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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>Francis Carr is spending a few days&#13;
with bis brother in Detroit.&#13;
Mrs F. L. Andrews and daughter&#13;
Florence were in Howell Saturday.&#13;
The foundation of the new state&#13;
sanitonuna at Howell will be started&#13;
this week.&#13;
Many ot our teachers are in Howell&#13;
this week attending the teachers1&#13;
examination.&#13;
Htockbndge is to have a street&#13;
carnival beginning with August 20,&#13;
and lasting one week.&#13;
The rains of the past two weeks&#13;
have been an excellent t h i n g tor tbe&#13;
bean crop and it promises to be a&#13;
record breaker.&#13;
A tine artesian well has been struck&#13;
on the new sanitorium grounds at&#13;
Howell. This is an excellent thing&#13;
for the institution.&#13;
Mrs. Sophia Smith of Marion and&#13;
nephew, Mr. Unas. Husband, of Petro*&#13;
lia, Can , attended the Old Boy's and&#13;
Girl's reunion last week.&#13;
The Democrat ot last week published&#13;
a picture i.f the proposed Stale sanitorium&#13;
to be erected near there. It is&#13;
to be an imposing structure.&#13;
The sale on souvenir postals at this&#13;
office the past week has been large,&#13;
but w&amp; still have plenty of them left.&#13;
They are a very nice souvenir to send&#13;
to absent friends.&#13;
William Hemingway ot Howell was&#13;
l):j years old July 27. His children&#13;
were all present to assist in celebrating&#13;
the event. Mr.''Hemingway is&#13;
enjoying unusual good health for a&#13;
man of h;s age. He is visiting&#13;
son. Fred, and family near here.&#13;
Old Boys' and Girls' Reunion.&#13;
The Biennial Meeting a Hummer&#13;
T h o u s a n d s v i s i t P i n c k n e y W e d n e s d a y and Thursday&#13;
That Wedneseay and Thursday,&#13;
Aug. 1 and 2, wer« banner days in&#13;
the history of Pincknoy, goes without&#13;
a dissenting word. People began to&#13;
arrive for the reunion a full week&#13;
in order to keep up the old friendships&#13;
renewed. Pinckney has no&#13;
excursions, no Fourth ot July celebrations&#13;
and there is no reason why the&#13;
village should not celebrate with the&#13;
before and continued to come on ail; old boys and girls at least once in two&#13;
trains up to Thursday morning and it| years. It is a good thing lor the&#13;
was well worth the price to see the ! town, a good thing for the old 'uns&#13;
greetings of the old bovs and girls as; and a good thing in general,&#13;
they met, perhaps tor the first time in&#13;
Headquarters for&#13;
Dmgs, Medicines&#13;
Books, Stationery&#13;
Fancy Crockery&#13;
Ice Cream Soda&#13;
25 years.&#13;
Wednesday, the first day ot the&#13;
reunion, was given up to the reception&#13;
of guests, renewing old friendships&#13;
and a general good time. In&#13;
T h e Ball Games.&#13;
The ball. games-for the two days&#13;
were in the hands of Frank Dolan,&#13;
manager-of the home team, and he&#13;
the evening there was the regular I arranged some interesting games and&#13;
meeting at the opera bouse where the! kept t h e b a l 1 tolling for both days.&#13;
us&#13;
large audience were delightfully entertained.&#13;
Miss Edith Pinckney, who&#13;
sang two years ago, was present and&#13;
agai-n charmed the people with her&#13;
beautifui voice and pleasing manner.&#13;
She had to respjnd as usual to an&#13;
encore. Miss Franc Adele Burch who&#13;
is becoming noted as an entertainer of&#13;
rare ability, rendered several readings&#13;
in such a pleasing manner as to receive&#13;
a hearty encore. Miss Eva&#13;
Iveliy, tbe young daughter ot Mr. and&#13;
Mr*. David Kelly, sang three selections&#13;
and captivated the entire audience.&#13;
She has a rare gift for one so young&#13;
Wednesday morning the game was&#13;
between the Pinckney and Gregory&#13;
nines and was a hotly contested game&#13;
ending in a victory for Pinckney,&#13;
score 4 and -3.&#13;
The afternoon game was between&#13;
Pinckney and Stockbridge and the&#13;
home team lost the game, score 6 and 0.&#13;
Thursday morning the home team&#13;
were rested and met the Dexter team,&#13;
winning the game, the score standing&#13;
4 and 3.&#13;
The afternoon game was between&#13;
Pinckney and Fowlerville and in the&#13;
ninth inning it was forfeited to Pinck-&#13;
P. A. SIGL.E.R&#13;
Assessment 86 of the L 0 T M M is&#13;
now due and must be paid on ot&#13;
before Aug. 31. Carrie Wilson, V. K.&#13;
Cow^ Y C\\XXTC\V&#13;
SUNDAY, AUGUST 12&#13;
and has a bright tuture before her. ney, score 9 and 0.&#13;
She also responded to an encore. I The games were fast ones and much&#13;
The meeting was thrown open to ( enjoyed by the lovers ot that sport,&#13;
the old boys and girls who responded j Mr. Dolan is to be congratulated on&#13;
wiih. short, speeches as they we/e ! his success in the arrangements of the&#13;
calied on by president G. W. tfykes. j games.&#13;
The dnlt of their remarks were mostly j .» , » , * ._&#13;
on the time of the "old red school' N o t e s B y T h e W a y .&#13;
house" and before and was very inter* j •&#13;
esting to those who were interested in&#13;
the early history of the village It&#13;
Several of the old boys and inrls&#13;
remained over Sunday and the&#13;
remainder of the week was -pent in&#13;
fishing, camping, visiting and enjoy.,&#13;
ing themselves generally-.--&#13;
A more enthuiastic crowd it would&#13;
be hard to find than visited Pinckney&#13;
last week.. They were easy to entertain&#13;
as they entertained them-elye.-.&#13;
Some ot the visitors will be dissapointed&#13;
that the name of visitors does&#13;
i not appear in the paper. Why, bless&#13;
j you, there is not type enough in&#13;
i Livingston county to print all the&#13;
j names of the visitors.&#13;
M. E. Church Notes.&#13;
Many of the old boys and girls' who&#13;
remained over Sunday were present&#13;
at the services toth morning and&#13;
evening and all expressed themselves&#13;
as delighted with the services. Rev.&#13;
Littlejohn delivered a sermon in the&#13;
morning especially for them and there&#13;
were lew dry eves in the congregation.&#13;
Many present had not worshiped there&#13;
since childhood and the recollections&#13;
of the past was pleasing as well as sad.&#13;
. The onterence collections were&#13;
taken Sunday' morning and $25.00&#13;
raised in a tew moments. The special&#13;
All who were here are counting on , collections amount this year to much&#13;
______ meeting again in 1W8, and are&#13;
The rain came just iu time to help.!-DP forward to a bigger time&#13;
i oo kthan&#13;
lay the dust somewhat and make tbe j ©vet-. Well, they will have, to hustle,&#13;
would be impossible to give all that; days pleasant for the crowd. The two j to have a better time than tbi&gt; year&#13;
was said, or the names of all who days seemed made on purpose for the; but there may he a chance to urmv.&#13;
responded to the call. The gathering i people of Pinckney. ! ' n i e committee are well satisfied&#13;
broke up at about ten o'clock but the' Chas. Shaffer says thete is only one j w j t Q t o e s u c c e s &gt; 0f the reunion and&#13;
old 'uns could not get away for an ; fault with Pinckney—they do not sell J a r e s e ttlintr all bills as thev&#13;
'aisHd hv&#13;
"M.OVT\VCV£ S e m e * as \xs\xa\&#13;
\Q,oO&#13;
Tonic: •After the Sermon is Over.&#13;
ss unday school and pastor- c la-&#13;
Young Men and Women at&#13;
A i\»rdial Welcome to All&#13;
lor&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
HiA-Sumer Clears Sale&#13;
hour o r t o u r or more as there was so&#13;
much hand-shaking and meeting of&#13;
old friends.&#13;
Thursday morning proved to be a&#13;
morning designed for the enjoyment&#13;
ot l\nckneyites and their old friends.&#13;
The day was all that could be desired&#13;
for a picnic, Dall games, etc., and at&#13;
an early hcur the crowds began to&#13;
arrive and at noon tbe woods was&#13;
Tr;IT~or*eIii. AH came-witb-weM-lad^a&#13;
baskets and as they proceeded to&#13;
lighten the burden tongues were&#13;
loosened and all enjoyed the two hours&#13;
of picnic dinner to the utmost.&#13;
Alter the dinner, Pres. Sykes called&#13;
to order and there was a coupb4 of&#13;
hours ot a love feast of the old boys&#13;
1 and g&gt;;rls that will be remembered for&#13;
year- to come as a bright --pot in the&#13;
j lustot v ot all present Kveryone had&#13;
' eonn' b&gt;r a uood time and proceeded&#13;
; to h;'.\i' it and help other- in the en&#13;
| j o y i i i r i i t of the Mime.&#13;
J In tin' .',Hnmt,* there v .is :i party at&#13;
the onern bouse which was. largely&#13;
attended and all&#13;
time, It was a&#13;
collars by the yard. He wears a Xo,&#13;
18. How evei he did not let a little&#13;
thing like that keep him from enjoying&#13;
the time to the utmost.&#13;
The E. A. Allen family held a reunion&#13;
here during the two days and if&#13;
anyone enjoyed the whole affair it was&#13;
this same Allen family. They were&#13;
all here and here for a good time&#13;
E. A. was among the oldest persons&#13;
nresent at the reunion a* he is S'2&#13;
years old and hale andniearfy.&#13;
Henrv Munsell of Marion wa; the&#13;
oldest person present that our reporter&#13;
could find, he being 84 years old.&#13;
There was every enjoyment that&#13;
any or all could wish. Those who&#13;
enjoyed base ball had four good games&#13;
tv/ witness in the two days. Those&#13;
who were fond of fishing could do that&#13;
and not go outside the village limits.&#13;
Those who liked boating could have&#13;
that fun in almost any manner as&#13;
there was two gasoline launches, two&#13;
sail boats and any number of row&#13;
boats at baud.&#13;
come . in.&#13;
i Anyone having a bill against the&#13;
! association are requested to hand the&#13;
same to th* old secretary this week so&#13;
all may be settled and a report of&#13;
finances given in the next issue ot the&#13;
DISPATCH.&#13;
The ladies of the M, E. church, assisted&#13;
by the Band of Hope and Danner&#13;
Class, took in over $72,00 .by the&#13;
sale of lemonade and ice cream during&#13;
-the-reua4^n. They -could- hjjve.s_o!d&#13;
I much more but their supply r:tn out&#13;
at 5 o'clock. The young people are&#13;
i entitled.to much credit for the way&#13;
they worked tor the success ot the&#13;
undertaking. All worked hard and&#13;
are happy ever their success.&#13;
more than has ever been&#13;
this church in many years.&#13;
The int rest is keeping up :n the&#13;
Sunday school and good wor&gt;k is being&#13;
done. There i^ talk of a picnic as&#13;
usual at this rime of the year and all&#13;
interested are requested to be piesent&#13;
next Sunday.&#13;
The evening service was excellent.&#13;
Kev. Littlejohn spoke on ''Life's&#13;
Jerusalem"' and the discours-e was as&#13;
good as any lecture delivered here in&#13;
years. It should have been listened&#13;
to by every young man in tbe country.&#13;
Do not forget that next Wednesday&#13;
evening, Aug. 15, at 7::30, occurs the&#13;
last iiuarterly conference of the y«-ar.&#13;
Every member of the board and others&#13;
a_re requested to to be present as Miere&#13;
is business to transact.&#13;
LOST.&#13;
A gentleman's gold scarf pin w&#13;
small diamood set. Return to ;&#13;
offive and get reward.&#13;
Is Now On&#13;
The launchts came in handy in the I&#13;
report a pleasant afternoon in ferrying passengers to&#13;
very orderly affair a n ( j from t n e grounds.&#13;
t»---&gt;&#13;
We iire soiling :»H our KHIU-V I'hina,&#13;
Lnnips and Water Sets at eost&#13;
in order to make room fur new&#13;
Goods. Decidedly low prire* me&#13;
made all through the store. For&#13;
instance:&#13;
1 lb A. Sc H. Soda for :*c&#13;
45 yd Spool Black Darning Cot ion for lc&#13;
Four -J00 yd Spools Thread for&#13;
and'the managers are entitled to credit. Tbe old boys enjoyed a dip in the&#13;
JClius' ended the second biennial "old swim'tu' bole" Friday afternoon.&#13;
meeeting oft he Old Boys' and Girls'; Many of t h e m b a d not been there in&#13;
Association of p inckney. Those who 20 cr 25 years.&#13;
prophesied that this year there would Those who were out with the "boys" j&#13;
not be as large a crowd or as good a Tuesday evening bad a big time. The j&#13;
time, were disappointed as the «'rowd editor and family had the fail •benefit I&#13;
was larger than before and the good of the concert. Well, it only comes j&#13;
time was the equal if not better than, once in two years and it was good |&#13;
00&#13;
E A. BOWMAN.&#13;
HOWELL'S BUSY STORE&#13;
E v e r y&#13;
o n e t o&#13;
'jfHiis trade&#13;
OUR n r s iNE S S&#13;
I S S K I . L I N O&#13;
p A I N T&#13;
the first and all seemed anxiou,s,«while&#13;
not to grow older, t? have the nest&#13;
biennial meeting come soon.&#13;
There was a sentiment in favor of&#13;
not holding the meetings oftener than&#13;
every five years, bat the members&#13;
would not stand for the change as&#13;
they wish to meet as oiten as possible&#13;
healthy sport.&#13;
Although Pinckney saw the largest&#13;
crowd that ever was in her borders,&#13;
there was perfect order and the best&#13;
feeling that could be imagined.&#13;
The interesting paper read by Miss&#13;
Margaret Cooke will be found on&#13;
page 4.&#13;
\; . know \rby; t&gt; look&#13;
It's likclv v,\; r!on't.&#13;
We vt* cMvi'unontcd;&#13;
trouble ami ar.iiuvance.&#13;
iov and what to loo!; out for.&#13;
That's when1 we'll help you.&#13;
our experience will save you&#13;
When we tell you&#13;
THE SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS&#13;
F O R A L L ^ I N D S O F G O O D P A I N T I N G&#13;
are the best paints for anything paintable you may&#13;
depend upon it. Let us show you color cards.&#13;
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&amp; Teeple H ardware Jga&amp;&#13;
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m ^m •slifa* ^ P f ^ E ? ^ 5 f ^ 9 ? P P ? ^ J&#13;
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$8R' '«S MS ?-• v'i^r^&amp;^fiv^i ^ ^ :^:^¾^¾^ : ¾ ¾ * « v %&#13;
: * • » &gt; • ' &lt; &amp;l^• :$&#13;
^ &lt; v ; &amp; • : ? ' • • ' . • • • • • &gt; •&#13;
• . • • * * . • :&#13;
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THE REPUBLICAN STATE&#13;
CONVENTION.&#13;
THE NOMINEES WERE NAMED BY A UNANIMOUS&#13;
VOTE FOR EACH OF THEM, WITH APPLAUSE.&#13;
THE PLATFORM AND GENERAL FEATURES.&#13;
**&amp;'&#13;
&amp; * • '&#13;
• &gt;&#13;
The Republican state convention&#13;
was held in the Light Guard Armory,&#13;
Detroit, on Tuesday to nominate state&#13;
officers and transact the usual convention&#13;
business. There was no inharmony,&#13;
no objections to any candidates,&#13;
no scrambles for place and all was&#13;
done in harmony and unanimity. The&#13;
preliminaries ot tiie night before&#13;
showed that there would be nothing to&#13;
delay the proceedings and there was&#13;
not. The convention was called to order&#13;
by Chairman Diekema and prayer&#13;
was offered by Rev. Mac. H. Wallace.&#13;
T h e delegates were welcomed by&#13;
Mayor Codd. Representative Fordney,&#13;
of Saginaw, was chosen temporary&#13;
chairman, and made a lengthy address.&#13;
Committees were appointed and&#13;
a recess taken till 1:30 p. m.&#13;
At the afternoon session speeches&#13;
were made by Governor Warner, P. H.&#13;
Kelley, candidate for lieutenant governor;&#13;
Senator Burrows and others. The&#13;
governor's address embraced these&#13;
points:&#13;
As a summary of two years of close&#13;
observation, he expressed the conviction&#13;
that there never was a time when&#13;
the people watched as carefully and&#13;
interestedly the conduct of public affairs&#13;
and when officials generally were&#13;
more responsive to public sentiment.&#13;
In an inventory of the accomplishments&#13;
of his administration, he frankly&#13;
admitted that some of the 1,020 acts&#13;
of the legislature to which he had&#13;
given his assent had proven a disappointment.&#13;
One of these was the law&#13;
making changes of venue mandatory.&#13;
Another was the law limiting to de&#13;
pendent relatives thw right of action&#13;
against those responsible for death or&#13;
injury caused by carelessness or neglect.&#13;
Another was the Galbraith law permitting&#13;
manipulation under the guise&#13;
of "equalizing values" in fixing the&#13;
railroad rate of taxation. Its passage,&#13;
however, had the advantage of resulti&#13;
n g In a judicial determination of an&#13;
important question.&#13;
Divers grounds for Republican optimism&#13;
were outlined and satisfaction&#13;
with the primary law and he expressed&#13;
gratitude for the honor of being the&#13;
first beneficiary under its operation.&#13;
Correction of defects in that law were&#13;
.recommended.&#13;
General legislation for the.more effit&#13;
i e n t regulation of corporations was&#13;
also recommended.&#13;
The Nominees.&#13;
The candidates for governor and&#13;
lieutenant governor having been nominated&#13;
at the June primaries, the Uck-&#13;
.et was completed by the unanimous&#13;
'Choice of the convention for all the&#13;
other places and is here given:&#13;
For Governor—Fred. M. Warner, of&#13;
Farmington.&#13;
P o r Lieutenant Governor—Patrick H.&#13;
Kelley, of Lansing.&#13;
For Secretary of State—George A.&#13;
Prescott, of Tawas City.&#13;
-For State Treasurer—Frank P. Glazier,&#13;
of Chelsea.&#13;
F'or Auditor General—James B. Bradley,&#13;
of Eaton Rapids.&#13;
For Land Commissioner—William H.&#13;
Rose, of Bath.&#13;
For Attorney General—John E. Bird,&#13;
of Adrian.&#13;
For Superintendent of Public Instruc-&#13;
,__tionj—Luther L. Wright, of Ironw&#13;
o o d ^ ' ~&#13;
For Member State Board of Education&#13;
—Dexter M. Ferry, Jr., of Detroit.&#13;
State Central Committee.&#13;
The congressional districts chose&#13;
these members to serve as the State&#13;
Central Committee:&#13;
First District—T. J. Navin and Jas.&#13;
*Murfln, Wayne.&#13;
Second District—T. Hawiey Chris-&#13;
Tan, Wayne; W. W. Wedemeyer,&#13;
ashtenaw.&#13;
Third District—J. E. Watson,&#13;
ranch; Frank Knappen, Kalamazoo.&#13;
Fourth District—George E, Bardeen,&#13;
Uegan; George W. Merriman, Van&#13;
Buren.&#13;
Fifth District—B. F. Hall, Ionia; E.&#13;
M. Barnard, Grand Rapids.'&#13;
Sixth District—Geo. W. Cook, Genesee;&#13;
Seth Rupert, Livingston.&#13;
Seventh District—A. E. Sleeper,&#13;
Sanilac; W. T. Hosmer, Macomb.&#13;
Eighth District—William M. Smith,&#13;
Clinton;' David L. Evens, Tuscola.&#13;
Ninth District—W. E Osmun, Muskegon;&#13;
E. O. Shaw, Newaygo.&#13;
.*• Tenth District—Dever Hall and&#13;
Frank Buell, both of Ba}\&#13;
Eleventh District—T. R. Welch,&#13;
Osceola; Orville Dennis, Missaukee.&#13;
Twelfth District—Robert H. Shields,&#13;
Houghton; Robert A. Douglas, Ironwood.&#13;
Hon. Gerritt J. Dlekema was reelected&#13;
chairman of the committee.&#13;
The Platform.&#13;
The committee on resolutions received&#13;
this one from William Alden&#13;
Smith:&#13;
Resolved, ThatJtftfs convention favors&#13;
the nomination1 of candidates by&#13;
direct vote of the peotye. \&#13;
There was ag-mp .flfacuaalon which&#13;
ended by a compromise and the com-&#13;
J U I U &lt; { made this report which was&#13;
DAZED WITH PAIN.&#13;
The Sufferings of a Citlaen of Olympia,&#13;
Wash,&#13;
unanimously adopted and so became&#13;
the platform of the party:&#13;
\Ve, the representative Republicans&#13;
of Michigan, in convention assembled,&#13;
unreservedly and cordially indorse the&#13;
patriotic, courageous and aggressive&#13;
administration of President Roosevelt.&#13;
We admire him as the embodiment,of&#13;
the high ideals of the Republican party,&#13;
for his insistence upon adequate&#13;
and efficient railroad legislation, and&#13;
for his demands that the welfare and&#13;
interests of the people shall be first&#13;
considered, regardless of selfish&#13;
promptings and of the organized protests&#13;
of greed and power. Under his&#13;
administration the enforcement of law&#13;
has been prompt and impartial, recognizing&#13;
neither position nor station in&#13;
dealing with violators and in urging&#13;
the requirements of justice.&#13;
We are glad to give voice to the&#13;
high appreciation on the part of the&#13;
Republicans of Michigan for the splendid&#13;
work of the fifty-ninth congress,&#13;
and to the Michigan members of that&#13;
body, for their legislation of the last&#13;
session. In our judgment the declarations&#13;
of President Roosevelt that no&#13;
congress in the last quarter of a century&#13;
has accomplished so much good&#13;
for the whole people of the United&#13;
States, Is a just tribute to the wisdom&#13;
and patriotism of the Republican majority&#13;
of.that body.&#13;
The prosperity of our state at the&#13;
present time and through recent years&#13;
surpasses all former records made.by&#13;
our own or any other nation since&#13;
civilization began. This prosperity has1&#13;
been.and is being shared by the worki&#13;
n g m e n and the farmer, by the merchant&#13;
and the manufacturer, and by&#13;
all men and women who make up the&#13;
great body of the American producers&#13;
and consumers. These conditions -illustrate&#13;
again, as they have so happily&#13;
in other periods of American history,&#13;
the practical value of Republican policies&#13;
and Republican principles, as established&#13;
in Republican laws and applied&#13;
by Republican administrations&#13;
We emphatically affirm our continued&#13;
belief in the wisdom of the Republican&#13;
protective tariff policy. Whatever&#13;
changes in tariff- schedules may be-,&#13;
come necessary should be so made as&#13;
to preserve the Republican principle&#13;
or' protection aud to aid the further&#13;
advancement of American industry&#13;
and achievement.&#13;
As Michigan Republicans, as well as&#13;
in.our.pwn capacity as delegates represent&#13;
ing\ the working forces of ourparty&#13;
\QJHH sections of the state, wo&#13;
are most glad to give cordial indorsement&#13;
to the renomination of Gov. Fred,&#13;
M. Warner, as the Republican candidate&#13;
for governor, already made by&#13;
55,000 Republican votes, In every feature&#13;
of his official course as governor&#13;
of Michigan has Fred. M. Warner fulfilled&#13;
the promises made by himself&#13;
to the people of this state and made&#13;
in his behalf by those who knew him&#13;
to be courageous, oonest and true. He&#13;
has assisted in the enactment of laws&#13;
which he believed were desired by a&#13;
majority of the people and has aa&#13;
vigorously opposed other enactments,&#13;
the purposes of which he deemed undesirable.&#13;
He has familiarized hlmsell&#13;
with the status and needs of our state&#13;
institutions, and with sincere regard&#13;
for their growth and advancement, has&#13;
successfully urged the greatest possible&#13;
economy and care. The people&#13;
of Michigan know Gov. Warner, and&#13;
their knowledge of his qualities as an&#13;
official and of his character as a man&#13;
will lead them to elect him as his&#13;
own successor in November by an&#13;
overwhelming majority. We also heart&#13;
ily ratify and approve the nomination&#13;
of the Hon. Patrick H. Kelley as the&#13;
Republican candidate for lieutenant&#13;
governor. We indorse the admlnistra&#13;
tion of state affairs by all of the state&#13;
officers and believe their records will&#13;
result in their election by overwhelming&#13;
majorities.&#13;
We commend the last legislature&#13;
for its efficiency and success in tha&#13;
disposition of matters of state importance;&#13;
for Its practical economy in pro&#13;
viding^for state expenditures and for&#13;
its fulfillment of its promises made tc&#13;
the people of the state by our party&#13;
We believe that the action of that&#13;
body in the inactment of a primary&#13;
election law, which Is giving the peo&#13;
pie of this state an opportunity to enter&#13;
upon the practical test of the il&#13;
rect nomination system, was a generous&#13;
fulfillment of our party's promises&#13;
and is an assurance that in such details&#13;
as may be found necessary thai&#13;
law will be so perfected as to as fully&#13;
a3 possible meet the best purposes it&#13;
seek*s to attain.&#13;
We heartily approve the action&#13;
taken by Gov. Warner In appointing&#13;
a delegation of distinguished citizens&#13;
to represent the state at the Iowa&#13;
convention to be held In September&#13;
next. We earnestly recommend tc&#13;
those delegates that they direct their&#13;
effort* to the end that the people of&#13;
the United States so amend the cpnstfc&#13;
tution of the United States as to permit&#13;
tbe election of United States senators&#13;
by direct vote of the people..&#13;
L. S. Gorham, ot 616 E a i t 4th S t ,&#13;
Olympia, Wash., s a y s : "Six years ago&#13;
I got wet a a d took cold, and was soon&#13;
flat In bed, suffering&#13;
tortures w i t h my&#13;
.back. Every movement&#13;
caused an agonizing&#13;
pain, and the&#13;
persistency of It exhausted&#13;
me, so that&#13;
for a time I was&#13;
dazed and stupid.&#13;
On the advice of a&#13;
friend I began using&#13;
Dotn's Kidney&#13;
Pills, and soon noticed&#13;
a change for the better. The&#13;
kidney secretions had been disordered&#13;
and Irregular, and contained a heavy&#13;
sediment, but in a week's time the&#13;
urine was clear and natural again and&#13;
the passages regular. Gradually the&#13;
aching and soreness left my back and&#13;
then the lameness. I used six boxes&#13;
to make sure of a cure, and the trouble&#13;
has never r e t u r n e d ^&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.&#13;
Fo8ter-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
CURIOS AND ODDITIES.&#13;
BOY'S TERRIBLE ECZEMA.&#13;
Only one woman in 100 insures her&#13;
life.&#13;
Ellen Terry is passionately fond of&#13;
cats.&#13;
Sarah Bernhardt has a huge bed 15&#13;
feet long.&#13;
Patti sleeps with a silk scarf about&#13;
her neck.&#13;
Brides in Australia are pelted with&#13;
rose leaves.&#13;
In stature Eskimo women are the&#13;
shortest on e^rth.&#13;
No photographs are ever taken of&#13;
women in China.,&#13;
A woman's brain declines in weight&#13;
after the age of 30.&#13;
In Africa wives are sold for two&#13;
packets of hairpins.&#13;
New York has 27,000 women who&#13;
support their husbands.&#13;
Drunkenness is rare, smoking common&#13;
among Japanese* women.&#13;
PHILOSOPHICAL POINTS.&#13;
The fatted calf never loves the&#13;
prodigal son.&#13;
Truth never runs around asking&#13;
people to believe it.&#13;
Alas, that fools are prosperous. Is&#13;
it their penalty or reward?&#13;
How many of us in listening to the&#13;
tomtoms forget the violins?&#13;
To think an original thought is to&#13;
take a step* nearer the divine.&#13;
People who need to be continually&#13;
propped up are not worth the prop.&#13;
When men become suddenly good&#13;
they should bo executed immediately.&#13;
It is easier for some people to believe&#13;
the impossible than the possible.&#13;
Before it was thrown down, the&#13;
Golden Calf had a son. and it is still&#13;
mooing around the world.&#13;
It is self-evident that to successfully&#13;
fathom the motives of men one&#13;
must be a man himself. To an idiot&#13;
—to a lunatic—ail men are either&#13;
idiots .'Or lunatics. •&#13;
PHYSICIAN SAYS&#13;
Children Thrive on Grape Nuts and&#13;
Cream.&#13;
A Mass. physician has found a cure&#13;
for constipation in children — citing&#13;
fifteen cases—by feeding them Grape-&#13;
Nuts.&#13;
"Some time ago," he writes, ' I became&#13;
interested J n your food, Grape-&#13;
Nuts, as a cure for constipation in&#13;
children. Having tried it in my own&#13;
family, I have advised it in fifteen&#13;
lng blocks laid in Flemish bond. The&#13;
roofs consist of semi-glazed red Spanish&#13;
tile. The first story contains entering&#13;
lobby, general waiting room,&#13;
ladies' parlor, smoking room and lavatories;&#13;
in the southeast corner of&#13;
the main building a lunch room has&#13;
been provided, and the northeast corner&#13;
is occupied by the baggage room.&#13;
A wide veranda connects the main&#13;
building with the express building.&#13;
The second story contains offices, etc.&#13;
The building is perfectly heated, ventilated&#13;
and lighted. It is one of the&#13;
finest 'depots of its size In the country.&#13;
A thing ceases to be a luxury after&#13;
we have money enough to afford It.&#13;
For children teething, eoftou toe jurat, reduce* la*&#13;
mi p.&#13;
, reduc&#13;
»• v* .» t «. X.&#13;
cases in which all suffered with constipaUon_&#13;
more-oi'Jes3„seYfire. T-he-xe^-struetion is of-Maine granite~and-^avsult&#13;
has been absolute relief in all.&#13;
"I write this that other children&#13;
may be benefited."&#13;
How much better it is thus to bring&#13;
about a healthy action in the bowels&#13;
of growing children by natural means,&#13;
than to feed them with improper food,&#13;
requiring some kind of cathartic at&#13;
intervals to overcome constipation.&#13;
Grape-Nuts gives energy to the entire&#13;
nervous system including the&#13;
nerves that cause the natural contraction/&#13;
and relaxation of the bowel&#13;
muscles, that propel the food mass&#13;
along.&#13;
It is predigested also, and the blood&#13;
easily absorbs the food as it goes&#13;
through the body, storing up vitality&#13;
and force for the functions of all the&#13;
organs.&#13;
Children especially, should get the&#13;
right start as to habits of living.&#13;
They should grow Into bright, strong,&#13;
cheerful men and women. Grape-Nuts&#13;
solve the question of the s t a r t ; a&#13;
wholesome appetite-will do t h e rest..&#13;
Children's teeth are benefited by&#13;
chewing Grape-Nuts, also. Your dentist&#13;
will tell you t h a t a certain amount&#13;
of exercise in chewing firm food, Is&#13;
necessary to grow strong, beaupful&#13;
teeth.&#13;
Teeth need exercise just the same&#13;
as muscles, If they are to grow&#13;
strong and firm a s nature intended.&#13;
Grape-Nuts give* the exercise and&#13;
also gives material from which good&#13;
teeth are made.&#13;
"There's-a reason." Read the Mtle&#13;
book, "The , Road to We^viHe," in&#13;
ukg*.&#13;
i • -&gt; - i&#13;
Mouth and Eyes Covered with Crusts&#13;
—Hands, Pinned Down—Miraculous&#13;
Cure by Cutlcura.&#13;
•'When a y little hoy was six months&#13;
old, he had eczema. The sores extended&#13;
so quickly over the whole body&#13;
that we at once called in the doctor.&#13;
We then went to another doctor,&#13;
but be could not help him, and in our&#13;
despair we went to a third one. Matters&#13;
became so bad that he had regular&#13;
holes in his cheeks, large enough&#13;
to put a finger into. The food had to&#13;
be given with a spoon, for his mouth&#13;
was covered with crusts as thick as&#13;
a finger, and whenever he opened the&#13;
mouth they began to bleed and suppurate,&#13;
as did also his eyes. Hands,&#13;
arms, chest and back, in short the&#13;
whole body was covered over and&#13;
over. We had no rest by day or night.&#13;
Whenever he was laid in his bed, we&#13;
had to pin his bands down; otherwise&#13;
he would scratch his face and make&#13;
an open sore. I think his face must&#13;
have Itched most fearfully.&#13;
"We finally thought nothing could&#13;
help, a a 4 1 had made up 4ay~mInd_jQ&#13;
send my wife with the child to Europe,&#13;
hoping that the sea air might&#13;
cure him, otherwise he was to be put&#13;
under good medical care there. But,&#13;
Lord be blessed, matters came differently,&#13;
and we soon saw a miracle. A&#13;
friend of ours spoke about Cuticura.&#13;
We made a trial with Cuticura Soap,&#13;
Ointment and Resolvent, and within&#13;
ten days or two weeks we noticed a&#13;
decided improvement. Just as quickly&#13;
as the sickness had appeared it also&#13;
began to disappear, and within ten&#13;
weeks the child was absolutely well,&#13;
and his skin was smooth and white&#13;
as never before. F. Hohrath, President&#13;
of the C. L. Hohrath Company,&#13;
Manufacturers of Silk Ribbons, 4 to 20&#13;
Rink Alley, South Bethlehem, Pa.,&#13;
June 5, 1905."&#13;
English t h e World L a n g u a g e .&#13;
The new world language, Esperanto,&#13;
seems to have already won more advocates&#13;
than the older Volapuk. No&#13;
manufactured language, however,&#13;
seems to have much chance in competition&#13;
with English, which long ago&#13;
displaced French as the most useful&#13;
and widely spoken language and which&#13;
is gaining faster than ever in all parts&#13;
of the world. Quite recently the German&#13;
government has ordered that all&#13;
railway officials and employes mu3t&#13;
learn to speak English. In Antwerp&#13;
also the authorities are urging all&#13;
classes to study English and are providing&#13;
special facilities in the public&#13;
schools; the city has become "almost&#13;
an English-speaking port." In Japan&#13;
all school children are now obliged&#13;
to learn our language. A few years&#13;
hence tourists from this country will&#13;
be able to get along there as ,easlly&#13;
as on a trip at home. With Great&#13;
Britain, India, Australia, Canada, the&#13;
United States- and large sections of&#13;
Africa using English, what hope is&#13;
there for any other -language?&#13;
New Depot at Battle Creek.&#13;
The Grand Trunk Railway System&#13;
has just completed and opened a new&#13;
passenger station at Battle Creek.&#13;
The station occupies the entire block&#13;
fronting on east Hall street, between&#13;
east Main and Beach streets. Special&#13;
station tracks accommodate waiting&#13;
trains independent o f the regular&#13;
main line tracks, and the approaches&#13;
to the building, together with ample&#13;
platforms, are so designed as to handle&#13;
the greatest number of passengers&#13;
with ease. Neither pains nor expense&#13;
has been spared in erecting a station&#13;
which not only meets every need of&#13;
the traveling public, but Is also a delight&#13;
to the lover of the beautiful.&#13;
The general design of the building is&#13;
a modified mission s. ;ie. The con-&#13;
Mr*. Window's Soothing 87m&#13;
Ildrea teething,&#13;
flainm*tloa,altyf pun, cure* wladoollu. 23c»bottie..&#13;
The real test of virtue comes after&#13;
office hours.&#13;
Marvin's H ascara&#13;
P.hocolate Tablets&#13;
The Great Constipation Cure BjUwaerlt rTeJroofulb wle *•. nmPutdrerl yf oTre fLelUr«brl*, .l liTu*uew&gt;h M ainad- sit** **4 toa* tae difwttre orgs**. a2&amp; SON&#13;
^tMsWtVaS^'******&#13;
MARVIN RBMBDY CO?; DCTROTT.&#13;
PUTNAM TADELESS DYES do not&#13;
•tain tbe band* or apot the kettle, except&#13;
green and purple.&#13;
. ; 4&#13;
When the average man dies tho l o w&#13;
is generally covered by Insurance.&#13;
Oet t h e Most Pleasure Out of Your&#13;
yaeatiofp&#13;
To do thla, yoa should go to Colorado&#13;
where you breathe the purest air and&#13;
see some of the grandest sights'in the&#13;
world. Here are to be found all the&#13;
recreations of the East—Golf, Polo,&#13;
Boating, Hunting, Fishing, Tennis, Riding,&#13;
etc., together with all the attractions&#13;
of a new and mountainous country.&#13;
Very low round-trip rates to Denver,&#13;
Colorado Springs and Pueblo, are now&#13;
in effect, via the Union, Pacific, whose&#13;
splendidly equipped trains and perfectly&#13;
ballasted road*he&lt;lJnaujpe you a&#13;
pleasant journey. POr full i n f o r m a -&#13;
tion in regard to rates and Colorado&#13;
literature, inquire of W. O. NtJmyer,&#13;
G. A., 120 Jackson Boulevard, Chicago,&#13;
111.&#13;
W a s Willing to Change.&#13;
According to Harper's Weekly. Marshall&#13;
P Wilder tells of a young man&#13;
In Wilkesbarre who had aspirations&#13;
to the hand of a daughter of one of&#13;
the wealthiest men In that place. Recently&#13;
the hopeful one ha*-an.j interview&#13;
with the father for the purpose&#13;
of laying the matter before v him.&#13;
"Well," growled the old man, &gt;'what&#13;
I moat desire to know Js,, .whjtt preparation&#13;
have you made for the future?"&#13;
"Oh," exclaimed the suitor, in&#13;
a confident and,obliging tone, "I am a&#13;
Presbyterian; but, if that denomination&#13;
doesn't meet wijfh your approval,&#13;
I a m quite willing to change."&#13;
ITS MERIT IS PROVED&#13;
RECORD OF I mUl MEDICINE&#13;
A Prominent Cincinnati Woman Telia&#13;
H o w Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound Completely Cured Her.&#13;
The g r e a t good Lydia E. Pinkham'a&#13;
Vegetable Compound is doing among&#13;
the women of America is a t t r a c t i n g&#13;
the attention of many of o u r leading&#13;
scientists, and thinking people generally.&#13;
The following letter is only one of&#13;
many thousands "which are on file in&#13;
the Pinkham office, and pro to prove&#13;
beyond question t h a t Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound must be a&#13;
remedy of great merit, otherwise it&#13;
could not produce such marvelous&#13;
results among sick and ailing women.&#13;
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—&#13;
"About nine months ago I was a great sufferer&#13;
with female trouble, which caused me&#13;
severe pain, extreme nervousness and fre-&#13;
?iuent headaches, from which the doctor&#13;
ailed to relieve me. I tried Lydia E. Pink-,&#13;
ham's Vegetable Compound, and within a&#13;
short time felt better, and after taking five&#13;
bottles of it I was entirely cured. I therefore&#13;
heartily recommend your Compound as a&#13;
splendid female tonic. It makes the monthly&#13;
periods regular and without pain; and what&#13;
a blessing it is to find such a remedy after so&#13;
many doctors fail to help you. I am pleased&#13;
to recommend it to all suffering women."—&#13;
Mrs. Sara Wilson, 81 East Sd Street, Cincinnati,&#13;
Ohio.&#13;
If you have suppressed or painful&#13;
periods, _ weakness of the stomach,&#13;
indigestions-bloating, pelvic-catarrh,-&#13;
nervous prostration, dizziness, faintness,&#13;
" don't-care " and •' want-to-beleft-&#13;
alone" feeling, excitability, backache&#13;
o r t b e blues, these are sure indications&#13;
of female weakness, or some&#13;
derangement of t h e organs. In such&#13;
cases there is one tried and true remedy&#13;
—Lydia E . Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.&#13;
Food Products&#13;
enable TOO te nuke good await oat el&#13;
"hurry* mo-k&#13;
libby*. Food Prodods era roady lo&#13;
terre wbaa yon'gal tkom, yet a n cooked&#13;
a« carefully aad at well at yoa could do&#13;
it ia your owa latches,&#13;
Ox Toaj-jo, Dried Beef, BoaodCokkea.&#13;
DevfleeT Ham, Vosl Loaf-tba* are&#13;
but a few of the away kindt year dealer&#13;
keeps.&#13;
Try for luncheon or fttppaf tocoorrow.&#13;
CM diced Chicken Loaf.&#13;
BooU-t. "How toMpfaCooJ&#13;
Tt-Bpto E-t." fm if ymi wrte&#13;
Libby, McNeill &amp; Llbby, CMufe&#13;
:-^:-:&#13;
r "&#13;
. - &lt; * •&#13;
H&#13;
*&amp;,'"&#13;
&gt;.K '}&#13;
•E«ES3^&#13;
' »&#13;
HON. W. H. KELBAUGH&#13;
OF WEST VIRGINIA&#13;
PRAISES PE-RU-NA.&#13;
&gt;•»&#13;
EVENTS NOTED&#13;
8CARCITY OF FARM LABORERS 13&#13;
GREATER THAN EVER IN&#13;
THE 8TATE.&#13;
HIGH WAGES THE RULE&#13;
Prosperity and the Great Factories&#13;
Call Men to the Cities and the Courv&#13;
try 8uffers for Help.&#13;
«83®&#13;
HM.W.N.KcaMU(li.&#13;
A Cold at Any Time of the Year. Especially&#13;
in Hot Weather^ is Very Depressing&#13;
to the System. Pe-ru-na is&#13;
an [/n equaled Tonic For Such Cases.&#13;
; Read What People Say About A&#13;
Hon. W. H. KeVbaugh, Ex-Member&#13;
'; W. Va. Legislature, 204 9th street,&#13;
i. N. E,, Washington, D. C, writes:&#13;
" You can use my name and word&#13;
at all timet tor Peruna as a medh&#13;
'; cine and tonic unequaled. I have&#13;
. tried it tor a stubborn cold and&#13;
'' badly run down system. J tried all&#13;
!I sorts of other medicines and paid&#13;
'Several expensive doctor bills.&#13;
[ | Peruna cured met strengthened me&#13;
\\ more than every and saved me-L&#13;
&lt;• money. tt&#13;
Mrs. Clara Litterst, Seafield, Ind.,&#13;
says: "Last fall I took a severe cold. I&#13;
took Peruna, began to improve and kept&#13;
on so until I was able to do my work."&#13;
SAYINGS OF THE SAGES.&#13;
Lack of desire is the greatest of&#13;
riches.—Seneca.&#13;
Art holds fast when all else is lost.&#13;
—From the German.&#13;
He is safe from danger who is on&#13;
his guard even when safe.—SyruB.&#13;
In the court of his own conscience&#13;
no guilty man is acquitted.—Juvenal.&#13;
He who is afraid of asking is&#13;
ashamed of learning.—From the Dan*&#13;
ish.&#13;
When all men say you are an ass,&#13;
it is time to bray.—From the Spanish.&#13;
The only competition worthy, a wise&#13;
man is with himself.—Anna Jameson.&#13;
A babe is an angel whoso wings&#13;
decrease as his legs increase.—From&#13;
the French.&#13;
BIBLICAL BASEBALL.&#13;
A Canton (0.) theological student interested&#13;
in baseball wrote a thesis on&#13;
"Baseball Among the Ancients," from&#13;
which are gleaned the following facts:&#13;
Abraham made a sacrifice.&#13;
The Prodigal Son made a home run.&#13;
f&lt;_J?aln made a btse hit when he killed&#13;
Abel.&#13;
- David was a great Jong-distance&#13;
thrower.&#13;
^Moses shut out the Egyptians at the&#13;
Red* sea.&#13;
Moses made his first run when he&#13;
slew the Egyptian.&#13;
The devil was the first coacher. Eve&#13;
stole first—Adam stole second.&#13;
When Isaac met Rebecca at the well&#13;
she was walking .with a pitcher.&#13;
Samson struck *out a great many&#13;
times when tiei beat the Philistines.&#13;
"NO TROUBLE"&#13;
Farmers Need Help.&#13;
Farm laborers are wanted in ever}&#13;
part of the state of Michigan and iq&#13;
eastern Canada, and the demand is insistent&#13;
and pressing. Farmers are&#13;
having the greatest difficulty in getting&#13;
enough help In all parts of the&#13;
state and are offering wages much&#13;
higher than usual in order to attract&#13;
men. The situation in many sections&#13;
of the state is so sevlous ihkLjvomejv&#13;
und children are working in the harvest&#13;
fields and there is hardly a couuty&#13;
that has anything like a full supply&#13;
of help.&#13;
The general prosperity of the country,&#13;
which insures work for everyone;&#13;
the heavy demand for laborers iu&#13;
western Canada and in the western&#13;
states, and the usual demand for extra&#13;
men at this season of the year for the&#13;
gathering of the crops, has resulted In&#13;
this unusual shortage of farm help.&#13;
All the employment offices In Detroit&#13;
that make a specialty of supplying&#13;
farm help say that farmers are&#13;
continually sending in for men from&#13;
all parts of the state, especially from&#13;
central Michigan, and that they are&#13;
offering wages much higher than&#13;
many of them can really afford to pay.&#13;
Comparatively few men are applying&#13;
for jobs. At the Central Employment&#13;
Agency it was said that they have&#13;
places for a thousand men open in&#13;
Canada and Michigan, and that farmers&#13;
are paying $25 a month with board,&#13;
arid in many cases more for good men.&#13;
But few men are applying for positions&#13;
on farms.&#13;
Great Boost in Valuations.&#13;
A material Increase In assessed&#13;
valuations in the state is looked for&#13;
when the board of equalization meets&#13;
In Lansing Aug. 20. The state tax&#13;
commission, in making the first assessment&#13;
of the railroad properties&#13;
under the Galbraith law, estimated the&#13;
value of the property at an increase&#13;
of $300,000,000 over the equalized&#13;
value of $1,578,000,000 in August, 1901.&#13;
This would apparently indicate that,&#13;
the total valuation will be. boosted to&#13;
near the two billion dollar mark.&#13;
Representatives from nearly every&#13;
county in the state are expected to&#13;
attend the sessions, which will probably&#13;
last 10 days. Lower peninsula&#13;
counties are expected to attempt to&#13;
boost the equalization of upper peninsula&#13;
counties producing mineral&#13;
wealth. Increased valuations are expected&#13;
in the prosperous cities.&#13;
To Change from Coffw to Postum.&#13;
"Postum has done a world of gob*&#13;
for me," writes an Ills. man.&#13;
"I've had Indigestion nearly all my,&#13;
. life but never dreamed coffee was Macause&#13;
of my trouble until last Spring.&#13;
I got so bad I was in misery all the&#13;
time.&#13;
"A coffee drinker for 30 years, it&#13;
Irritated my jstomach and nerves, yet&#13;
I was Just craay for it. After drinking&#13;
It with my meals, I would leave the&#13;
jtttle, go out and lose my meal and&#13;
Jmm coffee too. Then I'd be as hungry&#13;
"A friend advised me to quit coffee&#13;
and use Postum—said it cured him.&#13;
8ince taking hit «dvtee I retain my&#13;
food and get ill the good out of it, and,&#13;
don't have those awful hungry spelK,&#13;
, "I chaaged from coffee to Poetum&#13;
without any trouble whatever, felt&#13;
better fro* t i e first day I drank I t&#13;
I a n well Aow^aad five, the u a t l t to&#13;
Postum." N j t a t alvea by Poetum&#13;
Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the ,__&#13;
tie book, ' T h e Road to Wellville," in&#13;
pkta, "There*! a reason."&#13;
Tax Reviews.&#13;
Attorney General Bird advises the&#13;
state tax commission that they cannot&#13;
assume authority to review all assessments&#13;
of an assessing district when&#13;
complainants are made that a fow&#13;
specified pieces of property ave not usjessed&#13;
in compliajice with law. He&#13;
gives the opinion, however, that complaints&#13;
may be made broad enough to&#13;
suttroTfoe such £ review^&#13;
Complaints of persons not taxpayers&#13;
and residents of the district in which&#13;
a_ review of the assessments artsought&#13;
should not be entertained bj&#13;
the commission.&#13;
Peculiar Chicken Feed.&#13;
A mine was discovered in a verj&#13;
peculiar place by Mrs. C. J. Peterson&#13;
jiving on a farm near Buttersville. She&#13;
killed a rooster and in the gizzard she&#13;
found a stick pin, a watch wheel, head&#13;
of a tack, tip of a lead pencil, and oth&#13;
er pieces of metal, numbering 20 is&#13;
all. Every article seemed to be golt&#13;
plated so that they resembled nuggeti&#13;
of gold and on exposure do not chang&lt;&#13;
their luster.&#13;
i:&#13;
Long Canoe Trip.&#13;
Prof. Claud D. Van Tyne, professor&#13;
of history in the state university, le&amp;i&#13;
Saturday on a 2,500-mile trip which he&#13;
will make with a companion, Arthur&#13;
Pound, of Pontiac, a student in the&#13;
university, who will be a senior next&#13;
&gt;ear. Both men are enthusiastic canoeists&#13;
and 1,600 miles of the trip will&#13;
be made by this means.&#13;
WHAT JOYTHEY BRING&#13;
TO EVERY HOME&#13;
as with jcyous hearts and smiling faces they rcmp and play—when in health—and&#13;
how conducive to health the games in which they indulge, the outdoor life they&#13;
enjoy, the cleanly, regular habits they should be taught to form and the wholesome&#13;
dieToi which they strouM-partake. How tenderly their health should be preserved,&#13;
not by constant medication, but by careful avoidance of every medicine of an injurious&#13;
or objectionable nature, and if at anytime a remedial agent is required, to assist&#13;
nature, only those of known excellence should be used; remedies which are pure&#13;
and wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy,&#13;
Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Syrup of Figs has&#13;
come into general favor in many millions of well informed fami3ies,,..whose estimate&#13;
of its quality and excellence is based upon personal knowledge andi use.&#13;
Syrup of Figs has also met with the approval of physicians generally, because&#13;
they know it is wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. We inform all reputable&#13;
physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs, obtained, by an&#13;
original method, from certain plants known to them to act most beneficially and&#13;
presented in an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome- Californian blue figs are&#13;
used to promote the pleasant taste; therefore it is not a secret remedy and hence&#13;
we are free to refer to all well informed physicians, who do not approve of patent&#13;
medicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication.&#13;
Please to remember and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup of Figs&#13;
always has the full name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Co.—plainly&#13;
printed on the front of every package and that it is for sale in.bottles "of one size&#13;
only. If any dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent size, or having&#13;
printed thereon the name of any other company, do not accept it. If you fail to get&#13;
the genuine you will not get its beneficial effects. Every family should always have&#13;
a bottle on hand, as it is equally beneficial for the parents and the children,&#13;
whenever a laxative remedy is required.&#13;
*&#13;
©&#13;
e&#13;
• o • • • •&#13;
Ancestry of Dion Boucicault.&#13;
The name of Boucicault is French&#13;
In origin. Dion Boucicault was the&#13;
son of a French refugee who fled to&#13;
Ireland and married an Irish girl. He&#13;
was named Dion after his father's&#13;
friend, Dr. Dionysius Lardner, a noted&#13;
British writer on. physical science.&#13;
In a Pinch, Use ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE.&#13;
A powder. It cures painful, smarting,&#13;
nervous feet and Ingrowing nails.&#13;
It's the greatest comfort discovery of&#13;
the age. Makes new shoes-easy. A&#13;
certain cure for sweating feet. Sold&#13;
by all druggists, 25c. Trial package,&#13;
FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, Le&#13;
Roy, N. Y.&#13;
Close Second to American Tramp.&#13;
The American tramp must look out&#13;
for his laurels in the matter of stealing&#13;
rides. A Roumanian recently succeeded&#13;
in lodging himself on the pipes&#13;
underneath a dining-car of the Orient&#13;
express at Costanza, on. the Black&#13;
sea, these pi/f5es affording a sort of&#13;
shelf about Zt) inches wide. He left&#13;
his bed in Paris 53 hours later. It&#13;
is remarked that at the end of the&#13;
journey he was very dusty, hungry&#13;
and thirsty^ and possessed a capital&#13;
amounting to five cents.&#13;
One Ham, Five Years.&#13;
After having been on parole for ovei&#13;
two years, Fred. LeFarge, aged 21,&#13;
must go to prison for stealing a ham&#13;
from a Mason meat market in the&#13;
spring of 1904. LeFarge broke intc&#13;
the market with Lew Oliver, who was&#13;
convicted of burglary, third offense,&#13;
and sentenced to Marquette for life.&#13;
Sentence was suspended on LeFarge: but on July 18 he was arrested in company&#13;
with two women and Is now sentenced&#13;
to Jackson prison for five&#13;
years. ^&#13;
Made His Funeral Arrangements.&#13;
John H. Crlbbins, a well known Sag&#13;
inaw young man, after long suffering&#13;
succumbed to complications followinj&#13;
three unsuccessful operations. Whev&#13;
told that he must die he made all hit&#13;
own funeral arrangements. He aske4&lt;&#13;
that Rev. Emll Montantis officiate, an*&#13;
that he take *his text trom the Twenty.&#13;
tfrtrd P«*l", a°d he selected all&#13;
pallbearers from&#13;
friends. among his&#13;
India's Cotton Crop.&#13;
The cotton crop of India was larger&#13;
last-year, 1&amp;&amp;5, than the general&#13;
average. About 20,000,000 acres were&#13;
planted in cotton and the yield was&#13;
about 3,500,000 bales. During the year&#13;
there were exported from India to&#13;
other countries over 2,125,000 bales&#13;
of raw cotton at a value of over $81,-&#13;
000,000. the four countries, Japan. Germany,&#13;
Belgium and Italy, in the order&#13;
named, being the largest purchasers.&#13;
they together buying nearly 1,500,000&#13;
bales of Indian cotton, while Japan&#13;
alone took nearly 500,000 bales.&#13;
DODDS '•&#13;
KIDNEY&#13;
\ PILLS&#13;
, ^ K . ! D N E V ? - -&#13;
pNT-s D»*&#13;
« t APPLES L W A V T B B . J. B.HOXS1KACO Sv.Paul.Mma.&#13;
*0 Bus. Winter WXic»t Far ACT*&#13;
TO HOLDERS&#13;
U.S.4s°oil907&#13;
Your bonds will be paid off by the Government&#13;
at par on July i, 1907, or less than !&#13;
one year from now.&#13;
Owing to the demand for Government ,&#13;
bonds, due to the appointment at the present&#13;
time of a large number of temporary public&#13;
depositaries, we are in position to pay you '&#13;
for your bonds almost as much as vou will&#13;
receive from the Government in principal&#13;
and interest, even though you should hold •&#13;
them to maturity. (&#13;
We can pay 103^4, or at the rate of ;&#13;
$1,032.50, for a Si,000 bond. To retain&#13;
your bonds when you can sell them at this&#13;
price is equivalent to your investing your&#13;
funds at the rate of less than ?+ of 1 % per&#13;
annum. ' t&#13;
Conditions are unusually favorable to&#13;
the reinvestment of your funds. Railroad ;&#13;
bonds of the highest type are much lower/;&#13;
than they have ruled for several years, ';&#13;
If you are interested iu taking advantage&#13;
of the peculiarly favorable opportunity to&#13;
seli~roirr matarieg- Government bQnds._w-e j&#13;
shall be pleased to have you write us. In i&#13;
case you have $5,0001 qf more of bonds, we t&#13;
shall be glad to liave you wire us at our&#13;
expense.&#13;
THE NATIONAL CITY BANK&#13;
52 WALL STREET&#13;
N E W Y O R K&#13;
Are You Just As Well&#13;
As You Wish to B e ?&#13;
Every subscriber Jo Good Health is privileged&#13;
to submit questions on health topics to {he editors.&#13;
The mo&lt;t interesting: of these questions are answered&#13;
in the tjuestion Box, a monthly department&#13;
of the magazine. Others are answered by letter&#13;
without cost. i&#13;
This is but one of many interesting features of. ,&#13;
Good Health, the oldest health journal in the world&#13;
A big. handsomely illustrated monthly magazine. 1&#13;
A quarter and this ad. with your name in the&#13;
space below will bring you this handsome health )&#13;
magaiine for the next three months. Sample I&#13;
cov&gt;y ttn cent*. |&#13;
GOOD HEALTH PUBLISHING C O .&#13;
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AFTER&#13;
ITS&#13;
FIRST&#13;
BATH&#13;
WITH&#13;
T&#13;
-P-hysidans^harmacist s, and&#13;
Nurses endorse" Cut icura&#13;
Soap because of its delicate&#13;
medicinal, emollient, sana&#13;
tive, and antiseptic properties&#13;
derived from Cuticura.&#13;
the great Skin Cure/unite'&#13;
with the purest of cleansing&#13;
ingredients and most re-:&#13;
freshing of flower odors:&#13;
For preserving, purifying,&#13;
and beautifying the skin, as&#13;
well as for all the purposes&#13;
of the toilet and bath, Cuticura&#13;
Soap is priceless. Absolutely&#13;
pure and may be&#13;
used from the hour of birth.&#13;
8ol4 iaroufhoat the wort*. Cutfcwa Soap. ISe.. Obit.&#13;
MM, Ac., RMoWtmt, Me. &lt;tn torn of Cfc«coUt« Co«t«*&#13;
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Vottar Dr«t k Cheat. Corp., 80½ Prafa^Boatea, Hi&#13;
i^MaiM Fwo, "All Aleut tie JJai^Soalp, aa4 li*l»&#13;
THE DAISY FLY KILLER SSKSffiSTS?&#13;
dlal&amp;C-rooaa, iieepta» rooa aad pUeee « k n t&#13;
M H M M H H B M H i ^ ^ »«a art tioubJaaoflM.&#13;
Cloan.Beat,&#13;
wlilao«aoHo*l»»&#13;
iar# anyUla*.&#13;
Try tneat o»ei»&#13;
TOO will aerar b*&gt;&#13;
without Ifceaa.. Vt&#13;
eBroa.t k»eepatte jrr*e peJ£ for Me, Me**tt iHMM.lWMato&#13;
Afa.,area*|pM»V&#13;
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Mmm&#13;
TTTjJfPfrFf Piuf -*S|S?&#13;
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&lt;&lt;*'•:*;""&#13;
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W&#13;
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ike grerfennt Jispatrh&#13;
F , fc. A N D R E W S &lt;fe C O . PROPRIETORS.&#13;
THURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 1906.&#13;
A Great Offer.&#13;
FARM JOURNAL arH the DISPATCH.&#13;
Farm Journa, 5 years . . . .75&#13;
Dispatch, I year 1.00&#13;
BOTH for $1.00&#13;
By special arrangement with the&#13;
publishers of the FARM JOURNAL&#13;
(Philadelphia) we are enabled to offer&#13;
poth papers for $1.00 to every new&#13;
ad yan ca-'r ay ins? subscriber., and to&#13;
every eld subscriber who pays in ad&#13;
vance, the DISPATCH one year and the&#13;
FARM JOURNAL 5 years, both&#13;
papers for $1.00. the price of ours&#13;
alone.&#13;
The FARM JOURNAL is 29 years&#13;
old and enjoys great popularity, adapted&#13;
to and circulating in every state,&#13;
and is one of the most useful, interest&#13;
injr and trustworthy farm papers&#13;
published. This offer should be accent&#13;
ed without delay, as it only holds for&#13;
a limited time.&#13;
Reminlcenses&#13;
A u o r d o f truth in a few words:&#13;
"Nearly aLl other cough cures are&#13;
constipating, especially those containing&#13;
opiates. Kennedy's Laxative&#13;
Honey and Tar moves thw bowels.&#13;
Co-ntaines no opiates."&#13;
Sold by F..JL Slgler, Druggist.&#13;
$5.00 Round Trip $5.00&#13;
Upper Peninsula and&#13;
Northei u Wisconsin&#13;
A paper read at the Old Boys and&#13;
Girls reunion, Autr 1, 1906, by Mrs,&#13;
Margaret I'ooke Harrow.&#13;
D o w memory brightens as we recall ex*&#13;
jterieu*:e*i of the past, and what tt. privilege&#13;
is ours to hsive lived in this d a y and age of&#13;
the world with it« vast amount of progress&#13;
ou every liatui; and how greatly are we&#13;
indebted to the sturdy pioneers who early&#13;
laid the foundation for success for the&#13;
generations following. Let us pause and&#13;
pay a tribute to their memory. There is&#13;
something chilling in that sad, inevitable&#13;
word the " p a s t , " notwithstanding that in&#13;
looking through the thronged pages of&#13;
history, we read of the myriads who had&#13;
the same hopes and ambition as ourselves,&#13;
a n d j v h o are now but dust, yet the very&#13;
indistinctness of distance softness and&#13;
beautifies the seene upon which which we&#13;
look hack and see in the d«ys gone by a&#13;
thousand bright spots standing out to&#13;
catch the last rays of the sun that has long&#13;
set on those noble men and women who&#13;
labored and struggled Mgaiust mighty odds&#13;
to make a garden spot in the. wilderness&#13;
ami lay the corner s t o n e , of a home for&#13;
themselves and those who were to follow&#13;
after. ''This is tbe forest primeval"&#13;
might truthfully have been said by the&#13;
pioneers as they viewed the undisturbed&#13;
tract of Woodland which was to be their&#13;
future camping ground. Shall we say&#13;
they were in error to have made Piuckney&#13;
and vicinity their destination? N o t a tree&#13;
felled, not a rod ot' underbrush removed,&#13;
verily it required a vast amount of courage&#13;
to begin life in the wilderness. It&#13;
looks to usJike an herculean task as we&#13;
look back over the decades of years, a&#13;
task full of unsurmountable difficulties,&#13;
but it is said that individuals arise to tit.&#13;
the needs of the occasion (except in the&#13;
Democratic Party) and the early settlers&#13;
were the men for conquering the wilderness&#13;
and making it to "blossom as the rose,"&#13;
making the soil to yield its best crops and&#13;
_ : _ &gt;. j n every manner bringing forth results&#13;
A u g u s t 2 1 a n d 2 2 t h e A n n A r b o r J worthy their h e . o i c deeds. Living simply,&#13;
R . R. w i l l flive i t s a n n u a l e x c u r s i o n | working untiringly, success was sure to&#13;
t o M e n o m i n e e , a n d M a n i s t i q u e , M i c h . , j follow. They had a definite attitude t&lt;&gt;-&#13;
a n d K e w a u n e e a n u M a n i t o w o c , W i s . j wards life. T o live consistently with such&#13;
T i c k e t s s o o d fcr r e t u r n u n t i l S e p t . 8 / a " attitude is the highest success. Here&#13;
w i l l be s o l d f r o m all s t a t i o n s b e t w e e n&#13;
T o l e d o a n d T b o m p s o n v i l l e a t $ 5 0 0&#13;
Nature, "the great consoler" was at her&#13;
lovliest. The odors from the damp earth,&#13;
carpeted with wild (lowers, the multitude&#13;
of young growing things which was the&#13;
music of the tirst man was loud in their&#13;
ears. Here the voice wt' ' oi&lt;l spoke to&#13;
for the round trip, except that for&#13;
children oyer five and under twelve&#13;
years of age the rate will be $2,50.&#13;
This excursion will include a 200 j t J i e m in t|u,,ieidS). under the trees, in the&#13;
mile boat ride on Lake Michigan on j song of the birds, and in the sweetness of&#13;
o n e o f t b e l a r g e s t s t e a m e r s OU the. j .Spring. They found sermons in stones.&#13;
Iake9 a n d w i l l p r o v e i n e v e r y w a y a • books in the iimninj: brocks, yood in all.&#13;
up the pavements in their swift madness,&#13;
ami listen to the clang of the trolley c a n&#13;
disturbing the setting hens on your a v e n -&#13;
ues, w h y should we not wish to gather&#13;
from all quarters of the globe for celebration.&#13;
ami give ourselves a most hearty i n v i -&#13;
tation to repeat the visit two years h e n c e .&#13;
Don't drag alon*- with a dull, bil&#13;
lions, heavy feeling. You need a pill,&#13;
U*» He Witt's Little Ear.y Risets, Jhe&#13;
famous little 'pills. Do not sicken&#13;
or tffipet bat results ate sure.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Druggist.&#13;
Webster Farmers' Club&#13;
The Webster Farmers' Club will&#13;
meek with Mr. j;nd Mrs. J. L. Kisby at&#13;
Kisby Hall, Hamburg Village, Satur-.&#13;
day, Aug. 11. 1906: at which time the&#13;
following program will be rendered:&#13;
Music Piaua Solo&#13;
Mrs. Lewis Chamberlain&#13;
Recitation " T h e Survival of the F i t t e s t . "&#13;
Miss Ethel Lyon&#13;
Music, Vocal Solo " W h e n Song is S w e e t "&#13;
Miss Florence Ball&#13;
Recitation " T h e First Breeches"&#13;
Master Harlow Ttibbs&#13;
Columbia Drill:&#13;
Hazel and H e l e n Wood worth, Lena and&#13;
Florence Brown, Rntr Potterton, Fern&#13;
Olsaver, Ruth Valentine and M a r y ' H u m -&#13;
phrey&#13;
Recitation ".Old Glory"&#13;
Hazel Wood worth&#13;
"Strange Visitors" Fifteen little children&#13;
in costume; followed bv a son&lt;:—&#13;
" H u r r a h for the F l a g " by the girls in&#13;
the Columbia Drill&#13;
Music Piano Solo&#13;
Miss Mary Merril&#13;
Recitation " T h e Irish Philosopher"&#13;
Miss Jiilia Ball&#13;
Address "Some N e w Phases in Farm&#13;
.Management"&#13;
Prof. C. D . Smith of the Agr'l College&#13;
Music, Vocal Duet " O h , That We Two&#13;
Were^Maying" .&#13;
Mr. H . E. (Vouch and Miss J u l i a Bali&#13;
Recitation " J i m m y Brown's Sister's&#13;
W e d d i n g " Mrs, Edward Wagner&#13;
Music&#13;
" E q u i t y and Economics"&#13;
W. L. li. Collins&#13;
" A m e r i c a " By the Club&#13;
The program will commence at one&#13;
o'clock p. tn., to which tin public is&#13;
inyited.&#13;
Galveston's Sea Wall&#13;
makes lite now as sate in that city as&#13;
on the higher uplands. E. W. Goodloe,&#13;
who resides on Dutton St., in&#13;
Waco, Tex., needs no sea wall for&#13;
saiety. He .vrifes: "1 have used Dr.&#13;
King's New Discovery for consump&#13;
tion the past hv* years and it keeps&#13;
mn well and sale. Bbfore that time I&#13;
had a cough which for years had been&#13;
growing worse. Notv it's gone."&#13;
Cures chronic coughs, la grippe, croup&#13;
whooptrg couxh and prevents pneumonia.&#13;
I'lensuit to take. Every&#13;
bottle guaranteed at K. A. Sigler's&#13;
drug stoiv. I'l-i.-r 50c and $1 00.&#13;
Trial bo*tie free.&#13;
171" W.DANIELS,&#13;
Jj, GKNKRAl, AUCTIONEER.&#13;
S a t i s t a c t i m Guaranteed. F o r i n f o r m a -&#13;
tion call at D I S P A T C H Office or address&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. Lyndilla p h o n e&#13;
connection." Auction bills and tin c u p s&#13;
furnished free.&#13;
T h e HlMtprfo E y e ,&#13;
W a s h i n g t o n w u s c r o s s i n g t h e D e l a -&#13;
w a r e , l i e stood. "&#13;
" B e t t e r sit d o w n , sir," s u g g e s t e d a n&#13;
aid.&#13;
"Sit down.'" r e s p o n d e d lustily the F a -&#13;
t h e r o f H i s C o u n t r y . " A n d . pray, w a n t&#13;
s o r t of u p i c t u r e w o u l d thnt make'.'"&#13;
B l u s h i n g u n d e r the rebuke, t h e a i d&#13;
r e s o l v e d to m o n k e y no more- with urt.—&#13;
P h i l a d e l p h i a P u b l i c L e d g e r .&#13;
- F o r d r y , c r a c k e d lips,- or r o u g h s k i n ,&#13;
u s e Dr. S h o o p ' s G r e e n S a l v e . It p o s i -&#13;
t i v e l y m a k e s l i p s a n d s k i n l i k e v e l v e t .&#13;
S o l d by all d e a l e r s .&#13;
$8.00 1) Minneapolis ami St. Paul&#13;
and Return&#13;
from Chicago with Chicago Great&#13;
Western Railway -iccount G. A. R.&#13;
National Encampment at Minneapolis&#13;
August lo to IS Tickets on sale&#13;
August 11 to 14 Return limit Aug.&#13;
01 with extension privileges. For&#13;
further information apply to F. R&#13;
-nosier, T. P. A., llo Andams Str.&#13;
Chicago, 111. t 32&#13;
Talk&#13;
Music&#13;
Percy Swarthout&#13;
Funeral Director&#13;
AND EMBALMER&#13;
ALL CALLS ANSWERED&#13;
PROMPTLY DAY OR N/GH7&#13;
rJA •&lt; i_ ' : - &gt; 5&#13;
PL:MPTPr,' s r._ No. 3 0&#13;
most enjoyable outing. For time&#13;
trains, etc. call on nearest Ann Arbor&#13;
agent or write J. J. Kirby, G. P. A,&#13;
Toledo, Ohio. t 33 ,&#13;
3, ' book&#13;
of&#13;
In this state it is not necessary to&#13;
serve a five days' notice lor eviction ol&#13;
a cold. Use the original laxative&#13;
cough syrup, Kennedy's Laxative&#13;
Honey and Tar. No opiates.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Druggift&#13;
Annual Niagara Falls Excursion&#13;
via&#13;
Brand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
In looking'up the names of the pioneers&#13;
of these parts memory recalls most vividly&#13;
Mr. Monks who remarked on one occasion&#13;
• to your humble servent while passing—&#13;
"J've often been telling me b'ys how&#13;
that Miss Cooke is the finest lady&#13;
lady what travels this road.'' Think You&#13;
that iTr, Monks will ever be forgotten?&#13;
And Dr. Haze with pills and plasters surely&#13;
was nut to he dreaded when his genial&#13;
countenance appeared Ujvn the scene even&#13;
I in the sick chamber. Added to the list&#13;
of the personal friends among the more&#13;
elderly pioneers &gt;ve would not forget to&#13;
mention Mr. Leland, Mr. Reeves, Mr.&#13;
j Rose, Mr. Sigler and Mr. Millard Harrow,&#13;
' with the most profound thankfulness that&#13;
Ro».QCl.^rjp..e.X_CM.fion._ti2keJ4|on_iiale lliC-kLter bad ahrotliei'. TJujn_0iere were_&#13;
f o r a l l t r a i n s A u g . 7, 1 9 0 6 , t o ^ v t a g a r a C'arey Roach, Mr. Harris, .Mr. Michael&#13;
''al's, Toronto, Alexandria/Bay and , 1Jui'n :m'* ',tlu''' Dugnenots of France, each&#13;
hmtreai. -RBTuTnlimit* oh Niagara j " f wh""' have conirihmed toward the upf&#13;
l a i l s t i c k e t A u g . 1 0 ; bv d e p o s i t a n d | l , 1 , i l , , i n K a m l h ^ t e i m e n t of ,|u&gt; community.&#13;
" p a y m e n t of 25c, limit extended until! W h i h f w" ;,re "i v i n * tilP JllM nwl of&#13;
i;-»A i o i n n c D i ' i- 'i A ..L ! p r a i s e - t o t h e p i o n e e r m e n t u e n , Jet us not&#13;
r.Aug. 18, 1906. Return limit to other ' , , , . , ,&#13;
•~* . . . - n *r&gt;nr&gt; J, •, i forget the noble women ot those days, who&#13;
toints Aug. 18,1906, without deposit. . ., , , Ar , . , , ., ; , ,&#13;
' toiled from Mondav s dawn to Saturday s&#13;
i'or fares and further particulars con- twitigllt&gt; Mying u, ,1W11. »tht. hlM,,eiJ Jin&lt;1&#13;
suit local agent or write to. GEO. W./lie:Jt of t|u, ,!ay.» ^,^. „•&lt;.,.&lt;; nilt t l ^ ,irst&#13;
" V A U X , A . G. P . &amp; T . A . , C h i c a g o , III. W r flie fence after culture, though a&#13;
« » , a&gt; r J reasonable amoiiiu will not injure auvoue.&#13;
When a woman suffers from depressing&#13;
weaknesses, she then keenly&#13;
alizes how helpless—how thoroughly&#13;
brthless she is. Dr. Shoop has&#13;
;in*ougbt relief to thousands of such&#13;
Women. He reaches diseases peculiar&#13;
to women in two, direct, specific ways&#13;
*—a local treatment known ^by druggists&#13;
everywhere as Dr. Snoop's Night&#13;
ure, and a constitutional or internal&#13;
prescription called Dr. Snoop's Restorative.&#13;
Dr. Smaop's Night Cure is applied&#13;
locally, and at night. It works&#13;
while you sleep. It reduces inflammation,&#13;
it stops discbarges, it heals, it&#13;
soothes, it comforts, it cures.&#13;
Dr. Snoop's Restorative (tablet or&#13;
^liquid form) is a constitutional, nerve&#13;
sue tonic. It brings renewed&#13;
fcftreutftb, lasting ambiticn and vigor&#13;
fc#weaJc, lifeless women.&#13;
,'c Thete two remedies, singly, or used&#13;
together, have an irresistible, positive&#13;
lpfui power. Try,them a month&#13;
ttftd see. Sold by all dealers.&#13;
A woman worries until she pels&#13;
w r i n k l e s , t h e n w o r r i e s b e c a u s e s h e&#13;
h a s t h e m . If s h e t a k e s H o l l i s t e r s&#13;
R o c k y M o u n t a i n T e a s h e w o u l d h a v e&#13;
n e i t h e r . H r i g h t , s m i l i n g face f o l l o w s&#13;
i t s u s e . 3 5 c e n t s , t e a o r t a b l e t s , A s k&#13;
y o u r d r u g g i s t .&#13;
Slavery I n G r e a t B r i t a i n .&#13;
S l a v e r y s u r v i v e d in E n g l a n d m u c h&#13;
l a t e r t h a n Is g e n e r a l l y s u p p o s e d . T h e&#13;
w o r d " b o n d a g e " 'In N o r t h u m b e r l a n d&#13;
8tUl m e a n s a f e m a l e f a r m s e r v a n t . T h e&#13;
c o o l i e s a n d salters—i. ¢., s a l t miners—&#13;
of E a s t L o t h i a n wore a c t u a l l y s l a v e s&#13;
till 1775. If they d e s e r t e d their servi&#13;
c e a n y one .harboring t h e m w a s liable&#13;
t o a p e n a l t y of £5 if h e d i d n o t r e s t o r e&#13;
t h e t a in t w e n t y - f o u r h o u r s . T h e l a s t&#13;
s l a v e in E n g l a n d w a s not f r e e d until&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
Does Your Stomach&#13;
Bother You?&#13;
fir* Shoop's Restorative Cures AS&#13;
Distressing Stomach Troubles&#13;
Through the Inside Nerves.&#13;
A i you value your health and happiness d o n l&#13;
Begrlect to care for the slightest stomach pain—&#13;
don't l«t it go. At the first »(8rn of distress U M&#13;
Dr. Snoop's Restorative and end all thete&#13;
troubles. These ache.i are signals—they art&#13;
•ymptoms of eomintr disease—is i t wise to ignore&#13;
them? You who never eat a hearty meal without&#13;
a sense of fullness A followed by a period&#13;
o f l a s s i t u d e&#13;
Neffleet thesecondi&#13;
Invite distressing&#13;
become a sallow&#13;
1799, a n d in 1842 t h e r e w a s a cooly 1 ¾ } ¾ ¾ ¾ 0 1 1&#13;
IfTing- -•wbor-as-^welh a s i r i s - f a t h e r ancT T i r e &amp; s after&#13;
g r a n d f a t h e r , h a d w o r k e d a s a s l a v e in&#13;
a p i t a t M u s s e l l m r g .&#13;
&amp; JKfHlol ftyMMMla Our*&#13;
&gt;M0 tHMK JfM fJttti&#13;
T h e y did not know rmich about clubs and&#13;
"pink teas", but were line women notwithstanding.&#13;
Xot having many wants they&#13;
diil not realize that they were poor, ' but&#13;
labored on that those w h o were to follow&#13;
after might reap the jeVvnrd of their toil,&#13;
/hit to leave the more remote pioneer dayn&#13;
and hastily glance for a moment at what&#13;
we may term for convenience the " M i d d l e&#13;
Aire" in which we were permitted to res&#13;
i d e in this community, blotting out whatever&#13;
may have been of a nature not so&#13;
pleasing; we h;ive ever thought with&#13;
delight' of the joyous .seasons of appleparing,&#13;
Hleigh rideH, donation partjes,&#13;
rpiilting bees, boat riding, pinnies, and BO&#13;
on through the chapter, for surely none&#13;
knew better how to have a right royal good&#13;
time than the hoys and girls of 30 years&#13;
Ago.&#13;
W h e n in the course of tin?* we learned&#13;
at our Western home that Pr.vcKV E Y had&#13;
awakened from her R i p V a n W inkle nap&#13;
and had a new school house, a newspaper&#13;
a n d . a railroad, and that t h e gigantic&#13;
"representation of civilization/,' waf speedi&#13;
n g your way, verily we rejoiced. A n d to&#13;
know for a fact that the telegraph, telep&#13;
h o n e , a sanitarium, ftee mail delivery,&#13;
were all y o u n ; and see the autos tearing I&#13;
A Mystery Solved.&#13;
"How to keep of" periodic attacks of&#13;
biliousness and habitual constipation&#13;
was a mystery that Dr. King's New&#13;
L.le Fills solved for. me," writes John&#13;
X, Pieasant, of Magnolia, Ind. The&#13;
only pills that are guaranteed to give&#13;
perfect satisfaction to everybody or&#13;
money refunded. Only 25c at F. A.&#13;
Sigler's dru/ store,&#13;
Northern Resort Excursion August 80&#13;
On August 30 the Ann Arbor Railroad&#13;
will give its annual excursion to&#13;
the following Michigan resorts:&#13;
Petoskey, Hay View, Mackinac, Beu&#13;
lah, Frankfort, Charlevoix, Traverse&#13;
City, Ludington, Elk Rapids and&#13;
Manistee.&#13;
Special train will leave Lakeland at&#13;
!*:03 a. m. Fare to all points'except&#13;
Mackinac Island $5.00 Mackinac&#13;
Island will be one dollar higher.&#13;
Tickets will be good until September&#13;
8.-&#13;
Get a 5 cent box of Lax-ete at onr&#13;
store please. We think they are great.&#13;
Just test these tooth-some, candy-like&#13;
Laxative Tablets for constipation, soar&#13;
stomach, biliousness, bad breath,mud*&#13;
dy complexion, etc. Risk 5 cents and&#13;
see. Sold by all dealers.&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
M0Mt» what yon Mt.&#13;
insr of food&#13;
gnawing at&#13;
BCh.rumblinc ,&#13;
tag of w i n d , ,&#13;
tlte, heartburn,&#13;
rtness? i f y o&#13;
these ways, yourv&#13;
there i s b u t onu*&#13;
Strengthen the insi&#13;
S t o m a c h rwrves&#13;
evidence of disease. Put'&#13;
drowsiness — beware,&#13;
tions and you surely&#13;
indjjjestion—you'll&#13;
miserable d y i -&#13;
experience a n y&#13;
t~o-ia-&amp;?=^4i*»&#13;
eivtintcreturato&#13;
m o u t h ,&#13;
pit of stornof&#13;
gus, belchoss&#13;
of appseaduche,&#13;
d i i *&#13;
ufler in any of&#13;
\ u ty i s clear —&#13;
jurse open to you—&#13;
: &gt;&lt;»&gt;— these special&#13;
shaKe off forever this&#13;
the uu't-stjvfi nerves In&#13;
condition to act us nature intended thev 9hould»&#13;
Don't dru?, don't fore*—just uive tJKe insidS&#13;
nerves nat !.!M: r'.rw. •:. &lt;:_t j«- too io. nature's help.&#13;
Dr. Shooo's Restorative fT"i» lets or Liquid)&#13;
Should bu takm to do This it is the only prescription&#13;
whicl In:;,&lt;;s uji.or cveij atl»'mj&gt;ts CO&#13;
IMtore thu inside sion-ach nerves. Sold fc/&#13;
" A l . l . DF.AI.KKS.'&#13;
DR. PIERCE'S Malted Cocoa Tho Oooo* with&#13;
a Dettostto Flavom&#13;
M A L T E D COCI &gt;A i s prepared b y •&#13;
a l l y c o m b i n i n g t h e c u c o a o f t h e&#13;
c o c o a b e a n a n d t h e b e s t o f malt.&#13;
malt a i d i n g d i g e s t i o n , atid t h e f a t « 1&#13;
c o c o a h a v i n g b e e n p r e d i g e s t e d , t h e&#13;
f e e l i n g of h e a v i n e s s e x p e r i e n c e d after&#13;
d r i n k i n g tho ordinary coo&gt;a8 is a v o i d e d ;&#13;
t h u s a m o s t d&lt; h c i o u s e n d nouri»hing&#13;
bsivetage is pr.x-Accd, w h i c h i s » j&#13;
f o c t l y pure a n d will n o t d i s t r e s s t h e&#13;
m o s t delicate stomach.a'_\&#13;
2-\&gt;r salt by your dealer,&#13;
KERR'S&#13;
Malted Extract&#13;
OF TOMATO On»t—spoonftal to * cup of boflinf w»Ur&#13;
makes a delldous Bouillon.&#13;
For sale by your dealer. Prepared by&#13;
WILLIAM B. KERR,&#13;
Medford, Boston, Mass.&#13;
^&#13;
:1 ^ = ^ 5 i\&#13;
. . *• V&#13;
• r - ? S&#13;
Vi&#13;
/TOO&#13;
60 YEARS'&#13;
IENCE&#13;
T R A D E M A R K S&#13;
D E S I G N S&#13;
C O P Y R I G H T S A C .&#13;
Anyone sending a sketch and description may&#13;
quickly Ascertain our opinion free whether an&#13;
Invention 1» probably patentable. Communications&#13;
strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patent*&#13;
Bent free. OldJst auency for securing patents.&#13;
Patents taken through Muan A (&#13;
tpeciai notice, without charge, In the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest cirdilation&#13;
of any scientific journal. Terms, | 3 a&#13;
year: four months, f l . Sold byall newsdealers. MUNN &amp; Co.36'8™""' New M Branch Offlce, 625 V tit., Washington, t). C.&#13;
- ^ r "T r.s—i ft trr&#13;
$lii s*li^ij:;i&lt;ij«i»&#13;
1' f« i"nrrifi:i',f, (fin he IMI: fd i-t&gt;ily, :m«l all'&#13;
(hi- ujifraior lu ^;i«j;o the ,i&gt;i;iui.;y ot Ink dtoi:&#13;
SAVES TIME. SAVES INK.&#13;
Kic;i» hrushi'gaud i:ik.w'i&lt;'r'&gt; you \v:in! llifin, and&#13;
Aii'TV''! -'.r/.'NUi.:?,. n is &lt;.&gt;!&gt;(.mi! «t NVIII'II LITE'S ^TEflfriOGF SitHCIL FNK x ' •• '•• i' '' i .i-iiy 'ii'niini Hud "« u (r.iii'kly. N o&#13;
SU:'... i.r l.uli;,;:.&#13;
3.'V'S BRUSHES. SAVES STENCILS. SAVES TIME.&#13;
I •&gt;' HI; h:inW&lt;n liruslirs or clo&gt;: s t w i l a . Don't&#13;
'.:• our Hum ioi H, 'X'EHT I T . .VaUc only by&#13;
S. A. W H I T E CO., K&#13;
8 5 H i g h S t . , B o s t o n , M a s s . U . S . A .&#13;
»&#13;
' • ^ Of ^r CUBES&#13;
RHEUMATISM&#13;
LUMBAGO, SCIATICA&#13;
NEUML8IA and&#13;
KIDNEY TROUBLE&#13;
"$ DROPS" t iken fnternally, rids the blood !&#13;
of the poisonous matter and acids which |&#13;
are the direct causes of these diseases.&#13;
Applied externally it affords almost Instant&#13;
relief from paio, while a permanent |&#13;
cure is being effected by purifying the |&#13;
blood, dissolving the poisonous sub*&#13;
stance and removing it from tbe system.&#13;
DR. S. D. BLAND&#13;
Of Brewton, G s . , w r l t e t i -,&#13;
"I had bMn a saffer«r for a ndtaber of J M I * I wttb Lumbago »"&lt;* Rheumatism In ray arms |&#13;
and ]«rs,and triad alt thereniediM thai I ooald&#13;
gathar fron uedtoal worlsa, and also coasuitad .&#13;
with a number of tne beet payslelaos, but round&#13;
aalfalft sfeaS gave «fM rslfsf obtaued from&#13;
I "ft-DROPS.n 1 anall prwartb* ft la rayjsssHee&#13;
for rnsumattem and klndrod rtinsjsg*^ j FREE If you are suffering with Rhemnmtism, I&#13;
Neuralgia, K i d r e r T w v M s OK any kin*&#13;
.xM dfseass. vrr M so its 'ST i Srial bottl*&#13;
cf ^S-DROPa" i n d test A yoartelf.&#13;
' S-DROPS" «*a be used any lsngth of&#13;
time withoutaoquiriog ft 'drug habit."]&#13;
as it Is entirely m » o f opium, ooeaine.&#13;
alcohol. laud*aun). t a d other slailar&#13;
ittirndtratt. '&#13;
! « » « • Mae BetUe, •••&gt; 0BOPS" ( • « • Deess)&#13;
" •l.eeTrerSalebynpBfjgUta.&#13;
IWAItOi MWBATII flOIHOMPAlY,&#13;
l»e»i. «•» 1SS l*ake Street, Cbieage.&#13;
&gt; ^ "&#13;
r&#13;
* *&#13;
if&#13;
In Self Uclenoe&#13;
Major Hamm, editor and roauui/er ol&#13;
the Constitutionalist, Eminence, Ky ,&#13;
when be was fiercely attacked, tout&#13;
years a^o, by piles, bought a box nf.&#13;
Bucklen's Arnica Salvn, ot which lit*&#13;
says: u l t cured tne in ten day* mid i u&#13;
trouble sii,ii'tj." tj'ii 'k^&gt;t lieai- r i'f&#13;
burns, sol es, c u b ami woiiuiK. -.V&#13;
a*: F A S i a t e r V d r u t / KIITH.&#13;
A.tteutioiy.6. A. R- Excu-si^n Bate* to&#13;
Minneapolis, Ml no., and Return.&#13;
Account G. A. It National Enteainp&#13;
raent, the Ann Arbor Rail Hoa^ Co.,&#13;
will .sell excursion tickets Au^u^t 10th&#13;
to- 13th at very low round trip rates to&#13;
Minneapolis or St. Paul. Cill on&#13;
agents tor rates and lui.i inormation&#13;
{•.cncpvmuu \'''H)t exien'in!. d' i^'nrp&#13;
The End Of The World&#13;
of troubles that robbed E. H. Wolfe,&#13;
of Bear Groye, la., of all usefulness,&#13;
came when he began taking Electric&#13;
Bitters. He writes: "Two years ago&#13;
A Prolifle W r i t e r .&#13;
While I was writing "Gladys Fane"&#13;
I was doing my fall work for the Leeds&#13;
Mercury and was not only editing the&#13;
paper, but was writing for it an averlimit&#13;
• f i b&#13;
" * &lt; * •&#13;
FURNACE&#13;
kidney trouble caused me great suffer- age of twelve columns a week. "Gladys J, . . , , . . „ i Fane" is a long story, containing 130,-&#13;
in*, which i would never nave « w . L ^ ^ ^ i wrote it during my scanty&#13;
vived bad 1 not taken Electric Bitters, leisure In exactly sixteen weeks, or at&#13;
They also cared me of general debili- | the rate of lo.ooo words a week.—Autoj&#13;
ty." Sure cure fo&gt;- all stomach, liver | fciogflapby of Sir Wemyss Held.&#13;
j nnd kidney complaints, blood diseases, I&#13;
: headache, dizziness and weakness or&#13;
bodily decline. . Price 50c. Guaranteed&#13;
at F. A. Sigler's drug store.&#13;
is the best thing we&#13;
-——^—jr^mKKr* ^ i N ^ « v e r made and we've&#13;
been makmgTurnaces thirty-three years. It is Solid dteel—&#13;
every joint riveted. Never leaks. Has .lined casing, chain&#13;
regulation, evaporating pan, etc. Burns any fuel economically.&#13;
Made in six sizes; powerful and durable.&#13;
WE SELL DIRECT TO CONSUMERS.&#13;
and save you-dealers' profits, -end for full 40 page b o o *&#13;
which fully describes our goods and our maker»tQ«US6r&#13;
method of selling. We can save you money in buying and&#13;
fuel in using. Your name on a postal card, please.&#13;
HESS WARMING &amp; VENTILATING COMPANY,&#13;
921 Tacoma Building, Chicago, Ills*&#13;
Nervous, Diseased Men&#13;
DRS. K. &amp; K. ESTABLISHED 25 YEARS.&#13;
Consultation&#13;
FREE.&#13;
Question Blank&#13;
for Home&#13;
Treatment sent&#13;
FREE.&#13;
Prices Low&#13;
No Cure&#13;
NoPay.&#13;
A NERVOUS WRECK ROBUST MANHOOD&#13;
We Guarantee to Cure Stricture, Varicocele,&#13;
Nervous Debility, Blood Poisons, Vital&#13;
Weaknesses, Kidney and Bladder Diseases,&#13;
and All Diseases Peculiar&#13;
to Men and Women.&#13;
D o n ' t w.tste v o u r t i m e a n d o u m e v&#13;
•I&gt;Otf t itKTlM.-ii" a t ',(&gt;•.!! i/\Vl! in--.!. ',&#13;
I'dit-s w h i c h i h e v c l a m i n&gt; hav.&gt; :.&#13;
c o m e u&gt; u s in c o u f d e i i . e . VW -&#13;
autl resW.rp you u« lu-altlt in ';•,;&#13;
c o m f o r t atu1 e x p e n s e v'.'ict. i:a&#13;
O u r N e w M e t h o d is o r i g i n a l ai&#13;
i . t i&#13;
I ' t i r -,•[•:'•&#13;
,st i l ' . s n •&#13;
:: ir.-a:. -.&#13;
&lt; . K.tc.-:&#13;
ii 5( a - &gt;'&#13;
he.1 !', d a n j v r n u s . e x p e r i m e n t a l t r e a t m e n t . : ; i t i bv t . \ . ; g e.\ j i c r i m e n t e d on w i t h r'enired.&#13;
Tlii'v ^ i v e o n t t e m t j o r u r v relief. B u t&#13;
: c o r .&lt;:RMI;;"US!V, h o n e s t l y a n d . s k i l l f u l l y ,&#13;
[•oS'oMo tin'.' w i i h t h e l e a s t m e d i c i n e , d i s -&#13;
. asi- is t r e a t e d a s t h e s y m p t o m s i n d i c a t e .&#13;
id ; ' i e t e s t for t w e n t y - l i v e y e a r s . DRS KENNEDY &amp; KERGAN&#13;
148 Shelby Street, DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
Charles Lamb and Tobacco.&#13;
Charles Lamb, according to his own&#13;
confession, was "a fierce smoker of tobacco."&#13;
One day when puffing vigorously&#13;
the coarsest weed from a long&#13;
clay pipe in company with Dr. Parr&#13;
the latter asked him how he managed&#13;
to acquire this "prodigious power."&#13;
"By toiling after it, as some men toil&#13;
after virtue," was the prompt reply.&#13;
As he advanced in years, 'however,.&#13;
"Eliq" was obliged to relax bis intimacy&#13;
with the weed, so that, to use his&#13;
own words, he was "like a burnt out&#13;
volcano emitting now and tb^en only a&#13;
casual puff." Eventually b# took his&#13;
formal leave in a "Farewell Ode to Tobacco,"&#13;
and in forwarding a copy of&#13;
the poem to Wordsworth he writes. "I&#13;
bave had it in my head to do it these&#13;
two years, but tobacco stood in its own&#13;
light when it gave me headaches that&#13;
prevented me singing Its praises."&#13;
There i.s nothing so pleasant as tbat&#13;
insist, cheerful, at-peace with-tbewc&gt;&#13;
v\(\ feeling when you sit down to&#13;
\.rur breakfast. There is nothing so&#13;
coud-ucive to ^ood work and good&#13;
results. ' The healthy man with a&#13;
Leal'by mind and body is a better&#13;
lellow, a better workman, a better&#13;
Why Not . Give your heart the same attention&#13;
you do the other organs?&#13;
If your stomach, lungs, liver, kidney*&#13;
or any other organ is in trouble, refuses&#13;
to work, you hasten to repair them.&#13;
The heart never refuses as long a s It&#13;
has power to move, but continues to do&#13;
can, getting weaker and&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach No appetite, loss ot »trenfth,i&#13;
BOSS, headache, constipation, bad brsatfc,&#13;
general debility, sour risings, tod cstarrk&#13;
of the stomach are all due to Indigestion.&#13;
Kodol cures Indigestion. This new dlaot**&#13;
•ry represents the natural Juices of dlg«s&gt;&#13;
too ss they exist in a healthy stomtes*&#13;
combined with the greatest known teas*&#13;
and reconstructive properties. Kodol Dyspepsia&#13;
Cure does not only cureindigestlom&#13;
and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy&#13;
cures all stomach troubles by eleansinf,&#13;
purifying, sweetening and strengthening&#13;
the mucous membranes lining the stomach.&#13;
Mr. S. S. Ball, of Ravenswood, W, Vs.,&#13;
mm&#13;
" I was troubled with sour stomach for twenty ye«f&gt;&#13;
Kodol cured mt tad we ire sow using It ftft-tttt&#13;
for baby." '&#13;
Kodol Digests What Y o u ft*. ,&#13;
the best it . ^ u . nnlw «. 0 n ci,- hoidina- 2¼ times the tott&#13;
weaker, until it la past repair, and then i " ^ ^ 0Dl W wh?ch « » s fw l o S n u T ^ ^ "&#13;
stops. It is Just as .Bick a s . t h e other ! p , ^ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Drugglft.&#13;
Ask for t h e 100ft Kodol a l m a n a c&#13;
a n d 'iOO calendar.&#13;
organs, and needs help, but because It&#13;
will work, you let it.&#13;
This is wrong. If your heart Is weak*&#13;
you should take PrJMiles' Heart Cure&#13;
to strengthen your heart and enable It&#13;
to overcome Dizziness, Palpitation, Short&#13;
Breath, Faint Spells, Pains in Heart and&#13;
Bide, and all other Heart difficulties.&#13;
"I had palpitation of the h^art SO&#13;
bad that I would faint away. My doctor&#13;
recommend.-d Dr. Mills' Heart Cure*&#13;
and It helped me from the start."&#13;
MRS. J. C. WEIS, Cleveland. O.&#13;
The first bottle will benefit. If not, tbS&#13;
druggist will return your money.&#13;
PUBLISHED KVBBY T H U B S D A i 5IOK-NJNS 1 &gt;&#13;
F R A N K l_. A N D R E W S So C C .&#13;
EDITORS AhS PROPRIETORS.&#13;
3 inscription rVice- $1 in Advance&#13;
-iutwreJL;*i tue I'oaCodice at 1'iuciady, .Vlicbl^a^&#13;
tie) rsecuaci-clase uistier&#13;
Advertising rates made Known on application&#13;
rJueineea Cards, $4.00 per year.&#13;
i'eath and marriage uoticue puoiianed free.&#13;
Announcements ot entertainments may be p&amp;iu&#13;
tor, it desired, uy ^r jbenting the ottlce witb lie &amp;&#13;
etB of admiasion. In caae tickets are not bront^t&#13;
^o tne oilice,regular rates wilibe cuar^v „,&#13;
All liiditbi iu locainutieecolumn wiiioe cU.i^u&#13;
citizen than the man or woman who is } f^_»*o ^*ttt*.ft*^.i*?L*„05,*5**;^??..ti1.®^°*\*Vf ?.^:.''&#13;
handicapped by some disability, bowever&#13;
slight. A slight disorder D! the&#13;
stomach will derange your body, your&#13;
! thoughts and your disposition. Get&#13;
l away from the morbidness and the&#13;
i blues. Keep your • stomach in tune&#13;
j and hoth your brain and body will'&#13;
respond. Little indiscretions of over- !&#13;
eating can be easily corrected and you \&#13;
will l»e' surprised to see how much j&#13;
better mau you are. Try a little |&#13;
Kodol "For Dyspepsia after your meals, j&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler Druggist. i&#13;
H O L L 1 S T E R ' S M Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets&#13;
ft Busy Medicine for Busy People.&#13;
Brines Golden Health and Renewed Vigor.&#13;
A M^'oifie for Const; ration. Indigestion, "Liver&#13;
ar.d Kidm-v troubles. Ilnn-les. Eczema. Imimre&#13;
Hlood Had ilreath. Slu^ish Bowels Headache&#13;
and Bu'kiK'he. its Rocky Mountain Tea in tablet&#13;
t'o'-ni .!"•&gt; (•••us ii box. Genuine made by&#13;
HoLu'-rfc.H Duiro COMPANY. Madison. Wis.&#13;
GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPLE&#13;
Railroad Guide&#13;
l a e f f e c t A p r . 3 C . 1 S C E .&#13;
Tniins leave South Lyon as follower&#13;
For Petrtit anil K:i-t,&#13;
l»f.-4S m. . i'•.1iMv p . m . S . 5 ^ j i . m .&#13;
insertion. Wherenu time IB specified, all uoticed&#13;
will Reinserted until ordered discontinued, auu&#13;
will Qecnar^edforftccordinyly, i&amp;~Al{ change* ,&#13;
of adTertiBeuientaML'SX reacn thiaotfice asearlj I For lirano Kapids, &gt;orthand West,&#13;
asTuESDAi morning to insure an insertion tn« \ ^.^^ ;l&gt; n l &gt; 2:1-^ p. m., &amp;'-^ P- -° •&#13;
same week. I '" '' • JOS ±&gt;ni*\n*\ G ! !&#13;
i n tkll i t s b r a n c h e s , a s p e c i a l t y . We h a v e a i i k i u c ^ i&#13;
and tiie latest s t y l e s oi I vpe, e t c . , wliich eaat»U» \&#13;
us io execute a l l kinils ut work, such a» Booka, I&#13;
^ a m p i e t s , i ' o s t e r s , Programiaea, B i l l - H e a d s , N o t e I&#13;
U.eaus, s t a t e m e n t s , C a r d s , Auction Bills, e t c . , i n '•.&#13;
superior styles, upon t h e shortest notice. Fri«*ba» !&#13;
low as irood w o r k c a n be a o n e .&#13;
p. ru,&#13;
ALL 1ULLS PAYABLE KlU.tT OV KVKHV MOSTH.&#13;
Trlr: YiLLAufc' DIRECTOR&#13;
For Sasjiuhvi n n d ^ a y (-'ity-j&#13;
]0:4H ;i. •&lt;)., !i:lOl p. HI., $:")*&#13;
F"r T"! H\\&gt; iml Suiitli,&#13;
1 n:4s ;i. m., 'l-A'? p. m.,&#13;
F R A N K B A Y . I I . F . M O E L L E H ,&#13;
Ait^nt, s.iut-, I,von. \i, P . A., D e t r o i t .&#13;
BIGGLE A Farm Library&#13;
of unequalled value.&#13;
P r a c t i c a l , Up to&#13;
date, Concise and&#13;
Comprehensive.&#13;
Handsomely Printed and&#13;
Beautifully Itlaatrated.&#13;
BY JACOB BIGGLE BOOKS&#13;
No. 1-BIGGLE HORSE BOOK&#13;
All about Horses —n ('onmioii'-r'.isc- Ttvatise, with m o r t&#13;
than "•! illustrations , a• st;tiul:u A \\ oik. Price, .r&gt;0 Cents.&#13;
No. 2 - B I G G L E BERRY BOOK&#13;
All nbutij jjiowinj' Stii;vil i'*iiiits—read and k a r n bOW.&#13;
Beautiful c o l o u d plates. Piu e, "&gt;(l Cents.&#13;
No. 3 ~ B i a G L B POULTRY BOOK&#13;
'•All about Poultry ; the best Poultry Book in e x i s t e n c e ;&#13;
tells e v e | y t h i n &lt; . Profusely illustrated. Price, 50 Cento.&#13;
No. 4-BIGGLE COW BOOK&#13;
"All aluiut-t-Vtws—ami thAL_Dajrv_ Businesst new edition.&#13;
Excursion to the Picturesque Highlands&#13;
of Ontario ai.d Tcmagami Kegiou&#13;
via Grand Tmnk Railway System.&#13;
Extremely low lares to Muskoka&#13;
Wbarf, Penetan^, Temagauii and&#13;
Nevv Liskeatd and return on all trains&#13;
Au£..'Jo, 1006. Excursion tickets willala^&#13;
be on .-ale at Muskoka Wharf to&#13;
any point on Lake Muskoka, Ko&lt;seau&#13;
or Jo.-ep1,, and at Penetang to any&#13;
point on Parry Sound Division ot the&#13;
Northern Navigation Co. For fares&#13;
and h i t l e r intern ation consult local&#13;
a^enf &lt;;r write to Geo. W. Vaux, A.G.&#13;
P.:A- T. A., Ubififl^o, 111.&#13;
T H E O R I G I N A L L A X A T I V E COUGH SYRUF&#13;
KENNEDY'S LAXATIVE HONEY^TAR&#13;
jted Clover Blossom and honer Bee on Every BoUie*&#13;
VILLAGE O F F I C E K S&#13;
PKEr-lOE.Nt E..1'-. bi'OWl.&#13;
I'liUiTUEs Kui&gt;e:i F i n c h , •! aiues ito^ue.&#13;
W i n Iveutied/ &gt;r , J;iine?. jiiit; n,&#13;
•&gt;. -I , I'eeui..', I'.IL. l-'aruutu.&#13;
HitAsCitLii M a r i o n J. i i e i s o u&#13;
A s ? i ; 5 3 0 i 4 i ) . W . M u r t - i&#13;
STtiUiiT L o M i l l s S l O ^ B H W. A . N L X D U&#13;
ric.v.. i.i ij t~ &gt;•;•,'ER' U r . i i . r.-"M&gt;;ier&#13;
A i r o R N E t ' W . A . C ' a r r&#13;
M A U S H A L L Wm. M o r s e&#13;
firand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Fiist l;o;:rnl from P i n c l n e y&#13;
N .»• -,J,i P«??epgpr l--x ^ m d a v , ;&gt;:-}S A. M,&#13;
.No. : w P : i ^ t ' i : ^ r F.y. -itudHy, 4:55 P . M.&#13;
Wi-sr P.. •", 1 •; im IMnrkney&#13;
N'&lt;- -'" Pa^Sfni-^r !-;v Sunduv, 1&lt;&gt;:01 A . M.&#13;
N'n. • . ' s i F ' K ' - i i . v F.s. S u n d o y , 8:-14 P . M •&#13;
Sjol id » ii If ••»?•&gt;: i'•&gt;•'•' '.''sitnr" of r o a r h e s a n d siei ti -&#13;
ins: iMri :ire o|i.'rHt. \ &lt;•• N.»w York &gt;and P h l l a d e l -&#13;
i'hiu vj'. S M^.iri F ii I- v t !i-^ &lt; i riiti'l T r u n k - I . ^ -&#13;
hiL'h Villi.'v Ko':t-.&#13;
A- .'l.ClarV. Arf-r.T,&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
M E l ' t l o m s T E P I S C U l ' A L C l l b K C H .&#13;
a u n d a y Luorum^ at l o : i o , a.ud e v e r y s u a a a v&#13;
e v e n i n g a t T :ju o ' c l o c k . P r a y e r m e e t i n g T n u r L -&#13;
day e v e n i n g s , S u n d a y sctiooi at close o t n i o r u -&#13;
m g s e r v i c e ! M i s s M A K V V A N F L K ; ; ! , s u o t ,&#13;
C1 0-Scjiiiitf Ai ' iO-NAL Cl iUHCH.&#13;
Key. G . W . Mylue p a s t o r , s e r v i c e rfvei;.&#13;
sunoiiy ' i i j r u i a j ; »t Lmjo a u d e v e r y ?&gt;undu&gt;&#13;
.evening at'•':oc o ' c i j e k . P r a y e r m e e t i n g T i i u i j&#13;
day evjeninga. -.saaday s c h o o l at clo.se o t t n o r L&#13;
i n - s e r v i c e . ' Percy &gt;w artUouc, S u u t , . .MUCH.'&#13;
i eeple s e c .&#13;
w 1\ M A i i V ' S C A l ' H O U C C H U ' r i C a .&#13;
O P.ev. M. J , Coinuierlord, P a s t o r , ' j e r v i c e t&#13;
ever} aund&amp;y. Low m a s s a t V:3oo cloek&#13;
high cisise s\ U'L s e r m o n at y;aOa. m . C a t e c u i t u ,&#13;
t o ;ou p . m . , v e s p e r s a n a b e n e d i c t i o n a t 7 :ou-v&lt;- &gt;••&gt;&#13;
* *&#13;
#.&#13;
Colot'ed til.ites. Sound Common-sense. P'tTctTotT'Centtf-&#13;
No. 5 BIGGLE SWINE BOOK&#13;
All about Ho.qs—Breed, iii^, Feedinjr, Butchery, Disease*,&#13;
etc Covers tin-whole xvoutui. Price, oO Cents.&#13;
No. 6 - B 1 G G L E H E A L T H BOOK&#13;
Givt s l e m e d i r s and up-to-date information. A houseboldi&#13;
necessity. F.xtremelv piactical. Price, (0 Cents.&#13;
No. 7-B1GGLE PET BOOK*&#13;
Fur the-hoys a n d g'u\&gt; par.u u'arly. Pets of all k i n d s a n d&#13;
, * liow to r a r e for them; Pi 'ice. "i0 Cents.&#13;
SNo. 8-B1GGLE SHEEP BOOK&#13;
CovtM's tlie whole sroutul. V.\ ei y p a ^ e full of ^ o o d »&lt;|-&#13;
V ice. Sheep men piaise it. Pt ice, ."Hi Cents. Farm Journal&#13;
is your p i p e r , m a d e for von fin! not a misfit. It is ?•) vears&#13;
n i l ; it is the sjre-nt Soiled down, hit-the-nail -on-tho-head,&#13;
quit-after-you-have-saiil-it I'ar'ni and Household papci in t h e&#13;
world—the bitterest paper of its ^i/e in the I'nitei! States of&#13;
America—having m o t e than T h r e e AWIIion regular readers.&#13;
Any ONE of the BIOOLB BOOKS, and the FARM&#13;
J O U R N A L S Y E A R S ( r e m a n d e r of 1!XV.. a n d all of WT.1908,&#13;
1900 a n d 1^101, sent hv mail to anv" a d d r e s s foi A D O L L A R B I L L .&#13;
Sample of P A R IW J O U R N A L . M i d rirciibi desciihinK B I O O L E B O O K S , inse.&#13;
W I L J I l ^ R A T K I N S O N C O . .&#13;
P T B t , I » n R R S OF FAKM J O V R K A L , .PHH.APKt.HHIA.'&#13;
I - SOCIETIES;&#13;
POSTAL 4 M O « C t ,&#13;
The mop*iSToi»«.&#13;
Griswold -rf&#13;
House eUa*.&#13;
raodeni,&#13;
un-to-dat*&#13;
Hotol, located&#13;
in tl'« ac^rt • ! i&#13;
DETROIT. t h e C a ^&#13;
Rates, $2, $2 50, $3 per Day.&#13;
f T U i c A . O . H . Society or t u i s place, m e e t s e \ e r : •&#13;
JL t n i r d S u n d a y i n t u e t ' r . M a t t n e w t i a l l ,&#13;
J o n n T u o i n e y aud M. X. Kelly,Coutitj* D e l e g . i t e -&#13;
ri^HL' \V. C. I'. C. tneuts the lirst F r i d a y o t eaeti .&#13;
X m o n t h at J:30 p, :.i. at [tie Uome of D r . 11, F . ;&#13;
&gt;igler. E v e r y o n e i n t e r e s t e d i n t e m p e r a n c e is ,&#13;
cordially i n v i t e d . M r s . Leal S i l l e r , Pre?, M r ; . ;&#13;
t i t t a Ourfee, s e e r e t a r v .&#13;
PATENTS P R O C U R E D AND D E F E N D E D . SfadroodeU&#13;
drawiiifTo; j. j i. to.! r »-N; ert st-aA-h iuiaire« report. I&#13;
Krv»- advice. I.nw to obtain pntents. trade nisffcn,\&#13;
.copyrights, etc., I N A L L C O U N T R I E S .&#13;
BusirttM rfir,-&lt;-t v:\th Washington saxes time A&#13;
money and rften the patent.&#13;
Patent and Infringcmtnt Practice Exclusively.&#13;
Write or crime to Us&lt; at&#13;
613 NUxtli Street, opp XJaiUd State* Patsat OSes,]&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N , D. C. GASNOW&#13;
KILL H, COUCH&#13;
AND C U R ! ! THE L U N G S&#13;
WITH&#13;
F0»C UoiSL':;PTl0ci&#13;
OUGHSand&#13;
OLDS&#13;
iftoysry&#13;
Price&#13;
B0c&amp;$LOO&#13;
Free Trial. rhe C.T. A. and B. Society of this place, *• n&#13;
every third Saturday evening in the Fr ,\i&gt;,;&#13;
tUew Hall. John L'onohue, Tre»ident.&#13;
Surest and "Quickest Cure for all&#13;
THROAT and LUNG TROUBLES,&#13;
or MONEY BACK.&#13;
KN I G H T S O F M A C C A B E E S . '&#13;
M e e t e v e r y F r i d a y e v e n i n g o n o r b e f o r e : c : •&#13;
o t t h e m o o n a t their" h a l l in t h e S w a r t h o u : b e .&#13;
Vi-itia^T b r o t h e r s a r t c o r d i a l l y i n v i t e d .&#13;
I'MAS. 1., C A M P B E L L , S i r J . . ; r . ; - n -.&#13;
*$'&amp;&#13;
and Health REVIVO&#13;
CUSTOM MADE FLY SCREENS Our work h far superior t o the usual outpu* of local mills, and has a style ami&#13;
finish not obtainable from thoso^vho &lt;\o not nuiKo a specialty of screens. Semi&#13;
us sizos of doors and windows. We guarantee a lit.&#13;
For outsido Screens w e u s e the identical finish of the outaide of Fullman Cars.,&#13;
Tho best grade of Wire Clothr-enam^led, galvanized genuine bronze, etc.,&#13;
fastened b y tacka or b y the 4 4 lockstrip" process,&#13;
fntotulinjj purchasers m a y have, free by mail, samples of woods, finishes&#13;
f\n&lt;lUviro cloth and copy of catalog ami price list Agencies in many cities.&#13;
Sj»o||al terms to contractors and builders,&#13;
T\m A , 4, P H I L L I P S C O M P A N Y , P*n«on. «*iotot«an.&#13;
RESTORES VITALITY&#13;
"Hade a&#13;
Well Man&#13;
of Me."&#13;
Li v i n g s t o n Lod^e, No.:¾. F 4 ; A . M. K e g u ^&#13;
C o m m u n i c a t i o n Tnesdav evening, o n o r Uei. r e&#13;
t h e full of t h e moot;. K i r k Van Win Lie, v\ . &gt;:&#13;
K D E R O F KAS.TKKS S T A R meets each moiiiT&#13;
the F r i d a y e v e n i n g following th&lt;» r e g u l a r F&#13;
M . , m e e t i n g . M R S . X K T T K Vaumc.v, W . M.&#13;
( | i t:H »&gt;F M u D E K N W O O D M E N Meet t h -&#13;
Wfirat&gt;Tnur*ii.iy evening of each M o u t h in ;ne&#13;
MaccalH'; hall. C. L . C r i m e s V. C.&#13;
!0&#13;
I A A&#13;
LA D I E S O F T H E M A C C A B E E S . Meet every l*&#13;
and ;ird S a t u r d a y of each m o n t h a t i:30 t&gt; ;V,.»&#13;
K . H . T. M. l u l l . VisUiuij s i s t e r s c o r d i a i l v it;&#13;
v i t e d . LIL.V ( ' O M I V A V , Lady C o m .&#13;
p r o d u c e s line result* In 30 day*. It acts&#13;
powerfully and quickly, cures when others fail.&#13;
Yount,' wen can regain their lost manhoo«J and&#13;
old men may recover their youthful vigor by&#13;
using HKVIVO. It quickly and quietlv removes&#13;
Nervousness. Lost Vitality. Sexual&#13;
\Ve;il;nos&gt; such as Lost Power. Failing Memory.&#13;
VYa-ting Diseases,a»d effects oi self-iilnise or&#13;
excess and indiscretion, which unfits one for&#13;
study, business or marriage It not onlv cures&#13;
by sumi»K at. the seat of disease, but is a great&#13;
nerve l o u l e a n d b l o o d b u i l d e r , bringing&#13;
back the p i n k g l o w t o s a l e c h e e k * and restoring&#13;
the fire o r y o n t k . It wards off ar&gt;&#13;
proocbiftgdlaease. Insist oa having R E V I V O ,&#13;
r.o otber. It oft* $e earriji In vest pocket. By&#13;
mntl.Jl^NlMrpackft«re,,M.sttfoffts.OO. We&#13;
givetlrt«,adfiMtU!id'Foi; - - - - - -&#13;
with enarmntee. Cin&#13;
I J N k i H T S o K r u i . L O Y A L ( i l ' A U U&#13;
5 \ F . 1.. A n d r e w * 1'. M,&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
' H . F . S'3w£R M. 0 . C. L, SIGLER M, 0&#13;
I DKS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
j Poyaiciaa-j aad Surgeut.s. All calls prompily&#13;
I1 attended to day orniKbt. Offlce on Main «t:eet Pinrkney, Mich.&#13;
Why Not Buy the Best?&#13;
(food HouMkoptrs U M&#13;
P.H.IRISH'S&#13;
Green Gross&#13;
EXTRACTS&#13;
VANILLA AND LEMON&#13;
which comply rith the requirements&#13;
of the Michigan pure food law &gt; one of&#13;
the most stringent in the country)&#13;
are kept at a uniform standard of&#13;
strehph.&#13;
If YOUR GROCER does: 't, keep&#13;
the "GREEN CROSS" brand, send&#13;
25 cents and I will mail you a fall 2ot.&#13;
package of ranilla or lemon, prepaid.&#13;
Where it takes SO little/why not&#13;
nave the best.&#13;
Try it and you will use no other.&#13;
Satisfaction Guaranteed,&#13;
to all who wish it,&#13;
s tree. Address&#13;
IM*. Chlcae*. m.&#13;
Sold by F. A. BltftW, Drugglft,&#13;
PDJCKMY, MICH,&#13;
FRANK L ANDREWS&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH SEAL&#13;
AT DISPATCH OFFICE, yjj&#13;
P. H. IRISH,&#13;
M a m u f e o % M r « r *&#13;
Mt. Clem#nar Mrdu&#13;
•• 7:'* ^ * " S t . . . S ^ ^ * i - &gt; . *«?*•&#13;
-•7&#13;
THE DEMOCRATIC STATE&#13;
CONVENTION.&#13;
&lt;~^-L.&#13;
r^r SOCIALISM AND JUDGE GROSSCUP&#13;
NOMINATIONS MADE, THE PLATFORM AND&#13;
OTHER MATTERS.&#13;
NOTES ON THE PROCEEDINGS&#13;
^ :&#13;
The Democrats of Michigan held&#13;
their state convention in the Light&#13;
Guard Armory, Detroit, on Thursday&#13;
for the nomination of a state ticket,&#13;
adoption of a platform and other business.&#13;
The forenoon session was devoted&#13;
to the appointment of committees&#13;
and preliminary business, an adjournment&#13;
being taken till 2 p. nv,&#13;
when things became animated.&#13;
At the afternoon session the getting&#13;
together began for the selection of&#13;
candidates, the formulation of a platform,&#13;
etc. There was enthusiasm for&#13;
Bryan that broke out at numerous&#13;
times, showing that he has the hearts&#13;
of Michigan's Democrats.&#13;
The Nomination*.&#13;
Governor—Charles H. Kimmerle,&#13;
Cassopolis.&#13;
Lieutenant-Governor—Rush Culver,&#13;
Marquette.&#13;
Secretary of State—P. J. DeVine,&#13;
Stanton.&#13;
State Treasurer—Charles Wellman,&#13;
Port Huron.&#13;
Attorney-General -r- Emmanuel J.&#13;
Doyle, Grand Rapids.&#13;
Auditor-General—John Yuell, Vanderbilt.&#13;
Superintendent of Public Instruction—&#13;
Elmer R. Webster, Pontiac.&#13;
Land Commissioner—Clarence L.&#13;
Sheldon.&#13;
Member of State Board of Education—&#13;
James E. Sullivan, Muskegon.&#13;
Chairman State Central Commit&#13;
tee—John T. Winship, Saginaw.&#13;
State Central Committee.&#13;
The new state central committee&#13;
shows a large number of changes, only&#13;
eleven of the old members remaining&#13;
on it. The list is as follows:&#13;
First District—Edwin Henderson&#13;
and George F. Monaghan, Detroit.&#13;
Second District—Dr. D. L. Treat,&#13;
Adrian; A. J. Weier, Monroe.&#13;
Third District—Dr. E. Blackman,&#13;
Quincy; Edward Austin, Battle Creek&#13;
Fourth District—Thos. M. Cook, Allegan;&#13;
Thos. J. Cavanaugh, Paw Paw.&#13;
Fifth District—Thomas A. Carten,&#13;
Ionia; Geo. P. Hummer, Grand Rapids.&#13;
Sixth District—Dr. R. B. Hoyt, Detroit;&#13;
A. M. Cummings, Lansing.&#13;
Seventh District—Dr. J. P. Eggle&#13;
stone, Imlay City; Henry F. Marx,&#13;
Port Huron.&#13;
Eighth District—J. E. Brown, St.&#13;
Johns; John T. Winship, Saginaw.&#13;
Ninth District—Herman O'Connor,&#13;
Holton; C. A. Waal, Manistee.&#13;
Tenth District—J. E. Kinnane, Bay&#13;
City; Sigmund Wllhartz, Cheboygan.&#13;
Eleventh District—John T. Matthews,&#13;
Ithaca; D. Scott, Partridge,&#13;
Evart,&#13;
Twelfth District—Wm. P. Preston.&#13;
Mackinac IsJand; Edward P. Ryan!&#13;
iC al'u *m- et*, , The Platform.&#13;
The report of the committee on rest)-,&#13;
lutions, which follows, is the party&#13;
platform for the campaign:&#13;
The Democracy of Michigan in convention&#13;
assembled firmly reasserts its&#13;
allegiance to the principles of majority&#13;
rule and pure Democracy, wherein&#13;
laws are proposed, enacted, and execu-&#13;
_te_d_for the sole purpose of protecting&#13;
the interests-©?allTrTe people without&#13;
favor or special privilege to any class&#13;
or individual.&#13;
One: Evils under the form of combinations&#13;
and trusts, .which have so&#13;
shocked the moral conscience of the&#13;
nation in the last few years are a&#13;
direct outcome of class legislation by&#13;
the Republican party conferring privileges&#13;
upon corporations at the expense&#13;
of the common people. A continuance&#13;
of such . legislation is now&#13;
threatened by the many bills of like&#13;
L. ..... .ci, as lor instance the shii&#13;
subsidy bill, and inadequate remedial&#13;
laws enacted by the recent congress,&#13;
showing that there is* no honest purpose&#13;
on the part of the Republican&#13;
party to relieve the people from the&#13;
evils thus cast upon them by this unjust&#13;
class legislation. Their affiliations&#13;
with the classes thus favored make it&#13;
absolutely impossible to obtain relief&#13;
from Republican sources. In proof of&#13;
the uncertainty of the Republican&#13;
party not affording any relief from&#13;
these national evils, we have but to&#13;
refer to their action in rejecting the&#13;
proposition of Senator La Follette, regarding&#13;
railroad rate legislation,&#13;
which, if adopted, would have brought&#13;
certain relief, and was in perfect accord&#13;
with the declarations on that subject&#13;
in the Democratic platform of&#13;
1S96.&#13;
Fully believing In the honesty, integrity&#13;
and wisdom of William Jennings&#13;
Bryan, and that under his leadership&#13;
the people would receive relief&#13;
from the many ills above referred to,&#13;
we commend him to the people of the&#13;
United States as candidate for president&#13;
in 1908.&#13;
Two: We favor the nomination of&#13;
all candidates for office by direct vote&#13;
of the people and will do everything in'&#13;
our power to secure legislation directly&#13;
to that end. We favor the adoption of,&#13;
such legislation or constitutional&#13;
amendments as shall provide, viz.:&#13;
(a) For the election of railroad and&#13;
tax commissioners by direct vote of&#13;
the people.&#13;
(b) We favor home rule, giving to&#13;
any city, village, county or township&#13;
the right to decide for itself, subject to&#13;
the referendum «11 matters of purely&#13;
local interest, regarding local taxes&#13;
and the question of owning and operating&#13;
any given public utility, requiring&#13;
franchise rights, or granting of franchise&#13;
for such ownership to a private&#13;
company.&#13;
(c) We are in favor of the nomination&#13;
and ejection of United States seniors&#13;
by direct vote of the people.&#13;
(d) We favor the repeal of the so-.&#13;
^alled indeterminate sentence law, and&#13;
estorlng to the judges discretion in&#13;
ihe punishment of persons convicted&#13;
jf crime.&#13;
(e) We are opposed to* a political&#13;
pardon board and in favor of its abolition.-&#13;
(f) We reaffirm our faith in popular&#13;
government by majority vote and&#13;
piedge ourselves to enact the same by&#13;
ihe adoption of that principle of pure&#13;
Democracy, the initiative and referndlum&#13;
and popular recall.&#13;
Three: We are in favor of a passenger&#13;
rate on railroads not exceeding&#13;
two cents per mile in the southern&#13;
peninsula of this state and not exceeding&#13;
three cents per mile in the&#13;
northern peninsula.&#13;
Four: We most emphatically declare&#13;
for the election of delegates to.&#13;
.he forthcoming constitutional convenrion&#13;
by non-partisan method and that&#13;
.iny candidate for delegate may have&#13;
iiis name as such candidate placed on&#13;
the official ballot, if a petition by a&#13;
reasonable number of voters is filed in&#13;
iiis behalf. The names on the official&#13;
ballot should be without party or oth*&#13;
•jr designation. We demand an amendment&#13;
to the election law by eliminating&#13;
the cross at the head of the ticket,&#13;
und in place thereof require placing a&#13;
cross before the name of each candidate&#13;
for whom the voter desires to&#13;
votet&#13;
Five: We condemn in the most unmistakeable&#13;
terms, the action of the&#13;
last legislature in passing the change&#13;
of venue law, which makes it possible&#13;
for a litigant upon making a prescribed&#13;
affidavit without any investigation,&#13;
as to the truth of the statements&#13;
therein made^ to have his case transferred&#13;
to another circuit, thusplacin&#13;
a premium upon perjury and discomniuding&#13;
litigants and making the trial&#13;
of causes a farce.&#13;
Six: We believe that laws should&#13;
be "enacted making it a criminal offense&#13;
for any member of the state legislature,&#13;
or a state officer, to accept or&#13;
use free transportation from any railroad&#13;
or transportation company.&#13;
» Seven: We denounce the present&#13;
primary election law as a fraud and&#13;
sham, and pledge ourselves to enact&#13;
i primary law simple and workable&#13;
uul that will not, in its operation deprive&#13;
any voter of his franchise.&#13;
Eight: Our state government needs&#13;
readjustment upon the'llnes of greater&#13;
economy and better business methods.&#13;
We urge the voters of Michigan to lay&#13;
aside party prejudices, to elect members&#13;
of th\a legislature who are in&#13;
sympathy with honest primary reform,&#13;
and the other principles herein enunciated,&#13;
and to unite with us in electing&#13;
the state officers nominated at this&#13;
convention who are pledged to the&#13;
earnest support of those principles.&#13;
In this day of increase iu socialist ranks it&#13;
is of interest to hear what a man of Judge&#13;
Grosscup's authority may have to say on the&#13;
subject of socialism. This the judgment: "A&#13;
doubling back on the road along which the race&#13;
has come from the days when no man had a&#13;
hope of his own for an individual part in the&#13;
destiny of things." Socialism, then, Judge Grosscup&#13;
thinks, is a, stepping backward.&#13;
But he makes acknowledgment of present&#13;
ills, and gives suggestion for dealing therewith;&#13;
avers that what is needed is not prosecutions&#13;
of corporations simply because they are big;&#13;
"what is wanted is the corporation, big and little,&#13;
so rebuilt that in the vast domain of property&#13;
covered by it the people, who with their&#13;
hands have worked may hereafter see their&#13;
way to participate." The jurist does not think&#13;
the reforms are to be brought about by act o*&#13;
congress, but that state legislatures should "lay&#13;
clean and firm in state law the foundations for&#13;
the new corporation," and then the people themselves be relied on to look&#13;
after their interests.'' M . &lt; o n .&#13;
Judge Grosscup resides in Chicago, since the beginning of the year 1899&#13;
has been judge United States circuit court of appeals, Seventh circuit. Among&#13;
notable judicial acts in his career should be mentioned his opinion anent the&#13;
application to close the World's Columbian exposition on Sundays; the in&#13;
junction issued in conjunct4on with Judge William A. Woods against Eugene&#13;
Debs and other officers of the American Railway Union.&#13;
Judge Grosscup was born L* Ohio, is 54 years old, was graduated at Wittenberg&#13;
college, Ohio, and at the Boston Law School.&#13;
Traced to Ancient Sources.&#13;
Not a few of the familiar phrases&#13;
which avoid the use of the word death&#13;
date far back Into ancient times&#13;
Cicero said: "He has lived." Seneca&#13;
put it: "Not lost, but gone before."&#13;
A third Roman cloak for the hard&#13;
fact of death was "Abiit ad plures,"&#13;
or "Adiit ad majores" (He has gone to&#13;
the majority). The authorship of thisfamiliar&#13;
phra'se cannot be determined,&#13;
but it is still in common use, often&#13;
In the form "He has joined -the ma&#13;
jority."&#13;
THE GENTLEMAN FROM INDIANA&#13;
It was the gentleman from Indiana, Hon&#13;
Albert J. Beverldge, who introduced the agitat&#13;
ing meat-inspection bill in the senate.&#13;
Senator Beverldge's name has frequently&#13;
been beXore the public of late years. His is one&#13;
of the many instances in this country of rise&#13;
from obscurity and poverty to place of prom&#13;
lnence, one of the many instances that serve as&#13;
inspiration for young America.&#13;
He was born in Ohio state, that has turned&#13;
out so many public men. He first saw the lighl&#13;
of day on a farm, and at the tender age of 12&#13;
was put at the task of following the plow. This&#13;
was in Illinois, his family having moved thithei&#13;
after the war. Young Beverldge was given sorm&#13;
schooling, but had to toll laboriously for any&#13;
thing beyond the little red schoolhouse. Aftei&#13;
his plowboy experience he led for several years&#13;
a life of privation; at 14 was a railroad laborer&#13;
at 15 a logger and teamster. About this time be&#13;
found himself able to attend high school; latei&#13;
was enrolled at De Paw university, Indiana, from whkh institution he was;&#13;
graduated.&#13;
He read law in the office ot Senator__McDonald, became managing clerk,&#13;
and finally young Beverldge was member of the law firm of Ma3DohaTd~S&#13;
Butler. He continued with this firm until starting out for himself. He has&#13;
been identified with many important law cases.&#13;
Senator Beverldge is noted as an orator, has won no small fame as Republican&#13;
campaign speaker. His home being in Indianapolis; he could not&#13;
well escape the authorship microbe; "The Young Man and the World" bears&#13;
his name, he is a freauent contributor to the magazines.&#13;
Drinkiug plenty of cold water night&#13;
and morning and during the day, and&#13;
exercising properly, will do this more&#13;
effectually than most panaceas, which&#13;
may cure one 111, but leave another&#13;
more troublesome than the first. Let&#13;
nature do the work if possible, aided&#13;
by proper diet and care. Take the&#13;
deep breathing exercise night and&#13;
morning before an open window,&#13;
drinking two glasses of cold water&#13;
after exercising at night and before&#13;
the breathing in the morning. Avoid&#13;
tight clothing. Take an open air walk&#13;
every afternoon if possible. Bathe&#13;
daily, using plenty of friction in the&#13;
water, and dry with a Turkish towel,&#13;
rubbing the flesh until the blood is&#13;
brought to the surface. A Turkish&#13;
bath once or twice a week would&#13;
prove of benefit.&#13;
An Ethnological Mystery.&#13;
On St. Nicholas island, near the&#13;
south coast of California, explorers&#13;
have unearthed • the remains of pre*&#13;
historic giants—seven and a half footers,&#13;
many of them, and with massive&#13;
skull bones. Their thick-headedness&#13;
may have failed to save them from&#13;
the tomahawks of a Modoc surprise&#13;
party. One thing only is certain:&#13;
They did not succumb to atmospheric&#13;
hardships. The climate is the most&#13;
pleasant of the North Pacific.&#13;
Held th« Cofn.&#13;
A laughaLle incident occurred on a.&#13;
car in Kalamazoo Tuesday evening.&#13;
An unknown passenger attempted to&gt;&#13;
hand the conductor his fare, and asboth&#13;
men were touching iron they&#13;
formed a circuit of electricity, so that&#13;
neither was able to let go of the coin&#13;
for fully three minutes. They berated&#13;
each other soundly, each claiming the&#13;
other was playing a practical joke.&#13;
Treatment of New Floor.&#13;
A new floor when waxed must Deleft&#13;
over night before polishing, but&#13;
an old- floor may be polished as soon&#13;
as the wax has been applied all over&#13;
It. A woolen rag may be used for&#13;
this purpose, but the best thing is a&#13;
weighted brush with a long handle.&#13;
This should be used first across the&#13;
grain of the wood, then paralle"&#13;
with it.&#13;
Beavers Sometimes in Burrows.&#13;
Contrary to the general opinion thebeaver&#13;
does not always build a house&#13;
Tor himself, being content very often&#13;
with a burrow in the bank of the&#13;
stream. As is the case with the house&#13;
The efitranTir~tc— a— -burrow -is under&#13;
.vater, though sometimes there is an&#13;
opening from the surface through&#13;
which brush and sicks- are carried for&#13;
their food supply.&#13;
Washing Fluid.&#13;
Here li a recipe for a good washing&#13;
fluid. One box potash, one ounce saltl&#13;
tartar, one ounce pulverized ammonia,&#13;
one ounce pulverized borax, two quarts&#13;
boiling water. Af'.cr dissolved add&#13;
four quarts cold water. Use one cup&#13;
to boiler of clothes. Keep in jugs or&#13;
glass jars where it will not freeze and&#13;
out of the way of children; also keep&#13;
the children out of the room where it&#13;
is being made.&#13;
A Young Old Soldier.&#13;
William F. Hurlbutt, of Buchanan,&#13;
is another of the 14-year-olds who&#13;
shouldered muskets-in defense of their&#13;
country in* the dark days of '61 and&#13;
fought side by side with their older&#13;
comrades to save the union and keep&#13;
the Stars and StripeB waving over an&#13;
undivided country.&#13;
He enlisted as a private in Company&#13;
B, Ninth Michigan Infantry, on August&#13;
12,1861, while he still lacked over&#13;
Forty days of being 16 yeart old. He&#13;
was with his regiment from that time&#13;
until he was discharged January 18,&#13;
1864, at Chattanooga, Tenn.&#13;
When women cry at a wedding it's&#13;
hard to tell whether It's from sym*&#13;
jfctby or envy.&#13;
Killed the Conductor.&#13;
Conductor "Bud" Stone, aged'21, of&#13;
Saginaw, was killed by a stab In the&#13;
leg which severed an artery, the deed&#13;
being done by Tony Bartello, aged 43,&#13;
an Italian who sought revenps for a&#13;
practical joke played on him which he&#13;
attributed to his- victim. Stone was&#13;
conductor of a Pere Marquette work&#13;
train operating near Lowell on which&#13;
are quartered about 40 Italians, mostly&#13;
from Detroit, and Bartello was one of&#13;
these. He became intoxicated, and&#13;
went to the caboose, where Stone was&#13;
about to retire, and attacked him.&#13;
8tone, after receiving the wound in&#13;
his leg,, leaped from the car, calling&#13;
for help, but fell before going far and&#13;
«j#d In a few moments.&#13;
^ 1&#13;
r\-"4£-:&#13;
tt*&#13;
A U/rJf4wxn Annr&gt;artfno o f a TEN m i m DOLLAR CONCERN is the best assurance you can&#13;
TT I I l L C l l V F U a l a l l U T C have of the superiority of the&#13;
COLUMBIA 0R4PH0PH0NE&#13;
With this guarantee you don't guess, you KNOW which is best ASK&#13;
YOUR OWN BANKER as to our responsibility and financial standing. Tree Trial and Easy Payment Offer&#13;
Then send to oar nearest dealer or to us, and get our . . . . • " ^ " • • • • • • • • • • • ^ " ^ • ^ • ^ «&#13;
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W E A C C E P T O L D M A C H I N E S O f A N Y M A K E I N P A R T P A Y M E N T .&#13;
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A FOOL FOR LOVE&#13;
By FRANCIS LYNDE&#13;
AUTHOR OF "THE G R A F T E R S . " ETC.&#13;
(Copyright, UK,by 4.P Lipplaoott Co.)&#13;
CHAPTEB II.—Continued.&#13;
It was a rather unnerving thought,&#13;
•»nd when he considered it he was glad&#13;
(hat their ways, coinciding for the moment,&#13;
would presently go apart, leaving&#13;
him free to do battle as an honest&#13;
soldier in any cause must.&#13;
The Kosemary party was rising, and&#13;
Winton rose, too, folding the seat for&#13;
Mtos Virginia and reaching her wrap&#13;
••^i.\tt—i the rack.&#13;
^*"; .*'! am glad to have met you," she&#13;
.-••'•aid, giving "him the tip of her fingers&#13;
and going back to the conventionalities&#13;
as if they had never been ignored.&#13;
But the sincerity in Winton's reply&#13;
transcended the conventional form&#13;
of i t&#13;
"Indeed, the pleasure has been&#13;
wholly mine, I assure you. I hope&#13;
the future will be kind to me and let&#13;
me see moi*e of you."&#13;
"Who knows?" she rejoined, smiling&#13;
at him level-eyed. "The world has&#13;
been steadily growing smaller since&#13;
Shakespeare called it 'narrow.' "&#13;
He caught quickly at the straw of&#13;
hope. "Then we need not say goodb&#13;
y ? "&#13;
"No; let It be auf wiedershen," she&#13;
said; and he stood aside to let her&#13;
join her party.&#13;
Two hours later, when Adams was&#13;
reading In his section and Winton was&#13;
smoking his short pipe in the men's&#13;
•compartment and thinking things unspeakable&#13;
with Virginia Carteret for&#13;
a nucleus, there was a series of sharp&#13;
whistle shrieks, a sudden grinding of&#13;
the brakes, and a jarring stop of the&#13;
"Limited"—a stop not down on the&#13;
time-card.&#13;
'Winton was among the first to reach&#13;
the head of the long train. The halt&#13;
was in a little depression of the bleak&#13;
plain, and the trainmen were in conference&#13;
over a badly derailed engine&#13;
when Winton cme up. A vast herd of&#13;
cattle wa3 lumbering away into the&#13;
•darkness, and a mangled carcass ui^der&#13;
the wheels of the locomotive sufficiently&#13;
explained the accident.&#13;
"Well, there's only one thing to do,"&#13;
was the engineer's verdict. "That's&#13;
for somebody to niog back to Arroyo&#13;
to wire for the wreck-wagon."&#13;
"Yes, by gum! and that means all&#13;
night," growled the conductor.&#13;
There was a stir in the gathering&#13;
throng of half-alarmed and ali-curious&#13;
passengers, and a red-faced, whitemustached&#13;
gentleman, whose soft&#13;
southern accent was. utterly at variance&#13;
with his manner, hurled a question&#13;
bolt-like at the conductor. ,-,&#13;
"All night, you say, sen? Then we&#13;
miss ouh Denver connections.?"&#13;
"You can bet to win on that," was&#13;
the curt reply,&#13;
"Damn!" said the red-faced gentleman;&#13;
and then In a lower tone: "I&#13;
beg your pahdon, my deah Virginia; 1&#13;
was totally unaware of your presence."&#13;
Winton threw off his overcoat.&#13;
"If you will take a bit of help from&#13;
an outsider, I think we needn't wait&#13;
for the wrecking car," he said to the&#13;
dubitant trainmen.. "It's bad, but not&#13;
as bad as it looks. What do you&#13;
say?"&#13;
_... NoWj^as everyone knows, it is not&#13;
in the nature of operative railway men&#13;
to brook Interference even of the helpful&#13;
sort. But they are as quick as&#13;
other folk to recognize the man In esse,&#13;
as well as to know the clan slogan&#13;
when they hear it. Winton did not&#13;
wait for objections, but took over the&#13;
command as one In authority.&#13;
"Think we can't do it? I'll show&#13;
you. Up on that tank, one of you,&#13;
and heave down the jacks and frogs.&#13;
We'll have her on the steel again before&#13;
.you can say your prayers."&#13;
At- the hearty command, churlish&#13;
reluctance vanished and everybody lent&#13;
a willing hand. In two minutes the&#13;
ei«w of the "Limited" knew it was&#13;
working under a master. The frogs&#13;
(/ere adjusted under the derailed&#13;
wibels, the jack-screws were braced to&#13;
Utl and push with the nicest accuracy,&#13;
and all was ready for the attempt to&#13;
.**ck the engine in trial. But now the&#13;
engineer shook his head.&#13;
"I ain't the artist to move her gently&#13;
trough with all that string o' dinkeys&#13;
feer," he said unhopefully.&#13;
•aid Winton. "Come up into&#13;
Ith me and 1*21 show you how."&#13;
limbed to the driver's footboard&#13;
wKfc the doubting engineer at his heels,&#13;
!%• reversing-lever went over with a&#13;
6lMg; the air whistled into the brakes;&#13;
• a t Winton began to ease the throttle&#13;
open. The steam sang into the cylinders,&#13;
the huge machine trembling like A&#13;
living thing under the hand of a master.&#13;
Slowly and by almost imperceptible defy**&#13;
t i t ?t?$ of the p***-*;* V.**: power&#13;
crept Into the pistons and out.through&#13;
the connecting-rods to the wheels. With&#13;
the first thrill of the gripping tires Winton&#13;
leaned from the window to watch&#13;
the derailed trucks climb by half-inches&#13;
up the Inclined planes of the frogs.&#13;
At the critical instant, when the entire&#13;
weight of The forward half of the&#13;
engine was poising for the drop upon the&#13;
rails, he gave the precise added impulse.&#13;
The big ten-wheeler coughed hoarsely&#13;
and spat fire; the driving-wheels made a&#13;
quick half-turn backward; and a cheer&#13;
from the onlookers marked the. little&#13;
triumph of mind over matter.&#13;
Winton found Miss Carteret holding&#13;
his overcoat when he swung down from&#13;
the cab, and he fancied her enthusiasm&#13;
Was tempered with something remotely&#13;
like embarrassment. But she suffered&#13;
him to walk back to the private car beside&#13;
her; and in this sudden retreat from&#13;
the scene of action he missed hearing the&#13;
comments of his fellow-craftsmen.&#13;
"You bet, he's no 'prentice," said the&#13;
fireman.&#13;
"Not much!" quoth the engineer.&#13;
"He's an all-'round artist; that's about&#13;
what he is. Shouldn't wonder if he was&#13;
the travelin' engineer for some road&#13;
back in God's country."&#13;
"Travelin* nothing!" said the Conner&#13;
first view of the mighty hills to the&#13;
westward.&#13;
The temptation to let the telegraphing&#13;
wait while he went to say good-morning&#13;
to her was strong, but he resisted It and&#13;
hastened the more for the hesitant&#13;
thought. Nevertheless, when he reached&#13;
the telegraph office he found Mr.&#13;
Somerville Darrah and his secretary&#13;
there ahead of him, and he remarked&#13;
that the explosive gentleman who presided&#13;
over the destinies of the Colorado&#13;
&amp; Grand River appeared to be in&#13;
a more than usually volcanic frame&#13;
of mind.&#13;
Now Winton, though new to the&#13;
business of building railroads for the&#13;
Utah Short Line, was not new to Denver&#13;
or Colorado. Hence when the&#13;
Rajah, followed by his secretarial&#13;
shadow, had left the office, Winton spoke&#13;
to the operator as to a friend.&#13;
"What is the matter with Mr. Darrah,&#13;
Tom? He seems to he uncommonly&#13;
vindictive this morning."&#13;
The man of dots and dashes nodded.&#13;
"He's always crankier this time than&#13;
he was the othe;\ He's a holy terror, the&#13;
Rajah is. 1 wouldn't work on his road&#13;
for a farm down east—not if my job took&#13;
me within cussing distance of him. Bet&#13;
a hen worth $50 he is up in Mr. Colbert's&#13;
office right now, raising particular sand&#13;
because his special engine wasn't standing&#13;
here ready to snatch his private car&#13;
on the fly, so's to go on without losing&#13;
headway."&#13;
Winton's eyes narrowed, and he let&#13;
his writing hand pause while he said:&#13;
"So he travels special from Denver, does&#13;
he?"&#13;
aOn his own road?^well,' I -should&#13;
smile. Nothing is to©» good for the&#13;
Rajah; or too quick, when he happens&#13;
to be In a hurry. I wonder he didn't&#13;
have the T. C. pull him special from&#13;
Kansas City."&#13;
Winton handed in his batch of telegrams&#13;
and went his way reflective.&#13;
chiefly with the major's desire to know&#13;
when he was to be relieved.&#13;
But it Winton could have been an&#13;
eavesdropper behind the door of Superintendent&#13;
Colbert's office on the second&#13;
floor of the Union depot, his doubts&#13;
would have been resolved instantly.&#13;
The telegraph operator's guess went&#13;
straight to the mark. Mr. Darrah was&#13;
"raising particular sand" because his&#13;
wire order for a special engine had not&#13;
been obeyed to the saving of the ultimate&#13;
second of time. But between his&#13;
objurgations on that score, he was&#13;
rasping out questions designed to exhaust&#13;
the chief clerk's store of information&#13;
concerning the status of affairs&#13;
at the seat of war.&#13;
"Will you inform me, seh., why I&#13;
wasn't wired that this beggahly appeal&#13;
was going against us?" he demanded,&#13;
wrathfully. "What's that you say,&#13;
seh? Do.n't tell me you couldn't know&#13;
what the decision of the cou't was going&#13;
to be before it was handed down;&#13;
that's what you-all are heah for—to&#13;
find out these things! And what is&#13;
aU this about Majah Eva'ts resigning,&#13;
and the Utah's sending east for a professional&#13;
right-of-way fighteh to take&#13;
his place? Who is this new man?&#13;
?&#13;
business to know! Now when do you&#13;
faveh me with my engine?"&#13;
Thus the Rajah; and the chief clerk,&#13;
himself known from end to end of the&#13;
Colorado &amp; Grand River as1 a queller&#13;
of men, could only point out of the&#13;
window where the Rosemary stood&#13;
engined and equipped for the race, and&#13;
say, meekly: "I'm awfully sorry&#13;
you've been delayed, Mr. Darrah; very&#13;
sorry, indeed. But your car is ready&#13;
now. Shall I go along to be on hand&#13;
if you need me?"&#13;
"No, seh!" stormed the irate master;&#13;
and the chief clerk's face became instantly&#13;
expressive of the keenest relief.&#13;
"You stay right heah and see&#13;
that the wires to Qua'tz Creek are kept&#13;
open—wide open, seh. And when you&#13;
get an ordeh from me—for an engine,&#13;
a regiment of the National Gyua'd, or&#13;
a trainload of white elephants—you fill&#13;
it. Do you understand, seh?"&#13;
Meantime, while this scene was getting&#13;
itself enacted in the superintendent's&#13;
office, a mild fire of consternation&#13;
was alight in the gathering room of&#13;
the Rosemary. As we have guessed,&#13;
Winton's packet of mail was not the&#13;
A FLINT TRAGEDY.&#13;
The Result of a Drunken Carousal"&#13;
During the Night,&#13;
William H. Davis, 29 years old, a&#13;
member of one of the hfst known families&#13;
in Flint, ,was drowned at 3&#13;
o'clock Thursday morning in the mill&#13;
race of the Genesee Milling Co., at&#13;
Flint. The police believe he waa&#13;
pushed into the water by someone who&#13;
found him lying asleep on the bank.&#13;
A town loafer is suspected of rolling&#13;
him into the water.&#13;
Freeman Silver, night car Inspector&#13;
for the Grand Trunk railway, h«ard&#13;
cries, and on running to the bank saw&#13;
the body of Davis as it sank for the&#13;
last time. He says the form of another&#13;
man was plainly visible near the top&#13;
of the bank, and that be yelled to him&#13;
to throw the drowning man a plank.&#13;
Instead the figure disappeared over&#13;
the hill.&#13;
Investigation showed signs of a&#13;
struggle ^on the bank of the race. The&#13;
ground was trampled and the grass&#13;
twisted and mashed into the soft&#13;
earth. These marks extend down to&#13;
the very edge of the water, which at&#13;
this point runs 18 feet deep.&#13;
Davis and the man suspected were&#13;
seen together early in the evening&#13;
Don't know? d a m m i t , seh! it's youjL drinking in several, jaloons and walking&#13;
down the streets arm IB arm.&#13;
About 10 o'clock Davis left his companion&#13;
in a saloon and went home,&#13;
rejoining him about 12 o'clock. The&#13;
two men wandered out together, and&#13;
It is believed went to the bank of the&#13;
race to sleep.&#13;
What started the row in the early&#13;
morning no one knows, but the police&#13;
theory is that the men spent the night&#13;
alternately dozing and drinking, and&#13;
that toward morning they got into a&#13;
drunken bout which resulted in Davis&#13;
being thrown into the race. A bottle&#13;
containing alcohol, found in the trampled&#13;
grass, seems to bear out this&#13;
theory.&#13;
Give the average woman a button&#13;
»nd Bhe will want a dress to match It&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
ductor. "More likely he's a train master&#13;
'r p'raps a bigger boss than that.&#13;
Call in the flag, Jim, and we'll be getting&#13;
a move."&#13;
Oddly enough, the comment on Winton&#13;
did not pause with the encomiums&#13;
of the train crew. When the "Limited"&#13;
was once more rushing oh Its way&#13;
through the night, and Virginia and her&#13;
cousin were safely in the privacy of their&#13;
state-room, Miss Carteret added her&#13;
word.&#13;
"Do you know, Bessie, I think it was&#13;
Mr. Adams who scored this afternoon?"&#13;
she said.&#13;
"How so?" inquired la petite Bisque,&#13;
who was too sleepy to be overcurlous.&#13;
"I think he 'took a rise* out of me, as&#13;
he puts it. Mr. Winton is precisely all&#13;
the kinds of a man Mr. Adams said he&#13;
wasn't."&#13;
"DON'T KNOW?"&#13;
What was Mr. Somerville Darrah's "Didn't I see Uncle Somerville chargparticulur&#13;
rush? Asset forth by Adams, ' ing across to the telegraph office with&#13;
the plans of the party in the Rosemary ' war written out large in every line&#13;
contemplated nothing more hasteful j of him?"&#13;
than a leisurely trip to the Pacific coast "I am afraid you did," affirmed the&#13;
—a pleasure jaunt with a winter sojourn ; Reverend Billy; and thereupon the&#13;
„iAn California to lengthen it Why, then, explanation was rehearsed for Virthis&#13;
sudden change from" "Limited'' ]ginTa's benefit,&#13;
regular trains to unlimited specials? j T h e brown eyes flashed&#13;
Was there fresh news from the seat of .sympathy.&#13;
war in Quartz Creek canyon? Winton f&#13;
thought not. In that case he wojald have ]&#13;
had his budget as well; and so far as his&#13;
C H A P T E R nr.&#13;
It was late breakfast time when the&#13;
Transcontinental "Limited" swept&#13;
around the great curve in the eastern&#13;
fringe of Denver, paused for a registering&#13;
moment at "yard limits," and went&#13;
clattering in over the switches to come&#13;
to rest at the end of its long westward&#13;
run on the in-track at the Union depot.&#13;
Having wired ahead to have his mall&#13;
only one which was delivered by special&#13;
arrangement that morning to the&#13;
incoming 'Limited" at the yard registering&#13;
station. There had been another,&#13;
addressed to Mr. Somerville&#13;
Darrah; and when he had opened it&#13;
there had been a volcanic explosion&#13;
and a hurried dash for the telagraph&#13;
office, as recorded.&#13;
Sifted out by the Reverend Billy,&#13;
and explained by him to Mrs. Carteret&#13;
and Bessie, the firing spark of the explosion&#13;
appeared to be some news of&#13;
an untoward character from a place&#13;
vaguely designated as "the front."&#13;
"It seems that there is some sort of&#13;
a right-of-way scrimmage going on up&#13;
in the mountains between our road&#13;
and the Utah Short Line," s*aid the&#13;
young man. "It was carried into the&#13;
courts, and now it turns out that the&#13;
decision has gone against us."&#13;
"How perfectly horrid!" said Miss&#13;
Bessie. "Now I suppose we shall have&#13;
to stay, here indefinitely while Uncle&#13;
j Somerville does things." And placid&#13;
I Mrs! Carteret addej, plaintively: "It's&#13;
! too bad! I think they might let him&#13;
have one little vacation in peace."&#13;
"Who talks of peace?" queried Virginia,&#13;
driven in from her post of vantage&#13;
on the observation platform by&#13;
the smoke from the switching engine,&#13;
Detroit—Good milch cows are bring"*&#13;
ingr s t e a d y prices with last week, but&#13;
common g r a d e s a r e dull and h a r d to&#13;
sell. We quote: E x t r a dry-fed steera&#13;
and heifers, $5; steers and heifers, 1,000&#13;
to 1,200, $4 2 5 ^ 4 50; s t e e r s and heifers,&#13;
800 to 1,000, $3 50¾ 4; g r a s s steers and&#13;
heifers that are fat* 800 to 1.000. $3 50&#13;
(&amp;'4; g r a s s steers and heifers t h a t a r a&#13;
fat, 500 to 700, tl 75®3 25; choice fat&#13;
cows, $3 50@3 75; good fat cows, $ 3 9&#13;
3 35; common cows. $2 ,25(§3; canners,&#13;
}1 :&gt;i)'wl 35; chold1 heavy bulla, &lt;3@&#13;
U 25; fair to good bologna bulls, $2 75&#13;
*/'3; stock bulla, $2 fa 2 K5; choice feeding&#13;
steera, S00 to 1,000, $3 65 (S3 90;&#13;
fair feeding steers, S00 to 1,000, J3 25r&amp;&gt;&#13;
3 *jy; choice s toe Iter's, 500 to 700. $3 2!»&#13;
Ti 3 75; fair stockers, 500 to 700, $3©&#13;
3 2'5; stock heifers, $2 25&lt;g2 75; milkers,&#13;
large, young, medium age, $30®&#13;
45; common milkers, $13(8 25.&#13;
T h e v-eal calf trade Was, on th«&#13;
whole, about the same as last week.&#13;
They were a trirte dull at the opening,&#13;
took a brace up about noon and&#13;
dropped back at the close. A few&#13;
e x t r a fancy brought $*&gt; 75, but they&#13;
had to 1).? extra good.&#13;
S h e ^ p — One extra choice bunch&#13;
brought $7 75. but they were perfect&#13;
in every respect and could be made no&#13;
better. H a r l a n d bought them from the&#13;
Roe Commission Co. Best lambs, $7@&#13;
7 10; fair to good lambs. $6 50rg&gt;7.; light&#13;
to common lambs, $tj(a6 50; yearlings,&#13;
15 5t&gt;'&lt;i"5. fair to good butcher sheep.&#13;
$46 4 50; culls and common, $2 50&lt;5&gt;3.&#13;
H o g s — L i g h t to good b a t c h e r s , $6 60&#13;
fati 70; pigfs, $ti b"0; light yorkers, Jo' 60&#13;
'a ti 6 5.&#13;
militant&#13;
own advices went, matters were still&#13;
as they had been. A letter fronj the&#13;
Utah attorneys in Carbonate assured&#13;
him that the injunction appeal was not&#13;
yet decided, and another from Chief of&#13;
Construction Evarts concerned itself&#13;
"Oh, I wish Uncle Somerville would&#13;
go to 'the front,' wherever that is, and&#13;
take us along!" she cried. "It would&#13;
be ever so much better than California."&#13;
The Reverend William laughed; and&#13;
Aunt Martha put in her word of expostulation,&#13;
as in duty bound.&#13;
(TO B E C O N T I N U E D )&#13;
Chicago—Common to prime steers,&#13;
$4 25@ti.25i cows, $2 75® 4 50; heifers,&#13;
; : 7 5 » 5 25; hu'Az. *i 40@4 40; calves.&#13;
$6 fa) 7; stoekers and feeders. $2 60©&#13;
4 25.&#13;
Hoga—Market shade lower; choice to&#13;
prime heavy, $6 40&lt;£f6 50; medium to,&#13;
good heavy, $6 20(g&gt;6 35; b u t c h e r&#13;
w e i g h t s . $6 35&lt;#6 55; good to choice&#13;
heavy mixed, $6 25@6 35; p a c k i n g .&#13;
$5 75(55 6 30.&#13;
Sheep—Market firm for best, w e a k&#13;
for o t h e r s ; sheep, $4 25&lt;£5 60; yearlings,&#13;
$5a&gt;6; lambs, $ 6 0 7 75.&#13;
BLACKBERRYING.&#13;
While lying in the rifle pits, one j would move so that by the time the&#13;
day, before Port Hudson, says a wri- ball arrived where he was he was not&#13;
ter in the Vidette, I witnessed the cool- there. To show how good the confedest&#13;
performance I ever saw during the erate was with a rifle, the last shot he&#13;
war. Just across the road from where j made at the berrypicker will suffice.&#13;
I lay, behind a cotton bale, was a reg-1 After eating all the berries he cared&#13;
iilar jungle of blackberries, and they \ to, the soldier started across the road;&#13;
were nice ones, so very nice as to j and there the confederate had a clear&#13;
meet him at the yard limits registering ] tempt the appetite of a soldier, ?o sweep at him, and just as he got to the&#13;
station, Winton was ready to make a ; t n a t a e w a s bound to have some of j middle of the road fired; the soldier&#13;
dash for the telegraph office the moment ; t i i e m a t a11 events. So out he went stopped, and suddenly stepped back one&#13;
the train stopped. j tor the berries; but not long was he j step, and I saw the dust fly right in&#13;
"That is our wagon, ever there on the permitted to eat undisturbed, for he1 front of his foot, so if he had stood&#13;
narrow-gauge," he said to Adams, point-i was Quickly spied by a confederate j still instead of stepping back the ball&#13;
ing out the waiting mountain train. \ rifleman inside of the works, about 500 j would have struck right between his&#13;
"Have the porter transfer our dunnage, \ yards away, who soon sent his com-1 feet,&#13;
and I'll be with you as soon as I can send j Pliments to Mr. Berrypicker in the&#13;
a wire or two." | shape of a ball from his rifle. Nothhe&#13;
saw the yard crew cutting out the ing daunted, however, at such a trifle&#13;
as that, the fellow kept on eating berries,&#13;
In the rteftntime keeping a close&#13;
watch on the; breaatworks: and every&#13;
time he would ^ M a:putt, of smojge he&#13;
Rosemary,, and hqd a glimpse of MJsa&#13;
Virginia clinging to the hand-rail and&#13;
enjoying enthusiastically, he &gt; fancied,&#13;
Prolificacy of the Potato.&#13;
If there were but one potato in the&#13;
world, a careful cultivator might produce&#13;
10,000,000,000 from it in ten years,&#13;
and thus supply the world with seed&#13;
again.&#13;
E a s t Buffalo—Best export steers,&#13;
J5 25.125 50; beat- 1,200 to 1,300 pound&#13;
shippers steers, $4 65@5 10; best 1,000&#13;
to 1.100 pound do. $4 25@4 75; best fat&#13;
cows, $3 50® 4; fair to good, J3@3 25;&#13;
t r i m m e r s . $1 50; best fat heifers, $4 251¾&#13;
4 50; medium heifers. $3 25(2?3 50; best&#13;
feeding, $3 50(ft3 75; best y e a r l i n g&#13;
steers, J3 25@3 50; common stock&#13;
steers, $2 75@3; export bulls, $3 75@4;&#13;
bologna bulls, $2 50@3; light stock&#13;
bulls. J2 50@3. The cow m a r k e t wa»&#13;
about steady with last week's prices.&#13;
_.W«_£imale funcy^-$35@43; medium.- 1JL1-&#13;
@27; common, |1S@20. H o g s : M a r k e t&#13;
lower; medium and heavies, $6 95(S7;&#13;
mixed and y o r k e r s , ' $7@7 10; pigs,&#13;
$7 10@7 15; roughs. -'$5 95 0 6 ; stags,&#13;
$4 50@5 25. Sheep: M i i k n t a c t i v e ; top&#13;
lambs. $7 25@7 50; few at $7 75; culls,&#13;
$5 50(3&gt;6 25; yearlings, $6@6 25; best&#13;
sheep, %5 50@5 75; culls. $2 50@4 5-0;&#13;
ewes, | 4 75@5, Best calves. )6 75@7;&#13;
medium to Rood, $5 50@6 50; heavy,&#13;
13 50&lt;@5.&#13;
Grata, Etc. ,&#13;
D e t r o i t — W h e a t — C a s h No 2 red.&#13;
7 4 ^ c bid; September. 5.000 bu a t 75V*c.&#13;
12.000 bu at 75%c. 10.000 bu a t 75*40,&#13;
10.000 bu at 75%c, 5,000 bu a t 75%c,&#13;
5.000 bu at 75*4c; December. 20,000 bu&#13;
at 7 7 H c 15.000 bu at 77%c. 15.000 bu&#13;
a t 77*»c, 10,000 bu at 7 7 ^ c , 5.000 bu&#13;
at 77%c. 20.000 bu at 7 7 \ c , 10,000 bu&#13;
at 7 7 H c ; No. 3 red. 72%o; sample, 7 car&#13;
nt 7 l c ; mixed winter.^ 1 ear a t 73fto:&#13;
No. 1 white. 74%c bid.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, 1 e a r a t 53Vic. J&#13;
at 53»4c; No. 3 yellow, 3 c a r s a t 54?4c.&#13;
Oats—Cash No. 3 w h i t e , 39c bid;&#13;
new. 34c nominal, to a r r i v e , 2 c a r s a t&#13;
38c; September. 3 2 H e&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2. 1 e a r a t 57c; A u g -&#13;
ust. 1.000 bu at 57c.&#13;
Chicago—Cash q u o t a t i o n s : No. %&#13;
»prin*t w h e a t , 76@7fi^c; ^to^- i^ 10-fiL&#13;
76c: No. 2 red. 7l7 /»@72^e; No. 2 corn.&#13;
60V4C; No. 2 yellow. 51^51V*e; No. 2&#13;
oats. 30%c; No. 2 white. 31H@32c; No.&#13;
3 w h i t e , 30¼@32c; No. 2 rye, 56c; good&#13;
feeding barley, 35®39c; fair to choice&#13;
m a l t i n g . 42@46e; No. 1 flaxseed,&#13;
| 1 0 6 ½ ; No. 1 n o r t h w e s t e r n , ) 1 09½;&#13;
clover, contract grades, $12.&#13;
STEAMERS LKAVTXQ DBTKblT.&#13;
DITBOIT AND BUI"!1*LO STEAMBOAT Co., fOO»&#13;
of Wayne St., for Buffalo and th* East, dull? at c:iX) p. m. Sunday at 4:0 p. m. Weok Had&#13;
Lxcursior, te.i0round trip.&#13;
DBTBOXT AND CXJCVKLAND NAV. CO., foot of&#13;
Wayne St., for Cleveland, Pittsburg and Eastern&#13;
points, daily at 10:30 p. m. Week End Excursion&#13;
to Cleveland every Saturday, »2.00 round&#13;
trip.&#13;
W R I T E S T A B Lias, foot of Oriswold St. for.&#13;
Port Huron and way porta, datly at neos, m,&#13;
and £*i p. m., Suadav at 9:W a, n. For Toiada&#13;
HOW***.} ».»•,»». * •m — , v ?ii*w'iR*r't'' ,4m*££k*r 'i-v &gt;&gt;{o««4*''&#13;
«S"ih*i&#13;
•v.".'••.»;•• 4*.&#13;
" . . - • * . • : • &gt; • ; . • * • •&#13;
v»\&#13;
• : - % &amp; # *&#13;
V*1&#13;
**'&#13;
* :&#13;
••mor:^&#13;
&gt; \ &gt; . : •&#13;
"•'V •&#13;
v&#13;
%&#13;
i&#13;
I&#13;
;., t&#13;
I A^A^A^A^A*A&#13;
Imong Oifr Correspondents&#13;
SOUTH XAEIOH. Mr. Bush is entertaining his&#13;
Miss Flossie Pulver of Jackson grandsons this week.&#13;
WEST 3CABI01T.&#13;
Geo. D. Bullis has been having&#13;
his residence repaired.&#13;
Fred Merrils and wife have been&#13;
visiting friends in Lansing.&#13;
Those who attended the Old&#13;
Boys and Girls days, report having&#13;
a fine time.&#13;
Mrs. Anna Youngs of Ann&#13;
Arbor spent a few days at Mrs.&#13;
Will Miller's.&#13;
Mrs. Florence Dunwood of Clair&#13;
has been the guest of W. B. Miller&#13;
for a few days.&#13;
The LAS of this appointment&#13;
will meet Aug. 17, also the Fleniming&#13;
aid, at the home of Mrs.&#13;
Albert Miller.&#13;
is the guest of Miss Maud Pacey.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Abbott were&#13;
the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wm,&#13;
Blair last Sunday.&#13;
Guy and Edna 'Abbott visited&#13;
their sister, Mrs. Learn Newman of&#13;
Fleming last Friday and Saturday.&#13;
Several from this place attended&#13;
the Old Boys and Girls reunion at&#13;
Pinckney last Weenesday and&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
The lightening last Saturday&#13;
night killed a cow belonging to&#13;
John Carr besides doing slight&#13;
damages to the barn.&#13;
Miss Cathryne Brogan returned&#13;
to her home in this place last&#13;
Thursday after spending a few&#13;
weeks at the Summer Normal.&#13;
Prof. Tyler, of Amherst college, said&#13;
recently: "A man can live comfortably&#13;
without brains: no man ever lived&#13;
without a digestive system. The&#13;
dyspeptic has neither faith, hope or&#13;
charity." Day by day people realize&#13;
the importance of caring for their&#13;
digestion; realize the need of the use&#13;
of a littlee corrective after overeating.&#13;
A corrective like Kodol For Dyspepsia.&#13;
It digests what you eai.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist&#13;
Old maids wonld be scarce and hard&#13;
to find,&#13;
Could they be made to see,&#13;
How grace and beauty are combined&#13;
By using Rocky Mountain .Tea.&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
Gale Johnson visited at the&#13;
home of E. A. Sprout Thursday&#13;
last.&#13;
Geo. Sprout and family are&#13;
visiting Mary L. Sprout and other&#13;
relatives here.&#13;
Mrs. Clarence Powell and&#13;
daughters, Pauline and Louise, are&#13;
visiting relatives here.&#13;
Mary Sprout received word Saturday&#13;
of the deoth of Fred Sprout&#13;
son of Wm. Sprout, at Marthaville,&#13;
La., from cerebro-spinal&#13;
typhoid fever.&#13;
Scrub yourself daily, you're uot&#13;
clean inside. Clean insides means&#13;
clean stomach, bowels, blood, liver,&#13;
clean, healthy tissue in every organ.&#13;
Moral: Take Hollister's Rocky Mountain&#13;
Tea. 35 cents, tea or tablets.&#13;
Ask your drUggist.&#13;
Subscribe for the Pinckney Dispatch.&#13;
All the news for $1.00 per year.&#13;
• Business Pointers. t&#13;
Detroit&#13;
E. W.&#13;
Electa&#13;
a few&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Miss Franc Burch of&#13;
spent Sunday with Mrs.&#13;
Kennedy.&#13;
The Misses Ruth and&#13;
Mortenson are spending&#13;
weeks in Toledo. '&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Peek of Fowlerville&#13;
were entertained at E. W.&#13;
Kennedy's a couple of days last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hicks and&#13;
Cow, Incubator and Brooder, Coal M r. and Mrs. Charles and daughter&#13;
Stove anrrOoolrStove atecrafew-pota—Elorence__were_ with_ relatives i n&#13;
rom BAUD.&#13;
Four seven weeks-old pigs.&#13;
Thos. Burchiel.&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
E m m a Gardner is entertaining&#13;
her friend, Miss Irene Dupuis, of&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Webb of&#13;
Bay City were guests at H. B.&#13;
Gardder's the past week.&#13;
' Nellie Gardner and Fannie&#13;
Monks spent Saturday and Sunday&#13;
with Miss Jennie McGuiness&#13;
of Dexter.&#13;
Mrs. Conroy and daaghter who&#13;
have been spending a couple of&#13;
weeks at Mrs. Cooper's have returned&#13;
to Detroit.&#13;
During the severe electric storm&#13;
here Saturday night, J o h n Dunbar&#13;
had the misfortune to lose&#13;
several sheep by lightening.&#13;
Chas. Holmes and family and&#13;
Clarence Bennet and wife of Lansing&#13;
were entertained at the home&#13;
of Kirk VanWinkle last week.&#13;
Dr. C. B. Gardner and family of&#13;
Kiverdale and Mrs. Ray Backus&#13;
ane daughter Coriune, of Lansing&#13;
spent the&#13;
Gardner's.&#13;
past wee|t at H . B.&#13;
toes. Going to leave the village&#13;
Yates Burch.&#13;
To Exchange—A nice house and lot&#13;
worth |800 in the railroad center of&#13;
Dnrand for a house in Pinckney.&#13;
Mrs. Edith Olrich,&#13;
t 33 Durand, Mich.&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
Pure cider vinegar.&#13;
Mrs. Maud Carpenter.&#13;
ROTICB.&#13;
The time has been extended on the&#13;
tax roll until Sept. 1. This is positively&#13;
the last extention so let ail taxpayers&#13;
take notice. Ma/ion Reason.&#13;
Village Treas.&#13;
this place recently.&#13;
E. W. Lake of Forest Hill was.&#13;
the guest of his parents here last&#13;
week and also attended the old&#13;
boys reunion at Pinckney,&#13;
Mrs. Mary "Whitcomb and Miss&#13;
Abbie Hedger of Claremont, S.&#13;
Dak., were guests of Mrs. J. R.&#13;
Hall a couple of days last week.&#13;
Mrs. J. S. Fitch entertained&#13;
Mrs. D. Bennet of Fowlerville,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Bennet of Lan-&#13;
Grangers meet with Jas. Foster&#13;
Friday"^*ming, Aug. 10.&#13;
COLLINS PLAINS&#13;
Fred Bowdish is in poor health*&#13;
Wirt Ives and wife visited his&#13;
parents in Chelsea Sunday.&#13;
Geo. Goodwin's people entertained&#13;
company over Sunday.&#13;
Little Howard Mackiuder spent&#13;
last Thursday at W. B. Collins'.&#13;
Miss Inez Collins returned Sunday&#13;
from a two week* visit in&#13;
Toledo.&#13;
Will Stowe, who is caring for&#13;
Will Cone of Gregory, was home&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
A load of young people from&#13;
Chelsea spent Sunday at A. C.&#13;
Collin's of/Stockbridge.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Daley's little daughter&#13;
had the ends of two fingers&#13;
bitten of by a horse last week.&#13;
The Sunday schools of Unadilla&#13;
will hold their annual picnic at&#13;
North Lake in the near future.&#13;
A. C. Watson and family and&#13;
Miss Kate Collins left last Friday&#13;
for a few weeks outing at North&#13;
Lake.&#13;
The Misses Florence and Grace&#13;
Collins returned Saturday from a&#13;
weeks visit with relatives in Eaton&#13;
Rapids.&#13;
Mr. Spaulding of Chelsea accompanied&#13;
by his son and brother&#13;
spent last Thursday at W. J.&#13;
Pickell's.&#13;
Mr- and Mrs. Geo. Marshall and&#13;
little son of Plainfield spent t h e&#13;
latter part of last week visiting&#13;
friends here.&#13;
ART OF CONVERSATION.&#13;
ADDITIONAL LOCAL&#13;
S p o n t a n e i t y la a &gt; e c e » « * r y I n g r e d i -&#13;
e n t of Enffafflaff T a l k .&#13;
'"What I wish," says an essayist In&#13;
Comhill Muguzlue, "is that people&#13;
would apply the same sort of seriousness&#13;
to talk that they apply to guif;&#13;
that they should desire to improve their&#13;
game, brood over their mistakes, try&#13;
to dp better. Why is It that so many&#13;
people would think it priggish and effeminate&#13;
to try to improve their talk&#13;
and yet think it manly and rational to&#13;
try to shoot better? Of course it must&#13;
be done with a natural zest and enjoyment&#13;
or it is useless.&#13;
"What a ghastly picture one gets of&#13;
the old fashioned talkers and wits,&#13;
committing a number of subjects to&#13;
memory when they are dressing for&#13;
dinner and then turning over a commonplace&#13;
book' for apposite anecdotes&#13;
and jests, ;uldlng datus to those selected&#13;
that thvy may not tell the same&#13;
story again too soon, learning up a list&#13;
of epigrams, stuck in a shaving glass,&#13;
sallying forth primed to bursting with&#13;
conversation!&#13;
"It is all very well to know beforehand&#13;
the kind of line you would wish&#13;
to take, but spontaneity is a necessary&#13;
ingredient of talk, and to make up_&#13;
one's mind to get certain stories in is&#13;
to deprive talk of its fortuitous charm."&#13;
Mrs. Mark Bell is under the doctor's&#13;
care.&#13;
Mra. Amanda LaKue is veiy ill with&#13;
typhoid fever.&#13;
Geo. Green and family visited in&#13;
Detroit this week.&#13;
Miss Lillian Boyle is spending a few&#13;
wdeks in Cadillac and Petoskey.&#13;
We are glad to note that Mrs. Walter&#13;
Sharland is able to ride ont a little.&#13;
Bert Reason has purchased the&#13;
Burch place and will move there in&#13;
the near future.&#13;
Saturday. Aug. 11, at tbe depot&#13;
grounds the.Iosco and Pinckney ball&#13;
teams will cross bats tor $25 00.&#13;
The Anderson Farmers' club will&#13;
hold a basket picnic at Van Winkle's&#13;
grove SaturdayLAUST. 11* Everybody&#13;
invited.&#13;
Miss Alice Ewen was able to get&#13;
out to tbe reunion last week, the first&#13;
time she has been down town in several&#13;
months. /&#13;
Many from here attended tbe music&#13;
recital Wednesday afternoon, by tbe&#13;
pupils of Miss Emma Wright at her&#13;
home in Stockbridge.&#13;
Mrs. Koy Darwin and son of Northville,&#13;
Mrs. Paisley and Miss Fry of&#13;
Detroit, were the guests of F. A.&#13;
Sigler and family Monday.&#13;
The ladies of the Cong'l church will&#13;
serve supper at the opera house, Wednesday&#13;
afternoon, Aug. 15, from 5&#13;
until all are served. Everybody invited.&#13;
Gov, Warner has signified b*s intention&#13;
to be present at tbe catholic&#13;
picnic at Chelsea. Aug. 22. If he&#13;
says be will be there it will take con*&#13;
siderable to keep him away.&#13;
Duringtheelectricstorm Saturday&#13;
evening a barn belonging to Joseph&#13;
Busb, west of this village was struck&#13;
by lightening and burned to the&#13;
ground together with a stack of rye.&#13;
Homer Warren, postmaster of Detroit,&#13;
and his assistant, Lucius Wilson,&#13;
and his wife were at Howell Saturday&#13;
with an auto. They took supper with&#13;
Mr. Wilion's sister, Mrs. L. E. Howlett&#13;
and then went on to the Wilson borne&#13;
at Anderson .—Livingston Repuplican-&#13;
Arrangements have been made for&#13;
the annual meeting and basket picnic&#13;
of the Livingston County Soldiers'&#13;
and Sailors' association. The meeting&#13;
is to be held at Howell, Saturday,&#13;
August 25th, on the court bouse lawn.&#13;
The program will be largely informal&#13;
and a general good time is expected.&#13;
All old soldiers witb their wives and&#13;
sweethearts are invited and urged to&#13;
be present. The committee of&#13;
arrangements expect to have a martial&#13;
band in attendance.&#13;
Died Ang. 3, 1906, aged 91 yejra&#13;
and 6 months. Martha Ana Davit&#13;
was born at Tyrone, Btuben Go., N. Y„&#13;
June 22,1815. The a&gt;ughter of J M .&#13;
and Esther Davis. She came with bejr&#13;
father*a-iami!y to^4ichigan&gt; in 193«&#13;
and settledTh ffclflown^fcip ot Hamburg.&#13;
She was married to S. D.&#13;
Salmon and settled upon tbe farm&#13;
where the remaining years of her life&#13;
were passed.&#13;
To this union were given 3 daughters&#13;
and 1 son. She was a faithful&#13;
and consistent member of the N. Hamburg&#13;
Cong'l church from her early&#13;
days.&#13;
Bearing patiently the infermities of&#13;
age, she waited peacefully till her&#13;
change came. She was lovingly cared&#13;
for by her daughter, Mrs. Haddock&#13;
during the time of her illne*s.&#13;
Bless)d are the dead who die in the&#13;
Lord.&#13;
The funeral took place Sunday afternoon&#13;
at N. Hamburg church.&#13;
Burial in the parish cemetery.&#13;
CAM) OF THAHXS.&#13;
We wish to extned our sincere&#13;
thanks to all our friends who have in&#13;
so many ways expressed their sympathy&#13;
in thoughtful word and ministration,&#13;
during tbe sickness and burial of&#13;
our dear mother. We would especially&#13;
thank those who by their many&#13;
kind deeds and beautiful floral offerings&#13;
during those last days showed&#13;
theii&gt; love farther. We would also&#13;
thank our pastor for his words of comfort&#13;
and appropriate music.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Haddock.&#13;
Piano Recital&#13;
Given at the home of their&#13;
teacher, Miss Sarah Taylor, near&#13;
Dexter, Wednesday afternoon,&#13;
Aug. 8. Every number on the&#13;
program was w«ll rendered, showing&#13;
the careful and excellent&#13;
training of their teacher. T h e&#13;
following program was played:&#13;
A Om»M o f Wlfrd.&#13;
The origin of tbe phrase, "A capful&#13;
of -wind," can be traced to a Norse&#13;
king, Eric VI., who died in 907 A. D.&#13;
He was credited with the useful power&#13;
of directing the wind to blow where he&#13;
wished by the stmple method of turning&#13;
his cap to that point of the compass.&#13;
His powers wejte much appreciated&#13;
and trusted and'resulted in his&#13;
being known as "windy cap." There Is&#13;
no evidence as to whether he could regulate&#13;
the force of the wind as well as&#13;
Wanted—To buy a team weigbt&#13;
1,200 or 1,260, five or six years old.&#13;
Mark Swarthout.&#13;
tbe direction. Presumably be could, or&#13;
sing and Mr. Geo. Stocking of Ms faithful believers would not have&#13;
been so many. A "bagful of wind" Is&#13;
another common expression and Indicates&#13;
something like a gale. This has&#13;
been traced down to the classical leg-&#13;
People Are Warned&#13;
not to pick berries in tbe swamps&#13;
formerly known as Mulgrove or Gallager.&#13;
H. F. Kice.&#13;
FOB MAIM.&#13;
Two nice lots on Main street, with&#13;
fine shade. And door and window&#13;
frames sufficient for fair sized house.&#13;
22 tf H. W.Crofoot&#13;
Durand last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Stanton of&#13;
Chelsea, together with Mrs.&#13;
Scheonhals and children, were&#13;
^ith-their parents, R. W. Lake&#13;
and wife from Wednesday till&#13;
Friday.&#13;
end of Aeolus and&#13;
confined tn bags. his captive winds&#13;
PLAINFIELD.&#13;
S. G. Topping and wife visted j Jala&#13;
with the Old Boys and Girls at&#13;
Pinckney last week.&#13;
The ladies' aid will be at George&#13;
Phillip's home Friday afternoon,&#13;
| Aug. 17. All are invited.&#13;
L. J. Bisdon, an experienced&#13;
blacksmUh is prepared to do your&#13;
Celleetta* » Bill.&#13;
• claim was once placed in the hands&#13;
•f Judge Peters of Bangor, Ma, for&#13;
oollection. A. notice was sent to the&#13;
debtor, who called and promised to pay&#13;
the following Saturday. The judge&#13;
"Now, don't say you will pay&#13;
Satufdny night unless you mean to.&#13;
Just take a few more days and be sure.&#13;
Bay you will pay next Wednesday."&#13;
"All right," said the man; "if I live until&#13;
next Wednesday I will pay that&#13;
bill." Wednesday came, but no man&#13;
appeared to settle the bill, whereupon&#13;
the judge wrote out a notice of the&#13;
death of tbe man. and put it in the daily&#13;
work in Jas. Walker's shop here, stttlad.&#13;
Young Mens Club&#13;
I have told you the story that I&#13;
always myself cherish and best-remember&#13;
from the lips of that great friend&#13;
and true teacher_oiyoung men, Henry&#13;
Drummond, in the days I knew&#13;
him in Scotland. I have never for*&#13;
gotten it.&#13;
A lady called him in to speak to her&#13;
coachman who had given way to drink&#13;
and Henry Drummond said he did not&#13;
like to be called in like this to be&#13;
asked to argue with people of a sudden&#13;
and try to cure their souls, but be felt&#13;
it was a case demanding christian&#13;
intervention, so he plucked up courage&#13;
and went ont to talk to the man.&#13;
He put the problem to him: "Suppose&#13;
you were driving and your horses ran&#13;
away down hill and you lost all control&#13;
over them, what would you do?"&#13;
"Oh!" aaid the man, "I dould do&#13;
nothing."&#13;
"Yes," said Drummond, "but suppose&#13;
there were someone sitting by&#13;
you who could control them, what&#13;
would you'do?"&#13;
"OhV he said, "I would hand him&#13;
tbe reins, sir."&#13;
"Oh," said Drummond. "your life&#13;
has rnn away with you your appetites&#13;
and passions and lusts are carrying&#13;
you down hill and you in your own&#13;
strength cannot control your life,&#13;
But man believe me he said there is&#13;
one at your side stronger than yon&#13;
who oners to take control of yonr&#13;
life and make it what it should be.&#13;
What will you do?"&#13;
And the man seeing the point said,&#13;
"Sir, I will give him the reins."&#13;
Pres.&#13;
" • ! • *&#13;
• :t&#13;
I V&#13;
.' ft.&#13;
• V U i f&#13;
'.V&#13;
* * * .&#13;
• ! J &amp; J * ' ' ' ' '•'*''&gt;••&#13;
Iii the Clo'ster&#13;
Bliette&#13;
Duet&#13;
Play in a;&#13;
.Mabel Estahrook&#13;
Rose Stuarri&#13;
Mllitair* March&#13;
Julia and Bertha Jedele&#13;
Soldier&#13;
Laura Smith&#13;
Swing-Sony&#13;
Duet&#13;
Grace Walsh&#13;
s&#13;
.Miss Taylor, Mary Nanry&#13;
Triumphal Polka&#13;
Walt/&#13;
Duet&#13;
In Rank&#13;
Waltz&#13;
Maude Coe&#13;
Mabel Kenzle&#13;
Festival March&#13;
Lange&#13;
DuYfrnoy&#13;
Behr&#13;
Hirach&#13;
Hullak&#13;
MaylatD&#13;
Losey&#13;
Streabbojj&#13;
Tellman&#13;
Miss Taylor, Mabel Estabrook&#13;
and File&#13;
Louise Brucklacher&#13;
Lottie Parsons&#13;
Firelight Dance&#13;
Duet&#13;
Dreams c&#13;
Mareh&#13;
W a l t z -&#13;
Duct&#13;
Maiden's&#13;
Keverie&#13;
Cniderell&#13;
Ida Armbrutter&#13;
0 &gt; r the Lawn&#13;
Miss Taylor, Laura Smith&#13;
f Youth&#13;
Mre. F. Haist&#13;
Ethel Tucker&#13;
Olive Frey&#13;
Miss Taylor, Louise Feklkam&#13;
Dream&#13;
Ha/el Mer-rll&#13;
KiUa Zeeti&#13;
a Walt/&#13;
IVH Wood&#13;
Heyacireth March&#13;
Duet&#13;
Alma Brown&#13;
La Grace&#13;
Mis8 Taylor, Mra. Haist&#13;
Curly Head March&#13;
Lit Foulai&#13;
Piano Sol&#13;
Caprice&#13;
Eta Kraeny&#13;
lie&#13;
Julia .Tedele&#13;
n&#13;
Mildred Home&#13;
Pearl Wheeler&#13;
Vocal Solo&#13;
Reverie&#13;
March&#13;
Duet&#13;
Ha/el Martin&#13;
•4&#13;
Esther Sutton&#13;
-&#13;
Martha Fr.»y&#13;
tjui Vivi&#13;
Miss Taylor, Mabel KBtabrooit&#13;
Lange&#13;
Husewif&#13;
Jones&#13;
Haud&#13;
HamlaU&#13;
Lybach&#13;
Kosewlg&#13;
Sartorio&#13;
P&#13;
Heins&#13;
Kennedy&#13;
Hen.schel&#13;
Meacham&#13;
Bohm&#13;
Holeomb&#13;
Bohm&#13;
Selected&#13;
Roeenfeld&#13;
Selected&#13;
itanachel&#13;
Ganz&#13;
- -&#13;
»&#13;
&gt;' .&#13;
Why does the sun burn ? Why does&#13;
a mosquito sting? Why do we feel&#13;
unhappy in the good old summer&#13;
time? Answer: we don't. We use&#13;
DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve, and&#13;
tbese little ills don't bother us. Learn&#13;
to look for the name on the box to get&#13;
the genuine.&#13;
Bold by F. A. Bigltr, DruggftiL&#13;
DaWKf* JK» Safe*&#13;
#&#13;
* &amp; . ' • &gt;&#13;
.VN\&#13;
*-,-* ^m-.^fmf'nm^ v ,vV vflpTvm "^Sfltr.</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch August 09, 1906</text>
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                <text>August 09, 1906 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>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. XXI7. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 1906. No. 33&#13;
LOCAL, NEWS.&#13;
8t. 'oseph county observes "home&#13;
coming week" beginning Aug. 20.&#13;
. Mrs. J . J . Parker is spending a lew&#13;
fhgf with her husband at St. Johns.&#13;
T i e annual picnic of St. Mary's&#13;
parish is being held at Jackson's&#13;
grove today.&#13;
The postrftice at Howell has been&#13;
fitted up with new boxes and other&#13;
new fixtures.&#13;
Miss Florence Anerews visited her&#13;
aunt, Mr*. David Stoddard in Oak&#13;
Grove over Sunday.&#13;
Albert Miller, ot tbe U. S. Navy,&#13;
who formerly lividwest of tlrs place&#13;
is visiting at the home, of Fred&#13;
Burgess.&#13;
Eddie Sickle and his friend Gerald&#13;
Cox of Rochester, N. Y,, are spending&#13;
their vacation with his uncle, Cbae. H,&#13;
Stickle and family.&#13;
Rev. H . W , Hicks and wife of Dixboro,&#13;
are spending a tew weeks at the&#13;
cottage on Base lake. Mrs. H. wa9&#13;
the guest of Mrs. H. F. Sigler over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Marks, of Detroit,&#13;
were the guest of their daughter, Mrs.&#13;
Littlejobn at the M. E, parsonage, the&#13;
last ot last week.&#13;
" During the pasH wxr weeKs we bays&#13;
- heard many complimentary remarks&#13;
on the cement walks in this village.&#13;
They give the place a substantial look&#13;
as well as a clean one.&#13;
George Teeplo and tamily left last&#13;
Friday for Stillwater, Minn , to visit&#13;
their daughter, Mrs. Frank Wolfer,&#13;
also to make the acquaintance of their&#13;
grandson, George,&#13;
Assessment 86 of the L 0 T M M is&#13;
now due and must be paid on or&#13;
before Aug. 81. Carrie Wilson, F. K.&#13;
Cow^V CWcVv&#13;
SUNDAY, AUGUST 19&#13;
Citizens' Lecture Course&#13;
t&amp;ottvVtvty Seme* a&amp; uaue\&#13;
\0;SO&#13;
It is a pleasure to announce that the&#13;
people of Pinckney and vicinity are to&#13;
be given the benefit of a first class&#13;
lecture course during the season of&#13;
1906—7. The following ta'ent from&#13;
the Labadie Bureau of Detroit has&#13;
been secured,&#13;
No. 1, in November—Mr^and Mrs.&#13;
Francis Labadie in their unique character&#13;
impersonations from well known&#13;
plays.&#13;
No. 2, in December—Hon. Webster&#13;
Davis, an orator, whom to know and&#13;
hear helps people to a higher, broader,&#13;
more sympathetic appreciation of life's&#13;
opportunities and responsibility s.&#13;
During President MeKinley's career&#13;
Mr. Davis was selected to represent&#13;
him at several impressive functions&#13;
and was styled "The Administration&#13;
Orator.1'&#13;
No. 3, in January—Lynn Shaw's&#13;
Ladies Orchestra, consisting of six&#13;
ladies who play'the instruments—&#13;
violin, cornet, clarinet, trombone,&#13;
mandolin and piano. One of the&#13;
members is a whistler and reader.&#13;
This attraction alone is worth the&#13;
price of the course tickets.&#13;
No. 4, in February—Clarence E.&#13;
Maxfield, a lecturer of Scotch-Irish&#13;
decent, whosp purpose in lecturing is&#13;
ttf help men and^women in tfretrttrug-"&#13;
gle for success, Bis true christian&#13;
sympathy and love for everything that&#13;
will purify, brighten and ennoble&#13;
humanity, added to his keen, inherited&#13;
wit, dramatic eloquence and power of&#13;
vivid description make him a lecturer&#13;
who will please, instruct and help.&#13;
No. 5, in March-The Old Homestead&#13;
Male Quartette. Nothing is&#13;
more dear to the heart than tbe words&#13;
"Old Homestead" and this renouned&#13;
combination of male voices will easily&#13;
bear out any artistic opinion previously&#13;
formed.&#13;
Their repertoire consists of both&#13;
classical and popular music which&#13;
experience enables them to render in&#13;
such manner as to please the most&#13;
exacting audience.&#13;
The business men have agreed tc cooperate&#13;
in a sale of tickets ku this&#13;
course, the sale will begin at once and&#13;
we want the entire seating capacity of&#13;
the opera house sold before the first of&#13;
Oct:ber, therefore be pleased to purchase&#13;
your tickets of the best looking&#13;
man or woman who first gives you an&#13;
opportunity. Get your seat reserved&#13;
and look forward* to a rare treat this&#13;
coming winter.&#13;
Stop Turtle Catching.&#13;
Farmers near Battle Creek are en*&#13;
deavoring to stop the turtle industry.&#13;
For some time a gang of men, living&#13;
in tents, has been catching turtles in&#13;
the lakes, with bail and trap, shipping&#13;
them in crates to Philadelphia.&#13;
It has proven a profitable industry,&#13;
#but the farmers say that since tbe&#13;
turtles have gone their stock refuse to&#13;
drink from the lakes. Turtles are&#13;
natural scavengers, eating frogs,&#13;
snakes, dead fish, etc, and their destructson&#13;
is making the water foul&#13;
and impure. The farmere, therefore,&#13;
intend to stop the industry if they can.&#13;
Parties visit tbe lakesjin this vicinity&#13;
and the pond in the village annually&#13;
and take several tons of turtle, shipping&#13;
them to eastern points.&#13;
Pioneer P i c n i c&#13;
All old pioneers of the county are&#13;
especially invited to attend the pioneer&#13;
picnic at Howell Aug. 24. All who&#13;
are 70 years of age or upwards are&#13;
requested to report at the office ol&#13;
register oi deeds in the court house,&#13;
where all tbe vice presidents of tbe&#13;
society, assisted by James H. Worthington&#13;
of Handy and Albert D.&#13;
Thompson, will be found as a recepiiotf-&#13;
eommiAtee. Sfla.ts.-w.ill be^reserved&#13;
for all these people at all programs.&#13;
The progiam came too late tor publication&#13;
in full but is excellent, At&#13;
9:30 a. m. there will be a band concert&#13;
on the court house lawn by the International&#13;
Pipe and Drum band of Detroit&#13;
and Windsor in Highland costume&#13;
and they will also give exhibitions&#13;
of national dances of Scotland.&#13;
Curtis band ot Fowlerville will also&#13;
be present and participate in a concert&#13;
i at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
Hon. G. A. Gearhart will deliver&#13;
the address of the day, subject, ''The&#13;
Footprints of the Centuries."&#13;
The Perre Marquette Ry, will sell&#13;
Tickets to Howell for pioneer picnic,&#13;
Aug. 24, good to return Aug. 25, from&#13;
ail station between and including&#13;
Lansing and Plymouth for 1 £ fare&#13;
for round trip.&#13;
The A. A. Ry, will sell on same&#13;
terms net ween and including Byron&#13;
and Whitmore Lake.&#13;
Sunday school and pastor's class for&#13;
Young Men and Women at&#13;
A Cordial Welcome to All&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
Mid-Summer Clearing. Sale&#13;
f '&gt;&#13;
« ~ •&#13;
I s Now On&#13;
^&gt;- V?e are selling all our Fancy Chi-&#13;
M, Lamps and Water Sets at cost&#13;
x ... in- order to make room for new&#13;
Goods. Decidedly low prices are&#13;
made all through the store. For&#13;
^ instance:&#13;
1 lb A. AH, Soda for 3c&#13;
45 yd Spool Black Darning Cotton for lc&#13;
Four 200 yd Spools Thread for 5c&#13;
E A. BOWMAN.&#13;
HOWELL'S BUSI STORE&#13;
A N e w Record&#13;
Judge Montage has inaugurated a&#13;
new system of bonds in the Prob.te&#13;
Office. The law requires that all&#13;
bonds in that office should be renewed&#13;
every five years. When estates run&#13;
along for some time the bonds are put&#13;
away in the tiles and their time of&#13;
running is forgotten. One or two&#13;
cases have come up when th« rights ot&#13;
people have been lost because the&#13;
bonds hsd expired and no new ones&#13;
had been given. Judge Montague&#13;
has put in a newTegister in which ail&#13;
bonds are recorded with the time when&#13;
they expire. All tbe old files have&#13;
been gone over and the record brought&#13;
up it is then comparatively an easy&#13;
matter as they run from mouth to&#13;
month, to see what bonds expire and&#13;
secure their renewals. It was a lot&#13;
ot work to dig up the files and get the&#13;
book started but it was a good thing&#13;
to do.&#13;
All bonds which have expired since&#13;
J udge Montague came into office have&#13;
been renewed and the older ones are&#13;
now being looked after.—Livingston&#13;
tidings.&#13;
S. T. Grimes returned to Topeka,&#13;
Kan. Monday after spending a month&#13;
with his parents here.&#13;
Workmen have been in town the&#13;
past week repairing the Mutual telephone&#13;
lines and putting in a large&#13;
cable which was much needed. The&#13;
KneTare growTngTast and the company&#13;
are bound to keep up with the&#13;
times.&#13;
W. 0. Richards, secretary of the&#13;
Livingston Mutual Telephone Co.,&#13;
was here a couple of days last week&#13;
arranging copy and completing&#13;
arrangements for the publication of a&#13;
i new directory cf the company. The&#13;
- DISPATCH was awarded the printing of&#13;
tbe book and work has commenced.&#13;
The book will be a complete directory&#13;
of tbe Mutual and connections in tbe&#13;
county and will be up to date to the&#13;
time the copy was received at tbe&#13;
printing office.&#13;
HARD&#13;
C O A L&#13;
H. F. Sigler was in Detroit Saturday.&#13;
Eyerybody interested in the Gilks&#13;
cemetery are requested to meet there&#13;
Friday, Aug. 17, in the afternoon lor&#13;
the purpose of cleaning oat the same.&#13;
We have two&#13;
of Hard Coal&#13;
a l r e a d y I D&#13;
stock. Can deliver&#13;
promptly&#13;
T h r e a h i n * C o a l&#13;
6. W. REASON &amp; SON&#13;
Miss Ethel Graham went Monday to&#13;
Cement City to spend a few weeks.&#13;
GuyTeeph took ia the hardware&#13;
conyention at Detroit the latter part&#13;
of last week.&#13;
F. A. Sigler was in Detroit the last&#13;
of last week buying fancy china lor&#13;
the holiday trade.&#13;
C. W. Webb and wife, of Bay City&#13;
were guests of their many friends&#13;
here the past week.&#13;
Orville Topper and family of Ann&#13;
Arbor, were the guests of relatives&#13;
here the past week.&#13;
Miss Hill &lt;"&gt;f Pleasant Valley has&#13;
been the guest of Percy Swarthout&#13;
and tamily the patt week.&#13;
J. A. Cad well, wife and son, Ruel&#13;
and Mrs. F. A. Sigler are spending a&#13;
few weeks with relatives in Stillwater&#13;
Minn.&#13;
H. H. Swarthout and wife visited&#13;
at the home of bis sister, Mrs. Chas.&#13;
Rolison in Hamburg tbe last of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Geo. Reason and tamily went to&#13;
Detroit Friday last in the auto to&#13;
attend the Michigan Hardware convention.&#13;
Jas. Greene and wifi, who have been&#13;
camping at the lake several days, returned&#13;
to their home at Howell the&#13;
first of the week. _.&#13;
M. E. Church Notes.&#13;
Mrs. Theron Arnold and daughter&#13;
of Three Rivers, was the guest of her&#13;
sister, Mrs. Geo. Sigler and other&#13;
relatives here the past week.&#13;
C. P. Sykes is again under the' doctor's&#13;
care. He was with a party at&#13;
the lake camping and was taken sick'&#13;
and bad to be brought home.&#13;
Mrs. Hugh Clark, Sr. called en her&#13;
daughters Tn-town-Mroinfay. -&#13;
Peter Coniway and wife visited&#13;
relatives in Fowlerville the past week.&#13;
Pickpockets are busy at Lakeland&#13;
among the crowd of Sunday excursionists.&#13;
Dr. Watkins, ot Howell, who&#13;
has a cottage at the lake, while assisting&#13;
a friend on the train was relieved&#13;
of $10.00&#13;
If your tJQse needs painting, paint it now—this fall—with TH£ 8 HER WINWILLIAMS&#13;
PAINT. Here are some of the reasons why you should do so.&#13;
1. The weather is settled and you&#13;
don't have to contend with the&#13;
spring rains.&#13;
2. You will protect it against the&#13;
winter's snows and storms.&#13;
3. You wilt, avoid the. annoyance&#13;
of gn JUS .flies, and other insects&#13;
sticking to t'.ie surface.&#13;
4. Ther* is likely to be less moisture&#13;
in it now than any other&#13;
time; moisture is what often&#13;
causes blistering, cracking, and&#13;
6.&#13;
like troubles.&#13;
S. W. P. costs less by the Job&#13;
than any other paint because&#13;
it wears longest, covers most,&#13;
looks best, and is most economical.&#13;
S. W. P. is best because it's&#13;
made from best materials—pur "&#13;
lead, pyre zinc, and pure In.&#13;
s**d oil. It always satisfies;&#13;
never goes wrong if righty&#13;
used.&#13;
— SOLO »V&#13;
Teeple Hardware Go*&#13;
Every seat was filled at both the&#13;
morning and evening services, except&#13;
j a few at the very front, and all the&#13;
extra chairs were taken in the rear of&#13;
J tbe church. They were good audienjces&#13;
and appreciated the services. In&#13;
I the eyening the pastor spoke on the&#13;
j subject, "Face to Face With Jesus."&#13;
I It was an able sermon and should be&#13;
I productive of good.&#13;
j The Sunday school is still on the&#13;
increase, there being just an even 100&#13;
present Sunday and the collection&#13;
amounted to $1.61. The lessons are&#13;
proving exceptionally interesting and&#13;
all members are giving good attention.&#13;
With the present c^rps ot efficient&#13;
officers and teachers the school should&#13;
be a power for good in the church.&#13;
Let all help keep up the interest.&#13;
Services as usual next Sunday. No&#13;
special subject is announced but it will&#13;
be of interest to be present, There&#13;
nil! -^certainly be something worth&#13;
hearing.&#13;
Everyone will Le made welcome to&#13;
all the services of the church so invite&#13;
your friends and others who are not&#13;
in tbe habit of attending church elsewhere,&#13;
to come with you.&#13;
y&#13;
'ywi&#13;
\mTAjil?&lt; VJtk_.,*•'.*. .i«^&#13;
•' •^sne.^n'^'.yM-;&#13;
&gt;--..w- -.;,.,&#13;
;-ar MuHky "appiy&#13;
EVENTS NOTES&#13;
HERE ARE SOME MORE PRIMARY&#13;
LAW DECISIONS FOR STUDY.&#13;
HEARD DRIP OF BLOOD.&#13;
Michigan Troops in a Sham Battle-&#13;
Various Things le and About the&#13;
State.&#13;
A New Decision.&#13;
Attorney General Bird has decided&#13;
that a person enrolled as an '•independent"&#13;
may circulate petitions for&#13;
nomination to office on the Republican&#13;
ticket, holding that the law cannot deprive&#13;
any elector of the right to become&#13;
a candidate fou office in any&#13;
party.&#13;
A name_appearing on two petitions&#13;
for the same-office should not he&#13;
counted for either party, as county&#13;
clerks should not be required to solve&#13;
the proposition of the intent of any&#13;
petitioner.&#13;
The Twenty-sixth and Twenty-seventh&#13;
senatorial districts declared for&#13;
primary nominations, but since the&#13;
primary Benzie county, by a decision&#13;
of the supreme court, on the 1905 apportionment,&#13;
has been transferred&#13;
from the former to the latter district.&#13;
Mr. Bird decides that this does not&#13;
affect the primary vote.&#13;
By the same decision Arenac county&#13;
is now with Bay and Midland counties&#13;
in a senatorial district. Arenac&#13;
had not declared itself for primaries,&#13;
but Bay and Midland had. That the&#13;
senator in that district should be elected&#13;
by the primary method, is the ruling&#13;
of the attorney general, inasmuch&#13;
as all the enrolled voters of Arenac&#13;
could not overcome the majority for&#13;
the proposition in the other two counties.&#13;
Workman Electrocuted. ^&#13;
. The body of Frank V. Crusoe, an&#13;
electrician employed by the McLeary&#13;
Elctrical Co., was found Friday morning&#13;
in the loft under the roof o r t h e&#13;
Detroit city hall, where it had lain&#13;
almost 24 hours. One hand tightly&#13;
gripping a heavily charged feed wire&#13;
told the story of Crusoe's end. Working&#13;
at a disadvantage because of&#13;
cramped quarters and the intense heat,&#13;
the electrician had evidently grasped&#13;
the bare wire and in an instant his life&#13;
was gone.&#13;
Directly beneath, hundreds of busy&#13;
people came and went, but the body&#13;
was not discovered until 24 hours&#13;
later, after a systematic hunt for the&#13;
man had been instituted.&#13;
Crusoe was about 25 years old and&#13;
lived with relatives at 225 Greenwood&#13;
avenue. He had done much of the&#13;
electrical work in the city hall since&#13;
its rehabilitation and was familiar&#13;
with every foot of the building.&#13;
Heard the Blood Drip.&#13;
"Want to see me cut my throat?"&#13;
asked Contractor Albert J. Salisbury,&#13;
of Battle Creek, in a surly manner, of&#13;
his wife, as he brandished a razor.&#13;
Closing her eyes, she fled, pausing to&#13;
listen at the front,door.&#13;
"Oh, it was awful," she said later,&#13;
"when I stopped at the door before&#13;
summoning help I heard the razor&#13;
drop, to be followed by the sound of&#13;
a steady drip, drip, on the floor. Then&#13;
I opened the door and ran."&#13;
, Salisbury reached a neighbor's yard,&#13;
where he died from loss of blood.&#13;
Salisbury was addicted to morbid&#13;
brooding, and frequently quarreled&#13;
with his wife. Wednesday night he is&#13;
alleged to have seized her by the&#13;
throat. Last night, when informed&#13;
that she had visited a doctor during&#13;
the day, he whipped out his razor.&#13;
B&#13;
MICHIGAN IN BRIEF.&#13;
A Bloodless Battle.&#13;
A bloodless and indecisive battle&#13;
was fought on the banks of the creek&#13;
between Hie "browns," comprising the&#13;
Michigan state troops on the defense,&#13;
and the "bines," composed of regulars,&#13;
infantry, cavalry and artillery, the attacking&#13;
force at. the encampment of&#13;
regulars and Michigan troops near Indianapolis.&#13;
Although the umpire gave&#13;
no decision the Michigan boys were&#13;
highly commeuded by the regular officers.&#13;
Gen. Harrah's army of defense took&#13;
up its positions with a precision that&#13;
was .gratifying to the regular officers&#13;
and showd that the militia officers are&#13;
profiting by the extensive operations&#13;
at the camps of instruction. The work&#13;
of the M N G. signal corps was a revelation&#13;
to the militiamen, most of whom&#13;
saw for the first time the modern&#13;
methods of communication between&#13;
divisions of an army.&#13;
i -&#13;
A Police Puzzle.&#13;
*1 want to b!T7d~cT&lt;ej^irp;I am going-&#13;
Insane and I want to* be put in a cell&#13;
before I have a chance to make&#13;
trouble," said David Moffitt, when he&#13;
stalked into the Saginaw police headquarters.&#13;
He appeared to be perfectly&#13;
round mentally, but was accommodated.&#13;
Now the police are puzzled how to&#13;
dispose of him, as he says he will not&#13;
return home and the police do not feet&#13;
like turning him loose,&#13;
Disregarding the primary law, the&#13;
Prohibitionists of Lapeer county met&#13;
and nominated the following ticket:&#13;
Sheriff, Dan. Churchill, Burnside;&#13;
clerk, George Mitchell, Lapeer; treasurer,&#13;
Phineas Arms, May field; register.&#13;
George Lister. Arcad&lt;»&#13;
Pontiac Elks are planning on the&#13;
erection of a temple and have a good&#13;
start on the building fund.&#13;
P. D. Dean Warner, father of Gov.&#13;
Warner, IB considerably improved in&#13;
health, though not yet out of danger.&#13;
The blueberry crop in the upper&#13;
peninsula is almost a failure and buyers&#13;
are paying $3.50 to $4 per bushel.&#13;
According to the new Grand Rapids&#13;
directory, the city this year has a population&#13;
of 117,848, an increase of 10,-&#13;
408 in a year.&#13;
A Methodist picnic to Detroit and&#13;
Belle Isle and a Knights of Columbus&#13;
excursion to Orion almost depopulated&#13;
Pontiac on Wednesday.&#13;
Jarfies K, Patton, a St. Joseph resorter,&#13;
attempted to commit suicide&#13;
twice In one duy by Jumping into Lake&#13;
Michigan. He was rescued both&#13;
times.&#13;
Mrs. Claude Brown, of Flint, deserted&#13;
by her husband and about to become&#13;
a mother, has had another affliction&#13;
added by the death of her 2-&#13;
year-old baby.&#13;
Prof. W-m. • H. Hobbs, formerly of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin, has been&#13;
appointed to the chair of geology at&#13;
the IT. of M. In place of the late Prof.&#13;
Israel C. Russell.&#13;
James E. Walker, Socialist candidate&#13;
for governor, has issued a challenge&#13;
to Gov. Warner and Democratic&#13;
Candidate Klmmerle for a joint debate&#13;
on the issues of the campaign.&#13;
An accident happened to the apparatus&#13;
used by Balloonist Ray as he was&#13;
making an ascension at Goguac lake,&#13;
and he fell 25 feet. His hip was dislocated&#13;
and he sustained internal injuries.&#13;
Miss Louise Britten, aged 50, a Tekonsha&#13;
milliner for 25 years, ended her&#13;
life by strangulation with a shawl&#13;
twisted about her throat. She had been&#13;
in poor health for two years and grew&#13;
despondent.&#13;
Hiram B. Helmick, a well-to-do young&#13;
fruit farmer, and his bride of two&#13;
weeks were struck by an electric car&#13;
going 25 miles an hour as they were&#13;
driving from St. Joseph to Benton&#13;
Harbor and were killed.&#13;
Under Sheriff Bibbins has returned&#13;
from Chicago with Charles Jackson,&#13;
who confesses to several burglaries&#13;
committed in Hillsdale when the circus&#13;
was in town. Considerable of the&#13;
plunder was found on his person.&#13;
E. W. Sparrow has commenced suit&#13;
against the Michigan Power Co., of&#13;
Lansing, for $15,000 damages for overflowing&#13;
bis lands along Grand river in&#13;
the eastern part of the city by the&#13;
erection of a big cement dam.&#13;
Work was begun Monday on the&#13;
new car shops of the Grand Trunk&#13;
railroad in Battle Creek, which are to&#13;
cost $3,500,000 and will occupy fifteen&#13;
acres. . It is estimated that it will take&#13;
three years to complete them.&#13;
Mrs. M a r y W. Lucas, widow of a&#13;
former member of the Ingham county&#13;
bar, pleaded guilty to the larceny of&#13;
goods from Tamir Houraine, a Syrian,&#13;
who had rooms at her house. She paid&#13;
a fine and costs amounting to $48.&#13;
Charles Pontine, of Port Huron,&#13;
risked his life to sae his baby boy&#13;
from being burned to death. The family&#13;
was awakened at 1 a. m. to find&#13;
the house on fire. Pontine had to rush&#13;
through the midst of the flames to&#13;
reach his boy.&#13;
C. E. Blashfield, serving one to fourteen&#13;
years from Flint for forgery, was&#13;
released from Michigan Reformatory&#13;
Saturday by Judge Davis on habeas&#13;
corpus proceedings. He r was sentenced&#13;
under an 1905 law for crime&#13;
committed in 1903.&#13;
The annual Grange and Farmers'&#13;
picnic of Hillsdale county will be held&#13;
at the fair grounds in Hillsdale, Thursday,&#13;
August 16. There will be band&#13;
concerts, athletics and ball gamesi and&#13;
J. W. Helme, of Adrian, will be one of&#13;
the principal speakers.&#13;
Cooked to death in _a_ha.lh_luh was.&#13;
the fate of Mrs. Strauss, .of Cincinnati,&#13;
an aged guest at the Petoskey&#13;
Inn. She fainted when she turned on&#13;
the hot water for a bath Saturday&#13;
night. She was not discovered for&#13;
some time. She died early Sunday.&#13;
For shipment to the Chicago market&#13;
a load of 150 turtles, weighing 1,043&#13;
pounds, was brought to Hartford by D.&#13;
.1. Taylor, of Keeler township. They&#13;
were placed in boxes and started on&#13;
their journey to tickle the palates of&#13;
turtle-loving Chicagoans. He gets 7&#13;
cents per pound, live weight, for them.&#13;
In blowing the big iron safe in the&#13;
Camden postoffice at an early hour&#13;
Saturday morning at least one of the&#13;
robbers evidently was hurt. When&#13;
people, awakened by the explosion, ran&#13;
to the scene the robbers had escaped,&#13;
but big blood stains were found in several&#13;
places. The safe was demolished&#13;
and the thieves got a small amount of&#13;
money and stamps.&#13;
The coroner's inquiry at St. Thomas&#13;
into the recent collision on the Lon-&#13;
-don &amp; Port Stanley railroad, that resulted&#13;
in the death of Arthur Goodhue,&#13;
of Windsor, and/ Win. H. Hemphill,&#13;
the fireman,on the Michigan Central&#13;
engine, has resulted in a verdict&#13;
placing the blame on the Pere Marquette&#13;
railway, and exonerating the&#13;
officials bf the Michigan Central.&#13;
Joseph Mielke, of Detroit, interfered&#13;
between Vladisloff Felenski and Pelepski's&#13;
wife to save the latter from a&#13;
severe beating. The drunken and infuriated&#13;
husband retaliated" by shooting&#13;
Mielke dead. Neighbors and the&#13;
police reports show it was Fellnskl's&#13;
frequent pastime to beat and abuse&#13;
his family while drunk. He is under&#13;
arrest and acknowledges only an imperfect&#13;
remembrance of his crime.&#13;
T H I MOTH AND THE AUTOMOBILE.&#13;
Speaking of automobiles reminds me that the&#13;
New York state eutomologist has just made a&#13;
rather sensational announcement—that the devastating&#13;
gypsy moth is being brought into the&#13;
state by automobiles.&#13;
At the first reading this sounds as if the&#13;
dainty creatures were being Imported in a fashionable&#13;
way like so many pampered guests. But&#13;
the real purpose of the announcement is to remind&#13;
the farmers of the state that the dreaded&#13;
auto has a new power to annoy in that gypsy&#13;
moth caterplllers ride uninvited into our domain&#13;
by becoming, like so many human creatures, "attached"&#13;
to motor cars.&#13;
The gypsy moth is set forth as a ravenous&#13;
leaf feeder that has been particularly destructive&#13;
in eastern Massachusetts. It feeds, when present&#13;
in large numbers, on almost every tree and&#13;
shrub besides herbaceous plants. ItB operations&#13;
are particularly fatal to pine, hemlocks and other&#13;
evergreens, since one defoliation of these trees is&#13;
Invariably followed by death.&#13;
The more recently imported brown tail moth is said to be especially&#13;
destructive of fruit trees.&#13;
"Danger is spreading in New York," cries the entomologist. By Inference&#13;
it is spreading westward. Whether by automobile or otherwise it will&#13;
find its way westward unloss something radical is done to fight the cater&#13;
pillers, which are declared to be particularly hard to dislodge and kill.&#13;
Hundreds of thousands of dollars have been spent by New England fight*&#13;
ing the pests, who came to Massachusetts in 1868.&#13;
The birds most useful in the fight are the yellow and black billed cuckoo,&#13;
the Baltimore oriole, the cat bird, chickadee, blue jay, chipping sparrow and&#13;
robin.&#13;
FROM SHOWMAN TO PREACHER.&#13;
This city has just witnessed the extraordinary&#13;
spectacle of a man, for years devoted to the show&#13;
business, a master of his craft, turning his whole&#13;
time and fortune to the salvation of souls.&#13;
Everybody, I suppose, has heard of Capt.&#13;
Joseph George Woodward, master of the performing&#13;
seals. Capt. Woodward's trained seals were&#13;
real wonders. They played In a band. They juggled,&#13;
counted, performed all manner of curious&#13;
and singularly intelligent tricks. They did everything,&#13;
one might say, but speak. It was no exaggeration&#13;
to speak of them as the most intelligent&#13;
animals on earth. The seal is notoriously intelligent,&#13;
but it was under Woodward's astonishingly&#13;
successful training that these seals made their&#13;
hit.&#13;
These seals, for exploiting which Woodward&#13;
received $750 a week, have been sold—for $10,000,&#13;
I am told. If this figure Is correct Woodward&#13;
now has a fortune of about $70,000. The whole of this sum^ the showman is&#13;
to devote to his lifework, the conversion of his fellowmen to the paths of religion.&#13;
Every showman, every circus player or vaudeville artist who has ever&#13;
been associated with Woodward has known of his religious trend, aud not&#13;
one of these people will be found to say a word against his sincerity. When&#13;
Woodward held a religious meeting between the sessions of a show nobody&#13;
scoffed—or if he did he remained to pray.&#13;
It was a habit of Woodward to give away small Bibles with certain passages&#13;
marked. These markings were not the same in every case and those&#13;
who received the books soon discovered that in making the markings Woodward&#13;
had been influenced by what he regarded as the particular needs of the&#13;
person to whom he gave the gift.&#13;
That a man could follow the life Woodward has here in New York and&#13;
in other parts of the country without ridicule and without rebuff is a curious&#13;
and striking tribute to his sincerity and to his tect.&#13;
He is now going to England to pursue there the work of an evangelist.&#13;
Fails to Rescue Friend.&#13;
Chippewa Falls, Wis.—W. J. Iskstad,&#13;
a merchant, fell from a boat in Pike&#13;
lake and drowned. Joseph Harding's&#13;
clothes were torn to tatters and his&#13;
body bruised as a result of his effort&#13;
to save his friend.&#13;
Falli from Yacht; Drowned.&#13;
Detroit, Mich.—Lawrence True, of&#13;
Chicago, fell overboard from the&#13;
racing- yacht Ste. Claire, off Charity&#13;
island, Saginaw bay, while returning&#13;
with several young Detroit men from&#13;
the Bay City races at Tawas.&#13;
The Only One Awakt.&#13;
The pastor paused in his dlscourM&#13;
and looked over his congregation,&#13;
"Sister Smith," be said, "will you kindly&#13;
come up close to the pulpit? I can&#13;
save my voice by repeating the rest&#13;
of this sermon to you in a conversational&#13;
tone, and it will not disturb&#13;
the slumbers of the others."—Cleveland&#13;
Leader. ^&#13;
Always Had Kick Coming. * JrV —&#13;
This old lady was a hypochondria* ' '&#13;
Her various diseases interested hen '„&#13;
and she talked of nothing else. O i a ^ y&#13;
day a visitor found her eating h e a m f t y p ^ ;&#13;
and inquired as to her health. Tljpii* t&#13;
invalid sighed and answered: "I feel; ~&#13;
very well, ma'am, but I always feet&#13;
bad when I feel well, because I know&#13;
I am going to feel worse afterward."&#13;
Old Universities. %&#13;
Oxford and Cambridge hold an undisputed&#13;
primacy among English universities.&#13;
The most strenuous&#13;
enlightened modern effort can&#13;
duce nothing to rival the dignified tradition&#13;
of centuries of learning set&#13;
amid quiet lawns, mediaeval" butldrlugs&#13;
and beautiful music—University&#13;
Revie.w&#13;
Women and Their Fads.&#13;
A London physician has discovered&#13;
that the wearing of heavy necklaces&#13;
Is responsible for physical infirmities.&#13;
Necklaces, he says, cause a pressure&#13;
an the important nerves that converge&#13;
at the base of the skull. Jhls Is balm,&#13;
indeed, to the woman who owns np&gt;&#13;
Jewels.&#13;
Learning Obedience.&#13;
The only way of learning to do a&#13;
thing is to do it. The only way of&#13;
learning obedience from Christ la&#13;
to give up your will to him, and to&#13;
make the doing of his will the one&#13;
desire and delight of your heart.—&#13;
Andrew Murray.&#13;
Surprise for the Fish.&#13;
Seven thousand five hundred gallons&#13;
of adulterated wine were, by order&#13;
of the police, poured into the River&#13;
Necker last week. The effect on the&#13;
local fish, who were used to nothing&#13;
stronger than water, was, we understand,&#13;
deplorable.—Punch.&#13;
Jeweler Is Wily.&#13;
The newest scheme of a wily jeweler&#13;
is to try to get his customers to&#13;
buy jewels that match the color of&#13;
their eyes. Of course, he is always&#13;
sure to tell them that it enhances&#13;
their beauty.&#13;
Large Pecan Bearing Orchard.&#13;
What is thought to be the largest&#13;
bearing pecan orchard in the world&#13;
Is owned by Maj. John S. Horlbeck,&#13;
in Charleston county, S. C. He has&#13;
600 acres in bearing trees.&#13;
A W r i t t e n fiuarantPA of a ns miim °°lu* C0NCERN *-** * *&#13;
J\ TT I 1 L i t ? 11 V U d l a l l l A T C have of the superiority of the&#13;
assurance you can&#13;
COLUMBIA GRAPIIOPIIONE&#13;
With this guarantee you don't guess, you KNOW which is best ASK&#13;
VOIR OWN BANKER as to our responsibility and financial standing. F r e e T r i a l a n d E d S y P a y m e n t O f f e r&#13;
Then send to our nearest dealer or to us, and get our . . , . ~ m m m m m ~ m m ~ m m m m m m • * • • u — j m m m m m m m a m m m _ ^&#13;
This is your chaoce to secure the BEST TALKING MACHINE MADE, 00 payments which wiM not be felt.&#13;
W E A C C E P T O L D M A C H I N E * O T A N Y M A U I ! IN P A R T P A Y M E N T . '&#13;
A n I d e a l "•*• **" e v e r •*•* a 6r«pfcoa*a«e « * ef tfn*r*? In the mountain*; on the&#13;
C* k water; at the aeeehore; anywhere! The muak of a GrapWopboee in the opes Summer Amusement. 1» CLEAR, SWEET AND FAR-RCACWNS. Try it end judge.&#13;
•rend Prix, Pari*, 1 tee ft»uMe eraed Prtie, at. LeuU, i m&#13;
INfheat * » « * , Perttaad, ites&#13;
Columbia Phonograph Co.,&#13;
90-92 West Broadway, . ^ v&#13;
New Yocluv *.-•••"""'*•**&#13;
150&#13;
t*»N&#13;
0 ^ of yourS eEndi n m Pe afyumll endt« taanilds Exchange Plan.&#13;
Addresa.&#13;
A FOOL FOR LOVE&#13;
By FRANCIS LYNDE&#13;
AUTHOR OP "THH, ORAPTERS." ETC.&#13;
(Copyright, UK,by J. P. Llpplnoow Co)&#13;
&gt; . ^ CHAPTER III.—Continued.&#13;
*/"Why, my dear Virginia—the Idea!&#13;
itwi don't know In the least what you&#13;
are talking about. I have been read-&#13;
Jng in the papers about these right-ofway&#13;
troubles, and they are perfectly&#13;
. terrible. One report said they were&#13;
•rating the laboring men, and another&#13;
^ j M d the-militia might have to be called&#13;
"Well, what of it?" said Virginia,&#13;
with, all 1M_hardihood of youth and&#13;
unknowledge. "It's something like a&#13;
burning building; one doesn't want to&#13;
be hard-hearted and rejoice over other&#13;
people's misfortunes; but then, if It&#13;
has to burn, one would like to be&#13;
there to see."&#13;
Miss Bessie put a stray lock of the&#13;
flaxen hair up under its proper comb.&#13;
"I'm sure I prefer California and the&#13;
orange groves and peace," she asserted.&#13;
"Don't you, Cousin Billy?"&#13;
What Mr. Calvert would have replied&#13;
Is no matter for this history, since at&#13;
this precise moment the rajah came&#13;
In, "coruscating," as Virginia put it,&#13;
from his late encounter with the superintendent's&#13;
chief clerk.&#13;
"Give them the word to go, Jastrow,&#13;
and let's get out of heah," he commanded.&#13;
And when the secretary had&#13;
vanished the Rajah made his explanations&#13;
to all and sundry. "I've been&#13;
obliged in a manneh to change ouh&#13;
itinerary. Anotheh company is trying&#13;
to fault us up in Qua'tz Creek canyon,&#13;
and I am in a meashuh compelled to&#13;
be on the ground. We shall be delayed&#13;
. only a few days, I hope; at the worst&#13;
only until the first snowstorm comes;&#13;
and, in the meantime, Califo'nia won't&#13;
—run away.&#13;
Virginia clapped her hands.&#13;
"Then we are really to go to 'the&#13;
front' and see a right-of-way fight?&#13;
Oh, won't that be perfectly intoxicating!"&#13;
The Rajah glared at her as if she&#13;
had said something incendiary. The&#13;
picturesque aspect of the struggle had&#13;
evidently not appealed to him. But he&#13;
smiled grimly when he said: "Now&#13;
there spoke the blood of the fighting&#13;
Carterets: hope you won't change your&#13;
mind, my dean." And with that he&#13;
dived into his working den, pushing&#13;
the lately returned secretary in'ahead&#13;
of him.&#13;
Virginia linked arms with Bessie the&#13;
flaxen-haired when the wheels began&#13;
to turn.&#13;
"We are off," she said. "Let's go out&#13;
on the platform and see the last of&#13;
Denver."&#13;
It was while they were clinging to&#13;
the hand-rail and looking back upon&#13;
the jumble of railway activities out of&#13;
which they had just emerged that the&#13;
Rosemary, gaining headway, overtook&#13;
another moving train running smoothly&#13;
on a track parallel to that upon&#13;
which the private car was speeding. It&#13;
was the narrow-gauge mountain connection&#13;
of the Utah line, and Wlnton&#13;
and Adams were on the rear platform&#13;
of the last car. So it chanced that the&#13;
four of them were presently waving&#13;
their adieux across the wind-blown Interspace.&#13;
In the midst of it, or rather&#13;
at the moment when the Rosemary,&#13;
gathering speed as the-Tighter"6T~fhe&#13;
two trains, forged ahead, the Rajah&#13;
came out to light his cigar.&#13;
He took in the little tableau of the&#13;
rear platforms at a glance, and when&#13;
the slower train was left behind asked&#13;
a question of Virginia.&#13;
"Ah—wasn't one of -those two the&#13;
young gentleman who called on you&#13;
yestehday afternoon, my deah?"&#13;
Virginia admitted it.&#13;
"Could you faveh me with his&#13;
name?"&#13;
"He is Mr. Morton P. Adams, of Boston."&#13;
"Ah-h; and his friend—the young&#13;
gentleman who laid his hand to ouh&#13;
plow and put the engine on the track&#13;
last night?"&#13;
"He is Mr. Winton—a— an artist, I&#13;
believe; at least, that is what I gathered&#13;
from what Mr. Adams said of&#13;
him.''&#13;
Mr. Somerville Darrah laughed, a&#13;
•low litle- laugh deep in his throat.&#13;
"Bless your innocent soul—he a plcchuh-&#13;
painteh? Not in a thousand&#13;
yeab», qy.deah Virginia. He is a railr&#13;
o a A p t * , a a d a right good one at that.&#13;
F a w t y t M with the name again; Wint&#13;
f h j m you say?"&#13;
HNo; Winton—Mr. John Winton."&#13;
"IM-devil!' gristed the Rajah, smit-&#13;
Jftgtfee hand-rail with his clenched fist.&#13;
"H*h! I beg your pahdon, my deahs—&#13;
« mean slip of the tongue." And then,&#13;
w&gt; the full as savagely* "By heaven,. I&#13;
itope^hat train will fly the track and&#13;
ditch him before ever he comes within&#13;
ordering;distance of the work in&#13;
{feta'tz C¥eek*c*n*o*r&#13;
.*••W! hy. UAde Somerville—bow, Yindlctive!"&#13;
cried Virginia. "Who Is he,&#13;
and what has he done?"&#13;
"He is Misteh John Winton, as you&#13;
informed me just now; one of the&#13;
brainiest constructing engineers in this&#13;
entiah country, and the hardest man in&#13;
this or any otheh country to down in&#13;
a right-of-way fight—that's who he Is.&#13;
And it's not what he's done, my deah&#13;
Virginia, it's what he is going to do.&#13;
If I can't get him killed up out of ouh&#13;
way,—" but here Mr. Darrah aaw the&#13;
growing terror In two pairs of eyes,'&#13;
and realizing that he was committing&#13;
himself before an unsympathetic audience,&#13;
beat a hasty retreat to his&#13;
stronghold at the other end of the&#13;
Rosemary.&#13;
"Well!" said the flaxen-haired Bessteel-&#13;
blue dawn, she was—or thought&#13;
she was—the first member of the party&#13;
to dress and steal oat upon the&#13;
railed platform to look abroad upon&#13;
the wondrous scene in the canyon.&#13;
But her reverie, trance-like in its&#13;
wordless enthusiasm, was presently&#13;
broken by a voice behind her—the&#13;
voice, namely, of Mr. Arthur Jastrow.&#13;
"What a howling wilderness, to be&#13;
sure, isn't it?" said the secretary,&#13;
twirling his eye-glasses by the cord&#13;
and looking, as he felt, interminably&#13;
bored.&#13;
"No, indeed; anything but that,"&#13;
she retorted, warmly. "It Is grander&#13;
than anything I ever Imagined. I wish&#13;
there were a piano in the car. It&#13;
makes me fairly ache to set it in some&#13;
form of expression, and music is the&#13;
only form I know,"&#13;
"I'm glad it It doesn't bore you," he&#13;
rejoined, willing to agree with her for&#13;
the sake of prolonging the interview.&#13;
"But to me it Is nothing more than a&#13;
dreary wilderness, as I say; a barren,&#13;
rock-ribbed gulch affording an Indifferent&#13;
right-of-way for two railroads."&#13;
"For one," she corrected, in a qaiek&#13;
upflash of loyalty for her kin.&#13;
The secretary shifted bis. gazer from&#13;
the mountains to the maldeu and&#13;
smiled. She was exceedingly good to&#13;
look upon—high-bred, queenly and&#13;
just now with the fine 'fire of enthusiasm&#13;
to quicken her pulses and to&#13;
sie, eatcheing her&#13;
ginia laughed.&#13;
"I'm glad I'm not&#13;
said.&#13;
READING THE&#13;
breath. But Vir&#13;
WARRANT.&#13;
Mr. Winton," she&#13;
CHAPTER IV.&#13;
Morning in the highest highlands of&#13;
the Rockies, a morning clear, cold and&#13;
tense, with a bell-like quality in the&#13;
frosty air to make the cracking of a&#13;
snow-laden fir bough resound like a&#13;
pistol shot. For Denver and the dwellers&#13;
on the eastern plain the sun is an&#13;
hour high; but the hamlet mining&#13;
camp of Argentine, with its dovecote&#13;
railway station and two-pronged siding,&#13;
still lies in the steel blue depths&#13;
of the canyon shadowr - -&#13;
Massive mountains, dark green to&#13;
the timber line and dazzling white&#13;
above It, shut in the narrow valley to&#13;
right and left. A mimic torrent, icebound&#13;
in the quieter pools, drums and&#13;
gurgles on its descent midway between&#13;
two railway embankments, the&#13;
one to which the station and side&#13;
tracks belong old and well settled, the&#13;
other ' new and as yet unballasted.&#13;
Just opposite the pygmy station a lateral&#13;
gorge intersects the main canyon,&#13;
making a deep gash in the opposing&#13;
mountain bulwark, around which the&#13;
new line ha^ to find its way by a looping&#13;
detour.&#13;
denlng of the main&#13;
dred yards below the&#13;
' camp of rude slab&#13;
ng out its horde of&#13;
Italians; and on a&#13;
track fronting the shanties&#13;
blue wood smoke is curling lazily&#13;
upward from the kitchen car of a construction&#13;
train.&#13;
AH night long the hosemary, drawn&#13;
by the speediest of mountain-climbing&#13;
locomotives, had stormed onward and&#13;
upward from the valley of the Grand,&#13;
through black defiles and around the&#13;
shrugged shoulders of the mighty&#13;
peaks to find a resting-place tax the&#13;
white-robed dawn on the siding a^ Argentine.&#13;
The lightest of sleepers, Virginia&#13;
had awakened when the special&#13;
was passing through Carbonate; and&#13;
drawing the berth curtain she had lain&#13;
for hours watching the solemn processton&#13;
of cliffs and peaks wheeling in&#13;
*UteJy t a d tfrttMy array ejeinet the&#13;
Inky background of sky. Now. In the&#13;
In a seamy&#13;
canyon a few hi&#13;
station a&#13;
shelters&#13;
w i l d - l o s i n g&#13;
crooked spur&#13;
send the rare flush to neck and cheek.&#13;
Jastrow, the cold-eyed, the business&#13;
automaton set to go off with a click at&#13;
Mr. Somerville Darrah's touch, had&#13;
ambitions not automatic. Some day&#13;
he meant to put the world of business&#13;
under foot as a conqueror, standing&#13;
triumphant on the apex of that pyramid&#13;
of success which the Mr. Somerville&#13;
Darrahs were so successfully uprearing.&#13;
When that day should come,&#13;
there would need to be an establishment,&#13;
a menage, a queen for the kingdom&#13;
of success. Summing her up for&#13;
the hundredth time since the beginning&#13;
of the/westward flight, he thought&#13;
Miss Carteret would fill the requirements&#13;
passing well. - — _.&#13;
But this was a divagation, and he&#13;
pulled himself back to the askings of&#13;
the moment, agreeing with her again&#13;
without reference to his private convictions.&#13;
"For one, I should hare said." he&#13;
amended. "We mean to have it that&#13;
way. though an unprejudiced onlooker&#13;
might be foolish enough to say that&#13;
there Is a pretty good present prospect&#13;
of two."&#13;
But Miss Carteret was in -a. contradictory&#13;
mood. Moreover, she was a&#13;
woman, and the way to a woman's&#13;
confidence does not lie through the&#13;
neutral country of easy compliance.&#13;
"If you won't take' the other side. I&#13;
will," she said. "There win be t w o /&#13;
jastrow acquiesced a second time.&#13;
"I shouldn't wonder. Our competitor's&#13;
road seems to be only a question&#13;
of time—a very short time, judging&#13;
from the number of men turning&#13;
out in the track gang down yonder."&#13;
Virginia leaned over the railing to&#13;
look past the car and the dovecote station,&#13;
shading her eyes to shut out the&#13;
snow-blink from the sun-fired peaks.&#13;
"Why, they are soldiers!" she exclaimed.&#13;
"At least, some of them have&#13;
guns on their shoulders. And see—&#13;
they are forming in line!"&#13;
The secretary adjusted his eyeglasses.&#13;
"By Jove! you are right; they have&#13;
armed the track force. The new chief&#13;
of construction doesn't mean to take&#13;
any chances of being shaken loose by&#13;
force. Here they come."&#13;
The end of track of the new line&#13;
was diagonally across the creek from&#13;
the Rosemary's berjh and a short&#13;
pistol shot farther down stream. But&#13;
to advance it to a point opposite the&#13;
private car, and to gain the altitude of&#13;
the high embankment directly across&#13;
from the station, the new line turned&#13;
short out of the main canyon at the&#13;
mouth of the intersecting gorge, describing&#13;
a long, U-shaped curve around&#13;
the head of the lateral ravine and&#13;
doubling back upon itself to reenter&#13;
the canyon proper at the higher elevation.&#13;
The curve which was the beginning&#13;
of this U-shaped loop was the morning's&#13;
scene of action, and the Utah&#13;
track layers, 200 strong, moved to the&#13;
front in orderly array, with armed&#13;
guards as flankers for the hand-car&#13;
load of rails which the men were pushing&#13;
up the grade.&#13;
Jastrow darted into the car, and a&#13;
moment later his place on the observation&#13;
platform was taken by a wrathful&#13;
industry colonel fresh from his&#13;
dressing-room—so fresh, indeed, that&#13;
he was coatless, hatless, and collarless,&#13;
and with the dripping bath sponge&#13;
clutched like a missile to hurl at the&#13;
impudent invaders on the opposite side&#13;
of the canyon.&#13;
"Hah! wouldn't wait until a man&#13;
could get Into his clothes!" he rasped,&#13;
apostraphizing the Utah's new chief&#13;
of construction. "Jastrow! Faveh me&#13;
instantly, seh! Hustle up to the camp&#13;
there and turn out the constable, town&#13;
marshal, or whatever he is. Tell him&#13;
I have a writ for him to serve. Run,&#13;
seh!"&#13;
The secretary appeared and disappeared&#13;
like a marionette when the&#13;
string has been jerked by a vigorous&#13;
hand, and Virginia smiled—this without&#13;
prejudice to a very acute appreciation&#13;
of the grave possibilities which&#13;
were preparing themselves. But having&#13;
her share of the militant quality&#13;
which made her uncle what he is, she&#13;
stood her ground.&#13;
"Aren't you afraid you will take cold,&#13;
Uncle Somerville?" she asked, archly;&#13;
and the Rajah came suddenly to a&#13;
sense of, his incompleteness and went&#13;
in to finish his ablutions against the&#13;
opening of the battle actual.&#13;
At first Virginia thought she would&#13;
follow him. . When Mercury Jastrow&#13;
should return with the officer of the&#13;
law there would be trouble of some&#13;
sort, and the woman in her shrank&#13;
from the witnessing of it. But at the&#13;
same instant the blood of the fighting&#13;
Carterets asserted itself and she resolved&#13;
to stay.&#13;
"I wonder what uncle hopes to be&#13;
able to do?" she mused. •'Will a little&#13;
town constable with a bit of signed&#13;
paper from some justice of the peace&#13;
be mighty enough to stop all that furious&#13;
activity over there? It's more&#13;
than incredible."&#13;
From that she fell to watching the&#13;
activity and the orderly purpose of it.&#13;
A length of steel, with men clustering&#13;
like bees upon it. would slide from its&#13;
place on the hand-car to fall with a&#13;
frosty clang on the cross ties. Instantly&#13;
the hammermen would pounce&#13;
upon it. One would fall upon hands&#13;
and knees to "sight" it into place; two&#13;
others would slide the squeaking track&#13;
gauge along its inner edge; a quartette,&#13;
Working like the component&#13;
parts of a faultless mechanism, would&#13;
tap the fixing spikes into the wood;&#13;
and then at a signal a dozen of the&#13;
heavy pointed hammers swung aloft&#13;
and a rhythmic volley of resounding&#13;
blows clamped the rail into permanence&#13;
on its wooden bed.&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
AN OLD PAINTER'S IDEA*.&#13;
The autumn season is coming more&#13;
and more to be recognized as a moat&#13;
suitable time for housepainting. There&#13;
is no frost deep in the wood to make&#13;
trouble for even the best job of painting,&#13;
and the general seasoning of the&#13;
summer has put the wood Into good&#13;
condition In every way. The weather,&#13;
moreover, Is more likely to be settled&#13;
for the necessary length of time to&#13;
allow all the coats to thoroughly dry, a&#13;
very important precaution. An old&#13;
and successful painter said to the&#13;
writer the other day: "House owner*&#13;
would get more for their money if they&#13;
would allow their painters to take&#13;
more time, especially between coats.&#13;
Instead of allowing barely time for the&#13;
surface to get dry enough not to be&#13;
tack,y,' several days (weeks would&#13;
not be too much) should be allowed&#13;
so that the coat might set through&#13;
and through. It is Inconvenient, of&#13;
course, but, if one would suffer this&#13;
slight inconvenience, it would add two&#13;
or three years to the life of the paint."&#13;
All this is assuming, of course, that&#13;
the paint used is the very best to&#13;
be had. The purest of white lead and&#13;
the purest of linseed oil unmixed with&#13;
any cheaper of the cheap mixtures,&#13;
often known as "White Lead," and oil&#13;
which has been doctored with fish oil,&#13;
benzine, corn oil or other of the&#13;
adulterants known to the trade are&#13;
used, all the precautions of the skilled&#13;
painter are useless to prevent the&#13;
cracking and peeling which make&#13;
houses unsightly in a year or so and;&#13;
therefore, make painting bills too frequent&#13;
and costly. House owner&#13;
should have his painter bring the ingredients&#13;
to the premises separately,&#13;
white lead of some well known reliable&#13;
brand and linseed oil of equal quality&#13;
and mix the paint just before applying&#13;
it. Painting need not be' expensive&#13;
and unsatisfactory if the old&#13;
painter's suggestions are followed.&#13;
FINEST TROUT IN THE WORLD&#13;
Found in Small Stream In the High&#13;
Sierras, Says Expert.&#13;
The finest trout in the world, says&#13;
Dr. Barton W. Evermann of the bureau&#13;
of fisheries, is to be found in a&#13;
little stream of the high Sierras in&#13;
southern California called Volcano&#13;
creek. The trout is named the "golden&#13;
trout," ,and in beauty of coloring&#13;
gameness and delicacy of flavor it has&#13;
no equal.&#13;
So far as is known, it exists only&#13;
I in this stream, which is about 20&#13;
: miles in length. President Roosevelt&#13;
i recently called attention of the bureau&#13;
| of fisheries to this unique specimen.&#13;
! with the result that Dr. Evermann was&#13;
sent to California to study its habits&#13;
and environment and to see whether&#13;
it might not be introduced elsewhere.&#13;
j He reports tbat the trout is in danger&#13;
of extermination and.that fishing&#13;
: in the stream must be prohibited by&#13;
the state of California for three years&#13;
if the trout is to be saved. Dr. Evermann&#13;
has also recommended that the&#13;
bureau of fisheries undertake the ar-&#13;
\ tiflcial propagation of the trout and&#13;
i co-operate wi$h the state of California&#13;
| in transplating it to a number of bar-&#13;
! ren streams that can be easily&#13;
{ reached.—National Geographic Magazine.&#13;
The first melodrama was produced&#13;
i at the C o v n t Garden theater on Nov,&#13;
! 14. .1802, and was called "The Tale ot&#13;
: Mystery."&#13;
A N OLD TIMER.&#13;
1»&#13;
I&#13;
Has Had Experiences,&#13;
A woman who has used Postum&#13;
Food Coffee since it came upon the&#13;
market 3 y e a r s ago knows from ex-&#13;
LINCOLN'S NOBILITY,&#13;
"He that is slow to anger." says the&#13;
proverb, "is better than the mighty,&#13;
and he that ruleth his spirit than he&#13;
that toketh-a city." Great as was his&#13;
self-confrol in other matters, nowhere&#13;
did M*. Lincoln's slowness to anger&#13;
and nobility of spirit show itself more&#13;
than iiv'his dealings with the generals&#13;
of the civil war. He had been elected&#13;
president. Congress had given him&#13;
power far exceeding that which any&#13;
president had ever exercised before.&#13;
As president he was also eomhranderin-&#13;
chief of the army and navy: of the&#13;
United States. By proclamation be&#13;
could call forth great armies; and he&#13;
could order those armies to go^ w&amp;tiL&#13;
h*rer he ^boae to- send them; btrt even&#13;
he bad no power to make generals with&#13;
the gen'us and the training necessary&#13;
to lead them instantly ro success. He&#13;
had to work with the materials at&#13;
hand, and one by one he tried the men&#13;
who seemed best fitted for the task,&#13;
giving each his fullest trust and every&#13;
aid In his power. They were as eager&#13;
for victory and as earnest of purpose&#13;
as himself, but in every case some misfortune&#13;
or some fault marred the result,&#13;
until the country grew weary with&#13;
waiting; discouragement overshadowed&#13;
hope, and misgiving almost engulfed&#13;
his own strong soul.—Helen NIcolay,&#13;
In St. Nicholas.&#13;
Has Fewest Doctors.&#13;
Russia has the fewest doctors of any&#13;
civilized country.&#13;
perience the necessity or using Postum&#13;
In place of coffee if one values&#13;
health and a steady brain.&#13;
She says: "At the time Postum was&#13;
first put on the market I was suffering&#13;
from nervous dyspepsia and my&#13;
physician had repeatedly told me not&#13;
to use tea or coffee. Finally 1 decided&#13;
to take his advice and try&#13;
Postum, and got a sample and had It&#13;
carefully prepared, finding it delicious&#13;
to the taste. So I continued&#13;
its use and very soon its beneficial ef*&#13;
fects convinced me of its value, for&#13;
I got well of my nervousness and dyspepsia.&#13;
"My husband had heen drinking coffee&#13;
all his life until it had affected&#13;
his nerves terribly. I persuaded him&#13;
to shift to Postum and it was easy to&#13;
get him to make the change for the&#13;
Postum . is delicious. It certainly&#13;
worked wonders for him.&#13;
"We soon learned that Postum does&#13;
not exhilarate or depress and does not&#13;
stimulate, but steadily and honestly&#13;
strengthens the nerves and the stomach.&#13;
To make a long story short our&#13;
entire family have now used Postum&#13;
for eight years wlth^completely satisfying&#13;
results, as shown in our fine,&#13;
condition of health and we have noticed&#13;
a rather unexpected Improvement&#13;
In. brain and nerve power."&#13;
Name given by Postum Co., Battle&#13;
Creek, Mich.&#13;
Increased brain and nerve power always&#13;
follow the use of Postum in&#13;
place of coffee, sometimes in a very&#13;
marked manner.&#13;
Look In pkgs. tor "The Road tQ&#13;
Wtttwilfe"&#13;
•Sue ginckhqj gltepatoh&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS &amp; CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
T H U R S D A Y , A U G U S T 16, 1906&#13;
A Great Offer.&#13;
PA KM J O U R N A L an J the DISPATCH.&#13;
F a r m J o u r n a . 5 y e a r s . . . . 7 5&#13;
D i s p a t c h , 1 y e a r 1 . 0 0&#13;
BOTH for $1.00&#13;
Hv special a n n n c n i ^ n t with HIP&#13;
p u h l i s h e r s o t th&gt; FARM J O U R N A L&#13;
(Philadelphia) we.ara enahlfd to offer&#13;
porb papers for $1 00 to every new&#13;
advance pay i n ? v.n'vsrriher a n d to&#13;
every*rid s-ulis^riher who pays in ad&#13;
van™, the DISPATCH one year and the&#13;
FA KM -JOURNAL r, 'year.*, both&#13;
papers for" Si.00.~the prifft of onrs&#13;
alone.&#13;
The FA KM J O U R N A L is 29 years&#13;
old and enjoys great, popularity, adapted&#13;
to and circulating in every state,&#13;
and is one*of the most, useful, interest,&#13;
i n g and t r u s t w o r t h y farm papers&#13;
published. T h i s offer should be accent&#13;
ed without o&gt;lay, as it only holds for&#13;
a limited t i m e .&#13;
Drouth vs. Typhoid Fevzrf&#13;
as Cause and Effect.&#13;
The recent extreme dry spell the&#13;
past month, in nearly every section of&#13;
the State, causing in some places almost&#13;
a water famine, prompts us to&#13;
call attention to the danger arising&#13;
Irom this condition. When ' p u b l i c&#13;
water supply from any source becomes&#13;
limited, many will resort to surface&#13;
wells tor home consumption a n d in&#13;
times like the present the dauger is&#13;
aggravated, for typhoid and other&#13;
disease germs a r e more a p t to be&#13;
present under such condition* than&#13;
when there is an abundance ot water.&#13;
Hear in mind that the water we&#13;
drink is the most common IIVMIIS tor&#13;
conveying germ* ot typhoid fever and&#13;
kindred diseases into the system, and&#13;
it should be generally understood that&#13;
the health of a whole neighborhood or&#13;
community may be endangered by the&#13;
careless disposal of discharges from a&#13;
typhoid fever patient. Therefore,&#13;
when a case of t y p h . i d fever exists in&#13;
a community thoroughly disinfect all&#13;
the discharges before disposing of the&#13;
same.&#13;
Another precaution to be observed,&#13;
if water in your weLs is low, or for&#13;
jany other reason is not absolutely&#13;
R o c k e f e l l e r i s above suspicion, is to boil t h e same&#13;
before using for drinking and culinary&#13;
A Cowrt of F i n e Manners.&#13;
At the court of Marie Antoinette all&#13;
emotions Mini passion* wore volletl by a&#13;
1..ask cf i .:&gt;:ito!.'-•. Kv n tlio rliiUlron&#13;
w o i v 1:'U.i''!it \r, sjioak *, !t!i w i i Mlhl t:U*t&#13;
a:&#13;
'i'li.'&#13;
a:ui u» boar juun in si-&#13;
:n v&#13;
t ir • ( •&#13;
N o w t h a t Mr&#13;
e a g e r t o g a i n t h e f a v o r o f t h e&#13;
c o n s u m e r h e i s w i l l i n g t h a t t h e purposes; this especially is true of al&#13;
p r o d u c e r s h o u l d r e c e i v e a litetle&#13;
lees for h i s c r u d e p r o d u c t .&#13;
water from shallow wells.&#13;
Ice for cooling and freezing purposes&#13;
is all right, but ice p u t into&#13;
drinking water, tea, e t c , is not safe&#13;
for the reason that most ot it. is taken&#13;
from the streams, lakes a n d rivers&#13;
that are contaminated by sewage and&#13;
T h i s is a b a n n e r y e a r i n t h e&#13;
s u g a r b e e t i n d u s t r y i n M i c h i g a n ,&#13;
t h e p r o s p e c t s b e i n g g o o d f o r a&#13;
c r o p o n e - t h i r d l a r g e r t h a n e v e r | o t h e r " impurities. One "of. \he worst&#13;
b e f o r e . I t i s s a i d t h a t t h e . s u g a r ; e p , d e m i c s of typhoid fever ever ext&#13;
r u s t will h a v e e n t i r e c o n t r o l of t h e j perienced in Miohiaran was traceable&#13;
M i c h i g a n f a c t o r i e s b e f o r e theyear-ffhrectly to th»-te«-&amp;ttftph^ _j&#13;
!Uiio Pin- il'Auginilojn/',,&#13;
! I, w'.vii the old Sanbiy:\&#13;
p;v VIHV UlU'Xpl't'tO.'^V,&#13;
.; ;;..• l...);&gt;k in hi ! ban1.!:&#13;
", ••, ; ..-, •.!-. i ;;:a ia l!&gt; &gt; r u n p a r y&#13;
.-&gt;.' '.'[:. .r,\ ;i's r.'.i-'a. Ya;: r &gt;ultl iii.t&#13;
{ . :•.&lt; :::1 la.'ai.i'::'. i ••.. •"•• :. :&gt;i",'i&gt; y&lt;." '1 na&#13;
l ;:: i ; :• t'ail. '. v, '•. ii-.itlc! in bis&#13;
.'.'.• ;.', • too,! i v^d ard i- lini ia tl.a&#13;
, . , ,i ;i ';-• rr.i 'v.I I'IO guillotino.&#13;
'ia,- h' aisuatii Lift fit Uis lniitf curls.&#13;
'•.M.auicai'," sa.iil ll.o lxn\ with a bow&#13;
aial ;i • ;ail:\ ' I n - no:.t moiui'Ut lus&#13;
luv.d r.il'otl ia aln.si. 't'bo man or woman&#13;
who sliowoil any signs of proteulion&#13;
or &lt;o]f oonoi-it u as not jvcoivod a t&#13;
court, l'rol'oviiu] IICIVIVIK-O was shown&#13;
to woiuou ami to the aged. W\*\\ tired&#13;
uieu hoard of tboir own ruin with a&#13;
boumot and went out to tight each,&#13;
other to the- death with such grace and&#13;
courtesy that the duel seemed, a sacrament&#13;
of friendship.&#13;
Don't drag along with a dull, billious,&#13;
heavy feeling. You need a pill.&#13;
Use DeWitt's Little Early Hisei.s, the&#13;
famous little pills. Do not sicken&#13;
or uripe, but results are sure.&#13;
Sold by F . A. Sigler, Dmggist.&#13;
GaWeston's Sea Wall&#13;
makes life now as safe in that city as&#13;
on the higher uplands. E. W. Good&#13;
E. W.DANIELS,&#13;
QKNKRAL AUCTIONEER.&#13;
Satisfcactu u Guaranteed. For inform*;&#13;
furnished free.&#13;
loe, who resides on Dutton S t . , in tion call at DISPATCH Office or address&#13;
Waco, Te*.( needs no sea wall for Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. Lyndilla phone&#13;
safety. He writes: " I bave used Dr. j connection. Auction bill* ami tin cups&#13;
ft-ing's New Discovery /or consump&#13;
tion the past rive years and it keeps&#13;
me well and safe. Before that time I&#13;
had a coiitfh which for years had been&#13;
growing worse. Now it's gone."&#13;
Cures chronic coughs, la grippe, croup&#13;
whoopirg o u g b and prevents pneumonia&#13;
i'le.istnt to take. Every&#13;
bottle guaranteed at V. A.• Siyder's&#13;
drug st.oo. fri.T: 50i: and £1.00.&#13;
Trial bo'tie fioo.&#13;
Sympathy.&#13;
It may indoo.l bo said that sympathy&#13;
exists In all minds, as Faraday has&#13;
discovered that magnetism oxists in all&#13;
metals, but a oertaiu temperature is&#13;
rciiujml to.develop iiuiJbJiUl&lt;'ii_ property,&#13;
whether iu the metal or the mind.—&#13;
Bulwer.&#13;
rYr dry, cracknd lips, or rough .-kin,&#13;
use Dr. ShoopV Green Salve. It positively-&#13;
makes lips and skin like velvet,&#13;
Sold by all dealers.&#13;
is o v e r . Another medium for conveying the&#13;
infection is the Hv. Screen your kit-&#13;
T h e B r i s t i s h g o v e r n m e n t , fol-! chens dining rooms aud food from itl&#13;
o w i n g r e c e n t s u g g e s t i o n s of d i s - ! k ? e P u o u t and .you will keep r u t&#13;
, , ^ A. -i T • L i t disease.&#13;
a r m a m e n t , h a s c u r t a i l e d i t s n a v a l ! , . , , .&#13;
, , . . , „! • As typhoid fever in most prevalent&#13;
b u d g e t b y r e d u c i n g t h e n u m b e r or j , .. ." ,. . . , , , , ,&#13;
^ J ^ . : at this time ot t h e year and later,&#13;
s h i p s of t h e D r e a d - n a u q h t t y p e i t j t h e s e p t e c a u t i o n s s h o u l d b e observed.&#13;
p r o p o s e s t o lay d o w n t h i s y e a r j import promptly to the'health officer&#13;
f r o m four t o t h r e e , a n d a n n o u n c - 1 a n y c a s e of this disease you know of.&#13;
i n g t h a t i t will m a k e u p t h i s r e - j A pamphlet containing more full&#13;
d u c t i o n n e x t y e a r b y a n i n c r e a s e , and complete suggestions and recomi&#13;
n t h a t c l a s s of s h i p s s h o u l d t h e | mendations for the restriction and j&#13;
n e x t H a g u e c o n f e r e n c e fail t o pro-1 prevention of typboidP fever is issued&#13;
v i d a for g e n e r a l d i s a r m a m e n t . ' j by this Department and may be&#13;
. - 'obtained, without cost, by addressing&#13;
the Secretary, b a n g i n g , Michigan.&#13;
| V &gt; ; ' . O l " ! j ' &gt; (•&#13;
The prei&gt;arailo:i of popiH.u'inint is especially&#13;
an Amorioan industry, The&#13;
peppermint is cut \v!ion in Idooni, lilce&#13;
hay, dried, placed in e!o&lt;o wootlen vats&#13;
and steanioil. 'i'lio *.-'A-i-v'ils biirst and&#13;
the oil passes upward with the steam,&#13;
which is condensed and conducted nit:)&#13;
a receiver, whore the oil rises and is&#13;
piped off. It cvkes ai mt :5o0 pounds&#13;
of dry peppermint t'1 produce one&#13;
pound of oil. An acre of land yields&#13;
from six t.&gt; ton pounds of oil, often&#13;
more, even as high as fifty pounds.&#13;
A Mystery Solved.&#13;
"How to keep of periodic attacks of&#13;
iiiliousness and habitual constipation&#13;
was a mystery that Dr. King's N e w&#13;
Lite Pills solved for me," writes. John&#13;
X. Pieasant, of Magnolia, Ind. The&#13;
only pills that are guaranteed to give&#13;
perfect sati&gt;faction to everybody ar&#13;
money refunded. Only 25c at b\ A.&#13;
Sigier's dru'/ store,&#13;
$S.00t'&gt; Minneapolis and St. Paul&#13;
and Kef urn&#13;
from Chicago with G h i n g o Gre.it.&#13;
Western Hailway "iccount ii A. l i .&#13;
National Encampment at .Minneapolis&#13;
August l o to I S . Tickets on sale&#13;
August, 11 to 14. Keturn limit A u g .&#13;
31 with extension privileges. For&#13;
further information apply to E. R&#13;
...O'ier, T. P. A., 1L1 Andann S t r .&#13;
Chicago, I'l. t 33&#13;
Wc ttKLY r^rnm 1&#13;
StencE&#13;
am. $*&amp;$&gt;&#13;
H You Suffer with&#13;
Rheumatism&#13;
i&#13;
Pr. Shoop's Rheumatic Remedy W1D&#13;
Bring the Utmost Relief that&#13;
Medicine Can.&#13;
It 1» oompa«'t, own t&gt;o carrol &lt;• ..-ily, nn-1 all1"&#13;
the u)*rator to gaujfe the Qiuuiut/ or Ink Qe&amp;ir-&#13;
SAVES T I M E . SAVES I N K .&#13;
KP^PS brnRhpR atirl int? whon&gt; you vrmif them, ami&#13;
taaovuys Kh'AJ&gt;V l O U IASTAM' I SK.&#13;
A perfect combination Is obtained vhea&#13;
WHITE'S WATERPROOF STEK01L IKK&#13;
lit no-el. It Is t':isily applied and sttn tiuiukly. Sofliuut&#13;
or lading,&#13;
SAVES BRUSHES. SAVES STENCILS. SAVES TIME.&#13;
DIMS ivii harden liruslit&gt;8 or ctcn; 8teiuil», Don't&#13;
tal.L' .'iir word lur it, TEST I T . ilade oaly by&#13;
S. A. WHITE CO.,&#13;
85 High St.,BostonrW1as9.U.S.A.&#13;
upon&#13;
The one remedy which mnnv rhystctans rely&#13;
pon to free tiu&gt; system of tu,. Hheuuiatio Poiaons&#13;
which are the cause ot all Rheumatism.&#13;
Lumbago, Soiiitlcu, Gout, is U«. Snooi&gt;'s K H K U -&#13;
MAXio KKMKUV. Dr. shooy s ^ n t twenty veari&#13;
in Pxperimentinj,'- be&#13;
combined cheiiiV-als&#13;
one iiimost ahvays&#13;
Rheumatism, etc&#13;
SHOOP'S KHEI:-&#13;
can turn bon.v&#13;
atraia —thut is&#13;
Butitcan and&#13;
. J u s t a t t h e t i m e w h e n l a b o r&#13;
u n i o n m e n t h r o u g h o u t t h e c o u n -&#13;
t r y a r e b e g i n n i n g t o b e l i e v e t h a t&#13;
t h e y s h o u k l seek t h e i r f u t u r e vict&#13;
o r i e s b y c o n c e n t r a t i n g a t t h e b a l -&#13;
l o t box i n s t o m l of i n t h e i r u n i o n&#13;
h a l l s , t h e m e m b e r s of t h e E m p l o y -&#13;
e r s ' a s s o c i a t i o n of D e t r o i t c o m e&#13;
a l o n g w i t h a t h r e a t t o d i s c h a r g e ,&#13;
i n c e r t a i n c i r c u m s t a n c e s e v e r y&#13;
u n i o n m a n i n t h e i r e m p l o y . E m -&#13;
p l o y e r s c o n d e m n s y m p a t h e t i c&#13;
s t r i k e s o n t h e p a r t of w o r k i n g m e n&#13;
— w h y s h o u l d t h e y u s e ' t h e s a m e&#13;
t h e m s e l v e s . ?&#13;
State Department of health, Lansing,&#13;
Mich., August, 1906&#13;
In this state it is not necessary to&#13;
serve a five days' notice for eviction ot&#13;
a cold. Use t h e original laxative&#13;
cough syrup, Kennedy's Laxative&#13;
Honey and T a r . No opiates.&#13;
Sold by F . A. Sigler, D r u g g i i t&#13;
$ 5 . 0 0 Round Trip $5.00&#13;
Um*er Peninsula and&#13;
Northei n Wisconsin&#13;
A w ord of.. truth, in a lew words':&#13;
"Nearly all otber cough cures are&#13;
constipating, especially those containing&#13;
opiates. Kennedy's Laxative&#13;
Honey a n d Tar moves tht* -bowels.&#13;
Container n o opiates."&#13;
Sold by F . A. Sigler, Dmggtst.&#13;
Perfumes.&#13;
In tbe collection of perfumes two&#13;
processes a r e employed. In one, the&#13;
grease process, boxes with glass bottoms&#13;
are prepared, tlie bottom beiug i from t h e&#13;
covered with pure g r e a s a ^ r suet, and | causeV t h e&#13;
the flowers, gathered fresh every day I •weiitnjr. And&#13;
during the se.isou, are laid on trays iu&#13;
the box, the grease being left to absorb&#13;
the fragrance. In the oil process&#13;
the place of grease is taken by cotton&#13;
batting saturated with oil, the process&#13;
being substantially the same. Iu both&#13;
cases the vehiele becomes impregnated&#13;
with the essential oil and odor of flowers.&#13;
end of tlje-pain&#13;
theenrlof thesufof&#13;
Kheumatism.&#13;
falls where a cure&#13;
pot up in tablet or li&#13;
either. You who have&#13;
fore he discovered the&#13;
.'hich made possible&#13;
c e r t u i u cur* lor&#13;
N o t t h a t D H ,&#13;
MATH: I U M * D Y&#13;
'obits into flesh&#13;
imp of*« i b i e ,&#13;
w i l l d r i v e&#13;
b l o o d t h e&#13;
w ' h l c l&#13;
p a i n a n d&#13;
then that is tbe&#13;
and swelling—&#13;
ferine — the end&#13;
This remedy never&#13;
possible. It is now&#13;
fluid form—ask tor&#13;
.suffered and are suf-&#13;
&gt;&#13;
fenntf today from Pftln9Vand aches which vou&#13;
know to be Rheumatism; you who experience&#13;
lameness or jwlrures of pain in (jump weather;&#13;
you who easily become stiff and lame without&#13;
apparent cause—just trv D^. SHO&lt; &gt;L»'S RHEUMATIC&#13;
CURtt. It is just the kind uf a remedy&#13;
that accomplishes rwsul'.s. Sold and recommended&#13;
by&#13;
*4oe ftfS5 ^&#13;
Northern Resort Excursion August 80&#13;
On A u g u s t 30 the Ann Arbor Railroad&#13;
will give its aitnual excursion to&#13;
the following Michigan resorts:"&#13;
Petoskey, Bay View, Mackinac, Heir"&#13;
lab, Frankfort, Charlevoix, Traverse&#13;
City, Ludirigton, Elk Kapids and&#13;
Manistee.&#13;
Special t r a i n will leave Lakeland at&#13;
! A_u«_ust 21 and 22 the A n n Arbor&#13;
j H. K. will give its annual excursion&#13;
to Menominee, and Manistique, Mich.,&#13;
and Kewaunee ami Manitowoc, Wis.&#13;
Tickets good t'er return until Sept. 8,'&#13;
will he sold from all stations between&#13;
Toledo a n d .Thompsonville at §5 00&#13;
for the round trip, except that for&#13;
children over five and under twelve&#13;
years of age the rate will be $2,50.&#13;
This'excursion will incJud* ' a 200&#13;
mile boat ride on Lake Michigan on&#13;
one of t h e largest steamers on the&#13;
lakes and will prove in every way a&#13;
most enjoyable outing. F o r time of&#13;
trains, etc. call on nearest Ann Arbor&#13;
agent or write .1. J . Kirby, G. P. A.&#13;
Toledo, Ohio. * t T,3&#13;
A woman worries until she gels&#13;
•9:03 a . m . Fare to all points except, j w r i n k l e 6 | t h v N v o r n e s b e c a u s e s h e&#13;
Mackinac Fsland «5.00 Mackinac-. h a g t h e m &lt; I f s h e t a k e s Hollisters&#13;
ialand will he one dollar hiK her. j U o c k y Mountain Tea «he would have&#13;
^Pickets will be good until September&#13;
8.&#13;
Get R 5 cent box of Lax ets a t our&#13;
store pkaser. We think they are great&#13;
Juatftesl these toothsome, candy-like&#13;
Laxative Tablet* for cwis'ipation, sour&#13;
stoinacb. bi I ion sn ess/bad breath, muddy&#13;
complexion, etc. Risk 5 cents and&#13;
see. Bold by all dealer*.&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
Digests what you eat.&#13;
neither. Bright, smiling face follows&#13;
its use. 35 cents, tea or tablets. Ask&#13;
your druggist.&#13;
V , - • ••&gt; » I . I S w « &gt; ( ! ;•;•..&#13;
A iV.uy [: .. !:.:.., .-..;.;; - ;. h-)11--.- i:.&#13;
Sweden ', • i-. '---11 ilu* :.infly 11 iv v.ni nt&#13;
homo. ThV'c 11 -torn l,i more t-Durteous to&#13;
callers than tin- Aiuerlcjin jnMrtico of&#13;
allowhig the visitor to "find out by its&#13;
certain ing" through futllo bell ringing&#13;
or button punching, hut It roqnlres a&#13;
greater confidence In your fellow man,&#13;
justifiable perhaps in Sweden.&#13;
NVben a worn in suffers from d j&#13;
pressing *veaknes--Js. she then keenly&#13;
realizes how help'ess—how thoroughly&#13;
worthless she is. Dr. Shoop has&#13;
brought relief to -thousands of such&#13;
women. He reaches diseases peculiar&#13;
lo women in two, direct, specific ways&#13;
—a locf.' treatment known by druggists&#13;
everywhere as Df, Shoop's Night&#13;
Cure, and a constitutional or internal&#13;
prescription called Dr. Shoon's Restorative,&#13;
Dr. Shoon's Xight Cure ia anplied'locally,&#13;
and at night. It works&#13;
wLile you sleep. It reduces inflammation,&#13;
it stops discharges, it heals, it&#13;
soothes, it comforts, it cures.&#13;
Dr. Shoop's Re.-torative (tablet or&#13;
liquid form) is a constitutional, nerv.e&#13;
tissue tonic. It brings renewed&#13;
strength, lasting ambitLn and vigor&#13;
to weak, lifeless women.&#13;
These two remedies, singiy, or u-»-d&#13;
together, h t v ^ a n irresistible, poiiive&#13;
helpful power. T r y them a /noritu&#13;
a r d see. Sold by all d^alnrs.&#13;
' A L L D E A L E R S . '&#13;
6 0 Y E A R 8 '&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
DR. PIERCE'S&#13;
Malted Cocoa Tho Cocoa with&#13;
a Delicate Flavor&#13;
MALTED COCOA is prepared byftdenttia.&#13;
allycombiningthc cocoa of the ciMtiootk&#13;
cocoa bean and the best of malt. T«&#13;
malt aiding digestion, and t h e f a t d&#13;
cocoa having bot-n prodigested, the&#13;
feeling of heaviness expi-rifiiccd after&#13;
drinking tin; ordinary cocoas is a voided;&#13;
thus a most delicious pnd nourishing&#13;
b.. rciage is pr.v.-Ked, v^hich is . »&#13;
feetly pure and will not distress the&#13;
most delicate stomach.&#13;
J-W sale by your dealer.&#13;
KERR'S&#13;
Malted Extract&#13;
OF TOMATO One teaspoon fa) to a enp of boiling water&#13;
makes a delicious Bouillon,&#13;
l'or sale by your dealer. Prepared by&#13;
WILLIAM B. KERR,&#13;
Med ford, Boston, Mass*&#13;
CVKES&#13;
RHEUMATISMI&#13;
LUMBIQO, SCIATICA!&#13;
NEURALGIA and&#13;
KIDNEY TROUBLE "5-DROPS" tilteu internally, rids the blood'&#13;
of the poisonous matter and acids which |&#13;
are ihe direct causes of these diseaaes.&#13;
Applied externally it affords almost instant&#13;
relief from pain, while a permanent j&#13;
cure is being effected by purifying the&#13;
blood, dissolving tbe poisonous sub*&#13;
stance and removing it from the system.&#13;
DR. S. D, BLAND&#13;
Of Brewton, Qa., -writes:&#13;
" I had been » sufferer for * number of ye*if I&#13;
with Lumlm^o and Rheum»ttnrji In my 8.nn»&#13;
Hiui legs, Mid tried «11 the remedies thai I could&#13;
gather from medical vowe, and also consulted&#13;
with a number of tbe best phvslclam, but found&#13;
o:(.\7trt it** «»•• «b« relief obtained from&#13;
••yiiKops." i shall preeciibe It in mjr cmoUoe&#13;
for rneumatlim and kindred diieaew.^ FREE If you are suffering with Rheumatism.&#13;
Ntviralkia, Kidrey Troi,v\le T any kin-;&#13;
t il dlirann, -»r te to us J M *ial bottle ,&#13;
of "5-DUOPS." *nd test t yoarseif.&#13;
^ "3-DROPS" can be used any length of&#13;
£&gt;j time without acquiring a "drug habit,"&#13;
h* n.-i -t is entirely free of opium, cocnine.&#13;
^ aUohol. laudanum, and otber similar&#13;
» ititrvodifr.ts.&#13;
f&lt; LarjcSlie Home, "SDllOl'R" f800 Dotee)&#13;
rf tl.O(&gt;. For Sale hylM-uggl.te. I&#13;
•2 £VVAHS0M RHEUMATIC (JURE CONPAIY,'&#13;
1^ n.-pt. SO. 1«0 Lake Street. Ohlcafo.&#13;
TRADE MARKS&#13;
DESIGNS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A C .&#13;
Anyone sending a nketrh and description may&#13;
quickly Rucermln our opinion free whether an&#13;
Invention is probably patentable. Communlcatlnnaatrtctlyconfidential.&#13;
HANDBOOK on Patents&#13;
sent free. Oldsst nuency for securing patents.&#13;
tatents taken through Munn it Co. receive&#13;
tptcial notice, wit hout chame, In the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest clr-&#13;
culatton of any nclentlflc journal. Terms, 1. 3 a&#13;
year: four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers.&#13;
MUNN S Co£•««—. New York&#13;
Branch Omoe, ffitt F 8t^ Washington, P. C.&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
Digests what you eat*&#13;
BUY THE FAMOUS Lincoln Steel Range! Bmkmm&#13;
Oookm&#13;
Loom&#13;
Unmquailmd&#13;
•y laadlna D«alor».&#13;
BEST! IZ.&#13;
( prhto,&#13;
COSTS NO MORE THAN AN UNKNOWN MAKE.&#13;
Before you buy that range or cook stove,&#13;
write us, and we will mail you a copy of&#13;
"Points for Purohmsors "&#13;
It is free for the asking. Full of useful information.&#13;
THE LINCOLN STOVE I RANGE COMPANY, Framout, Olio.&#13;
lit Self Defence&#13;
Major Hamm, editor and manauer of&#13;
the Constitutionalist, Eminence, Ky ,&#13;
when be was tit reel v attacked, four&#13;
years ago, by piles, bought a box uf&#13;
Bucklen's Arnica Salve, ot which h&lt;-&#13;
says: " I t cured tne in ten days and no&#13;
trouble since." Quickest, healer of&#13;
bnrns, sores, cuts and wouuds.&#13;
at fc\ A. Siu'lni's dvuu store.&#13;
The Martyr*.&#13;
Polly—P) Mrs. irtfimiere'ti fcusband&#13;
has developed bad habits. How did&#13;
S"OU bear about it? Dolly—Oh, Mrs.&#13;
High mere invited us all to nn afternoon&#13;
tea, so she could tell us h &gt;w she&#13;
suffered In silence!--Brooklyn Eagle.&#13;
25'!&#13;
S h e K n e w B e n t .&#13;
Visitor—Tell ine now, professor, are&#13;
you suOriiitf mwh from your headnche?&#13;
Professor (to his n'ifet—Kay,&#13;
Aiiieliu, cv'i ! siif.'T hiiK'b fvom my&#13;
lK'adiiH.vV -VVx ::•"!de r.bitter.&#13;
THE FURNACE&#13;
1 The End Of The World&#13;
| ot troubles that robbed E . H. Wolfe,&#13;
lot Hear Groye, la., of all usefulness*&#13;
came when he began taking Electric&#13;
I Bitters. He writes: "Two years ago&#13;
kidney trouble caused me great sufferjiutf,&#13;
which I would never have sur*&#13;
• viv«d bad 1 not taken Electric Bitters.&#13;
1 Ihfiy also cured me ot general debility."&#13;
Sure cure for all stomach, liver&#13;
; and kidney complaints, blood diseases,&#13;
headache, dizziness and weakness or&#13;
oodily decline. Pri.ce 50o. G a a r a n -&#13;
teed at F, A. S i l l e r ' s d r u g store.&#13;
is the best thing wo&#13;
f ^ a w r - - ^ a ^ a ^ « v e r *na d e and we've&#13;
been making furnaces thirty-three years. It is Aolld 3te«k—&#13;
every joint riveted. Never leaks. Has lined casing, chain&#13;
regulation, evaporating pan, etc.. Burns any fuel economically.&#13;
Made in six sizes; powerful and durable.&#13;
WE SELL DIRECT TO CONSUMERS.&#13;
and save you dealers' profits, .end for full 40 page boo*&#13;
which fully describes our goods and our maker-tO-USSl*&#13;
method of selling. We can save you money in buying and&#13;
fuel in using. Your name on a postal card, please.&#13;
HESS WARMING &amp; VENTILATING COMPANY,&#13;
921 Tacoma Building, Chicago, Ills.&#13;
• u&#13;
iBMaatAw&#13;
iiiliiiffliiiltt i"K«V.ViW ,*lWrf&#13;
Fortfet Your Lost Battle*.&#13;
Napoleon the Great 011 one of his&#13;
campaigns while walking about the&#13;
camp one night,'as he was accustomed&#13;
to do to discover how the soldiers were&#13;
occupied, chanced to come upou a&#13;
group listening-to an excited speaker.&#13;
Napoleon stole near to listen and found&#13;
that the m a a was regaling his comrades&#13;
with an .account of battles that&#13;
Napoleon had lost&#13;
"I had the fellow hanged as a traitor,"&#13;
Napoleon said, ' • l e u do not win&#13;
battles by the memory of battles lost'."&#13;
It was perfectly true. A distinguish-&#13;
, ed military officer affirmed that after&#13;
: troops had been beaten In a battle it&#13;
J took weeks to get them to fire as well&#13;
as they had done before. Bad success&#13;
demoralizes them. If one Is continually&#13;
; looking back at the things one has&#13;
I missed in life one loses ^ e power to&#13;
• grip what is yet within• m i c h of one's&#13;
hands.—London Snectator.&#13;
We make you Uiis fair and square proposition for so many mea have been awindleJ&#13;
by Quacks ami Fakirs wlio have *evt them- cheap medicines for a cheap price. If&#13;
you have tried " p a t e n t medicines", "free t r i a l treatment*", " I a v l g o r a t o r a " , ''Electric&#13;
Belts", &amp; c , you are d i s c o u r a g e d — W B W I L L L E T Y O U P A Y A F T E H Y O U&#13;
A R E C U M E D — n o t a cent in advance. Dra. K. &amp; K. b a r e been eitablished 30 year*.&#13;
T h e New Method T r e a t m e n t cures when all else fails.&#13;
: i E RVOU S DEBILITY STS? SrEK&amp;'SS t-..i . . ....^i^av^ThTTi^h JITAKLY I N D I S C R E T I O N S , E X C E S S E S A N D B L O O D&#13;
I . - i ^ . \ M :•. 51 yc u have any of t h e following' •ymptonis consult us before it is too&#13;
la:?. Ar -...11 jKiviMis n:.d wc.iV:, despondent and ploomy, speck9 before t h e eyea, w i t h&#13;
dark circle; under them, weak back, kidneys irritable, palpitation of the heart, bashful,&#13;
d- us ami losses, sediment in urine, pimples on the faca, eyes sunken, hollow c h e e k s ,&#13;
1 r.w &gt;ru expression, poor memory, lifeless, distrustful, lack energy and strength, tired&#13;
:.:(&lt;: ings, r e s t l e s a n i g h t s , changeable moods, weak manhood, premature decay, bone&#13;
pains, hair loose, sore throat, etc. ?&#13;
n i f \ f \ r \ D ^ N S O ^ ^ I V I O Blopd poison i s ; h e most prevalent and&#13;
f*&gt; L ^ L J V , J L I " V y § ^ 3 \ J %\ ^ 5 most serious disease. It t»aps the very&#13;
1: t'e blood -of the victim, and unless entirely eradicated from the system will affect t h e&#13;
future generation. Beware of Mercury. It'oniy suppresses the symptoms—onr N E W&#13;
M E T H O D positively cures it forever.&#13;
OUR N E W M E T H O D T R E A T M E N T alone can cure you, and make a man of&#13;
vou. Usuler its itiiluence the brain becomes active, the blood puritied so that all p i m p l e s ,&#13;
V'.otches and ulcers disappear, the nerve* become strong as steel, so that nervousness,&#13;
bashful:ie&gt;»s and despondency vanish; the eyes becomes brig-ht, the face full and clear,&#13;
enerirv r e ' u r n s to Oie bodv, and t h e moral, physical and vital systems are invigorated;&#13;
all dr'ai:is (.'ease—no more vital waste from the system. Don't let quacks and f a k i r s&#13;
rob you of your hard earned dollars. We will cure you or no pay.&#13;
R t » « j ^ \ jr* D A r e TOB a victim ? Have von lost hope ? Are you intending1&#13;
t ^ U LV I t ^&gt; m'arrv? Has your blood been diseased? Have you any&#13;
weakness? Our New Method T r e a t m e n t will cure you, C O N S U L T A T I O N F R E E .&#13;
No waiter who has treated you, &lt;•• rite for an honest opinion Free of Charge. B O O K S&#13;
F R E E - " T U e Golden Monitor" (Illustrated)^ o a Diseases of Men.&#13;
DRS KENNEDY &amp; KERGAN&#13;
Cor. Michigan Avt and Shelby St.* - DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
There is nothing .so pleasant as that&#13;
liifiht. tbeerlul, at'-peace with-tba-&#13;
•vund fueling when you sit down to&#13;
•• our br«akf;ist. There is n o t h i n g so&#13;
HIGGLE A Farm Library&#13;
of unequalled value.&#13;
P r a c t i c a l , Up to&#13;
date, Concise and&#13;
Comprehensive.&#13;
Handsomely Printed and&#13;
Beautifully Illustrated.&#13;
BY JACOB B1QQLE BOOKS&#13;
No. 1 - B I G Q L E HORSE BOOK&#13;
All about Horses—a Common-sense Treatise, with mort&#13;
than 71 illustrations ; a standard wmk. Pi ice, fti Cents.&#13;
No. 2 - B I G G L E BERRY BOOK&#13;
All al&gt;o(it growing Small Fruits—read and learn how.&#13;
Beautiful colored plates. Price, 'H&gt; Cents.&#13;
No. 3-B1GOLB POULTRY BOOK&#13;
All about Poultry ; the best Poultry Hook in existence;&#13;
tells eveaything. Profusely illustrated. Price, 50 Cents,&#13;
No. 4 - B I G G L E COW BOOK&#13;
All about Cows and the Dairy Business; new edition.&#13;
Colored plates. Sound Common -sense. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 5 - B I Q G L E SWINE BOOK&#13;
All about Hogs— Rreeditig, Feeding, Butchery, Diseases,&#13;
etc. Covers the whole ground.. Prjcc, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 6 - B I G G L E HEALTH BOOK&#13;
I r.uiducive 10 good work and gocd&#13;
1 :vsults. The healthy man with a&#13;
1'beal'hy mind and body is a better&#13;
i lello.vv, a better workman, a better&#13;
• citizen than the man or woman who is&#13;
I handicapped by some disability, however&#13;
slight. A slight disorder of the&#13;
stomach wHI d e r a n g e your body, your&#13;
thoughts and your disposition. Get&#13;
j a way from the moruidness and the&#13;
! bines. Keep your stomach in tune&#13;
i and both Your&#13;
i respond.&#13;
I eating i'an be easily corrected and you&#13;
will be surprised to see how much&#13;
j better man yon are. Try a little&#13;
\ Kodol For Dyspepsia alter your meals.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler DrugclBt&#13;
l • ^&#13;
I Excursion to the Picturesque High-&#13;
| lands of Ontario a i d Teningnmi Region&#13;
i via y r a n d Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Extremely low tares to Muskoka&#13;
Wharf, P e n e t a n g , T e m a g a m i and&#13;
New Liskeard and return on all trains&#13;
Aug. 23, 1906. Excursion tickets will&#13;
al»T be on sale at Muskoka VN hail to&#13;
any point on Lake Muskoka, Rosseau&#13;
or Josepb, and at P e n e t a n g to any&#13;
point on P a r r y Sound DiYisioD ot the&#13;
Northern Navigation Go. For fares&#13;
and further infcrrr.ation consu.t local&#13;
a^ent or write to Geo. W. Vaux, A. G.&#13;
P. &amp; T. A., Chicapo, III.&#13;
THE ORIGINAL LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUF&#13;
KENNEDY'S LAXATIVE HONEY^TAR&#13;
ited Clover Blossom and Uoner Bee oa Every Bottla.&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach No appetite, lots ot stroDgth.i&#13;
M M , headache, constipation, b*d breath.&#13;
feneral debility, sour risings, tad catarrh&#13;
of the stomach are all due to indlgestioa,&#13;
Kodol cures indigestion. This naw disoov»&#13;
try rearesents the natural Juices of digaa*&#13;
tfoa a r tbay axlai in a healthy Ustjnanhj&#13;
oomblnod with the greatest known toafv&#13;
and reconstructive properties. Kodol Dya»&#13;
pepsla Cure does not only cure indlgestioa&#13;
and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy&#13;
m^ . !_ . x ,_, . ,, L. ^ i c u r e s *H stomach troubles by cleansing,&#13;
f a S l V a ^ ffiSulf-' i ^ y o u ^ h V r ^ ' P ^ i n « » •WMtontog « d M t h d j f&#13;
weak you have fainting, nmotherinjr, i the mucous membranes lining the stomach.&#13;
Mtrlctlr Bnnln&lt;&#13;
"May 1 ask if I am iu tfco afarfcwt for&#13;
a bid for your affectioBOf asked the&#13;
youth who did everything la * businesslike&#13;
way.&#13;
"You must go to pp.r bofore I can&#13;
take any stock in your offer," answered&#13;
the dutiful broker's daughter,—Baltimore&#13;
American.&#13;
You Know&#13;
•weak and hungry spells^ shortness of _ . . _ .&#13;
breath when walking or going up stairs; *-\ w a s troubled with «bur •tomacb'for'twea&amp;ywn.&#13;
Mr. S. S. Ball, of Ravenswood, W. V«-;\iay«—&#13;
heart is Irregular, flutters or palpitates; i Kodol cured ma aM we are now ustag It IS n s l&#13;
have pains around the hoart, in side for baby." - \&#13;
and under shoulders, cannot sleep on ' KAHAI ntmmatm W1u» V M W^&gt;&#13;
left side; or have difficulty in breathing . . ^ , R O " w Z**?V* 7 , ° * J,?? f ^ T ^ - .&#13;
when lying down. i Botuetooly. $1.00 Sire holdln* 2¾ times the trtsl&#13;
Then a o ^ M ^ g ™ . t a M n S : P n m m ^ ^ g S f f t O % m A&#13;
New Heart Cure i SoM&#13;
t&#13;
by *• A;n™f«- f ™ * * This h^art and blood tonic will cure A s k for t h e 190» k o u o l a l m a n a c&#13;
you if tnken in time. ' . ,,A.. 7 ,&#13;
The time is? when you notice any of i a m i 4(JU cuieiHlar.&#13;
the above symptoms. - - ^Maw^a^M^K^H^MMiH^wwBM^^—M^^MM.&#13;
"I am glad I was persuaded to try ~ —-r- •••-••-••••••-&#13;
Dr. Miles' Heart Cure. I suffered great- \ HOLLISTER'S&#13;
]y ,rom ,w«„™. o, ,„„,.„. ,,„„,,.„„. Roc. Mountain Tea Nuggola a Busy Medicine for Busy People.&#13;
Brings Golden Health and Renewed Vigor.&#13;
A specific fur Constipation, Indifrestion. Liver&#13;
and Kklnev Liouoles, Pimi&gt;,«.^. Eczema. Imoure&#13;
Hluoil, litui Iireaih. Slu^ish Bowels. Headache&#13;
and Kackiiche. Its Rocky Mountain Tea in tublet&#13;
form. r-&gt; cen-.s H box. Genuine . made by&#13;
HoM-is'iiii D\iv&amp; CuMi'ANV. Madison, Wis.&#13;
GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPLE&#13;
smothering p'pc-Hs, and pain around the&#13;
heart. I took six bottles and was entirely&#13;
eured, had no symptoms since."&#13;
JOHN K. TODD, P. M., Uniopolis, O.&#13;
The first bottle will benefit, if not, the&#13;
druggist will return your money.&#13;
She 3?iudnmi JHsyatrfc&#13;
PD8LI3HBD BVKRT THCKSDAY HORSISb h^&gt;&#13;
F R A N K L . A N D R E W S &amp; C C&#13;
EDITORS X»a PROPRIET0H8.&#13;
aauecriptlon Price $1 ia Advance.&#13;
R a i l r o a d G uicle&#13;
iat«rdti.!»l i.'id fodioJiv.&lt;j at Pmcsiiiay, M i c a l ^ a t&#13;
tia aecoud-ciaea la&amp;tter&#13;
AU.'ertiaiu^ raiee uiado known on application&#13;
Business CardB, $4.00 pur year.&#13;
i'ci&amp;iu t»au luurria^u notices puulietied t r u e .&#13;
Aunouacemeats ot emeri^innmnts may be ^bit.&#13;
[or, if desired, uy ,&gt;r'sentia*; ihe omce with tick&#13;
BCB of admie8ipn. In caaeticKetBare not broutM t&#13;
to tneuilice.remUar rates willLtecbaryt -.,&#13;
AH matter iu lucainotice column vpiliOe ch..i^a&#13;
«a a t o c e a t a per line or fraction tuereof .for e&amp;it&#13;
insertion. Where no time is apecinea, all notice,&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, anc&#13;
will be charged f or accordingly. £ip~All changes&#13;
of adTertisemente MUST reach t h i s office ae earl}&#13;
MTrjKHDAr morning to insure an insertion th#&#13;
same wee is.&#13;
JO'S rsixiz.vG :&#13;
In all i t i branches, a specialty. We naTeaHkinc =&#13;
and the latest styles oi Type, etc., which e n a b k s&#13;
UB to execute all kinds uf work, such as Hookt,&#13;
Pamplets, PosterB, Frogrammes, b i l l ' H e a d s , Nott&#13;
Heads, atateuientB, Cards, Auction Bills, etc.,in&#13;
&gt;rain a n d b o d v w i l l ' au Pe r i or styles, upon tUeihortest notice. Pric«sai&#13;
-' I low as ^ood work can be aone.&#13;
L i t t l e i n d i s c r e t i o n s o f o v e r - i ALL UILLS PAYABLE FIRST OK KVKBV MONTH.&#13;
PERE MARQyPTTE&#13;
I n e f f e s t A p r . 3 C . 1 9 C C ,&#13;
Trains leave South Lv&lt;.&gt;n art r.ili,,\s&gt;;&#13;
For. Detroit anil East.&#13;
10:4¾ a. m., '2:\i' [•. in. s.-&gt; p. in.&#13;
For (Jranil Rapids, North and Weft,&#13;
!&gt;:2'i :i. ni., '1:10 p. m., 6:1^ p. .a.&#13;
For Saginaw aud Bay Lily,&#13;
10:48 a. in.,.2:19 p. ia.,S:r&gt;s p. m.&#13;
For Toledo aud South ,&#13;
10:48 a.m., 2:19 p. m.,&#13;
FRANK BAV, B. F. MOELLEl:,&#13;
Ag^nt, Sout^ I.von. 'T. P. A., perr .,!f &lt;&#13;
Giv&#13;
ncc&#13;
ves remedies and up-to-date information. A ho&#13;
.essity. Extremely'practical. Price, '&gt;0 CenJ*.&#13;
household&#13;
No. 7-BIQQLE PET BOOK&#13;
For the boys and girls particulatly. Pets of all kinds and&#13;
, ' how to care for them. Price, .^0 Cents.&#13;
No. 8-B1QQLE SHEEP BOOK&#13;
Covers the whole Rround. Eveiy pai;e full of ^jood ad-&#13;
\ ice. Sheep men praise it. Pi ice, ,"&gt;0 Cents. Farm Journal&#13;
is your paper, made for you ami not a misfit. It is 'J9 vears&#13;
ol.l; it is the great hoilod-thnvn, Ini-ihe-nail-on-the-head,&#13;
quit-aftcr-you-havc-said-it FaMii and Household paper in the&#13;
world—the biggest paper of iis size in the I'nited States of&#13;
America—having more than T h r e e Million regular readers.&#13;
Any ONE of t h e BIGGLE BOOKS, end the FARM&#13;
JOURNAL 5 YEARS (remainder of V.KY.. and all of HX.17,1908,&#13;
1909 and 1910), sent by mail to any address for A DOLLAR BILL.&#13;
Sample of FARM JOURNAL and circular describing BlUGLE BOOKS, free.&#13;
W I L M E R A T K I N S O N C O . .&#13;
PUBLISHER* or FARM JOVHNAI., PIIH.AT&gt;RI.PRIA.&#13;
TiiE YILLAGF DIRECTORY&#13;
V I L L A G E OFFICERS,&#13;
PutsiDiSNT E Li. Brown&#13;
TiiL^TiiEs I-!.uoen FiueU, Jamei Li^cne,&#13;
Will Keonedy *r , J aiues ."Muitu,&#13;
j . J-l't-eple.' En. Farauai.&#13;
CLtKK. lioger Carr&#13;
TitEAsfKEii Marion J. lieasou&#13;
A-iSKssou D. ^V'.Murta,&#13;
S l i i t t r I'OMSllsSlONBK W. A. Nixuii&#13;
llfcALl Li Ui'l'lCEK 1)1, ii . f . ai^lel&#13;
ATToiiNEi W . A . U a r r&#13;
MAKSUALI- Wui.Moran&#13;
Hrand Trank Railway System.&#13;
Fa*t Honnd fnni F i u c i n e *&#13;
No- OS Pa?-jei&gt;aer V.x s-:ndav, n::&gt;«i A, y&#13;
-No. HO P,'i*ser»'er Ex. S:;; ;ty, 1:55 p . M&#13;
K'i'«! Pi o 11;: • 1 t'r.-n ' i ; r k i i f v&#13;
No. J7 Pa^S*»nt;er Ex, S;;ii'l:iv, [tf.'n] A. M.&#13;
N'n. -.^ Pa«5fii.-&gt;\' FT, Sui.fb'v. &lt;:H P. \' •&#13;
Solid ^\'\f vest i 1)-.:1,. trait;- • -f.• *a. -1.• ~ .-,rt •' -'&#13;
iiiL-car-;ir-operai.-.i t.. New York i.m ! I-i.i'i;.&#13;
phia\ vi.i Niagara Kct!I••* &gt;&gt;v t !:«• • ' i r-iiid T- : '•;..&#13;
hiLth, Valley Hoaie. w. ;i. r&gt;tri-. A:-- rf,&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
JETHODiST EiHsCOPAL C t l l K C U .&#13;
Kev. U. C, JLiitlei,)L,a pastor, services «\ei„. M buaday uioruiu;; ai iu:iu, uaa every s u u u a : eveniDk; at T :ou o'clock, i'rayer tueetia^ Thu: c&#13;
day eveuiniis. auuday. sctioci at close uiinorr.&#13;
mgaerviee. jliss MARY. VASfi-KET, &amp;upt.&#13;
C^O.NoKiiciAl'ioNALc'HL'HLLi.&#13;
.' Key. O. W. Alylue pastor, service eve:;&#13;
i: suauay .u-jraia^ ac iO:60 *nd j v o r r s a a C a i&#13;
I evening at r :uc o C I J C ^ . Prayer Lueean^ 'i iiuri&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at close ot morr,&#13;
' :nK'eervn,e. Percy Swaruioul, supt,, .Vlocco&#13;
1 eeple bee.&#13;
O rtev. M. J, Couiinen'ord, 1 astor. Service;&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at r:$uo'clu&gt; l&#13;
uigh mass with sermon at ii.ibs. in. C a t e c a i t -&#13;
t d :lHj p. in., vespers and bsaediction at ?:3u p. u&#13;
PATENTS PROCURED AND DEFENDED; ^ndmodel,&#13;
drawing &lt;n j.li.ito. j'orexi -it ?e;ireli in;,! i -"o report.&#13;
Free adviee, how to oljtam l-atents. itade laarks,&#13;
copyrights, etc., |N ALL COUNTRIES.&#13;
Busi'i&lt;:*.r direct vilh Washington sarss /iittf,&#13;
monty an J-often the patent.&#13;
Patent and Infringement Practice Exclusively.&#13;
Write or come to us at&#13;
BS3 Rlath Strwt, op p. Baited SUtM Patwt Ofllet,&#13;
WASHINGTON, O. C. GASNOW&#13;
EB&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
I&#13;
K I L L T H E COUCH&#13;
AND C U R E THE L U N G S&#13;
WITH&#13;
k » * &lt; » ! . 1 ^ N * * * * * * * * * * The POSTAL *. MORIV,&#13;
Gr is wold ^&#13;
House etA«A.&#13;
modera,&#13;
up-to-date&#13;
Rot4. located&#13;
ID the heart mi&#13;
DBTrCJIT. theLU&#13;
Rates, $2, $? "0. $3 per DST&#13;
; o « O H M ! " • • » . ' . 4 . * « O l l l «•,&#13;
fllhe A. O. H. Society or tuis jilace, meets e\er&gt; I&#13;
X third Sunday m t n e F-r, AJattuen- liall. i&#13;
Joan Tuoiuey and M. T.. Kelly, Coo.aty Delegate- '&#13;
' p i i £ NV. C. I . L. meets the first Friday of each '&#13;
J. month at-^:3C p. in. at tne houie-oi Ur. kl. F. i&#13;
Mgler. Everyone interested in temperance is I&#13;
coadially invited. Mrs. V,eal Siller, Pres; M r : . |&#13;
iitta Durlee,Secretary.&#13;
The C . T . A - a n a b . scciety of this place, n-et I&#13;
tsvety third Saturuay evening ia the Fr. Ai s&#13;
thew Hall. John Donohue, I'reiideni. '.&#13;
.JUng's&#13;
Bisebviiy 0!\'3U;H'T;LI«I&#13;
OliGHSand&#13;
OLDS&#13;
Price&#13;
50c&amp;$1.00&#13;
Fc90 Trial.&#13;
S u r e s t and Quickest Cure for all&#13;
T H K O A T and LTJXG T R O U B -&#13;
L E S , or MONEY BACK.&#13;
J&#13;
Disease&#13;
kand Health&#13;
CUSTOM MADE FLY SCREENS Our work ifltar superior to the usual output of local mills, and has a style ami&#13;
finish not obtainable from those who do not make a specialty of screens. Send&#13;
us sizes of doors and windows. Wc guarantee a fit&#13;
For outsido Screens we use the Identical finish of the outside of Pullman Cars.&#13;
Tho best grade of Wire Cloth—enameled, galvanized genuine bronze, etc.,&#13;
fastened by tacks or by the "lockstrip" process.&#13;
Intending purchasers may have, free by mail, samples of woods, finishes&#13;
and wire cloth and copy of catalog and price list Agencies in many cities.&#13;
Special terms to contractors and builders. -&#13;
The A.M. PHILLIPS COMPANY, Fimtort, Michigan.&#13;
a # Ymmf C W J M H I M O * 4 f-« Aov— of / t o o *&#13;
REVIVO&#13;
RESTORES VITALITY&#13;
"Made*&#13;
Weil Man&#13;
of it."&#13;
KX I G i l T S O F MACCABEES. j&#13;
Meeievery Friday e\enin,; oa or before fill !&#13;
ot the moon at their" hall iu the Swaithout uldg ;'&#13;
Visiting brothers art -ordiallyinvited. j&#13;
CllAS. i.. t, AMlMltUL s i t u ; , - a i .!r I&#13;
. . . . . . i LlTln^sion Lodge, No.T'3, F A, A. M. Kejju!»i |&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before '&#13;
tbeTtill of the moon. Kirk N'an Winkle, M . V ,&#13;
0UDEK OF EASTERN STAR meets each ruoutt I&#13;
the Friday evening t'ollowinjt the regular F I&#13;
A A. M. meeting, MKS.NKTTB V A C U U S , W. M.&#13;
OU. EK K&lt;V MODERN WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
flret'Tnursday evmiti^' of each Mouth iu thc&#13;
Maeca.be* hall. C. L.eirimes V. C.&#13;
produce* tine reKQlts In SO days* It acts&#13;
powerfully and quickly. Cures when others fail.&#13;
Younu men can retrain their lost manhood and&#13;
old men may recover their vouthful vtfror by&#13;
using KKVIVO. It Quickly and quietly removes&#13;
Nervousness. Lost Vitality. Sexual&#13;
Weakness such as Lost Power, Falling Memory&#13;
Wasting Uiseasos.aajd effects of self-abuse or&#13;
excess and indiserffion, which unfits one for&#13;
study, business or inarriaK*. It not only cures&#13;
by starving at tho seat of disease, but is a great&#13;
uerv© tonic a n d blood builder, bringin*&#13;
back the p i n k glow to pale cheeks and restoring&#13;
the a r e of youth. It wards off approaching&#13;
disease; Insist on having REVIVO*&#13;
no other. It can be carried in vest pocket. By&#13;
mail, «1.00 per package, or six for f 5.00. We&#13;
sive free advice and counselto all who wish it,&#13;
with g u a r a n t e e . Circulars free. Address&#13;
ROYAL MEDICINE CO., Marine Bldo.. Chicago, III. Sold PbByT FC.X AX.E SYig, leMr, ICDHru.g gist.&#13;
LADIES OF T H E MACCABEKS. M«?»t every Is i&#13;
and ;ird Saturday of each nioutb at li:30 u m . a 1&#13;
K. O. T. M . h a l i . Visitiag &lt;;*ter« cordially in :&#13;
vitsd. LIL.K COMVVVV, Ladv Com. j&#13;
I / N I G H IS OK TUK LOYAL OUARD&#13;
•V F. L. Andrew* t\ M,&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS. '&#13;
H. F. S1«LER W. 0- C. I . SIQIER.M, D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
eayaiciaue and Sur«eoi,«. All calls promptly&#13;
ai''itoaenkdneedy ,t oMdaiyc h. or uight. Odiee on Main nfeet&#13;
FRANK L ANDREWS&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH sm&#13;
AT DISPATCH OFFICE&#13;
Why Not Buy the Best?&#13;
Good HouMkoopori U M&#13;
P. H. IRISH'S&#13;
Green Gross&#13;
EXTRACTS&#13;
VANILLA AND LEMON&#13;
w , n £ n ^ " J P 1 ^ w i t h t h e requirements tohf et hem Moaitc hsitgrianng penutr e ifno tnthl ela ,wco tuonnetr oyf) satrree nkgetpht. at a uniform standia rd of&#13;
*urf XSSJL 9R °C^R doesn't keep&#13;
the "GREEN CROSS" brand, senS&#13;
28 cent* and I will mail you a full Sox.&#13;
package of vanilla or lemon, prepaid.&#13;
VNTjere it takes so little, whynot&#13;
have the beat.&#13;
a T^ it.,anl y0U wU1 08« O* °t*«'&#13;
bati&amp;faction Guaranteed.&#13;
* P. H. IRISH.&#13;
M a n u f a o t u r o r ,&#13;
Mt. Clemens, Mich.&#13;
MILLIONS OF PEOPLE&#13;
STUDYING THE TRUSTS&#13;
THOUSANDS OF NEWSPAPERS DECIDING TO&#13;
PRINT THE TRUTH REGARDING THE&#13;
GIGANTIC "SYSTEMS"&#13;
THAT CONTROL THE PEOPLES FOOD, PRODUCTS AND&#13;
PROSPERITY&#13;
ALSO THE INSURANCE COMPANIES AND RAILROADS&#13;
IN ORDER THAT THE PEOPLE MAY CONTROL THE TRUSTS BY THE&#13;
POWER OF KNOWLEDGE&#13;
Thousands- of newspapers are deciding&#13;
to print the truth about the&#13;
trusts.&#13;
They have concluded to give their&#13;
readers the power of knowledge.&#13;
Without knowledge people are helpless.&#13;
It is the basis of our self-government.&#13;
When we know what to do we can&#13;
do it. It is a free country. The people&#13;
control everything.&#13;
All Power it In the&#13;
Hands of the People.&#13;
No political party has power except&#13;
through the people.&#13;
No political party can act without&#13;
popular support.&#13;
It may do so, but that is suicide&#13;
—at the next election it loses its&#13;
power.&#13;
Political parties have but to hear&#13;
the verdict of the people to realize the&#13;
people's power.&#13;
Combinations of capital are equally&#13;
helpless&#13;
—they must yield to the people or&#13;
be crushed.&#13;
Io these matters of meat, railroads&#13;
and insurance the power of reform is&#13;
in the hands of the public.&#13;
The people have but to decide what&#13;
they want done and it will be done.&#13;
The Power of the Press&#13;
Belongs to the People.&#13;
"Publicity is the cure for the&#13;
trusts," the President has said,&#13;
—because when the press gives the&#13;
facts to the public the public will exercise&#13;
its mighty power.&#13;
The press belongs to the public.&#13;
The people who read the newspapers&#13;
and magazines control them.&#13;
Let the people cease to read any given&#13;
publication and no matter how much&#13;
money its publisher has and how&#13;
much advertisers spend in it. its power&#13;
is gone.&#13;
The people are represented by the&#13;
press. They delegate their power to&#13;
itb columns when they undertake to&#13;
1 ave it solve public questions, for it&#13;
just as much or more than when the&#13;
public power is delegated to ;i member&#13;
of the legislature or of Congress.&#13;
To secure the representation of the&#13;
public is the aim of every ambitious&#13;
publisher. He is representative of the&#13;
public just to the extent he has subscribers,&#13;
just to the extent people&#13;
read his publication.&#13;
Getting Subscribers is&#13;
Almost Like Getting Votes&#13;
It's about the same as getting votes.&#13;
A subscription is pracically a vote&#13;
for the policy of the publication. It&#13;
furnishes the cash with which to publish.&#13;
It furnishes the moral support&#13;
that lies in the fact that people read&#13;
any given publication.&#13;
So the struggle is for circulation.&#13;
The great giants in publishing are&#13;
the city j.ress. Millions in money backs&#13;
t h e enterprises of the city publisher.&#13;
He reaches out into the whole country&#13;
for subscribers.&#13;
He waxes wealthy and hires the&#13;
best writers in the country and decides&#13;
to make his publications so interesting&#13;
that everybody will have to&#13;
read them. He stirs up public questions—&#13;
goes after the meat trust, the&#13;
insurance trust, the railroads, all the&#13;
vast enterprises which handle the&#13;
people's money and products and distribute&#13;
and augment the people's prosperity,&#13;
or vice versa, whichever way&#13;
you want to look at It.&#13;
The City Versus&#13;
The Country&#13;
It's the same old story—creating&#13;
central control, bringing the people's&#13;
money into the cities to be handled&#13;
by the men who publish the magazines&#13;
and daily newspapers and who&#13;
aim to abolish the country store and&#13;
the country publisher by making it&#13;
impossible for them to compete just&#13;
as the other trusts have centralized&#13;
other things, such as insurance and&#13;
cattle-killing and management of railroads.&#13;
It's the city versus the country—&#13;
the non-producer versus the producer,&#13;
the middle man versus the end man—&#13;
the fellows who take control of commodities&#13;
and cash between the producer&#13;
and the consumer and adding&#13;
nothing to either commodities&#13;
or cash amass vast fortunes&#13;
for themselves. T-ast year the&#13;
country's products were over twelve&#13;
billion dollars in value but the farmers&#13;
And the other working people got only&#13;
two billion dollars of this money. Who&#13;
got the rest?&#13;
It's the cor runt, immoral, sens*/&#13;
tionaj, lawless, dirty and diseased&#13;
city versus the incorruptible, moral*&#13;
sober-minded, law-abiding, clean and&#13;
healthy country—and the city has&#13;
the best of it to date.&#13;
Altftd and Abetted&#13;
By the Government&#13;
"Millions for postal service to distribute&#13;
the city publications to the&#13;
country people but not one dollar for&#13;
one cent postage," is the policy of the&#13;
government—Democratic or Republican,&#13;
it makes no difference, for the&#13;
city publisher has been getting his&#13;
little million dollar a week graft out&#13;
of the postal department under both&#13;
for years.&#13;
"Help the city all you can," is the&#13;
cry in Congress. "Crush the countryman.&#13;
Build up Chicago, St. Louis,&#13;
New York as Jobbing and manufacturing&#13;
and railroad and packing and&#13;
brewery and publishing centers. Don't&#13;
let a single state have a wholesale&#13;
center of its own unless it's located&#13;
where It can help us politically. Regulate&#13;
railroad rates to compel the&#13;
whole country to buy everything from&#13;
these great political centers and .to&#13;
send everything there—wheat, cattle,&#13;
cotton, cash.&#13;
"Kill off the country merchant and&#13;
the country store. They interfere&#13;
with centralized control. Kill off the&#13;
country banker. He keeps some of the&#13;
people's money at home. Kill off the&#13;
country publisher. He appeals to a&#13;
free and intelligent people and has&#13;
power we must curb. Drive all general&#13;
advertisers to use only the big&#13;
city publications and let the mail&#13;
order advertiser get all the local trade&#13;
away from the country advertiser who&#13;
supports the country newspaper.&#13;
Hurray for centralization. The country&#13;
people supply us with evervthine&#13;
we eat and wear and now let's make&#13;
'em supply all our cash and buy nothing&#13;
except what's advertised in our&#13;
publications."&#13;
That's the Cry&#13;
of the City&#13;
That's the cry of the city—the hungry,&#13;
jjensual, wicked, selfish, lazy,&#13;
cruel, cursed city that takes our young&#13;
people and converts them into disciples&#13;
of mammon, into non-religious,&#13;
non-virtuous, non-intelligent supporters&#13;
of city systems of graft and greed&#13;
and now wants to take all our other&#13;
possessions, including our independence&#13;
of thought.&#13;
And the city publisher goes about&#13;
it shrewdly.&#13;
He publishes what looks at the first&#13;
glance to be honest articles, setting&#13;
forth the facts about "Frenzied&#13;
Finance" and meat methods and railroading&#13;
and private car system and&#13;
insurance scandals, but which are&#13;
really inspired by motives that will&#13;
not bear analysis. The plausibility&#13;
of these articles is their shrewdest&#13;
point.&#13;
They look exactly as if they were&#13;
written "For the Common Good," but&#13;
they should all be labeled "Centralize&#13;
Everything in the Cities." From&#13;
rate legislation to packing house exposures&#13;
they all aim to create conditions&#13;
that will compel all business to&#13;
be done in great cities by great trusts.&#13;
The local butqher can't kill cattle under&#13;
government inspection, the country&#13;
store can't sell goods in competition&#13;
with the city mail order house&#13;
and the ordinary jobber in any state&#13;
center can't compete with the Jobbei&#13;
in big cities that are favored by the&#13;
Interstate Commerce Commission and&#13;
rate legislation.&#13;
But when the country newspapers&#13;
band together and emloy men of talent&#13;
to write regarding great subjects,&#13;
men who will give the facts and let&#13;
the people judge for themselves .hen&#13;
the country publisher protects himself&#13;
and his patrons. This Is exactij&#13;
what thousands of them are doing.&#13;
They are combining to have the truth&#13;
brought out regarding the trusts and&#13;
thus putting their readers in position&#13;
to enact legislation that will safeguard&#13;
the country against the attacks&#13;
of the city and the city's publishers&#13;
and politicians.&#13;
Thus the country ptiuli^.n r is as&#13;
serting himself and will be able to win&#13;
in the struggle for his own existence&#13;
and that of his patrons—the country&#13;
storekeeper, farmer, cattleraise; and&#13;
banker.&#13;
A L L ARE FOND OF MOLA88E?&#13;
Favorite Dish with Farm Hands&#13;
After Hard Day's Work.&#13;
The farm hands, a dozen brawny&#13;
colored men, had washed at the pump,&#13;
and now sat patiently and quietly at&#13;
the table. Soon their dinner appeared.&#13;
There was some kind of boiled&#13;
pork—a long, low oblong of pure&#13;
white fat, with Just one thread of&#13;
lean running through it: and there&#13;
was pone, delicious pone made by the&#13;
Southern cook; and there wens pota&#13;
toes, coffee and black molasses.&#13;
The men pu^ the black molasses&#13;
on their fat pork. The farmer said:&#13;
BIG NEW 8 H 0 E BUILDING.&#13;
it la Dedicated by the W. L. Douglas&#13;
Cp, at Brockton.&#13;
The dedication a short time ago of&#13;
the new administration and jobbing&#13;
house building erected by the W. L.&#13;
Douglas Shoe Co. as a part of Us mammoth&#13;
manufacturing plant at Montello&#13;
was marked by the thoroughness and&#13;
attention to detail characteristic of the&#13;
firm In all its undertakings.&#13;
The dedicatory program Included&#13;
open house from 11 a. m. to 8 p. m.&#13;
with concert by t h e Mace Oay orchestra&#13;
and the presence of a Boston&#13;
caterer to attend to the wishes of all.&#13;
The building itself afforded a feast&#13;
"Girls don't care for a man to have&#13;
a mustache nowadays, do they?"&#13;
"Nope. My fiancee Is always calling&#13;
mlo© down,"-^Cl€Telands fcwrier^&#13;
"It is amazing how farm hands like J for the eye, especially the offices,&#13;
molasses. I like It myself. The long,&#13;
hard work in the sunny fields gives&#13;
you an appetite that nothing satisfies&#13;
as molasses will.&#13;
"I used to have an overseer who&#13;
could no more have eaten his dinner&#13;
without molasses than without a&#13;
knife. He would take on his plate&#13;
meat, potatoes, corn, beans and so&#13;
•on, and he would chop Trad~Tntngle&#13;
these things together, adding bits of&#13;
bread besides, and lastly he would&#13;
take the molasses jug and pour on&#13;
about half a*pint. That seems like&#13;
a heavy and sickening. dish for the&#13;
hot noon of an August day, doesn't it?&#13;
I tell you, though, it tastes good to&#13;
a man who has been toiling in a blazing&#13;
field since sunrise. I've tried it,&#13;
*nd I know."&#13;
Queer Ways of Becoming Dead.&#13;
A circular issued by the Travellers'&#13;
Insurance company tells of some queer&#13;
ways In which its policyholders have&#13;
met death.&#13;
B. F. Elbert, of Des Moines. la.,&#13;
drove a pair of horses that took fright&#13;
and plunged into a stream. His wagon&#13;
overturned, pinned Mr. Elbert under&#13;
water and he was drowned.&#13;
John H. Hessler, of Wilkesbarre,&#13;
Pa., while walking over a railroad&#13;
crossing stubbed his toe and fell,&#13;
fracturing his skull. He died five&#13;
minutes later.&#13;
Henry S. Potter, of New York, an&#13;
office doorman, when cutting bread cut&#13;
his thumb. Blood poisoning developed&#13;
and he died in 1?. days.&#13;
Charles A. Redmond, of Cincinnati,&#13;
0., struck his toe against a bedpost.&#13;
Blood poisoning followed and he died&#13;
in 16 days. /&#13;
W. H. M. Barnes, manager of a de&#13;
tective agency in Seattle, was waiting&#13;
to take a %teamer when he fell into&#13;
the water and was drowned.&#13;
Patrick McGarry, proporietor of. a&#13;
boiler works in Chicago, was held up&#13;
by highwaymen, who fractured hi?&#13;
skull. He died three days after.&#13;
Surgery Cures Idiocy.&#13;
Growing geniuses by the surgeon's&#13;
knife is promised by Parisian experiments./-&#13;
They have at least cured idiocy.&#13;
Thr idea was conceived that idiocy&#13;
was frequently caused by the premature&#13;
union of the bones of the skull&#13;
in infants where no congenital causes&#13;
wore apparent. Acting on this assupmtion,&#13;
the French surgeons removed a&#13;
portion of the covering of the skull on&#13;
several patients, the idea being that&#13;
the brain had no room to expand commensurate&#13;
with the growth of the&#13;
child. The results in many'" cases&#13;
proved the correctness of the theory.&#13;
In some instances the results were&#13;
marvelous. One girl began to show&#13;
signs of recovering intelligence the&#13;
day the operation was performed.&#13;
which are marvels In many ways.&#13;
Fifteen thousand invitations were sent&#13;
out, lnolnding over 11,000 to the retail&#13;
dealers In t h e United States who&#13;
handle the W. L. Douglas Co. shoes,&#13;
the others going t o shoe manufacturers&#13;
and all allied industries In Brockton&#13;
and vicinity. Mr. Douglas will be&#13;
glad to have anybody who Is Interested&#13;
call and Inspect the new plant, and&#13;
says "the latch string Is always out."&#13;
All departments of the plant were&#13;
open for inspection, t h e three factories&#13;
as well as t h e new building, and visitors&#13;
were received and escorted&#13;
through t h e industrial maze by ex-&#13;
Gov. Douglas, assisted by the heads&#13;
0l the various departments.&#13;
Under the present system all shoes&#13;
are manufactured to order, and customers&#13;
sometimes lose sales waiting&#13;
for shoes to arrive. With the new&#13;
jobbing house they will be enabled to&#13;
have their Hurry orders shipped the&#13;
same day they are received.&#13;
The new building is 260 feet long&#13;
and €0 feet wide and two stories in&#13;
height. The jobbing department will&#13;
occupy the entire lower floor, while the&#13;
offices will occupy the second floor.&#13;
The jobbing department will carry a&#13;
complete stock of men's, boys', youths',&#13;
misses' and children's shoes, slippers,&#13;
rubbers and findings equal to any jobbing&#13;
house in the country. Buyers are&#13;
especially invited to come here to&#13;
trade, and every effort possible will be&#13;
made to suit their convenience. There&#13;
will be a finely appointed sample room&#13;
on the second floor, with an office in&#13;
which both telephone and telegraph&#13;
will be installed, with operators, both&#13;
Western Union and Postal Telegraph&#13;
wires to be used. There will also be&#13;
arrangements for the receipt and despatch&#13;
of mail.&#13;
A N Y T H I N G FOR F I L T H Y LUCRE&#13;
Writer's Cynical Justification of Mean&#13;
Piece of Work.&#13;
Found Cannon Ball of 1634.&#13;
A cannon ball which had lain buried&#13;
since 1634 was recently recovered&#13;
from a field on a farm at Acton, Nantwich,&#13;
England. The ancient town of&#13;
Xantwich played a considerable part&#13;
in the civil war, as the headquarters&#13;
In Cheshire of the parliamentary Generals&#13;
Fairfax and Brereton, and much&#13;
fighting took place at Acton, where&#13;
during a portion of the siege of Xantwich&#13;
the royalist forces were located.&#13;
On some of the masonry of both Acton&#13;
and Xantwich churches there are&#13;
still visible marks caused by cannon&#13;
shot.&#13;
Morgan Had Boiled Codfish.&#13;
J. Plerpont Morgan was being discussed&#13;
the other day, A man asked&#13;
if the party had ever been in the&#13;
financier's house and none had.&#13;
"Well, I had to go to see him once,"&#13;
said the interrupter, "and do you&#13;
know the thing that impressed me&#13;
most was the thought that If I had&#13;
as much money as Morgan I wouldn't&#13;
let it be known to everyone who entered&#13;
my hallway at that moment that&#13;
I was going to have boiled codfish&#13;
for dinner. The place simply reeked&#13;
with the odor of that dish."&#13;
Poor Little Kid!&#13;
-/Maybe his kalserlets now thinks&#13;
that it is fun to have all the royalty&#13;
of Europe goo-gooing a t . h i m and asking&#13;
him to smile for the ladies if he&#13;
wants a crown to play with, but just&#13;
wait until" later and "the kids" want&#13;
him to come out and play.&#13;
tte will be mighty sorry te&#13;
stay in and practice half the mi&#13;
fh managing his scepter, when tj&#13;
of "the fellers" a r e igoing flahi&#13;
Take our word .for., it, boys/&#13;
lira'being a king.—Mloneapol&#13;
A certain gifted writer of whom it&#13;
was once said that he wouldn't recognize&#13;
his wife if he met her on the&#13;
street wrote a charming love story&#13;
not so long ago, and it was printed in&#13;
a popular magazine. His friends and&#13;
all those of the circle in which the&#13;
author moved recognized the story as&#13;
an exact and recent transcript from&#13;
the life of the writer, involving a very&#13;
beautiful young* woman, also well&#13;
known in the same set. One man,&#13;
coming across the author, took him to&#13;
task for it.&#13;
"What in the world did you write&#13;
up that affair with Miss Blank for?"&#13;
he demanded.&#13;
The author looked at him unmoved&#13;
and with the same exquisite calm and&#13;
clearness that characterized his work,&#13;
replied:&#13;
"I needed the money.""&#13;
NOTRE DAME ALWAYS CHARMS&#13;
Visitors Never Tire of Beauty&#13;
Famous Cathedral.&#13;
of&#13;
Often as I have seen Xotre Dame,&#13;
the marvel of it never grows less. I&#13;
go to Paris with no thought or time&#13;
for it, busy about many other things;&#13;
and then, on -my way over one of the&#13;
bridges across the river, perhaps, I&#13;
see it again on its island, the beautiful&#13;
towers high above the high roofs&#13;
of houses and palaces, and the view,&#13;
now so familiar, strikes me afresh&#13;
with all the wonder of my first impression.&#13;
The wonder only seems greater&#13;
If I turn, as I am always tempted to,&#13;
and walk down the quays on the left&#13;
bank, the towers before me and with&#13;
every step coming more and more&#13;
completely together, by the Pont&#13;
Neuf, to the island, and at last to the&#13;
great square where Xotre Dame fronts&#13;
me in. its superb calm.—Elizabeth&#13;
Robins Pennell, in The Century..&#13;
T H I E V I N G SQUIRREL D R I V E N OFF&#13;
Robins Successfully Defend Nest&#13;
Against Marauder.&#13;
A pair of robins proved too much&#13;
for a marauding squirrel in Independ*&#13;
ence square yesterday. While ou a&#13;
midair cruise he suddenly stopped M&#13;
though something apecial had attract*&#13;
ed hli attention, and then he caaar*&#13;
down the tree in a slow, unconcerned&#13;
manner. The secret was 'out wham&#13;
he shyly began the ascent of another&#13;
oak, in the branches of which a pair&#13;
of t h e redbreasts had built their n e a t&#13;
His little eyes glistening and b i t&#13;
whole manner that of a thief, tot&#13;
moved up the tree trunk, and had aK&#13;
moat reached the little blue egga in&#13;
the nest when the mother bird and&#13;
her mate saw him and flew down from&#13;
their upper perch. They were on Mr.&#13;
Squirrel in an instant, and the fur&#13;
flew when their beaks got into action.1&#13;
The retreat of t h e squirrel was quickly&#13;
effected. The "watchers were&#13;
amused. Then a second time the rob-'&#13;
ber advanced, and was so successful&#13;
a s to get one of the eggs in his paws&#13;
before the birds came to the rescue.&#13;
The squirrel was nonplussed, as h e&#13;
couldn't back down with the egg with!&#13;
t h e birds pecking him, and he was&#13;
loath to relinquish his hard-won prize.&#13;
His hesitation was fatal, though, as!&#13;
t h e birds, with a concerted rush, fair-!&#13;
ly shoved him out of the nest, and t h e&#13;
robins followed him so quickly and&#13;
furiously that the egg was dropped&#13;
and smashed on the ground. The,&#13;
squirrel then gave up his purloining&#13;
expedition—Philadelphia Record.&#13;
HERITAGE OF CIVIL WAR.&#13;
T h o u s a n d s of Soldiers Contracted&#13;
Chronic Kidney Trouble W h i l e&#13;
in t h e Service.&#13;
The experience of Capt. J o h n L. Ely,&#13;
of Co. E, 17th Ohio, now living at 500&#13;
Bast Second street, Newton, Kansas,&#13;
will interest the thousands&#13;
of veterans&#13;
who came back from&#13;
t h e Civil W a r suffering&#13;
tortures with kidney&#13;
complaint. Capt.&#13;
Ely s a y s : "I contracted&#13;
kidney trouble during&#13;
the Civil War,&#13;
and the occasional&#13;
attacks finally developed&#13;
into a chronic case. At one&#13;
time I had to use a crutch and cane&#13;
to get about. My back wza lame and&#13;
weak, and besides the aching, there&#13;
was a distressing retention of tho&#13;
kidney secretions. I was in a bad&#13;
way when I begr.n u\ing Doan's Kidney&#13;
Pills in 1901, but tb.3 remedy&#13;
cured me, and I have t e e n well ever&#13;
&lt;ince.'»&#13;
Sold by ali dealers. 50 cents a box,&#13;
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
Rich Women Have Troubles.&#13;
The idea that fashionable women&#13;
a r e too busy and had too many interests&#13;
to feel acute sorrow over their&#13;
broken crockery was disproved the&#13;
other day when Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish&#13;
went int/) the principal dry goods&#13;
store in Xewport with a friend who&#13;
stopped to watch a man who was&#13;
selling cement for cut glass and called&#13;
to Mrs. Fish: "Oh, here is a cement&#13;
for cut glass which not only mends&#13;
it but makes it ring as clearly as if&#13;
it were new." Mrs. Fish called back:&#13;
"My servants break so much of my&#13;
glass now that it is heartbreaking and&#13;
if they knew it were possible to&#13;
mend it they would break it alt, so t&#13;
don't care for any, thank you."&#13;
Amusements of Royalty.&#13;
T h e amusements of Queen Wilhelmina&#13;
of Holland are skating and riding,&#13;
but as a child her hobby was the&#13;
keeping of poultry.&#13;
Mexican Coffee Kaiser's Favorite.&#13;
The German emperor is very fond&#13;
of Mexican coffee, and now drinks&#13;
none other.&#13;
KDICATXOXAL.&#13;
The Greatest Boarding College in the World&#13;
University of&#13;
Notre Dame&#13;
NOTRE DAME, INDIANA&#13;
WetruaranUt two joints; Our student*&#13;
study and our students behavt themsetva&#13;
18 Beildmfs 75 Professor* 800 Stadeats&#13;
Courses in Anelent aad Modern Languages, Enprlf*&#13;
h, HUtory, ami Economic*, Chemistry, Biolojrv,&#13;
I'harmacv, Clrll,Kle&lt; iricaJ, and Mechanical Englnoerintr,&#13;
Architecture, Law, Shorthand, Hook-keeping,&#13;
Tyj&gt;e-wrUlnfj.&#13;
SPECIAL DEPARTMENT FOR BOYS&#13;
UNOtilt THIRTEEN&#13;
TBIMS: Board. Tuition, and UeiTdry. $4Sfl.&#13;
Send too ceoli to (he Rsjialrar for Calalnjno&#13;
TVi,.&#13;
S T R O N G E R I than equlp neivoenrt, awnidth r eav isbedet tceoru raateaaff ,l a iomupr rgorveea*t «** school, the&#13;
15 Wilcox Aveu, Detrcrtt, Mich.&#13;
OWaer gbraardeu nantems oarroeu i*n i mkeietnat odresm bauntd n aon edq &gt;tihale*r. get good talaflea.&#13;
Our new catalogue 1« now ready. Getaoopy&#13;
and then get ready to apeiufa term: with ua&#13;
from September 4 th next. Write. ,&#13;
w. r. Jcwtix, R. J. Btiornr,&#13;
Free. , Pr*n.&#13;
DITROIT, MIOHIOAft.&#13;
I&#13;
GOT WILD WELCOME&#13;
MAORIS GREET VISITORS WITH&#13;
NATIVE CEREMONIES.&#13;
Proceedings, One Would Imagine,&#13;
Rather Trying to the Nerves of&#13;
a Party of Weetern Tourists.&#13;
- A&#13;
A traveler In New Zealand telle of&#13;
a native welcome. His party drew&#13;
near to the central home of the tribe&#13;
.of Maoris: "As we rested beneath&#13;
the parapets, we were startled by a&#13;
horrible yell and round the corner of&#13;
the stockade appeared a ferocious&#13;
figure, tattooed, red-painted, befeathered&#13;
and naked, except for a very&#13;
brief waist fringe of dangling palm&#13;
fiber. His eyes rolled till the whites&#13;
only were seen, then he thrust out a&#13;
long and snaky tongue and grimaced&#13;
tearfully. Shaking a wooden spear&#13;
ftp his hand, he swiftly cast it at us,&#13;
then turned and rushed toward the&#13;
village. Just as the spearsman&#13;
turned one of our young men, who&#13;
had rapidly divested himself of all&#13;
but &lt; his waist shawl, darted out in&#13;
pursuit and we followed at a .more&#13;
dignified pace. The entrance to the&#13;
city was barred by a body of&#13;
armed men, crouching still as death,&#13;
on one knee, each holding a gun, butt&#13;
on the ground, barrel sloping toward&#13;
us. We advanced until we were&#13;
within twenty paces of the warriors&#13;
Then all at once, at a wild cry from&#13;
a chief on the right, they jumped to&#13;
their feet, leaped high in the air,&#13;
with their feet doubled' under them&#13;
like deer, and with one voice liter&#13;
ally barked out a thundering chorus&#13;
This way and that our martial hosts&#13;
bounded, -brandishing their loaded&#13;
rifles in time to the chant. Halting&#13;
abruptly, with an earth-shaking thud&#13;
they fired a volley ef ball cartridge&#13;
over our heads.&#13;
"Another volley reverberated from&#13;
hill to hill and the bullets whistled&#13;
over us. Then the brown warriors&#13;
fell back and a gayly dressed band&#13;
of women, with green leaves wreath&#13;
ed about their brows, and waving&#13;
shawls and leafy boughs, advanced&#13;
with a gliding semidance and chanted&#13;
their ancient welcome song. When&#13;
the women's song ceased, out to the&#13;
front danced six girls—a group of&#13;
vividly barbaric, yet not inharmoni&#13;
ous, color—appareled in loose crim&#13;
son roundabouts and short- gowns ol&#13;
georgeously flowered print, their&#13;
brows bound about with red handker&#13;
chiefs, which held in place the black&#13;
and white plumes of the rare huia&#13;
bird and the iridescent feathers ol&#13;
the long-tailed cuckoo, their cheeks&#13;
dabbed with red ocher paint, green&#13;
stone pendants and shark's teeth&#13;
hanging from their ears.&#13;
"These barefooted nymphs, hands&#13;
on hips and heads thrown back,&#13;
glided into the measure of a dance&#13;
to the music of a shrill monody&#13;
chanted by a white-haired, tattooed&#13;
old lady. Then all at once the chant&#13;
ended on an unexpected high note&#13;
and "the performers stopped, breath&#13;
less and glowing all over with their&#13;
self-evolved emotions. Broad flax&#13;
mats were spread out for us on the&#13;
green and after speeches of greeting&#13;
we were regaled, with pork, preserved&#13;
birds, wild honey and potatoes, in&#13;
quantity sufficient to have satisfied&#13;
a starving Russian garrison."&#13;
"Adding Insult to Injury."&#13;
The phrase "adding Insult to injury"&#13;
originated from a fable by&#13;
Phaedus, a Roman author, who lived&#13;
in the reign of .Augustus Caesar, and&#13;
whose writings were first introduced&#13;
in modern literature in 1596, at&#13;
Rheims. France. The fable is called&#13;
'The Bald Man and the Fly," and is&#13;
as follows: "A fly bit the bare pate&#13;
of a bald man, who endeavoring to&#13;
crush it, gave himself a heavy blow.&#13;
Then said the fly, jeeringly: 'You&#13;
wanted to avenge the sting of a tiny&#13;
insect with death. What will you&#13;
do to yourself, who have added insult&#13;
to injury?' "&#13;
Deaf Women' Form Club.&#13;
One of the most curious clubs on&#13;
record has recently been formed by&#13;
society women in Berlin. The principal&#13;
condition of membership Is that&#13;
the applicant must be deaf. The club&#13;
has over a hundred members, who&#13;
meet regularly once a week in handsomely&#13;
furnished rooms in the Wilhelmstrasse,&#13;
where they converse by&#13;
means of ear trumpets and sign language&#13;
and ddnk tea.&#13;
Drawing the Line.&#13;
We have followed the plow, wielded&#13;
the hoe, served time on the public&#13;
roads under an auBtere overseer,&#13;
swept the backyard, worked the garden,&#13;
churned the butter, washed the&#13;
dishes, nursed the baby and performed&#13;
other various and sundry disagreeable&#13;
tasks in our times without a murmur,&#13;
but when it comes to cleaning streets&#13;
under three lady bosses—excuse us,&#13;
please. Three women to boss you.&#13;
Great Caesar's ghost! Just the&#13;
thoughts of such a catastrophe is&#13;
enough to give a man the "buck-ague."&#13;
—Minden (La.) Signal.&#13;
NEAR DEATH THROUGH SNAKE&#13;
8leeper Awoke to Find Monster Coiled&#13;
Around His Neck.&#13;
F. B. Feve, an employe of the&#13;
Northern Electric, hid a thrilling experience&#13;
with a snake Tuesday morning.&#13;
Feve with two companions occupies&#13;
a tent made out of gunny sacks&#13;
in the western portion of Oroville.&#13;
He was awakened by a feeling of&#13;
strangulation. He attempted to cry&#13;
out, but so tightly was his throat&#13;
bound that he could make no sound.&#13;
As he became fully awake he realized&#13;
that something must be done or he&#13;
would choke. He grabbed frantically&#13;
for his throat and his hand slipped&#13;
over the scales- of a huge snake which&#13;
had coiled itself around his neck. He&#13;
frantically pulled the coils loose, the&#13;
reptile resisting him and biting him&#13;
In the cheek. C\,&#13;
His two companions, awakened by&#13;
the noise, came to Feve's rescue. The&#13;
two pulled the snake away and threw&#13;
it to the floor, where it glided away&#13;
while the men attended to Mr. Feve's&#13;
wound. . The reptile was a gopher&#13;
snake.—Redding Correspondence Sar&#13;
Francsco Call.&#13;
PECULIAR MEANS OF DEFENSE&#13;
Small Daggers of Light Sent Out by&#13;
the Centipede.&#13;
Among the peculiar powers of animals&#13;
there are none harder to explain&#13;
than the power of being self-luminous.&#13;
It is sometimes termed phosphorescence,&#13;
but it is not now supposed to&#13;
depend upon phosphorus in the animal.&#13;
A correspondent of Nature describes&#13;
her experience with a luminous&#13;
centipede which shows the evident&#13;
purpose of the luminous substance&#13;
as a means of defense. "Attention&#13;
was first attracted by a light of&#13;
brilliant bluish-green that moved forward&#13;
over the gravel, leaving behind&#13;
a trail of light, which, gradually separating,&#13;
became a scattered mass of&#13;
brilliant points. The scattered ponts&#13;
proved to be red ants, which were pursuing&#13;
the centipede. It had discharged&#13;
this luminous liquid over them. The&#13;
centipede was picked up and put in&#13;
a tumbler where it flashed out a&#13;
mass of light. When the hand was&#13;
placed over the tumbler to prevent&#13;
the escape of the captive, a strange&#13;
prickly sensation was felt as from a&#13;
slight charge of electricity. The centipede&#13;
would wrTtTuTthe light out of its&#13;
body in blue-green flashes until it had&#13;
exhausted its luminosity and ceased&#13;
to shine. Defense seems certainly to&#13;
be one of the uses of this secretion.&#13;
SORES ON HANDS.&#13;
Suffered for a Long Time Without&#13;
Relief—Doctor Was Afraid to&#13;
Touch Them—Cur^d by&#13;
Cuticura.&#13;
"For a long time I suffered with&#13;
sores on the hands which were itchins,&#13;
painful and disagreeable. I had&#13;
three doctors, and derived no benefit&#13;
from any of them. One doctor said&#13;
he was afraid to touch my hands, so&#13;
you must know how bad they were;&#13;
another said I never could be cured;&#13;
and the third said the sores were&#13;
caused by the dipping of my hands&#13;
in the water in the dye-house where&#13;
I work. I saw in the papers about&#13;
the wonderful cures of the Cuticura&#13;
Remedies and procured some of the&#13;
Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment.&#13;
In three days after the application&#13;
of the Cuticura Ointment my hands&#13;
began to peel and were better. The&#13;
soreness disappeared, and they are&#13;
now smooth and clean, and I am still&#13;
working in the dye-house. Mrs. A. E.&#13;
Maurer, 2340 State St., Chicago, 111.,&#13;
July 1, 1905."&#13;
8mokers Shown by Handwriting.&#13;
Mr. Saunders, a former schoolmaster,&#13;
-told the British house of lords&#13;
committee on juvenile smoking that&#13;
he could detect smokers by their&#13;
handwriting—that of boys who smoked&#13;
being a loose, flabby kind. Handwriting,&#13;
he said, was a cinematograph of&#13;
the heart.&#13;
All creameries use butter color. Why&#13;
not do as they do—use JUNE TINT&#13;
BUTTER COLOR&#13;
As a rule, a divorced woman acts a*&#13;
though she had been born that way.&#13;
Mr*. WlaftloWs Soothing* Syrup.&#13;
For children tecthls*, Mfteiu the gami, reduce* In*&#13;
flAmat«UoD,»JUytpaln.curte wiadcolic. 25cabo«le.&#13;
Finds Time for Christian Duties.&#13;
Sir Andrew Fraser, governor of&#13;
Bengal, virtual ruler of 80,000,000 people,-&#13;
is the active president of the&#13;
Calcutta Y. M. C. A.&#13;
To Wash Velveteen.&#13;
Velveteen may be wauhed by shaking it&#13;
about in warm Ivory Soap «suds; then&#13;
rinse thoroughly and let it drip dry'. On&#13;
no account squeeze or wring it. Be careful&#13;
to hang it straight on the line, for&#13;
otherwise it will be crooked when dry.&#13;
ELEANOR R. PARKER.&#13;
King Doing Equestrian Stunts.&#13;
King Edward has taken to equestrian&#13;
exercise as a means of keeping&#13;
his weight down. Since the rabbit&#13;
hole mishap, which lamed him, his&#13;
majesty has been unable to take walking&#13;
exercise.&#13;
The University of Notre Dame, it appears,&#13;
has some features that can not be&#13;
duplicated in any other school. It is one&#13;
°e*We* ? w . well-established colleges, with&#13;
settled traditions reaching back sixty-four&#13;
years, with a distinguished staff of professors&#13;
and excellent library and laboratory&#13;
equipment. Its discipline is of the&#13;
paternal kind—strong without being oppressive;&#13;
and as it embraces in its scope&#13;
the grammar school, high school and college&#13;
work, Its appea1 is as broad as it is&#13;
potent. Perhaps the most remarkable&#13;
feature of the famous Indiana University,&#13;
however, is the fact that it has arrived at&#13;
Its present marvelous development absolutely&#13;
without endowment. An announcement&#13;
of the courses provided at Notre&#13;
Dame appears on another page.&#13;
A constable who arrested four men&#13;
on a country road in England the&#13;
other day for gambling told the magistrate&#13;
the men played cards as they&#13;
walked along, stopping to deal.&#13;
Superb 8ervice, Splendid Scenery&#13;
en rotrte to Niagara Falls, Muskoka&#13;
and Kawartha Lakes, Georgian Bay&#13;
and Temegami Region, St. Lawrence&#13;
River and Rapids, Thousand Islands,&#13;
Algonquin National Park, White Mountains&#13;
and Atlantic Sea Coast resorts,&#13;
via Grand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Double track Chicago to Montreal and&#13;
Niagara Falls, N. Y.&#13;
For copies of tourist publications&#13;
and descriptive pamphlets apply to&#13;
Geo. W. Vaux, A. G. P. &amp; T. A., 135&#13;
Adams St., Chicago.&#13;
Nicotine in Tobacco.&#13;
A scientist writes: "The essential&#13;
quality for which tobacco is smoked&#13;
or chewed lies not really in the leaves&#13;
themselves, but Is contained in thousands&#13;
of hollow-knobbed hairs which&#13;
cover their surface. The vital nicotine&#13;
is garnered in these pearlike balls, but&#13;
[ as it is impossible to shave off these&#13;
hairs, and would be a scarcely com&#13;
mendable achievement if it could be&#13;
undertaken, it becomes necessary to&#13;
preserve the whole foliage for commercial&#13;
purposes."&#13;
A 300-Page&#13;
Cook Book Free We are the in the world .p OobOiiOehDr sH otf ttXhel /orlWdes. t hIeta lItsh sloliur—f cJ. monthly magaxine for the horn*, ably edited uet&#13;
W» i ra.n. t. ,r oti to read a few copies. Sow* BMk«&#13;
tbltapeeiai offer:&#13;
Send u«60oent»(»t*«ipt if yoo prefer) with this&#13;
advertisement, and in addition to&#13;
800D HEALTH for six Swrtfc*,/ we will send yon FJREB a copy of Mrs. B). K CK«e«llkoKer'jer .'n»e wT ah0U0 -poaffpeer weoiollk nboot okap, pe"aMr ea»faitilaU. tet&#13;
Good Health PuMishisf Co.. Battle Creek. Mick.&#13;
You CANNOT CURE all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal conditions&#13;
of the mucous membrane such aft&#13;
aasal catarrh, uteri no catarrh caused&#13;
by feminine ills, sore throat, sore&#13;
mouth or Inflamed eyes by simply&#13;
dosing the stomach.&#13;
But you surely can cure these stubborn&#13;
affections by local treatment with&#13;
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic&#13;
which destroys the diseasegerms,cbecka&#13;
discharges, stops pain, and heals the&#13;
inflammation and soreness. .&#13;
Paxtine represents the most successful&#13;
local treatment for feminine Ills ever&#13;
produced. Thousands of women testify&#13;
to this fact. 5° cents at druggists.&#13;
Send for Free Trial Box&#13;
TUB U. PAXTON CO*&#13;
POETw b ,&#13;
HTtoroLms MUSIC CO.,&#13;
MlBCBLLAJfBOUB.&#13;
to write words for a SONG.&#13;
We will write IDnsic and preeenl&#13;
New York l inert.&#13;
8t. Ja&#13;
Pubiiibe&#13;
APPLES WANTED. J. B. HOXSIK * CO.. St. Paul. Minn.&#13;
Petri**,&#13;
Pure,&#13;
8n»tt,&#13;
WINTER Wfceat, eOfemhel* per acre.&#13;
Catalogue and samples FB1B.&#13;
gaJs*r8«»4C«. B«l W.K.UfrWMiWI*.&#13;
W. U. U., DETROIT, NO. 33, 1906.&#13;
What is Castoria.&#13;
/^ASTOBIA is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and&#13;
^ ^ Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor&#13;
other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays&#13;
Feverishness, It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic It relieves Teething Troubles,&#13;
cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach&#13;
and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The children's Panacea—The&#13;
Mother's Friend.&#13;
The Kind Tou Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over&#13;
30 years, has borne the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under&#13;
his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this.&#13;
All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good " are but Experiments that trifle with&#13;
and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment.&#13;
Letters from Prominent Physicians&#13;
addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher.&#13;
A WINNING START.&#13;
American Poetry.&#13;
'AmericarK poetry Is occasional, not&#13;
professional; something aside from&#13;
the day's work, instead of being the&#13;
day's work.&#13;
Browning wrote a poem a day for&#13;
a stated period, applying his every&#13;
working hour to the task undertaken.&#13;
Browning is an example of a professional&#13;
poet. We cannot boast of such&#13;
an example.&#13;
John Burroughs boasts of only&#13;
one poem called "Waiting." Hawthorne&#13;
and Webster Wrote two or&#13;
three poems. Cooper wrote three.&#13;
Bryant had a day's work to do In&#13;
a atwapaper office, as did Eugene Ktifcile Emerson had lectures to&#13;
; Sidney Lanier was a flute&#13;
~ player In a Baltimore orchestra.&#13;
Joaquin Miller Is writing poems&#13;
. while he plows—like Burns.&#13;
A Perfectly Digested Breakfast Makes&#13;
Nerve Force for the Day.&#13;
J- Played In Luck.&#13;
Rowan—Did you have any trouble&#13;
In learning to play the cornet?&#13;
Bloit—tjpne worth mentioning. AH&#13;
the neighbors were poor shots.~Chlcago&#13;
Dally Newt.&#13;
Everything goes wrong if the breakfast&#13;
lies in your stomach like a mud&#13;
pic. What you eat does harm if you&#13;
can't digest it—it turns to poison.&#13;
A bright lady teacher found this to&#13;
be true, even of an ordinary light&#13;
breakfast of eggs and toast. She&#13;
says:"&#13;
"Two years ago I contracted a very&#13;
annoying form of indigestion. My&#13;
stomach was in such a condition that&#13;
a simple breakfast of fruit, toast and&#13;
egg gave me great distress.&#13;
"I was slow to believe that trouble&#13;
could come from such • a simple diet&#13;
but finally had to give it up, and&#13;
found a great change upon a cup of&#13;
hot Postum and Grape-Nuts with&#13;
cream, for my morning meal. For&#13;
more than a year I have held to this&#13;
course and have not suffered except&#13;
when injudiciously varying my diet.&#13;
"I have been a teacher for several&#13;
years and find that my easily digested&#13;
breakfast means a saving of nervous&#13;
force for the entire day. My gain of&#13;
ten pounds In weight also causes me&#13;
to want to testify to the vajue-of&#13;
Grape-Nuts.&#13;
"Grape-Nuts holds first rank at our&#13;
table." »&#13;
Name given by Postum Co., Battle&#13;
Creek, Mich.&#13;
"There's a reason." Read the little&#13;
book, "The Road to Wallville," to&#13;
nkft.&#13;
LJ,::^ ..,.&gt;. •:!•,,.'.T.i.Lii.ui::! .iniuiiniiiiiiin.&#13;
9 oo DROPS&#13;
^u-niutmli 'in'j'1&#13;
AYegetablc Preparatioafor Assimilating&#13;
(itcFoodandRegula-&#13;
Ung the Slomachs and Dowels of&#13;
I \ F IN I S SC H1L1) R F N&#13;
Promotes DigestiortCheerfulness&#13;
and Rest.Con tains neither §&gt;ium,Morphine nor Mineral.&#13;
OT MARC OTIC.&#13;
jjjgjfe&#13;
Aperfect Bemjedy for Constipation.&#13;
Sour Stomach.DiarrtttM&#13;
Wonns,Convul9bRsJievmth&#13;
ness and Loss OP S u n&#13;
fieSimat Signature ef&#13;
Dr. F. Gerald Blattner, of Buffalo, N. Y., says: "Your Castoria is good&#13;
2OT children and I frequently prescribe it, always obtaining the desired&#13;
results."&#13;
Dr. Gustave A. Eisengraeber, of S t Paul, Minn., says: "I have used&#13;
your Castoria repeatedly in my practice with good results, and can recommend&#13;
it as an excellent, mild and harmless remedy /or children."&#13;
Dr. E. J. Dennis, of St. Louis, Mo., says: "I have used and prescribed&#13;
your Castoria in my sanitarium and outside practice for a number of years&#13;
and find it to be an excellent remedy for children."&#13;
Dr. S. A. Buchanan, of Philadelphia, P3., says: "I have used your Castoria&#13;
in the case of my own baby and find it pleasant to take, and have&#13;
obtained excellent results from its use."&#13;
Dr. J. E. Simpson, of Chicago, 111., says: "I have used your Castoria in&#13;
cases of colic in children and have found it the best medicine of its kind&#13;
on the market."&#13;
Dr. R. E. Eskildson, of Omaha, Neb., says: MI find your Castoria to he a&#13;
standard family remedy. It is the best thing for infants and children I&#13;
have ever known and I recommend it."&#13;
Dr. L. R. Robinson, of Kansas City, Mo., says: "Your Castoria certainly&#13;
has merit Is not its age, its continued use by mothers through all these&#13;
years, and the many attempts to imitate i t sufficient recommendation?&#13;
What can a physician add? Leave it to the mothers."&#13;
Dr. Edwin F. Pardee, of New York City, says: "For several years I have&#13;
recommended your Castoria and shall always continue to do to, aa it haa&#13;
Invariably produced beneficial results."&#13;
Dr. N. B. Slser, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: MI object Jo what are called&#13;
patent medicines, where maker alone knows what ingredients axe pat la&#13;
them, but I know the formula of your Castoria and advise its use,"&#13;
GENUINE'? C A S T O R I A ALWAYS&#13;
Bern the Signature of&#13;
N E W YORK.&#13;
EXACT COPY Of WMAWC*. Tie KiDd Too fiave Always Bough!&#13;
In U M For Over 30 Y«&#13;
Mf &gt;&#13;
V'&#13;
ijfflffli'ji^&#13;
«tUCKUKMMalNied%»;9)nilUiMft^^ w *caiiu««*&lt;ia*--^*'^-v'"i*-''l*:M' "H"""****'&#13;
••&gt; «.• • &gt;&#13;
"^* .«!?£*• 'i- ;^t-' -'?-V £"*&#13;
: **a£S£Nfe&#13;
'*.%&#13;
IV? \y&#13;
A&#13;
•&#13;
;»&#13;
I&#13;
;V?V&#13;
Among Dilr Correspondents *&#13;
•wwrw^ t&#13;
CHILSON&#13;
N. O, Smith was in Toledo and&#13;
Detroit last week.&#13;
Miss Agnes Gehringer went to&#13;
Howell Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. A. J. Alden entertained&#13;
her sister from Toledo on Sunday.&#13;
Henry Gehringer amljwife spent&#13;
a few days last week at Albert&#13;
Smith's.&#13;
Floyd Maetas and Blongis Larkin&#13;
visited Mr. and Mrs. Oswold&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Miss Amelia Dam in ami spent&#13;
part of last week with friends in&#13;
Fowlerville and Webberville.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. F. P. Dammau and&#13;
Mrs. J. R. Dammann of ^ a m b u r g&#13;
spent Sunday under the parental&#13;
roof.&#13;
Mrs. L. A. Jackson returned to&#13;
Durand Saturday after spending&#13;
two months with N. B. Smith and&#13;
family.&#13;
"b&#13;
Scrub yourself daily, you're not&#13;
clean inside. Clean insides means&#13;
clean stomach, bowels, blood, liver,&#13;
clean, heaUby tissue in every organ.&#13;
Moral: Take Hoi lister's Rocky Mountain&#13;
Tea. 35 cents, tea or tablets.&#13;
Ask your druggist.&#13;
A. S. Williams of Sebewaing&#13;
and 0. D. Williams of Stockbridge&#13;
visited their sister, M r s / Richard&#13;
Mrs. Obert of Durand is the Mackinder, Saturday,&#13;
guest of her sister, Jennie Watson, ! Mrs. Fred Mackiuder off Ander&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
Mrs. Otis Webb spent last week&#13;
with relatives in Lansing.&#13;
Subscribe for the Pinokney Dispatch.&#13;
*&#13;
B usln esfPointers. 4&#13;
f&#13;
FOR BALK.&#13;
Four soven weeks-old pigs.&#13;
Thos. Burchiel.&#13;
FOB I A U L&#13;
Cow, Incubator and Brooder, Coal&#13;
Stove and Cook Stove also a few potatoes&#13;
Going to leave the village&#13;
Yates Burch.&#13;
To Exchange—A nice house and lot&#13;
worth $800 in the railroad center ot&#13;
Durand For a bouse in Pinckney.&#13;
Mrs. Edith Olrich,&#13;
t 3¾ Durand, Mich.&#13;
Edward Oranna and family are&#13;
on a visit with relatives in Lansing.&#13;
A, C. Watson and family are&#13;
enjoying a two weeks camp at&#13;
North Lake.&#13;
Frank Marshall and family of&#13;
Stockbridge spent Sunday with&#13;
his mother nere.&#13;
Lyman Hadley and wife and&#13;
Jas. Bartou and wife are taking in&#13;
tfye sights about Buffalo and Niagara&#13;
Falls.&#13;
The L A S of the M. E. church&#13;
held a social tea with Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Wirt Bartmm on Wednesday,&#13;
Aug. 15.&#13;
lJrof. Tyler, of Amherst college, said&#13;
recently: "A man can live comfortably&#13;
without brains; no man ever lived&#13;
without a digestive system. The&#13;
dyspeptic has neither faith, tope or&#13;
charity." Day by day people realize&#13;
the importance of caring for their&#13;
digestion ; realize the need of the use&#13;
of a littlee corrective after overeating&#13;
A corrective like Kodol tor Dyspepsia&#13;
It digests what you eai.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Druggist.&#13;
son, and Miss Marguarite Markinder&#13;
of Toledo, visited at R. H.&#13;
Mackinder's last week.&#13;
Mrs. H. F. Lyman attended services&#13;
at the Presbyterian church&#13;
iu Unadilla, Sunday, for the first&#13;
time in twenty-five years. She&#13;
says:&#13;
"But few are left&#13;
Of those we knew&#13;
Some twenty years ago."&#13;
ADDITIONAL LOCAL&#13;
of&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
Pure cider vinegar.&#13;
Mrs. Maud Carpenter.&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG ,&#13;
Cyrus Bennett and family visited&#13;
his brother Ralph, Sunday.&#13;
Clarence Travis' family of Chicago&#13;
are visiting at Mrs. Emma&#13;
Blacks.&#13;
Mrs. Reed of Washington D. C.&#13;
is visiting her sister, Mrd. Ben&#13;
Gartrel.&#13;
Mrs. Nettie Davis of Kansas&#13;
visited her niece, Mrs. R. Haddock&#13;
last wqek.&#13;
Mr.JWay and daughters of Detroit&#13;
j p guests of Geo. Hull and&#13;
da&#13;
About rifty spent a pleasant afternoon&#13;
at the Aid held at Mr.&#13;
Geo. Hull's Wednesday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Amos VanHorn of&#13;
Newark, N* J. have been guests of&#13;
John Vanhorn for the past week.&#13;
PLADTFIELD.&#13;
Alex Montague and sister&#13;
Howell visited heFe last week.&#13;
W. N. Braley is spending his&#13;
vacation at home on the farm.&#13;
Members of Hive 511 will pleaee&#13;
remember the regular meeting on&#13;
Aug. 22.&#13;
Neil McCleer and his gang of&#13;
carpenters began work on the new&#13;
church last Monday.&#13;
Ice cream sale at the hall over&#13;
the store, Saturday evening, Aug.&#13;
18. Everyone invited.&#13;
L A S meet with Mrs. Geo. Phillips&#13;
for tea on Friday afternoon,&#13;
Aug. 17. All are invited.&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
The time has been extended on the&#13;
tax roll until Sept. 1. This is positively&#13;
the last extention so let all taxpayers&#13;
take notice. Jlarion Reason.&#13;
r Village Treas.&#13;
Old maids would be scarce and bard&#13;
to find,&#13;
Could they be made to see,&#13;
How grace and beauty are combined&#13;
By using Rocky Mountaiu Tea.&#13;
Wanted—To buy a team weight&#13;
1,200 or 1,250, five or six years old./&#13;
Mark Swarthout.&#13;
People Are Warixd&#13;
not to fiik terries in the swamp&gt;&#13;
lormerly known as Mulgrove or Gallager.&#13;
H. F. Kice.&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Miss Nellie Fish is at Orchard&#13;
Lake for a short time.&#13;
Mr. D. Smith is entertaining&#13;
her sister from Ann Arbor.&#13;
Ed Dryer and Leon Lewis were&#13;
home from Chelsea o\er Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Eleanor Chambers is with&#13;
relatives in Highland for&#13;
Peasant*' 3vp»ratitlon».&#13;
Now and then, not often, ghostly appearances&#13;
or sounds are explained to&#13;
the peasant's satisfaction. Thus in the&#13;
county of Durham "Gabriel's hounds"&#13;
were for long, long years believed to&#13;
•hrlek and howl through the air on&#13;
dark nights and to forebode death to&#13;
hlru who heard and saw them. But&#13;
prosaic modern research proved them&#13;
to be uothing but flocks of wild geese&#13;
migrating southward on the approach&#13;
of winter and choosing dark nights for&#13;
their journeys. Similarly the ghost of&#13;
Irbydale, In the Lincolnshire wolds, a&#13;
goblin who territied travelers at night&#13;
with Ita * heartrending cries and who&#13;
was said to be a witch wTio had been&#13;
worried to death by dogs In a long past&#13;
age, has been shown to be nothing but&#13;
an owl. On the other hand, no true&#13;
Cornlshman will ever be Induced to relinquish&#13;
the belief that the spirit of&#13;
King Arthur still haunts the ruins of&#13;
Tintagel in the shape of a white chough,&#13;
and assuredly the many English families&#13;
who possess a white bird of omen.&#13;
•uch as that which John Oxeuham saw&#13;
In "Westward Ho," cling firmly to the&#13;
tradition if not to the belief in i t -&#13;
London Graphic.&#13;
The Will to Die.&#13;
Two or three years ago, in a Lancashire&#13;
town, while a fair was Ju progress,&#13;
to the proprietor of a steam&#13;
roundabout there came a shopkeeper&#13;
whoso wife was lying supposedly at&#13;
The Ladies Aid of tbe La kin- appointment&#13;
will meet with Mrs. 1. J*&#13;
Abbott on Thursday, Aug. 23, for&#13;
supper. Everybody cordially invited.&#13;
Masters. Hollis and Donald Sigler&#13;
have opened an open air store on the"&#13;
corner ot their lawn and are doing&#13;
a thriving business selling popcorn,&#13;
ice oream, candy, etc.&#13;
The Missionary meeting at tbe lake&#13;
was voted a great success in every&#13;
way and very much enjoyed by all&#13;
who attended- The ladies agree "it is&#13;
good to be there." so we appoint our&#13;
next meeting at the1 cottage and extend&#13;
on invitation to all who care to&#13;
be present at the September gathering.&#13;
Thy receipts of tbe meeting .vas two&#13;
dollars and twenty-rive cents.&#13;
The doctors of Ann Arbor have or&#13;
gani/ed to protect themselves against&#13;
people who do not pay their bills.&#13;
Tbey do not think a man should give&#13;
of his knowledge free any more than&#13;
the grocer or dry goeds merchant. A&#13;
death occured there recently where&#13;
then* would no doctor attend as the&#13;
family had proven themselves dead&#13;
beats and thus a controyersary has&#13;
arisen as to whether they could com&#13;
pel a doctor to attend a case acainst&#13;
his will and be held responsible if tbe&#13;
person dies.&#13;
The news last week that Fred&#13;
Sprout had passed away at the home&#13;
of his parents in Marthaville, l a „&#13;
was a surprise to all. We learn, bowever,&#13;
that his health had been failing&#13;
for more than a year and when stricken&#13;
with disease he did not have the&#13;
strength to stand it. Fred was well&#13;
known here having attended school&#13;
in the village and bad many friends&#13;
who were saddened to learn of his&#13;
death. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Sprout&#13;
and daughter Ethel, bave tbe sympathy&#13;
of the entire community.&#13;
T h o m a s H. B r o u g h i s D e a d&#13;
Thomas H. Brough died at his&#13;
home, 618 Hancock street, at 4&#13;
o'clock Monday of a complication&#13;
of diseases, aged 58 years.&#13;
Thomas Hay Brough was born&#13;
in Perth, Scotland May 30,, 1848,&#13;
and came to this country in 1872&#13;
and settled in Hartford, Conn.&#13;
He left there in 1873, going to&#13;
Buffalo, N. Y.» where he met&#13;
Amelia M. Allen, whom he married&#13;
on Jan. 14, 1874. They left&#13;
Buffalo and came to Pinckney,&#13;
Mich. I n 1884 they went to Saginaw&#13;
which has since been their&#13;
Young Mens Club&#13;
A letter received from a former&#13;
member of the dab, now in Seattle.&#13;
R«v. Q. W. Mylne,&#13;
Pinckney, Micb.&#13;
Dear friend:—&#13;
Thinking that perbapi&#13;
you may have gained tbe impression&#13;
that I had forgotten all the folks back&#13;
there because 1 have not,answered&#13;
your welcome letter before, but tbe&#13;
fact ot tbe matter is that I have been&#13;
quite bmy for tbe p ast month. 1&#13;
started in with this company four&#13;
weeks ago and it took quite a little&#13;
extra work to get next to their business,&#13;
but this afternoon I feel as if [&#13;
didn't care whither there was ever&#13;
any more business done or not. I do&#13;
net know what the cause ot this is&#13;
unless it is that 1 have been thinking&#13;
all day of the time- your folks were&#13;
probably having there celebrating the&#13;
honor of the "Home Coming," and I&#13;
wish I was there.to join in the *port,&#13;
but I may as well wish for a million&#13;
dollars, for as far ab all 1 can see now&#13;
I might set one just as soon as the&#13;
other. I hope you are having nice&#13;
weather tor it anyway and good&#13;
crowds, which I kn*ow there must be.&#13;
I have been working for the Magnesia-&#13;
Asbestos Supply Go. four weeks&#13;
and 1 find it a very pleasant company&#13;
to work for and the bosses are all good&#13;
natured, that helps some. 1 have&#13;
some stenography work to do, and&#13;
considerable collecting, and Oh, what&#13;
a time I do have when I get 25 or 30&#13;
cents of t! e company's money in my&#13;
pockets. My work of collecting lakes&#13;
me out two da?s every week and I&#13;
take a car ride all over tbe town at&#13;
their expense, (what a cinch).&#13;
I see by tbe last paper I got from&#13;
home that A. Swarthout and "Banty"&#13;
Campbell have gone to Chelsea to seek&#13;
their fortunes, well 1 can sympathizd&#13;
with them on their disappointment,&#13;
unless tbey Cum out more successful&#13;
in that line than I have, for I uced to&#13;
think that a person ought to save a&#13;
neat little sum off from $15 per week,&#13;
but I don't know why it is I haven't&#13;
found the receipt for that yet.&#13;
We have been having some very&#13;
fine vveitber in the past and I hope it&#13;
will continue for some time yet. It&#13;
is quite dry just at present but not&#13;
very warm, a person is comfortable all&#13;
the time, while I guess by the sound&#13;
of some of the letters I get from home&#13;
that it is pretty hot there, so you had&#13;
better all come to Washington where&#13;
everything is just, perfect.&#13;
Well 1 guesn I will bave to cut this&#13;
out as it is getting time for the boss&#13;
to make his sturdy appearance~around&#13;
will&#13;
imlth&#13;
R. H. Kennedy,&#13;
timo.&#13;
Miss Mayme Fish&#13;
FOR 9ALB.&#13;
Two nice lot; on Main street, with&#13;
fine shade. And door and window&#13;
frames sufficient for fair sized house.&#13;
22 tf H.&gt; W. Crofoot&#13;
WANTED.&#13;
A place to work for my board and&#13;
attend school in Pinckney tbes coming&#13;
year. C. F. Wegener. 133&#13;
a s h o r t , to die. And the woman was dying—&#13;
! from suggestion, though organlcally&#13;
i there was not tho least reason why she&#13;
returned 'should. The clergyman entered the&#13;
Tuesday from a visit with her : room and cleared out the doleful ones.&#13;
sister in Bay City. l"You're not going to die." he said.&#13;
"What! Am I not dying, parson? Then,&#13;
thank (Jod, I won't!" That woman was&#13;
well In next to no time and round at&#13;
the vicarage thanking its master for&#13;
having saved her life,—St. James' Qaeette.&#13;
home. Mr. Brough was in the yonder corner, so hoping this&#13;
the point of death. "Thou raun stop i dry goods business and was with! finti 3'0U enjoy inur rhu '^&gt;r. of 1&#13;
thy organ." he said. •'Why?" asked ! j w lD r ,e l u n t i l last December a n d having a tin* tim -, I rem MI&#13;
tho other. •Thou mun stop it, I tell | J " w. ijppei unxn i a « -uecemoer,, n Yourstiulv&#13;
tha\ My missus cawu't dee," was the when he was compelled to give up&#13;
reply, a dialogue for which the writer ! business jwing to ill health. Mr.&#13;
CflA S - n m i i had placed on record a | B«&gt;«gh's sickness dates back five&#13;
similar instance. Visiting a sick pa- j years when he was taken with tyrishioner,&#13;
he was told by the doctor that \ p u o i d fever and since then he has&#13;
the sickroom was full of mourners, as- '&#13;
BUring the woman that she was about&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
A.house and several lofs.&#13;
ot&#13;
Enquire&#13;
i&#13;
Lvman Peck, pinckney&#13;
Percy Swarthout&#13;
Funeral Director&#13;
AND EMBALMER&#13;
ALL CALLS ANSWERED&#13;
PROMPTLY DAY 00 NI6H7&#13;
C O L L I N S P L A I N S&#13;
Mrs. Janet Webb is at North&#13;
Lake for a time.&#13;
Richard Mackinder visited his&#13;
parents at Pinckney last week.&#13;
Tbe music of the threshing&#13;
machine is in the air these days.&#13;
Halstead Gregory of Detroit&#13;
called on old friends here last&#13;
week.&#13;
Kred Mackinder of Anderson&#13;
Stropping a Razor.&#13;
'"The tdoa that a razor needs frequent&#13;
grinding or honing Is not In keeping&#13;
with my experionce," said a man who&#13;
shaves himself. "I have a razor that i&#13;
got ten years ago which has never been&#13;
out of my possession, never had any&#13;
other treatment than stropp-ing, and is&#13;
today the sharpest and best of six. A&#13;
razor can only be kept in this condition&#13;
without boning, however, by using a&#13;
visited his brother Richard, Sat- ,lQftrd strop-that la, one which is rigid&#13;
Instead of flexible and not the kind&#13;
PARLORS AT&#13;
PLIMPTON'S OLD STAND Plione No.30&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
urday.&#13;
Lozell Hoard of Gregory called&#13;
on his sister, Mrs. Willis Pickell,&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Dennis Rockwell of Stockbridge&#13;
visited his father, John Rockwell&#13;
here, Sunday.&#13;
that makes an arc of a circle when you&#13;
u«e It. This latter sort will sharpen a&#13;
razor for awhile, hut It also makes the&#13;
edge round until at last it ceases to cut.&#13;
Why do I have six razors? Well, that&#13;
Is to use them In regular turn and give&#13;
each one of them a rest. I shave every&#13;
day. which I find the least troublesome&#13;
method, and If I use the same blade&#13;
•very day It would soon play out The&#13;
The WCTU will hold smother's edge of a razor needs rest, just like&#13;
meeting at the Unadilla M. E. ••ery other machine/&#13;
church ThurBday. ; ~&#13;
Mrs. H. G. Lyman of Jackson, I TO ****'&#13;
is visiting her grand daughter, I A store fo rent. Enquire of&#13;
_tr&#13;
'&#13;
Mrs. R. H. Mackiuder. Miss^^ITrjrerarVr-Pinckney.&#13;
1 been failing. He was a man est&#13;
e e m e d highly by everybody and&#13;
had a host of friends and the community&#13;
at large will mourn his&#13;
death. He is survived by a wife,&#13;
two sisters and one brother, living&#13;
in Scotland, also by a nephew,&#13;
James Brough, of Rochester, N.&#13;
Y. T h e remains were taken&#13;
to Pinckney jfor burial.&#13;
I «&lt;«1«'K* K x p e m e .&#13;
Aii ol»l couple fell ill of old age together.&#13;
The husband died, but the wife&#13;
had more vitality. On the day following&#13;
her husband's death she was bet»&#13;
ter, and the doctor was congratulating&#13;
himself on the success of his treatment.&#13;
Hut the woman's point of view&#13;
was different.. She complained bitterly,&#13;
for, as she forcibly pointed out. "Ef&#13;
ee'd lat me alone one funeral 'ud a done&#13;
for us two, an' look what it'll cost now&#13;
berrying two of us separately!"&#13;
Ask your druggist for Pylo Pile&#13;
Cure |Jvery box warranted. Price&#13;
25 cents. Por Sale by P. A. Sigler,&#13;
Pinckney , Micb. t, 36&#13;
Why does the sun burn? Why does&#13;
a mosquito sttns? Why do we feel&#13;
unhappy in the good old summer&#13;
time? Answer: we don't. We use&#13;
DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve, and&#13;
these little ills don't botbtr us. Learn&#13;
to look for tbe name on the box to get&#13;
the genuine.&#13;
Hold by F. A. Stfltr, Dragglft&#13;
; »M"HH 1 fci i I I I I I M i l l H i&#13;
A&#13;
;! All are not successful busi-&#13;
I; ness men who advertise, but&#13;
;; few men are successful who do&#13;
• • not advertise. No business&#13;
• j properly conducted and well&#13;
I! advertised will fail. A poor&#13;
!! advertisement in a poor medium&#13;
;; will accomplish nothing.&#13;
• A good tdvtrtiieme&amp;t in a nbptf a »&#13;
\ 4hun will •ocoapUah ^—J—&#13;
.»&#13;
1&#13;
JT i&#13;
» •&#13;
i •&#13;
*&#13;
v »&#13;
This paper is the right mo '4^M\&#13;
\ \ drum. '•;*"*&#13;
Any business man can pr*&#13;
I pare the right advertisement V&#13;
; he will simply state facts.&#13;
: : - • • - : . . : - . i'l I It 11II1111111II11 M&#13;
+&#13;
i&#13;
V&#13;
«&#13;
i,&#13;
Hewitt's ffi» Salv*&#13;
-j=~&#13;
itaisili</text>
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                <elementText elementTextId="1621">
                  <text>Newspaper</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <elementText elementTextId="1630">
                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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        <element elementId="52">
          <name>Note</name>
          <description>Extra information that can be shown with the item.  Such as how to get a physical copy of the item.</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="37022">
              <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="40289">
              <text>VOL. XXI7. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1906. No. 34&#13;
CI&#13;
f&#13;
J.&#13;
i&#13;
*•*'*•&#13;
• V , l&#13;
V&#13;
LOCAbNBWS,&#13;
The democratic county convention&#13;
will be held at Kowell Monday, Sept.&#13;
10.&#13;
Mrs. Jacob Bowers and daughter&#13;
Nellie are visiting her son Frank and&#13;
wife at Clare.&#13;
A county ditch is being constructed&#13;
in Washtenaw Co. that will be six&#13;
miles in length.&#13;
Martc Bell thinks be has quite a&#13;
harvest—he threshed 1,900 bu. of&#13;
grain the past week.&#13;
Chester Parshall and wife of »-Iowell&#13;
were the guests of tbeir daughter, Mrs.&#13;
Herbert Gillette, the past week.&#13;
Ht. Joseph's church, Dexter, will&#13;
hold their annual picnic in Birketts&#13;
grove, Tuesday ot next week, Aug. 28&#13;
The young people will want to put&#13;
in their best time during the next two&#13;
or three weeks—vacation is nearly&#13;
over.&#13;
Wesley Wilkinson,.formerly with L.&#13;
D. Brokaw in the furniture business at&#13;
Howell, has purchased a farm in Dakota.&#13;
Beginning wi'ii next Monday, Aug.&#13;
27, Wixom Bros are to have the use of&#13;
the str^es of Ho'well for a street&#13;
carnival.&#13;
Dr. J . M. Brown of Ne% Yorfc, was&#13;
the gu*st uf Miss Mae JReason the past&#13;
week. .Mr. Brown was formerly a&#13;
dentist here.&#13;
Casper CulEane, who has been&#13;
spending two or three weeks with his&#13;
parents here, returned to his work at&#13;
Freeport, 111., Monday. He is working&#13;
in a large job printing office. He&#13;
got his start in the DISPATCH cffice.&#13;
C. P. Sykes and son are in Munith&#13;
doing a job of plumbing,&#13;
The Grand Trunk freight abed9 are&#13;
undergoing much needed repairs.&#13;
Will Harris and bride, of Dexter,&#13;
were in town the first of the week.&#13;
Miss Hazsl Peters has been spending&#13;
the past few weeks in Howell with&#13;
relatives.&#13;
Paul Fobey entertained his friend&#13;
Duncan McDonnell, of Brighton, the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Miss Catherine Hackett, of Detroit,&#13;
is spending a few days with relatives&#13;
and friends here.&#13;
Geo. Spencer and wife of Parshallville&#13;
were guests of her sister, Mrs. W,&#13;
H. Clark, the'past week.&#13;
H. G. Briargs and wile, who have&#13;
been spending several weeks in N. Y.&#13;
returned home this week.&#13;
Grant Dunning and family-of Hamburg&#13;
were the guests of his brother&#13;
Willis and family Sunday.&#13;
'NotherBisTimein&#13;
Pinckney &gt;&#13;
St. Mary's Picnic the Attraction&#13;
Thursday last Pinckney was visited&#13;
by another large cr^wd as it was the&#13;
annual picnic of the members ot St.&#13;
Mary's parish and the many friends.&#13;
The day was a good one for a picnic&#13;
and everything passed of finely.&#13;
There was a large crowd, a large dinner&#13;
and a large time in general.&#13;
The ladies of this society are noted&#13;
for their excellent dinners and this&#13;
year was no exception—the tables&#13;
were actually laden with good things&#13;
and the woods was full of people to&#13;
help unload them.&#13;
After the dinner came the speeches&#13;
and they were listened to with good&#13;
attention and many good things were&#13;
said.&#13;
The usual games and sports were&#13;
indulged in and a genuine good time&#13;
J. J. Teeple nni wife l«ave today ! enjoyed, Everyone seemed to be out&#13;
'Assessment 86 of the L 0 T M M is&#13;
now due and must be paid on or&#13;
before Aug. 31. Carrie Wilson, F. K.&#13;
Don't Forget The&#13;
Dispatch Office&#13;
for Bay View, Marquette and Manistique,&#13;
for a few weeks visit.&#13;
Miss Jennie Black, daughter of W,&#13;
J.. J31ack, o'f St. John, is visiting&#13;
relatives here and at Plaingeld.&#13;
Joe Kennedy, who has been working&#13;
the past year in the DISPATCH&#13;
office, resigned his position this week.&#13;
H. D. Mowers and wife are spending&#13;
a couple ot weeks with a son at Manton,&#13;
in the northern part of the state.&#13;
Brighton has organized a "home&#13;
coming" association and will make&#13;
arrangements to hold a big meeting&#13;
next year.&#13;
for a good time and Rey. Comerford&#13;
and his people wjre there to assist in&#13;
having it.&#13;
' The ball game was the la?t in the&#13;
afternoon was between the Pinckney&#13;
and Gregory teams. Pinckney winning&#13;
the game, icore 17 and 10.&#13;
There was the usual party at the opera&#13;
house in the evening and a good time&#13;
was reported.&#13;
Altogether the picnic was more&#13;
successful than ever oefore, the pro&#13;
ceeds being $475.00.&#13;
Wl&#13;
Headquarters for&#13;
Drugs, Medicine&#13;
Books, Stationery&#13;
Fancy Crockery&#13;
Ice Cream Soda&#13;
P. A. SIGL.BR&#13;
Congregational Church. M. E. Church Notes.&#13;
The State Fair&#13;
Quite a number of our regujar at-j There were the regular services&#13;
tendants are absent on vacation and morning and evening Sunday and&#13;
are missed from their usual places. ! considering the weather there was a&#13;
The interest and attendance has; large attendance. Several droveMn&#13;
been well sustained however in spite j from five and sis miles and express&#13;
of the heated and vacation period. ! themselves as well paid for the effort.&#13;
There will be services at the church Both sermons were stirring ones and&#13;
tonight, Thursday, at 7:30. Well received&#13;
On next. Sunday there will be no; There will be the usual services&#13;
Dr. C. L. Sigler and family, Guy The Michigan State Fair, Detroit' ! preaching service, but Sunday classes , next Sunday and something excellent&#13;
Teeple and family and Norxa-Vaughn Augu&gt;t 30 to September 7, will be an will meet at 11:30, also pastor&#13;
spent several days at the cottage 'at j event of unusual magnitude, excelling j conducted by ;uperintendent.&#13;
Portage this week. in character and extent of exhibits, nu-&#13;
Alter beiflg bothered with the tfyer- merous sp eial features and in attendfiow&#13;
and impurities of the Grand river, ance all previous fairs held in Micbi-&#13;
Jackson citizens will expend $90,000 , gan. The new grounds at the north&#13;
in cleaning out and straightening the'of the city readily reached, by cars&#13;
river bed. j without transferring have been trans-&#13;
Mr. Stickle and Mr. pox_who have j formed into the prettiest, most convenbeen&#13;
spending ten days at "the home of i«nt ^position Held in the country.&#13;
Young Mens Club&#13;
Since organization of the club over&#13;
3 years ago the following active mem&#13;
bers have removed:&#13;
When in .need&#13;
&lt;if Printing of&#13;
any kind. We&#13;
own our plant&#13;
and building, so&#13;
pay no rent or&#13;
hiyh taxes, and&#13;
can do work «t&#13;
right prices. . .&#13;
Chas. Stickle and at Portage lake, returned&#13;
to tbeir home in Rochester, N&#13;
Y., Tuesday,&#13;
Many gcod items of news escape the&#13;
best njewspapers because people neglect&#13;
to inform the editor or correspondent.&#13;
Please remember we are&#13;
not omniscient.&#13;
Saturday Aucr. 18, the ball game&#13;
between the boys and men ot North&#13;
Hamburg ended with a score of 16 to&#13;
Enormous sums of money have been&#13;
expended for new buildings—twentyone&#13;
being built since Ihe last exhibition&#13;
of the Society—thus lorming a&#13;
veritable city of substantial structures.&#13;
Some of the toatures will be a very&#13;
complete show of live stock all under&#13;
Gale Johnson,&#13;
Glen Richards&#13;
Kay H. Kennedy&#13;
Roy Caverly&#13;
Brayton Placeway&#13;
Ijllery Durtee&#13;
Jay Smith&#13;
Frank Boylan&#13;
Will Mclutyre&#13;
Albert Mill's&#13;
The following&#13;
Detroit&#13;
Chicago&#13;
Seattle, Wash.&#13;
Dundee&#13;
Pontine&#13;
Port Arthur, Tex.&#13;
Chelsea&#13;
Chiibon&#13;
took to themselve&#13;
: is promised those who attend. The&#13;
Sunday school will take up the question&#13;
ot a nicnic and dispose of it at&#13;
that time so let all interested try and&#13;
be present. It a picnic is held it will&#13;
{ have to be some time next week as&#13;
i schools open the first week in Sep!.&#13;
! The pi&amp;yer meetings a*e woli attended&#13;
' and mujh good is being done there.&#13;
Every member of the church should&#13;
'attend these services, and all. persons&#13;
j will be made welcome.&#13;
There are only % few mm'e weeks&#13;
! before conference and .all should improve&#13;
them -by attending every service.&#13;
roof, .gricultural products, minerals,&#13;
art, etc., fancy work and needle display j wives and resigned their mem&#13;
—educational exhibit all shown ad- | Fred Teeple Geo M»wer&gt; Guv.&#13;
vantageously in some ot the many J e 8 8 e Heur.vexposition&#13;
buildings. A new b r i c k I Others expect to marry soon, but the&#13;
ot a&#13;
7 in favor of the latter, in spite of the' Horticultural Bui'ding, 70x160, and President is still doubtful&#13;
F. L. ANDEEWS &amp; GO., PUBS.&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
Id-Simmer Clearinn Sale&#13;
Is Now On&#13;
e are selling all our Fancy (Jhi-&#13;
, Lamps qnd Water Sets at cost&#13;
•"• to order to make room for new&#13;
Goods. Decidedly low prices are&#13;
made all through the store. For&#13;
instance:&#13;
1 lb A. A H. Soda for 3c&#13;
45 yd Spool Black Darning Cotton for lc&#13;
Four 200 yd Spools Thread for&#13;
(mistiness) ot the old men.&#13;
Will Parshall plowed up a good&#13;
sized nugizet of virgin copper on his&#13;
farm in Oeeola, a short time ago. T. e&#13;
interesting question now is whether&#13;
there is any more ther?.—Tidings.&#13;
Mrs. George Cuiy went to the sanitarium&#13;
this waek for a thorough&#13;
treatment of rheumatism from which&#13;
she has been&#13;
the Dairy Building with its 80 foot; A q u i e t w e d d i n g t o o k p l a c e T u e s&#13;
glass refrigerator will contain much to, i d a y m0VQ[ng W Q e n M i g J B e t h g w a r t b&#13;
interest and instruct every visitor. ^ d a u ^ t e r ot M l , a n d ^ H&gt; H&#13;
There will be plenty ot good races&#13;
fcr people who love that kind ot sport.&#13;
Stockbridge is m the throes&#13;
•treet carnival this week.&#13;
M or ley- Reeves and wife of Lansing&#13;
spending a few days with the&#13;
Van Winkle families here.&#13;
Mrs. Ray Culhane of Stoekbridge&#13;
visited at the home of her parents, Mr.&#13;
and Mr&gt;. Mark Be 1, the past week.&#13;
Mrs. S. I. Kennedy delightfully&#13;
entertained eleven young ladies at a&#13;
Good music by a band of 50 pieces-&#13;
Roy Knabenshue will be there again&#13;
with his air ship and make daily tours&#13;
over the grounds. The stock and&#13;
fruit entries promise to be better than&#13;
suffering tor several \ e v e r before- In fact.it is expe-ted&#13;
Swarthout, was united in marriage to thimble party at the residence of Mr.&#13;
Will Keanedy, by Rev. Fr. Comerford. and Mrs. E W. Kennedy last Wednes-&#13;
*The young couple left on the morning day afternoon. A dainty supper was&#13;
train for Detroit. Here's congratnla- served after which, those who had the&#13;
! tions. courage, had their iortunes told.&#13;
rier many friends hope tor ; t b a t t h e f a i r tbi*year will far exceed&#13;
'• any ever held in the state.&#13;
5c&#13;
E A. BOWMAN&#13;
HOWELL'S BUSY STORE ""»&lt;?&#13;
months.&#13;
a speedy recovery&#13;
VV. B Darrow has moved his stock&#13;
of goods to Dexter and ..has closed up&#13;
his store here. We understand that&#13;
Mr. CurletT of Dexter has sold his&#13;
drug business there and the stock included&#13;
the goods in the store here of&#13;
which Mr. Darrow was the manager,&#13;
hence the closing of this branch. We&#13;
also understand that Mr. Darrow has&#13;
been engaged as janitor ot the school&#13;
building and will remain in Pinckney.&#13;
Through the courtesy of Mrs.&#13;
Bertha Mann, of Lincoln, Neb., we&#13;
received a Souvenir menu from Rector's&#13;
Pharmacy of that city, also several&#13;
beautiful post cards. The menu&#13;
is a unique iffair and an excellent advertisement&#13;
of "The Quality Drug&#13;
Store/1 and gives the kinds and prices&#13;
of hundreds of different ices and cool&#13;
summer drinks. The menu is illustrated&#13;
with scenes about Lincoln and&#13;
e souvenir,&#13;
HARD&#13;
C O A L STOVES NEXT&#13;
We have two&#13;
K I N D S&#13;
of Hard Coal&#13;
a i r e a d y i n&#13;
stocky Can deliver&#13;
promptly&#13;
We have them&#13;
ALL STYLES AND ALL PRICES&#13;
-r*&#13;
Thre»htn&amp; Coal&#13;
G. W. REASON &amp; S 0 N Teeple Hardware Go.&#13;
^ v&#13;
• « • ' - *&#13;
^ ' * ; ^ i . •• nrnmammmmmm r r WHpiipsiaejHaHi IWOTHwap w^mky^w v XKl&#13;
MISS LEOPOLD, SECY$, j , R, ENDS ENCAMPMENT&#13;
LIEDERKRANZ,&#13;
Writes : " Three Years Ago My System&#13;
Was In a Run-Down Condition. I&#13;
Owe to Pe-ru-na My Restoration to&#13;
Health and Strength."&#13;
ADJOURNS AFTER DECIDING ON&#13;
N E X T M E E T I N G PLACE.&#13;
Ft. 3 . Brown, of Ohio, Elected Commander-&#13;
in-Chief—Fortieth An*&#13;
nuat Parade Held.&#13;
TUTlSS RICKA LEOPOLD, 1ST Main&#13;
* * x street, Menasha, Wis., Sec'y Liederkranz,&#13;
writes :&#13;
"Three years ago my system was in&#13;
a terrible ran-down condition and I was&#13;
broken qot ajl over my body. 1 began&#13;
to fee worried about my condition and J&#13;
was glad to try anything which would&#13;
relieve »»e.&#13;
"Penmn W*M recommended to me a*&#13;
a fine blood remedy and tonic, and I&#13;
soon found that it was worthy of praise^ 44A few bottles changed my condition&#13;
matcrislty and in a short time I was&#13;
all over nay troubles tkl*&gt;w* to Peruna mv restoration to&#13;
health and strength. I am glad to endorse&#13;
it"&#13;
Restores-Strength.&#13;
Mrs. Heitie Green, R. R. ft, Iuka, 111.,&#13;
writes: *41 had catarrh and felt miserable.&#13;
1 began the use. of Peruna and&#13;
began to improve in every way. My&#13;
head doea not hurt me so much, my&#13;
appetite ia good and I am gaining in&#13;
flesh and strength."&#13;
About the only way you can arouse&#13;
a mean man's conscience Is to catch&#13;
him at i t&#13;
DOCTOR CURED OF ECZEMA.&#13;
Maryland Physician Cures Himself—&#13;
Or. Flaher Says: "Cuticura Remedies&#13;
Possess True M e r i t "&#13;
"My face was afflicted with eczema&#13;
in the year 1897. I used the Cuticura&#13;
Remedies, and was entirely cured. I&#13;
am a practicing physician, and very&#13;
often prescribe Cuticura Resolvent&#13;
and Cuticura Soap in case^s of eczema,&#13;
and they have cured where other formulas&#13;
have tailed. I am iJot in the&#13;
habit of endorsing patent medicines,&#13;
but when I find remedies possessing&#13;
true merit, such as the Cuticura Remedies&#13;
do, I am broad-minded enough&#13;
to proclaim their virtues to the world.&#13;
I have been practicing medicine for&#13;
sixteen years, and must say I find&#13;
your Remedies A No. 1. You are at&#13;
liberty to publish this letter. G. M,&#13;
Pisher, M. D., Big Pool, Md., May 24,&#13;
1905."&#13;
Minneapolis, Minn.—The Grand&#13;
Army of the Republic completed its&#13;
fortieth encampment late Friday and&#13;
ldjourne'd to meet in Saratoga, N. Y.,&#13;
In 1907. The encampment, after an&#13;
jxciting debate, decided that a protest&#13;
against the erection of a statue&#13;
o Henry Wirz should be sent to Gen.&#13;
3. D. Lee, the commander of the&#13;
•southern Veterans' association.&#13;
Minneapolis, Minn.—The following&#13;
officers were elected Thursday at the&#13;
annual meeting oof the Grand Army&#13;
tf the Republic: Commander-in-Chief,&#13;
R. B. Brown, Zanesvllle, O.; senior&#13;
vice commander, William H. Armstrong,&#13;
Indianapolis; junior vice commander,&#13;
E. B. Fenton, Detroit; chapain-&#13;
in-chief, Arehbishop John Ireland,&#13;
Gt. Paul; surgeon-general, W. H. Johnson,&#13;
Lincoln, Neb.&#13;
The new commander-in-chief was&#13;
born in 1845, and has always lived in&#13;
Ohio. He enlisted in the Fifteenth&#13;
Ohio infantry at the age of 16 years&#13;
and served in the Fourteenth Army&#13;
corps In the Army of the Cumberland&#13;
until he was mustered out in 1864. He&#13;
then reenlisted as a veteran soldier&#13;
and served as such until the end of&#13;
the war. He was a private throughout&#13;
the first three years of his service&#13;
and then became a non-commissioned&#13;
officer. He has always been&#13;
active and prominent In the work, of&#13;
the Grand Arm}'. Mr. Brown is now&#13;
editor of the Zanesvllle Courier.&#13;
Minneapolis, Minn.—For the fortieth&#13;
time since its work in war was finished&#13;
and its glory won, the Grand&#13;
Army of the Republic was in Itne&#13;
Wednesday. There had been many&#13;
parades more gorgeous, many spectacles&#13;
more dazzling and bewildering,&#13;
but never was there in this country&#13;
one more appealing and impressive&#13;
than that which passed through the&#13;
streets of Minneapolis during the&#13;
morning.&#13;
Col. Charles T. Keating, of New Orleans,&#13;
was overcome by the heat and&#13;
exhaustion and died an hour after&#13;
reaching the hospital.&#13;
Thomas A. Martin dropped while&#13;
marching in the parade and died on&#13;
his way to the emergency hospital.&#13;
BOOM CANNON FOR PRESIDENCY&#13;
Danville Convention 8tarts Move&#13;
Honor of Uncle Joe.&#13;
8helis Make Good Paths.&#13;
Ground shells are being used for&#13;
paths in some of the London parks&#13;
with very satisfactory results, as they&#13;
do not make dust.&#13;
Another Dig at Powers.&#13;
A tew days ago Gov. Cobb, of&#13;
Maine, and Hon. W. R. Pattangall,&#13;
prominent In politics in the same.&#13;
state, were together on a train. Mr.&#13;
Pattangall la a lawyer and an editor,&#13;
the writer of the humorous "Meddy-&#13;
Jbemps Letters" appearing in his paper,&#13;
the Machias Union.&#13;
In the course of conversation, GOT.&#13;
Cobb remarked to Mr. Pattangall: "I&#13;
don't see Why you and Llwellyn Powers&#13;
should be so extremely antagonistic&#13;
to each other. Neither of you&#13;
ever fails to give the other a rap&#13;
when there ia opportunity."&#13;
At this point as interested listener&#13;
in the car leased toward their chairs&#13;
and asked: "Is it really true that ex-&#13;
Gov. Powers is of Indian descent?"&#13;
"Wen, the Indians deny it," Mr.&#13;
Pattangall answered, in his inimitable&#13;
manner.&#13;
DODD'S '&#13;
KIDNEY&#13;
PILLS&#13;
'tH..KlDNEV .$•&#13;
. &lt;-K.'Aocrrs&#13;
Danville, 111.—Speaker Cannon's&#13;
boom for the presidency was launched&#13;
here Thursday wherfNhe speaker was&#13;
renominated for cong^gss by acclamation&#13;
by the Republican congressional&#13;
convention of the Eighteenth district.&#13;
In accepting the renomination for&#13;
congress, Mr. Cannon made a long&#13;
speech, which sounded the party slogan&#13;
for the coming campaign. The&#13;
speaker extolled the record of the Republican&#13;
party and pointed to the nation's&#13;
prosperity as a justification of&#13;
its continuance in office.&#13;
Labor leaders have declared war on&#13;
Mr. Cannon for his attitude to labor&#13;
bills in the last congress. He replied&#13;
to attacks of President Gompers, of&#13;
the American Federation of Labor, regarding&#13;
the anti-injunction bill and&#13;
other measures.&#13;
RAILROAD MEN IN CONFERENCE&#13;
Discuss Rate Law at Suggestion of&#13;
Interstate Board.&#13;
Washington.—"I am not surprised&#13;
to learn that the attorneys of the railroads&#13;
of the country are in consultation&#13;
in order to reach a common conclusion&#13;
as to the interpretation of the&#13;
new rate law," said Interstate Commissioner&#13;
Clements in an interview&#13;
regarding the meeting of railroad officials&#13;
in Atlantic City.&#13;
"The commission," he said, "has&#13;
urged upon all of the railroads the&#13;
necessity for prompt compliance with&#13;
the provisions of the new law and to&#13;
this end has invited them to appoint&#13;
committees^ of conference with the&#13;
commission in respect particularly to&#13;
the preparation and publication of&#13;
tariffs and the keeping of account&#13;
books, etc."&#13;
Buffalo Treasurer Set Free.&#13;
Buffalo, N. Y.—Fred 0. Murray, collector&#13;
of customs, and former deputy&#13;
county treasurer, was acquited Thursday&#13;
of the charge of grand larceny in&#13;
connection with the "graveyard"&#13;
scandal by which the county was&#13;
mulcted out of many thousands of&#13;
dollars. When the state closed its&#13;
case against Murray the court directed&#13;
the jury to return a verdict of not&#13;
guilty.&#13;
Dinner to Fair Officers.&#13;
Berlin.—Dr. Theodore Lewald, who&#13;
was the German commissioner general&#13;
to the Louisiana Purchase exposition&#13;
at St. Louis, gave a dinner here&#13;
Thursday night in honor of David R.&#13;
[ Francis, president of the exposition,&#13;
and a deputation of the fair committee,&#13;
consisting of Breckinridge Jones,&#13;
L. D. Dozier and S. M. Felton, president&#13;
of the.Chicago &amp; Alton railway.&#13;
The Conspiracy&#13;
of the Cities!&#13;
DO THEY CONTROL THE COUNTRY?&#13;
The Trusts Centralizing Everything in the Cities,&#13;
Seek to Handle&#13;
Every Dollar of the People's Money, Every Pound of Meat, Buihei of&#13;
Wheat, Mile of Railroad, and Every Country Bank—Crushing the&#13;
Country Publisher and the Country Merchant with City Newspapers,&#13;
Magazines and Mail Order Houses Aided by the Washington Politicians.&#13;
"It is a 'conspiracy of the cities*!"&#13;
said a prominent man in Chicago the&#13;
other day.&#13;
"These gigantic combinations of&#13;
capital and power aim to put every&#13;
dollar of the people's money, every&#13;
pound of meat, bushel of wheat, mile&#13;
of railroad and every country bank&#13;
under control of the cities.&#13;
"The cities produce nothing, but&#13;
control everything. They would&#13;
starve and freeze if it were not for&#13;
the country, yet while country people&#13;
are busy growing grain and cattle to&#13;
feed the cities, city people have plenty&#13;
of time to scheme how to get this&#13;
grain and cattle into their own hands&#13;
soon as it is ready for market.&#13;
"And they succeed.&#13;
"The price of corn, wheat and cattle&#13;
is fixed in the cities. Shipments&#13;
of all products are under city control.&#13;
"Country Money Fiowt&#13;
Into the City Banks."&#13;
"Country money is also under city&#13;
control. The country banks carry&#13;
their reserve deposits In city banks.&#13;
"They have to do so by law, which&#13;
says reserve money of country banks&#13;
must bjgL carried in city banks designated&#13;
'depositories' in order to count&#13;
as cash in vault.&#13;
"Two-thirds of the money in city&#13;
banks is country money. Thirty-five&#13;
of the fifty billion or so In the Hanover&#13;
Bank of New York is deposits&#13;
of 'country customers.' This ratio&#13;
holds good of all.&#13;
"This money is used to control&#13;
Wall street and the trusts.&#13;
"Insurance money is another of&#13;
the three great rivers of cash which&#13;
flow into the cities and control the&#13;
corporations which control the country.&#13;
It's an endless chain by which&#13;
the country produces all the wealth&#13;
and turns it over to the cities.&#13;
The Object of&#13;
Rate Legislation.&#13;
"legislation aids the cities.&#13;
"Legislation as to meat, pure food&#13;
and all that sort of thing means in&#13;
the end ouly the trusts can do business.&#13;
The country butcher can't afford&#13;
the elaborate plant demanded bylegislation.&#13;
•&#13;
"The big concerns are the only&#13;
ones in any line that have moneyenough&#13;
to keep quality up and prices&#13;
down.&#13;
"Rate legislation will concentrate&#13;
wholesaling by making it Impossible&#13;
for wholesalers to ship goods. from&#13;
any except great cities like New&#13;
York, Chicago and St. Louis, where&#13;
the political organizations are that&#13;
control congress.&#13;
"The railroads are the friends of&#13;
the country. Not from friendly, motives.&#13;
They are as selfish as the rest&#13;
of the trust but their prosperity depends&#13;
on the prosperity of the country&#13;
people. So they build up the country,&#13;
settle new fields, stimulate agriculture,&#13;
cattle-raising, manufacturing&#13;
and wholesaling, and thus create traffic.&#13;
The more business and population&#13;
are scattered the better for the&#13;
railroads and the better for the country.&#13;
"Railroads want legislation that&#13;
will distribute prosperity through the&#13;
country, and the cities want legislation&#13;
that will concentrate prosperity&#13;
in the cities."&#13;
"The Private Car&#13;
Helps the Country."&#13;
"What do you think of the private&#13;
car question?" was asked.&#13;
"Legislation against the private&#13;
car is legislation against both .the&#13;
vegetables and meat," he replied. "It&#13;
aims to give control of perishable&#13;
products to city commission merchants.&#13;
"They had this control before the&#13;
private car took It away from them.&#13;
The private car system carries fresh&#13;
fruit, vegetables and meat from where&#13;
they were produced direct to where&#13;
they are consumed, guaranteeing&#13;
prompt delivery in good condition,&#13;
securing a universal market at fair&#13;
prices and distributing hundreds of&#13;
millions of dollars to the farmer, cattle&#13;
and fruit raiser through applying&#13;
business methods to the shipment&#13;
and selling of his products and leav*&#13;
Ing the control of those products In&#13;
his own hands.&#13;
"Abolish the private car! As well&#13;
abolish the express and postal systems&#13;
and compel each railroad to&#13;
have Its own express company and its&#13;
own postal service."&#13;
"The Railroads Will Not&#13;
Replace the System."&#13;
"But will not the railroads put In&#13;
a refrigerator car system of their&#13;
own?"&#13;
"No."&#13;
"Why not?"&#13;
"Weil, in the words of General&#13;
Manager Mohler of the Union Pacific,&#13;
no railroad could possibly afford&#13;
to have refrigerator cars enough to&#13;
send them out over ail the other&#13;
railroads as it would have to do, to&#13;
take the'prace of the present private&#13;
car system, and no railroad would&#13;
undertake to be responsible for products&#13;
shipped in Its refrigerator cars&#13;
over other lines and the consequence&#13;
would be that the producer would&#13;
find It Impossible to get cars when&#13;
he wanted them and also Impossible&#13;
to place any responsibility for the&#13;
shipment of his products except over&#13;
the one particular railroad that tapped&#13;
his territory."&#13;
"What do you think is the remedy&#13;
for the conspiracy of the cities?"&#13;
"The Remedy&#13;
Is Agitation"&#13;
"Agitation. Let the people understand&#13;
the true situation and they will&#13;
put the power back where it belongs."&#13;
"Where is that?"&#13;
"With the country people—those who&#13;
produce the commodities and wealth&#13;
of the country and who should have&#13;
the supreme say as to the management&#13;
of the enterprises which are&#13;
conducted solely for the purpose of&#13;
handling their products. That is all&#13;
any of the railroads or trusts or private&#13;
car systems exist for."&#13;
"Then you think the people can&#13;
control these things if they try?"&#13;
"Of course they can. The country&#13;
people are an overwhelming majority.&#13;
They are two-thirds of the total population.&#13;
When it comes to intelligence&#13;
they are the people of this country&#13;
who have the brains and the ability&#13;
to solve great questions same as they&#13;
have the industry that creates the&#13;
wealth of the nation. They cap&#13;
control all money, all legislation,&#13;
every railroad, every trust, every insurance&#13;
company, They have but to&#13;
realize this fact in order to have the&#13;
country people know their tremendous&#13;
power."&#13;
"How can they be made to realize&#13;
it?"&#13;
"Through the country press. Let&#13;
the thousands of independent, clean,&#13;
honest newspapers which the country&#13;
people read print the facts regarding&#13;
these great questions and the rest&#13;
Food&#13;
Products'&#13;
ssaUe yott to enjoy jem seals without&#13;
Kevtag to spend aaV your saw between&#13;
then over a hoi cook-Hove.&#13;
All the cooking it does ia Libby •&#13;
kitchen—a kitchen at clean and neat at&#13;
yew own, and u W s oothiaf for yon&#13;
lo do but enjoy ike remit&#13;
Libby'i Prodacti are selected meats,&#13;
cooked by coeki who know how, and&#13;
only the good parti pecked&#13;
For a quick sad delicious lunch any&#13;
teas, ia doors or out, try Ubby's M e t&#13;
rose Pate—with Libby s Camp Sauce.&#13;
Uhhy,?lcHeUl*Uhhy,ChUaf&gt;&#13;
y&#13;
SALESMEN WANTED,&#13;
We want a lire, acttTe end thoroughly experienced&#13;
talesman la tale locality wiita sufflciei.it money to&#13;
bullye lolujrt r£iv»awl h l»r rUtrMn SmNo—n th•K-'•fs-a &gt;suUp«pwl.y - Wo-Mfl rouer« I•»l!ee•a»e*•- uan*a Jabndls afuul.l y cAo muUphlytirn ng ewedltebdl iiunu rearenroye r(tuolrees. aTndo&#13;
gauucabra an tmeea nto w ree wfuinnd g Wmoea eexyc Iluf sgivooe'd saa nleost rsoigldh tI.annSdI day*, furtherumieuiaraon requrst. The8taudard-&#13;
UiUtt Light Co,, —O M. Halsted St.. Chicago, 111.&#13;
DO YOU WAIT A J0B1 ^ « 5 » «&#13;
rbaainlrkosa adr yea orrdw*H aonadd wedb awrirteht tobfe Smaoon feey'r oafn tchleto pbe.oT phlee kaninxdio oufs latob opru eto iwt mInaton db*u firldomlng Iat. 75T1 he pUernetreirf*ro gmets fSrtoomllC Sfat dtoaSy,l aIdf ayoyn; bwraioskt lt h.e faotsdlreot&#13;
¾ TB« commonest&#13;
TO to I* a day; oera&#13;
letter to the B U M A ir OF PUBLICITY. R. M4, Union&#13;
Trust Bldg., San Kranoisoo, and get full particulars.&#13;
Even at this stage of the game&#13;
there are men who deny that George&#13;
Washington erer owned a hatchet.&#13;
Pushing Cape te Csire Line.&#13;
In a report in the London Times it&#13;
(s stated that the Cape to Cairo railway&#13;
tn South Africa has been opened&#13;
so as to run orer the Kafue rirer on&#13;
a bridge which stands on 13 spans,&#13;
each 100 feet, with pillars resting on&#13;
a bed 16 feet under the water. Kafue&#13;
river is 266 miles north of Victoria&#13;
(alls, and the distance from Cape&#13;
Town Is 1,908 miles. The railroad,&#13;
however, is now at Broken hill, 347&#13;
miles beyond the falls, the line having&#13;
been pushed on while the bridge was&#13;
building over the Kafue river.&#13;
P U T T I N G IT RATHER ROUGHLY.&#13;
Leading Question Asked of Methodical&#13;
Writer.&#13;
producer and consumer of fresh fruit, will take care of itself."&#13;
lOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOQC&#13;
The Benefit of Exercise.&#13;
Exercise does for the body what the&#13;
mountain side does for the stream et&#13;
water. When the water runs down&#13;
the mountain . side, it is a -. babbling&#13;
brook, leaping out into the air now&#13;
and then, throwing Itself Into spray,&#13;
exposing itself to the air and sunshine,&#13;
and the waters are crystal pure.&#13;
In the valley or on a level plain the&#13;
waters may form stagnant pools, and&#13;
get covered over with slime of alt&#13;
sorts, and Inhabited by all kinds of&#13;
der wh&gt; the frogs croak in j&gt;tfaeir&#13;
brains, and why the birds do not&#13;
sing Instead. When a person gets&#13;
into the condition where the body is&#13;
like a stagnant pool, a radical change&#13;
must be made in his life. He nuat&#13;
begin by getting vitalized, new blood&#13;
rn*o all hii cells and tinaues.-'dood&#13;
Health, «... .^u&#13;
There is a certain writer In Boston&#13;
—a man of remarkable versatility—&#13;
who once gave a friend in the publishing&#13;
business in New York a resume&#13;
of the details of his average day's&#13;
work.&#13;
"I am as methodical in my work,"&#13;
said the Boston writer, "as any business&#13;
man. My daily task3 are so diversified&#13;
and so arranged that I am&#13;
able to afford myself considerable variety&#13;
during the 12 hours per diefn&#13;
that I employ in authorship. For instance,&#13;
from eight in the morning to&#13;
ten I do my verse; from ten to 12 my&#13;
criticisms; from three to five I am enraged&#13;
upon a history of the world intended&#13;
for perusal by children." And&#13;
so he continued to give his visitor the&#13;
whole scheme. When he had concluded,&#13;
the New Yorker, an excedingly&#13;
blunt individual, rather unkindly&#13;
Inquired:&#13;
"And when, sir, do you think?1*&#13;
MORE T H A N MONEY.&#13;
• r« af.f.i«*.»iv.,—.v&#13;
A Minister Talks About Grape-Nuts.&#13;
"My first stomach trouble began&#13;
back in 1895," writes a minister in&#13;
Nebr., "resulting from hasty eating&#13;
and eating too much. I found no relief&#13;
from medicine and grew so bad&#13;
that all food gave me great distress.&#13;
"It was that sore, gnawing, hungry&#13;
feeling in my stomach that was so&#13;
distressing and I became a sick man.&#13;
Grape-Nuts was recommended as a&#13;
food that could be easily digested.&#13;
"Leaving the old diet that had given&#13;
me so much trouble, I began to eat&#13;
Grape-Nuts with a little cream N and&#13;
sugar. The change effected in 24 hou/a&#13;
was truly remarkable, and in a few&#13;
weeks I was back to health again.&#13;
"My work as a minister calls me&#13;
away from home a great deal, and recently&#13;
I drifted back to fat meat and&#13;
indigestible foods, which put me&#13;
on the sick list.&#13;
"So I went back to Grape-Note&#13;
«i»u r- ^^-v. 4v, c . cream and in four days I&#13;
fllthjT creeping things. Some people r l g h t aga l n i T h e o l d d u l l h e f&#13;
let themselves get into the condition a r e g0 n e , stomach comfortable, Wad&#13;
^ . t h „ a L S t X ! " L E ? 0 l : _ ^ , d ? ? * w o ?* [clear, and it is a delight to pursue&#13;
my studies and work.&#13;
"Grape-Nuts food is worth more&#13;
than money to me, and I hope this&#13;
may induce some sufferer to follow&#13;
the" same course 1 have."&#13;
Name given by Postum Co., Battle&#13;
Creek, Mich.&#13;
"There's a reason."&#13;
Head the little hook, T h e Road to&#13;
» &gt; * • • » • • Xi »k«.&#13;
V ' • ! gP^i*^'^ mmmm mmmmm ^f ; - . - : ' v . j - T ' . .'»«' ; - C " •&#13;
!»**"&#13;
NEGRO SHOT TO DEATH&#13;
SOVERNOK APPEAL* TO MOB TO&#13;
ABIDE BY LAW.&#13;
\r&#13;
if&#13;
3ROWD REFUSES TO HEED&#13;
Applauds Executive When He Finishes,&#13;
Then Proceeds to Make&#13;
Black Fiend Pay Penalty&#13;
for Crime.&#13;
V&#13;
Columbia, S. C.—Within the shadow&#13;
)f the home of his victim, Miss Jenlie&#13;
Brooks, after having been 1 den tiled&#13;
by her, and after Gov. &lt;D. C. Hep&#13;
ward, who went to tW scene of the&#13;
.rouble, had,.;adcJN*Je4i^the mofc,, fct&#13;
til n, fpo\f* Davfs, 'the^negw -who *in&#13;
Tuesdnr Murderously attacked Miss&#13;
BrtfokBfwJth intent .t* commit assault,&#13;
ind wly&gt;, afterward* ouUased a negro&#13;
5irl I4?:yefirs Q\&lt;&amp;, j wa&amp; vJynched at&#13;
3ree^WH^Hshoufe fc30 c^eloek -Tters*&#13;
Jay eveoJjni(yg|'-.i^.&lt;i.•;• r&lt;^* v^t-&#13;
GovvJieyward reached the scene&#13;
shortly after the negro had been capered.&#13;
A platform was erected in a&#13;
fence corner on the premises of the&#13;
fictim"B father, from which platform&#13;
3ov. Hey ward addressed the mob in&#13;
in effort to prevent the lynching. The&#13;
governor beseeched the mob not to&#13;
Jynch Davis, but in vain. At the conclusion&#13;
of his speech the governor&#13;
was vociferously cheered.&#13;
The mob then removed the prisoner&#13;
from the view of the governor and&#13;
within a short distance of the home&#13;
of his victim the negro was riddled&#13;
with bullets,&#13;
It is impossible to estimate the&#13;
crowd, as citizens from several counties&#13;
had. gathered at the scene and&#13;
for two days had been in pursuit of&#13;
the negro, &amp;ut it is certain that hundreds&#13;
of bullets were sent through&#13;
his body. 'V&#13;
:&#13;
The militia in that section. of the&#13;
state is now encamped at Chickamauga&#13;
and there were no nearby troops&#13;
to be called upon. The governor's&#13;
guards and the Richland volunteers&#13;
of this city had been ordered to hold&#13;
themselves in readiness in the event&#13;
that their services were needed, but&#13;
the mob. was determined.&#13;
The assault by Davis on Miss&#13;
Brooks was made last Tuesday in her&#13;
father's store, where she was temporarily&#13;
in charge. After making&#13;
some purchases the negro grasped a&#13;
meat knife, shouting, "You are what I&#13;
want," and sprang toward the girl.&#13;
Miss Brooks attempted to defend herself&#13;
with an iron bar, but the negro&#13;
slashed her across the throat, making&#13;
a gash four inches long, and almost&#13;
severed two of her fingers.&#13;
Afterward he went three miles to&#13;
another farm and outraged a 14-yearold&#13;
negress. A posse of a thousand&#13;
men started in pursuit of the negro&#13;
soon after the outrage at the Brooks&#13;
store and finally captured him Thursday&#13;
afternoon, near Ninety-Six, a&#13;
town nine miles from Greenwood.&#13;
KING AND KAISER KISS.&#13;
Cordial Meeting of Monarchs at Krorv&#13;
lY- berg.&#13;
Kronberg, Hesse-Nassau, Prussia,&#13;
—King Edward arrived here on a&#13;
special train from Frankfort at&#13;
8:45 Wednesday. Emperor William&#13;
and Prince and Princess Frederick&#13;
Charles of Hesse-Xassau met him at&#13;
the station.&#13;
The emperor assisted the king in&#13;
alighting, and they kissed each other&#13;
on both cheeks. The meeting was&#13;
very cordial. The king wore a black&#13;
Prince Albert coat and a silk hat.&#13;
The emperor had on the uniform of&#13;
the Posen Jaeger regiment, with a&#13;
steel helmet.&#13;
King Edward was accompanied by&#13;
Sir Charles Hardinge, permanent under&#13;
secretary of the foreign office;&#13;
Maj. Gen. Sir Stanley Clarke, chief&#13;
equerry, and Maj. Frederick E. G.,&#13;
Ponsonby, equerry to his majesty. Sir&#13;
Frank Lascalles, British ambassador&#13;
to Germany, and the British consul&#13;
general, Francis Oppenheiraer, joined&#13;
the royal party at Frankfort.&#13;
After introductions had been exchanged&#13;
the party and their following&#13;
proceeded to Friederichshof in automobiles.&#13;
'&#13;
I&#13;
UNLISTED MEN TO BE ADVANCER&#13;
Privates Will Have Opportunity to)&#13;
Become Second Lieutenants.&#13;
Washington.—Secretary Taft hatj&#13;
decided that enlisted men.shall have)&#13;
tfte) irst chance at the 48 vacancies in)&#13;
Atfjpade of second lieutenants in the)&#13;
MM «rder was issue* some time agoi&#13;
fraatiaf only a small portion of the1&#13;
vacancies to enlisted candidates.&#13;
Secretary Taft's attention was called&#13;
to the order which discriminated&#13;
against the 35 enlisted men who are&#13;
candidates; and' he immediately seat&#13;
\ message from Oyster Bay asking'&#13;
that the order be annulled and an-t&#13;
other issued which will do justice to.&#13;
the enlisted men who are striving for&#13;
advancement&#13;
COULD NOT KEEP UP.&#13;
Broken Down, Like Many Another&#13;
Woman, with Xxhaustlng Kidney&#13;
Troubles,&#13;
Mrs. A. Taylor, of Wharton, N. 3.,&#13;
aays: "I had kidney trouble in its&#13;
moat painful and severe form, and the&#13;
t o r t u r e I went&#13;
through now seema&#13;
to have been almost&#13;
unbearable. I&#13;
had back-ache, pains&#13;
in the side and&#13;
loins, dizzy spells&#13;
a n d hot, feverish&#13;
headaches. T h e r e&#13;
w e r e bearing-down&#13;
pains, and the kidney&#13;
s e c r e t i o n s&#13;
passed too frequently, and with a&#13;
burning sensation. They showed sediment&#13;
I became discouraged, weak,&#13;
languid and depressed, so sick and&#13;
weak that I could not keep up. Ae&#13;
doctors did not cure me I decided to&#13;
try Doan's Kidney Pills, and with&#13;
such success that my troubles were&#13;
all gtme after ijsing eight boxes, and&#13;
my strength, ambition and general&#13;
health is fine."&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.&#13;
Foster-Milfcurn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
His Interest Wae Personal.&#13;
An eccentric member of the British&#13;
parliament who died recently endeavored&#13;
vainly during a quarter of a century&#13;
to get passed into law a bill for&#13;
preventing persons fro©.standing outside&#13;
windows while gleaning them.&#13;
During his last sessions the old fellow&#13;
complained to a colleague that his object&#13;
in introducing the bill had been&#13;
quite misunderstood by the house for&#13;
these 25 years. "I Introduced the&#13;
bill," said he, "not tor the sake of the&#13;
window cleaners, but for the sake of&#13;
the people below, on whom they might&#13;
fall. The idea of the bill was suggested&#13;
to me by the fear that a window&#13;
cleaner might fall on myself."&#13;
In « Pinch, Utf ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE.&#13;
A powder. It cures painful, smarting,&#13;
nei^oue feet and ingrowing nails.&#13;
It's the greatest comfort discovery of&#13;
the age. Makes new shoes easy. A&#13;
certain cure for sweating feet. 30,000&#13;
testimonials of cures. Sold by all&#13;
druggists, 25c. Trial package, FREE.&#13;
Address A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.&#13;
Origin of Knighthood.&#13;
Knighthood was intended to serve&#13;
as a mark of distinction for deeds of&#13;
renown and merit. "Knight" properly&#13;
signifies a person who, for his virtue&#13;
and martial proweBS, is raised from&#13;
the rank of gentleman into a higher&#13;
class of dignity and honor.&#13;
N n . Wlnatow'i Soothing- Syrnp.&#13;
For children tectbtnc, softeni tta« faros, reduce* ta*&#13;
lABuntUos, BIUJI P«n, cure* wind colic. fecaboUL*.&#13;
A man never realizes the goodness&#13;
of his neighbors until he is sick.&#13;
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES color&#13;
more goods,. brighter colors, with lees&#13;
work than others.&#13;
Transmission of Facial Characteristics&#13;
It would appear that the transmission&#13;
of facial traits subordinate to a&#13;
definite law, that is to say, that ancestral&#13;
facial expression and appearance&#13;
are more often than not transmitted&#13;
through the female members&#13;
of the family, who generally do not&#13;
exhibit the same characteristics to&#13;
the male offspring, and that the&#13;
younger generations show, as a rule,&#13;
all the facial conditions and signs&#13;
which were present in a remote an*&#13;
cestor.—North American Review.&#13;
GOOD COLORS FOR HOUSES.&#13;
It is not generally known—not even&#13;
among painters—why certain tints&#13;
and colors wear much better than&#13;
others on houses, and the knowledge&#13;
of just what tints are best to use is,&#13;
therefore, rather hazy.&#13;
One writer on paint, in a recent&#13;
book, says that experiments seem to&#13;
show that those colors which resist&#13;
or turn back the heat rays of the sun,&#13;
will protect a house better than those&#13;
which allow these rays to pass&#13;
through the film.&#13;
Thus red is a good color because it&#13;
turns back, or reflects, the red rays,&#13;
and the red rays are the hot rays.&#13;
In general, therefore, the warm&#13;
tones are good and the cold tones are&#13;
poor, so far as wear is concerned.. In&#13;
choosing the color of paint for your&#13;
house, select reds, browns, grays&#13;
and olives which, considering the various&#13;
tones these tints will produce,&#13;
will give a wide range from which to&#13;
choose.&#13;
Avoid the harsh tints, such as cold&#13;
yellows (like lemon), cold greens&#13;
(like grass green, etc.), and the blues.&#13;
It must be understood that no virtue&#13;
is claimed for tints in themselves,&#13;
irrespective of the materials used in&#13;
the paint. Any color will fade, and&#13;
the paint will scale off, if adulterated&#13;
white lead or canned paint is used,&#13;
but if one is careful to use the beBt&#13;
white lead—some well-known brand&#13;
of a reliable manufacturer—and genuine&#13;
linseed oil, the warm tints mentioned&#13;
above will outwear the same&#13;
materials tinted with the cold colors.&#13;
Superb Service, Splendid Scenery&#13;
en route to Niagara Falls, Muskoka&#13;
and Kawartha Lakes, Georgian Bay&#13;
and Temegami Region, St. Lawrence&#13;
River and Rapids, Thousand Islands,&#13;
Algonquin National Park, White Mountains&#13;
and Atlantic Sea Coast resorts,&#13;
via Grand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Double track Chicago to Montreal and&#13;
Niagara Falls, N. T.&#13;
For copies of tourist publications&#13;
and descriptive pamphlets apply to&#13;
Geo. W. Vaux, A. G. P. eVT. A., 135&#13;
Adams St, Chicago.&#13;
Ian Maelaren's Successor.&#13;
The Rev. Alexander Connell, who&#13;
succeeds to Ian Maelaren's pulpit at&#13;
Sefton Park, Liverpool, has beeer pas&#13;
tor of Regent Square Presbyterian&#13;
church, London, since 1893. He was&#13;
born in the Scotch Highlands just 40&#13;
years ago.&#13;
^ M * -&#13;
KBVCATWOWAL.&#13;
STRONGER ftbtq»tDtt p•m••ero, t wainthd N» vbiaeotdte re omunffw. Ul aoputrw ( eS •ebool, U»&#13;
I t Wilcox Avew DetreJt^ Mleft.&#13;
We bar* MMOrOMjarfHfttora • • • no&#13;
Oargraaoaiasarata&#13;
cot coed wUrie*.&#13;
Oar catalog** to MOOT. « • » •&#13;
W.l'.awiu. K.J.&#13;
•**ee&gt;,., *• ;•&#13;
I PETftOtT. MtOMtAAN.&#13;
SS az=K&#13;
60 B«»s* W i t t t t r Wheat Per&#13;
TWhhaet'a*t .t k*S myld* ltdo *la* fniaalxnawr'f*« Bre df m Ctr »owm yBU&gt; WofM • •W••ia.aojff klMoaMojra* of Winter Wfeotta, Ryo, Bartf/,&#13;
•AXJ&amp;SK SKkJ&gt; CO., Sn W.B.L»Croaa&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 34, 1t06,&#13;
Suffered for "White Lie."&#13;
Is a white lie ever justified? That&#13;
at least some people believe it has&#13;
no excuse is proved by the following&#13;
tale: An ancient rabbi came to a city&#13;
where all the people were truthful,&#13;
married one of the inhabitants, had&#13;
two children and prospered. One day&#13;
a neighbor called when the rabbi's&#13;
wife was washing her head, and the&#13;
rabbi, going to the door, was seized&#13;
by false modesty and said that she&#13;
had gone out. Thereupon both of his&#13;
children died, and, aB no one died in&#13;
that city before reaching old age, the&#13;
neighbors made Inquiries, the rabbi&#13;
confessed what he had done, and was&#13;
ordered to leave the city immediately.&#13;
IHWUKUWIWffMIt&#13;
)&lt;&gt;Ol)ROi'S&#13;
A\*?daUePrep*ralk^orAssimflating&#13;
toFoodandRetf ufcv&#13;
hng^StoawteairiBoWbof&#13;
I \ I \ \ I S . &lt; H I i I &gt; K I \&#13;
Promotes Dj$stkm£faeerfuromandltestjCofltoJits&#13;
neither&#13;
Ctaaum.Morphtne nor Mineral&#13;
N O T " N A R C O T I C .&#13;
A perfect Remedy for Constipation&#13;
, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea&#13;
Worms .Convulsions f cverisrvness&#13;
and L o s s OF SLEEP.&#13;
l a c Simile Signature of&#13;
NEW YDHK.&#13;
ASTORIA lot Infanta and Children.&#13;
The Kind You Have&#13;
Always Bought&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
of&#13;
4S&#13;
) ) U o s t s { j C i M S&#13;
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.&#13;
Forttver&#13;
hirty Years&#13;
CASTORU&#13;
THE LAXATIVE OF&#13;
KNOWN QUALIT*&#13;
There are two classes of remedies: those of known quality&#13;
and which are permanently beneficial in effect, acting:&#13;
gently, in harmony with nature, when nature needs assistance;&#13;
and" another class, composed of preparations of&#13;
unknown, uncertain and inferior character, acting temporarily,&#13;
but injuriously, as a result of forcing: the natural&#13;
functions unnecessarily. One of the most exceptional of&#13;
the remedies of known quality and excellence is the ever&#13;
pleasant Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California&#13;
Fig: Syrup Co., which represents the active principles of&#13;
plants, known to act most beneficially, in a pleasant syrup,&#13;
in which the wholesome Californian blue figs are used to contribute&#13;
their rich, yet delicate, fruity flavor. It is the remedy&#13;
of all remedies to sweeten and refresh and cleanse the system&#13;
gently and naturally, and to assist one in overcoming constipation&#13;
and the many ills resulting therefrom. Its active principles&#13;
and quality are known to physicians generally, and the&#13;
remedy has therefore met with their approval, as well as with&#13;
the favor of many millions of well informed persons who know&#13;
of their own personal knowledge and from actual experience&#13;
that it is a most excellent laxative remedy. We do not claim that&#13;
it will cure all manner of ills, but recommend it for what it really&#13;
represents, a laxative remedy of known quality and excellence,&#13;
containing nothing of an objectionable or injurious character.&#13;
There are two classes of purchasers; those who are informed&#13;
as to the quality of what they buy aud the reasons for the excellence&#13;
of articles of exceptional merit, and who do not lack courage to go&#13;
elsewhere when a dealer offers an imitation of any well known&#13;
article; but, unfortunately, there are some people who do not know,&#13;
and who allow themselves to be imposed upon. They cannot expect&#13;
its beneficial effects if they do not get the genuine remedy.&#13;
To the credit of the druggists of the United States be it said&#13;
that nearly all of them value their reputation for professional&#13;
integrity and the good will of their customers too highly to offer&#13;
Imitations of the Genuine—Syrup of Figs&#13;
manufactured by the California Fie Syrup Co., and in order to&#13;
buy the genuine article and to get its beneficial effects, one has&#13;
only to note, 'when purchasing, the fuU name of the Company-&#13;
California Fig Syrup Co.—plainly printed on the front of every&#13;
package, Prke, 60c per bottle. One site only.&#13;
Prevented&#13;
To treat Pimples and Blackheads,&#13;
Red, Rough, Oily Complexions,&#13;
gently smear the face with Cuticura&#13;
Ointment, the Great Skin&#13;
Cure, but do not rub. Wash off&#13;
the Ointment in five minutes wHh&#13;
Cuticura Soap and hot water, and&#13;
bathe freely for some minutes.&#13;
Repeat morning and evening. At&#13;
other times use Cuticura Soap for&#13;
bathing the face as often as agreeable.&#13;
No other Skin Soap so pure,&#13;
so sweet, so speedily efftcthw.&#13;
&gt; Cwtfcw Boo UMUBII a»lk*» mm*&#13;
»;B"'&#13;
. ' . * . • ' - •&#13;
®tte f incknrs Utepatrh&#13;
F. L. A N D R E W S &amp; C O . PROPRIETORS.&#13;
,.^..,&#13;
T H U R S D A Y , AUGUST 23, 1906.&#13;
a f e g r , , _&#13;
^ A Great Offer.&#13;
XM J O U R N A L ana th* DISPATCH.&#13;
^ i s j b u r n a , 5 y e a r s . . . . 7 8&#13;
' t 4 h , 1 y e a r 1 . 0 0&#13;
B O T H f o r $ 1 . 0 0&#13;
6y special' nnangenipnt with the&#13;
publishers of t h e FARM J O U R N A L&#13;
(Philadelphia) w* aip *n«blfd to ofter&#13;
poth papers for $1.00 to every new&#13;
advance r a v i n ? subscriber and to&#13;
every old oulwriher who pqys in ad&#13;
vanre. the DISPATCH one year and the&#13;
F A K V J O U E N A L ..5 * .rear, bath&#13;
papers for $1.00. t i e price of ours&#13;
alone.&#13;
The FARM J O U R N A L is 29 years&#13;
old and enjoys s r e a t popularity, adapted&#13;
to and circulating in every state,&#13;
and is one of the most useful, interest&#13;
i n ? and trustworthy farm papers&#13;
published. This offer should be accept&#13;
ed without d»!av, as it only holds for&#13;
a limited time.&#13;
A WELL KEPT SECRET.&#13;
With a new $2,000,000 brewery&#13;
Sau Fraucieco should be able to&#13;
stand it until the other agencies of&#13;
civilization are restored.&#13;
H o w t h e K e e p e r Ma u n w e d t h e C h v r v h&#13;
a n d Tovrii H a l l C l o c k s .&#13;
Tho old watchmaker of u 'small town&#13;
In the west of England recently retired,&#13;
and the contract for keeping the&#13;
church and town hull clocks in order&#13;
wasvgiven to bis successor. Unfortunately&#13;
from the start the new man experienced&#13;
a difficulty in getting the&#13;
clocks to strike at the same time. At&#13;
last the district council requested an&#13;
Interview with the watchmaker.&#13;
"You are not so successful with the&#13;
clocks as your predecessor," he w a s&#13;
told. "It Is very misleading to have one&#13;
clock strike three or four minutes after&#13;
the other. Why, before you took them&#13;
In hand we could hardly tell the two&#13;
were striking. Surely you are as competent&#13;
as Mr. H."&#13;
"Every workman has his own methods,&#13;
gentlemen," replied the watchmaker,&#13;
"and mine ain't tho siune as&#13;
H.'s were."&#13;
"I'm decldedty of^fte-ojmiioathat it&#13;
would be for the general good if they&#13;
were," remarked one of the councilors.&#13;
"Very well, sir; in the future they&#13;
shall be," came the reply. "1 happened&#13;
to write to Mr. H. lastvweek about the&#13;
trouble I had with the clocks, and—&#13;
b u t perhaps." he added as he produced&#13;
a letter and handed it to the chairman,&#13;
"you'd like to see wtfat he said."&#13;
,f- "Dear Sir (ran the letter)—About&#13;
them clocks. When you get to know'&#13;
what a cantankerous lot of busybodies&#13;
the council consists of you'll do the&#13;
same as I did for fifteen years—forget&#13;
to wind up the striker of the town hall&#13;
clock, and the silly owls won't be able&#13;
to tell that both clocks ain't striking&#13;
together."—Tit-Bits.&#13;
The Irish Kaln.&#13;
I must allow that it sometimes rains&#13;
in Ireland, but Irish rain Is not quite&#13;
llkt. other raiu. It is, as a rule, softer&#13;
thuji ruin olsewherejf and If the truth&#13;
must be told I like serin so long as one&#13;
has not to say, "For the rain It rainetu&#13;
every day." Irish weather Is not so&#13;
much capricious as coquettish. It likes&#13;
to plague you, if but to prepare you to&#13;
enjoy the more its sunny, melting mood.&#13;
It will weep and wall all night, and, lo,&#13;
^he next mornlug Ireland, is one sweet&#13;
iniile and seems to say: "Is ft raining 1&#13;
was yesterday? Ah, then, I'll rain no&#13;
more." And the runnels leap and laugh,&#13;
and the pastures and very stone walla&#13;
glisten; the larks carol on their celestial&#13;
journey; there Is a pungent, healthy&#13;
smell of drying peat; the mountains&#13;
are all dimpled with the Joy of life and&#13;
sunshine; the lake lies perfectly still,&#13;
content to reflect the overhanging'face&#13;
of heaven, and just won't your honor&#13;
buy the stoutest pair of homemade&#13;
hose from a barefooted, bareheaded&#13;
daughter of dethroned kings with eyes&#13;
like dewdrbps and a voireTMt""woutd&#13;
charm the coin out of the most churlish&#13;
purse? If on such mornings as&#13;
these you do not lose your heart to Ireland&#13;
it must be made of stem, unimpressionable&#13;
stuff indeed.—Blackwood's&#13;
Magazine.&#13;
S o m e t h i n g h a s b e e u h a p p e n i n g&#13;
in t h e i ' r i e g h t ' b u s i n e s s in C h i c a g o .&#13;
T h e I l l i n o i s T u n n e l Co., a f t e r five&#13;
y e a r s work a n d t h e e x p e n d i t u r e of&#13;
$30,000,000, h a s c o m p l e t e d 45&#13;
m i l e s of u n d e r g r o u n d t r o l l e y l i n e s&#13;
a n d a n n o u n c e s t h a t i t is r e a d y t o&#13;
h a n d l e m e r c h a n d i s e in c a r - l o a d&#13;
lots.&#13;
I n p u r s u i t of t h e d e c i s i o n t o&#13;
e m p l o y C h i n est' l a b o r on t h e P a n -&#13;
a m a c a n a l , p r o p o s a l s for 2,500 s u c h&#13;
l a b o r e r s h a v e b e e n a d v e r t i s e d for&#13;
b y t h e c a n a l c o m m i s s i o n . T h e&#13;
s e c r e t a r y of w a r is t o p a s s u p o n&#13;
c o n t r a c t s , a n d t h e g o v e r n m e n t will&#13;
p r o t e c t t h e i n t e r e s t s o f t h e C h i n e s e&#13;
so e m p l o y e d .&#13;
Don't drag along with a dull, billious,&#13;
heavy feeling. You need a pill.&#13;
Use DeWitt's Little Ear.y Riseis, the&#13;
famous little pills. Do not sicken&#13;
or aripe, bat results are sure.&#13;
Sold by F . A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
U i d d l e Affe« S-er i t i m e r s .&#13;
The groat per-'riii't':1^ ot' *!" middle&#13;
ugos Vi.Te.. It apinj-is, the Ara'is. The&#13;
fash feu of usiii.tr J;«T;V&#13;
wt\;t l'ini'.ipc u.; ; .uli&#13;
l;;i!u. -: were t h e i,Vi.;:&#13;
::u»i '-:'! !' sol.! &lt;i* ; Mi-'- '•&#13;
in li:. ir poriV.: :•• &lt;. Co.'i&#13;
c i , i . k • ! : l l i y &gt;•:" [.• i :.!&#13;
K M - ;• . - ••-:&gt; ' ; : ; : ' • ••! K&#13;
- : • • • - p . • : • / • . . . . . . i&#13;
[ : , ' t : • • -•;'. \v V. : ; : ; t&#13;
• •re; t.&#13;
.•I' .'.&#13;
. - , - 1&#13;
:ng.&#13;
'o\&#13;
I ott&#13;
iX-' '! '&#13;
.e all,I i:&#13;
YoMair&#13;
,.:-,. &lt;••&gt;•&gt;.0 irito&#13;
ilje crusade^.&#13;
i.;ti IL. a l l . s i u i t&#13;
• \I sa'.iilo |&gt; ;is')a ;&#13;
• tlioriae d&gt;' Medi-&#13;
:.: vo-'ears. tiaiaod&#13;
\ . ".• s ','i:\&gt;i:^,a&#13;
t'..;\ii::al Uichelui.&#13;
Jues.s I'ould b e&#13;
tKId a u d or-&#13;
. ware. Au:u-&#13;
1. '.li- X I I I . .&#13;
w i t h o u t h e r&#13;
: ; U T 11!• i* liiior.&#13;
i' i ' i l'cr-&#13;
'^ . , i " ^ U r ( l l l i U U ;lti l i u &gt; luxury of luxuries.&#13;
T h e M i n n e a p o l i s b i a t e B o a r d of ! The sunny hills of the Var luviuno a&#13;
H e a l t h - a d v i s e s officially t h a t t h o s e j mine of wealth and remain so to this&#13;
sufi«f e r i•n e ft ro~m~ , *t u„bUeAr,c.nu„llc, sDi;Ds osVn»aoull -i llu.v&gt;* t u l tllL' s?,c .n, t d,is,t.i lled fro,m, , llow-&#13;
° &amp; - •, ers has u subtle delicacy whU-h still&#13;
n o t b e e m p l o y e d a s t e a c h e r s b e - gives it the primacy. The Empress&#13;
c a u s e of t h e fact t h a t t h e o c c u p a - Josephine gave another great stimulus&#13;
.. , - i.i • i „ „„ t „^,„ to the,scent Industry. She constantly&#13;
t i o n l e s s e n s t h e i r c h a n c e of recov- . t • ' ' . ,&#13;
i n e j d D0fore n e r l n o n t h dainty lace liore&#13;
r y a n d b e c a u s e t h e y a r e ft m e n a c e | dered lawn pocket handkerchiefs, on&#13;
to c h i l d r e n in t h e i r care. T h e y j which she had sprinkled some delirious&#13;
i . I . I I , „ « • • „ i perfume.--Loudon News.&#13;
Golf M a n l a r a .&#13;
I have in my time lived on Intimate&#13;
terms with the officers of most nations&#13;
In Europe. My ' experience of British.&#13;
Officers (unioai; vvh mi 1 imw hittc* the&#13;
honor to count many friends) Is that&#13;
they are second to n.uie in intellect and&#13;
instruction, but this, bien entendu. only&#13;
until golf links and a golf Kill become&#13;
visible. Then lhey are maniacs. I try&#13;
to talk to them of s'.-eneoy. literature,&#13;
art, polities, etc,—they are polite, of&#13;
course, the English always are—but I&#13;
can see Instinctively that there is only&#13;
one subject to interest them, le sacre&#13;
white ball.—A Foreign 'Visitor in Civil&#13;
and Military Gaaette, Lahore.&#13;
A Mystery Solved.&#13;
"How to keep of periodic attacks of&#13;
biliousness and habitual constipation&#13;
wa? a myslery that Dr. K'flg's New&#13;
L.'le Pills solved lor me," writes John&#13;
N. Pieasant, of Magnolia, Ind. The&#13;
only pills that, a r e &lt;?naranteed'to ffive&#13;
perfect satisfaction to evervbodv -&gt;v \&#13;
money relunded. Only 25c at F. A.!&#13;
Sisrler's d r u ' store.&#13;
Galveston's Sea Wall&#13;
makes lite now as sate in that city as&#13;
on the uigher uplands. E. W. Go.jd&#13;
loe4 who resiies. on Dutton St., »n&#13;
^"aoij, Te^., needs no j&gt;ea wall tor&#13;
saiety. He .'/rites; " I have u^ed Dr.&#13;
xviOjA New Disi'overy for consump&#13;
tion the pasi tiv : &gt;eais aiid it keep*)&#13;
me well and sate. He.tore that time I&#13;
had ;*. COUL'II vvlreli for \eais had been&#13;
^i'tnvin&gt;» worse. No^v u.'&gt; uone."&#13;
Cures chronic couglis, I i urippe, croup&#13;
Mi^h and prevents pneu-&#13;
Every&#13;
S'k'ler'f*&#13;
$i.C0.&#13;
w h o o p a v&#13;
monia&#13;
'lOtllrt&#13;
r i e i s i n t t &gt;&#13;
k " j a i H U t e t - : d a t&#13;
t.tke.&#13;
F. A&#13;
d r u ; / ^Ti-i H. I'11 i&#13;
Trial bo'tin ' !••*•.&#13;
uO i: a n d&#13;
S h a k e s p e a r e In P a r l i a m e n t .&#13;
In July, lSi'i"), a debate was going on&#13;
in the house of commons respecting&#13;
Lord John (afterward Karl) Russell'*&#13;
Ignominious failure during his mission&#13;
In Vleintn to bring the Crimean war to&#13;
an end, in consequence of which the&#13;
opposition indulged in some strong&#13;
criticism regarding the p'arty in power.&#13;
At 1..st Lord Palmorston, then priine&#13;
minister, rose and began to talk In a&#13;
hectoring way about "this unnecessary&#13;
and unprovoked attack upon the government"&#13;
and ended by saying In a&#13;
loud voice and looking straight at two&#13;
literary members— Kuhver and Disraeli&#13;
—who were, sitting together on the&#13;
front opposition bench:&#13;
"The gentlemen are making 'Much&#13;
Ado About Nothing.' "&#13;
He sat down amid loud cheers from&#13;
his own sido, but in an instant Bulwer&#13;
"was up and with exquisite grace and&#13;
sarcasm safd:&#13;
"Mr. Speaker"—then turning to bow&#13;
slightly toward the treasury bench—"I&#13;
beg to remind tho noble lord that in&#13;
chronological order 'Much Ado About&#13;
Nothing' comes after 'A Comedy of&#13;
Errors.' "&#13;
In Womanly Ailments&#13;
and Weaknesses&#13;
Dr. Shoop's Night Cure Soothes, Heals&#13;
tad Cures while the Patient Sleeps..&#13;
- A o a n e t t r * l u e F u r a n E l e p h a n t .&#13;
Gabriel Hossetti had a penchant for.&#13;
wild animals. He was with'difficulty&#13;
prevented at one time from purchasing&#13;
for a very large sum a young elephant.&#13;
tient sleeps am! th&#13;
pain, the infhonTraiabated,&#13;
Tbeliws o"&#13;
records of manyr&#13;
they a r e s i c k ,&#13;
Browning said to him, "What on earth Jnd^siciffi's1&#13;
will you do with him. Gabriel?" and Every ailing&#13;
Rossetti replied: "I mean to teach him • J£ade*to°exto&#13;
clean the windows. Then when some . vigor and v&#13;
one passes by the house he will see the | i^hood!1 tt'LTt&#13;
elephant cleaning the windows and will ' ereasinj? num1 ^&#13;
say, 'Who lives In that house?* and poo-: 1 ¾ ¾ ¾ 8 ¾&#13;
pie will tell him, 'Oh. that's&#13;
called Rossetti,' and&#13;
The best remedy which physicians know for&#13;
Female Weaknesses is composed of parts of a&#13;
oertain white lily. To this are added other&#13;
remedies which draw out the poisons and heal j&#13;
(he inflamed membranes. This soothing antiseptic&#13;
local application is known by druggists '&#13;
and physicians everywhere as DR. SHOOP'S i&#13;
NwiHT rcKK—bi jaus«A&gt;t cures while the pam&#13;
o r n i n g tinds the&#13;
tion, the discharges, I&#13;
nany women are&#13;
dom. They suffer,&#13;
y never know&#13;
all this suffering&#13;
unnecessary,&#13;
woman may be&#13;
- m a y b e&#13;
perience the&#13;
taltty of roy&#13;
healthy woi&#13;
s e v e r - insuffering&#13;
women&#13;
his message of hope&#13;
cheer. It is to these&#13;
a painter »lekand aiHntl \vouaen&gt;8Rrthat !•&gt;»*. S H O O P ' 8&#13;
v. &gt; T.-111 c n , - &lt;T ! N I G H T CCHE will comeVas a Balm of Gllead.&#13;
U( VS 111 s a j . 1 Vnn m a r n m l i n n * v.&#13;
think I should like to buy one of that&#13;
man's pictures.' So he will ring to,&#13;
come in, and I shall sell him a picture."&#13;
f r o m t u b e r c u l o s i s "be e x c l u d e d&#13;
f r o m s c h o o l s for p r a c t i c a l l y t h e&#13;
s a m e r e a s o n s . T h e s e s u g g e s t i o n s&#13;
h a v e b e e n senjt t o all school b o a r d s&#13;
12,000 H a r r r s t Hands Wanted in&#13;
Minnesota and Dako as.&#13;
For very low rates every day Juring&#13;
Augus* inouire of V. H. Mosier, D. P .&#13;
A , Ciiii'ago Great \Ye?tern Railway,&#13;
When a u v m n n&#13;
pressing .veMkne^-ps&#13;
realizes h&lt;.vv hel;&gt;'e?:&#13;
worthle.ss SIJH is.&#13;
surY.-rs trom rr-p—&#13;
she then keenly&#13;
— ho/.' tboroufjii'v&#13;
Dr. Shoop IM&gt;&#13;
You may not know your trouble by the name&#13;
physicians giv« it, but remember P H . SHOOP'S&#13;
N I G H T CUKE may be relied upon in all cases of&#13;
womb ulceration, falling of the womb, pains in&#13;
the womb or ovaries, leucorrhcea. (whites),&#13;
j Inflammation, congestion, irregular or painful&#13;
I menstniiition. Ask for Dr. SHOOP'S N I G H T&#13;
' CTJBB. Hecommended ;ind bold by&#13;
tJ32&#13;
a n d t o t h e s u p e r i i r e n d e n t s of city&#13;
a n d c o u n t r y schools. — A m e r i c a n ! 103 Adams S:., Cliicawr&lt;\ Hi&#13;
M e d i c i n e . - - \&#13;
— • — • A •. &lt; rd ot truth in a few words:&#13;
I n t h e s u r r e n d e r of t h e L a k e ' ! "Nearlv all other cough cure* are&#13;
S h o r e &amp; M i c h i g a n S o u r t h e r n rail- cona;i(i.tting, especially those containr&#13;
o a d t o t h e i n d e p e n d e n t oil d e a l - i»« &lt;&gt;|&gt;i»^&#13;
e r s i n t h e m a t t e r of f r e i g h t r a t e s&#13;
O h i o h a s r e a p e d t h e first r e w a r d&#13;
of itB i n v e s t i g a t i o n of t h e S t a n d a r d&#13;
O i l C o . a n d i t s allied c a r r i e r s .&#13;
J F o r y e a r s t h e i n d e p e n d e n t s h.ive&#13;
b e e n e n g a g e d i n a n a l m o s t h o p e ,&#13;
l e s s s t r u g g l e t o s e c u r e from t h e&#13;
r a i l r o a d t h e s a m e r a t e s t h a t t h e&#13;
t r u s t e n j o y e d , b u t h a v e h i t h e r t o&#13;
b e e n c o m p e l l e d t o c o m p e t e in t h e&#13;
s a m e m a r k e t s w i t h a p o w e r f u l o p -&#13;
p o n e n t o p e r a t i n g « t a very g r e a t&#13;
a d v a n t a g e i n t h e c o s t ^ f t r a n s p o r -&#13;
t a t i o n . s&#13;
Kennedy'? Laxative&#13;
Honey und T a r moves thw bowels.&#13;
C o n t a i n s no opiate*:.".&#13;
•-• Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
In this state it is not necessary to&#13;
serve a five days' notice, lor eviction ot&#13;
a cold. Use t h e original laxative.&#13;
I Am Kate* West fia&#13;
Chicago Great Western Railway&#13;
For lowest rstes to all poinls west&#13;
write to F. .It Hosier, D. P. A , 103&#13;
Adam*. St., Chicago, 111., stat; ng how&#13;
many in party and when going, t 38&#13;
Northern Resort Excursion August 30&#13;
On Autfust.30 the Ann Arbor Railroad&#13;
will ffive its annual excursion to&#13;
the following MiebiKan resorts:&#13;
Petoskey, Bay View. Mackinsc, Beu&#13;
lab, Frankfort, Charlevoix, Traverse&#13;
City, Ludinjtton, Elk and&#13;
Manistee,&#13;
Rapid*&#13;
i&#13;
., j . i ,.- Special train will leave Lakeland at&#13;
couffh svrup, Kennedys Laxative/ ' .&#13;
t t -. ' XT : . . .19:0.3 a.-m. Fare to all points except&#13;
Honey and Tar. • No opiates.&#13;
Sold by F . A. Sigler, Druggint&#13;
Get a 5 cent box of Lax ets at ^our&#13;
store please. We think they are gieat.&#13;
J u s t test these toolh-some, candy like&#13;
"liaxative Tablets tot-constipation, sour&#13;
stouiach. biliousness*, bad breath, muddy&#13;
complexion, e t c . Risk 8 cents and&#13;
see. Sold b j all dea'lera.&#13;
- • ^&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsld Curd&#13;
DfQMts wfwt you • a t .&#13;
brouirht relief to thou-and&gt; of -neb&#13;
woiurn. Hy reaehHs (i-.sea&gt;ps peculiar&#13;
to women in two, direct, specific way-&#13;
— a ioct.1 treatment known bv d i u ^ -&#13;
i^ists everywhere as Dr Shoop's Nf^ht&#13;
Cure, and a constitutional or internal&#13;
prescription called Dr. ShoopV Restorative.&#13;
Dr. Shoop'.* Night Cuve is applied&#13;
locally, and a t . n i g h t . It tvorns&#13;
w^ ile you sleep. It reduces inflammation,&#13;
it stops dlscbarge^, it heals, it&#13;
soothes, it comforts, it cures..&#13;
Dr. Shoop's Restorative (tatuYt or&#13;
liquid form) is a constitutional, nerve&#13;
tissue tonic. It brings renewed&#13;
strength, lasting ambiti.n "and Vi;:or&#13;
to weak, lifeless women.&#13;
These two remedies, tin7!y. or u-fd&#13;
together, hav» an irresistible, positive&#13;
helpful power. Try them a month&#13;
aod see. Sold liy all dealers.&#13;
6 0 YEAR8*&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
Mackinac Island §5.00 Mackinac&#13;
Island will be one dollar higher.&#13;
Tickets will be good until September&#13;
8.&#13;
DR. PIERCE'S&#13;
Malted Cocoa The Cocoa with&#13;
a Dellcato Flavor jjj&#13;
MALTKI•&gt; Coo'A is prepared b y a c l e n * i f e - |&#13;
ally combiniiu,'tht: coi.-oa of theciwlOW* .&#13;
cocoa b e a u a n d t h e I n s t o f malt. 5 * * * t&#13;
malt aiding d i g e s t i o n , a n d t h e f a t c l t i « # *&#13;
ct&gt;c\.'a h a v i n g bt-^n p r e d i g e s t e d , t h e&#13;
fet ling of lu-avirifss expvrier»ced after&#13;
drir.Uing t b c o r d i n a r y c o c o a s is a v o i d e d ;&#13;
t h u s a m o s t d e l i c i o u s e n d n o u r i s h i n g&#13;
l&gt; vt i a g e i s p r k . i c e d , w h i c h i s&#13;
footly puro a:;d will n o t distress t h e&#13;
must delicate s t o m a c h .&#13;
For sale by your dealer.&#13;
KERR'S&#13;
Malted Extract&#13;
OF T O M A T O&#13;
One teaspoon nil to a cap of bofltag water&#13;
mnkes n delicious Bouillon.&#13;
1'or sale by your dealer. Prepared by&#13;
WILLIAM B. KERR,&#13;
Medford, Boston, Mass.&#13;
Ijl W. DANIELS,&#13;
• j , O B N B B A L A U C T I O N E E R .&#13;
SatiHtHCth u Guaranteed. For information&#13;
call »1 DrspATCH Office or «ddreaB&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. Lyndilla phone&#13;
couuectiou. Auction bill« und tin eupB&#13;
furninhed free.&#13;
s*&#13;
tr&#13;
— j&#13;
«3&#13;
It )s compart, can be cais ed .".--ll&gt;*, :ml ai^&#13;
tho opetiuur to ymige tlio tiuuuti'.y or iiii dee&#13;
SAVES T I M E . SAVES INK.&#13;
Ko«&gt;pa bnishes nisrt Irk whore von wnnt thr-m, and&#13;
iaaiways K i L V D l ' I ' O K I &gt; ' S X . V M LSJC.&#13;
A K^fcTt ecmbiniitlon lsobtftined when&#13;
WHITES WATERPROOF STENCIL INK&#13;
, i -•' .'il. H H fusily ai&gt;v&gt;lloil and 8*t3 tiuuklf. &gt; 0&#13;
r tiii .it or fuitlng.&#13;
I'J.m BRUSHES. SAVES STENCILS. SAVES TIME.&#13;
' " «'J noi V.:irdnn finisli?* r&gt;r clop stnu'its. I'en'f&#13;
: ' .mr WL..d lor It, T K S T I T . ihwle only :•!&#13;
A. WHITE CO.,&#13;
h S t . , D o s t o n f W a 8 S . U . S . A .&#13;
3.&#13;
S3Hig&#13;
I&#13;
CURES&#13;
RHEUMATISM&#13;
LUMB1Q0, SCIATIC*&#13;
NEURALGIA and&#13;
KIDNEY TROUBLE&#13;
'5 DROPS" liken"internally, rids the blood&#13;
of the poisonous matter and acids which&#13;
are the direct causes of these diseases.&#13;
Applied externally it affords almost instant&#13;
relief from pain, while a permanent&#13;
cure is being effected by purifyag the&#13;
blood, dissolving the poisonous substance&#13;
and removing it from the system.&#13;
DR. fc. D. DLAND&#13;
Of Brewton, Gft., write*!&#13;
"1 had been a aufferer for * number of yean I&#13;
with Lumbago' and Rheumatism In my arms |&#13;
mid leg*, and tried all the remedies that I could&#13;
gather from medio*! veriu, and also consulted&#13;
with a number of the beet phr ilclans, bat found&#13;
AofWac «*** a*** • * • relief obtained from&#13;
"M&gt;RoP8.n I than prescribe t» in a y M M I M&#13;
for rheumatism and kindred disease*.1^ FREE If you are suffering with Rheumatism, |&#13;
Nnuralcta. Kldrey TrorMe T any kini&#13;
?d illiiftasu. #r t« to as »ri trial bottle i&#13;
cf' B-DKOPS." and t«st x yoarself.&#13;
' 5-DKOPS" can be used any length of I&#13;
tfme without acquiring a "drug habit,"&#13;
as it is entirely free of opium, cocaine,&#13;
alcohol, laudanum, and'other similar)&#13;
ingredients.&#13;
Largefilz* lloUlc, "5-DR0P8M (SOODeasa)&#13;
•1.O0. For gale by nrvniets.&#13;
5WAK80K RHEUMATIC DURE OOMHIY.&#13;
bept. x«. i&lt;JO Late* Street, Oklea**.&#13;
A woman worries until she cets&#13;
wrinkles, then worries because she&#13;
has them: If she takes Holiisterrs&#13;
Kopkj&gt; Mountain IVa she would have&#13;
neither. Biisrbt, nmiling faen follows&#13;
its ose. 35 cents, tea or tablet*. Ask&#13;
your druggist.&#13;
v&#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 is probably patentable. Communlca&#13;
ttonifttrtctly confidential. HANDBOOK&#13;
lUil _ _ _ _&#13;
tptcW,~*otic«, without charge. In the&#13;
j t l y e&#13;
sent free. Old*t&#13;
Patents taken&#13;
......__w».. on Patents&#13;
agency for seeunncpatents.&#13;
throURh Mi "&#13;
.-jrpate&#13;
unn A Co. receive&#13;
, v w , .~.~v, ...—«— — . m J, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Lsrjrast ctr.&#13;
dilation (if any scientific Journal. Terms, ia a&#13;
year; four months, $L Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN&amp;Co"'6—NewYork&#13;
Branch OfBce, 635 F BU Washington. D. C.&#13;
Kocifc* : ^apsla Cure&#13;
9 wftnt you eats&#13;
BUY THE FAMOUS Lincoln Steel Range !&#13;
TKBESTliC^^&#13;
PS&gt;IO0b&#13;
COSTS NO MORE THAN AN UNKNOWN MAKE.&#13;
Before you buy that range or cook stove,&#13;
write us, And we wril mail you a copy of&#13;
. "Points for PurohasBrm "&#13;
Iftiit free for the asking. Full of useful inform.&#13;
Jttioft.&#13;
TIE UlfilJ STOVE IRANBE COMPAIY, FrtMOit, Ohii.&#13;
y . %&lt;&lt;i&#13;
£*&#13;
vV^5 *&#13;
iO^mamM^ik liiiisisisiiitf&#13;
- ~ t &gt; _&#13;
's&#13;
In Sell D'leuce&#13;
Major Hamm, editor and manauer&#13;
the Oottstitutiooalist, Eminence, Ky ,&#13;
when he was Hi reel v attacked, foui&#13;
years ai*o, by piles, hou^hr a box of&#13;
Bucklen's Arnica Salve, ot which h-&#13;
P e p p e r m i n t .&#13;
The preparation of f»epperrnlnt Is especially&#13;
an American industry. The&#13;
peppermint Is cut wbeu iu bloom, like&#13;
hay, dried, rl^'ed in closo wooden vats&#13;
and steamed. The oil cells burst and&#13;
the oil passes upward with the steam,&#13;
which is condensed and conducted Into&#13;
a receiver, where the oil rises and Is&#13;
says: u It cured me in ten days and no . piped oft', it l.ikes alnut '.\"M j;omids&#13;
, , , - n i\,', i , * 1.^1,.. ,xf trouble sim:w. Uui:ke.&lt;jt.. bean t or' of d,r y «p '&gt;,:,: :;i:n.uint to produce one "* . • ^ pound of oil. A n si ere orf &gt;l: iud, yii eilds,&#13;
burns, sores, cuts and wouuris. 25 • . fro3J] six t:&gt; ten pounds of oil. often&#13;
a* F. A .S--J.IT'- dnit/ st^-ie.&#13;
more, even a-', h'^'i as (ifty pounds.&#13;
THE FURNACE&#13;
Tlie Boil Of The World&#13;
of troubles that robbed E. H. Wolfe,&#13;
ot bear (iroye, la., ot all usefulness,&#13;
came when he began taking Electric&#13;
Bitters. He writes: "Two years a g o&#13;
kidney trouble caused me great suffering,&#13;
which I would never have survived&#13;
had 1 not taken Electric Bitters.&#13;
They also cured me of general debility."'&#13;
Sure cure fo»- all stomach, liver&#13;
Hiid kidney coinplaiuU, biood diseases,&#13;
ieadache, dizziness and weakness or&#13;
i-odily decline. Price 50c. Gnaran-&#13;
' e e l at F. A. Sifter's drug store.&#13;
P e a c o c k s ' F e a t h e r s .&#13;
Peacock feathers are said to bring 111&#13;
luck. The origin of this tradition is&#13;
Interesting. It is found in Palgrave's&#13;
work on central and east Arabia, where&#13;
the traveler says that, according to&#13;
Mohammedan tradition, the peacock&#13;
opened thfe wicket of paradise to admit&#13;
the devil and received a very ample&#13;
share of the devil's own punishment.&#13;
is the best thing w e&#13;
ever made and we've&#13;
Teen'making furnaces thirty-three&gt;ears. It Is 5 o l M 5 t e « ^ -&#13;
every joint riveted. Never leaks. Has lined casing, chain&#13;
regulation, evaporating pan, etc. Burns any fuel economically.&#13;
Made in six sizes; powerful and durable.&#13;
WE SELL DIRECT TO CONSUMERS.&#13;
and save you dealers' pfofltsr ^end -for **»=** p a g e b o o * I; man s t a t e s l o vote against the measure&#13;
which fully describes our goods and our m a k e r - t O - U W and thus defeat it. ^ n his baste he&#13;
method of selling. We can save you money in buying and handed the wrong paper to Bismarek,&#13;
_ fuel in using. Your name on a postal card, please. w h o read and returned It, with the re&#13;
HESS WARMING &amp; VENTILATING COMPANY, mark:&#13;
- . - . . _ _ . . . . **t«i—_— i n - I "There must be some mistake here."&#13;
921 Tacoma Building, Chicago, His. | R e c h b e r g g a w hi8 blunder a n d g r e w&#13;
• i i m s r c k and the Ambassador.&#13;
One day the Austrian ambassador&#13;
to the federal diet, Count Rechberg,&#13;
received a dispatch Instructing him to&#13;
vote with Pfussia for a, certain Important&#13;
measure, accompanied with a confidential&#13;
letter directing blm to Induce&#13;
the representatives of the other Ger-&#13;
^.. '&#13;
DISCOURAGED §¥1EN&#13;
IS LIFE WORTH LIVING&#13;
mm- *&#13;
\ I i : \ " , y o u b e c o m e u i s h e r v r t -&#13;
t'lU'i1, w i i . ' i y v . i i'."'i t i n - s y i n p -&#13;
tfjiii.+ ..1 N ' c i v c i i s i u - o i i i i y a n d&#13;
•V l i v "••••'li'i'T II '.-'I. J u l ] .&#13;
j pale and excited. "Don't be disturbed."&#13;
7=1 ' said Bismarck. "You did not intend&#13;
j to give me this document, and therefore&#13;
you have not given It to me, and&#13;
] I am wholly ijrnorant of* its cfjitents."&#13;
j In fact, he made no mention of it in&#13;
i his official reports and thus won Re'ch-&#13;
1 berg's gratitude, besides having him&#13;
1 henceforth "on the hip."&#13;
t t • • 1 "&#13;
-1&#13;
I f&#13;
• ['••&#13;
•-,V »AV. # • ' " ' / ] \&#13;
luviiii-r it&#13;
! t ' l ' '.' * . ' •&#13;
a in1 n ; '•'&#13;
., . r '.' .ki' ,&#13;
l--\ r. r t;&#13;
• &gt; r ; i : , i -&#13;
i .• •. Y o : i&#13;
;• : i " i " . ' &lt; . . u&#13;
f&lt; - 1 n k a&#13;
V 1 :- •• t&#13;
r\; • &gt; , - &gt;&#13;
A Sign of poor blood circulation^ shortness of&#13;
breath after walking, going up stairs,&#13;
sweeping, singing, excitement, anger,&#13;
fright, etc. Poor blood circulation&#13;
means a sick heart, and a sick heart is&#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 Cure.&#13;
If you find these symptoms present,&#13;
you should procure a bottle of Dr. Miles'&#13;
l e w Heart Cure&#13;
I t w i l l c u r e , a n d a t a v e r y l i t t l e e x p e n s e ,&#13;
c o m p a r e d w i t h d o c t o r ' s b i l l s . W e a r e s o&#13;
s u r e of it, t h a t if first b o t t l e d o e s n o t&#13;
benefit, y o u r d r u g g i s t w i l l r e t u r n y o u r&#13;
m o n e y ,&#13;
" M y h u s b n n d h a d p a l p i t a t i o n of t h e ,&#13;
h e a r t v e r y b a d . d o c t o r e d w i t h p h y s i c -&#13;
i a n s , w h o f a i l e d t o help h i m . H e t o o k (&#13;
D r . M i l e s ' H e a r t Cure a n d N e r v i n e , a n d '.&#13;
Is e n t i r e l y c u r e d . " • l&#13;
M R S . J . M. R A V E L . R e a d i n g , P a . i&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach No appetite, loss of strength, i&#13;
nets, .headache, constipation, bid breath,&#13;
general debility, sour risings, and catarrh&#13;
of the stomach are all due to indigestion.&#13;
Kodol cures indigestion. This new aiaoow*&#13;
ery represents the natural Juices of diffes&gt;&#13;
ttoa u they cxsit In a healthy atoassttfc,&#13;
oombtned with the greatest known teas*&#13;
and reconstructive'^ properties. Kedol Ofa&gt;&#13;
pepsia Cure does not tfnly cure lqdSgenioa&#13;
and dyspepsia* but this famous remedy&#13;
cures all stomach troubles by olesirmfnf,,&#13;
purifying, sweetening and strengthening&#13;
the mucous membranes lining the atemaolk&#13;
Mr. S. S. Ball, of Ravenswocd. W. Vs.. Ml SI&#13;
" I was troubled with sour stomach for tweaty yearn&#13;
Kodo! cured me sad we art now using it is sass&#13;
for baby."&#13;
Kodol Digests What You Bat,&#13;
Dottles onlys.i ze$, 1w.0h0ic hS tsaeel lh*o flodrlo 5f0 2 c¼en ttism. es the Mai&#13;
by a. a Dewrrr *oa, OHieAaa Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist&#13;
Ask for the 1906 Kodol almanac&#13;
and 200 calendar.&#13;
PDBLI3HED KVBBT TBCRSDAV VOBN'INe Y \&#13;
F R A N K L_. A N D R E W S &amp;u CC.&#13;
EOlTOhS A I 3 PROPRIETORS.&#13;
^abecriptloQ i'rice J l j a Advance&#13;
HOLLfBTER'S&#13;
Rocky Mountain Tea Nugget*&#13;
a Busy Medicine for Busy People.&#13;
Brines Golden Health and Renewed VigW.&#13;
A specitic for Constipation. Indigestion. L i v e r&#13;
and Kidnev troubles. Pimples. Eczema. Impure&#13;
Blood. B a d Breath. Slutfirish Bowels. H e a d a c h e&#13;
aud BacMiuehc. Its Itecky Mountain T e a i n t a b -&#13;
let form, as cent* a box. Oenuine m a d e by&#13;
Hoixt&gt;TKR n : u - u CoMr-ANY. Madison, W i s . GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPLE&#13;
Railroad&#13;
"Sfc&#13;
: ^ . ^ 1 ¾ ^ . . ^ ^ \ \ f~yy i :-..--^ Mtt\un\ T r e n t u i e » t i s y o u r&#13;
j ^ ; v s v U ^ ^ W V ^ ^ j I'.'i-u-'e. It w i l l .-=:1. Mjuin-n »11&#13;
\ f " ---:'• - U ' 1 ^ ^ £ \ \ I w ; i k 'ii-srans, v i t a l i z e th.&gt; n&lt;T- r:&#13;
• &gt; " V M » * A i r .&#13;
v o i i ^ s y s t e m , p u r i f y t h e b l o o d&#13;
:&gt;«vl i o s t o i - c y o u t o a m a n l y&#13;
i---^&#13;
iPay When Cured.&#13;
R A DEB&#13;
•l- o t ; ; . I---&#13;
1 ...• V •&#13;
•; !::•!" l!^Vi&gt; yr.u&#13;
::. !':"•''.' T !;L-^ Y-&gt;:\&#13;
y. -\v :.l\ ;i;. .,1 Tilt&#13;
w i l l &lt;; o f • r ^•&#13;
• st h o t w ? A r e y o u Jn-&#13;
!i!:&gt;',,i b e e n d i s e a s e i l ? H a v e&#13;
i t i n e i i t w i l l I ' U I V y o u . W h a t&#13;
C O N S U L T A T I O N F R E E .&#13;
\ i n , \v!-;i •• f'ir :i-n i i o n e s t o p i n i o n F r o e o f&#13;
1*0&lt;;1\S l - ' ! : i : i ' ' — " T h e G o l d e n M o n i t o r "&#13;
• i' M e n . ^.'-•;L11 (1 i ^ x i k c i " D i s e a s t ' S of&#13;
i There is nothing so ple*=ant as that&#13;
! hi^Ltt. cbeertul, at peace with-thi-&#13;
| .vor^'J fealin^ when you sit down to&#13;
j&gt;. our breakfast. There is nothing so&#13;
conducive to go^'l work an'J ^ocd&#13;
i .-.ih.uJts. T h e b«aithy man with a&#13;
I heal.by mind and body i» a better&#13;
tellow, a better workman, a hettej&#13;
oitiznn than the man oi woman who is&#13;
ban'iiicapped by some disability, however&#13;
slight. A slight disorder of the&#13;
I stomach will derange your body, your&#13;
j thoughts and yoar disposition. Get&#13;
jawny tiom the moroidness and the&#13;
j blues. Keep yoar stomach in tune&#13;
and hot I) vour brain and bodv I • . " low us (,'ooii work can be a o a e .&#13;
| respond. Little indiscretions ot over- [ A L L BILLS PAVABLL KIHMUK BVKBY MOSTH.&#13;
i eatintr can tje easily corrected and v o u i •&#13;
iatiitua^'. u u l'i&gt;3toili&gt;:&lt;? at rJ ijcicaey, Micui^SL&#13;
^3 secoua-cUaa :a»;ter&#13;
Advertieiag rates made Known o a application&#13;
* •&#13;
iiiislnesft CaraB, $4.00 per year.&#13;
Tenth and u a r r i a ^ e uoticee p u o l i t b e d f r e e .&#13;
Anuouaceiueatg of entortdiameatB may ue pai&gt;&#13;
tor, \i desired, oy ^r -senaa.*; the otnee with tich&#13;
t»te of uduiiusiOQ. I Q case tickets are not irouLOt&#13;
to theodice,r«&lt;^'jl(»r ratee w i l i o e ohar^i _.&#13;
A i l Mitttfei i u i ' J t a i u o t k t colliain w l h o t ca .1,. c&#13;
ed at J cent 8 per l i n e or fraction tner&lt;?of, foi etn.i.&#13;
iasertion. VS'hereuo time i s s p e c i i l e a . a H notices&#13;
•vi 11 be i n s e r t e d until ordered d i s c o n t i n u e d , am.&#13;
ill u^clinrged for Accordingly. Hf?Ali changef ! F ' . T Oi;ii&#13;
PERE MARgyrTTE&#13;
—as. a f f e c t - f i - p - ^~. l £ C i .&#13;
T r u i n g ie;iv*' &gt;&gt;.-u!h I . y o n us : o l i o \ v &gt; .&#13;
F o r D e t r o r . :i:icl K;»s:.&#13;
1 0 : 4 s :'. C J . . '"J: I'.» r . m . S.o&gt; \&lt;. u,&#13;
af advertisements ilL'ST reacn this .jfflceas eari\&#13;
»a T C B S D A T m o r n i n g to insure &gt;in i n s e r t i o n I L »&#13;
»&gt;iLUft wt*ek.&#13;
JOS *&gt;1£I.\ l l . \ G /&#13;
In all i t s branches, a specialty. We h a ^ e a l i k i a o ^&#13;
and the latest styles ot Type, e t c . , whicli enables&#13;
us to execute ail i i n d s ' u i work, suctf as Booke,&#13;
Pamplei8, Fosters,,hrogranjLies. tiili lieadi,^s,ott&#13;
Heads, Btateuients, Cards, Auction HiUu, e t c . i L&#13;
w i l l I superior styles, upon the dilonest notice. l&gt; rice»si&#13;
F o r&#13;
i\ '.pills, J w r t u jui'i «\ •&#13;
L':"J'i :• m ., '-' :1M p . m . , 0 : 1 s .&#13;
S;io'in:iw Mul Hp.v'Uitv,&#13;
b&gt;:-is&#13;
F o r T . l i&#13;
F R A N K B * Y .&#13;
Ageut, S'}Ut,r:&#13;
•:).. '2V&gt; '.&gt;. r u . , S . O N pa&#13;
u d Si'Utii,&#13;
. i n . . •!•&#13;
.von.&#13;
19p.m.,&#13;
: ; . F. M O E L L E P ,&#13;
H, Pf A., D - t i ,r.&#13;
: - . s i &lt;••*:&#13;
— \ &gt; i !?!•:—-\() I A Y , &gt;'&lt;&gt; M e r t i f i n e s e n t&#13;
lo- t •;. i v - e r y t h l u K o o a f l d c n t l H l .&#13;
; L I - :&#13;
^&#13;
i^iv;;^an / ve, and Sheiby St., Detroit., Mich.&#13;
KERGAN&#13;
will be surprised to see liow much ! ~Y[{£ V I L L A G F&#13;
better man y o u are. Try a little] : : ~zz&#13;
Kodol Fa;' Dyspepsia at't»*r your meal-.! V»LLAG£ OFFICERS.&#13;
Sold ^y F. A. Sigler D r u g c l i t&#13;
DIRECTORY&#13;
PrtE-IDENT&#13;
TKL'STEBS&#13;
j Excursion to the Picturesque Hijfhj&#13;
lands of Ontario and Tfiiiajraini Rejrio,n&#13;
' via Grand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
HIGGLE A Farm Library&#13;
of unequalled value.&#13;
P r a c t i c a l , Up to&#13;
date, Concise and&#13;
Comprehensive.&#13;
Hindftone!) Primed and&#13;
Beautifully Illustrate*.&#13;
~B^J*C0B B1Q0LB BOXDKS&#13;
No. 1-BIQGLE HORSE BOOK&#13;
All aijout Horses—a Common-sense Treatise, with morf&#13;
than 7J illustrations ; a st.uiilard work. Price, W Cents.&#13;
No. 2 - B I O Q L E BERRY BOOK&#13;
All about growing Small Fruits—read rind learn b o w .&#13;
Beautiful colored plates. Tiice, .¾) Cents.&#13;
No. 3-BIQQLK POULTRY BOOK&#13;
All about Poultry : the best Poultry IUu&gt;k in existence;&#13;
t d i s eve^-thing. Profusely illustrated. . Price, i&gt;D Cent*.&#13;
No. 4 - B I Q Q L E COW BOOK&#13;
All about Cows and the Dairy Business; new edition.&#13;
Colored plates. Sound Common-sen-e. Price, 50 Cent*.&#13;
No. 5-B1QQLE SWINE BOOK&#13;
All about Hogs—BreediiiR, Feeding, Butchery, Disease*,&#13;
etc. Covers the whole ground. Pnre, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 6-BIOQLE HEALTH BOOK&#13;
Gives remedies and up-to-date information. A household&#13;
necessity. Extremely practical. Price, oO Cents.&#13;
N o . # 7 - B I G G L E PET BOOK&#13;
For the boys and girls particularly. Pets of all kinds and&#13;
how to care for them. Price, SO Cents.&#13;
No. 8 - B I G G L E SHEEP-BOOK&#13;
Covers the whole ground. Kvcry page full of good *d-&#13;
\ ice. Sheep nien praise it. Pi ice, i&lt;0 Cents. Farm Journa&#13;
is your paper, made for you and not n mi&lt;nt. It is 'J9 vears&#13;
ol.l; it is the great boiled-down, hit-the-nailon-the-head,&#13;
cjuit-after-you-have-said-it Farm and Household paper in the&#13;
world—the biggest paper of its swe iti the f o i l e d States of&#13;
America—having more than T h r e e Million tegular readers.&#13;
A n y ONE of t h e BIGGLR BOOKS, a n d t h e F A R M&#13;
J O U R N A L S Y E A R S ("remainder H V.W and all of 1'.107,1903,&#13;
1908 and 1910), sent bv mail to any address lor A DOLLAR BILL.&#13;
Sample of P A R M J O U R N A L and circular desci thing BIGOLB BOOKS:*rree.&#13;
W I L M E R A T K I N S O N C O . ,&#13;
PrBMflBBita O F FARM JOT.'RNAL. P H I L A D E L P H I A .&#13;
— Extremely tow lares to Muskoka&#13;
Wharf, P e n e t a n j , TVmagami and&#13;
New Liskeard and return on ail trains&#13;
Au&lt;. 23, 1906. Excursion tickets will&#13;
ala^ be on sa'e at Muskoka \\ hart to&#13;
any point on L-tke Muskoka, R o s e a u&#13;
E 1:. l i r o ^ u&#13;
K'.iuen r inch, Jdtuea tiucue,&#13;
Will Kennedy Sr . Jduie* s m i t h ,&#13;
?. J. i t e p l e . ivi. Fariiutu.&#13;
CLUWii Hogei Carr&#13;
iHtASfKEK Marion J . rie»3on&#13;
A»st:ssu«; D. W.Murta&#13;
3TUEST LOMillsSlOSBK \V . A. NlXoU&#13;
&amp; i.A L T Li t : ficiii* D r . h . r . s i l l e r&#13;
'ATTOHNtiY W. A. Carr&#13;
MAiisnALL WUJ. Moron&#13;
'firand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Mil at n&lt;i-:ni: fr^ni F i n c k n e v&#13;
N'.i'^* l'a?rPrti:f&gt;r i;.x S'i! • v , v , ',•:'•&gt; .^, v&#13;
.No. :',••• P:i-s~:.^^r blx. Si.-, i-ty, 1:'." P V .&#13;
W e e : P,.-i:,-^-1 :'n IL 1 ' i i c k n c y&#13;
N*0. 1~ P a a a a n _ ^ r £ - c Siind.iv, 111 r*"5" A . ' Y . .&#13;
Nn. ,'•.• F i ; - 3 - - n . i - ^ 3 , V;:i J;, v . S:44 I . M '&#13;
ins.' car* a r - o p e r a t - d -.. N e w York' c m i l'hiliid*'!-&#13;
p h i a ; via V.i_c:ra F i l l - &gt;vt!n' ' . r a n d T\ v. \&lt; 1&lt;-LH.&#13;
hi_-h ValN-y )\&lt;^:\p.&#13;
•V. - i . if«rk Aat-nt.&#13;
CMURCHES.&#13;
Ai fcllliuLJiSl i i t ' i j C U t ' A ^ &gt;Ji±CltCd.&#13;
Kev. D, i . LutleioL^. pa*tor. serviced «&gt;*.•..&#13;
Sunday .noruiuj, at loiov, aucT tsvery s u n ^ a .&#13;
eM.-itij5 »c 7 ;jo'u'ciuclt, 1'rajei .ueetin^ l u . . t&#13;
o r J O s e p ' i , a n d &lt;-. t P ^ n e t a n g tO attv' &lt;l»j eve-mn^a, ?unaay liCiiooi i»t ciosb o : ru.. r:&#13;
pa in t ^n R i n y Soil n d.[) i_yis] p_n_o \ the&#13;
Northern Navigation Co. For fares'&#13;
U L syr Cu-, M'AKV &gt; ANi'LhBI, *..&#13;
(J .S \j lie. J A . i J . &gt; . I L C ti ^ tv.^ u .&#13;
and tuiti.er intern ation consult local ; jL.uii^ :^...1^, n. ,i:w W J every s - u a ;&#13;
au-ent or write to d e o . \\ . \ aux. A. Ci. |..-_, , ^ ^ ^ . ^^^^ *c^Ji at c.o*e ,1 i.......&#13;
! . a : service.' i'ercy swart:1011:, sup'-,. -&gt;U •.&#13;
: 1 eep;e s e c . V. k T A , Cliiuiyo, M.&#13;
_ . _ - -" • • • w ' i . * ! . » i i l .- . ' A l ' l K I l , , ! . C . I L LiCtl&#13;
THE ORIGINAL LAXATIVE CCJGH SYfVJF O K e V . &gt;&#13;
KENNEDY'S LAXATIVE HONEY^TAR 1&#13;
1&#13;
fted Clover SI-JSWO: ar.d J C T . Bee o a E?ery KoUle. ;&#13;
J . '_ j j i j i e n o r d , i » i i i o r . ' j c r \ l&#13;
•..\erj L-.iiiJay. i.uvi l^Aar a: ,":6:-0 c i&#13;
L-«M li.iiua w l i e j e r m o i i &lt;tt \t .'-'-b ». i n . C&lt;»:tCL&#13;
1 iiUu ,,. Ul., ^ ed^eiiJaLiu j e n e c i C L i o n » : 1 :':&gt;• \&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
P H O C U R E D A N D O E F E N D E O . r ; - n &lt; , m o ( 1 « | .&#13;
rtrawi:v • '• r- 't.t.lerexpvir 5*:ire!uki;drreereport I&#13;
Free nJvi v. liow to ot,:i.::i piti-nt*, truie m&amp;rka,|&#13;
copyrights, etc., I N AJ.L C O U N T R I E S .&#13;
Busirust direct ivilh Washington saves time,\&#13;
money and often the patent.&#13;
Patent and Infringement Practice Exclusively.&#13;
Write or co!iie to \±&amp; at&#13;
6*3 Ninth Strut, opp. TJalud SUtM fitant OAe«.|&#13;
W * S H I N G T O W , 0 . C . GASNOW&#13;
K I L L T M I COUCH&#13;
I liC&#13;
*-*&gt; i . n , f f , C i / ^ 1 ^ « ^ ^ .&#13;
•'OS I ' M &amp; M ^ ? * « ,&#13;
Gris^old -?»&#13;
ouse DBTV-JJT-.&#13;
mocfrTi.&#13;
un-to-diif*&#13;
RfiTr.l, 1.1,-» t J j&#13;
it. tii,- k- r t s i&#13;
th-&gt;(.': tv&#13;
Rites, $2, $^ ••'. $3 per Dav&#13;
Disease&#13;
land Health&#13;
&lt; " *&#13;
CUSTOM MADE FLY SCREENS Our v?ork 13 far superior to the usual output of local mi Its,'at id has a stylo and&#13;
finish not obtainable from those who do not make a specialty of screens. Semi&#13;
ua sizes of doora and windows. We guarantee a fit.&#13;
For outside Screens we use the identical finish of the outside of Tulhnan Cars.&#13;
The best grade of Wire Cloth—enameled, galvanized genuine bronze, etc.,&#13;
fastened by tacks or b y t h e "lockstrip" process.&#13;
Intending purchasers may hare, free by mail, samples of woods, finishes&#13;
and wir'o cloth and copy of cat.io\s* and price list.. Agencies in many cities.&#13;
Special terms to contractors ami builders.&#13;
The A. J . PfrfLLtrg COWH&gt;AI*Y, Fenton, Michigan.&#13;
Enpmrlmnom. S 1*2 Ao*mm • / FIMM* # J M O * .&#13;
REVIVO&#13;
RESTORES VITUin&#13;
"Hade a&#13;
" s O . ' J i S ^ t b .&#13;
1'&lt;Lt&gt; A . O. i i . buciety ot tnis pUca, u i e e u ever&#13;
taird s»-.iartay .ntus F;. &gt; U » a » w a ^ i i&#13;
Jona 'I'uomey and M. i . hieiiy,&lt;.'oa j : y 0.-..-¾¾.-.^&#13;
111¾ W. C . T . L. meets the nrst Friday ot e a i i&#13;
uionth at C:oC i&gt;, in. at tiie uome of i.&gt;r. II. F.&#13;
MKler. iivctyuiie interested in lemjieraucs is&#13;
ct&gt;akiully.in\iir?ii. J l r ; . L.ai M^ler, t're.i; &gt; i . . .&#13;
fclta I'urue.Jieerftttry.&#13;
I he C. T . A. hed U. s* i:eiy of t h i s pi'ace ,&#13;
eve/y iUira Suturcay b\euiSi; iu tne t :&#13;
tnew H^ll. John Donohve, Fre?iden:.&#13;
X:&#13;
M J s ' C S&#13;
\h T - m. ; • $ * tog'i&#13;
oi\iL'!MfTiO?s Price&#13;
GiJGHSapd 50c &amp; $1.0(&#13;
OLDS f-co Trial.&#13;
Surest and Quickest Cure for all&#13;
T H R O A T a - d LU3TC- T21CUBLES,&#13;
cr M O N E Y BACK.&#13;
KM u l i T S O K M A l C A B i l E S .&#13;
Meet ever ^ Fr»diy evenin»,- oa oi r^fure :^&#13;
.-t tlie moon at their ';all in tiie &gt;warriio-t bld^&#13;
Vi^tinu brothers art .ordiall) i n v i t e d .&#13;
CltAS. 1.. ('AMl'UtLt/Sir k l ; . i a ..;.&#13;
lvingeton Lodge, N'o.?-., F A, A. M.&#13;
' &gt;mmuniCiition Tueuda? evening, on&#13;
1! ot" the moon. iiirk VatAVini&#13;
)£K OF K KSIKKN 5SIAR meet j on&#13;
0 he Friday events^ following t ,ie re^;il:ii r Kt A A..J1; meeting, AIKS.NKTTK VAI-OUN. \V. M.&#13;
/ t i i . LK ul-' MOPEilN WOODMKN Mee; t.., I&#13;
I./firet-Tiuirsday evt-aisii: ,,: each Mouth :u -li. ;&#13;
'..'iccaiH* t ha,, C. l..(.ri:ne* V. 0.&#13;
M f A l l V ^ n ! i A D I K ! i 0 K l H K - M A t c ' A S r l h r Meet cv^r&#13;
f w Q I I H 9 I I | X&gt; And &gt;rd ^ilturdav ot u . : , r.iui.'.h at&#13;
of H e . " VUcil, L I L A T O N I W w , i.a.ty&#13;
*:JU y.&#13;
udiUl.&#13;
oui.&#13;
1 Why Not Buy the Best?&#13;
I Good HouttkNpert U M&#13;
P. H. IRISH'S&#13;
) Green Cross&#13;
EXTRACTS&#13;
p r o d u c e s t i n e r e u n i t e I n 3 0 d a y * , i t a c t s K&#13;
p o w e r f u l l y a u d q u i c k l y . Cures w h e n o t h e r s fail.&#13;
Y o u n c i n e n can retrain thoir last manhiH-&gt;&lt;! a n d ,&#13;
old m e n m a y recover their youthful 'vi*ror by&#13;
M&gt;inK K F V I V O . It q u i c k l y and q u i e t l y r e - | ~"&#13;
MOVVS Ner%*ousness. L o s t Vitality, S e i u a l \&#13;
Uc,:knosN such a s Lost P o w e r , P a i l l n e M e m o r y , '&#13;
WiiMim; D i s e a s e s , a i d effects of self-abu^e or&#13;
e x c e s s "''•&gt;! iTulisererioD, which uaflts o n e for&#13;
s t u d y . liUsin.VvN or marriu+fe. I t not onlv c u r e s&#13;
hy stiftinjr AX t h e s e a t o t disease, but i s a * r e a t&#13;
n e r v e t o n l e a n d l&gt;k»od l m t l d e r * bringing&#13;
' N k r h V; oK i 'tt. iA: V A.. * r I .i ii.l&#13;
1- . 1.. AirilVW* i' y. V BUSINESS CAr&gt;OS.&#13;
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AT ClSPATCH OFFICE&#13;
EVENTS NOTED&#13;
BUSINESS MAN OF MIO FLEES&#13;
THE COUNTRY UNDER A&#13;
CLOUD.&#13;
MAN OF POWERIN COUNTY.&#13;
The Lake Linden Mystery Is Not&#13;
Cleared and a New Theory of the&#13;
Missing Boy's Fate Is Advanced.&#13;
Noble's Flight.&#13;
A shortage in accounts with the government,&#13;
involuntary bankruptcy proceedings,&#13;
$20,000 worth of debts and&#13;
an action for divorce-i-tbese in brief&#13;
are the causes which led to the recent&#13;
disappearance of Frank T. Noble,&#13;
former postmaster at Mio and the best&#13;
known man in Oscoda county.&#13;
A few months age no man was more&#13;
respected than' Frank Noble. He had&#13;
a big business, a fine home; he was&#13;
the political power of the county; his&#13;
credit was unquestioned; his friends&#13;
legion. Now in Oscoda county Frank&#13;
Noble has hardly a friend left, his business&#13;
is in the hands of a receiver and&#13;
he escaped criminal prosecution only&#13;
by his timely flight for parts unknown.&#13;
'.' The general store which Noble ran&#13;
for years has been closed. A new postmaster&#13;
will goon be appointed. Noble&#13;
resigned by letter a few weeks ago.&#13;
The Noble home is in the name of his&#13;
wife so that can't be touched. Everything&#13;
else that belonged to the missing&#13;
man has been gathered la by the creditors.&#13;
But Noble is a long way from&#13;
penniless, according to his former&#13;
friends. His business was largely done&#13;
with sheep raisers. During the year he&#13;
would advance groceries and other&#13;
necessities on the promise of wool&#13;
when shearing time came around.&#13;
Just before he left Mio Noble is said&#13;
to have shipped about- 15,000 pounds&#13;
of wool to Jackson, subject to his own&#13;
order. It is presumed he sold this wool.&#13;
And beside that he had some $1,300&#13;
intrusted to him by friends.&#13;
Was Baby Killed by Hunters?&#13;
The disappearance of the 3-year-old&#13;
Karvela boy of Lake Linden is the&#13;
most mysterious in the history of the&#13;
copper district. Proceeding with other&#13;
children to meet his father, who lives&#13;
at the Allouez location, the little boy&#13;
sat down in the woods beside the road,&#13;
while his small companions continued&#13;
on their way. The youngster was tired&#13;
ajad could go no further. He was cautioned&#13;
to remain- where he was, yet&#13;
from that day to this no clue to his&#13;
whereabouts has been discovered.&#13;
There are all sorts of rumors and&#13;
theories afloat. One belief is that he&#13;
has been stolen, despite that his parents&#13;
are poor people, because if he&#13;
had merely wandered away it would&#13;
have been impossible for one of his&#13;
years to have strayed out of the area&#13;
which has been covered so paintakingly&#13;
by the searchers. If he were dead&#13;
from exposure or hunger his body&#13;
would have been yielded up to the&#13;
search. If an animal—and there have&#13;
been wolves reported in the vicinity—&#13;
had devoured him traces of his clothing&#13;
would have been found. So, it is&#13;
argued, it must have been that he was&#13;
carried away by some one.&#13;
A still more horrible theory is that&#13;
the child was killed by hunters in mistake&#13;
for game, and was buried so that&#13;
they might escape the legal penalty of&#13;
10 years in prison.&#13;
Though hundreds of men have engaged&#13;
in the search, and the territory&#13;
in the vicinity of the spot where the&#13;
child was last seen, ltf days ago, has&#13;
been thoroughly beaten for miles&#13;
around, no trace of the lad has been&#13;
found.&#13;
Only Four Survive. *&#13;
Four survivors constitute the full remaining&#13;
strength of Saginaw's two&#13;
companies, loo strong, in the famous&#13;
"Fighting Fifth"' that Michigan font to&#13;
the civil war, and' these veterans will&#13;
attend a reunion of the regiment at&#13;
Owosso August 29. They are D. KHalsey,&#13;
sergeant of police; John Monroe,&#13;
Francis Otto and Andrew Heinlein.&#13;
The two local companies were&#13;
named the East Saginaw Volunteers&#13;
and the Saginaw City Light artillery.&#13;
Henry YV. Trobridge was captain of&#13;
the former, Co. C, and Henry Miller,&#13;
of Co. K. They were mustered into&#13;
service August-2^. 1S61, and fought&#13;
continuously throughout the war. Out&#13;
of the regiment of 900 men less than&#13;
half returned.&#13;
Girl Wife Seeks Divorce.&#13;
Vera Hamilton Henniker, married at&#13;
13 years, a mother at 14, separated&#13;
from her husband at 15, now at the age&#13;
of 16 has applied for a divorce on the&#13;
ground of desertion. She lives with&#13;
her parents in Delta township, Eaton&#13;
county. George Henniker, of Ingham&#13;
county is her husband and he was aged&#13;
20.when they were married October 22,&#13;
1903, in Charlotte, after being refused&#13;
a license in Ingham county. A girl&#13;
was born to them December 23, 1904,&#13;
and was later adopted by Rev. and&#13;
Mrs. Win. Hollis, of the M. E. church&#13;
at Munith.&#13;
Isaac Cicero, machinist, of Cheboygan,&#13;
was nursed through several&#13;
weeks' illr.esss at Mercy hospital, Bay&#13;
City, and given employment; then, it&#13;
Is charged, be stole two watches from&#13;
a patient and a nurse who attended&#13;
*»*n. He was arrested.&#13;
BOILER LET GO.&#13;
Father and Son Killed, Grandchildren&#13;
Injured.&#13;
Father and son were killed outright&#13;
and two children were seriously hurt&#13;
in a boiler explosion at a mint still&#13;
xxi the farm of William Mohney, three&#13;
miles east of Three Rivers at 10&#13;
o'clock Wednesday morning.&#13;
All were employes at the still, Mr.&#13;
Mohney and his son were working&#13;
with the engine, the boiler failing to&#13;
operate properly. Without warning it&#13;
let go with a terrible report. Other&#13;
members of the family rushed from&#13;
the house and found the mangled remains&#13;
of the two men lying on the&#13;
ground nearly 30 feet from the wrecked&#13;
engine. The two children were unconscious&#13;
from their injuries and Dr.&#13;
Knowles was summoned from Three&#13;
Rivers. They will probably recover.&#13;
William Mohney had lived in Three&#13;
Rivers all his life and leaves a widow&#13;
and several children. Roy Mohney&#13;
leaves a widow and five children, the&#13;
two oldest of whom were hurt.&#13;
IN THE PUBLIC&#13;
A WIDELY CELEBRATED TARIFF REFORMER&#13;
MICHIGAN IN BRIEF.&#13;
Genesee county Socialists have nominated&#13;
a full county ticket.&#13;
Nashville will hold a two-day harvest&#13;
festival, August 31 and September&#13;
1.&#13;
Farmers report the watermelon and&#13;
canteloupe crops will be short, due to&#13;
dry weather.&#13;
Qulncy mine workers resume work,&#13;
after being on strike for three weeks,&#13;
at wages offered by the company.&#13;
Ernest Wetterau, a New Buffalo&#13;
shoe cobbler, while in a drunken frenzy,&#13;
stabbed and fatal)-/ wounded his&#13;
son.&#13;
Chris Washousan. reputed 102 years&#13;
old, is more or less actively engaged&#13;
in farming near Morrice. Age has bent&#13;
him nearly double.&#13;
The man killed by a Grand Rapids&#13;
street car Sunday night was Philip&#13;
Cummings, an employe of the United&#13;
States gypsum mine.&#13;
Some one, to vent spite on Harry&#13;
King, a Flint teamster, tried to strangle&#13;
his horse with a chain by tying it&#13;
up Bhort to a manger.&#13;
Coming home week will be celebrated&#13;
August 27 to September 1. in&#13;
Eaton Rapids. Gov. Warner and Gov.&#13;
Cummins, of Iowa, will attend.&#13;
John Colemmorgan, mourned dead&#13;
at his home in La Port, Ind., is in Jail&#13;
in Cassopolis charged with horse&#13;
stealing. H.is parents believe him insane.&#13;
Niles is threatened with an ice famine.&#13;
Wurz Bros., the only dealers, say&#13;
their supply is nearly exhausted and&#13;
that they are unable to buy a pound&#13;
elsewhere.&#13;
Tillie Kramer, aged 16, of Menominee,&#13;
swallowed laudanum with suicidal&#13;
intent while walking on the beach&#13;
with her lover, with whom she had&#13;
quarreled. She may recover.&#13;
The amphibious habits of a Lansing&#13;
auto with a bursted tire caused&#13;
it to plunge into an artificial lake, pinning&#13;
its driver, Ray C. Backus, in its&#13;
works, and nearly drowing him.&#13;
Port Huron druggists have posted&#13;
notices that they will sell postage&#13;
stamps to none but regular customers.&#13;
They attribute the extra demand&#13;
for stamps to the comic postcard fad.&#13;
The president of the village of&#13;
South Range and the council are at&#13;
war over the retention of the village&#13;
police chief. The chief_executj.ve wante&#13;
him ousted; the board thinks he is all&#13;
right.&#13;
Ex-Gov. Bliss' condition is improving,&#13;
after a relapse early in toe week. I&#13;
His physician predicts that if he withstands&#13;
the summer's'heat he will re-1&#13;
gain his health when cool weather I&#13;
comes. j&#13;
John Eckman, of Calumet, well j&#13;
known as mining expert, may die at j&#13;
Georgetown. Col., from a paralytic |&#13;
stroke induced by knockout drops ad- :&#13;
ministered to him in a saloon, where j&#13;
he was robbed.&#13;
No 'trace of the bodies of Guy ^Var-j&#13;
ner and Ella Squires, who were sup- |&#13;
posed to have been drowned at Reid's |&#13;
lake Thursday night, has yet been 1&#13;
found. The belief that perhaps they j&#13;
have eloped is gaining ground. The '&#13;
lake was dragged all day, but without&#13;
result.&#13;
Mrs. J. W. Lewis, of Battle Creek, is&#13;
'dead as the result of the prick of a&#13;
needle. Blood poisoning followed the&#13;
puncture and for three weeks great&#13;
agony was endured, death following at&#13;
Nichols" hospital. She was- 70 years&#13;
old and a pioneer school teacher of&#13;
Battle Creek.&#13;
In attempting to stop a runaway&#13;
team of horses belonging to her son,&#13;
Mrs. Bertha Hennegar, of Kewadin,&#13;
aged 59 years, was knocked down&#13;
and run over, receiving injuries that&#13;
resulted in death. The tongue of the&#13;
wagon was driven through the woman's&#13;
breast.&#13;
Formaldehyde has been discovered&#13;
in colored matter used by ice cream&#13;
venders in the northern part .of the&#13;
state. One arrest has been made by&#13;
the state dairy and food department.&#13;
It is claimed that formaldehyde in&#13;
quantities sufficient to \^ dangerous&#13;
was found in crushc."' strawberries&#13;
used by the dealer.&#13;
Representatives of the Armour Fruit&#13;
Co. are in western Michigan, arranging-&#13;
for the handling of the Michigan&#13;
peach crop. They report that the&#13;
peaches will not yield over 40 per cent&#13;
of a luli crop, but that apples and&#13;
grapes will be heavy. There is sharp&#13;
competition between the rail and boat J&#13;
lines for the hi»»ln«sa. 1&#13;
We speak of the Englishman, Joseph Chamberlain,&#13;
who recently, on the occasion of the celebration&#13;
at Birmingham of his seventieth birthday,&#13;
sent out this characteristic message to the nation:&#13;
"Treat foreigners as they treat us and treat your&#13;
kinsmen better than you treat foreigners."&#13;
Joseph Chamberlain is immensely popular and&#13;
Immensely unpopular, but appears equal to coping&#13;
with both friend and foe. When assailed as&#13;
he was so strongly during the Boer war and its&#13;
preceding and subsequent problems, his cool, cynical&#13;
meeting of attacks opposed formidable front&#13;
to those that attempted to down him.&#13;
Early In his career he was three times elected&#13;
mayor of Birmingham, and during his terms of&#13;
office carried through many public Improvements&#13;
in the face of obstinate opposition. In 1885 he&#13;
became member of parliament, soon won distinction,&#13;
became widely known by reason of the advocacy&#13;
of popular reforms. For a time he was the recognized elader of ttie Radical&#13;
party; but later organised the Liberal Union party which supported the&#13;
Conservatives, and was called "renegade" by the Home Rulers.&#13;
In 1888 he came to this country as chief commissioner; effected an agreement&#13;
in the Canadian fisheries dispute. This same year he married an American&#13;
woman, daughter of W. E. Endicott, secretary of war. In 1891 we find&#13;
Mr. Chamberlain leader of the Liberal Union party in the Commons. In the&#13;
"coalition ministry" of the Marquis of Salisbury he became colonial secretary&#13;
and proved himself most zealous in developing the interests of the British&#13;
colonies&#13;
An ardent disciple of the new diplomacy, Joseph Chamberlain has labored&#13;
assiduously for an Anglo-American alliance.&#13;
Plague of Belgian Hare*&#13;
The prediction that the Belgian bar*&#13;
fad would lead to the creation of a&#13;
public pest has ben realized in complaints&#13;
that come from Benningtoa&#13;
county, Vermont, where farmers are&#13;
suffering from the depredations af&#13;
rabbits and have no redress. 'Tha»&#13;
man who loses 1,000 head of cab bag*,,&#13;
as in Dorset, has his opinion of people&#13;
who freed their Belgian hares after&#13;
It had been found unprofitable to rear&#13;
them.&#13;
••% *&#13;
THE ADVENTURES OF GENERAL DIAZ&#13;
The long, peaceful, highly successful career of&#13;
President Diaz is not so picturesque as his life the&#13;
years preceding the occupancy of the presidential&#13;
chair. And it may be of interest to go back to&#13;
the days prior to modern, progressive Mexico—&#13;
modern and progressive largely by reason of the&#13;
man at' the helm—and note the adventures experienced&#13;
by Porflrlo Diaz.&#13;
It would seem the count of Monte Cristo had&#13;
no*more call for daring and resourcefulness than&#13;
Diaz a*d in that period when Mexico was struggling&#13;
t o reach a national existence. During his&#13;
soldier days Diaz, was thrice made a prisoner and&#13;
thrice made romantic escape. The first time he&#13;
broke away from Hip captors and on horseback&#13;
dashed over a high stone wall. The second time&#13;
he Outwitted his jailers In'the closely guarded&#13;
prison at Puebla, stole out by night on to the roof&#13;
of the building where he was confined, then along&#13;
other roofs and then down a rope in safety to the ground. The last trial and&#13;
victory was experienced on board a vessel as he was returning from his first&#13;
visit to the United States. Among the fellow passengers were numbers of his&#13;
enemies, bitter enemies only longing for a chance to do him harm. Knowing&#13;
he must forfeit liberty, and perhaps life, as soon as the boat landed, he drew&#13;
to his aid the purser, with this officer arranged a plot that Included a pretense&#13;
of jumping overboard. The enemies thought he had thus sought escape from&#13;
them, while really he was safe hid in a box-couch in the purser's room and&#13;
listening to the surmises of his foes.&#13;
President Diaz' mother was a full-blooded Indian, his father of good Spanish-&#13;
American blood; and thus the different elements of the country are represented&#13;
in "Don Porflrlo," as the Mexican people affectionately call their ruler.&#13;
Revolutionary Relic.&#13;
James R. Putnam, while at work 1» f.&#13;
his garden at Rutland, Vt., picked u p ^ ~ '&#13;
a bra8s button about an inch in diarneter.&#13;
When it was cleaned it wa*&#13;
found to be a military button in a&#13;
good, state of preservation. It is flat,&#13;
with the word "Massachusetts artillery"&#13;
around the edge of the face. In ^&#13;
the center In relief is a cannon mounted&#13;
on wheels and beside a flag on a.&#13;
staff. The button is a revolutionary&#13;
relic. +^&#13;
/&#13;
Most Marvelous of Birds.&#13;
The swift flying swallow is ever oa&#13;
the wing. It has attained the perfection&#13;
of speed, without friction and&#13;
noiseless. Every motion is directed&#13;
to its swooping flight for insects—now&#13;
darting upward, to right, to left so&#13;
rapidly that the eye cannot follow It&#13;
—and its nervous organism must be&#13;
wonderfully constructed to act upon&#13;
a delicate and certain mechanism devised&#13;
for swift flight.&#13;
. \&#13;
Just Wanted to Have It Around.&#13;
Old Donald Mackintosh was ill. The.&#13;
minister was with him. He listened&#13;
with patience to-the latter's exhortations,&#13;
but at length put a question:&#13;
"Will there be whisky in heaven?"&#13;
"Certainly not," the minister replied.&#13;
"I am surprised that you should ask&#13;
such a question." "Weel, sir, it's no&#13;
that I care for "t mysel', but it looka&#13;
weel on the table!"&#13;
University Five Hundred Years Old.&#13;
On December 4, 1909, it will be 5W&#13;
years since the University of Leipsic&#13;
was organized by the secession of several&#13;
thousand German students from&#13;
the University of Prague. Arrangements&#13;
are already being made to celebrate&#13;
this semimillennium by the&#13;
licatiori of a massive work on the&#13;
history of the city and the University&#13;
of Leipsic.&#13;
Easy to Rebuild.&#13;
Mexican style of architecture * is&#13;
such that when an earthquake tumbles&#13;
a man's house down he doesn't&#13;
lose much.&#13;
R*al and Imitation* Lovt.&#13;
There are two kinds of love—the&#13;
?enuine that serves and the Imitation&#13;
;hat demands servitude.&#13;
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Then send to our nearest dealer or to us, and get our . . . . " " • ~ " " " ™ " ^ ~ m m ^ — m m m " - £ — - — — » »&#13;
This is your chance to secure the BEST TALKIN6 MACHINE MADE, on payments which wiN not be felt.&#13;
W E A C C E P T O L D M A C H I N E S O F A N Y M A K E I N P A S T P A Y M E N T .&#13;
A n I d e a l * • * • V°» ever used a GraphophoM «*t of tfiwir*? In the mountains; oa&#13;
S . water; at the seashore; anywhere! The musk ol a Grepnopkoiie kk the o&#13;
UlTimer A m u s e m e n t . •• CLEAR, SWEET AND FARREACHIN6. Try it and judge.'&#13;
•raotf Prix, Parte, I MO fteitMt 9ri&gt;4 Prize, frt. Lewis, I »04&#13;
Highest * » a r e , •orttend, lt«5&#13;
.--*"&#13;
Columbia Phonograph Co&#13;
90-92 West Broadway,&#13;
New York.v&#13;
130&#13;
^W riA * *&#13;
* * v&#13;
of yonrS eEnadj ym Pe afyumll endte taanilds Exchange P« y V&#13;
flan.&#13;
-s-r&#13;
Name,&#13;
Address.&#13;
tr-r,if,'Tr^i&#13;
P*TP? w •***?&#13;
A FOOL FOR LOVE&#13;
By FRANCIS LYNDE&#13;
AUTHOR OP "THE GRAFTERS.'1 ETC.&#13;
X ^GSTC&#13;
•Do your worst, Mr. Darrah. We&#13;
have some 20 miles of steel to lay to&#13;
take us, into the Carbonate yards.&#13;
That steel shall go down in spite of&#13;
anything you can do to prevent it."&#13;
Virginia waited breathless for her^ secretary&#13;
M A 1 A * » **A«^1 w +rx +1* 4 a stsvrkl /4 A A a r i s t a ^ «*»-•__-_ i_&#13;
(Copyright, 1906, by J. P. Llppiaoott Co.)&#13;
^&#13;
. — f&#13;
1 i&#13;
i&#13;
V CHAPTER IV—Continued.&#13;
/ Ahead of the steel layers were the&#13;
Italians placing the cross ties in position&#13;
to receive the track, and here the&#13;
forman's badge of office and scepter&#13;
was a pick handle, Above all the&#13;
clamor and the shoutings Virginia&#13;
could hear the bull-bellow of this foreman&#13;
roaring out his commands—In&#13;
terms happily not understandable to&#13;
her; and once she drew back with a&#13;
little cry of womanly shrinking when&#13;
the pick handle thwacked upon the&#13;
shoulders of one who lagged.&#13;
It was this bit of brutality which&#13;
enabled her to single out Wlnton in&#13;
the throng of workers. He heard the&#13;
blow, and the oath that went with it,&#13;
and she saw him run forward to&#13;
wrench the bludgeon from the bully's&#13;
hands and fling it afar. What words&#13;
emphasized the act she could not hear,&#13;
but the little deed of swift justice&#13;
thrilled her curiously, and her heart&#13;
warmed to him as it had when he had&#13;
thrown off his coat to fall to work on&#13;
the derailed engine of toe "Limited."&#13;
"That was fine!" she said to herself.&#13;
"Most men in his place wouldn't care,&#13;
ao long as the work was done, and&#13;
done quickly. I wonder If—oh, you&#13;
startled me!"&#13;
It was Mr. Somerville Darrah again,&#13;
clothed upon and In his right mind;&#13;
otherwise the mind of a master of men&#13;
who will brook neither defeat at the&#13;
hands of an antagonist nor disobedience&#13;
on the part of his following.&#13;
He was scowling-fiercely across at the&#13;
Utah activities when she spoke, but at&#13;
her exclamation the frown softened&#13;
into a smile for his favorite niece.&#13;
"Startled you, eh? Pahdon me, my&#13;
deah Virginia. But as I am about to&#13;
startle someone else, perhaps you&#13;
would better go in to your aunt."&#13;
She put her hand on his arm.&#13;
^'Please let me stay out here, Uncle&#13;
J Somerville," she said. "I'll be good&#13;
and not get in* the way."&#13;
He shook his head, rather in deprecation&#13;
than refusal.&#13;
"An officer will be here right soon&#13;
now to mane an arrest. There may&#13;
be a fight, or at least trouble of a sort&#13;
you wouldn't care to see, my deah."&#13;
"Is it—is it Mr. Winton?" she asked.&#13;
He nodded.&#13;
"What has he been doing—besides&#13;
being 'The Enemy?' "&#13;
The Rajah's smile was ferocious.&#13;
"Just now he Is trespassing, and directing&#13;
others &lt;ko trespass, upon private&#13;
property. Do you see that dump&#13;
up there on tne mountain?—the hole&#13;
that looks like a mouth with a long&#13;
gray beard hanging below it? That is&#13;
a mine, and its claim runs down across&#13;
the track where Misteh Winton is just&#13;
now spiking his rails."&#13;
"But the right of way; I -don't- understand,"&#13;
she began; then she stopped&#13;
short and clung to the strong arm. A&#13;
man in a wide-flapped hat and cowboy&#13;
chapparajoes, with a revolver on&#13;
either hip, was crossing the stream oij&#13;
the ice bridge to scramble up the embankment&#13;
of the new line.&#13;
"The officer?" she asked, in an awed&#13;
whisper.&#13;
The Rajah made a sign of assent.&#13;
Then, Identifying Winton in the throng&#13;
of workers, he forgot Virginia's presence.&#13;
"Confound him!" he fumed.&#13;
"I'd give a thousand dollars if he'd&#13;
faveh me by showing fight, so we&#13;
could lock him up on a criminal&#13;
count!"&#13;
"Why, Uncle Somerville!" she cried.&#13;
But there was no time for reproaches.&#13;
The leather-breeched person masquerading&#13;
as the Argentine town marshal&#13;
had climbed the embankment,&#13;
and singling out his man was reading&#13;
his warrant.&#13;
Contrary to Mr. Darrah's expressed&#13;
hope, Winton submitted quietly. With&#13;
a word to his men—a word that&#13;
stopped the strenuous labor-battle as&#13;
suddenly as it had begun—he turned&#13;
to pick his way down the rough hilltide&#13;
at the heels of the marshal.&#13;
For some reason that she could never&#13;
have set out in words Virginia was&#13;
distinctly disappointed. It was no&#13;
part of her desire to see the conflict&#13;
blaze up in violence, but it nettled her&#13;
to see Winton give up so easily. Some&#13;
.^ »uch thought as this had possession of&#13;
^ fear while the marshal and his prisoner&#13;
A*J*» picking their way across the ice,&#13;
"* v atfnbhe was hoping that Winton would&#13;
gtr% fctr a chance to requite him, if&#13;
only with a look.&#13;
But it was Town Marshal Peter Biggin,&#13;
affectionately known to his constituents&#13;
aa "Bigginjin Pete," who&#13;
gave her the coveted opportunity. Instead&#13;
of dllsappearing decently with&#13;
his captive, the marshal made the&#13;
mistake of his life by marching Winton&#13;
up the track to the private car,&#13;
tfcrMtinc bin forward and saying:&#13;
other side of the canyon began again How Emperor William Is Battling&#13;
with renewed vigor. The Rajah threw j Against a Dangerous Heredity,&#13;
up his head like a war horse scent- Emperor William's father died of cancer&#13;
ing the battle from afar and faid his, of the throat.&#13;
commands upon the long-suffering&#13;
"Here's yer meat, Guv'nor. What-all&#13;
'ud ye like fer me to do with hit?"&#13;
Now it is safe to assume that the&#13;
Rajah had no intention of appearing&#13;
thus openly as the instigator of Winton's&#13;
arrest. Hence, if a fierce scowl&#13;
and a wordless oath could maim, it is&#13;
to be feared that the overzealous Mr.&#13;
Biggin would have been physically&#13;
disqualified on the spot. As it was,&#13;
Mr. Darrah's ebullient wrath could find&#13;
no adequate speech forms, and in the&#13;
eloquent little pause Winton had time&#13;
to smile up at Miss Carteret and to&#13;
wish her the pleasantest of good&#13;
mornings.&#13;
But the Rajah's handicap was not&#13;
permanent.&#13;
"Confound you, seh!" he exploded.&#13;
"I'm not a justice of the peace. If&#13;
you've made an arrest, you must have&#13;
had a warrant for it, and you ought&#13;
to know what to do with your prtsoneh."&#13;
"I*m dashed if I do," objected the&#13;
simple-hearted Mr. Biggin. "I allowed&#13;
you wanted him."&#13;
Winton laughed openly.&#13;
"Simplify it for him, Mr. Darrah.&#13;
We all know that it was your move&#13;
to stop the work, ah i you have stopped&#13;
it—for the moment. What is the&#13;
charge and where is it answerable?"&#13;
The Rajah dropped the mask and&#13;
spoke to the point.&#13;
"The cha'ae. seh, is trespass, and it&#13;
uncle's reply to this cool defiance.&#13;
Contrary to all precedent, it was mildly&#13;
expostulatory.&#13;
"It grieves me, seh, to find you so&#13;
determined to cou't failure," he began;&#13;
and when the whistle of the upcoming&#13;
Carbonate train gave him leave to go&#13;
on; "Constable, you will find transpo'tation&#13;
for yourself and one in the&#13;
hands of the station agent. Misteh&#13;
Winton, that is your train. I wish you&#13;
good morning and a pleasant journey.&#13;
Come, Virginia, we shall be late to ouh&#13;
breakfast."&#13;
Winton walked back to the station&#13;
at the heels of his captor, cudgelling&#13;
.his brain to devise some means of getting&#13;
word to Adams. Happily the&#13;
technologian, who had been unloading&#13;
steel at the construction camp, had&#13;
been told of -the arrest, and when&#13;
Winton reached the station he found&#13;
his assistant waiting for him.&#13;
But now the train was at hand and&#13;
time had grown suddenly precious.&#13;
Winton turned short upon the marshal.&#13;
"This is not a criminal matter, Mr.&#13;
Biggin; will you give me a moment&#13;
with my friend?"&#13;
The ex-cowboy grinned. "Bet your&#13;
life I will. I ain't lovin' that old&#13;
b'ller-buster In the private car none&#13;
too hard." And he went in to get the&#13;
passes.&#13;
"What's up?" queried Adams, forgetting&#13;
his drawl for once In a way.&#13;
"An arrest—trumped-up charge of&#13;
trespass on that mining claim up yonder.&#13;
But I've got to go to Carbonate&#13;
to answer the charge and give bonds,&#13;
just the same."&#13;
"Any instructions?"&#13;
"Yes. When the train is out of sight&#13;
and hearing, you get bac- over there&#13;
and drive that track laying for every&#13;
foot there is in it."&#13;
Adams nodded. "I'll do it, and get&#13;
myself locked up, I suppose."&#13;
"Faveh me, Jastrow. Get out there&#13;
and see what they are doing, seh."&#13;
The secretary was back in the shortest&#13;
possible interval, and his report&#13;
was concise and business-like.&#13;
"Work under full headway again, in&#13;
charge of a fellow who wears a billycock&#13;
hat and-smokes cigarettes."&#13;
"Mr. Mort i P. Adams," said Virginia,&#13;
recognizing the description.&#13;
"Will you have him arrested top, Uncle&#13;
Somerville?"&#13;
But the Rajah rose hastily without&#13;
replying and went to hjs office stateroom,&#13;
followed, shadow-like, by the&#13;
obsequious Jastrow.&#13;
It was some little time after breakfast,&#13;
and Virginia and the Reverend&#13;
Billy were doing a constitutional on&#13;
the plank platform at the station,&#13;
when the secretary came down from&#13;
the car on his way to the telegraph&#13;
office.&#13;
It was Virginia who stopped him.&#13;
"What do we do next, Mr. Jastrow?"&#13;
she said—"call in the United States&#13;
army?"&#13;
For reply he handed her a telegram,&#13;
damp from the copying press. It was&#13;
addressed to the superintendent of the&#13;
C. k G. R. at Carbonate, and she read&#13;
it without scruple.&#13;
"Have the sheriff of Ute county swear&#13;
in a dozen deputies and come with them&#13;
by special train to Argentine. Revive all&#13;
possible titles to abandoned mining- claims&#13;
on line of the Utah Extension, and have&#13;
Sheriff Deckert bring blank warrants to&#13;
cover any emergency.&#13;
"DARRAH, V. P."&#13;
"That's one of them," said the secretary.&#13;
"I daren't show you the other."&#13;
"Oh, please!" she said, holding out&#13;
her hand, while the Reverend Billy&#13;
considerately turned his back.&#13;
Jastrow weighed the chances of detection.&#13;
It was little enough he could&#13;
do to lay her under obligations to him,&#13;
and he was willing to do that little&#13;
as he could. "I guess I can trust you."&#13;
he said, and gave her the second&#13;
square of press-damp paper.&#13;
Like the first, it.was.addressed to&#13;
the superintendent at Carbonate. But&#13;
this time the brown eyes flashed and&#13;
her breath came quickly as she read&#13;
the vice president's cold-blooded afterthought:&#13;
*&#13;
"Town Marshal Biggin will arrive in&#13;
Carbonate on No. ail this a. m. with a&#13;
prisoner. Have our attorneys see to it&#13;
that the man is promptly jailed in default&#13;
of bond. If he is set at liberty, as&#13;
he is likely to be, I shall trust you to arrange&#13;
for his rearrest and detention ;at al'&#13;
hazards. r&#13;
"D."&#13;
Emperor William himself had infantile&#13;
paralysis, and has had to struggle with&#13;
many infirmities. ,&#13;
It has been whispered that he himself&#13;
is troubled with the aan&gt;e malady which&#13;
carried off his father. Royal blood is unfortunately&#13;
most generally deteriorated&#13;
blood. Emperor W illiam knows this as&#13;
well as anybody, and "is doing his best to&#13;
eradicate the bad blood from himself and&#13;
his family by the adoption of simple life&#13;
principles.&#13;
Through the visit of a countryman of&#13;
his to Battle Creek, Michigan, while iu&#13;
this country, visiting the \N orld's Fair in&#13;
Chicago in 1S93, Emperor William became&#13;
acquainted with the Battle Creek idea of&#13;
simple living and has to a large extent&#13;
adopt^ed the methods in his family. His&#13;
wife and children \\v* the simple life and&#13;
take Battle Creel; light baths. Their&#13;
uncle, King Edward, also has these baths&#13;
installed in his Windsor and Buckingham&#13;
Palaces for the u-e of himself and Queen&#13;
Among other things GOOD HEALTH,&#13;
the oldest health journal in the world,&#13;
tells about the Battle Creek idea and the&#13;
simple life. Every number is brimful of&#13;
up-to-date ideas. Sample copy 10 cents.&#13;
One dollar a year.&#13;
if vou will cut this out and send to&#13;
GOOD HEALTH PUBLISHING CO.,&#13;
Battle Creek, Mich., with a quarter you&#13;
will receive a trial three months' subscription&#13;
to -this handsome illustrated monthly'&#13;
health magazine. Write to-day.&#13;
Striking Advice.&#13;
Mrs. Anxious (mother of two marriageable&#13;
daughters)—Really, I don't&#13;
know whether to send Grace and Ethel&#13;
to the seashore or the mountains&#13;
this summer. What do you advise?&#13;
Mrs. Knowing—Well, I would advise&#13;
Sulphur Springs for a change. Sulphur,&#13;
you know, is one of the principal&#13;
requisites In matchmaking.&#13;
Rice Eaters.&#13;
In China and its dependencies, with&#13;
a population of 400,000,000, or 25 per&#13;
cent, of the total population of the&#13;
world, rice Is the principal food supply.&#13;
The same may be said also of&#13;
India, with its population of 275,000,-&#13;
000, and Japan, with its 40,000,000. In&#13;
addition to these it is a chief article&#13;
of diet with other peoples of Asia and&#13;
Africa, whose population is estimated&#13;
at 100,000,000. The total reaches 815.-&#13;
L 000,000, or 50 per cent, of the total&#13;
population of the earth.—Boston&#13;
Globe.&#13;
WINTON WALKED BACK TO.&#13;
is answerable in Judge Whitcomb's&#13;
cou't in carbonate. The plaintiff In&#13;
this particular case is John Doe, the&#13;
supposable owneh of that mining&#13;
claim up yondeh. In the- next it will&#13;
probably be Rlcha'd Roe. You are&#13;
fighting a losing battle, seh."&#13;
Wlnton's smile showed his teeth.&#13;
"That remains to be seen," he countered,&#13;
coolly.&#13;
The Rajah waved a shapely hand&#13;
towards the opposite embankment,&#13;
where the track, layers were idling in&#13;
silent groups waiting for some one in&#13;
authority to tell them what to do.&#13;
"We can do that every day, Misteh&#13;
Winton. And each separate individual&#13;
arrest will cost your company 12&#13;
hours, or such a matteh—the time required&#13;
for you to r_o to Carbonate to&#13;
give bond for your appearance."&#13;
During this colloquy Virginia had&#13;
held her ground stubbornly, this&#13;
though she felt intuitively that it&#13;
would be the greatest possible relief&#13;
to the three men if she would go away&#13;
But now a curious struggle as of a&#13;
divided allegiance was holding her.&#13;
Of course, she wanted Mr. Somerville&#13;
Darrah to win. Since he was Its advocate,&#13;
his cause must be righteous&#13;
and just. But as against this dutiful&#13;
convlncement there was a rebellious&#13;
hope that Winton would not allow&#13;
himself to be beaten; or, rather, it was&#13;
a feeling that she would never forgive&#13;
him If she should.&#13;
So It was that she stood with face&#13;
averted lest he should see her eyes&#13;
and read the rebellious hope in them.&#13;
And9 notwithstanding the preeaution&#13;
he both saw and read, and made answer&#13;
to the Rajah's ultimatum accordingly.&#13;
THE STATION AT THE HEELS OF HIS&#13;
CAPTOR.&#13;
"No, you won't; that's the beauty of&#13;
it. The majesty of the law—all there&#13;
is of It In Argentine—goes with me to&#13;
Carbonate in the person of the town&#13;
marshal."&#13;
"Oh, $ood—succulently good! Well,&#13;
so long. I'll look for you back on the&#13;
evening train?"&#13;
"Sure; if the Rajah doesn't order it&#13;
to be abandoned on my poor account."&#13;
Ten minutes later, when the train&#13;
had gone storming on its way to Carbonate&#13;
and the Rosemary party was at&#13;
breakfast, the clank of steel and the&#13;
chanteys of the hammermen on the&#13;
. - L&#13;
CHAPTER V.&#13;
. Virginia took th? first step in the&#13;
perilous path of the strategist when&#13;
she handed the incendiary telegram&#13;
back to Jastrow.&#13;
"Poor Mr. Winton!" she said, with&#13;
the real sympathy in the words made&#13;
most obviously perfunctory by the&#13;
tone. "What a world of possibilities&#13;
there Is masquerading behind, that little&#13;
word 'arrange.' Tell me more&#13;
about it, Mr. Jastrow, How will they&#13;
'arrange' it?"&#13;
"Winton's rearrest? Nothing easier&#13;
in a tougn mining camp like Carbonate,&#13;
I should say!"&#13;
'Yes, but how?"&#13;
—'-^r-eanH prophesy how Grafton will&#13;
go about it, but I know what I should&#13;
do."&#13;
Virginia's smile was irresistible, but&#13;
there was a look in the deepest depth&#13;
of the brown eyes that was sifting Mr.&#13;
Arthur Jastrow to the innermost sand&#13;
heap of hi3 desert nature.&#13;
"How would you do it, Mj. Napoleon&#13;
Jastrow?' she asked, giving him the&#13;
exact fillip on the side of gratified vanity.&#13;
"Oh, I'd fix him. He is In a frame&#13;
of mind right now; and by the time&#13;
the lawyers are through drilling him&#13;
in the trespass affair, he'll be just&#13;
spoiling for a row with somebody."&#13;
"Do you think so? Oh, how delicious!&#13;
And then what?"&#13;
"Then I'd hire some plug-ugly to&#13;
stumble up against him and pick a&#13;
quarrel with him. He'd do the rest—&#13;
and land in the lockup."&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED)&#13;
WAS A L T O G E T H E R TOO T A M E .&#13;
After he had fallen upon his knees! first cear, soft hand that I have ever&#13;
and kissed her handSj relates the Lowell&#13;
Mail, she said: &gt;~&gt;&#13;
"Before I answer yesia/r no these are&#13;
some things I'd like to ask you. Do&#13;
you ever gamble or drink?"&#13;
"No," he aagerly replied. "I do not&#13;
know what the taste -of liquor is. I&#13;
have never uttered a profane word in j&#13;
all my life, i have never played euchre |&#13;
where a prize was at stake." j&#13;
She looked at him thoughtfully for&#13;
a moment, drew a long sigh, and then&#13;
asked: "Have you ever broken a woman's&#13;
heart?"&#13;
"Ah, how can you ask me that?" he&#13;
almost reproachfully answered. "If I&#13;
had ever spoken words of love to another&#13;
I would not deem myself worthy&#13;
to touqh the hem of your garment. I&#13;
have never cared for anyone hut you;&#13;
I hav* never kissed any woman except&#13;
my mother (•see note below). I&#13;
have never given any girl came to utter&#13;
cac sorrowful siahi yours in the&#13;
held iu my own (*see note below);&#13;
never -before to-night have I looked&#13;
into cny girl's eyes as I am looking&#13;
into your deep, soulful eyes, never—"&#13;
"6h, dear," she 'impatiently Interrupted,&#13;
drawing her hand away from&#13;
him. "It's after eight o'clock, and you&#13;
shouldn't be so far away from home&#13;
at this time of night. Let's go home&#13;
and I'll get my brother Tom to go&#13;
honn with you. Your mamma must&#13;
be terribly worried." *Note—At each&#13;
of these remarks the writer wished he&#13;
had had a soft, hot squash pie handy,&#13;
and he would have handed it to him&#13;
good.&#13;
BOYISH MlriD WAS WORKING.&#13;
' 4- 1 &lt; 'Y \&#13;
"How did he propose to you?"&#13;
"He led up to it very gradually."&#13;
"Yes? Then it is true?"&#13;
"What is true?"&#13;
"That he proposed to five other girls&#13;
before he proposed to you."—Houston&#13;
Post.&#13;
• . . - • • . r •&#13;
Youngster on His First Sail Ovsrthe&#13;
"Raging Main."&#13;
None of us ever quite forget those&#13;
days—when our years were few—of&#13;
dreaming about life on the raging&#13;
main, when the Imagination reveled&#13;
in pirates and plunder from stately&#13;
galleons and valorous deeds done&#13;
on storm-swept decks, says a writer&#13;
in the New York Times. Recollection&#13;
of this period is. at any rate, sufficiently&#13;
Yjvid, so $i&amp;\ tjje remar^ of^&#13;
a* small boy could contribute inaierially&#13;
to the "gayety of nations,"&#13;
among the passengers on one of the&#13;
excursion steamers running from&#13;
Manhattan across the harbor to&#13;
Coney Island.&#13;
The steamer made her way across&#13;
the bay. dodging tugs and ferryboats&#13;
—fortunately meeting no pirate craft.&#13;
The passengers, escaping gladly from&#13;
the city's heat, nibbled their sandwiches&#13;
and enjoyed the breeze. The&#13;
waiters moved about the deck with&#13;
their trays. The boy, just from the&#13;
inland town, where his life so far&#13;
had been spent, sat rapt and wideeyed.&#13;
If one could but know fully&#13;
the "mental content" from which&#13;
sprang his words at last!&#13;
-Ma!" he cried, hoarsely, "tell me&#13;
which one of 'em is the skipper!"&#13;
SALLOW FACES&#13;
Often Caused by Coffee Drinking.&#13;
How many persons realize that coffee&#13;
so disturbs digestion that it produces&#13;
a muddy, yellow complexion?&#13;
A ten days' trial of Postum Food&#13;
Coffee has proven a means, in thousands&#13;
of cases, of clearing up bad&#13;
complexions.&#13;
A Washn. young oiady teHs her experience:&#13;
"All of U3—father, mother, sister&#13;
and brother—had used tea and coffee&#13;
for many years until finally we all&#13;
had stomach troubles more or less.&#13;
"We were all sallow and troubled&#13;
with pimples, breath bad, disagreeable&#13;
taste In the mouth, and all of us&#13;
simply so many bundles of nerves.&#13;
•We didn't realize that coffee wa3&#13;
the cause of the trouble until one day&#13;
we ran out of coffee and went to borrow&#13;
some from a neighbor. She gave&#13;
us some Postum and told us to try&#13;
that.&#13;
"Although we started to make it,&#13;
we all felt sure we would be sick if&#13;
we missed our strong coffee, but we&#13;
were forced £o try Postum and were&#13;
surprised to find it delicious.&#13;
"We read the statements on the&#13;
pkg., got more and In a month and a&#13;
half you wouldn't have known us.&#13;
We were all able to digest our food&#13;
without any trouble, each one's skin&#13;
became clear, tongues cleaned off and&#13;
nerves In fine condition. We never&#13;
use anything now but Postum. There&#13;
Is nothing like it." Name given by,&#13;
Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.&#13;
Read the little hook. "The Road to&#13;
Xre:iv:;i3." There's a reason/*&#13;
ADDITIONAL LOCAL.&#13;
Some of our correspondents must&#13;
be camping.&#13;
Howell uiu/ens a r j taiking ol a&#13;
system ot servi-ragn.&#13;
Lorenzo Farnam, ot Oklahoma, lnd.&#13;
Ter., was the gue&gt;t o! in- mother and&#13;
He has&#13;
ina^e a&#13;
bi\.t tier tiere f[•- pa-t week.&#13;
been absent two year&#13;
surprise visit&#13;
a n d&#13;
*E Plarlban t n o m " on Oar Cola*.&#13;
According to the I'nited States inlut&#13;
Officials, the words, "E Pluribua&#13;
Unum," as they appear on our coins,&#13;
Afe there without the su.netioh of law.&#13;
33xe legend first appeared upon a copper&#13;
coin "struck " at the Newburg&#13;
(K. Y.) luiut in the "year 17S(?.. The&#13;
United States was very young at that&#13;
time and could not afford the luxury of&#13;
B mint', so a private individual of the&#13;
name of Brasher opened the Newburg&#13;
coining establishment with the Intention&#13;
of turning out money of the realm,&#13;
for all comers. Exactly how the words&#13;
"E PlurUuis Unum" eame to be used&#13;
as a motto is not known, but one thins?&#13;
Is certain — the Brasher copper coin&#13;
bearing that legend and the date of&#13;
1786 is the most valuable metal disk&#13;
ever minted on this continent.&#13;
Some time after coining his famous&#13;
copper with the odd Latin motto as&#13;
4&#13;
I Among DUr Correspondents |&#13;
T"WV*^ ^ • ^ • ^ f r T fawWVIW WWW*&#13;
SOUTH MARION.&#13;
Kissing Susan Jones c&#13;
[ C o p y r i g h t , I'M*!, b y M c l ' l u n ' . P h i l l i p s &amp; Co.]&#13;
' . i At the age of twelve I fell violently&#13;
MIBB Mae Brogau is spending n ; l u l m v w i l l l S l l s n n Joll0Si&#13;
few days with her parents in tin's ! susan was no kind of a girl. On the&#13;
place. j contrary, hor age was almost twenty&#13;
. . . r T I D ' , * . £ n i L \ 'and her Miss Hazel Btuti, of Cohoctah, i ^ . weight a.b out 1 *.&gt;« &gt;'. p,o und..s ., Hail&#13;
' Susan been care-loss enough to sit down&#13;
is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Win. j § n m e { s h o u l l l haVl. hl,eI1 m a s tl w t a s&#13;
Bland. j flat as a shingle.&#13;
. . . «i i -r&gt; » x i '&lt; Heavens, how 1 loved that- girl! I&#13;
Miss Maude Paeey has accepted j J o s t [ a y ! l I ) I H &gt; t i u . n n t i m y ,,,.,,,, o v o r l t ,&#13;
a position in t h e M i c h i g a n S t a t e and the doctor who was summoned&#13;
T e l e p h o n e office at Howell as&#13;
operator.&#13;
Wm, C h a m b e r s and wife, F . N.&#13;
B u r g e s s , wife a n d c h i l d r e n , s p e n t&#13;
last S u n d a y at G. V. D i n k e l ' s in&#13;
P i n c k n e y .&#13;
Pro!. Tvler, of Amherst college, said&#13;
recently: "A man can live comfortably&#13;
without brain&gt;: no m-iu ever lived&#13;
witliout a digestive system. The&#13;
dyspeptic has neither faitb, hone or&#13;
cbarity." Day by day people realize&#13;
the importance of caring for their&#13;
digestion: realize the need.of the use&#13;
above described Brasher tried his hand&#13;
on a large sized gold piece, producing j o t ;l little- corvichve alter overeating&#13;
the coin known to the numismatics as A corrective like Kodol bov Dyspepsia&#13;
"Brasher's twenty.*' The Brasher j [t digests what you na,.&#13;
"twenty" was not a twenty dollar gold&#13;
piece, however, for It lacked i?4 of&#13;
.weighing enoi^ph, but of late years it&#13;
has become very scarce and valuable&#13;
because of the fact that the legend inscribed&#13;
upon it reads "Unum E Pluritms"&#13;
instead of "E Plnribus Unum."&#13;
Scrub yourself daily, you're not&#13;
clean inside. Clean inside- means&#13;
ciean stomach, boweis blood, iiver.&#13;
clean, heathy tissue in every oryan.&#13;
Moral:/Pike Hoilister's Rocky Mountain&#13;
Tea.--35 cents, tea oe tablets.&#13;
Ask your druggist.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Druggist.&#13;
CHILSON&#13;
looked at my tongue and sagely shook&#13;
hit i:ead and sard that I was going into ,&#13;
a decline. Being older and more of her, i&#13;
Susan didn't have lt quite so bud, but&#13;
it was hinted throughout the school j&#13;
that she was eating chalk to make her&#13;
look pale. |&#13;
At .the beginning ot* winter a man j&#13;
who called himself Professor Swift j&#13;
came along and opened a writing and ,&#13;
singing school combined. Susan and I&#13;
were among his pupils. '&#13;
The seed of jealousy was planted in&#13;
my breast. I was forced to observe&#13;
that the professor was flirting-with the&#13;
idol of my heart. As we walked home&#13;
together I charged her with it, and she&#13;
made indignant denial. 1 simply called&#13;
her false and told her to go to grass,&#13;
and when she sank down In a "snowdrift&#13;
and pretended to faint away I&#13;
walked on and left her to get frostbitten&#13;
toes. The ne\t night the professor&#13;
escorted her homo.&#13;
After three or four days I thought&#13;
Susan showed signs of relenting and&#13;
though the professor went home with&#13;
"Expositions are tlm Timekeepere of Proves* ."—Praddent McKluley.&#13;
The 57th&#13;
Michigan State Fair&#13;
DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
-A^-ULgr- 3 0 to Sept- 7 l a d l u e l v e&#13;
Held in the uew 140 acre Fair Grouud Park 'with more&#13;
and better buildings for all exhibits. Displays of products&#13;
from all counties. Fine showing of li\e stock of&#13;
all worthy breeds. 18 trotting and pacing races on the&#13;
new mile course. Special, Montana ladies' riding races.&#13;
Knabenshu aud his airship. Legare and his magical&#13;
tower. In ties' njted orchestral band. Pain's profuse&#13;
fireworks every evening. Mirth and folly on "The Glade."&#13;
Will i n t e r e s t you! Plan t o a t t e n d !&#13;
A Single Pare on the Street Car&#13;
Gets You There&#13;
KKKD POSTAL, President&#13;
T h e B e s t P a i r !&#13;
1. II. MTTKKKIKU), Sru-eiary&#13;
T h e G r e a t e s t P a i r !&#13;
'her from the school I tagged along aft&#13;
S a m u e l C a r p e n t e r is still q u i t e j "*, in hopes she mighty speak to me.&#13;
sick.&#13;
Subscribe for the Pinckney Dispatch P h i l l i p s&#13;
\ Business Pointers. i&#13;
t&#13;
Miss Amelia D a i u m a n n is visiti&#13;
n g in D u r a n d .&#13;
N. B. Smith and family have&#13;
moved back to D u r a n d .&#13;
village. Tramps and crime were un-&#13;
Mre. Alice B a w d e n , of Bay I known. One night a householder was&#13;
City, is being e n t e r t a i n e d at the i robin* of $100 in vcash. The next night&#13;
» i T i ». r, r, the professor, who was boarding/with&#13;
of Mr. a n d Mrs. B. F . ! a w l d o W f W f l g rol)beil o f ^ o r c l t t l m e d&#13;
to have been. 'Then followed the robbery&#13;
of two stores and two other&#13;
houses and, following them, that of the&#13;
po*t"&gt;fiice.&#13;
The robber had entered the• postotiice&#13;
by a side window and had left his&#13;
I was anionic those&#13;
der&#13;
She didn't, however, but when the&#13;
writing master left her on the doorstep&#13;
I saw him deliberately khss her. I&#13;
thought she also kissed lu return, and I&#13;
was so furious that the white snow&#13;
looked red to me.&#13;
Harpersville was a peaceful, quiet ! do with his arrest he asked:&#13;
"What, bad I done to you, my&#13;
..„. ., , , . , . Excursion to Toronto via&#13;
Well, I am caught and must make ,, , „, , . , ., ., 4il&#13;
the best of it" Grand Trunk Hallway System.&#13;
He was the robber who had entered Single hire plus 25 ^ents, foi the&#13;
the other places. Nearly all the plun- : round trip, from Micuii/an points&#13;
folksw faeslt rae cboitv eorfe ds,y mapndat, hyth ofourg hh imso. mbe (3e.x.., e p t , fMro,i,t, a. nd 0 PorLt H, ur.o n), going&#13;
was sen. to his trial and got a dose o f , d a t e 8 Aa*-- 2 6 t o ^ l L 5 ' ^ 1 ^ 1 ^&#13;
seven years from the judge. When he return liir.it Sept. 11, 1906. Fur fur*&#13;
came to understand that I had all to 'tber particulars consult local au^nts or&#13;
write toCieo. VV. Vatix, A. G. P A T .&#13;
A.. Io5 Adams St , Chicago, III. ' :16&#13;
home&#13;
should want to&#13;
boy,&#13;
that you hunt me&#13;
down?''&#13;
'•You had kissed Susan Jones," I replied,&#13;
aud as a matter of fact I could&#13;
have urged no other reason.&#13;
M. QUAD.&#13;
TO RENT.&#13;
A store to rent. Enquire of&#13;
&gt;Ji&gt;5 Alarv Clark, 1'incknev.&#13;
Old maids would be scarce and hard&#13;
to Hud,&#13;
' Could they i.'e made to see, '&#13;
How trace and beauty are combined ' tracks in the snow&#13;
Hv usin.iT Rockv Mountain Tea.&#13;
FOR SALE.&#13;
Four &gt;evfn weeks cid pig-&#13;
TllQS. Hut •chiel&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
H. B. Gardner is repairing his&#13;
barn.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Gardner, is on the&#13;
sick list.&#13;
OLD FAMILIES.&#13;
who saw those tracks, and 1 too!; notice&#13;
t h a t t h e s o l e o\' o n e of t h e s h o e s hail a&#13;
patch .on it. There are people who&#13;
walk In a maimer to wear a small hole j&#13;
through the ball of the sole, and this&#13;
was a cast' of it.&#13;
O n e o f T h e m C l a i m * t o K e u e h H a c k&#13;
B e y o n d t h e F l o m l .&#13;
The most ancient family in Franco.&#13;
In so far as the tracing back of the ancestry&#13;
in an unbroken line js eon&#13;
!eerned, is the royal house dV•Bourbon.&#13;
I which goes back to Kobert le Fort, in&#13;
- Saving ni»!liii:ur of my discovery to ! the year 801. Next in point of antiquicitizens&#13;
o r V o n ^ b l e , I sought out the ]*? ™P&lt;* t h o I i o l m u f a m i l 7 - A v h , c h l n r&#13;
cobbler, and in a careless way asked if&#13;
he !)!Nl ren-oivd a shoe In that fashion.&#13;
FOR SAUI.&#13;
Cow, Incubator and Krooder, Coal&#13;
Stoye and Cook Stove al&#13;
-toes. Going to .leave&#13;
&gt;r&gt; a few potathe&#13;
village.&#13;
Yates Huron.&#13;
the last century, however, has been settled&#13;
in Austria, the so called Itohaus&#13;
J o h n .Spears spent S u n d a y at | nVYin'd 'and' for the writing master! i i u F r n n c e l ^ i u S n o t r e a l I y U*»Ii*i"s, but&#13;
That evening, for 1 still attended his 'I niureJy Clnrbots, their only connection&#13;
classes, I observed his shoes and found j ^'ith the bouse of Rohan being by mar&#13;
that he was'wearing oue with a patch , ria.*fi&gt;'&#13;
on the sole.&#13;
lie bail been received into the best&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
Pure rider vinegar.&#13;
— - — — ^f^ir_^tallT^aTX^e^TTFr"&#13;
Wm. Doyle's,&#13;
Sadie and J o i e H a r r i s were in&#13;
S t o e k b r i d g e Tuesday.&#13;
Miss Nellie G a r d n e r is spending&#13;
a few weeks in Detroit.&#13;
Miss K a t e Gibney, of D e t r o i t ,&#13;
is a guest at Win, i i o i x p k y ^ — -&#13;
faiuili OS 0 1 the village, and he had offered&#13;
a reward for.the robbers, and it&#13;
would not do for me to make a mistake.&#13;
I urn-:t watch until I had better&#13;
Morla Beeves and wife, of Lan-&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
The time has been extenuYd on the&#13;
tax roll until Sept. 1. 11M- i&gt; positively&#13;
the last extention &gt;o let al! taxpayers&#13;
take notice, .tfaiicn I\VH&gt;'H.&#13;
Village Treav&#13;
Wanted — To buv a team weight&#13;
1,200 or 1,250, five or M.\ yf-ar&gt; clil.&#13;
Mark Swarthout&#13;
There wt&lt;re no more robberies for a&#13;
week. Then 1 followed the professor&#13;
sing, are guests at t h e h o m e of and Susan to her house after the Hose&#13;
of the classes and again saw hhu kiss&#13;
her. I was quite sure this time that&#13;
K i r k Van Winkle.&#13;
T h o m a s J e w e l l and&#13;
J a c k s o n , are visiting-&#13;
Cooper's.&#13;
wife, of&#13;
at Mrs.&#13;
she kissed in return, and I drew in my&#13;
breath with a hiss and vowed vengeance&#13;
of the most fearful kind.&#13;
When the professor Jeft her he went ' depicted&#13;
Then comes the house of Narbonue-&#13;
Pelet, the head of which is ihe l&gt;ue de&#13;
Narbonne, who can trace his lineage&#13;
back without interruption to the year&#13;
010. Of course, in making this asser&#13;
tion, 1 do not take into consideration&#13;
tho somewhat mythh-aI claim- of the&#13;
Duke of Lcvis-Mirepoix to he descend&#13;
ed in a direct and unbroken line from&#13;
Jacob's son, Levi. He Iras among his&#13;
family pictures one old painting in&#13;
which the Holy Virgin, is represented&#13;
as requesting the former Duke of&#13;
Levis-Miropoix to put on bis hat, which&#13;
he hail doffed in salutation, she being&#13;
as uttering the words&#13;
ST A T E H? MICHIGAN; T h e P r o b a t e Court for&#13;
tho County cf Livii getnn. A t st session of&#13;
said Comt , held at t h e Probate Office in the V\llajjt&gt;&#13;
ef Howell, in &gt;;iU\ &lt;'&lt;mnty, on the Cii! ii d.i.v of&#13;
Autjii-t, A. I). 190(1.&#13;
Present: A K T I I P K A. MdNTAia'K, .I'iLv of&#13;
Prdl'Hte. In the nml ler ot I he eMitte of&#13;
(iK(p»:&lt;:K H. HCTI.KK, deceased&#13;
Atu;ind» Kutlev liu\ ini; ti led iii &lt;n\d f i n t her&#13;
petti jo!', j u r y i n g lliat a certain iii-trnnuMit in.&#13;
w r i i i n c , |&gt;nr|iiirti!iL: ti&gt; he the hist will mid testament&#13;
and codeil of *nid d^eeased iin«- n;i ulv iu&#13;
saiil eotirt he adniittetl tu prijhate aud that th.-ai'-&#13;
inini.^ti ation of said estatr he planted to hwi^'IO&#13;
Hotter and Daniel S. T h o m a s oi to some other&#13;
S l l i t l l h l e | n T S i li&#13;
It in ordered thiit t h e U t h day ,.f Sept.. A D.,&#13;
JIMM;, (it :,m o'clock in the I'orenoon. at n;iin pie&#13;
bat' otllee, be and is heiel.y lippointed loi lieaiiiu&#13;
snid pel ition :&#13;
li i9 further ordered that pnltli&lt; notice thereof&#13;
be &gt;.',i\ eti hy })iilili('Htioti of ii copy of this order,&#13;
for tliree siicceseive weeks pre\ ions to said das el'&#13;
hetit in •, in t h e PINCKN r v D i ^ i ' A i o t , a it&gt;&lt;W!&gt;papti'&#13;
p r i n t e d ami circulated in said couiiiy.&#13;
Vrtliur A. Montague&#13;
t-l'.t i n d - e . v r P r o i u i I e&#13;
Atiss F a n n i e Monks e n t e r t a i n e d to his-lodging-;, but I had a feeling that j "Couvroz vous, mou cousin." Another&#13;
a few of her friends, S a t u r d a y lu* W u l ! l , ] reappear at aH»ter hour, It ! picture represents an ancestor of&#13;
,.. ' ' -was not a cold nightf and 1 hung j the Duk&#13;
afternoon. * '&#13;
Michael Handell and sou,&#13;
o of Lovis-Mirepoix naviaround&#13;
the streets until midnight, A * j Siting a small boat on tho waters&#13;
0 f that hour. 1 caught sight of a skulker j °f t l u - deluge, he being too exclusive&#13;
People Are Warm-&lt;]&#13;
not to pick berries in the swamps&#13;
formerly known as Mulgrove or Gallacjer.&#13;
H, F. Kice.&#13;
FOR SALE.&#13;
Two nice lots on Main street, with&#13;
fine shade. And door and window&#13;
frame.s sufficient for fair sized house&#13;
22 tf H. VV. t'rofoot&#13;
relatives here, have r e t u r n e d&#13;
home.&#13;
and followed after. I followed him to and higli toned to share the ark..vslth_^&#13;
the'-^TJolxnrnTiiis ana saw"hiiu"gaiu~en- | the Noah family and its belongings&#13;
trance with the aid of a skeleton key. ! Loudon Chronicle.&#13;
It was the night before the weekly pay j :—&#13;
day at the mills, and there would be&#13;
several hundred dollars iu money in the&#13;
old safe.&#13;
Using the utmost caution, I crept up&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
A house and several lo's&#13;
For dry, cracked lips, or rough skin,&#13;
use Dr. Snoop's Green Salve. It positively&#13;
makes lips and skin like velvet, to the "mills and through a window i&#13;
Sold by all dealers. saw tho marauder, whoever he was,&#13;
working away at the safe. Then I&#13;
. withdrew and made haste to the house&#13;
Of the village constable.&#13;
When he had been routed out he j&#13;
awoke two or three other men, and lu !&#13;
a few minutes we were at the mills. I&#13;
Minora IN I n Food.&#13;
Minerals in one food form an important&#13;
ingredient as regards our nutrition.&#13;
They seem to assist the digestion&#13;
.Meant W e l l .&#13;
Willie (handing his uncle a bottle of&#13;
glue)—I hope you will have a very happy&#13;
birthday, Uucle Dick. Uncle Dick—&#13;
Tlmnk you, little man, but what is this&#13;
for? Willie -Oh. I thought you would,&#13;
be so pleased with it. I heard papa&#13;
6a,V, the other night that you never&#13;
could make your stories stick together.&#13;
W h a t H e M e n n t .&#13;
of our foods and are-needed to complete T h V m i n inside had made good use of j o f t n a t&#13;
ot&#13;
Percy&#13;
Enquire, the composition of many fluids of Hie&#13;
! body. Thus the salt in tears Is poetic&#13;
Lvman Peck, 'hncknev \ a n , i I 1 1 ' ^ ' ' 1 ^ ' ' l&gt;|&gt;th. »nd salt is ;i]so&#13;
necessary for the perfection of the gas&#13;
trie- juice of the stomach. The phos&#13;
phuto of lime (iu which oatmeal, by the&#13;
way, is richi is needed for building&#13;
bones, Mm] there is not a fluid of the&#13;
body, from the blood to the saliva, for&#13;
which certain minerals are not neees&#13;
his time. The safe opened with a key, | p r l o e _ n h ( l n ] , . t&#13;
Dr. Price-- I can't make anything out&#13;
ease. His Wife-What? Dr.&#13;
Swarthout&#13;
Funeral Director&#13;
AND EMBALMER&#13;
ALL CALLS ANSWERED&#13;
PROMPTLY DaY OR NIGHT&#13;
and he had brought a key to ht. He&#13;
bundled up the bills and thrust them&#13;
Into his overcoat pocket and was leaving&#13;
the place when we arrivejf.&#13;
Realizing that lie was discovered, he&#13;
leaped from the platform and attempted&#13;
to pass me. Had be accomplished&#13;
this he might have&#13;
be foolish! I mean I&#13;
flon't understand it.&#13;
making money out&#13;
Punch.&#13;
Of course I'm&#13;
of i t —London&#13;
\Yliy does the sun tunn ?&#13;
a mosquito stiny ? Why do&#13;
W'hv dots&#13;
outdistanced the, u n h i n t h p L ,0 0 ( 1 o l d&#13;
men,-bin ,-is lie passed I stuck out my! ' ' • ,&#13;
sary. Too muHi mineral matter, takyn. f o o t i : " " ' l l ( m " l u ' &lt;"»iue. and hefore he { J , m f ! ? Answer; we' don t.&#13;
for example, iu overhard water, is In- ' ' '' . . ••* HT . . . .«-•..&#13;
jurious. Therefore all hard water&#13;
should be softened before use. Such water&#13;
produces,constipation and dyspepsia&#13;
and is apt to cause kidney troubles.&#13;
PARLORS M I&#13;
PLIMPTON'S OL ns'T;&gt;r;D l\\o.30&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
Ask your druggi«t lor Pylo Pile&#13;
Cure. Kvery box warranted. Price&#13;
55 cents. For Sale 'hv F. A. Sigder,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich. t 36&#13;
could i ise ihe. men were U| jn Iiim&#13;
Only then were any of us sure that It&#13;
was the professor. He had on an old&#13;
suit of clothes am) a set of false whisk- ,&#13;
ers ami might Jmve passed about n1(. | the genuine&#13;
village at any hour in the evening without&#13;
being known.&#13;
He fought hard to get away, but&#13;
when be saw the game was up he sub- [&#13;
italttod aud said: - i&#13;
we fee!&#13;
summer&#13;
we • don r. We use&#13;
De Witt's WiUh Ha/el Salve, and&#13;
these little ills don't bother u&gt;\ Learn&#13;
to look for the name on the hex to get&#13;
If you are In business and donl&#13;
advertise you are in danger.&#13;
This is a warning.&#13;
See your mistake in Mm*&#13;
and avert It.&#13;
A poor publisher, the proprietor&#13;
of a struggling magazine,&#13;
sent a half inch advertisement&#13;
to the New York Herald. The&#13;
J....ad man made It a half page.&#13;
The bill was bigger than the&#13;
publisher's entire possession*.&#13;
He thought he was ruined.&#13;
1 It was the turning point. The&#13;
magazine sold. It was good&#13;
"A&#13;
Danger&#13;
Foreseen&#13;
Is Half&#13;
Averted:'&#13;
% and people liked It. Other 4&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Drugglit.&#13;
DeWltt's O Salvo&#13;
For Pilot, Burnt, Soroti&#13;
haif page ads followed.&#13;
Result: fortune,fame,honor.&#13;
Advertising is Just as potentt&#13;
lever now as It was then.&#13;
This paper reaches&#13;
the homes of this&#13;
section.&#13;
s</text>
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                <text>August 23, 1906 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. XXI?. PJtfO£NEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MIOH., THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1906. No. 36&#13;
UOCAb NEWS.&#13;
Mrs, R. E. Finch is visiting her&#13;
sister and brother in Jackion,&#13;
Willis Tapper and wife spent Sunday&#13;
with bis sister in Dnrand.&#13;
Mrs U. P. Sykes is visiting a couple&#13;
of weeks with relatives in Detroit.&#13;
Mrs. Hugh Finley is visiting relatives&#13;
and attending the Carnival in&#13;
Howell.&#13;
Miss Maude Haney is spending a&#13;
few weeks with friends and relatives&#13;
in Dexter.&#13;
Mr. Jesfce Buchanan, of Detroit,&#13;
was the guest of Miss Mabel Sigler&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Miss Margaret Lynch is spending a&#13;
week or more with relatives and&#13;
friends in Detroit.&#13;
Mrs. £. R Brown, and daughter&#13;
Gladys, are spending the week with&#13;
relatives in Jackson. '&#13;
Miss I'earl Parsball, of Howell, has&#13;
been the guest of her sister Mrs. Herbert&#13;
Gillette the past week.&#13;
Mrs. Wm.Surdam, of Chelsea, was&#13;
the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
S. W. Swarthout, the past week.&#13;
The township board ot Howell has&#13;
purchased two Abbott voting machines&#13;
ior use in the coming election.&#13;
Post master Swarthout was in Detroit&#13;
the past week attending the&#13;
meeting of the Michigan and National&#13;
Postmasters.&#13;
Win. Richards, secretary of the&#13;
Livingston Mutual Telephone Co.,&#13;
was in town Saturday last and got&#13;
the first installment of the directories&#13;
of the company.&#13;
^Assessment 86j)f4iMt L 0 T M M is&#13;
now due and must be paid on or&#13;
betore Aug. 31. Carrie Wilson, F. K.&#13;
Printers!&#13;
Owing to a large&#13;
increase in our&#13;
business we have&#13;
been obliged to&#13;
add a larger machine&#13;
for binding&#13;
books and have a&#13;
Hercules Stapler&#13;
Foot Power&#13;
Nearly New&#13;
For Sale Cheap&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS &amp; Co.&#13;
PUBS. DISPATCH&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
M i n e r Clearing Sale&#13;
"»V •&#13;
Born, Sunday to Garner Carpenter&#13;
and wife, a girl.&#13;
Tuesday—PiackAey people attending&#13;
the picnic at Dexter.&#13;
Miss Martha Mnrphy is spending a&#13;
couple of weeks in Dexter and Detroit.&#13;
Mrs. Edward Burt, and son Louis,&#13;
visited friends in Farmington the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Reason Sr. visited her&#13;
daughter, Mrs. Joeie Harland at Marquette,&#13;
the past week.&#13;
The Livingston Tidings will be issued&#13;
hereafter twice .a week if the&#13;
business men patronize it sufficiently&#13;
by advertising.&#13;
Mrs. £. H. Dan forth and daughter&#13;
Sila, of Detroit, were guests ot Mrs.&#13;
Theo. Lewis the past week. Mr. D.&#13;
came out and spent-Sunday.&#13;
Handy township will use an Abbott&#13;
voting machine this fall at the election,&#13;
as that township and Fowlerville&#13;
village have purchased one of the&#13;
machines.&#13;
Our rapidly increasing list has&#13;
made it impossible to send the DISPATCH&#13;
to our exchanges the past three&#13;
weeks, but we hope in the future to&#13;
be able to fill the X list.&#13;
Edgar Bennett, of Cleveland, has&#13;
been the guest of his many friends&#13;
here the past week, fle was unable&#13;
to meet with the "old boys and girls"&#13;
here the first of August.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Cook, of Detroit,&#13;
Miss Gertrude and Mrs. George Snedicor,&#13;
ot Howell, were guests of George&#13;
Green and wife Thursday last. Mr.&#13;
Cook made the trip in his Areocar.&#13;
The village of Howell has decided&#13;
to pay half of the expense of a new&#13;
sidewalk across the court yard, by the&#13;
side of the jail. The county will&#13;
probably pay the other half .—Tidings.&#13;
Did you see those few people going&#13;
down the street occasionally the past&#13;
week, with a small package clasped&#13;
in their hands?—it was a pound or so&#13;
of butter they had been fortunate&#13;
enough to secure for their week's&#13;
supply.&#13;
Senator Rumer, of Davidson, was in&#13;
town last week, meeting his many&#13;
friends. He was very instrumental&#13;
Pinckney Schools&#13;
Open Tuesday, Sept. 4&#13;
Everything Flourlahlng&#13;
Tuesday of next week, Sept. 4, the&#13;
Pinckney Public Schools open with&#13;
the promise of a flourishing year. Circulars&#13;
have been issued setting forth&#13;
tiifl. work to be done in the school and&#13;
already many foreign pupils are making&#13;
arrangements to attend.&#13;
The school, as announced before,&#13;
has been placed on the State Normal&#13;
list and it is expected to be raised to&#13;
the University list also. The work&#13;
done by the pupils here will be second&#13;
to none, placing the graduates of the&#13;
P. H. S. on a standing with any.&#13;
The school board have assisted Superintendent&#13;
Gaul in arranging for&#13;
the best year the school has ever seen&#13;
and have spared no pains or hard toil&#13;
to make it -o. A fine room has been&#13;
fitted up in the basement for a chemical&#13;
and physical labaratory with tables&#13;
for work and cases tor chemicals, tool6&#13;
and instruments. This room has been&#13;
badly needed for year; and we are&#13;
glad Mr. Gaul took it in hand to push&#13;
it through and the board bad the&#13;
"gall" to spend a little money assisting&#13;
him. Mr. Gaul not only superintended&#13;
the work of arranging the new&#13;
room, but put on his "workin" clothes&#13;
and put in several days hard work.&#13;
In fact he has put in most of his vacation&#13;
doing something for the good of&#13;
the sc-bool the coming year, tie and&#13;
the board have worked hard to build&#13;
up a good school here and the citizens&#13;
of Pinckney and vicinity have some-'&#13;
thing to be proud of.&#13;
The following teachers will teach&#13;
trie different gradeslhe coming year&#13;
which speaks itself tor the success of&#13;
the school:&#13;
T. J. Gaul, Superintendent.&#13;
Miss Belle Kennedy, Principal.&#13;
Miss Mae Reasoti, 7th and 8th grades.&#13;
Miss Lela Monks, 4th, 5th and 6th grades.&#13;
Miss Jessie Green, 1st, 2nd and 3rd grades.&#13;
Rl'&#13;
'. ,t&#13;
'1 v'*&#13;
Headquarters for&#13;
Drugs, Medicine&#13;
Books, Stationery&#13;
Fancy Crockery&#13;
School Books&#13;
P. A. SIGLER&#13;
\&#13;
i&#13;
• • * • * i&#13;
Is Now On&#13;
We are selling all our Fancy Chi-&#13;
, Lamps and Water Sets at cost&#13;
order to make room for new&#13;
Goods. Decidedly low prices are&#13;
made all through the slore. For&#13;
instance:&#13;
1 lb A. &amp; H. *oda for 3c&#13;
45 yd Spool Black Darning Cotton for lc&#13;
Tow 200 yd Spools Thread for 6c&#13;
E A. BOWMAN.&#13;
HOWELL'S BUSY STORE&#13;
in pressing through the biTF in tbelast&#13;
session, creating the state tuberculosis&#13;
sanitorium which is to be erected at&#13;
Howell.&#13;
Something like 15 business men, of&#13;
fowlerville, and Conway farmers,&#13;
have been served with a summons to&#13;
appear as defendants in a damage suit&#13;
brought by Geo. I. Simpson, who was&#13;
tarred and feathered in Conway one&#13;
night some weeks ago.&#13;
r&#13;
Many of our young people will be&#13;
leaving next w6ek lor the different&#13;
colleges to fit themselves for business.&#13;
We will be pleased to publish the&#13;
names and different colleges attended&#13;
if we can be informed. Our patrons&#13;
are glad to know where our voung&#13;
people are studying and working.&#13;
An eitfbt page announcement of&#13;
the Pinckney public schools for ,the&#13;
coming school year was printed in the&#13;
DISPATCH job room last week, contai ning&#13;
the course of ?tudy, semester, tui&#13;
tion, instructors and all the necessary&#13;
information to foreign pupils and&#13;
others desiring to enter our schools,&#13;
They are now in the hanis of superintendent&#13;
Gaul.&#13;
For reasons best known to themselves&#13;
the officials of the Pere Marquette&#13;
railroad have served notice&#13;
upon F. G. Roundsville and E. W.&#13;
Burkhart that they must move their&#13;
respective grain elevators off the railroad&#13;
grounds. The Burkhart elevator&#13;
has occupied its present position&#13;
over thirty years and it is somewhat&#13;
doubtful if the company can enforce&#13;
the order for its removal, and it is to&#13;
be hoped that some amicable adjustment&#13;
may be reached allowing Mr.&#13;
Roundsville to remain.—Fowlerville&#13;
Review.&#13;
Last week of vacation.&#13;
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Wirt Hendee&#13;
a daughter, the past week.&#13;
David Bowen has been under the&#13;
Actor's care tbe-past week.&#13;
jiiss Ruth Mortenson visited her&#13;
cousin, Maude Mortenson, Tuesday.&#13;
Tuis is the last of the month and&#13;
Loyal Guards should remember the&#13;
assessment due.&#13;
Mrs. Fanny Hickey, of Howell, visited&#13;
at the^ome of her brother, Chas.&#13;
Love, this wfeek.&#13;
Will and LaVerne Turner, of Grand&#13;
Ledge, are visiting with James Nash&#13;
and Bert Appleton this week.&#13;
Sidney Lyons and wife, of Hartland,&#13;
were gu ?sts at the home of her sister,&#13;
Mrs. K. ri. Crane, the past week,&#13;
Mrs. Michael Dolan took in the&#13;
excursion to Manistique to visit her&#13;
daughter Mrs. Minnie Nowlan.&#13;
Our readers will be pleased to learn&#13;
that Rev. K. H. Crane has recovered&#13;
from his recent poor spell, and is able&#13;
to be around.&#13;
Temple Brown, son of Frank Brown&#13;
and wife, ot Chicago, is the guest of&#13;
his grand mo Aer, Mrs. Sarah Brown,&#13;
and other relatives.&#13;
Miss Clara Dunn returnes this week&#13;
to her schopl duties as teacher in tbt*&#13;
Chisago Normal, alter spending the&#13;
summer with her parents, 1. C. Dunn&#13;
and wife&#13;
The Mesdames, Kate and Emma&#13;
Saulsbury, who have been guests of&#13;
relatives in town for several months&#13;
returned to their home in St. Louis,&#13;
Mo., this week.&#13;
While making his rounds ,as mail&#13;
carrier Monday, tt. H. Swartbout&#13;
found a large package, well done dp&#13;
and sealed, bat without any postage&#13;
and he said he should hold it for postage.&#13;
As it was a good sized watermelon&#13;
we do not think it will keep on&#13;
his hands long.&#13;
More rain is needed.&#13;
Quite a change in the weather.&#13;
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Guy Hali,&#13;
a son, August 22.&#13;
On account of the ice supply running&#13;
short F. A. Sigler has had to&#13;
close his ice cream parlor for this&#13;
season.&#13;
As we go to press we learn that&#13;
the little child ot Mr. and Mrs. Will&#13;
Devereaux is very ill at their home in&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
The Ladies of the Conj:'l church&#13;
will serve ice cream at the Opera&#13;
House Saturday evening of this week.&#13;
Eyerybody invited.&#13;
Mr. Dan Donohue and daughter,&#13;
Agatha, and son, John, of Syracuse,&#13;
N. Y., and John Donohue and daughter,&#13;
Nellie, ot Gregory, spent Sunday&#13;
at C. Lynch's.&#13;
Since going to Seattle, Wash., Mr.&#13;
Samuel Kennedy has taken a post&#13;
graduate course in Wilson's Modern&#13;
Bus]mass College, at that place, from&#13;
which be graduated August 24.&#13;
Miss Bertha Watson, of Carlton, is&#13;
visiting her brother, Edward Galpin,&#13;
at the home of Perry fowle. They&#13;
have not met since their separation&#13;
when they were small children.&#13;
A sister of Rev. K. H. Crane, from&#13;
Tecumseh, has been visiting him the&#13;
past week.&#13;
B, F. Andrews who has been spending&#13;
several weeks in Flint and ?arshallville,&#13;
is expected borne this week.&#13;
Will Mclntyre, who has been in the&#13;
western states for the past year or&#13;
more, was shaking hands with old&#13;
friends in town the past week.&#13;
Congregational Church.&#13;
There will be no regular service&#13;
next Sunday, 2nd September, except&#13;
Sunday school as nsual at 11:30.&#13;
Services will be resumed Sunday,&#13;
September 9. PAS:TOR&#13;
o&#13;
M, E. Church Notes.&#13;
The services Sunday morning was&#13;
well attended although the crowd was&#13;
no larger than usual. The sermon&#13;
was an excellent one and much appreciated.&#13;
Miss Gracie, and Master&#13;
Harold Grieve sang a duet in excellent&#13;
manner.&#13;
There was a misunderstanding&#13;
about the evening service, and threatening&#13;
storm made the attendance&#13;
small. The subject, "Modern Sampsons"&#13;
was a good one, and the pastor&#13;
proved that there were some Sampson*&#13;
today.&#13;
Services as usual next Sunjlay__andall&#13;
are invited to come and feel at&#13;
home.&#13;
Do not forget the Thursday evening&#13;
prayer meeting.&#13;
MICHIGAN STATE FAIR&#13;
• * • •&#13;
y » .&#13;
August 30th to September 7th, 1906&#13;
The Grand Trunk Railway System&#13;
| Announces single fare tor the rofind&#13;
| trip, plus 50 cents for admission to&#13;
i the fair grounds. Tickets on sale&#13;
j Aug. 30tb to Sept. 7th inclusive, ftej&#13;
turn limit Sept. 8th 1906. For fares&#13;
I and farther information call on local&#13;
A&lt;?ent or write to Geo. W. Vaux, A.G.&#13;
P. £ T. A., 135 Adams St., Chicago, 111.&#13;
.. . xtrm&#13;
•II&#13;
"V&#13;
STOVES NEXT&#13;
We have them&#13;
ALL STYLES AND ALL PRICES •Xiii&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co.&#13;
» • - ; « • ;&#13;
- ^ % &amp; *&#13;
. XHwSMtf'Iprtftf""^NMMMRP1^*'&#13;
V&#13;
THE SHOW OF THE STATE.&#13;
A VIEW OF THE STATE FAIR GROUNDS&#13;
AND ITS EQUIPMENT.&#13;
BLOCKHOU8E ON OUTSKIRTS OF CITY OF PINAR DEL RIO, CUBA,&#13;
AROUND-WHICH ONB OF FIRST BATTLES OF CUBAN&#13;
REVOLUTION RAGED.&#13;
BACKACHE 10 KlONEYACMt.&#13;
MICHIGAN'S GREATEST FAIR WILL SOON OPEN.&#13;
A visit to the grounds on which will to the east, first passing the nursery&#13;
be held the Michigan State Pair of exhibits which occupy a liberal space&#13;
1906 and an inspection of the many I o n ^ rI h t P a r t h e r o n a n d t o t h l e f t new buildings recently erected tor ex-, a r e t h e h I d a n d a u t o m o b r i e 8 . y o u hlbition purposes impresses one with h a v e n o w r e a c h e d t h e p r , n c I p a l b r i c k the marvelous progress of the Michl- b u i I d ,n g S ( w i t h t h e M £ I n E x h l b i u o n&#13;
gan state Agricultural a&gt;ocieiy, wmcn f H a H d ir e c t iy i n fr o n t Here an avenue&#13;
had its origin in tlwiptonwr day a;of . projecting north and south crosses,&#13;
the commonwealth. The more than a , w h I c h le&#13;
6&#13;
ada southward to the&#13;
half c e . t m r ^ t has elapsed since the I f e n c e a n d l m p t e i a e i l t exhibits, north*&#13;
formation of the society at Lansing in w a r d t t h e Horticultural Building, a&#13;
1849, has marked a great transition In&#13;
agriculture and allied pursuits during&#13;
wbloh period Michigan has grown from&#13;
a comparatively wild and unsettled&#13;
domain to a state of 2,500.000 people.&#13;
The State Agricultural Society has&#13;
kept pace with the progress of the&#13;
state, each succeeding exhibition showing&#13;
a marked advancement, each better&#13;
than the one previous.&#13;
Earlier Days.&#13;
In the earlier years It was the custom&#13;
of the society to locate the yearly&#13;
fair In a city, somewhat remote from&#13;
where the fair was held the year previous,&#13;
believing that in this way alone&#13;
would these expositions of Improved&#13;
stock and agricultural products be&#13;
brought nearer the greatest number of&#13;
"people. Lack of transportation and&#13;
great expense made it difficult for&#13;
farmers to travel long distances. As&#13;
the state grew and the means of travel&#13;
were Increased, the fair was held In&#13;
some of the larger cities and trade&#13;
centers. A number of exhibitions were&#13;
held on the grounds In' the suburbs of&#13;
Lansing, that being thought the proper&#13;
. center for all the people, it being the&#13;
capital city. But in 1905, after a somewhat&#13;
extended but friendly contest the&#13;
society decided upon Detroit, the&#13;
metropolis of the state, as the place&#13;
ifor a permanent location of the great&#13;
fair. A plat of nearly 150 acres lying&#13;
at the north of the city adjoining&#13;
"Woodward avenue, the leading thoroughfare&#13;
of the city, was purchased,&#13;
and the work of preparing the rough&#13;
fields for an exposition park was begun.&#13;
Fair of 1905.&#13;
"When the dates for the 1905 fair&#13;
'Came about, the buildings were few&#13;
and incomplete, little had been accomplished&#13;
in the way of grading and beautifying&#13;
the grounds, though three fine&#13;
buildings had been erected and the&#13;
grand stand and mile track fitted for&#13;
the'races. A goodly part of the showing&#13;
was in improvised structures and&#13;
in tents. Nevertheless the exhibition&#13;
excelled those of other years; and the&#13;
attendance greatly outnumbered the&#13;
guesses of the wildest and most optimistic&#13;
of prophets. It proved the wisdom&#13;
of the men who had given rise to&#13;
the movement and had consummated&#13;
their plans in locating the society to&#13;
give its annual fair upon permanent&#13;
grounds adjacent to the first city of&#13;
Michigan scrreadily reached by steamrailways,&#13;
electric cars and by boat&#13;
from several sections of the state. This&#13;
patronage showed an appreciation by&#13;
the people of the city and state and&#13;
;gave assurance that future efforts&#13;
^rould merit even a greater interest by&#13;
•exhibitors and a far larger attendance.&#13;
Transformation.&#13;
But the State Fair grounds of today&#13;
are far different from those which&#13;
*he visitors at previous exhibitions of&#13;
the Michigan State Agricultural. Society&#13;
have known. A magnificent park,&#13;
with its acres of velvety green lawn,&#13;
with the many sweeping driveways&#13;
tad walks, beds of flowering plants&#13;
•Ed innumerable groups of foliage&#13;
plants and ornamental shrubbery has&#13;
seemingly (owing to the few months&#13;
given to preparation) sprung into being&#13;
as if from the hand of enchantment.&#13;
To get a fair conception of this&#13;
exposition ground one would need to&#13;
4iee it, and to walk the ways of its&#13;
avenues under many beautiful elms,&#13;
and to devote' hours in observation of&#13;
the fine buildings that grace the expansive&#13;
"beauty spot." Instead of this&#13;
the writer would in fancy take you&#13;
with him from the heart of Michigan's&#13;
metropolis out Woodward avenue on&#13;
one of the modern rapid observation&#13;
trolley cars, passing through Grand&#13;
Circus Park, on past the hundreds of&#13;
attractive homes of leading citizens,&#13;
-crossing the picturesque Grand Boulevard,&#13;
with its miles of resplendent&#13;
loveliness, on in view, of the fashionable&#13;
Boston Boulevard, out through&#13;
Highland Park village, touching delightful&#13;
Palmer Park, within' sight of&#13;
the famous Log Cabin for so many&#13;
years the pride of Senator Thomas W.&#13;
Palmer, and in a minute or two you&#13;
alight at the gates of the society's exhibition&#13;
grounds that stretch away to&#13;
, the eastward presenting an unparalleled&#13;
scene of beauty.&#13;
Arrangement of Groups.&#13;
Entering at the west, one approaches&#13;
the stately Michigan ^Building that occupies&#13;
a conspicuous place In the fore-&#13;
*cound. In tale apaclfestructure one&#13;
&lt;caa meet his friends, perhaps sit down&#13;
'for a little chat, visit the ore and mineral&#13;
display on the ground fioon^nd&#13;
the art exhibit on the second. You can&#13;
splendid brick 70x160 feet; the horse&#13;
stables, to accommodate 300 animals,&#13;
both on the right, with the grove of&#13;
oak nearly opposite, in which is the&#13;
magnificent band pavilion facing to&#13;
the east. On north and to the left are&#13;
nine long white barns, each 80x24 feet,&#13;
five being devoted to cattle, two to&#13;
sheep, and two to swine. The last two&#13;
have concrete floors. At the end of this&#13;
street are four more stables for speed&#13;
horses, back of which is a fine stretch&#13;
of forest. Passing back south over the&#13;
same course is the Poultry Building,&#13;
40x150 feet, that contains S00 coops.&#13;
The Administration Building, 70x160,&#13;
then take the main walk that leads&#13;
is of brick, situated to the south of the&#13;
Main Hall, which is 100x220 feet in&#13;
area. To the east of this largest structure&#13;
is the Dairy Building, 40x150 feet,&#13;
an airy, well lighted frame show hall&#13;
with concrete floors, and containing&#13;
a large glass refrigerator for the display&#13;
of fine .dairy products. Leaving&#13;
thfs you find yourself on the "Glade,"&#13;
that live avenue of mirth and gaiety,&#13;
where a number of lively yet refined&#13;
shows and exhibitions will be given.&#13;
Joining this is the booth and. lunch&#13;
mom section—-every feature has Its&#13;
own neighborhood here—and to the&#13;
east of which is the mammoth grand&#13;
stand that comfortably seats nearly&#13;
10.,000 people, and the new bleachers&#13;
that provides for about 2,000 more. A&#13;
fine ornamental iron fence separates&#13;
these from the course, which is a feature&#13;
of the grounds, being 90 feet wide&#13;
and a mile in' extent with thrown-up&#13;
turns, built after the most modern&#13;
fashion. Within the course la a well&#13;
sodded plot upon which various special&#13;
free entertainments provided by&#13;
the society will be given. Other features&#13;
will be presented here afternoons&#13;
during the racing program.&#13;
Large Display,&#13;
Besides the almost unbounded displays&#13;
of agricultural products, large&#13;
showings of the best live stock of&#13;
many breeds from this and other&#13;
states will be presented; many very&#13;
special features this year, notable&#13;
among which is Roy Knaubenshue and&#13;
his giant air ship, with which he takes&#13;
daily = trips to the clouds; Lionel Legare,&#13;
who ascends atid descends an&#13;
electrical spiral tower on a moving&#13;
sphere; the wonderful Norins, making&#13;
leaps of death from a tall tower into a&#13;
-tank-of- w*ter-i -Janes—fe^aotisnoTchW"&#13;
tral band of 50 skilled music makers&#13;
giving two concerts daily; accomplished&#13;
Montana lady riders, who will ride&#13;
in four-mile relay races each afternoon.&#13;
The society has also secured at&#13;
great expense Pain's Fireworks for the&#13;
evening entertainment of guests.&#13;
Many other features in the way of&#13;
agreeable surprises will be presented.&#13;
Program.&#13;
The following is a list of special&#13;
days:&#13;
Thursday, August 30—Opening day.&#13;
Friday, August 31—Children's day,&#13;
when all children under 15 will be admitted&#13;
free.&#13;
Saturday, September 1—Detroit day.&#13;
The mayor and city officers invited.&#13;
_ Sunday, September 2—No program,&#13;
but the grounds will be open and buildings&#13;
accessible. Two sacred concerts&#13;
will be given by the Innes band&#13;
Monday, September 3—Labor day.&#13;
The Detroit Federation of Labor will&#13;
conduct exercises, assisted by numerous&#13;
labor organizations and noted&#13;
speakers.&#13;
Tuesday, September 4—Fraternal&#13;
day. All fraternal orders are invited to&#13;
be present, to give drills, and hold&#13;
such exercises as they deem proper.&#13;
Wednesday, September 5—Governor's&#13;
day. The governor and other&#13;
state officers and the candidates for&#13;
the several state offices are expected&#13;
to be in attendance. A grand live stock&#13;
parade will be given at 10:30 a. m.&#13;
which will be reviewed by the governor.&#13;
Thursday, September 6—Farmers'&#13;
day, when the State Farmers' Club Association,&#13;
State Grange, and live stock&#13;
organizations will be fully represented.&#13;
It will be a real rousing agricultural&#13;
gathering on this date.&#13;
Friday, September 7—Closing- day,&#13;
which will be none the less a full show&#13;
day, with complete programs tare the&#13;
fireworks in the evening.&#13;
Eacn will 'be tine of many banner&#13;
days, weather permitting, and every&#13;
citizen should endeavor to be present&#13;
one or more of them. .&#13;
There is every prospect that this Annual&#13;
Exhibition of the State Agricultural&#13;
Society will be a record breaker,&#13;
and a pleasant and memorable event la th« irnatf •lipateflBtaadvUiwfa,&#13;
FAVORS REFORM SPELLING&#13;
PRESIDENT INDORSES THE CARNEGIE&#13;
MOVEMENT.&#13;
Orders Adoption of System In All Official&#13;
Documents of„the Government.&#13;
Oyster Bay, N. Y. — President&#13;
Roosevelt has indorsed the Carnegie&#13;
spelling reform movement. He&#13;
Issued orders Friday to Public Printer&#13;
Stillings that hereafter all messages&#13;
from the president and all other documents&#13;
emanating from the white&#13;
house shall be printed in accordance&#13;
with the recommendation of the spelling&#13;
reform committee, headed by&#13;
Brander Matthews, professor of English&#13;
at Columbia university. This&#13;
committee has published a Hat of 300&#13;
words in which the spelling is reformed.&#13;
This list contains such words as&#13;
"thru" and "tho" a the spelling for&#13;
"through" and "though." The president's&#13;
official sanction of this reform&#13;
movement Is regarded as the most&#13;
effective and speediest method of inaugurating&#13;
the new system of spelling&#13;
throughout the country. Not only will&#13;
the printed documents emanating&#13;
from the president utilize the reform&#13;
spelling, but his correspondence also&#13;
will be spelled In the new style.&#13;
Secretary Loeb has sent for the list&#13;
of 300 words which have been* reformed&#13;
and upon its arrival will immediately&#13;
order all correspondence of&#13;
the president and of the executive&#13;
force of the white house spelled in ac-.&#13;
cordance therewith. As the spelling&#13;
reform committee shall adopt new reforms&#13;
they will be added to the president's&#13;
list and also to that of the&#13;
public printer.&#13;
While the order to "the printer does&#13;
not contemplate an immediate reform&#13;
in the spelling of official documents&#13;
from the executive departments in&#13;
Washington, it Is regarded-that more&#13;
than likely the respective heads of the&#13;
department will fall in line with the&#13;
president's ideas and have their official&#13;
documents printed in the _new&#13;
spelling.&#13;
TAFT WANTS TO BE PRESIDENT&#13;
Secretary of War to Decline Place on&#13;
Supreme Bench.&#13;
Washington.—William H. Taft,&#13;
retary of war, will formally communicate&#13;
to the president in a short time&#13;
that he does not desire the honor of&#13;
an appointment to the supreme court&#13;
bench. He will send notice in time&#13;
for the president to make a selection&#13;
before the fall term of the supreme&#13;
court opens in October.&#13;
Mr. Taft's indorsement for the presidency&#13;
by the Ohio Republican state&#13;
convention is practically assured. He&#13;
has been considered one of the most&#13;
prominent possibilities by Ohio Republicans,&#13;
and in view of Speaker&#13;
Cannon's reiterated declaretions that&#13;
he would not be known as a candidate,&#13;
the secretary's plan of action is&#13;
considered most significant at this&#13;
time.&#13;
The Ohio Republicans have been&#13;
quietly booming Mr. Taft for the presidency&#13;
for months. By every possible&#13;
method they have been advancing his&#13;
cause, even going so-far, it is understood,&#13;
as to solicit a public expression&#13;
from him on the subject of his&#13;
candidacy. Mr. Taft has fought shy&#13;
of the subject, but the latest development&#13;
places him more conspicuously&#13;
before the public.&#13;
SAYS REBATES WERE PAID.&#13;
Standard Oil and Railroad Company&#13;
Indicted in New York.&#13;
Jamestown, N. Y.—The federal&#13;
grand jury investigating alleged&#13;
violations of the Elkms rebate law by&#13;
the Standard Oil company, the Pennsylvania&#13;
Railroad company, and the&#13;
New York Central Railroad company&#13;
in the state met here Friday and returned&#13;
two Indictments, one against&#13;
the Standard Oil company, the other&#13;
against the New York Central.&#13;
The charges against the Central are&#13;
covered in a single count, although,&#13;
according to the theory of the prosecution,&#13;
the company equally is guilty&#13;
with the Pennsylvania company in&#13;
granting rebates. The charge of failure&#13;
to file with the interstate commerce&#13;
commission, as required by law,&#13;
a schedule of rates, which evidence&#13;
taken by the grand jury indicates, was&#13;
maintained.&#13;
The Standard J}i} company was&#13;
again Indicted on a charge of accepting&#13;
unlawful and discriminating&#13;
freight rates on shipments of oil over&#13;
the Pennsylvania, the New York Central&#13;
and the Vermont Central railroad&#13;
companies.&#13;
The indictments are closely related&#13;
to those found by the same jury two&#13;
weeks ago against the Standard Oil&#13;
company and the Pennsylvania in the&#13;
matter of discriminating rates for oil&#13;
shipped by the Standard from Olean&#13;
to Burlington, Vt. All of such shipments&#13;
were over the Pennsylvania&#13;
from Olean to Rochester; over the&#13;
New York Central from Rochester to&#13;
Norwood, N. Y., and over the Vermont&#13;
Central from Norwood, to its destination.&#13;
Get at the Cause—Cure the KldneyaV&#13;
, • « » — -&#13;
Don't neglect* hfcekacbe. It warns&#13;
you of trouble i f Im* kidneys. Avert&#13;
If*,: the*danger by curj.&#13;
, .; ing {be kidneys with&#13;
. ; * Do»»'s Kidney Pffl%&#13;
J. A. Hsywood, #-&#13;
wety known resident&#13;
of L u f k i n , Tex.,&#13;
says: '"I wrenched;&#13;
my oaok working In&#13;
a sawmill, was laid;&#13;
up .six weeks, and&#13;
from that time had&#13;
pain in my back&#13;
whenever I stooped or lifted. Th#&#13;
urine was badly disordered and for&#13;
long time I had attacks of gra&#13;
After I began using Doan's Kldaay&#13;
Pills the gravel passed out, and my&#13;
back got well. I haven't had backache&#13;
or bladder trouble since,"&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a boat&#13;
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
Another Triumph for X-Rays.&#13;
So successful has the application of&#13;
the X-rays been in the tratment of&#13;
children suffrlng from ringworm, that&#13;
the Metropolitan Asylums Board, London,&#13;
has neen enabled to discontinue&#13;
the use of one of the two institution*&#13;
reserved for such cases.&#13;
Schools Spreading tn China.&#13;
A few years ago the foreign mlaeionary&#13;
schools were practically, the&#13;
only institutions in Foochow offering&#13;
facilities for the acquisition of western&#13;
learning. There are now at least&#13;
30 native schools fashioned after the&#13;
foreign model. Foochow is a city of&#13;
600,000 Inhabitants, and these schools&#13;
embrace about 2,000 students. Posters&#13;
placarded all over the city advertise&#13;
the opening of various modern&#13;
schools, which are springing up in&#13;
every nook and corner of the place.&#13;
Scarcely a week passes without the&#13;
announcement of the opening of a&#13;
new school.&#13;
HE MADE T H E OPPORTUNITY&#13;
STORM DAMAGES GRAVEYARD&#13;
Cemetery Grounds Flooded and 200&#13;
Bodies Exposed to View.&#13;
Kansas. City^Mo.—A terrific rainstorm&#13;
prevailed in" Kansas- City- and&#13;
vicinity early Thursday. In. Kansas&#13;
City 5.93 Inches of water fell, a record&#13;
for the time, three hours and a half.&#13;
-Low lyteg4ands~were flooded and the&#13;
police and fire departments were called&#13;
upon to rescue persons from basements&#13;
in Little Italy, in the north end&#13;
of town, and in the east and west bottoms,&#13;
where the water entered many&#13;
small houses. Several downtown&#13;
basements were flooded and goods&#13;
damaged.&#13;
At Elmwood cemetery, five miles&#13;
east of the business district the entire&#13;
cemetery grounds were flooded,&#13;
and in the lower ground a strong current&#13;
was formed. This resulted in the&#13;
washing out of dosens of graves. At&#13;
least 200 bodies were exposed. Monuments&#13;
were wrecked and other damage&#13;
done.&#13;
LYNCHING JURY FAILS TO AGREE&#13;
Little Likelihood of State Continuing&#13;
Case at Springfield, Mo.&#13;
Death of Henna's Brother-in-Law.&#13;
Cleveland, O.—Jay C. Morse, at one&#13;
time president of the Illinois Steel&#13;
company and brother-in-law of the&#13;
late Senator M. A. Hanna, died here&#13;
Wednesday of a complication of diseases.*&#13;
Mr. Morse was associated with&#13;
the late Col. C. M. Pfckands in an Immense&#13;
Iron ore and coal business, and&#13;
he amassed a large fortune.&#13;
Springfield, Mo.—The jury in the&#13;
case of Doss Galbraith, the alleged&#13;
leader of the mob which lynched and&#13;
burned three negroes here in April&#13;
last, and who was on trial charged&#13;
with second degree murder, was discharged&#13;
by the court Friday when it&#13;
reported that its members were unable&#13;
to agre.&#13;
After the jury was discharged its&#13;
members freely admitted that the&#13;
vote stood ten for acquittal and two&#13;
for conviction. Twenty ballots were&#13;
taken and there was no change after&#13;
the first ballot.&#13;
It is not believed the state will try&#13;
the case again.&#13;
Death Ends Suffering.&#13;
Tomahawk, Wis.--C. 0.. Ramsey,&#13;
district superintendent for the United&#13;
States Leather company, died. He&#13;
was stricken blind Tuesday while seated&#13;
at hia office desk and Thursday he&#13;
suffered a stroke of apoplexy.&#13;
How Educator Succeeded in Desire&#13;
to Address Students.&#13;
A distinguished educator of Boston,&#13;
who once visited a western college&#13;
during examination week, was, for&#13;
some reason or other, not asked to&#13;
address the students, as he had expected&#13;
he would be. In chapel he&#13;
was merely requested to lead in prayer,&#13;
which he did in this wise:&#13;
"Be pleased, father in Heaven, to&#13;
guide the steps of the president of&#13;
this college. Thou knowest that he&#13;
was a clasmate of Thy servant, a&#13;
graduate of the class of *'84, taking&#13;
high honors. Thine eye hath looked&#13;
with favor upon the happy choice that&#13;
resulted in his appointment, with the&#13;
consent of the trustees, as the head&#13;
of this institution. Thou knowest&#13;
that the students of this college ought&#13;
to look- upon him as a friend as well&#13;
as their president. Thou knowest&#13;
that thy servant Is well pleased with&#13;
the high standards of scholarship&#13;
here prevailing and with the righteousness&#13;
and loyalty of the sto&gt;&#13;
dents."&#13;
Finally, to the intense delight of&#13;
the students, the visitor concluded his&#13;
prayeras -follows:&#13;
And I thank Thee for this opportnnlty&#13;
to address the students of thia&#13;
college."&#13;
GOOD-NtGHT'S SLEEP.&#13;
No JHesUckie so Beneficial to Brain&#13;
and Nerves.&#13;
Lying awake nights makes it hard&#13;
to keep awake and do things in day&#13;
time. To take "tonics and stimulants"&#13;
under such circumstances is&#13;
like setting the house on fire to *ee&#13;
if you can put it out.&#13;
The right kind of food promotes re*&#13;
freshing sleep at night and a wide&#13;
awake individual during the day.&#13;
A lady changed from her old way of&#13;
eating, to Grape-Nuts, and says:&#13;
"For about three years I had been&#13;
a great sufferer from indigestion.&#13;
After trying several kinds of medicine,&#13;
the doctor would ask me to drop&#13;
off potatoes, then meat, and "sooon,&#13;
but in a few days that craving, gnawing&#13;
feeling would start up, and I&#13;
would vomit everything I ate and&#13;
drank.&#13;
"When I started on Grape-Nuts,&#13;
vomiting stopped, and the bloating&#13;
feeling which was so distressing disappeared&#13;
entirely. • *&#13;
"My mother was very much bothered&#13;
with diarrhea before commencing&#13;
the Grape-Nuts, because her stomach&#13;
was so weak she could not digest&#13;
her food. Since using Grape-Nuts she&#13;
is well, and says she don't think she&#13;
could live without it.&#13;
"It is a great brain restorer&#13;
nerve builder, for I can Bleep aq&#13;
and undisturbed after a sui&#13;
Grape-Nuts as in the old daj&#13;
I could not realize what, they meant&#13;
by a "bad stomach." There is no&#13;
medicine so beneficial to nerves and&#13;
brain as a good night's sleep, such as&#13;
you can enjoy after eating Grape-&#13;
Nuts." • * . ' • •&#13;
Name" given by Pottum Go., Battle.&#13;
| Creek, Mich. 1 "ThereVa reason."&#13;
•'wi» no ' •• » • .» &lt;£v&#13;
n&#13;
-. v r ......&#13;
s^^^rF**^^^^&#13;
ea&#13;
&gt; * # -&#13;
THE TAX COMMI83»^N'*VAClJt6&#13;
BEFORE THE B0*f|D OF :&#13;
eQUAUZATfpaj. ^ •*&#13;
EACH COUNTY QETS RAISE&#13;
Commi»»ion Raised Values Millions&#13;
i .. and the Equalizers Will Have Some&#13;
/ Strenuous Work.&#13;
o&#13;
i t -&#13;
Here Are the Figures.&#13;
After working until 3 o'clock Tuesday&#13;
morning the state tax commission&#13;
completed its estimated valuations of&#13;
' the properties of the state, which&#13;
were presented to the state board of&#13;
equalization in the forenoon. The tax&#13;
commission acts in an advisory capacity,&#13;
but It looks as if the board of&#13;
equattzaiioiMs inclined to, aceepJULhe.&#13;
advice. In addition to the $gures submitted,&#13;
the t#x commission will recommend&#13;
a^ what the various counties&#13;
shall be equalized.&#13;
Every county In the state Is given&#13;
a boost, In the, estimated valuations.&#13;
Wayne county is up $30,000,000, and&#13;
if the recommendations of the tax commission&#13;
are accepted, will bear 20 per&#13;
cent of the state tax, compared with&#13;
18.82 per cent at present. Other notable&#13;
iacreases in valuation are:&#13;
Kent, $26i000,000; Houghton, $17,-&#13;
000,000; Marquette, $9,000,000; Gogebic,&#13;
$6,000,000; Montcalm, $5,000,000;&#13;
Lenawee, $12,000,000; Berrien, $12,-&#13;
000,000.&#13;
The total valuation of state property&#13;
is placed at $1,931,568,000. This&#13;
is an increase of about $300,000,000,&#13;
the valuation as equalized by the&#13;
boards of supervisors being $1,565,011,-&#13;
758.&#13;
The following table shows the commission's&#13;
valuation of the state by&#13;
counties:&#13;
Alcona $ 1,555,800&#13;
Alger «, 4,652,400&#13;
Allegan 28,130,900&#13;
Alpena 9,470,106&#13;
Antrim . . , 10,249,600&#13;
Arenac 3,584,300&#13;
Baraga 3,385,000&#13;
Barry 19,582,000&#13;
Bay . • 32,255,500&#13;
Benzie ..;, 4,867,100&#13;
Berrien 38,546,500&#13;
Branch 27,492,500&#13;
Calhoun 42,937,800&#13;
Cass 18,571,600&#13;
Charlevoix 6,761,800&#13;
Cheboygan 9,645,000&#13;
Chippewa 17,002,800&#13;
Clare 8,103.200&#13;
Clinton 24,368,700&#13;
Crawford 2,399,400&#13;
Delta 10,800,000&#13;
Dickinson 13,263,600&#13;
Baton 23,117,000&#13;
Emmett 12,251,500&#13;
Genesee 31,587,400&#13;
Gladwin 3,299,100&#13;
Gogebic... 16,981.900&#13;
Grand Traverse 13,871.300&#13;
Gratiot 20,829,200&#13;
Hillsdajje^ 25,460,700&#13;
HougBton 125,295,400&#13;
Huron 20,421,600&#13;
Ingham 37,299,200&#13;
Ionia 22,989,600&#13;
Iosco 3,183,700&#13;
Iron 6,932,000&#13;
Isabella_^^L 10,263,500&#13;
Jackson . . . . . .7777777.- *3T$MTW0-&#13;
Kalamazoo 35,81-2,300&#13;
Kalkaska 5,200,900&#13;
Kent 125,127,600&#13;
Keweenaw S.643,200&#13;
Lake . 1,197,800&#13;
Lapeer 19,901,900&#13;
Leelanau , 5,259,800&#13;
Lenawee 44,326,300&#13;
Livingston 18,273,900&#13;
Luce 3,005,000&#13;
Mackinac „ - . 4,501,000&#13;
Macomb 29,119,800&#13;
Manistee 11,894,500&#13;
Marquette . . . . . 35,290,100&#13;
Mason 8,059.900&#13;
Mecosta 6,070,700&#13;
Menominee... •. 11,042,300&#13;
Midland 7 5,957,700&#13;
Missaukee 4,588,300&#13;
Monroe . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25,893,500&#13;
Montcalm 14,612,200&#13;
Montmorency 1,792,800&#13;
Muskegon 18,168,100&#13;
Newaygo 7,798,300&#13;
Oakland 37,4S4,300&#13;
Oceana 8,945,800&#13;
Ogemaw 3,010,100&#13;
Ontonagon 5,666,000&#13;
Osceola 6,631,400&#13;
Oscoda 1,255,900&#13;
Otsego 4,475,500&#13;
Ottawa 26,606,900&#13;
Presque Isle 3,820.700&#13;
Roscommon 1,073,900&#13;
Saginaw 45,127,400&#13;
•Sanilac 18,111,400&#13;
Schoolcraft 3,810,700&#13;
Shiawassee , 24,671,500&#13;
SI. Clair 35,644,800&#13;
St. Joseph 20,074,300&#13;
Tuscola 20,349,600&#13;
Van Buren 24,160,900&#13;
Weeatenaw 42,175,800&#13;
i 385,000,000&#13;
&gt;rd " 10,889,000&#13;
)tal $1,931,568,000&#13;
Want Permanent Camp.&#13;
The camp equipage of the Michigan&#13;
National Guard has Just been re*&#13;
turned to Ludington from Indianapolis&#13;
by Col. Rogers, of Detroit, and Capt.&#13;
Crawford, of Ionia. This has given&#13;
Ludington -cltisens enoonragesnent&#13;
t h a t ' the encampments may be resumed&#13;
there. An effort will be made&#13;
to induce the legislature to buy Lin«&#13;
total common outright for the future&#13;
encamafeent* of the guard.&#13;
ERRORS ABOUT THE WHITE&#13;
HOUSE.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
*s I noticed somewhere recently—I&#13;
would not say positively that it was In&#13;
your columns—an article on the White&#13;
House which contained several misstatements.&#13;
In the first place? It was stated the&#13;
White House was first occupied in&#13;
1809 and that its first occupant waa&#13;
President Madison. The fact is, its&#13;
first ooeupant was President Adams,&#13;
who teek up bis residence there in&#13;
lgfo.-*:. .;....&#13;
The original mansion was begun in&#13;
1792. In 1814 ft was burned by the&#13;
British and rebuilt in 1818.&#13;
..Another of the errors in the article&#13;
referred to was the statement that&#13;
ready-prepared paint i» used on the&#13;
Whit.e' House ,tp make it beautifully&#13;
wfcite. .V-&#13;
^ noticed .thfs especially because T&#13;
have used considerable pafcat -myself&#13;
and wondered that "canne4'\ paint&#13;
should be sjsed-.on such an important,&#13;
building when all painters know that&#13;
- pu»e whitehead and linseed oil make&#13;
tk&amp;JMst paint - -&#13;
It so happened also that I knew&#13;
white lead and linseed oil—not readymixed&#13;
paint—were used on the "White&#13;
House, because I had just read a booklet&#13;
published by a firm of ready-mixed&#13;
paint manufacturers who also manufacture&#13;
pure white lead. In that book&#13;
the manufacturers admitted that for&#13;
the White House nothing but "the&#13;
best and purest of paint could be&#13;
used," and said that their pure white&#13;
lead had been selected.&#13;
Above all people, those who attempt&#13;
to write on historical subjects should&#13;
give us facts, even if it is only a date&#13;
or a statement about wood, or brick,&#13;
or paint, or other building material.&#13;
Yours for truth,&#13;
L&#13;
GIANT RADISHES OF THE EAST&#13;
There the Vegetable Grows to an&#13;
Enormous 8ize.&#13;
Radishes in North' China and in&#13;
Japan are as important and ubiquitous&#13;
a part of every meal as is bread&#13;
in America. In both countries many&#13;
millions of .bushels of this vegetable&#13;
are grown every year, and they are&#13;
to be had at all seasons. It is thus&#13;
easy to understand why these parts&#13;
of the world grow the strangest and&#13;
biggest radishes known.&#13;
The giants beside the little French&#13;
Breakfast, our favorite American variety,&#13;
are but babies beside the monsters&#13;
they grow under the warm,&#13;
moist influences of the oriental climate.&#13;
These radishes are grown on American&#13;
soil from seeds imported by the&#13;
United States department of agriculture&#13;
from China. They take well to&#13;
the American climate, and probably&#13;
would have weighed five pounds when&#13;
full grown.&#13;
When these fellows are grown in&#13;
China they rapidly form a great brilliant&#13;
red globe eight to ten inches in&#13;
diameter and weighing sometimes 20&#13;
pounds. Another kind is snow white&#13;
and grows a foot long, and still another&#13;
is a brilliant green on the outside&#13;
and a beautiful wine red when&#13;
the skTrTTs-cut: Some—of—4hesectrange&#13;
vegetables are exceedingly&#13;
delicate in flavor and texture when&#13;
grown under favorable conditions.&#13;
The First Quill Pens.&#13;
Quill pens came into use in 553; the&#13;
first steel ones in 1820, when the first&#13;
eross of them sold for $36.&#13;
DUBIOUS&#13;
About What Her Husband Would Say.&#13;
A Mien, woman tried Postum Food&#13;
Coffee because ordinary coffee disagred&#13;
wtih her and her husband. She&#13;
writes:&#13;
"Hy husband was sick for three&#13;
years with catarrh of the bladder, and&#13;
palpitation- of the heart, caused by&#13;
coffee. Was unable to work at all&#13;
and in bed part of the time.&#13;
"I had stomach trouble, was weak&#13;
and fretful so I could not attend to&#13;
my housework—both of us using coffee&#13;
all the time, and realizing XL was&#13;
harmful.&#13;
"One morning the grocer's wife&#13;
said she believed coffee was the cause&#13;
of our trouble and advised Postum.&#13;
I took It home rather dubious about&#13;
what my husband would say—he was&#13;
fond of coffee.&#13;
"But I took coffee right off the&#13;
table, and we haven't used a cup of&#13;
it since. You should have seen the&#13;
change in us, and now my husband&#13;
never complains of heart palpitation&#13;
any more. My stomach trouble went&#13;
away in two weeks after I began Postum.&#13;
My children love it and it does&#13;
them good, which can't be said of&#13;
coffee.&#13;
"A lady visited us who was always&#13;
half sick. I told her I'd make her a&#13;
cup of Postum. She said It was tasteless&#13;
stuff, hut she watched me make&#13;
it, boittng it thoroughly for 15 minutes,&#13;
mad when done she said it waa&#13;
splendid. Long boiling brings oat the&#13;
flavor and food quality." Name given&#13;
by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.&#13;
Read.the little book "The Road.to&#13;
WeUrille/'inpkgs, "There's a reason."&#13;
THE WHITE RIVER COUNTRY.&#13;
In the opinion of o«a who has traveled&#13;
much and observed closely, the&#13;
most truly and rightfully contented&#13;
people In the United States to-day are&#13;
the small landowners In what is&#13;
known as the Upper White River Country,&#13;
any what* from Newport, Ark.; to&#13;
Carthage,'Me, They are contented because&#13;
their surroundings are ideal and,&#13;
until recently, the great, uneasy, disquieting&#13;
world, with its artificial needs&#13;
and inadequate compensations, has&#13;
been to them but little more tangible&#13;
than a, dream, .Here, still existent,&#13;
and by reason of ^heir very rarity at&#13;
this day and time more delectable&#13;
than in the past, are the conditions&#13;
which have ever appealed with irresistible&#13;
force to the Independent-spirited"'&#13;
Anglo-Saxon. Every man is the&#13;
supreme ruler of his own little prin-&#13;
(cipajity; acknowledging no master&#13;
jsave the law-—and, possibly Bis feminine&#13;
helpmeet; cringrag to no emipioyer;&#13;
asking no favors from the&#13;
world, save those that his neighbors&#13;
freely extend and expect as freely in&#13;
return. He lives In a latitude where&#13;
toe extremes of heat or cold are never&#13;
known, and at an altitude that insures&#13;
perfect health. The richest bounty&#13;
of Nature has been showered upon&#13;
him with unsparing hand, but It is a&#13;
question whether he more than dimly&#13;
realizes the fact. He accepts as a matter&#13;
of course the fertile soil which&#13;
produces in abundance every cultivable&#13;
growth common to the north&#13;
temperate zone, the surrounding forests&#13;
of valuable woods and the underlying&#13;
stratas of precious minerals, the&#13;
springs and streams of translucent&#13;
purity on every hand, the wealth of&#13;
fish and game at his very door, such as&#13;
less favored mortals annually travel&#13;
hundreds of miles to find. He is contented,&#13;
but small credit is his for that,&#13;
for how could he well be otherwise&#13;
than content? It is sad that such&#13;
idealistic conditions may not continue,&#13;
but it is written that the present&#13;
possessors of this favored land&#13;
must soon give place to others more&#13;
appreciative of its incomparable features.&#13;
A railroad has recently cut its&#13;
way through the best of this region,&#13;
and the unaccustomed rustle of bank&#13;
notes and chink of coin will eventually&#13;
tempt the hill-dweller to part with his&#13;
birthright. So it has always been in&#13;
the world's history—the good things&#13;
that are ours without price invariably&#13;
pass from our hands before we come&#13;
to understand their value. The White&#13;
River country will shortly be discovered&#13;
anew by a class of immigrants&#13;
better capable of judging its possibilities—&#13;
the men who seek modest&#13;
homes where the "lay of the land"&#13;
will effectually prevent crowding by&#13;
too close neighbors, where their cat*&#13;
tie can fatten on free range, where&#13;
the wealth of forest and mine awaits&#13;
development by intelligent workers,&#13;
and where the game and fish offer enjoyable&#13;
recreation to all who have&#13;
leisure and inclination for soort-&#13;
His Only Concern.&#13;
A well known member of the New&#13;
York bar, a man of most patronizing&#13;
manner, one day met John G. Carlisle,&#13;
to whom he observed loftily.&#13;
"I see, Carlisle, that the supreme&#13;
court has overruled you in the case&#13;
of Mulllns versus_Jenkinson. But,''&#13;
he added, in his~grand way, "you; Carlisle,&#13;
need feel no eoncern about your&#13;
reputation."&#13;
Carlisle chuckled. "Quite so," he&#13;
agreed. "I'm only concerned for the&#13;
reputation of the supreme court."—&#13;
Harper's Weekly.&#13;
Alum Baking Powder Is Wholesome.&#13;
Dr. Herman Reinbold, the expert&#13;
German chemist, in a recent official&#13;
report concerning Baiting Powders,&#13;
declares that a pure alum baking powder&#13;
is better, and less injurious than&#13;
the so-called cream of tartar powders.&#13;
He says that if the quantity of alum&#13;
contained in a sufficient quantity of&#13;
baking powder for a batch of bread or&#13;
cakes for an ordinary family, be concentrated&#13;
to one mouthful of food,&#13;
and taken into the stomach of any&#13;
one person, no matter how delicate,&#13;
it could do no harm. On the contrary,&#13;
alum is wholesome In proper quantities.&#13;
This is undoubtedly the reason&#13;
the State of Missouri quickly repealed&#13;
a law that prohibited the manufacture&#13;
of the most wholesome of all baking&#13;
powders. So much for Alum Baking&#13;
Powders.&#13;
Immense Steel Plates.&#13;
The shell and boilers of the new&#13;
Cunarder being built at Wallsend,&#13;
England, are said by Consul Metcajf&#13;
to be constructed of the largest steel&#13;
plates in the world. They are silicon&#13;
steel, weighing ten tons each. The&#13;
boilers alone will weigh over 1,000&#13;
tons. Massive ingots and* slabs&#13;
weighing 12 and 14 tons, are continually&#13;
passing through the rolling mills&#13;
there for this work.&#13;
. The man who plays the favorite&#13;
doesn't always win by a long shot&#13;
Has Been Buried for Centuries.&#13;
The body of a young woman has&#13;
been discovered In the ancient Priddy&#13;
lead mines in Somersetshire, England,&#13;
some 18 or 17 feet deep la the&#13;
Waterbone slit that has been accumulating&#13;
since the days before the Romans&#13;
came. The half is wonderfully&#13;
preserved, and remains la the plait&#13;
in watch tt was worked. Beside the&#13;
body were fosad five large blue aad&#13;
Mr*, W l a s l s i ' s SooihlaeT Syrap.&#13;
For children f i n i n g , aoftaas tha gant, reduce* b&gt;&#13;
**BJBrtjM,aU«f*ff«bc*rovlB4o«Ug. McabOUl*.&#13;
Handkerchiefs Date f*om 1744&#13;
The first pocket handkerchiefs,&#13;
utilised in the manner they are to-day,&#13;
were manufactured at Paisley m 1743.&#13;
Important to Mothers.&#13;
bantse overall? every bottle of CA8T0BJA,&#13;
a Mfe aad mre itaxAj for infante sad children,&#13;
aad aea thai it&#13;
Bean the&#13;
Signature of&#13;
IS Us* Foe Over SO Yean.&#13;
The Kind Yos Bare always fioagst&#13;
Seamen Given Privileges.&#13;
A marriage bill introduced in the&#13;
British parliament allows the marriage&#13;
of a seaman to take place by license&#13;
in the diocese of the port where&#13;
his ship is lying, if he has been a resident&#13;
for 15 days on the ship or partly&#13;
on the ship and partly on shore&#13;
within the diocese.&#13;
Superb Service, Splendid Scenery&#13;
en route to Niagara Falls, Muskoka&#13;
and Kawartha Lakes, Georgian Bay&#13;
and Temegami Region, St. Lawrence&#13;
River and Rapids, Thousand Islands,&#13;
Algonquin National Park, White Mountains&#13;
and Atlantic Sea Coast resorts,&#13;
via Grand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Double track Chicago to Montreal and&#13;
Niagara Falls, N. Y.&#13;
For copies of tourist publications&#13;
and descriptive pamphlets apply to&#13;
Geo. W. Vaux, A. G. P. ft T. A., 135&#13;
Adams St., Chicago.&#13;
French State Monopolies.&#13;
State monopolies are more than&#13;
ever in favor in France as a means&#13;
of raising revenue to the prejudice of&#13;
private enterprise. A committee of&#13;
the chamber of deputies has been appointed,&#13;
with a foreign minister of&#13;
finance as chairman, to collect information&#13;
on the possible working of&#13;
monopolies on sugar and petroleum&#13;
refining, the rectification of alcohol,&#13;
and insurance.&#13;
BABY COVERED WITH SORE8.&#13;
Would Scratch and Tear the Flesh Unless&#13;
Hands Were Tied—"Would&#13;
Have Died But for Cuticura."&#13;
"My little son^when about a year&#13;
and a half oldTbegaa^to have sores&#13;
come out on hisMace. I had a physician&#13;
treat him, but the sores grew&#13;
worse. Then they began to come on&#13;
his arms, then on,other parts of his&#13;
body, and then one came on his chest,&#13;
worse than the others. Then I called&#13;
another physician. Still he grew&#13;
worse. At the end of about a year&#13;
and a half of suffering he grew so bad&#13;
I had to tie his hands in cloths at&#13;
night to keep him from scratching the&#13;
sores and tearing the flesh. He got to&#13;
be a mere skeleton, and was hardly&#13;
able to walk. My aunt advised me to&#13;
try Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I&#13;
sent to the drug store and got a cake&#13;
of the Soap and a box of the Ointment,&#13;
and at the end of about two&#13;
months the sores were all well. He&#13;
has never had any sores of any kind&#13;
since. He is now strong and healthy,&#13;
and I can sincerely say that only for&#13;
J^uT-^gsLjwggjgrJHl remedies my&#13;
precious child would have J[ed"from&#13;
those terrible sores. Mrs. Egbert&#13;
Sheldon. R. F. D. No. 1, Woodville,&#13;
Conn., April 22. 1905."&#13;
Beware of Servian Bank Notes.&#13;
There is dismay in the Servian ministry&#13;
of finance. In the strong room&#13;
in this department, in a specific safe,&#13;
were stored the engraved plates from&#13;
which Servian bank notes were'&#13;
struck. These plates were engraved&#13;
in Paris and cost a sum of £1,600.&#13;
All these plates have within the past&#13;
few days been found to be stolen&#13;
from the safe, without any visible&#13;
sign of the safe having been tampered&#13;
with.&#13;
Economy Is the load te&#13;
PUTNAM FADELESS DYE&#13;
road to economy.&#13;
wealth&#13;
1»&#13;
Every' married woman under 40-&#13;
knows a man she thinks she might&#13;
marry it her husband sheald happen,&#13;
to die. - ?&#13;
*&#13;
TUMORSJflNQuTRED&#13;
KMtt OftUTtttt AVMB.&#13;
UnqoelHUd fhiooaes of Lydia • . Ptaa&gt;&#13;
ham's Vegetable Ootapotuad to the&#13;
Case of Mrs. Fannie D. Pox.&#13;
One of the greatest triumphs of Lydie&#13;
E. Pinkham'R Vegetable Compound is&#13;
the, conquering of woman's dread en*&#13;
amy, Tumor.&#13;
The growth of a tumor is ao sly that&#13;
frequently its presence is not suspected&#13;
until it is far advanced,&#13;
So-called "wandering' pains" maycome&#13;
from its early stages, or the*&#13;
presence of danger may be made manifest&#13;
by profuse monthly periods, accompanied&#13;
by unusual pain, from the&#13;
abdomen through the groin and thighs.&#13;
If yon have mysterious pains, if there&#13;
are indications of inflammation or displacement,&#13;
secure a bottle of Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound right&#13;
away and begin its use.&#13;
Mrs. Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass., will&#13;
give you her advice if yon will write&#13;
her about yourself. She is the daughter-&#13;
in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham and&#13;
for twenty-five years has been advising&#13;
sick women free of charge.&#13;
Deaf Mr*. Pinkham:—&#13;
" I take the liberty to congratulate you on&#13;
tiie success I have had with yoar wonderful&#13;
medicine. Eighteen months ago my periodsatopped.&#13;
Shortly after I felt so badly that&#13;
I submitted to a thorough examination by a&#13;
physician and was told that I had a tumor&#13;
and would have to undergo an operation.&#13;
•' Soon after I read one of your advertisementa&#13;
and decided to give Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound a trial Aftertaxing&#13;
five bottles as directed the tumor is&#13;
entirety gone. I have been examined by a&#13;
physician and be says I have no signs of a&#13;
tumor now. It has also brought my periods&#13;
around once more, and I am entirely&#13;
well."—Fannie D. Fox, 7 Chestnut Street*&#13;
Bradford, Pa.&#13;
You CANNOT CURE all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con*&#13;
ditions of the mucous membrane such as&#13;
nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused&#13;
by feminine Mis, sore throat, sore&#13;
mouth or inflamed eyes by simply&#13;
dosing the stomach.&#13;
But you surely can care these stubborn&#13;
affections by local treatment with&#13;
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic&#13;
which destroys the disease germs,checks"&#13;
discharges, stops pain, and heals the,&#13;
inflammation and soreness.&#13;
Paxtine represents the most successful&#13;
local treatment for feminine ills ever&#13;
produced. Thousands of women testify&#13;
j to this fact. 50 cents at druggists.&#13;
' Send for Free Trial Box&#13;
, THE R. PAXTON CO*.&#13;
Spreading India's Fisheries.&#13;
India is learning a lesson from&#13;
Japan, where fish ekes out the agricultural&#13;
situation. There, ten per&#13;
cent, of the population are engaged in&#13;
the fisheries industry, as against one&#13;
per cent, in India, where all the fishing&#13;
is still done within six miles of&#13;
the shore, and in the most primitive&#13;
manner.&#13;
When the landlord has the rent in&#13;
his pocket he's apt to forget about the&#13;
rent in the roof.&#13;
37,500,000&#13;
PEOPLE DIE EACH YEAR&#13;
la the United States, alone, more than a million&#13;
die yearly from preventable diseases,&#13;
GOOD HEALTH&#13;
tells why these startling facts exist GOOD&#13;
HJEALTn is the oldest lieahh journal in the&#13;
world, a big handsomely illustrated and a-bly&#13;
edited magazine for the home. The price is one&#13;
dollar a year. Single copies ten cents.&#13;
Send twenty-five cents and this advertisement&#13;
for a trial three months' subscription.&#13;
GOOD HEALTH PUBLISHING COMPANY.&#13;
B A T T U E C R S K K , M I C K .&#13;
KDrCATIOSAL,&#13;
DODDS&#13;
KIDNEY&#13;
* ? - . p , L L S&#13;
- V U . D N E V ^ .&#13;
' * u r T C S r -&#13;
w. N. u* DETROIT, NO. 35, itot.&#13;
The Grtstt* Baardisg CoOcgc is th« Werld&#13;
University of&#13;
Notre Dame&#13;
NOTRE DAME, INDIANA&#13;
W* fM*rmutt* tw finii: Our ttmUntt&#13;
ttudy «*d 0*r tttuUtUs btkav* t/umstbts&#13;
Is Besavss 75 rniMMit Sea Staetsts&#13;
{CUho, unHt*i sltao rAy,a a*aJ«daSte momoXo mMtaoad,w C*b l—aaitgatui-arg. wBt.o Blo*cay&gt;,&#13;
• n i W . •rekitaetara, Law, Steorttaad, Boot&#13;
Uf.Tyaa.wrmaa:. sracuLPuCsaPaAaR TTOttngtrTrs arifo a SOTS TlaUSi B*af4 TaMa*, mi&#13;
-%KC*a*at»*»~&#13;
lENSION JOlOfW.ltO]&#13;
U.S.1&#13;
\&#13;
1:&#13;
•r&#13;
• .-,&#13;
• . * i&#13;
t •&#13;
•i&#13;
\&#13;
V&#13;
Star f incknty Dispatch&#13;
;*'-.&#13;
fc.'&#13;
4&#13;
i**&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS &lt;&amp; CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 190f&gt;&#13;
A G r e a t Offer.&#13;
FARM J O U R N A L a n i the DISPATCH&#13;
F a r m J o u r n a , 5 y e a r s . . . . 7 5&#13;
Dispatch, 1 year 1.00&#13;
B O T H f o r $ 1 . 0 0&#13;
By sp^eiHl arrangement with the&#13;
publishers of the FARM .JOURNAL&#13;
(Philadelphia) we are enabled to offer&#13;
ponh papers for $1.00 to every new&#13;
adrarwe paying subscriber and to&#13;
every eld «nhRrriher who payg-Jh ad&#13;
vance. the DISPATCH one year and the&#13;
T A R M J O U R N A L '5"" years, both'&#13;
papers for $1.00. the price of ours&#13;
alone.&#13;
The FARM J O U R N A L is 29 years&#13;
old and enjoys great popularity, adapted&#13;
to and circulating in every state,&#13;
and is one of the most useful, interest&#13;
i n g and trustworthy farm papers&#13;
published. This offer should be accent&#13;
ed without delay, as it only holds for&#13;
a limited time.&#13;
In this state it is not nece»arv to&#13;
serve a hve days' notice tor eviction ol&#13;
.a. cold. LTse t h e original laxative&#13;
cough syrup, Kennedy's Laxative&#13;
Honey and Tar. No opiates.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Drnggliit&#13;
Exco i sion to Toronto via&#13;
Grand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Single tare plus 25 aents, toi the&#13;
round trip, from Michigan points&#13;
(except Detroit and Port Huron), going&#13;
dates Aug. 26 to Sept. 5, inclusive;&#13;
return limit Sept. 11, 1906. For fur&#13;
ther particulars consult local agents or&#13;
wiit« to Geo. W. Vaux, A. G. P. k T&#13;
A.. 135 AdainscSt , Chicago, 111. t 36&#13;
COSTLY COAL.&#13;
f » m « F a r W h i c h t h e I ' n l t e d S t a t * *&#13;
Fulil Ipso u T o n .&#13;
"The civil war led to the establishment&#13;
of a lot of little private coaling&#13;
Stations all over the worl.l by thrifty&#13;
persons who hoped Hint Uncle Sam's&#13;
ships might come that way about the&#13;
time that tboy m-&lt;?cle&lt;l eon I real bad,"&#13;
said an old naval official. "The old&#13;
Varlilerbilt in 18(12 had an exuerience&#13;
Of that sort. She was looking for the&#13;
Alabama like a good many more of the&#13;
Federal ships, and she came to 8t.&#13;
Helena just about the rime that she&#13;
was out of coal. The o t h e r s were delighted&#13;
to see a red headed Scotchman&#13;
sitting on a coal pile on the d ^ k , and&#13;
they at once oixmod up negotiations&#13;
with him. He demanded $H0 a ton&#13;
gold, and as the rate of exchange was&#13;
then $2.85 this made the price $S0 a&#13;
ton of Uncle Sam's money.&#13;
"The officers protested and refused&#13;
to take the coal: They put to sea, hoping&#13;
to reach another port before their&#13;
stock gave out, but after a run of a&#13;
few hours the weather began to get&#13;
nasty, and there was nothing for it but&#13;
to put back and buy 1.000 tons of the&#13;
Scotchman's coal.&#13;
"He said that he liked the United&#13;
States and sympathized with the north&#13;
In the war. but he had been sitting on&#13;
that coal pile for a long time waiting&#13;
for an American ship to come along.&#13;
and sympathy didu't buy things."—&#13;
New York Times.&#13;
A Mystery Solved.&#13;
' H o w to keep of periodic attacks of&#13;
biliousness and habitual constipation&#13;
was a im&gt;lery that Dr. King's New&#13;
Lite Pills solved tor me," writes J o h n&#13;
N Pleasant, of Magnolia, Ind. The&#13;
only pills that, are guaranteed to gjve&#13;
perfect satisfaction to everybody or&#13;
money refunded. Only 25c at F. A.&#13;
Sigler's dru ' store.&#13;
Thomas J. Allen&#13;
Requests your support for the office of&#13;
STATE SENATOR&#13;
For the 18th Sepatorial district,&#13;
including Geneesee and Livingston,&#13;
counties.&#13;
Primary Election Tuesday, Sept. 4 1906&#13;
Don't drag along'with a dull, billious,&#13;
heavy feeling. You need a pill.&#13;
Use DeNYitt's Little Eany l\ise s, the&#13;
famous little pill*. ^ not sicken&#13;
or gripe, but results are sure.&#13;
Sold by T. A. Slgler, Druggist.&#13;
ODDITIES OF AUTHQRS.&#13;
Get a 5 cent box of Lax ets at our&#13;
store please. We think they are great.&#13;
J u s t test these tooth-some, candy like&#13;
Laxative Tablets lor constipation, sour i&#13;
stomach, biliousness, bad breath, mud- '&#13;
' i&#13;
dy complexion, etc. Risk 5 cents and ]&#13;
see. Sold by all dealers. j&#13;
Low Rates West yia&#13;
Chicago tireat Western Railway&#13;
For lowest rates to all points west&#13;
write to F. R. Mosier, D. P. A., 10:1&#13;
Adams St., Chicago, III., stating how&#13;
many in party and when going, t 38&#13;
•A tyord of t r u t h ir. a. few word&gt;:&#13;
"Nearly all other cough, cures are&#13;
constipating, especially those containi&#13;
n g opiates. Kennedy's Laxative&#13;
Honey and Tar moves th* bowels.&#13;
Container no opiate*."&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Druggist.&#13;
Northern Resort Excursion August 80&#13;
On August 30 the Ann Arbor Kailroad&#13;
will give its annual excursion to&#13;
the following Michigan resorts:&#13;
Petoskey, Bay View, Mackinac, Beu&#13;
lab, Frankfort, Charlevoix, Traverse&#13;
City, Ludington*. Elk Rapids and&#13;
Manistee.&#13;
Special train will leave Lakeland at&#13;
9:03 a . m . Fare to .all points .except&#13;
Mackinac Island $5.00 Mackinac&#13;
Island will be one dollar higher.&#13;
Tickets will be good until September&#13;
8.&#13;
L i t e r a r y LfffhtM W l i o W e r e C o p a p l e -&#13;
uotm b y T h e i r A t t i r e .&#13;
In telling of the various means of&#13;
self advertisement adopted by certain&#13;
authors a critic says that Alexandre&#13;
Dumas, tlie elder, delighted to appear&#13;
la the uniform of the national guard of&#13;
France, with medals pinned to his&#13;
breast, though It is doubtful whether&#13;
his motive was anything deeper than a&#13;
vain childish delight In gauds. 'Tie&#13;
was tfie sort of man," one of his enemies&#13;
once remarked, "who was capable&#13;
of riding behind his own carriage in&#13;
order to prove .that he kept a negro in&#13;
his service."&#13;
A certain literary person once appeared&#13;
In the stalls of a London thea&#13;
ter wearing a Jeweled brooch In his&#13;
long hair, but be was anticipated in&#13;
thi« respect by Theophile Gautler,&#13;
whose many colored waistcoat was always*&#13;
the most conspicuous object hi&#13;
any theater which he entered, and even&#13;
by Disraeli, with his rings outside his&#13;
gloves and his green trousers.&#13;
It is stild that M. Paul Hourget also&#13;
wore green trousers when he was a&#13;
denizen of the Latin quarter, but that&#13;
was iu the days of poverty and early&#13;
struggles, and perhaps he had no oth&#13;
era.&#13;
Why does the &gt;un bnrny Wiry does&#13;
a mosquito sttnc V1 -Why do we teel&#13;
unhappy in the ycod "id summer&#13;
time? Answer: we d&lt; n't We use&#13;
F)eWitt's Wituh Hazel Salve, and&#13;
these little ills don't bother u». Learn&#13;
to Ivok for the name on the k s . r o get&#13;
the genuine.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
A custom has prevailed in t! is.&#13;
district, fcr many years, under&#13;
which the Candidate for state senator&#13;
is chosen from each legislative&#13;
district in this senatorial r&#13;
district in t u r n . The candidate&#13;
was chosen fram the first district&#13;
of Genessee county last term, and&#13;
under the rule should be chosen&#13;
Irom the second district of Oene&gt;-&#13;
see county this term.&#13;
The above is copied from the Flint&#13;
Journal. In addition we wish to say&#13;
in behalf of Livingston "ounty that&#13;
under the above custom lias regularly&#13;
every third term nominated a state&#13;
senator for this district. We believe&#13;
it to be lor the best interest of this&#13;
senatorial district and particularly in&#13;
the interest of hannony that Mr.&#13;
Allen should be nominated. We fail to&#13;
see the for^e of the ai gum ?nt, that Dr.&#13;
R u m e r should be given a second Term&#13;
in as much as he knew when nominated&#13;
and elected two years ago th .t&#13;
it was a one term office, and probably&#13;
know*, that no senator from tin- senatorial&#13;
district has had two terms in&#13;
twenty-five yeors. Dr. Rumer should&#13;
be satisfied with his term and then&#13;
step aside and wait until tlie nomination&#13;
comes to his district We think&#13;
the sentiment o\ the Republicans of&#13;
this county will be d»videdlv along&#13;
these line's, for the reason that under&#13;
the argument this nominaticn goes to&#13;
the second Legislative District el&#13;
Genessee county, and Mr. Alien is&#13;
the only candidate from that district.&#13;
His friends m that district expect him&#13;
to receive the hearty siippoit ot' th*1&#13;
Repuh'icarfs &lt;&gt;' this coitnfv and in&#13;
i return will supoort ihi- tPtintie'&lt;&#13;
candidate mxt term&#13;
60 YEARS*&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
-. Galveston's Sea Wall&#13;
makes life now as sate in that city as&#13;
on thu higher uplands. E. W. Good&#13;
ioe, who resides on Dulton St., iu&#13;
Waco, Tex.,, needs no s e a / w a l l lor&#13;
salrty. He .vrites: "I have used Dr.&#13;
iving's New Discovery fur consuiup&#13;
t;ou the past tiv ; \ e a t s and it keeps&#13;
me well and sale. B.etote that time I&#13;
bad a eon till wire!: for yea«&gt; had been&#13;
growing worse. N ox it's t o n e . '&#13;
d u e s chronic coughs, la grippe, croup&#13;
whooping cou»h and prevent- pneumonia&#13;
I'leisurt to take. Kvei&gt;&#13;
bottle guaranteed at F. A. Sn/lec's&#13;
drug stoie l;i-i'-e f&gt;0.- and $ 1 0 0 .&#13;
Trial bo*: !e fi ••&gt;•.&#13;
The Signs of&#13;
Heart Trouble&#13;
Too can Sorely Secure Heart Health&#13;
and Strength through Dr. Snoop's&#13;
Restorative.&#13;
^ oT rP $ •&#13;
H e a r t weakness which can be dealt w i t h at&#13;
all Is nerve weakness, J ust as your bund trembles&#13;
when its nerves are weak, when your heart&#13;
nerves are weak your heart flutters und palpitates.&#13;
Other aitfus are shortness of breath utter&#13;
alight exercise; fuintiiitf spells; pain or tenderness&#13;
about the heart caused by irregular heart&#13;
action; choklnn sensa A t i o n as if the heart was&#13;
in the throat; uneasy&#13;
chest. Bhowintr that&#13;
w o r k i n g right;&#13;
o n o n e s i d e —&#13;
s i d e , but fre&#13;
right, painful&#13;
b r e a t h i n g ;&#13;
f e e l i n g .&#13;
Bolutely on&#13;
t o t r e a t a&#13;
T h a t i a t o&#13;
n a t u r a l a n&#13;
s t r e n g t h to its&#13;
imagine how anydone?&#13;
Dr. Snoop's&#13;
b r i n g b a c k t h&#13;
heart nerves always&#13;
t h i s remedy to stimu&#13;
aysTW^ Thi&#13;
&gt;&lt;m&lt;.Jr lata&#13;
s e n s a t i o n in the&#13;
t h e ^ h e u r t I s n ' t&#13;
pain when you lie&#13;
usually the left&#13;
q u e n 11 y the&#13;
a n d difficult&#13;
s m o t h e r e d&#13;
There is ably&#13;
one w a y&#13;
weak heart,&#13;
b r i n g b a c k&#13;
c r m a n e n t&#13;
nerves. Can you&#13;
thin* else can be&#13;
Restorative w i l l&#13;
t r e n i f h t o t h e&#13;
There is nothing in&#13;
late ; nothing t h a t&#13;
leads to reaction. T h e strength that i t gives i s&#13;
natural and permanent. It is just the s a m e&#13;
strength as Nature g i v e s to those who are well.&#13;
Dr. Snoop's R e s t o r a t i v e (Tablets or Liquid)&#13;
creates strength which extends over the whole&#13;
inside nerve system—it overcomes the cause&#13;
of t h e trouble as well as t h e result. Sold by&#13;
"ALL DEALERS."&#13;
KG&#13;
tK-,&#13;
•sjsssa Cure&#13;
&gt;"»»* you ©at*&#13;
When a woman suffers from depressing&#13;
weaknesses, she then keenly&#13;
realizes how helpless—how thoroughly&#13;
worthless she is. Dr. Shoop has&#13;
brought relief to thousands of such&#13;
women. He reaches diseases peculiar&#13;
to women in two, direct, specific ways&#13;
—a local treatment known by druggists&#13;
everywhere as Dr. Shoop's Night&#13;
Cure, and a constitutional or internal&#13;
prescription called Dr. Sboon's Restorative.&#13;
Dr. Shoop's Night Cure is applied&#13;
locally, and at night. It works&#13;
wfcite you sleep. It reduces inflammatftOB,&#13;
it stops discharges, it heals, it&#13;
• M t t o s , it comforts, it cures.&#13;
Dr. Sboop's Restorative (tablet or&#13;
liquid form) is a constitutional, nerve&#13;
tissue tonic. It brings renewed&#13;
ft'rengtb, lasting ambiticn and vigor&#13;
to weak, lifeless women.&#13;
These two remedies, singly, or nsed&#13;
together, have an irresistible, positive&#13;
belpfal power. T r y tbem a m o n t h&#13;
t o d see. Sold by ali dealers.&#13;
F i n h n k l n L a n t e r n s ,&#13;
The puffer or swell risli Luis'the power&#13;
to distend itself with air into the shape&#13;
of a jrlobe. Japanese living iu the Hawaiian&#13;
Islands make of the skin of the&#13;
big puffer fotuul In Hawaiian waters&#13;
an odd and grotesque lantern. When&#13;
the skin of the big puffer has been tirst&#13;
removed while it Is still soft it is stuffed&#13;
out to its full size in globe shape&#13;
ami so loft to dry. The skin is not&#13;
murh thl-ker than paper and translucent&#13;
brown on the upper part and gray&#13;
below. The iins are preserved and dried&#13;
sticking out from tho tish. the tail bein.&#13;
cr perked up at an angle. A circular&#13;
opening 13 made in the baek, through&#13;
which the licht r a n - b e placed and in&#13;
which is set horizontally a hoop or rim&#13;
by which the lantern cau be suspended.&#13;
Such a lantern made of a big puffer's&#13;
skill may be a foot iu diameter crosswise&#13;
and fifteen inches in length, and&#13;
what with the head of the fish appearing&#13;
at &lt;mo e:id and the perked up tail&#13;
at the other and the fins projecting at&#13;
the sides this fish skin lantern makes a&#13;
very curious object—New York Herald&#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 Is probably patentable. Coromnnipa-&#13;
- - tla&#13;
XPai&#13;
Co. receive&#13;
tsieonnt t fsrterei.c tOlyl dcaosntf iadgeennticayl . foHrA NseDcBuOnOnKg jo&gt;na Pteanttesn. t*&#13;
Patents taken th rough BJunn A&#13;
tpteial notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A banrtsorrfely Illustrated weekty. largest drculatlou&#13;
of any scientific In urn a). Terms, | 3 m&#13;
year; four months, f L Sold by all newsdealers.&#13;
MUNN &amp; Co.36,B'"-«' New York&#13;
Branch Office, 625 F St* Washington, D. C.&#13;
^, : A woman worries until she gets&#13;
wrinkle*, then worries because she&#13;
has them. If she takes Hollister'8&#13;
Rocky Mountain Tea she Would have&#13;
neither. Hrigit, smiling face follows&#13;
its use :J5 cents, tea or tablets. Ask&#13;
your druggist.&#13;
Subscribe for t h * Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
Digest* what you eat*&#13;
Q T A T K of MICHIGAN; The Prolate Court tor&#13;
OKi« County rf J.ivii gst^u. At a se.-^ion of&#13;
j-aid Cou-t. helil at the Probate Office in the Village&#13;
of HONHII, in saiil county, on the ;J0th day of&#13;
Aiii»u»t, A, I). 19CHV&#13;
l're*itit: AKTIICR A. MoST.\&lt;.rK, Jml.;e oT&#13;
Prohati-. In tlic matter &lt;»f fhf t-xtitte of&#13;
( i K o K i i H I T . R l T I . K K , &lt;li&gt;cea!*f«fl.&#13;
Amanila Bntl«T having lilvd in saiil court ht?r&#13;
petition nraying that a crrtain instnimont in&#13;
writing, i'iir|.ortln^ to li&gt;-tl&gt;e last will ami testament&#13;
ami codesL of .-.aiil decea*pil a n * on tile in&#13;
said court be admitted to probftt.- and that the adrainidl&#13;
ration of said i-statc~\&gt;v yiantfil m 1 wi&gt;;hi&#13;
Butler and Daniel S. Thomas or to some other&#13;
suitable P-.TSU n&#13;
Itie ordered that the 14th day «&gt;f :?cpt., A. 1).&#13;
J90tt, at ten o'clnck in the forenrxin. at oairt probate&#13;
office, he and is hereby appointed l o r hearing&#13;
said petition:&#13;
It it further ordered that puhlle notice thereof&#13;
be 8ive?» by publication of a eopy of this &lt;&gt;rde'r,&#13;
for three :mrceftsiv&lt;* weeks previ.oim to said day of&#13;
bearin/, In tne PINCKNKV DISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated In said county.&#13;
Art liar A* Montague&#13;
Mft Jitdce of Probate&#13;
O e W H V s VSSt Salwa&#13;
F T PM—, Burwi, tsrsti&#13;
DR. PIERCE'S&#13;
Malted Cocoa The Coooa with&#13;
a Delicate Flaw*&#13;
MAI,TF.I&gt;COO&gt;A is prepared by&#13;
ally coin!&gt;inir,;j;1lR;cucuaoE the cbo4o«sT*&#13;
cocoa bean and the best of malt* Tioemalt&#13;
aiding digestion, andthefatottfcrtf&#13;
cocoa having been predigested, thel&#13;
feeling of heaviness experienced after!&#13;
drinking theordinary cocoas isavoided;!&#13;
thus a mo.^t dc licious ?»d nouri^hingl&#13;
1» e&lt;;iage is prvv.aced, which is &gt;&#13;
fectly pure and will not distress the&#13;
most delicate stomach.&#13;
J-ur sate by your dealer.&#13;
KERR'S&#13;
Malted Extract&#13;
OF TOMATO One teaspoonfhl to a c o p of boiling w a t e r&#13;
makes a delicious Bouillon.&#13;
l o r sale by your dealer. Prepared by&#13;
WJ L LI AAA B._ K ER R,&#13;
CURES&#13;
RHEUMATISM&#13;
LUMB180, SCIATICA&#13;
NEURAL8IA and&#13;
KIDNEY TROUBLE "5-DI0K" tiken internally, rids the blood&#13;
of tne poisonous matter and acids which&#13;
are the direct causes of these diseases.&#13;
Applied externally it affords almost instant&#13;
relief from pain, while a permanent&#13;
cure Is being effected by purifying the&#13;
blood, dissolving the poisonous substance&#13;
and removing it from the system.&#13;
DR. fc. D.BLAND&#13;
Of Brcwton, Gsw, write*J&#13;
"I had twra a lufferAr for • number of y e a n '&#13;
with Lumbago and Hkuumatlsta In my Mini&#13;
and l«ga,aiid tried all the remedlM t h a t ! oonld&#13;
gather from medloaJ worts, and also conaultod&#13;
* ltb a number of the bMt phyalelant, but found&#13;
notkntr (tot • * * • * • relief obtained from&#13;
"s-DRok." I ahaJI pretcribe It In my MStVl ne&#13;
for rheumatUnj «nd kindred dUeat—• . FREE If you are suffering with Rheumatism, I&#13;
Neuralgia, Kldrey TtovMe T any kin-1&#13;
i,-adh)ea3e. nr te to us »r» ffialbottle&#13;
of "5-DROPS." And test t yoarself.&#13;
'S-DROPS" can be used any length of&#13;
time without acQuirlng a "drug habit."&#13;
as it is entirely free of opium, cocaine,&#13;
alcohol, laudanum, and other similar&#13;
ingredients.&#13;
Large SUe Bottle, ••5.DUOP8»(«00 Doeee)&#13;
91.UD. F O F Sale by i&gt;raggiet*.&#13;
SWANS0N RHEUMATIC OURE 60MMIY, |&#13;
l&gt;ept. HO. 1 6 0 Lake Street, Chicago*&#13;
s~~&#13;
THE OilLV ei.&#13;
• ^ ^ - J t &gt; * ^ &amp; ^ -WMt^lK -e*H&#13;
Stencil W&#13;
rv: ad ford, Boston, Mass.&#13;
It is &lt;'ornpact, can 1* cm i cd • -. -il &gt;. nn I al1.&#13;
tb&gt;- ujn'ratyr to Kau^'c tlie 4iu.»utity of Ink desi:&#13;
SAVES T I M E . SAVES INK.&#13;
KM'P* finishes urA ink -whore you want tlipm. uul&#13;
i s ; ^,kys K i ; . U ) Y 1 OK I X S T A N T I S E ,&#13;
A pcrlcrt coinbl!ialionisol&gt;tni:nci.l when&#13;
WHITE'S''WATERPROOF STEROL INK&#13;
:•! ••• •.!. It ts easily aiu&gt;licd ami M-t^ ".oackly. Ko&#13;
L:iu.t or fartinj,'.&#13;
G;&lt;ES BRUSHES, SAVES STENCILS, SAVES TIME.&#13;
1'•* •« Ti'.' liiirilcn bnislic-&lt; or olri+t atpTvi!^. !&gt;on't&#13;
l- . &gt;.!.r \\ out lor it, T E S T I T . Ma.ic ui.ly by&#13;
Sr Ar WH4TE C O , , _&#13;
! S 5 H i g h S t . , B o s t o n , M a s s . U . S . A .&#13;
" J - . . \ ^ « i &gt; i t i n l . &lt; i n i- U;r i'if kef]M-:s at' I'rn:u&gt;J "—Pv. side:.: McKi;&#13;
The 57th&#13;
Michigan State Fair&#13;
DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
^L.\xgr- 3 0 t o S e p t . V ir^ClULSlTr(&#13;
H e l d in t h e new 140 a c r e F a i r G r o u n d P a r k with m o ;&#13;
a n d b e t t e r b u i l d i n g s for all e x h i b i t s . D i s p l a y s ..{' pr;&gt;.&#13;
d u c t s f r o m all c o u n t i e s . F i i i d , 8 h o w i n y of l i \ e st&lt;vk &lt;»f&#13;
all w o r t h y b r e e d s . 18 trot-tint? a n d p a c i n g . • n»c*^ on l i i -&#13;
, n e w m i l e c o u r s e . S p e c i a l , M o n t a n a l a d i e s ' r i d i n g m r , s ,&#13;
K n a b e n s l i n a n d hi8 airshi[). L e j ; a r e a n d his iiift^i.-hl&#13;
tower. I n n e s ' lifted o r c h e s t r a l b a n d . P R I M ' S f&gt;rofus»'&#13;
fireworksevery e v e n i n g . M i r t h a n d folly on " T h e ( r l a d e "&#13;
W i l l i n t e r e s t y o u ! F l a n t o a t t e n d !&#13;
A S i n g l e P a r e on t h e S t r e e t C a r&#13;
G e t a You T h e r e&#13;
FRKD POSTAL. 1'n.si.h-ni • I. II. I'.rTTKKl'l Kl.h, s.,.,,.,&#13;
T h e B e s t P a i r ! T h e G r e a t e s t&#13;
:i i v&#13;
Fair!&#13;
W*** BUY THE FAMOUS Lincoln Steel Range!&#13;
THE BEST! J W M M .&#13;
S«t4 »««nrwlMr* , .&#13;
COSTS NO MORE THAN AN UNKNOWN MAKE.&#13;
Before you buy that range or cook stove,&#13;
write us, and we will mail you a .copy of&#13;
"Points for Purchaser*"&#13;
It is free for the asking. Full of useful information.&#13;
THE LIWmH.ll STOVE &gt; MUBE COMPMy, Frintit, Olio.&#13;
r&#13;
ml*&#13;
mmq*&#13;
: • &gt; ' !&#13;
In Self Defence&#13;
Major Hamm, editor and manager of&#13;
the Constitutionalist, Eminence, Ky ,&#13;
when he was fiercely attacked, four&#13;
years ago, by piles, bought a box of&#13;
BuckWe Arnica Salve, of which he&#13;
says: "It cared me in ten days and no&#13;
trouble since." Quickest healer of&#13;
barns, sores, cuts and wouuds. 25&lt;;&#13;
at F. A. Sitfler'ts drutf store.&#13;
valine O H M &gt;&#13;
There is a false modesty, wWch i s&#13;
faulty; a false glory, which is levity; a&#13;
false grandeur, which is meanness; a&#13;
false virtue, which is hypocrisy, a n d a&#13;
false wisdom, which*is prudery,—Bruyere.&#13;
Laughter Is day, and sobriety is&#13;
night;; a sinUo Is the twilight that hovers&#13;
gently between both, moi-i- bewitch&#13;
Ing thau either.—H. \V. Beeehor.&#13;
THE&#13;
'•*fcV&#13;
FURNACE&#13;
The End Of T o e World&#13;
of troubles that robbed E , H. W o l f e ,&#13;
ot Hear' Grove, l a . , ot all usefulness,&#13;
c a m e when he began taking Electric&#13;
Bitters. He w r i t e s : " T w o years a g o&#13;
kidney t r c u b i e caused me great suffering,&#13;
which I would never have sur*&#13;
v:ved bad 1 not taken Electric Bitters.&#13;
They also cured me of general debility.'&#13;
1 S u r e cure to** all stomach, liver&#13;
*nd kidney c o m p l a i n t s , blood diseases,&#13;
headache, dizziness a n d weakness or&#13;
bodily decline. ' F*rice 50c. G u a r a n -&#13;
f't««d at F . A. S i l l e r ' s dru« store.&#13;
Careful Antltie.&#13;
&lt;rybu will never see your Aunt Maria&#13;
again until y o u get to heaven,** a little&#13;
girl w a s solemnly told by her mother&#13;
the other day, according t o the- London&#13;
Globe. "Will she ask me t o wipe&#13;
my feet?" w a s her only response. It&#13;
throws a flood of light on Aunt Maria's&#13;
character and history. ?&#13;
is the best thing w e&#13;
ever made and we've&#13;
been making furnaces thirty-three~year*. It i s S o l i d S t e e l —&#13;
every joint riveted. Never leaks. H a s lined casing, chain&#13;
regulation, evaporating pan, etc. Burns a n y fuel economically.&#13;
Made in six sizes; powerful a n d durable,&#13;
WE SELL DIRECT TO CONSUMERS.&#13;
and save y o u dealers' profits, ^ n d for full 40 page b o o *&#13;
which fully describes our goods and our maker-tO-USei"&#13;
method of selling. We can save y o u money in buying and&#13;
fuel in using. Your name on a postal card, please.&#13;
HESS W A R M I N G &amp; V E N T I L A T I N G COMPANY,&#13;
021 Tacoma B u i l d i n g , Chicago, Ills*&#13;
* £ J F&#13;
msaii&#13;
ARIGOCELE CURED&#13;
**- N O N A M E S U S E D T V F T H O C T W R I T T E N C O N S E N T .&#13;
Confined to Has Home for Weeks.&#13;
V2^&#13;
•JS&amp;j m&#13;
V!&#13;
'jand skillful.&#13;
imcnl f &gt;r me,&#13;
1¾&#13;
•v-V 'fAw&#13;
"Heavy work, severe straining and, evil habits In youth b o u g h t&#13;
on a doubte varicocele. When I worked hard the achmg^would&#13;
become severe and I w a s olten laid up for a- week at a time.&#13;
My 'amlly physician to d me an operation w a s my onli noP6"-&#13;
but I dreaded It I tried several s o c i a l i s t s , but soon found out&#13;
a n Ju&gt; wanted w a s my money. I commenced to look upon a l l&#13;
doctu s as little better than rogues. One d a y my boss asked .me&#13;
\ I w^s off work EO much and I told h i m my "condition. He&#13;
• • d ^ to consult Drs. K e n e d y and Kergan, as h e - h a d&#13;
" " . a t m e n t from them himself and k n e w they were square&#13;
Hf wrote them and got the N e w Method Trc.iti&#13;
l v progress w a s somewhat slow and dwrlng the&#13;
tlr--t m - n t h ' s treatment I w a s somewhat discouraged. Hnweyor,&#13;
('-jV'nurJ treatment for throe months longer and w a s rewarded&#13;
v 1-, a romp"to cure. I foul.l only earn 512 a m In a machine&#13;
1,,'ore triatrru-nt, :iuw 1 am rarning «21 and never lose a&#13;
v 1 ' . ;. h all sufferers know vf your v ^ ^ J L O C U S T&#13;
HAS YOUR BLOOD BEEN DISEASED?&#13;
^ ^ e ^ l ^ t i ! e % ^ ^ ' T C a a r e a n t T r ^ S a . K i h ? « . t S S&#13;
the very life b' •-_l ^ , ^ ' . ^ ^ i o n s . Howare of Mercury. It only suppresses the&#13;
v.i-itc for an h..jvst .virion Fr •• »f f n a r t - LOOKS F R E E Tne uoiaen&#13;
inr" CTlUis-trit.Jl. on p l e a s e s of Men. „ « . . « . . « , — »,&#13;
N O N A M E S U S E D W I T H O C T W R s T T E N C O N S E N T . " ^ J J J J J ; t - ¾&#13;
- i . i m e s o n l i M M f . r f n v r l o i M 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 l i s t a n d&#13;
&lt;•-.', t o f t r e a t m e n t FK'.:i5 f o r H o m e T r c a t a i e u t . DRJ KENNEDY&amp; KERGAN&#13;
Cor. Mich. Ave. and Shelby St., Detroit, Mich*&#13;
K . \\&#13;
i. . * BIQQLE A Farm Library&#13;
of unequalled value.&#13;
P r a c t i c a l , Up to&#13;
date, Concise and&#13;
Comprehensive.&#13;
Handsomely Printed and&#13;
Beautifully Illustrated.&#13;
BY JACOB BIQQLE BOOKS&#13;
No- 1 - B I G Q L E HORSE BOOK&#13;
All ah t Horses—a Common-souse Treatise, with mora)&#13;
than 74 illustrations : a M.uulanl svoik. \'w~- •"*&gt; r&gt;nt«.&#13;
^&#13;
•/*&#13;
No. 2 - B I Q G L E BERRY BOOK&#13;
All about growing Small Fruits—read and learn h o w .&#13;
Beautiful colored plates. Price, .V) Cents.&#13;
No. 3 - B I Q Q L B POULTRY BOOK&#13;
All about Poultry; the best Poultry Book in existence;&#13;
tells everything. Profusely illustrated. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 4 - B 1 G Q L E COW BOOK&#13;
All ahotit Cows and the Dairy Business; new edition.'&#13;
Colored plates. Sound Common-sense. P: ice, 60 Cents.&#13;
No. 5 - B I G G L E S W I N E BOOK&#13;
All about Hogs—Breeding, Feeding, Butchciy. Diseases,&#13;
etc.. .Covers the whole ground. Price, 60 Cents.&#13;
No. 6 - B I G G L E HEALTH BOOK&#13;
Gives remedies and up-to-date information. A household&#13;
necessity. Extremely practical. Price, oO Cents.&#13;
No. 7-BIGGLE PET BOOK&#13;
For the boys and girls particularly. Pels of all kinds and&#13;
how to care for them. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 8 - B U 3 G L E S H E E P BOOK&#13;
Covers the whole ground. Every page full of good ad*&#13;
vice. Sheep men praise it, Pi ice, 50 Cents. Farm Journal&#13;
is your paper, made for you and not a misfit. It is 129 vears&#13;
ol.i; it is the great boiled-down, •hit-the-nail-on-the-head,&#13;
quit-after-you-have-said-it Farm and Household paper in the&#13;
world—the biggest paper of its s i / e in the Cnitod States of&#13;
America—having more than T h r e e M i l l i o n regular readers.&#13;
A n y ONE of t h e BIOOLR B O O K S , a n d t h e F A R M&#13;
J O U R N A L 5 Y E A R S (remainder of 1i&gt;0fi, and all of 1907,190»,&#13;
1909 and 1910), sent hv msrtl to anv address for A DOLLAR BILL.&#13;
Sample of F A R M J O U R N A L «nd circular describing B1QGLE B O O K S , free.&#13;
W I L M B R A T K I N S O N C O . .&#13;
P T B L I S H F R S OF FARM JOURNAL. P H I L A D E L P H I A .&#13;
CUSTOM MADE LY SCREENS Our work i s far superior to the usual output of local mills, and lias a style ami&#13;
finish not obtainable from those who do not make a specialty of screens. Send&#13;
ua sizes of doors and windows. We guarantee a fit.&#13;
For outsido Screens w e use the identical finish of the outside-of Pullman Cars.&#13;
The best grade of Wire Cloth:—enameled, galvanized genuine bronze, etc.,&#13;
fastened by tacks or b y the "lockstrip " process.&#13;
Intendingtpurchasers may have, free by mnit, samples of woods, finishes&#13;
and wire cloth and copy of catalog and price list. Agencies in many cities.&#13;
Special terms t o contractors and builders.&#13;
A. J * P H I t t f P S COMPANY, Fen t o n , M i c h i g a n .&#13;
ai.*Amf**tFi—eS/&gt;*o:&#13;
Uavrdeat Water.&#13;
The Rev. Samuel Peters w a s the man&#13;
who made Connecticut's blue l a w s fa&#13;
mous by their publication in bis history&#13;
of that state. I n that Interesting&#13;
volume the following original bit of&#13;
natural history is t o be found: "In t h e&#13;
Connecticut river, 200 miles from Long&#13;
Island sound, is a narrow of five yards&#13;
only, formed b y t w o shelving moun&#13;
tains of solid rocc, whose tof s intercept&#13;
the clouds. Through this chasm&#13;
are compelled to pass all the waters&#13;
which In the time of floods bury the&#13;
northern country. Here water Is consolidated&#13;
without frost, by pressure,&#13;
by swiftness, between the pinching,&#13;
sturdy rocks to such a degree of induration&#13;
tbat an iron c r o w floats smoothly&#13;
d o w n its current. Here Iron, lead&#13;
and cork have o n e common weight;&#13;
here, steady a s time and harder, than&#13;
marble, t h e stream passes, Irresistible&#13;
If n o t s w i f t a s lightning."&#13;
Your Nerves It is your nerves that cause the heart&#13;
to pulsate, the lungs to inhale the oxygen,&#13;
the brain to direct the motion of&#13;
every organ of the body, the stomach to&#13;
digest food, the liver to secrete the bile;&#13;
the kidneys to filter the blood, and the&#13;
bowels to carry off the waste.&#13;
When the nerves of the stomach become&#13;
weakened it results in stomach&#13;
trouble, indigestion, constipation.&#13;
^ This Is true of all the organs of the&#13;
body, and proves that to cure til n e w&#13;
you must strengthen the nerves. Dr. Miles' Nervine will do it. It seldom fails to cure aH"&#13;
nervous affections, Sleeplessness, Neuralgia,&#13;
Headache, Backache, Epilepsy,&#13;
Stomach, Liver and Kidney troubles.&#13;
"I was all broken down, nervous, worn&#13;
out, and in constant, pain. I doctored&#13;
for months, and firfally the doctor said&#13;
he could do nothing for me. I took Dr.&#13;
Miles' Nervine, and it made me strong&#13;
and healthy; now weigh 170 pounds."&#13;
H. C. CUNNINGHAM, Allegheny, Pa.&#13;
The first bottle will benefit, if n o t tlM&#13;
druggist will return your money.&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach No appetite, loss of strength, i&#13;
M M , headache, oonsttpatioD, ted bvMB*&#13;
fenorat debility, sour rutingi, and cmtarrfc&#13;
of the stomach are ell due to IndtfesflOaV&#13;
Kodol cures indigestion. This new diaoo«fc&#13;
ery represents the natural Juices of difet&gt;&#13;
Hea a s they exiet in a healthy t l w i n l t&#13;
combined with the greatest known tenflt&#13;
and rooowtructWe properties. Kodol Djn&gt;&#13;
pepsia 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 stomach*&#13;
Mr. S. S. Ball, of Ravenswood, W, Va.,&#13;
I was troubled with tour stomach for twenty yean.&#13;
Kodol cured mo and we are now ustng It Is o A&#13;
forbaby."&#13;
Kodol Digests What Yen Eat&#13;
Botuesooiy. $1.00 Size holdta* 2¼ time* tee Ms]&#13;
' size, which sells for SO cents.&#13;
Prepared by E. O. OeWITT *&gt;0O., OHIOAOa&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, D r u g g l t t&#13;
—A*fe fori-rre 19G*f#odol ahn atrac"&#13;
and 200 calendar.&#13;
H O L L I S T E R ' S a Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets&#13;
A Busy Medicine for Susy People.&#13;
Brings Golden Health and Renewed Vigor.&#13;
A specific for Constipation. Indigestion. Liver&#13;
and Kidney troubles. Pimples, Eczema. Impure&#13;
Biood, Bad Breath, Slueuish Bowels. Headache&#13;
and Backache. Its Rocky Mountain Tea in tablet&#13;
form. X&gt; eon is a box. Genuine, made by&#13;
HOLLISTEB DRUG COMPANY. Madison. Wis.&#13;
GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPLE&#13;
Railroad Guide&#13;
There is n o t h i n g so pleasant as that&#13;
l i i ^ b t . ^heerlul, at-peace with-thawdrTd&#13;
fueling when y o u s i t d o w n to&#13;
your breakfast. There is n o t h i n g so&#13;
conducive to ^good work and pood&#13;
results. T h e healthy man with a&#13;
healthy mind and body is a better&#13;
fellow, a better workman, a better&#13;
citizen than the man or wpma'i who is&#13;
l u m i i o a p p e d by some disability, however&#13;
slight. A slight disorder of the&#13;
stomach will d e r a n g e your-body, y o a r&#13;
t h o u g h t s and y o u r disposition. Get&#13;
away from the morbidness and t h e !&#13;
blues. Keep y o u r stomach in t u n e !&#13;
and both y o u r brain and body w i l l !&#13;
respond. Little indiscretions of overe&#13;
a t i n g can be easily corrected a n d y o u&#13;
will be surprised to see -how much&#13;
better ;r.an y o u are. Try a little&#13;
Kodol For Dyspepsia a t t e r y o u r meals.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler Drugcint,&#13;
! E x c u r s i o n t o t h e Picturesque Hijfhj&#13;
lands of Ontario and Temagaini Region&#13;
| v i a Grand Trunk Railway S y s t e m .&#13;
PCHLISHED KVKBT THCKSDA\ XOfc-MNnj KY&#13;
F R A N K L-. A N D R E W S &lt;So CO.&#13;
»&#13;
— EDITORS A»D P R O P R I E T O R * .&#13;
S i t t s c r i p t i o u Price g l in Advance"?*&#13;
Entered tit Ida Fodioince m Pinciiuey, M i c h i ^ s i&#13;
aa aecoud-c.l&amp;aB matter&#13;
Advertising rates made known o n application.&#13;
baalneaa Carda, $4.00 par y e a r .&#13;
Peatti and marriage notices p u o l i e n e d f r e e .&#13;
A n n o u n c e m e n t s o t entertainment* may be p a K&#13;
tur, if desired, ny jr i s e n t i n g t n e oJflce witb tick&#13;
el8 ot aQuuttBion. In case tickets are Lot t. r^ut'i t&#13;
to tne ornce,regular rates w i l l b e cnar?i ...&#13;
All matter i n l o c a l notice c o l u m n VF i n oech^i^L&#13;
e«l a t a c e n t a per l i n e or fraction t h e r e o f , t o r earn i F o r D e t r n i t a n d E a s t ,&#13;
I a e f f e : * . j i . p r . 2 C , I S C 5 . -&#13;
T n i m s l e a v e .^outli Lvo'n us t&lt;&#13;
i n e e r t i o n . W k e r e n o U m e i 8 s p e c i a e d , a i l noticee&#13;
will b e i n e e r t e a until ordered discontinued, anc&#13;
wiliije charged for a c c o r d i n g l y . ^ J f A l l change t&#13;
vjtadTertisetnente MUST reach t h i s office a s earl;&#13;
as T U E S D A Y m o r n i n g t o i n s u r e a n i n a e r t i o n tb&lt;-&#13;
name w e e k .&#13;
In ali ita branches, a specialty. We haveail kin*.*&#13;
diid the latest s t y l e s ot Type, e t c . , wuich euaDUs&#13;
us to execute all kinds ot work, sucn as Hooks,&#13;
Pamplets, Posters, Programmes, Bill H e a d s , N o t t&#13;
Heads, Staienients, CardB, Auction BilU, e t c . , i t&#13;
Buuerior styles, upon the shortest notice. Priee*&amp;»&#13;
low as goJU work can be d o n e .&#13;
ALL BILLS FAYABLE FIRST 0 » EVERY MONTH.&#13;
10:4S rt. i n .&#13;
l o w s :&#13;
2:iy p. m. S.oS p. Ki .&#13;
bnr Grand Rapids, N'»rth and \Ye.si&#13;
!»:26 :i. m., 2 :19 p. m., 6 ; b p .&#13;
For Sagrinaw and Bay City,&#13;
10;4S ;t. un' 2:19 p. ni., S:o&gt; p&#13;
For Toledo and South,&#13;
10:43 a. m., 2:19 p. m.,&#13;
F R A N K B A T , H. F . MOELLEK,&#13;
Agent, Sout'i Lv-on. G. P. A., D e t r o i t .&#13;
^ 1 ,&#13;
ru,&#13;
THE VLLL'AGF DIRECTORY&#13;
E x t r e m e l y low lares to Muskoka&#13;
VVbarf, P e n e t a n ^ , T e m a g a m i and&#13;
N e w Lisk^aid and return on all trains&#13;
A u g . 2 3 , 1906. Excursion tickets will&#13;
al»i be on sale at. Muskoka V\ hart to&#13;
any point on Lake Muskoka, R o s e a u&#13;
or Joseph, a n d at P e n e t a n g to any&#13;
point on Parry S o u n d Division o f the&#13;
Northern N a v i g a t i o n Co. For fares&#13;
and furtl.er i r J c r n a t i o n consult local&#13;
_a"^enToT write To Geo; W,AT aux, A. G.&#13;
P. &amp;, T. A , Chicago, lil.&#13;
P u t S l D B N T&#13;
TKLSliiBiS&#13;
LLAGE OFFICERb,&#13;
E 1:. Bi'o'.vu&#13;
Ruben Finch, J^nies K^cUt-,&#13;
Will Kennedy Sr , James S m i t h ,&#13;
S. J . T e e p l e , Ed. Farnum.&#13;
CLXKh. Roger Carr&#13;
'I'uiAflCREH Marian J . iieaaon&#13;
A » * B S S O U - L). W . M u r t a&#13;
S T R B B T CoMiiissiioNiiH' W. A. N i x o n&#13;
kiiiALTu o r r n K H Dr. U. t. Sikjiei&#13;
ATTouMi^ W. A. (Jarr&#13;
.MARSHALL Wm. .Moian&#13;
Wrand T r a a k R a i l w a y S y s t e m .&#13;
East Bound from ! lucfcne*&#13;
N'o- ^S Paseen^^r Ex ' Sin.i ny, '.i;:js A. M.&#13;
&gt; o . :i0 P.irseu.'1-r L i . SuudJy, 1:.'.". P. M.&#13;
W».'5t BoiiU'l I'rotu Cirtkii'-v&#13;
N'o, '-'7 Pa^eensrer Ex. Sun'iiiv, V&gt;:'&lt;&gt;\ ,\ . M.&#13;
N&lt;i. ;'.» Pitf^u•_'..•! Ex.Mniday. S:J4 P. M&#13;
Solid \M"de vestii)il..' trains of OOHCIJC? and&#13;
inu' &lt;-ar^ are o^erar.'il r.• S e w York i.tn i Priilnde!-&#13;
1'hiai vin Si;ij.':ira b'.iils t.vth-&gt; 'irnn'l Trunk-Lelii^&#13;
h \'allev Houte.&#13;
W. H.Clartf. Arrat.&#13;
aleei&#13;
T H E O R I G I N A L L A X A T I V E C O U G H S Y R U F&#13;
KENNEDY'S LAXATIVE HONEY^TAR&#13;
r*d Clover Els^cm -i\d Ucnc;- Bee en Every BoUlo.&#13;
POSTAL h M O R I Y ,&#13;
' P » 0 P H i f T 3 * »&#13;
Gr is wold&#13;
House DETROIT.&#13;
Rates, $2« $2.50, $3 per Day.&#13;
C9« an«H» "&#13;
A&#13;
•trtrtly&#13;
Cl««£k,&#13;
uri-tn-daTs&#13;
Hot»M, locute4&#13;
in thf hvart •!&#13;
the C&gt; ty&#13;
• &lt; « » Q v , • «&#13;
CMURCHtS.&#13;
V | i . l U O i J 1 3 T Ll'lSL'Ol'.il. U i i l K C l l .&#13;
i l l Kev. i). C. Littleioha ^aS.tor, s e r v i c e s e v e i .&#13;
auuday c i o i n i u ^ ». lo:o&lt;., and e v e i j a u u u a .&#13;
eveuiUjj at T :oi. u'ciock. l'ra)«5l meeting i Lu. e&#13;
da&gt; c v e u i u t b . s u u d a y scUooi at ^ioee o t u i o i u&#13;
i u ^ s e r v i c e . i l i s s MAKV V A M - L K , B T , Mfpt.&#13;
C \o.v-jr i t i i t j A i i ' j N AL. C i l C tilC d .&#13;
Uev. O. W. &gt;iyl'uc 'i&lt;aslci. r e r v k e c u : ,&#13;
&gt;i.a..av , u j : n i i i *^ i i i i u AUi every a i i u , . \&#13;
e.eain'^ at T :\j\. o cl JCK^._ P_rav_er meetiUi; I ' I J - H&#13;
da,- tjveuinjs.&#13;
i n i service. -Percy&#13;
1 eejde s e c&#13;
i c u o o r a t e-iu-&lt;e i)i U'I»iri&#13;
svurthou:, supt,, -H o C l l&#13;
^ i ' . .VI \ it 1"' a 'J At'dUL.lv CH.L liOd.&#13;
O tiev. .M. J. CouiiutTiora, i aetor. 'jervK*..&#13;
every s . i n d a y . Low uiaiB at 7:3oo cl^'.:&#13;
uigu m a s s wuuserm(.iu at S ;3u a. m. OatectiiL.&#13;
t o ;0o p, in., v e s p e r s a n u benediction at t :oi. • . ^&#13;
SOCIETIES.&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
PROCURED A N D DEFENDED. Sondmodel.&#13;
drawiiu &lt;'i' i&gt;li')t.&gt;. f.&gt;r I\|HI t MM: vii luid frit' report. 1&#13;
Krtt.&gt; advice, IKIVV t'&gt; obiain patents, tra.lo mArlta, |&#13;
copyrights, eto., jN ALL C O U N T R I E S .&#13;
Busini-'-f dirt'ct'irith Was/tinglou saves tims,I&#13;
momy an J y'.'i-n the patent.&#13;
Patent and Infringement Practice Exclusively.&#13;
Write or comr to us at&#13;
BS3 Klath Stmt, opp. VhiUi AU.lt* Patent 0flca,|&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N , D. C. GASNOW&#13;
?&#13;
a&#13;
t&#13;
.&#13;
.*fe*J&#13;
K I L L T H S COUCH&#13;
AND CUrlE THI LUNGS&#13;
m h e A. O. H. socie'.y of tais place, meets e \ e r .&#13;
X t n i r d Sunday intne f r . .Uattuew d a i l .&#13;
Jonn Tuomey and M. T. Kelly,County D e l c g a u&#13;
'I'iHE W. C. T. U, meets the tirst Friday of e a t u&#13;
J. month at -±:3C p. in, at tue home of Dr. 11. F.&#13;
Mgler. Everyone interested in t e m p e r a n c e i s&#13;
coadially invited. Mrs. Leal S i l l e r , Paes; Mr-.,&#13;
liitta Durfee, Secretary,&#13;
X^he C. T . A. and B. s o t i e i y ot this p l a t e , n t i&#13;
. every third Saturday eveninjz in t h e Fr. A&#13;
tuew HaU. J o h n bonohue, P r e s i d e n u&#13;
\MTH&#13;
J&#13;
REVIVO&#13;
REStORES VITALITY&#13;
"Hade a&#13;
Wall Man&#13;
of Ma."&#13;
1^ N I G H T S OF M A C C A B E E S .&#13;
i \ . M e e &lt; o v e r ? Friday evening o n or b e i o r t ru;&#13;
6i t h e moon at their hall in t h e swart t o u t bit',&#13;
Visiting brothers a u c r u i a l l ) i n v i t e d .&#13;
C H A S . L.CASiriitLL s i r v i : i ' » u -i dc&#13;
.ir.iung s&#13;
New my« i*~&#13;
FORC ONStiMPTlON&#13;
OUGHSand&#13;
OLDS&#13;
very Price&#13;
i$1.00&#13;
rrc-c Trial.&#13;
5C&#13;
fin&#13;
Surest a n d Ciuxitost Cure for a l l&#13;
T H U O A T a n d L U N G T R O U B -&#13;
L E S , o r M O N E Y BACK.&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No,&#13;
• Communication Tuesdav evening, o n or b e . e n&#13;
tnefull ot the moon.&#13;
d. A. M. Kegu t&#13;
ag, oi&#13;
K^rk VanWinkie, V\&#13;
OKDEU OF EAsTEKN S'l'AK meetseach moui&#13;
the Fr hi ay-evening following the&#13;
A A. M. meeting, MRS.NKTTK V A U G R X&#13;
re-.&#13;
W.&#13;
ult»r t&#13;
M.&#13;
Our WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
LrstiThureday eveniui: of each Mouth \u iht&#13;
Maccal&gt;es hall. C. E, Grimes V. C.&#13;
LADIES OF T H E MACCABEES. Meat every I.-&#13;
and ord Saturday of each Konth at ^ :30 p&#13;
K.O. T. M. hall; Visiting sisters cordially&#13;
nied. L t u C o s n v A Y , U d y Com,&#13;
iu.&#13;
MOjIAJ 'SUOIAJOIO "4lAi&#13;
' H S I d l "H a d&#13;
acta&#13;
fail.&#13;
, , - ^ and&#13;
old men may recowr tho.tr youthful vipor by&#13;
usirwr KKVIVO. It quiakly and quietly removes&#13;
Nervousness, Lost Vitality, Sexual&#13;
Weakness such as Lost Power, Failing Memory&#13;
Wasting Diseases, ^ad erTect«of self-abuse or&#13;
excess and indiserotlon, which unfits one for&#13;
study .business or marriage. It not only cures&#13;
*"" ' '' ' ' ^ ^. ' ". -ise.butisagreat&#13;
nerve t o a t e amd b l o o d builder, bringing&#13;
"?" """-"^""w "-• . - 1 , , 1 aandr*&#13;
storlxiKith««r^ o f y o t t i k . It wards off ft'&#13;
by starting at the seat of disease, but is a great&#13;
a n d back the ptBk g l o w t o p a l e eheefca and restoring&#13;
the air* o f y o a t k . i t wards off approaching&#13;
disease. Insistonhav-inirBKVIVO,&#13;
no other. 11 can be carried iwiveat pocket. By&#13;
mall. $1.00 per paokajre. or six foT $ 6 . 0 0 . We&#13;
.* N I G i l T S OK THK LOYA L GCARD&#13;
\ F . L. Andrews ly. &gt;t. 11&#13;
Rive free advice and counsel to al&#13;
with araaraato*. Cirovlan&#13;
ROYAL MEDICINE CO., Marine&#13;
Sold by P . A. Sigler,&#13;
PIKCXHEY.&#13;
ho wish it,&#13;
^AaWress&#13;
80,111.&#13;
t&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. S'QLER M. 0- 0 . L, SIQLER M, £&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Cbyslclans and Surgeons. All call* promptly&#13;
at tended to day oruight. Otfloe on Main &lt;? eet&#13;
Plockney, Mich,.&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC SKA,&#13;
_WITH SEIL £ * £ ^ :&#13;
'.AT DISPATCH OFFICE&#13;
•jarfjo on asn UIAV noi puw ^ \ i j . "&#13;
, , "iseq stijaAtu&#13;
ion /qa\ 'arjjii 08 saijvj }i ajoq \\&#13;
•pt»ddad 'aotua; ao *uiauA jo aaB^osd&#13;
•Z0 5 unj B tioA' itism IJIAV i pun 6%u30 sc&#13;
S 2 " 'P'™-"! « SSOttO K33HO,, 9 ^&#13;
•qjSu3j;s jo pJBpa^is tujojtua v \* W«3i SJB&#13;
(ixjnnoo aqj UT iuo3uuw jsotn atu,&#13;
}o aao) AV«T JHX&gt;J wnd ai8tqo;K ^% jo&#13;
«juoui3j;uba4 aq&gt; q^iAi A^draoo qoiqu&#13;
N0N31 QNV m i N f A&#13;
S19VU1X3&#13;
SSOJO U89J9&#13;
SiHsrarH'd&#13;
M|) utdnyttMH aata.&#13;
7s®&#13;
&gt; \.-&gt;^ ,.'&#13;
'• lip*'.*&#13;
•&gt;*fc&#13;
iM-.&#13;
&amp;L+iti*u&#13;
.^•^[•A&#13;
1JPW IPFW ..WSPW, i' '"f^wi.a^gnvT •'.'"'•'By l l ^ T ^ f f V ' T ^ l l . ^ ^ ^ ^ 1 ^ ^ 1 ^ 1 . ^ .**«*»*'.• .*£..•*&#13;
..*?-»r- ^&#13;
S i&#13;
EVENTS NOTED&#13;
SUMMER OUTINGS SADDENED BY&#13;
TRAGIC DEATHS BY&#13;
ACCIDENTS.&#13;
TRAIN KILLED THE BABY&#13;
The Drowning of Mr«. Van Or man and&#13;
Narrow Escape of Husband and&#13;
Friend—A Mother's Great Grief.&#13;
The Babe Was Killed.&#13;
White attempting to save the life of&#13;
ner 2-year^old daughter, Mrs. Mary&#13;
Levi, of Chicago, was badly injured&#13;
ind her 8 months-old child, whom she&#13;
aeld in her arms, was killed instantly.&#13;
Mrs, Levi, with her husband and chil-.&#13;
iren, were resorting at Eastman&#13;
Springs. They were wandering through&#13;
;he fruit orchards when the eldest&#13;
daughter climbed up on the track of&#13;
:he iaterurban railway line, eighty fefci&#13;
in advance of a swiftly moving car.&#13;
Mrs. Levi, seeing the. approaching&#13;
sar, sprang upon the track with her&#13;
babe in her arms and attempted to&#13;
pull heT daughter from danger.&#13;
She was too late. The heavy car&#13;
•truck the group of three, injuring the&#13;
oabe so that it died in a few moments&#13;
and badly injuring both Mrs, Levi and&#13;
her daughter.&#13;
The daughter Is suffering from a&#13;
fracture of the skull and may not recover.&#13;
Mrs. Levi herself is in a less&#13;
dangerous condition.&#13;
MICHIGAN IN BRIEF.&#13;
Sad Ending of Fishing Trip.&#13;
Mr*. Chauncey Van Orman met a&#13;
tragic death in the waters of Cedar&#13;
creek, a tributary of the Muskegon&#13;
river, Friday evening. In the same accident&#13;
which brought a sad ending to&#13;
a fishing outing, the woman's husband&#13;
and a friend, George Richardson, narrowly&#13;
escaped a like fate. They endured&#13;
extreme anguish of mind and&#13;
body before rescued.&#13;
The party went up Cedar creek on&#13;
a fishing trip Thursday.. While returning&#13;
Friday evening, and when&#13;
about five miles from Muskegon, the&#13;
boat upset and the occupants were pre*&#13;
clpated into the fast running waters.&#13;
Mrs. Van Orman was quickly drowned.&#13;
The husband, who is 68 years of age,&#13;
managed to fight his way to a small&#13;
driftwood island in the middle of the&#13;
creek, where he lay until noon when&#13;
he was rescued. Richardson, who is&#13;
23 years of age, found his way into&#13;
the marshy swamps which border the&#13;
creek, in which he wandered until afternoon,&#13;
when he reached the outskirts&#13;
of the city, aimost crazed.&#13;
A rescue party set out in a launch&#13;
for the scene of the accident, where&#13;
they found Van-Orman, really more&#13;
dead than alive.&#13;
Mrs. Van Orman was 65 years of&#13;
age. She and her husband lived retired&#13;
in a humble way.&#13;
Bathers Battle.&#13;
On the bathing beach, at Muskegon,&#13;
before several hundred people, a jealous&#13;
wife belabored a young woman,&#13;
her supposed rival for her husband's&#13;
attentions. The husband bad been&#13;
teaching the young woman &lt; how to&#13;
swim, and when she tired he carried&#13;
her in his arms to the shore. His wife&#13;
was waiting. A policeman separated&#13;
them after the young woman's bathing&#13;
suit had been nearly torn from her.&#13;
Three Dry Days.&#13;
Law is going to make a Sahara out&#13;
of Michigan, with many an oasis, for&#13;
three days in succession so far as the&#13;
saloons are concerned. A three days&#13;
drought is certain on Sunday, Monday&#13;
and Tuesday of the Mist week of September.&#13;
Sunday, saloons are always closed;&#13;
Monday is Labor clay and Tuesday is&#13;
primary election day in a large portion&#13;
of the state.&#13;
A Sweet Subject.&#13;
Aecording to one of the local incorporators&#13;
of the Michigan Sugar Co.,&#13;
there are other and more important&#13;
persons interested in the combine&#13;
whose names do not appear in the articles&#13;
filed at Lansing. He says the&#13;
incorporators are merely trustees of&#13;
the various companies appointed to&#13;
make the transfer of stock necessary&#13;
to effect a consolidation of the majority&#13;
interests.&#13;
Remarkable Escape.&#13;
Edward Hanlon, aged 10 years, of&#13;
Port Huron, had a miraculous escape&#13;
from death Thursday afternoon, when,&#13;
partially stunned by an electric shock,&#13;
be fell from an electric light pole, 30&#13;
feet, to the ground. He had grasped&#13;
two wires, carrying 110 volts of electricity.&#13;
His hands were frightfully&#13;
burned, the flesh peeling off to the&#13;
bone in places. One finger of his left&#13;
hand had to be amputated at the hospital.&#13;
He is in a serious condition, but&#13;
will probably recover.&#13;
Blind, Penniless and Lost.&#13;
Blind and penniless, Joseph Will*&#13;
lams is missing from the county home&#13;
at Menominee. His relatives fear that&#13;
he wandered away and is dead. He&#13;
was rendered practically helpless by&#13;
an accident, but for five years assisted&#13;
In his family's support by giving&#13;
gramophone concerts. He was former-&#13;
]y a Canadian woodsman and was hurt&#13;
in the woods.&#13;
Cleveland reports four deaths from heat Wednesday.&#13;
The Camden and Northwest Orange&#13;
fair will be held on the fair grounds&#13;
Sept. 25 to 28, inclusive.&#13;
A monument is being made by the&#13;
Monroe Marble works to mark the&#13;
grave of the late Judge Isaac P. Christlaacy.&#13;
Three excursions on the Michigan&#13;
Central railroad brought nearly 2,wo&#13;
visitors to the State Agricultural college&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
Mrs. Spitzley, aged 58, wife of Bank.&#13;
er Michael Spitzley, of Westphalia,&#13;
was found dead in bed Thursday.&#13;
Death was due to apoplexy.&#13;
A company playing "Mr. Dooley&#13;
From Ireland" rang down the curtain&#13;
because of missiles thrown on the&#13;
stage by Allegan residents.&#13;
One nan dead and three prostrated&#13;
is the result of the jump in temperature&#13;
in Detroit, Saturday, to the 8Q's&#13;
from the 60's and 70's of Thursday.&#13;
Lansing Street Railway Co. announces&#13;
that hereafter only Americap&#13;
labor win be employed by them, Italians&#13;
having proved unsatisfactory.&#13;
John M. Caulfield, promoter of the&#13;
Elkhart, Three Rivers ft Kalamazoo&#13;
Interurbnn railway, reports he has succeeded&#13;
in securing the right of way.&#13;
Benjamin Randolph, a Lapeer painter,&#13;
mistook carbolic acid for whisky.&#13;
He ran to a doctor, who saved his&#13;
life by pumping him out. His mouth&#13;
was badly burned.&#13;
That Miss Ethel Wade and Arthur&#13;
Van Bochove, of Kalamazoo, were&#13;
married at Grand Haven, June 30, was&#13;
announced Saturday. They confessed&#13;
to the mother of the bride.&#13;
Two daughters of Richard Ayott,&#13;
living eight miles from Caseville,&#13;
were struck by lightning Tuesday.&#13;
Lola, aged 18 years, will recover. A&#13;
4-year-old girl will probably die.&#13;
Deep water fishing starts September&#13;
1. The spring catch was 5,000 packages&#13;
short. The sturm last October&#13;
destroyed many of the nets and discouraged&#13;
some of the fishermen.&#13;
Miss Anna Belle Hill, of Waco, Texl,&#13;
sustained a broken collar bone, and&#13;
had her scalp torn and her body badly&#13;
bruised by being thrown on a rock&#13;
pile when her horse ran away. She is&#13;
a resorter at Omens.&#13;
The 14-year-old son of Mrs. John Lapointe,&#13;
who was kidnaped eight years&#13;
ago and was given up for dead by his&#13;
parents, has returned to his mother's&#13;
home at Dollar Bay. He conld tell very&#13;
littie about his disappearance.&#13;
George H. Gray, a former member of&#13;
the drug firm of Field &amp; Gray, died&#13;
suddenly from heart trouble Just before&#13;
going on the operating table in&#13;
Alpena. One son and a daughter, Ma&#13;
rion Gray, of Detroit, survive.&#13;
Once possessed of $20,000 in cash&#13;
and 320 acres of land, Daniel B. Ay res&#13;
was taken to the Jackson county&#13;
house Saturday. He was well educated,&#13;
but It is said he lost his money&#13;
because he was a failure as a farmer.&#13;
James Donoicaka, of Muskegon, has&#13;
heen arrested on complaint of his&#13;
wife. She says he shot twice at her&#13;
and threatened to wipe out the family.&#13;
Donoicaka is a Bohemian farmer who&#13;
brought his family from Chicago several&#13;
months ago.&#13;
The city of Flint expected to lay&#13;
about seven miles of new water mains&#13;
this summer, but none will be laid&#13;
The pipe factories are tied up with&#13;
the rush of orders and have informed&#13;
the city that no shipments will be&#13;
made here until October 1.&#13;
The will of the late H. B. La Tourette,&#13;
of Flinty was filed in the probate&#13;
court Saturday. The bequests are as&#13;
fettews^ To-Ms-widow7tl0t)7000; Kalamazoo&#13;
college, $2,000; Baptist Minister's&#13;
society of Fenton, $1,000, and the&#13;
Baptist church of Fenton, $500.&#13;
Mrs. John Schinsky, living in Buena&#13;
Vista township, thinks that Fred C.&#13;
Simmet, who was accidentally&#13;
drowned in Detroit Tuesday, is her&#13;
brother. Mrs. Schinsky can give no&#13;
icason why her brother should have&#13;
gone under the name of Charles Wallace.&#13;
Gov. Warner appointed F. D. Linkletter,&#13;
of the Agricultural college, a&#13;
delegate to the National Irrigation congiess&#13;
at Boise, Ida., September 3. The&#13;
governor will name fourteen more&#13;
delegates if men can be found who are&#13;
willing to serve without compensation&#13;
or expenses.&#13;
Robert Hytinen, a Flnlander,, living&#13;
in Negaunee, was driven insane by&#13;
sunstroke, stripped his clothes off and&#13;
ran from his boarding house to near&#13;
the power house, where he was found&#13;
in a comatose condition, lying in the&#13;
hot sun. He was taken to the hospital,&#13;
where he died.&#13;
A common council committee, at the&#13;
instigation of Mayor Todd, will investigate&#13;
the alleged illegal combination of&#13;
ice dealers in Jackson. The price was&#13;
raised from 25 cents per 100 pounds&#13;
to 40 cents and the mayor wants to&#13;
know why. There are two companies,&#13;
the Consumers' and the Jackson Ice&#13;
Co.&#13;
Mae C. Wood, who obtained notoriety&#13;
through an alleged false claim that&#13;
she' is the wife of Senator Piatt, of&#13;
New York, is suing the Colon Riding&#13;
Park association, of Kalamazoo, under&#13;
the name of Mae Wood Piatt. Her&#13;
house faces the association's track,&#13;
which she wants declared a public&#13;
road.&#13;
The new Detroit city directory for&#13;
the year commencing August 1, 1906,&#13;
contains 175,218 Individual names,&#13;
which multiplied by 2 1-2, the ratio,&#13;
which has hitherto been found to correctly&#13;
embrace the names of women&#13;
and children not included in the directory,&#13;
Indicates a total population of&#13;
439.04K&#13;
NEW HEAD OF ORTHODOX JEWS&#13;
Philadelphian Honored by Co-Religioni*t:&#13;
When Rabbi Bernhard Louis Levlnthal was&#13;
elected to the office of chief rabbi of the entire&#13;
body of orthodox Jews of the United 8tates he&#13;
was given as great an honor as it was possible&#13;
for the Jews of the country to bestow upon him,&#13;
and It is an honor he had fully earned by his&#13;
efforts in behalf of the Jewish people.&#13;
Rabbi Levlnthal Is one of the best-known men&#13;
in Philadelphia, and is respected for his good&#13;
works by the Christian ministers of that city&#13;
quite as much as he is by his own people. For&#13;
the past 15 yearB he has been the rabbi of the&#13;
United Orthodox Hebrew congregations of Philadelphia,&#13;
and the founder of many of the Hebrew&#13;
institutions of that city. He is founder and vice&#13;
president of the Orthodox Rabbinical Association&#13;
of AmericaT~~Drr-Levinthaf-waa born In A^ilna,&#13;
Russia, in 1866. He is a graduate of the high rabbinical&#13;
institutes of Kovno and Vilna, and is noted&#13;
as a man of letters. In 1891 he came to the United&#13;
States. He is founder and principal of the&#13;
Hebrew high school in Philadelphia, is at the head of the Hebrew Talmudic&#13;
institufe, and is honorary vice president of the Federation of American&#13;
Zionists.&#13;
Peer Nourishment In Grass.&#13;
Horses, under/ natural conditions,&#13;
tleep ln*c$ lejte f a n jnen and spend&#13;
far more time every ofay In eating;.&#13;
There la little nourishment in grass,&#13;
In proportion to its bulk, *and^ the&#13;
horse Is forced to give so muchj tlm*\&#13;
to eating that it would be ruinous t*&#13;
human industry if like conditions existed&#13;
among men. '•&#13;
Her Busy Day.&#13;
Dusty and hot from the club train be&#13;
entered his pretty mountain cottage&#13;
slowly. "Where Is your mother?''.*•&#13;
languidly asked the little girl at plaf&#13;
in the hall. "Somebody told her a»&#13;
important secret after breakfast tbi§\&#13;
morning," said the child, "and she&#13;
has been out visiting ever since."&#13;
RUSSIA'S "BULLDOG" ADMIRAL&#13;
Skrydloff Now Idol of the Navy.&#13;
The Russian navy has figured more prominently&#13;
in the internal disturbances of that, country&#13;
than the army. This is especially true of the&#13;
sailors of the Black sea fleet who have within the&#13;
past few, months taken extreme measures to aid&#13;
the. revolutionists ashore, and the red flag of&#13;
anarchy has been hoisted at more than one Russian&#13;
masthead. Now the czar proposes if possible&#13;
to squelch this spirit of rebellion among his sailors'and&#13;
has assigned Admiral Nicholas Skrydloff&#13;
to the command of the Black sea fleet, giving to&#13;
him special powers to restore order and maintain&#13;
discipline.&#13;
Admiral Skrydloff has been a conspicuous&#13;
figure in the Russian navy for a number of years.&#13;
During the war with Japan he was sent East to&#13;
that naval command at Port Arthur after the&#13;
death of Makaroff, but was unable to reach that&#13;
place, and during the Japanese war spent most&#13;
of his time at Vladivostok. He is known as the&#13;
"bulldog admiral," and distinguished himself during&#13;
the TurklBh war by daring torpedo-boat attacks that paralyzed the sultans&#13;
monitors. He also took part In the pacification of Crete, commanded the Russian&#13;
Pacific squadron In the operations against the Boxers, and represented&#13;
the Russian navy at the diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria. SkrydloC was born&#13;
in 1844. He wears the cross of St. George for his heroism on the Danube.&#13;
Baseball as a Tonic.&#13;
There is no subject talked so much&#13;
about in this country as baseball"&#13;
There is nothing that is so much read&#13;
about. War extras in the days of the&#13;
rebellion were not more eagerly&#13;
snatched up than baseball of to-day&#13;
It is the daily diet of millions of people&#13;
who think or talk about little else&#13;
.&gt;"•&#13;
Surprised the Bishop.&#13;
It is said that Bishop Whipple, ot&#13;
Minnesota, being held up' by a foot&#13;
pad, said, indignantly, "Sir, I am the&#13;
bishop of the Protestant "Episcopal&#13;
diocese of Minnesota!" "The devtt&#13;
you are!" replied the robber; "why.&#13;
that's my church, too!"&#13;
Changes at Fort Riley.&#13;
Fort Riley.—Six companies of the&#13;
state militia of South' Dakota and the&#13;
Eleventh cavalry arrived Sunday to&#13;
attend the army maneuvers. The Arkansas&#13;
regiment left for home after a&#13;
week's stay at camp.&#13;
Former Army Surgeon Dead.&#13;
Leavenworth, Kan.—Dr. W. R. Van-'&#13;
Tuyl, who served in the Philippines&#13;
as a surgeon in the United States&#13;
army during the Spanish-American&#13;
war, died of heart disease at his homo&#13;
here Sunday, aged 42 years.&#13;
Cordial Indorsement.&#13;
Dear Doctor: Enclosed find cheque&#13;
for professional services rendered by&#13;
you to my late uncle. I thank yo«&#13;
for your zeal in the matter and shal'&#13;
not fail to recommend,* you to all my&#13;
other wealthy relatives.—Meggen&#13;
dorfer Blatter.&#13;
A Daily Thought.&#13;
One must have been preoccupied for&#13;
years by a work, by an idea, to appro*&#13;
elate the importance which a man at&#13;
taches to his work, a painter to hi*&#13;
picture, a poet to an idea, a man oi&#13;
science to a discovery.—Mme. Emlle&#13;
de Girardin.&#13;
Nature's Wise Provision.&#13;
Every year a layer of the entire sea&#13;
14 feet thick, is taken up into the&#13;
clouds; the winds bear their burden&#13;
into the land and the water comes&#13;
down in rain upon the fields, to flow,&#13;
"jack through rivers.&#13;
Bank Notes Have Short Lives.&#13;
An official estimate of the life of&#13;
Bank of England notes is~from-ten-tc&#13;
60 days. They are retired and re&#13;
placed as soon as they become soiled&#13;
and worn, if the bank can get possession&#13;
of them.&#13;
A Written Guarantee tJi L T H Z T " " is *" ^ t n u " ™ y o " ""&#13;
COLUMBIA GRAPI10PI10NE •n.&#13;
With this guarantee you don't guess, you KNOW which is beet. ASK&#13;
YOUR OWN BANKER as to our responsibUty and financial standing F r e e T r i a l a n d EaSY P a y m e n t O f f e r&#13;
Then send to our nearest dealer or to us, and get our . . . . " • " ^ ^ ^ - ^ ^ ^ ^ - ^ - * — — *&#13;
This is your chance to secure the BEST TALKING MACHINE MADE, on payments which wiN not be fett.&#13;
W E A C C E P T O L D r U C t l l N E f t O f A N Y M A K E I N P A R T P A Y M E N T .&#13;
A d I d e a l * • * • v o a *** M *** • Craphaohena oat of e m s ? |» the mountains;&#13;
S water; at the seashore; anywhersl The mask of a Grephophooe hi&#13;
ummer Amusement, UCUAR, swEnAN0FAt«AChiN6. Try tt and judge.&#13;
•read Prix, Paris, I see Bonnie fraud Prize, St. Louts, 19*4&#13;
t tWfsest 4n*are, PerHasd, ites&#13;
-*,&#13;
Columbia Phonograph Co.&#13;
90-92 West Broadway,&#13;
N e W Y 0 r l u V ...... •'Name.&#13;
160&#13;
.. o*1 „ S*?* » 1 *U c\W w of your Eaty PaymUe ndte taanidls ...- v pxcfaaftfa Plan.&#13;
Address,&#13;
••"i *»&#13;
-—1~&#13;
f !&#13;
tf&#13;
X^&#13;
A FOOL FOR LOVE&#13;
By FRANCIS LYNPE&#13;
AUTHOR OF "THE O R A F 7 I R S , " ETC.&#13;
(Copyright, IMft.by J. P. LlpplneoMCo.)&#13;
^&gt;&#13;
CHAPTER V—Continued.&#13;
'Those who knew her best said it&#13;
f%na a warning to be heeded, in Miss&#13;
VirginiaCarteret when her eyes were&#13;
downcast and her voice sank to its&#13;
softest cadence.&#13;
"Why, certainly; how simple!" she&#13;
Mid, taking her cousin's arm again;&#13;
Md the secretary went in to set the&#13;
wires at work in Wlnton's affair.&#13;
Now Miss Carteret was a woman in&#13;
•very fiber of her, but among her gifts&#13;
She might have counted some that&#13;
were, to say the least, super-feminine.&#13;
One of these was a measure of discretion&#13;
which would have been fairly&#13;
creditable in a past master of diplomacy.&#13;
So, while the sympathetic part of her&#13;
was crying out for a chance to talk&#13;
Wlnton's threatened danger over with&#13;
some one, she lent herself outwardly&#13;
to the Reverend billy's mood—which&#13;
was one of scenic enthusiasm; this&#13;
without prejudice to a growing determination&#13;
to intervene in behalf of fair&#13;
play for Winton If she could find a&#13;
way.&#13;
But the way obstinately refused to&#13;
discover itself. The simple thing to&#13;
do would be to appeal to her uncle a&#13;
sense of justice. It was not like him&#13;
to fight with ignoble weapons, she&#13;
thought, and a tactful word in season&#13;
might make him recall the order to&#13;
the superintendent. But she could not&#13;
make the appeal without betraying&#13;
Jastrow. She knew well enough that&#13;
the secretary had no right to show&#13;
her the telegrams; knew also that Mr.&#13;
Somervllle Darrah's first word would&#13;
be a demand to know how she had&#13;
learned the company's business secrets.&#13;
Regarding Jastrow as little as a highbred&#13;
young woman to whom sentiment&#13;
is as the breath of life can regard a&#13;
man who is quite devoid of it, she was&#13;
still far enough from the thought of&#13;
effacing him.&#13;
To this expedient there was an unhopeful&#13;
alternative: namely, the sending,&#13;
by the Reverend Billy, or, In the&#13;
last resort, by herself, of a warning&#13;
message to Winton. But there were&#13;
obstacles seemingly insuperable She&#13;
had not the-faintest notion of. howsuch&#13;
a warning should be addressed;&#13;
and again, the operator at Argentine&#13;
was a Colorado &amp; Grand River employe,&#13;
doubtless loyal to his salt, in&#13;
which case the warning message would&#13;
never get beyond his waste basket.&#13;
"Qettlng too chilly for you out here?&#13;
—want to go in?" asked the Reverend&#13;
Billy, when the scenic enthusiasm began&#13;
to outwear itself.&#13;
"No; but I am tired of the sentry-go&#13;
part of it—ten steps and a turn," she&#13;
confessed. "Can't we walk on .the&#13;
track a little way?*&#13;
Calvert saw no reason why they&#13;
might not, and accordingly helped her&#13;
over to the snow-encrusted path between&#13;
the rails.&#13;
"We can trot down and have a look&#13;
at their construction camp, if you&#13;
like," he suggested, and thitherward&#13;
they went.&#13;
There was not much to see, after all,&#13;
as the Reverend Billy remarked when&#13;
they had reached a coign of vantage&#13;
helow the curve. A string of use-worn&#13;
bunk cars; a "dinkey" caboose serving&#13;
as the home on wheels of the chief of&#13;
construction and his assistant; a&#13;
crooked siding with a gang of darkskinned&#13;
laborers at work unloading a&#13;
car of steel. These in the immediate&#13;
foreground; and a little way apart,&#13;
perched high enough on the steep slope&#13;
of the mountain side to be out of the&#13;
camp turmoil, a small structure, half&#13;
plank and half canvas—to-wlt, the&#13;
end-of-track telegraph office.&#13;
It was Virginia who first marked the&#13;
boxed-up tent standing on the slope.&#13;
"What-do you suppose that little&#13;
house-tent is for?" she asked.&#13;
"I don't know," said Calvert. Then&#13;
he saw the wires and ventured a guess&#13;
which hit the mark.&#13;
"I didn't suppose they would have a&#13;
telegraph office," she commented, with&#13;
hope rising again.&#13;
**Ok, yes; they'd have to have a&#13;
wire; one of their own. Under the&#13;
circumstances they could hardly use&#13;
He was gone before she could reply&#13;
—across the ice bridge spanning one&#13;
of the pools, and up the rough, frozen&#13;
embankment of the new line. There&#13;
were armed guards here, too, as well&#13;
as at the front, and one of them halted&#13;
him at the picket line. But Adams&#13;
saw and recognized him, and presently&#13;
the two were crossing to where Virginia&#13;
stood waiting.&#13;
• Eheu! what a little world we live&#13;
in, Miss Virginia! Who would have&#13;
thought of meeting you here?" said&#13;
the technologian, taking her hand at&#13;
the precise elevation prescribed by&#13;
good form—Boston good form.&#13;
"The shock is mutual," she laughed.&#13;
"I must say that you and Mr. Winton&#13;
have chosen a highly unconventional&#13;
environment for your sketching field."&#13;
"I'm down," he admitted, cheerfully;&#13;
"please don't trample on me. , But&#13;
really, it wasn't all fib, .Jack does do&#13;
things with* pencil—ether things he-[artistic way,&#13;
sides maps and working profiles, I&#13;
mean. Won't you come over and let&#13;
here a minute and I'll call him for&#13;
you."&#13;
-Jof&#13;
the rails from the car to the bench''&#13;
es; took her up into the cab of the big&#13;
"octopod" locomotive; gave her a&#13;
chance to peep into the camp kitchen&#13;
car; and concluded by handing her up&#13;
the steps of the "dinkey."&#13;
"Oh, how 'Comfortable!" she exclaimed,&#13;
when he had shown her all&#13;
the space-saving contrivances of the&#13;
field offlee. "And this is where.you&#13;
and Mr. Winton work?"&#13;
"It Is where we eat and sleep," corrected&#13;
Adams. "And speaking of eating:&#13;
it is hopelessly the wrong end of&#13;
the day—or it would be in Boston—&#13;
but our Chinaman won't know the difference.&#13;
Let me have him make you a&#13;
dish of tea," and the order was given&#13;
"before she could protest.&#13;
"While we are waiting on Ah Poo&#13;
I'll show you some t&gt;l'Jack's sketches,"&#13;
he went on, finding a portfolio- and&#13;
opening it upon the drawing board.&#13;
"Are you quite sure Mr. Winton&#13;
won't mind?" she: asked.&#13;
"Mind? He'd give a month's pay to&#13;
be here to show them himself. He is&#13;
peacock vain of his one small accomplishment,&#13;
Winton is—bores me to&#13;
death with it sometimes."&#13;
J'Really?" was the mocking rejoinder,&#13;
ancT~they~begair-to iook at the&#13;
sketches.&#13;
They were heads, most of them, impressionistic&#13;
studies in pencil or pastel,&#13;
with, jiow and then a pen-and-ink bearing&#13;
evidence of more painstaking&#13;
after-work. They were made on bits&#13;
of map paper, the backs of old letters,&#13;
and not a few on leaves torn from an&#13;
engineer's note book.&#13;
'"ftey don't count for much in an&#13;
said Adams, with the&#13;
brutal frankness of a friendly critic,&#13;
"but they will serve to show you that&#13;
rirs.&#13;
*No," she rejoined, absently. She&#13;
acannlqg tho group of steel hani&#13;
t the hope that a young man&#13;
ifc .aMtty-cock nat and with a cigar-&#13;
M N f M his lips would shortly&#13;
reiij^lflmself.&#13;
She found him after a time and&#13;
turned quickly to her cousin.&#13;
"There is Mr. Adams down there by&#13;
Che engine. Do you think he would&#13;
come over and speak to us if he knew&#13;
we were here?"&#13;
The Reverend, Billy's smile was of&#13;
honest admiration.&#13;
"How could you doubt It? Wait&#13;
me do the honors of the stud*?" with&#13;
a grandiloquent arm-sweep meant to&#13;
include the construction camp in general&#13;
and the "dinkey" caboose in particular.&#13;
It was the Invitation she would have&#13;
angled for, but she was too wise to&#13;
assent too readily.&#13;
"Oh, no; I think we mustn't. I'm&#13;
afraid Mr. Winton might not like It."&#13;
"Not like it? If you'll come he'll&#13;
never forgive himself for not being&#13;
here to 'shoot up' the camp for you In&#13;
person. He is away, you know; gone&#13;
to Carbonate for the day."&#13;
"Ought we to go, Cousin Billy?" she&#13;
asked, shifting, not the decision, but&#13;
the responsibility for it, to broader&#13;
shoulders.&#13;
"Why not, if you care to?" said the&#13;
athlete, to whom right-of-way fights&#13;
were mere matters of business in no&#13;
wise conflicting with the social ameliorations.&#13;
Virginia hesitated. There was a&#13;
thing to be said to Mr. Adams, and&#13;
that without delay; but how could she&#13;
say It with her cousin standing by to&#13;
make an impossible trio out of any&#13;
attempted duet confidential? A willingness&#13;
to see that Winton had fair&#13;
play need not carry with it an open&#13;
desertion to the enemy. She must not&#13;
forget to be loyal to her salt; and,&#13;
besides, Mr. Somervllle Darrah's righteous&#13;
indignation was not lightly to be&#13;
ignored.&#13;
But the upshot of the hesitant pause&#13;
was a decision to brave the conse-&#13;
Suences—all of them; so she took&#13;
alvert's arm for the slippery crossing&#13;
of the ice bridge.&#13;
Once on his own domain, Adams did&#13;
the honors of the camp as thoroughly&#13;
and conscientiously as if the hour&#13;
held no care heavier than the entertainment&#13;
of Miss Virginia Carteret&#13;
Hi explained the system under which&#13;
the material was kept moving forward&#13;
to the ever-advancing front; let. her&#13;
watch the rhythmic swing and slide&#13;
CAN YOU SEND ALL T H A T ? "&#13;
I wasn't aH kinds of an embroiderer&#13;
when I was telling you about Winton's&#13;
proclivities the other day."&#13;
"I shouldn't apologize for that, if I&#13;
were you," she retorted. "It is well&#13;
past apology, don't you think?" And&#13;
then: "What is this one?"&#13;
They had come to the last of the&#13;
sketches, which was a rude map. It&#13;
was penciled on the leaf of a memorandum,&#13;
and Adams recognized it as&#13;
the outline Winton had made and used&#13;
in explaining the right-of-way entanglement.&#13;
"It is a map," he said, "one that&#13;
Jack drew day before yesterday when&#13;
he was trying to make me understand&#13;
the situation up here. I wonder why&#13;
he kept it? Is there anything on the&#13;
other side?"&#13;
She turned the leaf, and they both&#13;
went speechless for the moment The&#13;
reverse of the scrap of cross-ruled paper&#13;
held a very fair likeness of a face&#13;
which Virginia's mirror had oftenest&#13;
portrayed; a sketch setting forth *J|&#13;
a few vigorous strokes, of the pencil&#13;
the impressionist's ideal of the g o d -&#13;
dess fresh from We bath."&#13;
"By Jove." exclaimed Adams, when&#13;
he could find the word for his surprise.&#13;
Then he tried to turn it off&#13;
lightly. "There is a good bit more&#13;
of the artist in Jack than I have been&#13;
giving him credit for. Don't you know,&#13;
he must have got the notion for that&#13;
between two hah-seconds—when you&#13;
recognized me on the platform at Kansas&#13;
City. It's wonderful!"&#13;
"So very wonderful that I think I&#13;
shall keep it," she rejoined, not without&#13;
a touch of austerity. Then she&#13;
added: "Mr. Winton will probably&#13;
never miss it. If he does, you will&#13;
have to explain the best way you can."&#13;
And Adams could only say "By Jove,!"&#13;
again, and busy himself with pouring&#13;
the tea which Ah Foo had brought in.&#13;
In the nature of things the teadrinking&#13;
in the stuffy "dinkey" drawing-&#13;
room was not prolonged. Time&#13;
was flying. Virginia's errand of mercy&#13;
was not yet accomplished, and Aunt&#13;
Martha in her capacity of anxious&#13;
chaperon was not to be forgotten.&#13;
Also, Miss Carteret had a feeling that&#13;
under his well-bred exterior Mr. Morton&#13;
P. Adams was chafing like any&#13;
barbarian industry captain at this unwarrantable&#13;
intrusion and interruption.&#13;
So presently they all forthfared into&#13;
the sun-bright, snow-blinding out-ofdoor&#13;
world, and Virginia gathered up&#13;
her courage and took her dilemma by&#13;
the horns.&#13;
"I believe I have seen everything&#13;
now except that tent-place up there,"&#13;
she asserted, groping purposefully for&#13;
her opening.&#13;
Adams called up another smile of&#13;
acquiescence. "That is our telegraph&#13;
office. Would you care to see it?" The&#13;
technologian was of those who shirk&#13;
all or shirk nothing.&#13;
"I don't know why I should care to,&#13;
but I do," she replied, with charming&#13;
and childlike willfulness; so the three&#13;
of them trudged up the slippery path&#13;
to the operator's den on the slope.&#13;
Not to evade his hospitable duty in&#13;
any part, Adams explained the use and&#13;
need of a "front" wire, and Miss Carteret&#13;
was properly interested.&#13;
"How convenient! ' she commented.&#13;
"And you can come up here and talk&#13;
to anybody you like—Just as if it were&#13;
a telephone?"&#13;
"To anyone in the company s service,"&#13;
amended Adams. "It is not a&#13;
commercial wire."&#13;
"Then let us send a message to Mr.&#13;
Winton," she suggested, playing the&#13;
part of the capricious ingenue to the&#13;
very upcast of a pair of mischievous&#13;
eyes. 'Til write it and you may sign&#13;
it."&#13;
Adams stretched his complaisence&#13;
the necessary additional inch and&#13;
gave her a pencil and a pad of blanks.&#13;
She wrote rapidly:&#13;
"Miss Carteret has been here admiring&#13;
your drawings. She took one of them away&#13;
with her, and I couldn't stop her without&#13;
being rude. You shouldn't have done it&#13;
without asking her permission. She&#13;
says—"&#13;
"Oh, dear! I am making it awfully&#13;
long. Does it cost so much a word?"&#13;
"No," said Adams, not without an&#13;
effort. He was beginning to be distinctly&#13;
disappointed in Miss Virginia,&#13;
CHAOS RULES IITCITf&#13;
REFUQEK8 IN&#13;
CHILI, FIQHT&#13;
VALPARAISO,&#13;
FOtf POOD.&#13;
sypPUE$ INSUFFICIENT.&#13;
Cemeteries Destroyed and Authorities&#13;
Unable to Bury Victims—Town of&#13;
Quillota 8tnke Out of&#13;
Sight.&#13;
Valparaiso.—Chaos rules in Valparaiso&#13;
and martial law is unable to keep&#13;
order. The scores of thousands of&#13;
homeles, famine stricken refugees&#13;
fight in the streets for food.&#13;
The army and navy officers are&#13;
working heroically to bring order out&#13;
of chaos, but they are fearfully handicaped.&#13;
The injured are still without adequate&#13;
medical care, in spite of the tireless&#13;
energy of army, naval and private&#13;
surgeons and nurses.&#13;
Food supplies axe insufficient, but&#13;
are increasing. The minister of the&#13;
interior has ordered all ships in Chilian&#13;
ports to proceed to Valparaiso&#13;
with food and bring away refugees. A&#13;
regular relief service has been established.&#13;
Cattle shipments are on the&#13;
way. Frontier train service has been&#13;
established from Talca. Supplies of&#13;
meat and milk are arriving regularly&#13;
but not in quantities sufficient to prevent&#13;
hunger.&#13;
Estimates of the number of dead&#13;
11 remain between 3,000 and 5,000.&#13;
Twenty-eight bodies were found Wednesda^&#13;
under the stairway of the telegraph&#13;
offlrt&#13;
Meat and Bread Scarce.&#13;
Meat and bread are scarce. Meat&#13;
Is now being distributed by the authorities.&#13;
Tbe grocers' shops that&#13;
were not destroyed by the earthquake&#13;
are now nearly out of stock. Canned'&#13;
meats, sardines, condensed milk and&#13;
biscuits are much needed.&#13;
As a first Installment the government&#13;
has appropriated $4,000,000 for&#13;
the relief of the destitute.&#13;
One of the greatest difficulties encountered&#13;
by the authorities Is the Interment&#13;
of the bodies recovered from&#13;
the ruin3, as all the cemeteries were&#13;
destroyed. At the various temporary&#13;
morgues heaps of coffins have accumulated,&#13;
awaiting- the designation of their&#13;
place of burial. The work of recovering&#13;
the bodies is being pushed to the&#13;
utmost in order to avoid an epidemic.&#13;
The total number of corpses buried&#13;
jp to Tuesday, August 21, was 648.&#13;
The main post office has been reopened.&#13;
Every Wall Ruined.&#13;
At Llai Llai there is not a single&#13;
wall in good condition. There, were&#13;
30 persons, kiiled there.&#13;
At Cabildo the'railroad station was&#13;
damaged.&#13;
At Quillota many buildings were&#13;
prostrated.&#13;
The earthquake was severe at Con- '&#13;
con and Coimo. The dead in those&#13;
places number 25.. ' '&#13;
The work of bringing order out of&#13;
chaos is progressing rapidly and the&#13;
telephone and telegraph lines have&#13;
his chief. Meanwhile she went on&#13;
writing:&#13;
"—I am to tell you not to get into any&#13;
fresh trouble—not to let anyone else get&#13;
you Into trouble; by which I infer she&#13;
means that some attempt will be made to&#13;
keep you from returning on the evening&#13;
train."&#13;
"There, can you send all that?" she&#13;
asked, sweetly, giving the pad to the&#13;
technologian. ^&#13;
Adams read the first part of the letter-&#13;
length' telegram with inward groanings,&#13;
but the generous purpose of it&#13;
struck him like a whip blow when he&#13;
came to the thinly veiled warning.&#13;
Also it shamed him for his unworthy,&#13;
judgment of Virginia.&#13;
"I thank you very ueartlly, Miss&#13;
Carteret," he said, humbly, "it shall&#13;
be sent word for word." Then, for tae&#13;
Reverend William's benefit: "Winton&#13;
deserves all sorts of a snubbing for&#13;
taking liberties with your portrait. I'll&#13;
see that he gets mere of it when he&#13;
comes back."&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
and was wondering in the inner depths i D e e u restored to Santiago. The postal&#13;
oi him what piece of girlish frivoiuy ! system is in working order and mail is&#13;
he was expected to sign and send to ! being delivered regularly.&#13;
Electric cars already are running between&#13;
Baron station and Recro, and&#13;
probably the opration of cars will be&#13;
extended to Vina del Mar.&#13;
A movement is on foot to organize&#13;
a company to facilitate the raising of&#13;
the money necessary to reconstruct&#13;
the city. It is proposed to advance&#13;
the sums needed without interest for&#13;
the first six months. The plan is to&#13;
construct the new buildings of light&#13;
materials and to lay out the streets&#13;
so that they will have a uniform&#13;
width of 20 meters.&#13;
The department of public works at&#13;
Santiago has appropriated 1100,000&#13;
for the construction of sheds to shelter&#13;
the refugees from Valparaiso and&#13;
elsewhere who continue to arrive&#13;
there.&#13;
Earth Swallows 10,000.&#13;
Lima.—It is reported that Quillota,&#13;
a city of 10,000 population, about 30&#13;
miles from Valparaiso, has sunk entirely&#13;
from sight and that less than&#13;
100 of the Inhabitants escaped.&#13;
POWERFUL CLEANSER&#13;
When anyone suggested to Mrs.&#13;
Herlthy that the extreme whiteness&#13;
of the clothes which she washed was&#13;
due to anything besides her exertions,&#13;
Mrs. Herllhy took fire at once.&#13;
"It's tbe*wurrk o' me hands and me&#13;
arrms and me elbows that does it!"&#13;
she cried, indignantly. "I use all me&#13;
stren'th on thlm clothes, and I'm as&#13;
wake as" a rag whin they're done.&#13;
Soap an' water is all I take to 'em,&#13;
barrinV the teste little bit of ft lovely&#13;
washing-powder that Just puts the last&#13;
touch to 'em."&#13;
"Are ye sure it's only a little bit&#13;
you're using?" asked the prylffg neighbor&#13;
in a dubious tone*&#13;
I "Am I surttV mad the irrath'.of Mrs.&#13;
HerTJhy&#13;
wouldn't I ^^ufe.-whin if ^owed ajfrom Cairo Jo Gizeh.&#13;
bit more it'd ate the nails right off me&#13;
fingers!"—Youth's Companion.&#13;
Build Road for Princess' Benefit.&#13;
Old Khedive Ismail's expensive compliment&#13;
to the then Empress Eugenie&#13;
36 years ago—the construction of ^a&#13;
fine carriage road from Cairo to the&#13;
pyramids and the Sphinx of Gizeh so&#13;
that she might drive instead of riding&#13;
a donkey—nas been copied by the&#13;
present khedlval government for the&#13;
princess of Wales. For her a carriage&#13;
road has been built from Bedrasheen&#13;
to the pyramids, and ruins at Sakkara.&#13;
This road, like the one made for the&#13;
empress of the French, will he serviceable&#13;
to ordinary tourists hence?&#13;
tortfc—There la even a trolley'&#13;
Two Dead in Wreck.&#13;
Bristol. Va— As a result of a washout&#13;
a freight train on the Virginia &amp;&#13;
Southwestern railway ran off a trestle&#13;
at Moccasin river at two o'clock Friday&#13;
morning and the engine and eight&#13;
cars loaded with coal were plunged&#13;
into the river and two persons were&#13;
killed.&#13;
Three 8teel Workers Killed.&#13;
Pittsburg, Pa,—Three men are dead,&#13;
two are in a serious condition and&#13;
nine others were rendered unconscious&#13;
by a blow-out of accumulated&#13;
gas early Tuesday morning at the&#13;
Eliza furnaces of the J?nes &amp; Laughlins&#13;
Steel company, at Soho, this city.&#13;
Wants Boycottsra Suppressed.&#13;
Hongkong.—The American consul&#13;
general has sent a dispatch to the&#13;
Viceroy of Canton requesting him to&#13;
fl^f*uppn»sjhe Boycott association for&#13;
"m&#13;
t •&gt;&gt;&#13;
;•-$£&#13;
"I]&#13;
-4 .--11&#13;
7.,&#13;
\ *,i&#13;
* '&#13;
-1:&#13;
'Jhi&#13;
&gt; i&#13;
the hindrance of American commercei,&#13;
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AMkA^A^A tilths A ^A^fcA^lfcA^g.A^.A&#13;
Among Oilr Correspondents i&#13;
I WEST PUTNAM. I Everybody get rea.ly for t h e&#13;
I Thomas Cooper and wife spent! ^ &lt; ^ i o n of the Maccabee hall,&#13;
j Sunday in Stockbridge.&#13;
Lucy Snyder, of Dexter, is visiting&#13;
at John Connor's.&#13;
James Roche and wife, of&#13;
Pinckney called on friends here&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Winnie Monks and Kathleen&#13;
j Hackett spent&#13;
Emma Gardner.&#13;
Wednesday evening, Sept. 12th.&#13;
Some noted speakers and musicians&#13;
have been secured for t h e&#13;
occasion. A banquet will be served&#13;
at the close of the exercises.&#13;
Remember, the date, Sept. 12.&#13;
'. UNADHIA.&#13;
Mrs. Breed is on the sick list.&#13;
Mrs. Joslyu of Howell is visiting&#13;
old friends here.&#13;
P. W. Watts is visiting his sister,&#13;
Mrs. John Webb.&#13;
Byal Barmnn is paying his son!&#13;
a visit at Lake Odessa. j Mrs. Anna Kirkland and daugh&#13;
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Wirt I ter&gt; o £ t h e Phillipiue Islands, are ; ANDEBSO*,&#13;
Ives, Aug. 24, a daughter. I visiting at Mrs. Savle's. j Mr. Ledwidge and family are&#13;
... n • i- , . • 0 „r t l l i;„,J • Miss Irene Dupiiis, of Miss Bessie Lane is spending i * ' Detroit,'! i campri n*g at Patterson lake this&#13;
ii i -H, i , . «„»«..^ ! w » ° n a s been a guest at the home&#13;
the week with tier parents. , &amp;&#13;
^ TTT.„ „T t .. „ T11 . of Mrs. Win. Gardner, has return-&#13;
Dr. W.ll Watts pt Poor* I ! i . ; ^ ^&#13;
visiting his sister, Mrs. Marshall.&#13;
S. G. Palmer~attended the bean"&#13;
V. v dry, cracked lips, or much skin,&#13;
Tuesday with UM- l)|* Whoop's Green Salve. It posi-&#13;
• tivrtlv makes lips and skin like velvet.&#13;
Sold l&gt;y all dealers.&#13;
Calendar&#13;
1906&#13;
inco examination Monday, Sept. :;.&#13;
The Misses Sadie and Joie&#13;
. . Harris were guests of Mr. and&#13;
growers association at Ann Arbor \ Af T . T v •, , n ,&#13;
f _ . , .-;Mrs. Irwin Kennedy, at Dexter,&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
Justin Hadley and family, of&#13;
Mosherville, were visiting among&#13;
relatives here last week.&#13;
Jarve Goodwin and family of&#13;
White Oak, spent a couple of&#13;
days la&gt;t week at H. Hadley's.&#13;
The Pres. L. A. society cleared&#13;
about $8 from their ice cream social&#13;
last Wednesday evening.&#13;
Frank H. West of Detroit, will&#13;
conduct a Gospel service illustrated&#13;
with stereopticon views in the&#13;
Miss Emma Gardner gave a&#13;
party last Friday evening in honor&#13;
of Miss Dupuis. A number&#13;
week.&#13;
The hay fever season is at hand K n l n t&#13;
and the sound of sneezing is heard , F i r s , S e r „e B | e r m,KillH S e | l t . 4 .&#13;
Vn t u e J a i u ^ . Thanksgiving m-ess Nov. 21» and :\0&#13;
Mrs. F. W. Mackiuder and Xratis vacation begins [)ec, 21.&#13;
children who have been spending)&#13;
several days with her people in&#13;
Stockbridge returned home Monday.&#13;
Mrs. C. Powell and daughters&#13;
1907&#13;
School reopens J a n . 2&#13;
First semester exam, begins Jim. 21&#13;
First semester ends J a n . 2")&#13;
Second semester begins J a n . 28&#13;
Mid semester vacation April 5 to 15&#13;
SeeomI semester exam, hegins J u u u 11&#13;
Commencement J u n e \\)&#13;
Animal exhibit J line 20&#13;
Promotion day J u n e 21&#13;
were present and an enjoyable returned to their home in.Mesick,&#13;
evening was spent. last Thursday. Mrs. E. \. Sprout&#13;
Prof. Tyler, of Amherst .college, said&#13;
recently: "A man can live comfortably&#13;
without brains: no nun ever lived&#13;
without a digestive system. The&#13;
dyspeptic ha9 neither faith, tope or&#13;
charity.1' Day by day people realize&#13;
the importance of carina for their&#13;
A n n o u n c e m e n t&#13;
The Pinckney Public Schools are intended to meet&#13;
fhe wants of Pinckney and vicinity. The courses of study&#13;
and Mrs. Crane accompanied j are intended to g"ive the pupil a good practical education,&#13;
them as far as Lakeland. i —&#13;
Burdocks and thistles abound&#13;
and it would be well if the "man&#13;
with the hoe" should exchange for&#13;
a scythe now and then. [Perhaps&#13;
it would be well to read the Michot&#13;
a littlee corrective atter overeating weeds on his own land and along&#13;
A corrective like Kodol 1'or Dyspepsia fne highway.]&#13;
It digests what you ea..&#13;
Presbyterian church on Friday j digestion:: realize the need of the use | igan law in regard to noxious&#13;
evening, Aug. 31.&#13;
Scrub yourself daily, you're not&#13;
clean inside. Clean inside? means&#13;
clean stomach, bowels, blood, liver.&#13;
clean, heaithy tissue in every orpan.&#13;
Moral: Take Hollister's Rocky Mountain&#13;
Tea. 35 cents, tea o» tablets&#13;
Ask y o u r d r u g g i s t .&#13;
Sold b y F . A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
COLLINS PLAINS&#13;
R. H. Mackiuder made a businesi&#13;
trip to Stockbridge Monday.&#13;
Several from this vicinity at&#13;
I&#13;
Prof. W. A. Sprout writes from&#13;
Zwolla, La., that they are much&#13;
pleased with their new place of&#13;
residence—that business is lively,&#13;
society good, the prospects for a&#13;
good school excellent, and if it&#13;
A d m i s s i o n&#13;
Pupils entering the school for the first time will be assigned to&#13;
such grades as their attainments allow.&#13;
Pupils holding diplomas from the rural schools of the county&#13;
will be admitted in t h e ninth grade without further examination.&#13;
Full credits will be given to pupils coming from schools of equal rank.&#13;
Students are, however, admitted provisiouslly omexamination, or&#13;
recommendation, and may be re-classified if found unable to do the&#13;
high* school work.&#13;
A t t e n d a n c e&#13;
Business Pointers. *&#13;
tended&#13;
bridge last week.&#13;
Mrs. Richard&#13;
It is very desirable that pupils enter at the beginning of the&#13;
year. Any absence tends to put the pupil at a disadvantage, T h e&#13;
were not for their great loss in j importance of regular and punctual attendance cannot be over estithe&#13;
carnival at Stock-! the deatl^of their son, they would mated. Irregular attendance and tardiuess not only puts the pupil&#13;
be very happy&#13;
Mackiuder and&#13;
W A N T E D — A r e s p e c t a b l e p i r l for&#13;
g e n e r a l house w o r k . S t e a d y work&#13;
a n d good wayes to r i g h t p a r t y . N i g h t&#13;
owls a n d run-?, bouts need n o t a p p l y .&#13;
H. G. P o r t e r . U n a d i l l a&#13;
P i n c k n e v . Mi oh. t m&#13;
N O T I C E .&#13;
The time has been extended on the&#13;
tax roll until Sept. 1. This i&gt; positively&#13;
the last extention so let all tax- I ^ i s i t i u ? b e r graudaughter, Mrs&#13;
payers take notice. Marion Reason.&#13;
, macKiULier arm A s k y o u r arn^i-&gt;t tor Pylo Pile&#13;
| children have returned from a'(jure. Every box warranted. Price&#13;
I short visit with her parents in; 25 cents. For Sale by F. A. Sigler,&#13;
: Stockbridge.&#13;
! Mr. and Mrs. Willis Picked&#13;
I spent the latter part of last week&#13;
visiting relatives near:Stockbridge&#13;
aud Williamston.&#13;
Mrs. H. F. Lyman who has been&#13;
back in his work, but injures the school as a whole.&#13;
Full credit will not be given if any recitation period is missed.&#13;
SOUTH MAHION. \&#13;
Miss Viola Howe, of Howell, is j&#13;
the guest of Edna Abbott this I&#13;
week. . I&#13;
I . J . A b b o t t and family inter-j&#13;
Village Treas.&#13;
F O R SAL.B.&#13;
1 wo nice lots on M a i n s t r e e t , w i t h&#13;
fine s h a d e . And door a n d w i n d o w&#13;
f r a m e s sufficient for ' a i r sized house.&#13;
22 t t H . W. Crotoot&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Bland and cousin,&#13;
Charles Husband, are visiting her&#13;
171 W. D A N I E L S , -&#13;
J j , GKXKR.M. AUCTION KER.&#13;
SatistftctKn Guaranteed. For information&#13;
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 ;tnd tin &lt;;u[)s '.. B e i ' l d c e J a c k s o n t e a c h e r .&#13;
furnished free.&#13;
Richard Mackiuder for a few, Gained Mr. and Mrs. Learn Newweeks,&#13;
has relumed to her home ; m R ! 1 last Sunday,&#13;
in Jackson. j Mr. and.Mrs. Roy Richards are&#13;
—^- - - - visiting his parents, Thos. Rich-&#13;
Old maid&gt; would he &lt;carce and hard, ards and wife, of this place,&#13;
to rind,&#13;
Could they be made to &gt;ee, --&#13;
How tjrace and beauty are combined; . , . , „ ' , , . J^ - I&#13;
sister, Mrs. frank Bruit, of&#13;
j Cohoctah.&#13;
j Mrs. Wm. Bland and Mrs. D.&#13;
1 D. Carr called on Mrs. Hiram&#13;
Backus, who is very sick, last,&#13;
Monday afternoon.&#13;
By using Rocky Mountain Tea.&#13;
PIAINFIEID.&#13;
School began last Monday with&#13;
Tuition&#13;
Non resident students will be required to pay the following rates&#13;
of tuition: —&#13;
Hl^h School, per month $1.50&#13;
Grammar Dept., per month $1.25&#13;
Intermediate Dept., per month $1.00&#13;
Primary Dept., per month . . . . / . $1.00&#13;
Tuition must be paid to the Treasurer or Superintendent for&#13;
three months in advance.&#13;
C o u r s e of S t u d y&#13;
NINTH GRADE&#13;
(iiuilish L a t i n C o u r s e&#13;
1st SKMKSTKR&#13;
Arithmetic&#13;
(irnmiwar&#13;
Physiology&#13;
Kngltfih Classic Kejidiiitf I"&#13;
2nd si:&gt;n:sTKK&#13;
[.'nnlLsh C our sir&#13;
1st SK&gt;«:STKK&#13;
Arithmetic&#13;
(inimrnar&#13;
Physiology&#13;
Inglisli Clas&gt;ic Keudiui,' 1&#13;
2nd SKMKSTKK&#13;
Arithmetic&#13;
tjiLilish German C o u r s e&#13;
1st SKMKsi'KH&#13;
Arithmetic&#13;
Grammar&#13;
Physiology&#13;
Kn^lish Classic utM.linjj I&#13;
L'lld SKMKSTKR&#13;
Arithmetic&#13;
F O R 3AIM.&#13;
^^^iPair cheap horses, also new milch&#13;
cow. C. E. Baugbn, Portage Lake, last week with a new machine.&#13;
Rev. Ostrander aud family are&#13;
at Caro this week and next.&#13;
R. W. Caskey began threshing&#13;
Percy Swarthout&#13;
Funeral Director&#13;
AND EMB&amp;LMER&#13;
ALL CALLS ANSWERED&#13;
PROMPTLY DAY OR NIGHT&#13;
A r e P i e E a t e r s H y p o c r i t e s t&#13;
- W h y do people w h o e a t pie In secret&#13;
and in the opera, p&gt;oplt» who when they&#13;
, order p i e cast a b o u t thorn furtive&#13;
M r . anci M r s . C l i a s . C o o m b s , glances a;i,l people who a o n o t cure&#13;
(ifiimmiiH, &lt; h'thograpny J II&#13;
Algebra&#13;
Botany&#13;
Arithmetic&#13;
Grammar ], Orthography ^ I I&#13;
Grammar 4, Orthograpy \ I I&#13;
Algebra&#13;
Botany&#13;
1st SKMKSTKK&#13;
Algebra'&#13;
Algebra&#13;
Botany&#13;
TENTH GRADE&#13;
1st SEMKSTKH&#13;
Algebra&#13;
1st -SKMKSTKR&#13;
Algebra&#13;
v i s i t e d a t 8 . T . W a s s o n s l a s t W e e k . | w l l ° s &lt;&gt; o s Uu^ "W^l on pie one a n d c ' v U Gov't ™d School Law Civil Gov't and School Law Civil Gov't and School Law&#13;
w , , , n : all talk anil iielmve J;S if the consump-&#13;
Maccabbee ice cream sale Sept. ! tlon or ,,;.. ronsiitm,.,i an nnpardonable&#13;
8 instead of 1 as before given out. j 8 l u "'llt,!i|,Vii' the sniijoct. is hronchedV&#13;
- iMur.r amn&lt;wi l AMir,s-.Q LrOvOKi , - or,rt AKn n ' ^irtJuw' .ii u .l,l,(,),l.i i,-.l. ".'i.r clrs con,i| )osod, ;o f those . . ' « . i i u w n o s e a n c e s t o r s were brought n p p n&#13;
A r l i o r , v i s i t e d a t E . , L . T o p p i n g ' s P'e, even pie tor breakfast, is p i e h u i i e d&#13;
M o n d a y of t h i s w e e k . \ w I t h ^it-thful t i t t e r i n g ? - P r o v l d e n c e&#13;
J o u r n a l .&#13;
PARLORS'AT&#13;
PLIWPTON S OLD STAND p&gt;~ No.30&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH J . P. Rumer&#13;
State Senator, 13th District,&#13;
Respectfully solicits your support&#13;
for re-nomination at the&#13;
primaries, Sept. 4.&#13;
fii- : &lt;,:&#13;
U. S. History&#13;
Kngli^h I I I •&#13;
2 n d SKM1-&gt;TKK&#13;
Algebra&#13;
Physical Geography I&#13;
Bookkeeping&#13;
English IV&#13;
1st SKMKSTKK&#13;
Rhetoric V&#13;
(General History&#13;
Physical Geography I I&#13;
Phvsus&#13;
2nd SRMKSTKK&#13;
/English VI&#13;
Getiend Histoiy&#13;
Physics&#13;
Plane (reonu-trv&#13;
1st SKMKSTKK&#13;
Plane Geometry&#13;
Literature VII&#13;
Fnglish History&#13;
Reviews / £ • S. History J&#13;
I Grammar ^&#13;
2 n d SKMKSTKK&#13;
Solid Geometry&#13;
. Liiefalnre V I I I&#13;
I&#13;
U. S. History&#13;
English I I I&#13;
2 n d SKMKSTKK&#13;
Algebra&#13;
Physical Geography&#13;
Bookkeeping&#13;
English IV&#13;
ELEVENTH GRADE&#13;
1st SKMKSTKK&#13;
Rhetoric V&#13;
General History&#13;
Latin&#13;
Physics&#13;
2 n d SKMKSTKK&#13;
Latin&#13;
G e n e r a l Ilintorv&#13;
t&#13;
Physics&#13;
Plane Geometry&#13;
TWELFTH GRADE&#13;
1st SEMESTIK&#13;
Plane Geometry&#13;
Literature VII&#13;
English History&#13;
Latin&#13;
2nd SKMKS IKK&#13;
Solid Geometry&#13;
-1&lt;K«1.V AgriM* W i K w c r i . l.«i-,U*'iv&#13;
iScr 11 c Ii c i.inii'.M.n l'-irfin &lt; &gt;• il", : • • f '.'• i. •&gt;•&#13;
liynO mul I'remiiini ('utal.i.;m- (sh,..01^ j J |&gt;i otumdis)&#13;
/ f l i t troe, AilJress THE McCAl.L CO,. New York.&#13;
Chemistry&#13;
Arithm&#13;
Geography f&#13;
Keview8 { Arithmetic JLiterature&#13;
\ ' I 1 I&#13;
Chemistry&#13;
Latin&#13;
l \ S. History&#13;
English III&#13;
2ml SEMESTER&#13;
AlgehiH&#13;
PhyBical Geography j&#13;
Bookkeeping&#13;
English IV&#13;
1st SEMESTER&#13;
R h &gt; * t k V&#13;
tieneral HnHnry&#13;
Latin ^ - /&#13;
Physics&#13;
2 m l SKMESTKK&#13;
Gerruau&#13;
Generul History&#13;
Physics&#13;
Plane Geometry&#13;
l*t SEMESTER&#13;
Plane Geometry&#13;
Literature VII&#13;
English History&#13;
German&#13;
2nd SEMESTER&#13;
S o l i d G e o m e t r y&#13;
f&#13;
. V A * "&#13;
lc&#13;
40&#13;
'-*?&#13;
Literature V I I I&#13;
Chemistry&#13;
Gerruan&#13;
M&#13;
w.&#13;
*.*•&#13;
;». 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. XXI ^ . P I N O K N E Y , LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., T H U R S D A Y , SEPT. 6, 1906. No. 36&#13;
LOCAL, N E W S .&#13;
y#:&#13;
•&#13;
i r&#13;
-'•!9&#13;
£ . U Brown spent Saturday and&#13;
Sunday in Ja-kson.&#13;
Mrs. Estella Graham spent las Monday&#13;
and Tuesday with Jackson friends.&#13;
Miss Effie Allen, of Howell, has&#13;
been visiting friends here the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Miss Orpha Heudee returned the&#13;
last of last week from a visit with her&#13;
sister in Lansing.&#13;
lHjKss Ethel Read left Saturday for&#13;
Sal in* to resume her work in the&#13;
school tteie as preceptress.&#13;
iMiss Florence Andrews was a guest&#13;
at the home ot Mr. and Mrs. Harry&#13;
Andrews is Detroit, the past week.&#13;
The dates of the .Fowlerville fair&#13;
are Oct. 9 to 12 inclnsive. The Standard&#13;
will be issued daily during that&#13;
time.&#13;
Miss Kate Brown, who has been&#13;
spending the summer with her mother&#13;
here, returned to her school work&#13;
in Chicago, Monday.&#13;
Arthur Swarthout, William Kennedy&#13;
J r . and Clayton Placeway left tast&#13;
Friday, for Big Rapids where they&#13;
will attend the Ferris col'ege.&#13;
Ethel Graham who has been spending&#13;
the passt two weeks with Mrs. J.&#13;
W. Knapp, of-Jackaon, is camping&#13;
with, a party of young people at (jil*&#13;
lett's lake.&#13;
Mrs. Nixon and children, formerly&#13;
-0f-Htttsxhrt&amp;7 vrstted" Mrs. H. F. Sigler&#13;
the past week. They leave soon for&#13;
their new home in southern California&#13;
where her husband has been for some&#13;
time.&#13;
The Catholic picnic at Chelsea&#13;
whijh v\ae given for the benefit ot the&#13;
parochial school, turned about $1,000&#13;
into the trea&gt;urery after paying all&#13;
expenses.&#13;
Printers!&#13;
Owing to a l a r g e&#13;
increase in o u r&#13;
business we have&#13;
-been obliged t o&#13;
add a l a r g e r ma&#13;
ohine for b i n d i n g&#13;
books and have a&#13;
Hercules Stapler&#13;
Foot Power&#13;
Nearly tiew&#13;
For Sale Cheap&#13;
F. L ANDREWS &amp; Co.&#13;
PUBS. DISPATCH&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
lid-S^iiier Cleariitf Sale&#13;
l a Now O n&#13;
it&#13;
VCJV&#13;
*fc IP&#13;
r#-»r«' selling »11 our Fancy Chilinmps&#13;
and Water Sets at cost&#13;
in order to make worn for new&#13;
Goods. Decidedly low prices are&#13;
made H11 through the store. For&#13;
instance:&#13;
14b A. * H. Soda for 3c f| f d Spool Black Darning Cotton for lc&#13;
oar 900 yd Spools Thread for 6c&#13;
I &gt; £ A. BOWMAN.&#13;
HOWELL'S BUSY STORE&#13;
Rev. Littlejohn was in Ann Arbor&#13;
Tuesday, on business.&#13;
This section was blessed by a shower&#13;
Sunday night, but more is needed&#13;
Eugene Reason of Detroit bas been&#13;
home tbe past week on account of&#13;
illness.&#13;
Mrs. Hug&gt; Finley entertained her&#13;
sister and two children, of Holly, the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Cavanauh,&#13;
a son, Aug. 26. Mrs. C. was&#13;
formerly Miss Nellie Mortenson.&#13;
We learn that Mr. and jjrs. Fred&#13;
Miine, of Cement City, bave been caring&#13;
for a baby boy since Aug. 26.&#13;
Miss Flora Culhane. who kas been&#13;
in tbe northern partjof the state the&#13;
past summer, returned home last&#13;
week.&#13;
Geo. Reason J r . made an 80 mile&#13;
trip, with his Reo auto, one afternoon&#13;
last week, taking a traveling man on&#13;
bis rounds.&#13;
H. D. Mowers and wife "who have&#13;
been spending two weeks, in• the&#13;
northern part ot the state, returned&#13;
home Monday.&#13;
Miss Mollis Wilson left'last Friday&#13;
for Dubuque Iowa to lm#ia teaching&#13;
typewriting and shorthand in the&#13;
Bay less Business college.&#13;
Mrs. Myer Davis has been under&#13;
the doctor's care for tbe past two&#13;
weeks, but we are glad to state that&#13;
she is better at thi3 writing.&#13;
The supervisors of Livingston county&#13;
assessed the properly of the county&#13;
at $15,647,951 and the state board of j&#13;
equalization raised it to $16,000,000.-}&#13;
The Ladies .of tbe M. E. church will !&#13;
serve tea at the opera house,. Wednes-'&#13;
day, gept. 12, from five o'clock until!&#13;
all are served. Everyone cordially!&#13;
invited to come.&#13;
Bills will be issued from this office,&#13;
this week announcing an auction sale |&#13;
at tbe home of L. E. Smith in this;&#13;
village, Saturday, September 15. Mr.l&#13;
Smith has decided to go west and will j&#13;
dispose of his personal property at!&#13;
that date. -;&#13;
Abram Boyer and wife left Tuesday&#13;
for a visit in VanVVert, Ohio. Thisj&#13;
was formerly Mr. Boyer's home and;&#13;
he has n^t visited it in 26 years. He |&#13;
attended the first fair held there 50:&#13;
years ago and will attend the one held&#13;
there this coming week.&#13;
Fred Mitchell, of Hamburg, was I&#13;
quite badly injured one day last week i&#13;
by falling under his horses feet while!&#13;
caring for them. He had an epileptic!&#13;
fit but screamed as he fell and his&#13;
mother heard him and rescued him&#13;
from his perilous position. He received&#13;
a bad cut on hi* bead.&#13;
Rev. C. S. Jones, of St Louis, Mo,»&#13;
formerly pastor of the Cong'! church&#13;
here, has received a call to the First&#13;
Cong! church in Detroit, and we understand&#13;
he will accept. Mr. Jones&#13;
is a preacher of rare ability and hisi&#13;
many friends will be glad "to learn '&#13;
that he is coming back to this state, '&#13;
ih« directories of the Livingston,&#13;
Mutual Telephone Co have all been i&#13;
finished and most of them turned,&#13;
over to the company or shipped to the :&#13;
central offices tor distribution. VVe&#13;
are receiving many compliments fori&#13;
the manner in which tbe work wasj&#13;
done. Man? did not know that the;&#13;
DISPATCH office could do such work,&#13;
and especially en such short nctice.&#13;
This office is equipped to do any and&#13;
all kind* of work, and issues books as&#13;
large as this at l«ast once a year.&#13;
Congregational Church.&#13;
Regular service will be resumed&#13;
next Sunday when tbe pastor will&#13;
preach a t 10:30 a. m. He will also&#13;
conduct hit olaos for—young men and&#13;
women at 11:30. Sunday school at&#13;
tbe usual hour. Evening service at&#13;
7:80.&#13;
Union- temperance meeting tonight&#13;
at M. £ . church, led by both pastors.&#13;
W. ALFRED SPROUT.&#13;
We publish the following by request,&#13;
as the deceased was well known&#13;
by many of our readers:&#13;
Died August 4,1906, at Marthaville,&#13;
La., W. Alfred Sprout, aged 24 years&#13;
and 10 mouths, only son of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. William A. Sprout.&#13;
W. Alfred Sprout was born in Putnam&#13;
township, Livingston county,&#13;
Michigan^December 17, 1881, where&#13;
bis father, grandparents and many&#13;
relatives have lived for many years&#13;
and are well known.&#13;
His education was pursued at home&#13;
until 1896 when he entered tbe eleventh&#13;
grade of the p inckney high&#13;
school, ot which his father was for&#13;
many years the principal. In DQC,&#13;
1897, he joined the graduating class&#13;
of the Howell bigh school, graduating&#13;
in June 1898, The next three years he&#13;
spent in study and assisting bis father&#13;
in then s*ore and on the farm. In&#13;
Sept., 1902 he entered the University&#13;
of Michigan at Ann Arbor, intending&#13;
to graduate in the medical department.&#13;
In the spring of 1904 an epidemic ot&#13;
measles broke oat among the students&#13;
and he fell a victim to the disease, be&#13;
ing very ill tor tour weeks, and his&#13;
eyes were left so weak that he was&#13;
unable to resume his studies, which&#13;
was a great disappointment to him. He&#13;
had made usual good progress in all&#13;
Of his college work.&#13;
Intending to specialize in brain and&#13;
nerve disease..he went to the asylum&#13;
at Pontiac, to sfudy such cases, v He&#13;
entered the hospital a&amp; an attendant.&#13;
The physicians were very kind and&#13;
helpful to,him, instructing bim with&#13;
their experience. He remained there&#13;
until an epidemic of smallpox broke&#13;
out in February, when he returned&#13;
home, soon securing a position as collector&#13;
for the International Correspondence&#13;
School, with headquarters at&#13;
Adrian. A more lucrative position&#13;
was later taken in the advertising department&#13;
ot the Page Fence company,&#13;
and afterwards with the Feohheim r&#13;
Advertising company, of Detroit,&#13;
which he left in Dec. 1905. to go with&#13;
his sister to join their parent* in Marthaville,&#13;
La., hoping to.regain his usual&#13;
good health in a warmer climate.&#13;
There occurred a vacancy of prinei&#13;
pal in the Pleasant Hill college, the&#13;
next town on the T. P. road; be was&#13;
offered the position, and accepted,&#13;
with his sister as assistant, giving the&#13;
utmost satisfaction.&#13;
He had his plans ail made to spend&#13;
the summer in Michigan, then resume&#13;
bis medical studies at the Tulare Uni&#13;
versity, New Orleans, this fall, then&#13;
next year return to Ann Arbor to finish.&#13;
He was writing a book, which&#13;
he extected to publish in the early&#13;
autumn.&#13;
All his earthly plans were ended&#13;
with his departure from this world&#13;
into a higher life with Christ, his&#13;
Redeemer, on August 4, after beinjr&#13;
lovingly cared for through 28 days of&#13;
a rilild form of typhoid fever, which&#13;
Gnly hastened the always fatal consumption&#13;
of the spinal cord.&#13;
He- leaves a father, mother and sis&#13;
ter, to mourn the loss ot a devoted&#13;
son, a tender comdanion and brother,&#13;
a host of relative* and friends in&#13;
Michigan and Louisiana.&#13;
He was unusually gifted in every&#13;
way^and with his sterling Christian&#13;
character, cordial geniality, helpful&#13;
n o s and sunny temperment, he&#13;
gained tbe warm esteem and lasting&#13;
regard of all with whom he became&#13;
associated.&#13;
In early childhood he took Christ&#13;
his Great Example, Quid* and Saviour,&#13;
and in March, 1903, he was&#13;
confirmed io tbe Episcopal church, at&#13;
Ann AroofT by tbe late Bisbjp Davies.&#13;
His lift* was short in.years, but full&#13;
in all that makes life true and beautiful,—&#13;
Capital City Democrat.&#13;
Headquarters for&#13;
Drugs, Medicine&#13;
Books, Stationery&#13;
Fancy Crockery.&#13;
School Books&#13;
P. A. SIGLER&#13;
All Persons owing us on Book&#13;
Account are requested to kindly&#13;
call and settle same by Oct. 4, —&#13;
1906, by Cash or Bankable notes.&#13;
JACKSON &amp; CAD WELL&#13;
M. E. Church Notes.&#13;
There were K.o stiring sermons&#13;
Sunday, and all who beard them were&#13;
well paid for attending. The sermon&#13;
in the evening was an exceptionally&#13;
good one to young men, and should&#13;
be repeated. In fact" it was a good&#13;
one lor parents. The attendance was&#13;
^ood at both services, considering that&#13;
so many are away on vacations.&#13;
There are onlv two more Sundays in&#13;
this conference year and all are invitto&#13;
attend. Ns subject was announced&#13;
for ne*t Sunday evening but something&#13;
is premised that will, stir people&#13;
up.&#13;
The Sunday school is still interest&#13;
ing and all seem to be getting into&#13;
the harness lor work. The school wa&gt;&#13;
organised into a missionary society,&#13;
Sunday, and work al^ng this line is&#13;
lo:ked for.&#13;
The prayer meeting Thursday even&#13;
ing will take the form of a temperenee"&#13;
meeting, and everybody is invited.&#13;
It is to be a union service and&#13;
every church member is urgently requested&#13;
to be»present.&#13;
T h e m a n a g e m e n t of&#13;
the Howell O p e r a&#13;
H o u s e take pleasure&#13;
in a n n o u n c i n g a special&#13;
e n g a g e m e n t of&#13;
Gordon &amp; Bennett's&#13;
Gr?at A t t r a c t i o n&#13;
The Holy City&#13;
F o r O o e X i g h t&#13;
Friday, Sept. 14&#13;
T h e G r e a t S t o r y of&#13;
Mary Magdalene&#13;
Dranmized ami presented&#13;
with all the gorgeous wealth&#13;
'f scenery and radiant splendor&#13;
that is required .for a&#13;
Perfect Production.&#13;
special attention given to&#13;
mail orders and out of t"\vn&#13;
patrol^.&#13;
On account of many&#13;
heavy bills due O c t .&#13;
1, we desire to have • . • • • » all accounts past&#13;
due settled.&#13;
Tccplc Hardware Go.&#13;
.*•• • t ¥ j&#13;
•'•£ ' •&lt;*•'&lt;. * .&#13;
• * &amp; &gt;&#13;
m-&#13;
- ^&#13;
EKJTEO&#13;
MURDER OF DYNE8 I N QALIEN&#13;
STILL R E M A I N * A DEEP&#13;
MYSTERY.&#13;
A C T E D SUSPtt?OVSI-Y&#13;
Report of Elder Barnes About Three&#13;
Suspiciously Acting Men—Was&#13;
There An Engagement*&#13;
Arrests to Be Mftde.&#13;
New evidence in the Galien mnv&lt;ier.&#13;
mystery has caused the abandonment&#13;
by Sheriff Tennant ami the detectives&#13;
of all theories except robbery.&#13;
•the sheriff made a hurried trip to&#13;
northern Indiana early Friday morning&#13;
and when he returned he gave out&#13;
the following statement:&#13;
"A plan to rob the depot caused the&#13;
murder of Lloyd A. Dynes at Gallon,&#13;
Monday. All of the officers at work on&#13;
the case have come to that conclusion&#13;
from the new evidence just obtained.&#13;
We~k"noW who the nren are, but until&#13;
we can join a few more links in the&#13;
chain of evidence against them there&#13;
will be no arrests. For this reason 1&#13;
cannot give out the nature of the evidence.&#13;
However, I can give assurance&#13;
that the men will be caught."&#13;
Three Strange Men.&#13;
Three strange looking men who acted&#13;
suspiciously were seen at the Michigan&#13;
Central depot in Galien by Presiding&#13;
Elder D. F. Barnes, of Miles, shortly&#13;
before Lloyd Dynes, the operator,&#13;
was murdered. Mr. Barnes says he saw&#13;
them between midnight and 12:40 a.&#13;
m.&#13;
"What do you want?" Dynes asked&#13;
one of the fellows who entered the&#13;
office, the elder says.&#13;
"We're waiting for the train,*' he replied.&#13;
"Want a ticket? I'll have to flag the&#13;
train."&#13;
"We don't need tickets. We have&#13;
passes."&#13;
Dr. Barnes says the men didn't&#13;
board the train.&#13;
What may prove a valuable clue was&#13;
the finding of a blood-stained handkerchief&#13;
bearing the laundry mark of&#13;
Smith. It was found tucked under a&#13;
platform leading from a, handcar&#13;
house, about 200 yards west of the depot&#13;
where Dynes was killed. There&#13;
is no laundry in the place.&#13;
Glen Smith, who keeps a general&#13;
store, and is local manager of the&#13;
Michigan State Telephone Co.. sleeps&#13;
at the store nights to answer tele&#13;
phone calls.&#13;
From present indications the sheriff&#13;
Is very reluctant to offer a reward, and&#13;
inquiries as to whether any money will&#13;
be offered for the arrest of the murderer&#13;
met with evasive answers.&#13;
Considerable excitement was occasioned&#13;
among the large crowd that attended&#13;
the funeral in Windsor when&#13;
it was known that the mysterious widow&#13;
that viewed Dynes' body was present,&#13;
accompanied by her mother. The&#13;
woman was heavily veiled, and after |&#13;
again viewing the body took a seat in&#13;
the rear parlor. When the services |&#13;
were concluded she quietly disap-&#13;
8care Lest Michigan Growers Are to&#13;
Magnus &amp; Lauer, importers and&#13;
manufacturers of essentia,! oils, of New&#13;
York, have addressed letters to the attorney-&#13;
general of the United States&#13;
and to William L/oeb, secretary to the&#13;
president, directing attention to a call&#13;
for a meeting of the peppermint growers&#13;
of Michigan, to be held lifKalamazoo,&#13;
Mich., September 4, for the purpose&#13;
of "fixing a minimum price for oil&#13;
of peppermint," an article of interstate&#13;
and export commerce. The letter says:&#13;
"Being extensive buyers and exporters&#13;
of this product, we take the initiative&#13;
in respectfully asking you to take&#13;
such measures as are in your power&#13;
to prevent or suppress this combination,&#13;
projected in defiance of the federal&#13;
laws; and we furthermore respectfully&#13;
suggest that the attorney of the&#13;
United States for the district in which&#13;
Kalamazoo is situated, be notified of&#13;
the date of this meeting, September 5&#13;
next, and the place, the Kalamazoo&#13;
house, Kalamazoo, Mich., so that he&#13;
may take measures to insure the observation&#13;
of the federal laws."&#13;
The firm also says that the value of&#13;
American peppermint oil consumed aunually&#13;
varies from 4500,000 lo $1,000,-&#13;
000. The letter of Secretary Loeb calls&#13;
attention to the communication to the&#13;
attorney-general and asks tnat it be&#13;
brought to the attention of the president.&#13;
The firm has also written to Attoruey-&#13;
General Bird, of Michigan, directing&#13;
his attention to the matter.&#13;
The American Society of Equity,&#13;
familiarly known as the "Farmers'&#13;
Trust/' and an outgrowth of the Farmers'&#13;
Alliance, with head offices in Indianapolis,&#13;
is behind the effort to fix&#13;
| a minimum price for peppermint oil.&#13;
The meeting was called by the president&#13;
of the society. It will be distinctly&#13;
a growers' gathering. Tnq A. M. Todd&#13;
Co., the leading peppermint concern&#13;
there, denies it is interested in the&#13;
meeting or its results.&#13;
Helen Keller, the wonderful blind, deaf and&#13;
dumb girl, has recently been apjx&gt;lnj;ed member of&#13;
the Massachusetts board of education for the blind.&#13;
The board was recently created, provided by the&#13;
Massachusetts legislature largely at the solicitation&#13;
of Helen Keller.&#13;
The wonderful results that have followed the&#13;
efforts to open the world of thought and beauty&#13;
to this famous blind girl,ihave teen an inspiration&#13;
the world over to workers in behalf of those that&#13;
cannot Bee. Miss Keller is a strong believer in&#13;
industrial training for persons afflicted with blindness,&#13;
and probably during her service on the board&#13;
-will further with characteristic enthusiasm this&#13;
training. •&#13;
Helen Adams Keller is a graduate of Radcliffe&#13;
college, one of our best schools for women;, finished&#13;
the four years' course, was graduated with&#13;
the degree A. B. She is author as well as college&#13;
woman, her literary style of an excellence.&#13;
Miss Keller now makes her home in the north, but she comes from the&#13;
south. She is related to well-known families of both north and south, the&#13;
Adamses and Everetts of New England, the Pottswoods and Lees of Virginia.&#13;
She was born at Tuscumbia, Ala.; at the age of 19 months an illness left her&#13;
blind and deaf. Until the age of seven years little was done in the way of&#13;
teaching her, when Miss Anna Sullivan, who had received training at the&#13;
Perkins institution in Boston, assumed charge of the unfortunate child. Helen&#13;
at that age was little more than a wild animal, very difficult to control. With&#13;
infinite patience and skill her teacher led her put of darkness, to-day sot is a&#13;
beautiful, cultured, splendid woman.&#13;
HAVE A MANIA FOR HOBOING&#13;
Litigation Cost Most.&#13;
The so-called Gibson drain controversy&#13;
among Tuscola, Bay ana Saginaw&#13;
counties, which has been in the&#13;
courts for nearly a generation and has&#13;
been appealed to the supreme court&#13;
seven times in various forms of litigation,&#13;
has been settled at a conference&#13;
resulting in an amicable agreement&#13;
among three counties.&#13;
The drain will bo built jointly by&#13;
Blumfteld township, Saginaw ctmnty:&#13;
Merrick township, Bay county, and&#13;
Denmark township, Tuscola county, at&#13;
an expenditure of $25,000. The lawsuits,&#13;
it Is estimated, have cost more&#13;
than the expense of building the drain.&#13;
The drain will be one.''of the largest&#13;
and most valuable in this part of&#13;
Michigan, opening up large tracts to&#13;
cultivation and will, it is said, now be&#13;
pushed to completion.&#13;
Wealthy Ohioan Arrested as a Crook&#13;
in I liana.&#13;
Logansport, Ind.—Preston H. Robincon,&#13;
50 years old, who Is serving a jail&#13;
sentence in this city for stealing a ride&#13;
pn a Panhandle freight train, has been&#13;
Identified as a wealth^ citizen of Plain&#13;
City. O., worth at least $20,000, but&#13;
with a mania for "hoboing" it over the&#13;
country. When first arrested Robinson&#13;
gave his name as James Smith,&#13;
but after admitting the name was fictitious,&#13;
he was held for further investigation.&#13;
In his possession were found&#13;
a revolver, a gold watch, a draft for&#13;
|75 on a Plain City bank, blank bank&#13;
?hecks and a grip full.of drugs.&#13;
The police thought they had captured&#13;
a notorious cropk and a careful&#13;
investigation was made. A letter&#13;
from J. W. Latham, marshal of Plain&#13;
«ity, s a j s that Robinson is a resident&#13;
of that city worth 120,000, and that the&#13;
draft he carries is good.&#13;
The marshal said that Robinson has&#13;
been making a practice of "going on a&#13;
bum" at certain interval* for years,,&#13;
and that while on one of his trips he&#13;
met with a railroad accident and lost&#13;
one of his feet. Despite the acclderit,&#13;
however, Robinson persists in traveling&#13;
in box cars without paying any&#13;
railroad fare and seemingly enjoys&#13;
this style of travel. When arrested&#13;
here he was fined for steeling a ride&#13;
on a train, and after paying his fine&#13;
was rearrested on a charge of trespass.&#13;
He refused to pay the second&#13;
fine and was sent to jail. *&#13;
. K&#13;
Taught.&#13;
He taught her how to skate,&#13;
He taught her how to swim,&#13;
They're marired now, and she's teaching&#13;
tots ot things to.him!&#13;
—Puck.&#13;
When a Qlrl 1» Nott&#13;
A woman i s a girl until §he is 85,&#13;
according to the board of manager*&#13;
of the Philadelphia Young Woman's&#13;
O l r i i t l ^ ^ a i o c f a a d n ^ O B&#13;
fifth birthday she cuts off the giddiness&#13;
of girlhood and becomes a woman.&#13;
T h a t j s , R e d o e s if she looks it.&#13;
1 « s h j is r i l e % h the aid _o a&#13;
swltcn andrperodlde,. rouge and U »&#13;
eyebrow pencil, to look or thlni^sjiir&#13;
looks less than 35, then she 1» » girt&#13;
so long as she Is able to look or t l s W&#13;
she looks so. For her still the chocolate&#13;
carmel and the marshniallow, the&#13;
American beauty amd the matinee&#13;
ticket, also tb* French heel-and the&#13;
straight front As not many unmarried&#13;
women ever arrive at tha aaja&#13;
when they do not look or t h i n ^ l i ^ , ,&#13;
look 35, It follows therefore t m t »VjeV&#13;
woman Is a girl as long as she waab*&#13;
to be, in spite of all the boards of&#13;
lady managers in existence. Which&#13;
is as It should be. or age is not, after&#13;
all, a matter of wrinkles and agility.&#13;
Is as it should be. For age is not. aft»r&#13;
of the spirit within. If we are iav&#13;
mortal souls, it were preposterous&#13;
say that. 35 years taken out of eternity&#13;
can have any effect upon u i j ^&#13;
nor 70 years, for that matter, nor a&#13;
hundred. If a woman's heart be pure&#13;
"*a* cannot wither her," says the Chicago&#13;
Journal. She is good, and goodness/&#13;
grows not old. 8he is tender,&#13;
and' tenderness knows no date. She&#13;
is loving, and love- Is immortally&#13;
yaairg. Her hair may be white and&#13;
scanty, her limbs feeble, her eyes&#13;
dimmed, her once rosy cheek pale&#13;
and sunken, but so long as the flame,&#13;
of life remains within her breast her&#13;
husband and her children know that&#13;
time has not altered her pure affection,&#13;
which burns as bright as ever&#13;
and Is young eternally.&#13;
WORD OF ADVICE TO EVERY WOMAN&#13;
MICHIGAN IN BRIEF.&#13;
Over 300 foreigners were ma&lt;]e citizens&#13;
of the United States in the circuit&#13;
court in Bessemer Wednesday. That&#13;
day was the last under the old naturalization&#13;
law.&#13;
The first night's attendance at the&#13;
State Fair, now being held in Detroit,&#13;
was 15.000. It is the greatest fair ever&#13;
peared in the throng. Despite all ques- i put up in the state.&#13;
tioning she refused to'give her name,&#13;
simply stating that she had known the&#13;
deceased for a short time, and had&#13;
been greatly shocked to hear of his&#13;
untimely end.&#13;
There was a report that Dyne.; was&#13;
engaged to be married to Miss Myrtle&#13;
E. Hill, formerly a stenographer for&#13;
the Kalamazoo Corset Co. Mrs. Fred&#13;
Arden, with whom Miss Hill boarded&#13;
for a considerable time, is authority&#13;
for this story.&#13;
"The wedding was set for September&#13;
12, Miss Hill told me," said Mrs. Arden.&#13;
"She met Dynes when on an excursion&#13;
to Detroit this summer. They&#13;
were mutually attracted to each other,&#13;
and an engagement soon followed. She&#13;
gave up her position here about July&#13;
1, saying she was going to Chicago to&#13;
prepare for her wedding. ~&#13;
"She was here recently and told me&#13;
how happy she was that-her wedding&#13;
day was near. I understand that their&#13;
wedding license was found in Dynes'&#13;
trunk in Galien since his death.&#13;
"I do net know where Miss Hill Us&#13;
now living. She is a petite girl, attractive,&#13;
with blue eyes and golden hair."&#13;
Harry Wright, aged 18, from Indianapolis,&#13;
is in jail in Adrian on suspicion&#13;
^of being a safe-blower. He had a burglar&#13;
kit, dynamite and jewelry when&#13;
arrested.&#13;
Michigan railroads during 190,5 killed&#13;
only two passengers and 15,72:.,682&#13;
persons were carried, according to. reports&#13;
received by Railroad Commissioner&#13;
Atwood.&#13;
Brick street pavement which cost&#13;
Laiising $54,000 only last year is fast&#13;
crumbling, and the taxpayers are enraged&#13;
at the manufacturers of-the poor&#13;
quality of brick.&#13;
The 7-year-old daughter of Mrs. Henry•&#13;
Hainstoeft, of Kingsley, died on the&#13;
:)0th ult., making the third death in&#13;
the family in a WPPIC n P child's fathv&#13;
- ..&#13;
Fire Loss at Empire.&#13;
The mill of the Empire Lumber Co.,&#13;
at Empire, one of the largest in the&#13;
state, owned by the T. Wllce Lumber&#13;
Co., of Chicago, the carshops of the&#13;
Empire &amp; Southeastern, a blacksmith&#13;
shop and six logging cars were entirely&#13;
destroyed by fire. The loss is $60,-&#13;
000 and the insurance, $35,o6o. They&#13;
will rebuild immediately.&#13;
The origin of the fire is unknown. It&#13;
was discovered by the night watchman&#13;
In the filing room. A heavy gale off the&#13;
lake fanned the flames. The water supply&#13;
gave out and the fire department&#13;
was powerless. '&#13;
The mill had been in operation for&#13;
IS years and had six years cut ahead,&#13;
two million feet of which was on the&#13;
tanks for this season's cut.&#13;
All Were Rescued.&#13;
The big wooden &lt;fre freighter Charles&#13;
A. Eddy, of the Gilchrist Transportation&#13;
Co., caught Are off Port SanHac, la/&#13;
I&gt;ake Huron, at 2: SO o'clock&gt; Tuesdaymorning&#13;
and was totally destroyed,&#13;
sinking In a little over an hour. The&#13;
crew of 17 men and Capt. E. B. Elsey&#13;
and his wife and two little children&#13;
were rescued by the p. '&lt;fc/C. steamer&#13;
City of Mackinac and brought to Detroit&#13;
— "f .&#13;
ei and grandmother died on the 27th.&#13;
Capt: Fox, of Cadillac, was shot at&#13;
several times while standing in front&#13;
of the Salvation Army barracks, in&#13;
Pig Ranids, by some unknown person.&#13;
Three bullets entered his neck am!&#13;
shoulders.&#13;
The largest mushroom on record is&#13;
in possession of Edwin Arnold, a restaurant&#13;
proprietor of Saginaw. Arnold&#13;
claims the fungus fills a half bushel&#13;
basket, weighs seven pounds and was&#13;
found in a cemetery.&#13;
There is every Indication that the&#13;
semi-centennial year of the Michigan&#13;
Agricultural college, an occasion that&#13;
will be celebrated by the visit of President&#13;
Roosevelt next May, will be a&#13;
banner year for attendance. It is estimated&#13;
there will be 1,000 students.&#13;
The college year begins September 17.&#13;
Clara Wlghtman, the 13-year-old girl&#13;
who became lost last week after visiting&#13;
her mother's grave at Dimondale,&#13;
was found at Jackson and returned to&#13;
her father, John Wlghtman. Because&#13;
of the impediment in her speech she&#13;
was unable to make anyone understand&#13;
her questions how lo reach&#13;
home.&#13;
Complete rura'i delivery service, consisting&#13;
of 51 routes, 17 of which are&#13;
new, have been ordered established in&#13;
Ottawa county. Mich., effective October&#13;
16. The list of new routes is as&#13;
follows: Allendale, route 1; Berlin, 3;'&#13;
Conklln, 4; Coopersvllle, 4, 5; Grand&#13;
Haven, IJ, 4; Holland, 11, 12; Hudsonville,&#13;
f: Jenison, 2; Robinson, 1;&#13;
Spring Lake, 2; West Olive. 1, 2; Zee-&#13;
Hand, *,-«;« •&#13;
f l a n g e the Entire Clothing to Get a&#13;
Thorough Rest—The Food&#13;
That Refreshes.&#13;
Every woman should learn how; to-'&#13;
change her clothing. Take off ij-the,&#13;
shoes you have been wearing all day&#13;
and put on other shoes. The pinch&#13;
will come In a different place.&#13;
Take off the blouse you have wora.f&#13;
all day, and the *jllar which has been&#13;
round your throat since morning, and&#13;
put on a different blo.ise and a different&#13;
collar. You have no idea how&#13;
a fresh blouse rests one, and especially&#13;
a fresh piece of neckgear. The&#13;
pinch goes on a different set of muscles.&#13;
Changing the underwear Is a good&#13;
plan, and best of all Is changing the&#13;
corsets. The bones will rub, no mat*&#13;
ter how carefully you plan things, and&#13;
a new corset makes you feel as though&#13;
you were just beginning a day instead&#13;
of finishing one.&#13;
1 The tired out woman usually eats&#13;
the wrong kind of food. When tired&#13;
one should select food not for their&#13;
food value alone but for ther recuperative&#13;
powers. Hot soup of any kind&#13;
quickly refreshes the tired woman.&#13;
Apple Slump.&#13;
Pare, core and quarter a dozen tart,&#13;
(uicy apples, pour over them a cupful&#13;
?f hot water and place in a saucepan&#13;
m the back of the range. Let them&#13;
itand five or ten minutes, then add&#13;
:wo cups molasses. Cook ten minutes,&#13;
:over with a paste made from a heaping&#13;
pint of sifted flour, a teaspoonful&#13;
)f sugar and two of baking powder,&#13;
with enough sweet milk to make a&#13;
loft dough. Spread this over the apples,&#13;
cover the kettle closely and cook&#13;
55 minutes without uncovering. Serve&#13;
ivith lemon or foamy sauce.&#13;
Quite Ancient.&#13;
Alcohol for illuminating purposes Is&#13;
not new. Many men have followed its&#13;
ruddy glow for sorne years.—American&#13;
Spectator.&#13;
A as/ • &lt; / rt r*ija*»artl-A^ o f a T t N M , L U 0 N DOLLAR CONCERN is the beat assurance yau can&#13;
T T f l l X C n U U a r a n i e e have of the superiority of the&#13;
COLUMBIA GRAPnOPliONE&#13;
With t Ms guarantee you don't guess, you KNOW which is best. ASK&#13;
YOUR OWN BANKER as to our responsibility and financial standing. Free Trial and Easy Payment Offer&#13;
Then send to our nearest dealer or to us, and get our . . . . " " — • — — • • — • — • — - - ^ ^ - ^ ^ -&#13;
TWs is your cbaace to secure the BEST TALKING MACHINE MADE, on payment* which will not be felt.&#13;
WE ACCEPT OLD MACHINE* Of ANY MAKE IN PART PAYMENT.&#13;
An Ideal ****• y o u e v e r "**** * 6raphoan»aa * * a! 4****? In the sftountains;' on the&#13;
o A water; at the ••ashore; anywhere I The musk of a Grapaophvne in the •pen&#13;
Summer Amusement* i» CLEAR, SWEET AND FAR-RCACHM*. Try K and judge.&#13;
•rand Prta, »«ri», i»•+ BeiiMc Crane Prize, at. Lento, I»a4&#13;
m«t»«st JavarS, rnrttaatf, tees *&#13;
Columbia Phonograph Co.&#13;
90-92 West&#13;
tvtvA&#13;
\:\tt O* S«nd me full details&#13;
of .vour Ks«y Payment and&#13;
New York. •••'' Name&#13;
Address ,&#13;
r«jc&lt;i«&#13;
Tfn&#13;
irr'-'A. .«.*%&#13;
t-'^Wf&#13;
fcvJfcU..&#13;
A FOOL FOR LOVE&#13;
By FRANCIS LYNDE&#13;
AUTHOR OF "THE GRAFTERS." ITC.&#13;
CG9Mri|**, lMi.br J. P. UJSJLKKH* Co.)&#13;
•iW&#13;
» &gt; • &lt;&#13;
CHAPTER V.—Continued.&#13;
Iter* the matter rested; and, baring&#13;
what she conceived to toe her&#13;
charitable duty, Virginia was aa anxious&#13;
to get away aa heart—the heart&#13;
of a slightly bored Reverend Billy, for&#13;
instance—could wish.&#13;
80 they bade Adams good-by and&#13;
picked their way down the frozen emnkment&#13;
and across the ice bridge;&#13;
wn and across and back to the Rosery,&#13;
where they found a perturbed&#13;
oiaperon in a flutter of solicitude arising&#13;
upon their mysterious disappearance&#13;
and long absence.&#13;
"It may be, Just as well not to tell&#13;
any of them where we have been,"&#13;
said Virginia in an aside to her cousin.&#13;
And so the Incident of tea-drinking in&#13;
the enemy s camp was safely pot away&#13;
like a little personal note in its envelope&#13;
with the nap gummed down.&#13;
CHAPTER VI,&#13;
While the technologian was dispensing&#13;
commissary tea in iron-stone china&#13;
cups to his two guests in the "dinkey"&#13;
field office, his chief, taking the Rosemary's&#13;
night run in reverse In the&#13;
oompany of Town Marshal Biggin, was&#13;
turning the Rajah's coup into a small&#13;
Utah profit.&#13;
Having come upon the ground late&#13;
the night before, and from the opposite&#13;
direction, he had seen nothing of&#13;
the extension grade west of Argentine.&#13;
Hence the enforced journey to Carbon^&#13;
ate only anticipated an inspection trip&#13;
which he had Intended to make as soon&#13;
as he had seated Adams firmly in the&#13;
track-laying saddle.&#13;
Not to miss his opportunity, at the&#13;
first curve beyond Argentine he passed&#13;
his cigar case to Biggin and asked&#13;
permission to ride on the rear platform&#13;
of the day cpach mr inspection&#13;
purposes.&#13;
"Say. pardnerL what do you take me&#13;
fer, anyhow?" was the reproachful re-&#13;
Joinder.&#13;
"For a gentleman in disguise," said&#13;
Winton. promptly.&#13;
••Sim'larly, I do you; savvy? You&#13;
tell me you ain't goin* to stampede,&#13;
and you ride anywhere you blame&#13;
please. See? This here C. &amp; O. R&#13;
outfit ain't got no surcingle on me."&#13;
Winton smiled.'&#13;
'"I, haven't any notion of stampeding.&#13;
As it happens, I'm only a day&#13;
ahead of time. I should have mafle&#13;
this run to-morrow of my own accord&#13;
to have a look at the extension grade.&#13;
You will find me on the rear platform&#13;
when you want me.'&#13;
"Good enough," was the reply; and&#13;
Winton went to his post of observar&#13;
tion.&#13;
Greatly to his satisfaction, he found&#13;
that the trip over the C. &amp; G. R. answered&#13;
every purpose of a preliminary&#13;
inspection of the Utah grade beyond&#13;
Argentine. For 17 of the 20 miles the&#13;
two lines were scarcely more than a&#13;
stone's throw apart, and when Biggin&#13;
joined him at the junction above Carbonate&#13;
he had his note-book well filled'&#13;
with the necessary data.&#13;
"Make It, all right?" inquired the&#13;
friendly bailiff,&#13;
"Yes, thanks. Have another cigar?"&#13;
"Don't care If I do. S*y, that old&#13;
Are-eater back yonder jp the private&#13;
car has got a mighty pretty gal, ain't&#13;
he?"&#13;
"The young lady Is his niece," said&#13;
Winton, wishing that Mr. Biggin&#13;
would find other food for comment.&#13;
"I don't care; she's pretty as a Jersey&#13;
two-year-old."&#13;
"It's a ftMW" observed Winton;&#13;
* and then, to background Miss Carteret&#13;
effectually as a topic, "How do the&#13;
people of Argentine feel about the opposition&#13;
to our rine?"&#13;
"They're red-hot; you can put your&#13;
money on that. The C. A O. R.'s a&#13;
sure-enough tail-twister where there&#13;
ain't no competition. Your road'll get&#13;
every pounfl of ore in. the camp if it&#13;
ever gets through."&#13;
Winton made a mental note of this&#13;
upcast of public opinion, and set it&#13;
over against the friendly attitude of&#13;
the official Mr. Biggin. It was very&#13;
evident that the town marshal was&#13;
serving the Rajah's purpose only because&#13;
he had to. • ^p&gt;&#13;
_^^- ul suppose you stand with yonr&#13;
' r f ^ ^ M M K e n on that, don't you?" he venftttiN&#13;
shouting; that's me."&#13;
M tkat**Athe case, we won't&#13;
take i i t o itttle Tollday of ours any&#13;
harder %%'we can help, When the&#13;
ottort business la settled—It won't take&#13;
firy long—you are to consider youry&#13;
guest. We stop at the Buok-&#13;
'a' told him to go to blazes with his&#13;
warrant. Next time I will."&#13;
Winton shook his head. "There&#13;
isn't going to be any 'next time,' Peter,&#13;
my son," he prophesied. "When Mr.&#13;
Darrah gets fairly down to business&#13;
he'll throw bigger chunks than the&#13;
Argentine town marshall at us."&#13;
By this time the train was slowing&#13;
into Carbonate, and a few minutes&#13;
after the stop at the crowded platform&#13;
they were making their way up the&#13;
single bustling stret of the town to&#13;
the courthouse.&#13;
"Ever see so many tin-horns and&#13;
bunco people bunched in all your&#13;
round-ups?" said Biggin as they elbowed&#13;
through the uneasy, shifting&#13;
groups in front of the hotel.&#13;
"Not often," Winton admitted. "But&#13;
it's the luck of the big camps; they&#13;
are the dumping grounds of tb* world&#13;
while the high pressure is on."&#13;
The ex-range rider turned on the&#13;
courthouse steps to look the 8idewa*K&#13;
loung%rs over with narrowing eyes.&#13;
"There's Sheeny Mike and Big Otto&#13;
and half a dozen others right, there&#13;
- Winton turned in his chair and saw&#13;
the boy coming towards'him; also he&#13;
saw the ruffian pointed out by Biggin&#13;
from the courthouse steps and labeled&#13;
"Sheeny Mike" lounging up to the&#13;
clerk's desk* for a whispered word with&#13;
the bedlamonded gentleman behind it.&#13;
What followed was cataclysmal in&#13;
its way. The .lounger took three staggering&#13;
lurches towards Winton,&#13;
brushed the messenger boy aside, and&#13;
burst out in a storm of maudlin invective.&#13;
"Sign yerself 'Winton* now, do ye,&#13;
ye low-down,, turkey-trodden—"&#13;
"One minute," said Winton, curtly,&#13;
taking the telegram from the boy and&#13;
signing for it.&#13;
"I'll give ye more'n ye can carry&#13;
away in less'n half that time—see?"&#13;
was the minatory retort; and the&#13;
threat was made good by an awkward&#13;
buffet which would have knocked the&#13;
engineer out of his chair if he had&#13;
remained in it.&#13;
Now Winton's eyes were gray and&#13;
steadfast, but his hair was of that&#13;
shade of brown which takes the tint&#13;
of dull copper in certain lights, and&#13;
he had a_temper which went with the&#13;
red in his hair rather than with the&#13;
gray in his eyes. Wherefore his attempt&#13;
to placate his assailant was&#13;
something less than diplomatic.&#13;
"You drunken scoundrel!" he&#13;
snapped, "if you don't go about your&#13;
business and let me alone, I'll turn&#13;
you over to the police with a broken&#13;
bone or two! '&#13;
The bully's answer was a blow delivered&#13;
straight from the shoulder—&#13;
too straight to harmonize with the fiction&#13;
of drunkenness. Winton saw the&#13;
sober purpose In it and went battlemad,&#13;
as a hasty man" will. Being a&#13;
thaVt white—ml&#13;
been ah inch or so more'n halt awake&#13;
this morning when* that old b'llerr's&#13;
hired man routed mt out, I'd&#13;
kUT O' THIS, PRONTO!"&#13;
in front o' the Buckingham that&#13;
couldn't stay to breathe twice in Argentine.&#13;
And this town's got a police!"&#13;
the comment with lip-curling&#13;
scorn.&#13;
"It also has a county co\irt which&#13;
1B probably waiting for us," said Winton;&#13;
whereupon they went in to appease&#13;
the offended majesty of the law.&#13;
As Winton had predicted, his answer&#13;
to the court summons was a&#13;
mere formality. On parting with his&#13;
chief at the Argentine station platform,&#13;
Adams' first care had been to&#13;
wire newa of the arrest to the Utah&#13;
headquaVteYs. Hence Winton found&#13;
the company's attorney waiting for&#13;
him In Judge Whltcomb's courtroom,&#13;
and his release on an appearance bond&#13;
was only a matter of moments.&#13;
The legal affair dismissed, there ensued&#13;
a weary interval of time-killing.&#13;
There was no train back to Argentine&#13;
until nearly five o'clock in the afternoon,&#13;
and the hours dragged heavily&#13;
for the two, who had nothing to do&#13;
but wait. Biggin endured his part of&#13;
It manfully till the midday dinner had&#13;
been discussed; then he drifted off&#13;
with one of Winton's'cigars between&#13;
his teeth, saying that he should "take&#13;
polsdn" and shoot up the town if ha&#13;
could not find some more peaceful&#13;
means of keeping his blood In circulation.&#13;
It was a little after three o'clock,&#13;
and Winton was sitting at the writing&#13;
table In the lobby of the hotel&#13;
elaborating •: hit hasty aote-book data&#13;
of the morning's inspection, when a&#13;
boy came 1¾^ with a telegram. The&#13;
young engineer was not so deeply engrossed&#13;
in his work as to be deaf to&#13;
the colloquy. *" jftatcwHr^s^^ 1&amp;a to the hoy's question; an* after an&#13;
at the writing table."&#13;
Rnt. Wintnn trna next .io..ha.. brought&#13;
to his senses so easily.&#13;
"Run away from that swine? Not&#13;
if I know it. Let him take it into&#13;
court if he wants to. I'll be there,&#13;
too."&#13;
The beaten one was up now and apparently&#13;
looking for an officer.&#13;
"I'm takin' ye all to witness," he&#13;
rasped. "I was on'y askin' him to&#13;
cash up what he lose to me las' night,&#13;
and he jumps me. But I'll stick him&#13;
if there's any law in thfs camp."&#13;
Now all this time Winton had been&#13;
holding the unopened telegram crumpled&#13;
in his fist, but when Biggin&#13;
pushed aim out of the circle and thrust&#13;
him up to the clerk's desk, be bethought&#13;
him to read the message. It&#13;
was Virginia's warning, signed by&#13;
Adams, and a single glance at the closing&#13;
sentence was enough to cool him&#13;
suddenly.&#13;
"Pay the bill, Biggin, and join me&#13;
in the billiard room, quick!" he whispered,&#13;
pressing money into the town&#13;
marshal's hand and losing himself in&#13;
the crowd. And when Biggin had&#13;
obeyed his instructions: "Now for a&#13;
back way out of this if there is one.&#13;
W*!W have to -take to the hlUa till.&#13;
train time."&#13;
They found a way through the bar&#13;
and out into a side street leading&#13;
abruptly up to. the fir-clad hills behind&#13;
the town. Biggin held his peace&#13;
until they were safe from immediate&#13;
danger of pursuit. Then his curiosity&#13;
got the better of him.&#13;
"Didn't take you more'n a week to&#13;
change your mind about pullin' it off&#13;
with that tin-horn scrapper in the&#13;
courts, did it?"&#13;
"No," said Winton.&#13;
" 'Taint none o' my business, but&#13;
I'd like to know what stampeded you."&#13;
"A telegram"—shortly. "It was a&#13;
put-up job to have me locked up on a&#13;
criminal charge, and so hold me out&#13;
another day."&#13;
Biggin grinned. "The old b'llerbuster&#13;
again. Say, he's a holy terror,&#13;
ain't he?"&#13;
"He doesn't mean to let me build&#13;
my railroad if he can help it."&#13;
The ex-cowboy found his sack of&#13;
chip tobacco and dexterously rolled a&#13;
cigarette in a bit of brown wrapping&#13;
paper.&#13;
"If that's the game,' Mr. Sheeny&#13;
Mike, or his backers, will be most&#13;
likely to play it to a finish, don't you&#13;
guess?"&#13;
"How?"&#13;
"By havin' a po-liceman layin' for&#13;
you at the train."&#13;
"I hadn't thought of that."&#13;
"Well, I can think you out of it, I&#13;
reckon. The branch train is a 'commodation,&#13;
and it'll stop most anywhere&#13;
if you throw up your hand at it.&#13;
We can take out through the woods&#13;
and across the hills, and mog up the&#13;
track a piece. How'll that do?"&#13;
"It will do for me, but there is no&#13;
need of you tramping when you can&#13;
just as veil ride."&#13;
But now that side oi Mr. Peter Biggin&#13;
which endears him and his kind&#13;
to every man who has. ever shared his&#13;
lonely roundups, or broken bread with&#13;
him in his comfortles; shack, came&#13;
uppermost.&#13;
"What do you take me fer?" was the&#13;
way it vocali;:ed itself; but there was&#13;
more than a formal oath of loyal allegiance&#13;
in the curt question.&#13;
"For a man and a brother," said&#13;
Winton.—hettr-tHy-;—a-ttd—they—se* a l -&#13;
together to waylay the outgoing train&#13;
at some point beyond the danger limit.&#13;
It was accomplished without further&#13;
mishap, and the short winter day was&#13;
darkening to twilight when the train&#13;
came in sight and the engineer slowed&#13;
to their signal. They climbed aboard.&#13;
WORN TO A SKBLBTONi.&#13;
A Wonderful Restoration Caused a&#13;
Sensation in a Pennsylvania&#13;
Town.&#13;
Mrs. Charles N. Preston, of Elkland,&#13;
Pa., says: "Three Tears ago I found&#13;
that my housework&#13;
was becoming a burden.&#13;
I tired easily.&#13;
had no ambition and&#13;
was fading fast. My&#13;
complexion got yellow,&#13;
and I lost over&#13;
50 pounds. My thirst&#13;
was terrible, and&#13;
there was sugar In&#13;
the kidney secretions.&#13;
My doctor, kept me on a strict&#13;
diet, but as his medicine was not helping&#13;
me, I began using Doan's Kidney&#13;
Pills. They helped me at once, and&#13;
soon all traces of sugar disappeared.&#13;
I have regained my former weight and&#13;
am perfectly well."&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.&#13;
Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
"Piigs" Ordered from Scattfe.&#13;
The chief of police of Seattle, be.&#13;
lieving that prize fighters bring criminals&#13;
and other undesirables in their&#13;
train, has ordered all pugilists, trainers&#13;
and others connected with the&#13;
ring to leave the city or take up some&#13;
respectable employment.&#13;
Sensible German Idea.&#13;
On continental railways and the&#13;
Rhine steamers there Is no miscellaneous&#13;
scrambling for meals. Instead&#13;
a steward goes through the train or&#13;
boat and lists the people who want&#13;
to eat. Each gets a number, and this&#13;
insures a seat without crowding, or&#13;
delay.&#13;
FORCE ALL IDLERS TO WORK.&#13;
Scarcity of Labor in the HarvsM&#13;
Fields of the Northwest.&#13;
Idlers in southern Washington must&#13;
either enter the harvest field or go&#13;
to jail. The old blue law of New&#13;
England that "he who will not work&#13;
shall not eat" has been revived&#13;
throughout the wheat belt of this&#13;
state and northern Oregon at the instance&#13;
of farmers whose chagrin upon&#13;
having an offer of $3 a day and board&#13;
rejected by loafers must be appeased.&#13;
Accordingly the town councils of&#13;
Pullman. Colfax, Garfield, Pomeroy,&#13;
Palouse and a half dozen other towns&#13;
have rendered it possible to inflict&#13;
double penalty for vagrancy, a fine&#13;
and jail sentence of thirty days being&#13;
imposed, and the prisoner being&#13;
required to work on a specially provided&#13;
rock pile in the broiling sun.&#13;
1 The definition of the term "vrgrancy"&#13;
has been enlarged in its application in&#13;
I the wheat belt until it practically tle-&#13;
| volves upon the accused to show that&#13;
i he has some means of support involving&#13;
some physical effort on his part.&#13;
for if it is not "visible" to the police&#13;
! magistrate, the prisoner will surely&#13;
be held for vagrancy.&#13;
1 The demand for help is almost a&#13;
tragedy in some localities. Farmers.&#13;
I realizing that their crop wfll be practically&#13;
ruined should it not be liar-.&#13;
; vested within a brief time, make&#13;
j frantic appeals to any man or woman&#13;
caiiable of wielding a pitchfork. They&#13;
offer from $2 to $3 per day and board,&#13;
skillful boxer—which his antagonist&#13;
was not—he did what he had to do&#13;
neatly and with commendable dis,- I a n d w hen they had found a seat In&#13;
patch. Down, up; down, up; down a t n e smoker the engineer of construethird&#13;
time, and then the bystanders ; t l o n spoke to the ex-cowboy as to a&#13;
interfered.&#13;
"Hold on!"&#13;
"That'll do!"&#13;
"Don't you see he's drunk?"&#13;
"Enough's as good" as a feast—let&#13;
him go."&#13;
Winton's blood was up, but he desisted,&#13;
breathing threatenlngs. Wherefriend.&#13;
"I hope Adams has knocked out a&#13;
good day's work for us," he said.&#13;
"Your pardner with the store hat&#13;
and the stinkln' cigaroota?—he's all&#13;
right," said Biggin; and It so chanced&#13;
that at the precise moment of the saying&#13;
the subject of it was standing&#13;
j with the foreman of track layers at a&#13;
at Biggin shouldered his way into the ; g a p in the new line just beyond and&#13;
circle, above the-R&amp;semartfs siding at Ar-&#13;
"Pay your bill and let's hike out o' gentine, his day's work ended, and his&#13;
this, pronto. ' he said In a low tone. I men loaded on the flats for the run&#13;
"You ain't got no time to fool with j down to camp over the lately laid rails&#13;
a Carbonate justice shop." | of the lateral loop.&#13;
' ' &lt;TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
Mmfymt Utarttt*&#13;
By REAR ADMIRAL J. B. COGHLAN.&#13;
U. 5. N.&#13;
m&#13;
A v e r y serious&#13;
need of our country at&#13;
the present time,-from&#13;
various points of view,&#13;
is a merchant marine.&#13;
The merchant marine&#13;
is needed, not only for&#13;
our commerce, but for&#13;
the navy, because in&#13;
time of war when we&#13;
put the whole fleet into active service, we will" have more than double&#13;
the number of men that we have in times of peace, and the great question&#13;
with the navy men. is whe/e we will get those other men. You&#13;
cannot make a sailor over eight. It takes two years at least to bring&#13;
a bright young^mMfrJEip to.the position where he is worth anything at&#13;
all to the service^ an&lt;J if we have to double the number of men that&#13;
we now have^w^V^*e we;^oijik to look for them? The only way that&#13;
we will be abl^lt^tfst^hein iflfren we want J;hem is 4&gt;y means of the&#13;
merchant marine. Tn thai \&gt;o4* of men we find the very materialthat&#13;
we n e ^ d , f o e f f ^ o f t ^ * &lt; ^ ^ naval training will make• first-&#13;
^fcas -&amp;aUorrnen:~ Of course, we shall not beabTeTtpTthrQW them right&#13;
and stipulate readily that the quality&#13;
of the board shall rival that at Delniunicos.&#13;
and the hired man can have&#13;
the best bed in the house for the&#13;
asking.—Seattle Post-Intelligencer.&#13;
CAINED 3 4 POUNDS&#13;
Persistent Anaemia Cured by Dr.&#13;
Williams' Pink Pills After Other&#13;
Remedies Had Failed.&#13;
" When I began taking Dr. Williams'&#13;
Pink Pills," says Mrs. Nathaniel Field,&#13;
of St. Albans, Somerset county, Maine,&#13;
"I was the palest, most bloodless person&#13;
you could imagine. My tongue and&#13;
gums Were colorless aud my fingers and&#13;
i ears were like wax. I had two doctors&#13;
j aud they pronounced my trouble anaemia,&#13;
shad spells of vomiting, could not eat,&#13;
in fact, did not dare to, I had such distress&#13;
after eating. My stomach was filled&#13;
with gas which caused me awful agony.&#13;
The backache I suffered was at times&#13;
almost im bearable aud the least exertion&#13;
made my heart beat so fast that I could&#13;
hardly breathe. But the worst of all was&#13;
the splitting neuralgia headache which&#13;
never leftiue for seven weeks. About this&#13;
time I had had several uumb spells. My&#13;
limbs would be cold and without any&#13;
feeling aud the most deathly sensations&#13;
would come over me.&#13;
"Nothing had helped me until I began&#13;
taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, in fact,&#13;
I had grown worse every day. After I&#13;
had taken the pills a short time I conld&#13;
see that they were benefiting me and&#13;
one morning I awoke entirely free from&#13;
pain. The distress after eating disappeared&#13;
aud in three weeks I could eat&#13;
anything I wanted and suffer no incouveuienoe.&#13;
I also slept soundly. I have&#13;
taken several boxes of the pi lis and have&#13;
gained in weight from 120 to 154 pounds&#13;
and am perfectly well now./'&#13;
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cure ausemia&#13;
because they actually make new blood.&#13;
For rheumatism, indigestion, nervous&#13;
headaches and many forms of weakness&#13;
they are recommended even if ordinary&#13;
medicines have failed. v They are sold by&#13;
all druggists, or will be sent postpaid, on&#13;
identifying glance, "There lie is—over into the best positions in the ships, will not be able to give them tht&#13;
most responsible positions.&#13;
receipt of price, GO cents per^&gt;oi, six&#13;
boxes for $3 GO, by the Dr. Williams&#13;
Medicine Cciupauy, Schenectady, N, Y«&#13;
I ' • - • 111 . ' '&#13;
• P I P&#13;
.-&gt; m*~^m *&#13;
» F ^&#13;
wCWtfikWe^tbift**^^&#13;
* '&#13;
i&amp;c fmciuujj gtepatch&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS &amp; CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
THURSDAY, S E P T . 6. 190(5.&#13;
ftlt'HltiA3 MATE I AIR&#13;
August liOlh to Sepiembrr 7tii, 11)0(1&#13;
Tlie Gniutl Trunk Railway System&#13;
Announces single tare t .,r the round&#13;
trip, plus 50 cents tor admission to&#13;
the fair &lt;,noui;ds, Tickets on sale&#13;
AUK. 30th to Sep* 7tli inclusive. H&gt;&lt;&#13;
turn limit Sept...8th 1900. Fur fares&#13;
and furthc- information call on loca.&#13;
Agent or write to Geo W. Vaux, A &lt;J.&#13;
P . &amp; T. A , 135 Adams.St .Chicawo, I! .&#13;
If all dyspepsia sufferer* kn-vv thut&#13;
Dr. Shoop\ Restorative would do tor&#13;
them. Qyspep.-ia would practical I v be&#13;
a disease of the past. Dr. Snoop's Re&#13;
storative readies stomach troubles by&#13;
its direct tonic action upon tbe inside&#13;
nerves—tbe true stomach nerves.&#13;
Stomach distress or weakness, tullness&#13;
bloating belching, etc. Call for tbe&#13;
Restorative. We re;ommend and sell&#13;
Dr. Sboop's Restorative. All Dealers&#13;
Excursion to Toronto via&#13;
Grand T n m k Railway System.&#13;
Single tare plus 25 ^ents, toi the&#13;
round trip, from Michigan point&gt;&#13;
(except Detroit and Port Huron), goin^&#13;
dates Aug. 26 to Sept. 5, inclusive:&#13;
return liu.it Sept. 11, 1006. For fur&#13;
t.hflr particulars consult local acents or&#13;
write to Geo. W. Vaux, A. G. P. £ T&#13;
A., 135 Adams S t , Chicago, III. -t 36&#13;
Tht kmtitiw! til i $:i&#13;
fCop.'.-ri^ln, !;•'',. K&#13;
C h i n K i n \»;if. Wn'.i&#13;
o f l r . ' i i n a n . in l b ' 'I:.".i&#13;
W a s i-i&gt;;it(;nl \vi;!i !i •- ii»l&#13;
ill^C i\\ t h e : i ~ c o l si \ l c M&#13;
g n u i n a r h . ' i o ild : . i v a l&#13;
•. .'. ! ! ; M . J&#13;
M:I i h c i s l a n d&#13;
s e a . anil h e&#13;
ii ii i i 1 a r r i v -&#13;
'I'lii'ii tic !&gt;«»-&#13;
thiols, lie&#13;
Starving' to Death.&#13;
Because her stomach was so weakened&#13;
by useless drugging that sh-&gt;&#13;
could not eat, Mrs. Mary H. Walters,&#13;
of St. Clair St., Columbus, . 0 . , wa&gt;&#13;
literally starving to death. She. writes&#13;
"My stomach was so weak from use&#13;
less drugs that I could not eat, and&#13;
my nerves so wrecked that 1 could&#13;
not sleep; and not before I was given&#13;
up to die was I induced to try Electric&#13;
Bitters; with the. wonderful result&#13;
that improvement began at once, and&#13;
a complete cure followed." Best health&#13;
tonic on earth. 5 0 J . Guaranteed by&#13;
F, A. Sigler, druggist.&#13;
Low Rates West ria&#13;
Chicago Great Western Railway&#13;
For lowest rates to all points west&#13;
write to F. R. M o s i e r ^ D . P. A., 10:¾&#13;
Adams St., Chicago, I'll., stat'ng bow&#13;
many in party and when going, t 3S&#13;
The Breath of Lile.&#13;
It's a significant fact, that TBe~&#13;
strongest a* imal ofitssize, the gorilla&#13;
also has the largest lungs. Powerful&#13;
lungs means powerful creatures. How&#13;
to keep the breathing organs right&#13;
should be inun's chiefest study. Like&#13;
thousands of others, Mrs. Ora A.&#13;
Stephens, of P o r t Williams, ()., has&#13;
learned to do'this. She writes: "Tlire*-&#13;
bottles of Dr. King's New Disoovery&#13;
stopped my cough, of two years and&#13;
cured me of what my friends thought&#13;
consumption. O, it's grand fcr throat&#13;
a n d ' l u n g trouble." Guaranteed by&#13;
F . A. Sigler,-druggist. Price 50cts&#13;
and $1.00-. Trial bottle free. . .&#13;
Northern Resort Excursion August---SO&#13;
On August 30 the Ann Arbor Railroad&#13;
will give its annual excursion to&#13;
the following Michigan resorts:&#13;
Petoskey, Bay View, Mackin&amp;c, Beu&#13;
lab, Frankfort, Charlevoix, Traverse&#13;
City, Ludrngtou, . Elk Rapids and&#13;
Manistee.&#13;
Special train will leave Lakeland at&#13;
9:03 a. m. Fare to all points except&#13;
Mackinac ' Island $5.00 Mackinac&#13;
Island will be one dollar higher.&#13;
Tickets will-be good until September&#13;
8.&#13;
No one would buy a sailboat with&#13;
sails that could not be reefed. There&#13;
is always that possibility "of a little too&#13;
much wind that makes a cautious man&#13;
afraid to go unprovided. Tbe think&#13;
ing man, whose stomach sometimes&#13;
goes back on him, proyides for his&#13;
stomach by keeping a boltle of Kodol&#13;
for Dyspepsia w\tb'in teach. Kodo! di&#13;
ge8ts what yon eat and restors the&#13;
stomach.to tbe condition to properly&#13;
perform its functions.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist&#13;
Subscribe for the Pinokney Dispatch.&#13;
•was a pivon-ii'Vis Vdiiui a.ul fairly well&#13;
eUuoaioil.&#13;
At llie ti-'i* of H'i-'litivii. when Chin&#13;
Fin sailed for Singapore to broaden&#13;
his mind, he was as well posted on&#13;
the subject iif piracy as llie average&#13;
American consul. His I'aiher patted&#13;
him on the back and told liiin to be :i&#13;
good boy and do all the grafting he&#13;
could, ami his mother foil on his neck&#13;
nnd wept and cautioned him that she&#13;
was badly in need of a pair of diamond&#13;
earrinus and a chatelaine walcli.&#13;
The young man arrived at his desTTTnr-"&#13;
tior. right side up and began to look&#13;
around for tough people to consort&#13;
with, lie found about IP.iMXi of thetn.&#13;
lie iigured that to become a pirate he&#13;
must first become a tough man. l i e&#13;
got in with the gang without any trouble,&#13;
lie became a swindler, thief,&#13;
robber ami worse. lie passed the first&#13;
six months in learning his A 15- C's and&#13;
the next six in jail. When his Singapore&#13;
record w a s finally looked up it&#13;
was found that he had had a hand" in&#13;
about but different "jobs" in throe&#13;
years and that these "jolts" ranged&#13;
from gold brick swindles to slitting&#13;
throats. How many of Ids little&#13;
curves the police failed to get on to&#13;
can only be guessed at.&#13;
When Chin Fin reached his majority&#13;
he was ready for piracy -on the high&#13;
seas. He had passed through all other&#13;
grades of crime, and even ttic police&#13;
had paid him the compliment of being&#13;
a crackajack. In spite of his youth&#13;
he could lead men, and, as for planning,&#13;
no one tspuld equal him. He had&#13;
saved his cash instead of "blowing it&#13;
in, and he had induced certain other&#13;
tough chaps- to do the same, and so&#13;
when the time came he was well heeled.&#13;
That time came when he learned&#13;
that certain merchants of Singapore&#13;
were to ship a large sum of money by&#13;
a sailing vessel to Manila. It was not&#13;
only in the way of trade, but the merchants&#13;
were going to make a corner in&#13;
the hemp market.&#13;
Chin Fin got his news straight. l i e&#13;
bribed a confidential clerk to get it.&#13;
and then murdered the clerk to get&#13;
his money back and'prevent any ease&#13;
of conscience. An agent \yas instructed&#13;
to purchase a ship and lit her out&#13;
with guns, while ( bin Fin attended to&#13;
getting a crew. The day came when&#13;
his &lt;ig:t was all ready and only waited&#13;
the sailing of the other. It had so&#13;
happened that on an occasion Chin Fin&#13;
had desiveif to burglarize the house of&#13;
the parents of one of his gang. The&#13;
son iiled objections. lie thought it&#13;
was carrying a good thing too far.&#13;
Chin Fin got mad and stabbed the&#13;
young man and then went on with his&#13;
burglarizing, The victim proceeded to&#13;
get well, saw wood and say nothing,&#13;
but when the time came he gave away&#13;
the piracy—s-rnrp.—r^tng'T'oT^waTheiir&#13;
the merchants and authorities put up a&#13;
job of their own. Just as secretly as&#13;
Chin Fiu himself had worked, they&#13;
had a brig fitted out at another port,&#13;
armed with six guns and manned by&#13;
eighty men, and when the treasure&#13;
ship finally sailed for Manila she was&#13;
followed by the brig. The latter&#13;
looked as peaceful as an old hen.&#13;
Chin Fin was in waiting at the Anamba&#13;
islands. That was a piratical&#13;
stronghold before his day. and the&#13;
young man had $jn eye to the eternal&#13;
fitness of things. The treasure ship&#13;
made her course up the China sea, followed&#13;
by the slouchy looking old brig&#13;
at n respectful distance, and one morning&#13;
about in o'clock was within live&#13;
miles of the islands. The pirates were&#13;
waiting for her. They not only' came&#13;
Sailing out from the lee of the group,&#13;
but they raised the black flag to show&#13;
their hand. Chin Fin wasn't going to&#13;
play any baby business by sailing under&#13;
a false Hag. The brig was sighted&#13;
In the distance, but treated with contempt.&#13;
The treasure ship naturally&#13;
tried to get away. She turned on her&#13;
heel and put back to meet the brig,&#13;
but the pirates pursued with yells and&#13;
a great wasro of ammunition. They&#13;
saw that they could capture two ships&#13;
where they bad counted on but one.&#13;
V,y and by things got to work, and&#13;
Chin Fiu felt his back hair curl. The&#13;
brig began hammering away witJi six&#13;
"guns io his two, and at tlje end of&#13;
eighteen minutes tlsjn.v of his fifty&#13;
rascals wore dead or Wounded and his&#13;
craft in a sinking condition, and he&#13;
had to cry for quarter. It was granted&#13;
him, and his men were taken abonrd.&#13;
While the treasure ship pursued her&#13;
voyage, the brig started hack for Singapore.&#13;
She had had seven niMl killed&#13;
or disabled, The pirates were shackled&#13;
and confined -between decks, and for&#13;
two days they were as humble as&#13;
cats. There was no need for Chin Fin,&#13;
who w a s a upturn] ora for, to tell them&#13;
how tu&gt;" cas. stood. They were goluff&#13;
back to Hi" strails for trial, conviction&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
Digests what you oat.&#13;
and execution. Had those pirates been&#13;
able to get a professional Jury nud a&#13;
weeping lawyer from tlte United States&#13;
they could not have been acquitted.'&#13;
One day, fifteen months after the raising&#13;
of the black flag'to the music of&#13;
the band, the Jive pirates stood on the&#13;
gallows with ropes around their necks.&#13;
Chin F!u had done no talking since&#13;
his capture except to claim that It was&#13;
all a mistake and that he was, a good&#13;
young man. When he saw that there&#13;
was no longer any hope, however, he&#13;
made a speech. Me admitted that he&#13;
had been a boss had man from head to&#13;
heel and that th« world ought to rejoice&#13;
that he was to die. Me spoke for&#13;
half an hour, then with a dignified&#13;
wave of his hand he signaled the hangman&#13;
io let 'er go and was launched&#13;
Into eternity. M. QUAD.&#13;
When you have a cold it is well to&#13;
bf very careful about, using anything&#13;
4-h*uw4U causa-oon^tifmtioiw l i d p a r -&#13;
ticularly careful about preparations&#13;
containing opiates. Use Kennedy's&#13;
Laxative Honey arid Tar, which stops&#13;
the cough and moves the bowels&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
Very Low Rates to the West&#13;
Tbe Chicago Great Western Railway'&#13;
w l l sell tickets to points in&#13;
Alberta, Arizona, British Columbia,&#13;
California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana.&#13;
Nevada, Oregon, [''ah, \\\i&gt;lnn-'ton&#13;
and Wyoming, at about one-halt tbe&#13;
usual tare. Tickets on sale daily&#13;
Aug. 27 to Oct. 31 inclufive. Get full&#13;
information lrom the great • Western&#13;
agent or .1. P Elmer.&#13;
F. R. Mosier, I). l \ A.&#13;
103 Adams St., Chicago, III.&#13;
A &lt; ' 4 &gt; i i t i n u o i i « Ft'HMt.&#13;
They , wero\ from the country, on&#13;
their first visit to London, nnd n notice&#13;
in their hotel! puzzled them consider&#13;
ably. It ran: '^ireakfasts. 8 to 11; luncheons,&#13;
12 to 'J; teas, 3 to 5; dinner*, 0 to&#13;
8: suppers. S to 11." "Say, Cargo,"&#13;
said tine lo Ihe other, " Vordln* to this&#13;
yere, there bean't so vary much tolme&#13;
for soightseeiu.' " St. .Tames' da/otto&#13;
IMi". positively •cured. wilh D r .&#13;
Snoop's Mai/ic ointn ent. It's made for&#13;
piles alnm&gt;. an 1 it d i e the work to&#13;
perfection, l e l i . n g , | M i n f u ! , p r o t r u d -&#13;
i n g or blind. 'pU*s dwippear like&#13;
magic So'd i.v a'l d-&gt;al«rvv.&#13;
Twenty Minutes&#13;
Time Enough?&#13;
To Care tbe Worst Headache From Any&#13;
Cause—New Reduction Method.&#13;
^ o? ^ V&#13;
Most headaches and pains yield instantly to&#13;
the new Reduction Method—Dr. Shoop's Twenty&#13;
Minute Headache Cure. T h e cause for these&#13;
palu9 Is congestion— a rushing of blood to t h «&#13;
nerve centers —which distends the veins t o&#13;
nearly the bursting point. Swollen and enlarged,&#13;
these veins and capillaries exert an irritating&#13;
pressure on the myriads, of nerve branches a n d&#13;
fibres. Then,there'9a&#13;
excruciating, cease-&#13;
Reduction Method&#13;
distributes t h e&#13;
reels it to the profrees&#13;
the nerve&#13;
pressure a n d&#13;
p a i n s a n d&#13;
pear because&#13;
has been re&#13;
may try a thou&#13;
dies—you may&#13;
plfy the nerves&#13;
—but the remedy&#13;
prompt relief and&#13;
will be successful&#13;
the congestion— it&#13;
R e d u c t i o n Method.&#13;
pjun, and finally t h a t&#13;
less ache. This new&#13;
disperses the blood,&#13;
overflow, and d i -&#13;
per channels. I I&#13;
centers from all&#13;
irritation—th»&#13;
aches disapi&#13;
their O&amp;UM moved. Yon&#13;
sand remedrug&#13;
and stuinto&#13;
submission&#13;
which b r i n g s&#13;
permanent cur*&#13;
because it reduoM&#13;
must embody the&#13;
Medicine has thui&#13;
CURES&#13;
RHEUMATISM&#13;
UJ1BAQ0, SCIATICA&#13;
NEURALGIA and&#13;
KIDNEY TROUBLE&#13;
i "5 DROPS" u k e u internally, rids the blood ]&#13;
| of the poisonous m a t t e r and acids which&#13;
are the direct causes of these diseases.&#13;
Applied externally it affords almost ins&#13;
t a n t relief from pain, while a permanent&#13;
cure is being effected by purifying t h e&#13;
blood, dissolving t b e poisonous sub*&#13;
stance and removing i t from the system.&#13;
DR. &amp;. D. BLAND&#13;
Of Drewton, Ga., write*t&#13;
'•l bad been * sufferer for-.numberof ye*n |&#13;
wKMRJuUnibaeo »nd Klieumfttlsm in my trail&#13;
and leg*, and tried all the remedies that I could&#13;
gather from medio*! voritt, and alio consulted&#13;
w I eh a number of the beet physician-, but fou nd&#13;
letter.* Aft* • » * • •** relief obtained from&#13;
••M)HoP8." 1 aball preeerlb* It in a y Mtetloe&#13;
for rheumlaattils-m ia nd kindred die**-**."&#13;
Good tor the, couch, removes the&#13;
cold, the cause ol tbe cough. T h a t ' s&#13;
the work of Kennedy's Laxative Honey&#13;
and Tar—the original laxative&#13;
cough \Viup. Contains no opiates.&#13;
Sold by F . A. Sigler, Drugglirt.&#13;
Ifnir* of C a t e r p i l l a r s .&#13;
Several kinds of hairy caterpillars are&#13;
known to have a- prisonous effect on&#13;
the human skin, .notably the caterpillar&#13;
of the processionary moth, so called&#13;
because' the caterpillars march In procession&#13;
after their food. The scientist&#13;
Reaumur found that this caterpillar's&#13;
hairs caused him considerable suffering&#13;
in the hands for some days and&#13;
that when he rubbed his eyes his eyelids,&#13;
too. were inflamed Even approaching&#13;
too near the nests of these&#13;
caterpillars has caused painful swellings&#13;
on tbe necks of -certain persons&#13;
from the caterpillar hairs floated by&#13;
the winds. ;&#13;
! found a war—simple aiid sure, yet the only way&#13;
i —to thoroughly overcome these attacks of Head-&#13;
1 ache and Neuralgia. The effect of Dr. Shoopt&#13;
Twenty Minute Headache Oure is prompt—per»&#13;
fectly suited to all forms of Headache and absolutely&#13;
positive in every temperament. For Met&#13;
and reoommended by&#13;
"ALL DEALERS."&#13;
Kocfc. •.-^pstei C u r e&#13;
' £"- • -rat yj&gt;u eate&#13;
• j • • " ' .• - • ' •&#13;
FREE If you are suffering with Rheumatism,&#13;
Neuralgia. Kldrey Trovvvle T any kint&#13;
-idliinasa, *r te to us a n trial bottle&#13;
of "6-DROPS." And test X yourself.&#13;
"5-DROPS" can be used any length of |&#13;
time without acquiring a "drug habit,"&#13;
a:, it Is entirely free of opium, cocaine,&#13;
nicohol. laudanum, and other similar&#13;
ingredients.&#13;
U r m M t f llottle, "5.DROP8"&lt;800 D**ee)&#13;
SLOW. F a r Sale »y Drufftista..&#13;
IWAN80H RHEUMATIC OURE C0MPAIY,&#13;
Wept, SO. 100 Lake Street, Chicago.&#13;
tv ^ ^ • • * • , . -&#13;
. J ' • \±* al 4 &gt; $**. K* DR. PIERCE'S&#13;
1 ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ Malted Cocoa&#13;
W-hen two strong m«n come to&#13;
blows, even i f they are well matched,&#13;
i it is not a pleasing siuht, but it tbe&#13;
man vvbo yets tbe worst oi' it w i l l use&#13;
DeWitt/s W i t c h Ha/.nl Salve, be w i l l&#13;
i look better and feet better in "sTrcrrt&#13;
order. Ue - o r e yon get D e W i t t ' s .&#13;
Qood for e v e r y t h i n g a &gt;alve is used&#13;
lor, including pil^s&#13;
Sold by F. A, Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
6 0 Y E A R S '&#13;
IENCE&#13;
T R A D E M A R K S&#13;
D E S I G N S&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A C .&#13;
Anyone lending a sketch nnd description may&#13;
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an&#13;
invention is probably patentable. Communications&#13;
strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents&#13;
sent free. Oldest agency for securing patent*.&#13;
Patents taken through Munn &amp; Co. receive&#13;
rptc.ial notice, without charge, In the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest circulation&#13;
&lt;»f nny scientific journal. Terras, | 3 a&#13;
ye«r: four months, (1, Sold by all newsdealers.&#13;
MUNN &amp;Co.36,B'»*^ New York&#13;
Brancb Office. 026 F St., Washington, D. C.&#13;
STATE of MICHIGAN; ThcProhatn- Court for&#13;
tha Countv c( I.ivii gsf'Ti. At a ?PPSIOD of&#13;
said Coiet, h.-l.l at the Probate Cilice in the Village&#13;
of Howell, in said county, on the '.tith day of&#13;
Aumi-t, A. D. 190fi.&#13;
Present: AKTiiUR A. M O N T A U K , Jml^e of&#13;
Prohatt!. hi the matter of llie estate of&#13;
(iKoitf.K II. BCTM'.K, deceased.&#13;
Amanda Butler having tiled in naid court her&#13;
petition praying 'hat a certain instrument In&#13;
writing, purpnriinu t&lt;&gt; he Hi* hut will and testament&#13;
ami coilcil of suid deceased now on lile in&#13;
said court b« admitted to probate and that the acinii)&#13;
istratioti of said estate he granted to I wih'ht&#13;
Butler and Daniel S. Thomas or to some, other&#13;
suitable p rfli n.&#13;
i t l * ordered that the 14th thy of S&gt;pt., A. D.&#13;
! 190&lt;i, at ten o'clock in the forenoon,- at said probata&#13;
office, be and is hereby appointed lor hearing&#13;
Raid petition;&#13;
It is further ordered thut public notice thereof&#13;
be given by publication of a copy of this order,&#13;
for three successive weeks previous to said day of&#13;
hearin/, in the PINCKNKY OISI&gt;ATCH\ a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated in said county.&#13;
Arthur A. Moulajrue •&#13;
MM Judge of Probate&#13;
J&#13;
&lt;&#13;
I it.IS i'0!i;p:iet. e ; m I f .Ml' e d r ; i - i l v . :151 1 a l l&#13;
j !li- u]&gt;eraiui° lo Kaiife'c the qnaniiiy ol ink den..&#13;
CAVE£ TIME, SAVES INK.&#13;
i . ' v p s br;i&lt;*:i ^ arid IT:'; 'where V&gt;n -.-, .i;t t'lem, aiiu&#13;
is*... .\uys l w . A i r i 11)11 I . N ' i T A M I ' S K .&#13;
A jx'rie'-t c o m b i n a t i o n Is ot)tai:&gt;-d v. hen&#13;
'"TE'S WATtHPHOUr T T E W U n H "&#13;
i ' 1. It ]•» easily applied and sets ntuekiy. N o&#13;
.:.t or lading.&#13;
":v:S BRUSHES. SAVES STENCILS. SAVES TIME.&#13;
• -s 1. •; h irlen h'-imnes or clrn: stenciK I&gt;on't&#13;
- ,M.r wutil w r it, T K S T I X . M.ul« only by&#13;
G. A. W H I T E C O . ,&#13;
K i g h S t . , B o s t o n , M a s s . U . S . A .&#13;
Tho Cocoa with&#13;
a Dolicato Flavor&#13;
M A L I I:I - C'f-t:. &gt;.v i&lt; p r e p a r e d b y s d e n t t S s -&#13;
ally c u m hi nine,-th&lt;- c\&gt;r&lt;&gt;a t&gt;f t h e c h o i c e * *&#13;
coro.i b r a n a i . d t h e b e s t of m a r t . *£.*••&gt;-&#13;
m a l t a i d i n g d i g v s l i o n , a n d t h e f a t o l t L # ^&#13;
coi-i-a h a v i n g l)«-cn p t t - d i p o s t e d , t h e&#13;
fi •&lt; -lino; of h c a \ ' i i ) r s s c x p v r i t ' i i c r d a f t t r&#13;
ilrinkiiio- t h c o r i l i i i a r y c o c - n a s i s a v o i d e i l ;&#13;
t h u d B m o s t d^'-licums i"&gt;d n o u r i b l i i o g&#13;
l&gt;. .-eta^o i s pr^A .ict.d, -v/hich i s&#13;
f n - t l y j u i r c a n d w i l l n o t d i s t r e s s t h e&#13;
m u s t d e l i c a t e s t o m a c h , .&#13;
l'»r nile by your dealer.&#13;
KERR'S&#13;
Malted Extract&#13;
OF T O M A T O&#13;
One teaspoon fnl to a cup ©f boiling: water&#13;
makes n delicious Bouillon.&#13;
Tor sale by your dealer. Prepared by&#13;
WILLIAM B. KERR,&#13;
Medford, Boston. Mass.&#13;
The Dispatch lob Department&#13;
Can do your Printing&#13;
on short notice and in&#13;
a workmanlike manner&#13;
F. b. A N D S E W S 6c C O .&#13;
l i t hi best school for yon to attend. F l u equipment;&#13;
lostrodioot lis very beat; 1! ving expenses low; graduates&#13;
| placed Id rood positions—every student condor, forbasl*&#13;
! oess may be sure of sncceedlnj. Same courses by com*&#13;
jspoodencc as at tbe Collefe; satisfaction tttaraotaed; 1 particularseo applkatioo. P. R. C L E A R Y , Prea.&#13;
DeWltt'a VSSt Salvo&#13;
For Pllost BuriMf S«roo&gt;&#13;
BUY THE FAMOUS Lincoln Steel Rang*!&#13;
THE BEST!&#13;
Sola ovorywhoro^.&#13;
by Looaina Doatoro.&#13;
H%«f« &gt; I M s 0 K * 9 1 • &lt; mny&#13;
Look* ) &lt; ja#m«.&#13;
COSTS NO MORE THAN AN UNKNOWN MAKE.&#13;
Before you buy that range or cook stove,&#13;
write u9, and we will mail you a copy of&#13;
"Points ior Purohmsmr* "&#13;
It is free for the asking. Full of useful inform*&#13;
ation.&#13;
THE LINCOLN STOVE H U M S OQHPW, Frtmont, Ohio.&#13;
•^•afc*&#13;
i&#13;
.A&#13;
$&#13;
' A bath clean sea the skin and rids&#13;
the pores of refuse. A bath makes tor&#13;
better fellowship and citiaeusbrp. Not&#13;
only should the outside'of the body be&#13;
cleansed, but occasional use of a laxative&#13;
o r cartbartic opens lbe bowels&#13;
and "clears the system of effete matter.&#13;
Best for this are DeWitt'sLittie Early&#13;
Risers. Pleasant little pills that do&#13;
not gripe or sicken.&#13;
Bold by F . A. Slgler. Druggist.&#13;
• • Geatle With Bitter People.&#13;
How often we come across people In&#13;
life so disagreeable and bitter, rejecting&#13;
all overtures of kindness we make&#13;
toward them, that we feel quite disheartened.&#13;
And yet if we only knew&#13;
their life's history how much we should&#13;
perlmp% find to forgive and pity, so&#13;
let us keep on with our good work&#13;
until we lune thuwed the icicles of&#13;
their hearts with the warmth of our&#13;
own.&#13;
9&#13;
Jfc-&#13;
9j \\ K t&lt; * ' • i&lt; * *• K K /y tt K • W K £, / 1&#13;
NERVOUS DEBILITY I O U R N E W M E T H O D T R E A T M E N T «111 cure you, and make a man&#13;
of you. Under Ita Influence the brain becomes active, the blood purified so that&#13;
all pimpleB, blotcbea and ulcers heal up; the nerves become* strong aa Heel, ao&#13;
that nervouHnesa, basht:ulriLSK and d&lt; spondeney disappear; the t y t s become bright,&#13;
tho face full and clear, &lt; ncigy returns to the body, and the moral, physical and&#13;
sexual systems are Invlaorati-dj ull drains cease-no more vital waste from the&#13;
gyjtcm. The various organs become natural and manly. You £eel youraelf a man&#13;
and know marriage cannot be a failure. We Invite all the afflicted to consult us&#13;
confidentially and free "t charKe. Don't let quacks and fakirs rob you of your&#13;
hard-earned dollars; SVK VV1UL, ^ C i t K VDU OR N&lt;J i;AY.&#13;
¢ 7 N O NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT.&#13;
THREATENED WITH PARALYSIS.&#13;
Peter E. Summers, of Kalamazoo,&#13;
MMi,, relates his experience:&#13;
"I was troubled with Nervous Debility&#13;
fur many years. I lay it to lndl.-&#13;
iLHeiion and excesses t« early&#13;
youth. I bee.line w r y despondent and&#13;
didn't cure wletlier I worked or nut. I&#13;
imagined everybody who looked at me, u r i — g f c . -&#13;
\«utssed my sivrtt. Imaginative l.-praf &lt;F5r^&#13;
ldreams nt night weakened me—my back]"1&#13;
'aclu-d, had nains in the back of my&#13;
• head, hands and feet were cold, tired&#13;
In the morning, iwor auoctit*, fingers&#13;
were shaky, eyes blurred, hair loose,&#13;
memory iioor, i to. Numbness in the&#13;
fingers set In and the doctor told me \ ^&#13;
he feared paralysis. I took all kinds of&#13;
medicines and tried many first-class&#13;
Vhvfieians, wore an electric belt for&lt;&#13;
HuVe months, went to Mt, Clemens for*&#13;
I JKFORf TRKKTMINT baihs. Imt received little tenant. \\ hile » f T t « T f « » T * t « T&#13;
at Mt. Clemens I was induced to eon.ult'Drs. Kennedy &amp; ^ e ™ . ^ ^ J . t h ^&#13;
lost all faith In doctors. Like a drowning, man I " " n " " ' " " ^ ^ , ^ , ^ ^ ¾ ¾&#13;
Treatment and it saved my life. The improvement W M " £ * Ea f/v&#13;
C ~LC «e*uaiw&#13;
the virfor going through mv nerves. I was cured menta ly. physically and sexually.&#13;
I have sent them msinv i a t k n t s and will continue to do so.&#13;
^ U ? ™ ? l a ^ ^ |BLOOD DISEASES, URINARY COMPLAINTS, KIDNEY AND BLADDER Dlfa-&#13;
E A C o N ? I ' L T . \ T l ^ r FREE. BOOKS F R E E . If unable to call write for a&#13;
| Question Blank for Home Treatment. KENNEDY&amp; KERGAN&#13;
AN ENGLISH HERO&#13;
• • u r k a b l e RrttUfc T r i b i t e t o t h e&#13;
A b i l i t y o f N e U o a . .&#13;
The time has come when we can specially&#13;
do hou^r to Nelson's memory&#13;
without wounding the feelings of other&#13;
nations. Tbe first tbing to be noted&#13;
concerning him Is that he Is the only&#13;
mun who has ever lived who by universal&#13;
consent Is without a peer. In&#13;
every walk of life except that which&#13;
Nelson chose as his own you will find&#13;
several competitors for the first place,&#13;
each one of whom will have many supporters.&#13;
Alexander of Macedon, Hannibal,&#13;
Caenar, Marlborough, Frederick&#13;
the Great and Napoleon have been severally&#13;
put forward for tbe palm of generalship.&#13;
To those who would acclaim&#13;
Richelieu as the first of statesmen others&#13;
would oppose Chatham or William&#13;
Pitt or Cavour or Bismarck or Marquis&#13;
Ito. Who was tbe first of sculptors 7&#13;
Who the first of painterH? Who the&#13;
first of poets? In every case there is a&#13;
great difference of opinion. Ask, however,&#13;
who was the first of admirals,&#13;
and the unanimous reply will still be,&#13;
"Nelson," tried as he was by many&#13;
years of high command In war. It is&#13;
not only among his fellow countrymen&#13;
that his pre-eminence is acknowledged.&#13;
Foreigners admit it as readily as we&#13;
proclaim It ourselves.—Admiral Sir Cyprian&#13;
Bridge in Cornhill Magazine.&#13;
148 SHELBY STREET, ••*** bEfffblt; ttllCH.&#13;
BIGGLE A Farm Library&#13;
of unequalled value;&#13;
P r a c t i c a l , Up to&#13;
date, Concise and&#13;
Comprehensive.&#13;
Handsomely Printed and&#13;
Beautifully Illustrated.&#13;
BY JACOB BIQQLB BOOKS&#13;
No. 1—BIGQLE HORSE BOOK&#13;
AH about Horses—a Common-seiise Treatise, with mart&#13;
than 74 illustrations ; a standard work. 1'rice, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 2—BIQOLE BERRY BOOK&#13;
All about growing Small Fruits—read a n d learn h o w .&#13;
Beautiful colored plates. Price, ft) Cents.&#13;
No. 3-BIQGLB POULTRY BOOK&#13;
All about P o u l t r y ; t h e best Poultry Book in existence;&#13;
tells eveayiiiing. Piufuscly ilh.^trateil. Price, 50 Cent*.&#13;
No. 4—BIGGLE COW BOOK&#13;
All about Cows a n d t h e Dairy Business; new edition.&#13;
Colored plates. Sound Common-sense. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 5-BIGGLE SWINE BOOK&#13;
All about Hogs—Breeding, F e e d i n g , Butchery, Diseases,&#13;
etc. Covers tne whole ground. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
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Gives remedies and up-to-date information. A household&#13;
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No. 7-BIGGLE PET BOOK&#13;
For t h e boys a n d girls particularly. Pets of all k i n d s and&#13;
"To Cure a Felon"&#13;
says Sam Kendall, of Pbillipsburg,&#13;
K«m., "just cover it over with tfucklen's&#13;
Arnica Salve and th^ Salve will&#13;
do the rest." Quickest nuretor Burns,&#13;
Boils, Sores, Scalds, Wounds, Piles,&#13;
Eczema, Salt Rheum, Chapped Hands,&#13;
Sore F«*t and Sore Eyes. Only 25cts.&#13;
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No. 8—BIGGLE SHEEP BOOK&#13;
Covers »he whole ground. Every pajje full&#13;
of good a d -&#13;
vice. Sheep men praise it.&#13;
age Price, 50 Cents. Farm Journal&#13;
is your paper, made for you and not a misfit. It is 29 years&#13;
oM; It is the great hdiled-down. hit-the-nail-on-the-head,&#13;
quit-after-you-have-said-it Farm and Household paper in the&#13;
world—the biggest paper of its size in the United States of&#13;
America—having more than Three Million regular readers.&#13;
Any ONE of t h e BICKILE BOOKS, a n d t h e FARM&#13;
JOURNAL 5 YEARS (remainder of 190»». and all of 1907,1903,&#13;
190» and 1910), sent hv mail to any address for A DOLLAR BILL.&#13;
Sample of FARM JOURNAL ftnd circular describing BIGGLE BOOKS, free.&#13;
W I L M E R A T K I N S O N C O . ,&#13;
PUBLISHERS OF FA.KM JOVRNAL. PHII.ADKLPHJA.&#13;
A c u t e L a r y n g i t i s .&#13;
George Washington died of a disease&#13;
that was then called a quinsy, but&#13;
which is now known as acute laryngitis.&#13;
His physicians treated him according&#13;
to their best light and knowledge,&#13;
but such treatment now would&#13;
be little short of criminal. An eminent&#13;
authority says that if medical men had&#13;
known as much then as they do now&#13;
the distinguished patient would probably&#13;
have been cured in a week. As it&#13;
was, he slowly strangled to death by&#13;
the closing of his throat. At the present&#13;
time physicians treat a case of this&#13;
kind by tracheotomy—that Is, by making&#13;
nn opening into the windpipe,&#13;
through which the patient may breathe.&#13;
They al^o diagnose u case by using&#13;
the laryngoscope,' which enables them&#13;
to look into the throat and see exactly&#13;
what the trouble is.&#13;
IQ these days of rush and liurtty&#13;
courtesy is otten forgotten. In the&#13;
mad, pell mell rush of our life little&#13;
things are done to offend tha, we&#13;
rather remain undone. A hastily catj&#13;
en meal and its resultant headache&#13;
may cause us social or financial loss.&#13;
The wis^ man or woman is tha one&#13;
ho rblieve$-+rtt+e-44i^-of this eort t&gt;y&#13;
a little dose of Kodol for Dyspf».p&lt;ia.&#13;
If digests what you eat and puts your&#13;
s'omach back in shap^.&#13;
Sold by P. A. Slgler Drugclst.&#13;
C a r e f u l A n n t i e .&#13;
"You 'will never see your Aunt Maria&#13;
igaln until you get to heaven," a little&#13;
firl was solemnly.,, told by her mother&#13;
tbe other day, according to the London&#13;
Globe. "Will she ask me to wipe&#13;
my feet?" was her only response. It&#13;
throws a flood of light on Aunt Maria's&#13;
character and history.&#13;
A Companion . A delightful little t r a v e l i n g c o m p a n -&#13;
ion, indispensable to m a n y w h o travel,&#13;
a r e t h e " L i t t l e Comforters"—1 &gt;r. Miles'&#13;
A n t i - P a i n Pills. B y their s o o t h i n g i n -&#13;
fluence upon t h e n e r v e s of t h e brain,&#13;
a n d s t o m a c h , t h e y p r e v e n t dizziness,&#13;
sick s t o m a c h a n d h e a d a c h e — C a r - s i c k -&#13;
n e s s . Dr. Miles'&#13;
Anti-Pain Pills.&#13;
c u r e all k i n d s of p a i n quick a n d s u r e ,&#13;
a r e perfectly h a r m l e s s a n d do n o t affect&#13;
you i n a n y w a y . e x c e p t t o s o o t h e&#13;
t h e n e r v e s a n d c u r e pain.&#13;
. " I a m p l e i s e d t o r e c o m m e n d D r .&#13;
Miles' A n t i - P a i n Pills. T h e y n o t o n l y&#13;
cured a chronic; h e a d a c h e , h u t since, it&#13;
m y h e a d s h o w s a disposition t o a c h e ,&#13;
one T a b l e t s t o p s it. I give h u n d r e d s of&#13;
t h e m t o sufferers o n t r a i n s , a n d derive&#13;
m u c h s a t i s f a c t i o n from t h e rvlirf t h e y&#13;
afford." M. H . C H A R T C S ,&#13;
T r a v e l i n g S a l e s m a n . St. I.ouis. M o .&#13;
T h e first p a c k a g e will benefit, if n o t ,&#13;
t h e d r u g g i s t will r e t u r n y o u r money.&#13;
25 doses, 25 c e n t s . N e v e r sold i n bulk.&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach No appetite, lost ot strength,&#13;
MM. headache, constipation, bad breath,&#13;
general debility, sour risings, and ealarril&#13;
of the stomach are all due to indigestion,&#13;
Kodol cures Indigestion. This new 4iaoo*»&#13;
cry represents the natural Juices of dlgee&gt;&#13;
moo as they exist in a healthy stomach*&#13;
oembinad with the greatest known lento&#13;
and reconstructive properties. Kodol Dyspepsia&#13;
Cure does not only oure 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 stomach.&#13;
Mr. S. fi. Ball, of FUvenswood, W. V s . .&#13;
THE ORIGINAL LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUF&#13;
KENNEDY'S LAXATIVE HONEYHTAR&#13;
i&#13;
I (fed Clover Blossom a c J Honrr Bee an Every Bottle,&#13;
THE FURNACE&#13;
i s t h e b e s t t h i n g w e&#13;
e v e r m a d e a n d w e ' v e&#13;
b e e n m a k i n g f u r n a c e s t h i r t y - t h r e e T y e a r s . I t i s S o l i d S t e e l —&#13;
e v e r y j o i n t r i v e t e d . N e v e r l e a k s . H a s l i n e d c a s i n g , c h a i n&#13;
r e g u l a t i o n , e v a p o r a t i n g p ^ n , e t c . B u r n s a n y fuel e c o n o m -&#13;
ically. M a d e i n six s i z e s ; - p o w e r f u l a n d d u r a b l e .&#13;
WE SELL DIRECT TO CONSUMERS.&#13;
and save you dealers' profits, .end for full 40 page boo*&#13;
which fully describes our goods and our maker-tO"USOr&#13;
method of selling. We can save you money in buying and&#13;
fuel in using. . Your name on a postal card, please.&#13;
HESS WARMING A VENTILATING COMPANY,&#13;
921 Tacoma Building, Chicago, Ills.&#13;
The&#13;
Griswold&#13;
House&#13;
POSTAL 4 MOftCV,&#13;
A&#13;
•«rtotijr&#13;
iMttcla&#13;
«r&#13;
M p- t«i-» 1 •» t #"&#13;
Hr*t.M I O C ' K ! ^&#13;
in th&gt;- h&gt;-art af&#13;
DETROIT. «»&gt;eLi\v »,&#13;
Rates, $2, $2 &gt;0, $3 per Dat.&#13;
9 c o n a u M i * r , , , , t t c i i i *«&#13;
She fitirhtutt JUspauh&#13;
PUBLISHED KVKaT THURSDAY MOENIHe m&#13;
F R A N K L. A N D R E W S &amp;, CO.&#13;
£OITO«* AND PROPRIETOR*.&#13;
m Subscription Price $1 in Advance.&#13;
Watered at tne Poatofnce at Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
aa Becond-cl&amp;as matter&#13;
A.dT«rtieing ratet made known on application.&#13;
Basinets Carda. $4.00 per year.&#13;
r « a t h and marriage notices published free.&#13;
Announcements of entertainments may be paid&#13;
for, if desired, by presenting the office with tick&#13;
ete of admission. In case tickets are not ' T O U ^ I t&#13;
W&gt; tne office,regular rates will be charpc d,&#13;
All m a t t e r i n l o c a l n o t i c e c o l u m n w l l i b e c h a r e d&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
Insertion. Where no time is specified, ail noticed&#13;
will be Inserted until ordered discontinued, sod&#13;
will be charged for accordingly, ( V A l l changes&#13;
of advertisements MUST reach t h i s office as early&#13;
as TUBBDAT morning to insure an insertion t b *&#13;
lame week.&#13;
JOB P&amp;IJVTIJVG /&#13;
In all Its branches, a specialty. We have al 1 k i n a s&#13;
and the latest styles of Type, etc., which enabUs&#13;
as to execute ail kinds of work, such as Booke,&#13;
Pamplets, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc.,in&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prioesai&#13;
low as good work can be a o n e .&#13;
ALL BILLS PAYABLE PIB8T OF KVKBT MONTH.&#13;
THE VILLAGF DIRECTORY&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PRBBIDBNT E K. Browu&#13;
T«udTBK9 Kuben Finch, James Roche,&#13;
Will Kennedy Sr , Jain^s dniith,&#13;
S. J.Teeple, Ed. Faruiuu.&#13;
CLKKK Koger Carr&#13;
TREASUKEH Marion J . Ke»9on&#13;
D. W.MurU&#13;
V\\ A . Nixon&#13;
H. F.bigler&#13;
\V. A. Carr&#13;
•Win. Moraii&#13;
I was troubled with sour stomach for twenty years.&#13;
. Kodol cured me and we ars now using tt In talk&#13;
forbaby."&#13;
Kodol Digest* Whet You E a t&#13;
Bottles only. $1.00 Size holdlnt 2¼ times the trial&#13;
size, which sells for SO cents, Prepared by E. O. OeWITT ft Oo., OHIOAOO.&#13;
Soli by F. A. Sigler, Druggiat&#13;
Ask for t h e 19(W Kodol a l m a n a c&#13;
and 200 calendar.&#13;
HOLLISTER'S Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets&#13;
A. Busy Medicine for Busy People.&#13;
Brings Golden Health and Renewed Vi«or.&#13;
A specific for Constipation.. Indigestion. L&lt;lver&#13;
and Kidney troupes. IMmplcs. Kfczemu. Impure&#13;
Blood. Bad Breath. Slutrgish Bowels, Headache&#13;
and Backnche. Its Rocky Mountain Tea in t a b -&#13;
let fnrm. :¾ cents a tinx. Genuine made by&#13;
! H O L L I - S T E S I)K(.'I&gt; C O M P A N Y , M a d i s o n , W i s . GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPLE&#13;
Railroad Guide&#13;
PEBE MARQUETTE&#13;
l a • « • = * -A.pr. 3 O , 3. 9 C Z..&#13;
T r a i u B l e a v e S o u t h L y o n a s f o l l o w s :&#13;
F o r D e t r o i t a n d E a s t ,&#13;
1U:48 a. m . , 2:19 p . m. &gt;.;&gt;^ p . m .&#13;
F o r G r a n d R a p i d s , N o r t h . a o d W e s t ,&#13;
9:26 a. m . , 2 :19 p . ra., 6 : 1 ^ n . J I .&#13;
F o r S a g i n a w a n d B a v C i t y ,&#13;
10:43 a . m . , 2:19 p . m.,-8:.r&lt; p . r u .&#13;
F o r T o l e d o a n d S o u t h ,&#13;
10:48 a. m . , 2:19 p . r a . ,&#13;
FRANK BAY, H. F . MOELLER,&#13;
Agent, South Lvon. &lt;i. P. A., Detroit,&#13;
Hrand TrnHk Railiray System.&#13;
K:tit E5ound from Fincknev&#13;
N o ' 5 3 Pas?enjier Ex. Snnrkiv, !):•&gt;.&lt;&lt; A,&#13;
No. 30 Passenger Ex. S n m l i y , 4:5S P .&#13;
West Bonoil freti. t'inckiiev&#13;
No. 27 Paipep^er Ex. f u n l n v , T):in A&#13;
No. ^9 Pafser'ir^r Ex, Stindav, $:U P&#13;
Solid wit)*! ve&gt;ii!)ulc trains of oonrlns an&#13;
insr cur? are operatod tu New York ':\n&lt;[ V]&#13;
jiliiai via N:,U'.ira Falls iiv-t!i&gt;' «'.r;i!id T r i&#13;
iiiirti Vallev Koute.&#13;
«*. H . C l a r k , AfCEt.&#13;
V&#13;
M&#13;
M.&#13;
M&#13;
1 s!e-.-&#13;
lliil.lr&#13;
itik-I.&#13;
A-sriESSOK&#13;
STREET COMMlbflONIB&#13;
iiKALTU OFFICER D r .&#13;
A T T O R N E Y&#13;
ilAKallALL&#13;
C H U R C H E S .&#13;
V | S r i i U D l S T fiPLSCUl'AL C U U C ' H ,&#13;
i l l Kev. D.C, LiuleioLn pastor. Service* evtsr^&#13;
Jjunday uiorniaj; *t lu:3u, auil every suua&amp;j&#13;
evening &amp;t ? :W) u'clock. Prayer meeting I'huru&#13;
day tsveninkjB. Sunday ISCLIOOI at eloee of mori*&#13;
iagjjirv 1 ce, ^1 isa MARY VANFLKET, buui.&#13;
r ^ . S ^ t i E G A l ' i o N A L CUL'KCd.&#13;
V ' Kev. 0 . W. Mylne pastor, servlct evei}&#13;
Sunuay tuiKLiini i t 1«&gt;:-&gt;J * a l etery b a n d a )&#13;
evening at 7 :DC j ' c i jck. Prayer meeting 'I'liur*&#13;
day evenin^a. -Taaisy scaool at cloae ot UAJTL&#13;
ini; aervice. Percy .Swirtaoat, s a p t , , Mocco&#13;
leejilesec.&#13;
PATENTS P R O C U R E D AND D E F E N D E D . Send model.&#13;
drawing i r ( :,•!'.&lt;&gt;.lori'v,..-, t --m •:. :IL. '. frue report.&#13;
Krve Hclvii^.. iniw to oUitin jxttfiit*, ti^lc tn*rka,&#13;
copyright, etc., |N, ALL, COU NTRl E S .&#13;
J3usitu-*s direct v:ith Washington sees time,&#13;
montv and often the patent.&#13;
Patent and Infringement Praetlc* Exclusively,&#13;
Write OP r-oine to us at&#13;
-M* Kiati «tee»t, «pp. Oaitwl S U t e a ^ a t t t l (Ac*,&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N , D . C.&#13;
CASNOW&#13;
^ T , M A l t l " s '.'Al'dOLlC CHURCH. \&#13;
O Kev. M, J . Coinuieriora, i a s t o r . K iervicet I&#13;
e v e r y S u n d a y . Low tuwit a t TiiJOo'cloti |&#13;
uigli m a s s with"seroiou at a;o0 a. in. Catectiian ;&#13;
t'd :uu p . ui., v e e p e r a a n d b e n e Q i c t i o n at 7 :oU p . :i&#13;
S O C I E T I E S ;&#13;
land Health R E V I V O&#13;
- *~*&gt; T- CUSTOM MADE FLY SCREENS &lt; Our work Is far superior to the usual output of local mills, and has a style and&#13;
finish not obtainable from those vrho do not make a specialty of screens. Send&#13;
us sizes ol doors and windows. \V© guarantee a fit.&#13;
, Fj&gt;r Qutaido Screens we use the identical finish of the outside of Pullman Cars!&#13;
The best grade of Wire Cloth—enameled, galvanized genuine broiuo, etc.,&#13;
iastenod by tacks or by the "lockstrip" process.&#13;
Intending- purchasers may have, free by mail; samples of woods, finishes&#13;
and vnro cloth ahd coffy "of: catalog and price list. Agencies in many cities.&#13;
Special terms to contractors and builders.&#13;
The A. J . PHILLIPS COMPANY, Fenton. Michigan.&#13;
8 9 r e a m * ExjwfeMM. 3 La Aormm mf Ftoor&#13;
RESTORES VITALITY&#13;
"Made a&#13;
Well Man&#13;
of Me."&#13;
Tllhe A. O. U. (society ot tnia place, meet* everv&#13;
X ttitrd Sunday iutae Fr. .Uattuew iiall. |&#13;
John Tuomey "and M. T. Kelly, Couuty Deiegaue&#13;
y n l l i ; W. C. i'. U. meete tlie rirat Friday ^t eacti '&#13;
X month at -J:3o p. m. at i tie uouie ol Ur. H. F. t&#13;
Mgler. Kveryoue interested in temperance id j&#13;
coadially invited. Mr*. '_cal bi^ler, 1'res;&#13;
Ktta lMirfee, Secretary.&#13;
I^ue C. T. A. »nd b . fcocieiv a! this p l ^ e , tret i&#13;
. every third S'aturoay evenitikf in ttie Fr&gt;AJ.-V&#13;
thew Hall. Johu bonohue, Fretidem,&#13;
KILLTHE COUGH&#13;
AND C U R E TH^ L U N G S&#13;
I ' N U i U T S O F MACCABKKS.&#13;
A\.Meetever&gt; Friday evening on or before tui&#13;
ol the uioon al their' hall in the Swarihout bld^&#13;
Visiting brothers a n cordially invited.&#13;
Sii K n u h - Ceroid «,,&#13;
Ra&#13;
Surest and Quickest Care for all&#13;
THROAT nr.d -LTJifG TROUBLES,&#13;
or MONEY BACK.&#13;
CUM I A &gt; 1 1 1 1. L&#13;
I lvingston Lodge, N'o.Tt, F &amp;\A, M. Kegulaj&#13;
j Communication Tuesdav evening, on or U e n r t •&#13;
the full ot t h e moon. Kirk Van w i n k l e , W . .\i j&#13;
OK O S R O K KASTKKN S T A R me«teeach m o n t ;&#13;
the Friday evening following t h e r e g u l a r F&#13;
A A, M. meeting, MKs.NhTTt; Y J I G H N . W . M.&#13;
fwh,&#13;
p r o d u c e s fine r e n a l t s I n 3 0 d a y n . i t acts&#13;
powerfully anU quickly. Cures when o t h e r s fail.&#13;
\ OUIIK meu can rejruin their lost manhood and&#13;
old men may recover their vouthful viaor bv&#13;
using K K V 1 V O . I t quickly a n d quietly r e -&#13;
nunTs Nervousness, Lost Vitality, Sexual&#13;
WciUcaesN such a s Lost Power. Failing Memory,&#13;
, Wasting Diseases, «}ii effects of self-abuse o r&#13;
excess a n d indiscretion, which unrlts one for&#13;
study, business or rnarrlaue. I t not only cures&#13;
by starting i\t the seat of disease, b u t is a t r e a t&#13;
u e r v e t o n i c a n d b l o o d b a i l d e r , bringing&#13;
back the p i n k g l o w t o m U e c h e e t o a n d r e -&#13;
storing t h e flre o f T o o t h . I t w a r d s off a p -&#13;
proaching disease. Inslut on navtmr H E V 1 V o ,&#13;
no other. I t can be carried i n v e s t pocket. By&#13;
"jail. « 1 . 0 0 per packajre, o r six for «&amp;.OC. W e&#13;
Rive free advice and counsel to a l l who wish it,&#13;
with g u a r a n t e e . Circulars free. Address&#13;
R0YM. MEDICINE CO.. Mariiie Bids.. CHi&lt;*#e, Ilk&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Druggist&#13;
PIHCKHEY, MICH.&#13;
0;x. fciU u F MuDEtiN WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
t\r»ttTlmre».iay Wfuiui: of each MoDth in the&#13;
Maccabca hall. C. 1.. Urimes V. C.&#13;
I AD1KSOFTUE MACCABEKS. Meet erery H&#13;
[j and drd Saturday of each u o u t b at ^:3u p m . i t&#13;
K.O. T. V. hatl. Visiting s;»ier» cordially iu&#13;
vued. LILA C O M W A Y , Lady Com.&#13;
k» NIGHT* OK THK L O ^ L l i L A R U&#13;
i F. L. Andrews Y. M, ^1&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F.S'GLER W. O- C, L, SIGLER M, D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians a n d S u r g e ^ c e . A l l calU prompily&#13;
ai tended t o day o r uitfht. OiMce o n Main street&#13;
I'Uckrey, Nflch.&#13;
. FRANK L ANDREvVS&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
'WITH SEAL&#13;
AT DISPATCH OFFICE&#13;
Why Not Buy the Best?&#13;
Oood HouMkMpcrs Ut«&#13;
P. H. IRISH'S&#13;
Green Cross&#13;
EXTRACTS&#13;
VANILLA AND LEMON&#13;
Tvhich comply with the requirements&#13;
of the Michigan pure food law^one of&#13;
the most stringent in t h e country)&#13;
are kept a t a uniform standard o f&#13;
stremrth.&#13;
If YOCR GROCER doesn't keep&#13;
t h e " G R E E N CROSS " brand, s \ n S&#13;
25 centa and I will mail you a full 2 02.&#13;
package of vanilla or lemon, prepaid.&#13;
Where it takes M&gt; little, why n o t&#13;
have the be8t&#13;
, Try it and yon will use a o other.&#13;
batiafactiou Guaranteed.&#13;
P. H. IRISH,&#13;
M a n u f a c t u r e r ,&#13;
Nit, Clemens, Mich.&#13;
J i t . ', . . * . - . . — - '* . » . . • ' • • • - . - . - . - .W—...&#13;
WSP^ wmi^f I — I I « in i*m" « i n " . — —&#13;
V'.S'"- r&#13;
J&#13;
'•*«*»*&#13;
i : : _„v ...... .„._-..••" -:T&lt;^,ju^vf.--tilingII1KI&#13;
ter&#13;
$ $ •&#13;
&amp;M&#13;
si&#13;
fr- I&#13;
0 &amp;&#13;
TWENTY THOUSAND GREET&#13;
WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN&#13;
Greet Host Fills Madison Square Garden&#13;
to Hear Democracy's Leader&#13;
Proclaim Campaign Cry.&#13;
MUST PROTECT AMERICANS&#13;
STATE" DEPARTMENT MAKES DEMAND&#13;
ON CUBA*&#13;
It's unsafe to bury the dead past&#13;
—better cremate It.&#13;
No Newt of Government Force Received&#13;
by Official* of the Itland&#13;
Republic.&#13;
New York.—The 20,000 and more&#13;
people who filled Madison Square garden&#13;
to the utmost Thursday night saw&#13;
«. new William Jennings Bryan. His&#13;
smile was gone.&#13;
Instead, when the two noisiest demonstrations&#13;
of the night occurred—the&#13;
«one at his entrance and the of.'ier&#13;
when he stood up to speak—his lace&#13;
"became grave, the lines about his&#13;
mouth tightened, his eyes closed at&#13;
1lme* to hide ft suggestion of moisture&#13;
in them, he bowed his head, and&#13;
iplainly was uuder a stress of emotion&#13;
which he found it difficult to conceal.&#13;
Having become master of himself&#13;
wjvlle the cheering was going on, he&#13;
gradually waved the people Into their&#13;
.seats and then began to speak.&#13;
Probably recalling the scene in the&#13;
.garden ten years ago—ten years and&#13;
IS days, to be exact—when a great&#13;
'irost on a sweltering night descended&#13;
upon the garden and cooled off the&#13;
j est of New York, Mr. Bryan did not&#13;
read his spee&amp;i. He had learned most&#13;
mi what he had written out, and fallowed&#13;
his text closely.&#13;
Speaker In Good Voice.&#13;
His voice was clear, and fresh, and&#13;
carried well into the farthest corner&#13;
of the garden. All through his speech&#13;
and those of the speakers who preceded&#13;
him there was a subdued roar in&#13;
i he place, like that of a traffic in a&#13;
&lt;iiy, and after Mr. Bryan had been&#13;
speaking for half an hour there was a&#13;
constant stream of people coming out&#13;
nominated for the presidency, and&#13;
who was making an address of accept*&#13;
ance. He outlfned a policy as if he&#13;
was outlining the policy of a nation&#13;
over which he had been chosen to&#13;
rule,&#13;
In brief, Mr. Bryan urged arbitration&#13;
between nations in order to avert&#13;
the horrors of war.&#13;
He opposed the use of the navy as&#13;
a collector of private debts.&#13;
He opposed the continuance of&#13;
American rule in the Philippines.&#13;
He urged government ownership of&#13;
railroads—the trunk lines by the nation&#13;
and the local lines by the states.&#13;
He demanded equal rights for capital&#13;
and labor, anti-trust laws, and&#13;
an income tax.&#13;
He said socialism was a mistaken&#13;
theory, but censured the arrogance of&#13;
wealth. •&#13;
His peroration was a scathing denunciation&#13;
of plutocracy.&#13;
He urged an amendment to the constitution&#13;
requiring congress to meet&#13;
soon after election instead of waiting j&#13;
election of United'States senators by&#13;
direct vote of the people.&#13;
la Loudly Cheered. •&#13;
Mr. Bryan was cheered frequently&#13;
and vociferously. When delayed by&#13;
the applause he waited, with only the&#13;
painted shadow of a grim smile on&#13;
his tightly compressed lips.&#13;
"How can I thank you for this welcome&#13;
home? My heart would be flint,&#13;
indeed, if it were not touched by&#13;
Washington. — According to a&#13;
dispatch received at the state department&#13;
Thursday from one of the&#13;
American" owners of the Constancia&#13;
estate, near Cienfuegos, Cuban insurgents&#13;
raided this property four&#13;
days ago, taking a number of horses.&#13;
The state department did not make&#13;
public the name of the American who&#13;
sent the dispatch. This is the first&#13;
protest received from Americans&#13;
against molestation of their interests.&#13;
Mr. Sleeper, the American charge at&#13;
Havana, was cabled to demand of&#13;
the Cuban government adequate protection&#13;
for the Constancia estate, and&#13;
all American property similarly situated,&#13;
Havana.—No news of the operations&#13;
of Col. Avalos, commander&#13;
of the government forces in Pinar&#13;
del Rio, has been received at the palace,&#13;
military headquarters or elsewhere&#13;
here since he Jeft San Juan&#13;
de Martinez Wednesday in search of&#13;
the main insurgent body, commanded&#13;
by Rftoo Guerra. GoWnsaent circles&#13;
continue hopeful of hisV'slnceess, but&#13;
the fact is not lost sight of that the&#13;
government troops are moving into&#13;
the center of their opponents' terri-&#13;
4ory, and that the numbers of the in&#13;
Mr*. Window's Soothing* Syron.&#13;
For children teetblu, tdftaai ibo gurai, reduce* laflunauiloo,&#13;
tlUjrip*u,curt* windcollu 35u»bottle.&#13;
We can generally avoid a • lot ot&#13;
trouble by not saying what wo think.&#13;
Important to Methods.&#13;
SzamlM cartfully every bottle of CA8TORIA,&#13;
» safe and mire remedy tot iuftoU and children,&#13;
and aee that it&#13;
Bean the&#13;
Signature of&#13;
la Vm For Orer 30 Ycara.&#13;
Tee Kiad Yea Hare Ahraya fiosfbt.&#13;
What a miserable crowd of pessimists&#13;
we would be if we could see&#13;
ourselves as others see us.&#13;
thirteen hKmths **jnom. He f * v o r e d ^ r g c n ^ ' . a r e not known. New bands&#13;
are reported to have been organized in&#13;
various places in Pinar del Rio and&#13;
elsewhere, which gives the situation&#13;
a gravity which there is no attempt&#13;
to disguise. Up to noon Thursday&#13;
no reports of engagements of importance&#13;
had been received, although desultory&#13;
skirmishes with minor bands&#13;
or ' in3urgcnta, especially westward,&#13;
had taken place. No suggestions have&#13;
been received at the palace from anybody&#13;
of a settlement of the insurrection&#13;
on political lints. It Is stated&#13;
that the government would not encourage&#13;
such a course under the present&#13;
circumstances.&#13;
Vice President Mendez Capote visited&#13;
President Palma Thursday and reiterated&#13;
his denial that,he had consulted&#13;
with Senator 3ayas, president&#13;
oi' the liberal party, on the question&#13;
whether peace could" not be restored&#13;
by Palma's withdrawal from the presidency,&#13;
permitting Mendez Capote to&#13;
succeed him and giving certain posts&#13;
to the liberals. •&#13;
The Americans here criticize the&#13;
! citizens of the United States who&#13;
' had enlisted in the government's machine&#13;
gun. corps, believing that they&#13;
should have remained non-combatants.&#13;
A tight "took place Wednesday night&#13;
at Calalirt'/ar, Havana province, between&#13;
")0 insurgents and 15 rural&#13;
guard?, with the result that the latter&#13;
retreated,' with one man •wouuded.&#13;
An e^aagement • between' insurgents&#13;
and government troops is&#13;
also reported'to have occurred near&#13;
Avtemisa, province of Pinar del Rio,&#13;
near the Havana border. The result&#13;
is not known.&#13;
i . Several exchanges of shots have&#13;
lket-ii_xepoi:tc(l at. various places west:&#13;
In a Pinch, Use ALLEN'S FOOTEA8E.&#13;
A powder. It cures painfulNjmarting,&#13;
nervous feet and Ingrowing nails.&#13;
It's the greatest comfort discovery of&#13;
the age. Makes new shoes easy. A&#13;
certain cure for sweating feet. Sold&#13;
by all druggists, 25c. Trial package.&#13;
FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, Le&#13;
Roy, N. Y,&#13;
The highest mountain in the moon&#13;
is thought to be at least 35,000 feet&#13;
in height; that is 6,000 feet higher&#13;
than Mount Everest.&#13;
ward of Guana.iay, near the Havana"&#13;
border, in Pimr/ del Rio. As the&#13;
place is poorly protected, reeni'orce&#13;
ments of 50 rural guards have been&#13;
sent there.&#13;
A portion of Pino Guerra-s' force is&#13;
stationed at Puerto Cortez, on the&#13;
south ccast near San Juan do Martiriez,&#13;
which the government contemplates&#13;
making a central point for&#13;
sending men and supplies by water&#13;
to Pinar del Rio, should communication&#13;
by rail be interrupted.&#13;
DECIDES BOYCOTT IS ILLEGAL&#13;
WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN.&#13;
\of the place—mostly those who had j your demonstration. My heart would !&#13;
• had to stand and had become tired.&#13;
The andience, in the main, remained&#13;
IO the end.&#13;
The occasion was the Commercial&#13;
Travelers' Anti-Trust league reception.&#13;
No attmept was made to decorate the&#13;
.garden, and the setting was bare for&#13;
the speech of the man proclaimed by&#13;
be ungrateful beyond measure if it j&#13;
did not in return consecrate iself&#13;
to your service.&#13;
'"It was kind on the Commercial&#13;
Travelers' Anti-Trust league to propose&#13;
this home coming reception. It&#13;
was kind in Gov. Folk to come all the&#13;
way from Missouri to bring the testi-&#13;
Racine Judge Holds Unions Liable for&#13;
Damages to Employer.&#13;
all the other sneakers than himself as i raony t h a t b e b r l n « s l n h l s o f f l c i a l&#13;
Jhe "nation's foremost privatec itizen." I c a r e e r o f l o v e f o r c l v l c Purit&gt;'- t h a t&#13;
I he might join in this reception. It&#13;
Lauded by Friende. J was kind in Tom Johnson, that exam-&#13;
The characterizations of Mr. Bryan j pie of moral courage that we so much&#13;
as the speakers endeavored to find&#13;
-some new appellation interested the&#13;
-audience much. Gov. Folk, of Missouri,&#13;
called him "the great torchbearer&#13;
of righteousness." Augustus&#13;
/Thomas referred tp him as another&#13;
lijAyngus and as a ''Roman conqueror,&#13;
leftdlug his iron legion through the Applan&#13;
way;" Tom Johnson said he was&#13;
'•'• noi yet the nr.&lt;' official citizen of the&#13;
land,'' Vit that lie was "two years in&#13;
advance of his election—," the rest of&#13;
his remarks along that line being overwhelmed&#13;
with lautjdvtcr. and then with&#13;
•cheers?..&#13;
While these phrases of eulogy were&#13;
being uttered Mr. Bryan remained..impasslve,&#13;
occasionally chatting with. aj&lt;&#13;
friend who eat bes-ide him. He made&#13;
•no open acknowledgment of them.&#13;
Outlines Party Policy.&#13;
]t!r. Bryan's speech was practically&#13;
tlhat of a man who already had been&#13;
need in this country, to end his presence&#13;
to this occasion. Kind in the&#13;
officers of this league to bring you&#13;
here. Kind in Mr. Thomas to voice&#13;
the welcome in words so generous&#13;
that f could not admit myself worthy&#13;
of them. Kind i n you to so fully&#13;
recompense me for any danger that&#13;
I ' have encountered or any sacrifice&#13;
that I have made in being absent so&#13;
long from my native land.&#13;
' I cannot use a better phrase than&#13;
the old simple,one—-*I thank you.,;&#13;
"Like all travelers who have visited&#13;
other lands, I return with delight to&#13;
the land of my birth, more proud of its&#13;
people, wjth more ,-confidence .in its&#13;
[government and grateful to the J^fid&#13;
Providence that cast my lot in th*&#13;
United States^..... ^ ; ..&#13;
"I desire, moreover,-to acknowledge&#13;
indebtedness to the Americas officials&#13;
who hare everywhere shown ua all&#13;
possible courtesy and kindness.&#13;
Racine. Wis.—Union labor was dealt&#13;
a heavy blow by the decision of Judge&#13;
Cheater A.' Fowler In the boycott suit&#13;
for $25,000 damages brought by Baker&#13;
Otto B. Schultz.&#13;
By the decision the contract exacted&#13;
by the boss bakers by the union men,&#13;
by means of which the workmen&#13;
sought to enforce the closed shop, is&#13;
held illegal, the trades council and&#13;
the individual members are enjoined&#13;
from, using the'"unfair list;", the boycott&#13;
is declared an actionable conspiracy&#13;
to accomplish a criminal or&#13;
inla.wful purpose; Baker Schultz is allowed&#13;
to recover damages 6f'$?,S00 for&#13;
the loss of profits from the t i n e of&#13;
he commencement of Che boycotting&#13;
acts up to the time of the trial, and&#13;
$3,500 ln damages for the amount of&#13;
njury to his biwftieis' and property in&#13;
relation to its selling value.&#13;
To Promote Corbln and Lee.&#13;
Washington.—As soon as the naval&#13;
maneuvers aft ove* at-Oyster Bay it&#13;
s expected President Roosevelt will&#13;
.ake up t h e u W t t e r of Ailing important&#13;
vacancies that are to occur in&#13;
ihe Wntf. I4eut. Gen. Corbln will&#13;
^Hre- SeptemW. K» - i t * is .to be suet&gt;&#13;
eeded ey^Me^ Qen. IseAeVrtkor, now&#13;
wmmandtfeg the Pacific division. The&#13;
vacancy in the list of major generals&#13;
will be filled by the promotion of&#13;
Brig. Oen. Jesse M. Loe.&#13;
To keep your auto looking bright&#13;
use the following mixture for all painted&#13;
parts: Sperm -oil, one-half pint;&#13;
common vinegar, one-half pint; oil&#13;
bergamot, one dram. Mix and rub with&#13;
clean cloth. For all brass work use&#13;
tripoli, one and one-half pounds; any&#13;
lubricating oil, eight ounces; gasoline,&#13;
three quarts. This is one of the best&#13;
cleaners for all polished brass.&#13;
If you contemplate buying a medium&#13;
priced automobile and want to be certain&#13;
of securing a car suitable for touring&#13;
on country roads, up hill as well as&#13;
down hill, you will make no mistake&#13;
ln buying either a Buieck, Maxwejj,&#13;
Mitchell, Reo, Knox, Franklin or'&#13;
Queen. These range in price from&#13;
|7B0 to $2,000.&#13;
MORE PULQUE BEING DRUNK.&#13;
North Dakota Solves the Adulteration&#13;
Problem.&#13;
North Dakota seems to have found&#13;
the key to the question, "How .shall&#13;
we protect the people from frauds in&#13;
manufactured products?'* A new law&#13;
has recently gone Into effeet designed&#13;
to make it impossible to deceive* people&#13;
Into haying inferior ,&lt;u||(]^fgjterated&#13;
paint under &lt;^vImpression that&#13;
they are getting .Jre^nafttt, viz.: pure&#13;
white lead'anVJlrrrawS oh.&#13;
The North Dakota IsJffmakens did&#13;
not attempt to absolutely prohibit the&#13;
inferior pigments,'tor Mixtures of&#13;
pigments. They adopted the slogan,&#13;
*&amp;et the label toik/Vand. then left to&#13;
tjfce people to buy whichever thfjr&#13;
Wished, l&#13;
Under this plan, if any one wishes&#13;
to buy a mixture, of rock-dust, ground&#13;
quartz and other . cfcesp elements&#13;
which are found In many pfgfcnts and&#13;
so-called "white ' leads," no-fcno *an&#13;
object; for they do it with their eyes&#13;
open. But if they prefer genuine&#13;
white lead and linseed oil, they can&#13;
be sure of getting it, for none but&#13;
the genuine article can bear a label&#13;
which says "pure white lead."&#13;
In all other States mixtures are often&#13;
sold as pure white lead which&#13;
contain little — sometimes no — real&#13;
white lead.&#13;
It would seem that were this same&#13;
principle applied to food, beverages&#13;
and all other prepared articles, where&#13;
deception is practiced upon the buyer,&#13;
the question would be solved. It&#13;
would leave us free to buy what we&#13;
pleased, but would protect us from&#13;
unwittingly baying what we did not&#13;
want.&#13;
Vanishing Rural Industries.&#13;
The gradual cessation, one after&#13;
another, of the countryside industries&#13;
Is one of the principal reasons why the&#13;
peasant owner has vanished from the&#13;
land . Thatching and woodcraft have&#13;
been killed by rural councils, with&#13;
their craze for slated roofs, and by the&#13;
substitution of other materials for&#13;
timber. The cottager can no longer&#13;
even burn wood, but must buy coal,&#13;
since his fireplaces are not fashioned&#13;
for the consumption of fagots.—London&#13;
Estates Gazette.&#13;
Mexico City Gets Away With 800,000&#13;
Litres Every Day.&#13;
The consumption of pulque in Mexico&#13;
city is rapidly increasing, and&#13;
the hauling of the drink is becoming&#13;
one of the principal sources of revenue&#13;
on a number of lines entering&#13;
the City.&#13;
OnA nearly every railroad entering&#13;
the city a special pulque train is run&#13;
into the city daily and many of the&#13;
regular freight trains carry large&#13;
numbers of cars containing the popular&#13;
drink.&#13;
During the month of June three&#13;
railroads, the Hildago. the Mexican&#13;
and the Interoceanic, carried into the&#13;
city 59,861 barrels and 3SI skins full&#13;
of the pulque gathered within a radius&#13;
of sixty mile's of the city. The National,&#13;
the Central and the smaller&#13;
lines brought in an amount probably&#13;
half as great.&#13;
Allowing that the population of&#13;
Mexico city is 400,000 men, women | der is Aluni and another CFeam- of&#13;
and children, the quantity of pulque Tartar. Alum has been declared to be&#13;
brought into the city daily is suf-: wholesome; |an established fact. Eiicient&#13;
to supply almost two* liters to ory 'large •watef"sy#teiu$ln the cities&#13;
.every individual. Do you drink your | along the Missouri river use Amm In&#13;
share? During the month or June 14,-&#13;
985,290 liters of pvilque were brought&#13;
into the city, as in one barrel ther,e&#13;
are 250 liters and in one skin 60 liters.&#13;
During each day of thfi^raonth an average&#13;
of 748,263 liters was brought to&#13;
the city.&#13;
The amount thus reckoned is exclusive&#13;
of the pulque brought to the&#13;
city in wagons and on muleback from&#13;
the nearby haciendas. ~ &gt; .&#13;
ANChemlcally Pure.&#13;
The mistaken idea of a few years&#13;
ago, about Alum in Baking Powders&#13;
being injurious, no longer jprevails, or&#13;
scarcely exists, It is -a well established&#13;
facte by icheraica| analysis that&#13;
Cream of Tartar belnf less volatile&#13;
than Alum, when, exposed to heat, Is&#13;
nop "entirely vajp^lzed as is ;the case&#13;
with'Aluti, but fca^es a (^sidfie in'the&#13;
bread, which is injurious. Alum, on&#13;
the confrary, Is eiitTreifc evaporated&#13;
whilpi • performing J&gt;ts function during&#13;
process of baking.^eaving no atom of&#13;
injurious residuous substance. The&#13;
words ^Cheniically Pure^ erroneously&#13;
uas-d to designate Cream v'ofj Tartar&#13;
from Alum baking powder is a. m'isn'omerl&#13;
Baking Powder made of pure&#13;
Alum is as chemically pure ns made&#13;
from pure cream of tartar. These&#13;
words n^ean nothing more uor jjess&#13;
tlia,n pure chemicals, and in no ffay&#13;
can they Imply that one baking pow-&#13;
GOOD AND HARD.&#13;
Results of Excessive Coffee Drinkii&#13;
It is remarkable what suffering&#13;
some persons put up with just to satisfy&#13;
an appetite for something.&#13;
A Mich, woman says: "I had been&#13;
using coffee since I was old enough to&#13;
have a cup of my own at the table,&#13;
and from it I have suffered agony&#13;
hundreds of times ln the years past.&#13;
"My trouble first began in the form&#13;
of bilious colic, coming on every few&#13;
weeks and almost ending my life. At&#13;
every attack for 8 years I suffered in&#13;
this way. I used to pray for death to&#13;
relieve me from my suffering. I had&#13;
also attacks of sick headache, and began&#13;
to suffer from catarrh of the stom-j&#13;
ach, and of course awful dyspepsia.&#13;
"For about a year I lived on crackers&#13;
and water. Believing that coffee&#13;
was the cause of all this suffering, I&#13;
finally quit it and began to use&#13;
Postum Food Coffee. It agreed with&#13;
my Btomach, my troubles have left&#13;
me and I am fast gaining my health&#13;
under its use.&#13;
"No wonder I condemn coffee and&#13;
tea. No one could be in a much more&#13;
critical condition than I was from&#13;
the use of coffee. Some doctors pronounced&#13;
it cancer, others ulceration,&#13;
since I stopped coffee and began Pos&#13;
turn I am getting well so fast I can&#13;
heartily recommend it for all who&#13;
suffer as I did." Name given by&#13;
Poitum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read&#13;
the little book. "The Road to Weft*&#13;
Tint," "There'i a reason,"&#13;
large quantities~to purTfy"~TJfe water&#13;
before pumping it into their water&#13;
mains for consumption./Cream of Tartar&#13;
baking powder is perhaps good&#13;
enough for any onel; Alum baking&#13;
powder Is better^ and very muc J*&#13;
cheaper.&#13;
YS TURN UP TOES.&#13;
Know Enough to Get In Out&#13;
of the Rafn.&#13;
/&#13;
The war department has learned&#13;
through experience that the American&#13;
donkey has not sense enough to live&#13;
in the Philippines.&#13;
Some time ago, more in the nature&#13;
of an experiment than for any other&#13;
reason, the bureau of insular affairs&#13;
sent a -dozen American donkeys, com&#13;
monly known as "burros," to. Manila&#13;
for use among the Spanish-speaking&#13;
people. The natives did not take&#13;
kindly to the new species, however,&#13;
but rather looked at them from afar&#13;
off. • ' ! • ;&#13;
Seven died. Such was the. news received&#13;
at the bureau recently. When&#13;
the torrential rains set in Uie little&#13;
animals were caught out In -ttke open,&#13;
and not knowing how to shelter themselves&#13;
like the native beast of burden,&#13;
seven docile, dirmb b&amp;asts jturned&#13;
•up their toes.,&#13;
' "They ougkt to die," eaid ft war&#13;
department official who has a deep&#13;
interest in everything . pertaining to&#13;
the Philippines; "they ought to die&#13;
if they don't know enough t o u t i a C i t&#13;
out of tne rain.''*- ' - *-- V* • ' ' * ' '&#13;
Labor Ike Great Qualify * % &amp;&#13;
The most beautiful *c0ofc« o/Jpe&#13;
human body, and the highest Results&#13;
of the human ..Intfllligwice. kre.jpondi&#13;
tions or achievements, of quite unla&#13;
but none gave me any reUef. But |»boriou#-^nat, "of* recreatftV Effort. It &gt;&#13;
4s 4fca negative quAaiity-^or.quaaUsTf&#13;
of, de-fect—whios, has fo, h* c o u s * *&#13;
against every r e s t tiMW'tetift whlfe&#13;
has to be counted against every Fact&#13;
or Deed of men. In brief, It la thai&#13;
quantity of our tod which w* tie |n&#13;
—Rua^ln,&#13;
*&#13;
ft&#13;
H&#13;
C»&#13;
K&#13;
A HEALTHY_OLD AGE&#13;
OFT ENTHE BEST PART OF LIFE&#13;
Hels for WoflMn Passing Through&#13;
O h a a g e o f L l f e&#13;
providence has allotted us each at&#13;
least seventy years In which to fulfill&#13;
our mission in life, and it is generally&#13;
our own fault if w e die prematurely,&#13;
STORY OF "LUCKY" BALDWIN.)&#13;
Nervous exhaustion invites disease.&#13;
This statement is the positive truth.&#13;
When everything becomes a burden&#13;
and you cannot walk a few blocks without&#13;
excessive fatigue, and you break&#13;
out into perspiration easily, and your&#13;
face flushes, and you grow excited and&#13;
shaky at the least provocation, and&#13;
yOu cannot bear to be crossed in anything,&#13;
you are in danger; your nerves&#13;
have given o u t ; you need building up&#13;
at once! To build up woman's nervous&#13;
system and during the period of&#13;
change of life we know of no better&#13;
medicine than Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound. Here is an illustration.&#13;
Mrs. Mary L. Koehne.. 371&#13;
Garfield Avenue, Chicago. 111., writes:&#13;
" I have used Lydia E. Pinkbain'sVegetable&#13;
Compound for years in my family and it&#13;
never disappoints; so when I felt that I was&#13;
nearinft the change of Hfe I commenced treat&#13;
ment with it. I took in all about six bottles&#13;
and it did me a great deal of good. It stopped&#13;
my dizzy spells, pains in my back ana the&#13;
headaches with which I bad suffered for&#13;
months before taMnfjUja-6empouiid. * ^ 1&#13;
that if it bad pot be«ntor thft-psat medicine&#13;
for women that I should not bavesbeeri alive&#13;
to-day. It is splendid for women.old oc y&amp;ing,&#13;
and will surely cure all female disoi"der»."&#13;
Mrs. Pinkham,: daughter-in-law of&#13;
Lydia &amp; Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass., invites&#13;
all sick and ailing women to write&#13;
her for advice. Her great experience&#13;
i» at their service, free of cost. —&#13;
For Baby's&#13;
Skin &amp; Scalp&#13;
Because of its Delicate&#13;
Medicinal, Emollient,&#13;
Sanative, and Antiseptic&#13;
Properties combined with&#13;
the purest of Cleansing&#13;
Ingredients and most refreshing&#13;
of Flower Odors.&#13;
S*M thtonflMtt tat wsrld. Cottrtm Rats. Ste, Olst.&#13;
' " !., JttwlvMrt, Mr. (ia term of ChtctUta Csstea&#13;
~ ft vfel of •&gt;). • ttst&gt;« •** ***** csws.&#13;
:toi«&#13;
I^afes^ChsrUrhoaas * i £ " * b * * M ^ * *»&#13;
lOjftpYiy CUia|uAi«)&#13;
'9*Lltvffiiow teftwoi Purify, wd BantUy tat&#13;
, BctlptiUii. •** Hud* oftmteata »»4 CUUns."&#13;
BALX8MMM WANTED,&#13;
. MWS tialloi vaouiMfleMiiyn tesparkaneetf BUtttt*a •spplyof oBnOr M«1T to awa MaOaw wlra "&#13;
Uy wjili&#13;
,a at• a wwaanta^SdlhM Mlas umsrraasarooytssrrtjuotjffsak* .a lm&gt;TaiO jraaraaiM to rafsoa awa•ssrc Il afasolvost asjaalotst iMffMS t laa» m4&#13;
WILD WITH ITCHING HUMOR.&#13;
How He Got Hit Start in the Early&#13;
Days of California.&#13;
In 1853, or more than a half century&#13;
ago, a little party of gold seekers&#13;
with a meager outfit of horses and.&#13;
wagons, started for California from&#13;
the village of Racine, Wis., says Outing.&#13;
In command of thia adventurous&#13;
expedition was a young man who took&#13;
with him his wife and infant daughter.&#13;
His name was E. J. Baldwin and&#13;
he made a wine choice in shaking&#13;
from his restless feet the dust of a&#13;
tamer civilization. He needed a larger&#13;
theater of action for his pent-up and&#13;
surging activities. While trailing&#13;
through the mountains of Utah the&#13;
pioneers were attacked by Indians,&#13;
who were beaten off during a six-hour&#13;
fight in which young Baldwin killed&#13;
their chief. After six months of hardship,&#13;
the party reached Hangtown&#13;
(later called Placerville) in California.&#13;
Here Baldwin tarried and began&#13;
placer mining. He appears to have&#13;
been no more than an ordinary redshirted&#13;
argonaut, meeting the ups&#13;
and dowus of mining luck, until the&#13;
discovery of the Comstock lode at&#13;
Virginia City. Thither he drifted and&#13;
discovered that his natural bent was&#13;
gambling with the mtnes that other&#13;
men had opened. Amid a whirlwind&#13;
of speculation, he fought his way&#13;
with such success that he' loomed&#13;
from the smoke in a few months as&#13;
"Lucky" Baldwin, the man who had&#13;
cleaned up $7,500,000 in the gigantic&#13;
deals in the stock of the Ophir mines.&#13;
San Francisco was the Mecca of&#13;
those lucky sons of fortune who were&#13;
rearing a great city by the Golden&#13;
Gate. As a stock and mining specula,&#13;
tor, "Lucky" Baldwin shone resplendent,&#13;
but he was also a loyal son of San&#13;
Francisco. He built hotels and theaters&#13;
and business blocks, even while&#13;
he was amazing that far from conservative&#13;
community by madly freakish&#13;
extravagances.&#13;
In the very lucid interval he bought&#13;
all the Spanish grants he could find&#13;
near Los Angeles and there spent a&#13;
million in making this ranch of his&#13;
not only a splendidly productive prop&#13;
erry, but also one of the most beauti&#13;
ful estates ever laid out in this 01&#13;
any other country. It was his hobby:&#13;
his pet, and he planted miles of avenues&#13;
with noble, shade trees and made&#13;
wonderful tropical gardens, so that today&#13;
his home is surrounded by a&#13;
paradise of vernal beauty.&#13;
Eruption Broke Out In Spots All Over&#13;
Body-—Cured at Expense of Only&#13;
$1.25—Thanks Cutlcura.&#13;
"The Cutlcura Remedies cured me of&#13;
my Bkin disease, and I am very thankful&#13;
to you. My trouble was eruption&#13;
of the skin, which broke out In spots&#13;
all over_my*body, and caused a continual&#13;
Itching which nearly drove me&#13;
wild at times. I got medicine of a&#13;
doctor, but it did not cure me, and&#13;
when I saw in a paper your ad, I sent&#13;
to you for the Cutlcura book and I&#13;
studied my case in it. I then went&#13;
to the drug store and bought one cake&#13;
of Cutlcura Soap, one box of Cuttcura&#13;
Ointment and one vial of Cutlcura&#13;
Pills. From the first application I received&#13;
relief. J used the first set and&#13;
two extra cakes of Cutlcura Soap, and&#13;
Was completely cured. I had suffered&#13;
for two years, and I again thank Cutlcura&#13;
for my cure. Claude N. Johnson,&#13;
Maple Grove Farm. R. F. D. 2,&#13;
Walnut, Kan., June 15, 1905."&#13;
**.-&#13;
Mice and conclusions are Hot synonymous,&#13;
yet women lump at both.&#13;
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES, are fast&#13;
to light and washing ana color more goods&#13;
than other*. 10c per package.&#13;
Although the rolling stone gathers&#13;
no moss the high roller scatters a&#13;
lot of it.&#13;
Deadly New Rifle.&#13;
Bullets from the new 30-caliber i&#13;
rifles of the United States army whirl '&#13;
with great rapidity. The rifling gives&#13;
one revolution, of the bullet about its&#13;
axiB in ten inches. At the muzzle the&#13;
velocity of the bullet is 2,300 feet a&#13;
second, which means 2,760 turns a&#13;
second, assuming that the bullet does&#13;
not strip in the rifling. The circumference&#13;
of the bullet is .942 of an&#13;
inch, which gives a peripheral velocity&#13;
of 2,600 inches each second, or 13,000&#13;
feet a minute.&#13;
Troubles of an Author.&#13;
Robert Louis Stevenson's mother&#13;
'wrote in one of her letters from Samoa:&#13;
"The people here are now discovering&#13;
that Louis writes, as 'The&#13;
'Bottle-Imp' is coming out in the native&#13;
paper, having been translated by&#13;
Mr. C . It is much appreciated,&#13;
but leads to some curious results. For&#13;
instance, the house in it somewhat resembles&#13;
ours, and a good many of the&#13;
natives suspect that Mr. Stevenson&#13;
has the 'bottle' himself."&#13;
His Choice for Dessert.&#13;
A story of a certain newspaper man&#13;
and one of his pugilistic friends is&#13;
going the rounds and making qui** a&#13;
hit with all who hear it. The two u ^&#13;
been together all day and along about&#13;
nine o'clock that evening the man&#13;
who writes the news said: "Come&#13;
and have lunch with me, Tommy."&#13;
They ate and ate until the newspaper&#13;
man could hold no more. He toyed&#13;
with his table tools for a moment,&#13;
and then he said to his friend:&#13;
"Well, what are you going to have&#13;
for dessert?"&#13;
"Wat's dat?" asked the other.&#13;
"Why, something to end the dinner&#13;
with," explained the newspaper man.&#13;
Then the pugilist did something unexpected.&#13;
He picked up the bill of&#13;
fare, scanned it as he picked his&#13;
teeth, and finally exclaimed:&#13;
"Gimme a beef stew!"—Columbus&#13;
Dispaich.&#13;
American School Children.&#13;
X 4 0 l t u . &gt; ^ t i r W H u t H r A « r i&#13;
V A » t &gt; *H rHM af Salssr's IU4 Cr»M lirsrM Vttatar&#13;
** - »»*• &lt;*l*lajw* *r W|n;«rW&gt;«*ta, * / • , Barb/, Ctovws,&#13;
According to the report of the commissioner&#13;
of education for the"- fiscal&#13;
year ended June 30, .1903, there were&#13;
in the United Stales at that time&#13;
22,G55,001 children between the ages&#13;
of five and 18, of whom 18,187,918&#13;
were enrolled in public or private&#13;
schools or colleges, or in special Institutions&#13;
of a more or less educational&#13;
character. Thus, during the period&#13;
mentioned, more than 22 per cent, of&#13;
our entire people were at school or&#13;
college, and their education cost for&#13;
that one year $251,457,«25, or $3.15 per&#13;
capita of population. To-day our educational&#13;
system is even larger, and&#13;
the expense of maintaining it greater&#13;
still.—North American Review.&#13;
Cold Job for the Under Man.&#13;
Some years ago an Irishman, not&#13;
long from the old country, secured a&#13;
job cutting Ice. The foreman gave Pat&#13;
an ice saw (ice in those days was cut&#13;
by hand) and told him to go on the&#13;
pond and go to work cutting ice. Now,&#13;
Pat had seen a crosscut saw that is&#13;
used in cutting logs, that requires a&#13;
man on either end, and, as the saw&#13;
that the foreman gave him resembled&#13;
the crosscut he had seen, he supposed&#13;
it required two men to work it; so,&#13;
seeing another man standing near,&#13;
when he was to commence cutting, he&#13;
said: "Say, friend, I'll toss up a cent&#13;
to see who goes below."&#13;
A Compromise.&#13;
He—By Jove! I believe you get&#13;
prettier every day.&#13;
She—Oh, no, I'm sure I don't.&#13;
He—Well, then, let's say every&#13;
other day.&#13;
Why He Won.&#13;
Eaziman—Made my first money on&#13;
tb/ races t'day. *&#13;
" Sharp—What hoas d'ye bet on?&#13;
Btsyman—DWn't bet on any, an' I&#13;
was* an esiy winner.&#13;
Atmosphtrio Poisoning.&#13;
The protests against the automobile&#13;
omnibuses of London have received&#13;
a powerful, reenforcement by&#13;
a declaration of Sir Jame.3 Dewar on&#13;
the chemical basis. He is undoubtedly&#13;
among the high chemical authorities&#13;
of the world, and his condemnation&#13;
of the motor buses and freight&#13;
vans seems conclusive unless invention&#13;
provides Innocuous motive power.&#13;
Sir James Dewar states that the&#13;
combustion of petrol or gasoline in&#13;
these motors throws off vast quantities&#13;
of noxious gases. Some of these&#13;
are absolutely poisonous and all injurious.&#13;
He holds that the air of London&#13;
is bad enough already without&#13;
the addition of carbonic acid gas, the&#13;
sulphurous gases, and, worst of all,&#13;
the asphyxiating carbonic oxide.&#13;
Moreover, while he admits that science&#13;
can improve motors, he declares&#13;
that it is impossible for it to burn petrol&#13;
and render tUe resulting gases&#13;
innocuous.&#13;
Marvin's r.ascart&#13;
Chocolate JaWrts&#13;
The Sreit Constlpttlon Cure&#13;
Uarrfj&#13;
MARiVVIiNN ^BMEtwSJf!! ftSUSfP&#13;
Superb Service, Splendid Scenery&#13;
en route to Niagara Falls, Muskoka&#13;
and Kawartha Lakes, Georgian tiay&#13;
and Temegami Region, St. Lawrence&#13;
River and Rapids, Thousand Isjanda,&#13;
Algonquin National Park, Whlfe^Mountalns&#13;
and Atlantic Sea Coast resorts,&#13;
via Grand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Double track Chicago to Montreal and&#13;
Niagara Falls, N. Y.&#13;
For copies of tourist publications&#13;
and descriptive pamphlets apply to&#13;
Geo. W. Vaux, A. G. P. &amp; T. A., 135&#13;
idams St., Chicago.&#13;
W h e n y o u b e y WEAWTEHT ER CLOTHING&#13;
ycooum pwlaetnet parnodt elcotniogn service.&#13;
Tothheesre gaonoddm parorin/ ts ere combined in&#13;
JOWEKS&#13;
&gt; £ H B R A N D&#13;
OILED CLOTHING&#13;
Ybucfeirt afford '&#13;
to btry any other /&#13;
• j towc* co sorrow u a * TOWC« C M * e i * « co bT»&#13;
W. L. DOUCLAS&#13;
•3.50 oV3.00 Shoes&#13;
B U T III TMI WOBLD&#13;
*LDo«!a$4ettEa*la»y&#13;
ws^fctsfMMesitaBiprict,&#13;
Eugenie's Mission to Austria.&#13;
The Paris papers still insist that 1&#13;
Empress Eugenie went to Ischl on a |&#13;
match-making errand. She wishes, it j&#13;
Is said, the hand of a granddaughter j&#13;
of Francis Joseph for Princess Louis i&#13;
! Napoleon. j&#13;
THE BEST COUGH CURE&#13;
No cough is too trifling' or too&#13;
serious to be treated by the r i g h t&#13;
method, ancr"the right method is~|&#13;
the use of the best cough cure,&#13;
which is&#13;
Kemp's Balsam&#13;
.This famous preparation cures&#13;
coughs, colds, bronchitis, grip and&#13;
consumption in its first stages.&#13;
Irritation of the throat and bronchial&#13;
tubes Is immediately removed&#13;
by the use of Kemp's Balsam.&#13;
Sold t y all dealers at 25c. and 5 0 c&#13;
IBQBirOB&#13;
*•&amp;•• sbo«L *s to s i . s a&#13;
toSl^O. WOOMB'M SBOSS.&#13;
i l M M ' S Children's ~&#13;
t^OOtofft&#13;
JTry W. I* Douglas WOIM,sBa'.Ia.» tHofiLss.1e&lt;.s0 0a. n*&#13;
Children's s h o e s ; f o r style, fit&#13;
they «xcel oth«r ——»-.&#13;
If I could take y o a Into m y large&#13;
factories at Brockton, Mass.^uid show&#13;
you h o w carefully W . L . Douglas s h o e s&#13;
are made, y o u would t h e e understand&#13;
w h y t h e y hold their shape, fR better,&#13;
wear longer, and e r e of greater value&#13;
than any other make. _ _ w r '&#13;
Wtamvar yoa Hv, y can fMaia\ W._L&gt;&#13;
• »b—t. W*neSMMM S»K»*»"*•••_'&gt;&#13;
prkaa abnpdtt mbtmfa,r iwora fcahb opcrsa.t ocTta« *j «• • M••O•* ••«•!* •#!««•*&#13;
tmtm. Ask yoar deafer 1*rW.L.Do«gtsaftlMt*&#13;
aa4 lasts* iipsa bavbw tksm.&#13;
Wrtta flsr fihtstratod Catalog •« PaB Stylo*. ,&#13;
W. L. DOUOLAS, Dap*. U, Bcocktao, Maa*&gt;&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO, 36, 1906. t , a t u ^ . : ^ t Tho»P»r/« Eye Water&#13;
Lata* • • a i m i - n i i " " " " " ^ - ^&#13;
Lttiiftfriiiioii urn&#13;
...^--....,,....-. - ^ . , . . ^J&#13;
:«S^f?V.\\";j;.v:.v.-.;&gt;-r!.;&#13;
r..v\&#13;
yMaaasiMo 1 i«inii i n&#13;
ititoaMS*iBOft«wkaMa«&#13;
:-:0^-/---&#13;
THEWINN ING STROKE&#13;
If more than ordinary skill in playing brings the honors of the&#13;
game to the winning player, so exceptional merit in a remedy&#13;
ensures the commendation of the well informed, and as a reasonable&#13;
amount of outdoor life and recreation is conducive to&#13;
the health and strength, so does ajperfect laxative tend to one's&#13;
improvement in cases of constipation, biliousness, headaches,&#13;
etc. It is all important, however, in selecting a laxative, to&#13;
choose one of known quality and excellence, like the ever&#13;
pleasant Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig&#13;
Syrup Co., a laxative which sweetens and cleanses the system&#13;
effectually, when a laxative is needed, without any unpleasant&#13;
after effects, as it acts naturally and gently on the internal&#13;
organs, simply assisting nature when nature needs assistance,&#13;
without griping, irritating or debilitating' the internal organs in&#13;
any way, as it contains nothing of an objectionable or injurious&#13;
nature. As the plants which are combined with the figs in&#13;
the manufacture of Syrup of Figs are known to physicians to&#13;
act most beneficially upon the system, the remedy has met&#13;
with their general approval as a family laxative, a fact well&#13;
worth considering in making purchases.&#13;
It is because of the fact that S Y R U P O F F I G S&#13;
is a remedy of known quality and excellence, and approved by&#13;
physicians that has led to its use by so many millions of well&#13;
informed people, who would.not use any remedy of uncertain&#13;
quality or inferior reputation. Every family should have a&#13;
bottle of the genuine on hand at all times, to use when.a&#13;
laxative remedy is required. Please to remember that the&#13;
genuine Syrup of Figs is for sale in bottles of one size&#13;
only, by all reputable druggists, and that full name of the&#13;
company—California Fig Syrup Co., is plainly printed on&#13;
the front of every package. Regular price, 50c per bottle.&#13;
FORNIATIG SYRUP&#13;
••ivaur"!.&#13;
^&#13;
mmm - ^ t . ~ - ^ — n . . * mm&#13;
f'V jr. &gt; Vu'fctf'gWiMiwiiA'i A 1 - — — "-«&#13;
-_ "• _ . , • ; _ _ _ , „ , ^ , w . . •„&gt; Si'in.i'iii«1^» «I»&gt;IIH»I1B«»,'I&gt; T- M i""-/if-jri:rf_iji&#13;
rofliatlm^^^ .&#13;
. A ^ A&#13;
Among Oilr Correspondents i&#13;
N O R T H H A M B U R G .&#13;
M i s s B e l l e H u l l r e t u r n e d t o&#13;
D e t r o i t M o n d a y .&#13;
M i s s A d d a K i c e e n t e r t a i n e d t e n&#13;
l a d y f r i e n d s to l u n c h T h u r s d a y .&#13;
-Mrs. T w i t c h e l g a v e a p a r t y in&#13;
h o n o r of Miss B e l l . ' H u l l , F r i d a y .&#13;
Mrs. J a c o b K i c e v i s i t e d h e r&#13;
d a u g h t e r , Mrs. E d p r e w r y , in&#13;
H o w e l l last week.&#13;
M i s s E l l a V a n F l e e t s t a r t e d ™ r&#13;
T o l e d o , M o n d a y , w h e r e s h e will&#13;
visit f r i e n d s b e f o r e r e t u r n i n g 10&#13;
N e w J e r s e y ,&#13;
P a r t i e s from O l e a v e l a n d , Morr&#13;
i s t o w n , D e t r o i t , H o w e l l a n d&#13;
W I S T P U T H A l t .&#13;
S c h o o l b e g a n h e r e M o n d a y&#13;
w i t h D. W. M u r t a t e a c h e r .&#13;
J o i e H a r r i s b e g u n t e a c h i n g in&#13;
t h e l i a u s e d i s t r i c t , T u e s d a y .&#13;
E u n i c e G a r d n e r left M o n d a y&#13;
to a t t e n d t h e • L H u s i n g B u s i n e s s&#13;
U n i v e r s i t y .&#13;
L u l u A b b o t t , of M a r i o n , a n d ] it out of the system, it's the blood&#13;
E s t e l l a H o l t , of F o w l e r v i l l e , w e r e j i h a t \ at fault Pois.-nous crystal* like&#13;
G a r d n e r ' s l a s t !*anii. ^«-t into the j.»itits and muscles. 1&#13;
i Di Shoon s Rheumatism Itemedv prevents&#13;
this It drive:- rheumatism Irom&#13;
It arou&gt;es energy, devUope* and the blood and then rh umatism dies&#13;
the WH recommend and sell it. All IX-al-&#13;
T h e M i s s e s F l o r e n c e a n d G r a c e&#13;
C o l l i n s h a v e c o m m e n c e d t h e i r&#13;
y e a r ' s w o r k ; F l o r e n c e a s p r i u c i p a l&#13;
in t h e h i g h s c h o o l in S t o c k b r i d g e&#13;
a n d G r a c e as t e a c h e r n e a r M u n i t h .&#13;
h'lu uuuitisui is not insurable. S t u b&#13;
OinV Yes! Uut Dr, StH)op's'Rheumat.i^,&#13;
IJ-m "iy will if faithfully used drive&#13;
g u e s t s a t H . B .&#13;
week.&#13;
Here Is The Proof of It&#13;
T h i s is w h a t o u e of J a c k s p u s l e a d i n g b a k e r * s a y s of O U R F L O U R .&#13;
O n e w h o d o e s a n e x t e n s i v e b a k i u g busine&amp;a a n d U S E S&#13;
THE BEST FLOUR HE CAN BUY&#13;
' • i M i l t l l l l l ' i i ' l i ' l i ' l . l M l i l ' H l l l ' l i ' l . ' l i l t i X i l l l&#13;
Office of&#13;
stimulates nervous lite, aiuu.»e.&gt;&#13;
courage of youth. It makes you&#13;
young" as:ain. That's what Molester's&#13;
Kocky Mountain Tea will do. 35 ets.&#13;
Tea or Tablets.&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
S a n f o r d R e a s o n has p u r c h a s e d&#13;
er-&#13;
H a m b u r g visited at C h a s . G . ! ftu 8 0 ftcre f a m i Gf Mrs. D . W a l t&#13;
S m i t h s , S a t u r d a y , at L a k e l a n d&#13;
M i s s L o r e n a B l a c k b e g a n s c h o o l&#13;
in t h e W r i g h t d i s t r i c t , . M o n d a y ;&#13;
M i s s S a d i e S w a r t h o u t t e a c h e s i n&#13;
t h e B e u r m a n d i s t r i c t ; M i s s Mely&#13;
i n i n t h e S a l m o n . , d i s t r k ' t j M i s s&#13;
P L A I N F I E L D . ~'&#13;
M i s s B r a l e y " i s " e n t e r t a i n i n g r e l -&#13;
a t i v e s f r o m A n n A r b o r .&#13;
Mrs. W h i t e h e a d is s p e n d i n g t h e&#13;
week w i t h M r s . S a g e r in I o s c o .&#13;
T h e l a s t ice c r e a m social of t h e&#13;
ei's " •• I&#13;
! s e a s o n will b e h e l d S a t u r d a y&#13;
M i s s F l o s s i e S m i t h will a t t e n d e v e n i n &amp; g e p t i g ^&#13;
J. L. PETERMANN&#13;
B A K E R&#13;
Jackson, Mich., Sept. 3, 1906&#13;
F. M. PETERS,&#13;
Mich.&#13;
of the 1st instant,&#13;
t h e S t o c k b r i d g e h i g h s c h o o l t h e&#13;
c o m i n g y e a r .&#13;
M i s s F l o r e n c e S p r o u t w h o h a s&#13;
b e e n s p e n d i n g - s o m e&#13;
C l a r a S w i t z e r in t h e C a d y d i s t r i c t ; . . •&gt; ~. n i -, , , n „ A u „ ^ «&#13;
. . . _ , . , _* . ' f r i e n d s in C h e l s e a , r e t u r n e d h o m e&#13;
M i s s L a m b o r n in t h e r e t t y s v i l l e , ^ ,&#13;
J 'ast week.&#13;
S. G. T o p p i n g a n d wife visited&#13;
L . C. W a s 8 o n of K a n s a s , a t t h e&#13;
h o m e of S. T. W a s s o n , last S a t u r -&#13;
TTav.&#13;
alid M i s s A l m a M c C l u s k e y in t h e&#13;
C o r d l e y d i s t r i c t .&#13;
Airs. H a r d i n g a n d d a u g h t e r , of&#13;
O h i o , - w h o h a v e b e e n v i s i t i n g h e r&#13;
6on h e r e , r e t u r n e d t o t h e i r h o m e&#13;
I Business Pointers. 4&#13;
XOTICE&#13;
The Pettysville cider mill is now&#13;
ready to., receive ..apples and make&#13;
cider, VVrn. Hooker.&#13;
FOR BALK.&#13;
'1 wo ni( e lot; on .Main street, -with&#13;
line shade. And door and window&#13;
frames -utlirient t r r jp.ir sized house.&#13;
22 tt ' H. W, Crofoot&#13;
171 W. DAMKI.S.&#13;
J , CiKNKKAI. AlCTlnNKKK.&#13;
fcvitishictn n &lt;uKinuiteecl. '"' Fur information:&#13;
call at IHSPATLH Urtice or address,&#13;
(injury. Midi, r. f. il.2. Lymlilla phone j&#13;
connection. Auction lulls ;in&lt;l tin enpsi&#13;
; furnished tiee. ,&#13;
FOR SALR.&#13;
1'air t heap hor-e-, a'-o new niiich&#13;
cmv. (J. K Haujjriiu. Portage Lake.&#13;
I AY*i&gt;tC ^ C Swect t0 ***&#13;
* U U A ^ 1 3 O AUndyBowdUxatlve.&#13;
S e v e r a l from t h i s v i c i n i t y at&#13;
t e n d e d t h e S t a t e F a i r T u e s d a y , | t h e first of t h e w e e k .&#13;
a m o n g ' w h o m w e r e F l o s s i e S m i t h T&gt; v *i i • c u «• n&#13;
" . | l i e m e m b e r t h e d a t e of t h e H a l l&#13;
a n d M a c k M a r t i n . ; i« r ™ * : „,-n i *i ^ • t&#13;
; d e d i c a t i o n will be t h e e v e n i n g of&#13;
T h e A n d e r s o n school h o u s e n a s S e p t e m b e r 12. A good p r o g r a m&#13;
b e e n n e w l y p a i n t e d a n d p a p e r e d&#13;
a n d s c h o o l opeised last M o n d a y&#13;
w i t h F m m e t t H a r r i s as t e a c h e r .&#13;
A s Mrs. G r e i n e r was r e t u r n i n g&#13;
from P i u c k n e y , last S a t u r d a y ,&#13;
h e r h o r s e b e c a m e f r i g h t e n e d b y&#13;
t h e s u d d e n a p p e a r a n c e of a n a u t o -&#13;
m o b i l e a n d s h e was t h r o w n t o "the&#13;
g r o u n d w i t h s u c h v i o l e n c e ' a s t o&#13;
r e n d e r h e r u n c o n s c i o u s for s o m e&#13;
j t i m e . S h e a l s o suffered s e v e r e&#13;
i b r u i s e s b u t f o r t u n a t e l y n o b o n e s&#13;
were broken.&#13;
Pinokney,&#13;
In reply to yours&#13;
I will Say! We like your flour as well as&#13;
any winter wheat flour we ever used and much&#13;
better than some*brands we have bought.&#13;
Please send me ten (10) barrels more by&#13;
first freight.&#13;
Resp.,&#13;
J. L. PETERMANN.&#13;
As-k auy " J A P " that you may see,&#13;
" W h v the Cz.Vr, with HEAR behind,"&#13;
is e x p e c t e d , a n d P l a i u f i e l d l a d i e s&#13;
k n o w h o w to p r e p a r e a fine s u p -&#13;
p e r a n d will d o t h e i r b e s t t o s a t i s -&#13;
f y y o u r h u n g e r at; t h e - e l o s e of t h e&#13;
p r o g r a m . T h e p r o g r a m b e g i n s&#13;
p r o m p t l y at 7:30, s u n t i m e .&#13;
Think ot Dr. Snoop's Catarrh Cure&#13;
it your nose and throat discharges—if&#13;
your breath is foul or feverish. . This&#13;
jsnow white .soothing halm contains oil&#13;
Jot Kucaiyptu-, Tuymol, Menthol, e t c ,&#13;
j incorporated-into an imported creamjiike&#13;
velvet petrolatum. It soothes,&#13;
I heals, purities controls. -Call at our&#13;
; store for free trial hox. All dealer.-.&#13;
P o r p a r t i c u l a r s o f t h e f i n e S i l v e r P r e s e n t s w h i c h w e&#13;
a r e &amp; i v i n 3 F R E E J O . O J U R P A T R O N S , s e e c i r c u l a r In e a c h&#13;
s a c k .&#13;
PINCKNEY FLOURING MILLS&#13;
P i n c k n e y , IVlich.&#13;
Republicans Nominated&#13;
The following is the nomination as&#13;
the result ot the primary Tuesday: —&#13;
Thomas Allen, Flint, Stale Senator.&#13;
'CIIHH. YanKeuran, Keprwentntire&#13;
Willis Lvou, County Clerk&#13;
James •Greene, Prosecuting Attorney&#13;
A. P. Thompson, Register (if Peeds&#13;
Kdwin Pi'Htt, Sheriff&#13;
Pnmk Mowers, Cnunty Pruin Corn.&#13;
J . A. Woixlnill, ('(unity School Com,&#13;
Henry ('. iMir'fee, School Examiner&#13;
T. J. (innI, Sclnml Examiner&#13;
Th.&#13;
Thev&#13;
had to ciimh a tree.&#13;
1 Yanks, (b&gt;d hless tiie Yanks,&#13;
&lt;ays lie,&#13;
jj^ve ns K-'Okv \ln»intain Tea.&#13;
A City on 1h«* CHITM.&#13;
Precisely why the town of Bonifacio,&#13;
In Corsica, is built to the slu or odjje&#13;
of the cliff which forms the sea frontage&#13;
of that part of the Island is u question&#13;
always asked hy the traveler who&#13;
views Bonifacio for the first time, ami&#13;
Percy Swarthout .—&#13;
Funeral Director&#13;
AND EMB&amp;LMER&#13;
ALL CALLS ANSWERED&#13;
PROMPTLY DAY-OR NIGHT&#13;
. CHILSON &gt;&#13;
; r » V- T . •-' ^'KS** 1 1 . 1 4 » . I V / L \J I l . 4 . * « _ l l l k l l l i U J l , C l I L V&#13;
I A. n u m b e r from h e r e t o o k in , he reiterates bis question when he on&#13;
l &gt;&#13;
t h e s i g h t s at t h e c a r n i v a l in H o w&#13;
ell l a s t w e e k :&#13;
T e n n i s n m l L a w n Tennlet.&#13;
There arc thousands who imagine&#13;
that tennis and lawn tennis are identical.&#13;
In America tennis, the mother&#13;
game, is always known as court tennis,&#13;
whereas lawn tennis Is generally&#13;
known as "tennis." The frames&#13;
are In many respects very' different.&#13;
The court, which in lawn&#13;
j S c h o o l - b e g a n — M o n d a y i u - d i a ^ J ^ l i ' i l i i il!H'ili'.&gt;lL The_&lt;Mirry Corsicans off the hack ami side wr&#13;
i t r i c t \ Q 2 w u h Mi*s C l a r a S w i t z - a t) J, 'u 'l 'I l l b' thought that farm laml was I are harder than lawn te&#13;
*. * '"" ' worth more th.tu city real estate ami i ing, (&#13;
er as i n s t r u c t o r&#13;
M r s . A l i c e B a w d e n r e t u r n e d to&#13;
B a y C i t y last w e e k , a c c o m p a n i e d&#13;
by h e r a u n t , M r s . F r a n k P h i l i p s .&#13;
Mr. a n d M r s .&#13;
so crowded their dwellings'to the dizzy&#13;
edge of th- :r 200 foot precipice. One's&#13;
first impression is that these houses,&#13;
with their v,;ills on a vertical plane&#13;
with Lhu c-1 • ix'. -were purposely so situ-&#13;
T , o ! ated that the body of a victim of a&#13;
d o n n S w e e n e y , d a r k vendetta murder might be con&#13;
PARLORS AT.&#13;
PLIMPTON'S CLrJ :&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
h a v e r e t u r n e d to t h e i r h o m e , a f t e r venicntly dropped out of the window&#13;
h a v i n g s p e n t t h e s u m m e r a t B a y ! l u t o t h e s e M ^eiu-atb. with no one the&#13;
y T l ' f ' 1 ' wiser. Certainly there is-a suggestion iuumi m LUU L-uueu iviuguom. in&#13;
view. l l i e i r m a n y m e n d s a r e , o f romance and mystery in the aspect I Scotland, Ireland,and Wales, coimtPios&#13;
«J;lad to s e e t h e m b a c k . , of the town. It forms, at any rate, one rich in national songs, the emutlonn'&#13;
of the oddest sky lines in the workl. | nature is strong. In England, w-here&#13;
, — | the melodies, if sweet, at auy rate are&#13;
STATE Of MICHIOAN: Th,&#13;
County &lt;&lt;f Li\ irjixstnii.&#13;
I'roli;iii' Court I'cir I tie&#13;
At a session oi pitiil&#13;
court, held at the probate ortio»&lt; in t!i«»'\-illage of&#13;
Howell, in said co-.miy, on the Jthday of ^f iitHiufier,&#13;
A I) lHlXi. Pre-i-iit, ^rtlnu A, M.-nit;*L:u'. . Judire&#13;
of Probate. Iii-tin- niattt-r of tin V*! att of&#13;
SASirKt. W I I X I N , ilece;ised&#13;
Albert (i. Wil-nn liaviti^; iilci] in -,-it»t court hi*&#13;
petition praying that suid c-ouit udjinlicHte and'&#13;
deteruiine wtj'&gt; were at the time of hi* death tiie&#13;
le^al h e i ^ i»f j»i)id de&lt;-e:i-" ,-md iMitith-d to.it'.lier't&#13;
the real e.-tati- of whi&gt;ti *aiti .lece;i*i-i died &gt;ei/&gt;-d.&#13;
It is ordered, tliat the -JSth day of *C|.temlx-r&#13;
A. 1). 1D0C, at teL o'clock in the forenoon, at -?iid&#13;
Probate &lt;Jtfice, be and i* hereby :ij)|Kiinted' for&#13;
liearinK said petition.&#13;
And \t is further ordered that public: not ire&#13;
thereof be ^iven liy puhlicution of a copy.i.f this&#13;
orter for :] Hiiccestds-p weeks previous to auici day j Ol'y, 1 e* v e t V i&#13;
of hearing, in the Pinckney DISPATCH, a new?&#13;
•paper, printed and circulated In said county.&#13;
A l l T I I L ' K A . M o N T A f i l K ,&#13;
f '^ Judge of Protiato&#13;
Well Worth Trying.&#13;
\V. H. Brown, the popular pension&#13;
attorney, of Pittsfield, V t „ says:&#13;
'•Next to a ppn^ion, tiie l&gt;e&gt;t thiny to&#13;
crei is Dr. Kind's New Life Pills.' He&#13;
writes: "thJ y keep my family in splenhealth."&#13;
(^nick cure for Headaclie,&#13;
Constipation and biliousness,&#13;
(roaranteed at F. A. Siglers&#13;
store '&#13;
25c.&#13;
•drug&#13;
COLLINS PLAINS&#13;
Bear limiting.'&#13;
Bear hunting, with the assistance of&#13;
guides supplied with a well trained&#13;
pack of hor.nds, may lie satisfactory if&#13;
merely the Killing of them is desired,&#13;
but it certainly is no sport and deserves&#13;
not even to be. ranked with trapping&#13;
hoars, as in the latter case the&#13;
hunter must possess at least some&#13;
knowledge of the quarry's habitat and&#13;
habits. Unlike a fox, a bear, when&#13;
once found by the hounds, stands no&#13;
chance&#13;
which is applicable ns far ns the latter&#13;
is concerned.- Field and Streum.&#13;
whatever of escaping-, and&#13;
there would be just as much sport in&#13;
shooting tiie animals in a park or pen&#13;
Mrs. H e n r y H e w l e t t , -of G r e g - ; as to kill a run to bay bear. And,&#13;
i|]; "" w n 5 1 e this truth applies to mountain&#13;
I r . . ' . . • , ; 1 I o u s J 'I s o, tliere is not even the exj&#13;
L i t t l e h l h s M a c k i u d e r h a s b e e n ; cuse of the animal's destructiveness,&#13;
' o n t h e sick list t h e p a s t w e e k .&#13;
Miss- G r a c e C o l l i n s a t t e n d e d&#13;
| t h e S t a t ^ F a i r at D e t r o i t , S a t u r -&#13;
d a y .&#13;
! G e o . G o o d w i n a n d s o n , a n d&#13;
! W i l l R o e p e k e a t t e n d e d t h e S t a t e&#13;
I F a i r a t D e t r o i t , S a t u r d a y .&#13;
F&#13;
T h e M i s s e s A v i s B a r t o n a n d&#13;
A D D I T I O N A L LOCAL.&#13;
Fine weather.&#13;
No; the gasoline launch was not&#13;
out Sunday, it was an automobile.&#13;
Me-vin Wood of Gregory has been&#13;
spending several days the past week&#13;
with VV. H. Clark-and wife.&#13;
Miss Margie Myers, of Munith, visited&#13;
at the home of her Sunt, Mrs. C.&#13;
P . SykeiY and other re'atives here&#13;
this week.&#13;
Ar exchange *ug-gests that the best&#13;
way to Inad off the mail order houses&#13;
is lor the merchant to advertise liberally&#13;
and get the trade theraseiyes. It&#13;
does look reasonable. All the successful&#13;
mail order houses are heavy advertisers,&#13;
and if they can make it pay,&#13;
why not the local merchant?&#13;
Miss Ida Tillman for several years&#13;
housekeeper for the iat* E z r a '&#13;
Chamberlain in Tyrone, was visiting&#13;
at the home of Mark Chamberlain in&#13;
-M-arion. La?t Friday on going tii the&#13;
I all for her wraps she opened the cellar&#13;
door, which was side hy side with&#13;
the ball door, and fell ! tdow killing&#13;
her instantly. The. remains were&#13;
taken to her home in Byron.&#13;
The remains of Donald Mclntyre&#13;
of Ho.veil, who disappeared J u n e 15,&#13;
while temporarily d e r a n g e d , were&#13;
found n e a r Battle Greek. The head&#13;
was hanging from a tree and the body&#13;
bad decomposed and fallen to the&#13;
ground. They were identified by his&#13;
son G. H., of Lansing, and were taken&#13;
to Howell for burial, last,.week.&#13;
The Hi^tor, «f Mn,.. , T l l e w a s b t e n a w County M u t u a l&#13;
The ecclesiastical authorities divide ^ i r e A n s u r a n p e Co. have been obliged&#13;
the hfstory of man into six ages: First, t o raise the assessment ot $3.00 per&#13;
from Adam to Noah; second, from&#13;
Noah to Abraham; third, from Abraham&#13;
to David; fourth, from David to&#13;
the Babylonish captivity; fifth, from&#13;
the captivity of Judah to the birth of&#13;
Christ; sixth, from the birth of Christ&#13;
to the end of the world.&#13;
tennis is open, in tennis is closet!&#13;
serves, upon visiting the environs of i at the back and sides by the walls, and&#13;
j the place, that there is plenty.of room \ almost invariably 'above by a roof.&#13;
1 for the town to have spread out in an There is a considerable amount of play&#13;
nd_si(ie_jvalls Tiie ..ball*&#13;
tennis balls, beng,&#13;
In fact, of the consistency of&#13;
cricket halls, lleuce the rackets are&#13;
heavier and the gut is thicker.—Pry's&#13;
Magazine.&#13;
S o n g s a n d S e n t i m e n t .&#13;
It Is a singular fact that in proportion&#13;
to the wealth of melody of a nation&#13;
so does its emotional sido develop.&#13;
Remarkable instances of this are to be&#13;
found in the United Kingdom. In&#13;
not so touching and appealing, sentiment&#13;
Is slight—Liverpool Courier.&#13;
thousand, owing to the electric storm.&#13;
Secretary Larkin of the Livingston&#13;
County Mutual feels that it came o u t&#13;
of the electric storm, A u g . 26, very&#13;
lucky. There was only two losses&#13;
and those ate both very small.&#13;
The Poodle.&#13;
Why is a poodle, so called? Some&#13;
one says; "Probably the natural answer&#13;
would recall the old lady who&#13;
said that no credit could be given&#13;
to Adam for naming the pig, since&#13;
anybody would have known what to&#13;
call it. 'Poodle' seems so obvious a&#13;
Typhoid. j , ~ ~ ~ ~&#13;
By boiling all the water and steriliz- b a d l f t S r e a d t h , s ^ t a i o p ot charms.&#13;
i ing all the milk and thoroughly,cook : HriRbt eyes, glowing cheeks, red lipe, ^&#13;
! ing all the vegetables and Uilltng all j a s m o t h skin without a blemish in&#13;
the fiios the average person may be- f short, .perfect health, t o r sale with&#13;
come fairly immune from typhoid te- &gt; , ., „. , n&#13;
i ver. i e v e r y Package Hollister's Rocky&#13;
i Mountain Tea. 35 cents.&#13;
i E n v y In the Garden. _ . _&#13;
"I have done nothing but blush all&#13;
day," c-oinpjuiined the rose, "and still&#13;
that I Hot of a poet goes on talking of&#13;
the modest violet, as if there were not&#13;
! others."&#13;
l.Ultv \£&gt;&#13;
Ih-i 'I v.! Ii t. .&#13;
iKU^i «i .J i';ci _ .. , „ „. .. , ,&#13;
••lit tree* A»Wr*s»''jy.ni McCAI.L CO.. New York.&#13;
T /~t I T -n i.A J \_ i • ! name for thia dog. And, in fact this&#13;
I n e z C o l h u . will a t t e b d s c h o o l in I s n o t f a r t r o m \ e ^ R£S ^&#13;
S t o c k b r i d g e t h e c o m i n g y e a r . , origin of the word. It is qulte^ recent&#13;
! T h e i n f a n t d a u g h t e r of M r . a n d ^ J ^ ^ L S S t ^ . . f ^ n d&#13;
0&#13;
b e f o r e&#13;
- . , . , . T&#13;
b . . , , , - , 1 8 6 4 » apparently. It is the&gt; German&#13;
Mra. \\ntIves w a s b u n o d S u n d a y , 'pudel,' which comes from the Low&#13;
S h e d i e d F r i d a y a f t e r a s h o r t i l l n e s s German, 'pudeln,' to waddle, and the&#13;
wwiitnh crnonni/aHtsiHonnn onft ttlhme Iinnnn .urps. i md o *s mVe l8t tb eUrQ vbee cbaeuesne shoe cawlaleddd, l eags Sa kf teeart&#13;
T h e y h a v e t h e B s i n c e r e s y m p a t h y his master or because he looks fat and'&#13;
of all. clumsy on account of his thick hair."&#13;
A&lt;lv:ii.t &lt;mr at li.'ln'n n llrute.&#13;
. "Do yoi- think an'mals feel pain as&#13;
deeply as we do?"&#13;
"I've never studied the subject, but&#13;
It is sa:'e to' s i r that they don't worry&#13;
as much as we -.1 &gt; over p a h * that have&#13;
not yet been. Celt." ChVago Record-&#13;
Ilerahi.&#13;
In. our relation with one another wo&#13;
are apt to neglect the little things&#13;
which count so much In making our&#13;
lives happier.&#13;
Prohibition Convention "&#13;
A mass convention of the p r o k j t f ^ f c '&#13;
tionists of Livingston county w i l f S&#13;
held in the court house in Howen&#13;
Saturday, September 15,1906, at one&#13;
o'clock p. m., for the purpose of placidg&#13;
in nomination a full connty ticket&#13;
and the transaction of any other business&#13;
that may come before the convention.&#13;
All who* believe in t h e "&#13;
principle of prohibition are cordially&#13;
invited. B Y ORDER OF OOM.&#13;
'W''*&#13;
s&#13;
Ask yonr druggist for Pylo Pile&#13;
Cure. Every box warranted. Price&#13;
25 cents. Fb"r Sale by P. A. Sigler,&#13;
P i n c k n e y , Alicb. ^ t 36</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. X X I 7 . PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, SEPT. 18, 1906. No. 37&#13;
LOCAL NEWS.&#13;
Yates Buroh has moved his family&#13;
back to Hortonville, Wis.&#13;
T. D. Austin has been walking with&#13;
ft cane the past week—rheumatism.&#13;
Wm. Gawley had th* misfortune to&#13;
dislocate his left shoulder last Thursday.&#13;
-•— -- — — — -&#13;
Miss Edith Eager, of Oceola, is&#13;
taking treatment lor rheumatism, at&#13;
the sanitarium here.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs Bianchard, of Brooklyn.&#13;
Alien., were guests at the home of&#13;
Born to Mr. aad Mrs. Geo. Mowers,&#13;
a daughter, Sunday.&#13;
At the recent election held in Ann&#13;
Arbor it was voted to build a city ball&#13;
there.&#13;
Luke S. Cole of Flint, was a guest&#13;
of bis uncle, P. L. Andrews and family&#13;
the past week.&#13;
^AlbertBradyandfaltrtty-irf-f^treit;&#13;
were guests at the home of Perry&#13;
Blunt the past week.&#13;
A Fenton, Genesee Uo. dealer purchased&#13;
and shipped to Detroit in ten&#13;
Congregational Church.&#13;
Services next Sunday morning at&#13;
10:30, with Sunday school and pastor's&#13;
classes at 11:30.&#13;
Evening service at M. E. church.&#13;
Usual meeting tonight at 7:30.&#13;
Pastor.&#13;
T e m p e r a n c e Meeting&#13;
As announced last week the prayer&#13;
meeting Thursday evening was union,&#13;
and took the form ot a temperance&#13;
her sister, Mrs. Percy Swarthout, the about $600.&#13;
past week. , i ^ j s s Annie Anderson, who has been&#13;
days, 2,500 frogs legs which brought | meeting. All churches were repre-&#13;
A person can usually find what he&#13;
looks for. There is a bright side—&#13;
do not look tor any other, if you do&#13;
you can find it.&#13;
Ping pong trains on the Ann Arbor&#13;
railroad between Ann Arbor and&#13;
Whitmore Lake and Lakeland were&#13;
discontinued Sunday.&#13;
The past two weeks have been excellent&#13;
ones for harvesting the bean&#13;
working the past six months" for Mrs.&#13;
C. L. Sigler, returned to her home in&#13;
Marion, Saturday.&#13;
F. L. Andrews and family, H. G.&#13;
Briggs and wife, and Luke Cole of&#13;
Flint, spent Monday on Zuky lake and&#13;
the string of lakes.&#13;
If you are going to have an auction&#13;
this fall, do not f jrget that the DISPATCH&#13;
office is prepared ta- get them&#13;
sented and an enthuastic meeting was&#13;
the result. Rev. Littlejohn gave a&#13;
stirring address for about twenty minutes&#13;
and was followed by Rev. Mylne&#13;
who also spoke in an earnest manner.&#13;
These addresses were followed by&#13;
others from the members present and&#13;
much enthusiasm was manifested.&#13;
This is the second meeting ot the kind&#13;
held and arrangements have been&#13;
made to bold tbem at least once in&#13;
two months.&#13;
crop and it is nearly all in in this vi- J out while you wait,&#13;
cinity, and promises a big crop. j Do not forget the auction of paint-&#13;
The postoffiee department is send-' er's ladder^ and household goods at&#13;
ing out a timely warning to patrons \ the residence of Lincoln E. Smith t in&#13;
of rural routes and road superintend- j this village on Saturday of this week&#13;
ents that bad roads means no maU,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Mowers attend&#13;
M. E. Church Notes.&#13;
Sept. 15.&#13;
The stats and county tickets can be rendered a pleasing solo&#13;
There was an excjptionally • good&#13;
sermon Sunday morning and" an attentive&#13;
audience. Mis2 Gracie Grieve&#13;
The Suned&#13;
the tuneral of a little grand; found on page 4 where they will redaughter,&#13;
in Marion, this week, the i ™am until after election.- You can&#13;
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank! ,00^: them over each week and make&#13;
Johnson. i your choice.&#13;
The department ot Agriculture an- I The County Line Independent telenounces&#13;
that an automobile goes to ! phone company is the name of anew&#13;
the scrap Leap in two years. But us- j corporaeion which has filed articles&#13;
ually not before it. has earned its&#13;
worth in damage suits, "*&#13;
R. C. Reed of Oceola has on exhibition&#13;
a sample of corn from his farm&#13;
the stalks measuriug 14 feet and 8&#13;
inches. Mr, Reed~ba*-eighi aer-es.&#13;
with the county clerk. The territory&#13;
of the new company is east Cohoctah.&#13;
The Chelsea M. E. society were in&#13;
need ot heating plants tor their&#13;
church aDd parsonage. Hrn. F. P.&#13;
Glaizer came to the—rescua with a&#13;
day school was well attended and the&#13;
collection large. The school .was tfevin&#13;
better shape for work than now,&#13;
and any who who are not in the habit&#13;
of attending any school are cordially&#13;
invited to come.&#13;
The evening service was another&#13;
interesting one and a large attendance.&#13;
The sermon was on "Modern&#13;
Jehu's."&#13;
There will be the usual services&#13;
next Sunday, and the last tor this&#13;
conference year. Come early and get&#13;
Headquarters for&#13;
Drugs, Medicine&#13;
Books, Stationery&#13;
Fancy Crockery&#13;
School Books&#13;
F.A. SIGLBR&#13;
All Persons owing us on Book&#13;
Account are requested to kindly&#13;
call and settle same by Oct. 1,&#13;
1906, by Cash or Bankable (totes.&#13;
JACKSON &amp; CADWELL&#13;
that average up to the sample.—Democrat.&#13;
One peach orchard of 3,500 trees&#13;
near Ann Arbor is to be cut down on&#13;
account ct the San Jose scale, and an-!&#13;
other orchard of 5,000 trees will be i&#13;
badly cut out when alt infestej trees!&#13;
are taken out.&#13;
Bank defaulters who wind up by&#13;
blowing out. their brains, at least show&#13;
that they had something to blow out&#13;
atter everything else had been blown&#13;
in. It they only had brains enough&#13;
to blow^'.era out before they bad blown&#13;
in, it would save many people much&#13;
trouble.&#13;
present of a steam beating plant for&#13;
each building.&#13;
It is estimated that the naval review&#13;
off Oyster Bay next month, will&#13;
cost nearly half a million. Weil it is&#13;
practice the boys get at this drill that&#13;
makes war a short natter and saves,&#13;
n^t only money but many lives.&#13;
Some schoo&#13;
a seat.&#13;
P u t n a m in It&#13;
districts that do not&#13;
[comply with the school Jnvvs of the&#13;
i state may likely have some difficulty&#13;
! in *eeuring their allotment of the&#13;
i big primary money. In order to'asj&#13;
certain to what, extent the school laws&#13;
are being complied with the depart-&#13;
' ment of public instruction has been&#13;
i sending t;&gt; the directors of every&#13;
Rev. Roderick Phelan formerly of school district In the state, blanks&#13;
Cement City, and who left there sud- j with the statement that answers must&#13;
denly a few weeks ago after obtaining j be given if the district are to parlieiconsiderable&#13;
money under faulse pre-[ pate in Jhe fund. The questions&#13;
terse, and leaving several debts,; cover a number of subjects, and are&#13;
plead guilty to the charge, at Jackson, intended to reveal&#13;
and was given from two to five years of the state are being&#13;
in Ionia. the school officers.&#13;
whether the laws&#13;
observed by&#13;
Having decided to go west, I will sell at public auction&#13;
my Personal Property at my home on west Main street,&#13;
Pincknev, on&#13;
SATURDAY. SEPT. 15,1906&#13;
A glance at the county tickets on&#13;
page four will show that this township&#13;
is in the race for county honors&#13;
this fall. On the republican ticket&#13;
we find the name of Prank Mowers&#13;
for Drain Commissioner, and T. J.&#13;
Gaul for School Examiner, both good&#13;
men and full capable to fill the offices.&#13;
On the Democrat ticket is the name&#13;
of F. D. Carr for School Commissioner&#13;
and as he has been o"n the board of&#13;
examiners for the past-two year he&#13;
understands the work and will make&#13;
a good officer.&#13;
The DISPATCH will take no sides in&#13;
the political campaign and if any&#13;
matter appears in favor of a candidate&#13;
the space will be paid for the same as&#13;
any other advertising matter. We&#13;
are glad however that Putnam has a&#13;
good representation on the tickets.&#13;
P i n c k n e y Public S c h o o l s&#13;
The management of&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
Mid-Summer Clearon Sale&#13;
As Now OIL&#13;
We iire selling ulJ our Fancy China,&#13;
Lamps ami Water Sets at cost&#13;
in order to make i\n&gt;nj for new&#13;
(roods. JPeeidedly low prices are&#13;
made all through the store. For&#13;
.instance:&#13;
1 lb A. A- H. *oda for&#13;
45 yd «?pool Black Darning Cotton for&#13;
Four 200 yd Spools Thread for&#13;
the 11 owell O p e r a&#13;
House take pleasure&#13;
in announcing a special&#13;
engagement of&#13;
Gordon &amp; Bennett's&#13;
Graat Attraction&#13;
The Holy City&#13;
For One Night&#13;
lc&#13;
•ic&#13;
14&#13;
E A. BOWMAN.&#13;
HOWELL'S BUSY STORE&#13;
Friday, Sept&#13;
The Great Story of&#13;
Mary Magdalene&#13;
Dramatized and presented&#13;
with all the gorgeous wealth&#13;
of scenery and radiant splendor&#13;
that is required for n&#13;
Perfect Production..&#13;
special attention given to&#13;
mail orders and out of town&#13;
patrons.&#13;
it&#13;
i * ;&#13;
The schools opened Tuesday Sept. 4,&#13;
just too late for an announcement to&#13;
be made in last week's issue as to the&#13;
attendance, etc.&#13;
The following is tbe enrollment in&#13;
the different departments:&#13;
High School, 30.&#13;
Grammar Dept., 12.&#13;
Intermediate Dept., 81.&#13;
Primary Dept., 27.&#13;
Thus tar eight foidign students have&#13;
entered the High School and more are&#13;
expected to enter soon. We also find&#13;
loretgn pupils in tbe grades as far&#13;
down as the Primary Dept.&#13;
« •«&lt; . Ai A r. r\ i it .- c%* - i i It is very desirable that all pupils A First-Class Soft Coal Heating Stove, nearly newjct^hooia^^teratoneeif credita&#13;
ble work is expected.&#13;
Visitors aro&gt;Always welcome in any&#13;
department so long as they occupy&#13;
places where they do not disturb pupils&#13;
at their work. . -&#13;
We do not see whyjhis year should&#13;
not be a profitable one. The Board of&#13;
Education are doing all in their power&#13;
to make, it the banner year in the his*&#13;
tory of tbe school.&#13;
Sf^i&#13;
ATI O'CLOCK P. M.&#13;
Complete Set of Painter's Ladders, All Sizes&#13;
Paint Brushes, Tools, Etc.&#13;
A Quantity of Household Goods,&#13;
^ Large Number of Fruit Cans&#13;
Couch, Wardrobe, and other numerous articles&#13;
S &amp; b E R E G A R D b E S S OP WEATHER&#13;
Terms:—On bills and made known at the sale—liberal.&#13;
LINCOLN E. SMITH.&#13;
m&#13;
On account of many&#13;
heavy bills due Oct.&#13;
1, w e desire to have&#13;
all accounts p a s t&#13;
due settled*&#13;
Teeple Hardware Go*&#13;
• \ • . . - * " : &lt;• A t y&#13;
EVENTS NOIED&#13;
CAPTAIN MATTRAY'S PERILOUS&#13;
VOYAGE OVER&#13;
LAKE MICHIGAN.&#13;
HIS AIRSHIP'S FLIGHT.&#13;
WENT UP AT A WISCONSIN FAIR&#13;
AND WAS CARRIED ACROSS&#13;
THE LAKE—HIS GRAPHIC&#13;
DESCRIPTION.&#13;
A Night of Anxiety.&#13;
The first ship to navigate Lake&#13;
Michigan aerially and cross from the&#13;
Wisconsin to the Michigan side, hung&#13;
a tattered, torn and twisted wreck in&#13;
a large tree in a dense swamp six&#13;
miles southeast of Wolverine. Its&#13;
eteering geaf de molished',it Tiacl sa fled&#13;
at the mercy of the winds.&#13;
The ship is the Columbia and its intrepid&#13;
navigator is Capt. Wm. Mattray.&#13;
The captain "dropped anchor"&#13;
in J his "port" in the dead of night&#13;
and had almost as terrible an experience&#13;
getting out of the swamp as be&#13;
had in crossing/the lake.&#13;
The good ship Columbia was performing,&#13;
or rather promising to perform&#13;
for the visitors at the county&#13;
fair at Oconto, Wis. When it failed&#13;
to go up the great crowd of ruralites&#13;
that had gathered to witness the&#13;
strange sight declared it a fake. Thursday&#13;
evening, however, they changed&#13;
their minds. The balloon apparatus&#13;
•was inflated and its "wings" began to&#13;
Jap, and the ajrship arose an$ flew&#13;
like a bird to the unspeakable wonderment&#13;
of the fair visitors. Out over&#13;
the town it went, seemingly at a hight&#13;
of 2,000 feet, and then with a sudden&#13;
twist it darted with the speed of a&#13;
homing pigeon toward Green Bay.&#13;
Capt. Mattray, in describing his experience&#13;
said:&#13;
"The big ship shivered and cracked&#13;
and moaned in its flight, and to every&#13;
counter wind current that hit it it&#13;
gave 'vocal' response. Several times I&#13;
think I "must have ~rfsen"above 5,000&#13;
_feet altitude and at other times I was&#13;
almost skimming the water like u&#13;
eeagull.&#13;
-"I got wet early in the voyage from&#13;
dipping into Green Bay and when the&#13;
night air struck me I was chilled to&#13;
the bone. My teeth chattered and J&#13;
became numb all over. 1 fell asleep&#13;
once from exhaustiorji and when I&#13;
awoke with a start I almost tumbled&#13;
out of my seat. Then I lashed »jrself&#13;
•to the ship and slept, I guess, about&#13;
four hours.&#13;
"I awoke when the ship struck in&#13;
the tree, about 1 o'clock in the morning.&#13;
I managed to clamber to the&#13;
ground and, finding a half dry spot, 1&#13;
slept till daylight and then finally&#13;
worked my way out of the swamp."&#13;
SCHOOL MONEY.&#13;
A Million Per Year Lost end Reform&#13;
Is Needed.&#13;
Commenting upon the effort being&#13;
put forth by the department of public&#13;
instruction to secure a better compliance&#13;
with the school laws of the state,&#13;
Deputy Superintendent W. H. French&#13;
"says that out of the $10,000,000 expended&#13;
for the support of the p\ibllc&#13;
school system of the state $1,000,000&#13;
is frittered away annually.&#13;
Asked In what manner the losses to&#13;
the districts are sustained, Mr. French&#13;
replied: "In many ways. I will specify&#13;
a few. We have discovered that&#13;
many district treasurers give no bonds,&#13;
and sometimes there are defalcations.&#13;
"Recently a district treasurer up&#13;
north who had given no bond disappeared&#13;
with $750 in school funds.&#13;
There are probably other instances&#13;
not known to this department.&#13;
"Again, district treasurers treat public&#13;
moneys as their own. They loan it&#13;
or deposit it in banks and pocket the&#13;
interest. This money belongs to the&#13;
schools. __&#13;
'"""Sometimes sch"6ot~aTstrict officers&#13;
allow themselves salaries. In most&#13;
cases this is unlawful. The school&#13;
laws do not provide for the payment&#13;
of salaries. If any are paid they must&#13;
be voted at the annual school meeting,&#13;
and may not be paid by order of the&#13;
board out of funds on hand at the end&#13;
of the year, as 1¾ frequently done."&#13;
f he purpose of tne department in re&#13;
quiring school officers to give sworn&#13;
answers to certain questions asked as&#13;
a condition preliminary to the allotment&#13;
of the primary school money is&#13;
to detect violations of the school laws&#13;
and compel their observance, so that&#13;
the primary school moneys will be&#13;
faithfully devoted to the purpose for&#13;
which they were appropriated.&#13;
Capt. Mattray will return to Chlca-.&#13;
go with his battered ship as soon as&#13;
money reaches him.&#13;
After Twenty-five Years.&#13;
Fred \V. Smith, after an absence of&#13;
£5 years, during which time his parents&#13;
and friends had thought him&#13;
dead, returned to Otisville Wednesday&#13;
and caused a sensation by his appearance.&#13;
Smith is now 47 years old and&#13;
•his father, "Cap" Smith, and mother&#13;
are both living.&#13;
After he was graduated from the&#13;
Otisville school the young man taught&#13;
several telfms and then mysteriously&#13;
disappeared. Ho says he has been all&#13;
over the west, but the greater part of&#13;
the time was in St. Louis, Mo. He as-&#13;
'signs no reason for so long absenting&#13;
himself and refuses to state why he&#13;
had kept his whereabouts a secret.&#13;
The story of "Cap" Smith's lost son&#13;
Is a familiar one in and about Otisville&#13;
and the return of the wanderer is&#13;
a live topic of conversation in the village.&#13;
A Soo Mystery.&#13;
The skeleton of an unknown man&#13;
was found far back in the woods from&#13;
Sault Ste. Marie under the partly&#13;
burned and abandoned hut of James&#13;
Janes, a homesteader who committed&#13;
suicide a year ago. Settlers believe&#13;
the man was murdered anu buried&#13;
there, and are inclined to connect&#13;
ines' suicide with the suspected&#13;
The remains of a watch found&#13;
beside the skeleton indicated the body"&#13;
was placed there many years ago.&#13;
Janes was an odd character, who&#13;
lived alone in the woods. He is supposed&#13;
to have seen better days, as he&#13;
was of more than average intelligence&#13;
and seemed to be well read. It was&#13;
eaid at the time of his death that he&#13;
killed himself because he could not&#13;
leave drink alone.&#13;
Another P. M. Wreck.&#13;
One man was fatally injured and&#13;
four persons were seriously hurt in a&#13;
headon collision at Wallin, between&#13;
the Pere Marquette "flyer," south&#13;
bound, and passenger train No. 10,&#13;
north bound, as the latter was backing&#13;
into a switch Wednesday night.&#13;
The "flyer" was running at high&#13;
speed and, it is charged, was ahead of&#13;
time, which charge, if* true, explains&#13;
the cause of the wreck. Only one passenger&#13;
was injured, the flyer being&#13;
made up of heavily constructed Pullman&#13;
coaches.&#13;
The engine*crews saved themselves&#13;
by jumping. Engineer McRoberts&#13;
struck a pole and was badly hurt. He&#13;
was taken to his home in Grand Rapids.&#13;
The locomotives were demolished.&#13;
The bursting of a pulley on the main&#13;
power machine of the Vlcksburg paper&#13;
mill practically wrecked the plant.&#13;
The Price Fixed.&#13;
A minimum price of $2.75 to $3 a&#13;
pound for peppermint oil was decided&#13;
upon by the mint growers of Michigan&#13;
and Indiana, who formed an association&#13;
at Kalamazoo Wednesday. The&#13;
prices now prevailing for peppermint&#13;
oil are $l.S5 to $2 a puuud. Thomas&#13;
J. T. Bolt was elected president; L.&#13;
E. Dufer, vice-president, and M. E. Os«&#13;
born, secretary and treasurer.&#13;
MICHIGAN IN BRIEF.&#13;
Startled Saginaw.&#13;
Fire, which completely destroyed&#13;
the three-story brick *uildlng on Germania&#13;
avenue, near Washington, containing&#13;
the Aubrey French Dye and&#13;
Cleaning works, and the terminal&#13;
headquarters of the Bay City-Saginaw&#13;
Jnterurban, gave the business portion&#13;
of Saginaw a bad scare Thursday&#13;
morning. Spontaneous explosion of&#13;
gasoline from rubbing garments together&#13;
in a tub in the dye works was&#13;
the cause of the fife. All the employes,&#13;
including the girl at the tub, escaped.&#13;
Because President Underwood, of&#13;
the Erie railroad system, recently&#13;
made a tour of inspection of the Pere&#13;
•Marquette, the rumor is current that&#13;
there is a deal on for the .absorption&#13;
ci the MicfriganJto*d by Oe Erie.&#13;
The profits of the state fair will&#13;
reach $75,000 this year it is estimated.&#13;
Potatoes and corn have been somewhat&#13;
injured in Oakland county by the&#13;
drought.&#13;
Forty voting machines have been"oTr&#13;
dered by Saginaw council for use at&#13;
the coming election.&#13;
R. H. Elliott, a farmer living near&#13;
•Riggsville, owns an eight-wee'ks-o'ld&#13;
pig which runs about on six legs. The&#13;
animal is thriving.&#13;
William Marks, an artist, once connected&#13;
with Leslie's Weekly and coworker&#13;
with the late Thomas Xast,&#13;
was found dead in bed at his home in&#13;
Calumet. Heart failure caused his&#13;
death.&#13;
The board of health has warned citizens&#13;
to refrain from using ice in their&#13;
summer drinks. Several cases of contagion&#13;
have been traced to the unhealthy&#13;
condition of the Flint water&#13;
supply.&#13;
Because the sparrow bounty law&#13;
hasn't been effective in ridding Kalamazoo&#13;
county of sparrows and the appropriation&#13;
has been exhausted, the&#13;
board of supervisors will likely rescind&#13;
the law.&#13;
Sylvester Daniels, who was sentenced&#13;
to life imprisonment in the&#13;
Jackson prison about 20 years ago for&#13;
the murder of Jerry White in Genesee&#13;
county, has taken the preliminary&#13;
steps looking toward his pardon.&#13;
For the third time in eight years W.&#13;
B. Cady, of Pittsfleld, has had his&#13;
barns burned. The third barn was&#13;
completed in June at a cost of $2,200.&#13;
The crops were just in and were&#13;
valued at $1,000. Insurance, $1,900.&#13;
Beet growers, patrons of the West&#13;
Wchigan Sugar Co., and other farmers&#13;
to the number of 5,000 gathered at the&#13;
first annual picnic in Charlevoix last&#13;
week. Addresses were made by Congressman&#13;
Darragh, President McLean&#13;
and others.&#13;
Mrs. W. Carey Hull ran down a&#13;
street sweeper in Traverse City with&#13;
her touring car Friday afternoon, the&#13;
wheels passing the whcl3 length of his&#13;
body. She took him to her home,&#13;
where it was found that he wasn't seriously&#13;
injured.&#13;
By January 1 next, it Is. expected&#13;
the people of gault Ste. Marie will&#13;
have the privilege of using gas for illuminating&#13;
Hnd cooking. A contract&#13;
has Just been tot for the construction&#13;
of a plant capable of producing 150,000&#13;
I feet of gas dally.&#13;
MANY DIVORCES FOUND ILLEGAL.&#13;
Speaking of- divorces, amazing Irregularities&#13;
in many of the divorces granted In this city,within&#13;
the past 20 years have been discovered' So&#13;
far there is a flaw in one divorce out of every&#13;
five examined.&#13;
These defects were found by William H. K.&#13;
Jarvis, of the census bureau, and his eprps of&#13;
15 "divorce girls," sent from Washington |for statistics&#13;
of divorces. If made known they, would&#13;
make bigamists of many couples married in good&#13;
faith and illegltimatise many children. -1'&#13;
How much and how many of these • discoveries&#13;
will be made public depends largely on action&#13;
to be taken by Mr. Jarvis. If he applies to&#13;
the court for necessary data in thousands of&#13;
cases an order may be granted to "unseal the&#13;
papers."&#13;
From 18S6 to 1896 divorces were granted in&#13;
the superior court and in the court of common&#13;
pleas here and in Brooklyn. The average was about 490 a year for the ten&#13;
years. Since they were replaced by the supreme court in 1896 the divorce&#13;
records of these two courts in New York county haye been filed away in the&#13;
county courthouse. Records of divorces since 1896 ore kept by the county&#13;
clerk.&#13;
The 15 examiners from the census bureau have reached the year 1887 in&#13;
their examination and compilation. Already they have discovered that nearly&#13;
20 per cent, of the papers filed away are incomplete. They do not contain&#13;
any final award or decree signed by a judge. Without this they are invalid.&#13;
It used to be the custom tor many judges to announce their decisions&#13;
from the bench, "Decree granted to the plaintiff" or "defendant." as the case&#13;
might be. Then it was the duty of the attorney to prepare a formal decree,&#13;
have this signed by the judge, and file it for record. Many lawyers neglected&#13;
to do this.&#13;
Their unsuspecting clients since then have married again and raised&#13;
other families.&#13;
As a matter of law, all such marriages are bigamous, and all such children&#13;
of the second marriage—even though it was contracted in good f a i t h -&#13;
have no property rights.&#13;
The complications of this sort that will arise if the incomplete records&#13;
are ever made public are matters of distressful conjecture.&#13;
"TOZErV' PET OF THE BATTERY, MISSING.&#13;
"Tozer"—nobody knows where he got his&#13;
name—has disappeared from Battery park. Tozer&#13;
is a little half-breed fox terrier, and for years he&#13;
has lived along the docks on South street by&#13;
night, and in front of the barge office by day.&#13;
Every policeman, every tramp, every longshoreman,&#13;
every newsboy, and for that matter everybody&#13;
who had business that took him to South&#13;
ferry and South street more than once a week&#13;
knew Tozer, for Tozer was the smartest, sleekest&#13;
little tramp of a dog that ever begged a meal&#13;
from a free lunch counter.&#13;
Tozer -came to the Battery five years ago.&#13;
"Dick" Galley, .one of the veterans of the police&#13;
force; fouqd hira. Tozer was so hungry that he&#13;
could!-hardly stand up, and Ganley hurried to a&#13;
nearby delicatessen shop and got a banquet for&#13;
the dog. Tozer ate until he almost exploded;&#13;
then Ganley took him inside the barge office and&#13;
showed him a horse blanket that wasn't in use. Five minutes lkter Tozer&#13;
was sleeping the sleep of the just. When he awoke somebody called him&#13;
"Tozer," and ever after that was his name. Ganley says the dog practically&#13;
named himself.&#13;
One of Tozer's Battery park friends thinks Tozer went to the West Indies&#13;
on a Nova Scotlan schooner and that he will'eventually show up again. Nobody&#13;
believes he has been killed, except possibly by accident.&#13;
Where Nutriment It Lott.&#13;
If meat is put into cold water first,&#13;
for boiling, there will be a constant&#13;
oozing of albumen from it. There will&#13;
be found more slbumeAin the scum&#13;
that arises t h a V t n thwimeat Itself.&#13;
Mutton, cornbeef, er Mx} If flret put&#13;
Into scalding water will have t h e&#13;
pores jit once plugged by the surfao©&#13;
albumen, and thus all that lb vitally&#13;
precious will be retained. By putting&#13;
salt in the water, quick coajjulatioa&#13;
la especially aided. The n u t r i t i v e&#13;
quality of fish and its flavor is best&#13;
obtained by roasting or baking.—&#13;
Farming.&#13;
This Is Worth Knowing.&#13;
It may be useful to know that ID&#13;
case of sudden need, such as often&#13;
arises in warm weather, a simple&#13;
form of starching is the use of borax&#13;
water. A quarter of a teaspoonful of&#13;
borax In half a teacupful of cold water&#13;
will give a dressing like new to embroidered&#13;
cuffs and collars or stock*,&#13;
even those made of linen. The article&#13;
should be dipped in the borax water,&#13;
wrung out and rolled out in a dry cloth&#13;
for a few moments before'ironing.&#13;
Suggestion.&#13;
Dere am one thing moh Ah want to&#13;
say befoh de congregashun am dismissed,"&#13;
said Parson Whangdoodle,&#13;
is he fixed his gaze on the contribution&#13;
plate before him, "an" dat am to&#13;
suggest dat certain membahs ob dis&#13;
(lock git together an' adapt a speshul&#13;
brand of button so as to make de collectshuns&#13;
moh uniform."&#13;
Rains Hamper Sanitation Work.&#13;
Colon.—The month of July witnessed&#13;
a series of heavy rains on the&#13;
Isthmus which have hampered Uve&#13;
work of sanitation In Colon. Preparations&#13;
are being made to pave the principal&#13;
streets of Colon with brick.&#13;
Smuggle Arms to Finland.&#13;
Berlin.—A dispatch sent out from&#13;
Lueback says the Danish police have&#13;
discovered that 707 cases of arms and&#13;
ammunition were shipped from there&#13;
to Finland during the month of July&#13;
upon false clearing papers.&#13;
F ^^ Vessel Is floated.&#13;
Wilmington, N. C—The Clyde liner&#13;
Ne&gt; York, bound from Wilmington to&#13;
New Yorjc, which while proceeding&#13;
down ^S$ Cape Fear river Saturday,&#13;
ran ashore nine miles below Wilmington,&#13;
was floated Monday.&#13;
Peace Cruiser Coming Here.&#13;
Washington.—The cruiser Marblehead&#13;
upon which peace was negotiated&#13;
between Salvador and Guatemala, arrived&#13;
at Corinto, Nicaragua, Monday.&#13;
After taking coal she prcoeeded to&#13;
San Francisco.&#13;
' The Horse's Handicap.&#13;
On a fair average, horses weigh&#13;
4bout seven times as much as men.&#13;
They can pull about seven times as&#13;
much, under favorable conditions. On&#13;
sxtreraely soft ground they are not&#13;
learly so good, in proportion, at such&#13;
:ests of strength, because their feet&#13;
ire much smaller than men's, relalively&#13;
to their \ eight.&#13;
Dog Scavengers.&#13;
The municipality of Nice hf s organized&#13;
a troop of dogs scavengers for the&#13;
cleaning of the sewers. Some of the&#13;
sewer pipes are too small to allow&#13;
the passage of men. The dogs have&#13;
been trained to drag a ccrd with a&#13;
brush at the end of it from one end&#13;
of the pipe to another. The system Is&#13;
meeting with success.&#13;
Accommodating to the End.&#13;
A London furniture dealer who committed&#13;
suicide the other day left a&#13;
note explaining that ho had done so&#13;
because a friend of his asked him.&#13;
Peculiarity of Eucalyptus.&#13;
The eucalyptus yheds its bark lav&#13;
*t(uiil of its leaves.&#13;
A Written Guarantee H YJTZZXtfi'Z*" is the*" "*""" y0° *"&#13;
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YOUR OWN BANKER as to our responsibifity and financial standing. Free Trial and Easy Payment Offer&#13;
Then send to our nearest dealer or to us end get our . . . . ^ • • * « •&#13;
This labour chance to secure the BEST TALKING MACHINE MADE, on payments wMch win not be felt.&#13;
W E A C C E P T O L D r l A C t i l N E &amp; O F A N Y M A K E I N P A R T P A Y M E N T .&#13;
A n I d e a l , t o v &lt; Y°* e v e f »••* a GrapfceeewNie « * of *w*e? In the moaetalns; — the&#13;
S _ water; at the seashore; eaywfcerel The musk ol a Grephophoe* to theopen&#13;
if timer Amusement, it CLEAR, SWEET AND FAR-REACHING. Try it end judoe.&#13;
•read Prix, Pert*, I tee NtMc trend Prize, ftt. Leal*, 11+4&#13;
IMofcest Aware, Perttaad, lies&#13;
Columbia Phonograph Co&#13;
90-92 West Broadway,&#13;
New York.4&#13;
CNNN o* ft* *&#13;
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150&#13;
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of your Easy Pay meat sa&#13;
Bxcbanfe Plan. S&#13;
Name.&#13;
Address.&#13;
A FOOL FOR LOVE&#13;
By FRANCIS LYNDE&#13;
AUTHOR OF "THB GRAFTERS,'* ETC. i&#13;
(Copyright, 1806,by J. f ^ipp^oyt* 0*&gt;&#13;
1&#13;
CHAPTER VI.—Continued.&#13;
"Not such a bad day, considering&#13;
•the newness of us and the bridge at&#13;
the head of the guich," he said, half&#13;
i o himself. And then more pointedly&#13;
to the foreman: "Bridgebuilders to&#13;
the front at the first crack of dawn,&#13;
Mike. Why wasn't this break filled&#13;
i i the grading?"&#13;
^ "Sure, sorr, 'tis a dhrain it is," said&#13;
the Irishman; "from the placer up&#13;
fceyant," he added, pointing to a&#13;
washed-out excoriation on the steep&#13;
upper slope of the mountain. 'Major&#13;
Bvarts did be tellin' us we'd have the&#13;
lawyers afther us hot-fut again if we&#13;
didn't be lavln' ut open the full&#13;
width."&#13;
"Mmph," said Adams, looking the&#13;
ground over with a critical eye. "n s&#13;
A bad bit It wouldn't take much to&#13;
bring that whole slide down on us if&#13;
it wasn't frozen solid. Who owns the&#13;
placer?"&#13;
"Two fellies over in Carbonate. The&#13;
company did be thryin' to buy the&#13;
claim, but the sharps wouldn't sell—&#13;
bein' put up to hold ut by thlm C. &amp;&#13;
O. R. divils. It's more throuble we'll&#13;
be havin' here, I'm thinking."&#13;
While they lingered a shrill whistle&#13;
echoing among the cliffs of the upper&#13;
gorge like an eldritch laugh announced&#13;
the coming of a train from the direction&#13;
of Carbonate. Adams looked at&#13;
his watch.&#13;
"I'd like to know what that is," he&#13;
mused. "It's two hours too soon for&#13;
the accommodation. By Jove!"&#13;
The exclamation directed itself at a&#13;
one-car train which came thundering&#13;
down the canyon to pull in on the&#13;
siding beyond the Rosemary. The car&#13;
was a passenger coach, well lighted,&#13;
and from his post on the embankment&#13;
Adams could see armed men filling the&#13;
windows. Michael Branagan saw&#13;
them, too, and the fighting Celt in&#13;
him rose to the occasion.&#13;
" 'Tis Donnybrook Fair we've conie&#13;
to this time, Misther Adams. Shall I&#13;
call up the b'ys wid their guns?"&#13;
"Not yet. Let's wait and see what&#13;
happens."&#13;
What happened was a peaceful&#13;
sortie. Two men, each with a kit of&#13;
some kind borne in a sack, dropped&#13;
from the car, crossed the creek and&#13;
struggled up the hill through the un*&#13;
-- bridged gap. Adams waited until they&#13;
were fairly on the right of way, then&#13;
he called down to them.&#13;
"Halt, there! you two. This is corporation&#13;
property."&#13;
"Not much it aln t! retorted one of&#13;
the trespassers, gruffly. "It's the&#13;
drain-way from our placer up yonder."&#13;
'What are you going to do up there&#13;
at this time of night?"&#13;
"None o' your blame business!" was&#13;
the explosive eouuter-shot.-&#13;
"Perhaps it isn't," said Adams, mildly.&#13;
"Just the same, I'm thirsting to&#13;
know. Call it vulgar curiosity if you&#13;
like."&#13;
"AH right, you can know, and be&#13;
cussed to you. We're gain' to ..work&#13;
our claim. Got anything to say&#13;
against it?"&#13;
"Oh, no," rejoined Adams; and when&#13;
the twain had disappeared in the upper&#13;
darkness he went down the grade&#13;
with Branagan and took his place on&#13;
the man-loaded fiats for the run to&#13;
the construction camp, thinking more&#13;
of the lately arrived car with its complement&#13;
of armed men than of the&#13;
two miners who had calmly announced&#13;
their intention of working a placer&#13;
claim oh a high mountain, without&#13;
water, and in, the dead of winter! By&#13;
which it will be seen that Mr. Morton&#13;
P. Adams, C. E. Inst Tech. Boston,&#13;
had something yet to learn in the&#13;
matter of practical field work.&#13;
By the time Ah Poo had served him&#13;
his solitary supper in the dinkey he&#13;
had quite lorgotten the incident of the&#13;
mysterious placer miners. Worse&#13;
than that, it had never occurred to&#13;
him to;connect their movements with&#13;
the Rajah's plan of campaign. On the&#13;
other hand, he was thinking altogether&#13;
of the carload o. armed men, and&#13;
trying to devise some means of finding&#13;
out how tney were to be employed in&#13;
furthering the Rajah's designs.&#13;
The means suggested themselves&#13;
niter supper, and he went alone over&#13;
**'Argentine to spend a half-hour in&#13;
DM %ar of the dance hall listening to&#13;
t k t r t i s i p of the place. When he had&#13;
lejmUf. what he wanted to know, he&#13;
forthfartd to meet Winton at the Incoming^&#13;
train.&#13;
"We are in for it now," he said,&#13;
when they had crossed the creek to&#13;
the dinkey and the Chinaman was&#13;
• bringing Wlnton's belated supper.&#13;
"The ipajah has Imported a carload&#13;
of armajd mercenaries, and he is going&#13;
to clea% us all out to-morrow; arrest&#13;
everybjftr, from the gang foreman up."&#13;
Wlntg£| eyebrows lifted. "So? that&#13;
k&gt;r* .r-'A-xn •»•. —&#13;
is a pretty large contract. Has he&#13;
men enough to do it?"&#13;
"Not so many men. But they are&#13;
sworn-in deputies with the sheriff of&#13;
Ute county In command—a posse, in&#13;
fact. So he has the law on his side."&#13;
"Which is more than he had when&#13;
he set a thug on me this afternoon at&#13;
Carbonate," said Winton, sourly; and&#13;
he told Adams about the misunderstanding&#13;
in the lobby of the Buckingham.&#13;
The technologian whistled under his&#13;
breath. "By Jove! that's pretty rough.&#13;
Do you suppose the Rajah dictated&#13;
any such Lucretia Borgia thing as&#13;
that?"&#13;
Winton took time to think about it&#13;
and admitted a doubt, as, he had not&#13;
before. Believing Mr. Somerville Darrah&#13;
fit for treasons, stratagems, and&#13;
spoils in his official capacity of vice&#13;
president of a fighting corporation, he&#13;
I wouldn't have shown you up that&#13;
way."&#13;
Adams chuckled reminiscently. "Had&#13;
to do it to make my day-before-yesterday&#13;
lie hold water. And she was immensely&#13;
taken with the scrawls, especially&#13;
with one of them."&#13;
Winton flushed under the bronze.&#13;
"I suppose I don't need to ask which&#13;
one."&#13;
Adams' grin was a measure of his&#13;
complaeence. He was coming off&#13;
easier than he had anticipated.&#13;
"Well, hardly."&#13;
"She took it away with her?"&#13;
"Took it, or tore it u^ I forget&#13;
which.'&#13;
Wlnton's look was that of a man&#13;
distressed.&#13;
'*Tell me, Morty, was she very angry?"&#13;
The technologian took the last hint&#13;
of laughter out of his eyes before he&#13;
said solemnly: "You'll never know&#13;
how thankful I was that you were&#13;
20 miles away."&#13;
Wlnton's cup was full, and he turned&#13;
the talk abruptly to the industrial doings&#13;
and accomplishments of the day.&#13;
Adams made a verbal report which led&#13;
him by successive steps up to the&#13;
twilight hour when he had stood with&#13;
Branagan on the brink of the placer&#13;
drain, but, strangely enough, there was&#13;
no stirring of memory to recall the incident&#13;
of the upward climbing miners.&#13;
When Winton rose' he said something&#13;
about mounting a night guard&#13;
on the engine, which was kept under&#13;
steam at all hours; and shortly afterward^&#13;
he left the dinkey ostensibly&#13;
"IT'S JUST ABOUT AS I EXPECTED."&#13;
was none the less disposed to find excuses&#13;
for Miss Virginia Carteret's&#13;
uncle.&#13;
"I did think so at first, but I guess&#13;
it was only the misguided zeal of some&#13;
understrapper. Of course, word has&#13;
gone out all along the C. &amp; G. R. line&#13;
that we are to be delayed by every&#13;
possible expedient."&#13;
But now Adams had also taken time&#13;
to think, and he shook his head.&#13;
"For common humanity's sake I&#13;
wish I could agree with you, Jack.&#13;
But I can't. Mr. Darrah dictated that&#13;
move in his own proper person."&#13;
"How do you know that?"&#13;
Adams' answer took the form of a&#13;
leading question, "You had a message&#13;
from me this afternoon?"&#13;
"I did."&#13;
"What did you think of it?"&#13;
"I thought you might have left out&#13;
the first part of it; also that you&#13;
might have made the latter half a&#13;
good bit more, explicit if you had put&#13;
your mind to if."&#13;
A slow smile spread itself over the&#13;
technologian's Impassive face, and he&#13;
lighted another cigarette.&#13;
"Every man has nis limitations," he&#13;
said. "I did the best I could under&#13;
the existing circumstances. But you&#13;
will understand: the Rajah knew very&#13;
well what he was about—otherwise&#13;
there would have been no telegram."&#13;
Winton sent the Chinaman out for&#13;
another cup of tea before he said:&#13;
"Did Miss Carteret come here alone?'&#13;
"Oh, no; Calvert came with her."&#13;
"What brought them here?"&#13;
Adams spread his hands.&#13;
"What makes any woman do precisely&#13;
the most unexpected thing?&#13;
You'll have to go back of me—say to&#13;
Confucius or beyond—to find that&#13;
out."&#13;
Winton was silent for a moment,&#13;
balancing his spoon on the tip of his&#13;
finger. Finally he said: "I hope you&#13;
did what you could to make it pleasant&#13;
ffc her—not that there was much&#13;
to be dom in such a God-forsaken&#13;
chaos as a construction camp;"&#13;
"I did. And I didn't hear her complain&#13;
of the chaos. She. seemed as interested&#13;
as a school girl—particularly&#13;
in your sketches." . ,,•&gt;..&#13;
. "That was low-down in you, Morty.&#13;
to do it, declining Adams' offer of&#13;
company. But once out-of-doors he&#13;
climbed straight to the operator's tent&#13;
qn_the snow-covered slope. Carter&#13;
had turned in, but he sat up in his&#13;
bunk at the noise of the intrusion,&#13;
blinking sleepily at the flare of Wlnton's&#13;
match.&#13;
"That you, Mr. Winton? Want to&#13;
send something?" he asked.&#13;
"No; go to sleep. I'll write a wire&#13;
and leave It for you to send in the&#13;
morning."&#13;
He sat down at the packing-case instrument&#13;
table and wrote out a brief&#13;
report of the day's progress in track&#13;
laying for the general manager's-record.&#13;
But when Carter's regular breathing&#13;
told him he was alone he pushed&#13;
the pad aside, took down the sending&#13;
book and searched until he had found&#13;
the original cor.y of the message&#13;
which had reached him at the moment&#13;
of cataclysms in the lobby of the&#13;
Buckingham.&#13;
"Urn,' he said, and his heart grew&#13;
warm within him. "It's just about as&#13;
I expected; Morty didn't have anything&#13;
whatever to do with it—except&#13;
totslgn and send it as she commanded&#13;
him to." And the penciled sheet was&#13;
folded carefully and filed in permanence&#13;
in the inner breast pocket of&#13;
his brown duck shooting coat.&#13;
The moon was rising - behind tie&#13;
eastern mountain when he extinguished&#13;
the candle and went out. xtelow&#13;
lay the chaotic construction camp&#13;
buried in silence and in darkness save&#13;
for the lighted windows of the dinkey.&#13;
He was not quite ready to go back to&#13;
Adams, and after making a round of&#13;
the camp and bidding the engine&#13;
watchman keep a sharp lookout&#13;
against a possible night surprise, he&#13;
set out to walk over the newly laid&#13;
track of the day.&#13;
Another half-hour had elapsed, and&#13;
a waning moon was clearing the topmost&#13;
crags of Pacific Peak when he&#13;
came out on. the high embankment opposite&#13;
the Rosemary, having traversed&#13;
the entire length of the lateral loop&#13;
and inspected the trestle at the gulch&#13;
head by the light of a blazing firbranch.&#13;
The station with its two one-car&#13;
trains, and the shacks of the little&#13;
mining camp beyond, lay shimmering&#13;
ghost-like in the new-born light of the&#13;
moon. The engine of the sheriff's car&#13;
was humming softly with a note like&#13;
the distant swarming of bees, and&#13;
from the dance hall In Argentine the&#13;
snort of trombone and the tinkling&#13;
clang of a cracked piano floated out&#13;
upon the frosty night air. -&#13;
Winton turned to go back. The&#13;
windows of the Rosemary were all&#13;
dark, and there was nothing to stay&#13;
for. So he thought, at all events; but&#13;
It he had not been musing abstractedly&#13;
upon things widely separated from&#13;
his present surroundings, he might&#13;
have remarked two tiny stars of lantern&#13;
light high on the placer ground&#13;
above the embankment; or, failing&#13;
the sight, he might have heard the&#13;
dull, measured slumph of a churn-drill&#13;
burrowing deep in the frozen earth of&#13;
the slope.&#13;
As it was, a pair of brown eyes&#13;
blinded him, and the tones of a voice&#13;
sweeter than the songs of Oberon's&#13;
sea maid filled his ears. Whereiore&#13;
he neither saw nor heard; and taking&#13;
the short cut across the mouth of the&#13;
lateral gulch back to camp, he boarded&#13;
the dinkey and went to bed without&#13;
disturbing Adams.&#13;
The morning of the day to come&#13;
broke clear and still, with the stars&#13;
paling one by one at the pointing finger&#13;
of the dawn, and the frost-rime&#13;
lying thick and white like a snowfall&#13;
of erect and glittering needles on iron&#13;
and steel and wood.&#13;
Obedient to orders, the bridge builders&#13;
were getting out their hand car&#13;
at the construction camp, the wheels&#13;
shrilling merrily on the frosted rails,&#13;
and the men stamping and swinging&#13;
their arms to start the sluggish nightblood.&#13;
Suddenly, like the opening gun&#13;
of a battle, the dull rumble of a,&#13;
mighty explosion trembled upon the&#13;
still air, followed instantly by a sound&#13;
of a passing avalanche.&#13;
Winton was out and running up the&#13;
tr^ck before the camp was fairly&#13;
aroused. What he saw when he&#13;
gained the hither side of the lateral&#13;
gulch was a sight to make a strong&#13;
man weep. A huge landslide, starting&#13;
from the frozen placer ground high&#13;
up on the western promontory, had&#13;
swept every vestige of track and eraban&#13;
indent—into—the deep •bed of thai&#13;
As a tuppjanter.&#13;
The Maid—Do yon think the auto*&#13;
mobile will ever supplant the hone.&#13;
The Man—Kor but it may supplant&#13;
the mule Jin. the course, of time. One&#13;
is fully as, unreliable as the other.&#13;
—4-—:—-—*—&#13;
Rather Rough.&#13;
- Above the stairway there flickered a&#13;
candle and then a deep veice called&#13;
from the shadows:&#13;
•Katherine,. Katherine.•' Who is&#13;
that sandpapering the wall this hour&#13;
of the night?"&#13;
A long stillness and then:&#13;
"No one down here, father, dear.&#13;
I guess it must be next door."&#13;
The candle vanished and then from&#13;
the gloom of the parlorr&#13;
"George, you big goose, I told you&#13;
never to call on me unless you had&#13;
been shaved."&#13;
WHEN THE BED GOES 'ROUND&#13;
But Smith Was Too Wise to Wait on&#13;
the Procession.&#13;
"That was an amusing story about&#13;
the congressman who caught his bed&#13;
the fourth time It came around. It&#13;
reminded me," continued the narrator&#13;
"of the first time I heard the bed&#13;
phrase. It happened in Harrisburg,&#13;
where I was then stationed, and it&#13;
happened to a legislator whom I shall&#13;
call Smith.&#13;
"At the first session Smith became&#13;
famous for his ability to comfortably&#13;
carry more liquor than any other man&#13;
In the legislature. At the opening of&#13;
the second session some Philadelphians&#13;
got together and put up a job&#13;
on Smith. They arranged relays, so&#13;
that when one party had enough another&#13;
should take hold, and thus keep&#13;
going until they had Smith down and&#13;
out Well, they began with Smith&#13;
one evening, and after two relays had&#13;
succumbed their successors noted&#13;
with much satisfaction that Smith&#13;
was mixing his beverages—they&#13;
didn't know that was his custom, and&#13;
he fooled them all. The bout continued&#13;
all night and all of the next&#13;
day, and when the second evening&#13;
came Smith was the only man able&#13;
to get away unaided.&#13;
"Several days later I asked Smith&#13;
how-he got along after he reached his&#13;
hotel. "When I got into my room,"&#13;
he replied, *.I saw a procession of&#13;
beds coming in my direction. I&#13;
grabbed the first one, fell into it, and&#13;
woke up the next afternoon.' "—Pittaburg&#13;
Chronicle-Telegraph.&#13;
Hasty&#13;
Nervous&#13;
Chewing;&#13;
of Food&#13;
the Cause of&#13;
creek at a point precisely opposite Mr.&#13;
Somerville Darrah's private car.&#13;
CHAPTER VII.&#13;
An early riser by choice, and made&#13;
an earlier this morjilng by a vague&#13;
anxiety which had turned the right&#13;
into a half-waking vigil for her, Virginia&#13;
was up and dressed when the&#13;
sullen shock of the explosion sat the&#13;
windows jarring In the Rosemary&#13;
Wondering what dreadful thing had&#13;
happened, she hurried out upon the&#13;
Observation, platform and so came to&#13;
look upon the ruin wrought by the&#13;
landslide, while the duet-like smoke of&#13;
the dynamite still hung in the air.&#13;
"Rather unlucky for our friends the&#13;
enemy," said a colorless voice behind&#13;
her;.and she had an uncomfortable&#13;
feeling that Jastrow had been lying in&#13;
wait for her, seconded instantly by the&#13;
conviction that he had done the same&#13;
thing the previous morning.&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
WILLIAM T H E CONQUERER.&#13;
Falaise, the birthplace of William&#13;
the Conqueror, is an interesting old&#13;
town, but looks as if it had been,&#13;
asleep ever since that great event,&#13;
writes Mme. Waddington id* Scribner's.&#13;
The old castle Is very fine, stands&#13;
high, close to the edge of the cliff, so&#13;
that the rock seems to form part of&#13;
the great walls. There is one fine&#13;
round tower, and always the grass&#13;
walk around the ramparts. ^The views&#13;
are beautiful. Looking down from one&#13;
of the narrow, pointed windows still&#13;
fairly preserved, we had the classic&#13;
Norman landscape at our feet—beautiful&#13;
green fields, enormous trees making&#13;
spots of black shade in the bright&#13;
grass, the river, in the sparkling; sunshine,&#13;
winding through the meadows,&#13;
a group of washerwomen, busy .and&#13;
chattering, beating clothe* on the flat:&#13;
stones, where the river ***row* a Ht&#13;
We walked through the Grande palace—&#13;
picturesque enough. On one side&#13;
the church of La Trinite, and in the&#13;
middle of the place the bronze equestrian&#13;
statue of William the Conqueror.&#13;
It is very spirited. He Is In full armor,&#13;
lance in hand, his horse plunging forward&#13;
toward imaginary enemies. They&#13;
say the figure was copied from Queen&#13;
Mathilde's famous tapestries at Bay-&#13;
"l^eux, but it looked more modern to me.&#13;
r\ remember all the men and beasts&#13;
and ships of these tapestries looked&#13;
most extraordinary as to shape. Monsieur&#13;
R. took over the young princess&#13;
the other day in his auto. They were&#13;
very keen to see the cradle of their&#13;
trace. It was curious to see the descendants&#13;
of the great rough soldier&#13;
staring In an auto, fresh, pretty English&#13;
girls, dressed in the trotteuees&#13;
^little short skirts) that we all wear&#13;
blue sky overhead. ;r,.«. I V *&#13;
tie under the castle wills, and a bright in the country, carrying their kodaks&#13;
yr d jketchinu mterisj*.&#13;
Dyspepsia&#13;
It your teeth are fit, chew, chew,&#13;
chew, until the food is liquid and&#13;
insists on being swallowed.&#13;
H teeth are faulty, soften Grape-&#13;
Nuts with hot milk or cream, or&#13;
allow to stand a minute soaking ir&#13;
cold cream.&#13;
"There's a reason," as follows:&#13;
Grape-Nuts food is in the form&#13;
of hard and brittle granules,&#13;
intended to be ground up by the&#13;
teeth; that work not only preserves&#13;
the teeth but brings down the saliva&#13;
from the gums so necessary in the&#13;
primary work of digestion.&#13;
Many people say (and it is true)&#13;
that when they eat Grape-Nuts they&#13;
seem able to digest not only that&#13;
food but other kinds which formerly&#13;
made trouble when eaten without&#13;
Grape-Nuts.&#13;
Chew!!&#13;
"There's a reason" for&#13;
Grape*&#13;
Nuts&#13;
:.1 tie gitwfctuy 5i$patch&#13;
F. L. A N D R E W S &lt;fc CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
THURSDAY, SEPT. 13,1906.&#13;
The Ghoice is Yours&#13;
The following are the nominrtions&#13;
ot th*1 three parties for state and county&#13;
offi«er». We can tell you »vho&#13;
they are, but you will have to make&#13;
your own choice:&#13;
KKPl'HLICAN&#13;
STATE&#13;
Govenor, Fred M. Warner. F:irmin«»ton&#13;
Lieut. Gov,, Patrick H. Kelly, Lansing&#13;
See.of Kt;ite, Geo. A. IVescott, Tawas&#13;
City&#13;
State Treas., Frank I \ Glazier, Chelsea&#13;
Autlhor General, James Hr Brail lev,&#13;
Eaton Rapids&#13;
Land Commissioner, William II. Hose,&#13;
Bath&#13;
Attorney-General, John E. Bird, Adrian&#13;
Superintendent of Fublic Instruction,&#13;
Luther L, Wright, Ironwood&#13;
Member of Board of Education, Dexter&#13;
M. Ferry Jr., Detroit&#13;
COUNTY&#13;
Thomas Allen, Flint, State Senator.&#13;
Chas. VanKeuran, Representative&#13;
Willis Lyon, County Clerk&#13;
James Greene, Prosecuting Attorney&#13;
A. D. Thompson, Register of Deeds&#13;
Edwin Pratt, Sheriff&#13;
Frank Mowers, County Drain Com.&#13;
J. A. Woodruff, County School Com,&#13;
Henry C. Duifee, School Examiner&#13;
T. J. Gaul, School Examiner&#13;
DEMOCRATIC&#13;
STATE&#13;
Gevernor, ('has. H . Kimmerle, l a s s o p -&#13;
olis.&#13;
Leut. G o v , , Thomas M. Rogers, Nault&#13;
Ste. Marie&#13;
State Treasurer, Charles Wellmau, Port&#13;
Huron&#13;
Attorney-General, Emanuel J . D o y l e ,&#13;
Grand Rapids&#13;
Auditor General, J o h n Y u e l l , Vanderbilt,&#13;
Otsego County&#13;
Superintendent of Public Instruction.&#13;
Elmer R. Webster, Pontiac&#13;
State Land Commissioner, Clarence L.&#13;
She!den, Bay County&#13;
Member of State Hoard of Education,&#13;
Jnme« E. Sullivan, Cheboygan&#13;
COUNTY&#13;
Edwin Farmer, Representative&#13;
Robert Wright, Cleric *&#13;
Louis E. Howlett, Pros. Attorney&#13;
Piles positively cured with Dr.&#13;
Snoop's Magic ointmeni. It's made for&#13;
piles alone, and :t d v the work to&#13;
perfection, h-hint/, painful, protruding&#13;
or blind pile*, disappear like&#13;
ma^ie. Suld by aM dealers.&#13;
Low Rates West ria&#13;
Chicago fclreat N o s U m Hallway&#13;
For lowest, rates to all points west&#13;
write to F. R. Mosier. I) P, A , 103&#13;
Adaius St., Chicago, Id., stat; ng how&#13;
m a n y in party and when going, t 3S&#13;
If all dyspepsia sufferers knew that&#13;
Dr. Snoop's Restorative would do tor&#13;
them. Dyspepsia would practically be&#13;
a disease of tbe past, Dr. Shoop's Restorative&#13;
reaches stomach troubles by&#13;
ns.direct ionic action upon the insi.de&#13;
nerves—the true stomach nerves.&#13;
Stomach distress or weakness, tullness&#13;
bloating, belchiug, etc Call tor the&#13;
Restorative. We recommend and sell&#13;
Dr. Shoop's Restorative. All Dealers.&#13;
Old WbiMt T e r m s .&#13;
The following passage Is from the&#13;
Adventurer, No. 35, March 0, 1753:&#13;
"On Sunday last a terrible Are broke&#13;
out at Lady Brag's, occasioned by the&#13;
followlng%accideiit: Mrs. Overall, tbe&#13;
housekeeper, having lost three rubbers&#13;
at whist running without holding a&#13;
swabber (notwithstanding she had&#13;
changed chairs, furzed the cards and ordered&#13;
Jemmy, the footboy, to sit cross&#13;
legged for good luck), grew out of all&#13;
patience and, taking up the devil's&#13;
books, as she called them, flung them&#13;
Into the fire, and the flames spread to&#13;
the steward's room."&#13;
Swabbers are the ace of hearts, the&#13;
knave of clubs and the ace and the&#13;
deuce of trumps at whist. To furz or&#13;
fuzz is to shuffle the cards very carefully&#13;
or to change the pack.—London&#13;
Notes and Queries.&#13;
W h y R a i n C l o u d r A r e B l a c k .&#13;
The color of a cloud depends on the&#13;
manner iu which the sunlight falls upon&#13;
It and the position of the observer. It&#13;
will be noticed that high clouds aro always&#13;
white or light in color, and this&#13;
Is because tbe light by which they are&#13;
seen is reflected from the under surface&#13;
by the numberless drops of moisture&#13;
which go to form the cloud. Heavy&#13;
rain clouds, on the other hand, are&#13;
found much nearer the earth, and so&#13;
the light falls on them more directly&#13;
from above, giving d%lver lining to the&#13;
cloud, though the undersurface np*'&#13;
pears black owing to the complete reflection&#13;
and absorption of the light by&#13;
the upper layers. Seen from above by&#13;
an observer in n balloon, the blackest&#13;
rain clouds appear of the most dazzlingly&#13;
brilliant white.&#13;
When you have a cold it is well to&#13;
be very careful about using anything&#13;
that will caase constipation. Be particularly&#13;
careful about preparations&#13;
containing opiates. Use Kennedy's&#13;
Laxative Honey and T a r , which stops&#13;
the cou^b and moves the bowels.-&#13;
3old by F. A. Slgler, Druggist.&#13;
Ask auy l J A P " that you may see,&#13;
" W h y the Czar, with RKAR behind,"&#13;
had to climb a tree.&#13;
The Yanks, God bless the Yanks,&#13;
says he,&#13;
They gave us Rocky Mountain T e a .&#13;
Not a C l o t h e s Pes;.&#13;
Peggie Newton had been a faithful&#13;
household drudge for years, and had&#13;
not grumbled much when her wages&#13;
were occasionally passed over. But as&#13;
time went on, and her salary fell more&#13;
and more into arrear, she ventured to&#13;
ask for something "on account"&#13;
"Why, haven't I paid you your wages&#13;
, , - „ . . . „ p - , / T&gt; i l a t e l y - r e S ? H o w careless of me,"&#13;
lofmttiggiesworth, Register of Deeds h e r m l s t r e s s s a U L »Vm s o r r y x h a v e&#13;
no money in the house just now, but&#13;
here's a smart cloak that I've ceased to&#13;
wear, and which is only a wee bit out&#13;
of fashion. You'll take It In lieu of&#13;
wages, won't you?"&#13;
"No, ma'am, I'm sure I shan't," said&#13;
Peg, wrathfully eying the faded old&#13;
cloak. "A peg I may be by .name, but&#13;
Will Stoddard. Sheriff&#13;
Clarence Bishop, Drain Com.&#13;
F. D. CHIT, School Com.&#13;
J . K. Osgerby, School Examiner&#13;
Miles Valentine, School Examiner&#13;
The Breath of Lite.&#13;
It's a "significant fact tliat Tfie&#13;
strongest a n i m a l of its size, the.gorilla&#13;
also has the largest lungs. Powerful&#13;
lungs means powerful creatures. How&#13;
to keep the breathing organs right&#13;
should be man's chiefest study. Like&#13;
thousands , of others, Mrs. Ora A.&#13;
Stephens, of P o r t Williams, ()., has&#13;
learned to do this. She writes: "Three&#13;
bottles of Dr. King's New Discovery&#13;
stopped my cough of two years and&#13;
cured me of what ray friends thought&#13;
consumption. 0 , it's grand fcr throat&#13;
and lung trouble." Guaranteed by&#13;
F. A. Sigler, diuggist. Price 50cts&#13;
and $1.00. Trial bottle free,&#13;
I won't be the sort of peg that people&#13;
hang castoff clothes on—not if I know&#13;
it."—London Answers.&#13;
Rheumatism is not incurable. Stub&#13;
orn? Yes! But Dr. Shoop's Rheumatic&#13;
Remedy will if faithfully used drive&#13;
itront of tbe system, it's the blood&#13;
that's at fault Poisonous crvstals like&#13;
sand, oet into the joints and muscles.&#13;
1)1 Sloop's Rheumatism Remedy prevents&#13;
this It drives rheumatism from&#13;
the blood and then rh. umatism dies.&#13;
We recommend and sell it. All Deal&#13;
ers,&#13;
Very Low Rates to the West&#13;
Tbe Chicago Great Western Railway&#13;
will sell tickets to points in&#13;
Aiberta, Arizona, British Columbia,&#13;
California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana.&#13;
Nevada, Oregon, Ctab, Washington&#13;
and Wyoming, at about one-halt the&#13;
usual tare. Tickets on sale daily&#13;
Aug. 27 to Oct. 31 inclufive. Get full&#13;
information from the great Western&#13;
agent or J . P . Elmer.&#13;
F. R. Mosier, D. P. A.&#13;
103 Adams St., Chicago, 111.&#13;
S t a r r i n g to Death.&#13;
Because her stomach was so weakened&#13;
by useless d r u g g i n g that she&#13;
could not eat, Mrs. Mary H. Walters,&#13;
of St. Clair St., Columbus, 0 . , was&#13;
literally starving to death. She writes&#13;
•'My stomaoh was so weak from use&#13;
less d r u g s that I could not eat, and&#13;
my nerves so wreoked that I could&#13;
not sleep; and not before I was given&#13;
up to die was I induced to try Electric&#13;
Bitters; with tbe wonderful result&#13;
that improvement began at once,Tind&#13;
a complete cure followed." Best health&#13;
tonic on earth. 5 0 J . G u a r a n t e e d by&#13;
F, A. Sigler, druggist.&#13;
•S3 Of V\t»&amp;&#13;
For the Stomach&#13;
Heart and Kidneyo&#13;
Dr. Shoop's Restorative is a Cans*&#13;
Cure—not a Symptom Cure.&#13;
It 1» a common mistake to take artificial digesters&#13;
(or stomach troubles—or heart stimulants&#13;
lor weak heart—or so-called kidney remedies for&#13;
diseased kidneys. These organs do not aot separ&#13;
ately or of their own accord—they have DO con*&#13;
trol over themselves—and not once in 800 times&#13;
la the sickness the fault of the organ. It is the&#13;
fault of the nerves which control the onrao—&#13;
and only through these A norves can stomach,&#13;
kidney I or heart dis-^aXorders be cured. Or.&#13;
Shoop. of Ruclne.^BkVWisconsin, learned&#13;
Good for the cough, removes the&#13;
cold, the cause of the cough. That's&#13;
the work pf Kennedy's Laxative Honey&#13;
and Tar—the original laxative&#13;
cough'sy• up. Contains no opiates.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Dragglft&#13;
early in his medical&#13;
these inside nerves&#13;
n e r v e s - t h a t&#13;
only was It pos&#13;
digestion, heart;&#13;
lng. insomnia,&#13;
heart weak-&#13;
Bright's dis&#13;
other affections&#13;
neya. For all of&#13;
•re not separate&#13;
•re not to be treated'&#13;
merely symptoms of&#13;
ness, ftnd when the&#13;
the symptoms and the&#13;
The remedy, which Or,&#13;
these ailing serves is&#13;
experience t h a t&#13;
were the power&#13;
through them&#13;
sibletocureinburn,&#13;
belchb&#13;
a c k a c h e ,&#13;
nesses. and&#13;
ease and ajl&#13;
of the kldthese&#13;
ailments&#13;
sicknesses and&#13;
, as such. They are&#13;
r inside nerve weak-&#13;
'nerves are restored&#13;
sickness disappear.&#13;
Shoop prescribed for&#13;
known as Dr. Shoop's&#13;
Restorative. It relieves the pain and distress of&#13;
kidney, stomach and heart troubles quicker even&#13;
than those medicines designed simply to give&#13;
temporary relief. Dr. Shoop's Restorative (Tablets&#13;
or Liquid) can now be had of druggists&#13;
everywhere. For sale and recommended by&#13;
"ALL DEALERS."&#13;
Kod&#13;
c&#13;
T h r e e K i n d s of L i g h t n i n g .&#13;
The Etruscans of old believed that&#13;
there were three kinds of lightningone&#13;
incapable Of doing auy injury, an-'&#13;
other more mischievous in its character&#13;
and consequently only to be issued with&#13;
the consent of a quorum of twelve&#13;
gods, and a third carrying, mischief in&#13;
its train and for which a regular decree&#13;
was required from the highest divinities&#13;
iu the Etruscan skies. Curiously&#13;
enough, modern scientific men&#13;
agree with the view that there are&#13;
three kinds of lightning, but their varieties&#13;
differ from tbe Etruscans. The&#13;
first is known as forked lightning and&#13;
runs in zigzag lines, the second as sheet&#13;
lightning, because it is seen in a body,&#13;
and the third as globe lightning, as it&#13;
sometimes runs in the shape of a ball.&#13;
The latter variety is rather slow In&#13;
moving,&#13;
A S a v a g e P o i s o n .&#13;
The juice of tbe green pineapple is&#13;
accredited in Java, the Philippines&#13;
and throughout tbe far east generally&#13;
with being a blood poison of a most&#13;
deadly nature. It is said to be tbe&#13;
substance with which the Malays poison&#13;
their kreesea and daggers and to i effeminate. From general foolishness&#13;
T h e W o r d " X i c e . "&#13;
'"N'ice" is one of the exceptional&#13;
words which have risen on the scale&#13;
and improved with age. It is from the&#13;
Latin "ueseius" and originally signified&#13;
ignorant. To Chaucer it regularly&#13;
meant foolish—"wise and nothing&#13;
nice.-' In Spenser's time it still meant&#13;
be also the "finger nail" poison formerly&#13;
in use among the aborigine Javanese&#13;
women almost universally.&#13;
These women cultivate a nail on each&#13;
hand to a long, sharp point, and the&#13;
least scratch from one of these was&#13;
certain death.&#13;
_ ^ :&#13;
Nq one would buy a sailboat 'with&#13;
sails that could not be reefed. There&#13;
is always that possibility of a little too&#13;
much wind that makes a cautious man&#13;
jafra.d to go unprovided. The think-&#13;
« man, whose stomach sometimes&#13;
there v^ts probablyfirst_a_. specialization&#13;
to foolish fussiness about trifles.&#13;
Then the idea of ignorance dropped&#13;
out, and the word meant particular&#13;
about details, accurate. It was creditable&#13;
to be a "nice" observer or to&#13;
show "nice" judgment. And so in the&#13;
end the positively agreeable meaning&#13;
of today was evolved.&#13;
When two strong men come to&#13;
blows, even if they are well matched,&#13;
Ttrrr'n.mTli-pleasing sigh77~T&gt;rfrTf the&#13;
man who gets the worst of it will use&#13;
DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve, he will&#13;
look better and feel better in !*hort&#13;
order. tie. sure you get De W i n ' s .&#13;
Good for everything a salve is used&#13;
for, including piles.&#13;
Bold by F. A. Sigler, Dragglft&#13;
STATE of MICHIGAN; The Probate Court for the&#13;
Connty of Livingston. At a session of said&#13;
court, held at tTie prolate office In the village of&#13;
Howell, in said county, on the 4th day of Sfptera.&#13;
Cer, i n lf*OH. Present, Arthur A. Montague, Judge&#13;
of Probate. Iu the matter of the estate of&#13;
tSAMi'ki. WILSON, deceased&#13;
Albert li. Wilson having tiled in said court hid&#13;
petition praying that said court adjudicate and&#13;
determine who were at the time of his death the&#13;
legal heirs of said decease and entitled to inherit&#13;
th9 veat estate nf wh'uh said deceased died seized.&#13;
It is ordered, that the 'JStli day of September&#13;
A. I). 1M)G, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at said&#13;
Probate Office, be and is hereby appointed for&#13;
bearing said petition;&#13;
And it ia further ordered thut public notice&#13;
thereof b" itlven by publication of n copy of this&#13;
order for 3 successive weeks previous to sain day&#13;
of hearing, in tbe Pieckney DISPATCH, a news&#13;
paper, printed and circulated in sJid county.&#13;
— -Airrrtt'R A. M&lt;&gt;NTA&lt;,IK,&#13;
t 3» Judge ot Probate&#13;
"papsSa Cure&#13;
"hat you eat*&#13;
CURES&#13;
RHEUMATISMI&#13;
LUMBA80, S C I A T I C *&#13;
NEURALGIA and&#13;
KIDNEY TROUBLE "S-DIOPS" taken internally, rids the blood&#13;
of tbe poisonous matter and acids which I&#13;
are tbe direct causes of these diseases.&#13;
Applied externally it.taffords almost in*&#13;
sunt relief from pain, while a permanent&#13;
cure is being effected by purifying the&#13;
blood, dissolving the poisonous substance&#13;
and removing it from the system.&#13;
DR. fc\ D. BLAND&#13;
Of Brewton, Gav, write*!&#13;
"I h».d be«n a snffarar for a number of year*&#13;
with Lumbago and Rheumatism In my anna I&#13;
.ml l«gi, and tried all the ramecUee ttaa* 1 eooM i&#13;
gather from modtoal wONa, and alao oonsulted&#13;
with a number of tbe beat pbyate)ana. but found&#13;
Aotkmct efeat •**• &lt;*• relief obtained from&#13;
for rheumatism and kindred dleeaeea " FREE If you are suffering with Rheumatism,&#13;
Neuralgia, Kidney Ttor.Ne&gt;r any kin-,&#13;
i &lt;d disease, jrr te to us »r i frial bottle&#13;
ot 'VDROPS.,,AndUst ,tyoarself- I&#13;
' 3-DROPS" can be used any length of&#13;
time without acquiring a "drug habit."&#13;
as It is entirely free of opium, cocaine,&#13;
alcohol, laudanum, and other similar&#13;
ingredients.&#13;
LarceStce Battle, "5.DROPS" (SOO Daeea)&#13;
•l.OO. For Bale by Vmggleta.&#13;
SWAMSON BHEDNATIt OURE COMPAU,&#13;
DapfTSO,"" iee-fcak« Street, Chloaaja.&#13;
THE ONLY PRACTICAL&#13;
Stencil Dish&#13;
!t !s compact, can be-'carried enstls-, and »Uc&#13;
th.'T operator to gauge the quunutv of ink de&amp;u&#13;
SAVES T I M E . SAVES I N K .&#13;
Keeps brushes and ink where you -want them, and&#13;
Uiuw.iya ICEADY FOB INSTANT USE.&#13;
A perfect combination Is obtained when&#13;
mw%-WAKRPM0F -«EWHr-l« • • ••-.'.. Tt is ,'asily applied and seta quickly. i«0&#13;
r'l.lll or tllu.UJf.&#13;
: V/ES BRUSHES. SAVES STENCILS. SAVES TIME.&#13;
! • s ;vY, hnrden brushes or clog stencils, l&gt;on*t&#13;
. • our vuul lor a, TEST I T . Made only by&#13;
6 0 YEARS'&#13;
IENCE&#13;
Well Worth Trying;&#13;
\V. H. Urowo, tbe popular pension&#13;
attorney, of Pittsfield, Vt., says:&#13;
'•Next to a pension, the best thing to&#13;
get is Dr. Kind's New Life Pills.' He&#13;
gr^rf back on him, provides for bis w r i t e s : "they keep my family in splenstomach&#13;
by-kefpin* a bottle of Kodol health." Quick cure for Headache,&#13;
for Dyspepsia within leach. Kodoldi Constipation and Biliousness. 25c.&#13;
p;ests what jo-&gt; eat and restors ih'e u u a r a n t e e d at F. A. Siglers d r u g&#13;
stomach to the condition to prcperly&#13;
perform its functions.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Dragglft&#13;
• • — • ^ ^ a * ^ — « e » i ^ « a ™ a ^ " «&#13;
Subscribe for the Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
store.&#13;
t 3. A. W H I T E CO.,&#13;
J High St.,Boston,Mass.U.S.A.&#13;
DR. PIERCE'S&#13;
Malted Cocoa - The Cocoa with&#13;
a Dolicato Flavo*&#13;
MAI.TKI &gt; ("no i\ is prepared b y adeQii3ft»&#13;
ally cum bluing the cui'Uci of thedaOtCa**&#13;
L'ucu.a lu-an and t h e b e s t of mart. *»•»*&#13;
malt a i d i n g digestion, and t h e f a t o l t L e ^&#13;
c o c o a huvi;:^ b e e n p r e d i g e s t e d , the&#13;
feeling'of h e a v i n e s s e x p e r i e n c e d afler&#13;
drinking theordi nary c o c o a s is a voided;&#13;
tints a most d e l i c i o u s p o d nouribking&#13;
I v s ' c i a g e is prA -iced, w h i c h is &gt;&#13;
t'eetly pure a n d will n o t distress t h e&#13;
m o s t delicate s t o m a c h .&#13;
/i&gt;r sale by ynur dealer,&#13;
KERR'S&#13;
Malted Extract&#13;
O F T O M A T O&#13;
One teaspoonful to a cap of boiling water&#13;
makes a delicious Bouillon.&#13;
l'or JtTe by your dealer. Prepared by&#13;
WILLIAM B. KERR,&#13;
Medford. Boston. Mass.&#13;
The Dispatch Job Department&#13;
Can do your Printing&#13;
on short notice and in&#13;
• a workmanlike manner&#13;
F . b A N D S B W S &amp; C O ,&#13;
1¾¾&#13;
lath* beat school for yon to attend. F i n eqalpmttl;&#13;
laitructloath* very belt; liviai ex peases low; iradaatM&#13;
placed In pod positioas—every itudiat comini lor basinets&#13;
nay be sure ot sacceedhsz. Same canrscs by com*&#13;
spondeifce as at tbe Callefe; satisfaction toaranteed;&#13;
particulars on application P. R. C L E A R Y , Prea.&#13;
TRADE MARKS&#13;
DceiaNt&#13;
, „ » . - COPYRIGHT* A C .&#13;
Anyone sanding a sketch and description may&#13;
oulckly ascertain- our opinion free whether an&#13;
fnrentlon IS probably patentable. Communlcar&#13;
tlons strictly conlldentlal. HANDBOOK onPatenU&#13;
s*e.n».t• f&gt;r»eae . tOlllfdineastt amgreanncoyv ff ot\rr asetucmurrtinnfgf pnaattaennttas..&#13;
Patent* taken through Munn 4 Co. recall&#13;
tptcial notice, without charge, In tbe ITS&#13;
Mkidol Dyspepsia Gure&#13;
pigMtt what y©u eata&#13;
pteuu notice, wunout coarge, in m* Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest ctrculatlon&#13;
of any scientific Journal. Terns. IS a&#13;
year: four months, ti. flold by all newsdealers. MUNN CCOA*""**-"New York&#13;
Branch OOoe, 8» V 8U Washington. D. C.&#13;
DeWltt'a Ki« Salve&#13;
. For PUa% Burnt,&#13;
BUY THE FAMOUS Lincoln Steel Range!&#13;
SeM evapywbara . ,&#13;
by Leading Oaalara.&#13;
W*mr* \ THE BEST! \ 2l»y Look* ) &lt; priom.&#13;
COSTS N5 MORE THAN AN UNKNOWN MAKE.&#13;
Before you buy that range or cook stove,&#13;
write as, and we will mail you a copy of&#13;
"Points for Purohasors "&#13;
It is free for the asking. Full of useful inform*&#13;
ation.&#13;
THE LINCOLN STOVE IRAN8E COMPANY, FremorU, Ohio,&#13;
"•Vlb'&#13;
.*w* •^INi0&amp;*'-&#13;
U*f iff-- ^jaL**"* i mssctsmmsssmss&amp;ssSBS^ "W •;• ••Krf'-'St'&#13;
/ A '&#13;
T&#13;
A bath clean sea the-skin-and rids&#13;
the pores ot refuse. A bath makes for&#13;
better fellowship and citizenship. Not&#13;
only should t U outside ot the I oJy be&#13;
cleansed, hut occasional use of a Inxafive&#13;
or carthartic opens the bowels&#13;
and clears Ibe system of nftete matter.&#13;
Best (or thus arn De Witt's Li*tle Early&#13;
Risers. Pleasant little piLs that'll*.&#13;
not «fri|;e or ^icCcn.&#13;
Sold by F. A Slgler, prnggltt.&#13;
T b « H * « n e » t M a n ,&#13;
The meanest man has been located&#13;
roil of bills on the street, and a boy&#13;
who found It returned the money to&#13;
him. Counting the bundle carefully,&#13;
the owner put It In Ills pockot. "My&#13;
sou," ho said benignly to the boy, "I&#13;
am rejok'od to see that you ura guided&#13;
by lofty principles, and as an earnest&#13;
of my approbation shall refrain from&#13;
oharjj;!:]^ y o u i n U ' v o n . f o r t h e t i m e ' y o u '&#13;
h a v e had' m y u n i i v y . "&#13;
W f c y L a r k * Arm Kttmilr C « « * f c t » ''&#13;
No bird Is so easily netted as the&#13;
in rhiladelphla. He dropped a large , I*1*; be generally starts from the&#13;
„0 •%&#13;
•-•fell&#13;
THE MASTER SPECIALISTS OF AMERICA&#13;
&lt;We know the diseaijes.and_weaknesses of nic-ii like ajti open book.&#13;
We have been curing them for 30 years. We have given' our lives to&#13;
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are today living monuments to the skill, knowledge and snore.'-.-:, of&#13;
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of all the diseases of men—' f Varicocele, Stricture, Blood Poisons,&#13;
Hydrocele, Nervous Debility, Paralysis, Bladder, Urinary and Kidney&#13;
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thousands of cases that if there is a cure for YOUK disease you&#13;
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skill and experience are at your service. We will explain to you&#13;
How and Why We Can Cure You; why the diseases of men require&#13;
the kttowleflge and skill of Master Specialists. We do not require to&#13;
experiment with your case as we know from experience in treating&#13;
thousands of cases exactly whnt to prescribe tor your symptoms. Don't&#13;
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the test for 25 years—why should It fail in yoifr case. Should your&#13;
case prove incurable you need not pay us a dollar. We refer you to&#13;
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write for a Question Blank for Home Treatment. Consultation Free.&#13;
Booklets sent Free.&#13;
ground Just before the lower edge of&#13;
the net touches him and Invariably&#13;
mounts perpendicularly. This characteristic&#13;
propensity to ascendat once&#13;
may be observed by any person who&#13;
"treads up" a lark in a field and satlHfactorily&#13;
illustrated by releasing, at the&#13;
same moment, a newly captured lark&#13;
ami a sparrow from a cage or hat&#13;
within the precincts of a room. While&#13;
the sparrow will fly off horizontally,&#13;
dash himself against the window and&#13;
j lie almost stunned from the shock, the&#13;
1 lark will almost always mount' up-&#13;
\ ward to the ceiling and flutter there&#13;
I- for a time in vain efforts to reach&#13;
j the sky before he attempts any other&#13;
J mode of exit; but this habit is fatal to&#13;
i him in the netting season. IIevwould&#13;
I generally be able to escape, as indeed&#13;
! t h e b u n t i n g o r c l o d b i r d , t h e s p a r r o w&#13;
' a n d t h e l i n n e t c o n s t a n t l y d o . b v i i v i i u&#13;
i&#13;
I s t r a i g h t f o r w a r d ; b u t a s c e n d i n g , a s h e&#13;
d o e s , d i r e c t l y f r o m t h e g r o u n d t h e m o -&#13;
; m e n t h i s w i n g s h a v e t o u c h e d t h e u p p e r&#13;
p a r t o f t h e n e t i t i s s u f f e r e d t o d r o p&#13;
s u d d e n l y , a u d h i s c a p t u r e i s r e n d e r e d&#13;
i n e v i t a b l e . — L o u d o n S t a n d a r d .&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach No appetite, loss of strength, i&#13;
•en, headache, constipation, bad breath.&#13;
general deWlily, sour risings, and catarrh&#13;
of the stomaoh are all due to indigestion.&#13;
Kodol cures indigestion. This new discovery&#13;
represents the natural JvJcos ef dlg»#»&#13;
tea as ibey exist In a healthy stsaack,&#13;
combined with the greatest known toast&#13;
and reconstructive properties. Kodol Dy»»&#13;
pepsia Cure does not only mire Indigestion&#13;
and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy&#13;
cures all stomadh troubles by cleansing,&#13;
purifying, sweetening and strengthening&#13;
the mucous membranes lining the atemaoh*&#13;
Mr. S. S . Ball, of Ravenswood. W, V s . , « W —&#13;
F a i n t s p e l l s m a y b e a c c o m p a n i e d b y ! " I was troubled with sour stomach for twenty 7«*r*&gt;&#13;
Kodol cured me aad w« are now using it la nans&#13;
V i e w i n g t h e R e m a i n s .&#13;
It bad been a strenuous afternoon for&#13;
the devoted teacher who todk six of&#13;
her pupils through the Museum of Natural&#13;
History, but her charges had enjoyed&#13;
every minute of the time.&#13;
"Where have you been, boys?" asked&#13;
the father of two of the party that&#13;
night, and the answer came with Joyous&#13;
promptness:&#13;
"We've been to a dead circus."&#13;
Faint Spells a r e v e r y o f t e n a t t r i b u t e d t o b i l i o u s n e s s , I&#13;
a n d tire s t o m a c h i s t r e a t e d t o e a t h a r - I&#13;
t i c s . T h i s i s w r o n g .&#13;
f DiuKENNEDY*. NEMAN&#13;
" 148 SHELBY STREET, DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
"To Cure a Felon**&#13;
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Kan., "just cover it over with tiucklen's&#13;
Arnica Salve and the Salve will&#13;
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at P. A. Siglers drug store. Guaranteed&#13;
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No. 1 - B I G Q L E HORSE BOOK&#13;
All about Horses—a Common-sense Treatise, with mofSJ&#13;
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No. 2-BIGQLE BERRY BOOK&#13;
All about growing Small Fruits—read and learn how*&#13;
Beautiful colored plates. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 3 - B I Q Q L B POULTRY BOOK&#13;
All about Poultry; tlie best 'Pouitr;. Book in existence;&#13;
tells evetything. Profusely illustrated. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 4-B1GOLE CO\V BOOK&#13;
All about Cows and the Dairy Business; new edMon.&#13;
Colored plates. Sound Common -setise. Price, 60 Cents.&#13;
No. 5-BIGQLE SWIN&amp; BOOK&#13;
All about Hogs—Breeding, Feeding, Butcherv, Diseases,&#13;
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No. 6-BIGGLE HEALTH BOOK&#13;
Gives remedies and up-to-date information. A household&#13;
necessity.,- Extremely practical. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 7-BIGGLE PET BOOK&#13;
For the hoys and girls particularly. Pets of all kinds and&#13;
how to i-arc-fm them. I'l lc"eT^~CeiiT5^&#13;
No. 8-BIGGLE SHEEP BOOK&#13;
Covers (he whole ground. Kvery page full of good ad-&#13;
\ ice. Sheep men praise it'. Price, .rKi (.\-nts, Farm Journal&#13;
is your paper, made for you and not a misfit. It is' -9 vears&#13;
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A n y ONE of t h e BIQOLE BOOKS, and t h e F A R M&#13;
J O U R N A L 5 Y E A R S (remainder of h»0rt. and nil of l'JOT, l'JOi,&#13;
1909 and 19101, sent by thai! to any address for A DOLLAR BILL.&#13;
Sample of F A R M J O U R N A L and circular des,- ii-ing Bl-iOIJ: I J O O K S , tee.&#13;
W I L M E R A T K I N S O N C O . .&#13;
P t - B L I S H E R S ^ O F FAKM J I M K S A I . P l l l I ..vny.t.PHIA.&#13;
b i l i o u s n e s s , b u t y o u w i l l a l s o n o t i c e&#13;
s h o r t n e s s o f b r e a t h , a s t h m a t i c b r e a t h -&#13;
i n g , o p p r e s s e d f e e l i n g i n c h e s t , w e a k o r&#13;
h u n g r y s p e l l s , w h i e h a r e a l l e a r l y s y m p -&#13;
t o m s o f h e a r t w e a k n e s s .&#13;
D o n ' t m a k e t h e mi. t a k e o f t r e a t i n g&#13;
t h e s t o m a c h w h e n t h e h e a r t i s t n a&#13;
s o u r c e o f t h e t r o u b l e . Dr. Miles'&#13;
Xew Heart Cure&#13;
w i l l s t r e n g t h e n t h e n e r v e s a n d m u s c l e s&#13;
of t h e h e a r t , a n d h e a r t t r o u b l e s w i l l&#13;
d i s a p p e a r .&#13;
"I w a s v e r y l o w w i t h h e a r t t r o u b l e . I&#13;
h a d f a i n t i n g s p e l l s , a n d t h e :-rht I w o u l d&#13;
d i e . I b e g a n using; Dr. f i l e s ' H e a r t&#13;
C u r e , a n d a f t e r takir.q- t h r e e b o t t l e s , I&#13;
f e e l t h a t I a m c u r e d . '&#13;
M R S . E F F I E C T . O U G H ,&#13;
E l l s w o r t h F a l l s , M a i n s ,&#13;
T h e first b o t t l e w l U b e n e f i t , i f n o t ,&#13;
t h e d r u g g i s t w i l l r e t u r n y o u r m o n e y .&#13;
A n I n c i d e n t o f L i f e I n N e w Y o r k .&#13;
The street beggar ^ i t h pockets lined&#13;
with money is a fairly familiar figure&#13;
of city life, but one of the free dispensaries&#13;
reports an instance of an&#13;
attempt to get free medicine on the&#13;
plea of poverty that deserves a place&#13;
in the catalogue of good stories of&#13;
graft. A middle aged woman appeared&#13;
the other day and got a prescription,&#13;
after which she took ^her&#13;
place in the line of persons waiting to&#13;
have their medicine made up by'the1&#13;
apothecary. This particular woman,&#13;
it should be said, had given satisfactory&#13;
answers to air the questions put&#13;
to her designed to show whether she&#13;
was a proper subject for charity. Suddenly&#13;
there was a cry: "I'm robbed!&#13;
I'm robbed:" The victim ' was this&#13;
woman, who so fur forgot her previous&#13;
professions as to assert that her&#13;
pocket had been picked and that the&#13;
thief ^had got away with $90. Then&#13;
she lost the opportunity to get free&#13;
medicine, thus adding, in her view,&#13;
insult to injury .—New York Post.&#13;
In these days of russh and hurry&#13;
courtesy is otten. forgotten. In the&#13;
mad, pel! mell rush of our life little&#13;
things are done to offend tha, we&#13;
rather remain undone. A hastily caten&#13;
me,: 1 and itt resultant headache&#13;
! mav cause us social or financial, ! w ,&#13;
j The wisi. man or woman is the one&#13;
_^_:-vho relieves little iil&gt; ot' this sot' i&gt;v&#13;
| a little dose of Kodol tor Dy&gt;p'p-i'a.&#13;
' It dwe,&gt;t&gt; what yon eat.and puts your&#13;
' -i'om.K'h back in ship \&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler Dru«eist.&#13;
THE ORIGINAL LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUF&#13;
REMEDY'S LAXATIVE H0NEY»TAR&#13;
/Sd.ClMMf UlcBSuG) zzi L\-irr Beo en Every Bottls.&#13;
She giorkntii gfenatch&#13;
POBLISHSD S V S S T THURSDAY MOBNlffe BT&#13;
F R A N K L_. A N D R E W S So C O .&#13;
EDITOR* AMD PROPRIETOR*.&#13;
Subscription Price $1 i n A d v a n c e .&#13;
5ntered s t t b s PostSfllc* s t P i n c k n e y , M i c h i g a n&#13;
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A d v e r t i s i n g rates made known o n application.&#13;
B a s i n e t s Cards, $4.00 p e r y e a r .&#13;
D e a i h and marriage n o t i c e s p u b l i s h e d f r e e .&#13;
A n n o u n c e m e n t s o t e n t e r t a i n m e n t s m a y b e pale&#13;
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ets of a d m i s s i o n . l a case t i c k e t s are not brought&#13;
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A l l m a t t e r i n l o c a i o o t i c s c o l u m n w l l i b e c h * r n j&#13;
ed at 5 c e n t s per l i n e or f r a c t i o n t h e r e o f , f o r each&#13;
i n s e r t i o n . w h e r e n o t i m e i e specified, a l l noticed&#13;
will be i n s e r t e d until ordered d i s c o n t i n u e d , and&#13;
v i l l b e c h a r g a d for a c c o r d i n g l y . j y A l l change*&#13;
of a d v e r t i s e m e n t s MUST reach t h i s office a s e a r l ;&#13;
as T U E S D A T m o r n i n g t o i n s u r e a n i n s e r t i o n th#&#13;
s a m e w e e k .&#13;
JO'S P8ZJVTZs\G/&#13;
In a l l i t s b r a n c h e s , a specialty. We have all k i n o *&#13;
and t h e latest s t y l e s o f Type, e t c . , which enables&#13;
us t o execute a l l kinds of work, such a s Book?,&#13;
Pampleta, Posters, Programmes, Bill H e a d s , N o t e&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction B i l l s , e t c . , i n&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prioei at&#13;
low as good w o r k can be a o h e .&#13;
ALL BILL3*PATABLE FIBST OF BVKHY MONTH.&#13;
, for baby." ]: Kodol Digests What You t a t .&#13;
| Bottles only. $ 1 . 0 9 Site holding 2¼ times ths I&#13;
I size, which sells for 5 0 cents.&#13;
j P r e p a r e d by £ . a O e W I T T « t O O . . O H l O A O a&#13;
S o l d b y F . A . S i g l e r , D r u g g l l t .&#13;
i&#13;
j Arik I'M- t h e 190*&gt; Kodol almanac&#13;
; a u d 2(H) enlett&lt;lar\&#13;
j H O L L I S T E R ' S . , I Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets 1 a Busy Medicine tor Busy People.&#13;
1 Brings Golden Health and Renewed--VWOP.&#13;
I A specific for Constipation. Indigestion. L i v e r&#13;
and Kidney troubles. P i m p l e s , Eczema Impure 1 Blood. B a d Breath. Slugtfish Bowels. H e a d a c h e&#13;
I and Backache. Its Rocky Mountain T e a in t a b -&#13;
! let form. 35 cants a box. Genu ne made b y&#13;
1 H O I X I S T B B D K C G C O M P A C T . Marttsoa. w i s .&#13;
GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPLE&#13;
Railroad Guide&#13;
I n . a f f e c t - ^ . p r . 3 O , 1 S C C L .&#13;
T r a i n s l e a v e S o u t h L y o n a s f o l l o w s :&#13;
F o r D e t r o i t a n d E a s t ,&#13;
1 0 : 4 8 a . m . , 2 : 1 9 p . m . 8.'&gt;8 p . m .&#13;
F o r G r a n d R a p i d s , N o r t h a n d - W « s t , '&#13;
9 : 2 6 A . m., 2 :19 p . m . , f&gt;:ls p.'Ji'.'&#13;
F u r S a j f i u a w a n d B ; i v C i t v ,&#13;
10:4S ;i. m . , 2 : 1 9 p . i n . , $:•"* p ra .&#13;
F o r T o l e d o a n d S o u t h ,&#13;
1 0 : 4 8 a . m . , 2 : 1 9 p . m . ,&#13;
F R A N K B A V , H&#13;
Agent, Sou^h Lvon.&#13;
MOELLKK,&#13;
i. P. A., Deti&#13;
THE VILLAGF DIRECTORY&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
P B S S I D K N T E K. B r o w n&#13;
TauaTKBS Kuuen Finch, J a m e s Roche,&#13;
Will Kennedy Sr , Jauies S m i t h ,&#13;
S. J . T e e p l e , Ed. Farnum.&#13;
CLKRS. Roger C a r r -&#13;
i'REASt'BEu Mariou J. Re»p&lt;&gt;n&#13;
AebEbSOR 1&gt;. W.Murta *&#13;
sTasETJJoMaussiossH W. A. N i x o n&#13;
H E A L T L O F F I C E R Or. H. F. S i l l e r&#13;
ATTGII-NEY W. A. Carr&#13;
M A R S H A L L Wia. i l o r a u&#13;
Hrand TroHk RallwaT System.&#13;
bli\*t Bouml from r i n c k n e v&#13;
No-:?* Passenger Ex Suiu.tv. :i:'2- A . M .&#13;
&gt; o . 30 Passenger Kx. SiirulHV, 4:.S" P. M.&#13;
West Bound t'nun f'iuckufv&#13;
Xo. 27 Pa^semrer Ex. Sun l.iv, jo.Vr, .¾. &gt;f.&#13;
No. 59 Pa-sen-ei E j , Sunday. *:^t P, V•&#13;
Solid uide'vestibule trains of o a r b . ^ :tn •! rleep&#13;
iiiLT cars'lire operated t &gt;&gt; New York : and Pliila.l.']-&#13;
phiai via NUiMra Fit!I? by th&lt;' ' . T T ^ I 1'IMI''.k-1.--&#13;
hl^rh Vallcv ({cinte.&#13;
" W, H. Clark, A ^ t t t .&#13;
'"J — • — ii i,&#13;
C H U R C H E S .&#13;
Jtl £ i ' U O l &gt; l s T E F l S t U P A L C i l L ' K C U ,&#13;
&lt;k.?-a Kev. i&gt;. C. LittleioLin pjtdtor. s e r v i c e s e&gt;ei.'&#13;
si;iid&amp;\ mui'uiati at ^luiou, a n a overy S U Q J U ;&#13;
eveain'i; at T ;j*» o'clock, l'rayer m e e t i u ^ TLu. =•&#13;
day e\ euiii^s. Sunday scuooi at close o l m o r ^&#13;
TiiiTeTvrr?. &amp;+»&lt;?: -U*A¥- -V A -Vt'-tKttT-- -STTptT&#13;
iilC&#13;
p' ' O.Sci ttiiltA i iONAL, L i d l ' K C H .&#13;
•tte,' tit1.', u . \V. .Myiuf pasior. ^ervK'tevx:&#13;
SLiLi^.Ay !i.i"[i:a; t : ! • &gt;: io ^tL.a e v t r y 5UQC;i&#13;
eveuin^ at . :01. J ' C . J C S , i ' r i y e t ' u e e ; i D s T „ : :&#13;
.laj i'ven:'i^e. .-&gt;.ii»vi»y s c h o o l at v i o s e of !iiv:&#13;
.ut'serv.ue'.' Percy S^artlioni, s u p i , . . i-.v ..&#13;
1 i i f p i e "&gt;«o.&#13;
w'i'. -M A U V ' 5 'J A 1' ti O .. 1C C Li L 1W i±&#13;
O Utiv. ,M. J. Ji&gt;,:a'iier:oi-il, 1 auior. k^er\i^'.&#13;
e'.ery Sunday. J.*.• vv uiaec i i l i i o o u o i&#13;
;I1L.'I. i^aod wiiii seruion ^t ^.iua.• ui. v.'atectiis.&#13;
t J :'JO p. u;., vespers s n a iieneaiction j t '. : i f p . .&#13;
3'JCItTlES;&#13;
rmTENTS&#13;
P R O C U R E D A N D D E F E N D E D , ^ n d model,&#13;
drawing .i j ii&lt;.:...1. rt-&lt;.;» . r i .:v:i»i!.! [ • ••• report. I&#13;
Krt-e aUvii",-. h.&gt;w t o oi&lt;:.i.ui ptii-nts. ti:ui».' tuarka, |&#13;
w p y r i f ^ i t o , IN A L L C O U N T R I E S .&#13;
Busi/t,---1: diti-rt z/ith Washington seres tinuA&#13;
mfney a nj :f.\-n the pjtfnt.&#13;
Patent and Infringement Practice Exclusively.&#13;
Wrtttmr-jcnnu" to us at' ~ ~~ -&#13;
S23 Nlntli Stmt, opp TTnit«d SUtet F»taat Offlc*.&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N , D. C. GASNOW&#13;
POSTAL 4 M C ^ f V ,&#13;
THE HESS FURNAGE ! Griswold A&#13;
f.'-'S*&#13;
I&#13;
i s t h e b e s t t h i n g w e&#13;
; e v e r m a d e a n d w e ' v e&#13;
b e e n m a k i n g f u r n a c e s t h i r t y - t h r t - e y e a r s . I t i s S o l i d d t e e l —&#13;
e v e r y j o i n t r i v e t e d . N e v e r l e a k s , l i a s l i n e d c a s i n g , c h a i n&#13;
r e g u l a t i o n , e v a p o r a t i n g p a n , e t c . B u r n s a n y f u e l e c o n o m -&#13;
i c a l l y . M a d e i n s i x s i z e s ; p o w e r f u l a n d d u r a b l e .&#13;
WE SELL DIRECT TO CONSUMERS.&#13;
a n d s a v e y o u d e a l e r s ' p r o f i t s . . e n d f o r full 4 0 p a g e b o o *&#13;
w h i c h f u l l y d e s c r i b e s o u r g o o d s a n d o u r m a k e r - t o - u s e r&#13;
m e t h o d o f s e l l i n g . W e c a n s a v e y o u m o n e y i n b u y i n g a m i&#13;
f u e l i n u s i n g . Y o u r n a m e o n a p o s t a l c a r d , p l e a s e .&#13;
HESS WARMING &amp; VENTILATING COMPANY,&#13;
921 Tacoma Building, Chicago, Ills.&#13;
m«' -;t&#13;
flot ,:...1&#13;
D E ' I ' K V J :&#13;
L Rjtcs, $2, $ ' &gt; ! S3 p f t&gt;^»&#13;
1The A. O. i i . society ot tnia place, uieeta e \ e r&#13;
. tuini Suaiia\ iUine f r . Mattuew tiail.&#13;
John Tuoai^y htia M. T. Kelly, County U e i c g a t t :&#13;
1 n i i l t . u . C. 1'. U. meets the tirst Friday o f e;tih&#13;
j J. l.iouth at'J:3t. p. r.i. j»t ;:.e hoiue of i&gt;r. i i . F.&#13;
I Mgler. Evory.^ne in:we^tod in teiupcrauce i?&#13;
; coadially inviteh. Mr^. Leal Si^ier, Pre»; .M :: .&#13;
' t t t a I'uiice, ."t-tretary.&#13;
"he C. 1 • A !vc- b. soi-itn.y 0 : ; a i s p a&#13;
evr.»,j tiiira &gt;aturu!iy eveuinn in tt.e&#13;
tuew Hall. Johii 1'onohi.e, i're:/" ' 1&#13;
tUc&#13;
k&#13;
fca iv; « ' &gt;•• &lt;L...' • V $J X'^J S T&#13;
AND C V ^ ^. "'" ' ' 'V ' * 9&#13;
•TS&#13;
%» b) Urn&#13;
FOR&#13;
(*&gt;&#13;
7SS&#13;
u r e s t ; / - . ' •:•.-:•: :&gt;&#13;
T K E O A T ii.'.u i,&#13;
L E S , o r L i - J I V L V&#13;
N K ' i i 1 s O F M A C ( . ' A t l L t s .&#13;
.Met-:&#13;
Q ^ K ^ i J&#13;
erv t'ridav e . 1 ^ 1 : ^ Tnr^or : ^ : 0 : 4 - : ,&#13;
.•I tht- : .i'" :. -t' ' . . n r ball iu ihr sw:»r:/6^i i.&#13;
Visitir. 1: bro;::er&gt; :-,:&gt;•..' r.lialh irs\ il^t&#13;
v 1:. - 1 . • .\&gt; 1 1 ; 1 1 J : I fciiii L/C i r. n.i &lt;&#13;
O * A /•. O -&#13;
CJBi&#13;
] I V I U I ; ? ' 'Z. l . " J ^ . - , N&gt;-&#13;
j ; (.'Oll'!n .1 ir.o.uioi". 'i' ..&#13;
':•&lt;•;'.11 v&gt;: t\w iuooi;. i v i r t /&#13;
V . t&#13;
on r&#13;
'an »\ ink.o.&#13;
JWhJ&#13;
Disease&#13;
u n d Health&#13;
s&#13;
CUSTOM MADE&#13;
LY SCREENS Otir W o r k i s f a r S u p e r i o r t o i h o u s u a l o u t p u t o f l o c a l m i l l s , a n d l i . i s a s t y l o a n !&#13;
i n i s h luit t i l t t a i l i a b l e f r o m t h o s o w h o d o n o t m a k e a s p e c i a l t y o f s c r e e n s . S r i u l&#13;
l i s s i z r s o f door's a n d w i n d o w s . W o g u a r a n t e e a lit.&#13;
F o r o u t s i d e S c r e e n s w e u s e t h e i d e n t i c a l t i n i s h o f t h e o u t s i d e o f P u l l m a n C a r s .&#13;
T h o b e s t g r a d e o f W i r e C l o t h — e n a m e l e d , g a l v a n i z e d g e n u i n e b r o n z e , e t c . ,&#13;
f a s t e n e d b y t a c k s o r b y t h e " l o c k s t n ' p " p r o c e s s .&#13;
I n t e n d i n g p u r c h a s e r s m a y h a v e , f r e e b y m a l l , s a m p l e s o f w o o d s , f i n i s h e s&#13;
rtn.l V i : v c!-&gt;\\\ a n d c o p y o f c . t . d o ^ a n d p r i c e U^t. A g e n c i e s i n ' m a n y c i t i e s .&#13;
S p e c i a l t e r m s t o c o n t r a c t o r s a n d b u i l d e r s .&#13;
Th3 A, J . PHILLIPS COMPANY, Fenton, Michigan.&#13;
23 Yom*m* £xp**J»i90» 3 1-2 Acr— of Floor Spmo:&#13;
RE VIVO&#13;
RESTORES VITALITY&#13;
OUPL'U v.',' : A^iKUN&#13;
tl'.e Friday eww.n-.J&#13;
A A. M. ir.eot :n.-, MKS.^&#13;
"Made a&#13;
Well Man j&#13;
of Me."&#13;
v. 'i.rst&#13;
FK OF &gt;k&gt;iir.jf:N WOODMEN &gt;lee!&#13;
iKirsdny ovt/iiisj ufe.icli .Mo:'t li in&#13;
itccabt - ti.;'!. 1./1.. tlrei'.o V. t \&#13;
A I) IF&#13;
&gt; .nu&gt; •&#13;
K. &gt;). i .&#13;
. l l f . t .&#13;
l»rodiiee.H l i n e r e s u l t s f n .10 d a y * . It acts&#13;
r o w o r f u l l y andquii*l;!y. t'tires w h e n o t h e r s fail.&#13;
Vinir.x.' m e n oa:i regain thoir lost manhood a m i&#13;
old m e n tt!:iv recover tlieir v o n i b f u l \ ; &gt; o r hv&#13;
usimr I t ! • : V I V O . It m:hktV a n d K\\\W\\\ r e -&#13;
«::.\&lt;s N e r v o u s n e s s . Lost V i t a l i t v S e x u a l&#13;
\\ enhi'.o- s u ^ h u s L o s t P o w e r . F a i l i n g \ U m o r v .&#13;
W a s t i t i . 11.senses. a»ni effects of seif-abu&gt;.e or&#13;
e w ^ s ;&gt;:i.l iiHtiseretion, n h i e h imrlts o n e for&#13;
v.'.vI.\. -&gt;;:-.m-N.s o* maryhure. It l : 0 t oulv eures&#13;
: y v.artLt:^ at t h e seat of d i s e a s e , b u t is'rt v-reat , I P C V " »«»«&lt;c » « &lt; l b l o o d b u i l d e r , bringing&#13;
» \&#13;
N h i i&#13;
1'A K meet-* eaca ;.&#13;
•illo'.vi,!:^ th^ rr_ :i:&#13;
TT.-: V ' U ' i i i i s , W , M.&#13;
:it&#13;
Li&#13;
VH/.' M At,':'AlU'fcs. Mof; L-vti \ !-&#13;
lay v ..i•••! &lt;..:v.i;tL at -i:$v p .':;, ,:&#13;
,V;&gt;': i ..v; • i»t». r.i v D r . l : ; i . . y ( ;:&#13;
'\ l \ i M VA \ &gt; , ',.,1,1 v v. , i ; „ ,&#13;
't • I .IK I A ' V A i . O i'.-t 1&#13;
i.. A i u i ' t . » * r . &gt; i ,&#13;
Daek t h e p i n k g l o w t o m i l e c h e e k * a n d r e -&#13;
stonnir t h e t i r e o l y o u t h . I t w a r d s off a p -&#13;
proaehinsr d i s e a s e . I n s i s t on h a v i n g R E V I V 6 ,&#13;
S U S I N S i b S C A R D S .&#13;
H. F. S ' G L t H \ i . 0 . • 0. L. SIGLbR W .&#13;
DKS. SIiiLEK &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
r-'iyBiciaus and Siu&gt;;tM: «. A h i*li- prouuj.il&gt;&#13;
:i t &gt;adei1 to il.iy o r i i i ^ h t . &lt;KHCP on Miiuvst • 0ft&#13;
i'luckut-y, ^;i».b.&#13;
Not Buy the Best?&#13;
Good Houstktepors Uie&#13;
P. H. IRISH'S&#13;
Green Cross&#13;
EXTRACTS&#13;
VANILLA AND LEMON&#13;
which corut^v with t h e req:-ire'-'&lt;;:*s&#13;
of the .Miehi^u,puro too i law o:ie '*&#13;
t a e . m o a t stringent ;;• the eot.tu.-.'&#13;
;trt&lt; kept at a e.nifnrui standard o f&#13;
strength.&#13;
If YOl'R (,ROC:::{ ,'.. . ;, L fc,.P»&#13;
the " G R E E N C R O S S " bruiirt =-•• 1&#13;
'iofcenUand I will mail V--.II a f i i l l a o z .&#13;
IM'^ka^e ot' vMnilla or :.. r.iou, pre-paid.&#13;
Where it takt-s s o little, w h v n o t&#13;
mive the best.&#13;
_ Try it and y o u will u s e n o oth«r.&#13;
iNU.stactiou tiuaraawedt.&#13;
?:^N.\ M ANJ.^i.VS r.o o t h e r ^ I t - c a n be carried in v e s t t x x k e t . B y I&#13;
mail. ¢ 1 . 0 0 p e r pacltoffo. or s i x for $ . 1 . 0 0 . W e&#13;
•:ive free a d v i c e and counsel t o a l l w h o w i s h it, '&#13;
w h u n a r a n t e e . Circulars free. A d d r e s s ! | | f l T A D V D I I D l I P&#13;
ROYAL MEDICINE CO.. Marine Bldg.. Chicaao, IIU R U I A R T YUK L i t&#13;
Sold by P. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH. WITH SEAL&#13;
AT DISPATCH OFFICE&#13;
.,-»»&#13;
liWS&#13;
;ftf"&#13;
•V."'.&#13;
&gt;•#;&gt; V&#13;
?&gt;•'&#13;
•fe •v. ;•&#13;
!-&gt;!&lt;'&#13;
HAY FEVER&#13;
"Having uud^irunp for catarrh and&#13;
toy fever, I can recommend it to all who&#13;
0re suffering with the above diseases. /&#13;
am happy to be able Uiay it has. helped&#13;
me wonderful/?:'&#13;
—hfayme £. Smith.&#13;
BANKER IN OLSON'S CHARGE&#13;
STENSLAND TURNED OVER; TO.&#13;
CHICAGO 8TATE»8 ATTORNEY.&#13;
It&#13;
MIBB MA YMM BMITB,&#13;
444 E. Mound Street, Columbus, Ohio.&#13;
&gt; — w ^ T 4 A Y FEVER is endemic catarrh.&#13;
•^ / ^ ^ ^ ^ i i is caused by some irritating sub&#13;
stance in the atmosphere during the&#13;
late summer months. It is generally&#13;
thought that th e pollen of certain weeds&#13;
and flowers is the cause of it.&#13;
Change of locality seems to be the&#13;
only rational cure. The use of Peruna,&#13;
iowerer, stimulates the nervous system&#13;
^to resist the effect of the poisonous&#13;
-emanations and sometimes carries'the&#13;
victim through the hay fever season&#13;
without an attack of the disease.&#13;
A large number of people rely upon&#13;
Peruna for this purpose. Those who&#13;
. """•-tio not find it convenient to change&#13;
their location to avoid Hay Fever,&#13;
ould do well to give Peruna a trial.&#13;
It has proven of priceless value to&#13;
many people.&#13;
Three Great Conversationalists.&#13;
The three greatest conversationalists&#13;
with whom it has been my good&#13;
fortune to come into touch were Maz&#13;
zlni, Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes and&#13;
Bisn&amp;rk.&#13;
Of these, Pr. Holmes was the most&#13;
spirited in the ' bel esprit sense;&#13;
Bismarck the most imposing and at&#13;
the same time the most entertaining&#13;
in point of wit, sarcasm, anecdote, and,&#13;
narrative of historical Interest,&#13;
brought out with rushing vivacity and&#13;
with lightning-like illumination of&#13;
conditions, facts and men. *&#13;
In Mazzinl words there breathed&#13;
such a warmth and depth of coavlc-.&#13;
tion, such enthusiasm of faith in the&#13;
sacredness of the principles pro*&#13;
fesaed and of the aims pursued by&#13;
!him, that it was difficult to resist such&#13;
a power of fascination.—Carl Schur*&#13;
in McClure's Magazine.&#13;
President Takes Hand in Bringing Fugitive&#13;
to Justice—May Return&#13;
on Refrigerating Ship.&#13;
Chicago.—Paul O. Stensland is&#13;
absolutely tn the custody of Assistant&#13;
State's Attorney Harry Olson at&#13;
Tangier, Morocco. This information&#13;
was obtained in a cablegram from Mr.&#13;
Olson, received Friday by Acting&#13;
State's Attorney Barbour, as follows:&#13;
"Stensland turned over to me."&#13;
The brevity of the dispatch leaves&#13;
much to conjecture, but Mr. Barbour&#13;
oelievos that Mr. Olson has brushed&#13;
iside all difficulties aud is in a position&#13;
to start for home with his prisoner&#13;
as soon as a ship is available.&#13;
The action of the United States&#13;
•epresentatives at Tangier In turning&#13;
Stensland over to Mr. Olson is beiieved-&#13;
to 4&gt;©-due to the cable gram sent&#13;
'rom the state department at Washngton,&#13;
in accordance with the inductions&#13;
of President Roosevelt.&#13;
The president wired from Oyster&#13;
3ay that he desired the department&#13;
)f state to go to any necessary ex*&#13;
'ent in the effort to bring Stensland to&#13;
yjstlce, adding:&#13;
'He is one of the most obnoxious&#13;
:ypes of criminals. He robbed hunlreds&#13;
of very poor people, and is&#13;
laid to have caused several sulfides."&#13;
The present indications are that&#13;
Stensland will return to America on&#13;
he United States refrigerating ship'&#13;
ilacier, unless some better method of&#13;
xansportation is1 found by Mr. 01-&#13;
*on. *&#13;
It is undesirable to take the pris-&#13;
)ner through any foreign country, for&#13;
tear of possible extradition entanglements.&#13;
The ship Glacier, if it is available,&#13;
will solve the problem, for this&#13;
ressel is expected to sail direct for&#13;
the United States without stopping on&#13;
:he way.&#13;
Nothing 8uecstds Liks "EGG-0-8EE."&#13;
The man who preaches the best&#13;
sermon; the man who tells the funniest&#13;
stories; the man who keeps the&#13;
best store, or the map who makes&#13;
the best goods, soon finds that people&#13;
come to him. Merit is the best advertisement&#13;
in the world. People&#13;
speak well of things they know are&#13;
good. They pass the good word&#13;
along.&#13;
The best breakfast food-is "EGQ-OSEE,&#13;
for it contains all the life-giving&#13;
properties pf nature's best food,&#13;
which is Wheafr&#13;
EGG-O-SEE is deeply in debt to&#13;
the thousands of wives and mothers&#13;
who use it in their homes, for these&#13;
good women tell their neighbors about&#13;
this great food.&#13;
Children and aged persons alike&#13;
are friends of EGG-O-SEE.&#13;
Merit and common sense are things&#13;
that advertise EGG-O-SEE most.&#13;
EGG-O-SEE is cheap. A 10-cent package&#13;
contains ten liberal breakfasts.&#13;
EGG-O-SEE is sold everywhere.&#13;
Grocers must keep it if they want&#13;
to keep their good customers, for good&#13;
customers insist oh buying EGG-OSEE.&#13;
The fact that no preparation, no&#13;
cooking, is required, makes EGG-OSEE&#13;
very popular. Open the package;&#13;
put in as much as you like in&#13;
a dish; pour on milk or cream and&#13;
eat. It is delicious. It is wholesome.&#13;
It makes you strong.&#13;
A lot of&#13;
EGG-OsSEE&#13;
book form entitled, "—back to nature."&#13;
This book also has a course of physical&#13;
culture—fully illustrated. Anyone&#13;
wishing this book will receive it&#13;
free by addressing EGG-O-SEE Company,&#13;
10 First St., Qnincy, 111..&#13;
STOP, WOilAN!&#13;
AND CONSIDER THE&#13;
AU.-IMPORTANT&#13;
FACT&#13;
\&#13;
That in addressing Mrs. Pinkham you&#13;
are confiding your private ills to a woman&#13;
—a woman whose experience with women&#13;
s diseases covers twenty-five years.&#13;
The present Mrs. Pinkham is the&#13;
daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham,&#13;
and for many years under her direction,&#13;
and since her decease,her advice has been&#13;
freely given to sick women.&#13;
Many women suffer in alienee and drift along&#13;
from bad to worse, knowing full well that they&#13;
ought to have immediate assistance, but a natural&#13;
modesty impels them to shrink from exposing themselves&#13;
to the questions and probable examinations&#13;
of even their family physician. It is unnecessary.&#13;
Without money or price you can consult a woman&#13;
whose knowledge from actual experience is great.&#13;
Mrs. PInkham'i Standing Invitation:&#13;
Women suffering from any form of female weakness&#13;
are invited to promptly communicate with Mrs.&#13;
Pinkham at Lynn, Mass. All letters are received,&#13;
opened, read and answered by women only. A&#13;
interesting facts about woman can freely talk of her private illness to a&#13;
have been published in woman; thus has been established the eternal&#13;
confidence between Mrs. Pinkham and the women&#13;
of America which has never 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 knowledge&#13;
that will help your case. She asks nothing&#13;
in return except your good-will, and&#13;
her advice has relieved thousands. Surely&#13;
any woman, rich or poor, is very foolish if&#13;
she does not take advantage of this generous&#13;
offer of assistance.—Lydia E. Pink*&#13;
ham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass*&#13;
,'»~ .&#13;
TT&lt;S*s- 'LV'-&#13;
MEXICO'S VAST SODA LAKES.&#13;
The Government Will Not Dispose of&#13;
Them to Anyone.&#13;
/&#13;
r&#13;
/ . /&#13;
/ /&#13;
V, ,&#13;
II&#13;
SENATOR DEPEW NEARLY WELL&#13;
Will Return to His Seat in Congress&#13;
Early in December.&#13;
' - - T h e - L i m i t .&#13;
Lawaon—What a rash fellow Bjenkins&#13;
is.&#13;
Dawson—Rash! I should say so!&#13;
"Why, Bjenkins would even offer to be&#13;
one of the judges at a baby show.—&#13;
Somerville Journal.&#13;
STOMACH PAINS&#13;
Dr Williams' Pink Pills Brought Re*&#13;
lief, and Cure for Splitting&#13;
Headaches as Well.&#13;
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, a remedy&#13;
"Which has beeu before the American people&#13;
for a generation, is still accomplish*&#13;
iug wonderful results as is evidenced by&#13;
the following interview with Mrs. Ra-&#13;
&gt; chael Gardner, of Wiisey, Kaus,&#13;
"It was very strange," she says, "I&#13;
never conld tell what caused it aud&#13;
• neither could auybody else. For a long&#13;
• time I had tad spells with my stomach.&#13;
" The pain would commence about my&#13;
heart aud was so deadly agonizing that I&#13;
"would have to scream aloud. Sometimes&#13;
it would last several hours and I would&#13;
have to take laudanum to stop it. Besides&#13;
this I had a headache almost constantly,&#13;
day and night, that nearly crazed&#13;
me, so yon see I suffered a great deal.&#13;
Aud when I think of the agony I ensured&#13;
it still makes me shudder.&#13;
" 'Doctors,'did you say? Their medicine&#13;
made me sicker. I couldn't take it&#13;
aud I kept growing worse until a frieud&#13;
advised me to take Dr. Williams' Pink&#13;
Pills, and I did. I began to feel better&#13;
aud was soon wholly converted to this&#13;
wonderful medicine. It did me more&#13;
good than I had ever hoped for. I kept&#13;
on with the pills and now I recommend&#13;
them to all who suffer.' *&#13;
. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have cured&#13;
severe casesof indigestion, bloodlessuess,&#13;
influeuza, headaches, backaches, lumbago,&#13;
sciatica, neuralgia, nervousness&#13;
-aud spinal weakuess. The genuine Dr.&#13;
Williams' Pink Pills are guaranteed to&#13;
be free from opiates or any harmful&#13;
• drugs and cannot injure themoei delicate&#13;
, system. At all druggists, or from the&#13;
Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady,&#13;
N.T., postpaid on receipt of price, 6C&#13;
-cents per box, six boxes for $3.50.&#13;
New York, Sept. 8.—When congress&#13;
cneets at the beginning of next December&#13;
Senator Chauncey M. Depew will&#13;
3e found in his seat. This assurance&#13;
was made by a member of his family.&#13;
"Senator Depew's recovery has been&#13;
slow, but the gains he has made have&#13;
been held," he said. "At no" time within&#13;
the last year has he been in such&#13;
good health and spirits, and the doctors&#13;
assert that if the improvement&#13;
continues he will be equal to the&#13;
strain, of another session of congress."&#13;
For several month* Senator Depew&#13;
has been in retirement at his home&#13;
in Dubbs Ferry. The nature of his,-&#13;
nmlady ha» Assrer seen made known,&#13;
but was generally understood to have&#13;
been in the nature of a nervous break&#13;
down.&#13;
ALLEGES CARRIERS ARE UNFAIR&#13;
Wichita (Kan.) Company Appeals to&#13;
Interstate Commission.&#13;
Washington.—Three petitions, were&#13;
flled Thursday with the interstate&#13;
commerce commission by the Johnson-&#13;
Larimer Dry Goods company, of&#13;
Wichita, Kan., against the Mallory&#13;
line of steamers sailing out of New&#13;
York, the Atchison, Topeka &amp; Santa&#13;
Fe railway, the Wabash, and about 40&#13;
other lines, alleging unjust, unreasonable&#13;
and discriminatory rates on cotton&#13;
fabrics and knit goods shipped to&#13;
Wichita, as against the rates accorded&#13;
various shipping centers in the west.&#13;
The interstate commerce commission&#13;
made public an order calling&#13;
upon the railroads of the country for&#13;
information in regard to block signaling&#13;
practice: and electric signaling appliances.&#13;
The Information is asked&#13;
in order that the commission may&#13;
comply with a Joint resolution passed&#13;
at the last session of congress.&#13;
Death in Vat of Hot Water.&#13;
Detroit, Mich.—John Mielke, laborer&#13;
at the plant of the Railway Steel company,&#13;
is dead after having beep parboiled&#13;
in a pit of hot water. Mielke's&#13;
shoes had become greasy from walking&#13;
about the engine room and as he&#13;
was passing the pit, which received&#13;
the boiling water from the cylinders&#13;
of the engine, he slipped and fell&#13;
headlong into the scalding liquid.&#13;
He was entirely immersed, being&#13;
practically parboiled from&#13;
foot and for five hours suffered most&#13;
intense agony until death brought relief.&#13;
Mexico is the possessor of such&#13;
vast and valuable soda lakes that the&#13;
government refuses to dispose of them&#13;
to anyone or at any price. President&#13;
Diaz believing that they are yet to become&#13;
sources of enormous income to&#13;
the country, just as the nitrate of soda&#13;
beds are to Chini.&#13;
At only one other place in the world&#13;
is natural soda found under conditions&#13;
which admit of industrial development,&#13;
and even there it must be&#13;
shipped hundreds of miles by rail and&#13;
many tons of water must be evaporated,&#13;
by. coal to obtain a ton of the&#13;
product.&#13;
But at the Bay of Adair, only a mile&#13;
from the coast of Lower California,&#13;
under the blazing sun of the desert, lie&#13;
vast lakes of crystals of carbonate of&#13;
soda,, with the appea range of masses&#13;
of snow and ice, but from which will&#13;
be made millions of tons of soap and&#13;
other millions of tons of glass.&#13;
The world's consumption amounts&#13;
to hundreds of thousands of tons annually,&#13;
and nearly all of it is manufactured&#13;
from common salt with the use&#13;
of expensive machinery, while at&#13;
Adair bay nature does all the work in&#13;
producing an article worth $75 per&#13;
ton. It is estimated that there is&#13;
enough soda on top of the ground to&#13;
produce 100 tons a day for 75 years.&#13;
Following we publish two letters&#13;
from a woman who accepted&#13;
this invitation. Note the&#13;
result:&#13;
First letter.&#13;
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—&#13;
" For eight years I have suffered something&#13;
terrible every month. The pains are excruciating&#13;
and 1 can hardly stand them. My&#13;
doctor says I have a severe female trouble,&#13;
and I must go through an operation if I want&#13;
to get well. I do not want to submit toft if&#13;
I can possibly help it Flesse toll nw what&#13;
to do. I hope yon can relieve me,"—Mrs,&#13;
Mary Dimmick, Wtta and K. Capitol Streets,&#13;
Washington, D. C.&#13;
Second letter.&#13;
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:~ i4 After following carefully your advfeev&#13;
and taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound^ I am very anxious to Bend you&#13;
my testimonial, that others may know tfieir&#13;
value and what you have done for me.&#13;
i&#13;
"As you know, I wrote you that my doctor&#13;
said I must have an operation or I could not&#13;
live, ,1 then wrote you, telling yon my ailments.&#13;
I followed your advice and am entirely&#13;
well. I can walk miles without an&#13;
ache or a pain, and I owe any life to yon and&#13;
to Lydia B. Pmkham's Vegetable Compound.&#13;
I wish every suffering woman would read&#13;
this testimonial and realize the vahwof writ*&#13;
big to you and your remedy."—Mm Mary&#13;
Dimmick, 59th and £. Capitol Streets, Washington,!).&#13;
C.&#13;
When a medicine has been successful&#13;
in restoring to health so many women&#13;
whose testimony is so unquestionable,&#13;
yon'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 £. PInkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound at once^andjurrite Mrs Pinkham,&#13;
Ly rrn. Mass., for special adviceit&#13;
is free and always. helpiuL&#13;
K M&#13;
Building Falls; Two Killed.&#13;
Elyria, O. — Two men were&#13;
Killed, two tatally injured, five seriously&#13;
injured and several others slightly&#13;
hurt by the falling of the second floor&#13;
of the new factory building of the&#13;
Garford company, under construction&#13;
hero, Thursday. Sixteen workmen oh&#13;
the first floor of the building w e&#13;
caught beneath the fall of heavy tite,&#13;
brick and fit eel beams, at. the wrecked&#13;
floor. •"-" •&#13;
Differences.&#13;
"You haven/t the old buildings nor&#13;
the development of the drama that we&#13;
have," said the European.&#13;
"No," answered the American. "1&#13;
suppose it's due to the fact that our&#13;
building inspectors and police look at&#13;
things differently."&#13;
HOW MANY OF US?&#13;
Tact. '&#13;
He had crossed her and she waa&#13;
in a dangerous mood.&#13;
"See!" she hissed, pointing her finger&#13;
at him, ''see how you have worked&#13;
up my feelings. Why, I am purple&#13;
with rage."&#13;
But the young man only smiled.&#13;
"So becoming," he mused, softly.&#13;
"What is becoming, sir?"&#13;
"Why, the purple. It just matches&#13;
that purple wai3t you have on."&#13;
And the next moment she was all&#13;
smiles and telling her girl friends that&#13;
George was^the cleverest chau la the !&#13;
world.&#13;
Fail to Select Food Nature Demands&#13;
to Ward Off Ailments.&#13;
A Ky. lady, speaking about food,&#13;
says: "I was accustomed to eating&#13;
all kinds of ordinary food until, for&#13;
some reason, indigestion and nervous&#13;
prostration set in.&#13;
"After I had run down seriously my&#13;
attention was called to the necessity&#13;
of some change in my diet, and I discontinued&#13;
my ordinary breakfast and&#13;
began using Grape-Nuts with a good&#13;
quantity of rich cream.&#13;
"In a few days my condition&#13;
changed in a remarkable way, and I&#13;
began to have a strength that I had&#13;
never been possessed of before, a&#13;
vigor of body and a poise of mind&#13;
that amazed me. It was entirely new&#13;
in my experience.&#13;
"My former attacks of indigestion&#13;
had been accompanied by heat flashes,&#13;
and many times my condition was distressing,&#13;
with blind spells of dtaainess,&#13;
head to 1 r u s n °f blood to the head and neuralgic&#13;
pains in the cheat.&#13;
"Since using Grape-Nuts, alone for&#13;
breakfast I have been free from these&#13;
troubles, except at times when I have&#13;
indulged in' rich, greasy foods In&#13;
quantity,.then 4 ^onld^h^ warned by&#13;
a pain under the left ihoujder blade,&#13;
and unless I heeded the; warning the&#13;
old trouble would come back, hut&#13;
when J finally got- tor know where&#13;
these troubles originated.I returned&#13;
to«my'^rape-Nuts and cream and the&#13;
pain andolHBturbtnce'.le^ very quickly.&#13;
"I am now in TJrime health as a result&#13;
of my use dt Graee«Ntrts." Name&#13;
"Cut out hot cream of tartar biscuit"&#13;
used to be a common, every-day&#13;
remark among physicians when die*&#13;
cussing items of diet for their patients.&#13;
But alum baking powder biscuits&#13;
are never mentioned in this respect.&#13;
Why? Because it's the cream&#13;
of tartar that is objectionable and injurious,&#13;
and yet there are some people&#13;
who to-day continue to use the old&#13;
cream of tartar baking powder, and&#13;
wonder why they are always, ailing.&#13;
His 8cheme Worked&#13;
It is related that a certain man was&#13;
recently very sad because his wife&#13;
had gone out of town on a visit,&#13;
which she would not shorten tn spite&#13;
of hla appeals to her to come home.&#13;
He finally hit upon a plan to induce&#13;
her to return. He sent her a copy of&#13;
each of the local papers with one Item&#13;
clipped out, and when she wrote to&#13;
find out what it was he had clipped&#13;
out he refused to tell her.&#13;
The scheme worked admirably! In&#13;
less than a week she was home to&#13;
find out what it waa that had been&#13;
going on that her husband didn't want&#13;
her to know about.—Pittsburg Press.&#13;
t&#13;
i&#13;
{ mmmmmmmmmmmm&#13;
MAKES BEAUTY&#13;
Among the ladies no other medicine&#13;
has ever had so strong a. following,&#13;
because, excepting pure&#13;
air and exercise, it is the source of&#13;
mora beautiful complexions than&#13;
any other agency, as&gt; Lane's Family&#13;
Medicine&#13;
the tonic-laxative. It puts"7-puro1 ]&#13;
', bloodrhrthe veins, and no woman&#13;
can be homely when the xmh, red&#13;
bloado£healih.(Muxaesiatervteins.&#13;
* SeMbjralldTealersa* 25c andl sot.&#13;
SMS**1SM*MBSSS*SS^^&#13;
90,000,000&#13;
BUSHELS&#13;
Fret- tana** 1¾ crap*, teur tasta, healthy&#13;
climate* food churcbe» aad acflbaUy splendid&#13;
railway aenrice.&#13;
Tk»C*aadi»u Gorafawent «#tf»MO acres of&#13;
laad free to every aettker wiUWr aod able to&#13;
comply with Ibe Homestead Ktfiuaiioes.&#13;
Advice and taforaaatioa may t e obtained free&#13;
froaa W. D. Scott Superinteadcat of Imrai-&#13;
Low Rates to the Northwest.&#13;
Every day until Oct. 31st the Great&#13;
Northern Railway will sell one way&#13;
Colonists' Tickets from Chicago at the&#13;
following low rates:&#13;
To Seattle, Portland and Western&#13;
Washington, .$33.00. Spokane, $30.50.&#13;
Equally low rates to Montana, Idaho,&#13;
Oregon and British Columbia.&#13;
For further information address&#13;
MAX BASS, General Immigration&#13;
Agent, 220 So. Clark St., Chicago, 111.&#13;
Army Quickly Mobilize?.&#13;
In the Prance-German war Germany&#13;
mobilized an army of 500,000 man la&#13;
a fortnight&#13;
Foreb.l.MM.^r_sn.- a Wt.-a_at.nt Mataotw, a*osf Staoasottfchalfsu*m Ss.iyr,arrdauadpoa.M bv&#13;
fliawanns,al&gt;ayipaIa,caisawlaa&lt;o»lu. tfftoa-beUte.&#13;
Bven by ,?oituw Cp« Bs^Uo,Creek,,j , It's as difficult to find a friend M It&#13;
kh. Is to loaf M enemy,&#13;
ewncsnRN&#13;
CAIA04 IBIS TEAR&#13;
Thra-wiUfc a*m#tT 80,-&#13;
OS0,0S»b«sh«laot oata&#13;
find rtJObfia* baesal* of baTley meaaa a cootuteatioejas'&#13;
ttwAtiaaeafoetbft-facBiaea.of Wealition,&#13;
Ottawa, Canada; or from authorised&#13;
Ageu&#13;
4 Avenue Theatre Block, Detroit, Michigan ; or&#13;
rrati&#13;
Canadian Government Ageut*—M. V. Mclnnaa,&#13;
fc Avenue Theatre Block, Detroit, Michiga&#13;
C i . Laariee. Sault bte, Marie. Michigan.&#13;
—— m You CANNOT CURE alt inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal coe&gt;&#13;
ditions of the mucous membrane suckasV ^av&#13;
na*alcatarrh,uterlnecatarrh&lt;^saMM|HFv&#13;
by feminine ills, sore thr* *»»• ^ ^&#13;
month or inflamed eye*&#13;
dosing the stomach. '&#13;
But you surely can care the__ _ _&#13;
affections by local treatment wish&#13;
Paxtlne Toilet Antiseptic&#13;
which destroys the disease gern*s,chetslsV^&#13;
discharges, stops pain, and heals * s &gt; f&#13;
inflammation and soreness. h Paxtine represents the most success**!&#13;
local treatment for feminine Ills ever&#13;
produced. Thousands of women testify&#13;
to this fact 50 coats at druggists.&#13;
Send for Free Trial Bos&#13;
t n ft. FABT9* CQ&gt;&#13;
• ' *&#13;
&gt;..&#13;
•aal •SSBSBSI&#13;
%$#m^w^^&#13;
»-*»r ^:^¾. ^ ' s * 1 " * . ••••.•&#13;
SICK FQft TtN YtARft,&#13;
Constant taekecfce, Drupey -end Severn&#13;
Madder Trouble.&#13;
Fred W. Harris, of Cbetjt$6t 81., Jefferson,&#13;
Otto, says: J ^ O T ' (mtr ten&#13;
yeare liufte^difrom&#13;
?tktoej|4liosa&lt;. The&#13;
b^pfter my feet&#13;
haute would]&#13;
ren awl remain&#13;
(puffed ue for days att&#13;
^a time. I seenWd&#13;
to have a fcotrttatit&#13;
backache. Finally I&#13;
got sc bad that I&#13;
was laid uajdfc bed&#13;
* witfc wveral dcejtors&#13;
1 » «ttendan&lt;*}&amp; I Uo&amp;rttr '*$»/*&gt;' I&#13;
wculd die. Jphan«e4 medicine aafl began&#13;
using D t o ' i Jtidpejr Piila when I&#13;
was still in,M|ed. The relief I found&#13;
was so grea\ that * Jcept on mxtil I&#13;
ted taken tfeout ten 'boxes. The kid-&#13;
»tlons became natural and&#13;
^o/misery I was cined. I&#13;
in weight, and show&#13;
- t°Wf &lt;tf&gt;my former tmuble."&#13;
! i$y dU dealers, 50 cents m b&#13;
3TrMIlbum Co., Buffalo, N. Y,&#13;
*l)o.ve^\*ahik it pays country people&#13;
to s^ajre in city boarders?" "Certainty,&#13;
;«« Hom as the boardens dontt&#13;
find 'it iout:,!-^Baltlmore Americsm.&#13;
IFKBBLESS DYES cohw&#13;
Bilk, Weol .and Cotton at one boiling,&#13;
tfafit, beaatifuLoolors. lOe per pavkajre.&#13;
4nto a Plow.&#13;
Duftng the'centennial cejebnrttonitn&#13;
rhlladeiph^Hn'l^Tff the memtoers of&#13;
the CtoiversnVPeaee nston assembled&#13;
iro celebrate the tenth anniversary of&#13;
i b e foundation of the order.&#13;
A tromber 'df ameers and dewjendants&#13;
«of -officers give, their swords to&#13;
•he made into &lt;a plow as a symbol df&#13;
•peaee. The weapons were afterward&#13;
fashioned into &lt;a homely agricultural&#13;
implement, Whtdh, however, insteaaof&#13;
feeing a frtow, -took the shape of tine&#13;
ordinary field 'cultivator.&#13;
This etrttrvwrtor may now be seen tin&#13;
tbe half art Geneva, Switzerland. Oner&#13;
it Is an twscrrption giving the history&#13;
of the imptettieiit&#13;
* r * " ••• " '* i - •&#13;
Twelve Good Rules.&#13;
Speaking of rule*: Do you remember&#13;
or can you recollect the "Twelve&#13;
Good Roles" of King Charles I.? They&#13;
are worth pasting i s your hat for&#13;
doily perusal, in case jnou do not care&#13;
to memorise them:&#13;
1. Urge no healths.&#13;
2. Profane no divine ordinance.&#13;
3. Touch no state matters.&#13;
4. Reveal no secrets.&#13;
6. Pick no quarrels.&#13;
6. Make no comparisons.&#13;
7. Maintain no ill opinions.&#13;
8. Keep no bad company.&#13;
9. Encourage no vice.&#13;
10. Make no long meals.&#13;
11. Repeat no grievances.&#13;
12. Lay no wagers.—New York&#13;
Press.&#13;
TERRIBLE SCALY ECZEMA.&#13;
The *o* of Lea*&#13;
r VPi *re wdfet «b epeak o£ la*"era&#13;
as tfcfe "age of Iron,* and Wat* i s no&#13;
gaJMsaying that, industrially speaking,&#13;
ire* is a "pfeclous metal*&#13;
Keverthetese, few people realise&#13;
bjow usefei, 1J not absolutely necee-&#13;
«ary, to s&amp;odern civiltaettkm, is that&#13;
other xntttal, lead. Sett, yielding,&#13;
pliable, ft is not much like Its sister&#13;
metal, tout those distinguishing qualities&#13;
art) what give it ssfch a promineoft&#13;
place ftn the arts and industries.&#13;
Modern plumbing, (requiring msxy&#13;
turnings and twistsngs, but wKfcal&#13;
tight Joints, would &lt;be almost impossible)&#13;
without lead (pipe. The greatest&#13;
(civilizing agent Jin the world—the&#13;
printing art—is absolutely dependent&#13;
on lead. Hand-e*t type, liaetype&#13;
"slugs," monotype type — all are&#13;
nrnde of compositions of which lead&#13;
is the chief component—to say nothing&#13;
of the bearings in the presses 4B&#13;
well as all other ftinds of machinery&#13;
•in which "babbitt"' metal is used.&#13;
Solder is another lead product—&#13;
&lt;what a field of usefulness that one&#13;
form opens up.&#13;
Then there Is rthe most important&#13;
use of all to which lead is put—paint,&#13;
that necessary material whidfc keeps&#13;
our houses looking pretty—inside&#13;
and out—and preserves them from&#13;
decay.&#13;
How many of es thank metal he lead&#13;
for the comfort* &lt;of paint? ff*t the&#13;
best house paint 'is nothing ihat metallic&#13;
lead corroded by acid to;a white&#13;
powder known s» "white leaoT Of&#13;
course, there are many imitations of&#13;
"white lead," some of which are sold&#13;
as white lead and some which are&#13;
offered by the name of reaflr-prepared&#13;
paint under the familiar pretense&#13;
that they axe "just as goof" as&#13;
white lead. But all good pais* is&#13;
made of the metal,'lead, corroded and&#13;
ground to a fine iwbite powder And&#13;
mixed with linseed coll.&#13;
White lead is a!«o used in the coating&#13;
of fine oil clotfhs and for msiiy&#13;
purposes besides paint.&#13;
"Red lead" is smother product &lt;nt&#13;
•metallic lead and Is &lt;what Is known as&#13;
an oxide of lead, being produced bf&#13;
-burning the metal. (Bed lead is the&#13;
best paint known to preserve Iron,&#13;
steel or tin, and is «sed largely in&#13;
ipsikiting metal, structure*, such as&#13;
•skyscraper "skeletons, jmllls and&#13;
brttises.&#13;
There are many other products of&#13;
the metal lead, such as litharge,&#13;
oraage mineral, etc., which are essential&#13;
to many of the a,rt« In which&#13;
we never imagine that lead would be&#13;
of the least use.&#13;
Verily, we live in an age of lead&#13;
as well as of Iron.&#13;
Eruptions Appeared on Chest, and&#13;
Face and .Neck Were-All Broken&#13;
Out—Cured by Cuticura. •&#13;
' "I had an eruption appear on my&#13;
ch~5St~and body and- extend upwardsand&#13;
downwards, so that my neck and&#13;
face were all broken out; also my&#13;
arms and the lower limbs as far as&#13;
the knees. j.J at.first thought it was&#13;
prickly heat. But scon scales or&#13;
crusts formed where the breaking out&#13;
was. Instead of going to a physician I&#13;
purchased a Complete treatment of th&amp;&#13;
Cuticura RemedieSi in which I h.u£&#13;
great faith,, and all*'was satisfaetojjy.'&#13;
A year or two' later the eruption Appeared&#13;
again, only a little lower; but&#13;
before it had time to spread I procured&#13;
another supply of the Cuticura&#13;
Remedies, and continued their wise until&#13;
the cure was complete. It is now&#13;
five years since the last attack, and&#13;
have not seejri any sighs of a return.&#13;
I have more faith in Outicura Remedies&#13;
for skin diseases than anything&#13;
I know of. w Emma E. Wilson, Liscomb,&#13;
Iowa, Oct. 1, 1905."&#13;
States of Brazil.&#13;
Politically, Brazil is divided into 21&#13;
states (Including the federal district),&#13;
but so unequal is the division that&#13;
three of these embrace practically her&#13;
entire lowlands, as well as a portion&#13;
of the western uplands, and exceed&#13;
in area the remaining 18, which lie&#13;
Within the highland region, except&#13;
for their narrow margins upon the&#13;
coast. These latter, however, contain&#13;
more than 96 per cent, of the population.&#13;
Superb Service, Splendid Scenery&#13;
en route to Niagara Falls, Muskoka&#13;
and Kawartha Lakes, Georgian Bay&#13;
and Temegami Region, St. Lawronco&#13;
River and Rapids, Thousand Islands,&#13;
Algonquin National Park, White Mountains&#13;
and Atlantic Sea Coast resorts,&#13;
via Grand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Double track Chicago to Montreal and&#13;
Niagara Falls, N. Y.&#13;
For copies of tourist publication85&#13;
and descriptive pamphlets apply to&#13;
C'o. ?* Vaux, A. G. P. &amp; T. A., 135&#13;
Adams St., Chicago.&#13;
*&#13;
Lincoln as a Lawyer.&#13;
. A leader of the Lincoln party .told&#13;
the other day in Philadelphia a story&#13;
of the astuteness of Lincoln SB a&#13;
lawyer.&#13;
"When Lincoln was practising law,"&#13;
he said, "he had a case involving a&#13;
disputed will. The opposition claimed&#13;
the will was MHF$kne and for several&#13;
hours ^djbucey prt&gt;of of this. For&#13;
Lincoln, who had to prove the will a&#13;
forgery, thin# loafed 1MM*. *' • *"*&#13;
"Lincoln, however, only called one&#13;
witness, a retired paper manufacturrenowned&#13;
the country over for&#13;
Wealth and probity.&#13;
Ttr. Dash/ Lincoln said to this&#13;
eevj^pding him the disputed&#13;
wfiL; -9Msv*hold that paper up to&#13;
the MtM writ tell us what is the water&#13;
Tfiarkep.tt.' ;&#13;
* The water mark of my own firm,&#13;
Co.,' the witness answered.&#13;
begin to&#13;
ture paper?'&#13;
'•"Itt HIV,,.", M 'And wtyU't, the date of the docu&#13;
meat'in your fca*d&gt;r&#13;
"'Auiue* JX 4*ae.V&#13;
"Th&gt;t is^ enough. Gentlenea of the jury i F t k ' l i doeed.'"&#13;
e^p^sa^s^s^ ex»&#13;
^**Hfoen did your firm&#13;
No Fear.&#13;
"Bridget," said Mrs. Hiram Offer,&#13;
sternly, "on my way home just now I&#13;
saw that policeman who was in the&#13;
kitchen with you so long last evening,&#13;
and I took occasion to speak to him—"&#13;
"Oh! shuve, that's all roight, ma'am,"&#13;
interrupted Bridget, "Oi'm not jealous.&#13;
Oi hov him cinched."&#13;
Physicians Recommend Castoria&#13;
CASTQ3QA has met with pronounced favor on the port of physicians, phanaa^&#13;
oeu&amp;al societies and medical authorities. It is used by physicians with&#13;
results most gratifying, l i e extended use of Gastoria is Bnqi»sti0nahlf tfie^&#13;
result of three facts: /a**—The indisputable evidenoe that it is hanrrtaa:;&#13;
^•oew-That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, trat atatiailatee&#13;
fiie food: ntw—J% is an agreeable and perfect substitute .for Castor Oil&#13;
It is absolutely safe. , B does not contain any Opium! Morphine, (^ other na»otw&#13;
and toes not stupefy.lit is unlike Soothing Syrups, Batematfs Dr^&amp;Godfeey^s&#13;
Carfial, eta, This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say• Onr duty^how^&#13;
ero^ is to (expose danger and record the means of advancing health, l i e dayv&#13;
to poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. To&#13;
oar knowledge) Castaria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by&#13;
ngnlating l i e system—not by Stupefying it—-and our readers are entitled to&#13;
the Jnformation.---HGi2^ Journal of BealtJu&#13;
Letters from Prominent Physidans&#13;
addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher.&#13;
D t . 3 . Halstead Scott, «CChiceco, His., says: "I have prescribed y e a r&#13;
Castorla often for infants daring my practice, and find it very satisfactory."'&#13;
Dr. William Belmont, cf Cleveland, Ohio, says: "Tour Castorla stands •&#13;
first in Its class. In my thirty years of practice I can say I never have&#13;
found anything that so filled the place."&#13;
Dr. J. H. Taft, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: "1 nave need your Castorla and '&#13;
fotmd it an excellent remedy m my household and private practice for&#13;
masgr^ears. The formula Is excellent&#13;
D t S . J . Hamlen, of Detroit, Jdich., says: "I prescribe your Castorla&#13;
extensively, as I nave never found anything to equal It for children's&#13;
troubles. I am aware that there are imitations in the field, but I always&#13;
see that my patients get Fletcher's.''&#13;
Dr.Win. J McCrann, of Omaha, Neb., says: "As the father of thirteen&#13;
children I certainly know something about your great medicine, and aside&#13;
from any own family experience I have in my years of practice found Castorla&#13;
a popular and efficient remedy in almost every home."&#13;
Dr. £ . B . Clausen, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: "The name that your Castorla&#13;
has made for itself in the tens of thousands of homes blessed by the&#13;
presence cf children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by the endorsement&#13;
of the medical profession, but I, for one, most heartily endorse It and&#13;
believe it an excellent remedy."&#13;
Dr. R. 1L 'Ward, of Kansas City, Mo., 6ays: "Physicians generally do not&#13;
prescribe proprietary preparations, but in the case of Castorla my experience,&#13;
like Chat of many other" physicians, has taught me to make an ex*&#13;
ception. t prescribe your Castorla in my practice because I have found i t&#13;
to be a thoroughly reliable remedy for children's complalnjts. Any physician&#13;
who has raised a family, as I have, will join me in heartiest reconv&#13;
mendatlon of Castorla."&#13;
GENUINE C A S T O R I A ALWAYS&#13;
Bean the Signature oi&#13;
The Kind You Have Always Bought&#13;
In Use For Over 3 0 Years.&#13;
TMK •CMTAMM € • « * * &lt; • « . TV B V a M V • T O U T , NtW VOMK PCTT.&#13;
War on Liquor and Tobacco.&#13;
The Kansas Anti-Liquor 'Society has&#13;
adopted a new plan to light the liquor&#13;
traffic. It is mailing free a recipe for the&#13;
cure of the liquor habit. It can be given&#13;
tsecrctlv in coffee or food. Also one for&#13;
the toDaoco habit that can be given secretly.&#13;
The only request they make is&#13;
that you do not sell the recipes, but give&#13;
free copies to friends. Their address is&#13;
Room 19, Gray Bldg., Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
Arrangements were made to takes&#13;
sunlight photograph at the. bottom of&#13;
the shaft of a mine 2,000 feet deep&#13;
at Sombrerete, in Mexico, on June 21,&#13;
the only day in the year when the&#13;
sun shines there. Even then its rays&#13;
touch the bottom of the mine for only&#13;
three minutes.&#13;
8outh Africa's Qold Production.&#13;
Tbe production of gold in the mines&#13;
of South Africa for the month of June&#13;
was the greatest ever recorded. In&#13;
the nrst six months of the' current&#13;
year the production was nearly $6,-&#13;
000,000 greater than in the corresponding&#13;
time last year.&#13;
The natives of the Malay peninsula&#13;
have In us* the smallest current ootn&#13;
In the world. It is a tort of wafer,&#13;
made from the resinous Juice of a.&#13;
tree, and is worth about oartwenty* M f H I T V B XSSSnM***?&#13;
thousandth of a cent&#13;
When Woman Isn't Young.&#13;
The report is that a local religious&#13;
institution which is for "young women"&#13;
has drawn the deadline of youth&#13;
at 35. Every woman over that age&#13;
will be marked 23 and requested to&#13;
sktdTloo; This la painful.—It is unkind.&#13;
What is worse, it is impracticable. We&#13;
are glad the task is to be performed&#13;
by women. Xo man nor set of men&#13;
would ever have dared tackle such a&#13;
problem—not they. This is simply&#13;
another example of woman's inhumanity&#13;
to woman.&#13;
We have been told for many ages&#13;
that a woman is as old as she looks&#13;
and a man is as old as he feels. Just&#13;
now, we say it with regret, most women&#13;
look like 60 and most men feel like&#13;
Methuselah. But the general rule&#13;
seems a good one. It is a plain, unpalatable&#13;
fact that women will deceive&#13;
as to their age as long as possible and&#13;
then openly lie about it. There are&#13;
many women who we're born during&#13;
the ravages of the qivil war who still&#13;
claim sweetly to be in the thirties.&#13;
Lord Milner, the former high commissioner&#13;
for South Africa, has received&#13;
through the duke of Somerset&#13;
an address expressing appreciation&#13;
of his services in South Africa signed&#13;
by 370,000 persons.&#13;
Don't worry over trifles. If you must&#13;
worry, pick out something worth while,&#13;
then get busy.&#13;
OODDS&#13;
KIDNEY ^&#13;
// PILLS&#13;
••Ji^T"- " " A ' i » . K ;&#13;
MAKE EVERY DAT&#13;
COUNT-&#13;
, no matter how'&#13;
baqlhewoJther,&#13;
-^HlcAnnot&#13;
afford to be&#13;
. without a'&#13;
TOWER'S&#13;
MiATEFERQOT&#13;
OILED SUIT&#13;
P R SLICKER&#13;
"When you buy&#13;
look for the&#13;
SIONOFTHEFISH&#13;
*****&#13;
fowtt cA* ju ato*w«it *c oc LaT Os orce*ioo«*T uo sCA*N&#13;
W. L. DOUCLASL&#13;
*3.50 &amp;*3.00 Shoes&#13;
B * 8 T IN TMK WORLD W.LDcuglas $ 4 Gilt Edge line,&#13;
caruwtbeequalWatanjprioe&#13;
Cheap Rates to&#13;
California.&#13;
and Mexico&#13;
Daily until October 31st. Colonists'&#13;
tickets will be on sale to Cali*&#13;
fornia and Mexico points at exceptionally&#13;
low rates:&#13;
Froni*s «»^% &gt; ^&#13;
Chicago&#13;
St. I,oms&#13;
Kansas Cit&gt;&#13;
Omaha&#13;
Saa Frantisco&#13;
Los Angeles&#13;
J2s&#13;
Mexico City&#13;
Caudalajara&#13;
- J33'&#13;
. « : &lt; .&#13;
$24&#13;
W. L. Donglaa' Jobbing&#13;
Houw la ine moat&#13;
complete in tbU country&#13;
Send/or Catalog&#13;
SBSm fOJl IVXEY30DT AT ALL MUCH,&#13;
Try W. U Jtooffl** Wowea's, Mliww a*d&#13;
ChlJdreafeahoes; forrtyk»,nt&#13;
tlMV «xeml other make*.&#13;
If 1 coukf teko you Into my large&#13;
factories at Brockton, Mass..and snow&#13;
you how carefully W . U Dotaslaeslioe*&#13;
are nst4e, yoa woaM then understand&#13;
whv they bold their shape, fit better,&#13;
weir leaiger, and are of greater value&#13;
W.UI&#13;
Through tourist sleepers from St.&#13;
Louis and Kansas City on Tuesday&#13;
of each week. You step into the&#13;
cars at St. Louis or Kansas Citj' and&#13;
do not leave them until you reach&#13;
San Francisco. Ask your nearest&#13;
railroad agent for rates or address&#13;
- W. S. ST. GEORGE&#13;
General Passenger Agent&#13;
580 Wainwright Building St. Louis, Mo.&#13;
GEO. W. SMlTil. 316 Marquette Bid*., Chicago, 111.&#13;
To Mexico* California"&#13;
SPECIAL QFFEt.1BPfff V$k&#13;
S1MOM WATCH COTP. OTBm ltlft, « o r forfc.&#13;
SKK x&amp;rsx&amp;mM Mi5rMs«r &gt;—** l y r t f — . Stmt 9 m t i « i a » »»B i i i n »&#13;
&amp;r&gt; 'M3 8P1CIAISV Co., BtrBiackMt. MMh.&#13;
W. N, U., DITHOIT, NO. 37, 1&#13;
*&#13;
•'1&#13;
h&#13;
i" V &gt; T , .&#13;
.s.&#13;
-.. * :&#13;
fi&#13;
'•' r /?'&gt;&lt;&#13;
*r 7**&#13;
Proper&#13;
Study&#13;
ofMankind&#13;
is&#13;
i Among Oiir Correspondents&#13;
«| • l An I&amp;_r«nlo*ia Aoetuatloau&#13;
"The favorite horse of the Chinese&#13;
I Emperor Tel/* said a Chinese state*&#13;
iMry^v; man, "died through negligence on the&#13;
. part of the royal master of the horse.&#13;
—he e m p e r o r w&amp;8 so enraged at this&#13;
ANDERSOft. | that he drew his sword and would&#13;
have run the careless functionary&#13;
through the body,&#13;
visited at ! "But the learned mandarin, Yen-&#13;
Man. »»&#13;
The proper way to secure customers&#13;
is to talk directly to&#13;
them. We are looking for new&#13;
customers for our advertising&#13;
apace. It is what we have to&#13;
sell. We know it is good. It&#13;
Is worth all that we ask for It&#13;
and more. If there Is any person&#13;
in this community who has&#13;
anything to sell, who has any&#13;
need that isn't supplied, we want&#13;
him to use these columns.&#13;
Tell the story here Tell it&#13;
simply and" directly Hundreds&#13;
will see it" and read it&#13;
If ycur poods are salable and&#13;
your wants reasonable your,&#13;
communication will receive&#13;
attention.&#13;
$x3X$^$x$&gt;&lt;£^&gt;:j&gt;«Nj&gt;&lt;$ $ ¢ ^ - i , \ i - i ^ •&#13;
•%&amp;$•$&amp; ^ J v M . ^ . ^ . t H W K ^&#13;
Subscribe for the Pinckney Dispatch.&#13;
P. L. ANDREWS &amp; CO., PUBS.&#13;
F. W. Mackinder and family i&#13;
E. F. Mackinder'a last '&#13;
Sunday. j&#13;
Mrs. A. Crane spent several |&#13;
days last week with her sister,'&#13;
Mrs. Frank Bartou. |&#13;
Mr. Gale Johnson, of Detroit, j&#13;
visited at the home of £ . A.&#13;
Spitout, and Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Ledwidge went to Howell&#13;
last Friday and Claire and Liam&#13;
returned home with her to spend&#13;
Saturday Sunday.&#13;
It arouses energy, develops, and&#13;
stimulates nervous life, arouses the&#13;
courage of youth. It makes you&#13;
young again. That's what Hollister's&#13;
ttocky Mountain Tea will do. 35 cts.&#13;
Tea or Tablets.&#13;
* '&#13;
Business Pointers. t&#13;
won SALB.&#13;
A good coal heatinj? store,&#13;
quire of W. B. Darrow.&#13;
'• rt —&#13;
LOST.&#13;
En-&#13;
On Sunday, Sept. 2, between St.&#13;
Mary's church and Chas. Teeples residence,&#13;
a black jacket. Finder please&#13;
leave at this office.&#13;
C H I L S O N&#13;
Clayton Carpenter is reported&#13;
as quite ill at this writing.&#13;
Mrs. Frauk Philips returned&#13;
from Rose City op Thursday last.&#13;
Wheeler Martin is spending a&#13;
few days with relatives in Bay&#13;
City.&#13;
Miss Amelia Damman returned&#13;
from" Duraud, Wednesday, after a&#13;
two weeks visit with f rieuds there.&#13;
*&#13;
Miss Freida Damman went to&#13;
Fowlerville Saturday to spend a&#13;
few weeks with friends and relatives&#13;
there.&#13;
Mr. Emil Hahn, of Detroit, is&#13;
the guest of Henry Damman and&#13;
family, and renewing old acquaintances.&#13;
tse, struck up the emperor's sword,&#13;
saying:&#13;
" 'Sire, this man has not yet been&#13;
formally accused of any crime. He deserves&#13;
to die, -but his accusation, should&#13;
corne first. It Is the law/&#13;
" 'Well,' said the emperor, 'tell me&#13;
what he has done.'&#13;
" 'Listen, you rogue,' said the mandarin,&#13;
turning to the trembling master&#13;
of the horse—'listen to a catalogue of&#13;
your heinous offenses. In the first&#13;
place, you have allowed a horse to&#13;
perish that his majesty bad Intrusted&#13;
to your care. In the second place, it&#13;
Is on your account that the emperor&#13;
became so exasperated that he was&#13;
actually on the point of disgracing&#13;
himself in all his people's eyes by&#13;
killing a man for the sake of a horse.'&#13;
" 'Enough/ said the emperor, appreciating&#13;
the, rebuke. 'Let him go. He&#13;
Is pardoned/ "&#13;
Here Is The Proof of It&#13;
This is what one of Jacksone leading bakers says of OUR F L O U R ,&#13;
One who does an extensive baking business and U S E S&#13;
T H E B E S T F L O U t i H E CAN B U Y&#13;
'.»«.».» &gt;&gt;»&lt;l&lt;*«»H..t|M.« »!•«•««'&lt;«•«••«, &gt;(&lt;)&gt;•»••»••&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
The Pettysville cider mill is now&#13;
ready to receive apples and make&#13;
cider. Wm. Hooker.&#13;
FOR SALE.&#13;
Two nice lots on Main street, with&#13;
fine shade. And door and window&#13;
frames sufficient for fair sized house.&#13;
22 tf H. W. Crofoot&#13;
E; W. DANIELS,&#13;
CJEXERAX AUCTIONEEK.&#13;
Satistacu&lt; n Guaranteed. For information&#13;
call at DISPATCH Office or address&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. Lyndilla phone&#13;
connection. Auction bills and tin cups&#13;
furnished free.&#13;
Pair cheap horse?, also new milch&#13;
cow, C. E. Baughn, Portage Lake.&#13;
I av-otc &lt;t C Sweet to Eat&#13;
U l * V v l 3 O ACaadyltweiLtufe.&#13;
Percy Swarthout&#13;
Funeral Director&#13;
AND EMBALMER&#13;
ALL CALLS ANSWERED&#13;
PROMPTLY DAY OR NIGHT&#13;
WEST PUTHAM.&#13;
Glenn Gardner was in Detroit&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Will Gardner Was in Howell,&#13;
Thursday, on business.&#13;
Faunie Murphy is teaching in&#13;
Fulmer district near Gregory.&#13;
U . B. Gardner and wife spent&#13;
Sunday at Otis "Webb's in Unadilla.&#13;
Will Dunbar and wife spent&#13;
Sunday at Valentine Dinkel's, in&#13;
Anderson.&#13;
Laura Doyle and Kate Van&#13;
Blaricum are attending the Pinckney&#13;
high school.&#13;
i Mrs. Valentine, of Anderson,&#13;
spent Friday with her daughter,&#13;
Mrs. Will Dunbar.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Horton, of Webberville,&#13;
are visiting their daughter,&#13;
Mrs. Wales Leland.&#13;
Mrs. George Erwiu, of Grand&#13;
Haven, visited her sister, Mrs.&#13;
Wm. Doyle, the past week.&#13;
John Harris and family, and&#13;
James Harris and wife, were&#13;
guests at D . M. Monk's Sunday.&#13;
UNADHLA.&#13;
Miss Grace Lane is teaching in&#13;
the Livermore district.&#13;
A. C. Watson was in Pinckney&#13;
on business, Wednesday.&#13;
Breaking It Gently.&#13;
"Laura," said Mr. Ferguson as be&#13;
buttered a biscuit amd passed his coffee&#13;
cup for a second filling, "I don't&#13;
miss anything, but after I had come in&#13;
last ulght, about 11:30, I found the&#13;
house had been broken into. Somebody&#13;
had smashed a. pane of glass in n&#13;
basement window, crawled inside and&#13;
made his way up the stairs to the first&#13;
floor. There hasn't been anything disturbed&#13;
in the pantry, the china closet&#13;
or the sideboard, has there?"&#13;
"No," answered Mrs. Ferguson.&#13;
"But, mercy, who could it have been&#13;
and what do you suppose he wanted?"&#13;
"I suspect," he rejoined, clearing his&#13;
throat, "that I—er—did it myself and&#13;
that I wanted to get inside without&#13;
disturbing anybody. Ydn had all gone&#13;
to bed, and I had left my latchkey in&#13;
my other trousers. It will cost about&#13;
25 cents to repair the basement window.&#13;
The weather man, ^1 see, predicts&#13;
possible si towers for today."—&#13;
Chi capo Tril nn;\&#13;
Office of&#13;
J. U PBTBRMANN&#13;
BAKER&#13;
tJackson, Mich., Sept. 3, 1906&#13;
F. M. *ETERS,&#13;
Pinokney, Mich.&#13;
In reply to yours of the 1st instant,&#13;
I will Say: We like your flour as well as&#13;
any winter wheat flour we^everusecUand much&#13;
better than some brands we have bought.&#13;
Please send me ten (10) barrels more by&#13;
first freight.&#13;
Reap. ,&#13;
J . L. PETERMANN.&#13;
POP particulars of the fine Stiver Presents which w e&#13;
are &amp;lvtria P R E E T O OUR P A T R O N S , see circular In each&#13;
sack. -*•&#13;
PINCKNEY FLOURING MILLS&#13;
Pinckney, Mich*&#13;
1 know no manner of speaking so&#13;
offensive as that of friviiur praise and&#13;
closfn.ir It with M exception—Steele.&#13;
PARLORS'AT&#13;
PLIMPTON'S OLD STAND PJ-lone No. 30&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
Ladies read this catalog of charms.&#13;
Bright eyes, glowing cheeks, red lips,&#13;
a smoth skin without a blemish, in&#13;
short, perfect health. For sale with&#13;
every package Hollister's Rocky&#13;
Mountain Tea. 35 cents.&#13;
ADDITIONAL LOCAL.&#13;
Mrs. W. W. Barnard is visiting&#13;
her mother in Howell.&#13;
Brayton Placeway of Pontiac spent&#13;
Sunday with bis parents here.&#13;
Lincoln E. Smith has an adv. in&#13;
this issue that may mteresTyou.&#13;
Gale Johrwon of Detroit spent Sunday&#13;
at the home of his parents here.&#13;
Airs. Esteila Graham and daughter&#13;
Ethel, returned Monday from Cement&#13;
City.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Towle were in&#13;
Detroit the first ot the week on business.&#13;
Hiss Myrtle Byer is quite lame from&#13;
a kick from a horse which struck her&#13;
ankle.&#13;
The 6th Annual Fair of the Cong'l&#13;
Church Society will be held at the&#13;
opera house, Oct. 5 and H, 1906. Further&#13;
notice next week.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Kennedy, Jr. leaves Friday&#13;
for Big Rapids to keep house for&#13;
her husband, and brother, Arthur&#13;
Swarthout, who are attending Ferns'&#13;
business college.&#13;
The Ladie6 Aid society of the M . E.&#13;
Mrs. George Green and daughter&#13;
are in Howell for a tew days.&#13;
Mrs. Anna Spears Irwin, of Grand&#13;
Haven, visited her people uear here&#13;
this week.&#13;
Special meeting OES Tuesday evening,&#13;
Sept. 18, for election of officers&#13;
All members ernestly requested to be&#13;
present. Worthy Matron.&#13;
Mrs. George Green and daughter,.&#13;
Gertrude, spent the last of last week&#13;
and the first of this with Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
A. B. Green of Stockbridge. George&#13;
went up and spent Sunday with them.&#13;
To some of the women of this vicinity&#13;
the interest in good mining&#13;
stock might be spelled Huckleberry.&#13;
Two women—one nearly seventy&#13;
years of age—picked in about forty&#13;
days two thousand and one hundred&#13;
quarts of the berries, selleng them at&#13;
an average of neaily seven cents a&#13;
quart.—Chelsea Standard.&#13;
As George Reason Jr., Norman&#13;
Reason and Dr. C. L. Sigler were pass*&#13;
ing through Ann Arbor one day last&#13;
L»adies' Missionary&#13;
Society&#13;
The above society held its regular&#13;
monthly meeting at the Teeple cottage,&#13;
Portage lake, Tuesday afternoon.&#13;
It was a very enjoyable event. Will&#13;
Miller and J. A. Cadwell had their&#13;
launches otft tor the occasion and took&#13;
the ladies riding en the lake.&#13;
Mr. Cadwell and John Teeple were&#13;
on hand with their horses and carriages&#13;
to convey ladies to and from&#13;
the lake. The Pres., Mrs. Ella Jackson,&#13;
also took a Lad in a two-seated&#13;
carriage. An excellent supper was&#13;
served to which all did justice.&#13;
Young Mens Club&#13;
The following members have left us&#13;
to attend school in Big Rapids:—Wm.&#13;
Kennedy Jr., who has been the efficient&#13;
secretary for the past year. Arther&#13;
Swarthout and Clayton Placeway.&#13;
For about three years they have been&#13;
regular in attendance at gym and&#13;
club meetings, while the last two&#13;
mentioned have been faithful in attendance&#13;
at church service* and Pastor's&#13;
classes. Glen Ricbards recently&#13;
left us for a position in Chicago, and&#13;
always was a serviceable and devoted&#13;
attendant. Ray Kennedy an&#13;
associate member of the club ii now&#13;
in Detroit. Ruel Cadwell our assistant&#13;
secretary expects to leave soon&#13;
for school.&#13;
Fred aud Rex Read have returned&#13;
to Ypsilanti after a two months vacation.&#13;
Emil Lambertson, one of our&#13;
-Herald. There is nothing unusual charter members, visited us one evenin&#13;
that in the Pin:kney schools a s jng last week and paid up dues. He&#13;
week on their way to the state fair in&#13;
Mr. Reasons auto, they collided with&#13;
a delivory wagon, or the wagon coltided&#13;
with them, and some damage&#13;
was done; however they were able to&#13;
proceed to Detroit in a short time.&#13;
There is two sides to the matter and&#13;
probably the courts will decide who&#13;
was to blame.&#13;
An unusual event occurred at the&#13;
opening of the present term of the&#13;
Howell schools, when non-resident&#13;
pupils applied, for admission tD the&#13;
eigbtl. grade of these popular schools.&#13;
Wirt Barnum had a horse badly&#13;
bitten by a rattlesnake recently j church at Unadilla, will give a mil-&#13;
The bean harvest is about o v e r . ! l i n e r ? s o c i a l a t t h e h o m 8 o f M r " a n d ^&#13;
School opened last week Monday&#13;
with Miss Ella Murphy as&#13;
teacher.&#13;
Mrs. Z. A. Hartsuff aud daugnter,&#13;
Pearl, have been spending&#13;
a short time in Petoskey aud&#13;
Bay View.&#13;
Everybody invited to attend&#13;
the millinery social at the home&#13;
of Mr. and Mr^ Albert Watson,&#13;
Friday evening, Sept. 14.&#13;
* f i t r j t h i n of any O'.i.- r m«. u of-paitcrnv '1 I n * is oic&#13;
iccount © ( t h e i r style, nrvi.r n.y and v-r^.l.tity.&#13;
M c C ' t l D ' a M.'14ri»&gt;.Jll*-"ni«Onr, ,o( »•'.••• hionl has&#13;
more subscribers in .&gt;, ,,: y 1.1 '• n- I.:.,1 ir ' \ | i' ••• .-. O• ••&#13;
year's subscription{ u num'.. •) fn&gt; i . ,\ •)••»•&gt;•» , 1 r&lt; • i&#13;
lumber, H cent*. 1 n " v - ibscrils' .&lt;-:,,. ',;..&lt; ..:, V,a&#13;
:«m F r e e * S u ^ c r i ' e i&lt; &lt;Uy.&#13;
L f t d f A » * i i H W a s t e d * U s n y « * n v &gt;--rmiums'nr&#13;
i b » M l cash commissi! n. I'^iFcrn &lt;";i'-ilr&gt;|.n; . f 6 ^ o d « .&#13;
lik ns) and Premium C'^lftl" :ir; (show i n * 4uo pirmiums)&#13;
&lt; c a t f r « * AdUrets T H h . M c C A J - L C O . . N e w Y o r k . ,&#13;
Convlne«4l.&#13;
Mr. Spongtly (slightly related)—Splendid!&#13;
Magnificent! Do you know, Uncle&#13;
Eli, I believe I shall never get tired&#13;
of seeing the sun set behind that hill!&#13;
Uncle Ell—Tfcat's what me an' mother's&#13;
bejjinnin' to think.—ruck.&#13;
Mrs. A. C. Watson, Friday evening,&#13;
Sept. 14,1906.&#13;
Mrs. Melvin and Mrs. McKeever&#13;
returned to their homes in the -West&#13;
Wednesday, after spending the past&#13;
two months with their mother, Mrs.&#13;
J. M. Kearney and other fiieoda here.&#13;
The ladies of the Cong'l church will&#13;
hold their Sept. tea at the home of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Carr, Wednesday&#13;
afternoon Sept, 19, from 5 until all&#13;
are served. A special invitation to&#13;
all.&#13;
tti*4£lla Devereaui returned Toesday&#13;
from a sir weeks visit- with relatives&#13;
in Grand Rapids, Milwaukee&#13;
and Jackson. She &lt;$ay§ that Mr.&#13;
Devereanr's baby has quite recovered&#13;
from a severe attack of erysipelas.&#13;
there have always been non-resident&#13;
pupils in naarly all grades evenJn the&#13;
primary, and they usually remain until&#13;
tbey graduate. It is to bad that&#13;
it is so, but it is true nevertheless,&#13;
that the young people from the country&#13;
appreciate the chance to secure a&#13;
good education more than those who&#13;
is teaching school again&#13;
the Hick's district.&#13;
tbis year in&#13;
Prest.&#13;
Think ot Dr. Shoop's Catarrh Cure&#13;
if your nose and throat discharges—if&#13;
your breath-is foul or feverish. This&#13;
snow white soothing balm contain^oil&#13;
of Eucalyptus, Thymol, Menthol, etc.,&#13;
have the chance right at hand with- j incorporated into an imported creamout&#13;
trouble or extra expense. l i k e v e , v e * P a l a t u m . It soothes,&#13;
heals, purines, controls. Call at our&#13;
The Farmington Enterprise-Herald j 8 t o r e f o r f r e e t r i a , b o x # A U d e a l e r S i&#13;
advocates that the eitizens of that vil- j m m M&#13;
tag. keep tbe walk, s^pt. Tbey , p p o h l b i t , o n C o A v c n t , o n&#13;
claim as much or more cement walk j _____&#13;
than any village in the state, and] A mass convention of the prohibiwant&#13;
to keep it clean. We do not tionists of Livingston county will be&#13;
believe any vi'lage of tbe size of n e 'd in the court house in Howell,&#13;
Pinckney bas „ « » , . ce.entwa.k a, 5 ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^&#13;
is here, and still the council keeps a i ( j g i n nomination a full county tick,,&#13;
contractor busy nearly all tbe time, and the transaction of any other bosi-&#13;
When he is not busy building corpor&#13;
ation walk he is building private ones.&#13;
Just at present be has his gang at&#13;
work building walks from each corner&#13;
of the school yard to the building.&#13;
This will be a big improvement to&#13;
tbe looks of the grounds and adds to&#13;
the beauty of the village as well*&#13;
ness that may come before the convention.&#13;
All who believe in the&#13;
principle of prohibition are cordially&#13;
invited. BY ORDER OF COM.&#13;
Ask yonr druggist for Pylo Pile.&#13;
Core. Every box warranted. Price&#13;
25 cents. For Sale by F. A. Sigler,&#13;
Pinckney, Micb. , 196&#13;
¥ $ • • •&#13;
v*»&#13;
&gt;&#13;
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch September 13, 1906</text>
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                <text>September 13, 1906 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>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. XXI7.&#13;
.rv^&#13;
*.*-&#13;
PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON COMMIOH/, THURSDAY, SEPT. 20, 1906. No. 38&#13;
LOCAL, NEWS.&#13;
Dry, dry hot and dry, Sept. 19.&#13;
„ Born, to Jesse Henry and wife, a&#13;
, Sept. 13.&#13;
Oct 9 to 12 are the dates of the&#13;
Pcwlerville fair.&#13;
Ghas. Teeple is visiting his brother&#13;
Percy, at Marquette.&#13;
B. F. Andrews is visiting relatives&#13;
in Clarenceville and Detroit.&#13;
Bro, Barnes, of the Livingston Republican,&#13;
was in town Friday last.&#13;
A field ot 23 acres on the C, A.&#13;
Mapes farm, in Iosco, yielded 65 bu.&#13;
of clover seed.&#13;
The ladies cf the M. E church took&#13;
in nearly $10 at their tea last Wednesday&#13;
night.&#13;
There is on deposit in the Chelsea&#13;
banks {1,410,911,81. A good showing&#13;
for a small village.&#13;
Mrs. H. F. Sigler and Miss Grace&#13;
Pool are taking in the sights and visiting&#13;
friends in Detroit.&#13;
Mrs. Martha Eager, of Howell, visited&#13;
her daughter Edith at the sanitarium&#13;
here, over Sunday.&#13;
Chelsea merchants will close their&#13;
stores at 7:30 from now on, except&#13;
Saturday. A good idea for others to&#13;
follow.&#13;
If you are going to have an auction&#13;
this fall, do not target that the DISPATCH&#13;
office is prepared to get them&#13;
out while you wait.&#13;
Theo J Gaul was in Howell on business&#13;
Saturday. He is out atter the&#13;
office ot school examiner, being a candidate&#13;
on the republican ticket.&#13;
Mrs. D. C. Littlejohn and daughter,&#13;
Norma, are visiting her parents in&#13;
Detroit, whele Rey. Littiejohn is absent&#13;
attending conference at isbperiling.&#13;
Thi drouth of the pasl few weeks&#13;
has done ^reat damage to pasture and&#13;
late crops. Many farmers in the&#13;
county have been obliged to feed their&#13;
stock bay and corn fodder.&#13;
Besides the regular run of home&#13;
work the DISPASCH job department&#13;
issued 24,000 circulars, cards and&#13;
envelopes for an outside firm the past&#13;
week. Besides this we found time to&#13;
close the office one day for a picnic.&#13;
About fifteen of the young lady&#13;
friends of Miss Ethel Graham, gaye&#13;
her a surprise "'parcel shower" at the&#13;
home of Mrs. E. Book, Monday evening.&#13;
A very pleasant time was spent&#13;
and Miss Graham was the recipient of&#13;
many useful articles.&#13;
Miss Kate Ruen went to Howell&#13;
Friday last wheffe she has opened up&#13;
a piano and mandolin studio of music.&#13;
Miss Ruen is not only an accomplished&#13;
pianist hut has proven herself to be&#13;
an excellent instructor. She has the&#13;
best wishes of ber many friends for&#13;
success.&#13;
Mrs. Clark ston Rrillinger is visiting&#13;
her mother in Dundee.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Peter W. Coniway&#13;
are visiting friends in Toledo.&#13;
If the weather man does not give&#13;
us rain soon we will have to appoint&#13;
a new one.&#13;
We understand tbo Reason Sigler&#13;
auto matter at Ann Arbor, was settled&#13;
out of court.&#13;
Mrs. Edward Burt entertained a&#13;
friend, Mr3. Smith, of Wayne county,&#13;
the past week.&#13;
Richard Clinton sold the shop and&#13;
lots in Gregory, the past week, to&#13;
John Heifer nan.&#13;
Harry Smith, of Detroit, was the&#13;
guest of bis brother, Lincoln, at this&#13;
place the past week. arranged for winter months. The&#13;
C. A, Parsball and wife were over J o i n t organization to be known as&#13;
from Howell Sunday to visit their&#13;
daughter, Mrs. Gillette.&#13;
Thomas Read and family are now&#13;
riding in a new Carter, friction-drive&#13;
auto, purchased ot Geo Reason Jr.&#13;
S. Grimes brought us a pototo the&#13;
past week that weighed one pound,&#13;
nine and a half ounces. A good meal.&#13;
Drayman, E. J . Brlggs made a trip&#13;
to Howell with his dray Monday. E.&#13;
G. Briggs had charge ot his dray&#13;
business here.&#13;
Miss Florence Andrews had charge&#13;
of the intermediate department in&#13;
the school, Monday, during the absence&#13;
of Miss Lela Monks, who attended&#13;
the funeral of an aunt in&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
W. E. Murphy was in Howell on&#13;
Monday attending the meeting of the&#13;
democratic county committee of which&#13;
he is a member. He also made a trip&#13;
Congregational Church.&#13;
Evening service was suspended last&#13;
Sunday for a union service at M. E.&#13;
cbnrcb.&#13;
The pastor favors union service in&#13;
the evening and expresses the hope&#13;
that they may he continued.&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 23, morning service&#13;
* t 10:30, topio, ^Christ before-Pilate."&#13;
Evening, union service, special topic,&#13;
"The Disunity of the Church." All&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Young Mens Club&#13;
Hereafter the Club will be incorporated&#13;
with the Young Ladies' Guild&#13;
and a program of meetings will be&#13;
"The Young People's Guild of the&#13;
Cong'l Church.&#13;
Rocco Bell aged 21, irreclaimable&#13;
thief and bad man, came to the con*&#13;
elusion that be was no good on earth&#13;
and hanged himself in his cell in Chicago&#13;
jail. He said: 'Young men&#13;
keep away from drink, gambling and&#13;
women. Please never smoke cigarettes&#13;
because you are going to the bad&#13;
when you do so. This is why 1 am&#13;
going to end my life in the Cook&#13;
eountyjail."&#13;
» m «&#13;
M. E. Church Notes.&#13;
The last Sunday of the conference&#13;
year was marked by good audiences&#13;
morning and evening, and the pastor&#13;
delivered exceptionally good sermons,&#13;
neither one of them being of the farewell&#13;
kind but of the soul stirring&#13;
Headquarters for&#13;
Drugs, Medicine&#13;
Books, Stationery&#13;
Fancy Crockery&#13;
School Books&#13;
P. A. SIGLER&#13;
All Persons owing us on Book&#13;
Account are requested to kindly&#13;
, character. At the close of the mornout&#13;
to the grounds of the Sute sani&gt; | i Q g . ^ . ^ a ^ W M ' t a k e n t o r e .&#13;
tonum. He says it is a very sightly ; q u e s t tfae D e t f o i t C o n f e r e n c e tQ r e t a r n&#13;
p l a ' 0 , i Rev. Littiejohn to the work here, and&#13;
Ej-Governor, P. P . Bliss died at a| t h e v o t e w a 8 u n a n i m 0 D 8 &gt; Mr. Little-'&#13;
'ganitorium at Milwaukee Sunday af-j j o b n h a s raade m a n y w a r m frjends&#13;
ter a year's tailing L.ealth. Death n e r e d u r m g t h e f e w m o n t h 9 h e h a g&#13;
call and settle same by Oct. 1,&#13;
1906, by Cash or Bankable nates.&#13;
JACKSON &amp; CADWELL.&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
FALL OPENING&#13;
This Store offers Great&#13;
Values iu Hosiery, Underwear,&#13;
Gloves aud&#13;
Mittens, Outing Flaniels,&#13;
Corsets, Etc.&#13;
I Fleeced Vests, only 5c&#13;
Chitd&amp;ns Fleeced Vests and Pants, 10c&#13;
Ladiea Double Knit Mittens, only 10c&#13;
Childiftns Double Knit Si it tens, only 10c&#13;
Xxtra Strong values in Outing Flannels&#13;
From 5c to 13c&#13;
C M * and See Us wM* in Hewell&#13;
++&#13;
E A .&#13;
HOWELL'S BUSY STORE&#13;
came suddenly although he was not&#13;
expected to live long. A stroke of&#13;
apoplexy was the cause of his sudden&#13;
demise.&#13;
Alfred Monks and wife, John&#13;
Monks, wife, and daughter Lela, Airs.&#13;
Marcellus Monks, Miss Maude Haoey&#13;
and Miss Mabel Monks were called to&#13;
attend tne tuneral of a sister of the&#13;
Monks', Mrs. Hackett, in Detroit,&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Several of the lady tneuds of Mrs.&#13;
D. F. Ewen gave her a birthday surprise&#13;
Saturday afternoon. Of course&#13;
the ladies enjoyed themselves, especially&#13;
Mrs. Ewen. They left h*er several&#13;
mementos besides wishes for many&#13;
returns of the anniversary.&#13;
There is no precedent in yellowback&#13;
novels for the crime of the Chicago&#13;
boy wbo buried his victim alive,&#13;
but there is a suspicion that he got&#13;
the " idea frox. reading the colored&#13;
pages ot the Sunday papers of that&#13;
city. We pay millions ot dollars&#13;
yearlv to teach children good English&#13;
and decency, and ^ e r e is no doubt&#13;
these papers do much^fn—tUe opposite&#13;
direction.' .&#13;
Albert Watson, of the firm n! Watsen,&#13;
Porter, Watson, ot Unadilla, was&#13;
in tewn again Tuesday, They were&#13;
in need of a "rush" job of printing&#13;
and as usual came to the DISPATCH.&#13;
This firm a;e manufacturing several&#13;
novelties and judging from the print&#13;
ed matter that they consume they&#13;
must be working over time. Good.&#13;
Success to them.&#13;
Remember ti e date of the 6th annual&#13;
fair of the Cong'l church society&#13;
Oct. 5 6. Contributions will be thinkfully&#13;
received from friends ot the&#13;
society. Produce, fruit, groceries,&#13;
fancy work, ready made clothing, etc.&#13;
By purchasing these goods you will&#13;
help a good cause along. Everyone&#13;
^ J t t f t i t U r * " * * * **•»*, tpeafttw*&#13;
pleasant afternoons and evenings, and&#13;
enjoy'a New England and chicken pie&#13;
supper. Q&#13;
labored here, and all have a kindly&#13;
feeling toward him. As a preacher&#13;
tbersare tew who. excel!, and as a&#13;
pastor there is none better.&#13;
The Sunday school showed a good&#13;
increase and interest. Attendance 86,&#13;
collection $1.76. Review next Sunday&#13;
and there is.goini to be an interesting j n e s d a y f o r Linden, Feoton, Flint and&#13;
time, All welcome. Millington, tor a visit with relative:&#13;
Mrs Jennie Barton attended the&#13;
funerat-oi-Ho_ra.ee Leek, in Lyndon,&#13;
Tuesday. «&#13;
Horace Leek ot near Gregory, pass&#13;
ed avay Sunday. He was a brother&#13;
of Mrs. Thos. Howlett.&#13;
James Fitch and wife are spending&#13;
a few days with friends and relatives&#13;
in Stockbridge and Jackson.&#13;
H. G. Briggs and wile left Wed-&#13;
The service Sunday morning next&#13;
will be in charge ot one of the class&#13;
leaders and every member should be&#13;
poesent. It will be a feast of&#13;
things in which everyone can&#13;
and take a part. Let everyone come&#13;
out. get warmed up, so that the pastor&#13;
may find a live church when be&#13;
returns from conference. There will&#13;
be no evening service and all will&#13;
surely be made welcome at the Cong'l&#13;
church.&#13;
Leaders have been appointed for&#13;
the Thursday evenitg meetings and&#13;
a good attendance oi all, especially&#13;
the members are requested to. be preen&#13;
t. Let all come out and pray for&#13;
the work of the coming year.&#13;
No sign of rain as we go to press.&#13;
Mrs. Mart Wilson went to Flint&#13;
last week.&#13;
Elda Kuhn of" Gregory, is reported&#13;
better from his severe illness.&#13;
Decorators have been at work the&#13;
past week on the interior of St. Mary's&#13;
church. , .&#13;
C. L. Campbell spent a couple of&#13;
days in Durand and Flint the first of&#13;
the week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Shaffer, of Pomona,&#13;
Cal., were guests of Mrs. H. F. Sigler&#13;
one day the past week.&#13;
Mist Alice Dunn, whd has beta visiting&#13;
her aunt, Mrs. Cuas. Campbell&#13;
fnr. several week*, r*t*Ht«d to half&#13;
home in Peoria, 111., f uetfay. \&#13;
W. A. N4son is having aR hit&#13;
MWdfoyfi "tDii ettt mBxn stv paftitfu?&#13;
His brother-in-law, H. K. Booker, is&#13;
doing the work to keep busy. It is&#13;
sort of a vacation for bitn.&#13;
St. Mary's society will give a box&#13;
social at the opera house Thursday&#13;
eveninsr, Sept. 27. Games and other&#13;
good jamusemeuts will be in evidence. Evhave&#13;
erybody invited.&#13;
Wanted:—In this section at once, if&#13;
not sooner, a heavy rain.&#13;
The weather man predicted rain for&#13;
Tuesday but it failed to arrive. We&#13;
are badly in need of a "soaker" and&#13;
we hope be will prejict another soon&#13;
with better success.&#13;
If the attorney general goes ahead,&#13;
and collects the $147,500,000 fines for&#13;
which Standard Oil Co. stands liable,&#13;
wont that be a long step toward public&#13;
ownership*?—Stockbridge Sun..&#13;
Yes, but what good will that do the&#13;
comrron' people?—the oil company&#13;
have already raised tbe price of oil to&#13;
oav the fine.&#13;
It is learned through a reliable&#13;
source that an \Ann Arbor capitalist&#13;
The Fowlerville Review says it has I and an Ann Arbor promoter are perjust&#13;
received one-halt ton of paper.&#13;
Come to think about it we never&#13;
thought of it in that way before, but&#13;
the DISPATCH office turned out a job&#13;
recently that took nearly a half ton of&#13;
fecting plans for an electric road to&#13;
connect that city with Whitmore&#13;
Lake. There is also talk of extending&#13;
the line to Lakeland and perhaps to&#13;
other lake resorts on the Huron. This&#13;
fine paper, and we were only about a ; line would be especially convenient to&#13;
month getting out the job besides do- J the large number of people WUJ are&#13;
ing all other work on time and&#13;
not hire any outside help either.&#13;
did | finding out that these lakes are great&#13;
! places to spend the summer season.&#13;
account of many&#13;
heavy bills due Oct*&#13;
1« we desire to have&#13;
all accounts past&#13;
due settled*&#13;
. 4'&#13;
&amp; H&#13;
- -&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co.&#13;
• * .&#13;
^ •&#13;
EVENTS NOTED&#13;
RECORD OP PAROLED PRISONERS&#13;
AND RESULTS OF LETTING&#13;
THEM L008E.&#13;
SHOWS HOW LAW WORKS&#13;
Ninety of Those Released Violated the&#13;
Parole and Ninety-two Have Received&#13;
Absolute Discharge.&#13;
Board of Pardons' Report.&#13;
There have been 419 convicts released&#13;
from the penal Institutions of&#13;
the state during the past 15 months&#13;
under the indeterminate sentence act&#13;
passed by the legislature at its last&#13;
session. Of that number, 14.32 percent&#13;
have violated their parole. This information&#13;
is furnished by the state board&#13;
of pardons.&#13;
Of the 419 convicts released, 237&#13;
were released from Ionia, 73 from&#13;
Jackson, 42 from Marquette, and 47&#13;
from the house of correction in Detroit.&#13;
There have been 92 of the paroled&#13;
convicts who have kept their obligation&#13;
and have received an absolute&#13;
discharge. The number who have violated&#13;
their parole is 90, and 34 of them&#13;
have been returned to the prisons in&#13;
which they were serving sentences,&#13;
while 26 are at liberty, with warrants&#13;
issued for their arrest. Nineteen of&#13;
the convicts committed a felony while&#13;
out on parole, and 41 failed to comply&#13;
with the parole obligations.&#13;
Secretary Murray, in making up the&#13;
report, states that under the old definite&#13;
sentence act the average length&#13;
of time served by criminals convicted&#13;
of larceny was 1 year 3 months and 5&#13;
days, while under the indeterminate&#13;
act that class of criminals have served&#13;
1 year 4 months and 27 days.&#13;
Storm Did Great Damage.&#13;
Escanaba ore docks and factories&#13;
were damaged to the extent of several&#13;
thousand dolUrs by a wind storm&#13;
which passed over this city Tuesday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
Two tramways, each 300 feet in&#13;
length, connecting the .Northwestern&#13;
ore docks, were completely demol-&#13;
JshejL_ ,&#13;
Two giant coal-hoisting towers, each&#13;
weighing 400 tons, on the dock of the&#13;
Reiss Coal Co., broke from their fastenings&#13;
and forced down the track for&#13;
300 feet before they crashed into two&#13;
stationary towers, badly damaging&#13;
both runway hoists.&#13;
Two sides of the brick boiler house&#13;
of the Escanaba Wooden Ware Co.'s&#13;
plant were blown in, damaging the&#13;
machinery and making it necessary to&#13;
close down the plant until repairs can&#13;
be made. The entire end of the warehouse&#13;
of the Stephenson dock was&#13;
carried out. A crew of 20 men was at&#13;
work on the hoisting towers at the&#13;
Reles Coal Co.'s dock when the giant&#13;
frameworks of steel began to move&#13;
and gained momentum with each foot.&#13;
The crew rushed out on the bridges&#13;
extending over the docks and dropped&#13;
to the coal piles, 20 feet below. Albert&#13;
Smith, fireman of one of the towers,&#13;
was burned about the face and arms&#13;
in an attempt to draw the fire from&#13;
his boiler before the crash came.&#13;
Miss Hill's Story.&#13;
Miss Myrtle Hill, the young woman&#13;
rumored to have been engaged to marry&#13;
Lloyd Dynes, the telegraph operator&#13;
mysteriously murdered some&#13;
weeks ago, appeared at the office of&#13;
the Kalamazoo Telegraph Wednesday&#13;
morning and denied ihat sne had ever&#13;
met Dynes. Miss Hill said:&#13;
"I have a woman enemy here in&#13;
Kalamazoo, and she has starred all&#13;
this talk. My brother-in-law, S. W. Taylor,&#13;
was once the operator at Galien,&#13;
and when I read of the murder of&#13;
Dynes, I remarked about Mr. Taylor&#13;
having once worked there. She heard&#13;
me say this and hence the gossip.&#13;
"That postal card dated September&#13;
10, from New Buffalo, in my mind&#13;
came from the same source as this&#13;
other talk, and could be traced to this&#13;
woman. I don't" believe that any woman&#13;
had anything to ,do with the murder&#13;
of Lloyd Dynes."&#13;
KiUedi by a Vicious Bull.&#13;
Green Olttey, aged about 43 years,&#13;
one of the well known and highly respected&#13;
farmers of this locality, died&#13;
at Harper hospital, Detroit, Wednesday&#13;
evening, from injuries received&#13;
while caring for an ugly bull at the&#13;
state fair grounds at Detroit, at the&#13;
commencement of the fair.&#13;
A widow, one daughter, his mother,&#13;
and a large circle of relatives survive&#13;
him. He was brought to Vernon for&#13;
burial, this being his home town for&#13;
many years past, having formerly&#13;
come from New York state.&#13;
Mr. Olney was owner of a large and&#13;
valuable farm, and was known in this&#13;
part of the state as owner and breeder&#13;
of valuabla cattle and horses.&#13;
FOUR SISTERS.&#13;
Calvin Carr,'of Flint, who attempted&#13;
to kill his mother because she refused&#13;
to give him his pension papers, was&#13;
adjudged insane in the probate court&#13;
and committed to the Pontiac asylum.&#13;
Madison Stoddard, aged 73 years,&#13;
of Penfleld, died Saturday from injuries&#13;
inflicted by an over-spirited heif.&#13;
er which took fright at a street car&#13;
Jn Battle Creek and ran away, dragging&#13;
Stoddard behind. He recovered&#13;
In time to undergo a similar experience&#13;
09 his farm, which resulted in&#13;
death. He had lived nearly forty&#13;
years on the farm where he died.&#13;
Three Celebrate Their Birthday and&#13;
a Fiftieth Anniversary.&#13;
Four sisters celebrated the fiftieth&#13;
anniversary at their arrival In Muskegon&#13;
and -also the birthday anniversaries&#13;
of three of their number. A&#13;
feature was the supper, fifty candies&#13;
on an Immense birthday cake, lighting&#13;
the table.&#13;
The celebration was in the form of&#13;
a reunion and fifty relatives, Including&#13;
children and grand-children, gathered&#13;
between 5 and 11 o'clock.&#13;
The sisters are Mrs. Alexander Marcoux,&#13;
142 Sanford street; Mrs. Adeline&#13;
Tarte, 44 Jefferson street; Mrs. Larry&#13;
Leveque, 70 Jefferson street, and Mrs.&#13;
Elizabeth Davids, 349 Lake street.&#13;
The first three mentioned observed&#13;
their birthday anniversaries. Mrs.&#13;
Marcoux and Mrs/Tarte are twins&#13;
and were born September IS, 1841.&#13;
They strongly resemble each other.&#13;
By a strange coincidence, Mrs. Leveque&#13;
was born two years later on&#13;
the same date as her sisters,&#13;
Mrs. Davids is younger than her&#13;
sisters, having been born sixty years&#13;
ago.&#13;
Port Huron's Forest Fire.&#13;
A forest fire which raged in the&#13;
southern section of Port Huron Thursday&#13;
afternoon and night, threatened a&#13;
portion of the populated district with&#13;
destruction. Many families residing in&#13;
the path of the fire packed their furniture&#13;
and goods and were ready to move&#13;
out if the blase spread.&#13;
Several people, who were in the radius&#13;
of the flames, were compelled to&#13;
leave their homes and seek shelter&#13;
elsewhere.&#13;
An aged and sick woman named Gill&#13;
had to be carried to a neighbor's home.&#13;
The devastated fields cover 3d acres.&#13;
No serious damage was done, but it&#13;
was necessary to plow the ground to&#13;
save the surrounding homes. Another&#13;
fire occurred at the home of Charles&#13;
Haviland at the same time. The damage&#13;
was |700,&#13;
Seventeen Injured.&#13;
Car No. 517 of the Detroit, Monroe&#13;
&amp; Toledo Short line ran into an open&#13;
switch and crashed into a gravel car&#13;
Tuesday evening a short distance&#13;
south of the viaduct crossing of the&#13;
Michigan Central and Wabash roads&#13;
in Ecorse and half a mile south of thu&#13;
River Rouge.&#13;
Motorman Augustus Menzel, after&#13;
putting on the air, jumped, and was so&#13;
seriously injured that he is not expected&#13;
to survive.&#13;
Of the 16 others who were hurt, it&#13;
is believed all will recover. The injured&#13;
were cared for at Detroit, Mon&#13;
roe and Toledo.&#13;
The Michigan Bean Crop.&#13;
"Do you know," said Secretary Kelsey,&#13;
of the Bean Jobbers' association in&#13;
session in Saginaw, "that Michigan Is&#13;
the most important bean state in the&#13;
union? Our estimated crop this year&#13;
of 5,000,000 bushels leads them all. It&#13;
will surprise most people to know, too,&#13;
that the handlers of beans pay out to&#13;
farmers and growers about $1,000,000&#13;
more annually than the much talked&#13;
of:sugar beet factories/The Michigan&#13;
Linn, also, has the finest quality of&#13;
any produced, being conceded in the&#13;
markets to be superior to that of the&#13;
celebrated New England grown varle^&#13;
ty."&#13;
MICHIGAN IN BRIEF.&#13;
The ll-month-old babe of F. Slusher,&#13;
Garfield township, ate poison fly paper&#13;
Tuesday, but will live.&#13;
The broom factory, which was installed&#13;
some time after the institute&#13;
for the blind was opened in Saginaw,&#13;
has been particularly (Successful, and&#13;
at present, although Operating both&#13;
day and night, is fully a month behind&#13;
in its orders.&#13;
Because two women became so Intoxicated&#13;
in the wine room under the&#13;
grand stand at the West Michigan fair&#13;
grounds that they were arrested for&#13;
disorderly conduct, the sheriff closed&#13;
up the place. The directors of the fair&#13;
canceled the privilege held by the proprietor&#13;
of the bar.&#13;
The recent statements at the four&#13;
Pontiac banks show an increase of&#13;
$35,000 in the total amount of savings&#13;
deposits. This means an increase of&#13;
$3 per capita for every man, woman&#13;
and child in Pontiac during a period&#13;
of three months. If the prosperity&#13;
continues Pontiac people bid fair to&#13;
have more money than they know&#13;
what to do with.&#13;
Dewitt C. Leach, a member of congress&#13;
from the Lansing district previous&#13;
to the civil war, and now a man&#13;
84 years of age, is visiting In that&#13;
city. He was state librarian in 1857&#13;
and was Iwice elected to congress. In&#13;
congress he was a prominent abolitionist&#13;
and when the state of South&#13;
Carolina offered a reward for the&#13;
heads of prominent anti-slavery agitators&#13;
his ajme was on the list. Mr.&#13;
Leach now lives in Missouri,&#13;
Around the Metropolis&#13;
Interesting Gostip Gathered in New York—War p a Pehreet tyrt.&#13;
Leslie Carter Payse and M M Norma Maaro—LflHan Rueiell to&#13;
Eater Horse Radnf Game.&#13;
NEW YOftK.-^The controversy hetween Mrs.&#13;
Leslie Carter Payne, the actress, and Miss Norma&#13;
Leslie Munro, the reputedly wealthy daughter of&#13;
the late millionaire publisher, Norman Leslie&#13;
Munro, continues to excite interest among the&#13;
dilettante friends of these two women who hav%&#13;
furnished more space, continuously, for the newspapers&#13;
than probably any two other women in&#13;
New York. Unquestionably there is a sentiment&#13;
favorable to the actress' side of the question, for,&#13;
while the emotional Mrs. Carter Payne is not&#13;
Intensely popular, the people who have been ac-&#13;
^ ^ I B B JB^MIIIHIII 4u&amp;tated with the career of the two women in&#13;
^ i f H l J B B H I t h e P™6611* controversy are also conversant with&#13;
* I i V J A ^ 2 ^ 3 B ^ H I t h e recent allegations made against Miss Munro&#13;
u KlavajgCB^L^LHlllllI o v Mrs. Robert Osborn of playhouse and shirtwaist&#13;
fame. Mrs. Osborn's experience with Miss&#13;
Munro was so identical with that which Mrs. Carter&#13;
Payne is experiencing that their mutual&#13;
friends and that section of the public which has hung agape upon the published&#13;
accounts of the qulxotleal lives these people lead- are beginning to&#13;
wonder if, after all, the strenuous Miss Munro is not a "hoodoo."&#13;
No room for doubt remains that Mrs. Carter Payne and her recent "dearest&#13;
friend" aro at daggers' points. Further sensational developments are&#13;
promised when Miss Munro returns from Bar Harbor and Mrs. Carter Payno&#13;
from Shelter Island to their apartments adjoining each other in the building&#13;
owned by the Munroe estate.&#13;
Fatally Burned.&#13;
Charles Marshall, aged 68 years, a&#13;
farmer living in Spaulding township,&#13;
died in Saginaw hospital Tuesday&#13;
night from burns received Sunday at&#13;
his home on the farm. Marshall was&#13;
unmarried and lived alone. Sunday&#13;
when he retired he left a lighted lamp&#13;
near the bed. The lamp was overturned&#13;
and set fire to the bedding. The&#13;
kerosene saturated his clothing and&#13;
burned the flesh on his legs from his&#13;
knees down, in a frightful manner.&#13;
He was unconscious when discov,-&#13;
ered by neighbors Monday morning.&#13;
The house was filled with smoke, and&#13;
Marshall had been overcome. He was&#13;
taken to Saginaw, but did not rally.&#13;
«U33tUt_ AS RIVAL TO LANQTRY.&#13;
Speaking of an actress brings to mind the&#13;
fact that Lillian Russell has decided to seek&#13;
honors on the turf this fall. The favorite commedtenne&#13;
will not desert the footlights but she&#13;
has been .Imbued with the racing fever and has&#13;
decided to try her hand at the game. Lillians&#13;
colors wiii be carried by horses bred by herself&#13;
in England. '&#13;
When Mi88 Russell went abroad more than a&#13;
year ago she expected to stay in Europe for twe&#13;
or three years at least, and it was then that she&#13;
concluded to become a rival of Mrs. Langtry for&#13;
racing honors in England. She wanted to race&#13;
horses' of her own breeding and John S. McDonald&#13;
waa commissioned to buy a number of high&#13;
bred mares.&#13;
The •p'tirchases were made early last year and&#13;
a majority of the mares now have foals, there&#13;
being three colts by Carbine in the lot. The&#13;
entire list of marcs and foals will be shipped to this country this autumn,&#13;
probably In October. The mares will be sent to a farm, probably to Kentucky,&#13;
while the foals will be reserved for racing year after next unleos there&#13;
is another change of plans in the meantime.&#13;
Commutes Death Sentences.&#13;
Helsingfors.—Gen. Baron Salza has&#13;
commuted the death sentences of the&#13;
Sveaborg mutineers to penal servitude&#13;
for life in one case and in the others&#13;
to terms of . impprlsonment ranging&#13;
from 12 to 20 years.&#13;
End of Long Storm.&#13;
Mexico City,—The terrible storm&#13;
which swept over the Pacific coast&#13;
of the republic for nearly three weeks&#13;
has ended, after having occasioned&#13;
immense damage throughout an extensive&#13;
region.&#13;
Girl Impaled on Pfcktt Fence,&#13;
South Bend, Ind.—Helen Keer, aged&#13;
six* fejl from a second-story window&#13;
Friday morning and was impaled on a&#13;
picket fence. Unassisted, she helped&#13;
herself.to the ground and back into&#13;
the house.&#13;
Fire Damages Iron Works.&#13;
San Francisco.—Fire broke out Friday&#13;
at the Fulton iron works. For a&#13;
time the works, valued at over $2,000,-&#13;
000, were threatened with destruction.&#13;
The pattern workB were badly damaged.&#13;
QUIPS FROM THE PROFESSOR.&#13;
TW© Points Seorad In Humorous hut&#13;
effective^ Manner,&#13;
"You don't seem to understand,"&#13;
blustered the maafwho was trying to&#13;
make art potot with a univepity professor.&#13;
"I ttU you, sir, I V&gt;ught to . *&#13;
know, I'm an alumni of this institution&#13;
myself." "Are you? That's nothing&#13;
singular," was the witty rejoinder, uttered&#13;
so quietly that the flustering&#13;
man, never knew what had happened,&#13;
says the Youth's Companion.&#13;
On another occasion the same professor,&#13;
having ordered from, a music&#13;
publishing house a copy of a "Valasr ^&#13;
Impromptu" by a certain French con* **&#13;
poser, received an "Impromptu Walts"&#13;
by another man. The publishers, when&#13;
called to account for their mistake, replied&#13;
rather insolently that they had&#13;
been in the music publishing business&#13;
a long time, and had yet to discover&#13;
the difference between a ' Valse Impromptu"&#13;
and an "Impromptu Walts." # '&#13;
Would Dr. Smith kindly state to them ^&#13;
that difference?&#13;
"Gentlemen," wrote the genial professor,&#13;
in answer. "I have not, like&#13;
yourselves, been in the music publishing&#13;
business, and am therefore not&#13;
fully qualified to inform you; but&#13;
since, in your extremity, you have appealed&#13;
to me, I would venture to suggest&#13;
that the difference between a&#13;
•Valce Impromptu' and an 'Impromptu&#13;
Waltz' may be similar t-&gt; the difference&#13;
between a blind Venetian and a Venetian&#13;
blind."&#13;
Diderot and Scott.&#13;
Diderot Is reported to have said&#13;
that he would cut off an arm not to&#13;
have written a certain one of his novels.&#13;
Some attribute to Scott the saying&#13;
that he had written no line which&#13;
dying he would wish to blot.&#13;
The New Standard.&#13;
So few women are not\ smartly&#13;
dressed nowadays that tlje new standard&#13;
of praise Is "She' wears her&#13;
clothes well." Better this than beauty&#13;
that fades.—Boston Herald.&#13;
Not All on the Surface.&#13;
Sympathetic people are otten un*&#13;
:ommunlcatlye about themselves; they&#13;
&lt;ive back reflected images which hide&#13;
heif own depths.—George Eliot (Madau&#13;
Evans).&#13;
Astrological Symbol.&#13;
The first word in a physician's prescription&#13;
is "a recipe," abbreviated to&#13;
11., which is a relic of the astrological&#13;
symbol of Jupited.&#13;
Swift Running Animals.&#13;
The Colorado fox runs faster than&#13;
any other living animal, and the cheetah,&#13;
or hunting leopard, holds second&#13;
dace.&#13;
A Written Guarantee tX 17^^,%1% ™m is ** "*" """~ *••«"&#13;
COLUMBIA GRAPHOPIIONE&#13;
With this guarantee you don't guess, you KNOWwhkh is beat ASK&#13;
YOUR OWN BANKER as to our responsibly and fiaandai standi** Free Trial and Easy Payment Offer&#13;
Then send to our nearest dealer or to us, and get our . . . . y 7 V " C I&#13;
This ia your chance to secure the BEST TALKING MACHINE MAM, on payments which will not be felt.&#13;
WE ACCEPT 0L» riACtllNES Of ANY MAKE IN PART PAYMENT.&#13;
A n I d e a l ^ v e yea ever used a Grephoohoaa sot of s W » ? ta u * , ^ 0 , ^ , * , * , ^&#13;
S„ A A&#13;
w a U f * •* «*• ••aehoret anywhere! The musk of a Graphopboae ia the O M S '&#13;
u Timer Amusement. i»aEAR,swmAM&gt;FAR-jeucHW6. Try it •**}&lt;*««, •»••»••••« "• «*•»&#13;
r&#13;
•rand Prts, 'art* i t * a * * * % r m 4 * * „ , M . ^ ^ , m&#13;
INfhtst Javar*, Pertlaad, I tea&#13;
Columbia Phonograph Co&#13;
90-92 West Broadway,&#13;
New Yorlu&#13;
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0ftt „ . . „ „ „ . . .&#13;
c\\\% of yonr Easr Payment u d&#13;
Send me full details&#13;
r B a n Pi Exctasage Pisa.&#13;
„.•*** * warns • . , . i t * . • • i1* • • *, &gt;«,,,,,.,.,&#13;
• M f r - M # &gt; % t j * | » i . .*%«„ '&gt;)»*•• # ' &lt; Y » .&#13;
[!&gt; }. ~r'&gt;'t^*F .^%^rr'Jjflr. v-.v-" • .- &gt; •* -5-^ ' *••' •-. ' * " ' ! * • . •&#13;
:• «»*•,**-..w g * . - f i » f &gt; « - . « v nt»^tit«M?^.&lt;^Jag*ttg^ww^wre^ao^aw."--**zr,'acut^WMtwritam. iw»&lt;3i«a«p3«aw«»rw.j»»^»«iBi*T«ew&gt;«^'Cili:&#13;
T^"1""'^'' **l#rtr™'&gt;V' ^TvfPftJcTf?&#13;
^ : ^ ¾&#13;
~ &gt;&#13;
A FOOL FOR LOVE&#13;
By FRANCIS LYNDE&#13;
AUTHOR OP "THB GRAFTERS." ETC.&#13;
T^STC tpoprtigbtt K», *r J- *»• UppiaoQtt oe.)&#13;
CHAPTER VII.—Continued.&#13;
She turned upon him quickly.&#13;
"Was it an accident, Mr. Jastrow?"&#13;
"How could it be any tiling else?"&#13;
lie inquired, mildly.&#13;
"I don't know. But there was an&#13;
explosion; I heard it. Surely Uncle&#13;
•Somerville wouldn't—"&#13;
The secretary shook his head.&#13;
"No; I think you may exonerate Mr.&#13;
Darrah, personally; in fact I am quite&#13;
•sure you may."&#13;
"But someone planned it You&#13;
knew it was going ^ o happen—you&#13;
were out here watching for it."&#13;
"Was I?" The secretary's smile was&#13;
a mere baring of the teeth. His blood&#13;
was the sycophantic ' lymph which&#13;
flows in the veins of those who do&#13;
murder at a great man's nod.&#13;
"It Is horribly unfair," she went on.&#13;
•"I understand the sheriff is here.&#13;
•Couldn't he have prevented this?"&#13;
Jastrow's reply was an evasion.&#13;
"Oh, it's all legal enough. That bare&#13;
place up there is a placer claim. Supposing&#13;
the owners found it necessary&#13;
to put in a few sticks of dynamite to&#13;
loosen the frozen ground. It is Mr.&#13;
Winton's misfortune if his railroad&#13;
happens to be in the way, don't you&#13;
think?"&#13;
"But it was planned beforehand, and&#13;
you knew of it," she insisted. Her&#13;
eyes were flashing, and the secretary's&#13;
desire for possession warmed into&#13;
something like admiration.&#13;
"Did I?"&#13;
"Yes, you did."&#13;
"It would be impolite to contradict&#13;
you."&#13;
"It is more impolite not to answer&#13;
my question. Couldn't the sheriff,&#13;
have prevented it?"&#13;
"Supposing he didn't want to prevent&#13;
it? Supposing he brought the&#13;
men who did it over on his train last&#13;
night?"&#13;
"Then I say again it is horribly unfair."&#13;
The secretary's rejoinder was a&#13;
platitude: "Everything is fair in love&#13;
or war."&#13;
"But this is neither." she retorted.&#13;
"Think not?" he said, coolly. "Wait&#13;
and you'll See. And a word in your&#13;
ear, Miss Carteret: you are one of us,&#13;
you know, and you mustn't be disloyal.&#13;
I know what you did yesterday&#13;
after you read those telegrams."&#13;
Virginia's face became suddenly&#13;
wooden. Until that moment it had&#13;
not occurred to her that Jastrow's motive&#13;
in showing her the two telegrams&#13;
might have been carefully calculated.&#13;
Though she would have disavowed it&#13;
emphatically, Miss Carteret was an&#13;
aristocrat of the aristocrats; and the&#13;
conviction that the secretary had deliberately&#13;
gone about to establish a&#13;
confidential relation filled her with&#13;
cold anger.&#13;
"I have never given you the right&#13;
to speak to me that way, Mr. Jasstrbw,"&#13;
she said, with the faintest pos*&#13;
sible emphasis on the courtesy prefix;&#13;
and with that she turned from him&#13;
to focus her field glass on the construction&#13;
camp below.&#13;
At the Utah stronghold all was activity&#13;
of the fiercest Winton had'&#13;
raced back with his news of the catastrophe,&#13;
and the camp was alive with&#13;
men clustering like bees and swarming&#13;
upon the flat cars of the material&#13;
train to be taken to the front&#13;
While she looked, studiously ignoring&#13;
the man behind her, Virginia saw&#13;
the big octopod engine come clamoring&#13;
Mp the grade, shoring the flats before&#13;
it, losing itself quickly in the&#13;
doubling of the gulch loop to reappear&#13;
presently on the scene of the disaster.&#13;
In a twinkling the men were off and&#13;
at work, and the frosty morning air&#13;
rang, with the battle shout of labor&#13;
triumphant—or meaning to be.&#13;
Virginia's color rose and the brown&#13;
eyes filled swiftly. One part of her&#13;
ideal—her masculine ideal—was courage-&#13;
of the sort that rises the higher&#13;
for ^reverses. So the prompt counterstroke&#13;
filled her with joy, and at the&#13;
moment Winton was as near gaining a&#13;
partisan as the Rajah was to losing&#13;
one. But at the heart-thrilling instant&#13;
•he remembered the eoW-eyed secretary,&#13;
and, lest he should spy upon her&#13;
emotion as he had upon her sympathy,&#13;
ahe turned quickly and took refuge in&#13;
fltegar. '&#13;
. 1 4 the open compartment of the&#13;
Jmjpiary the waiter was laying the&#13;
ie»ll« for the early breakfast, and&#13;
Battle and the Reverenu V&gt; illiam ware&#13;
at the window, watching the stirring&#13;
Industry battle now in full swing on&#13;
the Opposite slope. Virginia joined&#13;
Seas,&#13;
"Isn't it a shame!" she said. "Of&#13;
•omsa, I want our side to win; hut it&#13;
latsiurapfc a pity that we can't fight&#13;
haired cousin looked bar,&#13;
of understanding, and Cal&#13;
vert said: "Isn't what a shame?7&#13;
thereby eliciting a crisp explanation&#13;
from Virgin! in which she set wellfounded&#13;
suspicion in the light of fact&#13;
touching the cause of the landslide.&#13;
The Reverend Billy shook his head.&#13;
It was his metier to deprecate violence,&#13;
and he did It.&#13;
"Such things may be within the law&#13;
—of business; but they will surely&#13;
breed bad blood and lead to reprisals,&#13;
I hope—"&#13;
The interruption was the Rajah in&#13;
his proper person, bustling out fiercely&#13;
to a conference with his myrmidons.&#13;
By tacit consent the three at&#13;
the window fell silent. There was&#13;
- Winton was-in- the* tfctek of the pickand-&#13;
shovel melee, urging it on, when&#13;
Biggin ran up.&#13;
"HI!" he shouted. "Flxin* to take&#13;
another play-day in Carbonate?&#13;
Lookee down yonder!"&#13;
Winten looked and came alive to&#13;
the possibilities in the turning of a&#13;
leaf."&#13;
"Guns!" he yelled; and at the word&#13;
of command the tools were flung&#13;
aside, and the track foree,. over 200&#13;
strong, became an army, not with&#13;
banners, bat weR-weaponed withal.&#13;
Winton snapped out his order* lfke a&#13;
martinet major of drill squads.&#13;
"Mulcahy, take half the men and go&#13;
up the grade till you can rake those&#13;
fellows without hitting the car.&#13;
Branagan, you take the other half and&#13;
go down along till you can cross-fire&#13;
with Mulcahy. Aim low, ^oth of you;&#13;
and the man who fires before he gets&#13;
the word from me will break his neck&#13;
at a rope's end. Fall in!"&#13;
"By Jove!- said Adams. "Are you&#13;
going to resist? That spells felony,&#13;
doesn't it?"&#13;
Winton pointed to the waiting octopod.&#13;
"I'm going to order the 215 down&#13;
out of the way; you may go with her&#13;
if you like."&#13;
"I guess not!" quoth the technolo-&#13;
"COME DOWN!" HiS BELLOWED.&#13;
battle and murder and sudden death&#13;
in the Rajah's eye.&#13;
The event for which they waited did&#13;
not linger. There was a hasty mustering&#13;
of armed men under the windows&#13;
of thej Rosemary, and they heard&#13;
Sheriff Deckert's low voiced instructions&#13;
to his posse.&#13;
"Take it slow and easy, boys, and&#13;
don't get rattled. It's the majesty of&#13;
the law against a mob, and the Micks&#13;
*f*&gt;Hr.&#13;
« *&#13;
gian, calmly lighting a fresh cigarette.&#13;
And then to the water boy, who&#13;
was acting quartermaster, "Give me a&#13;
rifle and a cartridge belt, Chunky, and&#13;
I'll stay here with the boss."&#13;
"And where do I come in?" said&#13;
Biggin, reproachfully.&#13;
"You'll stay out, if your head's level.&#13;
You've done enough now to send you&#13;
to Canyon City, if anybody cares to&#13;
take it up. Heavens and earth, man!&#13;
won't fight when it comes to a show-/*^0 y o u forget that you are a sworn&#13;
down. Keep in line with the car ai officer of the law?"&#13;
long as you can. There ain't goings&#13;
to be a shot flred from up yonder so&#13;
long as there's a chance of hitting tue&#13;
car instead of you. Now, then; guns&#13;
to the front! itfeady!"&#13;
The Reverend Billy rose, and the&#13;
yelns in his forehead stood out like&#13;
whip cords.&#13;
"What are you going to do?" said&#13;
Virginia. She was standing, too, and&#13;
her hand, trembling a little, was en&#13;
his arm.&#13;
The clerical meekness in the athlete's&#13;
reply was conspicuous by its absence.&#13;
"I'm going to give Winton a tip if&#13;
it's the laBt thing I ever do. They'll&#13;
rush him like a rat in a corner!"&#13;
She shook her head and pointed&#13;
eastward to the mouth of the lateral&#13;
gulch. Under cover of a clump of flrscrub&#13;
a man in a wice-flapped hat and&#13;
leather breeches was climbing swiftly&#13;
to the level of the new line, cautiously&#13;
waving a handkerchief as a&#13;
peace token, "That is the man who&#13;
arrested M*. Winton yesterday. This&#13;
time he is going to fight on the other&#13;
side. He'll carry the warning."&#13;
"Think so?" said Calvert&#13;
"I am sure of it. Open the window,&#13;
please. I want to see better."&#13;
As yet there was no sign of preparation&#13;
on the embankment. For the&#13;
moment the arms of the track force&#13;
were laid aside, and every man was&#13;
plying plek or shovel as tt his Mfe depended&#13;
on the amount of earth he&#13;
I ain't a-forgettin' nothing," said&#13;
Peter, cheerfully, casting himself flat&#13;
behind a heap of earth on the dumpedge&#13;
and sighting one section of his&#13;
hip battery over the breastwork.&#13;
Winton pounced upon him, gasping.&#13;
"Here, you fire-eater! you mustn't&#13;
shoot!" he protested. "It's only a&#13;
long bluff, and I'm going to raise the&#13;
limit so those fellows can't come in.&#13;
There are ladies in that car!"&#13;
"You play your bluftln' hand and&#13;
lemme alone," "said the ex-cowboy. "I'm&#13;
jest goin' to have a little fun with old&#13;
Bart Deckert wnile the sun's a-«hln«&#13;
in'."&#13;
It was at this moment, while the&#13;
sheriff's posse was picking its way&#13;
gingerly over the loose rock and earth&#13;
dam formed uy the landslide, that the&#13;
window went up in the Rosemary and&#13;
Winton saw Virginia. Without meaning&#13;
to, she gave him his battle-word.&#13;
While she looked on he would fight to&#13;
win, andHhat without violence.&#13;
"We are a dozen Winchesters to&#13;
your one, Mr. Deckert, and we shall&#13;
resist force with force. Order your&#13;
men back or there will be trouble."&#13;
Winton stood put on the edge of the&#13;
cutting, a solitary figure where a few&#13;
minutes before the earth had been&#13;
flying from a hundred shovels.&#13;
The sheriff's reply was an order, but&#13;
not for retreat.&#13;
"He's one of the men we want;&#13;
cover him!" he commanded; and Virginia&#13;
caught her breath. Was she to&#13;
see him shot down before her eyes?&#13;
Happily the tragedy was only potential.&#13;
Unless the public occasion appeals&#13;
strongly to the sympathies or&#13;
the passions, a picked-up sheriff's&#13;
posse Is not likely to have very good&#13;
metal in It. Winton was covered by&#13;
three or four of the guns, pointed awkwardly,&#13;
ana Peter Biggin laughed.&#13;
"Don't be no ways nervous," he said&#13;
in an aside to Winton. "Them professional&#13;
venlry chumps couldn't hit the&#13;
side o* Pacific Peak."&#13;
Winton held his ground, waiting the&#13;
turn of events and looking on, not&#13;
without interest, while the sheriff&#13;
tried to drive h»s men up a bare s l o e&#13;
commanded by 200 rifles to right and&#13;
left. The attempt, was a humiliating&#13;
failure. Being something less than&#13;
soldiers trained to do or die, the deputies&#13;
hung back to a man, hugging tne&#13;
backgrounding shelter of the Rosemary&#13;
as if they were shackled to the&#13;
private car by invisible chains.&#13;
Virginia, standing ai the open window&#13;
and trembling with excitement,&#13;
could not forbear a smile. It was too&#13;
much for the sheriff, the added straw,&#13;
and his exhortation to his foot-posse&#13;
burst into caustic profanity. Whereupon&#13;
Mr. Peter Biggin rose up in his&#13;
place, took careless aim, and sent a&#13;
bullet to plow a little furrow in the&#13;
ice and frozen snow within an inch&#13;
of ijeckert's heels.&#13;
"Ex-cuse me, Bart," he drawled,&#13;
"but no cuss words don't go in this&#13;
here highly moril show. They pains&#13;
us extreme."&#13;
Under ordinary circumstances—the.&#13;
sheriff would have replied to Mr. Biggin's&#13;
salutation in kind. As* it was,&#13;
he ignored Peter Biggin as a person&#13;
who could ^¾ ^rgued with at leisure&#13;
and turned his attention to Winton.&#13;
"Come down!" he bellowed.&#13;
Winton laughed. The tide had&#13;
turned, and he knew it.&#13;
"Let me return the invitation. Come&#13;
up, and you may read your warrants&#13;
to us all day."&#13;
The crisis was past. Deckert withdrew&#13;
his men, and at. Winton's signal&#13;
the track layers came in and the earth&#13;
began to fly again.&#13;
Virginia sighed her relief, and Bessie&#13;
plucked up courage to go to the&#13;
window" which she had deserted in the&#13;
moment of impending battle.&#13;
"Oh-h-h! I wish Uncle Somerville&#13;
would take us away!" she gasped.&#13;
"Can't, you persuade him, Virginia,&#13;
dear?" - —&#13;
"I'll&#13;
The Age of Machinery.&#13;
We live in the age of machinery.&#13;
The thinking, directing mind becomes&#13;
daily of more account, while mere&#13;
brawn. fails correspondingly in value&#13;
from day to day. That eccentric philosopher,&#13;
Elbert Hubbard, says in one&#13;
of his essays, "where a machine will&#13;
do better work than the human hand,&#13;
we prefer to let the machine do the&#13;
work."&#13;
It has been but a few years since&#13;
the cotton gin, the "spinning Jenny" f&#13;
and the power loom displaced the&#13;
hand picker, the spinning wheel and&#13;
the hand loom; since the reaper and&#13;
binder, the lake and tedder, the mowing&#13;
machine took the place of the old&#13;
cradle, scythe, pitchfork and hand&#13;
rake; since the friction match superseded&#13;
the flint and tinder; since&#13;
the modern pajnt factory replaced the&#13;
slab and muller, the paint pot and&#13;
paddle.&#13;
In every case where machinery has&#13;
been introduced to replace hand labor,&#13;
the laborers have resisted the change;&#13;
and as the weavers, the sempstresses&#13;
and the farm laborers protested&#13;
against newfangled looms, sewing machines&#13;
and agricultural implement*,-&#13;
so in recent times compositors have&#13;
protested against type-setting machines,&#13;
glass blowers against bottle&#13;
blowing machines, and painters&#13;
against ready mixed paints. And as&#13;
in the case of these short-sighted&#13;
classes of an earlier day, so with their&#13;
imitators of to-day, the protest will&#13;
be in vain. It is a protest against civilization,&#13;
against the common weal,&#13;
against their own welfare.&#13;
The history of all mechanical Improvements&#13;
shows that workmen are&#13;
the first to be benefited by them.&#13;
The invention of the sewing machine,&#13;
instead of throwing thousands of women&#13;
out of employment, increased the&#13;
demand to such an extent that thousands&#13;
of women have been employed,&#13;
at better wages, for shorter hours and&#13;
easier work where hundreds before*&#13;
worked in laborious misery to eke&#13;
out a pitiable existence. It was so&#13;
with spinning and weaving machinery,&#13;
with agricultural implements—in&#13;
fafct, it is so with every notable improvement.&#13;
The multiplication of&#13;
\books in the last decade is a direct&#13;
result of ,the invention of linotype&#13;
machinery and, fast presses.&#13;
The mixed paint industry, in which&#13;
carefully designed paints for house&#13;
painting are prepared on a large scale&#13;
by special machinery, is another impriiv^&#13;
mejaJLjoJLthe same type. The&#13;
try," said Virginia, gTavely,&#13;
foreseeing future tragic situations too&#13;
terrifying to be witnessed.&#13;
"Breakfast is served," announced the&#13;
waiter as calmly as if the morning&#13;
meal were the only matter of consequence&#13;
in a world of happenings.&#13;
They gathered about the table, a&#13;
silent trio made presently a quartette&#13;
by the advent of Mrs. Carteret, who,&#13;
*M&lt;rom having her stateroom on the 7 peaceful side of the Rosemary, had&#13;
neither seen nor heard anything of the&#13;
Warlike episode with which the day&#13;
had begun.&#13;
Having weighty mr.tters to discuss&#13;
with Sheriff Deckert, Mr. Darrah was&#13;
late, so late that when he came in Virginia&#13;
was the only one of the quartette&#13;
who remained at tabic She. stayed to&#13;
pour his coffee and to bespeak peace,&#13;
knowing full well that' the time was&#13;
unpropitious, but believing that the&#13;
crisis was its own best excuse.&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
cheapness and generaPexcellence^ efthese&#13;
products has so stimulated the&#13;
consumption of- paint that the demand&#13;
for the services of-painter8 has&#13;
correspondingly multiplied. Before&#13;
the advent of these goods a well-painted&#13;
house was noticeable from its&#13;
rarity, whereas to-day an ill-painted&#13;
house is conspicuous.&#13;
Nevertheless, the painters, as a&#13;
rule, following the example set by&#13;
the weavers, the sempstresses and the&#13;
farm laborers of old, almost to a man.&#13;
oppose tb«» Improvement. It is a real&#13;
improvement, however, and simply because&#13;
of that fact the sale of such&#13;
products has increased until during&#13;
the present year it will fall not far&#13;
short of 90,000,000 or 100,000,000 gallons.&#13;
Hindsight is always better than&#13;
foresight, and most of us who deplore&#13;
the sliurt-sightedness-of our ancestors—&#13;
would do well to see that we do not&#13;
in turn furnish "terrible examples" to&#13;
our posterity.&#13;
Cure for Whooping Cough.&#13;
Irwin, Pa.—The "mine cure" for&#13;
whooping cough among small children&#13;
is attracting attention in this section,&#13;
where the disease is almost epidemic.&#13;
In one case a Jeannette father daily&#13;
takes his ten-months-old baby girl&#13;
down into the Pehn mine. He remains&#13;
half an hour, comes to the surface&#13;
for the same space of time, and&#13;
again goes down and remains another&#13;
half hour. This will be repeated daily&#13;
for two weeks. The child has a severe&#13;
case, and from a fit of coughing&#13;
goes into spasms. A Pittsburg&#13;
physician recommended the "mina&#13;
cure", as the only profitable relief,&#13;
DICTIONARY A T FAULT.&#13;
The other day we gave some illustrations&#13;
of the difficulties travelers encountered&#13;
in Interpreting the language&#13;
of native races. A doctor tells two&#13;
stories relating to India,&#13;
A friend of his desired a box of&#13;
matches, and Jooked up the word in&#13;
a dictionary. He called his servant&#13;
and told him his want, but the man&#13;
failed to understand. He tried another&#13;
word with similar result Then, making&#13;
sure the third was. correct, he vehemently&#13;
shouted at the servant, who,&#13;
this time fled in convulsive laughter&#13;
which he heard reechoed as he told&#13;
the other servants. « He discovered&#13;
later that he had Insisted 911 quickly&#13;
being married. J .' ^&#13;
The other story. I* o f a o unlucky&#13;
railway coolie who stood., in aniasement&#13;
near the lady who had^&#13;
coald add to. tha re-foraina^d**** ln^jOs^,a»i»a#-eeaAdasily&#13;
given* numW ortnlnutes. he would and all her paradise and&#13;
heaven beneath the seat! She meant&#13;
her luggage, but she had two letters&#13;
wrong.&#13;
What Willie Asked.&#13;
" 'And he rent &lt;hjs garments and&#13;
went upon his way,' " quoted the teacher.&#13;
"Now, which little boy or girl&#13;
can tell me where he was going?"&#13;
The little wise boy lifted his hand.&#13;
"You may answer, Willie."&#13;
"Why, if he rented his garments, he&#13;
must have been going to a masquerade&#13;
hall."—Judge.&#13;
A man who was arrested for break*&#13;
ing into a house in Berlin made the&#13;
excuse that he only wanted a pair of&#13;
shoes belonging to a celebrated Russian&#13;
pianist who was staying in the&#13;
house. A collection of women's shoes,&#13;
all neatly labeled and catalogued, waa&#13;
found In the roqa where ha lived,&#13;
From Clyde Fitch's Serapbook.&#13;
Clyde Fitch, at a dinner that he&#13;
gave in honor of a noted dramatic&#13;
critic, read from his library of scrap&#13;
books a western criticism on Hamlet.&#13;
The criticism, which was dated 1873,&#13;
ran:&#13;
"There is too much chinning in this&#13;
piece. The author is behind the times,&#13;
and seems to forget that wb^at we&#13;
want nowadays is hair raising situations&#13;
and detectives.&#13;
"In the hands of a skillful playwright&#13;
a detective would have been&#13;
put upon the track of Hamlet's- uncle,&#13;
and the old man would have been&#13;
hunted down in a manner that would&#13;
have lifted the audience out of their&#13;
cowhides.&#13;
"The moral of the piece is not good.&#13;
The scene where Hamlet sasses his&#13;
mother is a bad example to the rising&#13;
generation.&#13;
"Our advice to the author is more&#13;
action, more love-making, and plenty&#13;
of specialties. The crasy girl scene&#13;
should he cut.out altogether and a rattling&#13;
good song and dance substitute&#13;
1 ed."&#13;
1,.&#13;
* . N&#13;
( ^w*Atfyj&amp;;t*#^^ „ _ . ^ 1 ¾ 1 1 «•&#13;
3f.»- II&#13;
ft&#13;
&amp; • • 31 tie f mckiug Ji$patth&#13;
F. L. ANDRfcWS &amp; CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
rHrJRSDAY.SEP'l. 20, 1906,&#13;
T h e Ghoice is Y o u r s&#13;
T b e f o l l o w i n g a r e t h e n o m i n r t i o n s&#13;
ot t h e t h r e e p a r t i e s tor s t a t e a n d coun&#13;
ty flicers. W P r an tnll you who&#13;
l u v e t o m a k e&#13;
Piles positively c u r e d with Dr.&#13;
S h o o p ' s Ma^io o i n t m e n t . It's m a d e for&#13;
piles a l o n e , a n d it d~&gt;e tlio work t o&#13;
p e r f e c t i o n . I e h i n » , p a i n f u l , p r o t r u d -&#13;
i n g o r blind piles, d i s a p p e a r like&#13;
matfu-:. Sold by aM d e a l e r s .&#13;
they a r e , but" you wi&#13;
y o u r o w n cbo*t e:&#13;
K K P I R U C A N '&#13;
&gt;TATE&#13;
• (Sovenor, Fred M. Warner. Kunninston&#13;
Lieut.: Uov., Patrick H . Kelly, Lansing&#13;
Set;, of State, » Jen. A. Pivse-ott, Tnwas&#13;
City&#13;
State Tie;is.( Frank P. CJIa/ier, Chelsea&#13;
^AimtforTrenei'al, JrYnies H. Bradley,&#13;
Katun Rapids&#13;
Land Commissioner, William I I . Hose,&#13;
Bath&#13;
Attorney-General, John E. Hird, Adrian&#13;
Superintendent of Public Instruction.&#13;
Luther L. Wright, lronwond&#13;
Member of Board of Education. Dexter&#13;
M. Ferry J r . , Detroit&#13;
COUNTY&#13;
Thomas Allen, Flint, State Senator.&#13;
Chas. VanKeut'Hn, Representative&#13;
Willis Lyuti, County Clerk&#13;
J a m e s Greene,'Prosecuting Attorney&#13;
A. D . Thompson, Register of Deeds&#13;
Edwin Pratt, Sheriff&#13;
. Frank Mowers, County Drain Com.&#13;
J . A. Woodruff, County School Com,&#13;
Henry C. Durfee, School Examiner&#13;
T. J . (Saul, School Examiner&#13;
DEMOCRATIC&#13;
STATE&#13;
Crevernor, ('has. H . Kimmerle, ( assopolis.&#13;
Lent. Gov.. Thomas M. Rogers,&#13;
Ste. Marie&#13;
State Treasurer, ( harles Wellman.&#13;
Huron&#13;
Attoi'iiey-fU'iieial, Enianuel J . Doyle,&#13;
Grand Rapids&#13;
Auditor General, John Yuell, Vander-&#13;
—bllt, Otsego County ; —&#13;
Superintendent of Public Instruction,&#13;
Elmer R. Webster, Pontiac&#13;
Stnte Land Commissioner, Clarence L.&#13;
Shelden, Bay County&#13;
Member of State Board of Education,&#13;
James E . Sullivan, Cheboygan&#13;
COUNTY&#13;
Edwin Farmer, Representative&#13;
• Robert Wright, Clerk&#13;
Louis E . Hewlett, Pros, Attorney&#13;
JOhn Wiggles worth, Register of Deeds&#13;
Will Stoddard. Sheriff&#13;
Clarence Bishop, Drain Com.&#13;
F. D. Curr, School Com.&#13;
J . K. Osgerby, School Examiner t&#13;
Miles Valentine, School Examiner&#13;
The B r e a t h of Lile.&#13;
It's a significant, fact t h a i t h e&#13;
Low Hates West r i d&#13;
( h i e a go U r e a t W e s t e r n H a l l w a y&#13;
For lowest r a t e s to all p o i n t s west&#13;
w n r n to F . R Mosier, I). P . A , 108&#13;
A d a n . s Sr , C h i c a g o , III., s t a t ; n ^ how&#13;
mtiny in p a r t y a n d w h e n noititf. t 38&#13;
If all dyspep-ia sufferers l;np w t h a t&#13;
Dr."Shoop's S e s t o r a t i v - would do lor&#13;
t h e m . Dyspepsia would practically be&#13;
a disease of t h e past. D r . Shoop' s Kes&#13;
t o r a t i v e reaches s t o m a c h t r o u b l e s by&#13;
its d i r e c t tonic action u p o n . t h e inside&#13;
n e r v e s — t h e t i n e s t o m a c h nerves.&#13;
S t o m a c h distress o r w e a k n e s s , fullness&#13;
M o a t i n g belchintr, e t c . Call tor t h e&#13;
R e s t o r a t i v e , We r e c o m m e n d a n d sell&#13;
\)i\ Shoop's Restorative. Alt Dealers.&#13;
B&lt;*flrv&lt;trs W h o T*k*&gt; t h e •*C»rt&gt;."&#13;
Begging so«ins to l&gt;e a l u c r a t i v e calling&#13;
in Vienna. In one of t h e district&#13;
police c o u r t s a m u u uuU his wife were&#13;
s u m m o n e d to a p p e a r on a c h a r g e of&#13;
bogging In tlic sti-octs. Only t h e wo&#13;
m a n nppcared. a n d in n n s w o r t o t h e&#13;
m a g i s t r a t e ' s questions s t a t e d t h a t h«jr&#13;
h u s b a n d had gouo to B a d e u to t a k e a&#13;
c u r e ! T h e prosecuting a t t o r n e y ro&#13;
market! t h a t t h e Viennese btyjgars&#13;
e a r n e d suoh good incomes a n d lived so&#13;
well that they were forced to go to&#13;
some bath resort to recover from their&#13;
high living. Only a few d a y s «go, hn&#13;
said, n begtrar well k n o w n In t h e Vlcn&#13;
nn police icourts h a d r e t u r n e d from&#13;
C a r l s b a d after taking t h e c u r e there&#13;
and h a d resumed his begging with&#13;
renewed vigor. Pall Mall G a z e t t e .&#13;
W h e r e t h e M o n e y C a m e !&lt;&gt;om.&#13;
B a t c h e l l o r - T h a f s a good cigar you're&#13;
smoking. P o p l e y - Yes. t h a t ' s a fine ten&#13;
center you gave me. Batchellor -1&#13;
gave you? I guess not. Pop ley/—Oh.&#13;
yes, I ' m sure It w a s y o u r money paid&#13;
for it. T h e only money I t'aund in our&#13;
b a b y ' s bank this m o r n i n g w a s the&#13;
d i m e you p u t In y e s t e r d a y — C a t h o l i c&#13;
S t a n d a r d a n d Times.&#13;
W h e n y o u h a v e a cold it is well t o&#13;
be very c a r e f u l a b o u t u s i n g a n y t h i n g&#13;
t h a t will c a u s e c o n s t i p a t i o n . Be part&#13;
i c u l a r l y c a r e f u l a b o u t p r e p a r a t i o n s&#13;
c o n t a i n i n g o p i a t e s . U s e K e n n e d y ' s&#13;
L a x a t i v e H o n e y a u d T a r , which s t o p s&#13;
the c o u ^ b a n d moves t h e b o w e l s .&#13;
*&gt;ld b y P . A. Slgler, D r u g g l a t&#13;
S a u It&#13;
' o r t&#13;
T h e O n e R u l e .&#13;
At n club where card playing K a s&#13;
prohibited four m e m b e r s smuggled&#13;
hi n pack and, calling t h e waiter&#13;
aside, asked him if he h a d ever known&#13;
the rule broken. H i s reply w a s , "All&#13;
the y e a r s 1 have been here I h a v e&#13;
k n o w n every rule b r o k e n except one—&#13;
that of giving of tips." T h e g a m e pro&#13;
ceeded.&#13;
Ask a u y " J A P " t h a t y o n rriiy s e e , '&#13;
" W h y t h e Czar, ijith BEAR b e h i n d , "&#13;
had t o c l i i n V a t r e e .&#13;
T h e Y a n k s , God bless t h e Y a n k s ,&#13;
says h e ,&#13;
T h e y g a v e us Rocky M o u n t a i n T e a .&#13;
Yery L o w R a t e s t o t h e West&#13;
T h e C h i c a g o G r e a t W e s t e r n Railway&#13;
will sell t i c k e t s t o p o i n t s in&#13;
Aibi-rta, A r i z o n a , B r i t i s h C o l u m b i a ,&#13;
California, Colorado, I d a h o , M o n t a n a .&#13;
N e v a d a , O r e g o n . * l T ' a b , W a s h i n g t o n&#13;
a n d W y o m i n g , a t a b o u t o n e - h a l t t h e&#13;
u s u a l t a r e . T i c k e t s on sale daily&#13;
Autf. 27 t p Oct. 31 i n c l u s i v e . G e t full&#13;
i n f o r m a t i o n trom t h e g r e a t W e s t e r n&#13;
a g e n t or J . P . E l m e r .&#13;
F. R. Mosier, I). P . A,&#13;
103 A d a m s S t . , C h i c a g o , 111.&#13;
Starring to Death.&#13;
Because her stomach was so weakened&#13;
by useless drugging that she&#13;
could not eat, Mrs. Mary H. Walters,&#13;
of St. Clair St., Columbus, 0., was&#13;
literally starying to death. She writes&#13;
"My stomach was so weak from use&#13;
less drugs that I could not eat, and&#13;
my nerves so wrecked that I could&#13;
not sleep; and not before I was given&#13;
up to die was I induced to try Electric&#13;
Bitters; with the wonderful result&#13;
that improvement began at once, and&#13;
a complete cure lollowed." Best health&#13;
tonic on earth. 50J. Guaranteed by&#13;
F. A. Sigler, druggist.&#13;
-¾ Of 5^&#13;
Weak Kidneys&#13;
Bright'* Disease&#13;
and Diabetes&#13;
Use Dr. Shoop's Restorative to Cure&#13;
the Cause, If You Suffer From&#13;
These Symptoms.&#13;
Here are the symptoms of Kidney complaint*:&#13;
Urine laden with sediment, brick dust In urine,&#13;
highly colored urine, greasy froth or blood&#13;
In It, itrlngy mucous in urine, unusual desire&#13;
to urinate, puin in passing water, puin in&#13;
the back and over the kidneys, hot, dry and&#13;
H o n i n g s k i n , h t ^ r ^ d r y and brittle, pain&#13;
lul Joints, legs feel&#13;
d u l l n e s s , loss ( '&#13;
tlons. loss of mem&#13;
lty, i r r e g u 1 u r&#13;
of e y e s i g h t ,&#13;
hearing, wax;&#13;
•hitting from&#13;
the other in&#13;
An Impropment&#13;
is often&#13;
n o n e . M o s t&#13;
cine* get their&#13;
remedies called&#13;
are p r a c t i c a l l y&#13;
acting aa cathartics&#13;
They excite the klc&#13;
tion. they cause over&#13;
etio remedies are them&#13;
R B I T B T I I I o f L i t e r a t u r e .&#13;
A very talented a n d well k n o w n&#13;
writer—successful, too, In t h e popular&#13;
estimation—tells m e : " I k n o w a m a n&#13;
who s p e n t fifteen y e a r s ' leisure In petting&#13;
t h e material for h i s best book ami&#13;
w r i t i n g it over three t i m e s , then offered&#13;
It to a l m o s t every publisher in&#13;
America,' meeting with refusal by all,&#13;
a n d finally sold It t o a London publisher&#13;
for £uO, h a d it r e p u b l i s h e d In&#13;
America some y e a r s a f t e r w a r d , g o t a&#13;
few dollars before t h e p u b l i s h e r s failed&#13;
a n d a s his last royalty received&#13;
j u s t 2 cents, which w a s e x a c t l y 10 p e r&#13;
cent of t h e last s u m d u e him. I a m&#13;
the m a n , b u t I don't publish t h e fact&#13;
nor feel inclined to b r a g a b o u t it nor&#13;
to complain, for t h a t w o u l d be useless&#13;
nnd would only chenpen my w a r e s i:i&#13;
the literary m a r k e t . T h e book paid&#13;
me, by a c c u r a t e calculation. jl.Tj cents&#13;
a w e e k for t h e fifteen y e a r s ' w o r k ; - —&#13;
F a p y r u s .&#13;
R h e u m a t i s m is n o t i n c u r a b l e . S t u b&#13;
o r n ? Y e s ! B u t D r . S h o o p ' s R h e u m a t i c&#13;
R e m e d y will if f a i t h f u l l y used d r i v e&#13;
s t r o n g e s t at imal ot its s u e , t h e g o r i l l a&#13;
also h a s t h e l a r g e s t l u n g s . P o w e r f u l&#13;
l u n g s m e a n s p o w e r f u l c r e a t u r e s . H o w&#13;
to k e e p t h e b r e a t h i n g o r g a n s r i g h t&#13;
s h o u l d be m a n ' s cbiefest £ t u d y . L i k e&#13;
t h o u s a n d s of o t h e r s , M r s . O r a A . l i t o u t of t h e s y s t e m . I t ' s t h e blood&#13;
S t e p h e n s , of P o r t W i l l i a m ^ , 0 . , h a s I t h a t ' s a t fault P o i s o n o u s crystals like&#13;
l e a r n e d to do this. She w r i t e s : " T h r e e , sand, g e t i n t o t h e j o i n t s a n d m u s c l e s .&#13;
bottle s of D r . K i n g ' s N e w Discovery ; [)i S t o o p s R h e u m a t i s m R e m e d y p r e -&#13;
s t o p p n i my covuh of t w o y e a r s and v e n t s this It drive? r h e u m a t i s m from&#13;
c u r e d me o f ' w h a t my m e n d * t h o u g h t t h e blood a n d t h e n rli u m a t i ^ m dies.&#13;
c o n s u m p t i o n . 0 , it's g r a n d tcr ' h r c a t W e r e c o m m e n d a n d sell it. All D^ala&#13;
n d l u n g t r o u b l e . " G u a r a n t e e d b y . e i s .&#13;
F . A. S i c l e r , d i u g g i s t . P r i c e oOct.s. i&#13;
Good for t h e c o u g h , r e m o v e ? t h e&#13;
cold, t h e c a u s e ot t h e c o u u b . - T h a t ' s&#13;
t h e work of K e n n e d y ' s L a x a t i v e H o n -&#13;
ey a n d T a r — t h e o r i g i n a l l a x a t i v e&#13;
c o u g h s j \ u p . C o n t a i n s n o o p i a t e s .&#13;
Sold b y F . A. Slgler. D r u g g i s t&#13;
heavy, sleeplessness*&#13;
weight, chilly sensaory,&#13;
irrnernl debil*&#13;
h e a r t , disorders&#13;
t r o u b l e wi t h&#13;
s k i n , f e v e r ,&#13;
ne foot t o&#13;
s t a n d i n g .&#13;
e r t r e a t -&#13;
worse t h a n&#13;
Kidney medif&#13;
f ec t f r o m&#13;
diuretics. These&#13;
kidney physics,&#13;
act on the bowels.&#13;
eysto unusual acstratn.&#13;
These diurselves&#13;
the f r e q u e n t&#13;
eauae of serious kidney disease. Don't try to&#13;
doctor the kidneys themselves, for you will only&#13;
harm them. Their only strength is nervS Bwer. Dr. Shoop'a Restorative (Tablet! or&#13;
Quid) vitalizes the nerves that operate t o t&#13;
Kidneys. Sold and recommended by&#13;
"ALL D E A L E R S / '&#13;
B i r d s H a v e F a v o r i t e P l a n t s .&#13;
L i k e m a n , birds h a v e their favorite&#13;
p l a n t s . I t h a s been discovered t h a t t h e&#13;
goldfinch Is passionately fond of apple&#13;
blosson* T h i s m a y be b e c a u s e j t s fav&#13;
o r i t e building site I s T i n " t h e lichen&#13;
covered forks of apple trees, b u t a p a r t&#13;
from such a t t a c h m e n t t h e bright little&#13;
finch frequently spends h o u r s t e a r i n g&#13;
t h e petals into tiny f r a g m e n t s . Though&#13;
t h e nightingale never builds in t h e&#13;
t h o r n boughs, it loves t o sing on m a y&#13;
laden b r a n c h e s , often in t h e very midst&#13;
of t h e f r a g r a n t blossoms. I t is somew&#13;
h a t peculiar t h a t most birds avoid&#13;
the cow parsnip, owing, no doubt, to t h e&#13;
u n p l e a s a n t greenish smell e m i t t e d by&#13;
thiss umbelliferous plant. Small birde&#13;
very often build in less secure places,&#13;
b u t t h e p a r s n i p , g i g a n t i c a n d s t r o n g a s&#13;
It Is, is left severely alone.—London&#13;
Opinion.&#13;
W h e n t w o s t r o n g m e n c o m e t o&#13;
blows, even if they a r e well m a t c h e d ,&#13;
it is n o t a p l e a s i n g s i g h t , b u t if t h e&#13;
7nan~l^io~ireTsthe worst of irTwTn.nse&#13;
D e W i t t ' s Witch Hazel S a l v e , h e will&#13;
look b e t t e r a n d feel b e t t e r i n short&#13;
o r d e r . Be s o r e y o u g e t , D e W i t t ' s .&#13;
Good for e v e r y t h i n g a s a l v e is used&#13;
tor, i n c l u d i n g piles.&#13;
Bold b y F . A. Slgler, D r u g g i s t .&#13;
STATB Of MICHIGAN;&#13;
C o u n t y ot Livingston&#13;
and $1.00. Trial bottle free.&#13;
A S p e c i a l C a s e .&#13;
"If Mr. Winslow calls tonight,&#13;
m a m m a , w h a t shall I s a y ? "&#13;
" S a y w h a t e v e r your h e a r t tells you&#13;
t o s a y , m y dear."&#13;
" B u t this isn't one of those cases,&#13;
m a m m a . T h e r e is nothing t o Mx. Win-&#13;
Blow except h i s money."—Cleveland&#13;
P l a i n Dealer.&#13;
A C o m m o n M i s t a k e .&#13;
M a n y a m a n h a s become possessed&#13;
of t h e idea tluit h e is a h u m o r i s t merely&#13;
W h a t M a k e s t h e T r o u t S h y ?&#13;
T h e shyness of t h e s u m m e r t r o u t of&#13;
! t h e still spriughole is d u e n o t entirely&#13;
j t o h i s keen eye t r a i n e d by t h e quietude&#13;
i of t r a n s p a r e n t w a t e r s . It is to b e cred-&#13;
! lted more to his g r e g a r i o u s n e s s . T h e&#13;
I cool places a n d deeper pools of t h e&#13;
1 t r o u t stream a r e a p t to be few a u d hive&#13;
i t h e tish in schools. If t h e school n u m -&#13;
'&lt; bur, s a y ; fifty tish it m e a n s a h u n d r e d&#13;
j watchful eyes a n d a collective s h y n e s s&#13;
; a d j u s t e d to that of t h e most timid fish&#13;
| of t h e fifty, whose s u d d e n dash t o safet&#13;
ty gives t h e w a r n i n g signal t o all. A&#13;
single nervous trout—and there a r e&#13;
! usually several—is t h u s enough to'scat-&#13;
The Probate Court for t h e&#13;
At a seesion of s a i d&#13;
court, held at the probate office In t h e village of&#13;
Howeli, in said c o u n t y , o n t h e 4th day of Sfptenv&#13;
tipr, A n lWti. Present, A r t h u r A. Montague, J u d g e&#13;
of Probate. In t a e m a t t e r of t h e estate of&#13;
SAMrsr. W I L S O S , deceased&#13;
Albert ( i . Wilson having filed in said court his&#13;
petition prayint; tliat said c o u r t adjudicate a n d&#13;
determine w h o were at t h e t i m e of Iris death the&#13;
legal heirs of said deeea.se and entitled t o inherit&#13;
t h e real estate o f . w h k h said deceased died seized.&#13;
It is ordered, that t h e "JSth day of September&#13;
A. D. HK10, a t ten o'clock in t h e forenoon, at said&#13;
P r o b a t e Orfice, be a n d is hereby a p p o i n t e d for&#13;
hearing said petition; •&#13;
A n d U is further ordered t h a t pubUe notice&#13;
thereof b^ uiveu by publication of a copy of thia&#13;
o r d e r for 3 successive weeks previous tit RHIO .day&#13;
of hearing, in t h o P i r c k n e y D I S P A T C H , * news&#13;
p a p e r , p r i n t e d and circulated in said county,&#13;
A i n i t n i A. MONTAOCK,&#13;
t :&lt;s .Indue of Probate&#13;
b e c a u s e o t M r people think he Is funny, i t e r a big school in a flash a n d bafHe t h e&#13;
—Chicago Uerord-IIerald. hopes of t h e angler.—Clarence D e m l n g&#13;
j In O u t i n g Magazine.&#13;
N o o n e would b u y a sailboat w i t h ! :&#13;
sails t h a t could n o t be reeled. T h e r e&#13;
is a l w a y s t h a t possibility of a little too&#13;
m u c h w i n d t h a t makes a c a u t i o u s m a n&#13;
afraid to g o u n p r o v i d e d . T h e t h i n k -&#13;
insr m a n , whose s t o m a c h s o m e t i m e s&#13;
j p e s back on h i m , p r o v i d e s for his&#13;
s t o m a c h by k e e p i n g a bottle of Kodol&#13;
for D y s p e p s i a w i t h i n l e a c h . Kodol di&#13;
g e s t s w h a t y o u e a t a n d restors t h e&#13;
ftomaflb t o t h e c o n d i t i o n t o p r c p e r l y&#13;
p e r f o r m i t s f u n c t i o n s .&#13;
Sold b y F . A. Slgler. D r u g g l i t&#13;
Subscribe* for the Pi&amp;okaey Dispatch.&#13;
! Well Worth Trying&#13;
j \ V . H . B r o w n , t h e p o p u l a r penMon&#13;
a t t o r n e y , of I'ittsfield, V t . , s a y s :&#13;
14 , Next to a pension , t h e best t h i n g to&#13;
g e t is Dr. K i n g ' s N e w Life Pills.' H e&#13;
w r i t e s : " t h e y keep my f a m i l y in splenh&#13;
e a l t h . " Quick c u r e for H e i d a c h e ,&#13;
C o n s t i p a t i o n a n d B i l i o u s n e s s . 2 5 c .&#13;
G u a r a n t e e d a t P . A. S i g l e r s d r u g&#13;
store.&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
Dig**** what you eat*&#13;
6 0 YEARS*&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
Kodu spepsla Cure&#13;
what you oat*&#13;
CURES&#13;
RHEUMATISM&#13;
LUHBAQO, SCIATICA&#13;
NEURALBIA and&#13;
KIDNEY TROUBLE "J-DROPS" tikeu internally, rids the blood I&#13;
of the poisonous matter aud acids wmen&#13;
are the direct cause* of these diseases.&#13;
Applied externally it affords almost instant&#13;
relief from pain, while a permanent&#13;
cure is being effected by purifyiiB the&#13;
blood, dissolving the poisonous substance&#13;
and removing it from the system.&#13;
DR. &amp;. D. OLAND&#13;
Of Brewton, G*., write*]&#13;
"I bad been * mfferer for a number of ye»rt&#13;
with Luubwo »"d RheumatUm In my anni&#13;
•ml len.and tried all the remedies Ujat 1 could&#13;
n t h e r from medio*! wot**, and aUo^oniuited&#13;
with a number of tbe beet physician*, but found&#13;
tA.tm.tim ek*s • * * • • * • relief obtained from ,&#13;
"6.DROW." 1 ihall prewrtoi WinayHMMoe&#13;
for rheumatlem and kindred dli»»e— " \ FREE If you are suffering with Rheumatism,&#13;
Nfturalaia, Kidrey T w M e '•f anv Uin-&#13;
' i vl diuease. jrr te to us «r i Vial bottle i&#13;
of "6-DROPS," and test t yourself.&#13;
' S-DROPS" can be used any length of&#13;
time without acquiring a "drug habit.'&#13;
as it is entirely free of opium, cocaine,&#13;
alcohol, laudanum, and other similar&#13;
inwredients.&#13;
Large 81 «c Bottle, "S-DROP8" ( 0 0 * Doeee)&#13;
tl.OO. For Bale by Urucgiate.&#13;
SWANSOft IHEUMATIB SURE BOMPAIY,&#13;
l»ept, 8 0 . 1 6 0 Lake Street, Chlo***.&#13;
r THE Mtf PRACTICAL DR. PIERCE'S&#13;
It Is tK&gt;mpai't, ran 1* rarved t&gt;;t&gt;lly, :\r\i\ »U&lt;&#13;
tli,- oiH'raior to gauge the quantity ot tnk dean&#13;
SAVES T I M E . SAVES I N K .&#13;
Kwps bnistips and fnk •where yon wixnt them, and&#13;
ii L.uiiyu l i i ; . U &gt; Y F O U I N S T A M U S E .&#13;
A perfect combination Is obtained when&#13;
WHITE'S WATERPROOF STENCIL INK&#13;
I. U N j'iisiiy anplied and seta quickly. No&#13;
J 'ii'tt ur ImtotJ; : &gt;&#13;
;VES BRUSHES. SAVES STENCILS. SAVES TIME.&#13;
• •.&lt; ii'ii h:ir«lcn bnishes or cciloossrr aten^ila, Dont&#13;
ir wont lur it, T K S T I x . iliiUe only by&#13;
A. W H I T E CO.,&#13;
J h'lgh St.,Boston,Mas8.U.S.A.&#13;
s.&#13;
The Gipooa with&#13;
a Delicato Flavor A&#13;
MA L'I'KI ) C'oci iA is prepared b y B d e a &amp; f e l&#13;
5 ally coml &gt;inin^ the cocoa of the cbOicot^f&#13;
cocoa bean a n d t h e b e s t of mart* ( u r -&#13;
matt aiding digestion, a n d t h e f a t d t W *&#13;
cocoa having been predipested, t h e&#13;
tcclinpof hcaviiu-ss ex],vricii£cd after&#13;
d r i n k i n g t h c o r d i nary cocoas is a voided;&#13;
liuid a most delicious p n d nouriiiluog&#13;
i» c t i a ^ e is pr.»,. .icfd, "v^hich is&#13;
t'ectly puio a n d will n o t distress t h e&#13;
most delicate stomach,&#13;
/i»- sole /&gt;y )'&lt;&gt;UK dealer.&#13;
KERR'S&#13;
Malted Extract&#13;
O F J O M A T O -&#13;
One teaspoonful t o a c u p of boiling water&#13;
m a k e s i\ delicious Bouillon.&#13;
l-'or sale by your dealer. Prepared by&#13;
W I L L I A M B. KERR,&#13;
Medfordy Boston, Mass.&#13;
The Dispatch lob Department&#13;
Can do your Printing&#13;
on short notice and in&#13;
a workmanlike manner&#13;
F. b. A N D S B W S &amp; C O .&#13;
TRADC MARKS&#13;
DESIGNS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A C .&#13;
Anyone lending a sketch and description may&#13;
quickly ascertain onr opinion free whether an&#13;
invention Is probably patentable. Communications&#13;
strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patent*&#13;
sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents.&#13;
Patents taken through Munn &amp; Co. receive&#13;
ipeeial notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly.&#13;
Largest circulation&#13;
of any scientific Journal. Terms, |8 •&#13;
•'"-- "" "oitf — "&#13;
Illustrated culatlon .&#13;
year; four months, $L Sold by all newsdealers.&#13;
Branca OOoe, fab F 8t* Washington. D. C.&#13;
M f l W s JKiif Salv*&#13;
w FHdS) Burm&gt; tsresi&#13;
liSl&#13;
Isths best school for yos to attend. Flos equipment;&#13;
Instruction the very best; living expenses low; graduates&#13;
plsced In food positions—every student coming for but*&#13;
ness may be sore of succeeding. Sane courses by correspondence&#13;
is at tbe College; satisfaction nutraatecd;&#13;
particulars on application. P. R. C L E A R Y , Pres.&#13;
BUY THE FAMOUS&#13;
Lincoln Steel Rangef!&#13;
K3Z THE BEST!&#13;
••Id everywher*&#13;
by Leadlna 0«al«r«.&#13;
JM»rOS&gt;»&#13;
COSTS NO MORE THAN AN UNKNOWN MAKE.&#13;
Before y o u b u y that range or cook stove,&#13;
write us, a n d we will mail you a copy of&#13;
"Points for PurohMsers "&#13;
It is free for t h e asking. Full of useful information.&#13;
THE LINCOLN STOVE IRANBE HOMPANT, Fremont, Ohio.&#13;
4 -&#13;
V&#13;
/&#13;
! • t&#13;
• i .'Mi'i, &gt;iT,ijiiiii ; x y m ^ ^ ^ 0 ^ 0 ^ , i ^&#13;
x&#13;
A batb cU— im th« akin and rids&#13;
the pore**f refuse. A batb makes lor&#13;
better fellowship and citizenship. Not&#13;
00ly should tLe outside ot the l&gt;ody i&gt;t&#13;
cleanted, but occasional use of a iaxa&#13;
tive or cartbartic opens ibe bowels&#13;
and clears tfce system of etfete matter.&#13;
Best for tbis are DeWitt's Little Early&#13;
Risers. Pleasant little pills that do&#13;
not prripe t&gt;r sicken. --^&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggiit.&#13;
T o b a c c o L e a v e s .&#13;
A scientist writes: "The essential&#13;
quality for which tobacco Is smoked or&#13;
chewed lies not really in the leaves&#13;
themselves, but is contained in thousands&#13;
of hollow knobbed hairs which&#13;
cover their surface. The vital nicotine&#13;
is garnered in these pear-like balls, but&#13;
as it is impossible to shave off these&#13;
hairs and would be a scarcely commendabki&#13;
achievement if it could be&#13;
undertaken it becomes necessary to&#13;
preserve the whole foliage for com&#13;
mereinl jinrpo'os."&#13;
- &gt; :&#13;
STRICTURE CURED&#13;
YOU CAN PAY WHEN CURED,&#13;
NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT.&#13;
STRICTURE AND KIDNEY DISEA8E CURED.&#13;
" I b a d stricture for eleven years. I t finally brought e n B r i g h t ' s&#13;
D i s e a r e of ilie Kidue) t, 1 h a d a n uncotnfoi table shoo- ing p a i n in t h e&#13;
groin und feeling a s though something, was in the urethra. My back&#13;
wus weak a n d I could scarcely stoop over. U r i n e w a s f a l l o f *edinjent.&#13;
H a d a d e s i r e to u r i n a t e frequently Faojily doctors, so-called&#13;
specialists, pat: in medicines, electric belts, all tailed. I w a s d i s -&#13;
couraged. I l i a d ST ent h u n d r e d s of dollars in vain. Finally I c o n -&#13;
sulted Drs. Kennedy &amp; Kcrgan as t h e last r e s o r t . I h a d h e a r d a great&#13;
dKil about t h e m a n d concluded from t h e fact t h a t thi.y h a d b e e n&#13;
established 0\«r 25 y*ars t::at thev understood their business. I a n&#13;
delishtftd with tlie r e s j h a . I n c u e we^k 1 felt better a n d in a few&#13;
weeks »vas entirely cured. H a v e gained sixteen p o u n d s in w e i c h t f&#13;
G. E . W R I G H T , L a n s i n g .&#13;
G» E . W m o n j .&#13;
ESTABLISHED 2 5 YEARS.&#13;
CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY.&#13;
HAS YOUR BLOOD BEEN DI8EA8ED ?&#13;
B l a O O D P O I S O N S a r e t h e most p r e v a l e n t a n d most serious d i s e a s e s . T h e y&#13;
• a p t b e v e r f life blood of t h e victim and unto s e n t i r t l y eradicated from the system will&#13;
causa serious complications. B'-wareof Mercury. It only suppresses t h e symptoms—our&#13;
N E W M E l ' H O O positively cures all blood d i s e a s e s forever.&#13;
Y O U N G O R M I D D L E - A G E D M E N - — I m p r u d e n t acts e r l a t e r excesses&#13;
h a v e broken d o w n your system. You feel t h e s y m p t o m s stealing over you. Mentally,&#13;
physically a n d sexually you a r c not t h e man you used t o b e or should b e .&#13;
B f c g A 11¾ g 1 fflto Are you a victim ? H a v e yon lost h«-pe ? Are y o u intending&#13;
I f G i A w H 8 V t o m a r r y ? H a s % our b l o o d been d i s e a s e d ? H a v e you any&#13;
I w e a k n e s s ? O u r Now Method T r e a t m » n t will cure y o u . W h a t it h a s done for o t h e r s it&#13;
will d o f o r y o u . C "N'SI'LTATION I K h E . No m a t t e r v. ho h a s treated you, write for&#13;
a n h o n e s t opinion I r r i of CHarRft. Charges r e a s o n a b l e . B O O K S F R E B — " T h e Golden&#13;
[Monitor" ( i l l u s t r a t e d ) , on D i s e a s e s of .Men. S . a l e d b o o k on " D i s e a s e s of W o m s n " f r e e&#13;
NO N A M E 3 USED WITHOUT WRITTEll CONSENT. Cv«ry-&#13;
|thlng Confldantir.1. Question. List for Home Treatment Free&#13;
Dns.KEHM£DY&amp; KERGAN&#13;
Cor. M i c h i g a n A v e . and Shelby St., Detroit, M i c h .&#13;
*Tv\ K&lt;\K K A "K__K&gt; K K &amp; K &amp; K&#13;
BIGGLE A Farm Library&#13;
of unequalled value.&#13;
Practical, Up to&#13;
date, Concise and&#13;
Comprehensive.&#13;
HaadsoflKly Printed aid&#13;
Beaitlfilly Illustrated.&#13;
BY JACOB BIQQLE BOOKS&#13;
No. 1-BIQQLE HORSE BOOK&#13;
All about Horses—a Common-sense Treatise, with mort&#13;
than 74 illustrations ; a standard work. F r k e , 50 Gents.&#13;
No. 2-B1QQLE BERRY BOOK&#13;
AH about g r o w i n g Small Fruits—read a n d learn b o w .&#13;
Beautiful colored plates. Price, 60 Cents.&#13;
No. 3-BIQQLB POULTRY BOOK&#13;
All about Poultry ; t h e best Poultry Book in e x i s t e n c e ;&#13;
tells everything. Profusely illustrated. Price, 50 Cent*.&#13;
No. 4-BFQQLE COW BOOK&#13;
All about Cows a n d t h e Dairy Business: n e w edition.&#13;
CoLored plates. Sound Common-sense. Price, 60 Cents.&#13;
No. 5-BIUOLE SWINE BOOK&#13;
All about Hogs—Breeding, F e e d i n g , Butchery, Di?«tM»,&#13;
etc. Covers t h e whole ground. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 6-BIGGLE HEALTH BOOK&#13;
Gives remedies a n d up-to-date information. A household&#13;
necessity. Extremely practical. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 7-BIGGLE PET BOOK&#13;
For the hoys and girls particularly, Pets of all k i n d s t o d&#13;
how t o care For thcni. Price, 00 Cents.'&#13;
No. 8—BIQQLE SHEEP BOOK&#13;
Covers t h e w h o l e g r o u n d . Every page full of good a d -&#13;
vice. Sheep men praise it. Price, 50 Cents. Farm Journal&#13;
is your paper, made for you and not a misfit, tt is 29 years&#13;
61.1; it is t h e great boiled-down, hitthe-nail-on-the-head,&#13;
quit-after-vou-have-said-it F a r m a n d Household paper in t h e&#13;
world—the biggest paper of its size in t h e United States of&#13;
America—having tnore than T h r e e Million regular readers.&#13;
A n y O N E of t h e B I G G L E B O O K S , a n d t h e F A R M&#13;
J O U R N A L » Y E A R S fremainder of 1906. and all of 1907,1908,&#13;
1909 and 1910), sent by mail t o any a d d r e s s for A D O L L A R B I L L .&#13;
S a m p l e of P A R M J O U R N A L and circular describing B I Q Q L E B O O K S , tree.&#13;
W I L M E R A T K I N S O N C O . .&#13;
P U B L I S H E R S O F F A R M JOVRMAL, P H I L A D E L P H I A .&#13;
More New Trains&#13;
OB the&#13;
Ann Arbor Railroad&#13;
Now, that the summer tourist&#13;
season is over, it naturally follows&#13;
that the night trains on the Ann&#13;
Arbor R. R. must be discontinued&#13;
until the summer of 1907. The&#13;
travel which they were put on to&#13;
accommodate has ceased. Beautiful&#13;
Chrystal Lake is slowly but&#13;
surely losing its summer population&#13;
and the big Royal Frontenac&#13;
hotel at Frankfort is sulking behind&#13;
closed doors after a must&#13;
successful season.&#13;
The management of the Ann&#13;
Arbor R. R. hopes the time is not&#13;
far distant when the through&#13;
travel over it's lines will justify&#13;
the operation of night trains the&#13;
yenr around and the public may&#13;
rest assured that when the demand&#13;
for them manifests itself, the&#13;
company will not be slow in responding.&#13;
Believing that there are many&#13;
people along it's lines who are&#13;
gieatly inconvenienced through j&#13;
lack of Sunday passenger service,:&#13;
and desiring always to cater to&#13;
the wishes of'the public, the company&#13;
has decided to try the experiment&#13;
of operating Sundays,&#13;
as well as week days, it's through&#13;
trains Nos. 1 and 4, between Toledo&#13;
and Frankfort.&#13;
It will change time Sunday,&#13;
Sept. 23rd, after which date the&#13;
above trains will run daily, and&#13;
will continue on Sunday unless&#13;
the company is satisfied after a&#13;
reasonable trial that there is no&#13;
demand for them.&#13;
H e l g o l a n d S o a p .&#13;
What do the Helg iluuders do with&#13;
their birds? Some are sent away to&#13;
the Ham burg market and the rest kept&#13;
for home consumption. Roasting be&#13;
fore a Blow Are, with the tall on; ovei&#13;
toast, la practically an unknown art&#13;
or at least one rarely practiced. Everything&#13;
goes into the pot for soup. "Tros-&#13;
•elsoup" is an institution much lauded&#13;
Mr. Gatke tells us how it should heprepared.&#13;
Take care to commit forty&#13;
or fifty thrushes, according to the re&#13;
quiremepts of the family, to the soup&#13;
pot, and do not have the fattost birds&#13;
drawn, and if the cook is u true artist&#13;
no one will fail to ask a second helpinir&#13;
A favorite Helgoland dish is kittiwake&#13;
pie. In November and Decernbor thoso&#13;
gulls are very fat and when prepared&#13;
in Helgolandlsh fashion are considered&#13;
a delicacy, although a somewhat nshy&#13;
one. The gray crow is also a very fn&#13;
vorite dish.-Chambers' Journal.&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach No appetite, loee of Jtrenfth, i&#13;
BOSS, headache, constipation, bad breatii. '&#13;
general debility, sour risings, and eatanll&#13;
of the stomach are all due to Indigestion*&#13;
Kodol cures indigestion. This new diaoov*&#13;
ery represents the natural juices of digit*&#13;
ttoa as they exist in a healthy stswsoB&gt;&#13;
oomMaod with the greatest known tenia&#13;
and reconstructive properties. Kodol Dye&gt;&#13;
pepsf a Cure does not only cure indigestion&#13;
and dyspepsia, but this fafnous remedy&#13;
cures all stomach troubles by cleansing,&#13;
purifying, sweetening and strengthening&#13;
the mucous membranes lining the stomach*&#13;
Mr. S. S . Ball, of Rivenswood, W. V s . , aayi&#13;
M I was troubled with sour stomach for twenty yssra.&#13;
Kodol cured ma o d w i n now using It i s attB&#13;
for baby.&#13;
Th4* K t n t r f K l i « r .&#13;
M a n y a n d c . i r i &gt;;i&gt; : . - v t h e l e g e n d s o f&#13;
t l i o ki'.i^tislHV'. &lt;!'.n&gt; o f t l u v i . ' i s t o t h e j&#13;
e f f e c t tli:it t'lio }i\[\\ w a s o r i g i n a l l y a&#13;
.'1*, 1'iit u;i'.&gt;n 'u'in'.r l e t&#13;
a r i : t l e w t o w a r d t h e&#13;
li:ul i t s li:ick s t a i n e d&#13;
p l a i n .u'ra.v i n &lt;&#13;
loose f r o - ; t!n&#13;
s e t t in.',' s ' . n a n&#13;
I t l n e l&gt;y i ! . e s k y :\::A i t s ] n \ \&#13;
s o o r c l . e J ' &gt;y &lt; !i • ,-'..:i t.&gt; ;. •:'&#13;
T h e d r i e d V.r&gt;dy o f •&#13;
o n e e tis^ed a s a c l i : . : .&#13;
b o l t s a n d m o t h s , a i i&#13;
s o t h a t it m i i r h t " i &gt; o i&#13;
t h e w i n d ' s g u n n e r .&#13;
"To Cure a Felou"&#13;
says Sam Kendall, ol l'billip^bui*;,&#13;
Kdn. "just cover it over with Hucklen's&#13;
Arnica Salve and the Salve will&#13;
do the rest.1' Quickest cure tot* Burns,&#13;
Boils, Sores, Scalds, Wounds, Piles,&#13;
Eczema, Salt Rheom, Chapped Hand?,&#13;
Sore Feet and Sore Eyes. Only 25cts.&#13;
at F. A. Sillers drag store. Guaranteed&#13;
She gnufewti gispauh&#13;
PUBLISHED KVKBX TBCE8DAV KOH.Nllia £ 1&#13;
F R A N K L. A N D R E W S &lt;Sc C C .&#13;
EDITOR* AMD PROPRIETORS.&#13;
cJ'itjscrlptton iJ rice $1 i n A d v a n c e .&#13;
^ n t e r e a &amp;t t a e Poatodlce a t P i n c k a e y , M i c h l g a i&#13;
&amp;B aecoud-ciasa m a t t e r&#13;
A d v e r t i s i n g r a t e a m a d e k n o w n o n a p p l i c a t i o n .&#13;
B u s i n e s s C a r d s , $4.00 p e r y e a r .&#13;
r e a t h a n d m a r r i a g e u o t l c e s p u b l i s h e d t r e e .&#13;
A n n o u n c e m e n t s o l e n t e r t a i n m e n t s m a y b e p a l e&#13;
for, if desired, by ^ r &gt; a e n t i n g i h e office w i t h t i c k&#13;
6 t s of a d m i s s i o n . I n case t i c k e t s a r e not rrouarl t&#13;
to t h e office, r e g u l a r r a t e s w i l l be c h a r ^ t ^ .&#13;
A l l m a t t e r i n l o c a l n o t i c * c o l u m n wilJDe c b ^ r ^ d&#13;
ed a t 5 c e n t s p e r l i n e o r f r a c t i o n t h e r e o f , for e&amp;ct&#13;
i n s e r t i o n . W h e r e n o t i m e i s specified, a i l noticed&#13;
will b e i n s e r t e d u n t i l o r d e r e d d i s c o n t i n u e d , a n d&#13;
will be c h a r g e d f o r a c c o r d i n g l y . £ d T ' A l l c h a n g e e&#13;
of a d v e r t i s e m e n t s M U S T r e a c h t h i s office a s « a r l j&#13;
as T U K S D A T m o r n i n g t o i n s u r e a n i n s e r t i o n t b *&#13;
s a m e w e e k .&#13;
JOS P8SJVIIJVG /&#13;
I n a l l Us b r a n c h e s , a s p e c i a l t y . We have ail kino 9&#13;
a n d t h e latest s t y l e s of T y p e , e t c . , which e n a b l t s&#13;
us t o execute a l l k i n d s of work, such a s Bookr,&#13;
P a m p l e t s , P o s t e r s , P r o g r a m m e s , Bill H e a d s , Note&#13;
Heads, S t a t e m e n t s , Cards, Auction Bills, e t c . , i n&#13;
s u p e r i o r styles, upon t h e s h o r t e s t n o t i c e . Price* as&#13;
l ow as £OOQ w o r k c a n b e d o n e .&#13;
ALL BILLS PAYABLE FIBSTOK SVKBY MONTH.&#13;
Kodol Mgeata What You Sat&#13;
Bottles only. $ 1 . 0 0 Size hokUnt 2M tiro©* tn«1&#13;
_ size, which sella for 5 0 cents.&#13;
* r e p « r e d by E. O. OeWITT «V OO.f O H I O A O a&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist&#13;
Ask for the 190f1 Kodol almanac&#13;
and 200 calendar. —&#13;
HOLLISTER'S Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets&#13;
h Busy Medicine for Busy People.&#13;
Brings Golden Health and Renewed Vigor.&#13;
A specific for C o n s t i p a t i o n . I n d i g e s t i o n . L i v e r fi K i d n e v t r o u b l e s , Pimi&gt;lcs. Eezemii. I m p u r e&#13;
XHI, B a d l i r e a t h . Slujrjrish Bowels. H e a d a c h e&#13;
X B a c k a c h e . I t s R o c k y M o u n t a i n T e a i n t a b -&#13;
fnvm. 35 r e n t s u h o x . f i e n u i n e m a d e b y&#13;
H o i . L M ' t t t Dui'G C u M i ' A s r . Madison, W i s .&#13;
GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPLE&#13;
Railroad Guide&#13;
iihmi;!-.'"1&#13;
- ,:• -,1 '".is l u l l ' s .&#13;
k ; i i , i i s l u ' r w a s&#13;
- , : L i s t t l r m d e r -&#13;
t w a s h u u j ; Ul&gt;&#13;
with its lull to&#13;
TriE VILLAGE DIRECTORY&#13;
j In these days of rush and hurry&#13;
I courtesy is often forgotten. In the&#13;
j mad, pell mell rush of our life I it lie&#13;
j things are done to offend thai we&#13;
rather remain undone. A hastily eati&#13;
en tueal and its resultant headache&#13;
may cause us social or financial loss.&#13;
Toe wis3 man or woman is the one&#13;
M&#13;
who relieves little ills of this sort 7&gt;y&#13;
a little dose of Kodol tor Dyspepsia.&#13;
If digests what you eat and puts your&#13;
stomach back jn shap'1.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler Drugclst&#13;
J i r u u D l a T i l j ^ i S C u r A h C U L K C M ,&#13;
Kev. L&gt;. c , Littlejolin p a a t o r . Services e v e i ;&#13;
a u u j u v m o r u i n ^ a t l u : ^ , &amp;ua every suu&gt;;i&gt;:&#13;
e v e a i u g a t T :0^ u'clocii. i ' m y e r m e e t i n g i ' u u i t&#13;
dii&gt; e v e m u f i s . S u n d a y a c u o o i !tt cloae ot UIOIL&#13;
f-tftg S«f Vit'ft All 66 M A H Y A'A N: t-'r.Kn;T, S u p i ,&#13;
THE ORIGINAL LAXATIVE COUGH GYRUF&#13;
KENNEDY'S LAXATIVE HONEY^TAR&#13;
ifed Clover BloMom and Hoaer Bee on Every BoUle.&#13;
k^*»A."w»«..*^&#13;
THE FURNACE&#13;
is the best thing we&#13;
ever made and we've&#13;
been making furnaces thirty-three years. It is Solid dteel—&#13;
every joint riveted. Never leaks. Has lined casing, chain&#13;
regulation, evaporating pan, etc. Burns any fuel economically.&#13;
Made in six sizes; powerful and durable.&#13;
WE SELL DIRECT TO CONSUMERS.&#13;
and save you dealers' profits, .end for full 40 page booK&#13;
which fully describes our goods and our maker-to-user&#13;
method of selling. We can save you money in buying and&#13;
fuel in using. Your name on a postal card, please. v&#13;
HESS WARMING 4 VENTILATING COMPANY,&#13;
921 Tacoma Building, Chicago, Ills.&#13;
V W \ " . I V S &lt; v n 1 I S A . V&#13;
POSTAL 4 MOftIV,&#13;
»*9»ftieTORa.&#13;
etaca,&#13;
m o d e r n ,&#13;
up-fo-dftt*&#13;
ilr»T«'l. !or&gt;iU\j&#13;
In tl»c h e u r t «f&#13;
t h * C i t y&#13;
Rates, $2, $2 50. $3 per Da.v&#13;
Can 4«*M» *&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
P R E S I D E N T E l i . B r o w u&#13;
TttL'dTBKS Ruben F i n c h , J a m e s Hoc tie,&#13;
Will K e n n e d y Sr , J a m e s S m i t t i ,&#13;
S. J . T e e p l e , Ed. V a r n u m .&#13;
CLKHK. H o g e r C a r r&#13;
T K B A S C R E H M a r i u u J . K e » s o a&#13;
A S S E S S O R r&gt;. W . M u r u&#13;
S T B E E I C O J J M I S S I U S S P . NV. A. N i x o n&#13;
U K A L T U U F F I C E K D r . U. r". a i r i e r&#13;
ATTOK.SI;V S V . A . C &amp; r r&#13;
M A R S H A L L W Q I . M u r a n&#13;
Pigg MARQUETTE&#13;
I a e f f e c t - A - p r . 3 0 , I O C S .&#13;
T r a i n s l e a v e S o u t h L y o n at, f«&gt;]it-\*s.&#13;
F - » r D e t i o i t a n d ' E a s t ,&#13;
1 0 : 4 8 a . m . , 2 : 1 9 p . m . 8 . 5 s p . m .&#13;
F o r G r a n d R a p i d s , N o r t h a n d W e s t ,&#13;
'J:^ti a . i n . , 2 : 1 9 p . m . , 6:L* p. . Q .&#13;
F o r S a g i n a w a n d B a r C i t y ,&#13;
1 0 : 4 8 a . 111., 2 : 1 9 p . t u . , S o &lt; p . m .&#13;
Y'r T o l e d o a n d S f i u t h ,&#13;
1 0 : 4 * a . - m . , 2 : 1 9 p . m . ,&#13;
F R A S K B A T , H . F . M O E L L E K ,&#13;
Afjtrnt, South l.von. H. P . A., D e t r o i t .&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
Brand Tratik Railway System.&#13;
t a s t B o u n d f r o m P i n c k n e r&#13;
No- 2S P a s s e n g e r E x Snntlav, 0;:2&lt; A . M .&#13;
.No. 30 Passenger E x . Sun i i y , 4:J5 P . M.&#13;
Weet Bound, frotc I'iiifkripy&#13;
N'o. 27 Pa^sentcer E x . Sun&lt;i;iv, 10:01 A. M.&#13;
No. W Passenger E x , S u n d a y . 3:44 P . M '&#13;
Solid wide vestibule t r a i n s of o'larlic* a n d slet'pilii!&#13;
cars are operated t&lt;&lt; N e w York (;ind P h i l a d e l -&#13;
phia! via Niagara Falls h r - t h e iiran'1 Tnitik-L&lt;3»&#13;
hiL'h Vallev hjonte,&#13;
TT. H . C i a r t v .:-.-Lt,&#13;
4 ' U - S U i t E G A n O N A L C U l ' t t C a .&#13;
s..' Kev. U. W. .u&gt;iue y a a t o r . Service e v e i ;&#13;
suuutty .u i r u i a ^ %t u : i u aai every S u n d a j&#13;
e v e n i n g at r :UL o c o c k , i ' r a y e r uieetin*; PUQI t&#13;
day even:n&lt;^d. » i i a d i y aciiooi at cJoae o t m o r i&#13;
i n t s e r v i t e . Percy SwartUout, Supt,, MVJCUI.&#13;
i eeple S e c .&#13;
* J T . At A U JT'S '.' A i ' d u L l C C l i U ri«J H .&#13;
O , K e v . Ai. J . C o u i m e r t o r d , 1 a a t o r . ' j e r v u e :&#13;
every S u n d a y . L o w in as a a t l:3uo cluii.&#13;
u i g n iLiiue w i t u s e r o i o n a t y ; a u a . m. C&amp;tecm-M&#13;
I i ;0t) p.' in., v e e p e r s a n a b e n e d i c t i o n at 7 ;3u r - 1 .&#13;
3QC1£T1ES;&#13;
Th e A. O. H . Society o t t n i s p l a c e , meet* e \ e r .&#13;
t h i r d S u n d a y i n t a e fi. Matt new t i a l l .&#13;
J o h n l u o t n e y a n d M. T. Kelly, County Delesait.-&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
PROCURED AND DEFENDED. Send model,&#13;
o rawing '.i [.ii.. t. &gt;. for i'.\ '••&lt;.-'• I M'iirch an.! : r&gt;-v report.&#13;
Five ftih'K't'. huw to olju.ia v&gt;;tu-iiC.-;. t:..ilo luwlca,&#13;
copyrights, etc.. | N, ALL. C O U N T R I E S .&#13;
JBusiiit'ss direct ivitk Washbigton sa:cs time, |&#13;
money a ud often the patent.&#13;
Patent and Infringement Practice Exclusively.&#13;
Write or come to us at&#13;
OSS Ninth Strict, opp. UnitedTSUtM^^"fmttat OOc*,&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N , D. C. GASNOW&#13;
K I L L T H C C O U G&#13;
AND C U R E THE L U N G S&#13;
r|&gt;HK \V. C. X. U. meets t h e h r s t F r i d a y of ea«.h&#13;
X m o n t h a t •!;&amp;, p . m, at t h e home of Dr. l i . i ' .&#13;
Mgler. Everyone " i n t e r e s t e d i n t e m p e r a n c e is&#13;
coadially invited. M r s . '^t-al S i l l e r , Prt'»; M i : ,&#13;
l i t t a Dur£ee, S e c r e t a r y .&#13;
Disease&#13;
kand Healtb&#13;
•*JM&#13;
J&#13;
CUSTOM MADE&#13;
SCREENS Our %vx&gt;rk !s far superior to the usual output of local mills, and has a stylo and&#13;
finish not obtainable from thoso who do not make a specialty of screens. Send&#13;
us sizi-3 of doors and windows. We guarantee a fit/&#13;
For'outside Screens we use the identical finish of the outside of Pullman Cars.&#13;
The best grade of Wire Cloth—enameled, galvanized genuine bronze, etc.,&#13;
fastened by tacks or by the "lockstrip'" process.&#13;
Intending purchasers niay have, free by mail, samples of woods, finishes&#13;
acvl wire cloth, and copy o'f cat.ilog and price list. Agencies in many cities.&#13;
Special tortus to contractors and builders.&#13;
The A. J. PHILLIPS COMPANY, Fcnton, Michigan.&#13;
23 Ymm**' CxJMf/«*&lt;&gt;•. 3 1*3 A worn of Floor 3i$ooo,&#13;
REVIVO&#13;
RESTORES VITALITY&#13;
"Hade a&#13;
Well I a n&#13;
of He."&#13;
p r o d u c e s flue r e n u l t s I n 3 0 d a y * . I t a c t s&#13;
p o w e r f u l l y a n d q u i c k l y . C u r e s w h e n o t h e r s fail.&#13;
Younk? m e n c a n retrain t h e i r l o s t m a n h o o d a n d&#13;
ohl m e n m a y r e c o v e r t h e i r y o u t h f u l vi&gt;:or b y&#13;
usiitff K K V I V O * I t q u i c k l y a n d q u i e t l y r e -&#13;
i m o v e s N e r v o u s n e s s . L o s t V i t a l i t y . S e x u a l&#13;
J W e a k n e s s s u c l r a s L o s t P o w e r , F a i l i n g M e m o r y .&#13;
I W a s t i u t i D i s e a s e s , a n d effects of seii-abu.se o r&#13;
: e x c e s s a n d i n d i s c r e t i o n , w h i c h u n f i t s o n e f o r&#13;
I s t u d y , b u s i n e s s o r marrlag*. I t n o t o n l y c u r e s&#13;
by s t a r t i n g a t t h e s e a t of d i s e a s e , b u t i s a g r e a t '&#13;
, n e r v e t o u l c a n d b l o o d b u i l d e r * b r i n g i n g&#13;
j b u c k t h e p l a k s l o w ttf u a l e c h e e k * a n d r e -&#13;
( s t o r i n g t h e l i r e o f y o u t h . I t w a r d s off a p -&#13;
! p r o a c h i n f d i s e a s e . I n s i s t o n h a v i n g R E V I V O *&#13;
no o t h e r . I t c a n b e c a r r i e d in v e s t p o c k e t . B y&#13;
m a t l , ¢ 1 . 0 0 p e r p a c k a g e , o r s i x f o r fi&amp;.OO. W e&#13;
g i v e f r e e a d v i c e a n d c o n n s e T t o a l l w h o w i s h i t ,&#13;
w i t h g u a r a n t e e . C i r c u l a r s f r e e . A d d r e s s&#13;
ROYAL MEDICINE CO., Marine Bldfl.. Chicago, 111.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
PIHCXNEY, UCH.&#13;
I''he C. T . A. a n a 1&gt;. Socieiy ^f I b i s place , ; : » - .&#13;
. every t b i r d Saturday e v e n i n g in t e e F r . .V v&#13;
ihew H a l l . J o h n D o n u h ^ e , f res i d e m .&#13;
KS I G H T S O F M A C U A B E B S .&#13;
M e e t e v e r v Friday e v e n i n g o n o r before fr.i&#13;
oi t h e m o o n a t t h e i r h a l l i n t h e S w a r t U o u i tiit^&#13;
Visiting b r o t h e r s a n . • o r d i a l l y i n v i t e d ,&#13;
• On.»s. 1 , t AM t'PLLL. S h K n u L i C n n . i t&#13;
WITH&#13;
• w&#13;
FOR 1 OUGHSand&#13;
W 0 L D S&#13;
tew&#13;
Price&#13;
50c&amp;$1.00&#13;
Free Trial.&#13;
I iviii^ston Lodge, So.T'i, F A. A . M. Ueg'j!i4&#13;
j Comninnication Tuesday evening, on o r be for*&#13;
No. TS, M.&#13;
ig, 01&#13;
t h e full of the moon. Ki rk Va uWi a k l e . \\&#13;
K D E R O F E A S T E K S S T A K m e e t s each m o m :&#13;
t h e Friday evening following t h e r e g u l a r I-&#13;
\ A. M. m e e t i n g , MRS.NKTTt: V A I U U S , \V. M. 0&#13;
0 i\. EK OF. M u D E K N WOODMEN Meet t h e&#13;
fitet T u u r s d a y eveuius» of e a t h Mouth IU u . t&#13;
*l:tccabes hall. C. L. G r i m e s V„ C.&#13;
| A D I E S O F T H E M A C C A B E K S . Meat every H&#13;
I j a n d 3rd S a t u r d a y ot each n:outh at 2:¾) p ni. s&lt;&#13;
K . o . T . M. hall. Visiting l i s t e r s c o r d i a l l y it.&#13;
v u e d . L U . A V ' O M W A Y , L a d y C o m .&#13;
,' N i G l i ' l s o F T H K L O Y A L G l ' A K D&#13;
\ F . L, A n d r e w s l\ M,&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M.D. C. I . SIGLER M, C&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
P h y s i c i a n s a n d S u r g e o n s . A l l call* promptly&#13;
a tended t o d a y or ui(jht. *.&gt;•&amp;?* o o Main si&gt;eet&#13;
I ' l i c k n e y , Mich.&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH SEAL&#13;
AT DISPATCH OFFICE&#13;
fas AI*&#13;
Surest find Q,uicixest Cuy^kfcr all&#13;
THKOAT and LUNG TROUBLES,&#13;
or MONEY BACK.&#13;
Why Not Buy the Best?&#13;
Good HoustkMpirs Us*&#13;
P. H. IRISH'S&#13;
Green Cross&#13;
EXTRACTS&#13;
VANILLA AND LEMON&#13;
•which c o m p l y w i t h t h e r e q u i r e m e n t s&#13;
of t h e M i c h i g a n p u r e food" l a w l o n e o f&#13;
tiie most s t r i n g e n t in t h e c o u n t r y )&#13;
a r e k e p t a t a u n i f o r m s t a n d a r d o f&#13;
s t r e n g t h .&#13;
If Y O U R G R O C E R d o e s n ' t k e e p&#13;
t h e "GREENf C R O S S " b r a n d , s e n d&#13;
25 cents a n d I will m a i l y o u a full 2 oz.&#13;
p a c k a g e o f v a n i l l a o r l e m o n , prepaid.&#13;
W h e r e it t a k e s s o little, w h y n o t&#13;
h a v e t h e best.&#13;
T r y i t a n d y o u will u s e n o other.&#13;
Satisfaction G u a r a n t e e d .&#13;
P. H. IRISH,&#13;
M a n u f a o t u r t r ,&#13;
Mt^ Clemens, Mfch.&#13;
*»;e:&#13;
fm&#13;
,«, &gt;.j?Olfatt*)At^Afc.«. .*fuiiiSmJZJ&amp;nm*t* Ki-.'1 - .•''Rtfr'^at - n*Ml . ^ o w t j j a w&#13;
J. V&#13;
7 _&#13;
Low Rates to the Northwest.&#13;
£3very day until Oct. 31st the Great&#13;
Northern Railway will sell one way&#13;
Colonists' Tickets from Chicago at the&#13;
following low rates:&#13;
To,Seattle, Portland and &lt; Western&#13;
Washington, $a3.Qfe Spokane., $30.50.&#13;
Equally low rates to Montana, Idaho,&#13;
Oregon and British Columbia. .&#13;
For further information address&#13;
MAX BASS, General Immigration&#13;
Agent, 220 So. Clark St., Chicago, 111&#13;
I&#13;
Mark Noted Houses.&#13;
In pursuance of its policy of marking&#13;
the historic houses of the city, the&#13;
corporation of Bath has placed a memorial&#13;
tablet to Henry Fielding and&#13;
to his sister Sarah upon the wall&#13;
of the house in which they once lived.&#13;
The unveiling ceremony was performed&#13;
by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle&#13;
in the presence of a large attendance,&#13;
which included Henry Fielding, town&#13;
•clerk of Canterbury, a great-greatgrandson&#13;
of the novelist.&#13;
WOMEN'S_NEGLECT&#13;
SUFFERINGTHESUREPENALTY&#13;
Health Thus Lost Is Restored by Lydls&#13;
SL Plnkh&amp;m's Vegetable Compound.&#13;
r&#13;
How many women do you know who&#13;
are perfectly well and strong? "We&#13;
hear everyday the same story over and&#13;
over again. " I do not feel well; I ana&#13;
so tired all the time ! "&#13;
More than likely you speak the same&#13;
"words yourself, and no doubt you feel&#13;
far from well. The cause may be easily&#13;
traced to some derangement of the female&#13;
organs which manifests itself in&#13;
depression of spirits, reluctance to go&#13;
anywhere or do anything, backache,&#13;
bearing-down pains, flatulency, nervousness,&#13;
sleeplessness, or other female&#13;
weakness. -&#13;
These symptoms are but warnings&#13;
that there is danger ahead, and unless&#13;
heeded a life of suffering or a serious&#13;
operation is the inevitable result.&#13;
The never- f ailitfg remedy for all these&#13;
symptoms is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound.&#13;
Miss Kate McDonald of Woodbridge,&#13;
N..J., writes:&#13;
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:&#13;
" Restored health has meant BO much to me&#13;
that I cannot help- from telling about it for&#13;
the sake of other suffering women.&#13;
" For a long time I suffered untold agony&#13;
with a female trouble and irregularities,&#13;
which made me a physical wreck, and no one&#13;
thought I would recover, but Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound has entirely&#13;
cured me, and made me wetland strong, and&#13;
I feel it my duty to tell other suffering women&#13;
what a splendid medicine it is,'1&#13;
For twenty-five years Mrs. Pinkham,&#13;
daughter-in-law of Lydia E Pinkham,&#13;
has under her direction, and since her&#13;
decease, been advising sick women free&#13;
of charge. Her advice is free and&#13;
always helpful. Address, Lynn, Mass.&#13;
F r o m St. L o u i s a n d K a n s a s City&#13;
v i a M . , K . &amp; T . R ' y&#13;
T o D a l l a s , Ft. W o r t h , W a c o ,&#13;
H o u s t o n , G a l v e s t o n , S a n&#13;
Antonio, Corpus Christi,&#13;
Brownsville, L a r e d o , and intermediate&#13;
points.&#13;
T o El P a s o and intermediate&#13;
points . . . . $ 2 6 . 5 0&#13;
T o Indian Territory, Oklahoma,&#13;
and Northern T e x a s&#13;
points, one fare plus ¢ 2 . 0 0 ,&#13;
but no rate higher than . $ 2 0&#13;
&lt;!!orrespondingly low rates from all points:&#13;
From Chicago. $25.00; St. Paul, $27.50;&#13;
Omaha and Council Bluffs, $22.50.&#13;
Tickets on sale only on&#13;
September 18th and&#13;
October 2nd and 16th&#13;
good thirty (30) days from date of sale, with&#13;
liberal stop-over privileges in both directions.&#13;
Write for literature and full particulars&#13;
,W. S. ST. GEORGE&#13;
-General Passenger Agent, \l.t K &amp; T. R'y&#13;
Wainwright Building St. Louis, Mo.&#13;
•OBO. W.SMITH, 818 Marquette Bldg., Chicago, III.&#13;
EX-GOVERNOR AARON T. BLISS&#13;
Died from Stroke of Apoplexy in Milwaukee Sunday.&#13;
Ex-Governor Aaron T. Bliss died at Sacred Heart Sanitarium at Milwaukee&#13;
at 4 o'clock Sunday morning, of a stroke of apoplexy.&#13;
The death was sudden, but not entirely unexpected, because his condition&#13;
was such that a stroke was momentarily looked for.&#13;
A few moments before he died he awoke and aroused his nurse, who&#13;
took him his bathrobe. Mr. Bliss was returning to his bed with the aid of&#13;
his nurse and was only a few feet from the bed when he was stricken and&#13;
plunged to the floor. "&#13;
Dr. E. S. Davis, hi3 private physician, who has been in constant attendance,&#13;
was asleep in the next room. He was aroused by the nurse and hurried&#13;
to his patient's assistance, but found him dead.&#13;
Another Operator Assaulted.&#13;
_ The assault upon H. L. Armstrong,&#13;
Michigan Central night operator at&#13;
Wlards, who' WAS knocked unconscious&#13;
by a blow on the head by an unknown&#13;
man while working at his key, is connected,&#13;
it Is suspected, with the finding&#13;
of a cold chisel, placed in the track&#13;
just west of Wiards in such a manner&#13;
that it would wreck a train. The discovery&#13;
was made by a section boss.&#13;
Armstrong was found by a freight&#13;
train J2rew_at_.y-. 40 Tuesday nighT. He&#13;
was unconsicioiis and leaning over his&#13;
desk. Xo weapon could be found in the&#13;
office, but it is believed the blow was&#13;
dealt with a slung shot. Seventy-flve&#13;
cents which was in his pocket was&#13;
missing.&#13;
The operator was brought to Ypsilanti&#13;
on a passenger train and in the&#13;
hospital at midnight recovered consciousness.&#13;
—UAH 1 know is__thatI was sitting at&#13;
, i .&#13;
v*Wk*" SOUTHWEST"&#13;
my key working when some one whom&#13;
I did not even hear approach me dealt&#13;
me a "terrible blow on the head. The&#13;
next thing I knew I was in bed in&#13;
the hospital. I saw no one around the&#13;
station in the evening."&#13;
David Gordon, aged about 16, who&#13;
says he recently worked in the Hotel&#13;
Cadillac, Detroit, was arrested on suspicion.&#13;
He declares he was beating his&#13;
way from Detroit to Three Rivera and&#13;
was put off the train at Wlards at 5&#13;
p. m.&#13;
The motive of the assault is declared&#13;
by the officers to be robbery. The first&#13;
report was that the operator was not&#13;
robbed and that nothing was disturbed&#13;
in the little depot. Armstrong is certain&#13;
that he had some money in his&#13;
trousers pocket when he was assaulted.&#13;
When he regained consciousness he&#13;
had none.&#13;
No tickets are sold in the station and&#13;
no money Is kept there. It Is simply&#13;
a point where trains stop for water&#13;
and receive orders. Armstrong lived on&#13;
the Harris farm near the station. He&#13;
came from Grand Rapids with his wife&#13;
a few months ago.&#13;
The point where the chisel was&#13;
found in the track was a lonely spot&#13;
between here and Wlards, near the upper&#13;
bridge.&#13;
The crime bears some resemblance&#13;
to the murder of Operator Dynes at&#13;
Galien. The suspect now under arrest&#13;
is not believed to be guilty.&#13;
Barbarous Treatment.&#13;
The family of Michael Lukowski, ol&#13;
Bay City, for several months persecuted&#13;
by some unknown persona, is&#13;
in a state of terror over the continu'&#13;
ance of acts of violence.&#13;
Their home has been fired twice by&#13;
an incendiary, the house was entered&#13;
while the family slept and $100 worth&#13;
of clothiqp was slashed to pieces with&#13;
a knife, and now a child is ill from&#13;
drinking medicine left on the door&#13;
step. Around the bottle was a paper&#13;
with "Take this and get off the earth"&#13;
written upon it.&#13;
At the same time the stream oi&#13;
anonymous threatening letters continues.&#13;
One daughter^ Louise, is the&#13;
special subject of attack, and death&#13;
by mysterious means is threatened.&#13;
Matters growing out of the trouble&#13;
have been in court, but apparently tho&#13;
family do not know who their persecutor&#13;
is. The police and United States&#13;
AWFUL PSORIASIS 35 YEARS,&#13;
authorities have been working on the&#13;
case for over three month3 without&#13;
finding a single clue. Every efforl&#13;
has been made to trace the letters&#13;
back. The handwriting is always the&#13;
same, although the signatures art&#13;
sometimes different, in one instance&#13;
the name of a prominent attorney be&#13;
ing used.&#13;
Members of the household take&#13;
turns at staying awake all night ta&#13;
watch for attacks. There are ten&#13;
children in the family.&#13;
Live Wire Victim.&#13;
Howard McKenzie, a lineman in&#13;
the employ pt the Lansing lighting&#13;
commission, narrowly escaped death&#13;
Wednesday when he accidentally&#13;
touched a live wire while climbing a&#13;
pole. He was unable to free himself,&#13;
but fellow workmen finally pulled him&#13;
away and let him easily to the ground.&#13;
He was bleeding at the mouth and his&#13;
shirt was smoldering. In a doctor's&#13;
office he soon regained consciousness.&#13;
The Democratic territorial convention&#13;
of New Mexico indorsed William&#13;
J. Bryan for the presidency in 1908,&#13;
Mrs. Johanna •Scheffler-Strong, now&#13;
in Battle Creek, former domestic in&#13;
Banker Stensland's home in Chicago,&#13;
believes, hi* dowitfaiLdua to misplaced&#13;
confldeh6eTlB frWMgflne denies'file&#13;
alleged intimacy with women.&#13;
Saginaw's Great Drouth.&#13;
Rains partially broke one of the&#13;
worst drouths Saginaw county has suf&#13;
fered in years. Pasture fields hav«&#13;
been discarded long ago and farmert&#13;
have been feeding their stock from&#13;
silos. The excessive heat has ripened&#13;
everything prematurely. "October" po&#13;
tatoes are already on the market and&#13;
late fruits are all a month early. Dairy&#13;
butter is not to be had, while eggs are&#13;
at December prices. The ground hat&#13;
been so hard that farmers could not&#13;
plow for fall wheat sowing. These&#13;
same conditions prevail for 150 mllet&#13;
north, the drouth covering probably&#13;
15,000 square miles. Produce men say&#13;
that the damage to farm products has&#13;
exceeded 11,000,000 in the "dry" belt,&#13;
Terrible Scaly Humor in Patches All&#13;
Over the Body—Skin Cracked and&#13;
Bleeding—Cured by Cuticura.&#13;
"I was afflicted with psoriasis for&#13;
thirty-five years. It was in patches&#13;
all over my body. I used three cakes&#13;
of Cuticura Soap, six boxes of Ointment&#13;
and two bottles of Resolvent.&#13;
In thirty days I was Completely cured,&#13;
and I think permanently, as it was&#13;
about five years ago. The psoriasis&#13;
first made its appearance in red spots,&#13;
generally forming a circle, leaving in&#13;
the center a spxJt about the site of a&#13;
silver dollar of sound flesh. In a short&#13;
time the affected circle would form&#13;
a heavy dry scale of a white silvery&#13;
appearance and would gradually drop&#13;
off. To remove the -entire scales by&#13;
bathing or using oil to soften them&#13;
the flesh would be perfectly raw, and&#13;
a light discharge of bloody substance&#13;
would ooze out. That scaly crust&#13;
would form again in twenty-four hours.&#13;
It was worse on my arms and limbs,&#13;
although it was in spots all over my&#13;
body, also on my scalp. If I let the&#13;
scales remain too long without removing&#13;
by bath or otherwise, the skin&#13;
would crack and bleed. I suffered intense&#13;
itching, worse at nights after&#13;
getting warm in bed,'or blood warm&#13;
by exercise, when it would be almost&#13;
unbearable. W. M. Chidester, Hutchinson,&#13;
Kan., April 20, 1905."&#13;
Five Million Miners.&#13;
The number of persons employed&#13;
in the mines of the world is about&#13;
5,000,000, ol whom one-fifth are in&#13;
Great Britain.&#13;
Bismarck Hated Monuments.&#13;
Reinhold Begas, probably the greatest&#13;
German sculptor* has passed his&#13;
seventy-fifth birthday. Ten weeks before&#13;
Bismarck 8 death Begas appeared&#13;
at Friedrichsruh to get a final impression&#13;
of Germany's most striking figure&#13;
before beginning work on the great&#13;
Bismarck monument voted by the&#13;
reichstag. When Begas^stated his mission&#13;
Bismarck replied: "Gott; why do&#13;
you wish to set me a great monument?&#13;
Represent me as being on crutcheriii^&#13;
FINDS VIRTUE IN OLD CLOTHES.&#13;
Men's Garments Shaped to the Figure&#13;
by Age Catch Artist's Eye.&#13;
To the eye of the artist the garments&#13;
of the modern man are only&#13;
tolerable when age has adapted them&#13;
somewhat to the lines of the figure;&#13;
to the average artist a new suit of&#13;
clothes is an abomination.&#13;
"It Is not only that new clothes are&#13;
more ugly than old," said a knight of&#13;
the palette who discussed the question;&#13;
"to my mind no one can He properly&#13;
easy or graceful in them.&#13;
"I never feel that I properly know a&#13;
man until I have met him wearing an&#13;
old suit Certainly no man can possibly&#13;
be his natural self in evening&#13;
dress.&#13;
"I have noticed again and again&#13;
how different the same people are&#13;
when wearing different clothes. I&#13;
went, for instance, to a large family&#13;
gathering some time ago, and for&#13;
some reason everybody had donned&#13;
full evening dress. What a difference&#13;
it made! We were all on terms&#13;
of intimate friendship, but somehow&#13;
the clothes brought in ah element of&#13;
coldness and formality. We all felt&#13;
It—even , the women, although, of&#13;
course, the fair sex are not easily per.&#13;
suaded of the merits of well-worn garments.&#13;
But no man who has discovered&#13;
the ease and comfort of them&#13;
will readily give them up. As for the&#13;
artistic side of modern.clothes, it only&#13;
comes when they have mellowed by&#13;
use!"&#13;
WELL PEOPLE TOO&#13;
Living, But Legally Dead.&#13;
Wilson R. Mawrer, mourned for&#13;
dead in Marcellus for 20 years, after&#13;
he had suddenly disappeared, and&#13;
legally declared so in the probate&#13;
court, when his mother's estate was&#13;
settled the past, summer, has come&#13;
back to life through his arrest at Mishawaka,&#13;
Ind.&#13;
His mother died last spring, and&#13;
when the estate, consisting of a few&#13;
hundred dollars, was brought Into&#13;
court to be settled, every effort was&#13;
made to find Mawrer, the only missing&#13;
heir.&#13;
His arrest in Indiana was caused,&#13;
it is alleged, by making love to women,&#13;
winning their confidence and&#13;
then leaving with their money. He was&#13;
a young man when he left there and&#13;
little is known of his career.&#13;
George Studebaker, aged 16, of Muskegon,&#13;
has been missing for a month.&#13;
His mother h w asSe&lt;l the Detroit pa&#13;
lice to try to locate him.&#13;
/&#13;
Wit* Doctor Gives Postum to Convalescents.&#13;
A wise doctor tries to give nature&#13;
its best chance by saving the little&#13;
strength of the already exhausted patient,&#13;
and building up wasted energy&#13;
with simple but powerful nourishment.&#13;
"Five years ago," writes a doctor,&#13;
"I commenced to use Postum in my&#13;
own family Instead of coffee. I was&#13;
so well pleased with the results that&#13;
I had two grocers place it in stock,&#13;
guaranteeing its sale.&#13;
"I then commenced to recommend&#13;
it to my patients in place of coffee,&#13;
as a nutritious beverage. The consequence&#13;
is, every store in town is now&#13;
selling it, as it has become a household&#13;
necessity in many homes.&#13;
"I'm sure I prescribe Postum as&#13;
often as any one remedy in the Materia&#13;
Medlca—in almost every case of&#13;
indigestion and nervousness I treat,&#13;
and with the best results.&#13;
"When I once introduce it Into a&#13;
family, it is quite sure to remara. I&#13;
shall continue to use it and prescribe&#13;
it in families where I practice.&#13;
"In convalescence from pneumonia,&#13;
typhoid fever and other cases, I give&#13;
it as a liquid, easily absorbed diet.&#13;
Ton may use my letter as a reference&#13;
any way you tee fit." Jfame givefl by&#13;
Postum Co., Battle TJreek. Mich. * Read&#13;
"Ts* Road te W e W U e " In nkgs,&#13;
"Tbt re'i a reason."&#13;
There is no task too hard for ft&#13;
lacy man not to attempt.&#13;
" v S i T f o r ' Me!""&#13;
Although the statetfhan blandly fair&#13;
And almost unselfish seems to be,&#13;
His arguments boiled down with care&#13;
Are generally: "Vote' for ma" m&#13;
\n a Pinch, Use ALLEN'S FOOT-EAt*&#13;
A powder. It cures painful, smart'&#13;
ing, netvous feet and ingrowing naUe*&#13;
It's the greatest comfort discovery of&#13;
the age. Makes new shoes easy. A&#13;
certain cure for sweating feet. 30,0M&#13;
testimonials of cures. Sold by C^&#13;
druggists, 25c Trial package, FRB&#13;
Address A. S. Olmsted. Le Roy, N.&#13;
* *&#13;
Education in Sweden.&#13;
Nowhere else, unless in America, ia&#13;
education so universal aa in Sweden.&#13;
Every child must go to school between&#13;
the ages of seven and 14, unless&#13;
the parents can show that they „&#13;
are being privately educated. There&#13;
are about twelve thousand common&#13;
schools in Sweden, even the theiM -&#13;
populated districts having "ambttiiv&#13;
tory schools," held In various p a r t l y&#13;
of the district. When this is the case&#13;
the school term is reduced to about&#13;
half the ordinary duration.-rThe&#13;
Craftsman.&#13;
Women Aatronomers.&#13;
Mrs. Peton Fleming, who was recently&#13;
elected a member of the Royal&#13;
Astronomical society, is not the only&#13;
woman who has succeeded in comprehending&#13;
the mysteries of the heavens.&#13;
Miss Henrietta Leavitt discovered ,25&#13;
new variable stars some years ago.&#13;
Lady Huggins diligently helps hei&#13;
husband, Slr^Wllliam Huggins, in his&#13;
astronomical observations. In their&#13;
house in South London they possess&#13;
a very finely equipped observatory,&#13;
which contains the enormous telescope&#13;
presented by the royal society to&#13;
Sir William in recognition of the work&#13;
accomplished by Lady Huggins and&#13;
himself in astrophysics.&#13;
DODDS '&#13;
^KIDNEY&#13;
\ PILLS&#13;
' « 8 C T E 5&#13;
HOLD UP! etna? consider&#13;
- E2L POMMEL&#13;
UKE ALL&#13;
WTERPWK&#13;
CLOTHING.!&#13;
Ismadf oUhrb«t&#13;
maimer akfc»otilow I&#13;
totytfuAMmlMiinasold t?|&#13;
itutftfatotwr/vflitre&#13;
*W 5TKKTBTHK&#13;
SIGNOFTHEFISHI&#13;
CAMAIUMttdlMTA. AJTOWIR CO.&#13;
~ CAM. MSTOII W. L. DOUGLAS&#13;
•3.50 &amp;*3.00 Shoes&#13;
I I I T IN TM« WOftLD&#13;
WLDougittttfiftEfrtiM,&#13;
OMstttaaayrilriitwjprioa;&#13;
7kWS.h oL4, DDotaulgtlrats:* Job- toootmnggl oHteo Ians tth Iits cthoeu nmtroys t Send for Catalof&#13;
SHOES FOB BVEBYSOST AT Ail. FSltiSL&#13;
S a t s a f m ^ * £ £ • £ &amp; £ ? ? $ *syM Wi ^» 'A» ,O DbtnmdgUr «tM' « » o S * l f c S to fl.OO. . Children's shoos; f oWr OsUtyMleS,' IA. t Mt nUds »w« eaarn d&#13;
they excel other mafcem. _&#13;
If I could take yon Into m v large&#13;
factories at Brockton, Mass.,and show&#13;
you how carefully W J l l&gt;oug|aa s h o e s&#13;
are made, you would then understand&#13;
w h y they bold their shape, fit better,&#13;
wear longer, and are ot greater value&#13;
than arty other make.&#13;
WherevePTron "vs. yoa can obtain W.&#13;
DotfftaaalMM. His MOM and price U&#13;
on the bottom, which protects yoa&#13;
prices and Interior shoe*. _T«*»&#13;
tut: Asfc year dealer for W.L.D&#13;
and Insist upon having then*.&#13;
Fatt Color EgtkU uiif;ti*v will sot &lt;r» Sjajrap,&#13;
Write ter flfatf nrtedCataleg ofT&gt;all 8 t J * s T&#13;
W. U DOUGLAS, Deft. 1 * Btecfcteej, Mass.&#13;
HAMjESUmX WANTED.&#13;
We want* IITS.MloHcaVl*it ayn dw ltihtoo rsouufglhel}&#13;
ftaVJClsw—. A suiiiv Beaded 1 a vrwr ••deonhe a• eldoaf nu uwre ©woimn pgliiTven ia wselrlaikallaTsea rsaaaloess&#13;
Mleanwp io thU burotmljtht hit." plfelty Cew&#13;
. jo rcuatU fteyo awtinth* ssuu pp4 ly P r « N i r t Hellew&#13;
rules. To&#13;
SRKSt niseis* Sit «mr&#13;
-. J*-* ' # 1&#13;
A NERVOUS WRECK&#13;
•a*&#13;
Ibtre, Q N M Gained 26 Founds and&#13;
ftaoovered Her HsaKh by Taking&#13;
Dr. Williams9 ««l&lt; Pilla.&#13;
0aperal debility U a term that coven&#13;
aa«jpjti£ede of owes where there is uo&#13;
j S e ^ a e a a V ^ e t the patient continue*&#13;
felon* strength and the doctor's ssediofeaes&#13;
have no apparent effect. This is&#13;
%fcs decline that laade to death if mean*&#13;
am mot sound to check it. In a great&#13;
smjfarity of cases Dr. Williams' Pink&#13;
Mlis will check is and restore healtfcantd&#13;
jejeeugtihJjecause they actually make new&#13;
tfeod and so seald renewed vitality to&#13;
organ and tissue of the body.&#13;
x. 8. A. Oreeu, whose address i s&#13;
80, R. F. D. No. 4, Franklin, Gkv,&#13;
•ays: "For three and a half year* I&#13;
swffevod with weakness and nervousness,&#13;
complicated with stomach trouble.&#13;
At times I was confined to iny bed lor&#13;
periods ranging from three weeks to two&#13;
mouths and was uuder the physician's&#13;
&lt;eere most of tlse time for three years. I&#13;
40*a» know the cause of my trouble bos&#13;
rostrated with weakness and, aip.&#13;
I took a great deal of medicine,&#13;
Jug seemed to-give me strength. At&#13;
mmmcB my stomaefc hurt me something&#13;
* Jnarfttl and my head often troubled me.&#13;
t w a s sleepless and what sleep I did get&#13;
did not refresh me.&#13;
44 When I began taking Dr. "Williams1&#13;
Pink Pills, I weighed but 104 pounds.&#13;
I knew I was so bad that a few doses&#13;
would not cure me and I had patience.&#13;
Soon-the pills began to give me strength,&#13;
xny blood got in bettercouditiou, I could&#13;
sleep wellat night and helpsome wi th the&#13;
housework. Now I weigh ISO pounds and&#13;
think nothing of walking half ft mile.&#13;
©r. William*' Pink Pills hare done wonders&#13;
for me and the neighbors all know&#13;
this statement is trne.''&#13;
Dr. Williams* Pink Pills are sold by all&#13;
druggists, or will be sent by mail, postpaid,&#13;
on receipt of price, 50 cents per box,&#13;
six boxes $2.60, by the Dr. Williams Medicine&#13;
Co., Schenectady, N.Y.&#13;
Soothed by Baths with&#13;
And gentle .applications of' Cuticura,&#13;
the great Skin Cure, arid&#13;
purest and sweetest of emollients.&#13;
For sumjjfidr rashes, irritations,&#13;
itchings, crSfings, sunburn, bites&#13;
and.sting's of ^insects* tired, ashing&#13;
muscles and joints, as well as for&#13;
preserving, purifying, and beautifying&#13;
Ibe skin* scalp-, hair, and&#13;
hands, Qrticura Soap and Cuticura&#13;
Ointmenfc are Prte^erss.&#13;
Potter DrtlfJtCkcro. Corp..«•!» Prop*, Botfob.&#13;
SS^M*U«rrtM, ''How to Cats for tfkia, Sc*!*,* Bala,"&#13;
THE&#13;
CHRISTIAN&#13;
WORLD&#13;
M£8»AQE PROM MISSIONARIES.&#13;
FADED TO A SHADOW.&#13;
Worker* In China Sand Out an Appeal&#13;
to Mission Societies.&#13;
The following letter has recently&#13;
been swat to the members of the foreign&#13;
mission boards and societies in&#13;
all Christian lands, aad Is signed by&#13;
22 missionaries of various boards with&#13;
missionaries In Shanghai:&#13;
"Students are the awat influential&#13;
class la China, and heretofore they&#13;
have been also the most ^conservative.&#13;
There Is no better index of the change&#13;
which has come over the empire than&#13;
the recent remarkable exodus of the&#13;
8,620 Chinese students to Japan. Probably&#13;
there has not been la the history&#13;
of the wcartd any such migration of&#13;
students from one country to another&#13;
in an equally brief period. These students&#13;
are from all parts of tfceampire,&#13;
and belong to the educated and official&#13;
classes. They are bound in the fa.ture&#13;
to influence mightily every missionary&#13;
Interest throughout China.&#13;
"The Btudenta are living in Toldo&#13;
amidst dangerous conditions, tending&#13;
both toward extreme radicalism and&#13;
great immorality. . The good influences&#13;
which might come from Japan&#13;
are practically shut off from them, because&#13;
the Chinese students have but&#13;
little Japanese or English, while the&#13;
Japanese do not speak Chinese.&#13;
"There are in Japan a number of&#13;
revolutionary Chinese politicians who&#13;
are filling the minds of the students&#13;
with fanatical anti-Christian and antiforeign&#13;
ideas. The students are, therefore,&#13;
in danger of becoming a real&#13;
menace to China, and are a serious&#13;
hindrance to the missionary enter&#13;
prise;&#13;
"The general committee of the Young&#13;
Men's Christian Associations of China,&#13;
Korea, and Hong-Kong, has determined&#13;
upon making an effort in their&#13;
behalf. The Shanghai Missionary Association&#13;
appointed a committee to&#13;
call the attention of the boards of&#13;
missions throughout the world to this&#13;
great need, and to ask their hearty&#13;
cooperation with the Young Men's&#13;
Christian Associations in this enterprise.&#13;
The recent cooperation of the&#13;
missionaries with the Japanese troops&#13;
in Manchuria affords a valuable example&#13;
as to the results of such cooperation."&#13;
.&#13;
Contributions may be sent to the&#13;
honorary treasurer, Rev. A. J. Walker,&#13;
Shanghai; or to the national committee&#13;
of the Young Men's Christian Associations&#13;
of England and America.&#13;
90,000,000&#13;
BUSHELS THAT'S THE WHEA1&#13;
CROP IN WESTERN&#13;
CANADA THIS YEAR&#13;
ThU with nearly 80,-&#13;
— — 000,000 bushels of oats I'M* MT M•€ K9tt0 0b4n sthimelae so ffo r btaher lefya rmmeera*n to fa W cotant--&#13;
_ „ crop*, low ta*ea, healthy&#13;
churches and schools, splendid&#13;
taeid,~ f„ret _to -a yeGnro; wsenttmlerea wt 0ilU?«sf« 1s«o0 ds earbelse otfo •taAnsW pii;c ew •aitdh* t Ihnef oHrommitelostieia md aRye f"buet aotbiotanisn. ed fre* W.O Dtt.&lt;aw tae,s tCs aAnaodpatr;tonrt enfrdoemnt aouft hIomrimsedt- ,T Gheoavterren mBeknrtt .Abgeetraotsl-tM, M. yk. hMii«cl«sm .; aoar, ir. tacit Stt, Mark, aifcMgnn.&#13;
flam w. D&#13;
ramfe!'0 !!&#13;
TIBSPSV* G 8Es2 5£^~^HH&#13;
TO PROBE MI88IONS.&#13;
Syndicate of Daily Newspapers 8ends&#13;
Out Representative.&#13;
The big business of bringing the&#13;
kingdom closer to the world is evoking&#13;
various forms of present-day&#13;
Christian activity. The latest of&#13;
these Is a first-hand study of foreign&#13;
mission work, all around the world,&#13;
in behalf of a syndicate of daily newspapers&#13;
in the United States and Canada,&#13;
by Mr. William T. Ellis, one of&#13;
the editors of the Philadelphia Press.&#13;
Mr.. Ellis goes as a trained investigator,&#13;
with the avowed purpose of&#13;
telling, in popular form, exactly what&#13;
he finds. Just what foreign missions&#13;
are doing or failing to do, how they&#13;
work and in what conditions, and the&#13;
sort of men and women who represent&#13;
the American churches abroad, will&#13;
be reported with the utmost frankness&#13;
by Mr. Ellis.&#13;
His tour, which began at San Francisco,&#13;
June 13, will include Hawaii,&#13;
Japan, Korea, China, Philippines, Ceylon,&#13;
Burma, India, Egypt, Persia,&#13;
Syria, and the Holy Land, Turkey&#13;
and Europe. Nine months will be&#13;
consumed in the journey. Mr. Ellis&#13;
is not sent by any missionary body,&#13;
but goes independently on a strictly&#13;
journalistic mission. Whatever of a&#13;
religious nature is likely to interest&#13;
the American public comes properly&#13;
within the field of his survey. The&#13;
various missionary boards and International&#13;
religious organizations have&#13;
expressed a cordial Interest in this&#13;
project, and a desire to cooperate&#13;
with it.&#13;
Worn Down by Five Years of Suffering&#13;
from Kidney Complaint.&#13;
Mrs. Remethe Myers, of 180 South&#13;
Tenth S i , fronton/0., says: '1 have&#13;
__^aw worked hard l a my&#13;
^ W e m time) slid OATS been&#13;
T ant exposed again and&#13;
l ^ P V . ; • • *t*in to change* of&#13;
nfoamj*. weather. It Is no&#13;
. w f ^ s s u K WOn&lt;ier m y kidneys&#13;
gave out and I went&#13;
all to pieces at last.&#13;
For five years I was&#13;
fading away and finally so weak that&#13;
for six months I could not get osct&#13;
of the femes. I was nervous. resOeas&#13;
and sleepless at night, and lame and&#13;
sore fa the ' morning. Sometimes&#13;
everything would whirl and blur before&#13;
ssa. I bloated so badly I could&#13;
not wear tight clothing, and had to&#13;
put on shoes two sizes larger than&#13;
usual. The urine was disordered and&#13;
passages were dreadfully frequent I&#13;
got help from the first box of Doah*s&#13;
Kidney PJSa, however, and by the&#13;
time I had taken four boxes the pain&#13;
aad bloating was gone. I have been&#13;
In good heattfr ever since."&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.&#13;
Foster-Milbnrn Co., Buffalo, N. T.&#13;
Occasionally a man spends a lot of&#13;
time at his club because, there's no&#13;
place like home.&#13;
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES color&#13;
more rood*, per .neckage, than others, and&#13;
the colors are brighter and faster.&#13;
AJS alarm clock always gets busy&#13;
Just when a man doesn't want to be&#13;
Dfdnt Haws Auk Eggs.&#13;
Prof. E#win Ray Lancaster, president&#13;
of the British association, was&#13;
busy in bis study one morning recently&#13;
when a country woman sought an&#13;
Interview with him. Laying a parcel&#13;
on his desk she said, triumphantly:&#13;
"There's two of 'em." "Two of what?"&#13;
said the professor. '"Two 'awk's eggs.&#13;
I 'ear they are worth £1,000 pounds&#13;
apiece." The distinguished scientist&#13;
undid the parcel carefully, looked at&#13;
the eggs and said with a smile.&#13;
"These are not auk's eggs. Those that&#13;
are so valuable are the eggs of the auk&#13;
—auk." "Oh, hauk," said the woman.&#13;
"Wait till I get 'old of my son,&#13;
'Enery. I'll give 'im wot-oh for sending&#13;
me on a wild goose chase."&#13;
Superb Service, Splendid Scenery&#13;
en route to Niagara Falls, Muskoka&#13;
and Kawartha Lakes, Georgian Bay&#13;
and Temegami Region, St. Lawrence&#13;
-River and Rapids, Thousand Islands,&#13;
Algonquin National Park, White Mountains&#13;
and Atlantic Sea Coast resorts,&#13;
via Grand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Double track Chicago to Montreal and&#13;
Niagara Falls, N. Y.&#13;
For copies of tourist publications&#13;
and descriptive pamphlets apply to&#13;
Geo. W. Vaux, A. G. P. &amp; T, A., 135&#13;
Adams St, Chicago.&#13;
Mrs. Wlnalow'a Soothing- Sympw&#13;
SFaoarw chssitlJdaraen, a tlleaoytsa ipaa*in. s, ocfatreenss wthien ds ucmoli*c,. r2a5cd oso be*ot ttlne**&#13;
The rays of happiness, like those&#13;
of light, are colorless when unbroken.&#13;
—Longfellow.&#13;
8aved Many from Drowning.&#13;
Five hundred persons saved from&#13;
drowning in 48 years was the record&#13;
achievement of Christian Langer, a&#13;
Danish boatman, who has just died&#13;
at Harboe, Jutland, aged S3. V1RGIK1A FARMS Cataiog freelance inaplSa&#13;
*Mlk*m TlaW A Urn* €•., 1MM M m t a f t , »a»-&#13;
GASTORIA For Infants and Children.&#13;
The Kind You Have&#13;
Always Bought&#13;
I M Y \ I S / ( H1I.DKI.N&#13;
Neckties Women Buy.&#13;
Customer—Those are the fiercest&#13;
looking neckties J ever saw. Why&#13;
do you keep 'em? ;&#13;
Haberdasher—To sell.&#13;
Cuctoraer—Who on earth buys 'em?&#13;
Haberdasher—Women, to give to&#13;
their husbands. - •&#13;
Promotes Digestion,CheerfuK&#13;
ness and Rest.Con tains neither&#13;
Ctouim,Morphine nor Mineral.&#13;
NOT N A R C O T I C .&#13;
jtix.Sm/m *&#13;
ffi££&#13;
Aperfecl Remedy for Constipation&#13;
. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea&#13;
Worms .Convulsions .Fcverisnness&#13;
and LOS9 OF SLEEP.&#13;
facsimile Signature of&#13;
NEW YORK. •\t b&#13;
) 5 D n s F S - ] &gt;&#13;
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CUSTOM&#13;
9&#13;
©&#13;
N. U* DITAOflV NO. JaWUM.&#13;
Church Union In England.&#13;
Union of an organic nature among&#13;
the three smaller of the Methodist&#13;
denominations in England—the United&#13;
Methodist Free Churches, the Methodist&#13;
New Connexion, and the Bible&#13;
Christian Methodists, of which the&#13;
first Is more than twice the size of&#13;
either of the other two—Is about to be&#13;
consummated, says the Record of&#13;
Christian Work. All together they&#13;
number mora than 160,000 members,&#13;
with over 700 ministers, and nearly.&#13;
2,500 chapels. The throe bodies, which,&#13;
when the union is legally completed&#13;
by act of parliament, will be no longer&#13;
thrstv but ona, will be known as tha&#13;
Union Methodist church. It Is hoped&#13;
by many that this may prove the first&#13;
step to the organic union of all those&#13;
frrtsMeas wfce call John-Weniey&#13;
their oocloslastrcei father.&#13;
HAT J O V T H E Y B M N G&#13;
TO EVERY HOME&#13;
as with jcy.ous hearts and smiling faces they romp and play—when^n health—and&#13;
how conducive to health the games irf^hJch they indulge, the outdoor life they&#13;
enjoy, the cleanly, regular habits they sh^UlaSbe, taught to form and the wholesome&#13;
diet of which they should partake. How\end#ly their health should be preserved, ,&#13;
riot by constant medication, but by careful avoidance of every medicine of an injuri-'&#13;
ous or objectionable nature, and if at anytime a remedial agent is required, to assist&#13;
nature, only these of known excellence should be used; remedies which are pure •&#13;
and wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy,&#13;
Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Syrup of Figs has&#13;
come into general favor in many millions of well informed families, whose estimate&#13;
of its quality and excellence is base*} upon personal knowledge and use.&#13;
Syrup of Figs has also met with the approval of physicians generally, because&#13;
they know it is wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. We inform all reputable&#13;
physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs, obtained, by.an&#13;
original method, from certain plants known to them to act most beneficially and&#13;
presented in an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome Californian blue figs are&#13;
used to promote the pleasant taste; therefore it is not a secret remedy and hence.&#13;
we are free to refer to all well informed physicians, who do not approve of patent&#13;
medicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication.&#13;
Please to remember and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup of Figs&#13;
always has the full name of the Company—California Fig Syrup Co.—plainly&#13;
printed on the front of every package and that it is for sale in bottles of one size&#13;
only. If any dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent size, or having&#13;
printed thereon the name of any other company, do not accept it. If you fail to get&#13;
the genuine you will not get its beneficial effects. Every family should always have&#13;
a bottle on hand, as It is equally beneficial for the parents and the* children,&#13;
whenever a laxative remedy is required.&#13;
• e e&#13;
1 riA V&#13;
r&#13;
\&#13;
i Business Pointers.&#13;
WOm, SAL*.&#13;
A pood coat heating stove. Enquire&#13;
of W. B . Darrow.&#13;
F O R a A L J f c&#13;
A six year old roan horsn, weight&#13;
1.200 pounds John Webb, 1.} miles&#13;
south of Uaadilla village. Gregory&#13;
Jlmong Oilr Correspondents&#13;
Thii&#13;
ready&#13;
older.&#13;
Petty&lt;vil!-&#13;
to receive&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG .&#13;
The North Hamburg young&#13;
peoples club will meet with Claude&#13;
and Fannie Rollisou, Saturday&#13;
eveuiug, Sept. 29.,&#13;
The Putnam-Hamburg farmers'&#13;
club will hold their next meeting&#13;
NOTICE ' a* the home of Mr. and Mrs. John&#13;
lider mill i&gt; now | VanHoru, Saturday, Sept. 29/1)6&#13;
appUs and make j for dinner. please bring lap-&#13;
Wm, Hooker. Jjoards and dishes.&#13;
F O R S A L E .&#13;
1 wo .lice lot- en \!:iin t-tveet, with ,&#13;
H«e ^bad*tsAnd dt'fii' and window I&#13;
trauu's sufficient for tf.ir *ized house. !&#13;
22 tt H. W.CrolooU&#13;
It arouses energy, developes and&#13;
stimulates nervous life, arouses tbe&#13;
courage of youth. It mak*-* you&#13;
young again. That"* wba't Hollister's&#13;
Kockv Mountain Tea will do. 35 cts.&#13;
Tea-or Tablets. Ijl W. DANIELS,&#13;
J , GENERAL A U C T I O N E E R .&#13;
SatistactK u Guaranteed. For information&#13;
call at DISPATCH Office or address&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. Lyudilia phone&#13;
connection. Auction bills and tin cups!&#13;
furnished free,&#13;
Subscribe for the Plnckney Dispatch&#13;
F. I. ANDREWS &amp; CO., PUBS.&#13;
-rr-r&#13;
I A Y-pfc ^ C Sweet to Eat&#13;
L O V v l J a/ ACaidylowtlUudffv.&#13;
Percy Swarthout&#13;
Funeral Director&#13;
AND EMB&amp;LMER&#13;
ALL CALLS ANSWERED&#13;
PROMPTLY DAY OR NIGHT.&#13;
PARLCRS AT&#13;
P L I M P T O N ' S OLD STAND Phone N o . 3 0&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
ANDEBSON.&#13;
Will Roche has been engaged&#13;
as teacher in the Sprout district&#13;
for the coming winter.&#13;
Miss Myra Williams of Stockbridge,&#13;
visited her sister, Mrs. F.&#13;
W. Alackinder this week.&#13;
Mrs. E. A. Sprout and Miss . M.&#13;
L. Sprout called on Mrs. Erastns&#13;
Hinchey the first of the week.&#13;
Miss L. M. Coe and Miss L, O.&#13;
Haze of Pinckuey, were pleasant&#13;
callers on Anderson friends last&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Mrs. F. W. Mackinder visited&#13;
in Gregory Saturday and her sister,&#13;
Mrs. E. H. Mackinder, returned&#13;
with her to spend Sunday.&#13;
Miss Pacia Hinchey, who has&#13;
been spending her vacation at a&#13;
summer resort near Sandusky, 0.,&#13;
has returned home and will reenter&#13;
the state Normal at Ypsilanti&#13;
in Oct&#13;
COLLINS PLAINS&#13;
The Misses Collins spent Sunday&#13;
under the parental roof.&#13;
Mrs. Steve Hadley received the&#13;
sad news Monday, that her mother&#13;
was dead.&#13;
Mrs. , F . WT. Mackinder and&#13;
children of Auderson visited her&#13;
sister, Mrs. R. H. Mackinder Saturday.&#13;
A special meeting was held at&#13;
the school house to reelect the&#13;
district officers who were not lawfully&#13;
qualified according to the&#13;
state law.&#13;
Ask your druggist lor Pylo Pil«*&#13;
Cure. Every box warranted. Price&#13;
25 cents. For Sale by F . A. Sigler,&#13;
Pinckney, Micb. t 86&#13;
On the Battlefield&#13;
==3&#13;
There are more M e C a l l P a t t e r n * sold in the United&#13;
states than of any other make of paitems 1 his is on&#13;
ltcount of their style, accuracy ana simpii. ity.&#13;
M O O R I I ' B M a g a z i n e The Qiiren of Fashion) ha»&#13;
mdre subscribers than any oilirr Lsdif-' 1&gt;\.\c /ine. l&gt;i.e&#13;
rear's subscription (12 number?.' coMs 5 0 C(Milft. I atrst&#13;
lumber, !i e e s t H . Every subscriber gets a MtCali Hattern&#13;
F r e e . Subscribe today.&#13;
L a d y A g e n t * W a n t e d . Hanrl-^mr cr-minmsor&#13;
loeral cash commission. IVitreni Cn .lo^ue-, of 6 -0 delitfns)&#13;
and Premium Catalog,.- (shi&gt;» n.f 400 prrnnurai)&#13;
«*»t t r e e . AJdresi THE McCAl.L CO.. New York.&#13;
"For a Republic&#13;
We Must&#13;
Ham Men"&#13;
For a successful business&#13;
there must be buyers, A well&#13;
equipped store, a well assorted&#13;
stock of goods, efficient clerks,&#13;
all attract buyers; but no matter&#13;
what the store, no matter&#13;
what the stock, no matter how&#13;
agreeable or efficient the help,&#13;
buyers will not be attracted unless&#13;
they know the facts.&#13;
£ Telling the facts in regard to your business&#13;
is advertising. That method which&#13;
will tell them to the largest number of&#13;
prospective buyers is the best methed&#13;
It is obvious that the best&#13;
method of telling the facts to&#13;
the buyers of this community&#13;
is through the advertising columns&#13;
of this paper. Are you&#13;
employing this method to tht&#13;
best advantage?&#13;
Think ot Dr. Stoop's Catarrh Cure&#13;
it'your nose and throat discharges—if&#13;
your breath i* foul or feverish. This&#13;
snow white soothing halm contains oil&#13;
of Eucalyptus, Thymol, Menthol, e t c ,&#13;
incorporated into an imported creamlike&#13;
velvet petrolatum. It soothes,&#13;
heals, purifies, controls. Call at our&#13;
store for free trial box. All dealers.&#13;
CHILSON&#13;
Carl Dammann epent a few&#13;
days with friends in Millington.&#13;
Chas. Sohweinsberg went to&#13;
Kawkawlin Saturday to visit&#13;
friends.&#13;
James Carpenter and lady&#13;
friend of Owosso, visited his parents&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
WEST PUTMAM.&#13;
Wales Leland was in Saginaw&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Gardner is spending&#13;
a week with relatives in Hamburg.&#13;
Wheat sowing in this section&#13;
has been postponed on account of&#13;
dry weather,&#13;
Mrs. G. W. Bates and daughter&#13;
Nellie, called on friends here the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Monks were&#13;
called to Detroit Saturday by the&#13;
death of Mr. Monks' sister, Mrs.&#13;
Andrew Hacket,&#13;
John M. Harris is enlarging&#13;
his residence and adding some&#13;
modern conveniences. McClear&#13;
Bro*., of Gregory are doing the&#13;
work.&#13;
On explaining the principles of&#13;
a clover seed sower to the girl&#13;
from the city, she exclaimed,,"Oh!&#13;
what a beautiful mouse trap." Is&#13;
this not worse than "Whois drawing&#13;
the street car?"&#13;
&gt;• MM Mlli&#13;
Ladies read this catalog ot charms.&#13;
Bright eyes, glowing cheeks, red lips,&#13;
a soooth skin without a blemish, in&#13;
short, perfect health, l o r sale with&#13;
every package Hollister's Rocky&#13;
Mountain Tea. 35 cents.&#13;
All the news for $1.00 per year.&#13;
[Original.]&#13;
I was advancing with the Hue when&#13;
I was knocked down by a bullet striking&#13;
my hip. Not knowing that I was&#13;
badly wounded, I attempted to rise.&#13;
As I did so I was knocked senseless&#13;
by more lead striking my skull.&#13;
When I regained consciousness I was&#13;
In the center of a battlefield. I have&#13;
been exposed to shot and shell coming&#13;
from one direction, but this was the&#13;
only time in my life I was obliged to&#13;
endure a hot fire coming from two opposite&#13;
points of the compass. I could&#13;
not risq to run away If I would, and&#13;
had I risen I would not have bettered&#13;
my condition. In the one ease I would&#13;
have been shot down at once; in the&#13;
other I must take the risk of some missile&#13;
either striking the ground where I&#13;
lay or bursting near me. Round shot&#13;
coming from one direction passed near&#13;
above me, shells burst beside me, while&#13;
the air was alive with the songs of bullets,&#13;
sweetly terrible. Something fell&#13;
on my chest and rolled off on to the&#13;
ground. I grasped It. It was a lump&#13;
of half melted lead. Two bullet's had&#13;
met above me and been fused by the&#13;
Impact. The din of Incessant thunder,&#13;
shrieking Iron missies, yells, groans,&#13;
can only be described by one w o r d -&#13;
hell.&#13;
The fire instead of lessening grew&#13;
fiercer. I must do something to get&#13;
out of It or be killed sooner or later,&#13;
since no one could live long in such a&#13;
tempest. I raised myself on my elbow&#13;
to look about me. On my right was a •&#13;
line of bushes. They indicated a water&#13;
course. If I could drag myself&#13;
there and find it what I supposed, I&#13;
might get down into the water, where&#13;
I would be comparatively safe. The&#13;
ieslred line was several hundred yards&#13;
away. Nevertheless I determined to&#13;
make the effort.&#13;
I was obliged to pulU-w'ithsKiy arms&#13;
and push with one leg. The w&amp;unded&#13;
hip seemed u Ioa$ of stone \ h a t 1&#13;
was oblige.iXodrag with me, to\say&#13;
nothing of/the excru&#13;
lng with the slightest movem&#13;
While I was working through c"&#13;
and wounded—always it seemed in my&#13;
way—I was .stunned by an'explosion&#13;
not ten feet above me, and for a moment&#13;
half conscious I supposed the end&#13;
had oome. It was a bursting shell.&#13;
Had it exploded Just before it reached&#13;
me I should have undoubtedly been hit&#13;
by its fragments. Bursting directly&#13;
over me, its motion carried them beyond&#13;
me.&#13;
I heard the thunder of horses' hoofs&#13;
and knew that it denoted a cavalry&#13;
charge. The sound was far to my&#13;
right and to my left. I looked and saw&#13;
them coming. They would pass over&#13;
me. I would be crushed. They were&#13;
not in column fortunately, but in&#13;
line. On they came like a troop of&#13;
fiends, here and there a man falling&#13;
from the saddle, a horse rearing and&#13;
plunging forward or dropping dead in&#13;
his tracks. I saw the Confederate&#13;
gray, but It made no difference to me&#13;
whether they were friends or foes.&#13;
Their mad ride had nothing to do with&#13;
mercy; it was to destroy. A lieutenant&#13;
was riding directly for me. With an&#13;
effort almost superhuman I raised myself.&#13;
He saw me, but only In time to&#13;
Jump his horse over me. Of the first&#13;
file behind him two men saw hjs horse&#13;
Jump and, suspecting some pitfall,&#13;
passed on either side of me. In the&#13;
second file, a loose line, one horse&#13;
Jumped me; no other came within a&#13;
dozen feet of me.&#13;
Like a storm rack they had suddenly&#13;
loomed; like a hurricane they had&#13;
passed, and as u receding tempest will&#13;
draw the wind in Us tralj they drew&#13;
the fire.&#13;
For a time, relieved of the danger of&#13;
'lead and i o n , I lay exhausted. Hero&#13;
uod there t a m e a groan from those who&#13;
had fallen while the cavalry was\passlug;&#13;
then the tire grew hot again, and J&#13;
dragged myself on. It was that last&#13;
hundred feet which, came near p r e v a i l&#13;
lug my reaching the goal. .1 was half&#13;
au hour doing it. But a t last I got to&#13;
the bushes and, pulling myself through&#13;
them, looked o » c&#13;
stream. The current i• ; .&#13;
bank I was on, and I saw \AM \'AU&#13;
water w a s beyond my dep:h. -Seizing&#13;
a bush, I let myself'down and. buoyed&#13;
by the water, floated immersed to uiy&#13;
waist.&#13;
Oh, the blessed relief from pain&#13;
caused by that cool current about my&#13;
wound!&#13;
In an hour the tiring suddenly ceased.&#13;
Then 1 bethought myself of getting ou&#13;
dvy land. I pulied myself part way&#13;
up by the bush I held when I found&#13;
1 It was loosening at the root. If I&#13;
; bore my whole -weight\m it, it would&#13;
give way. 1 was in no condition to&#13;
| swim and I should drown. I w a s no&#13;
' longer between two fires. I was suspended&#13;
by n frail support over a watery&#13;
grave.' «&#13;
I heard a movement above me and&#13;
looked up. A face—it seemed to beloug&#13;
to a corpse—appeared over the&#13;
edge of the bank. It was the face of&#13;
a wounded Confederate who had&#13;
dragged himself to. the bank either for&#13;
the same purpose I had or to quench&#13;
his burning thirst, or both. Stretching&#13;
out his ham!, he bent a stronger bush&#13;
a short distance below me till it was&#13;
within my grasp. I caught it and&#13;
after several efforts pulled myself up&#13;
an to dry land.&#13;
How long I lay on my back looking&#13;
up at the heavens.—a few light clouds&#13;
sailing peacefully as a bird soaring—t&#13;
don't know. It might have been ten&#13;
minutes; it might have been an hour.&#13;
Then, partly recovered from my exertion,&#13;
I thought of the enemy who had&#13;
saved me. Turning on my stomach, I :&#13;
crawled to him. I found him lying on&#13;
his side—dead.&#13;
His last act was to save the life of&#13;
an enemy. F. A. M I T C H E L .&#13;
ATDITIOHAi, L0OAX.&#13;
Do not forget that wood you were&#13;
to bring us laat.winter.&#13;
Only a lew of our correspondents&#13;
r e p . r t this week. If a n y are out of&#13;
stationery, speak up.&#13;
Mrs. 'Jeo. I r w i n of Lansing, formerly&#13;
ot Grand HaveD visited her&#13;
father, Jas. Spears, the first of tba&#13;
week.&#13;
L E. Howlett of Howell was a caller&#13;
at this oflice Wednesday. He was&#13;
on his way to the funeral oi his uncle,&#13;
Horace Leek, at Waterloo.&#13;
Prohibition Convention&#13;
At the county convention held at&#13;
Howell S a t u r d a y , the lollcwiug tnes&#13;
were nominated:&#13;
COUNTY&#13;
1). M. Keekwith, Howell, Kepreseutative&#13;
E. M. Field, Green Oak, Clerk&#13;
John Snyder, Treasurer •&#13;
A. Crippeu, Brighton, Register of Deed a&#13;
(ieo. Lee, Marion, Sheriff&#13;
H. L. Dean, Green Oak, l)r;iiu Com.&#13;
Mrs. O. E. Carr, Handy, School Doui&#13;
Hubert M. WelU, Howell, School Exam.&#13;
Norton Clark. Hnrtlaud, School Exam.&#13;
T h e Caaerta Camellia T r e e .&#13;
i In the days of its glory the palace at&#13;
Oaserta of the king of Naples had&#13;
among Its features a so called English&#13;
garden, made in 1782 by order of Marie&#13;
Caroline of Austria. It was bright with&#13;
j flowers and wonderful rape oriental&#13;
plants and trees, so that it was renowned&#13;
throughout the world, but the&#13;
. crown and glory of all consisted in a&#13;
camellia tree, a plaut then unknown&#13;
j In Europe. The seeds were collected&#13;
i as though flakes of gold, and the queen&#13;
used to give them and cuttings of this&#13;
j camellia as presents to her friends,&#13;
I These cuttings were most highly prized.&#13;
! and thus it has become a European&#13;
iflower, so^much so that the exportation&#13;
of camellias is an extensive iral;:&#13;
try in central Italy, and in G e r m a n /&#13;
there are vast tie Ids of them, in its&#13;
palmy days ihe Caserta plant had oi^l*,&#13;
branches, the largest of which wa&gt;&#13;
twelve inches in diameter, the whole&#13;
being thirty feet high. This mother&#13;
plant was in a flourishing condition up&#13;
to a few years ago, but lately the gor&#13;
geous garden has been allowed to fall&#13;
Into decay, and with It the glorious&#13;
camellia'-Pall Mall Gazette.&#13;
The Itird'a Bill W«* Locked.&#13;
A curious bird tragedy is told about&#13;
In the London Field/ A man found a&#13;
yellow ham liter dead in his yard at&#13;
the foot of a wall. The bird had flown&#13;
against it with such force as to be&#13;
stunned. Not only that, but the upper&#13;
mandible had been bent back, and iu&#13;
the straightening out the sharp point&#13;
was driven down through the lower&#13;
bill and locked, thus dooming the bird&#13;
to death by starvation. The man sent&#13;
the head to the Field. A good many&#13;
similar accidents have been recorded,&#13;
but it was always a heavier bird, whose&#13;
weight made the springing of the bill&#13;
easier. A good many of the birds were&#13;
found In a starved condition, showing&#13;
that they died lingering deaths from&#13;
want of food. Birds that fly against&#13;
the lighthouses have the skull bones&#13;
crushed and die Instantly, but others&#13;
are stunned only.&#13;
T h e Real T r o u b l e .&#13;
The other afternoon a man rushed Into&#13;
tbe Heading terminal, galloped up&#13;
the stairs and dashed for the train&#13;
shed j u s t as the gates were closed&#13;
against hna.&#13;
He looked as if he wanted to swear&#13;
most vociferously, b u t he was but of&#13;
wind, nnd all that he could do wan toJ&#13;
•lean against the fence and soul fully&#13;
sigh. It was then that the grlnfu) idiot,&#13;
who is alwayB on hand, paced over and&#13;
butted In.&#13;
"Did you miss your train, old boy?"&#13;
be queried, with a smiling glance at the&#13;
panting one.&#13;
"No." was tbe grouchy rejoinder. "I&#13;
chase myself up here that way every&#13;
Ave minutes to see them shut the&#13;
gates."&#13;
"What made you so late?" queried&#13;
the other, not at all abashed. "Is your&#13;
watch out of order?"&#13;
"No, my watch is all to the good," replied&#13;
^ h ^ man who missed the train,&#13;
"but, I think that my feet are about&#13;
two minutes slow."—Philadelphia Telegraph.&#13;
\ ,&#13;
Hla L e i i o B .&#13;
A woman who had divorced her husband&#13;
met him after many years. •&#13;
"Have you married again?" she&#13;
asked.&#13;
The man shook his head.&#13;
"Ah!" sighed the woman. "You still&#13;
love me."&#13;
"No." said the man, "I love myself."&#13;
He was asked to explain.&#13;
"Bondage taught me the value of&#13;
freedom," he replied. "I am answerable&#13;
now only to myself. I come when&#13;
I please, go when I please, do what I&#13;
please and need not make explanation.&#13;
I no longer divide my pleasures&#13;
by two or multiply my worries by the&#13;
same number. What I earn Is mine&#13;
and, when I contemplate its possible&#13;
reduction, I need fear for myself alone.&#13;
I have no great Joys, ^ u t then I have&#13;
no great sorrows."&#13;
"And love?" Inquired the woman.&#13;
"I h a v e b e e n married," answered the&#13;
man.—Channlng Pollock in Show.&#13;
Pawnshop Salea.&#13;
"Don't tmagine," says an auctioneer,&#13;
"that you can get any real bargains at&#13;
a pawushoj) sale. The pawnbroker&#13;
knows just what people think about&#13;
his stock, many of them having learned&#13;
from experience that he will pay&#13;
next to nothing on the best quality of&#13;
jewelry and silverware, watches, etc.,&#13;
and they thus get it into their heads&#13;
that all the articles sold at auction are&#13;
genuine goods. But there's where-lhey&#13;
mak&lt;T a big mistake. The pawnbroker&#13;
seldom sells any pledged articles at&#13;
these auction sales. He uses (hem sim&#13;
ply for a 'blind.' Articles taken In&#13;
pawn are invariably sold a t private&#13;
sale."—New York American.&#13;
Coldness of Ice.&#13;
It seems strange to think that some&#13;
ice is colder than other Ice. The term&#13;
"Ice cold" always seems to signify a&#13;
definite temperature. All water under&#13;
similar conditions freezes at a certain&#13;
definite. temperature. But when the&#13;
thermometer falls below that it continues&#13;
to affect the Ice, making it harder&#13;
and colder. The test has been made&#13;
by placing a piece of ice from the&#13;
north and a piece of ice formed in the&#13;
vicinity of New York near a stove together.&#13;
The former took much longer&#13;
to melt than the latter.—New York&#13;
Tribune.&#13;
A Glimpse of Carlyle.&#13;
One day Carlyle suddenly stopped at&#13;
a street crossing and, stooping, picked&#13;
up something out of the mud, even at&#13;
the risk of being knocked down and&#13;
run over by passing vehicles. With his&#13;
bare hands he gently rubbed the mud&#13;
from it. Ho then took it to the pavement&#13;
and laid It down on a clean spot&#13;
on the eurhRtone. "That." said the old&#13;
man In a t-jne nf tenderness he rarely&#13;
us«d, "Is only a enisi of broad. Yet 1&#13;
w a i taught by my mother never to&#13;
waste anything above all. bread,juore&#13;
precious than gold. I am sure that the&#13;
Ifttle sparrows or a hungry dog will&#13;
gat nourishment from this bit of&#13;
braad.*&#13;
Town W i t h o u t Horses or Wheels.&#13;
The town of Funchal, in the Madeira&#13;
islands, is a town with no horses&#13;
and no wheeled vehicles. In tmvellj—V ^&#13;
about one either drives in a sledge ot&#13;
is carried in a hammock. The streets&#13;
and adjacent roads a r e paved with&#13;
small and curiously smooth cobblestones,&#13;
and from the first it was found&#13;
that runners were better than wheels&#13;
both for speed and comfort For t»V^&#13;
stance, when you come to a hill,&#13;
oxen draw your sled to the top&#13;
are then unhitched. Your driver thel&#13;
proceeds to toboggan your conveyance&#13;
gently down the other side, while the&#13;
team trots on behind. Horses ore not&#13;
available in Funchal, as the nature of&#13;
the cobblestone roads would soon ruin&#13;
their feet. This Is why the ox, with&#13;
bis flexible hoof, is the draft animal ot&#13;
Funchal. For expeditions into the&#13;
country the hammock is used. This it&#13;
slung on a pole, carried on the shoulders&#13;
of two men, and Is perhaps the&#13;
most comfortable conveyance in the&#13;
world—no, Jar and no need to guide i t</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch September 20, 1906</text>
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                <text>September 20, 1906 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1906-09-20</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="8825">
                <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="37027">
              <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. XXI*- PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, SEPT. 27, 1906. No. 39&#13;
L O C A U N B W S .&#13;
4&#13;
Oct 9 to 12 are the dates of the&#13;
Powlerville fair.&#13;
Will Harris and wife, of Dexter,&#13;
were in town Friday.&#13;
Eugene Campbell has been tussling&#13;
with tbe summer ffripp.&#13;
Cbelsea will have built this season&#13;
five miles of cement walk.&#13;
F. L. Andrews and wile spent Sunday&#13;
with relatives in Oak Grove.&#13;
M. C. Ruen left Saturday for tbe U.&#13;
of M.to finish up bis studies in dentistry.&#13;
Mrs. Jake Bowers is having an addition&#13;
built on her residence on West&#13;
main street.&#13;
The ladies of tbe Cong'l church&#13;
took in just an eyen $11.00 at their&#13;
tea last Wednesday at Mrs. Garr's.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. A. J . Wilhelrc who&#13;
have been living on tbe Reynolds&#13;
place, will move into the village of&#13;
Stoc^bridtre.&#13;
Mrs. 0. E. Henson, of Linden, and&#13;
Miss Pearl Parshall, of Howell, were&#13;
guests of then lister, Mrs. Herbert&#13;
Gillette the past week.&#13;
Mrs. Tbos. Cavanaugh and babe, of&#13;
Ann Arbor, have been spending the&#13;
past week with her parents, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. John Mortenson, and other relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
Lincoln E. Smith left last week tor&#13;
San Francisco, Calfornia, where he&#13;
will work. L. E. has been one of&#13;
Pinr'kney's best painters and decorators&#13;
and we are «orry to lose him, bowever&#13;
we wish him success.&#13;
In his latest bulletin State Dairy&#13;
and Food Commissioner Bird says'that&#13;
of the so called maple syr.upo commercially&#13;
handled in Michigan less than&#13;
one per cent consists of the pure&#13;
product of the sap of tbe live rr.aple&#13;
tree.&#13;
Miss Lillian Boyle&#13;
JnnoiJnces for&#13;
Saturday, Sept, 29&#13;
FALL and&#13;
WINTER&#13;
Millinery Opening&#13;
Ladies, you will find&#13;
all th 3 new fashions&#13;
in . . . .&#13;
Autumn and Winter&#13;
Millinery&#13;
Parlors over tne Bnqk O . l l *&gt;.nd see my goods.&#13;
'V&#13;
.. .4&#13;
\r&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
FALL OPENING&#13;
This Store offers Great&#13;
Values in Hosiery, U n -&#13;
derwear, Gloves and&#13;
Mittens, Outing Flannels,&#13;
Corsets, Etc.&#13;
5c&#13;
10c&#13;
10c&#13;
10b&#13;
Butter, Butter—who's got some&#13;
butter.&#13;
Mrs. Thomos Dolan, of Detroit, is&#13;
visiting relatives here.&#13;
W. B. Darrow has been under tbe&#13;
doctors care the past week.&#13;
Sykes &amp; Son are busy putting in&#13;
several heating plants in Chelsea.&#13;
Fred Fish has been entertaining a&#13;
cousin* &amp; Mr_^_J_Qne&amp; of Bay- City, the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Cbas. Holmes and C. D. Bennett&#13;
with their wives, of Lansing, were&#13;
guests of the Van Winkle families,&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
If you are going to have an auction&#13;
this fall, do not target that the PISPATCH&#13;
office is prepared to get them&#13;
out while you wait.&#13;
H. D. Mowers and wife have been&#13;
suffering with the summer grip tbe&#13;
past week. It seeme to be quite prev&#13;
alent in this vicinity.&#13;
Harold Brown, of Brooklyn, N..Y.,&#13;
was the guest of G. W. Teeple and&#13;
family the last of last week. He is on&#13;
his way to the U. of M.&#13;
Raymond Sigler and family moved&#13;
to Ann Arbor the last of last week&#13;
where he will enter the U. of M. and&#13;
take the dental course.&#13;
St. Mary's society will give a box&#13;
social at the opera house this, Thursday&#13;
evening, Sept. 27. Games and other&#13;
amusemeuts will be in evidence. Everybody&#13;
invited.&#13;
Floyd Randall and wite of St. Louis,&#13;
Mich., were the guest of friends in this&#13;
vicinity tbe pa9t week. Floyd was a&#13;
former resident here and well kno*vn.&#13;
He is now private secretary to the&#13;
congressman of tbe eleventh districb.&#13;
We are sorry to learn that Kernal&#13;
Doty of Niagara Falls, Ont., was&#13;
buried Thursday, Sept. 20. He was&#13;
about 35 years of age and well known&#13;
here, being a nephew of* the Teeple's.&#13;
Mrs. Doty attended the "Old Boy's&#13;
and Girl's Reunion" here in August.&#13;
Mr. Marvin Benjamin, of Fowlerville,&#13;
Mrs. Lucy Hendee, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
W. C. Hendee and daughter, Blanche&#13;
Lucile, of East Putnam, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Ned Chubb and son Loyd, of East&#13;
Marion, and Mr. and Mrs, C. H.&#13;
Jones, of Kawkawlin, were guests at&#13;
the home of E. G. Fish and wife the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
W. H. 6oHi«^ exhibited a watermelon&#13;
in towfi^ last Saturday, tLat&#13;
weighed 3&amp;| lbs. Friday he had three&#13;
that tipped the scales at 100" lbs.&#13;
From three acres of ground be has&#13;
this year, sold over $200 worth melons.—&#13;
Stockbridge Sun.&#13;
The elevator at the Michigan Central&#13;
depot at Dexter has been closed&#13;
on account of beiog condemned as&#13;
dangerous. At present there is no&#13;
grain elevator there and the farmers&#13;
are selling their produce at Pinckney&#13;
and Chelsea,&#13;
vator will not be repaired.&#13;
F. L. Andrews and wife were&#13;
Gong'! Cnurch Fair&#13;
At tbe Opera House, Oct. 5 and 6,&#13;
are the dates of tbe Cong'l church&#13;
society fair.&#13;
Contributions will be thankfully&#13;
received from all friends. These lairs&#13;
have been very pleasant and profitable&#13;
in the past, let us make this more&#13;
successful then any yet held.&#13;
_AJ1 ..have labored hard through tbe&#13;
warm months of summer, let us take&#13;
Friday and Saturday off and enjoy a&#13;
good time.&#13;
The articles for sale will please one&#13;
and all, and by purchasing you are&#13;
helping a go:d cause.&#13;
For supper there will be a feast ot&#13;
good things both evenings.&#13;
Seventy-third Anniversary&#13;
A number of the relatives of E G,&#13;
Fish met at his home on Thursday,&#13;
Sept. twentieth, to spend with him his&#13;
seventby-third birthday, and several&#13;
useful tokens were left as a reminder&#13;
of the day.&#13;
Among those present were Mrs.&#13;
Elizabeth Thompson, zi VVilliamston,&#13;
Mrs. Anna Gifford and George G.fford,&#13;
wife and son John, of Ingham county,&#13;
Cornelius Cad well of Fowlerville, C.&#13;
H. Jones and wife, of Kawkawlin,&#13;
Mrs. Fred Bollinger, Mrs. Frank&#13;
Barker, and Mrs. Lewis Boyce and&#13;
daughter Daisy, of Gregory, and Mrs.&#13;
Lucy Hendee, of East Putnam.&#13;
Congregational Church.&#13;
The services last Sunday were quite&#13;
satisfactory. God forbid that we&#13;
should glory save in the cross of the&#13;
Lord Jesus.&#13;
The Sunday school attendance is&#13;
below the average and all members of&#13;
the school are urged to be in their&#13;
places next Sunday and to attend the&#13;
morning service when the pastor «\ ill&#13;
speak especially to the young people.&#13;
Sacrament of Holy Communion will&#13;
be celebrated next Sundav morning&#13;
at 10:30,- when the pastor will give a&#13;
short address to the young people on&#13;
"Opportunity." All the young neople&#13;
of the church especially invited to&#13;
attend and every member and adherent&#13;
lovingly urged to be present on&#13;
this occasion rain or shine.&#13;
Evening, union service at 7:30.&#13;
Post communion sermon, topic, "Man's&#13;
Work Day." Music by young peoples&#13;
choir; duet by Messrs Moran and Buachiel.&#13;
No service tonight but pre-communion&#13;
service Saturday afternoon at 2:30.&#13;
Fleeced Vests, only&#13;
Childrens Fleeced Vests add Pants,&#13;
*w Ladies Double Knit Mittens, only&#13;
,T Childrens Double Knit Mittens, only&#13;
Extra strong values in Outing Flannels&#13;
From 5c to 13c&#13;
6MM il IMI SM lit ifcM il Htfltf&#13;
a E A. BOWMAN.&#13;
HOWELL'S BUSY STORE&#13;
M, £. Church Notes.&#13;
The people of this vicinity and especially&#13;
this charge will be glad to&#13;
lean that their request to conference&#13;
has been granted and Rev. D. C. Lit-&#13;
We understand the ele- j tlejohn has been returned here tor&#13;
i the coming year. There will be no&#13;
at preaching services Sunday but class&#13;
Lakeland last Thursday and made the j meeting and Sunday school as usual,&#13;
trip to Base lake and return in their j Let all come out. Prayer meeting&#13;
launch. Cottagers say that they nev- j tonight at the usual hour.&#13;
er knew the water to be as low as at The following are some of&#13;
tbe present time. There are many&#13;
places on this beautitul inland waterway&#13;
where there is but a narrow&#13;
channel, but by constant running of&#13;
launches and some dredging, keeps it&#13;
open. It is a beautiful trip through&#13;
the different lakes and Huron river a&#13;
distance of seven or eight miles.&#13;
K. ri. Crane baa sold his house and&#13;
lots here in the village to Paul Bock,&#13;
ot Detroit. With the transfer he also&#13;
sold his interest in tbe Michigan&#13;
Hatchery Co., and we are glad to announce&#13;
that the Hatchery company&#13;
will continue to do business at the&#13;
same place. The failure of Mr.&#13;
Cranes .health was the reason of his&#13;
selling.: We understand that Mr.&#13;
Bock will take posession Nov. 1. Mr,&#13;
and Mrs. Crane are making arrangem&#13;
e n t to move to the Mercer homestead&#13;
near Hartland.&#13;
the appointment,&#13;
as made by t;;e conference&#13;
and in which many of our readers&#13;
will be interested:—&#13;
K. L. Cope, Gagetown&#13;
W. T. Wallace, Harbor Beach&#13;
(T# H. Hopkins, Minden City&#13;
P.* J. Wright, Unadilla&#13;
Hartley Cautield, Howell&#13;
F. Pearce, Parshnllville&#13;
C. L. Adams, Ishpeming&#13;
Harvy Pearce, Bay City&#13;
W. G. Stephens, Northville&#13;
Mrs. Johanna Birnie, of Lansing, is&#13;
visiting her sister, Mrs. Agnes Harris.&#13;
Mesdames Michael and Thoe. Dolan&#13;
visited relatives in Gregory the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. P. Farnam attended the funeral&#13;
of her i rand daughter, daughter of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Fitzpatriok, in&#13;
Detroit last week.&#13;
All Persons owing us on Book&#13;
Account are requested to kindly&#13;
call and settle same by Oct. 1,&#13;
1906, by Cash or Bankable nates.&#13;
JACKSON &amp; CADWELL&#13;
You are Invited&#13;
to the&#13;
Pall Millinery Opening&#13;
at&#13;
The Misses Murphy's&#13;
Thursday,Friday, Saturday,&#13;
September 2 7 , 2 8 , 2 9&#13;
The display of Ladies' Misses' and Children's Millinery will be&#13;
interesting from every point of view. Quality is an important factor&#13;
sure. Exclusiveness and style characterize our display. We hope&#13;
every lady will accept our invitation for&#13;
, Thursday, Friday and Saturday&#13;
Opera House Block&#13;
On account of many&#13;
heavy bills due Oct*&#13;
1, we desire to have&#13;
all accounts past&#13;
due settled*&#13;
Teeple Hardware Go.&#13;
W^iV?^*&#13;
' &gt;:-'\&#13;
or I I!&#13;
-&#13;
'&#13;
EVENTS NOTED&#13;
•ANK ROBTOH8 AT WHITE&#13;
CLOUD WERE NERVY AND&#13;
TOOK BOOTY AWAY.&#13;
—.y&#13;
TWO BANKS DYNAMITED&#13;
Ex-Governor Bllte Died a Poor Man;&#13;
Made Fortunes and Then Lost&#13;
Them Again.&#13;
Robbers Got $2,000.&#13;
The safe of the Newaygo County&#13;
bank, of St. Cloud, .was dynamited&#13;
early Thursday morning and between&#13;
$2,000 and $4,000 taken. An attempt&#13;
was made to rob the R. Gannon private&#13;
bank in the same manner, but&#13;
the vaults and safe withstood the&#13;
blasts of dynamite, and the robbers&#13;
were scared away.&#13;
Eight masked, men rode into the&#13;
-village-.- between midnight and 1&#13;
o'clock in the morning. They surrounded&#13;
both hanks- The Newaygo&#13;
County bank was the first entered.&#13;
Two charges were exploded before&#13;
the vaults gave way. Several charges&#13;
were then exploded in tbe safe of the&#13;
Gannon bank, but the steel safety deposit&#13;
could not be broken.&#13;
- ~ B x this time many of the villagers,&#13;
hearing tbe noise, were hurrying toward&#13;
the scene, and the masked men&#13;
hastily mounted their horses and rode&#13;
away, It is thought that they went&#13;
in a southerly direction&#13;
George Rosenberg and family, living&#13;
above the store next to tbe Gannon&#13;
bank, looked out of their windows.&#13;
They were ordered to take&#13;
their heads In or they would be shot&#13;
off. The Rosenberg home was guarded&#13;
front and rear.&#13;
The village is aroused with excitement&#13;
and terribly wrought up over&#13;
the affair. It is not definitely known&#13;
the exact amount of money secured,&#13;
as the Newaygo County bank is so&#13;
wrecked that in its condition thorough&#13;
investigation is practically impossible.&#13;
Made Fortunes and Lost Them.&#13;
By far ttie most interesting phase&#13;
of the late Aaron T. Bliss' many-sided&#13;
activities was his business career,&#13;
compassing as it *did a range of 30&#13;
years of strife, success and adversity&#13;
alternating like the se'asons. Although&#13;
he engaged In many financial&#13;
undertakings his fortunes were in the&#13;
main made and lost in timber. In&#13;
1S98 Bliss became associated with&#13;
Gen. Alger in some extensive land&#13;
transactions which brought him excellent&#13;
returns, and it is said by his surviving&#13;
business associates that the&#13;
close of the century found the governor&#13;
in probably the most prosperous&#13;
condition of his life.&#13;
Possibly at this time he was worth&#13;
between $300,000 and $4J00,O00. But&#13;
In the brief time between 1900 and&#13;
his death, extending over his gubernatorial&#13;
terms, he again lost the bulk&#13;
of his fortune, through business accommodations,&#13;
unprofitable business&#13;
ventures and the spreading of his&#13;
money out over a multitude of undertakings&#13;
which he was unable to swing.&#13;
One single loss a few years ago is&#13;
said to have been $50,000. while his&#13;
investment in Idahoan irrigation lands&#13;
required a heavy outlay of money and&#13;
proved unprofitable.&#13;
It is said, though this cannot bo&#13;
certified, that Bliss' estate outside of&#13;
his life insurance, which is about&#13;
$300,000, will hardly pay all outstanding&#13;
mofXgaRes, notes and other obligations-&#13;
It has also hern gossiped&#13;
that friends during a very recent&#13;
period, have been paying the premiums&#13;
on part of his life insurance. However&#13;
this may be, it is certain that his&#13;
clear estate will be but a fraction of&#13;
the fortune he at several times possessed,&#13;
lost, regained and lost again.&#13;
His widow will have a competence&#13;
the remainder of her life, but not&#13;
much more.&#13;
Assailants Escape.&#13;
August 27.—Lloyd A. Dynes, Michigan&#13;
Central night operator at Gallen,&#13;
Mich., shot dead while sitting at his&#13;
telegraph key in the station. Crime&#13;
unsolved. ,&#13;
Septf4»ber 11.—H. L. Armstrong,&#13;
Michigtsa Central night operator at&#13;
Wiard^ Crossing, knocked unconscious&#13;
by blow on the head from a&#13;
•%llly" while sending message. Crime&#13;
unsolved,&#13;
September 18,—D. A Boomer,&#13;
Michigan Central night operator at&#13;
junction east of Jackson, assaulted&#13;
by three men. Struck in the face by&#13;
a man who appeared to be a negro.&#13;
Men escape; crime unsolved.&#13;
D. A. Boomer was the victim of the&#13;
third assault committed on Michigan&#13;
Central night operators in Michigan&#13;
within a month, when three men assaulted&#13;
him as he was coming out of&#13;
his office at the Junction east of&#13;
Jackson, Tuesday night. One man,&#13;
supposed to be a negro, but more&#13;
probably, it seems, a white man with&#13;
his face blackened for the purpose of&#13;
disguise, struck him a heavy blow in&#13;
the face, which nearly felled him. He&#13;
staggered back into the depot, Wheuce&#13;
the trio started to follow him, but desisted.&#13;
He extinguished the lights&#13;
immediately and hid, and the men&#13;
fled east and have escaped.&#13;
It is supposed the object of the assault&#13;
was robbery, but as the thugs&#13;
saiH nothing to Boomer, it is not&#13;
known. The assault is shrouded apparently&#13;
in the same impenetrable&#13;
mystery as those committed-on Operator&#13;
Dynes at Gallen, who gave up his&#13;
life, and on Operator Armstrong at&#13;
Wiard'B Crossing. In each case, as&#13;
far as can be learned, a motive is entirely&#13;
lacking The only explanation&#13;
offered is that some man or several&#13;
men have an Insane grudge against&#13;
Michigan Central night operators and&#13;
are systematically going about the&#13;
matter of getting revenge.&#13;
"I thought of poor Dynes, who was&#13;
killed, and of Armstrong, the moment&#13;
I saw those men," said Boomer. "As&#13;
in their case, I was given no chance&#13;
to defend myself. I owe my escape&#13;
to pure luck, that's all. If the blow&#13;
that big, powerful man hit me in the&#13;
face had struck my chin or my head&#13;
I would have been knocked unconscious.&#13;
Then I suppose I would have&#13;
been killed, if necessary. I have no&#13;
notion whatever as to their motive,&#13;
unless, of course, it was robbery.&#13;
That would be foolish, as there ia&#13;
no money kept at the junction."&#13;
It will be recalled that there was&#13;
no ^rnoney kept at Wlard's Crossing&#13;
nor at Gallen, except occasionally.&#13;
• a b s lorn in Death Ceil.&#13;
„Frau Bloemers, of Beraodorf, Qwmany,&#13;
who recently gave birth to a&#13;
wn In a prison cell while awarttfng&#13;
execution of her death s e n t e n c e tor&#13;
ttmphclty in the murder of a military&#13;
ameer in Oladbach, was refused pardot.&#13;
The*courts decreed that sheihould&#13;
nurse her child for eight weeks.&#13;
The baby was then placed in an orphan&#13;
asylum and the mother W a n i -&#13;
tated.&#13;
In the recent British, naval maneuvers, which&#13;
approached more aeariy -the conditions of actual&#13;
warfare than any previously undertaken, t h e&#13;
commander-in-chiet of the fleet which was sup*&#13;
posed to be defending the coasts- of England&#13;
against the attack of the enemy was Admiral Sir&#13;
Arthur Knyvet Wilson. Unless it be "Jackie"&#13;
Fisher, there was no admiral on the active list&#13;
better qualified tyir t%e task, even were it real&#13;
Instead of. make-Nltev* war.&#13;
Admiral Wilton is known in the navy M the&#13;
man who never tikes a holiday, despite his 64&#13;
years. When on M cruiser, be very seldom goes&#13;
ashore at the ports his fleet or flagship visits,&#13;
and then only to pay pr return some official call.&#13;
When he comes home to England, instead of going&#13;
off on leave the first thing, like the other&#13;
officers under him, he stays quietly on board the&#13;
ship all the time she is in port. It is not&#13;
the taste of the ancborite which guides him, for he is no hater of the world,&#13;
or of the pleasures of life and society with the big "S." It is simply that,&#13;
being a bachelor, he loves his profession more than anything else, and in his&#13;
estimation time devoted to any other pursuit is time wasted. Consequently&#13;
there is no officer more thoroughly up-to-date id all that pertains to naval&#13;
wflr©fflro.&#13;
He has been through the Crimean and China wars, and the Egyptian and&#13;
Soudan campaign. It was in the latter he showed himself a fighter of the&#13;
first order and won the coveted four cents worth of bronze known as the Victoria&#13;
Cross, with its hallowed legend, "For Valor." With his sword blade&#13;
broken off at the hilt and his revolver empty, he pushed his way through the&#13;
square at El Teb and went fov the enemy with his bare fists. It is a thrilling&#13;
story, but It is one which Admiral Wilson can never be got to tell himself,&#13;
for like nearly all brave and able men, he is a very modest one.&#13;
It remained, however, for Jack London to portray one of the darkest figures&#13;
in fiction, for the terrible forriT ofWolf Larsenwas hewurttrtr said, from—&#13;
the life of Alexander ^McLean. Without the refinement of cruelty exhibited in I "Yes, they do," answered Mr. Cum-&#13;
Capt. Silver's character, there remains In""the figureToTXarsen;, of-the Sea yrox, """mother an* the girts are now as&#13;
Wolf, more of horror and dread than any English sea novelist has ever succeeded&#13;
in portraying. But somber as is the life of Wolf Larsen, no one can&#13;
say that Alexander McLean's career has been less ferocious and morose. '&#13;
One Grain of 8a1t.&#13;
Teller—Of course, the note's a counterfeit.&#13;
There is one very evident&#13;
sign of that—&#13;
Depositor—Oh, come. I don't see— ,&#13;
Teller—Why, anyone could see it&#13;
It's in the paper. • *&#13;
Depositor—But, my dear sir, 1»&#13;
these days you can't believe everything&#13;
you see in the paper.—Philadelphia&#13;
Ledger.&#13;
j&#13;
/&#13;
Evolution in Society.&#13;
"I suppose," said the old-time friend,&#13;
"that your folks no longer feel the&#13;
anxiety about social matters that they&#13;
[cejgxperienced."&#13;
* - &gt; .&#13;
busy keepln' other women out of society&#13;
as they once were gettin' in&#13;
themselves."—Washington 'Stsar.&#13;
ENGLISHMAN RUNS AMERICAN RAILROAD&#13;
Parker Released.&#13;
George W. Parker, slaver of .Tames '•&#13;
Moore, his brother-in-law. who was&#13;
convicted of manslaughter in Detroit,&#13;
is set at liberty by a decision of the '&#13;
supreme court.&#13;
In the opinion, which was by Jus- \&#13;
tice Grant, the circumstances of '&#13;
Parker's trial are recalled, the third&#13;
jury'in the case being discharged .by j&#13;
Judge Phelan owing to charges made I&#13;
against the panel, and all the names&#13;
in the jury box were destroved bv his '&#13;
order. One hundred and fifty'new&#13;
names were ordered put into The box !&#13;
and a new jury was secured which j&#13;
convicted Parker. ,&#13;
The jury' was discharged after the i&#13;
people had rested their case and the !&#13;
respondent had entered upon his defense.&#13;
The judge's investigations into&#13;
the charges against the jurors were&#13;
held to be ex parte and they had no&#13;
chance to defend themselves.&#13;
"Under the facts of this case both&#13;
the accused and the people were entitled&#13;
to have the case submitted to&#13;
that jury," says the opinion.&#13;
Thirty-Eight Cases of Typhoid Fever.&#13;
Secretary Shumway, who has been&#13;
in Traverse City, reports an epidemic&#13;
of typhoid fever with 38 cases. He&#13;
concluded the Infection was due to the&#13;
water supply gained from Traverse&#13;
bay, into which sewerage is emptied.&#13;
He says the authorities have the situation&#13;
well in hand and will take up the&#13;
subject of installing a sewerage purification&#13;
plant, which Dr. Shumway suggested.&#13;
A Mother's Love.&#13;
Clasping in one arm her 9-monthsold&#13;
twin, which had been dead for five&#13;
hours, and in the other holding the&#13;
second babe, which was slowly dying,&#13;
Mrs. Jessie Nichols, of Chicago, was&#13;
taken in charge by the police in St.&#13;
Joseph on Tuesday.&#13;
She was traveling on a Pere Marquette&#13;
train, on her way home to Chicago&#13;
from a small town along the&#13;
lake side. Both babes were critically&#13;
ill when she boarded the train. Their&#13;
illness had made Mrs. Nichols frantic&#13;
and in her desperation she resolved to&#13;
take a chance of reaching Chicago before&#13;
death came to her.dear ones. '~&#13;
The train had been speedlng"'on to&#13;
its destination but a few minutes&#13;
when Baby ' Laverne succumbed. In&#13;
mortal fear that she would be detained&#13;
by vhe police,if, she told of the&#13;
death of the infant, and buoyed up by&#13;
a faint hope that she would reach Chicago&#13;
before Fern, the other twin, passed&#13;
away, the mother suppressed her&#13;
prief and softly sung a luljaby, pretending&#13;
that she was rocking the&#13;
babes to sleep.&#13;
Just before the train reached Benton&#13;
Harbor two young women sitting&#13;
behind the mother in the coach saw&#13;
that one of the babes was cold in&#13;
death and notified the conductor.&#13;
••At St. Joseph the mother and her&#13;
precious burdens were carefully taken&#13;
from the train. Mrs Nichols was&#13;
detained by the police. Physicians4 declare&#13;
there is no hope for the living |&#13;
babe. |&#13;
Sunday night Mrs. Nichols and her j&#13;
two babes, accompanied by a nurse, |&#13;
came to Michigan in hope that the I&#13;
change would benefit the health of&#13;
ihe twins. They grew steadily weaker&#13;
and ihe .mother bravely concluded to I&#13;
hurry home with the infants.&#13;
mvfy • ' ' '&#13;
Sir Charles Rivers Wilson, president of the&#13;
Grand Trunk railway system, and one of England's&#13;
most noted financiers, is the only man who&#13;
directs the affairs of a large American railroad&#13;
company from London. He has lately arrived in&#13;
Canada from England, and is meeting with the&#13;
directors of the road at Montreal. By far the&#13;
most important matter before the company at&#13;
this time is the Pacific extension of the road.&#13;
One of the first acts of the board was the expenditure&#13;
of $15,000,000 on rolling stock for the Grand&#13;
Trunk Pacific.&#13;
Ever since Sir Charles became president of&#13;
the road, in 1895, he has been in favor of the&#13;
project of reaching the Pacific ocean.&#13;
When Sir Charles took the presidency th€&#13;
Grand Trunk was'just emerging from a long&#13;
period of depression. The tide was on the turn&#13;
however, and the board had acumen enough tc&#13;
let the manager in Canada have a fairly free hand. Without a sagacious man&#13;
at the helm in London, however, the combined forces of Hays and good time*&#13;
could not have procured for the Grand Trunk its present excellent position&#13;
in the world of commerce. • a• &lt; .&#13;
Sir Charles Rivers Wilson was born in 1831 and was educated/at Eton anc&#13;
In Baliol college, Oxford. He tecame an officer of the British; treasury, anc&#13;
rose steadily until from 1874 to 1894 he held the post of comptroller general ol&#13;
the national debt office. Over $3,000,000,000 was the debt total then, so that&#13;
Sir Charles had often to draw on the reserve of clpherB. For a little while&#13;
he was in Egypt as finance minister, where there was nothing but ciphers tc&#13;
draw up on. He was also for many years on the Suez canal council board.&#13;
Amazon River Expedition.»&#13;
Dr. W. C. Farabee, of the anthropological&#13;
department at Harvard university,&#13;
with three students, will next&#13;
year conduct a research expedition&#13;
about the headwaters of the Amazon.&#13;
For a time a base will be established&#13;
at Arequipa, Peru. The party will be&#13;
gone three years.&#13;
Railway Construction.&#13;
In the six months ended June 30,&#13;
2,297.20 miles of new railway track&#13;
was laid in thlB country, a greater&#13;
amount of new construction than in&#13;
any corresponding six months in the&#13;
last 15 years, except in 1902, when&#13;
new construction aggregated 2/J14&#13;
miles.&#13;
Manchuria at Honolulu.&#13;
Honolulu.—The steamer Manchuria&#13;
came into this harbor Monday. Capt.&#13;
Metcalf thinks that the vessel can be&#13;
repaired here in ten days so that she&#13;
will be able to go to San Francisco&#13;
under her own steam.&#13;
Twelve Hurt In- Car Crash.&#13;
Seattle, Wash.—Three street cars,&#13;
one loaded to the guards with passengers,&#13;
collided here, more than a dozen&#13;
passengers and car employes being injured.&#13;
Three of the passengers are&#13;
not expected to survive.&#13;
Result of Bomb Outrage.&#13;
It is officially announced in the&#13;
Correspondence de Espana that 15&#13;
civilians were killed and 70 injured by&#13;
the bomb outrage in the Calle Mayor.&#13;
In the body of the horse which was&#13;
killed while drawing the royal coach&#13;
28 bullets were found.&#13;
Gold Fails to Excite.&#13;
Nearly four tons of gold were piled&#13;
up in the assay office in Seattle recently,&#13;
the bulk of which had been&#13;
received from the north. The arrival&#13;
of this gold did not excite more than&#13;
a ripple of interest in the city.—Se-&#13;
•ittle Post-Intelligencer.&#13;
MICHIGAN IN BRIEF.&#13;
M. B. Sherk's shoe store and stock,&#13;
in C'aseville. were damaged $2,()()0 by&#13;
lire.&#13;
Falling off the back steps Mrs. Jas.&#13;
Wallace, aged &lt;S2, of Sturgis, was perhaps&#13;
fatally injured.&#13;
Kugene Fifield will be the new manager&#13;
of the two local sugar factories&#13;
of Bay i iiy and 'succeeds \Y I,.&#13;
Churchill, retired.&#13;
('. H. Werner, an alleged fake newspaper"&#13;
solicitor, is under arrest in Cheboygan.&#13;
It is alleged that he collected&#13;
money in advance.&#13;
Farmers near Lakevlew discovered&#13;
D. N. Paddock, a sheep raiser, hanging&#13;
over the rear wheel of his wagon, dead&#13;
from heart disease.&#13;
John Onsted, a wealthy fanner of&#13;
Cambridge township, pleaded guilty&#13;
to selling watered milk to the Connor&#13;
creamery nt Onsted. He was fined&#13;
$10.67.&#13;
Verne Tx&gt;we. 11-year-old son of&#13;
Ch*rles Lowe, while playing arouud&#13;
the Scranton cars near the depot, was&#13;
run Over by a freight car and killed&#13;
instantly.&#13;
John Kb-.pnhnrt. of Flint, was given&#13;
90 days in the Detroit house pf correction&#13;
lor drawing a knife on a paperhanger&#13;
in his house who had resented&#13;
the abusive language used by Elserhart&#13;
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**° * *&#13;
LW&#13;
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%M;'w *&#13;
A FOOL FOR LOVE&#13;
By FRANCIS LYNDE&#13;
A U T H O R OF " T H B G R A F T E R S / ' ETC.&#13;
(Cop7»iiai,l**.b7 J. P. LipplnoouOo.)&#13;
«K&#13;
T CHAJPTEB VII.—ContinuexJ.&#13;
"Uncle Somerville, can't' we win&#13;
without calling In these horrid men&#13;
with their gutaf" she began, plunging&#13;
desperately ftto the mldat of things.&#13;
A mere Bhadow of a grim smile came&#13;
aad went in the Rajah's eyea.&#13;
"An unprejudiced outsideh might&#13;
_^ji my that the 'horrid men with their&#13;
gnns' Were on top of that embank-&#13;
, ment, my deah—ten to ouh one," he&#13;
/* remarket!. "It was the first time I&#13;
ereh saw Misteh Deck-^rt ifcow the&#13;
white featheh."&#13;
"But I should think we might win&#13;
In some other way. What is it you&#13;
want to do?—specifically, I mean.&#13;
Make me your ally and see if I can't&#13;
help you."&#13;
Mr. Darrah pushed his plate aside&#13;
and cleared his throat.&#13;
"For business reasons which you—&#13;
ah—wouldn't undehstand we can't let&#13;
the UUh finish this railroad of theirs&#13;
Into Carbonate this winteh."&#13;
"So mtttQr I have inferred. But Mr.&#13;
Winton seems to be very determined."&#13;
"Mmphr 1 wish Mr. Callowell had&#13;
favehed us with someone else—anyone&#13;
else. That young fellow is a bawn&#13;
flghteh, my dealv."&#13;
"You mean that another man might&#13;
make it easier for you?"&#13;
"I mean that anotheh man would&#13;
probably dally along—with ouh help—&#13;
till the shows come.','&#13;
Virginia had a bright idea, and she&#13;
advanced it without examining too&#13;
closely into its ethical part.&#13;
"Mr. Winton is working for wages,&#13;
isn't he?" she asked.&#13;
"Of cou'se; big money, at that. His&#13;
sawt come high."&#13;
"Well, why can't ,you hire him away&#13;
from the other people. Mr. Callowell&#13;
might not be so fortunate next time.&#13;
And it wouldn't be dishonorable in&#13;
Mr. Winton to resign and take a better&#13;
place, would it?"&#13;
The Rajah sat back in his chair and&#13;
regarded her thoughtfully. Then a&#13;
slow smile twitched the huge mustaches&#13;
and worked its way up to the&#13;
fierce eyes.&#13;
"What is'it?" she asked.&#13;
"Nothing, my deah—nothing at all.&#13;
I was just Wondering how a woman's&#13;
—ah—rsensw of propo'tions was put togetheh.&#13;
But your plan has merit. Do&#13;
I understand, that you will faveh raje.&#13;
with your help?*'&#13;
"Why, ye-yes, certainly, if I can,"&#13;
she assented, not wiuiout dubiety.&#13;
"That Is, I'll be nice to Mr. Winton,&#13;
if that is what you mean."&#13;
The saying of it cost her a blush&#13;
and Mr. Darrah remarked it. But he&#13;
did not give her time to retract.&#13;
"That is precisely what I mean, my&#13;
deah. We'll begin by having him&#13;
heah to dlnneh this evening, him and&#13;
the otheh young man—what's his&#13;
name?—Adams."&#13;
"But, uncle," she began, in hesitant&#13;
protest, "what ever will he think!"&#13;
"Neveh mind what he thinks. You&#13;
faveh me, my deah Virginia, by sending&#13;
him a right pretty invitation. You&#13;
know how to do those things, and I&#13;
—why, bless my soul—I've quite forgotten."&#13;
Virginia found pea, ink and paper,&#13;
something doubting—doubting a great&#13;
deal, if the truth were told—but not&#13;
knowing how to go about refusing a&#13;
confederacy^ which she herself had&#13;
proposed.&#13;
And tae upshot of the matter was a&#13;
dainty note which found its way by&#13;
the hands of the private car porter1&#13;
to Winton, laboring manfully at his&#13;
task of repairing the landslide damages;&#13;
this in the-middle of the afternoon,&#13;
after the sheriff's train had gone&#13;
back to Carbonate and all opposition&#13;
seemed to have been withdrawn.&#13;
"Mr. Somerville Darrah's compliments to&#13;
, Mr. John Winton and Mr. Morton P.&#13;
A d a m s and he will be pleased if they \vjll&#13;
dine with The party in the car Rosemary&#13;
at seven o'clock.&#13;
•Informal..&#13;
"Wednesday December the Ninth."&#13;
seen the error of his way and means&#13;
to come down gracefully.'&#13;
"Don't you believe it! Beware of&#13;
the Greeks bringing gifts. You are&#13;
going to be hit right where you live&#13;
this time.''&#13;
Winton growled his disapproval of&#13;
any such uncharitable hypothesis.&#13;
"You make me exceedingly tired at&#13;
odd moments, Morty. Why can't you&#13;
give Mr. Darrah the credit of being&#13;
what he really is at bottom—a rigtthearted&#13;
Virginia gentleman of the old&#13;
school?"&#13;
"Ye gods and little minnows!—&#13;
worse and more of It! You don't&#13;
mean that you are going to accept!"&#13;
said Adams, aghast.&#13;
"Certainly; and so are you. We&#13;
shall have quite enough of Mr. Mantalini's&#13;
'demnitlon grind' up here in&#13;
this God-forsaken wilderness without&#13;
anaTJtafoUHtolt It ¥11 Virginia »ho&#13;
fllhsd all honionrfoririBtOTir^&#13;
Knowing no m o ^ t h a n , nmftffri*^.&#13;
minded man the lat^t^social nUeties&#13;
of a dinh«r party, and c a r i n g - ^ p j e s s&#13;
for them/ he monopolized hercttityixaelessly&#13;
from the moment pf greeting.&#13;
In the interval of plat* iajn^0-hJQvi&amp;-&#13;
neuvered/ skillfully' t ^ e 4 r « * ^ » R e 8 -&#13;
aion of the. tete-atete chatr, » « ^ w i t h&#13;
that convenient piece 'if fi#ij$M» for&#13;
an aid ha managed to'ykejta wTOginia&#13;
wholly to himself ^nniu dfiner was&#13;
announced. "' '"* v&#13;
For another p a n tti«^ Intorrna&gt; table&#13;
gathering might have been easily prohibitive&#13;
of confidence a deux, even&#13;
with a Virginia Careteret to help, but&#13;
Winton was far above the trammelings&#13;
of time and place. All attempts&#13;
on the part ot his host, Mrs. Martha,&#13;
Adams, or the Reverend Billy to en-J&#13;
tangle him in the general table talk&#13;
failed signally. He had eyes and ears&#13;
'only .for the sweet-faced, low-voiced&#13;
young woman beside him, and some&#13;
of his replies to the others were irrelevant&#13;
enough to send a smile&#13;
around the board.&#13;
"How very absent-minded Mr. Winton.&#13;
seems to be this evening," murmured&#13;
Bessie from her niche between&#13;
Adams and the Reverend Billy at the&#13;
farther end of the table. "He isn't&#13;
quite at his best, is he, Mr. Adams?"&#13;
"No, indeed," said the technologian,&#13;
matcmng her undertone, "very far&#13;
from it. He has been a -it off all day;&#13;
touch of mountain fever, I'm afraid."&#13;
"MAY I H O P E YOU WI L L F A V O R US O F T E N ? "&#13;
* C H A P T E R VIII.&#13;
Adafts said "By Jove!" in his most&#13;
cynical drawl when Winton gave him&#13;
tUe dtaner-bidding to read; then he&#13;
laughed.&#13;
Winton recovered the dainty note,&#13;
folding it carefully and putting it in&#13;
et. xhe hannwriting was the&#13;
that of the telegram abstract-&#13;
Operator Carter's sending&#13;
1 ft*&#13;
Hi*&#13;
g J p ' t see anything to laugh at,"&#13;
he ob£cted, in the tone of one. who&#13;
doea apt mean to see.&#13;
"Nor You must be in fathoms deep&#13;
^koi to be able to multiply such a very&#13;
evident twice two. Jirst the Rajah&#13;
•ends the sheriff's posse packing without&#13;
striking a blow, and now he in-.&#13;
vitxi us to dinner. What's the infer-&#13;
' c n i ' f t ? ' ^ -&#13;
" O h ^ ioato fcftf^aa.taart *«£..»&#13;
be an Inference. Let us say he has&#13;
scamping our one little chance to forget&#13;
it for a few social minutes."&#13;
There was no more to be said, and&#13;
the technologian held his peace while&#13;
Winton scribbled a line of acceptance&#13;
on a leaf of his note-book and sent it&#13;
across to the Rosemary by the hand&#13;
of the water boy. But in the evening,&#13;
as they were setting out from the construction&#13;
camp to walk up the track to&#13;
Argentine, he made a final effort to&#13;
call a halt.&#13;
"Jack, this is worse than idiotic,"&#13;
he protested. "There is that consignment&#13;
of steel you were wiring about&#13;
to-day; one of us ought to go down&#13;
to the Junction to see if it is ready to&#13;
be shoved to the front."&#13;
"Bother the steel!" was the impatient&#13;
rejojinder. "Drayton wired it&#13;
wouid be there, didn't he? Come on,&#13;
we shall be late."&#13;
"Whom the gods would destroy they&#13;
first make- mau," quoted Adams under&#13;
his breath; but he made no more difficulties.&#13;
Their reception at the steps of the&#13;
Rosemary was a generous proof of the&#13;
aptness of that aphorism which sums&#13;
up the status post bellum in the terse&#13;
phrase: "After war, peace." Mr. Darrah&#13;
met them; was evidently waiting&#13;
for them; and was as heartily hospitable&#13;
as a master of men can be&#13;
when he puts his entire mind to it.&#13;
"Come in, gentlemen; come in and&#13;
be at home"—this with a hand for&#13;
each. "Virginia allowed you wouldn't&#13;
faveh us, but I assured her she didn't&#13;
rightly know men of the world; told&#13;
her that a picayune business affair in&#13;
whicn we are all' acting as corporation&#13;
proxies needn't spell out anything&#13;
like a blood feud between* gentlemen.&#13;
Straight ahead, Misteh Winton; afteh&#13;
you, Misteh Adams."&#13;
Such was the auspicious beginning&#13;
of an evening which Winton thought&#13;
worthy to be 'marked in his calendar&#13;
with a white stone.&#13;
The dinner was a gastronomlcrl&#13;
marvel, considering its remotenoas&#13;
from the nearest base of supplies; the&#13;
Rajah laid aside his mask of fierceness&#13;
and beamed hospitality; Mrs.&#13;
Carteret was innocuously gracious;&#13;
Beasin of the flaxen hair ahd the Reverend&#13;
William Calvert came In harmoniously&#13;
ou the cheerful refrain;&#13;
"But he doesn't look at all ill," objected&#13;
Miss Beaeie. "I chould say he&#13;
is a perfect picture of rude health." .&#13;
"You can't tell anytning about him&#13;
by his looks," rejoined Adams, glibly.&#13;
"Absolute mask—that face of his.&#13;
But between u3, don't you know, I&#13;
think he must be going to have a&#13;
fever. Struck him all at once about&#13;
three o'clock this afternoon, and I am&#13;
sure he hasn't been quite right in his&#13;
head since."&#13;
"Why, how dreadful!" said Bessie,&#13;
sympathetically. "And I suppose there&#13;
isn't a doctor to be had anywhere in&#13;
these terrible mounta.-is."&#13;
But upon this point Adams reassured&#13;
her promptly.&#13;
"Oh, yes, there is; Winton has already&#13;
had his preliminary consultation&#13;
and is, as you may say, in the&#13;
way of t&gt;eing prescribed for. And Til&#13;
see to it that he takes his medicine&#13;
before he turns in&lt; to-night. You may&#13;
trust me for that."&#13;
Thus Mr. Morton P. Adams, in&#13;
Irony far too subtle for the flaxenhaired&#13;
Bessie. But Winton's replies&#13;
were not specially irrelevant when Virginia&#13;
evoked them. On the contrary,&#13;
he was finding her sallies keenly provocative&#13;
of what wit and readiness&#13;
there was in him.&#13;
"I believe your chief delight in life&#13;
is to catch a man napping," he&#13;
laughed, when she had succeeded in&#13;
demonstrating, for the third time in&#13;
as many minutes, how Inadequate a&#13;
man's wit is to cope with a woman's.&#13;
"I do enjoy it," she confessed, with&#13;
the brown eyes confirming the admission.&#13;
"What woman does not?&#13;
Isn't your man's attitude towards us&#13;
one of thinly veiled contempt at the&#13;
very best? For Instance: you said&#13;
just now that while no woman could&#13;
do without a man, the reverse was&#13;
true of the man."&#13;
"I didn't know I said anything like&#13;
that. If I did, it was heresy."&#13;
"No; it was one of those little lapses&#13;
into sincerity which a man- permits^&#13;
himself on rare occasions, when he&#13;
isn't flattering. You really believe it,&#13;
you know you do."&#13;
"Do I? It wouldn't be polite to contradict&#13;
you. But what I said, or tried&#13;
to say, was that a man could exist,&#13;
as Adams and I are existing at present,&#13;
without feminine oversight."&#13;
"But what you meant was the other,"&#13;
she insisted—"that we are not&#13;
necessary to you, while you are necessary&#13;
to us." Then, reverting to the&#13;
matter of mere existence,: "Could you&#13;
keep it u^Hndeflnitely, Mr. Winton."&#13;
"Isn't bur being here this evening&#13;
proof positive to the contrary?"&#13;
"She smiled approval. "You are doing&#13;
better—much better. With a little&#13;
practice—you are sadly out of practice,&#13;
aren't you?—I do believe you could&#13;
pay one a pretty compliment."&#13;
Winton rose mantully to his opportunity.&#13;
"No one could pay you compliments,&#13;
Miss Virginia. It would oe utterly impossible."&#13;
"Why? Realise my chief delight in&#13;
life is to catch a man napping?"&#13;
"Oh, no. Because the prettiest&#13;
things that could be said of you would&#13;
be only an awkward mirroring of the&#13;
truth."&#13;
"Dear me—how fine!" she applauded.&#13;
"I am afraid you have been reading&#13;
'Lord Chesterfield's Letters to His&#13;
Son'—very recently. Confess, now;&#13;
haven't you?"&#13;
Winton laughed.&#13;
"You do Lord Chestenteld a very&#13;
great injustice; I cribbed that from&#13;
"The Indiscretions of a Marchioness,' '•'&#13;
he retorted.&#13;
Here was another new experience&#13;
for Miss Virginia ^arteret: to have&#13;
the trodden-worm turn; to be paid&#13;
back in her own coin. She liked him&#13;
rather better for it: and, liking him, !&#13;
proceeded to punish him, woraan-v.-ise. J&#13;
The coffee was served, and Mrs. Car- j&#13;
teret was rising. Whereupon Miss&#13;
Virginia handed her cup to the techno- \&#13;
logian, and so had him for her com- j&#13;
panion in tue tete-a-tete chair, leaving&#13;
Winton to shift for himself.&#13;
The shifting process carried him&#13;
over to the Rajah and the Reverend&#13;
Billy, to a small table in a corner of&#13;
the compartment, and the enjoyment&#13;
of a mild cigar and such desultory&#13;
racketing of the ball of conversation&#13;
as three men, each more or les3 intent&#13;
upon his own concerns, may keep&#13;
up.&#13;
Later, when Calvert had been eliminated&#13;
by Miss Bessie, Winton looked&#13;
to see the true inwardness of the dinner-&#13;
bidding made manifest by his host.&#13;
That Mr. Somerville Darrah had an&#13;
ax to grind in the right-of-way matter&#13;
he did not doubt; this notwithstanding&#13;
his word to Adams defensive of&#13;
the Rajah's probable motive.&#13;
(TO BE C O N T I N U E D . )&#13;
RACE RIOT.&#13;
Many Ne^roe* in Atlanta Btaten to&#13;
Peath i#nd, Many Jnjiired.&#13;
38?tujrday* f yenijaf rioting began in&#13;
Atlanta, Ga\, the negro population being&#13;
the victims, the alleged, eause being&#13;
th&amp; numerous a*MtpAts on white&#13;
women. At midnight Gk&gt;v. Terrell issued&#13;
an order calling out eight companies&#13;
of the Fifth infantry and one&#13;
battery of light artillery. This order&#13;
was not issued until three negroes had&#13;
been killed and fifteen taken to hospitals,&#13;
five of whom will die.&#13;
The mob began, its work early in&#13;
the evening, pulling negroes from&#13;
street cars and beating them with&#13;
clubs, bricks and stones. Negro men&#13;
and women, riding to their homes after&#13;
the work of the day were ruthlessly&#13;
torn from the cars or attacked on&#13;
the streets.&#13;
In a few cases negroes retaliated&#13;
during the early part of the night, but&#13;
after 10 o'clock they were scarce in&#13;
public places. The fire department&#13;
was called out to disperse the mob&#13;
on Decatur street, a street much frequented&#13;
by negroes, and for a time&#13;
seemed to hold the crowd at bay.&#13;
The police reserves were called out&#13;
to hold the situation until_ the troops&#13;
"could be mobilized. The mob seemed&#13;
to lack leadership and this doubtless,&#13;
prevented more slaughter. The reports&#13;
gave the number of known dead&#13;
as fifteen and it was thought that&#13;
thiriy, perhaps more, were either&#13;
killed outright or so injured that death&#13;
will follow.&#13;
The Union Trust Co., of Detroit, will&#13;
sell the big implement factory in Stan*&#13;
dish October 15.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
D e t r o i t — E x t r a d r y - f e d steern a n d&#13;
h e i f e r s , $4 75(^ o; s t e e r s and heifer*.&#13;
1,000 to 1.20Q lbs, $4 25® 4 50; s t e e r s a n d&#13;
helfera, 800 to 1,000, $3 50® 4 25; gra.na&#13;
Hteers and h e i f e r s t h a t are fat. 800 t o&#13;
1.000 Iks, $3 50@4 25; g r a s s s t e e r s a n d&#13;
h e i f e r s that are fat, 500 to 700 lbs, %2@&#13;
3 50; choisie f a t c o w s , $3 50@4; g o o d f a t&#13;
c o w s , $3; c o m m o n c o w s , | 1 50@2; c a n -&#13;
ners, $ 1 # 1 50; c h o i c e h e a v y bulls, $2 75&#13;
@3 25; fair to g o o d botognaa. bulla.&#13;
$2 50@2 35; s t o c k bulls, | 2 25@2 75;&#13;
c h o i c e f e e d i n g s t e e r s . 800 to 1,000 lbs.&#13;
$3 5 0 © 3 80; fair f e e d i n g steers, 800 to&#13;
1,000 lbs. $3@3 25; choice s t o c k e r s , 500&#13;
to 700 lbs, | 2 25@3 25; fair s t o c k e r s . 50»&#13;
to 700 lbs, | 2 2 5 ® 2 75; s t o c k helfery.&#13;
$2 2 5 ^ 2 75; m i l k e r s , large, y o u n g , m e -&#13;
d i u m age, $40¾ 47; c o m m o n m i l k e r s , $14&#13;
(y 25.&#13;
Veal c a l v e s — M a r k e r a c t i v e a n d 25';&#13;
h i g h e r ; best, $7 50¾ 7 7 3; others, $4\.«&#13;
6 50.&#13;
Milch c o w s a n d s p r i n g e r s — S t e a d y .&#13;
S h e e p a n d l a m b s — S h e e p s t e a d y . B e s t&#13;
l a m b s . $7&lt;G7 10; fair t o good l a m b s ,&#13;
$6 50@7; l i g h t to c o m m o n lambs. 15 ."&gt;0&#13;
if?6 25; y e a r l i n g s , $5 50® 5 75; fair t o&#13;
goodj b u t c h e r s h e e p . $'&gt;-5UIt4; c u l l s a n d&#13;
c o m m o n , $2ffj&gt;2 50.&#13;
H o g s — M a r k e t s t e a d y f l i g h t to g o o d&#13;
b u t c h e r s , $6 40¾ S 5J; p i s s , J'J 25&lt;&lt;tj 30;&#13;
liKht y o r k e r s . $t&gt; 40, r o u g h s , $4 7 ."&gt; tv&#13;
o 25 ; s t a g s . 1-3 off.&#13;
C h i c a g o — B e e v e s . $3 2 5 ^ 6 95; c o w s&#13;
and heifers, $1 60(&amp;5 15; s t o c k e r s a n d&#13;
fenders. $2 *&gt;.*»(£ 4 60; T e x a n s . $3 7Off&#13;
4 45; w e s t e r n s , 13 75^6 5 35; calves,$6 fo 8.&#13;
H o g s — M i x e d a n d butchers. | 6 10'cr&#13;
r&gt; H2i* ; g o o d h e a v y , ' $ 6 30&lt;&amp;6 52½ ; r o u g h&#13;
h e a v y . | 5 70to 5 95; light. |&lt;5 2ii&amp;6 62 ^ ;&#13;
p i g s . $3 6 0 ^ 6 r.7&lt;; bulk of sales, ttjifi'6 50.&#13;
S h e e p — M a r k e t s t e a d y ; sheep, $3 HOt?&#13;
3 55; laml&gt;£. $5 1 0 ^ 7 75.&#13;
HIS MOTHER.&#13;
The oldest emblem of deathless affection&#13;
is the natural love of a woman&#13;
for her child: Maternal love remains,&#13;
indeed, a fixed, conventional type, as&#13;
if the tender eminence belonged to&#13;
every mother.&#13;
To illustrate the child's hold upon&#13;
the mother no ordinary instance would&#13;
be new, but an Incident in the last&#13;
hours of a condemned criminal furnishes&#13;
one of the crucial cases.&#13;
For the brutal murder of a helpless&#13;
old man a youth of 18, in a neighboring&#13;
sliue, lay in jail awaiting execution.&#13;
He resisted every approach of&#13;
kinvlness, and resented the friendly&#13;
offices of the* chaplain with bitter&#13;
curses. The boy was apparently a reprobate.&#13;
Two days before his execution a telegram&#13;
was brought to him in his cell.&#13;
He i-natched it, and tore it open with&#13;
an oath. In an instant a change came&#13;
over his sullen face. He threw up his&#13;
hands with a cry, and began to weep&#13;
and sob. The chaplain took the telegram&#13;
and read these words:&#13;
"Your mother is loving you y e t "&#13;
, The message had cote* . 2.Q00 railfts.&#13;
The mother in her distant home ha*i&#13;
not hxard of her runaway boy for&#13;
three years. The young prodigal had&#13;
not changed his name, and one day, In&#13;
a brief newspaper mention, she read&#13;
of him—a murderer condemned to die.&#13;
It was too late to save him. All her&#13;
bleeding heart could send him in his&#13;
ignominy and ruin was that last fond&#13;
sentence.&#13;
An anecdote of a wretched-looking&#13;
tramp, arrested for vagrancy the other&#13;
day in Brooklyn, tells us, on the other&#13;
hand, something of the hold a mother&#13;
has upon her child. __&#13;
Wnon the man was searched by the&#13;
officers, a soiled photograph of a young&#13;
woman was found in his,clothing, says&#13;
the Youths' Companion. Beggars* explanations&#13;
usually find a more credulous&#13;
audience outside of the police station,&#13;
but the officers heard the tramp's&#13;
story and believed it. He declared that&#13;
the photograph was a . picture of his&#13;
mother.&#13;
"She s an old woman now," he said,&#13;
"if »ho is alive. I've carried that picture&#13;
lor many a year. I didn't follow&#13;
the i»ad she marked out for me—the&#13;
more shame to me—but h*u* face has&#13;
been with me in every state in the&#13;
union. I wouldn't part with it for anything&#13;
ir. this world. Keep it for rae,&#13;
and ler me have it when I go."&#13;
Mother love is a holy thing. Pitiful,&#13;
and moxe than pitiful, is the baseness&#13;
that will drag it in the mire. But it&#13;
outlived even that Indignity.&#13;
Kast B u f f a l o . — B e s t export s t e e r s ,&#13;
$5.75¾. 6.15; best 1,200 to 1.300-lb s h i p -&#13;
p i n g s t e e r s . $4.70@5.20; be's't 1,000 t o&#13;
1.1U0-11) kind. $4.10«o&gt;4.65; best fat c o w s ,&#13;
$3.50¾ 3.75; fair to good, $2.75&amp;3; t r i m -&#13;
mers, $1.50; best fat heifers. $4.10(g4.25:&#13;
m e d i u m heifers, $3(^3.50; best y e a r l i n g&#13;
s t e e r s . $3.50¾ 3.75; c o m m o n s t o c k s t e e r s .&#13;
$2.75¾ 3; e x p o r t bulls. $3.75@4; b o l o g n a&#13;
bulls. $2.50¾ 3; . i g h t s t o c k bulls. $2.50@&#13;
3. T h e c o w t r a d e w a s v e r y dull a n d&#13;
d r a g g y at last w e e k ' s prices; g o o d t o&#13;
extra. $40&lt;fcM5; m e d i u m , $23@33; c o m -&#13;
mon. $18¾ 20.&#13;
H i g s — M a r k e t s t e a d y ; y o r k e r s , $6.80&#13;
•5? 6.85; g o o d m i x e d . $6.S0@6.85; m e d i u m s&#13;
and h e a v y c o m m o n to good, $6.50¾ 6.80;&#13;
pigs, $6.60-g&gt;6.70; r o u g h s . $5.50@5.55;&#13;
few choice. $5.60; there w a s fair c l e a r -&#13;
a n c e for ail that g o t yarded in time for&#13;
the m a r k e t , q u i t e a f e w late a r r i v a l s&#13;
g o i n g o v e r u n s o l d : c o m m o n h e a v y&#13;
M i c h i g a n h o g s s o l d from $6.25 to $6.30.&#13;
S h e e p — M a r k e t l o w e r ; top l a m b s .&#13;
$7.73¾ 7.90: c u l l s . $6® 6.25: w e t h e r s .&#13;
$5,751$ 6: culls. $ 3 ^ 4 . 5 0 ; y e a r l i n g s . $ 8 ®&#13;
6.25; e w e s . $5@ 6.25. B e s t c a l v e s . $8.25¾)&#13;
8.50. m e d i u m to good, $6@S; h e a v y ,&#13;
$3.50¾ 4.50.&#13;
r . r t i i , E t e .&#13;
D e t r o i t — W h e a t — N o . 1 w h i t e . 74*«c;&#13;
No. 2 red spot. 1 car a t 7 4 ¾ c ; S e p t e m -&#13;
ber 2,000'bu at 74ViC. 5.000 bu a t 74&gt;4c.&#13;
1.000 bu at 74*4C 2.000 bu at 7 4 4 c 5.000&#13;
bu at 7 4 \ c ; D e c e m b e r . 10,000 bu a t&#13;
77^40. 3.000 bu at 77*»c. 15,000 bu a t&#13;
V»o. 12.000 bu a t 77%c, 10.000 bu a t&#13;
20.000 bu a t 7 7 V ' ; May. 25,00»&#13;
81e. 10,000 bu at 81 Vie 5.000 bu a t&#13;
10.000 bu a t 81 VcC 12,000 bu a t&#13;
3,000 bu a t 81 \ c .&#13;
&gt; ' ._&#13;
77Vi&#13;
bu at&#13;
81 V«c&#13;
81 4 c&#13;
8 1 4 c No. 3 red, 72 \ per bu.&#13;
10,000 bu a t&#13;
32c.&#13;
Corn—No. 3 m i x e d , 51c; No. 3 y e l l o w ,&#13;
both n o m i n a i .&#13;
O a t s — C a s h No. 3 white, 2 c a r s at 37c.&#13;
c l o s i n g at 3 6 \ c a s k e d ; rejected, I «jar&#13;
at 35 4 l &gt; per bu.&#13;
R y e — C a s h No. 2. 61c per bu.&#13;
Beans^—Cash, $1 35 n o m i n a l ; October,&#13;
1 c a r at $1 »9. c l o s j n g at $1 38 a s k e d ;&#13;
N o v e m b e r , $1 38 n o m i n a l .&#13;
C h i c a g o — C a s h q u o t a t i o n s : No. 2&#13;
s p r i n g w h e a t . 76@80c; No. 3. 7 6 4 ¾ - 7 9 c ;&#13;
No. 2 red, 72¾ 73c: No. 2 corn. 50c; No.&#13;
.' y e l i o w . 50c: No. 2 o a t s . 33"*c; No. 2&#13;
w h i t e . 3 3 c ^ 3 6 c ; No. 3 white, 3 3 ^ 3 5 ' ^ c ;&#13;
No. 2 rye. 60c: f a i r to choice m a l t i n g&#13;
hurley, 44¾ 52c: N o . 1 flaxseed. II 071¾ ;&#13;
No. 1 n o r t h w e s t e r n . $1 13: p r i m e t i m -&#13;
o t h y seed. $4 JO; &lt; lover, c o n t r a c t grade*&#13;
$12" 2 5.&#13;
A M I S K M E N T S I N D E T R O I T .&#13;
Week Kmiiusr JHeptemoer v, 1 jj.&#13;
TEMPI.« THKATRR A S P VVojrnFRr,ANr»—Aftern&lt;&#13;
K&gt;n.s 2:1V HV lo 25c; E v e n i n g 8:i\ 10c to50c&#13;
Walter J» ties A M a &gt; l Hite.* and others.&#13;
I.vrRUM— Prices always IV. 25c. 50c, ? x \ 25o&#13;
Matiue** \Vedne*rt*v and Saturday. t\. Miller&#13;
Kent, iu ' Raffles.*•&#13;
WHITNEY—Kv«Miim'«/ 10c. 20c. 30c: Matinee*&#13;
Z li*. 13c. i \ -The Boy Behind the Gun."&#13;
L A F A Y E T T E THEATR*—Bargain MatlneesSun.&#13;
Mon.. W e i . and Sat. Vest Seats 2«c. Nlghl&#13;
Prices, ICo. .V. 3oc. The Three Musketeers&#13;
8 T S A M E R S I,gAVTXO D E T R O I T .&#13;
' DETROIT AND BrrrALoSTEAMBOATCo.,roo»&#13;
of Wayne St.. for Buffalo and (he East, dally at&#13;
6:00 p, m. Sunday at 4:J0 p, m. Week End&#13;
Excursion. IS.ftO round trip;&#13;
D r r a o r r A N D CLEVELAND N A V . CO., footot&#13;
Wayne St.. fc r Cleveland, Pittsburg and Eastern&#13;
points, daily at 10-.30 p. m. Week -End Excursion&#13;
to Cleveland every Saturday, f&amp;ft) rovUE4&#13;
trip.&#13;
W H I T E S T A R L I N E , foot of Griswold St. for.&#13;
Port Huron and way ports, dally at 8:» a. m,&#13;
uid 2:30 p. m.. Sunday at 9:00 a, m. For Toledo&#13;
AftUiaitttJp.m., Sunday at »aN a.ni.aad^OUp.nv&#13;
1&#13;
t i t § iackney gityafch&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS &lt;fc CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
THURSDAY, SEPT. 27,1906,&#13;
The Ghoice Is Yours&#13;
The f o l l o w i n g are t h e n o m i n r t i o n s&#13;
ot the three parties for state a n d count&#13;
y officers. We can tell y o u who&#13;
they are, but you will have to make&#13;
y o u r o w n choice:&#13;
REPUBLICAN&#13;
£TATE&#13;
(iovenor, Fred M. Warner. Fartuington&#13;
Lieut.Gov., Patrick H. Kelly, Lansing&#13;
Sec. of State, Geo. A. Prescott, Tawas&#13;
Citv&#13;
State Treaa., Frank P. Glazier;ChetsW"&#13;
Auditor General, James B. Bradley,&#13;
Eaton Rapids&#13;
Luud Commissioner, William H. Rose,&#13;
Bath&#13;
Attoniey-Geueral, J o h n E . Bird, Adriau&#13;
Superintendent of Public Instruction,&#13;
Luther L. Wright, Ironwood&#13;
Member of Board of Education, / Dexter&#13;
M. Ferry Jr., Detroit&#13;
COUNTY&#13;
Thomas Allen, Flintt, State Senator,&#13;
Chas. VanKeurau, Representative&#13;
Willis Lyon, County Clerk&#13;
James Greene, Prosecuting Attorney&#13;
A. D. Thompson, Register of Deeds&#13;
Edwin Pratt, Sheriff&#13;
Frank Mowers, County Drain Com.&#13;
J. A. .Woodruff, County School Com,&#13;
Henry C. Durfee, School Examiner&#13;
T. J. Gaul, School Examiner&#13;
DEMOCRATIC&#13;
STATE&#13;
Governor, Chas. H. Kimmerle," ( sssopolis.&#13;
T h e S i r e n o f L a P r e n i t .&#13;
La Pren.su is the jiivutest and most&#13;
influential pupor i;i South America. Its&#13;
offices are in l&gt;u MI &gt;.; Ayros, Argentina,&#13;
situated in a m:i:«;:ni:reut l&gt;i:i!d:us: in&#13;
the Avenlda. This MtiUliug is said to&#13;
be -me of the moxt iiuiusing ill the&#13;
woihi. It lias a t.r.ver crowned by u&#13;
great :;ii!tlcn st.u-.v of a yoim;4 woman&#13;
I't'lirea';:;-.!;- \\:o Sp'ivt of the Press.&#13;
Tin* i I'-.-in'o t p &gt; s &gt;*-i &gt;:i of La Prensa&#13;
iw a ~&gt;.u-» li &gt;:'sep.) .ver steam operate.1&#13;
siiv;i Whenever iho;v is an appalling&#13;
«:isa.&gt;te;- tin- tic.iJlj of a crowned head&#13;
or o.her e . e u t of worldwide interest—&#13;
wi! i;\&gt; LToe- Ln Preasa's siren and is&#13;
heard for a while throughout the city.&#13;
Tla local gavernintMit exacts a tine for&#13;
this performance, $100 per minute.&#13;
with a minimum of &amp;!00, and if the&#13;
fine is not paid on the nail the charge&#13;
is double, so when one man is sent to&#13;
operate the screecher another Is sent&#13;
running with a t w o hundred dollar bill&#13;
t o the courts. The next operation is to&#13;
drape the above referred to young&#13;
woman's torch with? r » I ~ v e l v e t tn case&#13;
of a catastrophe; with crape In the&#13;
event of a death. All this causes the&#13;
most extraordinary sensation.&#13;
Ask auy " J A P " that y o u may see,&#13;
' W h y the Czar, with HHAB behind,"&#13;
had to climb a tree.&#13;
The Y a n k s , God bless the Y a n k s ,&#13;
says he,&#13;
I h e y gave us Rocky Mountain T e a .&#13;
• W*&gt;rk«4 tfc* Tlsj*s*.&#13;
N t a r Per&amp;k, in the Malay peninsula,&#13;
U a prosperous rubber factory run by&#13;
a long headed Scotchman. In order to&#13;
obtain the sap from which the rubber&#13;
la made it Is necessary to puncture the&#13;
bark of the trees. Laborers are scarce&#13;
In that district, but there Is an abundauce&#13;
of tigers. There were not&#13;
enough men to "tap" the trees, but the&#13;
Scotch proprietor hit on a brilliant&#13;
idea. H e knew that tigers are fond of&#13;
valerian, so he gave orders that all the&#13;
trees should be rubbed wltb this stuff.&#13;
T h e tigers came up and caressingly&#13;
scratched the bark tn the most approved&#13;
herringbone fashion, after&#13;
which all that the coolies had to do&#13;
w a s to walk around once a day and&#13;
collect the rubber.&#13;
W h e n y o u have a cold it is well to&#13;
be very careful about u s i n g a n y t h i n g&#13;
t h a t will cause constipation. Be particularly&#13;
careful a b o u t preparations&#13;
c o n t a i n i n g opiates. Use K e n n e d y ' s&#13;
Laxative Honey and Tar, which stops&#13;
the c o u g h and moves the bowels.&#13;
Hold by F. A. Slgler, Druggist,&#13;
Lent. Gov., Thomas M. Rogers, Sault \ 'de&#13;
I&#13;
two&#13;
Ste. Marie j&#13;
State Treasurer. Charles Wellman, Port !&#13;
Huron ;&#13;
Atinrney-Ceneral,&#13;
Grand Rapids&#13;
Auditor General, John Ynel!, Vander&#13;
bilt, Otsego Cuiinty 3&#13;
A B i g H o n n e h o l d .&#13;
The missionary was at once pale and&#13;
yellow—pale, he explained, from an&#13;
avoidance of the deadly Indian sun,&#13;
yellow from a disordoivd liver.&#13;
••Nevertheless," he said eayly, "India&#13;
for nif tiist, last and ail the time.. O n \&#13;
the money you and your family are&#13;
pay ill-.; at this hotel O.o you know how&#13;
you would live in India".'"&#13;
Lie lighted a cigarette and resumed:&#13;
"You would live in a beautiful house&#13;
set in a lovely garden, with a list of&#13;
servants that would include a khansamali.&#13;
&lt;&gt;r iaitler; a khitmutijar. or taervanl:&#13;
a'eho'ura, or page; *a'mus&#13;
salohee. or light bearer; a mut;. or cook:&#13;
syces, or grooms; a bheestee.&#13;
or water carrier; a saniah. or house&#13;
j oooly; a mulli. or gardener; a dhoViie,&#13;
Emanuel J. Doyle, j Q r washerman; u dur/.ee, or private&#13;
1 j tailor; an ayah., or nurse;-a sirdah. or&#13;
valet; a furrash bearer, or lamp man;&#13;
three punkah coolies to work the fans;&#13;
Superintendent "of Public Instruction, [* d u r m a n - o r l o d ~ e P ° r t e r ; a J«*""*«*.&#13;
vi i&gt; M" 1 4 o . - : or footman, and several chuprassies, or&#13;
ElmSteart e RL. a\n\de bCsotemi.m Pisosniotnineer , Clarence L ' - ' "&#13;
Shelden, Bay County&#13;
Member of Stale--Board of Education,!&#13;
James E. Sullivan, Cheboygan&#13;
messengers.&#13;
COUNTY&#13;
Edwin Farmer, Representative&#13;
Robert Wright. Clerfc&#13;
Louis E. Hewlett, P n&#13;
John WTiggleswort)i&lt;^Rpgister 01&#13;
WTiIl Stoddjp^Tsheriff&#13;
Clarence Bishop, Drain Com&#13;
F. D. Carr. School Com.&#13;
J . K. Osgerlxv,, School Examiii/r&#13;
Miles Valentine, School Examiner&#13;
PROHIBITION&#13;
STATE&#13;
Governor, R. Clark Reed, Howell&#13;
Lieut. Gov., Henry M. Moore, Detroit&#13;
Secretary of Stiite, Leroy H. White,&#13;
Kalamazoo&#13;
Treasurer, Jasper Smellzer, Vandalia&#13;
Auditor General, Fred W. Corbett,&#13;
Adrian&#13;
Land Commissioner. Addison B. Moreland,&#13;
Caro&#13;
Attorney General, Winent P.. Fox, Mt.&#13;
Clemens&#13;
Supt. P11ML Instriu'i .n. David 1&gt;.&#13;
Keed, Hillsdale&#13;
Member Board of Education, George A.&#13;
Parmenter, Petoakey&#13;
COUNTY&#13;
D. M. Beckwith, Howell, Representative&#13;
E. M. Field, Green Oak. Clerk . .&#13;
John Snyder, Treasurer&#13;
A. Crippen, Brighton, Register of Deeds&#13;
Geo. Lee, Marion, Sheriff&#13;
H. L. Doan, Green Oak, Drain Com.&#13;
Mrs. O. E. Carr, Handy, School D«.m&#13;
Hubert M. Wells, Howell, School Exam.&#13;
Norton Clark, Hartland, S-hool Exam.&#13;
Very Low S a t e s te the West&#13;
The Chicago Great Western Railw&#13;
a y will sell tickets to points in&#13;
Alberta, Arizona, British Columbia,&#13;
California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana,&#13;
Nevada, Oregon, Utah, W a s h i n g t o n&#13;
and W y o m i n g , at about one-halt the&#13;
usual i'are. Tickets on sale d a r t f&#13;
A u g . 27 to Oct. 31 inclusive. Get fall&#13;
information from the great W e s t e r n&#13;
agent or J. P . E l m e r .&#13;
F. R. Mosier, D. P. A .&#13;
103 Adams St., Chicago, III .&#13;
W h e a to B a t Ce&gt;ttoa.&#13;
When one by accident swallows an&#13;
object not Intended for eating it la a&#13;
wise precaution to send after It a,&#13;
quantity of absorbeut cot to u which&#13;
has been picked. Into due threads aud&#13;
m^xed in bread and milk. The button,&#13;
safely pin or whatever it may he gathers&#13;
Hie eottou about it, thus covering&#13;
i:p any rough edge or sharp tmiut ami&#13;
allowinu it to pass litumgu the stom&#13;
Bell :s:id iate.-itines without causing Inj&#13;
u r y&#13;
Starring to Death*&#13;
Because her stomach wafjfso weakened&#13;
by useless drugging that she&#13;
could not eat, Mrs. Mary H. Walters,&#13;
of St. Clair St., Columbus, 0., was&#13;
literal|y starving to death. She writes&#13;
"My stomach was so weak from use*&#13;
leas drags that I could not eat, and&#13;
my nerves so wrecked that 1 could&#13;
not sleep; and not before I was given&#13;
up to die was I induced to try Electric&#13;
Bitters; with the wonderful result&#13;
that improvement began at once, and&#13;
a complete care followed." Best health&#13;
tonic on earth. 5fc. Guaranteed by&#13;
F. A. Sigler, druggist.&#13;
No one would bay a sailboat with&#13;
sails that could mt be reefed. There&#13;
is always that possibility of a tittle too&#13;
ranch wind that makes a cautious man&#13;
afraid to «0 unprovided. The thinking&#13;
man, whose Etmnieh •nm^tiraes&#13;
g^es back on him, provides for his&#13;
stomach by keeping a '10 t'e of Kodol&#13;
for DyspepsU witni't *a?h K &gt;dol di&#13;
gests w h a t yun »at and r-s'ors the&#13;
stomach to thn condition to properly&#13;
perform it* fun -tiotH&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler. Druggist.&#13;
Good for the cough, removes t h e&#13;
cold, the cause ot the c o u g h . * T h a t ' s&#13;
the work of K e n n e d y ' s L a x a t i v e H o n -&#13;
ey and T a r — t h e original l a x a t i v e&#13;
c o u g h sy»up. Contains no opiates.&#13;
Bold by F. A. Sigler. D s o g g l s L&#13;
t . r &gt; . .;.:&#13;
b • d:-j»v\ a&#13;
Here's Just the Right&#13;
Bowel Laxative&#13;
Gentle, Sure—Pleasant to Take—A&#13;
Tried and True, Genuine,&#13;
Nature's Remedy.&#13;
If you do not hare free, easy and regular&#13;
SaoTCments of the bowels you luck the prime and&#13;
m m essential of good health. There's more&#13;
n a r m d o n e than mere uncomfortablene»s. sluni&#13;
i a b D e s s and bUiou^ft^ness— retention of food&#13;
^ 0? t ^ ; £&gt;&#13;
O.l Hie&#13;
:-111 is&#13;
Rheumatism is not incurable. S t u b&#13;
lorn:- Yes! But . D r . Shoop's ifcieumatic&#13;
Remedy will if faithfully used drive&#13;
it out ot the system. It's the blood&#13;
that's at fault. Poisonous crystals like j&#13;
nd, g e t into the joints and muscles.&#13;
Deeds 1 ; \ Shoop s R h e u m a t i s m Remedy pre*,&#13;
vents this It drive? rheumatism from&#13;
the blood and then rheumatism dies.&#13;
We recommend and sell it. Ail Dealers.&#13;
: i ' *&#13;
J a p n n r s r ArC r-&gt; n i l , ; . !&#13;
• If ;i . l a i e i i i c s e a;-;i-: • &gt; -&lt;'•&#13;
s c r i b e in '-olor' a a d&#13;
p a t i o i i . o f li;i!H&gt;iness !i •&#13;
Whirl) is :, r. '• ...&#13;
evening. ;: w.-- &gt;•&lt;. a. 1 ::&#13;
pllllll t r e e u:- ','•:••&#13;
b o l i / e d !&gt;y !!:•• ir;&#13;
n e s s h y t h e wi'd.'W 1: •&#13;
l o w f o r s y iidnil.-v 1 ::ti&#13;
t i m e s i n d i e I ' e i !-y :i •&#13;
b l o s S D l l l S |-'iie :.'r .&gt;ir&#13;
dower of s,&gt;;;u^ a i;d s.y:nin'!i/es tua.ity&#13;
The &lt;lra^;)i: tw.ines ;md writlies :m ;&#13;
artistic course through all .lapanese I&#13;
art, root and l^-aneh. His name is j&#13;
Tatsu. and when yon sec hiuj picture«l [&#13;
as fighting with a tiger it is the symbol&#13;
of religion lighting against power. A )&#13;
dragon flouting about in die clouds j&#13;
means success in life. • Tori, the cock.&#13;
perched upon a drum, signifies good&#13;
government. Both the Greeks and the&#13;
Japs use the butterfly to symbolize Immortality.&#13;
wastes in the bowels&#13;
potion*. You make&#13;
tern—the blood—a&#13;
of a fountain of&#13;
tainted vitality.&#13;
itip&amp;tion a r e&#13;
nearly always&#13;
with v i t a l&#13;
8e«k your&#13;
^ a t u r e l&#13;
« n tie. natural&#13;
Be sure not to'&#13;
orowd the deli&#13;
She i t o m a c h ! , te r ».f powerful&#13;
Inee! Ypur safety&#13;
•Jways secured—If you&#13;
Laxcts&#13;
pollutes, irritates and&#13;
the circulatory sys^'&#13;
scavenger instead&#13;
purest life and un-&#13;
The ills of con-1&#13;
not trifling but!&#13;
are fraught;&#13;
•iguificaaoe. •&#13;
r e l i e f l a&#13;
Accept -the 1&#13;
aidof Lax-eta!&#13;
f o r o e a n d&#13;
c a t e organs of&#13;
AToid all the danand&#13;
unknown medand&#13;
your health are&#13;
'take Lax-eta. T h e&#13;
formula is on every bo*^—show it to yonr f amflr&#13;
physician. La^-ets are put Up in a flat metal&#13;
e u e In handy tablet form—one taSlet taken before&#13;
meals or on retiring alwaya brings relief,&#13;
rleaslng to take—the most potent yet gentle of&#13;
all remedies—a genuine help of Nature's—•&#13;
bowel l&amp;xatiTe which cures constipation. Ee©»&#13;
eommended and for sale by&#13;
"ALL DEALERS."&#13;
Kodct L spepsia Cure&#13;
Di -e^ 3 v eiat you e a t .&#13;
CUBES&#13;
RHEUMATISM&#13;
LUHBIBO, SCIATICA&#13;
NEURALGIA and&#13;
KIDNEY TROUBLE&#13;
. "S-MOPS" t iken internally, rids the blood&#13;
I of the poisonous matter and acids which |&#13;
are the direct causes of these diseases-&#13;
Applied externally it affords almost instant&#13;
relief from pain, while a permanent 1 cure is being effected by porifyifg the&#13;
blood, dissolving, the poisonous sabstance&#13;
and removing it from the system-&#13;
DR. &amp; D. BLAND&#13;
Of BreWton, Gew, write*!&#13;
"I bad bMn a iuffer*r for » a m b e r of y t a n I&#13;
with Lombkgo and Rbeomattan la my arms&#13;
andU«,andtr1«daU tharMnadlea that Ieoald&#13;
gather froa Bt*tUe*l were*. &lt;bd alsoeonralUd&#13;
with a number of the beat phjralelana, bot found&#13;
coCfeMar &lt;•** • * • • eke r*U«f obtalaod from&#13;
••t-DaoPB." I ahall preewlban 1a s v M S U e e&#13;
for rbeumatiam and kladnd dhMaaea" FREE If yon are suffering w i t h Rheumatism, j&#13;
Neuralgia, K i d r e y T r o r S l e " anv kin-&#13;
. 1 T! d l s n s e . **r te to ns »r t *(al bottle&#13;
of ft-DROPS/' a n d t e s t ,1 yoorself.&#13;
"5-DROPS** can b e used any length of&#13;
t i m e without acquiring a "drug habit."&#13;
a s it is entirely free of o p i u m , cocfcir.e.&#13;
alcohol, laudanum, and o t h e r similar&#13;
Ingredients. "&gt;&#13;
Large BUe Bottle, " * - » B » P » " (SOS Be«M)&#13;
S l . e e . For 6al« by Irra«gUU.&#13;
IWAISON WEBlATfC 1011 BOHPAIT, &gt;&#13;
Oo»t. S». » &lt; • L«ke S l m t , Cktoagav&#13;
T h o n a h t f a l&#13;
"Are you sure the s i c i man wanted j&#13;
me?" asked the physician\reaching for !&#13;
his hat.&#13;
"He didn't mention your name, but&#13;
he's screamin' for some oue that'll put&#13;
him out of. his misery, and I thought&#13;
of you right a^ ay."—Houston Post.&#13;
T h e E v i l o f n G o o d ! V a m e .&#13;
"Mammy. ' said Pickaninny Jim,&#13;
"why didn't you name me George&#13;
Washington?" "Sonny," w a s the answer.&#13;
"I isn' gwine to name no mo'&#13;
r-billeii (iedr^a Wastiington. As soon.as&#13;
dey hyahs dat story "bout not bein' able&#13;
to tell a lie dey 'pears to git curious to&#13;
find out whether it's so or not. an' dey&#13;
8tahts*iu speiimentiu' as soon as dey&#13;
kin talk."—Washington Star.&#13;
W h e n two strong men c o m e to&#13;
blows, even i! they are well matched,&#13;
it H not a plea:&gt;ini? sight, but it" the&#13;
man who ^ets the worst of it wii! usr«&#13;
DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve, he will&#13;
look beHei* and teel better in short&#13;
order. Be sure y o u &gt;;et D e W i t t ' s .&#13;
Good for e v e r y t h i n g a -alve i&gt; used&#13;
tor, i n c l o d i n ^ piles.&#13;
Sold by F. A- Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
S&#13;
T w o E p o p h i ,&#13;
In the Honeymoon—Let me sit by&#13;
you, darling, while you pour the tea. I&#13;
love to watch your white hands toying&#13;
with the cups.&#13;
Next Season—What does the maid&#13;
j mean by not putting another leaf in the&#13;
• table? We might as well be sitting in&#13;
leach other's lap. etc.—Detroit Free&#13;
I Press.&#13;
If all dyspepsia sufferers knew that ) * ° R*porni©n T i c k e t .&#13;
Dr. Shoop's Restorative would do for! B e e n a w a y - L e t me see! About N o&#13;
.. r. ,-, ,, , I good son—when I left he wag going&#13;
t h e m . Dyspep-ia would practically bel f r o m l ) f l d t 0 w o r s e n n ( i _ e t f l l d h o m e -&#13;
a disease ot the past. Dr. Shoop's He- f.lt subsequently developed that he had j&#13;
storative reaches stomach troubles hv ' no retmn roupon.—Puck.&#13;
its direct ionic action upon the inside \ —————— j&#13;
. . . . . Fancv requires much, neceaaity but I&#13;
nerves—the true stomaeh - ^ - - - i -» i&#13;
l a t e o f M i c h i g a n , County of Livin^st.-n,&#13;
s* PrnbatH C'mirt for aaiii r-mnty. Ksta!-1 of&#13;
irKuRt.K H. Br.Ti.KR, •It'wa.Hed.&#13;
The nn&lt;ler-i;.'nea itariai; t&gt;f^ti n;&gt;pointe&lt;l, hy&#13;
Jii'lgeof rrnbnif lit -:iiil cmaty,t-iuiiuiissioneTS on&#13;
claim*'in the inatti-r &gt;&gt;( *aki e-itatt?, anil four m&lt; mtha&#13;
fn»m the ^ t h day of Septemt&gt;»r, A. U. l**i having&#13;
t««vn allowed by »ai&lt;l Judge of Probate ti&gt; all |xrsons&#13;
holding c l a i x s against saiil estate in whirh. to&#13;
present their claims to us for examination and&#13;
adjustment,&#13;
Not.ce is hereby g-iveti that we will meet on the&#13;
*«Mth day of November, A. n. 1*»«, and on the J.ith&#13;
•lay of January, a. r&gt;. 10J7, ;it tea oVlcx-k .i. m of&#13;
earli day at the resideoi-e of the late (ieor^e H.&#13;
Rutler in thetown-ldpof Hamburg in sai 1 conntr,&#13;
to receive and examine jnch claim*&#13;
Dated: Howell. Mich. N&gt;|I['SHII)IT Jlth. .¾. r&gt;. l'&gt;&gt;&gt;&#13;
K. (.'. I n s l e e 1&#13;
C'ommi«*ioneri on Claims&#13;
t -II ASner Batler I&#13;
6 0 YEARS'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
nerve?&#13;
Stomach distress or weakness, fullness !&#13;
little.—tJerman l*rc»verb.&#13;
bloating, belching, etc. Call for Ihe Well Worth T r y i n g .&#13;
Kestorative. We recommend and sell ' W. H. Hrown, the popular pension&#13;
Dr. Shoop's Restorative. All Dealers- , attorney, of Pittsheld, Vt., says*&#13;
!'*Next to a pension, the best thing to&#13;
Low Rate* West fia ! » e t i s D r - King's N e w Life Pills." H e&#13;
Chicago Great Western Railway ! writes: "they keep my family in splen- j&#13;
For lowest t i l e s to all points west j health." Quick cure for Headache,&#13;
w r i t e to F. R. Mosier, D. P. A , 103: Constipation and li.lioo-ness. 25c.&#13;
A d a m s St., Chicago. III., b a t i n g liow ( i n a i a n t e e d at F. A. S i g l e r s d r n g&#13;
m a n y in party and when going, t 38 store.&#13;
TRADC M A M t&#13;
DCSIONS&#13;
CorvmoHTft Ac.&#13;
Anyone aendfRg a aketcb and d«MrlpCk&gt;n may&#13;
qnlcklr ascartain oar opinion fras wbattaer an&#13;
Invention is probably patentable. Cofnmontcat•&#13;
ieonMt aftrretec.t l(yXodrraoafti daeanetoUcOy . fHoArNaDeBeOnOrKrn gopn etPcantteeo. tt&#13;
P a t e n u taken tbrtnich Mann 4 Co. recetve wpttial nottu, witboat chanre. In tbe Sckniifk HnerfOki&#13;
' I 5&gt;v.i&gt;tc ^ C Sweet to Eit&#13;
L l l A " v l 3 O ACaaiyMwdUiatf?&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
DIgtcte w h a t ymt mmU&#13;
A handsomely iltoetrated weekly. Lanrast «*r-&#13;
mlatkm of any aeienttse VwraaL Terms, (a a&#13;
year: f o u r m o n t b s , | L BoMbyaO newadealera. MUNNaCo^*~^ New York&#13;
Brancn OOea, m F 8t, Washington. D.C.&#13;
DnWHf • TESt 8alv«&#13;
THE ONLY PRACTICAL Stencil Dish&#13;
ft 1» (•ompar-t, &lt;&gt;i\n be ear ed pr»-il^, nn-l an&lt;"&#13;
:h- uper.uor tu gaujee the u^uuiny ot ink deai'&#13;
SAVES TIME. SAVE8 INK.&#13;
K-^ens brn&gt;hesnnd ihk where yon want them,and&#13;
.-a.vay* K i l A U i : F O B t N S T . V N T I S K .&#13;
A perfect com bjnat ion U obtained when&#13;
WHITE'S WITERPROOF STENCIL III&#13;
• - '.. 't •* easily applitti and seta quickly. Xo&#13;
:.-"".S BRUSHES. SAttS STWCIL8, SAVES TIME.&#13;
* n-.:. hr\ntpn t&gt;n»rt« or Hoe «t«"nrita, Horrt&#13;
our v»o;.l lur ii, T K S T I T . Ja*le only by&#13;
S. A. WHITE CO..&#13;
Vi High S t . , B o s t o n , M a s s . U . S . A .&#13;
DR. PIERCE'S Malted Cocoa The Cocoa with&#13;
a Delicate Flavor&#13;
M vi.TF.:&gt;CoC'&gt;Ais p r e p a r e d b y e c i e s j t i f c .&#13;
a l l y c o i n 1 d n i i i ^ t h v c u r o a o f t h e c h q i c ^ p *&#13;
c o c o a b e a n a n d t h e bt r-t c f r n a i c 1 »&#13;
znalt a i d i n g di^L-^rion, a n d t h e f a t o € t a »&#13;
1-1:.-.ia h a v i n g bt - n p r t d i g e s t e d , t h e&#13;
f u e l i n g of hc-axint-ss e x p e r i e n c e d a f t e r&#13;
d r i n k i n g t h e o r d i n a r y c o c o a s i s a v o i d e d ;&#13;
t h u s a m o s t d e l i c i o u s e&lt;\d n o u r i s h i n g&#13;
b . v - c i a g e i s p r o ^ . ^ c c d , v h i c h I s &gt;&#13;
f e r t l y p u r e ar^d w i l l n o t d i s t r e s s t h e&#13;
HKibt d c l k a t c s t o m a c h .&#13;
}-&gt;&gt;r itiie by your dealer*&#13;
KERR'S&#13;
Malted Extract&#13;
OF TOMATO One teatrpnonral to. a ctrp of boflin*; water&#13;
m a k e s a delicious Bouillon.&#13;
For sale by your dealer. Prepared by&#13;
WILLIAM B. KERR,&#13;
Medford, Boston, Mass* I&#13;
The Dispatch Job Department&#13;
Can do your Printing&#13;
on short notice and in&#13;
a workmanlike manner&#13;
F . U. A N D S E W S &amp; CO&#13;
I&#13;
BUY THE FAMOUS Steel Range!&#13;
TIE BEST! £&#13;
COSTS NO MORE THAN AN UNKNOWN MAKE.&#13;
Before you buy that range or cook stove,&#13;
write us, and we will mail you a copy of&#13;
" **-*—-^- s^.mm l a — . . a. • . • . - 99&#13;
It is free for the asking. Fad of useful inform,&#13;
ation.&#13;
THE U1C0LI STQIE t W i £ CeMPUT, Fnttt, ttir&#13;
• &lt; &gt; • ,&#13;
• " - ' . / . ;&#13;
A batb cleanses tbe skin and rids&#13;
t h e pores of ret use. A bath makes fur&#13;
bette^fellowsbtp aud citizen»bip. Not&#13;
oaly sbould tLe otits.ide ol riie I ply he&#13;
cleansed, hut Occasional USH d a iaxative&#13;
or cartbaitic 0[&gt;«ns (lie bowels&#13;
and clears the system u&lt; f-rt*jte matter.&#13;
Best tor this are Ue Witt's Ls*t H Early&#13;
Risers. Plea.-anr littU- pit s r!i;t' &lt;:&lt;&gt;&#13;
n o t ju'fij e &lt;-r •kel.-.-n&#13;
Sold by 7. A. SLgler, Drngglft.&#13;
X&#13;
W h y TT»ejrt F r e n c h .&#13;
The dlstinetion between a good&#13;
preacher aud a bad preticher has not&#13;
changed much siiu-e Arehidsbop&#13;
VVbately declared that "a good preacher&#13;
preached because he had something&#13;
to say and a bad preacher tx»-&#13;
eatis--* he had to »ay something."&#13;
A n o t h e r It e j e c t i o n .&#13;
I ' o e t c s s - I v.' )t &lt;;uit-t l:i-t ixi^ht w i t h&#13;
t h e e d l t o " Wlio r e j e c t s .ill iiiy vei'iio*.&#13;
F r i e a d — "vSli.il &lt;k». y o u d o : l'oeL*;»&gt;&#13;
I r e j e c t e d tits -on. L o n d o n . T i t - I t J t t .&#13;
«OrUmfe» O r i a a t a l * .&#13;
Knowledge of direction seems to be&#13;
Instinctive with the Burmans, says the&#13;
author of "A People at School." They&#13;
always reckon by the needle, not by&#13;
relative position. They do not say&#13;
"Turn to the right." but "Turn to the&#13;
west." If a table In a room has two&#13;
tumblers on It, one of them will be the&#13;
east tumider. the other the west, au\&#13;
the table Itself will be not the "table&#13;
near the window," but the "table in tic;&#13;
east of the room." So they speak of&#13;
the north or south side of a street or&#13;
of a tree, not the shady or sunny side&#13;
Even in rniu or mist they know tbe&#13;
direction at once. An Knglish traveler,&#13;
walking in the EJurman forest on u&#13;
B o t h S n a p l e t o u a .&#13;
Baron Hubiu-r went one evening to&#13;
call upon President Thiers, who was&#13;
then a t the bead of the French republic.&#13;
The baron found the door of the bouse&#13;
open and walked upstairs. In the dim&#13;
light a man crept stealthily toward&#13;
him. Knowing that the president went&#13;
In fear of ids life and, unwilling to&#13;
die a martyr in a cause not his own&#13;
the barou hurriedly explained, "I am&#13;
not M. Thiers." -I know that you are&#13;
not M. Thiers," answered the mysterious&#13;
stranger, "but 1 want t'&gt; know w!r&gt;&#13;
you are." lie fore 'answering the km-ou&#13;
insisted upon knowing the identity &gt;&gt;(&#13;
his conjpanh'U. "Oh. I am M. Thiers&#13;
butler," was the answer. Hubner d-&gt;&#13;
T H E M A S T E R S P E C I A L I S T S O F A M E R I C A&#13;
Wo know the di:-A.a»«-s and weaknesses of men like u:i open book.&#13;
W e ' h a v e been curing them for "') years. We have giv» n &lt;e;r li\ es to&#13;
it, and thousands upon thousands &lt;&gt;f men restored to Vigorous Vitality&#13;
are to'3}' ik. in-.' n&lt;-" rt imerits to t.ie skill, knowledge a.:;!'!•:':&lt;•&lt;-,•,.-- of&#13;
' Drs. Kf.;tudy tc. K"r:' n. '*."..• i: .'-r IK hi ty:t l'ak e. k k . .';.. . ••-•r&#13;
undertAko a &lt;-..•:&lt;: &gt;.rc • '..•AZ: ,t c •;• :. We-hn've mad.- so tk^.ro./:;, ;•. -Tiidy&#13;
of all the &lt;ks ..:•&gt; s &lt;,\" 1. a— 1' Varicocele, Stricture, Blocj poisons,&#13;
Hydrocele, Nervous Debility, Para'ysis. Bladder. Urktairy : n :. Kid-iey&#13;
Diseases, General V.-'ec.^ess, L.GO of Vitality, aud h:-v-e•&lt; UIY 1 .-&lt;&gt; i-ti.-iiv&#13;
tfcousanils of cases thrtt If tk*rc is a cure for YOI'H ik:-:. •.• you&#13;
'will find it here. Wk ri-v.e u^.d':r -ike a c^se there is no s'Hh thing.&#13;
as failure. We c h ^ s e r.cth,:-.._, f:r consultation a : i &lt;.••.• • ••' -.-1 !'••-\&#13;
ski!! ar.d e\y,erk rv • .'' •" ••• : * :.•.•?•.'••••• •.','.• ", kl -.•.'..: ;- e. ' -i&#13;
How and V/hy VVc " ' 1 Cu:? Yet,. \ ; :• ' k e - i s - : v ^ &lt;-i - • .: '• y'.'-..&#13;
the k:iu.;.! !• • • .... ;;• .:: M" :' -.-^ . .-iv- f ;.-••; v. \.' . -k; .: k'&#13;
expcTimenr \,-irh. yr-tu- .-.---1 . ..-.- kn.'v from &gt;•; •:.-•.-- • •• '. . .;&gt; •&#13;
thou, '^nds ,-. f cv -&gt;•-- »•:•:':,-•?';•' -•'••••• ,-,,- •-.-• -'V- f&lt; &gt;r y :•'-••-: • / - . . . . !.•;.:;&#13;
he di -c-o1;!•!'-*-• i it '''cu ii'^v. • 1 r- *-: e,i • i k. •- r :•-•( 1-. • •; ';, ' v: k • ; ' 'kv.,&#13;
Elccrric- T: :r.-, r..e-. kv:--:-. -• %'--i i v •'' .; ••••'•.• •&lt;-•-'•. • •-•• &gt;rs&#13;
ak)Ui' caii ft. (••"• y . :. Our Mew Method S'/steni ••! y •&gt; J;"-. ^.-'•••:- ; . :-.^.(.-,1&#13;
tho t^sl for 21 Vf-'^c:— wh:- :!-ouk! k t'-k-in , '.' ( •- . '-r--.: •••-''.'•• -;r&#13;
case provo inc-urak-o ycu r-:": r ' y p?y .,s a '.:'''r:.v V/ - r&lt; k'-r ;.-i.i to&#13;
ar.v 'Haikc in Tk:.;.c:*T* v." to oMr fi^n.n''-k'd : t^noiiyr. I/ you cariuoi call&#13;
y-rite for a Gjestion Blank for Home Treatment, Consultation Free.&#13;
Booklets r,-jnt F/ee.&#13;
D R &amp; K E N N E D Y &amp; K E H G A N&#13;
148 SHELBY STREET, DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
foggy morning to find all trace of the c i a m l himself. ••Ah." said the butler.&#13;
road wiped out by rain and every ap j w i t h - a s i ? ,h &lt;tf r,.Uef, "1 h n w your&#13;
parent means of ascertaining direc- j n a r i j e first u ; i t l u . 1Lst o f VjS-t*jrs."&#13;
tion gone, was at a loss what to d &gt;, , E a c h h a d { ; t k ,.n l n e o t h r . r for s i n - a s&#13;
but his Hurinan servants knew at y a ^ i n&#13;
once. "That is north," they said, point- ;&#13;
ing, "and that is east. Our course lies • - - - —&#13;
between." and straight to the northeast&#13;
they marched unerringly.&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach No appetite, loss of stotogth, i&#13;
MSS, headache, constipation, bad breath*&#13;
general debility, sour risings, and catanil&#13;
of the stomach are all doe to lodlgestiosh&#13;
Kodol cures indigestion. This new discovery&#13;
represents the natural Juices of digea*&#13;
Hen a t tbey exist In a healthy steottcs*&#13;
combined with the greatest known toast&#13;
and reconstructive properties* Kodol pys&gt;&#13;
pepsia Cure does not only cure ladlgestio*&#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 slemaoh.&#13;
Mr. S. S. Ball, of RaTenswood. W, Va., a*y«—&#13;
" I was troubled wttk sour atomaeh for twenty r*«ra&gt;&#13;
Kodol cured me end we are now uaine it la aaAt&#13;
for baby."&#13;
Kodol Mgests W h a t Y o o Bat.&#13;
Bottles only. $1.00 Stee hotdtnt 2¼ tiroes thetrts]&#13;
size, which sells for 50 cents.&#13;
areoered by E. a OeWITT * OO., OHIOAOa&#13;
Sold by P. A. Sigler, Drugglat&#13;
AP'K for t h e IU0*) K o d o l a l m a n a c&#13;
, 1 , ,&#13;
•To Cure a Felon"&#13;
&gt;ay&gt;- Sam K^ndail, ot Philiipnburg, | HlK[ v&gt;()i) CKICIKIUI-.&#13;
Kan., "ju-T cover it over with l i u t k - ; »&lt;&#13;
Iwn'.s Arnica -Saive and th- ?alve wilij _.., r .Jtli*lUVlgT£R;Su , - •• - do the ie,t Quicke t ure tor BumS Rocky MounfaiiiTeaNiiggets&#13;
Bail?, .Sore.-, Soalds, Wounds, E*Lle«,&#13;
i&#13;
A B-^y Medicine for B^sy People.&#13;
Sr'r.25 Golden Health and Renewed Vi?or.&#13;
A *\»-ri?c- for f'or.^tii.ik'Jon. 1::,1 i?^&lt;ti,&gt;n. T.iver&#13;
and Kidney \vou:&gt;;&gt;.-&lt;_. Piimufs. F.czrma. Impure&#13;
.\;&#13;
S t a m m e r t o Y o a r i e U .&#13;
To the many correspondents who&#13;
f«ave written impuiries and suggestions&#13;
as to a cure for stammering we may&#13;
state that th'is is not a medical bu- j K( j Z ema, Salt Rheum, Chapped Hand-,&#13;
« * u - T h i s w ^ i t e ; - a v e L i s o :::u .m e t h :..i ^ore,Feet and Sore Eve.. Only od of curing his own particular nerv- -- • , - • •-. •* ., 2 5 a , .:- -i«n w TH. XV &gt;v\H »^'-Z^V^s k-^'h^ - ^ M -l^i rnm sr ^TK^i-in. ^ tb^he -&#13;
ous disorder, which 1» probably | at F. A. birfler* drug = tote. Guaranteed aui 1 ¾ ^ . i . ; - ) : ^ . : ^ ^ ^&#13;
shared by many of his fellow men. Let&#13;
1% be repeated iu answer-to many .who&#13;
seem to have seen the problem and&#13;
missed the solution. Consume your ; ?{.-KUiiisi. KVK*^ racasDi-, «on.&gt;i.:.„ •-•-.&#13;
own smoke. If you must stammer, try j F R A N K . L_. A N u R E W S 60 C O .&#13;
to stammer to yourself. When you : £.;:TOBS s»: PROPH,ETOR6.&#13;
have tut-tutted and gur-gurred surti- | a . ,av.ni&gt;u,)a r n , ; e 51 iQ Ajvance&#13;
cieutly to yourself, yuii will be ready j ._-._-.-.-—-.-—^—•-&#13;
with the word. It is ouite astoiiishinj; l ia^rea *i iL-i ^ . ^ . u ^ e d t i'iac»^;y, jlichiii:&#13;
U..--.V -sj-m the inaudible sTau.mer be 1 •me^HM-an* •JXM'-H&#13;
. i i l i ^ r a t e r U i d i ; ICEl'.JWa OH . t ; , p . i C - i t I o I&#13;
ilhc t'mvbiuii gi^paun GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPLE&#13;
i ;• r c a a O.Liic-e&#13;
cou;e.s unue-'-js.---. !-y a:.,. 1. :&gt;&#13;
whipped out! But there ar •&#13;
BIGGLE A F a r m Library&#13;
of unequalled value.&#13;
P r a c t i c a l , Up to&#13;
date, Concise and&#13;
Comprehensive.&#13;
1 Handsomely Printed sad&#13;
Beaatifolly IlluitraUd.&#13;
BY JACOB BIGGLE BOOKS&#13;
No. 1-BICKiLE HORSE BOOK&#13;
All about Horses—a Co:v.inon-si-n&gt;f Trt-ntise, w t t r i . ' m o n&#13;
than 71 illustrations ; a st.tmlaril w o i k . I'rin.-, -A) Cents.&#13;
No. 2—BIGGLE BERRY BOOK&#13;
AH about growing Small Fruit1- —read and learn how.&#13;
Beautiful colored platt-s. Price, .'*J Cents.&#13;
No. 3-BIGGLB POULTRY BOOK&#13;
All alxjut Poultry': t'ir&gt; *-'fc5t ^ -:'-'o&gt; f'• '"• i" existence;&#13;
tells eveaythtfig. Profusely illustrated. l i n e , 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 4 - B I Q G L E COW BOOK&#13;
All ahoj.t 1'iwi and tiic L':iir&gt; r.Csiness; T:«L\V edition.&#13;
Cn!,'&gt;rei! plates. S, ,nnd Common -sense. P r t ^ t , 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 5-BIGGLE SWINE BOOK&#13;
All ab,,ut MORS—Breeding, F e e d i n g , Put.-hery, D i ; r a s e » ,&#13;
etc. .1 'livers the whole ground. Price, I*) Cents.&#13;
No. 6-BIGGLE HEALTH BOOK&#13;
G i \ e - t«»nedii'S arid up-to-date informatiwii. A household&#13;
i-.t.-, L—!'.vl l l v t r e m e b pra, t;c:d.. Price, oO Cents.&#13;
No. 7-BIGGLE PET BOOK&#13;
For the IKAS and &lt;ii-y 5 art;. r.'.&lt;: ',\ -. ' ^ets of all k i n d s and&#13;
how to , are for them. Price, ."^t Cents.&#13;
No. 8—BIGGLE SHEEP BOOK&#13;
CiAi-rs tlu- w h l e - .&lt;r, •••; nH. Fver&lt; f&gt;at»e f'-.ll of ffi-^od ad*&#13;
•\ice. Sheep men praise "it. P^ce, ,'K Cei.t^. Farm Journal&#13;
.vor.l is&#13;
.:,e men&#13;
who hui; ;i stammer—stan.menhir always&#13;
in the ri.irhf place—ki'^iui,' curiosity&#13;
to tiptoe in 'the. listener. Chark--&#13;
Lamk stamn.ered. but always in tieriu'ht&#13;
place, us whe.i ke we-.it ia buy&#13;
cki-es • {.the story may be qikte iminieo&#13;
The shop'.'-ian offered to send it home.&#13;
Lamb inspe-.-U'i it. Them he a-ked for&#13;
a kit "'' "-irkau-. "I thi'ik." he saiU.. "I&#13;
could 1-1-1-l-ead it home." — London&#13;
Spectator.&#13;
. i . i i&#13;
D i d n ' t W a l t .&#13;
-•Were you frighten &gt;^d when you&#13;
arose to make your first speech?"&#13;
"What should frighten me?" "The&#13;
nndience." "The audience left as soon&#13;
as civ name wa* nnnouneed."&#13;
I Budinese Caraa, §4.00 per year.&#13;
• J'eath and Laarrm^e noticee yiiDliaa'ea !re«?.&#13;
j Anaounceuieiito jf eutertrtiaments may be ^ait&#13;
j' tor, a riesired, &lt;&gt;y ,,r -centin^: 111-- uttice wita tic 1»&#13;
i ,.ti'ut .*omission. i i ,.ase iiciets ar&gt;. _ot r - ; ; . . i&#13;
. to itic ol^ct, ."Bii-.jr r at ei-,1-,11 ue ,...ir .&gt; ..&#13;
Aii matte] it. i oc ai 110 tie ec oit: tail ^rti; r&gt; e ca A .-.&#13;
; ed. nt 3 ceint* per iint- or fraction tuereof, :&gt;.«•£»,;.&#13;
inet-rtion . Wuere ti' ' luit? :H Jpecitif!f., all n-.";,..;-&#13;
• &gt;viU 'ein-ierteo .;ntil Jratr-:C iiac'/ntin^^o, s;.',&#13;
• wui-bdcnikr^^cl :or» cordinu'ij. iJBT-KV. -. -.int&gt;.. 1 of aiiTerti-ittuiente ML's f reacL tais u £ t - a.-t e^ri;,&#13;
; aa 'i'uEaDAV moraia^ to ia»ure a a i c j ^ n i J a ';;.-&#13;
, 1 -%^+v v.- ee i .&#13;
; y ; i ? *tti.\ii.\ G :&#13;
i in all its branches, d specialty. We havfeailkiac"'&#13;
, and the iateot style- oi type, ete., waich **uao\s&#13;
..- 10 execute A'A tinds or worn, sucn a^ Booke,&#13;
Pampieta, Posters. Pro^rauimes. Bil. Heads, Nott&#13;
' Heads, atateuaents, Cards, A'ictiou Hi."*, e t o . i r&#13;
! su^erier styles, upon tut shortest notice i'ricesa* FRANK BAY,&#13;
low aa good work can i&gt;e aone.&#13;
ALL l i l L L d P A Y A B L E f l K ^ T UK E V E H Y V o N T b&#13;
ERiM^?.QIJ.VT.X?&#13;
Tr;i hi- ie;tve Soil! li • .y- &gt; 1- .•&#13;
F o r 1».--/01- :tnd h k - ; .&#13;
i - -. iS :•. in.. - . i'-.' [ m . ^ i'&#13;
r' •:&#13;
F -r&#13;
/ • o l d R y&#13;
: - ' i 1. : 1 1 . ,&#13;
. i ^ ' k i . ' . u :i:&#13;
N -nil urn! \\h---,&#13;
•' ft. m . , . ' &gt; : ! ' p . a i .&#13;
,.v 1. iiy,&#13;
For IV'-.! ;v:&#13;
k 1 : ! ^ ;i. rn,&#13;
Agen", s.&#13;
&lt; -Ifl&#13;
• &gt; . i o&#13;
i l l . ,&#13;
]&gt;. m . ,&#13;
H. ? . M O E L L K H ,&#13;
'&lt;. P. A.. LVt?&#13;
Td£ VILLAar JuiLoi'jA^&#13;
A H n p e h - s n C n « e .&#13;
•I ;vm in favor of spellini: reform.'&#13;
V I L L A G E QFFiCERb&#13;
PuC-ODENT E li. ilr.)W:&#13;
Kraml T r n o k Railway Syst&lt; m..&#13;
K a - ' p o i n d f - " m T .[.,•• n f v&#13;
N o ' - J ^ P&lt;t?!&gt;-*njer K x *».:., a r , a:j-&gt; .'• , '•&gt;:&#13;
&gt;'&gt;. •/'P.fst.Mie-T K.^. *•;•:, !-.y.&#13;
W . a r B.-:m'.l f r o m&#13;
N o , .1^ PA«-&gt;rT._r'*r . K J . S ' .&#13;
'Glad to hear it. Come around and ' u ^ a s s K. *n Fine . i i i i e ? c t i e .&#13;
irive my -steuoL-'i'tfither a few points,&#13;
won't yon?'*—Philadelphia Leduvr.&#13;
J t l l U - ^ S l l K t l i ,&#13;
F ^ r a a:ii.&#13;
!Ui-r\&#13;
J&#13;
1 !!&#13;
kttle&#13;
A e&#13;
is vrrnr pip-T. made f&gt;r vr&gt;\: n-il n.ot a r-i^t't It i- '2$ \'ears&#13;
o!.!; it is the srciu hr&gt;i!rd ••!&lt; m rv l-.itthe-i.ae i-.-the-head,&#13;
Hait-aftcr-c. .11 ha\ e-.aM-it -[-'a-:-&gt;i .i:;-! }{• .;;^;-. '.! ; ; - : y in the&#13;
world—the le^iTc/ paper -•' i:&lt; - i ' e i-i the t':i: '., J . States of&#13;
America—havintr more thre; T h r e e Million re»jr.!.ir leaders.&#13;
Any ONE of t h e BIOGLR BOOK?, and the FARM&#13;
JOURNAL 5 YEARS 'remreader of p.xv,. :!;,d n-' ,,t l^XLPJOS,&#13;
191)9 and ltHOI, sent hv mail to any addres- t',»r A HOLLAR BILL. V$&#13;
Sample of PARM JOURNAL and circular d « - - •-..* Klin-.i.t. IsoOKS, r r « .&#13;
W l # &gt; l E R \ T K I \ S O X C O . .&#13;
P r R L ! * H E R S O F F . \ H ^ • . . ' a ,&lt;N'.vI. I ' : l ! ! . \ -111.-..&#13;
!T&#13;
%In thes- -iav-&#13;
•r ur'e^v i\ &lt;ob n ;--i J&#13;
i m d , ;)f ii mek :;u-ii • f&#13;
' U; riLr- a:'- &lt;! &gt;V.K lo&#13;
I' if her vein.iia und &lt;ne.&#13;
•-u i n - 1 ; ; .in i ';*•&lt; ;&gt;;-;.&#13;
;;• iv fail-5 u- --&gt; ; \i a&#13;
'." ' A ' l » • 111 M ; e l ' \ e , . . o&#13;
1 . ,r i'e -i &gt;-•* of iCo ho&#13;
[ 11; '^r *- - * -. . v . if V'V,i&#13;
-' -oil .vki n:ir'; ir. -li i#p •&#13;
Sold ky F. A. Sigler DrugriiL&#13;
T H E O R I G 1 N A L L A X A T J V E COUGH SVRUF&#13;
KENNEDY'S LAXATIVE HONEMAR&#13;
'.id Ckver ..'.•-.:.-. •- i ' .-- . ?;::. C2 Every ioltle.&#13;
f ru-l^ ar. d&#13;
• •i e;. r t - n .&#13;
' vir ,;fe&#13;
ti-nd 'li,&#13;
A h a ^ . v&#13;
: , u i f !]•-1 i&#13;
rinaneiai y-&gt;-.&#13;
:,-(n ;- t !&gt;• ^ n e&#13;
•-r. kii- «yr ey&#13;
:.T I&gt;y*[ ej.-ia.&#13;
it -anu 1 !ii- \ 1 ur&#13;
Wi.i K e n n e d y &gt; r ,&#13;
S. J . i y e ^ l e . Fa'.&#13;
cJLEiiii P«i'oc* C'arr&#13;
riiMA-&gt;Liir:ii .M^riou I. K f j * , m&#13;
. \ 5 - . - 7 , : ; i&gt;. A . : &gt; i u r t 4&#13;
&gt;Ti;t.:-.7 • I--4.H! . - l u S K i t W . A. N i x u a&#13;
ii &amp; A L 1 Li u ? F u t; a -J r . b . r-. •? 1 *.'ie i&#13;
A l T e , : N t. Y ).' , .^ . L'.ilT&#13;
M A Hall ALL ^ L.. M rwi.&#13;
C H U R C H L . 5 .&#13;
k J t. i t j 0 u : ^ r&#13;
• C , . k c .&#13;
1^V 1 »;• .'. u - ^ : 1 . ; . . „ .1 .&#13;
, ...'.-..•_* 1, L. a . j -!'. o f . . - c i ' . i . c ; c&#13;
i l i j J . . • , : &gt; , i L e . e v e r y •»•; n&#13;
5. U l . J i » , i T i V t - r - L i e c t l L i 1 .;&#13;
"5-^1 ^ a V : e . u w . .* t . . U 31) e . .-.&#13;
. I . I S , - M . v h i &gt; A S I L L : , 1, ."» . .&#13;
W &gt; .1 1. .-. ' ' A .&#13;
e v r r U L L i . :&#13;
- .&lt;;' - i _ e&#13;
, e .- r .&#13;
• .&gt; A .1 c .&#13;
..wet&#13;
. e e 11L .&#13;
. i \ . ; \ -•&#13;
i c . ..u. .;&#13;
-• .t.C-j&#13;
A 1 : 1 0 1 . i - . - . - t i c iti.' a&#13;
, . j j i i a r r w . ' , i , l i » S t o r . ' ; e . r .&#13;
i..u »» . . l . u e a t e .^,. 1 &gt;• &gt;.&#13;
&gt;•.... -1-.-:1.. ^ i t .- . :..: j . L2 . C * e-.&#13;
- . , v esper 3 anu ."eceutc tiot, .st . .u&#13;
•Jawr*iffV'&gt;l 3^-.^.-1^^. ar 1^5&#13;
1 J C i t T i c S .&#13;
THE HESS FURNACE - -1&#13;
&lt; • ,&#13;
'US&#13;
is t h e b e s t t h i r . ^ w e&#13;
e v e r m a d e a n d w e ' v e&#13;
l&gt;een m a k i n g f u r n a c e s t h i r t y - t h r e e y e a r s . It i s 3 o ( l d 3 t e e l —&#13;
e v e r y j o i n t H%-eted. N e v e r leaks, l i a s l i n e d ca-dr.£. i k . k u&#13;
r e g u l a t i o n , e v a p o r a t i n g p a n , e t c . B u r n s a n y fuel e c o n o m -&#13;
ically. M a d e in six s i z e s ; p o w e r f u l a n d d u r a b l e .&#13;
WE SELL DIRECT TO CONSUMERS.&#13;
and save you dealers' profits. -end for full 40 Vasr° koo^&#13;
which fully describes our goods' and our m a k e r - t o - u s a r&#13;
method of sellinc". We can save you money in buying a,u&#13;
fuel in using. Your name on a postal card, please.&#13;
HESS WARMING &amp; VENTILATING COMPANY,&#13;
921 Tacoma Building, Chicago, Ills.&#13;
ihOUSv -A&#13;
J r ; •&#13;
* T D.tT.&#13;
IV.r A.-IL.'. rl. ? , c . e t y 0: t:ua piACe, '.n-te's -.-'&#13;
'.. ird &gt; .: ml A/ ..it lie Kr. Mitt tew rl.»li.&#13;
.J.jtia i'.u.uney ami &gt;l. 1". Kelly, y o a a ' y 0:.fj;.i&#13;
j ii ii \s . e . i . l. . meets tUe lirat Friuuv- .&#13;
X i:&gt;er,:hi;:v-A | , , ; ' . . : i n , . e : o m ^ u i i'r.&#13;
^.jjier. cvri-j, jiu-&#13;
^ e i i . l l A . .,^ . .O 11(-,1&#13;
Lt : A l e . r t e e , -••, re&#13;
: ^ U&#13;
11. F.&#13;
m i c r e ^ t e u in "miapermute i-i&#13;
Mr = . LI-A. M^'ler, 1'res; M : .&#13;
e t r v&#13;
if '• i • ir - -&#13;
••-0 „.» V i&#13;
~&gt;3&#13;
Nisi&#13;
$&#13;
FOR&#13;
5 ^&#13;
ma&#13;
\?T'j &gt; y&#13;
w-1'i s&#13;
l:i-if • . i&#13;
•A l i * . .&#13;
\ .. ^. yj • e '&#13;
&gt; L i L . . 1 •..,»_.&#13;
J u a ^ 1 •,&#13;
t ^ i i&#13;
.e, r rt. iu-.:&#13;
S u r ^ r j T »y-&#13;
T H S 0 . V :&#13;
L 2 S . o: M&#13;
-aa&#13;
Disease&#13;
- ^&#13;
I CUSTOM MADE&#13;
FLY SCREENS Our work is far superior to the usual output of local nulls, and has a &gt;tylo a*:/d&#13;
tudsh not old.ahuihio fron; the*: \\ ho &lt;\o Hot make n tpecialty of ^-cr,&lt;.e!.&gt;. SiaiA&#13;
us M/.es of doors and windows. VYe guarantee a tit.&#13;
For outride Screens we use the identical finish of the outside of rulknan Cars&#13;
The b&lt; st grade of Wire Cloth—enameled, galvanized genuine broiue, etc.,&#13;
fastened by tacka or by the ••loc.kstrip" process.&#13;
Intr-ruk'iLf purchasers may have, free bv- mail, samples of wood-*, finishes&#13;
a,id v .:-.•. i k i i l and. c o p y of i . e . &gt;•***:.• i j . k ^ e lint. Ai S eiii:ii'» in i n . m y cities.&#13;
&gt;[ieci.tl terms to contractors and build, rs.&#13;
T h ^ A. J . PHILLIPS COMPANY, Fenton, Michigan-&#13;
23 Yoswm' Experience. 3 1-2 Acre* mi F / o o r Smmce.&#13;
«. REVIYO&#13;
RESTORES VITALITY&#13;
K N i e i . i ' M ' r '.. A L y . - . Li.-. £. &gt; .&#13;
Met-'e.er^ frid»y *•-.eniae; e s &gt;: nt-tu.r&#13;
• I. t ! l r i; :"•'' . i t i ' . e i r ; I A 1 1 IU t h e S •'••»-; o . . ' a&#13;
Vieitin*:'»rotLerj ,i; • -r-Ualiv it.',-.ted.&#13;
i i . - - , . ' .\ &gt; i . : l i &gt; •; h : . 11 ' u L !;&#13;
r i v i a ^ ^ t e n l.od^e. N.-..&gt;;, ? A A. M. V.-:&#13;
1 j i'-iinuii:i:aaiikjii Y,i «••&gt;,* A- &gt; vt n; :u . on ,.; -&#13;
. . . r l ., i l J t h t UnlOll. r i V l r k V.kli'.V ir. n..- . \^&#13;
/ \ t ; t &gt; : ' . . . e-. r.A.-&gt;n.t.N S I'Ai: -n.-et-ea, :- a.-&#13;
V.' '•.- t r:,i:.y r-vvii. r. i t',d..'A ir\x -,':ir« :-.•_ , , .&#13;
A. A. M. iin'^f.ri.-. Mi.vN KTT.-i V i i , u s . 'A . M;&#13;
' - &lt; i - ? ^ * t * -«w&#13;
"Hade a&#13;
Well Man&#13;
of Me."&#13;
. e :l'&gt;e - L A . . .&#13;
:*.N A ,»(. •, &gt;&gt;| h'N Mee&#13;
- . . a . - y t .eh V,.!&gt;r h ; a&#13;
. . ' . n - i . r - \ . &gt;'&#13;
AL»U.&gt;e:i- i l l - . .'•! A&lt; CA lil\'£"&gt;. ,»c-a: --very&#13;
:«ini -r 1 &gt;.;t,ird.-iy ,'•: •... L uL.n.i r, :»;-Ja^i - u:&#13;
' ' . . . V, ..ta. '. -&gt;:' • ; -,&gt;ter-&gt; v .,r,.ii.\.. y&#13;
•a. [.;:. V I ' D S : A I Y , l.al v t'.n.i.&#13;
pr«Mln«TM t i n e r e - t i l l * hi ;t&lt;&gt; d a ) * . . It aers&#13;
p-- Acrf-inv u:id ivti.-l.lv. Cu:-e-. when . the. s fail.&#13;
\ «• in .- rr.-."''. cati ves?:r..i their ., ,-&gt;t mnidiee.l and&#13;
nil nte-1 -:^v rtvovrr f a i r v.uitlti'nl v:-nr hv . i : i - : v i \ o . IL ..-in-iviv mi,'. ,,11,-is r&lt;;-&#13;
.e ...&gt; N :;--.-,&lt;m&gt;.nes.s. L e s t V i t a l i t y . &gt;osn;tl&#13;
i lo•&lt;&gt;•-•. •&gt;-..'U . ^ L o s t P m v t ' r . Finiiiu* Memory,&#13;
(. . v ' l a . . - a ; M ' ; l M N . a u , l O i f e ^ S ,H' se If-.l hl&gt;-» o r&#13;
- • •'--• ••- -i I'ldi.-enviori. which Yinht&lt; one for&#13;
y - , &gt; ' - s a r ; i r ! : - ; l : ; r i - ; ; o r ,,;;••; e i l T O s&#13;
• •-. - -.-:-.,/a; the sour of d'&lt;easr.but is it creat&#13;
» " ' » ' t&lt;»n»e a u d M o o d b u i l d e r , hrin^insr&#13;
.a-,-li ' h e p i n k g l o w t o p a l e o h ^ e k a a m i r e -&#13;
storing the rtre o f y o n t n . It wurrls off ar&gt;-&#13;
proaohtnKdisen.ie. Insist on ha vine R F . V 1 V O ,&#13;
••- othor. It can i&gt;c oarriod in vest rxx-ket Hy&#13;
:•• e;i 4i.CH&gt; p^r piirki-re. or six for j&gt;,&gt;.(H&gt;. We&#13;
.. Ive free -A,:vii'e and .•etas.-l to nil v\ ho w,,h it,&#13;
with «u»rartt«*e. l-yonl.irs fr.-c. A.Mress '&#13;
U0YA4. MEOICINE CO., -Marina Bid9.. Chicago. III.&#13;
Sold by P. A. SlglerrDruggist. PINCKJTEY, MICIL&#13;
-ii i'&gt;", .-" 1 ' i i . l A ' V A i. 0 t.&#13;
I- 1.. Ari-lr«".v* »'• 1&#13;
\ Why Not Buy the Best?&#13;
f Good Housoktopers Use&#13;
P. H. IRISH'S&#13;
) Green Gross&#13;
I EXTRACTS&#13;
VANILLA AND LEMON&#13;
•. S ' O .&#13;
&lt;SUSlN£:i6 CARDS.&#13;
.•i v.. 0 .&#13;
rvoca -ineiiior,.^&#13;
.'oa-i law :M&gt;.&gt; ef&#13;
•&gt;r,y*ici»-i.j. .ind s-,ir/e r*&gt;. .\ii mlis pr..".ui &lt;&gt;&#13;
.1 tended n&gt;-):vy ,&gt;r i u , h t . Drfi,-- en-, Mmr. &lt;' eet&#13;
la ,1'kt.ey, \1 . ^ h .&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH SEAL&#13;
• AT DISPATCH OFFICE&#13;
"-hich comply with y&#13;
et'the Michigan pm&gt;.&#13;
ti'io niost' striagciu 1,1 th-j t-i\in:,ai&#13;
ar- W-'pt .it A uniform .standard of&#13;
h t r e . K - t h .&#13;
If VOTR «;HOC;:i . i - . e / L keen&#13;
the "OREKN CROrtd " brand, send&#13;
•^ cents A:I, 1 T will mail ro-i a fall 2 cu.&#13;
\ n,&gt; 'i-&gt; ,&gt;f virii'la or a -a:. t,,*&gt;oai.l.&#13;
Where 1: takes so Uttie, whv not&#13;
luiye tlie -t-st.&#13;
.'.-&gt;•_ )•&lt;. u;i l you will use n6 other.&#13;
&amp;.i:.j:..ctiea laii.iranteed.&#13;
Mt, CI&#13;
P. H. IRISH,&#13;
f a o t u r a r ,&#13;
emens, Mich&#13;
M * i r&#13;
*&#13;
jsssrzaokSSWsassEW &gt;••«%. v - ^ v&#13;
V*r T * * r&#13;
BRi&#13;
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(&#13;
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fe&#13;
^ • - • * • « &lt;&#13;
PERUNA PRAISED. BUST WRECKS Tfli&#13;
TONS OF D Y N A M I T I ' BLOWN UP&#13;
AT JELLICO, TENN.&#13;
fWELVE PERB0N6 KILLED&#13;
-&gt; U-: •IK IJ V&#13;
MRS. ESTHER M. MILNER.&#13;
Property Lois Estimated at $500,000&#13;
—Carelessness of Two Men Results&#13;
in the Awful Disaster.&#13;
ILLINOIS STATESMAN DIES&#13;
CONGRESSMAN HITT PA38S8&#13;
AWAY IN THE BAST.&#13;
Heart Disease Ends Long Period of&#13;
Hi Health—His Long and&#13;
Varied Career.&#13;
Box 821, DeGraff, Ohio.&#13;
Dr. 8. B. Hart man, Columbus, Ohio.&#13;
Dear Sir :—&#13;
I was a terrible sufferer from&#13;
pelvic weakness and had headache&#13;
continuously. I was not able to do my&#13;
housework for myself and husband.&#13;
I wrote you and described my condition&#13;
as nearly as possible. You recommended&#13;
IVruna. I took four bottles of&#13;
it and w;is completely cured. I think&#13;
Peruna a wonderfulmedicine and have&#13;
recommended it to my friends with the&#13;
very best of results.&#13;
Esther M. Milner.&#13;
Very few of the great multitude of&#13;
womeu who have been relieved of some&#13;
i&gt;elvic disease or weakness by Peruna&#13;
ever consent to give a testimonial to be&#13;
read by the public.&#13;
There are, however, a few courageous,&#13;
-self-sacrificing women who will for the&#13;
.sake of their suffering sisters allow&#13;
their cures to be published.&#13;
Mrs. Milner is one of these. In her&#13;
gratitude for her restoration to health&#13;
she is willing that&#13;
the women of the&#13;
whole world should&#13;
know it. A chronic&#13;
invalid brought back&#13;
to health is no small matter. Words&#13;
a'v inadequate to express complete&#13;
gratitude.&#13;
Some one says that the voice of&#13;
conscience Is but an in-voice.&#13;
A GRATEFUL&#13;
LETTER TO&#13;
DR. HARTMAN&#13;
Important to Mother*.&#13;
ttxtmioe carefully every bottle of CASTOIttA,&#13;
a safe and tare remedy for infants end children,&#13;
and see that it&#13;
Bean the&#13;
Sigaatare of&#13;
In Use For Over 30 Y«ar*.&#13;
The jftad Yoa Have Always Bougat.&#13;
yff^c^U&#13;
' Tteie'-May Prove UsefuK&#13;
On retiring to rest, place a handkerchief&#13;
under the pillow. On being&#13;
awakened by smoke or cry of "Fire!"&#13;
thrust it in the mouth and nostrils,&#13;
and you can walk erect through very&#13;
dense smoke. The nightly practice&#13;
of placing the article will make you&#13;
lees nervous in the hour of danger.&#13;
Passport Hard to Forge.&#13;
When a traveler in China desires a&#13;
passport the palm of his hand is cov&#13;
ered with fine oil paint and an impression&#13;
is taken on thin paper. This pa^&#13;
per officially signed, constitutes his&#13;
passport&#13;
Jellico, Tenn.—Twelve1 deaths, the&#13;
injuring of score* of ~*4fcor~ persona&#13;
and $500,000'damage to property were&#13;
caused here'Frlday when a carload of&#13;
dynamite standing on a track near&#13;
the Southern depot exploded with, a&#13;
report that was heard for 20 miles.&#13;
There is a bare possibility that other&#13;
bodies may be recovered from the&#13;
ruins of buildings, but this is hardly&#13;
probable.&#13;
Buildings were shattered in the&#13;
business section of the town and&#13;
nearly every piece of glass within a&#13;
radius of one mile of the scene was&#13;
broken.&#13;
The explosion occurred at eight&#13;
o'clock Friday morning. The freight&#13;
car, belonging to the Pennsylvania&#13;
railroad lines, contained 450 boxes,&#13;
about 20,000 pounds, of ' high explosixes&#13;
consigned to the Rand Powder&#13;
company, at Clearfield, Tenn.&#13;
Near the scene of the explosion&#13;
there was ruin and wild panic. Men&#13;
shrieked and groaned as they died.&#13;
Buildings tumbled to the ground, and&#13;
a large part of the business district&#13;
of the city was reduced to a* pile of&#13;
rubbish. From beneath the wreckage&#13;
men and women, maimed and bleeding,&#13;
struggled into the streets and&#13;
fled at a mad pace, without stopping&#13;
to ascertain the nature of the disaster.&#13;
Two causes are assigned for the explosion.&#13;
One is that three parties&#13;
were shooting at a mark on the car&#13;
and that a bullet entered the car and&#13;
caused the explosion. The other is&#13;
that while the car was standing on&#13;
a side track a carload of pig iron was&#13;
switched against it and .hat the impact&#13;
caused the explosion.&#13;
Without exception every business&#13;
house in the town is either totally&#13;
wrecked or badly damaged. The&#13;
union depot of the Southern railway&#13;
and the Louisville &amp;. Nashville railroad,&#13;
located about one hundred yards&#13;
from the scene of the explosion, was&#13;
shattered to splinters. This cut off&#13;
all telegraphic -communication and&#13;
jews of the explosion was handled by&#13;
telephone. The. explosion, occurred&#13;
-\ upon:the Kentucky side of Jellico, and&#13;
in consequence every house on that&#13;
side of the town is wrecked. Not one&#13;
was spared, A large number of residences&#13;
located near the railroad on&#13;
the Kentucky side were without exception&#13;
demolished. As a result it is&#13;
estimated that one-seventh of the population&#13;
of the two Jellicos is homeless.&#13;
The line between Tennessee and&#13;
Kentucky runs through the town of&#13;
Jellico. The explosion occurred on&#13;
the Kentucky side, but owing to the&#13;
interruption of wire . communication,&#13;
the dispatch telling of the accident&#13;
was sent from Jellico, Tenn.&#13;
Narragansett Pier, R I,—Congressman&#13;
Robert Roberta Hitt, of Illinois,&#13;
died at hie summer home here, after&#13;
a long illness.&#13;
Congressman Hitt came here last&#13;
June, and since that time he has&#13;
been ill, requiring, most of the time,&#13;
the constant attention of nurses and&#13;
physicians.&#13;
The congressman's condition was&#13;
due to advancing years. He was 72&#13;
years old.&#13;
Ill health, continuing through two&#13;
years at least, which, for the most&#13;
part, unfitted him for his congressional&#13;
duties, had afflicted Representative&#13;
Hitt so that his demise was not altogether&#13;
unexpected. Is feet, the great-&#13;
MENTAL TELEGRAPH&#13;
BY ITS U S I 4 . 0 9 T PARTS OP&#13;
CHINERY WERE FOUND.&#13;
MA'&#13;
Civil Engineer Has Remarkable&#13;
perlence While Building Road&#13;
India—Developed to a Wonderful&#13;
Degree.&#13;
EM&#13;
In&#13;
"Many persons deride the id«a of&#13;
mental telegraphy, but if they would&#13;
spend a year or two la India, aa I did,&#13;
and work shoulder to shoulder with&#13;
the educated East Indians they would&#13;
cease their scoffing," said O. R. Scrugham,&#13;
organisation manager for the&#13;
International policyholders'*committee,&#13;
and one of the most prominent electric&#13;
railway men in Ohio. "It lb wonderful&#13;
to what a degree of perfection&#13;
those people over there have developed&#13;
the faculty of wireless communication&#13;
without the aid of any instrument&#13;
other than their sensitive brains.&#13;
They were using the wireless system&#13;
aver there cehturies beforeiTtarcofiT ahd ^Tem&#13;
DOCTOR DESPAIRED&#13;
Anaemic Woman Cured by D*. Wil&#13;
Hams' Pink Pills Recommends the&#13;
Pills to All Others Who Suffer.&#13;
Robert R. Hitt.&#13;
er part of the work of the Important&#13;
committee on foreign affairs of the&#13;
house of representatives, of which Mr.&#13;
Hltt was chairman during the entire&#13;
last sessionjpf the last congress, was&#13;
discharged first by Representative&#13;
Robert Adams, of Pennsylvania, up to&#13;
the time of his tragic death last&#13;
spring, and afterwards by Representative&#13;
Cousins, of Iowa; Charles Landls,&#13;
of Indiana, and Perkins, of New York.&#13;
Mr. Hitt's career was a varied oner&#13;
embracing newspaper work, diplomacy&#13;
and legislation.' As a young man he&#13;
was intimately associated with Abraham&#13;
Lincoln, and as *n expert stenographer&#13;
reported many oi that states;&#13;
man's utterances in the great joint;&#13;
campaign with Stephen A. Douglas, as&#13;
a representative of a Chicago newspaper.&#13;
His diplomatic career began&#13;
in 1874 as secretary of legation to&#13;
Paris, and in 1881 he went to Washinton&#13;
as assistant secretary of state.&#13;
The year following he was elected to&#13;
the Forty-seventh congress from the&#13;
Thirteenth Illinois district, and he&#13;
was serving his thirteenth continuous&#13;
term at the time of his death.&#13;
SAVES OWN LIFE; IS FINED.&#13;
Connecticut Man Punished for Killing&#13;
Adder on Sabbath Day.&#13;
SAGE WILL CASE COMPROMISED.&#13;
Heirs to Get Double Amount of Their&#13;
Legacies.&#13;
New York.—The will of Russell&#13;
. . . , Sage was presented to the sur-&#13;
Auaemift is jnst the doctor's name for rogate Friday, and proved without&#13;
bloodlessiieas. Dr. Williams'Pink Pills contest. Counsel for the executor ancure&#13;
anaemia as food cures hunger, nounced that Mrs. Sage intends to&#13;
They cured Mrs. Thomas Jr. McGniiu, of give to each,of Mr. Sage's relatives&#13;
17 Lincoln Place, PlamfieUI, N. J., who who are beneficiaries under the will&#13;
an additional *um equal to, the amount&#13;
of his or her legacy, provided there is&#13;
says;&#13;
"Iu the spring of 1908 I did my&#13;
usual house cleaning and soon after- n o contest. This was accepted as&#13;
ward I began to have the most terrible satisfactory by Senator Edgar T&#13;
headaches My heart would beat so ir- Brackett, of Saratoga, who was in&#13;
regularly that it was painful and there this city preparing to contest the will&#13;
came a, nionnug when I could not get i n b e half of Edson M. Coonrad of&#13;
up. My doctor said I had anemia and Watervliet, N. Y.. a grandson of one&#13;
he was surprised that I had eontiriued o f M r . gage's sjsters. Under this setto&#13;
live m the condition I was in. tlement Coonrad will receive $12 500&#13;
t was confined to my bed for nearly \ i n s t e a d o f ^6 &gt; 2 5 0 | a n d e a c h o f t Q e 2g&#13;
two months, the doctor coming every nephews and nieces of Mr. Gage who&#13;
day for tho first few weeks, but I did not&#13;
improve to amount to anything. Altogether&#13;
I was sick for nearly two&#13;
years. I was as weak as a rag, had&#13;
headaches, irregular heart beats, loss of&#13;
appetite, crahips in the limbs and was&#13;
unable to get a good night's sleep. My&#13;
legs and feet were so swollen that I&#13;
feared they wonld burst.&#13;
" Before very long after I tried Dr.&#13;
Williams'PinkPillsI felt a change for&#13;
the better. I have taken about twelve&#13;
were to receive $25,000, will be gfven&#13;
$50,000.&#13;
New York. — A Danbury (Conn.)&#13;
dispatch gives an example of the&#13;
workings of the Connecticut blue&#13;
laws. Peter Zarcone, 18 years of age,&#13;
while walking through a swamp on&#13;
his father's farm Sunday was attacked&#13;
by an adder. He had a shotgun with&#13;
him and shot and killed the reptile.&#13;
A policeman heard the report of the&#13;
gun and arrested the young farmer.&#13;
When Zarcone was arraigned before&#13;
Judge Scott he was fined $10 and&#13;
costs. The~ludge said thai he had no&#13;
doubt from the nature of the evidence&#13;
before him that the prisoner had used&#13;
his gun only to protect himself against&#13;
the snake, but the laws of the state&#13;
made it a crime even to carry a gun&#13;
in the open air on Sunday and consequently&#13;
he had no discretion under&#13;
the law and was obliged to punish&#13;
him for carrying his weapon across&#13;
Ihe farm.&#13;
The judge arraigned the law severely&#13;
and suggested that it be brought&#13;
to the attention of the general assembly&#13;
for amendment or repeal.&#13;
LINCOLN CONSPIRATOR IS DEAD&#13;
DECLARED GUILTY OF PEONAGE&#13;
Judge Imposes Prison Terms and&#13;
Heavy Fines on Defendants.&#13;
Cape Girardeau, Mo.—The jury 1¾&#13;
the Smith case Friday returned a verdict&#13;
of guilty against Charles M.&#13;
Smith and Charles M. Smith, Jr., and&#13;
boxes and although I was as near tho the five tenants of their farms on the&#13;
•grave as could bo, I now feel as if I&#13;
had a new lease of life. I have no moro&#13;
headaches, the heart bents regularly, my&#13;
checks are pink and I feel ten years&#13;
younger. I feel that I hnvo been cured&#13;
very cheaply and I have recoiniueuded&#13;
tho pills to lots of my friends."&#13;
Dr. Willian&#13;
eleventh count in the peonage case.&#13;
Judge Pollock pronounced sentences&#13;
as follows: Charles M. Smith, three&#13;
years and six months in the penitentiary&#13;
at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., and&#13;
a fine of $5,000 and costs; Charles M.&#13;
,_. , l v n , , Smith, Jr., two years in the penlten-&#13;
, 1 ™ ™ . ^ . J ^ I I K O C S i a r C H O - ' , I b y a l l i t l a r &gt; ' a n firnggiM*, or wm ne sent oy mail on l\.- d a fine o f *6'°°0 »nd costs; 1 l o n&#13;
ceipt of price, 50cents per box, six boxes V2rr»Tm a n / I P a n EMstlsJa svnsiU s*-**-..&#13;
•$2.50, by the Dr. William* ModiciueCo.,&#13;
^Jcueuectady, N. Y. „U&#13;
Den Stone and Ben Fields, each one&#13;
year and six months and $100 fine; W.&#13;
Leo Rogers and William Woods, each&#13;
two years and six months, and $100&#13;
SICK Rva'WcraitfittofT^aB^&amp;r116'1 Floyd wood8' ^y**.™ **« «*- year*e*p«irlonee. S^n.1 9-ceat MUMP and address, months and $100 fine.&#13;
•AI.\.«I:ST;&lt; r&lt;PK. I.\I.T\ m , i» r.uir&gt;g1miu. Mich.; .&#13;
Man Who Aided In Plot to Abduct&#13;
President Passes Away.&#13;
Baltimore, Md. — Samuel Bland&#13;
Arnold, who confessed that he was&#13;
a party to the conspiracy to abduct&#13;
President Lincoln, which culminated&#13;
in the assassination of the president&#13;
by John WJlkes Booth, died Friday&#13;
at the home of a relative in&#13;
Wavorly, a suburb of this city. He&#13;
was 72 years of age.&#13;
Arnold, with three others, was sentenced&#13;
in July, 1865, to life imprisonment&#13;
at the Dry Tortugas. All four&#13;
were pardoned by President Johnson&#13;
in 1869.&#13;
Eight-Hour Law Extended.&#13;
Oyster Bay.—President Roosevelt&#13;
Wednesday extended the eighthour&#13;
law to apply to all public&#13;
work under the supervision of any department&#13;
of the government. This or*&#13;
der affects more particularly work on&#13;
.iver and harbor improvements. '&#13;
and De Forest were born.&#13;
"Let me give you an instance in&#13;
point, and it is only one of many&#13;
which changed me from a skeptic to&#13;
a convert. Several years ago, when I&#13;
was in active work as a civil engineer&#13;
wi£h railroad construction as my specialty,&#13;
I went to India to assist in&#13;
building a line into the interior. We&#13;
came to a heading where the use of&#13;
rock drills, of the tripod style you see&#13;
In use here in New York in making&#13;
excavations was absolutely necessary.&#13;
This had been foreseen in the surveys&#13;
made in advance of the construction&#13;
work, and we had ordered a battery&#13;
&gt;f those steam drills. Finally we&#13;
worked right up' to the place where&#13;
we needed them, and we could not do&#13;
auch. more effective work until we&#13;
got them.&#13;
"I was in the office one day, fuming&#13;
and fretting about those drills and&#13;
wondering whether the steamship up-&#13;
&gt;n which they should have arrived&#13;
had reached Calcutta and whether the&#13;
Irills were in her cargo. I asked one&#13;
of my assistants If he had heard anything&#13;
from Calcutta, which was many&#13;
miles away. He replied in the .negative.&#13;
He had not even received advices&#13;
that the steamship had arrived.&#13;
I was turning away in discontent&#13;
when one of the East Indians who had&#13;
been assigned by the government to&#13;
assist us, stepped forward. He was&#13;
sducated highly and spoke English fluently.&#13;
" 'Excuse me,' he said, 'were you&#13;
asking if the steamship had arrived?'&#13;
" 'Yes—we are expecting several&#13;
steam drills on her and cannot do&#13;
much more work until we get them,'&#13;
I replied.&#13;
" 'She arrived this morning and the&#13;
drills have been unloa^d from her,'&#13;
said the East Indian. 'The;; are on the&#13;
pier now, but something seems to be&#13;
missing from them. Are they funny&#13;
looking things that stand on three&#13;
legs?*&#13;
"I told him they were and showed&#13;
to him a picture of one of the drills.&#13;
He looked at it carefully and then replied&#13;
: '&#13;
"'Yes; they're what are in those&#13;
long packages on the pier, but that&#13;
part is missing from each of them.'&#13;
"He indicated an essential part in&#13;
the body of the drill as that which&#13;
was missing from each. At first I was&#13;
inclined to regard what he said as a&#13;
joke, but his seriousness impressed&#13;
me. * I instructed the operator to wire&#13;
to Calcutta and ascertain what the&#13;
condition was. In a little white he&#13;
received a reply which corroborated&#13;
everything the East Indian had told&#13;
trie,-and, werstr-of alH that~#ben the&#13;
cases were opened it. was discovered&#13;
the parts were missing. That meant&#13;
long delay, because the drills were&#13;
worthless without the missing parts.&#13;
In my dilemma I called the East Indian&#13;
to me and said:&#13;
" 'Can you tell me whether those&#13;
missing parts were shipped with the&#13;
drills?'&#13;
"Without hesitation he replied:&#13;
"'Yes; but they have not been&#13;
taken from the ship.'&#13;
The Highest Honor.&#13;
The "golden rose" which the pope&#13;
presented Princess Ena on the occasion&#13;
of her marriage, is the highest&#13;
honor that can be conferred on a&#13;
Catholic princess. It is a mimic plant&#13;
of pure gold in a golden pot wTiereon&#13;
are emblazoned the papal arms. It has&#13;
leaves, buds, and flowers, the leaves&#13;
being set with small jewels in imitation&#13;
of dewdrops. In the central flower&#13;
is a tiny receptacle in which is contained&#13;
a small palm leaf blessed by&#13;
the pope.&#13;
Every mother pats herself on tft#&#13;
back when nW-d*u*TfteK marries theman&#13;
she sele-cbsxt, .,( . , ,&#13;
' Low Rates'to the' &gt;Northwest.&#13;
»;$V6JT day Until Oct 31st the Great&#13;
Northern Railway will sell one way&#13;
Colonists' Tickets from Chicago at list&#13;
following low rates: ~ 4&#13;
To Seattle, Portland and Western&#13;
Washington, $£3.00, Spokane, $3$.Ml&#13;
Equally low rates to Montana, IdaferSv&#13;
Oregon and British Columbia.&#13;
For further Information addreog&#13;
MAX BASS, General Immigrate*&#13;
Agent, 220 So. Clark SL, Chicago, H i&#13;
Unique Election Cry.&#13;
A wooden-legged candidate for thev&#13;
town council of Claston, Eng., urgei&#13;
his fellow artisans to elect him on the&#13;
ground that a wooden le# in the council&#13;
would be • pleasant variety among&#13;
the wooden heads there npw. "Vote&#13;
for Peggy!" was his inspiring slogan.&#13;
8uperb Service, Splendid Scenery j&#13;
en route to Niagara Falls, Muskolsft&#13;
and Kawartha Lakes; Georgian Bay&#13;
St7Lawrence&#13;
River and Rapids, Thousand Ishrmhrr&#13;
Algonquin National Park, White Mountains&#13;
and Atlantic Sea Coast resorts,&#13;
via Grand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Double track Chicago to Montreal and&#13;
Niagara Falls, N. Y.&#13;
For copies of tourist publications&#13;
and descriptive pamphlets apply to&#13;
Gee. W. Vaux, £ . G . P . ft T. A.. 135&#13;
Adama St., Chicago.&#13;
Proved Effectual.&#13;
It is 900 years since the failure of&#13;
a bank in China. On the last occasion&#13;
when such an event happened, the&#13;
emperor had the failure Investigated,&#13;
and found it had been due to reckless&#13;
conduct on the part of the directors.&#13;
He at once issued an edict that, the&#13;
next time a bank failed, the heads of&#13;
its president and directors were to&#13;
be cut off. This edict, which has&#13;
never been revoked, has made China's&#13;
banking institutions the safest in&#13;
the world.&#13;
Dispensing with Waiters.&#13;
. Automatic cars have become so successful&#13;
in Switzerland that a company&#13;
has been formed to supply the&#13;
Swiss and their visitors with electric&#13;
automatic restaurants, where, as if&#13;
by magic, meals will be served by electricity&#13;
to all comers. The only thing&#13;
necessary is to take your seat, glance&#13;
over the bill of fare, place your&#13;
money In the right slot, and the machinery&#13;
does the rest.&#13;
Safe From Serious Consequences.&#13;
"It's just scandalous the way the&#13;
bearded lady is loadin' himself with&#13;
booze'these days," remarked the wild&#13;
man from Borneo. "I should think&#13;
he'd be afraid o' delirium tremens."&#13;
"Oh, no, he considers himself safe,"&#13;
replied-the living skeleton; "he's married&#13;
to the snake charmer, you know."&#13;
—Philadelphia Press.&#13;
Of the 45,000,000 bullets fired by the&#13;
Russians during the Crimean war&#13;
44,952,000 tolled to fulfill their errand&#13;
of death.&#13;
The New State&#13;
of Oklahoma&#13;
Bigger than Missouri; as big as Ohio and&#13;
Indiana combined, with a soil teeming with&#13;
all the crops that any State raises,&#13;
OKLAHOMA—the new State—is destined&#13;
to occupy first rank in a few short years.&#13;
Here at the present time over a million&#13;
people are duplicating the life which is&#13;
going on in Illinois and Indiana. Their&#13;
houses, their towns and their schools are&#13;
newer but in nothing else do their surroundings&#13;
differ from those in our States.&#13;
Their cities and towns are growing and expanding&#13;
with the impetus of a fertile soil,&#13;
and a pushing, wide-awake citizenship.&#13;
Her settlers, mainly from the older States,&#13;
see the virtue of encouraging enterprises of&#13;
every kind and the needfulness of getting&#13;
more and better facilities; of getting more&#13;
hands to develop the country.&#13;
In brief, conditions to-day are simply&#13;
these: OKLAHOMA is in need of nothing&#13;
save people. More men are needed in the&#13;
cities and towns; more fanners for the vast&#13;
areas of unimproved land not now yielding&#13;
crops of which it is capable, There are&#13;
openings of all sorts, for farmers and&#13;
artisans, for mills and manufacturing&#13;
plants, for small stores of all kinds.&#13;
Your Opportunity Now&#13;
Tbeopportune tlma la now white the land iaofceap.&#13;
TbaoQuatrr lafa«t settling up. If you purchase Iaaii&#13;
now you will soon aeo grow up around you a OBI&#13;
inanity of prosperona. energetto men who, IlkeyeajS* ^y&#13;
self, have seen the brighter possibilities of o*i*a&gt;X&#13;
BOMA and h»T« taken adTaniage of them. •-*!**&#13;
On the First and Third Tu&#13;
of each month you can make a trip to l&#13;
exceptionally cheap. Round trip tick&#13;
-30—days will be sold by all lines in «&#13;
the M., K. AT. Ily. at very low rates. • nsnimsgu&#13;
to Oklahoma City the rate is S24.5&amp;; from, Si. Paul,&#13;
Bfl.26; from St. I&lt;ouls, 118 30; from KansaaClty.llxa.&#13;
The tickets permit of stop-OTers in b&lt;&gt;tadireciloM&#13;
T&lt;a M., K. AT. Ry. If your nearest railroad aga* • &gt;&#13;
cannot gl?a you the rates, write me for uartlculewajb&#13;
W. S. ST. GEORGR&#13;
General Passenger Agent&#13;
M., K. &amp; T. R'y&#13;
Walnwright Bid* St. Louis, Mo.&#13;
QBO. W. SMITH, m Marquette Bid*, «falea«o,IU.&#13;
ft t&#13;
itittmsmsMsm S M M i&#13;
m»&#13;
PREPARED FOR&#13;
WAR&#13;
PREPARED FOB T H E INVASION&#13;
OF CUBA TO PREVENT,&#13;
REBELLION.&#13;
AXMY AND NAVY READY&#13;
Mwry Detail Worked Out For Moving&#13;
a Force of Fivo Thousand Unftec&#13;
•Ute« Raguiars in a Day.'&#13;
VJK &gt;&#13;
Funston'a Mission.&#13;
Vigorous work Is in progress in pre&#13;
paration for any possible eventuation&#13;
of the trouble in Cuba. There is great&#13;
er activity In both the army and tht&#13;
navy than at any time since the war&#13;
with Spain.&#13;
j£hCs&gt;i»ful and systematic arnuge&#13;
nxajtt* are being made in every branch&#13;
of the military service for active work&#13;
«rlB the field. A formidable fleet of American&#13;
warships already is in Cuban&#13;
wafersand the army only awaits a signal&#13;
from President Roosevelt to move&#13;
in force to Cuba. •&#13;
Detailed plans for an invasion of&#13;
Cuba have been worked out by the&#13;
general staff of the army. When Gen.&#13;
Frederick Funston left Washington f'ir&#13;
Havana he knew precisely what troops&#13;
would be ordered to Cu&amp;a, in the event&#13;
of a decision by tha president id favor&#13;
of armed intervention; how those&#13;
tloops would be mobilized; from what&#13;
ports In this country they would embark&#13;
for the island and what means&#13;
the government had secured for the&#13;
transportation of the Invading force.&#13;
It was admitted at the war department&#13;
that the troops for service in&#13;
Cuba already had been selected and&#13;
that they were being prepared for the&#13;
campaign. No intimation of either the&#13;
number or the present location of the&#13;
troops, however, was obtainable. In&#13;
the view of well informed officers, it&#13;
is believed the force detailed for the&#13;
Cuban service numbers at least 5,000&#13;
men and that it will consist of infantry,&#13;
cavalry and light artillery.&#13;
It is expected that the troops, if, ordered&#13;
to Cuba, will be mobilized at&#13;
Norfolk and Newport News, and a part&#13;
of them possibly at Port Tampa, Fla.&#13;
- - t&#13;
The Sea Destroying England.&#13;
So serious has the gradual but sure&#13;
disappearance of England's coastline&#13;
become that a royal commission has&#13;
been appointed to study the matter&#13;
and devise some means to stop the&#13;
ravages of the greedy sea. It is known&#13;
that places that were beaches a few&#13;
years ago now He beneath the surface&#13;
of the ocean, and that towns that once&#13;
were far inland are now lapped by the&#13;
incoming tide.&#13;
Cases of erosion, or encroachment&#13;
by the sea, have long been known In&#13;
practically all portions of the English&#13;
coast line, but the facta that the&#13;
progress of the land-destroying; ocean&#13;
Is going steadily on and that the island&#13;
is being gradually eaten away&#13;
by the hungry waves are now considered&#13;
seriously.&#13;
It has been found that between 1867&#13;
and 1900 no less than 182,00t» acres&#13;
that once were English territory have&#13;
been claimed by the ocean as its bed.&#13;
Moreover, the amount of annual loss&#13;
is increasing from year to year and&#13;
unless something is done to stop the&#13;
encroachment of waters upon the'land&#13;
It can be almost calculated when England&#13;
shall have ceased to exist, except&#13;
as a little group ctf rocky islets.&#13;
WORBT FORM OF ECZEMA.&#13;
Black Spotehta All Over Face—Af&#13;
footed Parts Now Clear as Ever-r-&#13;
Cured by the CvUcura Rem*&#13;
•dies.&#13;
"About four year* ago I was afflicted&#13;
with black splotches «11 over my&#13;
face and a few covering my body,&#13;
which produced a severe Itching irritation,&#13;
and which caused me a great&#13;
deal of annoyance and suffering, to&#13;
such an extent that I was forced to&#13;
call in two of the leading physicians&#13;
of my town. After a thorough examination&#13;
of the dreaded complaint they&#13;
announced it to be skin eczema in its&#13;
worst form. They treated me for the,&#13;
same for the len-Tth of one year, but&#13;
the treatment did me no good. Finally&#13;
my husband purchased a set of&#13;
the Cuticura Remedies* and utter&#13;
using the contents of the first bottle&#13;
of Cuticura Resolvent In connection&#13;
with the Cuticura Soap and Ointment,&#13;
the breaking out entirely stopped. I&#13;
continued the use of the Cuticura&#13;
Remedies for six months, and after&#13;
that every splotch was entirely gone&#13;
and the affected parts were left as&#13;
clear as ever. The Cuticura Remedies&#13;
not only cured me of that dreadful&#13;
disease, eczema, but other complicated&#13;
troubles as well. Lizzie E.&#13;
Sledge, 540 Jones Ave., Selma, Ala.,&#13;
Oct. 28. 1905."&#13;
JEALOUS OF BOBBIE'8 WIFE.&#13;
• « . . . • — —&#13;
Money refunded for each package of&#13;
PUMAM PAOBLfiSS *&gt;tfES ifTiBWtuK&#13;
factory. Ask your druggist.&#13;
A homely rich girl Is prettier than&#13;
a beautiful poar. one—in the eyes of&#13;
some men.&#13;
Mrs. W U » l « w » i S o o t h i a g Syrup.&#13;
ror children-UetMag, tafMM tas (&lt;rau, leanest hv&#13;
daminattoa »U»y• piln. cur* wlad o»Uc. Sk a bottle.&#13;
Jap Converts to Christianity.&#13;
Last year 5,500 native Christians&#13;
were added to the church la Japan.&#13;
Cheap Excursions 8outh.&#13;
On the 1st and 3rd Tuesday of each&#13;
month the Big Four Ry. will sell excursion&#13;
tickets to most all point In&#13;
Virginia, South Carolina, Tennessee,&#13;
Alabama and Georgia at rate of one&#13;
fare plus $2.00 with return limit 30&#13;
days. Liberal stopover privileges.&#13;
Write I. P. Spining, General Northern&#13;
Agent. Big Four Route, 238 Clark St.,&#13;
Chicago, for further information.&#13;
Twenty-five Pound Head.&#13;
Ann Arbor physicians are much interested&#13;
in an extreme oase of hydrocephalus&#13;
at the university hospital.&#13;
Hydrocephalus is water on the brain,&#13;
the membrane lining, secreting a large&#13;
amount of water that is not removed&#13;
naturally.&#13;
The present case is that Of a sixmonths-&#13;
old babe of Ann Arbor parents.&#13;
About three months ago the&#13;
trouble began to manifest itself until&#13;
now the child has a 25-pooind head&#13;
on a 10-pound body- The disease produces&#13;
drowsiness, and the baby has&#13;
been sleeping most of the time for&#13;
two weeks. It Was taken to the university&#13;
hospital, but the doctors there&#13;
said it would be useless to treat the&#13;
case, as if the head is tapped the secretions&#13;
o f water would recur.&#13;
Lineman Electrocuted.&#13;
Burton Evans hung head down from&#13;
the cross-bars of a telephone pole on&#13;
which he had been electrocuted, for&#13;
several minutes before his fellow-workmen&#13;
discovered him. He had his feet&#13;
entangled in the wires when the deadly&#13;
current struck him. As he became&#13;
unconscious he lost the grip with his&#13;
hands and swung forward through the&#13;
air.&#13;
Assistance was rushed up the pole&#13;
aJid he was, brought to the ground unconscJeju*,&#13;
but still alive. Bart he died&#13;
n few nfimites later. The heavy current&#13;
Is supposed to have come from a&#13;
grounding or crossing with electric&#13;
as the wires with which he was&#13;
were used only for tele.&#13;
Naw York Woman's Excuse for Fits&#13;
of Extravagance.&#13;
Women dearly love an excuse for&#13;
little extravagances, says the New&#13;
York Globe. Of course, the masculine&#13;
readers of this column are not expected&#13;
to indorse this, for, according to&#13;
the masculine thought, women need&#13;
no "excuse" for their extravagances—&#13;
they just have them without rhyme or&#13;
reason.&#13;
An up-town woman has a charming&#13;
excuse for any extra indulgence in&#13;
her two-year-old blue-eyed eon Bobble&#13;
and Bobbie's future wife. In trust&#13;
for Bobbie is a handsome estate which&#13;
gives her great concern because she&#13;
leels that she must save and economize&#13;
for Bobbie, for Bobbie's college&#13;
education, his European trip, and. "oh,&#13;
dear!" she always adds, "Bobbie's&#13;
wife." Wearying of a continued spell&#13;
of economy, in a moment of reckless&#13;
extravagance she'll buy a lot of dear,&#13;
delightful things, have her fingers&#13;
manicured, her hair shampooed and&#13;
take fascinating trips here and there.&#13;
And then when her conscience will&#13;
prick she'll say. "Why not? Bobbie's&#13;
wife will, and he won't care how&#13;
much it costs." And Bobbie's wife&#13;
won't, either. She'll spend joyously&#13;
and gloriously.&#13;
Practiced What He Preached.&#13;
Rev. Denis P. O'Flynn, of New York&#13;
city, used to say that priests ought to&#13;
die poor and he practiced what he&#13;
preached. Aside from a valuable library&#13;
given' to the Paulist fathers he&#13;
has left no discoverable estate—-no&#13;
money in bank, no money in the rectory.&#13;
"He died as poor as the proverbial&#13;
church mouse," says his assistant,&#13;
Father Corrigan. "What little insurance&#13;
he carried will barely cover the&#13;
funeral expenses. He never saved a&#13;
,penny for himself. After keeping th«&#13;
house on his meager salary he gave&#13;
away all he had."&#13;
THE WAY OUT.&#13;
Change of Food Brought Success and&#13;
Happiness.&#13;
, Caught in the Act.&#13;
It k * 5 ^ K J e a k e d out that two prisoners&#13;
# a W discovered Monday burrowins;&#13;
t*4lr'way out of prison, via&#13;
the cell Mock. They were at once ai l strict seclusion. One of them&#13;
far as the yard. Warden Armsaid&#13;
tfcat he did not recall the&#13;
•sjarna, that the incident was a common&#13;
one In prison management and&#13;
that the rumors that the men had cut&#13;
their way out of the new steel cells&#13;
were unify*. They accomplished little&#13;
damage to the masonry walls of the&#13;
seV-WocR. "v&#13;
An ambitious but delicate girl, after&#13;
failing to go through school on account&#13;
of nervousness^ and hysteria,&#13;
found in Grape-"NutsHThe~ only thing&#13;
that seemed to build her up and furnish&#13;
her the peace of health.&#13;
"From infancy," she says, "I have&#13;
not been strong. Being ambitious to&#13;
learn at any cost I finally got to the&#13;
High School, but soon had to abandon&#13;
my studies on account of nervous&#13;
prostration and hysteria.&#13;
"My food did not agree with me, I&#13;
grew thin and despondent. I could&#13;
not enjoy the simplest social affair for&#13;
I suffered constantly from nervousness&#13;
in spite of all sorts of medicines.&#13;
"This wretched condition continued&#13;
until I was twenty-five, when I became&#13;
interested in the letters of those&#13;
who had cases like mine and who&#13;
were being cured by eating • Grape-&#13;
Nuts.&#13;
"I had little faith, but procured a&#13;
box and after the first dish I experienced&#13;
a peculiar satisfied feeling&#13;
that I had never gained from any ordinary&#13;
food. I slept and rested better&#13;
that night and in a few days began&#13;
to grow stronger.&#13;
"I had a new feeling of peace and&#13;
restfuless. In a few weeks, to my&#13;
rrreat joy, the headaches and nervousness&#13;
left me and life became bright&#13;
and hopeful. I resumed my studies&#13;
and later taught ten months with ease&#13;
—of course using Grape-Nuts every&#13;
day. It is now four years since I be*&#13;
gan to use Grape-Nuts, I am the mistress&#13;
of a happy home and the old&#13;
weakness has never returned." Name&#13;
given by Postum Co., Battle Creek,&#13;
Mich. "There's a reason." Read the&#13;
little book, 'The Road to Wellvillek&#13;
M&#13;
tn pkgs.&#13;
Constantly look up. Be on the&#13;
watch for chances to rise, like a bird&#13;
let loose, though but for a moment,&#13;
Into the upper air.—Austin Phelps.&#13;
A DANGEROUS PRACTICE,—&#13;
Burning Off Paint Makes Insurance&#13;
Void.&#13;
Tized, Netvous Mdthets&#13;
MaKe Unhappy Homes—Their Q^n^gg^fc.Irritatea&#13;
Both Husband and Ctrtldren-ftSw Ttio\&#13;
of Mothers Have Been S*x$d from Hi&#13;
Prostration and Made Strong and Well*&#13;
It seems that considerable danger to&#13;
property exists in the practice of&#13;
burning off old paint before re-painting.&#13;
The question has long been a&#13;
subject of debate in the technical&#13;
journals, and now householders and&#13;
the newspapers have begun to discuss&#13;
it. Those of us who, with trembling,&#13;
have watched the painters blow a&#13;
fiery blast from their lamps against&#13;
our houses, and hare looked sadly at&#13;
the Bize of our painting bill because&#13;
of the time wasted on this preliminary&#13;
work* are interested in the investigation&#13;
by the Greenfield (Mass.)&#13;
Gazette and Courier, which gives considerable&#13;
space to the reasons for the&#13;
practice, questions its necessity and&#13;
suggests ways to prevent the risk of&#13;
burning down one's house in order to&#13;
get the old paint off. It says:&#13;
"There is a good deal of discussion&#13;
among householders as to the desirability,&#13;
in painting houses, of burning&#13;
off the old paint, a practice that has&#13;
grown very common of late in Greenfield&#13;
and elsewhere. Insurance men&#13;
are strongly opposed to this method.&#13;
It makes void insurance policies for&#13;
fires caused in this manner. Several&#13;
houses in Greenfield have gotten afire&#13;
as the result of this method, and in&#13;
some places houses have burned as a&#13;
./esult.&#13;
"It is undoubtedly true that when&#13;
a house has been painted over and&#13;
over again there comes to be an accumulation&#13;
of paint in bunches. If&#13;
new paint is put on top of these accumulations&#13;
it is almost sure to blister.&#13;
To burn it off is the quickest&#13;
and cheapest and perhaps the surest&#13;
method of getting rid of this old&#13;
paint."&#13;
The Gazette and Courier quotes certain&#13;
old patrons to the effect that accumulations&#13;
of paint are unnecessary.&#13;
These old-timers lay trie blame partly&#13;
on the painter who fails to brush his&#13;
paint in well, partly on the custom of&#13;
painting in damp weather or not allowing&#13;
sufficient time For drying between&#13;
coats, and partly to the use of adulterated&#13;
paints instead of old-fashioned&#13;
linseed oil and pure white lead. The&#13;
paper says:&#13;
"Many of the old householders' say&#13;
that if care is taken at all these points&#13;
it is absolutely unnecessary to have&#13;
paint burned off. They advise that&#13;
people who have houses pairtfed should&#13;
buy their own materials, and to have&#13;
them put on by the day, so as to be&#13;
sure to get good lead and oil. Of&#13;
TtnrbTir n i ng~oir 6T ~patn tgreatly&#13;
-increases the cost of the job."&#13;
The trouble householders everywhere&#13;
have with paint is pretty well summed&#13;
up by our contemporary, and the&#13;
causes are about the same everywhere.&#13;
By far the most frequent cause of the&#13;
necessity for the dangerous practice&#13;
of burning old paint is the use of poor&#13;
material. The oil should be pure linseed&#13;
and the whit'e lead should be real&#13;
white lead. The latter is more often&#13;
tampered,with than the oil. Earthy&#13;
substances, ami pulverized rock and&#13;
quartz, are frequently used as cheapened,&#13;
to the great detriment of the&#13;
paint.&#13;
Painters rarely- adulterate white&#13;
lead themselves and they very seldom&#13;
use ready prepared paints—the most&#13;
frequent causes of paint trouble. But&#13;
they do often buy adulterated white&#13;
lead because the property owner insists&#13;
on a low price and the painter&#13;
has to economize somewhere. The&#13;
suggestion is therefore a good one&#13;
that the property owner investigate&#13;
the subject, a little, find out the name&#13;
of some reliable brand of white lead.&#13;
and see that the keg is marked with&#13;
that brand.&#13;
The linseed oil is more difficult to&#13;
be sure of, as it is usually sold in&#13;
bulk when the quantity is small; but&#13;
reliable makers of linseed oil can be&#13;
learned on inquiry, and. if your dealer&#13;
is reliable, you will get what you want.&#13;
Pure white lead and linseed oil are&#13;
so necessary to good paint that the&#13;
little trouble necessary to get them&#13;
well repays the house owner in dollars&#13;
and cents saved.&#13;
I ^ , ^ ^ B^~ re^ I&#13;
A nervous, irritable mother, often on&#13;
the verge of hysterics, is unfit to care&#13;
for children; it ruins a child's disposition&#13;
and reacts upon herself. The&#13;
trouble between children and their&#13;
mothers too often is due to the fact&#13;
that the mother has some female weakness,&#13;
and she is entirely unfit to bear&#13;
the strain upon her nerves that governing&#13;
children involves; it is impossible&#13;
for her to do anything calmly.&#13;
The ills of women act like a firebrand&#13;
upon the nerves, consequently ninetenths&#13;
of the nervous prostration, nervous&#13;
despondency,'" the blues," sleeplessness,&#13;
and nervous irritability of&#13;
women arise from some derangement&#13;
of the female organism.&#13;
Do you experience fits of depression&#13;
with restlessness, alternating with&#13;
extreme irritability? Are your spirits&#13;
easily affected, so that one minute you&#13;
laugh, and the next minute you feel&#13;
like crying ?&#13;
Do you feel something like a ball rising&#13;
in your throat and threatening to&#13;
choke you ; all the senses perverted,&#13;
morbidly sensitive to light and sound ;&#13;
pain in the abdominal region, and&#13;
between the shoulders ; bearing-down&#13;
pains; nervous dyspepsia and almost&#13;
continually cross and snappy?&#13;
1'f so, your nerves are in a shattered&#13;
condition, and you are threatened with&#13;
nervous prostration.&#13;
Proof is monumental that nothing in&#13;
the world is better for nervous prostration&#13;
than Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound; thousands and thousands&#13;
of women can testify to this fact.&#13;
Ask I n . PtaUua** Aivke-A&#13;
Mrs. Chester Curry, Leader of the&#13;
Ladies' Symphony Orchestra, 42 Saratoga&#13;
Street, East Boston, Mass.,&#13;
writes:&#13;
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—&#13;
"For eight years I was troubled with extreme&#13;
nervousness and hysteria, brought on&#13;
by irregularities. I could neither enjoy lifav&#13;
nor sleep nights; I was very irritable, nervous&#13;
and despondent.&#13;
" Lydia £. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,&#13;
was recommended and proved to be the only&#13;
remedy that helped me. I have daily improved&#13;
in health until I am now strong and&#13;
well, and all nervousness has disappeared."&#13;
Mrs. Charles P. Brown, Vice-President&#13;
of the Mothers' Club. 21 Cedar&#13;
Terrace, Hot Springs, Ark., writes '-&#13;
Dear Mrs. Finkbam:— 411 dragged through nine years of miserable&#13;
existence, worn out with pain and nervousnea,&#13;
until it seemed as though I should&#13;
fly. I then noticed a statement of a woman&#13;
troubled as I was, and the wonderful resultsshe&#13;
derived from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound. I decided to try it. I did so,&#13;
and at the end of three months I was a different&#13;
woman. My nervousness was all gone, I&#13;
was.no longer irritable, and my husband fell&#13;
in love with me all over again."&#13;
Women should remember that Lydia&#13;
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is&#13;
the medicine that holds the record for&#13;
the greatest number of actual cures of1&#13;
female ills, and take no substitute.&#13;
F r e e A d v i c e t o W o m e n .&#13;
Mrs. Pinkham, daughter in-law of&#13;
Lydia E. Pittkham, Lynn, Mass., invites&#13;
all sick women to write to her for&#13;
advice. Mrs. Pinkham's vast experience&#13;
with female troubles enables her to advise&#13;
you wisely, and she will charge*&#13;
you nothing for her advice.&#13;
Best IMentaafc t Wi&#13;
CURES CONSTIPATIOH&#13;
Relief that comes from the use of&#13;
pills or other cathartics is better&#13;
than suffering from the results of&#13;
constipation, but relief and cure&#13;
combined may be had at the same&#13;
price and more promptly, for Lane's Family&#13;
Medicine is a cure- for constipation, and the&#13;
headache, backache, sideache and&#13;
general debility that come from&#13;
constipation stop when the bowels&#13;
do their proper work. -&#13;
Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c.&#13;
W. L. DOUGLAS&#13;
•3.50 &lt;t*3.00 Shoes&#13;
• • S T IN TMS WOM.D&#13;
VJJtogta$4GftEdpllav&#13;
etHOtsi essjJMttajprlot.&#13;
To Shot Dtakrt:&#13;
W. U DoadM' Job-&#13;
Mac House la ins mora&#13;
complete i n this country&#13;
Send Jar Calalog&#13;
There is no satisfaction&#13;
keener than being dry / , /&#13;
Mid comfortable , ,-f /&#13;
when out in the&#13;
hardest storm&#13;
YOUAffESWe-&#13;
0F THIS IF YOU&#13;
WEAR&#13;
^SfBIatf^&#13;
WATERPROOF OILED&#13;
CLOTHING &amp;&#13;
BLACK OR YELLOW f&#13;
On sale everywhere '&#13;
A V TQwf» c o * e c s T N L «• A&#13;
' C * , :! C»S*P 4 N » 0 TO*C^"O «. *•*&#13;
SHOES FOB EVERYBODY AT ALL PRICES.&#13;
Kra's Shoe*. S9 to SlSO. Bo?£ SHOM, S3&#13;
to$Las. Women"a Shoes. S4.00 to Sl.«o,&#13;
Kisses' * Children's 8hoes. S3 8S to SUOO.&#13;
Try W. 1*. D o u g l a s Women's. M i s s e s and-&#13;
Children's s h o e s ; for style, fit a n d wear&#13;
t h e y excel other m a k e s .&#13;
If I could take you Into m y large&#13;
factories at Brockton, Mass. tand show&#13;
you how carefully W. L. Douglas shoes&#13;
are made, you would then understand&#13;
w h y they hold their shape, fit better,&#13;
wear longer, and are of greater value&#13;
than any other make.&#13;
Wherever you live, you can obtain W. L.&#13;
Douelas shoes. Hi* name and price Is stamced&#13;
on the bottom, which protects you against high&#13;
price* and inferior shoes. Tak* no substi*&#13;
ru re. Ask your dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes&#13;
and insist opoo having them.&#13;
Fast Color Eyelets ustd; theg will not umar brassy.&#13;
Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles.&#13;
W . L. DOUGLAS, Dept. 12, Brockton. Mass.&#13;
You CANNOT&#13;
90.000.000 C U R E&#13;
BUSHELS&#13;
THAT'S THE WHEAT&#13;
CROP IN WESTERN&#13;
CANADA THIS YEAR&#13;
This with nearly 80.-&#13;
., 000.¢00 bushels of oats&#13;
and 17,000,000 bushels of barley means a continuation&#13;
of good times for the farmers of Western&#13;
Canada.&#13;
Free farms, biff crops, low taxes, healthy&#13;
climate, good churches and schools, spleridid&#13;
railway service.&#13;
The Canadian Government offers lbO acres of&#13;
land free to everv .settler willing and able to&#13;
comply with the Homestead Regulations.&#13;
Advice and information may be obtained free&#13;
from \V. D. Scott Superintendent of Immigration,&#13;
Ottawa, Canada; or from authorized&#13;
Canadian Goverament Agents—M. V, Mclnues,&#13;
( A w n u t Theatre Block, Detroit. Michigan ; or&#13;
C. A. Laurier, Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan.&#13;
— — . , — » ' • ' • —&#13;
WANTEO Mail Carriers-Clerks. Salary «*0O to&#13;
rr*tarau*a few. rraUaa Uaiitatr, • » * • • * • • ( * , a. I .&#13;
; all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal cor •&#13;
' ditions of the mucous membrane such as&#13;
nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused&#13;
b y feminine ills, sore throat, sore&#13;
mouth or inflamed e y e s by simply&#13;
j dosing the stomach.&#13;
' But you surely can cure these stubborn&#13;
affections by .ocal treatment with&#13;
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic&#13;
which destroys the diseasegerms,checks&#13;
discharges, stops pain, and heals the&#13;
inflammation and soreness.&#13;
Paxtine represents the most successful"&#13;
local treatment for feminine ills ever&#13;
produced. Thousands of women testify&#13;
to this fact 50 cents at druggists.&#13;
Send for Free Trial Box&#13;
T V S B. PAXTON C O . P. t i l O laf^sW JOHN W. MORRIS&#13;
C r a O l U I V Washington IX C&#13;
•iiOCwMfuily ProaacutM Claim*.&#13;
Lata Prtacfpal Examiner U. a Ptnsloa Bareaa.&#13;
W. N. U„ DETROIT, NO. 39, 1906.&#13;
L Buttness Pointers. •&#13;
There will be a dance at the Dexter&#13;
opera boose Friday, Sept. 28. Good&#13;
music. Bill 50 cts.&#13;
House and lots on Main street.&#13;
Good location. Inquire at this office.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
Bushel Crates. Call and see a good&#13;
crate. Order new.&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co., Pinckney.&#13;
LOST.&#13;
Somewhere between Wright's Chaple&#13;
and Pinckney by the way of V. G.&#13;
Dinkels', a gold beaded umbrella.&#13;
Finder please leave at this office..&#13;
worn, l A U k&#13;
A six year ooldld roan irorse, wergnt&#13;
1,200 pounds. John Webb, l i miles&#13;
south of Uuadilla village. Gregory&#13;
RFD,&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
The Pettysville cider mill is now&#13;
ready to receive apples and make&#13;
cider. VVm. Hooker.&#13;
E W. DANIELS,&#13;
GENKRAL AUCTIONEER.&#13;
Satistnct.cn Guarauteed. For informa-&#13;
I Among Biir Correspondents&#13;
WEST P U T I A M .&#13;
J o h n M. H a r r i s is on t h e sick&#13;
list. '&#13;
G l e n n G a r d n e r w a s in Ypsilanti&#13;
Monday,&#13;
T h o m a s Cooper was in Stockb&#13;
r i d g e Monday.&#13;
J o h n Sweeney of H a m b u r g ,&#13;
called on friends h e r e S u n d a y .&#13;
Mrs. L . B . W h i t e and son Wellington,&#13;
were in Howell F r i d a y .&#13;
Mrs. M u r p h y , of P i n c k n e y , is&#13;
s p e n d i n g t h e week a t D . M.&#13;
Monks';&#13;
I r w i n K e n n e d y a n d wife of&#13;
D e x t e r ^ s p e n i S u retetives&#13;
her©.&#13;
Mrs. O t i s W e b b a n d M r s . J o h n&#13;
W e b b s p e n t T h u r s d a y last a t H .&#13;
B. G a r d n e r ' s .&#13;
Chas. Holmes a n d family, of&#13;
L a n s i u g , visited a t K i r k V a n&#13;
W i n k l e ' s t h e first of t h e week.&#13;
It arouses energy, developes and&#13;
stimulates nervous life, arouses the&#13;
tion call at DISPATCH Office or address j courage of youth. It makes yqu&#13;
Gwgory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. Lyndilla phone I young again. That's what Hollister's&#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 KIGHT&#13;
Rocky Mountain Tea will do.&#13;
Tea or Tablets.&#13;
35 cts.&#13;
PARLORSJAT&#13;
PLIMPTON'S OLD STAND Phone No.30&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
All the newB for $1.00 per year.&#13;
. TUn arc mm* K e C a l l F a t t e n s MM ta tfc« Ua&#13;
K U M than •» aay ata«r mak« of Mturnt. Tki» 1&#13;
Mc*uat »t their ttjrl*,' accuracy aai timplicity.ft&#13;
MeCatl*a Ma#a«l»e(The Queen of Faihloa) has&#13;
iar«lubscribert tka* any other Laaies'_Magazine._ Osa&#13;
C H I L S O N&#13;
C h a s , Crowe is u n d e r t h e doct&#13;
o r ' s care.&#13;
Mrs. J . W. Sweeney a n d Mrs.&#13;
W m . G a r d n e r s p e n t T h u r s d a y in&#13;
Howell.&#13;
Mrs. G a r d n e r , of P u t n a m , visited&#13;
h e r b r o t h e r , J . W. Sweeney,&#13;
last week.&#13;
H e n r y D a m n i a n n a n d wife visited&#13;
A n n A r b o r friends o n e d a y&#13;
last week.&#13;
M r . a n d Mrs. O r i n F i s k a r e t h e&#13;
p r o u d p a r e n t s of a baby girl b o r n&#13;
on M o n d a y 24.&#13;
W m . Beuh&amp;m a n d wife entert&#13;
a i n e d h e r parents, M r . a n d M r s .&#13;
J a c o b u s , of A n n Arbor, last week.&#13;
Claude Chadwick and family i&#13;
were guests a t t h e h o m e of h i s !&#13;
g r a n d m o t h e r , M r s . Margaret Case.&#13;
PLAHTFISLD.&#13;
W. M. r - ^ m i t h is visiting a t&#13;
F l i n t t n ^ w e e k .&#13;
Chas. H a r d i n g b e g a n p a i n t i n g&#13;
on t h e new c h u r c h T u e s d a y .&#13;
F. A. D a n i e l s , of Ypsilanti, w a s&#13;
in town t h e first of t h e week.&#13;
L o t t i e W a l k e i of D e t r o i t , s p e n t&#13;
last week with h e r p a r e n t s h e r e .&#13;
T h e b o y s of t h i s place a r e p l a n -&#13;
n i n g a d a y of pleasure for S a t u r -&#13;
day, Sept. 29.&#13;
M. E . K u h n a n d family of&#13;
G r e g o r y , s p e n t S u n d a y w i t h E .&#13;
T. B u s h a n d wife.&#13;
All a r e invited t o t h e L A S t e a&#13;
at t h e h o m e of M r s . W a l k e r ,&#13;
T h u r s d a y , S e p t . 27,,&#13;
Mrs. Belle W a r d a n d d a u g h t e r ,&#13;
l &amp; ^ &amp; u i Q S ^ w f l i M - h e r b r o t h e r ,&#13;
Or la J a c o b s M o n d a y .&#13;
Plainfield h a s a r r a n g e d for a&#13;
lecture course of five n u m b e r s ,&#13;
first one t o b e t h e evening of O c t .&#13;
30, by M r . Shafford, h u m o r i s t a n d&#13;
cartoonist. D o n ' t miss it.&#13;
Piles positively cured witb P r .&#13;
Shoop's Magic ointment. It's made for&#13;
piles atone, and it doe: the work to&#13;
perfection. Iching, painful, protruding&#13;
or blind piles, disappear like&#13;
magic. Sold by all dealers.&#13;
Emmett Hadley has the sympapathy&#13;
of a broken arm sustained&#13;
one day last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Clark, of&#13;
Stookbridge, spent Sunday with&#13;
her parents here.&#13;
Wm. Laverock has purchased&#13;
the Lyman Barton farm and is&#13;
prepaing to move soon.&#13;
Mesdames John and Otis Webb&#13;
spent Thursday last at Henry&#13;
Gardners in West Putnam.&#13;
The missionary society of the&#13;
Presbt. church met with Mrs.&#13;
Irving Pickell yesterday, Sept.&#13;
26, for dinner.&#13;
Rev. P. J. Wright attended&#13;
conference at Ishpeming the past&#13;
week. We will return again as&#13;
pastor of the M. E. church here.&#13;
Ask your druggist for l*ylo Pile&#13;
Cure. Every box warranted. Price&#13;
25 cents, t o r Sale by F. A. Sigler,&#13;
Pinckney , Mich. t 36&#13;
PUTNAM ABD HAJCBUBG FA1M*&#13;
IBS' CLUB.&#13;
The Putnam and Hamburg Farmers'&#13;
Club will meet with Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
John Van Horn Saturday, Sept. 29,&#13;
for dinner. The following program&#13;
has been prepared:—&#13;
Music i Club&#13;
Reading Mrs. Arthur Schoenhals&#13;
Recitation Ella Cady&#13;
Solo Fannie Rolison&#13;
Reading Glenn Smith&#13;
Music Club&#13;
Reading Mrs. Stephen VanHorn&#13;
Recitation Bernice Cady&#13;
Duett. .Mrs. Ida VauFleet and&#13;
Adda Kice&#13;
Reading. Mrs. Geo. VanHorn&#13;
Recitation .Albert Nesbit&#13;
Solo .Florence Kice&#13;
Reading Adda Kice&#13;
Question Box&#13;
Think ol Dr. Snoop's Catarrh Cure&#13;
if your nose anil throat discharges—if&#13;
your breath is foul or feverish. This&#13;
snow white soothing balm contains oil faar'a subscription (xa numbers) costs SO cent*. Late**&#13;
w»»er, 5 ceata. Kvery subscriber gats a HcCall ha-&#13;
(atn F r e e . Subscribe taday. i r T ? I &gt;•.&#13;
i t i W l l t t i . Haniieme prerniuma a* Ol fcUCaly ptUS, l u y U l O l . M e n t h o l , e t C ,&#13;
amission.* Pattern Catalogue . of 600 aa.&#13;
d&lt;ru) anal Premium Catalogue .(thawing 40c- premi»s»s)&#13;
««at fre*. Aaaxaaa THE &gt;IcCALL CO- M ew Yark.&#13;
Iiftdr Agent&#13;
•Wal caab com it&#13;
Mortgage Sal»*&#13;
Default having I'l'en made in the i-onditivns of&#13;
a mortgage made hy David P. Chalker and Amy 1.&#13;
Chalker, )i is wife, to the Glohe Fence Companv, a&#13;
Michigan Corporation, dated .August 24, 1'JOO, and&#13;
recorded in Hie office of the r*»'_ris"t*ir of ileitis, for&#13;
the county of. Livingston ami the stati: of .Vichigajlt-&#13;
ea_tlieJUtJhjlajM&gt;f_A_nj*iist, A. i&gt;, ly 0 5 . il» ' i -&#13;
l&gt;er !M of niort \i\ge&gt; 011 jiii^e H'i and siid mortgage&#13;
contiiinirir » clause statin:.' that should default I*&#13;
made in the payment of said principal or interest&#13;
or any pari thereof when the frame are payable .is&#13;
above provided and should the same or any nart&#13;
thereof remain unpaid for the period of thirty&#13;
days then the principal sum, wirli all arrearages&#13;
of interest shall at the option of said mortaijee,&#13;
its legal representatives and assigns become payable&#13;
immediately thereafter and the interest on&#13;
eaid mortgage, which became d ue on the ;Mth day&#13;
of August, A. D. 190fi, not having lieen paid and&#13;
the same having remained unpaid for the period&#13;
of thirty day 8, said mortgagee does hereby declare&#13;
that the principal .sum of said mortgage with aM&#13;
arrearages of interest i*. now due and that the&#13;
same shall become payable immediately and tin1&#13;
said mortgagee claims there is due ai the date of&#13;
this notice the sum of,SViO.Tl, and an attorney's&#13;
fee of$15.00 provided for in said mortgage and no&#13;
euit or proceedings at law having been instituted&#13;
to recover the moneys secuted by said mortgage,&#13;
or any part thereof, NOW THIvliE FOKE by virtue&#13;
of the power of sale contained in sfl'd moiigage&#13;
and the statute in said case made and pro-&#13;
Tided, notice i a hereby sjiven that on Thursday,&#13;
December 80, A. J&gt;. l'.XV., at one o'clock in the foreincorporated&#13;
into an imported creamiike&#13;
velvet petrolatum. It soothes,&#13;
heals, purifies, controls. Call at our&#13;
store for free trial box. All dealers.&#13;
to&#13;
ANDEBS0N.&#13;
Will L e d w i d g e m a d e a t r i p&#13;
Howell F r i d a y . &lt;&#13;
Clare a n d L i a m L e d w i d g e were&#13;
h o m e from Howell S u n d a y .&#13;
Mrs. F l o r e n c e S p r o u t visited t h e t l e a t h oi h e r mother, a week&#13;
friends in S t o c k b r i d g e last week. l&amp;%0&gt; t u r n e d home S u n d a y .&#13;
M i s s L u c y H i n c k e y entertained«i f ,. ~~7. 7 7 " , ,&#13;
Mica Tfiffi'« vt ^ft „t TV 1 Ladies read this catalog ot charms,&#13;
luiss ivittie liorr of P i n c k n e y . D . . . T • L J io&#13;
, J Bright eyes, glowing cbeeRs, red lips,&#13;
y' jastnoth skin without a blemish, in&#13;
Mrs. F . A. Barton - a n d M r s .&#13;
E u n i c e C r a n e a n d son, G e o r g e ,&#13;
went to Ypsilanti on business&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Mrs, Will Caskey e n t e r t a i n e d&#13;
Miss Margaret Grieve, of P l a i n -&#13;
C0LLINS PLAINS&#13;
Miss Madge Y o u n g is on t h e&#13;
sick l i s t&#13;
Mrs. Coy m a d e a t r i p t o Chelsea&#13;
Monday.&#13;
J a m e s L i t t l e was a Chelsea visitor&#13;
S a t u r d a y .&#13;
E l m e r J a y c o x called o n Steve&#13;
Hadley S u n d a y .&#13;
J o h n S u l l i v a n called a t F r e d&#13;
Wallace's S u n d a y .&#13;
Mrs. Cook w h o has been very&#13;
siek is on t h e gain.&#13;
Thos. Y o u n g a n d wife a r e e n -&#13;
t e r t a i n i n g company.&#13;
Mrs. J a m e s H o a r d is visiting&#13;
her sister in Dexter.&#13;
F r e d a n d Nellie Wallace were&#13;
in Chelsea S a t u r d a y .&#13;
Neil H u d l e r made a t r i p t o&#13;
S t o c k b r i d g e S u n d a y .&#13;
Mrs. J a m e s H o a r d called a t R .&#13;
H . M a c k i u d e r s S u n d a y .&#13;
H . N. S t i n s o n of Stockbridge,&#13;
was at h i s farm Saturday.&#13;
Sam L i t t l e of J a c k s o n , visited&#13;
his b r o t h e r J a m e s , over S u n d a y .&#13;
Mr. a n d M r s . Geo. Goodwin s u m m e r visitors, ventured to enumern&#13;
i i. -»T- T x»- i in 0 , -i 1 ate some of the distinguished men who&#13;
•ailed at *\ . J . Pickell s S a t u r d a y j had come from Maine.&#13;
night. -j "There's Longfellow," he said, "and&#13;
it* a 1 n 11 1 1 Hannibal Hamlin, and James G.&#13;
Miss Sylva H a d l e y h a s b e e n ; B l a i n e i W i l l i a m P l t t F e s s e n d e n&#13;
keeping house for h e r b r o t h e r Thomas B. Heed and"— «t&#13;
Steve, d u r i n g t h e absence of h i s ! H e r e a n o l d Asberman looked up&#13;
wife.&#13;
The Sim|kl«&gt; I t r i t l e .&#13;
Bri'ie (al'icr Uio ivturn from the&#13;
bridal tourt 1 see liy this modioal work&#13;
that a \\y.\n v\^\\)lvr&amp; «4jjUt-liuiu^l_£l_eeri&#13;
and a wotiian t»-&gt;u, Ivridryroom- A'es,&#13;
I've rciixl il);it SOMH'WIMMV myself.&#13;
Britliv How uif*&gt;: 'i'ou van p&lt;'t up I&#13;
every morning :t)&gt;d liavo the iirr made&#13;
and tlio bn\ikf;'.!'.t ready boforo It is&#13;
time few me to got up.—London Tit-&#13;
Bits.&#13;
Orla Hendee cf Dtirand, was the&#13;
guest of bis partnts hers Monday&#13;
night.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Reason 8r. has been enterUining&#13;
a oooein, Mrs. Geo. Hayes&#13;
of Canada.&#13;
The will ot ex-governor, P . P . Bliss&#13;
left Albion college 130,000 and Alma&#13;
college 110,000.&#13;
Wm. Potterton, wife and daughter,&#13;
Ruth, ot Hamburg, visited the Green.&#13;
families here Tuesday.&#13;
Mrs. J. S. Harland and son of Mar*&#13;
quette, are the guests of her parents,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Keason.&#13;
Mrs. Stella Graham and daughter,&#13;
Ethel, and Miss Florence Andrews&#13;
left Wednesday morning for Blissfield.&#13;
On Saturday Oct. 6, at one o'clock&#13;
sharp, Louis Oreyer will sell at public&#13;
auction a quantity of personal property&#13;
regardless of cost.&#13;
The scarcity of ice in this village&#13;
should inspire someone to erect a&#13;
large house and be ready to furnish&#13;
this comodity next season at so much&#13;
per.&#13;
A cement shingle has been inyented&#13;
which, it is said, will in time replace&#13;
the wooden shingle. The small boy&#13;
will recei ve the news with anything&#13;
but pleasure.&#13;
A seventeen-months old daughter&#13;
ot Wm. Pitzpatrick and wife, of De«&#13;
troit, died of whooping cough last&#13;
week Wednesday. They have the&#13;
sympathy of their many friends here.&#13;
Picnic Party&#13;
Possessed by a happy inspiration,&#13;
Mr&amp; H. P. Sigler wrote a number,of&#13;
cards to Pinckney friends to meet her&#13;
next day at train, in Detroit, and&#13;
spend the afternoon at Belle Isle.&#13;
Accordingly, on Wednesday. Sept.&#13;
19, t h j following responded:—Mesdames,&#13;
8. P. Yoings, D. M. Mann,&#13;
N. tf. Mann, B..U. Campbell, G. W.&#13;
Sykes, C. E. Pearce, and the Mi3ses&#13;
Minnie and Margaret Best.&#13;
A jolly time was reported and plans&#13;
artHaid^for a-Pinttfhrey-ptcmcirt Belle&#13;
Isle on a larger scale next year.&#13;
A Heal Celebrity.&#13;
The local pride of the natives of Oape&#13;
Elizabeth, Me., is so intense that it&#13;
takes the attitude of pity for all who&#13;
have the misfortune to ' dwell j els«v&#13;
where. This, says a writer in the Lewiston&#13;
Journal, Is&lt; known to regular&#13;
summer visitors, and l)jr most of tliem&#13;
Is respected. One raray day a newcomer,&#13;
who had joined .the gathering&#13;
In the store, composed of fishermen and [&#13;
[ from his work of splicing grass blades,&#13;
j and broke in. "Smart? Those fellows&#13;
Mrs. Steve H a d l e y w h o was | s m a r t • " h e Questioned. "You" just&#13;
'called to Howell on account of come down an' see Josh Pillsbury skin&#13;
fish!"&#13;
A Launch Party&#13;
Friday afternooi last, Mis9 Florence&#13;
Andrews gave a launch party to seven&#13;
young lady friends in honor of Miss&#13;
Ethel Graham. There was a ride&#13;
about the mill pond for a short time&#13;
then a heart lunch in the grove, where&#13;
everything served, sandwiches, cakes&#13;
and all were in the shape ot hearts.&#13;
The "favors were heart shaped sachets&#13;
presented to each guest. Later they&#13;
returned to Miss Andre vs' home&#13;
where they had music and pleasant&#13;
chat. The young ladies presented&#13;
Miss Graham ^with a silver butter&#13;
knife, sugar sheH and cream ladle.&#13;
Michigan State Sunday-&#13;
School Association.&#13;
short, perfect health. For sale witb&#13;
every package Hollister's Rocky&#13;
Mountain Tea. 35 ceots.&#13;
noon, tliore will he sold :it pnMlc auction to t h e ! .&#13;
hlKl'i'^ Udder ut the westerly front .loor oi th« s t , ' ° n " e ^ * l i m a l Of i t s Size, t h e g o r i l l a&#13;
Shootfnsr F &amp; m a n e l e p h a n t .&#13;
The elephant's howdah is that feed&#13;
of Trocrustes, in which one can neither&#13;
sit nor stand with any approach to&#13;
reasonable ease, and in which a recumbent&#13;
attitude is impossible, says&#13;
Blackwood's Magazine. Its advantages&#13;
are, first, that standlug In it a man&#13;
can shoot on every side of him; second,&#13;
that it is convenient for the carriage&#13;
of the occupant's paraphernalia&lt;-his&#13;
guns on racks on either side/ his ammunition&#13;
in a trough in front, his&#13;
other requisites in leather pockets here&#13;
and there on the sides of the machine&#13;
and his bed blanket on the seat—and,&#13;
third, that In a hinder compartment&#13;
an attendant can stand to hold that&#13;
T h R t . f | H j j monstrous umbrella over his head, or&#13;
i i i e u r e a i n o i L i e . | L , W a g 0 1 1 e r a n ( j £a milv of w h e n q u l c k l o a d l n 8 l&gt; required take&#13;
I t s a significant fact that the ; -. 3 "»»""&lt;»* » " " l a u i u y , OL . f p f t m h ,a . h ( i n r 1 thtk mn 4na4. „ , _ , _ ,&#13;
TTHADILLA.&#13;
Miss Lilly P a r k s is assisting&#13;
field aud Mrs. Lizzie Caskey, last [Mrs. Chas. Hartsuff.&#13;
T h u r s d a y . Mr. a n d Mrs. Breed a r e away&#13;
i on an extended visit.&#13;
Court House in the villas* of Howvll, Livingston&#13;
county, Michigan, (that being the place when, the&#13;
Circuit Court for Llvini?s!on county is held) the&#13;
pafinises described in said mortgujre or 90 much&#13;
thereof as may ha necessary to pay tin.* amount &lt;»&#13;
due on said mortgage with ft percent interest and&#13;
all legal conis, together wit h an li'torne}"'* fee of&#13;
£l&lt;1.(0ai"cnveoauteri therein ; theaaid premises 1&gt;«-&#13;
ing descril&gt;ed in said mnrtinjage as the eaat half&#13;
of the tout h west quarter {*4 ) o' section number&#13;
thirty, in township Dumber one north of range&#13;
Btlinbor four east, M'cbi^an, belni; In the townetalp&#13;
of Putnam, county of LiviiReton and state&#13;
of Michigan, tIlls Morta^age he'ng anhjett to a'&#13;
prior mortgage on said, premise*.&#13;
Globe Fence Company, a corporation&#13;
Mortage*.&#13;
Dated deptemher 2ii, \, t&gt;. 1909.&#13;
• Shields A Shields,&#13;
Attorney ior Mortgagee. t AV &gt;:&#13;
Illinois, a r e guests a t Z. A. H a r t -&#13;
also has the largest lungs. Powerful j 8 U " f l *&#13;
lungs means powerful creatures. How t Mrs. H u d l e r is m a k i n g h e r s o n&#13;
to keep the breathing organs right ia three week's visit at Mosierhould&#13;
be man's cbiefest study. Like&#13;
thousands of others, Mrs. Ora A.&#13;
Stephens, of Port Williams, 0., bas&#13;
learned to do this. -She writes: "Three&#13;
bottles ot Dr. Kind's New Discovery&#13;
stopped my cough of two years and&#13;
ville. '&#13;
Mrs. R u t h C h a p m a n „is visiting&#13;
friends a n d relatives about U n a -&#13;
dilla.&#13;
B o r n to H e r m a n H u d s o n a n d&#13;
from his hand the gun Just fired and&#13;
recharge it. These are the advantages.&#13;
Otherwise the howdah is an abomination.&#13;
ADDITIONAL LOCAL.&#13;
Will Wright and family,of Owosso,&#13;
are visiting lelatives hers.&#13;
Will Mclntyre of Jackson, visited&#13;
bis parents here over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Lincoln Smith and sons are&#13;
cured me of what my friends thought j wife, a 6¾ p o u n d son, W e d n e s d a y , | v i s i t i n 8 relatives in Stockbridge.&#13;
consumption. O, it's grand for throat j Sept. 19.&#13;
and lung trouble.'1 Guaranteed by ! -o T u ir- • &gt; .&#13;
v A «;„!&lt;&gt;.. A ., • L 0 -n * ! R e v * J o h n vines, of G r e g o r y ,&#13;
F. A. Sigler, druggist. Price 50cts. f ... , . ,, a , 6 . J i&#13;
and $1.00.. Trial bottle free. !swelrUv iccoen ad ut ctth teh Per eSs bunt .d acyh urecvhe. ning&#13;
The ladies of the M. E. church will&#13;
•hold their fair at the opera house,&#13;
Noy. 2 and 3. A fine time is anticipated,&#13;
and friends of the society are&#13;
requested to make it a success.&#13;
The 46t»h annual meeting of the&#13;
Michigan State Suniay-School Association&#13;
will be held in the First Methodist&#13;
church in the eity of Jackson on&#13;
November 12-14-15,1906. The meeting&#13;
promises to exceed all previous&#13;
conventions in numbers, interest and&#13;
results. The program is to be exceptionally&#13;
practical. In Marion&#13;
Lawrence, the International Secretary,&#13;
Prof. H. M. Hamill, D. D.,&#13;
chairman of the International Educational&#13;
Committee, Josephine L. Baldwin,&#13;
president of the New Jersey&#13;
Elementary Council, and Messrs Tullar&#13;
and Meredith of New York, the&#13;
committee has secured great attractions.&#13;
The Michigan Passenger Association&#13;
bas authorized a rate of one lare pine&#13;
twenty-five cents for "the round trip.&#13;
Lodging and breakfast will be furnished&#13;
free to delegates.&#13;
Through Tonr 1st Sleeping Cars&#13;
to California via \&#13;
Chicago Great Western Railway ^ ^&#13;
Leaving Chicago 6:00 p . m . Wedheft.&#13;
days, arriving at Omaba 9:00 a . m .&#13;
Thursdays, Colorado Springs 7:50 a.&#13;
m. Fridays, Salt Lake City 10:25 a. m.&#13;
Saturdays, arrive at San Francisco&#13;
4:28 p . m . Sundays. A good way to&#13;
go tor the rates are low. For full&#13;
information appry to&#13;
F. R. Mosier, D. P . A.&#13;
t&amp;2 103 Adams at., Chicago, lit.</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch September 27, 1906</text>
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                <text>September 27, 1906 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1906-09-27</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. XXI7. PINO^NET, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, OCT. 4. 1906. No. 4 0&#13;
at&#13;
,'.: - . '&#13;
'*&#13;
LOCAL* NEWS.&#13;
Jeff Parker is borne from St. Johns&#13;
for a tew days.&#13;
Do not forget tue auction at Louis&#13;
Dreyer's on Saturday of this week.&#13;
M i88 Georgia Martin and Fred and&#13;
Bex Read were home from Ypsilanti&#13;
oyerSondfty^—&#13;
Miss Laura Lavey and Roel Cadwell&#13;
enter the State Normal at Ypsilanti&#13;
this week.&#13;
Franc Adele Burcb will give "Mrs.&#13;
Witfgs o! the Cabbage Patch" at&#13;
Dexter, Friday night.&#13;
J. W. Placeway and wife were the&#13;
guests of her brother, Chas. King, in&#13;
Marion the first of the week.&#13;
The Fowlerville Fair will be held&#13;
next week, Oct. 9 and 12. A large&#13;
list of attractions have been arranged&#13;
for.&#13;
Peter Harris who is attending college&#13;
at Big Rapids, was home the&#13;
first ot the week to attend the wed*&#13;
ding of bis sister.&#13;
There will be a township Sunday&#13;
school conventicn at the M. E. church&#13;
in Hamburg, Sunday. Oct. 14. A&#13;
good program is being arranged.&#13;
Frank Peters and Robert Kelly&#13;
have received notice that they have&#13;
been drawn as jurors to the Oct. term&#13;
of court which convenes at Howell,&#13;
Monday Oct. 15.&#13;
s Miss Mary Kelly who has been&#13;
spending the summer at Wequeton*&#13;
sing, has retained and will visit here&#13;
a couple of weeks before going to&#13;
Ann Arbor tor the winter.&#13;
One day last week a partridge flew&#13;
and struck a large window in the&#13;
residence of Thos. Burchiel, breaking&#13;
it and disabling the bird so that it&#13;
was caught. The bird was good eating&#13;
bat rather expensive.&#13;
Livingston County Womans' Christian&#13;
Temperance Union will meet at&#13;
Oak Grove, Tuesday and Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 9=10. Mrs. Calkins, tbe state&#13;
president will give the lecture Tuesday&#13;
evening. Everyone cordially invited.&#13;
The ball game, Anderson vs Pinckney,&#13;
on tbe diamond here Friday last,&#13;
resulted in a score of 6 to 4 in favor&#13;
of the borne team. The Anderson&#13;
team came for a practice game as they&#13;
are to play Howell, and they got the.&#13;
practice all right Good, come again.&#13;
The drouth of several weeks was&#13;
broken last Saturday by a fine rain.&#13;
It came slowly so that it all, did good&#13;
only there was not quite enough of it.&#13;
We are thankful however. The rain&#13;
was followed by quite a frost Sunday&#13;
night but it came too late to do any&#13;
damage only to pasture.&#13;
Assessment No. 87 of the LOT MM&#13;
is now due and must be paid before&#13;
Oct. SI. ADDIK J. PLACEWAY, F. K.&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
FALL OPENING&#13;
This Store offers Great&#13;
Values in Hosiery, Underwear,&#13;
Gloves and&#13;
Mittens, Outing Flan-&#13;
^l»ls, Corsets, Etc.&#13;
" V&#13;
V&#13;
Fleeced Vests, only 5c&#13;
Childrens Fleeced Vests and Pants, 10c&#13;
Ladies Double Knit Mittens, only 10c&#13;
Children! Double Knit Mittens, only 10c&#13;
Sxtra strong values in Outing Flannels&#13;
From 5c to 13c&#13;
stat**;''&#13;
C M N I I U I S H D I tiMli HIWIII&#13;
E A. BOWMAN.&#13;
HOWEUS BUSY STORE&#13;
• y&#13;
Lyle Tounglove was home from&#13;
Detroit over Sunday.&#13;
Dr. Brogan of Stock bridge, was in&#13;
town one day last week.&#13;
Ws learn that a son was born to&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Campbell recently.&#13;
Mrs. N. H. Caverly has been visiting&#13;
tbe patt week in Dundee and&#13;
Northvilier&#13;
C. P. Sykes has been suffering the&#13;
past week with a severe attack of&#13;
appendicitis.&#13;
Mrs. Flora Grimes of Lincoln, Neb.,&#13;
is spending a couple of weeks with&#13;
old friends here.&#13;
Frank Parker and wife, of Boyne&#13;
Falls, are visiting hi parents and&#13;
other relatives here-&#13;
Rev. Benson and wife, of Linden,&#13;
were guests of her sister, Mrs. Herbert&#13;
Gillette, over Sunday.&#13;
Thos. Gilks, of Howell, was" tbe&#13;
guest of his daughter, Mrs. Frank&#13;
Peters, the past week.&#13;
W. S. Swarthout and wife and Mrs.&#13;
Maron Reason visited Mrs. William&#13;
Surdam at Chelsea tbe last of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Tbe dry weather in this section held&#13;
off the wheat seeding, and now it is&#13;
to late to seed and the acreage will be&#13;
small.&#13;
Word has been received that Mrs.&#13;
V. W. Davis had a safe and pleasant&#13;
journey, and arriyed at her home&#13;
Septl 26..&#13;
B. T. 0. Clark of Brighton, was in&#13;
town on business Tuesday, and was a&#13;
caller at this office. Mr. Clark is an&#13;
attorney at Brighton.&#13;
Now is the time to clean up any&#13;
rubbish that has accumulated in the&#13;
back yard. It will make tbe place&#13;
lock much better and save work in&#13;
the spring. 4&#13;
St. Mary's society took in 146 at&#13;
their box social at the opera house&#13;
last Thursday uight. There was a&#13;
large crowd ot young people and they&#13;
enjoyed themselves greatly.&#13;
Mrs. Martha Eager and Miss Euler,&#13;
of Howell, were in Pmckney Monday.&#13;
Miss Edith Eager, who has been&#13;
spending some time at tbe sanitarium,&#13;
returned home with them.&#13;
If there is one thing above another&#13;
a young man should be ashamed of&#13;
doing, it is loafing without aim or&#13;
purpose or profit, on the streets or in&#13;
the stores, day aftjr day, all week. If&#13;
you have nothing to do, stay at home&#13;
—a part of the time, at any rate.&#13;
A. D. Thompson, register of deeds,&#13;
J. A. Greene, prosecuting attorney,&#13;
and Edffin Pratt, sheriff, were in&#13;
town, Friday, looking after their political&#13;
fences a little. They attended&#13;
tbe box social given by St. Mary's society&#13;
Thursday evening. Their boxes&#13;
C09t them quite sums but then it was&#13;
Than-6y well expended. It went for a&#13;
good cause.&#13;
Autumn Wedding&#13;
A very pretty wedding occurred at&#13;
St. Mary's church on Wednesday&#13;
morning, Oct. 3, tbe contracting&#13;
parties being Miss Josepbyne M. Harris,&#13;
eldest daughter of Mr. ana1 Mrs.&#13;
James P. Harris, and Bernhard Hausheer,&#13;
of Howell.&#13;
Miss Hams is a graduate of the U.&#13;
ot M. school of music at Ann Arbor,&#13;
and has been organist at St. Mary's&#13;
church at this place for tbe past y.ear.&#13;
Mr. Haoaheer is an able mechanic and&#13;
holds a responsible position with tbe&#13;
Michigan Condensed Milk Factory in&#13;
Howell. Miss LiOO&amp;ie Redinger, of&#13;
Howell, acted at bridesmaid, and Emmett&#13;
Harris, brother of the bride, was&#13;
best man, A three course wedding&#13;
breakfast was served at the home of&#13;
&gt;ride's parent* to a few friends and&#13;
relative*.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Hausheer left for a&#13;
tour east, visiting Niagara, Buffalo&#13;
and Norwich N. Y„ the home of the&#13;
groom's parents,&#13;
, • . • *&#13;
A Pretty Home Wedding&#13;
On Wednesday evening, Sept. 26,&#13;
1906, in their own home which had&#13;
been made ready for bis bride, in&#13;
Blissfield, occurred the marriage of&#13;
Miss Ethel Graham, cf Pinckney, and&#13;
Mr. Harrie Palmer, of Blissfield.&#13;
The bride gowned in cream poplin&#13;
trimmed in Irish lace, accompanied&#13;
by Miss Florence Andrews, with&#13;
dress of pink silk mull with point&#13;
lace bertba. and the groom with Prof.&#13;
Winfield Stanley, as best man, took&#13;
their places in the parlor mid banks&#13;
of beautiful dowers of pink and white&#13;
decoration, where the cremony was&#13;
performed by Rev. A. Beamer, at&#13;
eight o'clock, in the presence of 25 of&#13;
tbe immediate relatives of the happy&#13;
couple, A two-course luncheon was&#13;
then served in tbe dining room, decorated&#13;
in dark red.&#13;
Mr. and Mr*. Palmer received many&#13;
beautiful and usefull gifts among&#13;
which was the furnishings of tbe&#13;
home from tbe groom's father.&#13;
Mr. Palmer is one of Blissfield's&#13;
young business men, with the firm of&#13;
Palmer &amp; Sons, furniture dealers, and&#13;
Miss Graham one ot Pinckne.vs popular&#13;
young ladies whose whole life has&#13;
been spent here, and the good wishes&#13;
of her many friends go with her to&#13;
her new home.&#13;
Congregational Church.&#13;
Sacrament of Holy Communion was&#13;
ceiebrated last Sunday morning when&#13;
the pastor was assisted by Dea. Colby&#13;
and Mr. J. A. Cad well. Elder Crane&#13;
was present and appropriate remarks&#13;
were made at close of service by the&#13;
pastor and Dea. Colby refering to Mr.&#13;
Crane's good service rendered the&#13;
church and community and expressing&#13;
regret at his intended removal to&#13;
otier scenes. A union service was&#13;
held in the evening. At both services&#13;
Miss Lola Moran and Miss Ida Burchiel&#13;
sang a duett which was well and&#13;
impressively rendered.&#13;
The Sunday school attendance was&#13;
an improvement over previous Sundays,&#13;
and the attendance at other&#13;
services was good.&#13;
Strangers and casual visitors are&#13;
invited to make this church their&#13;
Sunday home.&#13;
Phone 28.&#13;
M. E. Church Notes.&#13;
Rev. Littlejohn and family returned&#13;
home Monday, and there will be&#13;
the usual services next Sunday morning&#13;
and eyenirg. This is the first&#13;
service of the conference year and it&#13;
is desired that there be a good attendance.&#13;
The SUE day school has not been as&#13;
well attended the past two Sundays,&#13;
owing to there being no preaching&#13;
service. Now that the year has opened&#13;
up it is expected that all will fali&#13;
into , line again and bring up the&#13;
average. We enter a new quarter&#13;
next Sunday and let it be the best of&#13;
the year.&#13;
Prayer meeting as usual tonight&#13;
and all are invited to be present.&#13;
The ladie8 ot the society are busy&#13;
preparing for tLeir fair tc be held&#13;
Oct. 26 and 27. Everyone interested&#13;
are requested to help by contributing&#13;
articles to sell.&#13;
Cong'! Church Pair&#13;
At t h e Opera House Friday&#13;
and Saturday of this W e e k&#13;
The Ladies of the society will take&#13;
pleasure in exhibiting and selling the&#13;
goods from the different booths.&#13;
The sale begins at 3 o'clock p. m.&#13;
Friday. Ice o^eam, pop corn and&#13;
home-made candies for sale.&#13;
Friday evtaiaff topper 15ett^ Saturday&#13;
evening, the annual chicken-pie&#13;
supper, price 25cts,&#13;
Everybody cordially invited to&#13;
come and have a good time.&#13;
Headquarters for&#13;
Drugs, Medicine&#13;
Books, Stationery.&#13;
Fancy Crockery&#13;
School Books&#13;
P. A. S I G b B R&#13;
All Persons owing us on Book&#13;
Account are requested to kindly&#13;
call and settle same by Oct. 1,&#13;
1906, by Cash or Bankable notes.&#13;
JACKSON &amp; CADWELL&#13;
o^ America&#13;
Submit the following comparisons for your consideration:&#13;
T o t a l M e m b e r s h i p J a n u a r y 1, 1906, 7 4 7 , 8 6 7&#13;
I n s u r a n c e In f o r c e J a n u a r y 1, 1 9 0 6 , $ 1 , 2 0 4 , 0 4 5 , 5 0 0&#13;
103,951 P o l i c i e s W r i t t e n i n 1 6 0 5&#13;
The following table shows the cost of r\ $1,000.00 IMJHCJ as compared with the&#13;
fraternal societies named. Figures taken from Fraternal Monitor statistics-.&#13;
O R D E R M c m b e r i A j e 2 0 Age 2 5 j A g e 3 0 Age 3 3 ' A g e 4 0&#13;
MODERN WOODMEN JBWBO" $ 4,00 i $ 4,00 I T 2 0 " $ B.DO'-TwS"&#13;
K. 0 . T M. (Sup Tent) 341,423 10-80 1260 14.40 17.40 2100&#13;
A. O. U. W 323,393 7 80 9.00 10.80 12.60 15 00&#13;
Royal Arcanum 305,083 I 8.16 9.75 11.76 i 14 00&#13;
1 0 . F.. 225,876 9.60 ^ 11.28, 13.08 16.56 1 2016&#13;
K. O. T. M.(Modern) 125.680 6.00 j 6.00 8 00 10.00 ' 1 3 60&#13;
Catholic Order Fore'trs 114,266 i 7.20 828 9.48 11.16 I 1404&#13;
K. L. of Honor 78,459! 948 10.68 11.88 13 08 1524&#13;
C M . B. A 57,615 | 1164 j 12.96 1560 18.96 j 23'.40&#13;
A n y o n e i n t e r e s t e d !n F r a t e r n a l I n s u r a n c e a r e r e f e r r e d t o&#13;
D r . C. L. S I G L E R , e x a m i n i n g p h y s i c i a n o f&#13;
P i n c k n e y C a m p , M. W. of A&#13;
N.&#13;
On account of many&#13;
heavy bills due Oct*&#13;
1« we desire to have&#13;
all accounts past&#13;
due settled*&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co.&#13;
f&#13;
MRS. DOWIE SAYS SHE IS DONE&#13;
WITH EMJAH II. FOR&#13;
ALL TIME.&#13;
THEN ELIJAH II. LAUGHED&#13;
Brings Suit to Set Aside Two Deeds&#13;
She Says She Was Forced to Give&#13;
the Prophet&#13;
Parted Forever.&#13;
In an interview Mrs. Jane Dowie,&#13;
wife of John Alexander Dowie. "Elijah&#13;
II.," said that she and her husband&#13;
are completely estranged and that under&#13;
no circumstances will she ever go&#13;
back to him. She politely says he belongs&#13;
to the "down-and-out club." Gladstone,&#13;
her son, sides with her.&#13;
Mrs. Dowie waxes very warm when&#13;
the name of her husband is mentioned.&#13;
She says he is only a big humbug and&#13;
fraud and that at the very zenith of&#13;
his power he would often laugh and remark,&#13;
"How easy those people in my&#13;
congregation are."&#13;
Mrs. Dowie has brought suit in Muskegon&#13;
to set aside two deeds to&#13;
Dowie's former retreat at WhHe Lake,&#13;
known as iJen MacDhui. She charges&#13;
that she executed the deeds as the result&#13;
of undue influence.&#13;
Dowie recently declared publicly&#13;
that he had not known a moment's&#13;
happiness with his wife for 25 years,&#13;
ap she was constantly nagging him.&#13;
Mrs. Dowie charges that he even&#13;
threatened suicide if she refused to do&#13;
his bidding.&#13;
Their trouble is said to have really&#13;
begun a year ago last summer, when&#13;
they were living at Ben MacDhui.&#13;
Dowie suddenly left the retreat and&#13;
Mrs. Dowie says that a few days later&#13;
her husband's agents came to her&#13;
with the demand that she deed over&#13;
the retreat to her husband. She says&#13;
that they threatened Dowie would secure&#13;
a divorce, publicly scandalize her&#13;
and depose her from the church. Under&#13;
this pressure, she says, she signed&#13;
the deeds, although certain Dowie had&#13;
nc grounds for divorce.&#13;
Mysterious Disappearance.&#13;
Capt. L. A. Lelghton, for many years&#13;
i well-known business man of Grand&#13;
Haven, is reported mysteriously missing.&#13;
Capt. Lelghton left home Sunday&#13;
night on the City of Grand Haven for&#13;
Chicago and was seen last on the&#13;
promenade deck by a cabin boy.&#13;
There is little reason to believe that&#13;
he ended his own life and relatives&#13;
think that Mr. Lelghton lost his balance&#13;
in a-fit of dizziness and fell overboard.&#13;
He was last seen at 11 o'clock&#13;
on the promenade deck. He was&#13;
missed Tuesday morning. He had not&#13;
slfcpt in his berth.&#13;
Capt. Lelghton came to Grand Haven&#13;
about thirty years ago, ands engaged&#13;
in the steamship business,&#13;
which he pursued until abqut 1875,&#13;
when he built an opera house, which&#13;
he operated until 1885, when he went&#13;
back into the steamboat business and&#13;
remained until 1893, when he started&#13;
a small mercantile business here.&#13;
Lived a Hundred Years?&#13;
Mrs. Catherine Perseli. said to have&#13;
been over 100 years old, died in the&#13;
home of relarives, Mr. and Mrs. James&#13;
Murphy, of Flint. She nad been blind&#13;
for three years, but nil her other&#13;
senses were acute. She emigrated from&#13;
Ireland when a girl. Her husband died&#13;
21 years ago. They hal no children.&#13;
She had lived in Genesee county for 74&#13;
years. She was noted for her aversion&#13;
to having her picture taken, and all&#13;
through her life successfully resisted&#13;
the efforts of her friends to get a&#13;
photograph of her.&#13;
Ingrate Goes to Prison.&#13;
Isaac Cicero, who rewarded the charity&#13;
of the Bay City Sisters of Mercy by&#13;
stealing two gold waiches and a sum&#13;
of money, was sentenced to from six&#13;
months to 15 years in .Jackson prison.&#13;
He was nursed back to health and&#13;
Riven a job at the hospital when weil,&#13;
THE OWEN CASE.&#13;
Mooting of Owsn and Miss Curtis After&#13;
Coronsr's Verdict&#13;
After the verdict had been rendered&#13;
In the case of Mrs. J. B. Owen, of Lansing,&#13;
which set forth the fact that she&#13;
came to her death through the effects&#13;
of carbolic acid, but expressed doubt&#13;
whether she, herself, or others administered&#13;
it. Chief of Police Behrndt a c&#13;
companied Miss Maxlne Curtis to the&#13;
home of J. B. Owen. She was after&#13;
some-'of her belongings.&#13;
Miss Curtis had no conversation with&#13;
Owen since she had confessed her in*&#13;
faluatton. She offered to return to&#13;
Owen a plain gold ring which he had&#13;
given her in Detroit, when they were&#13;
on the way east with the body of his&#13;
wife. Owen, however, did not caro to&#13;
accept it&#13;
On her return from the Oweu house&#13;
Miss Curtis was asked if she would&#13;
consider a proposition of marriage&#13;
from Owen.&#13;
"No, not much," she answered spiritedly.&#13;
Miss Curtis announced thnt she&#13;
would go to Chicago.&#13;
Prosecutor McArthur says there will&#13;
be no.further proceedings. There was&#13;
little evidence for any other theory&#13;
than suicide, except the showing that,&#13;
according to Miss Curtis' testimony,&#13;
Owen had wished himself free to marry&#13;
her.&#13;
The feature of the closing session of&#13;
the inquest was the reading.of two letters&#13;
received by Miss Curtis, in the&#13;
handwriting, she testified, of Owen.&#13;
The latter refused to say whether- or&#13;
not they were his. They were written&#13;
to her while in Muskegon last July.&#13;
Speaking of weddings' recalls the recent announcement&#13;
of the engagement of Mils Margaret&#13;
Chanler, the Astor heiress, to Richard Aldrlch.Tif&#13;
the editorial staff of the Times. Miss Chanler is&#13;
following the lead of several other young women&#13;
of fortune and social position in promising' her&#13;
hand in marriage to a man of no means, but possessed&#13;
of brains. In the pursuit of his newspaper&#13;
work Mr. Aid rich met and became acquainted with&#13;
Miss Chanler. v&#13;
The news of the engagement is spmevhat/&gt;f&#13;
a surprise to many of Miss ChanlePs friend*, wfco&#13;
had supposed that matrimony was a thought far&#13;
remote from the mind of the actU-e young Woman,&#13;
who always declared that she was wedded to&#13;
philanthropy.&#13;
Miss Chanler, worth several millions in her&#13;
own right, a great-great-granddaughter ^of- the -J&#13;
original John Jacob Astor, daughter of the late&#13;
John Winthrop Chanler and sister of Mrs. John Jay Chapman, la a.ramarWable&#13;
young woman. 8he is beautiful, tall, slender and stately, and instead&#13;
of seeking the frivolities of the higher society, has devoted herself to the&#13;
welfare of mankind, to the relegation of social gayety. /&#13;
At the outbreak of hostilities between the United States and Spain Miss&#13;
Chanler joined the Red Cross society, went to Cuba and later established a&#13;
hospital in Ponce and nursed the ill and wounded soldiers, with no one to&#13;
help her but one woman, Mrs. Anna Boullgny. of New Orleans. For her&#13;
services Miss Chanler was presented by special act of congress in January,&#13;
1899, with a gold medal. ,&#13;
In 1900 she became the head of the Municipal League in this city and&#13;
devoted her time and money to reform in politics. In August, 1900, "Miss&#13;
Chanler went to China to assist in the hospital relief work.&#13;
She has raised her voice frequentlyIn public In^ehatf-c^w^mAals suffrage&#13;
and performed patriotic work besides.&#13;
During the summer months it has been Miss Chanler's custom, among&#13;
other charities, to throw open her mansion at 317 West Seventy-fourth street&#13;
to sick children of the poor.&#13;
No date has been mentioned for the wedding, but it will probably take&#13;
place early in the autumn.&#13;
Man and Gold Missing.&#13;
The stockholders of the Marinette-&#13;
Nevada Gold Mining- Co., an or wnum&#13;
reside in Menominee and Marinette,&#13;
Wis., are exceedingly anxious at present&#13;
over the carload of gold ore&#13;
shipped from their mine near Goldfield,&#13;
Nev., three weeks ago. The load&#13;
WAS worth $2,000. Herman A. Goethe,&#13;
of Marinette, foreman at the mine, has&#13;
also been missing for three weeks. It&#13;
is feared that foul play is at the bottom&#13;
of the mystery.&#13;
Loss Is $50,000.&#13;
For the second time in 36 hours fire&#13;
visited the Detroit Y. M. C. A. build&#13;
ing Thursday morning and the employes&#13;
who sleep there had to fly for&#13;
their lives once more. The whole top&#13;
floor was gutted and the roof destroyed,&#13;
while the rest of the building&#13;
was flooded with water, and will&#13;
be uninhabitable for some months to&#13;
come. The loss is at least $50,000. The&#13;
other fire, Tuesday midnight, caused&#13;
a loss of $10,000.&#13;
MICHIGAN IN BRIEF.&#13;
. Selden Allen, an aged and wellknown&#13;
Waverly farmer, was killed&#13;
Thursday by falling from a load of&#13;
hay.&#13;
Carl Finck, aged 20, was buried alive&#13;
by a cave-in at a gravel pit where he&#13;
was working alone, six miles south&#13;
of Quincy.&#13;
Beginning October 15, two more&#13;
rural delivery routes will be added to&#13;
the Shepherd service, together covering&#13;
54 miles.&#13;
The grand lodge meeting and Uniform&#13;
Rank, Knights of Pythias, field&#13;
day exercises will be held in Traverse&#13;
City October 2, 3 and 4.&#13;
Patrick Folen opened the door of&#13;
the oven in the Genesee Iron foundry&#13;
and saw a kitten sleeping. At the risk&#13;
of his life he rescued it.&#13;
Blood poisoning originating from a&#13;
sliver he ran into his foot last week&#13;
caused the death of Eugene Goodrich,&#13;
a pioneer of Atlas township.&#13;
Lockjaw, caused by running a sliver&#13;
into the little finger of his left hand&#13;
two weeks ago, caused the death of&#13;
Zuvier Baecheler, of Port Huron.&#13;
A number of Owosso and Corunna&#13;
business men are going to appeal to&#13;
the wholesale houses of Detroit tor&#13;
help in inducing the Grand Trunk to&#13;
run-another train- fritty Detroit**'-'' .&#13;
WiMiam'Wilcox, a mining engineer \&#13;
of.-Norway, was*-struck on the head&#13;
wkh the lever of his engine and instantly&#13;
killed Thursday. He was single&#13;
and the only support of his widowed&#13;
mother.&#13;
Mrs. ParsaM, of New Lothrop, wife&#13;
of Peter Paryall. owner of Alenwood,&#13;
stole the watches and money and do- , h € pacing stallion, drove him one mile&#13;
HEIRESS TO WIO POOR MAN. T h i s African explorer, whose experiences&#13;
are being published in tome&#13;
of the papers, says j£arrots_j£e de-&#13;
-fHlcious eating. I always- thought they&#13;
were very tough." ,&#13;
"But he refers to wild parrots, tit's&#13;
their association .with men that makes&#13;
m/Mt jparr^til tpugh."-rPhi}adelpfc4»&#13;
ST*8*-, ,. W ..:." Hi&#13;
Young Man at 77.&#13;
Peoria, UK, claims the mostjremar* '-&#13;
able bicyclist la the world, eonsldsi*&#13;
Ing his advanced age. This m a s v&#13;
Thomas W. Davis, is now in his sejr*&#13;
\ea4y-eeventh year'and has ridden ov*»&#13;
100,000 miles. He received from* Us* -.&#13;
Centuryv club of America the fitq^r&#13;
priee for the 1902 mileage record.&#13;
Dog's Point of View.&#13;
"I wonder, now," mused the dog,&#13;
"what fool thing it is that my. jnaster&#13;
wants me to do with that hoop he is&#13;
holding out before me. Maybe he&#13;
wants me to jump through it. I'll dd)&#13;
It, and see . . . That was It, *£*x&#13;
right How little it takes to make »&#13;
man happy!" &lt;-&lt;+&#13;
CARRY wUSIHESS TO LUNCHEON TABLE.&#13;
Thos,e who take a casual view of the great&#13;
restaurants in the lower part of the city at midday&#13;
are likely to think that "New York business&#13;
men live in sybaritic luxury. The appointments&#13;
of the tables, the excellence of the food and the&#13;
leisurely dallying over coffee and cigars which&#13;
ha re of late become concomitants of a luncheon&#13;
might be taken to mean that the "quick lunch"&#13;
habit had entirely disappeared and that men had&#13;
taken to rational ways of eating.&#13;
All of this looks well, but as a matter of fact&#13;
the luncheon has become a business function, as&#13;
much as any other duty connected with office or&#13;
counting Toom. Over the tables, where napery&#13;
and silver gleam, are discussed contracts and&#13;
deals and margins. The restaurant for the time&#13;
becomes a mart or a rendezvous, and everything&#13;
is seasoned with shop.&#13;
New York men are taking more time over&#13;
their luncheons because they have more business to transact or discuss at&#13;
that hour.&#13;
Down at Delmonlco's, of Beaver street, the coffee merchants, the dealers&#13;
in commodities which fill the great warehouses, and often the men of Wall&#13;
street meet and talk over the details of thel#business, often making harried&#13;
excursions to the ticker. In one of the smaller private rooms of downtown&#13;
Ddlmonico's It is the custom of the head of a well known publishing house&#13;
tozmeet the members of his-staff and the executive- heads of the various departments&#13;
for a conference, talking over with them matters of policy while&#13;
they discuss the menu.&#13;
Lawyers and their clients, merchants and customers, insurance, agents,&#13;
the heads of great business corporations may be seen in the principal restaurants,&#13;
where they linger often for an hour or so to discuss their compli&#13;
cated affairs, in low, confidential tones.*&#13;
Mancharia at Honolulu.&#13;
Honolulu.—-The ' steamer Manch«cia \ccame&#13;
into this harbor Monday. Capt.&#13;
Metcalf thinks that the vessel can be&#13;
repaired here tn ten days "s» that she&#13;
will be able to go to 8 » Francisco&#13;
under her own steam. .&#13;
X&#13;
Twelve Hurt in Car $rash.&#13;
Seattle, Wash.—Three street cars,&#13;
one loaded to the guards with passengers,&#13;
collided here, more than a dozen&#13;
passengers and car employes being injured.&#13;
Three of the passengers are&#13;
not expected to survive.&#13;
j,V.v&#13;
*&#13;
Servants Demand Right*.&#13;
Domestic servants in San Francisco&#13;
being scarce, all cooks and housemaids&#13;
In the relief camp were ordered out.&#13;
They declined to go till they were&#13;
ready, protesting that they were "just&#13;
as much entitled to a picnic at the&#13;
public expense as anybody else."&#13;
To Study Malarial Germs.&#13;
George H. Dieffenbacher, who has&#13;
been delegated by the grand duke of&#13;
Baden to study malarial, germs and&#13;
mosquitoes in North and, Central&#13;
America, arrived In this country recently,&#13;
and has gone to Mexico to&#13;
start his investigations.&#13;
Self-Oenial.&#13;
"Young man, why do you lead such&#13;
an idle life? Don't you know that&#13;
only work brings happiness?"&#13;
"Yes, sir. But I'm not so selfish as&#13;
to think only of my own happiness.&#13;
I'm leading a life of self-sacrifice!"—&#13;
Cleveland Leader.&#13;
Yes, Indeed.&#13;
"They are trying to invent a bottle&#13;
that cannot be refilled."&#13;
"Yes?"&#13;
"Yes; but they'd do more for the&#13;
world if they would invent a boozer&#13;
who could not be refilled."—Houston&#13;
Post.&#13;
The New Were Worse.&#13;
"Didn't you think Bilklns told some&#13;
awful old jokes last night?"&#13;
He certainly did. But it's better&#13;
to laugh twice at a good old joke&#13;
than to strain your mouths trying to&#13;
grin over a fresh one that isn't worth&#13;
the effort."—Detroit Free Press.&#13;
ormped. Fred Wellman. who '•carved*'&#13;
Tied Morgan in a-dozen places with a&#13;
hrge' knife, received a similar sentence.&#13;
He Denies It.&#13;
C. A. Boomer, Michigan Central operator&#13;
at the lonely telegraph station&#13;
east of the junction, whose reported&#13;
assault was declared to have been a&#13;
ruse to relieve himself of night work&#13;
and get another job through a play&#13;
on the sympathy of railroad officials,&#13;
says the stories to this effect are unqualifiedly&#13;
false. Boomer says he has&#13;
not been discharged, that he resigned&#13;
at the solicitation of his wife and was&#13;
r.otified to report for duty last night.&#13;
Pauper Found Millions.&#13;
'Uncle', Dick Langford, aged S3,&#13;
who first discovered ore In the Gogebic&#13;
range, has entered the Ontonagon&#13;
county poorhouse to end his days.&#13;
Millions were many times almost within&#13;
his grasp, but he was always a&#13;
poor man. For years he lived in a"h old&#13;
shanty on Lake Gogebic, a famous resort&#13;
for fishermen, who -contributed&#13;
gtr.erously to his support.&#13;
Twenty conventions have been secured&#13;
for Saginaw for 1907, the semicentennial&#13;
year. The last to select that&#13;
place Js the Dairymen's convention,&#13;
which will meet in Febrvary.&#13;
,.b. .s. T' " *&#13;
at the Flint fair Friday in 2:08(½. This&#13;
time, it is claimed, is the fastest made&#13;
by any woman driver in the world.&#13;
The inquest into the death of Chas.&#13;
Bates failed to clear the mystery,&#13;
rates returned to Ortonville from attending&#13;
the state fair in Detroit and&#13;
two days laur died from injuries&#13;
which „he was supposed to have received&#13;
at the fair.&#13;
Friends of Niles Caniff fear that he&#13;
is the unknown man found murdered&#13;
in the woods near the Soo. He left&#13;
Traverse City five weeks ago with&#13;
$500 for Sault Ste. Marie to buy a&#13;
farm. He has not been heard from.&#13;
It is believed that he was killed and&#13;
robbed.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Watkins celebrated&#13;
their golden wedding Saturday on&#13;
the farm In Norvell township, on which&#13;
Mr. Watkins has resided since he&#13;
drove in an ox cart from' New YorK&#13;
state, 72^years ago. His is said to have&#13;
been the first log hoiue in that section&#13;
of the county.&#13;
Miss Nellie Woodruff, aged 14.&#13;
daughter of D. W. Woodruff, of Billings,&#13;
was instantly killed, and W. t&#13;
Tripp an. i Willie Hamill and MttS&#13;
Maud Hamiil were .probably fatally&#13;
hurt, in a r i &gt;away. The Woodruff gbi&#13;
was thrown out, her head striking ft&#13;
stump, crushing her itrall. The&#13;
team inn a w a v M o i l r ,&#13;
A it/ » U A - g&gt; M ^ - ^ ^ of a TEN MILLION COLLAR CONCERN is the best assurance you can Written guarantee havc 0i the superiority 0f the&#13;
COLUMBIA GRAPriOPIIONE&#13;
With this guarantee you don't guess, you KNOW which is best ASK ^ W f c&#13;
YOIR OWN BANKER as to our responsibility and financial standing, f r e e T r i a l a n d L&amp;Sy P a y m e n t O f f e f "&#13;
Then send to our nearest dealer or to us, and get our . . . . ^ - • — — ^ - — ^ ., •*• ~&#13;
This is your chance to secure the BEST TALKING MACHINE MADE, on payments which will not be felt.&#13;
WE ACCEPT OLD MACHINES OF ANY MAKE IN PART PAYMENT,&#13;
The Graphophone is the Ideal Entertainer in the Home I "J££^Z ^ ^&#13;
Gr«»* Prix, Paris, I see ftevMc Crapd Prlie, frt. LmiU, IMS&#13;
lUefccst Award, Perttaee, ites&#13;
Try toil&#13;
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ntf-1&#13;
Columbia Pnonograph Co*&#13;
88 Wabash Avenue,&#13;
Chicago, HI.&#13;
, ^ &gt;&#13;
•&lt;* a*'a *^V&#13;
Komi nr. full dstsllaq&#13;
"f„jo"r Kony l'aymont and&#13;
Klchnnge Plan.&#13;
\i *&amp;.&#13;
Name. * • * 4 • • ft • » • »«••*&lt;&#13;
Addr*»«,. I -ir.T •r»t.&#13;
-s . , - r.-&#13;
#&#13;
CHAPTER Vm.—Continued.&#13;
' But Mr. Dawaa caa?te&lt;i; on, affably&#13;
boa-coftifaitfo!, and after a time Winton&#13;
b*g^Hd^j&gt;bi*fa Wniieirfor toftoctlngi&#13;
the uftetiof motive/ By no&#13;
wort or bint did tbe vie*, president&#13;
fiftr to the struggle pendent between&#13;
4/m two companies or to tbe warlike&#13;
laddent of tbe morning. And when&#13;
fce Anally rose to excuse himself on a&#13;
letter-writing plea, his leave-taking&#13;
was tha*. of th« genial host reluctant&#13;
to part ."company with-fats guest.&#13;
"I've enjoyed your conve'sation,&#13;
sen; enjoyed it right much. Most&#13;
happy to have had the pleasure of&#13;
your cqmpany, Mis^eh Winton. May I&#13;
hope you will faveh us often while&#13;
we are neighbors?"&#13;
Winton rose, made the proper acknowledgments,&#13;
and would , have&#13;
crossed 'tfie wmpirtnient; to make his&#13;
adieux io Mrs.*Carteret. But at that&#13;
moment' Virginia,^ taking advantage of&#13;
Adams''handshaking witli the Rajah,&#13;
came between.&#13;
"You re not going yet, are you, Mr.&#13;
Winton? Don't hurry. If you are&#13;
dying to smoke a pipe, as Mr. Adams&#13;
eays you are, we can go out on the&#13;
platform. It isn't too cold, Is It?"&#13;
Not the words themselves, but ner&#13;
manner of saying them, warmed him&#13;
«o suddenly that an Arctic winter's&#13;
night would not have been prohibitory.&#13;
"It is cleaT and frosty, a beautiful&#13;
night," he hastened to say. "May I&#13;
help you with your coat?"&#13;
She suffered him, but in the height&#13;
of the heart-warming glow gave him&#13;
a cold douche in a word to Bessie.&#13;
"Won't you come, too, Bessie, dear?"&#13;
she asked; and Winton set the whole&#13;
battery of his will at work to fend&#13;
off the threatened calamity.&#13;
Happily, it averted itself. Miss Bessie&#13;
was quite comfortable as she was&#13;
and begged to* be excused. Mrs. Carteret&#13;
in her' capacity of chaperon&#13;
looked askance at \ irginia, was met&#13;
by a glance of the resolute brown eyes&#13;
Which sfee: had come- to obey without&#13;
fully understanding, and contented&#13;
herself wn... a monitory: "Don't stay&#13;
out too long, Virginia. It Is dreadfully&#13;
cold."&#13;
So presently Winton had his heart's&#13;
desire, j ^ b ^ ^ a ^ ; . t c * be alone with&#13;
Virginia- alone, we say, though the&#13;
privacy of the square railed platform&#13;
was that of the ear only. For the&#13;
gatbering-room of the Rosemary, with&#13;
its lights and eyes, gave directly upon&#13;
the rear platform through the two&#13;
full-length windows and the glass&#13;
door.&#13;
Now in whatsoever aspect the mountain&#13;
skyland presents itself—and its&#13;
aspects are numberless—that of a&#13;
She, gave him a flitting glance of&#13;
intelligence,&#13;
"How strangely chance whips us&#13;
about from post to pillar. Two evenings&#13;
ago I was foolish enough t o -&#13;
well, you know what I did. And now&#13;
we have changed places and you are&#13;
telling me what a woman may do—if&#13;
she dare."&#13;
But he would not admit the premises.&#13;
"If the one were foolish, so Is&#13;
the other. But I can't allow that to&#13;
Btand. J shall alwa-ya he the better [And ae to the&#13;
for what you said to me the other&#13;
evening."&#13;
"I don't know why you should; you&#13;
didn't need it in the least," she pro-&#13;
' ' , ' - 1« I . • I .• ^ - — •&#13;
good faith', eve&gt;ything a man Values,&#13;
or should value. I was only, jesting&#13;
when I spoke of the day-pay; that la&#13;
nothing. I can't believe you would&#13;
ask such a sacrifice of me—of any&#13;
matt" '..''&#13;
The brown eyeB met hhl fairly, and&#13;
Jt was not Mr. Somerville Darrah's&#13;
confederate who said: "Indeed, I do&#13;
not ask It, Mr. Winton. I see now&#13;
how impossible It would be for you&#13;
to—" she stopped short, and leaving&#13;
tae sentence in the air, began again.&#13;
"But it Is only fair that you should&#13;
have your warning, r.nd I'm going' to&#13;
give It to you. My uncle will leave&#13;
no stone unturned to defeat you."&#13;
He was. still looking Into her eyes,&#13;
and so had courage to say what came&#13;
uppermost,&#13;
"I don't care. I shall fight him as&#13;
hard as I can, bu| I shall always he&#13;
his debtor for this evening. Do you&#13;
understand?**&#13;
She broke the eye-hold and turned&#13;
away quickly.&#13;
"You must not eeme again," she&#13;
said.&#13;
"But I shall—as often as I may.&#13;
railway tussle, Mr,&#13;
Darnah may take it out of me as he&#13;
pleases from sunrise to sunset, if he&#13;
will only invite me here to dinner&#13;
now and then."&#13;
lights burn clear in a black dome for&#13;
which the mighty peaks themselves&#13;
are the visible supports, is not the&#13;
least impressive. So, for a little&#13;
time, awe challenging awe in these&#13;
two had much in common, tongue and&#13;
lip were silent, and when they spoke&#13;
it was of the immensities.&#13;
"Does your profession often open&#13;
such wide doors to you, Mr. Winton?"&#13;
It gave him an exquisite thrill to&#13;
know that her mood marched so evenly&#13;
with his own.&#13;
"Outside of the office work, which&#13;
I ha,ve always evaded when I could,&#13;
the doors are all pretty wide. One&#13;
year I was on the Mexican boundary&#13;
survey—you can picture those silent&#13;
nights {n th£ desert. Another time&#13;
I was with the Geodetic on the coast;&#13;
slnee^that winter the tJoomtng^of the&#13;
surf ^HM'jbem the censtaajt-«nd*rtooe&#13;
for me in all mu3ic.&#13;
"Ah, yes, in music. You must love&#13;
music if you can associate it with&#13;
this."&#13;
"I do, indeed. I would build it the&#13;
grandest of the temples, though I&#13;
Should be only a mute lay-worshiper&#13;
to It myself."&#13;
»n&gt; smiled. "That temple must alwa^&#13;
i have two high priests, one who&#13;
prqphesies and one who interprets. I&#13;
can't play without a sympathetic listener&#13;
."&#13;
*I wish you might play for me&#13;
ktime. You would have to be very&#13;
If you- could find fault with&#13;
reciation."&#13;
I? But we are riding away&#13;
»by after we had fairly&#13;
mqMtai yours."&#13;
*•• u s laughed. "Mine is only a heavy&#13;
eja/t-horse, not fit for riding," he said.&#13;
* "Ton shouldn't say that It Is a&#13;
i's work—yours." And he made&#13;
there was a note of regret in her&#13;
••trice when she added.: "No woman&#13;
can aver share It with you, or herp&#13;
you m it."&#13;
'I saeaid be sorry to believe that."&#13;
HI-: O P E X E D T H E DOOR FOR H E R .&#13;
tested. "If I had known then what&#13;
I know now, I should have said something&#13;
quite different."&#13;
"Say it now. if you wish."&#13;
"May I? But I have no right. Bestarlit&#13;
winterhlghtr^wT^n"th§^heaven-1^11*65^1* wouht- sound like the-base3t&#13;
of recantations."&#13;
"Would it? Nevertheless, I should&#13;
like to hear It."&#13;
She nerved herself for the plunge—&#13;
her uncle s plunge—doubting more&#13;
than ever.&#13;
"Youi part in the building of this&#13;
other railroad is purely a business affair,&#13;
is it not?"&#13;
"My personal interest? Quite so; a&#13;
mere matter of dollars and cents, you&#13;
may say."&#13;
She went on, entirely missing the&#13;
j Irony in his reply.&#13;
"You did not know the difficulties&#13;
before you came here?"&#13;
"Only in a general way. I knew&#13;
there was opposition, and—well, I'm&#13;
not just a novice in this sort of thing,&#13;
and if I may be allowed to boast a&#13;
little, I knew my appointment was&#13;
owing to Mr. Callowell's belief in my&#13;
ability to carry it through."&#13;
"You are not smoking." she said.&#13;
"Haven't you your pipe?" She was&#13;
finding it desperately hard to go on.&#13;
"If yon don't mind." he returned;&#13;
hut when he had pipe and tobacco in&#13;
hand she plunged again.&#13;
"You say your interest in this other&#13;
railroad—your personal 'interest—is&#13;
only that of—of an employe. If you&#13;
should have another offer, from some&#13;
other company—"&#13;
He smiled. "Pnt yourself in my&#13;
place, Miss Virginia. What would&#13;
you do?"&#13;
She tried to think it out, and in&#13;
the process the doubt grew and overwhelmed&#13;
her.&#13;
"I—I don't (i know," she faltered.&#13;
"If, as you say, it id only a question&#13;
of so much money to be earned—"&#13;
He started as if she struck him&#13;
with a wTlp.A&#13;
"That* is nut'your argunient; it is&#13;
Mr. Darrah's." Then his voice took&#13;
a deeper tone that thUlled her tttL&#13;
she -wanted to cry out. "Don't, say&#13;
you want me to give up; please don t&#13;
say that.' I think I have been putting&#13;
he rtiofned, y u m y . « m mrimt?lm**«*&gt;9&amp;6MtoX th*** last tj»» 4ajr«&#13;
of any man's work may be shared by&#13;
the womae whe wHi«—and* dares.** .&#13;
In a flash her mood changed and&#13;
she laughed lightly. .&#13;
"Who would think if of you, Mr.&#13;
Winton! Of all men I should have&#13;
said you were the last to care so&#13;
nmch-for the social diversions. Shall&#13;
we go in?"&#13;
"If we must; but not until I have&#13;
thanked you for vour timely hint of&#13;
yesterday morning. It saved me no&#13;
end of trouble."&#13;
"The telegram? Mr. Adams sent&#13;
that. And besides, it was meant to be&#13;
a scolding."&#13;
__ - _ _ , 7 "I s i t e fl* doubt A4ta&amp; sent (he&#13;
wire, but he didn't; writ* W. Or, if&#13;
he did, he also wrote our invitation&#13;
to dinner. They are in the same&#13;
hand, you know."&#13;
She laughed again. "I think it Is&#13;
quite time we were going in," she&#13;
averred, and he opened the door for&#13;
her.&#13;
If "Mr. John Winton, C. E.. stood in&#13;
need of a moral tonic, as Adams had&#13;
so delicately intimated to Miss Bessie&#13;
Carteret, it . was administered in&#13;
quantity sufficient before he slept on&#13;
the night of dinner-givings.&#13;
Fer a clear-eyed Technblogian', free&#13;
from alt beart-trammelings and able&#13;
to grasp the unsentimental fact, the&#13;
enemy's new plan of campaign wrote&#13;
itself quite legibly. With his pick&#13;
and choice among the time-killing expedients&#13;
tbe Rajah' could scarcely&#13;
hare found one more to his purpose&#13;
than the private car Rosemary, li*»&#13;
eluding In its passenger list a Miss&#13;
Virginia Carteret. There would be&#13;
more dinners and social diversions;&#13;
other procrastinations like this of&#13;
neglecting to look after the consignment&#13;
of steel—which, by the by, was&#13;
not yet to be seen or even definitely&#13;
heard from; and in the end, defeat.&#13;
All of which Adams, substituting&#13;
friendly frankness for the disciplinary&#13;
traditions of the service, set forth in&#13;
good Bostonian English for the benefit&#13;
and behoof of his chief, and was answered&#13;
according to his deserts with&#13;
Bcofflngs and deridings.&#13;
''I wasn't born yesterday, Morty,&#13;
and I'm not so desperately asinine as&#13;
you seem to think," was the besotted&#13;
one's summing up. "I know the&#13;
Rajah doesn't split hairs In a business&#13;
fight, but he Is hardly unscrupulous&#13;
enough to use Miss Carteret as&#13;
a cat's-paw."&#13;
But Adams would sot be scoffed&#13;
aside.&#13;
"You're off in your estimate of Mr.&#13;
Darrah, Jack, 'way off. I know the&#13;
tradition—that a southern gentleman&#13;
is all chivalry when It comes to a&#13;
matter touching his womankind, and&#13;
I don't controvert it as a general&#13;
proposition. But the Rajah has been&#13;
a fighting western railroad magnate&#13;
so long that his accent is about the&#13;
only southern asset he has retained.&#13;
If I'm any good at guessing, he will&#13;
stick at nothing to gain his end."&#13;
Winton admitted the Impeachment&#13;
without prejudice to his own point of&#13;
view.&#13;
"Perhaps you are right. But forewarned&#13;
is forearmed. : And Miss Virginia&#13;
is not going to lend herself to&#13;
any such nefarious scheme."&#13;
"Not consciously, perhaps; but you&#13;
do-n't know her yet. If she saw a&#13;
good chance to take the conceit out of&#13;
you, she'd improve ic—without think-&#13;
I Ing overmuch of the possible ^onse-&#13;
! qnences^to the Utah company."&#13;
"Pshaw!" said Winton. "That i3&#13;
another of your literary inferences.&#13;
I've met her only twice, yet I venture&#13;
to say I know her better than&#13;
you do. If she cared anything for me&#13;
—which she doesn't—"&#13;
"Oh, go to sleep!" said Adams, who&#13;
was not minded to argue further with&#13;
a man besotted; and so the matter&#13;
went by default for the time.&#13;
It was very deftly done, and even&#13;
Adams, the clear-eyed, could not help&#13;
admiring the Rajah's skillful finesse.&#13;
Of formal dinner-givings there might&#13;
easily have been an end, since the&#13;
construction camp had nothing to&#13;
offer in return. But the formalities&#13;
were studiously ignored, and the two&#13;
young men were put upon a footing&#13;
of intimacy and encouraged to com'&#13;
and go as they pleased.&#13;
(TO B E C O N T I N U E D . )&#13;
, .Wealth Above and fUicw.&#13;
AniMIuhtraltoi *of the diversity of&#13;
appert MgfeifSiiLpilftesbiiroes came to&#13;
notice yesterday'at the Hammer farm,&#13;
near here._ ,Two different crews&#13;
Of men were at work, one* exploring&#13;
for iron ore for' Plelbrads,' fifather ft&#13;
Co., of Cleveland, which recently took&#13;
an option on the property, and the other&#13;
engaged in thrashing oats'/ • One&#13;
crew was sinking a test pit, and the&#13;
other was operating 3a steam, thrashing&#13;
'machine. A similar occurrence was&#13;
remarked in Spring Valley. A steam&#13;
thrasher was at work on the farm of&#13;
Andrew Youngs, while just across the&#13;
road was the big, Baltic mine, in full&#13;
commission. .&#13;
Mlsa Carteret You know well enough&#13;
what ia^U?ojveii.a-»asr,&#13;
THE OLD AGE THAT IS WORTH STRIVING FOR H E T H E R old age is worth striving for depends more or&#13;
less upon how the term old age is denned and conditions&#13;
which may surround it.&#13;
Persons with mental and, physical energies impaired by&#13;
excesses, accidents, illnesses, avoidable or unavoidable, contracted&#13;
or inherited, may have reached at 40 or 50 a period&#13;
of life and its conditions analogous to old age, so that its&#13;
prolongation may not be worth striving for.&#13;
A person may also, through loss of friends, relatives,&#13;
property, family, infelicity and other causes, become prematurely&#13;
old, and discouraged, so that the effort to prolong his&#13;
existence under these conditions is not worth striving for, although&#13;
not passed the middle period of life when reckoned by years.&#13;
Then there are the criminal classes, the low and vicious, the waifs&#13;
and unfortunates, the moral and mentally diseased, the physically diseased&#13;
who have no chance of restoration to perfect health and conditions&#13;
of comfort and happiness for themselves or help to their friends.&#13;
They, it would seem, see little betterment irPstriving to attain old age,&#13;
and of necessity must give place to the survival of the fittest.&#13;
But to persons of sound mental and physical development, with a&#13;
desire not only to benefit self but others, whose life has been of'even,&#13;
moral tenor and of benefit to self and others, there would seem to be&#13;
every inducement to desire life's prolongation, not only to the three&#13;
score and ten mark, but beyond.&#13;
Such an one has experience and observation for guidance, has&#13;
many a source of enjoyment Irv life denied to those younger, and if&#13;
that life has been the means of spreading sunshine round about and&#13;
into the hearts of feUow beings,' and able to continue to do so, such a&#13;
fife cannot be t,oo, 1Q/I£ on earth;, where such lives never can grow old&#13;
nor out of date. !it'••'• •-' ' -&#13;
Such a life te'arwavs a b u a y o n e ; ' 1 It is an -honor to t h e person&#13;
among wjiom "it i* Itved, and will not' J&lt;rust out and be cast upon the&#13;
rubbish heap," but is a life^Jurt honors- its, maker, and fulfills the com*&#13;
Bible—to love one s neighbor as him* ww*Vr&gt;J?C&#13;
scl^ and worthy of striving for.&#13;
Three Killed and Many Injured.&#13;
Passenger train No, 8, of the Wabash&#13;
railroad, running from Kansas&#13;
City to Buffalo, N. Y., known as the&#13;
Buffalo mail, and due in Danville, 111.,&#13;
it 4:52 a. m., ran into an open switch&#13;
west of Catiin, ILL, early. Wednesday,&#13;
and crashed into a section of a freight&#13;
train. The passenger coaches, except&#13;
one, turned over and burned.&#13;
Three persons are known to have&#13;
been killed. Several others are missing.&#13;
Thirty-seven InjureS are being&#13;
taken care of at Danville hospitals.&#13;
Accused of Forgery.&#13;
Because they are alleged to have&#13;
perjured themselves in swearing that&#13;
they had resided on homestead lands in&#13;
North Dakota, William Welsh and Elmer&#13;
Carr, of Gobies, and Claude&#13;
Weathersby, of Three Rivers, have&#13;
been arrested by. federal officers and&#13;
will be taken to Minot. All three men&#13;
have been indicted by a federal grand&#13;
jury In the west.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
D e t r o i t — E x t r a d r y - f e d s t e e r s a n d&#13;
h e i f e r s , $4 7 5 ^ 5 ; s t e e r s a n d h e i f e r s ,&#13;
1.000 to 1,200,'$4 25W4 SO; -steers ai:d&#13;
h e i f e r s . S00 to 1,000. S3 &amp;0^4 25; g r a s s&#13;
s t e e r s a n d h e i f e r s t h a t a r e fat, 800 to&#13;
1,000, $2 5 0 ^ 4 25; g r a s s s t e e r s a n d heifers&#13;
t h a t are fat, 500 to 700, $3&lt;g&gt;3 50;&#13;
c h o i c e f a t c o w s , $3 50© 4; g o o d f a t&#13;
c o w s , $3; c o m m o n c o w s , | 1 50(cr&gt;2; c a n -&#13;
ners, $l&lt;gr 1 i 0 ; c h o i c e h e a v y bulls, $2 75&#13;
&lt;&amp;3 2»; fair to g o o d b o l o g n a s , bulls.&#13;
$2 5 0 ^ 2 65; s t o c k bulls, $2 25@2 75;&#13;
c h o i c e f e e d i n g s t e e r s , 800 to 1,000, 13 r.0&#13;
(a 4; fair f e e d i n g s t e e r s , 800 to 1.000, $3&#13;
JS3 25; c h o i c e s t o V c e r s . 500 to 700, $2 25&#13;
@3 25; fair s t o c k e r s . 500 t o 700, $2 25&#13;
Cn 2 75; s t o c k h e i f e r s , $2 25@2 75; m i l k -&#13;
ers, l a r g e , y o u n g , m e d i u m a g e , $40(g50;&#13;
c o m m o n m i l k e r s . I 1 8 &amp; 2 5 .&#13;
V e a l c a l v e a — M a r k e t s t e a d y , a f e w&#13;
c h o i c e a t | 8 ; best. $7® 7 «5; o t h e r s , $4&amp;&#13;
&lt;&gt;;,milch c o w s a n d - s p r i n g e r s s t e a d y .&#13;
S h e e p and l a m b s — M a r k e t , l a m b s ' l o ®&#13;
25c h i g h e r t h a n the opening- lust T h u r s -&#13;
day; s h e e p s t e a d y ; w i l l c l o s e l o w e r ;&#13;
b e s t l a m b s . $7 25; fair to g o o d l a m b s .&#13;
|6 5 0 ^ 7 ; l i g h t to c o m m o n l a m b s , $6®&#13;
6 50; fair to g o o d b u t c h e r sheep, $4 50&#13;
^9-5: c u l l s a n d c o m m o n , $2(?r3.&#13;
Hogs—^Market s l o w at 10c h i g h e r&#13;
prices t h a n last w e e k . . R a n g e of* p r i c e s :&#13;
L i g h t to g o o d b u t c h e r s . JG 50; pigs,&#13;
JH 3."; light y o r k e r s , $6 4 0 ^ 6 50; r o u g n s ,&#13;
?5(&amp;5 25; s t a g s , 1-3 off.&#13;
C h i c a g o — B e e v e s . $3 2 5 0 6 90; c o w s&#13;
and heifers, $1 60&lt;??5 10; s t o c k e r s and&#13;
f e e d e r s , $2 «3?? 4 50; T e x a n s . $3 70(5*&#13;
4 40; w e s t e r n s , J3 50&lt;3 5 50; c a l v e s , |t&gt; 25&#13;
H o g s — M a r k e t s t e a d y ; m i x e d ;.nd&#13;
b u t c h e r s . $6 30¾ 6 72½ ; g o o d h e a v v .&#13;
*t&gt; 40@6 70; r o u g h h e a v y , $5 95«f6 20;&#13;
light, $6 45^.6 70; p i g s . | 5 70@6 40;&#13;
bulk of sales, $6 30&lt;£r6 55.&#13;
S h e e p — M a r k e t s t e a d y ; s h e e p , ¢3 7 3 ^&#13;
5 50; l a m b s , | 4 90@7 60.&#13;
E a s t Buffalo.—Best export steers, $5.75(^&#13;
6.15; best shipping steers. $4.«©6.10; best&#13;
1,000 to l.lOMb. do., S4.tfG4.tt; best fat&#13;
cows. $3.50^3.75; fair to good, $2,75@3;&#13;
trimmers. $1.50; best fat heifers $4.10^4.25;&#13;
medium heifers, $3@3.50; best yearling&#13;
steers. |3.50@3.75; best yearlings $3.25^3.50:&#13;
common stoe'e heifers, $2.75€!3; export&#13;
bulls, $3.75^4; bologna bulls, $2.50&lt;?3; light&#13;
stock bulls, $2.50@3. The cow market w a s&#13;
strong at las: week's prices; good to extra.,&#13;
$40&lt;@46; mediums, . $25@33; common,&#13;
$1«220.&#13;
Hogs: Market active; medium and&#13;
heavy. $6.»yd«.95; mixed packers and&#13;
yorkers, $6.90^6.96: light yorkera. $6.80*»&#13;
6.S3; pigs. $ti.706i&lt;&gt;.75; market closed steady&#13;
with few unsold.&#13;
Sheep: Market active; best lambs,&#13;
$7.75&lt;g7.90; culls. $6(8^.50: wethers $5.75^&#13;
6; c ills, JCIN.SO; yearlings, $6@&lt;.25; ewes,&#13;
$50^..25.&#13;
Calves: Receipts, 1.200; s t e a d y ; best.&#13;
$S.73&lt;&amp;9; heavy, $3.50#4.60.&#13;
Grata, E t e .&#13;
D e t r o i t — W h e a t — C a s h No. 2 red, 75c;&#13;
S e p t e m b e r . 1.000 bu at 7 4 4 c , 3,000 bu&#13;
at 74*»c. 2.000 bu at 7 4 \ c . 5,000 bu at&#13;
74%c. 2.000 bu at 7 4 \ c . 2,000 bu at 75c,&#13;
5,000 bu at 7 5 ^ ^ , 3,000 bu at 75c; D e -&#13;
cember. 5.000 bu at 77 H e , 8.000 bu at&#13;
77¾^. 12.000 bu a t 7 7 T j c 15.000 bu a t&#13;
78c. 15.000 bu at 7 7 3 ¾ ^ May. 20.000 bu&#13;
at 7 1 \ 4 C 22.000 bu at 81 V i c 15.000 bu at&#13;
8l5*c. 10.000 bu at S l ^ c , 10.000 bu at&#13;
SI H e ; No. 3 red. 73c; No. 1 w h i t e , 75c.&#13;
C o r n — C a s h No. 3. 49c; No. 3 y e l l o w .&#13;
30c.&#13;
O a t s — G a s h No. 3 w h i t e . 1 c a r at 36»4c:&#13;
rejected. 1 car at 34 ^ c 1 car ».t 1*4 l 5c.&#13;
R y e — C a s h No. 2.-1 car at 64c.&#13;
B e a n s — C a s h . $t '0; n?T.o!&gt;er, N o v e m -&#13;
ber ami D e c e m b e r , $1 36 nflfcniaal&#13;
C h i c a g o — C a s h . No. 2 s p r i n g w h e a t .&#13;
78&lt;il 83c: No. 3. 7 4 ^ 7 7 ^ 0 ; No. 2 red,&#13;
72av &lt;Q 7 3 U c ; No. 2 corn. 47V&gt;ic; No. 2&#13;
v e l l o w . 47V2c: 'No. 2 o a t s . 341¾ HMJ V. c;&#13;
No. 2 w h i t e . 35ff 35S&gt;e: No. 3 White. 3 2 ¾&#13;
^ 3 4 V i c : No. 2 rye. 61 4 c : g o o d f e e d i n g&#13;
harlev. 38(??39c: fair to c h o i c e m a i l i n g .&#13;
44rfF45Vic: No. 1 flaxseed. $1 io: No. t&#13;
n o r t h w e s t e r n . $1 lOVj; clover, c o n t r a c t&#13;
g r a d e . $12 7 5.&#13;
A M U S E M E N T S IN M5TROIT.&#13;
Week Endinjr September C9, 1908.&#13;
T B U P b * TW»AT*R AHD WOKDtWHIfD—AfternoonsS:!*.&#13;
in? to%c: Evenings 8:1\ 10c to50a&#13;
Charles E. Evans A Co.&#13;
LTOKTTM—Price* alw»TS IV. 25c. fiOc, 7Sc.' SRo&#13;
Matinees Wednesday and Baturdaj. The New&#13;
Buster Brown.&#13;
WHITWIT—E»*nin«r*. inc. **&gt;. SOc: Matinees&#13;
Hte, ISO,». Wnlle P r i w o Burns.&#13;
I, ATA T « T T B T«a A m c—Bmnrain Mattaees Sun.&#13;
Mon.. Wed. and Sat. Beat Seats SSc. Nigh*&#13;
Prices. 10c Ac. 3Se. Dark.&#13;
m A v n s LKATiiro rarrvoir.&#13;
ofD WCTaByOneIT B uA, HDfo Br oBrurffaaLloo a Sad.T EAtheM BEOaAsTt, Cod.. allfyo otM MEx»a upr,a mlo.c tLSu6n0d raoyu nadt t4r.i-p00, n, m. Week tit,&#13;
WDaByTnBeOSItT,. fAoWr CD leCvLeBlaTnBdL,A PHiDtt aNbAuTn.i aCaOd^ B faoaotte ronr •pIooinn tato, dCalielyve laatn dW e»v epr.y m S. atWuredeaky ,E fntdtt X rxoouonr*d trip. \ ^ - \&#13;
PoWrt aHrunr oSnT AenBd L tIrRaIy, lpooortt ao,f d Qarlliya waotl fde tSpt.n f.o nrv adada U£y3»a i 4p.a wmp...n Svu. nwduanyd najt *at 4t0o »a .mT.a vFisetr Tfco0le0dpo.n &gt;.&#13;
Sftt f inrkttey §itpnttk&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS A CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
THUB8DAY,OOT.4,1906.&#13;
The Gholce Is Yours&#13;
ADDITIONAL LOCAL.&#13;
The following are the nominrtions&#13;
of the tbree parties for state and conn*&#13;
ty officers. We can tell you who&#13;
they are, bnt yon will have to make&#13;
your own choice:&#13;
REPUBLICAN&#13;
STATE .&#13;
Govenori Fred M. Warner. Farmiogton&#13;
Lieut, Gov., Patrick H . Kelly, Lansing&#13;
Sec. of State, Geo. A. Prescott, Tawas&#13;
City&#13;
State Treas., Frank P. Glazier, Chelsea&#13;
Auditor General, James R. Bradley,&#13;
Eaton Rapids&#13;
Land Commissioner, William H. Rose,&#13;
Bath&#13;
Attorney-General, John E. Bird, Adrian&#13;
Superintendent of Public Instruction,&#13;
Luther L. Wright, ironwood&#13;
Member of Board of Education, Dexter&#13;
M. Ferry Jr., Detroit&#13;
COUNTY&#13;
Thomas Allen, Flint, State Senator.&#13;
Ohas. VanKeuran, Representative&#13;
Willis Lyon, County Clerk&#13;
James Greene, Prosecuting Attorney&#13;
A. D. Thompson, Register of Deeds&#13;
Edwhi Pratt, Sheriff&#13;
Frank Mowers, County Drain Com.&#13;
J . A. Woodruff, County School Com,&#13;
Henry C. Durfee, School Examiner&#13;
T. J. Gaul, School Examiner&#13;
DEMOCRATIC&#13;
STATE&#13;
Gevernor, Chas. H . Kimmerle, Cassopolis.&#13;
Leut. Gov., Thomas M. Rogers, Sault&#13;
Ste. Marie&#13;
State Treasurer, Charles Wellman, Port&#13;
Huron&#13;
Attorney-General, Emanuel J. Doyle,&#13;
Grand Rapids&#13;
Auditor General, Jphn Yuell, Vander?&#13;
bilt, Otsego County&#13;
Superintendent of Public Instruction,&#13;
Elmer R.JWebster, Pontiac&#13;
State Land Commissioner, Clarence L.&#13;
Shelden, Bay County&#13;
Member of State Board of Education,&#13;
James E. Sullivan, Cheboygan&#13;
COUNTY&#13;
Edwin Farmer, Representative&#13;
RubartJWrlght, Cleric&#13;
Louis E^Howlett, Pros. Attorney&#13;
John Wigglesworth, Register of Deeds&#13;
Will Stoddard. Sheriff&#13;
Clarence Bishop, Drain Com.&#13;
F. D. Carr, School Com.&#13;
J . K. Osgerby, School Examiner&#13;
Miles Valentine, School Examiner&#13;
PROHIBITION&#13;
feTATK&#13;
Governor, R.fClark.Reed, Howell&#13;
Lieut. Gov., Henry M. Moore, Detroit&#13;
Secretary of State, Leroy __ H. White,&#13;
Kalamaioo —&#13;
Treasurer, Jasper Smeltzer, Vandalia&#13;
Auditor General, Fred W. Corbett,&#13;
Adrian&#13;
Land, Commissioner, Addison B. Moreland,&#13;
Caro (&#13;
Attorney General, Winent B.-Fox, Mt.&#13;
Clemens&#13;
Supt.flJPublic Instruction, David B.&#13;
Reed, Hillsdale&#13;
Member Board of Education, George A.&#13;
Parmenter, Petoskey&#13;
. . COUNTY&#13;
D. M. Beckwith, Howell, Representative&#13;
E. M. Field, Green Oak, Clerk&#13;
John Snyder, Treasurer&#13;
A. Crippen, Brighton, Register of Deeds&#13;
Geo. Lee, Marion, Sheriff&#13;
H . L.|Doan, Green Oak, Drain Com.&#13;
Mrs. O. E . Carr, Handy, School Dom&#13;
Hubert M. Wells, Howell, School Exam.&#13;
Norton Clark. Hartland, School Exam.&#13;
A Washtenaw county man, last&#13;
week paid a fine of 115.60, for not&#13;
sending a yonnf? boy to school.&#13;
If yon have lost your boyhood spirits,&#13;
courage and confidence of youth,&#13;
we offer yon new life, fresh courage&#13;
and freedom from ill health in Holia-'&#13;
ters Rocky Mountain Tea. 35 cents,&#13;
tea or tablets.&#13;
Everyone in Howell seems to favors&#13;
a system of sewerage and plans will&#13;
be dram to that end that they may&#13;
know the exact cost.&#13;
Piles quickly and positively cured&#13;
with Dr. Snoop's Magic Ointment. It's&#13;
made for piles alone—and it does the&#13;
work surely and with satisfaction.&#13;
Itching, painful, protruding or blind&#13;
piles disappeaTlike magic hy~ Its use.&#13;
Large, Nickel capped glass jars, 50&#13;
cents. Sold and recomraedded by all&#13;
dealers.&#13;
Over 300 mail order bouses were&#13;
started last October, and yet some&#13;
country merchants cannot understand&#13;
that it is the mail order bouses they&#13;
must compete with very extensively&#13;
sooner or later. The non-advertising&#13;
merchant should bear this in mind&#13;
and not let the mail order man advertise&#13;
his way into the local family too&#13;
extensively.&#13;
Tery Lew Bales to the West&#13;
The Chicago Great Western Railway&#13;
will sell tickets to points in&#13;
Alberta, Arizona, British Columbia,&#13;
California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana,&#13;
Nevada, Oregon, Dtan, Washington&#13;
and Wyoming, at about one-half the&#13;
usnal fare. Tickets on sale daily&#13;
Aug. 27 to Oct. 31 inclusive. Get full&#13;
information trom the gre|t Western&#13;
agent or J. P. Elmer.&#13;
F.B: Hosier, D. P, A.&#13;
103 Adams St., Ohioawo 111.&#13;
DoWHt'* K3 Salvo&#13;
The ne* pure food and drag law&#13;
will mark it on the lable of every&#13;
cough care containing opintn, chloroform,&#13;
or any other stnpifying or pois3noas&#13;
druff. But it passes Dr. Snoop's&#13;
Cough Cnre as made for 20 years entirely&#13;
free. Dr. Hheop all along has&#13;
bitterly opposed the nse of all opiates&#13;
or narcotic*. Dr. Shoofs Cough Cnre&#13;
ii absolutely safe even for the youngest&#13;
babe--and it cures, it does not&#13;
si mply suppress. Get a, sale .and, JTJh&#13;
liable wrath cure, by simply insisting&#13;
on having Dr. Snoop's. Let the law&#13;
ceyour protection. We cheerfully&#13;
recomtnnnd and sell it All dealers.&#13;
flloo* Pels—lag&#13;
results from ohronio constipation,&#13;
which is quickly oared by Dr. King's&#13;
New Life Pills. They remove ell poisonous&#13;
germs from the system and&#13;
intnse new life and vigor; cnre sour&#13;
stomach, nausia, headache, diiainees&#13;
and colic, without griping or discomfort&#13;
25o. Guaranteed by P. A. Sigler&#13;
druggist.&#13;
Francis D. Garr&#13;
When a horse is so overworked it&#13;
lies down and in other ways declares&#13;
its inability to go further, you would&#13;
consider it criminal to use force. Many&#13;
a man ot humane impulses, who would&#13;
not willingly barm a kitten, is guilty&#13;
of cruelty where his own stomach is&#13;
concerned. Overdriven, overworked,&#13;
when what it needs is something that&#13;
will digest the food eaten and help&#13;
the stomach to recuperate. Something&#13;
like Kodol For Dispepsia that is&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Dmgglit&#13;
With the taking up of the side&#13;
track8 the fore part or th* week, the&#13;
last vestage of Green Oak station&#13;
passes away. The land occupied by&#13;
the siding will revert back to the original&#13;
owners as it was donated by&#13;
Green Oak farmers for the puroose of&#13;
facilitating the shipping ot produce.&#13;
The elevator that was recently torn&#13;
down by the railroad and sold was&#13;
built by Green Oak residents, some of&#13;
whom still reside there.—Brighton&#13;
Argns.&#13;
DRr«EROPS&#13;
Malted Cocoa&#13;
»&#13;
MALTED COCOA is prepared by&#13;
ally combiningthe cocoa of the&#13;
cocoa bean and the beat of tar&#13;
malt aiding digestion, and the&#13;
cocoa having been predigeeted* the!&#13;
feeling of heaviness experienced after!&#13;
drinking the ordinary cocoas Ua voided ;l&#13;
thus a most delicious rod nourishing!&#13;
U,veiage is piviuaced, which In , »&#13;
fectly pure and will not distress too&#13;
most delicate stomach.&#13;
for salt by your dtmltr.&#13;
KERR'S&#13;
Malted Extract&#13;
OF TOMATO&#13;
One tenapoonfW to a cop of boOlng water&#13;
makes * delicious Bouillon.&#13;
For sale by your dealer. Prepared ny&#13;
WILLIAM B. KERR,&#13;
Medford, Boston, Mass.&#13;
All the newt for $1.00 per year.&#13;
For County School Commissioner&#13;
A Graduate of tne Michigau State Normal College, and candidate&#13;
on the Democratic ticket for the above office, earnestly solicits your&#13;
support at the coming election. An X in front of the name is sufficient&#13;
Theodore Jo Gaul&#13;
When the tip ot a Jog'a nose is cold&#13;
and moist that dog is not sick. A&#13;
feverish, dry nose means sickness with&#13;
a dog. And so with the human lips.&#13;
Dry, cracked and colorless lips mean&#13;
feverishness, and are" as well ill appearing.&#13;
To have beautiful, pink,&#13;
velvet-like lips, apply at bed time a&#13;
coating of Dr. Snoop's Green Satverit&#13;
wiil soften and heal any skin ailment.&#13;
Get a free trial box at onr store and&#13;
be convinced. Large nickel capped&#13;
glass jars, 25 cents. All dealers.&#13;
Michigan State Sunday-&#13;
School Association*&#13;
A Young Mother at 70&#13;
"My mother has suddenly been made&#13;
yrung at 70. Twenty years of intense&#13;
suiienng from dyspepsia bad entirely&#13;
disabled ber, until six months ago&#13;
when she began taking Electric Bitters&#13;
which bave^completely cured ber&#13;
and restored the strength and activity&#13;
she bad in tbe'prirae of life,' writes&#13;
Mrs. W. L.,GHpatriek of Danfortb,&#13;
Me Greatest restorative medicine on&#13;
the globe. Seta stomach, liver and&#13;
kidneys ri(tbt, purifies the blood and&#13;
cures malaria, biiiousnrss and weaknesses.&#13;
Wonderful nerve tonic. Price&#13;
60c. Guaranteed at . h. A. Sigler's&#13;
drug store.&#13;
The 46th annual meeting of the&#13;
Michigan State Son Jay-School Assoct-'&#13;
ation will be held in the First Methodist&#13;
church in tbe city ot Jackson on&#13;
November 12-14-15, 1906. The meeting&#13;
promises to exceed all previous&#13;
conventions in numbers, interest and&#13;
results. The program is to be exceptionally&#13;
practical. In Marion&#13;
Lawrence, tbe International Secretary,&#13;
Prof. H. M. Hamill, D. D.,&#13;
chairman of the International Educational&#13;
Committee, Josephine L. Baldwin,&#13;
president of the New Jersey&#13;
Elementary Council, and Messrs Tuilar&#13;
and Meredith of New York, the&#13;
committee has secured great attract&#13;
ions?.&#13;
The Michigan Passenger Association&#13;
has authorized a rate of one fare plus&#13;
twenty-five cents for the round trip.&#13;
Lodging and breakfast will be furnished&#13;
tree to delegates.&#13;
POP County School Examiner&#13;
Graduate of the Michigan State Normal College, Superintendent&#13;
of the Pinckney School and Republican Candidate for the office of&#13;
County School Examiner, respectfully solicits your vote at the coming&#13;
election.&#13;
Thi« is the season of decay and&#13;
weakened vitality. Nature is being&#13;
shorn of its beauty and bloom. If you&#13;
would retain yonrs, fortify your system&#13;
with Holli*ter'8 Rocky Mountain&#13;
Tea. 35 cents, tea or tablets.&#13;
L a X " C l S O A Csae&gt; iwil I—g»&#13;
Kodol Dytpeptia Cure&#13;
Pig—U what yt* «rt«&#13;
Frank B. Mowers&#13;
OF PUTNAM,&#13;
FOP Drain Commissioner&#13;
The nSmrnee for County Drain Commissioner of the Republican&#13;
ticket, is an ideal candidate for the position. Thirty-six years old,&#13;
with a wife and two boys and a farm of 95 acres, he is an all round&#13;
hustler. He is a pleasant gentleman to meet and a general favorate&#13;
with those who know him. As a farmer he knows what a farm needs&#13;
to make it most productive, whether it needs draining or whetner it&#13;
does not. Last spring he was re-elected township highway commissioner&#13;
by a good safe majority in a strong democratic township and&#13;
that too after he had served one term. He is also chief Gleaner in&#13;
the Arbor of his township and director in his school district When&#13;
a boy he had the misfortuue to have his hip dislocated and has to&#13;
wear a lift of some two inches on one of his shoes. The lameness&#13;
caused by this misfortune is a decided disadvantage in much of his&#13;
farm work where he has to follow a team. He is the first and only&#13;
candidate in the county to be nominated for drain commissioner by&#13;
direct vote of the people and now it is up to the people to see that he&#13;
is elected to the position in November next. Nominated by direct&#13;
vote of the people and .if elected by the people he will be the people's&#13;
drain commissioner and will work tor their interest. This year is&#13;
the first time that the people have' had the right to nominate and&#13;
elect a County Drain Commissioner.&#13;
' 4&#13;
STAT* or MICHIGAN, The Probate Court for ths&#13;
County of Livingston,&#13;
At a session of said court hold at .the Probate&#13;
office in the village of Howell, in said&#13;
county, on the 1st day of October, A. D. 1906.&#13;
Present, Hon. Arthur A Montague, Judge of&#13;
of Probate, In the matter of the estate of&#13;
ALIX MXRCER,deceased.&#13;
Bosina Mereer bavin* filed in said court her&#13;
final account as admlnstratrlx of said estate, and&#13;
her petition praying for the allowance thereof,&#13;
It is ordered that Thursday, the 2ttth day of October,&#13;
A. D. 1906, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at&#13;
said probata office, be and is hereby appointed fa*&#13;
examining and blowing said account:&#13;
It Is further ordered, that public notice thereof&#13;
be given by publlcatioaof a copy ot this order, lor&#13;
three successive weeks previous to said day of&#13;
bearing in the PINCKVKY Dispa-rcu, n new spader&#13;
printed and circulated in said county. M2&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAGUE,&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
St a t e o f M i c h i g a n , County of Livingston,&#13;
ss. Probate Court for said county. Kstute ot&#13;
GSORGI H. BCTLKB, deoeased.&#13;
The undersigned having been appointed, by&#13;
Judge of Probate ot said county, commissioners on&#13;
clalms'ln the matter or said estate, and four mont ha&#13;
from tbe 34th day of September, A. u. 190fi having&#13;
been allowed by said Judge of Probate to all persons&#13;
holding claims against said estate in whictrto&#13;
present their claims to us for examination and&#13;
adjustment,&#13;
Not.ce is hereby given that we will meet on the&#13;
84tb day of November, A. D. 1906, and on the sJSth&#13;
day of January, A. D. 19CT, at tea o'clock a.m of&#13;
each day at tbe residence of the late George H.&#13;
Butler |n thetownbhip of Hamburg in saij county,&#13;
to receive and_flxsmine-such claims.&#13;
Dated: HowelJ, Mich. September 24th, A. D. 19*y&gt;.&#13;
E. U.Inelee )&#13;
&gt; Commissioners on Cluirus&#13;
t 41 Abner Butler)&#13;
Mortffare Sale&#13;
Deianlt having been made in the conditions of&#13;
a mortgage made by David P. Chalker and Amy I.&#13;
Chalker, his wife, to the Globe Fence Company, a&#13;
Michigan Corporation, dated August »4, 1905, and&#13;
recorded in ihe office of tbe register of deeds, for&#13;
tbe county of Livingston and the state of Michigan,&#13;
on the 94th day of August, A. D. 1905, in 11.&#13;
ber 94 of mortgages on page 548 and said mo rtgage&#13;
containirg a clause stating that should default be&#13;
made in the payment of said principal or interest&#13;
or any part thereof when the same are payable aa&#13;
above provided and should the same or any part&#13;
thereof remain unpaid for the period of thirty&#13;
days then the principal sum, with all arrearages&#13;
of interest shall at the option of said mortage*,&#13;
its legal representatives, and assigns become payable&#13;
immediately thereafter ^and the interest on&#13;
said mortgage, which became due on the 2ith day&#13;
of August, A D. 190B, not having been paid and&#13;
the same having remained unpaid for the period&#13;
of thirty days, said mortgagee does hereby declare&#13;
that the principal sum of said mortgage with all&#13;
arrearage of interest is now due and that the&#13;
same shall become payable immediately and the&#13;
said mortgagee claims there is due at the date ot&#13;
this notice the sum of $Vt0.7l, and an attorney's&#13;
fee of «15.00 provided for in said mortgage and no&#13;
suit or proceedings at law having been institutes!&#13;
to recover the moneys seemed by said mortgage,&#13;
or any part thereof, NOWTHBRS FORE by virtue&#13;
of the power of sale contained in said mortgage&#13;
and the statute in said case made and provided,&#13;
notice is hereby given that on Thursday,&#13;
December 27, A. D. 190«, at one o'clock in the aftesnoon,&#13;
there will be sold at public auction to ths&#13;
highest bidder at the weeterlv front door of the&#13;
Court House in the Tillage of Howell, Livingston&#13;
county, Michigan, (thnt being the place where th&#13;
Circuit Court for Livingston connty is held) t&#13;
premises described in said mortgage or so ma&#13;
thereof as may be necessary to pay the amou&#13;
due en said mortgave with 5 par eent Interest anO—&#13;
ajtfegnl costs, together with an attorney's foe of&#13;
115.(0 as covenanted therein; the said premise* bo&gt;&#13;
ing described in said mortagage as the east hall&#13;
of the »outhwest quarter ()4) o&lt; section numbor&#13;
thirty, in township number one north of range&#13;
number four east, Michigan, being in the town- -&#13;
•hip of Putnam, connty ot Livligston and stato&#13;
ot Michigan, thU Mortagage being .subject to *&gt; ',&#13;
prior mortgage on saW premises. ' ''&#13;
Globe Fonce Company, a corporation.&#13;
Mortafe* ••--»—: -&gt;—;:';&#13;
Dated September 20, a. o. 1008.&#13;
Shields a Hhields,&#13;
Attorney for Mortgagee. t 82&#13;
2 t'/-&#13;
-3C-C&#13;
.X&#13;
¥6 a&#13;
.1&#13;
i&#13;
mm A.'IV ' m •«• ^ ¾ ^ ¾ ¾&#13;
**' J L *&#13;
-... N'&#13;
:#&#13;
' * &gt; # •&#13;
S ~ ^&#13;
&gt;^^»&lt;&lt;%«%t«W*&gt;*^^^^*)MS»'M&gt;W»^»*«&gt;&gt;&gt;''&gt;''v&#13;
JSKf 4"*p 'o»m(C«i*ti "&lt;&#13;
modrra,&#13;
un-to-daM&#13;
DETROIT. th8,'cv&#13;
Rate*, $2. $7 -&gt;o. $3 per D«t.&#13;
.&#13;
• «» &lt;«••&lt;•»&#13;
Dots Your Stomaoh&#13;
Bother You 1&#13;
IV. Stoop's ResfooKtlve Cttrei At&#13;
Distressing Stomach Trouble!&#13;
Through the Inside Nerves.&#13;
A* you value your health and happiness donl&#13;
Mgleet to care (or the slUi hte*t stomach pain-*&#13;
don't let It go. At the tlrst Bism or distress&#13;
tit. Shoop's Restorative And end all thee*&#13;
troubles. These aches are signals—they arc&#13;
symptoms of cominsr disease—Is it wise to Ignon&#13;
i them? You wko never eat a hearty meal with*&#13;
;OU6 ft sense of fullness A followed by a period&#13;
%MJL&#13;
6 0 YCAH8*&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
TRADE MARKS&#13;
DESIGNS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS 4 c .&#13;
Anyone sending a sketch and description m a ;&#13;
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether aii&#13;
Invention is prohubly patentable. Communications&#13;
strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents&#13;
sent free, oid-st agency for securing patents.&#13;
Patents taken through Munn &amp; Co. receive&#13;
tptctal notice, without ofmnre, r a t h e Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. largest clrculatluu&#13;
of ntiv scientific Journal. Terms, $3 a&#13;
** " Ad by all newsdealers.&#13;
of l a s s i t u d e or SeRleot these oondi&#13;
vlte distressing&#13;
become a sallow,&#13;
peptic. Do you&#13;
, of these sympt&#13;
r e s s after&#13;
In* of food&#13;
Ii naelahw.ruinmgb alint g&#13;
lag of wind.j.&#13;
tlte, heartburn.&#13;
glnessr If you&#13;
. these ways, your&#13;
there is but one1&#13;
; strengthen the Inside"&#13;
i t o m a c b nerves —&#13;
Yo\i&#13;
FoelLikc&#13;
drowsiness — beware.&#13;
ttorus and you surely&#13;
Indigestion—youTI&#13;
miserable d y e -&#13;
experience any&#13;
torn a? — dl*«&#13;
eatlng,retur»«&#13;
to moutk*&#13;
pit of atom*&#13;
of gas, belch"&#13;
loss of appeheadache,&#13;
dlsiuffer&#13;
in any of&#13;
duty i s clear —&#13;
bourse open to yon—&#13;
Serves—these spec;&#13;
shake off forever thl&#13;
ABadfcBuruedtilrl&#13;
or boy, mau or woman in* quickly out&#13;
of pain if Bucklen's Aroi;a siaUe is&#13;
applied promptly. G J. Welch ot&#13;
Tekonsba, Alien, says:,I tu« it in my&#13;
family tor cuts, tores and all skin injuries&#13;
and find it neriecr. Quickr&amp;t&#13;
|).le cure known. Best healing naive&#13;
made 25c at Siller's diupr storv.&#13;
.01:-: lonnter.&#13;
•v»&lt;»tt to the l&gt;ook de&#13;
'.-.: modern store and Inl&#13;
) V s Tales" was told&#13;
that tish ami ;&gt;rovi;ious were on tho&#13;
ground floor.—Boston Herald.&#13;
Tho'lrv'' wh&#13;
partnien'. uf ;'«&#13;
q u i r e d li.i- •'(''&#13;
, evidence of disease. Put"the divest} ve nerve*.!&#13;
condition to act as nature trrtendrd they ^bottk&#13;
; Don't drug, don't force—just give tfee inside&#13;
; nerves natural force, gentle tonio. nature's help.&#13;
Dr. Shoop's Restorative (Tablets or Liquid;&#13;
: tbould be taken to do this—it is the only prei&#13;
aoriptlon which builds up. or even attempt* M&#13;
toatore the inside stomach nerves. Sold *f&#13;
Thruugh Tourist Sleeping Cars&#13;
to California ria&#13;
Chicago Great Western Kail way&#13;
Leaving Chicago 6:00 p. IU. Wednesdays,&#13;
arriving at Omata 9:00 a. m.&#13;
i'liursdays, Colorado Springs 7:50 a.&#13;
iu. Fridays, Salt Lake City 10:25 a. in.&#13;
Saturdays, arrive at San Francisco&#13;
4:28 p. m. Sundays. A «ood way to&#13;
go tor ttie rates are Ipw. For lull&#13;
information apply to&#13;
F. R. Mosier, i&gt;. i \ A.&#13;
;5'2 103 Adams &amp;t.. Chicago, III.&#13;
A D e a d l y W V . t p o n .&#13;
Tho geiitle wnvo of a Kice edge&gt;1&#13;
handkerchief lias carried more poo'&#13;
fellows to their doom than the might;.&#13;
breakers of the sea. -Exchange.&#13;
"ALL DEALERS."&#13;
Wftftlla."1 *-^' New York&#13;
firth**! Offlce. 686 to Bt» Washington, D. 1 ^&#13;
All the n e w s for $1.00 per year. ^--&#13;
KBC :^¾¾ Care&#13;
• '••'&gt;.•« s a w&#13;
Subscribe fcr the Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
fc, K K &amp; K ^ K Koc K K &amp; K K « K K &lt;£•&#13;
STRICTURE CURED&#13;
YOU C A N PAY W H E N C U R E D .&#13;
«2- NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT.&#13;
STRICTURE AND KIDNEY DISEASE CURED.&#13;
"1 bad stricture for cU'vsn years. It finally brought on Bright'*&#13;
D i s e a i e of tt.e Kulne\s. 1 had a:i uncomfortable shm u n g p a m iDthe&#13;
eroin 'ir.il feeling as though soon thing v.-as in the urethra. My back'&#13;
Danger from, the Plague&#13;
There's great danger from the plague&#13;
of coughs and colds, that ar* &gt;o prevalent,&#13;
unless you take Dr. Kind's New&#13;
Dileovei'j tor I'o'nsumplicii, t'cu_h^,&#13;
and co!d&gt;. Mrs Gj,o Wal'so'f Format&#13;
City, Me., writes: 'TttV";i &lt;i"ii&gt;enrl to&#13;
peoyle living in climates whep'couuhs&#13;
and colds prevail, I find it (|uiekly&#13;
ends them." It prevents priHumonia,&#13;
cures lay rippe, ai ve- -.vond-i ful relief&#13;
ii. asthmi and hay t«wr ht»d makes&#13;
w^ak inntfs r^ror-wr enough t.» ward fif&#13;
eon-u'iipMon, c '. ti/h&gt; and &lt;•• !&gt;:s _ 50o&#13;
and SI U0. 1 iiai i. n i - ti H &lt;Jn•mt.-ed&#13;
by F. A. Siyler's drug store. •..&#13;
Reprove thy friend privately, com&#13;
ineud htm publicly.—Solon.&#13;
Can you win'? You realize that to&#13;
win anything these days, require*&#13;
strength, with mind and body in tune.&#13;
A man or woman with disordered digestive&#13;
organs is nr-t in shape lor a&#13;
days work or a days play. How can&#13;
they expect to win? Kodol for Dya&#13;
p«psia contains the digestive juices cr&#13;
a healthy stomach and will put yenr&#13;
stornachjn shape to pertorm its important&#13;
lunction of supplying the&#13;
body and brain with strength building&#13;
blood. Digests what you eat, relieves&#13;
indigestion, dyspepsia, sour stomach,&#13;
palpitation of tn« heart, constipation.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Druggist&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach No appetite, loss of strenfth,;&#13;
aess, headache, constipation, bad breath,&#13;
ftneral debility, sour risings, and catarra&#13;
of the stomach are all due to indlgestlosV&#13;
Kodol cures indigestion. This new diac««&gt;&#13;
ery represents the natural luicea of dlges&gt;&#13;
ttOQ as Ibay exist In a healthy rtoraara*&#13;
oombtned with the greatest -known toast&#13;
and reconstructive properties. Kodol Dys&gt;&#13;
pepsia Cure does not only curelndlgestkm&#13;
and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy&#13;
cures all stomach troubles by cleansing,&#13;
purifying, sweetening and streogthenlnf&#13;
the mucous membranes lining the atamaoh*&#13;
Mr. S. S. Ball, of Ravenswood, W. Vs..;&#13;
I was troubled with sour stomach for twenty years.&#13;
Kodol cured roe sad we are BOW natot It m turn&#13;
forbaby."&#13;
Kodol Digests What Y o n B a t&#13;
Bottles only. $1.00 Size holdln* 2¾ times the trtsl&#13;
size, which sells for 50 cents.&#13;
Pvapared by E. a D»WITT It OO., OHIOftOa&#13;
Sold by P. A. Sigler, Druggist&#13;
Ask for t h e 190¾ K o d o l a l m a n a c&#13;
a n d 20() calendar.&#13;
was weal: aii'l I could scarcely stoop over. Urine w a s full of sedifcient,&#13;
Had a iJcsiie i;&gt; urinate fu^ier.tly Fau.i!&gt; d&lt; ctors, so-called&#13;
Epecialists, patrnt medicines, electric belts, all tailed. I was d i s -&#13;
couraged. I had spent hundreds of dollars in vain. Finally I c o n -&#13;
' " "" . - I hr.d hc;ird a great&#13;
-y had be en&#13;
THE ORIGINAL t.AXATv&lt;L'C CC';.".H SYRUf&#13;
KINNEDY'SLAXAT: : n::[:^*TAR&#13;
!«d Clover Eiuesora ai»! ri'.r; . "JC '-C Lvtry Battle.&#13;
m$- |pffir* U«B § tfpa u h&#13;
*&gt;UBL13U£1&gt; JtVBSV TUCKSL1A'i MOHIU.Sfe B \&#13;
F R A N K L A N D R E W S i t CO.&#13;
E01TORS A»D PROPRIETORS.&#13;
3 ludviriptiou t'rice $1 i n Advance&#13;
-Intered at ta-a I'oato.Uce at 1'incliQfy, M.ichw&amp;i&#13;
its Becuaa-cittse Laatier&#13;
i d v e r t i d i u s rate* lutide^aown on application.&#13;
H O L U S T E R ' S&#13;
Rocky Mountain Tea Huggei*&#13;
A. Busy Medicine foi Busy People,&#13;
Brings Golden Health and Renewed Vietfr.&#13;
A specific foe Constipation. Indigestion, L i v e r&#13;
and K i d n e y troubles. Prttrpl&lt;*,-*^ma.-J*MHHr«'&#13;
Blood. B a d iirtath. Slujfu'ish Bowels. HeiidBche&#13;
; and BucitticWo. Its Hooky Mountain l e a i n t a b -&#13;
I let form. ::."&gt; '•••nts a h--x. g e n u i n e made by&#13;
S H o ' i ' - i i t ' i l'u.-i; I " O ; K \ N V . M .•.',; son, W i s .&#13;
{ G0L0EH NUGGETS FCR SALLOW PEOPLE&#13;
! Rail road Guide&#13;
suited \iv,. Kennedy &amp; Kergan as the last resort. I hr.d&#13;
deali about ihvui ?nd c .ncl:ided from the fact that t&#13;
&gt;&#13;
established over 25 years ti&#13;
delighted with the results.&#13;
weeks was entirely cured.&#13;
G. E . W R I G H T .&#13;
at they understood their business. I aui&#13;
In e r e week 1 felt better and in a few&#13;
Have gained sixteen pounds in weiaht!"&#13;
G. E. W R I G H T , Lansing.&#13;
ESTABLISHED 25 YEARS.&#13;
CURES GUARANTEED OR MO PAY.&#13;
HAS YOUR B L O O D B E E N D I S E A S E D ?&#13;
I B L O O D P O I S O N S are the most prevalent a n c j n , 0 5 t serions diseases. They&#13;
I l i p the verv life blood of thn-vu-tirn and unices entir&lt; ly eradicated (rom the system will&#13;
lca'i.,-S' ric; :sc nu^li, aii-'iis. H«. v..net f f.'eic-.try. It c :ily suppresses the symptouis—cur&#13;
N.KVV MET110U positively cures ^11 blooddi.-ea£es forever.&#13;
Y O U N G O R M I D D L E - A G E D M E N . - i m p r u d e n t acts or later e x e r t s&#13;
ht'.e biokcn ilownyrur sv.;te!n. V&gt;'^-J fr-cl the rvrnp1. .:is su-almR i'ver you. tieniuily,&#13;
l^by^icallyaiiJ sexually yuu ar»2 not tha ruun you usea to be or should be.&#13;
% fr3* A | r ^ U R S J Are yrn a vir , :rn ? ITare vou lost hope ? Are you intending&#13;
v J t - - * ^ S ^ G W [ toBi;..:iv' l l . . s \ r v r bl-'od been diseased ? Have you any&#13;
. » . ^ k i H ^ : n j r \ , ,-- rn'eHh.'d Tr'^tmeru will ( ,.-. P yuu. Wb^t it has done for t thers it&#13;
•.iiU'.j : ;i • -.1. 1 - . S V L 1'ATIuN l-'Ki-.E. N o m.utar who has treated you. write for&#13;
v i l i r , r . e a t P t . . : ; i - . n l ! - c u i i \.iif;i:. Ch.irces i v , s . ^„i,!e i:OOKS I' KEE—"The I. J.den&#13;
••,-•;.,;,-'' . :. •. • '.„• •." .•.•!:'-• -:&gt;''•'.&lt;:&gt;-&gt;. b. -!-,.U l o o k on "L»ise-.ises of \ \ o o i " n i r e e&#13;
'.io"-MA?1ES• i J S i D WJVHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. Evoryr&#13;
^•; ing Con-iir)rsnt!ai. Q u e s t i o n List for H o m e T r e a t m e n t F r e *&#13;
.DioKENIiEBY&amp; KERGAN&#13;
Cor. Michigan Ave. and Shelby St., Detroit, Mich.&#13;
d a s l n e e s Cards, g-1.00 p e r y*s*i.&#13;
I^aih and marriage n o t i c e s puDliaaed f r e e .&#13;
Aaauunc^tnuncs ot entert&amp;iauieate in ay be i&gt;aU&#13;
for, it desired, &amp;y ^r i s e n t i n g i n e o f l c e with ticn&#13;
-t.b or ttUiniduion. i n caseticKetaare/cm^lroUi.'i ^&#13;
to tUe-udic6,rej;u.ia.r rateB wilioeca-'ar^t * .&#13;
A l l m a t t e r i n i v j c a l i ^ t i c b c o i u m n w i U D e c a . , i i , i .&#13;
ed at 5 cents per l i n e oTr raction tnereof, fur eacL&#13;
taeerLion. Where no t i m e i s s p e c i t l e c , ;;1] n o t i c e ,&#13;
.viii be inserted until ordered discontinued, a n c&#13;
•vill be charged for a c c o r d i n g l y , ^JT-All c h a n g e i&#13;
3f Advertisements MLT8T reach t LIB office ae e a r l j&#13;
&amp;a 1'L-ESDAT mornint; t o i n s u r e a n i n s e r t i o n t h *&#13;
J OH JfSSsVIIA G !&#13;
I EI all its branches, a specialty. We have all kin t. *&#13;
and the iateatstvlefl ot Type, etc., wuich e n a b l t s&#13;
us u&gt; execute all itinde o i work, such as Book*,&#13;
t'awpiets,Fosters, Programmes. Bill HeadB.Note&#13;
UeaQs, Statements, Garde, Auction Bills, etc. its&#13;
•inferior styles, upon the shortest notice. Pricesa*&#13;
low as £Ood work can be aoiie.&#13;
ALL UILL3 PAYABLE F U S T OF IVKRV MoKTU.&#13;
\ Trie VILLAGE DIRECTORY&#13;
1¾&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERb.&#13;
PKErfiDBNT E 1:. Browu&#13;
lid^TKEs Huben Fiuch, Jaiues iioche,&#13;
oT ^ ^ W James s m i t h ,&#13;
Karuutii.&#13;
K * K K ^ K K ^ K K &amp; r \ &amp; K&#13;
BUY THE FAMOUS Lincoln Steel Range! Bmkmm&#13;
Cookm&#13;
We*f looirs THE BEST! Unmquallmd&#13;
COSTS NO MORE THAN AN UNKNOWN MAKE.&#13;
^ Before y o u buy that range or cook stove,&#13;
write us, and w e will mail you a copy of&#13;
"Points for Purchasers "&#13;
It is fret for the asking. Full of useful information.&#13;
THE LINCOLN STOVE &amp; RANGE COMPANY, Fremont, Ohio.&#13;
THE HESS FURNACE&#13;
I&#13;
is the best thing we&#13;
ever made and we've&#13;
been making furnaces thirty-threcryears. It is 5ol|d Ste«4—.&#13;
every joint riveted. Never leaks. Has lined casing, chain&#13;
regulation, evaporating pan, etc, Burns any fuel economically.&#13;
Made it) six sizes; powerful and durable.&#13;
WE SELL DIRECT TO CONSUMERS.&#13;
and save you dealers* profits, -end for full 40 page boo*&#13;
which fully describes our goods and our maker-to-user&#13;
method of selling. We can save you money in buying and&#13;
fuel in using. Your name on a postal card, please.&#13;
HESS WARMING A VENTILATING COMPANY,&#13;
921 Taooma Building, Chicago, Ills.&#13;
CURES&#13;
RHEUMATISM&#13;
LUMBAGO, SCIATICA&#13;
NEURALGIA and&#13;
KIDNEY TROUBLE "5-DR0PS" t iken Internally, rids the blood&#13;
of the poisonous matter and acids which&#13;
are the direct causes of these diseases.&#13;
Applied externally it affords almost instant&#13;
relief *rompain, while a permanent&#13;
cure is being effected by purify me the&#13;
blood, dissolving the poisonous substance&#13;
and removing it from the system.&#13;
DR. fc, D.BLAND&#13;
Of Brewton. Ga»» write*!&#13;
••I bad been a sufferer f or a number of y e a n&#13;
vrtth Lumbago and Kueum.ttsm In my arma&#13;
and k'gf.and tried .11 the remedies that I could&#13;
rather from medtceJ wo***, and also consulted&#13;
! nfitb a number of the beet physicians, but round&#13;
I Aolttie? «to«t «•&gt;*• * • " » • ' obtained from&#13;
••{hDKoPS." I shall prescribe It In mjrsssjottce&#13;
t for rheumatism and Kindred diieaees.* FREE If you are suffering with R h e u m a t i s m , I&#13;
N&lt;n:ral«ia, K i d r e y 1 &gt; o v \ l e "" a n y k i n - [&#13;
i Mdlii'.'anp. 'rr te t o a s » r f » i a l bottle&#13;
t-f " 5 - D R O P S . " a n d test t yoarself. l&#13;
" 5 - D R O P S " c a n b e used a n y lenjrth of |&#13;
time without acquiring a-"drug habit."&#13;
as it is entirely free of Opium, cocaine.&#13;
i i ulcohol, laudanum, a n d o t h e r s i m i l a r :&#13;
* i iiitfrt'dirnts. w I S Lui«c 8 1 M Bottle, ••5.DROP8" (SO0 Doses)&#13;
Cl.oe. For Sale by Drue-fiat*.&#13;
SWAHSOH RHEUMATIC OURE C0MPARY, I&#13;
Dept. SO, 1 6 0 L « k e Stre«t, Uhle«c«.&#13;
Will Keuntidjr sr ,&#13;
S. J. Teeule, Ed.&#13;
CLKBh. Itoger Carr&#13;
TuKAn'iitii Marion J. Ke»sou&#13;
A s i t s a u l i , &gt; k), W . . M u r t a&#13;
S T K ^ E I COMMlsSlOSBK \^'. A . XiXgU&#13;
t i h . A L i u O F F i c t u D r . i i . r ' . s i g i e r&#13;
A T T O R N E Y VV.A.L'arr&#13;
AlAKdBALL Wm. Moraa&#13;
C H U R C H E S .&#13;
; , L l i i i l u U l s T a t ' i a t ' O l ' A L , CllL HCH.&#13;
; J ! rtev. u . C , LiUleiijLa pastor. serviced « \ e i ,&#13;
j ,-&gt;uu^ay ai^rnm&gt;; at. iu:Uu, a n a dvtrr suuJa.-&#13;
\K *«&gt;uiug at • :ut- u'cioCk, I'r&amp;yer lueetira^ i u u r t&#13;
I i i j cVbuiu;6. auuda) ocuoot at •, losts u t i u o r u -&#13;
! iiii; service.' ' -Ulss -M.A»iV V ANi'Ltt 1, .Mlpt.&#13;
U-Nt-iUii^Ai'iU^AL. CtiU UOH. !&#13;
s_' :iov. VJ. W. Mylue pautor. service e v e i j&#13;
-•..iiua&gt; itji'uia^ at iJ:do *u,i every s u u u » )&#13;
&lt;.-veuiu&gt;4 ai . :^C o c . j c k . i'rayei meeting 1 L U &lt; ;&#13;
diij e \ e a i n g e . s u u a * y e c u o o l ai close u i u i o r L&#13;
, u t service. . Percy aw art uouti »apt,, Mucco j&#13;
P E R E MM?Q?H;TTg&#13;
I a e f f s : * . A p : . 2 C , 1 S C C .&#13;
T r a i n s l e a v e S o u t h L y n n nt- lo!ii&gt;w&gt;;&#13;
F u r D e t i o i i n n d E.-ist,&#13;
1(::-18 a. in., "J: 11' JI. m . "v-V p . in.&#13;
F o r ( i n i r i d Ka'pidi*, N u r i h .in&lt;l \V"e-i.&#13;
ii :•_'*} a. m . , 2 :1(&gt; p . m . , H:lr? p . .u ,&#13;
i For S j t r i u a w n-jj*l B a v C i t v ,&#13;
j 1 0 : 4 8 a. i n . , -&gt;:VJ p . n i . . &lt; &gt; j . . iu . ,&#13;
j Fi»r T t i k ' d o atitl S c i u l i ,&#13;
j l i ^ : 4 S i i . r u . , / : 1 9 p . m . ,&#13;
j F R A N K B A Y , - / !i. s, MOELLKK,&#13;
! Agent, &gt;.)uth Lvon. ' ^ . P . A , Detn !r,&#13;
Hr^nd TraHk Railway System.&#13;
Ka*t IH.I-]ml from Tit.cinev&#13;
No-OA I'aaspn.ijer Kx si;ru A\, : I : , . N A , 1 .&#13;
I N o . "0 P.i-ser.^er Ex. Suu-iHy, 4:'.TP. V&#13;
] West Botind lV'un f'iftcktity&#13;
. No. i" Pa'Benirer Ex. Sundiiv, ]D:'o\ A . M.&#13;
No. 29 PasstMijicr E i , Suriday. «:14P. &gt;(•&#13;
:?o!id wide ve-stibolc trains of I&gt;.-IRCIn'* nail -!et-jij&#13;
ins: oar? ar? 0|&gt;erqti.'d t&gt;&gt; &gt; &gt; w Y'&lt;rk riti. 1 I'tiiladt'l-&#13;
I phia&gt; via Niagara Fail- ;.v t ;a&gt;.&gt; U n a i l Triii,k-I.»&#13;
• hiirh Vall.'v ii i',!.•,&#13;
! v;. H.CiMk. A .-em.&#13;
PATENTS PROCUrtEO A N D D E F E N D E D ^ ''!'»-^el.&#13;
duwiiik' • 'i i !•• '*.• .ii't &lt; a . . ~. .i: • a &lt;i;.'l i' &gt;'v report. |&#13;
i":-i o aivi'-, |L .v.- to id.d.ri j „L. I.:-. i":~ ':•• marti=&#13;
copyrights, etc., IN ALL COUNTRIES.'&#13;
Busir:,\-&lt; Ji&lt;\-r( T.-it/'i Wj^Jdngtoi SJI is tims,|&#13;
monsv and -.-•fisti tks patent.&#13;
Patent and Infringement Practice Exclusively.&#13;
Write or L'ime to us at&#13;
033 Ninth Street, opp. United BUtei Patent 0 « e e , |&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N , O. C.&#13;
T. .vl.-ViU'.'a 'JAi'tiOLlC Otfl'KCtl.&#13;
^ Utiv. 5T. J. Comtnarlord, l a a i o r . ' i e r v i c c i&#13;
i jvery Sunday. Low mass at r:3uo cioct&#13;
j ui^u iL.auB w i t h a e r u i o u at y;aua.'ni. CatecuiBu&#13;
i t ^:00 p. ui., v e e p e r s a n d b e n e d i c t i o n at 7 :oo ;&gt;. u&#13;
i i _ . . . . . . - , . _ 1 .&#13;
| SOCIETIES. r&#13;
f l l b e A. O. H. Society of tule place, uieeta e\er_.&#13;
JLtbird anuday m t b e r"r, Mattuew l i a l l ,&#13;
j o n a Tuomey and M. T. Kelly,Couuty Delejjatc^&#13;
i ii£- W. C. I . L. meets tiif lirst triday oi ^a*.u&#13;
- m o u i h at •:;&amp; p. m, at u i f aouie ot LT, i i . i'.&#13;
Mgler. Kveryone interested iu teiuperauce t^&#13;
coadiall'y iuvited. -Mrs. Leal s i l l e r , I'res; M r s .&#13;
t t l a ln'riee, secretary.&#13;
i'he C I • A . am; ii. bcciei.) oi ciiia p'ace , u • i&#13;
«ve&lt;y tuiru saiuruay evwuiug in tue i r. i i ,iiiitw&#13;
t i a u . Jubh iiL'UObue, 1 r t t i u t i , . .&#13;
GASNOW&#13;
K I L L T H C C C U C H&#13;
AND C U R E THE L U N G S&#13;
WITH Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery&#13;
FORT - " - r0NSUMPT»0N&#13;
OUGHS and&#13;
^ O L O S&#13;
Price&#13;
E0c&amp;$1.00&#13;
Free Trial.&#13;
Surest and Quickest Cure for all&#13;
THROAT and LTJKG T E&#13;
LES, or M O N E Y BACK.&#13;
• ° 0 U B -&#13;
KN i u U T f e O F MACL"ABJj.iuS.&#13;
Meeteverv Friday evening on or before t u i .&#13;
, ! che inoou at their, ball in the Swart bout tudg&#13;
Visiting brother* artoordially invited.&#13;
t i t . i s . 1.. t,..\&gt;, rt M L , s i i Knikbt Cctcmc*..-&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No.Tt\ ? Jt; A, M. Kegulu! i&#13;
Couiuiuuication Tuesday evening, o n or berort&#13;
I thetuH'of the LUOOU. , blirb VatiU'tukle. U . M&#13;
Disease&#13;
kand Health&#13;
•W&#13;
CUSTOM MADE FLY SCREENS Our worlcJWffir superior 1o the usual output of local mills, spri has a style and&#13;
finish not obtainable irom thoso who do not make a spccialtyS&amp;i screens. Stud&#13;
ut* sizes o l doors and windows. Wc cuarahtee a tit. "&#13;
For outside Screens we use the identical finish °ttfcfl|$N&lt;fe of PullmanCars.&#13;
The best grade of Wire Cloth—enameled, ga^sjPBd genuine broiuc, etc.,&#13;
fastened by tacks or by the •Mockatrip" process, ^v."&#13;
Intending purchasers may have, fn-o by mafrV tan^plos of woods, finishes&#13;
and wirj?'Oluth and copy of catalog anil price list. Aguncits in many cities,.&#13;
Special terms to contractors and builders.&#13;
The A, J. PHILLIPS COMPANY, Fenton, Michigan.&#13;
REVIVO&#13;
RESTORES VITALITY&#13;
"Made a&#13;
Well Man&#13;
of Me."&#13;
OKDEK OF EASTERN STAR meets each vnonti. •&#13;
the Friday evening following the regulars- I&#13;
I A A. M. :ueetinjj;..MKS.NKTTB,VAVC,n\. \V. M.&#13;
0,:1 EK OF MUDF.ILN WOODMEN Meet t h e :&#13;
rirst Tnureday evening of each Mouth iu t h e '&#13;
• M'accabea hall. C. L. Grimes V. 0. •&#13;
LADIES OF T H E MACi'ABEES. Meet every it.'&#13;
aud :ird Saturdtty of each i^.outa at ;J:3i&gt; p ui. a&#13;
. h . »&gt;. i \ M. ball. Visiting listers cordially in j L vited. LILA C o M W i v , Lady Com. .&#13;
p r o d i u e N f l n e r e n u l t s i u 3 0 d n y n . I t a c t s l i&#13;
p o w e r f u l l y and ciuickly. Cures when o t h e r s fail. 1 ^ -&#13;
Voting m e n c a n regain their lost manhood, a n d&#13;
old m e n m a y recover their Youthful viv'or b y&#13;
tisirtsr B 1 C V I V O , U q u i c k l y . a n d quietly r e -&#13;
m o v o s N e r v o u s n e s s , . Ix&gt;st V i t a l i t y . S e x u a l&#13;
W e a k n e s s such a s l*ost P o w e r . F a i l i n g Memory,&#13;
W a s t i n g Diseases,^aed effects of s e l f - a b u s e o r&#13;
e x c e s s and i n d i s c r e t i o n , w h i c h u n l i t s o n e for&#13;
study, b u s i n e s s or m a r r i a g e , It not only c u r e s&#13;
by s t a r t i n g at the s e a t of d i s e a s e , b u t Is a g r e a t&#13;
u e r v e i o n i c a r i a b l o o d b u i l d e r , b r i n g i n g&#13;
back t h e p i n k g l o w t o « a l e c h e e k s and r c -&#13;
storlng.tho l i r e ©t y o u t h . It wards off a p -&#13;
proaching d i s e a s e . I n s i s t o n h a v i n g R K V T V O ,&#13;
r o other. It ctwa bo oarrfed Iu v e s t i w c k e t . B y&#13;
mail. ^ 1 . 0 0 y&gt;or pnckaifc. or s i s for ? o . O O . W o&#13;
Kive f t * e a d v i c e and covins»tl t o nil w ho w i s h i t ,&#13;
w l t h g O H r a n t t ' c . C i r c u l a r s free. A d d r e s s&#13;
ROYAL IftOlCINE CO.. Marine Wd«„ Chicaoo, 111.&#13;
.• N I G U T S O K THK LOYAL. GUARD&#13;
F. L. Andrews P. M, V&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Druggist.&#13;
PINCKirET, MICH.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M, 0- C, L, SIQLER M, 0&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
t'byticisae and S u r g e o n s . A l l calls promptly&#13;
a tended today or night. Ofnoe on MainstieeC&#13;
I'iuekbcy, Micb.&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH SEAL&#13;
AT DISPATCH OFFICE&#13;
HE OHLY PHSOTIOAi&#13;
• «ff«sflk^&#13;
It t* compact, onn be ciir: e l i ..-il-.-,' n"n«l a*t .&#13;
thi' yivrator to s»utte the u,uautuy ot Ink. de».i&#13;
SAVES T I M E . SAVES I N K .&#13;
K.^nshrushpi* ^nd ink wherevon Wi»uf thoni, and&#13;
••3a.,&gt;.iy* l i E A D Y E l ) R l X S T A N X t S E .&#13;
A {iTfect i-onibiriation is obtained vehen&#13;
'WHITE'S WATERPROOF STENCIL INK&#13;
•- ••*•••!. U '« oasily nvi'-i--«.t u:;d seU liuickiy. N o&#13;
•:MTS 8RUSHES. SAVES STENCILS. SAVES TIME.&#13;
:&gt;&gt;'••» :••-. ^:l!(^^v v,nt«b.»»'or rtpst'stpn^lii'TVont&#13;
... &gt;\o:.d i.ot a , . T K s a : I T , X*fr w i y by-&#13;
' 3 . A. WHITE CO.,&#13;
8 5 High S t . , B o s t o n , M a » « . U . &amp; . A .&#13;
so&#13;
.•.vVf&#13;
^y/i\&#13;
/^3*&amp;i&#13;
''4*&#13;
EDITORS PROTEST.&#13;
CALL LATEST R&#13;
'V&#13;
NQ OF COM-&#13;
' U N F A I R . '&#13;
ttAILROAQ $ P S BARRED.&#13;
]%»y Ther^Jt^NoiKlnQ in the Law&#13;
That Calls for ^u^h ,an Interpreli&#13;
tation — • Th«'Commission&#13;
Flooded with "Kicks."&#13;
• •&gt;•' &gt; ' ; ' ' - 4 -&#13;
Washingt&lt;m.-Tijrh«j recent ruling :;'&#13;
•the interstate commerce commission&#13;
to Ilia e.ftW *M* 'frothing buf'money&#13;
;caav'jfe_ iiafO.*. to/ ^-transpontaSJop of&#13;
' either person* or property," means&#13;
that in future^ the "railroads will be&#13;
prohibited from exchanging transport&#13;
a t i o n for advertising space in the&#13;
newspaper's of the country.&#13;
The ruling has already aroused a&#13;
'storm of protest from the publishers&#13;
'.throughout the country. Every mail&#13;
into Washington brings hundreds of&#13;
letters from newspaper men all of&#13;
which severely criticise the commission,&#13;
for "going out of it s way to hit&#13;
the newspapers." The publishers inflftit&#13;
that, there is nothing in,the new&#13;
law which woivld in any way forbid&#13;
the railroads from purchasing advertising&#13;
space to be paid for in transportation,&#13;
and that such a ruling is&#13;
not only uncalled for by either the&#13;
letter or tlio spirit of the law, but is&#13;
uu constitution a I as well.&#13;
One promiaent publisher said a day&#13;
or two ajjo:&#13;
"There is'not only nothing in the&#13;
ne&lt;v rate law which would call for&#13;
such a ruling as this from the commission,&#13;
but the ruling is antagonistic&#13;
to the national constitution as well,&#13;
and it will not be upheld by the&#13;
courts. The railroads that desire publicity&#13;
through the medium of ray publication&#13;
make advertising contracts&#13;
with me, and pay me for the space&#13;
used with transportation which is the&#13;
SHrce as &gt;money to me as it is used by&#13;
myself or my employes in connection&#13;
witK my business. The government&#13;
might with oqual justice say the merchant&#13;
ctuiM nut give dry goods or&#13;
any. other marketable commodity in&#13;
exchange iov advertising space. The&#13;
courts woiiid not uphold such a ruling&#13;
a*i that for on»» moment, and there is&#13;
no more reason why they should .uphold&#13;
this latest erration of the commerce&#13;
commission,, for it is equally as&#13;
untenable a« the .proposition between&#13;
the publisher and the&gt; merchant&#13;
would be.&#13;
"Everyone Knows that the railroads&#13;
•do. and can afford to, advertise more&#13;
heavily when their advertising accounts&#13;
can be paid for in transportation.&#13;
Nor does this increased amount&#13;
of advertising affect the interests of&#13;
thrt general public in any way, but&#13;
it does.assist in making the prosperity&#13;
of the American newspapers and" pericvt&#13;
teals. The transportation that is&#13;
given to "newspapers in exchange for&#13;
advertising does' not affect in any way&#13;
the equitable enforcement of the rate&#13;
Jaw, nor does it affect in any way the&#13;
Tates charged the general public for&#13;
transportation for either persons or&#13;
property. It is a benefit to the railroads&#13;
in that it enables them to do a&#13;
greater amount of advertising that&#13;
they otherwise could or would do, and&#13;
in.this way secure a greater amount&#13;
of business ior their lines, and urider&#13;
a just interpretation of the law this&#13;
increase in business would eventuaWy&#13;
load to a reduction of transportation&#13;
charges to the general public.» It is&#13;
an unjust and uncalled for ruling, and&#13;
both the publishers and the railroads&#13;
should fight it."&#13;
That publishers are fighting it, not&#13;
only by their protests to the commission&#13;
but by protesting to their representatives&#13;
in both houses of congress&#13;
m proven by the fact that already the&#13;
commission is receiving communications&#13;
from many senators and congressmen&#13;
in which these representatives&#13;
of the people declare they had&#13;
no. intention of passing a law that&#13;
would affect the newspapers in this&#13;
way, and that there is nothing in the&#13;
now law which calls for such a ruling&#13;
on. the part of the commission.&#13;
N £ W YORK REPUBLICAN LEADER&#13;
Charles E. Hughes Nominated for&#13;
Governor in Convention.&#13;
Saratoga, N. Y.—The Republican&#13;
state convention met here Wednesday.&#13;
• nominated a state ticket, adopted&#13;
a platform and then adjourned.&#13;
Charles K. Hughes, who conducted&#13;
the*insurance investigation before the&#13;
legislative committee, wa-. placed In&#13;
nomination fr r the governorship by&#13;
j o b E. Hedges, ')r New York county,&#13;
'litenomination v.as greeted with tremendouK&#13;
enthusiasm. Senator Tully,&#13;
orf'Steeiibeti county, seconded the nomination,&#13;
and It was made by acclamattofi.&#13;
Two Switchmen Killed.&#13;
Indianapolis. Ind.—-Charles S Reed&#13;
and Herbert O. Oldridge, switchmen&#13;
ernpeoyed in the yards of the Big&#13;
Fc*ir railroad at Brightwood, were&#13;
HiltatJUi£ collision between a switch&#13;
e a | M a t ? a 3 W ! c l f r i *&#13;
PRIVATE OHIO BANK CLOSED&#13;
NEARLY ENTIRE FUND8 OF MIDDLEPORT&#13;
INSTITUTION GONE.&#13;
Great Excitement In Town Wh,en&#13;
News Is Made Public—To Ar-&#13;
• m t t ^President.&#13;
Ponieray, O.—The Middleport bank,&#13;
a private institution at Middleport. 0.,&#13;
failed to open its doors Friday. It is&#13;
stated that all the deposits, amounting&#13;
to $115,000, are missing and great excitement&#13;
prevails. Most of the depositors&#13;
are poor people and their deposits&#13;
represented nearly all their savings.&#13;
E. C. Fox, the president of the&#13;
bank, has been located at Toronto, O.,&#13;
where his wife's people reside, and his&#13;
arrest ordered. He is expected to be&#13;
apprehended and brought hack at&#13;
once.&#13;
President Fox went away last Tuesday,&#13;
leaving Vice President T. S.&#13;
Armentrout in charge. An examination&#13;
of the vaults after Fox had gone&#13;
revealed $3,000 in cash and paper&#13;
worth less than $50,000 on its face to&#13;
account for the $115,000 deposited.&#13;
Armentrout was formerly a Presbyterian&#13;
minister at Gallipolis and on&#13;
the solicitation of Fox resigned the&#13;
ministry the 1st of June, converted his&#13;
property into $6,000, and entered the&#13;
bank as an equal partner with Fox,&#13;
perfectly unaware of its financial condition.&#13;
He has lost his $6,000 and is&#13;
now almost a physical wreck joy,er worrying&#13;
about the outcome of his new&#13;
enterprise.&#13;
The people of Afiddleporti, became&#13;
thoroughly aroused late in the after&#13;
noon over the collapse of the bank.&#13;
For a time it looked like there might&#13;
be bloodshed. William Horden. an&#13;
old merchant, became so angered&#13;
over the loss of a heavy deposit that&#13;
he secured a revolver and sought Vice&#13;
President Thomas R. Armentrout at&#13;
his home in the Fox addition with the&#13;
avowed purpose of shooting the banker.&#13;
He wag intercepted just in time&#13;
to prevent it.&#13;
GOAST CITIES ARE&#13;
LAID WASTE&#13;
THE DESOLATION LEFT BY TflE&#13;
HURRICANE IN T H E SOUTH '&#13;
APPALLING. , ,&#13;
LIFE AND PROPERTY LOST&#13;
Known Dead Number One Hundred&#13;
and Thirty-seven—Property De»&#13;
•troyed Valued at Fifteen Millions.&#13;
QUIET RESTORED AT ATLANTA.&#13;
Authorities Succeed in Quelling Race&#13;
Troubles. '&#13;
Atlanta, Ga. — The race .riot situation&#13;
is In absolute control.of the&#13;
authorities and' business has resumed&#13;
normal' conditions. The city schools&#13;
are open and well*, attended and all&#13;
manuiaetliving- plants -and factories,&#13;
which have been suspended since Sa\-&#13;
arday, blew their whistles at six&#13;
o'clock and began operations. All saloons&#13;
are, plosed and licenses to negro&#13;
restaurants and low bars have beafc&#13;
rescinded by city council in special&#13;
session. A citizens committee of ten,&#13;
aided by the mayor, police and military&#13;
authorities; are iirabsoHite control;.&#13;
There was no disorder Tuesday nigrn&#13;
and with 14 companies of state militia,&#13;
a battery of artillery, a battalion of&#13;
cavalry, and an increased police force&#13;
on duty, it is believed the riots are&#13;
curbed and peace permanently restored.&#13;
Atlanta, Ga. — The known dead&#13;
in connection with the riots here&#13;
since last Saturday night number&#13;
one white man and 18 negroes.&#13;
To this number might be added the&#13;
name of Mrs. Robert P. Thompson,&#13;
an estimable white woman, who&#13;
dropped dead Monday evening after&#13;
seeing two negroes shot and beaten&#13;
in front of her home.&#13;
WEST POINT HAZING STOPPED&#13;
Practice of Initiating New Students&#13;
Entirely Stamped Out.&#13;
Washington.—No more favorable&#13;
report of the conditions at the military&#13;
academy at West Point has been&#13;
made in recent years to the war department&#13;
than that of the board of&#13;
visitors, of which Gen. Horace Porter&#13;
was president.&#13;
In its report, the board says: "The&#13;
practice of hazing new cadets, at one&#13;
time prevalent among the older students&#13;
of the academy, has been effectually-&#13;
stamped out, and we have&#13;
been Informed that no Instance of&#13;
real hazing has come to the attention&#13;
of the academy authorities during the&#13;
last three years, or since effective&#13;
measures were employed for Its abo&#13;
lition."&#13;
Earthquake at San Juan.&#13;
San Juan, P. R.—The city of San&#13;
Juan and the island of Porto Rico experienced&#13;
a series of heavy earthquake&#13;
shocks Thursday, beginning at&#13;
10:47 a. m. The people were thrown&#13;
into a condition of consternation and&#13;
Indescribable alarm, but the resultant&#13;
damage was comparatively slight and&#13;
there has been no loss of life.&#13;
Speed Cause of Disaster.&#13;
, London.—Excessive speed, causing&#13;
his engine to overturn, has been decided&#13;
by the board of trade inspectors&#13;
to have been the cause of the Ballsy&#13;
bury railway disaster July 1, in which&#13;
upward of a score of Americans on&#13;
their way from. Plymouth to London&#13;
i i tost their lives&#13;
• » / » f --N&#13;
Slowly awakening from the stupor&#13;
Which follows in the wake of one of&#13;
nature's mighty convulsions, the people&#13;
of the hurricane-swept sections of&#13;
the gulf states are now beginning to&#13;
realize the magnitude of the disaster&#13;
which nas befallen them.&#13;
With u known loss of life of 137&#13;
souls and property valued at $16,000,-&#13;
000 wiped out. with many isolated&#13;
points yet to be heard from, the calamity&#13;
appalls.&#13;
- Mobile Is cut off from the outside&#13;
world and chaos reigns In the city. The&#13;
loss is $5,000,000. Hattiesburg is practically&#13;
wiped out with damage of $1,-&#13;
000,000. Pensacola is desolated with&#13;
$5,000,000 loss, while from surrounding&#13;
towns hourly come reports of death&#13;
and destruction. Town after town in&#13;
the Interior is in ruins while the country&#13;
districts are devastated.&#13;
Enormous damage to both life and&#13;
"property was done at several of the&#13;
army forts and naval stations along&#13;
the gulf coast.&#13;
Six persons drowned, eight goodsi;&#13;
ed sailing vessels wrecked, about&#13;
30 smaller vessels sank or went ashore&#13;
and property damage of more than a&#13;
million dollars was the result of the&#13;
hurricane in Mississippi sound.&#13;
All the loss of life and most of the&#13;
wrecks occurred at the eastern end&#13;
of the sound, about 50 "miles from&#13;
Mobile. The worst catastrophe was at&#13;
Horn island where lightkeeper Johnson&#13;
with his wife and daughter were&#13;
swept into the gulf with their lighthouse&#13;
and drowned. Before the storm&#13;
Johnson refused a chance to go&#13;
ashore.&#13;
It Was Brutal.&#13;
Brutally hazed by upper classmen ou&#13;
the night of his first college day, William&#13;
Forrester, of Milwaukee, a freshman&#13;
of the University of Pennsylvania,&#13;
is lying in the university hospital in A&#13;
critical condition.&#13;
The attack on Forrester occurred in&#13;
the dormitories while he was attempting&#13;
to tear . dowa from t h ^ w a l l a&#13;
proclamation put up by the upper&#13;
cUssujen instructing the first year students&#13;
how to conduct themselves In&#13;
the university precincts. Before he had&#13;
finished the work Forrester, was set&#13;
upon by a number of sophomores, and&#13;
soon got the worst of it, although several&#13;
other freshmen came to his assistance.&#13;
In the attack he was hurled down a&#13;
flight of stairs, sustaining a fracture of&#13;
the skull, while a flst blow in hU right&#13;
eye may cost him his sight.&#13;
Before he went over the rail, however,&#13;
Forrester gave a good account&#13;
of himself and half a dozen of his asjailants&#13;
were also obliged to go to the&#13;
hospital for treatment. Forrester at&#13;
once hurried to the hospital and his&#13;
brother. Dr. Forrester, of the faculty&#13;
of the medical school, was summoned&#13;
Alcohol and Gasoline.&#13;
Tests of alcohol and gasoline in the&#13;
internal combustion engines used In&#13;
motor vehicles and motor boats indicate&#13;
that although alcohol has only&#13;
about 70 per cent, as much heating&#13;
power as gasoline, it can be used&#13;
with 20 per cent, less operating waste.&#13;
Parched Land of Little Value.&#13;
In parts of Australia where the&#13;
average yearly rainfall is not more&#13;
than ten inches a square mile of land&#13;
will support only eight or nine sheep,&#13;
tn the Argentine republic, South America,&#13;
the same area, with 34 inches of&#13;
rain, supports 2,560 sheep.&#13;
Oppose England in Egypt.&#13;
Among*the principal opponents of&#13;
England in Egypt are those-educated&#13;
Arabs, who, having learned the&#13;
French language, but not the English,&#13;
are now unable to obtain government&#13;
positions.&#13;
Barber's Sign Long in Use.&#13;
The barber's sign was a 3triped&#13;
pole as far back as 1650, the stripes&#13;
around the pole being symbols of the&#13;
bandages used in wrapping the arm&#13;
or part from which the blood was to&#13;
be l e t&#13;
immense Saving of Gold.&#13;
A process recovery Jrnown as "the&#13;
cyanide" has within the last 14 years&#13;
saved over $300,000,000 worth of&#13;
goHJ which would otherwise have been&#13;
lost;&#13;
Many Fish In Lake Erie.&#13;
It is claimed that Lake Erie pro*&#13;
duces more fish to the square mile&#13;
than, any other body of water in the&#13;
world.&#13;
Zebra Would to Useful.&#13;
Of an wlleVaniinalithe sehje^j-tould&#13;
b * moat naefjuJ.Jo man, 4t d o m e s t i -&#13;
cated. It is not liable to horse lever&#13;
or taetae fly.&#13;
Drewes, -Cloak** • Ribkoaa, £uit«, .ate.,&#13;
can be made to look like hew with* PUTNAM&#13;
FADELESS DXES. No MUM.'&#13;
'When | w h i t e r marries a widow&#13;
theyi are opth unselfish; neither of&#13;
them thinks of No. 1.&#13;
MM. wiMlowe ttoothijif Buap.&#13;
For cblMi^te«&lt;ltae,:M«Ua»Me'g«SM,'reduc*&gt;i la*&#13;
«juiun»ti«*,allavspaiii.oure*wlndcoUe. 'tfcabotue&#13;
When a married woman throws a&#13;
Mat it is reasonably sure to strike her&#13;
husband'*) pocketbook.&#13;
Important t o Mother*.&#13;
CMtfnlljr every bottle of CASTORTA,&#13;
a iefe sod ewe remedy fee inflate and. children,&#13;
and tee that it&#13;
Been the&#13;
Signature of&#13;
la Use For Over 30 Yean.&#13;
The Kind Too Have Always Boogot.&#13;
Died in Westminster Abbey.&#13;
Henry IV. died in Westminster Abr&#13;
bey in 1413. It is claimed, tltot from&#13;
that time to this no life has ended&#13;
there, except that of a minister named&#13;
Shepherd, who dropped dead In the)&#13;
famous old sanctuary, just as he fin-*&#13;
ished a speech, at a meeting recently&#13;
held under the charmansbip of the&#13;
Dean of Westminster.&#13;
Cheap Excursions South.&#13;
On the 1st and 3rd Tuesday of each&#13;
month the Big Four Ry. will se)l excursion&#13;
tickets to most all points In&#13;
Virginia, South Carolina, Tennessee,&#13;
Alabama and Georgia at rate of one&#13;
fare plus $2.00 with return limit 30&#13;
days. Liberal stopover privileges.&#13;
Write I. P. Spining, General,Northern&#13;
Agent, Big Four Route, 238 Clark St.,&#13;
Chicago, for further information.&#13;
"" Hhooelate Tatriefs&#13;
The Great Constlpafiofl Cure&#13;
•owe!&#13;
ulale and to&amp;i&#13;
Tou ean obuin % ftlXK temple&#13;
MARVIN«MEDY CO.,&#13;
?JSTk'&#13;
^vr^^r^-J i'JtUau&#13;
Hindu Moon'&#13;
2}e full ellipse- of thedw&gt;nl waj observed&#13;
in Singapore on the njghj' of&#13;
A ^ t f 4. -'Accord^ to th£ Hindus&#13;
thit'* oellpse is t h ^ c o n t a c t between&#13;
the^inpon and another planet' called&#13;
Rahoo, but the ma*sei believe that&#13;
owing to. the will oM^od, Rahoo.^Hr tfce^,&#13;
serpemlike planet, catfhe3 hold^f the)&#13;
moon by' Us. hltfeona mouth and releases&#13;
it after a"shojrf time* '[&#13;
At the first contact the ^ i'Hlndtte&#13;
bathe principally in the sea and anxiously&#13;
await the release. After the&#13;
contact they take another bath. During&#13;
the Interval they t r e not; allowed&#13;
even to drink a cup of water, Jas their&#13;
belief is that all things in the world&#13;
get polluted during the contact.—Singapore&#13;
Times. t&gt; ,&#13;
A KENTUCKY WOMAN&#13;
l , * ^&#13;
- • » • » . . - * i&#13;
"Tips" Given by Monarchs.&#13;
King Edward disburses a good deal I&#13;
How She Gained Fifteon Pounds in&#13;
Weight and Become Welt by-Taking&#13;
Dr. Williams* Pink Pi Us.&#13;
Women at fortyv or fcliereabouts, have&#13;
their future in their own- bauds. There&#13;
will bo a change for the better or worse,&#13;
for the better if the systemis pirifiedby&#13;
such a tonic as Dr. Williams'Pink Pills.&#13;
of money in tips every year. Each ! Mrs. D. C. Wedding, of Hartford, Ky.f&#13;
visit to one of his subjects costs him&#13;
from $1,000 to $3,000. At shooting&#13;
parties the gamebeaters get $15 each&#13;
and the gamekeepers $25 or $.&gt;0 each.&#13;
When he goes abroad he does still&#13;
better! On the occasion of his recent&#13;
visit to the, kaiser he gave away nearly&#13;
$10,000 in this way. When the czar&#13;
visited England he left behind a check&#13;
for $15,000 to be distributed among&#13;
servants who attended him.&#13;
BRAVED ANGER OF KING.&#13;
Lafayette Flaunted Liberty&#13;
Face of Louie.&#13;
Medal lit&#13;
Shortly after Lafayette's return, to&#13;
France from his second sojourn in&#13;
America, he was at Versailles, where&#13;
the king was about to review a division&#13;
of troops. Lafayette was auked&#13;
to join in the review.&#13;
He was dressed in the American uniform,&#13;
and was standing by the side of&#13;
the Prince de Cbnde, when the king,&#13;
in his tour of conversation with the&#13;
officers, came to him, and, after&#13;
speaking on several topics, asked him&#13;
some questions about his uniform and&#13;
the military costuirte of the United&#13;
States. The king's attention was attracted&#13;
by a little medal attached to&#13;
the general's coat, and he asked what&#13;
it was.&#13;
Lafayette replied that it was a symbol&#13;
which it was the custom of foreign&#13;
officers in American service to&#13;
wear, and that it bore a device.&#13;
"And what is the device upon&#13;
yours?" asked the king.&#13;
"My device," said the youug general,&#13;
pointing to his medal, "is a liberty&#13;
pole standing on a broken crown&#13;
and scepter."&#13;
The king smiled, and with some&#13;
pleasantry upon the republican propensities&#13;
of a French Marquis in&#13;
American uniform, turned the conversation&#13;
into other channels. Conde&#13;
looked grave, but was silent—The&#13;
Sunday Magazine.&#13;
writes as follows concerning the difficulties&#13;
which afflicted her:&#13;
" I was serious] y ill and was con fined&#13;
to my bed for six or eight mouths iu all,&#13;
during two years. I had chills, fever,&#13;
iheimmtism. My stomach seemed always&#13;
too full, my kidneys did not act&#13;
freely, my liver was inactive, my heart&#13;
beat was very weak and I had dizziness&#13;
or swimming iu my head and nervous&#13;
troubles.&#13;
"I WJVS under the treatment of several&#13;
different physicians but they all failed&#13;
to do me any good. After suffering for&#13;
two years I learned from an Arkansas&#13;
friend nlKiut the merits of Dr. Williams'&#13;
Pink Pills and I decided that I would&#13;
try them. The very first box I took&#13;
made me feel better and when I had&#13;
taken four boxes more I was entirely well,&#13;
weighed fifteen poumlsnioro than when&#13;
1 began, resumed my household duties,&#13;
and have since continued in tho best of&#13;
health. I have reooimnettded D*. Williams'&#13;
Pink Pills to many people on account&#13;
of what they did forme, and I feel&#13;
that. I cannot praise them too strongly."&#13;
Dr. Williams'Pink Pills restored Mrs.&#13;
Wedding to health because they actually&#13;
make new blood and when the,.blood is&#13;
in full vigor every function of the body&#13;
is restored-, because the blood carries to&#13;
every organ, every muscle, every nerve,&#13;
the necessary iionrisdinjeut. Any womna&#13;
who is interested in the core of Mrs. Wedding&#13;
will want our book, "Plain Talks to&#13;
Women," which is free on request.&#13;
All druggists sell Dr. Williams' Pink&#13;
Pills, or tlnty will be sent by mail j&gt;ostpajd,&#13;
on receipt of price, 50cents per box,&#13;
six boxes for $2.!J0, by the Dr. Williams&#13;
Medicine Co., ttohenoctttdyj N.Y.&#13;
RIGHT HOME.&#13;
Doctor Recommends Postum&#13;
Personal Test.&#13;
from&#13;
No one is better able to realize the&#13;
injurious action of caffeine—the drug&#13;
in coffee—on the heart, than the&#13;
tor.&#13;
When the doctor himself has been&#13;
relieved by simply leaving off coffee&#13;
and using Postum, he can refer with&#13;
full conviction to his own case.&#13;
A Mo. physician prescribes Postum&#13;
for many of his patients because he&#13;
was benefited by it. He says:&#13;
"I wish to add my testimony In regard&#13;
to that excellent preparation—&#13;
Postum. 1 have had functional or&#13;
nervous heart trouble for over 15&#13;
years, and part of the time was unable&#13;
to attend to my business.&#13;
"I was a moderate user of coffee and&#13;
did not think drinking it hurt me.. But&#13;
on stopping it and using Postum instead,&#13;
my heart has got all right, and&#13;
I ascribe it to t h e change from coffee&#13;
to Postum.&#13;
"I am prescribing it now tn cases-of&#13;
sickness, especially when coffee does&#13;
not agree, or affects the heart, nerves&#13;
or stomach.&#13;
"When made right it has a much&#13;
better flavor than coffee, and is a vHal&#13;
sustainer of the system. I shall continue&#13;
to recommend it to our people,&#13;
and I bare my own case to refer td."&#13;
Name given by Postum Co., Battle&#13;
Creek, Mich. Head the little book,&#13;
"The Road to Wellvllle,'V in pXca.&#13;
"There's a reason,"&#13;
THE BEST C0U6H CURE&#13;
When offered&#13;
instead of&#13;
something else&#13;
Kemp's Balsam&#13;
stop and consider: "Am I&#13;
to get something as good as this&#13;
b e s t cough cure ?&#13;
If not s o r e * what good reason&#13;
is there for for taking chances in a&#13;
matter that may have a direct&#13;
bearing on my own or my family's&#13;
health?"&#13;
Sold by all dealers at 25 c. and 50c&#13;
YOU WANT te EARN MONEY jre m yourebanetj. We offer S*A,e&gt;eo •** CASH&#13;
'RIZKJt fur those wbo«er*ur« cu bscripUon for the&#13;
ro greatest rmiKKzlnec-'ubbinir offers of the season,&#13;
S\ux*j»urut Woman n Himu Oompa&gt;iinn, «&gt;acb tor a&#13;
Iuli y*ar, tl '*; 8«wt*, U'owim * H»mt Oxnpan 'ot»&#13;
ar-U Review of lievmv*. H.UU. Pilieaarejaaddition&#13;
to a libera I conjtnisslon on each order. These Hubs&#13;
almost sell tbemaeivee. Some earn 1100 a week,&#13;
many a» much as tfto. Can use all four time or a&#13;
part of it.. Write to-day f&lt;&gt;r partlcutars, before your&#13;
territory la taken, to&#13;
Bl*«**a IU«UIIXk\ i» WMkfaftM a«. K.. KMrV*rkC1«y.&#13;
fOilllV1!'I V 1p6r CNenetr vt'ouueksa tHtee aKdKeKoKh !*! c"or ed ins t e a » i&#13;
years experience. Henn S-ceatst&#13;
MAJK8T1C Sl'KClALTV Co., "'&#13;
]&gt;r«g*1ai #e*ir&#13;
lUMid «eiree&gt;&#13;
tiiruilirzham. H "tTm"*&#13;
If afflicted with (&#13;
•or* «]TM, &lt;ue t Tfcrat-spjfr E|t WiHr&#13;
8ALM9MEN WANTM1K&#13;
We want a lire, act! re and thoroofWy expert&#13;
6al«aai»f) tn tnla locaiHy wim suOctent mo.&#13;
buy outrlirht bis ttr*i months supply of ou&#13;
ftlfellyXerw FiB—wra MwUwV Wire;&#13;
! • • JUlslit*. A utility needed to every&#13;
home and fully compiling with InaeraBOt&#13;
•Mb a man we will give exclusive Mies&#13;
Funrantee to refund money I f kood* hot&#13;
* . _ _ # • '&#13;
days; f"nrlberp%ul«&gt;niaraon&#13;
lieu Ligh*'&#13;
•fc&#13;
._ _ ot....&#13;
^ t. Tbea*ai&#13;
NHal»ted8l.k C&#13;
KEAL E9TATK.&#13;
BOOKLET FREE VtSffSiJSSSim** dpnoostt aaaj.. r e.U nJn. Cdt. eMdacmKnINktSsltt!.• «H•o*n*e*j' •P•"roOvtew, oTeeeagaea*, '&#13;
atM«^'ectasia tlwisr* I—ee&gt;.» Is** ftt*M*feYva»&#13;
-BBVCAWMAL.&#13;
L K A I I I L We (••«* eluaMM, wrtox-Ieytee and&#13;
^ _ * __*• Piaaieriaj »jr aeiwil praeijoe 1« itaiee&#13;
~ T * " ^ 1 snoot Is* Frs&lt;w^oWe.«*J&gt;rtfeT»Ai&gt;e&#13;
TIIAOE fcmo&lt;*^e^eieTuLaaJ^Avnow«Mo,&#13;
v.&lt; &gt;&#13;
CIHB- Eortha Blues&#13;
MEUEIICHETMTHAS ifYB FAILED&#13;
r&#13;
•noman U suddenly plunged into that&#13;
mrM/Uu &lt;S mtoeryftte^nCES, it te&#13;
i u d p i c t u r e . U is usually this way t&#13;
« h ^ a V b ^ f e e I i i i r "euto* sorts'*&#13;
for some t^ne; head has ached and&#13;
1&gt;ack also'; has slept poorly, been quite&#13;
nervous, and nearly fainted once or&#13;
twice; head dizzy* and heart beats very&#13;
fast; then that bearing-down feeling,&#13;
and during her periods she is exceedingly&#13;
despondent. Nothing pleases&#13;
her. tier doctor says: " Cheer up: yon&#13;
have dyspepsia; yoa will be all right&#13;
soon."&#13;
But aha doesn't jget ** all right," and&#13;
hope vanishes; thtfn come the brooding.&#13;
morhfcU melancholy, everlasting&#13;
Dont wait until your sufferings have&#13;
driven you to despair, with your nerves&#13;
all shattered and your courage gone,&#13;
but take "Lydia E. PinkhanVs Vegetable&#13;
Compound. See what it did for&#13;
Mrs. Rosa Adams, of 819 12th Street,&#13;
Louisville, Ky., niece of the late General&#13;
Roger Hanson, C.S.A. She writes:&#13;
Dear Mrs. Pinkhamt&#13;
** I cannot tell you with pen and ink what&#13;
Lydia E. Pinknam's Vegetable Compound&#13;
has done for me. I suffered with female&#13;
troubtee, extreme lassitude, 'the blues,'&#13;
nervousness and that all-pone feeling. I was&#13;
advised to fey Lydia E. Pinknam's Vegetable&#13;
Compound, and it not only cured my female&#13;
derangement, but it has restored me to perfect&#13;
health and strength. The buoyancy of my&#13;
younger days has returned, and I do not suffer&#13;
any longer with despondency, as I did be*&#13;
fore, I consider Lydia E. Pinkham's VegetabW&#13;
»CVminoundaboontosick andiuffeiing&#13;
women."&#13;
If yo« bay* soma derangement of&#13;
the female organism write Mrs.&#13;
Plnkbam, Lynn, Mass., for advice.&#13;
And no man realizes what a valuable&#13;
asset a wife is until he has occasion&#13;
to put his property in her name.&#13;
CURED OF GRAVEL.&#13;
Not a Single Stone Has Formed Since&#13;
Using Doan's Kidney Pills.&#13;
*J. D. Daughtrey, music publisher,&#13;
of Suffolk, Va., says: "During two&#13;
or' three years that&#13;
I had kidney trouble&#13;
I passed about&#13;
2½ pounds of gravel&#13;
and sandy sediment&#13;
in the urine. I&#13;
haven't passed a&#13;
stone since using&#13;
Doan's Kidney Pills,&#13;
however, and that&#13;
was three years ago.&#13;
I used to suffer the&#13;
most acute agony&#13;
during a gravel attack, and had the&#13;
other usual symptoms of kidney trouble—&#13;
lassitude, headache, "pain in the&#13;
back, urinary disorders, rheumatic,&#13;
pain, etc. I have a box containing 14'&#13;
gravel stones that I passed, but that&#13;
is not one-qnarter of the whole number.&#13;
I consider Doan's Kidney Pills a&#13;
fine kidney tonic."&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.&#13;
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
Jewelers Lament.&#13;
Rritlsh jewelers complain of great&#13;
depression In their trade. Persons&#13;
who wear good jewelry, are wearinf&#13;
less of it. and many are contented&#13;
with the imitation, much of which is&#13;
very good of its kind now.&#13;
• » % &gt; * . . 4 «4«»tf *&#13;
Superb Service, Splendid Scenery&#13;
en roii|^t^:Jf4aii&gt;ai^l1^MiSfckl'&#13;
and KawBrtha Lakes, Georgian Bay&#13;
and Temegami Region, St. Lawrence&#13;
River and Rapids, Thousand Islands,&#13;
Algonquin National Park, White Mountains&#13;
and Atlantic Sea. Coast r.eaorts,&#13;
via Grand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Double track Chicago to Montreal and&#13;
Niagara Falls, N. Y?&#13;
For Peoples of tourist publication&#13;
anet descriptive pamphlets apply to&#13;
Geo. W. Vaux, A. G. P. &amp; T. A., 135&#13;
Adami St.j Chicago.j &gt; /&#13;
% t o l&#13;
«*. *&#13;
A chadJable^. man glyes^ according&#13;
to his means* and "a miser gives accordto&#13;
his meanness.&#13;
£_. ; , *&#13;
Low nates to-the Northwest,&#13;
day until Oct. 31st the Great&#13;
Railway wllj.sell one way&#13;
•^Tickets frott}, Chicago at the&#13;
foUawJUwUow iaifia;.-.'LL J.. .&#13;
To Seattle* Portland and Western&#13;
Washington,' $33.00. Spokane, $30.50.&#13;
&gt; dually, fp^^ratee• w fl$tf*WlwW "bV m e i ^ l S&#13;
Oeegon and British Columbia. b e mV 01&gt; { fm&#13;
For further information address&#13;
MAX BA86, Geneiak Immigration.&#13;
Agent, -ia0.sSo.CUj* £t^.Chicago, 111.&#13;
Prefer Ceett to JUIifllon.&#13;
Some people never seek religion as&#13;
long as thera'ta dotta* in jltfrt *• ' &lt;&#13;
THE PASSING OF&#13;
ft&#13;
THE UNITED STATES A88UME8&#13;
. CONTROL IN UNHAPFY&#13;
CUBA. '*• • '&#13;
TAFT IS NOW GOVERNOR.&#13;
Palms Quits as President, Which&#13;
Forces Immediate .Intervention-&#13;
Hurrying Troops to the Island New.&#13;
The resignation of President Pal ma.&#13;
which he refused to recall, the split in&#13;
the Cuban congress, which body was&#13;
left, without a quorum to act, and the&#13;
condition of things generally were&#13;
buch than on Saturday Secretary of&#13;
War Taft issued a proclamation to the&#13;
people establishing a provisional government,&#13;
of which he is the official&#13;
head. One paragraph of the proclamation&#13;
shows the intent of the United&#13;
States. It reads:&#13;
"The provisional government hereby&#13;
established will he maintained only&#13;
long enough to restore order, peace&#13;
and public confidence by direction of&#13;
and in the name of the president of&#13;
the United States, and then to hold&#13;
H&lt;ch elections as may be necessary to&#13;
determine on those persons upon&#13;
whom the permanent government of&#13;
the republic should be devolved."&#13;
Marines were landed from the war&#13;
vessels in the harbor and Governor&#13;
Taft immediately asked for troops to&#13;
be sent to preserve order. The war department&#13;
received a wireless message&#13;
froni President Roosevelt, who is on&#13;
board the Mayflower, authorizing it to&#13;
send the first expedition from Newport&#13;
News, as planned by the general staff.&#13;
The first expedition is to sail from&#13;
Newport News in about 6 or 7 days,&#13;
and inclulas two battalions from each&#13;
of the- following regiments: Fifth, at&#13;
Fort D. A. Russell; Seventh, Fort Mc-&#13;
Pberson; Twenty-seventh, Fort Sheridan;&#13;
Twenty-eighth, Fort Snelling;&#13;
Eleventh Cavalry, Fort Des Moines;&#13;
Fifteenth, Fort Ethan Allen; Seventeenth&#13;
and Eighteenth mountain batteries,&#13;
Vancouver; and two companies&#13;
of engineers from Washington barracks.&#13;
It id nov known that Brlg.-Gen.&#13;
Frederick Funston, who is already in&#13;
Cuba, is to be in command of all the&#13;
trcoos sent to Cuba. Col. E. D. Crowder,&#13;
of the judge-advocate general's office,&#13;
is to be Secretary Taft's legal&#13;
adviser in the organization of the&#13;
Ltw government.&#13;
Mr. Taft stated that he expected to&#13;
remain in Cuba only a fortnight and&#13;
would then return to Washington, as&#13;
affairs concerning the Philippine&#13;
islands and the Panama canal demanded&#13;
his immediate attention. He has requested&#13;
Secretary Bacon to remain another&#13;
week to further assist In perfecting&#13;
an organization necessary to&#13;
thoroughly install a provisional government.&#13;
Gov. Taft has nominated&#13;
Beekman Winthrop, governor of Porto&#13;
Rico, for the provisional governorship&#13;
here, recommending to Hhe Cubans&#13;
Mr. Winthrop's special fitness for&#13;
the position. Mr. Tatt says mat as&#13;
long as the provisional government&#13;
continues it will be under his supervision&#13;
as secretary of war.&#13;
Everybody is praising the tact of the&#13;
United States in avoiding the hauling&#13;
down of the Cuban flag. This is felt to&#13;
be a distinct act of courtesy and a&#13;
double assurance that the motives of&#13;
the United'States are not sinister.&#13;
A dispatch from Havana says: Secretary&#13;
of War Taft is in full charge of&#13;
the Cuban government and ex-Presi&#13;
deiK Palma, of Cuba, is a private citizen&#13;
and preparing to take his departure&#13;
from the island, never to return,&#13;
his friends say.&#13;
The closing scene in the death of the&#13;
first independent Cuban republic was&#13;
simple in the extreme. There was no&#13;
blare of bugles, no ruffle of drums, no&#13;
marching troops or thronging spectators&#13;
when the United States secretary&#13;
of war took the reins of government&#13;
that had fallen from the hands of the&#13;
wr.vering Palma.&#13;
The Cuban flag at ill flies from government&#13;
buildings and the only sign&#13;
outwardly 0f the great change that has&#13;
come, is the little island squa°d of bluecoated&#13;
marines who guard the treas&#13;
ury with its $25,000,000 in money.&#13;
There is no evidence of activity on&#13;
the white warships that ride at anchor&#13;
in the harbor. .Havana is quiet and&#13;
peaceful as. any city in the world. Of&#13;
all the events that have occurred today,&#13;
the one that aroused the most interest&#13;
was the announcement that&#13;
5 00() United States soldiers had beers&#13;
ordered to the island.&#13;
There came at once the wondering&#13;
qi cry if they would ever depart There&#13;
is every faith in the good intentions&#13;
of President Roosevelt and Secretary&#13;
Taft, but ihere is always the haunting&#13;
belief with Cubans that they will not&#13;
be able to maintain peace without the&#13;
strong hand of the United States to&#13;
guide them.&#13;
When Havana awoke Saturday&#13;
morning it was to read in the Official&#13;
Gazette the proclamation of Secretary&#13;
Taft announcing himself as official dictator&#13;
of the Island republic. It had&#13;
,. J been so thoroughly expected that there&#13;
BABY'S TORTURING HUMOR.&#13;
was not even a ripple of surprise.&#13;
Then, too, the edict was reassuring m&#13;
that the regency would&#13;
emporary.&#13;
1 1 1&#13;
There are many flowers yet to&#13;
bloom, many sunsets yet to admire,&#13;
many red lips yet to kiss—hut it is&#13;
hard to convince a man with a deranged&#13;
Jiver!&#13;
Ears Looked as If Thsy Would Drop&#13;
Off—Fact Matt of aores-toiMSi&#13;
by Cuticura in Two Wooko&#13;
for,75o.&#13;
;4l feel It my duty to parents of&#13;
other poor suffering babies to tell&#13;
you what Cuticura has done for my&#13;
little daughter. She broke out all&#13;
over her body with a humor, and we&#13;
used everything recommended, but&#13;
without remits. I called in three, doctors,&#13;
they all claimed they could help&#13;
her, but she continued to grow worse.&#13;
Her body was a mass of seres, and&#13;
her little face was being eaten away;&#13;
her ears looked as if they would drop&#13;
off. Neighbors advised me to get&#13;
Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and&#13;
before I had used half of the cake&#13;
of Soap and box of Ointment' the&#13;
sores had all healed, and my little&#13;
one's face and body were as clear&#13;
as a new-horn babe's. I would not&#13;
be without it again It It cost five dollars,&#13;
Instead of seventy-five cents.&#13;
Mrs. George J. Steese, 701 Colburn&#13;
St., Akron, Ohio."&#13;
BEGGAR WORE SILK HAT.&#13;
QUEER TRICK8 OF ANIMALS.&#13;
Seemed to Find Pleasure in Washing&#13;
of Odds and Ends.&#13;
Beckmann gives a delightful account&#13;
of a coon which used to amuse itself&#13;
by washing various odds and ends in&#13;
a bucket of water. An old pot handle,&#13;
a snail shell, or anything of the sort&#13;
would do.&#13;
But the thing he loved best of all&#13;
was an empty bottle. Clasping it in&#13;
his fore paws he would waddle slowly&#13;
to the bucket with the bottle clasped&#13;
close to his breast and then roll It&#13;
and rinse It In the water. If anyone&#13;
ventured to disturb him he was furious&#13;
and threw himself upon his back,&#13;
clinging so tightly to his beloved bottle&#13;
that he could be lifted by it.&#13;
Groos says that bears,£j£lll^do the&#13;
same sort of thing. He relates the&#13;
case of a polar bear which used to&#13;
roll an old iron pot to and fro in his&#13;
tank, and then, lifting it out. rub it&#13;
up and down In a trough of running&#13;
water. He stood on his hind legs&#13;
and used his fore paws exactly like a&#13;
washerwoman washing clothes.&#13;
Attlrt of Mendicant Surprised Via*&#13;
Itors In London.&#13;
Tho visitors from the country turning&#13;
from a London railway terminus&#13;
Into the street on Saturday stepped to&#13;
gaze' aghast at a man standing In the&#13;
gutter", "Look," said one, nudging the&#13;
other, "even the beggars wear 'toppers'&#13;
la London!" It was true in this&#13;
case, at any rate.&#13;
Here was a man of about five and&#13;
thirty, dressed like a city clerk, in a&#13;
good morning coat and trousers, sound&#13;
boots, clean starched shirt and collar&#13;
ami a well fixed tie. He was crowned&#13;
with a silk hat, well brushed and&#13;
ironed. But there he was in the conventional&#13;
attitude of the curbstone&#13;
merchant, one foot on the pavement,&#13;
the other in the gutter. One hand&#13;
held out for sale half a dozen boxes of&#13;
matches, the other Invited alms.&#13;
A man keeps a nice little place in&#13;
the country from the profits of his&#13;
pitch on the pavement in the Strand,&#13;
but his workaday clothes would not&#13;
fetch as much as this man's hat cost&#13;
to iron,—London Evening Standard.&#13;
LUMBAGO&#13;
ST&#13;
JACOBS&#13;
OIL&#13;
Penetrates t o the Spot&#13;
Right 011 the dot.&#13;
Bernhardt'* First American Tour.&#13;
Sarah Bernhardt made her American&#13;
debut in "Adrienne Lecouvreur,"&#13;
at Booth's theater, New York, November&#13;
8. 1880.&#13;
How's This?&#13;
We offer One Hundred Duller* Reward for « 7&#13;
M M of Catarrh that cannot b« cured by Uall'i&#13;
Catarrh Cure.&#13;
F. J. CHESTY A CO., Toledo. O&#13;
We, the anderilgned, have known F. J. Cheuey&#13;
for the laat IS yean, and believe him perfectly honorable&#13;
la all buel&amp;eu transaction* and financially&#13;
able to carry out any obligations made by hi* Arm.&#13;
WALDIMS. RINNAN a MAKVIX.&#13;
_. Wholesale Drugaleu, Toledo. O.&#13;
Hall'a Catarrh Care U taken Internally, acting&#13;
directly upon the blood and macoui •urfeces of the&#13;
ayitenv. Testlmontala tent free. Price 75 cent* per&#13;
bottle. Sold by all Drunliu.&#13;
Take HaU'i Family piib fur constipation.&#13;
W. L. DOUGLAS&#13;
•3.50&amp;*3.00 Shoes&#13;
• c a r IN THK WOWLO&#13;
W.Llk^$46*tEd*»[b»,&#13;
caMotbHyttflsdatajpftot,&#13;
Two .8T/t*MBDSeuaUgrWt: jo*. btag Howe 1» the moat&#13;
eoupleUiathlfrcotmtry&#13;
Sad/or Cotaiog&#13;
Chinese Send Much Money Home.&#13;
It is calculated that Chinese living&#13;
and working in other countries now&#13;
send home not less than $50,000,000&#13;
annually. 419&#13;
STAND FIRM&#13;
"When yoo buy an&#13;
OILED SUIT&#13;
&lt;« SLICKER&#13;
demand,&#13;
40WEIt&gt;.&#13;
l b the east eat and&#13;
only "way to birt&#13;
the best&#13;
Sold everywhere&#13;
I BOBS FOB XVZEYBODY AT ALL&#13;
Han's Shoes, $0 to S1.SO. Boyr" C&#13;
t o t U t t . Women'* Shoe*. MOO ..&#13;
lElmaea' * Children's Shoes. $3.2* to I&#13;
Try W. I * D o u g l a s W o m e n ' s , I&#13;
Children's s h o e s ; for style, fit]&#13;
t h e y e x c e l o t h e r nasfces.&#13;
IT I could take you Into m y&#13;
factories at Brockton, Mass.,and show&#13;
you how carefully W.L. Douglas sfcoes&#13;
are made* you would then understand^&#13;
why they hold their shape, fit better*&#13;
wear longer, and are of greater value/&#13;
than any other make.&#13;
Wherever yon Hve, yoa ens oMsto W . L.&#13;
Doctfias shoes. His I O M and price Is rtsaaywt&#13;
so thebottosa. which protects yeetsgshnthsj[h&#13;
prices and tafertor shoes. T a * « » • mutr*tU&#13;
tut: Asfc yoeir dealer lor W . L . DeuKhts shir •&#13;
•nd Insist W N having then*.&#13;
fait Color tutirts HMO: they wUI not wmr srasaav&#13;
tor fllitstrated Cetale* of Fall Styles.&#13;
Write i DrscJctesK"&#13;
W. U DOUOLAS, DapC iau&#13;
$25 (\C\C\ (U\ FOR AGENTS. Pl«&gt;*ant&#13;
,UW.UU wrHrk arooa* Toar fnenoav&#13;
frequent sale*. I a rye jomm f s o n s . »u&lt;l bir T&gt;n*ea&#13;
lor all. Address l&gt;ept. «X. IJ K. -J«ih «.. M. T Oily.&#13;
W.' N. U., DETROIT. NO. 40, 1906.&#13;
THE LAXATIVE OF&#13;
KNOWN QUALITY&#13;
There are tvro classes 6¾ remedies; those of known quality&#13;
and which are permanently beneficial in effect, acting&#13;
frently, in harmony witd natnre, when nature needs assistance;&#13;
and another class, composed of preparations of&#13;
unknown, uncertain and inferior character, acting temporarily,&#13;
but injuriously, as a result of forcing the natural&#13;
fnnctions unnecessarily. One of the most exceptional of&#13;
the remedies of known quality and excellence is the ever&#13;
pleasant Syrup of Fi^s, manufactured by the California&#13;
Fig Syrup Co., which represents the active principles of&#13;
plants, known to act most beneficially, in a pleasant syrup,&#13;
in which the wholesome Californi&amp;n blue figs are used to contribute&#13;
their rich, yet delicate, fruity flavor. It is the remedy&#13;
of all remedies to sweeten and refresh and cleanse the system&#13;
gently and naturally, and to assist one in overcoming constipation&#13;
and the many ills resulting tlievefroui. Its active principles&#13;
and quality are known to physicians generally, and the&#13;
remedy has therefore met with their approval, as well as with&#13;
the favor of many millions of well informed persons who know&#13;
of their own personal knowledge and from actual experience&#13;
that it is a most excellent laxative remedy. We do not claim that&#13;
it will cure all manner of ills, but recommend it for what it really&#13;
represents, a laxative remedy of known quality and excellence,&#13;
containing nothing, of an objectionable or injurious character.&#13;
There are two classes of purchasers; those who are informed&#13;
as to the quality of what they buy and the reasons for the excellence&#13;
of articles of exceptional merit, and who do not lack courage to go&#13;
elsewhere when a dealer offers an imitation of any well known&#13;
article; but, unfortunately, there are some people who do not know,&#13;
and who allow themselves to be imposed upon. They cannot expect&#13;
Tge^the genuine remedy.,&#13;
s oOhsiJJuited States be it said&#13;
their reputation for professional&#13;
eir customers too highly to offer&#13;
its beneficial effects if they do no&#13;
To the credit of the druggi&#13;
that nearly all of them value&#13;
integrity and the good will of&#13;
imitations of the Gcnifine-^Syrup of Figs&#13;
manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., and in order to&#13;
bay the genuine article and to get its beneficial effects, one has&#13;
. only to note, when purchasing, the fall name of toe Company-&#13;
California Fig Syrup Co.—plainly printed on the front of every&#13;
package. Price, 6 0 c per bottle. One size only.&#13;
L***'&#13;
.11 o; &gt; • &gt; &lt; •&#13;
!&#13;
•AmiMtMAM*&#13;
fflmong Oifr Correspondents&#13;
TOADIIXA.&#13;
\fm. Stowe and wife were in&#13;
Chelsea Saturday.&#13;
A'; 0. Watson and family spent&#13;
Friday in Chelsea.&#13;
Miss Bern ice Harris of Chelsea,&#13;
was-here over Sunday.&#13;
Stephen Uadley and wife spent&#13;
Sunday with his mother in Lyndoni'&#13;
Ajris Barton, who is attending&#13;
school in Stockbridge, was home&#13;
over! Sunday.&#13;
Frank Hopkins and family of&#13;
Stoekbridge, spent Sunday at&#13;
HerWu Hudson's.&#13;
Mrs. Wirt Barnum and children&#13;
spent Saturday and Sunday with&#13;
her parents in Munith.&#13;
Mrs. John Webb and Mrs. Samuel&#13;
Denton visited Mrs. Clarence&#13;
Teachout, at Iosco, last Thursday.&#13;
The members and friends of&#13;
the M. E. church society gave the&#13;
pastor, Rev. P. J. Wright, a complete&#13;
"welcome surprise" in the&#13;
church parlors on Friday evening&#13;
last. A pleasant social evening&#13;
was enjoyed by everyone present.&#13;
SOOTH MAXIOI.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Pacy entertained&#13;
Thomas Gilks of Howell last Saturday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Line were&#13;
guests of their daughter of North&#13;
Howell, over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Lynn Gardner visited her&#13;
parents, Mr. and Mrs. George&#13;
Younglove , last Sunday.&#13;
H. M. Williston and daughter,&#13;
Louise, of Pinckney, were the&#13;
guests of Mr. and Mrs. William&#13;
White, Sunday,&#13;
Miss Lulu Abbott returned&#13;
Monday from an extended visit&#13;
with her sister, Mrs. Leam Newman&#13;
of Fleming.&#13;
A cold is much mora easily cured&#13;
when the bowels are open. Kennedy's&#13;
Laxatative Honey and Tar opens the&#13;
bowels and drives the cold ont of the&#13;
system in vounjr or old.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Drngstat&#13;
I will he loading a car of old iron&#13;
at the depot in Pinckney, next week,&#13;
and anyone bavinar old serap iron to&#13;
sell can bring it in Tuesday or Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 9 and 10. Will pay $7.00&#13;
per ton, weighing on the elevator&#13;
scales. A. Reedy.&#13;
Preventics, as the name implies,&#13;
prevent all colds and grippe when&#13;
taken, "at the sneeze stage." Preventics&#13;
are toothsome candy tablets. Pre&#13;
yentics dissipate all colds quickly, and&#13;
taken early, when you teel that a cold&#13;
is coming, they check and prevent&#13;
them. Preventics are thoroughly safe&#13;
for children, and as effectual for adults.&#13;
Sold and recommended in 5and&#13;
25 cent boxes by all dealers.&#13;
* Business Pointers. f&#13;
MOTICB.&#13;
I will be in my mill every day hereafter&#13;
to grind feed or make cider. I&#13;
have also a quantity of cabbage for&#13;
sale. . Wm. Laverock, Unadilla.&#13;
FOR BALM,&#13;
Fine Wool Rams,&#13;
J.J. Donohue&#13;
R. F. D 3 Gregory, Mich.&#13;
rOR. S A U L&#13;
House and lots on Main street.&#13;
Good location. Inquire at this office.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
Bushel Crates. Call and see a good&#13;
crate. Order nrw.&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co., Pinckney.&#13;
E A S T P i m m c .&#13;
Guy Lewis was in Howell Monday.&#13;
Chas. Brown was in Stockbridge&#13;
recently.&#13;
Mrs. R. W. Lake is visiting her&#13;
daughter in Chelsea.&#13;
Wert Hendee and family are&#13;
entertaining guests from "Detroit.&#13;
Parties from Webster have&#13;
been here the past week buying&#13;
lambs.&#13;
Miss Belle Kennedy of Pinckney&#13;
spent Saturday with E. W.&#13;
Kennedy and wife.&#13;
M18668 Martha Mullett and&#13;
Myrta Hall of Williamston s y n t&#13;
the week end with friends here*.&#13;
The farmers club having no&#13;
meeting in 4ugust, ie-assembled&#13;
last Saturday at John VanHoru's. •&#13;
An unusually pleasant and interesting&#13;
meeting was the result.&#13;
A six year old roan borse, weight&#13;
1,200 pounds. John Webb, 1-} miles&#13;
south of Unadilla village. Gregory&#13;
RFD.&#13;
Trua and tried friends of the family&#13;
—DeWitt's little Early Risers. Best&#13;
for results and best to rake. Rosy&#13;
cheeks and sparkling eyes follow the&#13;
use of these dependable little pills.&#13;
They do not gripe or sicken.&#13;
Sold bj f. A. Slglar Druggist.&#13;
PIAntFIlLD.&#13;
LOTMM meeting Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 10.&#13;
The.W. F. M. 8. meet with Miss&#13;
Lottie Smith Thursday afternoon,&#13;
Oct. 4.&#13;
Corn husking and bean thresh,&#13;
ing are the order of the day in this&#13;
section.&#13;
The L. A. S. took in $5.90 at&#13;
their tea at Mrs. J as. Walker's&#13;
last Thursday.&#13;
Mi as Bernice Jackson was able&#13;
to resume her school work here&#13;
again this week.&#13;
ADDITiaVAIi LOCAL.&#13;
Rev. Littlejohn it tnUrtainiftf a&#13;
brother from Ohio.&#13;
Several candidate* nave something&#13;
to say on page four tbii week,&#13;
Mrs. Gfaas. VanKeuran of Bo Well,&#13;
has been visiting her parents at this&#13;
place the past week.&#13;
Mrs. Brokaw returned to her home&#13;
Monday night, after visiting friends&#13;
in Green Oak, HoweU and Detroit,&#13;
the past two weeks.&#13;
Mr. Foo a Japanese who came home&#13;
from the Philippines with Rev. Ernest&#13;
Lyon and wife, has entered the&#13;
Howell public school.&#13;
Mrs. R A. Emenck and daughter,&#13;
Edith, of Howell, is visiting friends&#13;
here. Mr. Emeiick and family are&#13;
preparing to move to Detroit.&#13;
Mrs. Margaret Van Fleet and daughter,&#13;
Mrs. Ida Smith, at Wayne, visited&#13;
Mrs. Van's sister, Mrs. J. Fisk, and&#13;
brother, Edward Burt, near here, the&#13;
past two weeks.&#13;
The "Chance" club consisting of&#13;
twelve young ladies were pleasantly&#13;
entertained by Miss Mabel Sigler,&#13;
Tuesday evening. A good time is expressing&#13;
it mildly.&#13;
The local editor denies that he bad&#13;
anything to do with ringing of the&#13;
school bell Friday night—Pinckney&#13;
Cor. to the Livingston Republican.&#13;
That is more than the "Law and Order&#13;
League" can say—they were on&#13;
the ground but had sand in their&#13;
eyes—some one else had tj make the&#13;
complaint. You remember the old&#13;
adage "None so Blind etc.1' (?)&#13;
The supreme court, Monday, reversed&#13;
the decision of Judge. Miner&#13;
in the county drain commissioner&#13;
case. A judgement of ouster was ordered&#13;
entered by the court against&#13;
Eugene T. McClear, who was in office&#13;
when the new law was enacted and&#13;
was appointed by the supervisors.&#13;
The office goes to William Alexander,&#13;
wl o was appointed by the governor.&#13;
Several counties besides Livingston&#13;
have similar laws. The bill making&#13;
the change was one of Rep. Cbas. Van&#13;
Keuren'* bills and he naturally lee Is&#13;
elated oyer this last decision.&#13;
Keep the bowels open when you&#13;
have a cold and use a good remedy to&#13;
allay the inflamation of the mucous&#13;
membranes. The best is Kennedy's&#13;
Laxative Honey and tar. It contains&#13;
no opiates, moves the bowels, drives&#13;
out the cold. Is reliable and castes&#13;
good.&#13;
9old by r. A Slgler, Drofglft&#13;
D i c e m D o * W s t c k .&#13;
Mamma bad not noticed the clock&#13;
striking during all of the afternoon&#13;
and, thinking perhaps it had stopped,&#13;
she asked little Rita to go into the ball&#13;
and see if it was running. After a&#13;
hasty survey of the long pendulum&#13;
swinging back and forth, Rita ran back&#13;
and announced: "Why, no, mamma, it&#13;
isn't running. It's standing still and&#13;
wagging its tail.'*—Harper's Weekly.&#13;
A H e l p f u l W i f e .&#13;
"Ladies and gentlemen," said the&#13;
after dinner orator, "unaccustomed as&#13;
There will be no preaching here * *m t o Public speaking, and having&#13;
been suddenly called upon without the&#13;
slightest notice, I am—er—exceedingly&#13;
-erM -&#13;
"Why, John," said his wife from the&#13;
ether end of the table, "have you forgot&#13;
the rest? You said it all right this&#13;
morning."&#13;
next Sunday morning as Rev&#13;
Ostrander goes to Millville to assist&#13;
in quarterly meeting.&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
The Pettysville cider mill is now&#13;
ready to receive apples and make&#13;
cider. Wm. Hooker.&#13;
171 W. DANIELS,&#13;
J # GENERAL AUCTIONEER.&#13;
SaUstacticn Guaranteed. For information&#13;
call at DISPATCH Office or address&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. Lyudilla 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 DAT OR W6H1&#13;
Many men give lavish of geld,&#13;
To build bridges and castles&#13;
towers of old;&#13;
II you want everlasting fame,&#13;
benefactor be,&#13;
Give the poor and needy&#13;
Mountain Tea.&#13;
and&#13;
a&#13;
Rocky&#13;
PARLORSJAT&#13;
PLIMPTON'S OLD STAND Ptione No.30&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH&#13;
WIST PUTHAIL&#13;
Nellie Gardner of Ann Arbor&#13;
was home over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Will Dunbar is entertaining&#13;
friends from Ann Arbor.&#13;
Thos. Stfickable of Jackson,&#13;
spent Sunday with friends here.&#13;
Jeff Parker and wife of Pinckney&#13;
spent Sunday at Harry lehams.&#13;
Miss Mary Brown, of Ann Arbor,&#13;
is a guest at the home of*&#13;
B o o t Kelly. /&#13;
Floyd Randall and wife of St.&#13;
Lonis, visited at Kirk VanWinkkle's&#13;
the past week.&#13;
Miss fliary Kelly who bag spent&#13;
the gammer at Wequetonsing re*&#13;
turned home last week.&#13;
Nntar«'a Methods.&#13;
Nature is no spendthrift, bnt takes&#13;
the shortest way to her endi. As the&#13;
genera! sajs to his soldiers. "If you&#13;
want a fort, build a fort," so nature&#13;
makes every creature do its own wont&#13;
and get Its living, be it planet, animal&#13;
or tree.—Emerson.&#13;
Chan«« «nd Accident.&#13;
It is a mortifying truth, and ought&#13;
to teach the wisest of us humility, that&#13;
many of the most valuable discoveries&#13;
have been the result of chance rather&#13;
than of contemplation and of accident&#13;
rather than of design.—CoJton.&#13;
It WM a son of Erin who asked the&#13;
mtcrtlng to excuse hlra from serving&#13;
on a committee because he expected&#13;
to be unexpectedly called away.&#13;
«w . . . _&#13;
If an article is imitated, the original&#13;
is always beat. Think it over, and&#13;
when yon go to bay that box of salve&#13;
to keep aronnd tbe house get Oe Witts&#13;
Witctr Hazel Salve. It is the original&#13;
and the name is stamped on every box.&#13;
Good for eczema, tetter, boiia, eats and&#13;
bruises, and especially recon:mended&#13;
for piles.&#13;
Sold by r. A. Sider, Draggu*.&#13;
S a v e Money&#13;
On Dry Goods, Ladies', Misses* and Children's Cloaks,&#13;
Furs,, Carpets, Lineolums, Oil Cloths, Wall Paper, Men %&#13;
Ladies' and Children's Shoes, Men's, Beys and Children's&#13;
Clothing and Overcoats, Crockery, Lamps and Groceries at&#13;
V&#13;
i!&#13;
• J&#13;
Oifr new Fall and Winter Lines of Underwear are all In&#13;
Our Immense 8torc Is Packed to Its Fullest Capacity z*&#13;
We can show you a larger assortment of merchandise suitable to your&#13;
needs, and at lower prices ttfan can be found in any store&#13;
in Livingston County&#13;
Great Opening S a l e&#13;
Ladies', Misses' and Children's Cloaks and Furs •tf. No S u c h Yalues E v e r Shown&#13;
Prices ranging on Ladies' Cloaks—Latest Styles—&#13;
2.00, 2.50, 3 50. 4.50, 5.00, 7.50, 8.50, 10.10 and up&#13;
Prices ranging on ChilUren's Cloaks—1.25,1.50, 2.00, 2.50, 3.00 up&#13;
One lot of Ladies' 8,10, 15 dollar Cloaks to be closed out at 2.50, 3.98, and 6.50&#13;
Ladies'Furs 75 cts. 1.00, 1.25 up&#13;
300 pr. Ladies Fine 3.00, 3.50 value Shoes to be closed out your choice 1.50 t&#13;
The Greatest Bargains in Shoes of all kinds ever offered in Livingston county&#13;
All Men's Leather and Kubber Boots at Cost&#13;
1 5 0 Men's S u i t s of C l o t h e s to b e c l o s e d o u t at 1- 2 P r i c e&#13;
Men's Fine Suits ranging in price 5.50, 6 50, 7.50, up&#13;
Men's Business Suits 2.50, 3.00, 3.50, 4.98&#13;
Men's Fine Overcoats 5.00, 6.00, 750, up&#13;
Children's Suite and Overcoat* 1.25, 1.50, 2.00, 2.98&#13;
B a r g a i n s In U n d e r w e a r , Bedding, B l a n k e t s e t c .&#13;
W e c a n s a v e y o u m o n e y on y o u r Pall Bill&#13;
We can save you from 25cta. to 1.50 on a single pair of Shoes&#13;
We can save you from 1.50 to 5.00 on a single Suit or Overcoat&#13;
We can save you from 2.50 to 5.00 on a single Cloak or Jacket&#13;
Why not Save It&#13;
We invite you to look over our stock and get our prices. Bring all&#13;
yourProeuce, Butter, Eggs, and Dried Appier to us, we will g i v *&#13;
ypu the Highest Market Price&#13;
Yours Anxious to Please&#13;
A. J. Prindle H°n»&#13;
BIG DEPARTMENT STORE&#13;
MICHIGAN&#13;
Edwin Farmer&#13;
Democratic Candidate for the beflislatupei&#13;
SS&gt;^k4»3fc&#13;
A /&#13;
Respectfully solicits your votes, and if elected promises to legislate&#13;
for the best interests of the people of Livingston county irrespective&#13;
of party.&#13;
The Dispatch Job Department &gt;A&#13;
Can do your Printing&#13;
on short notice and in&#13;
a workmanlike manner&#13;
P. U. A N D S B W S &amp; C O ,&#13;
*J s</text>
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              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1621">
                  <text>Newspaper</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1630">
                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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        <element elementId="52">
          <name>Note</name>
          <description>Extra information that can be shown with the item.  Such as how to get a physical copy of the item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="37029">
              <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="40296">
              <text>OL. XXI7. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, OCT* 1). 1906. No. 41&#13;
LOCAL, N E W S .&#13;
y .&#13;
Fowler villa fair this week.&#13;
G. A 8iwrler spent Sunday with his&#13;
family here.&#13;
Mrs. Mike Fitzsimtnons of Adrian,&#13;
if the guest of ber mother, Mrs. Rose&#13;
Black.&#13;
Miss Ethel Read was home from&#13;
Saline over Sunday, and took in the&#13;
Cong'I fair.&#13;
Miss Mary Kelly went to Ann Arbor&#13;
the first of the week to resume&#13;
her work there,&#13;
Mrs. Eli«a Kubn of Gregory, visited&#13;
Mrs, Sheldon Webb and other relatives&#13;
near here the past week.&#13;
Miss Bernice Lamborn of loeco,&#13;
spent Saturday and Sunday wtth her&#13;
sister, Mrs. Geo. Mowers.&#13;
Several special speakers will be in&#13;
attendanc at the Washtenaw county&#13;
Sunday school convention to be held&#13;
at Wbitmore Lake Out. 30 and 31.&#13;
Mr9. Eliza Kuhn, who has been&#13;
caring (or Mrs. Jesse Henry and&#13;
young son lor a few weeks, returned&#13;
to her home near Gregory the past&#13;
weelr.&#13;
Tbe Misses Lillie and Dillie Garratson,&#13;
of Dntioit, have been guests at&#13;
the Lome of Mr. and Mrs. Thos, Read&#13;
the past. week. They are both proficient&#13;
artists and have been enjoying&#13;
the scenery and making sketches in&#13;
and about Pinckney. For the pas&#13;
nineteen years tbey have visited many&#13;
fcreign countries as well as our own&#13;
Uuited States and making many fine&#13;
pictures of what the have seen. They&#13;
are now opening up a studio in Detroit.&#13;
T h e Paf P a Success&#13;
The annual Cong'l falf closed Sat-&#13;
Dr. Leeee, of Mnnitb, is a patient at&#13;
tbe sanitarium.&#13;
Mr. James Morgan, of Tpsilanti, . • - , t ,&#13;
• •* J • . ,, , . . ., , i visited in town the nrst of tbe week. orday ev«e1n. in. g after a coupl.e of d• ays ; run. Tbeir suppers each evening&#13;
H. G. Briggs and wife who have j w e r e t h ( J u g u a l bounteous a f f a i r * a n d&#13;
been visiting in tbe "Thumb" return-: w e r Q v e r y p o p u l a r &gt; N o o n e w e n t&#13;
ed home Monday. | away hungry, Saturday evening was&#13;
John Kirk and family of Howell,'the regular chicken pie supper and all&#13;
were guests o t E . J. Brings and other j w e r e fe(jt 8tju tbey bad pies left.&#13;
relatives here Sunday. j The different booths were t.stefully&#13;
Mr. Roy Morton of Brighton, who j arranged and full of pretty and useful&#13;
had a serious operation at tbe sanitar- ! articles, which sold readily. In^ tbe&#13;
mm last week is making a good j vegetable booth there were many fine&#13;
recovery, j samples of fruits, potatoes, c abbage,&#13;
Louis Dreyer wishes to thank his I squasjb, etc., contributed by different&#13;
friends and neighbors for attending [ people and a pumpkin donated by J.&#13;
uiH sale and for kindness to him while ! 0. Mackinder that weighed 59£ pounds&#13;
living in this community. j —it was a "whopper.'&#13;
All interested in the study of ger-1 T b e " S e a t e d goose'&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
FALL OPENING&#13;
T h i s Store offers G r e a t&#13;
Values in Hosiery, U n -&#13;
derwear, Gloves and&#13;
Mittens, O u t i n g F l a n -&#13;
nels, Corsets, E t c .&#13;
Infants Fleeced Vests, only 56&#13;
Childrens Fleeced Vests and Pants, 10c&#13;
Ladies Double Knit Mittens, only 10c&#13;
ChiJdrens Double Knit Mittens, only 10c&#13;
Extra strong values in Outing Flannels&#13;
From 5c to 13c&#13;
Come In and See lis when in Howell&#13;
£ A. BOWMAN.&#13;
HOWELL'S BUSY STOAE&#13;
man will please meet at Dr. H. F.&#13;
Sigler's residence, Friday evening, at&#13;
7 o'clock, for the purpose of forming&#13;
a class.&#13;
Wra. Jenkins, of Harbor Springs,&#13;
was the guest of friends and relatives&#13;
here tbe past week. He has not been&#13;
here for about nineteen years and he&#13;
finds tbe place changed some. v&#13;
Rev. W, U. Allen of Gaylord, wa3&#13;
the guest of Rev. K H. Crane, Saturday.&#13;
Mr. Al]en has accepted tbe pastorate&#13;
of the Cang'l church at Grass&#13;
Lake and was on his way there.&#13;
Governor Warner and party will&#13;
arrive in Pinckney, Tuesday afternoon&#13;
next, via auto, and a mass meeting&#13;
will be held at the opera bouse in tbe&#13;
evening. Many of the county nominees&#13;
will also be present.&#13;
Rev. H. W. Hicks was a pleasant&#13;
caller at tbe Leader office this morning&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Hicks are moving&#13;
fromaDixboro to their home in (Jorruona.&#13;
and Mr. Hicks expects to supply&#13;
a charge in that vicinity.—Deiter&#13;
Leader.&#13;
Congregational Church.&#13;
The pastor preached to appreciative&#13;
audiences both morning a n i evening&#13;
last Sunday.&#13;
The evening hour of worship will&#13;
be decided next Sunday morning..&#13;
Tbe friends who did so much to&#13;
contribute to the success of the bazaar&#13;
have our most profound thanks. The&#13;
pastor desires to thank all who have&#13;
in any way contributed to his support&#13;
the past year, and affectionately solicits&#13;
their continued interest in behalf&#13;
of tbe cause.&#13;
Tbe 'Ten Virgins71 is the subject of&#13;
the Sundav school lesson for the 14th&#13;
October. 1 he superintendent invites&#13;
all members and friends to support&#13;
him in his efforts to promote the welfare&#13;
of the school.&#13;
Usual pre^chintf set vices nest Sunday&#13;
at 10:30, also evening at 7:30.&#13;
Everybody nios't welcome.&#13;
was a great&#13;
attraction and made some money for&#13;
the society.&#13;
The fair was not quite as mucb of a&#13;
success financially as last year but it&#13;
was a pleasant affair and a success in&#13;
every particular, and the society took&#13;
in $235.&#13;
— m • m ii ^&#13;
M. E. Church Notes.&#13;
I The first Sunday of the conference&#13;
i year opened up with a rousing sermon&#13;
[and a large audience, dearly every&#13;
chair being taken. There were more&#13;
out than generally come out to "hear&#13;
the new preacher," R v. Littlejohn&#13;
seemed as glad to get back to the work&#13;
as the people were to have him and the&#13;
work starts out very encouragingly.&#13;
Let every member do their best and&#13;
the year will be ore long to be remembered.&#13;
It was a pleasure to welcome so&#13;
many from tbe Lakin neighborhood&#13;
at tbe morning service and have them&#13;
remain to Sunday School—in union&#13;
Jhero is strength. Come often and&#13;
our mingling together will do u&gt; all&#13;
good—we need each other.&#13;
The Sunday school ^tas^ed out with&#13;
new vigor and we expect doin's from&#13;
that branch of the church in t i e next&#13;
few months. The first Sunday of each&#13;
month is known as "missionary day"&#13;
and tbe collection^ Sunday. amounted&#13;
to nearly $2.50. This is a uood start&#13;
for the year.&#13;
After considering the matter thoroughly&#13;
it has been decided not to&#13;
change the hour of prayer meeting as&#13;
announced last Sunday but to hold it&#13;
the same as before, at 7;30. Last&#13;
week tbe prayer meeting waa largely&#13;
attended and an interesting and profitable&#13;
meeting was the result. Everyone&#13;
present felt it was good to be&#13;
there and those absent missed a bless L&#13;
ing. Come out tonight at 7:30.&#13;
Services next Sunday as usual with&#13;
special music and a stirring sermon&#13;
Assessment No. 87 of the LOTMM&#13;
is now due and must be paid before&#13;
Oct. 31. ADDIE J. PLACKWAT, F, K.&#13;
Great Opening Week Discount Offer&#13;
«i&#13;
"He Don't Hurt You."&#13;
For One Week, Beginning&#13;
Saturday, Oct. 13&#13;
v tye will give the people of&#13;
' P i n c k n e y a n d surroundiui? connt&#13;
r y an o p p o r t u n i t y to get Strictly&#13;
F i r s t - C l a s s Dentistry for j u s t one&#13;
' ^ q m a r t e r less t h a n t h e r e g u l a r&#13;
pjfee.&#13;
f £ r t Miss This Chance&#13;
b«t come and get acquainted anyway&#13;
which don't cost a cent. T&#13;
P R I C E S&#13;
False Teeth&#13;
110.00 Set, Ten year guarantee,&#13;
18.00 Set, Five year guarautee,&#13;
$6.00 Set, One year guarantee,&#13;
To You&#13;
$7 50&#13;
$6.00&#13;
14.50&#13;
Headquarters for&#13;
Drugs, Medicine&#13;
Books, Stationery&#13;
Fancy Crockery&#13;
School Books&#13;
P. A, S I G b E R&#13;
All Persons owing us on Book&#13;
Account are requested to kindly&#13;
call and settle same by Oct. 1,&#13;
1906, by Cash or Bankable notes.&#13;
JACKSON &amp; CADWELL.&#13;
o^ SVmeuca&#13;
Submit the following comparisons for your consideration:&#13;
Total Membership January 1, 1906, 74-7,867&#13;
Insurance tn force January 1. 1906» $ 1 , 2 0 4 , 0 4 5 , 5 0 0&#13;
103,951 Policies W r i t t e n in 1905&#13;
The following table shows tlie cost of :i £l ,o00.»X) puli'cy a* compared with&#13;
fraternal societies named. Figures taken from Fraternal Monitor "Statistics.&#13;
the&#13;
ORDER M e m b e r s A $ « 2 0 A £ c 2 5 A g e 3 0 A $ e 3 5 f Afle 4 0&#13;
MODERN WOODMEN 692,260 $ 4,00 $ 4.00 J 5,20 $ 6.00&#13;
K. O. T. M. (Sup TenO 341.423&#13;
| A. O. U. W 323,393&#13;
| Roval Arcanum 305,083&#13;
I. O. F 225.876&#13;
! K. O. T. M. (Modern) 125,680 1 Catholic Order Fors'trs 114,266&#13;
K. L. of Honor 78,459&#13;
C. M. B. A . . . . . . . . . . . 57,615&#13;
10-80&#13;
780&#13;
9.60&#13;
6.00&#13;
7.20&#13;
9.48&#13;
11.64&#13;
12.60&#13;
9.00&#13;
8.16&#13;
11.28&#13;
6.00&#13;
828&#13;
10.68&#13;
12.96&#13;
14.40&#13;
10.80&#13;
9.75&#13;
13.08&#13;
800&#13;
9.48&#13;
1188&#13;
15.60&#13;
17.40&#13;
12.60&#13;
11.76&#13;
16.56&#13;
10.00&#13;
11.16&#13;
1308&#13;
18.96&#13;
$7,20&#13;
21.00&#13;
15.00&#13;
14.00&#13;
20.16&#13;
13.60&#13;
14.04&#13;
15,24&#13;
23.40&#13;
Anyone interested in Fraternal Insurance a r e referred to&#13;
P. G. J A C K S O N&#13;
Pinckney Gamp. M. W. of ACrowns&#13;
and Bridges&#13;
f 5 and f7.50 Solid Gold Crowns&#13;
13 75, $5.75&#13;
Hold Fillings $1.00 up&#13;
Silver Fillings 50c up&#13;
Porcelain Crowns $3.75 up&#13;
Painless Extracting&#13;
i..&#13;
I Propose to G i v e the People of this Locality ttie Chance to G e t&#13;
Strictly Up-To Date Dental Work, and if yon have any trouble I will be right .here to attend&#13;
to you and make good my guarantee. We will be here Tuesday, Wednesday,Thursday&#13;
Friday and Saturday of every week until snow flies, when we will be here all the time thereafter.&#13;
B. b. M O O R B , D e n t i s t ,&#13;
Lads Issistant Always in Attendance P I N C K N E Y&#13;
O n account of many&#13;
heavy bills due Oct*&#13;
I, w e desire to have&#13;
all accounts p a s t&#13;
due settled*&#13;
J I&#13;
Teeple H a r d w a r e &lt;L6. ... . : - 1 ) - .&#13;
'mmiM&#13;
EVENTS NOTED&#13;
THE TROUBLE IN THE MINING&#13;
DISTRICT BECOMING SOMEWHAT&#13;
SERIOUS.&#13;
THREATEN * WALKOUT&#13;
The Whole Question Arise* Over Chain&#13;
Mining, Which Chanfe* AH Conditions.&#13;
MICHIGAN IN BRIEF.&#13;
Statements made Friday by miners&#13;
and operators show the trouble ia the&#13;
Michigan district to be more eerioas&#13;
than was believed Thursday, when&#13;
the first joint conference adjourned&#13;
without success to meet again Saturday&#13;
morning in Bay City,&#13;
The introduction of chain mining,&#13;
which requires more drilling, is objected&#13;
to by the men under the present&#13;
scale. They say it completely&#13;
changes mining conditions. The operators,&#13;
on their part, say tbe scale provides&#13;
for chain mining, as well as&#13;
punch, and they favor tbe former because&#13;
it is cheaper and is operated by&#13;
electricity, while punches are run by&#13;
compressed air and are always getting&#13;
out of ord?r. The miners prefer the&#13;
punch' because It requires but one drill&#13;
hole.&#13;
Inasmuch as the chatn miningis.be- t K e n t y . e i h t l n j u r e d &gt; ing introduced in nearly all Michigan _ . . • _ . •&#13;
mines, if the question is not'settled&#13;
Saturday, it may result in a temporary&#13;
suspension of mining in the Michigan&#13;
district, pending the appeal of the controversy&#13;
to the national body. Friday&#13;
both bodies adopted an unyielding attitude.&#13;
Forty Ithaca business men %entertained&#13;
the Saginaw wholesale junketers&#13;
while there Wednesifay. '&#13;
Many petty burglaries are alleged to&#13;
have been committed by James Hlscojc,&#13;
aged 27, arrested in Fentou.&#13;
.Nearly 3,0041 more arrests were made&#13;
by Detroit police last year than were&#13;
made tbe year before, when there were&#13;
8,857.&#13;
-i Gov., Warner has been invited to&#13;
participate in the campaign in. Illinois&#13;
and Ohio, but he wilt be unable&#13;
to accept.&#13;
Joe Hiscox, of Fenton, arrested on&#13;
the charge of petty burglaries, drank&#13;
poison in tbe jail, but a physician saved&#13;
his life.&#13;
John Watson, aged 73, watchman on&#13;
the Grand Trunk at Grand Haven for&#13;
25 years, and for 40 years an employe&#13;
of the road, died Wednesday.&#13;
Gelstori"" Poole, a Pontlac lad, Tel}&#13;
from a hickory tree to the ground, frac&#13;
turing his hip and biting his tongue&#13;
nearly in two.&#13;
Jewish citizens of Battle Creek are&#13;
organizing a church, expecting lo have&#13;
a share of the services of Rabbi Jesselson,&#13;
of Grand Rapids.&#13;
It is probable that Deputy Collector&#13;
of Internal Revenue Charles Phillips&#13;
will be appointed quartermaster of the&#13;
Grand Rapids Soldiers' home.&#13;
Miss VigtuFench, aged 16, of Menominee,&#13;
one of those injured in the col*&#13;
lapse of the footbridge at Oconto Falls,&#13;
is dead. In all. two are dead and&#13;
The "Rector of Wall Street &gt;&gt;&#13;
New Y*rk FiMBciers Converted by fWare oP R A ^ " j [ B i ^ P t /&#13;
Roll of City—Coaateu &lt;k Rilly Seeks Divorce—Big Bore Com*&#13;
pleted—Other laterestiaf Newt. '"% .&lt;!&gt;•&#13;
1&#13;
An is* Seed Cordial.&#13;
Anise seed cordial, which is often&#13;
takes- a* a stomacher, is not a distilled&#13;
spirit, but is made by flavoring&#13;
a weak. spirit. wtUv anise aeed, corfcfoder&#13;
+sjp j|v«et, iennel aeed. Coriander&#13;
has an ajheabit aromatic&#13;
smell and a sweetish aromatic taste.&#13;
It is the essential ingredient o f t h e&#13;
ofordtOh whleh is sweetened with clarified&#13;
sirup or refined sugar^ ^&#13;
Nile* Bank Wins Suit.&#13;
The United States circuit court, in&#13;
St. Louis, Mo., has awarded George C.&#13;
Rankin, receiver for the First National&#13;
bank of Niles, Mich., a verdict of |S,-&#13;
915 against the New York Life Insurance&#13;
Co., on policies held by the late&#13;
George H. Kimmel, former cashier of&#13;
the Farmers* State bank of Arkansas&#13;
City, K.as. Kimmers"strange disappearance&#13;
in 1898 and the costly search&#13;
instituted for him by Charles A. .Johnson,&#13;
his uncle, president of the Niles&#13;
bank, together with premiums Johnson&#13;
Maxim Gorky and his "wife," Madam&#13;
Andrewsky, arrived at the Soo, Saturday,&#13;
on the steamer Juniata on a&#13;
pleasure trip, accompanied by their Interpreter.&#13;
They wouldn't talk.&#13;
A story reaches Battle Creek from&#13;
Brantford. Ont., that W. G. Sands, a&#13;
former employe of the Advance&#13;
Thrasher shops, has been left an estate&#13;
valued at nearly $400,000, by his&#13;
grandfather.&#13;
Fire in the warehouse of 'William&#13;
Curtis and at Gutgrich Bros.'s grocerystove&#13;
simultaneously at 1 o'clock Saturday&#13;
morning did $1,000 damage. Circumstances&#13;
indicate that both fires&#13;
were incendiary?" ~~&#13;
Ida Cokeen. who took the place of&#13;
her sister In the asylum in Traverse&#13;
City as stenographer, her sister being&#13;
ill with typhoid fever, died at the&#13;
asylum Tuesday from the same dis&#13;
**** *»Klmmel's life insurance, r e ^ ^ ^ " ; ^ ; ^ ^ ; ^ ^ e p o r t e d ^ i s dolngsuited&#13;
in the wrecking of the bank. | n i c e j v 1; is said Johnson used the depositor's&#13;
money for these purposes. Johnson is ;&#13;
now serving a 10 years" term in the j&#13;
Detroit house of correction. The •&#13;
money will be apportioned among the&#13;
depositors of the Niles bank, who have&#13;
alreadv been paid 85 cents on the dol- j&#13;
lar. I&#13;
Families Are Unfortunate.&#13;
Residents on east Maple street, Mason,&#13;
who live in the same block, are&#13;
beginning to think themselves the object&#13;
of a particularly adverse fate. The&#13;
family of Solon Neely are prostrated&#13;
by the tragic end of their son, Clare, a&#13;
t.opular young man of that place, who&#13;
was crushed to death Monday by an&#13;
elevator in Mercy hospital, Bay City.&#13;
The family of Geo. Webb are mourning&#13;
the death of Mrs. Webb's mother.&#13;
Mrs. Shattuck, aged 79, a pioneer of&#13;
Ingham county. Frank MeEuen, exsheriff&#13;
of Inpham county, fell from an&#13;
apple tree on his. farm on the same&#13;
day as th? other two events and&#13;
crushed a shoulder and broke three&#13;
ribs. HLVnow lies in ,i critical condition&#13;
at the home of a neighbor.&#13;
Near Jail Delivery.&#13;
Tlie Kalamazoo jail is surrounded-by&#13;
deputy sheriffs every night, each armed&#13;
with a rifle. They will continue to&#13;
guard the jail until Walter Smi-th,&#13;
slayer of 17-ycarold Goldie Moss, is&#13;
removed. These guards were placed&#13;
when Sheriff Shean received a tip&#13;
that Chicago pals of Smith were in&#13;
the city, planning to secure ihe release&#13;
of the prisoner. Smith is alleged&#13;
to be one of the most desperate negroes&#13;
in Chicago. Chicago negroes&#13;
have been here a number of times&#13;
to see Smith and have spent considerable&#13;
time with him. They have learned&#13;
the Interior of the jail.&#13;
Continued Increase.&#13;
The increase in the earning? of&#13;
Michigan railroads is continuous.&#13;
Every month shows larger earnings&#13;
than the corresponding month of the&#13;
previous year. During August, according&#13;
to a report issued by Railroad Commissioner&#13;
Atwood the earnings of&#13;
Michigan railroads were $5,216,923.98.&#13;
This is $306,904 more than was earned&#13;
during the month of August one year&#13;
ago. and is probably the largest amount&#13;
of earnings ever reported for a single&#13;
month. Up to September 1 the railroads&#13;
of Michigan had this year earned i three months.&#13;
$35,887,600, which is over $3,100,000&#13;
more than was earned in the same period&#13;
last year.&#13;
Wife Was Shrewd.&#13;
Mrs. Rose Vamrie, of Detroit, came&#13;
to an agreement with her husband by&#13;
which he was to pay her a certain&#13;
amount weekly, but she alleges he is&#13;
behind $160. She learned he had been&#13;
arrested on a charge of carrying concealed&#13;
weapons, and immediately garnisheed&#13;
the money and the gold watch&#13;
taken from him by the police. The police&#13;
department made a disclosure to&#13;
Justice Ott Thursday that there was&#13;
over $33 found on the man. Justice&#13;
Ott laid the case over for further cons'deration.&#13;
Miss Madelon Faterson, daughter&#13;
of ex-Mayor W. A. Paterson, of Flint,&#13;
was attacked by#a ruffian while returning&#13;
home from a call last night. She&#13;
screamed, broke away and ran to the&#13;
horn* of ex-Mayor D. D. Aitken for&#13;
refuge.&#13;
S. A. Baker, of Kansai City, Mo., 56&#13;
years ago delivered an address on education&#13;
in representative hall to the&#13;
Michigan legislators. He has just written&#13;
for a copy of the speech. It was&#13;
found among the state records. Baker&#13;
is now 92 years old.&#13;
"I am going to die within the next&#13;
meek."' said Mrs. Gilbert Delisle, of&#13;
Flint,' to her husband. On the following&#13;
day she was dead. She had tuberculosis.&#13;
Saturday afternoon her little&#13;
six months' old daughter died from an&#13;
attack of cholera infantum.&#13;
Two months ago Minor Wells, a farmer&#13;
of Excelsior township, gave a dog&#13;
to some friends visiting from southern&#13;
Michigan. They took the animal as&#13;
far as Howard City, where he escaped,&#13;
and nothing more was seen of him until&#13;
he appeared at his old home.&#13;
Robert Wilkinson, a prominent farmer&#13;
Ifving near Flint, was th a local&#13;
saloon and broke his leg in a peculiar&#13;
manner. He turned to walk to the bar.&#13;
when the bones in his lower right leg&#13;
snapped like a pipe stem. To necrosis&#13;
of the bone i^ attributed the strange&#13;
fracture.&#13;
Mrs. Mary A, Barnhart, of Schoolcraft,&#13;
has received word form Gov.&#13;
Pack, of the Philippines, that the remains&#13;
of her son, Percy C. Wager, who&#13;
was treasurer of the island of Negros,&#13;
had been buried there on account of an&#13;
epidemic of cholera, from which dis&#13;
ease it is thought he died.&#13;
Timothy Shane, who says he is on&#13;
his way from New York to Traverse&#13;
City, went into the Grand Rapids police&#13;
station white with fright. He talked&#13;
of being pursued by two men, who.&#13;
were trying to put him in a coffin.&#13;
He was put on a train to Traverse&#13;
City and a telegram sent to his broths&#13;
er.&#13;
Delia Keller, sent from Mackinac&#13;
county to Jackson prison for from one&#13;
to three years, has been ordered transferred&#13;
to the Detroit house of correc'&#13;
tion. Judges frequently send women&#13;
convicted of crime to Jackson, three&#13;
such cases having occurred within&#13;
There are no accommo-&#13;
NBW YORK.—With the remarkable achievement&#13;
of having converted Wall street to hii&#13;
credit, Rev. William Wilkinson, street preacher,&#13;
has ended his labors in the financial dittrictvand&#13;
will seek other fleldB for his evangelistic labors&#13;
While tew have suspected the reformation that&#13;
was going on among the men who promote trusts,&#13;
water stocks and strip the fleece from the guileless&#13;
lamb, It Is said confidently that the work haa&#13;
been thorough and that Wall street has resolved&#13;
to go and sin no more.&#13;
Men of millions as well as clerks, messenger&#13;
boyB and truckmen, went to old Trlnty church&#13;
to say farewell to Rev. Mr. Wilkinson, who has&#13;
gained the title of "Rector ot Wall Street," and&#13;
he closed there one of the most remarkable mis*&#13;
slons ever known in New York or anywhere else.&#13;
For five days a week Rev. Mr. Wilkinson,&#13;
who often calls himself plain "Wilkinson," has&#13;
Btood at the noon hour in front of the custom-house and those of every station&#13;
in life have stopped in the midst of the temples of Mammon to listen&#13;
to him. Bankers, brokers and merchants have Bought him out after his services&#13;
and have Invited the evangelist of the street to their homes. They have&#13;
taken him to luncheon, offered him the use of their offices and have done&#13;
everything possible to help him.&#13;
Chief among those who have accorded recognition to the missionary is&#13;
James Stillman, the president of the National City bank and one of the leaders&#13;
of finance.&#13;
Following the lead of Mr. Stillman, others in the street did all they&#13;
could to accord to the evangelist recognition and support. Hundreds of those&#13;
prominent in the commercial and the financial worlds, now count themselves&#13;
his parishioners. Protestants, Roman Catholics and- Jews are all the same&#13;
to him, and on his 'attendance committee" the "Rector of Wall Street" has&#13;
representatives of all races and all creeds.&#13;
Few who saw Rev. Mr. Wilkinson begin his missionary labors in the&#13;
street would have believed that he would have obtained such a following.&#13;
Those who are familiar with evangelistic work thought that he could not&#13;
have chosen a less promising field, but in less than a week he had all Wall&#13;
street listening to him. There is nothing of the hackneyed revivalist in his&#13;
methods of preaching, and all his appeals were directed to reason and to&#13;
the higher ideals of men.&#13;
The Way Back to the Land. '.&#13;
There is only one way to get the&#13;
people back to the land, that Is to lay&#13;
the road open for agricultural prosperity,&#13;
coax capital back into It, to do&#13;
which an inipcrt duty on corn is the&#13;
vital factor. Capital will only go&#13;
where there i/ profit or remuneration&#13;
for its service, and the long and short.&#13;
of It is that agriculture In England&#13;
cannot prosper under existing conditions.—&#13;
London Magazine of Commerce.&#13;
A Cautious Scotswoman.&#13;
Thirty-one years ago a womannamed&#13;
Robertson purchased a ticket&#13;
for Canada in Glaegow. For some&#13;
feminine reason or other she changed&#13;
her mind, but carefully preserved the&#13;
ticket. A few days ago it was presented&#13;
at one of the offices of the Allen&#13;
line and duly honored, the c6mpany&#13;
issuing an equivalent new ticket,&#13;
and retaining the old one as a curiosity.&#13;
CITY PAYS MILLIONS TO EMPLOYES.&#13;
The city of New York has 60,948 employes on&#13;
its pay roll. The tetal pay roll is $57,068,253.13.&#13;
This fact appears from a report submitted to the&#13;
board of estimate by the commission named by&#13;
the mayor early In the year to reclassify and regrade&#13;
all the employes in the city departments.&#13;
The commission was composed of Joseph Haag,&#13;
secretary of the board, and the various seers&#13;
taries of the members of the board of estimate..,&#13;
The report of the commission shows that the&#13;
slackest sort of methods prevail in the establish,&#13;
ing of titlesand in the correspondence of the&#13;
titles to the civil service reginatlohX The commission&#13;
reports that the same position and&#13;
grades have been created by the same departments&#13;
several times since January 1, 1*02, and&#13;
that the titles created do not In many instances&#13;
correspond exactly with the titles used in the&#13;
civil service regulation, thereby creating much&#13;
confusion.&#13;
• S i £ e r e n t s a , a r I e a a r G D e i n 8 P*id to persons holding the same title and&#13;
performing the same grade of work. A- general reclassification and regarding&#13;
OT the places of all departments is recommended, one of these being a&#13;
chemist for the finance department at $3,000 a year. The corporation counsel&#13;
wants a first assistant at $12,000 a year, four assistants at $10,000 a year,&#13;
two Junior assistants at $2,650 and two at $2,250. The commissioners of accounts&#13;
want a chief engineer at $6,000 and an examining engineer at $3,500.&#13;
Same as Christians.&#13;
I started to talk with my friend, and*&#13;
had got quite well along with what I&#13;
had to say when one of the old women&#13;
must have heard some of my remarks,&#13;
for I heard her say: "Ann,&#13;
don't talk so loud; that's a lawyer&#13;
over there, and they have eyes and&#13;
can see, and ears and can hear, just&#13;
the same as we Christians do."—N. Y.&#13;
Sun.&#13;
Lpve and Friendship.&#13;
To feed love there must be a difference&#13;
of tastes and opinions; there&#13;
must be little snfferings.^Qrgiveness,&#13;
tears, all that may excite suceptibility&#13;
and awaken daily solicitude.&#13;
Friendship is more happy, more peaceful;&#13;
it is a refuge against all the ills&#13;
of life, it is a consolation for_ all sufferings.—&#13;
M arTei Capelle._&#13;
Horrible Thought.&#13;
Mosquitoes grow to great size In&#13;
Burma. A young Scotch woman who&#13;
was making her first visit to that&#13;
country had heard travelers' tales of&#13;
the insect pest and was prepared for&#13;
the worst. When she saw an elephant&#13;
for the first time she said:&#13;
"Will yon be what's.called a muskeetae?"&#13;
William Gray, Bay City, machinist,&#13;
aged 53, fell down a stairway to the&#13;
ground and was Instantly killed.&#13;
dations at Jackson or Ionia for women.&#13;
William F. Notely, the first president&#13;
of the First National bank of&#13;
Vicksburg, has sued the bank for $1,-&#13;
ooo salary while he acted as president.&#13;
He says when a new president was&#13;
elected he was given no money for&#13;
what he had done for the bank. He&#13;
«was re-elected president in January.&#13;
Because of offending the directors he&#13;
was discharged.&#13;
Martin Berg, an employe in a Saginaw&#13;
tannery, was the victim of a serious&#13;
accident Sa;urday morning, necessitating&#13;
amputation of the right&#13;
arm aboye the elbow. Berg, who Is&#13;
40 years of ase. was'Working at one&#13;
of the machines which strip the hair,&#13;
when his arm was caught In the machinery&#13;
and before It could be stop-&#13;
; ped the member was terribly lacerated.&#13;
A t l / r J i i . A n r n a * » a n * A n o f tt TEN M,LLMJN C&lt;M-LAR CONCERN is the best assurance you can&#13;
TT r i t t e i l O U a r a f l U H ? t,ave of the superiority of the&#13;
COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONE&#13;
With this guarantee you don't guess, you KNOW which is best. ASK&#13;
YOUR OWN BANKER as to our responsibility and financial standing. F r e e Trial fifld EdSy P a y m e n t O f f e f&#13;
Then send to our nearest dealer or to us, and get our . . . . - ^ ^ » —&#13;
' • • This is your chance to secure the BEST TALKING MACHINE MADE, on payments which will not be felt.&#13;
WE ACCEPT OLD MACHINES OF ANY NAME IN PART PAYMENT.&#13;
The Graphophone is the Ideal Entertainer in the Home I ^^t^or^ln.&#13;
Qr*n4 PHx,P«rU, 1900 fj««*4etJr««« Prixe, at. Levis, IM4&#13;
lUekcst Aware, Perttaed, t««8&#13;
Try it&#13;
' * J&#13;
..'»'&#13;
176&#13;
Columbia Pnonograph Co.&#13;
88 Wabash Avenue,&#13;
Chicago, 111.&#13;
* *&#13;
«N\\ a* * Roft ehyoRuDr8f e*Kn JPdUl Tart asP*. a ^fyu ml"le ndtt taaullda&#13;
Name.&#13;
address.&#13;
V&#13;
FOR LOVE&#13;
By FRANCIS LYNDE&#13;
AUTHOR OF "THE GRAFTERS." ITC.&#13;
(0«»7Tiifct, jam. or J- F. u»»i*«ft»0»)&#13;
CHAPTEB IX.—Continued.&#13;
But la. the days that followed, days&#13;
"Ju which the sun rose and set in&#13;
cloudless vinter splendor and the&#13;
heavy snows still held' aloof, Adams'&#13;
prediction wrought itself out Into&#13;
ester fact After the single appeal to&#13;
(tree, Mr. Darrah seemed to have&#13;
given up £he flght. None the less, the&#13;
departure of the Rosemary was delayed,&#13;
and its.hospitable door was always&#13;
open to the Utah chief of construction&#13;
and his assistant.&#13;
Winton took his welcome broadly,&#13;
as what lover would not; and within&#13;
a week was spending most of his&#13;
evenings in the Rosemary—this at a&#13;
time when every waking moment of&#13;
the day and night was deeply mortgaged&#13;
to the chance of success. For&#13;
now that the Rajah had withdrawn&#13;
!iU opposition, nature and the perversity&#13;
of Inanimate things had taken&#13;
\ hand, and for a fortnight the work&#13;
if track-laying paused fairly within&#13;
plght of the1 station at Argentine.&#13;
first it was a carload or steel accidentally&#13;
derailed and dumped into&#13;
Quarts creek at precisely the worst&#13;
possible point in the lower canyon, a&#13;
jagged; rock-ribbed, cliff-bound gorge&#13;
ivhere each separate piece of metal&#13;
had to be hoisted out singly by a derrick&#13;
erected for the purpose—a process&#13;
ivhlch effectually blocked the track&#13;
for three entire days. Next It was anchor&#13;
landslide (unhelped by dynamite,&#13;
this) just above the station, a&#13;
crawling cataract of loose, sliding&#13;
ihale which, painstakingly dug out |&#13;
t\n_d dammed with plank bulkhead dur-U&#13;
nil the day, would pour down and&#13;
bury bulkhead, buttresses, and the.&#13;
v?ry right of way in the night..&#13;
Inhis right mind—the mind of an&#13;
of congratulating ms *n&gt;. "fhen—-&#13;
but we picture the scene: Mr. Darrah&#13;
late to his breakfast, being just&#13;
in from an early morning reconnaissance&#13;
of'the enemy's advancings; Virginia&#13;
sitting opposite to pour bis coffee.&#13;
'AH the others vanished to some&#13;
limbo of their own.&#13;
The Rajah rubbed his hands delightedly:&#13;
"We are coming on famously, famously,&#13;
my deah Virginia. Two&#13;
weeks gone, heavy snows predicted&#13;
for the mountain region, and nothing,&#13;
practically nothing at all, accomplished&#13;
on the otheh side of the canyon.&#13;
When you marry, my deah, you&#13;
shall have a block of C. &amp; G. R. preferred&#13;
stock to keep you in pinmoney."&#13;
"I?" she queried. "But, Uncle Somerville,&#13;
I don't understand—"&#13;
The Rajah laughed,&#13;
"That was a very pretty blush, my&#13;
ton was coming again that evening.] The sUusiion explained itself eve*&#13;
He must be stopped, and sent shout fcl«&#13;
business.&#13;
So she wrote him a note, telling&#13;
him he must not come—a note manlike&#13;
in Its conciseness, and yet most&#13;
womanly in Us failure to give even&#13;
the remotest hint of the new and binding*&#13;
reason whjr he must; not come.&#13;
And just before luncheon an obliging&#13;
Cousin Billy was prevailed upon to&#13;
undertake its delivery.&#13;
When he had found Winton at the&#13;
shale-slide, and had given him Miss&#13;
Carteret's mandate, the Reverend Billy&#13;
did not return directly to the Rosemary.&#13;
On the ossUsary,* he extended&#13;
his tramp westward, stumbling on&#13;
vaimlessly up the SMyonisfrer the unsurfaced&#13;
embankmasrt of the new line.&#13;
Truth to tell, VJyginJ*/* messenger&#13;
was not unwlllini^'ta* spend a littre&#13;
time alone with the immensities. To&#13;
put it baldly, he was beginning to'he&#13;
desperately cloyed with the sweets of&#13;
a day-long Miss Bessie, ennuye on the&#13;
one hand and despondent on the other.&#13;
Why could not the Cousin Bessies&#13;
see, without being told in so many&#13;
words, that the heart, of a man may&#13;
have been given in times long past&#13;
to another woman?—to a Cousin Virginia,&#13;
let us say. And why must the&#13;
Cousin Virginias, passing by the lifelong&#13;
devotion of a kinsman lover,&#13;
throw themselves—if one must put it&#13;
thus brutally—fairly at the head of an&#13;
acquaintance of a day?&#13;
So questioning the immensities, the&#13;
Reverend Billy came out after soma&#13;
little time in a small upland valley&#13;
mbitious young captain of industry j&#13;
ho sees defeat with dishonor staring j&#13;
Urn in the face—Winton would have&#13;
Tingnt all the more desperately for ,&#13;
ir.ese .hindrances.' But, unfortunate-I&#13;
v. he was no longer an industry cap- )&#13;
'tin with an eye single to success, j&#13;
!io *-as become that anomaly despised !&#13;
' f the working world—a man in love, i&#13;
"It's no use shutting our eyes to !&#13;
' V fact. Jack,'* said Adams one even- j&#13;
:14 when his chief was making ready j&#13;
' ~*r his regular descent upon the Rose- j&#13;
nzry. "We..SfcajU,.-,Jm»? t^.put night&#13;
jfof«*a**#*«t on that shale-slide if&#13;
e hope ever to get past it with the&#13;
f Hanljg the shale!" was the impac&#13;
t rejoinder. "I'm no galley slave."'&#13;
Adams' slow smile came and went&#13;
:1 rynical rlppltngs.&#13;
"It is pretty difficult to say precise-&#13;
'y what you are just now. But I can&#13;
rophesy what you are going to be&#13;
:f you don't wake up and come alive."&#13;
Having no reply to this, Adams&#13;
ivent back to the matter of night&#13;
shifts.&#13;
"If you will authorize it, I'll put a&#13;
light gang on and boss it myself.&#13;
What do you say?"&#13;
"I say you are no end of a good&#13;
fellow, Morty. And that's the plain&#13;
"act. I'll do as much for you somelime."&#13;
"I'll be smashed if you will—you'll&#13;
never get the chance. When I let a&#13;
nretty girl make a foot of me—"&#13;
But the door of the dinkey slammed&#13;
oehind the outgoing one, and the&#13;
prophet of evil was left to organize&#13;
Ms night assault on the shale-slide,&#13;
ind to command it as best he could.&#13;
So. as we say, the days of stubborn&#13;
totl with the enthusiasm taken out,&#13;
dipped away unfruitful. ' Of ^the en-&#13;
:[pb Utah force Adams alone held him-&#13;
«ft' u&gt;: .te1,t**^r*,,*n&amp;be&amp;g oni*&#13;
second in command, he was unable to&#13;
•seep the bad example of the chief&#13;
'rom working like a leaven of inert-&#13;
,. less among the men. Branagan&#13;
v*o!oed the situation in rich brogue&#13;
&gt;ae evening whea Adams? jiad exrmnste/&#13;
l his limited vocabulary of&#13;
ifcuse on the force for its apathy.&#13;
% w i s no use, ava, Misther Adams. If&#13;
rau was the boss himself 'twould be&#13;
you as would put the comether on&#13;
thlm too quick. But It's Mike masther.&#13;
HAD IT ALL FIGURED OUT.&#13;
SHE WROTE HIM A NO-'E.&#13;
deah. Bless your innocent soul, if I&#13;
were young Misteh Winton. I'm not&#13;
sure but I should consideh the game&#13;
well lost."&#13;
She was gazing at him wide-eyed&#13;
now, and the blush had left a pallor&#13;
behind it. -&#13;
"You mean that I—that I—"&#13;
"I mean that you are a helpeh worth^Grand river main line, and crossing&#13;
having, Miss Carteret. Anotheh time&#13;
Misteh Winton won't pay cou't to a&#13;
cha'mlng young girl and try to build&#13;
a railroad at one and the sain* moment,&#13;
I fancy. Hah!"&#13;
The startled eyes veiled themselves&#13;
swiftly, and Virginia's voice sank to&#13;
its softest cadence.&#13;
"Have I been an accomplice in this&#13;
—this despicable thing. Uncle Someryilie?"&#13;
"'"'"Mr. Darrah began a little to. see his&#13;
mistake.&#13;
"Ah—an accomplice? Oh&#13;
^dtah Virginia, not quite that.. The&#13;
word smacks too much of the po-lice&#13;
cou'ts. Let us say that Misteh Winton&#13;
has found your company mo* attractive&#13;
than that of his laborehs, and&#13;
commend his good taste in the matter"&#13;
So much he said by way of damping&#13;
down the Are he had so rashly&#13;
lighted. Then Jastrow'came in with&#13;
one of the interminable cipher telegrams&#13;
and Virginia was left alone.&#13;
For a time she sat at the deserted&#13;
to a Rererend Billy. The Rajah bad&#13;
not bvtti idle during the interval of&#13;
dlnner«glvings and social divagations.&#13;
He bad acquired the right of way&#13;
across the Utah's line for his blockading&#13;
spur; had taken advantage of&#13;
Winton's inalertness to construct the&#13;
track; and'was now prepared to bold&#13;
the crossing with a live engine and&#13;
such a show of force as might be needful.&#13;
Calvert turned back from the entrance&#13;
of the valley, and was minded,&#13;
in a spirit of fairness, to pass . the&#13;
word concerning the new obstruction&#13;
on to the man who.was most vitally&#13;
concerned. But alas! even a Reverend&#13;
Billy may not always rise superior&#13;
to his hamperings as a man and&#13;
a lover. Here was defeat possible—&#13;
nay, say rather defeat probable, for a&#13;
rival, with the probability increasing&#13;
with each hour of delay. Calvert&#13;
fought it out by length and by breadth&#13;
a dozen times before he came in sight&#13;
of the track force toiling at the shaleslide.&#13;
Should he tell Winton, and so,&#13;
indirectly, help to frustrate . Mr. Darrah's&#13;
well-laid plan? Or should he&#13;
hold his peace and thus, indirectly&#13;
again, help to defeat the Utah company?&#13;
He put It that way in decent selfrespect.&#13;
Also he assured himself that&#13;
the personal equation as between two&#13;
lovers of one and the same woman&#13;
was entirely eliminated. But who&#13;
can tell which motive it was thatj&#13;
prompted him to turn aside before he&#13;
came to the army of toilers at the&#13;
slide; to turn a^d cross the stream&#13;
and make as wide a detour as the&#13;
nature of the ground would permit,&#13;
passing well beyond call from the&#13;
other side of the canyon?&#13;
The detour took him past the slide&#13;
In silent safety, but it did not take&#13;
him immediately back to the Rosemary.&#13;
Instead of keeping on down&#13;
the canyon on the C. &amp; G. R. side, he&#13;
turned up the gulch at the back of&#13;
Argentine and spent the better half&#13;
of the afternoon tramping, beneath the&#13;
solemn firs on the mountain. What&#13;
the hours of solitude brought him in&#13;
the way of decision let him declare&#13;
as he sets his face finally towards the&#13;
station and the private-car:&#13;
"I can't do it. I can't turn traitor&#13;
to the kinsman whose bread I eat.&#13;
And that is what it would come to in&#13;
plain English. Beyond that I have&#13;
no right to go; it is not for me to&#13;
pass upon the justice of this petty t&#13;
war between rival corporations." |&#13;
Ah. William Calvert! is there no;&#13;
word then of that other and far&#13;
subtler temptation? When you have&#13;
j reached your goal, if reach it you&#13;
may. will there be no remorse- t&#13;
ful looking back to this mile-stQn^,&#13;
' where a word from you might have ;&#13;
! taken the fly from your pot of pre- [&#13;
j cious ointment? j&#13;
j The short winter day was darkening ;&#13;
I to its close when he returned to the '&#13;
j Rosemary. By dint of judicious ma- j&#13;
neuvering, with a love-weary Bessie&#13;
for an unconscious confederate, he [&#13;
managed to keep Virginia from ques- r&#13;
tioning him. this up to a certain mo- j&#13;
ment of cataclysms in the evening. |&#13;
But Virginia read momentous things |&#13;
in his face and eyes, and when the !&#13;
time was fully ripe she cornered him.&#13;
It was the old story over again, of!&#13;
where the two lines, old and new, ran j a woman's determination to know pit- |&#13;
parallel at the same level, with low j ted against a truthful man's blunder- j&#13;
embankments less than a- hundred i ing efforts to conceal; and before he |&#13;
Couple Not Only Were. Going to Uve,&#13;
But Become .Rieh.&#13;
i .Lead* DQhgla* who was arrested&#13;
recently In Maroe through an&#13;
error, was. congratulated at a Portland&#13;
hotel on the courtesy he had&#13;
shown ta pardoning the erring Maine&#13;
police.&#13;
"Why shouldn't I pardon them?"&#13;
said Lord.- Douglas, laughing. : '*They&#13;
did their duty. Their calculations&#13;
were wrong,.that is all. - . , - , ,&#13;
"I admit that their calculations were&#13;
absurdly wrong. They reminded me&#13;
of a young lady I used to know when&#13;
I lived in the west.&#13;
"This young lady, whose family was&#13;
well to do, announced to her father&#13;
one night that she was going to marry&#13;
a penniless man.&#13;
"'If you marry him,' her father&#13;
grumbled, 'how on earth will you live?'&#13;
"'Oh,' said the girl, confldentlv, 'we&#13;
have figured that all out and it is&#13;
very simple. You know that black&#13;
hen 1 bought last week?'&#13;
" «Yes. What of it?'&#13;
" 'Well, A have consulted the best&#13;
poultry circulars, and they all agree&#13;
that a good hen will raise 20 chicks&#13;
a year. That means that next* season&#13;
I shall have 21 hens. These at&#13;
the season's end, each having raised&#13;
her 20 young, will give me 420 in all.&#13;
The next season there will be 8.400,&#13;
the next 168,000, and the next 3,360,-&#13;
000. Just think of that! With chickens&#13;
at 50 cents apiece we will then&#13;
be worth $1,685,000. So you see, paya,&#13;
you needn't worry about us.'"&#13;
New York's Great Ocean Trade.&#13;
New York is the second great seaport&#13;
of the world. In 1903 over $0,-&#13;
000,000 tons of imports and 8,700,000&#13;
tons of exports were cleared through&#13;
New York harbor. London is the&#13;
greatest seaport, exceeding New York&#13;
in imports, though not by exports.&#13;
Antwerp and Hamburg are third and&#13;
fourth, respectively.&#13;
Cheap Excursions South.&#13;
On the 1st and 3rd Tuesday of each&#13;
month the Big Four Ry. will sell excursion&#13;
tickets to most all points in&#13;
Virginia, South Carolina, Tennessey,-&#13;
Alabama and Georgia at rate of one&#13;
fare plus $2.00 with return limit 30&#13;
days. Liberal stopover privileges.&#13;
Write I. P. Spining, General Northern&#13;
Agent, Big Four Route, 238 Clark St.,&#13;
Chicago,, fox further information.&#13;
yards apart.&#13;
Midway of the valley the hundredyard&#13;
interspace was bridged by a&#13;
hastily constructed spur track starting&#13;
from a switch on the Colorado and&#13;
knew what he was about Calvert had&#13;
betrayed the Rajah's secret—which j&#13;
was also the secret of the cipher tele- j&#13;
grams. j&#13;
Miss Carteret said little—said noth- j&#13;
ing. indeed, that an anxious kinsman |&#13;
tne Utah right of way at a broad an-1 lover could lay hold of. But when&#13;
gle. On this spur, at its point of in-1 the secret was hers she donned coat&#13;
tersection with the new line, stood a and headgear and went out on the&#13;
heavy locomotive, steam up. and J square railed platform, whither the&#13;
manned in every inch of its standing- j Reverend BUly dared not follow her.&#13;
room by armed guards. j ( T O B E ' C O X T I N U E D . )&#13;
Their Hotel Neighbors&#13;
At a little Denver hotel lives a very i hotel with her and her escort,&#13;
no, my | charming little widow who has many j went for their keys together.&#13;
They&#13;
The&#13;
masculine admirers. The other day ! &lt;^erk handed them No. 202 and No. 204.&#13;
she was asked by one of them to go T h e i l ' r 0°ms were adjoining.—Denver&#13;
I Pnst&#13;
out in the afternoon and play tennis.'* -l&lt;&#13;
At the courts she met a man wild&#13;
struck her fancy. So. between sets,&#13;
she and the new man would sit on the&#13;
grass and talk. It was during one of&#13;
these intermissions that he said: '"By&#13;
Had His Reason.&#13;
A certain country minister was the&#13;
owner of a swift and spirited horse. On&#13;
one occasion, while he was driving&#13;
the wav. Mrs. Blank, may I ask where i through the village, he overtook the*&#13;
' , . * . , I local physician on foot,&#13;
vou live I&#13;
"Jump in, doctor, he said, pulling up.&#13;
like mon.' The b'ys all know that I breakfast table, dry-eyed, hot-hearted, •"To be sure." she replied. "I live at&#13;
Misther Winton don't care a damn; thinking such thoughts as would come&#13;
-and they'll not be hurtin' thimselves&#13;
e/Id the wurrk."&#13;
' ^ id the Rajah? Between his times&#13;
&gt;klng high-priced cigars with&#13;
in the louriglng-room of the&#13;
lary, he was swearing Jubilates 2li the privacy of* his working-den&#13;
ateroom, having tri-dally weather&#13;
Y reports wired to him by way of Caragnate&#13;
and Argentine station, and&#13;
oSsying 'himself In the intervals with&#13;
«ending and receiving sundry mysteri-&#13;
•&gt;n|^telegrams in cipher.&#13;
s'Jhus Mr. Somervllle Darrah, all&#13;
*oia£W*M tor him- until ons fateful&#13;
morning when Ifr^ntte^h* htolstike&#13;
crowding thickly upon the heels of&#13;
such a revelation. Winton would fail;&#13;
a man with honor, good repute, his&#13;
entire career at stake, as he himself&#13;
had admitted, would go down to miserable&#13;
oblivion and defeat lacking&#13;
some friendly hand to smite him alive&#13;
to a sense of his danger. And, In her&#13;
uncle's estimation, at least, she, Virginia&#13;
Carteret, would figure as the&#13;
Delilah triumphant.&#13;
She rose, tingling to her finger-tips&#13;
with the shame of «t, went l o . h e r&#13;
stateroom and found her writing ma*&#13;
terials. In such a crisis her methods&#13;
could-be as direct as si •n«BVs&gt;.v'VHB^AC^'^^1 % l l l *w f M l k e S s i |&#13;
the such and such hotel."&#13;
"That's queer," he aaid. "I have a&#13;
room there, too. However. I've; had it&#13;
only a week. I'm thinking of changing.&#13;
There is a woman in the next&#13;
"I've got a horse here that goes pretty&#13;
well."&#13;
The doctor jumped in and the parson&#13;
drove off. The horso did go well, in&#13;
the tense of speed, but in a little while&#13;
it began to behave badly, and ended by&#13;
room to mine who comes in every I tipping over; the carriage and spilling&#13;
night about 12 o'clock and wakes me I o u t ^'n occupants. The doctor Jumped&#13;
up with her noise. If they don't oust 110 n i s f e e t a n a . felt, himself all over to&#13;
her I'm going.'n&#13;
"I don't blame you," said the Mittle&#13;
widow. "I know just exactly how you&#13;
feel. There's a man in the next room&#13;
to mine who* edttB* "noma; full almost&#13;
every night afld BTnffkjLthtJuncture&#13;
around. I'm ^ r a $ * t a ^ a k e ajfeomplaint&#13;
about hietf.ff !iN?**ssn't rsferm."&#13;
After the games had be*1$flfcf£! ths&#13;
rthe&#13;
[see if be was Injured. The parson also&#13;
got to his feet.&#13;
"Look here!" exclaimed the doctor;&#13;
"what do you mean by inviting me to&#13;
ride behind a horse like that?"&#13;
"^ell, you see," gasped the parson,&#13;
"luckily thl3 time there are no. bones 1&#13;
broken, but 1 always like to have %&#13;
doctor with me whea I drive that animal."&#13;
There was a time when the obese&#13;
woman was the light of other days.&#13;
NERVOUS DEPILITY&#13;
A Scranton Woman Tells How Or.&#13;
Williams'Pink PiKs Made Her&#13;
Well and Strong.&#13;
Nervous debility is the common name&#13;
for what the doctors term neurasthenia.&#13;
It is characterized by lueutnl depression,&#13;
fits of the "blues," or melancholy, loss&#13;
of euergy and spirits. The-patient's eyes&#13;
become dull, the pink fades from the&#13;
cheeks, the memory becomes defective so&#13;
that it is difficult to recall dates and&#13;
names at will. Some of these symptoms&#13;
only may be present or all of them. The&#13;
remedy lies il) ton.Ulg up tbe nervous&#13;
system aild there isuohiedieine better&#13;
adapted for this purpose thnn Dr.&#13;
Williams' Pink Pills.&#13;
Mrs. Jane J. Davies, of No. 314 Warren&#13;
street, Scrantou, Pa., says: " Some&#13;
years ago I became greatly reduced in&#13;
health and strength and my nervous&#13;
system became so debilitated that I felt&#13;
wretched. I could not rest or sleep well&#13;
at uight and woke up as weary and&#13;
languid iu the morning as I was when I&#13;
went to bed. My head ached in the&#13;
morning and often there was a pain in&#13;
my right side which was worse when I&#13;
sat down. My nerves were on edge all&#13;
the time, every little noise bothered me&#13;
and I was generally miserable. Then I&#13;
decided to try Dr. Williams'Pink Pills&#13;
for Pale People, as my husband had taken&#13;
them with good results, and they did&#13;
wonders for me. Now I have no more&#13;
pain iu my side, no more headaches, I&#13;
sleep well and feel strong and able to&#13;
do niy. work."&#13;
Dr.' Williams' Pink Pills cured Mrs.&#13;
Davies and they can do just as mnch&#13;
for other weak, pale, ailing men or&#13;
women who are-slipping into a hopeless&#13;
decline. They strike stmight at the root&#13;
of all common diseases caused by poor&#13;
and impoverished blood.&#13;
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all&#13;
druggists, or will be sent postpaid, ou&#13;
receipt of price, 60 cents per box, six&#13;
boxes for $3.50, by the Dr. Williams'&#13;
Medicine Co., Schenectady, N.Y.&#13;
You CANNOT CURE all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal conditions&#13;
of the mucous membrane such as&#13;
nasalcat*rrh,uterlnecaUrrh caused'&#13;
by feminine Ills, sore throat, sore&#13;
mouth or inflamed eyes by simply&#13;
dosing the stomaoh,&#13;
But you surely can cure these stubborn&#13;
affections by local treatment with&#13;
Paxtlne Toilet Antiseptic&#13;
which destroys the disease germs,checks&#13;
discharges» stops pain, and heals the&#13;
inflammation and soreness.&#13;
Paxtine represents the most successful&#13;
local treatment for feminine Ills ever&#13;
produced. Thousands of women testify&#13;
to this fac\ $o cents at druggists.&#13;
Stnd for Free Trial Box&#13;
T S B ft. P AXTOM CO*&#13;
£&amp;e f ittrktttg ffepatifc&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS dt CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
THURSDAY, OUT. 11,1906.&#13;
T h e G h o l c e I s Y o u r s&#13;
The following are the nominrtions&#13;
ot the three parties tor state and county&#13;
officers. We can tell you wbo&#13;
they are, but you will have to make&#13;
your own choice:&#13;
REPUBLICAN&#13;
STATE v -&#13;
(lovenor, Fred M. Warner. Farmiogton&#13;
Lieut. Gov., Patrick H. Kelly, Lansing&#13;
Sec. of State, Geo. A. Prescott, Tawas&#13;
City&#13;
State Treas., Frank P. Glazier, Chelsea&#13;
Aujditor General, James B. Bradley,&#13;
Eaton Rapids&#13;
Land Commissioner, William H. Rose,&#13;
Bath&#13;
Attorney-General, John E. Bird, Adrian&#13;
Superintendent of Public Instruction,&#13;
Luther L. Wright, Iron wood&#13;
Member of Board of Education, Dexter&#13;
M. ferry Jr., Detroit&#13;
COUNTY&#13;
Thomas Allen, Flint, State Senator.&#13;
Chan. VnnKeuran, Representative&#13;
Willis Lyon, County Clerk&#13;
James Greene, Prosecuting Attorney&#13;
A. D. Thompson, Register of Deeds&#13;
Edwin Pratt, Sheriff&#13;
Frank Mowers, County Drain Com.&#13;
J. A. Woodruff, County School Com,&#13;
Henry C. Durfee, School Examiner&#13;
T. J. Gaul, School Examiner&#13;
DEMOCRATIC&#13;
STATE&#13;
Governor, Chas. II. Kimruerle, Casso'polis.&#13;
Leut.Gov., Thomas M. Rogers, . Sault&#13;
Ste. Marie&#13;
ADDITIONAL LOCAL.&#13;
Tbe annual meeting of the board ot&#13;
supervisors meet at fcbwell this week.&#13;
It is estimated that there fs now a&#13;
telephone to every twelve inhabitants&#13;
of tbe United States.&#13;
It you have lost your bovbood spir*&#13;
its, courage and confidence of youth,&#13;
we offer you new lite, fresh eouraqe&#13;
and freedom from ill bealtb in Holister's&#13;
Rocky Mountain/Tea. 35 cents,&#13;
tea or tablets.&#13;
'From the size of tbe fleet which has&#13;
been sent to Cuba tbe world is undecided&#13;
whether tbe president wants to&#13;
wipe tbe Islands off the map or to&#13;
tow it up to New York harbor.&#13;
Piles quickly and positively cured&#13;
with Dr. Sboop's Magic Ointment. It's&#13;
made for piles alone—and it does the&#13;
work surely and with satisfaction.&#13;
Itching, painful, protruding or blind&#13;
piles disappear like xagic by its use.&#13;
Large, Nickel capped glass jars, 50&#13;
cents. Sold and recommedded by all&#13;
dealers.&#13;
Farmington village is soon to he&#13;
lighted by electricity furnished by&#13;
tbe Edison company of"Detroit. Lines&#13;
are being constructed now for that&#13;
purpose.&#13;
When a horse is so overworked it&#13;
lies down and in other ways declaies&#13;
its inability to go further, you would&#13;
consider it criminal to use force. Many&#13;
a man ot humane impulses, who would&#13;
not willingly barm a kitten, is guilty&#13;
of cruelty where his own stomach is&#13;
concerned. Overdriven, overworked,&#13;
when what it needs is something that&#13;
will digest the food eaten and help&#13;
the stomach to recuperate. Something&#13;
State Treasurer, Charles Wellman, Port I \\^e K o d o l F o r D i s p e p s i a t h a t is&#13;
Huron&#13;
Attorney-General. Emanuel J . Doyle,&#13;
G r i n d Rapids&#13;
Auditor General, John Yuell, Vanderbilt,&#13;
Otsego County&#13;
Superintendent of Public Instruction,&#13;
E l m e r R.{Webster, Pontiac&#13;
State Lsrhd Commissioner, Clarence L.&#13;
S h e l d e n , Bay County&#13;
Member of State Hoard of Education,&#13;
J a m e s E. Sullivan, Cheboygan&#13;
COUNTY&#13;
E d w i n Farmer, Representative&#13;
• RobertlWrlght, Clerk&#13;
Louis E . ' H e w l e t t , Pros. Attorney.&#13;
J o h n Wigglesworth, Register, of Deeds&#13;
Will Stoddard. Sheriff&#13;
Clarence Bishop, Drain Com.&#13;
F . D. Carr, School Cum.&#13;
J . K, Osgerby, School Examiner&#13;
Miles Valentine, School Examiner&#13;
P R O H I B I T I O N&#13;
STATE&#13;
Governor, K.'Clark Reed, Howell&#13;
Lieut. Gov., Henry M. Moore, Detroit&#13;
Secretary ot State, Leroy H . White,&#13;
Kalamazoo&#13;
Treasure]', Jasper Smeltzer, Vandalia&#13;
Auditor General, Fred VV. Corbett,&#13;
Adrian&#13;
Land Commissioner, Addison B . Moreland,&#13;
Caro&#13;
Attorney General, \Vjn ent B. Fox, Mt.&#13;
Clemens&#13;
Supt.JfPublic Instruction, David B.&#13;
R e e d , Hillsdale •&#13;
Member Board of Education, George A.&#13;
Parmenter, Petoskey&#13;
COUNTY&#13;
D , M. Beckw.it)vHowell, Representative&#13;
E . M. Field. Green Oak, Clerk&#13;
J o h n Snyder, Treasurer&#13;
A . Crippen, Brighton, Register of Deeds&#13;
G e o . Lee, Marion, Sheriff&#13;
H . L.fDoan, Green Oak, Drain Com.&#13;
M r s . O . E . Carr, Handy, School Dom&#13;
Hubert M. Wells, Howell, School E x a m .&#13;
Norton Clark. Hartland, School E x a m .&#13;
Sold by F. A. Blgltr, Druggist&#13;
It is said that more teachers from&#13;
the rural schools are expected to attend&#13;
tbe Association-Institute fo be&#13;
held at Battle Creek, the last of the&#13;
month than have attended a similar&#13;
meeting for several years. The teachers&#13;
from the Pincfcney school are arranging&#13;
to attend, as well as many&#13;
others from this vicinity.&#13;
When the tip of a dog's nose is cold&#13;
and moist that dog is not sick. A&#13;
feverish, dry nose means sickness with&#13;
a dog. And so with the human lips.&#13;
Dry, cracked and colorless lips mean&#13;
fevariehness, and are as well ill appearing.&#13;
To have beautiful, pink.&#13;
velvet-iike lips, apply at bed time a&#13;
coating of Dr. Snoop's Green Salve. It&#13;
will sotten and heal any skin ailment.&#13;
Get a free trial box at our store and&#13;
be convinced. Large nickel capped&#13;
glass jars, 25 cents. All dealers.&#13;
M i c h i g a n S t a t e S u n d a y -&#13;
S c h o o l A s s o c i a t i o n .&#13;
A Young Mother at 70&#13;
"My mother has suddenly been made&#13;
y r u n ^ a t T O . Twenty years of iutense&#13;
suffering from dyspepsia had entirely&#13;
disabled her, until six months Ago&#13;
when she beiran taking Electric Hitters&#13;
wbicb have completely cured 4ier&#13;
and restored the slrengtb and activity&#13;
sbe had in the prime of life,' writes&#13;
Mr*.&#13;
Me Greatest restorative medicine on&#13;
the tflohe. Sets stomach, liver and&#13;
kidneys ii*ht, purifies the blood and&#13;
cures malaria, hiliousm&amp;s and weaknesses.&#13;
Wondeitul nerve tonic. Price&#13;
50c. *Gaarante.rid at h. A. Sigler's&#13;
drug store.&#13;
The 46th annual meeting of the&#13;
-•iicbicran State SunJay-,School Association&#13;
will be held in the First Methodist&#13;
church in the city otJackson on&#13;
[ November 12-14-15, 1906. The meet-&#13;
1 ing promises to exceed all previous&#13;
conventions in numbers, interest and&#13;
results. The program is to be exceptionally&#13;
practical. In Marion&#13;
Lawrence, the International Secretary,&#13;
Prof. H. M. Hamill, D. D.,&#13;
chairman of the International Educational&#13;
Committee, Josephine L. Baldwin,&#13;
president of the New Jersey&#13;
Elementary Council, and Messrs Tullar&#13;
and Meredith of New York, the&#13;
committee has secured great attract&#13;
ions.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
The Michigan Passenger Association&#13;
has authorized a rate of one late plus&#13;
twenty-five cents for the round trip.&#13;
Lod u in a and breakfast will be furni.-&#13;
bed free to delegates.&#13;
Very Low Rates to tit* West&#13;
Tbe Chicago Great Western Railway&#13;
will sell tickets to ponts in&#13;
Alberta, Arizona, British Columbia,&#13;
California/Colorado, Idaho, Montana.&#13;
Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington&#13;
and Wyoming, at about one-hair the&#13;
usual fare. Tickets on sale daily&#13;
Aug. 27 to Oct. 31 inclusive. Get full&#13;
information from tbe v&gt;eat Western&#13;
agent or J. P. Elmer.&#13;
F. R. Mosier, D. P. A.&#13;
108 Adams S' , Chicayo, ill.&#13;
DoWl\Wm BE* Salvo&#13;
F o r PilM» B u r n s ,&#13;
Tue new pure food and drag law&#13;
, will mark it on the lahle of every&#13;
cough cxire containing opium, chloroform,&#13;
or any other stupifying or poisonous&#13;
drutf. But it passes Dr. 8hoop's&#13;
Couitb Cure as made for 20 years entirely&#13;
tree. Dr. Sbeop all along has&#13;
bitterly opposed th« use of all opiates&#13;
or narcotic-. Dr. Snoops Cough Cure&#13;
! is absolutely safe even for tbe youngj&#13;
e&gt;t babe-and it cures, it does uot&#13;
.simply suppress. Get a safe and re-&#13;
| liable fouiih cure, by simply insisting&#13;
Ion having Dr. Snoop's. Let tbe law&#13;
j i e v m i r nrttH.-tion. We cheerfully&#13;
' recommend and s«ll it. All dealers.&#13;
Francis D. Carr&#13;
Blood Poisoning '&#13;
TesulU from chronic jonatipatiou,&#13;
which is quickly cured by Dr. Kings&#13;
New Life Pills. Tbey remove sit poisonous&#13;
germs from the system- a i d&#13;
infuse new life and vitror; cure soar&#13;
stomach, nausia, headache, digjsiness&#13;
and colic, without griping or discomfort.&#13;
25c. Guaranteed by F. A. Sigler&#13;
druggist.&#13;
DR. PIERCE'S Malted Cocoa The Oooom with&#13;
m DoUomto Hmfom&#13;
MALTED COCOA ig prepared by I --—&#13;
ally combining the cocoa of the cbotM&#13;
cocoa bean and the best of malt* ***?&#13;
malt aiding digestion, and theiatcf tfcav&#13;
cocoa having been predigeated, the!&#13;
feeling of heaviness experienced after!&#13;
drinking the ordinary cocoas is a voided;!&#13;
thus a most delicious end nourishing!&#13;
U_cetage is pr*A—iced, which U '&#13;
fectly pure and will not distress tbe&#13;
most delicate stomach*&#13;
/i»r salt by your dtuUr,&#13;
KERR'S&#13;
Malted Extract&#13;
OF TOMATO One teaspoonfal to a cop of boiling water&#13;
makes a delicious Bouillon.&#13;
For sale by your dealer, p r e p a r e * * /&#13;
WILLIAM B. KERR,&#13;
Medford, Boston, Mass.&#13;
All the news for $1.00 per year.&#13;
FOP County School Commissioner&#13;
A G r a d u a t e of tne Micliigau S t a t e N o r m a l College, a n d candidate&#13;
on t h e Democratic ticket for the above office, earnestly solicits y o u r&#13;
s u p p o r t at t h e coming election. Atv X in front of the name is sufficient.&#13;
S ' . ' • ' I . ! I • • — —&#13;
Theodore J . Gaul&#13;
POP County School Examiner&#13;
G r a d u a t e of the Michigan State Normal College, S u p e r i n t e n d e n t&#13;
of t h e Pinckney School and Republican C a n d i d a t e for t h e office of&#13;
County School E x a m i n e r , respectfully solicit* your vote at t h e coming&#13;
election.&#13;
Preventics, as tbe name implies.&#13;
prevent all colds and grippe when&#13;
r taken "at the sneeze .stage." Prevt-n-&#13;
^ P ^ l i . .. D&#13;
J&#13;
a n l o r t h ' " « a r e toothsome candy tablets. Pre&#13;
ypntics dissipate all colds quickly, and&#13;
taken early, when yon feel that a cold&#13;
is coming, they check and prevent&#13;
them. Preventics are thoroughly safe&#13;
for children, and as effectual for adults,&#13;
Holland recommended in 5 and&#13;
25 cent b^xes by all dealers.&#13;
L t l * V v l 5 O ACtttfyBmJLaKa*&#13;
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
DlgotU what you eat*&#13;
Frank B. Mowers&#13;
OF PUTNAM,&#13;
FOP Drain Commissioner&#13;
T h e nominee for County Drain Commissioner of the R e p u b l i c a n&#13;
ticket, is an ideal candidate for tbe position. Thirty-six y e a r s old,&#13;
with a wife and two boys and a farm of 95 acres, he is an all r o u n d&#13;
hustler. H e is a pleasaut gentleman to meet and a general favorate&#13;
with those who know him. As a farmer he knows wjiat a farm needs&#13;
to make it most productive, whether it needs g r a i n i n g or w h e t h e r it&#13;
does not. L a s t s p r i n g he was re-elected township highway commissioner&#13;
by a good safe majority in a s t r o n g democratic t o w n s h i p a n d&#13;
t h a t too after he had served one term. H e is also chief G l e a n e r in&#13;
t h e A r b o r of his t o w n s h i p and director in his school d i s t r i c t W h e n&#13;
a boy he had the misfortune to have his h i p dislocated a n d has to&#13;
wear a lift :&gt;f some two inches on one of his shoes. T h e lameness&#13;
caused by this misfortune is a decided d i s a d v a n t a g e in m u c h of h i s&#13;
farm work where he has to follow a team. H e is the first a n d only&#13;
c a n d i d a t e in t h e county to be nominated for d r a i n commissioner by&#13;
direct vote of the people and now it is n p to t h e people to see t h a t h e&#13;
is elected to the position in November next. N o m i n a t e d by direct&#13;
vote of the people and if elected by the people he will be t h e people's&#13;
d r a i n commissioner a n d will work for t h e i r interest. T h i s y e a r is&#13;
the first time that the people have had the r i g h t to n o m i n a t e a n d&#13;
elect a County D r a i n Commissioner.&#13;
STATK OF MICHIGAN, The Probate CUDrt fortha&#13;
County of Livingston,&#13;
At a session of said court held at the 1'ro&#13;
bate office in the village or Howell, In said&#13;
county, on the lstday of October", A., r&gt;. 19)16.&#13;
Present, Hon. Arthur A Montague, Judi;e ot&#13;
of Probate, In the matter of the estate o f&#13;
ALSX MKRCKR, deceased.&#13;
Rosina Mercer having filed in said court her&#13;
final account as adminstratrlx of said estate, and&#13;
her petition praying for the allowance thereof,&#13;
It is ordired that Friday, the 2nd day of November&#13;
A. D. jiDCC, at ten v't lock in the forenoon at&#13;
said probate office, be and is hereby appointed far&#13;
examining and allowing said account:&#13;
It is mrtherordered. that public noti.-e thereof&#13;
be given by pnbllcationof a copy ot this order, for&#13;
three successive weeks previous to HMIII day of&#13;
hearing It) the I'ISCK&gt;KV DIBPHTI'H, a newspader&#13;
printed and circulated in said count*-. i-t.i&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAGUE,&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
St a t e o f M i c h i g a n , County oi I.i\ ini^tnn&#13;
SB; Probate Court for nald county. Kstato of&#13;
GHOKUK H. IU'TLKR, deceased.&#13;
The underBiyued having ooert appointed, by&#13;
Judge of Probate ot said county, cummiseibners on&#13;
claime'inthe matter of said estate, and four months&#13;
from the -,&gt;4th day of September, A. U. 190t&gt; having&#13;
been allowed b/said Judge of Probate to alt persons&#13;
holding clairrs against said estate in which to&#13;
present their claims to ns for examination and&#13;
adjustment.&#13;
Not ce is hereby .riven that we will meet on the&#13;
24th day of Novviuber, A. D. 11*06, and on the J.&gt;th&#13;
day of January, A. n. l'.ljr, :if tea nVloek n. in of&#13;
each day at the residence of the late (ieor^e It.&#13;
Butler in thetowntdiipof Hamburg in sai i county,&#13;
to receive and examine such claims&#13;
Dated: Howell, Mich. Pept-Mubor -.Mth. v. i&gt;. litoi,&#13;
K. C. Iuslee ]&#13;
t 41 A liner Butler)&#13;
Commissioners on Claim*&#13;
• C&#13;
Mortgrag'e Sale&#13;
Default having !&gt;eeii made in the condition s of&#13;
a mortgage made by David 1». Chalker and Amy t.&#13;
Chalker, his wife, tothe Globe Fence Company, a&#13;
Michigan Corporation, dated August 31,190,1, and •&#13;
recorded iu (he office of the register of deeds, for&#13;
the county of Livingston and the state of Michigan,&#13;
on the 24th day of August, A. D. 1905, in liber&#13;
94 of mortgages on page 548 and said mo rtgage&#13;
containir g a clause stating that should default be&#13;
made in the payment of said principal or interest&#13;
or any part thereof when the same are pavable as&#13;
above provided and should the same or any part&#13;
thereof remain unpaid for the period of thirty&#13;
days then the principal sum, with all arrearage*&#13;
of interest shall at the option of said mortage*&#13;
its legal representatives and assi^rirt become payable&#13;
immediately thereafter and (lie interest on&#13;
suit 1 mortgage, which became dii-&gt; on the 2Hh day&#13;
Of August, A n. 190«, not having been paid and&#13;
the same having remained unpaid for the period&#13;
of thirty da* s, said mortgagee does hereby declare&#13;
ttiat the principal sum of said mortgage with all&#13;
arrearages of interest is now due and tnat the&#13;
same shall become payable immediately and the&#13;
said mortgagee claims there is due at the date of&#13;
thisnotice the sum of S']*).71, and an attorney's&#13;
fee ofSl\00 provided for in said mortgage aifd no&#13;
suit or proceedings at law having been instituted&#13;
to recover the moneys seemed by said mortgage. J&#13;
or any part thereof, NOW WHIt? I-'OUE hy virtue&#13;
o-f the power of s*!e. contained In s&amp;id mortgage&#13;
i»nd the statute In siid case made »nd p r o&#13;
vided, notice is hereby given that on Thursday.&#13;
December 27, A. D. 190«, at one o'clock in tbe afternoon,&#13;
there will be sold at public auction to tua&#13;
highest bidder at the westerly front door of the '•&#13;
Court House in the Tillage of Howell, Livlngeto*&#13;
county, Michigan, (that being the place where thf »&#13;
Circuit Court for Livingston county is held) 1 1 » &amp;&#13;
premises described in aald tnortgajw or so meet&#13;
thereof as may be necessary to pay the araonat&#13;
due on aatri mortgage with &amp; per oent interest ami&#13;
all legal costs, together with an attorney's fee of&#13;
SIJMO as covenanted therein ; the said premise* being&#13;
described in said nortagage oa the east half&#13;
of the muthwest quarter (&gt;*) of eection number&#13;
thirty, in township number one north of range&#13;
number four east, Michigan, being In the township&#13;
of Putnam, county of Livlagaton ami state&#13;
of Michigan, thU Mortafage being-subject to a&#13;
prior mortgage on said pretniaee.&#13;
Globe Fence Company, a corporation.&#13;
Mortagee.&#13;
Dated September 2t5, A. n. 1900.&#13;
Shields A Shields,&#13;
Attorney lor Mortgagee. t ?&gt;2&#13;
. * .&#13;
The&#13;
Griswold&#13;
House&#13;
POSTAL 4 MOF'«V,&#13;
M O M i r O N *&#13;
DETROIT,&#13;
Rates, $2. $.* &gt;'».&#13;
Bra*&#13;
' etae*.&#13;
mod era,&#13;
up rn-data&#13;
H o t i i i i K - . L e ^&#13;
ir. i ;&gt;. •• .1 f i » 1&#13;
t l j * t .1 v&#13;
1 P';r r&gt;at.&#13;
'. » &lt;i «*«•«.&#13;
H You Suffer with&#13;
Rheumatism&#13;
Br. Shoop's Rheumatic Remedy WIS&#13;
Bring the Utmost Relief that&#13;
Medicine Can.&#13;
A Badly Burned «irl&#13;
or boy, mail or woman is quickly oat&#13;
of pain if Buck ten's Arnica SaKe is&#13;
applied proraptiy. - G J. Welch ot&#13;
Tekontha, Aiicb. says: I use it in my&#13;
family lor cuts, tores and all skin injuries&#13;
and find it perfect, Quicke&amp;t&#13;
pile cure known. He»t healing salve&#13;
made. 25c at Siller's di \in store.&#13;
The one rrrnody which man,- phrdclans rely i&#13;
upon to free the system of the Rtn-.miiitio Polsona&#13;
which are tho cause of uli Kheuraatism, !&#13;
I.umbuiro. Sduticu-, Gout, U Da. Snoop's. R H I U - &gt;&#13;
MATio HKMKuy. Dr, Shoojj spent twenty years&#13;
in experimenting be-&gt;®vfore lie discovered tm«&#13;
6 0 YEAR8'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
TRADE M A R K S&#13;
DESIGNS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A C .&#13;
Anyone sending a sketch and description may&#13;
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an&#13;
invention Is probnb)y patentable. CommuntcatloiisotricMymiindeiitial.&#13;
HANDBOOK on Patents&#13;
sent free, oldest uizency for securmg patents.&#13;
Patents taken through Munn &amp; Co. receive&#13;
tpecial notice, without charge, tn the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Lamest circulation&#13;
of any scientific journal. Terms. $3 a&#13;
year: l»ur months, $L Sold by all newsdealer*. NHMmifio » • — - * New York&#13;
Braedi Office. « 6 F SU Washiuifton. D. C.&#13;
All the news for $1.00 per year.&#13;
combined chemi.-al&#13;
one almost always&#13;
Rheumatism, etc&#13;
I SHOOP'S RHKH&#13;
can turn bou.v&#13;
again —thut i*&#13;
liutitcan and&#13;
f r o m t h e&#13;
p o i s o n i&#13;
caused t h e&#13;
swelling. And&#13;
end of the pain&#13;
theend of thesuf&#13;
of Rheumatism.&#13;
falls where a cure is&#13;
put up In tablet or 11- v&#13;
either. Von who have&#13;
Through Tourist Sleeping Cars&#13;
to California via&#13;
Chicago Great Western Railway&#13;
nich made possible Leaving (Jbicauo 6:00 p. ni. SVednes-&#13;
• e r t u i n cure for , . . . . . ,&gt; nn • Not thdt D B . days, arriving at (Jmata 9:00 a. m.&#13;
joints into fleaK' Ihursdays, Colorado t^imus 7:50 a.&#13;
i m p o s s i b l e . ' ii .-^ ,, .. • . . , . m o r&#13;
will drive, m^rndays, bait Lake City 10:25 a. ra.&#13;
bw h V 0&#13;
h ! Saturdays, arrive at San Francisco&#13;
knthutisul 4:28 p. m. Sundays. A «cod way to&#13;
feart-ihene,nl «° ttjr the ' rates are low. For full&#13;
This remedy never iutormation apply to&#13;
ossible. It is now nuid form-ask fori F. R. Mosier. U. P. A.&#13;
suffered and are auf« _ „ 1 A O , \ - / - 1 , . - n i&#13;
103 Adam* St.. Cbicago, III.&#13;
Danger from the Plague&#13;
ferlns; toduy from palnsv and aches which yen 1&amp;2&#13;
know to be Rheumatism; you who experience&#13;
lameness or twinges of pain* in damp weather;&#13;
you who easily become stiff and lame without'&#13;
apparent cause—just try DR. SHOOP'S RHETJ*&#13;
MATIC CURi:. It is just the kind of a remedy „ .. . ,&#13;
that accomplishes resulns. Sold and re com* : t h e r e s a r e a t d a n g e r t r o m t h e p l a g u e&#13;
mended by&#13;
• • M T HT,' \ ! rrpc " of coughs and colds that are so preva-&#13;
! lent, unless you take Dr. Kini/ s j\evv&#13;
. ; Ditcovery lor Consuttiptioti, cou-hs,&#13;
r JP© land colds. Mrs. G*o. Wal-s of Forest&#13;
Koe. V n fi*&#13;
Subscribe tcr the Plnckney Dispateo&#13;
; City, Ale., writes:&#13;
' peoyle&#13;
BLOOD DISEASES CURED&#13;
WJ d —&#13;
Drs. K. &amp; K. Established 25 Years.&#13;
49" NO NAMES USED W I T H -&#13;
OUT WRITTEN CONSENT.&#13;
After Treatment*&#13;
H e w a s wurprlsed a t h o w t h e&#13;
• o r e s ht-uled—''I t o o k y o u r N e w&#13;
Method T r e a t m e n t , f o r a s e r i o u s&#13;
blood d i s e a s e v.'ith whirh. I h a d&#13;
b e e n a t l l i c U d for t w e l v e yenrd.&#13;
I ' h a d c o n s u l t e d a score of p h y -&#13;
s i c i a n s , t a k e n a l l k i n d s of blood&#13;
m e d i c i n e , v i s i t e d H o t S p r i n g&#13;
and o t h e r m i n e r a l -water r e -&#13;
s o r t s , 1-uit only g o t t e m p o r a r y&#13;
relief. T h e y w o u l d h e l p me for&#13;
a • time, b u t a f t e r d i s c o n t i n u i n g&#13;
the 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 ^ 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 , sores, b l o t c h e s , r h e u m a t i c pains,&#13;
l o o s e n e s s of 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 of t h e h a n d s scaling-, i t c h i n e s s of t h e s k i n , d y s p e p -&#13;
tic s t o m a c h , e t c . I had g i v e n u p i n d e s p a i r w h e n a friend a d v i s e d m e&#13;
to c o n s u l t you, a s y o u h a d c u r e d h i m of 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 no hope, 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;
Method T r e a t m e n t f o r f o u r 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 had 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 and 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 boy, t h r e e y e a r s old, 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 s l l m y heart. Y o u c a n&#13;
refer a n y p e r s o n t o me 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;
a s y o u w i s h . " W. H. S.&#13;
W e t r e a t N e r v o u s D e b i l i t y , V a r i c o c e l e , Strlcturr. 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 * , 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 of&#13;
m e n a n d w o m e n .&#13;
A r e y o u a v i c t i m ? H a v e y o u l o s t h o p e ? Are y o u i n t e n d -&#13;
.. i n g t o m a r r y ? H a s y o u r blood been 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 cure you. W h a t i t&#13;
h a s d o n e f o r o t h e r s it w i l l d o f o r you. CONSULTATION F R E E . N o&#13;
rr..ttter w h o lvn« treated 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 of&#13;
C a r g o . C h a r g e s r e a s o n a b l e . B O O K S F F . E E — " T h e Golde n Monitor"'&#13;
( i l l u s t r a t e d ) , • o n D i s e a s e s of M e n . S e a l e d B o o k o n " D i s e a s e s of&#13;
W o m e n " F r e e .&#13;
NO N A M E S rSEFJ W I T H O U T WRITTEN" CONSENT. E v e r y t h i n g&#13;
c o n f i d e n t i a l . Q u e a t i o u l i s t a n d coat o f t r e a t m e n t F R E E .&#13;
READER&#13;
l t \ a Godsend to&#13;
living in climates where couyh*&#13;
; and colds prevail. I find it quickly&#13;
ends tbem." Ifprevunts pneumonia,&#13;
; cures la^rippe, yives wond-itu! leliel&#13;
; u. asthma and hay f'-ver and makes&#13;
:,weak lun^s strong eiiuu-h to ward off&#13;
! &lt;:(ii)&gt;n:itphon, c-.o^bvmni etlds. 50\:&#13;
j Mid £ 1 0 0 'i'ri.ti i. :Hie fi H ( i i i j i i f t t t d&#13;
J by F. A . Sitfier's d n t t f stot •&#13;
Can you win? Yon realize that to&#13;
win anything tLese days, requires&#13;
strength, with mind and body in tune.&#13;
A man or woman with disordered dil&#13;
a t i v e organs is nr.t in shape tor a&#13;
days work or a days play. * How can&#13;
they e/pect to win? Kodol for Uys&#13;
pepsia contains the digestive juices ct&#13;
I bealtby 8,omacb aod will pat j W " S L y g y . ¾ . "PASS? 2*S?&#13;
oembtned with the greatest known leakf&#13;
and reconstructive properties. Kodol Dye*&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach No appetite, loss of strength, i&#13;
nets, 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 dlsoe**&#13;
stomach in shape to perform its im&#13;
portant function of supplying the&#13;
; J J i .un»„^, *. t.,;M;r,,. pepsia Cure does not only cure indigestios&#13;
body and brain with BtrenUb building . Sri d,*»psi*, but this'famous remedy&#13;
blood. Digests what you ear, relieves | euros all stomach troubles by cleansing,&#13;
indigestion, dyspepsia, sour stomach, j purifying, sweetening and strengtheninf&#13;
* ' , , .- I the mucous membranes lining the stomach.&#13;
palpitation of the heart., constipation j Mr s s ^ ^ Raveniwoodi Wi Va..»«ys{-&#13;
riold by F. A. Sigler, Drogglt. • ^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ ^ ¾ ¾&#13;
TT^^^^^^r^^^^rr^^^r^r^^r^l for baby." State of Michigan, cne prubate court for Kodol Digests What Yoa Bat&#13;
the county of Livingston.- At a seesion ot said ; B o t t l a g ^ ^ $ , Q 0 S U a hofc,1|&gt;t ^ M m M ^&#13;
Court, held at tbe Probata Office iu tbu Vil'age oi | Hie, which sell*for 50-centa&#13;
llowell in said 1'ouaLy, uu the 5ih day of October 1&#13;
4. u. 1006. Preaeut, Hon. Artbur A. Montague,&#13;
Judge uf Probate. Iu the matter of the estate of j&#13;
• C U K A A HICKS, deceased |&#13;
John A. Ta&gt;lor bavin« filed in said court his&#13;
liual account aa admiuetraUir of &lt;said estate, and&#13;
hie petition prajing for the allowance thereof.&#13;
it ia ordered, that Friday, the 2nd day of November&#13;
A. D., 19o6, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at&#13;
said probate office, be and is hereby appointed for&#13;
examining aud allowing »aid account.&#13;
It is further ordered, that "uublic notice&#13;
Prepared by B. O. DeWITT ft OO., OHlOAOa&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, t)ruggi§t.&#13;
Ask for the 190(5 Kodol almanac&#13;
aDtl 200 calendar.&#13;
HOLLISTER'S&#13;
Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets&#13;
A Busy Medicine for Busy People.&#13;
Brinss Golden Health and Renewed Vigor.&#13;
A specific for Constipation. Indigestion, Liver&#13;
thereof be given by publication of a copy of a n ( j Kidney'troubles, Pimples. Eczema, Impure&#13;
thi* n™w for t!ir*« Bu.f-pssive weeks orevions to ' Ulood. Bad Hreath. SluKtfish Bowels. Headache&#13;
tins order, tor tnree euttessne weeks prt\ious 10 . ^ n ' a e k a c h e &gt; I t s R0 c uy Mountain Tea in tabsaid&#13;
day of hearing in the Pinckney DxsrATCU a i l e t f01-m. accents a liox. clenuine made by.&#13;
newspaper printed and circuited in county. . ' H O L L I S I E H THWG COMTANT. Madison, &gt;Vis.&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAGUE, 1 GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPLE&#13;
t 4 3 Judge of Probate.&#13;
Subscribe for the Pinckney Dispatco.&#13;
All the newt for $1.00 per year.&#13;
THE ORIGINAL LAVATiVE COUCH SYRUF&#13;
KENNEDY'S LAXAT.VEH08EY-TARI&#13;
r*d Clover BICSJRO! aci Horr . Z?a en Every Bottle.&#13;
eOBLlSUKD EVKBT TUUB3DA V Mt)».&gt;.i'« k\&#13;
F R A N K l_. A N D R E W S So CO.&#13;
EDITORS AMD PROPRIETORS.&#13;
a inscription Price $1 in Auvauce.&#13;
-.aiereu &gt;%i tuo fodCodic«s al Pinckney, Michigai.&#13;
ad seconu-clase matter-&#13;
Advertifling rates made kuowu on application.&#13;
Railroad Guide&#13;
daslness Cards, $4.00 per year.&#13;
Teath and marriage uotice.e puuiienedfrwo.&#13;
' Anuouncementa of entertainments may bs ^aU&#13;
tor, if desired, uy ^r^eeatifl^tne office with tick&#13;
I ,, t e of admission, In case tictets are not iruut't t&#13;
i to tUooflIce,r«h-ular ihtbe wilibb cnart-*-.&#13;
j Ail matterin locainoilcecolumn wiliDech^r^c&#13;
ed at 5 canta per line or fraction thereof, fur each&#13;
! insertion. VVhere no time is specified, all notice*&#13;
! will be inserted until ordered discontinued, anc&#13;
' will U« charged for accordingly. fJT~All change*&#13;
j jf adrertUementB MUST reach thlaoliice as earlj&#13;
as TUESDAY morning to insure an insertion th*&#13;
i iitine week.&#13;
JOS f&amp;IATIJVG!&#13;
&gt; • in all ita branches, a specialty. We have all kint =&#13;
.^nd the latest styles ol Type, etc., which enablts&#13;
ua to execute all kinds ot work, such as Booke,&#13;
: i'lvnipiets, Posters, Prograuimes, Bili Heads, Nou |&#13;
; deads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bids, etc.,in ;&#13;
^ui&lt;erior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices ai ;&#13;
I low as good work can be aone. :&#13;
! ALL B1LL3 PAYABLE FIRST OF SVKBT MONTH. ;&#13;
ERE MARQUETTE&#13;
^ oT X^K $ •&#13;
DRS KENNEDY&amp; KERGAN Cor. Michigan A v e . and S h e l b y St., Detroit, Mich.&#13;
"^ -..--i«&amp;^ BUY THE FAMOUS&#13;
incoln Steel Range! £*&#13;
X c&#13;
J ^&#13;
Bakmm&#13;
Cook*&#13;
Wear*&#13;
Look*&#13;
Unequalled&#13;
mt&#13;
any&#13;
.viior« .&#13;
THE BEST!&#13;
price.&#13;
COSTS NO MORE THAN AN UNKNOWN MAKE.&#13;
B e f o r e y o u b u y that range or c o o k s t o v e ,&#13;
w r i t e us, a n d w e will mail y o u a c o p y of&#13;
"Points for Purchasers "&#13;
It is free for t h e asking. Full of u s e f u l information.&#13;
TME LiNGQLN STOVE &amp; RANGE COMPANY, Fremont, Ohio.&#13;
THE HESS FURNACE&#13;
i s t h e b e s t t h i n g w e&#13;
e v e r m a d e a n d w e ' v e&#13;
b e e n m a k i n g f u r n a c e s thirty-three y e a r s . I t i s S o l i d 3 t e e t —&#13;
e v e r y j o i n t riveted. N e v e r leaks. H a s l i n e d c a s i n g , chain&#13;
regulation, e v a p o r a t i n g p a n , e t c . Burns a n y fuel e c o n o m -&#13;
ically. Made i n six s i z e s ; p o w e r f u l a n d durable.&#13;
WE SELL DIRECT TO CONSUMERS.&#13;
a n d s a v e y o u d e a l e r s ' profits, - e n d l o r full 4 0 p a g e b o o *&#13;
w h i c h fully d e s c r i b e s o u r g o o d s 4 h d o u r m a k e r - t O » U s e r&#13;
m e t h o d of s e l l i n g . W e c a n s a v e y o u m o n e y i n b u y i n g a n d&#13;
fuel i n u s i n g . Y o u r n a m e o n a p o s t a l card, p l e a s e .&#13;
HESS WARMING &amp; VENTILATING COMPANY.&#13;
921 Tacoma Building, Chicago, Ills.&#13;
CURES&#13;
RHEUMATISM&#13;
LUMBIBO, SCIATICA&#13;
NEURALGIA and&#13;
KIDNEY TROUBLE&#13;
"5-DR0PS" tiken internally, rids the blood&#13;
of the pois &gt;nous matter and. acids which |&#13;
are the direct causes of these diseases.&#13;
Applied externally it affords almost instant&#13;
relief from pain, while a permanent |&#13;
cure is being effected by purifying the&#13;
blood, dissolving the poisonous substance&#13;
and removing it from the system.&#13;
Dtl. S- D. BLAND&#13;
Of B r e w ton, Ga., write*:&#13;
"1 had been a sufferer for a number of years I&#13;
with Lumbago and Rheumatism In my arms I&#13;
ami leffe. »nd tried all the remedies that I could&#13;
n t i x r from medical «0*«», and also coasulted j&#13;
with a number of the beat physicians, but found j&#13;
tA'Unmm shaft •»*• •*• relief obtained from&#13;
•S-DKOPS." 1 shall prescribe It la m* inaUoe&#13;
(or rbwumatUat and Kindred dlMaMa." FREE If yon are suffering with Rheumatism, 1&#13;
Neuralgia. Kidrey TrovMe T any kin-&#13;
: \1 dl'ii'asQ.-jrr te to us a r t *ial bottle1&#13;
f "6-DROPS.** and test -t yoarself. 1&#13;
' 5-DROPS" can be used any length of;&#13;
„, time without acquiring a "drug habit."!&#13;
E«: : s it is entirely free of opium, coeaine. :'-' alcohol, laudanum, and other similar |&#13;
^¾ injiredimts.&#13;
,&amp; i*rge Size Battle, ••6-DBOP8" (BOO D«Ma)&#13;
H fl.OO. F«r Sate by Drvggiats.&#13;
SWAKS0H RHEUMAT10 SORE COstPAlY,&#13;
THE VILLAGF DiRECl'OKY&#13;
ViLi_AGic O r r - I U t r t b .&#13;
i'i»usiDBi«T K K. Browu&#13;
tHLSTBEs lluben Finch, J;iiue» Kocue,&#13;
&lt;Vill l v c a l i o d . . Of , . J a l U i . J O U i l t h ,&#13;
?. J. Teeple, t&gt;C. Farntnn.&#13;
CLKKIV Kugt-r Carr&#13;
I'ltjiAsi-'HiiH Mariou J. lie^soii&#13;
AasLsduU D. \V .Murta&#13;
^TKKiT LOMMI^SUSKH \V\ A. 2SiiOn&#13;
lij.Ai m UITICEK Dr. h . r". oilier .&#13;
A l i o i t &gt; t i W . A. Carr&#13;
JIAUSUALL Win. Moran&#13;
U H O R C H E S .&#13;
. j L, i'liuUlsT £iJliCOr,AL. C11L KCH.&#13;
AIA iicv. L). v-, i_iiue:viun ^'ditur. aer\icea e\ e:&#13;
CH-.«U^ ni I':JU o'kU'iiL, x'fttjel' a»e-etiUfc Ttiu.t&#13;
±*j cveniui,b. aauaay sciiuoi at close ot OIOIL&#13;
l a e f f e c t A p r . S O , 1 9 C E .&#13;
Trains leave South L y o n us follow*.:&#13;
t o r Detroit and E a s t ,&#13;
h):4S a. m., 2:1&lt;J p . ra. ^."&gt;&gt; p . m .&#13;
F o r ( i r a n d Rapids, North and We-st.&#13;
'.»:2Ga. ni., 2 :19 p . m.p 6:1^ p . . u .&#13;
For Siigiaaw ami Rny City,&#13;
111:4S a. m., 2:1^ p . m., "?•";&gt; p. ru.&#13;
For T o l e d o and S o u t h ,&#13;
10:4S a. m., 2:19 p . m.,&#13;
FRAMtBir, Q. F. MOELLEH,&#13;
Agent,South L*on. '4. P. A., Detroit,&#13;
ttrand Trnak Railway System.&#13;
F.a»t Bound from FinckTiPv&#13;
No1 -J* Passenger Fs SUM.IV, ) : &gt; A . M .&#13;
.No. 30 Pa?sen^r Kx. Sui^ny, t:".sp. y,.&#13;
West Borind frcir. i'i; rkiuy&#13;
Xo. 27 Pa^senL'er Ex. Sundav, ]&gt;)•.'&lt;&gt;] » . V .&#13;
j No. -29 Pas9en-_'t.-r Ex, Mmday. v.u F. y,&#13;
I Solid wide vestibuU* trains of c&lt;»a'. Ii--- .-in -1 "levijj&#13;
ini; oars are operated to N^iv York oind Phihidoj-&#13;
| phiai via Niagara F.dls l.y tho ' &lt; rra'- i Tr iii.k-I.e&#13;
hiL'b.'Valley hioute.&#13;
1 " V*. ii.''!ark A _\ :.r&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
P R O C U R E D A N D D E T E N D E D . s -"'! model,&#13;
dnl»::.» •!;•'.'!•.I.•!•*•-., ' • i '•'•&lt; .-.:. • •. rvp&lt;irt.&#13;
I'm- ;t ;-.ii.. i...»- to -j.ji^.n i .&lt;.&gt;'.'-, t::i.ii- niarkB,&#13;
copyrifhts, etv.-., | N, A LL_ C O U NTR1 E S .&#13;
ZJusi ant direct •z.'ith K'tj.. it'ingten i^ies time,&#13;
mont-y and often the patent.&#13;
Patent and Infringement Practice Exclusively..&#13;
Write nr come to Us at&#13;
013 Ninth Strwt. opp. United SUtet PktenJ Oflee,&#13;
WASHINGTON, D. C. GASNOW&#13;
L'.NvjrUtiuiAlKJ.NAi. C i l i . ' r t C ' l i .&#13;
N.' tiev. U.W. Ja&gt;in« piustor. ?arwc*eveir i&#13;
&gt;jauiiy ujf^ia^ »1 iJ:J-t A^a evary s u a u * . \&#13;
.»ouin&lt; *i i'mtoCiJC*. i'rayer uieettuk, riniU \&#13;
J.A&gt; eveaiugb. aaaddy acnool at ^ioaeu: mori.&#13;
iLmb«rvice. Percy swartnout, aupi,, -Uuctt i&#13;
1 c«ple sec. j&#13;
O rtev. M. J. Couiuieriora, laator. 'jervios- :&#13;
jver^ Sunday. LVW uitma ai ,:iuo cio^i :&#13;
uitju Luaua withserinon at a-.an a. m. Cat«cnuu ;&#13;
t J ;oo p. in., vespershnabenediction at 7:3u \&gt;. u.&#13;
, M . M I . I I I I ' * ' ~ !&#13;
oOCldTlfcS. i&#13;
KILLTHE COUCH&#13;
AND C U R E 7H2 L U N C S&#13;
M&#13;
I^he A. 0 . H. Society of thia place, meets every&#13;
, third Sunday intue b'r. .Vlattuuw daii.&#13;
jonn l uomey and M. 1'. hLelly.Coauty Diiti»aui\&#13;
tob « . L, 1. U. lueets the tirei Friday oi eatu&#13;
uibnth at ^:oo p. in. at ttie home of t»r. ti. r'.&#13;
.Mgier. Everyone inu-resiea in temperance its&#13;
cuaUiaily-iuviteU. Mrs. Ueal sutler, t'res; Mri.&#13;
t.tt« Durtee,secretary.&#13;
WITHDrB King's&#13;
New Oiscavery&#13;
FORC """ 'ONSUIWPTION&#13;
0UGHS and&#13;
/OLDS&#13;
Price&#13;
50c &amp; $1.00&#13;
Free Trial.&#13;
Sureat and Quickest Cure for all&#13;
THROAT and LTJNG TROUBL£&#13;
S, or MONEY BACK.&#13;
l&gt;epl. MO. 10O L»k« Street, Galeag*. A he C. i . A . anc b. auuei* ot this place, n?e,&#13;
eveo' third saturaay evening in the i r. ^»&gt;&#13;
John Donohue, Ireiideni.&#13;
e.'.eiy evenin&#13;
i tui-w H a l i . I.&#13;
Disease&#13;
land Health&#13;
CUSTOM MADE FLY SCREENS Our work \s for superior to the usual output of local mills, and has a style and&#13;
finish hot obtainable from those who do not make a speoialty of screens. Send&#13;
us bir.es of doots and windows. We guarantee a fit&#13;
\ For outside Screens wto use the identical finish of the outside of Pullman Cars.&#13;
The best grade of Wire Cloths-enameled,, galvanized genuine bronze, etc.,&#13;
fastened by tacks or by the •Mocksjtrip" process.&#13;
Intending purchasers may have, free by mail, samples of woods, finishes&#13;
and wwiirree ccrlootttht aanndd ccooppyy ooff ccaattaalloogg aanndd pprriiccee lliisstt AAggcein cies 'in many cities.&#13;
Special terms to contractors and builders.&#13;
Yho A. J. PHILLIPS COMPANY, Fenton, Michigan.&#13;
9 1 -» Ao+om mf Floor&#13;
REVIVO&#13;
RESTORES VITALITY&#13;
"Made a&#13;
Well Nan&#13;
of Me."&#13;
p r o d n e e s f i n e r e * u l t a l a 3 0 d * y » . It acts , " " « a b e 4 hall&#13;
• M C i U i S O F ilACCABKlia. :&#13;
i \ . M e e i every Friday evening on or oetoretmi&#13;
.'i the mouii at itreir hall iu the S w s n u o m bidg&#13;
Visiting brothers art cordially invited. j&#13;
CJUJS. I . lAiHi-VLL Mi hnitLi CinmctJ |&#13;
Ll»iug«ton Lodge, No.?ti, F 4 . A. M. Kejulai |&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before j&#13;
m e t u l l o t the moon. Kirk VauWinkle. \S . M ,&#13;
OKDER OF EASTERN STAR meetaeach uionti- !&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F. |&#13;
A A^=M. meeting, MRS.NtTTi£ VAUUIIN, W. M. I&#13;
0 .. EH OK MODERN WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
dtit 'i'nursday evening of each Month in the&#13;
C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
powerfully and Quickly. t'ure.H when others fail. ,&#13;
Youn»rmen can reffaiu thoir lost manhood and ! I A D I E S OF THE MACCABEUS. Mesterery is&#13;
old men may recover their youthful vi^or by i-L&lt;'&#13;
using K K V I V O . It quiokly and re- THE ONLY PRACTICAL&#13;
StenciiDish&#13;
NIGHTS 0 » T U S LOYAL GUARD&#13;
k F. L, Andrews F*. M,&#13;
i and Ard Saturday of each n:onth at si:80 p m. a&#13;
quietly r e - !&#13;
K . o . T . M. hall. Visiting .listers cordially in&#13;
roovi&gt;3 Nt-rvousnefi*. "Ix&gt;sit'Vitality. S e t u a l : »ued. LILA CONtWAY, Lady Coin.&#13;
Weakness siu-B a s Lost Power. FniUni'Memory, i : :&#13;
Wustiutf Disease*, and effecu yf self-abuse or&#13;
excess nnd indisoretton, which unfits one for&#13;
study. buslnnsM or marTiatr*'. It not only cures&#13;
by starting at the seat of disease, but is a great&#13;
, n e r v o t o n f c a n d b l o o d b u i l d e r , bringing&#13;
bo*k the p i n k giovr 1« i m l e c h e e k s and re-&#13;
. tuerlajr Ahe « r e &lt;M y o u t h . It warda o * approaching&#13;
disease. Insist on having R B V 1 V 6 , 1 *° ^ . ^ ^ J ' c a n ^ 6 « » m « d iu vest nocket. By&#13;
, mail. $ 1 . 0 0 per package, or six for $ 5 . 0 0 . We&#13;
give free advice and counsel to all who wish it,&#13;
with g u a r a n t e e . Circulars free. Address&#13;
MYAL MICHCHIE CO.. Marine Bido.. Chicago, III.&#13;
I Sold by p . A. Sigler, Druggist 1 piflciaraiY, MICE.&#13;
1&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F.SIQLER M. 0- C, L, SIGLER M, 0&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Phyalciaaa and Surgeons. All calls promptly&#13;
attsaaedtsday oraicat. Odioe on Mainstieet&#13;
Pincluwy, Mica.&#13;
It Is compact, can be can ed r^llv. nnrt allc&#13;
the operator to gauge the nuuuuty of laa deau&#13;
SAVE3 TIME. 8AVE8 INKs&#13;
Kper« brashes and ink where you yvant them, and&#13;
la a;ways lOLVDY FOK 1 &gt; S T A &gt; T U8K»&#13;
A perfect combination is obtained wben&#13;
WHITE'S WATERPRQQF STEWIL III u n*.-,\. u it easily applied and sett quietly. Ho&#13;
ftnut or fading.&#13;
SAVES BRUSHES. SAVES STENCILS. SAVES TIME.&#13;
:v,.* '.!•.". harden brushe* or clfjg stencfla. Dont&#13;
•-i..e our word lor it, TEST I T . -Jiade only by&#13;
3. A . vfrvrrnE co-f&#13;
High St.,Boston,Ma\s8.U.S.A.&#13;
v&#13;
ip&#13;
ZAV&#13;
WOULD CURB BI6 FORTUNES&#13;
PRESIDENT TO URGE REFORM IN&#13;
MESSAGE TO CONGRESS.&#13;
Will Recommend Enactment of Inheritance&#13;
Tax Law—Field Estate&#13;
an Instance.&#13;
Washington. — President Roosevelt&#13;
has inserted in the preliminary&#13;
draft Of his forthcoming annual&#13;
message to congress a recommendation&#13;
that a law be passed imposirfg a&#13;
national tax upon Inheritances. The&#13;
president first called public attention&#13;
to this idea In his celebrated "muck&#13;
rake" speech wMch he delivered at&#13;
the laying of the corner stone of the&#13;
office building of the house of representatives-&#13;
AprlPH Idst.&#13;
Therein he expressed the view that&#13;
ultimately the United States would&#13;
have to consider (he adoption of some&#13;
•such scheme as that of a progressive&#13;
tax on all fortunes beyond a certain&#13;
amount either given in life or devised&#13;
or bequeathed upon death to any individual—&#13;
a tax so framed as to put it&#13;
out of the power of the owner of one&#13;
of these enormous fortunes to hand on&#13;
more than a certain amouut to any&#13;
one individual. Such taxation should&#13;
be aimed merely at the inheritance or&#13;
transmission in their entirety of those&#13;
fortunes swollen beyond all healthy&#13;
limits,&#13;
He deeply regrets, for instance, that&#13;
there was no such law to prevent Marshall&#13;
Field from tyins up his estate&#13;
fu the way he did. The Field fortune&#13;
is regarded as having "swollen beyond&#13;
all healthy. limits" at the time of its&#13;
creator's death. It will be a positive&#13;
menace by the time it is turned over&#13;
to the heirs.&#13;
If John U. Rockefeller and other&#13;
wealthy men of the country should&#13;
follow the example of Mr. Field there&#13;
would develop an oligarchy of wealth&#13;
which would bring disaster to the&#13;
American, people.&#13;
.. COMING CABINET CHANGES.&#13;
AMERICAN WINS BALLOON RACE.&#13;
Lieut. Lahm Captures Contest for&#13;
James Gordon Bennett Cup.&#13;
&lt;&#13;
Paris. — Lncertainty regarding&#13;
the result of the balloon race for&#13;
the James Gordon Bcnnet cup, started&#13;
from here Sunday afternoon, was ended&#13;
at noon Tuesday when a dispatch&#13;
was received by the Aero club an&#13;
nouncing that Hon. O. S. Rolls and his&#13;
companion. Col. Capper, in the balloon&#13;
Britannia, landed between Sandringham&#13;
and the sea.at 6:30 Monday&#13;
night, thus establishing that Lieut.&#13;
Frank P. Lahm, Sixth cavalry, U. S.&#13;
A., the American competitor in the&#13;
race, who descended near&#13;
Monday afternoon in the&#13;
United States, is fhe winner.&#13;
Signor von Wilier of Italy&#13;
ond. Count de la Vaulx of&#13;
Secretaries Moody and Shaw to Retire&#13;
This Winter.&#13;
Washington.—Two retirements from&#13;
tfce president's cabinet are slated for&#13;
the coming winter. They are those of&#13;
Attorney General Moody, whose resig-&#13;
•nation will become effective about the&#13;
JtSt of December, juid that of Secretary&#13;
Shaw, who, according to present&#13;
j intentions, will retire in February,&#13;
jfof-'cae- pfiltesV vacancies io be erej&#13;
ated, the *presi4efit will nominate&#13;
I G-eorge V. L. Meyer','American ambassador&#13;
to Russia, but for the other he&#13;
is not jet ready to announce a successor.&#13;
Mr. Roosevelt has sought to prevail&#13;
qn. Attorney General Moody to remain&#13;
In the cabinet, but the latter, because&#13;
of business arrangements he&#13;
has made, has found it impossible to&#13;
do so.&#13;
He also would like to have Secretary&#13;
Bonaparte take Mr. Moody's&#13;
place when the latter retires, but the&#13;
former prefers the position at the&#13;
head of the navy department, with&#13;
whose workings he has become thoroughly&#13;
familiar. "&#13;
Some suggestion has been marie&#13;
that Secretary Metealf, of the department&#13;
of commerce and labor, take one&#13;
of the positions to be made vacant In&#13;
the proposed shifting of cabinet offices,&#13;
but he also has expressed y a&#13;
preference to remain where he is. *&#13;
POLICY KING KILLS HIMSELF&#13;
fc&#13;
"•AI" Adams, of New York, L-Inds Life&#13;
with Revolver. ., — s&#13;
N'ew York.—-Albert J. Adams, who&#13;
made a large fortune as the head of&#13;
the policy gambling combine, shot&#13;
himself in the head Sunday night at&#13;
his apartments In the Ansonia, in this&#13;
city. His dead body was found-Monday&#13;
morning. Adams had been in poor&#13;
health since his release from Sing&#13;
Sing prison, where be served a term&#13;
for having conducted a policy game&#13;
in N'ew York.&#13;
At the office of the Colonial Security&#13;
company, of which Adams is treasurer,&#13;
it was said Monday that Adams&#13;
had been ill of diabetes for a year,&#13;
and that it was this illness which&#13;
must have prompted him to commit&#13;
suicide " .&#13;
New York.—Coroner Harburger, in&#13;
a statement made Tuesday, gave an&#13;
intimation that he was not entirely&#13;
satisfied that the death of "AI" Adams,&#13;
the former so-called policy king, was&#13;
the result of suicide.&#13;
DEAD AT B L U E F I E L D MAY BE 70&#13;
Whitby&#13;
balloon&#13;
Twenty-nine Bodies Have Been Recovered&#13;
From Pocahontas Colliery.&#13;
is sec-&#13;
France&#13;
third and Hon. O. S. Rolls of Great&#13;
Britain fourth.&#13;
The beautiful cup presented for competition&#13;
by James Gordon Bennett becomes&#13;
a trophy of the Aero Club of&#13;
America. The first cash prize of $2,-&#13;
900 goes to Lieut Lahm. and the endurance&#13;
medal to Mr. Rolls, who was&#13;
the longest in the air, 26¼ hours.&#13;
BRIDGE OVER FALLS COLLAPSES&#13;
One High School Student Killed When&#13;
Crowded Structure Gives Way.&#13;
Menominee, Mich.—While a party of&#13;
25 students of Oconto, Wis., high&#13;
school were standing on a foot-bridge&#13;
at Oconto Falls, Wis.,,Friday watching&#13;
the falls, the structure collapsed, hurling&#13;
the whole party 40 feet into the&#13;
stream. William Ballou, aged 14&#13;
years, was killed and Viga Sentll, Hazel&#13;
Denizen and Frank Donlevy seriously&#13;
injured. Prof* Newcomb, the instructor,&#13;
was badly hurt, and several&#13;
others were slightly injured.&#13;
Bluefield, W. Va.—Twenty-nine bodies&#13;
have been recovered from the west&#13;
fork of the Pocahontas Collieries company&#13;
mine at Pocahontas, Va., and a&#13;
conservative estimate places the total&#13;
number of dead at 70.&#13;
The rescuing party reached the&#13;
scene of the explosion but the immense&#13;
amount of debris and wreckage&#13;
has hampered the search for bodies.&#13;
There is no evidence thus far of flre.&#13;
Raton. X. M. — A disastrous explosion&#13;
occurred early Friday in the&#13;
Dutchman coal mine at Bloasburg, a&#13;
small camp five miles from Raton, in&#13;
which 15 miners are supposed to have&#13;
lost their lives. Three bodies have&#13;
been recovered.&#13;
Kansas Pioneer Dead.&#13;
Kansas City, Mo:—William Weston,&#13;
a pioneer who held many municipal offices&#13;
here, died, aged 75 years. Mr.&#13;
"Weston, who served through the civil&#13;
/war in a Kansas.volunteer regiment,&#13;
came of a family of soldiers.&#13;
Iowa W. C. T. U. Is Reunited.&#13;
Des Moines, la.—By mutual agreement&#13;
of separate conventions'held in&#13;
this city Wednesday, two branches of&#13;
the W. Cr T. U., one known as the W.&#13;
C. T. U. of Iowa and the other as the&#13;
W. C. T. V.' of the state'of loWa, were&#13;
consolidated Into one body. Taey were&#13;
divide* 16 years ago by a dispute over&#13;
the question of affiliation or nonafflnation&#13;
with the Prohibition party.&#13;
Big Earthquake Registered.&#13;
Wa^hinugton.—The weather bureau&#13;
Friday issued a bulletin announcing&#13;
that the bureau's seismographs, recorded&#13;
"another great earthquake"1 beginning&#13;
at 9:05 p. m. on October 1,&#13;
but that the earthquake-probably'Was&#13;
not disastrous. ^&#13;
.' When a bachelor wants to make a&#13;
married man angry, all he has to do&#13;
is whistle the wedding march.&#13;
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES produce&#13;
the brightest and fastest color* with less&#13;
work and no muss.&#13;
The Alliance Israelite university has&#13;
placed five Bialyatok orphans in the&#13;
Ablem agricultural school, and has&#13;
as a first installment applied the suni&#13;
of 16,000 marks for their maintenance&#13;
and education.&#13;
8uparb 8ervice, Splendid Scenery&#13;
en route to Niagara Falls, Muskoka&#13;
and Kawartha Lakes, Georgian Bay&#13;
and Temegami Region, St. Lawrence&#13;
River and Rapids, Thousand Islands,&#13;
Algonquin National Park, White Mountains&#13;
and Atlantic Sea Coast resorts,&#13;
via Grand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Double track Chicago to "Montreal and&#13;
Niagara Falls, N. Y.&#13;
For copies of tourist publications&#13;
and descriptive pamphlets apply to&#13;
Geo. W. Vaux, A. G. I*. &amp; T. A., 135&#13;
Adams St., Chicago.&#13;
Uruguay's Financial Condition.&#13;
Uruguay reduced her national debt&#13;
by $1,570,450 during 1905. The total&#13;
debt on January l; 1906, was $121,455,-&#13;
747, of which about ?0 per cent, was&#13;
external. Uruguay is a prosperous&#13;
country, and in her prosperity is a&#13;
good customer of the United States.&#13;
Exports of merchandise from this&#13;
country to Uruguay for the nine&#13;
months ending March 31, 1906,&#13;
amounted to $2,172,276, against $1,200,«&#13;
542 in the same period of the pre-&#13;
Tious year.&#13;
Low Rates to the Northwest.&#13;
Every day until Oct. 31st the Great&#13;
Northern Railway will sell one way&#13;
Colonists' Tickets from Chicago at the&#13;
following low rates:&#13;
To Seattle, Portland and Western&#13;
Washington, $33.00. Spokane, $30.50.&#13;
Equally low rates to Montana, Idaho,&#13;
Oregon and British Columbia.&#13;
For further information address&#13;
MAX BASS, General Immigration&#13;
Agent, 220 So. Clark St., Chicago, 111.&#13;
A T T H E SUMMER H O T E L .&#13;
Experience of Winston Churchill Familiar&#13;
to Many.&#13;
Winston Churchill in an address&#13;
that he made in Concord recently&#13;
praised the New Hampshire farmer.&#13;
"Ours," he said, "is a state "fitted&#13;
above all others for a summer resort.&#13;
Ne\w Hampshire, with its superb climate,&#13;
its mountains, its lakes and&#13;
forests, will, in, a generation or two&#13;
be one great pleasure ground—a Vast&#13;
park, dotted wiUi .beautiful villas, to&#13;
which will conje each summer families&#13;
from all pails of America.&#13;
"In anticipation of this matff farmers&#13;
are learning to condfc]gtK«irypels.&#13;
They are building cottages far summer&#13;
visitors. Some of them.^fbo, are&#13;
taking boarders. ^1 ' "&#13;
"And I am glad to say that ttftNew&#13;
Hampshire farmer is in a position to&#13;
take boarders, because, unlfke the&#13;
farmers in other states that I could&#13;
name, he does not send all his good&#13;
things to the city. I once boarded at&#13;
a fine big farm, but the fare was&#13;
wretched—canned vegetables, condensed&#13;
milk and so on.&#13;
" 'By Jove,' I said one morning at&#13;
breakfast, a« I pushed my egg cup&#13;
from me, 'these eggs are really not&#13;
as fresh as those I get in New York.'&#13;
, My farmer host snorted.&#13;
"'That's rank prejudice on your&#13;
part, Mr. Churchill,' he said. 'It's&#13;
from New York that all our eggs&#13;
come.'"&#13;
LOOSE T E E T H&#13;
Mad* Sound by Eating Grape-Nuts.&#13;
Proper food nourishes every part of&#13;
the body, because Nature selects the&#13;
different materials from the food we&#13;
eat, to build bone, nerve, brain, muscle,&#13;
teeth, etc.&#13;
AH we need is to eat the right kind&#13;
of food slowly, chewing it well—our&#13;
digestive organs take it up into the&#13;
blood and the blood carries it all&#13;
through the body, to every little nook&#13;
and corner.&#13;
If some, one would ask you, "Is&#13;
Grape-Nuts good for loose* teeth?"&#13;
you'd probably say, "No, I don't see&#13;
how it could be." But a woman in&#13;
Ontario writes:&#13;
"For the past two years I have used&#13;
Grape-Nuts Food with most excellent&#13;
results. It seems to take the place&#13;
of medicine in many ways, builds up&#13;
the nerves and r;stores the health&#13;
generally.&#13;
"A little Grape-Nuts taken before retiring&#13;
soothes my nerves and gives&#13;
sound sleep." (Because it relieve irritability&#13;
of the stomach nerves, being&#13;
a predigested food.)&#13;
"Before I used Grape-Nuts my teeth&#13;
were loose in the gums. They were so&#13;
bad I was afraid they would some day&#13;
all fall out. Since I have used Grape-&#13;
Nuts I Wave not been bothered any&#13;
more with loose teeth.&#13;
"AU desire for pastry has disappeared&#13;
and I have gained in health, weight&#13;
and happiness. sjnee I began to use&#13;
Grape-NuU." Name,*iven by Postum&#13;
Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Get the famous&#13;
little book, "The Road to Wellville,"&#13;
in pkgs. 'There's a reason."&#13;
WHO S p WAS&#13;
' *— . , «y; • • »&#13;
SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF LYDIA E. FINKHAM&#13;
And a True Story of How the Vegetable Compound&#13;
Had Its Birth and How the "Panic of '73" CaustfJ&#13;
It to be Offered for Public Sale in Drug Stores.&#13;
This remarkable woman, whose&#13;
maiden name was' Bates, was born in&#13;
Lynn, Mass., February 9th, 1820, coming&#13;
from a good old Quaker family.&#13;
For some years she taught school, and&#13;
became known as a woman of an alert&#13;
and investigating mind, an earnest&#13;
seeker after knowledge, and above&#13;
air, possessed of a wonderfully sympathetic&#13;
nature.&#13;
In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkham.&#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&#13;
daughter.&#13;
In those good old fashioned days it&#13;
was common for mothers to make&#13;
their own home medicines from roots&#13;
and herbs, nature's own ^remedies—&#13;
calling in a physician only in specially&#13;
urgent cases. By tradition and experience&#13;
many of them gained a wonderful&#13;
knowledge of the. curative properties&#13;
of the various roots and herbs.&#13;
Mrst Pinkham took a great interest&#13;
in the study of roots and herbs, their&#13;
characteristics and*power over disease.&#13;
She maintained that just as nature so&#13;
bountifully pnMdes in the harvestfields&#13;
and orchards vegetable foods of&#13;
all kinds; so, if we but take the pains&#13;
to find them, in the root*.and herbs&#13;
of the field there are remedies expressly&#13;
aesigned to cure the various&#13;
ills and weaknesses of the body, and&#13;
it was her pleasure to search these out,&#13;
and prepare simple and effective medi&#13;
cines for her own family and friends.&#13;
Chief of these was a rare combination&#13;
of the choicest medicinal roots&#13;
and herbs found best adapted for the&#13;
cure of the ills and weaknesses peculiar&#13;
to the female sex, and Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
friends and neighbors learned&#13;
that her compound relieved and cured&#13;
and it became quite popular among&#13;
them. c&#13;
All this so far was done freely, without&#13;
money and without price, as a&#13;
labor of love.&#13;
But in 1873 the financial crisis struck&#13;
Lynn. Its length and severity were too&#13;
much for the large real estate interests&#13;
of the Pinkham family, as this class&#13;
of business suffered most from&#13;
fearful depression, so when the Centennial&#13;
year dawned it found their property&#13;
swept a*-ay. Some other source&#13;
of income had to be found.&#13;
At this point Lydia E. Pinkham'a&#13;
Vegetable Compound was made known&#13;
to the world.&#13;
The three sons and the daughter,&#13;
with their mother, combined forces to&#13;
restore the family fortune. They&#13;
argued that the medicine which was&#13;
so good for their woman friends and&#13;
neighbors waa equally good for Ufejt^&#13;
women of the w,hole world. . . "&#13;
The Pinkhams had no money, t a d&#13;
little credit. Their first laboratory*&#13;
was the kitchen, where, roots and&#13;
herba wore steeped oh the stove,&#13;
gradually filling a gross of bottles.&#13;
Then came t h e question of selling&#13;
it, for always before they had given&#13;
it away freely. They hired" a job&#13;
printer to run off. some pamphlets&#13;
setting forth the merits of the medi*&#13;
cine, now called Lydia E. Pinkham'a&#13;
Vegetable Compound, and these were&#13;
distributed by the Pinkham sons in&#13;
Boston, NeW York, and Brooklyn.&#13;
The wonderful ctaratfve properties ot&#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 the family&#13;
had saved enough money to commence&#13;
newspaper advertising and from&#13;
that time the growth and success of&#13;
the enterprise were assured, until today&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham and her Vegetable&#13;
Compound have become household&#13;
words everywhere, and many&#13;
tons of roots and herbs are used annually&#13;
in its manufacture.&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham herself did not&#13;
live to see the great success of this&#13;
work. She passed to her reward years&#13;
ago, but not till she had provided&#13;
means for continuing her work as&#13;
effectively as she could have done it&#13;
herself.&#13;
During her long and eventful experience&#13;
she was ever methodical in her&#13;
work and she was always careful to preserve&#13;
a record of every case that came to&#13;
her attention. The case of every sick&#13;
woman who applied to her for advice—&#13;
and there were thousands—received&#13;
careful study, and the details, including&#13;
symptoms, treatment'and results&#13;
were recorded for future reference, and&#13;
to-day these records, together with&#13;
hundreds of thousands made since, are&#13;
available to sick wotnei* the world&#13;
over, and represent a Vast collaboration&#13;
of information regarding the&#13;
treatment of woman's ills^ which for&#13;
authenticity and accuracy can hardly&#13;
be equaled in any library in the&#13;
world. \&#13;
With Lydia E. Pinkham worked her&#13;
d a u g h t e r - i n - l a w , the present Mrs.&#13;
Pinkham. She was carefully instructed&#13;
in all her hard-won knowledge, and&#13;
for years she assisted her in her vast&#13;
correspondence.&#13;
To her hands naturally fell th«&#13;
direction of the work when its originator&#13;
passed away. For nearly twentyfive&#13;
y^ars she has continued it, and&#13;
nothing in the work shows when the&#13;
first Lydia E. Pinkham dropped her&#13;
pen, and the present Mrs. Pinkham,&#13;
now the mother of a large family, took&#13;
it up. With woman assistants, some as&#13;
capable as herself, the present Mrs.&#13;
Pinkham continues this great work,and&#13;
probably from the office of DO other&#13;
person have so many women been advised&#13;
how to regain health. Sick women,&#13;
this advice is '•'Yours for Health'*&#13;
freely given if you only write to ask&#13;
for it.&#13;
Such is the history of Lydfa E. Plnlcham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound; made&#13;
from simple roots and herbs; the one&#13;
great medicine for women's ailments,&#13;
and the fitting monument to t h e noblewoman&#13;
whose name it bears*&#13;
New Use for Gramophone.&#13;
Drilling native Malay levies by word&#13;
of command emitted from a gramophone&#13;
is the latest instance of modern&#13;
ingenuity. Even the Zulu can now&#13;
hear his own native songs and war&#13;
dances from records made by a London&#13;
company, who have sold more&#13;
than 20 machines to swarthy warrior&#13;
chiefs in South Africa. Folk-songs of&#13;
the Pygmies were recently procured,&#13;
and a machine has been dispatched to&#13;
Lapland for the purpose, if possible, of&#13;
procuring Eskimo folk-songs.&#13;
$100 Reward, $100.&#13;
The readers of this paper will be pleased to leer*&#13;
that there liat lean one dreaded dlteaee that science&#13;
baa been able to cure la all Its itagea, and that li&#13;
Catarrh. Hall'* Catarrh Cure li the only poilUvecare&#13;
now knows to the medical fraternity, catarrh)&#13;
being a oonatttnClonal disease, requires a oonsUtuttonal&#13;
treatment. Heli'e Catarrh Cure it takenInternally,&#13;
acting dlrecUr upon the blood aodi miice*»&#13;
surfaces of the system, thereby destroying thefoundation&#13;
of the dtaeaae, and giving tba patleek&#13;
•trength by building up the constitution and aeetsfctng&#13;
nature In doing lta work. The proprietor* here*&#13;
ao much faith In lta caratlre powera thai they otter&#13;
One Hundred DoUara for any caae thai tt fall*, to.&#13;
cure. Send for Ilet of teatlmonrale.&#13;
Addreea F. J. CHCtfKT * CO., Toledo*©*&#13;
Sold by all Druggists, 75c Take) Ball's Fatally Tula Cor oonttipfttfca.&#13;
Those men who .ride en the water&#13;
wagon get eome awful Jolts.&#13;
Hurt. Bruise or Sprain&#13;
St. Jacobs Oil relieves from pain.&#13;
Somehow it doesn't sound just right&#13;
when a spinster asks for a match.&#13;
Mrs. Wia»low*s SootMna Syrup*&#13;
Tor osUldraa teething, eofaans the gnats, r*«uc«* fadMunaUan&#13;
allay a pnrn. cure* wind coll©. Sk about*.&#13;
A knocker Is hta own worst enemy.&#13;
CURES INDIGESTION&#13;
When what you eat makes you&#13;
uncomfortable it is doing; yott very&#13;
little good beyond barely keeping&#13;
you alive.. Digestive tablets are&#13;
worse than useless, for taey will in&#13;
time deprive the stomach e€ all&#13;
power to digest food. The stomachmust&#13;
be toned up—strengthened.&#13;
The herb tonic-laxative Lane's Family&#13;
. Medicine WEH do the work quickly and&#13;
antly.&#13;
Sold by all dealers/at 25c&#13;
Othiaetd s tands hardest senrke&#13;
Do^uKnow&#13;
Mad»&gt;fbrallkkwia&#13;
ef wwg wofa orapert&#13;
SOLDEVERYWHErUT&#13;
A* vawte to. aeajroN&#13;
- 1 *&#13;
»&#13;
•*&amp;am. :¾¼^ , ...... „.„, -„ S&amp;fi,-' ' &amp; &gt; ' ; • &gt;&#13;
1'l'Hll m.'i H I H ] | » I « i m i j&gt; « • • i yy«&#13;
*"H"&#13;
s&#13;
CATHEDRAL AT 8AN FRANCISCO.&#13;
€*t*k«r Site Given to the Episcopal&#13;
Chdreh~ for TMs Purpose.&#13;
fjfjlt common With all others, the&#13;
Bplacopal church suffered severely in&#13;
the San Fransjfcjtc €arthq\tal*e and fire,&#13;
and yet, aB in other similar cases, the&#13;
disaster is not unlikely to prove a&#13;
blessing. Parish churches were not&#13;
well located before the fire, and anything&#13;
like a cathedral was far from&#13;
Ojf) nost ambitious thoughts of the&#13;
Cawornla bishop. Because so many&#13;
mfcnrchee were wiped out, a redlstrict- fthg has been made possible, in order&#13;
that their fields may no longer&#13;
overlap. And the Episcopal church&#13;
on the coast is to have a cathedral&#13;
in San Francisco that will be one of&#13;
the best located In the world.&#13;
The Croker mansion, says the&#13;
New York Wgrld, which was rented&#13;
for a whole month by J. Plerpont&#13;
Morgan while the Episcopal general&#13;
convention was in session at San&#13;
Francisco some years ago, shared the&#13;
fate of so many other notable buildings&#13;
when the fire completed the destruction&#13;
begun by the earthquake.&#13;
Now the Croker family has presented&#13;
the site to the church to be used&#13;
as a cathedral close for the diocese of&#13;
California.&#13;
The site Is on the very top of Nob&#13;
Hill, a large block in extent, and any&#13;
building erected upon it can be seen&#13;
from every part of the bay and from&#13;
the entire city. A cathedral foundation&#13;
in such ,a place, even if it has&#13;
to be a modest one for some years,&#13;
will give the Episcopal church a great&#13;
advantage in the new-built city. To&#13;
begin the erection of a structure of&#13;
some kind, it is now proposed to&#13;
merge Grace parish into the cathedral&#13;
foundation, and giving the old&#13;
name "Grace" to the cathedral. Grace&#13;
church stood at California and Stockton&#13;
Btreets, on the very brink of one&#13;
of the numerous precipices which&#13;
made California one of the most remarkable&#13;
streets in the world. It&#13;
was wrecked and burned, and now Its&#13;
property, with insurance money, is to&#13;
go into the new foundation.&#13;
NORTHFIELO CONFERENCE.&#13;
Dr. G. Campbell Morgan Seeking to Establish&#13;
a Christian Training 8chool.&#13;
Dr. Campbell Morgan has been trying&#13;
with no small success, to give&#13;
English Christians an object lesson in&#13;
what is meant by the famous Northfield&#13;
convention, says the London cor-«&#13;
respondent of the Record of Christian&#13;
Work. Mundesley-on-Sea Is an unpretentious&#13;
watering place on the east&#13;
coast of England, where Dr. Morgan&#13;
has a summer residence of his own.&#13;
There the convention met. The meeting&#13;
place was a large tent. There&#13;
were two morning sessions, an earlier&#13;
and a later one. The earlier morning&#13;
sessions were devoted to Dr. Morgan's&#13;
course of lectures on the Book of Genesis,&#13;
of which I have seen nothing but&#13;
the highest praise. At the later morning&#13;
session, special subjects were&#13;
dealt with by, men peculiarly at home&#13;
in them, and the addresses were followed&#13;
by a time of questions and answers.&#13;
The afternoons were given to&#13;
relaxation and'social intercourse, and&#13;
the days as they went by were closed&#13;
with evening sessions at which some&#13;
front-rank man preached a sermon or&#13;
gave an address. The attendance at&#13;
the convention throughout was exceedingly&#13;
encouraging, and the experiment&#13;
is regarded as having abundantly&#13;
justified itself. It will be repeated&#13;
next year.&#13;
"A SMALL THING."&#13;
Do _y.ou believe in progress? Do you&#13;
believe that all the wonderful achievemants&#13;
pf the^nipeteenth centfry—the&#13;
railroad, the telegraph, the telephone,&#13;
electric light, kerosene, sewing machine,&#13;
agricultural machinery, steamships,&#13;
trolley cars, etc.—have made&#13;
life easier and better worth living? I&#13;
do. I believe that a man who lives&#13;
40 years under modern conditions has&#13;
experienced more life and better life&#13;
than Methusalem, though he had lived&#13;
20 centuries of his time.&#13;
The triumphs of the nineteenth century&#13;
were triumphs of human service&#13;
—the placing of knowledge and the&#13;
fruits Of knowledge within the reach&#13;
of the common man. Every man's&#13;
life is better,-happier, more secure because&#13;
of them. We live more comfortable,&#13;
more sociable lives in better and&#13;
more comfortable houses because of&#13;
them. Even the hopeless dweller in&#13;
the worst city slums Is more comfortable&#13;
in his physical conditions than&#13;
the middle-class citizen of the days of&#13;
George Washington.&#13;
In little things as in great, comfort&#13;
and convenience have been the legacy&#13;
ef the "Century of Improvement."&#13;
Paint, in a certain sense, is a minor&#13;
matter, yet it gives beauty, heaHhfulness&#13;
and durability to our dwellings.&#13;
Fifty years ago painting was a serious&#13;
proposition, a luxury for the owners&#13;
of stately mansions who could afford&#13;
the expense of frequent renewals. Today&#13;
ready mixed paint is so cheap, so&#13;
good, and so universal that no house&#13;
owner has an excuse, for hot keeping&#13;
his property well painted.&#13;
A small thing, indeed; yet several&#13;
hundred large factories, ^employing&#13;
thousands, of chemists and skilled&#13;
workmen, are running every day In&#13;
the year to keep our houses fresh,&#13;
clean and.wholesome. . .,.-&#13;
A small thing, yet a can of good&#13;
ready mixed paint, such as one may&#13;
buy from any reputable dealer, embodies&#13;
the study of generations of&#13;
skilled chemists, the toil of a thousand&#13;
workmen in mill,, laboratory and&#13;
factory, and the product of a long&#13;
series of special machinery invented&#13;
and designed just to make that can&#13;
of paint and* to furnish us an infinite&#13;
variety of tints, colors and shades.&#13;
It was a wonderful century, that&#13;
nineteenth of our era, and not the&#13;
least of its wonderful gifts was that&#13;
same commonplace can of paint.&#13;
' L. P.&#13;
ALA8KAN CABLE IS BUSY.&#13;
COAT OF PAINT SAVED BANK.&#13;
Pundita Ramabai Plans More Wgrk.&#13;
Speaking of that wonderful Hindu&#13;
woman. Pundita Ramabai, the Missionary&#13;
Review of the World says:&#13;
"This most fervid Hindu saint, though&#13;
already caring for more than 1,500&#13;
&gt;;ouhg\w4«;•«••;^writes *hat the Lord&#13;
has laid it on her heart to open 20 mission&#13;
stations in different villages to&#13;
which she may send her Christian&#13;
girla^-to preach the Gospel. She asks&#13;
for experienced workers from America&#13;
and England,, who will he. witling&#13;
to bear the hardships of village life&#13;
„ In jjrder 'to be leaders In "this form of&#13;
ition work."&#13;
Line te Be Duplexed and 200 Mere&#13;
Miles Added.&#13;
Few people who have not been over&#13;
the ground have any conception of the&#13;
wonderful development of Alaskan interests&#13;
and trade. For instance, the&#13;
commercial receipts from the Alaskan&#13;
cable and telegraph lines for the&#13;
month of July amounted to $24,000.&#13;
The rapid increase in the demands&#13;
upon the system will be met by the&#13;
government by duplexing the cable.&#13;
The cablet ship Burnside, which Is&#13;
to install the duplexing apparatus at&#13;
the Alaskan end of the cable, will&#13;
carry about 200 miles of new cable&#13;
for the extension of the service to&#13;
Ketchikan. This extension will be&#13;
effected by tapping the lines from Sitka&#13;
to Juneau at Cape Fanshaw. From&#13;
that point a branch line will be extended&#13;
down the Wrangel, then to&#13;
Hadley on Prince of Wales island, and&#13;
then to Ketchikan, which is only 60&#13;
miles from Fort Simpson, the English&#13;
town which is to be the terminus of&#13;
the Grand Trunk and Pacific railroads.&#13;
It is believed that this additional&#13;
200 miles of cable will largely increase&#13;
the cable receipts, as* it taps a country&#13;
rich in mines, fishery and canning&#13;
Industries and greatly in need of daily&#13;
communication with the United&#13;
States. It is expected that this new&#13;
line will be completed by November 1.&#13;
—Pilgrim.&#13;
NO REST NIGHT OR DAY.&#13;
of Missionary In West.&#13;
&gt;lomon Baker Is a Choctaw&#13;
,.m) Ia&amp;an territory. He tra,vsaUes&#13;
oa horseback in three&#13;
mofjejpB, and. preached. 65 sermons and&#13;
held 48 prayer meetings. He started&#13;
ttend a Bible 'institute 125;tniles&#13;
but his pony gave out when he&#13;
i p t i about 75 miles. So anxious&#13;
to to attend the IttAmftr that'he&#13;
walattd over the mountains*-sleeping&#13;
under the bluer sky on the way. That&#13;
it a sample, of home-missionary work&#13;
among the*lridifcn* -&#13;
With irritating Skin Humor—Hair&#13;
Began to, Fall Out—Wonderful Result&#13;
from Cuticura Remedies.&#13;
"About the latter part of July my&#13;
whole body began to itch. I did not&#13;
take much notice of it at first, but it&#13;
began to get worse all the time, and&#13;
then I began to get uneasy and tried&#13;
all kinds of baths and other remedies&#13;
that were recommended for skin humors;&#13;
but I became worse all the time.&#13;
My hair began to fall out and my&#13;
scalp itched all the time. Especially&#13;
at night, just as soon as I would get&#13;
In bed and get warm, my whole body&#13;
would begin to itch and my finger&#13;
nails would keep it irritated, and it&#13;
was not long before I could not rest&#13;
night or day. A friend asked me&#13;
to try the Cuticura Remedies, and I&#13;
did, and the first application helped&#13;
me wonderfully. For about four&#13;
weeks I would take a hot bath every&#13;
night and then apply the Cuticura&#13;
Ointment to my whole body; and I&#13;
kept getting better, and by the time&#13;
I used four boxes of Cuticura I was&#13;
entirely cured, and my hair stopped&#13;
falling out. D. E. Blankenship. 319&#13;
N. Del. St., Indianapolis, Ind., Oct. 27»&#13;
1905." .__&#13;
At honest man is not the worse&#13;
because a doc harks at him.—From !&#13;
theDamsh. i&#13;
Clever Device Stopped Run That&#13;
Would Have Been Disastrous.&#13;
Runs on banks, as all the World&#13;
knows, are often stopped or restricted&#13;
in the oddest ways.&#13;
A rich bank knew,.that a run was&#13;
to .set in on a certain Monday morning—&#13;
for it had been robbed of some&#13;
postage stamps on Saturday night,&#13;
Snd the robbery had been exaggerated&#13;
In the newspaper reports—and if this&#13;
run was not kept within reasonable&#13;
limits the bank would have to close&#13;
Us door*. It had plenty of money, but&#13;
not plenty of cash. It needed 24 hour**&#13;
time.&#13;
Before sunrise on Monday morning&#13;
a man put a fresh coat of paint on the&#13;
front doors of the bank, on the wall&#13;
panels, and on the counters. The result&#13;
was that the people who made&#13;
the run on Monday made rather av&#13;
walk of it. They wanted their money,&#13;
but they rushed no one. On the con*&#13;
trary, they came on with caution and&#13;
deliberation. So careful were they&#13;
lest they get paint on their clothes&#13;
that it took longer to pay off one of&#13;
them than it would have taken or*&#13;
dinarily to pay five.&#13;
This is one of many odd tricks&#13;
whereby, in a run, a bank has saved&#13;
Itself from wreck.&#13;
PENNIE8 FOR A COLLEGE.&#13;
One Hundred Thousand Workers Eaeh&#13;
Give a Penny to Ruskin College.&#13;
The British trade unions had not in&#13;
their origin any direct concern with&#13;
education, says the Fortnightly Review.&#13;
But It is a fact of no ordinary&#13;
significance that some of the leading&#13;
unions should be taking very great&#13;
interest in the higher education of the&#13;
workman.&#13;
For the last three years some 100,-&#13;
000 workingmen, members of the&#13;
Amalgamated Society of Engineers,&#13;
have made three levies of one penny&#13;
each to help on the work of Ruskin&#13;
college at Oxford. This levy produces&#13;
over £300 a year, and by means&#13;
of it six engineers are maintained for&#13;
a year's course of study at the college.&#13;
Smaller but substantial sums have&#13;
been contributed to the same institution&#13;
by the London Society of Compositors,&#13;
by the Lanarkshire Miners'&#13;
County Union, by the Amalgamated&#13;
Association of Beamers, Twisters and&#13;
Drawers, by the Derbyshire miners&#13;
and the Durham miners, while a large&#13;
number of other societies appear&#13;
among the donors and subscribers.&#13;
TIRED BACKS.&#13;
The kidneys have a great work to&#13;
do in keeping the blood pure. When&#13;
they get out of order&#13;
it causes backache,&#13;
h e a d a c h e s ,&#13;
dizziness, l a n g u o r&#13;
and distressing urinary&#13;
troubles. Keep&#13;
the kidneys well&#13;
and all these sufferings&#13;
will be&#13;
saved you. Mrs.&#13;
S. A. Moore, proprietor&#13;
of a restaurant&#13;
at Waterville, Mo., says:&#13;
"Before using Doan's Kidney Pills I&#13;
suffered everything from kidney troubles&#13;
for a year and a half. I had pain&#13;
in the back and head, and almost continous&#13;
in the loins and felt weary&#13;
all the time. A few doses of Doan's'&#13;
Kidney Pills brought great relief, and&#13;
I kept on taking them until in a short&#13;
time I was cured. 1 think Doan's Kidney&#13;
Pills are wonderful."&#13;
For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a&#13;
box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,&#13;
N. Y. _&#13;
There is an altar society in Brooklyn&#13;
composed of eight policemen. The&#13;
members contribute a certain amount&#13;
every month which pays for lights and&#13;
flowers on an altar of perpetual adoration.&#13;
mm*&#13;
)&lt;)OI)K&lt;H'H&#13;
AVfegebhfe FrefwtatioAfor Assimilating&#13;
sacroodsadBeguh;&#13;
bag BttStoswiaaftABowVor&#13;
| M \ N J S . &lt; Mil !&gt;K».N&#13;
Promotes DnjestionCheerfurntss&#13;
and JfestContains neither&#13;
Opium,Morptone norMktf/al.&#13;
N O T K A R C O T I C .&#13;
A perfect Remedy forConsfipaflon,&#13;
Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea&#13;
Worms .Convulsions ,Fevenshness&#13;
and Loss o r&#13;
YacSimfe Signature of&#13;
NEW YORK.&#13;
CASTQRIA Torlnfrati and Children.&#13;
The Kind You Have&#13;
Always Bought&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
of&#13;
• . H i s. « » ] &lt; !&#13;
j ) D i l S L S - J ' j ( L M S&#13;
EXACT COPY Of WRAPPER.&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
ICASTORIft&#13;
NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER.&#13;
THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITANT. CAPISICUM&#13;
VASELINE&#13;
EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE PEPPER PLANT&#13;
A QUICK. SURE. SAFE AND ALWAYS READY CURE FOR" PAIN.-PR1CE&#13;
15c.—IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES-AT ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS. OR&#13;
BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF 15c IN POSTAGE STAMPS. DON'T WAIT&#13;
T I L L T H E P A I N C O M E 5 - K E E P A T U B E H A N D Y .&#13;
A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster, and will not&#13;
blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaylnf and curative qualities of&#13;
the article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve&#13;
Headache and Sciatica. We recommend it as the best and safest external&#13;
counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains In the chest&#13;
and stomach and all Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Gouty complaints, A trial&#13;
will prove what we claim for it, and it will be found to be invaluable In the&#13;
household and for children. Once used no family will be without it. Many&#13;
people say "it is the best of all your preparations." Accept no preparation&#13;
of vaseline unless the same carries our label, as otherwise it is not genuine.&#13;
SEND YOUR ADDRESS AND WE WILL MAIL OUR VASELINE&#13;
PAMPHLET WHICH WILL INTEREST YOU.&#13;
CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO.&#13;
17 STATE STREET NEW YORK CITY&#13;
I nameiiite m&#13;
STOVE POLISH&#13;
OUST&#13;
DIRT&#13;
SLOP&#13;
SPILL&#13;
SMOKE&#13;
S M E L L&#13;
MUSS OR&#13;
SPATTER&#13;
To Launder White Silk Handkerchiefs.&#13;
Do not put white silk handkerchiefs in&#13;
the ordinary wat-h, us they are easily&#13;
laundered at home. Make a strong lather&#13;
of Ivory Soap ami water, hut do not&#13;
rub the soap on the handkerchief or u&gt;e&#13;
soda. "Rinse and iron while damp with&#13;
a moderated hot iron.&#13;
' KLKAXOR R. TARKKU.&#13;
"Soap Weed" of the Southwest.&#13;
Greatest, as well as most common.&#13;
of allcacti is the "soap weed," which&#13;
grows wherever cacti grow, and which&#13;
is man's onkv friend in the great southwestern&#13;
deserts of the United States&#13;
and in Mexico. It furnishes always a&#13;
quantity of water when cut. As its&#13;
name indtcares, it can be manufactured&#13;
into a soap, perhaps the least&#13;
alkaline soap ever made, even though&#13;
the weed itself may grow in the center&#13;
ot an alkali desert. Ueer is brewed&#13;
from it. the Indians make a hemp*&#13;
like fiber from it and horses and men&#13;
can eat parts of it if the spines are cut&#13;
away. Also when it shoots up its one&#13;
great arm skyward it tops that arm&#13;
with one of the moat gorgeous flowera&#13;
la the world.&#13;
Chandler's Joke on Conkling.&#13;
Roscoe Conkling was a capital boxer&#13;
and quite proud of. his skill. One&#13;
evening after considerable banter he&#13;
induced Senator Chandler to "put on&#13;
the .gloves" with him. He played with&#13;
Chandler for a few rounds, much to&#13;
the discomfiture of the downeaster.&#13;
j The latter bided his time and some&#13;
time later quietly brought a profes-&#13;
' sional pugilist to dinner where Conkling&#13;
was a guest. In the course of&#13;
the evening "Mr. Smith'' was induced&#13;
to engage in u boxing bout with MP.&#13;
Conkling. The professional danced 1 around the senator, landing when and&#13;
j where he wished, playing with him as&#13;
! he would with a punching bag. The&#13;
elegant New York senator was dazed,&#13;
overwhelmed, humiliated, crushed.&#13;
When he surrendered and called&#13;
enough, as -he did at last. Senator&#13;
Chandler smiled blandly and presented&#13;
the "pugilist in his true colors.&#13;
DOODS '/,&#13;
KIDNEY;&#13;
\ PILLS&#13;
W. L. DOUGLAS *3.50&amp;*3.00 Shoes&#13;
BEST IN THE WORLD&#13;
W.LDougIas $4 fift Edge ito,&#13;
carmotbe equailad atanjrwioe.&#13;
ToW S. hLo.e DDoeuagllears'* :J ob- cboinmgp Hleotea min t1h» i*th ceo umnotrayt Send/or Catalog&#13;
SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL PRICES.&#13;
Van's Shoes, $« to #1.60. toj" ahoes,f»&#13;
to $1.90. Women'i ihott, %:9P_ *° f r-59-&#13;
Kisses' * Children'* Shoes, ¢9.80Jo $1.00.&#13;
Try W. L. Douglas Women's, Hisse* ami&#13;
Children'* shoes: for style, fit and wear&#13;
they excel other makes.&#13;
If 1 could take you Into my large&#13;
factories at Brockton, Mass.,and show&#13;
you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoe*&#13;
are made, you would then understand&#13;
why they hold their shape, fit better,&#13;
wear longer, and are of greater value&#13;
I nan any other make.&#13;
Wherever you live, you can obtain W. L*.&#13;
Dong las shoes. His name and price U stasnpest&#13;
on the bottom, whichh protects you againtustb *htilg»h&#13;
shoe*&#13;
' S H T ' S Dl&#13;
Evangelists Tprtey and Alexander&#13;
are under enga&lt;«Bient to conduct&#13;
meetings next winter In' the follow&#13;
lug cttiea; Nashville. Omaha, Winnipeg,&#13;
Buffalo, Pittsburg and Montreal.&#13;
f*ia OOK tiflti fsA FOR AGENTS. Pleasant freeaaa(i VtaWles, i taWrg e .jwnomnta isualiooraisi. syaocu rW frn epnrdisae,s tor all. asttres* Uept. »X. 11 K.S«ib8t.. N.TOiy.&#13;
iVl lIHDQWIeIItIMA rrAHBe|i|e%W5 ict»at.0aSlo9gM 1r rees*; laatrHgea *wTaie&gt;uMpc. . »a leas €»•, h*,, flMtiari, Va.&#13;
, price* and inferior shoes. Takm n* tot&#13;
! tut; Ask yoar denier lor W. L. Douglas&#13;
&gt; snd Insist upon having them.&#13;
Fast Color Eutltia aW- (A*f mill *ot wear Arsssp.&#13;
Write for filustrnted Catalog ot Pall Styles. I W. L. DOUOLAS,D*f*. IX Bfwcfctoa, Mean,&#13;
i • - — You Ought to Know tnUata vberyieofu mhoearerd r aevbeonuut eo utrh wano uadneytf aolt hReric ela ln.ado*d ien, AoierleaT&#13;
ofD ooo ryn o.u o kant*o,w c atnh*a,t etohtetyo aw, if)t 1n altlas oa snrdo vdeegee*t aflbolee *cr ro on&#13;
•eDmoio yoo anr ek nsoowla *t htoa tm tahkree et hnee pwr troasi lorfo aladnsd t hJurum pth 1i n&#13;
Write »» and let as teodfullInformation.&#13;
w. w . rnvmv*&#13;
/^&#13;
stamps. W. N. U., DtTROIT, NO. 41, 1&#13;
**••, h^mmf ~iJ-«»" '•»•.•&#13;
5,...;{ ';*&gt;':'&#13;
$$W^&amp;ffi$$0&#13;
* oar •*&#13;
— 3&#13;
v ; • •&#13;
" » * • ; ^ ^ 1 ^ , ^ 1 ^ 4 ^ 1 ^ ^ 1 ^ ^ ^ ^ , ^ 4 ^ a9 XmoDj Otfr CorrttpofldiDU&#13;
Will Gardner spent Sunday at&#13;
Chilson.&#13;
Fannie Monks is visiting in&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Miss Mary Kelly has returned&#13;
to Ann Arbor,&#13;
Patrick Kennedy and wife are&#13;
spending the week in Fowlerville.&#13;
Wm. McQuillian and family of&#13;
Howell, spent Sunday at Robt.&#13;
Kelly's.&#13;
West Putnam will be well represented&#13;
at the Fowlerville fair,&#13;
this week.&#13;
Irwin Kennedy and • wife of&#13;
Dexter, are spending the week&#13;
with relatives here.&#13;
John Dunne is attending a seasion&#13;
of the bonrd of supervisors&#13;
in Howell this week.&#13;
Mrs. Sayles and daughter were&#13;
guests at the home of Wm. Pyper&#13;
in Unadilla, the past week.&#13;
Thi« is the season of decay and&#13;
weakened vitality. Nature is being&#13;
shorn of its beauty and bloom. If you&#13;
would retain yonrs, fortify your system&#13;
with Hollister's Rocky Mountain&#13;
Tea. 35 cents, tea or tablets.&#13;
PLADTCTELD.&#13;
Several from here attended the&#13;
Fowlerville fair as usual.&#13;
Not many of the farmers about&#13;
here are patting in any wheat&#13;
this fall as the crop has been a&#13;
failure several years back.&#13;
i Business Pointers. 1 f&#13;
AGENTS:—Stop peddling from house&#13;
to house. Se'l to merchants only.&#13;
Ready sale. No competition. Exclusive&#13;
territory given. Universal Supply&#13;
Co. Station ?. Toledo, 0.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
Three year old Itamboulette Ram.&#13;
Robt. Kelly.&#13;
~ NOTICE^&#13;
I will he in my mill every day hereafter&#13;
to grind feed or make cider. I&#13;
have also a quantity of cabbage for&#13;
sale. Wm. Laverock, Unadilla.&#13;
F O R S A L S .&#13;
Fine Wool Rams,&#13;
J. J. Donohue&#13;
R. F. D 3 Gregory, Mich.&#13;
F O R S A L B .&#13;
House and lots on Main street.&#13;
Good location. Inquire at this office.&#13;
For Sale&#13;
Busbei Crates Call and see a good&#13;
crate. Order o*w. *&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co., Pinckney.&#13;
F O R BAXA.&#13;
A six year old roan horse, weight&#13;
1,200 pounds. John Webb, H miles&#13;
south of Unadilla village. Gregory&#13;
RED.&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
The Pettysville cider mill is now&#13;
ready to receive apples and make&#13;
cider. VVm. Hooker.&#13;
8. G. Topping and wife entertained&#13;
company from Fowlerville&#13;
laat week.&#13;
There will be a social at E. N.&#13;
Braley'a, Friday evenings OQ$. 19,&#13;
given under the direction of the&#13;
JJAS. , A short program will be&#13;
given, and all are invited.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Cool, an old resident&#13;
of this township, died at her old&#13;
home last Sunday. The funeral&#13;
was held Tuesday and «hev was&#13;
laid to rest in the Plainfield cemetery.&#13;
A cold is much more easily cured&#13;
when the bowels are open. Kennedy's&#13;
Laxatative Honey and Tar opens the&#13;
bowels and drives the cold out of the&#13;
system in voung or old.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
CHILSON&#13;
Samuel Carpenter is etill very&#13;
low.&#13;
R. W. Schoenhals was home&#13;
from Howell over Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. George Case, of&#13;
Hamburg, spent Sunday at Chas.&#13;
Dorr's.&#13;
H. Pammann is attending the&#13;
session of the board of supervisors&#13;
at Howell this week.&#13;
Chas. Schweinsberg has given&#13;
his house a new coat of paint, and&#13;
other repairs which improves its&#13;
appearance greatly.&#13;
John Dammann and wife, F. P.&#13;
Dammann and wife, and Julius&#13;
Dammann and lady, spent Sunday&#13;
under ,the parental roof.&#13;
Trua and tried friends of the family&#13;
—DeWitt's little Early Risers. Best&#13;
for results and best to take. Rosy&#13;
cheeks and sparkling eyes follow the&#13;
use of these dependable little pills.&#13;
They do not gripe or sicken.&#13;
Sold by J\ A. Slgler Druggist.&#13;
Bev. Miller and wife of Sanilao&#13;
coqnty, are gaeste of her mother,&#13;
Mrs. Samuel DuBois.&#13;
Several from Una&lt;Hlla attended&#13;
the. Cong'l churoh fair at Pinckney,&#13;
Saturday night.&#13;
Keep the bowels open when you&#13;
have a cold and use a good remedy to&#13;
allay the inflamation of the mucous&#13;
membranes. The beat is Kennedy's!&#13;
Laxative Honey and tar. It contains&#13;
no opiates, moves the bowels, drives&#13;
out the ocld. Is reliable and tastes&#13;
good.&#13;
*xld by F. A. 8Jgler, Druggist&#13;
ADDITIONAL LOCAL&#13;
On Dry Goods, Ladies', Misses* and Children's: Cloaks,&#13;
Furs, Carpets, Lineolums,. Oil Cloths, Wall Paper, Men's,&#13;
Ladies1 and Children's Shoes, Men's, Boys and Children's&#13;
Clothing and Overcoats, Crockery, Lamps and Groceries at&#13;
Dilr new Fall and Winter Lines of Underwear are all in&#13;
ANDEBSOK,&#13;
Miss Claire Ledwedge has been&#13;
home from the Howell school for&#13;
several days on account of illness.&#13;
Wm. Ledwidge has a tine piano&#13;
and his daughter, Mies Gerinaine,&#13;
is taking lessons of R. Sidney&#13;
Sprout.&#13;
Mrs. A. Crane and son have&#13;
gone to Ypsilanti where George&#13;
will continue his studies at the&#13;
Normal.&#13;
Mi. and Mrs. Norman Wilson,&#13;
of Missouri, are said to be much&#13;
pleased with their netv. environments&#13;
and find the people very&#13;
cordial and friendly.&#13;
Many men give lavish of geld,&#13;
To build bridges and castles and&#13;
towers of old;&#13;
1( you want everlasting fame, a&#13;
benefactor be,&#13;
Give the poor and needy Rocky&#13;
Mountain Tea.&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
Bui lis is again on the&#13;
E W. DANIELS,&#13;
, GENERAL AUCTIONEER.&#13;
Satistaown Guaranteed. For information&#13;
call at DISPATCH Office or add mo&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. Lyndilla phone&#13;
connection. Auction bills and tin caps&#13;
furnished free.&#13;
Percy Swarthout&#13;
Funeral Director&#13;
AND EMfALMER&#13;
ILL CALLS ANSWERED&#13;
PROMPTLY DAY OR RIGHT&#13;
PARLORS&gt;T&#13;
PLIMPTON'S OLD STAND Phone No.30&#13;
/ PINCKNEY, MICH I&#13;
Mrs.&#13;
sick list.&#13;
Mrs. Ruth Chapman visited at&#13;
Wm. Pyper's last Saturday.&#13;
•Will Stevenson of North Lake,&#13;
was in towu one day last week.&#13;
Emmett Hadley is in Ann Arbor&#13;
this week serving as juror.&#13;
Fred and Howard Marshall of '&#13;
Stockbridge, spent Sunday with&#13;
friends here.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Marshall has returned&#13;
from a week's visit with Ann&#13;
Arbor relatives.&#13;
The Barnes Travelling Co. will&#13;
j?ive an entertainment in the&#13;
Presbyterian hall, Tuesday evening,&#13;
Oct. 9. *&#13;
If an article is imitated, the original&#13;
is always best. Think it over, and&#13;
when yon go to huy that hoi of salve j&#13;
to k»ep around the house get DeWitts&#13;
Witch Hazel Salve. It is the original&#13;
and the name is sta-nped on every box.&#13;
Good for eczema, tetter, boils, cuts and&#13;
braises, and especially reoon mended&#13;
for piles.&#13;
Nfcold.by F. A Blgler, Dragtfit&#13;
Did yon say wedding bells?&#13;
Mrs. H. F. Sigler and Mrs. W. H.&#13;
Clark attended the W. C. T. U. convention&#13;
at Oak Grove this week.&#13;
A reminder of winter came Tuesday&#13;
morning in the form ot a few enow&#13;
flakes. It makes one think of the&#13;
ooal bin and that promised wood.&#13;
Mrs. R. A. Kisby, of Hamburg, has&#13;
charge of the sanitarium while her&#13;
mother, Mrs. Vaughn is at Grand&#13;
Radids attending the state meeting of&#13;
theO. E. S.&#13;
Mrs. M. Wilson packed her goods&#13;
and left this week to join her husband&#13;
at Flint where they will make their&#13;
home. Their manv friends here wish&#13;
them success.&#13;
The ladies of the Cong'l church society&#13;
wish to notify all those who did&#13;
not receive their chicken-pie pan last&#13;
Saturday night will find them at&#13;
Jackson &amp; Cad well's store.&#13;
Circulars were issued from this&#13;
office, this week, for £. L. More,&#13;
dentist, who has located in Pinckney.&#13;
Mr. Moore has something in his "adv"&#13;
in this issae to interest yon. Read it&#13;
all.&#13;
Royal Hardy of Howell is at the&#13;
Pasteur Institute at Ann Arbor for&#13;
treatment. He bad a co v which it&#13;
was thought died of hydrophobia and&#13;
while he was extracting the spinal&#13;
column to send to the Pasteur Institute,&#13;
be cut his band on the bone and&#13;
is there lor treatment.&#13;
This is the time of year when it&#13;
takes considerable money to get ready&#13;
for winter. It would h»lp us out&#13;
considerable if those owing us small&#13;
amounts would give them attention&#13;
and settle at once. Each amount is&#13;
small but in the aggregate they&#13;
amount to considerable.&#13;
THe argument against a parcel pos&#13;
in this country is that its establish&#13;
ment would injure the byrsiness of&#13;
some of the small retailer?, bat there&#13;
is one thing the small retailer can do&#13;
and that is, reach the people bv parcel&#13;
post as well as the "mail order"&#13;
houses of the big cities. The country&#13;
merchant can sell the, same goods as&#13;
cheaply and their expenses are not&#13;
half as much. There is one thing&#13;
they must learn, to do however, and&#13;
that is to let the people know that&#13;
they have the goods by advertising.&#13;
The reason so many send to the "mail&#13;
order" houses for certain goods, is,&#13;
that the "mail order" houses go after&#13;
the trade by any and all kinds of ad&#13;
verti ing. There is no obligation on&#13;
the Government to protect the small&#13;
traders at the erpe ise of all the people&#13;
and th,3 principle of the greatest&#13;
good to the greatest number if applied&#13;
by the next congress would, result in&#13;
the parcel post tor this country.&#13;
Our Immense 8tort It Picked to Its Fullest Capacity&#13;
We cap show you a larger assortment of merchandise suitable to your&#13;
needs, and at lower prices than can be found in any store&#13;
in Livingston County&#13;
Great Opening Sale&#13;
Ladies', Misses' and Children's Cloaks and Furs&#13;
No Such Yalues E v e r Shown&#13;
Prioes r&amp;ngiag on Ladies' Cloaks—Latest Styles—&#13;
2.00, 2.50, 3 50. 4.60, 5.00, 7.50, 8.50, 10.00 aud up&#13;
Prices ranging on Children's Cloaks—1.25,150, 2.00, 2.50, 300 up 9&#13;
One lot of Ladies' 8,10, 15 dollar Cloaks to be closed out at 2.50, 3.98, and 6.50&#13;
Ladies' Furs 75 cts. 1.00, 1.25 up&#13;
300 pr.Cadies Fine 3.00, 3.50 value Shoes to be closed out your choice 1.50&#13;
The Greatest Bargains in Shoes of all kinds ever offered in Livingston county&#13;
All Men's Leather and Rubber Roots at Cost&#13;
A\&#13;
1BO Men's S u i t s of C l o t h e s t o b e c l o s e d o u t ah 1 - 2 P r i c e&#13;
Men's Fine Suits ranging in price 5.50, 6.50, 7.50, up&#13;
Men's Business Suite 2.50, 3 00, 3.50, 498&#13;
Men's Fine Overcoat*500, 6.00, 7.50, up&#13;
Children's Suits and Overcoats 1.25, 1.50, 2.00, 2 98&#13;
B a r g a i n s in Underwear* Bedding, B l a n k e t s e t c .&#13;
W e c a n s a v e y o u m o n e y on y o u r Pall Bill&#13;
We can save you from 25cU. to 1.50 on a single pair of Shoes&#13;
We can save you from 1.50 to 5.00 on a single Suit or Overcoat&#13;
We can save you from 2.50 to {^.00 on a single Cloak or Jacket&#13;
W h y not S a v e It&#13;
We invite you to look over our stock and t&lt;et" our prices. Bring all&#13;
your Proeuce, Batter, Eggs, and Dried Appier to us, we will giv-e&#13;
you the Highest Market Price&#13;
Yours Anxious to P l e a s e&#13;
&lt;A. J . Prindle&#13;
BIG DEPARTMENT STORE&#13;
HOWBLb,&#13;
MICHIGAN&#13;
Edwin Farmer&#13;
Democratic Candidate for the Legislature&#13;
EVERYBODY INVITED&#13;
TO COME AND HEAR&#13;
Gov. Warner&#13;
Hon. P. H. Kelley&#13;
Sam'l W. Smith&#13;
AND COUNTY OFFICERS&#13;
at the&#13;
Opera House, Monday&#13;
• • %,&#13;
Evening, Oct, 15&#13;
7:30 LOCAL TIME&#13;
Respectfully solicits your votes, and if elected promises to legislate&#13;
for the best interests of the people of Livingston county irrespective&#13;
of party.&#13;
About forty of tbe'frimds of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Harrie Palmer yav* •ihem a&#13;
surorisd in the line o a kitchen shower,&#13;
Monday evening at the home of&#13;
bis sister, Mrs. Frank Saxton. The&#13;
usnal «ood time was had durinu the! dnu^hter of Mrs. E. W. Mart&#13;
evening and light refreshments were&#13;
served at a late hour.—Blisstiehl Advance.&#13;
Mrs. Palmer WAS formerly&#13;
Misi Ethel Graham of this viMage.&#13;
Aromatft' I ' I - I I I t.urrrny.&#13;
"I hope you notirr how nw,oot I am."&#13;
•mlled tlu» Rlrl WIUMI ih»\v woro out on&#13;
the Rtroot Hgnlu. "While lh»&gt; man wn*&#13;
wrapping np the t• »-.&gt;t-lil&gt;:•-.t»sl» I WMX&#13;
trying »11 tho perfumo n:i ilie oonntor.&#13;
Be look I'd n.r nn« HW!'UII,\ luirl."&#13;
"I should think \\v W'.iuhl h:m&gt; hud&#13;
you arretted," rtmmrkcrt lu&gt;r companion&#13;
fertwly. "What If evorjiKxIy tried all&#13;
th* perfumes like tluit? II iw much&#13;
would he have left to aoll?"—New&#13;
• York Press.&#13;
Mrs i\ B Eaman and chitdren of^&#13;
Garden City, Kan , arc spending the&#13;
year in Ann Arbor, where the tw%.&#13;
sons ent^i thi U of M. andthedaugk*&#13;
t*r ih- limb'school. Mrs. Eaman is a&#13;
in of&#13;
this plane.&#13;
Through the kindness of Mrs. D. F.&#13;
Ewen w« h*d the pleasure of lookinj&#13;
over the Fairbanks Daily Times ta\&#13;
past w*ek It is published in Pairhanks,&#13;
Alaska. It is much like any&#13;
other newspaper only that much -of&#13;
the news pertains to mining of gold.&#13;
A letter received at this office the&#13;
r.a*t week from Lincoln £. Smith,&#13;
yiv8 his address as San Francisco, Cal.&#13;
and &amp;iate* that be is at work there.&#13;
He and T. P. McClear. of Gregory,&#13;
are rooming together. They will&#13;
read the Pinckney newt from the&#13;
DISPATCH.&#13;
V&#13;
/•*.,«..&lt;£:&#13;
&lt;."&#13;
&lt; C»i</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch October 11, 1906</text>
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                <text>October 11, 1906 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>Newspaper archives</text>
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                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="8845">
                <text>1906-10-11</text>
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          <element elementId="45">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="8846">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
              </elementText>
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