Money.&#13;
The Bridgeport police believe they&#13;
have accounted satisfactorily for all&#13;
the $101,000 taken by Edward Cunliffe&#13;
from the Adams Express Co. in Pittsburg.&#13;
Cunliffe said that one package&#13;
of $10,000 or more consisted of $100&#13;
bills issued by a bank in Pittsburg;&#13;
that he realized that to attempt to&#13;
spend any of this series of bills would&#13;
probably get him into trouble, and&#13;
that he therefore burned the entire&#13;
T&gt;aT!ka^-Trr«r-a--ke*&#13;
room, and then threw the charred re&#13;
mains into the bowl in the bath room.&#13;
Another package of bills he placed&#13;
in a bundle of soiled linen with the&#13;
intention of using this money iatei&#13;
as It consisted of bills of smaller denominations,&#13;
Issued by different banks.&#13;
It was this package which the police&#13;
recovered.&#13;
The sweating he xecelved In the&#13;
Plnkerton office in Pittsburg was extremely&#13;
severe. He was refused food&#13;
and was not permitted to sleep during&#13;
the inquisition, nor allowed to sit&#13;
or He down, but was kept walking&#13;
the floor until his reason was almost&#13;
gone. "They surely did put the blocks&#13;
to me down there," muttered Cunliffe&#13;
as he staggered Into the cell room&#13;
and fell on a bench. He was asleep&#13;
almost before he hit the board. He&#13;
had literally to be carried from the&#13;
Pinkerton's offic &gt;, six blocks away, to&#13;
the police station. He had been asked&#13;
If he would eat on being brought from&#13;
the Pinkerton's office, but he was tod&#13;
sleepy to answer. An effort was made&#13;
to give the exhausted prisoner some-&#13;
.thing ite eat, but he was asleep almost&#13;
the moment he got inside the room.&#13;
When food came he could not be&#13;
wakened^ , ,, ; „ . / . ,, ;/ "',&#13;
Norway 8tands Alone.&#13;
The union between Norway and&#13;
Sweden existing since 1814 has been&#13;
dissolved, both houses of the riksdag&#13;
having passed Uiengovernn^ent bill repealing&#13;
the act of union and recognizing&#13;
Norway "as a state separate from&#13;
the union with Sweden." *Phe new flag&#13;
of Sweden will be a yellow cross on&#13;
a blue ground, the same as existed&#13;
prior to 1814, the union mark, now&#13;
showing in the upper left corner, being&#13;
eliminated.&#13;
A widow generally teems to enjoy&#13;
her weedX as much as a wldowor does&#13;
The Knits potemkme, the Russian&#13;
warship seised by her crew in the&#13;
Black sea last summer, and which&#13;
bombarded and destroyed Odessa'*&#13;
jmagnificent water front, has been re*&#13;
named the Pandlelmon.&#13;
'\&#13;
" " T Jafequea Faurer th,a French aeronaut.&#13;
was the winner of the international&#13;
balloon endurance contest which started&#13;
from the Tuilerles Gardens in Paris&#13;
Sunday, He landed in Hungary after&#13;
covering 899 miles.&#13;
Bearing the limp form of her husband&#13;
for a&gt; Quarter of a mile up a&#13;
mountain side, Mrs. C. B. Wilson flag*&#13;
ged a Denver &amp; Rio Grande train Monday,&#13;
and then fell unconscious. She&#13;
accidentally shot her husband while&#13;
hunting. The plucky woman weighs&#13;
115 pounds and she staggered under&#13;
the weight ef a man who weighs 155&#13;
pounds.&#13;
*'&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
Detroit—The main market days ar&amp;&#13;
Thuradayiand Friday of e a c h j v e e k , although&#13;
considerable stock is received,&#13;
earlier In the week In the busy season&#13;
of the year. It matters very little&#13;
which day cattle or hogs are received&#13;
in the Detroit market, but as a rule&#13;
sheep and lambs will flrul^a. l&gt;et4*e=aalft&#13;
if they are in the yards early Thursday&#13;
morning, before the local buyers -&#13;
have purchased their supply for the&#13;
week. Cattle teles: Steers, medium,&#13;
1.200 to 1,400, $4 2o©4 50; butcher&#13;
Steers, good to choice, $3 85®4; medium&#13;
half-fat steers, $3 50@3 75; choice to&#13;
extra fat cows, $3@3 50; common to •&#13;
fair do, $2 50@2.76; canners, $1 50®&#13;
2 2G; feeders, choice to extra, $3 75®&#13;
4 25; feeders, fair to good, | 3 @ 3 50;&#13;
Btockers. 12 5S*!&gt;3; shipping- bulls, S3 25&#13;
@3 SO; butcher bulls, fat, hdndy, %Z6&gt;&#13;
2 25; bulls, common to good, «2 ©2 75;&#13;
bologna bulls, |2@2, 50; milch cows,&#13;
&lt;;ho\Ce, $40@&gt;50; milch cowsV fair to •&#13;
good. $25 @^5; choice springers, nearby..&#13;
$30® 35; fair to good do, $20@25.&#13;
The calf trade Was firm and active atunchanged&#13;
prices, the supply being&#13;
hardly up to the demand. *&#13;
Hogs—Market active, prices lower;,&#13;
pigs, $5 10® 5 15; fat Yorkers and me&gt;&#13;
dlums, (5 20®5 25; light Yorkers. $5 15&#13;
®5 20; roughs, | 4 ® 4 60; stags, $3®&#13;
3 50; grassers, all kinds, $5®5 10.&#13;
Sheep—Demand strong, quality poor;&#13;
choice to extra, 17 26®7 50; medium togood,&#13;
$6®7; fair to light veals, $5®&#13;
5 50; heavy veals, S3 50®4 50; heavy&#13;
calves, 250 lbs. up, $3®4.&#13;
Chicago—Beevea, | 3 65®6 40; cows&#13;
and heifers, $1 15®4 50; stockers and.&#13;
feeders, $2 10® 4 3.0; Texans, $3 30®&#13;
4 50; westerns, $3 25®4 30.&#13;
Hogs—Mixed and. butchers, | 4 SSS&gt;&#13;
5 55; good heavy. 15 25® 5 55; jretaalBw&#13;
heavy, $4 85®6 10; light. $4 a f # * ^ » 1 .&#13;
bulk of sales, $5 10®5 40. ' •'&#13;
Sheep—$4®5 30; lambs. $4 75S&gt;S.&#13;
East Buffalo.—Best export steers, $5.25&#13;
steers, $4.35®4.85; btoe st1 ,310,000 0l ht o shl,iltpfp0-ilnbg«:. —&#13;
do. $3.9094.25; best fat cows, $3.25®&#13;
3.50; extra, $3.76; fair to good, $2.50®-&#13;
3; trimmers, $1.60; best fat heifers, $3.50&#13;
@4; medium heifers, $3 ¢1)3.26; common&#13;
stock heifers. $2.50®2.75; best feeding&#13;
steers, $3.50®3.75; best yearling steers,&#13;
$3®3.25; common, $2.50®3; common&#13;
stockers, $2.5003: export bulls, $3.2|&gt;®&#13;
3.50: bologna bulls, $2.75@3.25; stock&#13;
bulls, $2.50®2.76; good to extra, cows,.&#13;
$4S@52; medium to good, $35(&lt;*42; common,&#13;
$18®20. Best calves, $8.5008.75;&#13;
medium to good, $7.50®8; heavy, $3®4.&#13;
Hogs—Yorkers.and pigs, $6.50; mixed&#13;
and mediums, $5.50®5.60; roughs, $4.40-&#13;
®4.50; closed steady.&#13;
Sheep—Best lambs, $7.65@7.75; fair togood,&#13;
$7@7.5u; cull to common, $5.60®&#13;
6.50; best sheep $5®5.25; cull to common,&#13;
$3.25®4.25; wethers, $5®5.25;&#13;
yearlings, $6.50®6.&#13;
Grain, Etc.&#13;
Detroit—Wheat—No. 1 white, 83%c;&#13;
No. 2 red spot, 3 cars at 86Vic; December,&#13;
5,000 bu at 88Uc; 10,000 bu at&#13;
&amp;8%c; 5,000 bu at 88Vic; 3,060 bu at&#13;
88c; May, 10,000 bu at »0»4c; 10,000 bu&#13;
at 00%c; 5,000.bu at 90c;. 5,000 bu at&#13;
00%c; 10,000 bu at 90c; No. S red. 82V*o&#13;
per bu. ' J&#13;
Corn—No. 8 mixed, 67Vip; No. 3 yellow,&#13;
2 oars at 59c, closing 59Vic per bu.&#13;
Oats—No. 3 white spot, 1 car at 31o&#13;
per bu. \&#13;
Rye^—No.. 2 spot, 1 ear at 68V£c per.Bu.&#13;
Beans—October, $1 62 bid; November,&#13;
$1 52 bid; December, $1 52 bid; January,&#13;
$1 62 bid.&#13;
4&#13;
Chicago—NOi 2 apring wheat. 85®87c;&#13;
Ne. 3 , 7«®85Hc; No. 2 red. 86U®87Vic;&#13;
No. 2 corn, 62%®52V4c; No. 2 yellow,&#13;
B4@64Vic; No. 2 oats, 28%®2«%c; No.&#13;
2 white. 29%i@30V4c; No. 3 white, 28®&#13;
29%c; No. 2 rye, 68V4®69c; good feeding&#13;
barley, 36Hc; fair to choice malting,&#13;
40®46c; No. 1 flaxseed, 93c; No. 1&#13;
northwestern, 99c: prime timothy seed,&#13;
$3 20; clover, contract grade, $13 25.&#13;
— • " " • - " •&#13;
Wireless telegraphy is sweeping the&#13;
ocean in search of David Hobhs. a&#13;
Canadian Pacific agent of Momreai,&#13;
who is believed to. be aboard some&#13;
ship bound for Europe,, with $50,000 of&#13;
cash which does not belong to him.&#13;
The burning of *the imperial granaries&#13;
which supplied thousands of&#13;
banner men and dependents about Pekin,&#13;
China, with rice, jost before the&#13;
winter's distribution, baa developed&#13;
into a scheme to further official corruption&#13;
of a huge scale. Superintend*&#13;
ents Kngi and Lin have petitioned the"&#13;
throne to est their respective heads&#13;
I thetrinabUitartogetflie&#13;
« •' .i-i.'. !.. » : •-, ' i T . T - &gt; ; i - . . v &gt;; ij&#13;
AUVSKKBNTA IN DETROIT.&#13;
Week Ending Oct. «8 •&#13;
TsuriiS TH»ATBR AND WoNDiRLA»D--Afternoon&#13;
«S:lM!&gt;c. to86o; Erenisga?:i5, JOo. to Mo&#13;
Ceeltl»Loftus.,,&#13;
LTOHUH--Prioes 16-55-8^-8%^½..' Mats. WoO.&#13;
and Sat. "Our New Minister."&#13;
WHiTMKT-BTenings 10-«o 30c.; Mats, 10-15-253.&#13;
•'Ssoret Service Sam."&#13;
AVMtJS—Vaudeville-Afternoons Z;l\ 10c to&#13;
25c; Evenlnsrs 8:15, 100. to Mo.&#13;
"Jollv Oirl^•• •&#13;
LArATrrrsTi!SATsa--Summ*r prices, 10-80-&#13;
86-8^60. Mst 1. Moo., Tues., Thurs., Sat, SSo,.&#13;
"Heart of Maryland."&#13;
(&#13;
^1%¾.&#13;
STKA1f«SM LRAVTWO DETROIT.&#13;
DiTBorr A QcsvazaMoNAV. Co-Foot WSJB St. -For Cleveland dally at lOtSO p m. MMkinao&#13;
'•8©o"*imCfciOMO, Moodo/ sad Saturdaj A pmt&#13;
WednesawiaaTrlaatt^ftm. ' • • •&#13;
anaidars»ranteas w&lt;3tovei«od, fj rooad trip&#13;
DtTHorr * Bvnxto STSAMBOAT Oo-Foot of&#13;
WTUC* hTAS LlWe-Foo* of OrlawoW 84. for&#13;
* - » • ; ' ^ *&#13;
. . . : ' • ' • * ses^ / . - •&#13;
V - T - ™ - - - '&#13;
. : V&#13;
"A- •-'.•-••'•:•. / , . : ^ - - : " ' , . ; " .:...-^- « : ^ ^ . r ' ^^r,'- ? ' ' - , . . • • " &lt; ^ V ; • f e - V ^ - ^ ' ' ' N . ":^&gt;.-'.&lt;:'." ."'*.•'•• V.-*# -,, " ; i ' • ,•'•:&#13;
:jf::-'.,.:v.»-.:&#13;
J). a • i 6 7f 5« H I Hi'iiiwuin.i-lj r&#13;
' • ' V ; '--•&gt;•,' • ^ • * ! \ . : '&#13;
•fcV&#13;
. * • - • - ' THE PRESIDENT ON HIS&#13;
SOUTHERN TOUR TALKS&#13;
*&#13;
PANAMA CANAL QOB8.&#13;
'-•. 7T-Trr-v, , ./. . -,'.,. .&#13;
PHA7IC MfTSIIANCSi ON THE&#13;
RAILROA0 RATS LAW&#13;
MA9B.&#13;
Tho WerH Done on the Cans* * Guaranty&#13;
That th« Qreit WOr* WIN&#13;
8e finished lit Near Future.&#13;
*-.v..j/.&#13;
At Jacksonviller Florida, Saturday,&#13;
President Roosevelt "said: "Here in&#13;
Florida, the first of the gulf states&#13;
which I have visited upon, this trip,&#13;
I "wJaTTToTgay a spec^^wbrd? ahour&#13;
the Panama canal. I believe that the&#13;
canal will be of great benefit to alt&#13;
our people, but moat of all to the&#13;
states of the" south Atlantic, the&#13;
gulf and the Pacific slope. When completed&#13;
the canal will stand aa a monument&#13;
to this nation; for It will be the&#13;
greatest engineering teat ever yet accomplished&#13;
in the world.&#13;
"A body of the most eminent engineers&#13;
in the world, both American&#13;
and foreigners, has been summoned to&#13;
advise as to the exact type of canal&#13;
which should be built. At no distant&#13;
date I hope to be able to announce&#13;
what their advice is, and also the&#13;
action taken upon their advice. Meanwhile&#13;
the work is already well under&#13;
way, and has advanced sufficiently far&#13;
io enable me to announce with certainty&#13;
that it can surely be accomplished,&#13;
and probably at rather less&#13;
expense than was anticipated.&#13;
"The work is as difficult as it Is important;&#13;
and It is of course inevitable&#13;
that from time to time difficulties will&#13;
occur and checks be - encountered.&#13;
Whenever such is the Case the men&#13;
of little faith at home will lose that&#13;
little faith, and the critics who- confound&#13;
hysteria with emphasis will act&#13;
after their kind; But. our people as&#13;
* whole possess not only faith, but,&#13;
resolution, and are of too virile fiber&#13;
to be swept one way or the other by&#13;
mere sensationalism. No check that&#13;
may come will be of more than trivial&#13;
and passing consequence, will inflict&#13;
any permanent damage, or cause any&#13;
serious delay. The work can be done,&#13;
is being done, and will be done. What&#13;
has already been accomplished is a&#13;
guaranty as to the future.&#13;
President Roosevelt, in an address&#13;
at Raleigh, N. C, Thursday, set at&#13;
rest any question there may have been&#13;
as to his purpose to invite congress&#13;
to pass a law for the regulation of&#13;
Tailroad rates. The president went&#13;
further than to indicate that he will&#13;
communicate with congress upon tho&#13;
-ggfetspt by practically outlining what&#13;
»#:Hmture of his recommendations&#13;
will he. He said:&#13;
' • ' • ' l . l i not believe in government&#13;
'^ownership of railroads, but I do bollovo&#13;
It is out of tho queotion for—thein&#13;
w g il.m ii. i IIJIII^II Win.n \a mmmm+mmmmmmmnf , i n&#13;
indispensable Re4tuls4t# irt fempWeV&#13;
-_ ^J^^^oiBiL^r^elBfM^ ~ -&#13;
It la of course true that some pre*&#13;
p W W 7 medicines contain alcohol and&#13;
nearly al) Uauid medicines prescribed&#13;
by physicians contain St No bonaat&#13;
man will defend the sale of intoxicants&#13;
under the guise of medicine; but&#13;
every honest man should protest&#13;
against a system of wholesale denunciation&#13;
born, of malice, or ignorance&#13;
of pharmaceutical principle*, and fostered&#13;
by selfish interests. It la asaumiaLthaf&#13;
areehottt the cause oMhtemperance;&#13;
but there is a gr^at dif*&#13;
Jterene* between alcohol and whisky.&#13;
If ne»t substitute for alcohol could be&#13;
found for nee.in the; manufacture of&#13;
medicines, its discoverer would render&#13;
a great service to the profession oi&#13;
pharmacy and • thd "alienee of medlcftfeV'for&#13;
alcbhor^s a very expenlive&#13;
ingredient and a cheaper ajbstltute&#13;
would be gladly accepted. Unfortunately&#13;
the word alcohol, in the minds&#13;
of many people is associated exclusively&#13;
with bar-rooms, drunkenness&#13;
and all form of degradation and vice.&#13;
This ia due to a lack of knowledge&#13;
by the general public of the fact that&#13;
alcohol is an indispensable requisite&#13;
in drugs, tinctures and fluid extracts.&#13;
All fluid extracts and tinctures on the&#13;
druggists' shelves contain from 20 to&#13;
90 per cent of alcohol; and of all&#13;
liquid medicines prescribed by pby&#13;
siclans more than 75 per cent contain&#13;
it in large proportions.&#13;
Alcohol Is required to preserve organic&#13;
substances from deterioration&#13;
and from freezing, and it is also re&#13;
quired to dissolve substances not soluble&#13;
in water, while it contributes to&#13;
their preservation when dissolved.&#13;
Diluted alcohol is largely employed in&#13;
fluid extracts; and whenever a greater&#13;
strength of alcohol is required as a&#13;
solvent (for extracting medicinal principles)&#13;
the medicine is of such a character&#13;
as to preclude a large dosage;&#13;
SHaTor this reason preparatldlsTever:&#13;
if containing 50 per cent or more of&#13;
alcohol, are practically less intoxicating&#13;
than beer. In - such cases the&#13;
character of the medicinal constituent*&#13;
is such as to absolutely forbid the&#13;
taking of the medicine in any wa7&#13;
except in very small doses'and at&#13;
stated intervals only. To assume that&#13;
any great number of proprietary medicines&#13;
are used as beverages is th»&#13;
veriest absurdity.—Exchange.&#13;
government not to exercise a super&#13;
visory and regulatory right over railroads.&#13;
"There are always some railroad&#13;
managers and some big shippers who&#13;
are always ready to take unfair advantage&#13;
of their weaker competitors&#13;
and thereby force others who would&#13;
like to do decently into similar acts of&#13;
wrong.&#13;
"What we heed is some*administrative&#13;
body with ample power to forbid&#13;
combinations which are hurtful to tho&#13;
public.&#13;
"This body must be given power to&#13;
make its findings effective.&#13;
"This is not revolutionary. I only&#13;
wish the same power given in reference&#13;
to railroads that is now exercised&#13;
by bank examiners.&#13;
"Nothing is more injurious than a&#13;
law which is merely sound and fury.&#13;
'I would like to see the new body&#13;
granted all the power I think it ought&#13;
to have; but I would far rather see a&#13;
part of it granted than see a pretense&#13;
of granting it all in such shape that&#13;
It really amounts to nothing."&#13;
Snr,&#13;
Raises White Pine.&#13;
That white nine reforestation 13 a&#13;
success is being demonstrated by1 Samuel&#13;
H. Bridges, owner of .one'of the&#13;
largest farms in Dickinson county. Inclosed&#13;
in Mr. Bridges's 1,280 acres of&#13;
land is a tract of 80 acres along the&#13;
Sturgeon river, which were burned&#13;
over 13 years ago, the fire killing&#13;
every tree. There are now on this land"&#13;
about 5,000 young white pine trees.&#13;
Some of them were : trimmed up six&#13;
years ago, and they have attained a&#13;
hlght of 25 feet and are from 10 to&#13;
12 Inches in diameter at the base. It&#13;
is Mr. Hrldgee's intention to have tho&#13;
rest of them trimmed this fall, and he&#13;
Is satisfied that in 20 yeara more he&#13;
will have a valuable tract of timber.&#13;
Czar Nicholas' very latest pronunciamento&#13;
*• addressed to "his own&#13;
Jteople." He congratulates "Russia's&#13;
glorious troops for their obstinate&#13;
struggle against a brave and mighty&#13;
neniy.&#13;
i*.&#13;
«audf«a&#13;
attajw&#13;
Dowager Queen Margherita of Italy&#13;
plans to itolt»America with a 40-ton&#13;
' jhobiHR^ '- •&#13;
rdlar*PPlr*cJ*Uott: of "President&#13;
relt'a efforts ft* bringing about&#13;
hearty tone by both eaar «nd nrtkade.J&#13;
BC&#13;
ew Ending of Two IDoin^atic Spats&#13;
O v e r IHa*Miyw&gt;efr Tbal &amp;eem&#13;
Jloupd, to .Oca** i a mm,. Jem*&#13;
*** Tatrnygh l4lev &gt;&#13;
'Men have died and' the worms&#13;
hate eaten them,'" quoted the" girl&#13;
who knows, "but not for love.'; Just&#13;
listen to this. I went to call on&#13;
Martha the other day. She was- telling&#13;
I me how she and Jack had quarreled,&#13;
Had quarreled so bitterly that at last&#13;
with tears she got op, puA oh her hat'&#13;
and left him fo*#er. .&#13;
"If Was* dark" In the street.' The&#13;
street lamps appeared, to make it&#13;
darker. • • * She walked » ^-&#13;
tie way, then half turned.' She walked&#13;
a little further/ then turned altogether.&#13;
Not straight back, but toward&#13;
the butcher, shop.&#13;
" 'Jack and I had chops this morning,',&#13;
she soliloquized, 'I think I will&#13;
order steak for tomorrow/&#13;
"She did so and went back home."&#13;
"What was the husband doing? Had&#13;
he gone out and made away with himself&#13;
? No, Indeed. He was sitting&#13;
quietly at the table where she had&#13;
left' him,&lt; reading his newspaper."&#13;
"That's nothing/' put in the browneyed&#13;
girl. t4l knew a woman once who&#13;
quarreled with her htisband, or he&#13;
with her. I never knew which, and&#13;
when he had gone out of the house&#13;
MANY KNOW THIS—DO YOU?&#13;
The following very Interesting conversation&#13;
between Mr. White, .banker, and&#13;
Mr. Walter Wellaoan, retired; two prominent&#13;
citizens of the town, was recently&#13;
overheard:&#13;
"1 never buy patent medicine," said&#13;
Mr. White. • "When I-feel the need of&#13;
medical assistance 1 call our physician.&#13;
I don't believe In taking a lot of stuff&#13;
that I know nothing about. 1 know, however,&#13;
that a great many do use it, and&#13;
apparently with good results, but I am&#13;
for getting a doctor every time."&#13;
"Your circumstances render this possible,"&#13;
replied Mr. Wellman, "but the majority&#13;
of people must consider the expenae.&#13;
My experience is that some patent&#13;
medicines frequently cure when the&#13;
doctor's skill Is baffled. Take, for instance&#13;
an affliction; say like constipation&#13;
and stomach trouble. Did you ever hear&#13;
of your family physician curing a case&#13;
like that? If constipated, he gives you a&#13;
physic; but a physic cannot cure constlnatlnn.&#13;
and he will, tell you so. It is a&#13;
temporary relief andbefore long you need&#13;
more physic or pills. The doctor charges&#13;
you 12 every time you call on him and&#13;
you have to pay &amp;0c or 75c to have his&#13;
prescription filled. Pretty soon you have&#13;
the 'PJll' or 'Physic' habit and your doctor&#13;
has a steady customer. You cannot&#13;
read the dootor's prescriptions. You know&#13;
no more about what he gives you than&#13;
you do about the Ingredients of a patent&#13;
medicine. No reliable company will put&#13;
a lot of money Into a patent medicine&#13;
unless they are convinced that it will do&#13;
all that Is claimed for It. Usually it 1«&#13;
tne prescription or some specialist who&#13;
has devoted his life to the study of a&#13;
certain disease and has mastered It.&#13;
I mention constipation and stomach&#13;
trouble because I suffered from that affliction&#13;
for years. It is the beginning of&#13;
nearly all disease. Once it gets a gr'p&#13;
on you, It is serious, stubborn and hard&#13;
to overcome. I never knew a case that&#13;
was cured by an ordinary practicing physician,&#13;
but I do know of a number of&#13;
bad cases that were permanently cured&#13;
by a remedy called Mull's Grape Tonic.&#13;
I have used it in my family with satisfactory&#13;
results. It cured me. and I know&#13;
a great many more persons it has cured.&#13;
It costs 50 cents-for a small or $1.00 for&#13;
a large bottle. 1 don't know exactly all&#13;
that is In It, but I do know it cures constipation&#13;
and stomach trouble and that Is&#13;
more than my famUy doctor could do for&#13;
me.&#13;
she determined, to a*ke way with her-&#13;
4&amp;: tW( deUr|Onati&lt;in did lot last,&#13;
however. \ She concluded, on the con-.&#13;
trary,jto lee what he Would do in case&#13;
she should end it all.&#13;
"There was a small pond nearby.&#13;
She eouldnt. have .drowned hersej! Jn&#13;
it if she had laid down and drunk up&#13;
all the water, but she nevertheless&#13;
wrote thisi farewell letter to him:&#13;
"Dear John—I can endure this life&#13;
no .longer, vj have thrown myself tn&#13;
the pond. Good-by and God bless you.&#13;
Jour loving SARAH."&#13;
"She put the letter np on.the table,&#13;
where he would be sure to find it,&#13;
then went into the closet and bid herself.&#13;
"It was a smaH closet. She nearly&#13;
smothered there, but she waited with&#13;
Just enough of a crack in the door&#13;
to breathe through.&#13;
"At last, after what seemed an interminable&#13;
time, she heard his footsteps.&#13;
He came in and sat down by&#13;
the table. After fumbling around&#13;
awhile he came upon her note. She&#13;
heard him tear it up when he had&#13;
finished reading it.&#13;
"'Drat that woman!' he said as he&#13;
threw it on the floor.&#13;
"Then he picked up a book and read&#13;
till she came out of the closet—had to&#13;
or smother."&#13;
Points Out Lesson Taught. by Dreams&#13;
Thoughts and Deeds of Our Waking&#13;
Life Influence the Hours&#13;
of Slumber—Make Visions of&#13;
the Night Useful.&#13;
A. B. Gibson presents ah exhaustive&#13;
analysis of the physical and psychical&#13;
basis of dreams, says the&#13;
Medical—Record. . He„ sums up his&#13;
views in part as follows: To sum up&#13;
the argument,, dream and waking differ&#13;
in degree and form of manifestation&#13;
only, not in principle and essence.&#13;
Like waking consciousness, dream reveals,&#13;
but does not create. The same&#13;
world that surrounds * the^ waking individual&#13;
surrounds the dreaming, only&#13;
the viewpoints and media of observation&#13;
are changed. ,&#13;
As the life experience of an individual&#13;
in his waking consciousness&#13;
receives its character and value by&#13;
and through his power of response to&#13;
environment, so in a similar way the&#13;
value of a dream depends upon the&#13;
power of the, ego to respond to consciousness&#13;
in its various forms of&#13;
emotions, ideas and feelings which&#13;
constitute the environments of the&#13;
subjective or dream plane. Waking&#13;
or dreaming, the individual is, or becomes,&#13;
what he chooses to be at any&#13;
given moment of his existence.&#13;
The background for ordinary&#13;
dreams consists of undigested remnants&#13;
of waging life. Hence, ordinary&#13;
dreams are merely undigested&#13;
life, being made up by longings, desires,&#13;
anticipations, idle hopes and&#13;
miscarried relations, which, occupying&#13;
the mind during-tbe day, are ever*&#13;
taken by sleep before having reached&#13;
their fruition. Hence the mixture, in&#13;
most dreams, of the sane and the insane,&#13;
of truth and delusion.&#13;
On the other hand, the life lived out&#13;
and assimilated in a purposeful existence&#13;
becomes' absorbed in the formation&#13;
of-character and leaves no&#13;
residue to form the bizarre staging&#13;
for the confused dream. And to such&#13;
an individual the intuitions of dream&#13;
life, with their dazzling imagery, will&#13;
introduce symbols which, properly interpreted,&#13;
may carry the significance&#13;
of- prevision or prophecy. Therefore,&#13;
to turn dreams into useful intelligent&#13;
and intelligible factors, we must fill&#13;
our waking life with ' deeds and&#13;
thoughts of universal usefulness, and&#13;
freight the train of events with an&#13;
unflinching devotion to duty and virtue.&#13;
= 5 EK »«m»•» li*f»p iftm easy.&#13;
•• • m PaesY Te«SA •*«*»•* J * *&amp;» Ame**&#13;
lean Smelting and Befnung^company&#13;
hag mirnhasori a site at Chihuahua,&#13;
liexico; fcr the"erect3eo o f t h e bl*&#13;
^rV«"&#13;
TT*.&#13;
^Hmgest&#13;
smelter la that e « r i &lt; ^ ^ o | k .&#13;
|»*»* • W d H «**9&amp;w*.&lt; «. ..*....* M--m^ »«f.. ...lifty•-&#13;
Indiana Contractor Is Misalsg.&#13;
Bedford, Ind., dispatch: ftichard&#13;
Clampitt, a contractor, hen seen misaing&#13;
alnce Thursday. He drew 9*0*&#13;
from a Bedford bank that day agd&#13;
started to tb^ Mitcbesl street ffttri^&#13;
v*&lt; '. *;&#13;
take gteai»ahtorle Burned.&#13;
Alpena, Mich., dispatch: The-steaav&#13;
ship P. H. Btrckheedv co«I laden, from&#13;
Ashtabula to Racine, Wie„ was barged&#13;
at a dock here. The crew of twelve&#13;
escaped uninjured, hat lost-ail&#13;
effects,&#13;
• . - ' ' ' • ' '&#13;
.1."'. yV&#13;
•• &gt; ' &gt; m&#13;
eTEfF-r**&#13;
Hanged for 8Iaying Pi&#13;
Winnipeg, Manitoba, dif&#13;
Charles King was hanged at&#13;
to a, Alberta, for the murder at&#13;
ser, Slave Lake, of Edward Haywood,&#13;
a young prospeetor. v&#13;
• V w&#13;
'T'&gt;-&#13;
To Convert Grant's Horn*.&#13;
St. Louis, Mo.,'dispatch: The old&#13;
Grant farm In St. Louis county, a short&#13;
distance west of the ctty limits of 8 t&#13;
Louis, for many years the home oi&#13;
Ulysses S. Grant, will be converted&#13;
into an amusement park next year:&#13;
£&#13;
Tuberculosis Congress.&#13;
Pari3 cablegram: The tuberculosis&#13;
congress, which will be attended by&#13;
delegates from all the nations of Europe&#13;
and America, will be held is&#13;
Paris from Oct. 2 to Oct. 7.&#13;
• „ • • - 4 , . - .&#13;
Helps Earthquake Victims. .&#13;
Rome cablegram: The-German emperor&#13;
has Bent Foreign Minister Titton!&#13;
$2,000 for the Calabria earthquake&#13;
victims. King Victor EmmanuW°&#13;
tfTroTrttnttiug hie trip through the ==^&#13;
stricken towns.&#13;
•*wi&#13;
* , • • ' • ' ' • '&#13;
Texas Judge i* Dead. -t ^v ; -, v&#13;
Galveston, Tex., dispatch: Judge Cfcjg&amp;£' %^-^S^fl^$^-&#13;
C. Garrett, who resigned as chief frm^^ &gt;,:• : ^ S ? l p&#13;
tice of the first district court of n f f . ^ :^M;-§m^&gt;i&#13;
peals, died at his homo !n Brenhaa,&#13;
Tex., aged 59.&#13;
Rice Paper.&#13;
Most of our readers have seen&#13;
rice paper, which is Quite&#13;
largely imported from China. This is&#13;
made from a plant botanically known&#13;
as &lt;4fataia papyrifera." The part used&#13;
Is the pulp, which is split open and&#13;
pressed flat, after which it ia dried.&#13;
U is Used for painting on and also for&#13;
pen work. An attempt is to he made&#13;
to grow it in this country, and It haa&#13;
been imported into Florida. The plant&#13;
belongs to the same family aa sj^s&gt;&#13;
Zl «•&lt;•»&#13;
I was first attracted ta tha^remedy by&#13;
te company's offer to give the first Dottle&#13;
freto to any on«^ who would writ* to&#13;
them givlns their dTugslaf* name. I anv&#13;
thankful for,, t1Vh e bbeenneeffiitt iitt jhiasa ggiivveenn aanndd&#13;
Sdvise evtrt Offerer froW cttflsttjpatlon&#13;
"lull's Grape Tonic Co.. 14?&#13;
4th Ave., Rock Island, 111., givlns them&#13;
their druggist's'address, so that they can&#13;
procure a bottle free of expense."&#13;
After,,a marv.ge.ts to know enough&#13;
not to be' married and have a. lot of&#13;
children he has already done it.&#13;
• - "" ^ ^ ^ * ^ ^ ^ — ^ » * .&#13;
Important to Mothers*&#13;
Xxamme carefully eveiy bottle of OASTOUA&#13;
a nfe and sore remedy for infants and chSdrea,&#13;
sad see that it&#13;
Bean the&#13;
^IgMtore of&#13;
m Use For Over ^30 Years.&#13;
The Kind You Have Always Bought&#13;
It is not what you've got, but what&#13;
you are, that -makes you happy.&#13;
PAIT I •I MMRdBMMiM'iuaUiir «0«( f«Ddr;. KWlloMa'otOwntravl Mcu«srva«—tier RMMT- •r. Sea4 forFREp jSS.OO trttU botti* tad trmMm.&#13;
Try to bring happiness to those who&#13;
often seem neglected.&#13;
Tefc* all yoor troutUs to the Lord&#13;
ta prayer. »-^.^,, ,f t - .^ .s •• •&#13;
-*r&#13;
Qroye, V. J.. Pee. I7.*nea'&#13;
St. Louis, §904&#13;
otumfoia g^raphophones&#13;
BEST TALMMQ MACHINES MADE&#13;
Cylinder Machines $7.50 to SWO&#13;
Disc Machine* $12 to $65&#13;
mnmhf porfootty —&#13;
mli ftfceejs of&#13;
o#*c*es£r*a, wiodba.&#13;
Ortftlnat&#13;
P 1 oud&#13;
\J nrtvaJexl&#13;
M&#13;
~m&#13;
'if* m&#13;
B r l l U c a n t&#13;
\ txmp&gt;lrln%&#13;
A ttraetlvej&#13;
Fetich&#13;
a r ^ n t e &gt; r t a i n l n | j ;&#13;
^ B / ttptlvatlnjjf&#13;
x j u t ' w e c t r i n g ;&#13;
Jha? e a o n a n t&#13;
D e j l l s h t f u l&#13;
COLUMBIA&#13;
aoM Moulded Cylinder&#13;
•PMMfMMMiWn»U*MH«U«ltaW«MauBMaM«naiMM&gt;MI&#13;
i&#13;
I&#13;
^¾&#13;
-'yO -•&#13;
COLUMBIA DISC RECORDS&#13;
I, BO e e &gt; n t « spamcht # 0 p e w d o x e &gt; n&#13;
K &gt; l n p h t n&gt;l e a c h } e&gt;10 pe&gt;r d o z e n&#13;
O r a a n c l O p e r a R o o o r d a * , ( m a d e I n l O - l n o H r l l g r i t&#13;
, o n l y ) # 3 e a o h&#13;
Goiiunbta Pjhonoffraph&#13;
272 Wci^ofd Avtw, DOHOIT, Midi.&#13;
#aeattTMfa^&#13;
yf-fi^ • »&#13;
'•}. V''&#13;
. V ,K • fu&#13;
*.n&#13;
w r .&#13;
•$'•."* '-.•' ?V'' THUBSDAT, oc i?, ae 1905.&#13;
««**«&#13;
Taxes for 1906&#13;
* 3* fc#P&#13;
SFfe.'&#13;
AV,&#13;
4 The county board of 'equalization&#13;
pots tbe taxes down to tlje different&#13;
townships (or u e coming year as follows;&#13;
Brighton&#13;
&lt;Conw*y&#13;
Oohoetah&#13;
I&gt;eerfiel4&#13;
• « • * •&#13;
• • » V f t %&#13;
• • • * • • e-"i&#13;
&gt; t t « « « « e « « l t « « I • • *&#13;
* . ' . - • • * &amp; # • • • '&#13;
t * i » « e * » *&#13;
* 4 •• « • » » •&#13;
•S3&#13;
KartJaj^r . .&#13;
Hamburg....&#13;
i . . « « * « « » - .&#13;
• « • •&#13;
$1,064,690&#13;
879,676&#13;
014,230&#13;
669,125&#13;
780,950&#13;
596,140&#13;
2,3464)60&#13;
1,417,980&#13;
720,170&#13;
780,040&#13;
- T O j W e -&#13;
877,390&#13;
O c e o l a . . . ; . . . , . . . , , 876,500&#13;
Putnam : . . 565,260&#13;
Tyrone 691,940&#13;
Unadiila 747;5O0&#13;
Totals ¢14,714,220&#13;
&lt;&gt;"•?&#13;
Tbe postoffioe department bas j ust&#13;
informed the local board of civil ser*&#13;
,..jjj-r, ,/ice examiners of a decision that in&#13;
%/\:^i the appointment of rural-mail carriers,&#13;
% hereafter, women applicants will not&#13;
be considered except where there ia no&#13;
qualified male applicant for the position.&#13;
U la &amp;H»o*ibT« w have a clear head&#13;
wttjvofif )i&amp;$:m\m tb&gt; dige«tfo»,&#13;
U wea$$t wbea the stomach is o*ta*t&#13;
order, Sodol DyspepsiaCar* wilf |»djt&#13;
the stomach and digestive organs in&#13;
good condition and improve the general&#13;
condition. 8old by Ft 4 . Sigier.&#13;
The fWlerville lair was a winner&#13;
this year and tbe Association has money&#13;
ia it* treasury after paying all premiums&#13;
.?&amp;*&#13;
Beat Barraw TreeWe&#13;
It is a bad habit to, borrow anything&#13;
but tbe worst thing yon oaa possibly&#13;
borrow, is trouble. . When sick, sore,&#13;
heavy, weary and worn-out by the&#13;
pains and poisone of dyspepsia, biliousn*&#13;
8*, Briffbt's disease, and similar internal&#13;
disorders, don't sit down and&#13;
brood over your symptomsvbut fly for&#13;
relief to Electric Bitter*JUre~you&#13;
will Knd sure and permanent forpet*&#13;
fulness of all yoor troubles, and your&#13;
bod? will not be burdened by a load&#13;
of debt disease. At F. A. Sigler'e&#13;
drug store. Price 50c. Guaranteed.&#13;
B. (J. Reed and wife of Oceota were&#13;
guests of W. H. Placeway And family&#13;
Thursday night last Mr. Reed is one&#13;
of the breeders of fine stock in this&#13;
county, and Friday received a shipment&#13;
here from Jackson parties and&#13;
drove them to his farm in Oceola.&#13;
— — • • • • — mn l n&#13;
To drawthefireoat.of a barn, jieal&#13;
a cut without leaving a scar, or to&#13;
cure boils, sores, tetier, eczema and all&#13;
The conncil of the village pi Fowler- 8kin and scalp diseases, use De Witt's&#13;
Ttltehaspassedar^rdraane^iortmh= W i t c F l i i e l Salve. ^IjpecifiT'for&#13;
NEW WAY TO BOOST.&#13;
Big Manufacturing Concern Adopts Noyel Method irf&#13;
Swuring Worfcert \ ^ ^&#13;
P a ^ Its Peoide Liber ally for&#13;
ding spitting on the sidensnjjcrosswalks&#13;
in tne village. The law goes&#13;
into effect Nov. 5, and anyone violataajt-&#13;
tne fame shall pay a fine of $15&#13;
tad costs or spend 90 days in the&#13;
county ia.it.&#13;
%4-i&#13;
New Care For Cancer&#13;
All surface cancers are now known&#13;
to be curable, by Bucklen's Arnica&#13;
Salve. Jas. Walters, ot Doffield\ Va.,&#13;
writes: ''I had a cancer on my lip lor&#13;
years that seemed incurable, till&#13;
Bucklen's Arnica Salve healed it, and&#13;
now it is perfectly well." Guaranteed&#13;
cure lor cuts and burns. 25c at F. A.&#13;
Sigler's drug store.&#13;
GO AS YOU PLEASE&#13;
Lake or Rail in Either Direction&#13;
Between Detroit and Buffalo&#13;
r * *&#13;
It yoor ticket read* via the Michigan&#13;
Central, Grand Trunk or Wabash Railways&#13;
in either direction between Detroit&#13;
and Buffalo, it la available for&#13;
transportation via the D. &amp; B. Line&#13;
and you can enjoy tbe del is bt of a&#13;
lake ride.&#13;
Address&#13;
D. &amp; B. STIAMBOAT (JO,,&#13;
WAYNE ST. WHARF. DBTBOIT, MICF.&#13;
Fall of Tragic Meaning&#13;
are these lines from J. H. Simmons, of&#13;
Casey, Ia. Think what might have resulted&#13;
from bis teml.Ie couah if be had&#13;
not taken the" medicine about wbi'h he&#13;
writes: "I bad a fearful cough, that&#13;
disturbed my night's rest. I tried&#13;
everything, but nothing would relieve&#13;
it until I took Dr. King's New Discovery&#13;
for consumption, cousbs and colds,&#13;
which completely cured me.1' Instantly&#13;
relieves and permanently cures all&#13;
throat and. lung diseases; prevents&#13;
grip and pneumonia. At F. A. Sigier&#13;
druggist; guaranteed; 50c and*$1.00.&#13;
Trial bottle free.&#13;
DID IT KTEB OCCUR TO YOU&#13;
piles, Get the genuine.&#13;
A. Sigier.&#13;
Sold by F,&#13;
Persons interested in the large&#13;
growth of vegetab'es have been calling&#13;
at OePuy &amp; Brown's stor* the&#13;
past week. They have an Iceberg&#13;
melon left by James Mitteer which&#13;
weighs 34 pounds, a cucumber left by&#13;
Len Cook weighing 4 pounds and 8&#13;
ounces; and a pumpkin from Edmund&#13;
Butt's farm which weighs"88 pounds.&#13;
—Stockbridge Brief.&#13;
The original laxative cough syrup is&#13;
Kennddy's Laxative Honey and Tar.&#13;
It expels all cold from the system by&#13;
acting as a cathartic on the bowels. It&#13;
relieves the feverish conditions of the&#13;
throat, -draw* out tbe inflammation,&#13;
cures tbe rough vnd strengthens tbe&#13;
mucous membranes of the lungs and&#13;
bronchial tubes, Kennedy's Laxative&#13;
Honey and Tar is a certain, safe.&#13;
prompt and harmless cure tor colds,&#13;
croup and whooping cough. Sold by&#13;
F. A. Sigier.&#13;
We are reminded again of the annual&#13;
meeting of the Chicago Live&#13;
Stock exposition held there, Dec. 2 to&#13;
9. In the circulars sent out they say.&#13;
'King cattle is low, kinff cattle will&#13;
rise." We are already paying twelve&#13;
and fifteen cents per pound for beef&#13;
If it goes much higher eggs will be&#13;
cheaper even at 20 cents per dozen&#13;
How to get the benefit.of employes'&#13;
brains as well as the. output of&#13;
their hands is a problem which has&#13;
been solved by the National Cash Register&#13;
Company at its factory in Dayton,&#13;
Ohio. The means of solving the problem&#13;
is the "suggestion system," which&#13;
has been in effect at the Dayton factory&#13;
since 1894, and which has in recent years&#13;
been adopted to a greater or less extent&#13;
in other factories.&#13;
The scheme of securing suggestions&#13;
from employes which has been carried&#13;
out to a very complete extent at the&#13;
N. C. R. factory, was-anifing the interesting&#13;
things noted o.n therecent visit&#13;
to Dayton of the Michigan editors.&#13;
Arrangements have been made at the&#13;
model factory by which any suggestion&#13;
from any member of the organization is&#13;
easily and quickly brought to the attention&#13;
of the authorities.&#13;
The employes have taken hold&#13;
with marked enthusiasm,, and each&#13;
year thousands of suggestions are received.&#13;
For handling these, and all&#13;
complaints as well, a department of&#13;
~ Women&#13;
who ham the «arirjtf e&#13;
en become *»ervoun w:&#13;
of_ vitality ctmaee hea&#13;
irrtt£bl&#13;
ftyit- *e*MJa~ w^raeJfmulej* *. worn out, tea Dp, Miles'&#13;
Restorative Nervtae which acts dfreetly upon tne nerves,&#13;
renwhlng. and Atrengthenin* them.. It&#13;
la a, nerve j ^ andante. wEleir si tand relieve* The tension of the&#13;
l»sj&amp;a*Jma^*wtoe* res* aad sleep. . J&amp;wae.so nemut X-.w4# tjaarty ermsr.&#13;
j^&amp;SSf*^?£ i*sfi&amp; tha* leeuaawf&#13;
ot tne imrttnejita ajw m ocarina; -csv? WS^uSS^r^^SStl^^&#13;
each considered. •••••. S^to-dayl^m able ^W^attfty work.&#13;
!:*•'' fl&#13;
MaUnt a ttwettton. AotograpHIo tune**&#13;
tioo reenters are placed in every department&#13;
complaints and suggestions has been organized.&#13;
A head, an assistant head, and&#13;
several stenographers and clerks arc&#13;
kept busy receiving, recording and investigating&#13;
these suggestions and complaints&#13;
which are made.&#13;
System Proves Valuable.&#13;
The value of the "suggestion system"&#13;
as carried out in the N. C. R. plant has&#13;
been demonstrated again and again.&#13;
The operation of the system involves a&#13;
large expenditure of money, and the&#13;
Company paid out in prizes from 1890 to&#13;
1904, inclusive, the sum of $12,897. Besides,&#13;
there is the cost of the maintenance&#13;
of the Complaint and Suggestion&#13;
Department. In spite of this Targe&#13;
outlay, however, the Company has found&#13;
the suggestion system one of its most&#13;
paying—investments.—Suggestions—a-re-&#13;
If, upon investigation, the suggestion&#13;
proves practicable, h i s put into effect&#13;
and the originator is notified by letter*&#13;
which authorizes him to receive One&#13;
dollar from the cashier in. payment for&#13;
the suggestion. If, on the other hand,&#13;
the suggestion is rejected, the author is&#13;
duly notified. Where possible the&#13;
-reasons* for the rejection are given and&#13;
in either case the suggester is encouraged&#13;
to try again.&#13;
Priiea far Bast Bnggaatlaaav&#13;
At the end of each quarter the best suggestions&#13;
are selected from those adopted&#13;
during the three months past, and fortyfour&#13;
quarterly prizes are awarded, The&#13;
amounts of these prizes vary from time&#13;
to time. At present the value of the&#13;
quarterly prizes is $750. Twenty-five&#13;
prizes aggregating $450 are offered to&#13;
the employes in the making division.&#13;
Twelve prizes aggregating $200 are&#13;
offered to the employes in the office&#13;
division, and seven prizes aggregating&#13;
$100 are offered to the members of the&#13;
selling force,- The prizes in both the&#13;
making division and the office include&#13;
a first and a second prize for foremen,&#13;
heads of departments and assistants.&#13;
They are eligible to compete for these&#13;
prizes only.&#13;
8ome Examples of Suggestions. (&#13;
A few_examples of the suggestions&#13;
may prove interggfiiig. IirthrlBdicluisr&#13;
Department, where are printed the metal&#13;
parts of the register"which indicate the&#13;
amounts of a transaction recorded, it&#13;
had been the practice for years to mix&#13;
certain kinds of ink by stirring Them in&#13;
a bucket, then straining through a cloth.&#13;
One of the women employes thinking&#13;
this could be done better,and more economically&#13;
by-machine, devised an apparatus,&#13;
dre^ the plans and turned them&#13;
over to theNCompany. As a result the&#13;
ink is now quickly and cheaply strained&#13;
by a machine.&#13;
- In this same department it was&#13;
formerly the practice to paste on the&#13;
indicators paper letters and figures,&#13;
MRfi. PAJLMXHL LftXfoftoa. O.&#13;
••:•.*^* %.&#13;
druggist wtfl return (vtf*otthe •%••••&#13;
DaWKf • B» Safes&#13;
am&#13;
'j&#13;
• • • • . • • - #&#13;
' * • • &gt; » •&#13;
Gray Hair it a bar to ear&#13;
eesare, bet there is relief' ..&#13;
178. ltosa be restored to its natpral oolor&#13;
r win* Mrs. R. W. Allen's Vita Bah* Color&#13;
estorer. -iris not a dye bnt in a natural rraff&#13;
. acta in the roots* compelling lb* secretion&#13;
of the piamente that five Ure aadeslox totho&#13;
hairinthreedaya. It is not sUoky prsrsssy;no&#13;
odor: doesn't stain tbe scalp. ABflOlUTBLY&#13;
HABMI.BB8. HM i» bottle. All druggist*.&#13;
"CREAWIthe&#13;
byaiank skin (bod gires rosy freahness&#13;
and beaoty to the £k\u. Bemovee aU im;&#13;
feetioM and. imparities, A perfect complex&#13;
Ion. » cents at your druggists, or sent&#13;
prepaid oa receipt of price.&#13;
MARK W . ALLEN A CO.&#13;
Detroit. Mich*&#13;
• v&#13;
being made continually which result in&#13;
the cutting down of expenses or doing&#13;
away with needless labor and the constant&#13;
improvement of the factory's output&#13;
How Suggestions are Made.&#13;
Any employe desiring to make a suggestion&#13;
for the betterment of the tools,&#13;
methods or output in his own or another&#13;
department, writes it out on a slip&#13;
of paper and drops it into a suggestion&#13;
box; or, if he prefers, he writes it out&#13;
on a manifolding autographic register,&#13;
retaining the original copy and leaving&#13;
the duplicate copy in the register.&#13;
In all cases an employe signs his name&#13;
Diploma and,eash—-Suggestion prises,&#13;
which were then varnished over. _One&#13;
of the girls suggested that these jchar&gt;i&#13;
acters bq printed. The suggestion was*&#13;
found practicable and the woricis n o w \&#13;
done by printing presses, with a great&#13;
saving of time and labor.&#13;
—Werkeis Devise Many Improvements.—&#13;
Throughout the factory departments,&#13;
machinists and helpers and men of all&#13;
ranks are constantly devising improvements&#13;
in little parts of the registers, doing&#13;
away with needless machine work;&#13;
punching a hole instead of drilling&#13;
it, inventing new parts to simplify the&#13;
mechanism and improving the machines.&#13;
In the Typewriting Department the&#13;
girls are constantly suggesting ways of&#13;
saving time and labor7 and in the office&#13;
divisions new schemes for counting and&#13;
recording are continually being worked&#13;
o.it. As one specific instance of how&#13;
great a saying one suggestion made, it&#13;
might be well to cite a suggestion re-&#13;
•?M&#13;
I&#13;
That Kail Tickets Are Areepted&#13;
On D. * B. Daily line Steamers?&#13;
Under special arrangement with tbe&#13;
%SUu.bigau Central, Wabash and Grand&#13;
Trunk Railways, all classes of tic nets&#13;
reading via these lines between Detroit&#13;
and Buffalo, in either direction, will&#13;
be accepted for transportation on D.&#13;
&amp; B. steamer*.&#13;
, Send two cent stamp for illustrated&#13;
booklet. Address&#13;
D. sVB. STEAMBOAT CO.&#13;
DepL A. V v DBTBOIT, MtCB&#13;
|H**sto &lt;fe* Kiel&#13;
ara often fraatrated ty sadden" break-&#13;
-^owaudue to dyapspsia or^co»Mi|*&#13;
tfc*. Braea up and take Dr. King's&#13;
tttw Lift Flit* They tmH^oai * •&#13;
' iMleriali which are ^Lngi^r .Jjroir&#13;
aodglfa yon a asw atsTrt&#13;
hearanhe and diaaiaesa .too.&#13;
A t * . *V, $$**;* *»itJmf^\Mfr&#13;
You may be just as skeptical and&#13;
pes^ioustic as you please. * Kodol will&#13;
digest what you eat whether you eat&#13;
or not. You can put your food id a&lt;&#13;
bowl, pour a little Kodol Dyspepsia&#13;
Care on it and will digest it the same&#13;
as it will in your stomach. It can't&#13;
help but cure Indigestion and Dyspepsia.&#13;
It is enring hundreds and&#13;
thousands—some had faith and some&#13;
didn't. Sold by F. A. Sigier.&#13;
October U the very best month of&#13;
the «h.ole year in which to take an&#13;
outing. Tbeti the fish bite well, tLe&#13;
mosquitoes are disappearing, the&#13;
weather is more enjoyabU and decent&#13;
the landscape scenery at tbe height ot&#13;
its beauty.—Stock-bridge, Brief. Bat&#13;
tbe editor is bead over heels in work,&#13;
some one else catches the fish and&#13;
October is gone.&#13;
to a suggestion, and also the name of J cently made by which the expense of&#13;
the department in which he is employed. ! supplies for a certain kind of register&#13;
The suggestion boxes and autographic ; is reduced nine cents per machine. This&#13;
registers are distributed in all departments,&#13;
and suggestions are collected&#13;
A new idea in a eouab syrup is advanced&#13;
in Kennedy's Laxative Honey&#13;
and Tar. Besides containing Pine&#13;
Tar, Hooey and other valuable fernidies,&#13;
it u rendered laxative, ae that its&#13;
use insures a promp and efficient ev*&#13;
cnation of the bowels. It relaxes the&#13;
nervonj ay stem, and cures all oou j&#13;
epldsvartfupsete,. Arid&#13;
and the honey bee on every bottle of&#13;
the original lasative eoogh syro|H-&lt;&#13;
KennedyV Laiatrre Hoaey and Tar.&#13;
rlja.&#13;
v.,-*:&#13;
from them twice a week by #t renttsentatrtt&#13;
of the Compiaint and §uggestioii&#13;
Committee.&#13;
Upon the receipt of a suggestion it is&#13;
given a number and entered-iir a hoole&#13;
' for that purpose. The aecretary&#13;
imittee then refers k&#13;
%&#13;
suggesttort berasgt, or tollsg&#13;
most directly interestedV not&#13;
ie.name of the suggester. 1$&#13;
happens that the tuggestion&#13;
iu$A one department, hi&#13;
means a saving of $1200 a year at the&#13;
present time.&#13;
QTAT1C of MICHIGAN, County of Lirlagston&#13;
Probate Coart for said oesaty. Estate of&#13;
AiMXAXDxn Mncis. deeessed&#13;
Tbe undaraigaed hatiag bees appointed, by the&#13;
Judge of Probate of said eooaty, eoaimissioners&#13;
on claiats in tbe matter of said estate, and four&#13;
asoaths from tbe 6th day of October, • . D. 1906&#13;
saving been allowed by said Jndgo of Probsts&#13;
to all persons holding claims against said estate&#13;
ID which* to pr+seat their oliiss to us fer&#13;
examination and adjuatment:&#13;
Notice is hereby given that we will meet on&#13;
the 6th day of I Member, A. D., 1906&#13;
mad on the bth day or February A. D. 1S0C at ten&#13;
o'clock «. m. of each day, at the residence&#13;
of Jaraea hash in the township of Haaburg&#13;
in said county, to receive and eiaalte auch&#13;
claims.&#13;
—f&gt;aled, H»w¢11,0(,1 obertth, A.&#13;
t4J&#13;
Jhmem NwNOommlsaiouers&#13;
George Vsufiorn )oa c , B l a »-&#13;
Sl a i c of Mlchlg«i&#13;
tbe county of LivTi.g&#13;
' osnjsBjBjrsx^nswesB ay gwi snisioys&gt;&#13;
The pecuniary vahte to the Company&#13;
is net the only valuable result of the&#13;
system. Under its encouragement the&#13;
employes are taught to think* tor themselves&#13;
and become more efficient workers.&#13;
At the same time tbe man or&#13;
woman erho hat originality Is brought&#13;
e ^depanmeni t^ wasch (to the attention of th&lt;»anagenent, and&#13;
In. this&#13;
,: •« r.&#13;
B. The circuit court for&#13;
est on, In chaacery. Suit&#13;
pending In the circuit court for the county of&#13;
Livings ten, la chancery, on tbe 5th day of Sept.&#13;
ember. IMS.&#13;
TIIOVA.H II. COLLI Nil, complainant&#13;
ETTAICOI UN* ^defendant&#13;
It BStla/actoilly appparing to this court by affidavit&#13;
on file, tbat tb&lt;&gt; defendant, Etta Collins, is&#13;
non-reeideiit of this stale and is residing in tba&#13;
state of Ohio; on moUon of B. T. 0. (.lark, solicit,&#13;
or for tbe complainant,, it ia ordered that tbe said&#13;
defendant cause bcr appearance to be entered in&#13;
this caste within one hundred and twenty-four&#13;
days from tba date of this order, and that in ease&#13;
of npr appearance she cause her answer to the&#13;
complainants bill'of complaint to be filed and a&#13;
cony thereof toi.be served on the complainant's&#13;
solicitor within twenty days afhr service of a&#13;
copy of said, bill and notice of ibia order, and in&#13;
deiaolt thereof tbat said bill be taken as confessed&#13;
by tbe said defendant, Etta Collins, and it is further&#13;
ordered tbat within twenty days the oom -&#13;
plaiaant cause a copy of this order to be published&#13;
I In the Pintkney Dispatch, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated in said county of Livingston&#13;
aad that said publication be continued la said&#13;
vewaaapar at least once in each week for clz successive&#13;
week •, or tbat became a copy of this order&#13;
to be served personally On said defendant&#13;
Stta Collins twenty da) s before the expiration ot&#13;
the Ume above limited for her appearance.]&#13;
• * .• IJTKA.HM F, PaUTU&#13;
{Circuit Jod+e.&#13;
AT.O. CLASS. .&#13;
Solicitor for Cunplnlnanf. M8&#13;
• • &amp; y *&#13;
.V-V&#13;
_ tc off MJcfilgan. The oirenit court"for&#13;
becouaty of LrtlBffttoi). locbancerj&#13;
#A FWJCD B^iWaieBT,ccmp1a1naat&#13;
J Jva&#13;
»iTJB Wnanr, Vefrndant&#13;
ThUty.tftbjwifeialCaircuit. hafchaaoary.&#13;
anlt reading id On circnit comt lorn be eooaty&#13;
of Livingston., in chameiy, at HowHl, e« the&#13;
eighth day of Ftatember, *4D. i«Sa.&#13;
In this caw eft sppwrtng tbat detendsnt, Katts&#13;
Wright, it not a MSMeat el this state and tfcs*&#13;
ser whereabout* is unknown, iherotere oa fitjbi&#13;
of Rlehaer D. Bocae, solicited lor ct&gt;m&gt;lato#a)^i&#13;
is ordered that ovfead»«t tnter|hcr»t»peaTaax&lt; ;&#13;
said cwHeJon or beforepive months from the&#13;
«g this Ofd&gt;r» u»d tbat vbfain U&#13;
nfiaplahana ttim this order JO he&#13;
^ I f i g j a y j * * * * * * . Mts^hub^ky ha&#13;
i-^imwii&#13;
placed in direct line for&#13;
The sumatlon system has&#13;
aimed success at Ae .&#13;
Its tl ttllUlilltiC '&#13;
• • • • * • wss^ysew sjoewasaftF *&gt;o^a&#13;
plactg has teen | * " ^ f * *****&#13;
V*.&#13;
•w*tr -%~&#13;
..^&#13;
. ^ .&#13;
-«?&#13;
. s-#1&#13;
';vt&#13;
w&lt; , * &lt; • •&#13;
1»,&#13;
^ .&#13;
•m ,.&gt;$;&#13;
aw*:. •^fl/i&#13;
v*» '-^i&#13;
B ^ T • • • &gt; . ' . . • • &lt; * ••• t - . A f t . , . - : . 1 ' . &gt; " % * • • ' . i. " . . • , • . * * « ^ - ' * &lt; » - . ' . ' . / • ' • " - • • ; •&#13;
- - ¾ % • &amp; £ : : ^ P 5 g g = £ £ 5 5 ' • " • •- *'••'.-AV "•&gt;*&amp;••$ lr.TT^;^!^•w•^:^.^'^•'^VI^¾¾¾^¾'^'1'•'^t:¾'•'!^^~^&#13;
;-v :. .'*$-&gt;&#13;
v&#13;
yew jMn&#13;
going to&#13;
hive . .&#13;
W&#13;
^ ( Know how *o T«urt B y e s asltave bad 25&#13;
years eac^eriebce in the one specialty. I do not use tbe old&#13;
confusing method of testing the eyes by placing lenses befoi&#13;
e the eyes- bwt bave an X-Ray Ophthalmoscope which&#13;
enables me to look into the eye and determine the amount&#13;
and kind oraeTecf land you are fitted correctly^&#13;
Dr L*eroy Lewis,&#13;
Ann 'Arbor Esye Specialist.&#13;
At Parlors of Hotel Pinckney,&#13;
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1905&#13;
lyes Tested FREE of CHARGE.&#13;
BseeVve* #»» one mill tax&#13;
S*a^tedftQ«Frtm«r7 School Fsnm&#13;
Mtetnp-Fnd&#13;
|ec«Hv&#13;
Photos lade for Xraas.&#13;
There U nothing yopr&#13;
friends will like half to&#13;
well as a Photo&#13;
PHOTO OF YOURSELF&#13;
Have them taken now,&#13;
before the rush is on. If&#13;
yon want . . . . . . . .&#13;
Good Ones&#13;
that will last and are&#13;
Up To Date&#13;
go to&#13;
MARTYN'S&#13;
Howell, Michigan&#13;
Becetvedfrom leteiga initio*&#13;
0 Total Raorlpts&#13;
VXPKXX&gt;ITUftS*&#13;
G. W. Season A 860, eoaj,&#13;
C. C.MillerVwages&#13;
Belle Kennedy's wages&#13;
Leia Monks' wages&#13;
Jessie Green's wages&#13;
Anna Miller's wages&#13;
P. A* Sigler, supplies&#13;
Vfi*»&#13;
$215.78&#13;
700X0&#13;
848 25&#13;
298.50&#13;
294.00&#13;
4.80&#13;
11^0&#13;
PUMrTOH'S OtD STAND&#13;
PIRWKET. MICH.&#13;
^-&#13;
NELSONS&#13;
John Jeffreys, Jan. service A work 13040&#13;
G. A. Sigler, copper wire .40&#13;
£. B. Brown, work 1.10&#13;
itobert Calbane, work 3.00&#13;
Alfred Monks, mowing * 2.00&#13;
Trank fiisle, work ».00&#13;
G. W. Reason A Son^upplies 11.00&#13;
F. A. Sgler, supplies 5.15&#13;
Wm. Moran, work 2^5&#13;
\ F. A.Sigter's salary 25.00&#13;
W. A. Can's salary 25.00&#13;
Alfred Monks' salary 10.00&#13;
Advertising, K. O. T. M. 2.00&#13;
Edward G. Martin &amp; Co., supplies 5.18&#13;
Grinned Bros:, organ ° .37.00&#13;
Albert Jackson, wood 3.00&#13;
£. B. Brown, work .70&#13;
Robert Colhane, work .75&#13;
Oval &amp; Kaster, diplomas 7.00&#13;
Teeple, supplies 7.04&#13;
F. A. Sigler, supplies 7.55&#13;
D. W. MurU's salary 25.00&#13;
F.D..Johnson's salary 25 00&#13;
Charles Campbell's salary 10.00&#13;
L&#13;
LINIMENT • $ *&#13;
A qnfc* mod eAetiye ewe fee&#13;
attsaMHattralgia,4tebtk^!*SBba&#13;
•she and other nervoo* veina en«&#13;
say part of tbe body- If yon st&#13;
any ofthe above i n * ^ w « * l ^ l &amp; ' &amp; R&#13;
I giro oar worthy ANTl-PAlH SOLTO&#13;
UCENT »fair trial ^. . ^ ^ - -&#13;
ANTI-PAIN SOLID UNIJnWT&#13;
in a oeM box in peate&#13;
y*^*'&#13;
*#;&#13;
^&#13;
riitfotms'&#13;
*m&#13;
Annual Excortlon tn Chicago via Hie&#13;
tirand Trunk Railway SysUm&#13;
Extremely low fares to Chicai/o snd&#13;
return oo all trains, '1'horsdf.y, Oct&#13;
26, 1905. Uetar.n limit Oot. 30, 1905&#13;
For fares and further pitriicolar* con&#13;
suit local spent or.write to GEO W.&#13;
VAUX, A. G P. &amp; T. A., nhicatfo. 111.&#13;
FRANK L ANDREWS&#13;
ROTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH SEAL&#13;
AT DISPATCH OFF CE&#13;
Business Pointers. t4&#13;
A P F i N I U V I M V P C T P n ' N A P O S T A U C A R D WILL*&#13;
V 1 3 1 mPI T I P ! ¥ S J . J • t j L f BRING YOU INFORMATION&#13;
OF T H B S E R V I C E O F F E R E D BY TrHB&#13;
GREAT C&amp;NTRAb&#13;
C. H. St D . - P E R E MAROUTTE-C. D. &amp; L.&#13;
TO THE S U N N Y S O U T H BBST LINE TO&#13;
No pill is as pleasant and positive as&#13;
DeWitt's Little Early Risers. These&#13;
famous little pills art$ so mild and&#13;
effective that children, delicate ladies&#13;
and weak people enjoy theisr cleansing&#13;
efieet, while Ptrong people pay they* are&#13;
the be«t liver pills sold. Hold by F. A&#13;
Sipler.&#13;
For Sal 3 or Bent&#13;
The Ulack residence on Hill street.&#13;
Enquire Richard Clinton or Daniel&#13;
Mnrty. t 4 3&#13;
i&amp;»»#-:*^&#13;
Florida—Asheviile&#13;
leans Cuba Nassau&#13;
For Sale—A Registered ShortHorned&#13;
Durham Bull two and a half years&#13;
old. ROBT. KELLY.&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Those who have apples to be made&#13;
into cider, our mill will lie ready for&#13;
business by tbe let of October.&#13;
Ilert. Hooker, Pettysville.&#13;
m&amp;-:&gt;::&#13;
NOTICB.&#13;
Everybody interested in the Gilk's&#13;
I cemetery are requested to meet at&#13;
Wt will ttkf I'liusrre it&gt; having one of our representatives'call on you and j tbat piace Saturday Oct. H tor the&#13;
arrange all &lt;le»; ils nf your hip; check ycur luggage ihn.ugh, piocure your sleeping! p U r p 0 s ^ of beautifying the place&#13;
caT' rest'rvHlti.iJs, aTTxh^rratitfe for vtn+r gewrul comfort. .._.. , •&#13;
C. S. CHAMBERLIN.&#13;
EXPERT AUCTIONEER&#13;
DEXTER, MICH.&#13;
Bell Phone 38, free P. O. Lock Box «8&#13;
Fom erly of Battle Cre*k, Silcb. Sella everything&#13;
on earth -Re*l Estste, Graded Stock, Personal&#13;
Property, Ooantry Sale*, etc Year* ol experleaee*&#13;
and prices reasonable,&#13;
Orders may be left at the DISPATCH Office,&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
other liahnenta, "Yes, i » .&#13;
predooa tp lose by breakage o»&#13;
All yoa have to do to to apply a&#13;
tbia&#13;
yoa ww&#13;
linimen t to tbe effected parts to.j&#13;
tbe pain instantly, wbkfc erentoall&#13;
1I foWrme ec aa wpwan"t»e*e« nA*UJSn2-F,i/A.*D»I» S&lt;O^L«I«Dn &lt; _M©«T to dp all we claim for tt&gt; or v&#13;
! refonded. ..&#13;
8e«d for a box to-day aadb«vatton&#13;
M- $m&#13;
ia of em&#13;
Totaf expenditures&#13;
Cash to balance&#13;
w *T**o*m**i 11 wTnquggagy gggL&#13;
725.85&#13;
|2,94o.30&#13;
D. W. Murta, Clerk&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Fins Wod Rms&#13;
• F. A. Barton&#13;
yoa Trill be more |&#13;
than pleased witE the result. Prioe 25 Cents.&#13;
, For sale by our agents or TOTiSMQrofder&#13;
direct from aa. Bent postpaid on reofjpiof&#13;
&gt;rice. AgenU wanted everywhere. Write&#13;
.'or terms. HENRY HEL80M k CO., Eckval, Mlam.&#13;
KENNEDY'S LAXATIVEHOKEY-TAR&#13;
Railroad G&#13;
pERE MAROUETTB&#13;
Address, GREGORY o? PINCKNEY&#13;
82T ATE OP MICUION—Courty of Urinfon,&#13;
ss. At a eesaloa of the Probate toart for&#13;
the said county, held at the probate office tn the&#13;
village of Howell, on Tuesday, thettth day of&#13;
October in the year one •thousand nine hundred&#13;
five. Present, .Arthur A. Montague, Judge of&#13;
V~ - hstf 1 ri t ha matter of t he eetate of&#13;
Add&#13;
D* G. EDWARDS,&#13;
l \ T.M.S (.;. H. &amp;l).,&#13;
t 44 Cincinnati, Ohio.&#13;
ri'ss e ither&#13;
H. F. MOEbUBK,&#13;
(i. I*. A., 1'ere Mai^uette,&#13;
Dt-troil, Michigan.&#13;
DAVID L. VABSTCKU^ deceased&#13;
Now comes Ellen Agusta VaaSycke), execntrix&#13;
of the estate of said deceased and represeats&#13;
to this court thai she is ready to render&#13;
her final account in said estate.&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered that Friday the l?th&#13;
day of November next at ten o'clock la the forenoon,&#13;
at said Probate Office, be assigned for the&#13;
heaiing of said account.&#13;
And it is further ordered that a copy of this&#13;
or er be paolibhed In the PISCKMXY DISPATCH:, a&#13;
newspaper printed and circulating in said county&#13;
three auoceeiiva weese previoua to said day of&#13;
hearing.&#13;
Arthnr A. Monta^ne,&#13;
149 Judge of Probate.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CUUKCH.&#13;
Rev. H. A Euierick pastor. Services aver)&#13;
eSvuenndianyg amt o,r»n"ii«n~g&gt; -»a-t^ -wl o:3iu»,— a-n^d.- «^ev.»e*r—y S•.nTakd-a«&gt;&#13;
evening&#13;
Ing service.&#13;
evening at 7:00 "o'clock. Prayer meeting Thure&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at close of morn-&#13;
Miss'MART VARFLKBT, Supt.&#13;
*$*?r:&#13;
A TRINITY OF TREASURES&#13;
Triple Extract of Violet, "French Roses Concentrate,&#13;
Imperial Hair Tonic. Three High Grade Essentials&#13;
to the Toilet at the price of one of them alone, via- s&#13;
81.00.&#13;
We manufacture and sell these goods direct to&#13;
the consumer, thus cutting out the profits of the&#13;
middlemen.&#13;
REGULAR RETAIL PRIOg&#13;
Triple Violet Extract . • . .50&#13;
French Roses Concentrate • » I.CO&#13;
{Makes 2 quarts exquisite toilet water.)&#13;
imperial Hair Tonic - • • • .50&#13;
ts.00&#13;
Our Prioe) tor thwThree-OMI DOLLAR.&#13;
A Saving to YOU of ico Per Cent Is'at It Worth While»&#13;
Writs to us for descriptive literature of these articles.&#13;
The CINCINNATI PERFUME CO. too., Clmclan^l,0Ws,&#13;
IJ1 W.DANIELS,&#13;
'jt OENKBAL AUCTIONKER.&#13;
Satistacru n Guaranteed. For informs*&#13;
Hon caH-el 4)»PAT«H—Office- or address&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. i. u\ 2., LynnMlla phone&#13;
conuection. Auction bills and- tin cups&#13;
furnished free.&#13;
THE ORIGINAL&#13;
LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP&#13;
TWtes&#13;
$ ; # *&#13;
i\ **1&#13;
TIN snadsi Wash Day-M nan. Waasng nasi easy by THE l-V WASHING TABLETS&#13;
I-V ^ i K ^ g A B U T s&#13;
re&#13;
Will not injure the finest fabrics.&#13;
Thar are striotty free from adds&#13;
Of any hind.&#13;
Thaydotbev#c«a^tb^utrnbbint-&gt;&#13;
l*«y make the ctethes white.&#13;
Thay oaa he wed in hard water.&#13;
They save time and the hard&#13;
werk on washday. They are india.&#13;
penaiNeforCX&gt;on«rpsmes«LsosFOu^&#13;
tains and Trnnrnint*. Thar win&#13;
remove stains trea? TaWe Ijtesn&#13;
wtthaheetoetynorsibtog. T h «&#13;
are eeonomioal to nae, "heoanae&#13;
ekthes are mere went oat on the&#13;
sH Coathstad&#13;
*Z assists ia tzpeOlat&#13;
' Golds froatbs&#13;
System by&#13;
gSBtihr morl&amp;(&#13;
the bowelsw&#13;
A certain&#13;
for crottp sod&#13;
vhosoing-corifb.&#13;
r^i: ,"*; » f thanbyac4oalws«#.&#13;
t sold on their r&#13;
• * • &gt; &gt; 5c.&#13;
KENNEDTS m m&#13;
'tM*-+r*&gt;-&#13;
&lt;&gt;.&#13;
4% Oa PsVrirr A OO., OHtOAOO, i , tj.-:«&gt;&#13;
j - For sale bj K. A. »t#3tr. '&#13;
ClONbttKClAriONAL CdUUCIi.&#13;
' Kev. U. W. Mylne pastor. Service ever;&#13;
Suau*y luoraiai st 1U:4U AU4 srery bunds;&#13;
evening »t 7:0C o'ciaefc. Prayer msetlngThnn&#13;
day evenings, oanday school at cJoss of morn&#13;
ingeervice. Kev. K. H.Crate, Sapt,, Mocc«.&#13;
i eeple Sec.&#13;
CT. MAUV's* CATHOLIC CdUROd.&#13;
O KeTr^L J. Commertord, 1 astor, ^rvlcet&#13;
•vary Sunday. Low mass at«:S0o'clocA&#13;
atgU maaa with sermon at »;30a. m. Catechisn.&#13;
7t»:0up. in., vespers ana benediction at 7 :su p. m&#13;
^ a * &lt; ^ "&#13;
.Secletj ef thtossaee, every&#13;
1&gt;UK W. C. T. U. meets the first Friday of each&#13;
month at *:» p. m, at the home of or. H. V.&#13;
sigler. Sveryone interested in temperance is&#13;
cosdkally Invited. Mrs. Ueal Sigler, r*res; Mn.&#13;
Situ Duriee, Secretary.&#13;
The C. T. A. and h. bucie^y of this pmce, n»*u&#13;
every third Sato may evening in the Kr. Jaai&#13;
thew Hall. John Donohue, &gt; resiuenVi&#13;
K1GUTSOF MACCABXKS.&#13;
Meetevarv Friday evening on or before f nl&#13;
01 the moon at their ludliniheSwartaoutlkt»&#13;
Visiting brothers are cimlially invited.&#13;
L. B.Saittr, 9tr alaight Commana«&#13;
T IvingstonLodge^Nw.T^F A, A. M. Keg*»&gt;s&gt;&#13;
J j CommuntestioA Tuesda? evening, on or betort&#13;
thetuli of the moon. Kirk Van Winkle. H. 2d&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN STAB meets each monti&#13;
the Friday evening following the regale* F.&#13;
A A. M. meeting, staaTSitsia Caaxs, W. l | .&#13;
0 &lt; £R OF HoDS&amp;si WOODMKN «ee% the&#13;
drat Tnursdaysvi&#13;
steceabat aalL : C.&#13;
efeach Xenth ia^the.&#13;
f ADroOFTHaV MACCASSswl. MsM every It&#13;
sited, LtLACoarwaT.XadyCem.&#13;
^bpc. S O . 1 S 0 6 .&#13;
Trains leave Sooth Lyon as follows:&#13;
For Detroit and East,&#13;
10:48 a. m., 2:1« p. m. 8;58 p . ^ , ;&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North and Westi ^-&#13;
9:26 a. m., 2:19 p* m., «:18 p.,*bi;&#13;
For Saginaw and Bay City, -&#13;
10:48 a. m., 2:19 p. m., 9.58 p. iu.&#13;
For Toledo'and South,&#13;
10:43 a . m . , 2:1» p . m . ,&#13;
FBAKK BAT, H. F. MOBLLBR»&#13;
Af^nt,sooth Lyon. t». P. A., Detroit.&#13;
Vv.&#13;
/'s&#13;
~^r-&#13;
K&#13;
tfrand Trait Railway System.&#13;
Ea»t Bonnd from Piactnev&#13;
No- SS Passenaer Ex Sunday, 9 : » A. M.&#13;
« 0 . 80Passenger Ex. 8ond*y, 4tS5 P. M,&#13;
West Bonvd from Pinckn*y&#13;
No. 27 Passenger Ex. Snnday, 10:01 A. at.&#13;
No. 99 Pataenger Ex. Sunday. 8:44 P. X*&#13;
W. H. Clark, Agent,&#13;
-"(a ! f *-*^^&#13;
COUCH8AREDANCER&#13;
Signals, Stop Them With&#13;
Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery&#13;
CONSUMPTION - , „&#13;
w i 2 £ 8 t n d BOsYlf-OO&#13;
THE CURE THAT'S SURE for all Diseases&#13;
of Throat and Liihgs or Money&#13;
Back. FEEE TRIAL.&#13;
RED CHIEF&#13;
ICefflShesetl Pntwrmm^^^m^ ^&#13;
Clasipsos Barrel,&#13;
as easily asosBsx.&#13;
Adjusts ttssrf te&#13;
say silt ear.&#13;
Closed&#13;
Makfsg it&#13;
sHrie ter Oeerater&#13;
to piieb Hasd.&#13;
Is gaarasteed te de as seed If sot&#13;
better work taaa asy sseOer ea ts*&#13;
•arket Throws cobs outside every&#13;
time. Cold rolled steel axle, ftef^ulrea&#13;
no wrench. Shells popcorn eplendidfy&#13;
by tightening tension On span* An&#13;
repairs f nrnisl^d free of charge* t y w y&#13;
fanner ahovld have one. For sals * y&#13;
hardvmre and implejnent liiajraTS ^^-'&#13;
•••'•&gt;'*»»«fA*nnKs^;-ww*&#13;
BWUY«HAW)Y C^.,&#13;
MswSwass, Ky., 0» S. w» X-'*-.*P&#13;
. ^&#13;
. . * • &gt; • : • . &lt; •&#13;
• % « . . •&#13;
V'.'&#13;
w&#13;
1 &gt;j^(|fr MARY It P. HATCS;•&#13;
Author of "The. Bat^k ^fMt^V&#13;
ifet6fp,.i&#13;
3-&#13;
-•:«*• :'«i rv'ft t : »•:&#13;
&gt;±4- C H A P T I R XX.&#13;
1 f y *&#13;
&lt;$jjf&#13;
sT&#13;
*3*&#13;
# '&#13;
# ;&#13;
-Yon Are Henry Ashley."&#13;
He them spoke of the examination,&#13;
of nhsy being found of unsound mind&#13;
he wife sent to an asylum, of his escape&#13;
and supposed death by drownlsa%&#13;
V*Wlta the cunning of insanity it&#13;
now^appeared1 that Mr. Hamilton had&#13;
Induced a weak-minded vagrant to&#13;
change cjothes with him, and with&#13;
disguise thus afforded succeeded&#13;
fettia^r clear of the town. The&#13;
wli6**esetnbied Hamilton in gen-&#13;
: •npearance- was afterwards&#13;
drowned and identified as a patient&#13;
of UMI asylum ehtefly by his dothes,&#13;
as the body was unrecognizable from&#13;
having been so long in the water.&#13;
"It must have been a strange fatality&#13;
or -blind instinct which led Ulm to&#13;
seek employment at his own mill,&#13;
ajnd a boarding place at the house of&#13;
lira. Fry, a woman previously well&#13;
known to himself and wife, the recipient*&#13;
as she avers, of many favors&#13;
from himself and wife.&#13;
"He saw his wife and children at&#13;
chorea. His wife was greatly moved&#13;
by hie resemblance to her husband.&#13;
He was,' also, much excited by her&#13;
looks and those of Perley ajttd Clare.&#13;
He knows nothing of all this now,&#13;
but I can prove it by the testimony&#13;
of Dan Fry and his mother. From&#13;
that time he began to watch her&#13;
house, his former home, one night&#13;
standing in a pouring rain until he&#13;
-araa drenchedand; made sick la con-&#13;
(vqaenoe. Although he knew little of&#13;
vnusie prevtously, he purchased a violin&#13;
and became a good performer in a&#13;
short time, but now he has returned&#13;
to his normal ignorance and cannot&#13;
play at all. I shall call to the stand&#13;
en eminent specialist who will explain&#13;
to you that this sort of dual&#13;
existence Is not unknown in science,&#13;
although it la so uncommon as to be&#13;
remarkable. Mrs. Hamilton shared&#13;
fa the feelings of her husband, but&#13;
could not explain them. She repressed&#13;
them, therefore, as much.as&#13;
i ly developed^ a*;others Jiaye that of&#13;
sight, taste, hearing; and Mrs. Hasty&#13;
ton was thus highly -enlaced, h§&#13;
said. . . . • • .&#13;
Th^en the plaintiff's oeunsel vent onto&#13;
speak 6t the'snot fired at his client&#13;
in the grounds fraudulently held andj&#13;
occupied by the defendant, which he&#13;
attributed to some perso*. interested&#13;
in removing him beyond reach of making&#13;
trouble. "We will suppose," said&#13;
Mr. Morley, "that Ashley had at last&#13;
recognised the true claimant in Primus&#13;
Edes, and that he realized his&#13;
own dangerous position, from which&#13;
nothing could extricate him but the&#13;
death of this man. We will suppose&#13;
that he saw him approaching the&#13;
Hamilton house and shoots him from&#13;
his window and then rushes upon the&#13;
spene flinging the pistol one side, and&#13;
was there, as we know, he was, before&#13;
Mr. Carter could get there. Or,&#13;
we will suppose thaf some Other person,&#13;
Solomon Marks, for instance, got&#13;
possession of Dan Fry's pistol and&#13;
followed Edes, shot him, and disappeared&#13;
down the river.&#13;
"It is well known in Grovedaie, and&#13;
can be proved by half a score of witnesses,&#13;
that Solomon Marks was&#13;
twice closeted with the defendant,&#13;
and that he went to the Fry house,&#13;
when it is easy to suppose he found&#13;
an opportunity to get possession-of&#13;
the pistol, to make it appear that&#13;
my client committed suicide—for&#13;
there is no doubt but that the shot&#13;
was flrM ..to kill -him. N o * . i t iiLflgfc. _&#13;
fectly clear to me and must be to&#13;
you, that the false claimant undertook,&#13;
either by his own hand, or another's,&#13;
to rid himself of a troublesome&#13;
person—troublesome, because&#13;
the true claimant. But did he succeed?&#13;
No; the very shot fired to send&#13;
Vane Hamilton out of the worjd restored&#13;
him to the full possession of&#13;
his faculties. Strange, yet true! Can&#13;
we doubt, after such a manifestation&#13;
in ' the overruling for-good of the&#13;
Divine Providence, which so often&#13;
says to crime, Thus far shall thou&#13;
V r&#13;
r*+&lt;~&#13;
possible; but when her little boy was&#13;
lost and returned through the efforts&#13;
of Primus Edes, as he was called,&#13;
she allowed her heart to rule her&#13;
handa to the extent of showing her&#13;
gratitude by gifts for his personal&#13;
comfort and convenience at Mrs.&#13;
NTy's.&#13;
"Now comes the false claimant, Mr.&#13;
Hamilton, or Ashley, on the scene,&#13;
safe, as he supposes, in his fraudulent&#13;
claim, because he thinks his wronged&#13;
brother la dead. He is the exact&#13;
image of the cashier, as we all know,&#13;
and he was received by Orovedale&#13;
people with opes arms. His extraordinary&#13;
nerve, ingenuity, and fertility&#13;
of resource carried him through&#13;
various tests and examinations, and&#13;
he was Installed in_ the place _of the&#13;
true and lawful owner and tenant of&#13;
the Hamilton estate. But there was&#13;
one, gentlemen, who did not receive&#13;
him. It was Mrs. Hamilton. She&#13;
could not believe he was her husband&#13;
and what testimony is better than&#13;
that of a wife who for seven years&#13;
lived with him and came to know all&#13;
his ways, his movements, his tricks&#13;
of manner, everything which goes to&#13;
make up personality, whieh we all&#13;
know does not consist entirely of&#13;
features, height, voice, complexion r&#13;
&gt;nality Is of a more subtle,&#13;
h&gt;e feature. It may elude recognition&#13;
by all' except the more intimate&#13;
•friends. In this caee it evaded all but&#13;
taat-of the wife, the true, loving worn-&#13;
8¾ w*e, through all would not be&#13;
aaveateq by a false resemblance."&#13;
Then In a low, Impressive voice Mr.&#13;
|farier broached the -matter of physlcaj&#13;
Oder, which, exhaled from the matefta)&#13;
bfatfi enables a dog to'dUting&#13;
^ ^ ^ W i master from all other persons.&#13;
Lost children, slaves, fugitives&#13;
from Justice, nave been tracked, by this&#13;
physical odor, so •powerful and unmieielrahle&#13;
a t in fling tft articles of&#13;
ototttag *orn by the person. Many&#13;
pe?7?**ave the serse of smell stronggo,&#13;
but no farther,' he recovered to&#13;
prosecute his claims to his family and&#13;
estate?"&#13;
It was then five o'elock, and an adjournment&#13;
was taken until the next&#13;
morning. 1&#13;
When the little court house bell began&#13;
to ring next day the streets rapidly&#13;
filled, and soon the small room&#13;
was thronged with eager spectators.&#13;
The work of the day was entered&#13;
upon promptly by the calling of the&#13;
witness, George Barnstead, to the&#13;
stand.&#13;
He gave a straightforward testimony,&#13;
corresponding to Mr. Morley's&#13;
presentation of it in his opening&#13;
argument.&#13;
"I sat In Portland depot, near to&#13;
the newstand, waiting for Hurd, who&#13;
was to go on with me to Bethel. I&#13;
saw standing, irresolutely, at a little&#13;
distance, a man whom I now know to&#13;
be Vane Hamilton. He was dressed&#13;
exactly as described by the advertisement.&#13;
He looked about him as if he&#13;
did not know what to do. Finally, another&#13;
man entered who stopped to&#13;
&amp;tare at the first.' Then, as if recollecting&#13;
himself, he went off a Utile&#13;
way, but still looked at htm. *The&#13;
first man was aware of this scrutiny,&#13;
It appeared, for at last he walked %p&#13;
to bim and asked L&#13;
'"You appear to know me. . Who&#13;
am I? What is my name.'&#13;
"The other seemed disconcerted a&#13;
moment by the inquiry, but answered&#13;
in a second or two.&#13;
" 'Your name is Henry Ashley. I&#13;
know you well.' j ,&#13;
"They talked together a few minutes,&#13;
but in a lower tone. I did not&#13;
hear what they said, and shortly^afterward&#13;
they went off together,"&#13;
"Mr. Barn stead," cross-questioned&#13;
Mt\ Ferguson, "you say the-first man&#13;
looked about arm as if he did not&#13;
kaow where he was. What was his&#13;
expression? War it Vague "and0' un-^&#13;
certain OT wide-awake?"&#13;
'ya^Ws; m ,QtbW&gt; eypregajflBriitwitdaw of the •arptwlT toMg-ett-ev&#13;
No, *lr; Jtji we* jth* reverse—&#13;
|J watcWul wide*w|ke.". mr* "fflbat* expression was totally unlike,&#13;
and* yet their eye* looked alike."&#13;
•Tea, sir," .&#13;
"When do. you usually make youx&#13;
trips, Mr, Barnetead."&#13;
of&#13;
"I have no regular time."&#13;
"Thie-tUne you-went on Friday/&#13;
•^Tes, sir/'&#13;
"What date?" ^&#13;
"The ftfteanth of May***&#13;
*Ho# do you knew?"&#13;
"I know by my remembrance&#13;
the day and by my diary."*&#13;
"Do you note the time of your trips&#13;
in your diary?"&#13;
"Yes, sir."&#13;
"Please produce the book If you&#13;
have it about you."&#13;
, Mr. Barnstead- took It from his&#13;
pocket and handed ft to the defend*&#13;
ant's counsel, who, however, did not&#13;
take it.&#13;
"No, read it yourself." Mr. Barnstead&#13;
did so.&#13;
'"Started for Bethel. Waited in&#13;
Port'and depot for Hurd. We went&#13;
on together.'"&#13;
"Now, Mr. Bamstead, turn, if you&#13;
please, to the following Thursday.&#13;
What did you do that day?"&#13;
" 'Waited in Portland depot for&#13;
Hurd a good hour. D - — take him&#13;
for punctuality,'" read Barnstead.&#13;
"Now which of these dates was&#13;
the one you saw the men meet?"&#13;
"The first."&#13;
• "Where did you and Hurd go?"&#13;
"We went to Mechanic Falls."&#13;
"What did you do then?"&#13;
"Took orders fox_goods."&#13;
•TFogetherr . -_'/.&#13;
"Yes. He for his firm, I for .miae."&#13;
"Did you stay all night?"&#13;
"Yes."&#13;
"Did you drink?"&#13;
"Did you not drink more than&#13;
glass or two. Did you not drink nearer&#13;
a dozen?"&#13;
"Perhaps."&#13;
"In short, were you not considerably&#13;
worse for what you. drank, so&#13;
much so that you had to stay in bed&#13;
a day or two?"&#13;
"I did."&#13;
"Wasn't your head in a confounded&#13;
muddle, and didn't you tell Hurd so?"&#13;
"I presume so"&#13;
"Could you swear to any event that&#13;
took place within a week or two of&#13;
that time?"&#13;
"I can swear I went to Bethel and&#13;
Mechanic Falls."&#13;
"Yes, that is in your note book. Did&#13;
you speak of meeting the two men,&#13;
or seeing them meet, to your friend&#13;
that week?" _• _..&#13;
"I don't recollect."&#13;
"Could you swear It was not Thursday&#13;
you saw them—saw them meet?"&#13;
"No, sir, I couldn't; but I think It&#13;
was the Friday before."&#13;
Mr, Barnstead, slightly flushed and&#13;
irate, left the witness stand.&#13;
—Mis. Hamilton's testimony came&#13;
next, and was given in a graceful,&#13;
though shrinking manner. She related&#13;
the various tests to which she&#13;
had subjected the two- claimants at&#13;
various times, and said that both had&#13;
responded readily, but that the defendant&#13;
invariably hesitated Dor a&#13;
moment before replying, but that the&#13;
plaintiff did not.&#13;
The judge at this juncture proposed&#13;
that she subject them to some test&#13;
"in the presence of the jury, if there&#13;
was any. point which remained unsettled&#13;
in her own mind.&#13;
"There is one," said Mrs. Hamilton.&#13;
"Is it of a nature to be conclusive?"&#13;
he asked.&#13;
"I think It is. It is something that&#13;
I do not know myself, but that my&#13;
husband does.&#13;
"Please state it."&#13;
"I wish to know the whereabouts of&#13;
a email diamond button, or stud, that&#13;
he gave me. It was his mother's, and&#13;
I told him I was afraid I should lose&#13;
it if I wore it. He laughed and said&#13;
he would take care of it for me; stnd&#13;
he did. I never-asked^JtoJaiojr:where_&#13;
he kept it, and he never told me."&#13;
"One claimant may be taken into&#13;
the next room while the cfther one&#13;
answers," said the judge. "The plaintiff,&#13;
as the first party, may remain&#13;
and-answer first."&#13;
There was a* decided stir In the&#13;
court room aV the proposition, so out&#13;
of the 'usual course; and as- the defendant'&#13;
ajjose' and ' walked into the&#13;
small office adjoining the court room,&#13;
yet beyond hearing, the audience&#13;
hardly breathed,, so deep was the&#13;
feeling . in expectation of something&#13;
unusual about to take place. .&#13;
But the- answer was commonplace&#13;
enough.&#13;
al todfc'lf to the. bank," said the&#13;
plaintiff. . .&#13;
"For what purpose was the button&#13;
used?"&#13;
'My wife fastened her night-robe&#13;
with ii:\ ._- w_&#13;
"In what part of the bank did you&#13;
keep It?" • ' - , : . „&#13;
"In a small drawer of the sale."&#13;
' I s It;there aowT' «- «* * i:&#13;
"'•r'don't know'. I BtdL f#*otteh the&#13;
Tttatter entirely till lowj'^j, - . *-&#13;
(To be contused.) .&#13;
, ,:• *l»m : '75&#13;
"The wtadoav of -the serpen*&#13;
delusion,"'satjf James JBL Beck* of&#13;
Nashville, to a representative of the&#13;
Milwaukee Free Press. '"He has lift)*&#13;
or no brains, learnt nothing^iNsa-eg*&#13;
perience and i* powerless to7re«ist or&#13;
overcome the wile* of his enemies. Hs&#13;
does not attack man and rarely' offers&#13;
combat to other serpents or animals.&#13;
Various snakes have enemies which&#13;
they dieed I%»4 avoid. The rattlers&#13;
fear the little king snake, a email&#13;
green reptile which hunts for rattlers&#13;
and strangles them when found. Oth*&#13;
era fear the razorbaok hog, whlebrunf&#13;
about the Southern swamps In search&#13;
of snakes, which he destroys and eats&#13;
by the wholesale. He has a.preference&#13;
for rattlers and mocnesin**; V&#13;
whose poison he seems invulnerable.&#13;
The most Implacable enemy of the&#13;
snake la the Industrious ant. When&#13;
a snake is hurt or bruised.he sloughs&#13;
his skin, and then It is good-bye to&#13;
him, for the ants soon overwhelm him&#13;
and eat him alive. "Even a perfectly&#13;
sound and healthy snake which has&#13;
come in contact with a dead or injured&#13;
member of his tribe suffers a&#13;
similar fate if the ants find it out."&#13;
Paul ftretaefv the Popular Ccmpceejy&#13;
~ ''•"'^^''^'Ui^'Kie^lPllBr"^&#13;
'•^*l^&#13;
, r 'Ne# Tor* 'author,&#13;
t£*;;tat&amp;a#$; and ninny&#13;
Ijghfe great song ltfU*X*&#13;
^ (Teatleafon; r wish&#13;
to rapgiinjBiend Pojm'#&#13;
I w m i«:u»t' -&#13;
i'bope that my. en- ,..•&#13;
dorsement will be&#13;
read by some of tho&#13;
many&#13;
sufl«res»&#13;
-m&#13;
' . # ' . •&#13;
'JVt;,i&#13;
•":#'&#13;
obnld&#13;
a weak&#13;
iey Pii&#13;
wish that others&#13;
f«ii&lt;Slgned|&#13;
s Kid-&#13;
•useil « c , and I&#13;
iwow*.&#13;
I4.DRE3SKR.&#13;
Qood News for Ail.&#13;
Bradford, Tenn., Oct.. 23d.—-(Special.&#13;
^Scientific research shows Kidney&#13;
Trouble to be the father of ao&#13;
many diseases that news of a discovery&#13;
of a sure cure for it cannot tail&#13;
to be welcomed all over the country.&#13;
And according to Mr. J. A. Davis of&#13;
thlB place just such a cure is found In&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills. Mr. Davis says:&#13;
"Dodd's Kidney pills are all that Is&#13;
claimed for them^_ Theyjiave done me&#13;
more good than anything I have ever&#13;
taken. I had Kidney Trouble very&#13;
bad and after taking a few boxes of&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills I am completely&#13;
= jairjBiLu-^L cannot ^praise thent-.toa,&#13;
much."&#13;
Kidney, Complaint develops into&#13;
Brlgbt's Disease, Dropsy, Diabetes,&#13;
Rheumatism and other painful and&#13;
fatal diseases. The safeguard is to&#13;
cure your kidneys with Dodd's Kidney&#13;
Pills when they show the first symptom&#13;
of disease.&#13;
Roumanian Hospitality.&#13;
The Roumanian peasantry lead a&#13;
very simple life. The principal dish&#13;
at each meal is the maize-cake. Each&#13;
person in his turn breaks off a small&#13;
portion for himself. Besides this,&#13;
each takes a couple of onions, a small&#13;
bowl of beans, a slice of watermelon,&#13;
a few plums and a draught of water.&#13;
To this frugal meal is bidden any laborer&#13;
or wayfarer who may look as&#13;
though he had no dinner. Roumanian&#13;
hospitality knows no limits. "I have&#13;
not even a bite left for a guest," Is&#13;
the bitterest complaint a housewife&#13;
can make.&#13;
Enough for a Bath.&#13;
Should an American, an Englishman,&#13;
a Frenchman, an Austrian, a&#13;
German, an Italian and a Russian sit&#13;
down to a table- together and order&#13;
drinks in a quantity that would show&#13;
the relative consumption of these beverages&#13;
by their respective peoples,&#13;
some would get enough for a bath,&#13;
while others would obtain only a&#13;
few mouthfuls.&#13;
Sold by all dealers^ 50 cents a box.&#13;
Foster-MUburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y.&#13;
ftmoKlnt by WajMeav&#13;
The London Truth quotes the foi&#13;
lowing reasons against ^smoking by&#13;
women: "The first is that smokini&#13;
develops the mustache, and the seo&#13;
ond, that smoking produces^*! as?&#13;
rate in women, ' iili iliiniM aaV&#13;
"" " """ j ; &gt; ' ; ; .•••„&#13;
*••••-.-• i i » . &gt; d . : ^ " . . v *&#13;
lids.&#13;
Tewsysoifw Pester.&#13;
Tennyson was a lover of porter.&#13;
When a peerage was offered him&#13;
didnt he put off deciding whether to&#13;
accept It-or not until he&gt; bad debated&#13;
the question wifb himself over a bottle&#13;
of what .Goldsmith called "parson's&#13;
black champagne?"&#13;
After 30.&#13;
While she is under thirty a woman&#13;
may get comfort out of the thought&#13;
that she is yosnger^ than, she looks.&#13;
After that her only hope is to look&#13;
younger than she is.&#13;
SIMHCIHEN THE STOMACH&#13;
Natural Lightning Conductors.&#13;
The Lombardy poplar tree, it is said,&#13;
forms a splendid natural lightning&#13;
conductor, its great height and lack&#13;
of spreading branches enabling it to&#13;
conduct a lightning stroke straight&#13;
downwards. No house near which&#13;
one of theBe trees has been reared&#13;
has as yet been known to suffer from&#13;
the severest storm.&#13;
T H E 8 E C B E T OF Y O U T H .&#13;
De Soto looked for the secret of&#13;
youth in a spring of gushing, life^&#13;
giving waters, which he was sure he&#13;
would find In the New World. Alchemists&#13;
and sages (thousands of&#13;
them), have apent their lives in quect&#13;
-for It, but it is only found by those&#13;
happy people who can digest and assimitate&#13;
the; right tootr -wfcichnkeeps&#13;
the physical, body perfect that peace [&#13;
and comfort are the sure results!&#13;
A remarkable man of 94 says: "For.&#13;
many long years I suffered more or.&#13;
less with chronic costiveness and:&#13;
painful indigestion. This condition,&#13;
made life a great burden to me, as'&#13;
you may well imagine.&#13;
"Two years ago- I began to use&#13;
Grape-Nuts as food, and am thankful&#13;
that I did. It has been a blessing to&#13;
me In every way. I first noticed that&#13;
It had restored my digestion. This&#13;
was a great gain but was nothing to&#13;
compare in Importance with the fact&#13;
that in a short time my bowels were&#13;
restored to free and normal action.&#13;
"The cure seemed to be complete;&#13;
for. two years I have had nose of the&#13;
old trouble. I use the Grape-Nut*&#13;
food every morning for breakfast and&#13;
frequently eat nothing else. Tho use&#13;
has made me comfortable and nappy,&#13;
and although I will be 94 years old*&#13;
nest fall, t have.become strong and&#13;
supple again* »ereot. in lgure and can \&#13;
walk wfth anybody and enjor It"&#13;
Name gWe* by Postum Co,, Battle'&#13;
^ 0 0 ^ ¾ ^ 4 ^ ^ ¾ a realon.^&#13;
Read t*etlw!e; book; *T*t Hoe* to&#13;
Dr. Wiitiame' Pink Plila Really Cure.&#13;
IndlBeetlo* Instead of Merely&#13;
Relieving Symptoms.&#13;
There are plenty of remedies by which:&#13;
yon can relieve for the time heartburn,&#13;
pain and gas on the stomach and cau&#13;
smother nervous sensations aud iuduce&#13;
artificial sleep. You cau humor your&#13;
stomach by giviug it predigested food.&#13;
But when you take your next meal all&#13;
your trouble begins afresh.&#13;
There is only cue sensible thiug to do.&#13;
Strengthen the stomach and do away&#13;
with the necessity for drugs and artificial&#13;
foods. The best remedy ever found&#13;
for this purpose is the one that v&gt;as used&#13;
by E. S. Stroug, of Gapleville, Shelby&#13;
comity, Teuu.&#13;
4'Fox years," he states, "I suffered Sreetly from indigestiou/ I tried many&#13;
iffereut/ remedies and soiu* of them&#13;
would t relieve me for a time, but the&#13;
troubleanlways &lt;akme back. About six&#13;
juouth&amp;^gol had an uuusually aeyere&#13;
attack, atfdtvyrhile I tried everything I&#13;
had everhelKplbBf, I found that none of&#13;
the ordiuAry^p^bdies wc«M iSSMSn tii*&#13;
difflcu,l|yJUis^iuter&#13;
" Oneragjj^l^r^a in a&#13;
how Dr. William*'Pink&#13;
Micbigau woman, a sufferer from&#13;
"dyspepsia or a most~sTiibboru type&#13;
then tried, tho same remedy mid it&#13;
proved just as successful iu iny caso. I&#13;
took only three boxes, aud was cured. I&#13;
lmve not had tli% slightest symptoms of&#13;
indigestion since."&#13;
The touic treatment has a sound priuciplo&#13;
as its basin, and abundant success in&#13;
actual use. Multitudes of cases that had&#13;
defied all other remedies have been cured&#13;
by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. The pills&#13;
actually make new blood and strike at the&#13;
root of all diseases caused by bad blood.&#13;
They contain no harmful stimulants or&#13;
opiates. Every dyspeptic should read,&#13;
" What to Eat and How to Eat." Write&#13;
the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady,&#13;
N, Y., for a free copy.&#13;
25 ENVELOPES FREE With your MOM and address printed fW attr«ctl«§\&#13;
-~4fc?&#13;
ityl« on corner of envelopes. Sent postpaid FRKK W&#13;
you send Ve, tor k tl» month* rabecrtptlnn i &gt; our b*nah&#13;
somely !lluttr»ted m««as1ne. Addres*. DeynrtDfent M,&#13;
T w e m t l e * k C « ) s t « &gt; 7 a « v l » w , Detrali* Mick.&#13;
&amp;8t Feel&#13;
Dont expect to feel well&#13;
if the etomech or the Uver&#13;
and bowels are not doing&#13;
their work right. Dont&#13;
try to set them rfcht with&#13;
c»itor-oil» tmt get the&#13;
trmVWsTsttver^Oelery&#13;
King. ass. s* drttfg&gt;ta&gt; Then&#13;
Thw World's Standard&#13;
DE LAVAL&#13;
CREAM&#13;
SEPARATORS eOOOOOlnUte.&#13;
Tan Tiraei&#13;
AV Otiun Combtoei.&#13;
•me gio.* par sav&#13;
^PHT fwW V VW&#13;
K m -M UIAI «MsUm n.&#13;
J.'jt&#13;
i,'i&#13;
*:.&#13;
~,tt&#13;
if;**s*#i!JW:,J&#13;
&lt;8*&amp;9t*d Over Two Veurs—Health Wa$&#13;
In a Precarious Condition—Caused&#13;
By Pflvic CatarrA.&#13;
-PKZ**N BeUtfB.&#13;
court 1¾ Duosnaber^&#13;
the IndstftrTTrlnsi,&#13;
. The&#13;
i a * V&#13;
sentence law inibosed so, doty upon&#13;
the trial'judfe * U | t v « Sim BdW*&#13;
thority t* fix tfcs nuuOnntin term to&#13;
sentencing ft prhwaer. Thti decision 1»&#13;
holding over 20&amp; pereoae in. penal to'&#13;
stituttone m tali etate heyo&amp;4 (be term&#13;
of thfemaxlnuup jtatenee fixed by the&#13;
trial jud**, ae » the case with Robert&#13;
Brown, the colored bojr whoee release&#13;
from lonla prison has been ordered&#13;
and which will take place wlthta the&#13;
i next tea or twelve dare.&#13;
Aside from this decision the sflomV&#13;
gaa supreme eoarfjs w a l l ? Interested&#13;
4a. the queation of the detention of&#13;
auch prisoners. A test ease that weutd&#13;
throw light on the situatlpa has been&#13;
before the supreme court since Juno&#13;
Although It involves the liberty ot&#13;
many persons who have served months&#13;
-beyond the maximum term of sentence&#13;
fixed by the trial Judge it has&#13;
not been disposed of by that body.&#13;
The decision of the supreme court&#13;
in December of last year is regarded&#13;
by judges and wardens of prisons as&#13;
not being, sufficiently' comprehensive&#13;
to apply in all cases, because the case&#13;
which the-d^cisiQn„jvB^s__based&#13;
TOUTUIIINQ HUMOUR.&#13;
Body a Maaa of *ere**-Treated"'ay&#13;
Three Ooetera btft Orew Worse&#13;
-,==^&#13;
HEALTH AND STRENGTH&#13;
RESTORED BY&#13;
PE-RU-NA.&#13;
Mrs. Emma Fleissner, 1413 Sixth&#13;
Ave., Seattle, Wash., Worthy Treasurer&#13;
Sons of Temperance, writes:&#13;
" / Buffered over two yean with ir~&#13;
regular and painfulperiod*. My health&#13;
waa In a very preearkma condition and&#13;
I waa aaxtoua to Had something to re*&#13;
store my health and strength.&#13;
"I was very, glad to try Peruna and&#13;
delighted to find that it was doing me&#13;
good. I continued to use it a little over&#13;
e months and found my troubles&#13;
OVjBd. .&#13;
* *'/ consider It a- splendid medicine&#13;
md ahall never be without It, taking a&#13;
amae occasionally when I feet run-down&#13;
and tired."&#13;
Our files contain thousands of testimonials&#13;
which Dr. Hartman has received&#13;
from grateful, happy women&#13;
who have been restored to health by&#13;
his remedy, Peruna. ; ;"&#13;
"My little daughter-was a mass of&#13;
sores all over her body. Her face&#13;
was eaten away, and her ears looked&#13;
as if they would drey off. I sailed in&#13;
three doctors, but she grew worse.&#13;
Neighbors sdviaed Guticura, and hefore&#13;
I had need half of the oak* a*&#13;
soap end bos of oiatmeat the sores&#13;
had all healed* and my little one's&#13;
skin was as clear a s a mew-born&#13;
babe's. I would no*-bs without Cuticura&#13;
again if it cost five dollars, instead&#13;
of seventy-five cents, which is&#13;
all it cost us to cure our baby. Mrs.&#13;
Q. J. Steese, 701 Goburn St, Akron,&#13;
Ohio."&#13;
an exceptional character. The&#13;
trial judge had hot in that case fixed&#13;
the maximum term of sentence.&#13;
The supreme court has not as yet&#13;
said what wardens must do with their&#13;
prisoners in cases Where the trial&#13;
judge has fixed the maximum senienee.&#13;
Remarkable Case.&#13;
Miss Lucy A. Humphrey was operated&#13;
on in a Detroit hospital on Saturday&#13;
as supposed successfully, but/lied&#13;
Tuesday. A tumor weighing 101½&#13;
pounds, almost as heavy as the woman&#13;
was herself after its removal, was&#13;
taken' from Miss Humphrey. It had&#13;
filled the abdominal cavity and forced&#13;
the ribs outward until they were standing&#13;
almost straight out. It was thought&#13;
that the recovery of the patient was&#13;
only a matter of a little time and that&#13;
the ribs could be pressed inwards until&#13;
t h o y had- r e s u m e d Ihftiv f o r m a l s h a p e , ,&#13;
but the operation was too much for&#13;
her strength, and she sank steadily&#13;
until death ended her sufferings.&#13;
w o CURES 1NDI6ESTI0H&#13;
When what you eat makes you&#13;
uncomfortable it is doing you1 very&#13;
little good beyond barely keeping&#13;
you alive. Digestive tablets are&#13;
worse fhoh Useless, for they will in&#13;
time deprive the stomach of all&#13;
power to digest food. The stomach&#13;
must be toned, upr-strengthened.&#13;
The herb tonic-laxative, Lane's Family&#13;
Medicine&#13;
quickly and pleasdealers&#13;
at 250. and 50c;&#13;
• 2 fe-l&#13;
Walls and Ceilings!&#13;
Town Blown Away.&#13;
A tornado struck the village of Sorento,&#13;
111., 32 miles northeast of St.&#13;
Louis, killing four persons, injuring 35&#13;
others of whom three will probably&#13;
die and doing a great amount of damage&#13;
to property. Forty houses were&#13;
blown to atoms or carried far from&#13;
their foundations. A complete swatnx&#13;
was cut through the town. Everything&#13;
in the track of the tornado was reduced&#13;
to debris or blown away.&#13;
A Rock Cement&#13;
and&#13;
*&amp;•#&gt;&#13;
w h i t e&#13;
and beautiful&#13;
tints. Does not rubor scale. Destroys disease&#13;
germs and vermin. No washing of&#13;
walls after once applied. Any one can&#13;
broth it on—mix with cold water. Other&#13;
finishes, bearing fanciful names and mixed&#13;
with either hot or cold water, d o not&#13;
have the: cementing property of&#13;
Alabastine. They are stuck on with glue,&#13;
•or other animal matter, which rota,&#13;
seeding; disease germs, rubbing,&#13;
coaling and spoiling walla, cloth*&#13;
lag, e t c Such Finishes must be washed&#13;
off every year—expensive, filthy work. Buy&#13;
Alabaatine only in five pound pack*&#13;
ages, properly labeled. Tint card,&#13;
pretty wall and celling design, .1" Hints on&#13;
Decorating" and our srtistsV services in&#13;
making color plans* free. *"; - -&#13;
ALABA9TINE Cfc,&#13;
Oread RjsMs. Mkb„ or If* Water St. N. V*&#13;
| $ *&#13;
V.&#13;
Worry wont cure a sought When&#13;
you- find a cough holding on—&#13;
when everything else has failed—&#13;
try&#13;
tSHiloH's&#13;
Consumption&#13;
Cure fts**"*&#13;
It is guaranteed to cure. If It&#13;
doesn't, we'll refund your money.&#13;
Prlcea; '* S. C. WELLS &amp; Co. 4&#13;
25o.SQcrg&gt;, LoRoy.y&lt;Y.tToroato&gt;C&gt;n.&#13;
TENTSSEPROFIT&#13;
T FULLY fftOTECT AN INVENTION.&#13;
•eJOncton,-^. C , gatablleited ieei.&#13;
taSgelUndis tforre t©loonrs 4. *orfd M Aeacnhtavnericsaelr yM froevee- Bseoatb*m, BtUe*t*to*w e$roem*a,SoiavldM*Utro«ae£f« «oafte* at«hnoutls»ain. d*W orfi tees att»a*MNU eMr,e am.&#13;
Now Hef« 8orry.&#13;
Edward George Cunllffe, the Adams&#13;
Express employ who disappeared&#13;
from Pittsburg with (101,000 in cash,&#13;
was arrested in Bridgeport, Ct, Thursday.&#13;
He declared that the money which&#13;
he took was intact and that it could&#13;
be restored, but he declined to tell&#13;
until his return to Pittsburg where it&#13;
was hidden. On his person when arrested&#13;
the detectives found' $290 in&#13;
cash. "Five minutes after I took the&#13;
money I was sorry," said Cunllffe, "but&#13;
It waa too late to do anything. What&#13;
can you.expect from a man getting a&#13;
salary of only $65 a mon^_^iidJtiandling&#13;
thousands of dollars a day. I was&#13;
tempted and fell. I have handled&#13;
larger sums. I remember once when&#13;
I had $250,000 In cash. 1 was tempted&#13;
then but I thought it over and decided&#13;
to be honest."&#13;
CONDENSED NEWS.&#13;
No, Cordelia, a m a t i n e e idol isn't&#13;
n e c e s s a r i l y an idle m a n w h o s p e n d s h.ts&#13;
t i m e a t m a t i n e e s .&#13;
Frldtjof Nansen, the Arctic explorer,&#13;
is mentioned in Christiania for the&#13;
post of Norwegian minister to Washington.&#13;
"The rigid requirements of women's&#13;
colleges are working incalculable injury&#13;
to girls," asserts Prof. John Tyler,&#13;
of the biographical department of&#13;
Amherst college.&#13;
After, as alleged/ stealing a $275&#13;
coat in Philadelphia, a woman giving&#13;
the name of Mrs, Rebecca Banv-of&#13;
San Francisco, handed over $500 in&#13;
court to apply on her bail bond-&#13;
George- Hayden, of New York, special&#13;
agent ot the Mutual-Life Insurance&#13;
Co., has been arrested at Carrollton,&#13;
0., charged with forgery in dealing&#13;
with policyholders there, figures&#13;
are believed to aggregate $10;000.&#13;
The murder 0¾. p. $. Walsh, of&#13;
Leadville, twelve years ago, has just&#13;
been cleared up by Georg6 Pickens,&#13;
of Cripple Creek, who confessed the&#13;
deed to save an innocent man who&#13;
had been arrested in Iowa for the&#13;
crime.&#13;
Rev. 0. Ernest Thorne, a London&#13;
clergyman, recently appeared for one&#13;
night in a theatrical performance. A&#13;
small part was written for him and&#13;
he sang a couple of hymns, also an*&#13;
nouncing that every Sunday he holds&#13;
meetings in the theater.&#13;
Captured ships will lead the van in&#13;
the coming review of the Japanese&#13;
navy in Tokio bay. Seven columns ot&#13;
war ships extending from Yokohama&#13;
to Haneda will stretch out a distance&#13;
• of 10 miles. Togo will be In supremo&#13;
(command and the emperor will wit*&#13;
ness the imposing spectacle.&#13;
After 10 years of waiting the Chicago&#13;
postmaster will move1 from the old&#13;
to the new building. The change involves&#13;
the continuous rh»an41iag at&#13;
1,306,000 pieces of flret-elaaa and JM0&#13;
tons ot second. lair* sad fourth-ojess&#13;
mail matter beattes-ovw }0e,W paot&gt;^.fTZSSl&#13;
WfE AT TCTTH M s T&#13;
¥•••&#13;
•119 pe&gt;t fJOt»iJ&#13;
Tbi» on iaad wsieh aaseetl the awstst aitaii;'&#13;
bat the price of Ulih-f SI, *•*• « • * » ^&#13;
One Man Psye for Canal.&#13;
Toulouse, France, has a canal which&#13;
was built entirely at the expense 0!&#13;
one man. Its name is the Canal du&#13;
Midi; it was built in 1G6S-1C81, and&#13;
coat M. Paul Riquet 680,000,000 francs.&#13;
Beware ot Ointments for Catarrh&#13;
that Contain Mercury,&#13;
M tnercoTy will tar«ly deMroy the M E M of m e n&#13;
and completely derange the whole ayrtem wbea&#13;
entering It tbrongh the inucoua anrfaeea. Saeh&#13;
anl^les «hool4 never b« oaed except on preecrip*&#13;
•ton* from repatahle phy«Jclana, ai th.« damage they&#13;
will do It ten (old to the good yon cam poaalbly derive&#13;
1rom tbem. Hall'a Catarrh Cure, manufactured&#13;
by F. J. Cheney 6 Co., Toledo, 0.. contain* no mer*&#13;
cary, and 1» taken Internally, acting directly upon&#13;
the blood and mncoua aarfacea of the aytten, la&#13;
bur Jg Hall'a Catarrh Core be aure yon ge* tSe&#13;
" • •• - • adelaTi Ssnnine. It la taken Internally and mi&#13;
hlo, by F. J. Cheney 4c Co. Testimonial! freeo.l edo,&#13;
Bold by Drui&#13;
Take Hall's&#13;
Price. ?5c. per bottle. ramUy Ptlla for conaUpaUoo.&#13;
Russia Hat 23,000,000 Hones.&#13;
There are nearly 23,000,000 horses&#13;
in European Russia. No other country&#13;
in the- world has so many horses&#13;
as Russia.&#13;
Mlsbury V Vlto*&#13;
la the beat and moat economical&#13;
breakiaat food you&#13;
can buy*;&#13;
The Meat of the'Wheat.&#13;
in*&#13;
Ite cole* «#•*•• «ta parity&#13;
Iie'euker guereateee He etuiSt'&#13;
Pillsbury&#13;
Two&#13;
hoaeat&#13;
pounds&#13;
In every&#13;
^ V l f D S&#13;
15c&#13;
Per&#13;
Ask your grocer&#13;
Tbe-OmaWaa&#13;
f res to everj seuiat USaexss of i&#13;
f^ftAm adjolieitts? saa be ]&#13;
to tie per acre'from railroad —• i&#13;
stiooa&#13;
Jireaey *7M0O&#13;
States aevonsde their actaweiai&#13;
For pasapblet "Tweut^tb OiaOutj CsoaOef*&#13;
and all intormettoa apply to Sopi. et"&#13;
tioa, Ottawa^ Canada, or to tallowing i&#13;
CaawHen Oovenuneat Agent—M. Vi&#13;
• • , &gt; ' •&#13;
J&#13;
+ *&gt;&#13;
$ Avenue Theatre Blosk, Detroit,&#13;
&amp; A. Lfturier, Sanlt Ste. Merie, MloaajBSV&#13;
{MtnUftn this papea&gt;&gt;&#13;
5 * &gt; i " . '&#13;
W*tt W. L. Douc »3^&amp;»3^SHOESB W. L. Oouglaa «4.00 Gift ftdgpe Uni&#13;
cannot be eo^aHe&lt;is&gt;f aivy prteav&#13;
THE CHANGE OF LIFE&#13;
1NTELLIGENTW0MEN PREPARE&#13;
Dangers and Pain of This Orltlcal Period 13'» test 63rd Street.&#13;
Avoided by the Use of Lydia B. PinkhanVs&#13;
Vegetable Compound.&#13;
How many wo&#13;
men realize that&#13;
the moat critical&#13;
period in a wo*&#13;
man'a existence&#13;
is the change of&#13;
life, and that the&#13;
anxiety felt by&#13;
Women as this&#13;
time draws near&#13;
is not without1&#13;
reason f&#13;
If her system is in a deranged condition,&#13;
or she is predisposed to apoplexy&#13;
or congestion of any organ, it is at this&#13;
time likely to become actirs and, with&#13;
a. host of nervous irritations, make life&#13;
a burden.&#13;
At this time, also, carreers and tumors&#13;
are more liable to begin their destructive&#13;
work. Such warning symptoms as&#13;
t f -se of suffocation, hot flashes, dixzinv.&#13;
as, headache, dread of impending&#13;
eril, sounds in the ears, timidity, palpitation&#13;
of the heart, sparks before&#13;
the eyes, irregularities, constipation,&#13;
variable appetite, weakness and inquietude&#13;
are promptly heeded by intelligent&#13;
women who are approaching the&#13;
period of life when woman's great&#13;
cnange^mavrbe expected^—-————&#13;
Lydia E. Puikham's Vegetable Compound&#13;
is the world's greatest remedy&#13;
for women at this trying period, and&#13;
may be relied upon to overcome all distressing&#13;
symptoms and carry them&#13;
safely through to a healthy and happy&#13;
old age.&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound&#13;
invigorates and strengthens the&#13;
female organism, and builds up the&#13;
weakened nervous system as no other&#13;
medicine can.&#13;
Mrs A. E. G. Hyland. of Chestertown,&#13;
Md., in a letter to Mrs. Pinkham,&#13;
says:&#13;
Dear Mrs. Pinkham.—&#13;
"I had been suffering with falling of the&#13;
womb for years and was passing through the&#13;
change of life. My womb was badly swollen.&#13;
I had a good deal of soreness, dizzy gpeDs,&#13;
headaches, and was very nervous. I wrote&#13;
yeu for advice and commenced treatment&#13;
with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound&#13;
as you directed, and I am happy to say&#13;
that all those distressing symptoms left me,&#13;
and I have passed safely through the change&#13;
Of life a well woman."&#13;
For special advice regarding this important&#13;
period women are invited to&#13;
write to Mrs. Pinkham for advice. It&#13;
ts free and always helpful.&#13;
'CO*&#13;
rARRPRoFcHLaaoTiraw;&#13;
rsUOtalPO»ffl.5UCttBAJOlAl5.1&#13;
K&gt;LLowiNcroua succeadt*&#13;
AT PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO&#13;
AND OTHER EXPOSITIONS&#13;
Wfc WON THl&#13;
FOREST POSSIBLE AWARD,&#13;
TttStLOOiSWORUTSj&#13;
A.J Towm a&#13;
PILEOID&#13;
WILL CURE YOU IF YOU HAVE PILES.&#13;
IT GIVES IMMEDIATE RELIEF.&#13;
Free tampks sal Qeoidet test Uses BsquesL&#13;
Aak roar drngtlat for It after haying naed the&#13;
•ample*. We Invite roareorra*o&lt;mdeaee. Tb»foltowfof&#13;
ta-one of many tearlmoaicta.&#13;
Champaign, IU., Kor. 30, IMS.&#13;
AsfrSeeto Medicine Company:&#13;
I have had more or leaa trouble from ftchinc ptlea&#13;
for more than foar yeara. One-half box of Plleold&#13;
cured me. Very reapeetfolly.&#13;
Yoor money will be refunded by the dmgjrtrt if&#13;
you are not aaUified ea to reanlta. The price of&#13;
Plleold la «1.60 per box; bat to any one who haa not&#13;
tried oar great remedy we will tend two boxea for&#13;
the price of one. Enough to care moat caaea. Made by&#13;
ANTI-SEPTO MEDICINE COMPANY,&#13;
^ ^Hr€AGft4&#13;
Western Life Indemnity Co.&#13;
The Policy Holders' Committee at No. 77 Jackaon&#13;
Bird.. Chicago, will give complete Information about&#13;
the expenditure of «200,000 of company funds aa&#13;
cammlaalona to Mr. Roaenfeld for the purchase of&#13;
Life Insurance Company of Pennsylvania business&#13;
made on or about February 20th, 1906, and the expenditure&#13;
of ¢200,00006 September 30tb, 1905, to purchase&#13;
8,000 shares of stock m the Security Life and&#13;
Annuity Company, (par Talue 110 per share.) Mr.&#13;
Moulton, Mr. Rosenfeld and Mr. Moore, the Executive&#13;
Committee, are now cited by Judge Kohleaat to&#13;
ihow cause why they should not be puniabed for&#13;
contempt la making the last transaction. Make&#13;
Inquiry at once. HERVEY B. HICKS. Chairman.&#13;
Take Your Choice&#13;
pair of Douglas i&#13;
why W. L. Donelas S3.SQ efebes ewe&#13;
shoes produced in the world.&#13;
M1 could show you the dlrfereeica!&#13;
shoes made In my factory a a d tan&#13;
BMkcs, yea would .unoeretaaS w a y&#13;
&amp;1.50 shoes cost more t o snake, wfcy f&#13;
their shape, fit better, wear k&#13;
greater intrinsic value than&#13;
shoe on the market to-day.&#13;
ST. K*m Oae*Stfassi aVr^ejsMV&#13;
**.*Q, asi.oa. _&#13;
- .ao,a*,-*i-:&#13;
C A U T I O N . — I n s i s t upon having W.LJtoag-&#13;
.^laa ahaea. Take no substrtate. Not&#13;
eTth out hn&#13;
M U - 8 h l n * - I t w — t h e new&#13;
liquid stove ^polish, brilUan^&#13;
and lasting. I t shines eajuerv&#13;
wears longer and covers more&#13;
surface than any other.&#13;
Big Can, 1 0 « .&#13;
If you want to save labor,&#13;
buy the 6^5-4 Bott-Mawlng&#13;
"Store Last*," which will&#13;
not wash off, is applied like&#13;
paint, "Sata Up" B o a t and is&#13;
equally good for Farm Ma&#13;
chinery, Steves, Stove Pipe&#13;
and Wire Screens. Keeps&#13;
forever. Price, SSe,&#13;
WHISKEY HABIT&#13;
CURED.&#13;
A Special Offer far Oetobtr asa Nsvambar.&#13;
Pour weeks' board, room and an absolute&#13;
euro for nil desire for drink for S75.P0,&#13;
Write for particulars. PATTERSM SANITARIUM,&#13;
310 K. a r l d s e Street, Grand R a p i d s , Mioh.&#13;
NERVODINE the gTeateB,t of all&#13;
medical discoveries&#13;
for restoring weak,&#13;
nervous men. It clears the brain, and revltatlzes&#13;
the whole system. It makes life worth living.&#13;
Price, tl.00 prepaid. K A T I O X A L K K s l K D T&#13;
CO., I&gt;td., Chamber of Commerce, Detroit, Mich&#13;
AMY OTHER PtAHt&#13;
$10,000 ' ^ . V W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes Bar*&#13;
cedent style, easy fitting, aad:&#13;
qnalltlesracliieved t h e fctrgast&#13;
shoe ha the world. They ara lust a s gaosl&#13;
those that cost you SS.00 to S7^SO—Ska m&#13;
difference Is the price. H I&#13;
my factory at Brockton, Masev, t h e&#13;
the world tusder one roof mak&#13;
shoes, and show you the cars with&#13;
shoes la&#13;
v:'--W%iS&#13;
• •• •-•• # * : • • " • •&#13;
nil name and price atampsj|^ib bait&#13;
W A N T E D . A shoe dealer In every t o w n *&#13;
WrL. Douglas Shoes are noVjaoM.- sT*U SUM ot&#13;
vunples sent free for Inspection ttjpoja, i __&#13;
fast Coior £ytl*U ut*d; th«§ mf&amp;mi swat,&#13;
WriU for Illnstrated Catalog of&#13;
W. 1» DOUGLAS, ~&#13;
y&#13;
FOR WOMEN&#13;
, ttrhoevirb lsseax w, nitshed m sss pae cduoluiacrh et si s seteoispfsa td.Tischaoarrocuegsh, lhye calelsa aaita's , 1&#13;
S O a?Ofisja94t a&gt; Paxtiae te in powder form to be dissolvsaijajm&#13;
water, and is few more cleansing, heaKagi *~*~&#13;
and economical than liquid antiarptira for ail&#13;
TOflJBT AND WOM&amp;fBSPBGUd.&#13;
For sale at druggtsta, 80 cents a T&#13;
Trial Beat ami Book • •&#13;
XH€ R. PAXTOM C O S M N Y&#13;
|a^B&gt;aJOBTif xwjaomMMM,&#13;
I W n i Waahlatfft*&gt;as BJu.tX&#13;
ipal SxamtnarlTS.&#13;
13 jra m CITU wur. 15 adjudicating&#13;
Coney bland Sotvenir Pitt tett.&#13;
Six beautiful colored scenes for 23*. Cotusv lasSMCl Poatai Card Co., Coney leiund, H* * .&#13;
rs&#13;
CHASE 6 RAKER&#13;
PIANO-PLAYER&#13;
is the charm of the household—an educator, aa entertainer&#13;
par excellence, in which the entire family as welt&#13;
*&amp; visiting friends participate.&#13;
Ton cannot afford to be without one when you learn&#13;
how easily you can play the piano with it. Our new&#13;
catalogue now ready and mailed postpaid 4» aay&#13;
The Chase &amp; Baker Cc*&#13;
* • * ,&#13;
t l&#13;
Factory: BuiEalo, K. Y, 2 5 0 W a b a s h A v e . , C M c a g O&#13;
Wt are excluaire manuiactarers of the List Paper Music Boris for pkao playam.&#13;
ti&#13;
SMTSN&#13;
•New&#13;
TsaeacAMMMMl&#13;
CO UHlTta.,"&#13;
fQUAHr&#13;
?*ur&#13;
To taTeetlga— the saerisa ot the&#13;
JMOHrS^N J ^ N E M COLLIttK,&#13;
SUhrar Av«v«&#13;
i m i M T . * t t t » 4S**iwO«&#13;
PRICE, ANTI-GRIPINE IS QVAIUMTU9 TO CVU&#13;
ttW, BAB COLO, IEMUCIE1» ttSBAUUL II sw. oCata slle flolr A yaoutkr eI3fH OM»laaVaT t oa VaA dOeaMle.r I wVh oI Vw« ra *t&lt;&#13;
'-:' ' &gt; ' ! &lt; ,&#13;
sWS awawa&#13;
CONSISTING of MEN'S AND BOY'S READY TO WEAR CLOTHING&#13;
Oar Fall and Winter Suits and Orercoats are perfection tiaelf.&#13;
Our Spring aud Summer business far exceeded our expectations,&#13;
therefore Nothing but New Clothing to offer for the coming season. v&#13;
Our Goods represent the Best Clothing Manufactures iu the&#13;
country.&#13;
r-;«ri'&#13;
L^sJ.'V&#13;
'-•I ^ T R A G Q O [ ) CLOTHES for BOYS&#13;
We cordially invite the people of Pinckney and Vicinity to inspect one of the Cleanest&#13;
and ^lost Complete Stocks of Clothing in Southern Michigan. ,H'&#13;
We offer Special Values in Suits and Overcoats at&#13;
,..£10.00,. $12.00 and $15.00&#13;
I Ranging in Price From ' Also other Suits at&#13;
^..-.^230 to $6.00-4 —A7.5o. S18.0Q ajjd $ 2 0 . o o&#13;
Boys' Knee Pant Suits,&#13;
Sizes, 3 to 17, COPTHIUHUO » 0 5&#13;
GOLDSMITH JO&amp;tPH ftlMCO.&#13;
Boys Overcoats From&#13;
$3.00 to $8.50&#13;
HATS&#13;
The Imperial Hat* . _&#13;
Sold the World over For ,$3.00&#13;
New and Stylish Hats, $1.00, &lt;$1.5o ,«&amp;2.oo&#13;
MEN'S S H O E S&#13;
XI&amp;SQQD The Crossett Shees, the best shoes made, &lt;$3.oo, 3.5o, 4.oo 5.oo&#13;
j5S*9ff&#13;
Seasonable Goods&#13;
at&#13;
*- Reasonable Prices&#13;
?m,^ j&#13;
A. DAVIS CLOTHING Co.&#13;
Dexfer, - Michigan&#13;
One Price to All&#13;
and tjiat&#13;
The Rijht One&#13;
CHILSON&#13;
Theodora-Sweet was in Howell on business&#13;
Saturday&#13;
—FranksSena and-^EAgju:d_SIcJ^i#jc„jof&#13;
Toledo are the guests of John Sweeney&#13;
and wife this week.&#13;
Miss Jenny Richardson who spent the&#13;
summer here with Mrs. Maud Carpenter,&#13;
started for her home in Sumaria Canada&#13;
last Monday bat meeting Mr. Dudley of&#13;
Sarnia in Pt. Huron was married and is&#13;
still traveling. This will be a surprise to&#13;
the many friends she made while in Michigan.&#13;
Chas. Chapman and family spent Sun-j Mrs. E. N. Bradley of Ypsilanti is visitday&#13;
with S. G. Toppiug and wife.&#13;
'*fc w&#13;
!&#13;
' * &amp; • • ' • &gt; •&#13;
HAMBURG .&#13;
Mrs. Corey is on the sick list.&#13;
Mrs. Oscar Price is visiting relatives at&#13;
North Star.&#13;
Mies Jessie Flurey entertained friends&#13;
from Ann Arbor, Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Nettie Vaughn visited her daughter,&#13;
Mrs. K. A. Kisby, Tuesday.&#13;
Dr. Reason and wife were Ann Arbor&#13;
visitors, Saturday and Sunday,&#13;
Clare Rorabacher visited his uncle,&#13;
Thomas Featherly of Munith, the past week&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. and Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
K. A, Kisby visited friends in Dexter Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Queal returned Saturday from Hen&#13;
AOTERSOK.&#13;
JdtSiJi. B^Smiih^was in Jackson a few&#13;
days last week.&#13;
j as. Hon* is spending a few days with&#13;
relatives in Lansing.&#13;
Mrs. Samuel Placeway visited relatives&#13;
at South Lyon last week.&#13;
Mr. ani Mrs. H. A. Smith expect to&#13;
start for California Thursday.&#13;
Mrs. Seth Perry, Mrs. E. ,.7 . Durkee and&#13;
children Fred and Ethel were in Howell&#13;
Monday last.&#13;
FOR SALK.&#13;
One large soft coal stove, one good&#13;
cook stove and other household goods.&#13;
Must be sold soon. Enquire of 0 . F.&#13;
Travis, •?, mile east of Pettysville. *&#13;
ing Emma Wright f &gt;r a few days.&#13;
Mrs. Ebb Smith and Mrs. Grant Smith&#13;
visited in Howell and Hartland last week.&#13;
—, The stork visited _Miv__and_ Mrs. Percy&#13;
Carson last Wednesday and left a baby boy.&#13;
Mrs. Lucy White of Collins is visiting&#13;
her brother, N. E. Walters, for two weeks.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Mapes will entertain the&#13;
Presbt. Aid Society this evening. Everybody&#13;
cordially invited. I&#13;
There will be quarterly meeting services ]&#13;
at Parker's Corners, Saturday add Sunday, j&#13;
Rev. Saxby will a ssist Rev. Ostrander. i&#13;
— • — m • m ' m • — !&#13;
IOSCO.&#13;
Mrs. Win Earl is havingiier eyes treated&#13;
by Dr. Sigler.&#13;
Mrs. Haviland aud Mrs. Carpenter were&#13;
in Pinckney last Wednesday. "r&#13;
An error on page 1, in&#13;
"Guild" Notes. The&#13;
Hallow'een meeting is&#13;
Monday, Oct. 30, The&#13;
Mistake was fault of the&#13;
copy.&#13;
U$e T^iunfo C°£fe*&#13;
And Your Breakfast Will be Good&#13;
A Pure, Undoctored"&#13;
Mountain Coffee,&#13;
Grown, Imported,'&#13;
and Roasted by the&#13;
Sermon American Coffee Co., N. K&#13;
&gt;•»••« &gt;.»«u'« '«.'&gt;,»&lt;,,&#13;
For Sale By&#13;
W. E. MURPHY&#13;
Ptnckney, Mich.&#13;
All Grades, 20 to 3$ Cents&#13;
£ • • • * .&#13;
-•«,.&#13;
.-.¾. ' '&amp;'•&#13;
• &lt; ' . &amp;&#13;
TBYIT&#13;
JACKSON &amp; CADWELLS&#13;
^•^ ''^bn Harbor where she went as delegate&#13;
'^&amp;- \-W&gt;* 'the Rebecke Lodge. Underwear Special&#13;
i© Miss Bessie Seymour who has l)een .: ,. „ , v . . „ t '&#13;
ependihgthe summer with her sister, Mrs. L a d , e * f x , r a F , n e ^ ^ V e ' t 8 a o d P a n t 8 « 2 5 c e n t * per garment&#13;
t&gt;. W. McNamee of this place, relumed toJ L a d i e s D t i c a «*t r a H e * v y . « " " " .&#13;
her home in Howell Monday. j Childrens Jersey Ribbed Vest and Pants, Prices ranging from 15 to 40 cento'&#13;
Mens Jersey aud Heavy, Doable Breasted Underwear, in 50 cent value* 45 ct*.&#13;
Boys Heavy fleectd Underwear. 25 cents.&#13;
Men and Hoys Da/k Coats, . $1.25 to $2 00&#13;
Mens Knit Jackets $2,60&#13;
x?&#13;
K&#13;
u&#13;
. fLAIOTIELD.&#13;
Rev. Saxbee of MUlrille will occupy the&#13;
M. P. pulpit here next Sunday evening,&#13;
Oct. 29.&#13;
Mesd&amp;mee Walker, Ward/ Sweet and&#13;
MoO^e attended a liaccabee Initiation at&#13;
•'*•• Qngory recently,&#13;
U'm Glenn eloees her aeoood term of&#13;
achool here this week for vacation before&#13;
tanning the winter ter*.&#13;
Mrs. S. N. Bradley of Ypeilaati end&#13;
UkeUi fc»Uey of 1hie piece vie**d "^&#13;
_Mi». P. L. Wright of loeco thh week. •&#13;
, BTanohie VeaKner^ returned to her&#13;
.i heme i» loeeo m #oi»d«y after epewUng a&#13;
j eo«ple^ »eete wkh SCrevPeteretm. -&#13;
Neckwear and Caps&#13;
New and Elegant line* of Men's fancy Neckwear*&#13;
Men's and Boy's Fall and Winter &lt;££vp e,&#13;
25 and 50 cents&#13;
23 cents to %l 00&#13;
Footwear&#13;
Oar stock of Men's and Bo&gt;VFeit and JCnit Boots, Knit tioekt, Miska#aka&#13;
Mi l^eajbMVilie JUbbatm Men's Jbj'ifMm,M'mu a«d Cbtdrei's m ^ a i s&#13;
' » . • •&lt;&#13;
No PAKE',. But PACTS.&#13;
Having made up my mimd not to&#13;
handle any more harnesses, I will sell&#13;
at Cost the'following aVtides, vis:&#13;
Single Harnesses, Li^ht Driving&#13;
Harnesses and Heavy Team Farm&#13;
Harnesses.&#13;
\ I have CoTlaro, Sweat tfads and the rar«e*t&#13;
stock ol Whips ever seen in Pinckney, look it the&#13;
Price, a No. 1, fnil length, Bawhide lor 40 cent*.&#13;
A Rood Whalebone lor 11.00, atnal price from "&#13;
f».00t6f|p$&#13;
*. 1 am not going oalof^bQsineas'bnt my repairing&#13;
%oth on Stapes end H&amp;rftestes lakes at! my time w "&#13;
work brought to me is done on short notice,&#13;
FWOUIB ^&#13;
v***^^&#13;
.vrf&#13;
•T-'&#13;
-. Jl: ^&#13;
! ; - ' • - •&#13;
^&#13;
l~V«rrr3&amp;"--ii^S&#13;
•mr. *?&#13;
* ,&#13;
' V&#13;
/•* ,»•;-.&#13;
4:: A&#13;
\&#13;
r: J*?'t&#13;
i&gt;'..V</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>VOL. KXITT. MNOENEY, LIVINGSTON OO..MIOH., THURSDAY, NOV. 2,1906. No. 44&#13;
• * • »&#13;
"WUc\v\wfc .&amp;&amp;&amp;, "R.^a.Vr ADwVt&#13;
.4&#13;
i s * .&#13;
. ^ -&#13;
We have a thoroughly eqmipped&#13;
machine shop and are in position&#13;
B •&lt;/, to do yoor J&#13;
at reasonable prices.&#13;
fc!zas&lt;L&#13;
#&#13;
Engine and Lathe&#13;
Work a Specialty&#13;
Sharp Edge&#13;
Grinding Done&#13;
1 * r i \ , tVw&amp;Wxa Mid "fcttt. ^Ve^MiM CwmMttena&#13;
a\aow YOTUT ADatanv Co. £&gt;U« AX*eA\\\&amp;,%ta\iv •&#13;
Another Double Wedding&#13;
i'-&#13;
"~~ 0 a 'Wed a esday evening stS-vcioclr&#13;
occured the marriage ol the Misses Almeda&#13;
and Estella, daughters of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. L. T. Laraborn,at their home&#13;
In Iosco, to Jessie G.Henry and-George&#13;
H. Mowers. The ceremony was preformed&#13;
by Rev. B. A Emerick of this&#13;
place, in the presence of the immediate&#13;
friends of the young people.&#13;
The young ladies are well known&#13;
here having mingled with oar young&#13;
people and are very highly respected.&#13;
The young men' are farmers well&#13;
known and well thought of by all, having&#13;
al way 8 lived near our village.&#13;
The young people start out with&#13;
bright prospects and we join with their&#13;
many friends in wishing them all the&#13;
successes of life.&#13;
:&#13;
&amp; •&#13;
: • *&#13;
Congregational Church.&#13;
The first ot a series ot special&#13;
meetings under auspices of the Guild&#13;
"and YrMrCtub"was beid-Sunday^vening_&#13;
at iha_regular hour of worship.&#13;
* y&#13;
t r &gt; »&#13;
The church was well filled. The young&#13;
people wire out in full array. The&#13;
musical program led by a male quartette&#13;
with Miss Mabel Sigler as organist&#13;
and Martin Clinton as cornetist&#13;
rendered excellent service. "Jessica's&#13;
First Prayer'' was heard by a most attentive&#13;
audience.&#13;
Regn'ar service tonight at 7 o'clock.&#13;
Choir meets at 8. Monthly Missionary&#13;
meeting Wednesday at 3 p. in. at&#13;
the borne of Mrs. Steve Teeple. Sunday&#13;
school Rally Nov. 5th. Ti e Supt.&#13;
urges all members to be in their places&#13;
on this occasion. Teachers are requested&#13;
to look up any absentee-. Bring&#13;
Bibles lor prize contest at 11 30. Annual&#13;
business meeting of eburcb and&#13;
society Saturday, rfow. 11, at 2:30 p. m.&#13;
U O C A L N E W S .&#13;
T e * 1M*»T»vsiri"K. 15 cents,^iek^WTfl*deTnjnarteriieirth^ weekfor4be H ^ ^ H m&#13;
en Supper. Saturday evening, 25 cts.&#13;
Wm. Ratz of Detroit was the guest&#13;
of Miss Florence Andrews over Sunday.&#13;
— ~ "&#13;
• B. F. Andrews spent part of the&#13;
past week at bis farm near Parshallville.&#13;
Margaret Lynch won t4.be medal at&#13;
the Silver Medal Contest at Howell&#13;
last week.&#13;
Mashed potatoes, cream biscuit,&#13;
chicken and gravy, like mother's. Be&#13;
sure and come to the carnival.&#13;
If anyone has an idea that the temperance&#13;
work isn't prospering read&#13;
what the N. Y. liquor paper says in&#13;
the W,C,T. U. columr..&#13;
Mrs, Harry Ayers and son of Detroit&#13;
were guests of ber mother, Mrs.&#13;
M. Nash, the past week. Mr. Ayers&#13;
was here the first of the week.&#13;
Frank Bowers, formerly of Pinckney,&#13;
bss been made—manager—oi _tne-&#13;
Kftll Tfllftphone Co. at Clare Mitsh.&#13;
M. £, Church Not*.&#13;
Lore, feast sad sacrament of the&#13;
Lord's Sapper will be ooserved one&#13;
wees from this com in* Sunday tad&#13;
will occupy the whole time of the regular&#13;
service, no sermon. We earnestly&#13;
desire a foil attendance. I*t a special&#13;
effort be made to bring oat our old&#13;
people. All christians invited.&#13;
Glad to greet so many young-people&#13;
in our evening service. We look for&#13;
a larger attendance of older people.&#13;
What we lack is a sence of personal&#13;
responsibility for the sucses6 ot every&#13;
service.&#13;
Prayer meeting last week was better&#13;
attended and was a season of refreshment&#13;
Do you wish to be spiritually&#13;
refreshed? Are you anxious to&#13;
be of use in the Lord's service? Then&#13;
come.&#13;
Bro. Andrews Sr. will lead the class&#13;
again next Sunday beginning at 10&#13;
o'clock sharp; class meeting is growing&#13;
in attendance, interest and power.&#13;
Be sure and come.&#13;
The Young People's Society expects&#13;
Sunday evening meeting and will later&#13;
have a full supply of new song books.&#13;
We cordially invite young people to&#13;
tne'weetisirof our society,not simply&#13;
to be entertained but to get and do&#13;
good.&#13;
Do you have family worship in&#13;
your borne? Do you read God's word&#13;
each day? Do you tind time for secret&#13;
prayer? Are you expecting the 'work&#13;
ol God to* go on without you? Do&#13;
you care?&#13;
A Nice Business&#13;
Frank has worked for the company&#13;
some time and has shown bis fitness&#13;
tor the position.&#13;
Mrs. Woodruff, who has been spending&#13;
some time with her sister, Mrs.&#13;
Daniel Murta, returned to her home&#13;
is Ames, Iowa, tbis week. Mrs. Mar&#13;
ta accompanied her as far as Jackson&#13;
for a few days visit.&#13;
The Margaret Y. W. C. T. U. of&#13;
Pinckney was represented t&gt;y Miss&#13;
Nellie Fish and the W! C, T. U. by&#13;
Mrs. C. F. Henry and Mrs. H. F. Sigler&#13;
at the Livington Co. convention at&#13;
Howell last Wednesday and Thursday.&#13;
Fred Fish brought a branch of rasp&#13;
berries to tbis office the past week&#13;
which contained several fully develop-&#13;
G. A. Sigler &amp; Son, of Fiint, have&#13;
now a factory putting out a nice line&#13;
of furniture polishes, etc. Tbey started&#13;
in business a tew months ago on a&#13;
small scale but the l,usine&gt;s has grown&#13;
until they are doing a nice business.&#13;
The main article manufactured is&#13;
Electric Furniture Polish, one that&#13;
Mr. Sigler formulated while in tne&#13;
rnitnre business and found to be&#13;
Just Received&#13;
•i •&#13;
, • ! &gt; • ' •&#13;
A Fine Line of the&#13;
and Latest Novels, .SCtf&#13;
Bound and suitable for&#13;
Gift Boa&#13;
itiik&#13;
• ^&#13;
Call and see them&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
Come and have a good time&#13;
carnival.&#13;
at the I Hillow'een pranks were not very&#13;
numerous this year.&#13;
.Wanted:—Good weather Friday and&#13;
San&#13;
The yonn« people must be attracted( e * and ripened nd raspberries. He&#13;
if the church is to&#13;
potent.&#13;
grow and become also brought us a watermelon. Tbis&#13;
is quite late in the season tor such&#13;
fruits.&#13;
^&#13;
• * ;&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
HOWELL, MICH.&#13;
Oar fall and winter goods are coming&#13;
iu from mill and factory. You will&#13;
' ivfrifciea good «tore to buy underhosiery,&#13;
gloves and mittens,&#13;
•lascinators, outiog flannels,&#13;
f many items necessary to be&#13;
comfortable when the cold weather&#13;
comes. Our lines of Holiday goods&#13;
are coming in and we will have by fat&#13;
the best assortment ever shown by us.&#13;
Bolls, books, games, ceilooid goods,&#13;
comb and brush sets, collar and cuff&#13;
sets, etc China, toys of every description.&#13;
Visit us when you come to&#13;
Howell, every elerk will welcome you.&#13;
Our method is to give big value for the&#13;
mans*, as we nod It pays to do so.&#13;
5#e sell for cash only andean sell&#13;
ctfcaper than (he stores selling 00&#13;
" A. BOWMAN&#13;
&gt;h« Busy Store* -&#13;
6rMtf*fc«St. Opposite Cow* Hewse.&#13;
HowsWIMtch*&#13;
rfixaiite.&#13;
Sunday November 5&#13;
Concluding Fiscal Year&#13;
Important service&#13;
at 10:30&#13;
EVENING SERVICE&#13;
At 7:30&#13;
Next of the series of special meetings&#13;
' Under auspice* of the Guild and&#13;
Young Men's Club.&#13;
John Adams Sherlck&#13;
0. K. and since leaving Pin kney he&#13;
made up his mind to manufacture it&#13;
and put it upon the market. The result&#13;
has tar exceeded his expectations.&#13;
Tin&#13;
will ieoturej&#13;
ion Spea ker&#13;
Young Mens Club&#13;
"Suic de Cox's Farewell message&#13;
to bis brother." "Stop smoking cigarettes&#13;
and don't drink."&#13;
The cigarette is the boy's easiest&#13;
and most direct road to whisky. If&#13;
it does not directly cause crime it at&#13;
least accompanies it in nine cases out&#13;
often. The fact that thousands of&#13;
boys are today gHng straight to the&#13;
saloon via the cigarette and cigarette&#13;
smoking chums proves -the intimate&#13;
relation of these two evils in our social&#13;
life.—Cleveland Press.&#13;
The President offers a premium to&#13;
any boy or young man, a member ot&#13;
the club, who is a cigarette smoker&#13;
and wbo-will resolve to abstain from&#13;
their use.&#13;
Young Ladies' Build&#13;
very pleasant gathering of the&#13;
members of the Guild, the young men&#13;
of the church and a few invited friends&#13;
took place at the home ot Mabel Sigler&#13;
Monday evening. The program was&#13;
appropriate for "All Saint's Eve"* and&#13;
was according to the uAuld Customs".&#13;
The mosioal program was much enjoyed,&#13;
also "the good old time1* sapper to&#13;
ssy nothing about the many items of&#13;
the program which made the gathering&#13;
so pleasant&#13;
* . * •&#13;
We hear it reported the*, Marion&#13;
Beaton has the typhoid lever.&#13;
Wednesday morning the P. M. By.&#13;
dropped the American elpress taking&#13;
up the United States Co. This will&#13;
A little j;irl came to live with&#13;
tord Reason last week.&#13;
Don t forget the_carnival Friday&#13;
and Saturday, Nov, 3 and 4.&#13;
Ruben Wright left for Lansing&#13;
Wednesday to look for work.&#13;
The Y's will meet at the home of&#13;
Mildred Emerick Wednesday evening&#13;
of next week.&#13;
Arthur Swarthont closed a two'&#13;
months of school in tbe Eaman district&#13;
last Friday.&#13;
Gos Markev of Pt. Huron was in&#13;
town tbe first of tbe week shaking&#13;
hands with old friends. He paid this&#13;
office a visit as usual* Says h« could&#13;
not get along without the DISPATCH.&#13;
W. J. Dancer had such good success&#13;
last week selling the Uock of cloaks&#13;
at W. W. Barnard's s*ore tbat be decided&#13;
to put in another stock of cloaks&#13;
and clothing on Thursday and Friday,&#13;
Nov. 9 and TO. Geo&gt;. DarcTy~witTb?rfn&#13;
charge. — _&#13;
Miss Mabel Swarthout was home*&#13;
=-fronr AnirArbw Tiresdnyr&#13;
Mrs.Cbas. Van Kueren,of Ann Arbor&#13;
visited her people here the past&#13;
^week.&#13;
The first snow to speak ot fell Wednesday&#13;
morning and made the ground&#13;
quite white.&#13;
Mrs. J as. Greea who has been at the&#13;
home of her parents, W. A. Carr a n s j \ /&#13;
wife, tor several weeks recoverinj^^^&#13;
freeve, severe ityeeei, »»t«rneo&gt;*jHket&#13;
bosee at Bofelt Wednesday&#13;
F. *. Peters ot she Ptnejrtew&#13;
?ng MHTs has given away over 900 lbs.&#13;
of flour during the past two weeks in&#13;
this village alone, by his cupon plan.&#13;
See bills tor tbe manner in which to&#13;
secure a sack of flour .free.&#13;
Another Great Clothing and €loak&#13;
Sale at Barnard's store, Thursday and&#13;
Friday, Nov. 9 and 10. Anhanre eT&#13;
your l.fe time to buy goost Jgojetfc ' l i t&#13;
reasonable ©rices. See bUie end&#13;
not miss it. \\ ;.'..i»-^&#13;
-*»•»••. t*Uurv ar ••&#13;
JS(O$. ]4 and ]6 $ r t Laurel&#13;
•flflHWtt&#13;
In heating capacity and economy of&#13;
fuel, as well as in appearance, these&#13;
base burners enjppaatejt eljwsra*' ^ -&#13;
tention is c a U a C ^ ^ f : ~ "&#13;
showing the J4Hiie|i&#13;
tion of back "Ante, When the damper&#13;
is closed tee hat air from the fire pot&#13;
travels down the hanging back flue&#13;
and is cirenlaled completely around&#13;
the bass ef the stove, coming in direct&#13;
ocz^ci. with both tbe outside and inside&#13;
walls of tbe base and then travels&#13;
upward .through tbe retain flue to the&#13;
smoke pipe.&#13;
The cold sir from tbe floor is drawn&#13;
up through the opening shown on illustration,&#13;
comes in direct contact with&#13;
entire fire pot wall, entire circumference&#13;
of the hanging or downward flue&#13;
and one entire side of the return fine,&#13;
finally passing into tbe room through&#13;
rjfi n m • « s&#13;
;m *&#13;
m&#13;
svfl&#13;
**',&#13;
\\S&#13;
the double heater outlet at the top of the&#13;
st:ve or can be carried to upper rooms by&#13;
means of an extra pipe. It will be observed&#13;
that the rear pnrt ol tbe return or up flue&#13;
forms tbe outside or back plate of the stove.&#13;
In tbis manner what remains of the heat,&#13;
after circulating around tbe base of the&#13;
stove is radiated into the. room.&#13;
This is the only construction where the&#13;
cold air is brought in contact with such&#13;
grear heating surface and consequently th:s&#13;
stove famishes at least 1,000 square inches&#13;
more radiating surface than any other base&#13;
burner made. A close examination of- the&#13;
illustration will give a more correct idea of&#13;
the heating and tuei saving advantages of&#13;
this improved base bnrner, The fire pot&#13;
and feeder can be qtickly and easily removed&#13;
through front doors.&#13;
Ie Hardware (£#;&#13;
,v&gt;. ' ••w &lt;&#13;
• , . . . : , . i&#13;
in. S!&amp;fP^k ¾^%^ ^ : :&#13;
. ~' I ^¾¾1 L&amp;. • • * &amp;&#13;
.4.. ' . ^ ' t . • t . • &gt;&#13;
' (..3^.&#13;
v ,&#13;
•J!' i * ' . '&#13;
**$?&#13;
^&#13;
? * • . * * " ^ ¾ ^ .&#13;
B*?W&#13;
.Artourti' «&#13;
^tff iw&#13;
•..«* V *&#13;
rrn^&#13;
v*&#13;
m^m^m^BSSSSSSSSST" JiTT^^Sr ' -•• '^^"^^'^^'"^^"IHBIWWmPP'WIIH—PWWPl&#13;
• ^&#13;
*•&#13;
. W i 1&#13;
-^:-. j v&#13;
&gt;&gt;&#13;
. • * . &gt; ' " ••'• - + ' ' '&#13;
•..iV-*-&#13;
*^-**Mi»*#&#13;
FMinL I*, AWDBBW*, P»U&#13;
MKOKjNST, »»&gt; MICHIGAN&#13;
Don't give up hope yet; tier* *r*&#13;
stiU fifteen vacant tablets in the Ha|l&#13;
of Fame.&#13;
The fatuous turkey, fattening on&#13;
.luxurious feed, feels that he is popular.&#13;
He is, too.&#13;
Which would you rather? Suffer&#13;
from insomnia or know that you snore&#13;
like a tuba horn?&#13;
&gt;t&#13;
Moral of the Taggart case—The&#13;
man who teaches his wife to drink&#13;
whiskey is a fool.&#13;
A livestock census is now planned.&#13;
M fe«44»«n that there'll he no kick&#13;
WMHWM ages this time.&#13;
-' j i i QSJSE = haa _e4ddjntly_jrtianged^&#13;
his mlntf." No one hearsaf his asking&#13;
anybody to pass him the chloroform.&#13;
' i A*&#13;
In this his hour of greatness let Mr.&#13;
Christy Mathewson remember the&#13;
fate of Pflug. He, too, was famous&#13;
once.&#13;
It Is a pertinent suggestion that the&#13;
automobile horn should be tuned to a&#13;
musical note. Even the swan song is&#13;
soothing.&#13;
» '&#13;
t AChlcagoan is under arrest in Kan-&#13;
City charged with "having one&#13;
too many." He might have only&#13;
one at that.&#13;
~** ""•***-• •**•* ' ^ v - — '&#13;
A Russian prince was fined for&#13;
speeding his automobile in Chicago.&#13;
It is needless to say that Chicago is&#13;
J e o O n ^ u s | i a ^ w « _ _ = _ « _&#13;
A man has written a large book entitled&#13;
"What to Have for Breakfast,"&#13;
when it could all be boiled down into&#13;
one word, food.&#13;
Oysters are said to be large and&#13;
plentiful this year, and many churches&#13;
have voted to use two at each sociable.—&#13;
Boston Globe.&#13;
*&#13;
, ,^4- *i&#13;
Somebody has Invented a new field&#13;
gun which fires 300 shots a minute.&#13;
Here is another argument in favor&#13;
of universal peace.&#13;
CHAKOE OF FROKT TAKEN&#13;
BY THE CZAR'S FIREEATERS.&#13;
NICH0LA8 LAST OF ROMANQFF8.&#13;
i&#13;
THE WHOL* NATION AWOK8 AND&#13;
REVOLUTION ALREADY&#13;
18 BEGUN.&#13;
Provisional Government is Bet Up&#13;
In Moscow*—Troops Ordered&#13;
Not to Rii'e on Assembling&#13;
People Now.&#13;
.fom&#13;
'"•ft"&#13;
V&#13;
'*k I&#13;
w w an.&#13;
Jtfohably does not see that&#13;
any thing inferior about&#13;
B~M* at Manila, even if he&#13;
ly officer.&#13;
A careless newspaper reports that&#13;
Mr. Taft "is getting thin." What it&#13;
means, of course, is that the secre&#13;
tar.v is getting less thick.&#13;
When an austere man of science declares&#13;
that kissing is an "unpleasant&#13;
custom" it is only right that he should&#13;
tell the world how he knows.&#13;
every man could use King Alsystem&#13;
and have the neighbors&#13;
(RT&#13;
pick out a wife for him the divorce&#13;
problem might be simpler than it is.&#13;
'"&#13;
The Lancaster boarding house man&#13;
who made a potpie out of buzzard was&#13;
fined, although justice fairly clamored&#13;
that he be condemned to consume the&#13;
pie.&#13;
r.-_,-&lt;J»*&#13;
Little Freeman Meinertz, the Brookitific&#13;
baby," who- has never&#13;
sat, candy or cake, has lots&#13;
oT trf«t» in store for him if he lives&#13;
#fr SJSSSF *ip.&#13;
f '&#13;
A Berlin professor says the bite of&#13;
a girl is frequently fatal. It has been&#13;
noted that the bite of a girl often&#13;
brings a box of chocolate creams to&#13;
an early end. " ^ •--.., *&#13;
It is claimed now that the aaeces in&#13;
the food which Is eaten by rich people&#13;
cause them to become immoral. What&#13;
about the farmer, whose apple «Je&#13;
is mostly nutmeg?&#13;
Russia is in the throes of a revolu-&#13;
---1 1~tft nrivl-fft fr^rp Mftuwy,&#13;
the great center of true Russian feeP&#13;
ing, say a provisional government haa&#13;
already been set up there by the revolutionists&#13;
and striking workmen who&#13;
have enrolled themselves under the&#13;
revolutionary banner. This govern^&#13;
ment is said to be acting already, disregarding&#13;
absolutely the imperial authority.&#13;
The city is full of troops, but&#13;
all communication with St. Petersburg&#13;
has been severed and. it is believed&#13;
that many soldiers will fellow the example&#13;
of their comrades in arms at&#13;
Kharkov Ya and join the revolt.&#13;
In the imperial palace at Peterhof,&#13;
with his private yacht, the Polar Star,&#13;
lying at Cronstadt, ready to take him&#13;
to Denmark at a moment's notice,&#13;
Czar JMcholas* £robab!y_the last of the&#13;
Romanoffs, as a last resort, alter a&#13;
lengthy conference with his ministers,&#13;
Issued an order to the troops to avoid&#13;
firing on the strikers unless absolutely&#13;
»-mr*ffa~y nnd granting thPiTLjrhfL&#13;
prfvilege of meeting iri freedom to discuss&#13;
political and economical questions.&#13;
Gen. Trepoff, by declaration ordered&#13;
the provincial governments to&#13;
carry out this order and to designate&#13;
buildings for the holding of such meetings.&#13;
Three have already been named&#13;
tn St. Petersburg.&#13;
Never before has the government so&#13;
completely backed down on any questions&#13;
and this change of front is taken&#13;
as a confession of weakness, for the&#13;
strikers and revolutionists are said to&#13;
be well armed and provided with&#13;
bombs and other explosives whicri&#13;
they have been collecting ever since&#13;
the beginning of the war, much of the&#13;
shortage of the ammunition at the&#13;
front being due to the peculations of&#13;
revolutionary agents at various points&#13;
along the trans-Siberian lines.&#13;
Every section-of both European and&#13;
Asiatic Russia seems to have caught&#13;
the spirit of revolt. From Omsk,&#13;
Tomsk and Irkutsk come reports of&#13;
the tying up of railway traffic and&#13;
other industries, and It is even hinted&#13;
that the agitation has made great&#13;
headway in the army . in Manchuria,&#13;
despite the herculean efforts of Gen&#13;
Linevitch to arrest its spread.&#13;
Claimed and Denied.&#13;
Truth About " SS2£?&#13;
mrmmmtm&#13;
Youth' » = = -fr.-.in&lt; • ••*_&#13;
-f?rr- l'"ftiji&lt;i&#13;
When woALng a maiden yon hop* you will&#13;
win&#13;
This friend «f your youth-is quite sure to&#13;
butt in,&#13;
With irrelevant an*odotea fitted to show&#13;
You a heartless Lothario aces oca&#13;
&gt;&#13;
ye_tojr __.&#13;
rrott were when belonji-Mr to Vo^kfrpo'V&#13;
¾u wish to appear a inan t«ber.'»»d*te:&#13;
J»OM ••, a *W*.r cd^(Chiu«b1llju9d:&gt;«l&#13;
T $ r a i ? n S ^ t f f ^ t l i i Indtecrettone ot&#13;
U you show hhp th# door or cut hiss, 'tis&#13;
That tn?*wc-rM that knows little of what&#13;
you endure&#13;
WW trot you a heartless hyena* In sooth.&#13;
A monster who turns down the friend or&#13;
his youlb.&#13;
Oh. no: it 1» vain that you hop* to elude;&#13;
He's always at hand with renVniecaaeea&#13;
. rude; • v . &gt;-]&#13;
And when you a^e dust he'll publish a&#13;
book •&#13;
On "The. Beat Mr, Blank," Where your&#13;
goose he wftl cook. ^&#13;
N o t Aftevty* an- W s J a o n w — &amp; i ^ ^ m * # m thlnds that to-day^&#13;
V » r — &gt; ^ o l Potfta H*V* D « - # n i leaves the"«wfeaattn you're stiUK&lt;0»&#13;
p l e t W - K*m*m T o o Muefc&#13;
AlMriit t t M M S e O e _ i l &gt; a y » ^ ;&#13;
It's a subjeo^ that's 4eajr. to the maJcere of&#13;
In m«lHni_f»us measure- they love te m»&#13;
The^tei^ejraCfeetlon. anctenc in* asVuth.&#13;
OX the tie thai U»l*ee US toTrleada of «ur&#13;
yooth.&#13;
&lt; • • * • • • , . ,&#13;
Now, I.And the friend of my youth oft a&#13;
bore, -&#13;
Whose very existence rye cause"to da*&#13;
plore,&#13;
A renTtdeeeat rufflan of unerring mtad.&#13;
* Who rakes up the past, that Iwieb Ittt&#13;
behind. ,.-...^^..-&#13;
If you are not as young as you'd have&#13;
-Soft believe&#13;
He'U expose all your guileless aUetopts&#13;
to deceive;&#13;
On the elichteet excuse he stands ready&#13;
to state&#13;
That you were at college In seventyeight.&#13;
* * &gt; . • •&#13;
Nay, I'm sure If I'm called te brtftht&#13;
realms In the sky&#13;
Some friend of my youth I shall find hovering&#13;
nigh,&#13;
Rem'nlscent as ever and quick to acquaint&#13;
v,- ... ••&#13;
The angels they needn't take me for a&#13;
sals-k , _. „ .&#13;
__ —Ernest De Lancey Pierson, in New York&#13;
He never allows you a chance to forgel I ™Tiroe*v ». _ r ___&#13;
. Caetua Blossoms, ' •;•• &gt; --, "*&gt;:&#13;
_-.Tht_cac^3i Is coming tola-: ftjrtiijS4s&gt;v^&#13;
fa Bnglaafl tt&amp;rtfi&amp;^WWijf^&#13;
m a i s u i n s ^ r t ^ i a c t r t bjossoms, ;&#13;
all other* ,fa .flrgrtfty t ^ d ^ r - ^&#13;
ol^brm nnd. color. r-&#13;
Affeotd A o f dT Hoft-l«. f\ ^&#13;
Civilltation is said to have retfwtoo&#13;
tau Uft^of th*Jh&gt;rif. nod R t ^ w ^ i t ^ ,&#13;
BIX th» d o m e s t t c - # &amp; &amp; ? * an old «g&#13;
though h e tad U^sd-^hlrty yeaxf in&#13;
% free state/ i:&#13;
' "• ' • .HI in H W W i 4»!p&lt;. •''•&#13;
• •»&#13;
Free •athn.and Doetore. •&#13;
' The Alsatian city of Malhauten hoi&#13;
wily provides free bath* tor i t s school&#13;
ohildren, hut free medical inspection&#13;
asidt dft&amp;tftj jtrd»thssflfc&#13;
• * * .&#13;
' . i ^ _»&lt;&gt;••.&#13;
\}*A;&#13;
( , . •&#13;
•elf Condemnation . * MhHaksv&#13;
There 1* nothing thgt wastes'and&#13;
.urtails one's powers of acccjuplishtnent&#13;
like self condemnation.—Ex*&#13;
.hange. . . ," *&#13;
. - . , ^&#13;
One Strawberry—One Franc—One Tip&#13;
The persistent report that Mrs.&#13;
Ijffe. Wife nt E d w a r d ft Cn-nUfta th,*&#13;
A Pittsburg court is going to determine&#13;
the money capacity of woman's&#13;
stocking. That will be of no advanttge,&#13;
- however, for the average man&#13;
Isn't able to reach it.&#13;
*;.*^"*&#13;
•'•i&#13;
Some editors are troubteTT because&#13;
O New York stock exchange seat sold&#13;
t Jor 185,000, and only the Portland&#13;
,.'j§tess stops to consider that the buy-&#13;
V J r at least got the seat.&#13;
• . * r *&#13;
The fall styles in women's hosiery,&#13;
judged by window displays, are rainbow-&#13;
hued and boldly designed. Until&#13;
a muddy day's^ disclosures, no man&#13;
n a y any whether they are popular.&#13;
J The courts have decided that a married&#13;
man has' a right to keep" a rat&#13;
trap, in his pocket to catch wlfey&#13;
when the goes through his pants as&#13;
fee sleep*. Spread the good news,&#13;
h*e*hH?».,,&#13;
v-H&#13;
.«. ^&#13;
JL Philaimphi* » * » i« worrying beoajoee&#13;
hd received* |20 in a letter to&#13;
which no name was signed. We nom-&#13;
.teat*.fcta*fay»Am-,tlee president, of&#13;
tSe AnsedgaBOB^v Association of&#13;
Adams Express robber, had in her possession&#13;
15,000 of the $101,000 stolen by&#13;
her husband on October 9, were confirmed&#13;
today when Superintendent HJ.&#13;
Blderman, of the Pinkerton detective&#13;
agency, went to the Cunliffe home&#13;
in Pittsburg, and in the lining of a&#13;
baby carriage found a package containing&#13;
$6,000. On the night Cunliff*&#13;
was brought here from Bridgeport.&#13;
Conn., where he was captured, h*&#13;
made a written confession to -the au&#13;
thorities that he had given his wife&#13;
$5,000.&#13;
Following the above statement comes&#13;
this one from Mrs. Cunliffe: "1 emphatically&#13;
deny that as a result of any&#13;
confession made by me $5,000 of the&#13;
money stolen by my husband was&#13;
found in a baby carriage in our home&#13;
at Pittsburg. If the money was found,&#13;
as stated by Robert A. Pinkerton, it&#13;
was because of disclosures made by&#13;
my husband. I maintained throughout&#13;
the ordeal to which I was subjected by&#13;
the detectives that I had none of the&#13;
stolen money, nor had I hidden any.&#13;
The allegation of Robert A. Pinkerton&#13;
regarding a confession made by me&#13;
is absolutely false."&#13;
Secretary Bonaparte has dismissed&#13;
an employe of the Norfolk navy yard&#13;
because the latter revoked an agree&#13;
ment to rent roomar to a saiior when ho&#13;
learned that he would come in and out&#13;
with bis uniform on The man said&#13;
that a prejudice exifted in the town&#13;
against sailors and that he had to&#13;
maintain the po_UIrn of his family.&#13;
Chasing a hog ended disastrously&#13;
for Frank Button, a farmer near Clayton,&#13;
He got mixed up with a wire and&#13;
was thrown to the ground while running&#13;
at top speed. His right leg was&#13;
broken in two places; he was Injured&#13;
Internally and -his condition is serious.&#13;
Gov, Folk of Missouri has been&#13;
caught in the act of accepting, a&#13;
bribe in exchange for a pardon.! The&#13;
prisoner waa sent to jail for sl±&#13;
years for fane registration, hot doe*&#13;
not seem to have understood what&#13;
he waa doing. His wife, with her&#13;
throe children, came to see the gov*&#13;
emoT, but be waa still in doubt. The&#13;
prisoner's 5-year-old dajjghter approached&#13;
him timidly and said: "Ut&#13;
yon let my papa go I'll give yon a&#13;
kiss.", The governor repMed a tittle&#13;
hotkily; ^ 1 ¾ littte ^ : ,&#13;
shall take him homo with j©%*&#13;
A m o r l o a n D i n a r In P a r i a R e s t a u -&#13;
rant R e m e m b e r e d t h e Walter&#13;
In L e a v i n g P o r t i o n of P i n o&#13;
F r u i t an G u e r d o n .&#13;
Roland Morrill of Benton Harbor,&#13;
Mich., has a-peach orchard of 5,000&#13;
acres in Texas. This is probably the&#13;
largest peach orchard In the world.&#13;
"When I went to Texas," Mr. Morrill&#13;
said recently, "they raised' only&#13;
cotton there. But I soon found that&#13;
peaches as fine-as California's could&#13;
he grown in Texas, where they would&#13;
ripen nearly a month ahead of all others,&#13;
and accordingly I went in for&#13;
Tfiwt P**ftCh-grnw1ng, and my fruit&#13;
fetches the highest price on the market.&#13;
So rare are peaches when mine&#13;
appear that they command a rate almost&#13;
as high as fruit brings in Paris.&#13;
The best and also the costliest fruit in&#13;
the world is to be found in the Parisian&#13;
restaurants. I know a man who*&#13;
lunched at the Cafe de la Prix one fall&#13;
day and noticed with surprise some&#13;
'unerb strawberries on a sideboard.&#13;
•' 'How much are your strawberries?'&#13;
he asked the waiter.&#13;
"'A franc, monsieur/ the waiter answered.&#13;
* ' K:&#13;
"And accordingly the man ordered&#13;
some, and a dish of berries* each as&#13;
big as a crabapple, waa set before him.&#13;
He enjoyed the splendid fruit. But&#13;
when his bill was brought he found&#13;
that bo was charged. 10 fraacs—$2--&#13;
for the berrfe*..&#13;
" 'Walter, how is this?' he said. *!&#13;
jmLJShargei_10_JraojcsJor thesejitrawberries,&#13;
whereas you told me they&#13;
were only a franc*&#13;
" 'A franc apiece, monsieur,' the&#13;
waiter said gently.&#13;
" T h o u g h thTTgrail had been *done* -&#13;
he paid. But he gave the waiter no&#13;
tip. As he was walking out the waiter&#13;
said reproachfully: 'Sir, have you&#13;
forgotten me?'&#13;
"'Forgotten you?' the American&#13;
said. 'Certainly not. I've left you a&#13;
strawberry on that plate there, which&#13;
is equal to a tip of 1 franc.' "-*-Chicago&#13;
Chronicle.&#13;
European Medical Men.&#13;
For every 100,000 persons, England&#13;
has 150^medical men, Cbsr^ttajiy__|5»:&#13;
Switzerland \2, and Russia 15.&#13;
-•*'&#13;
Qo Barefoot In Brazil.&#13;
A large, percentage of the people in&#13;
Brazil go barefoot except on Sundays&#13;
and holidays.&#13;
Important French Industry*&#13;
The grape culture in France gives&#13;
employment to over two million people.&#13;
SPOT LIGHTS.&#13;
On&#13;
yeL&#13;
the square. I haven't started&#13;
"Yankee&#13;
good tune.&#13;
Doodle" always was a.&#13;
Popularityls anfilrcTThing ttrHaT07&#13;
and to hold.&#13;
Archbishop Moeller Will Assist.&#13;
Archbishop Henry Moeller of Cincinnati&#13;
will assist in" the exeicises at&#13;
the dedication of the new Catholic&#13;
church at North Lewisburg,. Oct. 29.&#13;
A number of former'pastors and many&#13;
of the neighboring clergy will assist.&#13;
Christian Endeavor Directors Meet.&#13;
The annual meeting of the directors&#13;
of the Keystone League of Christion&#13;
Endeavor Societies of the United&#13;
Evangelical church was held in Canton.&#13;
The board directs the entire organization&#13;
from cdaet to coast.&#13;
Railroad Man Crushed to Death.&#13;
James Shelley, aged 35, a Pennsylvania&#13;
railroad yard foreman, fell&#13;
beneath the wheels of a freight cat&#13;
In making a coupling at Xenla and&#13;
was fatally crushed, living only ten&#13;
minutes. He leaves a wife and two&#13;
children.&#13;
Thieves Rob a Church.&#13;
Report haa been made to the Spring*&#13;
&gt; field police of the theft of a numbei&#13;
of birthday contribution boxes from&#13;
the Church of Christ. About $8 wai&#13;
stolen.&#13;
Anything I ever said about Louisville&#13;
don't go.&#13;
On the square, I'm sick and tired&#13;
counting money.&#13;
The new Chicago farewell&#13;
Long, Mary." My stuff.&#13;
ired of&#13;
i s / s o&#13;
Why don't you ask, for comedy ink?&#13;
It's the only kind to use.&#13;
No, I'm not writing a play for N a t&#13;
Goodwin. But you can never tell.&#13;
My next production will be an&#13;
American comedyv without music o r&#13;
star.&#13;
r i&#13;
I won't produce&#13;
plays this season,&#13;
work.&#13;
over four&#13;
It's too&#13;
more&#13;
much&#13;
Grand PrUo&#13;
olumbla&#13;
i&#13;
otom it la mm&#13;
C^ tear&#13;
Or *glnal&#13;
I -f °ud&#13;
- U n r l v a l e » d&#13;
1 V I u a l c a l&#13;
13 rtlllartt&#13;
, I n a p i r l n c&#13;
^ \ t t r o c t l v e&#13;
BEST TALKING MACHINES MADE&#13;
Cylinder Machine* 9?'MO to 91OO&#13;
Diso Machines 912 to 968&#13;
Tbo ChmtthogMhono ropgiMtoooa mil kind* of&#13;
mtwmlo porftKrtiy—Amnti, orcbmmtrm, vtoUn,&#13;
of&#13;
Rich&#13;
1"^ n ^ p r t a t n l n s&#13;
a p t l v a t l n g&#13;
{ J u t w e a r i n g&#13;
J h ^ e s o n a n t&#13;
D e l l f t h t f u l&#13;
o S u p a r l o r&#13;
,.**•."&#13;
A&#13;
'w A&#13;
L-AiLit,&#13;
Jett*&#13;
y&amp;"&#13;
•• .&gt;Li.i • Mlffr-,&#13;
'W .•;•*«*«. f ^-¾¾x w fesf"^ • • ^ ^¼ • . * • . ! .&#13;
' •-. •'... * i . '::*&#13;
• * * . ' • • :&#13;
AT .&#13;
;&gt;n , ^ •&#13;
wr. . ; * - • "r*t:&#13;
" T ^ * ; ^&#13;
•JPTf&#13;
•;**-.t..'.'&#13;
.'•vrt.'-y./&#13;
. V«'.&#13;
T • » * • *«p •fa " W — P — I II HI&#13;
I&#13;
**.-&#13;
#&#13;
&lt;&amp;.• «.-r • r *&#13;
am&#13;
* w ,&#13;
Autltor « t r *!*• Bank Tragedy *&#13;
- J * " f&#13;
* » 4 a - * . Tg. «TMII w»&gt;&#13;
. ^ l ^ f f l ^ j X X l . ' •rf,- &gt;•'•;• "None, air, except the *alor of h«r&#13;
htirj •' He hat stood. every teat I have&#13;
- ^ e d . tohlm. He knows all about&#13;
e affatj* that took piace_at the bank-&#13;
•V'Tht Tea*&#13;
A stillness so ieu'se as to-, be almost&#13;
Uuccee4ed the plaintiff^ words J when we were there together; be&#13;
- V&#13;
•5' -." r%T&#13;
aummone to admit the defendthe,&#13;
plaintiff, peeved bin) on&#13;
bis way to the seojuaion of J 0 * °ftlce. |&#13;
Mr. Hamilton, for auob he was, undoubtedly,&#13;
whether the, true or false&#13;
claimant, was deeply moved, i s was&#13;
apparent to all when he stood hi the&#13;
witness-box before them all. His face&#13;
was pallid, his eyes were gleaming,&#13;
his hanas were tightly clenched. -&#13;
All glances were riveted upon him&#13;
with astonishment as he said in a&#13;
strange tone, not waiting to be questional&#13;
at'all: _•&#13;
"I will go to get it. I will go to get&#13;
It."&#13;
Twice he said it, and then stood&#13;
looking at vacancy rather than at the&#13;
judge.&#13;
The judge directed that the counsel&#13;
for both parties and the jurymen attend&#13;
the defendant to his destination,&#13;
If not too distant, and see the search&#13;
take place. Meanwhile the court&#13;
-would adjourn until one o'clock. And&#13;
His Honor went to dinner. The sheriff&#13;
followed the thirteen, who filed&#13;
-down the street toward the hank building,&#13;
no doubt the place to which the&#13;
•defendant was leading them. Tall,&#13;
erect*Impassive, he passed on as in&#13;
A dream, never hesitating, never&#13;
speaking, neither looking to the right&#13;
nor to the left.&#13;
e led them to the bank and&#13;
seems to be the true Vano Hamilton&#13;
as I knew him,"&#13;
Two witnesses testified that Solomon&#13;
Harks bad been aeon by them&#13;
near the mill on the day before the&#13;
shooting of the plaintiff, and that he&#13;
appeared to wish to avoid recognition.&#13;
Next, several citizens of Grovedale&#13;
were examined, and they testified that&#13;
they believed the plaintiff to be Vane&#13;
Hamilton, for he had told them of&#13;
many instances known only to himself&#13;
and them, that he seemed familiar&#13;
with all their past lives, while the&#13;
-tip the steps&#13;
Mr. Morley explained their errand to&#13;
the cashier.&#13;
"It te in the vault, the safe, the&#13;
*mall drawer," said the defendant, and&#13;
the cashier successively opened each&#13;
receptacle except the drawer.&#13;
"I have no key to that," he said. "\&#13;
Tiave never been able to find it. The&#13;
directors told me nothing was ever&#13;
liept in It, because It was not accountwas&#13;
taken with a peculiar malady, *&#13;
M ^ p l a c i ^ S f ^ f e t i ^ a v ^ ^ b A g !&#13;
Mr. Baxnatead^I sbafl prove by the evf&#13;
|fteoT»oriil&gt;^f8trf«uN,^Magaol'i^.&#13;
Hamilton on the fifteenth; that it was&#13;
the: iiexa^Shured*? &lt;*at he witnessed&#13;
the meeting at Portland 4epot^ Instead&#13;
of Friday, when Mr. Hamilton -left&#13;
home. Tbe claimant is none, other&#13;
than the notorious Ashley,* who got&#13;
&gt;eoro«red at Portlaaddapot that very&#13;
day, and was arpoaUd by the sheriff&#13;
from Goodwin, Harrison ^cOnnty, Nebraska.&#13;
&gt;.- '&#13;
-"You will recollect that Mr, Barnstead&#13;
in his testimony could not swear&#13;
that he saw the meeting take place&#13;
Friday; but Mr.' Hurd la,ready to af-.,&#13;
firm, on his oath, that it was nearly a&#13;
week'later that he heard the account&#13;
from Mr. Bamstead, and that rt waa&#13;
told to him as If it occurred on Thursday.&#13;
uAshley waa taken to Goodwill and&#13;
Incarcerated in jail there, and it waa&#13;
in that town his hair changed from&#13;
light to dark. The-prosecution doea&#13;
not deny that this man? the prisoner,&#13;
was the claimant, or that It waa there&#13;
the remarkable change in the color of&#13;
his hair took place. It would be use-&#13;
•&gt;&gt;&lt;&lt;mi i mf!',mi sni*ii. t&#13;
other datttanraia Trotr-The—fceatt- - ^ to dQ ^- rh^y 0my veutur^4o&#13;
many of these witnesses was very&#13;
strong, and upon it the plaintiff's counsel&#13;
relied much for the success of the&#13;
case.&#13;
The last witness to be called was a&#13;
man from Valparaiso,. who testified to&#13;
the fact that Ashley was known to&#13;
him, and that he recognized the defendant&#13;
as the man. The plaintiff he&#13;
had never seen but once before. He&#13;
stated, that he had been engaged in&#13;
various nefarious, undertakings with&#13;
Ashley, who he knew to have been in&#13;
Boston at the very date when the altered&#13;
note was presented at the bank.&#13;
That since then he had been converted&#13;
under the *uspicea of ~the_&amp;alyation&#13;
Army, and had seen in a newspaper&#13;
the advertisement inserted by the&#13;
plaintiff'^ counsel for information re-&#13;
PuslThg aop^Tn¥^oW;t«ttrd4fir4fe* -e«*tM»4&#13;
it in person&#13;
When he left the witness-stand and&#13;
the case closed for the plaintiff, there&#13;
were Jnany among the audience, and&#13;
among the jurymen, too, if their faces&#13;
did not belie their minds, who were&#13;
more than half persuaded of the&#13;
claims of the plaintiff.&#13;
Next day Mr. Ferguson spoke for&#13;
upwards of an hour In an easy, grace- r - , V j : -——&#13;
"For my wife. to her," and then fell «rone uron the floor.&#13;
W&amp; 3&#13;
^-"^•^jit^&#13;
ed a safe receptable, being potfrly conatructecT."&#13;
At thte moment Tony Osborn came&#13;
forward with a key. "I found it not&#13;
long ago," he explained, "under the&#13;
corner of the, safe,"&#13;
"Try It," said Mr. Morley, but the&#13;
cashier handed it to the defendant,&#13;
who inserted it in the lock.&#13;
' Tb« jurymen crowded forward to&#13;
see what was in the drawer. Nothing,&#13;
evidently, but a piece of tissue paper,&#13;
unless that paper contained the diamond&#13;
stud.&#13;
It did.&#13;
A flash, a gleam, and the defendant&#13;
thrust it into the hands of Mr. Morley,&#13;
Instead of his own counsel's,&#13;
"For my wife. Give it to her," and&#13;
then he fell prone on the floor.&#13;
Had he fainted? Was It a fit?&#13;
The doctor waa called and pronounced&#13;
it the last, but he soon revived and&#13;
was in a short time apparently as well&#13;
as ever. He attended the afternoon&#13;
session of court, and was the center&#13;
of curious interest to atlT IhdeedTir&#13;
-was generally admitted that he had&#13;
triumphed by leading the jurymen&#13;
straight to the hiding place, though It&#13;
could not be denied that the other&#13;
claimant had indicated the place just&#13;
as surely by his words.. Strange that&#13;
both should know what waa a secret&#13;
except to one of them and to Mrs.&#13;
Hamilton! She seemed dazed by the&#13;
circumstances, while a hopejesa, Rejected&#13;
look settled over her coonte-&#13;
•ance.&#13;
Tony Osborn *s testimony waa taken&#13;
the afternoon, *a&lt;Moid agjdnai ihe&#13;
eUdant, since it waa plainly made&#13;
evident that he bad distrusted him&#13;
from the spat ., „&#13;
"Mr. 0ab*n^§e4iv&#13;
bare you any reason for beliering&#13;
the claimant U not the troe&gt;,Vaae&#13;
* * * * ' " •' ' " • ' .&#13;
ful manner natural to him, and his&#13;
outline of the case held the enrapt at;&#13;
tentlon of every person in the court&#13;
room that morning. There was little&#13;
of labored argument, but , starting&#13;
with the supposition that his client&#13;
was suffering a fraudulent attempt at&#13;
ejection, ,fea*l Jtie earn premises, he&#13;
proceeded to put the matter before the&#13;
Jurymen in this light. He said in substance&#13;
something like the following:&#13;
"My client, who Is none other than&#13;
the true Vane Hamilton—aa you can&#13;
see for yourself, Me looka fully corrol&gt;&#13;
orating my statement—returns after&#13;
put -m the .*&gt;lea that he was arrested&#13;
in the place of another, and to base&#13;
this they are compelled to set up the&#13;
absurd story of the twin brother.&#13;
There is no twin brother, for he died&#13;
In Infancy.&#13;
HERE'S A KNOCK FOR T H E&#13;
fclG CANAL BEFORE,&#13;
r CONGRESS.&#13;
THE FUND* ARC RUNNING LOW&#13;
OHIO GETS ftU«Y OVER THE BIG&#13;
INeUl«AI*$E, COM PAN 1 1 8 '&#13;
BUtfNEM IMTHAT STATE.&#13;
The New Battle 6liipe Are to Be Larg.&#13;
«r, Taaa EvafWT he Twenty*&#13;
Thousand - Ton Mark&#13;
Nearly Reached.&#13;
, WJth practicairy a bankrupt treasury&#13;
and a clash between Secretary&#13;
Taft and Chairman Shonts, the Pana*&#13;
ma canal commission Is confronted&#13;
with a situation that makes a gloomy&#13;
view of the outlook. ^ .&#13;
The fact that probably not a dollar J e r *&#13;
•tranaa Mixtai^ to *th*k&lt;*&amp;&amp;m&#13;
I was never an .enemy of the ooofw&#13;
aion of the 6Td and~n*w-tn Watvprn-^&#13;
when Italy waa all Europe to me. and&#13;
now in Bngkindl it waa distinctly a&#13;
ptaaeare. It is something we must ae*&#13;
cept, whether we like It or not,' and&#13;
we had better like it The pride of&#13;
the old custodian of the Exeter Guild-&#13;
Jaall in the coll of hot wnter pipes&#13;
neating the ancient edifice waa quite&#13;
as acceptable aa his pride in the thirteenth&#13;
century carvings-of the oaken&#13;
door and the oak-paneled walls, the&#13;
portraits of the Princess Henrietta and&#13;
Gen, Monk* and the swords bestowed&#13;
upon the faithful city by Edward IV.&#13;
and Henry VII. I warmed my chilly&#13;
hands about the medieval facts, and&#13;
even fly to that uttermost antiquity&#13;
when the Roman Praetorium stood&#13;
where the Guildhall stands now. Still,&#13;
I waa not so warm all over hut that&#13;
I was glad to shun Jaw fisnia 1e&gt;&#13;
clemency to which wwanwea, bavre'teg*,.&#13;
turned In the hotel* ami tv&#13;
stay In the milder air&#13;
a drive beyond the city&#13;
ing country.—W. D. Ho wells, In Hai»-&#13;
will remain in the commission'* hands&#13;
by December 31, so it is said. On October&#13;
31 about $2,000,000 waa on hand.&#13;
The salaries of employes on the isthmus&#13;
amount to $450,000 or more a&#13;
month; contracts have been entered&#13;
in j7aU5S bZy hiws aws ifev.U HHeed dnenexietd -that^ she¾ ¾ ¾ ^ ¾ X " u t V ^&#13;
was his wife„ and she did not contradict&#13;
him until after*ard. Then she&#13;
said that she was his wife. Ashley&#13;
got clear on the plea of being insane,&#13;
and was sent to the asylum. From&#13;
there he escaped, was supposed «to&#13;
have been drowned, worked awhile at&#13;
a mill, and then came to Grovedale,&#13;
where he got employment In the mill&#13;
here. He gave his name as Primus&#13;
Edes, said he was never married,&#13;
could not write; indeed, he appeared&#13;
^ e d 4 ^ A A very illiterate. He worked a s a&#13;
common hand at the mill until "He" *&#13;
chanced to meet Mrs: Hamilton at&#13;
church and fell violently in love with&#13;
her.&#13;
"He began to persecute her with attentions,&#13;
and finally won her interest&#13;
by finding her little boy who wandered&#13;
away to the woods and got lost. Mrs.&#13;
Hamilton made him sundry presents&#13;
and professed to think he resembled&#13;
her husband. Ashley, alias Edes, began&#13;
to learn to write, and learned astonishingly&#13;
fast, writing the name&#13;
Constance over and over again. He&#13;
purchased a violin and began to play.&#13;
Ashley was a fine player, as we shall&#13;
prove, and he was also well educated.&#13;
Mr. Hamilton could not play at all.&#13;
Neither was he an ingenious workman.&#13;
Ashley was. Mrs. Hamilton put&#13;
on mourning and had a monument&#13;
made to erect to .the memory of her&#13;
husband. She often opened her window&#13;
to listen to the strains of the vio-&#13;
~ttn played by Primus Edes as she&#13;
knew hlra.&#13;
"Then Mr. Hamilton returned with&#13;
a straightforward story of loss Of&#13;
memory as the reason for his detention&#13;
from home, and, very honorably,&#13;
settled up the bank tumbles, -as—nesald&#13;
he could not absolutely affirm&#13;
hist of the year the amount now on&#13;
hand.&#13;
Almost immediately upon convening&#13;
congress will be asked to meet promptly&#13;
this condition by making an emergency&#13;
appropriation of possibly $10,-&#13;
000,000 out of the original lump sum&#13;
of $130,000,000 authorized for the canalwork.&#13;
The proposition to enact legislation&#13;
so as to enable the issue of bonds&#13;
may-alse come_up_atAhat_time, but&#13;
what the commission wants is action&#13;
before congress takes its recess for&#13;
the Christmas holidays. This, • In all&#13;
liklihoodjjt will not get.&#13;
The Insurance Companies.&#13;
Quo warranto proceedings weTe&#13;
commenced in the circuit court in Akron,&#13;
0., Saturday by Prosecuting Attorney&#13;
Hagetbarger on the advice of&#13;
ex-Attorney General Monnett of Ohio,&#13;
against the Mutual Life Insurance Co.&#13;
and the New York Life Co. to oust&#13;
them from the state by taking their&#13;
franchises from them, on the ground&#13;
that the companies have misused their&#13;
powers for the last five years in violation&#13;
of the laws of the state.&#13;
Thirty-three interrogatories are submitted&#13;
to the companies to be answered.&#13;
The appointment of receivers&#13;
is asked for.&#13;
The receivers to be appointed are&#13;
authorized by the petition to make all&#13;
collections of premiums and funds due&#13;
the companies in this state and to hold&#13;
the same to be paid out as death&#13;
benefits until the final hearing of ths&#13;
cases&#13;
THE NEW AMP OLD 1« BN*LANOr~&#13;
' • • ' * ! •&#13;
• - • • * * '&#13;
-*——^*raXa3iia&#13;
»ti-a ,ai£THtb^^S5eeaaBaBma&gt;' r Into the cnarm-- c$',&#13;
A Teacher'* Testimony.&#13;
Hinton, Ky., Oct. 30th.—(Special.)&#13;
—It has long been claimed that Diabetes&#13;
is incurable, hut Mr. E. J.&#13;
Thompson, teacher in the Hinton&#13;
school, has pleasing evidence to the&#13;
contrary- Mr. Thompson had Diabetes.&#13;
He took Dodd's Kidney Pills and&#13;
Is cured. In a statement he makes&#13;
regarding the cure Mr. Thompson&#13;
says:&#13;
"I waa troubled, with my kidneys&#13;
for more than two years and waa&#13;
treated by two of the best doctors in&#13;
this part of the state. They claimed&#13;
I-had Diabetes and there was little to&#13;
be done for me. Then I started to&#13;
use DoddJs~ Kidney Pills and what they&#13;
did for me was wonderful. It is entirely&#13;
owing to Dodd's Kidney Pills&#13;
that I am now enjoying good health.**&#13;
°" Many doctors still maintain ^hat&#13;
abetes.is incurable. But tfiabetes is a&#13;
kidney disease and the kidney disease&#13;
that Dodd's Kidney Pills will not cure&#13;
has yet to be discovered.&#13;
. : : , , » • * # ; •&#13;
. 'V-?: •&#13;
• " • • ? • • ' '&#13;
.. .-^&#13;
'•••••• » * •• ' s s t f f ' l &gt; V *''!^Vl&#13;
• • •Trv,"^'^sp • 1&#13;
-••••' . ^ S ^ it&#13;
•' :• - - f i;V V&#13;
•**&amp;ffl 1&#13;
• * / ^ ?&#13;
an- absence of maay i months to his&#13;
home. He has been in the habit of&#13;
taking his yearly outinga in May, as&#13;
he it melined to bilioua difficulties and&#13;
is not so well able to pursue hia business&#13;
in the spring aa in the sammer.&#13;
Far from maicing any mystery of the&#13;
matter,Jhe has invariably toM his wife&#13;
that he went away for his health. On&#13;
one or two occasions he had other&#13;
business of a special nature connected&#13;
with th^^jalU; wbich it-was-betteved&#13;
best to keep Secret for" a-time.&#13;
i "Yon alt know how that is, and that&#13;
ladies af^aometimes apt to mention&#13;
such matters in their confidences with&#13;
other women, so that they leak out,&#13;
often, to the serious ^detriment of their&#13;
husbands' business. Knowing this,&#13;
Mr. Hamilton did not always explain&#13;
the full jceaaon of hia trips, and his&#13;
wife choaa to make -a mystery of&#13;
tbem.^ They had nothing to do with&#13;
seeking for a twin-brother. That silly&#13;
AddWbAdM^haa no jwnt^in^^he dettaae,&#13;
. Tb# ojoJx,.Other chiWreo bora&#13;
to the Hamilton parents were a boy&#13;
and a girl, wbo died In their infancy.&#13;
that he had not donexwhat was alleged&#13;
o§ him, for he knew nothing of his&#13;
acts after he left Grovedale on the fifteenth&#13;
of May. Mr. Carter, and his&#13;
children received him with open arms.&#13;
Not so his wife. She preferred to&#13;
doubt him. Mr. Hamilton took up his&#13;
place* in the mill and in the community,&#13;
unchallenged by a soul except his&#13;
wife. Reports were brought to him of&#13;
her affection for the man known as&#13;
Edes, but he paid no attention to them,&#13;
except to call him to the office and&#13;
-warn him *gaiast being seen on his&#13;
premises.&#13;
"In about a week afterwards Edes&#13;
was shot there by some one unknown,&#13;
probably by Edes himself, to awaken&#13;
suspicion against Mr. Hamilton. He&#13;
was 111 for three or four weeks afterwards,&#13;
and when he was partially recovered&#13;
he professed to recollect that&#13;
MeWfaeja- e^ aw woao)» I&#13;
Twenty&#13;
me Unitetf&#13;
that majT bo&#13;
years. Naval&#13;
to come and a step m this direction&#13;
will be taken this winter by congress&#13;
When Nuns Powdered.&#13;
The custom of powdering the hair&#13;
dates back as far as the sixteenth century,&#13;
and. was first introduced by the&#13;
nuns in French convents. Those who.&#13;
bad occasion to leave the cloisters for&#13;
any reason wereartafci ta powder their .&#13;
bair, so as to n^a^J^a«awrswr#ray aeat'&#13;
give tbem a vea«t|mL)eeE; the fae£^_&#13;
ioDabte Oames wWra M etrftck wHm&#13;
the novel effect of white- pawier em&#13;
dark hair tbat they soon appropriated&#13;
The device as one of the arts of the&#13;
worldly toilet. Out of this grew the&#13;
use of tint3 in tfie hair. The Roman&#13;
women often used blue powder, and&#13;
later, in I860, Empres Eugenie set&#13;
he fashion of using gold powder.&#13;
;•' .-.ml&#13;
in the canceling of the authorization&#13;
foi 1C.0O0 loii—ge&amp;sela. rha Mirhigpn&#13;
and South Carolina and providing for&#13;
18.600 ton vessels. Work on these battleships&#13;
has not begun so that no embarrassment&#13;
will be involved to congress.&#13;
he was Hamilton Instead of Edes.&#13;
Mrs. Hamilton professed to believe hia&#13;
statement, or at least did not deny his&#13;
claims. Proof would be offered that&#13;
before his illness she wrote him a letter,&#13;
calling him her dear husband, and&#13;
signing herself Calla Lily, as she&#13;
sometimes did In her letters to her&#13;
friends, it being a pet name applied to&#13;
her fair, stately beauty when a schoolgirl.&#13;
(Tobecontinued.)&#13;
How He Escaped.&#13;
Fred Faller, the Pontlac lad who,&#13;
with C. B. Flodell was charged with&#13;
burglary, told Sheriff Halladay, of&#13;
Charlotte, how his pal Flodell,&#13;
broke out of jail Tuesday night. Until&#13;
Faller gave up his story the officers&#13;
thought the escape was made&#13;
while one of the jail attaches was&#13;
serving supper to one of the prisoners&#13;
upstairs. Faller says Flodell, by&#13;
means of a key which he made since&#13;
his confinement, opened a door, and&#13;
that by stripping himself and soaping&#13;
his body he got in the Jailer's residence&#13;
by crawling through a 7½ by&#13;
11 inch hole In the door. Faller told&#13;
the sheriff where he found the key.&#13;
Flodell. made his break during the&#13;
time the officers and jail attaches&#13;
were at the court house to-hear the&#13;
verdict in the-Cole murder trial.&#13;
writer. Of cewraA ate pm«i JBK J&gt;retend&#13;
tor a mMgegLJfcat att'tba^ easentials&#13;
of good looks are in her poe&gt;&#13;
session, but when she comm to ULUBJT,&#13;
that the women of no other natiow&#13;
manage to give such general satisfaction&#13;
aa Englishwomen, they may,&#13;
f think, confidently conclude that in&#13;
tbem is combined the largest proportion&#13;
of good looks, grace and fascination&#13;
to be found in any daughter of&#13;
Eve all the world over. &lt; -••--•-&#13;
- i . i i . t - r t - ^ j S&#13;
.•"•ft.'&#13;
. % * • • • • &gt; - • * &gt;&#13;
Diplomatic-Small Boy.&#13;
To illustrate a point of statecraft&#13;
Sir Henry- Campbell-Bannermau, the&#13;
English statesman, has been telling&#13;
his constituents a story of a small&#13;
boy wbo went to his mamma and asked&#13;
her ,to len4,.him a pencil. ,4Bot,"&#13;
said: the mother, "1 left a pen and ink&#13;
tor you to do your lessons with on the&#13;
nurseryr&gt; table. , Why don't yotf use&#13;
that inatead Of a pencil?" Clarence&#13;
hta^ate* tor a moment. "Don't you&#13;
thinsV.aamma," Be said at length,&#13;
" t h a t • ^ m j ^ m !• a very naefaj paper?"&#13;
MOf ewnrae, I do," answered&#13;
. - iynp^PonXeaaipn of HaMth J^rgent is Lmamma: (,b\it what—** "Well, yon&#13;
Mr. m*Ki. .oit a&lt;&gt;,aotoe^*he&gt;l»i^ »jd at leaat' mt£&amp;* little-Ma explained, "1 want&#13;
Two Dead by Polaon.&#13;
William A. Cox, a Detroit printer,&#13;
and Mrs. Mary Camp&gt; also of D*&#13;
troit, were found dead in a cornfield&#13;
In Ypsilanti Wednesday- afternoon.&#13;
It is thought that they committed&#13;
suicide, but it is possible that Cox&#13;
- murdered the g4ri by forciag-her&#13;
drink poison, and then committed suicide&#13;
himself.&#13;
half a doxen different atoriee about the&#13;
^W^em Mr. Hamilton waa a&#13;
a peaoll to write to the editor an4 aak&#13;
/ . ih|m whatm take Ink atai&amp;a out of a&#13;
^*;-A. •^^iaaia1Mceja&gt; to**He£W&amp;tr*stp &amp;% - fe^;&#13;
« . ^&#13;
i i ^ 4 w » .&#13;
•&gt;• &lt; . 4 &lt; a » '&#13;
Rtv«r of Genuine Ink.&#13;
Algeria has a river of genuine Jak.&#13;
paused by the joining of two su earns,&#13;
one of which comes from an iron region,&#13;
while the second stream flows&#13;
from a peat swamp. On meeting, th&#13;
acid of one stream blends with the&#13;
iron solution of the other, and jnk is&#13;
the result.&#13;
.35--&#13;
,'-,&amp;&lt;?.,]&#13;
TOMMY&#13;
&gt;\&#13;
People Witt&#13;
probably fatally, in a factory fire in&#13;
Newark, N. J., last night. The fir*&#13;
started by one of the girls upsetting&#13;
a candle In a pot of lacquer. The damage&#13;
was $60,000.&#13;
Seventeen girls, all under six years&#13;
old, got hold of a bottle of poison In&#13;
-the absence of nurses at an orphan&#13;
asylum in Burlington, Vt., and three&#13;
died. They bad been left at the institution&#13;
while the 250 other inmates had&#13;
been taken to an entertainment.&#13;
John and Ed. Hoard, farmers living&#13;
Bear Morrice, both poor men, have received&#13;
word that they, with two brothers&#13;
living in New York, have fallen&#13;
heirs to an estate valued at $50,000 left&#13;
tbem by an uncle, William Pittla, of&#13;
Buffalo, " T T&#13;
I*&#13;
"1 began to use Postum because the&#13;
jld kind of coffee had so poisoned my&#13;
whole system that I was on the point&#13;
of breaking down, and the doctor&#13;
warned me that I must quit It.&#13;
My chief ailment -was nervousness&#13;
and heart trouble.&#13;
Any unexpected noise would cause&#13;
me the most painful palpitation, make&#13;
me faint and weak.&#13;
"had: lreard"of-Postum and- began—&#13;
to drink it when I left off the old coffee.&#13;
It began to help me just as soon&#13;
as the old effects of the other kind of&#13;
coffee passed away. It did not stimulate&#13;
me for a while, ana then leave&#13;
me weak and nervous w eoCee need&#13;
to do. Instead of that $f ftnUt nn **y - -&#13;
strength and supplied aTeejanWeaAtftaW*&#13;
to my system which I'CIBV;&#13;
ly on. It enables me to do&#13;
gest kind of a day's work without&#13;
getting tired. All the heart trouble,&#13;
etc*, baa paaaed away.&#13;
"I give 1* freely to all my children,&#13;
from the youngest to the oldest, and&#13;
It keeps tbem all healthy and hearty.'*&#13;
Name given by Poatunt Oo^ Battle.&#13;
Creek, Mien.&#13;
'There's a reaaeo.&#13;
Rend the little boon; TbwBetd te*&#13;
WeUtiUe," la ak*s.&#13;
w&#13;
'""?S»J'-J&gt;&#13;
*':P43&#13;
. ^ A)-.^&#13;
^&#13;
• • ^ • • * * A i&#13;
-ia&#13;
«»V*V&gt;Kli«» •rtlW^VMKM&amp;W'MrtBWM-IMt}--' 1-&#13;
&amp; T**3fTr --!l*$&amp;F* tf V .'*•&#13;
STr"*-;&#13;
.I've* • •AV"«*n'&#13;
^•IfTsfTT •Ar&gt;"&#13;
'-*• -»« -:\S&gt;' •-T' V'' •"•!.&#13;
' • • ' ' &gt; » &gt; &gt; » ' &gt; — &gt; —&#13;
* * ' X T , &gt;. J, -4&#13;
\t,&#13;
M M *&#13;
Sir $totn*tt fispntdi&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS A CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
THUR3PAT, NOV. 2,1905.&#13;
W.6.T.U.&#13;
Edited by the Pinckney W. C. T, U-!&#13;
1$&#13;
#£&amp;&#13;
Son Lost Mother.&#13;
" Consumption raue in oar family,&#13;
and through it I lost my mother,1'&#13;
writes £. B. Reid, of Harmony, Me.&#13;
"For the past five years, however, on&#13;
the siiRbtest sign of a cottjth or cold, I&#13;
have taken Dr. King's New Discovery&#13;
for Consumption which has saved me&#13;
from serious lang trouble.,' His mothers&#13;
death was a sad loss to Mr. Reid&#13;
bot he learned that long trouble must&#13;
not be neglected, taut t e w to cure it.&#13;
Q«ifik*4 relief j g i f M i for coughs and&#13;
***. f rioe 1 0 * 5 3 f l 00 guaranteed&#13;
^ • | R ~ X BiiierV"eS«g store. Trial&#13;
GO AS YOU PLEASE&#13;
Lake or Rail In Either Direction&#13;
Between Detroit and Buffalo&#13;
!'"»*&gt;&#13;
ife&#13;
If your ticket read* via the M ichigan&#13;
Central, Grand Trunk or Wabash Railways&#13;
in either direction between Detroit&#13;
and Buffalo, it is available for&#13;
transportation via tbe V. &amp; B. Line&#13;
and you can enjoy tbe deliebt ot a&#13;
lake ride.&#13;
Address&#13;
D7&amp; B, ST^MB0AT7"CO.7'~"'&#13;
WAYNE S T . WHABF. DETBOIT, MICH.&#13;
ManJs Unrertsonableeess —&#13;
is often as great as woman's, But&#13;
Tbos. A, Austin, titer, of the "Republican,&#13;
'' ot Leavenworth,,Ind , was not&#13;
unreasonable, when he relused to&#13;
allow the doctors to operate on his&#13;
wife, tor female trouble, "Instead,"&#13;
he says, " we concluded to try Electric&#13;
Bitters. My wife was then so sick,&#13;
she could hardly leave her bed, and&#13;
five [5] physicians bad failed to relieve&#13;
her. After taking Electric Bitters,&#13;
perfectly cared, and can BOW&#13;
»11 her household dsttea."&#13;
-F. A. Sigler erroggiftt,&#13;
piles 59600 ts.&#13;
Next to tbe evil of intemperance is&#13;
tbe evil of indifference on tbe part ot&#13;
those who fee! that they have not been&#13;
personally injured by it.—Tbe Lookout.&#13;
Tbe Anti-Saloon League is, in my&#13;
judgement, the sanest and most promising&#13;
movement to check, and ultimately&#13;
to checkmate the saloon, which has&#13;
yet been devised.—Rev. Dr. Josiab&#13;
Strong.&#13;
A wave of prohibition is sweeping&#13;
over this country from one end to the&#13;
other, that threatens to engulf and&#13;
carry to distinction the entire whisky&#13;
enterprise. It is growing stronger&#13;
each day, and eacLday, townsand jsi&#13;
ties, counties, and even states, are&#13;
added to that class in which the whiB&#13;
ky business cannot be carried on legitimately.&#13;
B-nfort's Wine and Spirit&#13;
C;rcular. New Yort City.&#13;
In France scientific temperance is&#13;
regularly taught and examined in all&#13;
the state schools. In Belgium, Temperance&#13;
lectures are ordered to be piven&#13;
from time to time in all state schools,&#13;
temperenoe reading books are to be&#13;
used, and temperance wall sheets displayed.&#13;
In Germau schools occasional&#13;
temperance lectures must be given&#13;
from timeTtb timeToy order of the government,&#13;
and it is intended shortly to&#13;
introduce systematic temperance&#13;
- teaching as anj^marxjciiool subject.&#13;
In Austria the education department&#13;
of Vienna have directed temperance&#13;
lectures to be given from time to time&#13;
in all state schools, and, further, that&#13;
all libraries maintained for the use o!&#13;
teachers shall contain a certain number&#13;
of books treating scientifically of&#13;
the injurious effects of alcohol.&#13;
HOW TO MAKE BAD BOYS GOOD&#13;
PROBLEM SOLVED AT DAYTON&#13;
Childrens Gardens at National Cash Register Factory&#13;
Teach Youngsters Valuable Lessons, Keep Them Out&#13;
of Mischief and Boost Property Values.&#13;
d-H&#13;
Appetite f dliAtrneda sep*e rhyaopue. wSthrietn gltihtt leis yf*aull.i ndao- i,a*r**t fbeielilo ubsl.u e Yaonud hmavelea nhcehaodlya—ch«en. db accakna cnhce , areres t uonrs tdruenevp.. anTdh ey ofuac at rIes oyno uthr en verevr&lt; sotfr ennegrthveonuesd :p, rorsetrnaetwioend.. TIhfe.y nemgulesct t* Tsthoemya, cwhi ll annodt ( .ckuried ntehye mstreolvuebsle, sb ufto mllouis t&#13;
have a *- This yovi win find In nerve remedy.&#13;
The "Bey in Summertime" has always&#13;
been a serious problem. Usually he has&#13;
a good deal of time to frivol away, and&#13;
Satan finds work for idle hands. As a&#13;
result the boy in summertime is often&#13;
a bad boy.&#13;
During several months of idleness&#13;
and purposeless play he forgets all that&#13;
he learns at school and acquires instead&#13;
a mass of undesirable knowledge that&#13;
makes him a source of unending worry&#13;
to his teachers when fall comes round.&#13;
This is especially true of boys raised in&#13;
the cities. The country boy—although&#13;
~he-would-,not -admit„it:=-is _more fortunate&#13;
in having certain duties to perform&#13;
each day before he can enjoy his&#13;
Karnes and larks.&#13;
DID IT KFER OCCUR TO T0U&#13;
That Rail Tickets Are Accepted*&#13;
OnvD. &amp; B. Dally Line Steamers?&#13;
Under special arrangement with tbe&#13;
Michigan Central, Wabash and Grand&#13;
Trunk Railways, all classes of tickets&#13;
reading via these ii nes between Detroit&#13;
iffalo, in either direction-,—writ&#13;
iHfcacceptfld for transport n-f ion on I)&#13;
w4&#13;
r - * ^&#13;
-f&#13;
;. steamer*.&#13;
* Send two cent stamp for illustrated&#13;
booklet. Address&#13;
D. &amp; B. STEAMBOAT Co.&#13;
JDtpt Ai DETROIT, MICH&#13;
. T h e . 3 - . l t ; : it&#13;
K:lU.s;l ( &lt;\!;•'•.&gt;&#13;
Quango askcl:&#13;
nn artist why&#13;
"Vs'!i it do y;jn tli'n'c r&gt;{&#13;
p.iintcJ &lt;'(&gt;b\s-cl,- on u&#13;
f^ccillnj? so natur.Miiy tli;«t thn hiivd tfiri&#13;
wore herself into nn attack- of uorvons&#13;
prostration trying to sweep- ttmu&#13;
down?" Mast of the editors say that&#13;
;'$&amp;&gt;;* there.may have boou such, an artist,&#13;
bajt there was never such a hired girl.--&#13;
jU&amp;gas City Journal.&#13;
4 «jhThank The Lord!"&#13;
cried Bannah Plant, of Little Rock,&#13;
AciUi "taMbe relief he got from Buck-&#13;
J M | ^ - ¾ ^ S a l v e . It cured my fearff^&#13;
ijjajjaej seres, which nothing else&#13;
wonW biai, and from which I had suffered&#13;
for 5 years." It is a marvelous&#13;
healer for cuts, burns and wounds.&#13;
Guaranteed at F. A. Sigler's drug&#13;
store; 25 cents.&#13;
A liquid cold cure and the only&#13;
cough syrup which moves the bowels—&#13;
vrorks all cold out of tbe system—is&#13;
Kennedy's Lavative Honey and Tar.&#13;
Clears the head and throat and makes&#13;
weak lungs strong. Best for croup,&#13;
whooping cough, etc. Children love it.&#13;
" Sold by P. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
The Hicks Almanac For 1906.&#13;
Tbe Rev. Irl. R. Hicks Almanac will&#13;
not be published for 1606, but his&#13;
Monthly Journal, WORD AKI&gt; WORKS,&#13;
has been changed into a large and&#13;
costly Magazine, and it will contain&#13;
his storm and weather lorecasfs and&#13;
other astronomical features complete.&#13;
Tbe November number, now ready,&#13;
contains the forecasts f'om January&#13;
to June, 1906. Tbe January number,&#13;
ready December 20th, will contain the&#13;
forecasts from July to December, 1906&#13;
Tbe price of thi? splendid magazine is&#13;
one dollar a year. See it and you will&#13;
have it. Tbe November and January&#13;
numbers tbe Rev. Iri. R. Hicks forecasts&#13;
for the whole year, and more&#13;
complete than ever, ca n be had by&#13;
sending at once 25 cents to Word and&#13;
Works Publishing Company, 22ol Lo&#13;
cust Street. St. touis, Mo.&#13;
PRITSS AS* GtVKtt FOR BzOQSST PUMTKIKS&#13;
AND M E L O N S&#13;
Down in Dayton, Ohio, the problem&#13;
of the boy in summertime ha5 been&#13;
solved. The solution has come through&#13;
giving the boy pleasant work to do&#13;
which interests him while he is about&#13;
it quite as much as his play. Dayton&#13;
is the home of the Boy Gardeners whose&#13;
work is now being held^up as a model&#13;
in all the manual training schools of the&#13;
country. The Boy Gardeners of Dayton&#13;
enjoy summer vacations as much&#13;
as other boys do, they get more out of&#13;
them in knowledge and experience, and&#13;
their teachers say they return to school&#13;
in the autumn fifty per cent, better for&#13;
having spent a few hours each day in&#13;
healthful outdoor work.&#13;
One of Dayton's great = industrial&#13;
institutions, the National Cash Register&#13;
Company, has made possible the&#13;
solution of the "Boy in Summertime"&#13;
question. The Boys' Gardens are a&#13;
part of the Welfare Work carried on&#13;
by this Company. They were one of&#13;
the most interesting features seen by&#13;
the Michigan editors who&#13;
•factory OituhiT 6—&amp;u_ihe excursion of&#13;
the Eastern Michigan Press Club,&#13;
Patterson Makes Investigations.&#13;
developed rapidly. By the time the&#13;
seeds began to sprout, the young gardeners&#13;
had become enthusiastic. Even&#13;
a dry season and the necessity of carrying&#13;
water did not diminish their interest.&#13;
Boys are Enthusiastic. *&#13;
Only two or three dropped out or the&#13;
class during the summer, and so the&#13;
results of the first year were highly&#13;
satisfactory. The next season there&#13;
was no difficulty in forming the class.&#13;
On the contrary, applicants were far.&#13;
in excess of the garden plots available.&#13;
Results, too, were more marked. Crops&#13;
were l a r g e r and the influence -of the&#13;
work on the conduct of the boys was&#13;
greater. ISince then the project has&#13;
grown continuously.&#13;
With each garden goc3 a set of tool?&#13;
—-a rake, hoe, spade and trowel—each&#13;
numbered to correspond with the garden.&#13;
Separate racks are provided in&#13;
the tool house for each boy's outfit and&#13;
he is required to keep the tools in place&#13;
and in good order. All the young gar-&#13;
's pay dues of ten cents each&#13;
nth, as it has been found advisable&#13;
let the boys feel that they are making&#13;
some return for the privileges&#13;
received.&#13;
Seeds and Ground Furnished.&#13;
The work of plowing and laying out&#13;
the gardens is done by the Company&#13;
before ~the"1&gt;oys are gtven possession.&#13;
This leaves only the easier preparation&#13;
of the ground to the youngsters, which,&#13;
with the planting, occupies the first four&#13;
weeks. AH necessary seeds, bulbs and&#13;
sets are~fufnTshed~Dy"tnT"Cotirpany. An&#13;
elective in the work is given by allowing&#13;
the boys to cultivate one of the&#13;
divisions of the individual gardens just&#13;
as each one may desire. Over tliis_&#13;
strip therinstructor exercises nO authority.&#13;
Whether the youth fills it full of&#13;
growing things or leaves it uncultivated,&#13;
no instruction or suggestion as to planting&#13;
is offered. As a test of the boy's&#13;
character and ability as a gardener this&#13;
is excellent. ^&#13;
Dr. Miles* Nervine Zt ts prepared for just such ailments,&#13;
and it I s a never-falling remedy, be*&#13;
cause It soothes, feeds and builds the&#13;
nerves back to health. '&#13;
"For SO years I had nervous diseasesof&#13;
the stomach. I had no appetite, could&#13;
sot sleep: run down^ to 8¾^pound*, x&#13;
now weigh 120, am In good health, and&#13;
Dr. Miles' Nervine ts the cause of It"&#13;
MR8. EMILY C. LANODON.&#13;
ISIS 8th Ave., Altoon*. Pa.&#13;
Druggists are authorised to refund&#13;
money If first bottle does not benefit&#13;
COUCH8AREDANCERSignals,&#13;
fitQp_Them With&#13;
Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery&#13;
CONSUMPTION&#13;
0UGM8 and&#13;
OLDS&#13;
Pries&#13;
50c* $1.00&#13;
THE CURE THAT'S SURE for all Diseases&#13;
of Throat and Lungs or Money&#13;
Back. FREE TRIAL.&#13;
St a t e o f M i c h i g a n , County of Livingston,&#13;
is. At ssesBionofthe-Probsio court for caid&#13;
county, held at tbe Probate office In the village of&#13;
Howell, on Weuoe»&lt;l»y the 25th day of October, ia&#13;
the year one thousand nine hundred and five.&#13;
Present, Arthur A. Montague, Judge of Probate.&#13;
In the matter of the eetats of&#13;
JAMse HEKFBBNAK, deceased.&#13;
T=TT6ir'TSH?IsTnnrXT"irfflro7 udiniuetntor of&#13;
tbe estate of said deceased and represents to tbis&#13;
court that he is ready to render h final account&#13;
la ealJ estate.&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered that Friday, the^34th&#13;
clajt"of No'v?Mber~he£t7st ten o'clock in the forenoon&#13;
at said Probato Officv, be assigned for the&#13;
hearing of aald account. »&#13;
And it i« furthtr ordered that a copy of this&#13;
order be published la the t iackney Dispatch, a&#13;
newspaper printed and circulating in tald county,&#13;
three successive weeks preyioue to said da; of&#13;
hearing. 't 46&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAGUE,&#13;
Judge ot Probate.&#13;
E X H I B I T AT T»ff C O U N T Y F A I R&#13;
The boys are encouraged to make a&#13;
beginning on hcmi? c m if nine nf t)v%-&#13;
same time that they are receiving the&#13;
benefits of the Company gardes.—Pur&#13;
«» T i u ' i • ('r&lt;«ilul:! v .&#13;
I w vs&#13;
A cough syrup which drives a cold&#13;
out of tbe system by acting as a cathartic&#13;
on the bowels is offered in&#13;
Kennedy*8 Laxative Honey and Tar.&#13;
Clears the throat, strengthens the&#13;
lungs end bronchial tubes. Ttte moth&#13;
er's friend and the childred's. favorite.&#13;
Best for cranp whooping couffb, etc.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
TWEORIGINAL&#13;
UXATIVE COUGH SYRUP&#13;
•11 Concha tad&#13;
; C # t l i t i s In expelltaf&#13;
GoMt from tnt&#13;
S y s t e m by&#13;
awing&#13;
wele&#13;
core'&#13;
and&#13;
;-ooogh«&#13;
T i t Bed&#13;
IENNEDTS m m&#13;
EY«TAR&#13;
fcaoewrrr * oa^ OHSOAOO. u. *. *&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sifter, Druggist,&#13;
Cleverly Braided.&#13;
A wealthy AuRtrallan squatter in order&#13;
to protect his six daughters from&#13;
fortune hunters left bis property to&#13;
them in equal shares, but decreed that&#13;
If either married without the consent&#13;
of tbe trustees she should forfeit her&#13;
share to her sisters. When the case&#13;
came up at Sydney It was found that&#13;
tbe six sisters had all married without&#13;
permission, and thus each bad forfeited&#13;
her share in the property to her&#13;
sisters, a state of affaire which the&#13;
ladles doubtless considered highly satisfactory.&#13;
Nature needs only a Little Eary Riser&#13;
now and then to keep tbe bowels clean,&#13;
the liver active, and tbe system&#13;
free from bile, headaches, constipation&#13;
etc. Tbe famous little pills "Early&#13;
Risers" are pleasant in affect and parfeet&#13;
in action. Tbey never gripe or&#13;
sicken, bot tone and strengthen the&#13;
liver and kidneys.&#13;
Sold by f\ A. Sigler, Druggiat&#13;
John H. Patterson, the President of&#13;
the Company, asked one of his foremen&#13;
several years ago why he built his house&#13;
on a $2000 lot three miles from the&#13;
factory, when he could have bought a&#13;
lot near the plant and equally good for&#13;
$300. Thq reply was: "I don't like the&#13;
neighborhood."&#13;
Upon investigation, Mr. Patterson&#13;
found that three boys gave the neighborhood&#13;
its bad reputation. lie m^de&#13;
an estimaLe of the value of the land&#13;
these boys influenced, wilhin a radius of&#13;
four blocks of the factory. The estimate&#13;
showed that the&#13;
the property owners in the district&#13;
$:J0,000, Ten thousand dollars for a bad&#13;
boy! Studying further the cause for&#13;
the trouble, he soon found that the boys&#13;
were made bad by idleness. Nothing to&#13;
do was the secret of their difficulty.&#13;
At once the Company decided to&#13;
establish the Boys' Gardens.&#13;
this purpose additional seeds and plants&#13;
are furnished to those who want them.&#13;
This helps to get the garden habit&#13;
firmly established at a time when the&#13;
intejest in such work is predominant&#13;
over interest in- all other occupation.;.&#13;
Money Prizes and Medals Offered.&#13;
To stimulate the boys in their work,&#13;
the Company offers annually • $.10 in&#13;
prizes besides handsome brojize, medals&#13;
designed in France on Mr. Patterson's&#13;
order.&#13;
The entire product of the gardens&#13;
belongs to the boys. Many of the little&#13;
farmers realize a good profit out of&#13;
the sale of their produce besides keepthree&#13;
boys cost! ing the table at h-.v..le supplied with ihic,&#13;
fresh vegetables all summer long.&#13;
This year the boy gardeners have had&#13;
greater success than ever before. The&#13;
gardens have been better kept and&#13;
generally more productive. A U\v&#13;
improvements introduced this j'ear&#13;
were: posting of a current bulletin&#13;
giving the-priees of vegetables; planting&#13;
t&#13;
BACH BOY HAS A SEPARATE PLOT AND OWNS ALL HE RAISES&#13;
Near the factory was a plot of ground&#13;
adapted to the purpose. Two acres of&#13;
this were plowed and forty lots, 10 feet&#13;
by 130 feet each, were laid out. Seeds&#13;
of various kinds were provided, as well&#13;
as all necessary tools and equipment&#13;
A competent gardener was secured to&#13;
instruct the boys. The age limit of the&#13;
gardeners was fixed at ten to fourteen&#13;
years. . ' , • - '&#13;
It was wholly a new enterprise&#13;
and at first there was difficulty in&#13;
"catching" the small boy, or rather in&#13;
getting the small boy to "catch" the&#13;
idea. But this obstacle was overcome,&#13;
and, with the forty boys started, interest&#13;
the borders of the gardens in solid beds&#13;
of petunias, chrysanthemums and sunflowers;&#13;
establishment of a co-operative&#13;
patdh for melons, peanuts and popcorn;&#13;
adoption of a self-government&#13;
feature giving the boys rights in dealing&#13;
with members of their organization&#13;
whose conduct is not what it should be.&#13;
Exhibits at Fair Hade.&#13;
At the Montgomery County Fair, recently&#13;
held in Dayton, the Boy Gardeners&#13;
had an exhibit of their products&#13;
which rivalled in excellence and attractiveness&#13;
those of the most experienced&#13;
agriculturists of the county.&#13;
STATE OP MICHIQN-Courty of Living&#13;
ston, ss. At a session of tbe Probate Court for&#13;
tne said county, Leld at the probate office In the&#13;
village ot Howell, on Tuesday, the «4th day of&#13;
October in the year one thonsand nine hundred&#13;
five. Present, Arthur A. Montague, Judge of&#13;
Probate. In the matter of tbe estate of&#13;
DAVID. I. VASSYCKKL, deceated&#13;
Now cornea Ellen Agustn VanSyckel, executrix&#13;
of the estate of aald deceased and represents&#13;
Jo this court that she ia ready to render&#13;
her final account in said estate.&#13;
Thereupon it ia cdered that Friday the 17tU&#13;
day of November next at ten o'clock in the forenoon,&#13;
at eaid Probate Office, be aaeigned for the&#13;
heaiingrbf said account.&#13;
And it is farther ordrrpd that a copy of thia&#13;
or or bo puhlltihod lu.lha PIMIKMKY D»»PATOU,&#13;
•ne_WBpap«_r printed and circulating in aald county&#13;
three auccesalvw weeaa pievluua to said day of&#13;
hearing,&#13;
t+i&#13;
Arthur 4. Montague,&#13;
Jndgeof Probate.&#13;
St a t e of M i c h i g a n , The circuit court for&#13;
the county of Livii'fiaion, in chancery, Suit&#13;
pending In the circuit court for the county of&#13;
Livingston, in chancery, on the 5th day of Septem&#13;
ber, 1906.&#13;
THOMAS H, COLLINS, complainant&#13;
VB&#13;
FTTAICOIUNP, defendant&#13;
11 BBtiBlattoiily appfaring to thia court by affidavit&#13;
on file, (bit the defendant, Etta Collins, ia&#13;
nonreeident of thia etate and is residing in the&#13;
state of Ohio; on motion of B. T. O. Clark, solicitor&#13;
/or tbe complainant, it is ordered that the said&#13;
defendant causa her appearance to be entered ia&#13;
this cause within one hundred and twenly.fonr&#13;
days from tbe date of this order, and that in cise&#13;
of her appearance she cause ber answer to the&#13;
con&gt;p]ainanlBbJ)l of complaints be filed and a&#13;
copy thereof toi^be served on the complainant's&#13;
solictor within twenty dayB afUr service of a&#13;
copy of said bill and notice"of this order, and In&#13;
defanlt thereof that said bill be taken as confessed&#13;
by the said defendant, Etta Collins, and it is further&#13;
ordered that within twenty days;the complainant&#13;
cause a copy of tliie order to be published&#13;
fin the Plnckney Dispatch, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated in said county of Livingston&#13;
and that aald publication be continued in said&#13;
newspaper at least once in each week for rix successive&#13;
weeks, or that he cause a copy of this order&#13;
to be served personally on said defendant&#13;
Etta Collins twenty dajs before tbe expiration of&#13;
the time »bove limited for her appearance.;&#13;
STKABKS F. 8MITH&#13;
"Circuit Jimns&#13;
F. T. O, CLARK.&#13;
Solicitor for Cmplainant. 48&#13;
S***« Of Mlchl^ain. The circuit court^for&#13;
the county of LlTinRBton. In chancery&#13;
* JjT Fn*o M. lWmoHT.coiuplninant"&#13;
. . . VH&#13;
.-WATII V\ FIGHT, defendant&#13;
Thlrty.fifth judidallciicult. Inlchancery.&#13;
Suit pending in the circuit cumt lor the county&#13;
of Livingston.'In cbanteiy, at Dowell,'on the&#13;
eighth day of September, M. I&gt;. 1STfr.&#13;
In thia cau«e|lt appearing that delendant, Katie&#13;
Wright, Is not a resident of thia state and that&#13;
her whereabouts is unknown, therefore on motion&#13;
ofRJdiarf 1&gt;. Jfocbe, solicitor for complainant, it ,&#13;
laddered that defendant tnlerjher appearance ia&#13;
•aid cause|on OT beforefflve months from the data&#13;
of this order, Htd that nithln twenty days the*&#13;
complainan crr.se (his order to be published in)&#13;
the PixcBBtT DWFATCH, aaidfrubiicatlon to be&#13;
continued once^in [esch week for six weaka in&#13;
succession, '•&#13;
fTtjkiwa F; Satiw&#13;
Circuit Jodge.&#13;
BlCHASDiD. Bocnt, , •'&#13;
Selidtor foTloomplainant. tjd]&#13;
- &lt; &amp; • •&#13;
; • ? -: , 1 ; . '&#13;
u . ' . ' • , ' - ¾ ^ " - ' • • ' • ' • ' ' • • " ' • ' . . . - . " ' . - - ' : ' : * • • ' . . - - ' W , ' ' ' . ' * * " •• •{ . * : • . . . . • • •&#13;
W*f**fff*w^&#13;
Pfk :&#13;
' ' J * :&gt;*&amp; "•&#13;
, ' ! &gt; •&#13;
A r * •"•&#13;
~ *&#13;
, ' ' 'I «!' • - .&#13;
&gt;. ' • ' • " ^ " " * V&#13;
v.,, ;V:;.&#13;
,75&#13;
Will Do&#13;
It ii^| di8Mtrooic*lawUyt when yoa&#13;
lose your health, because mdigestioii&#13;
and constipation have capped it away.&#13;
Prompt relief can*be had in Dr. KIBR'I&#13;
New LirePUla. The build up your digestive&#13;
organs, and sore headachy&#13;
dizziness, colic, constipation, etc.&#13;
Gaarantaed at F. A. 8tgl*rV diog&#13;
store; 25 cents.&#13;
! ~&#13;
if SOnt w v MS m ftfSJ subscription&#13;
far th* I9§6 Uotum* of Th*&#13;
Youth's Companion it Ml *atM*&#13;
pom Ie aU tu§ issu** far th* r*»&#13;
mmlmtmg v**U*fJ##5. FRSK.&#13;
it MU*nUU*popU (A«0oe*J«&#13;
Numksrs far Thanksgiving and&#13;
Christmas, rieht§ iltustrattd,&#13;
FMEC.&#13;
It mill sntltt* pan to Th* Companion's&#13;
"Minuttmon" Catandar&#13;
far l*Qfr-on txquistt* souVtntr—&#13;
ttWttonUtttvou to th* ftftw&#13;
two issuts of Th* Companion far&#13;
1906—a ttbrorp of th* host roadtng.&#13;
including th* faaturos noted&#13;
b*toW, ( ,&#13;
Cat out and sond this slip(or&#13;
th* nam* of this papor) with&#13;
pour $1.7$ — now.&#13;
7 Serial Stories&#13;
250 Complete Stories&#13;
300 Interesting Articles&#13;
Weekly Editorial Review&#13;
Children's Page&#13;
Weekly Article on the Care&#13;
of the Health&#13;
Notes on Current Events and&#13;
Nature aria* Science&#13;
Anecdotes and Miscellany __&#13;
Will fill the pages-of The Youth's&#13;
Companion during 1906.&#13;
niuttratrd Announcement for 1S0G and&#13;
Sample Copies of the paper sent Free.&#13;
THE YOUTH'S COMPANION. Boston, Mass.&#13;
Vt» embseriptfoM X«e«iv«d tt TkU Oftot.&#13;
Hewitt's O Salvo&#13;
For PUee, Burns, tores*&#13;
fttMitmn eaUarftr ^ »»&#13;
jUiaaat Exeartloe to Chicago T U The&#13;
tirand Tmak Railway System&#13;
Extremely low fares to Chicago and&#13;
return on aTt trttBY,"~¥hortdty, Oe4.&#13;
26,1905. Return limit Oct. 30, 1905.&#13;
For fares and farther particulars con*&#13;
suit local anient or write to GEO. W.&#13;
V AUX, A. G. P. &amp; T. A., Chicago, III.&#13;
Do not be deceived" by counterfeits&#13;
when yon boy Witch Hazel Salve.&#13;
Tikfl_nAme of E C, DeWitt &amp; Co. is on&#13;
efery box of the genuine. Piles in&#13;
their worst form will soon pass away&#13;
if you apply DeWitt's Witch Hazel&#13;
Saive nigbt and morning. Best for&#13;
cut*, burns, boa la, tetter, eczema, ete.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
Uameseekers Excursions rta Chicago&#13;
Great XS\ stent Railway&#13;
to points in Arizona, Arkansas, Assiniboin,&#13;
British Columbia, Canadian&#13;
Northwest, Colorado, Idaho, Indian&#13;
Territory, Iowa, Kansas, Manitoba,&#13;
Mexico, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana,&#13;
Nebraska, Nevadap New Mexico^&#13;
North and 8outb Dakota, Ore«or,&#13;
Texas, Washington and Wyoming at&#13;
prftfttly reduced rates for the r:und&#13;
trip. Tickets on sale theTrst ai d | po^Tnir less&#13;
third Tuesdays of each month. Fcr&#13;
further information apply, to P. R.&#13;
rosier, T. P. A., 115 Adams S t ,&#13;
Chicago, 111. • 150&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
Digests what you eat.&#13;
W P R N W One Chance&#13;
Hundred&#13;
ihance In a T&#13;
mdred For Life }&#13;
mi &gt;' * • n 1»' » » &gt; »'•&lt; !»••! • • 1 ie (g)&#13;
\ AH-£* fcnew .waa tliuL h&lt;?. wnst ftliye.&#13;
aboard the onr nud tlsere was lsope.&#13;
When he reached 1lie city the trninaien&#13;
offered to call nn--«rhbn1:.mce- for&#13;
Dim. but he said be felt strong enough&#13;
to get hom-v alone. He got upon his&#13;
teet and, r*Hlsting with nil his will a&#13;
disposition to faiht, staggered ont of&#13;
the car. When be bad passed the gate&#13;
without being stopped he seemed to&#13;
gather new rigor, walked briskly out&#13;
of the station and boarded a trolley.&#13;
He has never l&gt;eeu beard from by&#13;
the nohce. bit bis friends aver that&#13;
beyand bis wife are living under an&#13;
issnmed name In a foreign land.&#13;
CHARLOTTJ SHERWOOD.&#13;
Subscribe for the Pinckney Dispatch.&#13;
All the news for $1.00 per year.&#13;
THC oaiemAt viwunva OOUOH ****+•;&#13;
KEWEDY'SUXATIVEHOIEY-TAsV&#13;
* [Orifirinah]&#13;
It was'the old story of a murder,&#13;
circumstantial evidence, a legal duel&#13;
between, the state attorney and counsel&#13;
for the defense, with a defeat for&#13;
the latter and an 'innocent man sentenced&#13;
to death.&#13;
How a few days before the sentence&#13;
was* to have been carried out he got&#13;
out of jail was never certainly known,&#13;
though It was admitted at the prison&#13;
that ids wife was admitted to see him,&#13;
ind when she went away a keeper remarked&#13;
that she looked taller than&#13;
when she went In, and another, .seeing&#13;
ler get on to a trolley car, noticed that&#13;
&gt;he wore heavy boots. The rest of the&#13;
itory goes that the wife was found&#13;
locked in the prisoner's ceil alone.&#13;
Me had been hiding during the day&#13;
md had beard them beating the bush&#13;
iH_ about him. Several times be beieved&#13;
that in a few mlnufeslfff would I *""". .•-,-. . . TT -jr *~~*L T ~ T&#13;
perfect digestant. It digests the food&#13;
SBS Railroad Guide&#13;
ae dragged from his biding place. But&#13;
while ineu are much more intelligent&#13;
lhan dogs there are cases where dogs&#13;
aaay throw men into a contrast of stupidity.&#13;
His pursuers could not smell&#13;
aim. \&#13;
Night camel and under its friendly&#13;
Dover he left] a region where he was&#13;
known to be" and must certainly be&#13;
iiscovered ouythe morrow, if not during&#13;
the night. \CrawHug under bushes&#13;
!&gt;etween two mAn set to watch for him,&#13;
lie stole through their line and ran&#13;
with all the strength he had left after&#13;
two days' fast till he came to a farmtiouse.&#13;
There, knowing that he must&#13;
iave_fQod for strength to struggle further,&#13;
he went boldly in, asked for a&#13;
supper and ate his fill. Then he startad&#13;
on with one, and only one, advantage—&#13;
strength. But his chances were&#13;
A PENNY INYBSTED IN A P O S T A L C A R D W I L L .&#13;
B R I N G YOU I N F O R M A T I O N&#13;
O F T H E S E R V I C E O F F E R E D B Y T H E&#13;
G R 5 A T CENTRAL,&#13;
C. H. St D . - P B R E M A R Q U T T E - C . D.St L.&#13;
TO THE SUNNY SOUTH BEST LINE TO&#13;
FlopfHa Afthttville N e w O P -&#13;
leans Cuba&#13;
We will t«l»e pleasure in having one of our representatives call on you aud&#13;
anspge all details of your tiip; check your baggage through, procure your sleeping&#13;
car reservations, and arrange for your genernl comfort.&#13;
Address either&#13;
L&#13;
D. G. E D W A R D S ,&#13;
P. T. M., C. H. &amp; D.,&#13;
t 44 Cincinnati, Ohio.&#13;
H. F. MOEUbBR,&#13;
G. P. A., Pere Marquette,&#13;
Detroit, Michigan.&#13;
yft"'- *- I&#13;
Th* dnadtd Wash Day-no mora. Washing mads sasy by&#13;
THE l-V WASHING TABLETS Will not iidnre the finertftkbric*.&#13;
They are striotiy free from adds&#13;
Of any kind.&#13;
Theydotbeworkwithocttmbbing.&#13;
They make-the olothee white.&#13;
-They can be used in hard water.&#13;
They save time and the hard&#13;
work on washday. They are India*&#13;
pensible for C^imezpaneBJLaoe Curtains&#13;
and Trimmings. They win&#13;
remove stains from Table Ljnen&#13;
with absolutely no rubbmf. They&#13;
are economical to use, l&gt;ecan*e&#13;
etoflm ar*&gt; more worn put on toe&#13;
washboard than by ictual weSK&#13;
They are sold on their merits.&#13;
Save tour WrtDDeri. We offer aftnelineofpremiums. For saJebyypurgrowr. price 5 c .&#13;
UV WASHuRrTABLET CO., Inc, WBw^25l N. Ff^t8C.&gt;Phnad6lpiilSa,FeiiB.&#13;
. • ^ '&#13;
A TRINITY OF TREASURES&#13;
Triple Extract of Violet, French Roses Concentrate,&#13;
Imperial Hair Tonic. Three High Grade Essentials&#13;
to the Toilet at the price oi one ot them alone, v b i&#13;
¢1.00.&#13;
We manufacture and sell these goods direct to&#13;
the consumer, thus cutting' out the profita of the&#13;
middlemen.&#13;
RflOULAR RETAIL PRIOI T&#13;
Triple Violet Extract . . . ,50&#13;
French Rosea Concentrate • • t.00&#13;
., Afakea a quarts exquiaiU toilet water.)&#13;
Imperial Hair Tonic • • • .50 .&#13;
: &lt;v; ' • - |a.oo ' .&#13;
Our Rrtoo for thoThr«t&gt;-ONS DOLLAR.&#13;
A S.yint to YOU el 100 Per C u t Is'nt it Worth Wsik?&#13;
Write to «a ier descriptive Uteratereef taese articles.&#13;
TU CINCIMHAT, PtRRJUE COJ^ClaeJaaatKOple,&#13;
Suddenly he stumbled Into a depression&#13;
and fell. His hands struck&#13;
smooth iron and he kuew he was on&#13;
a railroad. He got up and walked on&#13;
the track, soon comlug to a point where&#13;
he could see a station a few hundred&#13;
yards from him. It was lighted, and&#13;
a single mau walked back and forth&#13;
on the platform. The fugitive watched&#13;
him, suspecting that he was there to&#13;
prevent bis escape by train. If he&#13;
could only get aboard without the&#13;
man seeing him he would have a further&#13;
a u d ' a better chance tbau before&#13;
to escape. A way train came along&#13;
and stopped at the statiou, but it was&#13;
closely watched, and he did not dare&#13;
try to get on. The watcher went&#13;
through it, and when It bud gone left&#13;
the station. Doubtless there could be&#13;
no other train for some time.&#13;
Two bams passed. A man drove up&#13;
to the station in a buggy and dragged&#13;
a big bag to a post beside the track&#13;
a short distance.* from the station and&#13;
attached it to a beum projecting from&#13;
the post. It was the mail bag placed&#13;
iu position to be caught by an express&#13;
train.&#13;
There is no such nourisneT&#13;
no self preservation-.—All that man is&#13;
today may be traced to his one instinct.&#13;
The hunted man knew that by&#13;
and by an express train would pass,&#13;
an iron hook on the mail car would&#13;
be adjusted and catch the bag around&#13;
the center and It would be caught and&#13;
swung Into the car.&#13;
The idea flashed into the fugitive's&#13;
brain, "Cau I be swung on to the train&#13;
with this bag?" He calculated the&#13;
chances, and concluded that tbey were&#13;
about as follows: Death, ninety;&#13;
thrown beside the track maimed, nine;&#13;
taken in alive and* recovering from&#13;
wounds, one.&#13;
While he was deliberating there came&#13;
from a distance the bark of a dog, followed&#13;
by another and another till their&#13;
number was lost in a confusion of baying.&#13;
His pursuers had secured bloodhounds&#13;
and his capture was now certain.&#13;
Hark—the distant rattle of a train!&#13;
It must be the express. The man's&#13;
mind is made up. He will take the&#13;
one chance in a hundred.&#13;
When his wife had taken his place&#13;
in prison she had brought him a rope&#13;
and a knife. These were all the articles&#13;
he had asked for and be had had&#13;
as yet no use for them. Taking the&#13;
rope from his pocket, he went to the&#13;
post, .stood on a platfQjm_J?ej\eath It&#13;
and began to lash himself to the bag.&#13;
He first tied a part of the rope around&#13;
the bottom of the bag, then lashed bis&#13;
body under his arms to the upper part&#13;
of the bag and, lastly, wormed his feet&#13;
Into the rope about the bottom. This&#13;
left his middle free.&#13;
The barking Qt the dogs and the&#13;
rattle of the train came nearer, though&#13;
from different directions. It was the&#13;
train alone In which he was Interested.&#13;
Having finished his lashing,, he turned&#13;
with the bag, which, finally settling,&#13;
brought his face to the track. Without&#13;
this his one chauce would have&#13;
been lost. As the train thundered&#13;
near he bent his body like a bow.&#13;
When the book struck the bag It&#13;
(truck out his consciousness. When&#13;
be regained his senses he was lying&#13;
on the floor of the mall car with sereral&#13;
trainmen standing over him. His&#13;
pursuers would not have known him,&#13;
lit hlft face VNW drenched In blood.&#13;
• '"T*" i&#13;
Every once of food you eat that fails&#13;
to digest does a pounJ 0: harm. lb&#13;
turds tbe entire meal info poison. This&#13;
not only deprives tBe blood of the necessary&#13;
tiasne building material; but it&#13;
poisons It. Kodol Dyspepsia^Core ij a&#13;
regardless ot the condition of tbe stomach.&#13;
It allows that organ to. rest&#13;
and get strong again. Relieves belch*&#13;
ing, heart burn, soar stomach, indigestion&#13;
palpitation of the heart, etc.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
_£L. ,**-&#13;
JM"*&#13;
All the news for $1.00 per year.&#13;
She gmrktuu gtepattb.&#13;
rCSUSBKD BVXBT THUatDAV VOKSMe BT&#13;
F R A N K 1-. A N D R E W S &lt;St&gt; C O .&#13;
EOITOM Ana PROWMtTOWS.&#13;
Subscription Price SI in Advance.&#13;
Catered st tae PoatoSce at Piackaey, Michigan&#13;
as second-class matter&#13;
—Ad fritting rajgs made known on application.&#13;
Baelness Cards. $4.00 per year.&#13;
.Death and marriage uotices published tree.&#13;
Announcements of entertalaiaents may be paid&#13;
(or, If desired, by pMsentin^tae office with tickets&#13;
of admission. In case tickets are not I rjujfht&#13;
l o tbe office, regular rates willbe charjrcdT&#13;
All matter in local notice column willbe cu*rgd&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
insertion, where no time is specified, all notlcei&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be chSTged for accordingly. |^r* All changes&#13;
of advertisement* MUST reach this office as early&#13;
as TCSSDAT morning to insure so Insertion th*&#13;
•ame week.&#13;
JOB f&gt;8ZJVZMVG/&#13;
In all its branches, a specialty. We bar*all kinds&#13;
and tbe latest styles or Type, etc., which enablts&#13;
us to execute all kinds of work, such as Books*&#13;
Pampleta, Posters, Programmes. Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, Statements. Cards, Auction Bills, etc.,in&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prieeses&#13;
low as good work can be none.&#13;
ALL BILLS PATA.BLR FIRM OF BTS»T MOUTH.&#13;
PEPE MARQUETTE&#13;
Zy.eXtoet^sVps. S O , I t O B .&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon as followt.&#13;
For Detroit and East,&#13;
10:48 a. m.. 2:19 p. m. 8.58 p . m.&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North andWest,&#13;
9:26 a. m.. 2:19 p. ''*'"&#13;
For Saginaw and Bay&#13;
10:48 a. m., 2:19 p.&#13;
ForToledoVand Sooth, . "" """"&#13;
10:49 a. m., 2:19 p.m.,&#13;
P a l i * BAT, " _ H. P. MOBLLEB,&#13;
Agent, South Lyon. &lt;*. P. A., Detroit,&#13;
ttrand T r a i l Railway System.&#13;
East Bopnd from Fines ney&#13;
No-8S Passenger Ex. Hnadsy, 9:28 A. X.&#13;
»o. 80 Passenger Ex. Bonds/, 4:S5P, If.&#13;
Ve»t Bmrd first Pin*kmy&#13;
No. 27 PanMnter Ex. Sunday, 10:01 A M.&#13;
No. 2» F»iffPgerEj,»und»y. 6:44 P. It'&#13;
W. H.Clark, Agent,&#13;
THE VtLIAGS DIRECTORY&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBSSIDSHT W. H. Placeway&#13;
TacsTacs Ruben Finch, James Bocae,&#13;
Will Kennedy Sr , Alfred htoaks,&#13;
F. 1). Johnson, M. Roche.&#13;
CLKUK &amp;o*a Head&#13;
T s u s o u s F.Q. Jackson&#13;
ABSBSSOB ° : ^ J ^ 1 " ^&#13;
Sramn COMMISSIOKBE Alfred Monks&#13;
ii*«x.TUUfr.caa Dr. H. r~. M*ler&#13;
•ATTUBirgT L. K. Howiait —&#13;
M^«HAI.I. S. Broken&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
aTHODlST EPISCOPAL CUUKCfl.&#13;
ck Service)&#13;
Sunday etery evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at&#13;
ing service.&#13;
l u Kev. B. AEmerick pastor. Services every&#13;
Q»V morning at lo:3o, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thura&#13;
Sunday senool at close of morn&#13;
MIMMABV VAMFLUT, Supt.&#13;
GlOautiKGAflONAL CHUBCH.&#13;
i Kev. G. W. Mylne pastor. Service eyerj&#13;
Sunday ruorning at MlM and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meetingThure&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at close of morn&#13;
ln« service. Kev. K. H. Crate, Supt„ Mocco&#13;
Teeple Sec.&#13;
iy j \ MAKE'S 'J ATHOulC CHUftUH.&#13;
&gt; Rev. M. J. Commerford, 1'astor. liervlces&#13;
ftvery Sunday. Low mass at7:SOo'clock&#13;
fttgU mass with sermon at 9;36a. m.^jCatecblsm&#13;
a a :00 p. m., vespers ana benediction sTC :S0 p. m&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A. O. H. Society of this place, meets ever j&#13;
third Sunday intue Pr. Mattnew Hail.&#13;
John Tuomey and M. T. Kelly. County Delegates&#13;
mHU W. C T. U. meets the tiret Friday of each&#13;
± month at ••i'.X p. m. at the home of 1&gt;I. H. b\&#13;
Mgler. Everyone interested in temperance ie&#13;
coadtsily invited. Mrs. Leal Sigler, Pres; Mn,&#13;
Etta Durtee, Secretary'.&#13;
The C. T. A- and B. society of this place, n»e*&#13;
ever,&#13;
thew Hall.&#13;
X every third Saturaay evening in the Kr. Mat-&#13;
John Uonohae, T resident.&#13;
KNIGHTS OP MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet ever v Friday evening on or before full&#13;
of the moon at their ball in the Swertuout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
L. E. SMITH, Sir Knight Commands!&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 7*7* A^ A. M. Kegular&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
tnef ull of the moon. Kirk VanWlnkle. W. M&#13;
RDER OF EASTEEN STAB meeteeach month&#13;
e Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
. meeting, Mss. Emu. CBAXS, W. M. 0 the&#13;
&amp;A.M&#13;
OltLER OF MODERN WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
first Tnursday evening ofeaoh Month in the&#13;
Maccabee hall. C. L, Grimes V. C.&#13;
T ADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet every Is&#13;
J j and 3rd Saturday of each month at 8:80 p m a&#13;
KTO.T. M. hall. VisiUng aUters oordiaily in&#13;
vited. Li LA CQNIWAY, Lady Com,&#13;
KNIGHTS or TUB LOYAL GUARD&#13;
F.L. Andrews P. M, ^ L&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. f. SrOUCR M. O* C. L. SIGLER M, D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons. All calls promptly&#13;
attended to day or night. Office) on Main street&#13;
Pinckney, Mieh.&#13;
fi&#13;
Gray Hair is a bar to employment and to&#13;
pleasure, but there is relief from it in these&#13;
days. It can be restored to its natural color&#13;
tjy nsing Mia. R, W. Allen's Vita Hair Color.&#13;
Restorer. It is not a dye but in a natural Tray&#13;
it acts in the roots, compelling the secretion&#13;
of the pigments that give life and color to the&#13;
hair in three days. It Is not sticky or greasy-no&#13;
odor; doesn't stain the scalp. ABSOLUTELY&#13;
HARMLESS, fl.00 a bottle. All druggists.&#13;
FLORIMELLA&#13;
CREAM&#13;
^s^sTmflsBWVRsw*&#13;
ion. 80 cents at your druggists,&#13;
prepaid on receipt of price. •&#13;
MARK W. ALLEN A CO.&#13;
Detroit, Mich.&#13;
or seat&#13;
NELSON'S&#13;
ANT|-PA!N:S0L!D 1 * "&#13;
LINIMENI&#13;
A qnick and effective care 1&#13;
atism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lnrnt&#13;
ache and other nervous pains ai&#13;
any part of the body. If ;y ou any of the above ills, we say in five our worthy ANTl-PADC&#13;
MENT » fair trial.&#13;
AJfTI-PAIN SOLTD LlNIMMi* «&#13;
| is a neat box in paste form, diflsfejst -&#13;
other liniments, " Yes, indeed," H l i&#13;
I precious to lose by breakage or spillini.&#13;
I All yon have to do is to apply a little of I&#13;
this liniment to the effected parts to relieve [&#13;
I the pain instantly,, which eventually per-]&#13;
forms a permanent cure.&#13;
We guarantee ANTI-PAIN SOLID LTNj&#13;
I MENT to do all we claim for it; or money&#13;
I refunded.&#13;
Send for a box to-day and have Hon head&#13;
i in case of emergency, yon will be mote I&#13;
! than pleased with tbe result.&#13;
Price 25 Cents.&#13;
For sale by onr agents or yon may order I&#13;
direct from us. Sent postpaid on receipt of I&#13;
price. Agents wanted everywhere, write [&#13;
for tcnua.&#13;
HENRY NELSON &amp; CO., Eckvoll, Minn* j&#13;
•m&#13;
:i*tm&gt;&#13;
RED CHIEF&#13;
Corn Shelter. Patented.&#13;
Clamps oa Barrel,&#13;
aseasHyasoflBox.&#13;
Adjust* Itself to&#13;
aay siie ear.&#13;
Hopper&#13;
J f ^ * M II eaiaftsv.&#13;
Is gaaraateed to do aa Mod If not&#13;
better work thai aay tbetter oa the&#13;
market. Throws cobs outside every&#13;
time. Cold rolled steel axle. Requires&#13;
no wrench. Shells popcorn splendidly&#13;
by tightening tension on spnne^ An&#13;
repairs furnished fre« of charge. jEvery.&#13;
farmer should have one. For safe by&#13;
hardware and implement dealers. '&#13;
MANUFACTURED BY' *•;«••'&#13;
BRINLY-HAROY CO., I&#13;
Lotievllle, Ry., U. 8. A.&#13;
*?'••?&#13;
iytf&lt;&#13;
—•-m&#13;
tr&#13;
*.,&#13;
J&#13;
^&#13;
.J.&#13;
mmlm&#13;
saw.*****. W T&#13;
-»""?;•.*? * *£«*:&lt;%&#13;
«••• . . , ; « V i ' - - .••• . . . . . ,&#13;
: , * • " ; • - &lt; * : ' . , . ' : - ' • - •&#13;
bfe';&#13;
^ ^ V " ?&#13;
r« ;?..-.;v.&#13;
• ' - • « i - ' ; - ••&#13;
• • • &gt;&#13;
T 5 T —&#13;
&amp;&#13;
M •»&#13;
II&#13;
h ^ '"'&#13;
'*-«&#13;
•V i ? , ^ '&#13;
#&#13;
* T B ^ ^ T ff^rMlWMm ™ " :&#13;
A. VWhu* of the bowels to carry off the&#13;
VMM matter wale* MM 1« th* alimentary oaaal&#13;
where it deoeysaadbaisoasthe entire oysteao.&#13;
Breatually the reaolta MO death wader the&#13;
• of eome other dieeoae. Note the deaths&#13;
typhoid (awe* and sypeneUntis. stomach&#13;
4V Weait cMaiss*3seesieeslQer&#13;
V.. la rashes* ta^fee call ef aatore&#13;
Lack or fiMcetek7 jtseeanlve brain&#13;
»talesaveta*anttlaproperdlet.&#13;
^ 5 j j f » # e . e j t * * « JSaalta jef jotfeoted gear*,&#13;
aay other digaue, II caaeae rheumatism, colds,&#13;
rarer*, s**ne*S, bowel, kktoey, l wag end heart&#13;
arotfldea, eta i t 1» the one disease that starts&#13;
«U others. Indlgeetiaa.e^epepeis^die^hee^loji&#13;
ol Bleep end strength axe ita eymptowe—pUet^&#13;
apcwodlelttt and Sesnla, are caused by Oooaupax&#13;
ttoa. Ite cotxsecjneneas are known to all pnyateiaas,&#13;
but fewaosTerers reattaetbnlr condition&#13;
vmtU it is too lata. Women become ooaflnBWJ'&#13;
IsW jftJUf o ***** of Ooaettpetloa.&#13;
^VWbhytielana reeognlso this?&#13;
A . ' I p L Theflrstqoeetlonyoqrdoctor aaka&#13;
f a e y y s y p s oonetipaMMir That la the secret&#13;
~ wvCl*&gt;^e«redt&#13;
A- Yes, Witt proper treatment. The oomnion&#13;
•rror Is to retort to pajatoe, saoh aa pills, salts,&#13;
xalnem water, cantor oil, injections, etc., every&#13;
of. which Is injnrtooa. They weaken&#13;
and.&#13;
vans W&#13;
Inereaae the malady, You know this by your&#13;
own experience, .&#13;
Q. What tben'ahonld be done to cure It •&#13;
A. Getabouieof atoll's GrapeTonlo at once.&#13;
Mull's Grape Itonjo will positively cure Consti*&#13;
patton and Stomach Trouble In the shortest&#13;
apace of time. No other remedy has before been&#13;
known to cure Constipation positively and per*&#13;
manently.&#13;
Q. What is Mull's Grape Tonic?&#13;
A. It is a Compound with 40 per oent of the&#13;
juice qt Oonoord Grapes. It exerts a peculiar&#13;
aCrengthentog, healing infiuenoe upon the intestines,&#13;
so that they oan do their work unaided.&#13;
The process is gradual but sure. It Is not a fsysk, but it ewree Constipation. Dysentery,&#13;
tomach and Bowel Trouble. Having a rioh,&#13;
fruity grape flavor, it is pleasant to take. As a&#13;
tonic ft is unequalled, insuring the system&#13;
against disease. It strengthens and builds up&#13;
waste tissue •— —&#13;
Q When oan Mull's Grape Tonic be had ?&#13;
A, Your druggist sells it. Tho dollar bottle&#13;
contains nearly throe, times the 50-cent size.&#13;
, Chfdjfta Ailing (JtiUrea and Hmsisg Mothsrs.&#13;
A free bottle 'c ill who have never used tt&#13;
because we, know it will ear* you.&#13;
124- FRI-E BOTTLE. 11405&#13;
Send this coupon with your name and address&#13;
and your druggist's name, for a free&#13;
bottle of Mull's Grape Tonic for Stomaoh&#13;
and Bowels, to&#13;
UNIX'S OBAPK TONIC CO*&#13;
148 Third A m o a B a e k Intend, Illinois&#13;
QtV4 Fvll AMrmt and Write Ptainif.&#13;
The tl.00 bottle contains nearly three&#13;
times the 60c size. At drug stores;&#13;
INSURANCE 13 TOO HIGH&#13;
AND SO NEEDS SOME&#13;
RBGlil^ATION.&#13;
MR. W A T R W VIEW Of M A T T E R&#13;
8 * N A T © R AM3ER WIUlI NOT RE-&#13;
8&lt;Q»J » E f 0 R E T H E COMPLE?&#13;
T W t l OF HI8 f I R M ,&#13;
Btuton H a r b o r . Worwan Horr*Jy&#13;
•' Burnad b ^ Fall on 8^ove—Kal*»&#13;
mazoo Molder Murderad In&#13;
Oakland. CaJIfomia.&#13;
Representative Arthur J. Waters, of&#13;
Manchester, wants the legislature to&#13;
look Into the Are Insurance business&#13;
of Michigan at t h e next session. H e&#13;
s a y s : "It i s well known that t h e ftre&#13;
insurance companies doing business&#13;
la this state are banded into one vast&#13;
combine for the purpose of forcing&#13;
tribute from the people. Although the&#13;
ratio of losses paid to premiums received&#13;
has stood at 46 per cent in&#13;
Michigan for the last three years, the&#13;
new system of scheduling each Individual&#13;
risk is doing some remarkable&#13;
things.&#13;
"The effect the central board has In&#13;
making 'advisory rates,* which are&#13;
really compulsory rates, is to destroy&#13;
competition and put the premiums as&#13;
high a s possible. In the last session I&#13;
introduced house bill No. 740, file No.&#13;
250, for the purpose, among others, of&#13;
compelling fire insurance companies, t o&#13;
do business on a competitive basis, and&#13;
to destroy all combinations between&#13;
them. I succeeded in having the bill&#13;
printed, but I was not able to get it&#13;
committee. -=• •—*- .^=^&#13;
"I think the fire Insurance compan&#13;
l e s of Michigan ought to be investlgav&#13;
ed, and If it is my fortune to return&#13;
t o the house, something along that&#13;
line will be doing if it is in ray power&#13;
t o do it."&#13;
as a date and number stamped on&#13;
Msmyour druggist.&#13;
« M M P M *&#13;
_ Weals,&#13;
'When Hog*** 4tar*«nw was a boy&#13;
o n e of his m a t e s said t o him one Saturday:&#13;
"Come, Hod, let's go fishing."&#13;
""Let's do our stent first," w a s young&#13;
Horace's characteristic reply. Even&#13;
in his youth he wanted t o get somet&#13;
h i n k done promptly and well. What&#13;
w/onder is it that w h e n he became a&#13;
m a n , and an editor of one of the most&#13;
powerful journals jn America, he still&#13;
wanted to do something with his paper,&#13;
to have it strike heavy blows in&#13;
-behalf of human freedom, happiness.&#13;
a«nnrrtt pprrnnggrrppaaaa?? AAnndd aannyy ^mmaann Wv. ho&#13;
che r i she s high Ideals of usStnftre ss-&#13;
•and governs his life by them will&#13;
n e v e r be accused of going through&#13;
motions. H e will be able, on the othe&#13;
r hand, to point to something done&#13;
when the s u m m o n s c o m e s to go up&#13;
.higher.&#13;
HEALTHY CHILDREN.&#13;
"Without good health life is not&#13;
w o r t h living. Sickly, pee ?ish children&#13;
are a source of endless trouble&#13;
and anxiety to their paredts, yet the&#13;
children's condition is frequently due&#13;
t o their parents' ignorance or thoughtl&#13;
e s s n e s s , or both.&#13;
T o make children healthy and to&#13;
Jkeep them i n that condition it is nec-&#13;
•essary to feed them proper food and&#13;
to s e e that they g e t - p l e n t y of exerc&#13;
i s e and fresh air. Meat is very bad&#13;
if or children: It should be avoided&#13;
:and food rich l a phosphates, such a s&#13;
eJatuld be given in&#13;
X M f t t * 4 to ttvJr A e "meat of the&#13;
wftpaLSrwft to M a t t by the world's&#13;
g r e a t e s t - m i l l e r s and it is free from&#13;
artificial coloring or adulteration. It&#13;
Is not especially a child's food. Tour&#13;
w h o l e family will enjoy this common&#13;
s e n s e eereaL It m a k e s a wholesome,&#13;
aabstaaUal breakfast or a n appetizi&#13;
n g dessert and c a n be prepared in&#13;
— o n e hundred different-ways,&#13;
Every good grocer will supply you&#13;
-with Pillsbury's Vltos. Large package—&#13;
enough to m a k e twelve pounds&#13;
of strength-building ' food 15c. Ask&#13;
.your grocer about it to-day.&#13;
Alger Won't Resign.&#13;
"There's nothing at all in the report&#13;
that Senator Alger will resign before&#13;
t h e end of his term," s a y s Congreso&#13;
man William Alden Smith, who had a&#13;
conference with the senator. "He&#13;
seem8 to be in better health than for&#13;
some time and will certainly hold his&#13;
place,"-&#13;
Mr. Smith said he s a w the senaloi&#13;
In reference to matters of patronage,&#13;
but would n o t state -what they were.&#13;
"Grand Rapids will g e t all that Is&#13;
coming to it," is all he would say.&#13;
Shockingly Burned.&#13;
Mrs. Lewis Larson fell across a gasoline&#13;
stove Saturday morning, sustaining&#13;
injuries from which s h e cannot recover.&#13;
S h e was getting a meal on the&#13;
stove when she was stricken with a n&#13;
epileptic fit and fell into the fire. Her&#13;
hair was-burned off; her face and neck&#13;
disfigured, and her back from the&#13;
shoulders to the waist i s a crisp. T h e&#13;
w o m a n was round on tne "floor with&#13;
her clothing burning , when her hus&#13;
band returned from the store.&#13;
Killed With An Ax.&#13;
Fred C. Turner, an iron molder oi&#13;
Kalamazoo, was found murdered a&#13;
few miles south of Oakland, Cal. The&#13;
discovery of the body w a s made by&#13;
Hugh Manaman, of Fruitville. Turner&#13;
had been assailed by a n unknown a s&#13;
sassln, armed with an ax, and the victim&#13;
w a s frightfully mangled. N o clue&#13;
to the murderer has been found.&#13;
Efforts t o definitely locate Turner In&#13;
Kalamazoo have been without resulf.s,&#13;
except it is known that Fred C. Turner,&#13;
a" factory hand, went west about&#13;
eight years ago, but his present whereabouts&#13;
are not known.&#13;
*a$H «,'&#13;
U n n a a o n l u g Femininity.&#13;
A girl thinks sat) l i k e s her lover to&#13;
4m,**»*#*.;Saat a n d sensible, but how&#13;
J|flB**fc4'pe if o * w r o t e her that kind&#13;
«fc l l s t t t g y Cleveland Leader.&#13;
•••r.-r'.ir. &lt; • * # # •&#13;
JOaatar for A l a * i F o o ^ E a a t&#13;
A powder. I t r e a U t a ^ a a t . O o m S w o U g * .&#13;
Sore, Hoi, Caikma, A e h i n g , S w U n g Feet&#13;
•vadlagrowiof Mail*. A i a i l Drn«fi»U and&#13;
a a w a a t o r t * , « g « r t f c A o c « p t a « e ^&#13;
Sexapto mailed r B S a V A M m a , Aliao 6 .&#13;
Olaisted, La9ft*,M.Y.&#13;
U n i t s *&#13;
i r h e r e a r e l$6*vM0 pensioners on&#13;
^ r o l i r * m U M t a 4 S u t s s V m n -&#13;
te»A^rat&lt;&gt;lylaf i ^ . 0 B t t a y of 1140,000,- 4k«&#13;
Smallpox Expense.&#13;
It cost Eaton county )2,383.24 for&#13;
smallpox and, other contagious diseases&#13;
for the nine months ending October&#13;
1, and there Is talk of the county&#13;
building a hospital for the exclusive&#13;
care of this disease. T h e tramp e v i l ,&#13;
and Charlotte is a mecca for the hobo&#13;
fracternlty, is lost sight of compared&#13;
with this expense. During the nine&#13;
months not a death from smallpox&#13;
w a s reported.&#13;
Fatally Shot-&#13;
It Is believed that Roy Evans, a&#13;
10-year-old lad of Horton township,&#13;
cannot survive the injuries to his face&#13;
and head caused by the accidental discharge&#13;
of hisni&gt;rdtherTs BTbtgunT H i s&#13;
right ear w a s torn off, t h e whole side&#13;
of hie face was lacerated, and it U believed&#13;
s o m e shot penetrated h i s shall.&#13;
John Evans, an older brother, Had left&#13;
t h e gun standing where his younger&#13;
brothei* could reach It.&#13;
The offer of the P e r e Marquette to&#13;
furnish a train to carry farmers' institute&#13;
workers along i t s Hne this wint&#13;
e r bag been accepted by the state&#13;
board of agriculture.&#13;
Motor engines t o pull whole trains&#13;
of cars i s to "be the method of t h e&#13;
Detroit-Bay City Traction Co. T h e&#13;
work of grading will begin next week.&#13;
T h e road 1» to he finished t o Car© by&#13;
Jaa. 1,&#13;
Rev. F. M. Coddlngton, of Quincy,&#13;
Mich., h a s been called t o t h e Presbyterian&#13;
church of Plainwell, Rev. F. Z.&#13;
Roaslter, the oldest minister 1¾ t h e&#13;
s t * t » In p o i n t * ; **rvi&lt;m l i v i n g r t - oently resignet.&#13;
MICHIGAN ITEMS.&#13;
James 'Vffi&lt;ffi4tf^iTJ^tf'"imc&#13;
it years,&#13;
Charles Gaige, onoe a wealthy m a n&#13;
of Hlllsdala, hut of late an m a t t e r s *&#13;
t h e county house, c o m m i t t e d suicide.&#13;
Gas w a s found Oft t h e farm of Geo*&#13;
Fox, near Warrei*. A s t r e a m W feet&#13;
high is biasing a s It flows from a tourinch&#13;
pipe. . &gt; ,. ^ r ."^.-wrl&#13;
Mrs, Eva, Marsh, of Three Oaks,&#13;
committed suicide a t Frankfort, IwL,&#13;
by drinking chloroform. S h e h a d bteft&#13;
deserted by h e r husband. &gt; .&#13;
The Pere Marquette depot in Mears&#13;
w a s robbed Wednesday nlgaL Thi%&#13;
safe w a s blown t o pieces, ajad the robbers&#13;
got abput $?00. . VMr.&#13;
HarVey B a l l e y , r a « M ^ ~ y ! » » T s r »&#13;
prominent farmer living near Hillsdale,&#13;
w a s found dead In h i s cornfield&#13;
Thursday. Apoplexy w a s t h e causa.&#13;
An epidemic of diphtheria h a s caused&#13;
four deaths and there are numerous&#13;
c a s e s in the St. Mary's lake community,&#13;
eight miles e a s t of P e n t w a t e r . s&#13;
Menominee does n o t want a repetition&#13;
of her recent storm experience,&#13;
a j ^ - W i i r t r y t o secure a government&#13;
breakwateT^~proTect docks a n d shipping.&#13;
Gov. Warner has issued a requisition&#13;
for Lucius Sluk, of Port Huron, w h o&#13;
is charged with having abandoned his&#13;
wife and children. Sink is under arrest&#13;
in Toledo.&#13;
Flora V., t h e gasoline fishing boat&#13;
missing from South H a v e n for 36&#13;
hours, reported at St. Joe, having&#13;
broken down and then making port,&#13;
under a small sail.&#13;
Lansing artillerymen of the First&#13;
battery, M. N. G., will establish a&#13;
school for the study of military subjects&#13;
and the scientific handling of&#13;
the long range guns.&#13;
Wm. Blackford, of Yale, the other&#13;
d a y read a n Item that application, had&#13;
been made to send him to the Eastern&#13;
Michigan asylum, and he ha»&#13;
been missing ever since.&#13;
, Adjt. Gen. McGurrin wishes to oblalu&#13;
the leeurds of the Michigan soldiers&#13;
and sailors w h o served in regim&#13;
e n t s of other states In the Cuban&#13;
war and in the Philippines.&#13;
Navigation of the Grand river at&#13;
Grand Rapids reopens with an excursion&#13;
by the board of trade on t h e n e w&#13;
river steamer Grand, to Claybanks, 12&#13;
miles down the river, for an autumn&#13;
picnic.&#13;
An attempt w a s m a d e t a burglarise&#13;
the post office at Alma Tuesday night.&#13;
The burglars had started to bore holes&#13;
around the lock In the rear door when&#13;
they were frightened away, leaving&#13;
their tools.&#13;
Peddlers, or transient merchants, do&#13;
not have to take dut a state license&#13;
under the l a w of 1905, according io&#13;
Atty.-Gen. Bird, w h o holds that the&#13;
1902 law w a s repealed and that only&#13;
a local license is. a o w .necessary.&#13;
Miss Bertha Boy les, only daughter&#13;
of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Boyles, of Charlotte,&#13;
goes to Butte, Mont., to be married&#13;
to Fred A. Clark, a Lansing man&#13;
who went west two years ago to look&#13;
after mining Interests.&#13;
Prisoners had planned a jail delivery&#13;
at the Soo, but Sheriff Lipsett&#13;
discovered the hole they had made&#13;
part way through t h e wall. Several&#13;
knives and a s a w were found.—Wm,&#13;
"&gt;w&#13;
* t M » :&gt;-•• ,J. ^,M'U • ' * * *&#13;
A oos|ai|tt4!^&#13;
"Te*~&#13;
&gt;v&lt;&#13;
^ t l ^ t w ^ b ^ ^ ^ ^ ache of&#13;
./*&gt;•&#13;
* • &lt; » '&#13;
1^&#13;
fc-&#13;
&lt;,tf&#13;
^ranlaMnn. allays the Masse_w«_wd&#13;
M&#13;
mmvymk is the duurm of the household—an tducMtor, aa eater*&#13;
ttiner p*r exccllenct, in which the entire family &amp;i Well&#13;
aa Yiaitiag frkndi pextidpate. '&#13;
You cannot afford to be withont one when you learn&#13;
how easily you can play the piano with i t Our new&#13;
catalogue now ready and mailed postpaid to any address.&#13;
The Chase Sr Bake* Co,&#13;
Factory: Buffalo, IT. Y. 2 5 0 W a b a s h A v e . , C h i c a g o&#13;
We are exclusive raaaofaotarers of the Lint Paper Music Sous for pUoo pkyets.&#13;
V&#13;
— &lt; , _ « « • • •&#13;
.••J*I&#13;
&lt; * • •&#13;
Important Subject.&#13;
H o w to manage self is an ever important&#13;
subject, but how to use one's&#13;
strength, wTieh it i s like the last flickering&#13;
match in the damp forest, is the&#13;
subject next to preparation for eternity.—&#13;
Earl M. Pratt.&#13;
eeeeeeeeeei&#13;
THE BEST COUGH CUBE&#13;
Cough syrups are all cheap&#13;
enough, but if you should g e t a&#13;
gallon of cough syrup that does not&#13;
cure for the price of a small bottle&#13;
of&#13;
Kemp's Balsam&#13;
the best cough cure, you would&#13;
have made a bad bargain—for one&#13;
small bottle of Kemp's Balsam m a y&#13;
s t o p t h e worst c o u g h and save a&#13;
life, whereas the cough "cure" that&#13;
does not cure i s worse than useless.&#13;
Sold b y all dealers at 25c. and 50c.&#13;
o&lt;*»oo»e»eoooo»»»o»eo«oee*&#13;
Klrby is on bread and w a t e r diet;&#13;
Work has been begun o n the cement&#13;
work of bridges, power house and&#13;
culverts of the Grand Rapids &amp; Kalamazoo&#13;
valley electric line. The gradlag&#13;
between Kalamazoo and Plainwell&#13;
will be completed within a month.&#13;
The victim. Millard Vealey, of Litchfield,&#13;
walked 16 m i l e s to Albion to&#13;
testify against Wm. Campbell and&#13;
John Nagle, who robbed him. They&#13;
pleaded guilty and were sentenced to&#13;
90 days each in the Detroit house of&#13;
correction.&#13;
Justice C. B. Grant, of the supreme&#13;
court, celebrated his seventieth birthday&#13;
Wednesday night by giving a din&#13;
ner to the members of the supreme&#13;
court and a few friends. Judge Grant&#13;
is still a vigorous m a n despite his advanced&#13;
years.&#13;
Miss Eliza Denham, of Flint, an accomplished&#13;
young lady, went to&#13;
Ouray, Col., for her health. She and&#13;
Miss Jeanette Lang w e n t prospecting&#13;
"just for fun," and n o w report that&#13;
they have located a claim that promises&#13;
both gold and silver.&#13;
Muskrata caused the drowning of&#13;
Louis Larke, aged 25, near Sturgis.&#13;
He went out In a boat to hunt the little&#13;
animals, and w h e n h e did not return&#13;
a search w a s made. H i s overturned&#13;
boat w a s found in the lake but&#13;
his body h a s not been recovered.&#13;
T h e 4-year-old son of E d Bvison,&#13;
two miles from Wallln, strayed 'from&#13;
home Sunday afternoon" and not returning&#13;
a t n t g f i t , t h e w h o l e n e i g h b o r *&#13;
hood and every o n e from Wallln formed&#13;
a searching party. The lad was&#13;
fomnd Tuesday in t h e depths of a&#13;
dense swamp, dirty and hungry, but&#13;
otherwise, all right. ,&lt;&#13;
Mrs. Branch, of Muskegon, married&#13;
but a short tfme, s h o w e d her inexperie&#13;
n c e with marital life when s h e poured&#13;
gasoline in a w a s h boiler on a heated&#13;
stove. T h e explosion, which followed&#13;
enveloped her in flames, but she ran&#13;
t o the yard, wrapped a n d rolled in, a&#13;
rug, and escaped with severe* burns.&#13;
The houserwas nearly destroys*.&#13;
-Second district, Woman's Relief&#13;
-Corps, in convention at Hillsdale,&#13;
elected ofllcers: President, Mr*. Cells&#13;
Westfatt, Hudson; vtoe-prastoant,&#13;
Mrs. Alma Fry, Ogden Center; treasurer,&#13;
Mrs. A m a n d a Sturgis, Hqdfton;&#13;
agate t o national convention, Sire.&#13;
ohiSNga, Palmfiraif&#13;
t o h e b ^ d l n&#13;
HIWK&#13;
The G W K T O W E W POMMEL&#13;
SLICKER&#13;
HA) s i EN ADVERTISED&#13;
AND3OLDF0RA&#13;
QUACTK OF A QNIUTC&#13;
LIKE A L L .&#13;
tOUKT&#13;
tt is made of the best&#13;
Beteriala in black or .yeto*&#13;
fully ouwanUtd. and so|« by&#13;
restate dc&amp;lcr* evcnwntr£&#13;
•TKK TO Tttt&#13;
SIGN OF THE HSR jpn^&amp;m&amp;p'1*'* avjwaa.85:&#13;
W.L.DOUGLAS&#13;
^3^4^3^ SHOES K&#13;
W . L . D o u g l a s 0 4 . O O Gilt K d g e Line)&#13;
cannot be equalled at any price.&#13;
$10,000 %b.sKS£!sr W. L. Dopglas »3.50 shoss bavs by tbdr&#13;
esllent styls, assy fitting, and eapsrferwtai.&#13;
quaiiUas, acfelavsd the Urgest lais of any S3.&#13;
*ho* ta tha wodd. Taay am last as good m&#13;
tbosa that cast yxm SS.00 ta 97.00— tCa oary&#13;
dllference Is th» prlc*. If I covld take yon Into&#13;
my factory mt Brockton, Mass., tb« largaat an&#13;
tbo world nndar OM roof making ntoa's ffata&#13;
shoos, ami show you the cars with which •very&#13;
pair ol Doagtas shoos Is snaan. yon wouM roalisa&#13;
why W. L. Dou«las S3.«0 shots are tbo bsat&#13;
sboas praducod In tho world.&#13;
III coald show yoa tho dltfarsnco between the&#13;
shoos nMdo ta mv factory and those of othar&#13;
Makes, you would understand why Douglas&#13;
Si BO shnns rest mora *t rrjT'i ^ y # h t r ^"^&#13;
When the little folks take colds&#13;
and coughs, don't neglect them&#13;
and let them strain the tender&#13;
membranes of their lungs,&#13;
Give them SHiloh's&#13;
Consumption&#13;
C u r e J&amp;cUun*&#13;
It w m cure them quickly and&#13;
strengthen their lungs.&#13;
It Is pleasant to take,&#13;
Prices, 2tct 5 0 c , and $1.00. «&#13;
^ ¾ Acbo&#13;
on I3ia snfforag endured&#13;
by women front dlatiNors&#13;
that arooansed by irTognlarity&#13;
of thorbow^la is appaHJnf.&#13;
Druggists saD tho&#13;
boiiremec^fbrsnohlsregularity.&#13;
ItisCelaryKing&#13;
thatonio-lazativa, 36c Acbo&#13;
thofr shupa, fit better, wear longer, and are oT&#13;
gr&lt;ater Intrinsic value than any othar S3.SQ&#13;
taoa aa the gsarhst te«day« — . — -&#13;
A/aw* 9*pUf, MUMJn ffavw'JS*OO/1&#13;
, CAUTION,—Insist upon hftrlng W.LuDongy&#13;
lw shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine&#13;
without his name and price stamped on bottom.&#13;
TVANTKD. A shoe dealer In every town where&#13;
W. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. Pull line of&#13;
samples sent free for inspection upon request. &gt;&#13;
Fm*t Co/or Eytttt ut$d; thtg mitt mt war ora'sssv&#13;
Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fsll Styles,&#13;
W. I* DOUGLAS. Brockton, Mass.&#13;
AXTINE r&#13;
n ToHET ,r^\&#13;
ANTISEPTIC I FOII WOMEN&#13;
troubled with ins enaflfar t&lt;&#13;
their atx. aaai as a doaeaa&#13;
eaasfml.&#13;
stops&#13;
4horonfhbrolai&#13;
icanxcM, aaals&#13;
WUS&lt;&#13;
tins a a o ^ a a l&#13;
Psxaas if in powder form to be dissolved la paw&#13;
water, sndto far more clesnalng, besKng, hsnaicidal&#13;
ns4 ewnSnksl ihsa nqoid aartteptks for siT&#13;
TOILET *NO WOMBtTaVSPECIAL US88&#13;
For sale at druggists, 80 coats s box.&#13;
Trial B M aad Book af Inatrnctlooe Praa,&#13;
Twa a . f**xTow coisaawT OoaTon. aiasa»&#13;
PILEOIO WILL CURE YOU IF YOU HAVE PILE8.&#13;
IT GIVES IMMEDIATE RELIEF.&#13;
Rree 8amnlas aad Booklet Seat Upon Request&#13;
Ask roar druggist for It after hsriug used the&#13;
kinpisft. eorrespondeaoe. Tne fo*&#13;
lowing Is one ot many testimonials.&#13;
sampist. We Invite your eotres&#13;
" silmonla&#13;
, , _ -jtmpatga&#13;
Antt«Septo Kedfeiae Company:&#13;
1 hare bad more or less' *"&#13;
for mora than fear years,&#13;
- -nil- ,&#13;
JOHK OODTJABD.&#13;
Cbaajpalga, Ml., XQT. tQ, lfOB.&#13;
ibl&#13;
emed sag-. . Very res.p ectfull-ys e-&#13;
less trouble from itebtag piles&#13;
One-halt box of PJleotd&#13;
Make year BoflQr a Sleigh for $80)0&#13;
A»waahl|&gt;rt&#13;
Write for CIRCULAR daaortbinff tha simple, but&#13;
• ^ W a ^ s i a ^ a W ^ B l ^ ^ l ^ T S ^ ^ S ^ S S ^ a w a l ^ * ^ a w e % leswWs^SPa^SMSwBsa-&#13;
IfeklOMahtaVaaV' KALAM/VPOOit ftitHPftH&#13;
Ybsr nonoy will be reroaded by the druggist if&#13;
yon are not satiated as to results. The price of&#13;
Plleotd is si .00 per box j bbt to any one who bss not&#13;
tried our great remedy we will serd two boxes for&#13;
tbaarkool one, Xaoogn to caresuu.*oases. Made by&#13;
ANTI4EPTO MEDICINE COMPANY,'&#13;
319 East e 3 r d S t r e e t » CHICACq&#13;
Detroit CoBsenratory of Music&#13;
' " ' , 530 WaeewrrJ Ave. .&#13;
TTbiitm Fnln^ttscto iCiow TsEtArn*. tef4y2 inm \rkn iuWcTitWt,&#13;
HJOIt PHU HOVKNTiMtl&#13;
J A M B S a&lt;&gt; B 8 L L .&#13;
Catalogtts sent free o n applteaeosw,&#13;
s&#13;
'f1 i&#13;
*s.&#13;
LAW V9*M I Y I I L r - U I K t M ,&#13;
* Dillon Wallace; the American * ^ 4 | e « l A ^ m ^ ^ W # ^ » » ^ ^ ' « " *&#13;
JiW*!* ^ B l ^ S&#13;
: 2 ^&#13;
V&#13;
•SB o*»j« •aSS*. 9 • * * &gt;&#13;
ssan&#13;
•3SS&#13;
Kaneae City.WanMUi!tJTejylfelt_&#13;
| MHe»ve# wHH Ktfaey Sleknase.&#13;
- Mrs. Mary Gogto^ tfitkc •&#13;
J*n4 ave., Kaneae Cjjftr,'&#13;
v '••&amp;,» "For&#13;
S&amp;fc.&#13;
* : y , • " • . , ^&#13;
| . « - : ; V "•••&#13;
•; i £" .is..&#13;
•7*-%r&#13;
I&#13;
*ld»ef «*er»&#13;
tyena w»re to»&#13;
ffiQwent. T^«n i&#13;
droj&#13;
wild* of Labraddj-. U » t aprimc he an&#13;
Habhard. both; ^rf N e *&#13;
dd on rival eipedltion* tx|&#13;
carry on exploration work to far Lah-,&#13;
rador, In prw^wtlon of which LeosK&#13;
da^vHsbhard, fcnuerly-a weU-kuown&#13;
Qtotro^ riawapaper man, #ejjj*hej| pret:&#13;
at RSdotoUa, X*abrador. ha« raaelmf&#13;
Halifax and taM: bl&#13;
/ a haiieva Wallace'e expedition 1» a&#13;
putfed failure and that poasibly the memhera £8»*rm j*«y mtr hat» ««t u» taw&#13;
i h « y , ! that Overtook poor Hubbard. On in*&#13;
j l i e i other hand It aeema a« *f Mm H ^&#13;
to behold, poc-i 1&gt;»rd ^ ^ ^ r party have reached thejf&#13;
'destination."&#13;
-¾&#13;
tore gave&#13;
%&#13;
w l • B»rgeaa,'adi&amp;ad that wDan be left&#13;
- ^ WnirUlirn«t r l ^ r T i r a n a Wait ^ f o r m e d&#13;
5 ^ L * ^ S ^ L v T ^ w * ? ' 1 *?* r # , f e a &lt; i ri % v v W »Uea djataat from the oblec-&#13;
2 ! ? 1 « T O ( f J S S i l ' f t ! i S ? A # H ^*lP&lt;Hat o^Ji#rexpedUlqn. They da&gt;'&#13;
a » r Binceian'd^a^e-bJdyiWe baby. W r d d t howfevet, that Wallace and hl»&#13;
"ii- »• •»"»• •^rr «•*•&gt;&#13;
the 'inf'te''*rV that wat ao* jjrenia&#13;
t«tr«ly-born."&#13;
5old by *H dealer*, SO cents a box.&#13;
.-Foater-MUbura Co;, Buffalo, N, Y.&#13;
Mercy at times is more criminal&#13;
thaff^wielty,- ? — : — - T i&#13;
To-day the -penal code ia s Wall&#13;
street's Bible. *&#13;
• . &gt; . - ECZEMA FOR TWO YEARS.&#13;
tittle Glrl-a Awful 8uffeHtfo Wtth Ter-&#13;
# rlble akin Humor—Sleepiest&#13;
Nlgatt for Mother—Speedy&#13;
Cure by Cuticura.&#13;
"My little girl had been suffering&#13;
tor two years from eczema, and during&#13;
that time I could not get a night's&#13;
sleep, as her ailment was very severe.&#13;
I had tried so many remedies, deriving&#13;
no benefit, I had given up all hope.&#13;
But as a last resort I was persuaded&#13;
to try^Cuticura, and" one box of the&#13;
Ointment and two bottles of the Resolvent,&#13;
together with the Soap, effected&#13;
a permanent cure.—Mrs. I. B.&#13;
Jones, Addlagton, ladHI8^ — - -&#13;
Wall street's&#13;
tlon lawyer.&#13;
priest is the corpora-&#13;
Hare is Relief for Woman.&#13;
Mother Gray, a nurse in Hew York, discovered&#13;
a pleasant herb remedy for women1 s&#13;
Ills, caUedtACBTRALIAN-lE AJ. It is Vue&#13;
only certain monthly rogulator. Cures&#13;
female weaknesses, Backache, Kidney and&#13;
Urinary troubles. At all Drttggists or by&#13;
maljSOcts. Sample mailed FREE, Address,&#13;
The Mother Gray Co., LeRoy, N. YFalsehood&#13;
aa truth.&#13;
uses the same'language&#13;
PISO'B Cure Is the best medicine wt ever used&#13;
for all affections of the throat and Umgs.—Wjt&#13;
O- ESDSUT. Yanburen, Ind.,Feb. 10.1900.&#13;
Conscience&#13;
^uences.&#13;
is a fear of legal conscifi'TStrJ''"&#13;
T^T&#13;
Bin. Wlnrtow** Soothlnc Syran.&#13;
Ytor a«at ncbifltt(dl(t»e,as UtMijatpb«tioac,,o isioiMftawoaia dthe«Q gllaut.a t, 2rdecd»abcotstU t«t. &gt;&#13;
That Bookish Look.&#13;
For sheer ornamentation any room&#13;
Is the prettier if it has an honest&#13;
book or two j not disposed for ornament,&#13;
but Just there as in the ordinary&#13;
course, like any other inhabjtaut.—&#13;
Ornamental booKs&#13;
put In ~ the bed linen&#13;
between&#13;
away.&#13;
should DP&#13;
press, stowed&#13;
blankets, to keep the moA*&#13;
Great Britain's Gardens.&#13;
Great Britain is noted for the beaut;&#13;
of its gardens, and their up-keep&#13;
amounts to a vast annual' expenditurp&#13;
—some say to aver two and a half mil-&#13;
Hon rounds.—Onlooker.&#13;
men were on the wrong track and thai&#13;
if they continued tfeey would either be&#13;
lost or come out on the seashore bur.,&#13;
drads of miles away.&#13;
KII&amp;ED BY RAILROADS.&#13;
The statement of railroad accidents&#13;
recently, issued by the interstate com*&#13;
merce commission covered only the&#13;
last quarter of the last fiscal year.&#13;
The figures for the entire fiscal year&#13;
are now, given as follow*:&#13;
The total number of passengers killed&#13;
in train accidents was 350; passengers&#13;
injured in train accidents waa&#13;
6,498. The total number of employes&#13;
killed in train accidents was 798; injured,&#13;
7,052. There were 187 passengers&#13;
killed in other than train accidents&#13;
and 3,542 injured; and 2,465 employes&#13;
killed in other than train accidents&#13;
and 39,374 injured; a grand total&#13;
of all classes of 537 passengers killed&#13;
and 10,000 Injured, and 3,261 employes&#13;
killed and 45,426 injured.&#13;
There Were 6,224 collisions during&#13;
the year, with a money loss of $4,-&#13;
849,054, and 5.371 derailments with a&#13;
money loss of $4,S62,602; a total of 11,-&#13;
&amp;il£ coHisions^and derailments and a&#13;
total money loss of |9,7Tl,e66, be|flg&#13;
damage to cars, engines and roadway.&#13;
An adroit but piansiUa scheme by&#13;
which Jt is hoped topreju4iet the aale&#13;
of nfoprtetary mMWlnaa 1« the preposition&#13;
to prohibit tba aale of mf remedy&#13;
which Mcontai»s poison" unUta&#13;
aach package or boWaft axpraaaly labaled&#13;
"Poison." Such blUa aaa ala©&#13;
well deaignad to inapoaa anon men who&#13;
have no familiarity with thy anWact&#13;
matter. The pretense of protecting&#13;
the public health put forth in aapoort&#13;
of aueh bUla U generaUy the marest&#13;
subUr/uge; and whenever you bear a&#13;
demand for a law of thfa kind it&#13;
originates with those who hare&#13;
a direct pecuniary interest to serve by&#13;
destroying the » l o Of projarlatsj^remedies.&#13;
d&#13;
Some of the beat and most widely&#13;
used remedies in the world contain&#13;
some one ingredient which, if taken&#13;
in sufficient quantities, might be poisonous,&#13;
and y®t the preparation aa a&#13;
whole la not poisonous at all. Opium,&#13;
for instance, is used in small quantities&#13;
in many of the best cures for&#13;
coughs, colic, diarrhea, etc., in toothachedrops&#13;
and in almost-all liniments-.&#13;
To require such medicines to be false*&#13;
ly labeled "poison" would be merely a&#13;
cunning device to alarm the public&#13;
and thus bring about the destruction&#13;
of the sale of those remedies, and indirectly&#13;
to compel people to procure&#13;
the medicine they want by the more&#13;
expensive method of consulting a physician&#13;
and getting bis prescription. In&#13;
other words, It is an effqrt to prevent&#13;
them from getting cheaply the remedies&#13;
which they and their fathers before&#13;
them have used for many years.—&#13;
Medical exchange.&#13;
» ? * •• &lt; . « « , %&#13;
v." • *\&#13;
Two Qrkt*ful Utter* from Women Who AYOM#*&#13;
Serious Operations.—Many Womea SotferUi*&#13;
from Like Conditions WiM Be interested.&#13;
• • • v : , - ^ , , . , % • - ; * v ';&#13;
Treea In Berlin.&#13;
Three hundred streets in Berlin&#13;
are planted with 44,d(Hl treesr which&#13;
represent a value of $200,000. The&#13;
care of the municipal parks and gardens&#13;
requires 250 gardenere and 700&#13;
"assistants, male-^aod ^female, grinds&#13;
pally the latter.&#13;
CONDENSED NEWS.&#13;
A race riot between schoolbeys occurred&#13;
in Indianapolis, in which Wm.&#13;
O'Connell, a 14-year-old white boy, was&#13;
shot and seriously wounded by W. Edward&#13;
Hunsford, a 12-year-old negro.&#13;
Cocoanut trees .were so badly whipped&#13;
and wrenched in a typhoon on the&#13;
island of Guam, Sept. 26, that they&#13;
will yield no crdp for two years. They&#13;
are the main dependence of the island.&#13;
Wealthy Chicago women formed a&#13;
club to raise money for a teacher for&#13;
the exclusive production of the classics&#13;
In drama. Their purpose hr to produce&#13;
only the works of Shakespeare,&#13;
Ibsen, Sudermann, Hauptmann and&#13;
others of their class. •&#13;
Infidel Tom Pr»'ne's 115-acre farm,&#13;
near New Rochelle, N. Y., presented&#13;
*to him in 1780 by the state of New&#13;
York, on account of his services iu&#13;
the revolutionary war, has been sold&#13;
for $115,00a to Charles W. and Wesley&#13;
See, of New York city.&#13;
Wm. Sheridan, aged 60, now an inmate&#13;
of the New Haven, Conn., jail;&#13;
Tina gppnt 4n years of his life behind&#13;
the bars for drunkenness. He was ffrsT&#13;
•arrested in 1867, and since then hats&#13;
&lt;••••,*+&gt;•&#13;
r&#13;
- v&#13;
PARALYSIS CURED&#13;
Caae Seemed Hooeleaa but Yielded to&#13;
Dr. WTtftema' Pink Pills,&#13;
* far. Keuney ha* actually escaped from&#13;
ttfee paralytic's fate to which^lieaeansad a&#13;
'a^ert tima-eiro hoaetes&amp;ly doowed. The&#13;
fssyprising report has been fully verified&#13;
OiH some important'details secured iu a&#13;
personal interview with the recent sufferer.'&#13;
"The doctor," said Mr. Keuuey, "told&#13;
me that if I wanted to live any length&#13;
of time I would have to give up work altogether,&#13;
and he told my friends that&#13;
the paralysis which had begun would iu&#13;
time iuvolve my whole bod^r."&#13;
"Just how were yon afflicted at this&#13;
time?" Mr. Keuney was asked.&#13;
" Well, I had first hot, and then cold&#13;
and clammy feelings, and at times inv&#13;
body felt as if needles were being stuck&#13;
into it. These seusatious were followed&#13;
byterrible paius, and again I would hare&#13;
_»ifl fpp.ling at ali^_bjntjLnjambneis would&#13;
4owe over roe,,and I wonld not be able to&#13;
move. The most agonising tortures came&#13;
from headaches and a pain in the spine.&#13;
" Night after night 1 could not get my&#13;
Wtturalsleepand my system was wrecked&#13;
•my the strain of torturing pains and tbe&#13;
"effect of she opiates I waa forced to take&#13;
to ihdnee sleep. As. I look back on the&#13;
terrible suffering I endured daring this&#13;
period lofteu wonder how Iretaimkniy • J r T K t a S " te^«i2^S3" . n ? \ « a . « r&#13;
^throghin^. :._ v • _l!iL&amp;*lr^&#13;
waa induced to try Dr." Williams' Piuk&#13;
.Pills for Pale Feopla. The very first bos&#13;
never enjoyed more than a month or&#13;
two at a time of freedom.&#13;
Fr, Ricard, astronomer of Santa&#13;
Clara college, who by reason of a clear&#13;
sky is enabled to keep close watch of&#13;
the remarkable disturbances in the sun&#13;
first, reported October 20, says the spot&#13;
has disappeared, but will reappear in&#13;
two weeks larger than ever.&#13;
Fire at midnight badly damaged the&#13;
residence of Bert Jamison, of Traverse&#13;
City. The family was aroused by the&#13;
crying of an infant, and the inmates&#13;
escaped in their night clothes. Loss on&#13;
house and furniture, $3,500. The fire&#13;
was caused by a leaking gas pipe.&#13;
- Gov. Pennypacker has commuted to&#13;
life imprisonment the death sentence*&#13;
of Mrs. Catherine Danz, the Philadel&#13;
phia woman who poisoned her husband&#13;
with powders obtained from a&#13;
"voodoo" doctor, G. P. Hoasey, who is&#13;
to be hung for a similar offense.&#13;
Myrtle Williams, of Albla, la., while&#13;
lovingly caressing Harold Step©-, her&#13;
i lover, slashed his throat with a razor&#13;
and left a gap that required-40 stitches&#13;
to pull it together. Myrtle claimed^that&#13;
Harold Was too attentive to another&#13;
woman. Stepp's recovery is doubtfu!.&#13;
John D. Rockefeller has taken such&#13;
a great interest In antomobillng that&#13;
it waB 'reported 1« Tarrytotftt; N. Y.,&#13;
that; he will learn to run a machine&#13;
himself. Since his return from Cleveland,&#13;
Mr. Rockefeller is out every day&#13;
sitting beside^his- French "chauffeur.&#13;
Peter August Eckland^Ts the luckiest&#13;
embezzler in the world. Last&#13;
Friday he surrendered himself to Bow&#13;
street officers in London, Eng., as having&#13;
defrauded the Clay County Land&#13;
Co. of St. Paul, Minn., of $11,000&#13;
whfie its secretary^ • That concern la&#13;
fearful that its interests will suffer&#13;
How's This?&#13;
We ooff fwC aOUrnr bH tuhnadt recda nDnootll arbse Kcuerwedtr db y* «H£a«lr•a»&#13;
Catarrh. Care. v F J. CHENEY ft CO., Toledo, O.&#13;
We, the undenlgned. have known F. J. Cneney&#13;
for tbe latt 15 yeara, and bellere him perfecUy honorable&#13;
lo_aU oualneas transactions and financially&#13;
able to carry out any obligations made by bisflrm.&#13;
WiXDIKO, KlXNAM ft M A R T I S , Wholesale Drugglsu, Toledo, O.&#13;
Ball's Catarrh Cur* 1» taken Internally, acting&#13;
directly upon tbe blood and maeons surfaces of the&#13;
system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per&#13;
bottle. Sold by all Druggists.&#13;
Take Hail's FamUy Pills for constipation.&#13;
Character lsr higher than intellect.&#13;
A great soul will be strong: to live, as&#13;
well as to think.&#13;
onEcev ewryh enm ahne pclaayne dr eam ehmerboe'rs paatr t.l east&#13;
Hearing bow Lydia B. Ffasrhaars Vegetable&#13;
Compound bad saved other women trose&#13;
serious operations I decided to try it, and fas&#13;
lest than four months I was entirely curat!}&#13;
and words fail to express my thamarfohiecs.*&#13;
Miss Margret Merkley of 275 Sd&#13;
Street, Milwaukee, Wis., writes:&#13;
DearMra'Pinkhsm:—&#13;
" Loss of strength, extreme nervousness,&#13;
severe shootlag pains through the pelvSo&#13;
organs, cramps, bearing down pains, and&#13;
extreme irrltauo&#13;
When a physician tells a woman, suffering&#13;
from ovarian or womb trouble,&#13;
that an operation is necessary it, of&#13;
course, frightens her.&#13;
The very thought of the operating&#13;
table and the knife strikes terror to&#13;
her heart. As one woman expressed&#13;
it, when told by her physician that she&#13;
nfast undergo an operation, she felt&#13;
that her death knell nad sounded.&#13;
Our hospitals are full of women&#13;
who are there for ovarian or womb&#13;
operations!&#13;
It is quite true that these troubles&#13;
may reach a stage where an operation&#13;
is the only resource, but such cases are&#13;
much rarer than is generally supposed,&#13;
because a great many women ^have&#13;
been cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's^. - ^ ^ - «. ,-, ^ „&#13;
Vegetable Compound after the doctors &gt;&lt;rt express my thanks for what it has done&#13;
I:&#13;
had said an operation must be |*erforined.&#13;
la facVup to the point where&#13;
the knife rnusTbe useoTto secure instant"&#13;
relief, this medicine is certain to help.&#13;
The strongest and most grateful&#13;
Statements possible to make come from&#13;
women who, by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound, have&#13;
escaped serious operations.&#13;
Margrite Ryan, Treasurer of St. Andrew's&#13;
Society, Hotel English, Indianapolis,&#13;
Ind. ,writes of her cure aa follows;&#13;
Dear Mrs. Plnkham:—&#13;
" I cannot find words to Express mv thanks&#13;
for the good Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound did me. The doctor said I could&#13;
not get well unless I bad an operation for&#13;
ovarian and female troubles. I knew I could&#13;
not stand the strain of an operation and made&#13;
op my mind I would be an invalid for life.&#13;
ash fee. MsUttaVs Adrlea-A W&lt;&#13;
n compelled me to&#13;
medical advice. The doctor, after malthas;&#13;
an examination, said that I had ovarian tree*&#13;
ble and ulceration, and advised an operation&#13;
as my only hope. To tins I strongly objected)&#13;
—and I decided as a last resort to try Lydia&gt;&#13;
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound..&#13;
" To my surprise the sdeeration healed, all&#13;
the bad-symptoms disappeared, aad lam onci&#13;
more strong, vigorous anal well; and I&#13;
forme/&#13;
Ovarian and womb troubles aresteadily&#13;
« a thsvinerease among womea&#13;
—and before submitting: to an operation&#13;
every woman should try Lydia £L&#13;
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and&#13;
write Mrs. PCokhaxn a t Lynn, Mass.&#13;
for advice.&#13;
Fer thirty years Lydia E. PinkhahVsT&#13;
Vegetable Compound has been curingf&#13;
the worst forma of female complaints,,&#13;
all ovarian troubles, inflammation, ulceration,&#13;
falling and displacement of&#13;
the womb, leueorrhosa, irregularities,&#13;
indigestion and nervous prostration.&#13;
Any woman who could read the many&#13;
grateful letters o» tt&gt; ia Mrs. MafW&#13;
ham's isaVtw T p a l O i j a a i l a i i i l a f t i e&#13;
c J R c i e D ^ o ^ ^ s ^ f e . a a s i i L y d i a aV&#13;
Pinkha«s% vesss|as»sWVBSBSsinsi.&#13;
•aaf^tof) * -v•ass^aass^spie^jBea^BsBaiBsBaVi wel &gt;^JT|VaBMSBSaBsasTa« ee 'B&lt;JSBfSSSLt&#13;
fboJ)ROPS&#13;
JwUIK»ii..i.ill,[:1111&#13;
v » e*-^&#13;
LiK.l.lilhlUl^i.iLtlHUI .11 'MllQli.44IUamilJUHiuB^ GASTORIA For Infants and Children.&#13;
The Kind You Have&#13;
Afcgetahle Pre patauonfor Assimilating&#13;
tbe Food andEc^uialing&#13;
the Stoiaacte arttBcnrels of&#13;
l \ h \ \ I S . ( Hll.DK11N&#13;
Promotes DigedHon.Chcerfulness&#13;
and Rest Con tains neither&#13;
Otaum^forphinc norMmeral.&#13;
HOT ^ A R C OTIC .&#13;
Apcrfecl Remedy forConsBoalion,&#13;
Sour Stotnach,Diarrt»ca&#13;
Worms .Convulsions Tevenshness&#13;
and L O B S OF SLEEP.&#13;
^^•^BaBBBBSBasaeaaaw * • «aBBBasaaas*^^nM.&#13;
FuSinotn SignalUR of&#13;
NEW YOHK.&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
of&#13;
The aoveraetat of Canaat&#13;
G i v e s absohrteiy&#13;
F R E E to eveey&#13;
eetder one h n i&#13;
and sixtyqf&#13;
land&gt; is&gt;&#13;
vVeeteru&#13;
Land adjoining this can be pt&#13;
from railway and land companies at&#13;
f6 to |10 per acre.&#13;
On this land this year has been&#13;
upward* nf twenty-fire/ bnshels of wheat t 6&#13;
the acre.&#13;
U is al«in the heat of graajny land and for&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
j y D i l ^ l S - | ' ^ t l M S&#13;
EXACT COPY Or WRAFVOt&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
1CAST0RIA&#13;
mixed farming it has no superior on the&#13;
continent.&#13;
Splendid climate, low taxes, railways&#13;
convenient, schools and churches close at&#13;
hand.&#13;
Write for 'Twentieth Century Canada'*&#13;
and low railway rates to Superintendent of&#13;
Immigration, Ottawa, Canada; or to&#13;
authorized Canadian Government Agent—&#13;
M. V. Mclnues, 6 Avenue Theatre Block,&#13;
Detroit, Michigan; or C A. Lanrier, Saulfc&#13;
Ste. Marie, Michigan.&#13;
(BXenUon this paper.)&#13;
Note the Difference&#13;
' r&#13;
Hi&#13;
This land is applied&#13;
Hsepsssrt.salnrs i tself&#13;
seal is aha enty.'aess*&#13;
artkm tkat waU«sT»si&#13;
i e asasssttesCit kflaa&#13;
Wire&#13;
Farm Machinery, er&#13;
any iron work. It will&#13;
not wash off,and wears&#13;
months. Price, 25«.&#13;
grTadheis l ikqiunidd isst oav en ipgoV&gt;- iah, brKlUeleapnst afaodr elavestiy. for wse.&#13;
" • : ' - - ^ ' • • • (&#13;
" . * •&#13;
- . . t atructed the London police to set him&#13;
una'Pink jz ^fc,;Vo^Avr*. . ^ . ^ . . - .&#13;
liaeined to helpme, and sevenboxes made A TPheesb ateifapa bluomdyb eorfm Daunn, cmanis sMincgG rseignocre,&#13;
% e entirely wejl. There can be uo doubt July *, ^arfYound in a pookat of sunkaboutthe^&#13;
»rou«m&gt;essof»ycnTe,forI en loge. Opamon Is dlvieed Tegardlng&#13;
hate worked steadily ever since and that the cause of McGregor's death, some&#13;
is nearly four years." j tnaihthWing n l t waa ,an accident or&#13;
sn^ej iaat present emnloyed by suicide, while others are-convinced ¢(&#13;
toul phty.-The man was-known t&gt;0;have&#13;
haeV oonaiderahle, money on hia. person&#13;
when ha diseppearedVbet osdy^lO fanmd when the tMy w»e recovstreei&#13;
AmesbWy^»Jtass.&#13;
which he used wish such&#13;
•««&#13;
»5 Ct*. AHTI-GRIPINE ia ovAsuunxBo TO eims&#13;
ttV, SID COLO, KaUCK AH KilALUA.&#13;
I woa*taell S a H Q i i j i l e e •» s d«al«r woo woa*t«sHuwaSee&#13;
Ctsty&#13;
antbeasii&#13;
«pp*&#13;
for Ste.• ISfftt-tfJ&#13;
ttS!!t^&amp;e} nfpiei't E»t Eats?&#13;
W. N. U . - O m i O l T . - N o . 44-l0O4S&#13;
ASK TOUR DEALER FOR KTTHEK:&#13;
PATENTS1N0FIT MUST FULLY f*HOTslCT&#13;
IUMN,rotwTa«UlltBrt&#13;
WSseenhdi nfoarr too»rn ,« DM. ACti»a taei—Cya &lt;fr«ele Booklet, si mlago ctsll,n Bstrraaduaotrsaae to fa »Me etaaaeasjwataaasle fa «ftfu rsaeattlaaaates.i aRn«etaias&gt;a . Cosunaaicanoaa — — —&#13;
| h « W^«»' v"mi "asiynaiiii «»M—ess-«&#13;
Ifffj W B H fav&gt;ajn et SV. Skri's Sat* &lt;^u«&#13;
"•w ^ - • ~^&lt;&lt;a*aaaeaw«alBa*ya»aMW SaveaM&#13;
oar rsenaj arfil aaavtaesySetna&#13;
flmappleaOoB. lint***,!*&#13;
Baeaady to., Lad. C&#13;
as F A D E L E S S&#13;
jwv**w*&gt;w-a9SBW*n ^"sm§ esssssssssam|as^eje^aeaisy*&#13;
\ •&#13;
•••f-";-frsi&#13;
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&gt; • ' % •&#13;
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!^C ^ : - ^ ? * * H ^ W&amp;Wy ».vi&amp; #: W.,&#13;
' * ' * * * v-***; MPt&#13;
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*&gt;•«••'&#13;
f - • ^ - «i&gt;&#13;
• • -. - * ! i *&#13;
* *&#13;
L* 1 -&#13;
Bean poking oegan at the eleyator&#13;
Monday. «y j . .&#13;
Mary ttrelner *p*«UJ» first of the&#13;
^ p a » k with friends in tfowell.&#13;
Geo. Phelne and wife of Stockbridge&#13;
visited t i Eugene Smifb'a Friday.&#13;
JLBowen and danghter Sarah of&#13;
H|ndy ftp«nton»day JaatJweJtAtJas.&#13;
HoiTs.&#13;
Scott Godtey and Libbie Farnum of&#13;
White Oak spent Sunday at Eugene&#13;
Smith's.&#13;
v l ^ § , j f ileon and wife of Detroit&#13;
£retof the week with his&#13;
G. Wilson and wife.&#13;
't&#13;
WKSTMABIOH.&#13;
Mary Jewel has the scarlet fever.&#13;
Geo. D. Bnlli8 lost a boree Friday&#13;
night.&#13;
The fall term of school closed Friday,&#13;
Miss Writ ht of Marion teacher.&#13;
Roy Lee of .)acks:n spent Sunday&#13;
with fronds at W. B. Miller's aid accompanied&#13;
his grandma hom 3. «&#13;
A number of the friends of JP. M.&#13;
Backus and wife gaye them a pleasant&#13;
surprisVIast-Wednesday evening and&#13;
left JOB ft tofcM of respect a fine water&#13;
set? We feel that in bidding them&#13;
good bye we are losing good neighbors.&#13;
CHIISON - - . - -&#13;
John Sweeney has purchased a fine&#13;
horse.&#13;
Minnie and Ineas Fansch are quite&#13;
aiok with tonsolitis.&#13;
Julias Qammann of Howell was&#13;
home over Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Stewart were in&#13;
Howell a few days last week.&#13;
Henry Gehringer cf Iosco spent part&#13;
of fast week.at Albert Smiths.&#13;
H. Dammann transacted business in&#13;
Howell Tuesday and Wednesday.&#13;
Loois Sweeney and Wm. O'Brian&#13;
were in Howell on business Monday.&#13;
Floyd Mattas and Blongia Larkin&#13;
ot Howell spent Sunday at Mrs. N. M.&#13;
Case's.&#13;
Miss Amelia Dammann returned&#13;
home-Saturday after a three weeks&#13;
stay in Marion.&#13;
A few from here attended the lecture&#13;
at Brighton last week and report&#13;
it fine. A good beginning.&#13;
Miss Catherine Mattieson retnrned&#13;
to Webberville Saturday after spending&#13;
the suicmer with Mrs. Albert&#13;
Smith.&#13;
Dave Van Horn and wife of Pettysville&#13;
have moved into Mrs. Mand Carpenter's&#13;
bouse where they expect to&#13;
make their home for some limu.&#13;
ADMTIOJIALlOGAl,&#13;
J '•""wr&#13;
Miss Mabel Emerick of Ypailanti, is&#13;
taking a vacation and visiting her&#13;
parents here. . ^&#13;
The burial of Miss Mud, of Detroit&#13;
formerly of this vicinity, took place&#13;
here ?rday, Rev. Mylae officiating.&#13;
John Chambers and wife and H. £.&#13;
8aylee were called to Highland Wed*&#13;
needay to attend the funeral of their&#13;
. c:u*in\ Mrs. Frank Williams&#13;
Last Friday Rebut Gardner threw a&#13;
at on* at a valuable horse, to frighten&#13;
JACKSON &amp;&#13;
M&#13;
• •"" " ' . "^H&#13;
- it'.&#13;
• » * .&#13;
• • &gt; ' • • . . • Y. Underwear Special&#13;
Ladies extra Fine Jersey Vests and Pant", 25 cents per garment.&#13;
Ladies Ctioa extra Heavy, " 45 •' " « "&#13;
Childrens Jetsey Ribbed Vest and Panto, Prices ranging from 15 to 40 cents.&#13;
Mans Jersey and Heavy, Double Breasted Underwear, in 50 cent values 45 cat*&#13;
Bpje Heavy fleeced Underwear, 25 cents.&#13;
Men and Boys Dork Coat*, ~ $1 25 to $2 00&#13;
Mens Knit Jackets v 92^0&#13;
)1&#13;
• • • • : &amp;&#13;
I&#13;
,JK&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG.&#13;
Rumor says wedding bells will soon&#13;
rinjr.&#13;
Chas. Travis of Chicago is visiting&#13;
friends here.&#13;
Bert Nash had the Mutual telephone&#13;
put in his house last week.&#13;
Mi s. Rosin a Mercer has sold her&#13;
place in Pettysville to Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Doc Carpenter. .&#13;
' f l a i l sjMlia&lt;Me%at obarck Sunday&#13;
' ^Lliwmifm t# keU tte fair the&#13;
|a^gj&gt;ajra#rkiiiei»er. fall particulars&#13;
later.&#13;
The young peoples society are arranging&#13;
for the opening meeting of&#13;
the club to be held in November; the&#13;
program to bo musical. Regular attendance&#13;
contest begins next Sunday&#13;
.and cards have been distributed to&#13;
ffcfttcfeterested.&#13;
A Browninir E n i g m a .&#13;
Elizabeth Barrett Browning has SOT&#13;
quite a Homeric problem aa to the&#13;
= place of _her birth. The Encyclopaedia i Brltannlca"~glves Loudon, but UiiTJIC"- j postponett trlt repairs conttf&#13;
tionary of National Biography prefers&#13;
Burn Hall, Durham, and there is au&#13;
entry in the register of Kelloe church&#13;
referring to "Elizabeth Barrett Moul*&#13;
ton Barrett, daughter and first child&#13;
of Edward Barrett Moulton Barrett of&#13;
Coxhoe Hall." Browning himself, however,&#13;
declared that his wife was born&#13;
at Carlton Hall, Durham. Now, Carlton&#13;
Hall is in Yorkshire. Finally the&#13;
authorities are not agreed.as to whether&#13;
Mrs. Browning was born on March 4&#13;
or on March G, but, of course, the outstanding&#13;
fact is tnat she Was born.-&#13;
London Globe.&#13;
her away from the new corn, breaking&#13;
her leg and making it necesmy to&#13;
shoot her.&#13;
The board of trustees appointed to&#13;
select a site for the new sanitonum&#13;
for tuberculoma will meet at Dexter&#13;
and Birket's prospect bill on Saturday&#13;
of this week.&#13;
Eugene Campbell and tamily have&#13;
moved back from the farm where they&#13;
have been spending the summer, and&#13;
are again located in their home on&#13;
Milt and Unadilla streets.&#13;
The Iaternational Live Stock&#13;
Exposition at Chicago has been postponed&#13;
until Dec. 16, 23 on aocount of&#13;
the inability of the contractors to finish&#13;
the building on time owing to tbe&#13;
strike.&#13;
Parlies visiting at Wm. Ryan's in&#13;
their auto Saturday nuib_t_found on&#13;
Sunday morning tbat Jack Frost bad&#13;
played havoc with their pipes'and tbe&#13;
attendance of ail at church had to be&#13;
and Caps » ? *&#13;
• * * ; * •&#13;
New and Elegant lines of Men's Fancy Neckwear,&#13;
Men's and Boy's Fall and Winter Caps,&#13;
25and 60 cents&#13;
25 cents to $100&#13;
Our stock of Men's and Boy's Felt and Knit Boots, Knit Socks, MUbawaka&#13;
and Lam be 1 ville Rubbers, Men's Boy's Ladies, Misses and Children's arctics is&#13;
complete. v&#13;
'•,-i&#13;
*&#13;
Business Pointers. •&#13;
-k R. Vfr. Lake%ajMit the bounty Seat&#13;
&gt; ^ ^i*frI?;; •&#13;
( • . « ! * : .&amp;&#13;
m -»*&#13;
one (Wy: last week.&#13;
S. J. and R, H. Kennedy relumed&#13;
to Ypsnanti Monday.&#13;
Mrs. S. J. Kennedy and Miss Flo&#13;
Hall were in flowell Tuesday.&#13;
Geo. Stocking and daughter, Miss&#13;
&amp;da, Mr. and Mrs. A. Brook and family&#13;
of Durand were entertained in tbe&#13;
bome of J as. Fitch last week.&#13;
Mrs. £. D. Brown was called to&#13;
Stock bridge last week to attend her&#13;
daughter Mrs. 6. W. Nichols who is&#13;
seriously ill with appendicitis.&#13;
The farmers club met with Geo.&#13;
Cnly and wife Saturday last and held&#13;
a very interesting meeting. Tbe&#13;
as usual of musical&#13;
geldings. The question&#13;
N i taro questions. Tbe&#13;
first was answered very satisfactorily&#13;
by E. G. Fish although it received&#13;
considerable discussion by tbe club,&#13;
ow can happiness be obtained. M r&#13;
hsaid: "What is happiness for&#13;
on would not be for another.&#13;
does not give it, neither dees&#13;
There is no happiness to be&#13;
A T i m e l y W a r n i n g .&#13;
Jimmy—What's tbe matter with you?&#13;
You don't never go-in for any fun at&#13;
all nowadays. Tommy—No, I'm belu*&#13;
good because I'm goln' to have a birthday&#13;
purty soon an' I want to git a&#13;
present. Jimmy—Better be careful an*&#13;
not be too good or mebbe they won't&#13;
give you nothln' but a Bible.—Phlladel*&#13;
phia Press.&#13;
Out of Pocket, T h o u g h .&#13;
"When General Lafayette ^attended&#13;
A shooting contest will be held at&#13;
the Dexter Grange Hall at 1:30 o'clock&#13;
on Saturday, Nov. 4, 1905. R. Mc&#13;
Neil and Wm. Steveson have been&#13;
selected to act as Chiefs, and a list of&#13;
seventy men have been chosen by the&#13;
respective leaders. An oyster supper&#13;
will he served to the winning side by&#13;
the loosers. Everybody invited to&#13;
come and bring tbeir ladies. Supper&#13;
foi those net taking place in contest&#13;
15 cents single plate; 25 cents per&#13;
couple. Foster vVheeler. Secy.&#13;
Lamarque's funeral the crowd&#13;
horses out-of his Carriage&#13;
kth«&#13;
tb-evr&#13;
hlm home themsejves. "Were you not&#13;
honored and pleased?" asked a friend.&#13;
"Very much pleased," replied Lafa-.&#13;
yette, "but I never saw my horsea&#13;
again."&#13;
Appaiitnar SuarereMioa.&#13;
Bride—My dear, this hat has been&#13;
crushed beyond redemption, and I&#13;
must have a new one. Bridegroom-&#13;
Very well, my darling. I'll stop in&#13;
somewhere on my way home and buy&#13;
you one. (Bride faints with horror.)&#13;
But few people are entirely free&#13;
from indigestion at this season ot the&#13;
year, Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is not only&#13;
the best remedy to use because it&#13;
digests what you eat but because it al&#13;
so enables the digestive apparatus to&#13;
assimilate and transform all foods into&#13;
tissue-building blood. Kodol relieves&#13;
sour stomach, heart burn, belching;&#13;
and all forma nf inriigiKt.inn.&#13;
For Sals or Rent&#13;
The Black residence on Mill street.&#13;
Enquire Richard Clinton or Daniel&#13;
Mnrty. __ _t_43&#13;
For Sale—A Registered Short Horned&#13;
Durham Bull two and a balf years&#13;
old. ~" RoBTriCEiTTr ~&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Those who have apples to be made&#13;
into cider, our mill will be ready for&#13;
business by tbe 1st of October.&#13;
Bert Hooker, Pettysville.&#13;
" , NOTicm.&#13;
Everybody interested in the Gilk's&#13;
cemetery are requested to meet at&#13;
tbat place Saturday Oct. 14 for tbe&#13;
purpose of baautifying the place.&#13;
C. S. CHAMBERLIN,&#13;
EXPERT AUCTIONEER&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Druggist.&#13;
Unanswerable,'&#13;
Husband—Do you really need a new&#13;
hat? Wife—I nhvaj's need a new hat.&#13;
-Husband—Then what's the use of getting&#13;
this one'/—Life.&#13;
*** r&gt;fr:&#13;
v,r;^&#13;
.•*-"V Xr^'Y.&#13;
d in this world except through&#13;
virtue and the religion of&#13;
si." Does a col I eg) edncar&#13;
hinder in farm life? Mr.&#13;
Seaoenhals\ thought education waa&#13;
in any business. If a&#13;
success&#13;
°f&#13;
leg*or edncaajon but the person;&#13;
?e been a success&#13;
**JWLJ.» it, *** Vroted to have an&#13;
^ytter dinoet attha\next meeting to&#13;
neral fond.&#13;
Qualified.&#13;
"Pojor Mrs. De Olde! Her eyesight&#13;
ia failing so fast she is of. very little&#13;
use In society."&#13;
"Oh, she is in great demand."&#13;
"What for?"&#13;
"All the girls want her as chaperon."&#13;
—Chicago Journal.&#13;
The K i t c h e n In China.&#13;
"In China everything seems to us to&#13;
pro by contrary, and the front part of&#13;
.the house is devoted to the kitchen,"&#13;
says a missionary, "t'pou entering the&#13;
.house at the trout door one is introduced&#13;
into the culinary department,&#13;
and so important an adjunct to a&#13;
household is the kitchen that the population&#13;
of towns and cities throughout&#13;
the empire is reckoned by the number&#13;
af kitchens within the "walls. Brick&#13;
chimneys in China are a thing unheard&#13;
Df, and the smoke from the fire is allowed&#13;
to roll lazily nlong the ceiling&#13;
out into the court or through an aperture&#13;
made In the roof. The kitchen fire&#13;
is usually built in a mud stove, for&#13;
any other kind of a stove is unheard&#13;
yt among the poor classes."—Chicago&#13;
Chronicle.&#13;
. FRANK L ANDREWS&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH SEAL&#13;
AT DISPATCH OFFICE&#13;
DEXTER,&#13;
Bell Phone 88, free&#13;
MICH.&#13;
P. O. Lock Box 63&#13;
Of Course&#13;
you are&#13;
going to&#13;
have . .&#13;
Photos Made for Xmas.&#13;
Formerly of Battle Creek, Vich, Sells everything&#13;
on earth—Real Estate, Graded Stock, Personal&#13;
Property, Country Sales, etc. Years of experience,&#13;
and price* reasonable,&#13;
Orders may be left at the DISPATCH Office.&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
TjV W. VJA .NIEL8,&#13;
GENERAL AIICTIONEEtt.&#13;
Satistacntn Guaranteed. For information&#13;
call at DISPATCH Office or iddress&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. Lynrlilla phone&#13;
connection. Auction bills and tin cups&#13;
furnished free.&#13;
There is nothing your&#13;
friends will like half so&#13;
well as a Photo&#13;
PHOTO OF YOURSELF&#13;
Have them taken now,&#13;
before the rush is on. If&#13;
you want . . . . . .&#13;
Good Ones&#13;
that will last and are&#13;
' Up To Date&#13;
go to&#13;
1&#13;
MARTYN*&#13;
Howell, Michigan&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Fine Wool Rams&#13;
F. A. Barton&#13;
Address, GREGORY or PINCKNEY&#13;
Percy Swarthout&#13;
Funeral Director&#13;
MDEMBALMER&#13;
ALL CALLS ANSWERED&#13;
PROMPTLY DAY OR RIGHT&#13;
"PAHLORS'AT&#13;
PLIMPTON'S OLD STAND P^one No. 30&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
&gt;rsow Was not a&#13;
rsi not tb* fault&#13;
% "*&lt;W pw* forf|j&gt;m'&#13;
y.&#13;
• ' * ,&#13;
•*r&#13;
l Don't forget tbe dotping and cloak&#13;
hursday and&#13;
40 Ladies and Misses Coats 40&#13;
Your Choice&#13;
99 Cents #9&#13;
M»Ji&#13;
fri*y&#13;
atflwninri&#13;
N o r l a n d&#13;
atora,&#13;
W. W. BARNARD.&#13;
FAKE, But FACTS.&#13;
H a v i n g m a d e u p m y mrmd n o t t o&#13;
h a n d l e a n y m ore' h a r n e s s e s , I will sell&#13;
at C o s t t h e f o l l o w i n g articles, vis:&#13;
S i n g l e H a r n e s s e s , Lij?ht D r i v i n g&#13;
H a r n e s s e s a n d H e a v y T e a m F a r m&#13;
H a r n e s s e s .&#13;
I have Collars, Sweat Pads and tbe largest&#13;
stock of Whips tyer seen in Pinckoey, look at tbe&#13;
Price, a No. 1, fall length, Kawbide for 40 cents.&#13;
A Rood Whalebone for $1.00, usnal price frum&#13;
12.00 to $2.50.&#13;
I am not going ajtjbf business bnt my repairing&#13;
both on Sboea and jMrneasee takes all my time aa&#13;
work brought to me ft done on abort notice.&#13;
,"'•-•$&#13;
N.H. CAVERLY&#13;
PINCKNEY&#13;
FIRST DOOR SOOTH&#13;
OP HOTEL. ,v&#13;
-/&#13;
v» .!•»•:. i*&#13;
•***, ^ ^ . ^ Or.</text>
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                <text>November 02, 1905 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1905-11-02</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="8510">
                <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>
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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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            <elementText elementTextId="40249">
              <text>KNOKN35T, tZSmmTOV CO., MIOH., THURSDAT, NOV. 0,1906. No 45&#13;
^ ' » V&#13;
• &gt; ' •&#13;
w •&gt;,&lt;&gt;•&#13;
• ' , &amp; '&#13;
f:&#13;
,'•*&amp;*'&#13;
«£&amp;VM axd ^cvaXr MDwfc&#13;
We have a thoroughly equipped&#13;
machine shop and are in position&#13;
to do yonr repairing promptly and&#13;
at reasonable prices. . ._ . . \&#13;
£ngln« and Lath*&#13;
Work a Specialty&#13;
8harp Edge&#13;
Grinding Done&#13;
'-.^&#13;
£\-\&#13;
r-.-&#13;
**Tt\, S*a4VUa a*A 'VAX 'MtaptoM CONMCUOTV*&#13;
T h e Carnival a S u c c e s s&#13;
iSrwrRa^^&#13;
L»OCAL»NBWS.&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mis. Willis Tapper&#13;
«.&#13;
the past week a daughter. ~~&#13;
W. H. Clark and wife are visiting&#13;
relatives and friends in Fenton and&#13;
Linden.&#13;
Gus Smith spent a few days the&#13;
past weel with his daughter at&#13;
Ypsilanti.&#13;
Miss Erma Pyper of Unadilla was&#13;
the guest of her aunt, Mrs. Griffetb,&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. R. A. Kisby was the gue^t of&#13;
her mother, Mrs. Nettie V*ughn the&#13;
last of last week.&#13;
R. F. Spragae was in town the last&#13;
of the week in the interest of the Mutual&#13;
Telephone Co.&#13;
Sunday and Sunday night this section&#13;
was yistied by a heavy rain which&#13;
filled up all the low places and put&#13;
things in good shape for winter.&#13;
' We just learn that Mrs. Clarence&#13;
Westfall died at her home in Ypsilanti&#13;
the past week. The was well known&#13;
here, heving lived here several years&#13;
ago^ —&#13;
It's a good plan to use disinfectants&#13;
pretty freely in the cellars, sinks and&#13;
house drains this time of the year. A&#13;
dollar spent for disinfectants may prevent&#13;
a case of typhoid fever.&#13;
The burial ot Mrs. Jhon A. Tanner&#13;
oi Fowlervilie,took place here Monday,&#13;
Bey- 'i. L. Adams -Officiating.&#13;
$Irs. Tanner was formerly Miss Benlab&#13;
WeUer of near here, and well&#13;
known by many of our older citizens.&#13;
She WAS over 80 years eld.&#13;
While helping put up articles at the&#13;
After the fair is over,&#13;
After the work is done,&#13;
After the burden's IK ted,&#13;
-After the victory'* woa.&#13;
Many a back is aching,&#13;
If you could feel them all,&#13;
Many a care that has vanished.&#13;
Until next fall.&#13;
Thanksgiving soon.&#13;
It is still tryirg to snow.&#13;
Harold Brown of the U. of M. was&#13;
the guest of relatives here over Sunday.&#13;
G. L. Adams of the Fpwlerville Review&#13;
was a pleasant caller at ?his office&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Edwin Dryer of. Chelsea, was ihe&#13;
guest of bis parents here the firdt ot&#13;
the week.&#13;
Regular Review K. 0. T. M M.&#13;
Friday eveniner of this week. Every&#13;
member should be present as it is the&#13;
nomination of officem.&#13;
The ladies of the M. E. Aid society&#13;
are requested to meet with Mrs. F. L.&#13;
Andrews, Friday afternoon, at 2 p. m.&#13;
Important bnoinooo,—aadturdty&#13;
evening in a very successful&#13;
manner. Friday was not a very promising&#13;
day but the people/got there at&#13;
sapper time and did justice to a bigspread.&#13;
, ^&#13;
The different departments wer« also&#13;
patronized to sach an extent that there&#13;
was not a very lar&amp;e assortment left&#13;
for Saturday. The ice cream and popcorn&#13;
stands as well as the fish pond&#13;
were well patronized/ A number were&#13;
present Fr.day from Gregory and Unadiila&#13;
and seemed to enjoy themselves&#13;
hugely.&#13;
Saturday was a beautiful day and in&#13;
the evening a large crowd were present&#13;
at the carnival. The supper ot&#13;
"old fashioned fried chicken, biscuit&#13;
and gravy etc." were much enjoyed&#13;
and full justice done to the same. The&#13;
tables were beautifully decorated and&#13;
presented a fine appearance.&#13;
Some of the booths bad been replenished&#13;
duiing the day and business&#13;
=j=opened up brisk as usual csontiaeiog^&#13;
nntil all were sold cut and the carnival&#13;
closed for want of anything to sell.&#13;
These "fairs and carnivals" are becoming&#13;
very popular in this vicinity&#13;
and while they make much work for&#13;
someone they are quite a source of&#13;
revenue to the societies. The ladies&#13;
of the society have not all reported as&#13;
yet so we are unable to announce the&#13;
result of their labor.&#13;
should be present.&#13;
every one&#13;
The work on the new post office&#13;
building has been held up the past&#13;
week on account of their inability to&#13;
secure brick. This village certainly&#13;
misses the Mc In tyre brick yard.&#13;
Lost daring the M. E. Carnival, a&#13;
silver teaspoon marked "Carrie", two&#13;
white platters, and a new tablecloth&#13;
three yards in length with narrow&#13;
hems. Leave at the DISPATCH office&#13;
where there is some other lost property.&#13;
Besides printing the Gregory Cook&#13;
Book tbe pest three weeks, the Oiscarniyil&#13;
Friday, Mrs. W. A. Davis! PATCH job department has done a large&#13;
stepped upon a chair which closed up , amount of other work and without&#13;
with her, thro 'iag her in sach a man-! extra help. Every job has been done&#13;
ner as to hurt her side quite badly/when promised and could have done&#13;
She was taken home in a carriage and I more if nese3&lt;ary. "Bat we are glad&#13;
we are glad to state is much better. [ howeyer that it was not neces3ary.&#13;
,-»»&#13;
A Fine Line of the Newest&#13;
and Latest Novels,&#13;
Bound and soitablr for-&#13;
Gift Books&#13;
Call and s e e them&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
Married Thirty Years&#13;
On Wednesday evening, Nov. 1st.&#13;
about fifty friends of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Chris Brottan gathered at their home&#13;
to remind them that it was their thirtieth&#13;
wedding anniversary. It was a&#13;
well planned and successful surprise,&#13;
as the couple admitted many times&#13;
during the evening.&#13;
The hours were very, pleasantly&#13;
spent in playing cards and games and&#13;
listening to music both vocal and instrumental.&#13;
The song, I've Grown So Used To&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
HOWELL, MICH.&#13;
Oar fall and winter goods are coming&#13;
in from mill and factory. You will&#13;
this a good store to buy nnderhoaiery,&#13;
gloves and mittens,&#13;
(Mines, fasciuaters,' outing flannels,&#13;
antt the many items necessary to be&#13;
eomfortable when 4bc oold weather&#13;
eemSf. Our lines of Holiday goods&#13;
ST* opmlag in and we will have by far&#13;
th&lt;j te*t assortment ever shown by us.&#13;
Bolls, books, games, ceilaoid goods,,&#13;
oomtfand brash sets, oolmr and cuff&#13;
sets, etc. China, toys of every desoript*&#13;
Mi. Visit us when you^eome to&#13;
Howell, every eietfc will.weleesne you.&#13;
Ch^msthod is to givt fcfc value tor the ]&#13;
money, as we find it pays to do so, 4&#13;
jfta sell for cash oely and A** etU&#13;
chi3K 1wia',tbV&#13;
Zy\§ \CVVMTC\V&#13;
Sunday November 12&#13;
^ * . . i &lt;&#13;
m*&#13;
selNe*&#13;
| A.^wum&#13;
OraHS Rivtr SU OppMtta Court HOUM, .&#13;
Howell Mich. "&#13;
• V &gt; ^ « ^ * W ^ ^ ^ l ^ i&#13;
EVENING SERVICE&#13;
At 7:00&#13;
Under auspices of the Guild and&#13;
Young Men's Club. /-^5&#13;
«leAs!ca's Mother,&#13;
You, sung by Will Roche, was very&#13;
appropriate and much appreciated.&#13;
Mrs. Will Ledwidge called the&#13;
crowd to order and in a few touching&#13;
and well chosen words told with what&#13;
regard and respect the couple bad always&#13;
been held and to prove this presented&#13;
ti em with two fine rockers. A&#13;
bountiful supper was then served after&#13;
which all returned to their homes&#13;
with many wishes for a happy future.&#13;
Young Mens Club&#13;
The miserable wrecks of manhood&#13;
and womanhood one meets eyery day&#13;
once bad a chance equal to the best&#13;
Habit which begins in cobwebs ends&#13;
iu chains The downward road is uol&#13;
sn downy. When a man falls back on&#13;
oaths he declares himself out of arguments.&#13;
ProfanB speech never gained&#13;
for you the respect of a single person&#13;
and never will.&#13;
The President is gratified at the&#13;
confidence reposed in him by the members&#13;
ot the club and because the boys&#13;
are beginning to recognise the fact&#13;
that in him they have a true- friend&#13;
whole frole purpose is to help and advise&#13;
tor their highest welfare. Secy.&#13;
m&#13;
»v&#13;
.,v r ~ urjed to attend this service an* every*&#13;
body right welcome^ ~]&#13;
A Valuable Cook Book&#13;
* There has jun been issued from this&#13;
office the&gt; "Gregory Cook Bock" arranged&#13;
sad compiled by tbV Baptist Ltdies&#13;
Aid Society of Gregory. It is a&#13;
beok of eighty two pages and contains&#13;
hundreds ot valuable rcxpe* for she&#13;
heasewileaitomajiy Itoueehosft remedies,&#13;
The boo* is to be sold by the ladies&#13;
as a source of raising ,4aopeyfor the&#13;
ctMjreh^, Xh*^pme jsVWiyjfe cents&#13;
and U worth^twicertaf.t aciouat to&#13;
anyone.&#13;
J*»*&#13;
Mr E. Church Notes. — •&#13;
The fair was a success and we thank&#13;
all who contributed in any way to&#13;
mate ridT^'Tgsiatftes stnrotd have a H&#13;
special vote of thanks for their energy&#13;
which seemed untireing. We can not&#13;
state as yet how much was; realized;&#13;
but sr nice earn.&#13;
Remember the Love feast and sacrament&#13;
of the Lord's Supper this Sunday&#13;
coming.&#13;
The Quarterly Collection will be&#13;
taTken, we have $8.25 to raise. Let us&#13;
give accordingly.&#13;
The Young Peoples Society will&#13;
have a social in the near future for&#13;
the purpose of raisin4 nnney to buy&#13;
song books. Qui* Quarterlies will be&#13;
in use next Sanday evening. Let&gt; us&#13;
unite in the work, all young people&#13;
invited. \&#13;
Now the fair is over let us concentrate&#13;
our attention more closely on&#13;
the spiritual interests of the church.&#13;
The prayer meeting Thursday evening&#13;
will be followed by a meeting of&#13;
the trustees. We Hope for a good&#13;
Congregational Church.&#13;
attendance at both.&#13;
Regular service tonight at 7, choir&#13;
tmej&amp;ting at 8.&#13;
Annual business meeting of the&#13;
cburch Saturday at 2:30 p. m. A&#13;
large attendance is urgently request*&#13;
ed.&#13;
Sanday Nov. 12, morning topic, The&#13;
Things that Matter. Cong 1 classes,&#13;
also pastor's elass for young men and&#13;
women at 11:30.&#13;
The young men of the church will&#13;
entertain the young ladies at Maccabee&#13;
hall Monday evening.&#13;
The Star Entertainers will appear&#13;
at the chnrch Friday evening the 17th&#13;
under theou*pices of the Y. M. C.&#13;
Tbe Young Ladis Guild will meet&#13;
at the home of Miss Kjt^ie Grieve,&#13;
Tuesday evening. Nov. 14. Topic, The&#13;
Liquor Traffic. '•'• • '' .&#13;
The Church workers of the Cong'l&#13;
church will bold -ttieir monthly' tea&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 15 at tfaer home of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Sigler from five&#13;
until all are served * Supper 15 cents.&#13;
N05. ]4 and 16 $ r t Laurel&#13;
In heating.capacity and economy of&#13;
fuel, as well as .,ip appearance, these&#13;
base burners surpass all otLers. ; Attention&#13;
is called to the illustrations&#13;
showing the Laurel'special construction&#13;
of back flues.' When the damper&#13;
is closed tbe bat arr from the fire pot&#13;
travels down the'hanging- back fine&#13;
and is circulated completely around&#13;
the base of tbe stove, coming in direct&#13;
contact with .both the outside and inside&#13;
walls of tbe base and then travels&#13;
upward through the return flue to the&#13;
smoke pipe. - ^&#13;
The cold air from tbe. floor is drawn&#13;
up through the opening shown on illustratiob,&#13;
comes in direct contact with '&#13;
entire, fire pot wall, entire circumfer- '&#13;
ence o^the hanging or downward floe*&#13;
- and one entire side of tbe return ,0ne*&lt;&#13;
finally passing into tbe room through&#13;
the douole heater outlet at tbe top of the&#13;
strve or can be carried to upper, rooms by&#13;
means of an extra pipe, it will be observed&#13;
thrt the rear pvrrol the retnrn or up flue&#13;
forms the on bide or back plate of the stove."&#13;
In this manner what remains of the beat,&#13;
alter ci'colatiog around the ba&gt;e of the&#13;
stove is radiated into the room.&#13;
This is the only construction where the&#13;
cold air is brought in contact with such&#13;
grear heating surface and consequently th^t&#13;
stove famishes at least 1,600 square, inches&#13;
more radiating surface the* any other base&#13;
burner made. A close examipatioa of the --&#13;
illustration will give a more correct idee ef£?&#13;
the healing and (041 saving advantage* of&#13;
this improved bate burner* - The /fire pot&#13;
aid feeder can be quickly and easily re-&#13;
»&#13;
U&#13;
moved through Iront dboi&#13;
f . . * . eeple Hardware Co.&#13;
•°**^*&#13;
*&amp;$*&#13;
w ;.-:,* k? v';'v?V. »&lt;- *m •f*v &gt;,».''w !=ifl&#13;
/ V Jr ,.- . , . . . * . 1 - '&#13;
. * $ &amp; ^¾¾¾¾¾ ^IWJ^t^iU^v^^^iijr,.,, UPMIHI&#13;
w , ' • . • . '.-, • &gt; • • • • ' , ' • • • • ' . „ ' ' ; • • V . . . ' ; . - - : . . . • &gt; • • . * ' . • •' x . ' • , • r . .-&#13;
«• IGMW »&#13;
! , • « .&#13;
&gt;*¥.-•&#13;
&lt;!**% ^&#13;
uv %•&#13;
$ .&#13;
^ .&#13;
BESSEMBR^ HEIR TO THE&#13;
THRONE OF NORWAY,.&#13;
MAY ACCECPT,&#13;
S ' *&#13;
BAOJNAW"'.'.. 8UICIDC&amp; APPEAL.&#13;
Araow the Hills With 8t*len Mcncy&#13;
and Jewels—8heWas a MleW&#13;
flan G i r t — V i n c e n t ^ —&#13;
• • ^&#13;
• - H 4 %&lt; , MICHIGAN XTElllk fl*.&#13;
Au*ur»t*d la W N r w S , ? ^ T T&#13;
.«nt«|ly «&gt;otrln &amp; • Icfcttrtftta brothwill&#13;
particularly watch Uia western&#13;
portion of tne opp*rp«nln*ula,&#13;
k t *»1 caaE diTideati^tt prUterred&#13;
•took was deelsjwd by tae Detroit *&#13;
Mackinac R. B. Co. annual feeetin*.&#13;
The special electtoa *n Ann Aroor&#13;
resulted in autoorlslac K.000 beaas&#13;
for a new detenUoa hospital Jor ooutaaioua&#13;
diseases.&#13;
While feeding a dog from the porch:&#13;
of her dsnthter,- Mrs,&gt; etareswe Oiark.&#13;
Mrs. Lydia CMover, aged 7», of Ithaca,&#13;
-feB and orphe her aeck&#13;
j j ^ ' w 1 . . ^ ^ v iHf.ii'avmi.HMu&#13;
Pays Up.&#13;
May Be a King.&#13;
Bessemer may furnish a ruler for&#13;
tfce now vacant throne of Norway. Invltatioas&#13;
have- been received by ex*&#13;
EtenresenXative Louis Muuthe, from&#13;
what ifi lerraed the legitimist wing in&#13;
the Tgnr^y^lanstorthlng, to visit Christtanla&#13;
sad eatajnih" his claim as direct&#13;
descendant of Haaken V., the last&#13;
Indepentfent king, who died in 1319.&#13;
Mr. Muntji* has been a resident of&#13;
Bessemer lor more than a decade. He&#13;
represented the Gogebic district in the&#13;
state legislature in 1891, being the only&#13;
Democrat ever elected to the legislature&#13;
from thte district.&#13;
The legitimist party in the storthing&#13;
iesiste that the Norwegian throne shall&#13;
be filled by a lineal descendant of the&#13;
native royal line. It is opposed to giving&#13;
the crown to any other. It was because&#13;
of this stand that the invitation&#13;
was sent to Mr. Munthe, who declares&#13;
that he can trace his descent from&#13;
Agnes Haakandotter, daughter of&#13;
Haakan V.&#13;
Mr. Munthe is now an old man, and&#13;
even the possible achievement of a&#13;
crown were he to return to Norway 1H&#13;
scarcely attractive enough to persuade&#13;
MS iiXf-fHTiiirvuriM&#13;
him to make the trip to his native&#13;
land^SfcouW ^trfther^im^ortunity-be-^ -B--^a-^e4gB»sr =M*4e-ha*wbeen&#13;
made upon him, however, it is possible&#13;
that he might acced$ to a pressing invitation.&#13;
— To Young Mm.&#13;
With bed clothes wrapped tightly&#13;
about him just as he had pulled them&#13;
in last convulsions, George O. Feige,&#13;
of Saginaw, rwas found in a room at&#13;
the Grand Union hotel, where he had&#13;
committed suicide 28 hours before.&#13;
Chloroform and strychnine found on&#13;
the dresser left no doubt of the means&#13;
employed. On a stand near the bed&#13;
was a note giving his name and asking&#13;
that Henry Feige, Jr., -of Saginaw,, be&#13;
notified. A letter written in a clear,&#13;
firm hand and addressed "to Young&#13;
Men," gave an inkling of the man's&#13;
history. In it he says:&#13;
"I began to go in fast company.&#13;
"My drinking and gambling habits&#13;
became fixed.&#13;
"I lost the only good job I ever had.&#13;
"I braced up for a time, but fell&#13;
back again.&#13;
"It got worse and worse till it has&#13;
come to this. .&#13;
"For (Sod's Bake, young men, stay&#13;
away from liquor, gambling and women."&#13;
Fled Witl&#13;
Somewhere along the range of hills&#13;
lining Lake Michigan north of Muskegon,&#13;
Owen Comm, alias'Louis Clarke,&#13;
and his wife and child are believed to&#13;
be hiding, having in their possession&#13;
$16,000 of precious jewels and money&#13;
stolen from along State street, Chicago,&#13;
during the past three months by&#13;
$ gang of professional thieves. Comm&#13;
«nu ™»rty'left "-Chicago last Thursday,&#13;
*n.t sent* a trunn ou &amp;h.??4 of them.&#13;
The trunk contained over $7,000 *n&#13;
money and the rest of the swag was&#13;
on their persons. Their trunk was carted&#13;
away from the Goodrich dock at&#13;
Muskegon by an old farmer. Chicago&#13;
detectives are aiding the Muskegon&#13;
officers.&#13;
!. Lived in Marquette.&#13;
Mabel Belaud, the young woman&#13;
who , is featured in the sensational&#13;
$50,000 damage suit for alleged breach&#13;
of promise against John O'Neil, a&#13;
wealthy Chicagoan, for whom she was&#13;
housekeeper, is the daughter of Mrs.&#13;
Stack, of Marquette. It is some&#13;
eight or nine years since she resided&#13;
there. She was reported to have married&#13;
the widower of her sister, a man&#13;
named Keister. The news of her&#13;
breach of promise suit is a big surprise&#13;
in Marquette on that account.&#13;
Her mother's second husband is a locomotive&#13;
engineer.&#13;
Vicious Convict.&#13;
An ugly convict, in. Jackson prison.&#13;
Wm. Hennessey, found a rusty old&#13;
shoe"knife and with it he slashed Convict&#13;
John Kreiting as he was passing&#13;
Hennessey's cell at locking up time.&#13;
The^ wound is- across the brcaat in a&#13;
jagged line and though not very deep&#13;
It is feared blood poisoning may result&#13;
because of the condition of the&#13;
knife. There was no cause for the assault.&#13;
Hennessey was sent up from Monroe&#13;
a few months ago for 15 years.&#13;
Kreiting was sent from Meskegon in&#13;
1900 for six and a half years tet, attempted&#13;
murder and would aeon have&#13;
seen released: .-&#13;
" Hennessey has been placed in a duugeoe,&#13;
awaiting l b * result of KreHinjc'*&#13;
wounds before a determination of-his&#13;
The Arcadian^ .Jhlne, Houghton,&#13;
which was closed about two years ago,&#13;
is to be reopened again for exploration&#13;
on an extenafre s«rfe. • "&#13;
Hallowe'en jokers set Are to James&#13;
Kuney's barn, in. Adrian, which -wes&#13;
totally destroyed with all of the contents,&#13;
including a cow.&#13;
Mrs. Abbie Baylis, aged 70, walked&#13;
directly In-front of a Lake Shore passenger&#13;
train a t Tecumseh, and was&#13;
probably fatally Injured.&#13;
H. E. Gill, of North port, consigned&#13;
1,327 bushels of potatoes to James&#13;
Flood at Chicago. This is a record&#13;
breaking carload or potatoes.&#13;
Christian Nonman, aged 60, of Grand&#13;
Rapids, dropped dead in his store.&#13;
Heart disease and the sudden shock of&#13;
his daughter's death were the cause.&#13;
Zeeland township, will go to the&#13;
courts to try ttrcompel the Grand Rapids&#13;
&amp; Holland Interurban line to abide&#13;
by its franchise and not increase its&#13;
rates.&#13;
Fred Leninger, of Lansing, had his&#13;
skull fractured by the falling of a&#13;
heavy cast iron weight attached to the&#13;
mechanism for lowering the street&#13;
lamps. He may die. ~&#13;
Gov. Warner has appointed Cheater&#13;
E. Cone, of Cassopolis, judge of probate&#13;
for Cass county, to succeed Judge&#13;
^ t h e ^ l n h w ceqjwry of Mjwtaoa&#13;
we^ve^fodeal^wltbl^ 0urlovs species&#13;
of tnan that comes ftotf Cornw "&#13;
amf coatiguotis s e ^ o W &amp; M&#13;
land, and we bete our hands&#13;
%lire4 Shsid^ B a i ^ Wsisteroetf .„ _&#13;
Ww iT(^ 8uadmy Telegraph msh.&#13;
'Those.Corniih mtnetf sj^lbis lifcttt&#13;
Amonr U s inatflBerabte things $ttv&#13;
de noi know t« l£e art of driving: * 1 (&#13;
man reaches the height,of opprobrium'&#13;
when he says that some otdier mgn&#13;
knows no more about "drlv^bg than ai&#13;
Ooralshmgn. there W usually: a fignt&#13;
over such a statement Anfl'the^wietlknown&#13;
inability of the Cornish sfctiOn&#13;
of the population was forniarfy the&#13;
cause of one of the weirdest speotaeles&#13;
Montana presented, even la the old&#13;
mining camp days.. •' ,&#13;
"When one of Cornwall's former eff*&#13;
laens dies It Is the custom to preserve&#13;
the remains, in some fashion until Sunday,&#13;
when all of his compatriots he*e&#13;
a day off and all can attend the funeral.&#13;
Next to getting drunk, the average&#13;
Ceroiah miner enjoys a funeral more&#13;
than anything else in the world/ -&#13;
"In Butte fifteen or twenty years&#13;
ago a Cornish funeral was a eight to&#13;
behold. I have frequently seen 560 ear-&#13;
V 'JFn'Vli.&#13;
•u»v V*&#13;
-n&#13;
$ * •&#13;
funerals were deprived of their most&#13;
spectacular and attractive feature, t o&#13;
the minds of the miners."&#13;
filled witH 0ke4rfJa% thai cheers;&#13;
sSalm i e t e ssjeU InlesreiF 11» Tsj) i,,M w&#13;
would staler 8ix and seven ablest. ' r J * ' « « , r . W ^ p j r * ^ * f p ^ ^ ,&#13;
ew wua^lnert w«ildricel»aS^; «^.r« you won^ have *** , &gt;&#13;
•qijjfc*.«- ••"*•"&lt;- • --ui-r- *»«* --.•f**'*"«-*-'••*.' ••=• Tot'i^HUJKh*o|MSl^euei,jlny&#13;
idxrisivhem, sann di sa s« eth»des we &gt;rtu atoer *sin aonwt iq1Ks&gt; Wwet roe v, D_o •n t ^h ra-*^'^. hvj^urt^iovw jl'j'1ii:t'/uT^ •i'f': :•y'e w'-"&#13;
well-known characterisUcs of the ape- **•***»** *«•* cl«#a spjriltin».&#13;
des, ea^VjrveTy-etaWB'ia-town would : v - r ^ v ^ ^ * ..:^''-T&#13;
have representadtres along the road to Most of m expect astteroblb&#13;
intercept tb« v/etnminsr-'mMwts ajrt{*9««lt:4M%.*W&gt;««p|l«ft&#13;
take the t»ami from them. The. Uyerjrman.&#13;
weujd* meet the maa M» hired&#13;
his team on the road, throw, him e«t&#13;
of the carriage and take the team&#13;
tetk to-the»i#blA, Tetuming on-house*&#13;
back to recover another team. It wag&#13;
s common thing for five or six horses'.&#13;
to be killed during the- course of. one of&#13;
these Sunday jambofees, and after #&#13;
while the liverymen reXused to trust&#13;
the ^miners with their (earns and 4tor&#13;
'»*&#13;
"-•A&#13;
•4&#13;
,''.',''V»&#13;
*..:^&#13;
• ft&#13;
;- 4&#13;
MJ8placed.c^nflaew^V DOT SlWayT&#13;
the r ^ e i t o t being aheent-miaded^&#13;
V- ^':''..*.&#13;
-RELICS OF THE CO/fFEPEHACy&#13;
U's a good plan to toistve your enemies&#13;
before £hey get back at. you.&#13;
Msny a good resolution ia wabbly&#13;
bsoans# it hasn't sufficient liackbone.&#13;
\»J I&#13;
*~ ' - • i ' i '&#13;
,.^:-.,¾&#13;
i '*+.&#13;
shattered hope, Just to put it out of&#13;
its misery. ^&#13;
elected circuit judge.&#13;
State Game Warden Chapman reports&#13;
that during October he seized&#13;
3,500 pounds of fish that had been unlawfully&#13;
taken, and distributed them&#13;
among the state Institutions.&#13;
Only $125 was raised by the private&#13;
bankers to defeat-the McKay bill in&#13;
the last legislature to provide for. state&#13;
regulation, so Prosecutor McArthur&#13;
has dropped the investigation.&#13;
Potatoes are decaying as a result of&#13;
the blight. The dealers are now asking&#13;
90 cents, and it is thought the price&#13;
will go higher before the enA of the&#13;
winter, Report from Houghton.&#13;
The body of a boy was found \n ex*&#13;
cavattng for a Cellar at St. Helens,&#13;
Apparently the body had been buriad&#13;
for years, but the golden curls, the&#13;
face and form were well-nigh perfect.&#13;
Eighteen-year-old Fred Fuller, oi&#13;
Pontlac, has been sentenced to from&#13;
six months to 15 years in Ionia for&#13;
assisting G. B. Flodell in a restauranl&#13;
theft. He also assisted Flodell to escape&#13;
from Jail.&#13;
The large beet sugar factory In&#13;
Blissfield Is about completed, everything&#13;
being finished except the pump&#13;
house. The plant has cost nearly $600,-&#13;
000, and has a capacity for 500 tons&#13;
of beets per dayr ~—~&#13;
Miss__Bertha Boyles, only daughter&#13;
federacy.&#13;
are the "Pickett Papers."&#13;
most important of the confederate archives&#13;
were removed from Richmond&#13;
the diplomatic correspondence was&#13;
hidden in a barn in Virginia. Later&#13;
the papers were brought in four trunks&#13;
from Richmond to Washington by Col.&#13;
John T. Pickett, their custodian.. Failing&#13;
in his efforts to dispose of thorn,&#13;
he took them to Canada, and there, in&#13;
1872, they were purchased for the use&#13;
of the United States. Congress appropriated&#13;
$75,000 in payment and&#13;
they were brought to Washington.&#13;
of M7Tl[nTlMTB7-W«7-Boyle8, of Char&#13;
sTcian.&#13;
c-;&gt;y., xTTTTTryTcrSTT—*• ti i i s uaAwMff*frhesjeW&amp;ton Harbor&#13;
endeavoring to ge* fee iaterartoaVi&#13;
from South Bend, and has offered $30&gt;&#13;
»*irfsom*n^&lt;JfcreUiag.ia,no worse; 1»t ___ __&#13;
^ • " ^ ' . a S ' W ^ S ^ f p r ^ ^ | i * &lt; * £ Matthew Tetcguaaes'without&#13;
lotte, goes to Butte, xMont., to be married&#13;
to Fred A. Clark, a Lansing man&#13;
who went west two years ago to look&#13;
after mining interests.&#13;
B. D. Chandler, secretary of the company&#13;
manufacturing voting machines,&#13;
has placed* a forfeit of $600 that Mayoi&#13;
Todd, of Jackson, cannot prove his assertions&#13;
that voting machines are a&#13;
menace to honest politics.&#13;
Lewis* A. Monroe, a Veteran of the&#13;
hrst engineers and mechanics, having&#13;
accidentally been found to be an inmate&#13;
of the Lenawee county poor&#13;
house, steps are being taken to have&#13;
him sent to the soldiers' home.&#13;
The store of L. Heanes &amp; Co., the&#13;
oldest mercantile firm in Houghton&#13;
was totaly destroyed^ Saturday by fire&#13;
which originated from an unknown&#13;
source. The total loss is estimated al&#13;
$85,000, partially covered by insurance.&#13;
;&#13;
Just as he was about to sit down, tc&#13;
the evening meal Tuesday night, Wij-&#13;
4iam Hodges, aged 75, of Bay City,&#13;
fell to the floor and expired. He waji&#13;
apparently hale and hearty,, working&#13;
at his trade, ship carpenter, in all&#13;
kinds of weather.&#13;
The chastisement t&gt;t a high sChoo)&#13;
girl by Principal Dunning has not resulted&#13;
in a public apology, neither&#13;
has that official resigned. The students&#13;
seem to favor the principal and&#13;
boys and girls Joined recently in giving&#13;
him three cheers:&#13;
Warden Vincent, of Jackson prison,&#13;
has paid into the state treasury $249..&#13;
representing the amount expended for&#13;
cigars and billed as groceries. He has&#13;
not yet paid the Interest collected on&#13;
convicts' money, but the attorney general&#13;
will insist that this amount be refunded.&#13;
Hugh McKeune. a wealthy Chicago&#13;
leather merchant, was potting his gun&#13;
in a buggy to go hunting at Hlchlllinda,&#13;
20 miles north of Muskegon,&#13;
when the weapon was discharged,&#13;
tearing his left hand and lower arm&#13;
to the elbow so as to destroy the use&#13;
of-It. • '••&#13;
Mrs. Anna Osorarites, of Saginaw;&#13;
was married 12 years a g a i n Potantt. it&#13;
is said, and a* she w a s toatried this&#13;
In a fireproof vault, opening from a&#13;
small room on the third floor of the&#13;
treasury department in Washington,&#13;
are the manuscript archives which set&#13;
forth the diplomatic efforts of the confederacy&#13;
to secure recognition as a&#13;
member of the family of nations, to&#13;
obtain means to establish an army and&#13;
navy and to bring about foreign Intervention,&#13;
according to~the Jacksonville&#13;
(Fla.) Metropole.&#13;
Washington contains other littleknown&#13;
but important relics of the con-&#13;
AmongIheHKostimportant&#13;
When the&#13;
They remained In their original trunks&#13;
until a short time ago, when they were&#13;
transferred to specially constructed&#13;
chests of polished pine.&#13;
In another small, dark room in the&#13;
Treasury building stand seven large&#13;
packing boxes, filled with confederate&#13;
money, a portion of which was captured&#13;
from southern banks and. from&#13;
confederate soldiers and which w a s&#13;
forwarded through" the -w*r~ department&#13;
to the treasury. The' larger&#13;
share of it was collected by treasury&#13;
agents, who conducted the cotton buslnette&#13;
©f-the United States in 18t4 and =&#13;
succeeding years. Every variety of&#13;
confederate note or bill may be found,&#13;
in these boxes. .,,&#13;
Among the confederate archives&#13;
there is a scrapbook containing a lith.ograrh&#13;
copy of the letter written by&#13;
Pope Pius IX. to Jefferson Davis, .re*&#13;
plying to Davis' letter thanking the&#13;
pope for hiB open letter to the archbishop&#13;
of New York and New Orleans,&#13;
urging them to endeavor to restore&#13;
peace. This is about the only one of&#13;
the relics of the collection which visitors&#13;
are permitted to inspect.&#13;
The.nien who preaches.economy by&#13;
the yard often practices it by,- the&#13;
inch. ^ :&#13;
The man who can not manage h i s&#13;
own, farm always wants to manage&#13;
somebody else's.&#13;
If a woman keeps busy with- h e r&#13;
household affairs she'll never have&#13;
time for divorce court affairs.—-Farm&#13;
Life.&#13;
-THE-iATTlC.._PJULQ8QPHER.&#13;
Wise talkers&#13;
thinkers.&#13;
are sometimes fool&#13;
The best way&#13;
through pluck.&#13;
to acquire luck is.&#13;
Make Fight on Thrre Vices.&#13;
Los Angeles, Cal.,' dispatch: The&#13;
Young Women's Christian Temperance&#13;
union adopted a number of&#13;
measures, principally on the subject&#13;
of securing pledges against the use&#13;
of alcohol, tobacco and profanity.&#13;
/Possum Hunter fs Kilted.&#13;
Alamo, Tetih., dispatch; Failing to&#13;
find a 'possum by lantern light. Hamlet&#13;
Powell climbed to the top of a tree&#13;
and in t h e fight that followed the&#13;
young man fell to the ground, sustaining&#13;
injuries which caused his death.&#13;
Some men don't have to be dead tobe&#13;
forgotteb. .&#13;
The man without hope is at least&#13;
never disappointed.&#13;
Hush money doesn't talk loud, but&#13;
it accomplishes lots. .&#13;
Most people are willing to accept&#13;
tainted money after they get their&#13;
eyes on it.&#13;
Marrying money is a splendid bleach&#13;
for a Woman with red hair. After&#13;
that it's auburn.&#13;
That man' who 'proposed to a girl&#13;
in a bathing jRuit fpund his finish in&#13;
a divorce suit.—Will F, Griffin, in Milwaukee&#13;
Sentinel.&#13;
&lt;Jt&#13;
QrmadPrixB St. Louis, §904&#13;
m ^OiUtnmlH&#13;
BEST TALKMa MACHINES MADE&#13;
Cylinder Machines $7jg0 te 91OO&#13;
Disc Machines fl* la 963&#13;
Tbo QrmphogtlHme repnoduomm aii Jritulm of&#13;
parfoatly»-band, oroboBtna, vioUn,&#13;
voomi and bmt+muontmi sroJosv qumrtmttem.&#13;
JtlJ ntcurtalnlnflf&#13;
O dptlveddns&#13;
CJ utwemrlnjc&#13;
ff^eaonant ,&#13;
D •Itshtf ut&#13;
« S Uf5*&gt;rlpr&#13;
O&#13;
getting a dieoroe, a warrant was swore&#13;
odt by her husband* brother, ebargtag&#13;
her with bigamy. The womssjified, ent&#13;
saaptune* in/ a eeSsetery* - « f U * a&#13;
\ — -&#13;
'•J..?.-&#13;
FWWWJ&#13;
^—-&#13;
CHAPTt* XXt*-*Bsu*»mH*. ? ,&#13;
"Thlf letter wee found by Detective&#13;
HwaiCoT rather by Mte, Fry, in the&#13;
lining pi Wet* ©cat, oat through bis&#13;
eBorts, and a* transmitted it to Detective&#13;
Brnoe/ K would be produced&#13;
in oonri In due-order ofHbr teetinaony.&#13;
wee known—taw cltlmto Mr.&#13;
j trial tut eoort house wasabronged to&#13;
bear ibe^ clealag awsaents by tb»&#13;
«ouaeel. - -• • .;•/• ••*•'• *&#13;
#Mp.. •:••*•&#13;
#.-/. *&#13;
4&amp;-&#13;
Hamlltoh's eetaW and family. At tbt*&#13;
point nothing would be artd about the&#13;
motive, which wan only too apparent,&#13;
but allusion* must he made to a serious&#13;
charge against Henry Ashley,&#13;
auns Pttmu* Bdes, for the murder of&#13;
bin wife, the beautiful, unfortunate Le-&#13;
&amp; " •&#13;
."•"^ - - CHAPT»* 3CXII.&#13;
The Closing JUrfiimeirttv&#13;
Mr. Stone, whose mind wee partiou*&#13;
larly Jwee and alert, reviewed m a telling&#13;
manner tbe evidence which bad&#13;
been presented for the defease.' "It&#13;
bad beet* ctaimed," be said, Mthat tbe&#13;
case was one of identity only; but it&#13;
was sot so. It was a wife's unfaithfulness&#13;
that was the root of the whole&#13;
nore, who died of poison but two matter. No one had denied tbe ldentiweeks-&#13;
previous to the- claims-|et up ty of Mr, Hamilton, except bis "wife, ; by gdes. She received by maila jtois^ at the time when he returned; and she&#13;
oned rtngr and was asked to wear It in f had no other reason for her denial except&#13;
the &gt; absurd, one of 'Individual&#13;
odor/ something- which, never before'&#13;
had been broached In any court of Justice.&#13;
. She had fainted whenv she first&#13;
saw him, which fact" spoke of instant&#13;
recognition, but claimed to have immediately&#13;
afterwards doubted him by the&#13;
absence of the individual odor.&#13;
" "The fw*Uffy of such reasoning as&#13;
this must be apparent to every one&#13;
who heard it. A matter of breath or&#13;
diet! It was not worthy of the least&#13;
consideration. But other matters&#13;
were. At the moment of his Return&#13;
Mrs. Hamilton was talking with Mr.&#13;
Allen about the monument,, which was&#13;
remembrance of her husband', who&#13;
would soon return to her. The name&#13;
'signed was Henry Ashley, and'it hid&#13;
been proved that after wearing^ the&#13;
rfng a week-she died. The body was&#13;
buried; but afterwards disinterred, and&#13;
it was proved that she was poisoned&#13;
by the ring, without doubt. This&#13;
charge would be proven by competent&#13;
witnesses to be true. It was very&#13;
startling when taken into account&#13;
with Kdes* Infatuation for Mrs. Hamilton,&#13;
and his claim that she was his&#13;
.wife.' ' '•- '-''&#13;
"You will see how diabolical was his&#13;
plan, and you can also bee his motive.&#13;
But for his love for Mrs. Hamilton he t$ust_j^ompleted% Jto be erected Jo the&#13;
would never have dared, to thrust his&#13;
claim before the public;'but a* Sameon&#13;
was shorn of his strength by*-the&#13;
fair handy n f ^ l l l a b , s o has many a&#13;
weaker man been robbed of his reason&#13;
•l * • by love of woman. Mr, Hamilton's&#13;
course has been straightforward&#13;
throughout Haying nothing to conceal*&#13;
there have been no efforts at concealment.&#13;
He warned Bdes not to&#13;
come near his house, as you or I&#13;
would have done. But when he heard&#13;
the shot fired he jumped from his bed,&#13;
rushed out, saw that be was lying&#13;
wounded upon the ground, and forgot&#13;
fcls displeasure In doing all that he&#13;
&gt; * • * •&#13;
giTi#iSJii&gt; ifP «1 in I 't»i** mm *m~ WB&#13;
mm- premise* wtth,,• aintd, without&#13;
fto«b| jtolea from Dan Fjy, Ja the&#13;
SeWfTg^^Ss/ Ufl^ J w aFWQSwBqBj #SSSJMp %^s",s ^sWaySha • •SSJBWSWS'^S^'&#13;
wWSSie, t 4WSMF^ ^Sr^B^SJB^SVej|~y4Si^r-'MBJBJB&gt;jSJ|SVk ^A'W*~r»*»Sjpg^SJgSg^gjBB&gt;^ ly^,&#13;
thai be wan sihoLby Mc Jnaalttaa, sad&#13;
\P*% v*..w*s t i n ^UVt ^ T ^ * ^ ^ ^ * * ^ 5 ^ * W P | W V ' ^ ^ W z T •&#13;
. ^ f l ^ w 1 ^SwT* W^**, rS^PSW - ^gVw^Sj^sM^pfwlrtJp^SW* • wfc* ^ ,^g^nwF; claims; for, no doubt, he alaanedthe&#13;
whole scheme of villainy before the&#13;
•booting ef himagIt&#13;
"Mrs. Hsjn#to* dU no* go mear&#13;
husw 4n4ee4. ane was niadout from&#13;
the. feat; but when Mrs. Fry weut for&#13;
h«r to^sietlher neiieat» who she&#13;
thought was wUderftbaa over, is Ms&#13;
ravinjfs, Mrs. HamUto* wont over.&#13;
Bdes claimed her a^bia wife; the moment&#13;
(she entered the room, and, she&#13;
did not gaiaeay Wm- The. next thin*&#13;
was JUo lay claim to the Hamlltea&#13;
estates.&#13;
memory of her husband. She was&#13;
dressed in tlack; but she was far&#13;
from being unhappy, for she had other&#13;
hopes in her heart regarding the un- he leaned forward to aay fa» Ms coun&#13;
known Primus Edes, who in some&#13;
mysterious manner had succeeded in&#13;
getting a nold on her heart and aym- Mr. Stevens was not gTad. He felt&#13;
pathles. She fainted because site saw&#13;
her hopes dashed to the ground by the&#13;
return of her husband; whom she bad&#13;
thought dead.&#13;
"But all this time her husband had&#13;
been suffering with a' mental malady&#13;
that robbed him of memory. What he&#13;
did or did not do at that time oouid&#13;
dot be discovered. He went away on&#13;
had she been In court" Mr. Stone's&#13;
speech must have lost some of its acrimony,&#13;
and that her calmv ladylike&#13;
demeanor would have presented a&#13;
speaking contrast to his words. However,&#13;
the opportunity bad passed, and&#13;
the counsel for the prosecution trembled&#13;
for the result.&#13;
Mr. Stevens began his argument at&#13;
about two o'clock, and he rejoiced&#13;
when he saw Mrs. Hamilton enter the&#13;
court room, for her presence . nerved&#13;
him to greater effort and belief in tbe&#13;
Justice of the" cause he advocated.&#13;
He spoke of the able and exhaustive&#13;
argument of Mr. Stone, and of the&#13;
manner in which the evidence had&#13;
been presented to make it show to&#13;
the best advantage. "No men know&#13;
better how to conceal weak points&#13;
than they," but in this case they had&#13;
overe,/—? the matter.&#13;
When the two men met at Portland&#13;
depot—?as thejc mpst. assuredly, did&#13;
meet on the Friday In g*estio»---the&#13;
respondent had ample opportunity to&#13;
see for himself the condition of the&#13;
true claimant's mind at that time. -It&#13;
was perfectly evlrt*nl_that he had for-&#13;
-A&#13;
: • &gt; ' could for the sufferer. Mr. Marks, ia a i Friday, the fifteenth pt May; he: re-&#13;
- i&#13;
respectable man, who was known to&#13;
the Hamilton family In early life, and&#13;
as an old acquaintance was kindly received&#13;
by my client. He has followed&#13;
the calling of*»&amp; ssjent, and lingered&#13;
ew days In Orovedale till a conslgnfrom&#13;
the publishers should arwith&#13;
eamest-&#13;
-•^c,&#13;
^ ^ r . Ferguson spoke&#13;
ness and eloquence, well sustaining&#13;
his reputation. The counter-charge of&#13;
murder against the plaintiff created no&#13;
little excitement among those ,who&#13;
now heard it for the first time., -&#13;
Mrs. Hamilton's letter signed Calls&#13;
Lily was produced In court and sworn&#13;
to as genuine. Even ahe did not deny&#13;
it, but said it was one she wrQte to her&#13;
husband, at least a year ago, and she&#13;
preferred to believe it additoinal proof&#13;
that the claimant really was her husband.&#13;
Her declaration was evidently- so&#13;
sincere that many gave It instant belief.&#13;
They felt convinced that in some&#13;
way the letter bhd-oome into the pos-&#13;
«jt $des, p^rhapV with the key&#13;
Thft*we* tfa0»e which&#13;
_ d in the lining of his&#13;
which she sent to Mr. Swan&#13;
by him was transmitted to Mr.&#13;
Bruce. /Two witneMes trom tbV neighborhood&#13;
where Mrs. Ashley resided&#13;
testified to the manner of her &lt;?eet|L&#13;
and the curious report was read in&#13;
court. The letter written by her busand&#13;
they stated could not be found,&#13;
t one witness, a woman, Mrs. Mann,&#13;
fled to having seen and read tt~&#13;
turned January twenty-fifth; and the&#13;
interval was filled in with tabor to support&#13;
his necessities?' Could anything&#13;
be simpler of understanding than this?&#13;
"He„took no cognisance of what&#13;
went on during his absence—the bank&#13;
troubles, his wife's hollow grief, the&#13;
half-hearted search for him, the monument&#13;
to be set up in the cemetery.&#13;
He knew nothing of all this, and when&#13;
he returned 4o Orovedale fbe was&#13;
greatly astonished at ..the turn affairs&#13;
had taken. He did bis best to set&#13;
them right, took up&gt; his Place, at the&#13;
mill, and ¥9^14 h ^ v e j ^ a ^ &gt; t o his&#13;
old relation, unquestioned by any one,&#13;
had it fio&amp;been for his #tte*s infatuat&#13;
i o n j ^ B p M workman&#13;
as he chose tf appear, jbut whom&#13;
we now-*»OWto b-eajjiost accomplished&#13;
viliiJni He sar fhe lady at church&#13;
and was struck by her beauty. There&#13;
can be little doubt but that he was&#13;
filled by a wild, uncontrollable love for&#13;
her the first time they met. Tie began&#13;
to lay plans-to possess her, knowing&#13;
that her husbanded leX&gt; he*,, perhaps&#13;
never to return, .&#13;
"In his love for" this woman be forgot&#13;
all else—forgot he was a fugitive&#13;
from justice, disguised to appear a&#13;
hatt-wkted workBfa1itw rorgoTher mad a&#13;
wife already, Uie beautiful .Lauera&#13;
Aahley, who had : clung to him, as&#13;
some women will, through evil es **U&#13;
as good report; or it he did not forget&#13;
It, he put. these considerations one&#13;
eldb, and set himself to win the notice&#13;
of Mrs. HaxnfltbhY&#13;
ring, on the day of Its receipt.&#13;
At tbe close of tbe testimony lor i&#13;
t Mrs. Ashley showed it to her, gad /'Sb^ from ^ ^ r s t prolessed, to&#13;
see a resemblance in Primue Bdes to&#13;
bef'husband, and, no doubt, he heard&#13;
"But before this* nearly two weeks&#13;
before the shooting; he sent the poisoned&#13;
ring to bis wife to remove her&#13;
from bis path, the letter was signed&#13;
'Henry Ashley/ and was a loving, tender&#13;
missive that would have deceived&#13;
any woman. She were tbe ring a few&#13;
days and died. There was so 'much&#13;
talk about the matter that ft led to&#13;
disinterment of the remain*, when It&#13;
was found that she had really neew&#13;
poisoned,"&#13;
Mueh more was said, but enough&#13;
has. been adduced to give some idea of&#13;
Mr. Stone's able and effective plea.&#13;
There was no doubt It bad been well&#13;
considered, and it evidently bore upon&#13;
Its face the individual belief of the&#13;
lawyer. At itB close friend's gathered1&#13;
around him, and both be and Mr. Hamilton&#13;
were warmly congratulated!, fbr&#13;
court had adjourned, it being near&#13;
noon..&#13;
, The claimant Edes camee in* for a&#13;
good share of the popular attention&#13;
during the plea, for he seemed fnstfnct&#13;
with determination and defianwe.&#13;
When allusion was made to fifrs. Hamilton&#13;
he was seen to clench his hand&#13;
and start wrathfully in Ms seat, and&#13;
sel, Mr. Stevens, that he was abkd she&#13;
was not present.&#13;
ROOSEVELT WILL HAVE A&#13;
GREAT CAREER SAYS&#13;
WATTERSON.&#13;
T H l TARIFF FOR &gt; H I U P P I N t a ,&#13;
Conditions in Paoawia Fleas* Mr. Taft&#13;
-.- •—Alexanoerr ef iaauranoa Fame,&#13;
la How "On the&#13;
•' fteaks-"&#13;
Tbe Pnsirhmt's Caraer.&#13;
A glorioua career for&#13;
EooseveR as preaident «f Harvard uni&#13;
veraity after he leaves the White&#13;
House is predicted by Henry Watttrsocu&#13;
He said: "President Rooievelt&#13;
will round out ais career after tearing&#13;
the White House aa presides* of Harvard&#13;
university. It will be a fitting,&#13;
and glorioua termination of his. useful&#13;
life. He will be the greatest figure in.&#13;
the' country aa the head of the university.''&#13;
It was suggested that Mr. Roosevelt&#13;
might be renominated, despite hia decision&#13;
not to accept a second term;&#13;
that in some circle* it had been predicted&#13;
thai the Democratic party would&#13;
choose him as their standard bearer.&#13;
"Stuff,"- replied CoL Watterson,&#13;
"Roosevelt would not touch a. second&#13;
term with a 40-foot pole. I wonrt say&#13;
why* and I won't give my reason* for&#13;
predicting; that he will hftcnmpi preaident&#13;
of Harvard.college*, but see if"I&#13;
am not right"&#13;
Commenting on the coaddmuoua. o*&amp;&#13;
tion Preaident Roosevelt received during&#13;
his, reaent trip through the south*&#13;
the or&amp;cte of the Lentodlle Coaxter&#13;
Journal started to give oat an extended&#13;
Interview, beginning,:.&#13;
_ "JPrejldfint Roosejejfc comes south&#13;
claiming kindred; tbe south are amesX&#13;
impressionable people. Now go away;&#13;
do yoa want me be say things, I&#13;
wouldavt say in my own paper? t want&#13;
to go. to Bleep."&#13;
. . , : • • ; ' , - - •••• - - &gt; Csntsaefte I&#13;
Itis.hardso _&#13;
dsbrnaa. One might taaV a^adosjs;&#13;
nciJcaaHB, a * * * * agj^en ai faooaaw*&#13;
Ujaaufactufer. tbj Btitlahrwtlsinaa, a -&#13;
bishop, aa eminent Nonconformist,&#13;
divine, and 'a large land owner, ana&#13;
roll them into a kind of coasposjte being.&#13;
Pecbapa the result would repre*&#13;
seat the type^Kxcbange. 7' * 'r&#13;
it« " i ... ' &lt; '-in&#13;
v . . . • • * , • • • • • . ,*'•:&#13;
:. • * ' • • ? * • ,,'.-• • .'.:&#13;
• • • V " - k - ^ - . - , .&#13;
;'?^~i-.-.'&lt;H&#13;
... .,,. ;p#l&#13;
. • • f:&#13;
•••; •f-^'y.-'&#13;
School for Aeronauts,&#13;
Paris has s school for aeronauts and&#13;
watemplates a second; Ia the one already&#13;
in existence beginners sa the&#13;
navfgatfam of tbe air can get instruct&#13;
tloa in tba latest theory and practice&#13;
of airship management Anchored balloona&#13;
with eabtee as high as 400 metars&#13;
(shout 440 yards) in length are&#13;
at tbe disposal of the pupils.,. 3* :&gt;£&#13;
•&lt;*fc&gt;;&#13;
New Jssnoy Marrlaua Notice.&#13;
Aatttowy Fuggy of Third avenue,&#13;
waa married to Miss Frances Buggy&#13;
in police court yesterday morning by&#13;
Judge Mahoau Tbe Fuggys will reltd*&#13;
fa Third* avenue, anfhony Fng-&#13;
Wfp tse bridegroom, is eighteen yextm&#13;
efd. Miss Buggy, the bride, is seventeen&#13;
yearn old.—Elisabeth (N. J.)&#13;
Dally Jestrnaf.&#13;
tfa Said and Left&#13;
A lawyer and a horse that always&#13;
stopped and refused to cross a certain&#13;
bridge readings out of the city. No&#13;
whipping; no urging, would induce&#13;
Mm to cross ft, so he advertised him.&#13;
"To bo sold for no other reason than&#13;
that the owner wants to get out'of&#13;
town.'*-—Pittsburg Press.&#13;
gotten his own name; and when after&#13;
the supposed death of his victim be&#13;
came here to take tbe place of bis&#13;
brother, to fraudulently take possessslon,&#13;
what course would look so plausible&#13;
as to pretend he had losUhls memory,&#13;
as he knew the other to have&#13;
done. This would account for the&#13;
long absence, the probable manner of&#13;
Hamilton on his way to Portland, and&#13;
and inconvenient lack of kowledge regarding&#13;
'people and events which&#13;
would of\ necessity recur to him. He&#13;
could lay, it to lapses of memory, as&#13;
he had done more than once.&#13;
The respondent, who was in reality&#13;
Ashley himself, was a man -of great&#13;
resources, of great fertility. He came&#13;
to Orovedale to step into his twin&#13;
brother's possessions, after the supposed&#13;
death of the true Vane Hamilton;&#13;
and he laid claim to the letter's&#13;
manner, peculiarities, and so forth,&#13;
much of .which was natural to him.&#13;
The great resemblance was true and&#13;
undoubted, but probably no greater&#13;
than ht, often observed between twins&#13;
of both sexes.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
In Fly TJme.&#13;
Charles J. Bonaparte, the new Secretary&#13;
of the Navy, writes a neat and&#13;
beautiful hand.&#13;
A reporter, on a hot afternoon not&#13;
long since; complimented Mr. Bonaparte'on&#13;
his ^Urography, *»&lt;* to the&#13;
compliment the secrc*tary replied:&#13;
"At the seaside I once beard a little&#13;
girl make a remark about her father's&#13;
writing, that would not have applied&#13;
to mine. ."•••'.'&#13;
"The IftuasJ* was reading with her&#13;
mothir -to the hotel oafee. On the&#13;
table befbreher waa an ink bottle and&#13;
some clean stationery, and as she read&#13;
a Ay g^ixitaUheijnav The fly, after&#13;
a bait ^Struggle; emerged from H*&#13;
black batt^aadJa«n exhausted and&#13;
drilled l » u W n ti trailed ItsejP&#13;
slow!* aad with greet difficulty&#13;
Curtia Tariff Bill.&#13;
PaCUppine tariff legislation will be&#13;
one of the first of several important&#13;
pieces of unfinished business brought&#13;
to the attention of congress when it&#13;
convenes in December. Advocates of&#13;
free trade between this country and&#13;
the archipelago are determined to see&#13;
to It that the excuse of lack of time&#13;
made last winter shall sot avail at&#13;
the coming session. The bill of Representative&#13;
Curtis providing for a duty&#13;
on sugar and tobacco at 25 per cent&#13;
of the Dingley rates and all other imports&#13;
free will be introduced again at&#13;
once. Representative Payne has prepared&#13;
a bill providing that all Imports&#13;
from the islands, including sugar and&#13;
tobacco, ahall come in free of duty, but&#13;
not to take effect until 1909, when the&#13;
provision of the treaty with Spain relating&#13;
to her trade with the Philippines&#13;
shall have ceased to be operative.&#13;
Good Progress.&#13;
Secretary Taft says he is very much&#13;
pleased with the situation in Panama,&#13;
which be said, he found, had greatly&#13;
changed for the hetter sincg^hlglast&#13;
trip. He thought from wJjathe~~5aa"&#13;
already -seen that the work on the&#13;
canal was progressing satisfactorily&#13;
and that the work was now efficiently&#13;
organized. He said he was happy to&#13;
note the spirit of th emen on the canal&#13;
had improved and that the depression&#13;
of five or six months ago did not exist.&#13;
All of them seemed to enjoy life&#13;
there and were interested in their&#13;
work.&#13;
The secretary said he had found&#13;
the sanitary conditions excellent and&#13;
believed that by 'continuing the present&#13;
methods yellow fever could be controlled,&#13;
or at least its ravages considerably&#13;
diminished.&#13;
"On th« Rocks,"&#13;
A dozen or more insurance financiers&#13;
were assembled .in a room just&#13;
prior to the exposure of the affairs of&#13;
the Equitable Life. Its president, Mr.&#13;
Alexander, stood before them and&#13;
pleaded for a change of method, announcing&#13;
the course he proposed to&#13;
take in case of their refusal. He could&#13;
endure existing conditions no longer.&#13;
They said, "It will ruin you." He replied,&#13;
WI know it."&#13;
"There is a saying of the ancients.&#13;
"Let the man who has the fewest&#13;
years to live be the sacrifice." I im the&#13;
oldest man present. "You with year&#13;
millions may weather the storm! I&#13;
shall go upon the rocks, but conscience&#13;
will be clear."&#13;
This was said in a sermon by Rev.&#13;
Dr. H. A. Stimson, of the Manhattan&#13;
Congregational church, and is the first&#13;
hint given the public that James W.&#13;
Alexander is irretrievably broken in&#13;
body. He Is ail but hopelesssly broken&#13;
in mind. He is broken in spirit. His&#13;
family name, which he revered above&#13;
ail. things, and which since long before&#13;
the revolutionary War waa synonymous&#13;
for honesty, integrity, fair dealing and&#13;
uprightness, has been assailed -and&#13;
tarnished.&#13;
Tallow candles are being used in the&#13;
dty of Winsaed, Conn., rather titan&#13;
gap, upon which a monopoly inHhe&#13;
atty iwoeatly raised the rates from&#13;
t» U ^ r tlK&gt;asaa« font&#13;
Automatic Fire Alarm.&#13;
A» automatic fire alarm recently&#13;
patented ha England sounds an alarm&#13;
In a hotel office twelve seconds after&#13;
a fire starts In sny of its rooms. Tbe&#13;
apparatus' ia simply an application&#13;
the fact that heat causes expansion,&#13;
snftefeat in this case to complete an&#13;
electric circuit.&#13;
Teaches Girls to Make Butter.&#13;
There is a society in Norwsy which,&#13;
ha order to increase the output of butter&#13;
for the British market, offers a&#13;
six months'.course, with free board&#13;
and tuition, to young country girls&#13;
who wish to learn how to take car*&#13;
of cows and make the best butter.&#13;
Lake to Furnish Power.&#13;
Lake Titicaca, the highest navigable&#13;
lake in the world. Is to be tapped&#13;
for electric power to run the Peruvian v&#13;
railways and to supply a surplus sufficient,&#13;
it is believed, to enable Peru&#13;
to take a prominent place Smong themanufacturing&#13;
countries.&#13;
7:SM&#13;
Study and Think.&#13;
It is a piling up of reserve forcethat&#13;
produces positiveness and popularity.&#13;
A lack ./Of inherited energy&#13;
binders, but a knowledge of self and)&#13;
the application of useful truths com*&#13;
pensate.—Earl M. Pratt.&#13;
Easy to Tell the Difference. ~&#13;
As near as the layman can make out&#13;
from the elaborate account of the distinction&#13;
made by the experts, the best&#13;
way to tell the difference between a&#13;
cyclone and a tornado is to look at ths&gt;&#13;
wreckage afterward.&#13;
One of Women's Trials.&#13;
Isn't it awful when a women keep*&#13;
fixing her back hair at the theater and&#13;
then when the performance is ewer&#13;
finds that she has left her diamond&#13;
ring on her dresser at home!—Cleveland&#13;
Leader.&#13;
I&#13;
Qetd 44200 Feet Underground. ~&#13;
Gold is on exhibition in the mining&#13;
department, Melbourne, Australia,&#13;
found in the New Chum mine, Bendigo,&#13;
at a depth of 4,200 feet, the record&#13;
depth of gold discovery.&#13;
Elections in France&#13;
The president of France is elected&#13;
for seven years, by a majority of&#13;
votes of the senate and chamber of&#13;
deputies, united in a national assembly&#13;
or congress.&#13;
Have You a&#13;
Father or Mother&#13;
Wwebaokseen esdd vesoaocdeldtt oyae aorfs (hhaevire beaowdiwly* f a u agoetnieoraasl. tcoarupsiindg l;iv inerd iogre simtiopno,v eoroiashaetidp Wstioooad, ?s lTughgsirssh i so rs o rweosreadoyu tia s ythstee mwi dliek ew oMrldsr vthia***s wOialls etoarnae CMa ofetok-s* Itisntey Tseslblsto tths.a t Bcyon tsnttetltrtt et otahteo mefsfseocto lsurp coaos tt aoaf tnhoer mthae l bseocwrestliso nth*e t aorses s otfi mtosslsst issd .r otipes ireslsdw, ntaen- Uwoanll so Ifs groso-eds,t hsbealllsthheyd W. sooodd i aissTtstshds votfe tas.s stttaasis&gt;l pgissrha,t uusn,h theae lthpyst fsstnstte l ao fi sthseto wrshdotjos dhficg,Ossltdis&gt;etb s»pe- vigor.&#13;
Those tab©le*tts s aarye ]&#13;
jte,stom&#13;
Wt want every*!&#13;
'•&gt;&#13;
.•*$£»&#13;
s«*r. &lt;.!.!.''•.&#13;
,:"k'fm$m&amp; ! B S » * &lt; a * W B ^ T » * » » B ^ ^ &gt;»~-sw*»!W*ft*:.&#13;
« # :¾ %*..&#13;
- * • * * •&#13;
-.3*'?&#13;
•" y^.' ***..- } • • •&#13;
•rv ^-¾¾ • Y * r , &gt;&#13;
•v^r -JIL£I:&#13;
J*/Ik:&#13;
-f'V ft"'-&#13;
« .&#13;
,-.^-&#13;
••v.- • .• uv «K* . v •» 4.-r'^» • . ,.- L . , •*&#13;
«s,v&#13;
mm —torn&#13;
W H S *&#13;
. **»- - v * -"VH*-&gt;****&#13;
# '&#13;
v ««?»'&#13;
^.ANDREWS d'%0. HMMHiTora.&#13;
— p ^ — — — — • — * — — • W I » I t4 pi n ^ l . U —&#13;
THtTHSPXY, NOV. 9,1905.&#13;
Son Lest Mother.&#13;
M Consumption runs ia oar %nuly,&#13;
tn&lt;l thioagc it I lost my esovner,"&#13;
wri$«.fivB. Reid, tf HiwnAoy, &amp;U.&#13;
"For fbeppst five years, however, on&#13;
.th&amp;gliftj)test sign 0/ acouab or cold. 1&#13;
-fcaflnrtaicen -£ivJC4aHrVNe*i-4)sseW&lt;^/-&#13;
for.Consumption Wbi&lt;*b has saved me&#13;
from serious long tjapnble.,' His moth&#13;
ere death was a sad loss to Mr. Reid&#13;
bat he learned thaHung trouUe must'&#13;
not be neg.ected, and how to care it.&#13;
. Quickest relief and care for coughs ajyl&#13;
eolds. Price 50o. and 11 00 guaranteed&#13;
~-*!br$7-k, Sigler'a drag stere^ ^rial&#13;
battle Iree. - '&#13;
"I&#13;
"i 1.&#13;
BlvebeareV *&lt;* *&#13;
"Who "was the original Bluebeard "?H&#13;
asks a -writer In the London Chronicle.&#13;
He continues: "We owe*.the familiar&#13;
Bluebeard of the pantomime to Charles&#13;
Perrault, the FrenchnmnVho published&#13;
in 1G96-07 his unmdr'tnl stories of&#13;
'Bluebeard,* 'The Sleeping Beauty,'&#13;
Xittle Red Riding Hoxxl' and Cinderella.'&#13;
But It la yWy uncertain who, if&#13;
anybody, was Perrault's model for&#13;
Bluebeard. SjaaeJUave supposed that&#13;
It was our Henry VIII., others that the&#13;
tale is a lampoon upon the castle lords&#13;
of .knighterrantry days in general.&#13;
Perhaps the , favorite candidate has&#13;
beeaV&amp;lleVde Rals, marshal of France,&#13;
•who was hanged and burned In 1440&#13;
for aa awful series of crimes. During&#13;
J» eertflirsnglisn itmkeepeVs4w&amp;Xf&#13;
eendttcted a weekly raffle. 1« tale ranlu&#13;
ate prises were turkey*, duo**, youa*&#13;
pigs, baskets of eggs and auch like&#13;
rural commodities. A quantity of&#13;
•teel disks, numbered from 1 to 25»&#13;
were put luto a black bag, and the little&#13;
daughter of the Innkeeper gut her&#13;
hand in the bag and drew a disk for&#13;
each speculator in turn. The person&#13;
whose number was the highest got the&#13;
prize.&#13;
Well, it had been notleed that the&#13;
Innkeeper's wife got the prise pretty&#13;
frequently, but nothing was thought&#13;
of this by the simple, honest rural folk.&#13;
£&gt;ne e^veiUi^JAough, the little girt&#13;
with her hand in the bag; paused, It&#13;
was her mother's turn, and she did not&#13;
draw forth her mother's1 disks In her&#13;
usual quick and careless way. She&#13;
rummaged about The other ramers&#13;
looked at one another oddly. The inn*&#13;
keeper said:&#13;
"Come, come, child, hurry up."&#13;
"But, father," .said the little girl, "I&#13;
-can'tilnd the hot _oue."&#13;
A Disastrous Calamity&#13;
It is a disastrous calamity, when you&#13;
lese your health, because indigestion&#13;
and constipation have sapped it awf y.'&#13;
Prompt relief can be bad in. Dr. king's&#13;
New Life Pills. The build up vour digestive&#13;
organs, arid cure headache,&#13;
dizziness, colic, constipation, etc.&#13;
Guaranteed at F. A. Sigler's ding&#13;
store; 25 cents. ':&#13;
»nu*mmn*&gt;+smn?mm . - * l ' i&#13;
~10NG ENGAGEMCNTS.&#13;
A. WtiMBi Ftat *y Warfe* &lt;* Brim*&#13;
. Ahout Hmp^r Mmtrtsigcan.,. .&#13;
Marriage is an institution "of . the&#13;
State; therefore she should put it out&#13;
of the bonds of possibility that, people&#13;
can marry each other in two days or&#13;
a week. How many, marriages would&#13;
be broken off If the state required a&#13;
three years' engagement before people&#13;
are married? After all,vif a woman&#13;
wants to become a 'mm In two months,&#13;
no convent iu the world, will accept&#13;
her. She must he a novice for two or&#13;
three years. During that time she has&#13;
to make an examination of her conscience'&#13;
every day and to And out if&#13;
she has a vocation for n nun. But&#13;
women and men marry without the&#13;
slightest preparation, without the&#13;
slightest thought of the future, while&#13;
Dame Nature laughs at her moat odd&#13;
pairings. She wants her world peopled.&#13;
That is her part. The men audjwpdeu&#13;
who are iH suited to each other are not&#13;
her affair.&#13;
Girls and 4ioys" at school should be&#13;
taught to look upon masriage as the&#13;
most beautiful, the happiest, the jnost&#13;
desirable and the most possible thing&#13;
in the world. Boys should be taught&#13;
to keep their minds und their bodies&#13;
pure for the state which they will&#13;
probably enter and to have a sense of&#13;
protection and loyalty to girls, and&#13;
girls should be taught industry, self&#13;
sacrifice and responsibility for the married&#13;
state.—Mrs. T. P. O'Connor in&#13;
Black and White.&#13;
ftr^y^aWie^s betiered^ T h e a i l m e n t 8 o f&#13;
k!dnjpA*$$ about 150 children, tortured&#13;
them|^ sacrificed- tbem to the devil, i bunletf their bodies and buripd their&#13;
bones in Jbjs castle grounds. But the&#13;
wteemblenee between his tale and B i u e ^ 1 1 ^ ^ 5 ^ ^ ^ - 1 1 ^&#13;
beard's is too slight to be convincing.'&#13;
A CARD.&#13;
[, the undersigned, do hereby agne&#13;
to refund the money on a 50 cent bottle&#13;
of Greene's Warranted Syrup of&#13;
Ta/ if it failes ro core your cough or&#13;
cold. I also'guarantee a 25-cent bottle&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money reunded.&#13;
119&#13;
Will H. narrow.&#13;
The Rajah's Gweat.&#13;
It is the custom in Sarawak that the&#13;
rajah's house shall be open to his subjects&#13;
at any time. That same Kayan&#13;
chief from Baram who visited me, Dian&#13;
by name, presented himself one&#13;
night at Astana whdi the rajah had a&#13;
tinner party. His appearance, clad&#13;
limply in a chawat (walstcormrwlttHnve&#13;
rolh&gt;wera in Pqnnlly full rtrogti,&#13;
among a dozen people conventionally&#13;
tttlred was a piquant reminder that I&#13;
was "east of Suez." Diau pulled a pipe&#13;
—I was going to say from his pocketlit&#13;
up and bore his part gallantly in the&#13;
social amenities of the evening,—London&#13;
Express.&#13;
«1 Thank The Lord!"&#13;
cried Hannah Plant, of Little Rock,&#13;
Ark., "lor the relief rhe got lrom Buck-&#13;
Arnica Salve. It cured my fear-&#13;
&gt;r*s, wbicb nothing else&#13;
would heal, aodlr6T!r-wb4eh,I bad snf-&#13;
-_fered fo_r 5 years." It is a marvelous&#13;
hemler tor cut.*, burns and pounds&#13;
Guaranteed at F. A. Sigler'* drug&#13;
store; 25 cents.&#13;
Fool* All the Doctors,&#13;
"There is a hale and hearty looking&#13;
old chap walking about town^'Lremarkr&#13;
ed a New York physician lately, "who&#13;
for years has had a complication.^ diseases&#13;
which make him most Interesting&#13;
which he^shows undeniable symplontrj rep^^^^a^eV^-^ttlMlo a, great deal&#13;
%re, rarely seen in combination, and the&#13;
state of his inner workings Is a matter&#13;
for speculation among the doctors who&#13;
"The old fellow himself loves to ten&#13;
that when he first asked medical advice&#13;
some twenty years ago the physlciarf,&#13;
a famous practitioner in those&#13;
days, wrote across the diagnosis he had&#13;
put down on paper: 'This man cannot&#13;
live thirty days. I should like to be&#13;
present at the autopsy.' That great&#13;
doctor has been dead these many years,&#13;
and the dying patient still smiles cheerfully&#13;
and seeks a cure for his malady.&#13;
Queer, isn't It?"—New York Press.&#13;
A liquid cold cure and the only&#13;
coush syrup which nicves the bowels—&#13;
works all cold out of the system—is&#13;
Kennedy'8 Lavative Honey and Tar.&#13;
Clears tbe bead and throat and .uakes&#13;
weak lungs strong. Best lor croup,&#13;
whooping cough, etc. Cbildreo love it.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Druggist.&#13;
WluMi-Piivv Crockett sat In the nn-&#13;
BIM Insanity.&#13;
"Your honor," said the attorney, "this&#13;
man's insanity takes the form of a belief&#13;
that every one wants to rob him.&#13;
He won't allow even me, his counsel to&#13;
approach him."&#13;
"Maybe he's not so crazy after all,"&#13;
murmured the court in a judicial whisper.—&#13;
London Express.&#13;
THE ORIGINAL&#13;
LAXATIVE COUCH SYRUP&#13;
Tk»le«&#13;
tioiKiU-p.^isltttuv as u representative of&#13;
tli;&gt; s:;itc of Texas be ha 1 many clashes&#13;
with iiu'ii of more oilueivtl &gt;n, but less&#13;
wit, than himself. It is to'.d of him&#13;
that one \\.\y while standing In front&#13;
of his hotel tin Pontnylvaula aveuue a&#13;
s w a m of mules trot led by under the&#13;
•custody of ;iu overseer from one of the&#13;
stock f ::Y.:S in Virg'nia. .A congressman&#13;
from l i j s t m, who w a s standing&#13;
near by, attracted Crockett's attention&#13;
to the unusual sight, saying:&#13;
•'Hollo there, Crockett. Here's a lot&#13;
of your constituents on parade. Where&#13;
arc they going?"&#13;
Tin1 celebrated hunter looked a t the&#13;
animals with a quizzical glance, and&#13;
then, turning to the other, saId quietly,&#13;
but with great emphasis, "They are going&#13;
to Massachusetts t o teach school."&#13;
—Harper's Weekly.&#13;
THE FOUR AGES.&#13;
So Life Goes, Always Ha« Goae and&#13;
Always Will Go.&#13;
Here^'areuiau's four views of time:&#13;
"You* still have forty years to live,"&#13;
said the guardian spirit to the youth.&#13;
"It is a long, long time," the youth&#13;
before it is past."&#13;
"You have thirty years yet to live,"&#13;
the guardian" spirit said to the still&#13;
young man.&#13;
—"WeHrtfaat -is- quite awhile," was the&#13;
reply. "Probably I cannot do all I had&#13;
Intended, but I will make quite a showing."&#13;
"You have twenty years to live," the&#13;
spirit said to the middle aged man.&#13;
"Only twenty! Well, I suppose 1&#13;
will have to do tbe best I can In that&#13;
length of time."&#13;
For the last time the guardian spirit&#13;
appeared. "You yet have ten years&#13;
left," he said to the rapidly aging man,&#13;
The man sighed. "But ten years,"&#13;
he whispered in reply. "And what can&#13;
one do in those few days?"&#13;
And when the end had come the man&#13;
looked backward and moaned, "I am&#13;
leaving it nearly all undone!"&#13;
And so life goes, although youth will&#13;
not believe it, and oniy old age fully&#13;
realizes that it is so.—Philadelphia Inquirer.&#13;
FIDDLERS AND DRUMMERS.&#13;
Two CU»iiei of Inaecf That Pro-&#13;
«lnee Audible Sound*.&#13;
Insects that produce soundsaMtWeaU&#13;
Coughs asMl&#13;
• • s l a t s la expeUinf&#13;
Colds from the&#13;
S y s t e m by&#13;
featly moving&#13;
tilt bowels.&#13;
A certain&#13;
lor croup and&#13;
Wisspluf-comfa&#13;
A cough syrup which drives a cold&#13;
out of the system by acting as a cathartic&#13;
on the bowels is offered in&#13;
Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar.&#13;
Clears the throal, strengthens the&#13;
lungs end tronubial tubes. Th* moth&#13;
er's friend and the childred's favorite.&#13;
Best for croup whooping cough, etc.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
.w I- : T l v r : . t ; &gt; : &lt;»» ir.u: J l i l h i t .&#13;
The \r. i of •':••*, n;' \w)\ jfov,-M r ; t&#13;
a Jimn Ji;»-&gt; the opium h.Voi'. !&gt;»t. ir-&#13;
Conseip-eiicc*. instead of beiu,:; disastrous,&#13;
u i e deMghtful and socially a*&#13;
well us morally Improving.—Sartorial&#13;
Art Hoy lew.&#13;
KENNEDY UUTIVE&#13;
• *".&#13;
* •&#13;
m » BeWriT m C*rC*|OAOO,U.«A&#13;
: 0614 fer F, A, StgrST, Druggist.&#13;
Bashfclnoss may sometimes exclude&#13;
pleasure, but seldom opens any avenue&#13;
to sorrow or remorse.—Johnson;&#13;
Nature needs only a Little Eary Riser&#13;
now and then to keep tbe bowels clean,&#13;
the liver active, and tbe system&#13;
free from bile, headaches, constipation&#13;
etc. The fa moos little pills "Early&#13;
R isers" are pleasant in affect and per&#13;
fect'in action. They never gripe or&#13;
sicken, but tone and strengthen^ the&#13;
liver and fcidaeySi&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Druggist.r*• -&#13;
to human ears have been roughly divided&#13;
into two classes—fiddlers and drummers.&#13;
The grasshopper is a fiddler and&#13;
makes music by scraping its fore wings&#13;
against the rows of spinelike teeth Unit&#13;
ornament its thighs. The katydid also&#13;
plays nn entomological fiddle. It produces&#13;
its notes by rubbing the inner&#13;
side of the hind legs over the front&#13;
wings.&#13;
The locust, on the other hand, is a&#13;
drummer, and a loud one too. His&#13;
drum is formed by a membrane situated&#13;
at the base of the fore wing, and&#13;
he can make a forest ring with it. Tbe&#13;
cicada, or seventeen year locust, carries&#13;
a drum at the base of the abdomenand&#13;
makes with it a noise that seems&#13;
to be quite as terrify-ing in the insect&#13;
world as that produced by the gorilla&#13;
pounding its resounding chest is amont,;&#13;
wild beasts. It Is said thatrthe cicada&#13;
sometimes frightens away Its enemies&#13;
with the rattle of its drum.&#13;
There are other drumming Insects&#13;
which make good music, but the violinists,'&#13;
after all, carry off the palm, for&#13;
the great insect soloist, the cricket, is a&#13;
fiddler.&#13;
The Month of Anmst.&#13;
Few persons know why August has&#13;
thirty-one days. July, which takes Its&#13;
name from Julius Caesar, has thirtyone&#13;
days, and Augustus, who completed&#13;
the calendar, declined to submit to&#13;
the Indignity of seeing his own month&#13;
branded with the Inferiority of one day&#13;
less. Tbe astronomers had according-&#13;
4y to reshuffle the lunar cards, and, after&#13;
some perplexity, hit upon the expedient&#13;
of shearing twenty-four hours&#13;
from February's glory in order that&#13;
August might face tbe world on a&#13;
footing of perfect equality with July.'&#13;
Do not be deceived by counterfeits&#13;
when you boy Witch Hazsl Silve.&#13;
The name of E. C. DeWitt &amp; Co, U on&#13;
every box of the genuine, Piles in&#13;
their worst form will soon pan away&#13;
M joo apply DeWittts Witch Hazel&#13;
Balveai^bt jinxl morning. Best for&#13;
eatsv bitfiwi^oilsv tester/ eczema, est.&#13;
Jolt;$T-ife:A. aider, Druggist&#13;
tmm»&#13;
.-.•r».' i * * .&#13;
1 ' *• .- ..•» i W . i M l A . * ,'litw Ji'fF*. " ,.-*,..'' ,*&#13;
• M i ' ' nn • i i i. • ILTIji'-&#13;
-•^jj;&#13;
-.^,...---&#13;
Vi&#13;
M&#13;
HIGH LIVING&#13;
Feats of Coofclna; and S a t i n s Perforined&#13;
a t Dlssy Altitudes.&#13;
One of Blondin's most applauded&#13;
feats was making an omelet while balancing&#13;
on his rope at a dizzy height.&#13;
When crossing Niagara.he performed&#13;
this culinary exploit, whtch he subse-&#13;
-quently repeated-in—England- in&#13;
strange situations, not the least being&#13;
above the Thames, which he crossed&#13;
more than once.&#13;
Tbe summit of Salisbury's spire was&#13;
used as a kitchen in 1655 when a&#13;
plumber named Hendley, having surmounted&#13;
Its height of 400 feet, proceeded&#13;
with the utmost nonchalance to&#13;
cook an ample -repast consisting of a&#13;
shoulder of mutton and a couple of&#13;
fowls. Agata in 1762, when lata same&#13;
spire stood in need of repair, James&#13;
Grist, to whom the job was intrnstel.&#13;
cooked and ate a dish of beans and bacon,&#13;
to the astonishment of the crowd&#13;
collected below.&#13;
On one occasion five adventurous&#13;
spirits under the leadership of a certain&#13;
Pierre Houbaud, taking with them&#13;
cooking utensils, scaled the spire of&#13;
Bayeux cathedral. On reaching the gigantic&#13;
glided statue of St. Michael,&#13;
which then stood on the summit, they&#13;
proceeded to cook their dinner, which&#13;
they ate with great gusto, much to the&#13;
amazement of • the onlookers, whose&#13;
health they drank at the conclusion of&#13;
the feast. *.&#13;
Bvery from he adrta yd isweea sere, ayde to ift s iusd sde fns odts .atht at, athned hgaeavret uhpa dth eb esetnr upglgelaed ionngly f owrh ehnem i.t ;&#13;
Ability te i t a * ! « &lt;p****fjf«&#13;
:, taHrerf Stajewejt/ &amp; ,;.. -^,&#13;
Tna*e arelnmny qualities necessary ^''tKnirmsmtTreeelveslie' atunfcoa&#13;
to success iu naoderu business IhX.pttt : ^^^^J^^^^^^Sm*&#13;
there Is juwfVef more importance to,.*;; 1 ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ ^ SnsaSfns.THnV&#13;
ty than the^&gt;ower te make a plain* mry hsij»7©r u eompeUed to tiv* up—&#13;
straightforward, businesslike state- stop.v You joey furnish this aid with&#13;
meat. The ojuelity of aueiiey^ hot D r . M U e f t ' H e a r t C u r e&#13;
so much what is required as the quail- which cures heart disease in every atsev&#13;
ties of accuracy and clearness, defljnte- ^^ ^ y ws read of sudden deafhf&#13;
teas and brevity, tact and judgment&#13;
If we are not clear, and precise it la&#13;
certain that those who listeu to ua&#13;
wiU he no more clear when we.have&#13;
finished thau we are ourselves, proba*&#13;
Wy BHieh 4t«s so, We must Jiave no&#13;
vague und misty Ideas about the' subject,&#13;
Jbut they must be crystallized and&#13;
definite. These (qualities of our thought&#13;
and speech, however, cannot bo left to&#13;
chance. They ure attained as the result^&#13;
f effort, of careful and iudepemlent&#13;
thought on the subject for ourselves,&#13;
of looking at It from many&#13;
points of view, aud thus satisfying&#13;
ourselves and those w-ha listen to us&#13;
that we thoroughly understand what&#13;
we are talking about. Having decided&#13;
what to say and having properly arranged&#13;
It, the Tast point Is how to say&#13;
it. The first essential Is to sneak distinctly,&#13;
then to be natural, straightfonward,&#13;
lucid, neither to strive after effect&#13;
nor to exaggerate, but to give the&#13;
impression that we are ourselves convinced&#13;
of the cogency and force of our&#13;
own contention,—Technics. "&#13;
- V&#13;
had exhaus^d the last mark of vltaWy.&#13;
"I was taken down with heart trouble,&#13;
and dropsy, and my family dootor said&#13;
there was no chance for me. I sat&#13;
up three months to keep from smothering-.&#13;
A trial bottle of Dr. Miles' Heart&#13;
Cttre helped « e , - a n d 1 got 6 hottlns*&#13;
which entirely cured me."&#13;
L. T. CTTRD. Wilmore. Ky. •&#13;
Ths first bottle wiU benefit, if not, the&#13;
druggist will return, your money.&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
C O U C H 8 A R I D A N C E R&#13;
Signals; Stop^Them With&#13;
» 5 * Dr. Kine's&#13;
/TO y ^0N8UHPTi0»&#13;
0UGSS and&#13;
ILDS&#13;
^Hcs^&#13;
80c A $1^)0&#13;
tJlE GURETIMrS Sime for all Diseases&#13;
Of Throat and Bungs or Money&#13;
Back. FREE TRIAL.&#13;
r «r'm **&amp;*.)&#13;
H&#13;
What&#13;
Will Do&#13;
1/ M»f aoo&gt; M f n i l i subscript&#13;
Horn for tf&gt;« 19H Solans o/ Ts»&#13;
Youth's Compmniom it Mil 9*tltU&#13;
gov to all tht issvts for th* r#«&#13;
malning ai##kj e/1903, FREE.&#13;
It »M •ntitU pou to thiJDovbU&#13;
Numbors for Thanksgiving end&#13;
Christmas, rtehlg illustrottd,&#13;
FREE.&#13;
«&#13;
It blili •ntitlo FOB fe Ths Companion's&#13;
"Minufmsn" Calendar&#13;
for 1906—an SXQUISIU somt/onir—&#13;
FREE.&#13;
It Witt ontttto yos to tho fiftp-&#13;
Wo Issues of THo Companion for&#13;
1906—a Uhrarp of th* b*st r*a*h&#13;
ing, including th* f*atnr*s neletf&#13;
atfow. { (&#13;
Cut oat and s*nd this slip (or&#13;
th* nam* of this pap*r&gt; With&#13;
pour $1.75 —nou).&#13;
7 Serial Stories&#13;
I S r t o m p t l t i&#13;
If you are in business and dont&#13;
advertise you are in danger.&#13;
This is a warning.&#13;
See your mistake, in time&#13;
and avert it.&#13;
A poor publisher, the proprietor&#13;
of a struggling megazine,&#13;
sent a half inch advertisement&#13;
to the New York Herald. The&#13;
ad man made it a half page.&#13;
The bill was bigger than the&#13;
publisher's entire possessions.&#13;
He thought he was ruined. v&#13;
' It was the turning point. The&#13;
• magazine sold. It was good&#13;
and people liked it. Other&#13;
half page ads followed.&#13;
Result: fortune,fame,honor.&#13;
Advertising Is Just as potent a&#13;
lever now as it was then.&#13;
This paper reaches&#13;
the homes of this&#13;
section.&#13;
ii+MMMMM+iii&#13;
300 Interesting Articles&#13;
Weekly Editorial Review&#13;
Children's P a l e&#13;
Weekly Article on the Care&#13;
of the Health&#13;
Notes on Current Events and&#13;
Nature and Science&#13;
Anecdotes and Miscellany&#13;
Will fill the pages of The Youth's&#13;
Companion during 1906. (&#13;
Illustrated Announcement for ISO* and&#13;
Sample Copiet (tf the paper sent Frtt,&#13;
WE YOUTH'S COMPANION. Bestea. Mass.&#13;
s IUWW.JC2&gt;SJa*r.&#13;
St a t e o f M i c h i g a n , County of Livingston,&#13;
se. At a session of the Probate court for taid&#13;
county, held at tbe Probate office in the village of&#13;
llowell, on Wednesday the 2Mb day ofUctober, in'&#13;
the year one thousand nine hundred and five.&#13;
Present, Arthur A. Montagne, Judge of Trobate.&#13;
In tbe matter of the estat3 of &lt;• *•&#13;
JAMS* HKFFXRHAJI, deceased&#13;
Xow comes Elda A. Kuhn, adminetrator of&#13;
the estate of said deceased and represents to this&#13;
court that he is ready to render h final account&#13;
In sal J estate.&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered that Friday, the 34th&#13;
day of Nov«mber next,,at ten o'clock In the forenoon&#13;
at said Probate Office, be assigned for the&#13;
hearing of said account.&#13;
And It is fnrthi r ordered thht a copy of this&#13;
order be published in the Hnckney Dispatch* a»&#13;
newspaper printed and circulating in said county,,&#13;
three successive weeks previous to said day of.&#13;
hearing. ^t46»&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAGUE,&#13;
Judge of Probate. 1&#13;
STATE OP^ MICBIGN-Courty of Livingitonr89.&#13;
At s session of tbe Probate i'ourt for&#13;
th« said county, held at tie probate office la the&#13;
village of Howell, on Tuesday, tbe Wth day of&#13;
October In the year one thousand ntee hundred&#13;
five. Preaent, irtbur A. Menlague, Judge of&#13;
Probate. In the matter of the estate of&#13;
DAVID I, VA*Syntax, deceased&#13;
Now comes Ellen Agusta VanSyckel, execnfrlx&#13;
of the eaute of said deoaaeed sad represents&#13;
to this court that she .Is Ksdj to reader&#13;
her final account la acid estate.&#13;
Thereupon It Is ordered that Friday tbe l?tb&#13;
day of ftoTeasaer next at tea-o'clock la the forencK)&#13;
n,atsaMPTObeteOnlee,beaertgned ibr tat&#13;
beaitaf of sa)d aoeenttat, .&gt;&#13;
And it is further ordered that a oopr of this&#13;
or or be pabHsaad la the Bntcnur Djerawa* a&#13;
aewspapf r printed sad etrealettof la said ooaatr^&#13;
ttreesu^te^vew^aesapMy|pAS to aaidT da? o r&#13;
hasflajt.' t - J ' s~ •&#13;
rxs- ^ - A k ^ . 4 ^ j s s i a g p ^&#13;
tej ; % Js^i^PToeate.&#13;
*&gt;'J;^|S^»^;&#13;
. * jhf;&#13;
i r*\&#13;
fr.X&#13;
•%ft:&#13;
I&#13;
• « * - , • * •&#13;
&gt;,v)HP* wPfPrflsY1 as*»lv?ie)JP-.&#13;
&gt;*...&gt;&#13;
•".*?•'&#13;
•/•-A-'&#13;
^&#13;
f/&#13;
to r^its in Arisoni, Arkansas, Aatinftoiii,&#13;
BritUh Colombia, Caoadisn&#13;
Northwest, Colorado, Idaho* Indian&#13;
Territory, Iowa, Kf0M8, lUnitob*,&#13;
MaiieOt Mioaeaots, Missouri, Montana,&#13;
Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico,&#13;
North aod-Soiith Dakotr, Oregon,&#13;
Texas, Wsabiogtoa and VYyoiniag at&#13;
greatly redout raUa for the r;ond&#13;
trip. Tickets dn ssie the first and&#13;
third Tuesdays of each month. For&#13;
fnrtber information apply to F. B.&#13;
hosier, fTTT A., Tlp^^damt&#13;
Chiesgo,Jll -" *&#13;
'Bly&#13;
WO&#13;
li often at great as woman's,, Bat&#13;
Too*: !^U Austin, Mtr. Qf the '^HopnU&#13;
iicao," ot LeaTenworth, Ind., was dot&#13;
unreasonable, when he related to&#13;
allow the doctor! to operate on bii&#13;
wife, for female trouble, "Iastesd,"&#13;
he eiyt," we concluded to try Electric&#13;
Bitters. My wife vat then ao sway knot* an hour, "Bret Iiarte bit 'em off&#13;
ibecouJdhKdly leave her bed, and] just as they are in bU 'An Sin.'&#13;
five [h] pbysietans bad failed to relieve&#13;
her. After taking Electric Bitters,&#13;
ibe was perfectly cured, and can now&#13;
prelorm ail her household doties."&#13;
TM not&#13;
tried to&#13;
'do' ue ID the China eea away back beq&#13;
, . ^ ^ ^ g i ainUr ^nn ,,i.) \ ton £****«**m thought of owning the&#13;
! 5 ? S ? f price oOeent^s. * ^ * *"iw-W PhJHpplnee. I wii7nnning theeigtoe&#13;
••!!*"&#13;
vv&#13;
i 3- ii*&#13;
- ^ ¾ ¾ ^ ¾ ^&#13;
*TOS ' «&#13;
RESULTS&#13;
WThe&#13;
word results means a whole lot to the fanner of to-day and it ia&#13;
- especially attractive to the homeeeeker or those seeking new locations.&#13;
If we tell you of a country where you are sure of success, will you&#13;
believe us? It is only necessary for you to farm the land and the&#13;
best results will follow—a State which the government reports will&#13;
- show leads in the production of wheat. It also ranks among the first&#13;
. in the raising of com, alfalfa, timothy and other products, together&#13;
with, stock rjusing. We apeak of&#13;
" ' afm asA J R f ' 9 ~ J R L ' 9&#13;
&lt;&#13;
Thegreat State of the West, where lands can ^¾ purchased&#13;
to $30 per acre which equals the returns of the $50 to $150 per acre&#13;
lands of other States. EASTERN COLORADO is identical in most&#13;
respects and the same opportunities are offered there. B&gt;uy quick&#13;
while the lands are cheap and secure the benefit of an excellent investment.&#13;
THE Mt«*OUftI PACIFIC RAILWAY touches the&#13;
heart of this rich agricultural region and extremely low rates are&#13;
offered, allowlhg atop-over at pleasure in certain territory for inspection&#13;
Of lands, etc Write us and we will send you free descriptive&#13;
literature and lull information.&#13;
H. D.-ARMSTRONG H- c - TOWNSEND.&#13;
' OEMCRAL MSSfffOCJt AND TICKET AOENT.&#13;
8 8 G r l e w o l d at. Detroit , Mich. 8T. LOUIS, MO.&#13;
•^r*"&#13;
n O N ' T f w O S O U T H UNTIUYOI H A V E S B B N A&#13;
U w W • \ J * * # 3 U U I n R n P R f e c f i N T A T I V E O F T H E&#13;
O r -&#13;
G K 5 A T C E N T R A L&#13;
C. H. c* D . - P E R E MAROUTTB-C. D. St U.&#13;
, AND HAVE LEARNED OF THE SERVICE TH S LINE OFFERS TO&#13;
^Jcxidd^^Aj^he^iUe^ New&#13;
leans &lt;~uba N a s s a u -&#13;
PULLMAN SLEEPIN6 CMS THR0U6H FROM&#13;
DBTROIT and TOI3BDO to JACKSONVIlal*B&#13;
• &gt; • • : . •&#13;
During the winter. Let us arrange your trip. We will check your baggage through,&#13;
reserve sleeping car swomodations and attend 10 all (he details. A postal card addressed&#13;
to either of the undersigned will bring full information.&#13;
An Oily Chinaman&#13;
l©H§1naX): '&#13;
"Talk about the Chinamen," said the&#13;
engineer after doing a little oiling and&#13;
sitting 4own to enjoy his pipe while&#13;
the steamer WHS rolling off twelve&#13;
They've got more smooth&#13;
about 'em than a detective,&#13;
soon forget how one ef 'eto&#13;
cunning&#13;
Railroad&#13;
aboard of :ns; :;iwi captain cut Uml^^!!SS^^SiSuS:MMmMf 1&#13;
down wliii a ifutlass. syltttliig him saott U N H ^ U s ^ ^&#13;
to the middle. 4n another w J e y t e ^ f - * * " 1 " 1 ^ ^ r " ^ - -&#13;
ftoatlug pirates beer.ro to ediujibi out, of&#13;
ills water. If we had Jaad a crew we&#13;
might have let 'em come up. As "it&#13;
was we had all we.eouJd do to kee{)&#13;
'em off. I felt a» the while AS if I&#13;
was fighting a swarm of rattlesnakes.&#13;
But at last there was none of 'cm left&#13;
and we'Hteamed away, listening to the&#13;
dteraal howls of the yellow wretches,&#13;
teeltog comfortable that tbey hadn't&#13;
pat us In their places.&#13;
"That Cheng Pen was an oily dog."&#13;
sdded the engineer sort© voce.&#13;
UABK ANDERSON.&#13;
D. G. E D W A R D S ,&#13;
P. T. M., C. H. &amp; D.,&#13;
t44 Cincinnati, Ohio.&#13;
H. P. MOBbbBR,&#13;
, G. P. A., Peie Marquette,&#13;
Detroit, Michigan.&#13;
I&#13;
1&#13;
;&#13;
-&#13;
A TRINITY OF TREASURES&#13;
Triple Extract of 'Violet, French Rosea Concentrate,&#13;
Imperial Hair Tonic. Three High Grade Essentials&#13;
to the Toilet at the price of one of them alone, vis t&#13;
• 1.00.&#13;
We manufacture and sell these goods direct to&#13;
the consumer, thus cutting out the profits of the&#13;
middlemen.&#13;
RKCUIAR RETAIL PRIOI&#13;
Triple Violet Extract .50&#13;
French Roses Concentrate • • 1.00&#13;
(Makes 2 quarts exquisite toilet water.)&#13;
• imperial Hair Tonic • • . .50&#13;
|s.oo&#13;
Our Prios) for ths Thrs)e-ONI DOLLAR.&#13;
A savins; to YOU of 100 Per Cent Xa'ril it Worth White f&#13;
Writ* to u« far descriptive Utentvr. of Cheat artida*.&#13;
Tat CINCINNATI PERFUME CO. lao., Clacissatl, Ohio.&#13;
of a chunky little boat need for towing&#13;
called the Polly, and we were making&#13;
for Canton. Our stoker got sick, and&#13;
we left him at Pontianak, Borneo, and&#13;
took in his place Cheng Fen, the .most&#13;
whipped cur appearing Celestial % over&#13;
saw. He looked as if he wouldn't-dare&#13;
take a drink of water without asking&#13;
permission.&#13;
"Pontianak, yon know, is dead on the&#13;
equator, and the southern end of-the&#13;
China sen is as measly a region for&#13;
weather as you want to strike. The&#13;
night we left port the sky looked so&#13;
queer that we were kept on the watch&#13;
for a big blow. The clouds were jagged,&#13;
and the full moon rose red as an&#13;
open furnace door. Going on deck for&#13;
a breath of fresh air—it wasn't fresh&#13;
anywhere, but was better up there&#13;
than in the engine room—I watched the&#13;
wriggling serpents the moon'threw on&#13;
the oily water, and as soon as I&#13;
thought I could stand more of it below&#13;
went down just in time to catch Cheng&#13;
Fen monkeying^ with the machinery. I&#13;
yelled at him to stop, and be turned his&#13;
heathen face, full of injured innocence,&#13;
and said in his pigeon English that a&#13;
screw on the connecting rod seemed to&#13;
be loose, and he was trying to fix i t I&#13;
called the captain to the head of the&#13;
companionway and told him the story,&#13;
adding that something was wrong with&#13;
the stoker and we'd better look out.&#13;
•" 'There's a junk been following in&#13;
pur wake," be said, "ever since we left&#13;
Pontianak. I wonder If there's a plan&#13;
among the copper colored devils to do&#13;
us some damage?'&#13;
"When I went below again the stoker&#13;
was looking dreamily at the steam&#13;
gauge, and the machinery was all agog.&#13;
I picked up a monkey wrench and hurled&#13;
it at him, but he dodged, and 1 knew&#13;
I'd better leave him to a more convenient&#13;
time and attend to the engine.&#13;
He had loosened so many screws and&#13;
the whole machinery was so limber I&#13;
had to stop her while I screwed up,&#13;
and stop her again and again as I&#13;
fouud more damage. The captain came&#13;
down, and when he saw what was the&#13;
trouble told me to go ahead screwing&#13;
up while he threw the stoker overboard.&#13;
He got a nasty wound from a&#13;
knife, but succeeded in dumping the&#13;
Chluamnn.&#13;
"The captain was as nervy a man&#13;
its e\et Ihed. When-ho got on deck he -&#13;
sang out to me to come up as soon as&#13;
Subscribe for the Pinokrvey Dispatch,&#13;
All the sews Cor fl.00 per year.&#13;
f&#13;
UN * M M WM* say-M wwfc" SMMRC "•*&gt; tan by&#13;
THE l-V WASHING TABLETS wm not infers the anest fabrics.&#13;
Thevars ssrJetty Jres frost acids&#13;
ofanjkind.&#13;
They dcthe work wUhenf Tahhim&#13;
Thay aaake the clothes waifiT^&#13;
They eaa he used m hard water.&#13;
They save tiate and the hard&#13;
work on washday. Th«&#13;
peaethlertoOowBerpeai-,- _ .&#13;
tains and Titimtnss They v/fll&#13;
t -w. immtimrtX'&amp;fin thaahy 1&#13;
1 sold est'&#13;
«Mt&#13;
LCcV&#13;
1 got the engine together. I did so, and&#13;
there, about 000 yards behind us, was&#13;
a sight to make my blood run cold. It&#13;
was a junk loaded with a chattering,&#13;
howling lot of Chinamen, pointing&#13;
dead for us. Of course she was a&#13;
pirate and was bent on taking our&#13;
craft, and that meant murder for us.&#13;
They had shipped one of their dirty lot,&#13;
Cheng Fen, on us to loosen our engine&#13;
so that they could overhaul us.&#13;
• *; 'Got Ihe engine all right?' asked&#13;
the captain^ .&#13;
" 'Yes,' I answered.&#13;
" *Are we gaining on 'em ?*&#13;
"I kept my eye on.'em for a time,&#13;
and told him that it was an even thing&#13;
between us, but I thought they were&#13;
gaining ou us slowly.&#13;
" 'Very well,' he said in the same&#13;
cool tone, 'go below and be prepared&#13;
for quick work. Our only chance is&#13;
to ram her, and when I call you come&#13;
up prepared to fight Some of 'em may&#13;
jump aboard/&#13;
"I confess I needed all the nerve 1&#13;
owned, for the prospect was bad.* 1&#13;
hadn't got below before I felt the captain&#13;
turning her in a semicircle, and&#13;
pretty soon he gave me a signal to&#13;
open up for all she was worth; then&#13;
called for me to come up.&#13;
"The sight I saw I shall never forget.&#13;
The captain had got position between&#13;
the pirate and the moon, and the light&#13;
showed the ugly villains almost as&#13;
plain as day. Right out on she junk's&#13;
bow stood Cheng Fen, who had, of&#13;
course, been picked up, with the wickedest&#13;
look on his face I ever saw. The&#13;
pirates hadn't got on to our intention,&#13;
but they did in about five seconds later,&#13;
and their jubilant howls suddenly&#13;
j ceased. We were making all the headway&#13;
we were capable of, and as we&#13;
were a solid little craft the prospect&#13;
for the pirates wasn't pleasant. Tbey&#13;
had.their starboard bow toward us,&#13;
and instead of taking the blow bow on&#13;
t their helmsman sheered off to port, en-&#13;
' abling us to hit her amidships.&#13;
j "I could see Cheug Fen, who seemed&#13;
to be one of their principal men, running&#13;
toward the probable striking&#13;
. point, and he got there just in tiaae.&#13;
We cot the junk in two like a, p*«»*of&#13;
cheese a** rede overiaf' keel. Cfcenr&#13;
j Pen was ttavaiUy one of 'em that j o t&#13;
Every ones of food you est that falls&#13;
to digest does s pons J of barm. It&#13;
turns the entire meal into poison. This&#13;
not only deprives the blood of the necessary&#13;
tisane building material; but it&#13;
poisons it. Kodol Dyspepsia Core is a&#13;
perfect digestsaL It digests the food&#13;
regardless oi the condition qf the stomach.&#13;
It allows that organ to rest&#13;
and get strong again. Believes belch*&#13;
iog, heart burn, soar stomach, indigestion&#13;
palpitation of the heart, etc.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
P^EMABQUETJg&#13;
All the news for 11.00 per year.&#13;
Sac f iwiMS gisajMfc.&#13;
rcaussansnrMTTB^rs*B*raKMurrJN av&#13;
FRANK. U. A N D R E W S db C O .&#13;
aorroaa M» wo«B*Toa«^&#13;
Sabacriptloa Price $1 in Advaaee.&#13;
Satarsd at the PoetoOee at Piaeaaey, atlehlf aa&#13;
aa aaeoaa-elaas matter&#13;
Advertlaiag rates lads Snews on agajteaiien^&#13;
Baalaeaa Carda.f4.00 P " y***.&#13;
Death and marriage noOcee published tree.&#13;
AaaaoaaoaaaeaU of satertaismsats may be said&#13;
for. If desired. hy»r»ses«st»as oslee with tie*&#13;
etsofadmisaioa. Is cess tinrsta axe set &gt;&lt;rjo«M&#13;
^ the office, regular rates wUlbecharsxd.&#13;
All aaatterialoealaeiJcecolnau wWeech.*fad&#13;
ed at Seen to per Use erfracttoa (hereof, tor each&#13;
Insertion. Where no time la apedaed, all aoUea«&#13;
will be inserted until ordered diaeonttsaed, sad&#13;
will he c Sergei for accordingly, f s r ^ e h a a g s s&#13;
.ef adrerttsemsatB MUST reach tela oflce as early&#13;
a* TvasnaT morning to lasers an insertion th*&#13;
same weak&gt;&#13;
IaaUmbraMbea,aaj»Mialty. WehavealtkiadB&#13;
end the latest styles ofTypa, *&#13;
us to execute ell&#13;
Pam&#13;
H&lt;&#13;
ypa, eta., vhteh enables&#13;
1 work can be done.&#13;
ALL BILLS f* TASLB riBST Q* I T M t MOSTH.&#13;
THE VILIAGB DIRECTORY&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PnsaisnaT W. H.PUoeway&#13;
Taonssa Boben Finch, James Bocae,&#13;
Wm Ketmed/Sr , Alfred Moaka,&#13;
b\ 0, Johosoo, M. Booh*.&#13;
CutsjL fiow Head&#13;
TanAaensn P. G. J aekaon&#13;
Aaanaans O. WJaoxto&#13;
STUBBT CoaViaaionsn Alfred Moaka&#13;
HEALTH urncaa Dr.H. K.blaler&#13;
anoka at • —L. E. Hewlett&#13;
MUMA4LL 3. Broajan&#13;
laa. asSact Jk.px. aro,&#13;
* Trains leave 4sonth T.yon as fol?oill&#13;
Por Detroit and East,&#13;
10:48 a. **., 2:19 p. m. 8^8 p. at.&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North and West,&#13;
9:26 a. m., 2:19 p. m., 6:M P* « •&#13;
&lt; . For Saginaw and Bay City,,.&#13;
10:48 a. m., 2:19 p. m., 8:58 p. m.&#13;
For Toledo and South,&#13;
10:48 a. m., 2:19p.m.,&#13;
Jhuim BAT, at n MOlLUin,&#13;
Acent,Soath Lftt. G. P. A., Detroit.&#13;
0rsjs4 Tramp Ball war System.&#13;
East Boand fteaa Piaefeney&#13;
Ve* * S Paatenter Es. ttasday, S4S A. M.&#13;
Mo/ SOPaatengrr tx. Sunday, 4«A» P. at&#13;
W«tt B&lt;nid frcm Pirthmy&#13;
Ho. 27 Peeress?! Xsr. Sunday, IS:01 A. M*&#13;
Ve. n Fattcnger Is, Sunday. M4P. M*&#13;
W. fl.Onrh,&#13;
**a,&#13;
• WgSswMlla-&#13;
Orny Hair is s bar to employment and to&#13;
from it in&#13;
» sow in w e i w o , wmpcuing uie uw.it u of the pjamenta Utatghrw life and color to 1&#13;
haiam three days. It &amp; not sticky or greaar;&#13;
odor:do«n*tst*inth«»c«Jp. ABSOLDTB1&#13;
KAftMT.RBB. tl.00 a bottle. All&#13;
pleasure, but there is relief&#13;
days. It eaa be restored to its natural color&#13;
by msne Mrs. B. W. Allen's Vita Hair Color&#13;
Restorer. It is not a dye bat in a natural way&#13;
it acts in the roots, compelling the secretion&#13;
" " " " " - - • 1^9 e&#13;
,Y&#13;
FLORIMELLA&#13;
CREAM&#13;
the hygienic akin food sires rosy freshness&#13;
afldbeaatytotheakin. Removes all imperfectiona&#13;
sad impurities. A perfect complexion.&#13;
50 cents at your druggists, or sent&#13;
prepaid on receipt of price.&#13;
MARK W. ALIEN A CO.&#13;
Detroit, Mich. m * * M I&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
MSTHOD1UT EPISCOPAL UUUKCH.&#13;
Hev. tt. A.Emehck pastor. Serrlcea erery&#13;
Sunday morning at iu:*^ and eveiy Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thura*&#13;
ddaayy evenlnga. Sunday aehoolatcloee of moraing&#13;
•ervice. MIDI Miar VA«FuuT,Supt.&#13;
ONUK&amp;eyS.Q tAi.TWIO. NMAyLU Ce HpUaaBtoCrH. . SerTleeevet)&#13;
0 and Prayer meet&#13;
every Sonde*&#13;
BUni&#13;
C&#13;
Sunoay lu^ruiai at w:*0 — .&#13;
evening at r.-oco'eixk. Prayer meeUngThnre&#13;
day eveainga. Auaday school at close of morn&#13;
ingaervke. Kev. K. H. Grace, SupL* Moeeo&#13;
Teeple Sec. ilT. MAKST'S CATHOLIC CHURCH.&#13;
5 Uev. M. J. Commerford, Faator. ^ervicee&#13;
•very Sunday. Low mass at7:S0o'clock&#13;
high maaa with aarmon at »;S6a.jn. Catechlam&#13;
"ta :0U p. m„ vssperaaadbenedlctionat7:sop.m&#13;
SOCIETIES:&#13;
The A. 0. H. Society of thla place,meeta averj&#13;
third Sunday intae Fr. MattaewJlaU.&#13;
John Tuomey and M. T. Kelly, County Delegates&#13;
ri\UK W. C. T. U. meeta the nrat Friday of each&#13;
I month at 4:SL p.m. at the home of l&gt;r. H. F.&#13;
sigler. Kvaryoae lntereated ia temperaneeia&#13;
coadtaUy invited. Mrs. Leal Sigler, fret; Mn.&#13;
SltU DurteeJSecretary^&#13;
The C.T. A. and B. society of thla place, me*&#13;
*r*tj third Saturoay evening in the r&gt;r. Av»ithew&#13;
Hall. John l&gt;oaohue. Treslcent.&#13;
KNIGHTS OP MACCABaKT ""&#13;
Meeteverr Friday evening on or before full&#13;
ot the moon at their hall In the Swarthout bldg&#13;
Vial ting hrethers are cordially invited.&#13;
L. nXSarra, Sir KaightOommandei&#13;
Livingston U&gt;dge, No.7«, F A A. M. Hegaiar&#13;
Communication Tueadav evening, on or betor «&#13;
the full ot the moon. Kirk Van Winkle, %. M&#13;
ROER OF EASTERN STAB meeta each month&#13;
' the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
A A. at. meeting, JlaaTSasu Caaxa, W.M.&#13;
RED CHIEF&#13;
Corn Shelter.&#13;
Classes SB Barrel,&#13;
as easily asss Bex.&#13;
Adfasts itself ts&#13;
asy size sar.&#13;
Closed Hepser&#13;
stsaisf It Isiaessisfsfer&#13;
to Pises Hand.&#13;
Is goarasteed ts do as soed If&#13;
better work thsa say shelfcr os ti&#13;
Market. Throws cobs outside every&#13;
time. Cold rolled steel axle. * Requires&#13;
no wrench. Shells popcorn splendidly&#13;
by tightening tension on spring. All&#13;
repairs furnished free of charge, livery&#13;
farmer should have one. For sale by&#13;
hardware and implement dealers.&#13;
MANUFACTURED BY&#13;
BRINLY-HARDY CO., Iscorporated, .&#13;
.\ loslsvine, Ky., U. S. A.&#13;
m .-..^yi&#13;
0&#13;
OlilER OF MODSRN WOODMEN Heat the&#13;
nrat Tnuraday evening of each Xoath in the&#13;
Maocahee ball. C. L. (irimes V. C.&#13;
f AD1SSOFTHB MAOOABBJfiS. Meat every la&#13;
J j sad srd satarday oteech month at S:M p m a&#13;
ZTo.T. M. halUViaitiaf aUteta eerdiaiiy is&#13;
vised, Lxsu. Coaiwar, Lady Com. ,&#13;
KNIGHTS or ran LOYAL GUARD&#13;
F. V Andrews *\ m.&#13;
^ .&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
F.SfOAUlSt.0. C.L,SteiIRM,D&#13;
DRS, SIGLER St SIGLER,&#13;
Att eats7|iias|tiy&#13;
aPtitaseaassadey t,e dhatiyeh .e ra^shsv-l^RS%r ^«1 ea ataia attest&#13;
mi*&#13;
NELSON'S&#13;
ANTI-PAIN ,SOUD&#13;
• m&#13;
m,v&#13;
1"+ INIMENT A onJcsf aad aflhetres ears for&#13;
atiam, Nearalate, Ssiayea, Launbesroache&#13;
sad other nervosa pains and se&#13;
any part of the body; If yon from I&#13;
any of the above illaTwe aai ha aU steesrite&#13;
give oar worthy AJ*w%PADr SOLTO IJNIMBNTn&#13;
fair trial. C ^ v&#13;
ANTI-PAIN SOLID IJD«MHNT «&#13;
in a neat box fa nsate.forth, dlfssreat from&#13;
potrhecekrm Usn ttaoM lnotsss, hy b1f,^ isnhdsefhed ,o"r istn Oisa tnofo.&#13;
A)l von have to o&gt; la to applyaflttleof&#13;
thiias liniment to the effactedpaitato reUers&#13;
the pain I&#13;
rbWnsneT jraa MeaAe'ees"»A.eier»asP» AJir 8OUD LTJS.&#13;
iBimrtjodoaa we cssftai Jbe A,&#13;
Sec4%ahoxto-6^yaadnavettoa&#13;
ttsh esagsS? sees TeniM^trnwKagev^. vreeaiS w^D^a sa-a&#13;
frjoe&gt; aftOess&#13;
Fee sals DVSJSS* ssjsaws ctr&#13;
HEPWYatlXSWIACO^Eavm^atlaa,&#13;
^lm^^j^*±mmmm^g&#13;
.#&amp; u «W.- .*v'(/»-J*»:,3[S^N»-*»iiv,f:'' &gt; , " * *&#13;
,7P?:.-y.&#13;
^ • V - £- ..«:&#13;
5. j..&#13;
..:'&gt;v:;w;&#13;
"7?»W:- ire: •«v;.V''£&#13;
" * &gt; ' • - • * .&#13;
.^••rx " • * ' ^ t&#13;
^ - : ^ ^ . J;. • &gt; . $ # * •&#13;
Wny«o—E»«" "—&#13;
' ^&#13;
^ ^ • ^ T,.;,'iH?A^:&lt;^^ v'ffftftft'^&#13;
.V/&#13;
'•jsv , 4 ' -^ V&#13;
f.'J" ••.*"'.&#13;
v'1 ' I -.Jjf.&#13;
mKx:: 7:.,^5-^.-&#13;
•^fc ^ •'•y^w wVf •&#13;
C&#13;
. , ^ - w&#13;
.•v*i :&gt; :.« T ^ * -&#13;
• • c * ' - - . •'. * '&#13;
^--^--.&#13;
:^&#13;
,,¾ ^&#13;
••v.&#13;
v. '•'&#13;
• * . • •&#13;
w :&lt;4'-&#13;
"&gt;*MSif&#13;
^ : ^ .&#13;
: : ^&#13;
&amp;&#13;
WM'-&#13;
rSfe&#13;
NUMSBrl&#13;
3fc«-r«M*yW»&#13;
tKNOltrH. labor fcvesttgatad&#13;
buWtt^ he." prott1&#13;
.la whatever tei&#13;
The rMry^JjQfe^di^ ^ • • ^ ^ ^ ¾ ¾ ^ , , - • V " - * - ' . - • &gt; • , , • - .&#13;
Immunity pom prestation u a W&#13;
the after dttfeatettt packer* tad&#13;
agents ejmrgedVwith halng amittotora&#13;
af tht^ilSmUedf ^heef trust" in an addmoalal&#13;
piea * bar filed by Attosaey&#13;
ftha B. «IH#r*.ioJ the packers. ^&#13;
•The xiev plea, which eam^-aa a »«r.&#13;
the packer* ttat&#13;
th^ejvafe with*&#13;
«''fr« whatevaf&#13;
they ^olnatarily&#13;
miimir^" * and Wounded.&#13;
Owiar^to the mo*&gt;8 beivgraaoated m&#13;
^ ;&#13;
ihe aaaa. id&#13;
hoatd haye&#13;
iafleaiaHlM and imteatubd&#13;
under&#13;
their teetia&#13;
baala&#13;
e$ai*et UM». Under&#13;
deetrocUoa by flame, the rfToit ataiast SSSSJi^rhaSeia ih* nSieri^aSa&#13;
b S o f i a K ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ evideaoawllhoat befr.&#13;
^ ^&#13;
er sections of the"fbw1kT3f J^lmpowlble&#13;
to ascertain the aanfear. "o# persons&#13;
killed. Qa tQ Saturday mprnlar M6?&#13;
wounded persons were reported to&#13;
have been taken to the hoslptaJa. The&#13;
whole fury of the mobs was/directed&#13;
unchecked against the Jews/, During&#13;
the first demonstration over the emperor's&#13;
manifesto and thg eudden acojdsir&#13;
tToVof "freedom,K tens of thousands of&#13;
men who had hated the Jews through&#13;
generations became drunk, with the&#13;
desire for Jewish blood, swarmed Into&#13;
the Jewish sections of the town and&#13;
kilted foi ihe very 4oy of kHHng.—&#13;
la some instance? the military aided&#13;
instead of prevented the work of vengeance&#13;
and-ftWF which fulminated Saturday&#13;
in the quarters .mentioned.&#13;
HBvery Jew, many-woman pf chUda whn&#13;
was caught was slaughtered. The&#13;
methods employed in the1 work of&#13;
butchery were too revolting for description.&#13;
Before the morning's dawn&#13;
the material had' become exhausted&#13;
and the men who bad for the. moment&#13;
become beasts, left the wrecked sections&#13;
of- the city, and thotga. sullen,&#13;
wece easily driven back before the&#13;
rifles of the infantry*'&#13;
A trip of investigation over the Jewish&#13;
quarters confirmed the.stories j&gt;f&#13;
horrors and devastation. Some bodies,&#13;
mutilated, of women aad children were&#13;
still unremoved from the deserted&#13;
streets. The- shops were closed and in&#13;
the wrecked houses brokesr furniture&#13;
was lying everywhere in heaps.&#13;
At the beginning of the massacres,&#13;
the students' militia rendered some assistance&#13;
and saved many lives, but the&#13;
police, it is said, disarmed the students&#13;
and^rvea in some cases shot them^wlth&#13;
their own revolvers. .&#13;
».-.«-&#13;
,." WttteY Problem.&#13;
'Count Wltte Is getting his hands on&#13;
the helm and the Russian ship of stftte&#13;
is beginning to right itself. Gradually&#13;
the disorder that followed the promulgation&#13;
of the constitution giving&#13;
the people liberty is being put down.&#13;
The i&#13;
difficulties confronting him and- the&#13;
A Winter in ths tea.&#13;
Eleven* winding vessels comprising,&#13;
almost the entire fleet which sailed&#13;
from San Francisco, have been caught&#13;
in the ice of the Arctic ocean." They.&#13;
pjromier- has met the immense]will not bobble to get out until next&#13;
.^_ ^, *,_„ n _ __«w .- J u l y o r August, and in the meantime&#13;
their crews of 440 men must face the&#13;
m^&#13;
./*•&gt;:&#13;
ri»aW!"»:&#13;
S2yV''*&#13;
'.*tt,u?.&#13;
,&lt;&amp;£*&#13;
..i«W"-:&#13;
* ; • •&#13;
r*,,t2*.'-*. •"*;&#13;
iff-&#13;
••#&lt;&#13;
are of the demands of the different&#13;
classes of society with the energy&#13;
and sincerity that are more and more&#13;
giving to him the support of the moderate&#13;
liberals, who have -been- frightened&#13;
by the carnival of disorder into&#13;
which the country has been plunged&#13;
and the inordinate demands of the proletariat&#13;
under the leadership of the&#13;
"reds" aftd social democrats:&#13;
•• freedom o* -the press and general&#13;
amnesty, exopt.for crime, have followed&#13;
each other, but Gaunt Witte&#13;
his steadily refused to yield to the demand&#13;
for tne organization of a national&#13;
guard on the ground, that it would&#13;
be equivalent to arming the social&#13;
democrats to fight and destroy the&#13;
whole government between midnight&#13;
and morning.&#13;
' A 8leeping Swimmer.&#13;
Deserting his bed for two hours or&#13;
more, at least twice a week, and then&#13;
denying that he had been absent at&#13;
all, caused Mrs. Gabriel Jackson of&#13;
English, Ind., to become suspicious of&#13;
her, husband and led her to have her&#13;
toothers "keep an eye upon him."&#13;
C*ast night Gabriel slipped out as usual&#13;
and was followed watchfully by&#13;
his brothers-in-law while he traveled&#13;
'more than a mile to the old "swim*&#13;
ming hole" upon his father's farm,&#13;
where he divested himself of his clothing&#13;
and swam to and fro across the&#13;
pond three or four times. When he&#13;
emerged he carefully redressed and&#13;
then returned home and to bed, in&#13;
the morning he knew nothing of the&#13;
occurrence till told of it, and could&#13;
not believe it till brought to the scene&#13;
and shown the footprints in the sand,&#13;
The queer part of it is that Jackson&#13;
was not known to be a somnambulist,&#13;
though he had been thus afflicted in&#13;
childhood.&#13;
"Please'do act say that the family&#13;
deeply mourn lor their dead. For years&#13;
he has been nusband and father only&#13;
In name. For affection given* only&#13;
blows and curse* have been received&#13;
in return. It is better for him that hs is&#13;
dead and better lor. as. Now thai Che&#13;
long, dark chapter is ended* do not&#13;
make us hypocrites by publishing that&#13;
which is ant tfmH So .declared-the&#13;
wilt amd family ot the late William&#13;
OlarkA of Muscatine, I** whan report*&#13;
cTs&#13;
a t&#13;
to ride on block. As for losg walks&#13;
la the country aad the exploration ol&#13;
fields and woods, why, perish the per&#13;
aldoas thought! On Sunday, after s&#13;
week cooped up In the offiee or the&#13;
shop, a man most spend his week's&#13;
earnings fo re buggy or aa aato. Bvea&#13;
the tramp would rather,steal a ride en&#13;
the truck of a freight car than be true&#13;
to his name. People ought to walk&#13;
more for recreation. It ;ls V fine way&#13;
o j seeing^e hear-by country. It tt&#13;
exercise that gives strength ttf we&#13;
body and the brain.—Washington Star.&#13;
Living Isummjes,&#13;
Living mummies exist, in Tibet in&#13;
were Ciasome way directedUmall caves in the,. solid rock, each&#13;
tween Commissioner Gatfield aad the&#13;
packers was a surprise to .District&#13;
attorney Morrison and Assistant Attorney&#13;
General Pagin; and it was said&#13;
that Commissioner Garfield had been&#13;
&amp;ske£ concerning exactly what occurred&#13;
during the Investigation Into the&#13;
beet business.&#13;
Germany Wants Trade.&#13;
Baron Speck von Sternburg, the&#13;
German, ambassador to the United&#13;
States, who sailed for New YOTPTC Oct:&#13;
25 _from Bremen, saiiLtoj correspondent:&#13;
"An idea, I suspect, is abroad&#13;
in America that the changes in the&#13;
German tariffs and the modifying&#13;
agreements with other European countries,&#13;
la some_ directed&#13;
against the United Slates, and that&#13;
Germany desired to damage the trade&#13;
of the United States. This, I am glad&#13;
to say, was never a motive with the&#13;
German government, and the proposals&#13;
that are about to be made'are designed&#13;
to Increase the exchanges between&#13;
the two countries and not to&#13;
contract them."&#13;
Stole $25,000. ' *&#13;
• . . - A susn of money said to be $25,000,&#13;
en route by. express from Hamilton,.&#13;
Mont., to New York is missing. The&#13;
Northern Pacific Express Company,&#13;
through several detectives, is trying to&#13;
discover what'^teesme of it. The&#13;
money wan shipped by Charles F. Kelley&#13;
to N. H. Harris A Co. for investment.&#13;
Instead of receiving5the securities&#13;
he had purchased, Kelley was&#13;
dumfounded 4o receive a letter stating&#13;
that contents of the package upon receipt&#13;
by the New York.firm.consisted&#13;
of newspaper clippings. Thar seals&#13;
w* i^ latict, however. - A(&#13;
hardships of a winter in the north.&#13;
The telegram comes from Capt. H. H.&#13;
Rodflsh, of the steamer Wm. Baylies,&#13;
and states that only this vessel and&#13;
the schooner Monterey were able to&#13;
escape. Most of the vessels now in&#13;
the Ice left San Francisco last spring&#13;
and are not provisioned for a stay in&#13;
the Arctic. Unless the boats are&#13;
heard from within a short time, it&#13;
will be concluded that there is no&#13;
hope for their escape, and the government&#13;
will be asked to send out a relief&#13;
expedition to forward supplies to&#13;
the imprisoned men.&#13;
CONDENSED NEWS.&#13;
A silver trowel* after being consecrated&#13;
in the New York Masonic ternpie,&#13;
by Justice Lodge No. 753, has&#13;
been started on a journey to every&#13;
lodge in the United States.&#13;
Mrs. W. W. Wilson, of Austin, 111.,&#13;
has given birth to triplets twice within&#13;
18 months. Her husband is an Odd&#13;
Fellow. The first triplets were named&#13;
Friendship; Love and Truthf They aJ|&#13;
died a few months after birth.&#13;
William Schaus, ari entomologist of&#13;
Twickenham, England, formerly of&#13;
-New York, has presented] to the National&#13;
museum at WashihsAon-a $100,-&#13;
000 collection of over 00,000 specimens&#13;
of South and Central American moths.&#13;
A shortage in the fund appropriated^&#13;
by congress to pay house rent for&#13;
many American consuls will necessitate&#13;
their going down into their own&#13;
pockets or else resigning. Congress&#13;
will be asked next session to increase&#13;
the appropriation from $75,000 to $100,-&#13;
000.&#13;
Alaska will have a railway its entire&#13;
length from north to south and&#13;
giving communication with the outside&#13;
world if plans which Are being&#13;
formulated in Los Angeles, are carried&#13;
oat If successful the enterprise will w- &lt;vK^». vTaW^t oexadl^ dWitt tbMV^neaabrctyw *t j,|m*o ,mooiole,-s&#13;
murdered Jacob H. Thompson, the&#13;
Mew York edit*, who was slain inhfs&#13;
room in the 8 t James hotel several&#13;
weeks ago. Hannibal was known to&#13;
5S .M'wi"••Syii H.w'wPii.'i.iJiWli, 33s^ winfriior&#13;
CAPT. &lt;HwVHAK|*t QVHp^&#13;
Captain W. B, Clreham, u n . K q *&#13;
eX,fcWhe*Uag, W. Va,, writing under&#13;
data ot June It. '04i says: *I am so,&#13;
grateful I want tpthAjk God that a&#13;
friend J^oomnH»de^ Cutlcura Soap&#13;
and Ointment to me, ^suffered for a&#13;
long time with, sores.-on. m&amp; faee and&#13;
Sos» doctors said I had ,&#13;
poison, and others that I bad bar^rs*&#13;
itch. None of them did me any good\&#13;
but they all tank my money . Ht&#13;
friends tell me my akjin new looks jas&#13;
olsar as a bahyii aad I tail MiftTi an&#13;
thatCuticura 8oap and Cuticuta Oiat-&#13;
~+*&#13;
VValklnj a Uaa| A^t.&#13;
The elevator and the street carV-%&#13;
doing damage to man's anatomy. Every&#13;
elevator boy can tell of Instances&#13;
where a man will push the electric ba&gt;&#13;
ton till it rings like a general firs&#13;
built up in front with stones^ and mortar.&#13;
They have padlocked doors, tiny&#13;
drains, and small holes, just sufficient&#13;
for a man to pass his hand through.&#13;
in these- cells *men are buried for life&#13;
with the . idea. of , thus ^attaining&#13;
merit." Once interred they are; in&#13;
dxtrema.: eases, never seen again by&#13;
aortal aye: Their-desth is, o*!y made&#13;
&lt;nown when they fail tor several dayi&#13;
to stretch out the hand for food.&#13;
Alt 50«1 Account •» the Weather.&#13;
An Emporia man Went around the&#13;
other: morning bmmmff the weather&#13;
for maathg him sick. Before W i t t A&#13;
to bed he had three bottles of beer,&#13;
several hamburger sandwiches with&#13;
dnlons, cheese/ rye bread and finished&#13;
off with, a particularly, bad cigar.&#13;
He says he didn't sleep at all, and no&#13;
one wonders. But. what has the&#13;
weather to do with his health?—Em&#13;
porta, Kan.. Gatette*&#13;
A Big Claim.&#13;
I have all my life teen made aware&#13;
when death has seised or danger&#13;
threatened those I love. Thus no fear&#13;
of evil things ever disturbs me,&#13;
9! S l i i w i&#13;
ts^VHjNINw^TMAT WAeVl^oara^&#13;
iSilrJIfsy"" t r "••, tsaiskv •&#13;
' ^V^«asH»»iP^i^.'V"-.^&#13;
* ^ ^ T w^"*^s»asi^g&lt;siflgjgJl ^9W^sw*a&gt;^Pna . swej Cw •^sWEs'&gt;ae^p&#13;
eilJMI mm*&#13;
*&gt; • n • s&#13;
« H A f &gt;fV5lff«- #Hs&gt;»tst«&#13;
H«»#*&lt;W«f*^w&#13;
• • * : '&#13;
a •&amp;l&#13;
^&#13;
Tha foflpwiag SPtaared la a Ms^ne .icajtwaTt stoyar. who broag* ^&#13;
ones a&#13;
the other&#13;
certain am I that if tne worst&#13;
^•Umttioa hpffll, T atwnM know&#13;
otalr&#13;
It op&#13;
the instant of its happening, without&#13;
the need of any human agency.—Helen&#13;
Mathers in the Daily Graphic.&#13;
OLD FASHIONED FARE&#13;
Hot Biscuits; Griddle-Cakes, Pies and&#13;
Puddings, '&#13;
The food that made the fathers&#13;
strong is sometimes unfit for the children&#13;
under the new conditions that&#13;
our changing civilization la constantly&#13;
bringing in. One of\ Mr. Bryan's neighbors&#13;
in the great state of Nebraska&#13;
writes:&#13;
"I was raised in the South, where&#13;
hot biscuits, griddle-cakes, pies and&#13;
puddings are eaten at almost every&#13;
meal; and by the time I located in&#13;
Nebraska I found myself a sufferer&#13;
from Indigestion and its attendant&#13;
ills—distress and pains after meals,&#13;
an almost constant headache, dull,&#13;
heavy sleepiness by day aad sleeplessness&#13;
at night, loss of flesh, impairv&#13;
ed memory, etc^ etc.&#13;
"I was rapidly becoming* incapacitated&#13;
for business, when a valued&#13;
friend suggested a change in my diet,,&#13;
the abandonment.of heavy, rich stuff&#13;
and the use of Grape-Nuts food. I followed&#13;
the good advice and shall always&#13;
be thankful that I did so*} ;&#13;
"Whatever may be the experience&#13;
of others, .the beneficial effects of the&#13;
change were apparent in my -case almost&#13;
immediately. My f stomach,&#13;
which, had rejected other food for so&#13;
long, took to Grape-Nuts most kindly;&#13;
in a day or two my headache was&#13;
gone, {began to sleep healthfully^and&#13;
before a week was out the scales&#13;
showed that my lost weight was cornlag'back.&#13;
My memory was restored&#13;
wtth the renewed vigor* that 1 felt in&#13;
body aad mind. For three years now&#13;
Grape-Note food has kept ma in prime&#13;
in length. condition, and I propose: iUgHaU for&#13;
Rtehard-Hsnnlbel, a aegfwballboy, 1«» rest of my daysv r~ ^&#13;
who died in B^esevek aospHaV New "And by tan way, my M year'ok&#13;
York, yesterday, la betteved to, ha«e J*by i* as fond of Gr&gt;p^Nuw^|aAv&#13;
get hU,ebeiaary, lie rd#d hare plenty of nwaay' foUowtng tj£&#13;
tramenai^&#13;
always insists on havmj^it&lt;.:Jt&#13;
heV as healthy and hearty.as the]&#13;
them." Ttame gWan&#13;
murder, and had a bad record; His&#13;
Co. Battle s a&#13;
Baad rat liftJf^-wwiL "TaaiBima&#13;
Ask Your leaioithora, -.-.-/.^-&#13;
OeUtt. Pa,, Nor. ,6th (Special)^&#13;
Mrs. H. W. Sterns, a well respected&#13;
j^aidant of Qeiatt. taUs in convincing,&#13;
words, what Dodds Kidney PUie have;&#13;
done for her. She'says: &gt; &gt; .+ ul was a great sufferer from Rheumatism,&#13;
caused through my Kidneys&#13;
being out of ordeiv I was subject to&#13;
it for years. It would take me without&#13;
warning, and while the attack&#13;
lasted I was so Isme I could not get&#13;
around. So 1 bad.to sen* for Dodds&#13;
Kidney pills. I took them for three&#13;
days, but didn't feel much benefit, hat&#13;
on the fourth day I noticed a great&#13;
change, the lameness in my back was&#13;
gone, and the pains I used to suffer&#13;
were less. 1 kept on with Dodd's Kidney&#13;
Pills and how I am glad to say&#13;
I have no lameness nor pain of any&#13;
kind. I feel as if I didn't know what&#13;
Rheumatism was. I shall never be&#13;
without Dodd's Kidney Pills in the&#13;
house, and I bless the day I first heard&#13;
of them. -&#13;
Sisters'and Brothers.&#13;
Don't snub your brothers. They are&#13;
lovely things to have around, if only&#13;
treated half-way decently. Unfortunately,&#13;
girls forget that" brothers&#13;
also grow up, and they go on treating&#13;
them as if they were boys. This leads&#13;
to friction, and very often disagreeable&#13;
repartee, when it is least wanted,&#13;
and is most disagreeable.—New York&#13;
Press.&#13;
Deftfnesa Cannot Be Cured&#13;
tj IOMU »»Pil«»«on«, u thyr eauot w*c* m«4M^&#13;
Tl&#13;
DtafaeM !• e»aa«d by an inftuM4 •Qadlttak of ttt»&#13;
M M portloft of the «*r.&#13;
our* dtttiiH, ltd Uwt U b; PMT» l«o«)r aae wr to&#13;
OOMthOttOMl r«IBMlM.&#13;
muooui Mnfng of the Xattechlw Tuba. What tbA»&#13;
tob« Is taflMMd 70« h»T« •rambUac 10004 or to•&#13;
ttaotn o,bf« taernta «cr «w tolel nbeoe ddrntrajred foreveri ahw CMM DBI by Ceurrh, wbteh to notbiag w wtmo tnoif^lBimrwedO cro^iwIlUon of toe maooae aurfscee. W « I * « I ****** *»&#13;
De«fn«&#13;
by Half&#13;
rrh Curec.a taBrernhd) tfhora iO renlara. free.&#13;
Sold br Dramrttru.. J7S.C u, mtam a cu., Toictio, o.&#13;
Take HairaJramUy PlOa for coaMtpaUon.&#13;
He h a s not learned the ' lessons of&#13;
life w h o does not every day surmount&#13;
a fear.&#13;
flT« lo•n tly eared. "N•tonfllrwtOorrneaetrKvoearTfneeRweaefttoorrer.&#13;
Set _, ^&#13;
DB. SjU. KLUtX, XAL, BH Awn Street, PhlhvMpbU, P»»&#13;
Jiat dey'mee of O*. Kl&#13;
er. 8eMferJrBias)S.eOti1albortteae^treMlMb.&#13;
Piao a Cure cannot 1M too highly spoken of as&#13;
a cough cure.—J. W. O'Bsaan, SSI Third Ave.&#13;
Jr.. MlwteapoiU, Minn., Jan. 6, ISO*.&#13;
Character Is the centralUy, the impossibility&#13;
of being displaced or overset&#13;
tlMntu,&#13;
There are men Who never pay anything&#13;
they owe except grudges.&#13;
esffsfnat every bottle of CASTOIIA&#13;
a aef• and «re roSMdy for t&amp;faste aad ehUdfea,&#13;
and ate that it&#13;
B»a»ta«-'&#13;
SlgBataMof&#13;
|S Has For Over SOYeara.&#13;
.Yea Base always fitteghV&#13;
The modiste dan Help a girt out&#13;
with her wedding gown, but not with&#13;
her divorce suit.&#13;
1 1 1 ¾&#13;
CURES SICK-HEADACHE&#13;
Tablets andV»wdera advertised&#13;
as cures for sick-headache are generally&#13;
hermftil and they doaotcuta&#13;
, bat only deaden the pain by fjjftjnf&#13;
me serves la skjta for a short time'&#13;
through the use of morphia* or&#13;
cocaine. Lane's Family&#13;
Medtotne ';the tonJo-lasaHve, esres sick head.&#13;
ach*,aot merer/ stops It for aa&#13;
hoar or twe. It removes the caase*&#13;
of hsadaohs and keebsit away. -&#13;
80I4 t^r att dealers at a$e, and son.&#13;
.•»&gt;•&lt;•&#13;
umoaa atngars and&#13;
actors; writes:&#13;
Qtotiemen: I wishas&#13;
many siiftsfine^&#13;
inenraad women a#&#13;
I e a » reach feo&#13;
kaos/ , tht&gt;&lt; e»oe4-&#13;
lenceof DoansKWaey&#13;
Pttls. I waa&#13;
J*PJ»* *** wh mias dear 1 ¾ ^ ¼ ^ ¾ ¾&#13;
77**» ,w»«m ,assvva jWfi ***&lt;. fRraatjy* t/Fw&#13;
takea.fro4 our midst! fThere was PP&#13;
one lady at the village whose Ipsa&#13;
would have been fait by so large a&#13;
circle el manaa s# hers, kar aha waa&#13;
end teewortiy petrencvV It wfa ben&#13;
rossj time -bafore we get apcusiomed to&#13;
ttviatt wi^out aery W&amp;^ aha j s s j&#13;
•sjasa^g^a* .^er^fsseSs *T** ewa . ^sssassj , ****&gt; • jpaersa' aj^Assjay la^pgg^au&#13;
m the wag list only «o he answered, in&#13;
Iks leatea a f^aj»aaBrfta*&#13;
slater and a brother. The beairttful&#13;
hope is so loaaly without her beau)iful&#13;
preseaoa there, wa would eaote a ra»&#13;
mark from Undertaker Jones, Wheat ri^A^eW^£»"«K* l^j^&#13;
ha' had aaiah^kis tast-'ha'gslW'lS '^g^f^m^7mm^&#13;
a moment into the casket, and them, (jngaed) ' X4&amp;CU8 R. MATKR.&#13;
turning away, he said: •That lg tha 80]«% all dealers, 10 cents a bos.&#13;
handsomest aorase I ever prepared for FM«r-JBlburn C3o„ BoSalo. N. Y.&#13;
boriaU* She has a fathen mother and f f ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ T T *&#13;
m* trast I • - y t 5 ^aiiaa far Rsjoiolnav&#13;
f i e PalT uWr Oasettg rejoices m&#13;
the fat^- thst qanada si a "chip of&#13;
the eld brock," because a steamship,&#13;
with supplies 'for the Hudson bay&#13;
mountfld pollca, has been kept watting&#13;
at &amp;t Johns for weeks; while tha&#13;
pc^ce department ape^mVaJstry of marise&#13;
settle a dispmW aa to whlcu ahaU&#13;
Opntrot her movemenUl&#13;
-TV ^¾4&#13;
:&lt;m0$&gt;&#13;
they were&#13;
Ucks5 and&#13;
•i^sajpa __ gsys • s&gt;eV*eyY&#13;
"flr"s»&gt;\&#13;
d^^era. I am&#13;
*^% %?i&#13;
•'•:•:&lt;%}&#13;
• ' ^&#13;
[$$-&#13;
WHO STOMACH TROUBLE m&#13;
J/8. Janaaari, PraaWarit of the&#13;
_ Mttwaukaa Ratal] Drug-&#13;
Talks en me Oar,fers of Conetipattee&#13;
W Stomae* trouble,&#13;
•&gt; "Have you notioed the iaife number of eases&#13;
of typhoid fever lately?" siM air. J. S.'Jaiiaeen&#13;
to aPaMyWewsiejieeeataSlye. "Tomynetion&#13;
typhoid lever, awds«iai.feye», appendieitis and.&#13;
aaasy.,ktwjred oomplaint* ^re the revolt of&#13;
©onetipsUon, which i n nuay eases i s allow**&#13;
by the patient to ran aloat without proper&#13;
treatawai. Yon wih remember when you were&#13;
a child and the doctor was Sailed, his first pre-&#13;
•oriptloo-.wae a doee of 'eaator oUi All&#13;
phyalejaoe know the valueof havlag the bowels .&#13;
thofeutmy- opened., Pteple, when they srow&#13;
up, auo% eonstipetion to beeecoe ehronie&#13;
thiiSaihiHrti af Meamioa qratwntl"" is the&#13;
failwpe o t the howe^s to oarryofl the undigested&#13;
food/ whteh eo^leetar Tn tad alimentary canal&#13;
aad*mere;aeeays. genetattaspoisonous disease&#13;
germs. These germs aad thetr way ihto the&#13;
blood by mesas of which they are carried to&#13;
every tissue. »The fever thus created affects&#13;
sot only the lungs, kidneys, stomaeh, heart aad&#13;
nervous system, bht iti fact any organ ol the&#13;
bfldy^s UaMe to break down as a result. The&#13;
blood beeomee thin and watery. The sufferer&#13;
loses IS flesh aad strength. Castor oil and puis&#13;
wmno*cu»aaa*letto«lflD»tkl«&gt; Somethiag&#13;
mere than a laxatir* is aeeded. There are&#13;
many physics on the market'aad we tell egress&#13;
many, having probably the most popular store&#13;
of the kind m the city. 1^6 not often talk about&#13;
manufactured medicine, bos the high esteem hi&#13;
which Mull's Grape Tonic b heed by the drag&#13;
and raedical-aratecmitiesJ&#13;
"&gt;.&#13;
:-/K&#13;
,. -»M&#13;
ti^rm t w HAiiT's fimst T^"1* 'rrtn^'rfT1*-&#13;
tlon and-stomach trouble posltiTelysnd-par--&#13;
maaeaely. Mull's Grape Tonlo Is noi evphyaio.&#13;
but it imvediately dears the bowels of the&#13;
deosylng food besause of the peeullarly&#13;
strengthening effect* it exerts over the organs&#13;
of the dlgestlTe system. Aa a tonlo it is superior&#13;
to the nauseating ce*41ve»ott compounds. It&#13;
builds flesh faster and creates strength Quicker&#13;
than any other preparation known to medical&#13;
science. The Ingredients are posttlTely harmlees,&#13;
made mainly from ernshed grapes and&#13;
traits. Although a full bottle might be taken at&#13;
-once, no inoonvenienoe would result. I only&#13;
wish that people paid store attention to these&#13;
Mttlc details, which is thum-lvsi la the beglanfiag&#13;
are of so slight lmportanee, but whlab&#13;
grow in magnitude until the moat serious&#13;
trouble and some deadly disease fastens Itself&#13;
on the constitution. There is really nothing&#13;
easier to take than lfcnU^Ois^ToBie. Xhept&#13;
you, through the lnflueaee ef your paper, can&#13;
bring the readers to a sense of the gravity et&#13;
allowing sensja^a^loataJSssos^&#13;
WBtTB PCMBjTtil8 fSBB BOTTLE TC-DAT. ^&#13;
Good for ailing children and nursing mothers.&#13;
i&gt; *&#13;
Ul 7BEX BOTTLE COUPON.&#13;
Bead&#13;
Hllft&#13;
this coupon with your name and&#13;
adsrsai and your drugsisVB same, for s&#13;
free bottle of Mall's Grape Tonic, tor&#13;
MDS4»'s G a t M TOBSO Co, let Third Ave.,&#13;
Book,Island, IU.&#13;
« M ruU AirnH- md Wtit4 Ftotmti*&#13;
The l l 00 bottie easterns nearly&#13;
timesthaieoalse. At drug stores.&#13;
The geaulae has a date aad number stamped&#13;
on tkj^lebel—take so other from your drugglss,&#13;
PftTfHTS2£PR0F(T atuaryoiLLv »BOT*CT AN laifstarrtoN.&#13;
•tsiM^mralC^^&#13;
Waaaasglnii) gs&gt;Cw« .v&#13;
BetTOtt Coa^irattry if Musk&#13;
•30 Wssswefi A»Si IliFtiist (UraKtrntm tt tbi&#13;
u&gt; smti rTiiiuiiif&lt;at1irrnia ^iitiiiri inaiee&gt;&#13;
:?-n*rf&#13;
' • »&#13;
"ij&#13;
&gt;. . -A,&#13;
••-v. e « ^&#13;
••*^».&#13;
* , . , " &amp; : •&#13;
•&gt;&gt;.&#13;
&gt; . • ' * "*-•&amp;'.&#13;
^f*i&#13;
- . - . • • ' ...--:- .•":•.-&gt; i-"--1 v.'-:'-'-- ...::--:': ••&amp;:.*.-*•- -S' ' - I ' v * ' v V--*-: ;*-• A^.-'S.: ' ' . • ^ ' - i a w m w M ^ "-'• "'• '• •:•*• h'.;-&#13;
' $&#13;
^ V : ^ * ^ '&#13;
XS?&#13;
: # . * •&#13;
"•A •rev&#13;
. * • - •&#13;
Jt± • % ' • • ; • * : ? « - :&#13;
wv*&#13;
9 U ' l l , ' ULl1 nawjaampamwowaw^nmaapi i| i • ^ ' "IB* I" I»I ' Tamil • * Hi i J nwiiJ»"i u ,,,.&#13;
••• ^ * • &lt; • • • « (&#13;
i ~-i**T&#13;
^ ;&#13;
wswsmni • da^ey wS'Wjwey ^ewew owsawmwrnnfe* ma emanate* •mmnwewnmwmw#mwmmnw&#13;
One of the moat noted, suooeearnl end&#13;
«-. richest a w q* thje, century, In *&#13;
» : : • . • &gt; • •&#13;
mrtide, hMtaWd, « W W ^ I J W M4&#13;
whatever* success I.b»M attained fa»&#13;
tfcUworldloweaHHom*&#13;
the any I Are* knew h i ^&#13;
•A inahiiwAton.etnd the&#13;
taste of**? life.'*&#13;
e .Sr^thlno Airways Awf .*)•&gt;&#13;
tt-W&lt;«^ ^Wa^rmte^r aW lifefiling&#13;
wpi«»t&lt;ft ha*t*en used with pl»raacist*«r Amelias.In connection&#13;
considerable . ¾ ^ ^ ¾ ^ ^ . ¾ ^ with w o e on*na^w&lt;*k. nndarti** U&gt;&#13;
ateprann-othe*, irtm a * f ^urreij to aaeertalii, b^iwi «ttfctef»*«&#13;
penetrate mln#s # a ^ m s ^ ' t h a t rtfpiftwta^e eitlea wf tba&#13;
n a^etr rir fr^sUrywH(ttol»»a,&#13;
Replying to the charge that certafavp&#13;
*^omey*^«^oo»#ef thelea4in«&#13;
i»" '.•&#13;
falsa, but .expose*th*-^ra; «6 / f e f . I ' W W «tte4«aer^T* almost&#13;
^ J # : W . i W f ^ ^ : . W | ! » ¥ s &gt; t «*•****&#13;
a^^n^V^sa^or ^&#13;
i « e . . espe^any aft^» acejdenla • « * s-prlDtions•/ « * ? * * * a ; J « f c o l « ^ ^&#13;
eseiploatons. WUb tfelB- Jjpwtua o/ some hjn&lt;L7 O* , ^ ^ ¾ ¾ ¾&#13;
eve* m*m tfre Ifidl^d^riir ftff»»» t $ ^ * i ? * i ! * ^&#13;
thjWabJjf aicoftpanled by th* moft «MM»&gt;. ^152¾¾¾¾&#13;
3**uv 4.'.&#13;
To be- pub ft successful wlte, to retain&#13;
ti*ulove and admiration oi her&#13;
Iwahandw to inspire him to make the&#13;
meet of himfw}^ ahonld be a. womaa'a&#13;
ooataaant BtaoT.&#13;
If a wonwfi finds that her ener^iea&#13;
a n fltwrging, that ahe gete eaaiiy tired,&#13;
dark ehadowa appear under her eyea,&#13;
ahe haa haekaeherheadaeheaj •faaaring'&#13;
down paiaa, nerrousness, wh)fce3» irregelaritleaior&#13;
th,e blues, ahe sbcrald start&#13;
at once to bnild up her eyetam Jay a&#13;
tonic with specific powera/'aueh aa&#13;
Lydht E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compoaxra.&#13;
Follow|ing we publish; by request a&#13;
letter from a, you*** wi|a: .. -&#13;
Dear*lrm.Ptnkh»mr ^ r&#13;
^ Ever since my chfld was ham I have suflerai,&#13;
as Inopefew weaaanever have, wjtktntamrnatkwa,&#13;
female wnakneat, bearing-down&#13;
BWSM, backache aMHnvteaedheiAachetT It&#13;
affected my stomach so I could not enjoy my&#13;
see*)*, and half my time was spent In bed.&#13;
"JLydlaR. Pfakham'a Vayiej*; Compoupd&#13;
ruiea watt woman, auu I feel so Ktatefet-&#13;
There a*e poaaeeMd Mth thftrHaak&#13;
two rubharhaaar-oDe to? the-^eAaledl&#13;
air and- th* other connected Flth~ the&#13;
oxygen and tho regenerated air. The&#13;
former la contained in stoel eyttnders,&#13;
and by naeana^ of proper ; reducing&#13;
vAhraa acta on the air after the carbonic&#13;
acid which haa been exhaled ie&#13;
abaorbed' toy ^^rajM^ted poUsh. The&#13;
at we*na abouT"twenty^lgbt | •&#13;
ponnds, buMa pure in its action, and&#13;
has been used successfully by the&#13;
Paris fire department, where, In addition,&#13;
portable electric lights with&#13;
flexible cables, form a part of the&#13;
equipment, and thus allow firemen to&#13;
penetrate dark and smeary rooms and&#13;
cellars to save life or cut off gas or&#13;
electricity, or perform some other useful&#13;
duties. In mines the apparatus&#13;
is valuable in case of accidents due to&#13;
fire-damp or explosion, and it is coming&#13;
into extensive use for thla purpose.—&#13;
Montreal Herald. ' /&#13;
phyaicmnit-preacrj^lpiiajare gameralrf&#13;
Very "brief, and. wxnetiapi i^legibUJ. It&#13;
is also true that but a moderate proportion&#13;
of proprietary medicines COB*&#13;
tain any poison or narcotic, and, when&#13;
they do, it la generally in ape* small&#13;
quantities or* so protected by acconapanymg&#13;
ikildbtet, a s % carry w W it&#13;
IM danger whatever.*&#13;
:'~ A Good Man. :"&#13;
A cohtmon good, a public stream, or&#13;
cohduit, that every man hath a share&#13;
! n . ~ T i b b e * . • ' " • ' . ' . '&#13;
:•-. II Tin i --'V London Bathers.&#13;
Bathers at borough prtyate baths in&#13;
London last year numbered 3,104,3S8;&#13;
at the swimming bathe. 2^68,502. Election Returns That Interest All Parties.&#13;
..»&#13;
that I am glad to write and tell you of my&#13;
saarveloaa recovery^,.. I^broqgbt ma health,&#13;
new life and vitality,"—Hrs. Bessie Ainaley,&#13;
e31ik«ith 10th Street, Tacona, Wash,&#13;
What tydia B. Finkbem's Vegetable&#13;
Compound did for Mrs. Ainsiey it will&#13;
ale for evelry siefcand ailhig woman, -&#13;
If you have symptom* Vou don?Wunderstand&#13;
write to Mja»-Pinkham, at&#13;
Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free and&#13;
always helpful, ; ; ; , . ^&#13;
Brittany* MarHage Customs&#13;
Conspicuous among Uie adornments&#13;
&lt;ff the bridal feast in Brittany is an artistic&#13;
and elaborate)' nutter atruoture&#13;
as fanciful and elegant aa !^e moat&#13;
beautiful bridal cake, and.&amp;tflu.thia&#13;
etructure the guests stick split sticks&#13;
bearing coins of gold-or ailver.&#13;
I I I " » i&#13;
Special Hearse fwr Giant&#13;
A hearse had to be specially made&#13;
«t RawtenstaJl, England, for the&#13;
burial,of James Nuttall, "the largest&#13;
man in Lancashire.' The coffin,&#13;
which was six feet foot niches long,&#13;
three feet wide and two feet deep,&#13;
was carried by twelve bearers.&#13;
IF YDU ARE A WBMAJL&#13;
The ideaj Wife.&#13;
—A &lt;%rlcogo clergyman preacheo; af&#13;
practical sermon on the ideal wife,&#13;
The~necessary attributes he dwelt On&#13;
especially were truth, gentleness and&#13;
pleasing appearance.&#13;
What Mrs. f-brd Saya Ouimei niity Da.&#13;
WMHama' Pink PUJswllI 8ureiy&#13;
Ititeraat t*nu.&#13;
"I wish I oonld help other women get&#13;
arid&lt; of certain physic** &gt;tronbies as comipletely&#13;
as I have succeeded iu getting&#13;
i-idof miue,"saia Mre, iB. B. Ford, of&#13;
Poahmataha, 91iss.» 3xeceut]y. "Ton&#13;
liuow," she contained, "that a woman's&#13;
health depends, chiefly on the regu-&#13;
Hariiy of joat one nuuetvon. If ahe&#13;
fails.to keep that propeulyareguloted she&#13;
ihasino end of physteal mieery. I stifiered&#13;
from tliat one &lt;cause for twe&#13;
wretched yeara,.durina; ion* ,of which I&#13;
wiaa ikept iu bed all the itkhq, I tried&#13;
auediciues euough to cuseiauy illness,&#13;
feut notbiug gave methe«lightest bene-&#13;
^mitllIbe«»eiu«njrDr.WaiJam»' Piuk&#13;
Ptllafor Pale People. Tliew cured me.&#13;
Why, 1 wad suffering all ithe tiuieJpracrttoauy&#13;
from aickuess of ithe stomach,&#13;
4iasiness&lt;or swiruuiiug ia auy head and&#13;
«ain in ray back; Kow I aib ehtirely&#13;
nW from diacomTort of that «ort; 1 a a&#13;
aiot.ouly able to keeptrtt my*eet?irat te&#13;
rioony work aa a teacher, *ud to eajoy.&#13;
she pleasures - that coine thrcngh the&#13;
lou eff Sound health.&#13;
To attain the realms of the Ideal a&#13;
wife must be absolutely truthful to&#13;
her husband; she should never criticise&#13;
her husband, nor be a scold;-she&#13;
must jlobk her best at all times, and&#13;
It ,1s a sin for her to be careless aboujt&#13;
heV personal attire in the presence of&#13;
her husband.&#13;
Theae are the quite .sensible points&#13;
made during the course of the sermon,&#13;
hut there was one essential virtue&#13;
omitted. The reticence that will prevent&#13;
a woman from ever confiding to&#13;
people outside her home what troubles&#13;
she may meet with there.&#13;
^ut when are the clergymen going&#13;
to tell'the world what the ideal husband&#13;
should be?&#13;
Mention Pillsbury's Vitos&#13;
to&#13;
your grocer and see&#13;
if he don't recommend it&#13;
jtb y^isTthe mosriSBstaiHS&#13;
Breakfast Food.&#13;
Economical. Satisfactory.&#13;
Puhbury Quality Excdb.&#13;
Price 15 cents per Package&#13;
W. L. DOUGLAS&#13;
•31? &amp; » 3 ^ S H O E S SB&#13;
W. L. Douglas f 4.00OIH EdajatUM&#13;
cannot bo equalled at any price).&#13;
« * - .&#13;
There Was an AgltaUeai.&#13;
the little man with two watch&#13;
chain* had ascertained that 4he other&#13;
man was from Powderville be asked:&#13;
^Sxcuse me, but I want te ask after&#13;
a man whom I think liven in your&#13;
town. His name is Barclay"&#13;
~Joe Bawfl&amp;y?"&#13;
"Yes, that's the one. I ased to know&#13;
Um in Indiana, la he an politics?"&#13;
"1 beliewe so." ^&#13;
•"What party does he belong to?"&#13;
agitator?'&#13;
that, but&#13;
1 He's an agitaTor^---^.&#13;
"Do yssi mean a labor&#13;
•"I wouldn't exactly saw&#13;
kiiow hele an agitator." 4'But If don't exactly understand.'&#13;
"Well. 2&gt;£ was my opponent for the&#13;
office eff mayor last mil, and he agitated&#13;
.things around ma that I was&#13;
snowed 4ihder by over 400 votes, and&#13;
hare haen agitated half to death by&#13;
bis crswanz ever since:"—Exchange.&#13;
-'Within &amp;ree weeks after beginning&#13;
tbetuae of Dr. WnHaj»s' Piuk Pms1 rftxpeDeuoed&#13;
audh relief that I fcaew^they&#13;
nsaat ibe adapted to She needs** any(ease..&#13;
Afaer^nsing them for a short watte longer&#13;
X beoaine and have styce re«aafifte&lt;r a&#13;
weal moimL^mA the'reason wh* !*««*-&#13;
I ^ k lar. Wflhans*&gt;Fh*PUls7&#13;
pills nagka uterine aetlaai reg-&#13;
Viewed fiaom a Business Standpoint&#13;
Walker iand Goodrich are undertaktere&#13;
and 'business rivals in one of our&#13;
northern New England (Cities. At a&#13;
(children's dancing partrilaat February&#13;
ithe hirthdsjy J&gt;f WashingiAn was being&#13;
observed Jaa pleasing.manner. Little&#13;
Margaret "Walker was GIB center of&#13;
jne aniaaajad group of «a*klren who&#13;
wees' eagerly- • discussing something&#13;
they had- «werheard -coawerning the&#13;
great map^ ^. -&#13;
^Why? dejrt &lt;you laPOjr tthart, .Washington^&#13;
i *#&amp;"•^•ghinteered one little&#13;
gial, prohff'of aef.JBuperior wisdom.&#13;
,:"Aj*t;K9,u wSt«- *$#. ^argaref;&#13;
"papa didn't say a thing abed it. I&#13;
Goodrich.got him,!'&#13;
^&#13;
. . OaaltMwtfii la Postal acrvlcev . ,&#13;
, The postmaster genera; has decided&#13;
to throw open positions in the ci|y&#13;
posto^ea.throughput Cana^ to an&#13;
nlsraad ptdnlesa, Spanish headache*, lan^ yfaforttml'te class OTcitizens, namely,&#13;
faeev'tterviMsnaf^^eato^npa^rp^ Six such persons are to&#13;
W* &amp;**&amp;** I ! i 2 S a l S l 2 ! &amp; f o m " i *&gt; appointed at ones in the Toronto&#13;
S ^ ^ S ^ S S f d ^ e n d t o ^ ' i r «p«*o««« aird a proporttonate number&#13;
^ T e T O * ^ » . ^ 5 £ S T : Si ot3le¥ city postomoes. They wlU&#13;
dy, N T., Ibr a salssbVbooklet, eh- reapire to be sufficiently educated ip&#13;
titled "Plate Ta*ks«aWomen." ItWifl perform the otdinarr sorting of mall&#13;
be mailed fk^ in' sealed airvelopo to the' matter, and to be under the age of&#13;
jiddreas of sary applicant. pr.Williams* thirty. j^arav—MontreaTgUr&#13;
If for any reasos ae fsila to sapaly you sand as his saaw aad we wul aiail yen a Free Sample Package&#13;
raTUbunr Dwpi P. aUnwaapsHa, aJian,&#13;
La grippe, pneumonia, and infiu-( enaa often leave a nasty cough&#13;
when they're gone.&#13;
It is a dangercjas thing to neglect.&#13;
Cstra it with •Sbiloh's&#13;
Consumption&#13;
The cure tfhat is guaranteed by&#13;
your druggist.&#13;
Prices: S. C. WELLS A Co. 9&#13;
25c. 50c SI l«Roy.N.Y.,Toronto, Can.&#13;
e*U3r&gt;&#13;
C^ety S3m, the toniolaxatire&#13;
la ant up in Tablet&#13;
as w«Bl aa Herb fium.&#13;
The latter 1« Tory popular,&#13;
bnt the Tmfctet f o r m Is&#13;
most enatnen^ent ibr travelers'&#13;
and •aeaw o t h e r&#13;
people. Bething elee is&#13;
lik»Celery X h j .&#13;
Good&#13;
VS.&#13;
Good&#13;
Around the World&#13;
grfllCTAWyJWdtI^FATa.lH4.&#13;
et&#13;
ef tfce Rs2&#13;
A.XTOwfecat Bostoo1 U.S,A.&#13;
TOWOR CANADIAN Cfe, UMsTfiD,&#13;
tst&#13;
Finlt^PUU atrsrsejid&#13;
J • it ' r&#13;
by all dmggista t s its*.&#13;
•iw&#13;
a-^A.-^ ^- *- ~—+ §kmmdm Sfrinoent Rul« Ajgabiav, Intoxicant.&#13;
. . * * * S ^ g g g L ^ E J ! S S - One of the HwW Tort', banks haa&#13;
X 5 ? t t V ' c l 5 , * ^ . &amp; K a ? tt!*^! adorrteM a most itrtng«nt TUte against&#13;
tkjo use of intoxtcasrts brtts emploiyes.&#13;
Bapry map in thesatvice.of tfte bank&#13;
IBA«W has been ,rai|ulrfd, tp)V aign an, agree. "^e&gt;&#13;
t&#13;
[ \&#13;
m^!T^7i^s3m^*Sr^*^ Jj|a&gt;^|^*W%s'eT.' ^w*WsAw^WWw*^^lfla^^aJ|5f^ajJpBr*l r^aW^^eV^pawaaasnp&#13;
MIXED FARMING&#13;
W H E A T&#13;
RA19tN€r&#13;
RANCHING&#13;
three great pursuits&#13;
have again shown&#13;
wonderful results on&#13;
the&#13;
$10,800 'Sgttfirssr&#13;
eeWBe.n Lt .a Dtyoleag, ieaa*s Sy 3f.iStt0i nagh, eaeasd h aaavpee rbfyc rtawecaarr ae&gt;ig.&#13;
qfumm, achUved the largest sale ef nay $»J»&#13;
vW» Taey atv Jaax aa seas aa&#13;
yaw $ 5 . 0 0 * f f o e - t S a a B l y&#13;
L H I&#13;
C M U tatotyeariaf*&#13;
ateeat as&#13;
f aaaaTa flaw&#13;
which erery&#13;
.yoa weald raaHxa&#13;
m the&#13;
theeethat&#13;
dlftneaee la the price. H the&#13;
O F W E S T E R N C A N A D A ,&#13;
MngniHoent climate—farmer* plowing in their&#13;
shirt sleeves in the middle of November.&#13;
"AD are boua* to be more than pleased with&#13;
the final results of the past season's harvest. *—&#13;
Extract.&#13;
Coal, wood, water, hay hot abundance—schools,&#13;
churches, markets convenient.&#13;
This is the era.of $1.00 wheat.&#13;
Apply for information to Superintendent of&#13;
Immigration, Ottawa. Canada, or to authorized&#13;
Canadian Government Agent— M. V. Mclnnes,&#13;
C Avenue Theatre* Block. Detroit, Michigan; ox&#13;
C. A. Laurter. Sault Ste. Marie. Michigan.&#13;
(Mention this paper.)&#13;
$1,000&#13;
Reliable Information&#13;
We will give One Dollar for a Postal&#13;
Card giving the first reliable news of&#13;
a chanee to sell a horizontal steam&#13;
engine of our styles, within OUT range&#13;
of sizes. We do not want inquiries at&#13;
this time for vertical, traction or gas&#13;
engines.&#13;
To Be Given for&#13;
ENGINES AND BOILERS&#13;
have tor the steedari Her alt&#13;
el SMterief aad workmanship.&#13;
Oar M| eatpat enables as te sell oa small prolate.&#13;
Aa Ants, the sett ia laewerld, easts ae&#13;
aaore thaaueetaer iteA&#13;
Wrtst |«scy for ear taaefat ft*,&#13;
ATLAS ENGINE WORKS&#13;
taaOwSw 1NDUNAPOUS&#13;
BlaA SDtaad EawStawM VaterTfekawk&#13;
tknMBas&#13;
ilaMrrtMS.OOO.aiSa.P.&#13;
a«M BUton U wrHM^SaVMSB.».&#13;
ad show vow that&#13;
pair at Doagan shoei Is i&#13;
why W. L. Dowalas W.SO _&#13;
shoes pradSead la the world.&#13;
HI cooM shew yaw the dttT&#13;
shwaa saada hi af y t a c t e r v ^&#13;
makes, yow waeU aaderstawd why&#13;
W.SO sasss cast mora f amafce. why they 1&#13;
their shape, flt batter, wear loafer, and tarn ef&#13;
tvaatar Intrtesic vakse than asy ether a3.Se&#13;
apawsaaj ^aaaj ajaawap aamasai aaaa*a&gt; SjA^^^aaaa w^ e&#13;
hV.f-&#13;
• » . -&#13;
•ji*»&#13;
without his name and price stamped on bottom.&#13;
^&#13;
fcynSP. Ashoedealat Ineterytorii whsie&#13;
Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full lupe&#13;
upon irxroest.&#13;
U Dovglas "of&#13;
pies sent free for Inspection&#13;
Fmst Os/ar £g»l*U vstd; tkt§ mill aec awer arostp;&#13;
Write for lllnstratod Catalog of Fall Styleav&#13;
W. I . DOUGLAS. - -&#13;
rOR WOMEN&#13;
treabled with iBs seodfar te,&#13;
their sex, ass*as a doaeae ^ ^ - ^ - : — *&#13;
Mssral. Taoieag&gt;^chmaaeav&gt;imiiteaigiaiswt steps discharge^ ieals tnilsin—rtoa and loeal&#13;
sareness. •*•&#13;
Puctine Is In powder fora to be dissolved hi pore&#13;
water, and is far more de«saing,.heajing, pmk&amp;*&#13;
sad economies! man Uqatdannseptics for all&#13;
TOtLBT AND WOMBTrn WECUL U8E&amp;&#13;
ForssleUbWggists,0Ocents&gt;abos. /&#13;
Trial Bex and Boo* el I -'&#13;
w*ia R. Parroji. COMMMV&#13;
Take Your Choice&#13;
' ' U . S . h l a o . I t ' * — t h e new&#13;
liquid stove polish, brtlltani&#13;
and lasting. It shines easier, „&#13;
weats longer and covers more&#13;
surface than, any othct.&#13;
HlgCaxi, lOe.&#13;
If you want to save labor.&#13;
ony the 6-5-4 M f ^ a j a d a e :&#13;
-Store Laatsv" which wrH&#13;
not wash off, is applied.like&#13;
paint, MZataOp"atwa»aaate&#13;
equally good for Farm Machinery,&#13;
Stoves, Stove Pipe&#13;
and Wire Screens,&#13;
forever.&#13;
AMU-GRIPIME - I t OCAIUUITEU TO C V U ~&#13;
I S a t t atet A a t l Iw aplh s » a Sealer whe '&#13;
g ^ a U ^ l o r y o a T l J ^ u t j g mAOK 1 » I T&#13;
.*••?? ^fffl^kmfi ^aM«Pf/&#13;
PILEOID WILL CURE YOU IF YOU HAVE PILES.&#13;
IT GIVES IMMEDIATE REUErV&#13;
Free&#13;
mAapskle sr.o aWr e• *in**vi*t»o* y fooerr ctoif rasfstseirm adaavatcaes. ntehee* f«etwa wwmg U one of many testhaealahi&#13;
Aa*t-SeptoMed!e•i Be CChomsmpaaanayj:a , PL, y-av^. as, -Ua^v&#13;
I have had mere or less treaale from ttsatag pfle*&gt;&#13;
for more thaa tear years. Oas half has oTfriesW&#13;
eared me. Very raspeotfauy iomr oonpARD. •V-5,&#13;
VE&amp;USIXSV* MeaW to Wi» per b«uu twt t«a aaaay# «aaee iw hwaea wa t&lt;&#13;
^Ajni^MPTO M r o q f f t •••—'&#13;
Jto f ^ e^rd s w e e t - f*a "«:&#13;
^: &lt; * i ' :&#13;
:\v;if&#13;
mm "j&lt;4 ^J*^T -&#13;
, ' # • ; * • # * • *ftM f* ;+&lt;«&#13;
MUPMP I P P , . V I J ^ | !&#13;
^ ¾ ^ ½ ^ • V . v^; .^^---14¾&#13;
; 1 v ,&#13;
- . - . • ' • •&#13;
~^f.' r" •" ~v^"L?fer :,-•; y- '«*f &lt;v Viv; !v•""Aw"":^»~r. • •. "T« « --—--*- "~"..:" •;.&#13;
- , r i i w r f • . ^ 1 .v.*.V..i-As *'»--&#13;
v-7rft«&lt;;&#13;
u&#13;
'"&amp;*}$"&#13;
» &gt; J i ^ .&#13;
3*x* ^&#13;
* ;.'M&#13;
After a w*eWrieifcwii* relative*&#13;
here Mrs. B. flCi^a%^e» retarned&#13;
5¾¾¾^ v^to her ionae io flint on Monday&#13;
' l a s t V ••,:..*• .¼ •*'.-;; :.'•&#13;
Men .have been digging trenehea*&#13;
tins week, for tlie wall nadef&#13;
the new hall which is to be put up&#13;
hOSepQn. * " " •&#13;
fe wmi"f- i^ - m&gt;/&#13;
* . - ! &gt; • :&#13;
* • , « * &gt; !&#13;
• V , ' •-.',-,&#13;
i.*.. r m&lt; is- *•&#13;
•(&gt; v '&#13;
. . V &lt; ,'&#13;
v;.-l:&#13;
vv .&#13;
! V '&#13;
' : •&#13;
' •»•&#13;
&gt; ' •&#13;
^ IE Sweet attended conrt Tat7"** wf c*~&#13;
Howett laet week* /^ •&#13;
Mra. N. M* Oaae fiaited o?er&#13;
Sundaftin Brighton.&#13;
N^JB* Smith waa in 2&gt;etroit on&#13;
bntiaeae one day'laat week. —&#13;
John Sweeney and C D. Thrathor&#13;
were in* Howell on buainees&#13;
Thnraday laat&#13;
Sohool was oloaed in the Oady&#13;
district thie week on aooonnt of&#13;
T—JSJZ—yy.WJTRit—••JPUVJBV - ^ — ^ i m K q ( u . s i i L 3 t A , — • J T f j t — —•"ajBvw'sxB^ii" ~*—'——"-— —r—— r — • —&#13;
tended the second number on the&#13;
Stookbridge Lecture Coarse, o n e&#13;
evening last week.&#13;
Miss Lottie Bradley entertained'&#13;
Mrs. Daniels of*Gregory, Mrs.&#13;
Saigeon of Flint and Mrs. T o p .&#13;
pinK and Miss Smith of this tflace&#13;
one day^ecentlyr ~ r ; ^ - -&#13;
Mrs. Reynolds house,* whipk is&#13;
oconpied by Frank Boyce and&#13;
wife, caught fire last Thursday&#13;
night and wben"disc6Vere|| by Mr.&#13;
Boyce was making fast work. H e&#13;
called up the neighbors and the&#13;
telephones called some out of the&#13;
village and the building with contents&#13;
was saved. The house was&#13;
quite badly damaged&#13;
- «&#13;
" Mrs. Winefred Spaujding anj}&#13;
Mrs. Gartrell spent one day last&#13;
week with Miss Blanch Martin of&#13;
Finokney.&#13;
Henry Dammann, wife and&#13;
daughter Amelia and Mrs. N. .G.&#13;
Smith visited in Howell one day&#13;
W&#13;
•V&#13;
The death of Almon B. Farrinfrton&#13;
pecured at the home in Marion Nov,&#13;
5th 1905 He was born in the state&#13;
of New York, Dec. 10tb, 1825, bemgr&#13;
at his death nearry 80 years of age.&#13;
He came to Michigan in Mafcb 1872&#13;
and located near Phinfield Where be&#13;
continued to reside nntii the spring of&#13;
1900 when the family .moved to Marion&#13;
township. He .is Rurvived by the&#13;
widow and two children' Mrs. 6 . D.&#13;
Blank cf Pntnam and Frank at home,&#13;
bnd two grandchildren, Robert Burns&#13;
of Jackson and Mrs. L A. Benttay of&#13;
Flint, also one great grandchild, Utile&#13;
Vira Bently.&#13;
The funeral was held at the M. E.&#13;
church in Plain field Tuesday afternoon.&#13;
Interment at the Ma pes cemetery.&#13;
to 9^TwTk^W0&#13;
Jfatie* Beasoii w abost taa swnau"&#13;
Tbil weather make* as tb.sk of the&#13;
wood promitad ua. "&#13;
We are glad to mfofm ear readers&#13;
thaUiim Norfr Bnan, wbe has batn&#13;
quite U 1,¾ baiter.&#13;
Ai We go to press we bear thai the&#13;
LaUiesot the M. k&gt; ehnrob realised&#13;
1260.60 from tlfeir Uarsival laafc weak.&#13;
They wish to think ail who helped to&#13;
make it a soeeeai.&#13;
- r - &gt; ...&#13;
,, '$$" •*•• :• ' f . y&#13;
1 . ^ ^ /&#13;
fT.&#13;
- * • ' ^r:. •^'X':&#13;
:^½¾&#13;
,v\, ^ '&#13;
• * ^ 4 V&#13;
last week.&#13;
Bert Carpenter who recently&#13;
underwent an operation for appendicitis&#13;
is doing well and will&#13;
soon be o u t&#13;
Mrs. N. B. Smith and daughter&#13;
Thelma and Miss Frieda Dammann&#13;
spent the first of the week&#13;
with relatives in Durand.&#13;
v Mrs. Hattie Fisher died at the&#13;
home of A. G. Carpenter Sunday&#13;
evening after a lingering illness of&#13;
consu mpGon". Funeral" Wednesday&#13;
at 1 p. m. Besides her husband&#13;
she leaves her parents and&#13;
one aifiter. _ Thft hflrftavftd family&#13;
have the sympathy of the entire&#13;
community^ •&#13;
Coming Soon a&#13;
The "Star" Entertainers, a itandrad&#13;
Lyceum attraction, have been iseured&#13;
for tbe Young Men's Club ef this city,&#13;
and will entertain our citizen* on tbe&#13;
evening o( Friday, ^ov. 17.&#13;
Mr. Morris presents original piano&#13;
solos, Organ Chimes, Xylophones,&#13;
4fa&gt;*ieal Bottles Aluminum Harp, etc,&#13;
and is an eip rt in this line.&#13;
His piano solos are conceived in&#13;
a very unsual manner. An absolute&#13;
period of silense followed by tbe most&#13;
brilliant strains of music, which are&#13;
easily heard hy M r. Morris, but entirely&#13;
inaudible to all others. All critics&#13;
agree that it is inspirational but none&#13;
can attribute the true source. Soon as&#13;
recieving such an impression he plays&#13;
and writes the selection and thus have&#13;
some of tbe best marches, waltzes and&#13;
two steps been born into the musical&#13;
world.&#13;
Mr. Abbott is an excellent character&#13;
delineator and impersonator and presents&#13;
his work in full costume. His&#13;
Old Man atones will shake yonr sidea,&#13;
his Old Maid will surprise and please,&#13;
his Old Darkey will uplift and benefit&#13;
your mora sftriouB imtnrn, hia Samnn&#13;
AKDEB80*.&#13;
. &gt;&#13;
Born to Mr. and" Mrs. Charles&#13;
White Nov. 1, a daughter.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Skulls of Northern&#13;
_ Michigan, is visiting at Seth Perry's.&#13;
Elmer Collins of Detroit spent&#13;
the past week with his sister, Mrs.&#13;
John Gardner.&#13;
A. G. Wilson and wife and N.&#13;
D. Wilson and wife, spent Friday&#13;
with relatives in Howell.&#13;
^ About 50 of the friends and&#13;
Neighbors .of Mr. and Mrs. D . B.&#13;
Smith met at their home Saturday&#13;
evening and gave them a surprise.&#13;
A very enjoyable time was enjoyed.&#13;
They left behind t w # nice&#13;
rocking chairs as tokens of respect&#13;
Mr. Smith is moving his&#13;
family to Stockbridge.&#13;
WEST KABI0H.&#13;
Mr. Rock wood spent Friday in&#13;
Howell. i&#13;
Mr. Furgeson of New Hudson&#13;
is a guest of Mr. Plommer.&#13;
Mr. Plummer is having a serious&#13;
time with a very painful carbuncle.&#13;
Mrs- Albert Miller is entertaining&#13;
her step-mother from Handy.&#13;
Mr. Hiram Backus is on the gain&#13;
after having an attact of blood&#13;
poison.&#13;
Fred Merrils and wife attended&#13;
the funeral of the infant of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs, Carson Sunday.&#13;
But few people are entirely free&#13;
from indigestion at this season of tbe&#13;
year, Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is not on- a . ,&#13;
i,-M.-ir—« [, -. » — - - T T — Saturday- 4ba-~&#13;
tfKy gienafer so-ewshi arte ymoend ye att ob uuts beo cbaeucsaeu siet a1h1 ] *&#13;
so e table* the digestive apparatus to&#13;
assimilate and transform all foods into&#13;
tissue-building blood. Kodol relieves&#13;
sour stomach, heart burn, belching;&#13;
and all forms of indigestion.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
tha Allen will appeal to your sense of&#13;
the-Judicrous a D ( j his Willie Perkins&#13;
foolish stories told in a foolish way&#13;
"will make yon howl with delight.&#13;
The Young Men's Club guarantees&#13;
this attraction and inasmuch as the&#13;
citizenship of the future depends Upon&#13;
the boys of to jay, let us give them encouragement&#13;
and hope by our presence&#13;
on that evening.&#13;
The Club is composed of members&#13;
di fie rent denominational views and&#13;
this fact should proves means of fusion.&#13;
Friday. Nov. 17, 8 p. m. at Conur1!&#13;
church. Admission, 15c children; 25c&#13;
adulte.&#13;
I44ie» extra, Fin* Jer«ty Vett»»Stt Pan^, •* 85 oentaper garment&#13;
1*4*« Dtica tstra Bee**; ' &lt; V &gt; 45 '** ' V • "&#13;
CtitdrsDt Jersey Ribbed Vast and Paatt, Price* rtngiSg from 15 t e 4 0 cant*&#13;
Mens Jersey and Heavy, DoubffSJrteated rfndtrwaar, « 0 sent value* 4ft ofta^&#13;
Qoys-UM?y foeed CJn,derwear, . \ . 25 cents.&#13;
M e . s % B o y s Dnck Coats, ^ $ | « k t e&#13;
Mens K%t Jackets&#13;
•k. ^ ' ; ' ••' 'W'A&#13;
• " &gt; • -&#13;
' - 1&#13;
'&gt;*&#13;
•," an';;.&#13;
Footwear %&#13;
&gt;\&#13;
Our stock of M'enV and Boy's Felt and Knit Moots, Knit Socks, Misbawak*&#13;
and Lambei villa Rubbers, Men's Boy's Ladies, Missis and Children's arctics is&#13;
complete. •*&#13;
:•&gt;•&#13;
Saturday? s Specials&#13;
Red Salmon 10c . *&#13;
Bed Elanket8, 49c, 59o per piir -&#13;
1 Doien &amp;fxn Matches 10c&#13;
Jap Rice, deafer lb&#13;
* -&#13;
Business Pointer*.&#13;
«&#13;
WAJITBD.&#13;
Ditchers at ence on county drair.&#13;
Enquire at Erwin Campbell's. Good&#13;
wages paid. Chas Mould.&#13;
Per Said er Bent&#13;
The Black residence on Mill&#13;
Enquire Richard Clinton or&#13;
Murty.&#13;
street.&#13;
Daniel&#13;
t 4 3&#13;
Of Cuurse t&#13;
you are&#13;
going to&#13;
have . .&#13;
ATTENTION POULTRYMEN&#13;
I have a limited number of S. C. R,&#13;
I, Red Cookrels, from prizo winning&#13;
birds, also some Golden Polish Cockrels.&#13;
For prices, call on or address,&#13;
Wm.Cady, Lakeland, Mich, \4S&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Those who have apples to be made&#13;
into cider, our mill will be ready for&#13;
business by the 1st of October.&#13;
Bert Hooker, Pettysville.&#13;
A Good Site&#13;
sanatorium for tubercolosis met and&#13;
&gt; 1&#13;
i:-;\-*.&#13;
•RAWEST&#13;
PUTHAM.&#13;
Vacation thiB week.&#13;
* Grace Gardner spent the past&#13;
week in Lansing.&#13;
Mrs. Sales of Plain field is visiting&#13;
relatives here.&#13;
Mrs. Andrew Hackett of Detroit&#13;
is visiting at D . M. Monks'.&#13;
Robert Gardner of Dexter called&#13;
on friends here Wednesday.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Gardner entertained&#13;
a few of her friends Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. 0 . B. Gardner and daughter&#13;
Lucile oMUver^Ul, who have&#13;
beeu visiting at the home of H. p .&#13;
Gardner, returned home Monday.&#13;
Word wag received here Friday&#13;
of the death of Tracy Tripp of&#13;
Washington. Tracy formerly&#13;
lived in this neighborhood and&#13;
well liked and highly respect-&#13;
&gt;y all who knew him.&#13;
K M M&#13;
Made It E m p h a t i c .&#13;
"What's Maude crying about now?"&#13;
"Oh, she asked her husband if he&#13;
would marry again in case she died,&#13;
and he declared that be wouldn't."&#13;
"Well, nothing wrong about that."&#13;
"No; but you should have heard him.&#13;
say It/'-Louisvllle Courier-Journal.&#13;
And H e r M o n e y .&#13;
"Yes, I was sorry to see Jack Goodley&#13;
married to Miss Roxley.".&#13;
"Sorry: For his sake or hersT&#13;
"For mine. I wanted h«r,"—New&#13;
Yorker.&#13;
Praise the sea, but keep on the land.&#13;
—Herbert.&#13;
vTewea tbe tJirkett property known as&#13;
"Prospect Hill" and which Thos. Birkett&#13;
has offered to the state for a site.&#13;
The «ift consists of 120 acres on the&#13;
west side of tbe road and coming down&#13;
to Portage lalce.&#13;
There is no better ploce in tbe state&#13;
for tbe sanatorium as it is on an elevation&#13;
of at least 100 feet and overlooks&#13;
many beautiful lakes of pure spring&#13;
water. It is only ab:ut three and onehalf&#13;
miles from Pinckney and five&#13;
from Dexter so is near enough stations&#13;
for transportation.&#13;
Tbe trustees have several other locations&#13;
to look after before deciding&#13;
on a site but we think there can be no&#13;
better one than that offered by Mr.&#13;
Birkett.&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
Digewte what you tat*&#13;
KOTICB.&#13;
Everybody interested in tbe G-ilk's&#13;
cemetery are requested to meet *4&#13;
that place Saturday Oct. 14 for the&#13;
purpose of baautifying the place.&#13;
C. S. CHAMBERLIN.&#13;
EXPERT AUCTIONEER&#13;
DEXTER, MICH.&#13;
Bell Phone 88, free P. O. Look Box 68&#13;
Formerly of Battle Creek, Mich. Sells everything&#13;
flB-*»rtfl-He»l fiaUle. Graced Stock, Peraoa*!&#13;
Photos Made for'Xmas.&#13;
There is nothing your.&#13;
friends will like half so&#13;
well a s a P h o t o&#13;
Property, Conn try Pales, etc. Years of experience,&#13;
and price* reasonable.&#13;
Orders may be left at the DISPATCH Office.&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
E. W. DANIELS,&#13;
OENEEAL AUCTIONEER.&#13;
Satistacticn Guaranteed. For informstiou&#13;
call at DISPATCH Office or uddress&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. ^Lyndilla phone&#13;
connection. Auction bills and tin cupa&#13;
furnished free.&#13;
PHOTO OF YOURSELF&#13;
Have them taken now,&#13;
before the rush is on. If&#13;
yon want . . ^ , . .&#13;
Good Ones&#13;
that will laet and are&#13;
Up To Date&#13;
K° to&#13;
• ' • * ' .&#13;
Ill Mil I I li O"&#13;
Howell, Michigan&#13;
AH persons owing on&#13;
Account arc requestto&#13;
call and settle by&#13;
FRANK L ANDREWS&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH SEAL&#13;
AT DISPATCH OFFICE&#13;
Percy Swarthout&#13;
Funeral Director&#13;
AND EMBALMER&#13;
ALL CALLS ANSWERED&#13;
rooiPTLY DAY. nmnr r*?-** 4-&#13;
PARLORS AT&#13;
PLIMPTON'S OLD STAND PlfoneNo.30&#13;
PINCKNEY. MICH&#13;
cash or note&#13;
as possible a s&#13;
bills to meet.&#13;
I&#13;
soon&#13;
have&#13;
FAKE, gut FACTS.&#13;
We carry a full line of Caps, Gloves, Mitts,&#13;
Wool Pants and Shirts.&#13;
W.B. MURPHY&#13;
. Having made up my mimd not to&#13;
handle any more harnesses, I will sell&#13;
at Cost the following articles, vis:&#13;
Single Harnesses, Light Driving&#13;
Harnesses and Heavy Team Farm&#13;
Harnesses.&#13;
I have Oblltrft, Sweat Fads and the largest&#13;
«teck of Whips eyer seen in Pinckney, look at the&#13;
Price, a No. 1, fall kngth, Haw bide for 40 cent*.&#13;
A good Whalebone for $1.00, nrotrprice fruin&#13;
12.00 to $2.50.&#13;
I am not going out of business but my repairiag&#13;
both on Shoes Md Harnesses takee all my time as&#13;
work brought.to me is done on short notice.&#13;
N.H.CAVERLY&#13;
PINCKNET&#13;
WM&#13;
&gt;T*'&#13;
m&#13;
k* \&#13;
#&#13;
.-*,' /&#13;
5«^ &gt; ^ *&#13;
IP'IRST DOOR 80UTH&#13;
OP HOTEL.&#13;
&gt; •&#13;
y.&#13;
,:&amp;&#13;
• ' * . •&#13;
X&#13;
-•—. .,. •&#13;
SUPPLEMENT TO THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH.&#13;
BQABD OF WEBV1BS.&#13;
October Session, 15)05&#13;
Monday, October ttth', IW*.&#13;
1» acec)j\lauc«' with tbe &gt;UtutH iu HUCII cane&#13;
made and provided tin- Hoard of Sup*rviaor«» of&#13;
ldvirigstou t*ou«t&gt; met «t their room8 in the court&#13;
hous*- In the village of Uowell in said county on&#13;
Monday th* Wb day of October, A Ol.lto.aud&#13;
were called to order by Willie* I. LyouH, clerk of&#13;
said county, and upon roll call by township* tbe&#13;
lolloping member.* were foiiud to be present:&#13;
Brighton-Chan FJndHon&#13;
Conway—Win Eiulan&#13;
L'(&lt;ti&lt;»'Uli—Win Slider&#13;
Ue«*fl.'ld-&lt;* Ibert * anieron&#13;
(i.-r oa-Khhard Ilehrons&#13;
Oreen Oak - Clarence Blah op&#13;
llurtland -Th.o* K l'arwbatl&#13;
Uaniburg-Oeo Winans&#13;
Lowell - T PStowv&#13;
Handy-fcdward Wilett&#13;
tcsco - 0 A Kirk laud&#13;
Marion- W J Witty '&#13;
rVoola—Joliu W Botsford&#13;
Putnam—Alex Mclntyre&#13;
Tyrone—Hoy D Kinm«&#13;
rnadilla—Kdwin Farmer , , . ,&#13;
Mr Witty moved that Kdwin Farmer be elected&#13;
temporary cbair.nan. Motion curried.&#13;
Mr Biehop moved that Kdwin Fanner be elected&#13;
permanent chairman of the board. Motion&#13;
carried, and AUr Fanner declared elected.&#13;
Mr bishop moved that tbe board adjourn until&#13;
to-morrow morning at 10 o'clock. Motion&#13;
carried. , , ,&#13;
Approved, . Kdwin Fanner, Chairman.&#13;
Tuesday Morning.&#13;
Board met, roll called, quorum present.&#13;
•Minute., of Monday "a nt wdoii read and approved.&#13;
Mr F n an IIKMMI ilut the chairman be aiithori/&#13;
ed to appoint the usual utanding committees.&#13;
Carried.&#13;
Mr Stowe moved tbat the rules governing the&#13;
board last year be adopted by thin board. Carried.&#13;
'ihtvekairman announced the following standing&#13;
con.tfut.tc»t»_i: '• ".&#13;
Kcjuali/ation-Hifhop, Botslord, Stowe, Winnie&#13;
" W d &gt; t f d e r . -•• - , , , , ,&#13;
C r i m i n a l Claiitia-Fiul.-tn, Belirenn a n d Kirkc&#13;
i v i l CU_iuu_ W i t t y . M c l n t y r e a n d FHrnhall.&#13;
To a p p o r t i o n S t a t e and County Tax—Milett,&#13;
Cameron aud J u d s o n .&#13;
To settle with County T r e a s u r e r Stowe, W (nai.&#13;
s and J u d s o n , _ , , , , . .&#13;
Salaries of County O l l i c e r s - B o t s f o r d , I'inlan&#13;
ami Kirklami.&#13;
Ab'.-tractn C a m e r o n , Milett and Kinitie.,&#13;
IMiblic C r o u u d s a n d liniMint:^ W i n a n s , Witty&#13;
and Slider&#13;
( o u n t v&#13;
l'ai'Mmll."&#13;
( miuty Draiun&#13;
ford ami llehreii."*.&#13;
I'ublie P r i n t i n g&#13;
l'oor Fai in - 1!&#13;
and Ditches&#13;
Fiulai&#13;
l i e n s , Bisdiop a n d&#13;
Mt'Intyre, ' J-lots-&#13;
Hitdiop and Slider.&#13;
,. r Heinous moved t h a t t h e board resolve&#13;
itseif into c o m m i t t e e of t h e whole for t h e p u r -&#13;
MIKI- of e x a m i n i n g t b e several as-rie.-dineut rolls.&#13;
v. a r r i e d .&#13;
Tbe c h a i r called Mr Witty to p n -dde.&#13;
lU-ctss until I :!H&gt; o'clock.&#13;
.Afternoon Session.&#13;
On motion of Mr Juilxon tin- Coin, of the&#13;
_"A .H4+* a r o s e , r e p o i - i e i i progr.etL*.and .w e r e dischitrged.&#13;
Mr Witty moved that the nucstuin of adjournment&#13;
on account of t h e Fowie.rvilie fair be considered&#13;
by t h e ooard. C a r r i e d .&#13;
Mr Fiu'lan moved that when t h e hoard adjourns&#13;
today that it •adjourn until next Monday a t 10&#13;
ii*rfr»C^v=~*^HN»«d*==^=_. _._._, ... ___, ^&#13;
Mr. Stowe p r e s e n t e d t h e following:&#13;
" T o the H o n o r a b l e Hoard of Mipervisors. Livingston&#13;
County, Michigan. W h e r e a s the people&#13;
of Livingston County t h r o u g h their chosen representatives,&#13;
t h e Hoard of Mipervisors, have for&#13;
ii,any years been oei initled to eject t h e i r D r a i n&#13;
C o m m i s s i o n e r , t n e i r S u p e r i n t e n d e n t s of t h e&#13;
['our. and their m e m b e r s of (he bouril of School&#13;
F.Ni.iuineiM . &amp; ri^lit (hat N still enjoyed by t h e&#13;
I e o o b ' of other i ounties of this state, and,&#13;
W h e r e a s , we believe in ttie constitutional right&#13;
of Li.cal Self (.Jovpnniient, ami v h e r e a s , t h e last&#13;
leirislatuiH d u r i n g t h e closing d a y s of its session&#13;
did pass an act a t t e m p t i n g to deprive t h e people&#13;
of Livinjiston County of t h e rii.rht of electing its&#13;
own OIHCPTH i n . t b o ' n u n n e v heretofore e n j o y d,&#13;
and placed t b e power of a p p o i n t i n g them i n tlie&#13;
h a n d s of t h e ( i o v e r u q r of the State of Michigan,&#13;
and the J u d g e of I'robat" of Livingston County,&#13;
and&#13;
W h e r e a s ,&#13;
u n p o p u l a r ,&#13;
therefore IK&#13;
V I . W h a t distinction, If a n y i s made, In t h e&#13;
t r e a t i n e o t of prisoner*. None.&#13;
VII A r e .prisonere under sixte«n yearn of age&#13;
at a n y tUue, d a y o r n t g b t , p e r m i t t e d to m i n g l e&#13;
or aeaocUlo with a d u l t p r i s o n e r s i n violation of&#13;
aection 5865 C o m p i l e d Laws. 18W. N o .&#13;
V I I I . A r e p r i s o n e r s o n civil procww k e y t In&#13;
r o o m s e p a r a t e ajid distinct from p r i s o n e r s held&#13;
on i r l m l n a l c h a r g e o r conviction, a n d o n n o&#13;
p r e t e n s e whernevwr p u t o r kept In t h e saute r o o m&#13;
as required by section IU&amp;34 Compiled L a w s ,&#13;
J W 7 . Yea. a , .&#13;
I X . Are male a n d female p r i s o n e r s conntied In&#13;
s e p a r a t e rooms a s r e o u l r e a by section 106.W5L'.&#13;
L.18U7. Y e s .&#13;
X. I s t b p r e a p r o p e r jail record kept, and in&#13;
it k e p t properly posted, a n d does it comply with&#13;
section 5 W 0 C . L . 18WV Y ^ s .&#13;
XL W h a t if a n y evil* e i t h e r In c o n s t r u c t i o n or&#13;
m a n a g e m e n t of J a n s a r e found to exiat. None.&#13;
Itecom mendations.&#13;
I. Water clo»ets should be overhauled a n d&#13;
put in good condition.&#13;
II, New h a m m o c k s a n d nev* bedding below.&#13;
A r t h u r A. Montague, J u d ^ s of P r o b a t e .&#13;
H. £»»ni!uaiiri, i&#13;
C. A. C o r n e l l , &gt; Supta. of Poor.&#13;
A. W i n e g a r , 1&#13;
D e w l t t C. C a r r . County Ajjt.&#13;
Mr. .ludson moved that t h e r e p o r t be accepted&#13;
and placed on tile. Carried.&#13;
E u j j e n e T McClear, D r a i n C o m m i s s i o n e r , x*ve&#13;
his r e p o r t as f o l l o w s :&#13;
T o t h e Board of Supervisors of the County of&#13;
L i v i n g s t o n :&#13;
G e n t l e m e n : I n c o m p l i a n c e with t h e provis&#13;
i o n s of Section V I I C h a p t e r 2 of Act N u m b e r&#13;
WW of t h e Public Acts of 1«W7. I have t h e h o n o r&#13;
to s u b m i t my a n n u a l r e p o r t a s D r a i n Couimts.&#13;
eloner of t h e C o u n t y of Livingston, c o v e r i n g t h e&#13;
period from t h e 8th d a v of October, Hk,'4, to t h e&#13;
7th day of October. IW.5. '&#13;
T h e following d r a i n s have been b e g u n by me&#13;
d u r i n g t h e y e a r : Livingston County N u m b e r&#13;
F o u r t e e n D r a i n , Livin«ston County N u m b e r&#13;
Fifteen D r a i n , Livingston. County t i m b e r h i x -&#13;
teen D r a i n , l.iviugi-ton County N u m b e r Seventeen&#13;
D r a i n , M a r i o n a n d (i«noa County D r a i n ,&#13;
Mardon N u m b e r T w o D r a i n , Iosco N u m b e r One&#13;
D r a i n , M a r r C o u n t y D r a i n , Handy N u m b e r&#13;
Eleven, H a n d y N u m b e r F o u r D r a i n , Lime L a k e&#13;
D r a i n , Branch F o u r a n d Five Cohoctah a n d&#13;
Conwav Union D r a i n ,&#13;
T h e following D r a i n s were finished by mo&#13;
d u r i n g t h e y e a r : Livingston County N u m b e r&#13;
T w e l v e D r a i n , H o w e l l N u m b e r T h r e e Drain,&#13;
H a n d y a n d Howell N u m b e r One D r a t n , H a n d y&#13;
N u m b e r Five. H a n d y N u m b e r Eleven D r a i n ,&#13;
C o t way N u m b e r Seventeen D r a i n , Iosco Number&#13;
T w o Drain.&#13;
T h e following n a m e d d r a i n s remain, unfinished:&#13;
Livingston County N u m b e r T h i r t e e n D r a i n ,&#13;
Marion a n d C e u o a County D r a i n , Marion N u m -&#13;
ber T w o D r a i n , J o s c o N u m b e r One Drain, Livingston&#13;
County N u m b e r T e n ' Drain, L i v i n g s t o n&#13;
C o u n t y N u m b e r Fifteen D r a i n , Livingston&#13;
C o u n t y N u m b e r s i x t e e n D r a i n , Livingston&#13;
c o i m t v N u m b e r Seventeen Drain, M a r r County&#13;
Drain^ Lime L a k e D r a i n , Branch Four a n d Five&#13;
of a n d Cohoctah a n d C/mway Union D i a i n ,&#13;
Madden County Drain. Green Oak N u m b e r T w o ,&#13;
H a n d y N u m b e r F o u r Drain.&#13;
The following is a financial s t a t e m e n t of t h e&#13;
several Hrains o n t h e "ill day of October,&#13;
A . I ) . UtCi.&#13;
Iosco N u m b e r T w o Oraiu.&#13;
Oct. SthvP.Ol. balance in fund $ M.7S&#13;
O r d e r s d r a w n 6:173&#13;
Oct. 7th,-li)0.r&gt;, balance in fund 00&#13;
Livingston C o u n t y N u m b e r Two Di*ain.&#13;
Oct S, 1WM, b a l a n c e in fund 7'.* Ki&#13;
Oct._7JiJl._o. b a l a n c e in fund. ^ 79 .)5&#13;
Livingston Countv N u m b e r J_.i_jht Drain,&#13;
Oct S. 1SH.4. balance i n ' f u n d '. 4S 10&#13;
Orders d r a w n 4 00&#13;
Oct 7. ly ."., ha l a n c e in fund l i 10&#13;
Livingston County N u m b e r Seven D r a i n .&#13;
Oct s, UK. L balance iu'fund&#13;
9 15&#13;
7*&#13;
75&#13;
S51 84&#13;
3:.4 4¾)&#13;
5&#13;
P T r f i m . 3 :&#13;
Oct 7, 1..0.1, balance&#13;
Livingston a n d&#13;
Oct S, 1.104, b a l a n c e&#13;
O r d e r s 11 raw n&#13;
Oct 7, 1!)U.*&gt;, balance in&#13;
in fund ..&#13;
S. bin was.&#13;
in i u n d .,&#13;
""futi'd".',&#13;
HO 51&#13;
fttrHf&#13;
:.0 ")1&#13;
ce Nine her Five.&#13;
Si) (13&#13;
H00&#13;
Si 0,"i&#13;
5TTTenT)r:un.&#13;
••aid act t o be not only&#13;
and u n c o n s t i t u t i o n a l .&#13;
we believe&#13;
but unjm-t&#13;
it,&#13;
ltesoived, T h a t we proceed to t h e election- of *&#13;
Drain C o m m i s s i . O U T for t h e County ot Livingston&#13;
for tbe r e g u l a r t e r m commencing J a n u a r y&#13;
l.-t. l!Ui,&#13;
Also to t h e election of a itieTuher of t h e Hoard&#13;
of Miiieriivtemients uf t h e Poor for the ( ountj- of&#13;
Livingston for t h e regular term c o m m e n c i n g&#13;
.lauuary 1st, HKki, also&#13;
'Jo t h e election of a m e m b e r of t h e Hoard of&#13;
Stht.ol h-jatniners for t h e c o u n t y of Livingston&#13;
tor t h e ensuing t e r m .&#13;
Dated. Howell, ...ich., Oct. 10. W &gt; . "&#13;
Mr s t o w e moved t h e adoption of t h e resolution.&#13;
Mr Kiiinie called for t:ie yeas and nays,&#13;
Y e a s - B o t s l o u l . Helmuts, b i s h o p , C a m e r o n ,&#13;
Finlan, M c l n t y r e , Milett, Stowi&lt;, Winans a n d&#13;
Witty -10.&#13;
N a y s - . l u d s o n , Kinnie, K i r k l a n d , P a r s h a l l and&#13;
Slider--"). Carried&#13;
Mr Kirkland moved that only t h e committee on&#13;
Poor F a r m visit t h e County b a r m . Carried.&#13;
Mr__.lclpt.yrc (iresentcd t h e n a m e of Kugene T .&#13;
"-VTcClgar fur Luuiity-Dnrfn—Conint-^HioDer a n d&#13;
moved t h a t t h e board proceed t o an election.&#13;
d'arrixd.&#13;
Mr WinanfTmoved thkt t h e c h a i r a p p o i n t t w o&#13;
tellers. CInrried.&#13;
Chair appointed S u p e r v i s o r s W loans a n d&#13;
Hotsford.&#13;
Board proenvd to ballot with t h e following&#13;
r e s u l t :&#13;
Whole n u m b e r of vofcs east ten (10) of which&#13;
E u g e n e T . McLlear received 10. '&#13;
Chair declared Eugene T . McCTear elected&#13;
D r a i n CoTnniissioner tor t h e e n s u i n g t e r m ,&#13;
For Supt, of t h e Poor Mr Stowe presented t h e&#13;
n a m e of Amos \ \ i n e g a r .&#13;
Ballot, was t a k e n with t h e following result:&#13;
W h o l e 'hum b. r of ballots cast ten of which Amos&#13;
VVinegar received 10&#13;
Chair declared Amos W i o e g a r elected , Siipt.&#13;
of Poor for t h e ousuing t e r m . *&#13;
For School Kxaminer Mr Finlan presented t h e&#13;
n a m e of F r a n c i s D. Carr.&#13;
Ballot was t a k e n with t b e following result;&#13;
Whole n u m b e r of ballots cast ten of which&#13;
F r a n c i s I), C a r r received Id.&#13;
Chair declared Francis D. C a r r elected County&#13;
School E x a m i n e r l o r t b e e n s u i n g term.&#13;
Jsuprs. Behrens a i d Finlan of C r i m i n a l C l a i m s&#13;
C o m m i t t e e r e p o r t e d accounts w h i c h were allowed&#13;
as recommended a s a p p e a r s by N o ' s 28W to 21.3&#13;
inclusive.&#13;
Supervisor W i t t y of Civil C l a i m s C o m m i t t e e&#13;
r e p o n e d s u n d r y bills which were allowed a s&#13;
recommended a s a p p e a r s by N o ' s . 294 to g! 8 inclusive.&#13;
The Civil C l a i m s C o m m i t t e e r e p o r t e d bill of&#13;
N. C. Knor.ihuis.en, help, etc. Mr F i n l a n moved&#13;
tbat t h e bill be laid on t h e t a b l e . Carried.&#13;
Mr Finlan moved A a t t h e vote, by which t h e&#13;
board decided t o a d j o u r n a t t h e i r a d j o u r n i n g&#13;
t i m e , until Monday n e x t , bo reconi-iderea.&#13;
Carried.;&#13;
9r1r Behrone moved that the hoard adjourn&#13;
until tomorro.v morning a t u o'clock.&#13;
• Approved. Edwin Farmer, Chairman.&#13;
Wednesday Morning,&#13;
Board met, roll called, quorum present.&#13;
Minutes of 'luesday's session read and approved.&#13;
"*"&gt;.&#13;
Judge A. A. Montague, read the following,&#13;
report:&#13;
To Honorable Board of Supervisors:&#13;
We, the undesigned inspectors of jails of&#13;
Livingston Count)'. In compliance with the provisions&#13;
of law, would respectively report:&#13;
That ou the 2nd day of September, 190", they&#13;
visited and carefuLy respected the county jail of&#13;
said county and found as follows:&#13;
I. That during the period since the last reouir&gt;&#13;
d report and tbe date of this examination,&#13;
there has been confined at different times t&gt;2&#13;
prisoners charged with offenses as follows:&#13;
Male Female Whole No.&#13;
Assault with intent to&#13;
1 1&#13;
I I&#13;
I 1&#13;
Livingston C o u n t v Slim&#13;
Oct S, 111 •. balance in id ml 4 h W&#13;
•interest on d e l i n q u e n t ta:; t 3"v&#13;
Orders d r a w n ' 'i&gt;'• M&#13;
Oct 7, tU..."», b a l a n c e in fund l.i&gt; »1&#13;
Howell a n d ILoulv N u m b e r O n e Drain.&#13;
Oct S. p.ti!.j, b a l a n c e in fund . . » 51." IS&#13;
Interest on delimjiient tax 3'&gt;&#13;
O r d e r s d r a w n . . . . : . ."&gt;I3 »;"»&#13;
Oct 7, P.*..."i, balance in fund 1 "&gt;"•&#13;
Livingston C o u n t v N u m b e r Tv\clvu D r a i n .&#13;
Oct s. i...,1.'balance in fund....-..- 101S 14&#13;
Interest &lt;m deliiii[ueut tax i&lt;-&#13;
O r d e i s d r a w n . . '.»S5 SO&#13;
Oct 7, p.iOo, balance in fund •. . ^2. Vti&#13;
Livirigsti)n County N u m b e r Kotiit'cn Drain.&#13;
Tax assessed 438 79&#13;
O r d e r s d r a w n -i'i'-i 73&#13;
O c t 7. IV0,"), b a l a n c e i n f u n d \K**&gt;&#13;
L i v i n . s t o n Countv N u m b e r K l e v e n Drain&#13;
Oct s. I'.hii, b a l a n c e in"fund : .35SI&#13;
O r d e r s d r a w n ..' 4-S--.0&#13;
Oct 7, UH."&gt;. balance in fund T t\j&#13;
Howell N \ m i b c r ' t h r e e Drain.&#13;
t.lct H. HOI, balance in lund MM 71&#13;
( r. from s a b ' of title l3ii:.")&#13;
Tax asrter-.vd for liK.5. 3"&gt;U 00&#13;
Orders d r a w n ' lO.'-'l ;'0&#13;
Oct 7', IW)), balance in fund ..1:.11&#13;
C o h o c t a h and Conwav Union D r a i n .&#13;
Oct i. HOI, balance in fund.' 12620.'2&#13;
Tax as-.es. M for 1U05 2d i0 oo&#13;
Cr. from sale of title 28 3.1)&#13;
O r d e r s draw'ri; lL'S9t,ti&#13;
Handy Number Seven Drkin.'&#13;
Oct8,lP04, balance in fund IOCS&#13;
Oct 7, U05, balance In fund 101)8&#13;
•*• HaSidy N«nber*'iva Drain.&#13;
OctX. 1904, balance in fund.. 150 50&#13;
Orders drawn...; 140301&#13;
Oct 7, 1905, balance in fund.... 10 i0&#13;
Conway Nuniber Sixteen Drain.&#13;
Oct 8,1GG4, baianqp In fund 8 21&#13;
Order* drawn... -. 3 21&#13;
Oct 7, 1903, balance In fund. 00&#13;
Oceota Number One Drain,&#13;
Oct 8.19*14. balance lu fund £.99&#13;
Orders drawn 4 0()&#13;
Oct 7,1906. balance In fund 21 99&#13;
Cohoctah Number Two Drain.&#13;
Oct H, 1901. balance in fund 1« 77&#13;
Oct 7, Ik-OS, balance infund 1(177&#13;
Lime Lake Drain.&#13;
Oct S, 1904, balance in fund 2M&#13;
Orders drawn 2 51&#13;
Oct 7,1905, balance in fund t. 00&#13;
Io«co Number One Drain.&#13;
Oct H, 1904, balauce in fund 12 88&#13;
Tax assessed 100!. 00&#13;
Orders draw n ?0 00&#13;
Oct 7,1905, balance in fund 102¾) 00&#13;
Conway NinnberOne Drain.&#13;
Oct 8,1004, balance in fund 61 82&#13;
Oct 7T U-05, balance in fund 61 82&#13;
Conway Number Two Drain.&#13;
Oct 8,1904. balance in fund 196 50&#13;
orders drawn, A 120Hi&#13;
Oct 7,\9o£, balance in fund 7!» tU&#13;
Conway Number Five Drain.&#13;
OctS. 1904, balance in fund&#13;
Oct 7, 1905, balance In fund 8 .11&#13;
Conway Number Tea Drain.&#13;
Oct 8,1904, balance in fund.,&#13;
Oct 7, 11)03, balance In fund&#13;
rConway Number Eleven Drain.&#13;
Oct 8, HW4, balance in fund&#13;
Orders drawn&#13;
Oct 7, I9C5, balance in fond 17&#13;
Conway Number Fifteen Drain.&#13;
Oct «, H04, balance in'fund 25 44&#13;
Orders drawn b 00&#13;
Oct-7,190ft, balance in fund ' 19 44&#13;
Conway Number Seventeen Drain,&#13;
OctS, )004 balance in f and 1B2 67&#13;
Orders drawn 109 80&#13;
Oct 7,1905, balance in fund 52 87&#13;
Cedar River Improvement Drain.&#13;
OctS, 1904,T&gt;alsnce in fund., 78 82&#13;
Orders drawn 41 U0&#13;
Oct 7, 1905, balance infund 37 82&#13;
Howell and Cohoctah Couuty Drain.&#13;
Oct S, 1W4, balance in fund 147 35&#13;
Orders drawn.. lti 00&#13;
Oct 7, 1903, balance in fund 131 35&#13;
Howell Village County Drain.&#13;
Oct 8, 1C04, balance iu fund 139 94&#13;
Orders drawn SI 75&#13;
Oct 7, 1905, balance infund 58 19&#13;
Marlon Number _»ix Drain.&#13;
1904, balance in fund 20&#13;
1905, balance m fund 20&#13;
Walsh County D r a i n . • —&#13;
Oct 8. ti-OJ, balance in i u n d ,&#13;
Orders drawn&#13;
Oct 7, 1905, balance in fund&#13;
Madden County D r a i n .&#13;
Oct 8. 1904, balance in fund&#13;
O r d e r s d r a w n&#13;
Oct 7, 1%."&gt;, balance in fund&#13;
C o h o c t a h Countv D r a i n .&#13;
•OcUvliHH, baiiiiitti i n f_u_rid _.__._.... ,^..^._._. 3 Oil&#13;
O r d e r s d r a w n 3 CO&#13;
Oct 7. 1!«0;.', balance in fund 00&#13;
Newton C o u n t y D r a i n .&#13;
Oct S, 1901, balance in fund 4 fM&#13;
Oct '., LH.5, balance in fund 4 01&#13;
-— 4vaut C&lt;»bt_ctabCai_rjtv Drain,, _. ____________&#13;
Oct s. 1901. balance in fund 3 . 41&#13;
Orders dravrn 33 LI&#13;
Oct 7. 1905, balance i n fund , . . 1 00&#13;
C o n w a y Ntimber T h r e e Drain.&#13;
Hill, balance la fund ... 1" 29&#13;
!905, balance in iund • • 17 29&#13;
11 a r t 1 a n d~Co HuTflfrra in.&#13;
Oct S. 1904, balance in fnrui 77&#13;
O i d e r s drnv. n. 77&#13;
Oct T. P.* o. balance iu fund UJ&#13;
Coles C o u n t , Drain.&#13;
Oct V, .MM, balan-'c. in fund .1&#13;
O r d e r - d r a w n&#13;
Oct 7, 1905, balance in fund&#13;
Amount of Proceeds&#13;
Kecd from twp lor support ot Insane..&#13;
•' " " i " " " p . o o r . ,&#13;
MAleof products.?....&#13;
. $ 337 72&#13;
. 2132 95&#13;
. 701 23&#13;
$3171 ««&#13;
DISMUli'.BMKXTS&#13;
Clothing ¢218 07&#13;
Fuel 2&amp;T 10&#13;
Furniture 47 13&#13;
Farm Implements \ repairs. . . . . . 10) 80&#13;
Funernl expenses, County House.. 42 00&#13;
" " outslcfe Couoty&#13;
House 25 00 \&#13;
(irocerles »ud provislous ^.. 434 92 •&#13;
Hay, trrain and seed i*_s M&#13;
lnsuramoe 18 50&#13;
Keeper.Couuty Uou.se 4oo 00&#13;
Labor on farm exclusive of keeper 347 'M&#13;
Labor iu house, exeiu»lve of keeper 171 50&#13;
Medicine Si medical attendance at&#13;
County House 249 76&#13;
Medicine &amp; medical attendance,&#13;
outside County House 241 50&#13;
Mlsa. supplies 71 03 2858 73&#13;
KepaitHon bid*, fences &amp; ditches 224 91&#13;
Supervisor olttclal service 11:«.&#13;
Supt personal ex 128 08&#13;
Temporary relief food 68 32&#13;
'• fuel 29 25&#13;
" " ClOtblUg ^22 84&#13;
Transportation to &amp; /row Co bouse 22 42&#13;
" irlends o.v.&#13;
Stock for farm (horse 6c l bull..... 216 00 722 71&#13;
Cost of law a .it between OakUud&#13;
&amp; LIvluKStou County 157 62&#13;
_^ — ——&#13;
Total «3739 06&#13;
Fam Koeplng Insane at Eastern ;AS&gt;1UII&gt; at&#13;
Pont lac.&#13;
guaiter eudlnsrSept. 30th. lfloi 9 98 36&#13;
by authorized and dlfected to apreftd upon the&#13;
assesbraent rolls of their tTwuships tbe taxes a»&#13;
reported to them by the drain commissioner&#13;
. for tne construction of the following named&#13;
JdralBSi Marlon aad Genoa drain. Green Oik&#13;
No. 2. Uviagetoo county No. 13, Iosco No. 1,&#13;
Howell No. 3» Livingston county No. 15. Hahdjr&#13;
No. 4. Handy No. u , Livingston county No. 14.&#13;
Livingston county N o , 16, Cohoctah and conway&#13;
utilQn^ •&#13;
On motion the same was adopted as read.&#13;
The bills of R, L. Polk, and O. A. Bee be were&#13;
reported without recommendation by civil&#13;
claim* committee.&#13;
On motion of Mr, Finlan the same were disallow*&#13;
l.&#13;
On motion of Mr. Milett board adjourni d until&#13;
tomorrow morning at 9:30 o'clock.&#13;
Approved.&#13;
E D W I N F A R M E R . Chairman.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER lslb, LXw.&#13;
Board met, roil called, quorum present.&#13;
Minutes of Mouday'a session read and&#13;
approved.&#13;
Mr. Hei&gt;rens gave tbe/eport of the committee&#13;
on county poor farm as follow*:&#13;
Your committee on county poor farm beg&#13;
leave to report as follows.&#13;
We find the farm under good state of cultivation,&#13;
live stock and tools In tood order, buildings&#13;
tn shape for tbe coming winter and the&#13;
of more than usual quantity and of good&#13;
Dee. 3ist, 1901.&#13;
March 3Ht. 1905.&#13;
16 25&#13;
147&#13;
June 30th, 1905 , 54 28&#13;
170 36&#13;
3739 06&#13;
Total&#13;
Oct 8,&#13;
Oct 7,&#13;
Oct&#13;
Oct&#13;
W&#13;
;. 9i i&#13;
00&#13;
Oct , 1905, balance in fund ,&#13;
Handy and Iosco N u m b e r One D r a i n .&#13;
Oct, 8. 1H0L halance in fund&#13;
Oct 7, 1905, balance in fund&#13;
L'nadilla and Stoc&#13;
"0lrt~Hrl90L halanot* in fund.&#13;
Drain.&#13;
1 jit 21&#13;
ID (.9&#13;
16 69&#13;
-49-40.&#13;
O r d e r s d r a w n . , 7 0 0&#13;
Oct 7, 1905, b a l a n c e iu f u n d . . . 12 30&#13;
Wolf Creek Drain.&#13;
Oct 8, 1G04, balance in fund,..' 30&#13;
Oct 7, 1905, b a l a n c e in fund 30&#13;
Hewell and Marion Drain.&#13;
Oct 6, 1904, balance in fund 24 80&#13;
O r d e r s d r a w n 13 00&#13;
Oct 7,1W5, balance in fund II *&gt;&#13;
Oreen Oak N u m b e r Two D r a i n .&#13;
Oct 8, 1901, balance in fund 672- S2&#13;
Tax assessed for 19o5 ;i40 00&#13;
Orders d r a w n . . , 7.-&gt;5 71&#13;
Oct 7, 1905, balance in fund 257 I t&#13;
H a n d y N u m b e r F o u r D r a i n .&#13;
Oct 8. 1904, b a l a n c e in fund 15 65&#13;
T a x aseessed for 1905 «81 22&#13;
Orders drawn 468 70&#13;
Oct 7, 19t5, balin fund 2S7 01&#13;
Livir.gston County Number Fifteen Drain.&#13;
Tax assessed ..87 CO&#13;
Orders drawn 40 CO&#13;
Oct 7, 19,5, balance in fund...~ 817 00.&#13;
Livingston County Number Sixteen Drain.&#13;
commit rape&#13;
Criminal Threats&#13;
Orand Larceny&#13;
Hreaking and entering&#13;
granary, night&#13;
Obtaining money under&#13;
false pretence&#13;
Obtaining good* und*&#13;
r falee pretenou&#13;
Bastardy&#13;
Petty Larcenc}&#13;
Using obscene language&#13;
in presence&#13;
of ladles&#13;
Carrying concealed&#13;
weapons&#13;
Wife desertion&#13;
Insane&#13;
Assault and battery&#13;
Vagrancy&#13;
Drunk and disordoily&#13;
II.&#13;
1&#13;
»&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
10&#13;
31 I&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
3&#13;
1&#13;
10&#13;
32&#13;
There arc now in jail delained for&#13;
trial 2&#13;
There are now in jail serving sentence l&#13;
There are now in jail awaiting sentence 1&#13;
N timber now in jail, male 3. 1'otai 3&#13;
Prlso.ers detained for trial have been held in&#13;
jail the following i umber of days each, Win.&#13;
Kaym- r 127, Peter Wool 140.&#13;
III.' Number utpaUy £p(Jlned in one room.by&#13;
dny 4 or 5. Nu'«t(f)r^Sf y»f*y coudned in one room&#13;
bynighrl,&#13;
iV. Kmnloym nt not-e.&#13;
V ' onoitioo of&#13;
U . . . .. "&#13;
4fo d. Conditio i of h»L« goo«l. conditi »u of&#13;
wat*r cloeete, Had c^ndit OJ.&#13;
Tax aat-cpflod.&#13;
Orders drawn&#13;
Oct 7, I9t5.balanceipfund&#13;
Mari .n and Genoa County Drain&#13;
Tax assessed&#13;
Orders drawm&#13;
Oct 7, 1905, balance in fund&#13;
Green Oak Number Three Drain.&#13;
Oct 8, 1901, balance in fund&#13;
Orders drawn&#13;
Oct 7,1906, balance in fund.;&#13;
Cohoctah and Deerfleld Couuty Drain.&#13;
113! H&#13;
iHOO&#13;
1103 41&#13;
m o o oo&#13;
158 75&#13;
1124125&#13;
13 37&#13;
13 37&#13;
00&#13;
123 48&#13;
400&#13;
119 18&#13;
3 21&#13;
800&#13;
21&#13;
25 79&#13;
II 11&#13;
14 t&gt;S&#13;
Oct 8, 1904, balance in fund.&#13;
Orders drawn ^&#13;
Oct 7, 1905, balance in fund&#13;
UOwell Number One Drain.&#13;
OctS, 1904, balance in fund&#13;
Orders drawn&#13;
Oct 7,19 5, balance in fund.,.'&#13;
Livingston Number One Drain&#13;
OctS, 1904, balance in lund&#13;
Orders drawn... , .&#13;
Oct 7, 1905, balance in fund&#13;
Shiawassee River County Drain.&#13;
Oct 8,1901, balance in fund..7. 16003&#13;
Orders dr^wn 24 00&#13;
Oct 7,19u5, balance in fund 1*8 03&#13;
Howell Number Two Drain.&#13;
Oct 8. HXXi, balance in fund&#13;
Orders drawn ;.&#13;
Oct 7, lu05 balance in fund&#13;
Livingston County Number Two Drain.&#13;
Oct 8,1901, balance in fund&#13;
Oct 7. 1905, balance in fund&#13;
Iosco Num ber Three "Drain,&#13;
Oct 8, 1.04. balance in tund&#13;
Orders draw n&#13;
Oct 7,190."), bal»nce in fund...&#13;
Marion Number Four Drain.&#13;
Oct 8, 1*04, balance In fund&#13;
Oct 7, if05, balance in fund&#13;
Marion Number Two Drain.&#13;
OctS, 1C01, balance in fund 15 37&#13;
Ore era drawn ,&#13;
Oct 7, 190*, balance in fund,...&#13;
Rush Drain&#13;
Oct 3, 19W, balance infund....&#13;
Oct 7,190ft, balance iu fund....&#13;
Livinaeton County Number Thirteen Drain.&#13;
TaX a**«»*e i f of L05 and 19C6 ••.. 3707 89&#13;
' Order* drawn 946 82&#13;
Oct 7, 1««. balance In fur d 2.01 27&#13;
Gr&gt;en Oak Number One Drain.&#13;
Oct 8,1004, balance in f una 3! £2&#13;
600&#13;
2U)&#13;
400&#13;
466&#13;
466&#13;
11 84&#13;
10 50&#13;
134&#13;
16 00&#13;
16 00&#13;
12 00&#13;
3 37&#13;
43 03&#13;
43 08&#13;
beddi a very pier. Ought to&#13;
burned and dew put i s . &lt; *»i oitlon of cells&#13;
Oct 7, 1905, balance in fund.&#13;
Largford Diain.&#13;
Oct 8, K4t, balance in fund&#13;
Oct 7, IW*. balance in fund&#13;
Handy Number Thirteen Drain.&#13;
Oct 8,1004, balance in fund&#13;
Oct 7,1*&gt;5, balance In fond&#13;
Handy Number Klevtn Drain,&#13;
Tax assessed tor 19,5&#13;
Ordrre drawn ;.&#13;
31&#13;
17 75&#13;
17 74&#13;
74fl&#13;
7 46&#13;
Ml t9&#13;
Mo 51&#13;
Oet 7,190T., balance In fund 00u8&#13;
the above is a full&#13;
drains constructed,&#13;
supervision d u r i n g&#13;
the tLiancial statedrain&#13;
s u b m i t t e d herewith is trno&#13;
" i i b m i i t e d .&#13;
And 1 hereby certify tliat&#13;
ami true tej o r t of flll t h e&#13;
finished or hegfin under my&#13;
the y e a r now e n d i n g . A n d&#13;
merit of each&#13;
and correct&#13;
AH of which is recrwetft 1 ly&#13;
El.'liKN'K T . Mi i'l.KAK,&#13;
County Drain Commissioner for the&#13;
Countv of Li', ing-ton.&#13;
DatedvHoweL.Mh'h.. Oct. li&gt;, P.H.5.&#13;
Mr. Finlan moved that the report be accepted,&#13;
and plac« d on tile;- Carried.&#13;
t rimtiiHl Claims •(. ommitiee by Supervisors&#13;
Finlan. Kirklat.d, ana Hehreus reported several&#13;
bills which wete allowed us recommended as&#13;
uppekrs by No's. :: 1'4 to 3J5 inclusive, Tb,:&#13;
Collins Cororuer Hill was reported without&#13;
recommendation. Ou motion the same was al&#13;
lowed a. $10.00.&#13;
Mr. Purshall of Civil Claims Committee reported&#13;
bills of Township Clerks for inakiDg&#13;
election returns, which were allowed t s appears&#13;
by No's. 30u to 312 inclusive.&#13;
Mr. witty of Civil Claims Committee reported&#13;
pay roll oi Supervisors for making returns etc.,&#13;
which were allowed and numbered birth 299&#13;
The bill of John Hillniau. quarantine account&#13;
was, reported by Witty of the Committee with.&#13;
r ecoih mend at ion t hSTTt be dmmHow«d ••,-.«• •*—-—&#13;
Mr. Cameron moved that tbe bill be not allowed&#13;
Cftirjerl.&#13;
Mr. Mclnt&gt;re of Civil Claims ConTOrrtttee-rai.&#13;
ported several bills which were allowed as&#13;
recommended as appears by No's. 32« to 332 inclusive.&#13;
Mr. Kirkland moved that the Board adjourn&#13;
until Moudaj morning at 9 o'clock, Carried.&#13;
Approved,&#13;
EmvjN F A K M E R Chairman.&#13;
MONDAY, OCTOBER icth, 1905.&#13;
Rcard met, roll called, quorum present.&#13;
Minutes of Wednesdays sesslou read and approved.&#13;
Mr. Bishop presented the report of the Committee&#13;
on Equalization,&#13;
$3909 42&#13;
Recapitulation&#13;
Total receipts for year $3171 ot&#13;
Paid lor all purposes 3739 06&#13;
Poor fund overdrawn 067 14&#13;
W hole number iu mates kept at County tarm&#13;
during year.&#13;
Male *. 25&#13;
Female - . « , , . . . 5&#13;
_ Total 30&#13;
The following persons have been kept at&#13;
County House-at County expense during year.&#13;
Andrew Nelson, Thomas Mills. Clarence&#13;
Williams, Dell Patrick, Philip Sheridan. Total&#13;
February, 1905. we hired Mr. and Mr3. Stoddard&#13;
as keeper and matron of the County House&#13;
at four hundred dollars per year and llnd th-in&#13;
honest, fiithful and kind to all inmates and&#13;
well fitted for keener and matrou.&#13;
HKNRV DAMMANN )&#13;
C. A. C O R N E L L - Supt. ol Poor,&#13;
A M O S W l N T E &lt; i A R .&#13;
Mr. .ludson moved that the report be accepted&#13;
ai d placed ou tile. Motion carried.&#13;
Mr. Judson moved that the County tax be fixed&#13;
at the sum of .*it.0Q0 for the year 1905—1906.&#13;
Carried.&#13;
The Criminal Claims Committee by Supervisors&#13;
Finlan and Behrens reported several bills&#13;
whicli were all vwed as recommended as appears&#13;
Ly NO'S. :.:.:5 to 33S inclusive&#13;
Mr. Behrens moved tbut the bill of commls-&#13;
292 AnsM Tewnsend, constable.... 2 85&#13;
29'J Root. Culhane et al Goodrich &amp;&#13;
Monk*, Inq 790&#13;
291 Gregory,Mayer*Thon».tup.. 32497&#13;
995 Utile, Brown &amp; Co., book jail.. 2 oo&#13;
29« Hesse Bros., soap l 45&#13;
297 Mattatuck Mfg.Co., handcuffs 7 75&#13;
2t« D, D , Harger, justice acct 3 oo&#13;
299 Alex. Mcintyre-et al»up. service*&#13;
pay roll 15716&#13;
300 John F. Baker, election returns 3 20&#13;
30i Myrou Hennck.elect.rets . . . . 3 4 4&#13;
302 J. C. Welmelster, elect rets... 2 60&#13;
303 Carl Bollinger, elect, rets 8 m&#13;
304 Herbert G. Munsell.eleci rets. 3 32&#13;
305 Edward White, elect, rets 3 41&#13;
306 J. L. Preston.elect, rets. 3 50&#13;
:m Itvlug W. Hart, elect, rets 2 72&#13;
398 Kobt. Eager elect, rets 2 72&#13;
309 DatlelC. Love,elect, rets 4 40&#13;
3io W. H. EJlfs, elect, rets 3 80&#13;
311 Douglas Glaaple, getting oallots 3 44&#13;
312 E. c . Westohal. getting ballots 2 60&#13;
313 F. H. Dillingham, elect, rets... 4 20&#13;
314 C. N. Wilcox, deputy sheriff.., 4819&#13;
315 A. K. Tooley, deputy snerlf!... 62 17&#13;
316 Frank Metz. deputy sheriff.... 30 00&#13;
317 G.C. Mack, justice a c c t 28 60&#13;
318 W M Powers, justiceaec't.... 29 40&#13;
319 Geo. Eildrige, constable 8 30&#13;
320 R. I). Roche, justice acc't 33 45&#13;
crops '4JI H. H, Collins, eoroner 10 00&#13;
g^o'ofdc -hTeaAlt1h1, ^seAnea.ItJaariy! ScroLnodt"itAioi^nrsD *g^osf Ktl,. ) j aYJ ionuKr ft^&amp; Krank'MeVr'deputreherifl'.:.: 19 00 committee recommend a cement floor be.placed H- . H,Cwonlliiun.s,,vco, »nust.able 270 ( a ™&#13;
In nog house.&#13;
R. J B E H K R S S ,&#13;
0 . A . BlsHOJr.&#13;
THOH. K . f A1UHAM..&#13;
consideration. Carried&#13;
Permission being granted. Prof. Knoolhu/en&#13;
appeared before the Board ami made some remarks&#13;
relative to h's bills.&#13;
On motion of Mr. Slider, tho bills were allowed&#13;
as charged, and numbered 339 to 340,&#13;
On TiuJclt.il of MrrBtsftop the-Board adjourncduuttl&#13;
to-morrow morning at 9::i0 o'clock.&#13;
Approved,&#13;
FJ&gt;\VIN FAIIMKR, Chairman,&#13;
TUESD.VY, OCTjBEIt 17th, I9L5.&#13;
Board met. roll called, quorum present.&#13;
Minutes of Monday's session read and approved.&#13;
Air. vVitty of Civil Claims Committee oresentfd&#13;
several bills, including Sheriffs Civil and&#13;
Board bill which were allowed a&lt; recommended&#13;
as appears bv No's. 342 to 3-15 inclusive on&#13;
motion Mr. Winans.&#13;
Mr. Kirkland of Criminal Claims CVnnmittee&#13;
reported Shields and Uorabacher Mils which&#13;
were allowed as appears by No's. 540 to 547,&#13;
Mr, Winans moved to adjourn until l o'clock.&#13;
Carried.&#13;
Al'TF.KN'OON S K S S t O N .&#13;
Mr. Finlan of Criminal Claims Committee- reported&#13;
liill of ..ustiee Harger which was on&#13;
motion of Mr. Slider, allowed as charged and&#13;
numbered 31*.&#13;
Mr. Milett of committer on apportionment&#13;
made following r jport.&#13;
Mr. Ktnnle moved that report be accepted&#13;
and adopted. Carried.&#13;
D. D. Harger, village attorney, nude request&#13;
In behalf of common council, that t i e board of&#13;
supervisors fake some action in regard to cess&#13;
pool counected with court house, atso hitching&#13;
posts on Grand Klver 8t&#13;
Moved by Mr. Stowe that request* of Harger&#13;
he referred^ to committee on grouuds and buildings.&#13;
Carried,&#13;
Mr. Mclntyre or civil claims o m m i t t e e reported&#13;
several accounts which were a! owed a»&#13;
recommended as appears by Nos. 35^ to 3t_i iuelusive*.&#13;
Moved by Finlan that the clerk be authorized&#13;
to buy a file case for dram ''ommissloriers&#13;
office, at an expense not to exceed $15 00.&#13;
Carried.&#13;
acbafer bill reeoi_.raende4-by con.i._ittee on&#13;
civil claims be allowed at $*03 J per s^'iare foot.&#13;
Moved by Judson that Scfcater bin oe laid on&#13;
the table, Carried&#13;
Moved and supported to adjourn until l&#13;
o'clock. Carried.&#13;
A1TKRSOON* SESSION.&#13;
Mr. Witty of civil claims committee reported&#13;
bills, numbered 363 to 375 with recommendation&#13;
that they be allowed, which was concurred in.&#13;
Mr. Stowe presented the following resolution.&#13;
lieHolved, That the county treasurer be, and&#13;
is hereby authorized to borrow what money Is&#13;
necessary to pay the expenses of running the&#13;
county business should the contingent fund be&#13;
or become exhausted during the remainder of&#13;
the vear.&#13;
T. P. S T O W E .&#13;
Moved by Mr, Stowe that resolution be adopted.'&#13;
Carried,&#13;
Mr. Witty of Civil Claims committee reported&#13;
bills which were allowed as recommended as&#13;
appears by No's. 37U to :.sS inclusive.&#13;
Moved by Mr. Bishop that bill of C. C.&#13;
Schalter be taken from table. Carried.&#13;
Moved by Mr. Bishop that same be allowed as&#13;
3 25&#13;
sione^K-fH&gt;o4httwen-b4^takeaJ_i_om.ihJiJ_ab.lei'or recommended by Coiyiuittee on Civi: Claims.&#13;
conspable&#13;
32i Chas. L Keed,constable..&#13;
325 Dr. H: F. &amp; C, L. Stgler, Goodrich&#13;
inquest 1000&#13;
3if&gt; John Ryan, printing...'. 24 65&#13;
327 Callagbao &amp; Co., law books.'... 15 60&#13;
328 Dr. R. H. Baird, Kapp case.... 12 W&#13;
3.9 T. W. Brewer, printing 3 15&#13;
330 O. .I.Parker, supplies 5 00&#13;
331 E. T, McClear, services and ex, 65 00&#13;
332 A. A. Montague, services and&#13;
expenses 32 74&#13;
,'&lt;33 Ruben H. Docking, services... 2 Oo&#13;
334 Miles W. Bullock, surveying... 8 00&#13;
335 Htuhrb°rg Bros., supplies....:. 2 00&#13;
28ft&#13;
790&#13;
328 17&#13;
200&#13;
145&#13;
7 7»&#13;
3 W&#13;
15716&#13;
3 »&#13;
344&#13;
260&#13;
888&#13;
3 3 2&#13;
844&#13;
350&#13;
2 72&#13;
2 72&#13;
440&#13;
380&#13;
344&#13;
2 60&#13;
4 2 0&#13;
48 19&#13;
62 IV&#13;
30 00&#13;
28 50&#13;
29 40&#13;
830&#13;
33 46&#13;
10 00-&#13;
19 00&#13;
270&#13;
325&#13;
10 00&#13;
24 69&#13;
1580&#13;
12 00&#13;
3 1«&#13;
500&#13;
65 00&#13;
32 74&#13;
2 00&#13;
800&#13;
200&#13;
8153&#13;
127 54&#13;
535&#13;
33« N . G . Morgan, deputy sheriff.. 8152&#13;
3:.7 E. C Hadden, under sheriff.... 127 54&#13;
33* B. F. Dibble, deputy sheriff... 5 35&#13;
339 Grace Knooihulzen, helping&#13;
KnooihiiJzen 9000 9003&#13;
340 N C, KnoolbuL.en, expense and&#13;
telephone.? 42 40 42 &lt;C&#13;
341 Municipal Light Co., jail Sept. 4 44 4 44&#13;
:U2 Kdwin Pratt,-civil bill 3-^144 323 41&#13;
343 -Edwitt Pratt, bo*rd bill.. ._„... sly HQ 819 80&#13;
314 Benedict &amp; Ratz, supplies and ...—___.&#13;
repair. 7368 73 68&#13;
315 Dr. F. A Lamereaux, attend&#13;
Canwell &amp; Berr&gt;&#13;
:&gt;4fi F. Rorabacher, constable&#13;
347 K.C. Shields, ass't. pros. atty..&#13;
:&gt;4s 1). D. Harger, justice acc't&#13;
349 Wm.Meyer reward .Clements;&#13;
y."0 Dotibleday Brps.&amp; Co, supplies&#13;
351 T. H. Flood Co.. hook&#13;
r.5.' C F. Howe, annotations&#13;
54 75&#13;
5 40&#13;
50 00&#13;
1*1 15&#13;
25 00&#13;
64 53&#13;
5 75&#13;
200&#13;
6 50&#13;
2 00&#13;
26 50&#13;
2 07&#13;
13 25&#13;
2'&#13;
S.S&#13;
» S » H t O 3 l&#13;
C 3 2-g-o 2..a.St'&#13;
:^ u&#13;
— t =&#13;
p •' .""&#13;
* 5&#13;
•i Z O i&#13;
a. * : ?*3r: 3&#13;
• '. 7? • . . • :&#13;
v&#13;
; — _ - OS -&gt; 3 : — t j&#13;
ilPls. S Si^l.l»l! _i' isali 5&#13;
* 5&#13;
Carried,&#13;
Moved by Milett to ad ionrn until to-uaorrow&#13;
morning at 9:30 o'olocK.&#13;
Approved.&#13;
K D W I N F A R M E K . Chairman.&#13;
TUESDAY. OCTOBER L-.h, U-O".&#13;
-Board met, i*41 eaUfed^nu^a^^&#13;
Minutes of Tuesday's .-essiot: read and approved.&#13;
By Supervisor Milett:&#13;
R E S O L V E D by the Board of Supervisors of&#13;
Livlngton Couuty, that from and after this date.&#13;
1h&gt;s County will not pay anv oerson lor repairing&#13;
or re-building any side walks.adjacent 10 or&#13;
abutting upon the County grounds in the village&#13;
of Howell-, unlees such repairs or si.ci: re-b.:i!a-&#13;
Ing shall be ordered by ttie C'oimr.on Council of&#13;
thevtUaireof Howell, and then oniv after due&#13;
and legal notice to the County of such order,&#13;
nor will the Comity pay any repairs to.or improvement&#13;
upon any 01 the property ci lhe&#13;
Co mty, unless by the expi.es* order o* some&#13;
person having the legai right to bind the&#13;
Couuty.&#13;
Dated October l:»th. 1:«U5.&#13;
Moved by Mr. FinKiu that resoUtiou be&#13;
adopted.&#13;
Moved by Mr. Witty tbat the reso'ution be&#13;
laid on table to be taken up fir-)t thing at afternoon&#13;
session, Carried.&#13;
Mr. Mclntyre ot, Civil Claims Committee reported&#13;
accounts which were allowed as recommended&#13;
as appears by No's. 3*. to 41 -',&#13;
Report by Mr. Cameron, Con.raittee 0:1 Abstracts&#13;
:&#13;
To the Honorable Board of Supervisors of&#13;
LiviDgston County.&#13;
Your committee on abstract L.ag leave to&#13;
submit the following reporr. We hav.-- examined&#13;
the books and records iatt.eab-tr.icr o.r.^e&#13;
and find them iu good condition and well Kept.&#13;
ALKKKT C A M K R O N ;&#13;
E D W A R D M I L E T T .-Con.t.iittea&#13;
R. D. KIX.VF. \&#13;
Moved by Mr, Finlan that report be adopted.&#13;
Carried.&#13;
Moved by Mr. Cameron to adjouru until ;&#13;
o'clock. Carried.&#13;
A K T E R N O O W SESSrCN, ,&#13;
Moved by Mr. Finlan that the resolution of&#13;
Mr. Milett be taken from table as arranged at&#13;
forenoon session. Carried.&#13;
- Moved by Mr Flulau that tLu lesoiution be&#13;
adopted. Carrrled&#13;
Mt=. F i n l a n . C o m m l t t p e an Prinfngr. mtrlft re-&#13;
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161 15&#13;
25 00&#13;
84 11&#13;
575&#13;
200&#13;
6 50&#13;
2 00&#13;
26 50&#13;
267&#13;
13 145&#13;
35 70&#13;
2 50&#13;
1800&#13;
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Allot which li (espnctfully submitted.&#13;
C. A. Bishop, ^&#13;
.1. W. tletftferd, &gt;&#13;
Tim P. Stowe, i Committee.&#13;
R. D. Kinne, |&#13;
W. B. Slider, 1&#13;
Dated, 17owt.ll, Mictf., Oct. 18, 1900.&#13;
Mr. Behrens moved that t u s report be accept&#13;
ed. and adopted.&#13;
Mr. Kirkland moved to adjourn until 1 o'clock.&#13;
Carrlec.&#13;
, AFTRHSOfW SKHSIOV.&#13;
Ch»lr o i l e d (or vote on Behrens motion to Accept&#13;
and ftdap* Hie report of Committee on&#13;
Equalizitlon. Motion curried and retort adopted&#13;
M above *et forth.&#13;
Mr. D*mm»nn, supt. of tae poor, read the&#13;
fotlowinu report.&#13;
To the"* Hon. B o a d of 8«ip^rvlaor* of tbo&#13;
CO'i«ityofLtvin*Aton, State of Michigan. -&#13;
The Supennteod-i ts «f the poor lor said&#13;
Cou ty subiu't the r»&lt; owing rep&gt;rt for tbo jear&#13;
ending Sept. ^ t h . 1906. |&#13;
-_.: $g — |J&#13;
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asssaassssisssss&#13;
Edward Milett, 1&#13;
Albert Camerorl, '-&#13;
Chas. F. Judson, \&#13;
Committee.&#13;
Mr. Finlan moved that the reportT&gt;e accepted&#13;
and adopted. Carried.&#13;
Mr, Witty of civil claim* committee reported&#13;
several accounts wfclch were allowed as recommended&#13;
as appears by Nos, 350 to 358 inclusive.&#13;
BySupe visors Winans.-&#13;
Resolved by tha ooarO of »up«nrl«ors ot Llvlotnton&#13;
county, that, the several supervisor* be.&#13;
and are hereby authorized and ordered t o&#13;
spread upon tbelr respective assessment roils&#13;
the several taxes as reported by the committee&#13;
on apportionment. Also au school, road grader,&#13;
library and other U $ M as reported by the&#13;
cle.ks of the townships to toeir iiiprrvlsir.&#13;
Also all rejected taxes a* «t.owu by the auditor&#13;
««»n»&gt;rAi rvport to the oouaty treasurer, and be&#13;
It further ^&#13;
R» solved that f h * supervisors of Marion,&#13;
Genoa, Howell, Ureen Oak, Putnam, Iosco.&#13;
Handy, Conway and Culioct__&amp; be, and are here*&#13;
port aslollows:&#13;
To the Board of Supervisors of LiviDgston&#13;
County.&#13;
Your committee on pnbtie printing would&#13;
recommend tbat tbe prlntine of the proceedings&#13;
of the Boara of Supervisors b e let to the lowest&#13;
bidder. That supplements be printed for each&#13;
of the other papers printed iu Livingston&#13;
County, and that the sum oftf, 00 be allowed&#13;
such papers fir folding in and sending out s u m&#13;
supplements in their regular Issue, and tuat the&#13;
work be done within three weeks alter the adjournment&#13;
of said board.&#13;
W. A. F I N L A N )&#13;
C A . BTSHOP ^ Committee&#13;
W. B. S L I D E R .&#13;
Moved by Mr Judson that report be adopted&#13;
and placed on tile. Carried .&#13;
Mr, Witty of Civil Claims Committee reported&#13;
bill of Supervisors.&#13;
Mr, Finlan moved tbat the ianitor be authorized&#13;
to i d l mowing machine iu basement, and&#13;
turn proceeds over, to Couaty Treasurer to bo&#13;
placed In Contingent fund.&#13;
Mr.-ParahaU, CSmmtttee. 0:1 .C:vlI...C.laiau,...re.-.&#13;
ported bills which were allowed as recommended&#13;
as appears by No's. H3 *_&gt; 4',1..&#13;
Mr. Finlan, Committee on Civil Bills, reported&#13;
bill which was allowed as recommeuded as&#13;
appears by No, 428.&#13;
Mr. Winans, Committee on t.rouadj and&#13;
Buildings, made report as follows:&#13;
To the Honorable Board of.Supervisors.&#13;
Your Committee on Public Grounds and&#13;
Buildings, beg leave to make the following report&#13;
and recommendations.&#13;
We would refcommend at j*il that the mattresses&#13;
be destroyed and replaced with one.d &gt;zen&#13;
hammock? and blankets sufficient for same.&#13;
The Moor in padded cell be replaced with new&#13;
paddings, w e would also recommend a new&#13;
earpet for dining room, and that the window*&#13;
be tightened and window sills and wood work&#13;
around windows varnished. We would also&#13;
recommend that new steps be nut MI at front&#13;
entrance of jail and that the water tank be taken&#13;
out and dltect connection be made with&#13;
water works, and that t h e water closet be repaired.&#13;
We would recommend that these&#13;
supplies and repairs be purchased and made&#13;
und»r :the supervision of County Clerk and&#13;
Treasurer. We would r e o m m e n d that the&#13;
second fl -or wood work of Court House receive&#13;
one coat of varnish. The decking of the roof be&#13;
painted with Graphite paint, w e would recommend&#13;
that the conductor pipes be disconnected&#13;
and waste the water from Court House on the&#13;
lawn, which we believe would be!p to remedy&#13;
the defects of cess pool. We would recommend&#13;
that three office chairs bs&gt; purchased for t h s&#13;
County Treasurers oKct Would further r e c o c t&#13;
meod that Frank Melio have charge of the&#13;
work oo Court nouse and that the Countv Clerkhe&#13;
authorized to issue orders In payment ol&#13;
same. That the janitor be instructed to cause&#13;
the arreat of any person or persons medd Ing&#13;
with aay o l t h e flower beds, cannon or c»nnon&#13;
balls or otherwise disturbing tbe ground) or&#13;
decoration^on Court House Square.&#13;
G«(&gt;. G. WlNA.VS&#13;
w . .1.'WITTY&#13;
W. B. S L I D B R&#13;
Dated Howell Mich. Oct. 19th, IW5.&#13;
Mr. Wlnaos moved t h e adoption of the re&#13;
port. Carried.&#13;
Mr. Witty on Civil Claims Committee reported&#13;
sundry accounts which were allowed as appears&#13;
by No's. 410 to 427. .' • - .&#13;
Thn Supervisors pay rMi was presented and&#13;
allowed, and numbe: ed 428.&#13;
Civil Claims Committee reported several&#13;
smallpox blUs with recommendation that thev&#13;
be allowed as audited bv Village Council which&#13;
recommendation was eoncured la and bills&#13;
numbered 43) to 443 inclusive.&#13;
Moved bv Mr. Stowe that the Board ad.oarh&#13;
until Tuesday. January 2nd. IOOO, at 11 o'clock&#13;
a. m. Approved.&#13;
Chairman.&#13;
BILLS AtXOw-SO.&#13;
No. Claimed AU'd.&#13;
289 Prank Metz, deputy sheriff $ 43 00 $ 43 00&#13;
an* D. 0 . Carr. Jostloe a c o t 9 70 9 70&#13;
291 Frank ?*•'•*. s et al Monks A&#13;
Uoodrtchloq tlM, 2136&#13;
353 Caliaghan &amp; Co., law book&#13;
354 Caliaghan &amp; Co., labels&#13;
.'«5 Ihllng Hros. &amp; Kverard, sup...&#13;
'.-•'/; Richmond &amp; Backus Co., sup.&#13;
:.57 Ht&amp;kalta Pea Co..supplir-s....&#13;
3M ( i . II, Schults, tally sheets 35 70&#13;
r.i..&gt; Fred Schafer, repairs on boiler 2 50&#13;
acoJi-nnette M Brigham, attend&#13;
Mangle case 1? CO&#13;
J. E Brow.n, M. D„ attend&#13;
Payne ease 10 23&#13;
Armstrong «.- Barron, SUJ. ia!i 200&#13;
J. A, fin-en Pros. Atty . ser... 8 .12&#13;
C. s . sjweet, groceries Kapo . 5 r&gt;l&#13;
W, B. Darrow. elect re.s... . 3 44&#13;
F--. ,}.-Ho_t. elecUrets _ . . . . 2 00&#13;
FranohD, Carr,Cond ,sth grade '&#13;
exam ;._; 00&#13;
Jo-&gt;eoli Franks, getting ballots 3 20&#13;
Edward Milett, services 8 2».&#13;
c . p . Hamilton, elect rets 3 ( *&#13;
Ko-aliM-yilU* R e v i e w , MatiQliarX- 3 00&#13;
37:.' (iovier ot Brown, supplies for , - =&#13;
rvA -.. 2 i i&#13;
:•-:; K. .I.-Wright, services :v&gt;21&#13;
:.7i Livina-i-oti Republican printing -_&gt;. yo&#13;
:.75 Strobel i\- sobmitt, groceries&#13;
Payr.v case : r r,i-&gt;&#13;
370 Myrt'e Campbell, unrse Bailey'&#13;
ease HO.,'0&#13;
:177 W. J. McHfticb. 1.1-D, services&#13;
B a i ' e v CASC 2* '.0&#13;
:;;s John W. Thompson, lautidry&#13;
wivr-k " 0 0&#13;
:,7.1 Wio. E. VcN-imara. s e r v c e s . . ;_f 00&#13;
:',-) KowWvil!.' standard, stat 2 00&#13;
:-,&lt;} Tornado'Ml« Co, supplies jail. G 23&#13;
.&gt;_: Or Wrn. K. M*-Namara, ser&#13;
. Sohanfetecase... ' 34 00 34 00&#13;
Mar^arft A Sullivan, nurse&#13;
Sclnnfele case .34 "•*&#13;
.1 J W'atklns, coal Bennettca&lt;.e 1 07.&#13;
K. A Rrvwman. M:polios jHi 1 1 On&#13;
Ooodrtch &amp; Son. burial NLake&#13;
soldier&#13;
Mrs N'ora.Jubli nur'&lt;eC&lt;&gt;n»4 case&#13;
CC Scha'er i Son.OPmentwalk&#13;
Anns Win^ear, supt of poor."&#13;
C A Con&lt;eL, supt of poor&#13;
3 «&#13;
:&gt;4&#13;
2 44&#13;
:.n 21&#13;
46 90&#13;
:;&amp;2&#13;
5«eo&#13;
28 00&#13;
r&gt;oo&#13;
30 01&#13;
200&#13;
G25&#13;
:.91&#13;
:::13&#13;
34 2«&#13;
I OT&#13;
1 «5&#13;
4n00&#13;
33 00&#13;
4.1 -K)&#13;
105 36&#13;
13fi60&#13;
120 14&#13;
« 0 0&#13;
COO&#13;
40r&lt;i&#13;
:&lt;&lt;&gt;O0&#13;
fi.j 70&#13;
Ki5:«;&#13;
136 W&#13;
H^nry Dainmann, supt of poor l.'O 11&#13;
.. E Browne, M I ) , services&#13;
Murdo-.'-and Ackl»»v' iNis»•'.. -I" 00&#13;
:i&lt;4 Albert Tr-vsk. law bonks index 1. OO&#13;
:JL&gt;5 o . d. Parker, disinfectant for *, •&#13;
jail -....' 265 265&#13;
3:&gt;6 J C Koyce, supplies Bennett&#13;
ra*p 2^0 230&#13;
r.:c Bvron Deffendorf, M D, ser&#13;
Dezesscase 25 50 25 50&#13;
;.9s 0 . J. Parker, supplies Payne&#13;
case 11 15 11 15&#13;
3W (J W Teeple, atlas for drain&#13;
com t&gt;oo&#13;
400 E A Bowman.BtippJiesjail 2 1«&#13;
401 Mrs Wm H Billings, nurse Bui-&#13;
402 Mr» J &gt;hn Herbert nurse Elliott&#13;
40". A D Thompson, express.&#13;
404 W 1. r.vons. s e r v i c e s . . .&#13;
405 w L Lvors, po»ta«e, ex. etc.&#13;
40« (r A Kirkland, ret of births.,&#13;
407 Barron .* Wines, supoi.es...&#13;
408 Rarron t Wines, "&#13;
40f&gt; E K Johnson&#13;
27 00&#13;
afioo&#13;
9 ro&#13;
2 18&#13;
27 00&#13;
36 00&#13;
__U- 57 48&#13;
18 20&#13;
20O&#13;
It 50&#13;
20 25&#13;
U 3 0&#13;
18 20&#13;
200&#13;
It 50&#13;
20 25&#13;
U30&#13;
410 Chas E Skinner, M D, services&#13;
Mangles i^ase 15 00 1500&#13;
411 Mrs L Barnard, nurse Mangles&#13;
ea«e , .'. 1000 10 00&#13;
412 J E Browne, M D, services jail. 4 50 4 50&#13;
41» Henry bammann, sunt of poor 22 08 220»&#13;
414 0 A C o r n e l l " " 22 80 22 80&#13;
415 Amos Winegar. '' -' • 21 12 21 12&#13;
411". John Hunter et al witnesses.. 8 00 800&#13;
417 F P Scbroeder. hardwire at&#13;
court house And jail .23 33. 23.¾&#13;
41* ( H i Jewetf. hardware etc GO 42 90 42&#13;
ilf* wm McPherson &amp; Son, carpet&#13;
foriMl 70 56 70 56&#13;
420 Sherwood &amp; Benjamin, groceries&#13;
Hilman case 113 113&#13;
421 A B Mefiregor. M D, services&#13;
• colo case &gt;... 2 75 2 75&#13;
422 W T Parker. M D. services Hilman&#13;
ea*e G 5-3 8 50&#13;
tis J -M Rhubottom, -burial- Alien&#13;
solder 40co 4000&#13;
424 R E Jubb, livery \r,w 15 00&#13;
42» w T Parker M n.^er Cole case 30 00 30 00&#13;
420 W T Parker, M I), ser Davis&#13;
case . . 5000 5000&#13;
427 John Boisford et al supv pay&#13;
roll ' £-57 42 357 42&#13;
43* Edwin Pratt, services sheriff.. 723 66 723 66&#13;
423 J MJRhubottom, burial McKeon&#13;
soldier.,, 4000 40-00&#13;
430 Timothy Smith, house rent&#13;
small pox case 25 00 25 00&#13;
431 Wm HuntL gton, M D services&#13;
small poxcase 10 00 1000&#13;
43-.vC E Skinner, M U, ser small&#13;
iv&gt;x c a s e 43 5« 43 50&#13;
433 Wm Blumenthal, clothing small&#13;
pox r a * e 25 30 25 90&#13;
434 R H Baird, M D', ser small pox&#13;
case , 1300 1300&#13;
435 Benedict &amp; Rat?., supplies pest&#13;
hou«e 24 36 24 36&#13;
4¾ R H Baird M D attend 3ma_l&#13;
pox caj e 3 ¾ 3 50&#13;
4:.7 Hesse Bros, sup small pox case 4 22&#13;
4:W Alva Pate, nurse small pox.... 42 00 42 00 ^&#13;
8 42&#13;
100&#13;
43:&gt; C L Cook &amp; Son, groceries 8 42&#13;
410 John Ryan sign small pox 1 00&#13;
441 (ioodoow &amp; Beach, dry goods&#13;
smallpox *25 5 2R&#13;
442 S B Hubert. ro%l small p&lt;»\ . 11 t&gt;5 It 6S&#13;
44^ Bmkaw .¾ Wllktnson, bed, etc&#13;
small pox ".;....• G 75 6 75&#13;
^ T A T E O F MICHIGAN.County of Livingston.&#13;
^ &lt;ts - I . Willis L. Ljon*. clerk ot s&lt;1d c o m t y&#13;
of Ltvinarston. and cle k of the e.rwft co jrt tor&#13;
said county, do hereby certify that t have compared&#13;
the foregoing c*py of the original record&#13;
of proceedings of supervisors at o c t o ^ r se su»n&#13;
ro*, with the original rewrd thereof, now remaining&#13;
in my office, and tbat it is a true and&#13;
correct trarsc-ipt thertjfrom, and of the whole&#13;
of such original ivcord.&#13;
In testimon* wh?r»»of, I have hereunto set my&#13;
blind, and sff.ted th-&gt; seal of «aid court and&#13;
county, this 26th day of October A D 1005.&#13;
CSRAL^ W I L L I S L. L v o x s , Clerk.&#13;
An,Only Daughter "*»&#13;
Cured of Consumption.&#13;
When death was lionrly expected, all reaedtat&#13;
having faiied« and Dr. II. Junee was experimenting&#13;
with the the many herbs of Calcutta, b* accideoUy&#13;
made a preparation which cured his only child0*&#13;
Consumption, Hischild is now in this co«ntryfand&#13;
enjoying the beet of health. He has proved to the&#13;
world that Consumption canbe pcetttrety and pee*&#13;
maoentlychred. The Doctor now givef this redpe&#13;
ttes, only asking two t-cea tstampsto payexpeo—L&#13;
This herb aluo cures Night Sweats, Nausea at the&#13;
StotnAch, and will break up a fresh cold in twenty*&#13;
fonr hours. Address CRADDOCK A CO., M B&#13;
Baca Su,PhlladelphiAj*-ftouag this paper. ^</text>
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                <text>November 09, 1905 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1905-11-09</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="36983">
              <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 0O.,MI0H., THURSDAY,NOV. 16,1906.&#13;
" • O P M * * * ?&#13;
#&#13;
":-ATdaeVylwe&#13;
atd 'RcpaVr \Dwfc&#13;
We have a thoroughly equipped&#13;
machine shop and are in position&#13;
to do your repairing promptly and&#13;
at reasonable prices. . . , . .&#13;
y.'«s-'..&#13;
;'r- . V&#13;
fr'\••"• -'&#13;
Engine and Latht&#13;
Work a Specialty&#13;
Sharp Edge&#13;
Grinding Done&#13;
llttra\, S#n&amp;U\a and 1*W *a*\«*\w\t CmuvtcXtaM&#13;
•\Da.Uov"Port« &gt;Datam Co. Z\L w&#13;
No. 48&#13;
THE BEST OF EVERYTHING FOR CHRISTMAS&#13;
WE HAVE THE BIGHT THING tor EVEBY PEB8QN, THE BIQBT PBICB for EVEBY f UB8E&#13;
A BEAUTIFUL ASSORTMENT OF PLEASING GIFTS&#13;
PERFECTLY ADAPTED TO THE WAXTB A N D REQUIREMENTS OF ODR FRIENDS AND PATB0N 8&#13;
EVERYTHING FRESH M P 8MRKL1N6 WITH THE BR16HTE8T NEW B00D8 OP THE 8EI8BN&#13;
We an waiting to plea$9 you with Pro$ont* that an Mpptoprtate, Popular, Praet.cal and in ortry way Dooirabie in tho lino of&#13;
s 7 BdotesT ana *&#13;
FANCY GOODS, NOTIONS, ETC. _ _ ^&#13;
WE HIVE THE VIRIETY THIT INSURES THE USY StTISFtCTORY CHOICE-THE FIELD FOR SELECTION THEWIOEST. PRICES FAIREST&#13;
A GENEROUS ASSORTMENT, FUL.L of QUALITY and MJ&amp;R1T&#13;
If YoU Wanl Satirfaclion In Selection aiid Economy In Price OUr Holiday Stock Will Pill Yoilr Needs&#13;
REMEMBER OUR HOLIDAY STOCK GIVES YOU SEW IDEAS AND SUPPLIES EXACTLY WHAT YOU WANT x C3- r* xs&#13;
bOCAb NEWS.&#13;
•v.r&#13;
-Qb« VanOrdenol=^ilii&amp;mstQn= is&#13;
the guest of Perry Blant and other&#13;
relative^ here.&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 30, is a legal holiday&#13;
and the rural carriers will not&#13;
make their trips.&#13;
Ruben Wright went to Lansing,&#13;
Saturday, wheje be has a job in an&#13;
automobile factor;.&#13;
Ohas. VanKeuren and wile of Ann&#13;
Arbor were the guests in the home of,&#13;
her parents over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Stella Graham was called to&#13;
Hornton Friday last by the severe illness&#13;
ot her sister, Mrs. Flora Snyder.&#13;
The many irienSs ot Marion Reason,&#13;
who has been having a run of Typhoid&#13;
fever, will be glad to know that ho is&#13;
gaining rapidly.&#13;
Qaite a number of our lovers of the&#13;
foot ball gaine are arranging to attend&#13;
the Michigan and Wisconsin game at&#13;
Ann Arbor Saturday.&#13;
Thfi Urge plate g t o i" *,hfl Te?plft&#13;
'Hardware Go's. sLore which U^&gt;, been&#13;
H. G. Briggs and wife were in&#13;
Howell the last of last week.&#13;
-=Ji(lis8 idh^«ncewAPdrew8 pick?&#13;
Rather late&#13;
fi&#13;
cracKed so long took a tumble into&#13;
the street Sunday morning and had to&#13;
be boarded up.&#13;
Be»t Hooker of Pettysville closed&#13;
his cider mill last week, Although&#13;
apples were a scarce crop be had a&#13;
large run at the mill and made excellent&#13;
cider as usual.&#13;
This has been an ideal fall to do&#13;
pansy Friday, Nov. 10.&#13;
for flowers in Michigan.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Burch ot Pontiac was the&#13;
guest of her brother, Buben Wright,&#13;
and family the last of last week.&#13;
M. C. Ruen of the U. of M. was&#13;
home oyer Sunday. He is on his last&#13;
year in the Dental college there.&#13;
Oar merchants are getting in their&#13;
holiday goods and starting up the season&#13;
early. Evidently they are looking&#13;
for a good season.&#13;
E. It. Brown, our -hustling blacksmith,&#13;
is getting ready for a run in&#13;
hcrse-shoeine. He has been making&#13;
hundreds of toe-corks&#13;
Word has just reached this place&#13;
that Mrs. Flora L. Griims of Lincoln,&#13;
Neb, baa been very ill for sev*ral&#13;
weeks hut is better at this writing.&#13;
Wm, Shehah of Dansville spent&#13;
Sunday with his father. Mrs. Shehau&#13;
ha.a hflwn r^rjpfl fpr her mother. Mrs.&#13;
Teachers' Institute&#13;
Saturday of this week the county&#13;
a 1 TeacherU Aasaciatiamiill be Jiejd in&#13;
the High School building&#13;
A| good program has&#13;
as follows:&#13;
10:00 a. m.&#13;
Music Invocation&#13;
Paper, English in the Grades,&#13;
at Howell,&#13;
been arranged.&#13;
Carey Roche ot Marion, who is very&#13;
low.&#13;
It was our privelege iast Friday&#13;
evening to y.sit the evening class in&#13;
German which is being conducted by&#13;
Principal Gaul of the High school.&#13;
He started the class by the request of&#13;
several of our citizens and is having&#13;
good success. Quite a large number&#13;
are taking the coarse and seem to be&#13;
-^-&#13;
farm wcrk and it is nearly all done. | making rapid progress&#13;
Weave perfectly satisfied with this T h a t 0 D r flouring m | „ i s a j&#13;
kind of weather but we suppose it is d r a w i n R c a r d i n o u r v i l l a K 6 w a 8 p r o y .&#13;
^ c e s s a r y to have wmter. | en the past week when several from&#13;
^ y ^ A t a regular review of the Hacca-j several fflitea"away were -here io-get&#13;
^es last Friday evening officers were; milling done-'and were pleased enough&#13;
nominated and other business transact-1 to come again. It would be a big loss&#13;
ed. After the business session, oysters to our village to haye to go without a&#13;
were nerved with fried cakes and coffee mill or if for any reason it should „ be&#13;
and a pleasant time spent. It was shortened in its work. Next to a&#13;
^voted to s?rve lanch also at tbe next printing office a mill is one of the beat&#13;
regular review. things a village can have to draw trade.&#13;
i» V&#13;
-T&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
HOWELL, MICH.&#13;
0«r fall and winter goods are coming&#13;
in from mill and factory. You will&#13;
find dm a good store to buy underwear,&#13;
hosiery, gloves and mittens,&#13;
-toques* fMciuators, outing flannels,&#13;
and the mauy items necettary to be&#13;
comfortable when the cold weather&#13;
eonwt. Our lines of Holiday goods&#13;
.ar&gt; coming in and we will have by far&#13;
the be*t assortment ever shown by us,&#13;
IJ0tlt, book*, games, celluoid goods,&#13;
oomb and brush sets, collar and cuff&#13;
•eft, etc. China, toy* of every deecri*&#13;
pUoa Visit uaJKhtiL^aiL «©me_ to&#13;
Howell, every clerk will welcome you.&#13;
^ CKir'inetlMxl Se to give .big value for the&#13;
mbney, «• wt &amp;ld it pay* to do to.&#13;
fffiawfL|orcask ooly and can sell&#13;
cliea^er than tM ttotw aelliog on PMdit, * A.&#13;
The &amp;umw&#13;
Riv«r Si, Ofj^ta Cow* Home,&#13;
(, HoweJtMlolu&#13;
Mildred Adams, FowJerville&#13;
Discussion, Belle Kennedy, Pinckney&#13;
Music&#13;
Afternoon&#13;
Music&#13;
'•Illustration Material in Geography,"&#13;
Mae Reason, Howell&#13;
Discussion, Annie MoNair, Brighton&#13;
"How to Get and Use a Library,"&#13;
Mildred McNamara, Howell&#13;
Discussion, Snpt. M. Valentine, Brighton&#13;
'•The Use and Abuse of School Incentives'&#13;
Idaline Webb, Fowlerville&#13;
Discussion, , Supt. Osgerby, Howell&#13;
"Physical Training,"&#13;
Coye Allen, Fowlerville&#13;
Discussion, Supt. J. A. Woodruff&#13;
No More bate Mail&#13;
Concfregaiioiml Church. Young Mens Club&#13;
Sunday services were largely at-j Our methods of doing good may be&#13;
iended aLboiii diatajiLsrjualu*. _ I c o n t r a r y t o t b e i d e a s °* s o m o outsiders&#13;
The Ladies Missionary Society held&#13;
a well attended and interesting meeting&#13;
at the home of Mrs. S|,eye Teeple&#13;
Wednesday of last week.&#13;
The annual meeting heid Saturday&#13;
had a satisfactory attendance. The&#13;
reports from the .different societies&#13;
OnWfl ware received here this week&#13;
for the Grand Trunk Lo. to care tor&#13;
our late mail, which will be held at&#13;
the depot until early morning and will&#13;
be distributed the first thing. Saturday&#13;
evenings the mail will be distrebuted&#13;
as usual.&#13;
Owing to tbe lateness, oi this train&#13;
it has become quite irksome for the&#13;
mail catrier during-the winter evenings&#13;
to get the same, especially when&#13;
the train was somewhat late, and it&#13;
was considered just as well to receive&#13;
the mail early in the morning. This&#13;
arrangement be^an-M^nday—&#13;
on church repair* which included tha&#13;
amount contributed for new pews and&#13;
also about $65 00 expended by the&#13;
Young Ladies Guild for chancel im&#13;
proyements, new pulpit and chairs.&#13;
The following officers were elected:&#13;
Trustees; Messrs. J. J. Teeple and&#13;
Percy Swarthout were elected to succeed&#13;
themselves for terra of 3 years.&#13;
H. W. Crofoot was elected clerk to&#13;
succeed him?elh Mrs. Ella Jackson,&#13;
Treasurer; W. A. Nixon, Chorister;&#13;
and Miss Mabel Sigler, Organist.&#13;
Usual services next Sunday, morning&#13;
and evening. Prayer service toea^&#13;
n—ehoir rehearsal&#13;
nfr ft p m. ——____^&#13;
but we have at least tried to do alt the&#13;
gcod in our power, after plans follow-&#13;
3d elsewhsre, and commended by denominations&#13;
of intelligent christian&#13;
people. Our leading members are&#13;
young men of irreproachable character&#13;
and of good influence in tbe&#13;
m/%nn community and we defy anybody to&#13;
were encourag.i n*g;'|6 30 was exvp ended p„o.i,n„t t aa tfiri%n„^g errt *o f »s u„o„r„n „a•t •t*h.„e.m„ .&#13;
Wo may have several whose records&#13;
are not what they should be but their&#13;
condition can never be improved^as&#13;
long as they are permitted by theil&#13;
parents to roam the streets deyiwBg&#13;
rowdyism. And unless such parents&#13;
begin at once to co operate with, us we&#13;
will be compelled to adopt a prescribed&#13;
course which will be detrimental not&#13;
only to t ;e "evil disposed ones" but&#13;
also to the community at large.&#13;
The Gym is not to be LeM responsible&#13;
for tbe conduct ot/boys on tbe&#13;
street, but only while they are" under&#13;
our supervision in tbe club rooms.&#13;
PnrontR please nhsfirve what ga_say..&#13;
PRE*.&#13;
.&gt;.&#13;
UNION&#13;
TEMPERANCE&#13;
MEETING&#13;
Sunday Evening, Nov. 19&#13;
Organ Voluntary Miss Hazel Johnaon&#13;
Violin Soto...., . t . Glenn Gardner&#13;
Music Choir&#13;
Devotional,, Exercises M iss Nellie Fish&#13;
Coet of Xiquor Traffic itev. TITA^ Emerie*&#13;
Duet Viola Peters and Lola Moran&#13;
Recitation Mwe Norma Vaughn&#13;
Solo . . . • Floris Moran&#13;
What Women Can Do;.Rev. G.-W. Mylne&#13;
Comet Solo. .Martin-Clioton&#13;
JanctC.• • * • « » &gt; • • • • « • • • • • • • . « . . . . v»boir&#13;
Rtadlnf-• *' &lt; 'Mrt, Herbert Cope&#13;
Dott...Mildred EmeticktMabel EmeHok&#13;
|Effect• of Inlemperanee. JJrof. T. J. Gual&#13;
•.. • •»«• •"..»»jk • • • •••«»• #v • A*. Aixon&#13;
jlttVvOoCcili tion..........B»v. B k} Emeriok.thisg ia fevofaMf.&#13;
be trafd next Sunday as uaual. No&#13;
alter-wryice, as there will be a union&#13;
temperance meeting at the Oongre ational&#13;
church under tbe atwpices of&#13;
i b a T W U m&#13;
The pastor will p m c b at Birkett^&#13;
ohurch one week trom Sunday, Nov.&#13;
26. afc 2:30 p. m. and eoatattplatut a&#13;
permanent •ppoiatmenitharnil every*&#13;
M05. J 4 and 16 ftrt l^aurel-'&#13;
In heating capaicty and economy at&#13;
fuel, as well as in appearance, thlfc&#13;
base burners surpass.aj! others. Attention&#13;
is called to tbe illustrations&#13;
showing tbe Laurel special construction&#13;
of back flues, hen the damper&#13;
is closed the hat air from the fire pot&#13;
travels down the- hanging back flue&#13;
and is circulated-completely around&#13;
the base of the stove, coming,in direct&#13;
contact with both the outside and inside&#13;
walls of tbe base and then travels&#13;
upward through the retain flue to the&#13;
smoke pipe.&#13;
The cold air from' the floor is drawn&#13;
up through the opening&gt;hown on illustration,&#13;
comes in direct contact with&#13;
entire fire pot wall, entire circumference&#13;
of the hanging or downward flue&#13;
and one entire side of the return flue,&#13;
finally pissing into the room through&#13;
the double heater Outlet at tbe top of the&#13;
st?ve or can be carried to upper rooms by&#13;
means of an extra pipe. H will be observed&#13;
thit the rear pvit 01 the return or up flue&#13;
forms tbe outride or back plate of the stove.&#13;
In this manner what remains of the heat,&#13;
alter ci-culaliog around tbe ba*e of the&#13;
stove is radiated into the room.&#13;
This is the oniy construction where the&#13;
cold air is brought in contact with such&#13;
grear heating surface and consequently this&#13;
M. E. Church Notes.&#13;
The Ladies Aid Society have the&#13;
thanks of the Pastor and family for&#13;
putting in a nice Peninsula range,&#13;
which will add materially to the comfort&#13;
and convenience ot the parsonage&#13;
home.&#13;
Love feast and Sacramental service&#13;
was a time of profit and blessing. We&#13;
had hoped to meet with all our peonle.&#13;
Quite a large number were present,&#13;
however, and we trust gathered inspiration&#13;
for future living and service.&#13;
The Young People's meeting was&#13;
very interesting and profitable and&#13;
ppomisea to be a help. Oar new&#13;
quarterly is splendid.&#13;
Class meeting next Sunday at 10 A.&#13;
M. Be sure and come.&#13;
trustee meeting at clcse of prayer&#13;
uwettng Thursday eveningv&#13;
Qar Yooag Feople's_niaeUng--Wtll stove furnishes at least1,000 square inches&#13;
more radiating surface than any other base&#13;
burner made, A close examination of the&#13;
illustration will give a more correct idea of&#13;
the heating and fuersaving advantages of&#13;
this improved base burner. The fire po£&#13;
and leeder can be qtickly and easily removed&#13;
through front doors.&#13;
-A. * ^k&#13;
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':*%j£,'i:tf-;:.:fK*. &gt; i f • • ; • , , - , ' * V&#13;
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^&#13;
•SEMI-ANNUAL APPORTIONMENT&#13;
OF SCHOOL&#13;
MONEY—$2,006,&amp;7T.&#13;
DETROIT SCHOOLS GET $243,721.&#13;
Rat* I t $8.70 Par Child W4th 743,288&#13;
Primary School Students,&#13;
The semi-annual apportionment of&#13;
primary school interest money has&#13;
been made by the superintendent &gt; of&#13;
public instruction, who will distribute a&#13;
total of 12,006,877.60 among the counties&#13;
of the state. This ja a rate of $2.70&#13;
per child of school age, there being in&#13;
the state 7*3,288 children. Last May&#13;
the rate was 60 cents per capita, making&#13;
the total for the year $3.30.&#13;
Of this amount Detroit gets $234,-&#13;
721.80 and Wayne county, including&#13;
Detroit, $294,329.70.&#13;
The apportionment by counties follows:&#13;
No. children&#13;
included In&#13;
apportionment.&#13;
A l c o n a 2,097&#13;
A l g e r 1.756&#13;
Allegan 11,941&#13;
A l p e n a 7,008&#13;
A n t r i m 4.949&#13;
A r e n a c 3,751&#13;
B a r a g a 1.818&#13;
B a r r y 5,926&#13;
B a y 22,263&#13;
B e n z i e 3,313&#13;
B e r r i e n . . . , ^ . 14,404&#13;
B r a n c h 6.505&#13;
C a l h o u n 12,695&#13;
C a s s . , 5,124&#13;
C h a r l e v o i x 5,15«&#13;
C h e b o y g a n 5,696&#13;
CMpppwa . • - - fi.931&#13;
Clare.. . ; . . , . 3.096&#13;
C l i n t o n 6,854&#13;
C r a w f o r d 1,026&#13;
D e l t a 8,254&#13;
D i c k i n s o n 6,554&#13;
B a t o n 7,290&#13;
E m m e t 5,104&#13;
G e n e s e e . . . . 10,723&#13;
G l a d w i n 2,904&#13;
G o g e b i c 5,515&#13;
G r a n d T r a v e r s e . . 6,610&#13;
G r a t i o t 8,707&#13;
H i l l s d a l e 7,352&#13;
H o u g h t o n 23,435&#13;
H u r o n , 13.031&#13;
I n g h a m 10,437&#13;
I o n i a 1 . . 8,986&#13;
I o s c o , 3,694&#13;
Iron 2,787&#13;
I s a b e l l a 7,453&#13;
J a c k s o n 11,312&#13;
K a l a m a z o o 11,639&#13;
K a l k a s k a 2,162&#13;
K e n t 39,267&#13;
K e w e e n a w 1,252&#13;
L a k e 1,490&#13;
L a p e e r 7,789&#13;
L e e l a n a u 3,754-&#13;
L e n a w e e 12,359&#13;
L i v i n g s t o n 4,810&#13;
L u c e -.'... 827&#13;
M a c k i n a c 2,701&#13;
M a c o m b 10,393&#13;
M a n i s t e e 9,422&#13;
M a r q u e t t e 13,046&#13;
M a s o n ..- 6,752&#13;
M e c o s t a 6,730&#13;
M e n o m i n e e 9.863&#13;
Midland 4.997&#13;
M i s s a u k e e 3,361&#13;
Monroe 10,303&#13;
M o n t c a l m 10,202 So n t m o r e n c y 1,119&#13;
u s k e g o n 12,691&#13;
-Ntrwaygo 0,18¾&#13;
O a k l a n d 11,242&#13;
O c e a n a • , , , . — 5 , 6 1 1&#13;
O g e m a w 2,958&#13;
O n t o n a g o n 1,947&#13;
O s c e o l a 6,176&#13;
O s c o d a 506&#13;
O t s e g o 2,005&#13;
O t t a w a 13;£00&#13;
P r e s q u e Isle 3,467&#13;
R o s c o m m o n 527&#13;
S a g i n a w . .&lt; 26,707&#13;
St. Clair 16,540&#13;
St. J o s e p h 5,935&#13;
S a n i l a c 11,921&#13;
S c h o o l c r a f t 2,427&#13;
S h i a w a s s e e 8,654&#13;
T u s c o l a . . . , . . . ; . . 11,109&#13;
V a n Buren 9,812&#13;
W a s h t e n a w ^ . 11.861&#13;
W a y n e , . . . . 1 0 9 , 0 1 1&#13;
W e x f o r d . . . . . 5,537&#13;
A m o u n t&#13;
apportioned.&#13;
% 5,661.90&#13;
4,741.20&#13;
32,240.70&#13;
18,921.60&#13;
13,362.30&#13;
10,127.70&#13;
4,908.60&#13;
16,000.20&#13;
60,110.10&#13;
8,945.10&#13;
—. 38,890-811&#13;
17,563.50&#13;
34,276.50&#13;
13,834.80&#13;
13.921.2U&#13;
16,376.50&#13;
_ _ 18,713.70&#13;
18,506.80&#13;
2,770.20&#13;
22,285.80&#13;
17,695.80&#13;
19,683.00&#13;
13,780.80&#13;
28,949.40&#13;
7,840.80&#13;
14,890.50&#13;
17,847.00&#13;
23,508.90&#13;
19,850.40&#13;
63,2-74,50&#13;
35.183.70&#13;
28,179.90&#13;
24,262.20&#13;
c9,973.80&#13;
7,525.90&#13;
20,123.10&#13;
30,542.40&#13;
31,425.30&#13;
5,837.40&#13;
106,020.90&#13;
3,380.40&#13;
4,023.00&#13;
20,949.30&#13;
10,135.80&#13;
33,366.60&#13;
12,987.00&#13;
2,282.90&#13;
7,292.70&#13;
28,061.10&#13;
25,439.40&#13;
35,224.20&#13;
18,230.40&#13;
1S.171.00&#13;
26,630.10&#13;
13,491.90&#13;
9,074.70&#13;
27,818.10&#13;
27,545.40&#13;
3,021.30&#13;
34,265.70&#13;
30J353.40&#13;
in,m.7o&#13;
• » # * W H m i w w m H w » i . 11 "1. • 11 r~TficptQaMrrrE3smr&#13;
Complete rural free deMvery aarrioa&#13;
in Calhoun county has bean ordered,&#13;
effective January^ • ••*,.-&gt;»&#13;
Mrs. Arthur Mnttlson; of Map)*&#13;
Ridge, has taken out a, Bonnie at tt*adish&#13;
to go deer hunting.&#13;
The Citizens' bank of Oxford will&#13;
be reincorporated aa a aUte bank. It&#13;
is now a private institotioa.&#13;
Nathan B. West, well known manufacturer&#13;
and capitalist of Allegan, Is&#13;
dead at the age of 8».&#13;
The* Jones, allege* burglar, woo&#13;
escaped jail at Charlotte in July, has&#13;
been captured m Waukesha, Wis. •&#13;
Albert Kretaer, hardware merchant&#13;
of Manistee, assigned to Alfred Christianson.&#13;
Liabilities and assets not&#13;
known.&#13;
Stanton Snyder, of Owoaao, aged 45,&#13;
dropped dead at the Ann Arbor depot&#13;
while talking to Calvin Jennings and&#13;
Henry Peltier.&#13;
For the twenty-seventh consecutive&#13;
year, Phillip Miller, of Traverse City.&#13;
aged 80, has gone to the upper peninsula&#13;
deer hunting.&#13;
Murray &amp; Co., of Saginaw, have&#13;
been awarde.d the contract to make a&#13;
macadamized road from Lansing to the&#13;
Agricultural college.&#13;
Charles Vosburgh, of Detroit, was&#13;
beaten into unconsciousness at the&#13;
depot at Owosso. Peter DeVoe, a&#13;
relative, has been arrested.&#13;
Miss Blanche Fetshuhn, living near&#13;
Maple Ridge, had her skull fractured&#13;
while out riding. An operation was&#13;
performed and she may recover.&#13;
Following the example of the Flint&#13;
High school members, the local school&#13;
boys of Pontiac have organized a military&#13;
company with over fifty members.&#13;
Two" trainsbacking together in the&#13;
yards of the Boyne City, Gaylord &amp;&#13;
Alpena railroad, at Boyne City, caused&#13;
the death of John Pumphrey, a brake.&#13;
majL ,&#13;
*•*«•&#13;
the, eyes of all engineers, of the engine room, tell&#13;
etejunanip* th* deck offloare of their ,thnt for**Of depended. "Why,&#13;
| ships are. protoundly Ignorant litre «ws down to toe engine room/1 wm$&#13;
frare some of the stories they teHi A the; reply* "You see all the orders on&#13;
1 ~ „ * w *w 1 ^ I i t «ruUv inMffiiMti,* 810^/ 'Stop.'&#13;
7\986.60&#13;
5,256.90&#13;
16,675.20&#13;
1.366.20&#13;
5.413.50&#13;
37,260.00&#13;
9,360.90&#13;
1,422.90&#13;
72,108.90&#13;
44,658.00&#13;
16.024.56&#13;
32,186.70&#13;
6,552.90&#13;
23,365.80&#13;
29,994*.30&#13;
26,492.40&#13;
32,024.70&#13;
294,323.70&#13;
14,949.90&#13;
T o t a l s . . . . . 7 4 3 , 2 8 8 $2,006,877.60&#13;
•"""' "Death of Bishop Davies.&#13;
The Rt. Rev. "Thomas Frederick&#13;
Davies, D. D., LL..D., bishop of Michigan,&#13;
succumbed to pneumonia at 6&#13;
o'clock Thursday evening at Detroit.&#13;
The attack, which dated from Tuesday&#13;
last, Was the culmination of a long&#13;
illness which incapacitated the bishop&#13;
for months. He suffered Intense pain&#13;
until 3 o'clock Wednesday .afternoon,&#13;
when he became unconscious, remaining&#13;
in this condition until death.&#13;
No More Church Fairs.&#13;
The ladies of the M. E. church of&#13;
Benton Harbor have given up fairs,&#13;
suppers^ etc., to raise funds for the&#13;
church. The Ladles' Aid society gave a&#13;
reception to the church members and&#13;
took a free will offering instead of&#13;
holding their annual chrysanthemum&#13;
fair, and more money was paid into&#13;
the treasury than was ever cleared at&#13;
a two days' fair where dinners were&#13;
served.&#13;
- . ' • #&#13;
The state board of education has&#13;
been 'reorganized by the election of L.&#13;
L. Wright as treasurer.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Church&#13;
celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary&#13;
at Lansing.&#13;
The Monroe circuit court docket contains&#13;
five criminal, twelve Jury and&#13;
six chancery cases.&#13;
Dr. R. S. Copeland, of Ann Arbor,&#13;
received the first installment of $5,00*&#13;
from Andrew Carnegie for the library&#13;
building. The remainder of $25,000&#13;
will come in five installments as the&#13;
work progresses.&#13;
JthB Outing Beach Resort assooial&#13;
tion, of Traverse City, has been barred&#13;
from the mails by the postal authorities.&#13;
This i s the concern which gave&#13;
away worthless lots, collecting from&#13;
&lt;ach. recipient something, over $3, in&#13;
Uses, eta . y •&#13;
The state pardon board has been&#13;
putting in full days since the new law&#13;
permitting members to draw pay not&#13;
to exceed 156 dayB, has been inaugurated.&#13;
Martin Scheiler's bookstore at Ann&#13;
Arbor, has been closed on, a $1,200&#13;
chattel mortgage held by George Affel,&#13;
of that place, and George Osius, of&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
John Gould, of Battle Creek, has&#13;
never walked In his life, and weighs&#13;
but 42 pounds, yet he took the state&#13;
bar examination at Lansing and will&#13;
practice law.&#13;
John Kuffler, of Grand Rapids, who&#13;
was convicted of sending poisoned&#13;
wine to his divorced wife, has been&#13;
committed to the asylum for criminal&#13;
insane at Ionia.&#13;
Addison Childs, aged 61, of Lansing,&#13;
and Mrs. B. E. Willams, aged 49, of&#13;
San Antonio, Tex., were married In&#13;
East St. Louis. It was a big surprise to&#13;
Mr. Childs* friends there.&#13;
John Weber, of Adrian, was thrown&#13;
over the dashboard of his buggy while&#13;
out riding and landed on the back of&#13;
his neck with great force. He is partially&#13;
paralyzed as a result.&#13;
John Levandowski, of Posen, who&#13;
had become—insane froi&#13;
caped from the hospital at A&#13;
""•fcs^e^Bfc'S^P1-&#13;
ta fins&#13;
yoeng man went into the engton room&#13;
wtth » meseafe from the captain to&#13;
the engineer. The letter eew *vhe&#13;
other wee interested and began to&#13;
explain things to him. Beta* a civil&#13;
awr'obligingi tnan an made no attempt&#13;
to ten fair? tales to the etranger, tnH*&#13;
moreover, he kept as clear, an possible&#13;
ot e l l ' puaallng technicaWUee. He&#13;
pointed out the cyllnderf, the various | sigh of plea* jrev &gt; *Wj^, that's fine,&#13;
rods, the eooentrice, the ehaft, and so&#13;
on, explained roughly the usee 06 the&#13;
various pumps *nd .auxiliary machinery,&#13;
and the mate was genuinely pleased&#13;
and interested, and said so. Then,&#13;
when going up on deck again, a&#13;
thought seemed to strike him. Halting&#13;
on the ladder, lie called the engineer&#13;
and explained his difficulty. "Thanks,&#13;
awfully, for showing me around, Mae;&#13;
you've made the whole thing as plain&#13;
aa a pikestaff. But one thing t don't&#13;
quite grasp; what., are the boilers&#13;
for?" The enginer promptly replied:&#13;
"Why, to keep the firemen from&#13;
wearying, you idiot!"&#13;
A burly, thick-headed skipper had&#13;
been given the command of a little&#13;
steam collier. Going up with great&#13;
pride on the bridge of his new ship, \&#13;
the first thing that caught his eye was&#13;
Ton Just have to mbse the handle."&#13;
The old man was charmed, "IfAaput&#13;
the handle to 'Full,' win she gang full&#13;
• p e e d r "Wtor, fiertnlnU.* ,'AnMt M&#13;
pat the handle to 'Stop,' -will she stop&#13;
gengingr •'Certainly." The* eld man&#13;
waa sUM more charmed. Finally, after&#13;
thitfking somn time, he heaved a great&#13;
man! That's clevert That doe* away&#13;
with all them saucy deevlls o' engineers&#13;
f"&#13;
Another old Scotchman was coming&#13;
alongside at South 8hields in his new&#13;
command. With great stampings on&#13;
the knob that rang the engine-room&#13;
bell, he had at last got abreast of&#13;
where be wanted to be, hut rather, far&#13;
out. He wan puzzled as to the means&#13;
for getting close in. He jumped on&#13;
•the -beft knob and rang&#13;
ent peals in the engine room. But it&#13;
had no effect. Matters seemed to get&#13;
slightly worse. Finally, in undignified&#13;
despair, he turned and addressed his&#13;
engineer by word of mouth: "Aa&#13;
diven't waant to gang aheid! Aa&#13;
diven't -waant to gang astern! But&#13;
idst gie 'er a wallop on the port&#13;
side."&#13;
use 00 polished&#13;
tables, A set wefl_mede TvooJd be&#13;
a charming weWiof .gift to a friend;&#13;
the plate; desert and t^mhler doilies'&#13;
should be made entjret* of tattlngj&#13;
but the centre piece, whether round&#13;
or square, would tetter have a llneni&#13;
centre. This centre may 0^ may not&#13;
be emnroldered or merely finished&#13;
with hemstitching 00 drawn work&#13;
and a deep border of tatting. If embroidered,&#13;
it should be In white.&#13;
A good sice to n table Mt, made&#13;
of heavy white llneni is a twenty-one&#13;
Inch centre piece, a twelve-Inch plate&#13;
doily and a six-inch desert doily, with&#13;
A tumbler piece of smaller size. These&#13;
may be button-holed around the&#13;
[edge with a rather coarse mercerised&#13;
'cotton tbvead, with or without embroidery&#13;
otherwise.' Table sets of&#13;
white with, a colored out-lining is&#13;
popular, but the colors must be fast,&#13;
and warranted to wash.&#13;
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ V ^ ^ r f ^ ^ M ^ ^ ^ ^ H ^ ^ ^ W ^ ^ ^ V ' M ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ W ^ ^ M ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ i ^ ^ ^ ' ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ A *&#13;
TRAVEL / A A/tCIEffT 7&gt;AyS&#13;
Travelers in old-time Italy had a&#13;
sorry time of it. Says a critic: "The&#13;
frescoes of Bonozzo Gozzoli in the&#13;
Rieoardi palace, and also those in the&#13;
Campo Santo of Pisa,' bring vividly&#13;
before us another phase of country&#13;
life, that of travel in the days of the&#13;
rejBaissance._ Asjwe watch, the long&#13;
cavalcade which winds round ihe steep&#13;
mountain-path, _we are carried back&#13;
to the time when wheeled carriages&#13;
were almost unknown, for, indeed,&#13;
there were but few roads on which&#13;
they would have been possible. The&#13;
only highway between one city and another&#13;
was often little more than a&#13;
rough bridle path, a quagmire of mud&#13;
In winter, and, passing through a&#13;
tangled thicket here and there, a hiding&#13;
place for outlaws and wild beasts.&#13;
There was no choice but to ride on&#13;
horseback, save on state occasions,&#13;
when a great lady might be carried on&#13;
a litter well padded with feather mattresses&#13;
covered with crimson silk. All&#13;
goods of every kind were conveyed&#13;
on the backs of horsee or baggage&#13;
mules.&#13;
"We have many accounts of travel&#13;
in those days, for a journey was a&#13;
serious matter, not to be lightly undertaken&#13;
or. easily forgotten. Thus,&#13;
when the Duchess Beatrice of Milan&#13;
went on a diplomatic mission to Venice&#13;
and wished to make a good impression&#13;
on the senate, we are told that&#13;
she had fifty mules in her train,Jaden&#13;
with her costly dresses. Of anotheri&#13;
princess Bianca Sforza, on her way&#13;
to marry the Emperor Maximilian, we&#13;
have a pitiful account of her Journey,&#13;
Tfom the pen of her~secretary. s h e&#13;
started from Milan at the end of November,&#13;
to be nearly shipwrecked in&#13;
a sudden storm on the Lake of Como;&#13;
then, with endles' hardships of tempestuous,&#13;
wintry weather, she rode&#13;
across that 'fearful cruel mountain'&#13;
the Stelvlo pass, one hapless lady-inwaiting&#13;
having to be left behind at&#13;
Gravedona! Not until Christmas eve&#13;
did Bianca at last reach Innsbruck.&#13;
"Again, we have the famous Jour&#13;
ney of Lucretia. Borgia across Italy,&#13;
from Rome to Ferrara, with an immense&#13;
retinue of nearly 1,000 persons,&#13;
which took twenty-five days in the&#13;
depth of winter. If we had chanced,&#13;
to meet them on the way—with their&#13;
splendid dresses and gaudily caparisoned&#13;
horses, with dwarfs and jesters&#13;
to beguile the way, and a company ol&#13;
trumpeters, drums and hautboys to&#13;
make martial music—we might have&#13;
mistaken It for a traveling circus thus&#13;
noisily parading through the land."&#13;
after assaulting three attendants,&#13;
was captured after a long chase.&#13;
The remains of Mrs. Harriette Marion,&#13;
of Adrian, the woman who was&#13;
burned to death at her home, have&#13;
been shipped to Detroit to be cremated,&#13;
in accordance with her wish.&#13;
Stephen Christiaaettfc, an «&#13;
of the Saginaw mine, at Norway, met&#13;
death by a fall of 250 feet off the&#13;
skip in which he was working. The&#13;
brake in the engine house became&#13;
loose.&#13;
To" comply with the new state law&#13;
German parochial schools will hereafter&#13;
teach English. German will be&#13;
the official language, but EngXsh will&#13;
be used in teaching, the lower branches.&#13;
"""" "'" " "• '"• •" "&#13;
William H. Humphrey, son of Henry&#13;
Humphrey, of Lansing, and Miss Kathryn&#13;
Dix, daughter of former Auditor&#13;
General Roscoe D. Dix, will be united&#13;
in marriage at Berrien Springs November&#13;
22.&#13;
The November number of Student&#13;
Life, a IT. of M. magazine, contains&#13;
an interesting article from the pen of&#13;
Misses Cecil, Grace and Louise Butler,&#13;
of Marshall, on "Athletics for&#13;
Girls."&#13;
C. B. Berry killed himself at the&#13;
Northern Michigan asylum Monday by&#13;
strangulation, by a piece of sheet. He&#13;
was at one time one of the leading&#13;
farmers of Leelanau county, living near&#13;
Maple City.&#13;
After a search of a year and eight&#13;
months Elmer Dewitt. of the Lehigh&#13;
road, has located a car of furniture&#13;
shipped from New York to Grand Rapids,&#13;
on a side track between Port Huron&#13;
and Saginaw.&#13;
W. C Cole, station agent of the&#13;
Pere Marquette at'Petoskey, has resigned&#13;
to become a district manager&#13;
for ihe Wyoming Gas &amp; Fuel Co. W.&#13;
A. Martin, freight agent, has been&#13;
promoted to the position of station&#13;
and freight agent at Traverse City.&#13;
After not having spoken to her husband&#13;
in 10 years, Mrs., Alice Hall has&#13;
begun suit for divorce from Harry&#13;
Hall, prominent farmer of Macomb&#13;
township. They are 60 yeara of age&#13;
and have four children, aged 34 to 25&#13;
years.&#13;
A $40,000 suit for personal damages&#13;
(t against the Grand Trunk railway has&#13;
been started in the superior court at&#13;
Grand Rapids by George C. Buffman.&#13;
The plaintiff claims to have sustained&#13;
serious and permanent injuries in a&#13;
wreck at Davidson, June 8.&#13;
Marmalade—-Simmer very slowly for&#13;
several houra one pound of fruit,&#13;
peeled end chopped, the same quantity&#13;
of sugar, a tea spoonful of ground&#13;
ginger, the grated rind of two lemon&amp;&#13;
and an orange. When ssoft, rub*&#13;
through a s]Levet put back on the fire*&#13;
and simmer ten minutes, stirring aJttr&#13;
the time.&#13;
Chocolate Biscuits—-Take the- bog;&#13;
Dyster crackers which are about tt»&#13;
sjj&amp;e_ ol_ your nnger.anjLdln-JbeiB_efie&#13;
by one in a mixture of four squares ef&#13;
chocolate, melted, one tablespoonfvt&#13;
of sugar, one-half teaspoonful vanilla.&#13;
Aftervthe crackers are finished lajj&#13;
cool oreD. i r&#13;
Muskmelon' picklfr—One-half bushel&#13;
gveen muskmelpns peeled and chopped&#13;
Bather coarselyr four heads, cabbage,&#13;
one peck green tomatoes, one dozen&#13;
«maU onions, three ounces white mustard&#13;
seed, one ounce celery- seed, two&#13;
ounces turmeric, horseradish, brown&#13;
sugar and vinegar to suit the taste.1&#13;
Chop each 'vegetable-, add one head A shredded cauliflower and other in!&#13;
gradients and cook until flavor is well&#13;
blended, but not until pickle la too&#13;
soft. Can and seal while hot. 1&#13;
Wild Cherry Jelly^rNo. 1—Cover the&#13;
sherries with water and. boil until quite&#13;
soft. Squeeze through a cloth, or rttb&#13;
through wire sleeve. Measure cup 01&#13;
sugar to cup of juice, boll down slow;&#13;
ly to half the quantity and cover when,&#13;
cold. No. 2—To every quart of cherj&#13;
ries add &gt;four large sweet apples cut&#13;
in quarters, but not pared. Proceed&#13;
as in No. 1, not using quite so much -&#13;
sugar. Does not make a clear jellyi&#13;
More like a marmalade, but has a vern ^_ | nice flavor. 7-'•*%£?&#13;
Qrmad Prli St. Lotdm, 1904&#13;
Columbia raphophones&#13;
BEST TALKING MACHINES MADE&#13;
Cylinder Machines STjS6fo6W0&#13;
Machines $12 to $66&#13;
Qumpbophono refwb+iuoGs a// kind* of&#13;
mumto porfootfy-~ band, dtntnomtra, violin,&#13;
vooml and Instrumental aotam, quartette*,&#13;
atom It Is an endlemm aowoo of amusement*&#13;
^ ^ lescu*&#13;
\ J r l g i n a l&#13;
I ^ oud&#13;
\J n r l v a l e d&#13;
1 V I uaslccU&#13;
£ 3 rllllant&#13;
f inspiring&#13;
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COLUMBIA&#13;
Gold Mwtfdod Cylinder&#13;
Records&#13;
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COLUMBIA DISC REOORD8&#13;
T - l n « h t t « 0 ce&gt;ntm e&gt;aoh| 0B p e r d o x e n&#13;
lO-lnch, *t M e r i t #10 0e&gt;r tiommn&#13;
o n l y ) # a eMhol*&#13;
ffw#fi a*&#13;
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F^ n t e t - t r a i n i n g&#13;
^ g / c a p t i v a t i n g&#13;
{ J u t w e a r l n g&#13;
Jra? c a o n a n t&#13;
] 3 esllghtful&#13;
J S uparlor* .&#13;
! • M&lt;'&#13;
y;-&#13;
PWPH&#13;
SUM* MUltottRi eJUB6EU&#13;
.ir'i/'* TO A DAYTOM, 6^ ,&#13;
* ,?,&#13;
7 3 - •••&#13;
• U A N t D FtWrr*R,&lt;%IQT&gt;lftft AND&#13;
v T " •'•''•''•HdTHWfc "&#13;
OCTOR |fr- i A i P 1 T 0 HAV*&#13;
POltONID Hff VlCTlWi ^NiP&#13;
THRN 8BT F»*f TO HOUtit&#13;
' No such weird poisoning plot frag&#13;
been unearthed 1st years as-the aeaaatiooal&#13;
charge* now ehawerrng thick&#13;
and fast upon Piw.QllvejE.A.iW***^*&#13;
Dayton physician who is .charged&#13;
with murderinf hie father*, mother&#13;
and brother by poison and then setting&#13;
fixe to their home to hide evidence&#13;
of the crime.&#13;
Police authorities tn Dayton and&#13;
other cities are trying Xo fasten upou&#13;
Haugh-the opisoning of a dozen women&#13;
whom Ire baa titter married of&#13;
^jr^M*'&#13;
• » * i ; - . &gt;;' 'lV;.*V,:' \r-&gt; *• "&#13;
&gt;v&#13;
*£*&#13;
•U.&amp;&#13;
$£"-'?$$•&#13;
AH&#13;
mm&#13;
S&gt;&#13;
wnnf!&#13;
&gt;v*f*- A&#13;
• - • &amp; : . • &gt; * / •&#13;
' - • ^ • -&#13;
»*' wj*sai«' si&#13;
Sir-George Wllliame, ftwbde:r/ 4«'vC •*/a 'e f* «|M*wr;^rmJ«« to sending to the&#13;
Y. I L C . jL, will be buried In 8tv emparor of Jape* a preeeat of a l l&#13;
»©Yed to a hospital&#13;
The CUpa M I 1. yet a dangsruirs &lt; * * * * • f e t t 1 * ^ A n , .&#13;
loenlW&lt;S-nnvif»*ion on aecount of ,:;MnUnooa ^ ¾ ^ * • . ' W S ?&#13;
***»fte»feiues. The Hstohp, a Chiaee« steamer IsmaU,.from Odeaea, Novent&#13;
lng-fl^teec pwseniers- - ^ , W W f ^ M xefiit^ to five them&#13;
Frank Youagahek Sunday waa prop- •waa*.&#13;
*Wy fatally ahot and fojr other, persons-&#13;
WOT* stabbed during, a-fight in&#13;
, Chicago .brought about hjr a dlscusaipn&#13;
of die revolution la Russia.&#13;
Jacob Haugh, his wife and his son&#13;
.Jesse were crajnated to a fire which&#13;
destroyed their coUage In Dayton^ .0.,&#13;
Sunday morning; W v w H i U « l f another&#13;
son., was seriously burned.&#13;
Mrs. Martha Johnson, of Cambridge,&#13;
Minn., who, with her husband and' i«&#13;
children was bound for a new home in&#13;
Quba/died on a west Shore train near&#13;
Rochester, N. Y., Sunday morning.&#13;
Great Britain has promoted Sir&#13;
^ w . . w . Mk . Claude McDonald from minister to amduped&#13;
and who are said to nave died g^ggador to Tokfo. Japan la overjoyed&#13;
mysteriously, £ U e n d - o t drug*, m©r- -¾¾ wants the Untted-Statea to do&#13;
IK PP mm&#13;
^a»^ww »,—.m p;&#13;
It's "adn^nlatraUon. A granite monument now marka'&#13;
: toi.:--¾1 B. R e n d e r ^ f ^ s t i y . HV&amp;t^TZthZSm rttfrta* wf»&#13;
resentalsvea. lg at-ina point of death Mrs. George Btefr&amp;tv aged ••. a t&#13;
» D u b u q u e , ^ ^ ^ ^ 4 ^ : ^ ^ - : - 1 ^ ^foWll^oewhitne^gt, ona, Ns. eJis.&gt;ft we *wsi tsho afr.bignhrtge4naerd,&#13;
/- - -&#13;
old and insane at times, this man, ac&#13;
wording to Coroner Kline, has poisoned&#13;
his victims slowly and with the&#13;
cunning cruelty of a Borgia.&#13;
In addition to the alleged murder&#13;
•of his own family, it is charged by&#13;
the coroner, Dr. Walter Klein, that&#13;
Haugh is&gt; the murderer of at least&#13;
nine people. .&#13;
In lh#, City Diimpv&gt;&#13;
One one of Cleveland's citr dumps&#13;
Saturday afternoon was discovered by&#13;
-Children a human torso, including the&#13;
thorax and shoulders, but devoid of&#13;
Jjtead, arms and legs.&#13;
^shrouded in mystery. There was not&#13;
a shred of clothing attached to the&#13;
torso. It was turned- ever to the 90-&#13;
•llce^ and removed tft th» morime, Xl»e&#13;
likewise by Minister Lloyd O. Oiisoom.&#13;
Chicago janitors, holding that their&#13;
wives are sacred, have agreed that&#13;
hereajfter contracts for their services&#13;
shall not include the clause: "And bis&#13;
wife shall at all times be ready to assist&#13;
him."&#13;
Senator Burrows, of Michigan, the&#13;
chairman of the committee on privileges&#13;
and elections, said in Washington&#13;
that he expected to have the case&#13;
of Senator Reed Smoot, of Utah, disposed&#13;
of before the term ends.&#13;
Anarehy prevails in the John&#13;
Worthy corrective school for boys In&#13;
John R, Plait, axed Ktw York millionaire,&#13;
has lost hie suit again!t the&#13;
negress,' Hanna Ella*, to recover&#13;
|686,eOO alleged to have been given&#13;
by him te her under coercion. The&#13;
supreme court heW that the charge&#13;
of coercion waa not proven.&#13;
.. The Boston police will elation men&#13;
at the door of eyery doctor's office iu&#13;
Boston suspected of being used as a&#13;
place for procuring criminal operations&#13;
and the business of every applicant&#13;
will be inquired into. The crusade&#13;
is the outcome of the "suit case"&#13;
murder.&#13;
- THE MARKETS.&#13;
•a* sr&#13;
TUB HOP^D-FOR WPROYBU&#13;
MENT IN RUSSIA HAS&#13;
NOT MATORIAtlZBD.&#13;
REPORT*? MUTINY AMONG 80L-&#13;
•: DiERA. •&#13;
FRESH TROUBLE NEAR ST, PLT6R8S&lt;/&#13;
RQ MAY PROVE MORE&#13;
8ERI0MS T«AN CRONSTAOT.&#13;
rrcKiwa SCALP HV«*oit. 7,W&#13;
• r i ^ - W -&#13;
'#; l^dy Suffered Tarturea MwtM Ce«s*f&#13;
^ . ky Cutloera• Soratchest Day•••&amp;• -$k-&#13;
: anst lttg*s?:&#13;
I * - •*•*:••&#13;
"My scalp&#13;
the itching. I wai&#13;
and-night, - and I conld net no jeet 1&#13;
gashed my l^ad r^tOt |ot waftr and&#13;
Cut&gt;&lt;mra floptp a$\d then applied the)&#13;
CtodcW&lt;fotmentasa«Te«»mg. One&#13;
box of the Ointment and one cake of&#13;
Cuticura. Soap cured me, New my&#13;
head to entirely clear and my hair to&#13;
growing splendidly; I have tiaad Co-&#13;
Ucuta Soap ef«t #ince» and shall never&#13;
be without it. (Signed) Ada C.&#13;
Smith. 309 Grand St., Jersey City,&#13;
N. J." '&#13;
The~~ftehtity~of the person to1 ^tChheiirca gtoe.a cThheer-s s. tuTdheenyt s p-aurte ^stteornreosr izainnKd&#13;
sand in Principal tJeorge B. MaaslTch's&#13;
bed and threatened to kill him.&#13;
Albee Oaks and William Rock, 87&#13;
most striking. discovery waa aTAUJet | and 81 yeiwroia respectively, chi&#13;
from boyhood, both ended their lives&#13;
in Buffalo, N. Y., Wednesday. Neither&#13;
wound ia the right iride^ which., "thw&#13;
\A -coroner thinka caused' death.&#13;
4 The post iaortem lMeld by'Coroner&#13;
• . .¾ ^legelstein showed that the. body was I believed to have been agreed upon&#13;
#?,] vthealotp oedf ath matu rtdheer ebdo dmya nh.a dI tb eaelsiro- fmde-- Detperate for want of liquor to quiet&#13;
balmed: The theory that the 'body&#13;
'had been cut up In a medical school&#13;
and th»n discarded, thence being&#13;
hauled to the "dump," was scouted by&#13;
the coroner. _,. . . .&#13;
The body showed curious marks of&#13;
mutilation in that the head and arms&#13;
evidently had been pulled off or cut&#13;
™.e.r. 'The c o « W how. that U * f * £ g j - ^ ¾ ¾ % ^&#13;
the portion of a body of: a man and&#13;
that hjs weight was probably 140&#13;
pounds. As to hie age it waa not possible&#13;
to tell.&#13;
Mother Became Maniac&#13;
Martha E. Barr, a pretty woman,&#13;
«ged 24, was adjudged 4nsane at Mun-&#13;
•cle, Ind, The court found that her&#13;
belief in tbe efficacy of both healing&#13;
.and disbelief in medicines had resultin&#13;
the death of her child two&#13;
ks ago at the Barr home in Satownship.&#13;
Although a'physician was called to&#13;
the ohfle^t*e -tftOther ateadfaatly&#13;
^ef4sed-to^adminlster_thjB_jn£dicin^_or&#13;
permit others to do so. She held that&#13;
faltE-would en™ thft child, though It&#13;
( • ;&#13;
tegged for relief from a physician.&#13;
B . ) , M . , ^.-:-. j v . - . y » •&#13;
- Courtmartlal Ordered.&#13;
Secretary of the Navy Bonaparte issued&#13;
an order calling for most drastic&#13;
•courtmartial of Midshipman Minor&#13;
Merriweather, Jr., who has been&#13;
charged with "having fought a fistic&#13;
oattle with Midshipman James&#13;
Branch, Jr.. which resulted in the&#13;
death of the latter.&#13;
Oemagea Awarded Consumptive Girl.&#13;
A jury at Seattle, Wash., awarded&#13;
B. Grover 110,000 as competitor&#13;
damages she had suffered&#13;
of Mayor Zcok, of Ballard,&#13;
his promise to marry her.&#13;
1 is in the last stages of consumption.&#13;
Zook took the position&#13;
that for him to marry her would re-&#13;
?ult in his contracting the disease,&#13;
'he case will be carried to the supreme&#13;
court&#13;
Mrs. George B. Cronk, wife of a&#13;
tormer grand exalted ruler of the&#13;
Elks, has obtained a divorce in Omaha&#13;
on the ground of cruelty and nonsupport.&#13;
Whitelaw Reid, American ambassador,&#13;
at a meeting in London of the&#13;
British Foreign Bible society, read,&#13;
letters from President Roosevelt&#13;
praising and congratulating the sottety&#13;
on the completion of its cente-&#13;
. f r y fund.&#13;
Wu Ting Fang, formerly Chinese&#13;
nhiter tp. the United States, is rerted&#13;
to have become totally deaf&#13;
alresult of tile explosion of a bomV&#13;
thrown by a flnatfc 'when the Chinese&#13;
commissioners were leaving&#13;
Pekln to visit foreign countries.&#13;
A lamb that will chew tobacco,&#13;
waitslo any whistled waits air that.&#13;
te not too dreamy, chase eata and&#13;
and to the Judas who betrays its&#13;
Armour ft Cou's big Chicago packboose.&#13;
He has been named Dick&#13;
Armour. Dick meete incoming flocks&#13;
of sheep and;pUote th %v through the"&#13;
town to the abattoir,, where they are&#13;
liaced (n the buck and have knives&#13;
a ihrqujd^tfcffe throats^by AatdV&#13;
left a message, but a death pact is&#13;
his inflamed nerves, Michael McOer&#13;
mott, a prisoner in the Newark Jail on&#13;
a charge of alcoholism, set fire to his&#13;
padded cell Thursday night and was&#13;
dead before the. flames were extinguished.&#13;
Howard Owen, of Vienna, Ga., was&#13;
held dp and robbed. Two days later&#13;
—DETROIT.—Extra 4ry-le&amp; sixers and&#13;
heifers, $4.2!&gt;@4.50; steers and heifers,&#13;
1,600 to 1,200, $3.5004; ateers and heifers,&#13;
800 to* 1,000, $3©3.26; steers and&#13;
heifers that Are fat, 500 t o 700, $2.24#&#13;
2.85; choice fat cows, $3@3.50; good f a t&#13;
cows, $2.5002.85; common cows, $1.50®&#13;
2; caimer*, $101.50; choice heavy bulls,&#13;
$2.7503.15; fair to good bolonga bull*,&#13;
$2.2507.75: stock bulls, $202.50; choice&#13;
feeding steers, 800 to 1,000, $3.50®3.85;&#13;
fair feeding steers. 800 to 1,000,-^2:850&#13;
3,25; choice stackers, 500 to 700, $2,75 0&#13;
.3.15; fair stockers, 500 to 700, $2,35 0&#13;
2.65; stock heifers, $2 02.25; milkers,&#13;
large, young, medium age, $35050;&#13;
common milkers, $18025.&#13;
VEAL—Best grades, $6.5006.75; mediums,&#13;
$5 0 6 ; heavy and common, $ 3 0&#13;
4.50.&#13;
SHEEP—The run of sheep and lamb*&#13;
was rather light and several country-&#13;
«v«d were-on hand buying feeders. On&#13;
this account prices held up fairly well&#13;
and the trade was steady to 10015c&#13;
lower than laat week. We quote: Best&#13;
lambs, $6.90; fair to good lambs, $6.50&#13;
©JS.75; light to common lambs, $5,500&#13;
6; fair to good butcher sheep, $404.30;&#13;
i Hr-an d c out m on, ¢403.50. .&#13;
HOGS—Light to good butchers, 44.70;&#13;
pigs, $4.70; light ybrkers. $4.70; roughs,&#13;
$4&lt;g&gt;4.25; stags, one-third off.&#13;
- CHICAGO —Cattle —Receipts, 9,000;&#13;
market for best steady, others dull;&#13;
common to prime steers, $3.15 06.40;&#13;
cows, $2.4004; heifers, $2.2505; bulls,&#13;
$ 2 0 4 ; stockers and feeders, $2.1506.25;&#13;
calves, $207.&#13;
HOGS—Receipts, 27,000; market weak&#13;
to 5c lower; choice to prime heavy,&#13;
$4.9505.05; medium to good heavy,&#13;
$4.85 04.95; lightweight butchers, $4.05&#13;
05,05; good to choice heavy mixed,&#13;
$4.8004.95; packing, $4.2504.95.&#13;
SHEEP—-Receipts, 20,000; market unchanged;&#13;
sheep, $ 2 0 6 ; fair to jtrime&#13;
yearling wethers, $5.7506.50; spring&#13;
lambs, good to choice, $707.65.&#13;
pare to meet thy God." Owen was so&#13;
unnerved that he went home and shot&#13;
himself dead.&#13;
The khedlve of Bgypt has amassed&#13;
an enormous private fortune. Not only&#13;
is he a monogamist and a teetotaler,&#13;
but it Is.said that he does not smoke&#13;
—even an Egyptian cigarette. He gets&#13;
up at 6 every morning and can talk&#13;
In six languages.&#13;
About 135,000 more will be added to&#13;
the assets of the wrecked Vicksburg&#13;
bank by the action of the United&#13;
State* court in declaring *Yed and&#13;
Bva &lt;Koaemlth and Ella Cooley lnvoluntary&#13;
bankrupts. They were eoncerned&#13;
m tne partnership:™&#13;
His marriage against the orders ot&#13;
the Annapolis Naval Academy win&#13;
-Oblige Rbllo C. Palmer, of Charlotte,&#13;
Vt, to pursue a civilian's vocation. He&#13;
first married and then tendered his&#13;
resignation which was not accepted,&#13;
the authorities deeming it necessary&#13;
on bebjrif of discipline to dismiss him&#13;
hi disgrace.&#13;
The Delta Kappa Bpailon fraternity,&#13;
in convention In New Yorkcity,Thursday&#13;
night adopted resolutions branding&#13;
aa "false and malicious" the reports&#13;
sent out from Mt. Vernon, 0., that&#13;
a student had been tied to a railroad&#13;
track as a feature of his Initiation i n £&#13;
the society, resulting in his being run&#13;
down by a train and killed.&#13;
Railroad magnates are generally&#13;
supposed to be hard workers, but many&#13;
of them seem to stand it very well.&#13;
James J. Hill Is 67, A. J. Cassatt is&#13;
6.6, Marvin Hughitt is 64 and B. T.&#13;
Jeffrey, RoaweH-Stiller and Thomas&#13;
Lowry own np t o 6S each.' Of 17 of&#13;
the most prominent railroad men in&#13;
the country aftt^ohv Is under 60 years&#13;
old. .,.T% - , ^&#13;
• Jjamee Richards and-Peter ^ t e vena,&#13;
members bt IWllon WaHacW expedition&#13;
ttf "Labrador, arrived at St. Johns,&#13;
N. F.,&lt; neportingv tbjejtf left Wallace,&#13;
Eastonand party *n ^epteiiber, with&#13;
provtalona growiag scarce, k No «ews&#13;
from Mrs.' lieonMee Hubbard w»#&#13;
biouglit by the mall boat. It is&#13;
feared she may have been lost in&#13;
Labrador.&#13;
Shelby Ball, leader of a gang of&#13;
Kentucky terrorists, who for a week&#13;
has been in the mountains .near Plnetttle,&#13;
defying thVefcorta of the poll**&#13;
and the militia to capture him, was&#13;
surrendered to the sheriff in. Kiddle*&#13;
boro, Wednesday, by his brother,&#13;
Houston Ball. The prisoner la. under&#13;
indictment far the murder of Lewis&#13;
Collins, last May.&#13;
King Edward's birthday, honor list&#13;
to the knife .of the executioner, includes th. e ,t itle^s ^o„f '.p_r inc_e ss royal"&#13;
pit aX the Poughkeepale branck Jo his sMest daughter, the Pucheaa of&#13;
^Wfe; Baron Windsor becomes a genuine&#13;
earl; Baron Iveagh will hereafter&#13;
be- addtesesd- a» '•iscount;"&#13;
George H.-Darwin is no longer plain&#13;
"mietef/' bat la. knight ofr the^oath:&#13;
J. R. Cowan, a Canadian, la exalted&#13;
Conditions in Ruaala&gt; a m steadily&#13;
progressing from had to worse, another&#13;
mutiny is . reported to have&#13;
broken out among; the troops stationed&#13;
at Kraaneye 8elo, eighteen miles&#13;
from St. Petersburg, which may prove&#13;
even more serious than at Cronstadt,&#13;
where the rioters were mostly sailors&#13;
who were not well provided with&#13;
arms, as are the soldiers in this great&#13;
camp. The mutineers at Cronstadt,&#13;
however, were still holding but at last&#13;
reports and demandJig thai they be&#13;
exempt from the rule which calls for,&#13;
the shooting of one man in every five&#13;
found guilty of disobeying or disregarding&#13;
the authority of their superiors.&#13;
~&#13;
At the admiralty offices in St. Petersburg,&#13;
it is admitted that the revolt&#13;
had been brewing' for a long&#13;
time, and that the sailors at Cronstadt&#13;
are not the only ones in the service&#13;
dissatisfied with their present&#13;
condition. It is also admitted by high&#13;
authorities that socialism had made&#13;
great progress among these soldiers,&#13;
and one evidence of this comes in a&#13;
Cispatch from Japan telling of a remarkable&#13;
socialistic demonstration&#13;
among the Russian military prisoners&#13;
there- awaiting the transportation to&#13;
Russia. The news o f the revolt in&#13;
Russia was greeted with acclaim, and&#13;
a parade was at once organized and&#13;
speeches made commending the stand&#13;
Blunder of a D4vo*««#. . ^&#13;
In these days ot many divorces a&#13;
man should be careful about whom he&#13;
marries—at least careful enough to&#13;
see that he doesn't remarry a woman&#13;
from whom be has been divorced.&#13;
That happened to a man in Montana&#13;
recently. He fell in love, proposed&#13;
and was accepted by a woman from&#13;
whom he had been divorced 23 years&#13;
before, but did not know It until after&#13;
the wedding.—Los Angeles Times.&#13;
ThTltlcHeit Maft. "&#13;
•*»*«*** the People against the ^^^A^Hl^_Ke^4i ijk a c o o l ^ a c # .&#13;
cracy.&#13;
The sentiments among these soldiers&#13;
are said to be typical of the feeling&#13;
throughout the army, with the&#13;
possible exception of the Cossacks,&#13;
who can be depended on to obey the&#13;
wishes of the czar, except when there&#13;
is loot in sight, as in the recent anti-&#13;
Jewish outbreak in Odessa.&#13;
Vegetable*.&#13;
DETROIT—Celery, fancy homegrown,&#13;
25030c per doi; cauliflower, 90c&#13;
©1 per bu; e g g plant, 65075c per doz;&#13;
cucumbers, hothouse, $1.50 per doa;&#13;
parsley, 15c per dox; radishes, 12c per&#13;
doz; onions, 1:% per dos; watercress-,&#13;
25030c per dox; lettuce, hothouse, 10c&#13;
per do*; beets, 35c per bu; carrots. 35c&#13;
per b u ; turnips, 40c per bu; parsnips,&#13;
60e per bu; cabbage, $1.25 per bbl; wax&#13;
beans, ' ' :.0 per' bu; spinach, 50c per&#13;
bu; tomatoes, $1 per bu; green pep-&#13;
.pers, 50c per bu; red peppers, 75c per&#13;
bu; mushrooms, 5 5 0 6 0 c per lb; Hubbard&#13;
squash, l t y c per lb.&#13;
East Buffalo.—Best export steers, $5&#13;
. 0 5 . 5 0 ; best 1,200 - I * 4,300 shipping&#13;
t^tepra, Jfca6#4.8T; D«»T- 1,000 to 1,100&#13;
Tjhft*p7nf stewra; $S.fO0*.2f;. beat fat&#13;
cows, $2.7503; few at $3; fair to good,&#13;
$ 2 0 2 ffQ; trlmlKrs. Sl.&amp;Q; best fat Ttelfers.&#13;
$3.2503.50; medium hejrers, $2.75&#13;
0 3 : common stock heifers. $2.25«2.50:&#13;
best feeding steerfc $3.7604; Dest year-&#13;
Ung steers. $303.25; common, $2,500&#13;
3; common stockers, $2.6003; export&#13;
bulls, $3.2503.50; bologna bulls, $2.75&#13;
03.25; stock bulls, $3.5002.75. The cow&#13;
market was steady on all kinds except&#13;
late springers, and they were very hard&#13;
Jto sell. Good to extra, $45052, medium&#13;
to good, $ 3 5 0 4 2 ; common, $18020.&#13;
Hogs—Market lower; pigs and yorkers,&#13;
$4.9505; mixed, $505.10; mediums,&#13;
15.0505.1,5: roughs. $4.2504.40.&#13;
Sheep—Market strong; best lambs.&#13;
$7.4007.50; fair to good, $707.35; rull&#13;
to common, $606.50; best sheep, $5.26&#13;
05.50; cull to common, $606.50; best&#13;
sheep, $5.2505.50; cull to common, $3.50&#13;
4.50; wethers, $5.5005.75; yearlings, $6 S6.25^ closed steady. Best calves, $7.75&#13;
8; medium to good, $6.7507.80; heavy,&#13;
$3.6004.60.&#13;
Slim Chance For Poles.&#13;
The' revolutionists, in Poland have&#13;
taken such a threatening attitude that&#13;
martial law has been declared&#13;
throughout the provinces. The government&#13;
has been informed that a&#13;
revolution on a large scale Hke 1864,&#13;
was preparing. Kaiser Wllhelm is believed&#13;
to have considerable influence&#13;
in bringing about this action on the&#13;
part of the Russian government, as&#13;
he has been considerably worried&#13;
over the prospect of the threatened inserrection&#13;
spreading into German and&#13;
possibly Austrian. Poland. Franz Josef,&#13;
too, Is interested in preventing&#13;
the further embroilment of his already&#13;
troubled dominions, so that between&#13;
these three nations the oppressed&#13;
Poles have a very slim chance&#13;
of obtaining freedom by means of&#13;
armed force.&#13;
Croesus waa king of Lydia, a country&#13;
of Asia Minor, In the seventh century&#13;
before Christ, and was renowned&#13;
for bis prodigious wealth. His conntry&#13;
waa conquered by Cyrus and annexed&#13;
to Persia, 546 B. C. His wealth&#13;
gave rise to the expression, "As rich&#13;
as Croesus." But with all his money&#13;
he could not buy food so wholesome,&#13;
nourishing and palatable as PIllsbury's&#13;
Vltos, the leading cereal food&#13;
of the day.&#13;
How to Get Cream for Tea*&#13;
Always keep two basins for your&#13;
milk, one larger _than the_other Get&#13;
your milk if possible before it has hal&#13;
time to cool, and put it in the small&#13;
basin, place the basin of milk within&#13;
the large basin and surround with&#13;
So treated, milk will keep any reasonable&#13;
time.&#13;
A Great Monarch.&#13;
Queen to Aid the Poor.&#13;
Queen Alexandra- has contributed&#13;
$10,000 and has initiated a movement&#13;
for the relief of the unemployed in&#13;
England by issuing an appeal through&#13;
Earl De Grey, treasurer of the Queen's&#13;
household. Her majesty says:&#13;
"I appeal to the people of the empire,&#13;
men and women, te assist me in&#13;
alleviating the suffering of the poor,&#13;
starving and unemployed during tne&#13;
winter. For this purpose I head the&#13;
list with £2,000. All contributions&#13;
should be sent to Earl De Grey.&#13;
"ALEXANDRA."&#13;
GRAIN, KJTC.&#13;
DETROIT — WHEAT — Thursday's&#13;
sales and prices were: Cash No. 2 red,&#13;
4 cars at 90He, 2 at 90c, 1 at 89¾c; De-&#13;
2Sm b e r ; A&#13;
6^$2°wbu a t„£ic ' \W&amp; £" a£ urday brought to the surface a leather 90%c. 5.0000 bu at 9054c. 12,000 bu at h a n d b a g m which the head of Susan&#13;
Ghastly Kind.&#13;
After two days' work dragging the&#13;
harbor bottom along the course of the&#13;
Eaet Boston ferry, the police on Sat-&#13;
90fec, 1.000 bu at 90%c. 5.000 bu a t&#13;
90½. 2,000 bu at 9 0 * c , 10.000 bu at 90c;&#13;
May. 2,000 bu at 9 3 t t c 3,000 bu at 93%c,&#13;
12.000 bu at 93c, 5.000 bu at 9 3 H e 10,-&#13;
000 bu a t 93c, 10,000 bu at 92 \ c . 15.000&#13;
bu at 92He; No. 3 red, 3 5 ½ ^ No. 1&#13;
white 87^4c&#13;
CORN—Cash No. 3, 4 9 ¼ ^ No. 3 white,&#13;
4 cars a t 60Hc; No. 3 yellow, 3 cars at&#13;
51 He, 2 at 51 %c; No. 4 yellow, 1-car'at&#13;
50c. x.&#13;
OATS—Cash No. 3 white, 1 car at&#13;
32%c, 1 at S3c; No. 4 white, 1 car at&#13;
32Hc.&#13;
RYE—Cash No. 2. 72c.&#13;
BEANS—November, 1 car at $1 56;&#13;
December, $1 56; January, $1 5S bid.&#13;
CLOVERSEED—,Prlme spot, 30 bags&#13;
at $8.05: January, 100 bags at $8.20;&#13;
sample, 20 bags a t $7,75. 17 at $7.60, 2,4 i&#13;
at $7.60. 20 at $7.2«, 1* at $7. 14 at $6.75, (&#13;
5 a t $6.25; prime alslke, $7.75; sample&#13;
alslke, 7 bags at $6.75, 3 at $5.50.&#13;
Geary was found, together with 110&#13;
pounds of lead.&#13;
This bears out the story of Wm.&#13;
Howard and Lewis H. Crawford, under&#13;
arrest in New York, who confessed&#13;
to disposing of the girl's remains.&#13;
The head is in a good state of preservation&#13;
and was readily recognized&#13;
by the officers.&#13;
A nurae named Dean is charged with&#13;
having performed the operation wnich&#13;
caused the chorus girl's death. She&#13;
cannot be located.&#13;
CHICAGO-—Cash quotations were a s&#13;
follows: Wlour ateettyitWNo. 2 spring&#13;
wheat, 8 7 0 8 9 c ; No. 3, 8 O 0 8 8 ^ c ; No 5&#13;
red, 8TVi0S8%c; No, j corn, SO06OHc;&#13;
No. 2 yellow, 64c; Nov I oats. 30c; No, 2&#13;
white. 31%© 32Kc; No. 3 white. 30¾ 0&#13;
32c; No. 2 rye, 72c; good feeding barley,&#13;
38¼ 0 3 9 c ; fair to choice malting,&#13;
43050c; No. 1 flaxseed, 9 3 ^ c ; No. I&#13;
northwestern, $1; prime timothy seed,&#13;
*a.25^&lt;r!ovfr, «onfr*ct .grade, $13.25.,.&#13;
A^agaawifTa.;&gt;w i&gt;KTRorr. .&#13;
Tmn*»T«**Tx» A*ro WowBswL*i*i&gt;-*Afte*.&#13;
^ ^ ^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ ¾ ¾ ^ Bert Coo**&#13;
^Taonidie Si^afpe wpwMiiM Ia7s3la3a3rMy IGSir7l " Mata! Wed, W'•mYToui^nKgT B.-uKfvfawloB.k"g * tO-ttSOa.; Mats. 10-*17*4H06&#13;
UT*feaJr*JA?aa-Prlj^MU^ * ° t f *&#13;
Passenger service between Saline&#13;
and Ann Arbor, a distance of nine&#13;
miles, has been established by an automobile&#13;
line.&#13;
After driving three hospital attendants&#13;
into a corner with a hammer,&#13;
John Levandowski; of Alpena, fled&#13;
three blocks clad only in his nightshirt&#13;
before he was captured by the&#13;
police.&#13;
"We are all dead" was the message&#13;
written on a piece of paper and pinned&#13;
to the outside door with a table&#13;
fork, on the house of Philander Burkholder,&#13;
a Beverly. Oht, farmer. Sunday&#13;
morning. "Prepare for an awful&#13;
sight." the gruesome message further&#13;
announced. Neighbors found that the&#13;
man had shattered the heads of&#13;
his wife and child with an ax and&#13;
then cut his throat Burkholder waa&#13;
a well-to-do farmer and did not trve&#13;
* on good terms with his wife.&#13;
Wealthier than any brother sovereign;&#13;
master of,legions, which number&#13;
over a millions lord of more than&#13;
one-sixth of the surface of the globe.&#13;
with subject* of many colors and&#13;
races, amounting to over one-hundred&#13;
and twenty million souls, the Czar of&#13;
all the Russias will not be invincible&#13;
until he adopts Pillsbury's Vltos ac&#13;
his regular breakfast diet.&#13;
On an Electrical Parade.&#13;
"I don't know much 'bout prophealcation,"&#13;
said uncle Eben, "but I kin&#13;
nay dar is three mighty reliable signs&#13;
o' rain—a horse race, a circus an' a&#13;
camp meetlnV—Washington Star.&#13;
Then is more Catarrh in thl« Metion of fb« soadtn&#13;
than ali other d l i i m t put together, and until tft* laei&#13;
taw rear* waa rappoaed to be Incurable. For a crest&#13;
many raara doctors pronounced i t s local dtaeaee aad&#13;
prescribed local remedies, and by consuatly faffing&#13;
to core with local treatment, pronounced It Incurable.&#13;
Science bat prorea Catarrh to be a consUtatfonal aH&gt;&#13;
ease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Care, manufactured by P. J. Cbesey&#13;
ft CO., Toledo, Obto, Is the only Constitutional cure ea&#13;
the market. It la taken Internally tn doeee from W&#13;
il Tt • r r t r i l r ^ P t t y n t . t a * bleed surfaces ef tbe system. They offer &lt;&#13;
hundred dollars for any case It falls to cue. "&#13;
tourr cemtrcmauuunss aanimd lteessutlmuwomiauaiig*.. "~~^&#13;
Address: F. J. CHEKKY * CO., Toledo, Ohiow&#13;
Bold by DrugKiats, 75c&#13;
Take BaU'sFamUy «Us for conatlpattaa.&#13;
T*e world must be getting better,&#13;
when w e pay more attention to the&#13;
man w h o moves for peace than the&#13;
men who bring on a war.&#13;
Hofs Is Relief for Women*&#13;
Mother Gray, a nurse in New York, dlav&#13;
covered a pleasant herb remedy for woman's}&#13;
ills, called AUSTRALIAN-LEAF. It Is the&#13;
only certain monthly regulator. C a n s&#13;
female weaknesses, Backache, Kidney and&#13;
Urinary trouble*. At all Druggists or by&#13;
mall 60 oU. Sample mailed FREE. .Addis—,&#13;
The Mother Gray Co.. LeRoy, N. YA&#13;
woman's Idea of an enemy is one&#13;
who laughs our imH when you walk&#13;
down the church aisle with a new hat&#13;
on.&#13;
Important to Motawra.&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle or CASTOIOA&#13;
a safe and sure remedy for Infanta and chUdrea&#13;
and see that it&#13;
Bean the&#13;
Signature of&#13;
A XlM For Over SO Years.&#13;
The Kind You Bare Always Bought&#13;
He h a s hot learned the lessons oi&#13;
life who does not every day surmount&#13;
a fear.&#13;
I do not believe Piso's Cure for Cotnunptloa&#13;
has on equal for coughs and colds.—! IHH F .&#13;
BOY**, Trinity Spriags, In&lt;L, Feb. 16, h VK&#13;
The more nerve *a man h a s the lest&#13;
money he loses when he falls in business.&#13;
Bin. Wlnatow'a Boothia*&#13;
FSaorm cmhailtdlornen, a tlelaeytbs Jpnacin, ,s coaftreenss w tihnedg caosUaua., i Stoaboatla,&#13;
• *&#13;
A girl's idea of a trust is to have a&#13;
monopoly on a young man's affections.&#13;
Detroit Conservatory of Misic&#13;
530 Woedwtrl Ave, The Fiwst Gon»nfatofi it the Wtal&#13;
THMTY4CC01I0 YEAR. 42 IMSTHtJCTOBt&#13;
MANY reii kvwttmn&#13;
JAMBS B\ MIA* Sac*.&#13;
Catalogue sent free on appMoatioa.&#13;
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:.&lt;*', ""*Xfi fe&#13;
^.w !&gt;/*-. -J.r «^v«' ' &gt; * • '&#13;
' * $ •&#13;
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vm:* $:&#13;
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m •". V: -[•. ^ ^ w ^ j*ss^i4j^a^&gt;^^*a«w&gt;B9«^ .*;• ;•*.•'&lt;A&gt;'^, A * '&#13;
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U ANDREWS A CO.&#13;
THURSDAY, NOV.&#13;
moFaifTORt.&#13;
16,&#13;
— L&#13;
1905.&#13;
I&#13;
Before going itaWs scheme that&#13;
seems to promisegreai returns pat&#13;
away enough money to buy a return&#13;
cicket. "*&#13;
Chicago hag completed her new&#13;
post office and the antiquarians&#13;
are looking up records to see when&#13;
it WEB began.&#13;
Person's who regard the pardon&#13;
board as useless, because it furi&#13;
n i&#13;
Irishes several attractive jobs to the&#13;
patronage controlled by the machine.&#13;
• /&#13;
The man who paid five*hundred&#13;
dollars to buy an extension of life&#13;
for the bigamist Hocb, was probably&#13;
not trying so hard to be benevolent&#13;
as to sEow "how cheap&#13;
the courts are.&#13;
Not Dead Yet&#13;
That the building of tbe big dam on&#13;
the fturon is not dead was shown the&#13;
past week when tbe Michigan Milling&#13;
Co. of Ann Ann sold thetr power at&#13;
that city the Detroit Edison Co. This&#13;
makes three good powers this company&#13;
owns and they will be used to furnish&#13;
power and light for Ann Arbor.&#13;
The plan for raising the level of the&#13;
lakes which are tbe b ad waters of the&#13;
H nron and tbe great consequent develop&#13;
m-nt of the water power of the river&#13;
tor nlectno purposes is evidently not a&#13;
dream as some people have imagined.&#13;
This is another step taken towards tbe&#13;
ultimate carayinu oat of tbe plans. It&#13;
may be years and it probably will before&#13;
they will become what it was re*&#13;
garded /ben tbe territory of Michigan&#13;
wa8"first settled, tbe power river of&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
H o w A p e Y o u J u d g e d ?&#13;
A young man (or old one for that&#13;
matter) is judged by the company he&#13;
keeps, The person who ba« tor associates,&#13;
those who are in tbe habit of&#13;
frequenting places of ill repute «s classed&#13;
with them. If he associates with&#13;
Hrowtlies" be will be a rowdy in spile oi&#13;
Many persons who tremble and I, him self and will be judged as one&#13;
froth at the mouth' over what they fby b i s associates.&#13;
call the public confiscation of private&#13;
property fail to show any agitation&#13;
over the private confiscation&#13;
of public propert&#13;
It is proposed tQ tax Peruna,&#13;
Hostetter's Bitters and Lydia&#13;
Pinkhams remedies for ner suffering&#13;
sisterhood in the class with&#13;
whisky, brandy, ajod other alcoholic&#13;
combinations.&#13;
The street is a poor educator for the&#13;
young. The young man will be no&#13;
better tor spending bis evenings on&#13;
the streets of any village. If he has&#13;
-=— -- no borne he i s ^ be pittied. Ithe~b*s&#13;
a home that is tbe place for him to&#13;
spend his evenings. It he has no&#13;
books to read be bad better sit with&#13;
folded hands than sit on a dry goods&#13;
box listening to the iale remarKs of&#13;
There are five thousand fewer&#13;
post offices in the United States&#13;
now than four years ago. This&#13;
might look like a decrease in the&#13;
postal business but that is not the&#13;
case for it is the rural free delivery&#13;
rentes that have shoved tbe little&#13;
post offices out of business.&#13;
The-Oovernment Printing Office&#13;
is under investigation and bein^&#13;
accused of wasteful and even vi-&#13;
0--&#13;
cipns extravagance, but what of&#13;
Congress who authorizes the \&gt;x'vc&amp;-&#13;
ing and diqfrifonti"e nf *hft vwt&#13;
n u m b e r s o f naftlpaa rifMMimftntq^ith&#13;
which it is constantly trying to&#13;
buy votes?&#13;
A CARD.&#13;
I, the undersigned, do hereby agree&#13;
to refund the money on a 60 cent bottle&#13;
of Greene's Warranted Syrnp of&#13;
Tar if it failes ro enre your congb or&#13;
cold. I also guarantee a 25-cent bottle&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money re*&#13;
unded. tl9&#13;
Will B. Darrow.&#13;
si&#13;
Village mar&amp;halls in onr neighboring&#13;
villages are rounding up tbe young&#13;
American who is in tbe habit of "skipping&#13;
school". According to th° new&#13;
iaw every boj or girl between tbe ages&#13;
of 7 and 15 inclusive, most be in school&#13;
every day unless tbey can furnish a&#13;
satisfastory excuse.&#13;
"I Thank The Lord!"&#13;
cried Hannah Plant, of Little Rock,&#13;
Ark., "for the relief he got from Backlen's&#13;
Arnica Salve. It cured ray fearful&#13;
running sores, which nothing else&#13;
wonld heal, and from which I bad suffered&#13;
for 5 years." It is a marvelous&#13;
healer for cuts, burns and wonnds.&#13;
Guaranteed at F. A. Stgler's drug&#13;
&amp; tore; 25 cents.&#13;
Experiments have been made recently&#13;
in tbe use of peat as a fuel for.locomotives.&#13;
It was found tbat peat is&#13;
more quickly consureed*than coal, hut&#13;
that it makes an exceptionally hot fire&#13;
and makes no smoke. Peat is also&#13;
qTieaTper-than coat. There is abundance&#13;
of it to be bad; in the bogs of&#13;
Maine is a great store, and in one,&#13;
plate in Massachusetts there is saict to&#13;
he enough to supply fuel for all tbe&#13;
railroads now entering Boston tor the&#13;
next two hundred and fifty years.&#13;
The peat bogs o1 Ireland may yet fur*&#13;
atjsB a wnofcelese fuel for the steam&#13;
•agiass of Europe. This would mean'&#13;
a fttw industry fat Ireland.&#13;
"street companions'1. Tbat remark&#13;
will bear repeating and adding to.&#13;
"The young man will be no better for&#13;
spending bis evenings on the streets.,,&#13;
He cannot be a frequenter of tbem and&#13;
be as good. Nay, be cannot help himself,&#13;
he will be worse.&#13;
Young man are you in the haqifc of&#13;
spending yoor time "op town"? Who&#13;
are your associates? How are you&#13;
judged ?&#13;
A Disastrous Calamity&#13;
It is 8 disastrous calamity, when you&#13;
lose your health, because indigestion&#13;
and constipation have sapped it awsy.&#13;
Prompt relief can be bad in Dr. King's&#13;
New Life Pills. The build up your digestive&#13;
organs, and cure headache,&#13;
dizziness—oolio,—constipation,—etc^&#13;
Guaranteed A. Siglev's drug&#13;
store; 25 cents.&#13;
Hud to Hunt F o r It.&#13;
She (at the theater)—I don't understand&#13;
what the detective Is supposed&#13;
to be doing in this piece. He—I fancy&#13;
he Is looking for the plot.&#13;
It requires less effort to be polite&#13;
than disagreeable.—Dallas N e w s .&#13;
A liquid cold cure and the only&#13;
cough s y r u p which moves the bowels—&#13;
works air cold out of the system—is&#13;
Kennedy's Lavative Honey and Tar.&#13;
Cleats tbe bead and throat and Jiakes&#13;
weak lungs strong. Best lor croup,&#13;
wboopmcr congb, etc. Children love it.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
AUDITXOVAii LOCAL&#13;
A move Ti oh foal in Chelsea to&#13;
adopt standard time.&#13;
The November apportionment of&#13;
the primary sobool money will be&#13;
92.70 for each scholar in the state&#13;
making a total of $380 for the year.&#13;
Those who enjoy hunting deer have&#13;
secured their licenses and sought the&#13;
nothern part of the state. The accident&#13;
reports will soon begin to come in.&#13;
Hereafter the people of Chelsea will&#13;
have to buy their Sunday meats on&#13;
Saturday. Tbe markets of tbat village&#13;
have agreed among themselves t: keep&#13;
closed on Sunday.&#13;
Sheriff Pratt of this county has had&#13;
five persons confined who had delirium&#13;
tremens. They were onoe young and&#13;
took a drink just for a lark—tbey did&#13;
not see what the end would be.&#13;
An auto line is to be established between&#13;
Ann Arbor and Saline. It it&#13;
does and pays as welt as ones tried&#13;
elsewhere it will make perhaps two&#13;
trips and go out of commission.&#13;
Bro. Jennings of tbe Fen ton Independent&#13;
is not cracking any old chestnuts&#13;
this year. One of his patrons&#13;
has given bim a basket of the nuts&#13;
which were-grown near that- village*&#13;
Chelsea is to have a Parochial School&#13;
connected »with the church of Our&#13;
Lady of the Saored Heart, -The build&#13;
ing is tj cost $10,000 and it is intend&#13;
ed to bave it ready for use by September,&#13;
1906;&#13;
An Osceola county farmer raised&#13;
eighteen acres of potatoes which not&#13;
only paid for the 160 acres of land the&#13;
field was situvted in but also paid for&#13;
grubbing the field. It evidently pays&#13;
to clear up and crop some of our&#13;
northern counties.&#13;
County Truant Officer, Glenn Seymour,&#13;
with the assistance or Prosecut&#13;
mcr Attorney Sawyer and County&#13;
School Coromisioner Foster, has&#13;
brought over 700 truant children to&#13;
school since the first of September, in&#13;
Washtenaw county.&#13;
The people of Detroit have been&#13;
raising a great cry tbe past week because&#13;
of the erection of a statue to the&#13;
Devil by one of her citiaens. Tbe&#13;
stone image can do but little harm beside&#13;
tbe licensed "bell holes'1 which&#13;
are sending men to the "Devil" every&#13;
day in tbe city. Give the cold stone a&#13;
rest and go for thereat working^demon.&#13;
Many ul the businfss bouses in—tfa*&#13;
villages of Oakland county have baen&#13;
inrc«ROn»lii«.&#13;
Mr. .Tones—Look hero! This horse&#13;
you sold ihe runs ou to the pavement&#13;
every time he sees a motor car. Horse&#13;
Dealer—Well, you don't expect a five&#13;
pouud horse to run up a telegraph pole&#13;
or climb a tree, do you?—London Fun-&#13;
Bu*. few people are entirely free&#13;
from indigestion at this season ot tbe&#13;
year, Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is not only&#13;
tbe best remedy to use becanse it&#13;
digests what yon eat but because it also&#13;
e »ab)*-- ihe digestive apparatus to&#13;
assimilatH and transform all foods into&#13;
tissue-building blood. Kodol. relieves&#13;
sour stomach, heart barn, belcbing;&#13;
and alt forms of indigestion.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
Faith, hope and charity! Cherish the&#13;
first, preaoh the eecoud and be silent as&#13;
to the last—New Orleans Times-Demo-&#13;
-emtr— -—&#13;
Nature needs only a Little Eary Riser&#13;
now and then to keep the bowels clean,&#13;
the liver active, and tbe system&#13;
free from bile, headaches, constipation&#13;
etc. The famous little pills "Early&#13;
Risers'1 are pleasant in affect and per&#13;
feet in action. They never gripe or&#13;
sicken, but tone and strengthen the&#13;
liver and kidneys.&#13;
Bold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
beat' out of grod money paid to a&#13;
traveling "fakir" wbo agreed to put&#13;
their advertisements up in an attrac&#13;
tive shape on a set ot large cards and&#13;
display them all over tbe county.&#13;
They paid their money and are now&#13;
looking for the cards and man. It is&#13;
safe to say those people will use their&#13;
newspapers hereafter to do their ad&#13;
vertising in.&#13;
A drum used to heat the chamber of&#13;
a dwelling in Chelsea exploded -one&#13;
day last week completely demolishing&#13;
tbe chimney and badty damaging tbe&#13;
bouse. The stove had been used for&#13;
wood during the fall but a coal tire&#13;
was built and it is thought the accumulated&#13;
ash dust in the drum, with tbe&#13;
coal gas caused tha explosion. No&#13;
one Wa&lt;* injured, but a new drum stovepipe&#13;
and chimney are needed.&#13;
A cough syrup which drives a cold&#13;
out of tbe system by acting as a cathartic&#13;
on tbe bowels is offered, in&#13;
Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar.&#13;
Clears the throat, strengthens the&#13;
lungs end bronchial tubes. The moth,&#13;
er's friend and the children's favorite.&#13;
Best for croup whooping cough, etc.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
That Coar P««11»S.&#13;
The Visitor-What a delightfully&#13;
snug little flat you have! The Renter—&#13;
Isn't It? When we open the door we're&#13;
In the middle of the room, and when&#13;
the'sunshine comes in we bave to move&#13;
-jonwbof J^__furnitBML out—Chicago&#13;
Tribune;&#13;
. Do not be deceived by counterfeits&#13;
when yon buy Witch Hazal Salve.&#13;
The name of E. C. Do Witt &amp; Co, is on&#13;
every box of the genuine. Piles in&#13;
their worst form will soon pass away&#13;
if yon apply Da Witt's Witch Hazel&#13;
Salve night and morning. Best for&#13;
cuts, burns, boils, tetter, sossma, ate.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist&#13;
-r~e*- m* U&#13;
If Yoii Knew&#13;
you could be rrtleved of that periodih' ;&#13;
or chronic, nervoua or »ick headSohe&#13;
In a i£w minutes, would you continue&#13;
t 0 lSpJoiaUy when you are . e n u r e d of&#13;
the K e t t n a t the remedy is .perfectly&#13;
hVrmleii. and will have absolutely no&#13;
o?h«v^reotT*xoept to relieve «nd oure&#13;
the pain. _ . « - . . , • Dr. Miles'&#13;
Anti-Pain Pills, wttl brins such relief, quick and&lt; sure.&#13;
That is not all. They wiU prevent&#13;
a*d oure all kinds • of pain—Neuralgia.&#13;
Backache. Rheumatism, Menstrual&#13;
Pains, Stomachache, e t c&#13;
••Four years a#;o I began using Dr.&#13;
Anti-P"a in' Pills for headache. I&#13;
11 kin&lt;&#13;
never found&#13;
havV'used all kinds of powders and pills,&#13;
^&#13;
&gt;ut fou&#13;
eliof they do.&#13;
pi .&#13;
anything to give the&#13;
MRS, B. D. WATROUS, Mahoning, Pa.&#13;
The first package will benefit. If not,&#13;
the druggist will return your money.&#13;
26 doses, 25 cents. Never sold in bulk.&#13;
Son Lost Mother.&#13;
" Consumption run? in our family,&#13;
and through it I lost my mother,"&#13;
writes E. B. Reid, tf Harmony, S1e.&#13;
"For the psst five years, however, on&#13;
tbe slightest sign of a cough or cold, I&#13;
have taken Dr. King's New Discover/&#13;
lor Consumption which has saved me&#13;
from serious lung trouble.,1 His moth&#13;
ers death was a sad loss to Mr. Reid,&#13;
bnt be learned that lung troulle must&#13;
not be neglected, and how to cure it.&#13;
Quickest relief and cure for coughs and&#13;
colds. Price 50e. and $1 00 guaranteed&#13;
at F. A. Sigler's drug fctore. Trial&#13;
b3*tle Ifee.&#13;
COUCHS ARE DANCER&#13;
Signals, Stop Them With&#13;
W,C'T.U. *&#13;
Edited bv the Plnekoey W. C. T- V-&#13;
' Princston theological seminary&#13;
is airangiug to stop the sale of&#13;
beer in the Princeton Inn,&#13;
I reoeived a letter from a woman&#13;
wbo thanled me for closing the&#13;
saloons on Sunday. She* sai4 it&#13;
meaut bread for family where&#13;
they did not have it previously.&#13;
One such letter from a good woman&#13;
more than compensates for&#13;
the curses from ten thousand outlaws.—&#13;
Gov. Folk,&#13;
South Carolina is in the midst&#13;
of a red-hot campaign, led by ex.&#13;
SeliaTor M c l ^ n n T ^ ^ f t t n st the&#13;
state liquoi dispnusary system.&#13;
He is opposed to Tillman and his&#13;
whole state saloon plan. He is&#13;
out for the governorship on the&#13;
platform: ''Take South Carolina&#13;
out of the liquor business*"&#13;
The movement for the earlier&#13;
closing of public houses in the old&#13;
il„a,nwdi ;isf e^xLtneAnindni ng. TTUh*e Lr o*nnAd*on n LPHE CURBTHArs SURE for all Diaea- B08 o f Thrpatand Lnngs or Money&#13;
c o T i s t y C P I I I I ^ jfKEIS T j J I S L .&#13;
of Liverpool and Leeds, and many&#13;
borough councils have passed resolutions&#13;
calling oirthe government^&#13;
to confer upon licensing justices&#13;
power to enforce a later opening&#13;
nouses. A memorial, signed by&#13;
representatives of all denominations&#13;
and by persons of all grades&#13;
of society, has been forwarded to&#13;
the archbishop of Canterbury, inviting&#13;
him to visit Liverpool and&#13;
speak on the subject.&#13;
T ~ ~ •*%:&#13;
Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery&#13;
CONSUMPTION p . r .&#13;
§LDSS M d 50c* $1.00&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
Digests what you oat*&#13;
E3X0 PEYREIEANRCSE'&#13;
TRADE MARK*&#13;
DastONt .&#13;
COPVftlOMTa * c .&#13;
Anyone Mndlnf a tk«teb and d««hrtlqn may&#13;
quickly McerUin oar opinion tr— wkvthc&#13;
invention is probably]&#13;
Mr&gt;&gt;l&gt;.&#13;
I? tho muscles iire not 11 m l , there&#13;
c ihiiDt_ In- a full demand for sleep, unless,&#13;
of course, the bruin has been&#13;
overworked. Healthy bodily exercise,&#13;
tarried to the point of rendering rest&#13;
sweetly welcome, is one natural means&#13;
of promoting sleep.&#13;
Dragging&#13;
Down&#13;
Pains&#13;
are a symptom of xtm fctost serious&#13;
trouble which can attack a woman,&#13;
viz: falling of the womb. With this,&#13;
generally, comes irregular and painful&#13;
periods, weakening drains, backache,&#13;
headache, nervousness, dizziness, irritability,&#13;
tired feeling, etc. The cure Is&#13;
WINE&#13;
OF&#13;
The Female Regulator&#13;
tbat wonderful, curative, vegetable extract,&#13;
which exerts such a marvelous,&#13;
strengthening influence, on all female&#13;
organs. Cartful relieves pain and&#13;
regulates the menses. It Is a sure&#13;
and permanent cure for all female&#13;
complaints.&#13;
At all druggists and dealers In 11.00&#13;
bottles.&#13;
invention•• ciesr ptarionb aobalyr poaptienniotanb flier.e *C wofmcentinuenrio man- •UeMntU f srtereic. tOlyl deoesntf ladgmentcUy. lfftoWr B•e0c0oKn ncoMn UPanttean. t*&#13;
jpePeaiatel nntost itcaek ewni thtGourot ocfhfha rgMe,a nInn tAhe C O. receive Scientific American. A handeomoly illustrated weekly. Jjuveat circulation&#13;
of any scientific journal. Terms, S3 a&#13;
year; four months, #L Bold by all newsdealers.&#13;
MUNN i% Co.36,Br^*-'- Hew Yorfc&#13;
Braacb Offloe, 625 F St, Washington. D.G.&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach No appetite, loss ot strength, nervousness,&#13;
headache, constipation, bad breath,&#13;
general debility, sour risings, and catarrh&#13;
of the stomach are all due to Indigestion.&#13;
Kodol cures indigestion. This new discovery&#13;
rearesents~The natural juices ot digestion&#13;
as they-ejUsjin a healthy stomach,&#13;
combined with the^g^Tgreeaatteesstt known tonlp&#13;
and reconstructive properties. Kodol Dyspepsia&#13;
Cure does not only cure indigestion&#13;
and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy&#13;
cures all stomach troubles by cleansing,&#13;
purifying, sweetening and strengthening&#13;
the mucous membranes lining the stemach.&#13;
Mr. S. S. Ball, of Ravenswood, W, Vs., says:—&#13;
I was troubled with sour stomach for twenty years,&#13;
Kodol cured me and we are now using it In milk&#13;
torbsby."&#13;
Kodol Dfeetts Whei Yon l * t&#13;
Bottles only. $1.00 Size holding 2½ times the trial&#13;
size, which sells for 50 cents.&#13;
Prepared by E. O. DeWlTTfcOO., OHIOAQO.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
St a t e o f M i c h i g a n , Cmmtynf Livlogstou,&#13;
ss. At n session ofthe Probsie court for sa'd&#13;
counly, hwld at tbe Probate office !n the village of&#13;
Uowell, on Wednesday the 25th day of October, in&#13;
the year one ilioiuaori nine hundred ond five.&#13;
Present, Arthur A. Montague, Judge of Probate.&#13;
In the mstler of the eslnU o»&#13;
JAMES HKKKXKNAN, deceased&#13;
Now cemffl KUla A Kuhn, adminplrator of&#13;
t he estate of said dect aeed a» d represents to this&#13;
coflrt that h*i is ready to render h rtnsl account&#13;
in sal J estate.&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered that Friday, tbe 24lh&#13;
day of November next, at leu o'clock In the forenoon&#13;
at said Probate Office, be assigned for'the&#13;
heari n g o f sa! d accou nt.&#13;
And it in fiirth&lt; r ordered thut a copy of this&#13;
order be published ia the i inckney Dispatch, a&#13;
newspaper printed and circulating in said county,&#13;
three successive weeks previous to said daj of&#13;
hearing. 't 46&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAGUE,&#13;
Judge ot Probate.&#13;
«1 StJirnUtD AWFUL FAIR&#13;
In my womb and ovaries,"writes Mrs.&#13;
Naomi Bake, of Webster Grove, Mo.,&#13;
"also In my right and left sides, and&#13;
my menses were very painful and irregular.&#13;
Since taking Cardui 1 feel Ukea&#13;
new woman asd do hot suffer as I did.&#13;
It to tbe best medicine I ever took."&#13;
BeWHVs tt* * • * •&#13;
STATE of MICHIGAN; Tbe Probate Court for&#13;
tbe Conntv cf Livii gst^o. At a session of&#13;
•aid Court, held at the Probate Office in the VJ1&#13;
lage of Howell, in said county, on the 9th day of&#13;
November, A. D. 1905.&#13;
President: ARTHOB A. MONTAOUK, Judge of&#13;
Probate. In the matter ot the estate of&#13;
THOMAS FKATH*HLT, deceased,&#13;
Henrlett D. Peatheriy having filed ID said court&#13;
iter petition praying tbat a certain instrument ia&#13;
writing purporting to be the last «111 and testament&#13;
of said deeeaeed, now on file in MM eojm&#13;
be admitted to jirobite, and theVthe administration&#13;
of said estate be granted to herself or to some&#13;
other suitable person,&#13;
It is ordered tbat tbe eighth day of December, A.&#13;
D. 1900, at ten o'clock In tbe forenooa, at said&#13;
Probate Once, be and is hereby appolnftd for&#13;
bearing said petition.&#13;
And it i« further ordered that puhlio notice&#13;
tfcereo&amp;e* giv••&gt; by publication of a copy of tela&#13;
order for I seeoesshre weeks previous to said day&#13;
of hearing, la tha Pinokney DISPATCH, a newspaper,&#13;
printed and circulated in aaideoaetj.&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAGUS,&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
M '*H&#13;
/ -&#13;
&lt;&#13;
1T'-«&#13;
',&amp;&#13;
r &gt; •• ••'&#13;
j,iyiJ4ltpiij|^A.4^ij,pip. i mp i m in&#13;
- , ¾ ^ ^&#13;
' • ' " • J . i A &lt;&#13;
' • * I . 1 , . * T&#13;
* ' •&#13;
-/:;&#13;
"V"&#13;
mT ; :• Tr.JW-5&#13;
. . &lt; * * , ' • . , * . ' &gt; • ; « # * * • &gt;&#13;
, • ; , » . '&#13;
^&#13;
• « &amp; ' ..Cfj,. pm&#13;
"'/•'V , ' » , "&#13;
/ * / •&#13;
mmm&#13;
^ ( , r&#13;
vr* * r v . -&lt;- •.&#13;
•to&#13;
BsmMootot- tocwrtl—t T U Chicago&#13;
V ..&#13;
" Great Wetleni Railway&#13;
• » » ' . • • .&#13;
to points in Jkriaoat, Arkansas, ASSIBifboii,&#13;
Drilifth Colombia, Canadian&#13;
N*rtbweit, Colorado, Idaho, Indian&#13;
Territory, Iowa, Kansas, Manitoba,&#13;
Jftoiieo, Miontflota, Miaioari, Montana,&#13;
Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico,&#13;
North and 8oott&gt; Dakota, Oregon,&#13;
Texas, Washington and Wyoming at&#13;
greatly reduced rates for the r:und&#13;
trip. Tickets on sale the first and&#13;
third Tuesdays of each month. For&#13;
farther information apply to P. R.&#13;
Baa's Pareaaeaatjleaeai&#13;
is orten is ar woman'*, ttu%\&#13;
Too*. A. Austin, U«v r.pj toe "Kopnrv,&#13;
liean," ot Leavenworth, I n d , was not&#13;
unreasonable, when he refused to&#13;
allow the doctors to operate on bis&#13;
wife, tor female tronble, "Instead"&#13;
he says,*• we concluded to try Electric&#13;
BitWrs. My wife waa then to aisk,&#13;
she could bardly leave ber bed, and&#13;
five [5] physicians bad failed to relieve&#13;
her. After taking Electrie Bitters,&#13;
she was perfectly cored, and can now&#13;
prelprm ail her household duties.1'&#13;
hosier, T. P. A , U 5 Adams 8t., j Guaranteed by P. A. 8igler druggist,&#13;
Chicago, 111. t-50| price SOcents.&#13;
* • * ' /&#13;
^.:- :m3g®&gt;&#13;
•**f&#13;
M M M f T i n ' IM m.&#13;
ital4kl&gt;^»il^^iiily atriiil iiill i nl I I I&#13;
snr" Major&#13;
mi* in nni"ii|imji|ifji|i&#13;
. • ' &lt; * « " %&#13;
'W&#13;
^&#13;
T h e word results means a whole lot t o the farmer of to-day and it i s&#13;
especially attractive to the homesccker or those seeking new locations.&#13;
If w e tell y o u of a country where y o u are sure of success, will y o u&#13;
believe u s ? It i s only necessary for y o u to farm the land and the&#13;
best results will follow—a State which the government reports will&#13;
s h o w leads in the production of wheat. It a b a ranks among the first&#13;
in the raising: o f corn, alfalfa, timothy and other products, together&#13;
with stock raising. W e speak of KANSAS T n l i greaTSrate oftfac W e s t , where Iaad*~ean4)e purchaacdJrom45=•&#13;
to $30 per acre Which equels t h e returns of the $50 to $150 per acre&#13;
lands o f other States. E A S T E R N COLORADO is identical in most&#13;
respects and the same opportunities are offered there. B u y quick&#13;
while the lands are cheap and secure the benefit of an excellent invest-&#13;
^ , ^ T ^ l ? M I S S O U R I P A C I F I C R A I L W A Y touches the&#13;
heart o f thai rich agricultural region and extremely low rates are&#13;
offered, allowing stop-over at pleasure in certain territory for inspection&#13;
o f lands, etc. Write us and w e will send y o u free descriptive&#13;
literature and full information.&#13;
H. D . A R M S T R O N G H. c. TOWNSEND,&#13;
" • ^ * - » • » • - - ^ CENCBALPAS»ENOCR AND TICKET AGENT,&#13;
8 8 G r l a w o l d a t . D e t r o i t , M i c h * ST. LOUIS, MO.&#13;
H A V E S &amp; c N A&#13;
m***'1''&#13;
D O N T G O S O U T H REPRESENTATIVE OF THE&#13;
GREAT CENTRAL&#13;
C. H. &amp; D.-PERB MARQITTE-C. D. 6t L.&#13;
AND HAVE LEARNED OF THE SERVICE TH S LINE OFFERS TO&#13;
Flortideaa nsA sChuebvail leN aNsseawu —O—P -&#13;
PULLMAN SLEEPING CARS THROUGH FROM&#13;
D E T R O I T and T O L . E D O fo J A C K S O N V I L L E&#13;
During the'winter. Let us arrange your trip. We will check your baggage through,&#13;
reserve sleeping car accomodations and attend to all the details. A postal card addressed&#13;
to either of the undersigned will bring full information.&#13;
v [Original.!&#13;
During my college d a y s our family&#13;
lived In Washington, and a s they left&#13;
it before t h e beginning a n d returned&#13;
after tbe close of hot weather' I w a i&#13;
not there in vacations. During this pe*&#13;
riod I understood that my sister had u&#13;
love affair, b u t since she w a s older&#13;
than 1 a n d I w a s a t au a g e w h e n neither&#13;
my sympathy nor my Judgment&#13;
w a s In demand very little w a s said to&#13;
me about the affair.&#13;
A f e w years later the Spanish-American&#13;
w a r broke out, and I, being a lieutenant&#13;
In the national guard, w e n t out&#13;
to fight the dons. I n the very first encounter&#13;
in whieh I took part I wan&#13;
wounded and taken prisoner. I had the&#13;
good fortune t o be located near o n e ot&#13;
the best Spanish hospitals, to which 1&#13;
w a s taken a n d treated with every attention.&#13;
One morning the officer of the&#13;
day went through t h e ward where 1&#13;
w a s lying in company with t h e surgeon.&#13;
W h e n tbe officer passed m y bed&#13;
I noticed "that m y face caught his attention.&#13;
Indeed b e stared a t m e a s it&#13;
he had k n o w n me before. T h e next&#13;
day I received a basket of fruit to&#13;
which.watt attached the card of Major&#13;
Adelberto Angelo.&#13;
Major Angelo c a m e to s e e me every&#13;
day- after that and loaded me with attentions.&#13;
Naturally' I became very&#13;
fond of him. I endeavored to gain from&#13;
him the cause of his having noticed&#13;
m e and of b i s attentions, but failed&#13;
signally. H e declared that it w a s the&#13;
result of fancy. The - intimacy lasted&#13;
five weeks, at the end of which time 1&#13;
w a s discharged^fwmLtheJtMiflpital and&#13;
very soon after exchanged.&#13;
The next time I s a w Angelo he w a s&#13;
lying mortally wounded on t h e battlefield.&#13;
We w e r e pressing the Spaniards&#13;
"before SaHHagO,, and h a t i n g eterrar"&#13;
a w a y directly, in front of our regiment&#13;
with a Gatling gun w e pushed&#13;
forward over a field. Stepping over&#13;
what I supposed w a s a corpse, I&#13;
wWefr atootr~eeeWT==B^ftr^=^fi^=woT^&#13;
spoken iu a voice familiar to m e :&#13;
"Come!"&#13;
Entering the room, the fading l!ght&#13;
coming through a window showed ine&#13;
Major Angelo raising Adele in h i s&#13;
arms. I passed my hands before my&#13;
e y e s to clear ray vision, and when T&#13;
had done so I s a w Adele lying alone,&#13;
stiff and stark. She w a s dead.&#13;
A f e w days later my mother told m e&#13;
that Adele's affair of the heart w a s&#13;
with Senor Adelberto Angelo, w h o w a s&#13;
at tbe time a n attache of the Spanish&#13;
legation. C. A U G U S T U S P O R T E R .&#13;
appearance.&#13;
the war,&#13;
raw~~nrgt sue wire&#13;
She wished me to talk about&#13;
ut l agreed With my motliei&#13;
D . G . E D W A R D S ,&#13;
P. X. M., C. H. A D.,&#13;
t 48 Cincinnati, Ohio.&#13;
H. F. M O E b U E R ,&#13;
(J. P . A., Pere Marquette,&#13;
Detroit, Michigan.&#13;
'. .«k-&#13;
A TRINITY OF TREASURES&#13;
Triple Extract of Violet, French Roses Concentrate,&#13;
Imperial Hair Tonic. Three High Grade Essentials&#13;
t o the Toilet at the price of one of them alone, v i s t&#13;
8 1 . 0 0 .&#13;
We manufacture and sell these goods direct t o&#13;
t h e consumer, thus cutting out the profits of t h e&#13;
middlemen.&#13;
REGULAR RKTAIL P R I O I&#13;
Triple Violet Extract .50&#13;
French Roses Concentrate • - 1.00&#13;
(Makes 2 quarts exquisite toilet water.)&#13;
Imperial Hair Tonic • - - .50&#13;
$3.00&#13;
Our Prloe for theThree-ONB DOLLAR.,&#13;
A Saving to YOlf of 100 Per Cent It'nt it Worth While?&#13;
Writ* to u» for descriptive litfratnre of the*, articles.&#13;
Ths CINCINNATI PERFUME CO. Ipo., Cincinnati, Ohio.&#13;
Tht drtadtd Wash Day - no m o n . W i t h l n f m i d t t a t y by THE l-V WASHING TABLETS • • " wmnotinjnntheflaertrabrtea,&#13;
•m • - ^ | — • - - ^ ^ • They are strictly free from adds&#13;
• V . * 1 1 Kl G | T A B L E T S I ^Tbey d?^eworkwiihoiitnibhtat.&#13;
Tbejowbeuaed la hard itater.&#13;
They save time sad the hard&#13;
work on washday. They are Jndla.,&#13;
panatbl. tor OonjieTpaneaJLaoaCar?&#13;
tains and Tr.i mmings. Ta&gt;• » wul&#13;
remove ttidn* from Table ubaes&#13;
with ab^otary no robbing. They&#13;
arc aooaomkal to u**T&gt;&lt;»Mt&#13;
elothas ate more worn otrt on M»&#13;
washboard than by aetaal wear.&#13;
Theyar. sold on thair merit*. f7^^T?A?L*Ercrfr^^^i.,^«rpiifi^Cpas:&#13;
.*»&#13;
that it would not be well to do so, and,&#13;
though Adele kept turning to it, I&#13;
held to other topics. Indeed, on ac&#13;
count of my sister's condition, I w a s&#13;
not asked to recount war's horrors, as&#13;
most of my comrades were, and I w a s&#13;
glad of it. Such experiences are more&#13;
agreeable to the narrator when- mellowed&#13;
by distance, and in m y case,&#13;
with the shadow of death over us, I&#13;
did not wish t o dwell upon them.&#13;
One day I w a s sitting by Adele's&#13;
bed chatting with her on ordinary topics&#13;
w h e u she-said suddenly:&#13;
"You were wounded and taken to a&#13;
hospital when y o u were in Cuba,&#13;
weren't you?"&#13;
"Yes."&#13;
"And a Spaniard w a s very kind to&#13;
you?"&#13;
"Yes. B u t y o u have heard nothing&#13;
about it from m e or from father or&#13;
mother, because I have not told them&#13;
a word about it. H o w did'you"—&#13;
"Hush. Don't tell them that I mentioned&#13;
i t "&#13;
"But tell m e " -&#13;
At the moment mother came into the&#13;
room and broke in upon my question.&#13;
The next time I w a s alone with Adele&#13;
I endeavored to reopen the subject, but&#13;
an expression passed over her face&#13;
that warned me to desist, and I never&#13;
referred to it again.&#13;
One evening between d a y and dark&#13;
I w a s passing through the lower hall&#13;
when I s a w a figure of a man come&#13;
j in a t the front door. S i n c e . h i s back&#13;
, w a s t o . t h e light, I could not s e e his&#13;
! face, but it w a s familiar. He appeared&#13;
to be a gentleman and walked&#13;
through the hall a s if perfectly familiar&#13;
with the premises. For this reason&#13;
! I did not regard htm as a thief, t u t permitted&#13;
h im to g o where h e liked, following&#13;
him from a distance. H e mounted&#13;
the staircase, anil I noticed that&#13;
though there w a s but the bare wood to&#13;
walk on h i s step w a s s o light that I&#13;
did not hear i t H e w a s considerably&#13;
in advance of me and had turned and&#13;
disappeared d o w n the upper hall hefore&#13;
I reached the top of the staircase.&#13;
When I dkl reach It h e w a s nowhere&#13;
t o be seen. H e must have entered&#13;
j some jrooQ on_ that floor, jind^ since&#13;
Adele's w a s one or liiem : u w r t e d tow&#13;
a r d it. Just b e f o t » reaching her door,&#13;
Subscribe tor the Pinckney Dispatch.&#13;
All the news for $1.00 per year.&#13;
Every once of food you eat that fails&#13;
to digest does a pound 0. harm. It&#13;
turns the entire meal into poison. This&#13;
not only deprives tbe blood of tbe necessary&#13;
tissue building material; but it&#13;
poisons it. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is a&#13;
perfect di#e#taut. It digest* the food&#13;
regardless oi tbe condition of tbe stomach.&#13;
It allows that organ to rest&#13;
and get strong again. Relieves belching,&#13;
heart burn, sour stomach, iniigestion&#13;
palpitation of the heart, etc.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
•rat on i«mA4. uaATtw ooow nm»i mmn\jmnwm~m&#13;
SNSSSRSSS?&#13;
Railroad 0uide&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
• S a c t J L p x . S O , 4S&gt;OB.&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon as follows:&#13;
For Detroit and East,&#13;
10:48 a. m., 2:19 p . » . 8:58 9 . m.&#13;
For Grand Bapids, North t a d West,&#13;
9:26 a. m., 2:19 p . m., 6:18 p . A .&#13;
For Saginaw and Bay City,&#13;
10:48 a. m., 2:19 p. mM 8:58 p . m .&#13;
For Toledo'and South,&#13;
10:48 a. m., 2:19 p . m.,&#13;
F * A * X B A Z V . Jj.Jr\Jf OBLLEfc»&#13;
Agent, tenth Lyon. G. P. A.. Detroit.&#13;
All the news for $1.00 per year.&#13;
She f uttkiuji guspaufc.&#13;
PDSUSBXD aTSif fEfcaiSAT xoaarsev r&#13;
F R A N K U, A N D R E W S So &lt;SO.&#13;
C0ITOM »»0 PKOMIITOM.&#13;
6 abKription Price | I In Advance.&#13;
Sotered ax the Poatoffice at Pittckaey, Micaigan&#13;
M tecoad-clMe matter&#13;
Adyertiaing rates made known on application.&#13;
tfrand Trunk Railway 8yste».&#13;
Eaat Bound ft cm f i n d ne?&#13;
No* 8 S Paw eager Ex. Sunday, 9:88 A. If.&#13;
.No. SCTsmttger Ex. Sunday, 4:JSP. M.&#13;
WeM BtnrdfroB* Pirtknty&#13;
No. 27 Fanitntei Ex. Sunday, 10:01 A. V.&#13;
No. 29 T$tteager Ex, 6nnd»y. ¢:44 P. M*&#13;
W. H.Clarfc, Ajeat,&#13;
Baatnesa Cards. $4.00 per year.&#13;
r*ath and marriage notices pabllaned tree.&#13;
Announcement* of entertainments may be paid&#13;
for, 1« dealred. by pr a n t i n g i h e office witb tick&#13;
eta of admiealon. In ca»e ticket*are not &gt;r&gt;ag)X&#13;
t0 tne office,regul*rrateawillbecbar?fd.&#13;
edA altl 5m ceanttte*r p lear l loicnael onro ftricaec ctioolnu mthne wrelolif b, ef ocrh e*arjcihd&#13;
insertion. Where no time ia apecifled, ail notice*&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
Till be charged for accordingly, &amp;T All changes&#13;
of adterUeemenu MOST reach thiaofflee-ns early&#13;
aa TCBSDAT morning to insure a* Insertion tb*&#13;
tame week.&#13;
JOS PSIJVIIJVG/&#13;
In all ita branches', a specialty. Webeveailkinds&#13;
"and the latest styles of Type, etc., which enables&#13;
oa to execute all kinds of work, such as Books,&#13;
Pampleta, Posters, Programme*. BUI Heads, Note&#13;
low as goc&#13;
ALL BILLS PATABLX ,Fiaer 0» • vanr MONTH.&#13;
glanced d o w n T&lt;TW sure that*I shojul4.&#13;
not touch it, a n d looked into the livid&#13;
face of Major Angelo. It w a s not permissible&#13;
for me to leave my company,&#13;
but I did. Stooping, I raised his head.&#13;
Angelo opened his eyes, and a loving&#13;
smile told me that h e recognized me.&#13;
I s a w him try to move his lips to speak,&#13;
but the effort w a s a failure. Then he&#13;
fell back—dead. ^~NI Heei," Statementa.Caxda, Auction Billa,etc.,in&#13;
I went home, like most of mv com- eiiperier styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices a*&#13;
rades, sick, but it w a s not long be- low as gooS work can be aone.&#13;
fore I w a s on my feet agaiu and&#13;
joined the family in October in Wash&#13;
ington. My, sister had for some time&#13;
been going into a decline, aud my&#13;
mother forbade me to excite her witb&#13;
accounts of my w a r experiences, especially&#13;
my stay in hospital. When I&#13;
went Into Adele's room tto greet her&#13;
after my long and eventful absence, I&#13;
w a s puzzled at the look s h e gave me'&#13;
It w a s a hungry look, a look a s if I&#13;
might ha :e n e w s to tell her that she&#13;
longed to hear, I w a s shocked a t hei&#13;
"mirj&#13;
THE VILIAGS DIRECTOR&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBSBIDBMT Vf. S. Place way&#13;
TACSTISB Ruben Finch, James Hoc be,&#13;
Will Kenned/ S t , Alfred Monks,&#13;
P. O. Joansoa, M. Boone.&#13;
Cuaax. Boss Head&#13;
TBXAaaaia P.O. Jackson&#13;
Aseaasoa O. W.MurU&#13;
SrasnT COMJUSSIONSB Alfred Mooks&#13;
HKaXTHOrncBB Dr. d. r\3t«ler&#13;
__ATToaj*xY L. E. Hewlett&#13;
3T£Kraxxs ii. Broaraa&#13;
•Gray Hair is a bar to employment and to&#13;
pleasure, but there is relief from it in these&#13;
clays. It can be restored to its natural color&#13;
by using Mrs. R. W. Allen's Vita Hair Color&#13;
Bestorer. It is not a dye but in a natural -ray&#13;
it «i*fa« in t h o mn*mt yvmpoUing t h « a e c r e t i o n l&#13;
6f the pigments that give Hfe end color to the "&#13;
hair in three days. It JS not sticky or gTeasy;no&#13;
odor; doesn't sUin the scalp. ABSOLUTELY&#13;
HARMLESS, fl.00 «, bottle. All droggists.&#13;
FLORIMELLA&#13;
CREAM&#13;
the hygienic skin food gives rosy freshness&#13;
and beauty to tbe skin. Removes aJl imperfections&#13;
and imparities. A perfect complex-&#13;
Ion. 60 cents at your druggists, or sent&#13;
prepaid on receipt of price.&#13;
MARK W. ALLEN A CO.&#13;
Detroit. Mich. •&#13;
RED CHIEF&#13;
Corn Shelter,&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
METHODIST KP1SCOPAL CHUKC'H.&#13;
Kev. K. A Emerick psator. Service* every&#13;
Sunday morning »1 n&gt;:3o, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 0 'clock. Prayer meeting Thar s*&#13;
day evenings. Sunday eciiooi at close of morning&#13;
service. Miss ftUar VAHFLKBT, Sunt. -&#13;
CiONttftblOArlOaAL OHUttCH.&#13;
» Kev. G. W. Myine pastor. Service ever)&#13;
SunUay "uoruini at 10:SO aud eiery Sunday&#13;
evenln* at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting Thura&#13;
day eveninga. auai*y school at close of morn&#13;
ingservive. Kev. K. H. Crane, Supt,, Mocco&#13;
Teeple Sec.&#13;
ST. i l A K r a CATHOLIC 0HUK0H.&#13;
Kev. M. J. Commerford, i'astor. »Jervices&#13;
-very Sunday. i*ow mass ai 7:*U0 clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9:30 a. m. Catechism&#13;
4 t 3:0U p. m„ vespers and benediction at7:»u p.m&#13;
SOCIETIES:&#13;
The A. O. H. Society of this place, meets every&#13;
third Sunday intne Fr, Matthew Hall.&#13;
Joan Tuomey and M. T. Kelly,County Delegates&#13;
M&gt;HK W. C. T. U. meets the first Friday of each&#13;
X month at * :&amp; p. in. at tbe home 01 Or. H. F.&#13;
Mgler. Everyone interested in temperance is&#13;
coafljally invited. Mrs. Ual Siller, Pres; Mr».&#13;
Kits iiurlee, Secretary.&#13;
-ftnlftnt©ct._&#13;
Clamps oa Barrel,&#13;
as easily HH 011 Boitr ^&#13;
Adjastt itself to&#13;
•ftle for Operator&#13;
to Piach Haad.&#13;
Is guaranteed to do as good if not&#13;
better work than any shelter on the&#13;
Market. Throws cobs outside every&#13;
time. Cold rolled steel axle. Requires&#13;
no wrench. Shells popcorn Splendidly&#13;
by tightening tension o n spring. All&#13;
repairs f umished free of charge. Every&#13;
farmer should have one. For sale b y&#13;
hardware and implement dealers.&#13;
MANUFACTURED .BY&#13;
BRINLY-HARDY CO., Incorporated,&#13;
Louisville, Ky., U. S. A.&#13;
INieC.T. A. and B. Society otthla place, me*&#13;
. eve// third Saturaay evening m the Fr. Jaai-&#13;
:hew Hall. JohnDonohue,Treslaent.&#13;
KNIGHTS OF MACCA3KKS.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before fuL&#13;
01 the moon at their hall ia the Swarthout bldg&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
L. IS. SMITH, Sir Knight Commaade;&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No.7«, F A. A. M. Keyulai&#13;
Communication Tuesdav evening, on or before&#13;
thefull oi the moon. Kirk Van winkle, tt . M&#13;
RDER OF EASTERN STAR meet*each n.outk&#13;
0 following the n&#13;
A A. M. meeting, Mas.&#13;
the Friday evening the^reguiai F.&#13;
OKI EK . . . _ . . _ .&#13;
first Thursday evening of each Month in the&#13;
Maccabee hall. C. L. (irlines V. C.&#13;
f A DIES OF THE MACCABEKS. Meat every Is&#13;
• j and drd Saturday of each month at 4:30 p m. a&#13;
K70. T. M. hall. Visiting sisters cordially la&#13;
vited. Liu*. CONIWAY, Lady Com.&#13;
'NIGHTSo*f« LVTA%tiVA&amp;i&gt;&#13;
L F. L. Andrews P. M,&#13;
* .&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. P. S!Oi.|R M. D. C. L. SIOA.tR M, D&#13;
. DRS. SIGLER &amp; SI0LER,&#13;
Phyaiciaaa aad Sargeoa*. All calls prompt ly&#13;
attended to day er night. Ofaeei on MainiUatt&#13;
riaokney, Mich.&#13;
ILS0NS&#13;
ANTI-PAIN ;SOLID&#13;
INIMENT • * * » •&#13;
A quick and effective cure for Rbetun-&#13;
; ati3m, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lnmbaro Heaaa&#13;
;he and other nervous pains and aches on&#13;
any part of the body, if you suffer from&#13;
ar&gt;y of the above ills, we-say In all sincerity&#13;
give our worthy ANTI-PAJN SOLID U N -&#13;
IMENr a fair trial.&#13;
ANTI-PAIN SOLID LINIMENT comes&#13;
I in a neat box in paste form, different from&#13;
other liniments, " Yes. indeed," it ia too&#13;
precious to lose by breakage or apilhnf.&#13;
AU yon have to do is fo apply a little or&#13;
this liniment to the effected parts to relieve&#13;
the pain instantly, which eventually per-&#13;
We'Jaarautee ANTI-PAIN SOLID LIHIMENT&#13;
to do all we claim for it, or monej&#13;
I refunded.&#13;
Send fbr a box to-day and nave Hon aand&#13;
in case of emergency, yon will b t&#13;
I than pleased with the result&#13;
Prloe 20 Ctnts.&#13;
P w sale by oar agents or yon mayottfer&#13;
direct from us. Sent postpaid oa reosjptof 8rice. Agents wanted everywhere* Wrtto&#13;
&gt;r terms.&#13;
HENRY NELSON k CO., EokvtN, Hbw. f&#13;
- * l J&#13;
•.v-i"&#13;
- ^ ¾ ¾&#13;
m&#13;
•*.&gt;;&#13;
a m&#13;
P C ;&#13;
/ J \$i&#13;
V -f $pit MAW *.&amp;H4wiM '«*&#13;
Author of "Tho Bank Tratfedy"&#13;
fc .\i&#13;
0097*0**. l a e a . b§ *«••&#13;
sasaiisas&#13;
f&#13;
CH^rrtn ^ocivJtcontKiuid.&#13;
Much had been said regarding the&#13;
motiveajtf^te jqtfeoVtaft Mr. Stevens&#13;
contei^uVthe^, were manifestly as f i ^ J . o i i ; ^ , ^ . ^ ^ defendant&#13;
There was no doubt he had become&#13;
enatoored wKh hie brothers wife and&#13;
he had deeded/ to posees* hex for&#13;
his . m ^ i ; &lt; | ( vfead repeateidly urked\| it than rj^ldi^iyjiy,&#13;
m a r ^ g e ^ M t , ^ o t until after the&#13;
&lt;ieata of Xenora, who had been murti^&#13;
rett to remove so dangerous a fitness&#13;
to hie post. When he became&#13;
convinced'that the workman called&#13;
Primus Edes waa no other than the&#13;
true vane Hamilton, there was but&#13;
oneii course open. IJe must renounce&#13;
his .claims or remove/ the true owner.&#13;
H e &gt; h o e e thelatter The shot-was&#13;
either fired by his own hand or by his&#13;
emissary, Solomon Marks, who waa a&#13;
fit tool for any such emergency.&#13;
The judge was very Impressive In&#13;
his summary of the case, which he&#13;
said was different from any other on&#13;
record. He .not only reviewed the&#13;
evidence on both sides as usual, setting&#13;
forth the claims oT each and explaining&#13;
corroborating and collateral&#13;
evidence, but he spoke of the gross&#13;
charges which would be made afterwards&#13;
of forgery, perjury, and perhaps&#13;
murder, against the person who&#13;
sustained defeat. He solemnly charged&#13;
them, therefore, to deliberate long&#13;
and wisely before deciding, that the&#13;
gravest conviction of duty ahd^ justice&#13;
called upon the best and wisest&#13;
faculties of the human mind to aid&#13;
them in a decision like this, upon&#13;
-which'-TOstedHHichrgreat-andunusual&#13;
Issues. It was not alone a question of&#13;
property, but of family and of life&#13;
and death. Therefore, let them deliberate&#13;
well before deciding.&#13;
Tvrn nighty unfl a day passed hfrore&#13;
a decision was reached, and then&#13;
it was in favor of the present Incumbent&#13;
of the Hamilton estates, who was&#13;
declared to be the true and legal owner,&#13;
Vane Hamilton; and an order for&#13;
the arrest of Henry Ashley, alias Primus&#13;
Edes, was filed by the order of&#13;
up.; and * kicks the bucket ^ver an'&#13;
proves that the first is all a turribie&#13;
lie, though he's maat«r polite about&#13;
i t Bla man is Vase Hamilton, + an&#13;
he explamelt all out jeai .ai pl%lh&#13;
and easy/as t'otkaf'dJdrJ pnly di»eck&#13;
edati'yv •«?• , '*$? priya^;^ln% th&gt;m&#13;
;urym»n.4iay^*aow^«K»&gt;morer %out&#13;
" t o ftey Jobked&#13;
.tmjaied af coufdjie a^el M*. Stevens&#13;
^ L ^ a n e ; « &amp; * * • " • * » •&#13;
f&gt;,on 4t&#13;
w *8 - Durty ijupa^eihajllthe&#13;
worst oVt, but I was dreflla ao^rf for&#13;
*im, but after Mr. Stevens -ahowed&#13;
out how that Ashley cam©,^1 jest&#13;
how, it all happened,^ we* Jeet aura&#13;
he'd gU the oaae..' BuVXQr,' .*a&gt;e!&#13;
there ain't no justice in $be&gt; lawk" t&#13;
CHAPTER xxirn •-;.-&#13;
Undercurrenta.&#13;
That evening the Rev. Arthur, Hammerly&#13;
sat by his study table trying to&#13;
Ax his mind upon the sermon he was&#13;
writing, but it would wander in spite&#13;
01' himself to the scene in court,&#13;
peculiarly trying to one of his sensibilities;&#13;
. for he ,could\ but pity the&#13;
pale, shrinking woman whose trials&#13;
were laid bare to the public gaze,&#13;
tOtf he could but jiity the one who&#13;
had lost the suit, whether guilty or&#13;
innocent, for his heart was a merciful&#13;
one. So when" a timid knock came to&#13;
his ears he welcomed it as a diversion&#13;
W toibHt wmif^ "^partact mm makes&#13;
•eoee art* Thoufhc thouW Fit Tofotft*&#13;
to doubt the good'Tether* Woatf ha,&#13;
do~ yon thinJ^.aHftif, any A,of his ore*,&#13;
tore* to b* so .deprave^ that they&#13;
coatf not be redeemed from aln?&#13;
T^hjs, man must ha the twin bsefhfjK&#13;
-of my husband, an0 he must have&#13;
goo0 In. his nature still; (or his par,&#13;
ents ware good poofter and wicked*&#13;
environment cannot ro,vtte change,&#13;
quite pervert, a JM&amp;IO nature, can itfr&#13;
"Perhaps not. 8UH you cannot&#13;
conceive of the dlffireooe between&#13;
good briuging up and the reverse. Before&#13;
I came here I waa ^engaged in&#13;
missionary work, that brought nwuln&#13;
contact witft the moat degraded pec*&#13;
l4e, They aotuaily had-oa conception&#13;
of goodneaa, no belief to a batter lite.&#13;
1 f people seemed good, they deemed&#13;
it hypocrisy. They would laugh to&#13;
scorn any,appeals to conscience, for&#13;
they literally seemed to have none.&#13;
Such people deserve the profound*&#13;
eat pity."&#13;
"But he la not like that. He Is educated,&#13;
he is capable of affection; my&#13;
children'love him, and he~appears~to&#13;
love them. He has noble impulses.&#13;
Such a man can be appealed to."&#13;
"Mrs. Hamilton, you are the one to&#13;
make the appeal."&#13;
"Oh, I cannot. There is a reserve&#13;
between us that no words of mine can&#13;
bridge. When in his presence I for&#13;
get everything but- that he has robbed&#13;
me of happiness. At other times&#13;
I can think of him as unfortunate&#13;
and to be pitied."&#13;
"I will talk with him, then, for you,&#13;
ironiTr^blesome^oughtranawheel-4?^i~Tx&gt;rn-irom- myhusband,and&#13;
ed from the table just as a lady en- forbidden to mourn, because the betered&#13;
in response to his invitation,&#13;
it was Mrs. Hamilton.&#13;
The minister arose aod bowedhastily&#13;
and in some confusion.&#13;
"Can I do anything for you?" he&#13;
said, earnestly. "I will, if I can."&#13;
"Oh, I don't know, I don't know!"&#13;
?hecried. "Icame to you for I have&#13;
no one else to go to. I want some one&#13;
TO advise me who is very wise and&#13;
gcod, and I know of no one but you."&#13;
"I am not very wise nor good," he&#13;
said gently, "but I will do my best to&#13;
nid you in any way that I can."&#13;
"I don't know that you can aid me,&#13;
lief Is general that he is not my hus-&#13;
Land. And to be called unfaithful—I,&#13;
the most faithful 'sLjdssalU _ _ -&#13;
"It is, Indeed, hard," said the minister.&#13;
"Whether right or wrong in your&#13;
belief, I know your heart is true."&#13;
"Your faith in me is a great comfort,"&#13;
she said, lifting her eyes earnestly&#13;
to his face. "You will see him&#13;
and do what you can?"&#13;
"Yes, I will see him, and do what&#13;
I can."&#13;
And then Mrs. Hamilton left the&#13;
study, and the minister thrust his&#13;
sermon one side and beat his head&#13;
in deep thought.&#13;
How could he touch this man, if he&#13;
were the impostor. Mrs. Hamilton&#13;
conceived him to be? Could he do&#13;
it? Could any one? He doubted it&#13;
Still, he would try. It was not&#13;
late; barely nine o'clock. He would&#13;
eo that very night.&#13;
Changing his dressing gown for a&#13;
coat, and making some other trifling&#13;
alterations in his dress, he set out on&#13;
his errand, -andf soon reached the&#13;
Hamilton residence. He rang the&#13;
bell and was admitted into the hall,&#13;
which held a few boxes and a trunk.&#13;
Mr. Carter and Mr. Hamilton came to&#13;
«%reet him, and the former said, as he&#13;
stepped over a box: •&#13;
tfesse&#13;
fcosfc^syo^tte edges-meat "wKi-af&#13;
ojjck like the blades of a ehajp pair&#13;
of shears. »Sometimes ' tfoo- vot*&#13;
thoughts nf t i g h * t e t h e r to entagcrUstie1&#13;
identity/as whan the man tatd&#13;
of the temperance exltoer that fio&#13;
would be a* good fellow if he would&#13;
only let drink ilona; or w*oo Dtsroeif&#13;
(If It waa he) wrote to the youth who&#13;
had sent hint a first novel: "1 thank&#13;
you vary much; I ahall lose no time if&#13;
raading it;M or as when a jhan. seeing&#13;
a poor place of carpentry said r 'That&#13;
chicken-coop looks as ff soma man* nad&#13;
made It himself." Exquisite perverse&#13;
literahtesa of thought! And the same&#13;
absolute punning, the very setf-dtetructlbn&#13;
of a proposition, was the .old&#13;
death thrust at a poor poet by the&#13;
friend who said: "Bis poetry will be&#13;
read when Shakespeare and Homer&#13;
ara"torgotteh.wr:1t wan 'a flna. dtiutte.&#13;
edged blade of speech until some crude&#13;
-fellow, Heine, I think, sharpened it to&#13;
a wire edge by adding? "and not till&#13;
then," a banality that dulled Its perfection&#13;
forever.—Atlantic "Monthly.&#13;
Get at tha Cause.&#13;
Sacramento, Ky., Nov. 18th (Special)—&#13;
A typical illustration of the&#13;
way Dodd's Kidney Pills Cure Rheumatism&#13;
Is well* told by Catherine De-"f andv she be willing,&#13;
vine, who is very well known here.&#13;
She says:&#13;
"For over four years I was greatly&#13;
troubled with Rheumatism. It used&#13;
to take me worst in my legs and feet.&#13;
At times I would be so bad I could not&#13;
and do what I *cah," saitHhe-mini8terr|-pnt »»y *«•* to-the ground.^ As faun -&#13;
"Oh, thank you, thank you!" she&#13;
said, gratefully. "I sometimes think&#13;
there was never so unhappy a worn-&#13;
'A brother's curse will rest upon you to the end!'&#13;
:&#13;
- . V . J T&#13;
r~- i&#13;
v; •;.. I&#13;
the judge, upon the charge of forgery,&#13;
rerjury and embezzlement.&#13;
When the decision was made known&#13;
it would have been hard to tell which&#13;
lace was more pallid of the two men&#13;
—the one who had just been declared&#13;
guilty or the one who-had gained the&#13;
suit.&#13;
For A moment they turned to gaze&#13;
into each other's faces, while a shade&#13;
of acute regret passed over that of&#13;
the one declared to be Vane Hamilton,&#13;
but on the other a look of terrible&#13;
anger rested.&#13;
"Do not think," he cried in thrilling&#13;
accents, **that you will ever be&#13;
allowed to enjoy your ill-gotten possessions.&#13;
Our mother's spirit will&#13;
prevent that. You will never know a&#13;
moment's peace, and a brother's curse&#13;
will rest upon you to the end. Remember&#13;
my words. As for justice,"&#13;
looking about the court room and covering&#13;
with his gaze the judge and&#13;
.Jurymen, "there is no such thing."&#13;
"That will do," said the judge, coldly,&#13;
"you have nothing to complain of,"&#13;
and the prisoner occompanled the&#13;
sheriff .from the court house.&#13;
Mrs. Hamilton, leaning on the arm&#13;
of Mrs. Fry, went to the latter's house,&#13;
for she would not enter her house&#13;
hlle tenanted as it was. There was&#13;
no doubt, thought Mrs. Fry, that she&#13;
really did believe that the man now a&#13;
prisoner was in reality her husband;&#13;
but the good lady herself had had her&#13;
mental faculties so played upon at&#13;
the trial that it almost seemed as if&#13;
ahe herself were another person.&#13;
'I wouldn't resk any case at court,&#13;
not one single minute," ahe said to&#13;
Dan. "One lawyer gits up an' proves&#13;
it all out that his man is Vane Hamilton,&#13;
'BO you see it Is all jest as easy&#13;
aa print. Then another lawyer gits&#13;
or that any one can. I don't know&#13;
what to do. I have been so terribly&#13;
shocked the past week. I have heard&#13;
*uch dreadful thingsv said about my&#13;
conduct, and you may1 think me very&#13;
wicked. But indeed I am not. I have&#13;
tried to do just right," and she looked&#13;
up piteousiy as a child might into&#13;
the minister's face. Never before had&#13;
he seen her stirred from Jier usual&#13;
queenly bearing, and the sight moved&#13;
him as nothing else could.&#13;
"I know it," he said, soothingly,&#13;
"you have tried to do just right. But&#13;
may you not have been mistaken?"&#13;
"No. I am not mistaken. I .am&#13;
' more firmly convinced than ever. I&#13;
know he is not my husband, and nothing&#13;
shall Induce me to say otherwise."&#13;
"How can you be so sure?"&#13;
"How can I be so sure? You never&#13;
loved, or you would know. I should&#13;
know my husband's soul in any body&#13;
if he claimed me. I did not know at&#13;
first because he did not recognize me,&#13;
but when he did I was sure. I tried&#13;
not to be precipitate, but all the time&#13;
i knew—knew."&#13;
"But the other man looks more like&#13;
your husband."&#13;
"Ah, but his soul is a strangor to&#13;
my soul," and she looked up in ah&#13;
earnest, almost wild manner that&#13;
touched him greatly.&#13;
"Do you mean to appeal for another&#13;
trial?"&#13;
J'No, It would do no good."&#13;
'Then what can be dohV?"&#13;
"I don't know, unless you appeal&#13;
to him."&#13;
"I appeal to him?"&#13;
"Yes, to the man who has fraudulently&#13;
got possession of our home.&#13;
You are a good man and might know&#13;
of some way to touch his heart. You&#13;
are very penruaalve, ve^y;; eiogjiefft."&#13;
J&#13;
"Vane is going to the hotel, for he&#13;
not keep Constance from her&#13;
He is a noble felwtTT&#13;
home any longer&#13;
low, Mr. Hammerly."&#13;
The minister felt a chill creep over&#13;
his resolution, but only for a moment.&#13;
Whether she was right or not, he&#13;
vould kep his promise to Mrs. Hamilton,&#13;
and as soon as Mr. Carter left&#13;
the room, excusing himself on account&#13;
of some duty, Mr. Hammerley&#13;
broached his errand.&#13;
"I do not say, Mr. Hamilton, that&#13;
you are not what you seem, but I&#13;
came simply at the request of Mrs.&#13;
Hamilton, who really believes that&#13;
vou are not her husband. It is her&#13;
solemn conviction, and it is cruelly&#13;
unjust to rank her •Mth the many&#13;
unfaithful wives, aqme of whom&#13;
might make pretences such as have&#13;
been ascribed to her. You, surely,&#13;
no not think her capable of such&#13;
baseness?" —-&#13;
"No. t think she is sincere in her&#13;
belief. She is a noble woman, in&lt;&#13;
capable of such an act. It was not&#13;
my wish to have her name dragged&#13;
before the public as it was, but one&#13;
cannot do as he would at such times."&#13;
"Mrs.. Hamilton is convinced that&#13;
you are her husband's brother, that&#13;
you have been led almost without&#13;
volition of your own to wiefced&#13;
courses which are at variance Iwith&#13;
your real nature. She thinks* with&#13;
Ufferent; environments you ''. would&#13;
have been a different man." \ '&#13;
"What else does she say?" asked&#13;
M/. Hamilton, as the minister paused / "She Vi8hed me to appeal; to you&#13;
to give her back her happiness. She&#13;
Is very miserable; very much changed&#13;
from the happy woman I. first&#13;
knew when I came to Grovedale. She&#13;
!s a rare woman; one among a thousand."&#13;
i ' '&#13;
"You are right. She Is one among&#13;
a thousand. Would you give up such&#13;
a woman?"&#13;
"I?" The minister's hot face gushed&#13;
with emotion. v.n&#13;
(To be continued.) . ' t&#13;
». -4:: '&#13;
A merely fallen 6*em^ lasvy^ rise&#13;
again, but'the reconciled one 4a $rniji&#13;
vsn4ui*h^d--r-8chlUer, ' --&#13;
over seventy-three years of age I began&#13;
to think X was too old to get&#13;
cured and should have to bear my&#13;
Rheumatism the best way I could.&#13;
But f heard about Dodd's Kidney Pills&#13;
and thought I would give them a trial.&#13;
So I got a box and began taking thenx.&#13;
Well, Z must say Dodd's Kidney Pills&#13;
did Bir^^onlleTfurToI ofRpooT They&#13;
eased the pain from the first, and today&#13;
I am in better health than I hSvo&#13;
been for many years."&#13;
Misunderstood.&#13;
President White of . Colby, Mass.,&#13;
was making an appeal for donations to&#13;
the college, and in the course of his remarks&#13;
cited the case of a wealthy gen&gt;&#13;
tleman in the west to whom such an&#13;
appeal was not made in vain.&#13;
"I spoke of his boyhood days in Wsterville,"&#13;
said President White; "I recalled&#13;
the dear old landmarks he knew&#13;
so well, and as I spoke of the college&#13;
on the dear old Kennobec he made out&#13;
a check, while tears ran down his&#13;
cheeks. I tell you, gentlemen, he was&#13;
touched." And President White, not&#13;
as well versed in the slang of the day&#13;
as in the management of an institution&#13;
of learning, stood amazed at the&#13;
rlppleB of merriment which followed&#13;
his tale of pathos.&#13;
Double Role Hard to Maintain.&#13;
"Did It never occur' to IgiU young&#13;
man," asked John Bright orjr young&#13;
fellow who waa discoursing about "the&#13;
fetters of matrimony," "that you canrf-&#13;
rothe a bachelor and a married man&#13;
at the_sanre-tlme?^ Many of the men&#13;
who complain loudest of the extravagance&#13;
of marriage find it so costly because&#13;
they are trying to maintain the&#13;
double role.&#13;
Searching Excitement.&#13;
"Hang these here motor cars," said&#13;
the man with the sunburned suit,&#13;
round shoulders and long beard. "1&#13;
think I've gone a-running up to no lest&#13;
than a dosen crowds, expectin* to see&#13;
a fight, and only found some fellow&#13;
doctorin' a motor car."—Stray Stories.&#13;
A atAKT U U » 4 - f t w \&#13;
CHpplod and Made 111 by Aw** K l *&#13;
•*fr&gt;&#13;
» 'W i&amp;mm4%mx&amp;&#13;
J e l i k e a&#13;
handa and&#13;
Woh-v'&#13;
**•&#13;
road ties easily'&#13;
b a t .•tench**&#13;
mPback an*&#13;
hegafc to taffer&#13;
wM^ha^aohif&#13;
and ki-dnar&#13;
trouble. Ihea&gt;&#13;
teeted It ttntifc&#13;
^ f c e ^ d a y a&#13;
•.twinge felle*&#13;
•aada^he crawl osr&#13;
J wji so crippled&#13;
• M .&#13;
r&#13;
for a timfllttiiMt'* efcottnt walk with?&#13;
out sticks/ Hadi heaaachew and dizsy&#13;
fjellf and the aida^y secretions were Eldy andjull of brtefcdust sediment.&#13;
n'B Kidney PUIS made the- pain&#13;
ppear and. corrected the urinary&#13;
tgDubiev'4 havelelt bettemever since."&#13;
— « — i » — « » — w ^ . — ~ .&#13;
Widower's Queer yAd."&#13;
The following advertisement apr&#13;
fears' In a Devonshire newspaper&#13;
%«duwej^ UM ,;fjnatty. rentlng^a&#13;
fa,rm near-Klngsbridge, wanta* "&#13;
keeper; a chapel-going person, end on*&#13;
that has charity, which is the love o f&#13;
CM, preferred, with views of mar*&#13;
rlage, if the Lord ptoepera my ways&#13;
—iv _t^ w. _ . „ . _ Apply." e t c&#13;
. ^&#13;
• W ^ ! Clothes Waahao^ny^Blectrlalty^&#13;
: Clothes waahlog hy eleptrlclty,&#13;
without soap, is the idea of a Hungarian.&#13;
.. t h e stream of electrified&#13;
water is claimed to remove a)l spoU&#13;
and_dirt, _and the_ 8Q0_garmenia_helfl&#13;
by the machine are washed in leaf&#13;
thanf 1X minute*/&#13;
NOT iHRAOtlttl&#13;
Roetttnatiain ThprouahJy i Osifwd by&#13;
Or. Williama'Pink Pilla for&#13;
— J a l a Jfisjiiftk,—. - _&#13;
Tfhero i« one roraedy that will cure&#13;
rheninatism in au|. of iff forms and so&#13;
thoroughly eradicate tba disease from'&#13;
the ayateai that the cure is permanent.&#13;
ThiSsSewedyisD^Wilhams'Piuk PUlt&#13;
for Pale People ^aud toe proof of the&#13;
etatemep? is found iu the experienoe of&#13;
Mr. T.: %. Wagar; of No. 78 Academy&#13;
streeti Watertown, K.Y. He says:&#13;
&lt;4 The paiu waa In my joints aud my&#13;
snff eriuga for over two yeara waa beyond&#13;
description. There waa au intense pais&#13;
lu my shoulders that prevented we from&#13;
sleeping and I would gel up aud walk&#13;
the floor at uight. Wheuluegautakiog&#13;
Dr. Willianur Pluk Pilla the improvement&#13;
was gradual, but by the time I bod&#13;
taken four boxes I was entirely cured&#13;
aud I have uo&gt; had the slightest touch&#13;
of rheumatism since that time." ,&#13;
Mr. Wagar's wife it also enthusiastic&#13;
iu her endorsement of Dr. Williams'&#13;
Piuk Pills. She says: "I have tried the&#13;
pills myself for stomach trouble and&#13;
have experienced great relief from their&#13;
use. My daughter, Mrs. Atwood, of&#13;
Gill street, Watertowi, baa used them&#13;
for female weakness and waa mhoh benefited&#13;
by them. I regard Dr. ^illiams'&#13;
Piuk Pills for Pale People aft an extremely&#13;
valuable family medicine."&#13;
Dr. Williams' Piuk Pills have cured the&#13;
worst cases of blood leagues^, indigestion.&#13;
FROM TEXAS&#13;
Some Coffee Facts From the&#13;
8tar State.&#13;
Lone&#13;
the beat cough cure. If this great&#13;
rtemedy will not cure the cottgh, no&#13;
medicine will, and then all hope&#13;
rests In a chango of climate—but&#13;
try .Kemp's Balsam first.&#13;
Sold by all dealers at 95c and 50c.&#13;
From a beautiful farm down in Texas,&#13;
where gushing springs unite, to&#13;
form babbling brooks that wind their&#13;
sparkling way through flowery meads,&#13;
cornea a note of gratitude for delivery&#13;
from the coffee habit.&#13;
"When my baby boy came to me five&#13;
years ago, I began to drink Postum&#13;
Food Coffee, having a feeling that it&#13;
would be better for him and me than&#13;
the old kind pf drug-laden coffee. 1&#13;
waa not disappointed in It, for it enabled&#13;
me, a small delicate woman,*to&#13;
nurse a bouncing healthy baby 14&#13;
months.&#13;
"I ha.-?© since continued the use of&#13;
Postum for I have grown fond of it,&#13;
and have discovered to my joy that it&#13;
has entirely relieved me of a bilious&#13;
habit which used to prostrate me two&#13;
or three times a year, causing much&#13;
discomfort to my family and suffering&#13;
to myself.&#13;
"My brother-in-law was cured of&#13;
chronic constipation by leaving off the&#13;
old kind of coffee and using Postum.&#13;
He has become even more fond of it&#13;
than he was of the old coffee.&#13;
"In fact the entire family, from the meat ttaata, oaa bay land adjoining st&#13;
latest arrival, (a J-yeiF oTo^wfio~eT | » » »&#13;
waya calls for h » &lt;potie' first t h u g in&#13;
the morning) up to the head of the&#13;
house, think there is no drink to good&#13;
OT so wholesome at Postum." .Name&#13;
given by Postum (Jo, Battle Creek,&#13;
Mich.&#13;
There's a reason.&#13;
* Read the little book, 'The Rood to&#13;
WoHvtUe^ tft.pkfs.&#13;
iuflnenzft, headaches; backaches,. Ium7&#13;
bago, sciatica, uehrnlgja, aeryotumesay&#13;
spinal wea&amp;uess, aud the special ailn^&#13;
euts.of girls aud women whoso blood&#13;
supply becomes weak, scanty or. irregular.&#13;
The genuiue Dr. Williams' Pink Pills&#13;
are guaranteed to be free from opiates 01&#13;
any harmful drugs and cauuot injure&#13;
the most delicate system. , At all druggists&#13;
or from the Dr. Williams Medl-_&#13;
cine Oo., Schenectady, N. Y., postpaid,&#13;
on receipt of price, 50 cents per box,&#13;
six boxes for $5.50.&#13;
THE BEST COUSM CURE '1 L m-'-~ - - " • 1—1 ^ _ ^ _ , ^ - ^ .&#13;
Many a lonesome and expensive&#13;
trip to Florida, California or the&#13;
Adirondacks has beesV a*esjt 1^&#13;
the use of . " ^ l " 3 &amp; £ " i •:-'f%&lt;.&#13;
$16 AN ACRE&#13;
ICna nWateiss It*e rn fasmwonuenrst mw lie fr eropftjhylehy eer.,&#13;
26 Buaholo to the Aoro Will bo the&#13;
Avorogo Yiold of Whoat&#13;
The land that this waa grown oaa&amp;at aaaay of&#13;
tbe farmers sbaolutsly aothiai, walls thoaa&#13;
who wished to add so the teo acres shs GOT*&#13;
&lt;THs&gt;avt rolenflkl SCHIIMJ saaeeaieat^&#13;
elose at hand, taxes lew. \ : f:&#13;
Send for pnopaJst. "KHh Osatury&#13;
sad fall paritaeutrs retarduis rate, stc,1&#13;
SuperhtteBdant ef rawrtar»ite«{ OHawa,&#13;
Oaaaoa, or to tha follawiaf.•*&#13;
OaaadiaB Oeverameat Atenfr-Jt'T. )C&lt;&#13;
iAveaueTheatrs Blook, Detroit, *Dob&#13;
a A. ^ttjie^Saalt »te. Merle&#13;
thlspeaer.)&#13;
- i . • ' ; *c "&gt;..&#13;
• ' / • ' •&#13;
"'f* Y.V*1&#13;
'.r'.&#13;
" » • ' : . . . , • • • ; , • » • ' • ' ' ' ' •&#13;
• &lt; # •&#13;
'.&gt;&#13;
$&#13;
5w'i* . ^ ' ?&#13;
^ ^ .w.&#13;
-*•&gt;-&#13;
&lt;*&gt;&amp;&#13;
Y wo*fw tHi&#13;
• j^'^'T^^r^v^CTr *&#13;
•4&#13;
r?&#13;
Mavb PMiMtf TWr WofW.&#13;
Dear Mother&#13;
Yets? brie ones a n a coedsnt cave Si&#13;
Fall sad Winter weather. TVnr witt&#13;
catch cold. Do youlcaowsbm* Shiioh'a&#13;
Coasuaptioa Cvie, the Laag Touie, and&#13;
wns**hM&lt;*ioefocsomaoy# |t » said&#13;
to be the only reliable temedy far all&#13;
daoMM of the air pastagat m caJdfca.&#13;
fca sbeobtely harmless and! pleasant to&#13;
take, U w i ^ a i i a ^ t o c t m ocyoet otooejf&#13;
kttanvxL The pnee is 25c* pot botaa,&#13;
and a l dealers urstsdicioe adl «14&#13;
Coloredr¥stmmyVEnt;hy^$*iii H a l l&#13;
••'•. . , Com^efsW VjUiiv 7 ',,;.,;•.&#13;
The young man,,dre*sed la his be*&amp;&#13;
« w waJWnf along looking "pretty **U&#13;
J satisfied with MBMK, , BtaadJng aea?&#13;
(a, teiecm^ pole was a* old negro&#13;
woman/ As he approached her aba&#13;
aecosted him.&#13;
"Wbj; Mlstab ton,1' she said.&#13;
' H f e s &amp; ^ w ^ to yoV' To» *aung&#13;
man stopped,&#13;
"talb, AiuU Nancy." U &amp;*.&#13;
"WW* MUtah;•. tomr- the oW * *&#13;
greaa went on, "yob^ J* suttuly defl&#13;
plgebet uf prettinesa. Yob tookto*&#13;
•well dia mawnin'. Man goodness,&#13;
yob's de nicee' lookin' young man&#13;
Ab's seed in a month/'&#13;
The young man waa pleated.&#13;
"Thank you, Aunt Nancy," be Mid,&#13;
straightening up a little, "I'm afraid,&#13;
though, that you're a flatterer."&#13;
"No, aaa, Ah isn't, Mlstab Tom.&#13;
Toh suahly look delightfil. Ah'a&#13;
mighty proud ter know you, Tou's&#13;
de essence uf awelloeas."&#13;
The young, man smiled and began&#13;
to move away.&#13;
"Say, Mistah Tom." she called after&#13;
hrm. He stopped. She hesitated.&#13;
"What Is it?" he asked;&#13;
"Well, sa&gt;," came from the old ne»&#13;
gress, "yoh sutlnly is lookin' flue an'&#13;
Ah was jlst thinkin' dat es good&#13;
lookin' young man eja1 yoh 'ud be&#13;
mighty glad ter loan a posh ole niggah&#13;
woman er quahtah/—Kansas&#13;
City Times.&#13;
\&#13;
T t o remedy at«&gt;ald be mcytrylwoaehoVi.&#13;
[ IHtRt IS NQ , f f i&#13;
mmLIKE ^55» Party ycoreogo&#13;
of use on the ewtem cowt'lorwr'M&#13;
Ykterproof QfizdOxte mre IMrodJced&#13;
Inlhe Wwt end were called Jlkkera b/&#13;
fix pioneers otti cowboy*. Thb QMfoc,&#13;
hunt Ku co»r Wo wch deteml use/ that)&#13;
ftUfr*o?wrWtho^wr^&#13;
tom^«jb^lt»YoawanttJwVw*«&#13;
' Ueliibrthe^ofther&amp;vand&#13;
the MBM Tower on tl« buttom r&#13;
T0raOaiMAItC0,bata*J0Mmft Call&#13;
. ^ ¾ Are JMs&#13;
w-&#13;
^*rhr^^tP\ - Pal«» weak and nervous&#13;
: 'V*;^ people need a ionic that&#13;
ffi'*** wfll bnfld tbem np and&#13;
^ - ' tnr,yt ihr™ m i l r»*&#13;
strong. Celery King: ta&#13;
- do&#13;
or&#13;
the tonic that wIH&#13;
theae thinga. Herb&#13;
Tablet fbrm, 35s.&#13;
YOU&#13;
TtltlT&#13;
i Note the Difference&#13;
I&#13;
TnlsJciad-U apoliedllke&#13;
palnt,shlnes itself&#13;
&amp;nd is the only prep-&#13;
•rtlon tbatwlil dry ttt&#13;
10 inln«te«. It kills&#13;
Bust on Stove Pipes^&#13;
Wire Screens, Slaves,&#13;
Farm Jaftchtnery, or&#13;
any iron work. It will&#13;
no t t^osb off,and wears&#13;
Price, *Bc.&#13;
'"HHlBiv ^ ¾&#13;
6-5-4- t L c . M I N N&#13;
^nt\j n s [ \&#13;
ThU kind is a nifib&#13;
grade liquid stove polish,&#13;
brilliant and lastin#.&#13;
Keeps forever,&#13;
always ready for use.&#13;
Shines easier, wean&#13;
loiajer.. and .covers&#13;
more surface than ally&#13;
other. Big-Can, 100&gt;&#13;
ASK YOtJB DEALER FOB EITHER.&#13;
&lt;2is ^^kJ*^&#13;
'TOILET ,;&#13;
ANTISEPTIC&#13;
II WOMEN&#13;
wita Ilia psoxUar i e&#13;
t^aajar as ajtoyaa la 1 ^ ^&#13;
waeirtatiaMls iaiaanaatie^aataucM&#13;
_ , . jctar. form to bt dtuohrad In pete&#13;
waiar. atvd ia fur anora daaasing. haaliag. aannkldal&#13;
i economical than hcyid andaaptka for all&#13;
TOtUBTAr«&gt;WOMOT»WeClALUfBS&#13;
For mA* at droggtala, 00 etnu a boa.&#13;
Trial Boa awd Book ei laotimtliMS 1&#13;
ai fa 9to,rom QOMMWY f DoeTO^&#13;
ENTSfsPfiOFlT wiirr ruu.Y pnoYtoT AH iMvumott.&#13;
HAIOft, FWWtt « UVK«IC£, tattM Lawym.&#13;
W»ahln«tonrO. 6 M latabManecl Met.&#13;
•end for oar &lt;M Aanrranary rrae BooUot, abow&#13;
fair tUQittationft of lfeebaaleal tUvaaaanta.&#13;
aac,:», BradatfMt and tjaovaaacVi or aattaftel&#13;
Wawnatoartoaa ooaadaattaU write as *f?5sl—' •r&#13;
IT l&#13;
No Chloride of&#13;
P a t Egan, a plasterer, and a&#13;
Lime for Him.&#13;
well&#13;
known character of Cambridge, Mass.,&#13;
walked into a shoe store on Massachus&#13;
e t t s avenue o n Saturday evening rec&#13;
e n t l y i o i m r c h a s e «r pair—of- shoes,&#13;
s a y s a writer in the Boston Herald.&#13;
After looking over three or four pairs&#13;
of s h o e * he hit upon one pair that&#13;
took hia. fancy. H e tried them on,&#13;
and found that they did not pinch or&#13;
chafe, but complained that they went&#13;
on too hard.&#13;
"Oh, that'll be all right, Mr.^Eean;&#13;
I'll easily flx—tbaV—remarked—tne&#13;
cited p*Wioati6na to uk/tointee the&#13;
faith ot tneJ people 1» &lt; proprteUrt&#13;
mediclmee' ha* drawn forth tie follow*&#13;
lag fro» s big* medical authority:&#13;
"It muai nerer be forgotten that the r&#13;
interest of the naej»lawturer ia to jmt.&#13;
out a remedy vbleb la not only merttortou*&#13;
but safe. W«3t a smaH army&#13;
of enemlea constantly on the alert,&#13;
ready to sel»e«oott and magnify evert&#13;
ttnUrorabbf ctrcwna&lt;a«ce, i w r&#13;
are the caaes of accident or Injury&#13;
from the use-of proprietary medicines!&#13;
Complaints in regard to the use or&#13;
such remedies are exceedingly rare&#13;
and utterly Insignificant, i« comparison&#13;
with the amount sold and the millions&#13;
of people who avail themselves&#13;
of these remedies." *&#13;
' ; , " * " ' • "&#13;
First Aecerrt of Mont Blenc,&#13;
The first ascent of Mont B l a n e in&#13;
1905 by a woman was accomplished&#13;
under great difficulties by B e s s i e Nor*&#13;
ton of London, on July 14. T h e journey&#13;
from t h e Grand Mulets occupied&#13;
nineJfcours, t h e a s c e n t flve-juid aJhalf&#13;
hours, and the return journey three&#13;
and a half hours. T h e return w a s&#13;
the more quickly accomplished b y pitting&#13;
down and sliding at all possible&#13;
places. T h e cold w a s so intense that&#13;
the breath froze inside Miss Norton's&#13;
helmet, and one of the men of t h e party&#13;
had icicles two inches long hang*&#13;
ing from his mustache. ~ " _&#13;
H60» TB WOM&#13;
•othen Sboutd tVgteh th« Oewlo#meot of Their Oaughtats--&#13;
latsrastiag ExBerieices af Misses Bormaa aad Mills.&#13;
: • : . : !&#13;
* --.&#13;
T h e Isthmian Canal.&#13;
clerk, who immediately took the shoes&#13;
off and proceeded to sprinkle powder&#13;
into them.&#13;
H e w a s about to try them on Pat&#13;
again, when the latter stood wrathfully&#13;
up in his stocking feet and shouted&#13;
out:&#13;
"Oh, no, you don't! No, you don't!&#13;
Mr. Bell! Mr, Bell! Come here!&#13;
Come here! I've bought shoes of you&#13;
for the lost foive years, but the divil&#13;
a shoe will I buy of you again. This&#13;
brazen-faced clerk of yours tried to&#13;
put chloride of lime in my shoes, but&#13;
I w a s too smart for him."&#13;
Why Mother Is Proud.&#13;
Look in his face, look In his eyes,&#13;
Rougtsh and blue and terribly wise—&#13;
Rouglsh and blue, but quickest to see&#13;
When mother comes in aa tired aa can&#13;
be;&#13;
Quickest to And her the nicest old chair; Suickest to get to the top of the stair:&#13;
uickest to see that a kiss on her cheek&#13;
Would help her far more than to clatter.&#13;
to speak.&#13;
Look in his face, and guess, if you can.&#13;
- 1 Why toother is proud of her little manproud—&#13;
I will tell you&#13;
for yourself in her ten-&#13;
The mother is&#13;
this;&#13;
You can see it&#13;
der kiss.&#13;
But why? Well, of all her dears,&#13;
There is scarcely one who ever hears&#13;
The moment she speaks, and jumps tc&#13;
see&#13;
What her want or her wishes mr.y be.&#13;
Scarcely one. They all forget,&#13;
Or are not in the notion to go quite yet&#13;
But this she knows, l f l i e r l » y is near&#13;
There is somebody certain to want tc&#13;
hear.&#13;
Mother is proud, and she holds him fast&#13;
And kisses him first and kisses him last;&#13;
And he holds her hand and looks in hei&#13;
And hunts for her spool wWch is out oi&#13;
place,&#13;
And proves that he loves her whenever&#13;
he can—&#13;
That is why she-is proud »f her little&#13;
man.&#13;
—Independent&#13;
.; Her Sugar Weighed By His Soap.&#13;
In the'little town of Peru, ten miles&#13;
from PiUsfleld, Mass., the farmers "In&#13;
the winter bring their butter and e g g s&#13;
to Frank Creamer's and exchange&#13;
t h e m for tea, sugar or anything else&#13;
they need.&#13;
One day Mrs. Ackert brought some&#13;
butter in pound lumps to exchange,&#13;
and after weighing them, h e said,&#13;
"Mrs. Ackert, this butter d o e s ' n o t&#13;
v e i g h a pound."&#13;
"I can't help that," she said, "1&#13;
weighed it by a pound of soap I got&#13;
here a few days ago."&#13;
Now that the Canal Treaty b a a&#13;
been ratified, w e may expect t o s e e&#13;
work resumed In a short time, and&#13;
the great canal-ships, carrying h u g e&#13;
loads of Pillsbury's Vitos to all parts&#13;
o f t h e w o r l d , B y t h e - w a y , - h a Y e y o u&#13;
ever eaten Vitos? You'll like it better&#13;
than any other cereal *ood.&#13;
— What-He Waa-^ywfr&lt;o-eor--&#13;
Dr. Kimball of Lowell, Mass., kept&#13;
up his practice after he had become&#13;
very deaf. One day he w i s asked by&#13;
a long-suffering patient, "Doctor, do&#13;
you think this will kill me?" Miataking&#13;
her anxiety for an appeal to his&#13;
skill, he answered cheerily: "That's&#13;
what w e are going to try to do."&#13;
Evidence of Brain's Activity.&#13;
Talking to one's self is generally&#13;
considered a sign of a w e a k brain,&#13;
says a doctor, but nothing could be a&#13;
greater mistake. It is a sign of a s&#13;
extremely active brain. It may be a&#13;
strong or a weak intellect, but the activity&#13;
must be there to cause this&#13;
peculiarity.&#13;
Ask YourOealer for Allen's Foot-Ease&#13;
A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Swollen.&#13;
Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching. Sweating Feet&#13;
and Ingrowing Nails. AtaU Druggists and&#13;
Shoe stores. 36 cents. Accept no substitute.&#13;
Ssfeple mailed FREE. Address, Allen S.&#13;
Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.&#13;
Wearing Out Motor Tires.&#13;
On heavy motor vehicles the cost&#13;
of the wear and tear of tires i s about&#13;
four cents a mile.&#13;
Every m o t h e r possesses information&#13;
w h i c h is of vital interest t o her y o u n g&#13;
daughter.&#13;
__To6_often t h i s is n e r e r imparted or i s&#13;
w i t h h e l d u n t i l serious harnThas resulte&#13;
d t o the- g r o w i n g girl t h r o u g h h e r&#13;
ignorance of nature's mysterious a a d&#13;
wonderful l a w s and penalties.&#13;
Girls' over-sensitiveness and m o d e s t y&#13;
often puzzle t h e i r m o t h e r s and baffle&#13;
physicians, a s t h e y s o often w i t h h o l d&#13;
their confidence from their m o t h e r s&#13;
and conceal t h e symptoms w h i c h o u g h t&#13;
t o be t o l d t o their physician a t t h i s&#13;
( c r i t i c a l period. _ _&#13;
When a girl's t h o u g h t s become s l u g -&#13;
gish, w i t h h e a d a c h e , dizziness o r a disposition&#13;
t o sleep, pains in back or l o w e r&#13;
pmbfl, eyf t a d i m i deaira for solitude;&#13;
w h e n she i s a m y s t e r y t o herself ancT&#13;
friends, h e r mother should come t o h e r&#13;
aid, and remember t h a t Lydia E. Pinkh&amp;&#13;
mV V e g e t a b l e Compound w i l l a t&#13;
this time prepare t h e system for the&#13;
c o m i n g c h a n g e , a n d s t a r t t h e menstrual&#13;
period i n a y o u n g girl's life w i t h o u t&#13;
pain or irregularities.&#13;
Hundreds of letters from y o u n g g i r l s&#13;
a n d from mothers, e x p r e s s i n g their&#13;
gratitude for w h a t L y d i a E. Pinkham's&#13;
v e g e t a b l e Compound h a s accomplished&#13;
for them, h a v e b e e n received b y t h e&#13;
Lydia E. P i n k h a m Medicine Co., a t&#13;
L y n n , Mass.&#13;
Miss Mills h a s w r i t t e n t h e t w o foll&#13;
o w i n g l e t t e r s t o Mrs. P i n k h a m , w h i c h&#13;
will be read w i t h i n t e r e s t :&#13;
Dear Mrs, Pinkham:-- (First Latter.)&#13;
"I am bat fifteen years of age, am depressed,&#13;
hevedisxy spells, chills, headache and backache,&#13;
aad as I have heard that yon can give&#13;
helpful adrU» to girts in my condition, l a m&#13;
writing yoa."-Myrtle Kills, Oquawka, HL&#13;
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— (Second Letter.),&#13;
" It is with the feeling of utmost gratitude&#13;
that I write to yon t o te&amp; you what your&#13;
valuable medicine has done for me. W h e a l&#13;
wrote yon in regard to my condition I had&#13;
consulted aeveraj doctors, bat they failed to&#13;
understand my case and I did not receive&#13;
any benefit from their treatment. I followed&#13;
•oar advice, and took Lydia 8 . Pinkham's&#13;
vegetable Compound and am now healthy&#13;
and well, and all the distressing symptoms&#13;
which I bad at that time have disappeared,"—&#13;
Myrtle Mills, Oquawka, B l&#13;
Miss Matilda B o r m a a w r i t e s Mrs.&#13;
P i n k h a m a s f o l l o w s :&#13;
Dear Mrs. Pinkham.—&#13;
'' Before taking Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound my monthlies were irregular&#13;
and painfnLand T *iw«yn n «d such&#13;
dreadful headaches.&#13;
" But since taking the Compound my headaches&#13;
have entirely l e f t me, my mom&#13;
regular, and l a m getting strong and welL I&#13;
am telling all my girl mends what Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for&#13;
me,"—Matilda Bormaa, Farmington, Iowa.&#13;
If you k n o w of a n y y o u n g g i r l w h o&#13;
is sick and n e e d s m o t h e r l y advice, a s k&#13;
h e r t o address Mr^. P i n k h a m a t L y n n .&#13;
Mass., a n d t e l l h e r e v e r y d e t a i l ox h e r&#13;
symptoms, a n d t o k e e p n o t h i n g back.&#13;
She w i l l receive advice absolutely free,&#13;
from a source t h a t h a a n o rival i n t h e&#13;
experience of w o m a n ' s ills, a n d i t will,, if&#13;
followed, p n t h e r on t h e r i g h t road t o a&gt;&#13;
strong, h e a l t h y a n d h a p p y w o m a n h o o d .&#13;
. Lydia E . Pinkham's Vegetable Comp&#13;
o u n d holds t h e record for t h e g r e a t e s t&#13;
n u m b e r of c o r e s of female i l l s of a n y&#13;
medicine t h a t t h e w o r l d h a s e v e r&#13;
k n o w n . W h y don't y o u t r y i t ?&#13;
Lydia E.Ptomm's Vegetable Compoud Hakes Sick Womca Well.&#13;
PRICE, 35 G t * AHTI-GRIPINE I S G X 7 A R A N T X K O T O C U R S&#13;
MP. BID COLD, HEADACME MB lEUMLfilA.&#13;
I won't sail Aaitl-Or1&gt;&gt;ln« to a dealer who voB'temaraataa&#13;
I t . Call for yonr MOMCT B A C K IV I T BOITT CTJStJBJ.&#13;
JF. W. IHemutr, M. MK9 Mannraotarer.gjifiiaaytetal, Jfew&#13;
$t They It Cures&#13;
Where All Others Fail f f&#13;
-JUDGE &amp; DOLPH DRUG CO. LV&#13;
W. L. DOUGLAS&#13;
• 3 S I * 3 S SHOES 8% W. L. Douglas M.OO Cllt Edge Line&#13;
cannot be equalled at any prieev&#13;
«•&#13;
Similar Symptoms.&#13;
"Well, suzz, Bzry!" ejaculated a&#13;
certain citizen of Pruntytown, upon&#13;
meeting an acquaintance. "You are&#13;
lookin* real smllin" and satisfied this&#13;
afternoon. Betcha it's a boy or girl—&#13;
hey."&#13;
"Betcha "tain't!" was the reply.&#13;
"I've just swapped a balky horse to&#13;
Deacon Pettlfer for an animal that&#13;
alnt got a thing in the world the&#13;
matter with him except a spavin-, the&#13;
heaves and a strlnghalt. That's what&#13;
Tickles TB© so^Toxrr-mtaoira Mag'&#13;
aztne.&#13;
1 Higher Education.&#13;
Two sisters were sitting in a bete*&#13;
writing-room. They audibly were discussing&#13;
their friends,&#13;
"Yes, I've just .wrtttea aunty about&#13;
Mrs. Blank. I told her that of all the&#13;
unrefined, uneducated, illiterate people&#13;
I ever saw"—&#13;
"By the,way, Emma, how do you&#13;
aoell iimerater&#13;
'From present rndkatiortf, H won't be very&#13;
Ions; before Muffs Crape Tonic U the only&#13;
remedy sold for constipatJon and ttomach trouble. It Is&#13;
the only one now in our store that ui sefftng to amount to&#13;
anything. Our customers are actually enthusiastic about it&#13;
"They say that it cures constipation and stomach&#13;
trouble where all others faS. That it builds up and strengthens&#13;
the digestive organs and the whole general system.&#13;
m fact, we hear more good words about this renurkable&#13;
remedy than anything that we carry In stock.&#13;
"Those who have used MulPs Grape Tonk not&#13;
only tell us that It is a certain cure tor stomach trouble&#13;
and constipation, but they tefl others. We have new&#13;
customers calling for it constantly who have been sent&#13;
to the store by those who have been cured.''&#13;
JUDGE &amp; DOLPH DRUG CO., 515 Olive St, S t Louts, M c&#13;
R V 0 * S I P ^ B W Wa1a^P^B"^aW ^BwaraaT V e w V P ^B^J^awW^p •W^S^B^iaF^P ^BsWOEsTslaT&#13;
_ W.L. DOUGLAS MAKES A*D MS.LL&amp;&#13;
MOR£ MEWS S3.BO SHOES THAM&#13;
AMY OTHER MAIWFAOTUBEJL&#13;
¢ 1 0 ftflfl fiEWMttl to asyeaa who ctn&#13;
$ I U , U U l f tiaerov* tafe ttat«nant.&#13;
thtm&#13;
b&#13;
There la nothing so good for 7 0 « « saa old aa HULL'S QKAPB&#13;
TOKIO. It trallds up and pars the atomaoa. tbo bowels, the whole&#13;
dlaeatlve aratem In perfeot condition to Oo ha natural work. It la&#13;
Indeed nature'• own trae teaie, saade from, the prodaets of natnre*a&#13;
own atorehuoaa. it does not ahoek or-weakea the delicate organs and&#13;
thna make a bad matter worse. It Is heating, soothing, atrengUealaa*&#13;
and pleasant to take.&#13;
MULL'S GRAPE TONIC CURES&#13;
Constipation, and Stomach Trouble&#13;
W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have by their excellent&#13;
style, easy fitUog, aad superior wearing&#13;
I qualities, achieved the largest fade of any S3.SO&#13;
j shoe In the world. They are lust as rood as&#13;
i those that cost yon $5.00 to $7.00—the only&#13;
difference la the price. If I could take you Into&#13;
my factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest 1» 1 the world under one roof sashing BBMTS fiae&#13;
i shoes, and show you the care with which every&#13;
! pair of Douglas shoes Is saade. you would realise&#13;
1 why W. L. .Dontins $3.50 shoes are the best&#13;
; shoes produce J ia the world.&#13;
HI could show you the difference between the&#13;
shoes mode In my factory and these of ether&#13;
makes, yen would understand why Douglas&#13;
! $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hokf&#13;
tbatr shape, tit bettor, wear longer, sad are ef&#13;
greater iatrmsic value than any ether $3.50&#13;
ahee 6a the market to-day.&#13;
yaneda tahlla tt hne edairsleya esvese rwy aelaesle tohfe yp Uea, bUlToaoauare oeew, nt ypphhyosiidc iafnev werin, ast*eku&#13;
headaohe, bleed aad akin dlasasea, appendicitis, nervous affeottoas&#13;
aad every Mad of female trouble are dlreotly ©eased by tadlgestloa&#13;
and ooaattpeatoa. By removing the cause aadeurtag the pares* "&#13;
ease-hWLL'S CHUPa TON 10 emres t'h eae dangerous eompHcatJom&#13;
aa mieuee hb oatat ltehs,e aSt$ a elel adSr aaswSem taaa. dT ahbeo «u.t10 9&#13;
SS oenta, 00 oeata aad tt.St sise bottles, a* all draswtata. The « . «&#13;
Boatslae about • times mueh aa the at cent slse aaf&#13;
arsneh as these eeat ame, IVpays torbuy-&#13;
Vv*nr*t*tplGt your address, your draggJat^a&#13;
poaiiIt Taeoee wUljuraJ\ yon a_ faanpie frea. If you have&#13;
ri*1!'* ®1**?'fS^^S?'^1L*^*y*»n4 X?" •"S'J'Uaeats UMirsaaaeef Toole from your araggttt.&#13;
and Me.e tro n peaedy for «owar« 3&#13;
IA)U.'SGItAKT13NICCO^r4aT1uiwAv«^&#13;
s*M,0*7*i.7i7si.&#13;
, CAUTIOM.-Insist sooa aavtnar W.L.Douf&gt;&#13;
laa shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine*&#13;
without his name and priee Btamped on bottom.&#13;
WANTED. A shoe dealer in every tovawbers&gt;&#13;
W. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full lino of&#13;
samples sent free for inspection upon request.&#13;
Fatt Color f ye/ef* usee*; t*e# mttl net auur vresqf.&#13;
Write for Illustrated Catalog ef Fall Style*&#13;
" W.X.DOCGJ-A*.- "&#13;
RHEUMATISM CURED Dr. Bart's Urto AoM Solvent will positively&#13;
cure the worst case by ridding the system of theorl&#13;
aSoI.n oNuea tuiornica l aRciedm. eAdy .f uCUo. ,m Lotudt.h, 'Cs htarmeabtemr enotf Commerce. Detroit. Mien.&#13;
w. n. u.-omtoiT.-Ho. 4e-t«oa&#13;
PUTNAM F A D E L E S S D Y E S&#13;
u&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
.A mf&#13;
•M&#13;
'••-*5,.&#13;
J •&#13;
'. &gt;&#13;
ujp^. •»fcr,.&#13;
*Wr^fc.-&#13;
•• • « " &gt; . • i^VrF&#13;
• • ^ r&#13;
^ ^&#13;
^&#13;
# *&#13;
. f" •&#13;
• ' * • - : . # •&#13;
"^?&lt;T"&#13;
u » *&#13;
CHILSON&#13;
Franc Dunning is quite sick at&#13;
this writing.&#13;
Mrs. Albert Funsch is visiting&#13;
in Brighton.&#13;
H. Damman transacted business&#13;
in, Pinokney Friday laat&#13;
'Claud Fisher went to Fowlervjlle&#13;
Saturday to remain.&#13;
Julius Dammann was home&#13;
from Howell over Sunday.&#13;
Miss Besste* Sweet is workiug&#13;
for Mrs. f red Lake nearBkiokney.&#13;
Garf Dammann is spending a&#13;
few days in Detroit and otner&#13;
points. \&#13;
0. E. Beurman of Flint, Ts Visiting&#13;
friends and relatives here for&#13;
: a few days.&#13;
Boy Schoenhals of Howell was&#13;
tbe guest of Miss Fauna Bolison&#13;
over Sunday. - j&#13;
Mildred and Vjvian . Stewart&#13;
spent the last part of last week at&#13;
Chas. Rolison's.&#13;
TheJuneral of Mrs. Wiilard&#13;
,HeiiMck was beM_at the house&#13;
Monday at 11 a. m.&#13;
Mrs. Rettie Griffih and children&#13;
— of Ban&amp;roft^araihe guests of her&#13;
—Hjister, Mrs. Winnie Spaulding,&#13;
this week.&#13;
Mr. Harvey. Middleton and Miss&#13;
Lulu Funsch bavo boon spending&#13;
The Putnam and- Hamburg&#13;
Farmer's Olub will meet at the&#13;
home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward&#13;
MoOloskey on Saturday, Nov. 25,&#13;
Oysters will be served. Program:&#13;
Music, Club&#13;
'Appointment of Commitfed&#13;
Election of Officers&#13;
Dinner&#13;
Music, Mrs. Arthur ScheonhaU&#13;
Recitation, Francis Traver&#13;
Recitation, Mrs. 1. 8. P. Jobnton&#13;
Music, Mrs. Guy Hall&#13;
Recitation, Mrs. £. W. Kennedy&#13;
Recitation, Raymond Traver&#13;
Solo, Fannie Swarthout&#13;
Question Box&#13;
P l e a s a n t Social B v e n t&#13;
ADDITIOJUL, LOCAL.&#13;
the past two weeks with relatives&#13;
in Toledo.&#13;
A number of guests from Brighton&#13;
and Genoa were entertained&#13;
at the home of T. Sweet and wife&#13;
oiae day this week.&#13;
Friday at 4 p. m. the residence&#13;
of Mrs- Jane Stewart was burned&#13;
to the ground. Nearly everything&#13;
was saved from the lower floors.&#13;
It is supposed to have started&#13;
from the chimney.&#13;
Tbe young men o( the Cong'l&#13;
church gave a reception to the young&#13;
ladies at tbe Maccabee ball Monday&#13;
evening. Refreshments were served.&#13;
Good music was provided and everyone&#13;
present voted tbe occasion one of&#13;
rare and reasonable enjoyment.&#13;
CAM OF THANKS.&#13;
We wish to tender our sincere&#13;
thanks to neighbors and iriends for&#13;
words of sympathy and many kind&#13;
acts during thn sickness ancLburial of&#13;
our beloved husband and father,. Mr.&#13;
A. B. Famagton.&#13;
Mr?. A. B. Parrington&#13;
Mrs. GD-. Bland&#13;
Frank Farrinpton&#13;
Mrs. L A. Bentley&#13;
Robert Rums .,=..&#13;
m m&lt; &lt;m—•&#13;
Married Twenty-five&#13;
Years&#13;
Every page of tbia paper is full of&#13;
good reading—do not miss anv of it.&#13;
Herbert L. Cope was home over&#13;
Sunday. Mis. Cope went with aim&#13;
for a short trip.&#13;
The YVYCTU will meet at the home&#13;
of Mrs. Mark Wilson Wednesday&#13;
evening, Nov. 22.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bart entertained&#13;
Rev. and Mrs. R. A. Emerick,&#13;
and Mrs. L*al Sigler Tuesday.&#13;
Miss Mabel Morebtad entertained&#13;
her friend Miss Rose Hall of Buffalo&#13;
who is attending the UV ot M, the&#13;
past week,&#13;
Mrs. VV. P. Scbenck of Chelsea and&#13;
Mesdames A. T. Lawerence and C. VV.&#13;
Davis, o/Lanore, N. D., were guests&#13;
of their sister, Mrs. J. A. Cad well,&#13;
over Sunday. Mesdames Lawrence&#13;
and Davis will remain daring the&#13;
week.&#13;
The Detroit Mill End Co., were in&#13;
the village Tuesday and disposed of&#13;
quite a number of dress patterns and&#13;
waists. WVbaveno doubt the purchasers&#13;
paid as much (or more) for tbe&#13;
goods as tbe same quality could have&#13;
been purchased of our home mer-&#13;
-cbants-nad the people knowri it,&#13;
A letter from C. K. Cobb states that&#13;
be, L. C. Rodman and A. L. Drew aro&#13;
nicely located in Camp Contort, Luce&#13;
Co.,,, U. P. and are enjoying themseives&#13;
hunting all kinds of game especially&#13;
deer, of which they have kil'ed two,&#13;
besides— duck, pa+tridge*&#13;
We are very tond of venison, Kit.&#13;
JACKSON &amp; CADWELL S&#13;
SPBCIAUS '"'.*.-.&#13;
Saturday, November 18,1905&#13;
if&#13;
• . v&#13;
• . . &gt;&#13;
Coming Soon&#13;
Mrs. Wiilard Hendricks j&gt;f North&#13;
Hambung died at her home Friday,&#13;
Ncv. 10th, 1905. She was well known&#13;
and highly respected by all her friends&#13;
and neigobors aod there w ,s a large&#13;
atteudance at the funeral services&#13;
Thu'sday last „Mr. and" 137s. John"&#13;
Monks celebrated their twenty-fifth&#13;
wedding anniversary. About fifty ot&#13;
their friends and relatives gathered at&#13;
their home and helped them remember&#13;
the day in fitting style. Those from&#13;
out of town were Mrs. Andrew Hackett&#13;
of Detroit, and the Morgan and&#13;
Harris families from Marion. A&#13;
bountiful dinner was served and all&#13;
enjoyed the occasion to the utmost.&#13;
They were the recipients of many useful&#13;
and valuable presents. The company&#13;
broke up wishing Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Monks many returns of tbe happy&#13;
day.&#13;
which were held at the home of the&#13;
deceased Monday forenoon. Burial&#13;
was in Hamburg.&#13;
V&#13;
3*&#13;
*M&#13;
..I&#13;
• ! &gt; •&#13;
IOSCO.&#13;
1&#13;
L. F. Peet is deer hunting in&#13;
Alger county.&#13;
Seymour Sawdy has moved into&#13;
J. G. Saytes tenant house.&#13;
August Buttman began school&#13;
in the Mapes district Monday.&#13;
S. A. Mapes and family of Chelsea&#13;
visited his parents, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Mapes, over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Carpenter of Gresham has&#13;
returned home after spending six&#13;
weeks with her sister, Mrs. Uaviland.&#13;
The Presb't Aid Society of&#13;
Plainfield will serve dinner at the&#13;
home of Mrs. F. A- Gardner Nov&#13;
23. A cordial invitation to al'.&#13;
EAST PT7THAM.&#13;
Thomas Shehan is erecting a&#13;
new barn on his farm.&#13;
Leon Lewis i% working in the&#13;
stove works at ^helsea.&#13;
W. C. Hendee and family were&#13;
in Howell Thursday last.&#13;
GuyJHfilland wife weie at the&#13;
county seat Thursday of last we«k.&#13;
Henry Hicks of Jackson called&#13;
on relatives in this place Sunday.&#13;
George Pearson is in Isabelle&#13;
county^okingafterhU property&#13;
interests there.&#13;
Tbe Missee Nellie Fish and Ida&#13;
Bnrchie} of Pinokney spent Sunday&#13;
at E. G. Fish's.&#13;
• Mr#» Warren Lewis who has&#13;
been making an extended visit&#13;
with relative* at Harbor Springs&#13;
returned home last week.&#13;
Former Pinckney Man&#13;
Dead&#13;
.Stanton Snyder, nl thfi can.) and \r.pi&#13;
firm of Howard &amp; 8nyderT of OEgnsso,&#13;
fell dead at the Ann Arbor frieght&#13;
bouse white unloading a car of wood&#13;
Friday last . He was 45 and leaves a&#13;
wife and child. Death was evidently&#13;
due to heart disease.&#13;
. Mr. Snyder was ajormer Pinckney&#13;
man and well known having married&#13;
Miss Alma Howard. The bereaved&#13;
family have the sympathy of their&#13;
many (Heads bere.&#13;
Thfl "Star" Entertainers, a standrad&#13;
Lyceum attraction, have been secured&#13;
for tbe Young Men's Club of this city,&#13;
and will entertain our citizen* on the&#13;
evening ot Friday, Nov. 17.&#13;
Mr. Morris presents original piano&#13;
solo9, Organ Chimes, Xylophones,&#13;
Musical Bottles, Aluminum Harp, etc,&#13;
and is an expert in this line.&#13;
His piano so'.os are conceived in&#13;
a very nnsual manner. An absolute&#13;
period of silenae followed by the most&#13;
brilliant strains of music, which are&#13;
easily heard l.y 'Mr. Morris, but entirely&#13;
inaudible to all others. All critics&#13;
agree that it is inspirational but none&#13;
can attribute the true source. Soon as&#13;
recieving such an impression be plays&#13;
and writes the selection and thus have&#13;
some of tbe best marches, waltzes and&#13;
two steps been borninto the musical&#13;
Assessment No. 81&#13;
is now due and must&#13;
Nov.-30.&#13;
t 48 Cora Wright, F&#13;
f the LOTMM&#13;
be paid before&#13;
K.&#13;
Domentic Xeedn.&#13;
Husband—Anything you want downtown&#13;
today, my dear? Shall I order&#13;
•owe more of that self raising flour?&#13;
Wife—We hrtve plenty left. But I wish&#13;
fou would stop at an intelligence office&#13;
and order me n self rising servant girl.&#13;
—New York Week 1 v.&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
Digests what you eat.&#13;
world.&#13;
Mr. Abbott is an excellent character&#13;
delineator and impersonator and presents&#13;
his work in full costume. Hks&#13;
Old Man stories will shake your sides,&#13;
his Old Maid will .surprise and please,&#13;
hispid Darkey will uplift and benefit&#13;
your more serious nature, his Saman&#13;
tba Alien will appeal to your sense of&#13;
the ludicrous and his Willie Perkins&#13;
foolish stories told in a foolish way&#13;
will make you howl with delight.&#13;
The Young Men's Club guarantees&#13;
this attraction and inasmuch as the&#13;
citizenship of the future depends upon&#13;
the boys of today, let us give them encouragement&#13;
and hope by our presence&#13;
on that evening.&#13;
The Club is composed-of members&#13;
difierent denominational views and&#13;
this fact should prove a means of fusion.&#13;
Friday. Nov. 17, 8 p. m. at Cong'l&#13;
church. Admission, 15c children; 25c&#13;
adnlts.&#13;
$1.00 Quality Bleached Table Linen,&#13;
$1.50 Quality Bleached Table Linen,&#13;
75c Quality Bleached Table Linen,&#13;
Meu'i #1.00 Quality Soft Shirts,&#13;
Meu's 50c Quality Soft Shirts,&#13;
Ladies Sateen Skirts,&#13;
Matches, 12 Boxes 10c&#13;
50c Bulk Tea, 40c&#13;
89o^eryard&#13;
$1.29 per yard&#13;
63c per yard&#13;
75c&#13;
42c&#13;
Mc&#13;
Red Salmon, 10c&#13;
Cheese, 13o&#13;
Uowest prices on Dress Goods* Underwear and&#13;
_ Rubberf ^ o a b W e a t - , ; &gt;.&#13;
i Business Pointers. 4&#13;
WASTED,&#13;
Ditchers at ence on county drair.&#13;
Enquire at Erwin Campbell's. Good&#13;
wages paid. Chas Mould.&#13;
J£ORSALS,&#13;
Horse, nearly new Road Cart, Wagon&#13;
and Harness.&#13;
Miss TRAVIS, Pettysville.&#13;
FOR SALE.&#13;
Tv\ o secondhand Round Oak stoves,&#13;
J^^uireot H. VV, SrofeoU— _ 46tL&#13;
ATTENTION POULTRYMEN&#13;
I have a limited number of S. C. R,&#13;
I. Red Cockrels, from prize winning&#13;
birds, also some Golden Polish Cockrels.&#13;
For prices, call on or address,&#13;
Wm. Cady, Lakeland, Mich. t48&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Those who have apples to be made&#13;
into eider, our mill will be ready for&#13;
business by the 1st of October.&#13;
Bert Hooker, Pettysville.&#13;
If OTICH.&#13;
Everybody interested in the Gilk'f&#13;
cemetery are requested to meet at&#13;
that place Saturday Out. 14 lor the&#13;
purpose of beautifying the place&#13;
Subscribe for the Pinckney Dispatch.&#13;
C.S.CHAMBERLIN,&#13;
EXPERT AUCTIONEER&#13;
Of Cuurse&#13;
you are&#13;
going to&#13;
have . .&#13;
Pfiofos Made forXmas.&#13;
— D E X T E R , MICH.&#13;
Boll Phono 06, frco P. U. LOck Box 1¾&#13;
Formerly of Battle Cre*k, Mich. Sells everything&#13;
on earth-Real Estate, Graded Stock, Personal&#13;
Property, Country Hales, etc. Years ol experience,&#13;
and prices reasonable.'&#13;
Orders may be left at the DISPATCH Office.&#13;
PLNCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
friends will like half so&#13;
well as a Photo&#13;
PHOTO OF YOURSELF&#13;
Have them taken now,&#13;
before the rush is on. If&#13;
yoowant&#13;
Good Ones&#13;
that will last and are&#13;
Up To Date&#13;
• - ^ j&#13;
J&#13;
" t&#13;
*&#13;
go to&#13;
MAfflrWS&#13;
Howell, Michigan&#13;
E. W. DANIELS,&#13;
GENERAL AUCTIONEER.&#13;
Satisractic n Guaranteed. For informs,&#13;
tion call at DISPATCH Office or address&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. rLyntlilla phone&#13;
connection,. Auction bills and tin&#13;
furnished free.&#13;
cups&#13;
PRANK L ANDREWS&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH SEAL&#13;
AT DISPATCH OFFICE&#13;
Percy Swarthout&#13;
Funeral Director&#13;
AND EMBALMER .&#13;
11&#13;
- -A&#13;
ALL CALLS ANSWERED&#13;
PROMPTLY DAY OR NIGHT&#13;
PARLORS AT&#13;
PLIMPTON'S OLD STAND P^one No. 30&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
AH persons&#13;
Account are&#13;
to call and&#13;
cash OP note&#13;
as possible a s I have&#13;
bills to meet.&#13;
owing on&#13;
uestseffle&#13;
by&#13;
soon&#13;
W e c a r r y a full line of Caps, G l o v e s , Miffs,&#13;
Wool Pants and Shirts.&#13;
W. B. MURPHY&#13;
FAKE, But FACTS&#13;
Having made up my mimd not to&#13;
handle any more harnesses, I will sell&#13;
at Cost the following articles, vis:&#13;
Single Harnesses, Lijrht Driving&#13;
Harnesses and Heavy Team Farm&#13;
Harnesses.&#13;
T have Collars, Sweat Paxls and tbe largest&#13;
stock of Whips ever seen in Pinckney, look at tbe&#13;
Price, a No. 1, foil Iwigtb, Hawbide for 40 cent*.*&#13;
A flood Wbalebooe for $1.06, nanaiprice frum&#13;
I am not going ont of business bnt my repairing&#13;
both on Shoes and Harnesses takes all my time a*&#13;
work brought to me is done on short ncti**&#13;
H. CAVERLY&#13;
PINCKNEY&#13;
&amp; • • • •&#13;
FIRST DOOR SOUTH&#13;
OP HOTEL.&#13;
dBktii&#13;
&lt;?•' &lt;&#13;
m&#13;
l a p *&#13;
' A ^ . Ml &gt;&#13;
?r~ii</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch November 16, 1905</text>
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                <text>November 16, 1905 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</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>VOL. XXIII. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON OO., MICH., THURSDAY, NO 7. 28,1906. No. 47&#13;
^*» **m&#13;
l ^ a H H » &gt; » 4 K &gt; &amp; H « ^ » H '&lt;it{ff+S+tt4B&#13;
I K A C Y I V M &amp;TV&amp; *R»ttya\x \DOTVI&#13;
W e have a t h o r o u g h l y e q u i p p e d&#13;
m a c h i n e s h o p a n d a r e in position&#13;
t o d o j o o r r e p a i r i n g p r o m p t l y a n d&#13;
a t reasonable prices&#13;
'THE BEST OF EVERYTHING FOR CHRISTMAS&#13;
WE HAVE THE BIGHT TfetlNG for EVEBY PERSON, TBE BIGHT PRICE for EVERY fORSE&#13;
A BEAUTIFUL ASSORTMENT OF PLEASING GIFTS&#13;
PERFECTLY ADAPTED TO T B E WANTS AND REQUIREMENTS OP OUtt FRIENDS AND PATRONS&#13;
EVERYTHING FRESH AMD SP1RRLIN6 WITH THE BRIGHTEST NEW GOODS OF THE 8EI80M&#13;
We are waiting to plea&amp;e you with Presents that are Apptopnatt, Popular, Pract.cal and in every way Desirable in the line of&#13;
Engine and Lathe&#13;
Work a Specialty&#13;
Sharp Edge&#13;
Grinding Done&#13;
ftattV, Sw&amp;Wu and TbtW ^etaphont e,&lt;mne&lt;A\onfc&#13;
"VDaAsotvYwXvt "\Da\wrv ^o. ZKL AtouufiAXa, I f l S .&#13;
Toys f Books * and * Novelties&#13;
FANCY GOODS, NOTIONS, ETC.&#13;
WE HAVE THE MRIETY THIT INSURES THE EASY SITISFICTORY CHOICE - T H E FIELD FOR SELECTION THE WIDEST. PRICES FAIREST&#13;
A GENEROUS ASSORTMENT, FUL.JL. of QUAL.ITY and MERIT&#13;
If Yoii Want Satirfaction In Selection and Economy In Price Oilr Holiday Stock Will Fill Yotlr Needs&#13;
REMEMBER OUR HOLIOATHiTOOK GIVES YOF- NEW IDEAS AXD Sl'PPLrES EXACTLY WHAT YOU WANT&#13;
X &lt;3- X *&#13;
+==&#13;
LOCALNEWS.&#13;
• &amp;&#13;
BeantiluTweather for November.&#13;
N^xtToursday will be Thanksgiving&#13;
flayj* Let all give thanks.&#13;
•'^^ndeJion8 are in_evidence Jn, this&#13;
yiemity or have been the patt week.&#13;
Jas. Kiizrarnons of Stock bridge was&#13;
town Friday evening between&#13;
ains.&#13;
Frank Moran has been nursing a&#13;
very soro haud the past week—a&#13;
carbuncle.&#13;
Walter Huick and wife of Mt. Calm&#13;
Co. visited her father, Ahrain Boyer,&#13;
and wife the past week.&#13;
Mrs. L. W. Richards of Bay City&#13;
has been the guest of her mother, Mrs.&#13;
E. W, Martin, the^past weetc or two.&#13;
Thirty-nine licensee to hunt deer&#13;
were issued in this county this year.&#13;
There was none from this township&#13;
and but one from Howell.&#13;
Mrs. F. L, Andrews and daughter&#13;
Florence were in Howell Saturday.&#13;
Mrs D. F. Ewen has been entertaining&#13;
her brother from Pulaski the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Ann Arbor is to h aye-a-hospital—torcontagious&#13;
disease?, $8,000 having&#13;
been added to the taxes for t h a i purpose.&#13;
The teachers of the Pinckney High&#13;
school, with the exception of Miss&#13;
Kennedy who was ill, attended the&#13;
Teacher's association at Howell Saturday.&#13;
« •&#13;
Those from here who saw the Michigan-&#13;
Wisconsin foot ball game at Ann&#13;
Arbor Saturday, claim it was a very&#13;
clean game and of course all Michigan&#13;
people were happy as Michigan won—&#13;
score, 12 to 0.&#13;
Now that the cold weather is approaching,&#13;
the patrons of the rural&#13;
routes will confer a favor upon their&#13;
M. E. Church Notes.&#13;
There are two ways of building np&#13;
the church; oue is God'e way and the&#13;
other is man's way. The first is by&#13;
having people born into the church&#13;
by the Hoiy Spirit's power in answer&#13;
H. M. Will'ston k Co. have a space'&#13;
on pace 8 *&#13;
= D r . r V W . C o k m a * - « ( £a4iUaca&amp;&#13;
« -&#13;
"5^"&#13;
carrier by not placing mohey in the&#13;
The Baptist society of Parsballville | mail boxes and compelling the carrier&#13;
are celebrating the fiftieth anniversary&#13;
ofJiie^edji»tion_p_f their churcLtodayi box over to find the jtenniei-&#13;
Nov. 23, with an all day service.&#13;
Miss Jennie Thorn and Albert Myers&#13;
were married last week at the par*&#13;
sonage in Dexter. They are well&#13;
known here and have the best wishes&#13;
of aH.&#13;
to pull of his mittens and rake the&#13;
The ladies of the Lakin Aid society&#13;
will serve Thanksgiving chicken-pie&#13;
dinner at the home of Sir. and Mrs.!&#13;
W. H. Chambers. A cordial invita-!&#13;
tion is extended to all.&#13;
A letter from Miss Franc Burcb&#13;
from Colorado Springs says they are&#13;
haying beautiful weather there. Miss&#13;
Burch is giving some of her excellent&#13;
entertainments in that section.&#13;
Frank Tip lady informs us that be is&#13;
fatening thirty-five hogs this season,&#13;
besides a* large flock of sheep. This&#13;
must take considerable work and a lot&#13;
of corn. But then think of the "mon."&#13;
While witnessing the foot ball game&#13;
at Ann Arbor Saturday most of the&#13;
Pinckney delegation were on the&#13;
bleechers that went down bat none&#13;
of them were injured in the least.&#13;
Toe bIeechers went down so. easily&#13;
that no one was seriously hurt and&#13;
but tew injured at all.&#13;
The entertainment given at the&#13;
Cong'l church last Friday evening unthe&#13;
auspices of the Young Men's Club&#13;
was well attended and all enjoyed it.&#13;
The musical numbers were excellent,&#13;
Mr. Morris showing considerable abil&#13;
ity as a composer. The musical novelties&#13;
were new, mostly to Pinckney&#13;
audiences and were good. The organ&#13;
chimes were exceptionally fine and&#13;
musical. The impersonations by Mr.&#13;
Abbott were well rendered and pleasing.&#13;
His costume characters being&#13;
exceptionally good.&#13;
to preyailing prayer; the second is by&#13;
proselyting or persuasion. The first&#13;
makes a man a christian; the second&#13;
makes a man an adherent a sectarian,&#13;
a Pharisee. The first saves a man&#13;
for time and eternity, if he continues&#13;
faithful to the faith already given him;&#13;
the second damns a man by substitution&#13;
and false hope unless he is afterward&#13;
awakened..&#13;
Prayet meeting in the upper room&#13;
this week. Let us make it a penticostal&#13;
season. Trustee meeting at&#13;
close. We hope bo see a majority of the &gt;&#13;
official brothers.&#13;
Our class meeting is growing in attendance&#13;
and interest. Be sure and&#13;
get in at 10:00 sharp. Bro. Mowers&#13;
will lead.&#13;
Let us get in line of revival. Other&#13;
places are enjoying "showers of bless&#13;
jng1' sn will gft hftra whwn "nra bring&#13;
T*l&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
HOWELL, MICH.&#13;
Oar fall and winter goods are coming&#13;
in from mill and factory. You will&#13;
find this a good store to buy underwear,&#13;
hosiery, gloves and mittens,&#13;
toques, fasciuators, outing flannels,&#13;
and the many items necessary to be&#13;
comfortable when the cold weather&#13;
comes. Our lines of Holiday goods&#13;
are coining in and we will have by far&#13;
the best assortment ever shown by us.&#13;
Dolls, books, games, celhioul goods,&#13;
comb and brush sets, collVe^and cuff&#13;
eels, etc. China, toys of every description.&#13;
Visit us when you come to&#13;
Howell, every clerk will welcome you.&#13;
Oof method is to give big value for the&#13;
money, as we find it pays to do so.&#13;
We^sell for cash only and can sell&#13;
cheVptr than the stores selling on&#13;
., j r t f H t . , - .&#13;
£ A. BOWMAN.&#13;
&lt;,The Busy S t o r e ,&#13;
OnM.RIw SI. - OppotitKCourt HOUM.&#13;
Howall Mich.&#13;
Sunday, Nov. 26&#13;
Morning Worship and Sermon&#13;
at 10:30&#13;
EVENING SERVICE&#13;
At 7:00&#13;
"«Ie&amp;»»oa'&amp; M o t h e r "&#13;
With appropriate Music Instrumental&#13;
and Vocal&#13;
• &gt;, • • . ! - v , . , . * • - A story,for,to* young. a&amp;4 helpful&#13;
as an inspiration tl&gt; christian living.&#13;
EVERYBODY WELCOME&#13;
all the tithes into the store house."&#13;
Young Peoble's meeting at 6:15&#13;
sharp. Please let us' be on hand to&#13;
help make each meeting successful.&#13;
—: m mm&#13;
Young Mens Club&#13;
, &lt;&#13;
The right and the wrong of ail&#13;
amusements depends entirely upon&#13;
the story, the play, the game, now and&#13;
what it is and bow it is done. Many&#13;
of us make virtue stupid and give the&#13;
devil the spice of life. Amusements,&#13;
pleasures and recreation are lawful&#13;
and necessary; they are not wrongs in&#13;
and of themselves unless they . are&#13;
abused by those who have depraved&#13;
tastes.&#13;
The is no harm in the billard table,&#13;
It is just as right to roll an ivory&#13;
ball over a green cloth with a cue as&#13;
it is to roll a wooden ball over green&#13;
grass with a mallet. Evil is not in a&#13;
thing it is in a person. God made&#13;
everything good. Men's minds put&#13;
eyil or good into them according as&#13;
the minds are inclined. Pres.&#13;
Congregational Church.&#13;
the gnest of bis sister, Mrs. Chafe. Love.&#13;
The weather of the past week has&#13;
been good for lbe work on the _post&#13;
office building but owing to a lack ot&#13;
material the work has been held up.&#13;
The photo gallery is to be opened&#13;
again. R. A. Williams having rented&#13;
it for three weeks commencing Tuesday&#13;
next. Nov. 28. See adv. on page 8.&#13;
We learn that Miss Ella Winegar of&#13;
Howell has gone to Mt. Clemens for&#13;
treatment for a typewriter's rheumatism.&#13;
Her many friends hope for her&#13;
immediate recovery.&#13;
Friday last Miss Bell Kennedy went&#13;
home from her school work at noon,&#13;
ill. The disease' took the form of&#13;
pneumonia and for a tew days she was&#13;
quite ill. A nurse was sent for and&#13;
everything possible done and we are&#13;
glad to state that she is en the way to&#13;
spe°dy recovery. Her school work in&#13;
the Grammar department is being.&#13;
looked after by Snpr. Ganl while Miss&#13;
Morehead takes the High school.&#13;
The Michigan Central is now double&#13;
tracked all the way between Detroit&#13;
and Chicago and trains are running&#13;
over both tracks. ™ = "&#13;
Wm. Kennedy has rented the Dolan&#13;
buildings in the western part :&gt;i town&#13;
and will make hoops. We understand&#13;
that he has material enough to keep&#13;
bis gang busy all winter.&#13;
Kalamazoo is losing its big celery&#13;
fields. The growth of the city will'&#13;
soon build up the celery land. The&#13;
growers are seeking other lands and&#13;
the crop is rapidly lessening,&#13;
Someone who is fond of figures, has&#13;
figured it out that the ven son shipped&#13;
into Washtenaw county this year by&#13;
the deer hunters will cost at least $1 a&#13;
pound.—Chelsea Herald. If it does&#13;
not cost a life or two you get off easy.&#13;
C. P. Sykes k Son returned Thursday&#13;
last from Chelsea where they, have&#13;
beau putting in three systems of steam&#13;
heat. They also have more work there&#13;
as well as a job or two here. We&#13;
wender why people always wait until&#13;
winter_tQ_rjat in thett steam or other&#13;
heating plants. —&#13;
The union service held last Sunday&#13;
evening-was largely attended, the&#13;
church being filled to its utmost capacity.&#13;
The pastor urges the christian&#13;
people to assemble for prayer this&#13;
Thursday evening at 7 o'clock. If the&#13;
wave of blessing is to come onr way&#13;
there mast be united prayer. Choir&#13;
meets at Sail members urged to be&#13;
present. Sunday morning service at&#13;
10:30.&#13;
N . H. Caverly moved his h a n e s s&#13;
attd shoe repairing business to Dexter.&#13;
Tuesday * n d will open a shop there.&#13;
He is a good, work man and Pinckney&#13;
is sorry to lose him.&#13;
No$. 14 and ]6 j{rt Laurel&#13;
In heating capaicty and economy of&#13;
fuel, as welt as in appearance, these&#13;
base burners surpass-all others. Attention&#13;
is called to the illustrations&#13;
showing the Laurel special construction&#13;
of back flues. When the damper&#13;
is closed the hat air from the fire pot&#13;
travels down thefchanging back flue&#13;
and is circulated, completely around&#13;
the base of the stove, coming in direct&#13;
contact with both the outside and inside&#13;
walls of the base and then travels&#13;
upward through the return flue to the&#13;
smoke pipe.&#13;
The cold air from the floor is drawn&#13;
up through the opening shown on illustration,&#13;
comes in direct contact with&#13;
entire fire pot wall, entire circumference&#13;
of the hanging or downward flue&#13;
and one entire side of ttie return flue,&#13;
finally passing into the room through&#13;
the double heater outlet at the top of the&#13;
s t : v e o r can be carried to upper rooms by&#13;
means of an extra pipe. Jt will be observed&#13;
th it the rear pv rt ol the return or up flue&#13;
forms the outside or back plate of the stove.&#13;
In this manner what remains of the heat,&#13;
after circulating around the- ba«e of the&#13;
stove is radiated into the room.&#13;
This is the ouiy construction where the&#13;
cold air is brought in contact with such&#13;
grear beating surface and consequently this&#13;
stove furnishes at least 1,000 square inches&#13;
more radiating surface than any other base&#13;
burner made. A close examination of the&#13;
illustration will give a more correct idea of&#13;
the beating and fuel saviatr:*adarantages of&#13;
this improved base burner^ ^The fire pot&#13;
and feeder can be quickly audi •aftilju removed&#13;
through front doors: •*•' l&#13;
fjf •&gt;::--^,&#13;
i m it&#13;
&lt;L ' ,i&#13;
), r&#13;
fa&#13;
. * '&#13;
•W. M&#13;
%\&#13;
• I .;• '&#13;
Teeple Hardware Go.&#13;
V&#13;
IV'.-&#13;
i-\&#13;
• 3 * " VSWr*&#13;
w ^ _ ^ r , . ^ ^ ^ - . . . - - - - , ^ ^ * ^ - . . , ^ l f ^ ^&#13;
vtetf5f»»w0&gt;'• * '•&#13;
#*;-rV&#13;
•• ^ . V ' * : - ;&#13;
^-/%¾'&#13;
&lt;i#i'&amp; ^&#13;
« * * •&#13;
'* — ^ — ' m v i I*. Astsutwj, Putt "&#13;
Ik&#13;
S:1&#13;
-I&#13;
3&#13;
N&#13;
i t&#13;
EiyCKSJET. MICHIGAN&#13;
Solitude is a place Where they never&#13;
advertise. — Philadelphia Saturday&#13;
Post.&#13;
The Women continue to wear their&#13;
hair to suit themselves, rather than&#13;
Mr. Carnegie.&#13;
If ,rMr». Warren's Profession" is too&#13;
toagh for New York, It must be almighty&#13;
tough.&#13;
As a small concession to common&#13;
sense William Waldorf Astor does not&#13;
wear a monocle.&#13;
Sir Frederick Treves says sickness&#13;
is a blessing. Perhaps he intends to&#13;
marry the nurse.&#13;
" Usually"wTieTnr~Tittrn^reaches the&#13;
turn in the lane he finds that it turns&#13;
in the wrong direction.&#13;
The duke business in Russia isn't&#13;
likely to be as profitable In the future&#13;
as It has been in the past.&#13;
:•&gt; 5 « v#* «&#13;
«» »«*• 5&#13;
COUNTY SEAT WAR IN ANTRIM&#13;
COUNTY IS&#13;
OVER.&#13;
THE OLD NORTHERN MILEAGE&#13;
BOOK 'JO BE RE8TOREO TO&#13;
TRAVELING MEN.&#13;
BCHOOL TEACHER DIES AFTEX&#13;
EATING SALAD AT A&#13;
CHURCH SOCIAL.&#13;
That Denver man who has never&#13;
been kissed is going to disappoint&#13;
some woman badly one of th^se days.&#13;
t r&#13;
The mystery of Edwin Drood has&#13;
T5ew^lvetTflnjt~we~BTestill searching&#13;
for the man who struck Billy Patterson.&#13;
--- Stuy vesant Fish has paid one of- hia&#13;
wife's bills at last. Oh, these women!&#13;
They always have their way sooner or&#13;
later.&#13;
rfden autumn love*&#13;
ly woman buys a frock, and the frost&#13;
is on the wallet and the neighbors get&#13;
a shock.&#13;
A Tennessee state senator who led&#13;
a raid on his son's poker game probably&#13;
gave the young man the surprise&#13;
of his life.&#13;
The American contractor is to build&#13;
the Panama canal. There is nothing&#13;
In this world he is not ready to under*&#13;
take and execute.&#13;
According to the new state census,&#13;
the population of Greater New York&#13;
is 4,014,304. This will make Chicago&#13;
feel worse than ever.&#13;
A check for $32,035,875.50 has just&#13;
been signed by the assistant secretary&#13;
of the treasury, but It wasn't drawn&#13;
en his personal account.&#13;
King Alfonso traveled incognito&#13;
through France on his way to Gerscany.&#13;
That's the only way that royalty&#13;
can have a real good time.&#13;
-Men aro the real-slaves of fashion.&#13;
In Mrs. Stuy vesant Fish's opinion;&#13;
look at the hats they wear. Well,&#13;
look at tho things called hats women&#13;
wear.&#13;
Accepts New Court House.&#13;
The new $30,000 brick courthouse at&#13;
Bellalre has been accepted by the committee&#13;
of the board of supervisors, and&#13;
-the building is now_accepted by the&#13;
county officers. This, it is hoped, is&#13;
the end of the county seat fight* which,&#13;
in Its various phases, has lasted over&#13;
a quarter of a century, The fight began&#13;
when the county seat was removed&#13;
from Elk Rapids to Bellaire, in 1879.&#13;
Bellalre was then without a building&#13;
or clearing of any kind, and without&#13;
a passable highway,, but it was centrally&#13;
located and had a good water&#13;
power, and was not the rival of any&#13;
other place. A hot campaign for votes,&#13;
and a stubborn contest in the supreme&#13;
court ended—the fight so far as Blk&#13;
Ranlds was concerned, but as soon as&#13;
Bellaire acquired a few buildings and&#13;
a population a rivalry sprung up between&#13;
it and Central Lake, and the&#13;
people of Central Lake_sei_their hearts&#13;
on getting the county seat. For twenty-&#13;
five years it was impossible to get&#13;
the question of raising money for a&#13;
courthouse submitted to the people,&#13;
and whim, it was iinaJlyj&amp;ubmitted another&#13;
hot campaign for votes was on.&#13;
The final act of accepting the courthouse&#13;
ends these matters, and air Antrim&#13;
county is now proud of its elegant-&#13;
aniL .substantial .nejvjcojjjttlyjbiiijd-.&#13;
ing.&#13;
Old Mileage Book Restored.&#13;
Gov. Warner and the commercial&#13;
travelers of Michigan have won their&#13;
fight, for the restoration of the northern&#13;
mileage book on Michigan railroads&#13;
except the Michigan Central and&#13;
Grand Rapids &amp; Indiana. At the meeting&#13;
of the Central Passenger association&#13;
in Chicago notice of withdrawal&#13;
from the central book was given by&#13;
the Pere Marquette, Grand Trunk, Ann&#13;
Arbor, Detroit &amp; Mackinac, Pere Marquette&#13;
steamship lines, Detroit &amp; Buffalo&#13;
Steamship Co., Detroit &amp; Cleveland&#13;
Navigation Co., Crosby Navigation&#13;
Co.&#13;
The northern book will be in use&#13;
again from November 30 and the&#13;
northern mileage' bureau, which remained&#13;
in existence to close up old&#13;
business, will resume the issue of new&#13;
books. The principal difference between&#13;
the northern and central books&#13;
Is the requirement that the latter book&#13;
be presented at station offices for exchange&#13;
for a passage ticket, while the&#13;
northern book may be presented to tlie&#13;
conductor on trains direct.&#13;
MICHIGAN ITEMS.&#13;
An eastern poet says: "The morning&#13;
Tight is breaking." It may be,&#13;
however, that it is the cook smashing&#13;
0 few cut-glass finger bowls in the&#13;
kitchen.&#13;
Fatal Church.Salad. • &amp;&#13;
An- Omaha man who lost his job at&#13;
the age of 104 and then tried to commit&#13;
suicide will be excused for thinking&#13;
that he had reached the end of&#13;
his rope.&#13;
William Schaus, a scientist, has&#13;
given 26,00,0 moths to the American&#13;
Museum of Natural History. The common&#13;
practice of donating dollars did&#13;
not appeal to him.&#13;
A Massachusetts man has been appointed&#13;
to the consulship at Vladivostok—&#13;
a place that seems very much&#13;
more attractive now than It did three&#13;
or four months ago.&#13;
A fleet may be sent to compel the&#13;
sultan to make reforms in Macedonia.&#13;
In arguing with the more or less sublime&#13;
porte there is nothing quite so&#13;
persuasive as big guns.&#13;
Miss Caroline Clifford, a school&#13;
teacher, attended a church social at&#13;
Menominee, and ate of a salad, among&#13;
other things. She was taken with convulsions&#13;
on her way home and was&#13;
found unconscious on the-street and&#13;
was carried into a doctor's office. She&#13;
died after 24 hours of agony from ptomaine&#13;
poisoning.&#13;
Judge Roberts Dies Suddenly.&#13;
Judge Lorin Roberts, one of the&#13;
most prominent men of Traverse City,&#13;
died very suddenly last night of apoplexy.&#13;
He was at the Wequetong club,&#13;
of which he is president, when attacked,&#13;
and lived only four hours.&#13;
He was born in Johnson, 0., in 1845&#13;
and enlisted in the cavalry when only&#13;
16 years of age, serving with honor&#13;
throughout the entire war. He graduated&#13;
afterward at Oberlin college and&#13;
served as the head of Benzonia college&#13;
in Michigan one year.&#13;
, Sugar beet and chickory factories ai&#13;
Bay City pay out nearly $350,000 to&#13;
farmers this week. ' ; -&#13;
Henry Pippo went to sleep in a bam&#13;
At &lt;Osk«r, sear Houghton, and a horse&#13;
trampled on him, crushing hie skull.&#13;
TM-yeoroli Vivian Viola ©reen. •&#13;
talented young artist of Kalamaioo,&#13;
was burled with her violin by her&#13;
«lde, , .,,&#13;
Over $4,000 in bank certiflc*4es b*«&#13;
beetf found In the little houae wheYe&#13;
Hiss Martha J. Hauser, of Qeroda, a&#13;
recluse, died&#13;
The marriage of Fred W. Mala, 6}&#13;
Tekonaha, to Mame B yajes, caused&#13;
a surprise, as' the license had been&#13;
suppressed. « &gt; •&#13;
W. O. Bmerick, of Saginaw, has resigned&#13;
his position as deputy collector&#13;
of customs to engage in the clothing&#13;
business^ at Detroit.&#13;
Sault Ste. Marie wants a new federal&#13;
building, costing $100,000, and congress&#13;
may be asked to appropriate the&#13;
money at the next session.&#13;
Company G, Second Michigan Cavalry,&#13;
held Its annual reunion at Hills*&#13;
dale, less than a dozen of the 100 musteredIn&#13;
44 years ago being present.&#13;
John Wormbrand, aged 80, who has&#13;
lived a hermit life for 10 years at Muskegon,&#13;
has been.granted a divorce from&#13;
his wife, aged 75, who lives in Kalamazoo.&#13;
A hobo held up* Ethan Cudney, aged&#13;
14 years, in the Grand Trunk yards, at&#13;
Owosso, went through his pockets and&#13;
relieved him of all his money—one&#13;
cent.&#13;
Charles—3irkenfeluer, of Monroe,&#13;
begged 10 cents to buy some parts&#13;
green, poured it into a glass of beer&#13;
and drank the stuff. A stomach pump&#13;
saved him.&#13;
--Gov.—Warner-HS conference with—themileage&#13;
book question with the committee&#13;
of the Central Passenger association&#13;
at Chicago, has been postponed&#13;
to December &amp;.&#13;
~X. WTWti^mibW1oT^6\im&#13;
was horribly burned by the explosion&#13;
of kerosene oil which he was pouring&#13;
over a smoldering ftre. His chances&#13;
for recovery are small.&#13;
A new creamery company has been&#13;
organized at Wayne, with J. C Stellwagen&#13;
president; John Truesdell,&#13;
treasurer, and Anthony Snyder, secretary.&#13;
Bay City capital is exploring around&#13;
Sandusky for coal beds and thousands&#13;
of acres of farm land have been leased&#13;
in Elmer, Moore and Lamotte townships.&#13;
Barney Jours, of Three Rivers, while&#13;
trying to extract a cartridge from his&#13;
revolver, accidentally shot his friend,&#13;
Lester Hill, in the groin. The boy is&#13;
in a critical condition.&#13;
The U. of M. regents authorized a&#13;
$14,000 addition to the university hospital&#13;
to accommodate Drs. Parker and&#13;
Canfleld In their special work on eye,&#13;
ear, nose and throat diseases.&#13;
The Port Huron Y. M. C. A. contemplates&#13;
purchasing the Port Huron auditorium&#13;
for $12,000 and converting it into&#13;
association headquarters. , Citizens&#13;
are subscribing money for the purpose.&#13;
The Commonwealth Power Co.; of&#13;
Lansing, which furnishes motive power&#13;
for several city and intcrurban linos,&#13;
BOARD DECIDES TO BUILD&#13;
CANAL QN THE&#13;
SEA LEVEL.&#13;
m»*5*ED THf LOCK CANAL FROJ&#13;
l C t »Y A VOTI OF&#13;
EIGHT TO FiVt-&#13;
THE ' COMMiSSIO*. THE PRRSv&#13;
. OCMT A NO CONGJte** MUST &lt;&#13;
PASS ON THE FLAN.&#13;
A Washington dispatch says: The&#13;
board .pf consulting engineers of the&#13;
isthmian canal commission declared itself&#13;
by a large majority in favor of&#13;
a sea level canal.&#13;
The conclusion was reached after t»&#13;
long and careful study of the project.&#13;
Since the beginning of September the&#13;
board had held meetings and in spe- 1 cial sub-committees had studied the&#13;
plans for a sea level and a lock canal&#13;
i with the greatest care. A trip to the&#13;
isthmus was made to enable the mem-&#13;
' bers.to form a better idea of the physical&#13;
difficulties which had to be considered.&#13;
1 The members of the board are men&#13;
of the greatest reputation In their line&#13;
of work. France, Germany and Hoiland&#13;
had sent their most eminent specialists&#13;
at the request of the American&#13;
government.&#13;
From the beginning it was evideni&#13;
that, a majority of the members was&#13;
ltr-fav©rof the-sea-levelcanal. Theli&#13;
point of view was that, even if it cost&#13;
more than a lock canal and would take&#13;
longer in the building, it would ultimately&#13;
be of greater use, as it will en&#13;
e-ahiftfl—to make a much shorter&#13;
trip than if they were obliged to go&#13;
through three or four locks.&#13;
Prince Louis Loses 1,056 Men.&#13;
One thousand and fifty-six -British&#13;
Jailors were missing today from the&#13;
squadron of Prince Louis of Battenberg,&#13;
which has been anchored in New&#13;
York harbor for a little more than a&#13;
week.&#13;
These sailors are recorded as deserters&#13;
on the books of the six ships&#13;
composing the fleet, but their officers&#13;
hope that most of them have merely&#13;
overstayed their shore leave.&#13;
Petty officers from all the ships of&#13;
the British squadron, their revolvers&#13;
and sabres strapped by their sides,&#13;
tramped the Bowery from one end to&#13;
the other trying to find some of their&#13;
enthusiastic crew. They found only&#13;
a few of them, and these they took&#13;
back to ship to do penance.&#13;
Serious for United States.&#13;
Jacob H. Schiff, at the annual meeting&#13;
of the Educational alliance at New&#13;
' York, referred to the conditions in&#13;
Russia and also spoke of the Jewish&#13;
race. He said:&#13;
"The turmoil in Russia must have&#13;
some serious consequences to the Uhitcd&#13;
States ' It will mean an immense&#13;
is erecting a station here preparatory immigration and this country must&#13;
A Long Island man who is 40 years&#13;
old anjfr'mlnus a leg bested his 16-yearon&#13;
in a race for the affections of&#13;
a 14-year-old girl. The Osier limit&#13;
certainly does not apply here.&#13;
Now they're asking: "In a football&#13;
game between college players and pugilists,&#13;
which would win V* • As well&#13;
ask, in a flirtation,between a man and&#13;
woman which would have the best of&#13;
ft?&#13;
When ^very paper in the country has&#13;
paid due and proper attention to the&#13;
fact that toothpicks are not considered&#13;
good form at the University of Chicago&#13;
the incident may be regarded as&#13;
closed.&#13;
Eggs laid on Sunday in Cumberland,&#13;
Ky., wJir hereafter be devoted to contfrting&#13;
the heathen. But the heathen&#13;
^ 4 t t * ^ H * * W m f e t ! e M meet the&#13;
emergency by -Joing his beathenlni&#13;
behind a net.—Chicago Journal.&#13;
Governor Kills Deer and a Wolf.&#13;
The governor killed a wolf, the hide&#13;
of which he will have made into a rug&#13;
for his office at Lansing. He also got&#13;
a fine buck.&#13;
Saturday the governor spoke in the&#13;
smallest schoolhouse in Michigan, in&#13;
the woods near Wellsburg near where&#13;
his deer hunting camp is located. The&#13;
building is 10x14 and has ten scholars&#13;
enrolled.&#13;
New Bridge Opened.&#13;
The new cement bridge over the&#13;
Maple river at Muir, just opened to the&#13;
public Is the only bridge of this kind&#13;
in Ionia county. It was built by the&#13;
Slater Construction Co. of Pontiac. It&#13;
consists of three arches of 84 feet&#13;
each, with a 16-feet roadway and cqst&#13;
$12,600.&#13;
Robbed of 91,200 in Cash.&#13;
That banks are safer than bureau&#13;
drawers aa depositories for ca#h has&#13;
Just been learned by Rev. John Baker/&#13;
who la 80 years of age. Burglars entered&#13;
hit home and secured $U2QQ in&#13;
cash. Oennxark township baa seen no&#13;
thlevePttttyesrs and the old minister&#13;
never thought of burglars when he hid&#13;
the gold, which has now gone glimmering.&#13;
The $e\&lt;K*.. water , works bonding&#13;
proposition was voted down at Athens.&#13;
To siippTylng the interurban lines out&#13;
of Lansing.&#13;
Muskrats are undermining the highway&#13;
between Montague and Whitehall&#13;
and Officer Hall, of this place, is doing&#13;
a nice stroke of business by trapping&#13;
them for their pelts and to stop&#13;
their damage.&#13;
Wiley H. Tollefson, the young man&#13;
wanted In fully a dozen cities on&#13;
charges of beating hotels and banks&#13;
out of various sums, was convicted of&#13;
swindling the National bank at Grand&#13;
Haven. . ,&#13;
The Port Huron police are1 puzzled&#13;
by a long list of midnight saloon robberies&#13;
which have occurred within the&#13;
last few months. Joseph O'Hearne's saloon&#13;
was robbed of nearly $50 early&#13;
Tuesday morning.&#13;
Wexford supervisors are In special&#13;
session at Cadillac on the subject of&#13;
granting the Manistee Power Co. the&#13;
privilege to dam Maplstee river 20&#13;
miles above there. The Manistee Navigation&#13;
Co. objects.&#13;
James Lott, aged 70, living near De&#13;
Witt, fell from the seat of his wagon,&#13;
and his head caught in such a way&#13;
that the tire ground a hole through his&#13;
skull so that his brain .was exposed.&#13;
His recovery is doubtful.&#13;
Prof. Henry S. Carhart, of Ann Arbor,&#13;
has arrived home from his trip&#13;
through Africa with a British scientific&#13;
expedition. The party traversed the&#13;
Zambesi river, and was present at the&#13;
dedication of the Victoria bridge on&#13;
the Cape to Cairo railroad.&#13;
Patent post-holes are to be a rea' ty.&#13;
Ernest O. Eddy, assistant city engineer&#13;
of Lansing, has patented a machine&#13;
which digs a hole and sets a&#13;
post or pole in six minutes, equaling&#13;
the speed of 15 men. Telegraph and&#13;
telephone companies will profit by it.&#13;
"The hoboes retreat" on the shores&#13;
of Boardman Lake, near Traverse City,&#13;
waa raided by Sheriff Oarhrlon, of Antrim&#13;
county, who recovered a quantity&#13;
of koJves, shoes, dethjng and jewelry.&#13;
The each* was discovered by means&#13;
of a may secured from a hobo who&#13;
had pawned a quantity of loot.&#13;
Arthur T. Rone, of Miey.was divorced&#13;
by hU wife a few days ago, but he decided&#13;
that it was not good to live&#13;
aiene He went to the county clerk's&#13;
office to get a license *to wed again,&#13;
and found hia former wife iu« the&#13;
deputy to whom he had to-make upplication&#13;
Mr. a Uoenae. He gat**, however.&#13;
I&#13;
keep its doors wide open to allow those&#13;
who flee from that country to enter.&#13;
•""•"There are many races of the Jew—&#13;
five or six at least. The races cross&#13;
in this country and they will unite in&#13;
making the greatest Jew that ever existed,&#13;
the American Jew."&#13;
Labor Lost .$2,000,000.&#13;
The report of Secretary Frank Morrison,&#13;
of the American Federation of&#13;
Labor, at the second day of the convention&#13;
at Pittsburg, showed there&#13;
were 1,157 labor strikes during tho&#13;
year ending October 1, 1905. These&#13;
strikes involved 107,268 men, of whom&#13;
63,350 were benefited and 52,028 worsted.&#13;
The strikes cost the unions in loss&#13;
of wages $2,517,291.&#13;
The secretary's report admits that&#13;
the figures are not complete. They du&#13;
not include the Chicago teamsters'&#13;
strike, nor the strikes of the iron and&#13;
steel workers, mlneworkers, painters&#13;
and textile workers. The strike of tlw&#13;
textile workers alone involved ,20,000&#13;
persons and cost $200,000.&#13;
Town ic Hen Crazy.&#13;
Tekonsha is hen crazy. Pleasure and&#13;
profit are the two reasons. It is&#13;
claimed more poultry is shipped out of&#13;
that village than from any other town&#13;
in the state. Nearly every resident&#13;
keeps chickens, not only as a domestic&#13;
necessity, but for the profit there&#13;
la in it.&#13;
New Town on the Boom.&#13;
Not a church, saloon, school or place&#13;
of amusement has Birch, but it can&#13;
boast of a park and a population of&#13;
300, which is growing and is expected&#13;
to reach 400 in the spring. Birch was&#13;
unheard of five months ago.&#13;
A postoffice will be opened about December&#13;
1, when the Marquette &amp;&#13;
Southeastern railroad begina its regular&#13;
service.&#13;
i 1 nil II M • I .«1 j f l 1 ' 1 '&#13;
Isle of f Ine^deoedea.&#13;
M M&#13;
Resident* of the Isle of Pines have&#13;
issued a declaration of their independence&#13;
from Cuba and organised a new&#13;
#ovtntfoenV A delegate to congresa&#13;
will be sent to Washington In order&#13;
to have the question affecting the future&#13;
of the Island .dieeuesed before the&#13;
house of representatives^ ignoring Cuban&#13;
authority. I&#13;
Mass meetings were held under the&#13;
name of territorial conventions and officials&#13;
were appointed to All all positions&#13;
except those that must be&#13;
named under the constitution of the&#13;
United State*,, .,&#13;
The convention divided the island&#13;
Into Ave district* and ordered elections&#13;
to be held Tuesday to select members&#13;
of the legislature, which Is to convene&#13;
next week, tax assessor*. and collectors.&#13;
One ticket was named in each&#13;
district, the only political question being&#13;
to keep the island under the stars&#13;
and stripes.&#13;
Worse Than a Mu ley Cow.&#13;
Jumping the track seems to be the&#13;
particular stunt of Pere Marquette&#13;
yard engine No. 419, for in less than&#13;
one year it has been derailed SO times.&#13;
The engine was brought to Port Huron&#13;
about a year ago from Saginaw. Although&#13;
no one has been seriously Injured,&#13;
several ^ e n have met with&#13;
minor accidents.&#13;
#&#13;
c•j&#13;
John D. Rockefeller, Jr., It Is said,&#13;
will give up his Bible class in the&#13;
Fifth Avenue Baptist church. He is&#13;
tired of notoriety.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
D e t r o i t — E x t r a dry-fed s t e e r s&#13;
and heifers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S4.23 &lt;g&gt; 4.50&#13;
Steers a n d heifers, 1,000 t o&#13;
1,200 . 3.f.0@ 4.0()&#13;
Steers a n d heifers.800 to 1,000 3.00@3.50-&#13;
Steers a n d heifers t h a t a r e fat,&#13;
500 to 700 2.5003.00-&#13;
Choice f a t - c o w s . . 3.00@3,50i_&#13;
Good fat cows 2.50@3.06&#13;
Common cows 2.00^)2.501&#13;
Canners , . . i.D0©l.BO&#13;
Choice heavy bulls 2.75^3.00-&#13;
F a i r to grood bologna b u l l s . 2.25©2.75&#13;
Stock bulls 2.00@2.5O&#13;
gholce= = feyd^ng atecrd, 800 • »o ===^^~^,&#13;
1,000 3.50@3.85&#13;
F a i r feeding steers. 800 to&#13;
1,000 3.00(^0-.50-&#13;
Choice s t o c k e r s , 500 to 700. 2.75® 3.2»&#13;
F a i r stockers, 500 to 7 0 0 . . . . 2.50*0 2.75&#13;
Stock heifers 2.00^)2.50&#13;
Milkers, l a r g e , young, medium&#13;
a g e \ . . . . . $35 ©50&#13;
Common m i l k e r s 18@30&#13;
Veal calves were active a n d prices&#13;
paid were from 25c to 50c higher t h a n&#13;
they were a week ago.&#13;
Best g r a d e s $6,756)7.25&#13;
Mediums 5.5O@6.0O&#13;
Common a n d heavy 3.75@4.50&#13;
The sheep a n d lamb t r a d e w u s active&#13;
and the q u a l i t y much better t h a n usual.&#13;
Prices w e r e about 15c higher at t h e&#13;
opening on both grades, and t h e close&#13;
was full s t e a d y with the opening. We&#13;
quote:&#13;
Best Iambs $7.00&#13;
Fair to good lumbs 6.50@-6.75&#13;
Light to common l a m b s 5.00fti)6.00&#13;
F a i r t o good b u t c h e r s h e e p . . 4.no©5.00&#13;
Culls and common 3.00@3.5&lt;&gt;-&#13;
Very little w a s done in t h e hog dep&#13;
a r t m e n t until noon. Shippers did not&#13;
like to let go at the prices p a c k e r s&#13;
were offering and held off a s long a s&#13;
possible. T h e m a r k e t w a s from 10c t o&#13;
15e lower a t the close than last T h u r s -&#13;
day. J e r r y Sullivan paid $4.«5 for a&#13;
few bunches, but the bulk of sales&#13;
were from $4.35 to $4,60. We quote:&#13;
Light to good butchers $450©4.85&#13;
P i g s 4.50&#13;
Light y o r k e r s 4,50@4.55&#13;
Roughs ; . 4.00®4.25&#13;
Stags One-third off&#13;
Chicago—Cattle: Receipts, 8,500:&#13;
m a r k e t steady; common _ t(3 prime&#13;
steers, $2.9Ufab.bb: cows, $2.75^4; FeTF-'"&#13;
ers, $ 2 ^ 5 ; bulls, $2@$4; s t o c k e r s a n d&#13;
f e e d e r s . ^ ~ t 2 r H ^ + . 4 ^ calves, - $2-®^&#13;
Hogs: Receipts, 28,000; m a r k e t lower;&#13;
good to prime heavy, $4.85(^4.9".; medium&#13;
to good heavy, $4.70(^4.80; l i g h t -&#13;
weight butchers, $4.75@4.&lt;&gt;0; good to&#13;
choice heavy mixed. $4.60@4.80; packing,&#13;
$4.20®4.80. Sheep: Receipts. 22,-&#13;
000; m a r k e t lower; sheep. $4®5.60:&#13;
£C&gt;^ (1.210 .n * s ' *r , - 5 °€' 6 ; spr ing lambs, $6.50-&#13;
- . E a , * l Buffalo.—Best export steers,&#13;
$4.75@5.20; best 1,200 to 1,300-lb s h i p -&#13;
ping steers, $4.J0®4.65; best 1,000 to&#13;
y « 0 5 ; , b - *3-7*&gt;@4; best fat cows, $2.75&#13;
©3.25; a few at $3.50; fair to good, $2&#13;
®2.50; t r i m m e r s , $1.50; best fat heifers,&#13;
$3.^5@3.50; medium heifers, $2.75&#13;
$3; common stock heifers, $2.25@2.50;&#13;
best feeding steers, $3.75@4; best y e a r -&#13;
lings, $3®3.25; common, $2.50@3; common&#13;
s t o c k e r s , $2.50®3; export bulls.&#13;
$3.25®3.50; bologna bulls, $2.75(6)3.25;&#13;
good to e x t r a fresh cows. $45®52;&#13;
medium to good, $35©42; common, $1»&#13;
®20.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 28,000; m a r k e t lower;&#13;
medium and heavy, $5.10^5.15;&#13;
mixed, $5.05 @ 5.y); y o r k e r s , $5 4») 5.05;&#13;
pigs, $5.05(8)5.10; roughs. $4.30@4.40;&#13;
closed s t e a d y ; about 30 c a r s unsold.&#13;
Sheep—Receipt*, 22,000; m a r k e t iowe&#13;
n - o e a t . l a m b s . $7.15@7.25; fair_to_aQ0dI $6.90®7.10; culls and common, $0®6.50;&#13;
best sheep, $5@5.25; culls a n d common,&#13;
$3.50®4.50; wethers, $5.5005.65; year-&#13;
-Hngs, $5.75®6; the m a r k e t closed dull;&#13;
20 cars unsold.&#13;
Calves—Steady; best, $7.75®8; heavy,&#13;
$3 @ 4.&#13;
Goes to Alter the frlfth Time.&#13;
•Mrs. Lucy Nelson, aged 54, widow&#13;
of &amp; linemen who was. electrocuted in&#13;
Lansing two years ago, will try matrimony&#13;
for a fifth time. Isaac T. Hallowell,&#13;
of. South Bend, Ind., aged *2, Is&#13;
the bridegroom. He has been married&#13;
twice before-&#13;
\yhrtehead U Dead.'&#13;
Robert Whitehead, toventor of the&#13;
torpede which beats hie name, died at&#13;
Shrivenham, Berkshire, Tuesday.&#13;
GRAIN, ETC.&#13;
D e t r o i t — W h e a t : No. 1 white. S7c;&#13;
No. 2 red, spot} 1 car a t 89c, ^ cm- a t&#13;
89'Ac, closing nominal at 89c; December,&#13;
5,000 bu a t 89%c, 3,000 bu a t 89V*c,&#13;
12,600 b„u at 89c, 10.000 bu a t 89¼c, 5,-&#13;
000 bu a t 89%c, 5.000 bu a t 89¾ c, closing&#13;
nominal a t 89%c; May, 10,000 bu a t&#13;
91 %c, 5.O0O bu a t 9 1 H c 5,000 bu a t&#13;
91 %c, 12.000 bu at 91'%c, 10,000 bu a t&#13;
92c, 5,000 bu a t 91 % c ; No. 3 red, S5c&#13;
per bu.&#13;
Cor"h—No. 3 mixed, 3 c a r s at 4 6 ¼ ^&#13;
No. S yellow, 3 e a r s a t 4 8 ¼ ^ No. 4&#13;
yellow. 6 c a r s at 47c; No. 3 white, 5 f&#13;
cars a t 47 H e ; No. 4 white, 3 cars a t&#13;
46 ^ p e r bu.&#13;
OaU—No. 2 white spot, 1 car at- 33c&#13;
per bu.&#13;
Rye—No. 2 spot, homlnal at 71 ^ o&#13;
per bu.&#13;
Clover seed—Prime spot, 15 bags »t&#13;
$*; J a n u a r y , 100 bags a t 18.15; by s a m - Jle, 60 b a g s a t $8.75, 40 a t $7.50, 26 a t&#13;
7.25. IS a t $7. a n d 9 a t $6.76 per b u ;&#13;
p r lm»e ..,a ,4.lM" IJ-JP b y «*mple, 6 bags a t $6.75, S a t $5.50 p e r bu.&#13;
Beans—-November, i~ c a r a t $1.59, l&#13;
car at f 1.60; December, 1 c a r at $1.60: V&#13;
J a n u a r y , $1.61 bid,; March, »1.66 bid. x&#13;
•KUSlCMKlfT* in DETROIT.&#13;
Week JS*mn*r. Nov » .&#13;
tmvui Tsuuro juio_Wo»om»tu»t&gt;- After-&#13;
Rts*e9:l», too. toftOe&#13;
. '&#13;
* *&#13;
LvdatJst-Prtcas IKJs-»«vffer 'KM* *e*yfS*&#13;
»od l e v "She ftanbo ©m." - ~r\J&#13;
Joe Welsh, i»"Tor Psofller.**^&#13;
U r A T i n t T«s&gt;*ea~pTt&lt;»s tt.Se, II.0S, He&#13;
»•1 Oo. Mats. Wed. end fteiwdey.&#13;
Herts* Oetlaels, is "»wee» Kitty BsUeta*&#13;
#&#13;
/&#13;
/ \\ A&#13;
•M&#13;
'&lt;•?$• » . t . ' . ^ -&#13;
^jP'tBP*'"/'."^* • - * &gt; •i&gt;T)v.' Vr 2r- •"ftvv,:^',., ivr1&#13;
'•*v;*Tt '•r'TiJii'^ « *&#13;
r&gt;i- ,«a.-'&#13;
•*»£•&amp; •?»- \&#13;
fi&#13;
• * • • ' . . •&#13;
) .,&#13;
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v ^&#13;
SB&#13;
THE CZAR AND PRIESTS&#13;
PRAY FOR PEACE&#13;
gr...EUMXA,&#13;
IMPRESSIVE CEREMONY AT TSAR-&#13;
8K0E-SELO—CZAK ASK8&#13;
DIVINE AID.&#13;
N E W E N E M Y OF RUSSIAN RADl&#13;
C A L S — D A N G E R OF AN-&#13;
-.,, JA..A:RPHy.. ;&#13;
The emperor received at Tsarskoe*&#13;
Selo a deputation of clergy of the holy&#13;
synod and joined with them In prayers&#13;
for the restoration of the peace and&#13;
tranquility of Russia, the appeasement&#13;
of class hatreds and the establishment&#13;
JJUOAKOAGE JUUDJW TiJE TUJK&#13;
«•••••&lt;•»•&#13;
Circassians the artists** Oteftfit* If&#13;
Asia Minos, &lt; / T r&#13;
Regarding tbl ; i r i g a W of- ksia&#13;
casus, aud-tus-veHars ar»g«osraily sals&#13;
from attack if they are under the pro*&#13;
tectkm of a member of the brother*&#13;
hood. The original Turfc&amp;b, ah-well&#13;
as the Christian population of Anatolia&#13;
is remarkably peaceebfe on 'the.&#13;
whole, asd the lawless element is a&gt;&#13;
most entirely composed of muha-&#13;
Jlras, ot Mussulman ^ u g e e % from&#13;
lands which ^ere onc*^ part of the&#13;
Ottoman emnirp, but have now fallen&#13;
under Christian rule. The Circassians&#13;
are the greatest sinners and&#13;
seem to matte their living mainly b j&#13;
brigandage &lt;*nt&gt; 44aaco»&gt; smuggling.&#13;
Some of thee* apat: engaged* as village&#13;
guards or escorts to travelers, and a&#13;
few even enter the gendarmerie, but&#13;
only, it would appear, when they are&#13;
tired of a more adventurous life. As&#13;
gendarmes they are said to be very&#13;
of mutual relations of love and confl efficient, although t,h ey, are, of course.&#13;
deiretrhetween gtt~tfaecttteeas ^ t h a | ft mtlejnclinefl Jolo£kto_othe^way&#13;
empire.&#13;
The ceremony was impressive. The&#13;
archbishops, bishops and priests in the&#13;
gorgeous cloth-of-gold vestments of the&#13;
Russian church, headed by the Metropolitan&#13;
Antonius, went in procession&#13;
to the reception hall of the Alexander&#13;
palace chanting prayers for the welfare&#13;
of the emperor and the safety of&#13;
the Imperial house.&#13;
The metropolitan thanked his majesty&#13;
in behalf of the clergy for the&#13;
imperial reform manifesto.&#13;
—The-metropolitan formally blessed&#13;
the emperor with a sacred ikon which&#13;
his majesty devoutedly kissed and expressed&#13;
his gratitude for the blessing.&#13;
He said:&#13;
—^Together—with youand the whole&#13;
Russian nation I constantly pray the&#13;
Lord to pacify the Russian people and&#13;
.send them piety and firm faith."&#13;
New Enemy of Russian Radicals.&#13;
Thenudden awakening of_the con;&#13;
servative and liberal elements to the&#13;
imperative necessity for resisting to&#13;
the utmost the attempt of the radicals&#13;
and socialists who are conducting the&#13;
9&#13;
'•** * * \ . » . r * . -» AUMQfiX AT iTlSTQL TOIffT&#13;
, . . M first few doses gave me relief, by the&#13;
^ r e j e i t ^ t ^ ^ ^ T h^ flpighed them all the pain&#13;
has galvanized the leaders into action^&#13;
and has started a healthy movement&#13;
in favor of entirely cutting loose from&#13;
the radical wing.&#13;
MM. Dmitri Shipoff and Guchkofl&#13;
and other leaders of various groups&#13;
Including the constitutional democrats&#13;
have gone £e- Moecow to urge the&#13;
zemstvo congress assembling there to&#13;
unite all the forces which desire to&#13;
prevent anarchy in condemning the political&#13;
strike and to join in supporting&#13;
the government in its efforts to restore&#13;
tranquility and Introduce the. new regime.&#13;
Korea Submits to Japs.&#13;
The Korean cabinet has agreed to&#13;
adopt the proposition for a Japanese&#13;
protectorate over Korea, made ,by Marquis&#13;
Ito. It was considered the ministerial&#13;
majority was sufficient to carry&#13;
the measure, and after nine hours' debate&#13;
all except the prime minister submitted&#13;
to the pressure brought to bear&#13;
on them by the Japanese minister,&#13;
?ftlayashi, and by Gen. Hasegawa, com-&#13;
- manrlor of tho .Tapnngap t r o o p s In K o&#13;
iea.&#13;
T h e J a i a a n e s e primp m i i y a r p r h a s »1-&#13;
when any of their old friends are out&#13;
on business."&#13;
Convincing Evidence.&#13;
Wlnthrop, Cal.v Nov. 20th (Special)&#13;
—A plain and straightforward story&#13;
is always the most convincing. And&#13;
that is what has impressed us most&#13;
in reading the testimonials in regard&#13;
lo Dodd's Kidney Pills. The experience&#13;
told by Davis Lewis of this place&#13;
bears the ring and stamp of truth&#13;
upon it* He says; —&#13;
"1 was ^troubled for six months&#13;
with dull heavy pains in the small&#13;
of my back, sometimes it passed into&#13;
my stomach, at other times up betweenmy—&#13;
shoulders. —When it_waa&#13;
In my stomach I was doubled up, and&#13;
hardly knew what to do for the pain.&#13;
I was advised to take all kinds of&#13;
remedies, and did so but without getting&#13;
any relief. Then some DUB told&#13;
me to try Dodd's Kidney Pills. I got&#13;
a box and began taking them. The&#13;
''Was 1 ever heldS^if V iftghwayman&#13;
during my western trips?" asked&#13;
the' drummer in the smoking car in&#13;
response to a question. "Wei), I&#13;
didn't escape the distinction, only, in&#13;
my cage the stage robber happened to&#13;
be a woman. We didn't size up her&#13;
sea at first because she was dressed&#13;
up like a-desperado and wore a mask&#13;
and carried a belt full of guns, but&#13;
she let us know who she was before&#13;
she got through with the outfit.&#13;
"I wai'seated with the driver of the&#13;
stage oh iny way from' Circle City&#13;
tp £,to,wn named Goldrock, and we&#13;
vvej-e not expecting a holdup, because&#13;
such' a, thing £ s a stage robber had&#13;
not been h*ard of in that neighborhood&#13;
for some,years.^ We,-were, tkereftue&#13;
* J&amp;tle neiryQus when at a tarn&#13;
of the road a masked figure appeared&#13;
and a shot was fired over our heads&#13;
while the driver was called an to hold&#13;
in his horses.&#13;
"The bandit seemed rather nervous&#13;
and new at the business, I thought,&#13;
but held a business-looking gun In&#13;
onei hajidt„ajnjijhat was quite enough&#13;
to keep us quiet.&#13;
"Well, he, or rather she, ordered&#13;
us all put in a rough voice and lined&#13;
us up along the roadside with our&#13;
hands stretched heavenward. I only&#13;
' had a few dollars with me, as I, was&#13;
waiting for a rfj^lftanee, so regarded&#13;
the adventure as rather interesting&#13;
than otherwise. The masked robber&#13;
looked us pvef sonic time—it seemed&#13;
to me hd^s—then advanced and motioned&#13;
ier * big, dressy looking man&#13;
to step out of the line. He was the&#13;
biggest fellow in the bunch and the&#13;
biggest coward, too, for he was shaking&#13;
all over like a bag of jelly.&#13;
"The bandit said nothing, but&#13;
helped himself-^-1 mean herself—to&#13;
the contents ot his pockets. There&#13;
was a roil of greenbacks that would&#13;
choke a tow, which she counted over&#13;
and finally stowed away in her blue&#13;
flannel shirt.&#13;
" 'You can sail ahead .now, gents,&#13;
when you please,' shV said, tossing off&#13;
her mask and revealing the face of a&#13;
handsome, black-eyed- woman. 'This&#13;
measly hound here,' pointing to the&#13;
stout -chap whose roll she had appro*&#13;
prlated, 'was once my husband. I got&#13;
a divorce .from him, and for a year&#13;
I never could get a cent out of him for&#13;
alimony; not even the courts would&#13;
_belp_me; so here I've took the law&#13;
In my own hands as a high spirited&#13;
woman should. Good day to you,* and&#13;
turning aroand on her heels she&#13;
swung her hat by way of farewell and&#13;
disappeared in the bushes."&#13;
»«ms ar&#13;
TO POU8&amp; FJENDBB8.&#13;
If the kitchen fender gets vary rusty&#13;
with the saucepans boiling over, clsan&#13;
|t with very fine emery cloth and then&#13;
tub it over well with a greased cloth&#13;
to prevent the rust from eating Into&#13;
b e steel. ^&#13;
PROTECTION AGAINST ANTS.&#13;
. Too many recipes can scarcely be&#13;
tried for this purpose, as-manyof sheas&#13;
ilready in use are failures* It.has&#13;
)een affirmed that, recently hosts of&#13;
heee pests hsjye been put to flight&#13;
jy placing in their haunts strips of&#13;
&gt;aper dipped in peppermint oU,—&#13;
Chemiker Zeltung.&#13;
was gone and I have been well ever&#13;
since."&#13;
Humor a Prime Requisite.&#13;
He who lacks fc/.mor, be his powers&#13;
what they may. has only half a mind.&#13;
$100 Reward, $100.&#13;
Tbc refers of tbls paper will be pleated to leant&#13;
that there Is at least ooe dreaded disease thai sdene*&#13;
baa been able to care in all Its stages, and tbat la&#13;
Catarrh. HaD's Catarrh Cure Is the only positive&#13;
cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrb&#13;
being • constitutional disease, requires a constitutional&#13;
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally,&#13;
acting directly npon the blood and mucous&#13;
surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the&#13;
foundation cf the disease, and giving the patient&#13;
strength by building up tbe constitution and assist*&#13;
log nature in doing fts work. The proprietors have&#13;
to much faith In its curative powers that tbey offer&#13;
One Hundred Dollars for any case tbat It falls tC&#13;
cure. Send for Mat of testimonials,&#13;
Address F. J. CHENEY * CO., Toledo, O.&#13;
Bold by all Druggists, 75c.&#13;
Take Hall's Family Plus for constipation.&#13;
ready instructed the consuls of Japan&#13;
and Korea to take the most stringent,&#13;
measures to prevent any abuses taking&#13;
place which might bring criticism&#13;
upen the Japanese government and it&#13;
is belfeved that the Korean people will&#13;
be..much.. hetter governed in the future.&#13;
Prince Charles Elected King.&#13;
The Norwegian parliament has unanimously&#13;
elected Prince Charles of&#13;
Denmark to be king of Norway. There&#13;
were 116 members present. The fortress&#13;
fired a royal salute of forty-two&#13;
guns in honor of the new king.&#13;
A majority of the members of the&#13;
storthing wore evening dress at the&#13;
session. The voting was viva voce&#13;
and after the result was announced&#13;
the ohaplain of the chamber invoked&#13;
blessings upon the monarch, the storthing&#13;
and the country. With the flring&#13;
of the royal salute the citizens in&#13;
«very quarter of the city began demon&#13;
strations of jubilation and kept them&#13;
up. until a late hour. The president of&#13;
the storthing was directed to communicate&#13;
tho result of the vote to&#13;
Prince Charles of Denmark.&#13;
Germany Will Not Mix.&#13;
Emperor William says he has had no&#13;
communication with the czar relative&#13;
to rendering assistance to Russia, if it&#13;
became necessary to suppress a movement&#13;
for Polish autonomy.&#13;
The Polish question so far as Germany&#13;
is concerned does not exist outside&#13;
of Germany. If( however, the Russian&#13;
Poles/rise up and the movement&#13;
for Pol Urn autonomy spreads to thn&#13;
PotTshprovinces of Prussia the latter&#13;
win firmly suppress it in the Prussian&#13;
Polish provinces. But Russia must&#13;
manage her own difficulties, as it Is&#13;
the flxe^d policy of Germany not to interfere&#13;
rn^ the internal affairs, of her&#13;
neighbors.&#13;
NEWS^ftTARlIF.&#13;
The 'Du7atk,'South shore &amp; Atlantic&#13;
road has adopted^, a/new trademark.&#13;
The title, "The Marquette Route," has&#13;
been discarded, and in its place will [ blood and TOStoxevshsvttered'nerves. Iu&#13;
be used the words, ""TTkh«e ,SOoAuHftWh SOhkonr.e. . •&gt; &gt;».i ..» . L ^ . 1 A , ^. . .4 ^ &gt; A . »«.&#13;
David GlllwateF, ft, 13-year-old boy of&#13;
Chillicothe, - 0., admitted that. he&#13;
burned his brother to-death to spite&#13;
his mother, 'fv I&#13;
Sunday School Collection.&#13;
After the annual Sunday school sermon&#13;
had been preached at St. Ann's.&#13;
Nottingham, a collection was made in&#13;
aid of the stck and poor. Trie gifts&#13;
Inrhiripri tHrty,flvP o r a n g e , g^3 p^pa,&#13;
forty-six pots .of jam, 102 bananas,&#13;
fifty-six tomatoes, sweets, tear&#13;
and toys.&#13;
Sure of Fresh Butter.&#13;
One of the machines exhibited at the&#13;
dairy show recently held in London&#13;
was a neat contrivance by which butter&#13;
could be made out of fresh milk in&#13;
sixty seconds at the tea table.&#13;
WHEft MEJ( FOUGHT VVELS&#13;
The Earl of Kimberley's much discussed&#13;
challenge to Col. Sapwell is a&#13;
reminder that though the days of dueling&#13;
are considered to have passed in&#13;
England the fighting spirit will still&#13;
break out on cccasions.&#13;
Not so very long ago Mr. Winston&#13;
Churchill was challenged to an encounter&#13;
a 1'outranee by an irate constituent&#13;
at Oldham. One hesitates to&#13;
think what would have happened had&#13;
Mr. Churchill had leisure enough to&#13;
-resume his martial role. ~=—&#13;
Lord Beaconsfield once challenged&#13;
O'Connnell to a duel, but the famous&#13;
stateman found himself bound over to&#13;
keep the peace in a police court in&#13;
stead of departing across the channel&#13;
to blow but the brains of^is political&#13;
opponent.&#13;
O'Connell himself fought a duel&#13;
with a member of the Irish House of&#13;
Commons named D'Esterre and killed&#13;
his opponent.&#13;
Another fatal duel was that in&#13;
which Lord Camelford, one of the&#13;
most confirmed duelists of his day and&#13;
a man who b*.d the death of more&#13;
than one feiiow creature on his hands,&#13;
was killed by Mr. Best. Both were&#13;
excellent shots, and one of the two&#13;
pistols used was supposed to be&#13;
slightly more perfect than the other.&#13;
A piece of money was tossed up to&#13;
decide the choice. Best won, and in&#13;
the result Lord Camelford fell mortally&#13;
wounded. _--&#13;
The last duel fought in Ireland was&#13;
between a Mayer of Sligo and a member&#13;
of the legal profession, but honors&#13;
were declared easy, for nothing happened,&#13;
Mr. TIerney charged Pitt with "obstructing&#13;
the defenses of the country,"&#13;
and that oratorical observation soundedso-&#13;
4ewible in ihe^ears of-the ^mk&#13;
nent statesman that he sent his seconds&#13;
to Mr. Tierney.&#13;
The two met at 3 o'clock one Sundaymorning&#13;
at Putney Heath, not far&#13;
from the Kingston road, fired two&#13;
shots at each other and then returned&#13;
home quite well for breakfast.&#13;
Charles James Fox, Pitt's brilliant&#13;
rival, took occasion to make some&#13;
scathing observations on the powder&#13;
supplied by the War Office and&#13;
promptly received a challenge from&#13;
Mr. Adams. Fox accepted, the duel&#13;
was fought, and the statesman was&#13;
wounded. "Adams," he is reported to&#13;
have said on that lamentable occasion.&#13;
"I do believe you'd have killed&#13;
me if you hadn't use1, government&#13;
powder."&#13;
DON'T FORGET ONIONS. ,&#13;
Don't forget onions In your daily&#13;
diet. Eat them raw as a spice for&#13;
your food. ' You will find they become&#13;
a necessity like other foods when the&#13;
taste is cultivated for their use. They&#13;
leave JM&gt; unpleasant effect except iu&#13;
the breath, and Canadian snake root&#13;
will disinfect the odor at once.&#13;
SUBSTITUTE FOR ZINC.&#13;
The housekeeper who cannot have a&#13;
zinc-covered kitchen table will find&#13;
several squares of hardwood an inch in&#13;
thickness and about five inches across&#13;
a great convenience for setting hot&#13;
dishes on. The wood should be sandpapered&#13;
and each block have a screweye,&#13;
with which it is hung under the Jedge of the table.&#13;
We call &lt;..; ^n^ia.j language our So&gt; w h e n selecting a "fad" go out&#13;
mother tor.^c. rrakm* it feminine a n d flnd o n e o f G o d ' s l i t t l e o n e s ' a n d&#13;
nrobabiy brca-sc ^ I- so full of incon- e x t e n d s o m e o f &gt;'our superfluous time,&#13;
money and loving care on them.&#13;
STALE BREAD.&#13;
The b esT of the 1 eft-over pieces&#13;
should be toasted for breakfast;&#13;
luncheon, or supper; they may be&#13;
used dry, or made into milk toast.&#13;
^fao^hwo^ei^. plorvttt a f r a i d _ J h g drJP&lt;flt&#13;
rolled and put aside for frying or&#13;
scalloping purposes. Or they may be&#13;
soaked in milk, a little sugar added,'&#13;
two eggs allowed to each pint of&#13;
milk, and a pint of stale bread crumbs,&#13;
the whole baked in the oven and&#13;
served as a pudding. Or they may bej&#13;
rolled, sifted and put Into a mould and&#13;
covered with eggs and milk, allowing&#13;
to each pint of crumbs two eggs and&#13;
a pint of milk, steamed for an hour,&#13;
and served with a liquid pudding&#13;
sauce. For a family of two, half a&#13;
pint of bread crumbs, one egg and&#13;
half pint of milk will be quite sufficient.&#13;
»&#13;
Locomotive Explodes.&#13;
Houston, Texas, special: A locomotive&#13;
on the Houston &amp; Texas Central&#13;
iallroad exploded near ILnnis, Texas,&#13;
killing two persons and fatally injuring&#13;
a third.&#13;
Grand Prizo SI. Louis, f 904&#13;
raphophonos&#13;
DISTRESS AFTER MEALS&#13;
Sure Sign That Dr.Williams' Pink Pills&#13;
Are Needed to Tone Up the&#13;
Digestive Organs.&#13;
Loss of appetite, distress after eating,&#13;
shortness of breath, a feeliug of utter&#13;
weakness—these are symptoms- that are&#13;
familiar to most sufferers from stomach&#13;
trouble. Too often the ordinary doctor's&#13;
treatment serves but to weaken the diseasedori&#13;
1&#13;
BEST TALKING MACHINES MADE&#13;
Cylinder Machines $7JS0to$100&#13;
kJisc Machines $12 to&#13;
Tbo Ormjihopixono rQ$wo€htc&amp;3 c£i kinds of&#13;
jttnslo Borfootly»- bond, orcfrcstrm, vioUn,&#13;
vooai and inmtfumontmi sokts, ejuartotto*,&#13;
eiom it is mn tmdtoss aommoo of&#13;
The uew tonic method of treating disorders&#13;
of this kiud does not aim to do the&#13;
work of the stomach, does u^fc demand&#13;
that the food be pre^ligested, but builds&#13;
up tho weakened organs, so that they cau&#13;
do the work that uature intended.&#13;
Mrs. LO. Law, of No. 824 North street,&#13;
Horton, Kansas, says : "Iu 1897, while&#13;
we were living ou a farm iu this neighborhood,&#13;
I became generally debilitated&#13;
as the result of overwork. I had serious&#13;
indigestion, lost my appetite, suffered&#13;
from a sense of suffocatiou and from obstruction&#13;
of the circulation, so' that artificial&#13;
means hud to be used to restore it.&#13;
After suffering for months without find-,&#13;
ingauy relief, I tried a box of Dr. Williams'&#13;
Piuk Pills of which I had read iu&#13;
a newspaper. The first few boxes made&#13;
me lots better, aud after using the third&#13;
box I felt eutirely well. 1 "I am now iu excellent health and tun&#13;
able not ouly to take care of my house&#13;
but also to assist my*husband in a store&#13;
whioh he has lately taken. Dr. Williams'&#13;
Pink Pills eared me and l o i n recommend&#13;
sbem. They are so simple, so&#13;
easily taken aud so prompt in their acth&gt;&#13;
H."&#13;
Remember Dr. Williams' Pfrik Pills do&#13;
not act ou the bowels. They make uew&#13;
# j \ ^ t t r a c t i v o&#13;
m~^ n t e r t a i n l n j g&#13;
%^ a p t ! v a t l r t g —&#13;
\ J u t w c a r l n g&#13;
, j p ^ e s o n a n t&#13;
D e l l x h t f u l&#13;
^ ^ u p e r l o r&#13;
•••tiiii«Mii,a i ^.,iniiiiiiiii(l i«ii«Hiiiiriintn«illti4)ra:i«t^ii«Htuliiatiinaiitiitii*«iniiiaii*H»itiiiaiiiM|ii«it«u^i(it«,itiilrMHtu«n««anantiiaHanir2&#13;
C f COLUMBIA&#13;
this way they carry health and vigor to&#13;
every orgau aud fiber of the body. They&#13;
are sold by all druggist* or will be sent,,&#13;
posttpi aid, ouTeoeiptof price, 60 oentspsv&#13;
J j r&#13;
l o t ; «tt boss* for f t 60. by the Dr. Willi**&#13;
i Medicine Q*, Solsssitotady, K.Y.&#13;
Gold Moulded Cylinder&#13;
Records [&#13;
a«»wawaiCTaaiiaiiau»ua»aMiiiaiiami4aiiaiiauan«iitiniiaimniiaiia«»aa«i»a)ii»wa«iiininii»&gt;t»iaiiai&#13;
COLUMBIA DISC RECORDS&#13;
7 - l n e h , SO c o n t a t»**cli| # 0 &amp;*&gt;r d o s M t i&#13;
lO-lnch, ¢1 eachj 0K&gt; p*Br dozen&#13;
Grand Opera. R^orda, (made In lO-lneh dlmom&#13;
only) $}2 oaoh&#13;
fa Phonograph Company^&#13;
272 Woodward Ave., DETROIT. MICH.&#13;
\Si.Loui8.$004&#13;
LI#s&#13;
• * l&#13;
*&#13;
ri'-.fc&#13;
•o&#13;
mwwwvt •iSit^-^WBWB:**9'***-&#13;
WIS&#13;
«&lt;*&#13;
;'? *&#13;
'&amp;'?&#13;
•I&#13;
the § tncbneg Utepatrh&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS dk CO. PROPRIETCRS.&#13;
T H U R S D A Y , NOV. 2 3 , 1 9 0 5 .&#13;
M r . L a w s o u h a d t o s t r i k e p r e t t y&#13;
far d o w n i n t h e financial s c a l e b e -&#13;
fore h e f o u n d a v i c t i m w i t h a&#13;
s t o m a c h f o r t h e Hbel c o u r t s .&#13;
' T h e b i t u m i n o u s coal m i n e r s of&#13;
P e n n s y l v a n i a will d e m a n d a t w e l v e&#13;
p e r c e n t i n c r e a s e i n w a g e s i n J a n -&#13;
u a r y . — W e h a v e o u r s u p p l y of&#13;
c o a l for t h i s y e a r .&#13;
T o m L a w s o u is t o b e b r o u g h t&#13;
intoltirtlisre^gtit^ai^KBkea^m&#13;
p r o v e s o m e of h i s a s s s e r t i o n s i n&#13;
r e g a r d t o t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s s e n a t e .&#13;
T h e p r o v i n g of h i s c h a r g e s w o u l d&#13;
r s s u l t in h i s s u c c e s s .&#13;
I t m a y b e t h a t t h e B u s s i a u&#13;
•workers a n d p e a s a n t s , h a v i n g&#13;
f o u n d t h e m s e l v e s i n p o s s e s s i o n of&#13;
t h e t r e m e n d o u s p o w e r t h e y n o w&#13;
w i e l d , will g o s o far a n d b e c o m e&#13;
so u n r e a s o n a b l e t h a t t h e y p l u n g e&#13;
t h e i r c o u n t r y i n t o a n a r c h y , civil&#13;
_wa"r_&#13;
R u r a l m a i l c a r r i e r s h a v e r e c e i v e d&#13;
o r d e r s f r o m h e a d q u a r t e r s t o r e f u s e&#13;
to t a k e u n s t a m p e d mail f r o m t h e&#13;
boxes. H e r e t o f o r e p a t r o n s h a v e&#13;
d r o p p e d u n s t a m p e d m a i l i n t o t h e&#13;
b o x e s ; a l s o d e p o s i t e d p e n n i e s f o r&#13;
t h e p o s t a g e . H e r e a f t e r s u c h m e t h -&#13;
o d s will n o t b e p e r m i t t e d , a n d&#13;
s t a m p s m u s t b e p r o c u r e d f r o m t h e&#13;
c a r r i e r o r e l s e w h e r e a n d b e p r o p -&#13;
e r l y affixed b y t h e p a t r o n t o i n s u r e&#13;
t h e s e r v i c e d e s i r e d .&#13;
" I Thauk The Lord!"&#13;
cried Hannah Plant, of Little Rock,&#13;
Ark., "lor the relief he got from Bucklea's&#13;
Arnica Salve. I t cured ray fearful&#13;
r u n n i n g pores, which nothing else&#13;
would heal, and Irom which I had suffered&#13;
for 5 years." It is a marvelous&#13;
"Beater for cuts, burns and Wounds:&#13;
Guaranteed at F. A. Siller's d r u g&#13;
&amp;tore; 25 cents&#13;
This office has just received from&#13;
the State Agricultural College, an announcement&#13;
ot their winter course in&#13;
Horticulture. It is a short, practical&#13;
and inexpensive course, which ought&#13;
to be of service to any one who desires&#13;
a training ior successful trait g r o w i ng&#13;
gardening, or greenhouse work. I t&#13;
begins J a n u a r y 3d and continues to&#13;
February 23d. There are no entiance&#13;
examinataonsfaiiy^nBJiaviiig a ^ - - j i t e i n r e d y V t m t i T B Honey a n d ^ a r ;&#13;
I t is e a s y t o o r g a n i z e m e n , a n d&#13;
t o c o m m a n d t h e m t o fight f o r&#13;
t h e m s e l v e s , b u t t o o r g a n i z e t h e m&#13;
so t h a t t h e y will m a k e s u c h s a c r i -&#13;
fices as a r e i m p l i e d b y t h e s t r i k e&#13;
o h b e h a l f oFTHe P o l i s h p e o p l e , , r e ^&#13;
q u i r e s s p l e n d i d l e a d e r s h i p a n d&#13;
h i g h e n t h u s i a s m ' a n d u n s e l f i s h n e s s&#13;
a m o n g t h o s e w h o a i e l e d .&#13;
mon school education can take this&#13;
course wiih profit. Any man or v^jtv&#13;
man over 16 years is admitted. T h e&#13;
rTrrecessary e i penseg, exegpfr -=r*Hfea4&#13;
are, aTe about $45. Any of o a r readers&#13;
who are interested should write at&#13;
once for an announcement, to DIRECTOR&#13;
P e i h a p s t h e d i s c l o s u r e s of T o m&#13;
L a w s o u h a v e b e e n t h e m e a n s of&#13;
s o m e g o o d . C e r t a i n i t is t h a t&#13;
t h e r e n e v e r h a s b e e n a t i m e b e f o r e&#13;
w h e n t h e r e w a s s u c h a w a v e of i n -&#13;
v e s t i g a t i o n a s a t p r e s e n t a n d i t is&#13;
. e x t e n d i n g e v e n t o s u r r o u n d i n g&#13;
c o u n t i e s , S h i w a s s e e c o u n t y b e i n g&#13;
in t h e d e p t h s of a n - i n v e s t i g a t i o n&#13;
of h e r c o u n t y affairs a n d finances.&#13;
W.C-T. U.&#13;
Edited by the Pinckuey W. C. T. V.',&#13;
O h i o h a s a p o p u l a t i o n of m o r e&#13;
t r a n 800,000 p e r s o n s l i v i n g i n n o -&#13;
license d i s t r i c t s . O u t of 1,371&#13;
t o w n s h i p s of t h e s t a t e , 9 7 5 a r e&#13;
now " d r y " of t h e 7 6 3 m u n i c i p a l i -&#13;
ties of t h e s t a t e , 4 6 0 a r e n o w u n -&#13;
d e r p r o h i b i t i o n .&#13;
S i r F r e d e r i c k T r e v e s s t a t e s t h a t&#13;
in t h e m a r c h of t h e 30,000 B r i t i s h&#13;
s o l d i e r s w h o w e u t t o t h e relief* of&#13;
L a d y s m i t h d u r i n g t h e B o e r w a r ,&#13;
" t h o s e s o l d i e r s w h o w e r e t h e first&#13;
t o fall o u t w e r e n o t t h e f a t o r t h e&#13;
t h i n t h e y o u u £ ; o r t h e o l d , t h e s h o r t&#13;
o r t h e t a l l , b u t t h o s e w h o d r a n k . "&#13;
T h e i n t e r n a t i o n a l T u b e r c u l o s i s&#13;
C o n g r e s s in P a r i s h a s d e c l a r e d&#13;
t h e m o s t i m p o r t a n t p r e d i s p o s i n g&#13;
c a u s e s t o ^ c o n s u m p t i o n a r e a l c o h o l -&#13;
ism, o v e r w o r k a m i o v e r c r o w d i n g&#13;
i n t e n e m e n t s . T h e first i s f a t h e r ,&#13;
m o t h e r , g r a n d f a t h e r , g r a n d m o t h e r&#13;
a n d t h e w h o l e a n c e s t r a l l i n e of t h e&#13;
l a s t t w o . — T h e W e s t m i n i s t e r .&#13;
THE ORIGINAL&#13;
LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP&#13;
Cores all Qoujhs t o d&#13;
a s s i s t s fa expelling&#13;
Colds from t b s&#13;
8 y s t e m b y&#13;
gtotlymoTiag&#13;
t h e b o w e l s&#13;
A certain curs1&#13;
for croup s a d&#13;
whoop Inf-cottfh&#13;
Glover Bis*-&#13;
KENNEDY'S m m&#13;
H O N E Y M T A R&#13;
F U T A U P AT TBI CASOEATOSY OF&#13;
I t O. DeWITT &amp; OO., OHIQAOO, U. S. A.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
o i i i " t v ; • • •• • ' •&gt;&#13;
I V c i ' i i t i v . ••.'. ;:&#13;
Yl&gt;" r ' ' &gt; ! ! : i v r&#13;
•'•\YU.v, .\\'.&lt;, &lt;le&#13;
"I ain't dot&#13;
fhild, "an&#13;
(lit none."&#13;
S)ie got&#13;
Times.&#13;
\v. '. \yritii!.:T a&#13;
s'lio rrpliod.&#13;
&gt; : • ; . • .&#13;
.1 r . i . .&#13;
lerli'i"&#13;
Your&#13;
Cray Hair&#13;
Not&#13;
Wanted*&#13;
Gray Hair i3 a bar to employment M i l to&#13;
pleasure, J u t there is relief from It in tL»&#13;
days. It can be restored to Sta n a t r n i l c&lt; •'&#13;
by'uslDg Mrs. it. \V. Allen's Vita il:iir C»&#13;
Restorer. It is uot a dye but in a n a t u r a l v.ny&#13;
it acts in t h e roots, compelling t h e necreticn&#13;
of t h e pigments that give life and color to the&#13;
hair in three days. I t is not sticky or (jroagyni o&#13;
odor; doesn't stain the scnlp. ABSOLUTELY&#13;
HABMLESS. f 1.00 v bottle. All druggists.&#13;
FLOR V1ELLA&#13;
GREAN~h _&#13;
t h e hygienic skin food gives rosy freshness&#13;
and beauty to the s in. Kutuovei all iutuerfectlons&#13;
and impurities. A perl'e(\ complexion.&#13;
60 cents at yonr druggists, o r s e n t&#13;
prepaid ou receipt of price.&#13;
MARK W. ALLEN &amp; CO.&#13;
Detroit, Mich.&#13;
any," tame from t h e&#13;
I jiiu't dot any nickel to&#13;
the nickel. ~ Kffu&lt;u\s City&#13;
JKodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
Digests w h a t you ©at*&#13;
A cough syrup winch drives a cold&#13;
out of the system by acting as a cathartic&#13;
on tlie bowels is offered in&#13;
Clears t h e tbroat, strengthens the&#13;
lungs end bronchial tubes. The moth&#13;
er's friend and tbe childred's favorite.&#13;
Best for croup whooping cougff, e t c .&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
0. D. SMITH,&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Agricultural . College,&#13;
A Disastrous Calamity&#13;
It is a disastrous calamity, when you&#13;
lese your health, because indigestion&#13;
and constipation have sapped it away.&#13;
P r o m p t relief can be bad in Dv, King's&#13;
New Life Pills. The build u p your digestive&#13;
organs, and cure headache,&#13;
dizxines-, colic, constipation, etc.&#13;
Guaranteed at F. A. Sigler's (Lug&#13;
store; 25 cents.&#13;
?"The p a r d o n b o a r d is r e s p o n s i b l e&#13;
t o n o b o d y . I t s a c t s a n d d e c r e e s&#13;
» r e n o t s u b j e c t t o r e v i e w b y a n y&#13;
c o u r t . * * * T h e c o n v i c t m a k e s " Ibis cuuuliy lu tt&#13;
u s e of i t nn4er-feke- M e f c e r a m s a t e - QQ° worth-otaggs.&#13;
Tbe South is rounding u p about 11,-&#13;
000,000 bales of cotton, worth about 11&#13;
cents a pound, a happy*, condition&#13;
which is in a way equaled by Iowa&#13;
with 240,000,000 bushels ot corn worth&#13;
4Q cents a bushel. The ben comes in&#13;
for her share in promoting property of&#13;
s e n t e n c e s t a t u e a s a c o u r t of l a s t&#13;
r e s o r t , n o t f o r t h e p u r p o s e of s e -&#13;
c u r i n g a n e w t r i a l , b u t f o r t h e&#13;
p u r p o s e of e s c a p i n g t h e p u n i s h -&#13;
m e n t j u s t l y i m p o s s e d . " — A t t o r n e y&#13;
A. J . S a w y e r , of "Ann A r b o r .&#13;
A liquid cold cure and t h e only&#13;
cough syrup which moves the bowels—&#13;
works all cold out of the system—is&#13;
Kennedy's Lavative Honey a n d Tar.&#13;
Clears the head and throat and inakes&#13;
weak lungs strong. Rest for croup,&#13;
whooping cough, etc. Children love it.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
ifi ?&#13;
:1 H&#13;
A c c o r d i n g t o a n o t i c e i n t h e&#13;
V o s s i s c h e Z e i t u n g , R i a r c i l l a o cont&#13;
e m p l a t e s t a k i n g a t r i p t o t h e According to the crop report report&#13;
N o r t h P o l e b y b a l l o n , s i m i l a r t o ^ n e d Noyember 1, the pctatce cron&#13;
, , , „ . , , , , , . - fcr 1905 will be tbe poorest in years,&#13;
t h a t of t h e u n f o r t u n a t e A n d r e e . . ' J&#13;
. , • - • i • not, onlv jn quautitv but in q u a l i t y .&#13;
A s a s a f e g u a r d a g a i n s t s u c h a c c i - n , , ; ,, ,.", . , ,&#13;
b &amp; . j i b e wet weather dm much damage to&#13;
d e n t s a s befell t h e l a t t e r , M n r c i l l a c j U l H p o t a t o e a e R r ) y i n t b e season and&#13;
i n t e n d s t o c a r r y w i t h h i m a ^ w i r e - i r s i P n e d the a c r e a g e . Tlie blight&#13;
later in some localities shortened t h e&#13;
yield. T4IH estimated yield lor the&#13;
state is about 60 bushels per acre.&#13;
W h e u J l u M k i n W o * S n o b b U l i .&#13;
Levcson-&lt;iiiwiu' in his memoirs" telta"&#13;
of an occasion^ on which Uuskin was&#13;
snobbish. He says; "Ruskln on one occasion&#13;
gavo a largo supper, to which&#13;
he Invited sonio of the letullng undergraduates,&#13;
whom he did not know. His&#13;
speech on. this occasion did not make&#13;
a • favorable impression/ He said he&#13;
could hardly express how much he&#13;
felt honored that so many young men&#13;
win) were superior to him socially&#13;
should have nuulcseendpd to accept his&#13;
invitation. This disinclined us to keep&#13;
up the acquaintance, although we were&#13;
the losers thereby."&#13;
Thanksgiving Ihiy Excursions t i a&#13;
Grand Trunk System&#13;
One a n d one third fare^for tlie rouind&#13;
trip on all trains Nov. 29 and 30,1905&#13;
Valid r e t u r n i n g to and including&#13;
Monday, Dec 3 , 1905. Tickets will&#13;
hfl^&amp;ald, ..hfttwppn till SJatiqnH WBhl £&amp;.&#13;
( l i h n i i c y SttickM Left StjindliiR.&#13;
8ome curious beliefs still linger In&#13;
country paris. I'or instance, in Hertfordshire&#13;
wisen ancient houses are destroyed&#13;
the rhiinney stacks are left intact,&#13;
the popular theory being that the&#13;
bi&gt;lises are still in existence while these&#13;
retrain s!.• i!iiI:Lr.u'. Tiiis may be a survival&#13;
t»i' some a.ncient but now '.-,1 most&#13;
forgotten lc.ua1 I'i.^iit.- London I'hronl-&#13;
Detroit and l*t. Huron,'and to points&#13;
on connectitii? lines in t b e state ot&#13;
Michigan, also to points on connecting&#13;
irnes" r n -Jttrrnoisr Indiana a n d Ohk&gt;-lwitbin&#13;
150 irilei from selling sta. ion&#13;
For further particulars consult loca&#13;
agent, or write to GEO, \V. V A U X , A&#13;
G. ?. &amp; T . A., Chicago, 111.&#13;
C O U C H S A R E D A N C E R&#13;
S i g n a l s , S t o p T h e m W i t h ,&#13;
Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery ei - - • • •&#13;
:&#13;
CONSUMPTION&#13;
OUbMS and&#13;
/OLDS 50c &amp;$ 1.00&#13;
THE CURE THAT'S SURH for all Diseases&#13;
of Throat a n d Lungs or Money&#13;
Back. F R E E T R I A L .&#13;
Son Lost Mother.&#13;
u Consumption runs in our family,&#13;
and through it I lost my mother,"&#13;
writes E. 15. R^id, &lt;t Harmony, Me.&#13;
" F o r the p. st live years, however, on&#13;
tbe slightest.sicn ol a couyh or cold, I&#13;
have taken Dr. King's New Discover/&#13;
for Consumption which has saved me&#13;
from serious lung trouble.,' H's moth&#13;
ers death was a sad b s s to Mr. lloid .&#13;
but be learned that luni/ t r o u l l o must&#13;
not lie neg.ecttd, and bow to cure it.&#13;
Qaic 1&lt;e-1 relief.and cure for eeuulH and&#13;
colds. Price 50vj. and $1 00 g u a r a n t e e d&#13;
at P. A. S i l l e r ' s d r u g (-tore. Tria&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN-Coitrty of. Livingston,&#13;
sa. At a session of the Probate Court for&#13;
the said county, held at the probate office In tbe&#13;
village of Howell, on Wednesday, the 15th day of&#13;
November in the year one thousand nine hundred&#13;
tiva. Present, J rtliui A. Montague, Judge of&#13;
Probate. In the matter of the estate of&#13;
, LYMAN L\ I3ABTON, ilerpafed&#13;
Now comes K. A . Kuhn, executor of the&#13;
estHts of said Lyman I), Ilarton and represents&#13;
(o this court that ho is ready to render&#13;
his fina,! account !n said eptate.&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered that Friday the Ifdli&#13;
day of December next at ten o'clock in the forenoon,&#13;
at said Probate Office, he assigned for the&#13;
heaiing ot said nccc unit.&#13;
And it Is further ordered that a copy of this&#13;
or er he uuDllehed in the PINCKNEY DIPPATCU, a&#13;
newspnp' r printed and circuliitiuK in said county&#13;
three succeeiive weefcs previoua to sahl day of&#13;
hearing.&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAGUE,&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
' M i f&#13;
111'.&#13;
O t h e r W a y ,&#13;
s p j ' . K i ) ^ t h e I ' - n b y , "&#13;
yuiin;; mother.&#13;
&gt;.' a mi.vl.ike," responded&#13;
ither. "Everybody olso&#13;
is spoiling me."—Chi-&#13;
STATE of MICHIGAN;&#13;
tha County cf l.ivit gaton&#13;
The Probate Court for&#13;
At a cession of&#13;
said Comt, h?ld at tlift ProliateCftlce i n t h e ' V i i&#13;
l a g e Of H o w e l l . I n Miild i - m i n t y , i i n t h n l l l h r i a y r,t&#13;
J e e s t e l e g r a p h a p p a r a t u s b y m e a n s&#13;
of w h i c h t h e b a l l o n will b e k e p t i n&#13;
p e r m a n e n t c o n n e c t i o n w i t h t h e&#13;
s t a r t i n g s t a t i o n .&#13;
C o n g r e s s m a n L a n c l i s a r g u e s t h a t&#13;
t h e n a t i o n a l g o v e r n m e n t c a n s a v e&#13;
a t l e a s t a m i l l i o n d o l l a r s a y e a r i n&#13;
i t s p r i n t i n g b i l l s b y p o i n t i n g t o&#13;
t h e t o u s . o . f u s e l e s s d o c u m e n t s&#13;
p i l e d i n t h e b a s e m e n t of t h e C a p -&#13;
i t o l , c a r l o a d s i n t h e g o v e r n m e n t&#13;
p r i n t i n g office, t o n s in t h e c o m -&#13;
m i t t e e r o o m s i n t h e d e p a r t m e n t s&#13;
a n d i n t h e g a r r e t s a n d w o o d s h e d s&#13;
of s e n a t o r s a n d r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s&#13;
t h r o u g h o u t t h e c o u n t r y . T h e y&#13;
a r e w o r i e t h a n a n e x t r a v a g a n c e *&#13;
T h e y a r e a n u i s a n c e .&#13;
Do not be deceived by, counterfeits&#13;
when yon buy Witch Hazel Salve.&#13;
The name of E C. DeWitt &amp; Co. is on&#13;
every box of the eenuine. Piles in&#13;
their worst form will soon pas* away&#13;
it you apply DeWitt's Witch Hazel&#13;
Salve ni'tfht and morninur. Best tor&#13;
cut.--, hum*, boils, tester, eczema, ete.&#13;
Sotd by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
T h u t C o z y Fcollnjor.&#13;
The Visitor—What a dcli^htfullj&#13;
snug little flat you have! The Kcnter—&#13;
Isn't It? When wr- open the d &gt;or we're&#13;
In the middle of the room, and whou ;&#13;
the sunshine conies lu we have to move j&#13;
some of the furniture out.—Chicago&#13;
Tribune. !&#13;
A CARD.&#13;
I,Uhe undersigned, do hereby apree&#13;
%q refund t h e money on a 50 cent hot&#13;
tie of Greene's Warranted S y r u p of&#13;
Tfti' if it failes 10 cure your couph or&#13;
cold. I also g u a r a n t e e a 25-ceut bottle&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money ren&#13;
n d e d . t l 9&#13;
Will ]R. Darrow.&#13;
N a t u r e needs onb; a Little Eary Riser&#13;
ntfw and then to keep the bowels clean,&#13;
the liver active, and the system&#13;
free Irons bile, headaches, constipation&#13;
etc. T h e famous little pills "Early&#13;
Risers" are p.leasant in affect and perfect&#13;
in action. They never gripe or&#13;
sicken, b u t tone and strengthen tbe&#13;
liver and kidneys.&#13;
Sold by P. A. Sigler, Druggiit.&#13;
How's&#13;
Tour&#13;
Liver?&#13;
It wiil pay you to take j;ood care of&#13;
your liver, because, if yau do, youL.,&#13;
liver will take good care of you.&#13;
Sick liver puts you all cut of sorts,&#13;
"makes you pale, dizzy, sick. at.the&#13;
stomach, gives you stoujach ache,&#13;
headache, malaria, etc. Well liver&#13;
keeps you well, by purifying your&#13;
blood and digesting your food.&#13;
There is only one safe, certain and&#13;
reliable liver medicine, and that Is&#13;
Bedford's&#13;
Black-Draught&#13;
For over 60 years this wonderful&#13;
vegetable remedy has been the standby&#13;
in thousands of homes, and is today&#13;
the favorite liver medicine in the world.&#13;
It acts gently on the Hver and kidneys,&#13;
and does not Irritate the bowels.&#13;
It cures constipation, relieves congestion,&#13;
and purities the system from&#13;
an overflow of bile, thereby keeping&#13;
the body in perfect healthu ,•• ?,&#13;
Price 25c at all druggists and&#13;
dealers.&#13;
TestJt.&#13;
TRADE MARKS&#13;
DESIGNS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS AC.&#13;
Anyone sending a sketch and description may&#13;
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an&#13;
invention la probnbly patentable. Communion,&#13;
tlons strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents&#13;
sent free. Oldest acency for securing patents.&#13;
Patents token through Munn &amp; &lt;x&gt;. receive&#13;
special notice, without charge, In the Scientific American. A hnnrtaomely illustrated weekly. largest circulation&#13;
of nnv scionittU: journal. Terms, %'i a&#13;
veur : four months, $L Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN &amp; Co.36'B'oatl*=» New York&#13;
Branch OfBee, 626 V St., Wash 1 nut on, D. C.&#13;
Xoven her, A. D. 19(\\&#13;
Tre*liU'tH: AUTHOR 'A. MuNTA&lt;;rK, Judge of&#13;
Proliato, In t lie mattei' of the estate of&#13;
TIIOXAS KKATHEHI.Y, deceased.&#13;
Uenriett D. rVatherly having tiled In 8»td court&#13;
li«?r petition praj ing that a certain ins.rumQ nt in&#13;
wriliD^purportlnL'to be the lust \ull and testa"&#13;
ment of said dec^a^t'd, now on fiU in said court&#13;
he admittctHt*probtte, and tliat the admtirhstration&#13;
of said estate he granted to herself or to some&#13;
olhet suitable person.&#13;
It Is ordered that the t ightUda.v of Decemher, A&#13;
P. IftOi, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at said&#13;
Probate Ottice, he and is hereby, appointed tor&#13;
hearing said pet'tiou.&#13;
A o i % t s further ordered that public notire&#13;
thereof lv» given hy p'ul&gt;li&lt; ation of a copy of this&#13;
order lor ;-S successive weeks previous to'said day&#13;
ol hearing, in Hie Piiekney I'lSl'ATCH, a news,&#13;
paper, printed nml circulated in said county.&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAGUE,&#13;
Judge of Prohate.&#13;
A TRINITY OF TREASURES&#13;
Triple°Extract of Violet, French Roses Concentrate,&#13;
Imperial Hair Tonic. Three High Grade Essentials&#13;
t o the Toilet at the price of one of them alone, v b t&#13;
%$I.OO.&#13;
We manufacture and sell these goods direct t o&#13;
the consumer, thus cutting out the profits of t h e&#13;
middlemen.&#13;
REGULAR RETAIL PRICK&#13;
Triple Violet^ Extract . . . .50&#13;
French Roses Concentrate • • I.OO&#13;
(Makes 2 quarts exquisite toilet water.)&#13;
Imperial Hair Tonic • • •50&#13;
$2.00&#13;
Our Price for t h e t h r e e - O N E DOLLAR.&#13;
A Saving to VOLT of 100 Per Cent Is'nt it Worth While?&#13;
Write to us for descriptive literature of these articles.&#13;
The CINCINNATI PERFUME CO. Inc., Cinoinnatl, Ohio.&#13;
Hewitt's KSSt Salve&#13;
For Piles, Burns, Sores.&#13;
TIM dreaded Wa$h Day-no mors. Washing madi taty by THE l-V WASHING TABLETS Will not injure the flnett fMnrlos.&#13;
They are strictly free from *dda&#13;
Of any kind.&#13;
Theydetheworkwithontrabbing.&#13;
They make the clothe* white.&#13;
They c*a be used in hard water.&#13;
They tare time and the hard&#13;
work on washday. They are indlspensible&#13;
for ConnerpanesJLaoe Curtains&#13;
and Trimmings.. They will&#13;
remove steins from Table Xlnen&#13;
with absolutely nb rubbing. They&#13;
are economical to use, Deeaoja&#13;
clothes are more worn oat on v »&#13;
washboard than by actual wear.&#13;
They are sold on their merits.&#13;
Save your Wrappers. Wo offer a fine line of premium*. For sale by TOUT grocer, prloe Bo*&#13;
l-V WASHING TABLET CO., Ino. Office, 251N. Front St., Philadelphia, Peon.&#13;
%*&#13;
y&#13;
H ^&#13;
•~i\UJX ^&lt;IA ^.o.A^^:- .. /•- - , . . , : ^ ^.r::,***^Ai j.» _»^tmj mmmt&#13;
* *&#13;
"*¥: •***'&#13;
s # w~. £?,*&#13;
vV&#13;
Hetatiietkert Excursions TIA Chicago&#13;
/ Great W«*te"n Biilway&#13;
to points in Arizona, Arkansas, Assin*&#13;
iboin.. British Columbia, Canadian&#13;
Northwest, Colorado, Idaho, Indian&#13;
Territ^eXJU low*, KitHsai, Manitoba,&#13;
Mexico, Mijj*#fOt»f Mis»oari, Montana,&#13;
Neftra^VaV t f o t f a ; r New Mexico,&#13;
Nor.th and South Dakota, Oregon,&#13;
Texas, Washington and Wyoming at&#13;
greatly.reduced ralets for the r:nnd&#13;
trip. TaekeU on sale the first and&#13;
tbirtf Tuesdays of each month. For&#13;
farther information apply to F. R.&#13;
hosier, T. P. A , 115 Adams St.,&#13;
Chicago, III. t-50&#13;
5 C m* mm&#13;
Man's Unreasonableness&#13;
is often as great as woman-*, But&#13;
Tbofc A. Austin, Mr r. of the "Hepublican,"&#13;
ot leaven worth, Ind , was not&#13;
unreasonable? when he refused to&#13;
allow the doctors to operate on bis&#13;
wife, tor female trouble, "Instead,"&#13;
he says, " we.concluded to try Electric&#13;
Bitters. My wife was then so sick,&#13;
she coqld hardly leave her bed, and&#13;
five |5] physicians bad failed to relieve&#13;
her. After taking Electric Bitters,&#13;
the was perfectly cured, and can now&#13;
preform all her household duties."&#13;
Guaranteed by F. A. Sigler druggist*&#13;
price 50cents.&#13;
ADDITIOHAL L0CA1.&#13;
T » -&#13;
K &amp; K ^ n K ex K K &gt;v * K o. ft K&#13;
VARICOCELE CURED 49-NO NAMES VBED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT.&#13;
Confined to His Home for Weeks.&#13;
"Heavy work, severe straining and evil habitg In youth brought&#13;
01» u. double varicocele. When I worked hard the aching would&#13;
become severe and I was often laid up for a week at a time.&#13;
My family physician told me an operation was my only h o p e -&#13;
tut I dreaded It. I Hied several specialists, but soon found out&#13;
all they wanted was my money. I commenced to look upon all&#13;
doi-tors n&lt;; little better than rogues. One day my boss asked me&#13;
why I was off work so much and I told him my condition. He&#13;
advised me to consult Dvs. Kennedy and Kergan, as he had&#13;
taken treatment from them himself and knew they were square&#13;
and skillful. He-wrote them and go: the New Method Treatment&#13;
for me. My progress was somewhat slow and during the&#13;
'first raiot nth'3 treatment I was somewhat discouraged. However, t:I continued treatment for three months longer and was rewarded&#13;
-Iwlth a complete cure. I could only earn $1J a week in a machine&#13;
lishop before treatment, now I am earning $21 and never lose a&#13;
Udaly. I wish all sufferers knew or your valuable ^ ¾ 1 ^ ¾ .&#13;
HAS YOUR BLOOD BEEN DISEASED ?&#13;
.OOD POI!&#13;
the very life&#13;
P.IOOD POISONS are the most prevalent and. most serious diseases, They sap&#13;
the ve?y life blood of the victim and unless entirely eradicated from the system&#13;
will cause serious complications. Beware of Mercury.. It only suppresses the&#13;
&amp; S S V M E - P H O D - positively eUfea-*U-W«od -disease* fonutftiu-&#13;
Y T W F N C P O R MIDDLEI AOED-MBN.-Imprudent acts or later excesses have broken&#13;
L w ^ your svsTern You feel the symptoms stealing over you Mentally. Physic ally&#13;
nnd vitally you are not the m a n you used to be or should be. Mill you heed the&#13;
danger signals? * . ,. ...&#13;
— — . n - D Are you a victim? Have you lost hope? Are you intending&#13;
R E A D E R to marrv? Has your blood been diseased? Have you any weak-&#13;
| * * * s * = e u r . S U « . M e t h o d ± r e a l m e n t *11L cure you. What « y &gt; « J ™ ° J X £ U £ £ -&#13;
it w*i: do for vou CONSULTATION FRKE. No matter who naj^t-reatea yoU7&#13;
wru! toVan honert or»nkm Vree of Charge. BOOKS F R E E - " T h e Golden Monitor"&#13;
(Illustrated), on Diseases of Men.&#13;
NCtXAKTES U S E D W I T H O U T W R I T T E N C O N S E N T . *™?.AT$. . ¾&#13;
I n a m e s o n boxes o r e n v e l o p e s . E v e r y t h i n g c o n f i d e n t i a l . Q u e s t i o n Uat a n a&#13;
c o s t of t r e a t m e n t F R E E f o r H o m e T r e a t m e n t . RS.KENNEDY&amp; KERGAN&#13;
Cor. WJich. Ave- and Shelby St., Detroit, Mich.&#13;
A lady near-8 lock bridge raised 80&#13;
turkey a that brought'her over flOO.&#13;
A iman near Stock bridge hosked 110&#13;
busbels of corn in ten boors one day&#13;
last weak.&#13;
The proprietors of tbe Farming ton&#13;
Herald are abont to install a new&#13;
Campbell press.&#13;
The citizens of of Detroit are con*&#13;
gratnlating themselves that there has&#13;
not been a muid«r in that city in over&#13;
four mouths.&#13;
Over 12,000 barrels of apples have&#13;
been shipped from Dexter this season.&#13;
It is claimed tbe crop in that vicinity&#13;
was the best in years.&#13;
A Rochester lather is serving fifteen&#13;
days in jail for not sending, his 16&#13;
year old daughter to school. He took&#13;
the jail sentence rather than pay $5.00&#13;
fine.&#13;
The Washtenaw Mutual Firelnsuiand&#13;
Co. have been investigating and&#13;
fiud that they have but few losses&#13;
where buildings are protected by lightnine;&#13;
rods.&#13;
Steven Smith of Williamston township&#13;
will be 86 years old in less than a&#13;
month. He has cut seven acres of&#13;
corn this year that will yield 100 bu.&#13;
per acre.—Stojkbridge Brief.&#13;
The Glazier Stove Co. ot Chelsea are&#13;
about to establish a welfare depart*&#13;
ment, similar in many respects to that&#13;
of tbe National Cash Register Co.. at&#13;
Cooked I ruler W a t e r .&#13;
I * 1700 one A-.\m*$ Avuthi' fctNfl tt&#13;
jvager of .?.'! O tlint 'he Y,OIT!&lt;1 ruoj: a&#13;
plimi pndillnjj ton ftvr l&gt;f--!&lt;':ith th&lt;&gt; *-.iv'&#13;
face uf tin? Th.-une.s vn-.\: Iiu!U:«i'Ui:li;».&#13;
Tbe bet was readily .•^•c-o.ttcJ. aiui&#13;
man) people flocked to the uppoSiiUsj&#13;
locale to watch this sti'sujtft? exhibition&#13;
of the culinary art. Inclosed In a tin&#13;
pan in the center of a_ sack -of^lune the&#13;
pudding was lowered'beneath'the water,&#13;
where fpr two hours and a half It&#13;
remained^ It was then taken up andpartaken&#13;
of by a committee, who declared&#13;
that Austin had won his wager,&#13;
the pudding being, if anything, overdone.&#13;
Subscribe for the Pinckney Dispatch.&#13;
All the news for $1.(10 per year.&#13;
'./,,&#13;
to cure indigestion is largely due t o til*&#13;
Old theory that when f i e stomach becomes&#13;
inactive it n e e * ; something t o&#13;
mechanically digest Itsfl c o n t e n t * / a n d&#13;
w^uhi^c1h- 1 1g^iv*e Ponul,yr g atet !mv ep8o' n;a^ry- . realireef . used.&#13;
Doctors now recognize-' the fact that tt&#13;
Is the nerves that fi«r»b*«s motivo&#13;
power to digest the contents of the&#13;
atomAch. Wh*n they become weakened&#13;
they lack energy, and Indigestion, ay»-&#13;
pepBia, sour stomach result. Dr. Miles'&#13;
Restorative Nervine will relieve obstinate eases of indigestion,&#13;
dyspepsia and stomach trouble by&#13;
strengthening the nerves.&#13;
"My daughter had stomach trouble,&#13;
doctors said she could not live. T i e&#13;
gave h er Dr. Miles' Nervine. She got&#13;
better from the first, and four bottle*&#13;
cured her.&#13;
A. H. MALCOLM, F t Dodge, ""'""f.&#13;
The first bottle will benefit, If not, the Every oq.ee of food you eat that fails j druggist will return your money,&#13;
to digest does a pouou o. barm. It&#13;
tarns the entire meal into poison. This&#13;
net only deprives the blood of the necessary&#13;
tissue building material; but it&#13;
poisons it. Kodol Dyspepsia Care is a&#13;
perfect digestant. It digests tbe food&#13;
regardless ot the condition of tbe sto&#13;
mach. It allows that organ to rest&#13;
and get strong again. Relieves belching,&#13;
heart burn, sour stomach, inii-&#13;
Kestion palpitation of the heart, etc.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
A F a t a l i s t .&#13;
The Jollier—Cheer up, old boy. Some&#13;
day you'll get iu on the ground floor.&#13;
The Jonah—If I do, I'll tumble Jnto&#13;
the cellar.—Tom Watson's Magazine.&#13;
Railway was once Rahwack, the name&#13;
of an Indian chief.&#13;
L/ t*&#13;
^&#13;
m^-.— -*-V-*.- *=&#13;
- - « * « S &gt; T : * » B I * ..&#13;
T h e word results means a whole lot to the farmer of to-day and it is&#13;
f^.ppicially attractive to the homeseeker or those seeking newlocations.&#13;
If we tell you of a country where you are sure of success, will you&#13;
Relieve us? It is only necessary for you to farm-the land-a-nd the&#13;
best results will follow—a State which the government reports will&#13;
show leads in the production of wheat. It a b o ranks among the first&#13;
in the raising of corn, alfalfa, timothy and other products, together&#13;
with stock raising. W e speak of KANSAS The great State of the West, where lands can be purchased from $5&#13;
to $30 per acre which equals the returns of the $50 to $150 per acre&#13;
lands of other States. E A S T E R N COLORADO is identical in most&#13;
respects and the same opportunities are offered there. Buy quick&#13;
while the lands are cheap and secure the benefit of an excellent investment.&#13;
T H E M I S S O U R I P A C I F I C R A I L W A Y touches the&#13;
heart of this rich agricultural region and extremely low rates are&#13;
offered, allowing stop-over at pleasure in certain territory for inspection&#13;
of lands, etc. Write us and we will send you free descriptive&#13;
literature and full information.&#13;
H. D. A R M S T R O N G H. c. TOWNSEND,&#13;
GENERAL PASSENGER AND TICKET ACENT,&#13;
8 8 G r l s w o l d a t . D e t r o i t , M i c h * ST. LOUIS, MO.&#13;
~--aa«*ssss»?^-! - , . ^ % S ; J S ^&#13;
Daytbn, Ohio, for tbe benefit of its&#13;
workmen.&#13;
There is talk of a 1200,000 electric&#13;
power plant at Argentine, Genessee&#13;
Co. Tbe water power privilege has&#13;
been purchased by Detroit parties and&#13;
the Westinghouse people have the engineering&#13;
in their haiidTi&#13;
E. N. Ball, ot Hamburg, has a five&#13;
acre lot of sugar beets which, it isaaid&#13;
will net him $65 per acre. His contract&#13;
was with the Mt. Clemens factory&#13;
who did the weeding ond pulling.&#13;
Ball doing the remainder of the&#13;
work.—Democrat.&#13;
Our souvenir post cards are ssllin*&#13;
nearly as well at this season as during&#13;
tb; summer time, showing that our&#13;
i eal souvenirs of Pinckney are popular.&#13;
We are the.only people in town wdo&#13;
handle "Pinckney" souvenir cards.&#13;
Write to your friends on them and let&#13;
them know th .t we are up-to-date.&#13;
L»earn a T r a d e&#13;
All the news for $1.00 per year.&#13;
She gwrimnt iHspauh.&#13;
POBLISHBD BVBBTTHCraSOAY MOKMl.se S t&#13;
F R A N K L A N O R E W S i t C O .&#13;
EOITOM AMD PROPRIETORS.&#13;
THE ORIGINAL L A X A T I V E COUGH SYRUF&#13;
KENNEDY'S LAXATIVE HONEY-TAR&#13;
JM Clover BIOMOID aod Honey Bee on Every Bettftt&#13;
Subscription Price $1 la Advance.&#13;
Snterea u the Poatoftce at Piackney, Michigan&#13;
&amp;a Becoad-claas matter&#13;
Advertieinj£rate« made known on application.&#13;
Bueineee Card*. $4.00 per year.&#13;
Pe&amp;th and marriage notices published tree.&#13;
Announcements ot entertainments may be paic&#13;
for, if desired, by &gt;&gt;r ^seating the office with tick&#13;
eteof admission, in case tickets are not i n a i f t&#13;
. V the office, regular rates will be charged.&#13;
Railroad Guide&#13;
All matter Ln local notice column wilJ6ech.»r&amp;d&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
insertion. Where no time is specified, all notice*&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be charged for accordingly. *^~All changes&#13;
ofadTertieements MUST reach this office ae earlj&#13;
as TOIBOAT morning to insure an insertion to*&#13;
same week.&#13;
J'OS f&gt;SUVXIJVG !&#13;
In all its branches, a specialty. We haveallkina|&#13;
and the latest styles o/Type, etc., which enable"&#13;
us to execute all kinds of work, such as Booke&gt;&#13;
Pamplete, Postere, Programmes, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, Statements. Cards, Auction Bills, etc..in&#13;
superior styles, upon ihe shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
low as good work can be done.&#13;
ALL IMLLSPAYABLB FIBST Ot XVSBY MONTH.&#13;
PEREJMLABQUBTTE&#13;
I a i . Q £ f « c t ^ L p r . S O , 1 9 C 5 ,&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon as follows:&#13;
Por Detroit an&lt;LEastT 10:48 a. m., 2:19 p. m. 8;58 p.. m.&#13;
For Gniml Rapids, North and West,&#13;
9:26 a. m., 2 :19 p. m., 6:18 p. ja.&#13;
For Sapinaw and Bar City,&#13;
10:48 a. m., 2:19'p. in., 8:58 p. ru.&#13;
For Toledo'and South,&#13;
10:48 a. m., 2:19 p. m.,&#13;
FBANK BAV, H. F . MOKLLEit,&#13;
Agent, Souti Lyon. G. P. A., Detroit.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DtRECrjRY&#13;
This Cjuntry would be much better&#13;
if everyone, especialiy.tbe men, were&#13;
obliged to learn a trade of some kind&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
P B S S I D B N T W. Q. Placeway&#13;
TtiusTiiss Ruben Finch, Jame* HocUe,&#13;
/ Will Keuned/ Sr , Alfred Monits,&#13;
' P. U. Johnson, M. ttoohe.&#13;
CLICHE HOSS ttead&#13;
TRKA8URKB P . C* . J*CkSOn&#13;
AsdKtiaou D. W.Murta&#13;
STBBBT C OK MISSION a a Alfred Monks&#13;
ii&lt;LiLTU o m c a a Dr. H. K. oi«ler&#13;
ATTOHNJJV L. E. Howlett&#13;
_ MaasUAbb -—••?. Hrngan -&#13;
n i ^ l M ' T f ^ O ^ O I I T H UNTIL YOU hAVE SEEN A&#13;
• ^ ^ • T . — L - . - ^ V " ^ ^ ^ . . 1 * • REPRESENTATIVE OP THE&#13;
GREAT&#13;
s&#13;
O P -&#13;
C. H. &amp; D . - P E R B I M A R Q U T T E - C . D. &amp; L.&#13;
I ,. AND HAVE LEARNED OF THE SERVICE TH S LINE OFFERS TO&#13;
Florida Asheviile New&#13;
leans Cuba Nassau&#13;
i PULLMAN SLEEPIN6 CARS THROUGH FROM&#13;
D E T R O I T and T O b B D O to J A C K S O N V I b U B&#13;
DnritsS ^»e winter. Let us arrange your (rip. We •will check your bnggj,ge tltrmigh,&#13;
reBerrey sleeping car au&lt;omodatiou» ar.d uiu-hd 10 «11 ihe dttnils. A postal card addressed&#13;
to cither of the undersigned will bring-full information.&#13;
oeto re tbey were twenty-five years old.&#13;
The jounjj man who bas a trade, if he&#13;
has any hustle in him at all, asks no&#13;
odds of anyore. He is not only sure&#13;
of a' living but.can do better.&#13;
The average young man without a&#13;
rvadeTs^Without a job, and tHe fcfle&#13;
man is tbe curse of any nation. Figures&#13;
show that the men in our prisons&#13;
ai;e most'y those without a trade.&#13;
There is always mischief for idle hands&#13;
to do.&#13;
Every Jew is tiught a trade at an&#13;
early age and we seldom if ever knew&#13;
ot a jaw who was not self supporting.&#13;
If they fail in business they are&#13;
always ready to take up th^ir trade.&#13;
The .lew is a dispised race but he has&#13;
his good traits just tbe same and learning&#13;
their young men a trade is one of&#13;
tuem.&#13;
The young man with a trade has&#13;
nothing to be afraid of but is independent&#13;
and as a rule s looked up to&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
METHODiST EPISCOPAL C h U K C H .&#13;
Kev. K. A Emerick paator. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning ai io:3i;, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:uu o'clock. Prayer meeting T h u r s -&#13;
day evenimjs. Sunday jseiiool at cloej»_ o t j n o r n -&#13;
ingservice.&#13;
tfrand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
East Boond firm Fines neT&#13;
No- 28 Passenger Ex. Stmdav, &lt;.):2H A. M.&#13;
No. 30 Passenger Ex. Sunday, 4:15 P . M .&#13;
'-" Wept Fcnrri fr«m Pirtktu'v&#13;
lib. 27 Paxfen^ei Ex. Stindav, 10:01 A. M,&#13;
No. 29 FsiEtrgcr fca. ^un(}*:.^ SA4F.HAW.&#13;
H.Clark, Avrent,&#13;
Jll»e MAKY V A M F L ^ E T , Supi.&#13;
/TCT^rrtKUAl'lONAL OtlUttCM.&#13;
•L' Kev. G. W. Mylne pastor. Service ever)&#13;
iunaiiy uornta.^ at U :W and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o c i j e k . Prayer meeting Thurs&#13;
day evenings, a a a i i y school at close o t i u o r n&#13;
i n ^ s e r v k e . itev. K. U; Crate, Supt,, Mocco&#13;
Teepie Sec.&#13;
o r . MAui"a'.'ATtiuLiio ciiuKCa.&#13;
O Kev. M. Ji Coiunierlord, 1 aetor. Services&#13;
every Sunday". Low masa at 7:SUo clock&#13;
high inaee with sermon i|t 9:30 a. m. Catechism&#13;
at3:0y p. in., vespers and benediction at 7; 30 p.m&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A. O. H. Society of this place, meets ever)&#13;
third Sunday intne br. Mattnew liall.&#13;
John i'uomey and M. T. Kelly,County Dslegatb*&#13;
r r H K W. C. r. U. meets the hret Friday of each&#13;
J. month ai »':3C p. ui. at iue home oi Dr. U. t\&#13;
Mgler. jivtryone interested in temperance is&#13;
coauially iuvited. Mrs. Li-ttl Siller, Presj M r . .&#13;
Jitta Durlee, secretary.&#13;
RED CHIEF&#13;
Corn Shelter. P a t e n t e d .&#13;
Clamps on Barrel,&#13;
as easily as on Box&#13;
Adjusts itself to&#13;
any size ear.&#13;
Closed Hopper&#13;
Making it Impossible&#13;
for Operator&#13;
to Pinch Hand.&#13;
Is guaranteed to do as good if not&#13;
better work than any sheller on the j&#13;
market. Throws cobs outside even.'&#13;
time. Cold rolled steel axle. Requires&#13;
no wrench. Slu lis popcorn splendidly&#13;
by tightening tension on" spring. All&#13;
repairs furnished tree qf charge. Every&#13;
fanner should have one. For sale by&#13;
hardware aad implement dealers.&#13;
M A N T F A C T I K K D 15 V&#13;
BR1NLY-HARDY CO., Incorporated,&#13;
Louisville, Ky., U. S. A.&#13;
TPhe C. T. A- and U. Sucieiy 01 this place, u?e*&#13;
X evety third Saturuay evening in the Fr. .Mai&#13;
thew Hail. John bonoaue, Fresident.&#13;
by all. II h, wanu * j„b in any other ; K S S S ^ ' r ^ ^ " i&#13;
business he standi a better chance.&#13;
! But few people are entirely free&#13;
from indigestion at this season ot the&#13;
! year, Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is not only&#13;
the best remedy to use because it&#13;
digests what you eat but because it also&#13;
e iable* [lie digestive apparatus to&#13;
assimilate and transform all foods into&#13;
tissue-building blood. Kcdol relieves&#13;
sour stomach, heart burn, belching;&#13;
and all forms of indigestion.&#13;
jSold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
n or hetore Cut&#13;
oi the moon at their' hall in the Swtu'thout bla«,&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited. -&#13;
' L. E, S u n n , s i r tonight C o m t n a n u e fi1 \i mi&#13;
dressexu&#13;
D. G.&#13;
48&#13;
BD WARDS,&#13;
P.T. M., O.U. &lt;&amp;D.f&#13;
Cincinonti, Ohio.&#13;
H. F. M O B b b B R ,&#13;
(i. I1, A., Pore Marquette,&#13;
Detroit,-Michigau&#13;
l i&#13;
e \ T :&#13;
les^&#13;
OVi"&#13;
M i v ; . .&#13;
t!\' i::-.:-M'!e&gt; ::re not iired, tbore&#13;
:; '' JH- it full ileinnnd for sloop, tin-&#13;
. of eourse, the biwin has been&#13;
worked. Healtlvy bodily exercise,&#13;
T ivingston Lodge, No..-., F 4 . A. M, Kegulai&#13;
Conluiuuication i'ue°sua. evening, on or iiet'ort&#13;
the lull ot the moon. ivirk VauvVinkle, W . ^.&#13;
V : ORDER OF EASTERN STAR meets each urn rub j Vthe&#13;
Friday eventnij following the regular F . '&#13;
A A. M. meeting, MRS. EMMA C R I S I S , W. M. INIMENT&#13;
OU. EH OF MODERN WOODMEN Meet t h e lirst Thursday evening of each .Month in t h e Maccnbee nail. C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet every Is&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of each E o n t b at j}:30 p m. a&#13;
K. O. T. M. hall. Visiting sisters cordially in&#13;
Tiled. LILA CQNIWAY, Lady Com.&#13;
XT NIGHTS OF TUK LOYAL GUARD&#13;
•V F . L , Andrews F. M,&#13;
enrried to the ]u&gt;int of rendering rest&#13;
sweetly welcome, is one natural means&#13;
of .promoting sleep.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F.S'GLER M.D&gt; C. L. SIOLER M. O&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
rhysicimue and surgeons. All call* promptly&#13;
attended to day or night. OJPrej on Main stieet&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
A quick and effective cure f$r Rheumatism,&#13;
Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lunibntro Fead-&#13;
-a^he and other nervous pains and aches on&#13;
aiy pnrt of the body. If you-suffer from&#13;
Any of the above ill's, i^e say in all sincerity I&#13;
give our worthy ANTI-PAIN SOLID UN-1&#13;
IM13NT a fair trial.&#13;
ANTI-PAIN SOLID. LINIMENT corneal&#13;
ii a neat box in paste form, different from&#13;
other liniments, "Yes, indeed," it ia too&#13;
precious to lose by breakage or spirting. I&#13;
AlfYyou have to do is to apply &amp; little ofl&#13;
thMQjniment to the effected partstorelieTef&#13;
tie Bain instantly, which eventually per*&#13;
fomiAa permanent cure. V*&#13;
Wti\uaraiitee ANTI-PAIN SOXTD U N -&#13;
IMENV to do all we claim for it, or monoy&#13;
refunded.&#13;
Send for a box to-day and have it on hand&#13;
,i c.tse of rniergency, yon will be more|&#13;
than •pleased with the result.&#13;
Price 29 Cents.&#13;
For sale by our aprentg or yon m»y order I&#13;
, direct from us. Sent postpaid on receipt of I&#13;
pru,-*.- Agenta wanted everywhex*. write [&#13;
fbr terms, . '&#13;
KEtftV NELSON &amp; CO.. Eckvoll,Mlott.I&#13;
4 "5M&#13;
^ ^ 4 ^ : ^ - • " ••"•&#13;
I^ilfwi^s**^ -*•*•«*»&#13;
v.&#13;
• • ' : * '&#13;
v-- "•.&#13;
t:&#13;
l4&#13;
ii i^wu I ' I P I H H W I wi«.jmm..i. T~-*t*SSrm Wr" flat'yoVWrref^sfosfr'OM.rNl&#13;
^'XoBJr qaesUon la. a stgang*: one^&#13;
$¢091 ye^ # ruf, 4&amp;*fce j £ r e ,$y wif^;&#13;
aotalrjg ,«1M)BH drag, her from me.&#13;
Ant U,r8heWer^ not my w|fe, no hope£&#13;
W^Aror-ehajLaif,* should allure me*i&#13;
fpnr o«e»tton baa made me doubt;&#13;
Ad'rwlll'open toy heart t o yoti, as I&#13;
•ever have ju» moc)iU,belore. I loved&#13;
it WQtta^,,pr^ou*dl*,once. It was&#13;
jer' s$e. donnfed black for her huafcand.&#13;
I had always derived Inspiration&#13;
from her presence at church;&#13;
bjit when he failed to return, T allow*&#13;
«4 my heart to lead my hopes along.&#13;
Ten think, perhaps, that I am Inoagihlff&#13;
of ^woh love as FOU feel, but&#13;
l tell you lip one can understand&#13;
what I suffered in wrenching this love&#13;
from my heart when you came here.&#13;
Bpt I did It. Yon can do it, if it is&#13;
a sin to cherish it"&#13;
Mr. Hammerly arose to depart, and&#13;
the two stood a moment, face to face.&#13;
Then each reached forth his hand.&#13;
"Good night," "Good night," they said&#13;
and parted.&#13;
"No use, no use," said the minister.&#13;
**T laid bare my heart for nothing. She&#13;
must be mistaken."&#13;
Mr. Carter came into the library&#13;
end found Mr. Hamilton in deep&#13;
thought, evidently, for he did not&#13;
look up.&#13;
"I thi»*f I will go to bed, Vane," he"&#13;
said. • ' .&#13;
*'All right, I will close up the&#13;
house," was tho reply, and soon Mr.&#13;
barterwas asleep andkdreaming.&#13;
One of his dreams he recollected in&#13;
the morning as a little curious. It&#13;
was of Vane going by his door, light&#13;
intiHtrdri&#13;
gleaming linen, tall, fair, and grand,&#13;
handsome as a prince. And so he&#13;
went on, down the stairs, and Mr. Carter&#13;
went on dreaming, but nothing&#13;
quite so realistic as that.&#13;
But ft was Hot a dream. Mr. Hamilton&#13;
did pass down the stairs and out&#13;
the door, dressed with care to look&#13;
his, best, and he was exceedingly&#13;
handsome.&#13;
He saw a light at Mrs. Fry's, and he&#13;
and you are not," saW -Constance,&#13;
rising to her feet and confronting&#13;
him with blazing eyes aim" cheeks?&#13;
"Or Constance, dont^|ooa*'i*f me&#13;
like that! How can -fwb whoa jou&#13;
know I love you so?r': Have "you no&#13;
love for me?"&#13;
''No, none," she said, pitilessly.&#13;
She tnfned away and there waa&#13;
silence between them. vVfeen she&#13;
next looked up she met a face so&#13;
changed that it startled her, there&#13;
was such a lost, despairing look in&#13;
it, and his voice was hollow when he&#13;
spoke.&#13;
"You have showed me heaven, and&#13;
now you thrust me back -into henV' he&#13;
said, with terrible significance.&#13;
The womanly, pitying element&#13;
awoke in her soul now for the first&#13;
time. She approached him and laid&#13;
her soft hand on his arm. A&#13;
"Victor," she said, "Brother Vtetor,&#13;
1 can love you. I do love you as a&#13;
brother. I forgive you what you have&#13;
done, everything, if yori will now set&#13;
matters right. You have done wrong,&#13;
but* we will forget all that and love&#13;
you, Vane and L"&#13;
For the moment she ceased to&#13;
think him a forger, a perjurer. She&#13;
forgot everything in her pity.&#13;
"How could you do it, Victor?" was&#13;
her next womanly cry.&#13;
She-saw"'"himi "shrink~and cower at&#13;
her words, and she said, soothingly.&#13;
"Tell me, tell Sister Constance, about&#13;
it, Victor."&#13;
There was almost divine pity In&#13;
her voice. Her wrath was all gone&#13;
when she saw him dejected and penitent&#13;
before her. He had not confessw*&#13;
m Tm'n**^ She knew&#13;
he had dropped all disguise before&#13;
her and would never seek to deceive&#13;
her again.&#13;
"Will you not tell me," she said&#13;
y.galn, "how it all happened?"&#13;
A new light struggled Into his face.&#13;
"Constance," he said, 'I am not all&#13;
bad. I am indeed Vane's brother, and&#13;
I long ago knew of his search for me.&#13;
I am a forger, a bank defaulter, but I&#13;
am not a murderer."&#13;
Nevertheless, that sickly, dark-haired wretch is my husband, and you are&#13;
not."&#13;
went there and asked to see Mrs.&#13;
ifantfrtoti.&#13;
—"Please say I want to see her alone,&#13;
.ard on important business," he said,&#13;
~1! she is still up.".&#13;
"Yes, she's up. She don't sleep&#13;
jrio great nowadays, said Mrs. Fry,&#13;
throwing-an accusing look at him before&#13;
she left to deliver her errand.&#13;
"Walk this way," she said, returning&#13;
In a few minutes. "She says she&#13;
;.*rill see you," and Mrs. Fry conducted&#13;
"him to the sitting room, which had&#13;
been given up to .Mrs. Hamilton's&#13;
occupancy. The night was chilly,&#13;
and a light gleamed from the open&#13;
.srra/te-nf the little stove upon the lap&#13;
.-80¾ white hands of Constance as she&#13;
*£-at before it. But her face was in&#13;
the shadow, out of the range of the&#13;
-.'larap, feebly burning. She did not&#13;
Took up when he entered, and he&#13;
strode*'to her side and gazed down at&#13;
• -her before speaking. Then he said,&#13;
•.almost with fierceness:&#13;
-"Look at me, Constance."&#13;
"She raised her eyes and let them&#13;
sink again. Then, as if wishing not&#13;
•;o anger him, she said, "Will you&#13;
he seated? I think you wished to see&#13;
me on business."&#13;
"I did, Constance, I did. It was on&#13;
;fhe business of my utter happiness&#13;
'or misery. I asked to look at me to&#13;
see whether yon could doubt me. Am&#13;
I cot the exact image of the man you&#13;
married?"&#13;
^. "Yes," she uttered faintly.&#13;
Do I not look more like your bus-&#13;
^hand than the sickly, dark-haired&#13;
S t r e t c h in prison.? Tell me that."&#13;
Constance drew back. She had forgotten&#13;
about Lenora in the excite*&#13;
ment of the Interview. Now the dreadful&#13;
charge came back with terrifying&#13;
force, and she could not prevent tht&#13;
^epellant movement.&#13;
'No, as heaven lg my witness. But&#13;
tf what use are vows in one like me.&#13;
Kere are my written words. They&#13;
will tell you all—everything. I wrote&#13;
it long ago, for I meant to give it ttr-&#13;
Vane; only your beauty kept me in&#13;
spite of my will to go. I came here&#13;
to give you this paper to-night; for&#13;
tbat, and nothing else; but you see I&#13;
was led out or my resolve when I&#13;
saw you; Will you promise me one&#13;
thing?"&#13;
"I think so. Let me hear your request."&#13;
"Let this interview be secret and&#13;
do not read this paper until a week&#13;
has passed."&#13;
What could she do? She was a&#13;
weak, loving woman, whose sympathies&#13;
outweighed her sense of justice.&#13;
She had in mind the Savior's&#13;
words to one who had broken the&#13;
law: "Neither do I condemn thee.&#13;
Qo, and sin no more," and she said,&#13;
gravely and eanrnestly: &lt;*&#13;
"I promise not to read it till a&#13;
week has passed. Would you like to.&#13;
Bee Clare and Perley?"&#13;
"Yes, if I may."&#13;
Without speaking she led the way&#13;
to the room where lay Clare in her&#13;
own bed and Perley in his crib, pictures&#13;
of childish grace and Innocence.&#13;
"I was once like that," he said,&#13;
bending over and kissing them tenderi&amp;*:&#13;
*Yott do- Nerertheless that sickly, ly. "Clare loved me from""the"ftrst,"&#13;
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ • • ^ *»,. tattlmd^ho^aid. "What can ^ , 1 ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ ^ ¾ ¾&#13;
;Uncle Victor and when she ia older&#13;
••he wilrWeritafid. perhaps." &gt; •'&#13;
"How changed you are, ConstahoeT&#13;
Once so repellant, now so forgiving."&#13;
"It was because you were trying to&#13;
deceive me. I almost hated you at&#13;
tlrn^s for that, but now it is different.&#13;
You are changed.'* *&#13;
"Yes, I am changed; but I scarcely&#13;
know what has chanted mV, unless&#13;
it,was the ring my mother left me,&#13;
my different surroundings, the chip&#13;
dren, your womanly triftuence. Perhaps&#13;
it was all combined, %nd perhaps&#13;
I am not naturally oidj* |!&#13;
"That is It," said Constance, eager-&#13;
;y; "and you will go away where you&#13;
can live a good, honorable life/ wttl rounotrt . :... . "\. ;••";•&#13;
"Is it not too late, fof thai?" '&#13;
"it is never too la,tee-never. Why,&#13;
you have only, to call back the, tm-:&#13;
pulses, of your nature inherited from&#13;
your gopd parents. You are not naturally&#13;
depraved, like some."&#13;
"No; I think I should like to he&#13;
good. Evil has no attraction for me.&#13;
But I knew no hotter.. I was nurtured&#13;
upon wickedness. ,My talents&#13;
were coined into evil deeds. I did&#13;
uot believe-^in honesty. I had no&#13;
faith in Christianity. I thought it&#13;
simply a cloak. Can you understand&#13;
it?"&#13;
. "I think I do." «&#13;
He took her hands, looked Into her&#13;
face, and was gone. Constance sank&#13;
down into her chair and began to&#13;
cry silently. But there was joy in her&#13;
tears, joy for herself and Vane, hut&#13;
sorrow for the oho who had left her;&#13;
who had gone out with the world&#13;
again because he must. What would&#13;
be the end of it all?&#13;
She arose, and with compressed&#13;
&gt;ip_s hid the closely written sheets in&#13;
her drawer, and she did. not read&#13;
them for two weeks Instead of one.&#13;
Meanwhile, Mr. Carter was alone in&#13;
the great home, with Tilly only for&#13;
company^ The=maa- known=, as ^£lk.&#13;
mus Edes was in prison, but with&#13;
comfortable surroundings and cheered&#13;
by a message from Constance&#13;
COUChed in four—W4WdS, "Cnnragft!&#13;
There is hope!" while she was still&#13;
with Mrs. Fry.&#13;
No one wondered at the absence of&#13;
Mr. Hamilton, not even the minister,&#13;
and no one had the least suspicion&#13;
that he would never return—no one&#13;
but Constance.&#13;
auotafT w Hnurs wittr&#13;
Ura, Pinkhanrt AdTloa I&#13;
' #fccsft«ttft 8*4 in&lt;rOc«tly«xpeTiano».&#13;
I t ^ a s a d b o i&#13;
true fact that&#13;
• * « r y y e a r&#13;
brings a n i n -&#13;
eresae In the&#13;
aasberof operatio£&#13;
S; performed&#13;
upon women in&#13;
o u r - hospitals.&#13;
jtovrths of the&#13;
patientaJyin*&#13;
W those snow&#13;
wWM ted* art women and girls who&#13;
k«£MNiM.liMi M* MMMMMtirfnir from antra*&#13;
From an Awful tkin Humor—&#13;
-*A*ra*c!»4vJJIM %\*A Ran—&#13;
Waata# to a tfctieton—&#13;
• - «pta«Uy CtatoaV ^y ..&#13;
J*tutl«yraa ••&#13;
"When three months *&lt;dd my boy&#13;
broke'out with an Itthing, watery&#13;
rash all orer1 his -hody, and he would&#13;
scratch till'the blood rahl We tried&#13;
nearly ejtrythlnjg, hut he grow worsa,&#13;
waattna; to % skeiti^, and we feared&#13;
he. w.ould die., He sjept only when&#13;
4a our J * » S . . The first apnUcaUon, pf&#13;
Qstteoffa soothed ^iart so that he slant&#13;
hi his cradle for the first time in many&#13;
weeks. One set of CuUeui* made a&#13;
coniplete ^ • and permanent cure.&#13;
(Signed) Mrs. M. a Maittand, Jaaoer, i u l y a f r a p ^ or recovering&#13;
OnUrib.,•, Uoasmadaneeeaaa^bynegleot.&#13;
Love of tobacco and wisdom ofUn w o m b ; nervous exhaustion, pain in the&#13;
go together. Prince Bismarck was .small of the back, leueorrhcea, diaai-&#13;
«ont to boast that he had in soma* JsjotJ, flathlency, dSpraoemente of the&#13;
thing like fifty yeara consumed over vnombor irregulari|lea. All of theae&#13;
100.000 cigars, a number that works »ymptoma are^lndieationa *t * » « * :&#13;
imt on «V«Y«M «# ««* • Am* »n Wealthy condition of the ovaries o*&#13;
! S ~ ? s T *l *f l v e *?J—*o imcjuALjavLii not heeded the trOnblo&#13;
gmat feat perhaps for one who was ^^ZtSSt^idWiy^ until^ the penalty&#13;
at one period a "chain" smoker, light- a M ^ oe paid by a dangerous opera*&#13;
ing each cigar from the glowing tibn, and a lifetime of impaired useiulstump&#13;
of the one just enjpyed. nesa at best, while in many cases the&#13;
results are fatal.&#13;
The following letter should bring&#13;
hope to suffering women. Miss Luella&#13;
Adam«}oi the Coloojafcif Hotel, SeatUa,&#13;
Wash., writes; _'.. ^.&#13;
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—&#13;
" About two yean ago I was* great tufferar&#13;
from a severe female trouble, nains and&#13;
headaetM The doctor prescribed for me and&#13;
fimUly told me that I MM a tumor on the&#13;
womb and must undergo an operation if I&#13;
I am sure Plso's Cure for Consumption sav-e d wanted to get well. I felt that this was my r death warraat, but I spent hundred* of doH&#13;
- - - - 'lam fo,. medical help, but the tumor kept&#13;
growing. Fortunately I corresponded with&#13;
an aunt in the New England States, and she&#13;
advised me to take Lydfa E. PinkbanVs Vegetable&#13;
Compound, as it was said tacnre tumors.&#13;
I did so and Immediately began J o&#13;
Improve in health, and I was anorely cured,&#13;
the tumor disappearing entirely, without an&#13;
operation. I wish every suffering woman&#13;
would try this great ppepeu-ation." •&#13;
v $j'J&#13;
For etalldraa teathtnc, tofteas th« guru, refit _&#13;
B^BvnKttoe,,slls9«pam,oarMwlad0aUo. afiesbostte*&#13;
Pity the Poor Cleric&#13;
An advertisement from the York*&#13;
shire Post: "Would any lady of&#13;
means care to marry poor* crowded*&#13;
out clerk, age thirty-seven ?"&#13;
my We three years ago.—Mas. Taos. ROBBIXS,&#13;
Maple Street, Norwich, N. Y.. Feb. 17.1W&amp;&#13;
Mr. Frisble'l^ Prayer for Rain.&#13;
Francis Dodge of Danvers, Mass.,&#13;
relates the following: Many years ago,&#13;
when Mr. Friable was minister of the&#13;
Congregational church In Ipswich,&#13;
there has been a great drought. Rain Just as surely as Miss Adams was&#13;
had not fallen for many days, and the 'enred of the troubles enumerated in&#13;
crops were In danger of being ruined, ber letter, just so surely will Lydla B.&#13;
The farmers besieged the worthy pas* Pinkham's Vegetable Compound euro&#13;
ToT-Su¥d^y^orning-to^sk-for rain, « • ? S S ^ i S L S l ^ L Z ^ J ^ S&#13;
and he did so in the following manner:&#13;
"O Lord! give us rain; give us rain,&#13;
not in floods and freshets, but simply&#13;
drizzle, drizzle, drizzle."&#13;
CHAPTER XXIV.&#13;
Benefits of Fresh Air.&#13;
Keep a healthy child shut up for&#13;
several days In a warm room in winter&#13;
The Confeasion. { aud„ h e becomes fretful and peevish, If&#13;
1 am the twin brother of Vane Ham-\ **&gt;actually sick; he loses his appeilton,&#13;
and when an infant I was stolen 1WnJad_will seldom ask for a drirtof&#13;
\&lt;y Solomon Marks and his mother in&#13;
the hopes of receiving a heavy ransom,&#13;
as my father Tas a very wealthy&#13;
man at that time. But there was&#13;
raised such a hue and cry that Marks&#13;
did not dare approach the offers of&#13;
restoration. I was hidden away for&#13;
months, and then my father had failed&#13;
in business and-my-abductors felt&#13;
that the hope of reward would scarcely&#13;
balance the fear of being brought&#13;
to justice. Therefore I was kept conceuted&#13;
and allowed to grow up among&#13;
their evil&#13;
criminals,&#13;
associates in the midst of&#13;
IT n o t , in squalor TCnd"&#13;
wretchedness..&#13;
Marks and his mother were uniformly&#13;
kind ta me, and as I grew up,&#13;
Marks thought he saw in me means&#13;
of gain to himself, for he fancied I&#13;
had talents which might be made useful.&#13;
Accordingly I was sent_to_a_good_&#13;
school, where I remained until I was&#13;
fourteen, when I returned to Marks,&#13;
who had a partner at this time named&#13;
Soule. No doubt they were engaged&#13;
in nefarious undertakings, but I did&#13;
rot know anything about it until I&#13;
was sixteen. Then I* was invested&#13;
with'some of the secrete of the gang&#13;
of which Marks and Soule were the&#13;
leaders.&#13;
I do not recollect that I shrank&#13;
from their enterprises, which were&#13;
(hiefly such as required great skill&#13;
and ingenuity—not actual robberies,&#13;
but dishonest schemes of less pror&#13;
ounced nature. Marks had an ojice&#13;
and organized a peculiar kind of&#13;
business. He sent out letters to&#13;
busines men informing them that on&#13;
such date their buildings would be&#13;
consumed by fire, professing to&#13;
know through the medium of. elalr-&#13;
\6yance that such attempts were&#13;
jneditated. At first no notice v a s&#13;
taken of the communications, but&#13;
after several warnings were followed&#13;
by the predicted conflagration, the&#13;
matter began to be inquired into and&#13;
the police interested themselves in&#13;
the matter. Marks was taken into&#13;
custody, but he appeared innoce;nt of&#13;
any criminal knowledge, laying it all&#13;
to a peculiar gift by which he qould&#13;
tell when such fires were meditated;&#13;
that was all, and he was released.&#13;
Afterward a n e w feature was added&#13;
to these communications. Marks professed&#13;
to receive impressions that if&#13;
auch .8um&gt;j M be stated were sent to&#13;
a given address no fire would take&#13;
place. The sums were not large, and&#13;
if paid, all went well. If not paid&#13;
the buildings were burned.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
water. But send him out Into the cold&#13;
fresh air to romp, and he will return&#13;
-with cheeks aglow, a voracious appetite&#13;
and nearly always thirsty, his&#13;
romp having created an appetite for&#13;
the life essentials.&#13;
Babylonian Studies.&#13;
Eminent Babylonian explorers say&#13;
that the rmiltipiicatLQn table which the&#13;
Babylonian child had to commit to&#13;
memory extended to thirty tlmeB thlr-&#13;
_ty, and that he was easily conversant&#13;
witsv two languages besides his own.&#13;
The schoolrooms have been discovered&#13;
and to-day it is possible to examine&#13;
the schoolbooks, the tablets with&#13;
the arithmetic lessons still legible&#13;
upon them.&#13;
PASSING OF PORRIDGE&#13;
Dear sir, It is just as bad to say&#13;
things^ that disagree with others as&#13;
1MB to eat Things that disagree with&#13;
Makes Way for the Better Food of a&#13;
Better bay. —&#13;
"Porridge Is no longer used for&#13;
breakfast in my home," writes a loyal&#13;
Britain from Huntsville, Ont. This&#13;
was an admission of no small significance&#13;
to one "brought up" on the timehonored&#13;
stand-by.&#13;
"One month ago," she continues, "I&#13;
bought a package of Grape-Nuts food&#13;
for my husband, who had been an invalid&#13;
for over a year. He had passed&#13;
through a severe attack of pneumonia&#13;
and la grippe combined, and was left&#13;
in a very bad condition when they&#13;
passed away.&#13;
"V tried everything for his benefit,&#13;
but nothing seemed to do him any&#13;
good. Month followed month and he&#13;
still remained as weak as ever. I waa&#13;
almost discouraged about him when I&#13;
got the Grape-Nuts, but the result&#13;
has compensated me for my anxiety. -&#13;
"In the one month that he has eaten&#13;
Grape-Nuts he has gained ld&lt;&#13;
pounds in weight, his strength is rapidly&#13;
returning to him, and he feels&#13;
like a new man. Now we all eat&#13;
Grape-Nuts food, and are the better&#13;
for it. Our little 5 year old boy, who&#13;
used to suffer from pains in the stomach&#13;
after eating the old-fashioned porridge,&#13;
has no more trouble since he&#13;
began to use Grape-Nuts, and I have&#13;
no more doctor's bills to pay for him.&#13;
"We use Grape-Nuts with only sweet&#13;
cream, and find it the most tasty dish&#13;
In our bill of fare.&#13;
"Last Monday I ate 4 teaspoonfuls&#13;
of Grape-Nuts and cream for breakfast,&#13;
nothing else, then set to. work&#13;
and got my morning's work done by &amp;&#13;
o'clock,, and felt lass tired, much&#13;
stronger, than if I had mads my breakfast&#13;
on meat, potatoes, etc., as I used&#13;
to. I wouldn't ha without Grape&gt;Nuta&#13;
in the house for any money." Name&#13;
given by Postum Co,, Battle Creek,&#13;
Mich. There's a reason.&#13;
Read the little book, "Th* Road tp&#13;
^ j g : IWtlrtlUe," in pkgs.&#13;
from womb troubles, inflammation of&#13;
the ovaries', kidney troubles, nervoos&#13;
tacit ability and nervous prostration.&#13;
Mrs: Pinkham invites all youngwomen&#13;
who are ill to write her for free)&#13;
advice. Address, Lynn, Mass,&#13;
Optimism IB thinking you. are happy&#13;
when you are only resigned.&#13;
Polished shoes and soiled collar do&#13;
not bespeak a gentleman.&#13;
A T I p«rm*n«BHy cor^d. K»fluorherroum«M»ftar&#13;
r 1 1 • flntdu'iuMof Dr.Kllne'tQTMtNerrcRMtor-&#13;
•r. Stttd for F B K B S3S.OO trUI bottle Mid treat!-*.&#13;
DR. R. U. KLUi £, UdT, SU An* Street. PblUwUlpfck*, p».&#13;
The day of rest Is never the better&#13;
for making ft a day of rust:&#13;
CURES CONSTIPATIOH&#13;
It is just about impossible to be&#13;
sick when the bowels are right and&#13;
not posssible to be well when they&#13;
are wrong. Through its action on&#13;
tbo bo.vels. Lane's Family&#13;
Medicine— cleans the body inside and leaves&#13;
no lodging place for disease. If for&#13;
once you wish to know how it feels&#13;
to be thoroughly well, give this&#13;
famous laxative tea a trial.&#13;
Isold by aii dealers at asc^And ioc^.&#13;
Take Your Choice&#13;
"U-&gt;8hlne.It»-thc new&#13;
liquid stove polish, brilliant&#13;
and lasting. It shines easier,&#13;
wears longer and covers more&#13;
surface than any other.&#13;
Uig Can, loe.&#13;
if you want to save labor,&#13;
buy the C-6-4 9elf«saiol«g&#13;
"Stove Laste," which will&#13;
not wash off, is applied like&#13;
paint, "KetsUp" Rust and Is&#13;
equally good for Farm Machinery,&#13;
Stoves, Store Pipe&#13;
and Wire Serosa*.&#13;
ss«&#13;
ay To Inrttttcate the mtrlta of the&#13;
MICHIGAN BUSINESS COLLEGE,&#13;
H&lt;ml-.l&amp;eept*i*t flkortfcaad, Pcibraa»»M|», «fc«&#13;
4S-SO a rand R i v e r A v e , Detroit. M l e b .&#13;
Do You •uffrr with P i l e s * Iteo. wndto ay&#13;
for a box of Dr. Hart'a Sure Core;&#13;
no natter what joy nay hare Qae«t&#13;
our remedy will convince you of Its wonderful merit* on&#13;
flnt application. Price. W, %$ mall prajSMd. National&#13;
Hemedy Co.. Ltd., Chamber/of £osu*«rea. Detroit. Mlcb.&#13;
Detroit Consenatery of Music&#13;
The Finest ConstmrorT fa the West&#13;
THIRtt-rtCOH* YEAR. 4* M3TAUCT0R&amp;&#13;
MMrrFMCABVANTMES&#13;
JAMBS H. BBLL, Secy.&#13;
Cstslogve seat free 6n application.&#13;
.MOftRISw&#13;
nstqn, p . c ;&#13;
kstfttwet,&#13;
»*•—&#13;
ffjRlSfc&#13;
v Heijii iH-Ust * t o y » K 7 ^&#13;
\»&#13;
i •'&gt;&lt;-.* &lt; j _IL v&gt;&#13;
• &gt; " - ^&#13;
*&gt;}?&gt; v.i»? :''S?fy&#13;
••v;'- s,v ,1»&#13;
7 * i .-'.».&#13;
^&#13;
^ • « -&#13;
~ / v ' .:^¾ *?-4^ «&#13;
-, . V&#13;
S s&#13;
U. OF M. BEATS WISCONSIN _ . 1 Q&#13;
Great dame of frootbalf at'Art^Arbcr.&#13;
n yetttaf hali s*yttfln* toc *o with&#13;
winning a 4ctot»aJ) sjaAsssii where were&#13;
fully 20,000 plajrera»od Ferry field at&#13;
Ann Arbor, Saturday afternoon.&#13;
8uch a mighty Iferonjc ha* aeye# belata&#13;
surrounded Ferry field,,aad such&#13;
yelling: A M aarsFUaeett haa** be^pi*.&#13;
Football history* happily minus the&#13;
somber nage of Its co{acUeot chapter,&#13;
repeated iUelf 9aturdjiy, when Uiclrt&#13;
gan triumphed pver1 Wisconsin-by tV-lf&#13;
to 0 score feat Were i t neeeisary,&#13;
might have been eonterted tote figure*&#13;
more oae-Wdedf Tlfc *sc4ac1deaee oaeAe&#13;
not to the play* Itself, bat in an Incident&#13;
that far a time threatened to ctaaa*e&#13;
the day from Michigan's moat jpxous&#13;
atretic wen* lata the saddest after-'&#13;
noon of the university's history.&#13;
With thAJBfiorfijiJteAJn Michigan's&#13;
favor, of; course, and the aeeond half&#13;
just Btarted, the temporary stand, at&#13;
the west end of the field, a Sloping&#13;
platform on which probably 2,000 per-&#13;
Bona, mett and women, were standing,&#13;
slowly sank beneath the weight of its&#13;
burden. The supports of the structure,&#13;
fortunately, gave way gradually, and&#13;
this, with the fact that there was a&#13;
vefy^lhOTt distance for the drop at&#13;
most, enabled all save a very few persons&#13;
on the platform to escape injury.&#13;
In no case was any person seriously&#13;
hurt.&#13;
• M M l I H I I H I I H I I I I ^ I I I ^ W ^ W U . (I Pi".."1 1 1 " • ' "&#13;
C J one occasion, when the late Ray.&#13;
CharlaiApage , aMen was daan cri Qrtel&#13;
College, Oxford, grata, complaiata&#13;
agatoat tjie college co^k ware bjmnjht&#13;
to, him by one of the undergraduates.&#13;
T&gt;e d*an sent for the offender, ,reca-,&#13;
pltnlated his several delinauendes,&#13;
and threatened him with dismissal&#13;
^ r t a , Mr, Kdan,'" rejoined the cook,&#13;
la a confidential tone, fit's no manner&#13;
of, nse ^attending to what the young&#13;
men tell you(about my dinners. Why,&#13;
*o« know, MjvBden. they come Just inr&#13;
the same way to' me and . complain&#13;
about your lectures t»&#13;
«m» '• i ii ii ' ' ' '•' ' • • " W " i ' . » "&#13;
«f&#13;
After * III LToBeGhwol&#13;
» r.. 1&#13;
You Won't cough long if you u e Shuoh a Consumption&#13;
Cure, the Lung Tonic It cure*&#13;
Colds, Cough*, and *H irritations of the&#13;
air passages almost instantly.&#13;
You won't lose anything ft k fails to&#13;
cure you, for then your dealer will give&#13;
you bade what you paid for it, If you&#13;
use Shuoh&#13;
You Will agree that k is the greatest metSdae for&#13;
Coughs and Colds in the world.&#13;
"W.W.MwJSUuh'iCj.iM^ii •&lt;&gt;»ferny&#13;
lea twelve yean, »ad daak k eae ef the be* cough&#13;
reawJaaoatae awrfcrt —Mrs. A. Scwasye, Sew*&#13;
C i f t ^ ' ~+ - ^ ^ A T A . Click.&#13;
* T C i W3 SUot/s Coafuawtwa COM for&#13;
a**?*.*}cold*with no* Miisfactay teada.-&#13;
MaawHow^Fwtl^Owat*." . SHILOH 25c. per pottle. AH dealers guarantee a.&#13;
CONDENSED NEWS.&#13;
t^Pty- t&#13;
The fattest landlord la&#13;
Philadelphia say* "C*l«rj&#13;
King ia said to be good for&#13;
thin folks, but it ia good&#13;
fox fat people too. It haa&#13;
cored » e of biliousness,&#13;
wad Z fcel like s youngster."&#13;
All draggiats sell it.&#13;
and&#13;
Fine&#13;
A G A I N S T&#13;
T H E S T O R M&#13;
THERE I.S N i l&#13;
PROTECTION&#13;
T0WE- l%rihlhwsW4P •&#13;
1S223L&#13;
JLaJLtOWUtCaCSTABLISini u&#13;
^ -swyoaa CMICAOO&#13;
CaUstai.TOtOsTO.ai.&#13;
'ALL THE&#13;
r PftALEKS&#13;
TWEin-FIVE BUSHELS OF&#13;
WHEAT TO THE ACRE&#13;
Means a prod&#13;
u o t l v e pa*&#13;
pacity In dollars&#13;
of o v a i&#13;
SI6 par aore.&#13;
This on land watefc aas aoat taa farmer not*,&#13;
ts* bu% UM pries of tUUac it, taUs its owi&#13;
free to every stitiar m acres stf such land.&#13;
Laada adjoiataf ean be pareaaead as tim* a&#13;
to HO per aore from railroad aad otbat oorpor&#13;
Already m , * * 1 fanner* fresa tae&gt;Vaitec&#13;
Hates save made their nosees la Caaaoa.&#13;
.Far pamtjatea^^anaiiiii Oiaissg O m a s "&#13;
and all iatenaalfhn aaaty to l a p v e t lamlgra,&#13;
U»,&lt;Hta#SvOJB*d«, or toteila^a^aaJaoriseiJ&#13;
• Oaaadlaa Q f i s i s i m t A g a a ^ H V y .&#13;
&gt;'AteirasntesraBtoeJ&#13;
§ ^ aWanie^AaM Msv Marie,&#13;
Horrors! Boston has a baked beans&#13;
famine.&#13;
Coal companies of Kentucky and&#13;
Tennessee have declared against the&#13;
rate bill.&#13;
Prince Charles of Denmark has accepted&#13;
his joB as king of Norway, and&#13;
will take the title of Carl V.&#13;
Southerners are raising $20,000 to&#13;
erect a monument to Confederate dead&#13;
iiv Arlington cemeteryT-^yashington. ,&#13;
Toledo is having a consumption epidemic.&#13;
There were 220 deaths last year,&#13;
and the record for 1905 will be worse.&#13;
KingOscarof^SaE£den,jm lojagfitthe&#13;
ruler of Norway, has taken the title of&#13;
"King of Sweden and of the Goths and&#13;
Vandals."&#13;
Arva Grinnell, a Mexican war veteran,&#13;
the first to ^cale the walls at&#13;
Chapultepec, is dead in Spencer, Mass.,&#13;
aged 79 years.&#13;
King Edward has added $10,500 and&#13;
the Prince of*Wa!es $5,250 to Queen&#13;
Alexandra's fund in aid of the London&#13;
unemployed.&#13;
The National "University project was&#13;
indorsed by the association of presidents&#13;
of state universities, which met&#13;
in Washington.&#13;
A 1,000-mile march from Junction&#13;
City, Kas-, to Port Sam Houston, Tex.,&#13;
has been begun by the Sixth battery of&#13;
field artillery.&#13;
Mayor Gaudy, of Ypsilanti, will&#13;
name ex-Mayor N. B. Harding for pa&#13;
lice commissioner. The appointment&#13;
will meet general approval.&#13;
Senator P. C. Knox, ex-attorney general&#13;
of the United States, will manage&#13;
in the senate President Roosevelt's&#13;
fight for railroad rate legislation.&#13;
Adolph Munch and George Herrman,&#13;
saloonkeepers, must pay $500 and co^ts&#13;
for selling liquor to Herman Nebel at&#13;
Monroe last June, when the youth beme&#13;
intoxicated nnd was drowned in&#13;
%9$ a * Mechanic But a McCormick.&#13;
A certain well known Celtic resident&#13;
of Canton made application the&#13;
other day,for a Job at the iron worka,&#13;
&amp;nd, among other questions he Was&#13;
asked If he was a mechanic. Drawing&#13;
himself up to his full height of four&#13;
feet seven inches, and looking his interrogator&#13;
squarely In the eye, he replied,&#13;
"fna not a mechanic;. I'm Mc-&#13;
Cormick."—Boston Herald.&#13;
irA. H. 8tbtt$ ntesaenger at tad Stat*&#13;
Capitol, Columbus, 0., says: w .; , |&#13;
•Tor fifteen yeaia&#13;
I had kidney troa.&#13;
hies, and though I&#13;
doctored faithfully. :&#13;
cpn^d^net, find a&#13;
cdfe: I had heary&#13;
backaches, d i s s y&#13;
heaflaehee and terrible&#13;
urinary dieordera.&#13;
One. day 1&#13;
collapsed, fell in-,&#13;
sensible on the&#13;
sidewalk, and then&#13;
wasted away in bad for ten weeks.&#13;
After being given up, I began using&#13;
Doan/s Kidney Pills. In a couple of&#13;
months I regained my old health, and&#13;
new weigh 188 pounds. Twelve boxes&#13;
did It, and I have been well two&#13;
yeara."&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 60 cents a box.&#13;
Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. T.&#13;
JtpUsble infetvltia]&#13;
I CM flviartbe I f * reliable newa at I&#13;
% ehaacs to j*ty *&gt; feocimtai ateaaa&#13;
engine of our styiaa, within our range);&#13;
of sizes. VafSosMCwaMiaqsmiaaal&#13;
] this time tar vertical, traction or gas&#13;
langinii.&#13;
BNGlKE8AlfD BOIL8BS&#13;
,fct yeaMseeaeissaaatsWiWatti&#13;
sa. leet ef afilirlil as&#13;
l^eaipstsswaiei a w t e e — - , . - , - ^ ^ ^ . ,&#13;
pa^Pe a * e a ewae^p^s^s pse^p&gt; sse^ea^w ^SPS w^^^^t ^P^SBP^^B^B1' ^^a^^paeK^ ^^sp* j&#13;
tereiaaaflMeesevlWasV' ^&#13;
WriU U0*rH* ear a**** efler.&#13;
ATLAS&#13;
lODcKailatt&#13;
faorTahvl&#13;
ill&#13;
ilsin river.&#13;
Emperor William has figuratively&#13;
stretched his hand across the Atlantic&#13;
in a telegram to the Manhattan Chess&#13;
club congratulating its members for&#13;
their "peaceful victory over the Berlin&#13;
Chess society of Germany."&#13;
Dr. W. R. Harper, president of Chicago&#13;
'"university, expecting to die- wTth-&#13;
In a few weeks of cancer, is closing up&#13;
his affairs and putting the university&#13;
to right. John D. Rockefeller will be&#13;
summoned to his death bed.&#13;
Lord Rosebery, former premier, is&#13;
slated for the job again, should Balfour's&#13;
party lose the elections and the&#13;
Liberals come into power. Sir Henry&#13;
Campbell-Bannerman, it is said, will&#13;
be made a peer and lead the Liberals&#13;
in the house of commons.&#13;
Prosecutor; Hamper, of Owosso, continues&#13;
to defy the "citizens' committee"&#13;
which seeks to *boss" the grand&#13;
Jury preliminaries. He says he will&#13;
not appoint as assistant any of the&#13;
persons named by the committee, but&#13;
if Judge Smith rejects G. R. Lyon he&#13;
will select Wm. A. Norton, of St.&#13;
Johns.&#13;
District Manager Thomas, of the&#13;
Michigan Telephone Co- of Manistique,&#13;
says the long distance service will be&#13;
extended from Rapid River, Delta&#13;
county, following the line of the Soo&#13;
road, shortly. At present Manistique&#13;
is the only town of importance in the&#13;
peninsula that does not have telephone&#13;
connection with the outside world.&#13;
Citizens of Fenton are "making a&#13;
noise" because the council, without&#13;
any warning, .gave Flint men a gas&#13;
franchise, exempting the company&#13;
from taxes for 10 years, giving them&#13;
free water for that time and .permitting&#13;
a charge of $1.25 per 1,000 cubic&#13;
feet for gas. Chicago people wanted&#13;
to pay $2,000 for the franchise and pay&#13;
taxes and water rates.&#13;
C. W. Post, of Battle Creek, address-&#13;
-lag the National Citizens' Industrial&#13;
Tae Canadian Government jivea aeaoltttelj] aaamldg ocinia tlSotn., Lofo. uwish:i ch" Thhee reis Isp rnesoitd, enats.&#13;
many believe, an organization to tear&#13;
down labor organisations or fight labor.&#13;
We are not partisans of the em^&#13;
plover. Our position is rather that of&#13;
an Intermediary batweaa capital and&#13;
labor. We want to strengthen both and&#13;
build ttoam up. We are just as jnuch&#13;
opposed to Industrial combinations as&#13;
wa are-4a a labor trust or any institution&#13;
thai seeks to comer the labor&#13;
atrkat,"&#13;
9 oo DROPS&#13;
AVfegetafaie Preparationfor Assimilating&#13;
tbcFoodandRctfufau^&#13;
fhcStonacteafalBcwelsof&#13;
CAST0R1A For Infants and Children.&#13;
The Kind You Have&#13;
Always Bought&#13;
. &lt; H l l . D K U N&#13;
Promotes DigedtionJCheerfur*&#13;
ness and HestXontatn&#13;
Opium,Morpiiine nor Mineral.&#13;
WOT N A R C O T I C .&#13;
Stmt'&#13;
A perfect Remedy for Constipation,&#13;
Sour Stomach .Diarrhoea&#13;
Worms .Convulsions ,Feverishness&#13;
and LOSS OF SLEEP.&#13;
Facsimile Signature of&#13;
NEW YORK.&#13;
FOR WOMEN&#13;
trotted wits ins aecsttarta&#13;
taelx eex. maeA ae a aoacae 1«&#13;
ceaafoi. TboroagMrciea&#13;
•tape dieeaaxsM, iemle&#13;
aoreaeas.&#13;
Puttine ia ia powder form to be diasotod ia&#13;
water, and ia far awe Mr—ring, baTrnt.&#13;
and ecooomkal tlam Hqsld aatiscptic* for al&#13;
TOILET AND WOMB** SPECIAL USES&#13;
For sale at draoMa, St cents a bos.&#13;
Trial Box and Bowk et I—tiertlsae Pree. • " • a . fUxTosi COMWUIT Boeroaj. taaasv&#13;
W. L. DOUGLAS&#13;
•3^°&amp;*3^SHOESK&#13;
W. L. Dougiaa M.OOCilt Edge Llne»&#13;
cannot be equalled at any price.&#13;
l h % i »1.1&#13;
] "y D o S h S J ^ C . M S&#13;
EXACT COPY OS- WRAPPER.&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CASTORU&#13;
PRICE, 25 Ctu.&#13;
rKlNONEDAY PtHPK&#13;
AMTI-GRIPINE IS GUARJUmtKO TO CURS&#13;
^ aUP, BAD GOLD, HEADAME M i l lEtttUKJU.&#13;
W*J 1 won't toll Aatue&gt;Hwta« to a d«kler who wont OauMMMaee&#13;
!'&gt;"^ I t . Call IOTJOUT M O H T S A C K IV I T &gt;S&gt;irT CV.&#13;
MMTOTHE* $10,000 ^S&amp;3*+i*? W . UDowglas SJLSaaejeae s w hj taotr _&#13;
Call sat stylo, oaejr fatitaa&gt; essS ewMffar w/esvtesr&#13;
qwaimae, ecttlevesl taw letajset aese wf aery S3.se&#13;
•aee hi tae warM. Tfsey are Jawt ae jeesl as?&#13;
tawae thet cmt yeej $S.wS to ffM etoowly&#13;
elffeiwawahtlMwrice. It f«swa« take yea)" '&#13;
aay factory et Brecfcten, Meae.. the sarvaa&#13;
tae world wador oae reoff i s l l a a seeai'e&#13;
aboce, ead ahew ywat tke usee with wtilca every&#13;
pear ef Dowgias sawce ia WMOW, yew weald ro&#13;
w » V w . U DowtkM aslsaiseaee ate taw&#13;
ewswJ preduead se&#13;
31&#13;
Qetm/Sutenedfa^^tfy The leadins batUMSt emlning lnstiMtfon ot Asacrioa. HM «daeftted more th*n 98,0» youn* DMI *nd wawia&#13;
tStibty em nlojrad la iUUrta.% part* ot tb» wortal BaadtoaM cotalos** sent on request, ii Wilcox bt.. Datxolk.&#13;
at.7av#f.a«v&#13;
, CAUTlO^.-U»awia-ea^liaTlr.gW.L.»opa&gt;&#13;
laa. abooa. Take BO aeaaUtale. None genuine&#13;
vithoet aja aaase and eriee etampod on bottom.&#13;
ITANTKU. i1 limn 1m1iirtnil~"TTtovnwber»&#13;
W. L. DouglM Shoes are not sold. Full Una of&#13;
samples sent free for Impottinri spoc request&#13;
Fast Color £y*l*ta aaed; tea* mill net moor oraare.&#13;
Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Style*&#13;
W. L. DOUGLAS. Brookton. M aee.&#13;
W . N. U . ~ D E T R O I T . - - * © . A7-1909-&#13;
NOW OR NEVER&#13;
A Foil Sized Bottle F R E E At Your Drflggi$t'$&#13;
You have no right to suffer from constipation or any Stomach trouble. There is ao necessity or excuse for it.&#13;
There is one poaitiTe, natural, harmless cure—and only one—for thee* troubles ami we are) Sjoang to grre yoa&#13;
enough free to prove it-&#13;
Cut out the coupon below and take it to any druggist in the United States and he will give yon absolutely free of&#13;
charge a fall sized 35 cent bottle of ull's Grape Tonic the only permanent, natural core for constipation and all bowel troubles and indigestion and all&#13;
CUT OUT THIS COUPON&#13;
COT OUT OH THIS U N I&#13;
iaa i rasa&#13;
Take this Coupon to your druggist and he will give you a regular full size 35c bottle of Mwtt'a Grape Tonic&#13;
abeohitely free. Remember, we give only one bottle to each family. If you can find a druggist who dees not keep&#13;
Mull's Grape Tonic, sead as this Coupon, together with name and address of the druggist, and we'll aee thai your wants&#13;
are supplied.&#13;
I solemnly swear that X have never taken Mull's Grape Toaic, that I win apply for but oaw free bottle and that I&#13;
will take thia bottle myself for Constipation and Stomach Trouble,&#13;
•BU'S 8UPE TOUO CO., l i k e n&#13;
14* Third AVWM ROOK ISLAND, ILL.&#13;
Patient, sign your name 1&#13;
Address, street sad number here.&#13;
TvTNIIIlTaJLOIIUMliT: STuE'^iE'S-!&#13;
eo«pea to tae joeosr ef whew yea partaaaeit tale M I&#13;
wriTjiVe yea is esato l a eaaher watfe for&#13;
i tale feu&#13;
lae&#13;
laser* si i have the |&#13;
Retail Orataiat, tlcnyew aaaw hare.&#13;
TO TOT JOBBER: £2.7"&#13;
letter taytaf * * • rew»ay(»sai yea.&#13;
BaaNaawaV. OwaVsa SfJLS|w&gt; elwsaa ajavaaaah ahgaat aaiawaSaawal aVawal 4¾ •a al aaylftae yam tike, ead we wtu rawJt yea 1&#13;
aveeaw far ease eevpea preaarly r&#13;
aaw&#13;
mmmmSTSm&#13;
a;&#13;
X&lt;Z&#13;
VW.&#13;
* *&#13;
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3f&#13;
ANDERSOS.&#13;
Born to Fred W. Mackinderand&#13;
wife, a 10 pound boy, Nov. 13.&#13;
Mrs. T, Williams is staying with&#13;
Fred W. Mackiuder a few days,&#13;
Ledwidge and Eoche shipped a&#13;
carload of potatoes from here last&#13;
week.&#13;
A number of farmers around&#13;
here are; skipping their milk to&#13;
'Jackson.;&#13;
Farmers are hustling in their&#13;
corn and preparing for winter&#13;
these fine days.&#13;
Married, Nov. 16, Mr. Chas.&#13;
Hoff fend Miss Mabel Drew, their&#13;
many friends wish them the best&#13;
The Putnam and Hamburg&#13;
Farmer's Club will meet at the&#13;
home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward&#13;
McOluskey on Saturday, tfov.' 25.&#13;
Oysters will be served. Program:&#13;
Music, Club&#13;
Appointment of CJommitiea&#13;
. Election of Officers&#13;
Dinner&#13;
Music, Mrs. Arthur Scheonhal*&#13;
Recitation, Francis Traver&#13;
Recitation, Mrs. I. S. P. Johnson&#13;
Music, Mrs. Guy Hail&#13;
Recitation, Mrs. E. W. Kennedy&#13;
Recitation, Raymond Traver&#13;
Solo, Fannie Swarthout&#13;
Question Box&#13;
sick&#13;
of success through life.&#13;
The oyster supper at MTJB. Mary&#13;
HincbeJ'8 last "''Friday efvening&#13;
was well attended and a very enjoyable&#13;
time was had by all.&#13;
WISTPUTHA1C&#13;
Kirk Van Winkle was in Ann&#13;
Arbor Saturdayf&#13;
James Harris and-family spent&#13;
Sunday at D. M. Monks'.&#13;
Fannie Murphy began her&#13;
schoel in DeerfieW Monday.&#13;
r i' _: - : A-t • • . J - - -&#13;
1 Grace and Eunice Gardner spen t&#13;
Saturday and Sunday with Otis&#13;
Webb and wife of Unadill&amp;,m====_&#13;
! Mabel Monks who has been&#13;
spending a couple of weeks in&#13;
Canada returned home Friday.&#13;
EA&amp;T PUTHAM.&#13;
James Fitch has purchased a&#13;
fine new horse.&#13;
Leon kewis was home from&#13;
Chelsea,over Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Hall visited&#13;
relative* ac Chilson Tuesday last.&#13;
Mrs. B. W. Lake is in Howell&#13;
caring for her grandchildren, Lura&#13;
and Mdx Scheonhals who are ill&#13;
With scarlet fever.&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG.&#13;
Boy Scheonhals spent Sunday&#13;
with relatives in Hamburg.&#13;
W. Hendee and family spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday at Jackson.&#13;
T h e Literary CIuB meets with&#13;
Miss Fanny Bolison Saturday&#13;
evening,&#13;
Cyrus Bennett and family and&#13;
David Bennett and family spent&#13;
Sunday at Ralph Bennett's.&#13;
Good attendance at the Ladies&#13;
Aid Thursday at Mrs. Scheonhals&#13;
Arrangements were made to have&#13;
the Fair the seventh and eighth&#13;
of December at the Maccabee hall&#13;
in Chilson. Many useful things&#13;
will be sold from booths. Thursdayeveuing&#13;
oysters (with other&#13;
toothsome dishes) will be served&#13;
at ten cents a dish. Friday evening&#13;
a chickluypfe^^liiMrer will be&#13;
served from five until all are&#13;
served at the usual price,* twentyfive&#13;
cents.—A ^ronoral invitation"&#13;
is extended to all.&#13;
PLAIHHELD.&#13;
Mrs. F. Gardner was very&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Ho war T Conk and wife visited&#13;
relatives in White Oak last Sunday.&#13;
Some improvements are being&#13;
made about the M. P. ohuroh this&#13;
week.&#13;
J u n e Sayles and family of&#13;
Stockbridge visited it Mr. £•&#13;
VanSyckel'8 last week.&#13;
The L. A. S. was well attended&#13;
at A. L. Dutton's last Friday and&#13;
all spent a pleasant day. Proceeds&#13;
about $100.&#13;
ADDITIONAL LOCAL.&#13;
Notl&#13;
A l l persons owing on book account&#13;
are kindly requested t o&#13;
call and settle same by D e -&#13;
cember 1st, 1005«&#13;
^ * .&#13;
M. Ruen and family have moved&#13;
into their mew house on Unadilla&#13;
l 4 M « t ^ _ . - -&#13;
When you go to Chelsea in the future&#13;
set your watch Lack 28 minutes&#13;
as the council there have adopted&#13;
Standard time.&#13;
Forty-four numbers were sold at&#13;
the dancing party given by the Pinckney&#13;
Dancing Society at the opera&#13;
bouse Tuesday evening.&#13;
A Jewelry Store for&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
C. t. Marvin ahd H. D. Finley of&#13;
the firm oX.Mjirvin_AJ?inlfijL-Q£Howell,&#13;
were in town Wednesday and&#13;
rented the room back of Sigler's drug&#13;
store facing on Howell street, and will&#13;
put in affinestock of jewelry, silverware,&#13;
etc. They ate the leading jewelers&#13;
ot the county, having the largest&#13;
stock in Howell. They expert tn&#13;
Saturday Specials ?&#13;
bow prices on S h o e s&#13;
b o w prices on Dress Goods&#13;
L o w prices on Rubber Foot-wear •&#13;
L o w prices on Groceries&#13;
JACKSON &amp; CADWELLS&#13;
FOR 9ALJJB.&#13;
A horse and nearly new road wagon&#13;
and harness. Mrs. Travers,&#13;
Pettysyille.&#13;
Have&#13;
Photo&#13;
Taken&#13;
2 4 PICTURES&#13;
4 Different Positions 4&#13;
25 CENTS&#13;
Pinckney Gallery&#13;
3 WEEKS&#13;
Commencing Nov. 2 8&#13;
C H I L S O N&#13;
Corn husking by machine, all&#13;
the go.&#13;
Mias Bessie Sweet was home&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Miss Griewold of South Lyon&#13;
was the guest of Miss Andrews&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Burt Stewart and family of&#13;
Brighton spent Surrday at Dan&#13;
Stewart's.&#13;
Mrs. N. B. Smith went to Pur*&#13;
and Monday to attend the funeral&#13;
of a friend. — —&#13;
Mrs. H. Dammann is spending&#13;
a week witli friends and relatives&#13;
in WebrJerville.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Sweeney&#13;
were the guest of relatives in&#13;
Howell one day last week. ,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Carpenter&#13;
entertained a number of friends&#13;
and relatives one day last week.&#13;
The Misses Kittie King and&#13;
Alice Timmons attended the Y. P.&#13;
8. &amp; L. Club at C. L. Edison's.&#13;
Franc Donning is able to be out&#13;
again but we are sorry to learn&#13;
that her little sister Marguerite is&#13;
quite sick.&#13;
A dance will be given at the Dexter&#13;
opera house, Thanksgiving, Nov. 80.&#13;
Good mu?ic and continuous dancing.&#13;
Louis LAVES-. RCBT FITZMMONS.&#13;
open up here Dec. 1. Watch our columns&#13;
next week for their annou neement.&#13;
Mr. Finley isex-sberiff and is&#13;
well known here.&#13;
A Pretty Wedding,&#13;
A pretty wedding occured Thursday,&#13;
Nov. 16, at the home of the&#13;
bride's parents, Air. and Mrs. C. E.&#13;
Drew of Marion, when their daughter&#13;
Lila, in tbe presence of about 50 invited&#13;
guests^was united in marriage&#13;
to Mr. Chas. Hoff of Anderson, Rev.&#13;
C. L. Adams officiating.&#13;
After tbe ceremony, a dainty luncheon&#13;
wos served, alter which the young&#13;
couple left for a short wedding trip.&#13;
They were the recipients~~of many&#13;
beautiful and useful gifts that show&#13;
the high esteem in which tbey are&#13;
W4;—May their journey through lite&#13;
fi a lony and prosperous one is the&#13;
wisb of their many friends.&#13;
• Business Pointers.&#13;
\&#13;
W A B T B D .&#13;
About 150 bushels of corn in the&#13;
ear. Will pay cash tor same delivered&#13;
at Pinckney. E. J. Bnggs&#13;
FOR SALJE.&#13;
Tv\o second-hand Round Oak stoves.&#13;
Inquire ot H. W. Orofoot. 46fcf&#13;
ATTENTION POULTRYMEN&#13;
I have a limited number of S. C. R.&#13;
I. Red Cockrels, from prize winning&#13;
birds, also some Golden Polish Cockrels.&#13;
For prices, call on or address,&#13;
Wm. Cady, Lakeland, Mich. t48&#13;
CS. CHAMBERLIN,&#13;
EXPERT AUCTIONEER&#13;
Of Course&#13;
r o u are&#13;
going to&#13;
have . .&#13;
Photos Made JoLXmas^&#13;
Assessment No. 81&#13;
is now due and must&#13;
Nov. 30.&#13;
t48 - Cora Wright, P. K&#13;
f the LOT AIM&#13;
be paid before&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
Digits what you oat.&#13;
Remembwtfre Tbaukstfivinff dance&#13;
at Dexter opera hou;e, Nov. 30, given&#13;
by Louis Livey and Robt. Fitxsimons.&#13;
B r o a d e n i n g t h e Shoqldera.&#13;
A good exercise for broadening the&#13;
shoulders requires the person to place&#13;
bis hands straight before him against a&#13;
door or wall, which he must faoe.&#13;
Straighten out the- arms and let th&#13;
palms of both hands be spread out upon&#13;
the surface of the door. Then slowly&#13;
press the chest forward toward tho&#13;
door. This will cause the arms to bend&#13;
at the elbows, but at the same time&#13;
will throw back the shoulders. Rowing&#13;
will broaden the shoulders very perceptibly.&#13;
Exercises with dumbbells are&#13;
also good,&#13;
DEXTER,&#13;
Boll Phono 88, free&#13;
MICH.&#13;
P. O. L A P * W^» Afl&#13;
There is nothing your&#13;
i n e n d a will like Jjajf so&#13;
well as a Photo&#13;
PHOTO OF YOURSELF&#13;
Have them taken now,&#13;
before the rush is on. If&#13;
you want&#13;
Good Ones&#13;
that will last and are&#13;
Up To Date&#13;
go to&#13;
MARTYN'S&#13;
Formerly of Battle Creek, Kich. Sells everything&#13;
on earth—Real Estate, Graded Stock, Personal&#13;
Property, Country Sales, etc. Years of experience,&#13;
and prices reasonable,&#13;
Orders may be left at the DISPATCH Office.&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
E.* DANIELS,"&#13;
GENERAL AUCTIONEER.&#13;
Salietactun Guaranteed. For informs^&#13;
tion call at D I S P A T C H Office or address&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. £Lyndilla phone&#13;
connection. Auction bills and tin cupr&#13;
furnished free.&#13;
ttowett? WIIcTitgan:&#13;
FRANK L ANDREWS&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH SEAL&#13;
AT CISPA7CH OFFICE&#13;
Percy Swarthout&#13;
Funeral Director&#13;
AND EMBALMER&#13;
ALL CALLS ANSWERED&#13;
PROMPTLY D M OR MIGHT&#13;
PARLORS AT&#13;
PLIMPTON'S OLD STAND PhiQne No. 30'&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
Satisfaction Guaranteed&#13;
3F :&#13;
WE TURK OUT NO POOR WORK&#13;
All persons owing on&#13;
Account are requestto&#13;
call and settle by&#13;
cash or note a s soon&#13;
a s possible a s I have&#13;
bills to meet.&#13;
3 Day 3&#13;
ial Sale&#13;
I1!* ^ R. A. WLLIAMS.&#13;
W e c a r r y a full line of Caps. Gloves, M i t t s .&#13;
Wool Pants and S h i r t s .&#13;
W . E . MURPHY&#13;
Commencing Thursday, Nov. 23&#13;
Closing Saturday, Nov. 25&#13;
WE WILL SELL ALL&#13;
Men's 5 0 cent Underwear* 4 5 c t s .&#13;
Men's 5 0 cent Gloves and Mittens, 4 3 cts.&#13;
Ladies' 2 5 cent Hose,&#13;
4 Cans of Corn,&#13;
3 Ca ns Baking Powder,&#13;
5 0 cent Tea,&#13;
. 4 0 cent Tea,&#13;
Reduced Prices on Gias&amp;ware&#13;
Crockery.&#13;
2 3 cts.&#13;
2 5 els.&#13;
2 5 cts.&#13;
4 5 cts.&#13;
3 5 cts.&#13;
a rtd Fancy&#13;
H. M. WILLIST0N &amp; CO.&#13;
»&gt;&#13;
A&#13;
^ n&#13;
. • : * ' = . •&#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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              <text>VOL. XXIII. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, NO7. -0.1906. No. 4 8&#13;
We have a thoroughly equipped&#13;
machine shop and are in position&#13;
to=do^yDur repairing promptly and „&#13;
at reasonable prices. . . . . .&#13;
I&#13;
Engine and Lathe&#13;
Work a Specialty&#13;
Sharp Edge&#13;
Grinding Done&#13;
"RAWflA. £w&amp;t\vt &amp;TV4, "fctU "StVt^ont Cormtctoons&#13;
THE BEST OF EVERYTHING FOR CHRISTMAS&#13;
WE HAVE THE RIGHT THING for EVERY PERSON, TBE RIGHT PRICE for EVERY PURSE dM A BEAUTIFUL ASSORTMENT OF PLEASING GIFTS&#13;
PERFECTLY ADAfrTED TO THE WANTS AND REQUIREME.-m OF OUK FRIENDS AND PATBON8&#13;
EVERYTHP FRESH AMD SPARKLING WITH THE BRIBHTEST KEW 600DS OF THE SEASON&#13;
We are watting to please you with Present* that are Apptopr/ate, Popular, Practical and in every way Desirable in the line of&#13;
Toys • Books * and * Novelties&#13;
FANCY GOODS, NOTIONS, ETC.&#13;
C _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _&#13;
WE HAVE THE VARIETY THIT INSURES THE EASY SATISFACTORY CHOICE-THE FIELD FOR SELECTION THE WIDEST. PRICES FAIREST&#13;
A GENEROUS ASSORTMENT, FULL of QUALITY and MERIT&#13;
If Yoil Want Satirfaction In Selection and Economy In Price OUr Holiday Stock Will Fill Yoilr Needs&#13;
REMEMBER OUR HOLIDAY STOCK GIVES YOU NEW IDEAS AND SUPPLIES EXACTLY WHAT YOU WANT&#13;
S I OSLOCAL&#13;
NEWS.&#13;
Minnie Monks visited relatives in&#13;
Dexter tbe past week.&#13;
Alfred Monks had the Lyndilla telephone&#13;
placed in his home the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. E. J. Drewery, of. Howell,&#13;
shook hands with friends in town&#13;
Monday.&#13;
The past two weeks have been fine&#13;
for automobiling and the Drs. Siller&#13;
have been enjoying it.&#13;
There are a few bad places in onr&#13;
sidewalks that should be looked after&#13;
be I ore winter sets in. It may save&#13;
accident.&#13;
Members of the Loyal Gnard will&#13;
please remember that this is the, last&#13;
day of the month and the assessment&#13;
should be paid at once.&#13;
Mist Mabel Emerick left Saturday&#13;
for Lansing where she will act as&#13;
stenographer and type writer for the&#13;
Oldsmobile Co. She has made many&#13;
friends during her ihorTsTay here who&#13;
wish her success.&#13;
Some from here attended the Odd&#13;
Fellow ojster supper at Hamburg last&#13;
week. Several new members are taking&#13;
the degrees and much interest is&#13;
manifest. The Hamburg Odd Fellows&#13;
know well how to entertain.&#13;
We recrived copy for some ad vs.&#13;
Wednesday of last week and they were&#13;
too late for us to make room tor.&#13;
Those who wish space or a change of&#13;
adv. sbculd remember that copy should&#13;
reach us Tuesday noon to insure the&#13;
change.&#13;
C. K. Cobb and party who went&#13;
north after deer a few weeks ago&#13;
returned home last week and report a&#13;
good time and some game. They were&#13;
called home by tbe illness and death&#13;
of a son of Mr. Drew, one of tbe party.&#13;
Mr. Cobb has our thanks for a nice&#13;
roast of venison.&#13;
"Moon's'1 the peoples store cf Howell&#13;
have a space on pige 8.&#13;
Miss Grace SpauIding~~oY"Chi 1 son&#13;
spent Saturday and Sunday with her&#13;
teacher, Miss Andrews here.&#13;
This is the day this nation is to give&#13;
thanks. Well we have mnch as a nation&#13;
and people to give thanks for.&#13;
Willis Dunning and iamily spend&#13;
Thanksgiving with relatives in Detroit&#13;
and will remain over Sunday in&#13;
Pontiac.&#13;
Judging from the large amount of&#13;
poultry shipped out of this place tbe&#13;
past two weeks; some people are celebrating&#13;
thanksgiving today.&#13;
Jeff Parker took a tumble out of an&#13;
appie tree the past week and was&#13;
quite badly hurt. He is better however&#13;
and able to get around.&#13;
During the wind storm Friday the&#13;
high board fence on tbe school grounds&#13;
was blown down. Well it looks better&#13;
with it away anyway. Later: The&#13;
school board have ordered a portion of&#13;
tho fonco romoyod.—Good. —&#13;
I OBITTJABY. V&#13;
MRS. KERRY ROCHE.&#13;
If yon do not see a mention of your&#13;
Thanksgiving guests or other company&#13;
please remember that we are not oinuicient.&#13;
We are glad it all times to&#13;
publish all tbe news bnt you can help&#13;
us very much by handing or sending&#13;
us items.&#13;
The M. E. society of Unadilla will&#13;
hold a two days fair Dee. 7 and 8. A&#13;
musical program will be given each&#13;
evening and this together with a&#13;
chicken pie and oyster supper, a great&#13;
time" is lookod for. Everyone come&#13;
and enjoy it!&#13;
The N. Hamburg Social and Liteaary&#13;
Club will hold a New England&#13;
supper at tbe home of David Van Horn&#13;
on the old Cady farm Friday evening,&#13;
Dec. 1, 1905. Several noted persons&#13;
will bti present. AH are cordially&#13;
invited to come and have a good old&#13;
fashioned time. Bill 15 cents.&#13;
Catherine Keating was born in Kilmedy.&#13;
Limerick Co., Ireland, in 1840.&#13;
When sixteen years old she came to&#13;
America where she spent two years in&#13;
New York, marrying Kerry Roche.&#13;
Soon after they came to Michigan and&#13;
settled on a farm in Marion township,&#13;
this county, where tbey have resided&#13;
ever since.&#13;
She was the mother of four children&#13;
one of whom, a daughter, passed on&#13;
before. Of those who remain are a&#13;
bereaved husband, two daughters, Mrs.&#13;
John Foran.of Chicago, and Mrs. Wm.&#13;
Shehan, of Dansville, and one son,&#13;
Andrew, of Detroit.wbo have the&#13;
sympathy of all.&#13;
Mrs. Roche was well known and had&#13;
a large circle of warm friends who&#13;
will miss her loving manner and&#13;
kindly advice. She was a devoted&#13;
Catholic and a true christian. She&#13;
• M. E. Church Notes. I Marion Reason is still on the gain.&#13;
• | You can' bel-p" but see Marvin &amp;&#13;
We are thankful for an increasing] ptnieys adv. in this issue.&#13;
interest in spiritual things as shown&#13;
by increasing attendance in the congregation&#13;
and the class* and prayer&#13;
Miss Belie Kennedy is able to be&#13;
around the house a little.&#13;
services. A constant and continued W. H. Cadwell arrived Tuesday&#13;
-waiting on-TBeTiorris what is needed e ,V P n u i g f r o m Stillwater,Mnn^SwuL&#13;
passed away Munday, Nov. 20, tiyuwpbant&#13;
in the4aith-an44hfljnneral was&#13;
held fjom St. MaryV&gt; church on Thursday&#13;
the 23rd, attended by a large&#13;
nnmber of friends and neighbors&#13;
which proved the high esteem in&#13;
which she was held.&#13;
BOWMAN'S | Cotv^V fcWcVl&#13;
We are ready for the rush of holiday ,&#13;
trade. Our stock will contain many desirable&#13;
items not found elsewhere. I place&#13;
my orders very early, buy direct, even in&#13;
Germany and France and do my own importing.&#13;
This may sound big to you but&#13;
it is ea,y enough wjben yon know how. As,&#13;
I own these goods cheaper than my competitors&#13;
it is an easy mattter for me to&#13;
undersell. It will pay yot to drive over&#13;
as we will show large assortment and save&#13;
yon money. Dolls,. Books, China, Toys,&#13;
and Fancy Goods of every disoripiion.&#13;
EtVry deyartment in our store is complete.&#13;
A pleasure to show goods. Just&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 3&#13;
Morning Worship and Sermon&#13;
at 10:30&#13;
J.-.&#13;
i&#13;
JE A. BOWMAN.&#13;
I Th« &amp;u*y Store.&#13;
Grand Rivtr St. Opposlta.Court HOUM.&#13;
Howell Mich*&#13;
EVENING SERVICE&#13;
At 7:00&#13;
The'Blble Uove Story.&#13;
M ':. -&gt;&lt;\ fc «'^v.•,&#13;
Tto* ofctMfctftftftt* • : Rpecial in v iUtion&#13;
to strangers and casual visitors&#13;
to make it their Sunday home.&#13;
CABD OF THANKS.&#13;
We desire to thank all the friends&#13;
and neighbors who so kindly assisted&#13;
ns during the last illness, death and&#13;
burial of our loved one.&#13;
Kerry Roche&#13;
Mrs. John Foran&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Sbehan&#13;
Andrtw Roche&#13;
Young Mens Club&#13;
Parents should forego all traditionall&#13;
scruples and make home attractive.&#13;
Half the charm of c rtain&#13;
amusements which are good in their&#13;
place come into youthful minds&#13;
through their prohibition in tbe home.&#13;
Tbe man who denies the solaces of life&#13;
to himself wfco takes the, bine and&#13;
pessinistic view Acf MM fuUre wbo&#13;
believes that pleasure* "-« iU immoral&#13;
is the man who may law a»&#13;
upright life himself bnt he make* existence&#13;
burdensome for his ckildrea&#13;
and as soon as they break from parental&#13;
authority they will swing wide&#13;
away from all the parental fashions.&#13;
Congregational Church.&#13;
and what counts. "Wait on the Lord,&#13;
be of good courage and be shall&#13;
strengthen thine heart. Wait, I say,&#13;
on the Lord." Let this waiting be in&#13;
the form ot an increasing and entire&#13;
consecration ani so get prepared for&#13;
blessing and service and we shall soon&#13;
see the salvation of God.&#13;
The pastor and church expect, if&#13;
God wills, to begin a special service&#13;
from January 1st. Let us be anxious&#13;
for the meeting to begin and be pre*&#13;
pared in every way with heart and&#13;
yoice, time and means to make this,&#13;
under God, the best revival meeting&#13;
we have ever known.. Let this meeting&#13;
have precedence over every other&#13;
thing. Arrange to let it have right&#13;
of way, side track eveaything else and&#13;
give it the main line.—Everyone ^Wor&#13;
invited to co-operate.&#13;
We had a well attended and interesting&#13;
meeting at "Birkett's". If this&#13;
first meeting is a promise of the&#13;
future we shall have a profitable and&#13;
useful appointment there.&#13;
Do not forget the prayer meeting&#13;
in the upper room, you need to be&#13;
there, we need you there. God needs&#13;
you there.&#13;
Don't forget the Young Peoples'&#13;
meeting at 6:15 sharp, Sunday. Let&#13;
our young people get in line for usefulness,&#13;
short visit.&#13;
Harold Brown o| the U. of M., is&#13;
spending tbe Thanksgiving vacation&#13;
in the home of G. W. Teeple.&#13;
Mrs. L. Kennedy wbo had a stroke&#13;
of paralysis Sunday; night is better at&#13;
tbis writing but is sfiil in a critical&#13;
condition. I&#13;
Mrs. Abbott, who has haen a^r the&#13;
sanitarium for several moTrths buffering&#13;
with rheumatism, was a&amp;m to be&#13;
taken to Detroit Tuesday, whers she&#13;
expects to spend the winter with her&#13;
father.&#13;
A good present for the housewife&#13;
for Xmas would be one of those GregoryCook&#13;
Books. Ti! e price is only&#13;
25?cents and they are worth three&#13;
tirpjes that amount. We have them&#13;
this office.&#13;
A heavy rain visited this section&#13;
Monday night.&#13;
Geo. Reason Jr. and wife are canng&#13;
for a ten pound boy since Tuesday.&#13;
Quite a heavy thunder storm visited&#13;
this section Tuesday night.&#13;
The trial of Bert- Abbott for nonsupport&#13;
was called for Wednesday&#13;
at Howell.&#13;
Mrs. Herbert Cope who has been on&#13;
the road with her husband tor three&#13;
or fonr weeks, returned home the first&#13;
of the week.&#13;
sa:e at&#13;
-—The dispute between the superintendants&#13;
of tbe poor of Livingston and&#13;
Oakland counties as regards the. residents&#13;
of the Wood family controversy&#13;
has been decided by trie supreme&#13;
court in favor of Oakland county.—&#13;
Democrat.&#13;
Tbe annual election of officers for&#13;
Livingston Lodge No. 76, F. &amp; A. M.&#13;
wiil be held Dec. 5 at which time other&#13;
important Matters and an oyster supper&#13;
will be disposed of. All members&#13;
requested to b« present.&#13;
E R Brown, Sect&#13;
Members of (he Younar Ladies'Guild&#13;
and Y, Si. club were entertained at&#13;
the hospitable residence of Mr. aid&#13;
Mrs. T. Read Tuesday evening. Tha&#13;
pastor gave an address on the subjeat&#13;
of uThe Anti Profanity League" fallowed&#13;
by a pleasant social time and a&#13;
musical program. At the close refreshments&#13;
were served.&#13;
Assessment No. 81 J tbe LOTMM&#13;
is now due and must be paid before&#13;
Nov. 30.&#13;
t48 Uora Wright, F.K,&#13;
m $25.00 GASH&#13;
&gt;k&#13;
' • % • : - • • " %&#13;
&gt; « . • • • • • • * .&#13;
• • * &gt;&#13;
Buys a Pull Size, 6&#13;
Hole, Large Oven&#13;
I&#13;
Once the church is brought to her&#13;
knees then her set time to favor her&#13;
will arrive aid the Spirit will be&#13;
emptied out from on high. We are&#13;
confident that God will glorify Himself&#13;
in the day of our humility and&#13;
penitence.&#13;
The service last Thursday was an&#13;
inspiration.&#13;
Everybody is urged to attend the&#13;
special Thanksgiving service tonight&#13;
ot 7 o'clock. §We most give up other&#13;
interests if we want Christ among ns.&#13;
STEEL RANGE&#13;
It is tne lowest price ever named for&#13;
a thoroughly reliable range. We&#13;
guarantee it stronger, better made,&#13;
better finished, and more lasting than&#13;
any other range offered for the price.&#13;
$25.Q^ t .. *&#13;
i Teeple Hardware;&amp;o&#13;
&gt; • '&#13;
jrjky.jj,&#13;
\&#13;
:$»*!«•*».**,: &amp;tint*$-&amp;&amp;i^^ m mm:**! 'V Wi.dl W&#13;
• • • * * ' * . •&#13;
*!"••«*&gt;.* V :&#13;
wr?*'**yi'"&#13;
&amp;?$.'&#13;
A&#13;
&gt;*v -*&#13;
*!*»' :V. ••!i*V ^ : ¾ . :#.&#13;
" &gt; * . •&#13;
MICHIGAN&#13;
HAPPEMGS&#13;
FORMER PORT HURON&#13;
GIRL ELOPES . WITH&#13;
A CHAUFFEUR.&#13;
SECRETARY GARFIELD GIVE'S&#13;
BENTON HARBOR MAN&#13;
A FAT JOB.&#13;
! '&#13;
i I&#13;
.1&#13;
A story coming from Los Angeles,&#13;
Cal.( that Miss Elizabeth A. Botsford,&#13;
a former Port Huron society girl,&#13;
daughter of William P. Botsford, millionaire&#13;
president of the Los Angeles&#13;
American National bank, had eloped&#13;
with Albert P. Fransen, her father's&#13;
chauffeur, has created a sensation in&#13;
this city.&#13;
Miss Botsford disappeared from her&#13;
home and was married to Fransen by&#13;
a JusUce of the peace. The young woman's&#13;
father is unable to obtain trace&#13;
of her and Uer husband, but he believes&#13;
that they have gone to Colorado,&#13;
where Fransen owns a ranch.&#13;
It is said that Botsford may try to&#13;
have the marriage annulled on the&#13;
ground that his daughter wasn't mentally&#13;
competent to select a husband.&#13;
Names Michigan Man.&#13;
Edmund J. Bard, of Benton Harbor,&#13;
formerly auditor of the Milwaukee,&#13;
Benton Harbor &amp; Columbus railway,&#13;
has been appointed assistant inspector&#13;
of the department of commerce and labor&#13;
by Secretary Garfield, and began&#13;
his duties Tuesday.&#13;
His first work will be in connection&#13;
with the beef trust investigation in&#13;
€hicago; The-appointment carries withlt&#13;
a salary of $3,000 per year and $4 per&#13;
day for expenses. The position was secured&#13;
without political pull, because of&#13;
the ability of Mr. Bard.&#13;
:;;.*&#13;
For Horticulturists.&#13;
Director C. D. Smith announces the&#13;
winter course in horticulture at the M.&#13;
A. C , at Lansing, which was attended&#13;
last year by 130 persons. The course&#13;
,1s short, practical and inexpensive, designed&#13;
for those who desire a training&#13;
for successful fruit growing, gardening,&#13;
or greenhouse work. It begins January&#13;
3 and continues to February 23.&#13;
There are no entrance examinations&#13;
; anyone having a common school&#13;
education can take this course with&#13;
profit. Any man or woman over 16&#13;
years is admitted. The necessary expenses,&#13;
except railroad fare, are about&#13;
$45.&#13;
Kills Ring-Tail Cat.&#13;
A ring-tail cat, an animal decidedly&#13;
rare In northern Michigan, has been&#13;
caught by Herman Thiele, a Negaunee&#13;
man. It was the first specimen ever&#13;
captured by either Mr. Thiele or his&#13;
father, and together they have been&#13;
engaged in trapping for 45 years. The&#13;
animal has fine, silky gray fur. The&#13;
most striking characteristic is a series&#13;
of black rings around the bushy tail. In&#13;
this appendage it differs radically&#13;
from the ordinary wildcat, which has a&#13;
bob-tail.&#13;
MICHIGAN ITEMS*&#13;
*****&#13;
t&#13;
•MM w . * U&#13;
Souvenir vandals stole the flowers&#13;
from the grave of Joaie Oom.at Qrand&#13;
Rapids. ••**•'&#13;
Robert Willis, Marlette, banker, was&#13;
stricken with paralysis in his office.&#13;
His condition Is serious.&#13;
Frank Tuttle, prominent farmer ot&#13;
Dowaglac, cut his throat because his&#13;
wife left him. He may recover.&#13;
Wells O. Brown, deputy state land&#13;
commissioner, Is suffering from an attack&#13;
of appendicitis at Lansing.&#13;
The Detroit ft Mackinac is said to&#13;
be planning to extend the southern&#13;
terminal from Bay City to Port Huron.&#13;
Mrs. Anna Daniels, of Twining, was&#13;
taken to 8tandlah by Sheriff Wademan&#13;
on a charge of illegally practicing medicine.&#13;
While burning leaves Mrs. Wm. Burreli,&#13;
of Denton, was fatally burned, her&#13;
clothing being entirely burned from&#13;
her body.&#13;
The Kings Daughters are making&#13;
preparations for their annual charity&#13;
fair to be held in Princess rink at&#13;
-Northville Dec—X and • &amp; . _&#13;
Three Killed at the "Soo."&#13;
Three persons ios r^vesla~ttie~T^hildren to school.&#13;
wreck on the "Soo" railroad Sunday.*&#13;
While a southbound extra freight was&#13;
taking coal, another extra crashed into&#13;
the rear of the train, the engine of the&#13;
second train demolishing the caboose,&#13;
killing the conductor, George W.&#13;
Smiley, Mrs. Smiley and their infant&#13;
daughter, aged 2 years. Mabel Smiley,&#13;
another daughter, aged 14 years, was&#13;
probably fatally injured.&#13;
Merchants of Tekonsha have signed&#13;
an agreement to close their stores&#13;
at 8 o'clock, having heretofore kept&#13;
open until 11 and even 12 o'clock.&#13;
The Detroit-Bay City Electric Co.&#13;
has received several steel cars and a&#13;
locomotive, and a full outfit of tracklaying&#13;
tools. About 10 miles of road&#13;
have been graded.&#13;
Mrs. Philip Elliott, of Lansing, will&#13;
not mix stove polish with gasoline&#13;
again. The explosion from her first experience&#13;
burned her hands and arms&#13;
severely.&#13;
On orders of Mayor. Parkill, Owosso,&#13;
was a "dry" town on Sunday, and&#13;
every slot machine was hidden away.&#13;
It Is said the "lid" is on for an indefinite&#13;
"time.&#13;
Ludlngton lifesavers found the body&#13;
of Gus Johnson, known as "Hobo Gus,"&#13;
who disappeared on Sunday. He was&#13;
rirnwnpri in HereMarquette lake. WjL..&#13;
friends say "foul play."&#13;
A grocer of Benton Harbor put gasoline&#13;
in Mrs. W. HogUe"s kerosene can.&#13;
Mr^. Hogne was carrying a lamp filled&#13;
wit a the stuff when it exploded and&#13;
she was badly burned about the head.&#13;
K. B. Dutcher, of Fennville, a cadet&#13;
at. Orchard Lake academy, fell head&#13;
long from the D. TJ. R. trestle over the&#13;
Grand Trunk tracks—40 feet—landed&#13;
on his feet and broke his ankle In two&#13;
places.&#13;
Dr. Nancrede, of Ann Arbor, and Dr.&#13;
McArthur, of Chicago, assisted by local&#13;
physicians, performed a successful op-'&#13;
eration for appendicitis upon Julius T.&#13;
Harrah, president of the Traverse City&#13;
State bank.&#13;
Bloodhounds will be used to track&#13;
the men at St. Joseph who cut out the&#13;
tongues of a team of horses belonging&#13;
to Bert Talbot, of Twin Springs. There&#13;
is even talk of lynching if the fellows&#13;
are captured.&#13;
A pet coon which had been kept&#13;
chained in the kitchen, broke loose and&#13;
in some way turned on the cock in the&#13;
gas range, which nearly resulted in the&#13;
asphyxiation of Mr. and Mrs. Reid Lyman,&#13;
of Jackson.&#13;
John Heininger, of Ann Arbor, Stipe-&#13;
„rinr t o w n s h i p f a r m e r defied »he authorittes&#13;
to compel him to send his&#13;
He-was sent to&#13;
t •:-1&#13;
t .&#13;
v •&#13;
iU V. RJ&#13;
-1i ^&#13;
Ellen Glenn Sentenced;&#13;
Ellen Glenn, the woman with the&#13;
mysterious past, who swindled Stephen&#13;
A. Lockwood, a Lapeer merchant,&#13;
out of $500 by means of fraudulent&#13;
deed and abstract in a land deal, was&#13;
sentenced-by Judge Dodds to from one&#13;
to ten years in the Detroit house of&#13;
correction. Judge Dodds recommended&#13;
that the maximum be three years.&#13;
Reward for Assassin.&#13;
William S. Wlnegar, of Grand Rapids,&#13;
heads a subscription list, of $500&#13;
already raised, as a reward for the&#13;
capture of the murderer of Josephine&#13;
Oom, and the council has adopted a&#13;
resolution urging the sheriff to hang&#13;
up a reward of $500. The Grand Rapids&#13;
Herald also offers a reward of $200.&#13;
Two Tots Cremated.&#13;
Mrs. Dell Wright, of Lake township,&#13;
near Baldwin, locked her two children&#13;
in the house while she went to visit a&#13;
neighbor. Tke house caught fire&#13;
and hot* chJMWB neHshed. They were&#13;
3 t a d fc.*0Spectlvely.&#13;
Three Years in Prison.&#13;
Obert Love, who recently attacked&#13;
his wife on the street at Jackson and&#13;
gashed her throat, and later made a&#13;
bluff at suicide by laying down on the&#13;
railroad tracks, was sent to Jackson&#13;
prison for three years. His wife Is recovering.&#13;
m ® '&#13;
J •&#13;
"All work and no play makes Jack&#13;
a dull box;" but all play and no work&#13;
generally makes him a grand rascal.&#13;
Ten industries in the state employing&#13;
77,942 men, have Invested capital&#13;
of $125,882,000, and the product annually&#13;
is $167,629,000, says Labor Commissioner&#13;
McLeod. The industries are&#13;
carriage and wagon factories, chemical&#13;
plants, flour and grist mills, foundries&#13;
and machine shops, furniture factories,&#13;
tanneries, planing and saw miUs, printing&#13;
and publishing houses and tobacco&#13;
Mat cigar factories.&#13;
VXTETUEflCES OF JL JtATVUALlST •,••&gt;- M."»J,. S£&#13;
^1&#13;
• * • »&#13;
: Richard Bell in hit new hook, "My&#13;
Strange Pets," tells of the solan&#13;
geese, which in Great Britain in bygone&#13;
days, used to be salted and dried&#13;
for human'food: "Many years ago&#13;
these dried geese found their way&#13;
to the lowlands of Scotland and were&#13;
used as an appetiser. A small portion,&#13;
when eaten before meals, was&#13;
The&#13;
supposed to tickle the appetite. In feet in the night becomes scared and&#13;
this connection I have heard a good&#13;
story. A worthy farmer in the neighborhood&#13;
gave a dinner party and&#13;
when the dinner was in progress he&#13;
iSked one of his guests if he would&#13;
have 'another portion/ upon which&#13;
the guest remarked, 'I think I will, as&#13;
I et a bit o' solan goose afore I left&#13;
name and it has made me very hungry,'&#13;
upon which his neighbor said:&#13;
I dinna believe in these solan geese,&#13;
tor I et a haill yin afore I cam' awa*&#13;
and I dinna feel a bit the hungrier.'"&#13;
A correspondent of Mr; Bell's gives&#13;
the following information about one&#13;
&lt;n\ bisyfavorite specimens;&#13;
gaut&amp;Jtt&amp;ffe** boas are matt&#13;
tamed. eMrpTeaen^boa, *|J|»n*f haf#^&#13;
Had about two years, invariably sleeps&#13;
Itf my bed, round my feett )He IT perfectly&#13;
clean, lies still and vejy seldom&#13;
.disturbs me; occasionally he crawls&#13;
$&gt; my face to lick ILI freftuegUy take&#13;
tihe python to bed, but at present she&#13;
at timid;.And JLjrtja..caonpt. JJnd my&#13;
walks out of bed, curling herself on&#13;
the floor. The evil result is that she&#13;
becomes cold." "&#13;
' Of the plague of caterpillars that&#13;
overran the Scottish lowlands in&#13;
1886: "The caterpillars marched in&#13;
armies straight ahead and the consequence&#13;
was that when they encountered&#13;
'sheep drains'—which are open&#13;
drains about eighteen Inches deep&#13;
and eighteen inches wide at the top—&#13;
they tumbled into them in such numbers&#13;
that their dead bodies dammed&#13;
up the water and they might have&#13;
been taken out in barrow loads."&#13;
*" When a man i s a» perfect as hi*&#13;
wife thinks he ought to be, he's about&#13;
due to get measured Jor a pair Of&#13;
' * $ * * ' * * ' ! * • " •&#13;
Make a fuss over a woman's first&#13;
fabjflAiha for the rest of hi* 11^ she&#13;
^11 .refuse to listen to^anythli-s bsd&#13;
about you.&#13;
The theatrical managers say the&#13;
deadhead muat go. . Ko^iooner said&#13;
than done. He is already a thing ot&#13;
the passed..&#13;
MOLTEJ* LAVAAJiHFLOOD&#13;
"Stra'ige things have been happening&#13;
in :he South Sea islands," writes&#13;
a Sydney correspondent of the Chicago&#13;
Oaily News. "In Samoa a volcano&#13;
has broken out, which belched&#13;
forth a torrent of molten lava three&#13;
miles wide clear to the sea. Fortunately,&#13;
the land over which the torrent&#13;
flowed was a desert and, though&#13;
the sight was singularly impressive,&#13;
very little harm was done. From the&#13;
Marshall islands, however, comes a&#13;
different tale. There was a terrific&#13;
hurricane swept over the atolls and&#13;
TsTeTs of which the gronpts composed,&#13;
and Jaluit, where most of the European&#13;
settlers reside, was washed by&#13;
an enormous wave at least six feet&#13;
high, which—suddenly —.transformed&#13;
that islet into a lake in which the&#13;
natives with their families swam for&#13;
their lives and the native houses&#13;
floated about.&#13;
"At noon the day of the hurricane&#13;
at Jaluit the sky was pitch dark, except&#13;
for balls of fire which occasionally&#13;
lit up the scene. Breadfruit and&#13;
cocoanut trees were knocked down&#13;
and piled up as high as houses. The&#13;
mission building, by far the finest in&#13;
the Marshall group, was reduced .to&#13;
ruins. Large masses of rock and.&#13;
coral washed up from tho lagoon&#13;
were strewn about here and there.&#13;
Of the magnificent wharf which the&#13;
Germans had erected at a cost of&#13;
much labor and money, not a trace&#13;
remains. Over seventy natives were&#13;
killed by falling trees or were drowned&#13;
and, with the exception of the German&#13;
"company's large store; Jahtlt&#13;
was almost entirely destroyed.&#13;
"European residents took shelter&#13;
successively in a bowling alley, an&#13;
ovenr -a-4MJthhouse&gt;.^a„ bar,andeventually&#13;
in a store and managed to survive.&#13;
Thfe new steamer, 0ormania,&#13;
with the utmost difficulty succeeded&#13;
4n riding out the storm. Altogether&#13;
tney seem to have had a pretty rough&#13;
time at the Marshall group."&#13;
--.&gt; '•: i&#13;
&lt;7&#13;
THE CYNIC'S DICTIONARY.&#13;
Altruism—Mowing your neighbor'a&#13;
Uwx&#13;
Reform—A brief vacation for practical&#13;
politicians.&#13;
The Simple Life—A strenuous effort&#13;
to live unnaturally.&#13;
Candor—-v*hat a woman&#13;
about auother woman's gown.&#13;
things&#13;
Tact—What she says about it.&#13;
Civil Service—Something&#13;
B waiter for and don't get.&#13;
yp(i C p&#13;
.&lt;L$fik—An explanation of the other&#13;
fe+loWs success.&#13;
Life Insurance—Providing for the&#13;
widows a i d orphans—of the directors.&#13;
The Water Wagon—A vehicle from&#13;
which a man occasionally dismounts&#13;
to boast of the fine ride he's having.—&#13;
Saturday Evening Post.&#13;
VEGETABLE- MEDICINC&#13;
Lettuce for tired nerves.&#13;
JPotaJtoes, salts of potash.&#13;
Fi-onrh h p n n s a n d l e n t i l s yive i r o n .&#13;
Waterc-ess, oil,&#13;
and other salts. _&#13;
iodine, phosphato&#13;
LEAIlftEJ) Iff COVJtTTty SCHOOL&#13;
jail and soon changed his mind. He&#13;
was let off with a fine of $14.&#13;
The U. of M. regents turned down&#13;
the proposition for the city to build an&#13;
$8,000 contagious disease hospital on&#13;
the university grounds. The city had&#13;
voted the money expecting the university&#13;
to maintain the institution.&#13;
John T. McCurdy, of Owosso, who&#13;
was special counsel to the board of supervisors,&#13;
says that the action of the&#13;
board in spending $60,000 more on the&#13;
new Shiawassee court house than was&#13;
authorized was against his advice.&#13;
Gov. Warner has personally informed&#13;
Judge Norman W. Haire, general&#13;
manager for the Bigclow group&#13;
of mines, of his appointment as a member&#13;
of the board of control of the&#13;
Michigan College of Mines.&#13;
The contract for the completion of&#13;
the Lake Huron-Black river canal at&#13;
Port Huron has been let to Graves &amp;&#13;
Stevens, of Indianapolis. The contract&#13;
price is $73,000, and 20 months is given&#13;
for the completion of the work.&#13;
Mrs. Carl Brower, aged^50, of Traverse&#13;
City, who shot herself recently&#13;
the day she was released from the&#13;
asylum, where she had been sent after&#13;
taking carbolic acid, died from blood&#13;
poisoning from the bullet wound.&#13;
A. M. Todd, manufacturer of peppermint&#13;
oil at Kalamazoo, has been&#13;
named representative of the chemists'&#13;
board of the middle west to the international&#13;
congress of applied chemistry,&#13;
which will be held in,Rome next April.&#13;
Ralph Baugh became enraged at the&#13;
poorhouse at St. Clair because Munroe&#13;
Burris, another Inmate, would not&#13;
get up at 3 a. m. and get him a drink&#13;
of water. He attacked and serlouslj&#13;
Injured Burris, who has had him arrested.&#13;
Miss Mary Louise McFarlan. of&#13;
Flint, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander&#13;
McFarlan, was married to John&#13;
Westervelt Ackley, a New York business&#13;
man. The ceremony, which was&#13;
a- society event there, was performed&#13;
iff the First Presbyterian church.&#13;
The village fathers of Wayne wen*&#13;
to council meeting with lanterns to&#13;
light their way because the lighting&#13;
company has no cash to buy carbide&#13;
for its acetylene plant^the village not&#13;
having paid its bill. Elbert English,&#13;
aged 20, fell against a post In the darknets,&#13;
breaking his collarbone.&#13;
In svveot October's short'ning days.&#13;
When comes the purple, smoky huze&#13;
"Of many an Indian summer morn,&#13;
when through the'ruatllng blades of corn&#13;
The winsome winds of autumn play—&#13;
No trace of winter, cold and gray—&#13;
Then fancy takes a backward flight,&#13;
Forgotten pleasures come to light,&#13;
Tl*e fun and frolic, rigid rule.&#13;
Of childhood's Joy—the Country School!&#13;
The course of atudy was not high,&#13;
But small boys oft were made to sigh,&#13;
With eyes upon t h e dog-eared book.&#13;
Not daring otherwheres to look;&#13;
'•The rule of three" they pondered o'er.&#13;
And sadly mused on Webster's lore;&#13;
McGufTey's Readers were the joy&#13;
Of every story-loving boy—&#13;
Tho teacher a t his desk and stool&#13;
Was tsar and sultan In the school.&#13;
But minds oppress'd would soon rebound&#13;
When came the call of "fox and hound'1;&#13;
And "townball" had its devotees.&#13;
Who scorned all games that proffered&#13;
ease;&#13;
With laughing eye and rosy ehe«?k&#13;
The girls would play at "hlde-and-seck."&#13;
When "books" were called with tinkling&#13;
bell&#13;
A thirsty crowd stood round the well,&#13;
Waiting their parched lips to cool&#13;
Before the grind of Country School.&#13;
Where a r e t h e boys who played with me&#13;
In long, gone days of "used-to-be"?&#13;
Ah, some are sleeping, calm and still,&#13;
By Salem Church—on Goshen hill!&#13;
And some afe living, brave and strong.&#13;
To lift their voice against all wrong.&#13;
And In the pulpit or the pew&#13;
t'phold the good, stand by the true—&#13;
Thank God for all—the kindly rule.&#13;
And lessons learned in Country School!&#13;
—J. S. Cheavens, In the St. Louis Globe-&#13;
Democrat.&#13;
Tomatoes stimulate the healthy action&#13;
of the liver.&#13;
Cabbage, cauliflower and spinach&#13;
are beneficial to aenemic peo.vle.&#13;
Turnips, onions, cabbasre, cauliflow*&#13;
er, watercress and horseradish contain&#13;
sulphur.&#13;
Spinach, salts of potassium and&#13;
iron. Food specialists rate this the&#13;
most precious of vegetables.&#13;
Parsley, mustard, cowslip, horserad*&#13;
lsh, dock, dandelion and beet tope&#13;
clear the blood, regulate the system&#13;
and remove that tired feeling peculiar&#13;
to spring.—Chicago Tribune.&#13;
Grand Prix* St.LoulaM1904&#13;
plumbia f^raphophones&#13;
BEST TALKING MACHINES MADE&#13;
Cylinder Machines $7.50 to $100&#13;
Disc Machines $12 to $08&#13;
The Oraphophono raproduoos «// kind* of&#13;
tnumio perfootly--band, orchestra, vioiin,&#13;
voomi mnd inmirumontmi moioa, quartettes,&#13;
mtom H te an entUom* aowoo of amuaemonu&#13;
^ ^ leor&#13;
C j rlfglnal&#13;
I Y oud&#13;
\m) nrlvaled&#13;
]VI ualoaX&#13;
£ 3 rllUant&#13;
1 naplrlnsj&#13;
JSL ttractlvo&#13;
fjf nt«rtalnlhg&#13;
c&amp;ptlv&amp;tlnc&#13;
O&#13;
ut wearing&#13;
J^^ eaonant&#13;
D etljghtfut&#13;
^ ^ uperlor&#13;
lW»MWtlWMl«llltini«MltMIW«l«l&lt;fat«HlW«l«IWt«1IWW^&#13;
\ • . . ! * • ; : : . r&#13;
&lt;•liailK.Ktl.lJMll.tUH&gt;* • " • " • " • " • M t l W W I r t n t M l l l M t l l i l l i l l M W I W i l t ^&#13;
C\ COLUMBIA !&#13;
Gold Moulded Cylinder&#13;
Records&#13;
I •Mill&#13;
COLUMBIA DISC : J ' &gt; :&#13;
7-Inch, SO cmntm each; QB p*ir dozen&#13;
ICMnch, ¢1 each} #10 per dozen&#13;
Qrand Opera. Record** (made In KMnoH dlaea&#13;
only) ¢3 eacli&#13;
'/ftpfateef*&#13;
Wmhmwmttthm jMfktfap kttm At&#13;
Phonograph Company,&#13;
272 Woodward Ave., DETROIT, MO.&#13;
9ULo*Ommt&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
. - 4&#13;
ess laV&#13;
\imwr Hi—wwuBWM^wffjawupBBayayy* •BSHSBSB&#13;
,£• - ¾&#13;
« * ' . •&#13;
«•&#13;
« \&#13;
THE^IISSING MAN&#13;
B y MARY R. P. H A T C H&#13;
Author of "THo Bank Tragedy" ,&#13;
Copyright. !••». sjr&#13;
C H A P T E R XXIV.—Contlnued.&#13;
Then Marks was warned to leave the&#13;
city by a special edict, and be turned&#13;
his talents to new achievements. We&#13;
all went West—Marks, Soule and I—&#13;
and we established banks in new growing&#13;
communities, forging our charters&#13;
and victimizing a great many people,&#13;
Mrs. Marks was dead, and I was told&#13;
by her previous to her death *uch facts&#13;
as she knew regarding my abduction,&#13;
and that my true name was Victor&#13;
Hamilton My mother and twin brother,&#13;
she told me, were living in Grovedale,&#13;
New Hampshire.&#13;
About this time I met Lenora Davis,&#13;
the daughter of a disreputable couple&#13;
known to Marks and Soule. She^ was&#13;
beautiful and virtuous, tainted by her&#13;
vicious surroundings though not more&#13;
than I, but indeed we both knew no&#13;
other life than that which we lived.&#13;
She was beautiful and true to me,&#13;
and she gave me her hand with all&#13;
the graciousness and sweetness of the&#13;
most high-bred and cultured lady. She*&#13;
was very beautiful, as I have said, and&#13;
she owed much of her loveliness to&#13;
the unique color of her hair, whioh was&#13;
of an emerald tint, the color of the sea.&#13;
She was always beside me, and she&#13;
bove well her part in the society of&#13;
the mushroom towns where we established&#13;
our banking institutions.&#13;
After a time I learned that my twin&#13;
brother, and who was said to bear a&#13;
most startling likeness to myself, was&#13;
endeavoring to find me; for what purpose&#13;
I could not understand. I had&#13;
no desire to meet him, but kept out of&#13;
his way, and gave orders that no one&#13;
-should direct him to me.—I had nefear&#13;
of being recognized by him, as i&#13;
seldom—I may say, never—appeared&#13;
in public without being disguised, our&#13;
nefarious banking operations making&#13;
this necessary to my safety. In one&#13;
place I would be known as dark-haired,&#13;
with long whiskers; in another, as&#13;
Bmooth-faced, with light, curly hair; in&#13;
a third, with close-cropped, dark&#13;
(dyed) hair and light mustache.&#13;
• • , • • " &gt; • v Like,-a flash came th# idea of shifting&#13;
myr Identity to this man until I&#13;
could make my escape. I thought no&#13;
further, than this. No conception of&#13;
the unhappy compilations to follow&#13;
occurred to me. I answered almpst&#13;
directly, "Your name is Henry Ashley.&#13;
1 know.you well.""&#13;
He did not appear satisfied, but we&#13;
entered into conversation. He told me&#13;
he had suddenly forgotten tys name&#13;
and home, and every event of his&#13;
past life, "I know nothing, absolutely&#13;
nothing of the past," he said.&#13;
I wished him to be ignorant for a&#13;
time, and as I feared his belongings&#13;
might contain his name or some date&#13;
to refresnTils rlcoTlectToTfijTor he lh~e~&#13;
means of information to some person&#13;
to whom he might apply, I determined&#13;
to change traveling bags and to possess&#13;
myself of his notebook, or any&#13;
papers that he carried. I succeeded&#13;
in doing so that very afternoon, but I&#13;
restored his money and gave him my&#13;
own overcoat and traveling bag to&#13;
take the place of his, which I thought&#13;
it prudent fo confiscate, the better to&#13;
throw the police off their guard.&#13;
, He was arrested a week later and&#13;
iaken to Goodwill, where his strange&#13;
manner was believed to be a ruse on&#13;
his part until his examination before&#13;
the authorities, when he was pronounced-&#13;
mentally- unsoundandsent&#13;
to the asylum.&#13;
Lenora, who sa'w in the newspapers&#13;
the statement that Henry Ashley was&#13;
arrested, went to see the prisoner,&#13;
Taut cried o~uf~in astonishment when&#13;
admitted.—He denied that sho was"&#13;
his wife, but she, thinking it best for&#13;
my safety, declared that she was. She&#13;
saw now that I was at large, and she&#13;
knew that the prisoner was the man&#13;
she had seen in Grovedale, and whom&#13;
she had for a time mistaken for my&#13;
self. She was convinced that he&#13;
could be no other than my twin brother&#13;
who had been seeking me, but she.&#13;
of course, said nothing to any one&#13;
An evil smile lit up his face, but he only said, "Leonora may die, she is far&#13;
from strong."&#13;
Once or twice I got into the clutches&#13;
of the law officers, but eluded them by&#13;
clever devices of my own. I am a&#13;
mind reader, having been naturally&#13;
. peculiarly, s l t t e i i n this direction, and&#13;
by study of hypnotic methods in time I&#13;
exceeded, or at least equaled, the performances&#13;
of Marks, Bishop and other&#13;
mind readers. I got clear on one occasion&#13;
by hypnotizing the jailer and&#13;
walking off before his eyes, ho believing&#13;
that I was the jailer and he the&#13;
prisoner.&#13;
At last a peculiarly aggravated swindle&#13;
of ours in Goodwill riveted the attention&#13;
of the whole country." Marks&#13;
and Soule succeeded in escaping to&#13;
Canada, where I hoped to meet.them.&#13;
Lenora was- instructed to proceed to&#13;
Quebec, while I was to-join her later.&#13;
But I was hard pressed. There seemed&#13;
little chance of escape. I was at Portland&#13;
depot, well disguised, yet, I&#13;
knew, in imminent, danger of arrest.&#13;
While there I saw Vane, but at first I&#13;
could not fully realize that it was my&#13;
twin brother. Sometimes in'the seclusion&#13;
of our home, at Lenora's request,&#13;
I would doff all disguise, and at such&#13;
lime9 I was the exact,likeness of the&#13;
man I saw that day.&#13;
I stared at him. I could not help it,&#13;
the resemblance was so complete.&#13;
But recollecting myself I walked to a&#13;
little distance and surveyed him less&#13;
openly, and I now'obsetved that he&#13;
acted strangely, as'if be hardly knew&#13;
what he was doing or where he was.&#13;
He looked about la a vague, pusaled&#13;
war t h a t ^ f i r i r t a ^ j ^ , B n t , ^ had&#13;
Observed toy looks in his' direction, and&#13;
after a time walked up to me agd&#13;
aiid: -;&#13;
"You appear to know me. What is&#13;
•fly, ™**w^p*Kw&gt;i4ifliii'ii » i » » j &lt; * t *&#13;
except to me when we met in Canada&#13;
a few weeks later.&#13;
Meanwhile, I had found the notebook&#13;
and read it with interest. I&#13;
saw that Vane was a bank cashier,&#13;
and I Judged him to be an honored&#13;
citizen. I read the confession he had&#13;
noted down—a "gold ring for Clare,"&#13;
"a writing book for Perley," and his&#13;
wife's request to "bring himself and&#13;
let it be soon."&#13;
There were allusions to his business&#13;
at the bank and the mill. His partners-&#13;
were named Henderson and Carter,-&#13;
whom I saw in another place&#13;
spoken of aV "Unde Carter." Tony&#13;
Os^born'was the bank clerk, 1 learned,&#13;
and^the' president was R. H. Hastings.&#13;
There was a great deal be&#13;
sides that told much of his life, both&#13;
private and public.&#13;
In the rocket of the note book was&#13;
a key and &amp;, rhig with the words "in&#13;
trust" engraved inside. I nut on the&#13;
ring and determined to use the key.&#13;
for I fancied it to be the key to the&#13;
bank, and I believed I could open the&#13;
safe from the figures which I found&#13;
In another receptacle of the notebook.&#13;
I went to Grovedale, and to the&#13;
bank, which I found without any&#13;
trouble. When I mounted the steps&#13;
to the bank a young man hailed me.&#13;
"Hullo!" he said. "Hullor I answered,&#13;
ann* adcfSd, *You didn't'expect me&#13;
back so soon, did you?" and after the&#13;
reply that he did not, he passed down&#13;
the street. But I was afraid he might&#13;
return. ajJd I worked hastily, opening&#13;
the vault and safe by the figures I&#13;
had found, and taking two notes of&#13;
four and Bve hundred each, which I&#13;
judged would be useful. But I took&#13;
In Vane's bag I foua4 a small box&#13;
containing some gold shirt studs, and&#13;
iaibis overcoat pocket a silk traveling&#13;
cap, all of which bore his initials. I&#13;
left one of the shirt studs on the desk&#13;
and then as it occurred to me that&#13;
he would be expected to visit his own&#13;
house I walked to the river bank and&#13;
tossed the cap carelessly into the&#13;
bufches and dropped the other shirt&#13;
stud on the graveled bank; not without&#13;
some qualms of conscience, for&#13;
there arose in my mind the distress of&#13;
his wife in thinking he might be&#13;
drdwued. But I rejected the thought&#13;
in a moment. He would soon be released,&#13;
and then It would be all right,&#13;
I reasoned. Meanwhile, it was well&#13;
for me to have the affair wrapped in&#13;
mystery for the present. -&#13;
' I altered the notes and presented&#13;
them" at the bank. There was no&#13;
need of any hypnotic or unusual&#13;
methods to deceive Simon Low. I&#13;
looked exactly like the man he knew,&#13;
and he recognized me as Vane Hamilton&#13;
almost directly, paying over the&#13;
money without comment or question.&#13;
To the other bank I produced credentials&#13;
and a letter purporting to have&#13;
been wTtfEen by" R. H. Hastings;&#13;
whose handwriting I imitated from a&#13;
note I found among Vane's belongings.&#13;
I afterwards wrote the letter found&#13;
under the bank president's door. I&#13;
placed it there myself when on my&#13;
way to join Lenora in Canada. In&#13;
the letter I wrote as if the cashier&#13;
wished to make it appear that he&#13;
would soon return and exonerate Osborn&#13;
from suspicion in a manner to&#13;
make the affair still more dark and&#13;
puzzling.&#13;
After this I stayed in Quebec for a&#13;
long time, receiving letters from the&#13;
States which I was too wise to notice,&#13;
for I was sure they were lures.&#13;
Finally,I read— in the -newspaper*&#13;
of the death, by drowning of Henry&#13;
Ashley, with an account of the whole&#13;
affair, a summary of his life, and dishonest&#13;
course^ which it stated had&#13;
culminated in insanity and death.&#13;
- \ wag^-sincerely sorry for all this,&#13;
though I reasoned as he was insane&#13;
he probably failed to realize the horrors&#13;
of his situation. I was not hardhearted&#13;
naturally, and my wtckedlife&#13;
had failed to make me wholly bad.&#13;
Marks, my evil genius, was in Canada,&#13;
and. it was he who, after the&#13;
death of the supposed Ashley, whom&#13;
we knew to be Vane Hamilton, pro&#13;
posed that I return to Grovedale to&#13;
take up the position and honors of&#13;
my dead twin brother: There would&#13;
be no danger at all to me, he argued,&#13;
with my peculiar gifts and talents.&#13;
I possessed in an unusual degree&#13;
the gift of mind reading, the subtle&#13;
magnetic or psychical chain which&#13;
binds one individual to another, making&#13;
them one through transmission of&#13;
the vibrations of the mind. Upon&#13;
this gift Marks declared I might depend,&#13;
and he instructed me in the&#13;
science to which he himself had introduced&#13;
me until I really felt myseif&#13;
pose d of an almost irresistible&#13;
power, and one that awed me at&#13;
times.&#13;
I decided to go to flrnvedale and&#13;
The AntlMptlc Thumb.&#13;
We can sterilize' his bottles, we can boil&#13;
hi* lUtle muff, We cadnia lnbfaekc*e htbise frluagn nel bandages and That menevdeilcoaptse dh aimir, when he partakes of But thuesr eI'ns- donesep aiimr—po ssibility that leaves And naollto wa— u njust%ifi able alarm, you will&#13;
To. wistt:e rilWisee tfheea rc o'wtw! ould never do to&#13;
We 'arteh ocuagrhetffuull ooff hhiiss tohyosu. rs, we are We ardei cuionums inodf fuhli s ojfo yhsis. sorrows ana ju-&#13;
We ardei spcirpalyineref,u lly considerate of needful Of ourth eli tptlree c•e•pMtso thwerri'ts thHearnedinb.o ok" and And wsieg nsetdr ifvoer mtoo urtehn doerr t usrtne.r ile all de-&#13;
But ocnaen nofrti gbhotiflu lh isd athnugmerb . menaces—we&#13;
—Harper's Magazine.&#13;
Phonopostals Now.&#13;
-The phonopostaUis- an apparatus&#13;
which registers and afterward reproduces&#13;
the human voice, by means ol&#13;
a sheet of. pasteboard (shaped like a&#13;
postal card.)&#13;
The records are made by an ordinary&#13;
phonograph of the simplest possible&#13;
type simply by means of a stylus&#13;
provided with a sapphire point. This&#13;
point ptasses or. an impressionable&#13;
substance spread on the surface of&#13;
the card.&#13;
The merit of the invention consists&#13;
in the discovery of a subBtance which&#13;
can be easily spread on a sheet of&#13;
cardboard and possesses all the advantages&#13;
of the wax-coated cylinders.&#13;
Moreover, it is able to stand the strain&#13;
of transmission by math&#13;
The sounds are inscribed in a spiral,&#13;
which commences at the outside edge&#13;
of the card and continues in an evernarrowing&#13;
curve until it forms a small&#13;
circle. The record is so deeply engraved-&#13;
in the coated cardboard that&#13;
Qot more than two or three syllables&#13;
are lost by the two stampings of the&#13;
postofflce on the concentric lines.&#13;
Seventy-five or 80 wuids can be inscribed&#13;
on a phonocard, which is sufficient&#13;
for news."—La Nature.&#13;
He Was Hard to Satisfy.&#13;
Dr. Alfred Russel Wallace, the British&#13;
scientist, tells in his autobiography&#13;
how he suffered by taking up&#13;
a challenge, in which i the stakes were&#13;
$2,500, to prove the convexity of the&#13;
surface of any inland water. The&#13;
challenger—one John Hampden—believed&#13;
it a flat earth. Dr. Wallace undertook&#13;
to convert him and all such&#13;
foolish persons. He satisfied the&#13;
stakeholder, at least, but Hampden&#13;
proved a marvel of obsUnacy. Assailing&#13;
his conquerer with storms of&#13;
abuse, he demanded the return of the&#13;
money. For years the persecution&#13;
lasted and several times Dr. Wallace&#13;
was compelled to take proceedings&#13;
against Hampden, who was finally&#13;
sentenced to a long term of imprison-&#13;
ULCERS FOR M YIAIU.&#13;
Painful KruptifM Wr*ni Km+1* Fast&#13;
geemsd tncurabt*-*-Ciittcurs&#13;
&gt;Knds Misery. .&#13;
Another of those remarkable. cures&#13;
by Cuticura, after doctors and aH else&#13;
had failed, is testified to by Mr. M.&#13;
C. Moss of Gainesville, Texas, in tho&#13;
following letter: "For oyer tbfrty&#13;
years I suffered from painful ulcers&#13;
and an eruption from my knees to&#13;
feet, and could find neither doctors&#13;
nor medicine to help me, until I used M&#13;
Cuticura Soap, eintment and, PiHg,&#13;
which cured me in six months. They&#13;
helped me tho very first time I used&#13;
them, and I am glad to *rrite this so&#13;
that others suffering as I did may bo&#13;
saved from misery."&#13;
The Kiss in Ancient Times.&#13;
Individuals of princely rank once expected&#13;
the kiss of respect from their&#13;
inferiors, but this custom - is almost&#13;
obsolete. A kiss was conferred as a&#13;
formal mark of favor by crowned&#13;
heads at jousts and tournaments. Princess&#13;
Margaret, daughter of James I. of&#13;
Scotland, kissed the poet Alain Chartier&#13;
for paying so many nice things&#13;
about her, though he was one of the&#13;
ugliest men in the kingdom.&#13;
(From the Chicago Journal, Nov. 6,&#13;
1905.)&#13;
When Commissioner Garfield went&#13;
to the Chicago packers and asked&#13;
permission to inspect their books, the&#13;
condition was made that no information&#13;
he might obtain therefrom would&#13;
be used in court proceedings against&#13;
them.&#13;
Mr. Garfield gave this pledge, it is&#13;
Btated, and the packers allowed him&#13;
to study their business in all its details&#13;
from the'inside.&#13;
Now, it is announced, the results of&#13;
his study have been turned over to&#13;
the government department of justice&#13;
to be employed in legal prosecution of&#13;
the packers.&#13;
- Commissioner Garfield—would not"&#13;
have ventured to give the pledge that&#13;
was demanded by the packers without&#13;
instructions from Washington. He&#13;
pledged, not his own word, hut the&#13;
government's.—It is not his good faith.&#13;
pretend I was Vane Hamilton, who&#13;
had lost his sense of identity but recovered&#13;
it. I had informed myself&#13;
of one or two similar cases when the&#13;
mind had suddenly recovered its powers,&#13;
and it would agree, I reasoned,&#13;
with his manner when he was on&#13;
the train, "which was said to have&#13;
been unusual.&#13;
In short, I decided to do exactly as&#13;
the real Vane Hamilton would have&#13;
done had he returned after the hallucination&#13;
had left his brain and memory.&#13;
It is known how the plan succeeded,&#13;
but it is not known how it&#13;
was regarded by myself.&#13;
Wlhen I stepped from the train and&#13;
walked up the street I perceived looks&#13;
of recognition from the few persons&#13;
whom I encountered, but none addressed&#13;
me. so I concluded they were&#13;
not personal friends of my brother&#13;
As I neared the marble shop the door&#13;
was being opened, and I saw the&#13;
monument and the name Vane Hamilton&#13;
on it. A beautiful woman stood&#13;
looking at it. and I conjectured it&#13;
was his wife. - May, I knew it to be&#13;
when she cried out and fainted. I&#13;
went in and bent over her and marveled&#13;
at her beauty. As I looked a&#13;
mighty love formed in my soul for&#13;
her I cannot understand it. I only&#13;
know I loved her with an undying passion.&#13;
T forgot Lenora, forgot every&#13;
thing, even the part I was to play, as&#13;
I gazed at the beautiful statuesque&#13;
figure extended In all the pathos of&#13;
lost animation before me.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
but the government's, that is in question&#13;
now.&#13;
The Journal has no concern for the&#13;
packers, except as they are citizens&#13;
of Chicago. If it can be proved that&#13;
they are guilty of engaging in a conspiracy&#13;
in restraint of trade, they&#13;
ought to be punished.&#13;
But their guilt, if they are guilty,&#13;
must be fairly proved- They must be&#13;
given a square deal.&#13;
Since the government has elevated&#13;
its vision to such a height as to overlook&#13;
the nest of defiant criminal trusts&#13;
in New Jersey, almost within the&#13;
shadow of the capitol dome, in order&#13;
to fasten itself a thousand miles away&#13;
upon Chicago, the government and&#13;
the President cannot be too careful&#13;
to avoid suspicion that they are mora;&#13;
anxious to prosecute western offenders&#13;
than offenders in the east. j&#13;
Some of the methods already eminent.&#13;
On being liberated he brought | ployed in this case have not been pardistinguisbed-&#13;
for decency.&#13;
When the government breaks into a&#13;
man's house and steals his private papers,&#13;
when it drags the wives of packing-&#13;
house employes Into court and&#13;
puts them under heavy bonds, it is&#13;
hardly dignified, not to say honorable,&#13;
nor even respectable.&#13;
an action-against-the stakehold*&#13;
the return of the $2,500, and won by&#13;
a legal technicality.&#13;
Russian Army Red Tape.&#13;
A story of Russian red tape is told&#13;
by W. T. Stead. Gen. Llnevlch, while&#13;
in supreme command of the Russian&#13;
army in Manchuria, once used a- rubber-&#13;
stamp signature TOr the papers&#13;
which he had to sign every daj before&#13;
he could draw forage for his own&#13;
horses. The commissary-general returned&#13;
the rubber-stamp signed papers&#13;
as out of order and every day&#13;
the general commanding an army of&#13;
500,000 men had to affix his autograph&#13;
to the requisition for his horses'&#13;
oats.&#13;
»v,«l*v « * " ~ -» j *&#13;
To Check Unposted Mail.&#13;
As he took off his coat his wife said&#13;
to him gengy: /&#13;
"You remember those letters I gave&#13;
you to post three days agu?,;&#13;
"Yes, I—1 remember."&#13;
"But you didn't remember to mail&#13;
them, did yont" she said, sweetly*&#13;
"No, I didn't. How did you find&#13;
orrt?"&#13;
"Because, among them was a postal&#13;
card addressed to myself. Sine* it&#13;
didn't reach me, I knew you hadn't&#13;
posted my mail. I shall always uso&#13;
ttat^s scheme In future. It only costs a&#13;
eent. and it makes an excellent check&#13;
on you. Now give me my letteravaad&#13;
.^^oat.tlKIPlJM^t , « • &gt; • , . •&#13;
Woodchuck Didn't Want Liberty.&#13;
For over a year past W. E. Elliot&#13;
of Bath, Me., has had a pet in the&#13;
shape of a woodchuck which he captured&#13;
at a tender age. The other day&#13;
he concluded to give the animal its&#13;
freedom. Taking it carefully to an&#13;
open field in the edge of the city, he&#13;
opened the basket and placed fhe animal&#13;
in its native surroundings. As&#13;
Mr. Elliot neared home he heard a&#13;
noise behind him and, turning, found&#13;
the "chuck" at his heels. He will&#13;
make no further efforts to lose his&#13;
pet.&#13;
Dancing Travels.&#13;
A young man fond of dancing recently&#13;
took a pedometer with him to&#13;
a ball, and found that In the course&#13;
of the evening he had covered thirteen&#13;
and a half miles. The average&#13;
length of a waltz was half a mile, ol&#13;
a polka three-quarters of a mile, bf a&#13;
schotiische a mile, and of lancers a&#13;
quarter of a mile. A. girl usually&#13;
dances more than a man. and is calculated&#13;
to cover more than sixteen&#13;
miles in a single evening.&#13;
May Make Good Diamonds.&#13;
Experiments lately made in France&#13;
and England strengthen the belle!&#13;
that it may be possible, some day, ta&#13;
produce in the laboratory of the&#13;
chemist diamonds of sufCelent size&#13;
iind perfection to compete with natural&#13;
diamonds.&#13;
How's This?&#13;
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward far *M&#13;
MM of CtUrrh that umnot be cured by H*iri&#13;
C»Urr&gt;. Care.&#13;
F J. CHEVET * CO.. Toledo, O.&#13;
We, tbe underatgned, b*v« known F. J. Cbener&#13;
foT thelatt is rears, and believe him perfectly honorable&#13;
In ail bualneu tranaactlona and flnanclaUj&#13;
able to carry out any obligation* made by bis arm.&#13;
W A X D I X G . KlN'NAX * M A B V I N . Wholesale Drngglau, Toledo, O.&#13;
Halt's Catarrh Care 1» taken Internally, acting&#13;
dtrtotly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the&#13;
system. Testimonials sent free. PTlce 73 cents p*t&#13;
bottle. Sold by all Druggists.&#13;
Take HaU's Family Pills for constipation.&#13;
"She's out of sight," can't be said&#13;
of the woman in a bathing suit or ball&#13;
dress.&#13;
To ''Knuckle Under."&#13;
To "knuckle under" or "knuckle to"&#13;
« person is a phrase derived from an&#13;
old meaning of "knuckle," the word being&#13;
formerly applied to any joint of&#13;
the body, especially the knee. Hence&#13;
to "knuckle under" was equivalent to&#13;
kneeling for pardon. Tbe knuckles of&#13;
l&amp;e bands were not referred to in n g&#13;
Ask Your Druggist for Allen's Foot-Easa.&#13;
"I tried ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE recently&#13;
and have just bought another supply. It&#13;
has cured my corns, and the hot, burning&#13;
and itching sensation iu my feet which was&#13;
almost unbearable, and I would not be with*&#13;
out it now/'-^Mrs. W. J. Walker, Camden,&#13;
N. J." Sold by all Druggists, 25c.&#13;
Injustice often pats men on the back&#13;
while justice kicks them.&#13;
Important to Mothers.&#13;
Bxsmtae oatefaRy every bottle of CASTO&amp;XA&#13;
• tskfe *sd aare raswdy for inflate sod children,&#13;
se that it&#13;
BesMtbe&#13;
Hfilnre of&#13;
la «7st Jo* O*** att&gt; Tears.&#13;
Tas KM Tea Bsts Always Boasat.&#13;
It is easier to be a philosopher la&#13;
thought than in action.&#13;
B•aends aO. reTs*h sB Baalls sB Otaoac.a pLaaayr,g eS efarte*e ,B meacdk,a lma* 1.&#13;
twBeveaan pai ectyh iladn dk npoawdds inthge. difference be*&#13;
fvi&#13;
"&amp;¥&#13;
"• ^ ^ T f ^ ^ ^ w w r ^ v ^ X "&#13;
3VW-WW 5iafciiai8HS^^&#13;
mr*mmmmm*m&#13;
£-$r#"&#13;
' '' i to-;&#13;
^.¾ * #&#13;
^&#13;
i M M MM* ' W ' ,-&gt;1*&#13;
' J &gt; &lt; .'"f,V-&#13;
. ; » ' "&#13;
» - U&#13;
iy .1&#13;
V&#13;
•«,'i.&#13;
'.vr&#13;
m&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS A CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
»1111 I I • HI • I. IP . . I •• • • I • ii • • I " —PI&#13;
THUKSDAY, NOV. 30,1905.&#13;
No consumer of meat can afford&#13;
to snicker over Mr. Armour's losses&#13;
in the wheat pit. They have&#13;
to be made u p somewhere.&#13;
ADDITIOHAL LOCAL.&#13;
I n considering' Mr. Carnegie's&#13;
praise of poverty, we must remember&#13;
that he is in admirable position&#13;
to appreciata all its advantages.&#13;
• -J ••.,:&#13;
The department of law at the&#13;
University of Michigan still enrolls&#13;
a larger number of students&#13;
than any other law school in the&#13;
nation.&#13;
Over 100 farmers are eaid to&#13;
have settled in Bay Ceunty within&#13;
the past two months, coming from&#13;
Illinois. Indiana, New York, Pennsylvania&#13;
and Ohio.&#13;
The "percentage of Michigan&#13;
students attending the University&#13;
of.MichigancpnthraesJbJiycreMei&#13;
being now fifty seven per cent of&#13;
the enrollment. This is one per&#13;
cent larger than.it was last year.&#13;
Varied and h u m e r o u s ' a n i r e the&#13;
means by which men seek to gratify&#13;
the longings and passions of&#13;
their being, just so numerous and&#13;
varied are the purposes which&#13;
prom|&gt;tmeiv to devise and produce&#13;
amusements to satisfy those passions&#13;
and loggings.&#13;
The salary of MrXShouts, head&#13;
of the Panama commision is $30,-&#13;
000 a year; Chief Engineer Stevensp-$&#13;
23,000; Governor Mago^an of&#13;
the Canal zone, $17,500 and the&#13;
Secretary and Auditors of the&#13;
commission receive 110,000 each.&#13;
Secretary Taft upon whom the&#13;
whole responsibility of the Canal&#13;
devolves receives ¢8,000 a year and&#13;
the congressman who vote the money&#13;
for the construction of the canal&#13;
money—reeeive $5,000—annually.&#13;
The Vice President draws k salary&#13;
of $8,000 and the President of the&#13;
United States alone draws a salary&#13;
larger than that of-. Chairman&#13;
Shonte. There are some discrepanc&#13;
i e s here that will attract the attention&#13;
of Congress this winter and&#13;
add to the complications of the&#13;
Canal question.&#13;
The Peat Fuel Co. of Chelsea has&#13;
just installed a new press tor making&#13;
the peat mto shape that weighed over&#13;
five ton.&#13;
The Livingston Home Telephone&#13;
Co. have purchased the Northville&#13;
lines and added them to their already&#13;
excellent system.&#13;
There will be no inaugural ball at&#13;
Columbus this winter, as the new&#13;
governorof Ohio is too good a methodist&#13;
to know how to dance,&#13;
The amount of money paid for admissions&#13;
to the Michigan-Wisconsin&#13;
foot hall game at Ann Arbor two&#13;
weeks ago was $28,037.&#13;
Perrine's show exhibited here last&#13;
Friday evening and gave good satisfac&#13;
tion. The weather was very ba.d and&#13;
the crowd not large but the attractions&#13;
were all right.&#13;
Friday last, the 24th, was a regular&#13;
November day. The wind blew a gale&#13;
and was very disagreeable. The&#13;
weather bereau need not hand out any&#13;
more—we had a plenty.&#13;
The Chelsea schools were out one&#13;
day last week to enable the teachers&#13;
to visit neighboring schools and learn&#13;
new methods if possible. This is a&#13;
good idea and is in practice in many&#13;
places.&#13;
A few years ago this country was&#13;
depandentlargeiyupon_Spain for__alL&#13;
the raisins it used. Now California&#13;
entirely supplies the home demand and&#13;
hae a surplus left for less favored&#13;
ctran tries. = - =&#13;
— T h o Mio^igani Contra) bogan, \mi&#13;
MAKING PIPE ORGANS.&#13;
Iatereitina; Wo r k That Is Done i »&#13;
t h e Voicluff Room.&#13;
Both the metal ntid wooden pipes of&#13;
a pipe organ a r e made on the selfsapie&#13;
principle of file willow whistles that&#13;
•very ninu made when he w a s a boy,&#13;
xml so, nft&lt;*r all, a ' pipe organ, th€&#13;
mightiest musical instrument yet invented,&#13;
U but the evolution of that&#13;
primitive pipe of Tan, the willow whistle.&#13;
The mo:*t interesting place In an organ&#13;
factory is the voicing room. Up to&#13;
the time the pipes enter this room they&#13;
are as dumb .us broomsticks. Here tbe&#13;
breath of life is breathed Into them,&#13;
lud they are made to'spenk, each In&#13;
the voice Intended by its muker. Here&#13;
the big fat pipes are taught to thunder&#13;
out their diapason and those scarce the&#13;
diameter of a slate pencil and one-half&#13;
an inch long to utter their shrill whistle&#13;
and others the thousands of varying&#13;
tones betweeu. And not only must the&#13;
pipes of oue stop speak correctly as individuals&#13;
u n ^ i n e i n b e r s of their own&#13;
particular family, but they must be in&#13;
accord with all the hundreds of others&#13;
in whose midst they arc to live. To&#13;
see that they do this is the work of u&#13;
man whose ear is keen to the slightest&#13;
variation and who must know why a&#13;
pipe does not speak as it should and&#13;
bow to make it. One by one the pipes&#13;
are set upon the wind chest standing&#13;
here, with the bellows and all the internal&#13;
mechanism of an organ properly&#13;
adjusted and with a keyboard in front&#13;
of him the voicer tests each one. By&#13;
changing the si/.e anil shape of the&#13;
aperture through whi«h the wind passes&#13;
he governs the tone until it \H exactn&#13;
man with the nicest sense of sound&#13;
can accomplish.&#13;
week, the aptual construction of the&#13;
big tunnel under the Detroit river,&#13;
with tbe opening of a main shaft 50&#13;
feet long, 24 feet wide and 85 feet&#13;
deep, just ea^t of the dppot at Windsor,&#13;
Ont.&#13;
After the people of Ann Arbor had&#13;
voted to raise $8,000 to erect a hospital&#13;
for contagious diseases the regents of&#13;
the University will not have it built&#13;
for fear it may injure the attendance&#13;
at the U. cf M. as i t w a s t j be erected&#13;
near the buildings.&#13;
An exchange says that a superstitious&#13;
subscriber who found a spider in&#13;
paper want-^.to know it it is a bad&#13;
omen. Nothing of the kind. The&#13;
spider was merely looking over tbe&#13;
paper to see^who was not advertising,&#13;
so it could arpjn its web across the&#13;
store door and tlrus be free from dis&#13;
turbance. \ v&#13;
—Tho o-xcollont ^rti^crb-p -this seasonhas&#13;
brought o u t some accounts of big&#13;
day's work a t husking. 0¾^ man&#13;
husked 110 bushels in ten bourV and&#13;
another 525 in a little over six day§,&#13;
making a rtcord ol 41 bushels in three&#13;
hours and a q u a r t e r , tying u p and&#13;
caring tor the stalks....-.This.is an.average&#13;
of thirteen bushels per hour—&#13;
several better than we rouid do.&#13;
N&#13;
" I Thank T h ^ Lord!"&#13;
«ried Barman Plant, of Little Rock,&#13;
Ark., "for the relief he got from Bncklen's&#13;
Arnica S a l v e . It cured my fear-j allow the doctors to o p i a t e on&#13;
Man's Unreasonableness&#13;
is often as great a* woman's, But&#13;
Thos. A. Austin, M&lt; r. of the "Kepubiican,"&#13;
ol Leavenworth, Ind , was not&#13;
unreasonable, when he retused to&#13;
his&#13;
t n l r u n n i n g sores, which nothing else&#13;
would heal, and from which I bad suffered&#13;
for 5 years." I t is a marvelous&#13;
healer for cuts, b u r n s and wounds.&#13;
G u a r a n t e e d a t F. A. Sigler's d r u g&#13;
i t o r e ; 25 cents&#13;
Homeseekers Excursions via Chicago&#13;
Great Western Railway&#13;
10 points in Arizona, Arkansas, ^AssinjJ^&#13;
Un—Qritish Columbia, Canadian&#13;
Horthwest, Colorado, Idaho, Indian&#13;
Territory, Iowa, Kansas, Manitoba.&#13;
Mexico, Minnesota,Missouri, Montana^&#13;
Hebraska, Nevada, New Mexico,&#13;
iniartb and South Dakota, Oregon,&#13;
Texas, Washington and Wyoming at&#13;
greatly reduced rales for tbe r:und&#13;
trip. Tickets on sale the first and&#13;
third Tuesdays of each month. For&#13;
farther information apply to F, R,&#13;
4*'. Stomach No appetite, loss of strength, imvo«a&gt;&#13;
nesa, headache, constipation, bad breath,&#13;
general debility, sour risings, and catarrh&#13;
of the stomach are all due to Indigestion.&#13;
Kodol cures Indigestion. This new discovery&#13;
represent* the natural Juices of digestion&#13;
as they exist in a healthy stomach,&#13;
combined with the greatest known tonic&#13;
and reconstructive properties. Kodol Dyspepsia&#13;
Cure does not only cure indigestion&#13;
and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy&#13;
cures all stomach troubles by cleansing,&#13;
purifying, sweetening and strengthening&#13;
the mucous membranes lining the stemach.&#13;
Mr. S. S. Ball, of Ravonswood, W, V*.. says.*—&#13;
" I was troubled with sour stomach for twenty years.&#13;
Kodol cured me and we are now using it In milk&#13;
forbaby."&#13;
Kodol Digests What You E a t&#13;
Bottles only. $ 1.00 Site holdint 2¼ times the trial&#13;
site, which sells for 50 cents.&#13;
Prepared by E. O. OeWITT * OO., OHIOAQO,&#13;
Sold by' F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
'.-,):&lt;!.&#13;
'•V.'-i.&#13;
"Ii' .*&#13;
-Will."&#13;
"\\'irleiHl."&#13;
' T i n t ' s jK.t ir: slu&gt; isn't."&#13;
Lender.&#13;
W I I V&#13;
1 didn't ki. &gt;w hi-* vitV w;is i&#13;
Gray Hair is A bar to employment and to&#13;
§leasure, out there is relief from it in UK;S&lt;- ays. It can be restored to its natural n w "&#13;
by using Mis. R. W. Allen's Vita H-tir Co- .1&#13;
Restorer. It is net adyebutlnan:ittml vv j&#13;
it acta in the roots, compelling tho secretion&#13;
o' the pigments that give Hf3 and color to the&#13;
hair in three duys. It is not sticky or greasy :n o&#13;
odorjdoesn'tstainthescalp. ABS' &gt;LUTELY&#13;
HARMLESS, tl.00 » bottle. All druggists.&#13;
FLORIHELLA&#13;
CUE&#13;
the hygienic skin food gives rosy freshness&#13;
and beauty to tbe s in. Removes all imper«&#13;
fectionaaud impurities*.. A perfoet complexion,&#13;
60 cents at your druggists, or sent&#13;
prepaid on receipt cf piicu.&#13;
MARK W&gt; ALLEN &amp; CO.&#13;
Detroit, Mich.&#13;
.&#13;
!&#13;
* . &lt; .&#13;
t'li'vclanil i&#13;
l i e \vLo_ apedks for any length of&#13;
time in the presence of others without&#13;
flattering his hearers awakeus the.i*&#13;
displeasure.—(.oethe.&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
Digest* what you eat*&#13;
Thanksgiving Day Excursions via&#13;
Grand Trunk System&#13;
One and one third fare (or t h e round&#13;
ly what-it-slio.uldbe^a jtask JVYlueli^nlyiij^ 29 and 30,1905.&#13;
A couRh syrup which drives a cold&#13;
out of tb"e~$ystenY by a c t i n g as a catfraTtic&#13;
on the bowels is offered in"&#13;
Kennedy's Laxative Honey and T a r .&#13;
Clears the throat, strengthens the&#13;
lungs end bronchial tubes. T h e moth&#13;
er's Iriend and the children's favorite.&#13;
Best for croup whooping cou^h, etc.&#13;
Sold by F . A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
Michigan, also to points on connecting&#13;
lines in Illinois, Indiana and Ohio&#13;
-wrtbin 150 rr.ilerfrom selling shtrion&#13;
For further particulars consult local&#13;
agent or write to GEO, W. V A U X , A.&#13;
G. ? . ^ T . A., Chicago, 111.&#13;
St. F l a f r e .&#13;
There is ti pretty bit of history in&#13;
the name of that vehicle, the tiaere. St.&#13;
Fiacre was an Irishman of noble birth,&#13;
who went over to France in the seventh&#13;
century and lived as a hermit in&#13;
a forest near Meaux. His popularity&#13;
•became very great in the France of&#13;
later centuries. "When Sauvage started&#13;
public hackney coaches in Paris in&#13;
1G40 he found the most convenient&#13;
center for them to be an inn in the&#13;
Rue St. Martin, named Hotel St. Fiacre&#13;
and adorned with an image of the&#13;
saint; hence "tiaere."&#13;
N a t u r e needs onW a Little Eary Riser&#13;
now and then to keep the bowels clean,&#13;
the liver active, and the system&#13;
free Irotr. Ijile, IVeadaches, colilttpatTOn"&#13;
eto. The tanions little pills ''Early&#13;
Risers'1 are pleasant in affect and perfect&#13;
in action. They never gripe or&#13;
sicken, but tone and strengthen the&#13;
jver and kidneys.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
wile, lor It-male trouble, "Instead,"&#13;
he says, " we concluded to try Electric&#13;
Bitters. My wife was then so &gt;i?k,&#13;
she could hardly leave her bed, and&#13;
five [5] physicians had failed to relieve&#13;
her. Alter taking Electric Bitters,^&#13;
she was perfectly cured, and can now&#13;
prelorm all her household duties."&#13;
Guarantee} by F. A. Sigler druggist,&#13;
price 50i;ents.&#13;
hosier, T. P.&#13;
Chicago, 111.&#13;
A, 115 Adams Sfri,&#13;
t-50&#13;
A CARD.&#13;
I, the undersigned, d o ^ r e b y agree&#13;
t o W u n d the money on a 50 cent bo}&#13;
tU of Greene's Warranted Syrup of&#13;
T^i* if it failes ro cure youf cough or&#13;
oaJd.* I also guarantee a 25-cent bottle&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money re-&#13;
UBde'd. t!9&#13;
Will B. Darrow.&#13;
Kates to Western Points&#13;
If contemplating a trip west, write&#13;
J O ' F . K. Mosier, T. l \ A . , Chicago&#13;
Great We-tcrn Kailway, 115 A^dams&#13;
St., (Jhicag^, III.stating how many in&#13;
the party and when you wish to go.&#13;
He will advise you promptly concerning&#13;
the best rates, routes and o t l u r&#13;
necessary I n f o r m a t i o n . t 52&#13;
promptly obtain&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
T o have a happy home&#13;
you should have children*&#13;
T h e y are great happy-home&#13;
makers. If a weak woman,&#13;
you can be made strong&#13;
enough to bear healtjyr children,&#13;
with little pain or discomfort&#13;
to yourself,by taking&#13;
WINE&#13;
OF&#13;
A Tonic for Women&#13;
It will ease all your pain, reduce&#13;
Inflammation, cure I t u c o r r h e a ,&#13;
(whites), falling womb, ovarian&#13;
trouble, disordered menses, backache,&#13;
headache, etc., and make&#13;
childbirth nituraland easy. Try it.&#13;
At all dealers in medicines, in&#13;
Si.00 bottles.&#13;
Valid r e t u r n i n g to and including&#13;
Monday, Dec. 3 , 1905. Tickets wilt&#13;
be sold between all stations wet&gt;t of&#13;
D*t roi t-and 4*t-.-Hu rorvaud—ta.- points&#13;
on _2onnectinir lines in the state ot&#13;
Son Lost Mother.&#13;
" Consumption runs in our family,&#13;
and through it, I lost my mother,'1&#13;
writes E. Ii. Reid, if Harmony, Me.&#13;
" F o r the past live years, however, on&#13;
the slightest sitrn of a cough or cold, I&#13;
have taken Dr. King's New Discover/&#13;
tor Consumption which has saved me&#13;
from serious Inng trouble.,' H ; s mothers&#13;
rteath was a sad b s s to Mr. Keid&#13;
but he learned that lung trouble must&#13;
not be neg.^cfed, ami how to cure, it&#13;
Quicke.-t relief and cure for ccughs and&#13;
colds. Price 50c. and $l 00 guaranteed&#13;
at F. A. S i y l e r s d r u g i-tore. Trial&#13;
tnttle !ree."&#13;
C O U C H S A R E D A N C E R&#13;
Signals, Stop Them With&#13;
Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery&#13;
CONSUMPTION D . . .&#13;
THE OUnr. THAT'S s u n t lui all Bieeases&#13;
of Throat and Lungs or Money&#13;
Back. F R E E T R I A L .&#13;
s&#13;
60 YEARS'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
TATE OP MICHIGAN-Countv of Livingston,&#13;
ss. • At a eeeelon of tbe Probate Court for&#13;
the said county, held at tbe probate office In the&#13;
village of Howell, on Wednesday, the I5th day of&#13;
November in the yenr ODe thousand nine hundred&#13;
five. Present, / r t h u r A. Montugue, Judge of&#13;
Probate. In ttie matter of the estatHof&#13;
LYMAN D. BAKTO.V, deceaeed ——&#13;
Now conies K, A. Knhn, execntor of the&#13;
estate of said Lyraau D, Harton and represents&#13;
to this court that he is ready to render&#13;
his llnul uccoDiil in eaid estate, ' "&#13;
ThcriMipon it is ordered that Friday the lMh&#13;
Jay of invemlier next at ton o'clock in the forenoon,&#13;
lit f&gt;iii(l Protiato Office, be assigned for the&#13;
bea i iufi ot said account.&#13;
Ami it is further ordered that a copv of t h h&#13;
or 'er lie cuhlishod in the PINCKSEY Diei'A'rcii, a&#13;
nuwapapt r priuted and circulating in said county&#13;
three successive wee In previous to said day o'f&#13;
hearins,'.&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAGUE,&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
STATE of MICHIGAN; The Probate Court for&#13;
the County cf Liviigst^n. At a session of&#13;
anld Q u i t , hsld at the ProUntrtCflloa in the Vil&#13;
TRADE MARKS&#13;
DESIGNS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS AC.&#13;
Anyone sending a sketch and description may&#13;
(julckly ascertain our optnton free whether an&#13;
invention is probably patentable. Communications&#13;
strictly conUdentlal. HANDBOOK on Patents&#13;
gent free. Oldest apency for securing[patents.&#13;
Patents taken through Munn &amp; Co. receive&#13;
tpecial notice, without chnrge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Lnrpest circulation&#13;
of any sctenUBo journal. Terms, 93 a&#13;
year; four months, | L Sold by all newsdealers. BIUNN &amp; Co.36"""**'' New York&#13;
Branch Office, 625 F St., Washington. D. C.&#13;
n^e of Howell, in said coun^-, 'on the !Hh day of&#13;
Noven-.her, A. I). 19&lt;'.\&#13;
President: AHTHUR . A. MONTAHIC, Jud^e of&#13;
Prohnte. In the niaiier of the estate of&#13;
THOMAS KKATHEIU.Y, d»eeased.&#13;
Menriett D. Featherly baying filed In said court&#13;
her petition pra;ing that a certain instrument i;i&#13;
wrllin^purportinL'to he the last Mill and testa&#13;
ment of. paid decea«eilv now ou file in said court&#13;
lw admitted to proh'tte. and that tho. adiiiiiiistration&#13;
ot said estate be ^ttiutt »1 to herself or to soaie&#13;
other suitable pcrscm.&#13;
It is ordered that t he. j^rtTfclay of December, A&#13;
I). 1005, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at eaid&#13;
Probate Oitiee, be and is hereby appointed tor&#13;
hearing said pet'tion.&#13;
Anl U is fiutlicr ordered that, public noiice&#13;
thereof Ii't;iveu by puhlii atii^n of a copy of tbia&#13;
order fur S sncces?ive weeks previous to said day&#13;
of bearing, in the Pit ckney i'l^l'ATCH, a news&#13;
paper, jirlnted and cirni Inted In said county.&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAGUE,&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
, ^ ,&#13;
A TRINITY OF TREASURES&#13;
Triple Extract of Violet, French Roses Concentrate,&#13;
Imperial Hair Tonic. Three High Grade Essentials&#13;
t o the Toilet at the price of one of them alone, viz t&#13;
$1.00.&#13;
We manufacture and sell these goods direct to&#13;
the consumer, thus cutting out the profits of the&#13;
middlemen.&#13;
REGULAR RETAIL PRIOR&#13;
Triple Violet Extract .50&#13;
French Rosea Concentrate • • I.OO&#13;
(Makes 2 quarts exquisite toilet water.)&#13;
Imperial Hair Ti»tt!c&gt;st^« - • .50&#13;
' $aToo™&#13;
Our Price for t h e T h r e e - O N E DOLLAR.&#13;
A Saving to YOU of 100 Per Cent Is'nt it Worth While?&#13;
Write to us for descriptive literature of these articles.&#13;
The CINCINNATI PERFUME CO.Ino., Cincinnati, Ohio.&#13;
f .viU m )iei.&#13;
f .rye rep ;i&#13;
&lt; How to -i-,&#13;
P'tiej-i'*&#13;
•n lability. For free book&#13;
write&#13;
to&#13;
SHINGTON D.C.&#13;
"DUE TO CARDUI&#13;
is my baby girl, now two weeks&#13;
old," writes Mrs. J. Priest, of Webster&#13;
City, Iowa. " S h e is a fine&#13;
healthy babe and we are both doing&#13;
nicely. I am still taking Cardui,&#13;
and would not be without It in&#13;
the house."&#13;
DeWlti's mssSt Salvo&#13;
FOP Pile*, Burnt, t o r e *&#13;
Thi dreaded Wash Day - no more. Washing made easy by THE l-V WASHING TABLETS&#13;
I-V ^jMGJTAB&#13;
MAKI&#13;
I A SV&#13;
Will not injure the finest fabric*.&#13;
They y e strictly free from acida&#13;
Of any kind.&#13;
»They dcthework withoutrobblng.&#13;
They make the clothes white.&#13;
They can be used in hard water.&#13;
They save time and the hard&#13;
work on washday. They are indl&amp;w&#13;
Smsible for Coanerpanes, Lace Cur*&#13;
ins and Trimmings. They will&#13;
remove stains from Table Linen&#13;
with absolutely no rubbing. They&#13;
are economical to use, becausf&#13;
clothes are more worn ont on the&#13;
washboard th*n by actual wear.&#13;
They are'sold on their merits.&#13;
Save your Wrappers, We offer a fine line of premium*. For sale by your grocer, price 5 c .&#13;
I-V WASHING TABLET CO., Ino. Office, 251 N. Front St., Philadelphia, Penn.&#13;
MM _L_&#13;
f;&#13;
r6r H K /x K &lt; »* ^ w y&lt; • " , - - " . r\ - • r\ i \ c- / . -&#13;
NERVOUS DEBILITY I OUR MBW M B T 9 0 D TRBATMBWT will cur* you. and make a man&#13;
of you. Under St* influence the brain become* active, tbe blood purified to that&#13;
all pimples* blotches and ulcere beal up: the nerves become strong as steel, so&#13;
that nervousness, baahfulness and despondency disappear; the eyes ^become bright,&#13;
tbo lace full and clear, energy returns to the body, and the noral, physical and&#13;
sexual systems are Invigorated; all drains cease-no more vital waste from the&#13;
syitcnt. The various organs become natural and manly. Ton feel yourself a,man&#13;
Land Row ^rrlage^cannot be a failure. We Invite all the aJJUcted to consult us&#13;
rcoPftdentlal^r aid tree of charge. Don't ^et quacks and fakirs rob you of your&#13;
hard-earned dollars. \VB WILL CURE YOU OR NO PAY. .&#13;
CTNO NiSIlBS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT.&#13;
THREATENED WITH PARALY8I8. Peter B. Summers, of Kalsiwatoo,&#13;
Mich., relates hie experience: ^&#13;
"I was troubled with Nervous Debility&#13;
for many years. I lay. It to in-&#13;
[discretion and excesses In early&#13;
youth. I became very despondent and&#13;
didn't care whether I worked or not. I 1&#13;
imagined everybody who looked at me,&#13;
Suesaed my secret. Imaginative w.„&#13;
reams at night weakened me—my back] J&#13;
fached, had pains in the back of my'* L&#13;
head, bands and feet were cold, tired * * * s -&#13;
in the morning, popr appetite. Angers&#13;
were shaky, eyes blurred, hair loose,&#13;
memory poor, etc. Numbness in the&#13;
fingers Bet in and the doctor told me&#13;
he feared paralysis. I tooK all kinds of&#13;
medicines and tried many first-class ^ x g g g - y^ s/j&#13;
'physicians, wore an electric belt forflaj ^ ¾ ^ v S * !&#13;
three months, went to Mt. Clemens f o r " _ „ - - - « * . , I Kr one TftcartJCWT baths, but received little benefit... While * £ * ^ " t l 5M JT* d&#13;
at Mt. Clemens I was induced to consult Drs. Kennedy &amp; «e«an ,ttongh 1 nao&#13;
loat all faith In doctors. Like a frowning man I w » m H k S ^ M i e - i enuW feel&#13;
Treatment and It saved my life. The lmPrW™«&gt;V Wift ihvs22flvlndsexually&#13;
the vigor going through my nerves. I was cured mentally, physically and sexuauy.&#13;
I have sent them many ratlents and will continue to do so.&#13;
BACONSI'LTATION FREE. BOOKS FREE. If unable to call write for a&#13;
[Question Blank for Home Treatment.&#13;
D R &amp; K E N N E W &amp; KERGAN&#13;
148 SHELBY STREET, DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
THE NEEDLE'S EYE.&#13;
MEDICINE&#13;
FREE&#13;
MEN&#13;
TJnTmonthVTOppty SbloiutetrFREE to~proveand- fcr-ahow-yott the skill-ef&#13;
the physicians of this&#13;
GHEUE^T INSTITUTE&#13;
_ This J8 no C. O. D. scheme. You are under no obligation to continue the&#13;
treatment. We leave it ail to you. We know that the results will be so satisfactory&#13;
that you will be glad to pay the small charge we ask after the first month.&#13;
HONEST OFFER&#13;
to men only, men who have tried other doctors without success, men who have&#13;
violated the laws of nature, men who have tried without success to regain the health&#13;
and vigor so foolishly wasted and recklessly squandered. We are willing to&#13;
prove at our expense that we can benefit and cure you by sending you&#13;
One Month's TreatmentFree&#13;
BOSTON MEDICAL INSTITUTE. 158 Lake Street - CHICAGO&#13;
}!&amp;**'•&#13;
ra."'i •Hsb&gt;&#13;
rC*''.&#13;
• • V O T ;&#13;
- . y S v - S V W S V % \\1 w&#13;
T h e word results means a whole lot to the farmer of to-day and it is&#13;
especially attractive to the homeseeker or those seeking new locations.&#13;
If we tell you of a country where you are sure of success, will you&#13;
believe us ? It i s only necessary for y o u t o farm the land and the&#13;
best results will follow—a State which the government reports will&#13;
show leads in the production of wheat. It also ranks among the first&#13;
in the raising o f c o m , alfalfa, timothy and other products, together&#13;
with stock raising. W e apeak of&#13;
t\fm fVSAS&#13;
The great State of the West, where lands can be purchased from | 5&#13;
to $30 per acre which equals the returns of the $50 to $150 per acre&#13;
lands of other States. EASTERN COLORADO is identical in most&#13;
respects and the same opportunities are offered there. Buy quick&#13;
while the lands are cheap and secure the benefit of an excellent investment.&#13;
THE MISSOURI PACIFIC R A I L W A Y toucheg the&#13;
heart of this rich agricultural region and extremely low rates are&#13;
offered, allowing stop-over at pleasure in certain territory for inspection&#13;
of lands, etc. Write us and&#13;
literature and full information.&#13;
H. D. ARMSTRONG&#13;
88 G r U w o i d at. Detroit, Mich*&#13;
will send you free descriptive&#13;
H. C. TOWNSEND,&#13;
GENERAL PASSENGER AND TICKET AGENT,&#13;
ST. LOUIS, MO.&#13;
- - , « 3 i * S S £ S K ^ - - r&#13;
fi--vHfT-fHcBAk M1T \€&gt;ZV.f\J ^^KBJXnJ i l T1 1H1 RUPNPTRILE, CYPONUT AHTAIVVFE. OSfFc BTNH AB&#13;
- • •«•&#13;
•transre Storr of How the Sowtatf&#13;
Machine Riddle Was Solved.&#13;
Ellas Howe almost beggared himself&#13;
before^ie discovered where the eye of&#13;
the needU* of a sewing machine should&#13;
be located. His original idea was to&#13;
follow the model of the ordinary needle&#13;
and have the eye at the heel. .It never&#13;
occurred to him that It should be placed&#13;
near the point, and be might have&#13;
failed altogether if he had not dreamed&#13;
he was building a sewing machine for&#13;
a savage king in a strange country.&#13;
Just as in his actual waking experience,&#13;
he was rather perplexed about&#13;
the needle's eye. He thought the king&#13;
gave him twenty-four hours to complete&#13;
the machine and make it sew. If&#13;
not finished in that time, death was to&#13;
be the punishment.&#13;
Howe worked nud worked and pua^&#13;
zled and puzzled and flnujly gave it up.&#13;
Then he thought he was taken out to&#13;
••be-executed. He noticed that the warriorscarried&#13;
-spears, that were pierced&#13;
near the head. Instantly came tbe solution&#13;
of the difficulty, and while the&#13;
inventor was begging for time he&#13;
nwoko. It was 4 o'clock In the morning.&#13;
He jumped out of bed, ran to his&#13;
work-hop, and by 0 a needle with an&#13;
eye at the point had been rudely modeled.&#13;
After that it was easy. This is&#13;
the true story of an important incident&#13;
hi the invention of the sewing^ machine.&#13;
A Disastrous Calamity&#13;
It is a disastrous calamity, when yon&#13;
lese your health, because indigestion&#13;
and constipation have sapped it away.&#13;
Prompt relief can be bad in Dr. King's&#13;
New Life Pills. The build up your digestive&#13;
organs, and cure headache,&#13;
dizziness, colic, constipation, etc.&#13;
Guaranteed at £ . A . JSigler'sdrug&#13;
store; 25 cents.&#13;
Origin of n P h r a s e .&#13;
Many year; ago the wild deer that&#13;
roamed through the forests of England&#13;
used to dig holes in the earth with&#13;
their forefeet. They pawed It out&#13;
sometimes to the depth of several&#13;
inches, sometimes a foot or more.&#13;
These hole.* wore called "scrapes." and&#13;
traveler.-! at dusk or night or those who&#13;
vvere eareless About their footing often&#13;
tumbled into them. They were laughed&#13;
at for their heedlessness when, they&#13;
camo home covered with mud. and, as&#13;
this frequently occurred after they had&#13;
been imbibing a bit. they were said to&#13;
have 'got luto a scrape." Some Cambridge&#13;
students -took up this expression,&#13;
and thus it came to be applied to&#13;
people who had got into difficulties of&#13;
various sorts.&#13;
A liquid cold cure and the only&#13;
bouflh syrup which moves the bowels—&#13;
works all cold oat of the system—is&#13;
Kennedy's Lavative Honey and Tar.&#13;
rroat and jjakos&#13;
weak lungs strong. Best lor croup,&#13;
whooping cough, etc. Children love it.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
One A h e a d .&#13;
Patience—See what airs she puts on!&#13;
Patrice—Yes. You know, a member&#13;
"oT~n~ef~ family has written-"a historic&#13;
novel. *&#13;
"That's nothing. A member of our&#13;
family has just finished a prehistoric&#13;
Hcvel."—Yonkers Statesman.&#13;
Do not be deceived by counterfeits&#13;
when you buy Witch Hazel Salve.&#13;
The name of E. C. DeWitt &amp; Co. is on&#13;
every box of the g%»uine. Piles in&#13;
their worst form will soon pass away&#13;
if you apply DeWitt's Witch Hazel&#13;
Salve night and morning. Best for&#13;
cuts, burns, boils, tetter, eczema, etc.&#13;
Sold by P. A. Sigler, Druggist&#13;
B i s m a r c k a n d E n g l a n d .&#13;
A remarkable utterance of Bismarck&#13;
to printed In the Paris Gaulois frou:&#13;
Emile OllivierV "L'Eiupire Liberal:&#13;
It was made at a dinner at Iieuedetti'!-&#13;
In Berlin, In 18C0, at which Prince Xa&#13;
poleon was present, from whom Olllvier&#13;
got the story. In answer to a&#13;
remark made by the prince, Bismarck&#13;
exclaimed: "They are always talklug&#13;
of England! What does England&#13;
amount to, anyway? A nation exists&#13;
only by the number of soldiers it can&#13;
furnish. How mauy soldiers has England?&#13;
Perhaps 70,000, or at most 100,-&#13;
000. And you? Half a million. And&#13;
we? At least as many as you/'&#13;
Subscribe for the Pinckney Dispatch.&#13;
All the news for $1.00 per year.&#13;
Every once of food you eat that fails&#13;
to digest does a pound of barm. It&#13;
turns tbe entire meal into poison. This&#13;
not only deprives the blood of tbe necessarytissue&#13;
building material; but it&#13;
poisons it. Kodol Dyspepsia Care is a&#13;
perfect digest ant. It digeststhe food&#13;
regardless of the condition of the sto&#13;
mach. It allows that organ to rest&#13;
and get strong again. Believes belching,&#13;
heart burn, soar stomach, indigestion&#13;
palpitation of the heart, 6tc.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
No Delay In keeping* social or business «&#13;
ments caused by nervous or sick&#13;
ache, or other pains -or aches by those&#13;
who use Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain PttU.&#13;
They simply simply take a tablet whan&#13;
the symptoms appear, a n d they a i e&#13;
(v'it-i-'W)?;')&#13;
:&gt; Dr. Miles'.&#13;
Anti-Pain Pills&#13;
prevent, and also cure, a&amp; pains of every&#13;
nature, and are absolutely harmleas.&#13;
Their soothing Influence upon t h e&#13;
nerves and muscles quiet the irritated&#13;
conditions, and remove tbe cause of pain.&#13;
"Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills always&#13;
cure my headache, and tbe beauty of it&#13;
Is, i t costs such a trifle. I am glad&#13;
there is such a remedy for people who&#13;
must work, sick or welL Headaches&#13;
never prevent me from keeping my engagements."&#13;
11118. G. N. GRIFFITH, Santa Ana, Cat&#13;
The first package will benefit, if not,&#13;
the druggist will return your money.&#13;
26 doses, 26 cents. Never sold in bulk,&#13;
A F a t a l s a t .&#13;
TAe_ Jollier—Cheer up, old boy. 8oxne&#13;
day you'll get hi on the ground floor.&#13;
The Jonah—If I do, I'll tumble into&#13;
the cellar.—Tom Watson's Magazine.&#13;
Rahway was once Bahwack, the name&#13;
of an Indian chief.&#13;
•gf&#13;
All the news for $1.00 Per year.&#13;
$ae f iwkutit guspatth.&#13;
FCBLISHXD BVaBTTHCBBDAYVOKJIIXe &gt;&lt;&#13;
ws&amp;co:&#13;
THE ORKslNAl LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP&#13;
KENNEDY'S LAXATIVE HONEY-TAR&#13;
sad lane* las sa Every&#13;
Railroad Guide&#13;
F R A N K U A N O R&#13;
t O I T O M ANB PROPRIETORS.&#13;
tt description Price $1 in Advance.&#13;
Satered at cite Postofflee s i Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
aa second-class matter&#13;
Advertising rates mads Known QP application:&#13;
Baslneas Cards, 14.00 per year.&#13;
Death and marriage notices published tree.&#13;
Announcements of entertainments may be pale&#13;
tor, if desired, by presenting tbe office with tick&#13;
et* of admission. In case tickets are not hronsK&#13;
to the office,regular rates wlllbe charred.&#13;
All matter in local notice column wlllbe charad&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
Insertion. wherenot!meis«peclAed,eilnotiee*&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be charged for accordingly, e r All changes&#13;
of advertisements MUST reach this office as early&#13;
as TUSSBAT morning to insure an insertion toe&#13;
same week.&#13;
SO* 1&gt;SI#IIJVGI&#13;
In alllts branches, a specialty. We nave all kino*&#13;
and the latest styles orType, etc., which enable*&#13;
as to execute all kinds of work, such as Books*&#13;
PampleU, Posters, Programmes, BUI Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc.,in&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
low as good work can be aone.&#13;
ALL BILLS FATABLS U B S * O* IVBBY M0MTH.&#13;
TtiE VILLAGE DIRECTORY&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBSBtoKMT W. H. Plsceway&#13;
TUCSTSSB Ruben Finch, James Rocbe,&#13;
Will Kenned/ Sr , Alfred Monks,&#13;
P.D.Johnson, M.Roche.&#13;
CLKBK „ Bo»e Head&#13;
TaSASOBSB F ' ^ i i r * i k i 0 . 1 1&#13;
8ATeBoBaBsTs oC*O SUUSSIOHBB AalfWred.M MnornkUs&#13;
HKAJ-Tuutriosa Dr.H. r.dlglei&#13;
ArroatfSY L. E- Howlett&#13;
MABsaALL ti« Brags*&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
MBTHODIST EPISCOPAL CilUKCH.&#13;
Rev. R. AEmerick pastor. Services every&#13;
Sundar moTninK *t iu:Su, and every Sunday&#13;
daVevenlnas. Sunday school at close ormornffiservicef&#13;
M I S / M A S Y V A H F I W Sapt.&#13;
. 1W -^QAriONAL CHURCH.&#13;
L» * Rev. (i.W. Mylne pastor. Service everj&#13;
Sunday moralni at 10:30 *a&lt;i every SdAasy&#13;
evenlnK at T:0C 5'dock. Prayer meeUngThur.&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at dose of morn&#13;
"Jservice. Kev. K;E. Crane, Supt,, Mocco&#13;
Teeple Sec. _ _ _ ^&#13;
ST. MARY'S CATHOUC CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. M. J. Commertord, 1'astor. B'»«'^o««&#13;
.very Sunday. Low mass at T:80o'clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9:30 a, m. Cateohlaia&#13;
°t% :0U p. m., vespers and benediction at 7 :s0 p.m&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
X a e f l s c t A p i . S O . 1 9 0 5 ,&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon ss follows:&#13;
For Detroit and East,&#13;
10:48 s. m., 2:19 p. m. 8.-58 p. m.&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North snd West,&#13;
9:26 a. m., 2 :19 p. m., 6:18 p, a».&#13;
For Saginaw and Bay City,&#13;
10:48 a. m., 2:19 p. in., 8:58 p.m.&#13;
For Toledo and Sooth, ,&#13;
10:48 a. m., 2:19 p. m.,&#13;
FBAMKBST, H. F. MOBLLER,&#13;
Agent,South Lyon. O. P. A., Detroit.&#13;
tiraMid Trnak Bail war 8 ysteal.&#13;
East Bound ftom Pinckney&#13;
No- 28 Passenger Ex. Sunday, 9:88 A. M,&#13;
No. SO Passenger Ex. Sunday, 4:55 P. V.&#13;
West Board from Piockncy&#13;
No. 27 Passenger Ex. Sunday, 10:01 A.M.&#13;
No. 29 Peteenger Ex, Bundsy. 9:44P.M'&#13;
__ W^H.Clark, Afeat, _&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A. O. H. Sodety of this place,meets every&#13;
third Sunday Intne Fr. Mattnew dall.&#13;
John Tuomey and M. T. Kelly,County Delegates&#13;
G R &amp; A T C &amp; N T R A L&#13;
/ C. H, &amp; D . - P E R E M A R Q I T T E - C . D. &amp; L,&#13;
AND HAVE LEARNED OF THE SERVICE THS LINE OFFERS JO&#13;
Florida Ashevllle New Orleans&#13;
Cuba Nassau&#13;
PULLMAN SLEEPINB CARS THROUGH&#13;
DETROIT and TOUEDO to JACKSONV1L.UB&#13;
Duriijg the winter. Let us arrange your trip. We will check your baggage through,&#13;
reaefye sleeping car sccomodalionB and attend to all the details. A postal card addressed&#13;
to either of the undersigned will bring full information.&#13;
De G. EDWARDS,&#13;
P, T. M.&gt; 0. H. A D„&#13;
48 Cincinnati, Ohio.&#13;
~Ht T** MOcL*L»ER, — r&#13;
G. P. A., Pere Marquette,-)&#13;
Detroit, Michigan&#13;
Xow, T h e n .&#13;
^ "Do you mean to say this child fell&#13;
from the third story and landed on her&#13;
feet?"&#13;
"Yes," replied the policeman. "I was&#13;
an eyewitness." .&#13;
"That settles It!" replied the neighbor.&#13;
"I always said her mother was a&#13;
cat "—Detroit Free Press.&#13;
Hla Mlaatoa.&#13;
Old Mortality was freshening up the&#13;
Illegible inscriptions on the ancient&#13;
tombstones.&#13;
"I merely wish to show," he explained&#13;
to the curious bystanders, "that&#13;
there is nothing essentially new In&#13;
modem fiction."—Chicago Tribune.&#13;
But few people are entirely free&#13;
from indigestion at thi* season ot the&#13;
year, Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is not only&#13;
the best remedy to use because it&#13;
digests what you eat l o t because it also&#13;
e tables the digestive apparatus to&#13;
assimilate and transform all foods into&#13;
tissoe-bnilding blood. Kodol relieves&#13;
sour stomach, heart barn, belching;&#13;
and all forms of indigestion.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist. •&#13;
mHIS W. C. T. U. meets the first Friday of each&#13;
I moathat2:8C»p, m. at ttie home of Dr. H. F .&#13;
sigler. Everyone interested in tempera&amp;ee ie&#13;
coadtaJly invited. Mrs, l*al Sigler, Pres; Mri.&#13;
Ktta Durlee, Secretary. ^&#13;
The C.T. A. and B. society of thie place, ivee&#13;
every third Saturaay evening in tne FT. Matthew&#13;
Hall. John Doaohue, President.&#13;
KNIGHTS Or* MACCABKKb.&#13;
Meet ever v Friday evening on or before foil&#13;
of the moon at their hall in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
L. E, SMITH, Sir Knight Commandei&#13;
T ivingston Lodge, No. 7(, F A;A, M. Kegulai&#13;
l j Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the moon. Kirk VanWinkle. W. M&#13;
0~~RD£R OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
A, A. M. meeting, MRS. EMMA CBANK, W. M.&#13;
OlilER OF MODERN WOODMEN Meet ta«&#13;
first Thursday evening of each Month in the&#13;
Maocabeehall. C. L.Grimes V. C.&#13;
IADIESOFTHE MACCABEJCS. Meet every Is&#13;
4 and 3rd Saturday of each month at 9:80 p m. a&#13;
.«). T. M. haH. Visiting sisters cordially in&#13;
vited, LILA CONIWAY, Lady Com.&#13;
KNIGHTS OF TH« LOYAL GPABD&#13;
F. L, Andrews F. M,&#13;
^ .&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F.SKJLER M. D- C, L. SIQLER M, D&gt;&#13;
. DRS. SISLER &amp; SIGLER, "'&#13;
Physicians sad Surgeons^ All calls prompt ly&#13;
atundedtoday or night. Offlcej on Main sti set&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
RED CHIEF&#13;
Corn Shelter.&#13;
Patented.&#13;
Clamps on Barrel,&#13;
as easily as on Box.&#13;
Adjusts itself to&#13;
any size ear.&#13;
Closed Hopper&#13;
Makiig K Impossible&#13;
for Operator&#13;
to Pinch Hand.&#13;
•a^t' *-tj&#13;
1 J'&#13;
Is guaranteed to do as oood if not&#13;
better work than any shelter on the&#13;
market. Throws c o b s outside every&#13;
time. Cold rolled steel axle. Requires&#13;
n o wrench. Shells popcorn splendidly&#13;
by tightening tension on spring. All&#13;
repairs furnished free of charge. Every&#13;
farmer should have one. For sale b y&#13;
hardware and implement dealers.&#13;
MANUFACTURED BY&#13;
BRINLY-HARDY CO., Incorporated,&#13;
Louisville, Ky., U. S. A.&#13;
fiLSON'S&#13;
INTIPWN ;S0UD&#13;
NIMENT A quick and effective) core for Rheumatism,&#13;
Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lurubapo Head-&#13;
, ache and other nervous pains and aches on&#13;
any part of the body. If you suffer from&#13;
any of the above ills, we say in all sincerity&#13;
Kive our worthy ANTI-PAIN SOLID LIN-&#13;
; 1MEN T a fair trial.&#13;
ANTI-PAIN SOLID LINIMENT comes)&#13;
in a neat box in paste form, different from&#13;
other liniments, "Yes, indeed," it is too&#13;
precious to lose by breakage or spilling.&#13;
, AM you bare to do is to applr a little of&#13;
i this liniment to tbe effected parts to relieve)&#13;
tha pain instantly, whkh eventually performs&#13;
a permanent cure.&#13;
We guarantee ANTI-PAIN SOLID LINIMENT&#13;
to do all we claim for it, or money&#13;
, refunded.&#13;
Send for a box to-day and bave it on band&#13;
I in case of emergency, yon will be mot*&#13;
than pleased with the remit.&#13;
Price 25 Cents*&#13;
For tale by oar agents or von may ___&#13;
direct from na. Sent postpaid on rsoalpt __ 8rice. Agents wanted everywhere, writ*&#13;
&gt;r terms.'&#13;
HENRY NELSON fc CO., Eokvoil, Miaav.&#13;
""*v.&#13;
•Si&#13;
.://---&#13;
l£p&#13;
*&amp;&#13;
W"M :-'?y&#13;
• ' * &amp; • '&#13;
*.^4 « * • : • . ..-**'&#13;
% * * • $&#13;
&gt; . « •&#13;
i W&#13;
: « ^ ' . ; : • ' • ;&#13;
JicV''' ^''&#13;
' * I ,*, i • ,&#13;
% - , ^ ^ -&#13;
Of Lydla EL' Pinkhain's Vegetable Compound, the&#13;
Great Woman's Remedy for Woman's' Ills,&#13;
y&#13;
••.i&#13;
j&#13;
i 1&#13;
&lt;I&#13;
N o other female medicine In the world has received such widespread and&#13;
arnqnaU fled endorsement&#13;
1$9 other Medicine has such a record of cures of female troubles or such&#13;
host* of fTatftful friends as has&#13;
- Jbydia E^ Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.&#13;
I t will entirely care the worst forms of Female ComplaintSj all Ovarian&#13;
Trouble*, Inflammationand LlceraTTonT Failing and DispTawmerTT of the&#13;
Womb, mad consequent Spinal Weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the&#13;
Change of Life.&#13;
It has eared mete cases of Backache and Leucorrhoea than any other remedy&#13;
the world has ever known. It is almost infallible in such cases. It&#13;
dissorves and expels tumors from the Uterus in an early 6tage of de«&#13;
velopmettt.&#13;
Irregmlar, Suppressed or Painful Menstruation, Weakness of the Stomach,&#13;
Indigestion, Bloating, Flooding, Nervous Prostration, Headache, General Debility&#13;
quickly yield to it. Womb troubles, causing pain, weight and backache, instanUy&#13;
relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circumstances it&#13;
invigorates the female system, and is as harmless as water.&#13;
It quickly removes that Bearing-down Feeling, extreme lassitude, "don't&#13;
~**rew »»d " want-to-be-lcft-alone " feeling, excltebility, irritability, nervousness.&#13;
Dizziness, Faintness, sleeplessness, flatulency, melancholy or the *' blues"&#13;
and headache. These are sure indications of Female Weakness, or some derangement&#13;
of the uterus, which this medicine always cures. Kidney Complaints&#13;
e n d Hncknohe, of either aex, the Vegetable Compound always cures.&#13;
Those women who refuse to accept anything else are rewarded a hundred&#13;
thousand times, for they get what they want—a cure. Sold by Druggists&#13;
sverywnere. Befuse all substitutes.&#13;
— — — • — ^ » ^ — — — — — — — — — — ^ m m ^&#13;
It Has Cured More Cases&#13;
Than All Others Put Together f f&#13;
Ilka u s * * it i&#13;
"We have never run onto an&#13;
article that met with the success of&#13;
MuITs Grape Tonic It has cured more&#13;
cases of constipation and stomach&#13;
trouble to onf certain knowledge, than&#13;
all other remedies that we ever sold put&#13;
together*&#13;
"Muffs Grape Tonic must possess some&#13;
pecufia* quality that no other constipation&#13;
and stomach remedy has. All who use H&#13;
say that It adds to the strength and general&#13;
health and makes them feel better in every&#13;
war* We all know that ordinary physics and&#13;
cathartics have exactly the opposite effect—they&#13;
hate ft weakening tendency* They leave the&#13;
dtgeaUye system in worse shape to overcome the&#13;
trouble than it was before.&#13;
"Huffs Grape Tonic Is a pleasant, natural&#13;
natrntf, effective remedy that does the&#13;
work and does it well, and the people have&#13;
found it out.* WOLFF fcwUSON DRUG CO.&#13;
. * Sixth aid Washington Ave^&amp;. Louis, Mo.&#13;
Inm from ar&#13;
Omo you net tmkm thml* nroref&#13;
•dymtrlmi?&#13;
or take tfeOM la an e.epdelrefsesc t,c hhaanrcmesle sws, itnha tcuornasl,t ippoaetUiolnT eo cru srteo mwiatcohia&#13;
CoRsfipation and Stomach Trouble jKllMa,, palkieias danlsdoa eayoesr,y s ikckin dh eca fdfoacmhae,l eb, itlrioouusbnlees sa,« t ywpehllo iads&#13;
Bat SOB'S HULL'S GRAPE TONIC olaf iyaoaslrsaiaUl —atlitnya aolclemainilsi n» ndha pramtsle syso urerm wehdgyl oth saystt ebmetl dlas stpipl etnhde itdis caonne-s Sruos is u i sioowe all attacks. It is very pleasant to take. The children&#13;
/ '&#13;
; ' - /;:&#13;
CONDENSED NEWS.&#13;
Gov.-elect Psttison't ojncfsl.plurality&#13;
In Ohio Is 4^,047. v&#13;
Russia's Jews are flocking from&#13;
Odessa to Palestine.&#13;
Thieves who love antiquity stole&#13;
$50,000 worth of jewels and helrloouts&#13;
from Pratt Institute in Brooklyn.&#13;
Richard McCurdy'a salary as president&#13;
of U e Mutual Life Insurance Go*&#13;
has been out from 1150,000 to | 7 M » e .&#13;
To save the buffalo, fast becoming&#13;
extinct, prominent naturalists In New&#13;
York have organised the American Bison&#13;
society.&#13;
The "Oriental Limited," a new transcontinental&#13;
train of the Great *North*&#13;
em, started its maiden trip west front&#13;
St. Paul 'Sunday.&#13;
Dr. A. D. Melvln, of Illinois, has&#13;
been appointed chief of the bureau of&#13;
animal Industry at Washington to succeed&#13;
Dr. Salmon, resigned.&#13;
Gov. W. L, Douglas of Massachusetts&#13;
will be a Democratic candidate for&#13;
congress, unless the tariff on hides is&#13;
removed at this winter's session,.&#13;
More than 200 actors and clergymen&#13;
attended, the Manhattan theater in&#13;
New York Sunday to participate in services&#13;
in memory of the late Sir Henry&#13;
Iggng.&#13;
Finding a burglar in her apartments,&#13;
Miss Maud Reese, employed by the&#13;
Union Traction Co., of Chicago, was&#13;
shot and killed by the man, who escaped.&#13;
A lunatic has just received $9,34S&#13;
back pension, the largest claim Commissioner&#13;
Warner has ever settled.&#13;
The old soldier contracted insanity lit&#13;
the army.&#13;
King Carlos of Portugal is having a&#13;
"hoo" of a time in Paris. State dinners,&#13;
gala performances at the opera,&#13;
a military review, a hunt and champagne&#13;
suppers galore&#13;
Tuttlehetm—Brosr~ fir Faggta Co;,&#13;
Philadelphia shirtmakers, have conceded&#13;
higher pay and piecework to&#13;
the 800 men and 600 girls employed,&#13;
and their strike is off.&#13;
President Roosevelt is great, but&#13;
costly. For his In'siifrnrsMffli 1145.491&#13;
treatgood&#13;
aatdlUB bottles at all dni«tsts&#13;
.Mtn«8o cent bottle and abont three&#13;
&gt;ftaast**ta*vinf I n haying theflAO Use.&#13;
The 11.00 bottle contains aboat&#13;
Untea as much aa the SO cent&#13;
tv7iwmUMl Bip«iln|t foofa y ao nsatamdpdlree fsrse, ey. oIfa ryo dnr ubgagriest n'se nvearm nee eadnd M Wnle .t 'tso Gparayp peo Tstoangiec , sUMSSMl7MaoerUa^tegc«dforll.00tow^&#13;
M J U S OtAPE TONIC CO, 14« Tslsi An* RoskUsssVsl&#13;
95 Cta* ANTI-GRIPINE IS eOAXANTXKD TO CUKX flwf, BID eeio, tuuni un IEUMUU. I won!tee11 AatU«Wij»tas to a dealer who woBt«««rmas««&#13;
It. Call lor year SfOXBT BACK IV IT MMTT CsTBUL&#13;
^ E r s W ^ r ' . EnoDjrh is as good as a feast; mors&#13;
1 leads but to famine.&#13;
was spent, more than was ever before&#13;
spent. It took $17,990 to decorate the&#13;
pension building for the inaugural ball.&#13;
Dave Sims, the negro who shot and&#13;
killed R. F. (Deacon) Jones at his&#13;
home one mile from Baugh station,&#13;
near Coahoma, Miss., Sunday night,&#13;
was lynched by an armed mob at the&#13;
scene of his crime.&#13;
Alonzo j . Whiteman and Joseph&#13;
Booth man, convicted of swindling the&#13;
Fidelity Trust Co., of Buffalo, must&#13;
serve their sentences of eight and five&#13;
years, respectively, is the decision of&#13;
a court of appeals.&#13;
Morris Koffman, a Cleveland cigarette&#13;
manufacturer, says cigarettes&#13;
drove his son, Lewis, mad. The young&#13;
man has been adjudged Insane. The&#13;
father says young Koffman smoked 100&#13;
cigarettes a day.&#13;
The muniolpal counefhof the Isle of&#13;
Pines has denied thatjuie island is&#13;
deficient in proper courts, schools, etc.,&#13;
and Insists the government has done&#13;
more for the island now than the&#13;
small revenue warrants.&#13;
Gen. Brugere, commander of the&#13;
Trench army, sentenced to 15 days' imprisonment&#13;
for talking to a reporter,&#13;
atluudud the mairlage of his daughter&#13;
Wednesday, and will now have to undergo&#13;
his desperate ordeal.&#13;
David F. Rowe, of Philadelphia, a&#13;
paralytic, upbraided his son-in-law for&#13;
abusing Rowe's daughter, whereupon&#13;
the son-in-law shot and badly wounded&#13;
the older man, fled from the house&#13;
and shot himself to death. ,&#13;
The legion of honor has been } w&#13;
3towed upon Lleut.-Gen. Adna R. Chaffee&#13;
by the French government, whoso&#13;
acceptance of it, owfug to a prohibition&#13;
of the Constitution of the United&#13;
States, will depend upon an act of congress.&#13;
-&#13;
Rev. Dr. Parkhurst, of New York,&#13;
told his congregation Sunday that he&#13;
believed in damnation. "The apparent&#13;
cruelties attributed to God," he said,&#13;
"are not a circumstance to the cruelties&#13;
in nature. Natural laws pay no&#13;
more'attention to man than to a dog.'*&#13;
Kenyon College, at Mount Vernon.&#13;
0., where Stewart L. Pierson was&#13;
killed by a train while undergoing an&#13;
initiation, will mandamus-the coroner&#13;
to get possession of testimony taken&#13;
at the inquest. The coroner says the&#13;
testimony must first go to the grand&#13;
lury.&#13;
Whether it was the ruling passion or&#13;
a mere coincidence must forever be a&#13;
matter of conjecture. At the opening&#13;
of the Louisville, Ky., free library&#13;
for colored people, Willis Thomas approached&#13;
the counter to get the first&#13;
book. "I want something on chicken&#13;
culture," ho said.&#13;
Patrick Raymond, aged 18, was arrested&#13;
Wednesday in Lincoln, Neb.,&#13;
while lighting a cigarette which he had&#13;
just rolled for his own use in the&#13;
presence of a city detective. He was&#13;
fined $50 and costs. This is the lightest,&#13;
penalty prescribed by the law for&#13;
'manufacturing" cigarettes.&#13;
The grievance committee in the A.&#13;
P. of L. convention in Pittsburg reported&#13;
protesting against the practice&#13;
of labor councils getting out a "souvenir&#13;
.book" program for Labor day&#13;
events. "Graft" was the forceful term&#13;
smployedsta condemnation. Delegates&#13;
from the Smaller towns argued in favor&#13;
of the books.&#13;
E. H. Wright, general freight and&#13;
passenger agent and auditor of the&#13;
Copper Range railroad, has resigned&#13;
and is succeeded by F. R. Bolles, of&#13;
Milwaukee, division freight and passenger&#13;
agent of the Chicago, Milwaukee&#13;
ft 8 t Paul road, as general freight&#13;
WfiOwr*&#13;
;, 5&#13;
" Peode oajfanre thems4t»*olH» good&#13;
maiiy'cotuuioD silnteutsr af i Very small&#13;
cost if they go about it the right way*"&#13;
said Mr, 8e^(ffc$Mfc&gt;&gt; "Fpr^sUupe,&#13;
I have joit oared myself of a very painful&#13;
disease. 1 mlg&amp;TnaVe began to treat&#13;
it sooner, that'* all the, mistake I made&#13;
in the matter. But I fonud the root of&#13;
the difficulty and I picked out the right&#13;
remedy withoat the at* of a doctor.&#13;
" It v a s wally all' to ifly Wood. I first&#13;
felt a twiuge 4s&gt; my tof&amp;foot and ankle&#13;
in the middle of last January, following&#13;
exposure to cold. I realized I had rheumatism&#13;
and I kuew.tnat really comes&#13;
from bad blood. Gold simply develops&#13;
it. Then my hands and, feet were cold&#13;
and clammy, even in hot weather, and&#13;
numb a great part of the time. I concluded&#13;
that my blood was thin aud poor&#13;
and the circulation sluggish.&#13;
''After a time my feet and ankles&#13;
swelled so badly that I could only tie&#13;
my shoes half way up. My legs swelled&#13;
terribly aud I could: walk only a short&#13;
distance before giving out completely.&#13;
~+*When I read oHhe cures of all kinds&#13;
of blood diseases, that had been effected&#13;
by Dr.Williams1 Pink Pitts; IMiraa convinced&#13;
that they were just the remedy&#13;
for my case, and so it proved. I could&#13;
see that they were beuefttiug mo before&#13;
I had quite used up the first box. The&#13;
improvement was decidedly marked after&#13;
I had taken two boxes. Three more&#13;
boxes restored my hands and feet and&#13;
legs to natural size aud feeliug and&#13;
then I stopped taking medicine and have&#13;
since been perfectly well."&#13;
Mr. P. LeRoy Hoar lives at No. 132&#13;
Constitution street, Bristol. R. I. Any&#13;
one can get convincing evidence that&#13;
Dr. Williams1 Pink Pills have cured&#13;
ancBinia, rheumatism, erysipelas and&#13;
other serious diseases of the blood by&#13;
simply writing to the Dr. Williams&#13;
Medicine Co.! Schenectady, NrY. —*~""~&#13;
One touch of the bunko man doth&#13;
the farmer skin.&#13;
COMVINW^&#13;
eannot ba •quiilad sit amy prtca.&#13;
AMYO&#13;
W. L. Dottglat SJ.50 shoes save by their ex-&#13;
Calient style, csey fitting, and eaperior wearing&#13;
qaamtetvacaleved the large** taGof sny A*.ai&#13;
eaoe In tbs world. They sts Jnst as good at&#13;
that cast yon $5.04 to Sf^OOr- the only&#13;
difference to the price. If I coo Id talc* yon Info&#13;
My factory at Brockton, Mass., the iarnot as&#13;
-flie world under one roof nsaktag ason's fine&#13;
shoos, and show you the cats with which every&#13;
pair of Douglas eboes to made, you would realtoo&#13;
why W. L. Douolae $3.50 aaees sre the best&#13;
•hoes produced In the world.&#13;
If I could show you the difference between the&#13;
•boot made hi sty factory and those of other&#13;
nukes, you wou/d understand why Douglas S.SO shoes coat mora to nuke, why they iokf&#13;
sir shape, fit bettor, wear longer, and are of&#13;
greater Intrinsic vabia than any other S3.SO&#13;
shoe on the market to-day.&#13;
HelghY of 8ea Wives.&#13;
Careful experiments made by a&#13;
noted English navigator along the&#13;
north coast of Spain show that waves&#13;
frequently attain a height of 42 feet,&#13;
which is nothing compared to the rise&#13;
of Plllsbury's Vltos- in the estimation&#13;
of people who like good, pure, common-&#13;
sense wheat food. You will like&#13;
it. Ask for it at your grocers.&#13;
CAUTION.—huist upon havine W.L.Douglas&#13;
shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine&#13;
without his name and price stamped on bottom.&#13;
WANTED. A shoe dealer in every tovm where&#13;
W. L. Douglas Shoos are not sold. Full line or&#13;
•ampleeeeiit free for inspection upon request.&#13;
Faat Color Eyitttg usut; th»y will not war brassy.&#13;
Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles,&#13;
W. L. DOUGLAS. Brockton. Mass.&#13;
Detroit Conservatory a! Music&#13;
530 Woodwird Ave.&#13;
I k Firt6St Consfinfatonrln tha Wt4t&#13;
THIKTY-SECOND YEAR. A INSTRUCTORS&#13;
MANY FREE *°VjMTMES&#13;
Catftlp&lt;nif sent fr»« on application.&#13;
RHEUMATISM CURED cuDrer. tHhea wrtoer sUt craics eA bcyid r idSdoilnvga1n tlh.we lBlYl spteomsi toivf etlhye tpoori sfol.n oNusa tuiornica la cRidem. eAdy f uCllo .,m Lotudt.h, 'Cs htarmeabtmere onft Commerce, Detroit. Mich. _ _ _ ^ ^ _ _&#13;
T o&#13;
u Personally&#13;
Conducted"&#13;
What does it mean?&#13;
That you can cross the continent in comfort,&#13;
without a travel worry, at about half the usual expense.&#13;
You can leave Chicago any Tuesday, Wednesday&#13;
or Thursday in a modern Pullman tourist sleeping&#13;
car, in charge of a special conductor, who accompanies&#13;
the party on the entire journey to San&#13;
Francisco and Los Angeles.&#13;
The route is over the Burlington's famous line&#13;
to Denver, thro' the Scenic Rockies of Colorado by&#13;
daylight, thro' Salt Lake City, across the majestic&#13;
Sierras, past California's fertile fields and dcttvn t o&#13;
the glorious Pacific&#13;
\&#13;
J&#13;
w-r"'^&#13;
Your aame ea a postal will ,&#13;
»rh^iasnUr*tedlafora«tioa.&#13;
*• .V • . • • * . .&#13;
J. rSAHClB, Gerroral Pssssstftr Afsst,&#13;
256 " 0 " Bttildisg,&#13;
, CHICAGO.&#13;
L.&#13;
California&#13;
mm2tmm^mtmmmmammn^ ^ ^ ^ I f ^ f t ^ f l g g&#13;
y^h^'PmV&#13;
vs.''''*•"*"-'*t -' ^ . " J v v " '••-&#13;
'^"^&gt;'V"i 7 y . • • • • • *&#13;
wv&#13;
TWlCiT6CD f tlYfMONV.&#13;
HOW to J»fHi ntlttf,&#13;
^Tfc* thousands of fojnen tfho suffer,&#13;
backache, lwiw^iS^'anK diioraera*&#13;
d other-kidney ills,&#13;
WlB flfttf'c^mtort in&#13;
t*e word* of ^Mrt.&#13;
JM« Ftfmll Of 606&#13;
Qcean avenue, Jersey&#13;
City, N. J., who&#13;
imymr Hlr refceratt&#13;
aU 1 have taid before&#13;
la pfaise ot&#13;
Doan's VMfW PUli&#13;
I had been having&#13;
and njur leneral&#13;
health waa affected when I began tela*&#13;
them. My feet were swollen, my&#13;
eyea puffed, aad (Ussy spells wife frequent&#13;
Kidney action waa Irregular&#13;
aad the secretion* highly colored. Today,&#13;
however, I am a well woman, and&#13;
I am confident that Doan's Kidney&#13;
Pills have made me so, and are keeping&#13;
me well."&#13;
Sold by all dealers. oO cents a box.&#13;
Foater-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
H I ii i I ••• ' I ' ,&#13;
Some Commercial Ambiguity.&#13;
From a window in the city: "Buy&#13;
..oar boots. Every pair will bring the&#13;
cnstomer back" This is not clear.&#13;
Will the customer be insido the boots&#13;
Or outside them?—Punch.&#13;
NEWSOF&#13;
heavy backaches.&#13;
The North Pole.&#13;
It is often said that, when the North&#13;
Pole is discovered there will be found&#13;
a Scotchman doing business. The&#13;
Highlander always ranked foremost&#13;
Amongst the pioneers of the American&#13;
West. His Herculean strength&#13;
Jltted him for frontier life, and to his&#13;
constant use of "porridge" for brcakfast&#13;
is attributed' his splendid phyaique.&#13;
~ This gene ration can be^ as&#13;
brawny by eating Pillsbury's Vitos.&#13;
Dry Fish Packing House.&#13;
- The largest dry-fish packing house&#13;
In the world Is at Halifax. It has 45,-&#13;
000 square feet of floor space —&#13;
Mother Cray's Sweet Powders lor Children,&#13;
—Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse&#13;
In the Children's Home in New York, cure&#13;
Constipation-, Feverishness, Bad Stomach,&#13;
Teething Disorders, move and regulate the&#13;
Bowels and Destroy Worms.Over 30,000 testimonials.&#13;
At all Druggists, 25c. Sample&#13;
FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, LeRoy,N.Y.&#13;
Time may be money, but we could&#13;
never see much in it unless it was&#13;
utilized.&#13;
On the Shelf&#13;
of every home in the Uuked States mere&#13;
shook* be found aWtle of Shiioh's Coosumption&#13;
Cure, the LungTook, lot Cough*,&#13;
Cold* and ail irritation* of the throat, lungs&#13;
and air passages. It is easy to take, gives&#13;
„,.: instant relief and cues permanently.&#13;
Generation after Generation&#13;
have pronounced ShOoh to be the safest,&#13;
surest, quickest and best family cute for&#13;
Colds and Coughs. Nothing has ever been&#13;
louad | o take its place in the home. Try&#13;
Shuoh and be cured, or say you were not&#13;
and get your money back. Isn't this fair ?&#13;
h^rs.CJames, olribbing, Minn., says:—&#13;
" T W U o o cure Ss» 3uU&gt; fo, C o w U . Cokk,&#13;
Cmcv vote Tkraat, Hoaneaes, BtOBchitit or&#13;
W a c o c b n G w s h . My o U e * ten. was akmt&#13;
cbolua. The doctor* could not refceve him. Ha&#13;
uMd tws bottle* of Shiioh and w u completely&#13;
cured. I t b u a o equal." 501 SHILOH 25c wifa sjaaraatea wheteygf mediciM H aou.&#13;
One Dollar&#13;
for a Postal, Card&#13;
This company will give one dollar for B&#13;
the first reliable information o! an&#13;
opportunity to sell a steam engine or&#13;
boiler of our standard types within&#13;
our range of sizes. This does not&#13;
Include vertical, traction or gas en*&#13;
gines. If you know of anybody intending&#13;
to buy an engine or boiler&#13;
tell us. A Postal will do. L4TXAS ENGINES AND BOILERS&#13;
yes _&#13;
lants. Best of material aad workmanship.&#13;
have for rears been the standard fa*afl steam Slants. Best of material aad workmanship.&#13;
&gt;ur bis output enables as to sell on small prof&#13;
its. An Atlas, the best In the world, costs no&#13;
-mora tbsa the other kind.&#13;
, Writ$ today for oar tptcial oHtr,&#13;
ATLAS ENGINE WORKS&#13;
tMUxw asaaciM la all oiUw INDIANAPOLIS&#13;
|CorUtaSn«taM Ht|hSpMdEntfn»* WatorTntoBoiWn I&#13;
roa*Val*(i KBgiiMt Compound E«|iiM« TntmUr BoiUr*&#13;
Automatic Sofia** Throttling Eat in** Portable Botlta* I&#13;
AUM tn*irm in Mrrle* t.MS.OOO R. P.&#13;
Atlaa BoUar* la mrrU» 4,000,000 H. F.&#13;
'£ took&#13;
F* els.&#13;
A laxative t h a t will&#13;
-carry off every taint from&#13;
the system and give per*&#13;
Met regularity of the bow*&#13;
Snob Is Oatey King*&#13;
the great trniWfiaattvo.&#13;
It always cares ooaitlpa-&#13;
Herb er* Tablet&#13;
Yes&#13;
Yes&#13;
Yes&#13;
S O S CUftl » OR&#13;
HIiLAu.&#13;
•T-SCT fc?V&#13;
POSTMAaTER-OENERAL&#13;
CORTELYOU ASKS&#13;
FOR $198,000,000&#13;
SAYS THAT AMOUNT If N U P I D&#13;
TO RUN POSTAL •MVICS&#13;
NEXT VKAR.&#13;
Postmaster-General Cortelyou recently&#13;
completed and forwarded to the&#13;
secretary of the treasury estimates for&#13;
the postofflce department for the fiscal&#13;
year ending June 30, 1907. They show&#13;
a reduction of expenses wherever it Is&#13;
believed It will not Impair the service,&#13;
but provision for development of postal&#13;
facilities to meet the growing needs&#13;
of all sections of the country.&#13;
The amount asked for salaries In the&#13;
department proper is $1,481, an apparent&#13;
Increase of 161,990 over the cur&#13;
rent appropriation; but as $$S,3UT7itf sealHslsouldnse bTo^iretghrTteyriater&#13;
WrftT ItrAtt^ltCW" H t * SUftrNftt*)&#13;
Ral'sd on tuperstitlon to Stir Corv&#13;
science of Thief,&#13;
/n Calcutta recently a box contain*&#13;
ing money and valuable papers was&#13;
stolen from a large business establishment&#13;
After tbe police had failed&#13;
to trace the thief a native wise man,&#13;
Tnrint Prasad Jyotishl, was called in,&#13;
He ordered an assembly of the whole&#13;
establishment—peons, .bearers, dur*&#13;
wans, table servants, coachmen, syces,&#13;
and what not—and began to harangue&#13;
them concerning the. unity and majesty&#13;
of the Almighty. The he entered&#13;
upon the ritual of his craft, in which&#13;
the registration of names, the wash*&#13;
ing of hands, breathing on little&#13;
squares of paper, distribution of sacred&#13;
rice, and muttering of prayers&#13;
played their part, A new earthenware&#13;
vessel received the names, with&#13;
some red powder, and tbe vessel was&#13;
finally covered and sealed, the awestruck&#13;
audience being Informed with&#13;
further, reminders of divine omniscience&#13;
and omnipotence that unless the&#13;
box were discovered the name of the&#13;
thief, inscribed in red, would be found&#13;
within the earthen vessel when the&#13;
ARE YOUR KIDNEYS WEAK?&#13;
Thousands of Men and Women Have Kidney&#13;
Trouble and Never Suspect It.&#13;
this is simply a transfer- from other&#13;
appropriations the net increase is only&#13;
(3,690. The estimate submitted for&#13;
next year is $44,020 less than the estimate&#13;
submitted one year ago. The&#13;
clerical force of the department, therefore,&#13;
will remain practically as It now&#13;
Is during the fiscal year.&#13;
The estimates for the postal service&#13;
at large aggregate $193,000,000, an Increase&#13;
over last year's appropriation&#13;
of about $12,000,000. This increase represents&#13;
the normal growth of the service&#13;
based upon what the postal authorities&#13;
regard as the most careful&#13;
and conservative estimates. Each succeeding&#13;
year sees a large increase in&#13;
the business of the department.&#13;
The principal items in the increase&#13;
are the rural delivery Bervice, railway&#13;
mail service, compensation to postmasters&#13;
and their clerks, and the compensation&#13;
of letter carriers&#13;
livery service and its proper extension&#13;
over $29,000,000 will bw ieu,ulred. This&#13;
is an increase of $3,600,000 over the&#13;
appropriation for the-current year,&#13;
which, in turn, is over $5,000,000 more&#13;
than that of last year, so that the&#13;
present estimate is $1,400,000 less than&#13;
the Increase of the present over the&#13;
previous year.&#13;
80 Ducks for Mrs. Cleveland.&#13;
Former President Grover Cleveland,&#13;
who with Dr. Paul Van Dyke, of&#13;
Princeton university, and Ernest Gittings,&#13;
of Baltimore, spent-Some days&#13;
gunning on tbe preserves of the- Back&#13;
Bay Guftffln* club. In Princess Anne&#13;
county, v a 7 has returned to Prlueeton,&#13;
after a (rip fined with fine sport, He&#13;
killed a large number of wild ducks&#13;
and other game, sending ahead a large&#13;
box of game to Mrs. Cleveland and&#13;
carrying with him when he returned&#13;
80 fine birds.&#13;
This was on Tuesday evening. On&#13;
Wednesday morning the box was&#13;
found rifled of notes and gold, but&#13;
with the valuable papers intact. But&#13;
the thief is still at large.&#13;
Ciever Appeal to Nature.&#13;
Some years ago in a large and rich'&#13;
ly stocked nursery in Belgium, chafer&#13;
beetles became so numerous as to be a&#13;
very serious pest. After trying by all&#13;
known means to eradicate them the&#13;
proprietor observed that starlings devoured&#13;
large numbers, both of the&#13;
larvae and the mature insects. Taking&#13;
a lesson from this he erected half a&#13;
dozen nesting boxes on 15-foot poles,&#13;
and as they were immediately occupied&#13;
by the birds he continued to provide&#13;
boxes until 125 were in use. The&#13;
result was that the chafer invasion&#13;
malntenaocfr of the rural de- | grew gradually less and was._flna.lly.&#13;
completely overcome.—Stray Stories.&#13;
Louis Bids United States Farewell.&#13;
Prince Lcuis' isit to New York ended&#13;
Monday m^ ning. The prince feels&#13;
very kindly toward us and says:&#13;
"We shall leave here with the greatest&#13;
feeling of regret, and there is not&#13;
one of us who would not like to have&#13;
made nis stay mucn longer, i hare met&#13;
with every demonstration of kindness&#13;
and regard and your reception has&#13;
been most cordial, particularly where&#13;
large numbers have congregated to&#13;
welcome us."&#13;
Two Section Men Killed.&#13;
f o r e m a n John Thomas and Chris&#13;
Hoverman, section hand, were instantly&#13;
killed by a Grand Trunk flyer&#13;
While at work near Vlcksburg. Hoverman's&#13;
skull was crushed, his back and&#13;
limbs broken, while Thomas's injuries&#13;
were principally- about the head. The&#13;
men had stepped from one track to&#13;
another to avoid a freight train, and&#13;
did not hear the express train approaching.&#13;
Hoverman's wife died six months,&#13;
ago, and now his six children are left&#13;
orphans. The families of both men live&#13;
at Schoolcraft.&#13;
810,000 Gallons of Whisky Burn.&#13;
At the-A. Overholt distillery at Braddock,&#13;
Pa,, 810,000 gallons of whisky&#13;
furnished a spectacular fire, entailing&#13;
a loss of $4,000,000.&#13;
Memorial services were held in New&#13;
York Sunday for the Presbyterian missionaries&#13;
murdered in Lien Chau, China,&#13;
October 22.&#13;
-The new sugar beet factory at Blissfield&#13;
is now running. The plant, which&#13;
cost, in the neighborhood of $700,000,&#13;
employs over 200 men and has a capacity&#13;
of 600 tons of beets per day.&#13;
Back to Nature Preacher 'John&#13;
Kleinst, 50 years old, who has for&#13;
years tramped the country winter and&#13;
summer, clad In thin raiment and&#13;
wearing only sandals on his feet, died&#13;
Tuesday in Chicago from over fasting.&#13;
The Indians of Neuchatalltz are&#13;
holding a so/row dance in whleh the&#13;
women scratch their cheeks and&#13;
breasts until blood is drawn, to mourn&#13;
for the Indian hunters of the overdue&#13;
sealing schooner Pawn, believed to&#13;
have foundered -en route home from&#13;
Bering sea. There were six white men&#13;
and 21 Indians oh the sealing vessel.&#13;
An electrical paddling machine, invented&#13;
by Prof. Dennis, Is now in operation&#13;
in the public, school 1m East&#13;
Peoria, 111. The mode of operation is&#13;
to place the recalcitrant pupil over a&#13;
chair near the spanking machine, press&#13;
a button mad the-tow of electricity&#13;
* * * £ * ***•* of PJOBM to operation&#13;
WOT ft** tj»cn % anatomy of the&#13;
Bptnkee. _&#13;
Effect of Pest Bounty.&#13;
Some years ago the government of&#13;
Java offered a reward for all crocodiles&#13;
killed or captured. For a time&#13;
enormous numbers of them were&#13;
brought to the authorities. Then it&#13;
was discovered that nearly all the natives&#13;
had gone to raising crocodiles,&#13;
so the reward was withdrawn.&#13;
Idaho Joins.&#13;
Fraser, Idaho, Nov. 27th (Special)—&#13;
Mrs. Martha J. Lee has given for publication&#13;
the following statement, concerning&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills:&#13;
"t Was down with Rheumatism&#13;
three times," she says, "and each&#13;
To Preve Whet the Great Kidney Remedy,&#13;
. Do tor YOU. Every Reader of Thif Paper May Hawa •&#13;
Sampi? Bottle Sent Absolutely Free by MaiL&#13;
It used to be considered that only urinary and&#13;
bladder troubles were to be traced to the kidneys,&#13;
but now modern sconce proves that nearly&#13;
all diseases have their beginning in tbe disorder&#13;
of these most important organs.&#13;
Therfelore, when your kidneys are weak or out&#13;
ol order, you can understand how quickly your&#13;
entire body is affected, and how every organ&#13;
seems to fail to do its duty.&#13;
If yon are sick or "feel badly" begin taking&#13;
the great kidney remedy; Pr. Kilmer's Swamp-&#13;
Boot, because as soon as your kidneys begin, to&#13;
get better they will help all the other organs to&#13;
health. A trial will convince anyone.&#13;
I was out ot bealtn and run down generally; had no&#13;
appetite, ,waa dizzy aad suffered with headache most of&#13;
the time. I did not know that my kidneys were the cause&#13;
of my trouble, hut somehow felt that they might he, and I&#13;
began taking Swamp-Root. There is ancfa a pleasant taste&#13;
to Swamp-Boot, and it goes right to tbe spot and drives&#13;
*,J3&#13;
diaeaae out of the system. It has cured me, making me&#13;
stronger aiKTUetUsr in every nay, uud I cheerfully reeuuimeod&#13;
It to all sufferers.&#13;
Gratefully yours,&#13;
A. L. WALKBB, S31 East Linden St., Atlanta, Oa.&#13;
Weak and unhealthy kidneys are responsible&#13;
for many kinds of diseases, and if permitted to&#13;
continue much suffering and fatal resuits are&#13;
sure to follow. Kidney trouble irritates the&#13;
nerves, makes you dizzy, restless, sleepless and&#13;
irritable. Makes you pass water often during&#13;
the day and obliges you to get up many times&#13;
during the night. '.Unhealthy kidneys euuae&#13;
rheumatism, gravel, catarrh of the bladder, pain&#13;
or dull ache in the back, joints and muscles;&#13;
make your head ache and back ache, cause indigestion,&#13;
stomach and liver trouble, you get a&#13;
sallow, yellow complexion, make you feel as&#13;
though you had heart trouble; you may have&#13;
plenty of ambition, but no strength; get weak&#13;
and waste away.&#13;
J!hecnre_ior_these—troubles is Dr_ Kilmer's&#13;
Swamp-Root, the world-famous kidney remedy.&#13;
In taking Swamp-Root you afford natural help&#13;
to Nature, for Swamp-Root is the most perfect&#13;
healer and gentle aid to the kidneys that is&#13;
known to medicaLseieiice. :.- . — _ —&#13;
_^ How^q Find Out&#13;
(Swamp-Rootls pleaavBtto take.)&#13;
If there is any doubt in your mind as to your&#13;
condition, take from your urine on rising about&#13;
four ounces, place it in a glass or bottle and let&#13;
it Btand twenty-four hours. If on examination&#13;
it is milky or cloudy, if there is a brick-dust settling,&#13;
or if small particles float around in it. your&#13;
kidneys are in need of immediate attention.&#13;
Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and is used in&#13;
the leading hospitals, recommended by physicians&#13;
in their private practice, and is taken by&#13;
doctors themselves who have kidney ailments,&#13;
because they recognize in it the greatest and&#13;
most successful remedy for kidney, liver and&#13;
bladder troubles.&#13;
I f you are already convinced&#13;
that Swamp-Root is what you&#13;
need, you can purchase ^the&#13;
regular' fifty-cent and onedollar&#13;
size bottles a t the drug?&#13;
stores everywhere. Don*t&#13;
make any mistake, bat remember&#13;
the name, Swamp-Root&#13;
Dr. Kilmer s Swamp-Boot, ani&#13;
the address, Binghamton, N.&#13;
Y., on every bottle.&#13;
EDITORIAL NOTE.—So successful is&#13;
Swamp-Root in promptly curing even&#13;
the mos^ distressing- cases of kidney,&#13;
J liver or bladder troubles, that to prove&#13;
time Dodd's Kidney Pills helped me. [its wonderful merits you may have a&#13;
The last time they cured me, and-now [sample bottle and a book of valuable&#13;
I am able to get around and do all information, both sent absolutely free&#13;
by mail. The book contains many of&#13;
the thousands upon thousands of testimonial&#13;
letters received from men and&#13;
women cured. The value and success&#13;
ot Swamp-Roof is so well known that&#13;
&gt;ur readers are advised to send for a&#13;
sample bottle. In sending your address&#13;
to Dr. Kilmer &amp;. Co.,~Hinghamton, N.&#13;
Y.. be sure to say you read this genermy&#13;
work, though I am fifty-eight, and&#13;
I can walk to Sunday School every&#13;
Sunday. Before I took Dodd's Kidney&#13;
Pills I was so bad I could use neither&#13;
hand nor foot. I shall keep Dodd's&#13;
Pills on hand all the time." i&#13;
Rheumattsm is caused by Uric Acid&#13;
crystallizing in the muscles. Healthy&#13;
Sidneys remove all Uric A d a rronr&#13;
the blood. Diseased Kidneys cannot&#13;
remove this Acid which collects in&#13;
the blood and poisons every vein and&#13;
artery. Dodd's Kidney Pills cure&#13;
Rheumatism by curing the Kidneys;&#13;
by healing and strengthening . them,&#13;
so that they can rid the blood of all&#13;
impurities.&#13;
German Military Penaltyv&#13;
From picking up an apple while on&#13;
a march and not dropping it imous&#13;
offer in this paper. The proprietors&#13;
of this paper guarantee t h e genuineness&#13;
of this offer.&#13;
COUPON&#13;
Please write or fill In t h i s B O I B W wit* your&#13;
name and address and Dr. K l h m r a Oik. will&#13;
send you a Frae Saaapla Bat&#13;
th« Orswt Kldawy Reassdy.&#13;
Nassc.&#13;
St. aad No.&#13;
City or Town.&#13;
State.&#13;
(.Mention this paper.)&#13;
W h e n a man s e e s a w o m a n \ w e a r i n g&#13;
w h i t e s t o c k i n g s he c a n ' t h e l p \ f e e J i n g&#13;
t h e r e are w o r s e t h i n g s t h a n v h e i n g&#13;
blind.&#13;
G o o d i n t e n t i o n s p o s s e s s t h e merit"&#13;
m a k i n g one c o n s i d e r a t e and s o m e t i m&#13;
k i n d .&#13;
Mrs. Wlnalow's 8oothtna; Syrup.&#13;
For ebltdrea teething, softens the rums, reduces&#13;
namraailoa, sllayt paitt, core* wtn4 colic. 25cabot&#13;
W e w a n t a c u p l i k e the ooean, that&#13;
k r i o w s no v/ail until it h a s t o u c h e d&#13;
e v e r y land and nation.&#13;
DON'T T O B G E T&#13;
mediately when ordered to do so by ; A lar*re2-oB. package Red Cross Ball uiuconiv&#13;
a sergeant, a soldier of the Sixtyninth&#13;
(German) Infantry has been&#13;
sentenced to eight months' imprisonment&#13;
at Treves.&#13;
5 cents. The Russ Company, South Bend. lnd.&#13;
European Breakfasts.&#13;
Mark Twain, in speaking of the typical&#13;
European breakfasts, said. "Do&#13;
you know what Til do? I'll nail a&#13;
piece of cuttle-fish bone to the chim-1&#13;
ney, and every morning I'll hop up on j&#13;
the mantel and take a pick at it with j&#13;
a tin bllL It will be just as filling and i&#13;
much cheaper than a European break-,&#13;
fast."&#13;
It is evident that Mr. Clemens prefers&#13;
the typical American breakfast ;&#13;
dish of Pillsbury's Vitos with good&#13;
cream and sugar.&#13;
R e m e m b e r y o u h a v e t w o oars, hut&#13;
o n l y one t o n g u e — t h e moral is o b v i o u s :&#13;
T a l k l e s s ; listen more.&#13;
Piso'sCure for Consumption is an Infallihla&#13;
medicine tor coughs and colds, - N. \V. S A M U S U&#13;
Ocean Grove. N. J.. Feb. i?. 1900.&#13;
H a r d w o r k is one of the most&#13;
t i c e a b l e a i d s to c o n t e n t m e n t . no-&#13;
Caprice and affection are potent factors&#13;
in governing the movement of&#13;
mankind.&#13;
ATTRACTIVE YOUNG LADY&#13;
agents wanted in every Town and&#13;
City.—Complete outfit furnished free.&#13;
We guarantee that you can make&#13;
from $1.00 to $4.00 per day. Address&#13;
P. O. Drawer No. 999, Buffalo. N. Y.&#13;
What*s ten years on the shoulders&#13;
of a man who thinks!&#13;
THE BEST COUGH CURE&#13;
In buying a cough medicine, remember&#13;
the best cough cure,&#13;
Kemp's Balsam&#13;
costs no more than any other kind.&#13;
Remember, too, the kind that&#13;
cores is the only kind worth any*&#13;
tnintj.&#13;
Every year thousands are saved&#13;
from a consumptive's grave by&#13;
taking Kemp's Balsam in time.&#13;
Is it worth while to experiment&#13;
with anything else ?&#13;
Sold by all dealers at 25c and 50c.&#13;
- *&#13;
W. # . l f . - - D s r n t O I T . - - N e . 4 8 - 1 9 0 «&#13;
Land adjoining this can be purchased&#13;
from railway and land companies at from&#13;
16 to 110 per aepe.&#13;
On this land this year has neea produced&#13;
upwards of twenty-five bushels of wheat to&#13;
. the acre. ~&#13;
It is also the best of grazing land and for&#13;
mixed farming it has no superior on the&#13;
continent.'&#13;
Splendid climate, low taxes, railways&#13;
convenient, schools and churches close at&#13;
hand.&#13;
Write for "Twentieth Century Canada"&#13;
and low railway rates to Superintendent of&#13;
Immigration, Ottawa, Canada; or to&#13;
authorized Canadian Government Agent—&#13;
M. V. Mclnnes, 6 Avenue TheatroBtoek,&#13;
Detroit, Michigan; or C. A. T e n i s i , Sault&#13;
Ste. Marie, Michigan.&#13;
{Mention this paper.)&#13;
' « • ' , -&#13;
THE EXTERNAL USE OP St. Jacobs Oil ;&gt;. '.wpj&#13;
(*':&lt;, .&gt;ii&#13;
Is the short, sure,&#13;
easy cure lor Rheumatism m* Neuralgia&#13;
It penetrates to the seat of torture, and relief promptly follows. Price, 25c. and 50c.&#13;
* &gt;&#13;
^:.rfe*A''&#13;
. - &gt; "&#13;
* :l&gt;&#13;
M'.»»f&#13;
^&#13;
^ , - ; ^&#13;
»&#13;
viv&#13;
*»y r&#13;
LI &lt; " I ' i&#13;
£'+*&gt;'• i BusliMsa^PoinUrg. 1&#13;
' &amp;&#13;
'4&#13;
FOUND.&#13;
. A set of false teetb. Owner can locate&#13;
them by calling at this office and&#13;
ying for tbii notice.&#13;
WAATBD.&#13;
bout 150 bushels of corn in tbe&#13;
: Will pay cash lor game delivered&#13;
at Pinckney. E.J. Briggs&#13;
* FOR SAUfc&#13;
Tt\o second-band Round-Oak s oves.&#13;
Inquired ft. W. Or.ofoot. 46tf&#13;
4&#13;
ATTENTION POtJLTRYMEN&#13;
I have a limited number of S. G. R,&#13;
I. Red puckrels,, tyom prize winning&#13;
birds, also some Golden Polish Cockrels.&#13;
''Mat prices, call on &lt;Sr address,&#13;
Wm.Cady, Lakeland, Mich. 148&#13;
4&#13;
t&#13;
«&#13;
*• i&#13;
*&#13;
#&#13;
y&#13;
f».'&#13;
w&#13;
&gt;.&gt;• " ^&#13;
CS. CHAMBERLIN,&#13;
E&amp;PE&amp;T AUCTIONEER&#13;
- DEXTER, MICH.&#13;
WS8T PUT*AM.&#13;
David Ohalker and wife are visiting&#13;
relatives in Gratiot Oo.&#13;
Ernest Frost and family visited&#13;
at Wales Lelaud the first of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. D. M. Monks entertained&#13;
a few of her friends Tuesday&#13;
afternoon,&#13;
Joie Uarris began her winter&#13;
term of school in the Hause&#13;
IOSCO.&#13;
Earl JJoyce trapped a badger recently.&#13;
Mrs. Eliza Kulm is spending two weeks&#13;
at Marion Center,&#13;
Esther 6harp went to Anu Arbnr Tuesday&#13;
for medical counsel.&#13;
The WFMS of the M. P . church of&#13;
Plaiutield will hold their next meeting,&#13;
Dec. 7, with Mrs. E. E. Huteou.&#13;
On account of the illness of Mrs. F. A.&#13;
Gardner last week, the Presb't Aid society&#13;
was held with Mrs. E. E. Philips and was&#13;
well attended.&#13;
Mrs. U . J ) . Streets, of Fowlerville, who&#13;
sr=c&#13;
Ntttlce ~f&#13;
district Monday. ,&#13;
TTT -r. »r v. z t ' l . „„ J was caring for her sister, Mrs. Gardner,&#13;
W. E. Murphy and family and , ^ ^ ^ ^M h o m e o l i n d a y o a M .&#13;
J a m e s K o c l i e a n d f a m i l y &lt;" !COUot of her daughter, Mrs. C. E . Holt of Pinckney, spent Suupay at H.&#13;
B. Gardner's.&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG.&#13;
being injured by the explosion of a gasoline&#13;
stove.&#13;
CHILSON&#13;
P e r r y TowJ£ a n d E r s , B e r t N a s h ' wheeler Martin visited relatives in&#13;
Bell Phone 88, iree P. O. Lock Box 68&#13;
Formerly of Battle Creek, ^Ich. Sells everything&#13;
on earth—Real Eatate, Graded Stock, Personal&#13;
Property, Country Sales, etc. Years of experience,&#13;
and prices reasouable.&#13;
Orders may b»le!tat the DISPATCH Office.&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
E. W, DANIELS,&#13;
OENEBAL AUCTIONEER.&#13;
Satistactun Guaranteed. For information&#13;
call at DISPATCH Office or address&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. £Lyndilla phone&#13;
connect i on. Auction bit Is smr 11 n tmpr&#13;
furnished free.&#13;
Percy Swarthout&#13;
Funeral Director&#13;
AND EMBALMER&#13;
ALL CALLS ANSWERED&#13;
PROMPTLY DAY OR HIGH!&#13;
are on the sick list.&#13;
Mrs. Ed. Drewery is visiting at&#13;
the home of her parents.&#13;
The heavy wind Friday blew&#13;
down a good many trees, two*&#13;
across the road near the McKinder&#13;
place.&#13;
Miss Lela Monks and Miss&#13;
Adda Kice spent Saturday night&#13;
and Sunday with Mrs. Bert Appleton&#13;
near Brighton.&#13;
Remember the dates of the fair&#13;
held at Chilson, 7th and 8th of&#13;
December. Chickeu pie supper&#13;
will be served Thursday evening&#13;
from five- o'clock until all are&#13;
served at toe usuaLprice, 25 cents.&#13;
Friday night oysters at ten cents&#13;
^a dish: Many beautiful irhwgswill&#13;
be sold at reasonable prices&#13;
which will make handsome and&#13;
i useful Xmas gifts. A hearty wel-&#13;
1 come is extended to all to« come&#13;
ijand have a sociable time.&#13;
Pinckney, Sunday.&#13;
Fred Allison of Detroit is= ttfenpesrxjf&#13;
his sister, Mrs. T. Sweet.&#13;
Mr; and Mrs. Henry Dammann are visiting&#13;
relatives in Detroit.&#13;
No school in the Cady district Thursday&#13;
and Friday—Thauksgiving.&#13;
Miss Grace Spaulding spent Sunday&#13;
with Miss Andrews in Pinckney.&#13;
Arthur-Dammann is spending Thauksgiving&#13;
with his brothers in Hamburg,&#13;
The young people of North Hamburg&#13;
give a New England supper at the home of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. David Van Horn Friday&#13;
evening of this week.&#13;
— -^JAST FtTTNAM; —&#13;
Miss Clella Fish'.is home from school&#13;
for :i week's vacation.&#13;
S. .J. and K. H. Kennedy are home&#13;
from Ypsilanti for a few days.&#13;
All persons owing on book a c -&#13;
count a r e kindly requested to&#13;
call and s e t t l e same by December&#13;
1st, 1905« ***"&#13;
f . T i&#13;
-¾&#13;
^&#13;
Saturday Specials&#13;
bow prices on S h o e s&#13;
Low prices on Dress Goods&#13;
bow prices on Rubber Foot-wear&#13;
Low prices on Groceries&#13;
JACKSON &amp; CADWELLS&#13;
M O O N ' s&#13;
The Peoples Store&#13;
In consideration of the fact ihat part of our trade comes from&#13;
Pinckney we feel as if the Pinckney people should know that it&#13;
would pay them to trade at Moons while in Howell.&#13;
• &gt; » ' . ( &gt;•&gt;•«••«•••&gt;•&lt;,&lt;&lt;. I'1 «•&lt;.&gt;&lt;.• ) . • &lt; , • &lt; . ' ' . o . ' * K ' K "&#13;
White Outing, best grade, regular 10c _&#13;
kind, Sale price 0 8&#13;
Ribbon No. 2} all silk, oc kind elae- „&#13;
PARLORS AT&#13;
PLIMPTON'S OLD STAND&#13;
PLAINFIELD.&#13;
Mrs. Foster of Iosco visited her daughter&#13;
Mrs. C. Bartig last week.&#13;
Harry Jacobs and wife are moving back&#13;
here and will live with his parents this&#13;
winter.&#13;
J. B. Stanton and wife of Chelsea were&#13;
guests of K. W. and F . L. Lake a few&#13;
days last week.&#13;
Mrs. J . K. Hall and Misses Myrta and&#13;
Flo Hall were guests Thanksgiving day of&#13;
Mrs. Fred"Moon at Hamburg.&#13;
The Putnam and.Hamburg farmers club&#13;
held its Hnnual meeting at the pleasant&#13;
home of Mr. and Mrs. E. McCluskey Saturday&#13;
last. About 75 members were present&#13;
and enjoyed the oyster dinner as well&#13;
the literary part of the meeting. .&gt; The special&#13;
feature of this was a paper by Mrs. H .&#13;
pacneNo.30J E. L. Topping and wife visited Fred ;-F&lt; S i 8 l e r describing her California trip".&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
Have&#13;
Grieve and family near Pinckney the last j&#13;
of last #eek. . j&#13;
The December meeting of the W F M S \&#13;
will be at the home of Mrs. E. Hutson,*&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 7. Dinuer will be served, !&#13;
to which all are invited. j&#13;
The friends and neighbors &lt;&gt;f Rev. Os-'&#13;
trander and wife gave them a pleasant sur-,&#13;
prise Nov. 28, that being the 2"&gt;th anni-!&#13;
versary of their wedded life.&#13;
This was especially interesting as she had&#13;
illustrations of the different places she&#13;
mentioned. Mr. A. Schoenhals was elected&#13;
president and Mae VanFleCt secretary.&#13;
U. W. Hendrick was elected delegate to&#13;
the state association at Lansing, Dec. 12-13.&#13;
Photo&#13;
Taken&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
Wm. Durkee was in Stocfcbridge Tuesday.&#13;
Oscar Heisig is visiting relatives in&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Notice .-Election of officers Dec. 2nd.&#13;
All members requested to be pre&amp;ent.&#13;
Nettie M. Vauprbn, R. K.&#13;
Remember the T h a n k s g i v i n g danee&#13;
at Dexter opera hou;e, Nov. 30, given&#13;
by Louis Lavey and Robt. Fitxsirnons^&#13;
HERE A R E PRICES THAT TAUK&#13;
24 PICTURES&#13;
4 Different Positions 4&#13;
25 CENTS&#13;
Anna and'Dwigbt, are visiting at Mrs. C.&#13;
M. Wood's.&#13;
Luella Ca'shey of Plainlield, is spending&#13;
a few days at Mr. A. G. Wilson's.&#13;
Wirt Smith, wife and family, of Fowlervjlle,&#13;
visited at E. M. Jeffry's, Sundav.&#13;
Mrs. Ralph Williams attended her&#13;
father's funeral in Davton, 0 . , last week.&#13;
FOUND.&#13;
A pocket pook containing a small&#13;
amount of monev. Owner can haye&#13;
Mrs. Jennie^ Wagner and children-, j the same by paying lor Ibis notice.&#13;
David Conners.&#13;
where, Sale Price 0 3&#13;
Stick Candy, best grade&#13;
Sale price 0 9&#13;
Good Pencil tablets, oc kind elsewhere&#13;
Sale price 0 4&#13;
Tooth Paste, food quality, germ destroyer,&#13;
well recommended by&#13;
those who use it Sale price 1 0&#13;
Tarn O'Shanters, long hair, all wool&#13;
regular price, 50c Sale price 4 B ,&#13;
Ladies Heeced lined wrappers, all colors&#13;
and sizes, regular 11.00 k h d&#13;
Sale price 9 5&#13;
Currants, extra good for the Thanksing&#13;
pudding Sale price 7 c&#13;
Salmon, regular 10c kind&#13;
Sale price 3 cans 3 B&#13;
Oat Me&amp;J, the kind that they left&#13;
plenty of meal in Sale price 8 lbs. 2 5&#13;
Lenox Soap Sale price, 10 bars • 2 5&#13;
(Jood tin dish pans Sale price 1 0&#13;
Granite iron wash basins,, good&#13;
quality Sale price 1 0&#13;
Granite iron soap dishes, 10c kind&#13;
Sale price _Q 5.&#13;
"Rnchitig, nice aiut'aoft, gooZT " "&#13;
quality *• Sale price 1 5&#13;
Fancy hat pins Sale price 0 5&#13;
Men's heavy, all wool, wo/k socks&#13;
Sale price 1 5 or 2 fer 2 5&#13;
Fast color apron ginghams, 6 cent&#13;
kind Sale price 0 5&#13;
Good quality table linen: Sale price 2 1&#13;
A dance will be given at the Dexter&#13;
opera house, Thanksgiving, Nov. 30.&#13;
Good music and continuous dancing&#13;
Louis LAVEY. RCBT. FIT2-IMONS.&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
Digests what you eat.&#13;
White ilutingSj good grade, _7£ kind _&#13;
Sale price 0 5&#13;
•AlLlOc Hosiery ._ Sale pxicfi 04&gt;-&#13;
Ail 15c Hosiery Sale price 1 2&#13;
All 2oc Hosiery Sale price 3 1&#13;
Talcum powder per box~ Sale"pKce ~ TO"&#13;
Vaseline or petroleum jelly, Sale price 0 5&#13;
Ax handles Sale price l o&#13;
Good pins, per paper Sale price 0 1&#13;
Good pen holders and pencils&#13;
Sale price 0 1&#13;
Decorated Crepe tissue paper ,regular&#13;
price loc Sale price 1 0&#13;
Men's oOc superior quality, fleeced&#13;
underwear, all sizes Sale price 3 9&#13;
Ladies 25c fleeced underwear&#13;
Sale price 2 1&#13;
Fleece lined Flannelette, in persian&#13;
patterns, all colors Sale price 1 0&#13;
Ladies kid mittens, fur top&#13;
Sale .price 4&gt;5&#13;
Scrubbing brushes, good quality&#13;
Sale price 0 3&#13;
15 in. corrugated iron coal&#13;
hod Ssle price 1 8&#13;
Flinch cards, per pkg. Sale price 3 9&#13;
Hooks a,nd eyes, per card Sale price 0 1&#13;
.Milk Strainers Sale price 1 0&#13;
Pan cake ^riddIes Sale 'price ~ ~ 2 3&#13;
Boy'8 suspenders, good and strong&#13;
Sale price 0 5&#13;
YeastFoam per pkg. Sale price 0 3&#13;
Sal Soda, per lb. Sale price 0 1&#13;
Extra good saw, square and rul J&#13;
combined Sale price 4 5&#13;
Carpenters squares Sale price 0 5&#13;
Padlocks Sale price 0 9&#13;
NEW JEWELRY STORE&#13;
PinCkn6V GsllerV E a d y i n D e c e f i l b e r w e wiHopen a branch of our Howell store&#13;
^ ^ IN PINCKNEY&#13;
3 WEEKS&#13;
Commencing Nov. 28&#13;
Satisfaction Guaranteed&#13;
WE TUKJI OUT HO POOR WORK&#13;
With a representative stock of Watches, Jewelry, Clocks,&#13;
Silverware, Cut Glass, Optical Goods, Phonographs,&#13;
Records, Pictures, and Picture Fi aming.&#13;
The store will be in charge of M r . H u g h F i n l e y ,&#13;
who has just finished a course in the Peoria, 111., Watch&#13;
Repair School&#13;
We will stock this store with the same H i g h G r a d e&#13;
G o o d s at reasonable prices, which have made the Howell&#13;
store so popular.&#13;
For the present the store will be located is the rear of&#13;
F. A. Sigler's Drug S t o r e .&#13;
We extend to all an invitation to call and look us over./&#13;
We are located in Howell, secoud door from P. 0. and are fast&#13;
becoming.known iti this vicinity as the cheapest and best place to&#13;
trade at far general merchandise. We take eggs in trade.&#13;
Mrs. C. W. Moon.&#13;
3 D A Y&#13;
Special Sale&#13;
3 l&#13;
I * R. A; WILLIAMS.' Marvin &amp; Finley.&#13;
Commencing Thursday, Nov. 3 0&#13;
Closing Saturday, Dec. 2&#13;
WE W I L I J SELL ALL •&#13;
Men's AO cent U n d e r w e a r , 4 3 eta,&#13;
Men's 9 0 cent G l o v e s and M i t t e n s , 4 3 cts.&#13;
Ladles 2 8 cent Hose, . 2 3 cts.&#13;
4 Cans o f C o r n , 2 8 cts.&#13;
3 C a n s B a k i n g P o w d e r , 2 8 cts.&#13;
F i f t y cent T e a , 4 3 c fA .&#13;
4 0 cent T e a , 3 8 cts.&#13;
Reduced Prices on Glassware and Fancy&#13;
Crockery,&#13;
H. M. WILUSTO* &amp; CO.&#13;
I&#13;
V*&#13;
-**-&#13;
.1--&#13;
4&#13;
J&#13;
3 •&#13;
1 l</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch November 30, 1905</text>
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                <text>November 30, 1905 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1905-11-30</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>VOL. XXIII. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MIOH., THURSDAY,DEC. 7,1906. .No. 49&#13;
^SHH^lB»IMa»B*a*«+g+a+W»+g+«*BWB+tf K«S+«K»«B&#13;
$ i T&amp;ac\vl\w &amp;xv&amp; lU\&gt;a.vr \JDwfc&#13;
We have a thoroughly equipped&#13;
machine shop and are in position&#13;
to do your repairing promptly and&#13;
at reasonable prices. . . . . .&#13;
Sharp Edge&#13;
Grinding Done 3&#13;
Engine and Lathe&#13;
Work a Specialty&#13;
THE BEST OF EVERYTHING FOR CHRISTJA&#13;
WE HAVE THE EIGHT THING for EVERT PERSON, THE RIGHT PRICE for EVERWURSE&#13;
A BEAUTIFUL ASSORTMENT OF PLEASING GIFTS&#13;
PERFECTLY ADAPTED TO THE WANTS AND REQUIREMENTS OF OUR FRIENDS AND PATRONS&#13;
EVERYTHING FRESH AND SPARKLING WITH THE BRIGHTEST NEW GOODS OF THE 8EAS0N&#13;
We are waiting to phase you with Presents that are Apptoprtate, Popular, Pract.ca/ and in every way Desirable in the line of&#13;
B o o R s i a n d t&#13;
FANCY GOODS, NOTIONS, ETC.&#13;
WE HUVE THE VARIETY THIT INSURES THE EASY SATISFftCTORV CHOICE-THE FIELD FOR SELECTION THE WIDEST. PRICES FtlREST&#13;
A G E N E R O U S A S S O R T M E N T , FULL of Q U A L I T Y and MERIT&#13;
If Yoi) Want Satirfaction In Selection and Economy In Price DUr Holiday Stock Will Fill Yotlr Needs&#13;
REMEMBER OUR HOLIDAY STOCK GIVES YOU NEW IDEAS AND SUPPLIES EXACTLY WHAT YOU WANT&#13;
S I C3S-&#13;
=4&#13;
b O C A L . N E W S . j The heaviest snow storm of the season&#13;
came Friday night when several&#13;
Only sHittle o v e r t w o weeks*©-riXi£hfiaJJalL-JLaa8.Aiery wet, beay£&#13;
Christmas snow. 4&#13;
Mis. F. L. Andrews and daughter&#13;
Florence were in Detro;t Saturday.&#13;
Bancroft has the boom "fever" and&#13;
has a driller working to find joal in&#13;
that vicinity.&#13;
This is the time of the year when&#13;
we all have to pay the debt we owe to&#13;
"Uncle Sam".&#13;
"Those who try to do something and&#13;
fail are infinitely better than tbo^e&#13;
wbo try to do nothing and beautifully&#13;
succeed."&#13;
Geo. Burch of Pontiac was in town&#13;
Friday shaking hands with old friends.&#13;
Geo. looks as if railroading agreed&#13;
frith him.&#13;
The A. B. Green family held a reunion&#13;
at the home of Geo. Green and&#13;
wife Thanksgiving. It was a very&#13;
feasant affair.&#13;
Do, not forget that the DISPATCH&#13;
hiafies" an excellent Christmas&#13;
1. W. Rennedyof Wawatusa, Wis.&#13;
is spending, the week with his mother,&#13;
Mrs. L. Kennedy, and other relatives&#13;
here. #&gt;&#13;
Gale Johnson returned to his studies&#13;
at Cleary's college Ypsilanti Mond iy&#13;
after spending part of the past week&#13;
at home.&#13;
The boys had a. great time Saturday I&#13;
building snow forts on the square.&#13;
The snow was just right and the day&#13;
fine. It made us wish we were boys&#13;
again.&#13;
F. G. Jackson has been having a&#13;
steam heating plant installed the past&#13;
week in his residence on Piety Hill.&#13;
C. P. Sykes &amp; Son have been doing&#13;
the work. ' "&#13;
Friday evening of this week occurs&#13;
the annual election of officers in the&#13;
Maccabee lodge. All members are&#13;
requested to be on band and help&#13;
p-electthe officers and enjoy the oyster&#13;
to an absent friend. It reminds them 8 a P P e r f o l l o w i n 8 -&#13;
of the gift 52 times a year. Several of our sportsmen have be"en&#13;
„ , , . . , , • r , , , , . out the past week but claim game,&#13;
1 bis is the season of the year that it •• n . . . , »,&#13;
J especially rabbits, scarce. There is a&#13;
law against the use of ferrits in hunting&#13;
them but we understand that it is&#13;
practiced by some. Better look out.&#13;
R, E. Finch and wife, F. D. Johnson&#13;
and daughter Hazel, and Mrs. E. R&#13;
Brown were called to Jackson Monday&#13;
to attend the funeral of a son of&#13;
Ben Johnson, who was killed by the&#13;
cars. He was a nephew of Mrs. Finch&#13;
and F. D. Johnson.&#13;
J. A, Cadwell and wife entertained&#13;
a party of young married people Friday&#13;
evening, in honor of their son Will&#13;
and wife of Stillwater Minn. Progressive&#13;
games were played and -an&#13;
excellent luncheon served. Altogether&#13;
will pay our readers to scan closely&#13;
the columns of the Dispatch, not only&#13;
for the news but for bargains.&#13;
The fine weather caught cold&#13;
Thanksgiving and our young people&#13;
have been enjoying some fine skating&#13;
for one day. when it'was-covered with&#13;
snow.&#13;
B. K. Pierce of the Millington&#13;
Qtsette is talking of putting in a new&#13;
press Bert was with the DISPATCH&#13;
fo* a time and we found him a good&#13;
newspaper man. During his ihree&#13;
years of ownership ol the Gazette he&#13;
has made it an excellent paper, full of&#13;
the news ol that vicinity. 'Millington&#13;
people.should certainly feel proud of it was one of the finest social events of&#13;
their home paper. the season.&#13;
'&amp;4&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
We are ready for the rush of holiday&#13;
trade. Our stock will contain many desirable&#13;
items not found elsewhere. I place&#13;
my orders very early, buy direct, even in&#13;
- Germany and France and do my own importing.&#13;
This may sou ud big to you but&#13;
t it is ea,y enough when you know how. As&#13;
2 own these goods cheaper than my competitors&#13;
it is an easy matt ter for me to&#13;
v- undersell. It will pay you to drive over&#13;
M we will show large assortment and save&#13;
. you money. Dolls, Books, China, Toys,&#13;
add Fancy Goods of every discription.&#13;
Every deyartment in onr store is comjjj]&#13;
Hli- A pleasure to show goods. Just&#13;
V. .&#13;
t&#13;
€ A. BOWMAN.&#13;
Mtftafeuy Store. /&#13;
Ckanti RWtr » . Opposrt^Court HOUM.&#13;
!tow*UMtoh.&#13;
Special Sendee Tonighl at 7:00&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 10&#13;
Morning Worship and Sermon&#13;
at 10:30 x&#13;
Congregational Classes at 11:30&#13;
/&lt;v&#13;
EVENING SERVICE&#13;
At 7:00&#13;
T h e Solemn Truth.&#13;
Young Ladie* Guild Tuesday at the&#13;
home of Miss Kittie Hoff.&#13;
Everybody welcome to above service?.&#13;
In T h e F a r W e s t&#13;
We clip the following fjoin the Colorado&#13;
Springs Daily Telegram in&#13;
regard to the entertainment given&#13;
ITiTTe TJy"M*prs fr'ntnc A. buiYu on ttTS"'&#13;
evening of Now 27. Mis? Burch is ope&#13;
of Pinckney's daughters and we have&#13;
an interest in seeing her succeed.&#13;
The members of the Young Women's&#13;
Christian association are much elated over&#13;
the success of the entertainment given last&#13;
evening at the Y. M. C. A. auditorium&#13;
under their auspices. The hall was crowded&#13;
to the doors and the entertainment netted&#13;
the association, above all expenses,&#13;
about $100. As some tickets are yet to be&#13;
reported it is possible that the proceeds&#13;
will exceed this sum.&#13;
Artistically the entertainment was everything&#13;
that was hoped. Miss Franc Adele&#13;
Burch proved herself a reader of exceptional&#13;
merit and her presentation of "Mrs-&#13;
Wigg's of the Cabbage Patch" well known&#13;
to be a piece of possibilities, was regarded&#13;
as bringing out with excellent effect the full&#13;
strength of the character.&#13;
Beautiful weather for December.&#13;
In the southwest corner of this issue&#13;
you will find the adv. of W. W. Bar-.&#13;
nar&amp;—=— — = - ^ = = =- ='—&#13;
W. H Cad wall&#13;
M. E. Church Notes.&#13;
Let us remember that Jesus sfcj((L'&#13;
'No man canserve twomasters." I t V&#13;
1 and r*mi1y rPfnrn»di ^ would be of any use in saving ourin&#13;
to their home Stillwater, Minn.'seTveTana omere we _musfc.De "clear&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Miss Lillian Boyle is under the care&#13;
of the doctor at the home of Norman&#13;
Reason and wife.&#13;
Mr. E. J. Bowers and wife of&#13;
Detroit spent Thanksgiving with bis&#13;
parents at this place.&#13;
Miss Ella Winnegar of Howell was&#13;
the guest of her sister, Mrs&#13;
Green, the past week.&#13;
G. A. Sigler was in town the last ot&#13;
last week shaking bands with old&#13;
friends and transacting business.&#13;
cut in our relationship to iesus, onr&#13;
Master and Lord. Who is on the- is on&#13;
Lord's side? l#et sucTl ,.boldly come N&#13;
out trom the world and tbejoractice ojf.,&#13;
encouragement of "doubttdl^hings"".;&#13;
and proclaim themselves b^^pree an4 '&#13;
life as followers of Christ and keepers *&#13;
oc His holy commandments. If we&#13;
have to "break every tender tie" wV&#13;
Geo.' mast be true to Christ.,&#13;
. Shall the christian indulge in or&#13;
encourage others in the use of-.those&#13;
games or amusements known to haye&#13;
a destroying tendancy? It would&#13;
* v • 1 1 '&#13;
Congregational Church.&#13;
We are trying to make this: church&#13;
a home for weary souls, a church of&#13;
the living truth of today, a church of&#13;
song, prayer and religious joy and&#13;
hope, i or those ot little or" much&#13;
taith and of different beliefs We&#13;
are trying to Luild upA church of hur&#13;
manity so large and loving that there&#13;
will be room tor all to live, grow and&#13;
try to do good. We invite all seekers&#13;
after truth and God into our fellowship.&#13;
Young Mens Club&#13;
Interesting and good times at the&#13;
Gym. every night. Room comfortable&#13;
and attractive these cold evenings. A&#13;
good deal better than loafing on the&#13;
street or making yourself a nuisance&#13;
where you are not wanted. Nonmembers&#13;
cannot be granted Gym.&#13;
privileges hereafter. The benefits are&#13;
strictly for the membership and such&#13;
friends as may be occasionally invited&#13;
to join the J. TJ. F, , Pres.&#13;
Clayton ?lao?way visited friends in&#13;
Perry the past week.&#13;
Dr. C. L. Sigler and wife are in Detroit&#13;
this week visiting friends.&#13;
Mrs. Caroline Van Winkle ia very&#13;
sick at the home ot her son, C. V. Van-&#13;
Winkle.&#13;
The roads are in good shape foi- a&#13;
little more * now and we would have&#13;
excellent sleighing/&#13;
Miss Ethel Sprout of Ypsilanti spent&#13;
the past week with ber cousin, Florence&#13;
Sprout ot Anderson.&#13;
Jim Smith killed lour mink Monday&#13;
while out hunting. It was quite a&#13;
caUh as their hides are quoted from&#13;
four to six dollars.&#13;
The Pinckney A, O. G. will meet at&#13;
the home of Ezra Brigham Friday&#13;
evening Deo. 8. Every one-come aa&#13;
it is the election ot* officers. Oysters&#13;
will be served.&#13;
seem that any one who claimed to love&#13;
W. E. Murphy, township treasurer, ] , i o d | bis neighbor and even his enemies&#13;
has received the tax roll and is ready | w o u l d n o t ffiye h U s u p p o r t t e a n y .&#13;
to give you a receipt for your taxes. t h i n ? n o ^ a t t e r h o w harmless''in his&#13;
Lost:—In Pinckney, or vicinity, onjown case which is known to -rutu&#13;
Friday night, Dec. 1, a black opera! others. Let our Love not only be in 4&#13;
shawl. Finder p'ease leave at this! word, but in deed and truth, "Abatk,&#13;
office. ^ nence for the sake of others" should be&#13;
! _iuu_ii -, 4&#13;
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Will WrigLt the Christian waTcFwoTd" atdtfg~~fBsr&#13;
ol Owosso, on Wednesday, Nov. 29, a&#13;
son. They were formerly residents of&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
Mrs. R. A. Emerick's brother, wife&#13;
and daughter Ida made a brief visit at&#13;
the parsonage Friday and Friday&#13;
night of last week.&#13;
Mouday evening about fifteen of&#13;
the young people went to the home of&#13;
A. B. Green and gave Miss Ethel G r l -&#13;
ham a farewell snrpriss. A very&#13;
pleasant evening was spent.&#13;
The new receipt cards for the Loyal&#13;
Guards have arrived and the paymaster&#13;
is anxious to fill in the first assessment.&#13;
. Let all members be prompt&#13;
this month so the Supreme Djyision&#13;
can balance&#13;
line.&#13;
The Thanksgiving dinner at Lakia^&#13;
was a success.' The pastor and his&#13;
wife enjoyed this social gathering and&#13;
met with a number of new people.&#13;
Praper meeting on Thanksgiving&#13;
night was well attended and encouraging.&#13;
Let us continue in prayer and&#13;
supplication. "In due season"ye shall&#13;
reap if ye faint not.',&#13;
We are sorry.to lose, for a cime, our&#13;
President of the League, Glen Gardner,&#13;
who goes east to school; also oo**».&#13;
organist, Ethel Graham, who is to*&#13;
visit friends for the winter. Our best&#13;
wishes and prayers follow .them.&#13;
Mrs. Estella Graham and daughter&#13;
their books before the i Ethel weqt the first of the week to&#13;
first of the year. Pinckney Division&#13;
has never failed to baye the report&#13;
ready by Dec. 25 and let us not fail&#13;
Cement City, where they will spend&#13;
the winter with Mrs. Graham's daugtw&#13;
ter. Mrs. Fred Milne. They will be&#13;
this year. Paymaster, | missed from our y.llage ve«*y louch.&#13;
Haveyou seen&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co's Holiday Display of&#13;
Silverware, Toys, Specialties?&#13;
The most complete line of Xmas goods ever shown in Pinckney&#13;
At E educed Prices.&#13;
Pneumatic Toys&#13;
Steam Toys&#13;
Magic Lanterns&#13;
Musical Toys&#13;
Wood Toys&#13;
(A&#13;
O&#13;
X&#13;
6.&#13;
3 O&#13;
"5.&#13;
10-&#13;
Automobiles&#13;
Mechahical Toys&#13;
Trains with Tracks&#13;
Steamers&#13;
Targets&#13;
Shot Guns, ' Rifle*, Ah^Gtinb; »&#13;
See the Auto "Loop the Loop0 at&#13;
&gt; * ' Teeple Hardware Co.&#13;
v -&#13;
I*'&#13;
t&#13;
^&#13;
'it'&#13;
* t «. k &gt;&#13;
• f w » « v ,&lt;r^ :';&#13;
t ; ,4-' &gt;v *. , ^ 3 0 ; ^ ' *&#13;
• , * . ' * ; • • • '&#13;
• » • • " ' • •&#13;
IF&#13;
I&#13;
EHj£i»l&#13;
" ^&#13;
&gt;&#13;
y-'V.&#13;
" \&#13;
— « r r ~ — - — -•&#13;
THE GREAT STORM MADE&#13;
THE DISASTERS GREATER&#13;
THAN EVER.&#13;
SEVENTY. «Hll?t ^WRtCKEO AND&#13;
ONC +4UNDRED M*Q -JMX-&#13;
„ r , TV-BtCHT WVES U)pT.&#13;
•.tiF 4 A n App»nin« Record.&#13;
Seven vessels totally destroyed, 20&#13;
more ashore or damaged and 11 Uve3&#13;
known to have been lost is the record&#13;
to date of lake disasters due to&#13;
the big storm. The list of lives lost&#13;
will undoubtedly be swelled, as little&#13;
hope Is entertained for Hie big steel&#13;
trust barge Madeira, with her crew of&#13;
nine men. It is about conceded that&#13;
the boat foundered off Two; Harbors.&#13;
Nothing more has been heard of the&#13;
Cn men: comprising the crew of the&#13;
au)w George Herbert, which sank in&#13;
Lake Superior. If the crews of these&#13;
two boats perished, the number of&#13;
dead would be 25. There is still no&#13;
news of the big steel steamer Angeline,&#13;
which has not been heard from&#13;
since she left Ashland before the&#13;
storm- There is still a strong possibility&#13;
that she is sheltered somewhere,&#13;
but fear that she is lost is&#13;
growing. Many more vessels are still&#13;
overdue, but some of them are very&#13;
likely among a fleet sheltered at&#13;
Whiteftsh Point. The financial loss la&#13;
reaching enormous proportions, the&#13;
steel trust alone losing nearly $1,-&#13;
600,000 on Its s i s wrecked boats.&#13;
The story of suffering and death&#13;
may never be fully told. The fury of&#13;
the storm, the cold weather, and all is&#13;
enough to show that the hardy men&#13;
COST IS HEAVY.&#13;
^ 1 ¾ ^ ¾ ^ ^ ^ ¾ ¾ ^ ^ tion of the state. A scai&#13;
Up to date it has coat the state&#13;
$1*6,009.87 In haviag the suits against&#13;
J the xailroads looltedafterjjh* money&#13;
rf having been paid onTtoTiwyers, expert&#13;
aooountants and engineers, who&#13;
have been preparing data and stalls-&#13;
| tics for more than two years,&#13;
t There are three suits, the tax case,&#13;
which was heard in the United States&#13;
court at Grand Rapids an A which has&#13;
been carried to the United States supreme&#13;
court; the Michigan Central&#13;
charter repeal case and the delinquent&#13;
tax suit-&#13;
There are so many legal processes&#13;
involved and so raaay intervening motions&#13;
are being carries (rem one court&#13;
to another that it; may be , years before&#13;
these' cases are heard upon their&#13;
merits.&#13;
Gov. Warrer's attention has been&#13;
called to the matter and he is being&#13;
urged to secure, if it is possible, a&#13;
speedy settlement of these matters.&#13;
All of the attorneys engaged in&#13;
thqse cases for the state are being&#13;
paid at the ra*.e of $50 a day and their&#13;
traveling expenses. Thus far the allowances&#13;
for legal fees have been as&#13;
follows: Otto Kirchner, Detroit, $13,&#13;
793.09; T h o s . E . Barkworth, Jackson,&#13;
$9,771.59; Charles Townsend, Jackson,&#13;
$6,335.78; L. E, Knappen, Grand Ranids.&#13;
$7,581.12; Horace M. Orei\ $2,-&#13;
425.&#13;
In the expert line Henry C. Adams&#13;
has drawn $12,397.85; Prof. Cooiey,&#13;
Ann Arbor, $8,943.35, James Walker,&#13;
Detroit, $2,037.14; Henry Humphrey,&#13;
Lansing, $2,907.32.&#13;
These are all individual Items and&#13;
in addition forces of clerks under M.&#13;
W. Thompson anil T* E. Borden have&#13;
been going over tihe-jjbooks of the railroad&#13;
companies ' l!hese 'payrolls&#13;
amounting to nearly $51,000.&#13;
Work f o r 'All.&#13;
State Labor—Gommissioner MeLeod}&#13;
has compiled statistics showing that&#13;
the 85 chartered cities and 325 incorporated&#13;
villages of Michigan have a&#13;
combined population of 1,329,309, or&#13;
ml a&#13;
with the raging elements—It Is more&#13;
than probable that the eleven lives&#13;
re-ported l03t are not more than half&#13;
flw rnjTTih^r who went to death in a&#13;
brave battle against the storm.&#13;
Pour more wrecks, a stranding and&#13;
more missing vessels, are the latest&#13;
returns from the big storm which&#13;
swept Lakes Superior and Huron the&#13;
forepart of last week. The storm has&#13;
created general havoc in the steel trust&#13;
fleet, having wrecked or disabled ten&#13;
trust boats. The wrecking of the steel&#13;
trust steamer Coralin and barge Maia,&#13;
and to cap the climax, the stranding&#13;
ofr the fleet's crack freighter, the Willlam&#13;
E. Corey, are reported.&#13;
One hundred and sixty-eight lives&#13;
have been sacrificed, over 70 ships&#13;
wrecked and a loss of nearly $7,000,-&#13;
000 has been sustained in three big&#13;
storms on the great lakes this season.&#13;
That this is the most disastrous season&#13;
in the history of shipping on the&#13;
lakes is beyond doubt. Vessels of all&#13;
types, from the mighty modern steel&#13;
freighters to the ancient wooden&#13;
schooners and old-time steamers, have&#13;
been swept from the lakes by the&#13;
terrific gales.&#13;
A list of the wrecks in which lives&#13;
were lost is as follows:&#13;
Ira uwen 18&#13;
M I L K CAJJST O N BABY.&#13;
Lost All H i t Hair—Scratched Till&#13;
Blood Ran —Grateful Mother&#13;
T i l l * of H i t Cure by Cuti&lt;&#13;
curt for 76c.&#13;
"When our baby, boy was three&#13;
months old he had the milk cruat vary&#13;
badly on hit head, to that all- the hair&#13;
came out, and It itched to bad Ae&#13;
would scratch until the blood ran. 1&#13;
got a cake of Cuttcura Soap and a boa&#13;
of Cutlcura Ointment. I applied th&lt;&#13;
Cuttcura and put a thin cap on hit&#13;
head, and before L had used half ol&#13;
the box it was entirely cured, hit hair,&#13;
commenced to grow out nicely again,&#13;
and he hat had no return of the trouble.&#13;
(Signed) Mrs. H. P. Holmes,&#13;
Ashland, Or."&#13;
Theological School for China.&#13;
The Northern and Southern Presbyterian&#13;
churches in the United States&#13;
are uniting to establish a theological&#13;
school for the training of native Chinese&#13;
ministers in Nanking, China.&#13;
Christian. 8cience.&#13;
scarcity of labor&#13;
was repoTTSTTri 276 Tocaltnes.&#13;
The whole number of men employed&#13;
at public work in the cities and villages&#13;
was 8,368. The daily wage&#13;
ranged from $1.50 to $2, the average&#13;
being $1.65. The highest wage for&#13;
man and team was $4.65 per day, this&#13;
being paid in Houghton county, while&#13;
the lowest)was $3, the average for the&#13;
state being $3.50.&#13;
In 264 localities the industrial outlook&#13;
was reported good, in 138 fair,&#13;
and in but seven poor. The outlook&#13;
was reported better than 1904 in 264&#13;
localities, while 136 reported no&#13;
change, and 27 said it was poorer than&#13;
last year.&#13;
Frank Nye 1&#13;
Mataafa . . . . . , 9&#13;
Scow- Herbert 3&#13;
Madeira 1&#13;
George Penman . 1&#13;
I^afayette 1&#13;
Edenborn &lt; 1&#13;
Tasmania 8&#13;
Iosco . ^ „ ^ , ,,-...49-&#13;
Kaliyuga 17&#13;
Sevona 7&#13;
J. S.'Fsy 1&#13;
Olive Jeanette " 7&#13;
Minsedcsa 9&#13;
Schooner Mary 6&#13;
Sheldon -. 2&#13;
Linden 2&#13;
Tuthill 1&#13;
Hudson '.... 1&#13;
Pretoria ." 5&#13;
W. Jones *.. .. 2&#13;
Ketchum 2&#13;
ColHngwood&#13;
Washed overboard&#13;
Killed by accident 15&#13;
Total 168&#13;
, In 1904 only 49 lives were lost and&#13;
'Only two of these in actual shipwreck.&#13;
Insurance loss amounted to only $1,-&#13;
.559,750. *&#13;
MICHIGAN ITEMS.&#13;
In the United States there are&#13;
about 400 Christian Science OhureheSr&#13;
with about 100,000 adherents. According&#13;
to Mrs. Eddy, its founder, the&#13;
church is making tremendous strides&#13;
in popularity, in which respect it resembles&#13;
Pillsbury's Vitos, the popular&#13;
cereal food.&#13;
High Prices for Onions.&#13;
Onions are so scarce in New Zealand&#13;
that recently they were selling&#13;
at $85 to $95 a ton at Wellington.&#13;
To Prevent Chapped Hands.&#13;
Many women who do their own work are&#13;
much annoyed in winter with chapped&#13;
hands. This" may be avoided by using Ivory&#13;
Soap~fOT~dl3h wasntng^md toilet purposesr-&#13;
Dry the hands thoroughly oach time after&#13;
they have been in water, and rub with a&#13;
iittie oatmeal-water or some good lotion.&#13;
ELEANOR R. PARKER.&#13;
The second set of twins has just&#13;
been born to Mr. and Mrs. Anson&#13;
Clark, of St. Johns. The other pair are&#13;
16 years old.&#13;
Marooned for three days on Wood&#13;
island, Lake Superior, with l&gt;cech nuts&#13;
as their sole article of diet, was the&#13;
experience of four Munising men am!&#13;
a boy.&#13;
Wholesalers who bought turkeys&#13;
weeks ago on contract for delivery at&#13;
iy to 2'Z cents dropped money on the&#13;
slump in the Thanksgiving market. Retailers&#13;
sold turkeys for 20 cents.&#13;
Building operations in Detroit for 11&#13;
months this year show an increase in&#13;
valuation of new buildings over the&#13;
same months of 1904 of $3,041,300. The&#13;
November increase was $217,600.&#13;
Capt. John Stewart and the crew of&#13;
Contrary^ HumanTNature.&#13;
An amusing—bit of. human nature {&#13;
comes to light in Paris. The management&#13;
of the underground railway&#13;
until recently provided at every station&#13;
a small box in an out-of-the-way&#13;
corner for passengers to deposit their&#13;
tickets in. As a natural result of this&#13;
system, only one ticket in ten was deposited&#13;
in the box; the rest fluttered&#13;
about at will all over the station. The&#13;
authoritlts noted this, and changed&#13;
the small Inaccessible box for a large&#13;
one in a prominent position. The surprising&#13;
sequel was that instead of one&#13;
in ten, only one in a hundred tickets&#13;
found its way into the new box. The&#13;
easier it was to deposit the tickets the&#13;
more careless were the passengers in&#13;
disposing of them.&#13;
Culprit VWs Superstitious.&#13;
A man, who was convicted in one ol&#13;
the New Jersey courts of highway robbery,&#13;
was sentenced to thirteen years'&#13;
penal servitude. "May it please the&#13;
court," said he, "I would call your attention&#13;
to the fact that thirteen years&#13;
gives me a feeling of vague uneasiness&#13;
akin to terror. Could you make the&#13;
W A N T * * TO ftfil H i t WEALTH&#13;
In the Process, Depoeftor Made Trou&#13;
' ble far the taahltr.&#13;
An oloYnegro w e n t 4 o Ah*.bank, 1«&#13;
which ha,, kept his hmrd»ears«d savings&#13;
and asked the paying teller to&#13;
give him all tile n o n e y he had deposited.&#13;
He offered ao explanation tit&#13;
his sudden desire to withdraw htf&#13;
funds, and after fain argument with&#13;
him the teller counted out the bills&#13;
and delivered them to the old man.&#13;
He eyed the paper money a moment&#13;
and said: &gt;•&gt;&#13;
'Kia J gll daUa^Jlyer. b o s e r&#13;
The teller aaswe* Aim he could,&#13;
and forthwith made the v exchange.&#13;
The oW negro retired to a neighboring&#13;
desk, wmfinejl^rouched over it a&#13;
long Hme, and then. • to'the teller's&#13;
great &gt; sa*pr4aev»»eUcne(K&gt;to the window&#13;
and gleefully thrua| his money&#13;
back through the pigeon-hole. Be&gt;&#13;
fore he could "speak, .the old man said,&#13;
grinning Widely?&#13;
"Thanks/boas; you kin take it&#13;
back. I Jes' wanted t' see ef it wus&#13;
all there.,,~Harper's Weekly,&#13;
Submarine Cables.&#13;
IN CONSTANT AOONY.&#13;
There are 376 submarine cables in&#13;
the world, the length of which&#13;
amount to 178,919 miles. Most of&#13;
these belong to private parties, only&#13;
25,000 miles being owned by the various&#13;
governments. All, however, bring&#13;
dally orders from every land on the&#13;
globe, for Pillsbury's Vitos, the allday&#13;
food.&#13;
Memory of a Kiss.&#13;
Rev. Sidney Smith once said:&#13;
"There is much virtue In a kiss when&#13;
well delivered. We have the memory&#13;
of one we received in our youth, which&#13;
lasted as forty years, ~and we- beltevr&#13;
it will be one of the last things we&#13;
stall think of when we die.&#13;
Cable Tolls to Japan.&#13;
It costs-*• L7-6a-word - t e - s e a d a m e s -&#13;
sage to Japan; and, with war raging&#13;
in the far East, the cable tolls for war&#13;
news are something tremendous. But&#13;
as the people will have the war news&#13;
in connection with their morning dish&#13;
of Pillsbury's Vitos, the cables are&#13;
kept busy day and night.&#13;
Sounds Through a Microphone.&#13;
A scientist who has listened to the&#13;
voice of a housefly through the microphone&#13;
says that it sounds much like&#13;
the neighing of a horse. We would&#13;
not care to listen to baby through&#13;
the microphone* but he would probably&#13;
Bound like the trumpetings of a&#13;
distressed elephant with hah* a ton&#13;
of stomach ache aboard.—Minneapolis&#13;
Journal.&#13;
4&#13;
2b&#13;
\ Great Savings.&#13;
Michigan is piling'up savings at the&#13;
rate of almost a million and a half a&#13;
month. The total savings of the state&#13;
*avG increased $19,758,708.65 in the&#13;
last 14 months. This information is&#13;
furnished in a consolidated statement&#13;
of state banks and trust companies&#13;
prepared by the state banking depart-&#13;
. meni, based on the close of business&#13;
November 9, made public today.&#13;
It shows.that thp commercial certificates&#13;
of deposit, subject to check,&#13;
amount to $45,041,2305; commercial&#13;
certificates of deposit, $18,364,826.02;&#13;
savings deposits, $89,902,383.40; savings&#13;
certificates. $21,331,745.46.&#13;
Since September 6, 1904, loans, discounts,&#13;
bonds, mortgages, etc., have&#13;
increased |17,1M,115.16, and other increases&#13;
as follows: Commercial deposits,&#13;
$8,307,513 75; savings deposits,&#13;
J 411,451,195.90. All deposits show an increase&#13;
of $6,597,634.62 since August&#13;
25, 1»05.&#13;
Benjamin F. Chadsey, alias Paul&#13;
Hamilton, alleged Brooklyn embezzler,&#13;
was brought to Niles from S t J o s e p h&#13;
Tuesday and taken before a local Jott&#13;
ice who granted a continuance until&#13;
December 5, fixing his bonds at $5,000,&#13;
•which Chadsey could not furnish.&#13;
19 men have abandoned to the Marine&#13;
Insurance Co. the steamer A.rgo, which&#13;
went hard aground near Holland harbor&#13;
entrance. The cargo-is being lightered.&#13;
The lifeless body of Hamilton&#13;
France, 80 years old, of Saginaw, was&#13;
found hanging to a rafter in his barn.&#13;
The 'rope was too long and the man&#13;
had to bend his knees to enuse^strangulation.&#13;
Fred Cook, a convict at the Ionia&#13;
reformatory, has been convicted in circuit&#13;
court of assault with lutent to&#13;
murder Convict Fenton because of&#13;
jealousy. The defense was that Cook&#13;
had insane delusions.&#13;
Mrs. Belle Fellows, of Cadillac, refused&#13;
to plead to the charge of murdering&#13;
her husband and a plea of not guilty&#13;
was entered for her, and her case&#13;
was put over io the February term.&#13;
She is out on $1,000 bail.&#13;
The question of whether a board insurance&#13;
company can force its' agents&#13;
to have nothing to do with non-board&#13;
companies without violating the anticompact&#13;
law of this state is up to, Insurance&#13;
Commissioner Barry for his&#13;
decision.&#13;
Burglars entered the home of Mrs.&#13;
Frank Cats in Ionia, and after beatinp&#13;
her into insensibility, ransacked the&#13;
house, securing $12 in cash and some&#13;
jewelry. A brother of the Injured&#13;
woman fired three shots at the fleeing&#13;
men without avail. .&#13;
An explosion of lacquer in the Timberlake&#13;
Plating works threw the burn&#13;
ing fluid over Fred Draine and Frank&#13;
Thayer, platers. Both men leaped into&#13;
a tank of water and thus saved theli&#13;
lives. Though the room was practically&#13;
full of flames, the building suffered little&#13;
damage.&#13;
Carl Speed, aged, 24, tried to excavate&#13;
around a "large stump near hi*&#13;
home in Dalton. township, while the&#13;
stump was partially out of the grounc&#13;
and held by two other workmen with i&#13;
rope. The rope, broke, dropping the&#13;
400-pipuftd stumo^uaceeAim. His Mel:&#13;
was broken and he was doubled up.ilk/...&#13;
a JacMfcnife. He w a i d e a d when takot&#13;
out b ^ ^ C O f ^ ^ ,&#13;
Law Takes Hold of Schoolboy.&#13;
The Supremo Court of the State&#13;
At Washington has decided that the&#13;
law against disturbing a public school&#13;
applies to schoolboys as well as to&#13;
others. So John Packenham, the fourteen-&#13;
year-old boy, who disturbed his&#13;
classat Chehalis,lias"TJeeh sent" to the&#13;
reform school.&#13;
T H E "COFFEE HEART."&#13;
VA..&#13;
I t l's as Dangerous as the Tobacco or&#13;
Whisky Heart.&#13;
"Coffee heart" is common to many&#13;
coffee users and is liable to send the&#13;
owner to his or her long home if the&#13;
drug is persisted in. You can run 30&#13;
or 40 yards and find out if your heart&#13;
is troubled. A lady who was once a&#13;
victim of the "coffee heart" writes&#13;
from Oregon:&#13;
"I have been a habitual user of coffee&#13;
all my life and have suffered very&#13;
much in recent years from ailments&#13;
which I became satisfied were directly&#13;
due to the poison in the beverage, such&#13;
as torpid liver and indigestion, which&#13;
in turn made my complexion blotchy&#13;
and muddy.&#13;
"Then my heart became affected. It&#13;
would beat most rapidly just after I&#13;
drank my coffee, and go below normal&#13;
as the coffee effect wore off. Sometimes&#13;
ray pulse would gc as high as&#13;
137 beats to the minute. My family&#13;
were greatly alarmed at my condition&#13;
and at last mother persuaded me to&#13;
begin the use of Postum Food Coffee.&#13;
"I gave up the old coffee entirely&#13;
and absolutely, and made Postum my&#13;
sole table beverage. This was six&#13;
months ago, and all my ills, the indigestion,&#13;
Inactive liver and rickety&#13;
heart action, have passed away, and&#13;
my complexion has become clear and&#13;
natural. The improvement set in&#13;
very soon after I made the change,&#13;
just as soon as the coffee poison had&#13;
time to-work out of my system.&#13;
"My husband has also been greatly&#13;
benefited by the use of Postum, and&#13;
we And that a simple breakfast with&#13;
Postum Is as satisfying and more&#13;
strengthening than the old heavier&#13;
meal we used to have with the other&#13;
kind of coffee." Name given by Postum&#13;
Co., Battle Creek, Mich.&#13;
mtife There's a reason. Read the little&#13;
booh, "The Road to WtUTille,'' In pkgt.&#13;
Chinese View of Law.'&#13;
A . San Francisco Chinaman, with&#13;
the sententiousness of his kind, after&#13;
some experience of American law,&#13;
once remarked: "Chinese law, firstclass;&#13;
man killee man, China, head&#13;
off; no ketchee him, somebody head&#13;
off, mebbce cousin head off. English&#13;
law, seconTFcTffsa!" him ketchee "ffiSW,&#13;
mebbee allee same head off. Mellcan&#13;
law, no good; too muchee elupleme&#13;
court."&#13;
D e t f n e s s C a n n o t Be Cured&#13;
iij- local applications, ua they cannot reach the diseased&#13;
portion of (he oar. There t» only one W»T to&#13;
cure deafness, and that Is by constitutional remedfr*.&#13;
Deafneas 1« can Fed !&gt;y an &gt;nAAtned condition of the&#13;
nrocoTis"ltntTTj? vtf the Eustachian 1'nbe. When thl»&#13;
tube 1a Inflamed you nave arunibllng sound or lm*&#13;
perfect bearing, and when it la entirely closed, Deafoesi&#13;
la the result, and uiilcxa the Inflammation can be&#13;
taken out and this tube restored to it* normal condition,&#13;
hearing will be deatroyed forever; ntne caaea&#13;
out of ten are caa»ed by ( atarrh, which li nothiutf&#13;
but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces.&#13;
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of&#13;
Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured&#13;
by Hall'* Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free.&#13;
F. J. CHENKY A CO., Toledo, O.&#13;
Sold by Druggists. 1,V.&#13;
T#4cc HaU'tJ'amtly Mils for constipation.&#13;
A man has to have a big income to&#13;
rtave any of it left to spend on himself&#13;
after he gets married.&#13;
A T I parmanently cured. KontsornerTOH'neataftM&#13;
r l 1 9 nrstdajr'auaaof Dr.KUne'aUr«atN«rveRestorer.&#13;
Mnd for F B K I SJS.OO trial bottle and treatise.&#13;
DR. H. U. KLINE.IM., »1 ArcbStrMt, PhiUdalpfaU, Pa.&#13;
Don't go tip a back alley to hunt for&#13;
trouble. You will find all you want in&#13;
the middle of the road.&#13;
Piso's Cure Is the bent medicine w« ever used&#13;
for all affections of the throat and lungs,—WM.&#13;
O. ENDSLBT, Vanburen, Ind.. Feb. 10.1800.&#13;
When a young plxl-bcgins to "do tip"&#13;
her hair 11 i^sr^ign she 1« dreUmlngr&#13;
of dolriif^TrTjrsotnethlng' flse.&#13;
USE THE FAMOUS&#13;
Red Cross Ball Blue. Large 2-oz. pockaire 5&#13;
cents. Tbe Runs Company, South Bend, Ind.&#13;
A girl think* a man is madly in love&#13;
with her if he says her baby sister has&#13;
a »weet disposition.&#13;
MM. Wlnalow'ft Soothing Syrtra.&#13;
For children teething, aoftens in* gnat, reaaoM lB»&#13;
flaArattto&amp;.aUayspaln.careawtDdcollo. IBcabotU*.&#13;
Don't ^rgurt with a^fool. It via like&#13;
trying to guide a blincTman with a lantern.&#13;
DOITT FORGET&#13;
A large 2-07.. package Red Cross Ball Blue, only&#13;
S cents. The RUBS Company, South Bend, Ind.&#13;
A charming widow is a well-educated&#13;
girl who has taken a post-graduate&#13;
course.&#13;
Important t o M|ofh«ft.&#13;
Hhrtw'1"* carefully svery bottle of OA8TORIA&#13;
a asfeasd sure ssstody for fofasst sod taUtrw,&#13;
sadiMtbattt ' *-••'-"'&#13;
the&#13;
A |rVfo^*0wnraR;'&#13;
" Throuflh Kjdnty Trouble*.&#13;
Witl*. jAsooXii*OTchi»t, of Park*&#13;
( W t : "Dritlng about&#13;
!'», bad 1 weaUitr&#13;
brpfafht kltoey trou&gt;&#13;
blea on fee, and I&#13;
amftred tp year*&#13;
wHh sharp, cramping&#13;
pains la the back&#13;
and urjaary disorders.&#13;
I often had to&#13;
get up a'doigen timed'&#13;
at night to urinate.&#13;
Retention set In, and&#13;
I was obliged to uae&#13;
the catheter. I took to my bed, and&#13;
the doctors falling to help, began using&#13;
Doan's Kidney Pills. The urine soon&#13;
came freely again, and the pain gradually&#13;
disappeared. I have been cured&#13;
eight years, and though over 70, am a*&#13;
active as a boy." • •&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.&#13;
Fo8ter.MiIburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
Rest for Tired Brain.&#13;
Many are the suggestions offered ai&#13;
to resting, for, strange as it may&#13;
seem, tew people understand t h e a r t&#13;
of resting properly. Thorough rest&#13;
does not necessarily mean lying down&#13;
or sitting; it means to relax the entire&#13;
system, the mind and body. For&#13;
a tired brain physical exercise Is the&#13;
best remedy rather than a resort to&#13;
drugs. If a brisk walk in the fresh&#13;
air can be taken, so much the better.&#13;
A very good remedy for a weary&#13;
brain is to rise slowly on the toes&#13;
(lifting the heels from the floor) until&#13;
the muscles at the calf of the leg&#13;
ache, and then to kick vigorously a&#13;
few times. Repeat this simple exercise&#13;
several times and excellent res&#13;
u l t s w i l l follow.&#13;
T&gt;&#13;
GOOD BLOOD FOR BAD&#13;
Rheumatism oncr-Othor Blood Disease*&#13;
are Curod by Dr. Williams'&#13;
~ Pmir*itlav -&#13;
"In the lead mines I was at work on my&#13;
kuees with my elbows pressed against&#13;
rock walls, in dampness and extremes of&#13;
cold," said Mr. J. G. Meukel, of 2975&#13;
Jackson aveuue, Dubuque, Iowa, in describiug&#13;
his experience to a&gt; reporter,&#13;
"and it is not surpriarug that I contracted&#13;
rheumatism. For three years I&#13;
had attacks affecting the joints of my&#13;
ankles, knees and elbows. My aukles&#13;
and knees became so swollen I conld&#13;
scarcely walk ou nueveu ground and a&#13;
little pressure from a stone under ray&#13;
feet would cause ine so much pain that I&#13;
would nearly siuk down. I was often&#13;
obliged to lie in bed for several days at a&#13;
time. My friends who were similarly&#13;
troubled were getting no relief from&#13;
doctors and I did not feel encouraged j o&#13;
throw niouyf away for nothing. B y&#13;
chauce I read the story of Bebert Yates,&#13;
of the Klauer Manufacturing Go., of&#13;
Dubuque, who had a very bad case of&#13;
rheumatism. I decided to try Dr. Williams1&#13;
Pink Pills for Pale People, the&#13;
remedy he had used. In three or four&#13;
weeks after beginning to use the pills, I&#13;
was much better and in three moutbo I&#13;
was well. The swelling of the joiasa&#13;
and the tenderness disappeared, I 00*14.&#13;
vrork steadily aud for eigut years I hava&#13;
h M i i o H t u r n Of tile tronb1e7~My whole&#13;
family believe in Dr. W^illiftms' Piuk&#13;
Pills. Both my SOUB nse them. We&#13;
consider them a household remedy that&#13;
we are sure about."&#13;
What Dr.Williams' Pink Pills did for&#13;
Mr. Meukel they are doing for hundreds&#13;
of others. Every dose scuds galloping&#13;
through the veins, pure, strong, rich, red&#13;
blood that strikes straight at the caus© of&#13;
all ill health. The new blood restores&#13;
regularity, and braces nil the organs for&#13;
their special tasks. Get the genuine Dr.&#13;
Williams' Pink Pills at your druggists'&#13;
or direct from the Dr. Williams Medicine&#13;
Co., Schenectady, N.Y.&#13;
, 11&#13;
r&#13;
^r '""muimmi" lf you think you have heart Off&#13;
ease von are only one of aooaatlesa&#13;
-number that are deceived by indigestion&#13;
into believing the heart is&#13;
affected. Lane's Family&#13;
Medicine&#13;
the tonic-laxative, will get your 1 stomach back into good condition,&#13;
| and then the chances are ten to one&#13;
. that you will have no more symp- 1 toms of heart disease.&#13;
&gt; sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c&#13;
Have You a&#13;
Father or Mother^ SSUEI"'''^&#13;
Whose advanced years have caused a general&#13;
weakened condition of their bodily functions,&#13;
oauslnk Indigestion, constipation, slugglah or&#13;
torpid liver or impoverished blood? There is no&#13;
remedy in the wide world that wlU tone up the&#13;
wornout aystem like Marvin's Caseara Chocolate&#13;
Tablet*. By their tonio effect upon the&#13;
tiny cells that constitute the musculsr coat o l .&#13;
the the bowels tbe loss of uae Is impaired, tht&gt;&#13;
normal secretions are stlmtfttM. f&amp;s cirpula* *&#13;
tion of good, healthy blood • to U* intestinal&#13;
walls Is re-established, and instead-of %slws&gt;&#13;
gish, unhealthy state of thelahole dJJfeatt** aa&gt;&#13;
paratus, the patient Is i ^ W t e ^ -h^M-tUa&gt;&#13;
tsJteowHaemjtay ntjuaeatlag fflcot into tne^&#13;
*&#13;
la Ust for Over SO Tears.&#13;
TasXlad Tea Bars Always Be*t*t&#13;
'e want evaar.&#13;
tablets at our exp*„&#13;
aoereas and we wl&#13;
sample.&#13;
Palme la atsttl boxes oalf&#13;
For sale at dragftata.&#13;
fiT-&#13;
• A ••&#13;
P»*&#13;
* &lt; ' * ' •&#13;
•wmwamgwraew^i1 w •iwmu ' I'P'W&#13;
'.:.:&lt; •'**•- #&lt;•"• ^ ^ ^ ^ ¾ ^ ^ . ^ • &gt; . . .I."l.&#13;
•i;&#13;
•»*a&#13;
WEBSTER&#13;
I&gt;4TERNATIQNAL&#13;
IICT101&#13;
C&#13;
**el&#13;
lve. MS&#13;
"^e* Osm^SJO}Omym)ej 9 •&#13;
wimY&#13;
a m j ^ t a t g a f l&#13;
new w«&#13;
L 4 M&#13;
sew , ft B«W&#13;
F r t w y S ^ i y S . g t . L o t t i * . Get the Best.&#13;
WrtsWrtColUfiaU Dictionary. Largest of aarabrUg-&#13;
! g a s a 5 t e a i t o P ^ &gt; d H ^ Uttpagsee.&#13;
WHto for" OiotlOHry Wrinkle* "-Frw.&#13;
LO.e C. MXWtX AM QO., Spring field, H u t .&#13;
MIXED FARMING&#13;
WHEAT&#13;
RAISING&#13;
RANCHING&#13;
three great pursuits&#13;
have again shown&#13;
wonderful results on&#13;
the&#13;
FREE H0ME8TEAD LAND8&#13;
OF WE8TERN CANADA.&#13;
Magnificent climate—farmers plowing in their&#13;
ahirt sleeves in the middle of November.&#13;
"A:i are hound to bo more than pleased with&#13;
tho final results of the past season's harvest. ••—&#13;
Extract.&#13;
Coal, wood, water, bay in abundance—schools,&#13;
churches, markets convenient.&#13;
This is the era of t! 00 wheat.&#13;
Apply for information to Superintendent' of&#13;
Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or to authorized&#13;
Canadian Government Agent—M. V. Mclnnes,&#13;
0 Avenue Theatre Block, Detroit. Michigan; or&#13;
C^A&gt; Laurler. SaulLSte. Marle^Michigan.&#13;
(Mention this paper.)&#13;
• \ .&#13;
rafferwitii p i l e s ! It so, tend to Jay&#13;
for* bo* of Or. Hart's Sure Care -,&#13;
no matter what you may have used&#13;
cur rfimnly m'lU tw^'w^you otJtssondBrfiUjngrltaoa&#13;
first appl cation. Trice, Si, by mall prepaid. National&#13;
Itemed? Co.. Ltd., Chamber of Commerce, Detroit. Mich.&#13;
iOYS OF MATERNITY&#13;
M i * F o t t r T M a Stow W o * « B&#13;
tMaaoMan&#13;
a&lt;&#13;
From inside&#13;
from' the State&#13;
assure.! voat&#13;
v %/•• • • ' • 1 fcf&#13;
. T h e d a r k e s &gt; day* of husband s o d&#13;
•life a r e w h o * t b e j 4 o m e t o look forward&#13;
to childless a n d lonely old u e ,&#13;
Many, a w i f e h u found keraelf Ipca*&#13;
paole of mdtfcernood o w i n g ? &amp; % displacement&#13;
of t h e w o m b or lack of&#13;
s t r e n g t h l a t h e g e n e r a t i v e organs.&#13;
Do You&#13;
to lareitigaie tbe merit* of Tte*&#13;
MICHIQAN BUSINESS COLLEGE,&#13;
Booktreeplsur. Bawerthamd. Penamauiahlp, A e&#13;
dSVOO d r a w l X K l T « r * A v * . . 9*tm»Vtt M U b .&#13;
9=&#13;
THE GRANGE IS ACTIVE.&#13;
"Tnfdrmaflon c o m i n g&#13;
Grange officials, it i s&#13;
the annual meeting of&#13;
E&#13;
Airs. Ahna Potts&#13;
Frequent backache and distressing&#13;
pains, accompanied b y offensive discharges&#13;
and g e n e r a l l y by irregular&#13;
and scanty menstruation indicate a displacement&#13;
or nerve degeneration of&#13;
t h e womb and su around in g organs.&#13;
The question t h a t troubles w o m e n&#13;
is h o w can a w o m a i \ w h o has some female&#13;
trouble bear h e a l t h y children?&#13;
Mrs. Anna Potts, of A10 Park Avenue,&#13;
H o t Springs, Ark., w r i t e s :&#13;
My Dear Mrs. Pinkham;—&#13;
" During the early part of nay married life I&#13;
was delicate in health; both my husband and&#13;
I were very anxious for a child to blew our&#13;
home, but I had two miscarriages, and could&#13;
oat carry a t i u l d to matority. A neighbor&#13;
who had been cured by Lydia B. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound advued me to try it. I&#13;
did so and soon felt that I was growin&#13;
stronger, my headaches and backaches 1&#13;
me, l o a d no more bearing-down pains^and&#13;
-fert^tilce a new woman. Within a year I&#13;
became the mother of a strong^ health;&#13;
child, the Joy of our home. Lydia&#13;
ham's ^ Vegetable Compound is certainly a&#13;
splendid remedy, and I wish every woman&#13;
who wants to become a mother would try it."&#13;
Actual sterility i n w o m a n is very&#13;
rare. If any w o m a n thinks she is sterile,&#13;
let her try Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound and write to Mrs.&#13;
P i n k h a m , L y n n , Mass. Her advice is&#13;
free t o e x p e c t a n t or would-be mothers.&#13;
the organization in Grand Rapids thia&#13;
month will be of keen Interest t o&#13;
Michigan politicians. "The executive&#13;
committee of the State Grange h a s&#13;
gone so far a s to retain a well-known&#13;
Grandi Rapid* attorney to study the&#13;
s e w state primary' law and to g i v e aa&#13;
opinion,..as t o i u constitutionality,"&#13;
aaid a n pftctal. "T*e farmers of the&#13;
state are. not interested in machine&#13;
methods or boasism. Taey. want reform&#13;
aod'are determined t h a t t W s »«•&#13;
fotm m o v e m e n t which has swept other&#13;
states shall be brought into Michigan.&#13;
* ..&#13;
Eighteen Killed.&#13;
An explosion Friday night in mine&#13;
No. 1 at Diamondville, Wyo., respited&#13;
m the death of IS men. The explosion&#13;
was caused by a "windy shot." The&#13;
mine officers -in Diamond ville say t h a t&#13;
all who were in the mine were killed.&#13;
Nearly all of t h e s e were English miners,&#13;
w h o came t o tbe Wyoming m i n e s&#13;
direct from England.&#13;
A "blown" shot was the cause of the&#13;
disaster. The small shift "'of 18 men&#13;
were working 4,000 feet down in the&#13;
mine, knocking down coal to be taken&#13;
out by the day shift. Presumably, the&#13;
men were close together in a bunch&#13;
when the "blown" shot of giant powder&#13;
exploded.&#13;
To&#13;
Los&#13;
k&#13;
Angeles&#13;
Over the Shortest and Quickest Line Via&#13;
Denver, Scenic Rockies, Salt Lake Route&#13;
Daily tourist sleeping car service from Chicago in&#13;
connection with the new Salt Lake Route (S. P.,&#13;
L. A. &amp; S. L. R. R.) Cars go thro*&#13;
Denver,&#13;
Colorado Springs&#13;
Ptikbtb&#13;
The Cuban Election.&#13;
President Pal ma has been re-elected&#13;
president of Cuba, together with every&#13;
other nominee on the moderate ticket&#13;
down to the provincial councilors.&#13;
The political agitation which began&#13;
six months ago with the national convention&#13;
of the libei'al party, and which&#13;
has dwindled since the withdrawal of&#13;
Gen. Jose Miguel Gomez, the presldentiai&#13;
candidate named by that convention,&#13;
ended Friday in an election&#13;
that was so quiet and uninteresting a s&#13;
to cause scarcely a ripple of excitement.&#13;
The withdrawal, Qt J he liberals from&#13;
all nominations as a protest against&#13;
d 4n4ustices-by the government&#13;
and the people in conducting the primaries,&#13;
left a clear field for the moderates.&#13;
The only liberals who will have seats&#13;
in the new congress, which opens in&#13;
April, will be hold-overs.&#13;
Field Is Dead.&#13;
Marshall Field, Jr., died at 5 o'clock&#13;
Monday night in Mercy hospital, Chi&#13;
cago. Mr. Field, who was the only&#13;
son of Marshall Field, the multi-millionaire&#13;
of that city, shot himself on&#13;
the afternoon of Wednesday, November&#13;
22. He wasn.sxamining a. new revolver,&#13;
which he ha^ purchased, when&#13;
it w a s discharged, the bullet striking&#13;
him in the right side, perforating the&#13;
liver and spleen and injuring the spin&#13;
al cord. -&#13;
CONDENSED NEWS.&#13;
•rrv&#13;
and&#13;
over the Denver &amp; Rio Qrande R. R., passing the&#13;
incomparably g;rand scenery of the Rocky Mounts&#13;
ains in daylight. They stop in Salt I^ake City for&#13;
several hours, affqrding opportunity for sightseeing,&#13;
and then leave over the Salt Lake Route, skirting&#13;
Great Salt Lake, passing thro' picturesque Utah&#13;
and the orange groves of Sputhern California.&#13;
No other tourist service to Los Angeles is more&#13;
convenient and no other affords such splendid opportunities&#13;
far-sightseeing.&#13;
.loton . - '; :;st,. '•*&#13;
.'VxUK. J.&#13;
„ JUla*tr*ted literature and detailed&#13;
information free for the askinc.&#13;
J* I t t A l f p I S , General Passengtr Agent,&#13;
237 "Q» Building,&#13;
C H I C A G O ^&#13;
President and Mrs. Roosevelt ate&#13;
their Thanksgiving dinner in their&#13;
country home, Plain Dealing, Va.&#13;
President Roosevelt has appointed&#13;
William C. Bristol United States attorney&#13;
for the district of Oregon, vice&#13;
_Francis C. Heney, resigned&#13;
Thomas Dancry and wife, of Buffalo,&#13;
were found dead together of carbolic&#13;
acid gas poisoning. A 15-year-old&#13;
daughter Was unconscious, but revived.&#13;
Charles Douglas, a farmer, uts wife&#13;
and two children were instantly killed&#13;
at Weston, W. Va., by an explosion of&#13;
a gas main running past their home.&#13;
Frank Stevens, an aeronaut," is in&#13;
j jail in Canton, 0., charged with the&#13;
murder of James J. Burk, of Wilkesbarre,&#13;
Pa. The crime occurred in a&#13;
shanty. Stevens claims self-defense.&#13;
Mary Jane Harris, aged 112, is dead&#13;
at N e w Rochelle, N. Y. She is believed&#13;
to have been the oldest woman in the&#13;
state. She leaves three sons all past&#13;
70.&#13;
Mormons are erecting a monument&#13;
to Joseph Smith at South Royalton.&#13;
Vt. In the copper box In the foot of&#13;
the structure have been placed photographs&#13;
of George Washington, Theodore&#13;
Roosevelt and Smith.&#13;
Rev. John Schaeffer, of Deerfield,&#13;
Portage county, O., has just celebrated&#13;
his 100th birthday, and is said to be&#13;
ihe oldest living preacher in the world.&#13;
He begun as a Lutheran, but is at present&#13;
a disciple of the Church of Christ.&#13;
John Mitchell, president of the United&#13;
Mine Workers of America, who id&#13;
ill at Spring Valley, is improving, but&#13;
it may be a week or more before he&#13;
can return to his work at Indianapolis.&#13;
He is suffering from nervousness&#13;
caused by overwork.&#13;
IJOTA Roberts has resigned from the&#13;
committee for imperial defense, in o r&#13;
der to promote universal military training&#13;
in England. He is "sore" because&#13;
Premier Balfour rejected his advice&#13;
regarding the strength of the forces&#13;
required for the defense of India.' lx&gt;rd&#13;
Roberts by resigning renounces a salary&#13;
of $25,000 yearly.&#13;
"King Dodo" was performed by 50&#13;
convicts in the Pittsburg penitentiary.&#13;
"King Dodo" was a convict not long In.&#13;
He was down on the program as No.&#13;
346. The other characters were,known&#13;
by their numbers. The libretto of&#13;
"King Dodo" had been tampered With.&#13;
The jokes were prison made and the&#13;
audience understood and enjoyed. The&#13;
leader of the orchestra was Walter&#13;
Donovan. H e was caught with the&#13;
Biddle brothers when they killed Grocer&#13;
Kahne. H e w a v e d the baton like&#13;
the real thing. T h e penitentiary a l s o&#13;
h a s a bfflM band composed of *0 life&#13;
1 convicts. , ...&#13;
Ex-Go*ernor o f&#13;
CAPITOL BUILDING, SALEM, OREGON.&#13;
A Letter from t h e&#13;
Oregon.&#13;
T h e Ex-Governor of Oregon ia a n&#13;
ardent admirer of Perun*. B e k e e p s i t&#13;
continually i n t h e house. I n a l e t t e r to&gt;&#13;
Dr. Hartman, h e s a y s :&#13;
S T A T E o r OBKOOIT, ; }&#13;
EXKCUTIVB} DcpABTiqarr. \&#13;
T h e Pei»nn«. Medicine Co., Colnmbns.O.:_&#13;
Dear S/n:~»i have bad o f r f s i o i f te&#13;
use your Peruaa m e d f c t o e i a my famOy&#13;
for coktM, and It proved to be an excel*&#13;
lent remedy. I nave not had occatkm&#13;
to use It for other ailments.&#13;
Yours very truly, W. M. Lord.&#13;
I t w i l l be noticed, t h a t t h e G o v e r n o r&#13;
s a y s h e h a s n o t had occasion t o u s e&#13;
P e r u n a for o t h e r ailments. T h e r e a s o n&#13;
for t h i s is, m o s t other a i l m e n t s b e g i n&#13;
w i t h a cold.&#13;
Ask Your Druggist for Free Peruna Almanac for 1906.&#13;
Peruna is k n o w n from t h e Atlantic&#13;
to the Pacific. Letters of congratulation&#13;
and commendation testifying t o&#13;
the merits of Peruna as a catarrh remedy&#13;
are pouring i n from every S t a t e i n&#13;
the Union. Dr. Hartman is receiving&#13;
hundreds of s u c h letters daily. A u&#13;
slasses write t h e s e letters, from t h e&#13;
highest to t h e lowest.&#13;
T h e outdoor laborer, t h e indoor arti*&#13;
san, the clerk, the editor, the statesman,&#13;
the preacher—all agree t h a t Peruna Is&#13;
the catarrh remedy of t h e age. T h e&#13;
stage and rostrum, recognizing catarrh&#13;
as their greatest enemy, are especially&#13;
enthusiastic in their praise and testimony.&#13;
Any man w h o w i s h e s perfect h e a l t h&#13;
must be entirely free from catarrh.&#13;
Catarrh is w e l l - n i g h universal. Peruna&#13;
is t h e best safeguard k n o w n .&#13;
READ lM- lSt * THIS COUPON IS GOOD FOR $1.00 ON PURCHASE&#13;
FREE Upon receipt of your name.&#13;
Address&#13;
GOOD FOR&#13;
ONE DOLLAR&#13;
PURCHASE&#13;
Druggist's Name.&#13;
Address.&#13;
And 10c in stamps or stiver to pay postage w e w i l l m a i l y o n a s a m p l e free,&#13;
if y o u h a v e never used Mull's Grape Tonic, and w i l l also mail y o n a&#13;
certificate g o o d for o n e dollar t o w a r d t h e purchase of more Tonic f r o m&#13;
your druggist. Address&#13;
MULL'S G R A P E TONIC CO., 148 T h i r d A v e , , Book Island, HL&#13;
YOU WRONG YOURSELF TO SUFFER&#13;
from Ccmitlpatlon and Stomach Trouble.&#13;
Why suffer or take needles* chancea with constipation or atomach troablecwbaa taenia a&#13;
perfect, harmleaa, natural, poaltlve cure within yonr reach ?&#13;
CONSTIPATION AND STOMACH TROUBLE&#13;
cause blood poison, akin diseases, sick headache, blHoumean, typhoid ferei, appendterUa. aflear&#13;
and every kind of female trouble aa wen aa many others. Your own physician win UU yo« that&#13;
all this is true. But don't oruf or physic yourself. Use MULL'S GRAPE TONIC the natural, strengthening, hanaalesa remedy that bufida npthe ttsauea of your dlgeattre evgaa*&#13;
and puts your whole system In splendid condition to overcome all attacka. It Is rtrj pieaaaat&#13;
to talte. The children like It and It does them great good.&#13;
SS cent, 60 cent andll.00 bottle* at all druggists. Tbe «140 bottle contains about six tfaaea&#13;
aa much aa the S3 eent bottle and about three tlmea aa much aa the SO cent bottle. There la a&#13;
great aarlng in buying the tl.00 slie.&#13;
MULL'S GRAPE TONIC CO4 148 Third A v e ^ Rock l a b a d , IB.&#13;
j ^ ^ i ^ ^ ^ ^ i M ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
i onubly employed in different part* of the world. Handsome catalogue "sent on request, l&amp; ' $&#13;
.» '&#13;
PRICE. Cta.&#13;
i*S&#13;
TO CURE THE I&#13;
IN ONE COT imam ANTI-GRIPINE I S G U A R A V T I E B T O C U R S&#13;
.RIP, BAD GOLD, HEADACHE AMD NEDiLIUUA.&#13;
I woBtseM ft-sfl f?Hs&gt;lsin In n tlmlrr Tihn irnn'tWusii smUej&#13;
~ Call for your M O N E Y B A C K . I F I T B O I f T C*7]&#13;
g . W. MHemer, M. J*., Mairofaeturer.aTprisnOtetet, JTsw&#13;
Cash or Cure&#13;
If Shiloh's Consumption Cure (ails to cure&#13;
your Cold or Cough, you get back all you&#13;
paid (or k. You are sure of a Cure or&#13;
ibeCash.&#13;
If k wasn't a sure cure, this oSci would&#13;
not be made.&#13;
Can anything be fairer ?&#13;
II you have a Cold, Cough, or any disease&#13;
of the Throat, Lungs or Air Passage*, try SHILOH&#13;
W. L. DOUGLAS s3 J=0&amp;*3^ SHOES Jft&#13;
W . L. D o u g l a s $ 4 . 0 0 Gilt E d g e L i n e&#13;
c a n n o t be equalled a t a n y p r i c e .&#13;
25c per bottle.&#13;
3^3&#13;
AH dealers gnarantee at.&#13;
^fcUSfy*&#13;
Dont lie awake nights,&#13;
aeiTOnt and feverish.&#13;
Ten to one your sleeplessness&#13;
ia caused by a torpid&#13;
liver. A few days' treatmeat&#13;
with Oeiery King,&#13;
the tonic- laxative, will&#13;
make your nigfcta restful&#13;
and strengthen isf'&#13;
Ten&#13;
to&#13;
One&#13;
MAKEMAKD StLLB t&#13;
$10,000 FEWMD to sayoM who csa&#13;
disprove this stataawrt&#13;
W. L. DoogU^ $5.50 eboes have by tfcetr «xcelleot&#13;
style, easy fitting, and assperiui weauswa&#13;
qualities, achieved the largest sale off aay %a3o&#13;
shoe In the world. They areJvst aa gwed&#13;
those that coat yoa $5.00 to $740— the m&#13;
difference la the price. If I coatld take&#13;
my tactory at Brockton, MOM., the&#13;
the world wmiar ooe roof aaelrhn&#13;
shoes, aod Jhow&#13;
••r&#13;
•agailsss at Lm Tbaa * Prist. ^ w ^ S s S S S S S r B&#13;
U ~ " ^ AaasaMMtoHaaaiiee ( • • * U 'hoaoo&#13;
•f ether&#13;
W . N. t l . ~ D I T f t O I T . ~ N o . 4 9 - 1 9 0 9 !&#13;
ahoaa produced ta the world.&#13;
If I could show yoat the drfleretiee&#13;
•hoes niade la any factory and those&#13;
.yoa woaUd aaderstaod why&#13;
shoes ont more to ataks, why they&#13;
ahspe,rM .better, wear reagar.aad asa jj&gt;&#13;
latrhsalc vatoe than any e t B MssaV&#13;
the market to-day. ^ ^ " —'*&#13;
* - ~ _&#13;
*%L __ . _ _&#13;
• • !. C A U T I O N . - i M i s t upon fcavbig&#13;
— but ahoea, T»k« »0 anbstitnte. Ko_-&#13;
without his aame and price stamped oa&#13;
_JTAXTKtk. Aahoe dealer iaeveey towa wham&#13;
L. Douglas 8boea are not a»M. fall tuaeaC:&#13;
^¾.&#13;
•asaplea ss/rt free for hmpeetloa upoa&#13;
fi**Q*rfr*t*m*t t»M«jB«aat aWavaajf&#13;
s&#13;
y&#13;
s&#13;
s#^r^--&#13;
**5»&#13;
n X'-&#13;
•fc* igus^unfi; Micwi^»flMBia»i»Ka^*, •*'^K''"ws»ic»aJ«»ja£!^^^2^«^*» - r iiiiMWiimira r-|-w - •#»»»»••&#13;
•T^WV^ I ? * ' ^!* •;«j3Fi' H W : &gt; ' •^••WO'r.l&#13;
V* W W " " • ^-#"&#13;
'I-Cf.ij.1&#13;
' -J£lZ*&amp;~ ?W&amp;&#13;
.^'&#13;
»-&#13;
M&#13;
$*t f iwfentg fispatrh&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS A CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
W. C- T. U.&#13;
ADDITIOHA-. LOCAL&#13;
Did it e?er occur to yon that the&#13;
man who works just for a living or to&#13;
have pay day come around, would&#13;
never get to the top?&#13;
Those "awful" Cbicagoians did&#13;
Michigan up TbanlcsgiviBK and BOW&#13;
we cannot Imst any more of "Michigan's&#13;
superior educational advantages.&#13;
A carload of chewing gum has just&#13;
been received by a firm in St. Paul,&#13;
Minn. It contained 2,5000.000 sticks.&#13;
It makes our jaws ache to think about&#13;
i t&#13;
The weather man has been ringing&#13;
on the changes very rapidly of late.&#13;
A person does not know wbattoexpect&#13;
from headquarters more than one day&#13;
ahead,-M i ilington Gazette. A bout half&#13;
the time the weather man bixself does&#13;
nofrknow what the weather is to be,&#13;
and Memorandum Book for 1906 of G.&#13;
A. Snow &amp; Uo, Patent Lawyers of&#13;
Washington D. C. This firm will&#13;
send it to any subscriber of the Dt8«&#13;
PATCH for two cents postage. It is a&#13;
diary with pages for memoranda and&#13;
cash accounts; the census of states and&#13;
cities; calendars tor 1906 07; distances&#13;
by miles and time to cities of the&#13;
world and business laws and court de&#13;
cisions for inventors and patentees.&#13;
H I T . B Y A SHELL.&#13;
a W r i t e r In * Boer E n g a g e m e n t D e .&#13;
•crlbea I l l s F e e l i n g * .&#13;
Edited by the Pinckney W. C. T. U&#13;
We may become a nation of prohibitionists.&#13;
It is not at all itn-&#13;
. possible. The fermentation going&#13;
on in particular localities may in.&#13;
crease until the ontire country is&#13;
covered and congress be compelled&#13;
to declare against the sale of&#13;
liquor.—Memphis News-Scimeter.&#13;
"Of the 105 c6uut.iesmKansa81"&#13;
says the Kansas City Journal,&#13;
"forty-four are without a pauper,&#13;
twenty-five have no poor houses,&#13;
thirty-seven have not a single occupant&#13;
in jail, and thirty-seven&#13;
have not a criminal case on docket."&#13;
In what but a prohibition&#13;
state could such a record be made?&#13;
The national Grange Patrons of&#13;
Husbandry, in session at Atlantic&#13;
Pity, N. J^ last week, went on&#13;
record in favor of temperance and&#13;
the curtailing of saloons, declaring&#13;
"that-they should be abriged until&#13;
they-are abolished," A resolutioa4 SoQn ^ ^ g*inners sat our-jUatarjcej.&#13;
.-. • •&gt; . -c And shells* were screaming and burst-&#13;
©a the subject jay si_ Kvery community&#13;
should be empowered by&#13;
law to vote every saloon from its&#13;
midst or its borders."&#13;
In his meeting at St. Paul Dr.&#13;
Chapman sobered the hearts of&#13;
men by exhibiting at his great&#13;
men's meeting a dollar bill that he&#13;
received at Topeka. It was sent&#13;
to*him with this note attached: "I&#13;
had $50,000, *a wife and a child.&#13;
»&#13;
This is my last dollar. My wife&#13;
and child have left me—have left&#13;
me on account, of whisky. Take&#13;
my advice, young man, and lead a&#13;
sober, Christian life...&#13;
Berea, Ohio, the seat of Baldwin&#13;
university and other institutions,&#13;
has gone dry for the second time&#13;
by an overwhelming Tote. The&#13;
"wets" brought in this second&#13;
election, and tried to vote the saloonsTnT&#13;
~~~ — - — -&#13;
During the last 20 years alcoholism&#13;
among women has made&#13;
alarming progress in France. Out&#13;
of ten divorces or separations,&#13;
pronounced on account of wrongdoing&#13;
on the part of the woman,&#13;
there are eight in which alcoholic&#13;
excess has been returned as £he&#13;
cause of their being no longer able&#13;
to live together.&#13;
DIET FOR FEVERS.&#13;
DilvteeV Mttlc la t h e Safest K i n d of&#13;
F o o d t o B m p l o y .&#13;
During the first few days of any run&#13;
of fever there should be no attempt&#13;
made to give food, for, as neither gastric&#13;
nor1 pancreatic juices are secreted,&#13;
the stomach cannot digest food and it&#13;
putrefies. After the saliva and other&#13;
secretions have been restored food&#13;
should be given that is easiest to digest.&#13;
Milk, which contains all the food&#13;
principles, is known as the special diet&#13;
for fevers of any sort. Diluted milk Is&#13;
easier of digestion than the pure milk,&#13;
which curdles almost as soon as it enters&#13;
the stomach. One part of limewater&#13;
tu one of milk la a good proportion.&#13;
Milk and mineral water Is&#13;
also excellent. Fill a glass half full&#13;
of milk and then fill up with the mineral&#13;
water. A little salt increases its*&#13;
pttlatabilfty. InvaUds, by the way, prefer&#13;
more salt and less sugar in any&#13;
dish. .. If-plain milk agrees with ilio&#13;
THE ORIGINAL.&#13;
LAXATIVE COOGH STROP &gt;.&#13;
Cam all Couth* and&#13;
assists In expolHaf&#13;
Colds from tfas&#13;
System by&#13;
ft stir moving&#13;
tbt bowels&#13;
A certain cure1&#13;
for croup tod&#13;
WnC&lt;f&gt;in&gt;'"COMgb&#13;
patient Ue may be, allowed to havt&#13;
bsvereceived the Pocket Diary] (vMU &lt;&gt;"c-U&gt; two quart*iu_twi&gt;iiiy_-faiir&#13;
hours. Milk ami barley waters aud&#13;
peptonized milk are all nutritious ami&#13;
digestible. Where a patient gets very&#13;
tired of the taste of milk the tlavor&#13;
may be varied by adding, with the&#13;
physician's permission, a little strong&#13;
coffee or o'ster or clam broth.—Chicago&#13;
News.&#13;
ing-orer tbe~ convoy, says Robert Mr*-&#13;
Caw iu "A Prisoner With De AVet" in&#13;
the Natioaal Magazine. Several wagons&#13;
in front of us were blown up and&#13;
the oxen scattered iu writhing masses&#13;
on the road. The Kaffir who led our&#13;
team took fright and bolted, the oxen&#13;
kwerved as a shell burst in front of&#13;
them, and, the wheels suddenly going&#13;
into a deep rut, the heavy wagon&#13;
turned completely over, grinding me&#13;
fceneath its weight. My head bursting,&#13;
I was falling down through blackness&#13;
In the midst of a thousand crimson&#13;
serpents. Somebody held my heart&#13;
hi his hand, was squeezing it, and&#13;
then— Thank heaven, this is death!&#13;
Ages after there was a roaring of&#13;
waters far beneath me. Then it thundered&#13;
on my naked brain. A faint&#13;
star was shining somewhere. It rushed&#13;
toward me, growing bigger and big&#13;
ger, until I was swallowed up in it—&#13;
and my eyes were open. The wagon&#13;
was righted. I was dripping wet, for&#13;
the drivers had thrown water upon me.&#13;
I heard the boom of the guns and the&#13;
crash of bursting shells. I tried to&#13;
rise, but my head seemed to float away&#13;
from me nud I felt myself striking&#13;
the ground, but I did not feel myself&#13;
falling. They lifted me on the wagon,&#13;
and the oxen moved off. My head and&#13;
face were sticky with thick blood and&#13;
dust, and 1 was in such pain that I did&#13;
not know'where the pain was.&#13;
iW»&#13;
m&#13;
; A CARD.&#13;
£, the undersigned, do hereby agree&#13;
to refund the money on a 50 cent bot&#13;
tie of Greene's Warranted §yrup of&#13;
Tai* if it' failes ro cure your cough ot&#13;
eold. I also guarantee a 25-cent bottle&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money rejUMi&#13;
«d. « 9&#13;
~~~~ Will H, Harrow.&#13;
HIH Miserable Lot.&#13;
"Why don't yoir go to work?"&#13;
"Lady." answered Plodding Pete,&#13;
"I'm on me way dere now. De trouble&#13;
is dat when I'm in New York I hear&#13;
about a job dat I kjri git in Frisco.&#13;
An' by de time 1 gits to Frisco 1 finds&#13;
de Job is taken an' I hears of another&#13;
one in New York,"—Washington Star.&#13;
I&#13;
famuli;)!) Hnlid:i) Excursions via&#13;
(Jrautl Trunk iluhvay System&#13;
Single fare lor tLe lound trip to&#13;
certain Canadian poinds &lt;m al: trains&#13;
Dec. 14th, 15th, lGth and 17th, 1902,&#13;
Vril'H returning to leave de-tinatton to&#13;
and including. January 6 u, 1906&#13;
Htneseekers Excursions via Chicago For fares ana lurther information call&#13;
on'vonr lo ai Ayent on write to GEO&#13;
?«V»..:&#13;
Great Western Railway&#13;
to points in Arizona, Arkansas, Assiniboio,&#13;
British Columbia, Canadian&#13;
Northwest, Colorado, Idaho, Indian&#13;
Terri.i.o:-y, Iowa, Kansas, ManitnM.&#13;
Mexico, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana,&#13;
Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico.&#13;
North and South Dakota, Oregon,&#13;
Texas, Washington and Wyoming at&#13;
•Hreatly reduced rates for the r:und&#13;
trip. Tiekets on sale the first and&#13;
,tbird Tuesdays of each month. For&#13;
further information apply to F. R.&#13;
Rosier, T. P. A., 115 Adams St.,&#13;
..Chicago, 111. t-50&#13;
KENNEDY'S UUTIIE&#13;
HONEYMTAR rtBNuuw AT i n lAMtAvoa* or&#13;
oV O. peWITT * CO., OMIOAQO, U. 8, A.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler. Druggist.&#13;
W-ttMtett; — ----- 1&#13;
An old iWM* woman, who at considerable&#13;
person:il inconvenience had&#13;
gone a K'.HKI way t&gt; visit a friend who&#13;
wan ill, learned on her arrival that the&#13;
alarming symptoms bad subsided. "An*,&#13;
hoo are ye the day, Mrs. Crawford?"&#13;
she inquired in breathless anxiety, i&#13;
"Oh, I'm nearly well noo, thank ye.&#13;
Nearly well!" ex-&#13;
Wanisdi&#13;
- Gray Hair is a bar to em pic Sleasore. out thero ia relief Fro..* .v ...&#13;
ays. It can be restored to its natural &lt;".j&#13;
by using Mra. B. W. Allen'* Vita iliur Co... ( RMtorer. It ia uot a dye but In a natural *:ay&#13;
It acta in the rooto, compelling the secretion&#13;
of the pigments that give life and color to tho&#13;
hair in three days. It 1B not sticky or g rewjyjnO&#13;
odor; doesn'taUlntheBcalp. ABSOLUTELY&#13;
In'three 11 fa not stiefcy or « reasyjno&#13;
doesn't stain the scalp. ABSOLUTBL&#13;
HARMLESS, fl.00 * bottle. All driiggibte.&#13;
FLO RB STELLA&#13;
CREAF&lt;i&#13;
the hygienic skin food gives rocy froskneaa&#13;
and beauty to the s., in. Reinovua all imperfections&#13;
art&lt;i Impurities. A perfect comtite*-&#13;
ion. 60 cents at your dru^sisu, or seat&#13;
prepaid on receipt of price.&#13;
MARK W. ALLEN &amp; CO.&#13;
Detroit, Mich.&#13;
Mrs. Graham."&#13;
claimed tho breathlestoViKltor. "Aeftcr&#13;
me com in' sae far to see ye too!"—Cassell's&#13;
Magazine.&#13;
Nothing will cure indigestion that&#13;
doesn't digest the food, itself, and give&#13;
the stomach rest. You can't expect&#13;
that a weak stomach will regain its&#13;
strength and get well wben it is cornpeltecTto'&#13;
do the fallworktfratasoimd&#13;
stomach should do. You wouldn't expect&#13;
a sick horse to get well wben it is&#13;
nojppjilled to do a full dajjs work^&#13;
every day of the week. Kodol Dys because of a persi ten' cough, resultpepsia&#13;
Cure isaper tec td igest ao4-andHtrg-frorathegrip;—I-bad-to-sleep—sft«&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
Digests what you eat*&#13;
digests the food regardless of the condition&#13;
of your stomach. Relieves indigestion,&#13;
belching, sour stomach and&#13;
all stomach disorders.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
T h e P i m p e r n e l .&#13;
Not every one knows what flower Is&#13;
meant by the pimpernel In the famous&#13;
lines:&#13;
The white lake blossom fell Into the lake&#13;
As the pimpernel dozed on the lea.&#13;
It Is a pretty English wild flower of&#13;
the primrose family and commonly&#13;
known as "poor man's weather glass,"&#13;
because Its petals are so sensitive to&#13;
moisture that they droop before the&#13;
coming of rain. Garden burnet Is&#13;
sometimes confounded with this English&#13;
plant because It Is called by the&#13;
French "plmperneJle." But the pimpernel&#13;
* which "dozed on the lea" Is a&#13;
slightly poisonous, acrid plant, not at&#13;
all suitable in a salad.&#13;
Torture of a Preacher&#13;
The-story-of the tortureDf Rev. O&#13;
D, Mcoro, paator of the Baptist church,&#13;
of Harperaville, N. Y., will interest&#13;
He say * :^1 suffered agonies,&#13;
ting up in bed. I tried many remedies,&#13;
without relief, until 1 to;-k Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery lor consumption,&#13;
couphs and colds, which entirely cured&#13;
my cough and saved me horn consumD&#13;
tion." A grand cure for diseased conditions&#13;
of the heart and lungs. At F.&#13;
A. Siller's drusrgist; price 5(b and'&#13;
|1.00, guaranteed. Trial bottle free.&#13;
H e Can, I n d e e d .&#13;
"Can a man have a billion dollars&#13;
and be honest?"&#13;
"I should think so. He can certainly"-&#13;
"Well?"&#13;
"Afford to be."-rhiladelphla Bulletin.&#13;
The most pjeasant, safest and best&#13;
remedy to use for coughs colds croup,&#13;
whooping cough, etc , is Kennedy's&#13;
Lavative Honey a id far. This remedy&#13;
expeli all cold from the system&#13;
by acting as a cathartic on the bowels.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
Subscribe for the Pinckney Dispatcn.&#13;
W. VAI'X. A&#13;
11&#13;
G. IV &amp; T A , C-h cago,&#13;
Hat'-H to Western Tuin's&#13;
If (•nnVnii-l ii \nj * h ip w eM. writein&#13;
V. U. Mi.sin-, T. IV A.. Chicago&#13;
&lt; i i t-H t v&gt; c i. :n Uailw.iy. 11-r) A d a m s&#13;
S t , Ci: i' ;i-';\ I i I ,*t,ii \ui&gt; h-'W u a n y in&#13;
tlie'prt!'?v n-ri IVIIHJI \ on w s h !•&gt; yo&#13;
He wili mjv:.»t. \:"U j r.^nii'ily e'.mccinitig&#13;
the ie$l rates, roi.t»'&gt; «n&lt;i oth&lt;*r&#13;
neee?-&gt;ary i n f o r r n s t u n : . t 52&#13;
In Mad Chase&#13;
^ Millions rush in mad chase afUr&#13;
Jiealtb, irom on* extreme of faddism&#13;
to another, when, if they would only&#13;
sat good food and keep their bowels&#13;
l»««t^r*j!jjth Dr. King's New L&gt;f«&#13;
Fills, their-troubles would all pa^s&#13;
away. Prompt relief aDd quick cure&#13;
' lor lifer and tt&lt;i%aob trouble. 25c at&#13;
A. 8i*lar*t drug storp; gaarantwd&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
PROCURED AND DErCNDgD.^*?*"0 **&#13;
dimwina or photo, for expert i«*roh»nafr« e report.&#13;
f n e itdirkM, how to obtoin&#13;
pfttan*, tndmitkM,&#13;
oowmSfhU,«tc, I N ALL COUNTRIES.&#13;
Butiiuss ^reci vitk Washington tavts MM,&#13;
wtonty and often thtpattnt.&#13;
Pittnt and InfrincMiMrt Pnctict Exelwivsly.&#13;
Write or come to «a at&#13;
M* Math ttrat, «ft. V\&#13;
WAaMlNOTON. D. C. GASNOW&#13;
You&#13;
Look&#13;
Yellow&#13;
The trouble is, your liver's&#13;
sick* One of its products*&#13;
"bile," is overflowing into&#13;
your blood*&#13;
You can't digest yout food,&#13;
your appetite ii poor, you&#13;
suffer dreadfully from headache,&#13;
stomach ache, dizziness,&#13;
malaria, constipation,&#13;
etc What you need is not a&#13;
dose of salts, cathartic water&#13;
or pills—but a liver tonic&#13;
Bedford's&#13;
Black-Draught&#13;
This great medidne acts gently on&#13;
the sick liver. It purines the blood,&#13;
renews theappetite, feeds the nerves,&#13;
clears the brain and cures constipation.&#13;
It is a true medidne for sick liver&#13;
and kidneys, and regulates all the&#13;
digestive functions. Try it.&#13;
At all dealers in aedidnas In&#13;
35( package*.&#13;
E x i t .&#13;
Mary Ann—I've come to tell you,&#13;
mum, that th' gasoline stove has gone&#13;
out. Mlstivss—Woll. light It again. "I&#13;
can't Sure, it went out through th'&#13;
roof f '^-Exchange.&#13;
60 YEARS'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
C O U C H S A R E D A N C E R&#13;
Signals, Stop Them With&#13;
Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery 0NSUHPT10N D .&#13;
OUGMS and . A / / ? ? A *&#13;
THE CURE THAT'S SURE for all Diseases&#13;
of Throat and Lungs or Money&#13;
Back. FREE TRIAL.&#13;
STATE OF MICHIOAN-Courty of Livingston,&#13;
88. At a MMIOO of the Probate Court for&#13;
the said county, held at the probate offloe In the&#13;
village of Howell, on Wednesday, the 15th day of&#13;
November In the year one thousand nine hundred&#13;
live. Present, i rthur A, Montague, Judge of&#13;
Probate. In the matter of the estate of&#13;
LYMAN D. BABTON, deceased&#13;
Now comes E. A. Kuhn, executor of the.&#13;
estate of said Lyman D, liarton and represents&#13;
to this court that he la ready to render&#13;
his final account In aald estate.&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered that Friday the 15th&#13;
day of December next at ten o'clock In the forenoon,&#13;
at said Probate Office, be assigned for the&#13;
heaiing ol said account.&#13;
And it is fnrther ordered that a copy of thia&#13;
or !er be nublished in the PINCKNKY DISPATCH, a&#13;
newspap* r printed and circulating ia Bald connty&#13;
three successive weeks previous to said day of&#13;
hearing.&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAGUE,&#13;
Judge oJ Probate.,&#13;
TRADE MARKS&#13;
D E S I G N S ••&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A C .&#13;
Anyone sending a sketch and description may&#13;
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an&#13;
invention Is probably patentable. Communications&#13;
strictly conBdenttaJ. HANDBOOK on Patents&#13;
sent free. Oldest agency for securing&#13;
Patents taken through Munn &amp; '&#13;
special notice, without charge, in the&#13;
rpate&#13;
Co. receive&#13;
tents.&#13;
Scientific American. • A handsomely illustrated weekly. I.nrsrest circulation&#13;
of any scientific Journal. TermB, $3 a&#13;
year; four months, $L Sold by nil newsdealers. MUNH &amp; Co.36'8""*™'- New York&#13;
Branch Office, 62S F St., Washtnjrton. D. C.&#13;
Circuit, in Chancery. Suit pending in the&#13;
Circuit Court for the county of Livingston, ia&#13;
Chancery, at Howell, Mich., on the '28th day of&#13;
j November, 1SXW,&#13;
LILLY B. FONOER, complainant&#13;
va&#13;
JAMKS FO^NGKB, defendant '&#13;
In this cauce.it appealing from affidavit on file,&#13;
that the defendent, James/Kongor, is a resident of&#13;
this Btate, bin that his whereabouts are nnkndwnT&#13;
therefore, on motion of James A. Greene, Solicitor&#13;
for Complananf, it is ordered that the defendant,&#13;
Jnnies Fonder, enter hi9 appearance in said cause&#13;
on or before three month's from the date of this&#13;
onler, ami ttn-t within twenty (Uys from said date,&#13;
the saiil Complainant cause this order to be published&#13;
in the PINCKNEY DISPATCH, A newspaper&#13;
printed unci pphliBhed in the county of LivingftODj&#13;
atleas't ones in each week, torsixsuccessive weeto,&#13;
STKUNS F, SMITH&#13;
Circuit Judge.&#13;
J A !K3 A. ( i l t G K N B ,&#13;
Solicitor for Complainant&#13;
t 3 Howe'l, Mich.&#13;
A TRINITY OF TREASURES&#13;
Triple Extract of Violet, FrenchrRoses Concentrate,&#13;
Imperial Hair Tonic. Three High Grade Essentials&#13;
to the Toilet at the price of one oi them alone, vi»t&#13;
8I.OO.&#13;
We manufacture and sell these goods direct to&#13;
the consumer, thus cutting out the profits of the&#13;
middlemen.&#13;
REGULAR RETAIL PRIOE&#13;
Triple Violet Extract • • • .50&#13;
French Roses Concentrate • • I.OO&#13;
(Makes 2 quarts exquisite toilet water.) .&#13;
Imperial Hair Tome • • • .50&#13;
$3.00&#13;
Our Price for theThree-ONE DOLLAR.&#13;
A Saving to YOU of 100 Per Cent Is'nt it Worth While?&#13;
Write to us for descriptive literature oi these articles.&#13;
The CINCINNATI PERFUME CO.Ina, Cincinnati, Ohio.&#13;
/ ^&#13;
•mm DeWtttfs KSt 8ri¥*&#13;
The dreaded Wash Day- no mon. Washing mada aaay by&#13;
THE l-V WASHING TABLETS ^mmmmmmmmmmmm^mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm^mmmmmm^mmmm TWhfelly n aorte ientjruicrOe yth fer etf lofreoamtiU aMciedss.&#13;
Of any kind. ' '&#13;
Theydctheirorkwithoatrabbinc.&#13;
They make the clothes white.&#13;
They oaa be need in U N water.&#13;
They lave time ao#T f§a^k»rd&#13;
work on washday. ^&#13;
penalblefi&gt;r&lt;&#13;
UtoTatH&#13;
with abeoltrtery no %m~&#13;
are ewnfliuiftal to&#13;
olothes are more w o n out&#13;
washboard than by actual wear.&#13;
They are sold on their merit*.&#13;
(a»erw Wrapper*, Weofferatoelinet^premiom*.'^•^•^TonraroMr.Drieeeo. •V w%HINiTABLET CO., Iw, OfBcVTisi N. Fnurt SX.PhllV^lpiiKPeti.&#13;
{** —"•m-m*&#13;
'•*.,•&#13;
V&#13;
, J***" &lt;**•?,&#13;
/&#13;
A&#13;
£V^.~. m : ^&#13;
oj&amp;fiiL-iBrr!: ^#..: ji."**&#13;
, • . &gt; • • • - • &amp; » - ! •&#13;
• **4 • «k4nn, *•**»-. -«—-&#13;
• ' ' - ' ; • " *&#13;
•••w«i4&#13;
iK&gt;e&#13;
V&#13;
ESTABLISHED 2 * YEARS.&#13;
UNLESS CURED&#13;
T H E MASTER SPECIALISTS O F AMERICA&#13;
We know the diseases and weaknesses of men like an open book.&#13;
We have been curing them for 30 years. We have given our lives t o&#13;
It, and thousands upon thousands of men restored to Vigorous Vitality&#13;
are today living monuments t o the skill, knowledge and success of&#13;
Drs. Kennedy &amp; Kergan. We never hold out false hopes, we never&#13;
undertake a case v/e cannot cure. We have made so thorough a study&#13;
of all the diseases of men—of Varicocele, Stricture, Blood Poisons,&#13;
Hydrocele, Nervous Debility, Paralysis, Bladder, Urinary and Kidney&#13;
Diseases, General Weakness, Less of Vitality, and have cured so many&#13;
thousands of cases that if there is a cure for YOUR disease you&#13;
will find it here. When we undertake a case there is no such thing&#13;
as failure. We charge nothing for consultation and our knowledge,&#13;
skill and experience vre at your service. Wo will c::?l^in to you&#13;
How an_d Why We C~ i Cure You; why the diseases of men require&#13;
the knowledge and skill of r a s t e r ?:;edallcts. Wo do not require to&#13;
experiment with your case as we know from experience in treating&#13;
thousands of.xanes &lt;:.xnelly v,-\.;it to prescribe for your symptoms. Don't&#13;
be discouraged if yen rr.vo treated without success i.vith Quad-is, Fakirs,&#13;
Electric Belts, Free Trials, etc. You must get cured—and Doctors&#13;
atone can cure you. Our New Method System of treatment has stood&#13;
the test for 25 'years—why should it fail in your case. . Should your&#13;
se prove incurable you need not pay_us a dollar._. We refer you to&#13;
any Bank in this city as to our financial standing. If you cannot can&#13;
write for a Question Blank for Home Treatment. Consultation Free.&#13;
Booklets sent Free.&#13;
D M KENNEDY &amp; KERGAN&#13;
1 4 8 S H E L B Y S T R E E T , D E T R O I T , M I C H .&#13;
D E S K S O F F A M O U S M E N .&#13;
T h e r e A r e H e a r o f Tken&gt; S c a t t e r e d&#13;
A b o u t t h e C o n n t r y .&#13;
The desk of Salmon P. Chase, a plain&#13;
piece of furniture made from mahogany,&#13;
is in one of the rooms of the treasury&#13;
department at Washington. There&#13;
are many of these old desks scattered&#13;
about the country, their chief claim to&#13;
Interest being that once some well&#13;
known man leaued over them.&#13;
Alexander Hamilton's traveling desk,&#13;
made of mahogany and measuring 12&#13;
by 1G inches and 10 inches high, is an&#13;
The bea&amp;on of indigestion is upon&#13;
us. Kodoi Dyspepsia Curs for indigestion&#13;
and dyspepsia wilt do everything&#13;
for the stomach that an over loaded or&#13;
an «ver worked stomach can not do&#13;
for itself. Kodol digests what yon&#13;
eat—gives the stomach a rest—relieves,&#13;
your stomach, belching, heart-burn,&#13;
indigestion, etc.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Druggist.&#13;
A l'«e F o r C l o v e s .&#13;
Persons who get "qualms" when ridinterestlng&#13;
object. Upon this desk was tag in the cars or on boats can almost&#13;
written much of his literary work, and certainly quiet'them by slowly chewthe&#13;
worn green baize with which it Is tag a clove or two. Indigestion, accomlined&#13;
attests to the use to which it was panietl by formation of gas, uausea&#13;
put. There is a drawer In one side and and dizziness, will often yield to the&#13;
several compartments for pens and same simple measure. There are other&#13;
Ink, while upon the top is inlaid a ail- and better means of accomplishing&#13;
M E D I C I N E&#13;
FJEfcEME&#13;
F O B MEIV OTVLY&#13;
O n e m o n t h ' s s u p p l y absolutely F R E E t o prove a n d t o show y o u t h e skill o f&#13;
t h e p h y s i c i a n s o f t h i s&#13;
INSTITUTE&#13;
This i s n o C. a r e tinder n o obligation—te- c o n t i n u e the-&#13;
W e k n o w that treatment. We l eave i t al l to y ou the results will be so satisfactory&#13;
that y o u will b e glad t o p a y t h e small c h a r g e w e a s k after t h e first m o n t h .&#13;
HONEST OFFER&#13;
t o m e n only, m e n w h o h a v e tried other doctors w i t h o u t success, m e n w h o h a v e&#13;
violated t h e laws o f nature, men w h o have tried without success t o regain t h e health&#13;
a n d vigor s o foolishly w a s t e d a n d recklessly squandered. W e a r e w i l l i n g t o&#13;
prove a t our e x p e n s e t h a t w e c a n benefit and cure y o u b y s e n d i n g y o u&#13;
One Monti*9 js Treatment F r e e&#13;
BOSTON MEDICAL INSTITUTE. 158 Lake Street CHICAGO&#13;
H •ig". ^QB.&#13;
.cr%attP3t&#13;
T h e w o r d r e s u l t s m e a n s a w h o l e l o t t o t h e farmer o f td=tmy a n d it i s&#13;
e s p e c i a l l y attractive t o t h e h o m e s e e k e r o r t h o s e s e e k i n g n e w j l o c a t i o n s .&#13;
If w e t e l l y o u o f a c o u n t r y w h e r e y o u a r e s u r e o f succcsy, w i l l y o u&#13;
b e l i e v e u s ? I t i s o n l y n e c e s s a r y for y o u t o farm t h e - l a n d a n d the—&#13;
b e s t r e s u l t s w i l l f o l l o w — a S t a t e w h i c h t h e g o v e r n m e n t reports w i l l&#13;
s h o w l e a d s i n t h e p r o d u c t i o n o f w h e a t . It a l s o ranks a m o n g t h e first&#13;
i n t h e raising o f corn, alfalfa, t i m o t h y a n d o t h e r products, t o g e t h e r&#13;
: w i t h s t o c k - r a i s i n g . W e - s p e a k x x f - KANSAS T h e great S t a t e o f the W e s t , w h e r e l a n d s c a n b e p u r c h a s e d from $5&#13;
t o $30 p e r acre w h i c h e q u a l s t h e returns o f t h e $ 6 0 t o $150 p e r acre&#13;
l a n d s o f other S t a t e s . E A S T E R N C O L O R A D O i s identical i n m o s t&#13;
r e s p e c t s a n d t h e s a m e o p p o r t u n i t i e s a r e offered there; B u y quick&#13;
w h i l e t h e l a n d s are c h e a p a n d secure t h e benefit o f a n excellent i n v e s t -&#13;
m e n t . T H E M I S S O U R I P A C I F I C R A I L W A Y t o u c h e s t h e&#13;
heart o f t h i s rich agricultural r e g i o n a n d e x t r e m e l y l o w rates are&#13;
offered, a l l o w i n g s t o p - o v e r a t p l e a s u r e i n certain territory for i n s p e c -&#13;
t i o n o f l a n d s , e t c . W r i t e u s a n d w e w i l l s e n d y o u free d e s c r i p t i v e&#13;
literature a n d f u l l information.&#13;
H. D. ARMSTRONG H- c- TOWNSEND,&#13;
GENERAL PASSENGER AND TICKET AGENT,&#13;
8 8 G r l t w o l d * t . D e t r o i t , M i c h ST. LOUIS, MO.&#13;
rtlTlfcl'T 1 * ^ , 0 ^ O I I T H UNTIL. Y O U H A V E S E E N A&#13;
U V * * ^ » V J V " r J V / U i n R E P R E S E N T A T I V E OF T H E&#13;
G R E A T C&amp;NTRAL,&#13;
C . H . &amp; D . - P E R B M A R Q U T T E - C . D . &amp; L .&#13;
1 AND HAVE LEARNED OF THE SERVICE THS LIKE OFFERS TO&#13;
Florida Asheville New Orleans&#13;
Cuba Nassau&#13;
PULLUAN SLEEPING CARS THR0U6H&#13;
DETROIT and TOLEDO to J A C K S O N V I L L E&#13;
During1 W«w»t«r. Let UB arrange your trip. We will check your baggage through,&#13;
regard ahJtpiof car accomodations and attend to all the details. A postal card adto&#13;
either of the undersigned will bring full information.&#13;
Mass. A desk at which he wrote some&#13;
of his inimitable romances was just.a&#13;
board standing out from the wall at an&#13;
angle. This is still in the tower room&#13;
at Wayside, his home at Concord,&#13;
Mass. Victor Hugo had in his Guernsey&#13;
house a study built almost entirely&#13;
of glass and perched upon the roof.&#13;
Like Hawthorne, he, tool stood at his&#13;
writing, and his desk was a mere shelf&#13;
fastened by hinges to the wall.—Delineator,&#13;
these results, but the value of the clove&#13;
la that it occupies so little room, is so&#13;
•asily carried about and can be so&#13;
readily got when wanted.&#13;
ver plate with the name "General Alexander&#13;
Hamilton" etfgraved upon It.&#13;
Within the top is a strip of parchment&#13;
which says, "Given by Mrs. General&#13;
Schuyler to her daughter, Mrs. General&#13;
A. Hamilton." No doub4 the convenient&#13;
size was what recommended it&#13;
to the general. ~&#13;
Nathaniel Hawthorne's desk Is pre- * . . . ., , _ .&#13;
served «*-*** custom -house,-Salem, ^ t i o n keeps tbeskin soltjiiQ smooth.&#13;
T w o Way* H a v e y o u noticed a difficulty ta&#13;
breathing—short, quicH breatjl—When&#13;
you are walking, going- up stairs, s i n g -&#13;
ing, or a r e angry or excited? Y o u m a y&#13;
not think what this means, b u t doctors&#13;
will tell you it m e a n s weak heart action.&#13;
Take Dr. Miles' N e w Heart Cure a t&#13;
once. I t will strengthen a n d build u p&#13;
t h e weakened nerves a n d muBcles o f&#13;
t h e heart, a n d m a k e s i t strong a n d&#13;
healthy.&#13;
This i s one way—the right w a y .&#13;
Neglect It a little while, and y o u wiH&#13;
than notice Fluttering, Palpitation, D i a -&#13;
ziness, Fainting Spells, P a i n i n region&#13;
of heart, side a n d shoulders.&#13;
I T U Ther other way^-the w r o n g w a y . Dr. Miles' Heart Cure&#13;
i s a safe, sure remedy f o r t h e cure o f&#13;
Heart Disease, a s thousands testify.&#13;
"I had enlargement of t h e heart. T h e&#13;
doctors said I could live but a s h o r t&#13;
time. I took Dr. Miles* N e w Heart Cure&#13;
which restored me t o perfect health-"&#13;
A. M. B A S 8 E T T , Wellington, Ohio.&#13;
The first bottle will benefit, if not, t h e&#13;
druggist will return yotfr money. '•&#13;
n&#13;
C a n n e d Lous o f S l e e p .&#13;
"How do you get along with your&#13;
ftew chief of department?"&#13;
"Oh, only so so. He causes us many&#13;
sleepless—office hours.''&#13;
'Rough'"'skin and cracked hands a r e&#13;
not only cured by DeWitt's Witch&#13;
Hazel Salve, but an occasional TppTT&#13;
Be not the fourth friend of him who&#13;
Best tor eczema, cuts, boils, burps, .etc, J had three before and lost them.—Lava-&#13;
The Kenuine DeVVitt's Witch Hazel ter.&#13;
Salve affords immediate relief in ali —&#13;
tonus of blind, bleeding, itebng and j THE ORIGINAL LAXATIVE COUGH 8YRUF&#13;
protruding piles.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Druggist.&#13;
Furious Fighting&#13;
~nFbFseven vearT," wrItes G ecT •vtv&#13;
Hoffman, of Harper, Wash., " I had a&#13;
bitter battle, with chronic stomach&#13;
and liver.trouble, but at last 1 won,&#13;
and cured my dVe.ses, by the use of Baslaeas Cards, $4.00 per year.&#13;
T i •. A I Death and marriage notices published f&#13;
t i t e r s . 1 » U h e 5 U a t l I l £ l v _ -^^aoaiM^meBUateateitaianiftaiuBLmay&#13;
recommend them to all, and don't in- for, if desired. Oy pnsentinijthe office with tlcjt&#13;
tend in the future to ha without them&#13;
in the houRe. They are certainly, a&#13;
wonderful medicine, to ha^e cured&#13;
such a bad case as mine." Sold under&#13;
sr.uarantee to do the same for you, by&#13;
Y. A. Sigler d r u t r ^ t , at 50c a bottle.&#13;
Try them today.&#13;
\.&#13;
tr&gt;o nnv-'i voii^f t &gt; lot i:in.&#13;
• " W h i&#13;
e n t s li&#13;
rr.arry."&#13;
"1'cs."&#13;
•'While h o w a s u n d e r fifty h e h a d t o o&#13;
m u c h s o n s o t o w e d . "&#13;
"I s e e . "&#13;
" N o w t h a t h e ' s eighty-five"—&#13;
" W e l l ? "&#13;
" H e ' s g o i n g t o t a k e a w i f e . " — L o u i s -&#13;
ville C o u r i e r - J o u r n a l .&#13;
A Fearful rate&#13;
It is a tearful fate to bave to endure&#13;
the terrible torturo ol pilot?.—"I can&#13;
truthfully say,' writes Harry Colson,&#13;
Masonville, la., "that for blind, bleeding,&#13;
itcbintr and protruding piles,&#13;
Bucklen's Arnica Salve is the best cure&#13;
made.'' A I S J best for cuts burns and&#13;
injuries. 25c at *?. A. S.gler's, dra£-&#13;
gis't."'" ~ ~'~ "~ " -&#13;
F o u r S o r t * o f R e n d e r s .&#13;
There are four sd£ls of readers—hourglass&#13;
reader?, whoac reading runs in&#13;
and out ami leaves nothing; sponge&#13;
readers, who Imbibe all, but only give&#13;
it out again as they got It and perhaps&#13;
not so clean; jell£—bair-readers, who&#13;
keep the dr,,*s find refuse and let the&#13;
pure run through; diamond readers,&#13;
who cast aside^all that is worthless and&#13;
hold only tbegems.&#13;
BD WARDS, -&#13;
, ¾ . ¾ . M., O. H . &amp; D.,&#13;
Cincinnati, Ohio.&#13;
G. P . A., Pare Marquette, i&#13;
. • „ • . . . ..' J ^ t r o ^ Miohigan^.&#13;
he mission of "Early Risers" is to&#13;
clear the way and give Nature lull&#13;
sway. These famous little pills rid&#13;
the stomach and bowels of all putrid&#13;
matter, thus removing the causes of&#13;
headache, constipation, callow complexion,&#13;
etc. De Witt's Little Early&#13;
Risers never gripe or sicken. A safe,&#13;
pleasant, perfect pill.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Druggist.&#13;
KENNEDY'S LAXATIVE HONEY-TAR1&#13;
ted Clover Bloaaom and flooey Bee &lt;m Every Bottle.&#13;
PUBLISHED K V M X THURSDAY UOHSIKB BT&#13;
F R A N K L.. A N D R E W S &lt;S* C O .&#13;
EDITORS AND PROPRIETORS.&#13;
Railroad Guide&#13;
Subscription Price *l in Advance-;&#13;
Sntaraa at ttie Postofllce at Piactaey, Michigan&#13;
aa aecond-clast mattei&#13;
Advertising rates made known on application.&#13;
e'teof adlhiBBion. IneaaetieketBare not ^rjotrft&#13;
to the office,regular rates wlllbecharprd.&#13;
All matter in local notice column wlli be ch-»rfr&lt;i&#13;
ed at 5 centa per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
Insertion. Where no time is specified, all notice*&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, anc&#13;
will be charged for accordingly, »^r"All changes&#13;
of advertisements MUST reach this office as earl;&#13;
asTUKSDAT morning to insure anineertion tbe&#13;
same-week.&#13;
JOS f&gt;ltIJVlIJVG /&#13;
In all its branches, a specialty. We haveal&#13;
and the latest styles of Type, etc., which&#13;
us to execute all kinds of work, such asBooke&#13;
Pamplets, Posters. Programmes, Bill Head&#13;
Heads, Statements. Cards, Auction Bills, etc.,in&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices at^&#13;
low as good work can be done.&#13;
ALL BILL8 PAYABLE irlBRT OF 1VBBY MOSTH.&#13;
TrfE VILLAGE DIRECTORY&#13;
PasaiDXNt&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS&#13;
\V. H. Place way&#13;
TBUBTKKS Ruben Finch, James Rocue,&#13;
WillKeuued/Sr , Aitred Monks,&#13;
r\ D. Johnson, M. ttoche.&#13;
OLUHK „ ,.»«»*" **ad&#13;
T U A T O M B - ~^~ e r » • J » ^ ^&#13;
AssBttBOB D- W.Murta&#13;
STHKKT CouMissioNBB Alfred MookB&#13;
HhiALTUOr#tcaa lit. li. r\ »1*1«&#13;
ATToa^isv L. E. Howlett&#13;
M n u m n , . ^. Broqan&#13;
laa. • £ f « c t ^ . p r . 3 © . I O C S .&#13;
TraTnV"Te^e^_ufBTl^o"n"ag"foltO"W'ST;&#13;
F o r D e t r o i t and E a s t ,&#13;
10:48 a', m., 2:19 p . m. 8:58 p . m .&#13;
F o r Grand R a p i d s , N o r t h and W e s t ,&#13;
9:26 a. m . , 2 :19 p . m . , 6:18 p . JO.&#13;
F o r Saginaw and B a y C i t y ,&#13;
10:48 a. m . , 2:19 p . m . , 8:58 p . n i .&#13;
Toledo and S o o t h ,&#13;
m., 2:19 p . m . ,&#13;
FRANK B A T , H. F . MOBLLER,&#13;
Agent, South Lyoa. O. P. A., Detroit.&#13;
ttrand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
East Bound from Pinckney&#13;
No- 28 Paeeenaer Ex Sundav, 9:28 A. M.&#13;
No. 30 Paesenfter Ex. Sunday, 4:55 P.M.&#13;
Wept fienrd from Pircknfr&#13;
No. 27 Pa^senper Ex. Sunday, 10:01 A. M, \&#13;
No. 29 Fafeenger Ex, ^nndhv. 8:44 P. M*&#13;
W. H.Clark, Agent,&#13;
-&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHUKCH.&#13;
KeT. K. A.Emerick pastor. Services everj&#13;
Sunday morning at W:3u, and every Sunday&#13;
'•""-''•i"&#13;
day evenin&#13;
ing service,&#13;
evening at uX&lt; b'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
emitting s. Sunday school at close of mornffiservice:&#13;
Alias MARY V A H F U S M , Supt.&#13;
ONUrlKOAl'IONAL OdUKCH.&#13;
Kev. O.W. Mylne pastor. serjlweTerj&#13;
O - . and every Sunday&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at close of morn&#13;
injservice Kev. K. H. Craxe, Supt,, Mocco&#13;
Teeple Sec. ! _ _ _&#13;
LIT. ilAKi"S'J ATHObIC CHURCH.&#13;
O Kev. M. J. Commerford, laator. Services&#13;
.very Sunday. Low maaa ai7:30o'clock&#13;
t i g h mass withsermon at 9:S0&amp;- » • C * ^ n&#13;
U ^&#13;
,U;0t) p. in., vesperaandbenedictlon at 7 ;ao p.m&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
H e r F a l l i n g .&#13;
"He makes me so augry," remarked&#13;
Miss Bute, "he's forever remarking to&#13;
toe that beauty Is only skin deep.*"&#13;
"And when yon get angry," remarked&#13;
MlSS ChellUS, "It j u s t s h o w s h i m h o w I Maccabee hall. C. L. Crimes V. C.&#13;
m h e A. O. H. Society of this plac«,me«ts every&#13;
1 third Sunday intne Fr. Hattnew Hail.&#13;
Jonn Tuomey and M. T. Kelly.County Delegate*&#13;
Il H K W . C . T . U . meets the first Friday of each&#13;
-month at«:3t*p. in. at theh&lt;meo t ' Dr. H. F.&#13;
Slgler Everyone interested in temperance is&#13;
coadtaily invited. Mrs. l*al Sigler, Prea; Mr».&#13;
Etta Duriee, Secretary.&#13;
The C. T. A- and B. society of this place, »t»«&#13;
every third Saturuay evening in the Fr. Matthew&#13;
Hall. John Donohue, President,&#13;
KN1QHTSOF MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before f nil&#13;
o l the moon at their hall In the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
L. E. SMITH, Sir Knight Commandei&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No.7*. F A. A. a* Kegulu&#13;
Conuuunlcatsoa Tueadav evenlaa.on or before&#13;
the foil of the moon. " Kir* VanWinkle, W. SI&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN STAB meets each monil&#13;
the Friday eTeningfollowring the regular k"&#13;
&amp; A. M. meeting, Mas. EMMA O&amp;AVB, W. M.&#13;
0U. ER OF MODERN WOODMEN. Ueet the&#13;
first Thursday evening ofeaeh Month in the&#13;
KNIGHTS or T B B LOYAL GUARD&#13;
F. L. Andrews P. M.&#13;
thin skinned yoti are."—Philadelphia r ADIES OF THE MACCABEKS. Meet every is&#13;
Press.' L i and 3rd Saturday of each month at 2:30 p m. a&#13;
K70. T. M. hall. Visiting sisters cordially in&#13;
vited. Li LA COHIWAY, Lady Com.&#13;
Group, coughs, colds, whooping&#13;
cough, etc., have no terrors for child*&#13;
ren or adults who evacuate the bowels&#13;
with Kennedy's Laxative Honey and&#13;
Tar. Tbia remedy expels all cold from&#13;
the system and strengthens the throat,&#13;
longs and bronchial tubes. The original&#13;
laxative cough syrup and liquid&#13;
eotd cure.&#13;
Sold to. F. A. Slgler, Drufftst.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
RED CHIEF&#13;
Corn Sheller, Patented.&#13;
Clamps on Barrel,&#13;
as easily as on Box.&#13;
Adjusts itself to&#13;
any size ear.&#13;
Closed . Hopper&#13;
Making ft Impossible&#13;
for Operator&#13;
to Pinch Hand.&#13;
Is guaranteed to do as good if not&#13;
better work than any shelfer on the&#13;
market. T h r o w s c o b s o u t s i d e ever}'&#13;
time. Cold rolled steel axle. R e q u i r e s&#13;
no wrench. Shells popcorn splendidly&#13;
b y t i g h t e n i n g . t e n s i o n o n spring. A l l&#13;
repairs f urnisht-d free of charge. E v e r y&#13;
f a r m e r should h a v e o n e . F o r s a l e b y&#13;
hardware and implement dealers,&#13;
M A N U F A C T U R E D 15Y&#13;
BRINLY-HARDY CO., Incorporated,&#13;
Louisville, Ky., U. S. A.&#13;
AI&#13;
-&#13;
1' i I &gt;%&#13;
^ ^&#13;
H. P. SIQLER M. D&lt; C, U, 8I04.ER M, D&#13;
D • DRS. SIGLER &amp; SLGLER,&#13;
Ph|«lei«ae and SargooM. A l l ealla promptly&#13;
attended to day or night. Offlc«| oa Mala iti ee -&#13;
Pinekney, Mieh. „ A&#13;
«&#13;
NIMENT A quick and- effective core fbr Rheomatisiu,&#13;
Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago Head-&#13;
:\.'he and other nervous pains and aches on&#13;
any part of the body, i f you suffer from&#13;
any of the above ills, we say in all sincerity&#13;
give our worthy ANTI-PAIN SOLID LIN-1&#13;
IIMEN'T a fair trial.&#13;
ANTI-PAIN SOLID LINIMENT corneal&#13;
: in a neat box in paste form, different from&#13;
other liniments, "Yes, indeed," it i s too&#13;
precious to lose by breakage or spilling. I&#13;
All j o u have to do is to apply a little of I&#13;
this liniment to the effected parts to relievoT&#13;
the pain instantly, which eventually per-]&#13;
forms a permanent cure.&#13;
I We guarantee ANTI-PAIN SOLID LINIMENT&#13;
to do all we claim fbr it, or m o w&#13;
I refunded.&#13;
Send for » box to-day and have it on 1&#13;
| in case of emergency, yon will he '&#13;
than pleated with tbe result. Price 25 Cents.&#13;
For sale by oar agents or you may&#13;
direct from oe. Sent postpakl on receipt*&#13;
?&gt;rtee. Agent* wanted everywhere, wrf&#13;
or terms. v&#13;
IT-HELS0N*e0.',£Wt#»0,IIML&#13;
V&#13;
• ' . ^ 1&#13;
tfssv-&#13;
" * • • • • •&#13;
V- '**&#13;
'«(W#W&#13;
,"**». *&#13;
rt\«; iw»s I.I&lt; v v . • J V - / . ' ^ •KT*&#13;
"*•»»•».-•• m»)&lt;%i^n*n -A,*&#13;
r.V &gt; * • - • •' I '••'".&#13;
^ i l " * '&#13;
»—. jqp ••••NWfcwm*.' cttm&#13;
.%&gt; •&#13;
fj&#13;
*&#13;
i *&#13;
*a^t'&#13;
PRAN&amp; I*. AWDBKW*, Pub.&#13;
HNCKNEY, &gt;;r MICHIGAN&#13;
The Russian eagle may be bald t&lt;&#13;
be suffering from &lt;.TO bad cases oi&#13;
headache.&#13;
The BoBton Olobe indulges in a&#13;
Latin pert paragraph. That will go&#13;
all right in Boston.&#13;
Bernard Shaw says he is proud of&#13;
his play, and it may even be that he&#13;
is yain of {hose whiskers.&#13;
Chicago glassworkers have gone on&#13;
strike, thus threatening the hotel&#13;
clerks' diamond^ stud industry.&#13;
i , . , . , ^ . . 1 . „ • » • • • - • — . • • • i • • • • •&#13;
No one who reads the letters In *&#13;
hreach-of-promise case will have any&#13;
fear that the age of romance is dead.&#13;
The two most popular flowers-this&#13;
fall are chrysanthemums and - cauliflowers.&#13;
And they're about the same&#13;
price.&#13;
A report from Seoul says the Korean&#13;
emperor has agreed to Japan's&#13;
terms. Evidently there are&#13;
ists in Seoul.&#13;
humor-&#13;
Mosquitoes do not spread yellow&#13;
fever in winter time, according to the&#13;
experts. They are too busy being&#13;
dead, we suppose.&#13;
We have observed that when a man&#13;
gins making '$100,000 a year he&#13;
ddenly realizes that long ago he&#13;
chose an aim in life.&#13;
AT rival "claimant to the throne of&#13;
Russia has started up in one of the&#13;
provinces. He must have an insatiable&#13;
appetite for trouble.&#13;
Every actor who is struggling halfwayup&#13;
4-he ladder of success must rejoice&#13;
to see the way Sarah Bernhardt&#13;
orders her managers around. ,&#13;
Final decision[ between the rival&#13;
claimants to be the first lady ir&#13;
New York's 400 may be delayed until&#13;
King Edward visits Manhattan.&#13;
• y w i . ^ * * •&#13;
FAILURE&#13;
THE SITUATION GROWS&#13;
MORE ALARMING IN&#13;
RUSSIA.&#13;
. [ H Q , straight ahead o'er the level plate,&#13;
* f In a r W n of light U lies;&#13;
And It may be wet with the driving rain,&#13;
BuOt r Itd rlyu ret»o the drifting ukles; Through thtme ea rocnh. topf tthhee laainudrse adfaayr,. ToA sth Ie rTpduorp otne tthweil ilgohntg'* -w shwitien gwinagy . star,&#13;
And I'm out one the long white way onoe&#13;
more, .^&#13;
OfT hme yp abtrho kteon thperi ssokni,e*s thoef bolpueen, door, I Tcaon thseineg *th teh alitg hart eo sht fIctnsg lee vaenl dt rpacekw*,, •&#13;
AnInd tthhee ssuinng ionfg ac vitaiensi shcaeldl dmaey ; back,* .-&#13;
From the end of the long white way.&#13;
d the swlrllm&#13;
PREMIER NOW 8AID TO FAVOR&#13;
0RAST4C MEASURES TO.&#13;
BRJNfi ORDER ANOQUIET,&#13;
A Gloomy Outlook.&#13;
With the complete cutting off of&#13;
Si. Petersburg from the outside world,&#13;
showing the failure of the efforts of&#13;
Count Witte to bring the telegraphers'&#13;
strike to and end, the Russian situation.&#13;
become$ more alarming than ever.&#13;
It is reported that a general strike of&#13;
all branches of industry has already&#13;
begun and that the railways may be&#13;
expected to stop running at any moment.&#13;
The 8ltnatlon-at Sebastopol-aad&#13;
Cronstadt is enveloped in deep mystery&#13;
and reports aresteadily, coming&#13;
in from various sources of the spread&#13;
of the disaffection among the troops&#13;
at all points and the anger of the people&#13;
in general at the threat of the government&#13;
to mobilize another half million&#13;
Cossacks for general service.&#13;
That the premier has changed his&#13;
attitude in dealing with the threatening&#13;
industrial and political situation&#13;
is one of the surprising bits of news.&#13;
Count Witte is said to be opposed to&#13;
further conciliatory methods and to&#13;
favor the adoption of drastic measures&#13;
for the suppression1 of the troubles In&#13;
the army and navy,' as well as among&#13;
he city workers and the peasants. This&#13;
report has amazed those who have&#13;
bladejiever rest*,&#13;
*' f I / * ••'&#13;
. &lt;0'er the ^s ky-,p ^it.c htehde Iccrea gasgTuTLta itiplewa,; L- Ifh i*ZS* /rom the ^ ¾ ¾ ^ 1 iiwhere the pinioned torrent cries;&#13;
While, shining bright ha tha,btue aftovft&#13;
j S t a n d the peaks in WtelPwhlte Ifrray,&#13;
And point the path to the land I love,&#13;
"By the Pass of the l^onr White Way. u-&#13;
Ho. straight ahead from the harbor's&#13;
mouth, ' . .,&#13;
A Isnh i*p' s* uwwhyit eo fw .afkoaem t,o UthjUe besu:r, ning south. ShWe itlhia s Itdsi pbpieadsi nhg ers afplapgh-i rteo stkhiee s.f ortress The ggriumar. d of th&lt;* outer bay; She hoacse and'rso pripmed'; the hand neath, the And she's off on the long white way.&#13;
And she's out on the long white way once&#13;
more. *&#13;
In the salt of the ocean breeze,-&#13;
The long white rldo to a distant shore.&#13;
On the backs of the long white seas;&#13;
Where the wind-whipped billows' smoking&#13;
crests&#13;
on through the racing day;&#13;
lg screw-bladejiever&#13;
..AsU4Kut»ouT4h&lt;t&gt;long wtflt* * a r .&#13;
&amp;w&amp;?ag&amp;*»lf«&#13;
l'an-u» 4»a Uxa Un# white-way once&#13;
more?' '~&#13;
ThTeh adt anrgaemr pst ratcok thoe' evr etrhgee olofo 'ss igbhatc: k, TiWll itthh et opea sths !pi ssn wowosn carnusdt intgh ew hpliuten:g e&#13;
b e g u n , •&gt; • ToD oaw lna—ndd oowf no rtaon gthe ea gnldo wviinnge daanyd. sun, And the dust of the long white way.&#13;
Oh—thlees s loqnuge swt hite way, with Its end-&#13;
ThOef adniostdaynnt e setoa s thaen ds osukli'ess ,.u n. rest,&#13;
ByE reth He heg rferaete s whheirt ew imngoso na nmd f liitess . purple&#13;
^ A L L SOKT6.&#13;
.. wmi'm/f&#13;
*f?J&#13;
are&#13;
night,&#13;
ToA tnhd et h&#13;
At the end" ortfg ht&#13;
e sun in Iti a sure day,&#13;
risinsgtr abnrgieg ht,n ew worlds, that&#13;
he star-strewn way.&#13;
are&#13;
—Bertrand Shad well.&#13;
•BtCGA'R J&amp;atoEtJTQ &amp;REAKFAS1L&#13;
\h.%\f ylrdt irtth the fgtnily tree.&#13;
Beauty is gnly ski.i deep, and comiJlttJeu&#13;
Is ucfcally ;;ut en top cf in*&#13;
s:'fr • _ •&#13;
Health culture is ih'j saxe as sweaj*&#13;
Inrr oft. You can kf-cp it up about a&#13;
•week. ' . ' •'** '&#13;
V.";y poke ,*un at him? Tho football&#13;
he: .i V.'.aLu ledger than almost any other&#13;
ki^d.&#13;
A'ttr all, a peacemaker is merely&#13;
t' -\ bal^s lucky one among the innocent&#13;
bystanders.&#13;
This thlag of showing how, thankful&#13;
you u.e is n.orely another way of running&#13;
typ household expenses,&#13;
Ch, yia, there are plenty of men&#13;
w? y ccvld l.ivent rtally sensible college&#13;
yells, ' .t who would yell that&#13;
eort.&#13;
- St. Petersburg now has a "Hooligan&#13;
quarter," so called in the Russian&#13;
papers. American is gradually&#13;
becoming the universal language.&#13;
A contemporary speaks of the&#13;
"ideal battleship." The ideal battleship&#13;
consists largely of good guns&#13;
and a good man behind every gun.&#13;
Jack Frost is the Russian government's&#13;
faithful ally, now as in Napoleon's&#13;
time. Even the most ardent&#13;
revolutionist's blood is chilled by a&#13;
blizzard.&#13;
The-Chicago _ woman who threw&#13;
$15,000 of her money into the fire,&#13;
and then sued her husband ior support,&#13;
must have regarded her own&#13;
clashas tainted.&#13;
.Norway has. the first Queen Maud&#13;
on record. Now why can't King Alfonso&#13;
go Norway one better by coming&#13;
over here and picking out a&#13;
Queen Daisie fcr Spain?&#13;
been aware of the facrtfiat"a mintary&#13;
dictatorship was one of the pitfalls&#13;
which the reactionaries have been constructing&#13;
in order to bring about the&#13;
downfall of the premier_juid_the abandonmentofThelib&#13;
era 1 program- wh tc h&#13;
he has been engaged in carrying out.&#13;
It is also i-eported In Berlin, from&#13;
whence the preceding report comes,&#13;
thai the Poles are already taking advantage&#13;
of the relaxation of the government's&#13;
watchfulness and that the&#13;
revolutionists have again taken up&#13;
their work where it was interrupted by&#13;
the declaration of martial law. Disturbances&#13;
were reported from several&#13;
points today and Warsaw dispatches&#13;
say that strong bodies of troops are&#13;
still held in the city ia anticipation&#13;
of another outbreak of rioting and disorder.&#13;
Several mutinies of troops are&#13;
also reported, but none on a large&#13;
scale.&#13;
Only vague'reports have been received&#13;
of the peasant uprising. These&#13;
represent the movement as steadily&#13;
spreading in the Volga and central&#13;
provinces. Reports have also been received&#13;
of minor anti-Jewish demonstrations&#13;
on the south, but these cannot&#13;
be verified in the present state of co.-=;&#13;
munication.&#13;
^Speaking of beggars,^said the man&#13;
smoking, "I know of a kind-hearted&#13;
woman in Seventy-fourth street west&#13;
who isn't so kind-hearted as she used&#13;
to be—at least, as far as one New&#13;
York bOggar is concerned.&#13;
"Some time ago a Weary Willie appeared&#13;
at her portals and craved a&#13;
crust for breakfast. He got a good&#13;
deal more—meat and potatoes and coffee&#13;
and rolls and an invitation to. call&#13;
again in case he did not And the employment&#13;
he so anxiously sought.&#13;
'He had told a good story, and he&#13;
lcrked the part, so that It was not surt.&#13;
mueli, and for which he was duly&#13;
thankful.-&#13;
"But it couldn't continue forever, as&#13;
much as he may have wished it&#13;
mfgllt. One morning as he came up&#13;
from the basement entrance he was&#13;
met by a friend of the family who&#13;
was making an early call on business.&#13;
This man, who was as hard-hearted&#13;
as the lady was not, recognized the&#13;
tramp and made some inquiries about&#13;
•him of the lady. She told his hard luck&#13;
story, and the hard-hearted man informed&#13;
her that the tramp had been&#13;
riding up to her house every morning&#13;
in the street car to get his breakfast.&#13;
upon the tender heart of the excellent&#13;
lady. Employment seemed to be difficult&#13;
to secure and for the next several&#13;
days Willie showed up each morning&#13;
about *9 o'clock and had a cracking j along for the&#13;
The mr.:;&#13;
ananswer&#13;
one who&#13;
answer.&#13;
3 t&#13;
h.&#13;
ho won't take "No" for&#13;
*hoTrt"as anttoylnfc as tho&#13;
es to give "No" for an&#13;
wising that he-made an impresstea 'That ended-his snap, and where he&#13;
good breakfast,- which he enjoyed very-j-N** York-Hera4dr&#13;
is setting his breakfasts now I can't&#13;
say, but there are many kind-hearted&#13;
women in New York, and he is no&#13;
doubt feedings his morning iace right&#13;
price of a car ride.—&#13;
WE3STE*R A/tl) THE SPECTACLES&#13;
Why is it that nobody places auy&#13;
ceaSu' ca ' l the claims made by some&#13;
men t".:.. 'i.ey prefer the upper berth&#13;
in a sleeper?&#13;
It is a wonder to us that would-be&#13;
inventors of airships do not take a&#13;
silk hat for a model, and of perpetual&#13;
motion machines a gas meter.&#13;
It is odd, but If a poor man should&#13;
suddenly become rich wo- should dislike&#13;
him as much for being wealthy&#13;
as we now pity him for being poor.&#13;
It is a shame that Cadmus, who in«&#13;
vented the~alphabet, did not have sufflcient&#13;
business foresight to Invent the&#13;
Dying Murderess.&#13;
In .solitary confinement in a cell-&#13;
East Cambridge, Mass., jail since No&#13;
vember 13, 1S8S, without having had a&#13;
glimpse of the outside world since her&#13;
Incarceration. Mrs. Sarah Jane Robin&#13;
Daniel Webster had a habit, while&#13;
speaking in court, of putting on oldfashioned&#13;
spectacles, whose arms rested&#13;
over the ears. After reading any&#13;
passage desired, lie used to raise the&#13;
spectacles from his nose and push&#13;
them up over his forehead until they&#13;
rested on his head.&#13;
4Dne day a waggish member sitting&#13;
in the next seat to Mr. Webster placed&#13;
his own spectacles in front of,Webster,&#13;
who had already one pair on -his&#13;
head. Bending to take up some book&#13;
he picked up the new spectacles at&#13;
the same time, and adjusted them to&#13;
read. Then up went the second pair&#13;
to join company with the first pair&#13;
above the massive forehead.&#13;
The wag, grinning over the success&#13;
nf his trick, borrowed another pair of&#13;
spectacles and placedjthem before the&#13;
great orator, who was too much excited&#13;
to notice. In due time he had&#13;
occasion to read again, and seized the&#13;
spectacles before him. As a matter&#13;
of course, the third pair shared the&#13;
same fate as the two preceding, and&#13;
Webster was astonished to find everybody's&#13;
face wearing a broad smile, and&#13;
especially the face of the man whose&#13;
arguments he was answering.&#13;
'The sentleman may smile and&#13;
smile.'' Mr. WebBter roared out, shaking&#13;
his head angrily and pointing a&#13;
finger at his opponent, "but he pnly&#13;
makes of himself a,spectacle for the&#13;
derision of his countrymen"&#13;
At the same time the three pairs of&#13;
spectacles feH upon the orator's desk,&#13;
and there was a general roar of merrJment.—&#13;
London Answers. ^ ^&#13;
alphabet block and patent it and leave&#13;
some sort of legacy for his heirs.&#13;
There ought to be some kind of n&#13;
semi-charitable association formed,&#13;
whose purpose should be to explain&#13;
to the public that because a man h&amp;s&#13;
made R fortune.he did not necessar^fc^&#13;
steal the money.&#13;
SAYINGS OF SAGES.&#13;
Take all the swift advantages of the&#13;
hours.—Shakespeare. ,&#13;
All human power is a compound ol&#13;
tkne and, patience.—Balzac.&#13;
Intolerance has been the curse&#13;
every., age ard Gtate.—S. Davios.&#13;
of&#13;
An obstinate man does not hold&#13;
opinions—they hold him.—Bishop Butler.&#13;
- "I -Avonder,'' -remarked Smkhr--^4f&#13;
there ever was a social 'function,'&#13;
pulled off with something to eat, at&#13;
which the refreshments were not&#13;
eulogized as 'delicious?'"&#13;
son. the noted murderess, sentenced to&#13;
imprisonment for life for poisoning her&#13;
brother-in-law., Prince Arthur Freeman,&#13;
and indicted for the death of five others,&#13;
has become a nervous wreck,&#13;
which, coupled with a recent development&#13;
of heart failure has caused the&#13;
jail officials and the prison doctor, Edward&#13;
Utley, to give up all hope for her&#13;
One Chicago septuagenarian&#13;
lust been mulcted of $15,000 for&#13;
breach of promise and another has&#13;
married a young girl. Our climate is&#13;
certainly full of electricity.&#13;
In providing herself with a fortyhorsepower&#13;
automobile for her American&#13;
tour Queen Margherita has assured&#13;
herself a warm welcome in society's&#13;
most exclusive circles.&#13;
recovery and to look for her death at&#13;
i any moment. Mrs. Robinson has noi&#13;
been outside of her room since her&#13;
recent illness, but previous to this she&#13;
had been allowed in the yard for about&#13;
an\hour every day after the other prishas&#13;
f/oners had retired to their cells.&#13;
For years Mrs. Robinson has been&#13;
reading religious papers, and magazines&#13;
in preference to others, and all&#13;
the jail officials who see her say that&#13;
she appears contented and cheerful&#13;
and thoroughly resigned to her fate&#13;
Grand PTIZB St. Louis, 9904&#13;
otumSfia g^raphophones&#13;
BEST TALKING MACHINES MADE&#13;
Cylinder $7JtOto$1QO&#13;
Disc Machines* $12 to $65&#13;
version of "Romeo and&#13;
be brought out in Lon-&#13;
A musical&#13;
Juliet"' is to&#13;
den, with Edna May as&#13;
was Shakespeare himself who said:&#13;
MTo what base uses may we come."&#13;
Sultan Must Yield.&#13;
• The powers after carefully examining&#13;
the sultan's latest counter proposals&#13;
have decided to reject them and&#13;
actively resume the naval demonstrations&#13;
in Turkish waters and seize the&#13;
islands of Lemnos and Imbros. No con-&#13;
Another of the few remaining survivors&#13;
of the charge of the light, brigade&#13;
a t Balaklava has just died in&#13;
England, aged 78. According to our&#13;
records, he is No. 1708. Expansive&#13;
600!&#13;
Juliet. It slderation has been given to stopping&#13;
the passage of the Dardanelles owing&#13;
to the interruption of international&#13;
commerce which would follow.&#13;
After an examination of tho sultan's&#13;
counter proposals all the power: came&#13;
to the conclusion that the propoMtlons&#13;
twoser-e dilato_ry _an_d e_nt_irel y u.n.a.a-t^isfa c-&#13;
It is reported that the "elite" of&#13;
Jersey City are • shocked by the discovery&#13;
that a "society man" is a professional&#13;
burglar. No w«*ider. ^ In&#13;
Jersey it is safer and morejxrofftable&#13;
to be a trusl. '^-^&#13;
Yale's -share-tH* the receipts for tho&#13;
-football games with Princeton and&#13;
Harvard will this year amount to&#13;
$63,000. Is it still difficult to guess&#13;
why some people are opposed to the&#13;
abolition of the game?&#13;
How many salaried men are there&#13;
who after a day's figuring could asfiWtif&#13;
the chief financial question that&#13;
Secretary Shaw put to the clerks of&#13;
his department: "How much are you&#13;
/jrortn abore your debts?"&#13;
Wants Jews tc^ome.&#13;
Premier Laurier, of Canada, i n an&#13;
'address before'a meeting called to protest&#13;
"kjakjiiat the massacre of Jews in&#13;
Russia, and to subscribe funds for the&#13;
survivors, suggested Canada as a haven&#13;
for the persecuted race. Clarence&#13;
T. Desola, of Montreal, president of&#13;
the Zionist federation, said 26,000 Jews&#13;
had been murdered, 100,000 maimed,&#13;
and that there are now 300,00¾ of them&#13;
homeless and on the verge of starvation.&#13;
Taking these facts for his text&#13;
Sir Wilfrid Laurier freely discussed&#13;
conditions in Russia.&#13;
"I am doubtful," he said, "If the&#13;
present government at St. Petersburg&#13;
has the power to put a stop to the barbarity&#13;
and slaughter. We cannot hope&#13;
to bring all the homejess to Canada;&#13;
but al! those who come will find a&#13;
hearty welcome and an equal measure&#13;
of justice, liberty and nms*?i&gt;»"&#13;
Tbo Graphophono roppodvooa c// kinds of&#13;
Jttuslo perfootty — band, orclicstra, vtottn,&#13;
voomi and Instrumental solos, quartettes,&#13;
etGm It Ic an endless sowoo of amuaomontm&#13;
I y OUd&#13;
v J n r l v a l e d&#13;
JVI tusical&#13;
E J rlUlcrnt&#13;
- J n»plrin$j&#13;
j \ ^ t t r a c t l v ©&#13;
I~3( nt©rtalnlnjj&#13;
^ ^ activating&#13;
\ J utwearlnjg&#13;
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**&#13;
CHAPTER XXIV.—Continued . ,&#13;
But I recovered my composure sufficiently&#13;
to play my part of the returned&#13;
husband. It was not unsuccessfully&#13;
done.. The children clung to me&#13;
from the first, Mr. Carter was like a&#13;
father In his kindness, Constance only&#13;
was cold. But I did not wish to remove&#13;
the barrier between us. I was&#13;
not such a Tilllan as that, and from&#13;
the first my calculations had only extended&#13;
to the position held by my&#13;
brother in the bank and mill, not to&#13;
that in his wife's affections. I was&#13;
married, and Lenora loved me.&#13;
But my plans changed. I saw that&#13;
It would not be politic to take the position&#13;
of/ cashier, even. If it could be&#13;
obtained, and I decided to renounce&#13;
it and, for tne present, all designs of&#13;
appropriating its funds or those of the&#13;
mill; for my overpowering love for&#13;
Constance increased day by day while&#13;
1 lived under the same roof.&#13;
And then the tempter came in the&#13;
person of Marks. "Marry her," he&#13;
said, "for I see you love her. She is&#13;
rich, and you can help the rest of us.&#13;
Business does not prosper as it used;&#13;
our ^operations are too well understood"'&#13;
t^lariy her!" I echoed; "how can I,&#13;
when Lenora is alive?"&#13;
'[ An evil smile lit up his face, but Jae&#13;
^only said, "Lenora may die, she Is far&#13;
M .u, 11 r ^ ng ... ' . j n r y j — -&#13;
not now—not now. &gt; tor fear of seeming&#13;
maudlin r refrain from saying&#13;
more. v Ydto must have known how 1&#13;
loved you, and yon can realize what&#13;
it costs to leave you to him.&#13;
VICTOR HAMILTbN&#13;
CHAPTER XXV&#13;
from strong;" but I thought nothing&#13;
of all this, for I did not think he was&#13;
bad enough to attempt her life. Now&#13;
I know that he was. I know that it&#13;
was he who sent the potsoned ring in&#13;
my name to her.&#13;
I saw a notice of her death in a&#13;
newspaper which, no doubt, he sent&#13;
to me. But there was nothing concerning&#13;
the suspicions regarding the&#13;
cause, and. indeed, I do not think they&#13;
awoke until Bruce began his investigations&#13;
in the claimant case.&#13;
I had long ceased to love Lenora&#13;
though I appreciated her slngle-heartbfflce&#13;
after rejecting my proposal to&#13;
give him a better Job in another mill&#13;
I warned him to keep off my premises.&#13;
My premises, and; he the true ownerf&#13;
Marks waa keener than I, and, I&#13;
think, mistrusted JAm from the /first.&#13;
But be eaid nothing to me about it.&#13;
It was his hand that fired the shot at&#13;
Primus Edes, as he was called. Of&#13;
that I am firmly convinced, though T&#13;
did not see him about Grovedale. I&#13;
think he conceived the scheme of removing&#13;
Lenora and Vane from my&#13;
path, and then of holding It over me&#13;
afterwards as the means of getting&#13;
large sums of money.from me, which&#13;
he reasoned .1 would pay rather than&#13;
suffer the matter to become known.&#13;
But I never even mistrusted it until&#13;
Vane recovered his reason and&#13;
brought suit against* me. Then love,&#13;
jealousy, fear, and the old instinct to&#13;
pit my faculties against the world&#13;
arose within me. There seemed no&#13;
other course open than to oppose the&#13;
suit, and everything seemed in my&#13;
favor. This was at the outset. But&#13;
as the days went on, and I saw the anguish&#13;
of Constance, the dejection of&#13;
Vane, a great, shuddering pity for&#13;
them both, and horror for myself,&#13;
awoke in my soul. I would thfftk of&#13;
our mother, of her love for us both, of&#13;
her dying request to Vane, of his long&#13;
search for me, of my treachery in al-&#13;
, , , t , *it tu t t. — --- ------ disposition to take away the authority&#13;
ln&amp;a -Been, iasieneainto.me iflrtuoua._jlow jje ^ ^ risen-from.being the.maiL _nowexercised by- the severaL-jslales.&#13;
lowing him to fall Into the clutches&#13;
of the law in my place, of his recovery&#13;
to reason, only to find me in .his&#13;
place, and the cumulative wickedness&#13;
of my course would grind me as If I&#13;
iron frames used upon criminals in&#13;
olden times.&#13;
But slowly up from under all this&#13;
anguish of, mind there grew up a firm&#13;
resolve which comforted me,—comforted&#13;
while it made me wretched. I&#13;
determined to let matters take their&#13;
course, play my part to the end, and&#13;
'vhen that end should come, which I&#13;
Conclusion&#13;
The husband and wife read the confession&#13;
together after he had been released&#13;
and returned to his own home,&#13;
and a great pity took possession pf&#13;
his soul for his unfortunate brother&#13;
"He had great Innate nobleness,"&#13;
said Constance, "or he would not have&#13;
given up everything when he might&#13;
have kept It."&#13;
"Yes. that proves It," said her husband;&#13;
"but for this I might still be in&#13;
confinement and awaiting trial on&#13;
charge of murder; but I. owe It to&#13;
your faithfulness, my wife, first of&#13;
all."&#13;
The Hamlltons continued to reside&#13;
in Grovedale, the children grew to be&#13;
a tall youth and maid, and great comforts&#13;
to their parents, and they were&#13;
taught to feel pity, rather than detesatldn,&#13;
for the wicked."&#13;
After two or three years passed&#13;
away, a large box of fruit reached&#13;
them trom California, and they felt&#13;
sure the sender must be Victor. In&#13;
five years came a check for one thousand&#13;
dollars. It was signed "Charles&#13;
Rogers," but they were sure it came&#13;
from him also, particularly as others&#13;
followed from time to time. They&#13;
wrote to Charles Rogers, but receiveing&#13;
no reply fancied that he did not&#13;
dare answer, and so they would not&#13;
write again.&#13;
But at last they heard of him, and&#13;
in a way to create the ntmost consternation.&#13;
He had been arrested. We&#13;
alt read Ah&amp; account oi a wealthy&#13;
MEETS&#13;
FIFTY-NINTH CONGRESS&#13;
NOW IN OFFICIAL&#13;
EXISTENCE.&#13;
TWO SENATORS EXCLUDED FROM&#13;
T H E SESSION—THE WORK TO&#13;
BE DONE BRIEFLY STATED.&#13;
ranch owner who was arrested and&#13;
held for trial on charges of former&#13;
dishonesty. How for years he had&#13;
commanded the universal_respect (rf&#13;
the community in which he lived;&#13;
" I owe It to your faithfulness, my wife, first of all."&#13;
WW-&#13;
.7:^7- /::&#13;
ed devotion to me. But now that she&#13;
was dead, I said to myself, 'exultantly.&#13;
I would press my pretended claims&#13;
U£OQ Constance as I never had done.&#13;
But I aaW nothing about it to Marks,&#13;
yltfc w&amp;osn and all my evil associates&#13;
I determined to break; for, strange as&#13;
It may appear, I fully decided to begin&#13;
a new upright life, to be in reality&#13;
what Vane had been. I would persuade&#13;
Constance-to marry me on the&#13;
plea of beginning a new life together,&#13;
and then I decided to be so kind, so&#13;
good and true, that she would never&#13;
mistrust I was not the real Vane Hamilton.&#13;
The good, pure moral atmosphere&#13;
of Grovedale seemed to1 have uplifted&#13;
my soul to better things than I had&#13;
ever known. I began to- see that honor&#13;
really existed, that there were true&#13;
hearts in the world. Little Clare&#13;
would kneel beside me when she&#13;
.fntyed, and sometimes I prayed&#13;
Wijfch her, in my. heart, and&#13;
tMfcied I waa struggling to free&#13;
itself of the terrible tolls of sins;&#13;
but : how could I t h i n k l h a t forgiveness&#13;
was mlne^^or that -it&#13;
could come to mTlnrtne^mldst of the&#13;
wicked deceit of my daily life!&#13;
About this time I began to feel conscious&#13;
of an uneasiness regarding&#13;
Prlnlus Edes. Not that I mistrusted&#13;
Constance of any wrong. Far from&#13;
it. But I feared that she might have&#13;
a rofoantlc attachment for him. as he&#13;
wastsald to resemble her husband In&#13;
some degree; „1 palled&#13;
flee and talked wj&#13;
lm .to Jhe. of*&#13;
£Th**ieej»v&#13;
was confident would establish me in&#13;
the eyes of the law as Vane Hamilton,&#13;
I would go away and give him his&#13;
rightful place.&#13;
Vane was arrested, and I remained&#13;
free. That was as I expected, but I&#13;
lingered a few days on the scene of&#13;
my quiet, happy, yes, happy life,&#13;
for it seemed hard to cut myself&#13;
off from it all. I do not mean to&#13;
preach, but I want to say that&#13;
good people know little about what&#13;
they condemn so rapidly; they&#13;
know little and seem to care little&#13;
about the lives of the poor creatures&#13;
bftenest found in their courts of justice.&#13;
I have thought of this much in the&#13;
past week, and i have wondered what&#13;
my life would have been if I had not&#13;
been taken from my parents, but al&#13;
lowed to grow up in the midst of good&#13;
influences; arid I have been, probably,&#13;
as good a man as my twin brother,&#13;
and perhaps it is not too much to say&#13;
that he might have been like me with&#13;
the same environment.&#13;
1 go away, an&lt;t I go a thief, a criminal&#13;
In the eyes of the law. But I know&#13;
Vane's heart* and I feel that. I may&#13;
,hope for forgiveness, and that he will&#13;
believe me when I say that I will repay&#13;
him some time, if possible, the&#13;
money I took while occupying his&#13;
premises. And, Constance, 1 prqoiiae&#13;
you thafl will live an honest life here:&#13;
after. I can fancy your doubting my&#13;
ability to do so; but I will—I swear&#13;
i t . ., . . . , . - , • ^ •&#13;
ager to the ownership of a large fruit&#13;
ranch, and how his friends felt at his&#13;
arrest. "After a time the matter was&#13;
dropped and we wondered at it.&#13;
Long afterwards the reason was&#13;
known to a few. Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton&#13;
read the accounts likewise, and&#13;
immediately started for California.&#13;
They went to the governor and laid&#13;
before him the whole story of his life,&#13;
temptations, and struggles. Vane&#13;
pleaded and Constance pleaded, and&#13;
both were made eloquent by their&#13;
great sympathy and emotions. The&#13;
governor fortunately was-a man of&#13;
heart as well as of jtfstice and discernment.&#13;
Perhaps, too, the grace&#13;
and beauty -of'Constance touched him,&#13;
for he^was a gallant man.&#13;
t all events, after some delay and&#13;
no little consideration, a full pardon&#13;
was granted Victor Hamilton, and&#13;
thenceforth he was free to travel as&#13;
he would, and without fear. It was&#13;
not I.iiu.vn for a long time that it was&#13;
Solomon Marks who denounced him.&#13;
because his demands of "hush money"&#13;
were disregarded,—not until the_aj&gt;&#13;
Brief Sessions.&#13;
The fifty-ninth congress began its&#13;
first session on Monday, two members&#13;
of the senate being absent for cause—&#13;
MitchelL of Oregon, and Burton, of&#13;
Kansas—the black sheep of the assemblage.&#13;
Both are under conviction of&#13;
violating the federal laws, and both&#13;
have been warned not to enter the senate&#13;
chamber until their names have&#13;
been cleared of these accusations.&#13;
Both houses soon adjourned out of respect&#13;
to those who have died during&#13;
the year.&#13;
Among the Important measures com*&#13;
ing up for consideration will be those&#13;
regulating freight and passenger railroad&#13;
rates; giving federal supervision&#13;
over Insurance companies; providing&#13;
the form of government fo^the canal&#13;
zone and pertaining to the construction&#13;
of the waterway; lower duties on&#13;
Imports from the Philippines; providing&#13;
some form of American citizenship&#13;
for the residents of Porto Rico; restricting&#13;
objectionable immigration;&#13;
renewal of the Chinese exclusion laws;&#13;
a ship subsidy for American vessels;&#13;
determining a course to be pursued in&#13;
Santo Domingo, and adjusting further&#13;
differences with Cuba.&#13;
Of these, a more or less drastic- rate&#13;
regulation bill is certain to be passed&#13;
after long discussion and possibly a&#13;
bitter fight. There is no present hope&#13;
i insurance^4egialatioo, there being no&#13;
and death of Matks&#13;
Wfceteyei; I go J ahall take with me&#13;
totoaon eiitotect-but not to an unusual the memory' of your true, noble wo-&#13;
I hufcj&amp;ot the slightest M««( manhoojl'afd wifehood. , tVan^ may&#13;
VMRV Hamilton—not ' tn'eTrest his soul in your truth and faith&#13;
M, I waa convinced, fulness, and I, In time, perhaps, may usually drops a subject before heJua&#13;
W«e*J»titft U*H be glaf ttrtum* ot^on •« **IK*r: bntftffcMiwd ^ : ^ ^ ^ - ^ ^ 7 ^ ^ ^&#13;
vest, confession,&#13;
tOOU placei&#13;
He visited Grovedale, and such was&#13;
his genial nature and manner that he&#13;
was well and even cordially received,&#13;
for his story was well known as well&#13;
as his subsequent" reformation. Then&#13;
he returned to his California ranch.&#13;
As he shook hands woth Constance&#13;
at parting she said to him:&#13;
"You should marry, Victor. The&#13;
ranch needs a mistress."&#13;
"Never," he said. "You have spoiled&#13;
me for any other woman;" but his&#13;
head was uplifted and he breathed&#13;
a full breath at thinking he had been&#13;
able to give up his chance of winning&#13;
her when in his own hands was held&#13;
his brother's fate. . "Cherish her,&#13;
Vane, as you would cherish your own&#13;
life, for she is a jewel."&#13;
"She is more than my life to me,'*&#13;
8atd Vane.&#13;
"When will you send for me to keep&#13;
house for you?" asked Clare, dancing&#13;
out into the sunshine before him.&#13;
"Next year; and when the conquering&#13;
hero follows—as no doubt he will&#13;
in a week—we will have a grand wedding&#13;
at the ranch. How does that&#13;
strike you, missy?"&#13;
Clare blushed a little, for the conquering&#13;
hero was not a myth, and the&#13;
wedding actually took place last summer&#13;
at the ranch as her uncle proposed.&#13;
Her parents and brother were&#13;
present, and the ring used at the cere&#13;
mony was the one left in trust by the&#13;
sorrowing mother years before, and&#13;
whose spirit must have been present&#13;
to bless them all.&#13;
The ISnd.&#13;
A Literary Chemist.&#13;
"What Is Skrybbter's profession?"&#13;
"WeUVfeoVa sort of literary chemist."&#13;
' - .&#13;
"Literary chemist? What do you&#13;
mean?"&#13;
"Every book he writes is a drug on&#13;
the market."&#13;
The Santo Domingo treaty will be rati&#13;
fled if the reports of Prof. Hollander&#13;
satisfy * the senate that President&#13;
Roosevelt was justified in adopting&#13;
the course he is now pursuing.&#13;
A ship subsidy bill cannot pass, as&#13;
the treasury is threatened with a serious&#13;
deficit and revenues are too low&#13;
for such a measure to be successful.&#13;
Citizenship will probably not be given&#13;
the Porto Ricans, as a majority believe&#13;
they are not yet fitted for such an honor,&#13;
Chinese exclusion will be renewed&#13;
in some form.&#13;
The Isthmian canaPwill play an important&#13;
part in the session's work.&#13;
Hon. Charles E. Townsead. of Michigan,&#13;
has about completed bis bill for&#13;
the regulation of railroad rates and&#13;
will introduce it at once. He says: "In&#13;
my bill I shall endeavor to follow the&#13;
desires of the president and accomplish&#13;
what I believe he will ask congress&#13;
to accomplish. I dont know, but J&#13;
think the president in his message will&#13;
cover three cardinal points upon which&#13;
legislation la necessary to correct evils&#13;
from which the country is suffering.&#13;
I think he will recommend the abolition&#13;
of what are""krf©wn as *midnight&#13;
rates.' By that term J mean those rates&#13;
nrar&#13;
^ • ! *=f&gt; e=f&#13;
FUNNY BUT NATURAL M f S T A K *&#13;
Arjltt Was Net ffamUkr With JUflfT&#13;
of tlie S M .&#13;
Dr. B. B. Norland of Wheatlwy,&#13;
Minn., is said to hold that moseattoet&#13;
bring about marriages, th4 fame mosquito,&#13;
in the summer time, biting a&#13;
young man and a maid, and thus causing&#13;
a transition of blood and a mutual&#13;
affection.&#13;
"I did say that mosquitoes caused&#13;
marriages," admitted Dr. Norland the&#13;
other day; '*bnt tbe statement was a&#13;
facf tlous one. To take It seriously is&#13;
a mistake—a ludicrous mistake, like&#13;
that which Black, the artist made.&#13;
"Black lived near here. He was a&#13;
handsome chap, but poor. He feH in&#13;
love with Nancy Lee, a rich sea, captain's&#13;
daughter.&#13;
"And his suit prospered, though fee&#13;
pressed It very timidly, fearing that&#13;
rich old Skipper Lee would not care&#13;
to see bis darling Nancy marry a&#13;
poverty-stricken artist&#13;
"As to Nancy's mind, there was no&#13;
question; she loved Black ardently.&#13;
"He sat with her one night In the&#13;
parlor, with the light lowered, when&#13;
suddemY, -front-tbe-aeat room, Caofc-&#13;
Lee's gruff voice shouted:&#13;
"'Leggo that painter!'&#13;
"Poor, timid, mistaken Black drew&#13;
away from the girl, grabbed his hat,&#13;
and darted out into the road; but&#13;
Nancy, overtaking him. explained that&#13;
her father was talking in his sleep,&#13;
and that a painter, In sea language,&#13;
meant only a small rope."&#13;
tbat are made tempdiarily by a road to&#13;
serve a certain purpose and are then&#13;
Senator Alger's Story.&#13;
Senator Alger of Michigan tells a&#13;
story about a "call-down" one of his&#13;
friends received at the hands of a&#13;
Kansas farmer some years ago. The&#13;
senator was speeding through Kansas&#13;
on a. return trip from California,&#13;
where he has immense timberlnterests.&#13;
Seated with him waa a friend&#13;
from Michigan, and as they passed&#13;
through Kansas a prosperous farmer&#13;
came into the car and took a~seat~jusr&#13;
opposite them.&#13;
The senator and his friend were&#13;
aiscussing the relative value of Michigan&#13;
and Kansas lands when the for*&#13;
mer said: "I think that is a mighty'&#13;
good farm," and he pointed out the&#13;
window at a typical Sunflower plantation.&#13;
"It may be good enough," said Senator&#13;
Alger's friend, "but r wouldn't&#13;
take ft as. a gift"&#13;
The Kansas farmer, who had been&#13;
listening to the conversation, said,&#13;
addressing Alger's companion:&#13;
"Did I understand you to say you&#13;
are from Michigan?'"&#13;
"Yes, from Michigan.** replied the&#13;
Wolverine traveler.&#13;
"Well, I want to remark," replied&#13;
the farmer, who had been stiing by&#13;
the alight on Kansas, "that you are&#13;
the first Michigan man I ever saw&#13;
who wouldn't take everything in&#13;
sight, gift or no gift**&#13;
t l Illogical.&#13;
Simkins-^Chatterton is a great fellow&#13;
to argue, isn't he?&#13;
Timkins—Oh, I don't know. Q»&#13;
aboiisned. under the~~present law rail&#13;
roads* must give 10 days' notice&#13;
of _an increase in rates and&#13;
three days' notice of a reduction&#13;
of rates. If a big shipper tells&#13;
a railroad he will have 500 cars&#13;
of freight at a certain point at a certain'&#13;
time, the railroad gives three&#13;
days' notice of reduction, a notice nobody&#13;
hears of but the shipper. When&#13;
the 500 cars have been shipped, notice&#13;
is at once published and the rate put&#13;
back where it was before. These 'mid&#13;
night rates' must be made impossible.&#13;
"Then I think the president will ask&#13;
for ample publicity so that all may&#13;
know what the railroads are doing.&#13;
He will ask tbat the government have&#13;
access to books of all railroads, just&#13;
as to those of national banks, and that&#13;
no books be kept by railroads save&#13;
such as the government may prescribe.&#13;
Thus we will have uniformity all over&#13;
the country and information taken&#13;
from railroad books will be intelligible&#13;
to all.&#13;
"And, lastly, I believe* the peesident&#13;
will ask congress to empower the in&#13;
terstate commerce commission to fix&#13;
reasonable rates wherever unreasonable&#13;
rates are found in force. This last&#13;
I consider very important. The Foraker&#13;
bill, for instance, provides that courts&#13;
shall fix reasonable rates whenever a&#13;
railroad is convicted of maintaining un&#13;
reasonable rates. That plan I hold utterly&#13;
impracticable and futile.&#13;
"Courts have repeatedly held that&#13;
they cannot llx rates, that rate fixing&#13;
is a legislative function and not a&#13;
judicial one. Hence, a shipper with a&#13;
complaint would be obliged to fight&#13;
his case through the courts, taking&#13;
him probably several years, and if he&#13;
won, and, the railroad was,ordered to&#13;
reduce the rate, it would simply reduce&#13;
it one cent and make the shipper go&#13;
through all courts again.&#13;
"Rate fixing is a legislative function&#13;
which can be delegated to the interstate&#13;
commerce commission as an administrative&#13;
act to be performed."&#13;
Facts and Proof.&#13;
Hulett, Wyo., Dec. 4th (Special*—&#13;
An ounce of fact is worth a ton. of&#13;
theory and it is evidence foundsd on&#13;
facts that backs up every box of&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills. The evidence of&#13;
people who know what they do. Mrs.&#13;
May Taber, highly esteemed resident&#13;
of Hulett, says:&#13;
"I know Dodd's Kidney Pills are a&#13;
valuable medicine because I have&#13;
used them. I took seven boxes and&#13;
they cured mo of a severe attack of&#13;
Kidney Trouble. They relieved me&#13;
from the first dose, and when I had&#13;
finished the last box I had no pain&#13;
and my Kidneys are now acting properly."&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills are now recognized&#13;
all over the world as the greatest&#13;
Kidney Remedy science has ever&#13;
produced. They cure Rheumatism,&#13;
Dropsy, Gout, Lumbago, Diabetes,&#13;
Urinary and Bladder Troubles&#13;
Bright's Disease, and all disorders&#13;
arising from any form of Kidney Disease.&#13;
Dr. Hcssel Postma, late of Amsterdam,&#13;
Holland, is courting his sweetheart,&#13;
Miss Laura May Love, of Toledo,&#13;
through an interpreter. Miss Love&#13;
met Herr Postma in Amsterdam last&#13;
year, and has accepted him, but is unable&#13;
to get her tongue' around the&#13;
Dutch language, although she sneaks&#13;
French, German, Spanish and English&#13;
fluently.&#13;
A Demonstration.&#13;
The superintendent of a factory&#13;
went into the storehouse one day and&#13;
saw the storekeeper tugging at a big&#13;
case of goods. His face was red and&#13;
the muscles of his neck^were bulging&#13;
out.&#13;
"Hold on there, Jack," cried the su«&#13;
perintendent. "allow me to demonstrate&#13;
to you the power of brain over&#13;
muscle." He grabbed a hook that&#13;
was on a shelf and stuck It in the&#13;
case, gave a quick jerk and toppled&#13;
over Into a pile of rubbish. He got&#13;
up. looked at the storekeeper, and&#13;
said: "Blame it, the handle was&#13;
loose."&#13;
"Yes. sir," replied Jack, "that's&#13;
why I didn't use it!"&#13;
Lavish Gifts of the Mortons.&#13;
Former Vice President Levi P. Morton&#13;
has given to Rhinecliff, near which&#13;
his home, Ellerslie. Is situated, an industrial&#13;
home and reading room, to&#13;
cost $50,000. The new building will&#13;
have a gymnasium, baths, readingrooms,&#13;
library and assembly hall. In&#13;
the same village Mias Mary Morton, a&#13;
daughter of Mr. Morton, has established&#13;
a holiday farm, where the convalescent&#13;
crippled poor of N s * ;York&#13;
are cared for. •...••' &lt;, . ,&#13;
- « # - i&#13;
Atf-&#13;
(-.,&#13;
**k&amp;&#13;
V&#13;
•.V.'J&#13;
/ ' • ' ' . : • * &amp; # ! • • ; , w&#13;
'%&#13;
1&#13;
I . ••.&#13;
- *&#13;
..* i*5%&#13;
Vv-&#13;
*&#13;
W5?S^^v&#13;
^&lt;&#13;
$ # •&#13;
TO1 Vf&#13;
BM^' ^&#13;
_'.— .&#13;
'*« .*»•&#13;
I BtttlncM PoInUrtr 1&#13;
Notice to Tax Payers&#13;
Tbe tax roll for Putnam township ia&#13;
now in my hands and 1 am ready to&#13;
receivH taxes at any time. Will be at&#13;
the Town Hall in Pinokhey every Friday&#13;
in December ana] at tbe store of&#13;
Ledwidge &amp; Rovbe in Anderson Wednesday,&#13;
Dec. 27. W. E. Murpby.&#13;
Treat,&#13;
i\&#13;
mS&amp; K&#13;
\K&#13;
ATTENTION POULTRYMBN&#13;
I have a limited number of S. C. R.&#13;
I. Red Cockrels, from priae winning&#13;
birds, also some Golden Polish Cockrels.&#13;
For prices, call on or address,&#13;
Wm. Cady, Lakeland, Micb. t48&#13;
WEST XABIO*.&#13;
Mb* Mildred King is improving.&#13;
Frank Farrington left last week for&#13;
Adrian to attend school.&#13;
Lvle Gorton of Ypatlanti spent Sunday&#13;
under tbe parental roof.&#13;
The first sleighing of the season was improved&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 2, 1905,&#13;
Mrs. John Clements spent the last of last&#13;
week at Ypsilnnti with her daughter.&#13;
L. A. 8. of this church will meet at the&#13;
home of Mrs. Geo. Bullis Thursday Dec. 14.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Rock wood were guests of&#13;
friends at Willi-imstou the week of Thanksgiving.&#13;
The Thanksgiving dinner at Will Chamber's&#13;
was largely attend and enjoyed ay all&#13;
present.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Kern and Elmer Kern visited&#13;
Mrs. Gardner the first of the week.&#13;
C, S.CHAM BERLIN,&#13;
-EXPERT^AUCTIONEER&#13;
JUXTER,&#13;
Bell Phone 88, free&#13;
MICH,&#13;
P. O. Lo«k Box M&#13;
Formerly of Battle Creek, Kioh. SeJle everything&#13;
on earth-Real Estate, Graded Stock, Personal&#13;
Property, Country Salee, etc. Yeara of experience,&#13;
and prioea reasonable.&#13;
Orders may be left at the DISPATCH Office.&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
^&#13;
E W. DANIELS,&#13;
OBNEBAL AUCTIONEER.&#13;
8atistacticn Guaranteed. For information&#13;
call at DISPATCH Office or address&#13;
Gcegory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. JLyndilla phone&#13;
connection. Auction bills and tin cups&#13;
furnished free.&#13;
Pei^SwartMut&#13;
Funeral Director&#13;
AND EMBALMER&#13;
ALL CALLS ANSWERED&#13;
PR01PTLY DAY OR NI6H1&#13;
PARLORS'AT&#13;
PLIMPTON'S OLD STAND P^one No. 30&#13;
PINCKNEY. MICH&#13;
WEST FTJTVA1L&#13;
Patrick Kelly who has been sick is&#13;
better,&#13;
H. B. Gardner and wife spent Thanksgiving&#13;
with Ray Backus and family of&#13;
Lansing.&#13;
Kirk VanWinkle and family spent&#13;
Thanksgiving with C. V. and wife of&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
Perry Noah and family, and Mrs. O. P .&#13;
Noah of North Lake, epent Thanksgiving&#13;
at Mrs. Wm. Gardner's.&#13;
A surprise party was held for Glenn&#13;
Gardner at his home last Friday evening.&#13;
The evening was enjoyably spent in games&#13;
and other amusements after which refreshments&#13;
were served. Glenn left Monday&#13;
for Washington D. C , to attend the Bliss&#13;
Electrical School. Success to him.&#13;
PLAHTFIELD.&#13;
Miss Lottie Bradley returned last week&#13;
from a visit with Detroit and Flint friends.&#13;
Rev. Jeffrey, of Detroit, is holding&#13;
meetings in the Presbt. church here this&#13;
__week* - - — - —&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mrs. S.&#13;
Sunday,a~ son.&#13;
Robert Fraaier and wife left last Saturday&#13;
for a visit with their daughter at&#13;
Jackson.&#13;
Charles :Walker of this place closes a&#13;
very successful term of school in the&#13;
Reeves district this week.&#13;
Members of Plainffeld Hive will please&#13;
remember that the election of officers&#13;
comes on Wednesday, Dec. 13, 190o.&#13;
Word came to this place Sunday night&#13;
of the sudden death of Mrs. Wnj. Hicks of&#13;
Fulmer's Corners. The deceased was well&#13;
known here being a faithful member of&#13;
the M. P. church. She leaves a husband&#13;
and three children who have the heartfelt&#13;
sympathy of the community.&#13;
W&#13;
'«?., Have&#13;
Your&#13;
Photo&#13;
Taken&#13;
CHILSON&#13;
Max Martin "and sister Blanche called on&#13;
relatives in this vicinity Sunday.&#13;
Bert Stewart and family of Brighton&#13;
spent thanksgiving at D m Stewarts.&#13;
Irene Smifh who.has been attending&#13;
school in Durand was home last week.&#13;
Harry Gartrell of Howell was the guett&#13;
of Wheeler Martin Friday and Saturday.&#13;
A number of guests from Howell were&#13;
entertained at the home of Wm. Benham&#13;
Saturday last.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Sweet of Pennsylvania&#13;
are the guests of hia brother Theodore&#13;
Sweet of this place.&#13;
Married at Brighton, Wednesday, Nov.&#13;
29, Dr. H P. Martin of that place and&#13;
Mrs. Mariette Case of Cbilson.&#13;
A large crowd attended the New England&#13;
supper at Dave VanHorn's last Friday&#13;
evening and over $10 was taken in.&#13;
Mesdamee Eva Case and Lucy Mandeville&#13;
of Williamston were the "guests of&#13;
their sister, Mrs. John Sweeney the last of&#13;
last week.&#13;
Albert Benham and Miss Benham of the&#13;
U. of M. and Miss Hazel Benham"otOceola&#13;
spent Thanksgiving at the home of their&#13;
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Benham of&#13;
this place.&#13;
KOKTH LAKE.&#13;
Herman Hudson is on the sick list.&#13;
Alex Gilbert is attending school at Big&#13;
Rapids.&#13;
E. J. Cooke and wife spent Sunday at&#13;
Jackson.&#13;
The ladies aid are preparing for a church&#13;
fair soon.&#13;
Oar Annual HolkUy Sale will opon . T ;*v&#13;
L. Leach, on&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Glenn were in&#13;
troit most of last week.&#13;
enburn and Maggie Hudson&#13;
Dern&#13;
of&#13;
Chelsea spent Sunday at Wm, Hudson's.&#13;
Preparatioos are being made for holding&#13;
Christmas exercises at the M. E. church.&#13;
Robert Glenn paid his friends here a&#13;
farewell visit last week before going to&#13;
Florida.&#13;
The Lyndilla Tele;pphnoc ne Co. holds its&#13;
annual meeting at Unn adilla next week&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Mrs. Emma Webb of Dakota, is spending&#13;
several weeks at horre with her parents,&#13;
Mr, and Mrs. W. H. Glenn.&#13;
Kirk Haze of Pinckney has begun a 400&#13;
cord of wood job for E. C. Glenn. Homer&#13;
Reason will share in the undertaking.&#13;
The barn at the old Sweeney farm burned&#13;
Monday, supposed to have been set on&#13;
tire by hunters—no insurance. The buildwas&#13;
owned by Perry Noah,&#13;
IOSCO.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Smith is in poor health.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Greening is on the sick list.&#13;
Elmer Hutson was home from Grand&#13;
Rapids last week.&#13;
Fred Jacobs is moving back to his&#13;
father^sfarm in Unadilla.&#13;
Joe Roberts is moving to the farni r*p*?it-&#13;
ADDHIOJTA^ LOCAL.&#13;
Marvin &amp; Finley inform as that&#13;
they hope to be able to open their jewelry&#13;
store' Saturday or Monday.&#13;
Rural mail carriers examination at&#13;
Howell Jan. 6, 1906. All wbo expect&#13;
to take the exinunvtion should file&#13;
their applications with PostmasUd-ar a n He &gt;trtm m*v dishwriOc kind&#13;
Swarthout before Deo. 27, 1905. Q&#13;
ly purchased of Fred Jacob,. . Mr. and Mrs. •&gt;. l&gt;. VVat^on of Una- Bale price&#13;
dilla, entertaiaed Monday evening in&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Courtland'Sweet aud son honor of Miss Fannie Murphy of&#13;
Dale spent last week in Detroit. Pinckney, thfi folfowinff guests: Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. M. E.Ttuhn, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
.Fred Howlett, Mr. -and Mrs. Henry&#13;
Risdon. (Howlett, Mr. and Mrs. N. H. Bullis,&#13;
E. E. Hnteon and family spent Thanksat&#13;
the&#13;
•*&#13;
^Pinckney Gallery&#13;
i*. '.?•'&#13;
24 PICTURES&#13;
4 Different Positions 4&#13;
25 CENTS&#13;
Vera Tunnard of Oak Grove spent&#13;
Thanksgiving with his grandfather, S. L.&#13;
and Dick .Uf ear ley of Gregory; and&#13;
i Mr. and Mrs. Fred Marshall, Mr. and&#13;
giving with, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. [ Mrs. H. G. Porter, Miss Nellie Hud-&#13;
Fred Sharp of Stockbridge. ! ler, Miss Grace Collins, and J. W.&#13;
Mr.an dMr..FredMeadofWebbervWe'H Ti VnU »n a d i , n!l.; " * - ^ 1 6 S U "&#13;
: pish of Dexter. The evening was very&#13;
their aunt, ; pleasantly spent playing progressive&#13;
this pedro, after which a dainty luncheon&#13;
:^was served.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
Saturday, December %•&#13;
and close&#13;
Saturday9 December 232&#13;
During this IS day sale we shall make prices that will move the goods&#13;
A few of the many bargains to be had at our store&#13;
SATURDAY, DEC. 9&#13;
Best Print,&#13;
Flannelette WaiBtings&#13;
Ladies Wrappers,&#13;
Best Comfortables,&#13;
Bice 4c Yeast 3c&#13;
Only 5c per yard&#13;
8o per yard&#13;
88c&#13;
88c&#13;
Currants 8c&#13;
Above prices for Saturday only&#13;
JACKSON &amp; CAD WELL S&#13;
MOOINl's&#13;
The Peoples Store&#13;
In consideration of the fact that part of our trade comes from&#13;
Pinckney we feel as if the Pinckney people should know that it&#13;
would pay them to trade at Moons while in Howell.&#13;
H E R B P R I C E S T H A T T A b K&#13;
White Outings licaLgrade, regular&#13;
kind, Sale price&#13;
Ribbon No. 2, all silk, 5c kind elsewhere,&#13;
Sale Price Q 2&#13;
Stick Candy, best grade&#13;
Sale price 0 9&#13;
Good Pencil tablets, 5c kind elsewhere&#13;
Sale price 0 4&#13;
Tooth Paste, food quality, germ destroyer,&#13;
well recommended by&#13;
those who use it Sale price 1 0&#13;
Tarn O'Shanters, long hair, all wool&#13;
regular price, 50c Sale price 4 5&#13;
Ladies fleeced lined wrappers, all colors&#13;
and sizes, regular $1.00 kind&#13;
Sale price 9 0&#13;
Currants, extra good for the Thanksing&#13;
pudding Sale price 7 c&#13;
Salmon, regular 10c kind&#13;
Sale price 3 cans 2 5&#13;
Oat Meal, the kind that they left&#13;
plenty of meal in Sale price 8 lbs. 2 5&#13;
Lenox Soap Sale price, 10 bars 2 0&#13;
Good tin dish pans ' Sale price 1 0&#13;
Granite iron wash basins, good&#13;
quality Sale price 1 0&#13;
_OB_&#13;
spent part of last week with&#13;
Mrs. Haviland, and other friends&#13;
vicinity.&#13;
in&#13;
NEW JEWELRY STORE&#13;
Ruching, nice and soft, good&#13;
quality ," Sale price- 1 5&#13;
Fancy hat pins Sale price 0 5&#13;
Men's heavy, all wool, work socks&#13;
Sale price 1 5 or 2 fer 2 5&#13;
Fast color apron ginghams, 6 cent&#13;
kind Sale price 0 5&#13;
Good quality table linen Sale price 2 1&#13;
-White Outiogvgood grade,&#13;
Sale price&#13;
All 10c Hosiery Sal* price&#13;
All 15c Hosiery Sale price&#13;
All 25c Hosiery Sale price&#13;
Talcum powder per box Sale price&#13;
Vaseline or petroleum jelly, Sale price 0 5&#13;
Ax handles Sale price l o&#13;
Good pins, per paper Sale price 0 1&#13;
Good pen holders and pencils&#13;
Sale price 0 1&#13;
Decorated Crepe tissue paper ,regular&#13;
price 15c Sale price 1 0&#13;
Men's 50c superior quality, fleeced&#13;
underwear, all sunt Sale price 3 9&#13;
Ladies 25c fleeced underwear&#13;
Sale price 2 1&#13;
Fleece lined Flannelette, in peraian&#13;
patterns, all colors Sale price 1 0&#13;
Ladies kid mittens, fur top&#13;
Sale price 4*5&#13;
Scrubbing brushes, good quality&#13;
Sale price 0 3&#13;
15 in. corrugated iron coal&#13;
hod Sale price 1 8&#13;
Flinch cards, per pkg. Sale price 3 9&#13;
HookB and eyes, per card—Sale priee ~Ot&#13;
-Milk Strainers .Sain prir.P - | Q&#13;
Pan cake "riddles Sale price 2 3&#13;
Boy's suspenders, good and strong&#13;
Sale price 0 5&#13;
YeastFoam per pkg. Sale price 0 3&#13;
Sal Soda, per lb. Sale price 0 1&#13;
Extra good saw, square and rul-j&#13;
combined Sale price 45&#13;
Carpenters squares Sale price 05&#13;
Padlocks Sale price 09&#13;
Early in December we will open a branch of our Howell store&#13;
IN PINCKNEY&#13;
isfaction Guaranteed&#13;
K :'/&#13;
£&lt;; WE TURN OUT NO POOR WORK&#13;
A. WILLIAMS.&#13;
With a representative stock of Watches, Jewelry, Clocks,&#13;
Silverware, Cut Glass, Optical Goods, Phonographs,&#13;
Records, Pictures, and Picture Flaming.&#13;
The store will be in charge of M i s H u g h F i n l e y ,&#13;
who has just finished a course in the Peoria, 111., Watch&#13;
Repair School&#13;
- We will stock this store with the same High G r a d e&#13;
G o o d s at reasonable prices, which have made the Howell&#13;
store so popular.&#13;
For the present the store will be located is the rear of&#13;
F. A. Sigler's Drug Store.&#13;
We extend to all an invitation to call and look us over.&#13;
We are located in Howell, second door from P. O. and are fast&#13;
becoming known in this vicinity as the cheapest and best place to&#13;
trade at for general merchandise. We take eggs in trade.&#13;
Mrs. C. W. Moon.&#13;
• ' * ' &lt;&#13;
. &gt;'r&#13;
Y&gt;. • • #&#13;
i^\ '&#13;
%&#13;
0 5&#13;
0 9&#13;
12&#13;
21&#13;
10&#13;
* •&#13;
: r&#13;
*&#13;
-&#13;
Ladies Home Journal&#13;
^ ^ P a t t e r n s ^ ^&#13;
P 6 R SAUB BY&#13;
W.W.BARNARD&#13;
FINCKNBY, MICH.&#13;
Call and ace Style BooK&#13;
Marvin 6c Finley. my 7.&#13;
• t&#13;
f c .;••••'";&#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="40254">
              <text>•^•••?"««"ii»H*H'"T» *&#13;
PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, DEC 14. 1906. No. £0&#13;
RCW&#13;
•-,«&lt;•:-5ft*-'i&#13;
,^i3-&#13;
^iTSBrWrfiSTH&#13;
"KlacVvvTve axvdi *R*cpa\T ADor^&#13;
.'• r -&#13;
We have a thoroughly equipped&#13;
machine shop and are in poaition&#13;
to do yoar repairing promptly and&#13;
at rea8onable_price8. . . . . .&#13;
^r&#13;
EngineandLathe&#13;
Work a Specialty&#13;
Sharp Edge&#13;
Grinding Done&#13;
ic&#13;
IUTILV. S.^IV4\V\A and lbe\X "3e\tthont CowntcWons&#13;
ADaUoxv YOTUT ADa\&amp;or\ Co. Z\\. ^adVVVa. "NUcV&#13;
THE BEST OF EVERYTHING FOR CHRISTMAS&#13;
WE HAVE THE RIGHT THING for EVERY PERSON, THE RIGHT PBICE for EVEBY PURSE&#13;
A BEAUTIFUL ASSORTMENT OF PLEASING GIFTS&#13;
PERFECTLY A D A P T E D TO T H E W A X T 8 A N D REQUIREMENTS OP OUR FRIENDS A N D P A T R 0 N 8&#13;
EVERYTHING FRESH AND SPARKLIN6 WITH THE BRIGHTEST NEW GOODS OF THE SEASON&#13;
We are waiting to plea$e you with Presents that are Apptopnate, Popular, Practcai andmsvery way Desirable in the fim of&#13;
Toys rBooks * and* Novelties&#13;
FANCY GOODS, NOTIONS, ETC.&#13;
WEHME THEMRIETVTHUT INSURES THE E»SY SUISFICTORY CHOICE-THE FIELD FSR SELECTION THE WIDEST. PRICES FIIREST&#13;
A G&amp;NEROUS ASSORTMENT, FULL of Ql)AblTV and MERIT&#13;
If Yoil Want Satirfaction In SelectiM •aad-Ecwamt In Price OUr HoHdan Stock Will Fill YntfrMrete&#13;
REMEMBER OUR HOLIDAY STOCK GIVES YOU NEW IDEAS AND SUPPLIES EXACTLY WHAT YOU WAx\T&#13;
S I Gr&#13;
LOCAL NEWS.&#13;
The wrtather iootinues fine.&#13;
—ThereisBewe^-o^-evepyHWf6&#13;
week.&#13;
4Ws&#13;
• V :&#13;
..*s&#13;
The church workers of t h e Coug'l&#13;
churcb will hold their monthly tea at&#13;
the home of Mr. and Mrs. J&gt; J. Teeple&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 20, from five until&#13;
all are served. Sapper 15 cants,&#13;
Mrs. P. G. Teeple and daughter&#13;
Jlelen, 0 f Marquette are the f*ue6t ot&#13;
lier parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cbas. Love,&#13;
and other relatives here. Percy is&#13;
expected to arrive for the holidays.&#13;
Ladies' Missionary&#13;
Society,&#13;
The society met at the home of the&#13;
president, Mrs. Ella Jackson, last&#13;
week Wednesday when the following&#13;
officers were elected:"&#13;
Pres'dent, Mrs. Ella Jackson.&#13;
Vice Pres., Mrs. John Teeple&#13;
Treasurer, Mrs. M. Wilson.&#13;
Seer etary, Mrs. S. Grimes.&#13;
There was a good attendance and&#13;
the usual pleasant social time at the&#13;
close of program. &gt;&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
--=--==^ -MRS, L ^ E K ^ E B ^ T -&#13;
Louisa Watrous was born in the&#13;
K8&amp;&#13;
?-&gt;»;•''&#13;
'.«*-." Holiday Sale&#13;
A Few of the Many Bargains to be&#13;
AT OUR STORE&#13;
had&#13;
•m* Children'sHandkerehiefa&#13;
LiadioB* Handkorohiofo&#13;
Doylies - -&#13;
Towel8&#13;
let ea&#13;
5o to 75o ea&#13;
10c to 50c ea&#13;
5c to $1 ea&#13;
50c to $2,50 ea&#13;
75c to $1.50 ea&#13;
48c&#13;
8c&#13;
88c&#13;
town of Colchester, New London Co.,&#13;
Conn., February 18, 1816. In 1836&#13;
she came to Michigan. The following&#13;
year she was married to Wm. H. Kennedy&#13;
and settled in the township of&#13;
Brighton, Livingston Co. In 1860&#13;
they moved to the township of Putnam&#13;
and later to the village of Pinckney.&#13;
Mrs Kennedy survived her husband&#13;
twenty-two years.&#13;
To them were born t°n children, six&#13;
of whom are^still living.—Mrs. 0 . J.&#13;
Sawyer ol Fowlerville; E. W. Kennedy&#13;
Pinckney; Mrs. D. G. Clark, LaPark.&#13;
Cal ; I. W. Kennedy, Wanwatosa,&#13;
W i s ; I. F. Kennedy, Lincoln, Neb.;&#13;
and Belle KenfredyT^inckney.&#13;
During her last sickness, lasting&#13;
five months in which she was confined&#13;
to her bed most of the time, she exhibited&#13;
great-patience and ol ten expressed&#13;
her trust in Him who c*reth for a l l .&#13;
She passed away peacefully Dec, 7 and&#13;
has gone tocher last home"wberersorrow&#13;
and Rnffftring erft nnkn^wn, •—*-&#13;
Lunch Cloths ^ - -&#13;
Sideboard Scarfs&#13;
60c Table Lioen cut to&#13;
Flannelette Waisting cut to&#13;
Ladies' $LW Wrappers -&#13;
One lot Ladies' 50c Jersey vests and pants&#13;
Reduced to 42c ea&#13;
All $1.00 value in Dress Goods cut to 92c yd&#13;
All 50c values in Dress Goods cut to " 45c yd&#13;
Special Cut Prices on Furniture, Hats, Caps and Shoes&#13;
a&#13;
ft / A&#13;
For low prices on Groceries come and see Our&#13;
Store Saturday, Dec. 16&#13;
JACKSON &amp; CADWELLS&#13;
iwt#;,.*&#13;
\ -&#13;
B O W M A N ' S&#13;
Wjpare ready for the rush of holiday&#13;
trade. Our stock will contain many desirable&#13;
items not found elsewhere. I place&#13;
my orders very early, buy direct, even in&#13;
Germany and France and do my own importing*&#13;
T h '8 m a y ^ ^ b i 8 t 0 y o u b u t&#13;
it is^ea,y enough when you know how. As&#13;
I own these geods cheaper than my competitors&#13;
it is an easy mattter for me to&#13;
nndksell. It will pay you to drive over&#13;
as we will show large assortment and save&#13;
you money. Dolls, Books, China, Toys,&#13;
jmdfcancy Goods of every discription.&#13;
Ejpry deyartment in oor store is compleif&#13;
A pleasure U) show goods. Just&#13;
E A. BOWMAN.&#13;
Busy Store. ^&#13;
Sunday, Dec. 17&#13;
Third SilJiday In Bduent.&#13;
Morning Worship and Sermon&#13;
at 10:30&#13;
« * t * ^ * ^ A « i ^&#13;
EVENING&#13;
ONLY SERVICEJAT&#13;
7:00&#13;
On which occasion the pastor will&#13;
probably speak on a subject by DO&#13;
'mean8 popular.&#13;
Service Thursday at 7 with speak-&#13;
Everybody welcome to above services.&#13;
P^of Howel 1 and Mrs. NjJUflJiEjugfal \l J^-M^Chupeh-lhHeJr&#13;
of Owos-o. I&#13;
In the early days of her married&#13;
life, she and her husband united with&#13;
tin Baptilflclilrch^ot this village. S h e&#13;
^fways-Kved a-ctmsistent christian life&#13;
and held to her faith in the Saviour&#13;
and hope of eternal happiness to the&#13;
last.&#13;
The funeral was held at the home&#13;
of her son, C. V. Van Winkle Thursday,&#13;
(today) at 10:30, Rev. G. W.&#13;
Mylne officiating.&#13;
Happy Marriage.&#13;
The marriage of Claude W. Reason&#13;
to Edna E. Carpenter took place at&#13;
home ot the bride in Pettysville, Dec.&#13;
12. The ceremony was performed by&#13;
Rev. G. W. Mylne in the presence of&#13;
large number of invited friends. The&#13;
young couple are well and favorably&#13;
known and have oar best withes for&#13;
long life and prosperity.&#13;
Trustee meeting at the DISPATCH&#13;
office Saturday at 2 p. in.&#13;
Class meeting aTTlO sharp. Brother&#13;
MtJwerTi^exijecteuttrteady ~~p" ;&#13;
Our young people who are qQmtbvs.&#13;
and workers are so much scattered at&#13;
present, we have decided to omit the&#13;
young peoples' service at 6:30. Let&#13;
the young people come into the other&#13;
services.&#13;
We are pleased to note a good attendance&#13;
and .decided interest in the&#13;
service at Birkett's. The people interested&#13;
will have a Christmas tree&#13;
and appropriate exercises Saturday&#13;
evening before Christmas, The public&#13;
cordially invited.&#13;
Notice:—Regular meetinar of the&#13;
L. O. T. M. M., Saturday, December&#13;
16. All members requested to be&#13;
present. Business ot importance.&#13;
Nettie M. Vaughn, R. K.&#13;
A Few Christmas Bargains&#13;
From Dec. 14 to 23&#13;
The funeral was held from the M.&#13;
E . church Sunday, Rev. R. A. Emerick&#13;
officiating. The house was crowded,&#13;
showing the esteem in which the deceased&#13;
was held.&#13;
•500 yds. Best Heavy lOct Tennis Flannels for 7j«ts&#13;
1000 "yds. of Best &lt;ct Prints tor "&#13;
GRANT MAC0MBER.&#13;
Grant G. Macomber was born Feb.&#13;
5,1876 in the township of Green Oak&#13;
and spent most of his early life In the&#13;
vicinity where he was born.&#13;
At the outbreak of the Spanish*&#13;
American War he enlisted in Co. G.&#13;
31st Michigan Volunteers, and served&#13;
his country for more than a year in&#13;
the United States and Cuba. Dec. 19,&#13;
1899, be was united in marriage to&#13;
Erma C. Hinchey and since then has&#13;
resided in the vicinity of Plainfield&#13;
All Ladies' 50c Gloves for&#13;
All Men's 50c Gloves&#13;
Ladies' $1.25 Sateen Petticoats for&#13;
Ladies' $1.50 Sateen Petficoats for&#13;
Ladies' $1.75 Sateen Petticoats for&#13;
Ladies' §2.25 Sateen Petticoats for&#13;
Men's $1 ..50 Pants for&#13;
Men's $2.00 Pants for&#13;
Men's $2.50 Pants for&#13;
20 per cent discount on all Shoes&#13;
Special prices will be made on all goods during this sale&#13;
Call and see our line of Ladies' and (ient's Handkerchiefs&#13;
Octs.&#13;
45ctb&#13;
45c ts&#13;
93cts&#13;
11.19&#13;
$1.39&#13;
$1.79&#13;
$1.29&#13;
$1.69*&#13;
$2.10&#13;
•i- •£&#13;
ontil March 1905, when he moved to&#13;
Howell township where he died Dec.&#13;
7,1905. ^&#13;
He leaves a mother, three sUtevs,&#13;
t-vo brothers, a wile and two small&#13;
children, besides a boat of other relatives&#13;
and friends to mourn bis loss.&#13;
He was laid to rest in the Green Oak&#13;
Plains cemetery.&#13;
A Few Prices on Groceries:&#13;
Best Rod Salmon 10c 4 Pounds Best Crackers 25c&#13;
Best Cheese H e per pound&#13;
Arm and Hammer Soda in bulk 5c per pound&#13;
All Goods Sold for Cash at Above Prices Butter ai\d Eggs Same as Cash&#13;
W. W. BARNARD.&#13;
Have you seen&#13;
*'*!'• ;"V&#13;
flL.v ' . &gt; t;-\&lt;&#13;
* ••• ' i h * » ' i^&#13;
MRS. CAROLINE VAN WINKLE.&#13;
Caroline M. Sigler was born in On&#13;
tario Co. N. Y., September 27, 1830,&#13;
and died at the home of her son in this&#13;
village, December 11,1905, at the age&#13;
of seventy-five years, two months and&#13;
fifteen days.&#13;
She moved with ber parents, Jacob&#13;
and Mary Sigler, to Michigan in 1833,&#13;
locating in Putnam townshit), two&#13;
miles south of Pinckney on the farm&#13;
known as the Sigler farm. She was&#13;
..tie .f seven children, only one, Mrs.&#13;
Betsy Kick;, surviving ber.&#13;
June 27,1850, she married Charles&#13;
U, Van Winkle who proceeded her to&#13;
the Better UodQftU &amp; 1888. Of a&#13;
family ot Uv* M l i l l W t h f r s are &gt;till&#13;
living Carey V ^ « | f i | i k n 6 y ; William&#13;
Teeple Hdw. Cos Holiday Display of&#13;
Silverware, Toys, Specialties?&#13;
The most complete line of Xmas goods ever shown in Pinckney&#13;
At Reduced Prices.&#13;
Pneumatic Toys&#13;
Steam Toys&#13;
Magic Lanterns&#13;
Musical Toys&#13;
^Wood Toys&#13;
(A&#13;
3 i&#13;
O&#13;
ti&#13;
Automobiles&#13;
Mechahical Toys&#13;
Trains with Tracks&#13;
Steamers&#13;
Targets&#13;
M&#13;
Shot Guns, Rifles, A i r Guns, Skates&#13;
All Will Be Sold At Price? fteo^lew^i-Oost&#13;
Teeple Hardware Go.&#13;
&gt;• i&#13;
fc ••';&gt;•• • &gt;. ' ;.r...-»:V'.-. ' • • ^&#13;
V »'!!"*•&#13;
/"&#13;
%&#13;
/&#13;
WW r^^^^pJfJ&#13;
..V:.&#13;
L-y jjinchmg gispaick&#13;
FBASK L. ANDREWS, Pub,&#13;
MNCKNEY, MICHIGAN&#13;
The pessimist Insists on his right to&#13;
life, liberty and the pursuit of mis*&#13;
ery.&#13;
Sir Archibald Geikie predicts another&#13;
deluge. All right, Sir Archie—&#13;
"after us."&#13;
It all that is printed about Kubelik&#13;
be true, it Is his head, not his hand,&#13;
thai needs a muff.&#13;
It is unnecessary to add that the&#13;
London man who says that disease 1s&#13;
a blessing is. a. physician.&#13;
A girl may weigh 200 pounds, and&#13;
stiU think of herself as a ray of sunshine&#13;
in some fellow's life.&#13;
It will be necessary, however, to&#13;
reform ^ football gradually. Otherwise,&#13;
there might'be danger of a riot.&#13;
As between a battleship and a new&#13;
bonnet there is some doubt as to&#13;
which more Quickly becomes obsolete.&#13;
Christmas and a ^old wave are both&#13;
coming, but there should be no cold&#13;
wave for the children on Christmas&#13;
day.&#13;
It is said there is a scarcity of&#13;
small bills. We have also noticed a,&#13;
Bcarcity of large bills, such as the dollar&#13;
bill.&#13;
There are several beautiful young&#13;
ladies in Europe now building royal&#13;
eagt1es~inrSpain, who-arcsure-to-be&#13;
disappointed.&#13;
i **&#13;
The bridegroom who trlod to travel&#13;
in hid bride's trunk will probably&#13;
never be able to cut loose from her&#13;
apron string. ~&#13;
The captains and the kings are&#13;
curious to know what Spain can possibly&#13;
want to do with thoso rapid fire&#13;
guns lately bought.&#13;
After reading the stirring account&#13;
of the hunter who was treed by a deer,&#13;
sympathy runs to the four-footed animal&#13;
by a large majority.&#13;
A man with a microscope and an investigating-&#13;
turn of mind has discovered&#13;
a new variety of mosquito. He&#13;
Is ip mighty small business.&#13;
A Washington editor says. "Give&#13;
us the woman who can talk" All&#13;
rtrjht. Send address, in confidence,&#13;
at once.—New York- Herald.&#13;
It is always well to look on the&#13;
bright side of things. St. Petersburgers&#13;
do not have to tip the waiters&#13;
while the waiters are on strike.&#13;
The woman who burned $15,000&#13;
because ber-^iusbajidJiaoLJjiEne^jcQld&#13;
might have gained better results If&#13;
She had given filnr^monoy to burn."&#13;
Kingdon Gould was blackballed "by&#13;
members of a college society for refusing&#13;
to be hazed. However, Kingdon&#13;
is alive now, which is some compensation.&#13;
Japan's bill for services rendered in&#13;
driving the enemy out of Manchuria&#13;
will call for enough yen to offset any&#13;
claim for damages that China may&#13;
present. *&#13;
Residents of a Delaware town have&#13;
been forbidden to take a bath for one&#13;
mojth. Some places do go to desperate&#13;
lengths in order to advertise&#13;
themselves.&#13;
The centenary of the birth of Benjamin&#13;
Franklin ought to be especially&#13;
celebrated in Franklin, N. H., and all&#13;
the other places through the country&#13;
that are named forHtirr;&#13;
Four million dollars' worth of whisky&#13;
was destroyed by fire a few days&#13;
ago in a Pennsylvania town, but the&#13;
shortage this makes' in the vislbie&#13;
supply is not worth mentioning.&#13;
What will they think a tlfousand&#13;
years from now, when our successors&#13;
on this continent dig up that forty&#13;
ton steel ingot which was burled with&#13;
funeral obsequies in Pennsylvania?&#13;
When two preachers met at Richmond,&#13;
Va., a few days ago they hugged&#13;
each other so fervently that one of&#13;
them retired with a broken rib. This&#13;
shows that even brotherly love can go&#13;
too far.&#13;
•r&gt;'-v&#13;
Not since Dr. Syntax's celebrated&#13;
tour in search of a wife has there&#13;
been anything to compare with King&#13;
Alfonso's swing around the circle inspecting&#13;
the marriageable princesses&#13;
of Europe.&#13;
A Chicago woman got a divorce be-&#13;
; cause her husband insisted upon, playing&#13;
the piano. Now he ought fo&#13;
marry the woman who got a divorce a&#13;
'Vswweetos. Ago because her husband&#13;
4t*4* her play th* piano.&#13;
POUND BOGUS HALF DOLLARS.&#13;
Fstsl Flew in Tp«eeure Trvm Turtttd&#13;
Up by Laborer.&#13;
An Italian laborer who w*s digging&#13;
a road near Ard more yesterday afternoon&#13;
unearthed fully a bushel of half&#13;
dollars. The report spread and It was&#13;
not long qntll almost the whole population&#13;
of Ardmore, particularly the&#13;
younger portion of it, went out to the&#13;
old Saunders farm, where the treasure&#13;
had been found.&#13;
Sure enough, it was there, and the&#13;
Italian was so confounded that he&#13;
could only mumble incoherently. The&#13;
corns lay scattered about on the&#13;
ground and many were picked up and&#13;
stowed away in pockets. When they&#13;
were examined later, however, it was&#13;
found that they were all counterfeit.&#13;
The coins, which were good pieces of&#13;
workmanship, bore the dates 1848 and&#13;
1851.&#13;
Saunders, for whom the farm was&#13;
named, was a counterfeiter. One day&#13;
his place was surrounded by government&#13;
officials. Saunders escaped them,&#13;
however,, only to be captured a few&#13;
days afterward in a hotel in Philadelphia.&#13;
At his home was found a.&#13;
wagon load of moulds and other material&#13;
for making bogus coins. He was&#13;
sent to prison for twenty years, but&#13;
managed to get away in an ingeniously&#13;
contrived box of his own making. This,&#13;
unfortunately, was turned wrong side&#13;
up and Saunders, upon being discovered,&#13;
had to go back to jail to finish&#13;
his term. Soon afterward he died of&#13;
paralysis and was buried near Grassland.&#13;
The coins found yesterday were&#13;
specimens of his work. Inspectors&#13;
from Philadelphia have taken them in&#13;
charge and are trying to recover those&#13;
which were carried away by persons&#13;
who arrived soon after the find was&#13;
made.—PhltadeTphTa Press.&#13;
Used Diplomacy With the Boy.&#13;
Hall Caine was praising the Ameri&#13;
carr autumn. —— —&#13;
J'I vlsited in October," he salad, " t h£&#13;
country house of a New York man. It&#13;
was In New England, on a mountain&#13;
side, and the splendid colors of the foliage—&#13;
the scarlets and golds and innumerable&#13;
flamelike tints—gave to th*&#13;
still forests an indescribable magnificence.&#13;
"And the leaves fell in a rain of&#13;
color through the transparent air. In&#13;
the garden, one afternoon, I heard a&#13;
gardener say to his little son:&#13;
" 'I wish you would rake up these&#13;
dead leaves in a pile.'&#13;
'"Oh, I don't feel like It," whined the&#13;
boy. 'My back's sore and I've got a&#13;
cramp in my wrist and there's-gtowing&#13;
pains in my leg.' sr^^ ^ ^&#13;
" 'After you get *em rakeC up,' went&#13;
or&gt; the gardener calmly, 'you can make&#13;
a nice, big bonfire out of them ani&#13;
jump over it.'&#13;
"The boy began to whoop and leap.&#13;
"'Hurrah!' he shouted. . 'Where's&#13;
the rake?'" .&#13;
WITH THE HVJ*€AHtAJ(~GytSltlS&#13;
Down in some grassy valley about&#13;
an open wagon the family has its camp&#13;
and here the mother sews and putters&#13;
over the cooking while father and&#13;
sons fell the giant Lombardy poplars&#13;
that make beautiful this section of&#13;
gypsy land, says Felix J. Koch in the&#13;
Pilgrim. These trees, be it said to&#13;
the shame of Croatia, the government&#13;
is now selling to the gypsies at an&#13;
average price ot $2 apiece, for the&#13;
nomads to fell and cut up Into timber,&#13;
to be sold to manufacturers of wooden&#13;
wares.&#13;
Picturesque, indeed, are these men&#13;
with their long hair braided across the&#13;
top of the head, so that approaching&#13;
them from the rear, as they repose&#13;
for a moment from their labors, it Is&#13;
difficult to tell the men from the women.&#13;
Others are horse trading, as are&#13;
most of their kin in Turkey proper&#13;
(not a few are Itinerant smiths besides),&#13;
whom'one meets traveling the&lt;&#13;
roads &lt;vith long trains of steeds that&#13;
take one back in fancy to the Arabs of&#13;
the desert, or with a portable bellows&#13;
Making a senaeleas ditplaj In' pab-&#13;
JfcT «tve* e ^ f e e j f l f %.ffl*od,4»ekirig;&#13;
pikes. Now and then the women oome&#13;
into the villages to bet or barter, •#,&#13;
as the village folk hint, to steal; teeing&#13;
fortunes to those who may barken,&#13;
as incentive to other business., •'•-&#13;
Seated on one ot the- crude rock&#13;
walls that hem in the flats of corn&#13;
land in the shadows of the Lombardy&#13;
4&#13;
" i&#13;
«v, ».?i•*« l'M'L-^&#13;
\vcoAav&#13;
ib old W &lt;*Pf/J&amp;Uti^eim&#13;
aviAion Mn t l ^ t t aw ajjeae*&#13;
'The value of an o&amp;dtn\-&gt;&amp;dA^ifc.t ,•%&amp;*•&amp;#&#13;
tlrely upon the position of the person^';*'&#13;
expressing i t ••&gt;• '"*•*'-' ( . :'" ^-^-^4&#13;
poplars, these gypsies, men and woav i " - ***•&#13;
en, smoking their pipes and chattering When dissatisfied ,w^fc what you&#13;
In their curious Unto, ever tempt the nav* J&lt;iet think Of Ihose who snl—&#13;
much-abused camera. For background fortunate than yon.&#13;
there will be some old Magyar castle, 1 ' — ' '&#13;
its turrets peeping th^bugi the aUle Paotntfthe bbim* 0 * another fo&#13;
gofa tter—eeas ,s oalnddie rw iinth utnhifeo rsmen ttointel a agty pIstys your o v a mistake* doe* aW alwa&#13;
at heart, for while they pay no' taxes&#13;
in Hungary, they are forced to do military,&#13;
service, much as t they rebel&#13;
against It. \ &gt;&#13;
Less and less each year grow the&#13;
number of the gypsies, less and less&#13;
frequent their visits, until it, will doubtless&#13;
not be long before, like the Arabs,&#13;
they will have ioided their tents for&#13;
all time and silently- stolen away.&#13;
DISPOSING OF A VIPOSE TISSVE&#13;
A man has actually appeared upon&#13;
the scene who says that he has hammered&#13;
off his adipose tissue with a&#13;
mallet and at the same time hardened&#13;
his flesh to the proverbial consistency&#13;
of nails. It is rather difficult to feel&#13;
convinced of the truth of this statement,&#13;
in view of the fact that a similar&#13;
kind of xylophone gymnastics is&#13;
daily practised upon all beefsteaks of&#13;
the boarding house variety for the purpose&#13;
of rendering them juicy and&#13;
tender. Though the mosquito may&#13;
seem entirely irrelevant to the forego-&#13;
IngTlt~rather obviously pops up~and~&#13;
into the argument, and in so doing&#13;
suggests the question as to whether&#13;
or not this winged auger could penet&#13;
rate the-4eathera envelope of a subject&#13;
so hammered Into the pink of cast&#13;
Women in Government Employ.&#13;
An official of the government printing&#13;
office was talking the other evening&#13;
o f t h e personnel of the women,&#13;
employed in the big printery. He said&#13;
the'civil service rules went into eff'&#13;
at the office just ten years ago. The&#13;
result has been to give the office&#13;
much better class of women workers&#13;
than those who were appointed prior&#13;
to that time.&#13;
"The women in the folding rooms&#13;
the bindery and the press room now,''&#13;
.said the official, "are largely of the&#13;
educated class. - Some of them are&#13;
former school teachers, stenographers&#13;
and the like, and I will add they are&#13;
a credit to the government service."&#13;
The statement was added that It&#13;
frequently happens that these workers&#13;
in the printing office are transferred&#13;
to important clerical positions in the&#13;
other departments by reason Of the&#13;
high percentage they make—hmompetitlve&#13;
examinations.—Washington&#13;
Star.&#13;
cause them to explode and scatter to&#13;
the misty realm of otherwhere. It is&#13;
rather a difficult question to answer&#13;
satisfactorily on the fly and' without a&#13;
considerable investment of thought! In&#13;
fact it may be regarded somewhat in&#13;
the light of a recondite proposition in&#13;
view of its importance from both a&#13;
physical and a hygienic point of view;&#13;
for when the performer gracefully&#13;
carroms on himself and the persistent&#13;
pest he rids himself of worthless fat&#13;
and destroys a natural conservator of&#13;
malaria, thus killing two birds with&#13;
one stone, or rather two mosquitoes&#13;
wittr one hammer. It only remafc&#13;
add that there Is a colossal fortune&#13;
awaiting the man who can find in the&#13;
above-a suggestion upon which to pro-&#13;
=duce-..ak-haj&amp;mer which shall prove to&#13;
with a pair of antifat mallets could&#13;
not, while discoursing impromptu&#13;
moonlight fantasies on his anatomy&#13;
with the same, hit the mosquitoes as&#13;
they light upon him. and thereby&#13;
relieve you of responsibility.&#13;
Happiness 'pomes with'' greatest good&#13;
when it is least expected,—Philadelphia&#13;
Bulletin, ^ J , \,&#13;
DYSPEPTIC rPrH ILQftO^Y.&#13;
Every man has lots of friends—until&#13;
he really needs ope. - $^7¾¾&#13;
The only-man who has an* an&#13;
trwtta lb the widower.—'' "; •,—mq&amp;y.&#13;
all lovers of good government &amp;iLM&#13;
iron perfection; and also~if^an expertr-^atrument wttfa- which -the tat can^beruthlessly&#13;
whacked off a political sinecure&#13;
while it flatten? the sku'ls of the&#13;
human mosquitoes that would convert&#13;
the body politic into a fountain ot unadulterated&#13;
financial joy.—Exchange.&#13;
When a man stands on his dignity&#13;
he ought to,be well.heeled. ' . -&#13;
The man who pays his-debts isn't&#13;
the one who borrows troubled&#13;
Charity may cover a multitude of&#13;
sins, but a lot more will spring &lt;ft&#13;
One woman can always majl&#13;
other woman happy by envying-Hfe&#13;
An opportunity to do the wrong&#13;
thing is generally taken advantage of.&#13;
Some people are too much afraid of&#13;
freckles to make hay while the "sun ~&#13;
shines.&#13;
Some people are too much afraid of*,&#13;
freckles 4e^make hay while, the suit&#13;
shines.&#13;
Slff/fEVS. JSTEATT OF Klff ^&#13;
One night tho.v^pake of me—my kin.&#13;
Wide-wandered from the earth!&#13;
The dew that fell was from her eyes,&#13;
Who here did give me birth;&#13;
My father's voico was in th*. wind:&#13;
"I eowexl. but there is dearth,&#13;
Or bitterness, a s of the ash&#13;
The gale lifts from my hearth!'&#13;
Mv little, sister (flown in Spring)&#13;
I/eaned past the evening star:&#13;
•'Till now I waited for thee here&#13;
Beside the crystal bar;&#13;
But that which thou hast done, ala.s!&#13;
From thee removes me far;&#13;
And in the wreath I made for thee&#13;
The fior/era-all weeping a r e ! "&#13;
They spake of me. of me—my kin.&#13;
In' lengthened line arrayed;&#13;
From one to other passed the word.&#13;
On blanching lips effrayed;&#13;
Th»v mounted far—an ancient host,&#13;
art,&#13;
1&#13;
By . scorn or pity swayed!&#13;
Of me they all together spake,&#13;
Yet none.would give m t t a i d ,&#13;
Then from the lessening line, came one&#13;
With mine own form and face;&#13;
"Thy gTandsire's grandslre knew me not,&#13;
f Yet a m I of thy race;&#13;
Thy good—thy ill—and all thou&#13;
To me mayst surely trace;&#13;
And. next of kin, I'll stand by thee.&#13;
In the dreud Judgment Place!&#13;
"I beat can say how that wild blood.&#13;
Which ruled thine erring will.&#13;
Ran, undiverted, from my spring.&#13;
Thy fragile cup to fill;&#13;
And, when the iest thy dot»m Invoke,&#13;
From Heaven's midnight hill.&#13;
Thy next of kin for thee will plead.&#13;
And they shall hold them still!"&#13;
—Edith M. Thomas in the November Century.&#13;
Many a fellow has won a girl's hand&#13;
only to discover that he hasn't won&#13;
her heart.&#13;
Prosperity has ruined many a man*&#13;
but if a fellow is going to be ruined&#13;
at all, that Is the pleasantest way.&#13;
GnufdPHi&#13;
WORD FROM BRE'R WILLIAf**.&#13;
. Don't let Joy fool you into beliefs*&#13;
Trouble's gone forever, en quit dano&#13;
in' 'fo' the fiddler passes roun' de hat.&#13;
"Dey ain't no use in sendin' tracts&#13;
ter de heathen, kaze w'en de Are gits&#13;
too hot fer 'urn dey'll make tracks)&#13;
fast enough?&#13;
. Don't be always axin' de Lawd Mr&#13;
give you wtedom, but rise u» ea ate)&#13;
ef you can't git some on yofc own&#13;
count."—AtTanta Constitution.&#13;
St. Louts, 1904&#13;
BEST TALKING MACHINES MADE&#13;
Cylinder Machines 07MO to $WQ&#13;
Disc Machines $12 to $88 /&#13;
The Martyrdom of Statesmanship.&#13;
"I_ hear, Senator," jaid the Inquisitive&#13;
young lady, "that it cost you" $20,-&#13;
000 to be elected."&#13;
"Yes, approximately that."&#13;
"Well, that will leave you only $10,-&#13;
000. for six yeacs' work. Isn't that&#13;
rather small for a man of your ability?"&#13;
"For a man of my ability it is rather&#13;
small, but I expect the sacrifice to be&#13;
not wholly in vain. In fact, I have&#13;
already been retained as attorney for&#13;
three large corporations that -would&#13;
have been injured by the passage o*&#13;
bills which I intended to introduce.&#13;
So you see there are honest ways in&#13;
which a man may be compensated&#13;
for the annoying expenditures which&#13;
in this age of graft and chicanery the&#13;
high-minded servant of the people&#13;
must make ir. order to help to preserve&#13;
the foundations of the republic."&#13;
Tho GrmphoBbono ropnoduceo all kindm of&#13;
mmmio wwfootly»band, orohemtra, vtottn,&#13;
vooai and tuairumamtmi moiom, tttm^totiem,&#13;
atom H is an endhnm uouroa of amuwomentm WC HOLD THC RECORD&#13;
M&#13;
Choice of €vils.&#13;
Jack-—So you are engaged to Miss&#13;
Gotrox, 1 understand.&#13;
Tom—You have said It.&#13;
Jack—Well, I hardly know whether&#13;
to congratulate you or not. She Is&#13;
very exacting, I hear, and if you marry&#13;
her y&lt;e»J will have to give up drinking&#13;
and smoking.&#13;
Tom—Oh, well, it mltffct be worse.&#13;
If I don't marry her I'll probably have&#13;
to give up eating. - ,,&#13;
F^f n t e &gt; r t a i n i n £&#13;
R p t K a t l r t g&#13;
O&#13;
utwearlng&#13;
{•^•sonant&#13;
D e&gt;Ii£htful&#13;
^ ^ upe&gt;rlor&#13;
•iiiiitiiiHin*iitii«oititiiaMtiiaMaMa«iiH«mManfMiimiauii&gt;iiiaJitMflii^^ COLUMBIA&#13;
Bold Moulded Cylinder&#13;
Keoords&#13;
iMMMm«HmmiM»IMM&lt;l,M«liauMI.».WWWMHIMMM«MM.II.II»i«»YMU»l,l&lt;M«MM»&#13;
COLUMBIA DISC RECORDS&#13;
7 - i n e h , BO ce&gt;nt« e&gt;aehs 0B p-»r dozem&#13;
l O l n c h , f l e a o h i #10 p e r d o z e n&#13;
O p e r a R e c o r d e , ( m a d e In KMnoH d l e e e&#13;
Only) #21 e a e h&#13;
!'"**&#13;
Wmmmwm mU dm&#13;
* m m " • • ~ • I Columbia Phonograph Company,&#13;
V 372 Woodward ^ DCTHOIT, MJOL&#13;
V X e j s v ^&#13;
^ " ^ " ^ " ^ " ^ ^ ^ " ^ " ^ • ^ " ^ " ^ ^ • ^ " • ^ ^ • ^ s ^ ^ ^ e f ^ l ^ f ^ T ^ ^ ^ P s w 4sWf eTwBB-^Br&#13;
i'i'. •.»•''.&#13;
k%fc»'iMs&#13;
*'..'/&#13;
/&#13;
(Jr.&#13;
'A&#13;
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ML.'-'&#13;
Bsssassf' ^-... »...-&#13;
&gt;««»~*.««^«&gt;*. ..&#13;
^',"r *; ",".•. &lt; * " * &amp; . • ' ' • • ( V ••• • • v ••• -.. . . . .&#13;
• ..' -'..• . ;' • .;»• ,. U: V . ,&#13;
- :.-- ••..v-''-TV'-.i*''&#13;
«: * •&gt; ' j&#13;
V*'.* ,^p • -, ,.'&#13;
« . - - • « - -STATE CASES" SEBMS&#13;
' • • * J * * ^&#13;
-v&#13;
•'-V&lt;J&#13;
at:&#13;
: ^&#13;
•. • • • J » H .&#13;
WIV«» EACH LEFT AN&#13;
Kim TQ THE WIDOW**&#13;
WH* »©VR*i*&gt; THBM.&#13;
Tht Coroner Graft&#13;
A* tM I b M t ^ ( &lt; « of the .leglsiatare&#13;
the auditor general will reconv&#13;
mend t^at tbe law relating to coroner*&#13;
toe amended »6 a* to do away with&#13;
•Ute cases altogether, leaving each&#13;
county to bear 4he expense. As a matter&#13;
oil fact there are very few legitimate&#13;
state cases, but so opportunity&#13;
overlooked to strain the laws BO as&#13;
if possible, no matter If&#13;
death he plain. In .order&#13;
thei'igeetr These include a post&#13;
0, a chemical analysis at&#13;
ISO and tBSJ charges of the undertaker,&#13;
V which, usually run pretty close to the&#13;
.same figure.&#13;
For the fiscal year 1904 the state&#13;
paid out $10,447.07 for state cases, $8,-&#13;
684.26 of that amount going to the&#13;
Wayne county coroners, who fixed up&#13;
Jteg*. several state cases every week. For&#13;
iwfe%f'.*k» flgCa] y^ar x»05 the fees for state&#13;
es amounted to $7,490.44, nearly all&#13;
which went to the, Wayne county&#13;
JEoronera. Since the last exposure the&#13;
*^etrqit coroners, their state cases&#13;
have dropped to about one a month,&#13;
but the exposure has had the effect&#13;
of increasing the number of state cases&#13;
—from other parts of the state. The result&#13;
is that the auditor general's office&#13;
is obliged to investigate every&#13;
bill sent; in and already several misc-,..,&#13;
&lt;takes have been caught.&#13;
| * - r 4ehhpugh roroner—^Eoepel^cX.^fe&#13;
^1..-.-^—-. n a s penned t B e | e e 8 j n the years, chUilren of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
-cases— directlyY InYolved In 1 soph Cropka, on Monday,&#13;
w&#13;
jftrtal of his case, there are still a&#13;
-number, involving some $2,000&#13;
fees which he received, of which the&#13;
legality as state cases is In dispute.&#13;
When the criminal charge against&#13;
Toepel is finally decided the state will&#13;
take steps to have the status of these&#13;
cases settled, so that any illegal fees&#13;
*tft *• recovered.&#13;
fainser Coroner Hoffman has never&#13;
&lt;ttuia#d a cent to the state and it Is&#13;
that he should repay about $0,-&#13;
99f,bfk this phase of the matter1 will&#13;
not be taken 'up until the supremo&#13;
court hands down a decision In his&#13;
case.&#13;
Five Estate* Left Him.&#13;
Word Comes from Lima, 0., that Di.&#13;
Wilson C. Watson, formerly of Adrian,&#13;
will fight the application made to have&#13;
Jiim removed as administrator of his&#13;
wife's estate and will also fight tho&#13;
action of his late wife's heirs In bringing&#13;
suit for the remainder of the estate&#13;
after he had granted half of it to rela-&#13;
*l?&lt;ej of "the woman's first husband,&#13;
^••ring in the probate court is set&#13;
ber 20 and may prove interas&#13;
^rihejvjn^ujrj^jnto the ju^m- on the Toledo &amp; Western, slip&#13;
Of the Lima physician, who is&#13;
d. to have had five'wives, each of&#13;
jrfcpny-dted leaving him an estate, de&#13;
«elaps a new wife in the records of the&#13;
4&amp;trt at Adrian.&#13;
In addition to his dead wife in Lima.&#13;
#fcose estate was rated by* him as&#13;
$100, though, she had $125,000 when&#13;
married her three years ago, Dr.&#13;
atson's Hancock county wife left&#13;
m valuable assets, as did a wife in&#13;
ontiac, Mich., and a wife in Toledo,&#13;
oi whom no trace can be found.&#13;
Now comes the news, backed by&#13;
court records, of Dr. Watson's marriage&#13;
to Diana F. Skells, of Adrian,&#13;
ftrfcjch occurred in .Windsor, Ont., Au-&#13;
3gMt 11, 1897, whose will left everyj$&#13;
M|g to her husband.&#13;
iJjfcis estate was considerable and the&#13;
was fought by relatives, but was&#13;
held good.&#13;
In memory of his widow in Adrian&#13;
Dr. Wattson placed a memorial window&#13;
in the First M. E. church, costing&#13;
$500.&#13;
Revolting Crime.&#13;
Charged with committing a shocking&#13;
assault on a 6-year-old girl, Peter&#13;
Foulke, an aged shoemaker of Port&#13;
Huron, pleaded guilty in- the circuit&#13;
court Saturday and was sentenced to&#13;
a term of not less than five nor more&#13;
than ten years at Ionia, with a recommendation&#13;
by Judge Law that he be&#13;
required to serve the maximum term.&#13;
-.Foulke had been arrested for an almost&#13;
similar crime last July, the vie-&#13;
L41 mbeing a 7-year-olo; girl, but was rej^&#13;
ased on suspended sentence. Prose-&#13;
, tffuting Attorney Moore said the offense&#13;
•^a*as the most revolting in the criminal&#13;
" amnals of St. Clair county.&#13;
,.,¾&#13;
Coat Two, Xo*e, N..&#13;
Ray A. Heath and Randall Groeasar,&#13;
Traverse City, aged 14 and 13 respectively,&#13;
were fooling wlttiV small rifle&#13;
'Jnnd each has a bullet hole in Ms big&#13;
toe. They started out each with a rifle&#13;
nd Heath tried to put In a long inpointed&#13;
downward and he got the bullet&#13;
In the big toe. The Groeaaer boy&#13;
tried to show that it could he withVhis mrW&lt;mt**m&#13;
) 8anfc place. *&#13;
to sale of scattering pieoaa&#13;
s by the state land coaaaiaaioner&#13;
CHJOAK ITEMS,&#13;
_M/mtl Linabuhf, aged 66, civil war&#13;
veicraa,^f OWQBBO, died of blood potsoakig&#13;
front running a sliver In his fin*&#13;
C*9\&lt;f •&gt;**••• &lt; :, t&gt; •:&#13;
After: many years, Potterville has a&#13;
saloon. Tha resort has been opened but&#13;
three days, und there are threats of&#13;
putting it ont of business.&#13;
Wm. Miller, aged 69, an umbrella&#13;
.mender, was found dead In the boat&#13;
houaa.Qf the St. Joseph Gun club, apparently&#13;
frcssn. to .deaths&#13;
Sjtove. wood cut. by neighbors for&#13;
My a. John Jgdwardg, a widow, has been&#13;
stolen in Bokagon township, also potswcea&#13;
fromUer cellar^ &lt;-""&#13;
Those familiar with public affairs in&#13;
Shiawassee county are figuring that if&#13;
the grand jury does its duty there will&#13;
be at least 50 indictments.&#13;
Holland taxpayers want a county&#13;
normal training class in connection&#13;
with the public schools: The special&#13;
election vote' stood 279 to 17.&#13;
Arthur Whitney, while cutting hay&#13;
with a knife at his farm south of&#13;
Standish, slipped and fell on the knife&#13;
and almost disemboweled himself.&#13;
T. J.. Ryan, keeper at the Jacksou&#13;
prison for the past seven- years, has&#13;
been appointed prison steward, to succeed&#13;
Frank Skinner, resigned.&#13;
Fred Cook, the convict found&#13;
of assault with intent to kill Fred&#13;
Fenton, a fellow inmate "vt the Ionia&#13;
reformatory, was sentenced to 12¼ to&#13;
25 years at Marquette.&#13;
Joseph Lio, on trial for the murder&#13;
of Franceaca Cerro at West Neeblsh&#13;
In October, says he shot Cerro when&#13;
the latter &lt;!rew a knife on him. The&#13;
bullet which did the killing struck&#13;
Cerro in the back.&#13;
Nicholas Loukle, living near Coldwater,&#13;
was fined $209 by Judge Yaple on&#13;
a charge of selling liquor without a license.&#13;
This was his second offense&#13;
and the judge told him not to appear&#13;
before htm again. ~ — -&#13;
Grand River mill pond, Jackson's&#13;
noted death trap, has claimed its first&#13;
victims.of the winter season, Alexander*&#13;
Jo-&#13;
Boys who read two nature books a&#13;
month from now until spring and attend&#13;
Sunday school regularly, are .eligible&#13;
for a trip In a flotilla of row&#13;
boats down the Kalamazoo river in an&#13;
outing to be conductf d by Rev. T. Pi&#13;
Bauer.&#13;
The Michigan Union, a student organization,&#13;
has settled the damage suit&#13;
of Mrs. Frank Blair for $650. Mrs.&#13;
Blair was injured in a -'rush1' during&#13;
the students' "county fair" in the U. of&#13;
M. gymnasium last winter. ' She sued&#13;
for $5,000.&#13;
Two dray loads of alleged stolen&#13;
stuff were carted from the home of&#13;
Henry Yensou Brlchong^ in Sault Ste.&#13;
Marie, who was sentenced to three&#13;
years' Imprisonment for theft from local&#13;
stores, residences and even&#13;
churches.&#13;
A 2-year-old child of Thomas Riley,&#13;
of Gladwin, was burned to death Wednesday&#13;
morning. While the mother was&#13;
out on an errand the house caught fire&#13;
and the child could not be rescued. The&#13;
mother rushed in and brought the body&#13;
out. but too late.&#13;
Charles Heath, aged 23, freight con-&#13;
I I I i HllV X&#13;
8ENATOJUS DEAD.&#13;
United "States Senator John Hippie&#13;
Mitchell, disgraced, and shunned W&#13;
his old associates, is dead of a broken&#13;
heart. Mitchell &gt;u his old age—the time&#13;
when the students of human naturo&#13;
say the cumulative instinct if strong*&#13;
eat—bartered his birthright of probity&#13;
for a few paltry thousands. The&#13;
gnarled, veinous fingers clutched the&#13;
price of his' good name for a brief&#13;
space and then came the inevitable exposure&#13;
and disgrace.&#13;
Now, on the deathbed, the face seamed&#13;
by 70 stormy years, framed in Its&#13;
bushy, white beard? 4a draw* and pate.&#13;
It shows the terrible Aental strain to&#13;
which he has been subjected since the&#13;
disgrace of his conviction, last June,&#13;
In connection with the Oregon land&#13;
frauds.&#13;
CNEWS OF&#13;
fHE NATION&#13;
NO HONORS TO BE PAID&#13;
THE LATE SENATOR&#13;
FROM OREGON.&#13;
Canal Money.&#13;
Rep. Williams moved to cut out tl e&#13;
canal appropriation "from $16,600,000 to&#13;
$6,858,383 in the house Thursday morning,&#13;
stating that he had come to the&#13;
conclusion that the latter sum was sufficient&#13;
to meet the needs of the commission&#13;
to January 15 next. The&#13;
amount had been arrived at by taking&#13;
the Indebtedness of the commission,&#13;
which they had stated was 14,500,000.&#13;
guiltjrkH* h*'! added to this the December esirreri&#13;
timates, amounting to $2,358,333.&#13;
An amendment was offered by Mr.&#13;
Prince (111.) making the appropriation&#13;
$10,000,000. He opposed the issuance of&#13;
bonds. No bonds had been issued since&#13;
the Spanish-American war. Besides, he&#13;
said there were $136,000,000 in the&#13;
treasury and $55,000,000 of government&#13;
money in national banks.&#13;
The house rejected the amendment&#13;
Of Mr. Williams and adopted an&#13;
'amendment fixing the amount at $11,-&#13;
000,000.&#13;
Without Honors.&#13;
Vice-President Fairbanks will not&#13;
appoint s committee of senators to attend&#13;
the funeral of Senator John H.&#13;
Mitchell, of Oregon, and it was the&#13;
understanding that the senate will not&#13;
follow the custom of setting aside a&#13;
day for eulogies of the dead senator.&#13;
On reaching this decision the vicepresident-&#13;
did not.act on his own initiative.&#13;
He received information that&#13;
the friends of Mr. Mitchell would not&#13;
,ask for the appointment of a committee.&#13;
It was clear that the elder senators&#13;
were opposed to showing the&#13;
usual honors paid a dead member, but&#13;
if the Oregonian'8 friends had'Insisted&#13;
upon appointment o r a committee one&#13;
would have undoubtedly been appointed.&#13;
Under the program that has been&#13;
agreed upon the senate simply forgets&#13;
that John H. Mitchell was a member&#13;
at the time of his death. Never before&#13;
was the senate confronted with suco&#13;
an embarrassing situation.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
Detroit—Nearly all grades of cattle&#13;
brought good prices in this market&#13;
during the principal sales days. Outside&#13;
buyers for stockers and feeders&#13;
were plentiful. Milch cows of good&#13;
To Tour the World.&#13;
Definite Information has been received&#13;
that President Roosevelt has&#13;
announced privately to some of his&#13;
close, personal friends at Washington&#13;
—.that aJLihc._end_ol his Jerm as presl-&#13;
) years, and Ella, aged ^ ^ u ^ t y ^ r o u g h t last week's prices, l.*\it&#13;
commbii grade^lvglle TflUtlv liate sprtnir•&#13;
ers were also dull and hard t o , sell,.&#13;
Extra dry-fed' steers and heifers, 14 50&#13;
5; steers and heifers, 1,000 to 1.200,&#13;
?3 75@4 25; steers and heifers, 800 to&#13;
1.000. $S@3 50; steers and heifers that&#13;
are fat. 500 to 700. $3®3 25; choice fat&#13;
cows, $3® 3 50; good, fat cows, $2 &amp;0@3;&#13;
common cows, $1 7 5 ® 2 25; canners,&#13;
II 25® 1 50; choice heavy bulls, $3®&#13;
3 50; fair to good bologna bulls, %l 60©&#13;
2 85; stock bulls, | 2 25®2 50; choice&#13;
feeding steers, 800 to 1,000, $3 50®4;&#13;
fair feeding steers, 800 to 1,000, S3®&#13;
3 50; choice stockers, 500 to 700, $3®&#13;
3 50; fair stockers. 500. to 700, $2 50®3;&#13;
stock heifers, $2 25®2 75; milkers,&#13;
large, young, medium age, *40&lt;g~50;&#13;
common milkers, fig®30.&#13;
Hogs—There w a s quite a heavy run&#13;
of hogs, and a few sales were as high&#13;
as i"&gt; per hundred. Light to good&#13;
butchers. $4 95®.r.; pigs, $4 SO; tight&#13;
yorkers, $4® 4 95; roughs, 14® 4 50.&#13;
iStags one-third off.&#13;
Sheet)—The sheep and lamb trade&#13;
openrd up strong at last week's prices,&#13;
but the quality was none too good, and&#13;
after the tops were sold out others&#13;
were about 25c lower; $7 50 Was paid&#13;
for several bunches and $7 60 for one&#13;
extra fine bunch in the morning, but&#13;
they would not bring it at the closo.&#13;
ped,and fell under his train at Frank-"&#13;
lin JnnpHnn., 19 miloa rvent nt Mnrpn^i,&#13;
Both of his legs Were cut off close to&#13;
his body, and he died two hours later.&#13;
He was unmarried.&#13;
The supreme court of the United&#13;
States has entered an order advancing&#13;
the argument in the 28 cases before&#13;
the court involving the application of&#13;
the (Michigan ad valorem tax cases to&#13;
tho railroads of this state and set the&#13;
hearing for February 19 next.&#13;
The coroner's jury has decided that&#13;
the death of Cyrus Noggles, of Waylatid,&#13;
was accidental. He was found&#13;
dead in his barn, having evidently fallen&#13;
from a scaffolding and broken his&#13;
neck.^ He was 50 years of age and&#13;
leaves a widow and six children.&#13;
/Lttorney R. G. Smith, of Galesburg,&#13;
has just commenced his 503d divorce&#13;
case, Mr. Smith is known throughout&#13;
the state as "Dictionary Smithy because&#13;
of the fact that he can use&#13;
more unusual words than any other&#13;
man in Michigan, and use them in the&#13;
right place.&#13;
When Miss "Anna Fournier, a pretty&#13;
French -girl, of. Chicago, learned that&#13;
heriormer sweetheart,^-Leo Nelson,&#13;
had married another gfrl while she was&#13;
confined temporarily in an asylum, she&#13;
cametto 3duth H*yenTto*hllr home and&#13;
started feugfi'housev She was returned&#13;
to Chicago.&#13;
Search of the effects of the aged&#13;
and eccentric late Mrs. Harriet Miller,&#13;
of Bloomingdale, who had lived for&#13;
years on the tfte'rity of thje Baptists,&#13;
the Odd Fellows and others, showed&#13;
that she had quite an elaborate wardrobe,&#13;
money enough In? the house to&#13;
pay her funeral expenses and several&#13;
hundred dollars in bank.&#13;
While worWnjnin, . g O, JrNsters'a&#13;
lumber camp, near" Cadillac, John&#13;
Teatherstone was killed as the result&#13;
of being struck on the head by the&#13;
tongue of heavy Jogging wheels, be,&#13;
was 25 years old and unmarrledV He&#13;
has relatives riving in the state somewhere,&#13;
but local authorities have thus&#13;
Chicago—Common to prime steers, $.1&#13;
®7: cows. $2 80® 4 60; heifers, $2® 5;&#13;
bulls, $2fo~4 15; stockers and feeders."&#13;
J2 15® 4 25; calves. $2® 7 75.&#13;
Hogs—'"'holco to prime heavy, $5-05®&#13;
5 12% : -diurn to good heavy, $4 95ft&#13;
5 05; iight weight butchers, $4 -§6®&#13;
5 10; good to choice heavy mixed, $5(£/'&#13;
0 10; packing. 34 K5®5 05.&#13;
Sheep—$4(Fr4 7"&gt;; yearlings, J6(?J6 05;&#13;
•lambs, ITjauT- S"&gt;. , „ , _-—^- — =&#13;
-EAST n n r i ^ r . o — T^gt oypnrt&#13;
been very successful in making the&#13;
collections and another dividend la ex- _&#13;
steers. $"»@5.25; best 1,200 to 1,300&#13;
pound shipping steers, $4.50®5; best&#13;
1.000 to 1,100-pound shipping stee'rs,&#13;
$4.15&lt;ft4,40; best fat cows, $3.25®3.50;&#13;
fair to good, 12.50® 3; trimmers, $1.75;&#13;
be§t fat heifers. 13.50®4; medium heifers,&#13;
$3® 3.25; common stock heifers,&#13;
$2.50® 2.75; best feeding* steers, $4®&#13;
4.25; best yearling steers, $3.25®3.60;&#13;
common stock steers, $3®3.25; export&#13;
bulls. $3.75® 4; bolon^a bulls. $3®3.25.&#13;
Good cows strong and all others barely&#13;
steady at last-week's prices. It is&#13;
almost impossible to sell late springers.&#13;
Good to extra. $42@50; medium&#13;
io good, $33®S8; common, $18®20.&#13;
Hogs—Market lower; mediums and&#13;
heavy, $5.10®5.15; yo'rkers. $5.05@5.10;&#13;
pigs. $S.0o®r».10; roughs, $4.300 4.50.&#13;
Closed active.&#13;
Sheep—Loweir' best lambs, $7.75®&#13;
7.80; fair to good, $7.25®7.50; cutis to&#13;
common, $6.50®7; best sheep. $5.50®&#13;
5.75; culls to common, $4®4.50: wethers,&#13;
$5.75 ®G; yearlings. $6.25 @ 0.75;&#13;
best calves, $9®9.25; medium to zood&#13;
$7.50@S.50; heavy, $3.30®4.50.&#13;
--• Grata. Etc.&#13;
Del/olt—Sales and prices in this market&#13;
were as follows: Wheat—No. 1&#13;
white, 86¾c; No. 2 red, spot. 1 car at&#13;
89Vic, 1 car at 8 8 \ o . 2 cars at S9c; December,&#13;
5.000 bu at 89Vic. 3,000 bu at&#13;
^dOO- bu—at- -SSe-,—W" '&#13;
88%c, 1,000 bu at S9c, 5,000 bu at S S * c ;&#13;
Mav, 10.000 bu at 93c, 10.000 bu a t&#13;
92%c, 5,000 bu at 9 2 V c 3,000 bu at&#13;
92Hc, 15,000 bu at 92%c. 10,000 bu at&#13;
9 2 \ c . 5,060 bu at 92½c; No. 2 red, 8 4 ^ c&#13;
per bu.&#13;
Cor i—&gt;To. 3 mixed, 1 car at 4 5 H c I&#13;
car at &lt;5%c: No, 3 yellow. 1 car at 47c,&#13;
2 cars at 47%c; No. 4 yellow, 1 car at&#13;
45Vic 1 car ut 45Hc; by sample, 1 car&#13;
at 45c, 1 car at 44 £ c per bu.&#13;
Oats—No. 2 white, spot, 1 car at 3S-J4c&#13;
and 2 cars at 34c per bu,&#13;
Rye—No. 2 spot, nominal at 70c bu.&#13;
Clover ««ed—Prime spot. 30 bags at&#13;
$8 10; January, 100 bfc*s at $8 li»; by&#13;
samnl». 10 bag* at $7 80. 23 at $7 75. 46&#13;
at $7 50. 19 at $7 25. IS at $6 75 per bu;&#13;
prime alsike. 17 t8; by sampb , 5 b a g s&#13;
at $6 25. 3 at $5 per bu.&#13;
Beans—December. $1 59 asked; January,&#13;
$1 60 asked; March. Jl 60 bid.&#13;
Chicago—Ca*B fHiotatlons were as follows:&#13;
No. 2'spring wheat. 86®88c; No.&#13;
3. 82#*T; No. t red, M - * ® 8 8 H c : No. 2&#13;
corft, :4$Hoj« No. 2 y«llow. 49c; No. 2&#13;
oat,s.'MVfee;^Mtt. 2 White. 8 2 * ® 3 4 c ; No.&#13;
i w S f t &amp; l l t t S l e ; No. 2 rye. 67½c; good&#13;
"'"'" ~ SrHcr fair to choice&#13;
No*; 1: flaxseed, »?c;&#13;
•ntt. t l 0 3 ½ ^ prime&#13;
;isY M; clover, contract&#13;
feed!&#13;
maitl&#13;
No, ••*,&#13;
Q. &amp;.' MonrM, gf ^Csiani4soo, receiver&#13;
of the VicKsbufg Exchange bank,&#13;
on Saturday commenced the paying ol&#13;
meat would begin ao soon and only —,---. - - „-,.__--- „ , - -&#13;
afrtfft'? «lftl nftlri ftnf fen .ftlAhi^fcaii ( "*** 9 * t "m New York Town.n k -&#13;
fS^'JSrJ^'SJS'. T ^ f f 0 ? * 0 6 ? * * watTKRY-BTenlos* 10-10100.: Mats. lO-lV^Jo&#13;
IN DETROIT.&#13;
Week Badlo* Dec. 16.&#13;
T:iJfuCuTy*r.a tao. £AtVeD; BWveoawt&gt;a»farit»:A ii\« D10-0«.A tof't Wtr-o&#13;
„ S D M e l n •To*r\rH*nToabTh».'&#13;
X.YC*p*--Pric** tS-'SWS^St-TBo. Sfeta. fflsd&#13;
SooUftta't Travels Around the WorHL" ^*&#13;
I^VATfrrTS TwsATta-.Prioes ft.ao, U . ^ 9te&#13;
wr&#13;
PRE8IOENT ROOSEVELT TO MAKE&#13;
A.TOUR OF THE WORLD ON HIS&#13;
RETIREMENT FROM OFFICE.&#13;
dent of the United States he will take&#13;
a trip around the world. The news of&#13;
his plan ha3 penetrated to the chancellories&#13;
of Europe and already plans&#13;
«re-being-ffiad«-toleader-hla in-extraordinary&#13;
series of receptions.&#13;
Already arrangements are on—foot&#13;
to entertain him as guest of honor at&#13;
a royal international dinner at The&#13;
Hague. The puraose of this plan is to&#13;
bring together most of the crowned&#13;
heads of Europe, and, if possible, certain&#13;
potentates from Asia and thus lay&#13;
the foundation for a new Hague conference,&#13;
at which J;he cause of arbitration&#13;
will be materially strengthened&#13;
and the great nations of the earth&#13;
brought to a footing where war will be&#13;
practicaly impossible.&#13;
Mr. Roosevelt will be accorded a&#13;
welcome, such as is ordinarily accorded&#13;
only to ruling sovereigns. Possibly&#13;
the only comparison that could be&#13;
drawn would be between the proposed&#13;
trip by Mr. Roosevelt and that of Gen.&#13;
Grant during the 70X but even in this&#13;
regard there is significant differences&#13;
between the character of the two tours&#13;
of the wcrld.&#13;
so well there has not been the slightest&#13;
sign of my old complaint coming&#13;
back. The pain in my back used to&#13;
be terrible. If I got down I had a&#13;
"Yara 30¾TWgW'sTraTghr^glrtiir But&#13;
my back is like a new one now and I_&#13;
can stoop as much as I please. I don't&#13;
believe there ever was any medicine&#13;
half so good as Dodd's Kidney Pills."&#13;
Mrs. Rogers Executed.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Mabel Rogers, who, with&#13;
Leon Peruana, her lover, brutally murdered&#13;
her husband, Marcus Rogers, on&#13;
August 13, 1902, was hanged in t he-jail&#13;
yard in Windsor, Vt., at 1:13 o'clock&#13;
Friday afternoon. It is announced that&#13;
-ths-fcxeeutlon was njQ^accompjyQlfidJiy&#13;
any unusual incidents. Only a small&#13;
number of witnesses were adroHttod .to&#13;
the scene of the hanging, these Including&#13;
the officials, the legal witnesses&#13;
and three newspaper men. Mrs. Rogers&#13;
went to her death composedly.&#13;
"I do not. think it would be brave&#13;
for me to make a confession," she declared.&#13;
"I would just be saying I am&#13;
guilty ot what other peopie did."&#13;
She mounted the gallows with a&#13;
steady step. Although a deathly pallor&#13;
overspread her countenance! hardly a&#13;
muscle quivered as Deputy Sheriff&#13;
Spafford pronounced the fatal words:&#13;
"I now proceed to execute the sentence&#13;
of the law and may God have mercy&#13;
on your soul." When the words were&#13;
pronounced Deputy Sheriff Angus Mc-&#13;
Auley sprung the trap and, the drop&#13;
fell.&#13;
A strenuous effort had been made (0&#13;
secure a reprieve for the murderess,&#13;
but Gov. Bell rsfused steadfastly to interfere.&#13;
He said:&#13;
"I know of no law that is not as&#13;
much for a woman as for a man. 1&#13;
consider that for me to meddle in this&#13;
case would place me as executive of&#13;
the state of Vermont and its laws in a&#13;
ridiculous position."&#13;
Mrs. Rogers spent her last days in&#13;
crocheting fancy work for her relatives&#13;
and for people who have aided&#13;
her, in reading the Bible, and in playing&#13;
with the little daughter of the keepe&#13;
» of the prison.&#13;
\ v Indicted Twenty-four.&#13;
After submitting a partial report&#13;
containing 24 indictments against cattlemen,&#13;
a federal grand jury, which&#13;
has been in session for a week investigating&#13;
Kansas land fraud cases,&#13;
adjourned Saturday for three days.&#13;
Three of the indictments Charge conspiracy&#13;
to defraud the United States&#13;
of a portion of Its public domain and&#13;
cubornation of perjury in the securing&#13;
of fraudulent homestead entries.&#13;
The other 21 charge the unlawful inclosure&#13;
of public lands. The jury adjourned&#13;
to give officers time to secure&#13;
additional witnesses.&#13;
Governor La Follette, of Wisconsin,&#13;
has resigned to eater the United States'&#13;
senate.&#13;
-T;here was an increase during the&#13;
month of November of 632 rural free&#13;
delivery routes established, making the&#13;
total In operation at the present time'&#13;
54,316. More than 4.000 petition* remain&#13;
to be noted upon.&#13;
aa-r&#13;
Tetohpne « W s in T r e ^ e .&#13;
A queer situation wa% recently ere*&#13;
ated In Melbourne, Australia, by t*+&#13;
telephone gtrte of thn genrrel eaK&#13;
change. They suspended ail telephone&#13;
work in the busiest hour of the&#13;
day in order to have themselves photographed&#13;
in a group. They were allowed&#13;
five minutes for the purpose by&#13;
the head of the department, bat the&#13;
operation lasted for. nearly half an&#13;
hour, during which numerous fussy&#13;
subscribers were ringing up in vain.&#13;
The metropolitan fire brigade, failing&#13;
to get any response, dashed at foil&#13;
speed to the exchange and retired disgusted&#13;
on learning the true state of&#13;
affaire. The Melbourne papers are&#13;
flooded with letters calling for the&#13;
abolition of the "lady telephonist." A&#13;
board ie inquiring into the incidentr&#13;
Put Him There.&#13;
Hunters have been fined in New&#13;
Jersey for shooting robins; There&#13;
ought to be something more than a&#13;
fine aa punishment for the offense ot&#13;
taking ao much music out of a world&#13;
that needa all the melody it caa get&#13;
to soften its workaday life. A n n&#13;
who wonld wantonly kill singing birds&#13;
fa the sort of a man for whom prison*&#13;
are built.—Baltimore American.&#13;
Tennessee Praise.&#13;
Dayton,' Tenn., Dec. 11th (Special)&#13;
—Among many prominent residents&#13;
to praise Dodd's Kidney Pills Is Mr.&#13;
N. R. Roberts of this place. He tells&#13;
of what they have done for him, and&#13;
his words will go deep Into the hearts&#13;
of all who are suffering in the same&#13;
way. He says:&#13;
"I was a martyr to Kidney Trouble,&#13;
but Dodd's Kidney Pills completely&#13;
cured me. I shall always keep them&#13;
on hand In case there should be any&#13;
return of the old trouble, but I am&#13;
thankful to say they did their work&#13;
"Corner" in Pigeons.&#13;
Having created a "corner" in English&#13;
owl pigeons, Mr. John Brayshaw,&#13;
a Keighley mechanic, has just sold his&#13;
stock of 117 birds at auction for no&#13;
less than £800. With his pigeons he&#13;
won from. £79 to £80 a year in priza&#13;
money; his sales have averaged about&#13;
£100 a year, and he has carried off&#13;
no fewer than twenty-three silver&#13;
cups and other awards, including the&#13;
eighty-guinea Esqualant trophy at the&#13;
Crystal Palace, presented in memory&#13;
of one of the most famous pigeonfanciers&#13;
in the land.—London Tit-Bits.&#13;
Owl Served for Quail.&#13;
Lovers of game in this city h^ve&#13;
been eating owl under the impression&#13;
that the toothsome morsels served&#13;
to them were quail. As expert evidence&#13;
seems to be necessary to determine&#13;
just what sort of birds are&#13;
being served up, forNthe epicures of&#13;
the city^perhaps tlhere is no realjcause&#13;
for disgruntiement. If owl by another&#13;
name tastes good why shouM.&#13;
it not be a favorite dish?—San Francisco&#13;
Chronicle.&#13;
^Ascertaining Size of Raindrops&#13;
The largest raindrops, the bucketfuls&#13;
that we tell about, are about onefifth&#13;
of an inch in diameter. They are&#13;
measured by allowing them to fall&#13;
in flour. Each drop forms a pellet&#13;
of dough. These pellets are compared&#13;
with others obtained from drops&#13;
of known size.&#13;
A BRAIN WORKER.&#13;
Must Have the Kind of Food That&#13;
Nourishes Brain.&#13;
"I am a literary man whose nervous&#13;
energy is a great part of my stock in&#13;
trade, and ordinarily I have little patience&#13;
with breakfast foods and the&#13;
extravagant claims made of them.&#13;
But I cannot withhold my acknowledg-&#13;
-mpnt nf the d£ht that I owe to Grape-&#13;
Nuts food.&#13;
"1 discovered long ago that the very&#13;
bulkiness of the ordinary diet was not&#13;
calculated to give one a clear head, the&#13;
power of sustained, accurate thinking.&#13;
1 always felt heavy and sluggish in&#13;
mind as well as body after eating the&#13;
ordinary meal, which diverted the&#13;
blood from the brain to the digestive&#13;
apparatus.&#13;
''1 tried foods easy of digestion, but&#13;
found them usually deficient in nutriment.&#13;
I experimented with many&#13;
breakfast foods and they, too, proved&#13;
unsatisfactory, till I reached Grape-&#13;
Nuts. And theo the problem, was&#13;
solved.&#13;
"Grape-Nuts agreed with me perfectly&#13;
from the beginning, satisfying&#13;
my hunger and supplying the nutriment&#13;
that so many other prepared&#13;
foods lack.&#13;
"I had not been using it very Ion*&#13;
before I found that I was turning ont&#13;
an unusual quantity and quality ot&#13;
work. Continued use has demonstrated&#13;
to my entire satisfaction that&#13;
Grape-Nuts food contains all the element*&#13;
needed by the brain and nervous&#13;
system ot the hard working public&#13;
writer." Name giren by Poetum Co-&#13;
Battle Creek, Mich.&#13;
There's a reason. Read the little&#13;
book. "The floed te Weftrille/ la pkfs.&#13;
;&gt;.fl*a&#13;
' • % *&#13;
..I w&#13;
-v-x$.&#13;
. ^ 1&#13;
- .'ifc**&#13;
.-.It; ,^&#13;
vi"~&#13;
!«;„"&lt; 1&amp;&amp; &gt; \ tftnlr&amp;&#13;
rKW&#13;
f i^KwHnyi.wy111 w &lt;»**&#13;
~xw.* :•.•»• jrJ.rfr****)' ; •*.-*W*"SW-1&#13;
&gt;.?*#*•''&#13;
-.+ I",&#13;
, * ^&#13;
1"«^.&#13;
^ • '&#13;
ggfeCT,.-rr mm »*•»•&#13;
II&#13;
:¾&#13;
felt fhtttatg gispatch&#13;
»-:i?&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS &amp; CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
THURSDAY, DEC. 14, 1905.&#13;
The farmer may have hayseed&#13;
in his hair, but he has $605,000,-&#13;
000 worth of hay in t h e market&#13;
The only good thing some landlords&#13;
seam to be glad to do for&#13;
their tenants is to write a receipt&#13;
for three months rent paid in advance.&#13;
i&#13;
• j ••&#13;
The farmer is king of the land.&#13;
The cornstalk is his humble soep-&#13;
Jer4. but a yields ^2,700,000,000&#13;
bushels, and that is more than&#13;
any other king's scepter, though&#13;
of gold and jeweled.&#13;
Few if any were surprised at&#13;
the contents of President Koosevelt's&#13;
message to congress. I t was&#13;
just what was expected. H e is a&#13;
man who has convictions and is&#13;
not afraid to "speak right out in&#13;
meetin". H e dearly loves to&#13;
preach, and while he preaches to&#13;
congress in the first instance, it is&#13;
perfectly evident that he intends&#13;
his preaching to go beyond congress&#13;
and reach all the people.&#13;
ADDITI0HA-, LOCAL.&#13;
The opposition on the lUilroad&#13;
interest to the Panama Canal will&#13;
doubtless find expression on the&#13;
floors of the House and the senate.&#13;
The railroads are very jealous of&#13;
an all water route between the Atlantic&#13;
and Pacific Oceans, and&#13;
knowing they cannot finally prevent&#13;
the completion cf such a&#13;
route, their aim is to delay it as&#13;
long as possible, and their advocates&#13;
in Congress will find much&#13;
to criticise in the management of&#13;
affairs and work on the Isthmus.&#13;
Miss Norma Vaughn visited her&#13;
sister, Mrs. Ruben Kisby of Hamburg,&#13;
from Friday until Monday.&#13;
Arrangements are beiu? made by&#13;
the M. E. people to hold a Christmas&#13;
tree for members tf the Sunday school&#13;
on Friday evening, Dee. 25.&#13;
Marvin &amp; Finley opened their jewel*&#13;
ry store on Howell street in this village&#13;
Monday, with a latere and elegant&#13;
display of goods. See their adv. on&#13;
page IB.&#13;
Photographer Williams and sister&#13;
spent Sunday in Chelsea, if yon&#13;
have not had your photo taken better&#13;
do so at-once as they will only remain&#13;
until Deo. 23.&#13;
Jerry Dnnne has been renewing his&#13;
old school-teaching days, by taking&#13;
charge of the Grammar department&#13;
the past week, during the absence ot&#13;
SKs8 Kennedy. 7&#13;
According to the report there were&#13;
26 persons killed and 55 badly mounded&#13;
during the recent deer bunting&#13;
season. Some of the wounded cannot&#13;
recover. But think of the fine venison,&#13;
t&#13;
The citizens of Stockbridge had a&#13;
chance last week to lojk upon the jarcases&#13;
of ten deer piled up on the&#13;
sidewalk, the results of the marksman*&#13;
ship of some of her sportsmen who&#13;
Congregational Church.&#13;
Your example ie blessing or blight*&#13;
ing someone. You don't know bow&#13;
many are kept back from confessing&#13;
Christ because you do notiead the way.&#13;
Let us have no false shame, no cowardly&#13;
reserve but declare ourselves on the&#13;
side ot God and truth. Let us have&#13;
more cousfcration, more devotion of&#13;
heart and life, saying, Here am I Lord&#13;
send me. And he will lead us into the&#13;
deeper pla-es and into the higher&#13;
things of His love and service.&#13;
E l e c t e d O f f i c e r s&#13;
At the annual election K. 0. T. M.&#13;
Friday evening, Deo. 8, the following&#13;
oflkers were elected:&#13;
Com maud er,&#13;
Lieut. Commander,&#13;
Record Keeper,&#13;
Finance&#13;
C. L. Qampbell&#13;
•P.-W. Comwttyl-Decf 14tivl5thT 16th ami _17td,&#13;
i&gt;&#13;
N. P. Morteuson&#13;
xx • if? Teeplo&#13;
Chaplain,&#13;
Physiciau,&#13;
Sergeant,&#13;
Master at Arms&#13;
1st M. of G.,&#13;
2d M. of G.,&#13;
Sentinel,&#13;
Picket,&#13;
R. C. Coniway&#13;
Dr. H. F. Sigler&#13;
E. R. Brown&#13;
E. R. Ceok&#13;
E. J. Briggs&#13;
J. C.Henry&#13;
L. £. Shehan&#13;
W. C Dunning&#13;
N. P. M.&#13;
Young Mens Club&#13;
The Government is compelled&#13;
to make the Isthmus of Panama&#13;
sanitary and healthful from one&#13;
end to the other before work on&#13;
the Canal can proceed. I t must&#13;
hove hotels with French cooking,&#13;
chfnaTbr tne tables "anct "doubTF&#13;
sheets for tho bedo boforo it can&#13;
induce the honest workmen to live&#13;
t o far from home. But if there&#13;
were to be a gold boom on the&#13;
Isthmus there wouldn't be room&#13;
for the tents and dug outs&#13;
and a vast population would work&#13;
and thrive on the products of the&#13;
surrounding country.&#13;
went north.&#13;
Fred Wyman, of Oexter, the bridge,&#13;
builder, has the contract for the abut-.&#13;
Iment8 of the 1sr1iJi3feT~that are across&#13;
theLnick drain in Lima and has quite&#13;
a lorce of men at work.—Chelsea&#13;
Standard.&#13;
Rep. Sam W. Smith has introduced&#13;
a bill increasing the pay ot the rural&#13;
mail earners to 11,000 a year, and&#13;
granting them two weeks vacation&#13;
each year, thus putting them on a par&#13;
with city carriers.&#13;
Richard Wilson of Parkers Corners&#13;
was operated-on for appendicitis at&#13;
the Samtarinm Tuesday last. Drs.&#13;
Sigler and Brigham performed the&#13;
operation which was very successful&#13;
and the patient is doing well.&#13;
The glass for the postoffice which&#13;
has been two weeks on the Grand&#13;
Trunk from.Detroit, arrived Tuesday&#13;
morning and was put in place immediately.&#13;
It is expected the office will&#13;
be moved into part of the building in&#13;
a day or two.&#13;
We often hear good things at the&#13;
tEeater. lira play a, young marTsays&#13;
he is doing al) bis pay warrants.—-±±11&#13;
—(JourtesyJsthe ouUvard— manifesta&#13;
t i o n o f a r i g h t spirit towards other?.&#13;
Others have advice to give you, listen&#13;
to it. Have no scenes in your career&#13;
TTVBT °wfareh you wish to thrsw^tbe&#13;
cuHain^.JPLeasjire_isjist be pure and&#13;
that pleasure is only found by those&#13;
who do not seek it. The purpose for&#13;
which we live determines the use we&#13;
make of life.&#13;
Don't give your nature to the&#13;
lowest but give your nature to the&#13;
highest. Experience is a dear teacher&#13;
but fools learn from no other. Cease&#13;
to do evil is the first step towards a&#13;
better life. Pres.&#13;
T h o s e C h u r c h F a i r s&#13;
UNADILtA METHODIST&#13;
Quite a number from this place visited&#13;
the Unadilla M. E. church fair&#13;
last Thursday or Friday evening and&#13;
all report a fine time, and a successful&#13;
affair.&#13;
Thursday evening a chicken pie&#13;
supper was served with the usual sup*&#13;
ply of other goodies and Friday evening&#13;
was followed by an oyster supper.&#13;
A CARD.&#13;
I, the undersigned, do hereby agree&#13;
to refund the money on a 50 cent bottle&#13;
of Greene's Warranted Syrup of !&#13;
Tar if it failes ro cure your cough or&#13;
cold. I also guarantee a 25-cent bottle&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money reled.&#13;
U9&#13;
Will H. Harrow.&#13;
Homeseekers Excursions via Chicago&#13;
Great Weste-n Railway&#13;
to points in Arizona, Arkansas, AssinipsisV&#13;
British Columbia, Canadian&#13;
Northwest, Colorado, Idaho, Indian&#13;
Tsxrtto y, Iowa, Kansas, Manitoba,&#13;
Mexico, Minnesota,, Missouri, Montana,&#13;
Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico,&#13;
North and South Dakota, Oregon,&#13;
Texas, Washington and Wyoming at&#13;
greatly reduced rales for the r:und&#13;
trip. Tickets on sale the first and&#13;
third Tuesdays of each month. For&#13;
further information apply to F. R.&#13;
hosier, T. P. A., 115 Adams St.,&#13;
Chicago, 111. t-50&#13;
you don't earn more than you are&#13;
paid.".replied his employer, "you will&#13;
never be paid more than you earn."&#13;
Think it over if you are working for a&#13;
salary.&#13;
To the reporter for the Livingston&#13;
Co. Republican, of Pinckney. In reply&#13;
to the very pleasant sketch published&#13;
Dec. 4, would say I am the only&#13;
business man that left town lately and&#13;
take the insult this way. The party&#13;
that reported the same is a contemptable&#13;
liar. N H. Caverly.&#13;
H. -H. Swarthout the past week&#13;
traded the Cordly farm with Seth and&#13;
Vincent Perry for their farm west of&#13;
here and then sold the Perry farm to&#13;
Henry Howlett of Gregory. The&#13;
Cord ley farm is nnw nf thw finpst plar&gt;P«&#13;
The Euarle on the Dollar*&#13;
The figure of the eagle ou the dollar*&#13;
of 188*3, 1SU8 aud 1S39 are exact portraits&#13;
of a famous American eagle.&#13;
"Peter, the? mint bird," Ue was called&#13;
by everybody lu Philadelphia, and during&#13;
his life his fame was equally us&#13;
great as that of "Old Abe," the Wisconslu&#13;
war eagle, the latter being&#13;
reallyJI spring chicken wben compared&#13;
with Peter. Peter was the pet of the&#13;
Philadelphia mint for many years.&#13;
Finally he was caught in some coining&#13;
machinery and had the life jerked out&#13;
of his body in a Jiffy, Tbe figure on&#13;
the coins named above is an exact&#13;
reproduction of a portrait taken of&#13;
Peter after be bad been stuffed and&#13;
placed in a glass case In the mint&#13;
cabinet.&#13;
" Canadian Holiday Excursions via&#13;
Grand Trunk Railway SysUm&#13;
Single (are for the round trip to&#13;
certain Canadian points on all train*-&#13;
1902.&#13;
yalid returning to leave destination to&#13;
and iaeluding -^aauary- _6th_,_ J90_6&#13;
For fares and further information cali&#13;
on your local Apent on write to GEO.&#13;
W. VAUX, A. G. P. &amp; T. A , Chcago,&#13;
III.&#13;
Kates to Western Points&#13;
If contemplating a trip west, write&#13;
to P. K, Mosier, T. P. A., Chicago&#13;
Great Western Railway, 115 Adams&#13;
St., Chicago, 111..stating how many in&#13;
the party and wben you wish to go.&#13;
He will advise you promptly concerning&#13;
the"tiesr~rate~8, routesT andT""other&#13;
necessary Information. t 52&#13;
Hl&gt; W a n P e r m a n e n t .&#13;
In idleness there Is perpetual despair.—&#13;
Carlyle.&#13;
The&#13;
Period&#13;
of a woman's Ufa is the name often&#13;
given to •" change of life.*' Your&#13;
menses come at long Intervals, and&#13;
grow scantier until they stop. The&#13;
change lasts three or four years, and.&#13;
causes much pain and suffering,&#13;
which can. however, be cured, by&#13;
taking&#13;
WINE&#13;
OF&#13;
Woman's Rcfutfe in Distress&#13;
It quickly relieves the pain, nervousness,&#13;
irritability, miserableness,&#13;
fainting, dizziness, hot and cold&#13;
flashes, weakness, tired feeling, etc.&#13;
Cardul will bring you safely through&#13;
this "dodging period," and build&#13;
up your strength*ior the rest of your&#13;
life. Try it.&#13;
You can get it at all druggists in&#13;
SI .00 bottles.&#13;
Y&#13;
"EVERYTHING BUT DEATH&#13;
I suffered." writes Virginia Robson. of EasteniM&#13;
»H-.''umUf took CarduMrMclv &lt;uted&#13;
me »o quickly It surprised my doctor, who&#13;
dlda't know 1 was taking It."&#13;
TTSTTT, Jeuklus, r r a r i n a t e m p o r a r y | Subscribe for the Pinckney Dispatcn.&#13;
•Sjnhfljragsmeni^JCaiLyiMilend me $10?"&#13;
"Only a temporary emba-rrassment?&#13;
You're much luckier than I am."—&#13;
Translated For Tales From Fllegende&#13;
Blatter.&#13;
Hewitt's JKSfr Salvo&#13;
For Piles. Burns, tares.&#13;
There were many a n d - varied Taney&#13;
articles on sale and all was cleaned&#13;
ID Mad Chase&#13;
Millions rush in mad chase after&#13;
health, from one extreme of faddism&#13;
to another, when, if they would only&#13;
eat good food and keep- their bowels&#13;
regular with Dr. King's New Life&#13;
Fittfr their troubles would all pass&#13;
•Wftjr, Prompt relief and quick cure&#13;
for' litpr and stomach trouble. 25c at&#13;
F. A* 8iftler's drug store; guaranteed&#13;
for a country home in this vicinity&#13;
and the I'errys have secured a&#13;
bargain. Situated as it is on the&#13;
banks of a beautiful lake it makes, an&#13;
ideal home.&#13;
Physicians are charged with a new&#13;
duty under an act of the last legislature&#13;
in regard to filing certificates of&#13;
birt s wi'n township, village and city&#13;
clerks. The act takes effect on January&#13;
1, 1906. Uniflr the o d law births&#13;
were enumerated by assessors and sup&#13;
ervisors once a year, which proved to&#13;
be a very imperfect and inaccurate&#13;
way. When filed promptly within&#13;
ten days after birth, tha returns should&#13;
be complete and reliable. Blanks and&#13;
instructions have been mailed to all&#13;
physicians in the state by tbe Secretary&#13;
of State, Lansing, who has charge&#13;
of this matter.&#13;
out before the end of the fair.&#13;
Each evening an entertainment was&#13;
given in the body of tbe church, consisting&#13;
of recitation, song, etc. The&#13;
main part being the "Album" and the&#13;
Vestal Maidens. The latter was a&#13;
drill of nine young ladies d essed in&#13;
white carrying candles and was very&#13;
fine and well executed.&#13;
HAMBURG M. E.&#13;
Saturday tbe M. E. ladies of&#13;
Hamburg held a fair with dinner&#13;
andr;supper served. The I. O. O. R&#13;
hill was well decorated and many&#13;
beautiful articles placed on sale.&#13;
About fiftoen from here attended in&#13;
the evening and enjoyed themselves to&#13;
Abe utmost. All,articles were sold before&#13;
9 o'clock and the society realized&#13;
nearly $55.&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG CONG'L.&#13;
As advertised, the ladies of the&#13;
North Hamburgh Cong'l .society heid&#13;
toeir annual fair and suppers at Cbilson&#13;
Thursday and Friday of last week.&#13;
The attendance was good both days,&#13;
the suppers excellent and everyone&#13;
seeaced satisfied. The. fancy work and&#13;
other articles were all disposed of but&#13;
we have not learned how much was&#13;
taken in.&#13;
Tbe most pleasant, safest and best&#13;
remedy^to use for coughs colds croup,&#13;
wfrooping coogb, etc., is Kennedy's&#13;
Lavative Honey a id Tar. Tbis rem*&#13;
edy expels all cold from the system&#13;
by, acting as a cathartic on the bowels.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
Nothing will cure indigestion that&#13;
doesn't digest the food, itself, and give&#13;
the stomach rest. You can't expect&#13;
that a weak stomach will regain its&#13;
strength and get well when it is competed&#13;
to do the full work that a sound&#13;
stomach should do. You wouldn't expect&#13;
a sick horse to get well when it is&#13;
co^ipelleoV^to do a full day's work&#13;
every day of the week. Kodol Dyspepsia&#13;
Cure is a perfect digestant and&#13;
digests the food regardless of tbe condition&#13;
of your stomach. Relieves indigestion,&#13;
belching, sour stomach and&#13;
alt stomach disorders.&#13;
Sold by F. A. 8ifllef, Druggist&#13;
It is The Town Talk&#13;
Yes one tells the other how good it&#13;
is and thousands of people and physicians&#13;
haviog used Mexican Corn Plaster,&#13;
saying it is the best corn and bun&#13;
ion cure on earth, like court plaster,&#13;
bandy to stick on. easy to wear, antiseptic,&#13;
painless and harmless. Send&#13;
your correct address and 10 cents and&#13;
by return mail we will send you a&#13;
large package of Mexican Gore plaster.&#13;
You will bless the day you did.&#13;
Reliable agt. wanted for this city.&#13;
Address F. Bassler Co.,&#13;
Lansing, Mich.&#13;
417 Dorrance Place.&#13;
Christmas and New Year Excursions&#13;
via Grand Trunk Railway System&#13;
One and one-third fare lor tbe round&#13;
trip on all trains December 23d, 24th,&#13;
25th, 30th, 31st, 1905 and January 1st,&#13;
1906. Return limit any date to and&#13;
including January 3d, 1906.&#13;
For further information consult lo&#13;
cal agent or write to GEO. W. VAUX,&#13;
A G . P , &amp; T . A., Chicago, III, t 52&#13;
Tortur« of a Preacher&#13;
The story of the torture ol Rev. O.&#13;
D. Moore, pastor of tbe Baptist church,&#13;
of Harper»ville, N. Y., will interest&#13;
you. He 8ayt:*'I suffered agonies,&#13;
because of a persi^ten'" cough, resulting&#13;
from the grip. I l^ad to sleep sit&#13;
ting up in bed. I tried many remedies,&#13;
.without relief, until 1 to.'ik Dr. K-Uigla.&#13;
New Discovery for consumption,&#13;
cougbs and colds which en'irely cured&#13;
my cough and saved me Irom consume&#13;
tion." A grand cure for diseased conditiors.&#13;
of Ihe'heart anJ luogs. At F&#13;
A. Si^ler'.s druggist; price 5 0 ; arw&#13;
$1 00, girnvinteed. Trial bottle free.&#13;
Llvlng-&#13;
At ston,ss. a anseton of tbe Probate Court for&#13;
the said county, held at the probate office la the&#13;
village of Howell, on Thursday, the 7th day of&#13;
December in the year one thousand nloe hundred&#13;
flvd. Present, /rtbur A, Montague, Judge of&#13;
Probate. In the matter of the estate of&#13;
SAMUEL DUBOIS, decrated&#13;
Now comes Holden A. DnRo|8,administrator of&#13;
the esfata of said deceased and repree&#13;
«nts lo this court that he is ready to render&#13;
his flual account in said estate.&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered that Friday the 5th&#13;
day of Jannary next at ten o'clock in the forenoon,&#13;
at snld Probate Office, be assigned for the&#13;
heat ingot said accc &gt;unt.&#13;
And it is further ordered that a copy of this&#13;
or er be published in the PJNCKNRY DISPATCH, a&#13;
newapnpi r priuted and circulating in said county&#13;
three euccesiive weeks previous to said day of&#13;
hearing.&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAGUE,&#13;
Judge o t Probate.&#13;
STATU OF MICHIGAN, the probate court for&#13;
ttie ojunty of Liviogaton —At a session of&#13;
said court, held at the probate office in the village&#13;
of 4kH*&gt;4t4tt-8ald-&lt;itwmy-0TS tlur ninth day of Deo»&#13;
^&#13;
•••?***&gt;• 3M&#13;
&gt;»&#13;
ember A. D 10OS. Present: Hon. Arthur A. Montagiiis&#13;
jud«e of Tiubute:—hi tuu matter or the&#13;
estate of&#13;
UKKT (Joomviy, deceased&#13;
Dessle Whitehead having filed in said court her&#13;
petition praying that the administration of said&#13;
estate be granted to llaniet Porter, or to some&#13;
other suitable person.&#13;
. It is ordered, that the filth day of January, A.&#13;
D., 1906, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at said probate&#13;
office, be and is hereby appointed for hearing&#13;
said petition. It is further ordered, that public&#13;
no'ice thereof be givpu by publication of a copy of&#13;
thi9 order, for three successive weeks previous to&#13;
said day of hiaring, lu the PINCKNEY DISPATCH, a&#13;
newspaper printed and circulated in said county.&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAGUE,&#13;
52 Judge of Probate.&#13;
^ t a t e of Michigan.&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach No appetite, loss of strength, nervoutness,&#13;
headache, constipation, bad breath,&#13;
general debility, sour risings, and catarrh&#13;
of the stomach are all due to indigestion*&#13;
Kodol oures indigestion. This new discovery&#13;
represents the natural juices of digestion&#13;
as they exist in a healthy stomach,&#13;
combined with the greatest known tonio&#13;
and reconstructive properties. Kodol Dyspepsia&#13;
Cure does not only cure indigestion&#13;
and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy&#13;
cures all stomach troubles by cleansing,&#13;
purifying, sweetening, and strengthening&#13;
the mucous membranes, lining the stemach*&#13;
. Mr. S. S. Ball, of Ravanswood, W. Vs., •***—&#13;
" I * u troubled with sour stomach for twenty years,&#13;
Kodol cured me sod we are now using ft te milk&#13;
for baby,"&#13;
Ko4oJ MgM* What Y o u 1 s t .&#13;
Botttosenly. $1.00 Slse hokUn»2K times the trial&#13;
•lie, which sells for 50 cents.&#13;
• t e s f e d k? I * O. OaWITT A 0 0 . , OMIOMO*.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist&#13;
Thirty-fifth Judicial&#13;
Circuit, in Chancery. Suit pending in the&#13;
Circuit Court for Mie county of Ltvincrston, in&#13;
&lt; huncery, at Howell. Mich,, on the 28th day, of&#13;
Noveml er, 190.%&#13;
LILLY R. KOSQKR, complainant&#13;
vs&#13;
J . . M K 3 i'OSGKK, O u f i M u l o n t&#13;
rBTTiTTcaufe.it appealing Irom affidavit on file,&#13;
that the defeudent, .lames Konger, is a resident of&#13;
this statu, but-that his whereabouts are nnknown,&#13;
therefore, on motion of James A. Greene, Solicitor&#13;
for Complainant, il is ordered that the defendant,&#13;
James Fongcr, &lt;&gt;. tt&gt;r l i s appearance in said cause&#13;
on or be lore tbr^e months trim the date of this&#13;
jofrdpr, ami tru t within twenty &lt;l*ys from eaiddate,&#13;
j the *-aid Complainant rause this order to be published&#13;
in the PINCKNKY DISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
I printed and published in thecrumty of" Livingeton,&#13;
at least once in each week, forsix successive weeks&#13;
STKHNS V, SMITH&#13;
Circuit Judge.&#13;
J A M K S A. CiRSKNK,&#13;
Solicitor for Complainant,&#13;
t i Howell, Mich.&#13;
6 0 YEARS9&#13;
BXPERIENCI&#13;
* /'&#13;
..'*fiv'...Vi-&#13;
TRADE MARKS&#13;
DCSION*&#13;
Anyone sending a iketeCb Oanf*dV dPeUsQcrHipTtti)o ne \m0a.y qnlekly eeeeruin oar opinion free wbeth« 'S^s^sxim^s] sent free, oldest annoy for •eonrmtMtents.&#13;
Scientific Hitficaft, A haxMHoajely til Of t~&#13;
J&#13;
eeiationyesr;&#13;
foor mottbs» SL Kfl&#13;
•-; -'M&#13;
i yjUH^ijgf^liii&#13;
; x f :V:&#13;
!*?'*&lt;?•&#13;
.Gray Hair it a bar' to employment and to&#13;
pl«a*wa, but there la relief Som it to these&#13;
Wi&gt;, It can be restored to it* natural color&#13;
by tMtac lira. E. W. Allen's Vita Hair Color&#13;
Beatorer. It ia not svdye bat in a natural vray&#13;
of the pigments that wrirlnthreedaya. Iti gainvoet alitfJeo aknydo rcoglroera atoy ;tnhoe&#13;
SH^A'Hl^M*l?lf'tB1* 4*fi1M1 1 ^a6 'b^o?tt-le . AABSllO dLruUgTgEiaLtaY.&#13;
FLORIMELLA&#13;
CREAM&#13;
t h e hygienic akin food gives roey freshness&#13;
~~ .beauty to the skin. Removes all imper-&#13;
~ imparities. A perfect complexat&#13;
your druggists, or sent&#13;
of price* "~ ~~&#13;
QOUCH3AREDANCER&#13;
* Signals, Stop Tbem With&#13;
Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery&#13;
ONSUIUPTION p .&#13;
g j £ « « BOc^f.OO&#13;
Trie CURE THAT'S SURfc *cr all Diseases&#13;
of Throat aud Lungs or Money&#13;
Back. FREE TRIAL.&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
K W. ALLEN &amp; CO&#13;
Detroit, Mich.&#13;
Kodfol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
Digests what you eat.&#13;
copyright*etc., ) N A 1 &gt; L COUNTRIES.&#13;
Business direct tuUk Washington saves time,&#13;
mo**y and ojUn tiupaUnt.&#13;
Pttontand Infringement Practice Exclusively.&#13;
Write or come to ua at&#13;
818 Mat* tttwtr «pp, PniUd lUtet JaUat-CJUe,&#13;
WASHINQTON, P. 6 . GASNOW&#13;
fc&lt; r\ K &amp; K &amp; ft K,*H&amp;^K-&amp; ft:^K#t Jft&#13;
TR1CTU&#13;
vV.C-T.U.&#13;
Edited by the Pinckney W. C. T. U.&#13;
M t t R S f X S S ^ S A VtfVEBJC^^B^3S]BKlttVlSlBSMBVSS]SJtSjB)!MkdSHSJKS^BL^Bfe&#13;
The liquor* traffic is the only&#13;
business that requires officers to&#13;
arrest its products, and prisons to&#13;
lock them up. '&#13;
The Blue Book shows that of&#13;
the 1,361 prisoners in Canada penitentiaries&#13;
1,239 are drinkers, and&#13;
only 122 are total abstainers.&#13;
The marine insurance companies&#13;
doiug business in New Xork&#13;
city how offer a reduction of five&#13;
per cent in rates to ships on which&#13;
no ardent spirits are drunk during&#13;
the voyage. This is one of the&#13;
best temperance speeches.—Christian&#13;
Endeavor World.&#13;
The United Kingdom Temper&#13;
jinrce Alliftnce, at il&#13;
ventiou at Manchester, England,&#13;
jOct. ltt, adopted resolutions demanding&#13;
the "local veto" (local&#13;
prohibition privilege), and declaring&#13;
its membership would refuse&#13;
to support any candidate who failed&#13;
to pledge his support of "veto"&#13;
legislation,&#13;
~ Tbewaftoa of indigestion t i npon&#13;
08. Kodoi Dyspepsia Cure for indigestion&#13;
and dyspepsia will do everything&#13;
for the stomach that an over loaded or&#13;
an over worked stomach can not do&#13;
for itself. Kodol digests what vou&#13;
eat—gives the fetomacb a rest—relieves&#13;
your stomach, belching, heart-burn,&#13;
indigestion, etc.&#13;
Sold by P. A. Sigler, ttruggist.&#13;
HiM L i t e r a r y T r e a s u r e * .&#13;
"Jones took me to his rooms to see a&#13;
Collection of rare and curious manuscripts."&#13;
'What were they?"&#13;
'Receipted tailors' bills."—Cleveland&#13;
Leader.&#13;
The coat U in the fifteenth century&#13;
first mentioned as an upper garment&#13;
for men. All the seams were then covered&#13;
with gold braid or lace.&#13;
BraveWomett&#13;
W o m e n ' s • delicate n e r v e oi_&#13;
aubjects them t o much suffering.&#13;
As a rule t h e y overlook t h e wonderful&#13;
Influence their nervous s y s t e m h a s upon&#13;
thfeir general health.&#13;
T h e y a r e n o t sufficiently lmpreaajw&#13;
with the fact t h a t all their Ilia are d i -&#13;
rectly traceable t o t h e nervous s y s t e m .&#13;
T h a t their periodical sufferings a n a&#13;
h e a d a c h e s are due t o weakened n e r v e s .&#13;
Dr. Miles* Nervine&#13;
la wonderfully successful i n revitalising&#13;
t h e nerveB and curing ail cases of n e r v -&#13;
o u s disorders and loss of vitality.&#13;
"I w a s afflicted w i t h female w e a k n e s s&#13;
and e x t r e m e nervousness. A t t i m e s w a »&#13;
entirely helpless. Three physiclAns&#13;
treated m e without results. Finally I&#13;
took D r . Miles* Nervine and b e g a n t o&#13;
improve, and 8 bottles cured me?j_ y MRS. H A T T I E GRABTLL.&#13;
422 t h Ave., N . B „ Roanoke, v s ,&#13;
T h e first bottle will benefit, if not, t h s&#13;
druggist will return your money.&#13;
Rough skia and cracked hands are&#13;
not only cored by DeWiitV Witch&#13;
annual CUTTH Haz** Sal ve, but .an occasional _anpiu&#13;
cation keeps tbe skin sott and smooth.&#13;
Explained.&#13;
Sapleigh—Why do you dislike cigarettes?&#13;
Miss Knox-Because they are&#13;
dangerous. SapleigtF-But T Iravr&#13;
smoked them for ten years, and they&#13;
•aren't Stilled me yet. -Miss- Knox&#13;
Yes, I know, ami that's one reason&#13;
Best tor eczema, cuts, boils, burus etc, 1 why I object to them.—Chicago News. ,&#13;
The gen,uiue DeWitt'a Witch Hazel "&#13;
Salve affords iraraediat: relief in ali • : .1&#13;
forms of blind, bleeding, itch;ng and T H E ORIGINAL LAXATIVE COUGH SYRWT •&#13;
protruding pii*.' | KENNEDY'S LAXATIVE HONEY^TAR&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist fed Clover Slcuom and honey Bee on Every Bottle. -&#13;
YOU ©AN PAY WH5M CURE.S3*&#13;
^ear M&amp;_giArag;s EJSED I V I T K O D T waiTTt:M C O N S E N T&#13;
St^ICTURS ASSC KIDKEY DiSEASS CUiP2P:D.&#13;
1' ''!•• ) - ^ - 3 ^&#13;
"I had stricture f: r elav.Ni years.&#13;
Dis3A^e &lt; i IIIH Kiiint\s. 1 lidd a a iiticoi::!'.&#13;
It CP roi:f&#13;
&lt;o u : i " . i i i ' \ .&#13;
P.riaht'&#13;
&lt;CT»&#13;
i.. y&#13;
I o&gt; cii- [f$&#13;
groin u.id ic-licR aa though suait-tlimg v&gt;*s ii&#13;
v. as weak and i could scarcely s:oup over. Cnixj v. as fall c&#13;
tRent: tfI^d,a=a¾5tfrt?y¾Ttf^ft1rfr^qt5etrt^y f -3iffH7-dT^**ei«Tise-caUeJ = ^&#13;
6pecialb.ts, pat -nt medrinrr,, c'ottric b-::!s, &amp;JI t-.iied.p J war. dis- £e&#13;
^&#13;
nura?fd. TT'nti-6* f.uX .Jiundifcxia- oi rtnH.n ^-Uljrjiiri^_JEi'a,ir^i_ciLn---g«&#13;
u''ed Drs, Kfunedv &amp; Ker^an as ths Ir.st retort, i I'.'tj linrd a prcct jpy&#13;
—al about thmn and c~nr-!ndfvi troin t!;e iact '.h:.t t '•&lt; y lad been CO&#13;
e«nabhsheti over 25 ye.irs t.ut ilu-uiuh-r&lt;iti&gt;cd the'-r business. I a i K g&#13;
deliehted wiih the rVsnlis. 1» cno vrck I fc't belter and !n a f-;w 1¾¾&#13;
weeks was eatir.ly cared. Have gained sixteen pnmu's in weicht* '&#13;
G. E. WRIGHT, Lausiau.&#13;
G. E. WKIGKT.&#13;
ESTABLISHED 9 8 YEARS.&#13;
dURES GUARANTEED OR HO PAY.&#13;
I1HAS YOUR BLOOD 3EESM DISEASED ?&#13;
&amp; L . O O D P O I S O N S &amp;:e the most prevalent and most serichs diseases. Tbf-v&#13;
fcap the very lift blood of the-victim aijd u::k s en!ii&lt; !y erhd-rated from tl:-: pystem v.r.l&#13;
[Ci'jSH sprioutcompiicaiions. Ueware tf Mercury. It en1)' suppresses tha syiaptcms^—our&#13;
PNliW MiiTHOL) positively Cures all biuod disear.es forever.&#13;
Y O U N G O R M I D D L E - A C E D M E « . - I m p r u d e n t ..acts or iafer e x c i s e s&#13;
[ h^ve broken down your systcu. You feci the r-ympti ms st.ahrR ever you, Riei:tiuy.&#13;
physically and sexually you are not the man you used ta bo or shculd be. '.-«jj&#13;
F ) G T A I % f ? S 9 Are vou a vie: :m ? ITnveyoti Vet li-pe? Arerou in^cno'in- K *S&#13;
IfSf b i #»* 1W 5 ¾ SnK ternary? H.is \crr bio--d be;n d.buascd ? l ^ v c yea ;.....• t ^&#13;
weakness? Our New Method Trc?ti^rnt wiil cure you. V/h.it it has donu l^r t.tluu-s it |S&#13;
will do for you, CONSULTATIOiN I-"KKB. l.o innticr v, ha has treated you. wrile for jy&#13;
TI honestoniuion Fr-e of Cnr.rg'*. C'iari-csro 'sntmb!e. 1'OOXS FilEC—"1 he i.ohi ^n ii&#13;
Monitor" (illustrated^ en Diseastja of Men. b nled licck oa "I.isc-ise.i of Womsri" i'ros gjj&#13;
|MO N A M S S " U 3 E 3 WiTKOUY •WfHiTTSs] CONSEE^T. "very&#13;
t h i n s C o n f i d e n t l y ! . Q u e s t i o n List for Kjorne T r e a t m e n t Free&#13;
Cor. Michigan Ave. and Shelby St., Detroit, EVHch.&#13;
FinioAis Fierhtiog&#13;
"For seven year?," writes Geo. W.&#13;
Hr ffman, of Harper, Wash.,T;I T a d a&#13;
bitter battle, witb chronic stomach&#13;
and liver trouble, but at last I won,&#13;
aad cured my dise ses, by thfL, use oL&#13;
Electric Bitters. I unhesitatingly&#13;
recommend them to al), and don't intend&#13;
in tbb future to ba without them&#13;
in the house. Tbey are certainly a&#13;
wonderful medicine, to have cured&#13;
such avbad case as mine." Sold under&#13;
guarantee to do the same for you, by&#13;
?. A. iSigler druggist, at 50c a bottle.&#13;
Try tbem today.&#13;
K &amp; K * KdcK K A - K - - - K &amp; K &amp; K&#13;
.%k&amp; £.&#13;
One i&lt; y ..'•_'•: •&lt; V. &gt;;•;•&gt;;•(•.' &lt;'::s!i;u:ni&#13;
.".lid ].:\rr.&lt;-. r Ii; I'.Mi &lt;•:'.'.:.t1 ov,t &lt;••[' 111 = &gt;&#13;
tlio;.tc •• I M;,\1:; ; 'l'he :-.ep; v.-ovy I':;H-&#13;
^:iMr..-'y ;-iii ;;•.': y. aiul it w:H with iliflit'iiliy&#13;
il;:,t ;ht\y Kept tin'ir t'rot at all.&#13;
As tbey tut o.-in.^ly tlesceiuloil tli.&gt; gi'^it&#13;
ai-tress said to her companion, tpuitt,'&#13;
in'her Lady Macdioth .manner: "Take&#13;
a good grip on my arm, Ljawreuce, and&#13;
j if I slip hold on like grim death. But&#13;
if you slip in the name of heaven let&#13;
go!"&#13;
A Fearful rate&#13;
It is a tearful fate to have to endure&#13;
Tbeterrible Torture 6t piles.-""I"can"&#13;
r L&#13;
FREE&#13;
One month's supply absolutely FREE to prove and to show you the skill of&#13;
the physicians of this&#13;
GIfcE_4JT I^^TITUTE&#13;
This is no C. O. D. scheme. You are under no obligation to continue the&#13;
treatment. We leave it all to you. We know that the results will be so satisfactory&#13;
that you will be glad to pay the small charge we ask after the first month.&#13;
HONEST OFFER&#13;
to men only, men who have tried other doctors without success, men who have&#13;
violated the laws of nature, men who have tried without success to regain the health&#13;
and vigor so foolishly wasted and recklessly squandered. Vv'c are willing t o&#13;
prove at our expense that we can benefit and cure you by sending you&#13;
One iWCoiitli's Treatment F r e e&#13;
BOSTON MEDICAL INSTITUTE. 158 Lake Street CHICAGO&#13;
L&#13;
Tilple Extract of Violet, French Roses Concentrate,&#13;
Imperial Hair Tonic. Three High Grade Essentials&#13;
to the Toilet at the price of one of them alone, via i&#13;
$1.00.&#13;
We manufacture and sell these goods direct to&#13;
the consumer, thus cutting out the' profits of the&#13;
middlemen.&#13;
REGULAR RETAIL PRICK&#13;
Triple Violet Extract • . • .50&#13;
French Roses Concentrate « . I.CO&#13;
(Makes 2 quarts exquisite toilet water.)&#13;
Imperial Hair Tonic • • • ~ .50&#13;
$2.00 '&#13;
Our Price for theThree-ONE DOLLAR.&#13;
A Saving to VOU of 100 Per Cent. Is'nt it Worth While?&#13;
Write to us for descriptive literature of these articles.&#13;
The CINCINNATI PERFUME CO. Inc., Cincinnati, Ohio.&#13;
•truthfully say,' writes Harry Colson,&#13;
MasonviUP, la , "that for blind, bleeding,&#13;
itching aad protruding 'piles,&#13;
Bucklen's 4-i'nica Salve is the best cure&#13;
made.'' A I S J best tor cuts burns and&#13;
injuries. 25c at ?. A . Sigler's, druggist.&#13;
Mnra'A V o i c e .&#13;
Mme. Mara had a voice that extended&#13;
from middle G to E in *alt and was&#13;
one of the most facile and flexible ever&#13;
known. Sho delighted- in the florid&#13;
music of Ilasse, Graun, Benda, Jommelll,&#13;
Pergalese, Porpora. Sacchini and&#13;
others of that School, and with the utmost&#13;
ease executed passages that are&#13;
now consigned to solo instruments,&#13;
such as the -iolin and flute. She held&#13;
the stage from 1771 to 1802, with an&#13;
occasional appearance after the latter&#13;
date.&#13;
^rxs.&#13;
m SittA«8 ftepattu. Railroad Guide&#13;
PCBLISHBD KVSBY THURSDAY »OKSIS« BY&#13;
F R A N K U. A N D R E W S cfc, CO'.&#13;
EDITORS *»!&gt; PROPRIETORS.&#13;
6iit&gt;8orlptlOQ Price $1 in Advance.&#13;
lateral at tbe Poitoftca at fiac&amp;nay, Michigan&#13;
•CUBB matter&#13;
Adrertieing rates made known on application.&#13;
Basinets Cards, $4.00 per year.&#13;
Peath and marriage notices puDlisned tree.&#13;
•nnoancementsof entertainments may be paic&#13;
for, if desired, by ^ri seating the office wita tick&#13;
eta of admission. In case tickets are not ^r^ogit&#13;
to tne office, regular rates willbecnarycd.&#13;
All matter in localnoticecolumnwUibech^rvd&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for eac h&#13;
insertion. Where no time i s specified, all notice*&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, anc&#13;
will be charged for accordingly. £ # ~ A l l changee&#13;
of advertisements MUST reach this office as earl;&#13;
as T 0 « S D A T morning to insure an insertion tb#&#13;
same week.&#13;
JOB P8IJVJIJVG/&#13;
In all its branches, a specialty. We hare all kin u^&#13;
and the latest styles of Type, etc., which enable8&#13;
as to execute all kindB of work, such at Booke&gt;&#13;
Pamplets, Posters, Programmes. Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, Statements. Cards, Auction Bills, etc., in&#13;
superior styles, upon tbe shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
ALL BILLS PAYABLE FIRST Of BVBBY MONTH.&#13;
TrfE VILLAGE .DlRECrjtiY&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
P a s s m a n * W. H. Placeway&#13;
TauaTKB* Ruben Finch, James Hoc lie,&#13;
Will Keaned/ Sr , Alfred Aloake,&#13;
F. D. JoUuson, -vl. ttoehe.&#13;
CLKBK ROIS Head&#13;
TBBASDBIB K.G.Jickson&#13;
AbSBasoB D- W.Murta&#13;
STBBBT COMMISSION«B Alfred Moeks&#13;
- *—ETgAXTa^Jf ttt»a- -4J^-li- V. ni*,ivt&#13;
ATToaj*av L. E. Uowlett&#13;
M^MBAt.t. ; af. tfroitan&#13;
PEI^E j^ARQUETTB&#13;
I x x a f f e c t ^ . p r . 3 0 , 1 9 0 B ,&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon as follows:&#13;
For Detroit and East,&#13;
10:48 a. m., 2:19 p. m. 8:58 p. m.&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North and West,&#13;
9:26 a. m., 2 :19 p . m . , 6:18 p. a .&#13;
For Saginaw and Bay City,&#13;
10:48 a. m., 2:19 p. m., 3:58 p. ru.&#13;
For Toledo and South,&#13;
10:48 a. m., 2:19 p. m.,&#13;
FRANK B A T , H. F. MOELLER, .&#13;
Agent,Soutti Lyon. G. P. A.» Detroit.&#13;
Wrand Trnnt Hallway System.&#13;
East Pound from Finciney&#13;
No- 28 Passenger Ex. Hunday, 9:48 A. M.&#13;
Mo. 30 Passenger Ex. Sunday, 4:55 P . M .&#13;
West Bctird ficro Pinckmy&#13;
No. 27 Pa*eengeT Ex. Sunday, 10:01 A. M.&#13;
No. 29 Psteecger Ex.Snnciy. 6:44 P. M*&#13;
W. H.Clark, Agent.&#13;
RED CHIEF&#13;
Corn Shelter.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
The mission of "Early Risers" is to&#13;
3lear the way a n i £ive Nature lull&#13;
sway. These famous little pills rid&#13;
tbe stomach and bowels of all putrid&#13;
matter, thus removing the causes of&#13;
lieaaache, constipation, sallow com&#13;
ple.uon, etc. DeVViUj^CLittle «*Early&#13;
Risers never gripe or sicken. A safe,&#13;
peasant, perfect pill.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggiat.&#13;
I l f i T H O D l S T EPISCOPAL CUUKUH. j&#13;
i l l Hev. K. AEmerick pastor. Services ever&gt; ,&#13;
Sunday morning a t . 11):30¾ and efery Sunday ,&#13;
eveuin« at 7:0rt o'clock. Prayer meeting Thure- ,&#13;
dav -veninuB. Sunday school at close of mora- ,&#13;
ingaervice. M^s'MAav VASFLKBT, aupt. j&#13;
ClONtitlKGtAl'IONALCkltJKCH.&#13;
' itev. G.W. ilylne pastor. Service ever)&#13;
Sunday luorniag at 10:40 a a 4 every. Sunday&#13;
evening at T:DC o;ciock. Prayer meeting Thurs&#13;
dav evenings, Sunday eciioolat close of morn&#13;
lngservice Hev. K. U. Crane, Supt„ Mocco&#13;
1 eeple Sec.&#13;
O T . ilAK^'S CATHOLIC CHURCH.,&#13;
IO Kev. M. J. Commeriord, 1 aato^r. ierviceb&#13;
avery Sanday. Low mass ai ?-.3Uo'clo&lt;.ii&#13;
high mass with sermon at 8:80 a. m. Catechism&#13;
„ 13:00 p. in., vespersand benediction at 7:80 p. m&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
rnhe A. O. H. Society of this place, meets everj&#13;
A third Sunday intne Fr. Xlattbew Hall.&#13;
Jolin Tuomey and il. T. Kelly, Couuty DalegaU*&#13;
The dmdtd With Day—no mora. Washing mada aasy by&#13;
THE l-V WAS HING TABLETS rni not injure the finest fabrics.&#13;
, They are strictly free from acida&#13;
I of any hind.&#13;
They dctheworkwithoutmbbinf.&#13;
They make the clothes white.&#13;
They can be used In hard water.&#13;
They tjwe time and the hard&#13;
I work on washday. They are India*&#13;
""jfbrOon&#13;
Boy** B r e a k f a s t L o g i c .&#13;
Father (to sleepy headed son coming&#13;
to breakfast on time)—So yon j?ot up&#13;
before breakfast, did you? Son—No,&#13;
Mr, after It. Father (surprised)—After?&#13;
Son—Yos, sir. If I hadn't got up after&#13;
It I wouldn't have got any.&#13;
rnHE W. C. T. U. iueetB~tlre drat Ifuday of each&#13;
J. month at 2:&amp; p. m. at tbe home of Dr. H. F.&#13;
Sigler. Everyone interested in temperance is&#13;
coadrally invited. Mrs. Leal Siller, Pres; Mr&gt;.&#13;
Etta Durtee, Secretary.&#13;
'Hhe C. T. A', and B. Sucie.) 01 this place, u?9r&#13;
X every third Saturaay evening in the Fr. iiv.&#13;
thew Hall. John Donohue, President.&#13;
J7N1GUTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
xVMeet every Friday evening on or be£oiu foil&#13;
of the moon at their nallin theSwarihout Udg.&#13;
Visiting brothersaroc'ordiallyinvited. ,&#13;
L. E. SMITH, Sir S n i « h t Commandei \&#13;
Patented.&#13;
Clamps on Barrel,&#13;
as easily as on Box.&#13;
Adjusts itself to&#13;
any size ear.&#13;
Closed Hopper&#13;
Making it Impossible&#13;
for Operator&#13;
to Pinch Hand.&#13;
Is guaranteed to do as good if not&#13;
better work than any shelter on the&#13;
market. T h r o w s c o b s o u t s i d e e v e r y&#13;
t i m e . Cold rolled steel axle. R e q u i r e s&#13;
no wrench. Shells popcorn splendidly&#13;
b y t i g h t e n i n g t e n s i o n o n spring. A l l&#13;
repairs furnished free of charge. E v e r y&#13;
f a r m e r s h o u l d h a v e o n e . For s a l e b y&#13;
hardware a n d i m p l e m e n t dealers.&#13;
M.VNl'FACItHKD 11Y&#13;
BRINLY-HARDY CO., Incorporated,&#13;
l^iflsvnieTKyTTrsrTr&#13;
- +-1&#13;
r. lvlngston Lodge, No. A. A. M. Hegulti&#13;
Croup, coughs, colds, whooping&#13;
icuRb, etc., have no terrors for child*&#13;
ren or adults who evacuate the bowel9&#13;
with Kenuedy's laxative Honey and&#13;
Tar. Tbit remedy expels all cold from&#13;
the system and strengthens tbe throat,&#13;
lungs and bronchial tubes. Tbe original&#13;
laxative couprh syrup and liqnid&#13;
CoiU C U l t l .&#13;
Sold by F. A. « | t a r , DrugglBt&#13;
I j Communication Tueadav evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the moon, Uirk VauWinkle. W. y:&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN STAR meets each mom •.&#13;
the Friday evening followiug the regular K&#13;
A A. M. meeting, Mas. EMMX CK&amp;NK. W. M.&#13;
OKI ER 0? MODERN WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
drst Thursday evening of each Month in the&#13;
Maccabee hall. C. L. Grimes V. C&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet overy Is&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of each month at * :30 p m. a&#13;
K.O. T. M. hall. Visiting sisters cordially In&#13;
vited. LILACONXWAY, Lady Com,&#13;
^&#13;
«fcl 1&#13;
W LW&#13;
.1 i - - . V MIMENT • • • - * « !&#13;
m&#13;
'NIGHTS OF.THB LOYAHiUAP.D&#13;
F . U Andrews P. M, 1&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. StOLlR M. D. C. I , SIGLER M, D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
t*Ly»ivi*ao»nu Stttgeoua, *• All c a l * p&lt;uuip,ly,&#13;
attended today or night. Oflcei on Main st&gt;ea&#13;
Piaekney, Mieh.&#13;
i . .'•. quick and effective cure for Rbent&#13;
5¾ . •; i»., Neura'.^ia, Sciatica, Lumbago Head-&#13;
^ -i'.ie and othei nervous pains ana aches on ;&#13;
(£j .1 jy part of the body. If you suffer from |&#13;
fe*•: :• of the aMv j ilia, wo pay in all sinceriittyy&#13;
l4i.'.II':oNuPr awfaoi.-ra :t-r, iaAl NTI-PAIN SOLID LINi.&#13;
A^i'i-PAIM SOLIL&gt; LINIMENT comes&#13;
vi'. ; ^ nt..:, b &gt;x in piiaio form, different from&#13;
I V V I H T liniments, " \ \ s , indeed," it i s too&#13;
Mpr.cious to lose by breakage or s&#13;
H All you have t o do i3 to apply a little of&#13;
S fc-is liiiir.ient to the effected partato relieve&#13;
t:&gt;e pain inr&lt;taui)y. -which eventually perf&#13;
&gt;;-;:i3 a permanent cure.&#13;
We guarantee ANTI-PAIN SOLID LTNIM&#13;
HNT to do all we claim for it, or money&#13;
refunded.&#13;
Sehd fbr a box to-day and have i t on battd&#13;
in case o f emermncy, yon will bs&gt; n o t e&#13;
than pleased with the result.&#13;
P r i c e 2 5 C e n t s .&#13;
For sale by our agents or yon may ordafc&#13;
direct ffe&gt;m oe. SentDosUPtAoaasveiplof&#13;
V••::..?. Ajjenta wantea everywhere, write&#13;
ior"t«rras*. • * !\ \ v %&#13;
v &gt;&#13;
HENRY NELSON &amp; CO., Eckyoli, MiMk&#13;
&lt; •&#13;
HitMi&#13;
&gt;&#13;
T»Tr: • ;•»&#13;
. * * , ? &gt; . ; * •&#13;
m^TIr' v. aj w i * ^&#13;
$ * V - ; ..&gt;&amp;,:&#13;
^Yl£ *»:':&#13;
-¾^ W-&#13;
-J* TO •&#13;
vArc&#13;
J*..&#13;
•:*»*v&#13;
. &amp; * ' ' •&#13;
' &lt;*&#13;
.,-.,^.1&#13;
. &lt; • ' • *&#13;
• * • :&#13;
,4«&#13;
•v&#13;
• &gt; • •&#13;
Shouts were heard from the outside&#13;
proclaiming the pxdsehceSot tne enfrnj'&#13;
in force. John's bravery had beer&#13;
tested ere now on many a hard-fought&#13;
; field, [and It was with Impatience a'&#13;
being* interrupted Hither than alarn&#13;
that h» scrambled through the small&#13;
pantry window.&#13;
S&#13;
Ansa/? crm2fa/XS&amp;m&amp;£&amp;££E&gt;mJTi?&#13;
&lt;W«BWWZ2? Assejr jzasr&lt;fja/zar&#13;
CHAPTER I.&#13;
Held by the Enemy.&#13;
It was night in Georgia.&#13;
The misty moonbeams, filtered&#13;
"through the latticed branches of the&#13;
pinea, fell upon the figure of a man in&#13;
blue w o o followed a well-worn path&#13;
leading to a mansion situated on defeatable&#13;
ground near Atlanta.&#13;
Fierce and sanguinary battles had&#13;
been fought all the way from Chattanooga,&#13;
and the doom of the Gate City&#13;
was sealed. Presently Atlanta and&#13;
Its eavirous must fall Into the hands&#13;
o f the victorious Sherman. Those&#13;
•were troublous times for the Confederacy,&#13;
and many a heart grew cold&#13;
-With a vague fear while-facing the approaching&#13;
disaster.&#13;
Close behind this advancing figure&#13;
a second might have been seen—a tall,&#13;
lean fellow who wore the chevrons of&#13;
* sergeant, though it would be impossible&#13;
to tell whether his dusty wellworn&#13;
garments stamped him a member&#13;
of the blue or gray.&#13;
Emerging from the pines the house&#13;
lay before the leader, bathed in the&#13;
flood of lunar light&#13;
He came to a stand and gazed upon&#13;
the scene as though certain emotions&#13;
long since dead had been aroused to a&#13;
new life. _Whlle he thus stood, the&#13;
lanky sergeant joined him.&#13;
"There It is, Shanks. I was a boy&#13;
when last I looked on the old home,&#13;
and it would hardly do to tell how&#13;
many years ago that was. Groat&#13;
changes have taken place here in&#13;
Chat time. No doubt some of my old&#13;
neighbors would think it rough that&#13;
Fletcher Ridgeway's son should be&#13;
with the army of invasion, but they&#13;
know little of my life, and could never&#13;
guess the powerful motives that bring&#13;
m e here. Let's Advance, sergeant. I&#13;
believe the house is deserted. Indeed,&#13;
I am surprised to see it standing,&#13;
with so many bands of plundering&#13;
jayhawkers and guerrillas running&#13;
through the country."&#13;
"Just as ye say, sir," replied the&#13;
"D»/, sir, pesky dry. Shall 1 raise&#13;
a bucket?"&#13;
"If you will. Then we will try to&#13;
enter the, house. My night mission&#13;
concerns the Interior, and the old&#13;
hearth of the great sitting room in&#13;
particular,. Please heaven they may&#13;
be there."&#13;
The windlass sent forth many a&#13;
dreary creak, as if displeased at being&#13;
compelled to again enter the field of&#13;
labor; but the bucket of sparkling&#13;
well-water, better than the nectar of&#13;
the gods, was soon tilted tfpWn the&#13;
curb, and after an absence of many&#13;
years John quenched his thirst at the&#13;
same foumata~that-haxr Berved him in&#13;
boyhood.&#13;
This pleasant duty finished, he ajdU&#13;
vanced to the building. Whatever&#13;
recollections were rioting through his&#13;
mtnd—and they must have been legion&#13;
—he did not allow them to appear upon&#13;
the surface. Evidently this same&#13;
John was capable of controlling his&#13;
feelings to a remarkable extent.&#13;
Of course the door was fast—he&#13;
expected that. A window would grant&#13;
the desired ingress.&#13;
There was something repugnant&#13;
about this mode of entrance, but during&#13;
the stormy war times men who&#13;
were soldiers met with so many&#13;
strange adventures that these feel;&#13;
had to be stifled to a greater or less&#13;
extent.&#13;
So John passed from one window&#13;
to another, trying each in turn. Suo-&#13;
-eess- did- not; come Immediately, btrthe&#13;
jwas not discouraged. A man's&#13;
character crbps~ow"treven in such small&#13;
things of life, and John possessed&#13;
pertinacity to a certainty.&#13;
Finally he discovered a window thi t&#13;
offered no resistance to his onslaught,&#13;
and thus after the long lapse of years&#13;
he once more entered the house that&#13;
had been hre boyhood's home.&#13;
Like a man walking in his sleep,&#13;
he passed from one room to another.&#13;
The moonlight found an entrance&#13;
through' the many windqws, though&#13;
they were festooned with cobwebs&#13;
No sooner had he dropped upon th&lt; explosions, to which the gas. which&#13;
ground than violent hands were lai&lt;&#13;
on h i u . A muscular man, John se'&#13;
about persuading his assailants tha'&#13;
they- could not thus, act -with impunity&#13;
Though three to one, they migh1&#13;
have met their match in this desperate&#13;
soldier, but for the coming of rein&#13;
forcemeats. Underline combined. as&#13;
sault John was soon made a prisoner&#13;
and ranting for breath awaited th&lt;&#13;
next move of his enemies.&#13;
To his surprise only two of then'&#13;
. seemed to wear any uniform. Th*&#13;
others were civilians or blacks, and&#13;
evidently belonged to some plants,"&#13;
tion. He looked in vain for signs of&#13;
the sergeant, and would have believec&#13;
the ether must have, made his escape&#13;
only for the haunting memory of the&#13;
single shot.&#13;
What would 4hey do with him1&#13;
John gave no sign of alarm, and yet&#13;
under the peculiar circumstances h*&#13;
knew theynsilgh't be disposed to treaT&#13;
him as a spy.&#13;
Exasperated by the march of Sher&#13;
man and the fate of Atlanta, whicl&#13;
hung trembling in the balance, the&#13;
Georgians were not in a mood for&#13;
philosophy or mercy. Cruel wax&#13;
brings out the most intense passions&#13;
of men.&#13;
Under these circumstances, therefore,&#13;
he kept his ears on the alert to&#13;
catch what was .said, when the man&#13;
wearing a Confederate captain's uniform&#13;
advanced and looked closely into&#13;
his face.&#13;
ou are a Yankee?**"he asfcedT&#13;
curtly.&#13;
"I am," replied John, boldly, desirous&#13;
of avoiding the charge of being&#13;
called a spy.&#13;
was still imperfectly purified, exposed&#13;
the citizens. Scientists confirmed these&#13;
assertions, and the first gasometerserected&#13;
in London, by Samuel d e g g ,&#13;
so terrified the, people that no work*&#13;
man would venture to light the gas&#13;
Jets which had been placed on Westminster&#13;
bridge. BuFciegg soon- ever*&#13;
came this difficulty by lighting a&#13;
torch and applying It to the burners&#13;
with his own hands. On another occasion,&#13;
before a committee of the Royal&#13;
Society nf London, ha bored a ^ftla in&#13;
• " " • • i " •3FR** •- w* PUT LONDONER* ' I N A PANIC&#13;
gxcItefnsntAtefntfsrri^^saofllT^t &gt;*WP:tht&#13;
mlnsttrnj OJti&#13;
In. the early . d a j s p t , the lajt can^&#13;
tury, wneni illuminating ga» w«s ftrjsj*&#13;
used in London, timorous people talked&#13;
. of the dangers of suffocation and of&#13;
AJA.INO WOJW&#13;
.. .fc- fe» . ^&#13;
rr.&#13;
the ga* holder and p u t s lighted can*J Sold by all dealers. 50"cents* box,&#13;
die* W l f S l n e S s W ' a f i » l | 5 ½ ********** ********&#13;
spectators, but&#13;
slightest accidenrf:^^&#13;
even of the j h m * pre&#13;
opened to the t w i n .&#13;
sing the&#13;
t h i eyes1!&#13;
edTwere&#13;
T •w&#13;
A Great Monarch,&#13;
Wealthier than any brother \ sovereign&#13;
; master of legions, which'nnnv&#13;
feer-«ver a mUUonV lord of more than&#13;
one-srxth of ta^tifrface of the globe,&#13;
with subjects o &amp; p a n y colors and&#13;
races, amounting &amp;'»o*er one hundred&#13;
and twenty million nouls, the Csar of&#13;
all the Russias will, not be invincible,&#13;
until he adopts PtHsbury's Vltos as&#13;
hlft regular breakfast diet&#13;
"Married or singleT was the next&#13;
-astonishingquestion. —&#13;
"A bachelor," returned the Federal,&#13;
proudly.&#13;
* "Then I reckon you'll do. Men, bring&#13;
him along..and if he tries to escape,&#13;
a charge of buckshot must finish him.&#13;
To Lyndhurst."&#13;
As he marched along in their midst,&#13;
the prisoner found himself wondering&#13;
what astonishing adventure was about&#13;
to overwhelm hlui.&#13;
Gladstone Overcame Obstacle.&#13;
Mr. Gladstone one day evaded an&#13;
international regulation at the Franco-&#13;
Italian frontier as follows: He was&#13;
carrying for his refreshment a basket&#13;
of-fine grapes,—whica-stringent regulations&#13;
at the .time', forbade being&#13;
taken from one county to the other&#13;
on account of phylloxera, an Insect&#13;
that attacks the roots, and leaves of&#13;
.T+grape'-viBes^&#13;
kvdjuffcrin*, Jang*** women axafc&#13;
rnittg the true caejte&amp;efthad ibackf&#13;
" and 5 now t o&#13;
them, Mrs; W* 0 ; &gt;&#13;
pavls^of Oroesbeck.&#13;
Ters*4aa**4 |BackT&#13;
-meal* H f r m r so ^&#13;
.cquJd titMj^Mtoa&amp;t&#13;
and •U*-C fe«iache»&#13;
were fren^h* and&#13;
t h e actiou .qf&#13;
* kidneys- w«*4rj&#13;
Igr. Soon after I, began taklnf poan&#13;
Kidney Pills I passed several travel&#13;
ttffit; "l'JWW aW^JHlbuwIe hat&#13;
net fa/urned. .. My bo/sk U good and&#13;
strong and my general hearts better.&#13;
Sold by all dealers".&#13;
"*•&#13;
/&gt;•-&#13;
«*Z&#13;
brain-reviewed the situation; he must&#13;
obey the law, but he was determined&#13;
to have the grapes, so he sat down&#13;
there and then on a railway station&#13;
bench and ate them.&#13;
CHAPTER II.&#13;
\&#13;
"You are a Yankee?" he asked curtly.&#13;
other, his manner affectionate rather&#13;
than obsequious.&#13;
"Remember my caution—guard your&#13;
tongue. To you for the present I am&#13;
only a fellow- soldier, plain John Emmet&#13;
t."&#13;
The sergeant saluted in a formal&#13;
w a y . V , • •&#13;
".Sergeant, you're a Tenaesseean, I&#13;
JielleieTL i _:&#13;
r&lt;.. "From near Knoxvllle, sir. My peop&#13;
l e lived in the moantains. Some of&#13;
m y kin * wear the gray—others the&#13;
bine."&#13;
•"How came you to go with the&#13;
North? I've known you a year, and&#13;
never asked that before."&#13;
•"The jayhawkers murdered my fathe&#13;
r hefore my eyes. They wore the&#13;
butternut—that settled the matter&#13;
with me. I've paid back the debt, I&#13;
reckon," and the mountaineer ground&#13;
.his teeth at the recollection.&#13;
They were now near the house, one&#13;
oT those rambling Southern structures&#13;
«o well adapted to the country, a picturesque&#13;
building that would have delighted&#13;
the eye of an artist.&#13;
John seemed deeply interested.&#13;
Memory awoke within him, and a&#13;
strange thrill passed over his frame.&#13;
"Tea, many happy days I spent here&#13;
a t the old home before that, wretched&#13;
affair made me an exile. See. there&#13;
l a the same well—how often have I&#13;
•slaked my thirst from its mossy buck-&#13;
•ait^Aud yojxder ancient oak served&#13;
m e as—a hiding-place from the little&#13;
trine* imps who were my boy companions.&#13;
The Impulse to again test the&#13;
t^rt '**ater far below the well-remembered&#13;
c m * ta irresistible. How do&#13;
• a . * * , ' * ' " S * * ' » . ' • . / &gt; * » • '.«• . - . « • • &lt; • J - "&#13;
after the manner of deserted mansions.&#13;
It served to reveal various&#13;
objects in the rooms, and John's mTnd&#13;
went back through the vista of years&#13;
as each familiar scene aroused memories&#13;
of the past.&#13;
At length he stood in the room that&#13;
seemed to be his goal. Here was the&#13;
wide-throated chimney, the generous&#13;
hearth with its old-fashlo]&#13;
In front of a roaring fire how many&#13;
times in the long ago Had he sat with&#13;
his boy companions, cracking nuts&#13;
and chattering like a lot of magpies,&#13;
or listening to grandfather's weird&#13;
stories of early life in the South.&#13;
John was an intensely practical&#13;
man, and quickly swept aside this halo&#13;
of romance that threatened to overwhelm&#13;
him.&#13;
"Now to see whether the papers&#13;
have lain there during these years, or&#13;
been discovered. Come, my dear fellow,&#13;
brace up and put the matter to&#13;
n test."&#13;
Just as he was bending down to remove&#13;
one of the stones that formed&#13;
the hearth, he heard the hoot of an&#13;
owl from the outside. This was the&#13;
signal arranged with the sergeant—&#13;
it meant sudden danger.&#13;
John wheeled and stepped to a&#13;
window, but the dust was too thick&#13;
on the niass to allow him a chance to&#13;
The report of a gun sounded on the&#13;
night air. »*&#13;
This meant business beyond a peradventure,&#13;
for In war times the dfcr&#13;
charge of fire-arms is significant..&#13;
Whatever his mission to this home&#13;
of his boyhood, it must for the present&#13;
be postpone J He aeafn traversed the&#13;
roomr, alr.Injr ?JI- t X open window.&#13;
A Grim Alternative.&#13;
Not a word was said as they&#13;
tramped along the road. John's curiosity&#13;
had been aroused, however, and&#13;
he wondered whether his confession&#13;
as to being a bachelor would have&#13;
any bearing one way or another upon&#13;
his possible fate as a spy.&#13;
The growl of heavy guns could be&#13;
heard in the distance, telling that&#13;
Sherman's grip was hourly growing&#13;
more tenacious, and the time close at&#13;
hand when the Gate City must surrender&#13;
to superior force.&#13;
These sounds were unpleasant music&#13;
in the ears of those whose sympathies&#13;
rested with the distressed Southland.&#13;
AN AWFUL SKIN HUMOR.&#13;
Covered Head, Neck and Shou I tiers-&#13;
Buffered Agony for Twenty-five&#13;
Years Until Cured by&#13;
• Cuticura. • f l&#13;
Doing the mist ine., Could.&#13;
Hotel story: A lady&#13;
ed at the hotel counter, an£ swff&#13;
Utsly asked/for a glass of&#13;
fr-4lttUv-*Ja«t-^l* . ,&#13;
counter again and said:&#13;
bother you, but would yon 'ohljge me&#13;
wTfn^anolner glaas at wmterf^ T h e&#13;
water- wn* « | L w hfr^ and/shej went&#13;
away, bul came back 4sY slfs-ar mlnn&#13;
t e s ~ ~ a % V f t « * d ^ f "*&amp;$&amp;^glaas.&#13;
When she appeared and asked for a&#13;
fourth glass the clerk said: "1 beg&#13;
pardon, but what are you doing wi(ty*&#13;
aH that water?" -To which -she&#13;
plied: "I hate to bother yon so. mu&#13;
but there is a fire in my room an&#13;
am nutting .It. out."—Alchttpa Glo&#13;
' T&#13;
The Waterproof Face.&#13;
I am convinced that our' solemnity&#13;
of demeanor is generated by our gray&#13;
ritfpa; o u r p t j ^ c i n r e a s t ^ w j ^ d a j our&#13;
heavy, yellow fogs, and our slushy&#13;
roads and pavements. The water*&#13;
proof face is the direct result of a&#13;
firmament of lead. Many of u |&#13;
•***--TROT pedple^TBo&#13;
bwllaj.—Queen.&#13;
like&#13;
"For,1&gt; tw enty'-flve jjears II s lifered zgony&#13;
from a terrible humor, completely&#13;
covering my head, neck and shoulders,&#13;
discharging matter of such of&#13;
feneiveneis- to sight "and a m e l l &amp; a t f&#13;
became an object of dread, f con'&#13;
suited the most able doctors, far and&#13;
near, to no avail. Then I got Cut!&#13;
cura, and ]n a surprisingly short time&#13;
I wae completely" \JurelT For ithiS I&#13;
thank Cuticura,'and advise all those&#13;
suffering from skin humors to get it&#13;
and end their misery at once. S. P.&#13;
*Keyes. 149 Congress Street, Boston,&#13;
Mass."&#13;
and it promised to be an unfortunate&#13;
time for any Federal whom the fortune&#13;
of war might throw into their&#13;
grasp.&#13;
Lyndhurst—the name was familiar&#13;
to John, and he remembered that in&#13;
the days of his youth the Grangers&#13;
lived there. Perhaps officers were&#13;
quartered there, for the squire had&#13;
always been a most ardent patriot,&#13;
and no doubt from his vast resources&#13;
had contributed much to help on the&#13;
cause of the Confederacy.&#13;
Under such circumstances, therefore,&#13;
it was possible that a drum-head&#13;
(urt-martial might be held, and a&#13;
speedy execution take place. John&#13;
hardly liked the thought of dying&#13;
upon the scene of boyhood's pleasures,&#13;
but the stern lessons of campaign&#13;
life make light of even such a ghastly&#13;
possibility.&#13;
So he trudged along In the midst of&#13;
sHent captors. Now and then his&#13;
Merry Man Always Welcome.&#13;
Dan Leno, the English comedian&#13;
who died not long apnr mild: "Whan&#13;
thoughts turned in the direction of&#13;
the sergeant, but on each occasion the&#13;
remembrance of that shot caused him&#13;
to shrug his shoulders and mentally&#13;
decide that poof Shanks had already&#13;
gone upon the road that awaited him.&#13;
They passed through % gate and&#13;
entered upon well-kept grounds. Lyndhurst&#13;
was considered the finest estate&#13;
near Atlanta. Its peculiar position&#13;
had thus far saved the historic old&#13;
mansion with its delightful grounds&#13;
from the bombarding guns of the&#13;
enemy, but once the city fell Into the&#13;
hands of the conquering Federals,&#13;
Lyndhurst would feel the blighting&#13;
influence, and, possibly, be left in&#13;
ruins.&#13;
Lights gleamed through the trees,&#13;
showing that the mansion was far&#13;
from being deserted. Straight up to&#13;
the door they led the prisoner, and&#13;
presently John found himself locked&#13;
in a room. Voices in earnest conversation&#13;
could be heard near by. Finally&#13;
the door opened and some o n r '&#13;
entered.&#13;
It was a man of about fifty whom&#13;
John faced, a man with a most determined&#13;
countenance. In spite of the&#13;
passage of years he recognized, t h e&#13;
other as his father's neighbor and J&#13;
friend. Bssrtts Granger.&#13;
(To t t Continued.)&#13;
your face wants to slide into a smile&#13;
let it; when it doesn't want to, make&#13;
it. A merry-minded man is a perpetual&#13;
slab of sunshine and brightens&#13;
up the workaday world a sight more&#13;
than a circus procession or a check&#13;
suit. A sad-eyed sinner is no use to&#13;
any one and a nuisance to himself."&#13;
STATZ OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, ( . .&#13;
LUCAS COUXTY. f " • '&#13;
F R A N K J: CHSKXY makes oath that he Is M&amp;tot&#13;
partner of the firm of P. J CHKXBY &amp; Co., doing&#13;
busloesa In the City of Toledo.,County and State&#13;
aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the mm of&#13;
ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every&#13;
case of C\TAREII that cannot be cured by the uae of&#13;
UALL'S CATABBU CURE.&#13;
FRANK J. CHENEY.&#13;
Sworn to before roe and subscribed In iny presence,&#13;
this 6th day of December, A. D. 188C.&#13;
Queer Place For Nest.&#13;
A large centrifugal pump at a Brighton&#13;
(England) bath'stopped working,&#13;
and an examination revealed the presence&#13;
in a pipe of a pigeon's nest with&#13;
two eggs. To reach its nest the bird had&#13;
to find its way through a six-inch&#13;
djtameter pipe—horizontal for six feet,&#13;
and bending sharply into a six-feet&#13;
jhWPend Icular.&#13;
^ 1 1 ' —»&#13;
: THEOLD-MONK-Cum&#13;
8XAL&#13;
A. W. GLEASON,&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally and aeta&#13;
directly on the btood and mucous eurficea of UM&#13;
system. Send for testimonials, free.&#13;
F J. CHENEY &amp; CO., Toledo, a&#13;
Sold by »11 Druggists. 75c.&#13;
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.&#13;
It pa%-s t o be p o l i t e , provided it is&#13;
not curried to the line of obsequiousness..&#13;
- Ask Your Druggist for Allen's Foot*Ease.&#13;
«&lt;I tried ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE recently&#13;
and have just bought another supply. It&#13;
has cured my corns, and the hot, burning&#13;
and itching sensation in my feet which was&#13;
almost unbearable, and I would not be without&#13;
it now."—Mrs. W. J. Walker, Camden,&#13;
N.J." Sold by all Druggists, 26c&#13;
Good intentions possess the merit of&#13;
making one considerate and sometimes&#13;
kind.&#13;
For chiMldrre*n. WtMiatbstloagtW, sosf tSenoso tthbein* ftrma, fiajDmaUoo,allayspdk.cmrMWtadcoUu. 39o«bottas»&#13;
Hard work is one of the most noticeable&#13;
aids to contentment.&#13;
,DOXT FORGET&#13;
A large fros. paoksce Red Cram Ball Blue, only&#13;
5 centH. The Russ Company, South Bend, Ind.&#13;
There is always a brilliant light ^ x /&#13;
Illumine the road to ruin.&#13;
r' toAat taietT, AmHtnAe',W BminneCinP. f PrmRntFmf O Ir umn. c~n .&#13;
• ' • * ; i &lt; y ' "• . • » » i . • • &gt; . » i . — • • '-&#13;
&lt;i *W# musHbee otrreeltes *fa the bap*&#13;
pinett ef others. - ^ = - S&#13;
Plse&gt;s&#13;
••jeajsr&#13;
t sflrmeaeelUW9 e^a»aBasjfaj a*#lsa» w* ••^'•st 1 •". • i. - t . . .*....&#13;
- 8tr%n»th is the •p^yilcni ex^resefvh&#13;
of purpose.&#13;
TRAM&#13;
MARK.&#13;
St. Jacobs Oi&#13;
has traveled round the world,&#13;
and everywhere human&#13;
Aches and Pains&#13;
have welcomed it and Meat&#13;
it for a cure.&#13;
Pric«t 35«» *&gt; 50«.&#13;
$5¾ Not&#13;
iS£4Wonce&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Elliot, 273&#13;
West Ave,, Rochester, in N. Y.,says: " I n s e d t o&#13;
have a severe sick-headache&#13;
e v e r y S u n d a y .&#13;
Since I began talcing&#13;
Celery King, one year&#13;
ago, 1 have nothad headache&#13;
once."&#13;
Last&#13;
Year&#13;
One Dollar&#13;
for a Postal Card&#13;
This company will give one dollar rot |&#13;
the first reliable information of an&#13;
opportunity to sell a steam engine or]&#13;
boiler of our standard types wh'"&#13;
onr range of sites. This dees __&#13;
include vertical, traction or gas en-1&#13;
gines. If yon .know of anybody in*&#13;
tending t o buy an engine or boiler&#13;
tallus. A Postal will do.&#13;
v • *^&gt;,t&#13;
ENGINES *ND BOILBUS&#13;
But ef atMrlftl sad Tertsmsslilp. I&#13;
As AIIM» dw sew.hi&lt;a»i&#13;
IX&#13;
*&gt;&#13;
^ORKI&#13;
"r*&lt;i&#13;
Mmmmtmiim §m mmm^M*&#13;
A*.&#13;
wi "fl*V w^&#13;
'V-i-. :*£• ' :';^-'.-:vi^' "¥;&#13;
* • " * M . - - . ,&#13;
: • $ ; • : :.V&#13;
**&gt; 'US*,'&#13;
I mill! • S i * • P l ^ s&#13;
••' • • -•'.-' • } • • ; • .:• *v ••&gt; •• ••, v"~i"&gt;-'Ii-'J»i:'wa&#13;
•&amp;•?&#13;
sss&#13;
^ BOT jHwgt COM:&#13;
Kowurfih t * trifll^(f ot^top&#13;
method, aid * • rigkt m«tbo4i»&#13;
the MI &lt;rf **»• fast coiagh w t v&#13;
•fris latnonft.&#13;
iconic, cotdsvta&#13;
IrriUJHc«^ th« throat «»d ticbi&#13;
^*nje of K^ap'* BaWm.&#13;
Soli by alt dealers at 85c ajkt joe&#13;
J? •••&#13;
ttsSttetetvIt&#13;
MotMr Cray* tweet PowcWftlor CMMNK&#13;
Bncceeafuily used by- Mother Gray, ntune&#13;
l a the Children's Home in N«w York, euro&#13;
fattloB, I&gt;wrblMM*», B»datomftch,&#13;
. A W i ^ D l « &gt; r d ^ f m d ^ o * ^ r o r i U U « »&#13;
Bowels t a d Destroy Worma-Ovcr 80,00010*-&#13;
t t t t o a U b . J A i f t U D r u g f U t t , « 6 . Sample&#13;
XKEE. Addsess A; ft. Olmsted, LeBoy,N, Y.&#13;
. A young mad should not marry the&#13;
handsomest, wittiest, wealthiest f i r ! in&#13;
the world ff she will not marry him.&#13;
TO CUBS A GOLD Hf OSTf DAY&#13;
Take LAXAT1YX BQOICO QelStiieTsblett. Draggist*&#13;
recaa« ssonpr tfjt IsQs to ewe. B. w.&#13;
• - « « a a « a « » a e « t W " ^ * ^ ^ ^ B » - ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ " ^&#13;
A sirl thinks a man is madly in love&#13;
with her If he s a y s ber baby sister has&#13;
a i w e « t • disposition.&#13;
• u s s T M FAMOCS&#13;
Bed Cross Ball Blue. Large t-oz. pocksce I&#13;
cents. The g a s s Oocapapy. Sooth Bend, Xad.&#13;
What a man likes about the Fourth&#13;
of* Jaler is the way he can cuss things&#13;
he did w h e n he w a s a boy.&#13;
w&#13;
900 DROPS&#13;
ANWefabtePrepdtolionfof Assimilating&#13;
theroocJandBe^ula-&#13;
For Infimta and Children,&#13;
The Kind You Have&#13;
Always Bought&#13;
CYWA E .-&amp;..--&#13;
«»&#13;
| M \ M S ,• ( H I U ) K » N&#13;
Promotes Digpation£heerfuh&#13;
ne5s and RestContalns neither&#13;
Ctaium^fofphme nor Mineral.&#13;
Xox N A R C O T I C ,&#13;
r T &amp;&#13;
Aperfecl Remedy* forConslipa-&#13;
Hon,Sour Stomach*Diarrhoea&#13;
Worrfts .Convulsions Jeverislrjness&#13;
and L o s s OF SLEEP.&#13;
1 1 1 1 ; • • " ?&#13;
Fax Siirile Signature of "*•&#13;
•-• NEW YOHK. ••»»&#13;
y f 1)(»•&gt;» s I N I S&#13;
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPr-R.&#13;
For Iher&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CASTORIA&#13;
MUTINIES OF TROOPS ARE&#13;
FREQUENT ANP MORE&#13;
ALARMING.&#13;
PLOT TO K I D N A P C O U N T W I T T *&#13;
8 A I P T 0 HAVE BKEN PLANNED.&#13;
BY HOUSEHOLD GUARD.&#13;
Peasant Uprising 8preade.&#13;
Saturday's dispatches from Russia&#13;
tell of several new mutinies of troops&#13;
and sailors at various points, besides&#13;
a plot to kidnap Count Wltte and another&#13;
to assassinate Minister Durnovo&#13;
and his assistant, M. Sebastianoff, superintendent&#13;
of posts and telegraphs.&#13;
Tho most alarming of the several mutinies&#13;
reported occurred in St. Petersburg&#13;
itself, t w o battalions of marines&#13;
refusing to obey orders to proceed to&#13;
Krohstadt until martial law w a s raised&#13;
there. It was found necessary to call&#13;
out troQPfl_to force the men to leava&#13;
their barracks and embark. It was7&#13;
feared that the revolt would spread&#13;
even to the troops themselves.&#13;
The plot to kidnap Count Witte Is&#13;
alleged to have been arranged by some&#13;
of the czar's household guard. It Is&#13;
persistently rumored that the premier&#13;
will resign and that Count Alexis Ignatieff&#13;
will be appointed military dictator&#13;
on Monday.&#13;
Serious disorders are reported from&#13;
Warsaw and other points in Poland.&#13;
The radical papers at Warsaw have&#13;
brought about a run on the banks there&#13;
that may prove serious, the object being&#13;
the exhaustion of the gold reserve.&#13;
The peasant uprising is steadily&#13;
spreading^ the latest evidence of its&#13;
spread being found In the vicinity of&#13;
Peterhof and Gatchina. At Saratoft&#13;
there are said to be over 50,000 peasants&#13;
in the field, well armed, deterjffiLlneiL^&#13;
lo- reaiat a n y attempt -ofr^thenew&#13;
governor, Maximovitch, to carry&#13;
out the—bloodthirsty order issued to&#13;
the Cossacks on his accession to office,&#13;
which was in efTect an order to&#13;
slay right and left. Maximovitch made&#13;
a sorry exhibition, of incapacity when&#13;
he was governor of Warsaw and it to&#13;
not expected he will make a success&#13;
0? his n e w office.&#13;
Dispatches from various sources&#13;
show the situation -at Harbin and&#13;
Vladivostok is more serious than ever&#13;
and that the mutineers have almost&#13;
complete controljof both cities. ^Previous&#13;
advices to the effect that mutinous&#13;
soldiers have killed several of-&#13;
1 fleers are confirmed.&#13;
Fresh disorders are reported from&#13;
Kronstadt. It is said that the loyal&#13;
troops there were obliged to fire on&#13;
mutineers. Riots are also reported to&#13;
have taken place among the troops returning&#13;
from Manchuria, At Sizian&#13;
rioters are reported to have sacked the&#13;
railway station&#13;
A BRIEF SKETCH OF HER LIFE €&#13;
How the Vegetable Compound Had Its Birth ant*&#13;
How the "Panic of '73" Caused it to be Offered&#13;
for Public Sale in Drug Stores.&#13;
ROMANCE&#13;
Are the result Of Con&amp;tlpation.&#13;
There is a remedy now to be had that cures these (roubles absolutely.&#13;
A full sized bottle is furnished you free to prove it.&#13;
Remember we give only one bottle to each family. If your druggist fails to&#13;
supply you with Mull's Grape Tonic send us this coupon together with name and&#13;
•flilr— of the druggist and we will mail you a bottle.&#13;
Try all the druggists before yon write us as the bottle he is authorized to give&#13;
you for this coupon is three times as Urge as the one we axe allowed to send by mail.&#13;
The following coupon will not be honored unless it is cut out of the paper in&#13;
one piece including the Patient's coupon, Re,«*i! Druggist's coupon and Wholesale&#13;
or Jobber's coupon, they must not be separated.&#13;
CUT OUT THIS COUPON, SIGN AND TAKE IT TO YOUR DRUGGIST WHO IS&#13;
U7-12H5 AUTHORIZED TO GIVE YOU A FRE5 35c. BOTTLE FOR IT. -&#13;
It is wrong for you to suffer from Constipation,&#13;
Bowel and Stomach Trouble when there is a positive,&#13;
natural and harmless cure—MULL'S GRAPE TONIC.&#13;
Have you noticed the large number of Typhoid Fever cases lately ? Typhoid&#13;
Fever. Malarial Fever, Appendicitis, Impure Blood, Pimples, Sick Headache,&#13;
Skin Disease, Piles, Female Troubles, Stomach Troubles, Heart Troubles, etc.,&#13;
:&#13;
I hnreby certify that 1 h«v« never taken Mull's Grape Tonic that I will apply for only one&#13;
freabetUe, that I will not tell or five ft away and that I will take it myself for Constipation.&#13;
Bowel and Stomach Trouble as soon as I obtain it.&#13;
Patient aim your name here very plainly.&#13;
Write yonr full address here vary plainly.&#13;
N O N E B U T T H E R E T A I L D R U G G I S T M U S T SIGN THIS:&#13;
TO THE&#13;
address ou the line below.&#13;
coupon void nnlesa you sign your name and&#13;
. Send this foil coupon to the jobber of whom you purchased this&#13;
remedy, and he will five you 35 cents in cash or trade for each coupon, properly signed,&#13;
which you. tend him- All jobbers have the 35c, 50c sod ft.00 sizes. The 41.00 bottle contains&#13;
nearly 6 times the 35c size and 3 times the 50c size, ?&#13;
Retail DrucsUt sic* your name here.&#13;
Your address here.&#13;
N O O N E B U T T H E W H O L E S A L E D R U G G I S T M U S T SIGN T H I S :&#13;
TO THE JOBBER: You will please.accept this coupon if the same is properly sieved,&#13;
sfod tree to the retailer buyint the remedy from you. 35 cents ia sash or trade for same. This&#13;
•ceasieo void an less yon sifn your firm name and address. Forward all coupons to ua, and we&#13;
will {emit you 35 cents for each coupon properly signed t y the consumer, retailer sad yourself.&#13;
Jobber, sifn your name here.&#13;
Ajddress here.&#13;
*'• t?.Cat out the aboye three coupons in one piece. Do not separate.&#13;
s f U l X ' S GTtAP^ T O ^ I C ^ O . Timers, No. 148 Third Ave., Rock Island, X1L&#13;
•HP&#13;
Retaliation For Exclusion.&#13;
Capt. A. C. Baker, of the cruiser&#13;
Raleigh, who has been detached for&#13;
several months to study commercial&#13;
and political conditions in China, w a s&#13;
a passenger on the Manchuria, arriving&#13;
today from the orient, on his way&#13;
to Washington to lay before the presi-&#13;
This remarkable woman, w h o s e&#13;
maiden name was Estes, w a s born in&#13;
Lynn, Mass., February 9th, 1819, coming&#13;
from a good old Quaker family.&#13;
-FdTm^ny~ye"arir'stretaught school,"antr&#13;
during her career as a teacher she became&#13;
known as a woman of an alert&#13;
and investigating mind, an earnest&#13;
seeker after knowledge, and above all,&#13;
she w a s possessed with a woTfilerluny&#13;
sympathetic nature.&#13;
i Tn 184a~sfae^marrted Isaac Pinkhamr&#13;
a builder and real estate operator, and&#13;
their early married life was marked by&#13;
prosperity and happiness. They had&#13;
four children, three sons and a daughter.&#13;
I In those good old-fashioned days few&#13;
drugs were used in medicines; people&#13;
relied upon nature's remedies, roots&#13;
and herbs, which are t o d a y recognized&#13;
as more potent and efficacious in controlling&#13;
diseases than any combination&#13;
of drugs.&#13;
Mrs. Pinkham from her youth took a&#13;
deep interest in medicine, in botany—&#13;
the study of roots and herbs, their&#13;
characteristics, .and^ power over disease;&#13;
s h e believed* that as nature&#13;
so bountifully provides food for the&#13;
body s o she also provides medicine for&#13;
the ills and weaknesses of the body,&#13;
in the roots and herbs of the field,&#13;
and as a wife, mother and sympathetic&#13;
friend, s h e often made use of her&#13;
knowledge of roots and herbs in preparing&#13;
medicines for her family and&#13;
friends.&#13;
Knowing of so much suffering among&#13;
her sex, after much study and research,&#13;
Mrs. Pinkham believed that&#13;
the d i s e a s e s of women have a common&#13;
cause, and she set to work to&#13;
nnd a common remedy—not at that&#13;
time as a source of profit, but simplj&#13;
How her efforts have been rewarded&#13;
the women of the world know to-day.&#13;
In 1873 the financial crisis struck&#13;
J^ynn. Its length and severity w a s too&#13;
much for the large real e s t a t e interests&#13;
of the Pinkham family, a s this&#13;
class of business suffered most from&#13;
this fearful depression, so when the&#13;
Centennial year dawned it found their&#13;
property swept away.&#13;
At this point the history of Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound commences:&#13;
The three sons and daughter, with&#13;
their mother, combined forces to restore&#13;
the family fortune. They resolved&#13;
to give to the world the vegetable&#13;
compound that Mrs. Pinkham&#13;
The Gate of Italy. i&#13;
That part of the Valley of the Adige j&#13;
which is in the vicinity of Trent and j&#13;
'Roveredo, is known a s the ''Gate of j&#13;
Italy." It is a narrow gorge between :&#13;
two mountain ranges.&#13;
GRIPINE OftAJLAefT&amp;U TO CftnUL&#13;
we*«f&lt;&#13;
•'*;&#13;
v&#13;
X tWJty*»V.4fHi~Ml*»»** *•**&#13;
dent and,-his a d v t s o r a t h c rcaults of his- that she might aid the-Buffering,&#13;
investigation. He says:&#13;
"It is nonsense to talk of the boycott&#13;
as dying out. The commercial situation&#13;
in South China is absolutely at the&#13;
mercy of the guilds. There are 71 of&#13;
these, and they control trade with an&#13;
iron hand and they have given -orders&#13;
not to handle American goods. It is almost&#13;
impossible to get at them. Of&#13;
course, we have treaties guai anteeing&#13;
the free circulation of our goods, but&#13;
supposing the coolies on the docks, the&#13;
carriers on. the streets and everybody&#13;
connected with the handling of goods&#13;
refuses to touch them, what are you&#13;
to do*/ '&#13;
"American houses'in Canton are full&#13;
to the roof with flour, and they cannot&#13;
budge it. In the meantime, Australian&#13;
merchants are chartering everything&#13;
they can get their hands on to rush&#13;
their inferior flour into the market to&#13;
take advantage of our difficulty.&#13;
"The Chinese merchants admit that&#13;
the flour Is not as good as ours, but&#13;
they are committed to this war on&#13;
American products and are preparer&#13;
to make sacrifices to carry it our. j&#13;
"Not only the Australians, but the&#13;
Japanese also, are taking advantage of&#13;
the boycott to get our business. Cotton&#13;
mills are being established in China by&#13;
Japanese houses, and with cheap labor&#13;
and no transportation charges they are&#13;
in a position t o drive us out of the&#13;
field. They will also develop the steel&#13;
ore of Korea and probably the oil. In&#13;
thig way our vast kerosene and steel&#13;
business there will be taken over by&#13;
the Japanese.&#13;
"The"only thing that could raise the&#13;
boycott would be to rescind the Chinese&#13;
exclusion laws, and this, of&#13;
course, will not be done. It looks a s&#13;
though o u r , business relations with&#13;
China were doomed. The boycott is&#13;
setting worse every day there."&#13;
The Coat of Government.&#13;
The annual book of estimates of the&#13;
Appropriations required for the government&#13;
service^of the fiscal year ending&#13;
June 20, 1907, h a s been transmitted&#13;
to "congress' by the secretary of t h e&#13;
treasury. The total for all departments&#13;
Including deficiencies, miscei'&#13;
laneous and permanent annual appro-.&#13;
priations is $622,723,151. T h e appropri*&#13;
ations for the current fiscal year were&#13;
1629,738,097, and the e s t i m a t e s for the&#13;
current fiscal year were $619,699,852.&#13;
had so often made, from roots a n d&#13;
herbs for such of h e r w o m e n neighbors&#13;
and friends w h o were sick a n d&#13;
ailing. Its s u c c e s s In those c a s e s h a d&#13;
been wonderful—its fame had spread,&#13;
and calls were coming from m i l e *&#13;
around for this efficacious v e g e t a b l e&#13;
compound. "&#13;
They had no money, and little&#13;
credit. Their first laboratory w a s t h e&#13;
kitchen, where roots and herbs w e r e&#13;
steeped on the s t o r e , gradually filling&#13;
a gross of bottles. Then came t h e&#13;
question of selling it, for a l w a y s before&#13;
they had g i v e n it a w a y free.&#13;
They hired a Job printer to run off&#13;
some pamphlets setting forth t h e merits&#13;
of the medicine, now called Lydia&#13;
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,&#13;
and these pamphlets w e r e distributed&#13;
by the Pinkham s o n s in Boston, N e w&#13;
York and Brooklyn.&#13;
The wonderful curative properties of&#13;
the medicine were, to' a great extent,&#13;
self-advertising, for whoever used it&#13;
recommended it to others, and the demand&#13;
gradually increased.&#13;
In 1877, by combined efforts, t h e&#13;
family had saved enough money to&#13;
commence newspaper advertising o n *&gt;&#13;
small scale, and from that time t h e&#13;
w a s assured, until to-day, Lydia JBL&#13;
Pink ham_and he r__ Vegetable_jCoiapoun&lt;i&#13;
have become household words everywhere,&#13;
and thousands of pounds . o t&#13;
roots and herbs are used annually in&#13;
making this great remedy for w o m a n ' s&#13;
ills.&#13;
Although Lydia E. Pinkham passed)&#13;
to her reward some years ago, the perpetuation&#13;
of her great work w a r&#13;
guarded by her foresight.&#13;
During her long and eventful experience&#13;
she was ever methodical i n her&#13;
work and w a s careful to p r e s e n t a&#13;
record of every case that came to her&#13;
attention. The c a s e of every s i c k&#13;
woman who applied to her for a d v i c e&#13;
—and there w e r e thousands—received&#13;
careful study, and t h e details, including&#13;
symptoms, treatment and results,&#13;
were recorded for future reference,&#13;
and to-day these records, together with&#13;
thousands made s i n c e / a r e Yvailsble t o&#13;
sick women the world over, and represent&#13;
a vast collaboration of information&#13;
regarding the treatment of woman's&#13;
ills which, for authenticity and&#13;
accuracy, can hardly be equaled in any&#13;
library in the world.&#13;
Another act of foresight on t h e . p a r t&#13;
of Lydia EL Pinkham w a s to s e e t h a t&#13;
some one of her family w a s trained tocarry&#13;
on her work, and with t h a i , e n d&#13;
in view, for years before heVTBeath,&#13;
had as her chief assistant her daugfcter-&#13;
in.lawr thP.pr&lt;&gt;s«nT Mm PinVham&#13;
Therefore, under the guidance a n d&#13;
careful training of Lydia E . P i n k h a m .&#13;
and a vnst experience of her o w n .&#13;
covering twenty-five years, the present&#13;
Mrs. Pinkham is exceptionally well&#13;
equipped to advise sick women, which&#13;
she is a l w a y s glad to do free of&#13;
charge.&#13;
The record of Lydia E . Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound, made of simple&#13;
herbs and roots, is a proud and peerless&#13;
one. It is a record of constant&#13;
conquest over the obstinate ills of&#13;
women, greater than that of any other&#13;
one medicine of its kind in the world,&#13;
and will ever stand as a monument to.&#13;
that noble woman whose . n a m e its&gt;&#13;
bears.&#13;
Faith&#13;
Yen cannot be expected to have (aim in&#13;
Shiloh's Constimprioe Cure, the Lung&#13;
Took, as a cute for Colds, Coughs andfaU&#13;
daeeses oi the air passages, if you have !&#13;
act tried it. We have faith in it, and we ,&#13;
gswarteeit U k doesn't cure you it costs ]&#13;
yeunethiBf. If it does it costs you 2 5 c&#13;
Thais fair. Try it to-day.&#13;
Sfassoh has owed many thousands of the&#13;
iaoatc4)ebeetecase^ai&gt;dwedoixitb«silate&#13;
lo say that it will curs any Cold, Cossjh,&#13;
Thtoat or Lung trouble. &lt; If we did not&#13;
believe this we would not guarantee k.&#13;
Shtloh has bed an uahrokea record of&#13;
success lot thirty years. It has stood&#13;
every ftosable test wmSoot failure. Further&#13;
Proof is fouad ia the many kistimoniah of those&#13;
who have tried Shiloh aad been cured.&#13;
M s . Archie Taylor, Asaph, rV, writes ¢ -&#13;
Ibosanta aetda of Stake's CoaeamptnCw*&#13;
kvwybsaaftasi 1 hwetwo chiMma,&#13;
•sd *ay bad^ ^ w j t V 1 teWtjwsi&#13;
SIM ease eveae* stylseaSeaa BOMBM a I**** &lt;e&#13;
Salon. Vfo rnmrn sa &amp;i irateS WVWSIOT&#13;
weal to bed. sad sWOspt all asset h eafS&#13;
&gt;Wa riilniJj. IsllsFsJksspTEspitiatse&#13;
Mesa, g e n SHILOIT&#13;
$16 AN ACRE in W e s t e r n&#13;
Canada is the&#13;
amount many;&#13;
farmers wi I i&#13;
realize f r o m&#13;
their w h e a t&#13;
crop this year.&#13;
25 Bushels to the Acre Will bo tho&#13;
Average Yield of Wheat,&#13;
The land that this was grown on cost many or&#13;
tbe farmers absolutely nothing, while these&#13;
Who wished to add to she 160 tores the Government&#13;
grants, can buy land adjoining at from Sffto&#13;
$10 an acre.&#13;
Climate splendid, school convenient, railways,&#13;
close at hand, taxes low.&#13;
Send for pamphlet "SOth Century Canada'"&#13;
sand full particulars regarding rate, etc, to&#13;
Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa,&#13;
Canada, or to the following authorized&#13;
Canadian Government Agent—M. V. Mclanea,&#13;
6 Avenue Theatre Block, Detroit, Michigan; o r&#13;
C A. Laurier, Sault Ste. Merle, Michigan.&#13;
(Mention this paper.)&#13;
RHEUMATISM CURED Dr. Hart's T?rk&gt; Aeld Solvant Will positively&#13;
cure the worst case by ridding- the system of tbe&#13;
polsonoua uric aeld. A foil month1* trcaUnent&#13;
for I t National Remedy &amp;j, Ltd., Chamber ot&#13;
Commerce. Detroit. Mich.&#13;
W.H.U. - DETROIT. No. SO 1 9 0 »&#13;
I — ,&#13;
P I S O ' S C U R t F, v&#13;
. . « * * &gt; • • « &gt; - •&#13;
ff*i y1* ifHir'ff *f*iffgi&#13;
Best GeaiaTsyna*- _.&#13;
tattoos.BoMby&#13;
C O N •&lt; i T • O N&#13;
J L B M H . ^&#13;
•MW^&#13;
f^KR;^ ^ ^ ^ 1 ¾ ^ ..-ft**?*&#13;
'Wif&#13;
¥&amp;**&amp;('.&#13;
7 - ^ 7 ¾ ^ ^ ^ 1 Vj*rv?;''&#13;
* £ ^S R^T&#13;
• M &gt;&#13;
-v,;*&#13;
•. ••••'•+ H : ' : ^ ' • •'••&#13;
3ft?. ^ ¾ ^ ^ ¾ '.S'ftf&#13;
:»"&#13;
*c&#13;
*«!= fry&#13;
&gt;&amp;j&#13;
• r - i ^ s&#13;
*&#13;
*r&#13;
./' 1 . (&#13;
7.. ' N .&#13;
1 Bustnlss Point&#13;
;* ^ V&#13;
The Porter €lotbjin«r UOJ. of Howell&#13;
will sell |30 Stilts .and Overcoats for&#13;
$17;fl5fo/$12;$10for*7jf8for | 6&#13;
$6 for $4. Other goods equally its&#13;
cheap.&#13;
FOR SALB.&#13;
A one year old colt, price reasonable&#13;
Inquire of Wm. Hassencbal,&#13;
Chilson, mail route No. 1; ' t 51&#13;
N6tice&gt; to T a x Payers&#13;
WBSTMABIOH. |&#13;
There is to be a Christmas tree at th e - • • • • « • church for the*Suuday school scholars&#13;
Walter Rollins was kicked in the faoe by&#13;
a horse Sunday, knocking out two teeth.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. James Catrell of UnadUla&#13;
atteuded the funeral of her brother, Grant&#13;
Macomber on Sunday, north of Howell,&#13;
A. S. Wilhelm sold his farm here to E.&#13;
Horndurffer, the house is rented to Phil&#13;
Smith and a family of Howell who will take&#13;
possesion the first of April.&#13;
New Store&#13;
y and&#13;
New Goods&#13;
Tbe fax roil/for Putnam township is&#13;
now in./ny, bands,and 1 am ready to&#13;
receive-taxes at ai&gt;y time at my store&#13;
in Pinekney. W»ll be at the store of&#13;
Ledwidge &amp; Roche in Anderson Wednesday,&#13;
Dec. 27. W. E. Murphy.&#13;
.^ Treas.&#13;
.—. , vv- '• ' *—_—_—&#13;
•For Sale or Exchange.&#13;
Forty acres of timbered land in&#13;
Iosco. Inquire of P. A. Barton,&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
C. S. CHAMBERLIN,&#13;
EXPERT AUCTIONEER&#13;
DEXTER, MICH.&#13;
Bell Phope 88, free P. O. Lock Box 68&#13;
Formerly of Battle Creek, Mich. Sells everything&#13;
on earth—Real Estate, Graded Stock, Perecnal&#13;
Property, Coantry^sJeTrstc:—Years of eatperlenoe,&#13;
and prices reasonable.&#13;
^Orders may be left at tbe DISPATCH Office.&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
E71 W. DANIELS,&#13;
OEJTEBAL AUCTIONEER.&#13;
Satisfaction Guaranteed. For information&#13;
call at DISPATCH Office or address&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. 'wLyndilla phone&#13;
connection. Auction bills and tin cups&#13;
furnished free.&#13;
Percy Swarthout&#13;
Funeral Director&#13;
AND EMBALMER&#13;
ALL CALLS ANSWERED&#13;
PROMPTLY DAY OR NIGHT&#13;
PARLORS AT&#13;
PLIMPTON'S OLD STAND Phjone No. 30&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
Have You Had&#13;
CHILSON&#13;
Everyone who wants to be in style gets a&#13;
cold.&#13;
Mr, and MJS. J. W. Sweeney were in&#13;
Howell on business Tuesday.&#13;
Arthur Dammann woo has been quite&#13;
sick is able tu be about again.&#13;
John Gttlligan of Webster, was the guest&#13;
of his sister, Mrs. Clarence Carpenter,&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
The North Hamburg church fair at&#13;
Chilson, last Thursday ai.A Friday was&#13;
well attended.&#13;
EAST PUTVAH.&#13;
Chas. Brown was at the County seat&#13;
Tuesday of last week.&#13;
Mesdames, James Fitch and Bert Hicks&#13;
were in Howell Tuesday.&#13;
Mrs, J. M. Eager, of Howell, was the&#13;
guest of her cousin, Mrs. Guy Hall, iasl&#13;
week,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Culy were called to&#13;
Ann Arbor last week by the death of the&#13;
infant daughter, of Mrs. Adolf Spaulding.&#13;
Mesdames, Libbie Thompson and Jennie&#13;
Boyd, of Gregory, were guests at E.&#13;
G. Fish's, Friday and Saturday last.&#13;
SOUTH HABIOir.&#13;
I. J. Abbott is erecting a new ice house.&#13;
Mr. H. M. Williston and wife and J. B.&#13;
Buckley and wife were the guests of Wra.&#13;
Blair last Sunday.&#13;
Miss Gecile Stowe of Howell visited her&#13;
sister, Mrs. Clyde Line of this place, last&#13;
Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
The Misses Cathryne and Eleanor Brogaii&#13;
were the guest of Mr. and Mrs. John&#13;
White of near Pinckney, last Sunday.&#13;
John Gardner, wife and niece Marie&#13;
Jeffrey, and Wirt Smith wife and danghter&#13;
were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred'&#13;
Merrils last Sunday.&#13;
Last Wednesday, Dec. 7, occured tha&#13;
marriage of Miss Grace, eldest daughter of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Blair of this plaee, to&#13;
Mr. J. B. Buckley of Iosco. Kev. C. L.&#13;
Adams officiating.&#13;
WEAfffHERtr&#13;
Marvin &amp; Flnley&#13;
HUGH FlNL.BY.Mn4r.&#13;
a T • 1 - . m»l 111W r&#13;
^rW&#13;
, . :&#13;
• * • • ; ^ •''i : * • :&#13;
; . " * Specialty&#13;
ttmmmmmm&#13;
We have opened our Branch Store In F t a c k n e y l but not as some suppose, just for the Holidays—&#13;
We a r e H e r e t o S t a y . There are a few more\days before Chrietmss and we have a completeline&#13;
to select Holiday gifts from, suitable for anyone. You will be made welcome at any time to ojdl\&#13;
and see what we are offering. ^ .. _&#13;
Of Swr^l&amp;aVit&#13;
Elgin&#13;
New England&#13;
Hampden&#13;
and&#13;
Swiss —&#13;
All Sizes in&#13;
GOLD, SILVER&#13;
NICKEL and&#13;
ENAMEL&#13;
S*\»eVn&amp;&#13;
Many new ideas. Stud*,&#13;
Diamond Rings, Brooches,&#13;
and Ear Rings. Signet&#13;
and Opal band Kings.&#13;
Scarf Pins,""Fobs, Link Butlxms,&#13;
Bracelets, Crosses, Rosaries and Hat&#13;
Pins.&#13;
Everything in J e w e l r y&#13;
Rich Cut Glass—Bowls, Vases, Etc.&#13;
Everything in Silver—Sterling and Plated.&#13;
Fountain Pens—Always useful and acceptable.&#13;
Phonographs—A much appreciated present.&#13;
Silver Mounted Toilet and Manicure Sets.&#13;
Kodaks,PocketBooks&gt;-4akStands^—Eter&#13;
***!&gt;--&#13;
. ^ - - 4 ^MAIWffil^iHfifc&#13;
H U G H F I N b E Y , Mngp. Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
NORTH LAKE.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Myron Lighthall of Chelsea&#13;
spent Sunday at F. A. Glenn's.&#13;
Remember the church fair Friday afternoon&#13;
and oyster supper in the evening.&#13;
Your Picture Taken&#13;
Yet ?&#13;
-^¾&#13;
• ^&#13;
Why Not ?&#13;
Only a few more days before&#13;
we expect to leave here.&#13;
We are still making&#13;
2 4 Photos, for 2 5 Cents&#13;
Ralph M o e i i has room to let in the&#13;
upper story—of his mouth. The dentist&#13;
has had hold of him.&#13;
E. C. Glenn of Detroit spent the first of&#13;
the week with his brother Fred, after&#13;
looking after his interests in this vicinity.&#13;
Chas. Carpenter and family have returned&#13;
from Hnmilton Ont, and are paying&#13;
their daughter, Mrs. E. S. Cooke, a visit.&#13;
Married at Detroit on Tuesday, Dec. 12.&#13;
190o, Mr. Robert C. Glenn to Luella&#13;
Buchanan.of ( helsea. The young couple&#13;
started immediately for the south where&#13;
they intend to spend the winter.&#13;
MOON'S&#13;
The People's Store. The Store That Saves You Money&#13;
T s&#13;
Eight More Business Days Left Before Christmas.&#13;
No«v is tbe time to buy Holiday Goods. Come and buy early whi'e the stock i« large, and a large&#13;
selection awaits you at this store. We are absotatety presenting to you the best line ot holiday goods in this&#13;
town; that's what oar customers tell everybody.&#13;
1¾¾&#13;
H A N D K E R C H I E F S&#13;
IOSCO.&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sharp,&#13;
Dec. 8, a line boy.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Alex. Cameron have&#13;
moved to White Oak.&#13;
- Exchange Photos with all your&#13;
school friends—you will prize&#13;
them in after yeaas.&#13;
We guarantee satisfaction.&#13;
R. A. *jLLIAMS.&#13;
Richard Wilson went to Pinckney Monday,&#13;
to be operated on for appendicitis.&#13;
Orla Stowe 19 seriously ill, but hopes is&#13;
entertained for his recovery.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Dutton visited his&#13;
brothers at Laingsburg and Lansing, last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Wright, of Pasadena&#13;
Cal,,arrived here last Saturday, for the&#13;
winter.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Sharp was severely injurnd&#13;
by a fall, last Friday, the jaw-bone beiug&#13;
broken in two places, and otherwise badh?&#13;
bruised. Her daughter, Mrs. Noyse is&#13;
caring for her.&#13;
ADDITIONAL LOCAL.&#13;
DON'T PAIL to see our larcje line bdks. We&#13;
can certainly fill your wants in tbis line, if they run&#13;
from 1c up.&#13;
G A M E S&#13;
Why certainly Xmas means one or two frames to&#13;
be given in each family. We have tha fullest line&#13;
of the newest and up-to date games and also the old&#13;
stand bys, of any store in this town.&#13;
TOILET G O O D S&#13;
Here again is where we lead. We have anything&#13;
yon want in this line. If you are going to give a&#13;
toilet set, Xmas brush and comb, glove box, collar&#13;
box, hdkf. box, etc.. for a present, don't fail tx) buy at&#13;
this store. We can give better satisfaction, we can&#13;
give you the lowest prices, (live us a chance and be&#13;
convinced.&#13;
D O L L S&#13;
How can we possibly baye ended without mentioning&#13;
tbat we carry the sweetest, dearest little creatures,&#13;
in the line of dolls ever presented to yon.&#13;
A fancy dressed doll only 10c.&#13;
We have dolls of any kind, all discriptions from&#13;
5o up.&#13;
B O O K S&#13;
Why when you can give a friend so many pleasant&#13;
hours of reading tor only 25c, buy then! at least one&#13;
book. We are offering for only 25c, each volume of&#13;
Mary J. Holmes complete works in good binding,&#13;
also Bertha M. Clay's, Mrs. Soutbworths, Garvice,&#13;
Alger, Henty.^and many, others. We also have a&#13;
line of books.&#13;
You can make tbe children laugh from one Xmas&#13;
until tbe next, by buying them a story or pictflre&#13;
book, at this store.&#13;
friend or M&#13;
• £. H. Byer is walking with a cane—&#13;
rheumatism.&#13;
Mrs. Ruben Kisby and&#13;
Hamburg", were guests&#13;
Vaughn, Wednesday. ^&#13;
A letter*from Pasedena Cal. state&#13;
tbat Fred Mortenson has been quite&#13;
tick. HSB many friends here hope to&#13;
hear of bis speedy recovery*&#13;
Malacba Roche and wife of Fowlerville&#13;
spent Saturday and Sunday w.itb&#13;
his sister, Mrs. M. Lavey, and shook&#13;
hands with their many friends here.&#13;
C H I N A&#13;
Your wife certainly wants a pretty dish for Xmas, it is a woman's second nature to admire and&#13;
crave pretty dishes. Sbe almost always wants something in a pretty dish it' notning more than a pin tray or&#13;
cup and saucer. We are offering the prettiest and most up-to-date line ct"fancy china you ever saw, in the&#13;
cheap as well as more expensive goods. The Japanese ware plays an iraortant part \a our stock. It takes those&#13;
little Japs to decojate china, if you don't believe it come and see. We also have many different makes of China.&#13;
Don't forget the man of tbe borne, be will always give a little grunt of satisfaction with a new shaving mug,&#13;
or a big cup and saucer, and sometimes he is very much p J eased!**"&#13;
T O Y S&#13;
Well great scott, here is where we shine, we are practically tbe only firm that carries toys inw this&#13;
town. We have toys tbat clearly show great skill in construction and instruct the young in this line. We&#13;
have toys that make you laugh and we have stout built toys tbat are snre to please. Don't fail to look this line&#13;
over, and take the children home some toys. They are sure to please.&#13;
We are absolutely as we ad7er.isn, the best place to buy holiday goods in tbis town. We have&#13;
tried to please all, and we firmly believe we have. "&#13;
* '&#13;
If you think from this adv. we are onljfca holiday firm, you are mistaken. We are always ready to show jou a&#13;
good pair of gloves and mittens, hosiery and a so it'of underwear. We stand ready to sell you anything you need. We hav*&#13;
a large store, extra fine chances for displaying goods and plenty of clerks that know their business, and tend strictly to it.&#13;
they know how to give corteous treatment and they give It,&#13;
• ^&#13;
If. - V&#13;
Mrs. C. W. Moon&#13;
This store is most of yon know this time is second door from pott office.&#13;
v . * \t•-&lt;•-&gt;&#13;
w*1&amp;mm+*9*t* \-t."M,VX&#13;
• ^ 9 ^ ^ ^&#13;
itd&amp;i&amp;feyfeu</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>VOL,Sni. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO.,MICH., THURSDAY,DEC. a 1,1906. No. 51&#13;
'.*» W * p i&#13;
! • » • » « i&gt; i&#13;
K^ac\vVxve axd lUpaxr \Oorfc&#13;
We have a thoroughly equipped&#13;
machine shop and are in position&#13;
to do yoar repairing promptly and&#13;
_at reasonable prices. . . . . .&#13;
Engine and Lathe&#13;
Work a Specialty&#13;
Sharp Edge&#13;
Grinding Done&#13;
A '&#13;
\Da\awv Yortet &gt;DaY*o* fco. Z\L "UxvatoWa, KftcK. ?&#13;
THE BEST OF EVERYTHING FOR CHRISTMAS&#13;
WE HAVE TRE RIGHT THING for EVEBY PEE80N, THE EIGHT PBIOE for EVERT J?UB8E&#13;
A BEAUTIFUL ASSORTMENT OF PLEASING GIFTS&#13;
PERFECTLY ADAPTED TO THE WAXTS ANDJIEQUIBEVIE^TS OP OUK FRIENDS AND PATR0N8&#13;
EVERYTHIK6 FRESH BMP 8PIRKLIHB WLTH THE BRI6HTE8T ffEW GOODS OF THE 8EI80H&#13;
We are waiting to please you with Present* that are Apptoprtate, Popular, Praet.eal and in every way Desirable in the line of&#13;
* B o o k s &lt;a annda * • Novelties&#13;
FANCY GOODS, NOTIONS, ETC.&#13;
WE H W THE VIRIETV THUT INSURES THE EISY SUISHCTORf CHOICE - T H E FIELD Ktl SE.ECTION THE WIDEST. PRICES FtlREST&#13;
A GENEROUS ASSORTMENT, FUbb of QUALITY and MfeRlT&#13;
If YoU Want SatirfacHon In Selection and Economy In Price OUr Holiday Stock Will Fill Yoilr Meeds&#13;
REMEMBER OUK HOLIDAY STOCK Gl-VES YOU XBW IDEAS AND SUPPLIES EXACTLY WHAT YOU WANT&#13;
S I GLOCAL*&#13;
NEWS.&#13;
' V - 3&#13;
Next week is vacation.&#13;
Neit Monday is Christmas.&#13;
***$&amp;&#13;
•"'SSSB&#13;
We wish one and all a Merry&#13;
Christmas:&#13;
H. F. Sutler was in Ann Arbor&#13;
Monday on business.&#13;
A sure winner—T'riss, at the opera&#13;
house, Pinckney, Deo. 28.&#13;
Oar merchants have decorated their&#13;
stores and windows gaily for the holidays,&#13;
dome windows even put on a&#13;
trnely citified air. Pinckney merchant?&#13;
are After your trade.&#13;
33?&#13;
Hngh Finley and wife visited Sanday&#13;
in Howell.&#13;
Fred and Rex Read of Ypsilanti are&#13;
1)0mef for the boITclays.&#13;
ETR. BrownThas been a busyT)lac¥-&#13;
smith the past few weeks—lots of&#13;
horse-shoeing.&#13;
Eugene Campbell bas opened up&#13;
his .jewelry store in his building vacated&#13;
by the post officer&#13;
Mrs. H. Duane Brown and Mrs.&#13;
Nbyes of Jackson and Mrs. H. E.&#13;
Brown of Stockbndge, were guests at&#13;
the home of Chas. Love, Monday of&#13;
this week.&#13;
T ' r i s s&#13;
Holiday Specials&#13;
Tbe Columbian Dramatic Club are&#13;
rehearsing tbe melo drama. T'iiss, to&#13;
be put on the boards at the Pinckney&#13;
Opera-house,-Tburs4ayevening, Dec.'&#13;
28 The oast of Characters is good&#13;
and the drama a good one. Reserved&#13;
seats on sale at Sigler's drug store.&#13;
CAST OF CHARACTERS&#13;
HANK JORDAN Ray Kennedy&#13;
NAT WEBBER Will Kennedy&#13;
JACK HAMLIN Bert Roche&#13;
JUDGE A. LOVETODDY Louis Monks&#13;
HALLELUJAH BILLY Martin Clinton&#13;
ZENAS GRIMES&#13;
BILL&#13;
JAKE&#13;
SUSIE SMITH&#13;
MRS. R0B1E&#13;
MISS PRIM&#13;
T'RISS&#13;
Cf4fe£":'&#13;
• - )&#13;
•ivv, • &gt; Handkerchiefs from - - •- 1c to 75c ea&#13;
Towels - - • - - 5c to $1 ea&#13;
JLitjies' stock Collars - - 15c, 25c, 50c ea&#13;
T.orTiaa' Pnrf l B f l - gfin. 50c. 75c. $1.00. $1.50 4-&#13;
i Mat Jeffries&#13;
Joe Kennedy&#13;
Ben White&#13;
Cora Shehan&#13;
Mae Kennedy&#13;
. Edna Tiplady&#13;
Florence Harris&#13;
Songs by Miss Mae Kennedy and&#13;
Miss Florence Andrews.&#13;
Music by Fisher's Orchestra of Ann&#13;
Arbor.&#13;
Congregational Church.&#13;
1 /&#13;
The pastor appreciates verj much&#13;
tbe expressions ot apreciation extended&#13;
_JBjLah-.EinJay—and- ui^ *we now&#13;
settled in the Goodrich bouse on Pearl&#13;
street.&#13;
Pacia Hinchey of Ypsilanti was the&#13;
—P*K,Capita tax and Hive dues of&#13;
| $1.00 of L. O. T. M. M. are now due&#13;
and must be paid before Dec. 30.&#13;
5152 Cora Wright, F. K.&#13;
gaest of E. J. Briggs and family one&#13;
day the past week. "&#13;
Revt W.G.Stephens of Northville&#13;
was the guest of his daughter, Mrs. F.&#13;
'Jr. Jackson, Tuesday.&#13;
We are glad to note that Marion&#13;
Reason is able to be around tbe house.&#13;
He hrfsUeen confined to the bouse for&#13;
several weeks but we hope to see bim&#13;
on our streets soon.&#13;
J. B. Stanton formerly of the firm&#13;
of Prudden &amp; Stanton, dealers in well&#13;
supplies, etc., ol Chelsea, bas purchased&#13;
bis partners interests in th« business&#13;
and is continuing thre same at the old&#13;
stand. J. H. i* one of our Pinckney&#13;
boys and w« wish him all kinds of sue&#13;
cess. See his adv. in another column.&#13;
Loyal Guards pleasa remember this&#13;
is the last week of 1905 and all assessraents&#13;
must be paid before th* 30th.&#13;
Paymaster.&#13;
Fischer's orchestra of Ann Arbor&#13;
with drums aud traps will furnish the&#13;
music at the New Year's Dance, Monday.&#13;
Jan. 1 at the Dexter Opera House.&#13;
Bill 75c. •&#13;
A petition is being circulated in&#13;
this township aga.nst the surveying&#13;
for and construction of the county&#13;
ditch in the western part of tbe to.vnsliip&#13;
irom tbe mill creek to School-lot&#13;
lake and on north. The drain tax is&#13;
already hicrh and most taxpayers are&#13;
in favor of not doing too much ai uue&#13;
time unless absolutelv necessarv.&#13;
5 . : - *&#13;
. . . * • # • • •&#13;
Low Prices on&#13;
Low Prices on&#13;
All $1.00 Dress Goods&#13;
All 50c Dress Goods&#13;
Ladies' Wrappers&#13;
Underwear&#13;
Shoes&#13;
92c&#13;
45c&#13;
88c&#13;
-rrtfr&#13;
A f e w Christmas Bargains&#13;
From Dec* 14 to 2 3&#13;
500 yds. Best Heavy lOct Tennis Flannels for 7jcts.&#13;
» • &amp; , $&#13;
eft'&#13;
f o r low prices on Groceries Come to Our Store&#13;
Thursday, Friday and Saturday&#13;
.We-Will Save You Dollars&#13;
him by his numerous 'friends lur&#13;
utterances last Sunday. Further be&#13;
recognizes with much satisfaction tbe&#13;
uniform regularity of a faithful band&#13;
at church services and the heroic work&#13;
ot loving hearts to promote a deepening&#13;
interest in the cause of Christ. !&#13;
The members of the Guild and Young&#13;
Men's Club have shown their loyalty&#13;
and interest by a consistent regularity.&#13;
P. Monroe is under tbe doctor's care.&#13;
S.VVelker and wile ot Detroit left&#13;
(or California this week to spend tbe&#13;
winter. Tb^y were former citizens of&#13;
Pinckney,&#13;
Owing to tbe death of the pastor's&#13;
mother, the Christmas exercises have&#13;
been pastponed to Wednesday, Dec. 27,&#13;
1000 yds. of-Beat 7et PtiiUs fot -—Seta,&#13;
All Ladies' 50c Gloves for&#13;
All Men's 50c Gloves&#13;
Ladies' $1.25 Sateen Petticoats for&#13;
Ladies' $1.50 Sateen Petticoats for&#13;
La-dies' $1.75 S.iteen Petticoats for&#13;
Ladies' $2.25 Sateen Petticoats for&#13;
Men's $1..50 Pants for&#13;
Men's $2.00 Pants for&#13;
Men's $2.-50 Pants for&#13;
20 per cent discount on all Shoes&#13;
Special prices will be made on all goods during this sale&#13;
Call and see our line of Ladies' and Gent's Handkerchiefs .&#13;
45cts&#13;
45c ts&#13;
DScts&#13;
$1,19&#13;
$1.39&#13;
'$1.79&#13;
$1 29&#13;
$1.69&#13;
$2.10&#13;
A Few P r i c e s on G r o c e r i e s :&#13;
Best Rod Salmon 10c 4 Pounds Best Crackers 25c&#13;
Best Cheese 14c per pound&#13;
Arm and Hammer Soda in bulk oc per pound&#13;
All Goods Sold for Cash at Above Prices Butter and Eggs Same as Cash&#13;
:'n&#13;
JACKSON &amp; CAD WELLS&#13;
SOCMAN'S | Coua'V eWcVv&#13;
• ; ' $&#13;
/&#13;
"HH'tH H&lt;tt .f~r the rush of holiday&#13;
"*'" Jfc#%tock will contain many de?&#13;
^,-^./items not found elsewhere. I place&#13;
xny orders very early, buy direct, even in&#13;
Germany and France and do my own importing.&#13;
This may souud big to you but&#13;
It is ea,y enouah when you know how. As&#13;
I own these goods cheaper than my com*&#13;
petitora it is an easy mattter for me to&#13;
undersell. It will pay you to drive over&#13;
as we will show large assortment and save&#13;
jounjoney. Doll*, Book*, China, Toys^&#13;
Mid Fancy Goods of every discriptioj*-^-"&#13;
Every deyartment in oar store^is com&#13;
plet£ A pleasure to show sKwds/ Just&#13;
E A. BOWMAN.&#13;
i T h * ftu^y Store.&#13;
ft./ Ow»stts|CourtMoM»#.&#13;
«11 Mich.&#13;
Services Tonight at 7&#13;
Choir • , " " 8&#13;
*&#13;
Christmas Fxercises&#13;
Friday EVening at 7:00&#13;
C*\^"» -*H^V"««tf^^S "****•&#13;
(nday, Dec. 24&#13;
FoUrili Sunday Aduent. .&#13;
Hording Worship and Sermon&#13;
at 10:30&#13;
ironing at 7:09&#13;
"RBTRiBOTION"&#13;
1 0 brut mis Et% Service.&#13;
/&#13;
Everybody welcome to above services.&#13;
at the M. E. church.&#13;
Mrs. L. W. Richards who has been&#13;
visiting her mother, Mrs. E. W. Martin&#13;
tor a few weeks returned to her borne&#13;
in Bay City Tuesday.&#13;
Dr. H. F. Sigler went to Ann Arbor&#13;
Wednesday in bis auto. Mesdames&#13;
Guy Teeple, Herbert Cope and C. L.&#13;
Sigler went with him.&#13;
We are glad to know that Miss&#13;
Belle Kennedy is ibie to resume her&#13;
work in the grammar department of&#13;
our school after several week's illness.&#13;
Miss Lillian Boyle who has been&#13;
quite ill at the home of Norman Reason \&#13;
for several weeks was taken to ber&#13;
borne at Leslie tois morning. We&#13;
hope to hear of her immediate recov.&#13;
ery«&#13;
W. W. BARNARD.&#13;
Have you seen&#13;
Teeple Hdw. Cos Holiday Display of&#13;
Silverware, Toys, Specialties?&#13;
The most complete * Hue of X*mas, goods ever shown in P i n c k n e y&#13;
At Reduced Prices. \&#13;
"V .**:&#13;
Mrs. Etuerick, tbe aged mother of&#13;
Kev. B. A. Emerick, died at the borne&#13;
of her son here Wednesday morning.&#13;
She has been verv poorly for some&#13;
time, being a sufferer from asthma&#13;
and the weather of the past few days&#13;
was too oppressive f e r H r Aeble con&#13;
dMo». Tbe fun*rar*»%* held from&#13;
the home Fndty moftjft* emd the remains&#13;
taken to Sag«MK4«t burial.&#13;
Pneumatic Toys&#13;
Steam Toys&#13;
Magic Lanterns&#13;
Musical Toys&#13;
Wood Toys&#13;
0 Automobiles&#13;
1 I Mechahical Toys&#13;
s.&#13;
3&#13;
O&#13;
Trains with Tracks&#13;
Steamers ,&#13;
Targets&#13;
Shot G u n * , Rifles, . A i r Guns, S k a t e s&#13;
All Will Be Sold At Prices Regardless of Cost.&#13;
Teeple Hardware Go.&#13;
1¾&#13;
/ f.ti&#13;
p&#13;
».&#13;
m ; » * ( • •&#13;
• * * ' • $ *&#13;
*&amp;V • J t W % ; . - • % : •:.v ,^-^-^---^&#13;
C-i-.V • ' &gt; • * . 1 * . . ' ,**"&#13;
, • * , -&#13;
' • &amp; ! •&#13;
. * * . •&#13;
- ^ 1 . - V .&#13;
*z&lt;-&#13;
K^fym M . ^ -&#13;
'&amp;'j ? V,.&#13;
£&#13;
r&#13;
* • &lt; &amp; :&#13;
-*.:&#13;
&gt; * • „;.**. &gt; ^ * - ' ,4.:-&#13;
-^--. ,. y.VV-,&#13;
• * , j » i&#13;
s y&#13;
sN»f&#13;
•*' . • • * * 4'&#13;
ghttftntg gispatth.&#13;
FRAXK L. AXDBSWS, Pub.&#13;
CKNBY, MICHIGAN&#13;
,1 II I, J B&#13;
it is true that the Grand Duke&#13;
Boris struck the czar, it was probably&#13;
cnly for a loan.&#13;
The itinerary of that international&#13;
fleet reads like one of St. Paul's celebrated&#13;
sea voyages.&#13;
Was it in good taste to mention a&#13;
pup in connection with Edna May's&#13;
matrimonial speculations?&#13;
As an old experienced hand the sultan&#13;
should be able to judge when an&#13;
ultimatum is really ultimate.&#13;
It appears to be a cinch that&#13;
duke of Manchester will never&#13;
any the better of his papa-in-law.&#13;
the&#13;
get&#13;
bother fts little head about its future.&#13;
We never expected to live to see&#13;
the phrase "The Revs Terry and&#13;
Alexander" in the purist New York&#13;
Sun.&#13;
This dispute between the sultan&#13;
and the powert is bringing our old&#13;
friend Toothpick Pasha into public&#13;
view again..&#13;
Although death does not always&#13;
liquidate a man's debts, it dispenses&#13;
with the services of the bill collector,&#13;
Just the same.&#13;
• * T&#13;
SHREDS OF TORN FLESH&#13;
—ALT, THAT REMAINED&#13;
OF FIVE MEN.&#13;
MARQUETTE DYNAMITE WORK8&#13;
BLOWN UP, CAU8WO OEATH&#13;
AND GREAT DESTRUCTION.&#13;
The Whole City 8haken.&#13;
A quick, sharp detonation, louder&#13;
than the combined report of many cannon;&#13;
a distinct tremor that shook Marquette;&#13;
the sound of falling glass, and&#13;
a dull, rumbling roar that" vibrated!&#13;
among the hills. These were the accompaniments&#13;
of the disastrous ex-&#13;
H- ought to _be some comfort to plosion when 1,300 pound_s of nitro-&#13;
Corea to know that it will not haveTotgTycefin and a~Tjuanttty of dyuanrtte- -&#13;
A Boston paper refers to hinr~tt3&#13;
"Albert Austin, the poet laureate."&#13;
Out no matter. He says he never&#13;
reads press clippings.&#13;
If you have jiot had J16 eggs dur&#13;
ing the past twelve months&#13;
American hen has been holding&#13;
on you, after she laid them.&#13;
the&#13;
out&#13;
There is so much revolt against&#13;
bosses and autocrats these days that&#13;
it would not be surprising to see a&#13;
Korean bite off a Jap's nose.&#13;
W. S. Gilbert says that the editor&#13;
of Punch refused the "Bab Ballads"&#13;
when they were offered to him. That&#13;
it what we should naturally expect.&#13;
As to which of the sexes is the&#13;
more courageous, it is, after all, hard&#13;
to-decide, for as often as a man marries,&#13;
a woman marries likewise.—&#13;
Puck.&#13;
Several Korean officials have&#13;
mltted hara-kiri, thus showing, as&#13;
Japan desires the world to note, their&#13;
thorough sympathy with Japanese institutions.&#13;
let go, which wrecked the plant of the&#13;
Eastern Dynamite Co., three miles distant&#13;
from Marquette, Saturday, morning.&#13;
The scene at the works Is one of&#13;
dire havoc. The nitro-glycerin house is&#13;
a total wreck, also the "dope" house.&#13;
The packing houses look as though&#13;
they had been bombarded with heavy&#13;
guns, and the engine room and other&#13;
buildings more or less damaged. Great&#13;
holes were torn in the roofs, the walls&#13;
were bulged in or shoved out, and in&#13;
some instances the buildings had collapsed&#13;
utterly.&#13;
Of the mixing house, located on the&#13;
bank of Deer river, not a vestige remains.&#13;
It was here that the explosion&#13;
of the deadly nitro-glycerin had occurred—&#13;
hew, will never be-known,forall&#13;
five men in the building at the time&#13;
were blown into atoms. Torn into&#13;
splinters, the timbers had been scattered&#13;
like so much chaff. The machinerybroken&#13;
into pieces* hadnSeen&#13;
**H4ed-inaH-dlreetiona,somesmaller&#13;
fragments being picked up a mile distant.&#13;
Parts of the flywheel were found&#13;
several hundred feet away on the Ice&#13;
of the river. Large pine trees had been&#13;
broken in two, and in general the&#13;
scene was one of devastation, foe&#13;
which, however, thanks ere due that&#13;
it was no worse. Had the nitro-glycerlu&#13;
house gone too, and it is regarded as&#13;
remarkable that it didn't, the horror&#13;
possibly would have been magnified&#13;
many times over.&#13;
Of the five men killed, only enough&#13;
shreds of their blackened flesh to cover&#13;
the bottom of a small powder box had&#13;
been found in the snow in the nearby&#13;
woods up to late this afternoon.&#13;
The plant comprises about 30 buildings,&#13;
scattered over 80 acres. Some&#13;
structures were wrecked, others badly&#13;
damaged, the property loss running&#13;
con^fwell luio the thousands. It will bv&#13;
That barber who took an electric&#13;
&gt;,u?b to bed with him to warm his&#13;
feet and thereby set the bed clotfi"-&#13;
ing.on fire, had what you might call&#13;
close~shiivev-&#13;
The best time in the year to eat&#13;
eggs, "Constant Reader," is when the&#13;
relations subsisting between your&#13;
pocketbook and the price of eggs are&#13;
most harmonious.&#13;
A writer for the Saturday Evening&#13;
Post asserts that the horse is the&#13;
most dangerous and deadly animal In&#13;
the world. .Worst of all, he proves it&#13;
by official statistics.&#13;
The czar of all the Russians would&#13;
rrobably be willing to give a considerable&#13;
part of his $12,000,000 salary to&#13;
l:now just what is going to happen to&#13;
bim in the next few weeks. »&#13;
The farmer who can read Secretary&#13;
Wilson's glowing and auroral report&#13;
without feeling allfired rich and prosperous&#13;
may be set down as an incurable&#13;
and unimaginative pessimist.&#13;
\ A vagrant kindly treated by a Denver&#13;
policeman got a new start and&#13;
left his benefactor $32,000. No policeman&#13;
ever won such a dividend as this&#13;
by using his club on a park sleeper.&#13;
necessary to rebuild practically the entire&#13;
plant.&#13;
Burned to Death.&#13;
Three children of Mr. and Mrs. Albert&#13;
Ingersoll, ranging in age from 3&#13;
to € years, were burned to death in&#13;
their home near Fife Lake, Thursday.&#13;
The father was at work and the mother&#13;
went to visit a neighbor, leaving the&#13;
children in the house alone. -Theyoungest&#13;
child was cremated and the&#13;
other two died shortly After being taken&#13;
from the burning house.&#13;
TheHre was started by the children&#13;
playing with kerosene oil while the&#13;
mother was absent looking for another&#13;
child which had wandered away from&#13;
home.&#13;
East Paris Tragedy.&#13;
Webb Clark, aged 45, a prosperous&#13;
farmer of East Paris township, shot&#13;
his wife in the right temple at an early&#13;
hour Thursday morning. She will die.&#13;
After defying the efforts of the neigh:&#13;
boring farmers to enter his homo to&#13;
give aid to his wife he returned into&#13;
the house and sent a bullet into his&#13;
own right temple. He cannot live and&#13;
was unconscious when two deputy&#13;
sheriffs reached the scene, after driving&#13;
five miles from the city,-&#13;
Clark Is said to have been Insane.&#13;
His three children declare that he&#13;
-night, having terrific&#13;
SB&#13;
AH^b*&#13;
convention of the State Association of&#13;
Farmers' Club*, beM-in Lansing, 'wee&#13;
along the line of conciliation, expressing&#13;
the feeling that ibe law&#13;
passed by the last legislature weave*-.&#13;
acknowledged compromise measure,&#13;
and ike best, that could be paese£.at&#13;
that time. This, imp* was apparent,&#13;
however, that a better law would he&#13;
passed by the next legislature. Prank&#13;
A, Whelan, of Durand, In his addrest&#13;
on "Our Mistake*," sairftv&#13;
"We gated tor a pracGcal primary&#13;
Law two years ago. Why* H -wet because&#13;
we had become disgusted with&#13;
©ooditton*. A public *u\eethe*&lt;wte&gt;*&#13;
position.of some dignity had bees put&#13;
up for sale and the people were outraged.&#13;
The legislature took plenty of&#13;
time and passed what Is known as&#13;
the administration measure. Is the&#13;
administration greater than the people&#13;
who created tt? It if an unsati*&#13;
tory measure, and now we are asked&#13;
to make another mistake and try to.&#13;
give this law effect. It is time for us&#13;
to balance accounts with political&#13;
bosses. We demand to have our citizenship&#13;
restored to us."&#13;
&lt;tevv Warner poured o U o n the&#13;
stormy waves. He said in part: "No&#13;
primary election law ever passed by&#13;
any, state in the.Union is perfect. More&#13;
U to be gained in this state by testing&#13;
the present law and improving it than&#13;
by criticising it. Someone has said&#13;
they would have vetoed that bill. If&#13;
I had done that we would never get a&#13;
chance at primary election law. It&#13;
was the best law that could be passed.&#13;
Let us work to test and Improve it,&#13;
instead of criticising it bitterly. Get&#13;
everyone to turn out next June and&#13;
vote, then the governor and lieutenant&#13;
governor can always be nominated by&#13;
that system."&#13;
JJMUtJNV IN T H 1 ARMV GROW!&#13;
DAILY AND m i l , WLMMML.^&#13;
AND AUTCMlftV CONTIfcfJK&#13;
MICHIGAN ITEMS.&#13;
caused a loss of $9,000 in Sandusky,&#13;
Mich.&#13;
During November there were 2,644&#13;
Proclamations are being distributed&#13;
invitingijeople~tothe Red-Square in&#13;
the Kremlin on December 19 to a public&#13;
service. It is believedTby some that&#13;
this means a massacre by the "Black&#13;
Hundred" after the people assemble.&#13;
The city council of Reval passed a&#13;
resolution in favor of the removal of&#13;
Che police and troops from the city&#13;
and io rely foe protection on .the. wptfc&#13;
men's militia. It was also resolved to&#13;
transform' the city !"treas'tffy into a&#13;
state fund. t &lt;&#13;
deaths in MichlgeanQf-wfeieh=4^^were j and othe^rogimenti&#13;
from tuberculosis and 143 from cancer.&#13;
Judge W: RrKendrtck, of Saglnawr&#13;
will be reappointed by Gov. Warner a&#13;
member of the state board of pardons.&#13;
Bessemer tax rate, whiclV has just&#13;
been fixed at $4.81 on every $100 valuation,&#13;
is the highest the city has ever&#13;
had" to pay.&#13;
Williamsburg woke up when the&#13;
youths of the town gave an all-night&#13;
serenade to Hiram Leonard^ who at 74,&#13;
married Mrs. Emma Cross, aged. 70.&#13;
Una E. Chaukon, aged: 15, of Bay&#13;
City, who waa married««t 13 and a&#13;
mother at 14, asks for.the annulment&#13;
of her marriage to Leonldas Chaukon,&#13;
aged 43.&#13;
With eight cases of typhoid fever&#13;
in Laingsburg, it seems justifiable to&#13;
call it an epidemic, although no deaths&#13;
have occurred. There are three cases&#13;
in one family.&#13;
Efforts are being made to raise $5,-&#13;
000 to 110,000 for a portrait of President&#13;
Angell, to be painted by John Sargent&#13;
and hung in Memorial hall, soon&#13;
to be erected.&#13;
The U. of M. regents have condemned&#13;
the west end of the old medical&#13;
building and no more classes will&#13;
be held there after the close of the&#13;
first semester.&#13;
Earl Hampton has been arrested and&#13;
"takfMi to Bay City, where he will b€&#13;
The leading man in San Francisco's&#13;
Chinese theater says bis enemies&#13;
hjsve offered $2,500 for his assassination.&#13;
They are not necessarily his&#13;
enemies; they may be lovers of acting.&#13;
King Edward has decided to confer&#13;
the Order of Merit on both Field Marshal&#13;
Oyama and Admiral Togo. Does&#13;
this remind you of the Rewards of&#13;
Merit that you used to get at Sunday&#13;
tchool? . 4 .&#13;
Gen. Horace Porterls thought for&#13;
Sunday:, "When yere goin' tae kirk,&#13;
lassie," said the Scot, "droop yer eyes&#13;
on the sidewalk. It'* pious like an'—&#13;
mebbe ye'll find a purse or some*&#13;
thing like." -&#13;
Paderewskt te entirely recovered,&#13;
t&amp;er two operations, from the effects&#13;
of his American railway accident It&#13;
ttfieid not to be safe yet, however,&#13;
dog "Syracuse", ra the plan-&#13;
•- ' " - i t&#13;
pains in the head, and that at 'an early&#13;
hour Thursday morning he began to&#13;
rave. About 5 o'clock, as nearly as the&#13;
children figure it, Clark called his wife&#13;
to his side and with her head almost&#13;
against his bosom and In the act of&#13;
caressing her, he pulled his 'revolver&#13;
and put a bullet into her temple. &gt;&#13;
The three children were unharmed.&#13;
One, the oldest boy, named Fred, escaped&#13;
from the house at 6 o'clock, and I marriage&#13;
conveyed the news to a neighbor, who&#13;
called the' sheriff.&#13;
Young Hangmen.&#13;
Two 14-year-old boys, Barl Bowman&#13;
and Arnold Pittsburg, of Traverse City,&#13;
tried to emulate the hanging of Mrs.&#13;
Rogers. They put a noose around, the&#13;
neck of a playmate, Will Hoxie, after&#13;
standing him on a stick of wood, and&#13;
then kicked the wood away. Willie was&#13;
nearly dead when he,was rescued by&#13;
another playmate. * " u&#13;
It is reported that Creasy L. Wilbur,&#13;
chief of the department '** vital statistics,&#13;
will resign the-trst of the year.&#13;
He her been to the ttepartment. 13&#13;
years.&#13;
A-marrie4 man hy4h»nan&gt;e.of Qoreman&gt;&#13;
living in-JMdetone,\*Jackson&#13;
county, left his horse and buggy in&#13;
Jaokeom, came to Ann Arbor-by electric&#13;
car, looked up some legal matters&#13;
In the probate court, Wednesday, and&#13;
charged with murder, if Warden Bee&#13;
be, of Bently, whom he playfully shot&#13;
in the back, dies.&#13;
The state has received from the federal&#13;
government $1,522, which is 5&#13;
per cent of the receipts of sales of public&#13;
lands within this state during the&#13;
year ending June 20.&#13;
Dr. Louis Gelston, of the Calumet&#13;
&amp; Hecla medical staff, is dead from&#13;
overwork, caring for victims of the&#13;
scarlet fever epidemic. The disease attacked&#13;
him in his exhausted state.&#13;
Francis LeRoy, an old soldier of Bay&#13;
City, stilt lives' after swallowing three&#13;
ounces of carbolic acid while on a&#13;
spree. He tried the same deed four&#13;
years ago, but was pulled through. •&#13;
The skeleton of a man with one shoe&#13;
intact was washed ashore at Lake Harbor.&#13;
A dent in the skull leads to the be«&#13;
lief of possible foul play, but the death&#13;
must have occurred at least two yeals&#13;
ago.&#13;
Jerrv Thomas, nf Travprso nuy- ^r t t i&#13;
tnM U N JPB0PLRAJUT&#13;
RWN0 TO AVENGB "V&#13;
WRONGS. - T * * -&#13;
&lt; * • • &amp; &lt; ; r&#13;
arVftf&#13;
nancinaVft. - *• •*&gt;* • ,^ •• • • -.-,-^&#13;
Congressional feWUatfen W&#13;
.cjwdttJons at fj»Mjfejte^ftfc£fa&#13;
r•.been proposed i*&lt;* gseetntiait; te M duced in the house by Reft toad, of&#13;
Michigan. The resolution provides that&#13;
; :;tfce committee mt «** by a enb^on^&#13;
. miltee It found advisable,^epd « * * *&amp; r&#13;
ger.'Bast Prussia,^ cetreejojaaett^ aa*r«v ;atthe capitd or atL^hernavnl af*demj&#13;
the Revolutionists are JiTfuJl rfontror e* elsewhere,, ane^mef atad for -perof&#13;
ay of Courland and Livonia and that eons and papers a«d examine witnesses&#13;
the neighboring g&lt;&amp;mm$^Jfam&amp;MV^^3w^J^UI^^^r^**&amp;*&#13;
la also a blase of rebellion* .- Armed ] necessary. ^ - 7 ^ - - ^&#13;
bands, he says, are burning everything1&#13;
Mitau and Rign are' m flames and&#13;
Ubau Is seriously threatened. The&#13;
lives of all Germans are in the, gjeat-&#13;
The&#13;
Burning Everything. "- ,. '&#13;
Lokal Anseifer's Kbjsipceber*&#13;
est danger. Everything is in an .up-{.Thursday he reoeTXBd&#13;
roaf from Kreutsberg, on the Bjunn to&#13;
Kovno, and rescue pertiefci to iave" the&#13;
Germans are imperatively needed. Tw©&#13;
gentlemen from the Baltic province.&#13;
Baron KorfC and M. von Rosenbach,&#13;
who were about to take a tra&gt;n for&#13;
Kovno, were seized by insurgents and&#13;
detained as hostages.&#13;
Mutiny Spreading.&#13;
A dispatch from St, Petersburg says:&#13;
Reports of mutinies in regiments in&#13;
various parts of Russia, continue to&#13;
pdur in ceaselessly. At Irkutsk, practically&#13;
the entire garrison of 4,600 men&#13;
and even the officers voted for the Immediate&#13;
convocation of a constituent&#13;
assembly jnd_a^Jbattery_statldned at&#13;
A defectIve~galoTrhe_IIghtihg plantfSerpukiop!^ presented a series of pot7*&#13;
er"&#13;
port from Admiral Sands' announcing&#13;
the suspension of ^Uenhipmanr. Ttenmof&#13;
Coffin, Jr., third classman, tor&#13;
basing Midshipman. Jerdjme Pettus&#13;
Kimbrough, fourtfc^la^gi^nr^y forcing&#13;
him to stand on h&gt; bjnd|«ntil he,&#13;
became unconsciene, and'of Midshipman&#13;
Warren Abbe -Van Derveer, sec*,&#13;
end classman, because while on duty&#13;
he observed the occurrence and failed&#13;
to report it. -v '.;•.'-ji-&#13;
The superintendent nailed attention&#13;
to the fact that Midshipmen Coffin&#13;
and Van Derveer were guilty .of violaiing&#13;
a well known regulation for. the&#13;
government of the naval academy and&#13;
recommended their summary dismissal&#13;
in accordance with an act of congress&#13;
approved,March 8, IMS.&#13;
litical and military demands. The news&#13;
from Moscow is very bad. Open mutiny&#13;
has broken out in the Grenadier&#13;
' » ! • » ! •&#13;
Mere Jews Kilted.&#13;
A dispatch to the Neue Freie Presse&#13;
from Bucharest, Roumanla, says: "Reports&#13;
received here through refugees&#13;
declare that since Sunday the town of&#13;
Blisabethgrad, Russia, has been burning&#13;
and that a mob has been killing&#13;
and plundering in the Jewish quarter.&#13;
A legiment la proceeding to Elisabethgrad&#13;
from Kishinefl to restore order&#13;
there."&#13;
STOP HAVING.&#13;
enV wUVibe g j f t n ^ * u t Of the: Naval&#13;
men neeeeaary to bring abouj tW#&#13;
r ,. Jit,, f wo n^dsWumen will n^ &lt;Js*&#13;
«1 {ted *rom^as ecaeemy wkWu a few&#13;
dr rs by the tse«jrete«r of the nn*y, theohe&#13;
for h a i t o a n d t b e other^ f or cowV&#13;
tawuSng it bY mm wbU4 «»• ^&#13;
to retSrUts ooenrreneei &lt;Wner dlsmis&#13;
,MPW...&#13;
I&#13;
.briefly, there we;AwtomjBiita^p&#13;
the movement $*mwwwrto the&#13;
naval academy. WheU Secretary Bonaparte&#13;
reached the nary deo*rtjn«Bt ^&gt;*^.-&#13;
^r»&#13;
* * $ ' • • •&#13;
: * # . . * • :&#13;
.%&#13;
ft-*-'&#13;
'*•••'. f*&#13;
&gt;**&#13;
•&gt;Urn •**•*• y ~-y&#13;
Found Guilty.&#13;
Milo Keep hai^been found guilty Of&#13;
the murder olBert Miller on the morning&#13;
6t M a y T l S ^ ^ p ^ I e a r A t h e ve&gt;&#13;
diet "Guilty in the first degree" with- m out any apparent Interest and quietly 1¾&#13;
returned to hie ceH 4n the jaiL&#13;
Attorney Ketchum filed a motion for&#13;
a new trial on the grounds of new evidence&#13;
and error in evidence/&#13;
Milo Keep has served time In Ionia,&#13;
Jackson and Marquette prisons, having&#13;
been released from the latter but a&#13;
few m b n W W o l r t m S nl«rnwr of Miller.&#13;
Under the name of Milo Sexton he&#13;
had married a Mrs. McLaughlin, an&#13;
aunt of Bert Miller's, who kept rooms&#13;
over a Kalamazoo saloon. The couple&#13;
quarrel and the woman asked Miller tocome&#13;
and room with her for protection.&#13;
Keep is said to have become madly&#13;
jealous at this. On the morning of May&#13;
2 Miller was found dead in bed. his&#13;
skull having been crushed' with a&#13;
heavy iron rasp which was found under,&#13;
a bureau. Keep was at once under suspicion&#13;
and wa«r convicted on ctrcum*&#13;
8tantial evidence.&#13;
Meriwether's Case.&#13;
Midshipman Minor Meriwether, Jr.,&#13;
who was tried by court martial for&#13;
causing the death of&#13;
Branch/has been sentenced en&lt;&#13;
ment to the limits of the&#13;
emy for a period of one yeai&#13;
publicly reprimanded by the&#13;
of the navy. Secretary Bonaparte has&#13;
m^m;&#13;
+*»e^) %&lt;• m ktomr****** ±*~^^«w&#13;
convicted in the circuit court of the&#13;
premeditated attempted murder of Gilbert&#13;
Olson, whom he got drunk, led to&#13;
the Pere Marquette trestle, struck with&#13;
a billy, robbed and threw into Broad&#13;
man lake.&#13;
Mrs. Oliver Little, the youthful St.&#13;
Johns bride, is stopping at a hotel with'&#13;
her husband, awaiting the time when&#13;
•her parents will forgive her'runawa^&#13;
The mother is said to be&#13;
trying to patch up a peace, but the&#13;
father is obdurate.&#13;
The supreme court of the United&#13;
Slates has entered an-order advancing&#13;
the argument in the 28 eases before&#13;
the court involving the application of&#13;
the Michigan ad valorem tax cases to&#13;
the railroads of ibis state and set the&#13;
hearing lor February 19 next.&#13;
Marine insurance companies have&#13;
beeiub**a*dev b^.tfce season of navigation&#13;
Just closing on J&amp;e great lakes&#13;
than; evdr*eftwe. The/ total value of&#13;
vessels destroyed 0 damaged, together&#13;
with UHTlee^eeWthel^^arcoei, reaches&#13;
the ene*i*OS)evqpic* of #6,375,000. . v&#13;
Despite, J M meet .stringent quarantine,&#13;
efforts en4eTn*ve failed to stank*&#13;
cut the diphtheria epidemic which hae&#13;
Infested ^Qliidalona, for nearly tw$&#13;
months. Several new oases are repo ~&#13;
t d r Area -Beftinger, the-16-year-old&#13;
of John Bellinger, is dead. Two&#13;
cases are reported in the family of&#13;
gust Martin, whose oldest d&#13;
Retaliation For Exclusion.&#13;
Capt. A. C Baker, of the cruiser&#13;
Raleigh, who has been detached for&#13;
several months to study commercial&#13;
and political conditions in China, was&#13;
a passenger on the Manchuria, arriving&#13;
today from the orient, on his way&#13;
to Washington to lay before the preslclent&#13;
and MB advisors life results of hls-fpWcledlhat The Ve'nten^ensrcwrted&#13;
investigation. He says:&#13;
"It is nonsense to talk of the boycott&#13;
as dying out. The commercial situation&#13;
&lt;u South China is absolutely at the&#13;
mercy of the guilds. There are 71 of&#13;
these, and they control trade with an&#13;
iron hand and they have given orders&#13;
not to handle American goods. It is almost&#13;
impossible to get at them. Of&#13;
course, we havo treaties guai*meeing&#13;
the free circulation of our goods, out&#13;
supposing the coolies on the docks, the&#13;
carriers on the streets and everybody&#13;
connected with the handling of goods&#13;
refuses to touch them, what are you&#13;
to do?&#13;
"American houses in Canton are full&#13;
to. the roof with flour, and they cannut&#13;
budge it. In the meantime, Australian&#13;
merchants are chartering everything&#13;
they can get their hands on to rush&#13;
their inferior flour kito the market to&#13;
take advantage of^eur difficulty.&#13;
"The Chinese merchants-admit that&#13;
the flour is not as good as ours, but&#13;
their are committed to this&#13;
&gt; • ; * - .&#13;
out, but that so much of the penalty&#13;
as would debar the accused from serving&#13;
on any practice ship attached to&#13;
the academy be remitted. Midshipman&#13;
; Meriwether was acquitted of the charge&#13;
of manslaughter^ and found^gullty of&#13;
the other two charges, namely, violation&#13;
of the third clause of the eighth&#13;
article for the government of the navy,&#13;
which prohibits midshipmen from engaging&#13;
in fisticuffs, and conduct to the&#13;
prejudice of good order and discipline.&#13;
t*#&#13;
1 ***«*-&#13;
this" war on&#13;
American products and are prepare;!&#13;
to make sacrifices to carry it out.&#13;
"Not only the Australians, but the&#13;
Japanese also, are taking advantage of&#13;
the boycott to get our business. Cotton&#13;
mills are being established in China by&#13;
Japanese houses, and with cheap labor&#13;
and no transportation charges they are&#13;
in a position to drive us out of the&#13;
field. They will also develop the steel&#13;
ore of Korea and probably the oil. in&#13;
this way our vast kerosene and steel&#13;
business there will be taken over by&#13;
tho Japanese. -&#13;
"The only thing that could raise the&#13;
boycott would be to rescind the Chinese&#13;
exclusion laws, and this, of&#13;
course, .will not be done. It looks as&#13;
though our business relations with&#13;
China were doomed. The boycott is&#13;
getting worse every day there."&#13;
Rep. James B. Watson, of Indiana,&#13;
has been chosen by the Republican&#13;
house cauous as "whip" to succeed Mr.&#13;
Tawney, of Minnesota, •«:&#13;
The .Illinois aupfemv court affirmed&#13;
the verdict of the lower oourt, which&#13;
condemned Johaan Hoch to death for&#13;
the murder of We wife, Mrs. Merit&#13;
Welcker Hocb, and the date of bis. ex-&#13;
4cntUavhe* beefc.ee* to yehruary *3.r&#13;
^ ws^^e^ejw n^^se^ewe^^^a e ^s^e&gt; «s^pe&gt;^rnejAen^veBy. nee^^gF '^^g^sjpnva appointed » niember of the sub-commit&#13;
tees on District ofc Qolumbla «** peev&#13;
tetona n* tfcev home enmmitlee ,en .*•»&#13;
--N. The Money Was Bogus.&#13;
overlooking the real thing fas&#13;
haste to get a handful of bogus&#13;
was the bad break made by a yi&#13;
bandit in Lansing. The "highwi&#13;
was a girl about 14 years old,&#13;
victim the 9-year-old daughter of W.&#13;
N. Wilder. The latter was accosted in&#13;
broad daylight by the older girl, who&#13;
drew her into a hallway and seized her&#13;
pocketbook,- which was bulging with&#13;
bills. The bills, however, were only&#13;
;^&gt;&#13;
4&#13;
the script used in a business college,&#13;
but the bandit didn't notice this. She&#13;
seized the whole roll, overlooking a&#13;
genuine silver dollar, then threw the&#13;
purse on the floor and ran away.&#13;
• The police have been unable to find&#13;
any clue to the girl, who was poorly&#13;
di eased.&#13;
CONDENSED NEWS.&#13;
*• mm—mm*r&#13;
Unless we despise a woman wh&#13;
we cease to love her, we are-still&#13;
slave without consolement of into:&#13;
cation.&#13;
Capt. Saraanaki, of the 222d reg&#13;
ment, stationed at Kaluga, has declin&#13;
to obey the order of his colonel to use&#13;
his company In breaking up the strike,&#13;
declaring tn writing" that be regarded&#13;
polico work as outside the duties of of-*.&#13;
ficers and soldiers. .'.._.««... «*&#13;
It is probable that Michican's artillery&#13;
organisation may be .the first e f&#13;
the: national guards of 4n«r egenirr to&#13;
receive the new light neW'fiece* to b»&#13;
issued iiy the government and which&#13;
are said to be the d^i4liest w^ponf e t&#13;
tbelf kind 70t detijjed. ': '. v ^&#13;
In view of the sertous nejrg from&#13;
Riga and Revel, ChanceUpr von Buelow&#13;
has authorised m president wo*;i$g«V JMlUrv to., eh.&#13;
Wl RliwT RovnT and&#13;
p m e e t h e m t r « e&#13;
t.be&#13;
•^ s&#13;
J*&#13;
*M&gt;-&#13;
i*.- W.&#13;
": tiearly ;»if th* obituaries M 0m&#13;
Bargees, the nsgro^minatrel, who died&#13;
recently in Canada, aad who was distinguished&#13;
as 'the ftrst man to wear&#13;
large shoe* WJMU performing,'* have&#13;
ascribed to him tha authoraWp of the&#13;
pace popular song, 'Shoo Fry; Doth.&#13;
Bother Me," , :•;.&#13;
No negro Bong and dance was so&#13;
popular to its time as "Shoo Fly." It&#13;
^ TWS heard au over (be country. Tf&#13;
was sung in nearly every theater and&#13;
it attained the distinction, which few&#13;
po»«fop«onf*&lt;h*v*hed,'of r place in&#13;
i » ita^ m^izm*m*»mTz&#13;
I feel like, a |w» that's lost ita ma."&#13;
A colored listen*?, overhearing both r ntmaskf, said disg^wtedly:; "Qo away,&#13;
coon; aiioo fly, don't bother me:"&#13;
Bishop caught the exclamation like&#13;
an inspiration for- a song. He wrote&#13;
from it "Shoo Fly, Don't Bother Me."&#13;
He taught It to his soldiers, ami it became&#13;
popular. The spng^was pirated&#13;
F. Butler of Massachusetts, then a republican,&#13;
being interrupted in a speech&#13;
by Samuel B. Co* of New York, responded&#13;
"Shoo Fly, Don't Bother Me,"&#13;
and this gave the song a new lease of&#13;
Ufe on the stage.&#13;
But Cool Burgess didn't write it.&#13;
Of all beautiful legends, of all beautiful&#13;
verse, of all Btories told In all&#13;
the fife of the whole world, there^ 18&#13;
no tale *o wondrousJy beautiful as the&#13;
sto^y of' the Christ-child. Every man&#13;
and every women must recall those&#13;
long-ago,, faraway days when first the&#13;
story was {old to them, the story of&#13;
the little babe in the manger, of the&#13;
star of Bethlehem, with its rain ol&#13;
fire, the.shepherds, the wise men and&#13;
the doings of the ang&lt;&#13;
this memory come back other memories,&#13;
mental visions of those whom&#13;
we loved and who have passed away;&#13;
of all the sweet joys of childhood,&#13;
when the world was a playground instead&#13;
of a workshop; of fond dreams&#13;
^msi nbtlstsli i n g i i l a l s j i s i s Cbristft&#13;
tissv WM* we must&#13;
Joan** did rest by the&#13;
^ystf*. SfchrtSW *«* *eM«i hours for&#13;
reverie and tasting the sweets of generosity&#13;
and tender charity. '~~'&#13;
» * " * . ** *&#13;
4^^-.^--&#13;
$&#13;
By all manner of judgment and be-.&#13;
llefs we must concede that, so far as&#13;
doing good is concerned, all days&#13;
should be Christmas. To bestow&#13;
neckties on Dec. 2&amp;, and cross words&#13;
all the other ?64 days of the year is&#13;
to be like the common sinner who&#13;
cheats his neighbor during the week*&#13;
and prays most energetically on the&#13;
Sabbath.&#13;
It isnT the gift, it's the love and&#13;
thoughtfulness that prompt it. The&#13;
woman who gives because she feels&#13;
it**-duty is practicing deceit, and bettnfhig&#13;
herself. If one wishes not to&#13;
w a holiday remembrance let one&#13;
ast have the courage of one's&#13;
feelings and sentiments and be true&#13;
and honest about it. No human soul&#13;
wants a present that is given grudgingly.&#13;
According to our way of thinking \t&#13;
r-v&#13;
&lt; &amp; &gt;&#13;
1? !&amp;*&lt;-&#13;
is a beautiful thing that once a year,&#13;
*• ,oae may have the privilege of doing&#13;
hing nice for those to whom&#13;
devoted.&#13;
„„_ pleasure is so great that, on&#13;
^¾¾ one should decide to put a&#13;
little of the Christmas spirit into&#13;
daily existence.&#13;
Perhaps you donTJcnow it, but it is&#13;
{rue nevertkssea* ikat the more you&#13;
give ts* «ttr* ys*-wall have. There&#13;
k P.INsPfr- mm 'freat, wonderful&#13;
..^jjiPiMay f\om those&#13;
jl^if^lpaspuig and selfish, and&#13;
ps along all those whose&#13;
rts swing true.&#13;
There is such a keen pleasure in do*&#13;
!ng for others that it inspires one to&#13;
work, to greater endeavor and to better&#13;
purposes and higher ambitions.&#13;
What JaJfcere in other earthly things&#13;
lsfying?- .,-. -i&#13;
an; who *ay**retty clothes&#13;
sfactUm of looking A't'trtlr&#13;
ftfitetltif rir atwitter.Jhk thh&#13;
faction l i ^ : rttMwy, al" filtt&#13;
unreal as the visW she oenoM&#13;
woman whq ft^.h^ hoiJS'Mljt^b^a^&#13;
buVyou can't get any more neart&#13;
warmth out of a bank book than if it&#13;
were an. icicle.&#13;
Let me.aell yon something. It is&#13;
in her heart that you will find' genuine&#13;
contentment. No matter what&#13;
horrible anxieties she has suffered,&#13;
what dreadful troubles*ahe has dragged&#13;
wearily through, what pain and&#13;
cares have been hers, she is the one&#13;
who knows the calm, sweet comfort&#13;
4&amp;at—comes when she looks outJnttiL&#13;
a gray sky and realizes that she hai&#13;
done good to some one, that she has&#13;
brought a smile to Quivering lips, a&#13;
light to discouraged eyes, life to a&#13;
heart without hope. a&#13;
She doesn't have .to wait until&#13;
Christmas. Every day is that—and&#13;
more—to her.&#13;
There is a woman I know, and she&#13;
hnri nnthfoff at all—father, mother.&#13;
~ TtalcecT In" tWe cliurch, and serves to&#13;
trace the union between ancient civilization&#13;
and that of the Middle Ages.&#13;
The sacred dance of the pagans* is&#13;
preserved to a certain extent in Christian&#13;
rites. It is transformed to a series&#13;
of revolutions made to the sound&#13;
of the tambourine. St% Isadore, Archbishop&#13;
of Seville, born about A. D.&#13;
580, was intrusted by the Council of&#13;
Toledo with the revision of the liturgy&#13;
as it was then 'practiced in the&#13;
Roman church, fa which there was a&#13;
tambourine 'dance. The Council decided&#13;
to adopt the Isadorian liturgy&#13;
In all Spain, and it differed but' little&#13;
from that used in other countries at&#13;
that time. * v&#13;
brother or sfster or even a home. But&#13;
she had something else that lots of&#13;
people have not, and that is courage—&#13;
and she was only a little slip of a girl,&#13;
too. But she worked very hard for&#13;
quite a number of long years, and&#13;
now she has many things which she&#13;
has always wanted—little luxuries&#13;
that every Avoman loves—pretty&#13;
things in her home and pretty things&#13;
to wear.&#13;
The other day in a shopping crowd&#13;
she met another woman who, like&#13;
herself, had carved a little niche in&#13;
the world of hard work, and this other&#13;
woman said:&#13;
"Aren't you proud of yourself for&#13;
having accomplished something? 1&#13;
am.&#13;
The first woman was silent fox a&#13;
moment. Then she said:&#13;
"No, I am not proud of myself, I&#13;
can't be—yet I've done so^ery.it&#13;
compared with what I want to do, and&#13;
learned so little when I wished to&#13;
learn so much. But I am tremendously&#13;
happy that when I want to buy&#13;
some little comfort for somebody or&#13;
send a box of flowers to somebody or&#13;
give some little child a happiness it&#13;
is in my power to do* so. My years of&#13;
work have-been worth this mighty&#13;
sweet reward.&#13;
op, who wrote a great variety of popular&#13;
songs, some comic, some, sentimental,&#13;
some patriotic and some descriptive.&#13;
—"Shoo Fly*-was writtenduring the&#13;
civil war. Bishop waa in the Union&#13;
army and assigned to the command of&#13;
a company of colored soldiers. One&#13;
day he heard a colored soldier ask another&#13;
how he felt. »&#13;
The latter said: "lse feeUn* like a&#13;
and Bishop profited very mtie rrom us&#13;
aale.&#13;
Ft was first sung on the stage by&#13;
Dan Bryant-and had 225 representsthe&#13;
Congressional Heeord. Benjamin, tions during the season of Bryant's&#13;
minstrels on Broadway in 1869-7Q. On&#13;
Nov. 28, 1870, Bryant opened, his minstrel&#13;
house on West Twenty-third&#13;
street in what was afterward Koster&#13;
ft Bial'8, and it was sung there too.&#13;
The circumstances attending the&#13;
writing of "Shoo Fly" by T. Brigham&#13;
The reaLaathor was 3% Brigham Bish- Bishop are attested aa authentic igr&#13;
Col. T. Allston Brown.&#13;
The song "Shoo FJy" was more&#13;
properly a jingling accompaniment to&#13;
a dance, and in this dance Dan Bryant&#13;
made one of- his—greatest sue*&#13;
cesses, though the act occupied only&#13;
a few minutes in the second part of&#13;
the minstrel programme. Cool Burgess&#13;
appeared in it, according to stage&#13;
records, too, and most negro comedians&#13;
of the same period.&#13;
WALTJZ VA/fCE A/f EVOLVTIOJ*&#13;
Of all the millions who waltz, who&#13;
can tell how this famous dance originated?&#13;
The story is a curious one.&#13;
It is wrongly supposed that France&#13;
received the waltz from Germany toward&#13;
the close of the eighteenth century.&#13;
The waltz did -not emanate'in&#13;
ita-present form-from-thVbrain-of-al*** I t w a s&#13;
dancing master. Long before 1780,&#13;
the time It is first mentioned under&#13;
this name, it was displayed on the&#13;
village greens. The waltz jjtras firsts&#13;
This rite, celebrated before the&#13;
eighth century, when the Moors first&#13;
invaded Spain, was still celebrated by&#13;
the Christians in the seven churches&#13;
of 'Toledo, which the' Moors abandoned&#13;
after their capture of the city,&#13;
ter that time called-the-&#13;
Moorish rite. This was known and&#13;
employed In Provence and Italy. The&#13;
tambourine in use in this religious&#13;
dance' was called by St. Isadore&#13;
"molte de symphonle," and evide^tTy&#13;
corresponded., to the instrument which&#13;
in the ancient sacred dances accompanied&#13;
the flute, a sort of bagpipe invented&#13;
two centuries before Christ. As&#13;
the religious dance of the Middle&#13;
Ages fs allied to the ancient sacred&#13;
—tittle- kindnesses comer back lo pa ,.&#13;
full grown. }'•'-'" "r&#13;
The healthy heart can aiway* find1 •&#13;
some happiness.&#13;
It's never hard to believe in tha&#13;
gratitude/that gives.&#13;
_ *''&#13;
He who finds no cause for gratitude , "&#13;
probably causes none. ', ; " —-&#13;
• ' . &lt; • : ' • * .&#13;
-*l&#13;
Count your mercies and you discount&#13;
your miseries. _&#13;
He has little gratitude who seeta&#13;
only to gratify himself.&#13;
Many a man who Ir, only see-sawing&#13;
thinks he is sawing wood.&#13;
The best appreciation of God's bounty&#13;
is seen in our liberality.&#13;
The review of the past often gives.&#13;
a new view of the present. ^&#13;
Our best welfare_ has seldom Jbcen.&#13;
welcome aTTts first coming.&#13;
The man whose voice drowns t!ie&#13;
church sings small on the street.&#13;
The poorest kind of sermon is the&#13;
one filled With fear of the rich hearer.&#13;
The wisest man is he who knows&#13;
how big a fool he can be without trying.&#13;
Some people never feel good unless&#13;
they are making others feel the other&#13;
way.&#13;
It's a poor kind of Thanksgiving&#13;
tfiat only conflrms-us in our own-con^&#13;
c i t s .&#13;
It is the man who fears to soil his&#13;
jiands who will worry 1 pa at: about hi3&#13;
heart.&#13;
A man does not get to be one of the&#13;
good sheep by letting the wool fall&#13;
over his eyes.—Chicago Tribune.&#13;
Njaoc^-&#13;
this rell&#13;
through&#13;
In its y&#13;
altz is an evolution of&#13;
dance, having passed&#13;
y)changes before arriving&#13;
eW form. In the eleventh&#13;
centuryrivhen the Gregorian rite supplanted&#13;
the Moorish rite, the dance&#13;
disappeared from the church. It appeared&#13;
very quickly in society under&#13;
the name of "carole," a word derived&#13;
from the Latin "caroler."—New York a ta,1&gt; handsome Atchison girl; she&#13;
Of course you are familiar with the&#13;
man who says, thoughtfully: "Let's&#13;
see; what day Is this?"&#13;
The really onery man can't do work&#13;
unless he either has a lot of people&#13;
to watch him or an assistant.&#13;
Something terrible has happened to&#13;
Herald.&#13;
Prefer Old-Style Tobacco.&#13;
Thft Kuhgt.ltution__o_f manufactured&#13;
and cut tobacco for the time-honored&#13;
plug has not met with universal approval&#13;
in the British navy.&#13;
Opposition Strengthens Desire.&#13;
There Is no doubt that opposition&#13;
has made more undesirable marriages&#13;
than any form of encouragement.—&#13;
Kathleen Robinson. ....&#13;
has fallen in love with a man who&#13;
scarcely reaches her shoulder.&#13;
After a man spends two or three&#13;
wefeks on a jury, he ought f* be&#13;
pretty good lawyer. Indeed, he ought&#13;
to be a pretty good Judge.—Atchison&#13;
(Kas.) Globe.&#13;
Grand Prize St. Louis, t904&#13;
W w w v y / v w v y w w ^ v w v &gt; .&#13;
BEST TALMSNQ MACHINES MADE&#13;
Cylinder Machines 9T\SO to 91OO&#13;
kJisc Machines $12 to 065&#13;
Tkm OfapAopAojfo PogUHuhtoos c// kinds of&#13;
musto perfectly — band, orchestra, vEottn,&#13;
vooai and Imstnutiontai motos, quartettes,&#13;
ofOm tt is an ondiosm source of&#13;
C' tea**&#13;
0 rlglnfU&#13;
1 y oud&#13;
*&#13;
Won't you try to let a little more of&#13;
the holy spirit of the hour sink into&#13;
your soul, and won't you remember&#13;
that your stay and mine and your&#13;
neighbor's and everybody's is dreadfully&#13;
limited here in this pleasant&#13;
vale &lt;ft smiles and laughter? There's&#13;
no telling where any of us will be this&#13;
time next year, so live this Christmas&#13;
as happily and as generously as you&#13;
can./. -&#13;
There's something else, too. If you&#13;
[are.going to hefe aitttle child hang&#13;
btiVthTs &lt;tttt£ J upa tiny stocking, and if you are now&#13;
answering all sorts of questions about&#13;
SantM data and' chimneys and tela-&#13;
„ dean and Jf, on Christmas Bvei yon&#13;
go to a Tfttle bedside and Wa*1b*&lt;&#13;
— m e e t IRilet *ps «a alette ajatld,&#13;
iatl aatm your knee* :*m • ttoanT Ood?&#13;
Wr^ydi are ilssssdr •'-•''»&lt;- - - • ••»•&#13;
m mWtf dirtetnssl;^ you all&#13;
j*m* -»»j&#13;
.»Miu' * o i f&#13;
£ 3 rilllant&#13;
j[ ns»plrlng&#13;
-rV ttractlvo&#13;
m~*f ntortalnlng&#13;
VaV aptlvatlng&#13;
\J aitwearlns&#13;
.F^ aaonant&#13;
£ ) oHshtful&#13;
£^&gt; uporlor&#13;
•«aJ&#13;
niniu»&lt;niijM«ii»M&gt;inu»fwmnwii COLUMBIA&#13;
Gold Moulded Cylinder&#13;
COLUMBIA DISC RECORDS&#13;
7&gt;Inch, SO o«nt« oach; B3 pe&gt;r doxan&#13;
10-lncht $1 eaohf 410 per dozen •&amp;&#13;
Qrtancl Opara Rsaoordsa* (made In KMneH tSLmom B&#13;
only)$3«ach f£:&#13;
I CokmMa&#13;
Br 2 n Woodward Ave., DCTROIT, MICH;&#13;
9*ny&gt; i&#13;
m ^SA- . -%^3f&#13;
.'^.&#13;
"V&#13;
•• V m l *m -^i&#13;
mp*&#13;
^ss\&#13;
'.', SSm&#13;
\f .&#13;
• flJFW^^NfWWBW^R ^^^7 V***^P^V4W W&#13;
:**?&#13;
f. L. ANDREWS A CO. MO**itTOS$.&#13;
• i i i " - • • ' " • • i , ' i — • • ; ' ' \ '•• "&#13;
THUBSDAY, DEO. 21,1905.&#13;
The location of the next Army&#13;
and Navy football game will be&#13;
determined simply by the Emergency&#13;
Hospital accomodations&#13;
offered.&#13;
Russia is in sore distress, but&#13;
tbe nations of the earth will hopd&#13;
that out of it she will come redeemedand&#13;
petrified, and—aHgn&#13;
herself with the civilization of the&#13;
time.&#13;
W18TKA&amp;I0V&#13;
The pcofittDt %U Michigan foot bah&#13;
team are said to be about 125,000 for&#13;
the season.&#13;
There has been excellent skating&#13;
for the past two weeks and our young&#13;
people haye been enjoying i t —&#13;
«&#13;
Secretary Hitchcock has now&#13;
discovered that there *have been&#13;
extensive land frauds perpetrated&#13;
in Kansas. If Mr. Hitchcock&#13;
wants to entertain the public with&#13;
a novelty, he will discover some&#13;
section of the public domain&#13;
where the land frauds have not&#13;
been perpetrated.&#13;
Citizens of Brighton have to clean&#13;
the snow from tbeir sidewalks before&#13;
9 a. m. or pay for having the same&#13;
d:ne.&#13;
Mr. Rockefeller's income* is now&#13;
placed by a Wall street authority at&#13;
$10,000 per hour. Well, we all have&#13;
to use o«l.&#13;
A country town is a wonderful convenience&#13;
to residents of the country.&#13;
The better the town tbe ouore valuable&#13;
are tbe larras near it.&#13;
Anjj3por_gjr]Jn need jf a friendor&#13;
advice can*call on or write to Ensign&#13;
P. Mogenson, 89r&gt; Kort St. West,&#13;
Detroit Salvation Aroiy.&#13;
Thursday night last some one broke&#13;
into Uowlett Bros. Hardware store, M&#13;
E. Kohn's general sCbre and the meat&#13;
market at Gregory. But little booty&#13;
was secured and no clue.&#13;
H. % Briggt was under U» doctors&#13;
ears the ftrst, of tha weak&#13;
Do act forget tbe roeio-drama, T ri*8&#13;
at the opera bouse Dec 2*. » .-&#13;
Be member, tbe date of tbe New&#13;
YearV Dance at tbe Dexter Opera&#13;
Houie, Monday, Jan. 1, Fischer's&#13;
Orchestra.&#13;
. With the leaders of the State&#13;
Grange berating the new primary&#13;
election law at the Grand Rapids&#13;
meetittg^anoV 4he friends of-the—&#13;
administration apologizing for it&#13;
before Farmers' clubs in Lansing&#13;
the unbiased and not too well informed&#13;
! ay man would be justified&#13;
m concluding lHatTEe~lawis open&#13;
to hostile criticism.&#13;
A CARD.&#13;
I, the undersigned, do hereby agree&#13;
to refund tbe money on a 50 cent bottle&#13;
of Greene's Warranted Syrnp of&#13;
Tar if it failes ro cure your cougb or&#13;
cold. I also guarantee a 25-cent bottle&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money reunded.&#13;
tl9&#13;
Will B. Harrow.&#13;
Canadian Holiday Excursions via&#13;
Grand Trunk Rail way'Sy atom&#13;
Single fare for tbe round.trip to&#13;
certain Canadian points on all tiains&#13;
Dec. 14th, 15tb, 16th and 17th, 1902,&#13;
valid* returning to leave destination to&#13;
and including January 6tb,' 1906&#13;
For fares and further information call&#13;
on your 16carAgentt&gt;n write to GEO.&#13;
W. VAUX, A. G. P. &amp; T. A., Chicago,&#13;
Ilk&#13;
N. Knoohuizen of Fowlerville, county&#13;
commissioner of schools, was in this&#13;
vicinity the past week visiting schools.&#13;
He was the guest of F. L. Andrews&#13;
and family while in Pincknej.&#13;
This office turned&#13;
The secretari' a of the different societies&#13;
will please bear in mind that we&#13;
cannot publish tbe officers elected un&#13;
less they a.re handed .in. We would&#13;
like all societies represented.&#13;
Tbe L A. 8, of tbe bakin appointment&#13;
will meet at tbe borne ot Mr,&#13;
and Mrs. John Gardner, Thursday,&#13;
Dec. 28 for dinner, everybody invited.&#13;
Gentlemen are invited.also.&#13;
Tbe December number of the Loyal&#13;
Guard contained a balf tons picture&#13;
of R. C. Auld formerly rf this p'ace,&#13;
now! of Greater New York and chart*&#13;
r member of the first division of the&#13;
Loyal Guards organized there.&#13;
Glad to weloMoe our alaeut roen»-&#13;
l*ra torn* tro^f fubooJr, f r*4 ***&amp; R«*&#13;
Read and &lt;Hta Jo^woa: also Pr*d&#13;
Campbell,Abo bis been at work in&#13;
Flirvt WU1 Miller is home alter an&#13;
eitended vi»it norlb,&#13;
Wo extend tu ail our&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG.&#13;
out a co&#13;
invoices of job work for Chelsea parties&#13;
the past wt ek. Thanks, gentlemen,&#13;
do so some more. We will trv and&#13;
A Fearful rate&#13;
It is a tearful fate to have to endure&#13;
the terrible torture ol piles. "I can&#13;
truthfully sayV writes Harry Colson,&#13;
Masonville, la., "that for blind, bleeding,&#13;
itching and protruding . piles,&#13;
Bucklen's Arnica Salve is the best cure&#13;
made.'' Alsj best lor cots burns and&#13;
injuries. 25c at ?. A. Sigler's, druggist.&#13;
treat yon right both in quality of work&#13;
a~ndprice. _ "&#13;
Don't encourage that boy in his idea&#13;
that be has bad enough schooling before&#13;
be has finished a common high&#13;
Bchool course. The chances for tbe&#13;
plug man are disappearing, so give&#13;
him enough education to raise him&#13;
out of this class.&#13;
W. R. Owen ol Pontiac was In town&#13;
Friday and Saturday last, exhibiting&#13;
the Fcrde lighting plant. The Forde&#13;
is similiar to the other gasoline plants&#13;
in town but'is a pressure plant and&#13;
gives a beautiful light. Anyone thinking&#13;
of putting in a plant would do&#13;
well to correspond witb'Mr. Owen.&#13;
Two men were disputing over their&#13;
respective churches. Finally one of&#13;
them called a neighbor who was passing&#13;
by and asked bis opinion as to&#13;
which was-the only church in whic'a&#13;
to be saved. Well, said he, my s:n&#13;
and I have hauled wheat to the same&#13;
mill nigh unto forty years. , Now&#13;
The people of this vicinity were shocked&#13;
by the sad and sadden deaths of Bert&#13;
Stewart and his consio, Mias Nellie Ainsworth&#13;
of Madison, Wis. Miss Ainaworth&#13;
came to visit her aunt and cousin about&#13;
two weeks ago and during 'her brief stay&#13;
had made many friends by her pleasant&#13;
and genial manner. Wednesday she and&#13;
Bert were skating cnthe lake in front of&#13;
unTe~oTrkk"k°mei~ They had not been on the ice&#13;
veryioug when Mr. Cord, a near neighbor,&#13;
heard a cry for help. He 'and his wife&#13;
running to the lake saw a cap on the ice,&#13;
and knew some one wassHt=the™!&#13;
immediately slipved a boat to the spot and&#13;
with the help of other neighbors and&#13;
friends secured the bodies from their&#13;
watery grave. ' Everything possible was&#13;
done to restore life, bnt life was extinct.&#13;
Bert was an exemplary young man. refined&#13;
and cultured, careful and painstaking,&#13;
pure minded and kind hearted. Always&#13;
ready to do his part in the society to which&#13;
he belonged. Truely we cau say the&#13;
world is better for his having l.ved iu it.&#13;
His life resembling a "snow flake which&#13;
leaves a mark but not a stain." Bert&#13;
leaves a widowed mother with whom he&#13;
lived, and a brother in California. And&#13;
Miss A ins worth leaves a widowed mother&#13;
and a brother; who.have the sympathy of&#13;
this entire community in this sad bereavement.&#13;
The funeral of Bert Stewart was&#13;
largely attended a t the Horth Hamburg&#13;
friends' a&#13;
**|!errj Christmas, and «xprej» oor&#13;
sincere thanks to all v bo baye contributed&#13;
(b help our -work during the&#13;
past yew whether in money or its&#13;
value. Further donations are respect*&#13;
(ully tolioited, Pies.&#13;
Attsnal Meeting. . '"&#13;
The annual mutiny of the Liv iog&#13;
stou County, Mutual Fire Insur* nee&#13;
Co., for tbe election of officers and for&#13;
'he transaction of such other business&#13;
as may legally come before it, wilt be&#13;
the courtboiise^n the village of How,&#13;
ell, in said county, Tuesday the 2nd&#13;
day of January, 1906 a' 10:30. c'clock&#13;
in the forenoon.&#13;
Dated, Howell, Mich., Dec. 18tb, 1905.&#13;
W. S. Larkin. Secretary.&#13;
It is The Town Talk&#13;
Yes one telis the other how good it&#13;
is and thousands of people and physicians&#13;
baviag nsed Mexican Oorn Plaster,&#13;
saying it is the best corn and bun&#13;
ion cure on earth, Hke court plaster,&#13;
bandy to stick on. easy to wear, antiseptic,&#13;
painless—andbarral«a*~Send&#13;
your correct address and 10 cents and&#13;
by return Onoajl we , will send you a&#13;
large package of Mexican Core plaster.&#13;
YoulvT!T™bles8 the day you did. ~~&#13;
,v/&#13;
"v,1,::&#13;
- fittliab4e*fft. wanted for this city.&#13;
Add ress F. Bassler Co.,&#13;
Lansing, Mich.&#13;
417 Dorrance Place.&#13;
there are two roads that lead from&#13;
our place to the,mill— one's the valley&#13;
road, t'other takes over the bill. And&#13;
never yet, friends^has the miller asked&#13;
me which road I took, but he always&#13;
asks, is your wheat good?&#13;
PECULIAR FIRES.&#13;
I l i e • !W::'i*Ue-r Ift- W l i l c h M a n y Dlwasti';&#13;
»;.:-: lil.nzvs Oi-iRiiialo.&#13;
JJU-'I i.i a wosiiiivful proslmvi' of Li.v.;&#13;
There h.ivt&gt; IHH».: ";:ist:iiKTs :u ;&gt; &gt; toili&lt;&#13;
v., wlio.v 111'.' dust Of the i.i;i!l l.;iy.:&#13;
susii'^iiavl iM tliv- rc'ii' of ;&gt; clo-io rox;i&#13;
CApIo.uul \vi!!i triviiic i'ui'w. Dust e.c-&#13;
-plojiij'a - ::i' • ol-tva ]\\:&gt;v.t Oi.-i-umiuca-lq.&#13;
How: 411,1.1 ih'u-j mills. Tbe origin of&#13;
uiiiu.v Hr&lt;M In tiiilor shops i :ay IK;&#13;
trjioi'-ilto the so CM lie: 1 dry cleaning of&#13;
clotho.?. A rug dipped !u naphtha is&#13;
frequently used ' hi reiuoviug gveiise&#13;
Kpots from garments. The rug soaked&#13;
with inflammable fluid Is thrown Upou&#13;
the floor. Wheu the shop is closed up&#13;
and the •air is coaflued the naphtha&#13;
soaked material will of itself generate&#13;
flre. Bales of cotton placed iu the&#13;
hold of a ship are often tbe cause of&#13;
disastrous fires. Frequently a spark&#13;
from s- cigjsr finds a_ resting place lu a&#13;
cottob bale, svhere it smolders for&#13;
weeks. The, dark hall in tenement&#13;
.houses Is the indirect originator of&#13;
fires. Greasy matting or small heaps&#13;
Of paper lie about. A match not extinguished&#13;
or a cigarette stub is thrown&#13;
down, and a bla/.e results,—Fire and&#13;
Water.&#13;
In Mad Chase&#13;
Millions rush in mad chase after&#13;
health, from one extreme of faddism&#13;
to another, when, if they would only&#13;
•at good food and keen their bowels&#13;
rtfrajat with Dr. King's New Life&#13;
^Hfettarir troubles would all pass&#13;
away. , Prompt relief and ijutek x&gt;ore&#13;
fdTKw and atooeaan 4ronble. 26c at&#13;
F. A. 8iglar*# druf store; guaranteed&#13;
NOT1CB.&#13;
The tax roll of the Cownshipot U»iadiila&#13;
is now in my possession, am ready&#13;
to receive the taxes of said township at&#13;
the lollowinf places: Plainfield Dec.&#13;
19, 26 and Jan 2,1906; Gregory, D,&gt;c.&#13;
13, 20, 27 and every Wednesday until&#13;
Jan. 10, J906; DnadflU, Dec. 21, 28&#13;
John J. Donobue, Treas..&#13;
Unadilla.&#13;
The most pleasant, safest and best&#13;
church Saturday and his remains laid to&#13;
rest beside his father in the church cenietery.&#13;
The remains of Miss A ins worth&#13;
were taken to Madison for burial, by her&#13;
brother.&#13;
Kates to Western Points&#13;
If contemplating a trip west, .write&#13;
to P. R, Mofiier, T. P. A., Chicago&#13;
Great Western Railway,-115 Adams&#13;
St., Chicago, Ill.,stating how-rattny"in&#13;
tbe party and when you wish to go.&#13;
He will advise you promptly concerning&#13;
the Lest rates, Toutes and other&#13;
neces&amp;ary information. t 52&#13;
remedy ro use for coughs colds croujT&#13;
whooping cough, etc, is Kennedy's&#13;
Lavative Honey a id Tar. This remedy&#13;
expel; all cold from the system&#13;
by ac*intr as « cathartic on the bowels.&#13;
Bold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
Nothing will cure indigestion that&#13;
doesn't digest the food,itself, and give&#13;
the stomach rest. You can't expect&#13;
that a weak stomach will regaiu its&#13;
strength and get well when it is compelted&#13;
to do the full work that a sound&#13;
stomach should do. You wouldn't ex&#13;
pect a sick b o m to get well when it is&#13;
compelled to do a full day's work&#13;
every day of tbe week. Kodol Dys&#13;
pepsia Cure is a perfect dipestant and&#13;
digests the food regardless of the condition&#13;
of your stomach. Relieves indigestion,&#13;
belching, sour stomach and&#13;
all stomach disorders.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
Subscribe for the Pinckney Dispatch.&#13;
WELL!&#13;
DO YOU WANT A WELL?&#13;
Having bought out my partners interest iu&#13;
Well Business, at Chelsea, I will continue&#13;
the same at the old stand.&#13;
-,Ht&#13;
All calls answered on shor^twice. Phone 107&#13;
' i • •&#13;
We understand the business and solicit&#13;
your work.&#13;
«1. B. Stanton, Chelsea, Mich.&#13;
y. •'.• ^ • • ' • - • ^ • , . • •&#13;
Christmas and New Year Excursions&#13;
via Grand Trunk Railway System&#13;
One and one-third fare for the round&#13;
trip on alt trains December 23d, 24th,&#13;
25tl:, 30th, 3Ut, 1905 and January 1st,&#13;
1906. Return limit an^ date to and&#13;
including January 3d, 19(Mk&#13;
For further information consult )o&#13;
cal agent or write to GEO. W. VAUX,&#13;
A G. P. &amp; T. A., Chicago, III, t ^&#13;
Torture of a Preacher&#13;
Tbe story of the-torture of Rev. O.&#13;
D, Mcore, pastor of tbe Baptist church/&#13;
of Harperaville, N. Y., will interest&#13;
you. He says: "f suffered agonies,&#13;
because of a persbtent cougb, resulting&#13;
from the grip. I had to sleep sit&#13;
tinu up in.bed. I tried many remedies,&#13;
without relief, until I took Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery—TOT—consumption,&#13;
coughs an^-^dK"vvhTch en'irely cured&#13;
TfiyTotiizh and saved me Irom consumD&#13;
tion." A grand cure for diseased conditioi's&#13;
of the heart an i lungs. At F.&#13;
A. Siller's dniijurist; price 5 0 J and&#13;
| l 00, guiranfeftd. Trial bottle free.&#13;
THE ORIGINAL&#13;
LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP&#13;
Cures all Coughs and&#13;
a s s i s t s in expelling&#13;
Colds from the&#13;
System by&#13;
gently moving&#13;
the bowels.i&#13;
A certain cure&#13;
for croup and&#13;
whooping-cough&#13;
The Bet&#13;
OoverBlM-&#13;
— - 7 — • — • •, . • • • • f , - » - . — v - ' . - r . "&#13;
• * • ^ ' . - i ••• •*••&lt;*•*&#13;
has a very bad effect on ywr system.&#13;
It disorders your stomaA&#13;
and digestive apparatus, tabxtayouf&#13;
blood and causes cottstlpatloa, ytth&#13;
air Its fearful ills.&#13;
Thedford's&#13;
4r&#13;
•;w.&#13;
Is a bland tonic, ttver regulator, and&#13;
Wood purlner.&#13;
It gets rid of the poisons caused&#13;
by over-supply of bile, and quickly&#13;
cures bilious headaches, dltdness,&#13;
loss of appetite, nausea, &gt; indigestion,&#13;
constipation, malaria, chills,&#13;
and fever, Jaundice, nervousness,&#13;
Irritability, melancholia, and all&#13;
sickness due to disordered liver.&#13;
jttfc not a cathartic, but a gentle,&#13;
herbaVtiver medicine, which eases&#13;
withouUTritating.&#13;
X&#13;
Jrice 2Sc it »U BrnSgHa.&#13;
Subscribe for the Pinc^fiey Diepatoiit -&#13;
DeWIWs VSSt Solve&#13;
F o r PMoiy Burwti &lt;PP—•&#13;
STATE OP MICHIQAN-Courty of Livingston,&#13;
ss. At a session of the Probate Court for&#13;
the said county, teld at the probate office In the&#13;
village of Hpwell, on Thursday, the 7th day of&#13;
December in the year one thousand nine hundred&#13;
ft vs. Present, /rthui A, Montague, Judge of&#13;
Probate. In ttie mutter of theestatoof&#13;
SANUKL J cBois, dectaced&#13;
Now comes HoldenA. UtiBo|S,a4min!ttr«lor of&#13;
the eatute ol «ald deceased and represents&#13;
to thti coutt that he is ready to render&#13;
bis final account in said estate.&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered that Friday the 5th&#13;
day of Jtndary next at ten o'clock In the forenoon,&#13;
Ht said Probate Office, be assigned for the&#13;
beating oi said accc'unt.&#13;
\ And it Is further ordered th&gt;ta copy of this&#13;
oKer be cut)IIshed in the PINCKNEY DISPATCH, a&#13;
newtjuip' r printed and circulating in said county&#13;
threo successive wwec«e ss previous to said day of&#13;
heartn/X&#13;
A R ^ U R A. MONTAGUE,&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
STATE OP1 MICHIttW the pr«bate court, fci-'''&#13;
tbe cjunty of Livingston —At a session of&#13;
said courts held at the probata.offloe in the vlllag* '^%^S*&gt;&#13;
of Howell in said county on theN^iuth day ol Deo» .,^^-^&#13;
ember A. D. 1903. Prewut: Hon. Arthur A. MOLtagiig,&#13;
judge of Probate, in the ritatter of the&#13;
eitate of -*~~&#13;
BBRT GOODWIN, deceased&#13;
Desaie Whitehead having filed la said court her&#13;
petition praying that the administration of said&#13;
estate be granted to llaniet Porter, or to some&#13;
other suitable person.&#13;
it is ordered, that the filth' day of January, A.&#13;
D., 1006, at ten o'clock in the fore noon, at said probate&#13;
office, be and is hereby appointed for hearing&#13;
said-petition. It is further ordered, that public&#13;
no*ice thereof b£.glv?u by publication of a copy of&#13;
this order, for three successive weeks previous to&#13;
said day of h&lt; Bring, iu trie PISCKS BY DISPATCH, a&#13;
newspaper printed and circulated in said county.&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAGUE,&#13;
52 Judge of Probate.&#13;
^ t a t e of Michigan. Thirty-fifth Judicial&#13;
'Circuit, in Chancery buit pending in the&#13;
Circuit Court for ihe county of Livingston, in&#13;
' hancery, «t Howell. Mich., on the «th day of&#13;
November, 19M,&#13;
LILLY B. FO.XGER, complainant&#13;
V8&#13;
JIMKS FONOKK, defendent&#13;
In this canfe.it appealing irom aflidavit on-flie,&#13;
KENNEDYS LAXATIVE&#13;
HONEYHTTAR&#13;
nppcai&#13;
t.ilftmj&#13;
: Ills \vl&#13;
rawaas» AT t u I*M«A*MT •»&#13;
Oi 0*WITT ft OQ., OHIOAQO, U. •• A»&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
STATE OFiMICHIOAN, the probate court for&#13;
the county.of Livingston.' At a session of said&#13;
court, held at the probate office m tbe village of&#13;
Howell in said county, on tbe 18th day of, December,&#13;
A. D. lSf&amp;, ' Present: Hon. Arthur A.Montague,&#13;
judge of Probate! In the matter of the&#13;
estate of&#13;
CAROLINK M. VAN WINKLE, Deceased.&#13;
. Carey V. Van Winkle having filed in said court&#13;
Me petition prariog that a certain instrument in&#13;
writing, purporting to be the last will and testament&#13;
of aald decease*/now dn file in said court&#13;
be admitted »b probate, and that the adaitoiatration&#13;
of said estate be granted to William P. Van&#13;
Winkle or aome othet suitable person.&#13;
It la ordered, (bat the 12th day of January A.J).&#13;
190«, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at aaid probate&#13;
oflce, be and: is hereby appointed for hearing aaid&#13;
petition. ie la further order*!, that pabtto notice&#13;
tbe/eof beglvenbypabUoationofa copy ot tola&#13;
order, for thtee eioaewhre wteto ptevioaa to aaM&#13;
-aaj ot nearrac, Is tke- FoKnonrr DnvAtas, a.&#13;
new»]«^|«intedaft4clronUtedln ajU eoastj,&#13;
t &lt;4 &gt;:^*i**.Jiy4lwajP 'Ae*|ntaB^i|rMlp ' ^' ---^&#13;
t l ' Jndge of Probate,&#13;
tliat tbe defendant,/nmes Fonger, is a resident of&#13;
this state, but that (lis whereabouts are nnknown,&#13;
therefore, on motion of James A. Greene, Solicitor&#13;
for Compla-nnnt, it la rrdered that the defendant,&#13;
James Fouler,-e ter \,\e appeflrance in said cause&#13;
on or beiore tbr;&gt;e months irum the date of thia&#13;
or&lt;ler, snd l hi t within twenty &lt;l*iys from said date,&#13;
the fald t'oiuplaluantrause this order to be pub*&#13;
liahedin the PINCRNKY UISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
printed and pnblished in the county of Livingtton&#13;
at least once in each week, forsix successive weeks.&#13;
STRUMS F. 8JIITH&#13;
Circuit Judge.&#13;
JAMBS A. GKKRNK,&#13;
Solicitor for Complainant.&#13;
t3 Howell, Mich.&#13;
SO YEARS*&#13;
tXPSRICNOK&#13;
.(-JS&#13;
%&#13;
TRADC MAMRS;&#13;
DtSIONS&#13;
Anyone sending a sketchC aen^dv dmeeoerHipTttto n4 nea*y qInnviseknltyio nae e}ae rptarolnb aobolyr jo pinion -free whether an U—on;e f srterei.o Oml doeosntf isdgeenn oy for seen iu taken tbnmtta Mnnn 1^¾ Connnnleav&#13;
on&#13;
BPnantetneaavj&#13;
,k ewni Utbwroaneg*bjB Mwen,ntnn thSveb . wietf iflfk HnWkaiL&#13;
BMrr&#13;
* •«&#13;
" / ^&#13;
• •A Vft&#13;
:,-V4-.. "'%1&#13;
€pi&#13;
?$»&amp;*.&#13;
Co emplayiuent and tc.&#13;
relief from 'IV in tii.«:•-, i&#13;
" to its natural &lt;*•!:.&#13;
Alien'* Vita Hair Co:&#13;
a dye but in a natural r&lt;&#13;
compelling the secretin&#13;
• &gt;&#13;
raedaya, Jt fi» not sticky or area*y :f&gt;o $&#13;
isg/UtJJiitheac^lp. A B e ^ w T B t Y f&#13;
108. ffcOgf (i bottle,, iMi dnjggwl*J&#13;
ORIMELLA!&#13;
cl -&#13;
t h e aygienic skin food elyc* roey'f^hr.rss&#13;
ead beauty to toe i&gt;i". Tfcs:jov**f..t impcs-||'&#13;
faction* andimparities, 4A ycrfe*'. •&lt; rtr.tpie.v-jt'&#13;
ton. 00 oenta a t your d n i ^ i s ;..:,• &lt;,;•. si.--.il r&#13;
prepaid o a receipt of price.&#13;
COUCHSAJUPANCERI&#13;
Siguala, Stop Tbem With&#13;
'lIli'H.liil ",1 " r,n,wi, miii niui.ii.i jrm Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery&#13;
For ^ * y * * * * * *&#13;
MARK W. ALLEW &amp; 0 0 .&#13;
Detroiti Mich.&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
Pip—to what yoy eats'&#13;
THE CURE THArs $UR£ for all Diseatiee&#13;
of Throat and Lungs or Money&#13;
Back: FEEE TRIAL.&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
... how to eMstn pssenta, trade marts,&#13;
»Wr*i«aw.etd, m ALL COUNTRIttL&#13;
Buibuts tOrectvUk Wtuifagton tav*» tfsw,&#13;
momty ahdo/Un $A*fattuL&#13;
rSSBnt SRI&#13;
Write or sometous at&#13;
M t state awsst, osy. Usitst Its** tasas* M s ,&#13;
WAtMINOTOW. D. ft&#13;
GASNOW&#13;
•mm-.&#13;
$m-.&#13;
&gt;:M.&#13;
BLOOD DISEASES CURED&#13;
Drs. K. &amp; K. Established 2 5 Years.&#13;
47- NO NAMES USED WITHOUT&#13;
WRITTEN CONSENT.&#13;
W-,O.T.U.&#13;
Edit#d by the Piu«W»y W. C. T, U.&#13;
Someone remark* that the saloon&#13;
is the devil's way to man.&#13;
True. And the man's way to the&#13;
I (leTil.—Bishop Berry, \&#13;
Opium kills about 160,000 persons&#13;
annually in China. And it&#13;
is estimated that alcoholic liquors&#13;
kill every year 60,000 in America,&#13;
with a population about one-fifth&#13;
as large. v&#13;
; In the casuality wards of the&#13;
London general hospital, regularly&#13;
on Saturday night ninety per&#13;
cent of the injuries admitted are&#13;
directly due to drink, and ou the&#13;
last boxing day every admission&#13;
was Idue'to 3rink7 ~~-&#13;
Seven typical ten-year-dry towns&#13;
of Ohio wo visited last year have&#13;
in round numbers a census population&#13;
ot 12,000. They have nearly&#13;
or quite 9,000 church members.&#13;
Seven typical ten-year-wet towns&#13;
of Ohio of nearly corresponding&#13;
size we were in have 15,500 population&#13;
and less than 4,000 church&#13;
members.—American Issue.&#13;
ip4Lg&lt;»Uott « ojxm&#13;
Uf. *Lo4ot Dyipei*i«;Oore for indi*etfties&#13;
and dyspepsia will d© everything&#13;
for toe Btomacb tbU a» over-loaded or&#13;
am over worked stomach can nofc dp&#13;
for lttelt. Kodol digests what you&#13;
eat—gives the stomach a rett—relieve*&#13;
your- stomach, belching, heart-burn,&#13;
indigestion,-ate.&#13;
Sold by F. A Sigier, Druggist.&#13;
T e a L o i t s W o r s t * . - '&#13;
A correspondent wants to know. It&#13;
the telegraph companies -tfoold send&#13;
the following ten words, which, he&#13;
says, are the ten largest words tn the&#13;
language, at the regular rates for ten&#13;
words: Valetudinarianism, snbeonstitntionalist,&#13;
Incomprehensibility, philoprogenltlveness.&#13;
honorlflclbllltndlnity,&#13;
anthropophageuenarian, disproportionahleness,&#13;
veloetpedestrlnnlstlcal, tran-&#13;
BUbetantlaticmableneeB, proantltransubetantiationlst.&#13;
He ca« easily find out&#13;
by sending them.&#13;
Rongh skin and cracked hands are&#13;
not only cared by DeWitt's Witeb&#13;
, Hazel Salve, but an occasional application&#13;
keeps the skin soft and smooth.&#13;
Beat tor eczema, cots, boils, burns, etc.&#13;
The genuine DeWitt'd Witch Hazel&#13;
Salve affords immediate relief in ali&#13;
forms of blind, bleeding, itching and&#13;
protradinw piles.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigier, Druggist&#13;
A Companion ,i o/nA, idnedliigsphetfnusla blliet tlteo • tmraavnetytn fwt; hoco mtrepyaenL- ¥A•nt.i.-F*a&amp;in/ %PU£1 *. CBoym ftohreitre rs*oo'-th-Dta*n;J tMat ? falnude ncseto mupaocnh , ththee yn erpvreesv eontf tdhlaew olnreaale*, side stomach and heod*ohe Car-*Jifc»,&#13;
ft&#13;
Dr. Miles'&#13;
Anti-Pain Pills. acurer e paerlfle cktliyn dsh aormf ple*sisn aqnudio kd oa nndot s Aorff-w- ftehcet nyeorvue *i nan adn ycu wrea yp,a einx.c ept to eootft* „M'i1le_s'a mA n^tiP-Pfeaaisne d PUtIos. reTcohmeym ennodt D on*lvy cmuyr edh eaa/d c hsrhoonwics haea ddiascphoes,i tibonu,t tsoin caec,h |er, tohneem T atbol eBtu sfftcorperss ito.n Itr gaiivne* , haunnddr eddesr idvet amffuocrhd ."s atisfaction fMrom. H t.h Ce HreAliBefT UthfteTy&#13;
_TThrea vfierlsi»t« pr acSkaalegsem waniU. b«ewne f*it^, w. th2e3 ddrousgegs,i s3t 6w cielln trse. tuKrne vyeoru sro lmd oinne byu. lk.&#13;
St. IXJUIS. Xo. t, if not.&#13;
W e a l t h o f W o r s t .&#13;
"He talks very interestingly,M said&#13;
one girl. ^ ^ - ^&#13;
"Xes." replied the__other+ "but in aU&#13;
the stories I ever read the man whoi&#13;
used lovely language was always poor |&#13;
and strnggiiag. It doesn't seem a good4&#13;
sign to me."—Washington Star.&#13;
* £ i&#13;
*&#13;
• o r e s h e e l e d — " I t o o k y o u r N e w&#13;
M e t h o d T r e a t m e n t f o r a s e r i o u s&#13;
b l o o d d i s e a s e w i t h w h i c h I h a d&#13;
b e e n afflicted f o r t w e l v e y e a r s .&#13;
I h a d c o n s u l t e d a s c o r e o f p h y -&#13;
s i c i a n s , t a k e n a l l k i n d s o f . b l o o d&#13;
BiB«icrne, v i s i t e r i ^ o t - &amp;p*4«#s&#13;
a n d o t h e r m i n e r a l w a t e r r e -&#13;
a o r t e v - b u t - o n l y -fifet t e m p o r a r y&#13;
relief. T h e y w o u l d h e l p m e f o r&#13;
a t i m e , b u t a f t e r d i s c o n t i n u i n g&#13;
t h e m e d i c i n e s t h e s y m p t o m s&#13;
w o u l d b r e a k o u t a g a i n — r u n n i n g&#13;
B e f o r e T r e a t m e n t , s o r e s , b l o t c h e s , r h e u m a t i c pains, A f t e r T r e a t m e n t .&#13;
l o o s e n e s s o f t h e hair, s w e l l i n g s&#13;
of t h e g l a n d s , p a l m s o f t h e h a n d s s c a l i n g , I t c h i n e s s o f t h e « k l n , d y s p e p -&#13;
t i c s t o m a c h , e t c . I h a d g i v e n u p i n d e s p a i r w h e n a f r i e n d a d v i s e d m e&#13;
t o c o n s u l t y o u , a s y o u h a d c u r e d h i m o f a s i m i l a r d i s e a s e 8 y e a r s a g o .&#13;
I h a d n o nope, b u t t o o k h i s a d v i c e . I n t h r e e w e e k s ' t i m e t h e s o r e s&#13;
c o m m e n c e d t o h e a l u p a n d I b e c a m e e n c o u r a g e d . I c o n t i n u e d t h e N e w&#13;
M e t h o d T r e a t m e n t f o r four m o n t h s a n d a t t h e e n d of t h a t t i m e e v e r y&#13;
s y m p t o m h a d d i s a p p e a r e d I w a s c u r e d 7 y e a r s a g o a n d . n o s i g n s of a n y&#13;
d i s e a s e s i n c e . My b o y , t h r e e y e a r s o l d , i s s o u n d a n d h e a l t h y . I c e r -&#13;
t a i n l y c a n r e c o m m e n d y o u r t r e a t m e n t w i t h o i l m y h e a r t . Y o u c a n&#13;
r e f e r a n y p e r s o n t o m e p r i v a t e l y , b u t y o u c a n u s e t h i s t e s t i m o n i a l&#13;
aa y o u w i s h . " -. W . H. S.&#13;
W e t r e a t N e r v o a a D e b i l i t y , V a r i c o c e l e , Stricture, V l t n l W e a k n e s s ,&#13;
B l o o d a n d S k i n d i s e a s e s , U r i n a r y , B l a d d e r a n d K i d n e y c o m p l a i n t s o f&#13;
m e n a n d w o m e n .&#13;
D C A n C D ^TQ y ° u a v i c t i m ? H a v e y o u l o s t h o p e ? A r e y o u i n t e n d -&#13;
n X H t l L l l i n g . t o m a r r y ? H a s y o u r b l o o d b e e n d i s e a s e d ? H a v e y o u&#13;
a n y w e a k n e s s ? Our N e w M e t h o d T r e a t m e n t w i l l c u r e y o u . W h a t i t&#13;
h a s d o n e f o r o t h e r s i t w i l l d o f o r y o u . CONSULTATION F R E E . N o&#13;
m a t t e r w h o h a s t r e a t e d y o u , w r i t e f o r a n h o n e s t o p i n i o n F r e e o f&#13;
C h a r g e . C h a r g e s r e a s o n a b l e . B O O K S F R E E — " T h e G o l d e n Monitor"&#13;
( i l l u s t r a t e d ) , o n D i s e a s e s o f M e n . S e a l e d B o o k o n " D i s e a s e s o f&#13;
Furious Fighting&#13;
^rVr^even-rear&amp;^-writ&#13;
Hoffman, of Harper, Wash., "I had a&#13;
bitter battle, with chronic stomach&#13;
and liver trouble, but at last I won,&#13;
irdTcrjfed ray dnre^sesTHby toe use of&#13;
JUectricBitters. t unhesitatingly:&#13;
recommend them to all, and don't intend&#13;
in the future to ha without them&#13;
in the house. Tbey are certainly a&#13;
wonderful medicine, to have cured&#13;
such a bad case ag mine." Sold under&#13;
guarantee to do the same for you, by&#13;
7. A. Sigier druRRist, at 50c a bottle.&#13;
Try them today.&#13;
W o m e n " Free.&#13;
NO N A M E&#13;
c o n f i d e n t i a l . &lt;&#13;
I U S E D W I T H O U T W R I T T E N C O N S E N T ,&#13;
meat Ion list «ri«i~c&lt;Hrt o f t r e a t m e n t F R E E . — E v e r y t h i n g&#13;
i u n e s u o n a n d c o s t t r e a t m e n " T K B T D M KENNEDY* KERGAN Cor. M i c h i g a n A v e . and S h e l b y St.. Detroit, Mich.&#13;
W E D I G I N E&#13;
,'•• FBEK-&#13;
• V .&#13;
F O K MEN OTVX.&#13;
One month's Supply absolutely FREE to prove and to show you the skill of&#13;
the physicians of this&#13;
GREAT mSTITUTE&#13;
T h i s i s n o C. O. D . s c h e m e . Y o u arc under n o obligation t o continue t h e&#13;
t r e a t m e n t . W e leave it all t o y o u . W e k n o w t h a t t h e results will b e so satisfactory&#13;
*hat y o a Will b e g l a d t o p a y . t h e email c h a r g e wu a s k after t h e .first xnocth.&#13;
HONEST OFFER&#13;
to men only» men who have tried other doctors without .success, men who have&#13;
Violated the laws of nature, men who have tried without success to regain the health&#13;
and vigor so foolishly wasted and recklesslv squandered. We* are willing to&#13;
prove at our expense that we can benefit and cure you by sending you&#13;
One I\Xontlx's Treatment F r e e&#13;
BOSTON MEDICAL INSTITUTE. 158 Lake Street CHICAGO&#13;
The dreaded Wash D a y - n o more. Washing made easy by THE l-V WASHING TABLETS Will not injure the finest fabrics.&#13;
They are strictly free from acids&#13;
Of any kind.&#13;
Theydctheworkwithoutrubbing.&#13;
They make the clothes white.&#13;
They can be used in hard water.&#13;
They save time and the hard&#13;
work on washday. They are indis&gt;&#13;
pensible for CouneipaneaLLace Curtains&#13;
and Trimmings. They will&#13;
remove stains from Table Xipen&#13;
with absolutely n o rubbing. They&#13;
are economical to use, becauao&#13;
clothes are more worn ont on the&#13;
washboard than by actual wear.&#13;
They are sold on their merits.&#13;
\ vour Wrappers. W e offer a fine line ofpremiums. For sale by your grocer, price S o . WASHIN6T ABLET CO., (no. Offloet251 N.front St., Philadelphia, Peno.&#13;
J^ P o s t a l A n t i q u i t y .&#13;
t discussion of certain postal&#13;
grievances lii the British house of commons&#13;
has recalled the history of the&#13;
post. Fosts are mentioned In Scripture.&#13;
Jn Job lx, 25, it Is written, "My&#13;
days are swifter than a post," and&#13;
again in the book of Esther, chapter&#13;
vIIT, lefteir:^ Avcre sent "by posts on&#13;
horseback." The word, of course, here&#13;
mean i runnor. To Cyrus has been&#13;
ascribed the ••tablishnient of systematic&#13;
couriers and post horses&#13;
throughout Persia, and Augustus is&#13;
credito.l "with introducing post chaises&#13;
at Rome. It was in the reign of James&#13;
I. that a postitl system was introduced&#13;
Into England.&#13;
The mission of "Early Risers" is to&#13;
clear the way and give Nature lull&#13;
sway. These famous little pills rid&#13;
the stomach and bowels of all putrid&#13;
rnatNSiv thus removing the causes 01&#13;
headache, constipation, sallow com;&#13;
plexion, etc. DeWitt's Little Early&#13;
liisers never gripe or sicken. A safe,&#13;
pleasant, perfect pi*.l.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigier, Druggist&#13;
the&#13;
• i . •&#13;
01.&#13;
1:::.:1..: "i . &gt; U HUN* .F.prgTH."&#13;
-V' ;&gt;:..• • i . -.ni ; maki» list' of&#13;
; \ : ' , j c \ ; i (.'.'.it.Vohnj 411010:.1 hi&#13;
l;r».&gt; v, Iioii i v . ' o i r i n ^ . t o :;n (.-:-:-&#13;
I,- lu-t d a y . SiK-k a n c:;iy"i-&#13;
.' .-.v;n a liMlo i':ir foii-hod a n d&#13;
1 •&lt;:• .i:!:;i; . iiiK tliero a i v m a n y&#13;
IO'-.IOI w l i o i v Sv-!o;itists h a v e&#13;
\\u's boat.&#13;
She finrbntu giapatch.&#13;
PCSLISHSD B V S S T TH0BSDAY MOaHlHe BY&#13;
FRANKL ANDREWS &amp;C3.&#13;
T H E ORIGINAL LAXATIVE COUGH 8VRUF&#13;
KEHHEDY'S LAXATIVE HOHEY-TAR&#13;
mi Ctofer blossom tod Honey ftes oa Evsry Bsntt*&#13;
E0ITOR8 AHO PROPRIETOR*.&#13;
Sabscriptioa Price $1 la Advance.&#13;
Snterel at tae PoatoQiceat P i a ^ a e y , Michi^at&#13;
aa secoad-class matter&#13;
A Jverttalag rates mads known oa application.&#13;
BttBtaes»€arts, $4.00 per year.&#13;
reaib and inaxriake notices published free.&#13;
Announcements of entertainments may be pale&#13;
for, if desired, by ^rjaentingthe'office with tick&#13;
ets of admission. In case tickets are not t-rjasrl t&#13;
to the office,regular rates willbe c h a m d ,&#13;
All matter in localnotlce colomn wll 1 be «h^i (,d&#13;
•d at5 cents per line orfraction thereof, for each&#13;
insertion, w hereno time is specified, all noticed&#13;
will be Inserted .until ordered discontinued, anc&#13;
• i l l fee charged for accordingly. e f * A l l changer&#13;
of advertisements MUST reach this office as oarlj&#13;
asTUSBDAT morning t o insure aninsertiontb^&#13;
same week. --&#13;
JOS PSIJVIZJVG/&#13;
In all its branches, s specialty. We hare all kinoB&#13;
and the latest styles of Type, etc., which enablts&#13;
us to execute all kinds of work, such as Book*,&#13;
Pamplets,Posters, Programmes, BilJ, Head*.Note&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc., in&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices w&#13;
low as good work can be aone.&#13;
ALL BILLSPATASLB KIH8T O* SVKBY MOUTH.&#13;
Railroad Guide&#13;
pRP&amp;|VtAROUECTE&#13;
Xaa. e f f e c t ^ . p r . 3 0 , 1 9 0 6 7&#13;
Trains leave S o u t h L y o n a s f o l l o w s :&#13;
F o r Detroit and E a s t ,&#13;
10:48 a. m., 2:19 p . m.' 8;58 p . m .&#13;
F o r Grand R a p i d s , N o r t h a n d W e s t ,&#13;
9:26 a. m . , 2 :19 p . m . , 6 : l 8 p . ja.&#13;
F o r Saginaw and B a y City,&#13;
10:48 a . m . , 2:19 p.T ni., 8:58 p . n i .&#13;
•For Toledo and S o u t h ,&#13;
10:43 a . m., 2:19 p . m . ,&#13;
FaANKBiT, H. F.MOELLER,&#13;
Agent, South Lron. O. P. A., Detroit.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBSSIOBNT W. H. Placeway&#13;
Tacrrsss Ruben Finch, James Kocne,&#13;
Will Keaned/ Sr , Altred Monks,&#13;
t\-i&gt;. Johnson, Al. Jioche.&#13;
CLsaK Ko*a Kead&#13;
TBKASOBKR r".G. Jackson .&#13;
Aassatou D. W.Murta&#13;
STBEBTCOMMISS'IONSE Alfred Monks&#13;
UiUXTuorncsB Dr.H. r. si«lei&#13;
ATTOUMSX ' L. E. Eowlett -&#13;
UABSUALL *• Bronan&#13;
C H U R C H E S .&#13;
I J I S T H U I M &amp; T KPISOOPAL UUUitCH.&#13;
i l l Kev. K. A.Emerick pjsior. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning ai W:3o, and every Sanday&#13;
evening at ?:^&gt; o'clock. Grayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. SundSy school at ciose of morning&#13;
service. MibsMASY VANFLSKT, &amp;upt.&#13;
/^ONUftttCiAl'iO^AL UilUitCtl.&#13;
iL' " Kev. U.W. Mylue pastor. Service ever&gt;&#13;
Sunday morutag i t iu:i0 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:DC o'clock. Prayer meeting Thurs&#13;
day eveninge. ouniay school at close of morn&#13;
ln«aervice. Kev. K. U. Crate, Supt,, Mocco&#13;
Teeple Sec. i&#13;
S~ T . AIAKV'S CATHOLIC OUURCH.&#13;
Kev.' .M. J. Co miner lord, l i e tor. Services&#13;
Avery Sunday. Low mass at 7:30o'clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9;X0a. m. Cstechism&#13;
"t3:00p. m.t vespersanabenedictionat7:au p.ro&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
Grand Trunk Rail war Srstem.&#13;
East Bound from Ficciney&#13;
No-28 Passenger Ex. Sunday, *):28A.M.&#13;
No. 30 Passenger Ex. Sunday, 4:55 P. M.&#13;
West Bonrd from Pit (knfy&#13;
No. 27 Ps*senger Ex. Sunday, 10:01 A. M.&#13;
•Jtto. 29v Paest n ger E x,Sunday, —S;44 P. Mr&#13;
W. H.Clark, Agent,&#13;
The A. O. H. Society of this place, meets ever j&#13;
third Sunday intne Fr. Mattuew Hall.&#13;
John Tttomey and M. T. Kelly. Couuty Delegate*.&#13;
T. U. iiie^ts the first Friday of each&#13;
J. month at -J:3L p, m, at tue Louie of l&gt;r. u . *'.&#13;
a o u ; ¾:. 11,v -tHH&gt;kinl oiry- by tlie&#13;
, I n 1S87 ' w h e n H o r s e h e l Was iu S o u t h ^ l e n K y e r j .o n e - interested in temperance i s&#13;
),Afrio:i h o cool;oil ogrj?s b y e x p o s u r e t o \ coadrally invited. Mrs. Leal Siller, Pres; Mr».&#13;
, tlio h e a t o f t h e s u n "until t h e y w e r e j * » » i&gt;"rtee,Secretary.&#13;
powdery-to the-center."" Sir J. C. lioss '&#13;
made a similar experiment in New&#13;
Zealand.&#13;
A TRINITY OF TREASURES&#13;
Triple Extract of Violet. French Rosea Concentrate,&#13;
Imperial Hair Tonte. Thre« High Grad*» Ea&lt;t*ntialsy K&gt; tn* Touet at cne piike ot one oi them alone, •»»&#13;
SUM.&#13;
We manttfacture and sell these goods direct to&#13;
Hie contKuner, thus cutting oot the profits o i the&#13;
. REGULAR RITAIL PRIOK .&#13;
Triple Violet Extract • . . .50&#13;
French Roeea Concentrate • • 1.00&#13;
* i M ^ 3 g g ^ " &lt; j ^ t « t o O e t i a i t &lt; r . )&#13;
I s ^ s v M I w r ToaoGt » • *. * • .50&#13;
m—&#13;
Our M M f 6 r t h * T s 1 r * * H M I I DOLLAR. .&#13;
Aftavtaf t o Y O U o f i o o P w C s o t la'nt It Worth WaUeT&#13;
W t t ^ ^ ^ ^ d e s ^ r ^ r v s l i t s t s a a t e s i t l s a s s s r j i r l s i ,&#13;
Croup, coughs, colds, whooping&#13;
coutfh, etc., bave no terrors for children&#13;
oi* adults who evacuate the bowels&#13;
with Kennedy'vS Laxativa Honey and&#13;
Tar. Tbia remedy expels all cold from&#13;
the system and strengthens the throat,&#13;
[.lungs and bronchial tubes. The original&#13;
laxative couph syrup and liquid&#13;
cold cur**.&#13;
Sold by P., A. Sigier, Druggist.&#13;
I^ne C. T. A. and a. bocie^y 0; this place, urnc&#13;
. eveijr third Satoroay evening in the ft. Aiat&#13;
thew Hail. John Donohue, Fresitient,&#13;
—; • KNltiUTSOF MACCABEEfe.&#13;
Meetevery Friday evening on or before fnL&#13;
01 "the moon at their hall in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited-&#13;
L. E. SMITH, Sir &amp;,nlsbt Commands&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No.7';, ? 4. A. M. Kegulsi&#13;
Communication Tuesdav evening, on or beiort&#13;
the full ot the moon. Kirk Vanwinkle. VY. N&#13;
0 ROEil OF EASTERN STAR ineoteeach tuoutl&#13;
the Friday e?tnin^ following the regular F&#13;
Jt A. M. meeting, MRS. EMMA CUINX , W, M.&#13;
RED CHIEF&#13;
Corn Shelter. Patented.&#13;
Ciamps on Barrel,&#13;
as easily as on Box.&#13;
Adjusts itself to&#13;
any size ear.&#13;
Closed Hopper&#13;
Making it Impossible&#13;
for Operator&#13;
to Pinch Hand.&#13;
Is guaranteed to do as good if o^t&#13;
better work than any sheller on the&#13;
market. T h r o w s c o b s o u t s i d e e v t r y&#13;
• t i m e . Cold rolled s t e e l axle. Requires&#13;
no wrench. Shells popcorn splendidly*&#13;
b y tightening t e n s i o n o n spring. All&#13;
repairs furnished free of charge. Even.*&#13;
farmer should h a v e o n e . Eor sale b y&#13;
hardware and i m p l e m e n t dealers.&#13;
"' M A N X F A C T I / R E D VA'&#13;
BRINLY-HAR0Y CO., Incorporated,&#13;
-UttfsvHteT-Ky., U. S. A.&#13;
aBsBaasi^s«BWs^aw^samBiaiBVaas^n&gt;sBvssF«s^**i&#13;
&lt;»**&#13;
I v i&#13;
3¾¾ 'J&#13;
1 _ ^ ^ ~ J IIMENT&#13;
T h e W o r d «*Plpate.»»&#13;
"Pirate" Is n G^*ook wortl coming&#13;
directly «Croni "peimtes,*' which menns,&#13;
etymologically, "one who tries" or "attempts"—&#13;
In other -words, an adventurer.&#13;
"Adventurer," too, Is a word&#13;
that has lost respectability, but not to&#13;
far. as "pirate,*! .which aoqnJred Its&#13;
special sense at least 2,000 years ago.&#13;
"Peirates" and the Latin -plrata" are&#13;
, knovm only In this sense. -Gteero dettnea&#13;
the pirate aa- lU* »ommoo enemy&#13;
A , i . E K O F MODERN WOODMEN Meot th&#13;
Vffiret Tuursday evening of each Month in ib„&#13;
\iuccabee balk. C. L, Grimes V. C.&#13;
— • ' 1 — ' ~ — — — — ~ •'• - —&#13;
f AD1ES OF THE MACCABEES. Mest every Is&#13;
LJ and 3rd Saturday of each couth at 2:30 p m. a&#13;
K7o, T. M. hall. Visiting sisters cordially in&#13;
vi ted, Li LA CoHiWAY, Lady Com.&#13;
K NIGHTS or THti LOYAL GUARD&#13;
, F. L, Andrews P. X,&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. P. S K l t R M* 0. 0 . L, SIQLM M. 0&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGIER, &gt;&#13;
Pnystotea*aa«0«rf«ua*. Ail calls plots pi ly&#13;
aPUlase^kdasedyt,o day armlgai. Oflk«{ en. Mala stJ es&#13;
o a i y nnrt of the b&lt;xly. If yon suffer from&#13;
s a V of ihe abovi ilia, we say in all sincerity&#13;
J&lt;: -eour \vorth\ A N T I - P A I N SOLID LINRi..;.::\!'&#13;
&gt;'. iV.irirlal.&#13;
k AXn-PAiN SOLID LIlflMEST comes&#13;
H i n a aSLit box ia paste form, different from&#13;
^joijier liiiiments, " Y e s , indeed," it i s too&#13;
predou3 to lose by breakage or spilHns;.&#13;
All you have to do is to apply a little of&#13;
1 tiiis liniment to the effected parts to relieve&#13;
I t"ts p*iu instantly, whiuh eventually performs&#13;
a permanent cure.&#13;
Wo guarantee ANTI-PAIN SOLID LIN-,&#13;
IMENT todo all wo claim for it, or money&#13;
t refunded.&#13;
Send for a b o s to-day and have Hon hand&#13;
in case of emenreaey, yon wiU be mote&#13;
j than pleased witE the result. Price 35 Oents* For ssJe by onratentswyeo may order&#13;
' " 'peMo&#13;
»day a&#13;
Miea.&#13;
I dlreet ftoa a s . Sent post'&#13;
price. Agent* wanted vn&#13;
tot terms.&#13;
on receipt e# I&#13;
wan' everywhsre, wrjtel&#13;
as.&#13;
HENRY MEL80H4 CO., Eckvoll, Mlae.&#13;
• * : •v. *&#13;
;f«*&#13;
Misksse miii&#13;
•••V*3»'» tr"«»:««f* :£^ mmWQF^yW®&#13;
tf» : ~ * w •---..-^-^--,^:'!•'••&#13;
V i T&#13;
^&#13;
'If ",&lt;(.'."Vj:^-&#13;
1-. !.'&#13;
r1' '&#13;
c&amp;*aanm&gt; /asvjrjsBazr&lt;rjazsy&#13;
CHAPTER n.-~^rHtn«od. &gt;i&#13;
Bending a keen look upon the prisoner,&#13;
the planter addressed., him.&#13;
"I presume there is little need of my&#13;
telling you, my man that you are in a&#13;
.fair way of stretching hemp. Caught&#13;
within our lines, there is but one conclusion&#13;
to be drawn—that is, you are&#13;
a Federal spy. Of course you will&#13;
deny thte, but it matters little. We&#13;
are justified in acting upon this supposition.&#13;
These are times for action,&#13;
and"xrvr pottcy tr^to Tediice^Sherman's j "Well, cry H e a r sir, you must con&#13;
•?&#13;
army at every chance,&#13;
"Under these circumstances I might&#13;
a s well prepare to meet my fate," renarked&#13;
John, coolly.&#13;
"Wuatr i r e ^otr^anxIdTnr^^dler*&#13;
ejaculated the planter, with considerable&#13;
surprise.&#13;
"Not at aH. On the contrary, I have&#13;
every reason for desiring to live, but&#13;
as a soldier I long ago made up my&#13;
mind to face the worst manfully when&#13;
it came."&#13;
"But there is a peculiar stigma attached&#13;
to the fate of a spy—unmerited,&#13;
I adroit. It has always been so. To&#13;
fall in battle is honorable—to be hung&#13;
a disgrace."&#13;
"Granted—yet not being a spy I&#13;
take Httle interest in the controversy.&#13;
You have not come here to engage in&#13;
an argument, squire."&#13;
"Ah! you know me?"&#13;
"That is the penalty for being a&#13;
prominent man, sir. Every one has&#13;
heard of Squire Granger and his lovely&#13;
home."&#13;
agjne smy distress at the prospect to&#13;
come. What is your name?"&#13;
"John Emmett," replied the prisoner,&#13;
which was true enough a s far as it&#13;
went.&#13;
"Then listen to me. I am about to&#13;
s i v e you one chance for your life.&#13;
Refuse ii^Jf you like, but the penalty&#13;
it death."&#13;
~Go on—I am ready to hear you,"&#13;
said Emmett, calmly.&#13;
One glance at that determined face&#13;
told him Squire Granger meant aj! he&#13;
gald, and that a refusal to accept the&#13;
contract would, be the signal for a&#13;
hasty execution.&#13;
"What is your daughter's name?''&#13;
"It does not matter—stilt, you Would&#13;
have to know—it is Mollie Granger."&#13;
"She cannot be twenty, as yet."&#13;
"Just eighteen. Allow mo to add&#13;
you are showing a curiosity that is&#13;
unpleasant to me."&#13;
fess It would only be natural for a&#13;
gentleman to ask the name of the&#13;
lady who was to be his wife."&#13;
the situation. TJhder~ordinary clrcum&#13;
stances I would as soon see my child&#13;
dead as the wife of a Yankee. To&#13;
save Lyndhurst we are ready to do&#13;
even this. If you consent I have a&#13;
solemn contract here which you must&#13;
sign."&#13;
"A contract—kindly tell me Its&#13;
nature. It may put a different face&#13;
on the matter"&#13;
"It is simply an agreement by means&#13;
Mollie as your wife—in fact, to be a&#13;
stranger to her^ unless she of her own&#13;
rfree will decides otherwise."&#13;
"And you tell me she has consented&#13;
to this?"&#13;
"I have said so. Expect nothing but&#13;
coldness from her. She is a Georgia&#13;
girl and bitterly opposed to all Northern&#13;
soldiers. Make up. your mind that&#13;
you will never see her after this night.&#13;
It has been my= pride.You can im^ AHowthis=8trenge-romance t o - t e d e&#13;
out of your mind. Lyndhurst will be&#13;
savecTand in twelve months the courts&#13;
will set you both free again. This&#13;
is a marriage of business and convenience—&#13;
no dancing, no blushing&#13;
bride, no happy hearts. The growl of&#13;
Sherman's heavy guns is the only&#13;
music, and that sad enough to Southern&#13;
hearts. Decide in five minutes&#13;
whether you care to live'a Benedict or&#13;
die a bachelor."&#13;
MMS^M&#13;
thing to do with this departure from *&#13;
his usual nonchalance, or it may be,&#13;
t h e presence of MoHte Granger arouy"&#13;
ed a peculiar eensatioh within h l i&#13;
bachelor/heart.&#13;
The girl was, as oold as ice, and&#13;
beyond one contemptuous look, never&#13;
vouchsafed him a glance.&#13;
John found himself smiling at tfct&#13;
ridiculous nature of his position. U f a&#13;
Is sweet to nearly every human being,&#13;
and few men would have refused to&#13;
accent it, even though the inevitable&#13;
result was a sacrifice of personal&#13;
liberty.&#13;
She stood beside him while the&#13;
parson went through the service .hastily*&#13;
as though a little ashamed of the&#13;
part he took, but ready to assist the&#13;
squire in his scheme to save Lyndhurst.&#13;
When the words "to love, honor and&#13;
obey" were read, John saw her scarlet&#13;
lip curl In contempt, while the color&#13;
momentarily left her face; but she&#13;
gave a little affirmative nod&#13;
Some spirit possessed him on his&#13;
part to exclaim with more that usual&#13;
emphasis "I will" when the usual&#13;
"Listen to^me. You fall to grasp question was put to him,,and thejgjd J ^ 0 . w J e J 2 ^ _ B J S e e / , $ f i g i B j y&#13;
turned a startled look upon him,&#13;
while her father scowled like a pirate,&#13;
as though a terrible suspicion had entered&#13;
his head that this good-looking&#13;
Yankee whom he was using as an&#13;
instrument for saving his property&#13;
might at some future time give them&#13;
trouble.&#13;
It was by accident that John's hand&#13;
touched that of the girl. He was&#13;
amazed at feeling a strange thrill&#13;
of which you swear never to. claim, ^fihoot through his frame, and ready&#13;
to laugh at himself for such foolishness;&#13;
but it gave him a sensation he&#13;
had never experienced before, and&#13;
which he would remember.&#13;
Again he was left alone with the&#13;
planter^ - -,&#13;
"Allow me to congratulate you,"&#13;
said the other, with a sneer in his&#13;
voice.&#13;
"I can hardly realize that I am no&#13;
l o n g e r ir single man7"An hour ago I&#13;
The Open F\r*. J How It leapt, in dance excited,&#13;
How it sleeps, in trance delighted.&#13;
How it looms in golden shining-,&#13;
How it glooms In wan declining&#13;
While around the hearth we gather&#13;
One and all!&#13;
In the bleak and windy weather&#13;
Of the fall!&#13;
Friendly flame, remote Chaldean,&#13;
Soars, of name .effaced, Sabaean,&#13;
8hephards of the elder ages,&#13;
Persians boards in mystic pages&#13;
Thee adored, and thought divinely&#13;
Streamed thy light.&#13;
Symbol pure they did enshrine thee&#13;
SSnpfi rit bright.&#13;
Friends, how dear each h&#13;
mb«&#13;
row tw'dttty,&#13;
As In cheer we stir the embers;,,&#13;
Bid the ash renew its beaut&#13;
Sparkle, flash, and&#13;
remembers,&#13;
Friends, how dear each heart remembers&#13;
rt&#13;
he eml&#13;
Its bea&#13;
... _-Jr-gi 'Kid the comfort of the hour&#13;
Woos our soul;&#13;
And we deem Its sternest dower&#13;
Life's best goal.&#13;
So we dream.&#13;
The marriage of Mollie Granger and the Colonel,&#13;
r-r!^&#13;
"You are a bachelor, I am told."&#13;
"That is true."&#13;
"Then hark! in half an hour from&#13;
now yoiy-mff be a married man, or&#13;
have ceased to live."&#13;
At this strange remark John turned&#13;
and looked, squarely into the face of&#13;
the planter.&#13;
"Pardon m e . i f I say that under&#13;
ordinary circumstances of the two&#13;
evils I misht choose the latter."'&#13;
"Oh! I see, you are a woman hater."&#13;
-'Hardly that. I have grown somewhat&#13;
cynical regarding the happiness&#13;
.oTTSoso w S o l v e d , and; long" ago~re-~&#13;
-solved to remain single."&#13;
"Perhaps we can batter down the&#13;
•walls of your prejudice, especially&#13;
when it is a case of giving up your&#13;
bachelor freedom, or meeting a fate&#13;
that usually makes men shudder."&#13;
"'Explain yourself, squire, for you&#13;
must admit this is a remarkable proposition&#13;
ypu bring me."&#13;
"Then listen, and weigh well the&#13;
-consequences before you decide. This&#13;
estate bus been my pride. It would&#13;
l.ill me to have it. ruined by the&#13;
Yankees, which must come about unless&#13;
I can secure immunity. I have&#13;
&lt;mc child, a daughter, whose heart is&#13;
the same as mine. ' She is ready to&#13;
sacrifice herself in order to save&#13;
Lyndhurst."&#13;
"Go on—I am still unable to grasp&#13;
t h e matter."&#13;
John walked up and down. Life&#13;
was sweet to him, for ha had much to&#13;
accomplish, duties to perform. Bes!&#13;
des_what mattered it under these&#13;
peculiar circumstances? As yet the&#13;
romance in the affair did not appeal&#13;
to him.&#13;
"Before I decide one way or the&#13;
other, will you allow me to see the&#13;
young lady who has offered herself a&#13;
sacrifice in order to save Lyndhurst?"&#13;
"I don't see why you show any&#13;
curiosity in the matter, as she will be&#13;
your wife; in name only. However,&#13;
Mollie.&#13;
Squire Granger was a man of business,&#13;
as he proved by producing the&#13;
You are a Federal soldier—my men \ document in question. \ At a signal .a&#13;
tell me they believe you to be an&#13;
ofllcer." •&#13;
"It i s true."&#13;
"If I can show proof that this estate&#13;
is~£h£ property of my daughter, and&#13;
ttag, and looked curiously at the man&#13;
«h#ewd brain had evolved i t&#13;
T a m disposed to be lenient. , Step&#13;
this way—she stands by the table in&#13;
the other room under the light. Tell&#13;
me, Yankee, will you accept and live?"&#13;
John held his breath.&#13;
He had not expected to see such&#13;
a charming girl as the one who raised&#13;
her head and looked coldly, yet with&#13;
some little show of curiosity, toward&#13;
him.&#13;
"I will sign the paper, squire." he&#13;
said, quietly, while to himself he-muttered:&#13;
"If I have to be sacrificed on&#13;
the altar of connubial folly, I could&#13;
hardly wish for a more interesting&#13;
partner in the ceremony."&#13;
C H A P T E R 111.&#13;
couple of John's cmhteWf: entered to&#13;
act as witnesses, and hY signing,be&#13;
was careful to put dOtBlonP sojjMgph&#13;
of his name as he had already given.&#13;
It was evident that sir preparations&#13;
t i i t ^ h o ; Is. the wife of a Federal w e ^ j n a d e . lor th*: aM^y«vJtf ;to'.a&#13;
oScer, Lyndhurst win be saved frott *«-*»*••&amp;#***•*** Mhftrtm»M•«*.-.*,•&#13;
the torch."&#13;
* John was electrified by the proposipartofl,&#13;
fceY6?Vthe expedition* tfas sent&#13;
out to capture a bachelor Yankee.&#13;
John aroused himself to take some&#13;
interest in the case. Perhaps the&#13;
novelty of the situation bad&#13;
Household fire,' once more relighted.&#13;
Biasing higher the while .united&#13;
Round the hearth of home, we gather&#13;
One and all,&#13;
In the bleak and windy weather&#13;
Of the fall.&#13;
—Margaret E. gangster.&#13;
Made Living Robbing Beggars.&#13;
A murderer named Everard was&#13;
sentenced to penal servitude for life&#13;
a few days ago at Paris. His specialty&#13;
was robbing beggars, and he&#13;
only brought himself-into the clutches&#13;
of justice when he so far forgot his&#13;
methods as to murder two of his victims—&#13;
a man and a woman. He began&#13;
his career with the hypothesis&#13;
that every beggar is an imposter—&#13;
and- generally a prosperous one.—Hemade&#13;
his home In Calais, and studied&#13;
the movements of the beggars. He&#13;
noted those who were possessed of&#13;
wealth, and robbed thjm« Ja—their&#13;
Q. What Is the banning of sickness*&#13;
A. Constipation, •, J. What is Constipationt&#13;
. Failure of the bowels to carry off the&#13;
waste matter which lies in the ahjmentary&#13;
canal where it decays and poisons the en*&#13;
tire system. Eventually the resalts are&#13;
death" under the name of some other d' '&#13;
ease. Koto the deaths from typhoid fa&#13;
and appendicitis, stomach and&#13;
trouble at the present time&#13;
Q, What ntiiiins CoAStlxtatkuxl,&#13;
£ S e ^ ^ h t o J » i | ^ V J ^ c a U tf _&#13;
tore promptly. l a c k of astralse. Execs*&#13;
sive4&gt;mu»wo^/135iMa M l and improper&#13;
diet, p/;-:*\.s»r •"*•• •&#13;
Q.^Wfcat are the- ws^ltootneglected&#13;
Oons#a$Joot Z$jj**' r&#13;
than asy other diseaisr'&#13;
matlam, colds, fevers,&#13;
kidney, lung ana heart t&#13;
Indigestion, dyspepsia, d&#13;
sleep and strength ai?4ts *»j&gt;&#13;
appendicitis and Astula, are, .&#13;
Constipation. (Ujeoaaeoueaces are 1&#13;
to all physicians, but .*ew suffess** realise&#13;
their oondition until tt is t&lt;K&gt; late^ Women,&#13;
become, confirmed Invalids as a result of&#13;
Constipation.&#13;
Qt. Xn physicians recognise this?&#13;
JL Yes. The first question your doctor&#13;
asks you is "are you constipated?" That&#13;
is the secret.&#13;
Buflprlng&#13;
\ rheubo&#13;
It&#13;
-&amp;&#13;
Q. Can it be cured? f:&#13;
S£»&amp;&#13;
- # • • •&#13;
Yea, with proper treatment. The&#13;
common error is to* resort te physics, such&#13;
as pills, salts, mineral water, castor oil, uv&#13;
lections, etc., every one of which is Injurious.&#13;
They weaken and increase the&#13;
malady. You know this by your own experience.&#13;
Q. What then should he done to cure itt&#13;
A. Get a bottle of Mull's Grape 'l\&gt;nic at7&#13;
once. Mull's Grape Tonic will positively&#13;
cure Constipation and Stomach Trouble In&#13;
the shortest space of time. No other&#13;
remedy has before been known to cure&#13;
Constipation positively and permanently.&#13;
Q. What is Mull1* Grape TonioT&#13;
—A. It la a Compound-with ^perosnt^ofthe&#13;
juice of Concord Grapes. }t exerts a&#13;
peculiar strengthening, healing influence&#13;
upon the intestines, so that they can do&#13;
their work unaided. Tbe process Is gradual,&#13;
but sure. It 1^ not a physio, but it cures&#13;
u""u usu"u dtion; i/ysieelmteerryy,, Ssitoommaaccnh aannda „...,&lt;... M&#13;
rooms. Everard, carried out his thefts Bowel Trouble. Having a rich, fruity ^ , - ^ J&#13;
ha_d__not_Tdreamed such_JL_destiny_KasJ-ln the most barefaced fashion, fe-B-P-H-i^SP6^-?-&#13;
in store for me," returned John, with ing well that his victims could not ^ £ ^ disease., It strengthens and builds&#13;
a careless laugh. - obtain redress from the police with- mvvaste tissue.&#13;
"I have a little more writing to be out exposing their own frauds. He "&#13;
done. Sit down, please, and fill out prospered. The beggars offered him&#13;
these documents. Then the bargain a handsome share of their takings to&#13;
will be complete." leave them unmolested, but he pre-&#13;
John did as requested- Of course ferred his own method. At last two&#13;
flavor, It is pleasant to take.. As a&#13;
unequalled, insuring the system&#13;
Q. Where can Mull's Grape Tonic be&#13;
ad?&#13;
the papers concerned the one movement&#13;
in which the squire'was deeply&#13;
interested. Whe"n John came to sign&#13;
his name and his regiment, he managed&#13;
to so manipulate the pen that&#13;
the word Ridgeway was" obscured, and&#13;
a casual glance would only reveal&#13;
plain John Emmett.&#13;
When the squire discovered that his&#13;
new son-in-law had placed the word&#13;
"colonel&#13;
of them offered him violent resistance&#13;
and he was compelled to put an end&#13;
to their^career, and thereby his own.&#13;
Irmnense English GravtrVg Dock.&#13;
One of the most remarkable graving&#13;
docks yet designed has just been&#13;
completed at Southampton, England.&#13;
It is one of the largest in the world,&#13;
ant) is amply capacious for the big&#13;
before his name, he smiled i gest vessels afloat or building. The&#13;
grimly, not because of pleasure In I dock is built almost entirely of Port-&#13;
ilated to a Yankee officer, for land »ter-4aav0OO cubl&lt;&#13;
he hated the whole army of invasion&#13;
from Sherman down to the humblest&#13;
drummer boy in blue, but simply on&#13;
account of the more favorable prospect&#13;
ahead in saving the estate from&#13;
the torch and the pillager.&#13;
As it now stood Sherman .would be&#13;
yards of which material have been&#13;
used. The dock-Will hold 85,000 tons&#13;
of water, and can be emptied by two&#13;
centrifugal pumps in 2 1-2 hours.&#13;
The entrance gates are covered by&#13;
greenheart. timber meeting faces, and&#13;
250 tons of steel is contained in each&#13;
compelled to put a guard around | leaf. The plant provided for grav-&#13;
Lyndhurst. In case any damage was ing purposes includes a traveling&#13;
done, the gove^rnm,ent would be resuonaible,&#13;
for the whole property belonged&#13;
to the wife of a Federal officer.&#13;
"Are you satisfied, squire?" asked&#13;
the prisoner, as the other put the&#13;
papers away.&#13;
"I believe it is all right."&#13;
"Then allow me to depart in peace.'-&#13;
The squire raised his heavy eyebrows.&#13;
"My dear colonel, you certainly must&#13;
have misunderstood me. I said nothing&#13;
at all about giving you liberty.&#13;
It is against my principles to assist&#13;
the enemy."&#13;
"Sir, I understood that the reward&#13;
which was to follow my—er—sacrifice&#13;
of bachelor principles was to be&#13;
freedom./'&#13;
John showed some signs of annoyance,&#13;
though too diplomatic to even&#13;
raise his voice above the ordinary&#13;
pitch.&#13;
"I gave you the choice between marr&#13;
i a g e a n d the death of a spy.. YOIL&#13;
electric crane—the largest in exlsteiiee—&#13;
capab-Io of lifting more—than&#13;
have chosen wisely, colonel. We will&#13;
keep you~here over night, and when&#13;
the morning comes send you under&#13;
guard to headquarters. Your life was&#13;
in question, and you have saved it.&#13;
Say no more—words would be useless,&#13;
and might bring on trouble."&#13;
Closing abruptly, the. squire clapped&#13;
his hands, .and again his satellites&#13;
entered, each with an exasperating&#13;
grin upon his face, as though thoy appreciated&#13;
the humor of the sltua-i&#13;
tlon.&#13;
"Gentlemen, kindly show Colonel&#13;
Emmett, my Federal son-in-law, to his&#13;
boudoir. I hold you responsible for&#13;
his appearance in the morning."&#13;
As the squire spoke a hand was laid&#13;
upon each of John's shoulders. .&#13;
"I will go with you quietly, gentlemen.&#13;
No violence, if you please, or&#13;
you will find yourselves' handling a&#13;
desperate man," was what the Federal&#13;
said, and his manner impressed&#13;
them «o far that they used no undue&#13;
familiarity.&#13;
The sarcasm of tbe squire's words&#13;
could be plainly seen when the prisoner&#13;
was ushered in the "boudoir" in&#13;
question—a strong room that, had&#13;
evidently served as a prison on moro&#13;
than one occasion, perhaps for r *&#13;
fractory slaves.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
fifty tons at a radius of eighty-seven&#13;
feet. This enormous steel structure&#13;
will be invaluable to ships of war, as&#13;
well as to passengers steamers.&#13;
Mill Opened W i t h Prayer.&#13;
A curious custom was observed&#13;
when the Forrest mill, Bacup, was&#13;
restarted last week, after having&#13;
changed hands.&#13;
About forty persons assembled in&#13;
one of the rooms, and a "consecration"&#13;
service was held. Hymns were&#13;
sung by the assembled persons and&#13;
afterward prayers were offered for&#13;
the success of the undertaking.&#13;
This is the first service of its kind&#13;
held in Bacup, but prayer meetings in&#13;
mills are not uncommon. The custom&#13;
was originated by the late John&#13;
Bright, who at the commencement of&#13;
the firm's large concern in Rochdale&#13;
assembled the workpeaplfi_£X£ryimoxning&#13;
and engaged in prayer for a few&#13;
minutes.—London Telegraph.&#13;
Car Floor Fell With Passengers.&#13;
A curious accident happened recently&#13;
to the Venice-Milan express a&#13;
few miles from Milan. The axles of&#13;
two wheels of the las^ carriage broke&#13;
and the wheels became detached from&#13;
the carriage, carrying away a part of&#13;
the flooring with them. The passengers,&#13;
feeling the floor give way, clung&#13;
to the baggage rack and anything else&#13;
they could catch hold of. Being unable&#13;
to sound the alarm signal, the&#13;
express continued its way. When at&#13;
last the engine driver noticed there&#13;
was sometUng wrong and,pulled up,&#13;
almost all the passengers In the&#13;
wrecked car fainted. Some of them&#13;
were seriously hurt.&#13;
Geese for Hungry Russians.&#13;
The strike, pn.. j h e ^ railways of*&#13;
Russia stopped 40,000 geese from&#13;
making their t r ^ , t o ^ e / m a n $ ; p that&#13;
1$ the, monthly export, to the neigh*'&#13;
boring empire,. Tije geese frere driv*&#13;
w , * f o o t tp the ^ U w ^ s c i o n s , , bqt ?* S N M tn*» ,?nw*rd. Itg!*a*&#13;
{••TOft that,th.o g e e s * would gjairtv&#13;
i t ih» statfona, «bu£ i t , i s \ # u w a a U d&#13;
that tbe hungry Russian« will, egfc&#13;
them «10 atv» their Uvea.*'&#13;
bad?&#13;
A. Your druggist sells it. The dollar&#13;
bottle contains nearly three times the 80-&#13;
cent size.&#13;
Good for ailing children and nursing&#13;
mothers.&#13;
A free bottle to all who have never used&#13;
it because we know it will cure you.&#13;
188.¾¾ —)'f PREK BOTTLE JJ38-5&#13;
FREit. Send tbl* coupon with four name sod&#13;
•ddreu, your drugglit'i nsme sad too. to pay&#13;
portage and we wtll lupplr you a tsmbtofree, 1(&#13;
yottn»r« never used Mull'i Grape Toitta, and&#13;
will also send roa a certfllcate good for 11.00&#13;
toward the purchase of more Tonto from your&#13;
drnffgiH*&#13;
lOtufoOBAPa Teaufl Go.. WS-TWrdAve..&#13;
Roots Island, 111.&#13;
Gin Full Mdru* and WtH* ZWnly.&#13;
M cans 90 cent aadsi.09 bettlaa at alldrugxlst*&#13;
The al.OOiwttlc cop tains about ii» tlnwta as_mmih_&#13;
^33 cent twttte^ and about iSrtfe times ai&#13;
mu«s aa.tka W cent liottle. There U a great&#13;
saying In baying the »1.00 size.&#13;
The genuine has a date and number&#13;
stamped on the label—take no other from&#13;
your drumist.&#13;
n&#13;
To Keep Windows&#13;
Glass windows&#13;
ably during cold westtber. To&#13;
vpnt this rub a thta coat of&#13;
glycerine on both slrtea nf th* gtaBa&#13;
This will prevent any moisture forming&#13;
on it.&#13;
C a t a r r h C a n n o t B e Cured&#13;
with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach&#13;
the seat of the disease. Catarrh Is a blood or const!*&#13;
tutlonal disease, and in order to cure It you must take&#13;
Internal remedies. Hall'a Catarrh Cum Is taken Is*&#13;
ternally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous&#13;
surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure 1« not a quack inedh&#13;
cine. It was prescribed by one of the host physician*&#13;
In this country for years and Isarsgutar prescription.&#13;
It Is composed of the best tonics ^nowa, combined&#13;
with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the&#13;
mucous surfaces. Tbe perfect combination of the&#13;
two ingredients ts what produces such wonderful results&#13;
In curing catarrh. Send for testimonials, free.&#13;
F. J. CHKN'ET * CO., Propa , Toledo, O&#13;
'UKglsts, prlca75c&#13;
i Family Pills for constipation.&#13;
TSoalkde bllya Dll'r*u ggists, price.75c&#13;
Worst Has Hsppeneta/ &lt;&#13;
A nice thing about being in politic*&#13;
is you never fear that anything woMpr&#13;
can happen to you in the next wotUt&#13;
Important to Motbars.&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA&#13;
s nsfe and sore remedy for infanta and children;&#13;
sod eee that It -:&#13;
TM&lt;63&amp;K - Been f* e&#13;
Signature of&#13;
In Use For Over 30 Years.&#13;
The Kind You Have Always Bought.&#13;
Many a! man has drffwned himself&#13;
tor looking: into the depths- of a weV."&lt;&#13;
man's eyes.&#13;
U8E THE VAMPKB&#13;
Red Cross Ball Blue,&#13;
cents. The Rusa Compgn»7&#13;
oackape 5&#13;
Ind.&#13;
Many men believe""-&#13;
thc lonfr run, but they&#13;
run long*!&#13;
• * * . "&#13;
-ihWta^r&#13;
^ ^ w r w Pp&#13;
^,^ h*m'» Venrsssoie Cxj^uwt j» tt»&#13;
^ One of thegwwktwttriaaBphjof L3rdl»&#13;
: E. Pinkhama XaffeiebJeCo»po***4 is&#13;
the conquerinf,rf wafMV4*eaA«fe&#13;
•my, Tumor. &gt; f&#13;
T h e g r o w t h o f .*} toOKOr 1» SO tHj t h a t&#13;
lr«4u«uUj its p i w a o a Isao* snap«atsd|&#13;
ITS*O*4:&#13;
,-&gt;&#13;
i.x ..¥•''&#13;
¥:.&#13;
TO PH0t9«fUM»« 9 I A F 4 : AOOWY OF SORft HAW?t.&#13;
•Vf&#13;
Thai* Infirmity &lt;*lv«s That* a: Hardt&#13;
Kto.&#13;
• v l »&#13;
rtfiotoETftabec, wit*; ap, air ot apology.&#13;
*?&gt;• »rawa#-4«aj." ; \ x ~.&#13;
"How can (fiat Inflraity affect- the&#13;
picture?'aakefi a visitor.&#13;
"It tfives hie face a tense, strained&#13;
look,* eaid ifc* photographer. / "All&#13;
deaf persons hare that eapxeaslo*&#13;
wken placed before a camera. They&#13;
eit with their head* tilted forward and&#13;
eyebrows, uplifted, as If waiting for the&#13;
command to look pleasant. Generally,&#13;
I suppose, that is what they are waiting&#13;
for. But even after I have given&#13;
the order to brace; their muscles refuse&#13;
to. relax.&#13;
"What's that?", says the deaf man&#13;
When he sees my lips move.&#13;
'"Look pleasant!' I shout again.&#13;
' 4"Oh„Vsays he.&#13;
"He takes his band from behind his&#13;
ear and trie* to u iaume a beaming&#13;
r.nunfpiiftTH-pi, bur PA only comprnmlspia&#13;
7~in a**ef.&#13;
-• . J, ,. -« L. * «, ±- ^ *.„•*•- TottknowId/, ^hunii xukoUtr. *fc©&#13;
Craeke4 cntf P t i i e ^ W ^ t r aM Heat ^ , prtdM himself o» aaaweriaf&#13;
Caused Intense fralit—CeuleSDo rejajufcs wisj oM wordr W«fr I to**&#13;
to Cuticurs.&#13;
"My hand! cracked and peeled, and&#13;
were so sore it was impossible for me&#13;
to do my housework. If I put them in&#13;
water I was in agony for hours; and&#13;
if 1 tried to cook, the beat caused intense&#13;
pain. I consulted two doctor*,&#13;
Afrvfttnni* &amp;fo*&#13;
So-called "wandering pains'* may&#13;
eome from its early stages, or the&#13;
presence of danger may be made manifest&#13;
by prof use menstruation, eccompaniedL&#13;
by unesual pain, from the&#13;
ovaries down the groin and thighs.&#13;
If you hare mysterious pains, if there&#13;
are indications of inflammation or displacement,&#13;
don't wait for time to confirm&#13;
your tears and go through the&#13;
horrors of a hospital operation; secure&#13;
Lydia, fcf. Pinkham-s Vegetable Compound&#13;
right away and begin its use.&#13;
• Mrs.PTnkham, of Lynn,'Mass., will&#13;
give yon her advice free of all charge&#13;
if yon will write -her about yourself.&#13;
- Tour letter will be seen by women only.&#13;
vmrVHrpmsssm^-— — - — * -&#13;
*' I take the liberty, to congratulate you on&#13;
the success I have had with your wonderful&#13;
medicine. Eighteen months ago my montbhesstopped.&#13;
-Shortly after I felt so badly that&#13;
* «"&gt;»»»«*qd; j n n thnmngji examination by a&#13;
physician and was t o l d ^ k a T r h W T l i m W -&#13;
on the uterus and would have to undergo an&#13;
" Soon after I read one of your advertisements&#13;
and decided to give Lydla E. Pink"&#13;
ham's Vegetable Compound a trial. After&#13;
five bottles as directed the tumor is&#13;
gone. I have been examined by a&#13;
and he says I have no signs of a&#13;
yt now. It has also brought my monthlies&#13;
around once more, and I am entirely&#13;
well."—Fannie D. Fox, 7 Chestnut Street&#13;
Bradford. Pa.&#13;
for Family Colds&#13;
A r e s a b l e C o g A e r J C o U ^ A o d d&#13;
be tHraya fa the boeae ready for see the&#13;
OMSpsst tW ink symptoms appear. t&#13;
It n always easier, cheaper sad better&#13;
t e s W s v e c o M i a A e v e r / liifanssj&#13;
It is mitt, loo. . .&#13;
SaeVtfY* Coiissmpwin Cure, the Lung&#13;
Tosk. hat been Sailed foe thaty-threa&#13;
yeanvaad tea* oi thousands of home* in&#13;
IhvUiatoi Stifcr^ad Csssda Uxlajr^rc&#13;
wskostk.&#13;
"We an a n * jo hawb. We U boaai*&#13;
assayb&amp;kaofShOoh'sCuiiieaaiiiiinCam lt&gt;&#13;
•sod sod w* WMU art U wUhea* it-Mas&#13;
Mary E. Apple. Gummm*. N.Y.&#13;
It »T w S * earthing but me best would&#13;
9slraeav&gt; Try a in your own familys,&#13;
you set back all it cost&#13;
. _ _ all the chance*. NeioSer&#13;
sssiwsr veer dealer can lose. Isn't that&#13;
hur&gt; 25c. u the price. All dealer* in&#13;
m**Srf,te sdl »$HILOH&#13;
Wanted* Hustling Newspaper Man&#13;
to ttart weekly paper at Marlborough, Lake Co..&#13;
Michigan, liaclborougb !• three year* old, ha* 500&#13;
' ltaata, and la the home of the Great Northern&#13;
•ad Cement Co., employing apwardi of 300 men&#13;
faaereaalng erery year. The Company ha* 1,400&#13;
kho!dera,mo*t of whom would take nla paper«-&#13;
, rtuhVTnan.wlth good outfit will find thla a&#13;
Bndtd opening. For partlculara addreaa H, H.&#13;
raone, 88 Qrlawold Street, Detroit, or&#13;
Fred •% Ferneworth, Martborouatt, Mioh*&#13;
TWEITY-FIVE BUSHELS OF&#13;
WHEAT TO THE fiCRE&#13;
Means a pro*&#13;
d u c t i v e capacity&#13;
In dol*&#13;
lars of o v e r&#13;
$16 per acre.&#13;
This on land which has cost the farmer tioth&gt;&#13;
Tng hut, the price of tilling It. tells its own&#13;
story.&#13;
The Canadian Government gives absolutely&#13;
ftsstto every settler 180 acres of such land.&#13;
Stands adjoining can he purchased at fjom t6&#13;
SeaBbper aore from railroad and other oorpor-&#13;
^^ready 175,000 farmers from the United&#13;
States have made their homes in Canada.&#13;
For' pamphlet "Twentieth Century Canada"&#13;
and all information apply to Supt of Immigration,&#13;
OUawa. Canada; or to following authorized&#13;
CJpvcmmfnt Agent—M. V. Mclnnes,&#13;
•SV|Sj*«wlHsatre Block, Detroit, Michigan; or&#13;
-C^aawaSSS. 9*ult Ste. Marie, Michigan,&#13;
tion this paper.)&#13;
3*y to raTsatlg*** the nerlta of ttw&#13;
MICHIGAN B U S I H t e t QOU.EAB,&#13;
h««t&gt;iac, aharth«Mi«, Paassaaaaisi. * e&#13;
« r « a d h l » * r Ave., ^ e s r e t i Klaft.&#13;
as V ^ a a «*o"a &gt;*«HapilMt Xtae,&#13;
rerafSK aCM&#13;
lerwIpaAjroa&#13;
will eaa^taca son of tt* woaSarrul&#13;
atos«ass»:e»«iia&gt; BS»a^s&gt; pytatt &gt;i&gt;flil. m&#13;
«ppe»&gt;o».,a«i&#13;
Mil '1r **^V'* "i*^^•M*»rf,**^a^aJ&#13;
&gt;'«i.-.,&gt;.*-.-»-&#13;
dn a fixed glare. None of the devices&#13;
known to the photographic trade can&#13;
dispel that. In fact, the more 'business'&#13;
I Introduce to charm my sublectintlr-&#13;
a joyful statfe the more rlgtdhls&#13;
facial muscles become. He Is&#13;
listening always for'further Instructions.&#13;
Whether they come or not, the&#13;
look of expectancy is there. For that&#13;
reason the deaf are the hardest people&#13;
in the world to photograph. If an artist's&#13;
reputation depended upon the&#13;
pictures he makes of them he would&#13;
soon be obliged to go out of business."&#13;
of Cuticurs Soap and one box of Cutl&#13;
cura Ointment my hands are entirely&#13;
w«U, and I am very grateful. (Signed)&#13;
Mrs. Minnie Drew, 18 Dana St., Roxbury,&#13;
Mass."&#13;
South African Game Reserve.&#13;
Threatened disappearance of the&#13;
wild fauna of South Africa has led&#13;
the Natal government to form a reserve&#13;
of some 20,000 acres In extent&#13;
on the slopes of the Drakensberg. In&#13;
tire deep- "kloofs-" of these- seeluded&#13;
had Jfcst 4aosj* across our doctor at the&#13;
friends's I had been calling on, he&#13;
smiled and said, 'Metaphysician.' Then&#13;
L asked him if he could guess at what&#13;
hour we had breakfast and morning,&#13;
and he nodded his head and said,&#13;
'Attenuate/ To - change the conversation&#13;
I Inquired what he thought of&#13;
**#*"' * * * * * * after - « u ^ one cake4 ^ ^ ^ m , w . head, 'Dynasty/&#13;
I invited him to come home with me&#13;
and take a bite at least, and he replied&#13;
with an accepting nod, Dynamite/&#13;
%ut he capped the climax when&#13;
I asked him if we might hope to hear&#13;
a speech from he at that public dinner&#13;
next week by proudly saying 'Expectoration.'&#13;
"—Baltimore American.&#13;
How Bear Escapes from Trap.&#13;
When caught by a paw in the Jaws&#13;
of a trap a bear will drag; the heavy&#13;
apparatus'^BffltB clog uuill tho latter&#13;
mountains patches of berg cypress&#13;
and other natural forest- afford good&#13;
cover for the eland, of which only'&#13;
some 130 specimens now remain In&#13;
Natal. " The reserve' also contains&#13;
herds of blue buck and klipapringer.&#13;
In this game reserve are also found&#13;
many valuable specimens of early&#13;
Bushman paintings and drawings,&#13;
many of which are disappearing owing&#13;
to the rapid disintegration of the rock&#13;
surfaces.&#13;
is . caught in the brush or trees, and&#13;
then, if the paw is not in too far, will&#13;
often pull out or chew off the captive&#13;
member, j&#13;
Power of Intellectuality.&#13;
A great soul draws and is drawn&#13;
with a more fierce intensity than any&#13;
small one. By every Inch we grow in&#13;
intellectual height, our love^ strikes&#13;
down, it roots deeper, and spreads out&#13;
its arm wider.—Olive Schreiner.&#13;
Ministers Late Risers.&#13;
"Ministers is the latest risers. Doctors&#13;
comes-4iextr" said the cook.&#13;
She was entertaining the maids from&#13;
next door. As she bustled about getting&#13;
the tea and cake ready she talked&#13;
Mike-a&#13;
How Birds Destroy Insects.&#13;
The chickadee will destrov plant&#13;
lice, for it sometimes eats 5.500Jice_&#13;
for breakfast. The woodpecker gets&#13;
after the borers. The flicker eats&#13;
some wood-boring insects. The cuckoo&#13;
is needed greatly, for it eats the&#13;
hairy caterpillars that prey pn trees&#13;
listened, their eyes fixed on the colla&#13;
tion that each moment grew more&#13;
tempting under her hand.&#13;
_ "Some ministers don^t rise till 10,"&#13;
she said. "There's hardly one of them&#13;
that you'll find up by 8. Nine or halfmaidsU-&#13;
tt—sQrjaetlft)p« «pt.« an many that \ts_&#13;
past is their average hour&#13;
"You see, they don't have no ofilce&#13;
to go to at a certain time. They have&#13;
no early appointments that must be&#13;
kept. They have no clerks that they&#13;
must look after. Consequence is. they&#13;
become the latest risin' class of men&#13;
9n e^rth. , , r i l .&#13;
"I've worked, .ajound considerable in&#13;
my time. I've had forty-seven places,&#13;
all told. Some has been-with doctors,&#13;
some with business men and eleven&#13;
with ministers. The ministers is the&#13;
best to live with. They are so considerate&#13;
and generous and they have&#13;
such perfect dispositions. If they&#13;
would only get quit of this lazy habit&#13;
of loafin' away the' morning in bed&#13;
they'd be a class without a fault."&#13;
Bird Was . Removed.&#13;
A woman rushed into a fashionable&#13;
millinery establishment which she had&#13;
left only an hour before with a new&#13;
hat that cost her $75. She had returned&#13;
to discard the elaborate headgear.&#13;
"Why, madam, what is the trouble&#13;
with this hat?" the milliner asked.&#13;
"What is the matter?" gasped the&#13;
purchaser.—"There 1« much the matter.&#13;
Why, I would not wear that&#13;
again until that bird with the big wing&#13;
is removed or set in a different position."&#13;
"But that is the style," said the milliner.&#13;
"Style or no style it has got to go,"&#13;
said the purchaser. "I will never wear&#13;
that hat until I can go about without&#13;
the wings of birds sticking in the eyes&#13;
of men, and especially horrid men like&#13;
the horrid one that told me tfcat 'one&#13;
bird in the bush is worth two in a&#13;
hat.' "&#13;
The bird in the hat was removed.&#13;
Seedtime and Harvest.&#13;
As o'er his furrowed flelds, which lie&#13;
Beneath a coldly dropping sky.&#13;
Yet chill with Winter's melted snow,&#13;
The husbandman goes forth to sow;&#13;
Thus, Freedom, on( the bitter blast&#13;
The ventures of thy seed we cast, -&#13;
And trust to warmer sun and rain&#13;
To swell the germ, and nil the grain.&#13;
Who ealts thy glorious service hard?&#13;
Who deems it not i!« own reward?&#13;
Who, for its trials, counts it less&#13;
A cause of praise and thankfulness?&#13;
It may not be our lot to wield&#13;
The sickle in the ripened field;&#13;
Nor ours to hear, on summer eves.&#13;
The reaper's song among the sheaves;&#13;
Y/et where our duty's task is wrought&#13;
In unison with God's great thought.&#13;
The near and future blend in one,&#13;
And whatso'er is willed is done!&#13;
—John Greenleaf Whittler.&#13;
gizzard Is often fuzzy with the hairs.&#13;
T h e grosbeck eats potato .beetles, and&#13;
two of them will keep a quarter of an&#13;
acre free. But aside from all utilitarraTr^&#13;
considerationsr" 4»if4^-muaie&#13;
enough to pay us for our care and&#13;
protec tion.—Exchanger "&#13;
Words of Wisdom.&#13;
Westfleld, 111., Dec. 18th (Special)—&#13;
AH who are suffering with Bright's&#13;
Disease, should read carefully the following&#13;
letter from the Rev. G. L. Good&#13;
of this place. He says:.—--&#13;
"I feel it is my duty to tell you of&#13;
the wonderful benefit I have received&#13;
from the use of Dodd's Kidney Pills.&#13;
I am a Minister of the Gospel, and in&#13;
my work, I am frequently exposed to&#13;
all weathers: Six years ago, I was laid&#13;
up sick. I doctored with a number of&#13;
physicians, and' finally consulted a&#13;
specialist, but without success. They&#13;
all told me I had Bright's Disease. I&#13;
was in a bad way and almost helpless&#13;
when, thank God, I heard of Dodd's&#13;
Kidney Pills. They saved my life. I&#13;
took sixteen boxes and now I am&#13;
cured. Tne first day Itook them I felt&#13;
relief. When I began I weighed only&#13;
one hundred and five pounds, now I&#13;
weigh one hundred and sfcty-nve and&#13;
I am the picture of health. I recommend&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills to all my&#13;
friends who have Kidney Trouble and&#13;
I pray to God that other sufferers&#13;
wul read these Words and be helped,&#13;
by them."&#13;
Work in Painting Portrait.&#13;
After sitting for his portrait to two&#13;
German artists, a-scientific observer&#13;
has calculated that each of the two&#13;
pictures required 20,000 strokes of the&#13;
paint brush.&#13;
Chinese Ruler.&#13;
The Empress Dowager of China&#13;
was sold into slavery at the age of&#13;
eleven, to save her family from starvation.&#13;
Afterwards, she was presented&#13;
to the late Emperor, and, upon his&#13;
wife's death, became Empress. Her&#13;
/eet were never bound, and she was&#13;
taught to read after persistent pleading.&#13;
The sterling - qualities of this&#13;
wonderful woman, like those of Pillsbury's&#13;
Vltbs, have overcome every obstacle,&#13;
Arid she holds herself _al_the&#13;
head of China, as does Vitos at the&#13;
bead of breakfast foods.&#13;
To Paint Miniatures of Americana.&#13;
Viscountess Maitland the wellknown&#13;
miniature painter, arrived last&#13;
week from England for an extended&#13;
stay, during which she will paint a&#13;
number of miniatures of prominent&#13;
people, among them half a dozen&#13;
which she has been cotomissioned^to&#13;
do for members of the President's&#13;
family.&#13;
To Honor Patriotic Chef.&#13;
Residents of Nice are about to erect&#13;
a aUttte in nrenrory of Nebain Dubois,&#13;
who lot many years was chief cook to&#13;
the kaiser's grandfather. Kinr "William&#13;
of prasaia, receiving a salary of&#13;
fnjOOO a yestK Aa^bon as thw Franco-&#13;
Prussian war waf declared he fa--&#13;
« 3 « M * * O t f a t a«ata«t hJs ftrmar em-&#13;
MftaaJii ' rT: -'^t- ••-••:• V - .- '&#13;
•.••a*HI • ^ K * * ^ ^ - i - i t r ' ..•(;•&lt;•«•.&#13;
How True.&#13;
How true is^ the old proverb that&#13;
birds of a feather flock togetherwhy,&#13;
only a pain in two little fingers&#13;
(belonging to separate persons, of&#13;
course) may unite their owners in a&#13;
bond of friendship.&#13;
T O CURE A COLD IN ONE D A T&#13;
Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tablets. DrnjrtclBtt&#13;
refund money If It falls to ear*. £. W.&#13;
GROVE'S »i«nature U on each box. 25c&#13;
Why Is It that a woman tells a funny&#13;
Ktory the same way she throws a.&#13;
beanbag at n cat?&#13;
CITS) pcrmaiianUy cnNd. NofltaorMrrouaetMaftor&#13;
r 1 1 « flrat dar'a DM of Dr. XUM'aUreat K*&gt;rv KvaUNp.&#13;
V - 8wd for PJBKB • S . e O trial bottte aad treaMa*.&#13;
rat dar'a am of Dr. XUM'aUrMt Narva Kwtor-&#13;
_,. for PJBKB • S . e O trial bo&amp;ta aad traaMa*.&#13;
dt|. R. H. KLINK, Ltd., W Arch Stmt, PbttafelpUla, Fa.&#13;
Fear isn't the only thing that causes&#13;
n woman to change color.&#13;
Mrs, WtitstttwM&#13;
WmcMMrea taeUSut, aeftaaaUMmarts, _&#13;
aUarasMuearaawtaieoUo. Heaboatkt.&#13;
Glittering generalities are the rhinestones&#13;
of speech.&#13;
I d s art believe Ptato Cure for Cos. -umpttea&#13;
IJBW aa eqoa) fer oousha and eoM».-~J?8Uf F.&#13;
I»A. Feb. I*, * *&#13;
Ceateatment m » beat cure - far&#13;
wrinkle*.&#13;
Is&#13;
, 8EVEN YCARt AOO.&#13;
A Rochester Chswtlst&#13;
tarly Cffactrwe MedWntV&#13;
Iln ft Palmer Cbemteaa Co.-,&#13;
ter, N. Y., wrttea:&#13;
''Seven y e a r s &gt;&#13;
ago I was sugaring&#13;
very antcfe&#13;
through the failure&#13;
of the kldatyav&#13;
to eliminate tbe&gt;&#13;
nrie acid from my&#13;
system. My back&#13;
waa very Iamo&#13;
and ached if B&#13;
overexerted myself in the least degree.&#13;
At times I wag weighed dowm.&#13;
with a feeling of languor and depression&#13;
and suffered continually from*&#13;
annoying irregularities of the kidney&#13;
secretions. I procured a box of Doan'a&#13;
Kidney Pills and began using them. 1&#13;
found prompt relief from the aching:&#13;
and lamenes in my back, and by thetime&#13;
I had taken three boxes I wasv&#13;
\ &gt; ' ' ' ' ' . •''••• ' ' ' i * i ' / * ' r « ' '&#13;
• • • • • ' J&#13;
cured of all irregularities."&#13;
Sold by air dealers. 50 cents a box.&#13;
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
A GTJARANTKED CURE F O B P I L E S .&#13;
Itvbtns, Blind, Bleeding, Protruding Piles. Drug-&#13;
Rtota are authorized to refund money U PAZO&#13;
OINTMENT falls to cure tn 6 to 14 days. 90c.&#13;
It Is not considered good form to ask&#13;
the pork packer's wife to "render"&#13;
something on the piano!&#13;
DOICT FORGET&#13;
A large 2-oz. package Red Cross Ball Blue, only&#13;
5 cents. irheRus^ Company, South Bend, Ind._&#13;
T0UET&#13;
ANTISEPTIC&#13;
FOR WOMEN&#13;
troubled wits ffls seeaUar t»&#13;
taeir H I , msed as a Aoacfce is&#13;
MMfsl. Tseroegatveleaaeea, MT1» Htnm&#13;
nope disekaxgee, seals laflamioatioa aw&#13;
aortaeM.&#13;
Paxtine is in powder form to he dissolved in&#13;
water, and is far more deaadnf, healing,&#13;
and economical thea Uqnid aatisafaks for aJ&#13;
TOILET AND WOatEff* SPEOAt UBEft&#13;
For sale at drasfjbts, ¢0 cents a box.&#13;
Trial Box aad Beok ef I&#13;
H c A PAXTOSJ coMMtav aoextm.&#13;
W h e n a man t a l k s of h i s o w n h o n e s t y ,&#13;
we b e g i n s l y l y to hide our e d i t o r i a l&#13;
scissors.&#13;
roentw.i&#13;
raahlti Ktoa» js»&lt;&#13;
itMr u^SVPsnalon 1&#13;
14yra tn drll wtx. lSadtwUeatins^lainia, attj i&#13;
[ L a u n ^ i ^ B D M&#13;
-443&#13;
W. I? U.-DETROIT.-No. 5 t - l « 0 »&#13;
TOCUttWoWP,&#13;
^ . J « ONE-DAY mwm ANTI-GRI PINE IS GUAKJUmUCO T O CVRC&#13;
GRIP, BAD GOLD, HEAMCIE AID lEUMUUL&#13;
I won't sell AavtUOrlwtae to a dealer who won't &lt; H — w f a j&#13;
I s . Call for TOUT M O X I T B A C K UP I T B O S T OVBUk f,W,IMemer,M.M&gt;.tr&#13;
S •*-i&#13;
Over the Shortest and Quickest Line Via&#13;
Denver, Scenic Rockies, Salt Lake Route&#13;
Daily tourist sleeping car service from Chicago in&#13;
connection with the new Salt Lake Route (JS. P.»&#13;
L. A. &amp; S. L. R. R.) Cars go thW&#13;
A:^&#13;
and&#13;
Denver,&#13;
Colorado Springs&#13;
FueSlcr^ i«M'&#13;
over the Denver &amp; Rio Grande R. R., passing t h e&#13;
incomparably grand scenery of the Rocky Mountains&#13;
in daylight. They stop in Salt Lake City for&#13;
several'.hours, affording opportunity for sightseeings&#13;
and then leave over the Salt Lake Route, skirting&#13;
Great Salt Lake, passing thro* picturesque Utah&#13;
and the orange groves of Southern California.&#13;
No other tourist service to Los Angeles is more&#13;
convenient and no other affords such splendid opportunities&#13;
for sightseeing.&#13;
• J-';,&#13;
iiflin§tnn&#13;
Illustrated literature aad detailed&#13;
information free for th«&#13;
J. FKARaS, General&#13;
257 "Q»»&#13;
CHICAGO.&#13;
A * * ,&#13;
-¾ if&#13;
V?&#13;
\*&gt;&#13;
;.v v&#13;
•n p»&#13;
in&#13;
3?&#13;
fifcAt*&#13;
»V. \.&#13;
The L'orter Clothing Co. of Howell&#13;
will 8*11 $30 Suits and Overcoats for&#13;
$17; 115 for $12; $10 for $7; $8 for $5&#13;
$6 for $4. Other poods equally *s&#13;
cheap.&#13;
'•' i • — — — — — _ _ _ ^ _ _ _ _&#13;
TOR »ALK.&#13;
i&#13;
A on* year old colt, pric* reasonable&#13;
Inquire of Wra. Ha8senchal.&#13;
Chilson, mail route No. 1. t 51&#13;
Notice to T a x P a y e r s&#13;
WBSTPUTHA1L&#13;
D. M. Monk* visited at Otis Webb's&#13;
Unadilla one day last week. '&#13;
Mrs. Murphy of Pinckney is spending a&#13;
week at Mrs. Wm. Gardner's.&#13;
The Misses Fannie Monks and Nellie&#13;
Gardner were in Howell Wednesday last.&#13;
At the annual meeting: for the election of&#13;
officers, for the Lyndilla Telephone Co.,&#13;
held at Unadilla last Wednesday, Kirk&#13;
Van Winkle of this place was elected&#13;
director for the ensuing year.&#13;
New&#13;
and&#13;
New Good©&#13;
WE ARE HERE&#13;
Marvin &amp;&#13;
- HUGH PINUBY, M«gr.&#13;
mm ""*&lt;Tm* -•••&#13;
« *&#13;
/Specialty&#13;
The tax roll far Putnam township is&#13;
FoW^Tnlfiy Tandran(T T~Fmnrp^ay~To&#13;
receive taxes a.t any time at my store&#13;
in Pinckney. W»l! be at the storedf&#13;
Ledmo^eARpche in Acderjo^Wed^,^ ^ ^ 1 l h a j t d d t t U €SmRi ^ j ^&#13;
nesday, Dec. 27. VV E. Murphy.&#13;
Treas.&#13;
in&#13;
For Sale or Exchange.&#13;
Forty acres of timbered land&#13;
Iosco. Inquire of F. A, Barton,&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
C S. CHAMBERLIN,&#13;
EXPERT AUCTIONEER&#13;
DEXTER, MICH.&#13;
Bell PtwaeBS, free _ _ P . O. Lock Box 68&#13;
-gogmarlyjof Battle Creek, Mich. Sells everything&#13;
IOBCO.&#13;
Elmer Hntson is home for the holiday&#13;
vacation.&#13;
Ira McGlockne and wife of Stockbridge&#13;
visited his father Sunday.&#13;
TI&gt;AT,. A . S . held at the church hall,&#13;
Parker's Corners, last week was largely&#13;
attended.&#13;
W. S. Earl has put extensive repairs on&#13;
Mrs. Mary Sharp was moved last week&#13;
to the home of her daughter, Mrs. Frank&#13;
Noyea. of Stockbridge.&#13;
PLADTCIEIJ).&#13;
J o h n Longnecker visited a friend in losco&#13;
last Sunday.&#13;
S. G. Topping is taking in the sights at&#13;
Chicago this week.&#13;
W. X. Braley of Ypsilanti is spending&#13;
vacation with relatives here.&#13;
on earth—Real Estate, Graded Stock, Personal&#13;
Property, Country tfalea, etc. Years of exper&#13;
lence, and prices reasonable,&#13;
Orders may be left at the DISPATCH Office.&#13;
E.&#13;
It-&#13;
W. D A N I E L S ,&#13;
GENKRAL AUCTIONEER.&#13;
Sati8tactu n Guaranteed. For information&#13;
call at D I S P A T C H Office or address&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. t Lyndilla phone&#13;
connection. Auction bille and tin cups&#13;
furnished free.&#13;
Percy Swarthout&#13;
Funeral Director&#13;
AND EMBALMER&#13;
Mrs. E. Bush and Mrs. MaryToofare"in&#13;
the care of n doctor at present.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Will Wright came home&#13;
from California, a few days ago, where&#13;
they have been the past year.&#13;
Rev. Ostrander, assisted by Mr. George&#13;
J ackeon, the colored evangUisV will -hohL&#13;
special meetingsliitlie M . P . church until&#13;
Dec. 31.&#13;
The Presbt. L. A. S. will meet at the&#13;
home of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Conkvjfoy&#13;
dinner on Thursday, Dec. 28. All are&#13;
cordially invited.&#13;
We have opened our Branch Store In P?nckney, but uol ag some suppose, jael for the Holiday&#13;
a—We a r e H e r e t o S t a y . There £re a few mor^rJays before Christmas and f$have a complete&#13;
line to select Holiday gifts from, suitable for anyone. You will be made welcome at any time to call&#13;
and see what we are offering.&#13;
Elgin&#13;
New England&#13;
Hampden&#13;
and&#13;
Swiss-&#13;
Ail Sices in&#13;
GOLD, SILVER&#13;
NICKEL and&#13;
ENAMEL&#13;
^1½.&#13;
mtm&#13;
Scarf&#13;
Bracelets,&#13;
Pins.&#13;
f Many new ideas. §tuds,&#13;
Diamond "Rings, Rrnofh^S,&#13;
and. Ear Rings. Signet&#13;
and Oval band Kings. ;&#13;
Pins,«Fobs, Link ButtonsT&#13;
Crosses, Rosaries and Hat&#13;
T V&#13;
*V&#13;
E v e r y t h i n g in J e w e l r y&#13;
Rich Cut Glass—Bowls, Vases,-Etc.&#13;
Everything in Silver^Sterling an(J Pj^ted.&#13;
Fountain Pens—Alwaysja^e^flind' acceptable.&#13;
Prronographs—A rnucii appreciated present.&#13;
Silver Mountfcff Toilet and Manicure Sets.&#13;
~ ~rifejdaks, Pocket BooksrHEnk Stand&#13;
"~^\&#13;
i n&#13;
ALL CALLS ANSWERED&#13;
PROMPTLY DAY OR NIGHT&#13;
CHILSON&#13;
John Sweeney and son Louis are&#13;
Detroit for a few days. ,&#13;
Albert Benham who is in the l ' . of M.&#13;
was home over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Winnifred Spsulding was in Brighton&#13;
a few days last week.&#13;
M/,. V. C Walton of Alto has been vis&#13;
it fag" her friend Mrs. W. Spaulding the&#13;
past week. . ,&#13;
M?UHttI*t&amp; K I ^ t E T&#13;
HUGH FINLEY, Mn£r. Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
The fuueral of E. Keit Stuart, who was&#13;
drowned while skating hist Wednesday,&#13;
was held at the North Hamburg church&#13;
Saturday at 2 :00 o'clock p . m .&#13;
MOON'S&#13;
The People's Store. TheStoreThatSaves You Money&#13;
-&gt; Eight More Business Days Left Before Christmas.&#13;
PARLORS AT&#13;
PLIMPTON'S OLD STAND ?r)Onp No. 30&#13;
PINCKNEY; MICH&#13;
H^ve Xou Had&#13;
R e s o l u t i o n s .&#13;
Wur Picture Taken&#13;
Yet?&#13;
3f:&#13;
W H E R E A S in the providence of the&#13;
Great Ruler ot the universe, the home of&#13;
our brother Sir"Knlghl E . B. Stewart lias&#13;
been entered into by the Destroying Angel&#13;
of death arid has reaped the golden grain&#13;
and gathered it into the Lords garner. The&#13;
mother's heart has been made (o bleed b y&#13;
the death of her beloved son, E. B. Stewart&#13;
on whom her heart and comfort rested&#13;
with fondness and joyful pride. Therefore&#13;
be it&#13;
R E S O L V E D : - - T h a t we, the Sir K n i g h t s&#13;
of Genoa Tent, 875, K. O. T. M. M . e x -&#13;
tend to the bereaved mother our heartfelt&#13;
sympathy, and commend her to Him who&#13;
i knoweth all tilings best tlmt He rmy ena-&#13;
J ble her to bear with fortitude the sorrows&#13;
brought so suddenly upon her. And be it&#13;
further&#13;
RriJsou'KD:—That through his death we&#13;
fully realize the uncertainty of life and&#13;
saould ever be ready for the sickle of life's&#13;
harvest.&#13;
KKSOLV&amp;D: — T h a t a copy of—tliese—rfifiQ^.&#13;
Now is the tiir.e to buy Holiday Goods. Come and buy early while the stock i» large, and a large&#13;
selection awaits you at this store. We ate absolutely presenting to you the best line ot holiday gQedi ip titia&#13;
town; that's what our customers tell everybody. » . ^&#13;
HAND1&#13;
DON'T PAIL to see our large line bdks. We&#13;
can certainly fill your -wants in this line, if they run&#13;
from lc up.&#13;
G A M E S&#13;
Why certainly Xnias means one or two flames to&#13;
be given in each family." We have tha fullest line&#13;
of the newest and up-to date games and also the pld&#13;
stand bys, of any 9tore in this town.&#13;
..- T O I L E T G O O D S&#13;
D O M A&#13;
!&lt;&amp;£:&#13;
m&#13;
k&gt;'uwv**&#13;
If Not, Why Not?&#13;
Only a few more days before&#13;
.* we expect to leave here.&#13;
We are still maUing&#13;
2 4 Photos, for 25 Cents&#13;
. Exchange Photos with all your&#13;
school friends—you will prize&#13;
fehem in after yeaas.&#13;
* •&#13;
\,We guarantee satisfaction.&#13;
R. A. WILLIAMS.&#13;
lutlons be sent to the mother and family of&#13;
the deceased and also be spread on the&#13;
records of the Tent.&#13;
H . DAMMAN'N'I&#13;
W M . M r * c n vCommittee .&#13;
A. G."CAKI*KXTER )&#13;
PUTNAM A2TO HAJCBTJEG F A T H -&#13;
ERS' 0LTTB.&#13;
The Putnam and Hamburg farmers'&#13;
Club will meet with Mr. and jirs.&#13;
Alphens Sn ith .Saturday, Dec. 30,&#13;
1905t|lor dinner. Ladles please bring&#13;
lap boards and diibes.&#13;
•tfB|oq»|N&#13;
'48—Pioo aq; SuoraB J3JBAV VOJLBM. qonttl&#13;
e}nq|J4S|p s^iidjjno s;i -^Beq jo asnotj&#13;
-ajo;s ;ST?A v s] }j mdap %vatii «\\ jo&#13;
uosBaj ^q pa» 'suosBds JIB ;B sa^BrxxrfO&#13;
auBAv ojnj paajxa ;j jo saonaod OSJVI&#13;
»z]8 sji ^o lunoooo no "S»9.UOtaaioa&#13;
sin A*q pus ez]H g;] iq SB jpaii t\]&#13;
rpntn «t joo SUVA*)*) inoaj pe;a&gt;Adad&#13;
n«&amp;po attt •*wa9J9Brp r^^jgax/iiaA oa&#13;
•q TfnoM aadij; jnq 'Aion «aoi&gt; ;j a»qj&#13;
Xirpw^ 9&lt;xoaz juq^araos asweij ptao*&#13;
« tlt^^Anq. ion pip an*x&gt;/aqi JI&#13;
All the news for $1.00 per year.&#13;
Here again is where we lead. We have anything&#13;
yon want in this line. If yon are going to give a&#13;
toilet set, Xmas brush, and comb, glove box, collar&#13;
box, bdkf. box, etc.. fd$\a present, don't tail to buy at&#13;
this store. We can giW better satisfaction, we can&#13;
give you the lowest prices. Give us a chance and be&#13;
convinced.&#13;
How can we possibly have ended without mentioning&#13;
that we carry the sweetest, dearest little creatures,&#13;
in the line of dDlls ever presented to yon.&#13;
A fancy dressed doll only 10c.&#13;
We have dolls of any kind, all digeriptions from&#13;
,5o up.&#13;
B O O K S&#13;
Why when you can give a friend so many pleasant&#13;
hours of reading tor only 25c, buy them at least one&#13;
hook.* We are offering for only 25c, each volume of&#13;
Mary J. Holmes complete works in good binding,&#13;
also Bertha M. Clay's, Mrs. Southworths, Garvice,&#13;
Alger, Henty, and many others. We also have a&#13;
line of.book8.&#13;
You can make the children laugh from one Xmas&#13;
until the next, by buying them a story or picture&#13;
book, at this store.&#13;
•A&#13;
-St.&#13;
CHINA&#13;
i •&#13;
Your wife certainly wants a pretty dish for Xmis, it is a woman's second nature to admire and&#13;
crave;pretty disbes. She almost always wants something in a pretty dish if notning more than a pin tray or&#13;
• cup and saucer. We are offering the prettiest and most up-to-date line cf fancy china you evt&gt;r saw, in the&#13;
oheap as tell as more expensive goods. The Japanese ware plays an imortant piit i.\ our stock. It takes those&#13;
little Jap? to decorate china, if you don't believe it come and see. We alao have many different makes of China.&#13;
Don't forget the man of the house, be will always give a little grunt of satisfaction with a new shaving mug,&#13;
or a big cup and saucer, and sometimes be is very much pleased. ^&#13;
•Toys ,^.,&#13;
Well great scott, here if&gt; where we shine, we are practically the only firm that carries toys in, this&#13;
town. We have toys that clearly show great skill in construction and instruct the young in this line. We&#13;
have toys that make you laugb and we have stout built toys that are sure to please. Don't fail to look this luxe&#13;
over, and take the children home some toys. They are sure to please.&#13;
We are absolutaly as we adver.ise, the best place to buy holiday goods in this towa. We have&#13;
tried to please alt, and we firmly believe we have.&#13;
If you think from this adv. we are only a holiday firm, you are mistaken. We are always ready to show you a&#13;
good pair of gloves and mittens, hosiery and a suit'of underwear. We stand ready to fell you anything you need. We hav*&#13;
4a hyge store, extra fine chauces for displaying goods and plenty of clerks that know their business, and tend strictly to it."&#13;
T* 1 fijikknow how to give corteous treatment and they give it.&#13;
^1&#13;
•••u.J&#13;
1 '• «?V'.&#13;
{ft&#13;
Mrs. C.W. Moon.&#13;
This *o§t of you know tb|» 1iine.it second door from poet oftee.&#13;
• . * « " . . •&#13;
-Jf.&#13;
' • • * '&#13;
, ^ ,&#13;
:'i^*&gt;- v * * ^&#13;
,.',•**'*' ^«&#13;
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch December 21, 1905</text>
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                <text>December 21, 1905 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1905-12-21</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>voL.xxm.&#13;
v* VIAM'-', "HtacVvVw atv^ 'Repair \D wfc&#13;
-rr ^Wefrave a thoroughly equipped&#13;
machine shop and are in position&#13;
to do yoar repairing promptly and&#13;
at *eaaoaablg prices.—. . .—.—...&#13;
Engint and Lath*&#13;
Work a 8ptclatty&#13;
8harp Edge&#13;
Grinding Oone&#13;
PINOKNET, Ll^TNGrSTON OO.,Ml0HM THTJRSD A Y, DEC. a&amp; 1906.&#13;
'tattV ttfft&amp;Ua ftn4 'ftft 'MteifeMtt CflmnMlVimt&#13;
ADa\sotv YqirtaT ^Da^;M1i Co. &amp;U. "VXxvadWVa, 'WXcVv. |&#13;
Congregational, Church,&#13;
Christmas celebrations Friday night&#13;
attracted a crowded boose. Tbe exercises&#13;
by tbe children and others were&#13;
very satisfactory. Gifts from the Sanday&#13;
Hchool to the scholars were distribnted&#13;
it—the scholars at close o f&#13;
bOCAU NEWS.&#13;
l-AT&#13;
&amp;$*•$&amp;&#13;
w\\l soon have to write- it&#13;
;^iv,-:5Rpitmore Lake is soon to have a&#13;
full-fledged bank.&#13;
Ged. Burchiel of Detroit is spending&#13;
a few days with his parents here.&#13;
Do not forget tbe melo-drama, T'riss&#13;
at the opera house Dec. 28. Tonight.&#13;
Daring the year 1905 thirty-eicrht&#13;
divorces bav9 been granted in this&#13;
conntyv&#13;
F. L. Andrews and family spent&#13;
Sunday and Christmas with bis sister&#13;
*ere few people in this vicin-&#13;
Santa Clans did not remember&#13;
in w m e way. ^&#13;
— W e wish yotra-happy and prosperonr&#13;
N e w Year.&#13;
- A MJIB wippeT^^TViss, at tbropera&#13;
honse, Pinckney, Dec. 28.&#13;
Jobn Tiplady is spending the holidays&#13;
with his parents here.&#13;
Herbert Gelette spent Christmas in&#13;
Lansing, Grand Rapids and Albion.&#13;
C. V. Van Winkle and wife spent&#13;
Christmas with relatives in Lansing.&#13;
Miss J68816 Green visited ber sister,&#13;
Mrs. Win, Vail, at Milan, for Christ*&#13;
mas.&#13;
May tbe coming year be as productive&#13;
of peace and plenty as tbe year&#13;
that is iast closing.&#13;
Lee Graham of Cement City was&#13;
tbe guest of bis grandparents, A. B.&#13;
Green and wife the first of the week.&#13;
exercises. Others received gifts' on&#13;
the occasion including Mr. Willie&#13;
Kennedy the popular secretary of the&#13;
?. M. C. who w«$ presented by bis&#13;
friends with numerous articles of&#13;
household furniture, much to the&#13;
amusement of tbe audience.&#13;
Another good audience assembled&#13;
Sunday eveuing and listened to a&#13;
program of Christmas music. Floris&#13;
Moran «ang with good voice and taste&#13;
the baritone solo, u 0 h Little Town&#13;
of Bethlehem' ; a trio by Percy and&#13;
and Art Swartbout and Floris Moran,&#13;
with tbe~pastor as organist, was sung&#13;
with good voice and tone. A duett&#13;
by LaRue Moran and Onie Campbell&#13;
proved-fhaVtbese—boy8~bare~imusicat&#13;
talent which fihoo4d be cultivated. —&#13;
^H^r^s*y^cnii!5Hf7&#13;
* ; / mm&#13;
Miss Belle Kennedy spent the first&#13;
of tbe weetfrtfrtjgtmas, with ' relatives&#13;
at FowlerfiHav&#13;
Wl^tln'^ni^^t-tk* y,,ir is a&#13;
M S P ^ to pay for yo«r pap«r a&#13;
I * * * advance.&#13;
S**'' Principal 'iaul. of oar.High scbool,&#13;
is spending the bulida.ys with bia peo&#13;
- y^&#13;
$:r-&#13;
-.. :*&#13;
j&#13;
pie at Tawas City.&#13;
Remember the date of tbe New&#13;
Year's Dance at the Dexter Opera&#13;
House, Monday, Jan. 1, Fischer's&#13;
Orchestra.&#13;
Mrs, Sarah Brown of ibis place and&#13;
daughter Kate o f Chicago, are spending&#13;
the week at tbe home oj D . M.&#13;
reman'8 in Oak Grove.&#13;
H. A. Warner and family of Jackson&#13;
were the guests of her parents, 8.&#13;
G. Teeple and'wife oyer Sunday and&#13;
Christmas.&#13;
M i8a_Lnttke Bamnm, state secretary&#13;
cf the L. T. L. will lecture in the&#13;
Baptist church at Gregory, Sunday&#13;
-moraiftg next. Music by tbe, Loyal&#13;
Christmas is over and we&#13;
never had a better trade.&#13;
Of course we still have&#13;
some beautiful things suitable&#13;
for birthday, or other&#13;
gifts. Call and see them.&#13;
X&#13;
J,-&#13;
f&#13;
F. A. SIGLER. y-&#13;
{&#13;
Mrs.BetsyBriggs--of HowelH&amp;the ~.w&#13;
-Teaiptffaoce Legion.&#13;
A wr#ck ot freight cars at Rushton&#13;
made many people anxious about their&#13;
Christmas visit. It took nearly 24&#13;
hours to clear the track. A broken&#13;
wheel caused the piU up.&#13;
Tbe state lost an excellent person&#13;
' last week in the deal h of J. E, St. John&#13;
j of the Industrial school at Lansing.&#13;
„v&gt;'kAjvflv. •- j He has had charge of the institution&#13;
^ , Alter expending between $400,000, for 32 years and proved himself one&#13;
^ ¼ ^ - $ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 oh an elaetric railroid of God's noble me*.&#13;
y j i p M i A u s Ai-bor and Toledo, all&#13;
s # * U stepped fer lack of fund«. It&#13;
tt * » p ^ * flOjn^fcta tM line in the&#13;
TheTJoIumbian^Dramatic Club are&#13;
rehearsing tbe melo drama. T'riss, to&#13;
be put on the boards at the Pinckney-&#13;
Opera house, Thursday evening, Dec.&#13;
28 The cast of Characters is good&#13;
and the drama a good one. Reserved&#13;
seats on ^ale at Sigler's drug store.&#13;
CAST OF CHARACTEB8&#13;
HANK JORDAN Ray Kennedy&#13;
NAT WEBBER Will Kennedy&#13;
JACK HAMLIN Bert Roche&#13;
JUDGE. A. LQVETODDY Louis Monks&#13;
HALLELUJAH BILLY Martin Clinton&#13;
ZEN AS GRIMES t Mat Jeffries&#13;
BILL Joe Kennedy&#13;
JAKE Ben White&#13;
SUSIE SMITH CoraShehan&#13;
MRS. ROB1E MIe Kennedy&#13;
MISS PRIM Edna Tiplady&#13;
T'RISS Florence Harris&#13;
Songs by Miss Mae Kennedy and&#13;
Miss Florence Andrews.&#13;
Music by Fistier's Orchestra of Ann&#13;
Arbor.&#13;
guest of relatives here.&#13;
eirrT§8 6T Lansing is spending&#13;
Ibe holidays with.her parents_here*_&#13;
Representative Chas. VanKeuren&#13;
and wife are residents of Howell.&#13;
They have rented Mrs. Gilmore's&#13;
rooms in tbe Curtis House and will&#13;
take passession about J a n . 1, Mrs.&#13;
Gilmore expects to be away during&#13;
tbe winter.—'Republican,&#13;
According to the usual custom&#13;
che children and grand children to&#13;
the number of 35, of Mrs. Hugh Clark&#13;
Sr., gathered at her home south of the&#13;
village to eat Xuo*sdioner. "Grandma"&#13;
Clark, although 86 years*of age, is still I&#13;
young in appearance and action, and&#13;
ber ready wit and good humor made&#13;
the day a most marry one and—a4&#13;
Good Skating on the poodT&#13;
The beautiful weather still continues.&#13;
Wednesday was like spring.&#13;
W. W. Barnard and wife spetrtr&#13;
i Christmas with relatives in.Howell.&#13;
j !&#13;
i Married, Tuesday evening, Dec. 26,&#13;
j at tbe borne fo tbe bride, Mr. Frank&#13;
| H. Moran and Mrs. Lena Smith, both&#13;
I of Pinckney. Magistrate W. A . Carr&#13;
| officiating.&#13;
I Tbe Loyal Guards are doing an i m -&#13;
mense business, not only in Michigan,&#13;
but \a other states as well. Six divisions&#13;
were lately organized in the city&#13;
ot New York. The graft lately ex*&#13;
possed in tho big insurance companiat&#13;
his induced many people to invest in&#13;
those organized on the mutual plaa.&#13;
The Loyal Gnsids have made tha&#13;
r^JS*&#13;
came a*ay saying the&#13;
well spent.&#13;
day bad been&#13;
Per Capita tax and Hive dues of&#13;
$1.00 of L. O . T . Mf. M. are now due&#13;
and must be paid before Dec. 30,&#13;
51 52 Cora Wright, F. K.&#13;
U E i:f*ui»h N****&#13;
HI&#13;
.v.&#13;
preceptress&#13;
Mnskrats are not taking much pains&#13;
this year with the building of their&#13;
mud houses which trappers say is a&#13;
sure sign of an open • winter. Wben&#13;
bard winter or flood times are to fother&#13;
-Bt&#13;
%ha holiday * tow, the musk rats build mud bouses&#13;
bride, p&amp;:&#13;
, « «—.or. * %&#13;
f i f e have s ^ V nate has&#13;
$1,00r &lt;»«&#13;
br speot tor \nt&#13;
five dollar* for;&#13;
ia f*enn» &gt;low the water and—ex^&#13;
t e n d n g coesiderable above the surface.&#13;
Tbis winter tbe houses are built very&#13;
carelessly and shallow.&#13;
q r = =&#13;
The pastor and family wish to thank&#13;
all those friends who so kindly ministered&#13;
to them in tbe time of their&#13;
sorrow and loss.&#13;
Special services will begin Sunday&#13;
morning. Miss Best of' Detroit, who&#13;
is to assist in the singing through the&#13;
week also, is expected to be present&#13;
and sins?. She is a beautiful and&#13;
effective singer. Let all who can attend&#13;
this first service and be ready to&#13;
reconsecrate themselves to. tbis rcnrk,&#13;
for God and humanity.&#13;
Young Mens Club&#13;
The president very much appreciates&#13;
the thoughtfulne$8 of the members&#13;
and their very acceptable gifts pregreatest&#13;
record for the time it has been&#13;
organized os any fraternal . insurance&#13;
organization of tbis country. l i s reserve&#13;
fund is tbe largest of any&#13;
mutual fraternal organization in the&#13;
United States. It amounts to $28&#13;
for every member of the society.&#13;
^ - ^ ^ — &gt; ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ — — —&#13;
•&gt;#-m&#13;
^&#13;
^sisfti&#13;
JACKSON &amp;&#13;
Coty^V CtanreYi&#13;
foK^&amp;t rush of boMd*y&#13;
fur nock will contain winyVdeitctas&#13;
oot foti%d elsewhc**.- I place&#13;
my dir«ot» even ia&#13;
aad do my own jiming.&#13;
thi* may sound big to vou Nit&#13;
i,y enough when yoairaow how. A*&#13;
ithese ^oods cheaper UMJB ^&#13;
Services TonigbCat 7&#13;
Spdayi|h|fc»&#13;
seated him Christmas.&#13;
Latest magazine and periodicals in&#13;
reading road. F ree lunches Saturday&#13;
nights and hot baths for members&#13;
only. Tbe most popular resort in&#13;
town. Every decent young man&#13;
should belong.&#13;
P U T S A K A H B HAKBTJSQ FAJUC nun.&#13;
This Week O n l y ^ j&#13;
.1-&#13;
* f ^ - . *&#13;
"v?&#13;
* 1.00 Ladies' Union Suits \&#13;
T .00 Ladies' Wool Underwear&#13;
1.00 Men's Wool Underwear'&#13;
50c Quality Ladies' Underwear&#13;
50c " Men's Underwear&#13;
Prints per yard&#13;
Flannelette Waistings&#13;
83c&#13;
85c&#13;
85c&#13;
42c&#13;
5c&#13;
Sc&#13;
Vv I&#13;
-^:&#13;
Special prices on "Shoes, Hats, Caps,&#13;
Groceries and Furniture. .&#13;
•*£&amp;&#13;
• • » '&#13;
'•"'*!,&#13;
Our Store wHI be Closed Monday, January t, 1 9 0 6 ^1&#13;
?•:'-.. ^ r ? ,&#13;
The Putnam and Bam burg Farm&#13;
rt*' Club will meat with Mr. and jar*.&#13;
is Smith Saturday, Deo. 30&#13;
&gt;r dinner! Ladies pleasa bring&#13;
a n i d i i h a t .&#13;
flowing is the ptogram:&#13;
' l&amp;t*. John&#13;
r„ -Tin&#13;
Mirts&#13;
jrs&#13;
A'.'.^'^ft- tot llheunr&#13;
1 ^ rnmhacro Head-&#13;
^rpainsnu-i aches on&#13;
,' If ycu suffer from&#13;
»o say ia ail sinceHty l&#13;
A1K SOLID U N - 1&#13;
-¾..&#13;
l ] R « LOYAL GUAl&#13;
f " ^ j ^ , Andrew* Jf. Jt,&#13;
EUS*H£SS CARCS.&#13;
A l l v ,&gt;u h a v e i.w»&#13;
\jk\\\\\ •&lt; -Tit.ro iV&#13;
'««#«f^i.-.&#13;
•'i&gt; LINIMENT comes&#13;
o form, ditTerent from&#13;
Ves, indeed," W is too |&#13;
breakage or B-pilTirtfc.&#13;
to&#13;
apply a l't-tlc of&#13;
^ted parts'U^ n !; -&#13;
&gt;h niiMwtuttit;. p*.r-\&#13;
Wi.VO LIM-1&#13;
.or&#13;
-¾.&#13;
flw fit A|n. • » • ' • * • » &gt; • « &lt; • * &gt; K m.&#13;
*.*J1&#13;
C. t . SIQLf R M.&#13;
.R,&#13;
promp! |&#13;
wra^Bsy *.*y,",7&gt; ,»-M&#13;
^ ' J f t V / * r •;••••&#13;
f^'v.&amp;^V'- -- *-V^-;^-5 *'. .-•• -&#13;
' % &amp; • . &gt; ' * • ; , '&#13;
£&gt;$* ^.•:"..;'&#13;
' • ? ' . ' • • • - &gt; • ' . = ^ -&#13;
.''."'; *.' •.'''.&#13;
^&#13;
\&#13;
~&gt; V:"&#13;
\&#13;
.•&#13;
-:.f- ."*A*&#13;
* * *&#13;
- , , - %&#13;
* * • '.V'. C&#13;
•A'."&#13;
: ^ v . r t ••&gt;£ ^ .&gt;&#13;
V •••#&gt;.&#13;
~t V&#13;
:-^/&#13;
M:&#13;
ginchney gispM.&#13;
FRAXE L. AHMUSWS, Pub.&#13;
KNCKNEY; -t- MICHIGAN&#13;
• • «&#13;
Even disagreeable people serve- *&#13;
good purpose, for they teach us how&#13;
not to be. , '&#13;
* . * :&#13;
Queen Alexandra has written a&#13;
book. She won't have to look long for&#13;
a publisher.&#13;
Unfortunately the change In the&#13;
British cabinet doesn't give England&#13;
a new poet laureate.&#13;
air Alfrod Chaxle^Harmaworth'g&#13;
peerage entitles him to ran* as i-oru | ^ —&#13;
of Thirty-one Newspapers.&#13;
MR. FORDNEY TAXKS ON&#13;
THE PHILIPPINE TARIFF&#13;
BILL.&#13;
THS MONROE OFFICERS THINK&#13;
THEY WILL FIND MAN WHO&#13;
SHOT-SULLIVAN.&#13;
CRUSHED TO DEATH BY A MONWAS&#13;
SLEEPING.&#13;
___er_8ince the pencil sharpener was&#13;
invented lrome¥ "have felt lhat thoy-4—^on£f0DflmftU&#13;
could get along without men.&#13;
Any one can muster courage to meet&#13;
threat trials, but It takes a genius of&#13;
patience to endure the little ones.&#13;
The most effective argument a&#13;
charming woman can use to a man is&#13;
fcn appealing "Don't you think so?"&#13;
Some man haa Just 'Uirown a rock&#13;
at Gen. Shafter." The extraordinary&#13;
thing about it Is that he missed him.&#13;
Mr. Fordney's View.&#13;
W. Fordney.&#13;
strength of the opposition to the Philippine&#13;
tariff bill cannot be determined&#13;
at present. The president and Secretary&#13;
Taft seem to have set their hearts&#13;
on the passage of the bill, and many&#13;
congressmen hesitate to vote against&#13;
their wishes, despite their personal&#13;
opinions.&#13;
"It is a significant fact that, in connection&#13;
with the effort to rush the bill&#13;
through, jthe Philippine BUgar now in&#13;
New York in bond will yield something&#13;
like $800,000 to those interested in it if&#13;
it can be held in bond until after this&#13;
, Getting up in the middle of a winter] bill passes ^that is ifjtcan bejassed&#13;
„&gt; »,* •„»„« „ir.«tx, «,nQO «,!«*&gt;,+ «of Cuban reciprocity has not behenTed&#13;
night to run ninety miles might not t h e CubAn% b u t l n *2 a m o a t h s k h a 3&#13;
h t ^ S S T w a a h ^ ^ Co- haa be€D «*«•&#13;
home from Washington, says. *n« 1 ^ a l n wgheaeM^!^-!,^^^-,-..^^...^!!&#13;
se&lt;mi_^tch_great sport-to some peo&#13;
pie&#13;
John Bartlett, compiler of the wellknown&#13;
"Familiar Quotations," is dead.&#13;
™ ^ t e F H f f i r e ^ ^&#13;
-ttelL^L&#13;
lost for the treasury of the United&#13;
States-something UkaJ16,000,000, due&#13;
to the 20 per cent reduction of the&#13;
Dingley rate of duty. Everybody knows&#13;
it has not benefited the American users&#13;
The Kansas City judge who decided&#13;
fliat silk skirts are not a necessary of&#13;
life should have consulted some married&#13;
man.&#13;
*.*••&#13;
Cato learned Greek at 80. and now&#13;
a Chicago man 80 years old has secured&#13;
a marriage license. Another&#13;
slap at Osier!&#13;
How homelike and familiar that&#13;
closing sentence of Capt. Amundsen's&#13;
message to Nansen: "Wire me $506 as&#13;
soon as possible^&#13;
Yes, Gentle Annie, it is safe to marry&#13;
on $1,000 a year; that is, it is Just&#13;
as safe as it is to marry on any other&#13;
amount per annum. s&#13;
Mr. Ryan acted like a bachelor. A&#13;
liachelor, you know, is a man who&#13;
M)t neve to answer questions he&#13;
;•';, waat to answer.&#13;
•*m!••; .&#13;
Personally, we wish Henry Sienkewicx&#13;
would devote less attention to&#13;
Russian politics and hurry up with his&#13;
Napoleon triology instead.&#13;
In the studios they ire bettine that&#13;
Areitt Charles Dana Gibson" will&#13;
rope back' within two years and re-&#13;
MUfte black and white. Why not?&#13;
_T_heMonroe Assassin.&#13;
The attempted assassination&#13;
Roadmaster Michael J. Sullivan,&#13;
of&#13;
of&#13;
The scarlet fever scourge claimed&#13;
nine victims Monday in Calumet and&#13;
two—in hartttm.—Qv^r 75 _eases have&#13;
broken out and 24 houses are quarantined.&#13;
The- Hume-Bennett Co., composed of&#13;
f^a«ia*»TJ^uak£SLon^ld Grand Rapids , rlftaftri w e c capitalists, has purchasecT7nelargest j n ^rkness&#13;
redwood section-in-California^jMs_50&#13;
miles long.&#13;
Monroe, is still an unsolved riddle, although&#13;
the authorities and the people&#13;
have settled down to one conviction,&#13;
that the man who shot Sullivan is&#13;
some foreign-born laborer who had&#13;
worked under Sullivan and been discharged&#13;
or laid off. Sullivan has an&#13;
average of half a hundred men under&#13;
him all the time, and in spite of his&#13;
emphatic and repeated assertion that&#13;
be does not know a man in the world&#13;
who could reasonably have such a bitter&#13;
grudge against him, there is no&#13;
other tenable theory for the crime.*&#13;
Sheriff Dull and Chief of Police Anteau&#13;
still believe that they are on the&#13;
trail of the assassin, although they returned&#13;
empty handed from their, trip&#13;
to Ohio. The sheriff expresses himself&#13;
as being confident that he will get the&#13;
man, and "The people- irnve-immense,&#13;
confidence, in the ability of the sheriff&#13;
to do what he sets out to do.&#13;
Crushed to Death.&#13;
Clifford Underwood, an electrician&#13;
employed at the power house of the&#13;
Benton Harbor-St. Joseph Electric&#13;
Railway and Light Co., mef instant&#13;
death Wednesday, morning in the belting&#13;
at the power station.&#13;
Underwood waa one of the - nightJjamil:&#13;
men, and while on duty endeavored to | t ^ e &gt;'&#13;
-'am'&#13;
*heu he tells you your eyes&#13;
la the night in his life, rekka*&#13;
there are estimated to&#13;
,3H*e ijWT.822 stars on&#13;
•"**jr¥"&#13;
•M&#13;
The HrJ farmer who is using his&#13;
**to pump water and run&#13;
rV* may not have a&#13;
It isn't he intensely&#13;
Ht: i*«V&#13;
"More money ia lost on the race&#13;
cs of the country in one season&#13;
lere is in circulation," says a&#13;
L-sporting gossip. This .is also&#13;
Jr*a&gt;/«f':Jfe)l street.&#13;
lodest little evensays&#13;
a fashion writer.&#13;
if if a the one who sends&#13;
to Wt she is electioneering&#13;
JnJt—Cfctcago Journal. „&#13;
m ^''••'.y''-~^d&amp;Mr' Jersey comes to the front with&#13;
^ . v . - i j | f t u l e y cow that barks like a dog. But&#13;
«'. . ^ | K h e will have to do better thAn thai&#13;
.r'if-to beat the Massachusetts rabbit that&#13;
• "y-i« attacked a man and bit off his nose&#13;
""•?«.•.•, &lt;* !U£tter reading that eight titled Eng-&#13;
"kttnters killed 3,300 pheasants in&#13;
£*yp, tk»e American live-pigeon&#13;
|fe4^t fail that an apology Is&#13;
'-^^K*fl&amp; things said abouf&#13;
snatch a few moments of sleep. One&#13;
of the big engines was standing idle&#13;
and Underwood laid down on the fivefoot&#13;
belt attached to the dynamo. At&#13;
12 o'clock Wm. Mann, a fellow-workman,&#13;
turned on the power, and a nv&gt;-&#13;
ment later he saw the belt carrying his&#13;
comrade into the big pulley. He endeavored&#13;
to shut off the engine, but&#13;
the momentum was too great, anti Underwood&#13;
was crushed to death between&#13;
the belt and the pulley.&#13;
Underwood was a young man and&#13;
his wife died only four weeks ago, and&#13;
he has brooded considerably over this.&#13;
MICHIGAN ITEMS.&#13;
Plans and specification B have been&#13;
prepared for a $10,000 addition to the&#13;
Monroe court house.&#13;
Frank Lewis, of Pontiac, went tQ *&#13;
husking bee and while* operatta* t*e&#13;
machine husked his handsome gold&#13;
vateju&#13;
Mrs. Jeremiah 8alllvan was struck]&#13;
and Instantly killed by a Grand Trunk&#13;
engine at a Lapeer street crossing.]&#13;
She was 76 years old.&#13;
Chauncey Hall, an employe of the&#13;
American Screen Door factory, will be&#13;
totally blind, a flying nail having injured&#13;
his only good eye.&#13;
Grand Rapids council has pasno.l&#13;
an ordinance to compel all saloons to&#13;
be on police beats. Eleven saloons now&#13;
operating are affected.&#13;
iMjre^Til^A^Preston, the newspapa*&#13;
writer"oTl^Harlgtte/ who was struck&#13;
by an auto a&#13;
Thursday, died&#13;
San Diego. Cal., last&#13;
f her injuries.&#13;
A company, to be known as the: Sun&#13;
on the south bank of Sunday lake.&#13;
Owing to the continued illness of&#13;
Judge Carpenter It \a likely that Judge&#13;
A. V. McAlvay will preside over the&#13;
supreme court as chief justice in'lyud.&#13;
• Harvey Reams; of Three Rivers,&#13;
skated on thin ice and broke through.&#13;
.He was rescued by means of a rope,&#13;
but it took some time to resuscitate&#13;
him.&#13;
Jolin Brown, of Millersburg, removed&#13;
his red sweater and placed it&#13;
beside the railroad track, stopping a&#13;
freight train and causing much confusion.&#13;
Word reached Kalamazoo of the&#13;
tragic death of Charles Barnes tit St.&#13;
Louis on Sunday. He is the fourth&#13;
member of the family whom sudden&#13;
death has reached.&#13;
Two more skeletons have been unearthed'on&#13;
the fatm of Henry Ohmer,&#13;
three miles from Yale, while 11 others&#13;
were uncovered by the shifting sands&#13;
a few months ago.&#13;
Gov. Warner has not granted a pardon&#13;
during his first year of oQce. One&#13;
hundred pardons have been granted in&#13;
the last six years, 57 of them being&#13;
by Pingree in 1901.&#13;
Samuel Reeves, of Constantino,&#13;
drove directly in the way of a backing&#13;
freight train at the .station in iuree&#13;
Rivers. His right leg was cut off aud&#13;
-he will probably—die.&#13;
Mrs; G. D. Obeman, of Grand ii!»pids,&#13;
wife of an old soldier and in rather&#13;
moderate circumstances, has ivceived&#13;
a $26,000 bequest from the £2,-&#13;
000,000 Guy estate in London.&#13;
Albert Neal, aged 19, was fonnd guilty&#13;
of non'sudport. Hfs wife was formtrly&#13;
Miss Fiances Conger, and both&#13;
resided at Akron, Tuscola county. A&#13;
family row broke out and estranged&#13;
oung couple:—~ —&#13;
Fatally Scalded.&#13;
Roberr McCullough, chief engineer&#13;
at the Lake Superior Corporation's&#13;
veneer mill, fell into a tank of boiling f&#13;
water Wednesday morning and was&#13;
submerged up to the neck.&#13;
Although he was quickly gotten out&#13;
and taken to the general hospital,&#13;
-where he ii_getting the best of caie&#13;
possible, it is not thouglirtfiaF"&amp;e~wnr}&#13;
survive.&#13;
McCullough walked into flie tank&#13;
without being able to see it on account&#13;
of the steam, Which was unusually&#13;
thick, made SQ by the cold. Hfs home&#13;
is out in the country, whe/e there are&#13;
four children, who will be orphaned In&#13;
case of his death.&#13;
fMOO.OOO yearly&#13;
m * tame stattoand&#13;
after an evening's spree was landed&#13;
in the village lockup.&#13;
At 4 o'clock Thursday morning the&#13;
jail building burned and Groveburg&#13;
was cremated, the remains being hardly&#13;
recognizable when tajsen from the&#13;
rolaa. The lockup was a small frame&#13;
the origin of the fire is&#13;
fc'attftO£er&#13;
0 %mmi&#13;
and noththat&#13;
his&#13;
far&#13;
Banking Commissioner Moore has&#13;
approved *the articles of incorporation&#13;
of a new state bank to be established&#13;
at Oxford under the name of the Farmers'&#13;
State Bank of Oxford with a capitalization&#13;
of $20,000.&#13;
Because the Eaton county jail has&#13;
been condemned and fearing Thomas&#13;
Jones, alleged burglar, who broke jail&#13;
last July, would try it again, Sheriff&#13;
Halliday has secured a court order to&#13;
remove him to the Barry county bastile.&#13;
Suit will be commenced on behalf of&#13;
the Saginaw west side school district&#13;
against the coal companies which are&#13;
undermining the streets, public buildings,&#13;
parks and other public property,&#13;
under authority of, ,the council, they&#13;
'claim.* "°&#13;
The dead body of a man hanging to&#13;
the limb of a wayside tree was too&#13;
ghastly discovery made in the early&#13;
dawn this morning oy a farmer near&#13;
St. JohnfiL___The man is supposed to&#13;
M&gt; . ' » ' " ' j'.it'JU-.U&#13;
¥&#13;
TH»4&lt;«l&gt;la-0BLram0ZAJOS&#13;
THE QUESTION TO&#13;
BE SOLVED.&#13;
THE aHEATWT CRIftia* IN HISTORY&#13;
OF TROUBLED R U * '..,..&#13;
8IA TO BE MET.&#13;
RIOTING, SRJUTAL ' SLAUGHTER&#13;
AND THREATS THAT A^tLiiafc&#13;
OF BLOOD WILL COME.&#13;
works to the number of about 12,000&#13;
struck.&#13;
The government's adviceB show that&#13;
all the trains with troopB which enter&#13;
the Baltic provinces are being stopped&#13;
by the insurgents. A number of Cossacks&#13;
in a car were captured and disarmed&#13;
beyondDorpat&#13;
Tha town of Tukum has been retaken&#13;
from the insurgents by Russian&#13;
troops.&#13;
According to information received&#13;
during the-night from Moscow, that&#13;
city was in a state of great excitement.&#13;
The inhabitants were scurrying about&#13;
buying supplies of candles, etc., the&#13;
stores were- hnardart qp^the_jgrear_ majority&#13;
of the mills were closed and the&#13;
&gt;«l»f pl'lH " l ¥ i * l ' l V.'?**&#13;
U1&#13;
-«r"v' 4-&gt;-&#13;
Tha visit o* Prasidtnt Caaaattyof t*£;&#13;
»vai tna cprttM; Uon#| ffterooott*&#13;
_apWd with*the sihsoqaftf remark*&#13;
of vth« hitherjto unplaced Senator Penroae.&#13;
majtea th* rfthroad, »t*. aHiia^oa&#13;
muoh- more clear &gt;«e«ofdtt» &lt;o popular&#13;
opinion, v v v ^ •. v.r-?'1''"•&#13;
. Penrose, after Oassatt want&#13;
said ha was tor any rate legislate&#13;
tha president wanted. From tfei^ '&#13;
other information that If.hate&#13;
lated, rt is bec^m^ng *pp«i%tft w great trunk Una raihxiadi wm&#13;
draw all oppoalttoo tOriltfS^ftftlslatl&#13;
as soon as to«-f are assured .that&#13;
law will be passed that w)il effectm&#13;
ty do away with rebates, and all otkei ,,&#13;
radroada wfff d6' JrteVis^ft the iatr"&#13;
will allow toew'torjsuot? «f: &lt;...&#13;
Baiik.FaMufc*.&#13;
SlTTJUHijU fa 'llwi riom»'&#13;
troller of the -currency,'WflUam B.&#13;
UfiU-V&#13;
A&gt;.&#13;
The Great Strike.&#13;
A St Petersburg dispatch says that&#13;
the railroad strike began at the &gt;T^uolas-&#13;
atation at noon Thursday, nut th'J&#13;
Baltic roads were still wbrkTng~aTth*t;&#13;
^ n e employes of the Putiloff 1 ^ 1 ¾ ^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ ^ ¾ *™*'»&#13;
RWgeiy^ that wl» feottp«l 4ho thrar&#13;
large ftnanclal. Institution*, the Chie*&#13;
ago, nMiooal^aAk. tae CJfeJcago Hora^&#13;
Saving* ^a^ao*th*T»Ql»aote f « « ^&#13;
wind up their affairs. .&#13;
The other national banka of the&#13;
have come to the rescue, and it is&#13;
clared on the authority of ihe cl&#13;
ing house association, the «ainptrotf&#13;
and also by the officers ol the Ch&#13;
0 go National -bank, o*at nob. a si&#13;
depositor will lose a cent&#13;
The difflcttitioa _of.tthojhiw baftks^&#13;
which are practically one and these&#13;
me institution, are attributed by the&#13;
| comptroller of the currency to the&#13;
large loans made by tae Cuicago National&#13;
bank to the railroad, coal min*&#13;
ing and. other *rivater«»tarprises*con^&#13;
trolled by Mr. Walsh.&#13;
The liabilities of the two baivks. and:&#13;
of the Equitable Trust Co. weretfBJir'*&#13;
telegraph offices, which had partially&#13;
resumed their services, were again&#13;
losed. Wednesday night Moscow was&#13;
Drenched With Blood.&#13;
The strike .leaders at Moscow are&#13;
boasting that the strike will be trans*&#13;
formed into an armed revolution, the&#13;
orators at the meetings declaring that&#13;
Russia will be drenched with blood&#13;
before the long struggle ends.&#13;
, Gen. Doubassoff, governor-general or&#13;
Moscow, who has taken possession of&#13;
the late Grand Duke Sergius's palace&#13;
in that city, delivered an address to&#13;
the municipal authorities Wednesday&#13;
in which be declared an unrelenting&#13;
war on agitators. He spoke of the&#13;
ishame to Russia that Moscow, the&#13;
.former bulwark of the autocracy and&#13;
;the holy city where the emperor came&#13;
to pray, should become the center of&#13;
[disorder and insolent agitation for the&#13;
overthrow of the emperor. The geueral&#13;
insisted that there were enough&#13;
-of-4he_falihlul^to preserve the autocracy&#13;
unshakenTouTTHsr ttoy-must-er-4wbil« _his auditors, although&#13;
ganize and suppress the criminal elements,&#13;
and he has accepted his present&#13;
post because he wished to be in&#13;
the forefront of the battle where he&#13;
could show his devotion to the emperor.&#13;
roughly esllniatBaTat $2tt.600,W0^--Th.a:_&#13;
assets of the (three institutions made&#13;
up about-,$«0,600,000 of this amount,,&#13;
and the directors and officials of the&#13;
^***rfffr National banV came to the&#13;
front with securities amoftwting: ,te^ .&#13;
abOuT-$W0#ee— moro.--T^la-4elC^_&#13;
deficit of about $3,000,000 to be - f a « ^ ^&#13;
and the Chicago banks represente^KT^&#13;
the meeting declared at once t$fp:&#13;
they would _meet the situation, ancT&#13;
care for the deficit. If it proved necessary&#13;
to advance any more than $3,-&#13;
000,000 to meet all demands the bankspledged&#13;
themselves to make up theamount&#13;
whatever it mignt be.&#13;
Inciting Disorder,&#13;
Rothay Reynolds, a New Yorfc&#13;
World correspondent at Riga, cablesa&#13;
vivid account of the peasants' revolution&#13;
at Livonia. He attended the&#13;
funeral of a peasant killed by soldiers*&#13;
at Lennewarden, In southern Livonia,,&#13;
and describes the service as follow*:&#13;
"A rebel ascended the pulpit, *cuL..&#13;
taking- the coffined body as hi.r&#13;
made a violent revolutionary&#13;
:¾¾&#13;
•jj&amp;&#13;
Burned in Lookup.&#13;
Charles Groveburg, aged 51. of Sacaginaw,&#13;
who has been'working in the&#13;
woods at Cornwall's Camps, came into | he' realized of his danger was when&#13;
Rapids.&#13;
Dr. Chas, l^ards, of Adrian, has received&#13;
word that the Toledo &amp; Michigan&#13;
railroad has been successfully&#13;
financed in New York, and the foad,&#13;
from Adrian to Coldwater, and ultimately&#13;
to Elkhart, Ind., will be pushed&#13;
in the spring.&#13;
Louis Roman, aged 54, of Bay City,&#13;
bled to death from ao ulcer on his&#13;
ankle eating into an artery. The first&#13;
the village Wednesday night with $?7 khls shoe began to fill with blood. A&#13;
Horrors Multiply.&#13;
The muting and rioting in the Man-&#13;
•r.hnriftn armV are extending and tee&#13;
most terribte scenes are win&#13;
daily.&#13;
A detachment of Cossacka ittacked&#13;
the barracks at Toms|t, wtapein&#13;
900 mutineers were confined, aei4 get&#13;
fire to the buildings. It to- refafted&#13;
that all the imprisoned men were&#13;
roasted to death.&#13;
Rioting in the streets of Vladivostok&#13;
is continued. In one street dnraken&#13;
Cossacks set fire to a block of hewut»&#13;
and massacred 120 of the residents as&#13;
they attempted to escape.&#13;
Numbers of people 'are kitled daily&#13;
in the streets.&#13;
faces wereinsTorted-by-i&#13;
sat as silent as if' they were at au&#13;
ordinary religious ceremony.&#13;
"The fiery address finished, the congregation—&#13;
for so I must call them—&#13;
I sang rebel songs as a fitting dirge&#13;
for the 'marlyr.*&#13;
placed on a&#13;
hundreds, bofS&#13;
"There .anettor&#13;
and priests' beside the o#e&#13;
grave* in which, as a revi&#13;
.anthem sounded In the frosty aii% the&#13;
soldiers' victim found his last resting&#13;
place."&#13;
Reynolds quotes Gov. Regihsk of&#13;
Riga as saying:&#13;
"The socialists are fighting with a&#13;
long sword. I am armed onlv vtttfe%&#13;
little knife." " - ^&#13;
ft.*w&#13;
Shanghai Rioting.&#13;
Armed guards and patrols are maintained&#13;
in Shanghai to cope with a possible&#13;
renewal of tlje disturbances. The&#13;
streets are filled with rowdies. The&#13;
shops are open but looting is greatly&#13;
feared. The United States cruiser Baltimore&#13;
has landed a force and the British&#13;
cruiser Diadem sent 500 men&#13;
h a v e ~ b ^ G ^ r g e T n t o ^ ^ and it is reported that German troops&#13;
are coming here from Kiao-chau.&#13;
The Chinese newspapers say the&#13;
rowdies proposed to take advantage&#13;
of the mixed court dispute to attack&#13;
and loot tho foreign settlement.&#13;
doctor was called, but Roman died before&#13;
he arfived.&#13;
Frank A. Wheeler, Lawrence Fisher,&#13;
Ira Dennis and L. H. Clendenlng,&#13;
all of Ohio, were each fined. $60 and&#13;
costs for violating the game laws. Defendants&#13;
came from Ohio during tho&#13;
deer season, and secured resident U*&#13;
censes In Lenawee county. ,,.&#13;
The state military board has a oetfmunication&#13;
from Robert A. CraiK a ,&#13;
.farmer near Ludington, w.ho sjjjfti frif J&#13;
drove into tne camp grounds lppfc^—— * f ;&#13;
•Ktr to sell butter. A gas fire&#13;
one of his horses died of&#13;
wants pay for Mi&#13;
Steamer Lost.&#13;
The German steamer Audes was 48&#13;
days overdue Tuesday from Newport&#13;
News for Guenta, Venezuela, and she&#13;
has been posted in Lloyd's register of&#13;
shipping as lost. Since the Andes&#13;
passed out of the Virginian capes, on&#13;
the morning of Sunday, "October 22,&#13;
%he has not been seen or heard of and&#13;
it is announced that her owner has&#13;
gtte^her up *s lost. It is believed&#13;
tStSjW ftatei ettoountered a severe&#13;
through t*e West&#13;
. ,diea&#13;
SP"3"_3B^B^E^E^B^B^Ha^^fliP^'j''^^*^'^s^-&#13;
^&#13;
&gt;;;*&#13;
• f ' v w , ^ :&#13;
"*- .fttl?"&#13;
CONDENSED NEWS&#13;
F. S. PUsey, of Philadelphiav a pr#K&#13;
motor of a $3,000,000 mining schema!&#13;
was sentenced, Tuesday, to six monthir&#13;
imprisonment for swindling A. 'qp&#13;
Moore, of New York, out of $4,000. &gt;^&#13;
Senator Frank Farnum, of Chilajiift&#13;
will not be tried for complicity- ia^ taev-'.&#13;
murder of County Commlturiomer Joaa\ v&#13;
Kopf. The coroner's lwr&amp; mf taerelfr&#13;
not enough evidence te IMM him. •&#13;
A man, belie*ad&gt;to be- Barton Mansfield,&#13;
about 60 j^ara oK,.&#13;
on a Bldewalk&#13;
^-dying con 1&#13;
and had $1*1* &amp;-ft|s&#13;
thought that be was&#13;
drops.&#13;
Mrs. Laura&#13;
ident of the a&#13;
lieved to be&#13;
Mabelle.&#13;
suit for&#13;
of Nevada* SB*&#13;
it all out i t Mr&#13;
Fred Pabs^ farmer&#13;
Pabst Brewing On., and 0&#13;
known millio^i(Nd 1&#13;
studying agrlc&#13;
of Wisconsin,&#13;
fine stock farm&#13;
into the business&#13;
an elaborate and setemt!&#13;
In view of the decisietf of4 A&#13;
Qenerfel tfeedj thai ml&lt;ishii-i^n can-&#13;
Irom the ejcaiH^.,,. ,y&#13;
recoeathee*&#13;
B» decided to go'&#13;
m**&amp;nhilfif. on m&#13;
.±*Ai&#13;
"•i*4f"*-&lt; "*" vn*******-*&#13;
' i**1t»-;?&lt;..&lt;&#13;
' «lv":''5»'*J'*"'.."*','"&gt;&#13;
7 ,41 \ jiw^mwm^mmmm ^ p ^ , ^ * i ^ ^ ^ * ^ W P ^ W i l 7 | K W t 1 j W l B P S ^ B l p 3 ^ i # . -.*»•***&amp; '»««M*a««i»,«!*ya f « « u i : l^aVA-M****1' • •**•&#13;
. • * * • : A«\ *« l£ WT^W^m^m, vr:.*' &amp; $ $ ..**•.&#13;
• " V ^7 'I' r&#13;
9 mm&#13;
WO!«Ali ^WUJRES PARDON&#13;
ON T*£&amp; FORTIETH&#13;
•' :v A P P R A I A " . y ; . i '-,.•&#13;
« • • •&#13;
^MkH|» IWQKT AWAY.&#13;
v . —•!••&lt;&lt;a»»a»a— r&#13;
AM EX-OOVJlERNOR WK6 COULO&#13;
MOT kflfiv^BOM. WCCUtAT*&#13;
INQ QOKSTfeCHAPttffY HOMC&#13;
"H%&#13;
•s» 'Asu«.tti«.,&#13;
she had been ©ottflaed since S M&#13;
16, LlbWe Oacfahiaadt, N e w J t i W a&#13;
Mrs. MaybrlosvoTSroosse st her Christ*&#13;
mas i&gt;resdtt&lt; : i ot' UWfrtjM^ef ****&#13;
glimpse o r w ' i i n i t a f c ^ t f ? : ? W ^ -&#13;
swooned, fe|i Jitfo.\f| cataleptic state td had to be carried t&gt;*ck; to her call.&#13;
The huddea change fro» her coffin&#13;
t f o u r white walla to the streets, with&#13;
elf long vistsa, tfifcirnoise* aad hurrying&#13;
people; ted confused and terrified&#13;
her. The eyes of womea seemed to&#13;
seek her out—Llbble Oaxrabrandt, the&#13;
murderess of her husband. £he pressed&#13;
her head hard against the cold wall&#13;
of the prison she had Just left, swayed&#13;
and. was caught by Miss Mary Phil-,&#13;
briclc, her attorney, who was not born&#13;
when Li bote Oarrabrandt's death in&#13;
lite-4&gt;egua. When She recovered, she&#13;
was taken in a closed carriage to a&#13;
Roman Catholic institution. '&#13;
A living, growing son* in* a dying&#13;
body-was-the -plea upon which Gov^&#13;
Stokes and the board of pardons ewer&#13;
which, he presides decided to liberate&#13;
the woman who had struggled for par&#13;
j j o i i i n 4 6 a p p e a l s .&#13;
.:-.-./•;&gt;'-'•%,• ;„ ,»a^ ^°rs; i » =&#13;
^^PWiipjJnesGo.&#13;
ratic minority on the&#13;
__ Aeans committee of the&#13;
b.us.e has submitted its report on the&#13;
Philippine tariff bill, favsring a complete&#13;
divorce of the islands from the&#13;
United States, A substitute is offered&#13;
for the majority report, declaring for&#13;
absolute free trade with the islands, including&#13;
Hawaii and Porto Rico, but&#13;
adding that if the substitute is voted&#13;
4$own the minority will support the Reiblican&#13;
bill, as it is "a long step in&#13;
e logical and right direction."&#13;
MIPSHIPMBN'S "CODE,"&#13;
The n^shipmW of ^be flrWcla» V&#13;
^ naval-academy, who form the oourr&#13;
bf last resort in matters relating to&#13;
the "code" have, it Is said, passed the&#13;
word-among the f«urth-*lajf men who&#13;
ale lpiig called | s wftnefcee before&#13;
the bosvd of investigation' that they&#13;
may answer freely and fully all questions&#13;
asked them.&#13;
•1 his it understood to mark the&#13;
breakdown of all efforts of the midshipmen&#13;
to defy the authorities. The&#13;
•hoard has anmnrionert so gisny midshipmen&#13;
of the fourth class thai the&#13;
upper classmen are said to have decided,&#13;
that It will be useless to make&#13;
any further attempt to control the matter.&#13;
Touching the rumor that whole&#13;
classes, as. suoh, contemplate admittlni&#13;
haiifig, an otfjeer In authority today&#13;
said tMt midshipmen would not&#13;
be allowed to adnrft fiasihiPit? a general&#13;
way, but that any of them who&#13;
desired to confess to a Bpecial case&#13;
would have it attended to promptly.&#13;
Klmhrougb&#13;
^s*. ^.iimT.tm,&#13;
MlfiliS'\ m}4* TH'ROVGH SUKCK&#13;
H. Addtogtc^ Bruc^ dejcrlbes the&#13;
attempt of an HnfJlsb! clergyman'TiT utter aniasemen^aiid then ai I&#13;
passed »p the sflteauui he disappeare4&#13;
/ The imptession left^on my&#13;
mind WM so vlrft that I fully intended&#13;
waking a friend who occupied&#13;
the same room as myself, but remeav&#13;
berihg that T should only be laughed&#13;
at as romantic and Imaginative 1 refrained&#13;
from doing so."&#13;
Arguing from analogy, it was held&#13;
no intimation of the experiment, was-J ^ y those advancing thetelepathic hy&#13;
named Clarence (Godfrey to "prpject&#13;
himself' into^the! presence of a friend&#13;
at a distance. The attempt was made&#13;
on the night of Nov. 16,18WThe'result&#13;
of his attempt, as described&#13;
in the account written out a*&#13;
his request by the "percipient," who&#13;
ii. jhc^ld J&gt;erhap8 be added, had had&#13;
as follows: "Yesterday—viz., the&#13;
morning of Nov. 16, 1,886--about half*&#13;
past 3 o'clock I woke up with a start&#13;
and an idea that someone had come&#13;
into the room. I hoard a curious&#13;
sound, but fancied it might be the&#13;
birdB;in the ivy outside. Next I experienced&#13;
a strange, restless longing&#13;
to leave the room and go downstairs.&#13;
This feeling became so overpowering&#13;
that at last I arose and lit a candle&#13;
atfd Henry G. Cooper, Jr., were both&#13;
released from the hospital Monday and&#13;
will, it is thought,'shortly be called before&#13;
the board of investigation.&#13;
Cornelius, the 15-year-old son of&#13;
Peter Reilly, broke through the ice and&#13;
was drowned while skating on the Ral-t sin river.&#13;
Gov. La Follette, before resigning A*&#13;
governor, removed District Attorney&#13;
John A.'Kittell, who was thought to&#13;
be too lenient toward graft and prize&#13;
fights. -&#13;
Mrs. Mary Liggins, proprietor ol a&#13;
Jewelry' store--in -Philadelphia, waH&#13;
knocked senseless and her place&#13;
robbed of $2,000 worth of jewclrv,&#13;
Tuesday evening.&#13;
An offer of -fWMHH) -towanL a tuna&#13;
of $100*000 for the relief of a«ed Presbyterians&#13;
in Ohio was announced in&#13;
Cincinnati, Tuesday. The name of the&#13;
donor was-wlthbeldi- „&#13;
get some soda water it might have&#13;
a quieting effect.&#13;
"On returning to my room I saw&#13;
Mr. Godfrey- standing under Jhe large&#13;
window on the staircase. He was&#13;
dressed in his usual style and with&#13;
an expression on his fact that I have&#13;
noticed when he has been looking&#13;
very earnestly at anything. He stood&#13;
there and I held up the candle and&#13;
gazed i t him for tares or four meosds&#13;
potheets that the mind of a dying person&#13;
in reverting t o n distant friend&#13;
conveyed to- the friend's mind a distinct&#13;
impression which took the form&#13;
of n vivid, visual hallucination. To&#13;
the reply that the apparitions we e by&#13;
no means uniformly coincident with&#13;
the moment of death- and not infrequently&#13;
occurred only after a lapse&#13;
of several hours- it was deemed sufficient&#13;
to point to such cases as that&#13;
and went down, thinking that ff T oonldjofjtev. Mr. Godfrey as Illustrative of&#13;
similar deferment ~ot experimental&#13;
hallucinations. In the Godfrey case&#13;
the "willing" begun at 10:45 p. m. on&#13;
the night of Nov. 15, and lasted only&#13;
elgh f minutes, after whieh-Otr^Qpdfrey&#13;
fell asleep; whereas, it was not&#13;
until 3:30 a. m. of the following morning&#13;
that the hallucinatory vision appeared&#13;
to the "percipient/'—Public&#13;
Opinion.&#13;
HAVOC WROVGHT BX SILKWORM&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
.i*»&#13;
Charity Provides Home.&#13;
Homeless and penniless, former Gov.&#13;
WHtfttm R. Taylor, of Wisconsin, aged&#13;
f t , pHo scourged the railroads in the&#13;
j?0s as champion of the "granger"&#13;
nt, just as La Follette has&#13;
•-^oing^.has entered the Gisholt&#13;
Home for the Aged, a semi-charitable&#13;
*-:rv"*&#13;
institution just outside, of Madison&#13;
The |500 entrance fee was raised by&#13;
wealthy relatives, who first offered&#13;
utfarm4sJi*'S»s»e for 4fee "farmer gov.&#13;
:7¾^ eru?.e for wpsiesatssft hros&lt;s»r&gt;y r lor to penury in his old age. Neaffy all&#13;
the money he could raise since leaving&#13;
thP ffnvornnr'g oh air tmq hppn Inst ]p&#13;
'hitring" the wheat market, or in taking&#13;
flyers on the stock exchange. Four&#13;
months ago he sold out his homestead&#13;
at Cottage Grove for $800. He flirted&#13;
with the Chicago market for several&#13;
days, and then asked his acqualnt-&#13;
••%auces to help him get Into the- Gisholt&#13;
Longworth-Roosevett.&#13;
A Washington dispatch "says that&#13;
Miss Alice Roosevelt and Congressman&#13;
Nicholas Long*orth of Cincinnati will&#13;
be married at hUa noon on February&#13;
22 next, Wwhiftftoaa birthday.&#13;
U ^ t h e Wish ftJOili•••sss-elt that&#13;
bd nsartied * f a n . aMsiopalian,&#13;
Os4«nf^SSl*V 'JfJSJiP. m *% John's&#13;
" * VmWm* the&#13;
Hbuse, will probably .read the&#13;
service. ,: . - . : , ^ - : - ^ ..'&#13;
Uat Miss XU&lt;« had little 1 weddiug&#13;
Ike highly&#13;
beqtfeathed to&#13;
mother.—" _&#13;
t» half-sister of&#13;
th# only maid of&#13;
President^ frsWer.&#13;
l«s bf spent for info&#13;
fivf dotlan for&#13;
o has agreed to the house&#13;
cans; bill by which the&#13;
t'nalljr disposed by this&#13;
imputed Question wh.ei.hiil,&#13;
whioh provides bo«h&#13;
ncy canga fund as we1!&#13;
uce or^H.000,000 in&#13;
residesir k Hfihed with&#13;
: ^ - ;&gt; expend th« «|jg|Bratn without&#13;
askisg any ttord ipRuons of congress.&#13;
- •' ••*•.-l ' ^ #&#13;
TJse jolnf^miKptanoe was vopoi.-ni&#13;
WvsMMWI»n»''nn.l the bill is now rjw-iy&#13;
it for Lne presUetitrs&#13;
It-^iThyrr were-*ret miui^= ! atacl£s&#13;
cr» o r f e e d e r s \n t h e r e c e i p t s , t h e f e w&#13;
offerings— b e i n g -picked uj&gt;__readlly ^ y&#13;
f a r m e r s a t full s t e a d y prices. T h e b e s t&#13;
g r a d e s of m i l c h c o w s sold a t l a s t w e e k ' s&#13;
p r i c e s , b u t c o m m o n g r a d e s w e r e d u l l&#13;
a n d a b o u t $3 l o w e r . E x t r a d r y - f e d&#13;
s t e e r s a n d h e i f e r s , $4 50@5 1 0 ; s t e e r s&#13;
a n d h e i f e r s , 1,000 to 1,200, *4©&gt; 4 15;&#13;
s t e e r s a n d h e i f e r s , 800 t o 1.000, $3 2 3 ©&#13;
3 75; s t e e r s a n d h e i f e r s , fat, 500 t o TOO,&#13;
$3@3 50; c h o i c e f a t c o w s , $3^)3 5 0 ;&#13;
g o o d f a t c o w s , $2 50*®2 6 5 ; c o m m o n&#13;
c o w s , %Z@2 25; c a n n e r s , f l 25@1 5 0 ;&#13;
c h o i c e h e a v y bulls, $ 3 # 3 2 5 ; f a i r to&#13;
g o o d b o l o g n a s , bulls, %t 2 5 ® 2 75; s t o c k&#13;
bulls, $ 2 ® 2 25; c h o i c e f e e d i n g s t e e r s ,&#13;
800 t o 1,000, &gt;3 50@ 3 S5; fair f e e d i n g&#13;
s t e e r s , 800 t o 1,000, | 3 ® 3 5 0 ; c h o i c e&#13;
s t o c k e r s , 500 to TOO, t 3 © 3 25; fair&#13;
s t o c k e r s , 500 t o 700, $2 5 0 © 3 j s t o c k&#13;
h e i f e r s , $2 50(g&gt;2 7 5 ; mjllkers, l a r g e ,&#13;
y o u n g , m e d i u m a g e , M 0 | ? 5 0 ; c o m m o n&#13;
m i l k e r s , $18@30. V e a l c a l v e s s o l d a t&#13;
the o p e n i n g a b o u t the s a m e a s o n l a s t&#13;
T h u r s d a y , t h e t o p g r a d e s b r i n g i n g *8&#13;
per 100. T h e c l o s e w a s a trifle l o w e r .&#13;
Sheep—-From 10c t o 15c l o w e r t h a n&#13;
last w e e k . B e s t l a m b s , $7 2 5 ® 7 50; fair&#13;
to g o o d l a m b s , 16 7 5 ® 7 ; l i g h t t o c o m -&#13;
mon l a m b s , $6@»6 25; fair t o g o o d&#13;
h u t r h e r aheepr $4(H&gt;5; c u l l s a n d c o m -&#13;
tnon, $2 50(0)3. ~&#13;
H o g s — T r a d e a c t i v e ; r a n g e of p r i c e s :&#13;
L i g h t t o good b u t c h e r s . $5; pigs, $4 95;&#13;
l i g h t y o r k c r s , $4 9 5 ® 5 ; r o u g h s , $4 25@&#13;
4 50; stag's, third off.&#13;
A thrifty woman of Augusta began&#13;
experimenting, some time ago to learn&#13;
what effect the Georgia cltmate_would ported by the&#13;
have upon imported silkworms."" A&#13;
room in her house was given up to&#13;
their use and mulberry leaves in&#13;
— -frtHmfliUMVft JKAVBL- tfuppHort to__ibjm.&#13;
were swollen and her face gave evidence&#13;
of long weeping, whlclrwas suppersistent&#13;
convulsive&#13;
Later, when they began to Increase&#13;
in numbers and to escape to other&#13;
parts of the house, whatever spot they&#13;
chanced upoj^became sacred to them.&#13;
No one was allowed to interfere with&#13;
a-slfHw-orm in its-pursuit-of happiness^&#13;
C h i c a g o — C o m m o n to prime s t e e r s , $3&#13;
@6 6"&gt;; c o w s , $2 S0@4 40; bulls, J 2 ®&#13;
4 25;' s t o c k e r s a n d f e e d e r s , $2 15@4 25;&#13;
c a l v e s , $2 50 &lt;8 7.&#13;
Hogs*—Shipping and s e l e c t e d , | 5 @ 5 05;&#13;
m i x e d a n d butchers, $4 "0@5; l i g h t ,&#13;
(4 90.^.5 0 2 ½ ; p i g s a n d r o u g h s , VS&amp;&#13;
4 90.&#13;
no matter where it might have established&#13;
its cocoon. This was strongly&#13;
impressed, upon the servants.&#13;
All the while the worms were grow-,&#13;
ing. Mandy, the colored cook, was&#13;
making preparations for her wedding.&#13;
In order to take advantage of every&#13;
minute she could spare, she brought&#13;
the materials for her wedding dress&#13;
to the kitchen, and there constructed&#13;
a thing of beauty with which to bedeck&#13;
herself. At last her day cf happiness&#13;
arrived, and her mistress consented&#13;
to allow a substitute to cook&#13;
dinner while Mandy was away for a&#13;
day to celebrate the event.&#13;
That evening, however, Mandy appeared&#13;
in the kitchen as usual, and&#13;
pet about getting supper. Her eyes&#13;
V StNTfeNCt M9T IIMONfe •*£:.&#13;
God Is not lauded By libeling m e t i \&#13;
Citizenship simply means service.&#13;
Bad news never spoils by keeping.&#13;
True blue seldom sees things bine.&#13;
Nothing worries- worry worse than&#13;
work.&#13;
The greatest art of life is that of&#13;
living.&#13;
Sow a small joy and reap a great&#13;
happiness.&#13;
It takes more than diplomacy to defeat&#13;
the devil.&#13;
Ho need8 to wear wading boots who&#13;
takes short cuts to success.&#13;
Better is It to drive the gloom from&#13;
one heart than to dower it with gpld.&#13;
-^~H H-«agy—to-jgaaif&gt; e n o u g h s t r e n g t h ^&#13;
dodging your duties to do them twice&#13;
over.&#13;
The value of a strong man's power&#13;
depends on his patience- with the&#13;
weak.&#13;
If some hearts should go to heaven&#13;
there would be a hard frost there&#13;
right oh'.&#13;
God's workers never have to watt&#13;
for a raise in salary before they will&#13;
do their best.&#13;
Bearing the cross does not exempt&#13;
one from bearing a share of the&#13;
world's cares. - —&#13;
fe!# '•$•'•'!£.&#13;
¢ . ^ , . 3&#13;
* ; V-V|C.fl [tt&#13;
In a s-nf world the only saints wfco&#13;
have a right to sleep are the ones ia&#13;
The trouble with much preaching is&#13;
that it is advertising truffles when the&#13;
WEy^bxtf**60*1^-need.noiaiQej.&#13;
heaving of her shoulders.&#13;
"Why, Mandy!" exclaimed her mis&#13;
tress. "I'm right glad to see you back&#13;
Did tlLe_weddin£_go nicely?" '&#13;
"No, ma'am," said MandyT ~Jhent^h^nsr^r^eyaTdT&#13;
burst into a storm of tears. "No,&#13;
ma'am, It just didn't go at a^l. I ain't&#13;
been married."&#13;
"Not married, Mandy?&#13;
Mr too bad! '-Wbat-was- the matter? „ , . , , _ , . , ,&#13;
Didn't Henderson come?" ' ^ ~ - -««a«-P««PlnTAic lmyin«__their Uck&#13;
Ya-as'mrhe done come. Eve'ybody&#13;
done come. The whole chu'eh was&#13;
plumb full of people. I reckon some&#13;
of 'em Is there yit. Eve'ybody was&#13;
there but me."&#13;
Sobs again shook her and Interfered&#13;
with Speech.&#13;
"Well, what was the matter, then?"&#13;
finally inquired her mistress. 'Did you&#13;
change your mind?'&#13;
O, lawsy. no. Miss Sally. I wanted&#13;
to git there bald enough. But, Miss&#13;
Sally—Miss Sally—" sobs again—&#13;
"Miss Sally, one of dem plaguy,&#13;
squnshy white worms done—done—&#13;
coococ-ed in my weddin' dress!"— A womab generally thinks her.l&#13;
Youth's Companion. t r ] u s t a t r l f l e better-than-the mother&#13;
of her husband.&#13;
*: *ii d&#13;
•-•m&#13;
*n&#13;
ets to glory on the installment plan,&#13;
at the rate of a niokel a week.—Chicago&#13;
Tribune. ^&#13;
WISDOM'S WHISPERS,,&#13;
Some men are powerless to make&#13;
themselves understood %j a woman.&#13;
Charity may cover a sa«ttitade of&#13;
f.ins, but a lot more will spring up.&#13;
The man who boasts that he hasn't&#13;
»ny friends does not deserve to have&#13;
any. "?^v-,&#13;
'itf-j&#13;
&gt;&gt;i&#13;
3heep—tifi-*—3S; v o^r\ i^gja ^ t l If? fl&#13;
a m b s , $ 7 ^ 7 00. - "* -&#13;
E a s t Buffalo—Bes'. e x p o r t s t e e r s ,&#13;
$4.75¢1 ~i; oni' load of l i g h t w e i g h t c a t -&#13;
tle, prime, sold at "$5.60. this b e i n g t h e&#13;
top of the m a r k e t ; best 1.200 to 1.3«0-lb.&#13;
s h i p p i n g s t e e r s , $4.40@4.6r&gt;; best 1,000&#13;
to 1,100-lb. d o . , $4.15(1(. 4.40; best , f » t&#13;
c o w s , $3@3.5A; fair t o g o o d , $2.50@2.75;&#13;
t r i m m e r s , $1.7r&gt;£i.2; host fnt h e i f e r s ,&#13;
$0.50^*4; m e d i u m h e i f e r s . $ 3 ^ 3 . 2 5 ; c o m -&#13;
mon s t o c k heifers, $2."»0^ 2.7.1; best&#13;
feeders, $4@4.2or*bost j e a r l i n g steer's.&#13;
S3.40¾ 3.GO; c o m m o n s t o c k s t e e r s , $3¾&#13;
3.25; e x p o r t bulla, $3.50©3.75; bolcigna&#13;
bulla, $S@3.2n; m i l k e r s sold a t s t e a d y&#13;
hast w e e k ' s prices nnd s p r i n g e r s w e r e&#13;
dull and from f 2 to $3 l o w e r ; it i s i m -&#13;
p o s s i b l e t o sell late s p r i n g e r s f o r a n y -&#13;
t h i n g a b o v e beef p r i c e s ; w o u l d not a d -&#13;
v i s e s h i p p i n g them', g o o d t o eTctra, $40®&#13;
50; m e d i u m t o g o o d , $33@S8; c o m m o n ,&#13;
$18@20. B e s t c a l v e s , $9.23®9;50; m e d -&#13;
ium t o g o o d , $7.50&lt;@ S.7."&gt;; h e a v y , $ 3 . 5 0 $&#13;
4.50. J . • ••&#13;
H o g s - ^ R e c e l p t s , 2 5,000; s t r o n g ; a l l&#13;
g r a d e s , $5.20^ closed s t e a d y . -&#13;
Sheep—.Top l a m b s , $7.75@7.90; fair t o&#13;
g o o d , $7.25®7.60; cull to c o m m o n , -$7®&#13;
7.25; b e s t s h e e p , $5.50@3.75; cull t o&#13;
c o m m o n , $ 4 ® 4 . 5 0 ; w e t h e r s , $5.75@6;&#13;
y e a r l i n g s , $6.25@6.75.&#13;
Qraad Prize&#13;
olumbia&#13;
St. Louis, 1904&#13;
raphophones&#13;
BEST TALKING MACHINES MADE&#13;
Cylinder Machines $7,80 to $tOO&#13;
kJisd Machines* 012 to $65&#13;
Tho Qrmstfvophono re§uroducos alt kinds of&#13;
mumSo perfectly-~ band, orchestra, violin,&#13;
vooal end inmirmuontai GOMOB, qumrtoitom,&#13;
etom H f9 mn ondices BOUTOG of&#13;
(iT»*n. Kf«».&#13;
D e t r o i t — W h e a t — X o . 1 w h i t e , S4%o:&#13;
No. 2 red spot, 1 car a t $&lt;5!4c, 3 c a r s « t&#13;
8 6 ½ c , c l o s i n g n o m i n a l a t K6c; D e c e m -&#13;
ber, 5,000 bu a t S6V4C, 3,000 bu a t 86%c,&#13;
5,000 bu a t 8 6 H e ; 1,000 bu a t S6c; May.&#13;
10,000 bu a t 909ttc, 5,000 bu a t 9 0 H c ,&#13;
10.000 bu a t 90%c. 12.000 bu a t 9 0 H c ,&#13;
5,000 bu a t 9 0 * i o ; No. 3 red. 82c-per bu.&#13;
C o r n — N o . 3 m i x e d , 45c; No. 3 y e l l o w .&#13;
3 c a r s nt 46Vie; No. 4 y e l l o w , 2. cars a t&#13;
44%c; No. J w h i t e . 1 c a r a t 45Vfcc; b y&#13;
s a m p l e . 1 c a r nt 43Vic pt»r bu.&#13;
O a t s — N o . 3 w h i t e , spot, 1 car a t 34c&#13;
per bu.&#13;
Itye—'No. 2 spot, S c a r s a t 67c per bu.&#13;
C l o v e r s e e d — P r i m e spot, 25 b a g s a t&#13;
$8 10; J a n u a r y , 100 b a g s a t $8 1 2 ½ :&#13;
March, 100 b a g s a t $8 15; b y s a m p l e , 14&#13;
b a g s at $7 75, 23 a t $7 60, 29 a t f t 50. 15&#13;
at $7 25. 8 a t $7, 5 a t $6 75 p«f bu, P r i m e&#13;
atsik&lt;\ $7 75; b y sample,, Avhfltpl *4k4&lt;&gt; 2&gt;&gt;x&#13;
a n d 2 At $5 pet- b ^ ""." ' ^ ^ - *&#13;
Jue«tnb«(S H t t&#13;
iSJM:_Umt*m**A m&amp;&#13;
f j oud&#13;
^J nrlvaled&#13;
F^ rilliant&#13;
J nsplrtn^&#13;
^ \ ttretctl&#13;
"R^^m*t'*&#13;
K&#13;
V ©&#13;
r ^ ntertainin^t&#13;
^^ apt I vat Ing&#13;
C J utweorlng&#13;
Jt«^ esonant&#13;
D eK^htfui&#13;
^ ^ uperlor&#13;
*m :-?*$'•&lt;. a&#13;
•«&lt;i»iwii«iifcii»ti&gt;H«w»i&gt;»MiM»u«i»iii&gt;iitii»H»ii»»»«w««t&gt;wtM«w&lt;&lt;ii&gt;&gt;&gt;«tn«it»w«nm»«ii««»&gt;ti««i»«tn«M»M»M»^ COLUMBIA&#13;
Gold Moulded Cylinder&#13;
IHtlMlllilWlwhwiWWI Mw*«««;«N«««wtii»«MNauMiaHa&lt;M&gt;iaiitHaii«MiM«ii&gt;ii«nBiiiuiMBH«(ia«iaiiaiitiMNMit&#13;
. &gt; . ) . • 4&#13;
— U"»i"|»&gt;*|&gt;li&#13;
J' *m%&#13;
-8¾&#13;
j t&#13;
COLUMBIA&#13;
7«lnoh9 «qt&#13;
, m , f t ^&#13;
a / i s&#13;
iu ail sincerity 1&#13;
" SOLID LINO&#13;
F J H K LOYAL GUJ&#13;
| 5 ( V Andrew* P. A,&#13;
.* cure for IlheujT!&#13;
•a, Lumbfliro Head&#13;
^%'f 4 jwinsnud aches on&#13;
• J s--i.'*f y°xi »»8fer from&#13;
"•' re say i&#13;
1^ f I-PAIN rnir trTa"&#13;
;irV*-**AIN. SOLID LINIMENT comes&#13;
,vi a ueat box m piu,to form, different from&#13;
•*:.»or liniments, '-Yes, indeed," It ia too&#13;
•pf.-.cious to !o-w h^ -Sreakagc or spillW*.&#13;
All y^u have _ v f c J S A t o apply a little r^&#13;
a\iu\oiiSHMlllB^BlBllW«dj&gt;fkrt«iot&lt;•! ,&#13;
tu«*J^v |i«r.&#13;
* * *&#13;
I&#13;
3¾ •'.v&#13;
^,' r \ •&#13;
J"1&#13;
*&#13;
'&amp;\*&#13;
K i j |&#13;
* ' - ' • ] *&#13;
:.yk&#13;
B U S I N E S S CARD'S.&#13;
•*4lfyY. Q. t . SIQUIR M,&#13;
prompi fl&#13;
la »u eel&#13;
BWpBWSFjBHSHBKro ^ w ^ ^ '^T^i I^y^/J^7 ^1¾ -ul\ \*, ••^..^'v -*&#13;
T&#13;
f^^'i ...**•,&#13;
'"•» ,,v5&#13;
* - P&#13;
$k» fincaucg Jjisspatrh&#13;
MM F.&#13;
1&#13;
1 S —&#13;
L. ANDREWS&#13;
-£——&#13;
ICO. PROPRIETOR 8.&#13;
fc L&#13;
THURSDAY , DEC. 28, 1905.&#13;
ft • " •&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Tho trial of the indicted meat&#13;
p .Backers now in progress in Chica-&#13;
^ ¾ ) is attracting very wide attention&#13;
because of the great effect a&#13;
verdict in favor of the government&#13;
wil1 nave on future transactions&#13;
along that line.&#13;
"""~No matter V h a t - m a y b e - s a i t l&#13;
against the President's policy in&#13;
the West Iudies, it must ba said derbilt c:m not purchase a seat iu your&#13;
-in its favor that it iias given theJ PosLr2£Hi_ItB d o w n i n g open on[y o n&#13;
Island of San Domingo the only&#13;
rest from revolution she has&#13;
known in many years,&#13;
if I&#13;
The battle against greed and&#13;
graft is on throughout the country&#13;
and people everywhere who love&#13;
their country aud prefer honest&#13;
methods to trickery, corruption&#13;
«*d—reign_ai miHiosaires__. wil]_&#13;
lend a helping hand.&#13;
fcivery little Senator with a con^&#13;
Attention, G. A. R.&#13;
The following are extracts from a&#13;
paper wbicb was read by rl.~H. Hause&#13;
at a uieeting'ot'-ihe 1). V.'. Wasbburn&#13;
Pest ot Wa]kins N. Y. Mr. Hause is&#13;
well known in this vicinity as one «1&#13;
the • old boys" ana* expects to be with&#13;
us in 1906&#13;
Comrades, did you ever *top to think&#13;
what it is to belong to this'order? Do you&#13;
realize that there is no other organization&#13;
on earth like the Grand Army of the&#13;
Kopublic? N o child can be born iuto it;&#13;
no proclamation of president, edict yt king&#13;
or czar.can command admission ; no university&#13;
or institution ot learniug can issue a&#13;
If- : -'•&#13;
1 « .&#13;
stHoent owning a little sugar beet&#13;
patch iaopposing the free importation&#13;
of Philipine sugar in teeth&#13;
oT thVFact tbaf 75^00,000 of peopl&#13;
«-4n this country use sugar—-an4&#13;
demand it at less cost.&#13;
begrimmed, it may be, which certihes to&#13;
an honorable discharge from the armies or&#13;
navies of the Nation daring the war against&#13;
rebellion. Unlike any otheif association,&#13;
no new blood can come in. There are no&#13;
growing ranks from which recruits can be&#13;
drawu into the Grand Army of the Republic.&#13;
With the consummation of peace&#13;
through victory in 1805 its. rolls of'recruits&#13;
were closed forever. Its lines are steadily&#13;
aud swiftly growing thinner, and the cease-&#13;
Tesslramp ot Us columns is with ever lessening&#13;
tread; The gaps in the picket lines&#13;
grow wider; day by day details are Sum-&#13;
.Dioned into the shadowy regoins to return&#13;
no more to touch elbows; until by and by&#13;
only a solitary sentinel shall stand guard,&#13;
w«iting till the bugle call shall muster out&#13;
the last comrade of the Grand Army of&#13;
the R e p u b l i c .&#13;
&gt;ur country is proud of UH&#13;
^ mmm&#13;
W.C.T.U.&#13;
E d i t e d by the P i a c k u e y W . C . T . - U .&#13;
Hon. Oarrol D. Wright, ex-&#13;
Gommissibner of Labor, says:&#13;
"Ninety-two per cent of the crime&#13;
iu this country is the result of&#13;
intoxicating liquors."&#13;
I t is stated in the National&#13;
Temperance Advocate that Secretary&#13;
Tait has but recently ' aokuowledged&#13;
to Mr. Littlefield that&#13;
officers had been giving manifestly&#13;
diploma authorizes its holder to e n t e r ; no p r e j Q j i c e ( j D p i n i o u s o n t h e c a i l -&#13;
act"of c6hgre88~or p U'liuieut secuies * e e o t f - - ._ ^ — - ;r-*fcx=5r-*js-w*TO&#13;
.i i.i c u i t ii^.. „,. v»„ teeu, aud has ordered t-Uemto^ive&#13;
union; the wealth of Rockefeller or \ an- the a» nti-canteen gymnasi. u"*m s, ordered&#13;
by congress at a cost of&#13;
preseriuuion o T r b ! T o ? T F q n * v t o « n ^ r A » 4 n t n i U f c i l $ 2 , 0 0 0 , 9 0 0 - , 7 ¾ n d tJt&gt;tr-yet i n&#13;
a*".&#13;
Perhaps the most important&#13;
'^jrorteiou proposed by the natural-&#13;
\ iltfiiOQ commission is one that no&#13;
parson shall become a citizen who&#13;
^&lt;k»Aot speak English. The rer,&#13;
qfrwenbent is a reasonable one.&#13;
• I BagMfh is the language of the&#13;
Ncottfcfrfy; laws and ballots are&#13;
printed in that language, and the&#13;
;-&gt;&#13;
courts are conducted in&#13;
guage and no other.&#13;
that i an-&#13;
- * • $ - - &lt;&#13;
tbe fauJt of-hazing at the Na^&#13;
\\ Naval Academy lies at the&#13;
door of Congress and the country&#13;
must know it. That irresponsible&#13;
legislative entity passed astringent&#13;
law against hazing several years&#13;
j ^ a g o , but when the Commandant of&#13;
J t h e Academy Admiral Brownson&#13;
3li smiesed three cadets For the&#13;
* * * • &gt;&#13;
ty offeree Congress had legisto&#13;
stop, Congress'ate its own&#13;
and reinstated the young&#13;
TwrfotUums and they^are-now naval&#13;
Congress is making a&#13;
t&amp;put the recent dis-&#13;
Jfcizing is still in full&#13;
ait in* the &gt; Academy^ but the&#13;
ault is in the weak legged easy&#13;
irtue of Congress and HO where&#13;
lee.&#13;
for what we have done for her,'' and we&#13;
should be proud of one another aud do all&#13;
wtthin our power for each other's welfare&#13;
and happiness. Ever be mindful of F . C&#13;
and L . t o each other and everyone that&#13;
wears or is fntitled to wear the bronze&#13;
buttoe.in the lapel of his coat.&#13;
Yes, we have doue much for our country.&#13;
And our work is not doue yet: a great task&#13;
is befroe UP. T h e rising generations must&#13;
be taught the lessons of patriotism ami&#13;
Americanism, that their object be their&#13;
country, and nothing but their country,&#13;
and by tne blessing cf God, their country&#13;
remain a vast and splendid momument,&#13;
uot of oppression and terror, but of wisdom,&#13;
of peace and of liberty, upon which the&#13;
wTTrtd may gaae w-fHr- ttdmmttton forever.&#13;
Rou^h skin and cracked hands are&#13;
not only cured by Do Witt's Witch&#13;
Hazel Salve, but an occasional application&#13;
keeps ttf6 skin soft and smooth.&#13;
Best lor eczema, cuts, boils, burrjs, etc,&#13;
The genuine DeWitt's Witch Hazel&#13;
.Salve affords immediat. •, relief in all&#13;
forms of blind, bleeding, itching and&#13;
protruding piles. .&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Druggist.&#13;
ENVELOPES.&#13;
l Why S o m e of T h e n A r e C o l o r e d B l u e&#13;
on t h e In.Mldf.&#13;
j "Why are theso onvolopos miulo b l u e&#13;
I on the insUU'*.''- a s k e d a m a n looking at&#13;
I a s p e c i m e n w h i c h a w h o l e s a l e station-&#13;
! er held in his hand.&#13;
] "For a very s i m p l e r e a s o n , " w a s t h e&#13;
: reply. "One oi'-tho m o s t Important rv.-&#13;
j suits in the. m a k i n g - o f e n v e l o p e s is to&#13;
j prevent t/aie&gt;parenc'.v. Many w h i t e pa&#13;
full operation, a.fair trial, which&#13;
they certainly could not have had&#13;
in use, even if officers were not&#13;
continually condemning the law,&#13;
which it is their business to enforce&#13;
impartially:&#13;
Quite a sensation was raised&#13;
recently by a statement to the&#13;
effect that President Roosevelt&#13;
had been presented a large case of&#13;
beer by a uew brewing company.&#13;
I t is now stated in Washington&#13;
that the ea$e of beer was promptly'&#13;
returned to the company with a&#13;
formal letter of thanks from Sectary&#13;
Loeb. as the president has&#13;
directed all presents sent to him&#13;
to be politely returned. " I t is also&#13;
stated authoritatively that beer is&#13;
not used at the White House.&#13;
The question was raised by the&#13;
ladies of the W. C. T. XL of Allegheny,&#13;
Pennsylvania.&#13;
Mr. E. Tennyson Smith* the&#13;
English temperauce evangelist, on&#13;
tour in America, has opened his&#13;
fall campaign most successfully.&#13;
He concluded a series of eight&#13;
days' meetings at Haverhill, Mass.,&#13;
which were the largest temperance&#13;
meetings ever seen in the city.&#13;
Two of the principal churches&#13;
were crowded nightly; after the&#13;
first two evenings and on Sunday&#13;
evening over 200 people had to&#13;
stand, atid numbers were -turned&#13;
from the doors.-. All the ministers&#13;
co-operated most heartily. The&#13;
city was stirred and there is a&#13;
strong impression as the outcome&#13;
of the enthusiam created the people&#13;
will vote out the saloons.&#13;
The season of indigestion is upon&#13;
us. Kodoi Dyspepsia Cure for indigestion&#13;
and dyspepsia will do everything&#13;
for thestomach that an over-loaded or&#13;
an over-worked stomach can not do&#13;
for itselt. Kodol digests what vou&#13;
eat—gives the stomach a rest—relieves&#13;
your stomach, belching, heart-burn,&#13;
indigestion, etc.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Stgler, Druggist.&#13;
A Kearfnl tato ' pers are so transparent that by careful&#13;
. . . , ' fcerutinv the c o n t e n t s of an e n v e l o p e&#13;
r t u l f a t e to h a v e to e n s u r e n m i | l . ( ) l s l K . u l n r t t e r i a l m a y be d e t e r&#13;
_^ t o r t u r e ' ol piles. "1 can . mini il. For i n s t a n c e , let us put a sheer&#13;
r n t p n l l v s a y , ' w r i t e s H a r r y C o l s o n , ! oTv paper w i t h w r i t i n g o n it Into thin&#13;
WB-'Mi"'"^. 1" . " " " " *" btii.H -1.1»^ | envelope. W e w i l l n o w seal it a n d h o l d&#13;
• * •. , : 1 . _ \ J _ _ _ t . . . . j : „ . _ :i..- It t o the light t h u s . There, yoti c a n u o l&#13;
j?, i t c h i n g and . .pr o t ruding piles, only s e e the bank check, but you c a n&#13;
.'Ko^klenVArnica Salve is the I est cure&#13;
madn '' AISJ best lor cuts barns and&#13;
injuries. 25c at ?. A. S.gler's, druggist.&#13;
B * » e f t i 9$ C o n t r a c t ,&#13;
tbhdr that Industry Is essen&#13;
L^lggpfred the easy go&#13;
'yi xna^l'bai wmcr fame&#13;
• £*4U*iCti$&lt;l- • ^ • f fiirtbi now&#13;
, jj-^.^Aa In. terj^f none&#13;
IT. ""••'&#13;
also read m a n y of t h e w o r d s on t h e&#13;
sheet of p a p e r . , T h i s c a n b e p r e v e n t e d&#13;
eitber by g e t t i n g a thick and h i g h&#13;
priced e n v e l o p e w h i c h Is not t r a n s p a r -&#13;
ent or by t a k i n g a c h e a p e r g r a d e of paper&#13;
whh'h is b l u e on o n e side. W e s e l l&#13;
t h o u s a n d s of p a c k a g e s of b l u e envelopes—&#13;
that is, e n v e l o p e * w h i c h ' i i r e b l u e&#13;
on the o u t s i d e — b u t p e o p l e d o n o t 'like&#13;
t h e m on a c c o u n t of their color. S o t o&#13;
g e t o v e : t h e difficulty a n d still m a k e&#13;
a n e n v e l o p e t h a t will hide, t h e c o n t e u t s&#13;
and not be high priced t h e m a n u f a c -&#13;
turer u s e s p a p e r w h i c h is b l u e o n o n e&#13;
s i d e and w h i t e o n the other. O n e factalry&#13;
in A is o * y t u r n s out m o r e t h a n a&#13;
• * • t w m . f * * m « * of mdk e m t o p e s d a i l y , a n d&#13;
# r t r Ml* i a • U r » m?* ». pwwaftua."&#13;
JuNt- a n E x p e r i m e n t .&#13;
"If 1 w e r e t o a s k y o u t o m a r r y m e&#13;
w h a t w o u l d y o u s a y ? "&#13;
"Why, Mr. B r o w n b y , " s h e f a l t e r e d ,&#13;
"really t h i s i s s o s u d d e n . "&#13;
—"T thought &lt;s&lt;V' ho nnawprwl. "Thnt'a&#13;
about what they all say. &gt;Iuch obliged."&#13;
And then he said it was time for him&#13;
to go.&#13;
r^-pAZ&#13;
Gray Hair ix a bar to employment and to!&#13;
- ,Kc^t/:r«'f. It i.; not ;\ C, . iV&#13;
ItactH in the roots, compelling th« necretic&gt;';i i&#13;
Of tbc pi^mcnt.s that give life and color toth»&#13;
halrinthroeUiivs. Itrsnotstickyor&#13;
Odor:do*«»t»Ubu tin-scalp. A&#13;
AU drnfKiat«.(&#13;
yorgreaMyjno&#13;
BS'iLUTELY&#13;
IMEiLA&#13;
Nothing will eert indigestimr that&#13;
doesn't diyest tbn food. &lt;tw!f, and^rive&#13;
tba titomacb .r«»J;. You can't »»i?rct&#13;
that a weak stomach wilt regain its&#13;
«trenK*h anefget well when it i* com*&#13;
pelted to do ;he fall work that abound&#13;
stomach should do. Yon woo Id a t ex&#13;
pectasick horse to ge.t well when it is&#13;
compelled to do a .lull dayV work&#13;
everyday cl" the week. Kodol Dys&#13;
pepsia Cure is a perfect digestant and&#13;
digests the food regardless of the con&#13;
dttion of your stomach. Relieves indigestion,&#13;
belching, sour stomach -and&#13;
all slomich disorders.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Drugglit&#13;
Hates to Western I-otnts&#13;
k y : -&#13;
• ^ • -&#13;
A&#13;
If contempIitTny a ttip we&gt;f, wrire&#13;
to F. '.«. Mosier, T. I*. A., Uhicago&#13;
Great Western Railway, 115 Adams&#13;
i^tM UhwagA, instating ho_w„m_an_y in&#13;
the par^y aud when you wish to no.&#13;
He will advise you promptly concerning&#13;
tbe best rates, routes and other&#13;
necessary Information. t 52&#13;
A CABl&gt;.&#13;
I, tbe undersigned, do hereby agree&#13;
lo refund the money on a 50 cent bot&#13;
tie of Greene's Warranted Syrup of&#13;
Tar if it failes ro cure your cough ot&#13;
cold. I also guarantee a 25-cent bottle&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money reunded.&#13;
119&#13;
Will H. Darrow.&#13;
Canadian Holiday Excnrsions via&#13;
Grand Trunk Hallway System&#13;
Single tare for LheL romidjtrip to&#13;
certain Canadian points on all trains&#13;
Dec. 14th, 15Th7i6fh and 17th, 1902;&#13;
valid returning to leave destination to&#13;
and including January 6th, 1906&#13;
For fares and turther information call&#13;
on your local Agent on write'to GEO&#13;
W, VAUX, A. G. P. &amp; T. A, Chcago,&#13;
111.&#13;
It is The Town Talk&#13;
Yes one telis the other how good it&#13;
is and thousands of pecple and physicians&#13;
having used Mejftcan 3or* Plaster,&#13;
saying it is the best corn and bun&#13;
ion cure on earth, like court plaster,&#13;
handy to &amp;tick on. easy to wear, antiseptic,&#13;
painless and harmless. Send&#13;
your correct address and Ifhcents-andby&#13;
return mail we will *;end you a&#13;
large package of Mexican Core plaster.&#13;
You Will bless the day you did.&#13;
Reliable agt. wanted for this city.&#13;
Address F. tiassler C©.,&#13;
Lansing,,Mich.&#13;
417 Dorrance Place.&#13;
says m a n y a doctor to h h&#13;
lady patients, because h e&#13;
•doesn't know of any medicine&#13;
that will cute female&#13;
troubles except the surgeon's&#13;
knife*&#13;
T h a t such a medicine&#13;
exists. however,is proved by&#13;
thousands of cures made by •* • -&gt;.w-&#13;
W1NF&#13;
OF •t:,!&#13;
Cures Womb&#13;
Disease&#13;
It has saved the lives of many&#13;
weak, sick women and rescued others&#13;
from a lifetime ot: chronic sickness.&#13;
It will cure you if you will&#13;
only give it a chance; Try it.&#13;
'Sold by all druggists and dealers&#13;
Jn Si .0Q bottles.&#13;
•&#13;
1&#13;
ii&#13;
?r.&#13;
. . . X ' I ' . .&#13;
a*i&#13;
•&#13;
&lt;SBtaSV"*-&#13;
m$t&#13;
GAVE UP SUPPORTER.&#13;
*' 1 wore a suppoitvsr for foa?&#13;
years,, to keep up my womb,'*&#13;
writes Mrs. S. J. Chrisman, of&#13;
Mannsville,N.Y. V My doctor said&#13;
m&gt;_iiiedicine would help me. After&#13;
taking Cardui 1 gare up my supporter&#13;
and am now well."&#13;
For PUesy Burnsy 8oree«&#13;
STATE OP MICHl'JAN-Cou'-ty&#13;
ston, ss.&#13;
Christmas and New Year Excursions&#13;
via Grand Trunk Railway System&#13;
One and one-third fare lor the round&#13;
trip on all trains December 23d, 24th,&#13;
25th, 30tb, 31st, 1905 and January 1st,&#13;
lOrtA D^*..^.^ u.v,:*. ~~„ xirir. +^ ~~A 0.,1906, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at sold pro&#13;
1906. Return limit any dale to « t d | b i f i ^ K 5 ; s ^ l r ^ ^&#13;
incFlourd itnugr th.Jearn uinarfoy rm3da,t i1o9n0 6c, onsult lo&#13;
cal agent or write to GEO. W. VAUX,&#13;
A. G. P. &amp;T. A., Cbicaxo, III. t 52&#13;
Torture of a Preacher&#13;
f be story of tbe torture ot Rev. O&#13;
D. Mcore, pastor of tbe Haptist ohurrh,&#13;
of Harper&gt;ville, N. Y., will interrst&#13;
you. He says:"i suffered agonies,&#13;
because of a persr-ten' cough, result&#13;
ing from tbe grip. I bad to sleep sit&#13;
tincr up in bed I trifd inanv remedies.&#13;
without reueTTTuutil 1 to;-k Dr. KinK'-&#13;
New Di&gt;c&gt;vpry tor consumption,&#13;
coughs and co'd-, Which entirely cured&#13;
my cough and saved me from consume&#13;
tion." A grand cure for diseased condition*&#13;
ot the lieart. and lungs. At F&#13;
A. Sillers dru/cist; price OOo and&#13;
$1.00, guaranteed. Trial bottle free.&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach . No apMttto, IOM;&#13;
ness, heaveha,&#13;
general +**&amp;,&#13;
of tho stomach are,&#13;
Kodoloweelodlfi&#13;
ery remtnt* th&#13;
tton^ji. HUT&#13;
&amp;t»&#13;
.C2ate&#13;
of Livings&#13;
Al a session of tbe Probate Court for&#13;
the said county, Leld at the probate office In the&#13;
village of Howell, on ThurBday, the 7th day of&#13;
December in Ihd year oue thousand nine hundred&#13;
flva. Present, /rthui A, Montague, Judge of&#13;
Probate. In the mntter of the estate of&#13;
SAMUEL LCBOIS, deceased&#13;
Now comes Hi&gt;hlon A. UuRois.admiulstrntor.of&#13;
the estate ol saltl deceased and repreaenta&#13;
to tl,i&gt; court Umt he is ready to render&#13;
his final account in said estate.&#13;
Thereupon U ia ordered that Friday the 5th&#13;
day of January next at ten o'clock in the forenoon,&#13;
at said Probate Office, be assigned for the&#13;
heaiiugol said acccmnt.&#13;
Aiul it le further ordered thata copy of this&#13;
or er be minlished In the PIHCKNEY DISPATCH, a&#13;
newspap* r printed and circulating in said county,&#13;
three successive weefs previous to said day ofbearing.&#13;
~&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAJ3UE,&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
ClTATK OP MlOHlQAN.4h* pr«:&#13;
H the c-ninty of Mvingaton — Vt »&#13;
said court, held at the probate oflic|ia»&#13;
of Howell in said county ou the "'^Hl'tHf i f * ^&#13;
ember A. D. 190S. Present: Hon. Arttiur A. Montague,&#13;
judge of Probate. In the matter of tho&#13;
entail of .&#13;
•flkRT OooD\vi», deceased&#13;
Deasie Whitehead having filed in said court her&#13;
oeUtion praying that the administration of said&#13;
estate be granted to llaniet Torter, or to some&#13;
other suitable persoa.&#13;
It is ordered, that the filth day of January, A&#13;
said petition. It Is further ordered, that public&#13;
no'lee thereof be givpu by publication of a copy of&#13;
this order, for three successive weeks previous to&#13;
Bald clay of luaring, In the PINCKNBY DISPATCH,*&#13;
n wspa'per printed and circulated-in said county.&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAGUE,&#13;
52 Judge of Probate.&#13;
STATE ot'iMlOHKJAN, tho probata, eotfi far '••% :•&#13;
Ihecounty,of Livingston,- Atasenitee efeMft &gt;;•' '&#13;
court, held at the probato office in the Vtrlejp eC.-¾&#13;
Howell in paid county, on the iyth day of Decern- .&#13;
her, A. 1). 19f5. Present: Hon. Arthur A. Mon- , /&#13;
tajjue, judi;e of I'robnto. In the', matter of tM '•,&#13;
estate of&#13;
CAKOLINK M. VAN WrsKi.K, l)i&#13;
Carry V. Van Winklr having titodta M 4&#13;
bis petiiion pr«ying ihui a cerTstirtl .&#13;
writing, purpoi ting t • be the last \«t!t&lt; e a ^ t l B f a - . /&#13;
ment of Baid deceased, now on Gle K^eMrT C04ijev&#13;
be admitted to prViate, and that thic udiuirtfltte**-'&#13;
Don of said estate bs grantevl to William P. tya "•'&#13;
Winkle or some other au;table person,&#13;
It is ordered, i but the rJth A^y of JarttOiff A- D&#13;
1(K6, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at/Mfci&#13;
office, be and is hereby appointed for "hiring&#13;
petition. Tt is further ordered, that&#13;
thereof be. given by publication of » ^ptf et t&#13;
order, for three ancce%sive weeka ^&#13;
day ot hearine, in the PWCKNKY 1)'&#13;
newspaper printed and circulated &lt;n said&#13;
t l Judge of pJBBfc^&#13;
ti'.- • « ' &gt; i&#13;
.^...,a- irttJ«B»&gt;&#13;
^ " * * ^&#13;
WW9H&#13;
U C H 8 * « D A N C E R&#13;
Signals, Stop Thenr With&#13;
Dr. King&#13;
New Discovery CONSUHPTIOfl D .M 85? Md: Boc'Rt.oo THE CURE THAT8 SURE for all Diseases&#13;
of Throat and Lungs x&gt;r Money&#13;
Back. FREE TRIAL.&#13;
Krell Auto-Grand The Krell Auto-PUno 1B doubly welcome&#13;
in every muaic-lovinf flunity. As a perfectly&#13;
constructed, beautinuly finished, Upright&#13;
Grand Piano, it satisfies the critical taetee ol&#13;
the most finished musician. As a mechanic&#13;
cal pianeyplayer &lt;a»made by the mere torn&#13;
of a lever) anyone can play anything*&#13;
from apopolar eong to grand opera.&#13;
toTnehde Kpiraenllo ,A fu«tou-G irnan Vdo ulum ae manardv eIlonucsormy paswraebelte-&#13;
IT « TOTALLY KfFIREKT&#13;
from combinations of piaao-Dlayeni and pianos of&#13;
separate make*, He Important point* of contraction&#13;
are covered by patent*. Fall/ ttaaraateed for&#13;
Ire year*. Don't fail to see toe Krell Auto-Grand&#13;
before you purchase.&#13;
t j i e 4UTO-CRAND PIANO CO.&#13;
Newcastle, Ind.&#13;
A&#13;
M&amp;PVOUS, Diseased M&#13;
55R8. K. &amp; K, ESTABLISHED 2 5 YEARS.&#13;
Consultation&#13;
FREE.&#13;
L..J&amp; W&#13;
A NERVOUS WRECK&#13;
Question Blank&#13;
for Home&#13;
eatment sent&#13;
FREE—&#13;
Prices Low&#13;
No Cure&#13;
No Pay.&#13;
A Gentle Servant&#13;
[Original.]&#13;
Colonel Colin wood commanded th&lt;&#13;
— t h Haidarabad native Infantry. Tlu&#13;
colonel w a s a large, florid m a n who&#13;
well Illustrated the English prdclivlty&#13;
for not being uble to Jeam from others&#13;
H i s father hud been a s m a l l tJudeawatt&#13;
in London w h o in «ome w a y had put a&#13;
member o f the cabinet under obligation&#13;
to him and the obligation w a s repaid&#13;
by a commission for the son. JSearlj&#13;
all t h e young man's brother officer!&#13;
were gentlemen born, a n d many oj&#13;
them younger sons of nobles. Colin&#13;
wood w a s snubbed for twenty years&#13;
and a s soon as he w a s promoted to tin&#13;
command of a regiment commenced o&#13;
systematic snubbing of every officer&#13;
Tjeneatb him in rank excepting tnos*&#13;
connected with the nobility.&#13;
The colonel w a s especially hard or&#13;
his servants. H e seemed to consldei&#13;
any s e i w a h f a s ~ a necessary^vltTiTidTr -&#13;
native Indian servant a s a worm of thf&#13;
dust. Among those who attended bin;&#13;
were an Irishman named Malony ant&#13;
a native named Haroutune. Malonj&#13;
treated all natives as his master treated&#13;
his inferiors. Haroutune w a s very&#13;
different from both the colonel and thf&#13;
Irishman. H e w a s as gentle,as a worn&#13;
an. He w a s married .to a soft eyed&#13;
young Indian, and they had three chii&#13;
dren, on whom they both doted. Thev&#13;
w e r e very frugal, their one supreme&#13;
object being to accumulate something&#13;
for their little ones.&#13;
One day Colonel Colinwood missed :i&#13;
land. H e promised t o d o so, but before&#13;
h e could make his arrangements&#13;
tow^wrrVtortd ttset--ft-fafce Hijujiar-te that&#13;
of her children. The distracted man&#13;
followed her to her grave arid completed&#13;
his preparations t o leave a country&#13;
that had become-a horror to him.&#13;
The night before he w a s to sail he was&#13;
awakened b y n choking sensation and.&#13;
grasping what w a s coiled about his&#13;
neck, tore it away and threw it to the&#13;
other side o f the room. The next&#13;
morning a servant w e n t to...awaken,&#13;
him and found his dead body terribly&#13;
swollen. H e bad been bitten o n the&#13;
hand by one of tke most deadly snakes&#13;
in India. E T H A N T. HOWE.&#13;
Furious , Fighting&#13;
"For seven year.*," writes G e o . W.&#13;
HoffmaD, of Harper, Wash., "I had a&#13;
bitter battle, with chronic stomach&#13;
and liver trouble, but at labt I won,&#13;
and .cured ray d i e .ses, by th« use ol&#13;
Electiiu Uitlcrs. i--unhesr(st-rBiffy—&#13;
recommend them to all. and don't in&#13;
tend in the future to iu without them&#13;
in t h e house. They are certainly a&#13;
wonderful medicine, t o have cured&#13;
'such a bad case as mine." Sold under&#13;
g u a r a n t e e to do the s a m e lor y o u , by&#13;
A. chgler dru«#i;t, at 50c a Lottie&#13;
Try them today.&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
Digest* what you eat*&#13;
, ?&#13;
A Siftn of poor blood clrculatiottw shortness 'of&#13;
breath after walking, going up stairsv&#13;
sweeping, singing-, excitement* anger,&#13;
fright, etc. Poor blood circulation&#13;
means a sick heart, and a sick heart i f&#13;
a -result of weak and impoverished&#13;
nerves.&#13;
Every one knows the results of poor&#13;
blood circulation, but everybody does&#13;
not know tnat the quickest and safest&#13;
treatment is Dr. Miles' New Heart Cu:&#13;
If you find these symptoms pr&lt;&#13;
you should procure a bottle of Dr. Miles'&#13;
New Heart Cure It will cure, and at a very little expense,&#13;
compared with doctor's bills. We are s o&#13;
sure of it, that if first bottle does not&#13;
benefit, your druggist will return your.,&#13;
money.&#13;
"My husband had palpitation of the&#13;
heart very bad. doctored with physio-&#13;
Jans, who failed to help him. He took&#13;
Dr. Mills' Heart Cure and Nervine, and&#13;
Is entirely cured." _&#13;
MRS. J. M. RAVEL. Reading, Pa.&#13;
f- :•**- 1;&#13;
v' - -"JR.&#13;
v , V&#13;
•iS&#13;
-O&#13;
. An Anttel Once.&#13;
"Does it create a furore in your family&#13;
when you g o home late?" asked&#13;
Bjones of his friend D e Smith.&#13;
"No; it creates a fury." w a s the suggestive&#13;
a n s w e r - C h i c a g o Record-H*js&gt;&#13;
aid. -1 '&#13;
m%£ &amp;*&#13;
ROBUST MANHOOD&#13;
fm @3*p@ Stricture, Varicocele?&#13;
Btiervmss &amp;&amp;feeiity? Blood Prisons, VsteS&#13;
©ai&amp;es, ansti Mii Biswases Pecm*zr&#13;
m. »&lt;&amp;' • * • •&lt;&#13;
i) * ; \ -CV.IJUI: JO-M-tlr.^i ami ir.o-.r-y c i ctif--&gt;[v; I'.-i-'-jcroi;-:. c-:--j;ori:v.&lt;' :1.:1 X•• '•'tT»er.t.&#13;
I'i-iti t i,ii r;'a'j." at \N,:ir ov\ a ,'..st vowr ^.::.^ i ii.'.'ti by bei;.;* t:; ps. r i:.K-uud t.. u ioL.1 it:ii-&#13;
*dU-s whicli UifV CM:M to h:ivo jj-ist discovered, 'J lie &lt; ^ ^ i but u:&gt;t;iM,rar &gt; • relivf • Uut&#13;
come to ;:s hi cHI f'il&lt; nee, ' V\" e v.'ill t rr at you coit'cicn tious I v, Lotsos-tly :u: '1 s:&lt; i \\ full'-,&#13;
ami j-iwstii'-r» \ i;u ii'i hi'.i'tli in H '•? ^horU-st popsiblo time Vvith tlie U--st r.i*'d;ciiie, &lt;iisr&lt;&#13;
i:;ifori. u::J s»\! .; so v'lu't c..i:',', l.';:cli i::r,c is treated a s the fvm pti-r^s iadicatts&#13;
O-.ir Nf&gt;.v/ / oJh.J !s o' .'&gt;., .'• a ;t\ b is stood&#13;
^ g r .&#13;
'{J&#13;
^ito Sheets DETROIT, M I C H .&#13;
MEDICI&#13;
.— Mf* 1&amp; tQ JbS&#13;
F O R M E N OTSTJTT&#13;
w One month's supply absolutely FREEJ to prove and to show you the skill of&#13;
i | i e physicians of this&#13;
• » * * ! * •&#13;
a«S GREAT INSTITUTE&#13;
This is no' C , O. I"), scheme. You are under no obligation to continue the&#13;
.treatment. We leave it all to you, "NYe know that the results will be so satisfactory&#13;
*"*iat 7 0 a Will be glad to pay the small charge we ask after the first month.&#13;
HONEST OFFiath&#13;
w •"•X*&#13;
4 t » ^&#13;
i'-'K'&#13;
s» , t s » w » Sflly, men who have tried other doctors without success, men who hate&#13;
•i USsttSSlthe laws of nature, men who have tried without success to regain the health&#13;
vs^Sjg«#;.t|gpSr so foolishly wasted and recklessly squandered. We are willing t o&#13;
our expense that we can benefit and cure yxm by sending you&#13;
t&gt;iiev ]&gt;Ioiit1i'« Treatment F r e e&#13;
J ^ m ^ 'Sgjakejtreet CHICAGO&#13;
Valuable diamond T M r h e had boUgbt;&#13;
fxpecting to make a display with it&#13;
when'hejtfeturned to England. The on&#13;
'y t w o persons w h o had access to tho&#13;
-reo»°4¥faere°4t-was kept -were Maleny&#13;
t n d Haroutune. The cpJoaeL w h o had&#13;
l^rfect confidence in Malony, bad Haroutune&#13;
arrested, and the courts In the&#13;
neighborhood were so afraid of the an&#13;
tocrutlc soklier that he had little trou&#13;
ble in having the Indian convicted.&#13;
Haroutune w a s sent to prison to serve&#13;
a term of fifteen years.&#13;
Not long after the loss of the diamond&#13;
Malony left the colonel's service&#13;
to return to the British isles. Eight&#13;
years later Colinwood, having been invalided&#13;
home, found his former servant&#13;
living "iu clover." Setting detective.:&#13;
on his track, the coionel unearthed the&#13;
fact th;it he had disposed of a valuable i&#13;
diamond, and his prosperity dateil t&#13;
from the sale. Colinwood, finding it to j&#13;
his interest to accept the remainder of j&#13;
tho thief s fm'd on condition that he I&#13;
would n V ijrosecute, made th£ compro- j&#13;
m b c . ; ; ~— \&#13;
A few year.&lt; after this the colonel re&#13;
turned to Tndia with a wife and two.&#13;
little children. He debated the i&gt;aUT j&#13;
as \o what he should d o in nvikin;-! j&#13;
amends to Haroutune and decided that j&#13;
to s a y anything about the mistake j&#13;
would place him in an unpleasant posi-1&#13;
tion. Haroutune now had but a few I&#13;
years to serve. Besides, he w a s no'h i&#13;
—f| big bid a low cas'iH mttlve, and a pris- j&#13;
'on w a s as .g tod a place for him as any- j&#13;
where else. »So the colonel concluded&#13;
to.do nothing in the w a y of justice..&#13;
Meanwhile Haroutune w a s languishing&#13;
In prison. He w a s so gentle in his&#13;
manner that one of the prison oiheiahtook&#13;
him into his service. This gave&#13;
the poor fellow a great deal of liberty&#13;
Not long before his term expired' n&#13;
-Siialie .charmer gave, an exhibition at&#13;
the prison, and Haroutune saw him&#13;
perform Among other things, the&#13;
.snake charmer would place a bird&#13;
the same apartment with a snake. O&#13;
She JJitubiuii dispatch.&#13;
POBLI9HBD BVKRT TBDBSDAY S O S M i t S S I&#13;
F R A N K L. A N D R E W S &lt; L C O .&#13;
EDITORS AMD PROPRIETORS.&#13;
dataBcriplltm Price t l in Advanee.&#13;
Sotarei at tae Podtoinoe at Piactcaaj, M.ichl%M&gt;&#13;
as «econ(f-clM0 matter&#13;
Advertising rates made known on application&#13;
~Basiaesa u&amp;rda, j^tRT par year. ~&#13;
reaia and marriage notice* puDUabed tree.&#13;
AiinonncemeniB ol entdrtilnmeat* may be t&gt;ftic&#13;
for, if deaired, by pr seentinutne office with tick&#13;
etB of admiBaion. in oase ticket ear e not &gt; r^ae-l t&#13;
to tneoffice,reKularrates willbectiare&lt; d.&#13;
All matter lnlocalnoticecolumnwiliD6^h*rj,d&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or traction thereof, for eat b&#13;
insertion. Where no time is s pacified, ail notices&#13;
will ye inserted until ordered discontinued, nn&lt;&#13;
will be charged for accordingly, {JfAll changer&#13;
of adTertisements MUB31 reach this office as earl)&#13;
as TIJKSDAT morning to inBure an insertion t l *&#13;
tame week.&#13;
r JOB fSiyiiJVG /&#13;
In all its branches, a specialty. We haveallkinc.s&#13;
and the taleat styles oiType. etc., which enabltB&#13;
us to execute all kinds of work, such as Booke,&#13;
Pamplets, Posters, Programme*, bill Heads, Not&lt;&#13;
Heads, statements. Cards, Auction Bills, etc.iL&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Pricesai&#13;
low as good work can be done.&#13;
ALL BILLSPATABLE f l R S T OF BVKBY MONTH.&#13;
TciE'VILIAG3 DlRECfJ^V&#13;
THE ORIGINAL LAXATIVE COUGH&#13;
KEMHEOY'S LAXATIVE HCNEY«T«&#13;
jtsi Clfiwr £l««se» aai llaaey Bee on Craty BeUlsk&#13;
Railroad Guide&#13;
lARQUEttE t&#13;
1 9 0 E .&#13;
'Trains leave South Lyon as followss " ^&#13;
For Detroit and East,&#13;
10:43 a. in-, 2:19 p. m. 8.58 p . » .&#13;
or Grsnd Rapids, North and Wl "&#13;
•»., 8^19 p. m . , 6:18 p . Mf&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PiiBsiDBNT VV.lI.PTaceway&#13;
TrttWTKS^ Ruben Finch, J ame* KocUe,&#13;
Will Keanad/ Sr , Alfred Mouks,&#13;
if'. 1). Johnson, M. Koche.&#13;
' - ^ Cwotfc . . Boss Kead&#13;
• TKEAsaitKH' P.G.JscJison&#13;
ABABSSOK i). W'.Murt*&#13;
STBBBT COMMISSIONsa Alfred Mouks&#13;
nKALTu.orriCBtt Dr. u . r". siuler&#13;
' ArroRxjiv » L. E. Howlett&#13;
MAKSUALL . &gt;. Brokiat&#13;
For Saginaw «ad Ksy Vf *T» -&#13;
10:48 a. rm, 2 : » p. 0 0 : . , 8 ^ 0&#13;
For Toledo and South, »&#13;
10:4Sa. m., 2:19 p. m.,&#13;
FRANK BAV, II. F. MOELLEK,&#13;
Agent,;*jun Lynn. 'i. P. A., Dei»«tU&#13;
Wrand Trunk Railway System,&#13;
East Bonnd from Finckaey&#13;
No- 2&amp;Psssis&lt;sr SXSwaSsy» 9:¾A*;&#13;
Ms*. tSPsssssgis b . S n e p r ,&#13;
- 2 — # : H.dftarl, A^ni.&#13;
• * v' -&#13;
&lt;i\'&#13;
L&#13;
CHURGriES.&#13;
VJlSrUODiST Ei'tSOOPAL, C'tiUrtCH.&#13;
M Kev. rt. A.Emcnck pastor. Services every&#13;
.Sunday morning ai tu;3y, s^a every Sunn a j&#13;
evening at 7:LKI o'clock, i'rajtr ujeetiotiThureilav&#13;
«veninkj8. Sunday scliboi at close of morning&#13;
service. -Alls*MAliV VANFLKBT.S'jpt.&#13;
t O-NutiEUAi'lONAb (MUKCH.&#13;
s_' Kev. G.W. Myluu pastor. Service everj&#13;
Sunudy luoraia^ i t 11:110 id.l every Sunda)&#13;
eveninnnrt FiOCo cijek. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings, a^ad-iy school at -close ot mors&#13;
in« service.' Kev, K. tl. Crai.e, Suut,, Mocco&#13;
leepie^ec. ^~ " '•&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
\&gt;f\&#13;
fc hs?s set aside&#13;
$ 1 , 0 0 0 ^&#13;
spent tor infonnatia^C: »-£•&#13;
ttastrffisy-no more. Washing madt easy by&#13;
B1,V WASHING TABLETS Will not injure the finest fabrics.&#13;
They are suicUy free from acids&#13;
Of any kind.&#13;
They dothework withoutrnbbing.&#13;
They make the clothes white.&#13;
They can be used in hard water.&#13;
They save time and the hard&#13;
work on washday. They are Indispensible&#13;
for (^unerpanekLace Curtains&#13;
and Trimmings. They will&#13;
remove stains from Table Linen&#13;
with absolutely no rubbing. They&#13;
Are economical to use, because&#13;
clothes are more worn out on the&#13;
'iWM&#13;
washboard than by actual wear. 1 They are *old on their merits.&#13;
tS* offer a fine line of premiums. For ?ale by your grocer, price 5 c .&#13;
"ABLET CO., Inc. Office, 251 N. Front St.,Philadrtr&#13;
11 he-A. 0. U. Society of this ptace, meets ever\&#13;
third Sunday intue Fr. Matt new tiall.&#13;
Jottn 1'uomev and M.. T. lielly.Couaty Delegate*&#13;
f|&gt;UK W, C. T. U. meets the firei friday ot each&#13;
X month at-,':acp. m, at tue hoiue 01 Ur. ti, -F.&#13;
^i¾ler. Kveryoue interested id temperance is&#13;
matiially iavitwl.—Mrs: Irfni fii^lor, frea; Mr..&#13;
t t t a bt;rlee,Mcretarj. rhe C.T. A- and B. hucievy&#13;
every third Sat ur nay evening in the Fr. M&#13;
;iiew Hail.&#13;
;i this place,-0»««.&#13;
ig Fr&#13;
John iionohue, &gt;re&lt;»ioi«ut.&#13;
I ' N I&#13;
.IV Alt&#13;
-»»HP|&gt;M~&#13;
a$M&#13;
•Hi&#13;
•-A-* -*f&#13;
1 -JT. MAKl'^'JATHtliitO CilUitOU.&#13;
in O Kev. M. J. Coinutenord, 1 astor. Service-&#13;
)n f every Sunday. • Low m^ss at TiiWo'clOvli&#13;
, , i uigh mass withsermonat 9;UG&amp;. m. Catecaiaii.&#13;
its master's order the snaite wonld j ta:oo p. m., ve«peraandbenedictionat7:au p.m&#13;
steal up to the lard and strangle it.&#13;
One day when Colonel Colinwood 1&#13;
was at dinner "with some friends he&#13;
remarked that the time for the expiration&#13;
of the man w h o had stolen his&#13;
diamond must have arrived. Some of&#13;
the party said that the natives were&#13;
proqe to take revenge for punishment&#13;
and. It behooved "the colonel to be on ;&#13;
his guard. Colinwood .declared'that if&#13;
he were inclined to fear any Indian he j&#13;
certainly would not fear Haroutune. !&#13;
who w a s more woman than man. Had&#13;
the colonel realized that the prisoner, \&#13;
who had served fifteen years for an&#13;
offense of which he knew himself to ;&#13;
be Innocent; that ho had come out of !&#13;
prison to find his wife and-children, j&#13;
having been deprived of his support.&#13;
had succumbed and were all d e a d -&#13;
had the colonel known this* be might&#13;
have feared that even a worm will&#13;
turn. Mrs. Colinwood did not shtire&#13;
hdr husband's want of faith in Indian&#13;
revenge and shuddered.&#13;
$Uo very next day Elsie Colinwood&#13;
pSjSjfl i\mnd dead in the .garden. The&#13;
i W r e a w e r e permitted to piny there,&#13;
the place w a s surrounded by a&#13;
TLK? little brother w h o made&#13;
id that he had seen a&#13;
a tree* on. to the gnr-&#13;
V a s n o mark o*&gt; the&#13;
NIGllTSOF MACCAlii ES.&#13;
eeteverv Friday evening on or befere ful&#13;
~ti the moon at their hall in the Swartuout bid*&#13;
Visiting brothers ar« cordially invUed.&#13;
L. E. SMITH. Sir tvniijut Jooatuac. U &gt;&#13;
Livi-ngston Lodge, No.T', K A A, M. Kegu'^.'&#13;
Communication Tuesdav evening.on or Ueioit&#13;
iheiull ot" the moon. liirk. VSoWinkle. \\ . &gt;&#13;
&gt;£AH each laonii&#13;
?e&#13;
0KO£ROFkASTHiK&#13;
the WMSSf.SSSMsitJslsMrtSgtts^ceKiiUr r&#13;
A A. M. &lt;^S^ iSTmrSLcn+xu, W, \(.&#13;
« 1 . 1 1 » . . « . &lt; - ! Hljllfc I II , ^ I.I&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACtJABEKSJ&#13;
and drd Saturday of each nionttt,&#13;
K. O. T. M. haH. VisiUM sist&#13;
tiled. LlLA CoSiWAV, 2»dy '&#13;
every IS&#13;
::iu \i m, •&#13;
mat&#13;
• * * % ' * :&#13;
RED CHIEF&#13;
Corn Shefier.&#13;
Patented.&#13;
~ aCsla emaspisly o n Barrel,&#13;
Adjusts itsatf b&#13;
ssy size sj|r.&#13;
•7:&#13;
c &lt;&#13;
!? guaranteed to &lt;• as 0t&gt;&#13;
better v.ork. than my •htHsfri.&#13;
market. Thrown cobs oatside&#13;
time. Cold rolled steel i r i e . R . ,&#13;
no &gt;vreuch. Shells popcorn spJe»*aiii!y&#13;
by ti^hti-iun^ tension o n sprang. A u&#13;
repairs furnished iree of chaise. Kveary:&#13;
farmer should have one. K&gt;r iyj.la'w'&#13;
hardware and implement dealers. •'&#13;
MAM i.V.T :;KD UY&#13;
BRIN'LY-HARDY CO., Incorsortltil, -&#13;
Louisville, iCy., U. S. A.&#13;
:. b&gt;t.&gt; --' %mi&#13;
I/lUQHTSoVtHK LOVALGUA1&#13;
•V C^V Andrew* k*. Jft,&#13;
&gt;••&gt; A quick and effective cure for Iih{*um-&#13;
':•' .'.".sm, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbairo Head-&#13;
" a-.'ite and otbor nervous pnin^ aucl ach.es ou&#13;
.-vty part of&lt;he body. If you suffer from&#13;
a ry of the above ills, wa say iu ail sincerity&#13;
;Tiva our worthy ANTl-PAlK SOLID LIN-&#13;
1:,; TAT a fair trial.&#13;
ANTI-PAIN SOLID LINIMENT .comes!&#13;
.' 1 a neat box in ptisto form, different from J&#13;
|V')»r liniments, "Yes, indeed," it is tool&#13;
pr. L-iotis to !;&gt;Art 1- breakage or spillrtiK- J&#13;
[All v&gt;u havo j&amp;jtlm.^to apply a little of&#13;
i i n i i i i e u M H l H ^ B t e d partKto n&#13;
lio^^|S^^^^^^Bj^^|patuAHy V^-^i m&#13;
^&#13;
\&#13;
•'wwSfr'P,&#13;
aosmtss CARCS.&#13;
Jfest'V&#13;
C.t^^lGLIRM,&#13;
:B, "&#13;
prom p&gt; 1&#13;
!&amp; s l i t ? !&#13;
sat ':' ••• •-• ^ •••Ht&#13;
.'" ' ,,-k'P' "j &lt;* •&#13;
. « . • .7*1« T..--V. , - ; % i\: • ' ' ^ . * ' . ' ' : - ' •&gt;!•• - V ' , . , ! ' . ' ' ' , ; . ; ~ •,«:..- " " ' .. • * - • • ' ' . " • • • &lt;..&gt;&#13;
- , , " ^ VJ : xk** •&gt;-:-^----^-.-• / i •'•' *V-.:**;V:?v'- *; ' ' ^ ^ K ^ * . -.- • •'""• . ' ' '" • *&#13;
• -' - ' ' « . " - 1 '- . • .T" . - US*" * . ' ' * ^ i / " V l - * 4 i &gt; ^ ' ', "&#13;
Atom* cr'2fc/K5Zm&amp;J&amp;S^mj!hr&#13;
&lt;CS ' ?1 cwwpowzz? j&amp;ejrjKatrrcTjx&amp;y&#13;
^ : - , ^ - ¾ ^ ^ V CHAPTER IH—Continued.&#13;
* ' ' , ; ^ p t a e « s i m p o u n d e d htm. T h e door&#13;
SjMSjl s h u t with a bang, and h e heard&#13;
***IVH • * '&#13;
.viz* a^Wc^turn i n the lock.&#13;
lyWhmiXhe volceB o i his jailers died&#13;
siway a l o n g the passage, a s i l e n c e like&#13;
• a t o the grave fell upon John and his&#13;
ceedingly bright idea flashed into his&#13;
mind.&#13;
C H A P T E R IV/&#13;
«9rrpnnding8,&#13;
H e did n o t expect t o 'sleep. His&#13;
&gt;1&#13;
F&#13;
s i t a a i l o * wit* a .desperate o n e , and&#13;
u n l e s s s o m e m e a n s o f securing h i s&#13;
M f c w ^ w ^ S ^ i s o b w e d before another&#13;
d a y dawned,' the chances of spending&#13;
t h e balance of h i s life at Andersohville&#13;
s e e m e d prqmisiag. That were a conn&#13;
a m m a t i o n devoutly t o be avoided.&#13;
T h u s , John had enough to spur him&#13;
o n i n h i s desire to escape. He w a s In&#13;
good health and had everything to&#13;
l i v e fOr. Even the reckless spirit&#13;
&lt;at h a d marked h i s bachelor life&#13;
__ atost be subdued, now that h e had&#13;
&lt;aken to h»msolf a wife.&#13;
T h e matter was more than a joke&#13;
w i t h him. He had been deeply intere&#13;
s t e d in Mollie, a n d even while he&#13;
ntood a t her side during t h e brief&#13;
•ceremony "had secretly vowed to make&#13;
s o m e attempt to win her regard.&#13;
t h o u g h keeping the solemn pledge&#13;
— c n a d c t a h e r f a t h e r , _&#13;
H i s first act w a s to move around&#13;
t h e room, ami find out its nature. :&#13;
T h i s s a v e him no encouragement, for i&#13;
t h e walls offered little opportunities&#13;
- i n the lioe=of~M&amp;mixL^A M n a U s l i t&#13;
to t h e side allowed air to enter, but&#13;
A Break for Liberty.&#13;
Why not try in another direction?&#13;
if t o descend entailed too much&#13;
4&lt;ui^aLot^li.s(iover&gt;y&gt; wixat -chance w a s -&#13;
there tor him above?&#13;
The thought aroused new hopes.&#13;
"When",, after teeliag that t n e risk of&#13;
a fall upon t h e r o o f - b e l o w w a s t o o&#13;
great t o b e recklessly taken, Coloael&#13;
John twisted h i s head aDd looked&#13;
above, he felt very much in t h e humor&#13;
for giving vent to a shout.&#13;
The roof sloped down within reaching&#13;
distance of h i s embrasure.&#13;
A determined man, crawling out of&#13;
the opening, and resolved to risk&#13;
everything on tho c a s t of a die could&#13;
at least grasp the coping.&#13;
After that s u c c e s s o r failure must&#13;
rest entirely with h i s own muscular&#13;
powers.&#13;
He only watted long enough to cor*&#13;
rectly gauge the distance and make&#13;
sure his muscfes were in good condition.&#13;
TtmT7 pressing-outward, h e stretched&#13;
his arms upward until the edge of&#13;
the roof w a s within h i s grasp.&#13;
Another moment and h e J t o o d erect&#13;
—one leg was thrown up over the cop-&#13;
• " • " • m i t pi n j i .I&#13;
-. .loot i n a position about a t Bprawlinf&#13;
a r t e n t &gt;of a\frc*~-WaHfpe~hnme41*W&#13;
thought being to prevent himself from&#13;
continuing t h e fall a s t a r a t • t h e&#13;
ground.*&#13;
T h e clatter would, of eourae, arouse&#13;
every soul about the plantation.&#13;
Thta wag a foregone conclusion.&#13;
H e grimly adra 1 tted that hl» chances&#13;
to e s c a p e just then were s l i m indeed.&#13;
Loud outcries could be heard—men&#13;
shouted t o one another—lights flash*&#13;
ed through t h e windows of t h e old&#13;
house, and the excitement w a s communicated&#13;
to t h e negro quarters'.&#13;
One glance showed John several&#13;
m e n running i n the direction of the&#13;
house, the leader carrying a lighted&#13;
lantern.&#13;
It w a s a t i m e for action, since a.&#13;
delay would bring his etaemiea on the&#13;
scene; a n a fohilcr~Tiir c h a n c e s of es»&#13;
cape hopeless.&#13;
So over he went, n o t i n a mad&#13;
leap, b a t by hanging with h i s hands&#13;
and lowering h i * body m a n a g i n g t o&#13;
shorten h i s fall.&#13;
!£ «i¥ •«•»» i ^^B58!&#13;
CLI«QYM.KN A C C B P T I ^ T H * F i t&#13;
•V, IJI^H #4.00 IF4IENT AT ONCsT&#13;
M*&#13;
"A c o o d story Is told o n a y o u n | , ' ^ ' ^ w ^ ^ ^ ^ &lt; i q ^ ! f ^ S ! f J ! f f ^&#13;
JTTgg—a muscttiar tension o f t h e ai&#13;
t h e stoneS were well set a n u n f u s ' b e s t ^ t i c ^ f t n m ^ a u ) t h c t h i n B M d _ b e e n&#13;
•J*u* A&#13;
efforts failed to dislocate any one of&#13;
t h e m .&#13;
* A search of his person brought to&#13;
l i g h t a pocket knife which had someb&#13;
o w escaped the Argus c j e s of h i s&#13;
captors. With this he sol t o work&#13;
d i g g i n g the mortar from between the&#13;
a t o n e s .&#13;
S l o w progress was made, for the out-&#13;
« l d e shell proved a s bard a s Hint,&#13;
%ut a s time rolled on the indomitable&#13;
Spirit of ;hc prisoner kepi him en-&#13;
Sagei*'-'though h i s fingers were sore&#13;
4Mld bled from the contiimc&lt;l etertion.&#13;
O n c e . a n opening was made, John&#13;
c o u l d look out and see the stars. A&#13;
s h r e w d observer of these heavenly&#13;
accomplished.&#13;
He lay quietly upon the root for a&#13;
little time to recover his breath before&#13;
venturing upon a voyage o f exploration.&#13;
The battle w a s not y e t won—no&#13;
one knew this better than Colonel&#13;
John.&#13;
The first act of the soldier w a s t o&#13;
allow himself t o slide down the sloping&#13;
roof until he rested his feet in the&#13;
gutter.&#13;
This gave him an opportunity to relieve&#13;
the strain upou h i s arms.&#13;
Surely -he must discover s o m e&#13;
means of rcac.hiug t h e ground in&#13;
safety—be it a waterpipe o r a lightc&#13;
o u r t s A&#13;
g u a g e a ^ £&#13;
n&#13;
^SV&amp;0O5 /20IS&gt;~7O-A&#13;
h o o d l u m s a n d t&#13;
C o n g r&#13;
atVpuy^a, h e ' had brconie lu utmmon&#13;
htkzM uiOfft £olriicrs (tuiini; t h e war;&#13;
art- i n t h e *: m** ™cn n ' a , ( h : m '&#13;
• / / /&#13;
BS?fr3*&#13;
the&#13;
his&#13;
the&#13;
&gt;i™&#13;
f a u l t i s i n / ^ ¾&#13;
tjiey .arci apt l&lt;i be belter ac-&#13;
L.:_i.— / » * F V ^ g j i n t e d with the lnigbl consieilatious&#13;
i d h s a those who dwell under the roote&#13;
• "t$ houses.&#13;
T h e room in which he bad been i&#13;
-Imprison r&lt;1—wts«—ttt—H+e—K*p—of^—the&#13;
^ ^&#13;
"•v;,&#13;
^ :.••;}:&#13;
t w u s e , and in his eager desire t o ' e s -&#13;
c a p e the Yankee colonel bad a s y e t&#13;
Sjivcn no thought as &lt;(» how be should&#13;
• t a c i t t h e ground when Hie- breach&#13;
i n the wall w a s wide enough, for him&#13;
t o crawl through.&#13;
T h a t must be left l o a t h e future,&#13;
s i n c e there w a s no need or crossing&#13;
a bridge until It loomed up before&#13;
Jhim.&#13;
S u c h indomitable energy-was ceTTWti&#13;
tot i i s reward, and when the prisoner&#13;
&gt;nad buckled to his work for the fifth&#13;
&gt;1me, h e realized that the _eiid w a s&#13;
s e a r , in -so fav ^s it related to tiis&#13;
enlarging the fissure to a proper size.&#13;
It had required considerable tact&#13;
- 4 » h i s part t o avoid dropping port&#13;
i o n s of t h e : stone and dried plaster&#13;
outside.^&#13;
What l i t t l e did fall seemed to strike&#13;
s o m e wooden object below.&#13;
This^ gave him a sifting hope that&#13;
t h e r e might be a roof under his wfcs-&#13;
40W.&#13;
T h e time had t o m e to make a;&#13;
•serration, a n d tin listing Tiis&#13;
eyed the s i&#13;
res alt©'&#13;
jet&#13;
ire o n e&#13;
t»&#13;
riing rod, he cared liitlc, since&#13;
opportunity was what he sought,&#13;
dvouac for j I5y degrees- i h e colonel made&#13;
canopy of blue ; way from one end of the roof to the&#13;
other. ,&#13;
Not a single tree offered a friendly&#13;
limb.&#13;
True; h e did discover a tin waterspout&#13;
at the center, but here would&#13;
skr^ii intctfrpTTTTg :ar&#13;
descent through such means.&#13;
Italher than climb the. slope of the&#13;
roor and descend agaiji on the other&#13;
side he resolved to trust bis weight&#13;
to tho waterpipe.&#13;
Willi b i s knees h e clutched t h e&#13;
tin, and presently w a s hanging there&#13;
half w a y down to (lie shed.&#13;
Serious doubts a s to t h e stability&#13;
of the pipe now assumed a leading&#13;
place in his mind/ but he bad aouc loo&#13;
fur to retreat.*&#13;
Alas! h i s fears proved too well&#13;
grounded.&#13;
The wretched fabric gave way tho&#13;
very instant h i s full weight rested&#13;
upon it.&#13;
Having no hold above, below, it&#13;
was natural that the doughty wacrlor&#13;
should m a k e a m u c h more expedlilo&#13;
«»&gt; descent than h e b a d calculated&#13;
«st{a4jftpi most sanguine m o m e n t * '&#13;
goodly portion pi t h e trencherpe—&#13;
whlch must' certainly have"&#13;
sympathetic leanings In Ihe^ h e dug o u t ! " exc&#13;
tion of the hard-pressed Con fed&#13;
•jjracy, judging by I t s quicH Uctrayal&#13;
- fptpf t h e escaping FederalT-at&lt;ompanied&#13;
John i n his*iias*y dot-cent, H may&#13;
be gafely-^KsusVsd that the advent&#13;
the s&lt;:&#13;
of tsw'&#13;
ra«&#13;
Here again fortune played him a&#13;
bad turn.&#13;
It chanced that John had thrown&#13;
himself o v e r just above a door leading&#13;
from the colonnade, and that a t the&#13;
instant he released h i s hold above,&#13;
this flew open, giving e g r e s s tp the&#13;
doughty planter, half-dressed a n d&#13;
wholly alarmed, for the dreadful confusion&#13;
which had aroused him from&#13;
slumber could have but.'one meaning&#13;
— t h e hostile army h a d arrived and&#13;
w a s engaged in bombarding the castle.&#13;
W h e n , therefore, a weighty object&#13;
c a m e crashing down upon him, t h e&#13;
squire promptly went Ao grass, but&#13;
in his desperation wrapped' his a r m s&#13;
around t h e escaping soldier and at&#13;
the s a m e time ^bellowed lustily for assistance.&#13;
1 J o h n was not 4 a a^oadition^&#13;
to offerrauch resistance a s h i s s u p e r i o t&#13;
strength might guarantee, since h i s&#13;
a r m s were clasped at his s i d e s by the&#13;
frenzied embrace of his e n e m y .&#13;
Had they been left to t h e m s e l v e s ,&#13;
in a l l probability h e would i n d u e&#13;
time h a v e overcome t h e squire, but&#13;
this chance w a s not given.&#13;
Attracted by the bull-like roars o f&#13;
tho gentleman plautcr, his overseer&#13;
and s o m e of t h e help h a s t e n e d "to the&#13;
spot.&#13;
Colonel John was quickly pounced&#13;
upon and tightly held.&#13;
The s c e n e w a s very Impressive a s&#13;
the squire arose to h i s feet, feeling&#13;
oi his collar-bone to make sure it had&#13;
not been "broken by t h e tremendous&#13;
shock of a falling human planet.&#13;
" S k a g g s ! " he called out.&#13;
•'I'm here, s i r , ' answered the oveT^&#13;
seer.&#13;
"Yoii were with the "boys when the;*&#13;
captured my— er—son-in-law, Colonel&#13;
E m m e t t of the Yankee army of invasion?"&#13;
"I helped g e t him," growled the&#13;
other.&#13;
"You said there w a s another with&#13;
him?*'&#13;
— " T h a t ' s true, oh*." :&#13;
j&#13;
clergyman In tfce suburbs w h o • » # .recently&#13;
married and w h q WM^properly&#13;
punttiftd for t r y U c ^ 1 s M s W « i f o » r&#13;
. » k A . ? i h A : | ^ l a j f r r i o n t&#13;
Clergymen n o t t o t a k e a f e * from&#13;
dominie for marrying hisa. T h e general&#13;
custom is, h b w e v e t / f o r the bast&#13;
m a n to go through Jhe uaual farm and&#13;
present the officiating clergyman with&#13;
*w[&#13;
^*#9 •4.&#13;
make a big s h o w i n g before&#13;
and placed WMjfFi "&#13;
tog In antU ^ -&#13;
•A,» x when she s hQ^ pvT:swi P:.:s- s ^ p B s l ^ e ^ h a t -&#13;
her lover w a ^ w ! l l l ^ ^ j p « y for being&#13;
united tptxher. i ; a ^ . ? w&#13;
T h e V o ! « H ^ : i a n ^ copeleroatlon e s s&#13;
be i t o a f j « ^ ; ^ n e n ^ e - e ! h e r c l e i i y i&#13;
mai\ fiafmjy ^pocketed The envelope&#13;
^ ^ S ^ A J 8 P v e I t t « n t *° ratwfB.lt&#13;
The.offl«iating minister h a d board&#13;
glowtng&gt; reports.;&lt;tt th,e rich bride his&#13;
joungfWead.^S5Sifl3getting and decided&#13;
that t h e f e e w o a f i d o him more good&#13;
t h a a ^ t h e ^ i ^ / i p a r r i e d coiiple, and&#13;
tfc«*irbi«HtoVoi&amp;a.^pparted from Uw&#13;
u s ^ l ^ &amp; * V ^ &gt; a ^ B T o o m i s still&#13;
s o r | j ^ o m f A B [ M p b DUt the joke w a s&#13;
himself.^-?hJlsd«lpWs Record.&#13;
Qrape S&amp;S^Stj ffSet^ws-g Jm$m&#13;
sbsolntely. •*•' -.. - - - .-^&#13;
A fulTsWl: bottle i s f u r n i s h e d ^ Q I r e a M M f t } . / .&#13;
t o p r o v o t t ^ s e e coupon b*low. ^ -J^fr^il&#13;
Have'0^ -yrooan nnootti ced _th_e UJJT» dumber of*&amp; j : ^ :M&#13;
cases of Typhoid Fever 1»&#13;
Fever, Malarial Fever.&#13;
xn piQDdV 4W»pl»s,&#13;
ieaoaohapBiuousaess,&#13;
,je», e t c , are the-wsl^&#13;
j y L ^ - ^ t A J J s w t r - k o run on wiftouf psopfff&#13;
oiSi treatment. Mull's Grape Tonic cures&#13;
a n envelope containing t a « J s A ^ T ! ^ j ^ J &amp; ^ ^ f t i&#13;
velope to her. Aware of this _ ^ w _ , - . — - — T - = — , - - . ¾ ^ V 4 , ^&#13;
the young mlaiat#r t^jought^ h d 1 K w . ^ d 1 . .n2ea^r ^wta^y-, -di^ff^er^e5nt*-f?lf?o^m-aal ,y5 SotMhe^r,-&#13;
tereJLvaes^^e'syJ&#13;
Mull's OOrraspg s- Tojdo strengthens sail&#13;
builda them up. It oleaases i k o system of&#13;
u n p u r l t i ^ incites t b * d i g e s # w y * t « m t e&#13;
natural action, and enres t h o disease in a&#13;
shorTsime. I f t l k W v f l t t i d y o ^ w a - w l S t&#13;
give yon d bottle free i t yon&lt; hava never&#13;
USSdltv.^i,s&lt;rtrfv*.; t..k .. •:•.' ••»*-* i f ' .•:'&#13;
Good^fojr. afling ch-Um-ea^aad nursing&#13;
mothers, .&#13;
A free betsle^o vM wlx^liave never used&#13;
it beeause w a k a o w 4 t will euro you.&#13;
COUPON.&#13;
x^^&#13;
He Doesn't ^ u r e e Hp*i*&#13;
Washington, Rani., D e c / * &amp; ( S p e c - i i s5 6eBt,Mc«t-»d»tjio bottle**nu«truggi»u.&#13;
J a l W 0 8 W : E v ^ n e n i j j ^ e p h o n e - j ^ g s m i s ^ j j i y j ^&#13;
d a l s d - i weH-knowtt-reat&#13;
dent here. Everybody acquainted&#13;
with Mr, Mitchell knows that h e w a s&#13;
a m a n w h o held very positive Views&#13;
about Patent Medicine. H e a r w h a t he&#13;
s a y e now:—= - — — ^—1, =&#13;
. "And h e got away?" -&#13;
''Sorry t o , s a y h e did, sir, though&#13;
I*d a sworn I fired clean through the&#13;
varmint." continued Skaggs.&#13;
Colonel John, he rejoiced at the&#13;
news, for the honest sergeant had&#13;
been with h im on more than o n e&#13;
dangerous mission, and h e felt more&#13;
interest i n his welfare than common.&#13;
"I s e e it now," declared the squire,&#13;
"that fellow h a s not deserted his companion,&#13;
but has hovered around seeking&#13;
a chance to assist him. Weil, w a&#13;
have two prisoners i n place o f one.&#13;
I think I deserve some praise from&#13;
General Johnston for such meritorious&#13;
services. If every m a n did a s well&#13;
we'd soon have Sherman's h o s t s back&#13;
of the stockade a t Andersonville."&#13;
"Reckon you're kinder a little mixed,&#13;
squire," said the overseer, with&#13;
n grin—trust h i s sharp, ferritlike e y e s&#13;
for discovering the truth.&#13;
"How s o — t h i s can't be one of our&#13;
fellows?"&#13;
"Take a look, sir."&#13;
The lantern w a s raised until its&#13;
rays fell upon the- smiling countenance&#13;
of the soldier.&#13;
"How a r e you, squiro? Really, I&#13;
ought t o apologize for dropping s o&#13;
unexpectedly on your shoulders. If&#13;
e v e n t s that could not have been antlcl-&#13;
Ttted have made you my respected&#13;
father-in-law o n this night, I assure&#13;
you 1 "had no intention of s o soon,-becoming&#13;
a burden upon you. Besides.&#13;
you 'spoiled, my little plan of escape."&#13;
"Confusion! how did you get there?"&#13;
"Surely y o u of all persons ought&#13;
to know that I descended from^fcfirrjA".&#13;
"But—how did you get out, s h - 4 - ^&#13;
"A little breach of etiquette t h a t&#13;
is all. I am not a s t o n e mates) o r «.&#13;
brick-layer by trade, but i s &gt; a a enser-c,&#13;
gency a man can do nlrusat aaythj&#13;
you know," laughed tha"&#13;
"By all that's wo&#13;
-¾ used to cnrsirail kinds of Patent&#13;
Medicines, for they never did m e any&#13;
good, but Dodd's Kidney Pills have&#13;
caused me t o change my mind. For&#13;
twelve years I suffered from Kidney&#13;
Trouble. There w a s a hurting across&#13;
my back that made it positive agony&#13;
to stoop, and a s I a m in a stooping&#13;
position nearly all day, you c a n Imagine&#13;
how I suffered. After a day's w o r k&#13;
that any man would think nothing of,&#13;
I would b e tired, and worn out. In&#13;
fact, I w a s always tired. I be'gan using&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills and after&#13;
taking four boxes .1 feel like a new&#13;
man, I am a s fresh a t night a s when&#13;
I begin work in the morning. I have&#13;
no pain fn my back now, and I am&#13;
stronger than ever."&#13;
180 GOOD FOH O N E DOLLAF 1&#13;
SMdttiu cotipoBwitb f^roSi&amp;eWad&lt;&#13;
tad your drogalkft nasu and 10a. to p»y pottage&#13;
«adw«wtUMBW9otia«ijBPte€t««,if "&#13;
• e w used MaiTa Orapa Tonic,&#13;
4 yon a certificate gvod for at.&#13;
you have&#13;
tu\ alao&#13;
ward to*&#13;
pureBiaao of more Wale frota your dragglst. ./&#13;
IftriA's Gaipa Tosic Co., 148 Third Ave.,&#13;
Rook Island, HL&#13;
Give Futt Addrtu and Writ* Plainly.&#13;
t £ -&#13;
jnltcb-aa t&amp;aJSflr ,&#13;
aa-Wag la Imyla* toe |l.(M alac.&#13;
, Ttere U a sraat&#13;
' k .&#13;
T h o genuine h a s a date and number&#13;
stamped on the label—take no other from&#13;
your druggist. K&gt;&#13;
Exorolsioa J}isaaae.,&#13;
Proper Diet.&#13;
The basis of all foods consists of at&#13;
feast four essential e l e m e n t s ; but it&#13;
does n o t follow that all. these elem&#13;
e n t s will be present i n equal proportions&#13;
In various life sustaining&#13;
substances. Thus, weight for weight,&#13;
bread contains more carbon tbau&#13;
meat, and meat more nitrogen than&#13;
bread. T h e s e theoretical considers&#13;
ttons are' borne o u t by """^served&#13;
Tacts. Modern researches httVe shown-j^&#13;
that there i s an intimate relation subsisting&#13;
between tho quality and quantity&#13;
of food takeu &gt;aud t h e kind of&#13;
work or "energy" into which H i s&#13;
eventually transformed. l l e n c » a&#13;
man's diet ought to depend iu spreat&#13;
part on his work.&#13;
The Pe-ru-na Almanac in 8,000,000&#13;
Homes.&#13;
The Peruna Lueky Day Almanac&#13;
h a s become a fixture i n over eight&#13;
million homes. It can b e obtained&#13;
from all druggists free. B e sure t o inquire&#13;
early. T h e 190C Almanac i s already&#13;
published, and the supply will&#13;
Eoon be exhausted. Do n o t put It off.&#13;
Get one today.&#13;
Vast Sum Long Tied Up.&#13;
Thirty-fiv^ y e a r s a g o i n Birmingham,&#13;
England, a man died w h o s e wilt&#13;
was contested, bat finally allowed by&#13;
the~court. The provisions of It were&#13;
not t o come i n t o force i n a quarter&#13;
of a century, s o that though h e left&#13;
four million sterling t o be divided&#13;
a m o n g three persons, one of t h e m in&#13;
the meantime had died in the workhouse.&#13;
Their relatives, including the&#13;
deceased pauper's heirs, are numerous,&#13;
and all i n a humble position in&#13;
life. ~ Some a r e factory operatives,&#13;
some cabmen, some beer-shop keepers.&#13;
After twenty-five years of hope, despair&#13;
a n d heartburning, this millionaire&#13;
J wealth is about t o be divided.&#13;
8outful 8rolt.&#13;
A melodrama w a s presented a t La*&#13;
roy, Kas,, recently, and the Reported&#13;
d e c l a r e s t h a t ^ h e n the blind heroine&#13;
g a * e t a « iettar to' the villain, s a ^ o a -&#13;
taf it waa har kt-aband, s o m e w o m a a .&#13;
^&#13;
Hffcat's easily se*&#13;
"Brtlaf Ui« fellow&#13;
lnv&lt; 1 ne i t f .&#13;
' i ^ i e S l t l y , sot&#13;
the ft stomach are/&#13;
V ^ l o w a a U&#13;
yresreaenta&#13;
»n.at thsy&#13;
'coraJMaed wit&#13;
Very- cmrfdW"nielh'dW wcTo empT6£&#13;
ed by t h e ancient Buhylouiaiis.Tif^f&#13;
orcise disease. t T h c suckhig | "&#13;
kid played a n important&#13;
t h e ' remedies. T h e p i g oif&#13;
was to ^ be killed, c u t up, a n d&#13;
placed upon the sick m a n . T h o&#13;
heart of the pig, which had been&#13;
placed upon the sick man's heart, w s s&#13;
to be held by him, and the pig's heart&#13;
w a s t o b e a s his heart, the blood a s&#13;
his blood, the flesh a s h t a flesh t o d&#13;
the pig w a s t o be in b i s stead. T h e&#13;
virgin k i d w a s dealt with in the sameway,&#13;
being placed upon t h e s i c k man.&#13;
• : ; • * . •&#13;
THE EARTH'S AREA. - m&#13;
One of t h e b e s t authorities esti*&#13;
m a t e s t h e area of t h e earth's'st&#13;
at 196,791,934 square miles, of ? M&#13;
about 53,000,000 square m i l e s l a&#13;
the rest water. Throughout most:&#13;
t h i s 53,000,000 square m i l e s P i&#13;
bury'B Vltos h a s made i t s w s y - b # »&#13;
c a u s e it's s o good. It i s t h e ideal&#13;
breakfast, food, and m a y b e had at,&#13;
•any np-tp-date grocery.&#13;
...-,.- .,.^- . .'• ,.,!!"A'--".'rwV'-RI.' " .i." - -&#13;
&gt; .-i •'-•ry&#13;
•&gt;•':•-'.a&#13;
r'**^J#&#13;
r--s&#13;
•idtr&#13;
back h e gave the* ticket collector h i s&#13;
marriage certificate instead o f t h o&#13;
pass. T h e latter studied it- carefully &gt;&#13;
for a f e w minutes'; and then s a i d : "My&#13;
man, you have got a ticket for a long,&#13;
w e a r i s o m e journey, but not o n thta&#13;
railway." • w - m«*~&#13;
I m p o r t a n t t o M o t h s - f a .&#13;
aarerally tmrj bottle of&#13;
a tmt* aad aare retnedji for infanta and eaUdnpftT&#13;
asai aoa tfaaVlt&#13;
ta«&#13;
St$Batare of&#13;
ta Bsr 9m Ov«r 30 Yearn.&#13;
' The Bind Voa Have Always 3¾&#13;
lEr-crsknce loves to wear,&#13;
plumes and s i t in the same p e w Wit&#13;
-irlatiom. • -y&#13;
. N o m a n ever bought, a w^idtikcr pr&#13;
ent b«ca&gt;use he wanted to.&#13;
Mother Cray^ir^'i&#13;
buco&#13;
to t h e (&#13;
bucceesXii^-J&#13;
••W*»*krX-*&lt;plir*1»i&#13;
all&#13;
JOT Chltdretv&#13;
•asrjasv&#13;
&gt; v e a ^ K ^ i s t f t : - l h *&#13;
^ * « * ^&#13;
. FESEaB^PsTreas&#13;
~ In -^sr&#13;
tbo.eattti&#13;
M H P * ••terallUrert'&#13;
aaaatmrinn.&#13;
A fire eaeaj-N)&#13;
A . D .&#13;
kKng,&#13;
wn JOl %ier&#13;
1» tooa&#13;
One-hnlf the world&#13;
ttt« Lhjpr hnlt «J*e«.&#13;
iOW/1 -ttff&#13;
I U K T •ss&#13;
BaJ!&#13;
w^-&#13;
• • • » • " M.IMIIHIPM Alt .»•!.' H , I' M M mi, ..in L,,' J.UAJ'1, '! J"-' J "• '^V'^.'.v^ .'j-J-1- JIU.J&gt;--^^--.--.^J ^J-' 'l^1 ^ l ^ ^ " ^ T ' ^ ^ ^ 5 g ^ ^ g ^ ^ ? ^ ! ^ ^ ^ T ?&#13;
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-. .B,;-V^^;^r.,:„;.,; V » . * ; i J , i ^ "c:?^: -^^-:-/--:^ --:-^ • • &lt;•-• ~ • &gt; -- . •- &gt; • — v . :&#13;
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SP&#13;
^ . . - &gt;-.Vlv.;:.,&gt;-':::,v' ;5;'vc .' v y ^ . ^ ^ '•'• v.. : 7 &gt; f t / ' - ^ - ^ ¾ ¾ ^ - ¾ .&#13;
.V'T.&#13;
* - &gt; - ' - - * J&#13;
.'iJ&amp;iS&amp;ri&#13;
Ffc&#13;
~?CT7 -la*&#13;
&lt;f »-«••&#13;
i W&#13;
**J&#13;
' i :&#13;
« 3&#13;
- i : &gt; . . . ,&#13;
VJ (:&#13;
rJ'fc. i i ^ t / . ^ ;&#13;
" i i - F .&#13;
JEttlLeaJ&#13;
it to uMresstasrJfre. Pinkfeaa*. yog&#13;
your private tils to a woman;.&#13;
whose *eaoe -Vn " J - * " * &gt; , - •&#13;
: ntMur veanv&#13;
V^UU THAT ^HOV«fr Or VAU^t. \&#13;
Old Oentleman Ha* Underrata* HI*&#13;
Sen's AWmis*.&#13;
,A young ana once returned from&#13;
.allege with long hair, a sweater that&#13;
aad eleven distinct colors in its fabric,&#13;
^ good opinion pf MfeaeK *nd a eol*&#13;
lege yell tl*ajt wat ^ejfrifyinf.&#13;
#1» father sized bim up gad tben&#13;
romplained bitterly. HU complaints&#13;
mere more bitter when be heard the&#13;
:olllege yell.&#13;
"And* I paid good money to havq&#13;
kirn aoajOre&#13;
'14*-' - fji-fJHq-- &amp;r&amp; 1»&#13;
g man,&#13;
not," replied the father. "It&#13;
is as valueless as the squeal of a pig&#13;
and (hat 1B one part of the animal&#13;
UM5taM7tY?*AL&#13;
Cao«a^ by&#13;
Itobinf&#13;
M#ck-l^.roHe^&#13;
Yean Marfe&#13;
riW—Another Cure&#13;
by Cuticwra.&#13;
"tor two years my&#13;
ered with sore*, thi&#13;
to a»y, heir, w h i a M&#13;
unsightty b&gt;aalldd »pot,.&#13;
Inflammation&#13;
made ma wild,&#13;
cum&#13;
Hre?olti^rlw»la*oyoorpri»at«troubl«&#13;
t o a m a a &gt;boatd—m man 4oea not wider-&#13;
.,;.; atajia /•iy^lybe^ftnae **• te * * * ^ , ;•:':'" :*&#13;
Ban# wfrtiMfli swfea?iUi. alienee-and&#13;
&gt;. ^ ooght to hare immediateataJHtianoe, bn^a naturai&#13;
' mpdesty WpeU them toekirlnb frpift e*pg#in&lt;r themselvea&#13;
ta^4oe«|iona.aadp?i«b*hly examioations of&#13;
eren their, iamllflr phyaioian. It i* unajoeessary.&#13;
%^J£ithout money'--or pHce you can oonsnlt a woman&#13;
&lt;rwjSj|vlpdfelro» aotaalr-experieneo la groat.&#13;
SSk. MP*. ^toUdlo^ Invltfttlon:&#13;
afferSair &amp;em any form of female weak.&#13;
•ea» arirnHted to promptly communicate with Mrs.&#13;
Ptakham *fc Lynn, Maaa. All letters are received,&#13;
opened, read and apawered by women only. A&#13;
woman can freely talk of fier private illness to a&#13;
woman; thus fcj&amp;a^been. established the eternal&#13;
eon£dence between Jtfra. Pinkhamjmd the women&#13;
of America which has ne vee been broken. Out&#13;
'' of the vast volume of experience which; she&#13;
has to draw from, it is more than possible&#13;
that she has gained the very kWwledjre--&#13;
ihat will help yonr. case. She-asks sot&#13;
'log'in returnexcept ybtir good^will.and her/&#13;
advice has relieved thousands'. Stfrely any&#13;
woman, Holt or poor, is very-foolish if she/&#13;
h// £ i&#13;
which is lost when he is butchered."&#13;
A few weeks later, while on a trip&#13;
to a new country, the father and son&#13;
were attacked by a band of marauding&#13;
LnJBanjL The young man opened b i s&#13;
mouth, threw the reverse lever away&#13;
ever in the corner, and emitted a&#13;
college yell, which was substantially&#13;
as follows:. "Br-r-r-! Woof, woof woofwoof!&#13;
Zip, zip, plppitysip! compat,&#13;
corapah! Gurgoo, gurgoo! Wottell,&#13;
wortell! wheeeeee!"&#13;
The members of the marauding&#13;
band, amazed at the sound, and unable&#13;
to understand it, turned and&#13;
fed.&#13;
"Maybe a college education does&#13;
ray," said the father, slowly.&#13;
offer of assistance.-^-Lydia B. Inkham&#13;
Medicine Co., Lynn,-M*ssr&#13;
w e p u b l i s h t w o let*&#13;
a w o m a n w h o aocep*&#13;
r; iuvitation* N o t e t h e&#13;
ar?&#13;
«• Dear Mrs. PrakhAm:—&#13;
V For eight years 1 have suffered something&#13;
terrible every mouth with my periods.- The&#13;
- ' - i are etcrudatiiig and I can hardly stand&#13;
. My doctor says I have ovarian and&#13;
ib trouble, and I must go through an option&#13;
if i want to get well I do not want&#13;
submit to it if I can possibly help it.&#13;
tell me what to do. I hope yon can&#13;
rn»e^Mrs.Mary Dlmmick, WtLand B.&#13;
18k)., Bennirj P.O., Washington,D.C.&#13;
id letter.&#13;
Mrs. Pinkham:-&gt;&#13;
After KaUowing carefully your advice,&#13;
. lydia E. Ffetkhanh Vegetable&#13;
I am very anxious to send you&#13;
testftnonkl, that others may know&#13;
you ha?e done for me.&#13;
n rr, v ii&#13;
t-&#13;
She Was Ready for Him.&#13;
He had come to break off the engagement.&#13;
His mother didn't approve&#13;
of-nis-ctroiee. BeslflW1re~!eirtlnif he&#13;
'{was too timid to assume the responsibilities&#13;
of married life.&#13;
It wasn't a pleasant task.&#13;
^-have comerMte-^aidH^d say tha^&#13;
f&#13;
" As you know, I wrote you that my doctor&#13;
said I most have an operation or I could not&#13;
live. I then wrote you, telling you my ail&#13;
inents. I followed your- advice and am entirely&#13;
weli I can walk miles without an&#13;
ache or a pain, and I owe my life to you and • T . . . „ , . . . _&#13;
tIo LwyfcdhU eBvTerPyi nskuhffaermin'gsV wegoem^alonC wfeomuldp oruenadd . 8 u r e r h e a r somebody snuffling at the&#13;
this testimonial and realize the value of writing&#13;
to you and your remedy. V Mrs. Mary&#13;
Dlmmick, 59th and £. Capitol Streets, Ben*&#13;
ning P. 0., Washington, D. C.&#13;
When a medicine has been successful&#13;
in restoring to health so many women&#13;
whose testimony is so unquestionable,&#13;
you cannot well, say, without trying it,&#13;
" I do not believe it will help me." If&#13;
you are ill. don't hesitate to get a bottle&#13;
of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound at once, and write Mrs. Pink*&#13;
hany Lynn. Mass., for special advice—*&#13;
t r i e free and always helpful.&#13;
or 33 Years &lt;s&#13;
\ Owwnapooa Cure, Ae Lsag&#13;
'*B» been^beisia.|hc wdbfie, and&#13;
';**r."&#13;
^rdi&#13;
T%T^lU.&#13;
for&#13;
of the&#13;
These who have used&#13;
bewaaeata. T W&#13;
owd kAottld know ffest&#13;
•old wkh a poauve gssc&#13;
doemt ewe you, tat dBsJer&#13;
utUt you petd for il. Shaoh IliOired , ntmgtopd* o&lt; the aw* obitaasle&#13;
^ ^ ^ W P M , Cokk and Lang troubles.&#13;
Mother's Plan For Revenge.&#13;
William Brookfleld, the English divine,&#13;
used to tell this story; "The new&#13;
bishop of New Zealand, in a farewell&#13;
SKI pathetic interview with his mother&#13;
after ate iittiiiiargmt. wail thus adtaraaad&#13;
br a ^ ! • a^a* a«iaw^ce as&#13;
"'I sup-&#13;
It.&#13;
of.&#13;
Lei it4&#13;
'i$!k&#13;
^m¾ * *m&#13;
C l M » * t&#13;
Mr WBar, wee&#13;
«10, WM BIOMghl wp o e&#13;
tmlrhwox&#13;
can yon.&#13;
• M M ncdfesweMra&#13;
nmem s o u r t a * ywra&#13;
SUokifKlafaltttUby&#13;
Uf«mi. UlMMomvyataisteac.hwtcpofk&#13;
et eoldi OM 4t twp OOMS ilwtjn WBMM M . I&#13;
woMMaotbf w i a W n W l e t i SbdcK't bra*&#13;
home f« maor \me» to* ptin of ft. hhuMvea&#13;
S H I L O H&#13;
10¾-aaa#i^rtse, but I suppose they&#13;
W«U&gt; We will leave it in the&#13;
of Providence. But if they do—&#13;
d\ say dear. &amp;nd dI«agree with i n * " 1&#13;
•reness,&#13;
[ess itching&#13;
advised Cutitt,&#13;
and after a&#13;
tent subsided,&#13;
sores soon dismy&#13;
hair grew&#13;
and healthy aa ever. I shall&#13;
always recommend Cutlcura, (Signed)&#13;
H. J. Spalding, 104 W. 104th St., New&#13;
fork/City."&#13;
The Northumberland (England)&#13;
coal owners propose to abolfgb the&#13;
system of free houses for colliers, and&#13;
offer an advance in wages to miners&#13;
equivalent to house rent, cost of coals&#13;
and taxes.&#13;
ANTISEPTIC O&#13;
How's This J&gt;&#13;
We ofltr Oat Haadred Dollar* Reward for say&#13;
' Catarrh that cannot be cured by HaJrt&#13;
CatarrX Cure.&#13;
F J. CHENEY a CO., Toledo, O.&#13;
We, tb« uadenlSBSe; nave kBown P. J. Cheney&#13;
for tnolaat 15 yeart, aad beUere bim p«rfee)ly neeorable&#13;
to all bnatoea* enuwartlotu and nnancUllj&#13;
able to carry oat any obngettooa tnade by bit arm.&#13;
WALOIXO. KIXMAS A SUBVIH,&#13;
Wboleaale Draggliu, Toledo, O.&#13;
Hall'a Catarrh Core Is taken Internally, acting&#13;
directly upon the blood and maenna aurfacea of the&#13;
•yitam. Teatlmonlals aeat free. Price 75 cent* per&#13;
bottle. Sold by aU Drugslata.&#13;
Take UaU's Family PUlafor conatlpatioa.&#13;
FOR WOMEN&#13;
ttraeeeifrc Usedz w. istehe dil als* H ae #a*t eiteospsefn diirsncaoaMrfs egaa, lyseelaslfs&#13;
•or&#13;
Paxtine ia ia powder form to be dtaaoJred {a pi&#13;
water, and ia far more dcaneiac, healing^asnaim&#13;
aBdecoaomkaltbanUQ^idandatptfcaferair&#13;
TOILBT AND WOMEN** SPECIAL O C S&#13;
ForialeatdrafgUta,StcenUa&#13;
Trial Box aad Boek ef "&#13;
*'« av PaavoM Coat M M v&#13;
m i0&#13;
• ; k &gt; . .&#13;
Lightning Stroke at Wedding.&#13;
During a wedding at Grafenbaum&#13;
Australia, lightning struck the church&#13;
and tore away the bridegroom's right&#13;
foot;- — - ~~&#13;
RHEUMATISM CURED ! Dr. Hart's TTrlc Acid Solvant will poe4U««a*&#13;
! f ure the voret cas^ by- ridding- the ay stem of taa»&#13;
lK)isonous uric acid. A full month's treataaaaj&#13;
for $1. National Remedy Co., Ltd., Chamber eft"&#13;
Commerce, Detroit. Mich. - _ „&#13;
,ii&#13;
J-:&#13;
"assagai nmm** t» «&#13;
W. N U.-DETROIT.-No. I 2 - 1&#13;
eeeeeeeeeeeeeoeeooeeeeeeee•••eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeoa««&#13;
• e&gt;&#13;
—isn't there some one stirring at the&#13;
HSiuV-door?"- —&#13;
"It is nothing," she hastily answered.&#13;
"You were about to say that—"&#13;
if we don't heed prevention, we will need a cure. The Old-It oak-Cora&#13;
"I were about—! mean I was about t *&#13;
to say that I think that we have—I&#13;
mean I have, made a mistake in—I'm&#13;
keyhole!"&#13;
She laughed in an unmirthful way.&#13;
"Yes," she said, "my football brother&#13;
with his brindlc bulldog are out&#13;
there waiting."&#13;
Ho didn't ask what they were waiting&#13;
for.&#13;
"I have come to say, dearest," he&#13;
briskly remarked, "that I think I have&#13;
made a mistake in permitting you to&#13;
put our wedding day so far ahead."&#13;
—Cleveland Plain Dealer.&#13;
St. Jacobs Oil&#13;
is ready always for ail forms et muacular aches or pains, from&#13;
LUMBAGO RHEUMATISM&#13;
&amp;TIFFNECK SPRAIN&#13;
IT CURBS AUKB TBX WHOLE LOT.&#13;
rfc&#13;
*rv&#13;
; • - , &gt; .&#13;
It Made a Difference.&#13;
Itobbie's father had a man drop In&#13;
to see him. After they had chatted *&#13;
few minutes, the guest was offered&#13;
the only cigar on the table, so Robbie&#13;
v\as sent upstairs for a fresh box.&#13;
As the boy reached the top stair his&#13;
ftther was startled to hear: "Which&#13;
Mad, papa? Do you want, those you&#13;
smoke yourself, or the kind you give&#13;
away?"—Lippincott's Magazine.&#13;
Ad Catches the Farmer.&#13;
Thousands of farmers answered the&#13;
advertisement of n man who offered&#13;
to sell "a receipt for making a pound&#13;
cof butter from a pint of ml Ik and c&#13;
m'i&#13;
kttmforBilrtlriti&#13;
fe have set aside&#13;
i-&lt; $1,000«°&#13;
spent (for infasjjiajioa and will&#13;
" W l ^ f ^ i a s f t H , CARO&#13;
leagbwa. taja-l&#13;
Ue\spooniul of oof preparation."&#13;
ASBV^our Druggist for Allen's Foot-Ease,&#13;
tftried ALLBN'S FOOT-EASE reoentand&#13;
ha-we just bought another supply. It&#13;
cured my corns, and the hot, burning&#13;
and itching sensation in my feet which was&#13;
almost unbearable, and I would not be without&#13;
it now."—Mrs. W. J. Walker, Camden,&#13;
N. J." Sold by aU Druggists, S5o.&#13;
Fess Up, Diogenes.&#13;
When Diogenes went around bunting&#13;
for an honest man, could be have&#13;
found one by holding up his lantern and&#13;
looking In- the glass?— Somervilto JournaL&#13;
L Red Cms* cents,&#13;
TJMC THE&#13;
Even Tides at His Command.&#13;
A Boston financier whose summer&#13;
home is on the souIh shore, recently&#13;
paid the fines" imposed, on a group of&#13;
lobster fishermen after the'raid of&#13;
the state fish commission for short&#13;
lobsters. At that particular beach the&#13;
broker's name has the prestige of the&#13;
President's.&#13;
One Saturday afternoon as lie seathlmoclf&#13;
in hia, touilug &lt;.'ar at the&#13;
rr.ilway station, he directed the chauffeur&#13;
to follow a certain road to his&#13;
estate iu order that he might pass the&#13;
chanties of the lobstermeu. Having&#13;
plans for a sail, and noticing, as he&#13;
lollowed the shore, that it was then&#13;
about half-tide, he inquired of the first&#13;
lobsterman he met when it would be&#13;
nigh tide.&#13;
With hat In hand, the; man in oilskins'&#13;
replied: "Any lime vou say,&#13;
Mr. X."&#13;
•j.r-*-- - •&gt; -a? * &gt;k * &gt;&#13;
TAKE A MINUTE ti u&#13;
* .&#13;
AND A POSTAL CARD.&#13;
V&#13;
WRITE THE WORD&#13;
Tompson Saved His Opponent.&#13;
'JSam" Tomp&gt;ton, the Boston lawyer,&#13;
back In the seventies had a CJISC ia&#13;
the civil court, and during the trial&#13;
the attorney on the other side, in a&#13;
heated argument, called hjm a liar, in&#13;
words more forcible than elegant.&#13;
Now "Sam" was hard Qf hearing, and&#13;
his alert assistant promptly informed&#13;
htm that his opponent had Just c;»iied&#13;
hiin a blankely-blanked Irar.&#13;
"Sam" at once faced him, and, in&#13;
his peculiar drawl, said: "I can tuku&#13;
lou out on the street and liud a hundred&#13;
who will say the same thing.'&#13;
Then he proceeded with his argument&#13;
so quickly, the court, if so inclined,&#13;
had no chance to administer&#13;
a rebuke, or perhaps a fine for contempt,&#13;
to his opponent.&#13;
' '4 T ?&#13;
Wit of College President.&#13;
Dr. Thwing, president of the West&#13;
era Reserve University, is credited&#13;
with a clever mot in connection with&#13;
the recent horse show In New York.&#13;
In company with another educator he&#13;
Raited the show one evening and his&#13;
remarked that it seemed more&#13;
exhibition than one of&#13;
nee. "In other words,"&#13;
"it Is a clothesline inseiq."&#13;
* *&#13;
low to Dress.&#13;
wwat* &lt;f*w-&#13;
CALIFORNIA&#13;
above your name and address, sending&#13;
the card to me. By return mail&#13;
I will send you free some interesting&#13;
literature.&#13;
If you care to ask questions they will&#13;
be answered correctly, promptly*&#13;
courteously.&#13;
^&#13;
&gt; • '&#13;
. Vv.&#13;
v&#13;
/&#13;
Ram?&#13;
w&#13;
«•:,*&#13;
sw&#13;
General! Passenger Agejat,.&#13;
^Q" Bulldin*;, ^ ^&#13;
«aiCA00.&#13;
.-.»&#13;
.'«.•&#13;
'&gt;**o^ %i tr.-'-' "M&#13;
^M^J^.jTfi"^'.' «f^t ftff.&#13;
• ^ j * ^&#13;
/ * * ' . •&#13;
• ^ ~Mf&lt;&#13;
•V*«.&#13;
'tun;**&#13;
•••••••prf : ^:%^vB3wfra&#13;
• J . • « . , &gt; '&#13;
/^--&#13;
•# 'Ijpl*&#13;
im mmmmmli*'** s iij^tf,is.i..j!,&#13;
iv.:,.,iv.a' . » • • • » » .SaC'&#13;
• ! * • • '&#13;
' * ? , • " - *&#13;
1?3tf*$f&#13;
^ f t E : v « k&#13;
TJMfort^r Clothing Oo. of HoweU&#13;
$jt2^10for$7j».fwr | 6&#13;
III* ' II. * ^ ,&#13;
/ &gt; y ^&#13;
Hnb«'Wrijii4pt y?**' "Jl n ,«*f|l ay*aja*ai MP wim/mm—mmmmymmm******&#13;
W^P^ «MflP»^&#13;
The BftftUf eerrlerr * iH sel « # e&#13;
' i r\ ; m - « t « ! ! 4 -&#13;
Fiw&#13;
mods eqneJiy »*j Urtain«d *% »1&#13;
'Ohrbfafoa*.&#13;
1 *"";;«;&#13;
owner can&#13;
on* for this&#13;
• * *&#13;
rW*' ••(? v3p•&#13;
^ 5 .&#13;
« •&#13;
&gt;•»&#13;
;«TiVittkWood&#13;
ofOaroare visiting be&#13;
Mm p Wood&#13;
D. B. Smith and family of&#13;
x&gt;r write 4&lt;v Basign&#13;
" ~ " Mr..and Mrs. Gins. Ruffspent&#13;
wipsles* Monday, •• .:: [^ -:^ -•':&#13;
a B ^ a ^ a^d Ca«ilf.«!nt»rk*in»&#13;
tives O*0pj^^r of # ^ ^&#13;
" - ! T e a s e Q^eetmaa of: Pittokney.&#13;
^ j ^ a y l a a t , :&#13;
Loyal (fciaflft pla*w ra«ai»bar&#13;
U \k* fy&amp;mk of 1905 imd all aanav&#13;
meal*an&gt;i*4» aa^baCOrt thr 8&lt;Hh.&#13;
# ^&#13;
M&#13;
K&#13;
•ft&#13;
ibair^|» How**** ? ;&#13;
Carkl«w»i» Howell.&#13;
•j,-. QroBPt' &lt;Mb 4 ? 6 0 ¾ wao^ing W^*£'&#13;
w ooaah, Vte., baya no terrors lor eftild«&#13;
^ fta or adult* wtoo attcaaU ibe Vowtja^&#13;
&lt; ^&#13;
V" *•-&#13;
jf«5*i&#13;
l?ort^$t. Wa$t,&#13;
Ghristmas with her pftrente, Mc&#13;
,.,% - . - . . . . „ . * . and Mrs. 0, Pre^ of flowift&#13;
^mmfimte^^Ut*^^^^ nhm».HDlmoAima Wo and 0.1 «»*&#13;
'TThTt T T&#13;
BlIPS-/'^ N o f t ^ l * r r * x Payers&#13;
•saaw-Ks- &gt; • '&#13;
lE^r.&#13;
Treag.&#13;
CHI&#13;
Lene Smith&#13;
Do&#13;
-Wm.-0'Brian w apending the&#13;
holiday in Detroit&#13;
f(avo bim a piaataat *«&gt;pxUo tbaolUtiejr&#13;
e«oinR aad prataataf $*: - ^&#13;
gold riiwr.&#13;
j i ^ O a ^ e n t e f a p e n t C h r i s U ^ * ' U M 1 ^&#13;
w itb Wi partnU bwe.&#13;
first of the week at Jaa. Marbles.&#13;
Margaret and' George Greiser&#13;
of Mt Clemens are visiting their&#13;
paaente.Mr. and Mrs, Geo. Greiner&#13;
daring the holidays.&#13;
Glare and Li am Ledwidge of&#13;
ta« roil fair Pntaam township is&#13;
ooir mm j hands and 1 am ready to&#13;
rec«iv« taxefi at any time at my store&#13;
in P^pkney. Will be at the store of&#13;
litdilMie &lt;fe Rocbe in Anderson Wed-&#13;
. 27. W. E^ Murphy. | Howell are spending their holiday&#13;
vacation with their parents, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Wm. Ledwidge.&#13;
•T&gt;nmnna Wilson and wife " of&#13;
far Sale or Cuehaafe.&#13;
y^orty aores of timbered 4and »n&#13;
Inqaire of F, A. Barton^&#13;
iS^S^ -• .pinckney-&#13;
C, S. CHAM BERLIN,&#13;
Detroit, SamM Wilson of New&#13;
YorFatvd: MotUrWitaoirof-Pitta^ —^MrerHrF-^lartia^ entertapeoV £ar4ot the elaotion of Qfioer»aM (or&#13;
t&#13;
EXPEffiLAUCIIONIER&#13;
DEXTER, MICH.&#13;
B«ll Pbone 88, tt* P. 0. Lock Box M&#13;
Formerly of Battle Cmk,.Kkh. Sells evwythlig&#13;
on e*rtb-Reel EstUe, Graded Stock, Penra*l&#13;
Property, Conntry Sales, etc Years of experience,&#13;
and prloes reasonable.&#13;
Orders may be left at the DISPATCH Office.&#13;
PINCKNEY. MICH.&#13;
rjl W. DANIELS,&#13;
CTIOKEBB.&#13;
.«&lt; ^ v J W B a * * * ' 7 * - - !&#13;
For infc:raaoe&#13;
o r address&#13;
ijndilla phone&#13;
f^SJff^rtJofU, AactrounbTTK' and tin -enps&#13;
fif&#13;
conrtsa^^jj/&#13;
guage a « J ^&#13;
.:»&#13;
Ut&#13;
T«*N&#13;
IkLMER&#13;
~~ --^ ^~-^^^ &gt;»^ — ^-^ '&#13;
I L L CALLS ANSWERED&#13;
PROMPTLY DAY OR RIGHT&#13;
burg spent Christmas under the&#13;
parental roof.&#13;
The most pleasant, safest and best&#13;
remedy 10 use for coughs colds "crbop"&#13;
whooping congb, etd., is Kennedy's&#13;
Lava live Honey a id Tar. This remedy&#13;
expels all cold from the system&#13;
by acting as a cathartic on the bowels.&#13;
Sold by F. A Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
BAST PUT*AIL&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J. 8. Fitch entertained&#13;
guests on Xmas day.&#13;
Mrs. J. B. Hall entertained a&#13;
company of twenty on Xmas day.&#13;
Miss Myrta Hall of Williamston&#13;
is the guest of her mother, Mrs.&#13;
JTK. Hall.&#13;
R. H. Kennedy is the guest of&#13;
his parents during the week of vacation&#13;
from school at Ypeilanti.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Adolf Spanieling&#13;
and daughter of Ann Arbor are&#13;
guests of Geo. Co4y and family.&#13;
The Misses May me and Clella&#13;
PARLORS AT&#13;
J M P T O N ' S O L D STAND Phone No. 30&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
•\ - ! i?' 'iih'iia &lt;.i rr&#13;
i^ * 3&#13;
'\&#13;
^ • • • l i » » » » s ) » i | S M »&#13;
Proper&#13;
Study&#13;
ofMankind&#13;
is&#13;
Man/'&#13;
&lt;&#13;
*&#13;
h.-*v...&#13;
ri^:^f,-i&#13;
ptr • * ,&#13;
h'%**:&#13;
way to secure cutis'&#13;
to talk directly jo&#13;
^fe are looking for nasr &amp;&#13;
customtfs for our advertlsinf «&#13;
spajOft. ft la what we have to '&#13;
aeiL Wt know It is good ft 1&#13;
Is forth M that we ask for tt&#13;
«fid more. v'H there Is any par- !'&#13;
son in this community who Ins&#13;
, we want&#13;
Pish are spending their holilay&#13;
vacation with their parents here.&#13;
The teacher and pupils arejobe&#13;
congratulated on the success of&#13;
their Xmas entertainment Saturday&#13;
evening.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Herberj^Seheonhal&#13;
and children of Howell are&#13;
visiting at R. W. Lakes during&#13;
the holidays.&#13;
WEST FTJTHAJC.&#13;
Miss Joie Harris is enjoying a&#13;
weeks vacation.&#13;
Jobn Monks and family spent&#13;
Christmas at D. M. Monks'.&#13;
Miss Mollie Kelly or Ann Arbor&#13;
mas with his parents.&#13;
Jeeeie Knools of Port Huron is&#13;
visiting his sister MrsTWJTXiewis.&#13;
Albert Smith of Durand visited&#13;
his son, N. B. Smith over Sunday.&#13;
Albert Benham is home from&#13;
the U. of. N. for the holiday vacation.&#13;
Frieda Dammann went to Hamburg&#13;
Monday night to visit her&#13;
brothers.&#13;
Mrs. W. B. Spaulding and&#13;
daughter Grace are visiting in&#13;
Lansing and Bancroft.&#13;
about thirty friends and re latives&#13;
at a Christmas dinner.&#13;
H^tnrBftffl&#13;
v" said i*.%:£-mi^j*i*i*i'&lt;&#13;
J,&#13;
n&#13;
, - . ' ^ . • ,&#13;
* V * **W» W | » H -r.*^*r«iMk\MaaHHB)SBNSMSjAisna^^&#13;
Wisdior,. Ont., spant ;1&#13;
Chnstmaa-with barpArant^ &gt;kv*and&#13;
A^vVinTKf^sedy. y v&#13;
^B. W. ttykssT"a«W ¥)ls&#13;
was the po*»t o T b ^ b r o U ^ , C . ^ . ^&#13;
family, ajrf;;;«iis^^lB^fs^&gt;|^:&#13;
Sunday and Cbristmav ; t&#13;
Fiscber's oroheatra of Ann Artor&#13;
with drums audtrape will fcaiyth *h*&#13;
musio at the NHw Year's Danoe\&#13;
day. Jan. 1 at the Dexter Opera House-&#13;
Birl75c.&#13;
:•:.*• -V-•?* i t - r- v 4 y&#13;
^ &lt;•&#13;
ABBssl Xesttaf -;.?•; : 3 r t *":&#13;
Thft a n n n a l mdfttin^ of tbS L m a f ^ |&#13;
ston County Mutual Fire Ia«uranca&#13;
the transaction of such other business;&#13;
as may legally come before it, will, be&#13;
thecourtbobsa in the village of Bow*&#13;
, _ T&gt; TA J _• • ell, in said eoooty, TuSbday (hs 2nd&#13;
^ 1 ^ D ^ m m ^ n ^and wives _ot ^ ^ ^ o ^ ^ 3 ¾ t f a W t&#13;
Hamburg, spent Christmas n n d e r ] ^ ^ feM^JTDated,&#13;
Howell, Mich., Dec. 18th, 1906-&#13;
W. 8. Larkin, Secretary, \&#13;
the parental roof.&#13;
, HOT1CB.&#13;
The tax roll of tbd townshippf Unadilla&#13;
is now in my possession, am ready&#13;
to receive the taxes of said township at&#13;
the tollpwinf places: Plain6eld Dec.&#13;
19, 26 and Jan. 2,1906; Gregory, Dec.&#13;
13, 20,27 and every Wednesday until&#13;
Jan. 10,1906; TJnidilla, Drc. 21, 28.&#13;
John J. Donobo*, Trees..&#13;
Unadilla.&#13;
FRESH AIR IS LIFE.&#13;
Am* It 1« Jmat aui Weesssarr at Hlsjkt&#13;
• a 1m tfisFDairtlsa*.&#13;
Air 1» a Ufe preserver. It is the particular&#13;
friend of man, and be who bardeftdes&#13;
the doore and^windowe against&#13;
this life saving friend gives a cordia1&#13;
Invitation to disease and death to enter.&#13;
' • -&#13;
Open tbe doors and windows and let&#13;
the sunshine in, and let wind blow&#13;
rhmngh the rooms every morning, for&#13;
LoTe/a Comaaamaaaeata.&#13;
1. Thou sbalt have no other love&#13;
but me. 2. Trust me all In all or not&#13;
at all. 8. Thou sbalt not dull me with&#13;
satiety, 4. Wound me not wtttfJfl^&#13;
words. 5.'Thou sbalt not l)Tpd?^ate&#13;
with fetters. 0. Guard me ns Urn jew.&#13;
el of thy soul, for &lt;mee lost I cun&#13;
never be regaiued. 7. Then «hait not&#13;
mlstnke thy fancies for me.—Phlladei&#13;
phia Bulletin.&#13;
1- . •• ••• ••'•• ' - ' r . " : i"i'~ : . . &lt;l&#13;
ScHyturni^&#13;
,. -...'-,-.. * .&#13;
•W"',-&lt;... •.-&#13;
.? . - •..." • tt • 7 Seriil Sfcsfitt: "'•• : *\.^,#":¾¾¾^&#13;
•251 Complete Storlaw , ^ v ,v&#13;
;; ^ ¾ '&#13;
Weekly W i t o i ^ w U ^ ^ ^&#13;
Chiltiren's ftlft :^-^&#13;
WesJiry Article o» the Ce&gt;e&gt;&#13;
s__ of tlw Health v ^&#13;
is spending a couple ol&lt; week at&#13;
'her home here.&#13;
H. B. Gardner and family spent&#13;
Christmas with Otis Webb and&#13;
wife of Unadilla.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Holmes~and&#13;
son Marble; and Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
(Jjlarance Bennett of**Lansing are&#13;
gnesta at the home of Kirk Van-&#13;
Winkle;&#13;
so the fresh "nigbt air" can come In&#13;
from one side-and. the Impure air can&#13;
go opt through the oAer.&#13;
lethne bad&#13;
•sorvntion, and thtv&#13;
Uivoiii^u. John s^aicyoc^&#13;
r» tw&#13;
80&#13;
Wm. Ch&#13;
with his&#13;
Jfis» Ets&#13;
i s visiting&#13;
' M r . and&#13;
the guest of&#13;
ChrieUasm.&#13;
li&#13;
1&#13;
^4¾&#13;
Monday&#13;
they are disinfectants performing labor&#13;
of a sanitary nature.&#13;
Breathe long and deep. Fill the&#13;
lungs to their utmost capacity with&#13;
pure air several times each day and&#13;
keep the home well ventilated nigbt&#13;
and day, and remember that when&#13;
night comtos on all the air you have in&#13;
or out of the house till the next morning&#13;
is "night air," and you cannot bottle&#13;
day air rnough within the sleeping&#13;
room to last through the night, so by&#13;
all means let the air circulate through&#13;
the room and thus keep a fresh supply&#13;
of this Ufe giving element constantly&#13;
with you. -&#13;
More fresh i(|r is required during&#13;
sleep than when^awake, for increased&#13;
quantities of poisonous products are&#13;
given off from the koigaand skin at&#13;
this time, so j each respiration renders&#13;
the air in an uuventilated room more&#13;
unfit to be breathed again.&#13;
3Ci&gt;ep th« wlnrtmvM aufpHoptly open&#13;
T»ml»a«iia&lt;s&gt;taaai l»&lt; loaa,&#13;
A visitor to the West-Cemetery at&#13;
Utchfleld, Conn., found the^oilowtng&#13;
interesting inscription* on'^smbstones&#13;
there: . • vij^-v1'. • :'-^.\ '&#13;
"Here lies the body of Siaryt wife of&#13;
Dr. John Buei, Esq. She died Nov. 4th,&#13;
1708, aet. i%^having bad 13 children,&#13;
101 grandchlldreu, 274 great-grandchildren,&#13;
22 Kr*di*gt*&gt;jtmjMj^ to^&#13;
tal, 410: ^.sttrvtve-.'nY." &gt; r *&#13;
• • &gt; . - ;&#13;
WAn3tb^::'&#13;
a.'$|gN to th&gt;^a^mory of&#13;
InwtlmsiSU" \vlrTlKeta*pr!v«led BxceS&#13;
&amp;' Vlrfno. wSJtJttihcJ, wife^f Js&gt;-&#13;
B. Wfl^d^ &amp;.\iaii3«ater elf^er-&#13;
M')U:-jpHi«^,#ia',f etheres'&#13;
'/i^Jlr ^:^4^1^1 ^ &gt; ^ , 1^8¾ ni&#13;
iJjairanafamgUy ^ frioun oM»;m». n Lnufipn «d)tot«:::!&#13;
Sunday and Monday/ MJSSbj^ ' ^ i ^ i H t e a ^ i i a a a B 1 ^ ^ they&#13;
ents o|ibis place. r '^^P*^^^***^^**'*** *&#13;
.wii&#13;
A letter In tho Chrlstluu Regbrter&#13;
tells of ;i minlwtcr's sou who had been&#13;
so disobedieut at table that he was t&#13;
biinished to a smali tabts by himself,&#13;
to eat there until he should repent and&#13;
reform. He could not even jolu hi thf.&#13;
amlly gnure, Lmt was told to say grace&#13;
at h\s own little table. So from nia s t 0 '« o r Scripture seleoflons~he chose&#13;
this: "OLord, I thank thee that thou&#13;
hast prenareil n tnhl^ for mA tn the&#13;
Notes on Correal Eyentt&#13;
Nntare end Science&#13;
Aaecdotes end Miscellmny *•'"•#• - ""-v.-; x ^&#13;
Will mi the panes of The Youtli** * -\&#13;
jSwrinn «906.&#13;
presence of mine enemies."&#13;
IS IT COLD &amp;NOUG&#13;
Y o u * U w a n t t o h u r t t h e f e l l o w who»&#13;
t e n t i m e s « d a Y ,&#13;
WHY NOT BSCAJPB WM*&#13;
Go South where, t h e green thing* a r e beglnnlqft to-*how, afceVr&#13;
there's sunshine all t h e t i m e . Go .VIQ&#13;
GREAT (CENTR^U eHsaBsaSs«BBas«BBB%aaaa1sB«Bfla«Baa«aa«a%«^&#13;
^ - • _ r v .&#13;
THROUGH tlCRETS BI6GA6E CHECKED THRDU6H THWW6H SUE&#13;
A s k arry a ^ ^ r i t o f the^ . ' v .-,&#13;
_ - f i R E A T CF.NTRA&#13;
OP wHte&#13;
s*rjtL_ - r&#13;
i ^ P f W i l M J .&#13;
*••* - 4 - ^ . . . - • Cimsittbad, Ohio. &lt;J Ap&#13;
^ V . M .&#13;
&lt; . ?&#13;
Tvf^^ i *&lt;;:• ^r&#13;
W WANT A WELL? &gt; -"J&#13;
soul-&#13;
^MlMtPA&#13;
. •.*'• i.*^(r, sov&#13;
'iiSn aref&#13;
• " • W&#13;
••"*• #&gt;&#13;
^ ^ $t</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch December 28, 1905</text>
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                <text>December 28, 1905 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1905-12-28</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="8566">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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