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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan, Thursday, December 12, 1912 No. SO&#13;
fflistate f^Tents Tragedy&#13;
Clerk SsNtflli Fire Girtrfdns for&#13;
Cutir Fire 6«i&#13;
School Notes&#13;
Koy flicks is absent on account&#13;
of sickness.&#13;
Kathleen Roche visited school&#13;
Wednesday p. m.&#13;
Margaret Brogan was the ^uest&#13;
of Kathleen Roche Monday.&#13;
Raymond Mclntyre is on the&#13;
sick list.&#13;
The High School Orchestra con-&#13;
Bat for the mistake of a clerk&#13;
who sold rim fire cartridges for a&#13;
center fire gun * tragedy would no&#13;
doubt have resulted at Hamburg&#13;
last Friday. Mrs. Arthur Rice,&#13;
wifeof the snperintendantof the, . . , ~ „ , .. , L Hiimbnrg schools and Mrs. Fred ?llltl?F ?t ° ° a Campbell,1st. vie&#13;
Rice, wife of a cobbler, are neigh-(li?: ^ron Dunning, 2nd violin;&#13;
borsandupto a short tfo&gt;e ago! 5 ¾ ° ®?a:t^onJ' c°r n e t ; Alger&#13;
were the best of friends. Both|H *U flate' Earl dripper, drums&#13;
women worked in the bean room)a?d t r a Ps ftod R u t h Potterton,&#13;
at Watkiu's elevator and recently Pla?° accompanist are practicing&#13;
hha*dA *a lmit.tfil»e tfmroiuiKbiloe tthhoe ^fo.rmmAe.r ,I with great diligence.&#13;
Mrs. Rice claiming that the latter&#13;
had slandered her. Soon afterward&#13;
they made up and apparent-&lt;&#13;
ly were as good friends as ever, j&#13;
Friday the professor's wife pur-;&#13;
chased a center fire revolver at&#13;
one store and a box of cartridges&#13;
at another store. The cartridges&#13;
were rim fire cartridges.&#13;
Meeting a son of Mrs. Fred Rice&#13;
on the street she ...askedhimto instruct&#13;
her in the loading of the&#13;
revolver saying she was unfamiliar&#13;
with weapons. After loading&#13;
the revolver, she proceeded to the&#13;
baau room at the elevator and going&#13;
up to the cobbler's wife placed&#13;
the revolver to ber head and pulled&#13;
the trigger three times, saving,&#13;
You have had yonr say long&#13;
enough Now I'll have mine." But&#13;
the cartridges failed to explode.&#13;
Confusion ensued. One woman&#13;
fainted away three times before&#13;
the professor's wife was overpowered&#13;
and disarmed A warrant&#13;
w,is sworn outa for her and she&#13;
was taken to the county jail at&#13;
Howell. Later she was released&#13;
under bail by fn?:ide. Both&#13;
women are well known and highly&#13;
respected and it is not believed&#13;
the professor' s wife is responsible&#13;
for her acts. The two families are&#13;
oot related.&#13;
A New System&#13;
SPECIAL CHRISTMAS SALE&#13;
Commencing Thursday, December 12, and Closing Wednesday, December 25&#13;
i&#13;
AIL prisoners at thn Washtenaw&#13;
county jail who are able are forced&#13;
to work out their sentence on&#13;
the road cutting brush and other*&#13;
wise improving the highways.&#13;
Many of the farmers to show their&#13;
appreciation have Jbeen inviting&#13;
the gang in to dinner. A number&#13;
of counties have sent committees&#13;
there to investigate the system&#13;
with a view to adopting it&#13;
aiyl all have reported favorably of&#13;
the plan. During the six weeks&#13;
the system has been in operation&#13;
only one prisoner haj made bis&#13;
escape from the deputy sheriff&#13;
charge. in&#13;
Don't miss that Chicken Pie&#13;
Supper to be yiven Saturday&#13;
night by the M. E. Ladies in their&#13;
rooms below the Opera House.&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
Grocery Specials&#13;
1 Can Peos 10c&#13;
IJ Cans Coin 25c&#13;
1 Can Tomatoes 10c&#13;
1 lb. Best Raisins 8c&#13;
Soda 5c&#13;
2 pkgs. Washing Pcwder.. .j_. fl_...._._._.5c.&#13;
IOcHar "Williaoo'B Shaving Soap 5c&#13;
1 qt. Olive* 27c&#13;
l-5c Can Baking Powder 3c&#13;
1 Large BottU Olives 21c&#13;
1 pkg. Mince Meat 8o&#13;
Sardines in Oil, 7 Cans 25o&#13;
Sardines in Mustard, 12c Cnn 9c&#13;
15c Can Mackeral 12c&#13;
Corn Starch * 4c&#13;
25c Coffee 22c&#13;
4 lb. 50c Tea 2 l c&#13;
MOcSack Suit 8c&#13;
$ gal. Best Molasses .16c&#13;
1 Cun Red Salmon 14o&#13;
Ladies List&#13;
Kid Gloves 81.00 to H 50&#13;
Wo »1 Gloves 25c to 50i:&#13;
Lace Collars 50c t«» H 50&#13;
Fine Shoes&#13;
Lisle and Silk Hose&#13;
Overshoes&#13;
Handkerchiefs&#13;
Combs and Barrete&#13;
Mens List&#13;
Two Pair Sox 25c&#13;
Gloves from 25&gt; lo H 50&#13;
Overshoes from * 1 1 0 to S&gt;2 75&#13;
Rubbers from 90c to 83 00&#13;
Ties from 25c to 50c&#13;
Handkerchiefs from 5c to 25c&#13;
Mittens from 15c to $1 00&#13;
Coif Buttons from -25c to $1 00&#13;
¢1.25 Wool Sweaters 75c&#13;
—- ALL DKESS G O O P S AT COST&#13;
All 35c goods 25c All 50c goods at 41c&#13;
All 60c goods at 47c All 75c 'goods at 61c&#13;
All $1.1X1 good* .-it 79c All $1.50 goods at ^1.21&#13;
_ _ — O U T I N G S&#13;
All 10c Outing at 8|c Alt Percales a t . , l i e&#13;
All 12jc Ginghams at 10c_ All Everett^ Shirtings...&#13;
ALL BED COMFOKTABLKS TO UK SOLD AT COST&#13;
1 Lot of Odds and Ends in Children* Stockings at COST PKICKS&#13;
\ fine line of Handkerchiefs ranging in price from lc to 5(&gt;e&#13;
1 LoL of Misses 50c Wool Luderwear at i'2c&#13;
Our Kubber Stock is large aud the lowest in prices. Cull aud see&#13;
2 0 p e r c e n t o f f on all Mens Shoes during this sale&#13;
8*c&#13;
A L L S A L E S CASH&#13;
W. W. BARANRDi **AAttfMAAAAAtt*aAa)a&gt;a)tM0tMftAe)S)f)SMS)f)OS)S)OtStS4A0#0S)tS9&#13;
Anneal M e e %&#13;
Putnam and Ramberg Farmer's Cab&#13;
The annual meeting of Putnam&#13;
and Hamburg Farmer's Club was&#13;
held at the pleasant home of Mr,&#13;
and Mrs. S. E. Swarthout Nov. 30.&#13;
After a sumptuous chicken pie&#13;
dinner a fine program was rendered&#13;
The following officers were elected&#13;
for the ensuing year: Pies. Geo.&#13;
VanHorn; 1st. Vice Pres., H. F.&#13;
Kice; 2ud Vice Pres. Frank Mac-&#13;
Kinder; Seo'y; Mts. Fred Teeple;&#13;
Treas.; S. E, VanHorn; Organist;&#13;
Miss Fern Hendee.&#13;
The resolution from the President&#13;
of the,State Association relative&#13;
to a change in membership&#13;
and dues was taken up and after&#13;
some discussion it was voted not&#13;
to endorse the amendment. Considerable&#13;
sentiment was expressed&#13;
in favor of appointing a commit.&#13;
tee to act with the President to&#13;
secure speakers and take up other&#13;
new work in crder to make the&#13;
work even more interesting and&#13;
instructive than in the past.&#13;
T O HAVB A J O L L Y CHRISTMAS&#13;
Make presents to your father, mother, sister, brother, wife or husband,&#13;
children, neighbor, friends or sweetheart, and select them from&#13;
our stock. Our prices will give everybody a chance to play Santa Claus&#13;
25 DOZEN MENS INITIAL&#13;
A' t&#13;
Business Quite&#13;
At last the people of Pinckney&#13;
•re going to have what they have&#13;
.been looking for.&#13;
*v?Tbe Hoy t Bros, have purchased&#13;
electric light plant of the Jack-&#13;
ID Lighting Co. and as soon as&#13;
ible will move the same to&#13;
their mill and ran it by water, giving&#13;
all night light. This is something&#13;
the people have Ions wished&#13;
for. Tbeirew firm intend to give&#13;
the best service po-sibk and their&#13;
support by the people will be appreciated.&#13;
The new concern will&#13;
fas known bv the name of the&#13;
PIHOXNXV ELECTBIC CO.&#13;
Mens Neckwear&#13;
Latest Designs s 25c aud 50c&#13;
Mens Holiday&#13;
Suspenders&#13;
For ... 25c and 50c&#13;
Mens Suspenders and&#13;
Garters to Match&#13;
For... , . 50c, 75c, »1.00&#13;
Gents Umbrellas&#13;
Pat op in Christmas boxes at »1.50, 1-75, 2.00&#13;
Mens D r e s s Shirts&#13;
S*H«. SVtt, 6 * * 4 0 •&#13;
$\.2S \&gt;ataes to dose; at&#13;
9joc ^ v&amp;vr&#13;
Handkerchiefs&#13;
Regular 10c values, only _ „ 5c&#13;
Mens Dress S h o e s&#13;
For «2.50, 3.00, 3.50, 4.00&#13;
Men&amp; Kid Gloves&#13;
ANDMOCCA MITTS. 98c to #1.50&#13;
New patterns, th* kind that sell for 1.00, at _89c&#13;
i&#13;
i Mens Wool Overshirts&#13;
For. 1,00 and 1.5D&#13;
»&gt;':&#13;
)hickeD thieves are getting ac-&#13;
6 ¾ this vicinity.&#13;
14! B? Ladies will also offer&#13;
luster of spurns for sale.&#13;
Boy Crownmn and family and&#13;
Geo* Sheridan and wife of Hamberg&#13;
spent Sunday at WntBtades.&#13;
&amp; and Mrs. Dale Dsr&#13;
waw nsmed ForartWiliis*.&#13;
w i ^ s W n ^ t ^ s T ' e l e c t i o i of&#13;
*fie»rs*Pridsy svsning, Dsc. IK&#13;
Att tt*«swn-SMTf«NMft*d to* be&#13;
Bargains in Vleus and Boys Cnderwear&#13;
Bargains in Mens and Boys Sweaters&#13;
Bargains iu Mens and Boys Dress Shoes&#13;
Bargains in Mens Work Shirts and Overalls&#13;
BargMns in ftiens Dack &amp; Wool Lined Costs&#13;
30 Dozen&#13;
Mens Canvas Gloves&#13;
5c per pair&#13;
7ff 01VL.Y&#13;
Mens $1.00 Winter Caps&#13;
To Close at 75c&#13;
Mens Rain Coats&#13;
Extra VHIUHS »t . »3.50,5.00, 6.00, 10.00&#13;
Grocery Specials&#13;
Blue Ribbon Raisins, pe; pkg&#13;
Best Red Salmon, per can&#13;
Choice Mixed Nuts, per lb _&#13;
Gold Medal Baking Powder, per lb&#13;
Lenox Soap, 8 bars for&#13;
Sate opens Satuday, Dec. 14,&#13;
•i • y r f ''fit "• **' * - Leftve four Order Early For Baked. Goods&#13;
MURPHY &amp; JACKSON,&#13;
Fresh Candies&#13;
Largest assortment ever shown m Piuckney.&#13;
Ranging from , 10c to 40c per lb.&#13;
c l o s e s at 11 p. mM Tuesday, Dec. 2 4&#13;
• • . ; ' • * &gt; * . &gt;&#13;
\,&#13;
/ . . I&#13;
253 •#jp* m^&#13;
A. Jackknife Carpenter&#13;
can do some good work with&#13;
that handy tool, but a real Carpenter&#13;
uses a Modern Chest&#13;
t of Tools and the right raw&#13;
materials.&#13;
HENKEL'S&#13;
Bread Flour&#13;
produces more and better&#13;
bread than any "one flour&#13;
for all purposes."&#13;
VELVET&#13;
PASTRY FLOUR&#13;
does not have to be loaded&#13;
with shortening to ge^ proper&#13;
r e s u l t s — T h e s e modern&#13;
Kitchen helps save time and&#13;
money and produce the best&#13;
bread and pastry.&#13;
Henkel's Flour&#13;
Is Never Dear&#13;
Ship Your Furs to&#13;
UNSTEN&#13;
We Want Tea Million OoOart' Worth of For*&#13;
Bfegar Prtoaal B«Uar Grading! M o a t M o i M r by&#13;
•at una Malll Thnao uro some of the advnutatea&#13;
Uuitaievn'inwbenyouecnaynurfurstoFuDitoa&#13;
Bros. A Co. in 8t. Lnoi»—(be I^rvTht&#13;
f u r ITouxe in tbn lyiruettt Primary Fur&#13;
Mnrkut 1A the World. Our aa lot ore&#13;
utUiniled by the greatest fur ba&gt;eni of&#13;
tl»i» country. Kuropa and Canada. Compolitico&#13;
•~-i UPPERS amou^ them la flerco. And ui»&#13;
TREE 1&#13;
«ut&gt;ie |&gt;rircal De*l I OK direct with ynu&#13;
a«itedo,cun'tT"o»op » tay wecanuffortf&#13;
I to pay you biggeat price*?&#13;
BISJ Monoy In Trapping&#13;
*• Trap during apnretlmft. Mink. Coon,&#13;
Skunk.MniUrst. Wolf, Lyux. White Weaael&#13;
andotliar f u n ara valnabla to m, and ll'a a clncfa&#13;
to catch thato with Pauitcn animal Uait Wowanl&#13;
Tan Million Dollari' worth of j u . l am-h tart and&#13;
will p»» caib for them. To r«t tu-«t reault*&#13;
wruij Funsten Animal Bait-$lCan&#13;
W« goaranUa (bit bait to l o m t M your ratrh.&#13;
.Astasia ean't rati at it Ouecan, at a dollar, mad* |1.1M clear&#13;
a T o M r o r o n i m i n Uaad by U S Ootarnmunt and b» aipfrl-&#13;
^•oadWapfMriartrfwhera. Too* (Irand Prlia.World'iFair.1$&lt;M.&#13;
•tatlSfcfant ball for each kind of animal. Bute kind warlad.&#13;
V J U P S » T r * 0 T O « V C O S T - t o c l u d l o f thafamnui Vloa&#13;
w . a l a o as lira outfit* for trappara. all at lavinr prirm.&#13;
#WCC—Trappar'iOulda.Oama l a a i . Supply t'atalof--Sbeokf&#13;
&lt;*»*—aritb Pur Harkat Baport, Shipping Taca, ate. Wrlta today.&#13;
••laWsSMaBrM.'SjCs., 701 r u n a t o n a i d g . , S t . L a u l a , Mo.&#13;
WTENTS Watajoa E.f?o1em*n,Wa*r&gt;.&#13;
Ington.D.C Hooksfrw, I upbeat&#13;
refereuuea. Ba»l result*.&#13;
PROMISING TO MARRY HER.&#13;
Ella—Dick la a very promising fel-&#13;
8tella—Why don't you sue him for&#13;
••reach of promise?&#13;
Not Used to "High Life."&#13;
An old farmer was In London visiting&#13;
his son, who had got on in the&#13;
world, and who kept a large house,&#13;
-servants, etc.&#13;
When the two Bat down to dinner&#13;
.the first night a manservant waited&#13;
*ipon them, and was most assiduous&#13;
•4av his attentions to the old farmer&#13;
After watching his antics for a bit the&#13;
•guest exclaimed:&#13;
"What the mischief are ye dancin'&#13;
about like that for? Can ye not draw&#13;
4n yer chair and sit down? I'm sure&#13;
-Uteres enough here for the three of&#13;
1"—London Mail.&#13;
One Fisherman's Idea.&#13;
First Angler—Look, this fish was&#13;
almost caught before; see the broken&#13;
hook in its mouth.&#13;
afecond Angler—It should have had&#13;
-sense enough to steer clear of hooks&#13;
after that&#13;
First Angler—Oh, come, you can't&#13;
aspect a Ash to exhibit more sense&#13;
than a human being.&#13;
Just 4ftbppJne&gt;&#13;
Tired Clerk (over piled up counter)&#13;
—Can I show you anything else,' e r e d ^ 8 nakedness with rags&#13;
madam?&#13;
Costomer—Yes; the nearest war&#13;
OQC—Boston Evening Transcript&#13;
Borrowed money often&#13;
toss of memory.&#13;
cau set&#13;
Dr.nevee's Pleasant Pellets regulateand Invig-&#13;
Bstomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated,&#13;
granules, easy to take as caudy. Adv.&#13;
Only a poor love letter can be&#13;
^•polled by weRk spelling.&#13;
tkoaffctftu person tttea liquid brae. It's a&#13;
e* 0* blue tn a iarge bottle of water. Ask for&#13;
Crass Jkll Blnt&gt;&lt;the blue tta»r&gt; *tt bioe.Adv&#13;
Just Before the Battle.&#13;
''''Would you marry him if you were&#13;
" I ' d marry anyone that asked me, if&#13;
I%ere you." m J. D. KELLOQG'8 A . . . f o r tho prompt relief of&#13;
t fof Ifa wnU aw F M i SRSNXI&#13;
* LYMAN 00a, Lai. BUFFALO. N.Y.&#13;
N tho left, just past.&#13;
the w e a t h t; r hen's&#13;
nest, and not more&#13;
than two steps from the&#13;
box where they keep the&#13;
cuckoo, there is the long&#13;
bed where rosea bloom all&#13;
the year round. And they&#13;
grow like this so that&#13;
Columbine m a y a 1 w a y s&#13;
have one to stick in her&#13;
hair, and that odd, mocking,&#13;
soft-hearted cynic Pier-&#13;
Columbine. r o t may cull one now and&#13;
again to twiddle between his teeth.&#13;
If you know the way, and the Cheshire cat will&#13;
let you, you walk down the garden path, past the&#13;
butterfly lime, and arrive at the neatest little&#13;
cottage in Olympus.&#13;
Now this is the dwelling place of the Harlequin&#13;
set—Harlequin, Columbine, Clown and Pantaloon.&#13;
It is one cottage in a little colony on&#13;
the lower slopes of Mount Olympus (where the&#13;
high gods dwell: Jupiter and the like), and is&#13;
most- important because it contains the oldest&#13;
inhabitants.&#13;
The Clerk of the Weather lives a little higher&#13;
up. The Four Queens a2id Kings live in a square&#13;
Ql pagoda-like houses, and are waited upon by the&#13;
Knaves. Pierrot and Pierrette live in romantic&#13;
seclusion by a pool iu a tumble-down place covered&#13;
with blue roses. And away behind the&#13;
fields of stars where the flocks of clouds graze,&#13;
there is another village where the Seven Princesses&#13;
live, and the Third Son and an Ogre, and&#13;
a Talking Rabbit, and all those peculiar and&#13;
beautiful people who are entangled in our minds&#13;
with the memories of -night nurseries, -and__the&#13;
scent of our mothers who-bent over us in wonderful&#13;
toilettes, and told us to go to sleep, or&#13;
they'd be late for dinner.&#13;
When.it gets to be about Christmas'there is&#13;
a sort of aroma of excitement on the lower slopes&#13;
of Olympus, and, especially in the house where&#13;
Harlequin lives—a delicious sense of something&#13;
exciting happening.&#13;
Columbine opens the lid of the well that looks&#13;
down onto the world, and there comes up a murmur&#13;
of children's voices, and you can hear the&#13;
quaintest things being said about the hanging&#13;
up of stockings, and about Santa&#13;
Glaus and the likely width of chimneys,&#13;
and the running power of&#13;
reindeer. And there is a tremendous&#13;
rustle of colored paper, and a great&#13;
run on almonds and raisins, and&#13;
quite respectable citizens stand in&#13;
front of shop windows gazing at&#13;
dolls and dolls gaze back at them,&#13;
so that the citizens go back forty&#13;
years at a rush, and the rush is so&#13;
great sometimes that they get tears&#13;
in their eyes; for memory is quicker&#13;
than motor cars, and the road it&#13;
travels- is often dark and broken.&#13;
So Columbine leaves the top of&#13;
the well open all day and all night,&#13;
and all the people in her cottage&#13;
sleep with their windows open, so&#13;
that the sweetly laden air comes up&#13;
and gives them wonderful dreams.&#13;
It does more than that. It waves&#13;
the branches of the Christmas tree&#13;
that grows at the bottom of the&#13;
garden, near the sausage frameB,&#13;
and very soon candles begin to bud&#13;
on its branches.&#13;
Now when the candles begin to&#13;
get ripe, which happens at the same&#13;
time that geese and turkeys hang&#13;
in rows in shops and grow rosettes&#13;
all over them, Harlequin takes an&#13;
old, oaken pipe from a cupboard under&#13;
the stairs, and they all sit round&#13;
while he puts it to his lips and&#13;
blows.&#13;
As ho plays, dreams come to them&#13;
of their ancient days, for Harlequin&#13;
is first cousin to Mercury, and wears&#13;
a black mask to hide the light of&#13;
his face when he visits Columbine,&#13;
who is Psyche, the Soul; the Clown&#13;
is Momus, the Spirit of Laughter;&#13;
and Pantaloon is Charon, who has&#13;
that grim work of ferrying the souls&#13;
over the Styx.&#13;
There's an odd link of memories&#13;
and of things held all through the&#13;
centuries, but the most charming is&#13;
this: Columbine Is a flower-like person,&#13;
and there is a flower called Columbine, and&#13;
it is BO called because it Is like four doves with&#13;
outspread wings, and the French dove is colombe,&#13;
and the dove is the symbol of the soul. So the&#13;
world is never allowed to forget beautiful things,&#13;
even if the burden of history is borne on the&#13;
back of a flower. And the god-like glow and glitter&#13;
of Mercury's limbs still shows in the glistening&#13;
Bequlns on Harlequin's clothes, parti-colored&#13;
as thoy have always been, to show how he covall&#13;
ready to be lighted. They are so ready that&#13;
when Pantaloon looks out of his window before&#13;
making up his lace for the day he sees that&#13;
the candles have burst into flame-flowers in the&#13;
night.&#13;
Then Columbine takes out a pipe, and she puts&#13;
some magic soap into nectar and stirs it round&#13;
with the bowl of the pipe until frothy suds appear.&#13;
And then she blows bubbles that float up&#13;
and out of the; window until they reach the&#13;
Christmas tree, when they turn into great, glittering&#13;
glass balls, all sorts of colors, and show&#13;
pictures of the world all colored and shining.&#13;
The children in the World look up and think&#13;
they see Harlequin and Columbine floating down&#13;
as gently as featherc, but they don't say so because&#13;
their elders would only tell them it was&#13;
the clouds. But it is Harlequin and Columbine,&#13;
and Pantaloon end Clown follow soon after,&#13;
bringing the&#13;
t r e e w i t h&#13;
N o w their&#13;
each to his&#13;
Columbine to&#13;
to preparing&#13;
that m l i s t&#13;
this, season,&#13;
easily as ,a&#13;
in a breeze.&#13;
his m a g i c ,&#13;
things must&#13;
tiful n o w,&#13;
must buy the&#13;
Indies. And Pierrette.&#13;
C h r i e t mas&#13;
them.&#13;
work begins,&#13;
own job and&#13;
hers. Clown&#13;
the laughter&#13;
spring up iu&#13;
and ripple as&#13;
barley field&#13;
Harlequin to&#13;
f o r common&#13;
appear beauand&#13;
a penny&#13;
wealth of the&#13;
Pantaloon to&#13;
stirring up old memories in dull people, so that&#13;
uncles must remember all their nephews in remembering&#13;
when they were nephews themselves,&#13;
and had a peculiar hunger at Christmas.&#13;
Columbine"is awfully practical. Hersentiment&#13;
extends from the joy of watching the making of&#13;
baby-clothes to the pleasure of remembering to&#13;
put nice soap in the spare rooms. It is she who&#13;
sees that children get the right presents, and&#13;
when they don't it is not her fault, but the fault&#13;
of some stupid person in a shop.&#13;
It is she who suggests the secret delight of&#13;
keeping presents hidden at the bottom of the&#13;
wardrobe; and it is she who suggests the secret&#13;
delight of peering at children when the,y are&#13;
asleep,&#13;
There are Pagan Saints who find Arcadia everywhere.&#13;
Pan pipes as much in the crowded city&#13;
as on Mount Ida when the sun is high. And&#13;
Columbine finds roses where the world sees&#13;
thorns; and Harlequin finds magic in motor&#13;
'buses; and Pantaloon digs away for pleasant&#13;
memories in the most unlikely places, and finds&#13;
them bright and clean, and as good as new.&#13;
These half-gods of mine (and yours) come&#13;
down at Christmas to correct the bilious attitude&#13;
All thlB, beautified by the essence of Time, like&#13;
things put away In a cedar chest, comes back&#13;
when Harlequin blows on his pipe that air the&#13;
shepherds learnt in Greece from Pan.&#13;
The next night Clown will take out another&#13;
kind of pipe, a long churchwarden of white clay,&#13;
and fill it with tobacco, and then as the fragrant&#13;
clouds roll up into the rafters, memories come&#13;
of all the great people of the Harlequinades they&#13;
play down in the world, all Inspired by them, and&#13;
they see the figure of Tarlaton, who was the first&#13;
clown, and Invented the vary clothes they now&#13;
wear, hand in hand with GriraaldS, that great&#13;
clown. And they seem to see all the great Italian&#13;
Harlequins, and the dainty French Columbines,&#13;
and the old dandies of fifteenth-century Venice&#13;
whose clothes Pantaloon wears.&#13;
Do you know that elderly gentlemen rh, the&#13;
World smell that magic tobacco, or something&#13;
like it, and they forget their paunches, or their&#13;
bald heads, and they sit and dream of the time&#13;
they went to their first pantomime? * Was it&#13;
•Cinderella," or "Beauty and the Beast"? Or was&#13;
it that B p l e n d i d t h i n g&#13;
"Mother Oooae," or that entrancing&#13;
production "The&#13;
yellow Dwarf"?&#13;
Such things are conjured&#13;
up by just that one pipe of&#13;
tobacco smoked in the cottage&#13;
on Olympus, and on&#13;
that night a gentle breeze&#13;
blows up through the well,&#13;
laden with the poignant,&#13;
eternal memories of childhood,&#13;
«n4 the candles on&#13;
Pantaloon. the Christmas tree are&#13;
of the rest&#13;
They c o m e&#13;
s e e d s that&#13;
ers in the&#13;
hearts. They&#13;
ence t h a t&#13;
give a man&#13;
instead of a&#13;
the b e i n g&#13;
that the busweighs&#13;
more&#13;
timent h a d&#13;
up his stockmas&#13;
Eve, and&#13;
feels like to Pierrot.&#13;
of the year,&#13;
to sow those&#13;
grow to flowstill&#13;
innocent&#13;
are the influraakes&#13;
y o u&#13;
fifty c e n t s&#13;
quarter. And&#13;
w h o s a y s&#13;
iness of life&#13;
than the senbetter&#13;
hang&#13;
ing on Christsee&#13;
what it&#13;
find nothing&#13;
but a hole in it in the morning.&#13;
And when it is dark these four quaint figures&#13;
flit through the country, city, town and village&#13;
like conspirators, Harlequin tapping doors and&#13;
windows with his magic wand. "Open, open!"&#13;
.he cries to the Spirit of Chrlstmaa. "Let the&#13;
rich uncle reward his needy nephew, and the&#13;
unforgiving father his repentant son. Mothers,&#13;
forget to be jealous of your elder daughter's&#13;
growing beauty. Children, forget your spite and&#13;
naughtiness. Let's be old-fashioned. Let's believe&#13;
in ghosts. I'll tell you ghost-stories^ storieB&#13;
of yourselves when you were children and played&#13;
Pirates on the stairs.&#13;
And Clown says as he taps on the doors with&#13;
hfi red-hot poker:&#13;
"Open, open, you old grousers! And let the&#13;
Spirit of Pun come into thia house. Romp a hit,&#13;
and lose your twopenny dignity, for pompous&#13;
stiffness makes the gods laugh."&#13;
Pantaloon, taking his turn, taps with his walking-&#13;
stick, and aays:&#13;
"Open, open, and let in the flood of memories&#13;
of the good old times!&#13;
Holly and mistletoe and&#13;
robins, and church bellB&#13;
sounding over the snow.&#13;
And hampers all packed to&#13;
be sent away, and plenty&#13;
to eat at home.&#13;
And then C o l u m b i n e&#13;
steals up to the windows,&#13;
and taps them with the&#13;
rose from her hair, and&#13;
she whispers:&#13;
"Open, open to me all&#13;
you who have no children Harlequin,&#13;
and no friends and no hope, and I will bo the&#13;
warm, nestling tning you covet for your frozen&#13;
hearts, and you shall feel my soft cheek against&#13;
yours till the tears come and your heart takes&#13;
life again. You shall give joy to other people's&#13;
children. And if you have no friends who have&#13;
children, are there not a thousand, thousand children&#13;
who have no friends? Go to them, and give&#13;
them all you can, and you will be rewarded almost&#13;
more than you can bear, for there is a link&#13;
between thoseywho suffer. Are there not some&#13;
you have forgotten or neglected? This lonely&#13;
man, that lonely woman whom you have left uncared&#13;
for, perhaps for years. Put on your hat&#13;
and your coat, and put your heart on your sleeve,&#13;
so that all may know your errand."-&#13;
To see her pleading before black, sombre houses&#13;
where a thin light shines under a blind; to see&#13;
her face pressed against the window of some big&#13;
mansion where a man or a woman sits alone with&#13;
hearts like stone; to see her tears as she essays&#13;
to melt an aching heart is to see something so&#13;
touching and beautiful that one almost wondefs"&#13;
the doors and windows are not instantly opened&#13;
to admit the spirit o f love she begs for so pitifully.&#13;
'»&#13;
"Look at yourselves, Messieurs et Mesdames&#13;
Importance, and remember the funny little things&#13;
you used to be when you bit at coral and bells,&#13;
and wore bibs, and thought everybody in the&#13;
world had enough to eat; when you hated to gGkj&#13;
to bed early, and crept downstairs in your night-^J&#13;
gowns to listen over the bannisters to the voices ;&#13;
in the dining room; when no jam for tea was a&#13;
tragedy. And when your mother's knee was the&#13;
throne of justice and mercy, for you buried your :&#13;
head there with her hand in your I&#13;
hair, and forgot to be afraid'of the&#13;
dark."&#13;
Columbine has her own very partucular&#13;
work, and she calls it in&#13;
her mind Secret Delights. She calla&#13;
it that because she delights in making&#13;
up odd names for emotions, as,&#13;
for instance, when she pointed out&#13;
two' lovers to iffe one day in the&#13;
spring, who were seated under a&#13;
hedge, yellow-flushed with primroses;&#13;
they were holding hands and&#13;
looking at the hills beyond just as&#13;
If some, wonderful thing was about&#13;
to come over the hills to tell them&#13;
what their feelings meant. . And the&#13;
peace was so greatand the moment&#13;
so held that the World seemed to&#13;
have stopped breathing. antT'-something&#13;
superhuman to have poured&#13;
out a cup of stillness. And she&#13;
called it Liquid Velvet. A Liquid&#13;
Velvet moment. And I understood.&#13;
It is Columbine who watches that&#13;
beautiful comedy of the newly mar-j&#13;
ried, who steal about their house&#13;
hand-in-hand, fearful of waking the&#13;
very new servants, fearful of creaking&#13;
the boards as they gaze enraptured&#13;
on tho very new furniture,&#13;
looking with joy on the very new&#13;
pots and pans in the kitchen, turning&#13;
the electric lights up and down&#13;
all over the place to 'see the effect&#13;
in their new bedroom. And be has&#13;
a dreadful brooch for her hidden&#13;
where he keeps his razors; and she&#13;
has knitted him a tie he will have&#13;
to wear. But it is all perfectly&#13;
beautiful.&#13;
Someone wrote the other day that&#13;
people who read are more interested,&#13;
nowadays, in business than in&#13;
dove, and I'm so sorry for that man.&#13;
He Is more blind than I thought&#13;
anybody could be, Business may be&#13;
the means to an end, but Love is&#13;
the beginning and the end. And it&#13;
is just at this season that Love&#13;
makes business: hence the shops full of gifts.&#13;
Imagine a poet writing:&#13;
"Cent, per cent, the moon is rising,&#13;
Watch the stocks upon the bank;&#13;
Rubber shares are too surprising,&#13;
Speculators are surmising&#13;
Who the deuce they have to thank!"&#13;
No one can get a heartbeat out of that, and&#13;
whatever your business man says, he knowB he&#13;
gets all the good in his life out of heartbeats.&#13;
So this Christmas Spirit creeps abont the world,&#13;
mocked at, scorned, but alive.yet. And yon who&#13;
feel these things may one night Bee this quaint&#13;
quartet at work, perhaps for a second at the corner,&#13;
of your street, perhaps just vanishing down&#13;
the drive, or moving swiftly down a country&#13;
lane. And you may aay wonderingly: "It Is a&#13;
cobweb, a moth, and the branch of a tree, and&#13;
the starlight makes them look like—like something&#13;
I remember." •&#13;
But I tell you who they are—Harlequin, Columbine,&#13;
Clown and Pantaloon! And if you hear a&#13;
child's laugh ring out suddenly, and it brings a&#13;
new, quick emotion, one of them has conquered&#13;
you! „ 0 - ,,,&#13;
The spirit of Christmas doesn't cling to presents&#13;
in proportion to their cost—unless y m are very&#13;
rich; and if you-are very rich the voice of the&#13;
jeweler and of the furrier and of the motor car&#13;
maker will seem to you as wise, as the word of a&#13;
happy poor man, though he were a philosopher.&#13;
Simple and genuine and glad—strike these notes&#13;
and the chimes will he&#13;
very melodiously for you&#13;
and for those whom you try&#13;
to make happy. And remember,&#13;
you can't feign&#13;
Christmas without being&#13;
caught as an Impostor,&#13;
both h7 your own conscience&#13;
and by the feelings&#13;
of those about you.&#13;
The very value of Christmas&#13;
is that It puts the genuineness&#13;
of everybody to tat&#13;
unerring teat Ctown.&#13;
EN DANGER&#13;
the WggM to/id . ^ S V &amp; ' a&#13;
the bjtood of One [ W^W 1 Story'&#13;
acid," aa irtitating&#13;
poison that,1s constantly&#13;
forming inside.&#13;
'&#13;
When the kidneys&#13;
fail, uric acid&#13;
causes rheumatic&#13;
attacks, headache,&#13;
dizziness, gravel,&#13;
urinary troubles,&#13;
weak eye*, dropsy&#13;
or heart disease.&#13;
Doan's Kidney&#13;
Pills help the kidneys&#13;
fifiht off uric&#13;
acid—b r i n g i n g&#13;
new streogth to&#13;
weak kidneys and&#13;
relief from backache and urinary ills.&#13;
„ A MICHIGAN CASH.&#13;
Vra. O. W. Burger, 408 Sherman Ave..&#13;
Corunna. Mich.. say«: "The pains throuib&#13;
the •mall of my back wer« so severe thai.&#13;
•ometlrneg I could not tet out of a chair. ™&#13;
If I stoopfd, I would nearly topple ov«r^&#13;
I had awrfui dttey spells and my housework&#13;
was * bu ro&gt;p. Doan'a Kidney P$to.&#13;
helped me from the first fend, -continued&#13;
usu entirely cured me."&#13;
Cat Dba»*s «1 Any Dm, StoM. SO« • Box D O A N ' S ^ "&#13;
I FOSTER-MILB'JRN CO.. Baffalo.N«w York&#13;
Not to Be Caught.&#13;
Farmer" (on one side of the hedge&#13;
to boy on the other side)—Now, then,&#13;
my lad, didn't I tell you not to let me&#13;
catch you here again?&#13;
Roy (preparing to nm)—Ail right,&#13;
don't make a fuss. You ain't caught&#13;
me yet!—Weekly Telegraph.&#13;
Many Children Are S ckly.&#13;
Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children&#13;
Break up Coldai i 24 hours, relieve Feverishneaa,&#13;
Headache, Stomach Troubles, Teething Diaordera.&#13;
mQveand regulate the bowels, and pestrgy&#13;
Worms. They are so pleasant to take children&#13;
like them. Used by mothers far 22 years. At alt&#13;
druggists, 25c. Sample mailed FREE. Addream.&#13;
A."S. Olmsted. teRoyvNTY. Acv:&#13;
There Were Others.&#13;
"You," sighed the rejected lover,&#13;
"would find your name written in imperishable&#13;
characters on my heart&#13;
could you but look."&#13;
"So," murmured the fair young&#13;
thing who was aware of the fact that&#13;
the swain had been playing Romeo&#13;
at the seaside for something like 20&#13;
years. "So? Then you must have a&#13;
heart like a local directory by this&#13;
time/'—Tit-BIts.&#13;
Two Guesses.&#13;
"Well," said the proud father ae&#13;
the doctor entered the room, "what&#13;
is It—a boy or a girl?"&#13;
"I'll give you two guesses, and even&#13;
then you won't guess right," said the&#13;
doctor.&#13;
"Tush! nonsense!" said the proud&#13;
father. "Boy?"&#13;
"Nope," said the doctor.&#13;
"Ah—girl, then?" said the proud&#13;
father&#13;
Nope," said the doctor.&#13;
"Ah—I know,1' said the proud&#13;
father, sadly,—Harper's Weekly.&#13;
INFORMATION WANTED.&#13;
He—You say that all you want la&#13;
a good home and a good husband. I&#13;
can surely furnish you a good home.&#13;
She—But can you furnish roe a&#13;
good husband? -&#13;
NEVER TIRES&#13;
Of the Food That Restored Her fa&gt;&#13;
Health. ^&#13;
"Something wac making me IU and&#13;
I didn't know the cause," writes a&#13;
Colo, young lady; "For two years I&#13;
was thin and sickly, suffering from kk.&#13;
digestion and Inflammatory rfeeumatlam.&#13;
"I had tried different kinds of diet,&#13;
and many of the remedies recommend),&#13;
ed, but got no better.&#13;
"Finally, Mother suggested that I&#13;
try Grape-Nuts, and I began at'once*'&#13;
eating it with a little cream or mflfc.&#13;
A change for the better begitn at once,&#13;
"To-day I am wrll and am raining&#13;
weight and strength all the time; lJve&#13;
gained 10 lbs. ir the last five weeks&#13;
and do not suffer any more from indigestion,&#13;
and the rheumatism is all&#13;
gone. -&#13;
"I know it is to Grape-Nuts alone&#13;
that I owe my restored health. I still&#13;
eat the food twice a day and never&#13;
tire of it" Name given by Postum&#13;
Co., Battle Creek* Mich.&#13;
The flavour of Grape-Niitsjs. peculia*&#13;
to itself. It is neutral, not too iweet&#13;
and has an agreeable, healthful quality&#13;
that never grows tiresome.&#13;
One-of the sources of rhenasarJei^ti&#13;
from overloading the system with&#13;
acid niaterfar, the result of imperfect&#13;
digestion and assimilation. ,&#13;
As soon, as improper food la a ban*&#13;
doned and Grape-Nuts is taken regs&gt;&#13;
larly. digestion is made strong,, t b i&#13;
organs do their work of build in g.Ap&#13;
good fed "blood cells and of canjirt&amp;sj&#13;
away the excess of diseaaeHEo\ku*g&#13;
material from the- system. . t l ^&#13;
The result Is a "certain and eteady&#13;
return to normal- ^ealth^.a^ ittretrtai&#13;
activity. "Tbere'p a reason." Read&#13;
the little book, "The Road to*We!&gt;.&#13;
ville," tn pkgs.&#13;
* * * * * &gt;—ii'jay **f»*uissiuit* •%-&lt;&#13;
•*» m u t a s . tana* sssi fatt of&#13;
'o*r&#13;
*4&#13;
MMMMH&#13;
T&amp;0&#13;
^ • ^ • ^ for all by Calumet.&#13;
For dally use In millions of kitchens has&#13;
proved that Calumet is highest not only in&#13;
quality but in leavening fower as well—unfailing&#13;
in results—pure to the extreme—and&#13;
wonderfully economical in use. Ask yout&#13;
grocer. And try Calumet next bake day.&#13;
RECEIVED HIGHEST A W A R D S&#13;
WorM'l Put*&#13;
FM4 KxpMltlafl,&#13;
CklMl*. •&gt;*•&#13;
|&gt;SrU Kup—U&#13;
Ben. Pr«n««.&#13;
Mia.&#13;
--• s..&#13;
Gat a Canadian Home&#13;
In Western Canada's&#13;
Free Homestead Area&#13;
THE&#13;
PROVINCE ,&#13;
OF&#13;
Manitoba has SVMTEI Hew Home-&#13;
•leading DUtrtct* that&#13;
afford ran opportunity&#13;
to seen re MDacrea of exc&#13;
e 11 e D t_ag7lottlt»ral&#13;
landFBJEB.&#13;
^ ¾ ¾&#13;
"«*£%&#13;
For Brain Browing&#13;
and Cattle Raising&#13;
itnfa lpi rpotfoitralbaleea a bratet anIote sru*psehroiowrs a annd oufn barOokeDento prerr. iod of over a ojvsnor&#13;
raPilewrafeycst oealmimraeitret;a nglo; otdol l. mtbarekveetisy: dbaeaaitr, aabnlde. social eondlttoM awst&#13;
HToaaoesatsetaladas dsta aa&amp;j Jbaee espta rtaob afraaeda laaanddsa lacaonu sb et bbeoM olbdte ra t driostariiocnt*- able price*.&#13;
For timber panieaiars write to&#13;
M. V . M c l n n e e ,&#13;
178Jertar»an»»fc, Detroit, men.&#13;
.1&#13;
FARM AND&#13;
GARDEN&#13;
L3E i&#13;
DEVICE FOR HOLDING BAGS&#13;
Pair of Metal Bars Connected Plvotally&#13;
Form Rectangular Frame in&#13;
Which Sack la Fixed.&#13;
A device for holding a bag open and&#13;
at the same time holding It above the&#13;
ground—on a fence post, for example,&#13;
has been invented by a North Dakota&#13;
man. It consists of a pair of metal&#13;
bars that are plvotally connected.&#13;
The short ends of the bars are bent&#13;
in to form spun*, like the tongs, and&#13;
Bag H o l d i n g F r a m e .&#13;
the long endB form a rectangular&#13;
frame in which the mouth of the bag&#13;
is fixed. A strong spring joins the&#13;
long ends near the pivotal point&#13;
When the outer ends of the bars are&#13;
spread apart the inner ends spread&#13;
also and can then be made to embrace&#13;
a poBt. When the device is let&#13;
go and the spring contracts it grips&#13;
the jaws against the post and holds&#13;
the apparatus in horizontal position,&#13;
with the mouth of the bag open.&#13;
TIME FOR UMING PASTURES&#13;
Late Fall Is Best as Winter Rains&#13;
Will Work It Into Soil—Spread as&#13;
Soon aa Alr-SUcked.&#13;
The latter part of the fall is the best&#13;
time to lime the pasture, as the winter&#13;
ralnB and snows will gradually work&#13;
it into the soil. A medium dressing,&#13;
about 40 bushels or air-slacked lime&#13;
spread to the acre, is about the right&#13;
quantity to use. One bushel of freshly-&#13;
burnt lime, when air slacked, will&#13;
make two bushels; 20 bushels of freshly&#13;
burnt lime will cost six cents per&#13;
bushel at trSjkiln, which is $1.20 per&#13;
acre, not counting the hauling. This&#13;
is an economical dressing for one.&#13;
acre of grass pasture. The lime should&#13;
be spread as soon as it is air-slacked.&#13;
The field should be run over with a&#13;
sharp iron-tooth harrow, and about ten&#13;
pounds of a mixture of timothy, red&#13;
top and blue grass sown to the acre.&#13;
In the spring sow two pounds of red&#13;
clover, one pound of white clover, and&#13;
one pound of alsita cloverseed to the&#13;
acre. The clover and grass will make;&#13;
a rapid growth In the spring if the&#13;
land is in good health. Lime sweetens&#13;
land; kills out Borrel; rots up the&#13;
vegetable matter; disintegrates the&#13;
hard particles of clay and puts the&#13;
ground in good condition for plant&#13;
growth.&#13;
Ground limestone is now quite large-,&#13;
ly used and has some advantages over&#13;
burnt lime. Being ground very flne»&#13;
it may be drilled in with the seed inl&#13;
any quantity. Ground limestone has&#13;
a very mild action on the soil, and ia&#13;
not as effective as burnt lime. It is&#13;
now recommended for light lands and&#13;
for land that is to be sown in alfalfa.&#13;
Two to three tons is said to be the&#13;
proper dressing forgone acre.&#13;
Prepared lime or agricultural lime is&#13;
made by adding water to caustic lime&#13;
out of contact with air. By this process&#13;
56 pounds of caustic lime becomes&#13;
74 pounds of hydrate of lime.&#13;
HOW TO MAKE CORN SHELLER&#13;
FARMERS GOING BACK EAST&#13;
Maiy Advantages Offered Worn Out&#13;
Farms by Adoption of Modern&#13;
Methods of Agriculture.&#13;
A good many men at the present&#13;
time are going east (in many instances&#13;
these were farmer boys back east before&#13;
they grew up and went west) and&#13;
buying worn out, rocky homesteads&#13;
that have been abandoned, hoping with&#13;
the money and Ideas they gained in&#13;
the west to make themselves wealthy&#13;
on the abandoned acres near the big&#13;
eastern markets.&#13;
There should be a great opportunity&#13;
for active young agriculturists with&#13;
modern agricultural training in the old&#13;
eastern states. Many farms there have&#13;
been abandoned because of the depleted&#13;
condition of the soil and the&#13;
fact that competition with the fresh&#13;
lands of the west was unprofitable on&#13;
standard crops.&#13;
It la Bald that at the present time&#13;
nearly 2,000,000 acres of Idle farm land&#13;
is lying along the boundary line between&#13;
New York state and Pennsyl«&#13;
vania. Surely, with the great markets&#13;
at the very door of these lands, there&#13;
are for the eastern farmer wonderful&#13;
possibilities.&#13;
EASY TO MAKE HOG HANGER&#13;
One Can Raise and Handle Largest&#13;
Animals by Use of Device Shown&#13;
in Illustration Herewith.&#13;
The poles are 8 % to 9 feet long and&#13;
3 Inches in diameter. Bore a %-fi&#13;
hole through the large end of each&#13;
pole and a %-lnch bolt will hold the&#13;
three together making a tripod. Bore&#13;
Easily Made Hangar.&#13;
a %-inch hole 18 Inches from top of&#13;
each of the ten outside legs of the&#13;
hanger. In these put %-lnch bolts to&#13;
hook tinder the cords of the .cross&#13;
legs. One cnj|LajiajpiaYt4toidle the&#13;
largest hog with this device.&#13;
seed Corn.&#13;
Next spring there is going to be a&#13;
big demand for good seed corn. Now&#13;
is the time to prepare for this demand.&#13;
It is well to select the seed&#13;
from the field. If the ear was ma*&#13;
tared before the frost the vitality la&#13;
not seriously impaired. This corn&#13;
should be selected now and stored in&#13;
a place,where it can dry out within&#13;
a short time.&#13;
ing Seed) Corn.&#13;
Vln selecting* seed corn save four or&#13;
flvrtinaea as much as yen can possibly&#13;
nee, for It win be beet to select&#13;
TfJT rigidly at seeding time and soda&#13;
earn as la not needed can be readfly&#13;
told at good prtcaa.&#13;
Few Scraps of Old L u m b e r , U s u a l l y ,&#13;
Found on A n y F a r m , Can Be Made&#13;
of Good Service. )&#13;
Where there is but a small quantity'&#13;
of corn to be shelled a sheller can be1&#13;
made of a few scraps of wood usually'&#13;
found on a farm. A block of wood!&#13;
having a sloping notch cut from one&#13;
end is mounted on three legs asj&#13;
shown In the illustration from Popu-i&#13;
lar Mechanics. The notched part as&#13;
well as the lever ia thickly filled with;&#13;
&lt;1&#13;
Homemade Corn Sheller.&#13;
spikes driven in so that their heads&#13;
protrude about one-half Inch.&#13;
The ear of the corn ia placed in the&#13;
notched part and the lever pressed&#13;
down. Two or three strokes of the&#13;
lever will remove all the kernels&#13;
from the cob. A box is provided and&#13;
conveniently located on one leg to&#13;
catch the shelled corn.&#13;
ach "mp&#13;
Buying Machinery.&#13;
One thing that cuts down the profits&#13;
on the farm is the expense for new&#13;
machinery. Usually these* machines&#13;
are necessities but the first cost is&#13;
always something of an Item.&#13;
G A R D E N &amp;»*&#13;
FARM NOTCS&#13;
Keen tools save time, labor and do&#13;
ost efficient work.&#13;
The man with the silo is not worrying&#13;
over^wjnter feed.&#13;
Anything that reduces the cost of&#13;
maintenance increases the profit.&#13;
As a general rale, potatoes should&#13;
be planted on fresh gxound^each yean.&#13;
A 160-acre farm with a silo wtH .produce&#13;
aa much revenue as a 180-ai&#13;
farm without&#13;
Deep plowing increases the soil's&#13;
water-holding power, also Its plant*&#13;
feeding power.&#13;
The corn that shells off while husk*&#13;
ing can be saved if a coal shovel is&#13;
used in unloading.&#13;
It's a shame to let a vast amount&#13;
of feed go to waste each year by not&#13;
using the corn stalks.&#13;
Asparagus is a hardy plant, ft&#13;
does not need a winter mulch to keep&#13;
it from being killed by freezing.&#13;
» More alfalfa means more homegrown&#13;
feed and smaller feed bills. It&#13;
naturally leads to better profits.&#13;
Borne people have gone so far as to&#13;
claim that the corn stalks in the silo&#13;
are worth as much as the ears in the&#13;
crib. f&gt;&#13;
Secure an abundance of good, clean&#13;
straw now, for bedding, thus insuring&#13;
the'comfort of all animals during&#13;
the winter months.&#13;
A few gallons of paint would not&#13;
be expensive^ but if it were rightly&#13;
applied It would add a great deal toi&#13;
the value of the place.&#13;
Keeping any machine well oiled and&#13;
In proper repair not only Increases&#13;
efficiency, but decreases the amount&#13;
of power required to run the machine.&#13;
The garden truck, which moat&#13;
firman allow to waste at this season&#13;
of tba year, can be turned Into big&#13;
Prodi* by feedtat tnem to the bogs,&#13;
•attlo asd asejttiy.&#13;
NEWS IN BRIEF.&#13;
At a meeting in Grand Rapids of&#13;
the receivers of the Pere Marquette&#13;
Railroad Co., it was decided to over*&#13;
rule the order of the traffic department&#13;
not to accept perishable freight&#13;
in lean than carload lota during severe&#13;
weather unlets shipped la refrigerator&#13;
cars.&#13;
Whether you smoke Duke's Mixture in pipe or cigarette,&#13;
it is delightfully satisfying. Everywhere it is the&#13;
choice of men who want real, natural tobacco.&#13;
&lt;x3w2SV^^«vi4&gt;&#13;
a1 This is a Duke's Mixture Umbrella J&#13;
9&#13;
In each 5c sack there are one OTt(fCt Half ounces of&#13;
choice Virginia and North Carolina tobacco—pure, mild,&#13;
rich—best sort of granulated tobacco. Enough to make&#13;
many good/ satisfying cigarettes,—-the kind that makes^&#13;
rolling popular. And with each sack you get a present&#13;
coupon and a book of cigarette papers free.&#13;
Get an Umbrella Free&#13;
^ The coupons can be exchanged for all sorts of valu- ',&#13;
able presents. The list includes not only smokers' articles&#13;
—but many desirable presents for women and c h i l d r e n -&#13;
umbrellas, c a m e r a s ,&#13;
toilet articles, tennis&#13;
r a c k e t s , c a t c h e r ' s&#13;
gloves and masks, etc.&#13;
During December&#13;
and January only we&#13;
will send our illustrated&#13;
catalogue of presents&#13;
FREE to any address. Ask&#13;
for it on a postal, today.&#13;
Coupons from Duke's Mixture may&#13;
be assorted with tags from HORSE&#13;
SHOE. J. T.,TINSLF.Y'S N VTURAL&#13;
LEAF, GRANGER TWIST.&#13;
coupons from FOUR ROSES (10ctin.&#13;
double coupon), PICK PLUG&#13;
CUT. PIEDMONT a G A R O T E S .&#13;
CLIX CIGARETTES, and other&#13;
rajw or coupons usued by as.&#13;
Premium DepL&#13;
The East Side Improvement association,&#13;
of Kalamazoo, has appointed&#13;
a committee which will try to st-curo&#13;
a Carnegie library.''&#13;
Cheatham switches have been ordered&#13;
for the Kalamazoo lines of the&#13;
Michigan United traction system. The&#13;
switches will be operated by electricity.&#13;
Mrs. C. H. Doskam and Mrs. H. 11.&#13;
Taylor, of Marshall, have returned&#13;
with their husbands from the north&#13;
woods, both women with two deer&#13;
each.&#13;
Plans are being made to hold the&#13;
ninth annual Michigan corn show of&#13;
the State Corn Improvement association&#13;
at the Kalamazoo Western normal,&#13;
Jan. 10 and 11.&#13;
The Saginaw board of health endorses&#13;
the proposition of Dr. Guy L.&#13;
Keifer, of Detroit, recommending a&#13;
health law governing the issuance of&#13;
marriage licensee.&#13;
Gov. Osborn has been asked for&#13;
requisition papers for the return of&#13;
Dr. Robert McCullough, of Mason, to&#13;
Newark, O., where he is wanted for&#13;
alleged abandonment.&#13;
A co-operative store may be established&#13;
in Cadillac, where groceries&#13;
and a general line of foodstuffs will&#13;
be sold at cost. At. the head of this&#13;
plan are local socialists.&#13;
According to statements made bydealers,&#13;
there will be no shortage of&#13;
coal in Port Huron, such as is being&#13;
experienced in Detroit. CheHtnut coal&#13;
is quoted at J8.25 per ton.&#13;
e&#13;
The next legislature will be asked&#13;
to create-the office- of state sanitary&#13;
inspector and authorize him to hire&#13;
assistants. The bill will provide that&#13;
the inspector be a civil engineer.&#13;
Copies of resolutions passed by the&#13;
Commercial club of Bessemer, protesting&#13;
against excessive tax assessments&#13;
in Bessemer, have been forwarded to&#13;
Gov. Osborn and Gov.-elect Ferris.&#13;
State Senator William H. Grace, of&#13;
Kalamazoo, says he will introduce a&#13;
bill at the next session of the legislature&#13;
which will prevent the intermarriage&#13;
of blacks and whites in Michigan.&#13;
James C. Chase, former postmaster&#13;
at Norwood, was arraigned in U. S.&#13;
district court in Grand Rapids, charged&#13;
with embezzling $8(50 of postotflce&#13;
funds. Restitution has been made to&#13;
the governor.&#13;
Two banners were received and&#13;
placed In the capitoi museum, in Lansing.&#13;
They were presented to the&#13;
Brady Guards, of Detroit, in 1837 by&#13;
Stevens Thompson Mason, Michigan's&#13;
first governor.&#13;
. Rev, Jt A! .fJuukel,. of Warren avenue&#13;
Presbyterian church. Saginaw, is&#13;
appointed chairman of the, home mission&#13;
committee of the Michigan Presbyterian&#13;
synod, succeeding Rev. C. A.&#13;
Uppincott, of Flint.&#13;
A movement, Is now on foot to form&#13;
unions among the stationary firemen,&#13;
moving picture oprators and hotel and&#13;
restaurant employes, of Muskegon, all&#13;
of which, it is planned, will join the&#13;
Muskegon Trades council.&#13;
t Hunting parties returning from the&#13;
northern part of Newaygo county report&#13;
that there was not enough snowto&#13;
follow a wounded deer after the&#13;
shooting, One party reports the loss&#13;
of four deer In this manner.&#13;
The recently reorganized Muskegon&#13;
Chamber of Commerce has elected officers,&#13;
Paul R. Beardsley being&#13;
chosen president, Dr. J. F. DenslOw,&#13;
vice president; W. Wilfred Barous,&#13;
secretary, and John H. Moore, treasuer.&#13;
\&#13;
Michael Byrne, of Bay City, laborer,&#13;
was knocked down by an automobile&#13;
and while lying unconscious waB run&#13;
over by a team of horses, the feet of&#13;
one of the animals puncturing one of&#13;
his lungs. He has little chance to recover.&#13;
A fund of nearly $10,000 has been&#13;
raised for Bronson hospital, at Kalamazoo,&#13;
and a part of the money will be&#13;
used in creating a free bed memorial&#13;
to Fr. Joseph Kraemer, who a few&#13;
weeks ago died at sea on his return&#13;
trip from Palestine.&#13;
Following Sunday saloon closing in&#13;
[enomlnee, enforced two weeks ago,&#13;
and the demand of 13 Marinette ministers&#13;
to^olose saloons in Marinette,&#13;
Wis., MayorFiaher, of Marinette, has&#13;
ordered the enforcement of the curfew&#13;
law and the regulation of pool&#13;
rooms. ^ ^ - v&#13;
.Tuberculosis has caused 1,870 deathsu I f o n e gAye v o l c e o n l y t o o n e . 8&#13;
in Michigan in ten months. Typhoid ^thoughts one wouldn't talk so much&#13;
fever 453, the lowest In several years.&#13;
Diphtheria and croup 346. Scarlet&#13;
fever 136. Measles 79. Whooping&#13;
cough 217. Pneumonia 2,164, which is&#13;
very high for the state. Diarrhoea enteritis,&#13;
under two years of age, 1,177,&#13;
which is low compared with other&#13;
years. Cancer 1,796. Secretary Dixon&#13;
says the state board of health spends&#13;
annually one cent per capita, while&#13;
Pennsylvania spends 4 cents per capita.&#13;
The report of the Deputy game warden&#13;
at Mackinaw shows that 4,000&#13;
deer were brought by hunters from&#13;
the upper peninsula across the straits.&#13;
This is a decrease in the number taken&#13;
in upper Michigan last year.&#13;
1&#13;
St. Louie, Mo. j f l&#13;
ss»s*!ffrce\v&amp;w&#13;
Countryman's Notion.&#13;
Farmer (seeing a water cart, for the&#13;
first time)--Dang me, Halbert, if&#13;
these Lunnon chaps ain't smart! Just&#13;
look what that feller's fixed up at the&#13;
back of 'is wagon to keep boys from&#13;
hangin' on be'ind!"—London Sketch.&#13;
RASH ON F A C E I O R 2 YEARS&#13;
Sioux Falls, S. D,—"My trouble of&#13;
skin disease started merely as a rash&#13;
on my face and neck, but it grew and&#13;
kept getting worse until large scabs&#13;
would form, fester and break, This&#13;
was Just on the one side of my face,&#13;
but It soon scattered to the other&#13;
side. I suffered a great deal, especially&#13;
at night, on account of 11B itching&#13;
and burning. I would scratch It and&#13;
of course that irritated it very much.&#13;
This rash was on my face for about&#13;
two years, sometimes breaking out&#13;
lots worse and forming larger sore*&#13;
It kept me from sleeping day or night&#13;
for a couple of months. My face looked&#13;
disgraceful and I was almost&#13;
ashamed to be seen by my friends.&#13;
"A friend asked me to try Cutlcura&#13;
Soap and Cutlcura Ointment. I would&#13;
bathe my face with hot water and a&#13;
lot of Cutlcura Soap, then I would put&#13;
on the Cutlcura Ointment. In less&#13;
than two, days' time, the soreness and&#13;
inflammation had almost entirely disappeared,&#13;
and in four weeks' time you&#13;
could not see any of the rash. Now&#13;
my face is without a spot of any kind,&#13;
I also use them for my scalp and hair.&#13;
They cured me completely." (Signed)&#13;
Miss Pansy Hutchlns, Feb. 6, 1912.&#13;
Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address&#13;
post-card "Cutlcura, Dtpt L, Boston."&#13;
Adv.&#13;
You&#13;
Often Want&#13;
quick relief from biliousness—-fr&#13;
its headaches, its sour stomach*,&#13;
hiccoughs, flatulence, unpFeasns*&#13;
breath and tbe genera) feeling of&#13;
good-for-notbingnes8 it causes.&#13;
Thousands—-through three generations&#13;
and the wide work! o v e r -&#13;
have found, as you will find, the*&#13;
fleecAamZ &amp;m&#13;
F01EY KIDNEY PHIS Ar» RIcbMt integrative Qualities&#13;
r O R nAOKACHE. W H E U M A T I S M ,&#13;
K I D N I Y S AND B L A 0 O E *&#13;
Your l i v e r&#13;
Is Clogged U p&#13;
T W s Why You're Tired- of Sorts&#13;
mm&#13;
irrTix&#13;
bars w a y Tour* inn&#13;
—Have No Appetite.&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS&#13;
will put you right&#13;
in a few days.&#13;
T h e y d&#13;
their duty.&#13;
Cure Con&#13;
Suetaaneat, Indigestion l a d Sfcek Headache&#13;
8 l i m L r U ^ O ^ U X D O S t 8 M A I X « l C £ .&#13;
Genuine mutt bear Signature&#13;
y give the necessary relief quickly,&#13;
safely, gently, naturally. Thi*&#13;
harmless family remedy Is justly&#13;
famous for its power to put t h e&#13;
bowels, liver, kidneys and stomach)&#13;
in regular active working order.&#13;
In every way—in feelings, looks*&#13;
actions and in powers—you wBI&#13;
find yourself altogether better after&#13;
you have used BeechanTf Pifle&#13;
For&#13;
Quick Relief&#13;
Yau ought to be van to read the directkasr&#13;
witli every bog.&#13;
Sold OTorywka**. »*•-***&gt;&#13;
^^AflSORBDEJH.™^&#13;
Corns, Bimion«v Callous&#13;
Bunches, Tire**,&#13;
Aching, Swollen Feet.&#13;
It allays pain andT fa&gt;e»&#13;
out soreness an&lt;9 inflammation&#13;
promptly. Healing?&#13;
and soothing—causes a&#13;
better circulation of the blood&#13;
through the part, assisting nature&#13;
in building new, healthy tissue ssndl&#13;
eliminating the old. Ate*' Ahl,&#13;
Tobinspori, Indv writes Nov. 15»&#13;
— 5 . No doubt you remember&#13;
my ^getting two bottles of&#13;
ABSORB1NE, JR., for a&#13;
on my foot/^My foot is well.&#13;
valuable for anySweHing,orjpai&amp;MI affliction. Goitre,&#13;
Glands, Varicose 'i&#13;
Leg, Strains, Sprain*.,&#13;
Cuts* 9misea,&gt;l&#13;
Price $1,00 and te.bo at a#&#13;
tistsor.denvered.. JsVaok#&lt;?j&#13;
itf.ltsaiMMt"&#13;
W. N. U., DITI 80-1112;&#13;
•M&#13;
*****&lt;-&#13;
»:&gt;&gt; V,.&#13;
: .'A '&#13;
•y A"&lt; '••••'&#13;
i MjymmiH • * &lt; « • ' • • * % :&#13;
&lt; • ! « • 1 » , | . l — , - - • -~m- ,&#13;
' ',&gt; '&#13;
Ktf if&#13;
f •;:!'"&#13;
,t&#13;
i\&#13;
i*»-t,'* ,•&#13;
7.';&#13;
^&#13;
t « K '&#13;
ST&#13;
;7"V&lt;^.&#13;
&amp; • $ &amp; &amp; &amp; $ &amp;&#13;
THE PIRCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
— ^ - — — — ^ . i .i&#13;
" ' r1 • . . — . . . ' - - — , . . t t&#13;
rosLusao *T»»TTBC»BIJA* woaamm mi&#13;
ROY W. CAVERLY. PROPRIETOR.&#13;
£at«r«a at the Pottofica at Flacknqr, Michlcai&#13;
•• McoactaUM mttt«r&#13;
XdvertlBiax r*t«e mat* known on application.&#13;
There was a man in our town.&#13;
And be wat wondrous wise;&#13;
He swore (it was bis policy)&#13;
He would not advertize,&#13;
Bat one sad day be advertized,&#13;
And thereby hanics a tale,&#13;
The ad. was was set in quite sraal&#13;
type&#13;
And headed "Sheriffs Sale.—Ex.&#13;
Jobn Fttzsimmons and wife spent&#13;
Saturday in Howell.&#13;
£d Farnara and wife were&#13;
Howell visitors Saturday.&#13;
Claude Miller ot Dexter was in town&#13;
on business last Friday.&#13;
8. E. Nelson of Chicago transacted&#13;
business here the latter part of last&#13;
week.&#13;
The Bell teleptune pane; have betn&#13;
working-on the Gregory line lor the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Mr. Steveson ol North Lake was in&#13;
town on business one day the latter&#13;
part of last week.&#13;
Frank La Rue and wife of Howell&#13;
visited at tbe home of Mrs. Emma&#13;
Moran la^t Thursday.&#13;
Blanche Martin spent a lew days&#13;
the past week at the home ot Miss&#13;
Florence Kice ot North Hamburg.&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Tonnes and son, Bert,&#13;
of Detroit were guests cf friends and&#13;
relatives here over Sunday.&#13;
Fred Campbell and wife of Ann&#13;
Arbor visited at the home of his parents,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Campbell over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
The Chelsea meat dealers announce&#13;
that their places of business will be&#13;
closed OQ Sundays during tbe winter&#13;
months.&#13;
It is about time to issue the annual&#13;
warning against the cotton Santa&#13;
Claus whiskers. Many persons who&#13;
bave&amp;anta Claused at cburob doings&#13;
and have leaned over lighted caudles&#13;
whiu wearing tbe wxtton-wind -shieldaare&#13;
with us no more.&#13;
L. E. Smith U spending the weak&#13;
in-Wayne.&#13;
C. I!, tiigler of Ann Arbor spent last&#13;
Friday here&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Max Ledwedge spent&#13;
Sunday at A. M. Roche's.&#13;
Win, Kennedy Jr. spent tbe fore&#13;
part of tbe week in Detroit.&#13;
Miss Katbryn Lam borne of Gregory&#13;
is visiting at Mrs Jesse Henrys,&#13;
Mr William Suydam of Detroit&#13;
gpent Saturday and Sunday here.&#13;
Mrs. Collins of Toledo is spendiag&#13;
a few weeks at the home of E. E. Hoyt.&#13;
Dale Chappel of Webberville has&#13;
been visiting at tne borne ot John&#13;
Dinkel.&#13;
Miss Gladya Pool spent tbe first of&#13;
tbe week with ber sister Mrs. A. Gilchrist.&#13;
Earl MacLaclan and wife left last&#13;
week lor their new home at Croswell&#13;
Mich.&#13;
John War9 and wife of Spokane&#13;
Washinston spent Sunday at Wm.&#13;
Dunbar's.&#13;
Laverne and Mary McQuillan ol&#13;
Cbilson spent Sunday with Mrs Gregory&#13;
Devereaux.&#13;
Mr. Percy Teeple of Marquette is&#13;
spending a few days with ber parent*,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Unas. Love.&#13;
Miss Florence Reason spent a few&#13;
days the past week with her sister.&#13;
Mrs. J. Rane of Wbitmore Lake.&#13;
The North Lake Grange will give a&#13;
box social"at their ball Friday"evening&#13;
Dec. 12- Ail are cordiallv invited.&#13;
Capitalists from PittRburg,Pa„ are&#13;
securing leases on land in tbe vicinity&#13;
of Fenton with the view of prospecting&#13;
for oil.&#13;
Jamas Morgan has over 6000 bushels&#13;
ot oofatoes stored in various cellars&#13;
in Brighton. In addition to this be&#13;
has shipped seven car loads.&#13;
The Gleaners of the Pinckney Arbor&#13;
will hold a meeting at tbe home of&#13;
Mr and Mrs Arthur Vedder Saturday&#13;
evening, Dec, 14 for tbe purpose ot&#13;
e'ecting officer-'. All tbe members are&#13;
requested to be present.&#13;
It is never out of order to remind&#13;
people that no law can enforce itself&#13;
Tbe stalnte books of most states have&#13;
in them many excellent laws that are&#13;
indifferent. One common fault is that&#13;
while many people are anxious to&#13;
have good laws passed tbey take no&#13;
interest in having thoRe laws enforced,&#13;
and so tbey remain « dead letter. Evil&#13;
minded people are quiie willing to&#13;
have good ;a w s passed if they have&#13;
the assurance thai nothing _wi 11 be&#13;
dene to make them effective.&#13;
WE SAVE YOU&#13;
MONEY&#13;
On Best and Latest of Standard&#13;
Makes of&#13;
Cut Water Sets, Berry Bowles,&#13;
Celery and Olive Dishes,&#13;
Spoon Trays, Salt and Pepper&#13;
Sets, Oil Bottles, Etc.&#13;
Complete Line of Silverware&#13;
\&#13;
TeaSpoons Knives and Porks Souvenir Spoons&#13;
Desert SDOOMS Buffer Knives Childrens Set&#13;
Sudor Shells Cold Meat Pork&#13;
Prult. Cake Baskets Cream Ladles&#13;
Salt St Pepper Sets Jewell Boxes&#13;
Toothpick Holder Pickle Porks&#13;
Table *XX; '»&#13;
Berry •&#13;
Soup&#13;
Gravy Ladles&#13;
Complete Line of&#13;
Carving Sets 11.00 fa $1.50¾ Pocket Knives lOo to 11.1)0&#13;
Razors 1.00 to 2.60 Razor Strops..... 25c to 1.50&#13;
Brushes 25c&#13;
/&#13;
We Oum?fiiitee a. Savins: of S3&#13;
per cent oitStreet and Ntable&#13;
Why Go Without When YoulCan Buy Blanket*&#13;
( *7 Fi«oiti$i.00 to $7.80&#13;
Jeepje; H«pd&gt;v&lt;xre Co mPa n y&#13;
/ ; ^ -&#13;
A * .&#13;
js%K^j^k^^i'^.. i.j fci'^t&#13;
&gt;i#r*. .. • •. • v m .•iW'1''&#13;
"V/\&#13;
Christmas Suggestions Prom&#13;
•M.99 " T h e Store of the Christmas Spirit&#13;
For weeks back we have been making arrangements for supplying the people of Pinckney and&#13;
vicinity with a stock of Xmas merchandise, such as was never displayed before in this town.&#13;
The goods are'now in stock, and we ask that you shop early; thereby getting better selections&#13;
and better service. A visit to each of our departments will suggest many gifts you would not&#13;
otherwise think of.&#13;
Suggestions FOP&#13;
Sensible Gifts For M e n&#13;
| Silk Neckties, (boxed)&#13;
Fancy Hosiery&#13;
Christmas Belts, (boxed)&#13;
Collar Bags, (ail shades)&#13;
(StickPine,-, (-boxed)&#13;
Cuff Link Sets, ( boxed)&#13;
I Eid and Mocha Gloves&#13;
\ Fancy Suspender Sets&#13;
* Mission Umbrellas&#13;
* Bath Robes, each&#13;
k House Coats, each&#13;
Knitted 8carfs&#13;
\ Silk Scarfs&#13;
Necktie and Stick Pin Sets&#13;
. Handkerchiefs&#13;
Initial Handkerchiefs, linen,&#13;
I 6 in a box&#13;
House Slippers&#13;
) Pajamas, per suit&#13;
\ Fancy Vests&#13;
1 Necktie Holder and Rings&#13;
' Dress Shirts&#13;
Flannel Shirts&#13;
Sweater Coats (wool)&#13;
| Fur Hats&#13;
\ Suit Cases and Bagw&#13;
25c to «1.00&#13;
25c to 1.00&#13;
50c&#13;
1.00 and 1.50&#13;
50o to 1-.0O&#13;
25c_tol.50&#13;
75c to 2 50&#13;
25c to 1.00&#13;
75c to 3.30&#13;
3.50&#13;
5.00&#13;
29c to 50c&#13;
1.00 to 1.50&#13;
1.00&#13;
5c to 50c&#13;
75c and 1.50&#13;
75c to 2.00&#13;
1.00&#13;
1.75 to 3.50&#13;
50c&#13;
50c to 2 00&#13;
1.00 to 2.50&#13;
1.50 to 7 O0&#13;
2.50 to 6.50&#13;
1.25 to 9.00&#13;
In Remembering*.&#13;
Others, do not forget yourself. You cannot&#13;
en joy-Christmasas youshould unless&#13;
you are properly dressed. It is a duty&#13;
you owe yourself as well as your friendn,&#13;
to look and feel your best on Christmas&#13;
Day.&#13;
New Xmas Suits and Overcoats&#13;
for Men $10. to 2 5 /&#13;
Boy's Suits and Overcoats&#13;
$ 4 . to 10.&#13;
badles Coats $ 8 . to 25.&#13;
Practical GiFts For Ladies&#13;
Hand Ba«s, (Leather, Velvet&#13;
Ohatelatie)&#13;
Silk and Knit Scarfs&#13;
Fancy Collars&#13;
Sash Pins&#13;
Back Combs&#13;
-Handkerchiefs&#13;
Ribbons ,&#13;
Umbrellas&#13;
Knit and Kid Goods&#13;
Furs, (Scarfs and Muffs)&#13;
Silk Hosiery&#13;
Hat Pins&#13;
Knit Underskirts&#13;
Woolen " Patterns&#13;
Duster Bags&#13;
Sweater Coats&#13;
House Slippers&#13;
Kimonas&#13;
Dressing Sacques&#13;
Knit Hats&#13;
Muslin Underwear&#13;
Fur Coats&#13;
Pillow Tops&#13;
Neck Novelties&#13;
and&#13;
50c to $7.50&#13;
25c to 2.50&#13;
15c to 50c&#13;
25c and 50c&#13;
25c to 2 00&#13;
be to 1.50&#13;
50c to 3.50&#13;
50c to 3.50&#13;
All Prices&#13;
50c end 1.00&#13;
25c and 1 00&#13;
50c to 1 50&#13;
1.00 to 1.50&#13;
25c and 50c&#13;
2.00 to 3.00&#13;
1.00 to 1.50&#13;
1.00 to 2.50&#13;
50c to 1.00&#13;
1.00&#13;
Children's GiFts that will&#13;
be enjoyed A N D U S E D&#13;
Sweater Cortts&#13;
House Slippers&#13;
Woolen Gloves&#13;
Caps&#13;
Handkerchiefs&#13;
Ribbons_&#13;
Shoes&#13;
Fur Sets&#13;
Knit Toques&#13;
Boys Suits&#13;
Fancy Ties&#13;
Hosiery and Underwear&#13;
All Prices&#13;
Table L»1nens and Uinen Pieces&#13;
We want to especially mention, as our&#13;
stock of "Humidor Linens" is entirely&#13;
new and one of the largest assortments&#13;
shown anywhere&#13;
Table Linens Napkins&#13;
"""'" TrayXJloths LuncYCloths'&#13;
Individual Towels Dresser Scarfy, Etc.&#13;
POP the Whole Family&#13;
Bed Blankets&#13;
Clothing&#13;
Suit Cases and Trunks&#13;
Rugs&#13;
Comfortables&#13;
Bed Spreads&#13;
Auto Blankets&#13;
OUR LARGEHandkerchieF&#13;
Booth&#13;
Will contain our fine line of 2500 ladies,&#13;
mens and childrens handkerchiefs. They&#13;
are all at one place whore you can nicely&#13;
see all kinds from 2 for 5o to $1 50 each&#13;
Xmas boxes of nice handkerchiefs at all&#13;
prices.&#13;
Visit our store—"Th^^Ntoreofthe Christmas&#13;
Spirit"—That is the only way to realize how&#13;
well we have provided for your Xmas wants&#13;
Only 11 more shopping days before Christmas. This store will hold open later in&#13;
the evening than usual from now until Christmas.&#13;
VV. J . DANGER &amp; COMPANY "EST&#13;
NOW, PEOPLE OF PINCKNEY,4he above list are but suggestions—and can in now way describe the large amount of beautiful&#13;
gifts that are on display at oar store. We are firm in the belief that nowhere will you find larger selections and at money-saving&#13;
prices than at our Btore. We solicit a goodly share of your Christmas patronage. We will pay your fare on $10. purchases.&#13;
Give us a Christmas call.&#13;
•* Mrs A. M. Utley was in Detroit on&#13;
business last week,&#13;
Monks Bros, are now living in the&#13;
rooms formerly occupied by Dr. W. T.&#13;
Wright.&#13;
W. C. Dunning transacted business&#13;
in Sro^kbridge one day tbe past&#13;
week.&#13;
Lucius Wilson, son of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Albert Wilsoo, west of town, has*been&#13;
appointed secretary of the New York&#13;
City Board of Commerce at a salary&#13;
ot 115,000 a year He bas certainly&#13;
done some climbing in tbe last few&#13;
years. Starting as tbe secretary&#13;
of tbe Board of Commerce at Des Moines,&#13;
Iowa then back to Detroit to&#13;
tbe secretaryship of the Detroit Board&#13;
of Commerce, Irom there to tbe vice&#13;
presidency of tbe Warren Automobile&#13;
Co. and now to the New York City&#13;
poet,&#13;
Tbe first proof that the post-office&#13;
department meant enetly what it&#13;
said wben it. iwaned the order that tbe&#13;
rural mail delivery tarries would be&#13;
discontinued where the roads were&#13;
not kept in good condition, arrived&#13;
this week wben Wellitt«ton H. Van&#13;
Biper. carrier on Holly roraf route&#13;
No. 4, received orders to discontinue&#13;
the delivery cf mail oa what is known&#13;
as tbe town line road between Rote&#13;
and Highland townships.—Holly&#13;
Herald.&#13;
Rev, W, H. Ripon spent tbe fore&#13;
part of tbe week in Detroit.&#13;
F. C. Montague of Gregory bad corn&#13;
wbicli went 160 bo to tbe acre.&#13;
Mis* Ella Black bas been visitibgat&#13;
tbe home of Michael Fitzsimmons of&#13;
Jackson.&#13;
Mildred Palmer of Hamburg w%s&#13;
tbe guest of Rose Jedries over Sunday.&#13;
Fred Lake and wife spent several&#13;
days tbe past week at tbe home of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. J. B. Stanton of Milan.&#13;
Some person or persons have been&#13;
giveing exhibitions of their marksmanship&#13;
bv shooting ont street lights.&#13;
The dispute abont tbe Handy election,&#13;
seems to have blown over for the&#13;
time at least. Glen Telland who was&#13;
one of the repubhaan candidates defeated&#13;
by (be Handy vote recently&#13;
had a fetter pnhiebed in the Living&#13;
ston Tidings In which be stated that&#13;
be bad throughly investigated tbe&#13;
Handy affair and as there was no evidence&#13;
of any f rand having bten perpetuated&#13;
he had decided not to eonteat&#13;
the election. The other candidatet&#13;
bate made no statements to the&#13;
press aa yet. The grounds on which&#13;
the contest was to have been made&#13;
was that tbe ballot bos was left unguarded&#13;
ioring the noon hour on&#13;
election day.&#13;
Kitsey Allison spent Snnday at tbe&#13;
home of Dell Hall.&#13;
Howefl would like to lie incorporated&#13;
as a city.&#13;
The Fowlerville Review bas changed&#13;
from a 7 to a 8 column 4 page paper,&#13;
all of which is set and printed at&#13;
borne.&#13;
Mrs. Alden Carpenter was the guest&#13;
of Mrs Pang born of near Gregory one&#13;
day tbe past week. \&#13;
Benjamin Singleton died at tbe&#13;
home of his son Harry in-Unadilla&#13;
township Dec. 4 aged 75 years. The&#13;
funeral was held from tbe home Friday,&#13;
Rev. McTaggert of the Gregory&#13;
Baptist choroh officiating, Interment&#13;
in Williamsville cemetery. Tbe deceased&#13;
was the father ot Mrs. Albert&#13;
Pr&#13;
Adrian Lavey spent Saturday in&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Benjaman Earaea of Benton Harbor&#13;
bas been visiting friends and relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
Dr. A, B. 'Jreen and wife of Jack*&#13;
son were over Sunday visitors at the&#13;
home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A.&#13;
B, Green.&#13;
Dr. Walter Snyder and wife of&#13;
Jsfcksdn spent the fore part ot the&#13;
w:ek at the home of her parents, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. A. B. Gr^en.&#13;
It is announced that within a year,&#13;
tbe Grand Trunk will be doubletracked&#13;
the whole distance between&#13;
Durand and Detroit—Holly Advertiser.&#13;
The Pinckney LiTerary and Social&#13;
club was organised at the home of&#13;
Miss Kate Brown on tbe evening ot&#13;
Dee, 6. Rev. W, H. Ripon was appointed&#13;
president and Uta* M. E*&#13;
Brown, secretary, Tbe nest meeting&#13;
will be held Friday evening, Dec, 18&#13;
at tbe home of Miss Mabel Brown,&#13;
All those who are desirous of joining&#13;
the elnb are cordially invited to&#13;
attend, lach membo? t» requested&#13;
to come prepared to talk five minutes&#13;
on any snbjeet they oa&gt; choose. One&#13;
hour will be devoted to talks and discussion&#13;
followed by a social hour.&#13;
)&#13;
• * &lt; ' • •&#13;
'%&#13;
&lt;-'ir-tt'-&#13;
\&#13;
\&#13;
r _ Drives o t a Terror&#13;
.The chief essesntioner of death in&#13;
the wsneer and esxtanj months it pneumonia.&#13;
Its advance agents are ooids&#13;
and,grip. In any attack by one ejf&#13;
these maladies no time should be lost&#13;
in taking the best medicine obtainable}*;&#13;
to drive it off. Countless thousands&#13;
have found this to be Dr. King's New&#13;
Discovery. "Mj hnsband believes nt&#13;
has kept trim from having flsiriiijsjla.&#13;
three or four times," writes Mrs.&#13;
George W. Place, Rawsonyille, ? t ,&#13;
"and for coughs, ooids, sad crouo w&#13;
hays never fonnd its equal/1 Guaranteed&#13;
for all brcmriieJ t}#eetionx Prion&#13;
50 ots. and $1.00 Trial bottle fret .«*&#13;
W. E. Brown's the drtggiat [ -f.vr* vi*&#13;
M \JA't&#13;
.JLT:"&#13;
f&#13;
&gt;v •&#13;
'*'&#13;
tfGDtt&#13;
FOR YOUNG AND OLD&#13;
WE cannot sell you all your Christmas Gifts, but we can show you many&#13;
thmgs which many would appreciate on account of their utility and many&#13;
other things which children expect Santa Claus to bring them.&#13;
A-&#13;
&lt;?!&#13;
I&#13;
•i&#13;
jt .&#13;
u-:-::.-^ .-,&#13;
•i+ • ' -1 * , •,&#13;
r* '&#13;
r.ft •&#13;
Pocket Knives&#13;
Carving Knives&#13;
Table Knives&#13;
Rogers Plated Ware&#13;
Spoons&#13;
Oyster Forks&#13;
Child's Sets&#13;
Chafing Dishes&#13;
Alarm Clocks&#13;
Watches&#13;
Family Scales&#13;
Boy's Skates&#13;
Girl's Skates&#13;
High Sleds&#13;
Food Choppers&#13;
Razors&#13;
Safety Razors&#13;
Savory Roasters&#13;
CHR&#13;
Give Us a Call&#13;
R 5 M 5 M 6 E R - W e have The Good Stove that is necessary to cook The&#13;
Good Xmas Dinner, R e n o w n a n d E c l i p s e R a n g e s .&#13;
D I N K E L c* D U N B A R&#13;
mnolcuey, Mich.&#13;
Holiday Message&#13;
W E W I S H E V E R Y B O D Y&#13;
ftlMlMS&#13;
We handle the goods to help make it so. Come&#13;
and see, It is worth a long drive to look over our&#13;
p. splendid assortment of&#13;
Popular Priced Merchandise&#13;
Suitable for Gifts&#13;
, We show you a City Assortment at fair prices.&#13;
Our numerous offerings are too many to specify in&#13;
a small adv., but here you will find the best in&#13;
r&#13;
Toys, China, Post Cards,&#13;
Games, Books, Caddies&#13;
5 c and 10c Goods and&#13;
Other Departments&#13;
SO Y E A f t * .&#13;
CXPCItlENaS&#13;
TRADE MARK*&#13;
D E M O N S&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A C&#13;
quAic.kiyly*n aeM spif&gt;nrttlmliinR onu Mr -o.optrihn iaonnd f dreesec wriphteitohne rtn &amp;rjL lilnovjwenrttitoTnlc tilsv PmD i'ilni;ci!l&gt;e]nyt lpaul.i oHtiAtuNbDlBoO, OCKo omnt oPuaBtiecnitt s scut froa o!dr!&lt;t m.'Rur-y lorsecurlnirpaterm.&#13;
I'muiits K;U&lt;!ii through Munn 4 Co. recetwe (Tptrial noUce, without cbnrgft, in the Scientific American.&#13;
oyeualar tlo..n. or nnyeclenMU_o- i&gt;J ournal, Term„s, 9„3 _a&#13;
,— , tour months, $L Sold byali newsdealers. IVUINN&amp; Co,««i««—i New Tort&#13;
Branch Offloe. S» V St., Waahingtoo, A &amp;&#13;
Frank and Helen Do Ian hav&#13;
to Pontiac.&#13;
Jonu Dinkel waa itt Detroit Saturday&#13;
on business.&#13;
Rev. Pr. Coyle ipent a few days the&#13;
pawt week in Detroit.&#13;
Una Bennett of North Hamburg is&#13;
clerking for Mrs, A, M. Utley.&#13;
Mrs. A. H. Flintoft and Mrs. h . K&#13;
Hoyt are taking treatment at the Sanitarium&#13;
here.&#13;
Eugene Dinkel of Detroit spent tun&#13;
latter part ot last week with friends&#13;
and relatives here.&#13;
The Stock bridge Eievator UoV wlevator&#13;
at Anderson is now under the&#13;
management of Michael Hoc be.&#13;
Oscar Walters, is spending &gt;ome&#13;
time at the home of home of his uncle,&#13;
William Walters, of Carleton, Monroe&#13;
(!Oiinty.&#13;
The Michigan State telephone company&#13;
is liable to be assessed | 2 5 a day&#13;
for cutting oat telephones paid for in&#13;
advance at Pontiac.&#13;
.No better place will y o u find to&#13;
get unlimited selections of Xmas gifts&#13;
without payinsr high city prices, than&#13;
at the Dancer store in Stockbvidge.&#13;
They pay your fare one w a y on 110&#13;
purchases from now until Christmas,&#13;
Adv&#13;
SOUTH IOSCO.&#13;
The Misses Beatrice and Kathryu Luinboine&#13;
entertained their cousins, Rose&#13;
and Ethel Foster of East Lansinp; and&#13;
Gladys Roberts of this place Saturday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. D. Green took dinner at&#13;
Mr. Cros^mBtis near Gregory.&#13;
Mr' and Mrs. Joe Roberts, Gladys and&#13;
J. D. entertained the following at their&#13;
home Sunday, Misses Ethel and Rose&#13;
Foster of East Lansing, Elva Caskey,&#13;
Kathryn and Beatrice Lamborne, Martin&#13;
Anderson, Cecil Cone and Ray Hicks.&#13;
Mr. aud Mrs. Bert Roberts end Mrs,&#13;
David Roberts spent Sunday at Willis&#13;
Tuppers.&#13;
Mrs. Amy VanKeuren returned home&#13;
from Jackson last week.&#13;
Miss Kathryn Latuborne is spending&#13;
some time with her sisters at Pinckney.&#13;
Mrs. Elvida Robert* and Daisy, visiter*&#13;
her Unc!«», who is very sick, Wednesday.&#13;
A number from here attended the dinner&#13;
ai the Maccabee Hall in Plainfield Thursday.&#13;
Could Shont For Joy&#13;
"I want to thank you from the hot.&#13;
torn of my heart," wrote C. B . R a d e r&#13;
ot Lewiabursr, W, Virginia, tor the&#13;
wonderful double benefit I g o t from&#13;
Eiectnu Hitters, in etirinw me of both&#13;
a severe case of stomach trouble and&#13;
of rhenraatistn, fr^m which I had been&#13;
an almost helpless sufferer for ten&#13;
years It suited my c«*e a* though&#13;
made just for me." For dyspepsia,&#13;
indigestion jaundice, and to rid the&#13;
oy*t»»ni of kidney poipnna that eausr&#13;
rheuraatinm. Eiectric Bitters have no&#13;
equal. Try tbem. Every bottle in&#13;
guaranteed t o satisfy. Only 50c a t&#13;
Brown's Drug Store.&#13;
Useful—Sensible—Beautiful&#13;
P r e s e n t s for Everybody&#13;
HILL'S VARIETY STORE&#13;
Where Quality, Assortment and Economy Rule&#13;
KW tin.* Ubt two mouths I'ViiryihiriK has been on the move. We have unpacked hundreds&#13;
of boxes of holiday goods. Th" store iu general has been given a thorough rearrangement,&#13;
every available bit of ilooraud shelf space is so utilised that we are&#13;
ready to display to our patrons and friends tiiu largest and most complete atwortruont&#13;
of practical and fancy Christmas gi'ts ever ufferod in "Old Livingston".&#13;
A Few Timely Suggestions&#13;
Chinaware&#13;
Sal»d Dish CM&#13;
Cups and Saucora&#13;
Artistic VftNes&#13;
Dinner Sets&#13;
Box Stationery &amp; Books&#13;
loc to $100 Stationery a fine assortment 10c to 81 10&#13;
"jc to 50 Books by Popular Authors 10 c to 50&#13;
oc to 2 00 Nooks tor Boys and Girls 10c to 26&#13;
")0s to '' oTT Books for Children of all ages 6e to 50&#13;
~ . Gift Books - . 10c to 25&#13;
C'S.U.NB&#13;
T H E HOME GOODS BAZAAR&#13;
Opposite Court House H o w e l l M i c h .&#13;
• !' '&#13;
&amp;&amp;fld bome , n e w s fn the form&#13;
of the Dispatch* to a friend a s&#13;
a s a welcome Ghrlstmas gift.&#13;
Only ¢1.00 per year.&#13;
X 3VE P O R T E D&#13;
E M P B R B U R&#13;
6 7 1 5&#13;
Belgian Draft Stallion, 3&#13;
years old, fine Chestnut&#13;
color, w t . oyer 1700 lbs.&#13;
Imported from Belgium in&#13;
August, 1012.&#13;
Owned by W. C. DUNNING&#13;
Will make t h e season of&#13;
1913 at Pinckney livery barn&#13;
Emperetir's entry in the National Stud Book at&#13;
Brussels, Belgium, is as follows: Chestnut stallion,&#13;
foaled 1909, sired by Bean Liseron (19546) he by Bean&#13;
Lys (11494) out of Lice De Plutsingen (12341). Dam&#13;
Doka (79643) bv Lafleur (8616) out of Sarah De Wilden&#13;
(66595). In competjon at Charlotte he took first&#13;
prize over 24 competitors in his class.&#13;
T e r m s - $ 2 0 . to Insure&#13;
Plain Handkerchiefs Fancy&#13;
KvurythiiiK from Llu« plaio noiiMible aort to t\w. white linen and delicate pieces of&#13;
laco and embroidery&#13;
Colored Hind kerchief* lc to 2"&gt;c Initial White Linen oc 25c&#13;
Fancy Lace and Embroidery Fine Variely&#13;
ThQQsands of Yards of Ribbons&#13;
:5¾ to $2 00 Fancy ribbons in dainty patterns and&#13;
2oc to 3 00 light coloring. CbriKtmas ribbon si 8|&gt;e&lt;h&#13;
10c to 00 i&amp;lty, juBt the thing to tie up your present*&#13;
15c to (»0 all widthH&#13;
Toilet Articles&#13;
Manicure Seta&#13;
Brush and Comb seta&#13;
Shaving Mirrorn&#13;
Sbaving Outtitfl&#13;
Hosiery and Underwear&#13;
The enormoiiH amount olf thw line that we have purchased enablen m to give better&#13;
VHIUH for lew money. These valuerar« being eagerly seized by the thou^litful&#13;
buyer. Dm't be left. Huy NOW.&#13;
Ladies' Hone 10c tJ 60 Men'H Hose ~u: to 50&#13;
Bright -Jewelry-&#13;
Cllfl ButtOUH&#13;
Scarf Pins&#13;
Beauty Pins&#13;
Belt P.ns&#13;
Kings&#13;
Hair&#13;
Hat Pins&#13;
Buck Combs&#13;
Side Combs&#13;
Barrets&#13;
Braid Pins&#13;
Eiectr c Enginet&#13;
Electric Trains&#13;
Friction Tovs&#13;
Steam Engines&#13;
Sledi&#13;
iiocking Horsed&#13;
- Artistic&#13;
10c to 50&#13;
._ 10c to 50.&#13;
6c to 25&#13;
10c to 50&#13;
25c to $4 00&#13;
Ornaments&#13;
•&#13;
Toys&#13;
i&#13;
10c to 50&#13;
10c to $2 00&#13;
10c to 50&#13;
5c to 1.00&#13;
5c to 25&#13;
60c to ¢2 00&#13;
$1 25 to 3 00&#13;
10c to 1 90&#13;
25c to 2 00&#13;
50c to 2 50&#13;
50c to 3 50&#13;
Fancy Goods&#13;
1 New and of the very tati^t designu&#13;
Doilies&#13;
Pillow Tnpw&#13;
Centre Pieces&#13;
lUnd/BagH&#13;
Towels&#13;
Silk Scarfs&#13;
lc to 50&#13;
25c to 50~&#13;
10c to 50&#13;
25c to 3 00&#13;
10c to .'JO&#13;
25c to 1 25&#13;
Fancy Boxes &amp; Booklets&#13;
Burnt Wood Boxe*&#13;
Japunefie Boxen&#13;
Booklets&#13;
15&#13;
10c to 1.50&#13;
10c to 40&#13;
Cretonne Covered BoxeB 10« to 15&#13;
Dolls and Doll Cabs&#13;
Dolls&#13;
Doll Cabs&#13;
Tool Chests&#13;
Printing Presses&#13;
lc to 3 00&#13;
40c to 3 00&#13;
50c to 3 00&#13;
8 50 to 4 5Q&#13;
Christmas Candies&#13;
We have a new lot of choice can Vies, fresh and tasty, for the Christmas trade 10c&#13;
caudies a Specialty. Candy Boxes in abundance.&#13;
Games&#13;
Of nil sorts and descriptions, puzzles,&#13;
card games, blocks, and in fact everything&#13;
you could think of in this line.&#13;
Christmas Decorations &amp;&#13;
Christmas Boxes&#13;
Uf all size*&#13;
Hundreds of wonderful, fascinating things to make the children*? eyes grow big and&#13;
round with anticipation of Santa Clans.&#13;
Aluminum and Graniteware a specialty&#13;
V. E. HILL&#13;
Howell, Michigan&#13;
P. 8. Oo account of our immense stock we have been compelled to transform our&#13;
basement into a salesroom during the Christmas Season.&#13;
mm&#13;
ectrlc&#13;
Bitters whan everything atet fcfla.&#13;
DsTOBtsTSiQOQ sW29 MBBBUuft •Sty ant 6M raprfmi&#13;
; at thousands hsrre tssttflad.&#13;
FORKIDNBYJLIVIRAND&#13;
STOMACH TROUBHLC&#13;
It !• tba best medidx* s^rsr «14&#13;
ovat a iraffaii't&#13;
%&#13;
/ . y KV.VrV.-W'&#13;
Haw&#13;
/t&#13;
:: .v.v.^'iiV'v '''&gt; -,&#13;
mm&#13;
j s j d ^ g s p w s r ^ * * ^ '&#13;
ii'v *A -*. ,&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
ROY W. CAVEKLY, Tub.&#13;
_&gt;J__.&#13;
K;*'-.&#13;
" ' # »&#13;
_ 3 . . , - • ' • '&#13;
'-V.&#13;
I..*-&#13;
it&#13;
_ i ' '-. »&#13;
( / ' ; • ' • - 0 - ^ :&#13;
s..&gt;; •-./J0&#13;
' * &amp;&#13;
P I N C K N E Y , MICHIGAN&#13;
! Figures published by the federal butreau&#13;
of education give evidence that&#13;
the rewards of genius engaged in the&#13;
educational field are considerably below&#13;
those attainable in oth-r of the&#13;
learned professions and in many industrial&#13;
avocations. The highest paid&#13;
head of a state-aided institution of&#13;
learning is -he president of th« Uuiver-«&#13;
Hlty of California, who receives $12.-&#13;
OOO a year and house. The president&#13;
•of Cornell university and the University&#13;
of Illinois, each receive J10,-&#13;
OOO a year and house, and the president&#13;
of the University ot Minnesota, \&#13;
110,000 a year -without house. Other&#13;
presidents 'salaries run dowsx as low&#13;
as $2,400. The beBt paid full professor&#13;
•enJoyB an income ot f€,&lt;HK) a year,&#13;
and the least paid tutor straggles along&#13;
on an allowance of $50. When it Is&#13;
considered that there are lawyers tn&#13;
the country earning from $50,000 to&#13;
$100,000 a year, that eozne medical&#13;
men command almost as laTge earnings,&#13;
and that many engineers, presidents&#13;
of manufacturing concerns and&#13;
others engaged in industrial pursuits&#13;
are equally weil rewarded, one may&#13;
well marvel that so many men of superlative&#13;
intelligence devote their&#13;
liveB to pedagogy.&#13;
PRESIDENT SENDS ANOTHER MESSAGE .—•___&#13;
Tells Congress About the Fiscal, Military, Insular&#13;
and Judicial Affairs of the Nation, Including&#13;
Panama Canal and Tolls Established.&#13;
There are'almost two sides to the&#13;
simple little facts of life. There is&#13;
this matter oT drinking water at one's&#13;
jtteals.Tt has beeli regarded as a miserable&#13;
habit. The school textbooks&#13;
teach it that way, and they give very&#13;
impressive reasons for it. It used to&#13;
be taught—drink at your meals, if&#13;
you feel like it; drink all you want;&#13;
it is good for you; helps digestion.&#13;
Then came the opposite doctrine,&#13;
never drink at your meals, and not&#13;
for an hour afterward, and that Idea&#13;
has prevailed and is a part of our wlso&#13;
school knowledge these days. Now&#13;
comes Professor Hawk of the University&#13;
of Illinois who has been studying&#13;
the subject for seven years, and&#13;
his conclusion is that water-drinking&#13;
at meals helps digestion, principally&#13;
by utilizing the protein food, which is,&#13;
regarded as the most important function&#13;
of digestion, says the Ohio Journay.&#13;
Then, fluids help digeBt the fats&#13;
and throttle the bacteria that rango&#13;
along the alimentary canal and keep'&#13;
stirring up all sorts of tumults. So&#13;
the latest information is not to let'&#13;
anybody scare you about drinking water&#13;
at your meals. Just drink what&#13;
you want and forget about it.&#13;
Scientists say that the average&#13;
man eats 60 per cent, more food than&#13;
he uses. This is a violation of economic&#13;
law. Hence dyspepsia and kindred&#13;
ills. The best digestive tonic in&#13;
the world is hunger, actual, gnawing&#13;
hunger. ' Let the average dyspeptie&#13;
try it for a while and see how it&#13;
"works. The only animal in the world&#13;
1hat eats when he is not hungry is a&#13;
liog—of one kind or another.&#13;
A Japanese steamship company issues&#13;
with each ticket sold a coupon&#13;
representing a certain seat in a lifeboat&#13;
and requests the passenger to acquaint&#13;
himself with tho location of&#13;
the particular boat to which he is al&lt;&#13;
loted. Is there any harm in accepting&#13;
a suggestion from the Orient?&#13;
A new benefactor of mankind has&#13;
arisen in California. He has discovered&#13;
a concoction which robs roosters of&#13;
their ability to crow. -A sharp ax&#13;
administered with vigor just where&#13;
the tall feathers merge into the comb&#13;
Is also effective.&#13;
The supreme cour^of Iowa has decided&#13;
that tips belong to the person&#13;
who receives them, not to any boss&#13;
or syndicate that grabs the privileges.&#13;
It would have been a better decision&#13;
to brand them as bribery and illegal.&#13;
A Brooklyn motor cyclist dying&#13;
from cancer has been pronounced a&#13;
victim of the jouncing of the machine.&#13;
Hut why blame the cycle for Brooklyn's&#13;
uneven pavements?&#13;
Baldy, a New York monkey, examines&#13;
his food to se« whether it is inhabited&#13;
by germs. Science has robbed&#13;
the monkey of his gastronomical&#13;
pleasures.&#13;
Japanese school children are taught&#13;
to write with both hands. Just think&#13;
what Journalists they'd have made&#13;
before typewriters were invented.&#13;
A railroad company is asked to pay&#13;
$200,000 for the death of a chimpanzee.&#13;
Must have been the missing link the&#13;
biologists are looking for.&#13;
'A machine has been invented by&#13;
which the blind can hear light. Now,&#13;
it they only fix up another so that&#13;
'the deaf can see sound, all will be&#13;
»*ppy.&#13;
^A pitcher for champagne has been&#13;
dftrented by an Englishman. But few&#13;
&lt;of us drink champagne by the pitcher.&#13;
J&#13;
*A Belgian bank oHelel is accused of&#13;
jftatef short M UgttOOQ. It ma*&#13;
'•:'.W.v-&#13;
'• ~'f:&#13;
•WuMhlnRton, TV«\ •.—Congress today n&gt;-&#13;
£«slv*t] lrt&gt;m President Tart th« stiond of&#13;
ma messages tu the short session. It&#13;
(Seals with lineal, military, Insular mid&#13;
Judicial affairs und in part la as follows:&#13;
The condition of the country with reference&#13;
to huslneMH could hardly be better.&#13;
While the four years of the administration&#13;
now drawiriK to a close have riot developed&#13;
RTeut speculative expansion or a&#13;
wide field of new Investment, thi; recovery&#13;
and progress made from the depressing&#13;
conditions following the panic of 1907&#13;
have been steady and the Improvement&#13;
ha* been cleur and easily traced In the&#13;
Btatlstictt. The business of the country is&#13;
now on u Holid basis. Credits are not&#13;
unduly extended and every phase of the&#13;
situation seems in a state of preparedness&#13;
for a period of unexampled prosperity.&#13;
Manufacturing concern* are running&#13;
at their full capacity and the demand for&#13;
labor was never so constant and growing.&#13;
The foreign trade of the country for this&#13;
year will exceed 14,000.000,000, while the&#13;
t&gt;alance rn our favor— that of the excess&#13;
of exports over imports—will exceed $500,-&#13;
¢00,000. More than half our exports are&#13;
manufactures or partly manufactured&#13;
material, while our exports of farm products&#13;
do not show the same Increase of&#13;
fie-mestle eonsuflvption. U -4« a y«ar of&#13;
bumper crops; the total money value of&#13;
farm products will exceed $9,500,000,000. It&#13;
Is a year when tho bushel or unit price&#13;
of agricultural products has gradually&#13;
"fallen, and yet the total value of the entire&#13;
crop is greater by over $1,000,000,000&#13;
than we have known in our history.&#13;
Condition of the Treasury.&#13;
The condition of the treasury Is very&#13;
tintlsfactory. "Thrvr totnt 1 nterest-bt» arin*f&#13;
debt is $-»«.777,770, of which $134,031,980 con-&#13;
Rtlute the Panama canal loan. The mminterest-&#13;
bearing debt Is $378,301.2X4.90. Including&#13;
$346,671,011) of greenbacks. We have&#13;
In the treasury $1.-)0.000,000 in gold coin as&#13;
a reserve against the outstanding greenbacks;&#13;
and in addition we have a cash&#13;
balance in the treasury as a general fund&#13;
of |167,152,478.99, or an Increase of $2-,975,-&#13;
562 over the general fund last year.&#13;
Receipts and Expenditures.&#13;
For three years the expenditures of the&#13;
government have decreased under the Influence&#13;
of an effort to economize. This&#13;
year presents an apparent exception. The&#13;
estimate by the secretary of the treasury&#13;
of the ordinary receipts, exclusive of postal&#13;
revenues, for the year ending June&#13;
30, 1914. indicates that they will amount&#13;
to $170,000,000. The sum of the estimates&#13;
of the expenditures for that same year,&#13;
exclusive of Panama canal disbursements&#13;
and postal disbursements payable from&#13;
postal revenues Is $732,000,000, indicating a&#13;
deficit of $22,000,000. For the year ending&#13;
June 30, 1913. similarly estimated receipts&#13;
were $667,000,000, while the total corresponding&#13;
estimate of expenditures for that&#13;
yeai', submitted through the secretary of&#13;
the treasury to congress, amounted to&#13;
$656/)00,000. This shows an Increase of&#13;
$76,000,000 in' the estimates for liH4 over&#13;
the total estimates of 1913. This Is due to&#13;
an increase of $25,000,000 in the estimate&#13;
for rivers and harbors for the next year&#13;
on projects and surveys authorized by&#13;
Congress; to an Increase under the new&#13;
pension bill of $32,500,000; and to an increase&#13;
In the estimates for expenses of&#13;
the navy department of $24,000,000. The&#13;
estimate for the navy department for the&#13;
year 1913 included two battleships, i.'ongress-&#13;
made provision fur only one.battleship,&#13;
and therefore the navy department:&#13;
has deemed it necessary and proper to&#13;
make an estimate which Includes the first&#13;
year'H expenditure for three battleships&#13;
In addition to the amount required for&#13;
work on the uncompleted ships now under&#13;
construction. In addition to the natural&#13;
tncreaae in the expenditures for the uncompleted&#13;
ships, and the additional battleship&#13;
estimated for, the other increases&#13;
are due to the pay required for 4,000 or&#13;
more additional enlisted men in the navy.&#13;
and to this must be added the additional&#13;
cost of construction Imposed by the&#13;
change In the eight-hour law which&#13;
makes It applicable to ships built In private&#13;
shipyards,&#13;
The president then explained at some&#13;
l e n g t h the national reserve association&#13;
s y s t e m recommended by the monetary&#13;
commission and urged congress to examine&#13;
the plan impartially from all&#13;
standpoints and then to adopt some&#13;
plan which will secure the benefits desired.&#13;
Concerning1 the tariff he had little to&#13;
nay in view of the fact that a n e w cong&#13;
r e s s has been elected on a platform&#13;
of tariff for revenue only.&#13;
Army Reorganization.&#13;
Our small army now consists of S3,809&#13;
men, excluding the 5,000 Philippine scouts.&#13;
Leaving out of consideration the coast&#13;
artillery force, whose position is fixed in&#13;
our various seacoast defenses, and the&#13;
present garrisons of our various Insular&#13;
possessions, we have today within the&#13;
continental United States a mobile army&#13;
of only about 36,000 men. This little force&#13;
must be still further drawn upon to supply&#13;
the new garrisons for the great naval&#13;
base which is being established at Pearl&#13;
Harbor, In the Hawaiian Islands, and to&#13;
protect the locks now ra.pl4.ly approaching&#13;
completion at Panama. [ -fhe force* remaining&#13;
In the United States are now&#13;
scattered In nearly fifty posts, situated&#13;
for a variety of historical reasons In&#13;
twenty-four states. These posts contain&#13;
only fractions of regiments, averaging&#13;
less than 700 men each. In time of peace&#13;
It has been our historical policy to administer&#13;
these units separately by a geographical&#13;
organization. In other words,&#13;
our army in time of peace has never been&#13;
a united organisation but merely scattered&#13;
groups of companies, battalions and&#13;
regiments, and the first task in time of&#13;
war has been to create out of these scattered&#13;
units an army fit for effective teamwork&#13;
and co-operation.&#13;
To the task of meeting these patent&#13;
defects, the war department has been addressing&#13;
Itself during the past year. A&#13;
comprehensive plan of reorganization was&#13;
prepared by the war college division of&#13;
the general staff. This plan was thoroughly&#13;
discussed last summer at a series&#13;
of open conferences held by the secretary&#13;
of war and attended by representatives&#13;
from all branches of the army and from&#13;
congress. In printed form it has been&#13;
distributed to members of congress and&#13;
throughout the army and the national&#13;
guard, and widely through institutions of&#13;
learning and elsewhere in the United&#13;
States. In it, for the first time, we have&#13;
a tentative ohart for future progress.&#13;
The National Guard.&#13;
Under existing law the national guard&#13;
constitutes, after the regular army, the&#13;
first line of national defense. Its organisation,&#13;
discipline, training-, and equipment,&#13;
under recent legislation, have been&#13;
assimilated, as far as possible, to those&#13;
o( the regular army, and Us practical&#13;
efficiency, under the effect of this training,&#13;
has very greatly increased. Our clti-&#13;
,sen soldiers under present conditions&#13;
have reached a stage,of development beyond&#13;
which they cannot reasonably be&#13;
asked to go without further direct aa-&#13;
''vtatano* In the form of pay from the federal&#13;
government. On the other hand, such&#13;
'pay from the national treasury would not&#13;
. bo Justified unless it produced a proper&#13;
j teulvsle&amp;t in additional efficiency on the&#13;
part of the national guard. The organized&#13;
militia today cannot be ordered outside of&#13;
the hmlta of the United States, and thus&#13;
cannot lawfully be used for general military&#13;
purposes. The officers and men are&#13;
ambitious and euycr to make themselves&#13;
thus available and to become an efficient&#13;
national reserve of citizen soldiery. They&#13;
are the only force of trained men, other&#13;
than the regular army, upon which wc&#13;
can rely. The so-called military pay bill,&#13;
in the form agreed on between the authorities&#13;
of the war department and the&#13;
representative* of the national guard, In&#13;
my opinion adequately meets these conditions&#13;
and offers a proper return for the&#13;
pay which it is proposed to give to the&#13;
national guard. I believe that its enactment&#13;
into law would be a very long step&#13;
toward providing this nation with a first&#13;
line of citizen soldiery, upon which its&#13;
main reliance must depend in case of any&#13;
national emergency. Plans for the organisation&#13;
of the national guard into tactical&#13;
divisions, on the same lines as those&#13;
adopted for the regular army, are being&#13;
formulated by the war college division&#13;
of the general staff.&#13;
Porto Rico, Mr. Taft says, continues&#13;
to s h o w notable progress and he urges&#13;
the senate to pass the bill g r a n t i n g the&#13;
Porto Rieans American citizenship.&#13;
Philippines.&#13;
A bill is pending In congress, continues&#13;
the message, which revolutionizes&#13;
the carefully worked out scheme&#13;
of government under which the Philippine&#13;
islands are now governed and&#13;
which proposes to render them virtua&#13;
l l y rratrmomous at once and absolutely&#13;
independent in eight years. Such a&#13;
proposal can "only be rouTTcTeTI on the&#13;
assumption that w e have now discharged&#13;
our trusteeship to the Filipino&#13;
people and our responsibility for them&#13;
to the world, and that t h e y are now&#13;
prepared for s e l f - g o v e r n m e n t as -well&#13;
as national sovereignty, A thorough&#13;
and unbiased knowledKe of the facts&#13;
clearly shows that these a s s u m p t i o n s&#13;
are absolutely with justification. As&#13;
to this, I believe that there is no substantial&#13;
difference of opinion a m o n g&#13;
any of those who have had the responsibility&#13;
of facing- Philippine problems&#13;
in the administration of the islands,&#13;
and I believe that no one to w h o m the&#13;
future of this people is a responsible&#13;
concern can countenance a policy&#13;
fraught w i t h , the direst consequences&#13;
to those on whose behalf it is ostensibly&#13;
urged.&#13;
Our true course is to ptirsue steadily&#13;
and courageously the path we have thus&#13;
far followed; to guide the Filipinos into&#13;
self-sustaining pursuits; to continue the&#13;
cultivation of sound political habits&#13;
through education and political practice;&#13;
to encourage the diversification of Industries,&#13;
and to realize the advantages of&#13;
their industrial education by conservatively&#13;
approved co-operative methods, at&#13;
once checking the dangers of concentrated&#13;
wealth and building up a sturdy, independent&#13;
citizenship.&#13;
Regulation of Water Power.&#13;
There are pending before congress R&#13;
large number of bills proposing to grant&#13;
privileges of erecting dams for the purpose&#13;
of creating water power In our navigable&#13;
livers. The pendency of these bills&#13;
has brought out an Important defect in&#13;
the existing general dam act. That act&#13;
does not, in my opinion, grant sufficient&#13;
power to the federal government in dealing&#13;
with the construction of such dams to&#13;
exact protective conditions in the interest&#13;
of navigation. It does not permit the&#13;
federal government, as a condition of its&#13;
permit, to require that a part of the&#13;
value thus created shall W applied to tho&#13;
further general improvement and protection&#13;
of the stream. I believe this to be&#13;
one of the most Important matters of&#13;
internal improvement now confronting&#13;
the government. Most of the navigable&#13;
rivers of this country are comparatively&#13;
long and shallow. In order that they&#13;
may he made fully useful for navigation&#13;
there has come into vogue a method of&#13;
improvement known as canalization, or&#13;
the slack-water method, which consists&#13;
in building a series of dams and locks,&#13;
each of which will create a long pool of&#13;
deep navigable water. At each of these&#13;
dams there Is usually created a long ppol&#13;
of deep navigable water. At each of these&#13;
dams there la usually created also water&#13;
power of commercial value. If the water&#13;
power thus created can be made available&#13;
for the further improvement of navigation&#13;
In the stream, it Is manifest that the&#13;
improvement will be much more quickly&#13;
effected on the one hand, and on the&#13;
other, that the burden on the general taxpayers&#13;
of the country will be very much&#13;
reduced. Private interests seeking permits&#13;
to building waterpower dams in&#13;
navigable streams usually urge that they&#13;
thus Improve navigation, and that if they&#13;
do net impair navigation they should be&#13;
allowed to take for themselves the entire&#13;
profits of the water-power development.&#13;
Whatever they may do by way of&#13;
relieving the government of the expense of&#13;
improving navigation should be given due&#13;
consideration, but It must be apparent&#13;
that there may be a profit beyond a reasonably&#13;
liberal return upon the private&#13;
investment which is a potential asset of&#13;
the government in carrying out a comprehensive&#13;
policy of waterway development.&#13;
It Is no objection to the retention&#13;
and use of such an asset by the government&#13;
that a comprehensive waterway&#13;
policy will Include the protection and development&#13;
of the other public uses of&#13;
water, which cannot and should not be&#13;
ignored in making and executing plans&#13;
for the protection and development of&#13;
navigation. It Is also equally clear that&#13;
Inasmuch as the water power thus created&#13;
is or may be an incident of a general&#13;
scheme of waterway Improvement&#13;
within the constitutional jurisdiction of&#13;
the federal government, the regulation of&#13;
nucli water power lies' also within that&#13;
Jurisdiction. In my opinion constructive&#13;
statesmanship requires that legislation&#13;
should be enacted which will permit the&#13;
development of navigation in these great&#13;
rivers to go hand In hand with the utilization&#13;
of this by-product of water power,&#13;
created In the course of the same improvement,&#13;
and that the general dam act&#13;
should be so amended as to make this possible.&#13;
I deem it highly important that&#13;
the nation should adopt a consistent and&#13;
harmonious treatment of these waterpower&#13;
projects, which will preserve for&#13;
this purpose their value to the government,&#13;
whose right it is to grant the permit.&#13;
Any other policy in equivalent to&#13;
throwing away a most valuable national&#13;
asset.&#13;
The Panama Canal.&#13;
During the past year the work of construction&#13;
upon the canal has progressed&#13;
most satisfactorily. About 87 per cent, of&#13;
the execavation work has been completed,&#13;
and more than 93 per cent. «of the concrete&#13;
for all tho locks Is In place. In&#13;
view of the great Interest which has been&#13;
manifested as to some slides In the- Culebra&#13;
Cut, I am glad to say that the report&#13;
of Col. Ooethals should allay any apprehension&#13;
on this point. It is gratifying&#13;
to not* that none of the slides which occurred&#13;
during this year would have Interfered&#13;
with the pass*** of th* ships&#13;
had the canal, la fact, been in operation,&#13;
and whan the slop* pressures will have&#13;
been finally adjusted and th* growth of&#13;
vegetation will minimize erosion In th*&#13;
banks of the cut, the slide problem will&#13;
be practically solved and an ample stability-&#13;
assured for the Culebra Cut.&#13;
Although the .official date of the opening&#13;
has been set for January 1, 1915, the&#13;
canal will, In fact, from present Indications,&#13;
be opened for shipping during the&#13;
latter half of 1913. N o fixed date can as&#13;
yet he set, but shipping interests will be&#13;
advised us soon as assurances can Y&gt;e&#13;
given that vessels can pass through without&#13;
unnecessary delay.&#13;
Recognizing the administrative problem&#13;
in the management of the canal, coni-&#13;
rress in the act of August 24, 1912, has&#13;
made admirable provision for executive&#13;
responsibility i n the control, of the canal&#13;
and the government of the Canal Zone.&#13;
The problem q/ most efficient organization&#13;
Is receiving Careful consideration, so&#13;
that u scheme of organization and control&#13;
best adapted to tho conditions of the&#13;
canal may b«# formulated and put in operation&#13;
an expeditiously as possible. Acting&#13;
under the authority conferred on me&#13;
by congress, 1 have, by executive proclamation,&#13;
promulgated the following scheduel&#13;
of tolls for ships passing through the&#13;
canal, based upon the thorough report&#13;
of Emory R. Johnson, special commissioner&#13;
on traffic and tolls:&#13;
1. On merchant vessels carrying passengers&#13;
or cargo. $1.20 per net vessel&#13;
ton—each 100 cubic ___t--of actual capacity.&#13;
2. On vessels in nallast without passengers&#13;
or cargo, 40, per cent, less than&#13;
the rate of tolls for vessels with passengers&#13;
or cargo.&#13;
3. Upon naval vessels, other than transports,&#13;
colliers, hospital ships, and supply&#13;
ships, 50 cents per displacement ton.&#13;
4. Upon army and navy transports, colliers,&#13;
hospital ships, and supply ships,&#13;
$1.20 per net ton, the vessels to be measused&#13;
by the same rules as are employed&#13;
in determining the net tonnage of mer-&#13;
. chant vessels&#13;
Rules for the determination of the tonnage&#13;
upon which toll charges are based&#13;
are now In course of preparation and&#13;
will be promulgated in due season.&#13;
P a n a m a Canal T r e a t y .&#13;
Tlie proclamation which I have Issued&#13;
In respect to the Panama Canal tolls is&#13;
In accord with the J Panama Canal act&#13;
passed by this congress August 24, 1912.&#13;
—We—have -been advised—that the British&#13;
government has prepared a protest&#13;
against the act and its enforcement in so&#13;
far as it relieves from the payment of&#13;
tolls American ships engaged in the American&#13;
coastwise trade on the ground that&#13;
it violates British rights under the Hay-&#13;
Pnuncefote treaty concerning the Panama&#13;
Canal. When the protest is presented, it&#13;
will be promptly considered and an effort&#13;
made to reach a satisfactory adjustment&#13;
of any differences there may be between&#13;
the two governments.&#13;
Promotion for Col. Goethals.&#13;
As the completion of the canal grows&#13;
nearer, and as the wonderful executive&#13;
work of Col. Goethals becomes more conspicuous&#13;
In the eyes of the country and&#13;
o_ the world, It seems to me wise and&#13;
proper to make provision by law for such&#13;
reward to him as may be commensurate&#13;
with the service that he has rendered to&#13;
his country. I suggest that this reward&#13;
take the form of an appointment of Col.&#13;
Ooethals as a major general in the army&#13;
of the United States, and that the law&#13;
authorizing such appointment be accompanied&#13;
with a provision permitting his&#13;
designation as chief of engineers upon&#13;
the retirement of the present incumbent&#13;
of that offlen.&#13;
Navy Department.&#13;
Tho navy of the United States? is in&#13;
a greater state of efficiency and is&#13;
more powerful than it has been before,&#13;
but In the emulation which exists&#13;
b e t w e e n different countries In respect&#13;
to the increase of naval and&#13;
military a r m a m e n t s this condition Is&#13;
not a permanent one, In view of the&#13;
many improvements and Increases by&#13;
foreign g o v e r n m e n t s the slightest halt&#13;
on our part in respect to n e w construction&#13;
t h r o w s us back and reduces us&#13;
from a naval power of the first rank&#13;
and places us a m o n g the nations of the ^&#13;
second rank,&#13;
A year a g o c o n g r e s s refused to appropriate&#13;
for more than one battleship.&#13;
In this I think a g r e a t mistake of&#13;
policy w a s made, and I urgently recommend&#13;
that this c o n g r e s s make up '&#13;
for the m i s t a k e of the last session by&#13;
appropriations authorizing the construction&#13;
of three battleships, in addition&#13;
to destroyers, fuel ships, and&#13;
the other auxiliary v e s s e l s as shown&#13;
In the building program of the general&#13;
board. We are confronted by a condition&#13;
in respect to the navies of the&#13;
world which requires us, If we would&#13;
maintain our navy a s an Insurance of&#13;
peace, to a u g m e n t our naval force by&#13;
at least t w o battleships a year and by&#13;
buttle cruisers, gunboats', torpedo destroyers.&#13;
?.nd submarine boats in a&#13;
proper prorotion. We have no desire&#13;
for war. We go as far as any nation&#13;
in t h e world to avoid war, but w e are&#13;
a world power. Our population, our&#13;
w e a l t h , our definite policies, our responsibilities&#13;
in the Pacific and the Atlantic,&#13;
our defense of the P a n a m a canal,&#13;
together with our enormous world&#13;
trade and our missionary outposts on&#13;
the frontiers of civilization, require&#13;
us to recognize our position as one of&#13;
the foremost in the family of nations,&#13;
and to clothe' o u r s e l v e s with sufficient&#13;
naval power to g i v e force to our reas&#13;
o n a b l e demands, and to g i v e w e i g h t&#13;
to our Influence In those directions of&#13;
progress that a powerful Christian nation&#13;
shotfld advocate.&#13;
Department of Justice.&#13;
This department h a s been very active&#13;
in the enforcement of the law. It has&#13;
been better organized and w i t h a&#13;
l a r g e r force than e v e r before in the&#13;
history of the government. T h e prosec&#13;
u t i o n s which h a v e been successfully&#13;
concluded and w h i c h are n o w pending&#13;
t e s t i f y to the effectiveness of the department&#13;
work.&#13;
T h e prosecution of t r u s t s under the&#13;
Sherman a n t i - t r u s t l a w h a s gone on&#13;
w i t h o u t restraint or diminution, and&#13;
decrees similar to t h o s e entered in the&#13;
Standard Oil and Tobacco cases have&#13;
been entered in other suite, like the&#13;
s u i t s a g a i n s t the p o w d e r trust and the&#13;
bath tub trust. I a m very s t r o n g l y convinced&#13;
that a steady, consistent course&#13;
In this regard, w i t h a c o n t i n u i n g of&#13;
Supreme court decisions upon the new&#13;
p h a s e s of the trust question not already&#13;
finally decided, is g o i n g to offer a&#13;
solution of this much-discussed and&#13;
troublesome issue in a.quiet, calm and&#13;
judicial w a y , w i t h o u t any radical l e g -&#13;
islation c h a n g i n g the governmental&#13;
policy in regard to combinations now&#13;
denounced by the Sherman anti-trust&#13;
law. I h a v e already recommended a s&#13;
an aid in this matter legislation which&#13;
would declare u n l a w f u l certain w e l l -&#13;
k n o w n phases of unfair competition In&#13;
interstate trade, and I have also a d v o -&#13;
cated voluntary national incorporation&#13;
for the larger industrial enterprises,&#13;
w i t h provision for a closer supervision&#13;
by the bureau of corporations, or a&#13;
board appointed for the purpose, so asto&#13;
m a k e certain compliance w i t h the&#13;
a n t i - t r u s t l a w on t h e one hand and to&#13;
g i v e greater s e c u r i t y to the stockholders&#13;
a g a i n s t possible prosecutions&#13;
on the other. I believe, however, that&#13;
the orderly courso of litigation in the&#13;
c o u r t s and the regular prosecution of&#13;
t r u s t s charged w i t h t h e violation o t the&#13;
a n t l - t r u s t l a w la producing a m o n g&#13;
bualness men a clearer and clearer&#13;
perception of the 11«e of distinction bet&#13;
w e e n business t h a t la to be encoura&#13;
g e d and b u s i n e s s t h a t la to ha c o n -&#13;
demned, and that in this quiet w a r the&#13;
question of trusts can be aettled and&#13;
competition retained aa a n economic&#13;
force to s e c u r e r e a s o n a b l e n e s s | « 4&#13;
pricea and freedom and indepeadeace&#13;
In trade. WILLIAM H. TAFT.&#13;
I W i t TALK PEACE&#13;
IN KING'S PAtACE&#13;
BALKAN PEACE CONFERENCE TO&#13;
BEGIN FRIDAY, T H E THIRT&#13;
E E N T H , IN ST. JAMES&#13;
PALACE, LONDON.&#13;
W I L L BEGIN NEGOTIATIONS IN&#13;
DEFIANCE OF A L L SUPERSTITIONS.&#13;
The Outlook for Lasting Peace&#13;
Throughout Europe Is Considered&#13;
Promising.&#13;
The Balkan war situation is practically&#13;
unchanged. There is no confirmation&#13;
of the Constantinople dispatches&#13;
that Greece has affixed a belated&#13;
signature to the Baghtche protocol&#13;
for an armistice. As far as can&#13;
be learned, Greece still refused to join&#13;
the truce agreement.&#13;
The other Balkan states and Turkey&#13;
are continuing their preparations&#13;
for the peace conference which, in apparent&#13;
defiance of all superstition, will&#13;
begin in London on Friday, Dec. 13.&#13;
Athens dispatches give assurance that&#13;
Greece will participate in the negotiations^&#13;
With peace of some kind, no matter&#13;
how costly, assured by the protocol, it&#13;
is agreed that Turkey__has turned her&#13;
_atten.tiQ.n_ _to a p o l i c y o f diplomacy&#13;
that will sow the seeds of dissention&#13;
among the Balkan allies, in order that&#13;
Turkey might conclude as favorable a&#13;
bargain as possible.&#13;
Diplomatists and war experts credit&#13;
to Turkish mendacity all of the little&#13;
disquieting rumors from eastern&#13;
Europe, reports for which no foundation&#13;
in fact can be discovered.&#13;
The report that the Greeks had&#13;
signed a separate and more advantageous&#13;
armistice with Turkey; that&#13;
Roumania would insist on representation&#13;
in the London conference, and&#13;
a part in the division in the spoils;&#13;
that the Greeks would hold aloof&#13;
from the negotiations; that Servia&#13;
would persist in her defiance of Austria-&#13;
Hungary, and various other rumors&#13;
of the same kind were attributed&#13;
the porte's crafty efforts to stir&#13;
up trouble.&#13;
With all of the Balkan belligerents&#13;
appointing their peace plenipotentiaries&#13;
and all of the six powers accepting&#13;
the proposal for the ambassadorial&#13;
conference, the outlook for lasting&#13;
peace throughout Europe Is considered&#13;
promising.&#13;
500 Die of Cholera.&#13;
Cholera is causing great havoc in&#13;
the native quarters of the Turkish&#13;
capital. It is officially admitted that&#13;
over 1,000 cases have occurred during&#13;
the paBt 20 days and that half of them&#13;
have been fatal. ThiB total, however,&#13;
is believed to be much below Ihe real&#13;
figures.&#13;
The prefect In a proclamation Issued&#13;
refers to the great proportions&#13;
of the epidemic and warns the public&#13;
that failure on their part to notify&#13;
cases of cholera to the authorities will&#13;
be punished by fine and imprisonment.&#13;
TEST PARCELS POST&#13;
Apportionment Made Postmasters t o&#13;
Work Out Systsm of Delivery.&#13;
Test as to tbfi cpacty* ot the new&#13;
parcels post "law haye'-.-.|een authorized&#13;
by the p&lt;wt0fllpe«4^iartment in&#13;
Washington, during tj_/s l l w 15 days of&#13;
January, a certain apjpja^TOtrBie#tv being&#13;
giv^en to each o t t l a ^ t f i W H ^ delivery&#13;
oftlceJs, to be s^ettt at ^ e - discretion'&#13;
of tfce postm^JtgTte'"forking&#13;
out delivery and ascM^ining the extent&#13;
to which the parcels post is being&#13;
used through Ms ^jrce and the&#13;
receipts derived from $.: .&#13;
From these reports t&amp;e department&#13;
expects to base its estimate of money&#13;
needed for carrying on, the business&#13;
the balance of the year, for which an&#13;
appropriation will be asked of congress.&#13;
Postmasters are limited only by the&#13;
amount of money given them. They&#13;
are authorized to work out their own&#13;
delivery system, whether by mail carriers&#13;
on foot, horseback or in automobiles.&#13;
Upon reports from the several&#13;
poBtofflces the department expects&#13;
to choose a plan for delivery in&#13;
all the cities of the country.&#13;
New Job for Pierce.&#13;
The appointment of Charles S.&#13;
Pierce to be secretary of the public&#13;
domain commTssTon when" "A."~C. "Car- "&#13;
ton, the present incumbent, becomes&#13;
state land commissioner, Jan. 1, was&#13;
announced in Lansing.&#13;
Inasmuch as Pierce had been considered&#13;
to have a cinch on the position&#13;
of clerk of the house of representatives&#13;
. t]_e„-Com_ng session, this a p ^&#13;
point/nent will let down the bars for&#13;
a flock of candidates for the clerkship&#13;
of the house, which pays $70 a week&#13;
during the session of the legislature.&#13;
Engineers of the Grand Trunk railroad&#13;
are in Saginaw arranging to raise&#13;
the tracks between Saginaw and Bay&#13;
City above flood danger. Last spring&#13;
the tracks were covered, interfering&#13;
with transportation.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
To Buy Birthplace of Lincoln.&#13;
Rep. Johnson, of Kentucky, introduced&#13;
a bill in the house for the acquisition&#13;
by the government of the&#13;
farm and the log cabin in Kentucky&#13;
in which Abraham Lincoln was born.&#13;
Johnson proposes the homestead be&#13;
kept as a park.&#13;
DETROIT — Cattle — Extra dry-fed&#13;
steiTH. $7.&amp;0^8; steers and heifers, 1,000&#13;
to 1.200, $6.50(^7.36; steers and heifers.&#13;
SU0 to 1,000, $5,505.6; steers and heifers&#13;
that are fat, 500 to 700, $4.50(^5; choice&#13;
fat cows. $..50(¾6; good fat COWB, $4.50^&#13;
5; common cows, $3,754^4.25; cannera.&#13;
$3(&amp;3.50; choice heavy bulls. $5.50^6; fair&#13;
to good bolopnaa, bulls, $4.75($_; stock&#13;
bulla, $3.75&lt;i'&lt;;4.50; choice feeding steers,&#13;
800 to 1.000, $5.50((06.25: fair feeding*&#13;
steei-H, 800 to 1.000, $5.25 (ft 5.50; choice&#13;
HtockeiB, 500 to 700, $5^5.50; fair stockers.&#13;
500 to 700, $4.60&lt;?M.75; stock heifers,&#13;
$3.50((.4.25: milkers, lai-jre, young-, medium&#13;
ufc'e, !&gt;4C-&amp;(i&amp;; common mllkera, $»Ka)&#13;
Veal—Mmket atronK and 50c higher&#13;
than last week; best, $9.50^11; others, $4&#13;
feS.50. Milch cows and springers steady.&#13;
Sheep and lambu—Lambs 25c(g)40c&#13;
higher and sheep steady; best lambs, $7&#13;
¢07.25: fair to good lambs, $6.50&amp;)6.7G;&#13;
light to common lambs, $5(9)6; fair to&#13;
pood Hheep, $3(^3.75; culls and common,&#13;
$1.75#2.75. __ _&#13;
"Hogs-^LTghT to good butchers, $7.4»;&#13;
pigs, $8.70©«.90; light yorkers. . $7.25^&#13;
7.30; stags, 1-3 off.&#13;
STATE NEWS IN BRIEF.&#13;
More than 200 laborers on the Kalamazoo&#13;
city pay rolls will receive a&#13;
turkey for their Christmas dinner from&#13;
the city.&#13;
Warren Shepard, of Belding, Mich.,&#13;
will get $1,200 in a lump from Uncle&#13;
Sam as back pension. He will also receive&#13;
$12 a month.&#13;
Nearly 1,000 children will be presented&#13;
with shoes at Chirstmas&#13;
through the beneficence of the Grand&#13;
Rapids lodge of Elks. The order will j&#13;
spend $1,000.&#13;
West Side Business association of&#13;
Saginaw adopted a resolution urging&#13;
the state legislature to take action to&#13;
insure Michigan being represented at&#13;
the Pan-American exposition in San&#13;
FranclBco in 1915.&#13;
The Michigan crop report just issued&#13;
shows that the condition of wheat is&#13;
good. The condition as compared with&#13;
an average per cent is 90 in the southern&#13;
counties; 88 in the central counties&#13;
and 97 in the upper peninsula.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Gustave Buschke, of&#13;
Saginaw, are the parents of twin&#13;
daughters, who will celebrate their&#13;
birthdays on different dates. One&#13;
daughter was born shortly before midnight&#13;
Friday and the other early Saturday&#13;
morning.&#13;
Men who signed the local option petition&#13;
in Calhoun county for a resubmission&#13;
of the question next sprit*&#13;
will receive a strong appeal from tht&#13;
liquor Interests to ?vott ;"wet." Three&#13;
clerks are copying the names of those&#13;
who signed the petition.&#13;
Deputy State Fodtt fnipector Mel*&#13;
selbich and City Inspector fri^r obtained&#13;
samples of oysters carried by&#13;
meat markets and groceries. The. oysters&#13;
were tent to Lansing fnd wjj} u* |&#13;
analysed and \proce*df»gs started&#13;
against dealers where the bivalves are&#13;
found to be watered.&#13;
$1St f.&#13;
**&amp;.**&#13;
flutter—Fancy creamery, 36e; creamery&#13;
firsts, 33c; dairy, 22c; packing, 2ic&#13;
per lt&gt;.&#13;
APPLES—Baldwin, $2.25@2.B0; greening.&#13;
$2.50®2.75; spy, $2.7E@S; s i s * red&#13;
«3®3.50; No. 2, 75c®$1.60 per bbir_ancv&#13;
$2.50®3 per bbl; common, $1.50031 M r&#13;
bbl.&#13;
C R A N B E R R I E S - L a t e Howes, per bbl&#13;
$9; in bushel lots, $3.25.&#13;
PEARS—Oregon. $2.50@2.75 per box&#13;
CABBAGES—$1© 1.25 per bbl&#13;
fanDcRyE, S1S2E@D1 3cC ApLerV ErtS&gt;-. Ordlnary, 10011«&#13;
ONIONS—65c per bu.&#13;
DRESSED HOGS— $».50fi&gt;10 oer cwt&#13;
for light to medium. • ^ W l "&#13;
DRESSED POULTRY — Sprin* chickens.&#13;
13® 15c; hens, 12014c; o M ^ r w ^ e r .&#13;
10011c;: turkeys, 1 7 © l T c ; . d u S ; * S J 3 K ;&#13;
gese, 14©16c per !b. " ^ r '&#13;
POTATOES - Michigan, sacks, ' 58c;&#13;
bulk, 48c, In car lots, and 56««0c&gt;/_or&#13;
store.&#13;
H O N E Y - C h o l c e fancy white comb, I f&#13;
@l?c per lb; amber, 14«15c.&#13;
i o V y j £ i , P O U L T R Y - Sprint chlcksns,&#13;
12 1-20il3c per lb; hens, 1 1 © U l - f c ; No!&#13;
2 hens, 9c; old roosters. 9010c; ducks&#13;
15®18c; geese, 13014c; turkeys, 17018&lt;#&#13;
per lb. •&#13;
VEGETABLES—Beets. 40c per bu; car-'&#13;
rots, 45c per bu: tunTlps, SOc per bu;&#13;
SP'^J&amp;'-I5 0 P*5? b u : hothouse auouatiMM,&#13;
$1.2501.50 per bu; green onions, 10c per&#13;
doz; watercress, 26® SOc per dos; head let- '&#13;
tuce, $1.2501.60 per hamper; hom*-gr«wit&#13;
celery, 26B30e per bu; green peppers, 40c&#13;
per basket; rutabagas, 45c per bu.&#13;
PROVISIONS—Mess pork, $19; family5 ^&#13;
pork, I28&amp;24; celar backs, $22024; h a » _ &gt;&#13;
16 1-2« 17c; brisket.. 11 l-2®12ct bacon&#13;
18^20c; shoulders, 14 l-2c; picnic hams *&#13;
14c; pure lard In tierces, 123-4C; kettle?&#13;
rendered lard, 13 3-4c per lb, "&#13;
HAY—Oar lot prices, track. Detroit:&#13;
No. I tltnothy, $16®16.80; S90T2 timothy&#13;
$14.50016; No. 1 mixed, $14® 14.60; Ugft&#13;
mixed, rye straw, $10.50® 11 per ton.&#13;
There Is a possibility, It is said,Jiat&#13;
William L. PiUtgerara, recently elected&#13;
member of the legislature, w_rf^&#13;
the democrat candidate ty. sj^*k#r&#13;
ot the house. , ' ' . . '&#13;
' - • • • » • '&#13;
It Is stated In Port- Hauron Grand&#13;
1 rank eix dee that Thome Pidgepn,&#13;
treiiht ageflt here foe yeans, m\ik be*&#13;
transferred to Owosto. 3. C. MeFa4»&#13;
seam: a Jprmer vityet okrt .4» Sort&#13;
Huron but .now employed.,** tha-td**&#13;
paay In Detroit, wttt take itr. 9 * .&#13;
ceoa's plaee.&#13;
•v&#13;
'1±JLM$$0%&#13;
GRAIN, ETC. .&#13;
DETROIT—Wheat—Cash and Decern-&#13;
- f l * 1 . 0 . 2 "-1 , , I j ) 5 3 - &lt; ; M a &gt;' opened at&#13;
!*J2J"„- fa,,n*d ! - 4 c and declined to&#13;
$1.10 1-2; Ju y opened at 93c, touched ,&#13;
931-2o and de-lined to 93c; No. 1 white&#13;
$1.04 3-4. *'&#13;
Corn—Cafih No. 3, 49 1-2; No. 3 vellow&#13;
50 l-2c; No. 4 yellow, 48 l-2c. '&#13;
Oats—Standard. 37c; No. 3 whlto. g&#13;
cars at S_c; No. 4 white, 1 car at 35c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 64c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate shipment, $2.20:&#13;
prompt shipments, $2.18; December. S2 15'&#13;
January, $2.15.&#13;
Clover seed—Prime spot $11; sample, 12&#13;
bagB at 19.50; prime alslke, $13; sample&#13;
alsike, 8 bags at $12, 5 at $9.50.&#13;
OENERAL MARKETS&#13;
There in little change in produce prices&#13;
and tho market is quiet In all directions&#13;
Strictly freBh eggs are in much better demand&#13;
than supply and the market in&#13;
firm. Butter of the best grade Is flrnv and&#13;
In moderate supply. Poultry rules steady&#13;
with no overaupply and a good demand.&#13;
Potatoes are steady and quiet. Most of&#13;
the trade Is still done direct from the&#13;
farmers. Fruits are dull and apples verv&#13;
alow. *&#13;
•I 'J&#13;
\&#13;
•»&#13;
w mil IIIIJI w n J win «p»n»»^mriwiir •&#13;
/&#13;
• V&#13;
^&#13;
^ABIxB&#13;
HORACE&#13;
HA3ELTINE LORCHA&#13;
SYNOPS18.&#13;
Robert Cameron, capitalist, consults&#13;
3?hiHp Clyde, newspaper publisher, regarding&#13;
anonymous threatening letters ho&#13;
ha* received. The first promises a sample&#13;
of the writer's ppMtyer on a certain day.&#13;
On that day the head Is mysteriously cut&#13;
from a portrait of Cameron while the latter&#13;
Is In the room, Clyde lias a theory&#13;
that th&lt;? portrait was mutilatud while the&#13;
roora was unoccupied and the head later&#13;
removed by mtansi of a string, unnoticed&#13;
.by Cameron. Evelyn Grayson, Cameron's&#13;
niece, with whom Clyde Is in love, finds&#13;
the head of Cameron's portra.it nailed to&#13;
a. tree, where it was hadkbeen used as a&#13;
target. Clydo pledges Evelyn to secrecy.&#13;
Clyde learns that a Chinese boy employed&#13;
by Philetus Murphy, an artist living&#13;
nearby, had borrowed a rifle from Cameron's&#13;
lodtrekeeper. Cl«de makes an excuse&#13;
to call on Murflhy^and Is repulsed&#13;
He pretends to be Investigating alleged&#13;
CHAPTER V—(Continued).&#13;
At last I saw him half-way amenable&#13;
to reason. Now that he was out&#13;
of the shadow, I saw too, more clearly,&#13;
what manner of man he was. His&#13;
ru-&#13;
••':y*,: u&#13;
v 't&#13;
through t h e - g l o o m , w a s abnormally&#13;
large, yet not out of proportion with&#13;
MB herculean torso. His red hair,&#13;
frowsy, unkempt, was of such abundance,&#13;
that, in the dark, its outline had&#13;
given me a grotesquely magnified impression.&#13;
His red beard, too, was&#13;
thick, long, and untrimmed. What little,&#13;
of his face showed, was sunburned&#13;
to what, in the dim light, seemed the&#13;
color of ripe russet apples. Hia eyes&#13;
were nearly indiscernible, deep set,&#13;
under bushy red brows.&#13;
"If you had shown the least bit of&#13;
humanity to brother men in distress,"&#13;
I responded. In a half jocular vein,&#13;
"I'd probably never thought of this&#13;
being your place, and you being you;&#13;
and the Incident of the morning&#13;
might have been forgotten."&#13;
I thought I heard his teeth grit together&#13;
in his effort to suppress a rising&#13;
rage. I certainly saw his hands&#13;
clench; and then, with an assumption&#13;
of Indifference, ho took a final puff&#13;
at his cigar and tossed it, sparkling,&#13;
among the weeds of his lawn.&#13;
It was evident to me, now, that in&#13;
spite of the nonchalance he affected,&#13;
my reference to the Chinaman's&#13;
poaching, and his presence at Cragholt,&#13;
had aroused his Interest, and so&#13;
hoping to draw him out, I continued:&#13;
"Your man told the lodge-keeper&#13;
that you sent him over to borrow a&#13;
rifle."&#13;
"You don't mean to, tell me you'd&#13;
believe a Chinaman, do you?" he returned.&#13;
**It wasn't for me to believe or disbelieve.&#13;
The lodge-keeper believed&#13;
him."&#13;
"And so he borrowed a rifle, and&#13;
then with one of Cameron's own Instruments&#13;
of destruction proceeded&#13;
to destroy Cameron's game? Is that&#13;
It? What did he shoot? A deer or&#13;
one of those starved-looking white&#13;
dogs that Cameron has following him&#13;
about?"&#13;
Apparently Murphy knew much&#13;
more of my. friend than my friend&#13;
knew of Murphy.&#13;
"Neither, I fancy. In fact, I'm no/&#13;
sure just what he did shoot in the&#13;
way of game. But he seems to have&#13;
Indulged in a hit of target practice.&#13;
He found a piece of an old portrait,&#13;
tacked it to a tree, and shot holes in&#13;
i t Rather silly, eh? Foolish for him&#13;
to chance getting into trouble for&#13;
child's play of that tort"&#13;
"How do you know that?" he&#13;
growled, with an Inadvertent dropping&#13;
of hia mask. There was no mistaking,&#13;
now, that I had made captive&#13;
his attention.&#13;
"I taw the target," I answered,&#13;
•Imply.&#13;
"That's like saying, 1 caught a&#13;
twelve-pound bass. Here's the hook&#13;
and line to prove i t ' "&#13;
"X have a scale of the bass."&#13;
-A what?"&#13;
"Something your Chinaman dropped&#13;
besjde the tree."&#13;
Phlegmatic though he was, something&#13;
very like a start followed upon&#13;
my words. Then, as if to cover the&#13;
movement, he shrugged his shoulders,&#13;
and chuckled ponderously.&#13;
- H i t viflUhg card, I suppose."&#13;
"Nearly as good," I supplied, "the&#13;
bowl of his opium pipe."&#13;
At that moment Jerry cam* %round&#13;
the oerner of the house and stopped&#13;
abruptly, stupefied by suiferise; for&#13;
the open mouth of the giant&#13;
issued a rosr of hats laughter,&#13;
reverberated in weird discordthrough&#13;
the night silences,&#13;
on bally idiot!" he cried, his gufeoded.&#13;
"I suppose no persons ex*&#13;
t Chinamen smoke opium, eh!&#13;
that betas so, BO Chinaman but&#13;
my sChinaman could have made a tar*&#13;
gert of a piece of an old portrait and&#13;
dropped hit pipe bowl at the foot of&#13;
a-tnset Go on with you, you make&#13;
m r tick!" And then, seeing Jerry,&#13;
who had quickly Joined ma: "Didn't&#13;
ffiMHttsi eh? Wall, that's not strange.&#13;
.Bating lost the bowl of hia pipe, he's&#13;
tfrobably gone to borrow another&#13;
tram a laaadrymah friend in Cos&#13;
C o t r » » d that, by the way, is about&#13;
periodical which aims to focus popular&#13;
sentiment to a righteous viewpoint&#13;
concerning matters of national&#13;
and social import. For the time being&#13;
my consideration of Cameron and&#13;
his strange problem was suspended.&#13;
Now and then the subject recurred to&#13;
me, dragged into the mental light on&#13;
the train of Evelyn Grayson; but almost&#13;
immediately it was buried beneath&#13;
a question of editorial policy&#13;
or a debate regarding a contract for&#13;
white paper at an extortionate increase&#13;
in price.&#13;
When, however, my business day&#13;
was ended, and I had boarded the&#13;
train for Greenwich, the whole involved&#13;
enigma spread itself again&#13;
4&gt;efor* m«r demanding attention. And&#13;
in the midst of it, dominating it,&#13;
stretching his great Bhadow over it&#13;
to the farthest limit, appeared that&#13;
frowsy red giant. Murphy, a mystery&#13;
within a mystery; for, though he&#13;
seemed to pervade it, there was no&#13;
head, as I had already discerned it p o j n t ~ a t ' w h i c h ' l " c o u W ^dScover "him&#13;
quite touching it. -&#13;
In vain I tried to detect a real qonnection.&#13;
I started with the letters.&#13;
They bore no single characteristic&#13;
mark of this uncouth creature. As an&#13;
artist he might have devised the curious&#13;
silhouette signature, but there&#13;
was something about that—some cunning,&#13;
inventive subtlety—which I&#13;
could not reconcile with the ogre I&#13;
had played upon, stung to anger and&#13;
aroused to curiosity.&#13;
That he could either have conceived&#13;
or executed the ruin of the&#13;
portrait I did not believe possible.&#13;
The conception, like the letters and&#13;
the signature, bore evidence of a&#13;
craftiness too fine for such as he; and&#13;
to fancy him, mammoth that he was,&#13;
stealing unobserved into Cameron's&#13;
stury, was to fancy the Incredible.&#13;
And so, though the impression of&#13;
intimate relationship "persisted, I&#13;
could find no point of cpntact, closer&#13;
or more definite than through his&#13;
servant's rifle practice, which after&#13;
all might have been quite without motive,&#13;
There was little, therefore, in the&#13;
line of reason, to convict Murphy of&#13;
any knowledge of the matters which&#13;
had so disturbed us. And yet, as I&#13;
have said, I felt intuitively that he&#13;
possessed an Intimate acquaintance&#13;
with the whore affair.&#13;
At the Greenwich station, \ found&#13;
my touring car waiting; my mother&#13;
in the tonneau. My chauffeur touched&#13;
his cap as I approached. "&#13;
"You may drive, Francois," I said,&#13;
and I took the place at my mother's&#13;
side.&#13;
"You look tired, Philip," she announced&#13;
when I had kiBsed her. "Was&#13;
it very warm in the city?" Her eyes&#13;
were ever quick to note infinitesimal&#13;
changes in my appearance of wellbeing.&#13;
"Not uncomfortable," I answered,&#13;
indulgently. "I had a very busy day,&#13;
though. But I'm not the less fit because&#13;
of it."&#13;
"We have had some little excitement&#13;
here," she hastened, eager to&#13;
give me the news. "* "Old Romney&#13;
called you up on the telephone about&#13;
noon. I happened to answer it, myself,&#13;
and when I told him you were In&#13;
New York, and would not be back&#13;
until six, it just seemed he couldn't&#13;
wait to unburden himself. 'Won't you&#13;
please tell him, Mrs. Clyde,' he said,&#13;
'that Mr. Murphy's Chinaman was&#13;
found at daybreak this morning, lying&#13;
dead, just outside Murphy's back&#13;
door?'"&#13;
"Found dead'." I cried, in amasement.&#13;
"That is what he said. Then he&#13;
added that the poor fellow's head bad&#13;
been crushed with some heavy Instrument,&#13;
and that Mr. Murphy had been&#13;
arrested on suspicion and was In the&#13;
Cos Cob lockup."&#13;
For a full minute, I think, I sat in&#13;
silent amase. Then theories and con*&#13;
jectures In infinite variety gave&#13;
chase, one after the other, through&#13;
my excited brain. But it was more&#13;
than ever difficult, I found, to reach&#13;
anything like a satisfactory conclusion&#13;
concerning th"e position the now&#13;
lifeless Celestial and his accused mas*&#13;
ter held in the chain of mysteries I&#13;
wished so much to solve. That they&#13;
were both of them more or less Important&#13;
Huks, however, I had small&#13;
doubt.&#13;
"Did you know Mr. Murphy?" my&#13;
mother asked. And all at once I&#13;
realised that her question was a&#13;
repetition. In my absorption I bad&#13;
not heeded the original inquiry.&#13;
"Nobody knows him," 1 answered,&#13;
unconsciously echoing the words&#13;
voiced by the man in the catboat on&#13;
the previous night. . "Nobody knows&#13;
him. But I've met him in a rather&#13;
casual way."&#13;
CHAPTER V I .&#13;
Nell Gwyrms's Mirror.&#13;
With the approach of the twentyfirst&#13;
of the month, which Is to say&#13;
the seventh day following Camamf a&#13;
tbm aa*f sat tdace for jam ta buy gas-1 receipt of the second letter, I ob-&#13;
•3 otana,&#13;
«aa mm esr f apeot at my oflfcevf&#13;
fmNaw^TwtVbtjay wttk the hundred&#13;
4*a*» lb* m to tft* maklaf of a&#13;
served in him a growing nervous rest-&#13;
H statu, which with praiseworthy effort&#13;
la waa •fricjaauy striving to ova*&#13;
Of as? natt to the rad giant&#13;
and the tragedy which followed it, he&#13;
was, of course, informed; as he had&#13;
been of the incident in the wood, Including&#13;
the finding of the bullet&#13;
pierced piece of canvas. Everything,&#13;
save only that Evelyn was the&#13;
discoverer of the portrait remnant—&#13;
which I thought best under the circumstances&#13;
to keep secret—was told&#13;
to him in detail, and with all the circumstantiality&#13;
necessary to an intelligent&#13;
discussion of even the minutest&#13;
point.&#13;
My description of Murphy elicited&#13;
from him a recollection. He remembered&#13;
having seen the man once. It&#13;
was on the Fourth of July. Evelyn&#13;
and Mrs. Lancaster, Cameron's house-&#13;
[ keeper, had- accompanied. Gamej-on ip&#13;
what is called "The Port of Missing&#13;
Men," a resort for motorists, on the&#13;
summit of Titlcus mountain. They&#13;
had lunched there and were returning&#13;
by a route which took them over a&#13;
succession of execrable roads, but&#13;
through some of the most glorious&#13;
seenery in the whole state of- Connecticut.&#13;
For a while they had been&#13;
following a stream, willow-girt, that&#13;
went babbling down over a rocky bed&#13;
which at Intervals broke the waters&#13;
into a series of falls and cascades. At&#13;
the foot of one of these they had&#13;
stopped the car and alighted for a&#13;
better view, and so had come upon&#13;
the unexpected.&#13;
Seated upon a great bowlder, his&#13;
easel planted between the stones of&#13;
the stream's shallows, was a redheaded,&#13;
red-bearded Colossus, In a&#13;
soiled suit of khaki and a monstrous&#13;
straw hat such as is worn by harvesting&#13;
farmers. Cameron told me that&#13;
all three of them made bold to peep&#13;
over the painter's shoulder at his&#13;
work, and then, though it was of the&#13;
most mediocre quality, to shower him&#13;
with laudatory and congratulatory&#13;
phrases.&#13;
"I can fancy how he thanked you,"&#13;
I broke in, smiling. "I suppose he&#13;
said something very rude."&#13;
"He said nothing at all. He simply&#13;
stopped painting, and turning, fixed&#13;
his eyes upon me. It was as If he&#13;
saw no other one of us. He seemed&#13;
to be making a careful appraisement&#13;
of my every feature. After a moment&#13;
It grew embarrassing, and&#13;
though I did not resent it—feeling&#13;
rather that we, ourselves-had been&#13;
In the wrong—I very speedily withdrew.&#13;
To my surprise he rose from&#13;
his stone seat; and, palette and&#13;
brush In hand, followed us up the&#13;
little acclivity to the road, watching&#13;
in silence,&gt;until we got back Into our&#13;
Car, and wheeled away."&#13;
"&amp;)id you gather from his inspection&#13;
that he recognized you, or thought he&#13;
recognized you?" I asked.&#13;
"I gathered only that he meant to&#13;
be insufferably rude," was Cameron's&#13;
answer.&#13;
"And you have never seen him&#13;
since?"&#13;
"Never."&#13;
"He has evidently seen you. He&#13;
spoke of, the Russian wolf-hounds&#13;
that go about with you."&#13;
Cameron made no response.&#13;
"Well," I added, In a tone meant to&#13;
be reassuring, "I think we need have&#13;
little fear of a continuance of this&#13;
singular method of annoyance.&#13;
Though we can't trace It directly to&#13;
Murphy and hia unfortunate. Mongolian,&#13;
I thoroughly believe that one or&#13;
(he other was responsible, With the&#13;
Chinaman dead and Murphy in jail,&#13;
the persecution will cease, The threat&#13;
contained in the second letter will&#13;
never be executed. See if I'm not&#13;
right!"&#13;
My hope of putting Cameron at&#13;
ease, however, was not rewarded. He&#13;
continued to exhibit tigna of an almost&#13;
constant apprehension. There&#13;
was, indeed, a sympathy-stirring&#13;
pathos about the nervous disquiet of&#13;
this man, usually so impenetrably&#13;
self-contained. And at moments, in&#13;
spite of me, a suspicion gripped and&#13;
held that he had not been entirely&#13;
frank; that somewhere in hia past&#13;
(here was something unrevealed&#13;
which might serve as a clue, if not&#13;
an explanation, to the present But&#13;
these doubts of him were always&#13;
transitory. •&#13;
The twenty-first of September fell&#13;
that year on Monday.' My office demanded&#13;
my presence, but I arranged&#13;
affairs as well as possible by telephone&#13;
and devoted the entire day to&#13;
Cameron. When I told him 1 meant&#13;
to do' this he protested, pretending&#13;
that he was quite without foreboding;&#13;
while the unconscious tapping of his&#13;
foot on the rug, even as he spoke, belted&#13;
his words.&#13;
We spent the better part of the day&#13;
golfing over the Apawamla links at&#13;
Rye, lunching at the club house between&#13;
rounds, for as a specific for&#13;
nerves I have ever found that game&#13;
of rare benefit. In the present in&#13;
a&amp;ance it more than fulfilled my expectations.&#13;
Camerom apparently at&#13;
least, forgot everything save bis o&gt;&#13;
•Ira to out-drive, out-approach, and&#13;
out-put me. And when it was over,&#13;
and with - sharpened appetites wa&#13;
drove back to Cragbolt for dinner, he&#13;
appeared stimulated by a new-found&#13;
The day bad pasted without untoward&#13;
event, and I felt sure that my&#13;
'riend was gradually coming around&#13;
&gt;o my way of thinking. Neither of&#13;
us mentioned the subject, but it must&#13;
have recurred to him, at intervals, as&#13;
it did to me. And as the hours went&#13;
by without a sign, the conviction&#13;
grew that Murphy, with hands tied,&#13;
was fretting over the coup he'was deterred&#13;
from compassing.&#13;
Mrs. Lancaster, whom I have mentioned&#13;
merely as Cameron's housekeeper,&#13;
but who was, in addition, a&#13;
distant kinswoman and acted as a&#13;
sort of duenna to Evelyn, dined with&#13;
us that evening, and our little partie&#13;
carree seemed to me morq than usually&#13;
merry, owing doubtless to the&#13;
relaxation .of tho__ strain which both&#13;
Cameron and I had been under for&#13;
the past week.&#13;
It gratified me to see my host so&#13;
unfeignedly cheerful. I remember&#13;
how he laughed over Mrs. Lancaster's&#13;
recital of an incident of the morning.&#13;
"I had no idea," she said, "that Andrew,"&#13;
referring torthe kennel maBter,&#13;
"was married. He astonished me&#13;
when he told me he had a wife and&#13;
three children. And when I told him&#13;
he did not look like a married man&#13;
he seemed rather pleased than otherwise."&#13;
"It is odd," Cameron returned, "but&#13;
It seems always to flatter a husband&#13;
'o tell him he doesn't look it." And&#13;
then he laughed as though he had no&#13;
care on earth.&#13;
After dinner we had the usual&#13;
music, and Evelyn sang again that&#13;
lyric of Baudelaire's, this time in the&#13;
original French. But the melody&#13;
brought back to me in vivid vision&#13;
our chance meeting In the woods and&#13;
all its train of circumstances.&#13;
When I had finished applauding,&#13;
Cameron turned to me.&#13;
"Do you like Baudelaire?"&#13;
"I like bis art," I answered, "and&#13;
his frank artificiality."&#13;
"He appeals to me," Cameron confessed,&#13;
"decadent though he is. I&#13;
have 'read everything he ever wrote, I&#13;
hink, prose and verse. Did you ever&#13;
see my copy of his 'Fleurs du Mai'?&#13;
The casket is worthy of its contents.&#13;
It is the most exquisitely bound little&#13;
volume I ever saw. Come, I'll show&#13;
It to you."&#13;
I excused myself to Mrs. Lancaster,&#13;
| an'd~wlth pretended formality bent&#13;
over Evelyn's hand, brushing it with&#13;
my lips.&#13;
"Won't you be back?" she whispered.&#13;
"I hope so," was my answer. "But&#13;
I can't promise."&#13;
"Gh, what a trial it is to have a&#13;
selfish uncle!" she murmured as I&#13;
went.&#13;
Cameron led me through the library,&#13;
across, the hall, and thence Into&#13;
his study, where he dove Into a&#13;
miniature book rack reserved for his&#13;
favorites. After a moment of fruitless&#13;
search he said:&#13;
"It isn't here. How stupid! I took&#13;
It ifpstairs a week ago, I remember&#13;
It is in my dressing room. Do you&#13;
mind coming up?"&#13;
Did I mind coming up? How glad&#13;
I was to see him Interested! He was&#13;
more like the old Cameron than he&#13;
had been at any lime in the past seven&#13;
days. My golf prescription had&#13;
proved even more efficacious than I&#13;
had dared hope.&#13;
At the risk of being tedious I&#13;
must describe Cameron's dressing&#13;
room. It was not large—probably 20&#13;
feet square—with three doors; one on&#13;
each of the three sides. That which&#13;
admitted from the passageway faced&#13;
that which opened into the bath room&#13;
On the left, the third door connected&#13;
with Cameron's bedchamber. On the&#13;
right were two windows, giving upon&#13;
an outside balcony. Between them&#13;
was a fire-place.&#13;
To the left of the bath room door&#13;
w»s the entrance to a huge closet,&#13;
guarded by a heavy curtain of old&#13;
rose velvet. To the right, was a stationary&#13;
wasb-stand, and above it a&#13;
rectangular mirror, probably ten Inches&#13;
wide and a foot leng, and very&#13;
curiously framed. Across from this,&#13;
against the wall which divided the&#13;
room from the passage, was an enormous&#13;
chiffonier, or chest of drawers.&#13;
In the room's center was a round&#13;
table, on which rested a reading&#13;
lamp. Between the table and the&#13;
fire-place was a reclining chair. Oth*&#13;
er chairs, three or four, were variously&#13;
placed.&#13;
1 have given these facts because&#13;
they are necessary to an Intelligent&#13;
understanding of what I am about to&#13;
relate. That tn furnishing and adornment&#13;
the room was plainly utilitarian&#13;
Is not so material. But there is&#13;
one exception to this general declaration&#13;
which demands to "he specified.&#13;
The mirror above the wash-stand possessed&#13;
a distinction quite aside from&#13;
its practical utility. This was by no&#13;
means tho first time I had seen It.&#13;
Cameron had showed It to me, with a.&#13;
degree of pride, early In our acquaintance,&#13;
explaining that It was at&#13;
once a relic and an heirloom. Originally&#13;
the property of Nell Gwynne,&#13;
It bad descended to him through&#13;
The glass was framed in colored&#13;
beadwork, to which were attached&#13;
wax figures in highsrellef: at the top,&#13;
a miniature portrait of Charles n. in&#13;
his state robes; at the bottom, one&#13;
of Nell herself, in court dress. The&#13;
king appeared also on the right, in&#13;
hunting costume, and on the left was&#13;
snother figure of his favorite in less&#13;
ornamental garb. According to tho&#13;
legend which accompanied this In-&#13;
•.eresting antique, it was Nell&#13;
Gwynne's own handiwork.&#13;
It possessed for me a certain fascinatlon&#13;
due more to its history than&#13;
its beauty, for it was not the most&#13;
artistic of creations, and as Cameron&#13;
poked about for his Baudelaire. I&#13;
stood gazing at the glass and thitfk-&#13;
Ing of all I had ever read of the illiterate,&#13;
but saucy, sprightly actress&#13;
whose sole claim to fame hung on her&#13;
winning the favor of that easy-going,&#13;
royal hypocrite, Charles II.&#13;
"Here's the binding!" I heard Cameron&#13;
Bay, and -turned- from the mirror&#13;
to the table, where he had found his&#13;
sought-for treasure beneath a pile of&#13;
heavier, grosser works.&#13;
"You know something of bookbinding,"&#13;
he went on, with enthusiasm.&#13;
"Now examine \hat carefully,&#13;
and tell me if you ever saw anything&#13;
more exquisite. I had It done in London,&#13;
last year. It's a copy of one of&#13;
Le Gascon's."&#13;
At first sight it seemed all glittering&#13;
gold, but on closer inspection I&#13;
found that the groundwork was bright&#13;
red morocco, inlaid with buff, olive,&#13;
and marble leather, the spaces closely&#13;
filled with very delicate and beautiful&#13;
polntille traceries,' It was a veritable&#13;
gem in its way, and I could not&#13;
blame Cameron for his raptures.&#13;
When I had applauded and bepraised&#13;
to his content, he took the little&#13;
volume from my hand and opening&#13;
it, with a sort of slow reverence,&#13;
observed with something like patronism:&#13;
"I'm afraid you don't quite understand&#13;
Baudelaire."&#13;
"Does anybody?" I flung back.&#13;
"He is not so obBcure as his critics&#13;
would have us believe," Cameron asserted.&#13;
"Sit down in that lounging&#13;
chair a moment, and I'll read you&#13;
something." And as 1 obeyed, he&#13;
drew up a chair for himself, speaking&#13;
all the while in denunciation of Tolstoi&#13;
and the injustice of his criticism.&#13;
One poem after another he read,&#13;
while I lay back listening. To his&#13;
credit he read them well, though be&#13;
paused often in mid-verse to explain&#13;
what he thought I might regard as an&#13;
affectation or, as Tolstoi has put it,&#13;
"an Intentional obscurity."&#13;
There was one verse which Impressed&#13;
me particularly as he read&#13;
it, and remained with me for a long&#13;
while afterward, for, in view of everything,&#13;
It seemed to have a special apposltiV€&#13;
ne88. The lines to which I&#13;
refer have been translated in this&#13;
way:&#13;
From Heaven's htj?h balconies&#13;
See! In their threadbare robca the dead&#13;
yenrs cast their eyes,&#13;
And from the depths below regret's wan&#13;
smile uppcara.&#13;
Cameron sat with his back to the&#13;
door leading to the passageway, and&#13;
facing, diagonally, across the table,&#13;
the Nell Gwynne mirror.. My own&#13;
gaze was on him as he read.&#13;
.As he finished thja verse, a portion&#13;
of which I have quoted, he lifted his&#13;
eyes, I thought to meet mine, but his&#13;
look rose over my head, and clung,&#13;
while his lids widened, and Into every&#13;
line of his face there came a rigid,&#13;
startled expression, half amazement,&#13;
half horror And In that instant af&#13;
tense silence the "Fleurs du Mai"&#13;
•lipped from his nerveless fingers,&#13;
struck the table edge, and dropped&#13;
with unseemly echo to the floor.&#13;
In a breath I was on my feet and&#13;
staring where his vision had foc'ussed.&#13;
! hardly know what I expected to sea.&#13;
I am sure nothing would have surprised&#13;
me. And yet I was scarcely&#13;
prepared for the, Inexplicable ruin&#13;
which my sight encountered. The&#13;
glass of the Nell Gwynne mirror was&#13;
In atoms.&#13;
Cameron rose, a little unsteadily I&#13;
thought, and coming around the table,&#13;
joined me In closer Inspection of bis&#13;
wrecked hereditament. I can find no&#13;
word adequate to the description of&#13;
what we experienced. Amazement&#13;
and all its synonyms are far too&#13;
feeble for the task. We were certain*&#13;
ly more than appalled. What we saw&#13;
suggested to me spontaneous disintegration.&#13;
If such a thing were possible,&#13;
which 1 believe it is not. It&#13;
might have explained the condition of&#13;
the mirror. No other ascription&#13;
seemed admissible; for, though the&#13;
glass remained In its frame not so&#13;
much as a splinter having been&#13;
dropped, it was fractured into a&#13;
thousand tiny pieces, resembling a&#13;
crystal mosaic, Incapable of any bat&#13;
the most minute reflections. And the&#13;
change to this condltkrc from a fair,&#13;
unmarred panel bad baas wrought&#13;
without sound as* laacalngly Without&#13;
Loss of Power&#13;
Jg and vital force follow loci of flesh or&#13;
•JJ cautclntlon. Tfatw* come from Impov-&#13;
55 urished blood.&#13;
£ I&gt;r. P i e r c e ' a&#13;
| Golden Medical Discovery&#13;
S enlivens a torpid liver—enrichee the&#13;
B blood—stops the wasteof strength and&#13;
S tissue-aud builds up healthy fUsh— to&#13;
5 the proper body weight. As an appe- a tiztag-, restorative tonic, it Mts to&#13;
M work all the processes) of digestion&#13;
S &lt;*nd nutrition, rouses every organ into&#13;
natural action, and brings back health&#13;
and strenjrth.&#13;
Gloomy Outlook.&#13;
"It's going to be a hard winter."&#13;
"How can you tell?"&#13;
"By tho size of the salary I'm getting."&#13;
Important to mothers&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle of&#13;
CASTOIUA, a safe and Bure remedy for&#13;
infanta and children, and see that It&#13;
Signature of Qu^/$f/^&amp;J&amp;U&#13;
In Use For Over 30 Years.&#13;
Children Cry for F l e t c h e r ' s Castoria&#13;
Advice From an Acquaintance.&#13;
"Now if [ can get some acquaintance&#13;
to indorse my note—"&#13;
"Bettor try some stranger."&#13;
Liquid blue is a weak solution. Avoid-it.&#13;
Buy HcU Cross Hall Hlue, the blue ihut'irall&#13;
bluw. Ask .your grocer. Adv.&#13;
Exception.&#13;
"Yon can't put water colors in an&#13;
oil painting."&#13;
"You can, sea blue, can't you?"&#13;
Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for Chlldrer&#13;
terthlng, boftens the gums, reduces lnflammat&#13;
i t&gt; n, all ay spaln, curcuwi ad colic, 25ca bottle -Afc&#13;
Made-to-Order Kind.&#13;
"My wife is always bringing home&#13;
so much toothpowder," complained a&#13;
man the other day to a friend. "It's&#13;
a waste of money. As for me I Just&#13;
take the bathtub cleanser and scrub&#13;
| my teeth."&#13;
The pair were walking down Chestnut&#13;
street and his companion stopped&#13;
in amazement. "What! Doesn't it&#13;
hurt your teeth and gums, too?" he&#13;
exclaimed almost in horror.&#13;
"No," came back the surprising reply.&#13;
"You see they're the kind you&#13;
buy at the dentist's."&#13;
Protecting Valuable Interests.&#13;
"Why do you charge so much extra&#13;
for putting in a load of coal?"&#13;
"Well," replied the dealer, "you&#13;
know coal is coal, and while it costn&#13;
a little more, it is better to have anybody&#13;
Hint handles it bonded."&#13;
Helping Bob Along.&#13;
May—I've just been reading about a&#13;
Uoston physician who tells you what&#13;
alls you by holding your hand.&#13;
Jane—1 must tell that to Dob tonight.&#13;
H O B thinking of studying&#13;
medicine.&#13;
Very Much So.&#13;
„"When Mrs. Jibbetts was asked why&#13;
she neglected her friends so, she gave&#13;
a bald excuse."&#13;
"What was It?"&#13;
"The baby."&#13;
Hard to Go.&#13;
"This case has some ugly features&#13;
about It."&#13;
"Then put a good face on It."&#13;
A small boy doeBn't find it very&#13;
amusing to do the things his parents&#13;
are willing to let him do.&#13;
An old toper says that none are so&#13;
blind as those who refuse an eye&#13;
^ opener.&#13;
Every woman should have an aim&#13;
in life, even If she can't throw a atone&#13;
with any degree of accuracy.&#13;
The chap who poses as a "good fellow"&#13;
is apt to get the short crtd of it&#13;
eventually&#13;
tti^or tow generation, of miternml fr^iMjfc** ^t0m^nmn%&#13;
Model&#13;
Breakfast&#13;
—has charming flavour and&#13;
wholesome nourishment—&#13;
Post&#13;
Toasties&#13;
and Cream.&#13;
This delightful food, made&#13;
of Indian Com, is really fascinating.&#13;
Corn, says Dr. Hutchison,&#13;
a noted English authority, is&#13;
one of the ideal foods.&#13;
As made into ^Post Toasties,&#13;
it is most attractive to the&#13;
"The Memory Lingers"&#13;
Sold by grocers— %&#13;
Packages Wand I5cts.&#13;
CsssstXtw t s i&#13;
A &gt;•'.&#13;
ifc&#13;
• * ! * *&#13;
&gt;V y:&#13;
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ w v .*&#13;
• &gt; . . • • , «&#13;
i-wji&lt;&#13;
&lt;.'&lt;:'&lt;&gt;,&#13;
* &amp; • j U j ^M^&#13;
•yw*'&#13;
" /&#13;
.,, &gt; • "• '" " " " , v » f I I I I I &lt;•*"' —* f * ~ ~V/ *£&#13;
' r'v 1&#13;
•&amp;K..&#13;
&amp;v*&#13;
«J iiiV'&#13;
!&gt;..&#13;
! : •&#13;
% &gt; ; .&#13;
».iJi&#13;
?;3M • -&#13;
),j&lt;"J. '\ ]&#13;
&gt;'l''v,- •'''&#13;
IP '^.'&#13;
•4 '&#13;
wffwwww^rwwmmwmwwww^wwwwwflrwmwMfitfwwflfg&#13;
Why&#13;
Not&#13;
r&#13;
A n&#13;
EDISON&#13;
FOP&#13;
X m a s&#13;
NOW that the Fall work is nearly done you naturally turn your attention toward&#13;
finding- some means of passing- the winter evenings. Had you thought&#13;
ot a phonograph? Why not get an EDISON.&#13;
THfe big reduction on records; 5 0 c A m b e r o l a t 3 1 c a n d tjhe 3 0 c&#13;
S t a n d a r d a t 2 1 c , should be inducement enough for the most conservative.&#13;
Butter Nut and Yery Best Bread, Addison Cheese, S e a l -&#13;
shipt O y s t e r s , Xmas Cards on S a e at&#13;
33&#13;
33 3&#13;
33&#13;
t M O N K S B R O T H E R S 3&#13;
THE CENTRAL'&#13;
We think we have the prettiest line of T O Y 8&#13;
I to oiler you that we ever&#13;
from a real Santa Claus&#13;
saw, and we expect a visit&#13;
too. He promised to make&#13;
our store his headquarters for several days before&#13;
Christmas and the little folks are safe in coming to&#13;
see him. Big folks are very welcome also and we have&#13;
tried to find something to please them as well as the&#13;
little ones.&#13;
S e e our handsome blnen Pieces.&#13;
Our table cloths, napkins, dresser scarfs, table covers,&#13;
towels, doilies; also hand bags, sweaters, dress goods,&#13;
gloves and m'ttens.&#13;
All the; Regular bine of Dry Goods&#13;
and notions on hand as usual.&#13;
Groceries, candies, cigars, etc.&#13;
Very respectfully,&#13;
MRS A. M. UTLEY&#13;
AHDEESOS.&#13;
Pet*r Greiner of Ml. Clemens spent several&#13;
dayg the past week at the home of bis&#13;
brother G. M. Greiner.&#13;
Vincent Young and Mark McCleer of&#13;
Gregory and Rajmnnd Brogan of Marion&#13;
hubked corn for M. J . Roche last week.&#13;
Miss Gertrude Hoff of Anderson and&#13;
John Murakigham of Marion were quietly&#13;
married at the Metnodist parsonage at&#13;
Howell last Thursday.&#13;
Mnlachy Roche of Fowlerville visited&#13;
relatives here the first of the week.&#13;
Orla and Glenn HJnchey entertained&#13;
their sister Mrs. Clarinda Fink and&#13;
nephew Robert last week.&#13;
Mrs. C. A. Frost was called to Stockbridge&#13;
by the death of her father Mr.&#13;
Singleton last Friday.&#13;
Mr«. Gknn Gardner and children of&#13;
Stockbridge visited her parents Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. E. A. Sprout recently.&#13;
! Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bimey entertained&#13;
i relatives from the west last week.&#13;
Jwhn Loughlin of Chitson was an over&#13;
( Sunday guest of Will Brogan.&#13;
1 Mrs. Will Connors and Mrs. Ovid of&#13;
Gregory visited their parents Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Dan PLummer Friday.&#13;
i Charles Hoff of the Sanitarium took&#13;
dinner at Wm, Ledwidge's Monday.&#13;
! Tom Frost and Phillip Sprout were m&#13;
' Detroit lust weeltl .&#13;
! George Greiner is attending the Ferris&#13;
Institute at Big Rapids,&#13;
Mr, and Mrs. R. M. Ledwidgeand little&#13;
daughter were guests of Mr. and Mrs,&#13;
Burt Roche of Pinckney last Minday.&#13;
Arthur Sanford who has been workin&#13;
for E. A. Sprout the past season retnrne&#13;
to Detroit Monday.&#13;
&lt; Walter and Raymond Reason spent the&#13;
' week end with their parents here.&#13;
Mr. Shrotzberger Jr. was in Detroit over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
tail Proceeds&#13;
Special Dec. 4. 1912&#13;
Council convened and was called m&#13;
order by Pres. Reason&#13;
Trustee* Present—Plintoft, Clinto;&#13;
Monks, Teeple, Dunbar, Roche.&#13;
Minute* ot last meeting wtue reac&#13;
and approved.&#13;
Th« following bills were rwad am&#13;
upon motion wera ordered paid am&#13;
orderti were drawn.&#13;
Thomas Read, lumber 15,9^&#13;
Jackson Ltg. Co., Nov. lighta 49.6&lt;&#13;
E. 2 , Hoyt, by order from W. Moran 3.24&#13;
An application was presented i&gt;&#13;
W. A. Clinton for a franchise to establish&#13;
an electric li?ntin£ system within&#13;
tha corporate limits of Piuckney&#13;
and to have the exclusive ri^ht to furnish&#13;
tbe village with ehctric?ty for r&#13;
period of 30 years under the lolLowin^&#13;
conditions.&#13;
lst,tbat .IK lines jh built and /ead;.&#13;
lor operation at the expiration ot the&#13;
contract now in force,&#13;
2nd, that the service be continued&#13;
day and night except tor the reason o'&#13;
some unavoidable accident.&#13;
3d. that the street lights, same a&gt;&#13;
are now used, be furnished lor $3 00&#13;
per lamp per year and if any change&#13;
be made such'ad laryer lamps or longer&#13;
hours tbe price to be in porportion.&#13;
4tb, that the commercial hffhtinu&#13;
be furnished lor eistbt cents (8c) per&#13;
kilawat and f h e minimum charge br&#13;
fifty cents (50c) per month.&#13;
Motion made by Clinton and s u p -&#13;
ported by Teeple thai, the application&#13;
be laid on the table until tbe next re&#13;
aular merttintr.&#13;
Upon motion council adjourned.&#13;
W. A. Clinton, Village Cler*&#13;
Mrs. Lewis Colby&#13;
Mrs. Lewis 'CoIby7~a well known&#13;
Pinckney resident, died at her home&#13;
here, last Friday morning, aged 82&#13;
vears. Deceased bad resided Lere ior&#13;
the past fifty years. The funeral was&#13;
held Sunday at the Pinckney Congregational&#13;
church. Rev. W. H. Ripon officiating.&#13;
Interment in PinckDey c e n -&#13;
etery. Those from out of town who&#13;
attended tbe funeral were as follow*:&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Y o u n e and son Bert of&#13;
Detroit. Benjaman Eaman ot Benton&#13;
Harbor and Fred Campbell and wife&#13;
ol Ann Arhor.&#13;
SOUTH KAMOir.&#13;
Aaron Younglove entertained relatives&#13;
from Dansville over Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Will Bland visited rela&#13;
tives in West Marion Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Campbell and family&#13;
spent Sunday at Pinckney and attended&#13;
Mrs. Colby's funeral.&#13;
Clifford Dey is visiting filends in Handy&#13;
sj&#13;
BROWN'S DRUG STORE m&#13;
0&#13;
W i s h e s Y o u&#13;
Notice To Taxpayers&#13;
The township tax roll ie&#13;
in my possession and I am&#13;
ieady to receive taxes at any time.&#13;
„ . Louis C. Monks, Twp. Treae;&#13;
DOW&#13;
now&#13;
££ £&#13;
—»•*•+*-•-•—-—&#13;
Fameus Star* Beauties&#13;
look with horror on Skin Eruptions,&#13;
Hlotches, Sores or Pimples, Tbey&#13;
-*don't have them, nor will any one,&#13;
who uses Bocklen's Arnica Salve, It&#13;
plorifie* the face. Eszema or Salt&#13;
Rheum vanish before it. It cures sore&#13;
lips, chapped hands, chilblain?; heals&#13;
burns, cuts and bruises. Untqualed&#13;
for piles. Only 25c at Brown's Druj?&#13;
Stoi-p.&#13;
AHA Bnllis-enterfcaiued friends&#13;
from Gregory Suridaj^&#13;
Perry Towle of Pontiac-spent&#13;
the first of the week here.&#13;
Samuel Wheeler and son, Kay,&#13;
of near Dexter were in town Tuesday.&#13;
The M. E, Chicken Pie Supper&#13;
commences at 5 p. m. and lasts&#13;
until all are served&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
Where It Pays to Pay Caab&#13;
Christmas&#13;
Dry Goods&#13;
Handkerchiefs, a little differ-&#13;
•nt and better than the usual&#13;
kind at our price. Holiday&#13;
Eibbom. Oar itook is largest&#13;
in Howell. Fancy dry&#13;
goods of every description.&#13;
Oome in and see.&#13;
1VBBTDAY 18 BARGAIN DAY&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN&#13;
HOWELL'S BU8Y STORE&#13;
I FLAnrnsLP&#13;
1 Mrs. H . Reason of Lansing is visiting&#13;
her mother Mrs. Charlie Harding.&#13;
Bliss Smith and family spent Sunday at&#13;
Claude Stowes.&#13;
Mn. Augusta VanSyckel will upend the&#13;
winter with her daughter at Battle Creek.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Oobe McGee of Fowlerville&#13;
attended the Maccabee Fair,&#13;
A large crowd attended the Fair at the&#13;
halt last Thursday. Pjoceeda—$175.00&#13;
Mrs. Mnrgaret Walters spent Thursday&#13;
at Will Waiters.&#13;
L e g a l A d v e r t i s i n g&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN, the Probate Court for&#13;
the county of Livingston, Eatat* of&#13;
SARAH M, BDBNETT, Deceased&#13;
The undersigned having been appointed, by&#13;
Judge of Probate ot said conncv, cummisstonera on&#13;
claims in the matter of said estate, andfonr month*&#13;
from the 6tb day of December, A. U. 1912 navinp&#13;
been allowed by uid Judge of Probate to all per*&#13;
tons holding claims against said estate in which to&#13;
present their claims to as for examination and&#13;
adjustment,&#13;
Notice is hereby given that we will meet on the&#13;
fith day of February, A. n. 1913, and on the 7th dav&#13;
ot April, A. D. 1913, at ten o'clock a. m. of each&#13;
uay at the ator» of John Dammaon in the.&#13;
village of Hamburg in said county to receive4&#13;
and eximlne suoh claims.&#13;
Dated: Howell, Mich,, December 6th, A. D. 1013&#13;
John Damnann&#13;
Commissioners on Claims&#13;
Too busy to tell you about&#13;
the new styles in portraits,&#13;
but not too busy to show&#13;
them. Come and see.&#13;
Daisie B. Chapell&#13;
Photographer&#13;
Stockbridge, Michigan&#13;
FOB 8ERVICE—0. L 0. Boar.&#13;
vie* fe** 11.00. Alfred Mown.&#13;
Ssr-&#13;
49t2&#13;
Foils a Foul Plot&#13;
When a shameful plot exists between]&#13;
liv'n* and bo#e1s to came distress&#13;
by relusinp, to act, take Dr,&#13;
Kind's New Lite Pills, and end such&#13;
ahnse of jonr system. Tfaey ffently&#13;
compel riirht action ot stomach, liver&#13;
add bowel8, and restore yoor health&#13;
and all «ood feeiiosa. 26c at W. E&#13;
Brown's tbe Draggist.&#13;
NORTH FJUIBURQ.&#13;
Stepbeu Van Horn and wife ha?e returned&#13;
from Chicago.&#13;
Prank MacKinder and wife are rltiting&#13;
ralativea in Deztar.&#13;
Jaa. Burroughs transacted biuineat in&#13;
I Pinckney Saturday.&#13;
Erwin Naah 2a still on tin wUk list&#13;
/ Jas. Nash was kicked by a colt Satarday&#13;
evening,&#13;
— m • • &gt; ^&#13;
FOR SAUE-A sow sad sight pigs&#13;
Prank llaekinder, Pinckoey&#13;
J^nd ^tz also v/igh y o u v^ould call&#13;
und gee our line of&#13;
Fancy Crockery&#13;
Cut Glass&#13;
Stationery&#13;
Toilet Articles&#13;
before buying elsewhere&#13;
We also have a line of New and Popular&#13;
Copyright Books&#13;
That make good Christmas presents. Also&#13;
fancy covers from 10c to 50c.&#13;
A years subscription to a goodrift&#13;
books in&#13;
IWrag-aziiie M a k e s a G o o d&#13;
bat us send in your clubbing liet for magazines this year.&#13;
We guarantee that the subscription will be sent to publisher. =g&#13;
Perfumes&#13;
Thailand see oijr line of Perfumes in fancy pkgs., 25c to $1.25 2&#13;
MiUiUiftiUia^iuiUiuwiu^iUiUiaiii^iUUiiUiUiul&#13;
y o u r ^ J l ^ r i s t m a s E&gt;infY«M^ &lt;±&gt;ill B e &lt; 5 o m p l © t e&#13;
If y o u r TBr©ad, 'p'ies a n d ^ r j e s a r e&#13;
"nfyad© "fprorr* ^&#13;
^PURITY FTOUR&#13;
Prank DeWolfe { fiOtS&#13;
Try SOLACE At Oor Expense&#13;
Money Bach P O P A n y Case of '&#13;
Rheumatismt Neuralgia OP&#13;
Headacjie fhaf Solace&#13;
Palls to remove&#13;
S o l a c e R e m e d y ia a re-ent medical digo-&#13;
v#ry of throe tierman Sclertbti that dissolve*&#13;
Uric Acid Cryitals and pcrlfiea the b!&gt;od. It la&#13;
eaa&gt; to take, and win not effect the w»«keet&#13;
•tot£a«Q.&#13;
It la gnaraataad aider the Para Food and Drag*&#13;
Law to be abtolus^lT free from opiatea or harmful&#13;
i n n of any deacrtptl"%.&#13;
S o l a c e la a pure apecite la every way, aad&#13;
baa been proven beyond aueatton to b&gt; tbe en^aat&#13;
aad aakkrat nmaav fur Urio Aeld Tronblea&#13;
xnown to medical aclonoe, no natl«r how leag&#13;
atandtag. It reacbaa aad removal the root of tn#&#13;
troable (Urie Add) and parifiea th»blo d.&#13;
T h e S o l a c e C o . of Bait)* Crwk are tb*&#13;
aole U. 8. A genu and bava tbooaan^a of voluntary&#13;
tcBtlmonlalletUra which have bean reeved f»m&#13;
rratefal peo&lt; )a S o l a c e hu raatortd to health.&#13;
Testimonial lattan, Uteratnra aad P r e e B o x&#13;
*».t upon redaeat,&#13;
B.LoaMorrU,Preald«nt oftbePirat National&#13;
Bank ofChicOi Tezaa, wrote tba Solaoa Compaaj&#13;
utollowi;&#13;
•'Iwaat yoo to atad a box of Solace to my&#13;
lather ia tempbU, Tenn., for which X aaekea ti.&#13;
Tbia raetad.&lt; baa been aaed bv tome friaade of&#13;
aalM ban aad I moat aav it* actio* waa wonder*&#13;
faJL OSKDWI) B. L. Morrie&#13;
Pot np i s SSe, 50o, ao4 tt.00 boree. \&#13;
Ita m i g h t y f i n e t o b e w e l l a a d y o u&#13;
i c s « a o o i i b o a o b y taklaA S o l a c e .&#13;
••Xo apaalal tram meat ansamss or Rmr J u s t&#13;
/ S o l a c e . A l o o e doae tba wore. W r i t e&#13;
t o d a y f o r t h e f r e e b o x, e t c _&#13;
S o l a c e I t e a t e d y C o 4 B o t t l e C p e e h .&#13;
Advwltalac&#13;
••gggggPaaaaaaaoaaaeaaiaaBoaaasaaap&#13;
FOR BALE—Thoroughbred Single Comb&#13;
Brown Leghorn Cockerels.&#13;
' N. P. Biortsnsoo&#13;
O U R G R A H A M M A R E S&#13;
N I C E B R O W N B R E A D&#13;
Our Buckwheat Plour Makes t the Good Old Fashioned Pan&#13;
t&#13;
The H°yt' Brother^&#13;
PiT2G"f^T2Sj£, Mi G&amp;i gran&#13;
Phonographs&#13;
Yea, we have tbem, in all style* and' prices. They a&#13;
T H E W O N D E R F U L C O L U M B U&#13;
in both horn and hornleaa typesr. Hear one with the&#13;
new reprodaoer (joet ont) and yon will be rarpristd.,&#13;
Try one in yoor home. Sold on taasy paymsuffs&#13;
J o h n D i n k e l a r&gt;nckney&#13;
1&#13;
r / • 1&#13;
,/. .!. 'pjm *?,•'*.*': '',*&#13;
W A V 'V\ K.l j ,&#13;
t ' ' ' I* *&#13;
•r &gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch December 12, 1912</text>
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                <text>December 12, 1912 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>PincUney, Livingston County, Michigan, Thursday, December V), 1912 No. 51&#13;
t . -•&#13;
Commencing Thursday,&#13;
December 12, and Closing&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 25&#13;
G r o c e r y S p e c i a l s&#13;
1 Cm Pass 10c&#13;
3 Cans Corn 25c&#13;
1 Can Tomatoes 10c&#13;
—i~Hr. Best Raisins 8c&#13;
2 pkgs. Washing Powder 5c&#13;
j 10c Bar William's Shaving Soap y 5c&#13;
1 qt, Olives 27c&#13;
l-6c Can Bakiug Powder 3c&#13;
1 Largo Bottle Olives 21c&#13;
1 pkg. Mince Meat 8c&#13;
Sardines in Oil, 7 Cans 25c&#13;
Sardines in Mustard, 12c Can . .9c&#13;
16c Can Mackeral 12c&#13;
Own tttarch 4c&#13;
25c Coffee 22c&#13;
i lb. 50c Tea 21c&#13;
l-10c aack Silt 8c&#13;
} gal. Bern Molaboes 16c&#13;
1 Can Red Salmoa,.. T . . . 14c&#13;
Ladies L&gt;ist&#13;
Kid Gloves $1.00 to 11.50&#13;
Wool Gloves. 25c to 50c&#13;
Lace Collars 50c to (1.50&#13;
Fine Shoes&#13;
Lisle and Silk Hose&#13;
Overshoes&#13;
Handkerchiefs&#13;
Combs and Barrets&#13;
) Mens bist&#13;
J Two Pair1 Sox 25c&#13;
Gloves from.. &gt; 25c to $1 50&#13;
Overshoes from $1.10 to $2.75&#13;
Rubbers from 90c to 13 00&#13;
Ties from 25c to 50c&#13;
Handkerchiefs from.. ^ 5c to 25c&#13;
Mittens from. 15c to $1.00&#13;
Cuff Buttons from. 25c to $1.00&#13;
$1.25 Wool Sweaters 75c&#13;
A Merry Christmas and a Happy N e w Year&#13;
Insured to One and All by Choosing Your Eatables and Presents From Our Stock of High Quality Merchandise&#13;
Toys&#13;
Includitig Dolls, Teddy liear&amp;, Tupsy&#13;
Games, Banks, Story liooks, Etc., at&#13;
Reasonable Prices.&#13;
P o s t C a r d s&#13;
H far 5c; U/for oe and 5e each.&#13;
Including' Broken Mixed, Grocers Mixed,&#13;
Peanut Tnffy, Chocolate Creams, Cocoanut&#13;
Creams, Old Tavern Chocolates,&#13;
Nut Waffles, Chocolate Caramels, Maple&#13;
Walnuts, Etc Etc. T &amp; y ^ , Q^X+JC*XS&#13;
Xmas Boxes of Meaora/B, King Alaerte,&#13;
LaPreferencia's. Canadian Clubs oi^aiy of /&#13;
^ W ^ J ^ T ^ - r ^ ^ ^ v v U ^ ^ K i l v v juM***1' Hcrring;&#13;
Pop Corn B a l l s&#13;
10c per dosten.&#13;
Ice C r e a m&#13;
!K)c per quart.&#13;
Fruits&#13;
Oranges, Bananas, Malaga Grapes, Xem&#13;
is aiiil QjljjjinViiU. f * M * -T&#13;
N u t s ^ . u ^ t K c | Fireside&#13;
English Walnuts, Mixed Nuts and Fresh&#13;
Roasted Peaauts. 7&#13;
Groceries&#13;
Addison Cheese, Seaishipt Oysters,'But..&#13;
ter y^ttJiad- Very Best Biead. j .&#13;
EDISON&#13;
PHONOGRAPHS&#13;
of-Various Types&#13;
Fish&#13;
r, Mackerel and Salmon.&#13;
National Cookie-&#13;
A Large Assortment.&#13;
$27 00&#13;
Standard _.... 35 00&#13;
Home... ^ 45.00&#13;
Triumph 65 00&#13;
50*~Aiffberoi at... 31c&#13;
:JCa SUadard at..„21c&#13;
Reduction in MENS FURNISHINGS&#13;
P r i c e on . • •&#13;
From Today Until December&#13;
Men's $1..10 Sweater*;;".'&#13;
« 1.75 " -&#13;
" 2.00 *'&#13;
" 2.25 '•&#13;
" :i.2o '&#13;
" 5.00 '•&#13;
" 1.00 Wtiol Shirts...&#13;
1.25&#13;
1.50&#13;
" 1.75 "&#13;
•' 2.00.)nckotn&#13;
.i -J 25 "&#13;
i '&lt; :-5.75 '&lt;&#13;
1.50 "&#13;
" 1.00 Caps 89c&#13;
" - 2.00 Hats...:-..-T . . . . . .... 1M&#13;
" t 50c Mufflers y ... t, 39c&#13;
&lt;'/'j»60c Overalls . ? ' / ^ ' '&amp;*&#13;
» 1.00 " «9c&#13;
'«'" 50c Work- Shirts 39c&#13;
" 50c f4bves or Mitten? 43c&#13;
10c Work Sox, JUT pair 7c&#13;
3 pair . ., 20c&#13;
\L- »«&#13;
50c Cap*&#13;
.$1.25 j&#13;
. 1.45&#13;
. 1.65 j&#13;
. 1.80&#13;
. 2.90;&#13;
.. 4.40&#13;
. 89c&#13;
. 1.10&#13;
. i .25:&#13;
. 1.45 ! .,&#13;
•JUJj R e d u c t i o n on Rain C o a t s&#13;
,, ojj • which range in price from $3.00 to $12.50&#13;
3.75: Reduction o n U n d e r w e a r&#13;
. .'We in piece and union suits&#13;
M O N K S B R O S .&#13;
fe*-:4&#13;
All D r e s s Goods&#13;
af C o s t&#13;
Alf3S*g$eds 25c&#13;
Ail^goocts^aU^. 41c&#13;
All (We goods at. . 7 T &gt; J S 47c&#13;
All 75c goods a t . . . . 61c&#13;
All $1.00 goods a t . . . . ;„ 79c&#13;
All$1.50 goods at ....$1.21&#13;
r&#13;
-OUT1NG8-&#13;
All 10c OntiDg at&#13;
) ^ c Ginghams at 10c&#13;
1 Percales a t . . . He&#13;
1 Ererett Shirtings %&#13;
.1&#13;
Alt Bed Comfortables to&#13;
be Sold at Cost&#13;
1 ,i*t of Odds and finds in Cnildrens&#13;
tt COST PBICE8.&#13;
AJt— line of Handkerchiefs ranging in&#13;
lurjoefroS 1« to-Me.&#13;
Lei of Misses 60c Wool Underwear at&#13;
'&gt;'• • ' . . ' • : " , • • '&#13;
OK Bnbber Stock is large and the lowftslprtos.&#13;
Call and see.&#13;
2 S Mir cent off on all Mens Shoes&#13;
&lt;fcri#lUf a*k&gt;&#13;
• * * * • * » * * ; • ' SALES CASH&#13;
&gt; . . • «&#13;
SSS1 .JMsl «"1&#13;
Mens Neckwear&#13;
Lftre^t Designs 25c and 50c&#13;
Mens Holiday&#13;
Suspenders&#13;
For 25c and 50c&#13;
Mens Suspenders and&#13;
Garters to Match&#13;
For _50e, 75c, «1.00&#13;
Gents Umbrellas&#13;
Pat up in Christmas boxes at »1.60,1.75, 2.00&#13;
i&#13;
Mens Dress Shirts&#13;
New patterns, the kind that sell for 1.00, at 89c&#13;
Mens Wool Overshirts&#13;
For 1,00 and 1.53&#13;
Bargains in Mens and Boys Underwear&#13;
Bargains in Mens and Boys Sweaters&#13;
Bargains iu Mens and Boys Dress Shoes&#13;
Bargains in Mean Work Shirts and Overalls&#13;
BarjrXnii in MetfaDack &lt;fe. Wool Lined Coats&#13;
TO HAVE A JOLLY CHRISTMAS.&#13;
Make presents to your father, mother, sister, brother, wife or husband,&#13;
children, neighbor, friends or sweetheart, and select them from&#13;
our stock. Our prices will give everybody a chance to play Santa Claus&#13;
25 DOZEN MEN8 INITIAL&#13;
Handkerchiefs&#13;
Kegular 10c values, only _5c&#13;
Mens Dress S h o e s&#13;
For _ $2.50, 3.00, 3.50, 4.00&#13;
Mens Kid Gloves&#13;
AND MOCOA MITTS ..... _98c to 11.50&#13;
Mens Rain Coats&#13;
Extra values at $3.60,5^10^00, 10.00&#13;
Grocery Specials&#13;
Sutra SVit, fc\x&amp;0&#13;
$\&amp;5 \&gt;aWes to dose at&#13;
Soc V&amp;T ^avr&#13;
3 0 D o z e n&#13;
Mens Canvas Gloves&#13;
5c per pair&#13;
7 « O I V&#13;
Mens $1.00 Winter Caps&#13;
To Close at 75c&#13;
Blub Kibbon Raisins, per pkg.&#13;
Best Red Salmon, per can&#13;
Choice Mixed Nets, per lb&#13;
Gold Medal Baking Powder, per lb&#13;
Lenox Soap, 8 bars for i.&#13;
._8c&#13;
17c&#13;
.20c&#13;
5c&#13;
-25c&#13;
F r e s h C a n d l e *&#13;
Largest assortment ever shown in Ptockney*&#13;
Ranging from. v _ 10c to 40c per lb. my&#13;
ale opens Saturday. Dec. 14, and c l o s e s at 11 p. m.« Tuesday, Dec* 2 4&#13;
L e f c v e Y o t l r O r ^ t e r l&amp;arly F o r B e a k e d G o o d i&#13;
MURPHY &amp; J A C K S O M , rRiGB&#13;
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HAND REQUIRES CARE&#13;
* I O DETAIL OF T H E TOILET IS&#13;
MORE IMPORTANT.&#13;
Even Where Nature Has Denied&#13;
«3eauty Much May Be Accomplished&#13;
by the Persistent Use&#13;
of the Proper Lotions.&#13;
FOR SUM FIGURES&#13;
A pretty hand, well kept, with nails&#13;
rilliantly polished and trimmed, is a&#13;
ter ornurneut to a woman than&#13;
most priceless jewel. Even a comnplace&#13;
hand can be made attractive&#13;
ing by careful treatment. There-&#13;
^ibre&gt;4,he girl to whom Nature has dekiied&#13;
taper fingers and an altogether&#13;
•model hand can take heart of grace,&#13;
4auttd so improve on the commonplace&#13;
Chat her hands and nails may excite&#13;
admiration and envy.&#13;
I ff the akin of the hands is rough, it&#13;
c a n soon be softened by the applicat&#13;
i o n of well-chosen creams or lotions&#13;
and, the use of soft water _for_ablu-.&#13;
jttonal purposes, care being taken to&#13;
tslry the hands thoroughly every time&#13;
a l t e r washing. Neglecting to do this&#13;
i s the cause of many a rough-looking&#13;
stand, and encourages chilblains. The&#13;
first thing to do in treating the hands&#13;
l a to get the skin soft and the fingers&#13;
pliable.&#13;
Hands that are inclined to be red&#13;
And rough are often benefited by bei&#13;
n g washed in oatmeal water. Take&#13;
a o m e good oatmeal and boil it in waiter&#13;
for an hour, strain it, and use the&#13;
liquid to waBh with night and mornfeng.&#13;
This wash must bo made fresh&#13;
•«prery day, If toilet borax Is added to&#13;
rae oatmeal, the whitening effect of&#13;
&lt;ho lotion will be enhanced. To keep&#13;
&gt;tbe hands white, some women sleep&#13;
I n gloveB smeared inside with melted&#13;
tallow.&#13;
Five or ten minutes given to the&#13;
fcoilet of the nails every day and an&#13;
o x t r a 20 minutes every week will keep&#13;
t h e m In good order.&#13;
To keep the finger nails clean the&#13;
nail-brush and soap and warm water&#13;
ahould be used dally, and every time&#13;
fits hands are washed the free edge of&#13;
'the scarf-skin, which, If not attended&#13;
• o , 1« apt t o grow upward over the&#13;
Saaile, should be gently loosened and&#13;
pressed back In a "neatly rounded&#13;
form, by which the occurrence of&#13;
« r a e k i , hang-nails, etc., about the&#13;
r o o t s _of_ t h e - n a i l s w i l l be prevented,&#13;
a n d a graceful oval form and the disp&#13;
l a y of a crescent-like space of white&#13;
will be ensured. This scarf-skin as&#13;
m, rule should never be cut, and should&#13;
o n no account be torn or picked off,&#13;
« a Is commonly done. The less It is&#13;
meddled with, other than in the way&#13;
recommended, the better.&#13;
Very often finger nails are disfigured&#13;
f*y dark coffee-colored rims that He&#13;
tietween the nail and the flesh surrounding&#13;
it. This rim should be rem&#13;
o v e d at once with a strong cleansing&#13;
'fluid, for it mars tho beauty of the&#13;
nana.&#13;
GREAT AUK'S EGG?&#13;
Maybe, but Nevertheless, It Arrived&#13;
at the Breakfast Table&#13;
in a Scramble.&#13;
Aceordlon-Plalted Negligee.&#13;
Among the costume conceits of the&#13;
•season are to be noted the accordionplaited&#13;
negligee, which are made of&#13;
cbiffon net, both plain and embroidered,&#13;
and liberty silk and satin.&#13;
These garments are designed in a&#13;
g r e a t variety of styles, but there is&#13;
n o n e more fetching for the woman of&#13;
slender figure and some height than&#13;
t h e Empire gown of plaited chiffon&#13;
w i t h an elaborate coat of lace and&#13;
TWO OF THE LATE DESIGNS&#13;
Smartneao of the Belted Tailor-Made.&#13;
For the slim-figured and fairly tall&#13;
woman the belted coat is certainly&#13;
one of the smartest and most becoming&#13;
aspects of the tailor-made costume.&#13;
So if you can be numbered&#13;
among these fortunate folks you can&#13;
quite safely have your new costume&#13;
made in the style you so much admire,&#13;
the sketch here providing all&#13;
the necessary guidance as to detail.&#13;
A slight opening of the skirt, too, at&#13;
the loft side, Is not only permissible,&#13;
but also piquant, always presuming&#13;
that your footwear be of immaculate&#13;
shaping and smartness.&#13;
chiffon and satin to go over it. The&#13;
coat for a pale pink gown of this sort&#13;
is more than half of yellow lace. It&#13;
is a very much cutaway garment, with&#13;
a frou frou of lace cascades in front&#13;
and a long tailed back that Is all lace&#13;
and shirring and frills also. The&#13;
sleeves are draped lace flounces and&#13;
there is a wide girdle of pink satin&#13;
ribbon, which has a huge satin buckle&#13;
in tho back. J&#13;
By MARGARET MANNING.&#13;
Professor Ferdinand Brinckhofen&#13;
wandered into the kitchen of his summer&#13;
bungalow, on the Maine shore.&#13;
His wife was washing the dinner&#13;
dishes.&#13;
"Ellen, my dear," he said, "Doctor&#13;
Cavendish, of the Natural History&#13;
museum, will be here this afternoon.&#13;
Can you get up a meal for him? He&#13;
has to start back tomorrow morning."&#13;
"I suppose so, Ferdinand," answered&#13;
his wife, a little tartly. "You know,&#13;
of course, that we haven't much in&#13;
tho house to offer a guest. However,&#13;
I'll do my best, and if he will be satisfied&#13;
with it he's welcome. Why is&#13;
he coming all this distance just to&#13;
spend the night with us?"&#13;
Professor Urinckhofen put his arm&#13;
round his wife's waist and kissed&#13;
her.&#13;
"I know Vou're busy, Ellen," he&#13;
said. "Next summer we'll get a maid."&#13;
And he wandered out, while his wife&#13;
went on washing. She dried the last&#13;
plate and set it aside.&#13;
"I wonder just why Doctor Cavendish&#13;
is coming here for one night,"&#13;
she said to herself.&#13;
Professor Urinckhofen engaged a&#13;
rowboat and pulled round to the railroad&#13;
terminal, where he arrived just&#13;
In time to greet Doctor Cavendish as&#13;
his visitor stepped out of his car.&#13;
"Well, what did yuu think-of my letter?"&#13;
he asked, after the customary&#13;
greetings had been interchanged.&#13;
Doctor Cavendish took his friend&#13;
by the arm. "My dear old enthusiast,"&#13;
ho answered, "to be frank with you,&#13;
the subject until the men oamo in.&#13;
Then she welcomed Doctor Caveu&amp;sh&#13;
with smiles.&#13;
"Gome, Cavendishr;J wapt to .ahpw&#13;
you my laboratory,'"euld Briiickfcdjfcn,&#13;
dragging his friend away as soon as&#13;
he decently could. They wont into&#13;
tho professor's little bare room and&#13;
began discussing the great discovery.&#13;
"Of course it goes to the museum,&#13;
Brinckhofen," said Cavendish. "It&#13;
will be worth a thousand dollars to&#13;
you."&#13;
"A thousand dollars!" exclaimed the&#13;
professor, "You are joking, Cavendish.&#13;
Why, the egg alouo would bring that&#13;
at auction."&#13;
"Yes, yes, I'm speaking about the&#13;
egg," said Doctor Cavendish irritably.&#13;
"What are you Bpeaking about?"&#13;
"Why, the auk, of coarse. Don't&#13;
you know that I put it there so that&#13;
it would hatch? Why, we'll have a&#13;
real live bird, Cavendish. I shall sell&#13;
it to the Zoological Bociety, and I'll&#13;
patch up the egg after it has hatched&#13;
out, and I'll let you have that for a&#13;
thousand. And the bird will lay more&#13;
eggs, and I'll get a thousand apiece&#13;
for those too, and—"&#13;
"I say," interposed Cavendish, "remember&#13;
it isn't hatched yet. If I&#13;
were you I 'would tell Mrs. Brlnckhol'en&#13;
about it."&#13;
"Tell Mrs. Brinckhofen! Why, she'd&#13;
tell the neighbors and they'd steal it&#13;
or do something to it! Never trust a&#13;
woman. No, it is safest just where it&#13;
is."&#13;
They argued with some lack of&#13;
equanimity until dinner time, when&#13;
Mrs. Brinckhofen ejected them into&#13;
the dining room.&#13;
"Hum! I'm hungry as a bear," said&#13;
Doctor Cavendish, pulling his* napkin&#13;
across knees. "What have we here?&#13;
Scrambled eggs? Fine!"&#13;
"I don't know whether you like&#13;
scrambled goose eggs," Baid Mrs.&#13;
Brinckhofen. "They say they're very&#13;
nice. I found one under our biddy—It&#13;
must have been laid by one of Mr.&#13;
Giles's geese, for it wasn't there last&#13;
time I looked. So I thought that aa&#13;
we hadn't many eggs I'd try what it&#13;
tasted like."&#13;
"Woman!" gasped the professor,&#13;
springing to his feet, "do you mean to&#13;
say you—you scrambled that egg?"&#13;
"Yes, % dear," said Mrs. Brinckhofen&#13;
sweetly.&#13;
(Copyright, 1912, by W. G. Chapman.)&#13;
HOT BREAKFAST MEANS MUCH&#13;
Success or Failure of the Day Depends&#13;
to a Large Extent on&#13;
First Meal.&#13;
Ostrich Plumes.&#13;
Ostrich plumes, like lace, are never&#13;
allowed to remain in the background&#13;
for any length of time, and an early&#13;
return to favor is predicted for them&#13;
as the season advances. The smaller&#13;
hat shapes of satin and plush are so&#13;
chic in form and fabric that they really&#13;
require but little trimming of any&#13;
kind. The "Berets" of velvet are&#13;
very becoming, and real Tam-o'-Shanter&#13;
shapes In the same fabric denote&#13;
a tendency to return to the styles ol&#13;
• 1885.&#13;
The corsage opens over a plastron&#13;
like the tablier and the collar and girdle&#13;
are of garnet velvet, The sleeves j&#13;
are draped at the bottom over cuffs i&#13;
of the white satin and are ornamented&#13;
with motifs of passementerie, which i&#13;
also ornament the corsage and skirt. |&#13;
The next model is also of taupe&#13;
velvet. The skirt Is slightly gathered&#13;
at the top and cut out at one side of&#13;
the front over a panel of taffeta to j&#13;
match.&#13;
The edges of the velvet are caught&#13;
together with knots of the taffeta&#13;
passed through large rings of silk; ,&#13;
the ends of the knots are finished with&#13;
aiguillettes.&#13;
T h e upper part of the corsage and&#13;
the sleeves are of the taffeta ornamented&#13;
with buttons and buttonholes;&#13;
the lower part, or corslet, is of the&#13;
velvet trimmer like the skirt. The&#13;
collar is of green velvet, the chemisette&#13;
ia of white tulle.&#13;
4 K » njixM afrthe lefi U of taupe vel-&#13;
*ftfc »Tb*4*irt U slightly gathered «&#13;
q p f c l t M a d draped In the back; the&#13;
t v t t t e r % of WjMt* aeeordkm plaited&#13;
anffa ornamented WKh told buttons&#13;
*M*^ tatfcpfcols* a** ftnlahed with a&#13;
aaaiaaa of f a a a % l ^ a w t i n e « • «&gt;l*&gt;&#13;
^paaaaa^araa*&#13;
ggEi mipifTi I t " . . v ~ -&#13;
Old Raincoats.&#13;
There are many occasions when at&#13;
play children need rubber aprons.&#13;
Make these from your discarded rain*&#13;
coats. Cut them out In the form of&#13;
a rectangle. Round the corners, hollow&#13;
out the neck, bind the edge and&#13;
attach strings to the neck and w a i s t&#13;
They can be easily adapted to children&#13;
of different sires.&#13;
Soap bubbles can be blown, flowers&#13;
sprinkled and boats sailed in a tub&#13;
without fear of being w e t&#13;
Vslt Renewed.&#13;
If the stiffness is out of your veil&#13;
and it is still good, wrap it around a&#13;
pasteboard roll, stretching full width*&#13;
| and steam. Let It dry on the roll and&#13;
It will be as good as new. ./'&#13;
«j&lt;^r«**»&#13;
"Good Heaven, Brinckhofen, It lal&#13;
It Is!"&#13;
I am sceptical—wholly sceptical. It&#13;
sounds too gooe-to be true. If you&#13;
had told me that you had discovered&#13;
a buried Indian village or a dozen&#13;
asterfllds I would have accepted your&#13;
word without question. But a great&#13;
auk's egg—no, ray friend. You have&#13;
probably mistaken the egg of a&#13;
crested grebe or tufted puffin for that&#13;
of the auk."&#13;
"But the great auk did range as far&#13;
south as Maine in the last century!"&#13;
cried the professor.&#13;
"And the last specimen was shot&#13;
in 1844."&#13;
"No, Cavendish, in 1912. I tell you&#13;
it was an auk. I shot the brooding&#13;
bird, but it fell into the water and&#13;
drifted out to sea before I could get&#13;
a boat. But tho egg—it was an auk's&#13;
egg, and it was warm. I took it home&#13;
and I'm Incubating i t "&#13;
"What does Mrs. Brinckhofen think&#13;
of it?"&#13;
"She doesn't know anything about&#13;
it, of course. I don't believo in telling&#13;
my wife a professional secret.&#13;
And the joke of it Is"—he nudged&#13;
Cavendish in the ribs—"It's incubating&#13;
with a clutch of eggs that she set&#13;
out last week under one of our hens.&#13;
It couldn't be safer anywhere."&#13;
"Show me!" said Cavendish sceptically,&#13;
and they entered the rowboat&#13;
and, a few minutes later, rounded tho&#13;
point of land behind which the Brlnckhofens&#13;
had their bungalow.&#13;
"There was where I shot her," said&#13;
the professor, pointing to tho high,&#13;
towering cliff. "I didn't mean to, either,&#13;
but I was so excited that I couldn't&#13;
bear to think of her getting away.&#13;
Now, before we do anything else we'll&#13;
go straight to the clutch."&#13;
They climbed the hill and entered&#13;
the little garden of the bungalow. In&#13;
one corner was the hen house, and, in&#13;
the center, seated upon a clutch of&#13;
eggs surrounded with straw, was a&#13;
gray hen, which looked at them with&#13;
malignant eyes and half opened her&#13;
beak as though to protect her treasure.&#13;
"Shoot" said Profesor Brinckhofen,&#13;
and the hen slowly rose and retired a&#13;
few paces, where It crouched with&#13;
flapping wings and an irate expression.&#13;
Professor Brinckhofen plunged&#13;
his hand into the clutch and drew out&#13;
the precious egg. It was a little&#13;
larger than that of a goose.&#13;
"Good heavens, Brinckhofen, it lit&#13;
It is!" yelled Doctor Cavendish, and,&#13;
carefully replacing It, he seised his&#13;
friend round the w a i s t and the two&#13;
graybeards executed a dance.&#13;
Mrs. Brinckhofen watched them out&#13;
of the kitchen window.&#13;
"I suppose that is Doctor Cavendish,"&#13;
she said pityingly. "I wonder&#13;
why they a n dancing In the henhouse.'*&#13;
She t a t down and meditated upon&#13;
When a singularly successful business&#13;
man was asked the secret of getting&#13;
on in the world, he modestly said&#13;
his wife deserved most of the credit,&#13;
as she always had a good breakfast&#13;
ready for him every day In the year,&#13;
served punctually and piping hot. He&#13;
further said that poor food, especially&#13;
ii\ the morning, was responsible for&#13;
njauy business failures, for the man&#13;
who sets out on a cold morning with&#13;
jcoiil, indifferent food in his stomach&#13;
is ill-prepared for the business battle.&#13;
•,t takes time and planning, but it pays&#13;
«» serve good breakfasts. It means&#13;
.getting up early enough to Insure&#13;
against rushing about and fretting&#13;
when things go wrong, but the wise&#13;
woman counts It no sacrifice to send&#13;
her husband off cheery and well fed.&#13;
There are plenty of ways in which&#13;
a woman without help may manage,&#13;
and even if she keeps a maid she&#13;
will find plenty to oversee and correct&#13;
day after day. The women who&#13;
riBe early to get breakfast for their&#13;
husbands unite in saying there are&#13;
possibilities in the early morning&#13;
hours realized later in the day. When&#13;
other women are sleepily getting up,&#13;
the thrifty housekeepers have their&#13;
morning work done and aro ready to&#13;
get the children off to school. There&#13;
would be fewer failures In school work&#13;
if all children were sent to the school&#13;
room well fed in the morning. If&#13;
they were aroused in time to dress&#13;
leisurely and eat a hearty breakfast&#13;
there would be fewer cases of nervous&#13;
prostration among teachers. A cup&#13;
of hot cocoa, a poached egg, good&#13;
toast and well-cooked cerceal served to&#13;
the entire family in the morning and&#13;
eaten in a leisurely manner would rob&#13;
hospitals of many patients and give&#13;
doctors and surgeons extra vacations&#13;
every year.&#13;
Theories About Rainfall.&#13;
While we in this country have been&#13;
suffering for some years from a lack&#13;
of rain, Bome parts of Europe appear,&#13;
according to statistics, to be getting&#13;
more rain every year.&#13;
Observations at the Observatory of&#13;
Paris show that from 1804 to 1824 the&#13;
average yearly rainfall was 502 millimeters&#13;
(an inch is about 25 millimeters).&#13;
In the next twenty years the&#13;
average was 507; then from 1845 to&#13;
1872 there was an increase to £25; in&#13;
the next twenty years it was 553, and&#13;
in the last nineteen years the average&#13;
has grown to 584 millimeters—about&#13;
23½ inches.&#13;
The commonest theory to account&#13;
for this is that the smoke and dust&#13;
rising from a large city favor the&#13;
condensation of moisture. But this&#13;
theory runs counter to the experience&#13;
of London, the smokiest city of Europe,&#13;
where no such increased rainfall&#13;
is recorded.&#13;
And in some of the mountainous regions&#13;
of France the increase has been&#13;
as much as 73 per c e n t , as compared&#13;
with thirty years ago.&#13;
DISSOLVE BUTTER TRUST&#13;
Sleeping Changes o l Conspiracy to.&#13;
Fix Prices Is Cfcarftsd.&#13;
The Elgin board of trade, popularly&#13;
known as the "Butter Trust," and the&#13;
American Association of Creamery&#13;
Butter Manufacturers was attacked&#13;
by the federal government In a civil&#13;
anti-trust suit filed in Chicago, for the&#13;
dissolution of both concerns.&#13;
Sweeping charges of a conspiracy&#13;
to fix arbitrarily the price of butter in&#13;
the interest of big manufacturers and&#13;
cold storage concerns and to the detriment&#13;
of the farmer, other small producers&#13;
and the consuming public, are&#13;
made by Attorney General Wickersham.&#13;
Butter-making has drifted to the&#13;
large manufacturers, the natural Increase&#13;
in volume of business has been&#13;
curtailed and prices to the people have&#13;
been enhanced, especially during the&#13;
winter season, by the operations of the&#13;
"conspirators," according to the government's&#13;
petition in equity.&#13;
[WAS. WILLING TO REPEAT"If&#13;
Bright Youth's'Phrase- of Gratitude&#13;
7 Pai4 foj a»d,VV£fl,.V«prthy&#13;
r &gt;i &amp; R&gt;3*tltio». , r &gt;-&#13;
He was S* most intelligent youth,&#13;
and whil» going through the basement&#13;
at the works he noticed that somethiji.&#13;
s ^ a s wrong with the machinery.&#13;
Ha at once gave the alarm, and* prevented&#13;
what might have been a serious&#13;
acicdent. The circumstance was&#13;
reported to the head of the firm, before&#13;
whom the lad was summoned.&#13;
"You have done me a great service,&#13;
my lad," said the genial chief, "and in&#13;
future your wages will be increased&#13;
by two shillings weekly."&#13;
"Thank you, sir," said the bright little&#13;
fellow. "I will do my best to be&#13;
a good servant to you."&#13;
"That's the right spirit, my lad." he&#13;
remarked, encouragingly. "In all the&#13;
years that I have been in business no&#13;
one has ever thanked me in that way.&#13;
I will make the increase three shillings.&#13;
Now, what do you say to that?"&#13;
"Well, sir," replied yhe lad, smilingly,&#13;
"would you mind if I said it&#13;
again?**&#13;
Commercial Workers Organized.&#13;
At a meeting of secretaries and other&#13;
executive officials from commercial&#13;
club,s and chambers of commerce&#13;
of a numbe? of Michigan cities, held&#13;
in the Lansing chamber of commerce&#13;
rooms, thj Michigan Association of&#13;
Commercial Secretaries was formally&#13;
organized and officers for its initial&#13;
year selected.&#13;
The association is headed by Martin&#13;
C. Huggitt, of Grand Rapids, as&#13;
.presider.t, with Norman Flowers^ of&#13;
Jackson, as vice president, and Thos.&#13;
H. Stambau^h, secretary, Lansing.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
DETROIT—Cattle—Market, cows and&#13;
bulls mrong', other g r a d e s 10@20c higher,&#13;
dry-fed steers, $9fal2; s t e e r s a n d heifers,&#13;
1,000 to 1,200, J7.50&amp;8; s t e e r s and&#13;
heifers. SOO to 1,000, $6.D0@7.25; ateers&#13;
a n d heifers that are fat, 500 to 700, HB0&lt;&amp;)&#13;
G; choice fat cows, $").50(&amp;;C.25; good fat&#13;
cows, $4.50(^)6; common cows, ?3.76@4;v&#13;
eanners, $3@3.50; choice heavy bulls,&#13;
$5.50; fair to good bolognas, bulls, $4.50¾})&#13;
5; stock bulla, $3.75^04.25; choice feeding&#13;
steers, SOU to 1,000, $5.50(^6.25; fair feeding&#13;
steers, SOO to 1,000, $5515.50; choice&#13;
stockorH, 500 to 700, $5®5.50"; fair stockers,&#13;
500 to 700, $4 ft, 4.75; stock heifers,&#13;
$3.75Si;4; milkers, large, young medium&#13;
age, $45(ji75; common milkers, $r,0&lt;&amp;J 40.&#13;
Veal Calves—Strong; best, $9fyll; others,&#13;
$4.50^8.50: milch cows and springers,&#13;
strong.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Sheep steady; best&#13;
lambs, $8r&lt;t8.25; fair to good lambs, $0.50&#13;
St 7,50; light to common lambs, $5(fi'6;&#13;
yearlings, $4fi5.50; fair to good sheep.&#13;
$3^3.75; culls and common, $2'';rR.&#13;
Hogs—Packers bidding $7.1r&lt;fl 7.15:&#13;
s t a g s , 1-3 off.&#13;
TOAST HUFFALO, N. Y,—Cattle, steady.&#13;
Hogs—Steady; heavy, $7.05^7.70: yorkers.&#13;
$7.00; pigs, $7.40.&#13;
Sheep—Strong; top lambs. $0(0)9.15:&#13;
yearlings. $ 6 ^ 7 ; wethrers, $5^5.25: ewes,&#13;
$4.50¾ 4.85.&#13;
Calves—$51«; 12.50.&#13;
OR A IN, ETC&#13;
Wheat—Cash No. 2 red, $1.05 1-.'; December&#13;
opened without change a t $1.05&#13;
and advanced to $1.05 1-2; may opened&#13;
a t $1.09 1-2 and advanced to $1.04 1-4;&#13;
J u l v opened at 92 1-2 and advanced to&#13;
92 3-4; No. 1 white, $1.04 1-2.&#13;
CORN—Cash No. 3. 4&amp;c; No. 3 yellow, 1&#13;
c a r at 49c; No. 4 yellow, 47 1-4.&#13;
OATS—Standard, 1 car a t 36 3-4; No. 3&#13;
white, 2 c a r s a t 39c; No. 4 white, 1 car&#13;
a t 35c.&#13;
RYE—Cash No.. 2. 62c.&#13;
BEANS—Immediate shipment, $2.15;&#13;
p r o m p t shipment, $2.15; December and&#13;
J a n u a r y , $2.15.&#13;
CLOVER SEED—Prime spot, $11.50;&#13;
sample, 24 bags at $9.75, 12 a t $8.50; prime&#13;
alsike, $12.90; sample alsike, 6 bags a t&#13;
$11.50. 5 at $10.&#13;
FLOUR—In one-eighth paper sacks,&#13;
pei' 196 pounds, Jobbing lots; I3est patent,&#13;
$5.00; second patent, $5.30; straight, $5.20;&#13;
clear, $4.90; spring p a t e n t , $5.10; rye,&#13;
$4.SO per bbl.&#13;
OENERAL MARKETS&#13;
Poultry Is firm and higher prices are&#13;
quoted for dressed chickens. Dressed&#13;
calves are firm and in some cases higher&#13;
and the m a r k e t is firm for dressed&#13;
hogs. Trade in C h r i s t m a s decorations is&#13;
gaining in activity and offerings are lneceasing.&#13;
Butter, cheese and eggs are&#13;
firm and In brisk demand. Apples .are&#13;
dull and easy, and t h e r e is not much activity&#13;
in other lines of fruit.&#13;
Flutter—Fancy creamery, 3Gc; creamery,&#13;
firsts, 33c; dairy, 22c; packing, 21c&#13;
per Yt&gt;.&#13;
Eggs—Current receipts, candled, cases&#13;
ncluded, 20 per doz.&#13;
Worse and More of I t&#13;
"Concord! Concord!" shouted the&#13;
himkeman, as the train polled Into&#13;
the station during a tremendous outburst&#13;
of thunder and lightning.&#13;
The elerer woman grasped her&#13;
umbrella firmly.&#13;
"Not only conquered," she ejaculated,&#13;
-but taken by t t o m r — Y o u t W s&#13;
Companion, . '&#13;
•ffh&#13;
APPLES—P.aldwln. $2,25^:2.50; greenng,&#13;
$2,50(fi2.75; spy, $2.75(ra)3; steel red,&#13;
^¢£3.50: No. 2, 75c(?2&gt;1.50 per bhl; fancy,&#13;
2.50@3 per bbl; common, $1.50@2 per&#13;
•&gt;hl. »&#13;
CARP.AGES—$1@1.2B per bbl.&#13;
ONIONS—55c per bu.&#13;
D R E S S E D HOGS—$9.E0@10 p e r cwt.for&#13;
srht to medium.&#13;
D R E 9 S K D POLUTRY—Spring chickns,&#13;
14@15c; hens, 13tfil4c; old roosters,&#13;
&gt;f&lt;/llc; turkeys, 17@19c; ducks, 17@20;&#13;
r&gt;i*f&gt;e, 14fi)15c per rb&#13;
POTATOES—Michigan, sacks, 53c; bulk&#13;
Sc\ in car lots, find 55©60c for store.&#13;
HONEY—Choice fancy white comb, 16&#13;
',17c per lb. amber, 14©15c.&#13;
LIVE POULTRY—Sprtaig chickenn, 13&#13;
H4c per lb; hens, 12(®13c; No. 2 hens.&#13;
••; old roosters, 9®10c; ducka, 15@16c;&#13;
eese. 135?-14c; turkeys, 17@lSc per n&gt;.&#13;
VEGETABLES—Be*t8, 40c per bu; carots,&#13;
45c per bu; cauliflower, $2.25 per&#13;
oz; turnips, 50o per bu; spinach, 75c&#13;
or bu; hothouse c u c u m b e r s , $1.2501.50&#13;
&lt;cr bu; green onlQM, 10c p«r d o t ; wnter-&#13;
•ress, 25(f«;3fic per doz; head lettuce, $1.25&#13;
«1.50 per h a m p e r ; h o m e jrrown celery,&#13;
:»y30c per bu; green peppers, 40c per&#13;
&gt;a»ket; r u t a b a g a s , 40c per bu; hothouse&#13;
•adtHhen, 25c per do*.&#13;
•PROVISIONS—Mess pork. $20; family&#13;
C!fM7c; briskets, 11 1-2@12 l-2c; bacon,&#13;
7®19c; shoulders. 14c; picnic h a m s , 131-2;&#13;
ure lard In tierces, 12c; kettle rendered&#13;
ird, 13c per tt&gt;.&#13;
HAY—Car lot prices, track, Detroit:&#13;
Vo. 1 timothy, J16@16.60; No. 2 timothy,&#13;
*l*.60fc&gt;15; No. 1 mixed, $14@14.50; light&#13;
mixed, $15015.50; w h e a t and oat straw,&#13;
;-3©10; rye straw, $10.50@n per ton.&#13;
'' Chas. McComber, Battle Creek drugslat,&#13;
was convicted In circuit court in&#13;
Marshall of selling liquor to trade by&#13;
the drink. McComber will appeal and&#13;
sentence for this reason was deferred.&#13;
Mrs Fred Kemp, of 'St Louis, was&#13;
.twar ed a $t,M0'"verdict In th« Ithaca&#13;
circuit court against the Michigan&#13;
tending &amp; Surety Co., bondsmen for&#13;
two Merril' saloonistt, charged by&#13;
Mrs Kemp for her husband's death.&#13;
Which occurred In 19).0. Kemp waa&#13;
filled when he drove Into a ditch on&#13;
hie war home.&#13;
ITCHING AND BURNING&#13;
Iberia, Mo.—"I was troubled with&#13;
scalp eczema for about five years and&#13;
tried everything I heard of, but all of&#13;
no avail. The doctors told me I would&#13;
have to have my head shaved. Being"&#13;
a woman, I hated the idea of that. I&#13;
was told by a friend that the Cutlcura&#13;
Remedies would do me good. This&#13;
spring I purchased two boxes of Cutlcura&#13;
Ointment and one cake of Cutlcura&#13;
Soap. After using one box of&#13;
Cuticura Ointment I considered the&#13;
cure permanent, hut continued" to use"&#13;
it to make sure and used about onehalf&#13;
the other box. Now I am entirely&#13;
well. I ajso used the Cutlcur^ Soap,&#13;
/ ' T h e disease began on the back of&#13;
my head, taking the form of a ringworm,&#13;
only more severe, rising to a&#13;
thick, rough scale that would come off&#13;
when soaked with oil or warm water,&#13;
bringing a few hairs each time, but in&#13;
a few days would form again, larger&#13;
each time, and spreading until the entire&#13;
back of the head was covered with&#13;
the scale. This was accompanied by&#13;
a terrible itching and burning sensation.&#13;
Now my head is completely well&#13;
and my hair growing nicely." (Signed)&#13;
Mrs. Geo. F. Clark, Mar. 25, 1912.&#13;
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
free with 32-p. Skin Book. Addrees&#13;
post-card "Cuticura, Dept, L, Boston."&#13;
Adv.&#13;
Where Autos Are Barred.&#13;
Prince Edward island bars automobiles,&#13;
not because the Islanders cannot&#13;
afford the machines, but because&#13;
of accidents caused by the recklessness&#13;
of drivers who brought in the&#13;
first cars. They caused many runaways,&#13;
and a few had tragic endings.&#13;
The legislature at once passed a law&#13;
barring autos from the island Some&#13;
of the leading cities have since e n -&#13;
deavored to have the enactment repealed,&#13;
but the country Influence has&#13;
always been strong enough to overcome&#13;
all such efforts.&#13;
Scarce as Hen's Teeth.&#13;
Mr. Crimsonbeak—That bachelor&#13;
friend of mine is looking for a partner&#13;
for his Joys and sorrows.&#13;
Mrs. Crimsonbeak—Well, it seems&#13;
to me he's a long time about it.&#13;
"Yes; you see he's looking for a silent&#13;
partner."&#13;
Don't buy water for bjuing. Liquid blue&#13;
is almost all water. Buv Red Cross Ball&#13;
Blue, the blue that's alt blue. Adv.&#13;
But a tip doesn't always come to the&#13;
man who waits.&#13;
CANADA'S OFFERING&#13;
TO THE SETTLER&#13;
THE AMERICAN RUSH TO&#13;
WESTERN CANADA&#13;
I* INCREASM8&#13;
F r e e H o m e s t e a d s&#13;
In the new Districts of&#13;
Manitoba, Saskatchewan&#13;
and Alberta there&#13;
are thousands of Tree&#13;
HomekieadH left, which&#13;
to the man making entry&#13;
in 8 yft&amp;rt time will be&#13;
worth from ti&gt; to M per&#13;
acre. These lands are&#13;
, well adapted to grain&#13;
growing and cattle raising.&#13;
EXCXUOT BAILWAT ncutms&#13;
In many C U M the railways tn&#13;
Canada have been built la advance&#13;
of settlement, and In a&#13;
short Ume there will not be a&#13;
settler who need he more thae&#13;
ten or twelve miles from a line&#13;
of railway. Railway Rateaare&#13;
regulated by GoTerasaent Ooi&#13;
suasion.&#13;
Social Conditions&#13;
The American SettleHs at home&#13;
In Western Canada. He 1 s not a&#13;
stranger In a strange land, having&#13;
nearly a million of .bjs own&#13;
people already settled there. If Jon desire to n o w whj theoon-&#13;
Itlon of the Canadian Settler ia&#13;
Smuperous write and tend for&#13;
toratore, rates, etd, to&#13;
M . V . NIolnnes),&#13;
Cf7aBnJadsU*«mrs GtftbArear»n.m, eDnett rAogite, nHti,e *o.r [aIdmdrmeslsc reStulopne,r iOnttetanwdean, bt eaotsf.&#13;
y&#13;
Woman's Best Help&#13;
to the good health which comes&#13;
from regular action of the organ*&#13;
of digestion and eliminatkm--to&#13;
freedom from pain and suffering—&#13;
to physical grace and beautyis&#13;
the harmless, vegetable remedy&#13;
BEECHAMS&#13;
Pi r&gt;o s P i ' H i t&gt; v&#13;
.11&#13;
i&#13;
3&#13;
\&#13;
-*. ,...t'&amp;&#13;
.'V I&#13;
:4%&#13;
tfMty&#13;
T?&#13;
**•'*&#13;
A&#13;
4&#13;
i&#13;
)&#13;
.•&gt;,&#13;
• • • • &amp; '&#13;
• • ; ^&#13;
v &amp;&#13;
* *•&#13;
mm (msmm&#13;
:m&#13;
HO invented t h e&#13;
ChristmaB tree?&#13;
Whence does it&#13;
come? It is a&#13;
c u r i o u s fact&#13;
that niost of the&#13;
o 1 d chroniclers&#13;
have thrown a&#13;
veil of mystery&#13;
a r o u n d t h e&#13;
Christmas tree&#13;
and make no attempt&#13;
to explain&#13;
its origin.&#13;
It h a s been&#13;
^ stated that t h e&#13;
tree came to us&#13;
f r o m E g y p t&#13;
•a&#13;
This legend is well propagated in&#13;
old Irish and Welsh fairy tales.&#13;
The Idea is that in ancient Egypt&#13;
they used a slip of the palm tree&#13;
with twelve shoots on it at certain&#13;
winter festivities. The tree symbollzed&#13;
the year with its twelve&#13;
months.&#13;
Consequently, any one who is&#13;
equal to the effort may believe that&#13;
the modern Christmas tree represents&#13;
that twelve-shooted slip of&#13;
palm. Minds of less stalwart credulity&#13;
may prefer to trace t h e&#13;
Christmas tree back to Germany&#13;
only, where they had Christmas&#13;
trees long before they were ever&#13;
hearri of In this country of England&#13;
or France,&#13;
The Christmas tree was not introduced&#13;
into England from Germany&#13;
until after the marriage of&#13;
Queen Victoria to her German consort,&#13;
Prince Albert. But wiiere did&#13;
the Germans get the ChriBtmas tree&#13;
Idea from? S. J. Adair Pitz Gerald,&#13;
writing in T. P.'s Weekly, offers an&#13;
explanation of this by saying that&#13;
far away back in the ages you find&#13;
Teutons believing in a mystic ash&#13;
tree, Yggdrasil, which, with its&#13;
roots and branches, united the&#13;
world of the living and the world&#13;
of the dead. "At the foot of Yggdrasil&#13;
sit the three Norns, who determine&#13;
the' destinies of men, and&#13;
Yggdrasjl's branches bear gifts for men to take."&#13;
Is that our Christmas tree? Anyhow, the id'ja&#13;
that Prince Albert introduced it into Great Britain&#13;
is very prevalent. One of the prettiest and&#13;
most eagerly looked for events of the Christmastide—&#13;
that of t h e setting up of the Christmas&#13;
tree—is associated with the late Empress Frederick&#13;
of Germany. Queen Victoria, after the&#13;
birth of the princesB royal, had Christmas celebrated&#13;
at Windsor in 1840, and "on that occasion&#13;
Prince Albert introduced the pretty German custom&#13;
of decorating a Christmas tree. Since that&#13;
period it has become a welcome custom for both&#13;
rich and poor, and affords a graceful means of&#13;
distributing little presents. It was probably&#13;
first imported into Germany with the conquering&#13;
legions of Drusus, and is alluded to by„ YirgiL i n&#13;
the "'Georgics.1'&#13;
It will be seen by this that the generally accepted&#13;
notion is that Prince Albert was responsible&#13;
for the British adoption of t h e pleasing&#13;
tree and all that it means, symbolical and practical,&#13;
to t h e youngsters. But on the threshold&#13;
of this acceptation we are met with thiB statement&#13;
from the "Grevllle Memoirs," under date&#13;
Dec. 27, 1829, when Queen Victoria was yet but&#13;
ten years old. *On Christmas day the Princess&#13;
Lleven got up a little fete, such as is customary&#13;
all over Germany. Three&#13;
trees in great pots were put&#13;
on a long table covered with&#13;
linen; each tree wa3 illuminated&#13;
with three circular&#13;
tiers of colored wax candles&#13;
—blue, green, red and white.&#13;
Before each was displayed a&#13;
quantity of toys, gloves,&#13;
handkerchiefs, workboxes,&#13;
books and various articles,&#13;
presents made to the owner&#13;
of the tree." This princess&#13;
was a Russian, and in her&#13;
later days lived mostly in&#13;
Paris. Then again Prof.&#13;
Ditchfleld, in his "Old English Customs," says&#13;
that the Christmas tree was first imported Into&#13;
England by some German merchants who lived&#13;
at Manchester in the first years of the nineteenth&#13;
century.&#13;
In 1900 a writer on folklore said: "Although&#13;
we a r e accustomed to consider Germany the&#13;
home of the Christmas tree, it has not been general&#13;
there for more than a couple of centuries.&#13;
Old people are still living whose parents never&#13;
saw one in Germany. The decoration of houses&#13;
. with olive leaves and .green branches, a s in England&#13;
a t ChristmaB, is a far more ancient custom,&#13;
and can he noticed In Bottlcelli'B picture of "The&#13;
Adoration of the Shepherds," in the National Gallery&#13;
In London. It is, a s Frita Ortwein observes,&#13;
a distinct remnant of an ancient heathen custom,&#13;
as a t the turn of the year during t h e twelve&#13;
days of t h e Jul festival in Wnor of Woden, greenery&#13;
could be fetched by all from,the woods&#13;
without punishment, and every haHi was decorated&#13;
with green leaves and branches.&#13;
Again, in old works on English customs we&#13;
find many references to the decorating of the&#13;
Interior of the dwellings, as well a t the pious&#13;
: adornment of the churches with greenery, and&#13;
the Introduction of a fir tree a s symbolical of&#13;
the palm. In the halls of the barons and the&#13;
squires and in t h e gigantic kitchens of t h e&#13;
farmers a fir tree ever held prominent place,&#13;
but' whether ordinarily decorated or not Is not&#13;
specifically recorded. Here we are in doubt&#13;
In all probability the remaining fruits of the&#13;
orchards of the year were hung upon the&#13;
branches a s a propitiation to the gods of the&#13;
fruUs, of the earth to. insure «ood harvests.&#13;
Going abroad we get fuller knowledge of these&#13;
Tbs-custom of carrylnjg away branches&#13;
f*pm .the; woojds, «t.tf«irtatmas time In&#13;
various parte of Aus^ajhecame so extensive on&#13;
account o f t l i e wprtWQons of the peasantry&#13;
that at BalaVun; M 1755* and at Nuremberg, In&#13;
17», severe bylaws wore. Isaued.agalnst persons&#13;
purloining from the forests. In some regions of&#13;
a decorated&#13;
:e before "the&#13;
ed with ribsymponse&#13;
most #T t b t&#13;
HAD BEEN CHARGED.&#13;
'''«*,,-K^V A:,.'&#13;
A-.&#13;
• "&gt;,&gt; ^#^i&gt;^4^f^^iy&#13;
Christian customs adhered to by the Austrian-&#13;
German peasant can be traced back to heathenish&#13;
Germanen rites, some dispute the use of a&#13;
tree at the Jul festivities; nevertheless, it is certain&#13;
that in Sweden needle pines and firs were&#13;
Bet up a t this time before the houses." Teutzel&#13;
of Saxony, an antiquarian authority on these&#13;
subjects, says: "The ancient heathen sat before&#13;
their houses between two croHsed pine treeB and&#13;
ate and drank at the turn of the year for nineteen&#13;
days."&#13;
The Christmas tree was introduced Into Austria&#13;
Borne eighty years ago by a Duchess of&#13;
Wurtemberg and spread throughout Germany.&#13;
About 1840 it is supposed to have taken fresh&#13;
root in England, and became highly popular.&#13;
Both Thackeray and Dickens seized hold of the&#13;
idea of happiness begot of Christmas—gatherings&#13;
and the Christmas tree, and Charles Dickens in&#13;
1850 used "The Christmas Tree" as a title for&#13;
one of his annual stories.&#13;
Although Christmas was not celebrated in the&#13;
first centuries of the Christian era, there are&#13;
indications in the records of early Roman history&#13;
of the setting up of a decorated tree at&#13;
Christmas time and the presentation of gifts of&#13;
fruit and toys. The Romans are supposed to&#13;
have taken the idea from the early Egyptians.&#13;
Centuries old, the customs of Christmas observance&#13;
have taken myriad forms in the various&#13;
countries of the world, In many cases they perpetuate&#13;
some ancient custom which long antedates&#13;
the advent of Christianity. Such are the&#13;
customs which have grown up around the mistletoe,&#13;
worshiped by the ancient Druids of Britain&#13;
as a sacred and me gical plant. An old English&#13;
writer, speaking of the Druids' celebration of&#13;
the winter solstice, our Christmas, says:&#13;
"This was the most respectable festival of&#13;
our Druids, called Yuletide; when the mistletoe,&#13;
which they called all-heal, was carried in their&#13;
hands and laid on their altars as an emblem of&#13;
the 8alutiferous advent of Messiah. This mistletoe&#13;
they cut off the trees with their upright&#13;
hatchets of brass, called celts, put upon ends of&#13;
their . staffs, which they carried in their hands.&#13;
Innumerable a r e these instruments found all&#13;
over the British Isles. The custom is still preserved,&#13;
and lately at York on the eve of Christmas&#13;
day they carry mistletoe to the high altar&#13;
of the cathedral, and proclaim a public and universal&#13;
liberty, pardon and freedom to all sorts&#13;
of Inferior and even wicked people, a t the gates&#13;
of the city, towards their four quarters of&#13;
heaven."&#13;
The lore of the strange plant is prominently&#13;
in evidence I n the Voluspa and other Scandinavian&#13;
Sagas. It was with a mistletoe branch—or&#13;
an arrow prepared therefrom—that t h e blind&#13;
and heavy-headed deity Hoder aimer his deadly&#13;
blow at Balder, the god of light or benevolent&#13;
principle of northern mythology. The inspiration&#13;
of the use of the mistletoe was, of course, due&#13;
&lt; to the opposing&#13;
principle&#13;
—of darkness&#13;
or evil. The&#13;
p l a n t which&#13;
furnished the&#13;
deadly d a r t&#13;
grew on t h e&#13;
slope of Asgard,&#13;
and/ was&#13;
the sole agent&#13;
k n o w n t o&#13;
gods or men—&#13;
a m o n g poL&#13;
sonous plants&#13;
—which h a d&#13;
not given definite promise to Fteya to prove&#13;
harmless if used against the person of her son&#13;
Balder, Thus Scandinavian mythical lore accounts&#13;
for the death of the latter. And accordingly,&#13;
a traditional idea of the poisonous properties&#13;
of the mistletoe is found to persist In remote&#13;
regions of the north and west of Europe,&#13;
even to the present day. In Great Britain (In&#13;
the Forest of Dean) it has been' used down to&#13;
recent date as a popular remedy in the treatment&#13;
of cardiac troubles. Like t h e strophantbus of&#13;
African arrow poison fame/ ft proved a reliable&#13;
substitute for digitalis. ,&#13;
Kissing under the mistletoe i s oil that now re-&#13;
'}•'&#13;
mains of a once horrible Druid rite.&#13;
The ceremonies which t h e mistletoe&#13;
figured in among the ancient&#13;
Druids always accorded it a place&#13;
of honor. The myths that clung&#13;
around it in their wondering, puzzling&#13;
minds were many more than&#13;
the few that have come to us in&#13;
these later years. But, old as they&#13;
are, those hoary, heathen myths&#13;
lack the true flavor of antiquity&#13;
when it comes to measuring traditions&#13;
by the centuries.&#13;
Oh, we do not by any means owe&#13;
our mistletoe to the Druids. We&#13;
can go back so much further for the&#13;
first adventures of the mistletoe&#13;
that the Druids become merely&#13;
modorn innovators. It waB one of&#13;
the noblest of the trees iu Paradise,&#13;
the lordly treo of good and evil;&#13;
and on its twig hung the apple&#13;
which Mother Eve plucked with&#13;
such disastrous consequences. Alas&#13;
for Mother Eve and Father Adam!&#13;
And alas for us, their punished&#13;
hfirs-at-law divine! But alas, toor&#13;
for the wicked, handsome, tempting&#13;
tree-of knowledge which put humanity&#13;
in such graceless plight! Upon&#13;
its lofty crown, its massive trunk,&#13;
its delicious fruit, descended tho&#13;
universal curse. It shriveled away&#13;
from tho horrified rjarth; it dwindled&#13;
to the meanest .sinallncss; it&#13;
was cast out into the bitter cold;&#13;
it became a parasite unci beggar,&#13;
existing by the bounty of vulgar&#13;
neighbors. Only in the pearly&#13;
translucence of its shrunken fruit,&#13;
the most trivial of berries, did it&#13;
preserve some semblance of its&#13;
once radiant splendor.&#13;
And it has preserved some of its&#13;
pristine virtues, too, in traditional&#13;
Christian lore, as if it were still hedged about&#13;
with a vestige of the glory that arrayed it in&#13;
Paradise.&#13;
Time was, and time is now, when epilepsy is&#13;
one of the scourges of mankind; only now we&#13;
look for its cure, a s we look for Its cause, in&#13;
quite natural means and conditions. The notion&#13;
that some poor devil with the falling sickness&#13;
has been cursed from on high is held scarcely&#13;
compatible, in popular science, with the principles&#13;
of eternal justice or with cold observation&#13;
of cause and effect.&#13;
Hut in times that wero, in Wales, when an&#13;
epileptic developed the Symptoms characteristic&#13;
of the disorder, it was commonly believed that&#13;
he was being scourged with the "rod of Christ,"&#13;
and that was the name by which the disease&#13;
went^— althTragtir"lt had- another destgnatlrm as&#13;
well—St. Valentino's sickness. The cure for it&#13;
was believed to lie in the Hod of Jesse. The use&#13;
of the mistletoe as the Rod of Jesse in epilepsy&#13;
was general and, if faith can work wonders, perhaps&#13;
the miracle of cure did sometimes attend&#13;
its employment.&#13;
Perhaps it didn't, If hard-headed science&#13;
choose to take a shy at that gracious addition to&#13;
the list of miracle-working agents. But whether&#13;
it did or didn't the mistletoe's rare birth and&#13;
fruition still carry with them&#13;
the tenderest of Christian&#13;
faiths, as they carry, too, the&#13;
story of humanity's most farreaching&#13;
disaster. It is one&#13;
of the Christmas greens&#13;
which has the warrant of religious&#13;
associations dating&#13;
back to the very beginnings&#13;
of man's creation, even as It&#13;
is accorded the sublime&#13;
honor of typifying the ancestral&#13;
origins.of the Redeemer&#13;
of Man himself.&#13;
Rut what about the mistletoe&#13;
kiss?&#13;
Hm! To tell the truth, if we want to be consistently&#13;
Christian in our Christmas greens and&#13;
the purposes to which they should be put, there&#13;
isn't anything about it, at least of any records&#13;
which such careful investigators as Alfred E. P.&#13;
Raymond Dowjlng have dug up while studying&#13;
the general subject. None will deny that the&#13;
most consistent Christians have taken to the&#13;
mistletoe kiss with abundant enthusiasm and a&#13;
faith in its excellent results that has never been&#13;
surpassed. But that doesn't make the mistletoe&#13;
kiss any more Christian than it ever was.&#13;
Isn't the excellent story of foolish Mother Eve&#13;
and the original mistletoe apple enough for any&#13;
reasonable Christmas decorator who wants to&#13;
justify its employment? And if it isn't, haven't&#13;
we the legend of the Rod of Jesse to make it&#13;
distinctly one of the Christmas greens? As for&#13;
the kisses that are supposed to go with it—well,&#13;
if you Insist on knowing about them, you'll&#13;
simply have to take the consequences, same&#13;
as Eve did when she insisted on tasting of&#13;
that confounded tree of knowledge.&#13;
The mistletoe kiss seems not to be Christian&#13;
a t all—Druidical, probably, and therefore&#13;
heathenish, and therefore very, very wrong.&#13;
So, all young men who encounter it, artfully&#13;
'suspended where a pair of ripe, red lips must&#13;
pass, dn you piously refrain or, more piously,&#13;
tear down the hoary old temptation and flee&#13;
the accursed roof, as if it were the house of&#13;
Arria Marcella and you were not Gautier's&#13;
young Frenchman. And you, maidens, .give '&#13;
leave to no pagan rites; remember the fate of&#13;
your poor Grandmother Eve and beware lest&#13;
the fruit of the mistletoe, accursed tree of&#13;
knowledge, prove now more bitter in the mouth&#13;
than it did in Eden.&#13;
But if you have Ivy, wreathe it generously, for&#13;
the Fronch know It a s the herb of S t John, the&#13;
disciple whom the Savior loved, the emblem of&#13;
pure friendship, the vine that heeds not decay&#13;
and death of its beloved, but clings ever more&#13;
closely as the fall impends and bears up its falling&#13;
ally against all adversity. Learned students&#13;
of these legends have surmised, too, that It may&#13;
be the herb of St. John the Baptist, who is usual- .&#13;
ly pictured as the boy in bis earners-hair ooat,&#13;
gazing at his ooasta, the infant Jesus.&#13;
Guest—Has this soda been charged?&#13;
Waiter—Yes, sir; a t the bar and at&#13;
the cashier's desk, too, sir.&#13;
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure constipation.&#13;
Constipation 1B the oaumj of many&#13;
diseases. Cure the cause and y o u cure the&#13;
dLuease. Eaay to take. A d v .&#13;
Good Reason.&#13;
"Mrs. Comeup is alwayB boasting&#13;
that her huBband can take any man's&#13;
measure."&#13;
"That's true. He used to be a tailor."&#13;
FOLEY'S&#13;
" A N D&#13;
COMPOUND&#13;
[Stops Coughs - Cures Colds]&#13;
The Wretchedne,&#13;
of Constipation&#13;
Can quickly be overcome by_&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS.&#13;
Purely vegetable&#13;
act surely and&#13;
gently on the&#13;
liver. Cure&#13;
Biliousness,&#13;
H e a d -&#13;
a c h e ,&#13;
Dizz iness,&#13;
and Indigestion. They do their di&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRI&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
KrH. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Childrei&#13;
teething, Hoftens tiie KUIIIM, ri'duocs inflammation,&#13;
allays pain, cures wind colli',U!x! a. bottle.Ad*.&#13;
T h e Way.&#13;
"Come, my acur, let's travel into&#13;
slumberland."&#13;
"Well, mamma, can we travel on&#13;
the sice per s?"&#13;
•ftmtt.&#13;
W a t e r in bluing is adulteration. C l a s s and&#13;
w a t e r rnal;e« liquid blue costly. 15uy R e d&#13;
Cross Jia11 Hluc, makes clothes w h i t e r t h a n&#13;
enow. A d v .&#13;
It takes a romantic woman to arrange&#13;
for the marriage of her children&#13;
before they are born.&#13;
FREE TO ALL SUFFEHEI&#13;
If yon feol "unt of sorts"— "run down"or"«oi&#13;
blutifc.'VirTer I ruin kidcoy.bladder.nervoutidiaeiMmkl&#13;
chronic weuknebseb. ulcers,ukin eruption*,pile* A c . I&#13;
write for my FKKMbook. h l s t b w most tmrtructm&#13;
modicat book ever wrlture. It tell* all obocittoewd&#13;
dlK«-a.se«uridther«marlmUlHctir*)HBtTect*&lt;lbyll»eNewl&#13;
fcreDch ttomedy " T H E B A P I O N " No. 1.NoA N o . r&#13;
and you can docldaf or yonnwtf If I tin the remedy f«-&#13;
your ailment, bon't Head a cent. It'siab*olntr»&#13;
1'HKB. No'follow-up"clrenlars. I)r.L«C!er«Mt ^&#13;
Co.,Hi»vurHtock l t d . , liaiuysUHhd, Lwui«*,.««tv*&#13;
MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET)&#13;
POWDERS FOR CHILDREI&#13;
Relieve I'\rvcrishnes8, Constips&gt;-]&#13;
tion.Coldsond correct disordersot'&#13;
the stomach and bowels. Used by \&#13;
I Mothers for 22 years. At all Drat&gt;&#13;
jjists 25c. S&amp;nrple mailed EX 1&#13;
nuiiKMAUK. Addroe* A. 8. Olmsted, Ls Rsy. «. W.J&#13;
HAIR BAL8&#13;
Olttaaet *n4 bancUflw tfc•s &gt;hf e&#13;
Promotes s loxiulant grown.&#13;
Ifever Fails to Bsjrtore O n j&#13;
XZsiv to lta Youthful Ooloz.&#13;
Pruvenlu tasJr fulllujr.&#13;
n r r i f c N P P C T A R P U extent to work with ar«ft&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 51--1912.&#13;
ft&#13;
it&#13;
9 oo DROPS&#13;
inniinniiimnnmnmnnmn»iiiimiiiHiimiiiiu n,t&#13;
ll&gt;Olllill».imi|MMIII&gt; I t l M M I I i m l l M I M n M I N I I I I I I I I l l&#13;
ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT&#13;
AVegetable Preparation for As •&#13;
similaling (he Food and Regulafind&#13;
the Slomachs and Bowels of&#13;
INFANTS/CHiiDKtfN&#13;
-6.&#13;
h&#13;
T&#13;
i &gt;&#13;
CO&#13;
&amp;&#13;
'fit&#13;
| ! 1&#13;
Promotes Digeslior^Chcerfu!-&#13;
nessandRest.Conlains neither&#13;
Opium .Morphine nor Mineral&#13;
NOT N A R C O T I C&#13;
Pnipt s/Wrf DrSAm/ELfm#SR&#13;
F\tmpitii\ $*»&lt;(' •&#13;
MxS**nm *&#13;
#H*tlL S°lh •&#13;
Aniu StiJ '&#13;
Apfenm'/U •&#13;
B(C&lt;*fi*nmUU&lt;U\ •&#13;
norm Sttd •&#13;
C(«*/itd Sufr&#13;
Winkiyntn ff*¥0r&#13;
A perfect Remedy forConstipalion,&#13;
Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea,&#13;
Worms .Convulsions .Feveri shness&#13;
and LOSS OF SLEEP&#13;
Facsimile Signature o/&#13;
THE CENTAUR COMPANY,&#13;
N E W Y O R K&#13;
GASTORIA I'or Infants and Children.&#13;
The Kind You Have&#13;
Always Bought&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
of&#13;
A t { ) m o n l h i o l d&#13;
[Guaranteed under the Food8¾&#13;
Exact Copy of Wrapper.&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CflSTORIA OITY.&#13;
_ ^ . „&#13;
You Could Do&#13;
It Too, in the&#13;
Fertile&#13;
Northwest&#13;
OOne man made a bountiful living for his family (ha&#13;
has 11 children) and put $2,385 in the bank as the result&#13;
of the season's yield from his 40 acres of irrigated land in&#13;
this productive country. This is not cited as an exceptional&#13;
case. OThe "PROSPERITY STATES O* AMERICA'^&#13;
is the name we a^ply to Wisconsin, Minnesota, North1&#13;
Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Washington, Oregon, £ 2 ¾ ¾ 0 ^&#13;
Northern Pacific R'y&#13;
QTo locate along this line is to assure yourself of fertile Y soil, nearby markets, quick transportation, good neighv&#13;
bors, good schools, progressive communities and '&#13;
ing land values. Investigate now!&#13;
dAtk for Tree dettriptive literature about&#13;
the state that moat interest* you. Let us&#13;
help you to locate in the Fertile Northwest&#13;
where you will prosper. Write today&#13;
L. J. BRICKEft, Gaol laaitratioa Aftau&#13;
W« will t* glad to adviaa you of lowtatea&#13;
for winter or apting trips tf you will ataw)&#13;
tima you wish to go and detonation yon&#13;
wish to reach or ^points you want to cover.&#13;
/A&gt;.&#13;
,v*&lt;iiji:'&#13;
'•.' y:&#13;
.^¾&#13;
• • *&#13;
y&gt;':i- ••'.&#13;
**~&#13;
isv ' • " . . ' • &gt; • &lt;...&#13;
^ ^ , . : ^ ^ : , . ^ , , . 1&#13;
w^i^iHiiiijoyjj^.. •0' .ti&#13;
.*&#13;
•l'-y&#13;
&gt;&#13;
, I"::&#13;
I&#13;
u&#13;
•i&#13;
•S&#13;
my&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
rrrr.rmnr- BVBBV TBUMOAY w a i m v »T&#13;
ROY W- CAVERLY. MOPHiETOfl.&#13;
Altered *t thePoeiiflieeH #lnckney^MitkiRu&#13;
M MCOOA-«UM metier&#13;
Adverttilng niee m«de known on application.&#13;
M. 8. Cook and Frank Cassidy of&#13;
Dexter were Pinckney visitors Mon-&#13;
&lt;iay.&#13;
Do your Christmas shopping early&#13;
while the stock of the merchants is&#13;
complete.&#13;
Petitions are being circulated in&#13;
Howell in behalf of W. H. S. Wood&#13;
for postmaster.&#13;
Mts. John [lane and daughter were&#13;
Afnests at the home of Floyd Reason a&#13;
a couple of days laet week.&#13;
Mrs. R. Clinton fell down cellar&#13;
last Friday evening spraining her arm&#13;
and sustaining other injuries.&#13;
Mrs, Julia PaiiKborn of near Gregory&#13;
was a guest at tb&lt;~ home Alden&#13;
Carpenter tbe latter part of last week.&#13;
Mrs. Emery Read and family of&#13;
near Gregory are visiting at tbe home&#13;
working in Ann Ar&#13;
the&#13;
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William&#13;
Fhk.&#13;
Last Thursday was the last time for&#13;
89 years when tbe day, tbe month and&#13;
tbe year can be expressed by the same&#13;
figure.&#13;
It is doubtful whether it will ever&#13;
he necessary to pension ex-presidents&#13;
while tbe Cbaataqua business retains&#13;
its prosperity.&#13;
At Howell December 11 occurred&#13;
the marriage of Carleton Barnard to&#13;
Alice Vogt. They will make their&#13;
home at Chilsou.&#13;
Several wagons from Ann Arbor&#13;
passed through here last week on tbeir&#13;
annual pilgrimage to Braley's swamp&#13;
near Plainfeld for Xmas trees.&#13;
Frank Maas of Marion has been unisally&#13;
successful in tbe trapping business&#13;
this fall. His receipts for one&#13;
month were about 75 dollars,&#13;
As Xmas comes on Wednesday of&#13;
next week tbe Dispatch will he printed&#13;
one day earlier and all country correspondents&#13;
should send in tbeir items&#13;
Monday morning.&#13;
When you are makingoutyour list of&#13;
Xmas presents remember you can&#13;
send the DISPATCH to an absent friend&#13;
for $1.00 a year—a letter containing&#13;
tbe home news each week.&#13;
The city of Ann Arbor may join&#13;
with the county in furnishing employment&#13;
to tbe Washtenaw county&#13;
load gang during the winter months,&#13;
Tbe county committee ba9 asked for&#13;
the use of tbe city yard as a workshop&#13;
jbr the prisoners to break stone.&#13;
Ed Shields or Howell, was offered tbe&#13;
job of state insurance commissioner&#13;
by Governor elect Ferris and it was&#13;
respectfully declined. Last year Governor&#13;
Osborn offered him a place on tbe&#13;
industrial commission, bat be also declined&#13;
tbtt position. Either appoint&#13;
meat would have given him $3,500 per&#13;
annum.&#13;
Clayton PI ace way and wife while&#13;
driving to town one evening recently&#13;
collided with an another rig, tbe&#13;
horse of the former bein? injured so&#13;
badly that it died a* few days afterward.&#13;
Neither rigs earned lights*&#13;
A number of accident* of this natnre&#13;
have happened in tb is vicinity in the&#13;
last year in which horse* were either&#13;
killed-or injured and in not one of&#13;
tne«9 instances did the colliding vehicles&#13;
carry lights,&#13;
According to the Fowlerville Standard&#13;
tbe choice for postmaster at Fowlertille&#13;
has resolved itself into such a&#13;
complicated affair that Woodrow himself&#13;
may have to go there in person&#13;
and settle the difficulty. Tip to date&#13;
a number of democrats have thrown&#13;
their hats into tbe ring and others are&#13;
lightning op their belts tor the race.&#13;
Mere there has been nothing doing&#13;
with the exception of a few vague&#13;
rsmors.&#13;
. Oar teachers are working hard and&#13;
soeoesafnlly bat they never know&#13;
whether their work it appreciated or&#13;
Mt nnlew they have some intimation&#13;
to tbe elect from tbe patron* of tbe&#13;
schools. Virion stmtftt make it a&#13;
point at least to visit the rooms in&#13;
whieh tbtw have children. Kindly&#13;
from parent* have an inspiring&#13;
for both pupils aid teachers&#13;
Md if tt» visit be accompanied by an&#13;
coscafioail.wofd of cswc^agcmant so&#13;
Win, Bell is&#13;
•&gt;or.&#13;
Frank Kennedy is working on&#13;
telephone gang.&#13;
Tax time as well as tbe holidays are&#13;
with us again,&#13;
Mrs. H. W. Crofoot spent last Fn&#13;
day in Stockbridge.&#13;
E. J. Brigge transacted business in&#13;
Howell last Saturday.&#13;
School closes December 20 for tbe&#13;
holiday vacation of two weeks.&#13;
John Dinkel transacted business in&#13;
Howell a couple of days tbe past week.&#13;
Robert Gardner of Dear Dexter was&#13;
in town on business one day last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Van Horn and&#13;
son Edward were Ann Arbor visitors&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Dr. H. F. Sipler and A. H. Flintoft&#13;
were in Saginaw on business one day&#13;
the past Wbek.&#13;
Mrs. Harry Ayers of Detroit spent&#13;
several days last week with her mother&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Nash.&#13;
The Michigan State Teachers' Association&#13;
may bold their meeting at Ann&#13;
Arbor next year.&#13;
Freeman Allison of Chubb'e Corners&#13;
was quite badley bort by being kicked&#13;
by a borse last week.&#13;
Tbe Michigan State Telephone Co.&#13;
has been forbidden to cut any more&#13;
trees .n Putnam township.&#13;
Joe PJaceway who has been spending&#13;
some time.with relatives in Fowlervilie&#13;
is vitiiting at the borne of Guy&#13;
'm^mW^^t% •;,? , k r* ^i&lt;» bmshcls,&#13;
Hall&#13;
Mrs. F. G. Jackson was the guest of&#13;
her parents. Rev. and Mrs. W. G.&#13;
Stephens of Stockbridge Friday and&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Our merchants are doing their part&#13;
to reduce the high cost of living and&#13;
are quoting some very interesting low&#13;
prices in this issue.&#13;
Chas. Love and wife returned with&#13;
their daughtber, Mrs. P. G. Teeple,&#13;
Monday to her heme at Marquette,&#13;
Mich, for an extended visit.&#13;
The Columbian Dramatic Ciub of&#13;
St.Mary's cburcb will put on tbe play,&#13;
•The Dust of tbe Earth" at tbe Pinckney&#13;
Opera House in January.&#13;
Married in Howellk Wednesday, December&#13;
11 Mr. Fred Wylie to Miss&#13;
Margaret Connors. They will make&#13;
tbeir borne on the groom's farm west&#13;
of town.&#13;
Tbe Fowlerville fair at its annual&#13;
meeting elected new officers. A balance&#13;
of f 1,.'306 was found to be on&#13;
baud. This years-"tairpatd a, net profit&#13;
of $412.&#13;
Earl Baughn, Clyde and Willie&#13;
Darrow, Albert Dinkel, Wm., Steve&#13;
and Richard Jeffries, Norbert Lavey&#13;
and Thomas Moran attended the party&#13;
at Hamburg Friday evening.&#13;
The Gleaners ot thePinckney Arbor&#13;
will bold an oyster supper and installation&#13;
ot othcers at tbe L. A.. S. Hall,&#13;
Friday evening, Dec. 27, Gleaners and&#13;
families are invited. All others will&#13;
be charged 25c. each.&#13;
Tbe Chelsea Business Men's Association&#13;
are considering a proposition&#13;
submitted by Ohio parties, which if it.&#13;
works out will result in tbe locating&#13;
in Chelsea of a porcelain factory employing&#13;
at least 100 men.&#13;
Mrs. J L. Kisby of Hamburg has&#13;
sold the hardware business and store&#13;
building to C. A. Gittens of Canton,&#13;
Wayne County, who takes possession&#13;
at once. Mrs. Kisby wilt eonduct the&#13;
postoffice in the present quarters until&#13;
1914.&#13;
A. H. Bidwell of South Lyon has a&#13;
Certificate of Register 95 years old.&#13;
It was given to Jacob E.and Ellis Bullock&#13;
on August 1, 1827. It certifies&#13;
thai they were entitled to land in Salem&#13;
township and was given under&#13;
the hand of John Q. Adams, then president&#13;
of the United States, It is a&#13;
genuine sheepskin parchment and in&#13;
a splendid state of preservation.&#13;
.One day recently a prosperous Hartland&#13;
iarmer climbed up the ladder&#13;
and began opening op his silo. In&#13;
throwing out the spoiled ensilage he&#13;
filled np the shoot forgetting he bad&#13;
to come down that passage to get out.&#13;
After some delay and mncb noise Mr.&#13;
Farmer made his wife understand&#13;
that he was in trouble. She soon sited&#13;
np the situation and seat for a&#13;
neighbor to dig him out—Ex. t&#13;
According to tbe Corn Reporter,&#13;
every state west ot tbe Mississippi,&#13;
except California, Io«*a. Louisiana,&#13;
and Texas, predncee more wheat than&#13;
it consumes. On the other hand, every&#13;
state east of th&lt;&gt; Mississippi, save Delaware,&#13;
will this year consume more&#13;
wheat than it produces. The snrplus&#13;
wheat crop for the whole country&#13;
amounts to 184 1-8 million bushels.&#13;
Last year the surplus was only 45 mil-&#13;
Joe Curtis has been on the sick list,&#13;
Gladyu Fink is working in the restraont.&#13;
Ed. Farnam waa in Detroit on bnsmettt&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Mrs, Guy Teeple was in Howell one&#13;
day last week.&#13;
Howell is trying to raise money to&#13;
build a race track.&#13;
Mink are reported to be rather&#13;
scarce in this section.&#13;
Mrs. M. C, Wilson ot Flint has been&#13;
visiting at the home ot Willis Tupper.&#13;
The nrst skating ot the season was&#13;
enjoyed by the youngsters last week.&#13;
What has become of the farmer's&#13;
old triend, the lightning rod peddler?&#13;
Henry Reason of Lansing was a&#13;
Pinckney visitor a couple of days last&#13;
week.&#13;
Rev. E. H. Vail of Homer spent several&#13;
days last week at the home of A'&#13;
B. Green.&#13;
Alta Bullis and Rose Jeffries were&#13;
guests of Mildred Palmer ot Hamburg&#13;
last Friday,&#13;
It you can't afford to buy your wife&#13;
an X-mas present, she might be satisfied&#13;
with a V-mas one,&#13;
Tbe M. E. Ladies Aid Society cleared&#13;
over 36 dollars at tbeir chicken pie&#13;
supper last Saturday night&#13;
Claude White and wife of near&#13;
Howell visited at the home of H, M.&#13;
Williston a con pie of days last week.&#13;
Tbe Seniors took tbeir play, "Tbe&#13;
Country Doctor" to Pfainfield- last&#13;
Friday evening and played to a good&#13;
bouse.&#13;
Could Shout For Joy&#13;
"I want to thank you from the bottom&#13;
of my heart," wrote C. B. Rader&#13;
of Lewisburg, W. Virginia, for tbe&#13;
wonderful double benefit I got from&#13;
Electric Bitters, in curing me of both&#13;
a severe ense of stomach trouble and&#13;
of rheumatism, frutn which I had been&#13;
an almost helpless sufferer tor ten&#13;
years It suited my case as though&#13;
made just for me," For dyspepsia,&#13;
indigestion jaundice, and to rid the&#13;
system of kidney poisons that cause&#13;
rheumatism. Electric Bittere have no&#13;
equal. Try them. Every bottle is&#13;
guaranteed to satisfy. Only 50c at&#13;
Brown's Drug Store.&#13;
Facts&#13;
••jtf&#13;
A town which never has anything&#13;
to do in a public way is on&#13;
the road to the cemetery. Anyone&#13;
who will do nothing for his town&#13;
is helping to dig the grave. A&#13;
man who curses the town furnishes&#13;
the casket. The man so selfish&#13;
as to have no time from his business&#13;
to give to the city affairs is&#13;
making tbe shroud. The man who&#13;
does not advertise is driving the&#13;
hearse. The man who is pulling&#13;
back from any pnblic enterprise&#13;
throws boquets on the grave. The&#13;
man who is howling hard times&#13;
preaches the funeral sermon and&#13;
sings the doxology; thus the town&#13;
is buried from all sorrow and care.&#13;
—Tradesman.&#13;
Drives Off a Terror&#13;
Tbe chief executioner of death in&#13;
the winter and spring months is pneumonia.&#13;
Its advance agents are colds&#13;
and grip. In any attack by one of&#13;
these maladies no time should be lost&#13;
in taking the best medicine ootainable&#13;
to drve it off. Countless thousands&#13;
bav*|onnd this to be Djr. King's New&#13;
Discovery^ "My husband believes it&#13;
has kept him from having pneumonia&#13;
three or four times," writes Mrs.&#13;
George W. P'ace, Bswtonrille, Vt„&#13;
"and for coughs, colds, and croup we&#13;
have never tound its equal." Guaranteed&#13;
for all bronchial at factions. Price&#13;
50 cts. and $1.00 Trial bottle free at&#13;
W. E. Brown's tbe druggist.&#13;
Big prices will be paid for all RED and&#13;
WHITE OAK, TAMARACK and HEMLOCK,&#13;
BEECH, BIRCH, HARD MAPLE and&#13;
CEDAR TIES, also WHITE OAK Switch&#13;
Ties, produced and piled in Grand Trunk&#13;
Railroad Yard.&#13;
SPECIFICATIONS:&#13;
FACE THICK LONG&#13;
Pole Ties, 6 to 12 in.-6 to 7 in.~8 ft.&#13;
r '&#13;
No. I&#13;
No. 2 Pole Ties,&#13;
No. ISqrd. Ties.&#13;
5 to 12 \n,-bk to 7 in,-8 ft.&#13;
8 to 42 in. -f&gt; 4o 7 in. - 8 ft.&#13;
NbT2Sqrd:Ties, 7 to 12 in. -5¾ to 7 in.-8 ft&#13;
Bark must be removed from a l l ties&#13;
FOP further INFORMATION call on or w r i t e&#13;
S. F. M c C A N D L E S S ,&#13;
ROOM 3 0 5 EDDY BUILDING&#13;
SAGINAW, MICHIGAN&#13;
&gt;&#13;
1&#13;
Try a sack of Dexter Milling&#13;
Co's. Best Flour on sale at Monk's&#13;
Bros. 47tf&#13;
FOR SALE—Barred flock Cockerel&#13;
that will improve your flock and&#13;
increase egg yield. Prices reasonable&#13;
Fred Teeple. 47t3&#13;
notice To Taipajers&#13;
The township tax roll is now&#13;
in my possession and I am now&#13;
read; to receive taxes at any time&#13;
Louis C. Monks, Twp. Treas.&#13;
» . i i &gt; « i - - — -&#13;
FasHis Stif* lassUes&#13;
look with horror on Skin Eruptions,&#13;
Blotches, 8ores or Pimples, They&#13;
don't bare them, aor will any one,&#13;
who nses Backlen's Arnica tsjUye- It&#13;
alorifie* the face. Issema or Salt&#13;
Bhenm vanish before it. It so res sore&#13;
itps, chapped hands, chilblains; heats&#13;
bnrnti, cot* and bruises. Uneqnaled&#13;
for pi lee. Only 25c at Brown's Drag&#13;
8tore.&#13;
Real Estate Transfers&#13;
William Layton and wife to Arnold&#13;
Filkins and wife, land in Cohoctab,&#13;
$8,000&#13;
George A. Caswell to George Westmorelana-&#13;
d.nd wife, 50a., $4,200. ,i_&#13;
Lewis N. Brayton to Charles P&#13;
Kleofcter and wife, 40a., $975.&#13;
Chas. Gartis to Michigan Oil Co.,&#13;
land in Fowlerville, for $50,&#13;
L. P. Eager to Austin Kiraberly,&#13;
lot, Howell, $400.&#13;
W. H. Cadwell et al to William Clark&#13;
and wife, lot, Pinckney, $2000&#13;
Chas. E. Ranger to Jacob Miller,&#13;
40a., Oceola, 2500,&#13;
H. M. Wells and wife to Ada Carr&#13;
land, Howell, $1750.&#13;
Adan Meyer to Silas Allen, 75a.,&#13;
Handy, $2d00.&#13;
Wilham McKane and wife to Chas.&#13;
E. Ranger, land, Hartland, $2000.&#13;
H. G, Thompson to Newman C.&#13;
Rathbun, lot, Brighton, 650.&#13;
0, E. Carr and wife to Robin K.&#13;
Carr and wife, lands, Handy, $13,000.&#13;
Adam F. Andrews to Cranston 40 a,&#13;
Tyrone, $1300.&#13;
C. D. McEwen to Joseph Frances,&#13;
lot Brighton, $275.&#13;
Adell M. Hartson to Joseph Francis&#13;
2a., Brighton, $375,&#13;
Jnlins Wilcox to Mable Griffith et&#13;
al, 2a., Oceola, $375.&#13;
Merritt X. Cook and wife to Roy J.&#13;
Holt and wife, lots Fowlerville, $2500.&#13;
Carrie M. Gilmore to F. M. Backns&#13;
and wife, lots, Howell, $9500.&#13;
Da?id H. Force to Andrew Woll,&#13;
lands, Handy, $9000,&#13;
W, H. Stark et al to Frank Mack,&#13;
30a, Hartland, $900.&#13;
Adelia Moore to Shnbal Moore, la&#13;
Marion, 400,&#13;
E, L. Thompson to MaryHauser lots&#13;
Pinckney, $250.&#13;
Frederick A. Risen to J. Birkenstoek,&#13;
80a., Brighton, 4000.&#13;
Fred Lang to Fred Miller and wife,&#13;
40 Conway, $2000.&#13;
Anna Belle Elliot to Merritt Cook&#13;
and wife 11a., Handy 2800.&#13;
Melvin S. Edgar to J alia French,&#13;
lot Howell, 450.&#13;
Thomas Gordon Jr. et al to Warren&#13;
B. Warner and wife, 60a., Genoa,&#13;
2500.&#13;
PeUs a Fsal Pie*&#13;
When a shameful plot exists between!&#13;
lifer and bowels to oanse distress&#13;
by refusing to act, take Dr,&#13;
Sing's New Life Pills, and and snch&#13;
abase of yoar system. They gently&#13;
compel right action ot stomach, liver&#13;
and bowels, and restore yonr health&#13;
and all good feeling*. 25c at W. Jfi,&#13;
Brown's tbe Droggist&#13;
WE S A V E YOU&#13;
- MONEY&#13;
On Best and Latest of Standard&#13;
Makes of 4&#13;
Cut Water Sets, Berry Bowies,&#13;
Celery and Olive Dishes,&#13;
Spoon Trays, Salt and Pepper&#13;
Sets, Oil Bottles, Etc.&#13;
Complete Line of Silverware&#13;
T e a S p o o n s&#13;
D e s e r t S p o o n s&#13;
T a b l e&#13;
B e r r y&#13;
| S o u p&#13;
G r a v y L a d l e s&#13;
K n i v e s a n d P o r k s S o u v e n i r S p o o n s&#13;
B u t t e r K n i v e s C h i l d r e n * S e t&#13;
S u g a r S h e l l s C o l d M e a t F o r k&#13;
P r u l t , C a k e , B a s k e t s C r e a m L a d l e s&#13;
S a l t St P e p p e r S e t s J e w e l l B o x e s&#13;
T o o t h p i c k H o l d e r P i c k l e P o r k s&#13;
Complete Line of&#13;
Carving Sets _$l,0O to $1,50&#13;
Razors _ 1.00 to 2 50&#13;
Brushes _&#13;
Pocket Kni.es... 10c to $1.00&#13;
Razor Strops 25c to 1.60&#13;
* 26c&#13;
per cent on&#13;
of 9&#13;
et ana Ntable&#13;
Why Go Without When You Can Buy Blankets&#13;
From $1.00 to $ 7 . 0 0&#13;
Teeple }{ardv*ape Company&#13;
Jv&#13;
% &amp;d&#13;
• * A&#13;
m^:&lt;*M&#13;
COWttlNS&#13;
MO&#13;
O t t A T I *&#13;
FOLEYS&#13;
HONEY&#13;
POP Sale Cy Alt Dei*&#13;
, « ' ; ' * • ' *;w fi: *,-"', &gt;.&#13;
%i&#13;
. * « &amp; * * # •&#13;
-\&#13;
• - \ &gt; l - : : " "&#13;
&gt; • »&#13;
FOR YOUNG AND OLD&#13;
WE cannot sell you all your Christmas Gifts, but we can show you many&#13;
things which many would appreciate on account of their utility and many&#13;
other thing-s which children expect Santa Claus to bring them.&#13;
Pocket Knives&#13;
Carving Knives&#13;
Table Knives&#13;
Rogers Plated Ware&#13;
Spoons&#13;
Oyster Forks&#13;
Child'sSets -&#13;
Chafing Dishes&#13;
Alarm Clocks&#13;
Watches&#13;
Family Scales&#13;
Boy's Skates&#13;
Girl's Skates&#13;
High Sleds&#13;
Food Choppers&#13;
Razors&#13;
Safety Razors&#13;
Savory Roasters&#13;
Yteawvte tit ^aaftotvaVAe Ttvctfc&#13;
Give Us a Call&#13;
R E M E M B E R — W e have The Good Stove, that is necessary to cook The&#13;
Good Xraas Dinner, R e n o w n a n d E c l i p s e R a n g e s .&#13;
P I N K B L c* D U N B A R&#13;
Pinokney, Mioli.&#13;
; ^ * ; - - : o ^ ^&#13;
A Christmas Invitation&#13;
This weefc the Dispatch has been&#13;
used quite extensively by the majority&#13;
of Pinckney merchants in&#13;
extonding to you an invitation to&#13;
viait their stores. Their advertisements&#13;
appear in this issue.&#13;
They realize they most inform&#13;
yon of the goods they have in&#13;
their store, before you will be&#13;
anxious to bay. Many are adding&#13;
new lines for your inspection.&#13;
Look each and every advertisement&#13;
over carefully. On some&#13;
page you will find advertised just&#13;
the gift you want to buy.&#13;
,JI» ^,,¾.1¾ ' i&#13;
IMPORTED&#13;
E M P E R B U R&#13;
6 7 1 5&#13;
Belgian Draft Stallion, 3&#13;
y e a r s old, fine Chestnut&#13;
color, wt. over 1700 lbs.&#13;
Imported from Belgium in&#13;
August, 1912.&#13;
Owned by W. C. DUNNING&#13;
Will make the season of&#13;
1913 at Pinckney livery barn&#13;
Empereur's entry in the National Stud Book at&#13;
gsels, Belgium, is as fallows: Chestnut stallion,&#13;
ed 1909, sired by Bean Liseron (19546) he by Bean&#13;
B (11494) out of Lice De Plutsingen (12341). Dam&#13;
a (79643) by Lafleur (8616) out of Sarah De Wildeo&#13;
(.S6S95). ' I n competion at Charlotte he took first&#13;
prite over 24 competitors io his class.&#13;
I for Qialltr&#13;
j i For Price I&#13;
• '( T e r m s - $ 2 0 . to Insure&#13;
Where It Pays to Pay Cash&#13;
C h r i s t m a s&#13;
Dry Goods&#13;
Handkerchiefs, a little different&#13;
and better thaL the usaal&#13;
kind at our price. Holiday&#13;
Ribbons. Our stock is largest&#13;
in Howell. Fancy dry&#13;
goods of every descriptioa.&#13;
Come in and see.&#13;
EVERY DAY IS BARGAIN DAY&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN&#13;
HOWELL'S BUSY STORE&#13;
SOUTH MAJUOr&#13;
Geo. Younglove returned home&#13;
Monday after a short visit with&#13;
relatives in Detroit.&#13;
Lucille Demerest visitod ,Kva&#13;
Smith of Chubbs Corners last&#13;
Thnrsday.&#13;
Mesdamee Pacey and Newman&#13;
spent a portion of lust week with&#13;
relatives in Fowlerville.&#13;
Mark Allison and wife of Ioaco&#13;
were weuk end visitors with relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
Claude White and wife returned&#13;
home last Thursday after an&#13;
extended visit with friends and&#13;
relatives in Hillsdale and Lansing.&#13;
Geo. Bland and wife entertained&#13;
a company of friends at dinner&#13;
last Sunday.&#13;
M. Gallup and wife were Gregory&#13;
visitors last Friday.&#13;
A number from this way attended&#13;
the chicken pi^ sapper at the&#13;
Pinckney opera house Saturday&#13;
evening.&#13;
SOUTH IOSCO.&#13;
Ohas. Foster and wife of East&#13;
Lansing are visiting friends and&#13;
relatives in this vicinity.&#13;
Clyde Jacobs of Plainfield spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday with J. D.&#13;
Roberts.&#13;
The Misses Gladys Roberts,&#13;
Beatrice Larfrborn and Elva Caskey&#13;
called on Mrs. Nick Burly&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Harford, a former&#13;
resident of this place, died at the&#13;
home of her son, Eugene Wilcox&#13;
of Ifltnt, last Tuesday. Funeral&#13;
services were held Irom the South&#13;
Iosco church Thurnday afternoon.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Anderson and&#13;
children and Martin Andsrson&#13;
spent Sunday at Wm. Caskey's.&#13;
Mrs. John Roberts and children&#13;
and Mrs. David Roberts ware&#13;
Pinckney callers Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Albert Messenger who has&#13;
(been ill is slowly recovering.&#13;
Floyd Munsell had the misfortune&#13;
_la get hi* right h*nd badly&#13;
crushed in a corn htisker Thurs-&#13;
Mrs. Bert Roberts and Bernie&#13;
visited at T. Wainwright's Sunday.&#13;
U s e f u l — S e n s i b l e — B e a u t i f u l&#13;
P r e s e n t s For Everybody&#13;
HILLS VARIETY STORE&#13;
Where Quality, Assortmentv and Economy Rule&#13;
t&#13;
' For the last two mouths everything has been on the move. We have unpacked hun--&#13;
1 dmU of boxes of holiday goods. Thn store in general has been given a thorough rej&#13;
arrangemeut, every available bit of floor aud shelf space JH »O utilised that we are&#13;
j ready to display to our patrons and friends the largest and most complete aBSortmen*&#13;
| of pnicticnl and fancy Christmas gi'ts ever offered in "Old Livingston".&#13;
A Few Timely Suggestions&#13;
Chinaware&#13;
SaU'd Dishes&#13;
Cups and Saucen&#13;
Artistic Vases&#13;
"Dinner Set*&#13;
Box Stationery &amp; Books&#13;
15c to $100 Stationery a fine assortment lUc to ¢1 10&#13;
"5c~to 50~ Books by Popular Authors 10 e to 50&#13;
•r&gt;c to 2 00 Ro°ks for Boys and Qj^is 10c to 26&#13;
50c to 2 50 Books for Children of all ages- 5c to 50&#13;
Gift Books 10c to 25&#13;
Plain Handkerchiefs Fancy&#13;
Everything from the plaia sensible sort to the white linen and delicate pieces of&#13;
laca and embroidery&#13;
Colored Handkerchiefs lc to 25c Initial White Linen 5c 25V:&#13;
Fancy Lace and Embroidery Fine Variety&#13;
Thousands ot Yards of Ribbons&#13;
3r&gt;c to $2 OX) Bancy ribbons in dainty patterns ami&#13;
25c to .'5 00 light coloring. Christmas ribbon a apec-&#13;
10c to fi() ialty, just the thing to tie up your present&#13;
15c to til) nil widths&#13;
Toilet Articles&#13;
Manicure Net*&#13;
Brush and Comb nets&#13;
Shaving Mirrorn&#13;
Shaving Outfits&#13;
Hosiery and Underwear&#13;
The enormous amount of this line that we have purchased enables us to give better&#13;
valuo for less money. These value* are being eagerly seized by the thoughtful&#13;
buyer. D^n't be left. 'Buy NOW.&#13;
LadicH' Hose 10c tj 50 Men's Hose 5o to 50&#13;
Bright -Jewelry- Artistic Fancy Goods&#13;
Cuff Buttons*&#13;
"ScarfPins&#13;
Beauty PiiiH&#13;
Belt Pins&#13;
Rings&#13;
10c to 50&#13;
10c to 50&#13;
6c to 25&#13;
10c to 50&#13;
25t; to $4 00&#13;
Hair Ornaments&#13;
•\f - V&#13;
i ' "'ft*' I "^ FY'S HONEY TAR Gmpoun&#13;
t , For Sale |&gt;y All Dru&amp;tftts&#13;
n e w s in the fbi*m&#13;
to a Mend a s&#13;
a s a weJeom&amp;Chrlstmas $lft.&#13;
Too busy to tell you about&#13;
the new styles in portraits,&#13;
but not too busy to show&#13;
them. Come and see.&#13;
Daisie B. Chapell&#13;
Photographer&#13;
&amp;tockbr!d6e, Michigan&#13;
P I T S&#13;
$ 2 . 0 0 Treatment FltBB&#13;
Msa, woven and children have bean permanently&#13;
retieved of Fits, KpSlepey, Hervone end&#13;
ralttag Hpaltaby •*• resto%lvee of a prominent&#13;
Battle Cre*k,(MJea.)DoetoT. •&#13;
One*osimwrit*ae&lt;aerao«:MR*lMe no* tnd&#13;
ketneateltoevtfce fret aMSOh'e treat-&#13;
• « L M A H SMn i E n «M MIf eamTtfMM Mdl&#13;
after bagf naJat tee tieetaavat.** A wateasi writes&#13;
•Tew tare sandBM sTtWee tarrlfielu.&#13;
M—» anew saatfrs4 lawowMit frees the Fwt&#13;
Trial fieatpaea •&amp;&gt;•&gt; WfM&gt; tm*j1«&lt;&amp;trm&#13;
*tP«UHm\mM wortttJ i^j ptof tS« mtiti of&#13;
CODII'I CHmrch Notes&#13;
Services in the Cong'l cbarch&#13;
Sunday Dec. 22 a« follows: Mo.ning&#13;
service at 10 a. m. Christmas&#13;
sermon by the pastor. At this&#13;
service a solo will be rendered by&#13;
Miss Florence Eioe. The pastor,&#13;
will speak on some lessons learned&#13;
at a Free Mason BaDquet. Handay&#13;
school immediately after&#13;
morning service. A cordial invitation&#13;
is extended to all.&#13;
Hat Pins&#13;
Back Combs&#13;
Side Combs&#13;
Brtrrets&#13;
Braid Pino&#13;
Toys&#13;
Electric Engines&#13;
Electric Trains&#13;
Friction Tori&#13;
Steam Engines&#13;
Sledi&#13;
Rocking Horses&#13;
|10c to 50&#13;
10c to $2 00&#13;
10c lo 50&#13;
•rxj to 1.00&#13;
5c to 25&#13;
60c to $2 00&#13;
$1 25 to 3 00&#13;
10c to 1 no&#13;
2,5c to 2 00&#13;
50c to 2 50&#13;
50c to :5 50&#13;
'New fttid of the very latent designs&#13;
T)oll[et " ic ^ so&#13;
Pillow Toi« 26c to 50&#13;
Centre Pieces 10c to 50&#13;
Hand Bug* 25c to 3 00&#13;
Towels 10c to 30&#13;
Silk Scarfs 2.5c to 1 25&#13;
Fancy Boxes &amp; "Booklets&#13;
Burnt Wood Boxen If,&#13;
Japanese Boxes 10c to 1.50&#13;
Booklets 10c to 40&#13;
Cretonne Covered Boxes 10c to 16&#13;
Dolls and Doll Cabs&#13;
Dolls&#13;
Doll Cabs&#13;
Tool Chests&#13;
Printing Presses&#13;
lc to 3 00&#13;
40c to 3 00&#13;
50c to 8 00&#13;
3 50 to 4 50&#13;
GOITRE Now Curable&#13;
Christmas Candies&#13;
We have a new lot of choice can lies, freah and tasty, for the Christmas trade lOo&#13;
candies a Hpecialtj. Candy Boxes in abaadance.&#13;
Christmas Decorations &amp;&#13;
Christmas Boxes&#13;
Of all sizeK&#13;
Games&#13;
Of all aorta and description*, puzzles,&#13;
card garnet, blocks, and in fact everything&#13;
yon could think of la this line.&#13;
Reliable Treatment Pound by&#13;
Eminent Doctor—You Can&#13;
Teat It Pvee&#13;
It ssenu abMlotol* oeruln that at laat tbert \&gt;u&#13;
been found aa eftetlvt ritaod? for Oottra—thr&#13;
ntwletulr and diMMtloi tumor* that dtilntn&#13;
he uses and up th« atfitafth and vitality of&#13;
otherwise health? and attrartFvem*o and woman.&#13;
Some yean seo. Dr, W. T. Bobo, of BatU*&#13;
Creek, Michigan, discovered wh*tbe bajieved to&#13;
be a eacoMful tr'atmest for itoltre, fht bM'tsf&#13;
WMfort^«T atmgttieaad by th&lt;* fact tti^t baa*&#13;
dram of aoftrm etatsi Puy wft yroansnUy&#13;
urad tn a few waatu Hy this nourksbie remodf.&#13;
Ose fratefol wotam wrtiaa that Dr. BoWs&#13;
eMBktnatawnt eared bar gofen. Aootbar tails&#13;
as thai ow stoath's iiatftant c mpUtaty aad&#13;
parmawMUr aarad ktt aattaa, StlU aaotk«r wtlua&#13;
I ?&lt;* ssArlrasa Oottrs wrfta today to Dr.&#13;
*M fwaiaiasw stf iMa aa^ettWoottrS rtataiy, to&#13;
pro^jawatUaaaaososaplisfctotyow. .&#13;
. »-,Bow&gt;a«Utotlaaa aato Mab tMa trm oaV&#13;
IO vsiHwsiiaaiwra.&#13;
Hundreds of wonderful, fasoinating things to make the childn n'« eyes grow big and&#13;
round with anticipation of Santa Clans.&#13;
Aluminum and Graniteware a specialty&#13;
V. B. HILL&#13;
Howell, Michigan&#13;
P. 8. Oo acconut of oar Immense stock we have been compelled to transform onr&#13;
basement into a salesroom daring the Christmas Sesjeon.&#13;
EBlietctterrisc to MIVSJUC&#13;
when ersfTthinf elaw&#13;
proasjauoa aad Canute&#13;
they art the npreme&#13;
M W IBS) M M 8MOBBISS)&#13;
ever a&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
tiyoii i.Oav&#13;
IMS I&#13;
H&#13;
MS. M ^ S S S : pat*&#13;
Wi^&amp;K^a:&#13;
D.&#13;
J&#13;
"&lt;•&#13;
i - «&#13;
Ji&#13;
•&gt;•*&#13;
'•'I ' 0 « »&#13;
• &gt; &lt; '&#13;
\fkV*&#13;
N&#13;
&gt;*&gt;&#13;
#&#13;
,-**&#13;
M&#13;
,)&#13;
1$&#13;
I&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
BOY W. I'AVKULY, Pub.&#13;
PINCKNEY. - - . MICHIGAN&#13;
BEFORE AND AFTER MARRIAGE&#13;
What Occurs When Mr. Pennypacker&#13;
Takes the Lady of His Choice&#13;
Out to Dine.&#13;
•Fragments of Mr. Penny packer's&#13;
restaurant conversation, when the&#13;
lady accompanying him in his fiancee:&#13;
"I hope ni're good and hungry,&#13;
dearest. I know I am."&#13;
"You would like some oysters and&#13;
a little clear soup, of course."&#13;
"I think a nice cold quart of Chateau&#13;
Qquera would go about right,&#13;
don't you?"&#13;
"Suppose we have some of that&#13;
filet mignon with fresh mushrooms.&#13;
Two portions, so we'll both have&#13;
enough."&#13;
"Don't want any salad? O, do have&#13;
some salad. Let's have a nice fruit&#13;
salad with allgator pears and things,&#13;
huh ?"&#13;
"You'll have some dessert, -won't&#13;
you, an Ice or something—and then&#13;
some chese and a deml tasse?"&#13;
"O, don't let's hurry. Let's stay a&#13;
while. It's so cozy here."&#13;
II.&#13;
Fragments of Mr. Pennypacker'a&#13;
restaurant conversation when the&#13;
lady accompanying him is his wife:&#13;
"You're not very hungry, are you?&#13;
I know I'm not."&#13;
"You don't want any oysters o?&#13;
soup, do you?"&#13;
"You don't want anything to drinlc,&#13;
do you?"&#13;
. "Suppose we have a "steak. One&#13;
will be enough for the two of us."&#13;
"I don't care for any salad, do&#13;
you?"&#13;
"O, shucks: Sweets will only upset&#13;
your stomach. They always do.&#13;
O, very well; have It if you want to."&#13;
"I don't want any cheese and coffee,&#13;
do you?"&#13;
"Come on; lot's get outside. It's&#13;
awfully stuffy in here."—-Brooklyn&#13;
Times.&#13;
Nobs and Snobs.&#13;
Thackeray's noted aphorism "there&#13;
are nobs and there are snobs," continues&#13;
to hold good in England, and&#13;
those to whom the latter designation&#13;
applies seem to find space for their&#13;
activities in the newspapers. A London&#13;
morning paper remarks: "It is&#13;
Interesting to note that the queen will&#13;
In future Join the guns for luncheon&#13;
at the king's shooting parties." Commenting&#13;
upon this a cynic in London&#13;
Opinion says:&#13;
"ThiB Is indeed most refreshing and&#13;
should greatly stimulate the patriotic&#13;
•wave in Australia and other distant&#13;
parts. Queens are Independent people,&#13;
and assert their right to take a&#13;
glass of sherry and a biscuit in their&#13;
hack sitting room if so disposed. 'To&#13;
know that her majesty will positively&#13;
pick the leg of a chicken in the society&#13;
of her husband and friends is&#13;
a great Joy, and has set me off upon&#13;
my week's labors with a light heart."&#13;
When Turkey Had Its "Season."&#13;
The famous landlords of fifty and&#13;
sixty years ago who ran the world's&#13;
finest hotels from Maine to Oregon,&#13;
men like Paran Stevens of the Revere&#13;
house, Boston; Fifth Avenue hotel,&#13;
New York, and the Continental at&#13;
Philadelphia never served turkey before&#13;
early October nor later than&#13;
March 1. Until ten years ago only a&#13;
few eastern hotels and restaurants&#13;
served turkey between April and mid-&#13;
September. Since then the large&#13;
patronage of eastern hotels, restaurants&#13;
and clubs by well-to-do western&#13;
people has made the turkey and the&#13;
oyster an every-day item on bills of&#13;
fare prepared by landlords and&#13;
stewards who used to say that neither&#13;
turkeys nor oysters should he eaten&#13;
In springtime, summer or early&#13;
autumn.&#13;
Spanish Mutton.&#13;
Dog meat, we learn from the Frankfurter&#13;
Zeltung, lsv largely sold In Germany,&#13;
and more especially In Saiony,&#13;
but rarely under Its own name. Traders&#13;
describe It as Spanish mutton, and&#13;
their customers are less chary of asking&#13;
for it. Catfish in this country is&#13;
treated In the same euphemistic way.&#13;
There was a time when thiB fish was&#13;
never seen in the shops. Then some&#13;
•fishmongerlng genius invented the&#13;
name of "rock salmon," and hestowed&#13;
It npon the despised catfish,&#13;
which now has an established place in&#13;
the m a r k e t&#13;
L i s t of Zones and Rates.&#13;
Th" parcel post law which becomes effective January 1, 1913, provides:&#13;
"Thiit hereafter fourth-class mail matter shall embrace all other matter, including&#13;
farm and factory products, not now embraced by law in either the&#13;
first, s c o n d , or third class, not exceeding eleven pounds in weight, nor&#13;
ni'Mitter in »ize than seventy-two inches in length and girth combined, nor in&#13;
form or kind likely to injure the person of any postal employe or damage the&#13;
mail equipment or other mail matter and not of a character perishable within&#13;
d period reasonably required for transportation and delivery."&#13;
For the purpose of carrying this law into effect the United States is&#13;
divided into zones with different rule.-; of postage applicable lo each, us&#13;
follows:&#13;
1 ;t&#13;
| K a t e | Kate Katf&#13;
o&#13;
liiitt&#13;
0&#13;
•5 v!&#13;
" ™&#13;
s-= N o ts&#13;
rm&#13;
- * •&#13;
U t i l e&#13;
5&#13;
o&#13;
£ "! 7 ° 1 'JJ&#13;
^ ~*&#13;
c _&#13;
•- *-•„&#13;
W f—1&#13;
K a t e&#13;
C- ~&#13;
*-&gt; p&#13;
C1 o&#13;
£ o&#13;
^ .—'&#13;
• ~ »rf&#13;
¢ ^&#13;
Kate&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
ft&#13;
a&#13;
7&#13;
S&#13;
!&gt;&#13;
Ill&#13;
11&#13;
p u i m t l .&#13;
p o u n d s ,&#13;
pound.s.&#13;
p o u n d s ,&#13;
p o u n d s ,&#13;
p o u n d s ,&#13;
p o u n d s ,&#13;
p o u n d s ,&#13;
p o u n d s ,&#13;
p o u n d s ,&#13;
pound.s,&#13;
50.5&#13;
.OG&#13;
.07&#13;
.os&#13;
.O'J&#13;
.10&#13;
.11&#13;
.12&#13;
.13&#13;
.14&#13;
.15&#13;
JO. OS&#13;
.OS&#13;
.11&#13;
.14&#13;
.17&#13;
.20&#13;
M&#13;
.2S&#13;
.29&#13;
.32&#13;
.35&#13;
$o.ot;&#13;
.10&#13;
.14&#13;
.IS&#13;
.22&#13;
.2t;&#13;
.81»&#13;
.34&#13;
.38&#13;
.42&#13;
.4«&#13;
$0.07&#13;
.12&#13;
.17&#13;
.22&#13;
.27&#13;
.32&#13;
.87&#13;
.42&#13;
.47&#13;
.52&#13;
.57&#13;
*0.OS&#13;
.14&#13;
.20&#13;
.26&#13;
.32&#13;
.38&#13;
.44&#13;
.50&#13;
.56&#13;
.62&#13;
.«8&#13;
$().00&#13;
.1(1&#13;
.23,&#13;
.30&#13;
.37&#13;
.44&#13;
.51&#13;
.OS&#13;
.65&#13;
.72&#13;
.79&#13;
$0.10&#13;
.lit&#13;
.28&#13;
.37&#13;
.40&#13;
.55&#13;
.&lt;i4 j&#13;
.73 |&#13;
S2&#13;
.91 I&#13;
1 . 0 1 »&#13;
SS&#13;
4C .c0_&#13;
50,11&#13;
.21&#13;
.31&#13;
.41&#13;
.51&#13;
.61&#13;
.71&#13;
.81&#13;
.'Jl&#13;
1.01&#13;
1.11&#13;
c --&#13;
Z&#13;
~ o&#13;
K a t e&#13;
$0.12&#13;
.24&#13;
.36&#13;
.4S&#13;
.60&#13;
.72&#13;
.S4&#13;
.96&#13;
3.OS&#13;
1.20&#13;
1.32&#13;
The local rates is applicable to parcels intended for delivery at the&#13;
office of mailing or on a rural route starting therefrom.&#13;
It will be observed that the rates of postage are largely jAduced and&#13;
that the limit of weight is increased from four to eleven pounds. P a r c e l s will&#13;
be delivered at all free delivery offices and to patrons residing on rural and&#13;
star routes; they may be registered and may be accorded special delivery&#13;
service on payment of the usual fees, and they may be insured against loss in&#13;
ur amount equivalent to their actual value, but not to exceed $25, upon payment&#13;
of a fee of five cents. Distinctive stamps must be used on all parcels,&#13;
but they may be mailed in quantities of not less than 2,000 identical pieces&#13;
without stamps affixed, the postage being paid in money.&#13;
Many a One.&#13;
Speaking nearly twenty years ago&#13;
to a great gathering of women, Mrs.&#13;
Ellen M. Henrotln, took occasion to&#13;
say: "The value of one person's mind&#13;
or one person's work is steadily diminishing;&#13;
it is the associate mind,&#13;
the many hearts heating as one, that&#13;
now move the world; and this is so&#13;
well understood by women that they&#13;
are rapidly learning what can be accomplished&#13;
in economic, social, and&#13;
intellectual life by the power of an'&#13;
educated public opinion."&#13;
Wm. Cotter Quits Pere Marquette.&#13;
Wm. &lt;-'&lt;&gt;tU&gt;r will retire from the&#13;
Pere Marquette railroad general manngemetit&#13;
on Jan. 1, having tendered&#13;
his resignation to the receivers.&#13;
This action was voluntary on Mr.&#13;
'otter's part and on account of Mrs.&#13;
Cotter's health. She is in a very&#13;
weak condition with bronchial and&#13;
pulmonary trouble, and removal to a&#13;
dry climate is ordered. Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Cotter will go to Houston, Tex., where&#13;
a brother, George Cotter, is in the&#13;
lumber business.&#13;
The receivers offered Mr. Cotter a&#13;
long vacation when he tendered his&#13;
resignation, but as a permanent residence&#13;
elsewhere is necessary, he declined&#13;
it, feeling also that such a&#13;
course would not be just to the PCre&#13;
Marquette,&#13;
PROSPERITY LARGEST EVER&#13;
Indians to Fight for Lake Front.&#13;
The few Ottawa Indians that are&#13;
left of the tribe after which the county&#13;
of Ottawa is named have joined with&#13;
the descendants of the Chippewas and&#13;
the Indians from the more southern&#13;
part of the state in the ejectment proceedings&#13;
that have been started to&#13;
prove claim to the lake front property&#13;
in Chicago.&#13;
Chief Andrew Rapp and Chairman&#13;
Joe Cushway, of the Pokagon band of&#13;
Pottawatomie;!, have filed with K, B.&#13;
Stark, the Indian agent, whose home&#13;
is at Fennville, a few miles south of&#13;
Holland, an enrollment of the band,&#13;
containing the names of 230 Indians,&#13;
who will become plaintiffs in the suit.&#13;
Both Candidates Guilty of Fraud.&#13;
Rep. Charles C. Bowman of the&#13;
eleventh Pennsylvania district, was unseated&#13;
by the by the passage, 153 to&#13;
118 of a resolution declaring that corrupt&#13;
practices had been used in his&#13;
election in 1912.&#13;
At the same time the house refused&#13;
181 to 88, to seat George R. McLean,&#13;
his democrat opponent. It was charged&#13;
on the floor that he had been guilty&#13;
of the same practice as were alleged&#13;
against Bowman. The seat from the&#13;
eleventh district will be vacant until&#13;
March 4, when it will be filled by John&#13;
J. Casey, a democrat, elected in November.&#13;
Law Is Aimed at " W i l d Cat" Concerns.&#13;
Rep. Hinkley, of Emmett, vvill be the&#13;
member of the house to introduce the&#13;
"blue sky" law at the coming session&#13;
of the legislature, as prepared by state&#13;
officials who are studying the question.&#13;
By the adoption of this law, freak&#13;
wild cat investment associations now&#13;
thriving on revenues derived from the&#13;
sale of worthless Investments, will&#13;
come directly under the supervision of&#13;
the Michigan securities commission,&#13;
composed of the state banking commissioner,&#13;
state treasurer and the attorney&#13;
general.&#13;
Bank Report Proves 1912 Was Banner&#13;
Money Year.&#13;
This has boon the most prosperous&#13;
year in the history of this country, as&#13;
reflected in the condition of the banks&#13;
of the United States, according' to the&#13;
annual report, of the comptroller of&#13;
the currency, made public in Washington&#13;
which showed the assets of&#13;
2.", 195 banks whose condition has been&#13;
tabulated aa $2,3,(100,00(), in round numb&#13;
e r s - or an increase of $1,"55,000,000&#13;
over last year.&#13;
The capital of these financial institutions&#13;
amounts to approximately&#13;
$2,010,000,000, an increase of $58,-&#13;
000,000.&#13;
Exports from the United States&#13;
during the first 10 months of this&#13;
year aggregated $1,870,000,000 and the&#13;
imports $1,511,000,000, resulting in a&#13;
favorable balance of $359,000,000.&#13;
There are in actual operation 7,307&#13;
national banks, representing paid in&#13;
capital of .$1,046,012,580. The total of&#13;
deposits in all banks, the report states,&#13;
is $(5,496,192,707.GO.&#13;
State Board Has Control of P. M.&#13;
In an opinion handed down by Attorney&#13;
General Wykes,he holds that the&#13;
state railroad commission has the&#13;
same rights of supervision over the&#13;
Pere Marquette railroad as though&#13;
that road was not in the hands of a&#13;
receiver, basing his opinion upon a&#13;
federal statute. He also holds that&#13;
a railroad company, whether in the&#13;
hands of a receiver or not, can properly&#13;
be held to be a common carrier&#13;
of perishable shipments, and that the&#13;
right of a carrier to limit its liability&#13;
can be entered into by a written&#13;
contract with a shipper, though not&#13;
to the extent of absolving the carrier&#13;
from liability for negligence.&#13;
by a&#13;
Not a Greek.&#13;
"Is your furnace controlled&#13;
thermostat, madam?"&#13;
"Well, we have a man come in to&#13;
look after It, but I don't think he's&#13;
one of those Greeks you mentioned,&#13;
because his skin i t Mack."&#13;
Quits House of Correction.&#13;
John L. McDonell, for 13 years superintendent&#13;
of the Detroit house of&#13;
correction, connected with the institution&#13;
for the last 28 years and known&#13;
as one of the foremost penologists In&#13;
the country, ..has tendered his resignation&#13;
to the board of directors. The&#13;
resignation, which takes effect June&#13;
1, 1013.&#13;
State Can't Educate Tubercular Children.&#13;
Michigan has made no provisions for&#13;
educating its children barred from&#13;
the public schools on account of tuberculosis,&#13;
it develops through a case in&#13;
Roscommon county, where a child, an&#13;
"open case" of tuberculosis, has been&#13;
barred from the schools and is now&#13;
in the county poor house without any&#13;
provision for education.&#13;
Pierce to Succeed Himself.&#13;
Charles S. Pierce, clerk of the&#13;
house of representatives, will be a&#13;
candidate to succeed himself. Pierce&#13;
claims to have enough votes pledged&#13;
to insure his election. Despite reports&#13;
to the contrary, Pierce will not be a&#13;
candidate for secretary of the house&#13;
domain commission to succeed A. C.&#13;
Carton, who becomes land commis&#13;
Eioner tlie first of the year.&#13;
Young Elected to Congress.&#13;
H. Olvn Young, republican, was&#13;
given a certificate of election by the&#13;
state board of canvassers to the Office&#13;
of congressman in the twelfth&#13;
district &lt;n the upper peninsula. The&#13;
decision was based on an opinion&#13;
given by the attorney general's department.&#13;
The decision means the defeat&#13;
of th* progressive candidate,&#13;
William J. McDonald.&#13;
That there is a need for a state&#13;
game preserve is the statement of&#13;
Representative JameB Henry, of Battle&#13;
Creek, author of a bill setting aside&#13;
a tract of land in the upper peninsula.&#13;
A special investigating committee&#13;
recently appointed by the board of&#13;
supervisors will visit the Detroit&#13;
house of correction on Dec. 17, to get&#13;
pointers for a reformatory, which the&#13;
board plans to build in Kalamazoo&#13;
county.&#13;
'iy.VV&#13;
\t',.. J&lt;:'..y,;£ .•{&#13;
Qot to Live Them Down Again.&#13;
"Do you think he will ever run for&#13;
office again V* While Prof. W. B. Pillsbury, of the&#13;
"I don't think so. It will take htm physiological department of the 17. of&#13;
a}l hig time living down again the M., at Ann Arbor, was lecturing to&#13;
( h i s class ho suddenly lost his mind.&#13;
Physicians said the affliction was&#13;
caused by an attack of acute indigestion,&#13;
and that ho will recover.&#13;
«ff( thlnga they discovered In hie past&#13;
dn^ing (he lest campaign."&#13;
Frank Bliss, 72 years old, wealthy&#13;
Lake Odessa farmer, charged with&#13;
shooting Ed Willett a former Muskegon&#13;
boxer, told his story of the affair&#13;
on the. stand, denying he had intended&#13;
to In any way harm Willett&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Gustave Buschke, of&#13;
Saginaw, are the parents of twin&#13;
daughters, who will celebrate their&#13;
birthdays on different dates. One&#13;
daughter was horn shortly before midnight&#13;
Friday and the other early Saturday&#13;
morning.&#13;
Mrs. M. B. Ferry, secretary of the&#13;
Michigan Pioneer and Historical society,&#13;
announces that the mid-winter&#13;
meeting of the society will be held at&#13;
Grand Rapids, Jan. 30 and 31. Governor&#13;
Ferris and Lieut. Governor Ross&#13;
will be asked to participate.&#13;
E YIS&#13;
REFORMATION OF "SPENDING&#13;
CONDITIONS" IN FEDERAL&#13;
SERVICE BEGUN.&#13;
SAVING MAY BE $100,000,000&#13;
Postmasters Fear Wilson W i l l Rescind&#13;
Taft's Civil Service Order and&#13;
Take Away Their Jobs—Moving&#13;
Day for Government Officials Approaches.&#13;
By GEORGE CLINTON.&#13;
Washington.—Men who have made&#13;
a study of "spending conditions " in&#13;
the federal service believe and have&#13;
reported that more than ¢100,000,000&#13;
a year can be saved to the government&#13;
if certain recommendations for&#13;
economy be observed, and the claim&#13;
is that this saving can be made without&#13;
in any way crippling the service.&#13;
It is probable that before the next&#13;
congress ends the entire system of&#13;
making appropriations will be&#13;
changed, that many bureaus will be&#13;
consolidated and the supply bills cut&#13;
many millions of dollars, the money&#13;
saved to be used for extending the&#13;
useful services of the government to&#13;
fields not already covered.&#13;
When Theodore Roosevelt was president&#13;
he appointed, what was known&#13;
as "the Keep commission." It was&#13;
the duty of Mr. Keep and his colleagues&#13;
to study business methods in&#13;
vogue in the different departments&#13;
and to see how the work could be&#13;
slJbrtened and yet be "Just as effective&#13;
as it was under existing conditions.&#13;
Start Made On Economy.&#13;
When President Taft came into&#13;
office one of the first thirfgs he did&#13;
was to call his cabinet officers together&#13;
to urge upon them the neces-&lt;&#13;
sity bf economic administration.&#13;
Secretary MacVeagh was made the&#13;
chairman of a cabinet committee&#13;
charged with the work of economic&#13;
administration. It was soon discovered&#13;
that in single departments&#13;
of the government the different bureaus&#13;
purchased their supplies Independently&#13;
of one another arid that&#13;
different prices were paid for precisely&#13;
the same article. One bureau&#13;
for instance would pay two or three&#13;
cents a dozen, more for lead pencils&#13;
than another bureau was paying for&#13;
the same article of the same manufacture.&#13;
A good many economies, small as&#13;
compared to the saving which it is&#13;
lished, were made. It was a start,&#13;
however, for greater things. The&#13;
system which was in vogue in the&#13;
treasury department, or perhaps it&#13;
had better be called a lack of system,&#13;
was the same which held in nearly&#13;
every other department of government.&#13;
All the secretaries got busy&#13;
In the saving venturo and there was^&#13;
an "economic spurt" all atong- the&#13;
line.&#13;
Not long after the first initial economic&#13;
venturo President Taft appointed&#13;
a commission on economy and efficiency&#13;
with Frederick A. Cleveland as&#13;
its chief. This commission has been&#13;
at work for more thon two years and&#13;
it has worked out an elaborate and&#13;
yet at the same time simple scheme&#13;
for saving Uncle Sam money.&#13;
Budget System Approved.&#13;
President-Elect Wilson has sanctioned&#13;
the budget system of appropriations&#13;
which has been urged by&#13;
the present president and by the commission&#13;
on economy and efficiency,&#13;
budget system all the appropriations&#13;
asked for go to dozens of committees&#13;
of congress. For Instance, the naval&#13;
appropriation is acted on by several&#13;
different committees, each one taking&#13;
a part and no one of them knowing&#13;
Just what the other is doing. The&#13;
result is a scattering of energies and&#13;
a scattering of money. Under the&#13;
budget system all the apropriations&#13;
will be considered by the chairmen of&#13;
different committees acting together.&#13;
They thus can get concrete knowledge&#13;
of the whole situation at once and&#13;
by intelligent direction can stop many&#13;
holes of waste.&#13;
If the economy and efficiency commission's&#13;
recommendations finally be&#13;
adopted by congress it is believed&#13;
that the agricultural Interests of the&#13;
country largely will be aided. There&#13;
are bills now in congress looking to&#13;
this very thing, but the cost is said&#13;
to be prohibitive because of the present&#13;
extravagant methods. With a&#13;
saving of $100,000,000 a year, and&#13;
some of the experts place it as high&#13;
as $300,000,00 a year, maqy of the&#13;
helpful measures now under consideration&#13;
by the law makers can be&#13;
passed, the money will be forthcoming,&#13;
and the treasury will be just as&#13;
well off as it is now and the benefits&#13;
to the people will be multiplied. This&#13;
matter Is going to he a live issue in&#13;
congress from now on.&#13;
Postmasters Fear tor Jobs.&#13;
Naturally the Democrats^ of both&#13;
house and senate are looking ahead to&#13;
the glad time when they will come into&#13;
full possession of the administration&#13;
in all its branches. The Democratic&#13;
leaders are nonplussed as to&#13;
what to do about the blanket oivil&#13;
service executive order issued by&#13;
President Taft not long before the&#13;
election, the effect of which was to&#13;
put nearly 40,000 postmasters of the&#13;
country on the civil service list It&#13;
goes without saying, perhaps that&#13;
nearly all of these postmasters are&#13;
Republicans, many of whom have held&#13;
office for years and who, unless the&#13;
executive order be set aside, will continue&#13;
to draw their pay from Uncle&#13;
Sam for the years to come or until&#13;
death or misconduct removes t h e n&#13;
from their delivery windows.&#13;
There ere few Republican leaders&#13;
who find any fault at all with their&#13;
Democratic colleagues for urging that&#13;
President-elect Wilson set aside the&#13;
civil service executive order of President&#13;
Taft as soon after March 4 as&#13;
possible. A good many of the Republicans&#13;
are willing to confess that it&#13;
would have been a hard blow to their&#13;
party organization if years ago all&#13;
the postmasters of the cottjfttry ha^j^&#13;
been removed from the field Of political&#13;
appointments. They say they&#13;
would have resented it and&gt; that they&#13;
cannot honestly complain because&#13;
the Democrats now are seeking to prepare&#13;
to have the order rescinded. The&#13;
•Republicans of course Bay that the&#13;
postmasters ought to be kept on the&#13;
civil service list, but that this fact&#13;
naturally does not prevent Democratic&#13;
resentment because the order was issued&#13;
just at a time to do damage to&#13;
the faithful who have been waiting&#13;
long for preferment&#13;
For years labor has asked that a new&#13;
department of government should be&#13;
created to deal alone with labor problems,&#13;
with a labor member in the&#13;
president's cabinet as its presiding&#13;
chief Not long before he set sail for&#13;
Bermuda, President-elect Wilson expressed&#13;
a desire to have a labor chief&#13;
In his family circle. The Republicans&#13;
in the past have not.been averse to&#13;
the establishment of a labor department.&#13;
The Democrats in the main&#13;
seem to be for it, and so it is probable&#13;
that one of the legislative acts of moment&#13;
of the present session will be to&#13;
establish such a department and to&#13;
give Mr. Wilson the right to name an&#13;
additional member of the cabinet.&#13;
Moving Day Approaches.&#13;
To a great many people Washington&#13;
will not be Washington after&#13;
March 4. The day following the&#13;
inauguration, or at any rate some&#13;
day-not far•• removed from it _wll_l be&#13;
"moving day" for hosts of long time&#13;
Washington residents, calling themselves&#13;
temporary residents, but hoping&#13;
that as the years went on they&#13;
finally might write the adjective- "permanent"&#13;
before the noun.&#13;
What changes will take place in&#13;
Washington in the personnel of the&#13;
existing office forces? Well, of course,&#13;
first and foremost there is the president&#13;
who must move with his family&#13;
and his law library to the old home&#13;
on the banks of the Ohio river. Prior&#13;
to the day of moving from the White&#13;
House Mr. Taft will entertain for two&#13;
days his coming successor as chief&#13;
executive, and the successor's good&#13;
wife.&#13;
Philander Chase Knox, the secretary&#13;
of Btate, on March 4 will give&#13;
way to William Jennings Bryan possibly,&#13;
or certainly to some other&#13;
good Democrat of the country. Mr.&#13;
Knox has been in Washington in one&#13;
official capacity or another for a good&#13;
many years, and he has a fine old&#13;
home on K street where with Mrs.&#13;
Knox he entertains In a hospitable&#13;
spirit Republicans, Democrats, Progressive-&#13;
Republicans and Progressives&#13;
alike, to say nothing of foreigners and&#13;
the casual Amcricari visitors to Washington.&#13;
It Is said that Mr. Knox will&#13;
move "only-from the_atata_department&#13;
and that he will keep his K street&#13;
house for nine months a year and will&#13;
spend the other three months in the&#13;
state of Pennsylvania which, after he&#13;
had been attorney general in the&#13;
Roosevelt cabinet sent him to the senate.&#13;
MacVeagh W i l l Not Depart.&#13;
Franklin MacVeagh, secretary of&#13;
the treasury, is the only other cabinet&#13;
officer who will not move from&#13;
Washington when some good Democratic&#13;
financier takes his seat in the&#13;
big building where Uncle Sam's money&#13;
is kept. Two years ago next Christmas&#13;
day Mrs. Franklin MacVeagh&#13;
presented her husband with a house&#13;
on Sixteenth street. Mr. MacVeagh&#13;
from the windows of his residence at&#13;
the time saw tho Christmas gift building&#13;
rising stone by stone only a block&#13;
or two away, but he had no idea who&#13;
wa3 building It or who was to live in&#13;
it. Finally it was completed and, as&#13;
the children say, the secretary of the&#13;
treasury found the new residence "in&#13;
his stocking" on Christmas morning&#13;
with the "Merry Christmas card" of&#13;
his wife attached. Mr. MacVeagh, it&#13;
is understood, will not return to Chicago,&#13;
but will continue to live in&#13;
Washington in his holiday gift house.&#13;
Secretary of Commerce and Labor&#13;
Charles Nagel will return to St, Louis&#13;
to take up the practice of the law.&#13;
Secretary of the Interior Walter L.&#13;
Fisher will return to Chicago to continue&#13;
the course of court pleading and&#13;
of closet counseling which he followed&#13;
before Mr Taft called him to Washington.&#13;
l&#13;
Attorney General George W. Wickersham&#13;
also will return to the law&#13;
and probably will become a member&#13;
again of the old established New York&#13;
firm with which he severed his connection&#13;
when bidden to come to Washington.&#13;
Hitchcock May Enter Business.&#13;
Frank H. Hitchcock, postmaster&#13;
general, it is currently reported, has&#13;
been offered eight different business&#13;
positions from time to time i f he&#13;
would consent to give up directing&#13;
Uncle Sam's mail matters and would&#13;
return to business life. It is not known&#13;
whether Mr. Hitchcock will accept one&#13;
of these former offers or will wait for&#13;
a new and more attractive one, but&#13;
the confirmed word Is that he it to&#13;
enter business in New York city.&#13;
Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson&#13;
and the Secretary of the Navy George&#13;
'Von L. Meyler will go back to the law&#13;
in the one case and to business In the&#13;
other. It is possible, however, that&#13;
Mr. Meyer still may have political ambitions&#13;
and that he may strive one&#13;
day to be made United State! senator&#13;
from Massachusetts.&#13;
James Wilson, who has been secretary&#13;
of agriculture since the year 1897&#13;
and has broken all records of continuous&#13;
cabinet service; fteatty !• to t o&#13;
back to- private life. Mr. Wilson wfD&#13;
move, it Is sand, to an Iowa farm.&#13;
mm&#13;
.,..&amp;&#13;
STATE T A X BOARD WOULD JOIN&#13;
FORCES W I T H T H E STATE&#13;
ASSESSORS. ,&#13;
TAX BOARD WJLL REAPPRAISE&#13;
SEVEN COUNTIES. *&#13;
Says Electric Railways Should Be Assessed&#13;
by State Officials Only—&#13;
Many Other Important &gt;&#13;
Recommendations.&#13;
;&#13;
Recommendations by Board&#13;
That supervisors begin their&#13;
termB of ottice in July instead of&#13;
April and have nine months for&#13;
their work.&#13;
That electric railways and sim-.&#13;
ilar properties be assessed, not by&#13;
local assessing ofheers, but as an&#13;
entirety by the state board and&#13;
the levy duly apportioned among&#13;
the counties.&#13;
Asks for power to call assessing,&#13;
officers together, instead of the&#13;
board being required to visit each&#13;
county.&#13;
That the state board of assessors&#13;
and the state tax commission&#13;
be consolidated.&#13;
That all conveyances of real estate&#13;
name the actual consideration.&#13;
The board of state tax commission&#13;
ers made its report _to Gov, lOsbo&#13;
for 1911 and 1912. It is the mosj: complete&#13;
ever issued by this board."&#13;
The report shows that during the&#13;
past two years the assessed valuations&#13;
of iron mines have been raised&#13;
from $19,G2J,508 as assessed by local&#13;
assessing officers, to $85,567,500 after&#13;
reviews had been held.&#13;
"When the board began its work&#13;
in 1309, the real estate of the state&#13;
was assessed at §325,858,711, and the&#13;
personal property at $14&amp;,o20,37G, or&#13;
a total of both real and personal of&#13;
$968,189,087.&#13;
"In 1891 the real estate was assessed&#13;
at $796,431,830, and the personal&#13;
property at $156,299,285, a total&#13;
of $952,731,115, showing an increase&#13;
for the ten year period of. $29,426,8S1&#13;
in real estate and an actual decrease&#13;
in the assessment of personal property&#13;
of $13,968,909, and showing a net&#13;
increase of the whole assessable&#13;
property in the state for the ten years&#13;
mentioned of only $15,407,972.&#13;
"In 1910 the real estate of the state&#13;
was assessed at $1,348,901,950 and the&#13;
personal property at $390,750,508, or a /&#13;
total of $1,739,652,458. This was an increase&#13;
in real estate assessments of&#13;
$523,043,239. and an increase in persona!&#13;
property assessment of $248,-&#13;
4207132, or .a total ihcerase oT $771,-"&#13;
463.871."&#13;
"In 1899 the per cent of personal&#13;
property assessed to real estate as- •&#13;
sessed was 14.66 per cent. Through t h e '&#13;
work of the commission of personal&#13;
property assessed is now 10. 1&#13;
As to the Railroads.&#13;
Under the old taxation law, the report&#13;
shows 101 railroad companies, 70 '&#13;
car loaning companies, seven express&#13;
companies and 250 telephone and telegraph&#13;
companies paid in taxes $1,649,-&#13;
175, while under the new ad valorem&#13;
tax law as administered by the tax&#13;
board these companies paid the state&#13;
in taxes $4,857,865 in 1910 and $4,912,-&#13;
997 in 1912.&#13;
During 1912 reviews were held in six&#13;
counties, resulting in increased assessed&#13;
valuations by the state board&#13;
of $98,092,1112.&#13;
W i l l Reappraise Seven Counties.&#13;
The state tax commission announced&#13;
that the commission would start a reappraisal&#13;
of the counties of Bay, Calhoun(&#13;
and Jackson in the lower peninsula,&#13;
and the counties of Alger, Baraga,&#13;
Ontonagon, Chlppawa in the upper&#13;
peninsula for the coming year.&#13;
The work in these counties will&#13;
probably take the entire year of 1913&#13;
and judging from the raises made inthose&#13;
counties where reappraisalshave&#13;
been held, there will be some&#13;
big boosts.&#13;
Another Dam In Au 8able River,.&#13;
Another link has been forged In-the&#13;
remarkable chain of dams which are&#13;
harnesBing the water power of the Au&#13;
Sable river. The gigantic dams at Five&#13;
Channels are completed and power t*&#13;
being furnished from three 3,000 kilowat&#13;
units. This means that 9,000 kilo*&#13;
wat are being generated. The Five&#13;
Channr.ls development is the second&#13;
of tho big dams that has been completed&#13;
by the Commonwealth JUir,.&#13;
Light and Power company. Cooke's&#13;
was the first and power from It&#13;
furnished about five months ago.&#13;
first dams furnished 12,000 horsepe&#13;
There will be 13 dams in all.&#13;
Work has been started on the t ^_&#13;
set of dams. These will be a t ,waat&#13;
will he known as Loud'e, aboet, 13~&#13;
miles above Five Channel*, ^,&#13;
r&#13;
*&#13;
State Senator WWIam B. Gracue&lt;,i ©t:&#13;
Kalamazoo, says he wfli introduce *&#13;
bill at the next session of th*4egtela&gt;&#13;
tore which _wilLprej^&#13;
•••#4*&#13;
• • *&#13;
riage of blacks and, white* Js X!eb&gt; J&#13;
At a meeting in fraatf BKpidt ot&#13;
the receivers of la* Pere llargvettav&#13;
Railroad Co, it was decide* to OV5L \&#13;
role the1 ordetv of the traflle departntent&#13;
not to aoeeft peTWsaaft'lrejx**&#13;
Is hws'tfcan earMMTO* ftvto/oWiV&#13;
weather unless shipped 1% istrttsVitor&#13;
"?;;;&#13;
* ' V&#13;
&gt; -&#13;
•• &gt; I V ' * A"! .v'/'h&#13;
*&#13;
3SJW y' .'*?%*, * »&#13;
. 1 " &lt;s&lt;-'&#13;
V MS'.,... . - - •"&#13;
'v, vy SABLTB&#13;
,¾.&#13;
K—rfi-lit.&#13;
HORACE&#13;
HA3ELTINE&#13;
A. • SYNOPSIS. whelmed by the pathos of bi3 condi&#13;
tion. So wrought and tortured, in&#13;
rt Cameron, capitalist, consults I deed, was I, by the sad picture of de-&#13;
Clyde, newspaper publisher, re- j t h r n M Q ( , „..ui~w &lt;~n -* ™~&#13;
g a n o n y m o u s t h r e a t e n i n g letters he&#13;
fectived. T h e first promises a sample&#13;
LORCHA COPYMGHT, /9/JZ, A C Ar?CJLl/f?G &amp;. CO.&#13;
queried, in&#13;
writer's power on a certain day.&#13;
On t h a t day the head is mysteriously cut&#13;
from a portrait of Cameron while the latter&#13;
is in the room. Clydo has a theory&#13;
t h a t the portrait was mutilated while the&#13;
room wras unoccupied and the head later&#13;
removed by m e a n s of a string, unnoticed&#13;
by Cameron. Evelyn Grayson, Cameron's&#13;
titeo.e, with whom Clyde is in love, llnds&#13;
the head of Cameron's portrait nailed to&#13;
a tree, where it was had been used a3 a&#13;
target. Clyde pledges Evelyn to secrecy.&#13;
Clyde learns t h a t a Chinese boy employed&#13;
' b y Phlletus Murphy, an artist living&#13;
nearby, had borrowed a rifle from Cameron's&#13;
lodgekeeper. Clyde makes a n excuse&#13;
to call on Murphy and is repulsed.&#13;
H e pretends to be investigating alleged&#13;
Infractions of the game laws and speaks&#13;
of finding the bowl of an opium pipe under&#13;
the tree where Cameron's portrait&#13;
w a s found. T h e Chinese boy is found&#13;
dead next morning. While visiting Cameron&#13;
in his dressing room a Nell Gwynne&#13;
mirror is mysteriously shattered.&#13;
CHAPTER VI,—Continued.&#13;
For just a moment Cameron stared&#13;
in dumb awe. When he turned to me&#13;
he appeared suddenly to have aged.&#13;
His eyes were lustreless; and his&#13;
cheeks wore 9, gray pallor.&#13;
"My God!" he murmured in 2» klntl&#13;
of breathless whisper.&#13;
I would have given a great deal to&#13;
have been able to allay that terror of&#13;
the impalpable which was gripping&#13;
him. But 1 was helpless. Shocked&#13;
and astounded, myself, solace was not&#13;
at my command. More to escape (the&#13;
piteous appeal of his silent gaze than&#13;
In hope of making discovery, I turned&#13;
in haste to one of the long windows&#13;
which onened on the outer balcony.&#13;
Drawing back the sashes and&#13;
flinging them wide, I stepped outside&#13;
and, listening, bent over the railing.&#13;
But the night was strangely still.&#13;
There was no sound, even, of stirring&#13;
leaves. A brooding hush seemed&#13;
spread over all the outdoor world—&#13;
that ominous silence which often precedes&#13;
the breaking of a storm. I&#13;
looked up to find the heavens&#13;
wrapped in a pall of Inky cloud. And&#13;
then, with a feeling of having fled&#13;
from a lesser to a greater evil, I returned&#13;
to the lighted room, and&#13;
closed the window to shut out the&#13;
horror of the night.&#13;
Cameron was standing where I had&#13;
left him He looked woefully tired&#13;
and haggard.&#13;
"Explain it!" he cried, hoarsely.&#13;
"My God, Clyde, explain it!"&#13;
"I would to Heaven I could," .was&#13;
my forlorn reply&#13;
1&#13;
CHAPTER V I I . ,&#13;
"From Sight of Men Into Torment."&#13;
* Seldom have I passed a more miserable&#13;
hour than that which followed&#13;
upon the seeming phenomenon I have&#13;
described. Cameron was nervously&#13;
in tatters and my own pdlse was&#13;
something more than threatened. The&#13;
sight of a usually brave, strong, selfcontained&#13;
person of stolidly phlegmatic&#13;
temperament transformed Into&#13;
a relaxed, nerveless, apprehensive&#13;
creature is enough of itself to try&#13;
one's fortitude, even with the most&#13;
favorable collateral conditions. And&#13;
the collateral conditions here were&#13;
quite the reverse. That which had affected&#13;
Cameron had exerted an influ*&#13;
ence upon me as well, knowing, as I&#13;
did, all the circumstances, and being&#13;
interested, as I was, in my friend's&#13;
problem. And so while his plight&#13;
tore at my heartstrings, my own inability&#13;
to grapple with the mystery&#13;
contributed an added mental distress.&#13;
To my dismay I found Cameron&#13;
quite incapable of anything approaching&#13;
a calm, common-sense discussion&#13;
of the matter, and realized to the full&#13;
the mischief which this last performance,&#13;
coming as a climax upon a&#13;
week of more or less disquietude, had&#13;
effected.&#13;
He sat most of the time with head&#13;
bent forward and knees doubled, his&#13;
toes touching the floor but his heels&#13;
raised and in constant vibrating&#13;
movement, as though stricken with&#13;
palty. The fingers of one hand toyed&#13;
Incessantly, too, with the fingers of&#13;
the other, in a variety of twisting,&#13;
snakelike involutions. In vain I endeavored&#13;
to arouse him; to stir In&#13;
him. a spirit of retaliation. Some one&#13;
warn playing tricks upon him, and that&#13;
tome one must be discovered and&#13;
ought to justice. Common sense&#13;
Id us that, however mysterious&#13;
ese happenings appeared, they&#13;
uld not have occurred ^without hum&#13;
agency. It was our task to dis-&#13;
*pver the agent and punish him. This&#13;
•'•m**' my line of, argument; but&#13;
fMiuugu It all, Cameron sat unmoved&#13;
u In*-flttresponsive.&#13;
And then there came to me again,&#13;
that unwelcome suspicion that all&#13;
eJontg he had been hiding something&#13;
from we; that he divined the cause&#13;
end tirtv^sboroe of the persecution,&#13;
hsjt far aoiae reason of his own would&#13;
s e t divulge them.&#13;
I r u g for one of the footmen and&#13;
««4f btendr brought, and forced&#13;
to swallow s stiff drtok of&#13;
| B wkjoe iTjoteed hlat Bat even&#13;
stinalAat had smaU effect *pcn&#13;
A ^ * M t i f i p » t a b l.reUsctaasJy&#13;
throned courage which followed me&#13;
home, that sleep fled me and left me&#13;
wide-eyed until the dawn.&#13;
The tidings which came to me with&#13;
my coffee that morning were more&#13;
than half expected. Cameron was ill,&#13;
and his physician had been summoned&#13;
from New York.&#13;
When I reached Cragholt the doctor&#13;
had come and gone, and a&#13;
trained nurse was in attendance.&#13;
Evelyn, meeting me in the hall, conveyed&#13;
this intelligence in a breath,&#13;
and then, laying hold upon me, a&#13;
slender hand upon each coat sleeve,&#13;
her big eyes pLea/ilng and anxious,&#13;
she ran on:&#13;
"It is shock, Dr. Massey says. Deferred&#13;
shock, he called it. He says&#13;
Uncle Robert has suffered from some&#13;
sudden grief, fright, or other dreadful&#13;
mental impression. His temperature&#13;
is way below normal and his&#13;
"You'll find out?" he&#13;
credulously.&#13;
"Yes. I'll get your mall that day,&#13;
myself. I'll tell that monument of&#13;
pomposity, your butler, Mr. Checkabeedy,&#13;
that I am to see every letter&#13;
that comes to the house and know&#13;
ho\v and by whom it is delivered. Letters&#13;
can't get here without hands, you&#13;
know."&#13;
"Other things seem to be done&#13;
without hands," was his conclusive&#13;
comment; and I had no reply for him.&#13;
Concerning Murphy and the murdered&#13;
Chinaman, Cameron did not&#13;
ask, and I was glad he did not. For&#13;
Murphy had been discharged from&#13;
custody, for lack of evidence; and&#13;
though there were some desultory efforts&#13;
making to place the blame for&#13;
the Celestial's violent taking-off, I&#13;
doubted that they would have practicable&#13;
result.&#13;
The precautions again3t surprise on&#13;
the fourteenth, which I had outlined&#13;
so briefly to Cameron, I carried out&#13;
pulse is. a. .sort of rapid feeble iiutteivjwith added detail. For instance, I instructed&#13;
Rom hey to- report-to me every&#13;
person who passed in or out of&#13;
tho gates guarded by his Lodge. I&#13;
had Kilgour, the superintendent of&#13;
the Cameron acres, Issue similar orders&#13;
to his men concerning any strangers&#13;
seen on the estate that day.&#13;
And, finally, when not fetching the&#13;
mail from the post office, myself—&#13;
and four times I made the trip—I sat&#13;
on guard in Cameron's study, waiting&#13;
and expectant.&#13;
But the day passed, it seemed,&#13;
without the looked-for incident. Every&#13;
letter, by post or by hand, which&#13;
came that day, Inside the Cragholt&#13;
limits was by mo personally Inspected,&#13;
and amongst them all there was&#13;
no one which bore the faintest resemblance&#13;
to those two baleful missives&#13;
of the two preceding fourteenths.&#13;
When I had made my last trip to&#13;
the post office, finished my final inspection,&#13;
and was almost jubilant&#13;
over the significant cessation of the&#13;
threats which, in their ultimate fulfilment&#13;
at least, had brought my friend&#13;
so close to dissolution, I made haste&#13;
to carry to Cameron the glad news.&#13;
Oddly enough, his condition In the&#13;
past forty-eight hours had materially&#13;
improved, and as Dr\ Massey attributed&#13;
this, in part at least, to the influence&#13;
exerted by my brief visit, I was&#13;
now permitted to repeat the treatment&#13;
at pleasure.&#13;
It wanted but a few minutes of&#13;
eight o'clock, and Checkabeedy&#13;
seized the occasion to inform me. as&#13;
I passed through the hall, that dinner&#13;
had been waiting for nearly a&#13;
half-hour; a fact which I knew quite&#13;
as well as he, but when I had chosen&#13;
to disregard in favor of more pressing&#13;
and important employment. Nevertheless&#13;
I had dressed before going&#13;
for the last mall, and as a moment&#13;
would suffice to assure Cameron that&#13;
all was well, I relieved the mind of&#13;
the distressed butler, by assuring him&#13;
that dinner should not wait over five&#13;
minutes ldnger, so far as I was concerned.&#13;
A very light tap on the chamber&#13;
door was answered by Miss Collins,&#13;
who came out into the passage and&#13;
closed the door behind her.&#13;
"I fear it is not advisable for you&#13;
to see him, now, Mr. Clyde," she&#13;
said. "He has suddenly had a return&#13;
of some of his worst symptoms, and&#13;
I am sure Dr. Massey would object&#13;
to his being at all excited."&#13;
"But I shan't excite him," I expained.&#13;
"I have the very best of r:ews&#13;
for him. It is his anxiety over a certain&#13;
matter, no doubt, "which has&#13;
brought about the symptoms you&#13;
speak of. I know I can relieve his&#13;
mind, which I have reason to believe&#13;
has been all day under an unusual&#13;
strain."&#13;
But still this efficient-looking:,&#13;
white-clad woman was not wholly&#13;
convinced.&#13;
"It must be only for a minute then,'&#13;
she finally allowed. "You can po la&#13;
alone. But at the end of Bixty seconds,"&#13;
she added, as she glanced at&#13;
the little gold w*»-t.ch she wore pinned&#13;
to her spotless waist, "I shall Interrupt&#13;
you; and then you must leave."&#13;
Yielding, perforce, to her condition,&#13;
I entered. And BB I did so, Cameron&#13;
half rose on his elbow, regarding me&#13;
with what I thought was anxiety for&#13;
my report.&#13;
"It's all right," I said, quietly. "All&#13;
right. Not so much as a line from&#13;
the enemy. They have withdrawn,&#13;
just as I—"&#13;
But he interrupted me.&#13;
"Here, quick!" he was saying. ' T a k e&#13;
this!" And I saw then that one hand&#13;
was drawing something from beneath&#13;
his pillow. The next moment he had&#13;
given me a long envelope of that thin,&#13;
waxy texture 1 had learned to loathe.&#13;
For a heartbeat I stood appalled.&#13;
transfixed.&#13;
"Quick!" be insisted, excitedly.&#13;
"Open ttt Read it! Shell not leave&#13;
us long and I most know its contents."&#13;
"Bat how—'" I began, as I tore the&#13;
Oh, do tell mo what you. know about&#13;
it. What shock has he had? You&#13;
were with him last evening. He was&#13;
gay enough when you and he went&#13;
from the music room. What happened&#13;
afterward?"&#13;
Caressingly I rested my palms upon&#13;
hej shoulders.&#13;
"My dear little girl," I satd, soothingly.&#13;
"1 am sorry I can't satisfy&#13;
your very natural curiosity."&#13;
"But it isn't curiosity," she corrected,&#13;
promptly. "It's interest."&#13;
"Well, interest then. I'm sorry, I&#13;
say. Something did happen; but to&#13;
tell you just what it was, and why it&#13;
was a shock to him, I am not able.&#13;
Not now, at least. Maybe, some day,&#13;
you'll know all about it."&#13;
There never was a more reasonable&#13;
young person than Evelyn Grayson.&#13;
Most girls, I fancy, would have teased&#13;
and grown peevish at being denied.&#13;
But she seemed to understand.&#13;
"Do you want to see uncle?" she&#13;
asked me.&#13;
"I don't believe it would be wise,"&#13;
I answered. "Probably I, being a&#13;
reminder, might do him harm. Tell&#13;
me how he seems? He isn't unconscious?"&#13;
"No. He answers questions. But&#13;
he never says anything for himself.&#13;
And, Philip, he looks --so-pincired and&#13;
old and pale! And his hands are so&#13;
cold. The nurse has taken away his&#13;
pillows and raised his feet, and—&#13;
It's gruesome, that's the only word&#13;
that describes it."&#13;
"But he'll soon be better? The&#13;
doctor said that, didn't he?"&#13;
"Yes. He said that."&#13;
But the reaction which usually follows&#13;
shock was only partial In Cameron's&#13;
case, and for days his life was&#13;
in danger. Then followed a period of&#13;
slow, general recovery.&#13;
As the month of October progressed&#13;
I feared the liability to relapse.&#13;
I knew, instinctively, with&#13;
what dread sensations he must be&#13;
awaiting the fourteenth of the month.&#13;
He had been forbidden, of course, to&#13;
receive any mall, just as he had&#13;
been denied visitors; but I felt that&#13;
in an uncertainty that must of necessity&#13;
prove injurious. And so I took&#13;
Dr. Massey, in a measure, into my&#13;
confidence, and gained from him permission&#13;
to see Cameron for a brief&#13;
moment.&#13;
"He has been asking for you," the&#13;
physician informed me, "but I fancied&#13;
it better to make no exceptions.&#13;
Now, however, I see that you may be&#13;
a help instead of a hindrance."&#13;
Despite the more or less circumstantial&#13;
reports as to his condition&#13;
and appearance which had filtered to&#13;
me from the sick room, through the&#13;
medium of Evelyn, Miss Collins, the&#13;
nurse, and Dr. Massey and his assistant,&#13;
Dr. Thome, I was not altogether&#13;
prepared for the marked change&#13;
which less than three weeks had&#13;
wrought in my friend. He was peaked&#13;
and bloodless and tired and old. And&#13;
his voice was little more than a whisper.&#13;
He made a brave effort to smile, as&#13;
I came in, but it resulted In a sad&#13;
grimacing failure. I lifted one of his&#13;
thin, clammy hands which lay inert&#13;
on the coverlid, but it gave me only&#13;
the feeblest answering pressure.&#13;
"I'm so glad you're better," I told&#13;
him, cheerily. "Fancy the doctor allowing&#13;
me to see you! That shows&#13;
what he thinks."&#13;
"Yes," he whispered, "I'm coming&#13;
round, slowly. And I wanted to see&#13;
you, Clyde. What day of the month&#13;
li this?"&#13;
"The twelfth."&#13;
"pay after tomorrow, it will come,"&#13;
be said.&#13;
"Don't be too sure," I replied. "I&#13;
think they've done about enough to&#13;
satisfy any ordinary villains."&#13;
He was silent for a moment. Then,&#13;
with lust the faintest turn, of his head&#13;
from side to side, he said:&#13;
"Bat they axe not ordinary villains."&#13;
"Well," •ball find 1o usta idho, w" ifI tI tg odto ehs erceo;n ea,n dI Lend of the •ttvelope.&#13;
Ibxt wia b*,% step towards b f t o t W ""^ ' ' *~&#13;
P • &gt; t&#13;
•XJod knows." be answered, before&#13;
I had put my question into words. "1&#13;
/&#13;
had been dozing; about an hour ago.&#13;
I stretched out my hand, unconsciously,&#13;
and that lay beneath It, on the&#13;
counterpane. It crackled as I touched&#13;
[ it; and I knew then, even before I&#13;
recognized the feel of it."&#13;
Sixty seconds! Was there ever such&#13;
an interminable period? Sixty long&#13;
seconds before that door would "open&#13;
with the interruption that would&#13;
spare me. I fumbled with the devilish&#13;
paper; let it slip through my&#13;
fingers; tore a bit here and a bit&#13;
there; finished the tearing; and then,&#13;
dissembling, begun tearing the other&#13;
end. And still the seconds lagged;&#13;
still the door remained stationary.&#13;
"My God, Clyde!" Cameron cried,&#13;
in a frenzy of impatience. "What's&#13;
the matter with you tonight? Are&#13;
you never going to get that thing&#13;
open?"&#13;
And then I, desperate, too, with&#13;
eyes fixed imploringly on the door,&#13;
was about to answer him with the&#13;
truth—that I did not want to open It;&#13;
] that_I would not* could, not read_the&#13;
contents; that he must wait and trust&#13;
me, absolutely—when, quite without&#13;
design on my part, the envelope fell&#13;
to the rug at my feet. And as I&#13;
stooped to recover it, I heard the doorknob&#13;
'..turn.&#13;
^/hen I regained the upright, Miss&#13;
! Collins was entering, and the letter&#13;
was in the pocket of my dinner jacket.&#13;
"And so you see, Cameron," I said,&#13;
speaking distinctly and with double&#13;
purpose, the nurse being in ear-shot,&#13;
"everything is quite right. The matter&#13;
you spoke of shall be attended to,&#13;
at once, and I'll report to you, tonight—&#13;
before ten o'clock, surely."&#13;
The reproach in his eyes stung me,&#13;
and the pain of it followed me from&#13;
the room and stabbed me at intervals&#13;
during dinner. And yet it was&#13;
not the part of sanity to have acted&#13;
otherwise than 1 did. The temptation&#13;
had occurred to me to invent&#13;
phrases and sentences expressive of&#13;
satisfaction over the effort of the&#13;
previous communications. But 1&#13;
doubted that, in my agitation, I&#13;
should be successful In the deception.&#13;
And so, my only course had been delay—&#13;
stupid, bungling, palpable delay&#13;
It was, I suppose, but after all it had&#13;
served; and, though it left Cameron&#13;
in doubt^-it gave me-time and opportunity&#13;
to arrange some plan for extracting&#13;
the fangs of this epistolary&#13;
adder before It could strike its prey.&#13;
Purposely I delayed reading the letter,&#13;
myself, until after I had dined. I&#13;
chose uncertainty as to its contents&#13;
as less likely noticeably to affect my&#13;
demeanor than an exact knowledge of&#13;
the minatosy message which I felt&#13;
sure It carried.&#13;
I think I fancied I should be able&#13;
to conceal my real state of mind. Certainly&#13;
I willed to do BO. But I was&#13;
very soon conscious that Evelyn had&#13;
divined my dissimulation Her eyes&#13;
became suddenly grave and question;&#13;
ing, her laughter quieted, and her conversation,&#13;
which hod been glad and&#13;
gay, relapsed abruptly into the serious.&#13;
When the coffee and liqueurs&#13;
had been brought on, Mrs. Lancaster&#13;
asked to bo excused, and left us&#13;
alone together&#13;
There followed then a moment of&#13;
silence between us, while I selected&#13;
a cigarette and lighted it. She had&#13;
edged her chair a little closer to me&#13;
—she was sitting on my right, as usual—&#13;
and leaned forward, her slender&#13;
but divinely rounded forearms extended&#13;
across the shining damask of&#13;
tho tablecloth.'&#13;
As I dropped my match upon the&#13;
tiny silver tray which the inimitable&#13;
Checkabeedy had placed conveniently&#13;
at my elbow I turned to her and&#13;
saw her question in her imploring&#13;
gaze and attitude even before she&#13;
voiced it.&#13;
"Tell m e ! " was what she said. And&#13;
although I knew that she would demand&#13;
it I was unprepared. To gain&#13;
time rather than information I bade&#13;
her be more explicit&#13;
"Everything," she pursued, inclusively,&#13;
with a peremptory emphasis&#13;
which indicated her determination not&#13;
to be denied.&#13;
My hesitation resulted in some amplification&#13;
on her part. She was impatient&#13;
as well as resolved, and resented&#13;
what she interpreted as my reluctance&#13;
to gratify her.&#13;
"Everything," she repeated. "Everything&#13;
that you have been hiding&#13;
from me from the firsr. I am entitled&#13;
to know. What about the head that&#13;
was cut from the portrait? What was&#13;
It that caused the Bhocks which&#13;
brought on Uncle Robert's lllncfea?&#13;
Why did you go for the mall four&#13;
times today, and sit all the rest of the&#13;
time in Uncle Robert's study? What&#13;
has. happened to make him worse&#13;
this afternoon? What is troubling&#13;
you, now? I'm not a child, I'm a&#13;
woman, and"T refu'e to be kept in ignorance&#13;
any longer&#13;
She was glorious as she thus formulated&#13;
her demands, V r cheeks&#13;
blazing, her eye*., brilliant, her voice&#13;
a crescendo, She must have seen m»&#13;
admiration Certainly 1 made no attempt&#13;
to hide it; and before the had&#13;
quite finished 1 had possessed myseJT&#13;
of her, clasped handB, and was bestowing&#13;
upon tham an applauding pressure.&#13;
AnJ fcor argument prevailed. She&#13;
knew too much not to know more.&#13;
Cameron 3 wishes in the matter could&#13;
no longer fre regarded. Just how&#13;
tactfully I managed the disclosure, it&#13;
is not for m.» to Judge. Perhaps I&#13;
told more than I should. Possibly I&#13;
revealed too little. I was guided solely&#13;
by the wish not to alarm her, unduly.&#13;
And yet, as nearly every feature&#13;
of tho affair was of necessity&#13;
STATE NEWS&#13;
IN BRIEF&#13;
Grand Rapids.—Frank C. Hesley,&#13;
formerly a rural mail carrier of&#13;
Rapid City, pleaded guilty in United&#13;
States district court here to a charge,&#13;
of embezzling money orders aggregating&#13;
$81.72. He was fined $3,400. James&#13;
C. Chase, former postmaster at Noralarming,&#13;
it became a vexing problem , wood, pleaded guilty to tho embezzle- m e n t Qf m o r d e r 3 u g g r e g a l U l g&#13;
as to what to lucnide-autj *^vliat i0&#13;
X&#13;
omit. ,&#13;
Eventually Bhe heard thev"wUgl©&#13;
story, every phuse of it. And so it IV&#13;
not altogether clear In my memory&#13;
how much I conveyed that night and&#13;
how much was left for me to add ten&#13;
days later.&#13;
There is no question, however, regarding&#13;
that third letter which had&#13;
been so mysteriously received that&#13;
day. I drew it from the envelope,&#13;
there, at the table, and we read it together,&#13;
by the light or the pink-shaded&#13;
candles; our chairs touching uml&#13;
her cool little left hand clasped hard&#13;
in my sinewy right.&#13;
As I spread the sheet that sinister&#13;
appearing black daub at. the bottom&#13;
smote me with a sense of ill as acutely&#13;
poignant as a rapier thrust, and&#13;
the heavy, regular, upright chirog- . l f t „ r n „ v Hi-it&#13;
raphv, with its odd f's and p's, so | cas. widow of a iormer attorney that&#13;
awesomely familiar, was scarcely (less ! she poisoned her boarder, Mrs I au-&#13;
¢618.89. He was fined the amount of&#13;
his embezzlement, which he paid. Arthur&#13;
Holmes of Kalamazoo confessed&#13;
t^j sending an obscene letter through&#13;
the-mails and fined $100.&#13;
Cadillac. -Hecause they stole five,&#13;
cartridges, Mack Nvatz, a Russian&#13;
Pole living several miles from&#13;
Jlarrletta, locked his son of eight&#13;
years and his daughter of nine in a&#13;
corncrib and allowed them to remain&#13;
there two nights with the mercury&#13;
hoveriug about the zero mark, Judge&#13;
Dunham had Evatz brought before&#13;
him and still has under advisement&#13;
the question of punishment for his inhuman&#13;
act toward his own offspring.&#13;
Lausing.--The alleged confession&#13;
in jail here of Mrs. -Mary Ludisturbing,&#13;
Silently the girl and I ran through&#13;
the dozen lines.&#13;
Like its two predecessors the letter&#13;
began with the sentence:&#13;
"That which you have wrought&#13;
shall In turn be wrought upon you."&#13;
line Fingel, caused the officers to mako&#13;
an extensive investigation in the Lucas&#13;
homo for possible evidence in tho&#13;
disappearance of Carl Mi 11 ere, a Lansing&#13;
contractor, who was last seen in&#13;
! the Lucas home here a little more&#13;
than a year ago.&#13;
No longer could this be regarded as j —&#13;
[..Idle boasting, It had. become an edict I Pay City.—Alexander Lazeski, eighof&#13;
grave significance. And what fol- [teen years old,- was drowned iu&#13;
lowed only emphasized the proven ! the Kawkawlin river. The young&#13;
force behind thi3 series of singular man attempted to cross on the ice&#13;
communications. near his home, two miles northwest&#13;
"All having been performed as fore- of Kawkawlin. A neighbor saw him&#13;
told, our power is demonstrated." | break through the Ice, but could not&#13;
Then, simply, almost crudely, but ' Ret to him in time to rescue him. The&#13;
of horrid poignancy, ran the words: ' body was recovered about two hours&#13;
"Know then, that before the morn- , later,&#13;
ing of the Eighth Day hence, as passed | —&#13;
the face from the portrait, as passed | Algonac—William Lecroix and four&#13;
the reflection from the mirror, BO Indians had to take to the icy&#13;
you, physically, will pass from sight water to escupe being burned&#13;
of men into torment.", I when a tank on the former's launch&#13;
As I read my breath caught in my ] Nonpareil burst and 40 gallons of&#13;
throat and my pulses paused, Evelyn , gasoline ignited. The accident bappressed&#13;
closer to my side, and I felt&#13;
her shiver as with cold. The final&#13;
words, solemn, admonitory, priestllko,&#13;
were these:&#13;
"Say not Heaven is high above!&#13;
Heaven ascends and descends about&#13;
our deeds, daily inspecting us, wheresoever&#13;
we are.''&#13;
pened when the launch was nearlng&#13;
the shore of Walpolo island and was&#13;
in shallow water. The boat was completely&#13;
destroyed.&#13;
Yp;silantl.—The dwelling house of&#13;
Mayor Frank A. Norton burned&#13;
to the ground with all its con-&#13;
Instantly she turned to mo, and I ' tents. Mayor Norton and his family&#13;
saw there were tenrs on her cheeks,&#13;
and that her long dark lashes were&#13;
wet.&#13;
"You cannot tell him this, Philip,"&#13;
she said, her voice low but unfaltering.&#13;
"No," I replied, "I cannot tell him.&#13;
In his present condition, it might be&#13;
fatal."&#13;
"And now he must get well," she&#13;
declared, with decision. "He must be&#13;
well enough In a few days to be&#13;
moved. He shall not stop in thl3&#13;
house any longer. Ho shall go where&#13;
he can be protected, and these fiends,&#13;
whoever they are, cannot:, or will not&#13;
dare to follow."&#13;
As she Bpoke an Inspiration came&#13;
to me.&#13;
"The yacht," I said.&#13;
Impulsively she laid hold upon my&#13;
arm, in a way she had.&#13;
"The Sibylla," she agreed, delightedly.&#13;
"Of course. It will do everything&#13;
for him,"&#13;
"Rut What am I to tell him about&#13;
this?" I asked, in perplexity*&#13;
For a second she was thoughtful.&#13;
"We couldn't imitate the writing,&#13;
could we?" she asked.&#13;
"Oh, yes," I answered. "We could.&#13;
I think-I'd even guarantee to reproduce&#13;
that hideous black thing, but—"&#13;
"But what?"&#13;
"We can't imitate the paper The&#13;
paper is as characteristic as any of&#13;
the other features, if not Indeed more&#13;
so. And he knows that paper."&#13;
"Then you must just lie to him,"&#13;
she decided. "You must tell him the&#13;
envelope was empty; and you must&#13;
make him believe it "&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
Original Psnamarta.&#13;
The Chocos Indians, who live on th«-&#13;
southwestern coast of Panama, are believed&#13;
to be descendants of the tribes&#13;
which inhabited that part of the world&#13;
when Columbus discovered Santo Domingo&#13;
They are tall and stalwart, with&#13;
kindly natures, a free hospitality and&#13;
an innate honesty. Few white men&#13;
have e v r been among them. Tribes of&#13;
a somewhat similar nature are also&#13;
found on the southeast coast, many of&#13;
them having never seen a white face&#13;
in their lives While the republic of&#13;
Panama nominally rules this section,&#13;
the truth is that these Indians govern&#13;
themselves entirely, and have absolutely&#13;
no intercourse with the white They&#13;
do not allow a white man to visit their&#13;
lands and still fly tbe Colombian Hag.&#13;
Their houses are grass huta, th*t*k&#13;
clothing is almost* nothfr.fe, K i they&#13;
seem to enjoy life in Bpl*c cf the fact&#13;
that they are uaft^aainted with the&#13;
benefits of T*5igion, fashion, society&#13;
and government.&#13;
Kouie Plans Important.&#13;
The care of food In lb a home and&#13;
all other forms of houtehold work are&#13;
gTeatTy facilitated oy right piatminf&#13;
and then the use of suitable materials&#13;
for the construction and furnishing of&#13;
the home. An adequate and convenient&#13;
water supply and other conveniences&#13;
are essential, not only for&#13;
comfort and for saving labor, but also&#13;
from the eUadroiat of hone hygiene.&#13;
were awakened Just in time to escape&#13;
with their liven and a few clothes Tho&#13;
loss which is partially covered by insurance,&#13;
will roach between $3,000 and&#13;
$4,000.&#13;
Marshall.—Charles MeCumber, Pattie&#13;
Creek druggist, charged with&#13;
violating the liquor law, was found&#13;
f guilty by a circuit court jury.&#13;
The case will be appealed to the supreme&#13;
court. Motion for a etuy of&#13;
sentence was granted until the appeal&#13;
can be heard.&#13;
Chesaning.—While hunting rabbity&#13;
in the outskirts of town Max&#13;
Judge, sixteen-year-old non of Hurt&#13;
Judge, was shot in the right hip by a&#13;
small rifle in the hands of a companion,&#13;
tho gun being accidentally discharged.&#13;
The wounded boy will recover.&#13;
Coldwntrr.—Miss Angle Pratt, seventy&#13;
years old, was found dead&#13;
In her bed. Heart failure is given&#13;
as the c;im&lt;e She had lived hero&#13;
all her life and leaves one sister, Mrs.&#13;
Julia P.rnoks, in Detroit,&#13;
Kalarvn 00.—Pev. N*. J. Peterson,&#13;
pastor of the Portage Street&#13;
Haptlfit church, has received a cab to&#13;
the Ponson Avenue Haptlst church In&#13;
Omaha, N&lt; b He says he will nccept.&#13;
He has been here for four years&#13;
Kalamazoo.—When one of the bunk&#13;
wagons used bv the prison road&#13;
gang caught fire Arthur Thomas&#13;
and Curt Miller hud a narrow ..seapo&#13;
from burning to death An oil stovo&#13;
turned over and almost Immediately&#13;
the entire structure was on fire. It&#13;
was with difficulty thnt the men in it&#13;
made their ev&lt;:;ppo through the ffnmes,&#13;
Poth were slightly burned&#13;
Kalamazoo—Although he worked&#13;
In the kitchen of a hotel to&#13;
pay for hif- room and bonrd while at-&#13;
•endlnp school here, f?uss' II rtyrun&#13;
has pone fcr °0 days without food Bynin&#13;
had stomach trouble and he believed&#13;
that by fnMing he could cure&#13;
himself His Indi^r-f-.tlon hap dlsapririj.&#13;
red.&#13;
St. .Joseph.-••Charles Warren, convicted&#13;
of attempting to kill his&#13;
mother-in-law, and. who told t h e&#13;
•urv he "only "h^ &gt;o scarp h''f was&#13;
1 entenced to ,Inrk"on nrlson for two*&#13;
O ten, years Nick n "ltnil 01' NUes,&#13;
who killed an Arkr&#13;
itrhtlng with him. wo&#13;
fifteen yearB&#13;
« youth white&#13;
iven from ffve&#13;
Kalamazoo. - - Ka!amazoo officers&#13;
were amajrd when they learned&#13;
that "Whitey" Pli-ck, known also as&#13;
Whltey" ' r e v m , would secure his&#13;
releasa from the nRylum for criminal&#13;
isano at loni;&gt;. ' b c k was sent n p to&#13;
from thi* d t y 15&#13;
:ne in robbing the&#13;
Inck ' played the&#13;
tho dlchland robbery.&#13;
It wan Black who stood in the&#13;
Tiddl*- of the street shooting at anyone&#13;
whipt'tpptarr^ nnd at people a*&#13;
they looked oat c the windows afte&gt;&#13;
I 'he exr&gt;&lt; t'v'" tn the hank '00k platttv&#13;
Msre.uptie pti"o-&#13;
: i" . "0 ' r -&#13;
'icbland b*nk&#13;
icet dartre pi-&#13;
. ^ ,&#13;
';'&amp;*.**&amp;*&amp;¥ • w&amp; _ 2 y* 'Jut:' '• J.....&#13;
^g?... ^ ¾ •-^S^'&#13;
»&amp;VV',&gt;;-C-'..',&#13;
M * * , * i ' . -'4". •• • . n • "&#13;
f ' v ; ) •' V ' '• r' • ' V '&#13;
l:&gt;M\i#.-.'* • . • , &gt;•&#13;
' ' ' ' • • ' • ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ : \ n&#13;
• . •»• ; W • j * .• . - . ,&#13;
'fa r\&#13;
•Q Hm • §m ''WfW mw tmm\&gt;m &lt;n»i&lt;&gt; pl»i M « i&#13;
1.- /.«.•''&#13;
ST&#13;
fv; t/ •&#13;
,y&#13;
H&#13;
•) K&#13;
• i &gt;&lt;•&#13;
I' C&#13;
V&#13;
If&#13;
tv&#13;
A I:&#13;
#&#13;
k •*»»»..&#13;
:^-..^1.-:,... Visit our store&#13;
Friday or Saturday&#13;
and look&#13;
over our large&#13;
stock of Xmas&#13;
Gifts.&#13;
W. J. Dancer &amp; Company&#13;
S t o c k b r i d g e , M i c h .&#13;
. 0~&#13;
wmiiiioi,&#13;
Rev. A. E. Miller and Prof.&#13;
Obeak are haying good success&#13;
with their meetings at the church.&#13;
Evening meetings wiiHcoutraue&#13;
this week and perhaps longer.&#13;
F. Wilson and family will move&#13;
toOwosso thib week.&#13;
Joseph Williams has purchased&#13;
the farm vacated by F. Wilson.&#13;
Miss Ret tie Collins is spending&#13;
a few weeks at the home of Mrs.&#13;
John White.&#13;
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. John&#13;
Wylie, a son.&#13;
School' clised for one week.&#13;
l*he teacher. Miss McCollum will&#13;
spend the week with friends in&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
8 , W. Plummer called on&#13;
frieodB in Fowlerville the first of&#13;
the week.&#13;
H B f l FUTHUL&#13;
M r. and Mrs. ElmerJGlenn were&#13;
in Ann Arbor Saturday.&#13;
Walter Collins of Marion visited&#13;
at the home of John Ohalker&#13;
several days last week.&#13;
Miss Martha Murphy of Marine&#13;
City is home for the holidays.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Lei and and&#13;
daughter Carmen were in Jackson&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Harry Isham and wife entertained&#13;
their cousin George Bullard&#13;
of South Lyon a portion of&#13;
last week.&#13;
Mrs. Patrick Kennedy was a&#13;
Howell visitor one day this week.&#13;
ANNUAL MEETING&#13;
The Annuak meeting of the&#13;
Livingston County Mutual Fire&#13;
Insurance Company, for the election&#13;
of officers and for the tranof&#13;
such other business as may legally&#13;
come before it will be held&#13;
at the court boose in the village&#13;
of Howell, in said county, on&#13;
Tuesday the 7th. Day of January,&#13;
A. D. 1913 at 1:00 o'clock p. m.&#13;
Dated Howell, Mich. December&#13;
16 1912. W. J. Larkio, Secretary&#13;
' % , : •&#13;
V\&#13;
BA :&#13;
J as. Smith was a Jackson visitor&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Roy Merrill of Hamburg visited&#13;
friends here Sunday.&#13;
Howell is takeing steps to establish&#13;
a county fair there.&#13;
C. J. Teeple visited friends and&#13;
relatives in Howell Monday.&#13;
C. Lynch spent the past week&#13;
with relatives in Syracuse, N. Y.&#13;
F, 6. Jackson and son, Harry&#13;
were Stock bridge callers Saturday.&#13;
Glen Gardner of Stockbridge&#13;
spent the fore part of the week&#13;
here.&#13;
E. Farnam has a force of&#13;
women picking and preparing&#13;
turkeys for shipment.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. F. Courtney of&#13;
Dexter viai ted at the home of Mrs.&#13;
Mary Eagen Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Gregory Devereanz and&#13;
Miss Joie Devereaux were Jackson&#13;
callers Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Claude Dan forth of Saginaw&#13;
is visiting at the home of her&#13;
mother, Mrs. Emma Moran.&#13;
Miss Martha Murphy of Marine&#13;
City is visiting at the home of&#13;
her pareuts, Mr. and Mrs. Wm,&#13;
Murphy.&#13;
Mrs. Elmer Book of Gregory&#13;
visited at the home of her daugh*&#13;
ter, Mrs. A. H. Gilchrist the lat&#13;
ter part of last week.&#13;
L. E. Howlett, Hugh McPheraon&#13;
and E. J. Drewery of Howell&#13;
attended the Masonic banquet and&#13;
school of instruction Monday.&#13;
The North Hamburg men will&#13;
pull off their annual oyster supper&#13;
Saturday evening, Dec. 21, at&#13;
the home of Clyde Dunning. An&#13;
apron sale will be held and a&#13;
Friendship quilt will be disposed&#13;
of. All are cordially invited.&#13;
We have received a copy of the&#13;
S ' &amp; ' ^ ^ l J ^ . ^ r S &amp; f f S i S ! ! " 8 ' ' , 1 ? 1 2 ' " 1 ! "&gt;«P o ' Michigan&#13;
» % u J i a i ^ , ? S 5 , ^ u S ? S S b 2 ! P L&#13;
n b l » h e d b 7 W. Wangersheim of&#13;
U&amp;UttlRttL'SSn ,h# s,Bndard ^ P °°" a86-131&#13;
EDWABD u BCHLIMMKB, Dwwd West Ohio street, Chicago. This&#13;
fcS2iiKl^^^i1Sw^.^Sffi map is the latest of the state and&#13;
SSL*-^,** P***4 * w«M«li or t« lost „k«— «11 *vA .ww* ~aMAA - « J&#13;
Ttl*ord*rWtm the lOUi day of Juaarr, A. a. I t i t j i Urn o'clock la too fonaoon, at MM protart*&#13;
oflw, to Md ia bwoby appoint** for&#13;
fcoarUWMdd pttttloa*&#13;
ZljitertlMrordarad OtttpnbUo aotle* tk«no&lt;&#13;
•TpabUoatlMof a oopj of thU er4»r&#13;
Mooaaalva waaks pnvtou toaaldday of&#13;
, ia.UM P t t o m t DUMCK, a aawapapar&#13;
aMdroaUtadinaaM ooaaty. M t i&#13;
I»c4«l A d v e r t U f n i&#13;
| : i. far Sale !&#13;
Hotel Tuomey&#13;
%Nt Brtttr^Or Trade!&#13;
• i - • - •.-• , • ••&#13;
Wbat have yon got 7&#13;
'''' , * •&#13;
Lock Bo» 4% Brishtaiw&#13;
shows all the post offices and&#13;
towns established up to date. It&#13;
is well printed, colored by hand&#13;
and fully indexed. By mail to&#13;
introduos 60c. Agents wanted.&#13;
Write to the Standard Map Co.&#13;
125-181W. Ohio Street, Chicago.&#13;
The Masons were preparing for&#13;
their banquet Monday evening&#13;
when about 8 o'clock in celebration&#13;
of the event, the gasoline&#13;
stove unexpectedly exploded.&#13;
Some of Pinokney's enterprising&#13;
citiions came to the reeene with •&#13;
tack of Hoyt's Punty Flour which&#13;
with a small amount of water waa&#13;
en^etivwin-cmenohlng the" flames^&#13;
ttam obeara for Purity Flour,&#13;
which may be used aaa i r e extingttWwf&#13;
or to make the finest&#13;
oakea, pies and bread you ever&#13;
at*. I f s handy, to have aioond&#13;
Wm. Gawley was in Howell on&#13;
business Monday.&#13;
Wirt Barton of Dmrand was in&#13;
town the first of the week.&#13;
Fred Bowman spent last Friday&#13;
and Saturday with relatives in&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
C fl. Stannard of Dexter was&#13;
in town one day the latter part ol&#13;
last week.&#13;
Vera and Xrma Isham of North&#13;
Lake spent Sunday at the home&#13;
of J. C. Parker.&#13;
Mark Swarthoat and wife spent&#13;
laot week visiting friends and relatives&#13;
in Detroit and Arbor Beach.&#13;
Mrs. Cbas. Bowman who has&#13;
been spending some time at the&#13;
home of her son, Fred, has gone&#13;
to Detroit to reside.&#13;
Wouldn't a packagae of calling&#13;
cards make a nice Christmas gift&#13;
for mother or sister?. And while&#13;
you are thinking of it father would&#13;
appreciate a package of neatly&#13;
printed business cards or business&#13;
stationary. The Dispatch is well&#13;
outfitted to properly care for your&#13;
wants in this line. Place an order&#13;
now.&#13;
Leap Year Parly&#13;
Hold fast to your hearts fellows,&#13;
The enterprising Junior girls&#13;
of the Pinckney High- School in&#13;
behalf of themselves and the rest&#13;
of their Bisterhood are planning&#13;
on catching you yet. Friday evening,&#13;
December 27 has been d e -&#13;
cided upon as the fatal day. Tour&#13;
hearts will be on sale for 11.00 a&#13;
bid including all you want to eat.&#13;
Fischers orchestra of Ann Arbor&#13;
will be in attendance at your&#13;
funeral. Put on your best bib&#13;
and tucker boys or you may be&#13;
overlooked by some fair young&#13;
miss who desires to eHCort you to&#13;
the last Leap Year party of the&#13;
season.&#13;
School Notes&#13;
Margaret MeCluskey has returned&#13;
to sahool after several days&#13;
illness.&#13;
Esther Barton is still on the&#13;
sick list.&#13;
The Seniors are very hilarous&#13;
since their trip to Plain field December&#13;
13 and are now talking of&#13;
purchasing class pins.&#13;
Carmen Leland was in Jackson&#13;
last Tuesday.&#13;
Lottie Blades and Edward Van&#13;
Horn were in Ann Arbor Saturday.&#13;
All Grades are looking forward&#13;
to the Christmas vacation.&#13;
The Misses Helen and Florence&#13;
Reason and Mary Lynch visited&#13;
school Tuesday p. m.&#13;
The Juniors will hold a Leap&#13;
Tear Party at tho Opera House&#13;
Friday evening, December 27.&#13;
Bill 11.00.&#13;
Masonic Deions&#13;
A Masonic school of instruction&#13;
was held Monday evening by P.&#13;
O. Gilbert, G. 8. in the lodge&#13;
room in this village. A number&#13;
of visiting members were in attendance&#13;
from Howell, Stockbridge&#13;
and South Lyon.&#13;
At eleven o'clock they repaired&#13;
to the opera house where a bounteous&#13;
repast was served by the O.&#13;
E. 8- Geo. W. Teeple acted as&#13;
toastmaster and several brothers&#13;
responded to his call.&#13;
At the regular communication&#13;
of Livingston Lodge No. 76 F. k&#13;
A. M„ held Deo. 17, the following&#13;
officers were elected for the en*&#13;
suing year.&#13;
John B. Martin, W. M.&#13;
Aubrey H. Gilohrist, a W.&#13;
Bote T. Bead, J. W.&#13;
Hugh D. McDougall, Seo'y.&#13;
George W. Teeple, Trees.&#13;
Marion Reason, S. D.&#13;
E. J. Briggi, h 0 .&#13;
Fred Lake I&#13;
J Stewards&#13;
Will Docking )&#13;
C. V. VanWinkle, Tyler.&#13;
George Onxy, lUrehatt.&#13;
wssBmsBBBammmmmaam-&#13;
He Wanted a Change.&#13;
One Clevelander was explaining to&#13;
another, the other day. all the fact*&#13;
about the theory of. reincarnation,&#13;
metempsychosis and all that stuff.&#13;
"That's silly dope," announced the&#13;
matt who waB being educated. "No,&#13;
air—I will never fall for that kind of&#13;
theory. How can I?"&#13;
"ft Is a beautiful thought to me!"&#13;
insisted the teacher.&#13;
"Well, it ain't to me. I can't believe&#13;
that I may be a pig ia my next&#13;
life.-&#13;
"Why can't you 7 Do you shudder at&#13;
the monotony of it?"&#13;
Severe, but Neoeaaary.&#13;
"I'm glad you're getting the better&#13;
of your laryngitis, old chap. Is it true&#13;
that the doctor had to operate on&#13;
you?" _&#13;
"He thought ho had to anyway,&#13;
blame him! Ho cut out my dgaroota!"&#13;
•deling the craving coming on,&#13;
again, he reached for another slab of&#13;
chewing gum.&#13;
A Question.&#13;
Clerk (to woman who has fingered&#13;
over everything in the store without&#13;
buying anything)-—Excuse me, mad*&#13;
am, but are you shopping here?&#13;
Customer—Certainly. What would&#13;
I be doing?&#13;
Clerk—1 thought perhaps you might&#13;
bo taking an Inventory.—Woman's&#13;
Home Companion.&#13;
A Praotioal Suggestion.&#13;
"Whatever are we going to do with&#13;
nine chafing dishes?" exclaimed the&#13;
bride when she and the groom had&#13;
at last bean permitted to look at the&#13;
presents.&#13;
"We might exchange two or three of&#13;
them for a couple of sktUots and perhaps&#13;
trade the rest in on a sack of&#13;
tour and a peok of potatoes."&#13;
Hick's Almanac For 1913&#13;
The. Rev. Irl R. Hicks Almanae&#13;
for 19i3 is now ready. It is the&#13;
most splendid number of this pop.&#13;
uiar hook ever printed. It's value&#13;
has been more than ever proven&#13;
by uemarkable fulfillment of its&#13;
storatv weather and earthquake&#13;
forecasts this year. Prsf Hicks&#13;
justly merits the confidence and&#13;
support of all the people. Don't&#13;
fail to se*3 35c for his 1913 Almanac,&#13;
or only 11.00 for his Bplendid&#13;
Magazine and Almauac for&#13;
one year. The best one dollar investment&#13;
in any business or home.&#13;
Send to Word and Works Publishing&#13;
Company, 3401 Franklin&#13;
Ave., St. Loais, Mo.&#13;
.«* r-&#13;
How's This?&#13;
We offer $100 Reward for any. case&#13;
of Catarrb that cannot be cured by-&#13;
Hairs Catarrh Core.&#13;
F. Ju CHENEY &amp; CO., ToledoO.&#13;
We, the undersigned, bnvj known&#13;
F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and&#13;
believe him perfectly honorable in all&#13;
business transactions and financially&#13;
able to carry oot any obligation* mads&#13;
by bis firm.&#13;
Waldiug, Kionan &amp; Marvin,&#13;
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.&#13;
Hall'» Catarrh Care is taken internally,&#13;
acting directly upon the blood&#13;
and mucons surfaces of the systems.&#13;
Testimonial* sent free, fries, 75c tier&#13;
bottle. Sold by all druggists.&#13;
Take Hall's family pills for oocsti*&#13;
patton.&#13;
Advartii'Bf&#13;
PlKkity MarfcH Rtpprtt&#13;
Corrected every Wednesday morning&#13;
WHEAT—88c&#13;
BYE-6 4c&#13;
OAT&amp;-82&#13;
j*BAK8-~|».00&#13;
ONION8-S1.00&#13;
POTATOB8~50c&#13;
BUTTER—38c.&#13;
EO(iS-30e.&#13;
0HI0KBN8-livtH Ho. hens 10c&#13;
MBsmammesssssmamBmmmmeB&#13;
:*ffy&#13;
&lt;*v.&#13;
i?-&#13;
i»*&#13;
**:**, i??.mj*&gt;&#13;
BROWN'S DRUG STORE&#13;
Wi)»W You •*&#13;
f i f y v&#13;
j^nd we al?o wish you would call&#13;
and gee our line of&#13;
Fancy Crockery&#13;
Cut&#13;
• \ &lt;»:•:•&#13;
Stationery&#13;
Toilet Artfcles&#13;
before buying elsewhere&#13;
We also have a line of New and Popular&#13;
Copyright Books&#13;
That make good Christmas presents. Also gift books in&#13;
fancy covers from 10c to 50e.&#13;
\$±£Z&#13;
A years subscription to a good&#13;
Magazine Mcik:e&amp; a, Good&#13;
Let us send in your clubbing list for magazines thiB year.&#13;
We guarantee that the subscription will be sent to publisher.&#13;
Perfumes&#13;
Call and see our line of Perfnmes in fancy pkgs., 25c to 11.25&#13;
• &gt; . • • * »&#13;
gJillllilUilllUlUlliilUU&#13;
^w ejvve^v^we^e^pe^e^pe^e^ejeje^gfe/fgV VV^Vw^W&#13;
ilillUUkililUliilUiUlUJ&#13;
» ej?^*#w?jrwej^'we^*^wf^*#s#e^'^WeweM*F ^^*wTWP*»e&#13;
-&lt;K"&#13;
•fi-&#13;
• * , J '.&#13;
4&#13;
['THE CENTRAL'&#13;
i We think we have the prettiest line of T&#13;
i&#13;
O&#13;
:^4&#13;
m&#13;
m&#13;
r- " ":•**"»•,&#13;
• « * &lt; • • •&#13;
to offer you that we ever saw, and we expect a visit&#13;
froni a real Santa Claus too. He promised to make&#13;
our store his headquarters for several days before&#13;
Christmas and the little folks are safe in coming to&#13;
see him. Big folks are very welcome also and we have&#13;
tried to find something to please them as well as the&#13;
little ones. /&#13;
* • %&#13;
See our handsome bitten Pieces;&#13;
Our table cloths, napkins, dresser scarfs, table covers,&#13;
towels, doilies; also hand bags, sweaters, dress &amp;?&lt;"&amp;&#13;
gloves and/mittens&#13;
All t h e Regular b l a w «T D r y&#13;
and notions on hand a* usuaL&#13;
Groceries, candies, cigars, etc.&#13;
Veryre«,tfui^&#13;
MRS A.M.&#13;
**&lt;&amp; n/&#13;
assaemsaaeasa&#13;
•vv • \ s?:s:&#13;
A&#13;
H'&#13;
I/ 1&amp;1&#13;
H s H H&#13;
Send home n^^s in the farm&#13;
of the Qfspafch* to a friend&#13;
a s a welpome ChrtBf mas ^Ifto&#13;
i * •&#13;
^ v 'i'lViartr; ii'SMurf ii'-'-r-^'i.if -rfii-V m it&#13;
i •'^-m W ''&#13;
\&#13;
Supplement to the Pinckney Dispatch W.&#13;
AUTOMOBILE&#13;
BARGAINS&#13;
Reo, two passenget-&#13;
Flander, four passenger&#13;
Jackson, five passenger&#13;
Queen, Four passenger&#13;
T h e s e cars are all in a^ood condition and will 1)&lt;&#13;
sold right.&#13;
%&#13;
* ! 8&#13;
.1&#13;
I i&#13;
I&#13;
ft I&#13;
* A H. FLINTOFT 8&#13;
... EGGS, POULTRY AND VEAL ...&#13;
Attention Farmers ! j&#13;
D o n ' t forget t h a t we come here&#13;
Every Wednesday A. M.j&#13;
A n d will pay every rent the market affords. We will;&#13;
appreciate a share of your business* j&#13;
Cal vs by phone—No. 33, either phone, for prices. j&#13;
H. L WILLIAMS i&#13;
4&amp; 6-e:6-:g-:c*tt6ie-:e6i$6G€#£@&lt;! feSteeefc! a S - S 3 S 3 e e e g : g e t t @ @ @ 9 $ 9 * : 3 ^ ' £ .&#13;
W Either Phone&#13;
ty :: 1-583 ::&#13;
Office and Works&#13;
Ml&gt; Cooper Strep'&#13;
E M P I R E M A R B b B A N D&#13;
G R A N I T E . W O R K S&#13;
Work Giiurntne 51&#13;
:: First Class'' ft&#13;
.1»&#13;
0&#13;
J O H N (}. LK*\AK, Prop.&#13;
MniiufHCtui'fMK ot :iiiil Dealers in&#13;
» Monuments, S t a t u a r y and Stone B u r i a l V a u l t s&#13;
© J A C K S O N , MICHIGAN&#13;
ffl&#13;
I IF\ 3D.&#13;
^ P I N C K N E Y , . . . . M I C H I G A N /¾&#13;
.A grexrt,&#13;
^&#13;
jj&#13;
:&lt;&gt;,&#13;
HER BEST CHRISTMAS&#13;
OME on along, Bandy;&#13;
I'll treat to dinner at&#13;
the Metropolitan!" j&#13;
Sandy, a tall girl who&#13;
didn't look lv&gt;r thirty&#13;
years, was buny glan- '&#13;
cing over u typewritten&#13;
sheet and for a moment&#13;
did not answer.&#13;
Bob stood watching&#13;
her, taking in the delicate&#13;
lines of her face&#13;
and the beauty of the&#13;
"sandy" hair, which, when he was&#13;
alone and forgot that Sandy was a&#13;
newspaper woman and his "pal," he&#13;
was pleased to call golden.&#13;
"Cut that out, Sandy. You'll be&#13;
hack. I have a check and it's Christmas&#13;
Eve. I'm for a treat. I say—did&#13;
you hear me ask you to go to the;&#13;
Metropolitan? You take it as calmly&#13;
as if I bad asked you to go around to&#13;
Otto's lunch counter. Deuce take it!&#13;
W%y can't you be a little enthusiastic?"&#13;
Slowly the girl raised her head,&#13;
More than a sheet of copy had been&#13;
holding her attention. But she caught&#13;
Bob's frown and immediately the&#13;
mother instinct in her was aroused.&#13;
She broke into her usual comrade&#13;
laugh.&#13;
"All right, Boh. The invitation&#13;
overwhelmed me. The Metropolitan?&#13;
But I couldn't, - _ „&#13;
Bobby dear My /fl Y ^&#13;
shirtwaist is soiled&#13;
and you yourself&#13;
said there&#13;
was a hole in&#13;
my b e a u t i f u l&#13;
brown coat," -&#13;
"Oh, c o m e&#13;
along! I was&#13;
o n l y joking. —&#13;
You'd outshine ~ i&#13;
all the women at&#13;
the Metropolitan&#13;
if y o u w e n t&#13;
there In a khaki&#13;
suit 1 wish you&#13;
had a little more&#13;
vanity W^omen&#13;
are awfuly tame when they haven't."&#13;
"Come, now, you know I'm vain of&#13;
the fact that I haven't any vanity.&#13;
Don't call me tame. I won't go to the&#13;
Metropolitan with you if you do.&#13;
Somehow 1 feel "&#13;
"Fiddlesticks! Get on your hat.&#13;
I'm going. The idea of a newspaper&#13;
woman's feeling! Cut it out!"&#13;
you out I've a ^reut plan Put on&#13;
that brown wilk and play you're a&#13;
woman for once "&#13;
'Yes, a Bweet, young, clinging femi&#13;
nine creature with my heart on my&#13;
sleeve! 'Twill be charming, of courBe&#13;
Do you really think I could play the !&#13;
part?"&#13;
"Stop joking, Sandy. You never ,&#13;
will take me seriously. You will go,&#13;
won't you?"&#13;
"I'd liUo to please you, Bobby, but 1&#13;
rcntlly must be home tomorrow 1&#13;
have work that&#13;
must be dune, and&#13;
b e s i d e 1 uavrt a&#13;
f e e l i n g that 1&#13;
ought not to go."&#13;
"F n o l i u s be&#13;
darned! If you&#13;
hud fewer 'l'oelings'&#13;
A r^'-l'^f-\ and more feeling&#13;
rl J^J^JL/-^ tor a poor fel-&#13;
»Yf •^-m^. low— What's the&#13;
^ matter. Sandy?"&#13;
•yn The girl had&#13;
vi A cast a glance over&#13;
the room and had&#13;
grown suddenly&#13;
She closed her eyes for a mo-&#13;
Bob bad caught the pallor&#13;
"Oh, nothing. I had a little twinge&#13;
of that old neuralgia.&#13;
Thus the chasm was bridged aud&#13;
t'L dinner ended happily. If anyth.'•&gt;*:,&#13;
Sandy was gaynr than usual&#13;
* &amp; • • • ' .&#13;
pale,&#13;
ment.&#13;
The Metropolitan was filled with&#13;
the "vulgar rich'' in holiday attire;&#13;
but Sandy and Bob were happy in&#13;
true bohemian style as they sat at&#13;
their little table chatting and joking&#13;
like two boys. Sandy never would&#13;
play the woman—that was the onlyobjection&#13;
Bob had to her.&#13;
"I say, Sandy, 1 bet you've no plans&#13;
for tomorrow and I'ni, coming tfl. take&#13;
Four o'clock the next day Saudy'i&#13;
hoart was beating loud. Her "studio/&#13;
a.* bhe was pleased to call it, wore it*&#13;
very best attire. Even the inevitable&#13;
typewriter was out of sight.&#13;
She was older, older by six yeara&#13;
than when he had last seen her, b\**&#13;
happiness made her wondrously beautiful.&#13;
Bobby would have lost hia wits.&#13;
If he should not come! But he&#13;
wquld come. If he should come and&#13;
t h e d r e a m could not bo realized! But&#13;
he would not come unless he could.&#13;
A rap at the door!&#13;
"Miss, there's a shentleman a-askin'&#13;
for ye. Should I send him in?"&#13;
"Yes, Mary." The tones were perfectly&#13;
calm. Six yeara of patient&#13;
waiting had not been without their&#13;
power.&#13;
"Margaret!"&#13;
"John!"&#13;
"I knew you would come. I saw&#13;
you last evening. I knew you would&#13;
find me. Oh, John, I am BO happy!"&#13;
She rested her head on his shoulder&#13;
to hide the tears.&#13;
"My Margaret, now and forever!"&#13;
"And Constance?"&#13;
"Constance is gone—and she wished&#13;
it to be."&#13;
A long silence.&#13;
"Sit down, John. There is your&#13;
chair How often have I pictured you&#13;
in it. Let me think Let me got my&#13;
breath. I knew you would come. I&#13;
wonder what Bobby will say! He&#13;
thinks I have no heart. But—it Wftj&#13;
to be."—New York Mall.&#13;
I "F T S&#13;
A Few Suggestions&#13;
W A T C H E S&#13;
L a d i e s ' O p e n Fact; and H u n t i n g F r o m £(1,()0 and up.&#13;
( r e n t ' s Open F a c e and H u n t i n g , Nicklc, Ooid Filled and&#13;
Solid, 81.00 and u p . A L L T l i U S T A N D A K I ) M A K F S&#13;
C L O C K S . F a n c y j„'oW, aiivs'i, [&gt;VKM .md muutit ,i&gt;I, and u p&#13;
W a t c h , c h a i n * a n d fobs, *1.00 1-).81500. Lockets, 75c to&#13;
£5, LncketH a u d fancy n?ck chains?, 7Hc to $8; Gold and&#13;
pearl bends, £1,50 to 7.50; UroaclieH 75c to *15; Cuff links,&#13;
25c; to §10; T i e clasps a n d scarf pins, 25c to £'10; Beautiful&#13;
ladies' rttid g e n t ' s s t o n e tdgnet and&#13;
Plain Band and Diamond Rings,&#13;
beauties, a n d , a t prices t h a t you can't beat.&#13;
S t e r l i n g silver aud plated flat and hollow ware and .silver&#13;
novelties of all kindH.&#13;
Parisian Ivory&#13;
Toilet Articles of all kinds, Photo I'nimeh find Clocks.&#13;
All the very latest.&#13;
Something to Consider&#13;
All my goods are new and up to date, gi. iuaid"»'n. and&#13;
[&lt;t prices that w i l l c o a i p a r e with any one, and a square dual&#13;
to oil. Follow the line to&#13;
W. H. Gartrell's&#13;
Next to P . O. Howell, Mie.h. " l'h • \\'«\- h I&gt; "•'&lt;&gt;:'.&#13;
Fine Kn^ravinL! Free&#13;
Tako Dr. Mil' s'&#13;
OOnstipatlon. 'l'h&#13;
i.ixitlvo Tablets tor&#13;
y will holp you.&#13;
Whether you spend little OP much fop Christmas, it is impoptant that youp gifts shou&#13;
have lasting value. Christmas prices are lower than at other seasons here becai&#13;
OUP larger purchases give us bigger discounts.&#13;
The quality of everything in this store makes it a worthy gift, whether the price you pay is lage or small. The entire range of your family&#13;
are covered by the articles you find here, whether they be big needs or little. HERE ARE A FEW SUGGESTIONS:&#13;
For Mother or&#13;
Wife&#13;
Bed Room Chair&#13;
Jardiniere Stand&#13;
China Closet&#13;
Rocker.&#13;
Magazine Stand&#13;
Hoosier Cabinets&#13;
Davenport&#13;
Cut Glaas Bowl&#13;
Fancy Cake Plate&#13;
Carpet Sweeper&#13;
Fancy Cnp and Saucer&#13;
Set of Nice Dishea&#13;
For Brother Jack&#13;
Pipe Rack&#13;
Chiffonier&#13;
Morris Cbrair&#13;
Arm Chair&#13;
Card Table&#13;
Leather Rocker&#13;
High Back Rocker&#13;
For the Best Girl&#13;
in the World&#13;
Divan&#13;
Music Cabinet&#13;
Work Table&#13;
Sewing Rocker&#13;
Dresser&#13;
Pedestal&#13;
Book Case&#13;
Parlor Table&#13;
Chocolate Set&#13;
Nice Mirror&#13;
Hat Pin Holder&#13;
Nice Cracker Jar&#13;
Nice Water Set&#13;
For Grandfather&#13;
Comfortable Arm Chair&#13;
High Back Rocker&#13;
Genuine Leather Chair&#13;
Foot Stool&#13;
For Sister&#13;
Pretty Chair for her Room&#13;
Slipper Cbair&#13;
Dressing Chair&#13;
Music Cabinet&#13;
Writin,.; Desk&#13;
Arm Chair&#13;
Bookcase&#13;
Nice Spoon Tray&#13;
Nice Brush and Comb Tray&#13;
Nice Berry Set&#13;
Nice Sugar and Cream Set , j j e 8Urt, a n t |&#13;
- . f* , . , Department; w*« For Grandmother'°yi,ifi,rfi£&#13;
^ and pncea ore -*-&#13;
For Father&#13;
Husband&#13;
Morris Chair&#13;
Leather Rocker&#13;
An Easy Chair&#13;
Conch&#13;
Card TabUFoot&#13;
Stool&#13;
Book Caae&#13;
Wardrobe&#13;
viai&#13;
Jardinier Stand&#13;
Sew in g Rocker&#13;
Morris Chair&#13;
MagiziIIP Stand&#13;
Arm Chair&#13;
Nice Reading Lamp&#13;
Nice Bread and Milk Set&#13;
in China, Opt*&#13;
ware, Etc.&#13;
W e pay tha&#13;
Furniture&#13;
to be dell'&#13;
rtey OPCFKJM&#13;
&lt;•?&amp;&#13;
U R M A N N C O M PA MY, H o w e l l , Mich&#13;
The Quality Furniture Store&#13;
^ ' • ) .&#13;
Qnce ]V[ore and of (jour^e W e a r e Ready F o r You&#13;
"What To Buy and Where To Buy It" Is the Question That is Uppermost in the Minds&#13;
of the Holiday Shoppers These Bays&#13;
F. C, Schnac ken berg, Now Livingston County's Largest Furniture House,&#13;
however Offers a Solution to the Problem&#13;
No Other Gift Article Offers a Wider Range of Selection Than Purniture, and We Have&#13;
a barge and Up-to-Date L»ine of&#13;
i&#13;
l&lt;&#13;
B e d r o o m S u i t e s&#13;
P a r l o r S u i t e s&#13;
Princess D r e s s e r s&#13;
Gombination D r e s s e r s&#13;
ChiffiT)nepes&#13;
Combination D e s k s&#13;
L a d i e s ' D e s k s&#13;
Dining C h a i r s&#13;
C l o t h e s H a m p e r s&#13;
P a r l o r T a b l e s&#13;
L i b r a r y T a b l e s&#13;
E x t e n s i o n T a b l e s&#13;
Jardiniere S t a n d s&#13;
I r o n B e d s&#13;
C h i l d ' s B e d s&#13;
C r a d l e s&#13;
B u f f e t s&#13;
O f f i c e C h a i r s&#13;
R o c k e r s&#13;
H a l l R a c k s&#13;
F.lectric Vacum Cleaners&#13;
Davenports&#13;
Clothes Bars&#13;
Couches&#13;
A r m Chairs&#13;
Reed Rockers&#13;
OLID f ^ ^ R f&#13;
SOLID&#13;
Go-Carts&#13;
In Fact Everything That is Usually Kept in a First Class Furniture Store&#13;
We^ C a r r y a Complete Line of Funeral Supplies&#13;
And Give the Same Our Special Attention We Also Have a Lady Attendant&#13;
All Calls Promptly Attended To Day or Ni^ht&#13;
F. C , S C H N A G K E N B E R G , Furniture Dealer&#13;
and Undertaker, Howell, Michigan&#13;
' . ( • .&#13;
he Pinckney&#13;
hange Bank&#13;
p&gt; y&gt; Conservative Batiklinens.&#13;
::&#13;
_ - • * _ * .&#13;
c e n t&#13;
on all Time Deposits&#13;
it!&#13;
tney - Mich.&#13;
TEEfLBI Prop.&#13;
mmmmmrfmmmm^.&#13;
isiness&#13;
apare a few&#13;
a oE his tirue to&#13;
[to^rapher of to&#13;
;aae his entire&#13;
• \&#13;
l \&#13;
l \&#13;
* i l b©&#13;
^••rprite—&#13;
&gt;kly and&#13;
1611,&#13;
Itik.&#13;
• i&#13;
a&#13;
L$att«*M«&#13;
A * ' -&#13;
HOME FOR CHRISTMAS&#13;
HAD been west taking&#13;
a convalescent patient&#13;
to his home and waB returning&#13;
to New York&#13;
when a case fell unexpectedly&#13;
into my handB,&#13;
The Pullman conductor&#13;
startled us early one&#13;
morning by calling out&#13;
to know If there was a&#13;
physician in the car.&#13;
There was no response,&#13;
BO without hesitation I&#13;
offered my services. He took me at&#13;
once into the stateroom and introduced&#13;
me to a worried-looking young&#13;
man. There was no need to ask his&#13;
trouble. On the couch tossed a little&#13;
girl of five or six years, her cheeks&#13;
and eyes bright with fever.&#13;
I had a few simple remedies with&#13;
me, but the child showed rather&#13;
alarming symptoms of an aggravated&#13;
cold. Deciding to take no risk, I sent&#13;
a telegram ahead, and when we reached&#13;
Chicago a physician with necessary&#13;
medicines came aboard and accompanied&#13;
us to Buffalo.&#13;
Dorothy escaped all of the maladies&#13;
with which she was threatened and&#13;
by the time we reached New York&#13;
was very much better. However, Mr.&#13;
Singleton, her father, retained me,&#13;
and the three of us went to a fashionable&#13;
hotel&#13;
The little girl continued&#13;
to improve,&#13;
but the spontaneous&#13;
gayety of childhood&#13;
was lacking.&#13;
Christmas was approaching&#13;
and Dorothy&#13;
was now able&#13;
to go about. I was&#13;
instructed to take&#13;
her to shops and&#13;
matinees—in fact,&#13;
to do everything to&#13;
afford her amusement.&#13;
, Her father&#13;
suggested that she give a Christmas&#13;
tree for twenty less fortunate little&#13;
girls, and he kept the btg limousine&#13;
car touring the shopping district&#13;
while we played Santa Claua.&#13;
One day we had been out all of the&#13;
afternoon Dorothy had selected&#13;
twenty dolls, and in retrospect I viewed&#13;
my own meager childhood and&#13;
fancied what such a glorious aftersoon&#13;
would have meant to me, but the&#13;
child appeared even more listless&#13;
thao usual Peeling rather anxious, X&#13;
took her temperature, gave her some&#13;
atUgbJ|tlng nourishment and asked&#13;
her to get into, my lap while I read&#13;
to her&#13;
Dorothy had the beautiful old-young&#13;
n\anj&amp;rs in. wJUch. jfcft Utile, children&#13;
of the ricfc "are "drTTTe&lt;f, Tfrid always&#13;
treated me with careful consideration&#13;
and politeness, regardless of her own&#13;
wishes. Obediently she climbed into&#13;
my lap. put her head against my&#13;
shoulder, and 1 began to read aloud&#13;
a wonderful Christmas tale, We are&#13;
all of us children at ChriBtmas and I,&#13;
found enjoyment in the story. Dorothy&#13;
was very quiet, and as I turned a&#13;
page I looked down to see if she had&#13;
fallen asleep. To my consternation,&#13;
the wide blue eyes were brimming&#13;
with tears, fast overflowing and running&#13;
down the child's white cheeks.&#13;
As I dropped the book and clasped&#13;
her closely in my arms she gave wax&#13;
to convulsive sobs.&#13;
Mr. Singleton&#13;
came in.&#13;
The opening&#13;
of the door&#13;
r o u s e d Dorothy,&#13;
and, seeing&#13;
her father,&#13;
she stretched&#13;
eager arms to&#13;
him and cried&#13;
out:&#13;
"Father, dear,&#13;
I don't want a&#13;
tree. I Just&#13;
want mother&#13;
f o r Christmas."&#13;
I placed the child in her father's&#13;
arms and left the room. An hour&#13;
passed and then Mr. Singleton rapped&#13;
on my door. He told me the story.&#13;
Mrs. Singleton was not dead, as I&#13;
had supposed; she was in Paris, and&#13;
if the separation of which he told me&#13;
was caused by fault of hers he did not&#13;
so much as hint at it.&#13;
Mr Singleton cabled at once to&#13;
Paris. There would just be time.&#13;
Christmas Eve came and still no&#13;
word, and though Mr. Singleton's face&#13;
looked thin and strained, he started&#13;
out with Dorothy at noon, telling her&#13;
they were going to have a srand and&#13;
glorious time that afternoon&#13;
I was left to attend to the last details&#13;
of the tree that stood in glittering&#13;
bravery in the center of the sitting&#13;
room. There was a lot to do. and I&#13;
was bustling around when the door&#13;
flew open and a radiant young woman&#13;
rushed in, calling:&#13;
•Dan! Dorothy!"&#13;
Stopping quickly, her look arrested&#13;
by my uniform, she exclaimed: "He—&#13;
she—oh, who is 1U?M She faltered, going&#13;
white.&#13;
My smiling assurance that all was&#13;
well brought forth a thousand questions,&#13;
and we both talked at once,&#13;
and I helped her off with her&#13;
wraps. She cried in my arms and&#13;
kissed me with fervor when I told her&#13;
of how Dorothy had ?begged for her.&#13;
and then she bubbled over and we had&#13;
a gay afternoon finishing the tree.&#13;
Mrs Singleton was on the stepladder&#13;
laughing down at me when Dorothy&#13;
and her father came l a The laugh&#13;
dledTon Eer lips; butTcaug"htliTs gTorfc&#13;
fled look and heard Dorothy's glad cry.&#13;
Then I _cre.pt silently from the room,&#13;
feeling the loneliness of 8plnBterh-K&gt;d&#13;
aa I had never thought to do.&#13;
SB33J&#13;
Not the Proper Word,&#13;
"Did you send Mr. Dresser the samples&#13;
he asked for?" inquired the&#13;
tailor.&#13;
"Yes," replied the clerk; "I'm Just&#13;
finishing our letter to him. I'm send?&#13;
ing It 'Trusting to have your order—'"&#13;
"What I Cut out that word 'truafc&#13;
ing' and make it 'hoping/ "—Cathollo&#13;
Standard and Times.&#13;
A Civic Duty. !&#13;
"Every business man should belong&#13;
to the board of trade or the chamber&#13;
of commerce and be on a committee.!&#13;
Such la a civic duty." '&#13;
"Are you on a committee?"&#13;
"To be sure." i&#13;
"And what committee are you o a f ;&#13;
"I—that is—well, I can't remember •&#13;
just now." i&#13;
a hyp-&#13;
A Crucial Moment&#13;
"Flibbitson claims to have&#13;
aotlc eye."&#13;
"It didn't help him any yesterday."&#13;
"How was that?"&#13;
"He was suddenly confronted by a&#13;
landlady to whom he owed six months'&#13;
board."&#13;
A CALL DOWN.&#13;
immrmMmmm&#13;
fa&#13;
Mr. Newwed—You mustn't bo «nvi&gt;&#13;
ous of other people. That's a fault&#13;
that you cannot find In me.&#13;
Mrs, Newwed—No, you doat believe&#13;
there la anybody better than&#13;
you are, or that anyone possibly could&#13;
be.&#13;
lor tte Ptaekaey Diapetta j&#13;
Barron &amp;Wines&#13;
Howell, Mich.&#13;
Jnvitep you to select your&#13;
JsgLlDAY Q1FTS&#13;
at their store&#13;
And in order that you may see their magnificent&#13;
Stock, THEY WILL ALL OW RAILROAD FARE&#13;
on all purchases of $5.00 and upward, during&#13;
the month of December.&#13;
0 u r S^Ock C°mPr ^e r*»&#13;
The Celebrated Piokard and Luken Hand Paiqted China&#13;
ijaujkes and Pairpoint Cut Glass&#13;
Gift Books of Euery Description&#13;
The Famous Conklin Fountain Pe&gt;,&#13;
Beautiful Box Paper and Initial Stationery&#13;
Toilet Sets, Bibles, Prayer Books and Rosarieti&#13;
Leather Goods. Consisting of Music ijoHs&#13;
Marjd Bags, Purses and Tourist Sets&#13;
Ctjoioe Domestic aqd /reported Perfurrje*&#13;
Safety Razors fronj 1 to 5 Dollars&#13;
Frarrjed Picture? and Art Calendars \t&#13;
t/*C&#13;
OLEYS HONEY TAR C ompound&#13;
POP Sale by All Dtm^fstft&#13;
A&#13;
f-T"^&#13;
?**'»' 'V. Supplement to the Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
• M M « i -&#13;
Lefta| A d v e r t i s i n g&#13;
QTATK OF MICHIGAN, the Probate Court for&#13;
OCh* oounty of Uvinptoo. Eatafce o&gt;&#13;
8ABAH M. BU&amp;NETT, Demand&#13;
Tbe undenlrad having been appointed, hy&#13;
Jtaja of Probata ot Mid county, vutntnlaalonera or.&#13;
otauu In the natter ot aatd estate, and four moot litem&#13;
the 6th day of Dacwabar, A. u. 1V12 uarliif r i baan alio wad braald Jodgw of Probate t o ail pei&#13;
w o a holding claims against «ald estate In which t«&#13;
pr—ant their claima t o ua for examination a s o&#13;
adioatment.&#13;
Notioe Is hereby given that we will meet on the&#13;
4th day of February, A. D. 1913, and on the 7tb dav&#13;
of April, A. D . 1U18, at ten o'clock a. m. or each&#13;
day at the ator* o f Johs Daumatin i n the&#13;
rlUaga of Hamburg in eaid couuty to receive&#13;
a&amp;d e x a S A u each claims.&#13;
Dated: Howell, Mich., Detwmber 6th, A. D. WW&#13;
John Dammann (&#13;
&lt; CommiBoionuri. on Claims&#13;
Frank DeWolfe ( e^ts&#13;
JTATK ot MICHIGAN: 'Vim Probate Court ior the&#13;
county of Uvlnystou. At a session of aaltl&#13;
ooart, held at the probate office i n the villain ot&#13;
Howell in Bald county on the tfrd day ot December&#13;
a. D. 1W2, Present, Hon. / r t h u r A. MouUf.ue,&#13;
Judge ol Probate. In the matter of the estate oi&#13;
EUNICE WABNEB, Incompetant&#13;
E. A . Stowe having filed in paid court his reaiKuation&#13;
and final account tu guardian of said&#13;
Mtate, apd his petition praying for the alluv&#13;
ance thereof.&#13;
It IB ordered that the 27th day of LJecembur&#13;
A D. 1912, at t e n o'clock i n the torenoon,&#13;
at aaia probate office, be and id hereby appointed&#13;
for examining and allowing said account&#13;
• It le further ordered, that public notice thereoi&#13;
be given by publication of a cooy ot this order&#13;
for three eucceealve weeks previous to said da; ot&#13;
hearing in the Hnckney biapaich, a uewep*i&gt;er&#13;
printed and circulated in said county. 48t -,&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAOUR.&#13;
Judos of Probate.&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Doeb a Conservative&#13;
ing Business. ::&#13;
Bank-&#13;
3 p e r c e n t&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
£ \ ;. *&#13;
L**.-:'.«j&#13;
STATE OK MICHIGAN, Coun ty of Livingston&#13;
Probate Court For Said Coi:nty. Estate ot&#13;
FRANCES STICKLE, Deceased&#13;
The undersigned having been appointed by the&#13;
Judge o f Probate of said county, Commissioners&#13;
on Claims in the matter of said estate, and four&#13;
mputhe from the 3rd day of Dec A. D. 1912&#13;
having been allowed by buid Judge of Piobate to&#13;
all persona holding claims agaiuet aaid esuue in&#13;
which to present their claima to ua for exaniina-&#13;
P l n c k n e y&#13;
G. W. T E E P L E&#13;
Mich,&#13;
P r o p .&#13;
Try SOLACE At Our Expense&#13;
Money Back Por A n y Case of&#13;
Rheumatism, Neuralgia or&#13;
Headache that S o l a c e&#13;
Pails to remove&#13;
don and adjustment.&#13;
Notice is hereby given-that we will moet on the&#13;
Hrdday of Febrnuty A. P. 1913 and on the 4th day ^ ¾ Crystals and o"r&#13;
of April A. D. W13 at. teno'clwk- u. m. of ea&amp;tt- ™ y ^ ^ 8 ^ * ^ f "&#13;
day, at the Bark ot George W. iv, tne Baric Teeplo in the f»&gt; *}. ''&#13;
Village of Pinckney iu said county to&#13;
and examine euch claims.&#13;
receive&#13;
S o l a c e R e m e d y is a re ent medical die&#13;
c very of three German Pei?' tiits that dissolves&#13;
fie* me bl od. It is&#13;
nor effect "The wnkest&#13;
etotcach,&#13;
It is guaranteed under the Pure Food aud Drug*&#13;
Law t • bo absolutely free from opiates or harmful&#13;
Dated: Howell, Df.c 3rd, A. D. 2912. drnes of any deecrlpti n.&#13;
Albert Jack»on i Commissionere on S o l a c e ia a pure specific in every way, and&#13;
JohoHaaaencahl f Claims 40tlJ has been iroven beyond question to b the sn.est&#13;
and quickest reme-v for Uric Acid Troubles&#13;
. z _ Known to med'eal science, no matt*r how long&#13;
'. , . . . . . . . . .. . , standlDg. it reaches and removes th&lt;» root of the&#13;
^ . l a i e o f M i c h i g a n , the probate c 0 " « »°r&#13;
t r o u h | e (Uric Acid) anl purifies th«blo d.&#13;
V l 1e ?qVJ?^?£L « !t B t .0 I J^A t *s»ei?sl5Bii°'""'# ! T h e S o l a c e C o . of Battle Cwek are the&#13;
Court, held at the Probate Office in the Village of s o J e v s . / g e n i g a n d have thousan -e ol voluntary&#13;
Howell inisaid county on the 3rd day oi 1 erember ; t^timoniai jettere which htve b^en re&lt;e ved from&#13;
A. D . 1912. Present, Hon. Arthur A. Montague | „r&amp;l*&lt;u[ p e 0 le S o l a c e hss restored to fealth.&#13;
Judge of Probate, In the matter of the estate ot Ti " ~ ~&#13;
ANSON CAMPBELL, Deceased&#13;
Nelson P. Morteuson having fi-led ;n s lid court&#13;
hiipeiitlon praying that ihe administration ol'&#13;
said estate be giantcd to Eugene Campbell ur to&#13;
some other suitable uerson.&#13;
It ia ordered that the arth day of December A,&#13;
o. 1912 at ten o'clock in the loreiiuou, ai suld iiro-. . , , T , ,A .. _ _&#13;
bite orSoe, be and le hereby appointed for mloo l:ere and I must say f a c t i o n Wi.s won&lt; er&#13;
hfarlnc said petition.&#13;
eBtioionial I't'^rs, literature and P r e e B o x&#13;
sent upon request.&#13;
B.I/oe Morris, President of the Fir«t National&#13;
Bank i-f Chi&lt;o, TeX-:s, tsrote the Solace Cuaiijauy&#13;
as follows:&#13;
"I want you to si nd a box of Solsce to try&#13;
lather in ^'empbis, Teon., for which I enclose Si.&#13;
This rpmed has beei u?ed Of some friends of&#13;
It is further ordered that public notice thereof&#13;
be (riven by publication of a copy of this order&#13;
for three successive weeks previous to said day of&#13;
bearing, in tun PIKGKNKY i&gt;thPATCii,a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated in s:»id county. 4«t :-5&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAOaK,&#13;
Jndce of Probate.&#13;
iul. (Hi^ned) R L Morris.&#13;
Put up in 25c, bQc, aud 81.00 boxee.&#13;
I t * m i g h t y f i n e t o b e w e l l a n d y o u&#13;
c a n s o o n b e n o b y t a k i n g S o l a c e .&#13;
"No special trea ment echi&gt;mes or fees." Juftt&#13;
S o l a c e A l o n e does f o worn. W r i t e&#13;
t o d a y f o r t h e f r e e b o x , e t c .&#13;
S o l a c e R e m e d y C o . , B a t t l e C r e e k . "&#13;
Advertising&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN, the l'rooate Court ol&#13;
the County of Livingston,&#13;
At a aesslon of said court held at the Probate&#13;
Office in the Village of Howell in said County, on&#13;
the 26th day of November A. I) 1912.&#13;
Present, Hon. Arthur A. Montague, Judge of&#13;
Probate, In the matter of the eetate oi&#13;
JOHN N. GILBERT, Decease l&#13;
Julia Foster having tiled in »nin court her&#13;
petition pra lng that th» administration&#13;
of [said estate be grautea to i'alph Gorton&#13;
or to some other suitable person.&#13;
It is Ordered. That the 20ih day of December&#13;
A. D. 19W, at ten o'clock iu the forenoon, at said&#13;
probate oflice, bp and-is herwby appointed for&#13;
hearing saia petition.&#13;
It is further ordered that public notice thereof&#13;
be given by publi&lt; atioti of a copy ot this order, for&#13;
three successive weeks previous to said riay it&#13;
hearing in the Pinokney DISPATCH U newspap r&#13;
printed and circulated in Bald county. 49t3&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAGUE,&#13;
Judfe of Probate.&#13;
Electric&#13;
Bitters Ducceed w h e n everything else Ails. |&#13;
In nervous prostration a ^ d female .&#13;
weaknessea they "OV t h e - s u p r e m e t&#13;
remedy, a s thousands h a v e testified. ,&#13;
FOR KIDNEY, LIVER AND *&#13;
STOMACH TROUBLE \&#13;
it ia the best medicine ever sold |&#13;
over ft druggist's countei. I&#13;
Wi««MiBievMae«eVHBVft«Bft«BBaa«Nr ~. *.*&#13;
Holiday Message&#13;
WE WISH EVERYBODY&#13;
W e h a n d l e t h e g o o d s t o help m a k e it so. C o m e&#13;
a n d see. I t is w o r t h a l o n g drive t o look over ours&#13;
p l e n d i d a s s o r t m e n t of&#13;
Popular Priced Merchandise&#13;
Suitable for Gifts&#13;
W e s h o w you a C i t y A s s o r t m e n t a t fair price*.&#13;
O u r n u m e r o u s offerings a r e too m a n y t o specify in&#13;
a small a d v . , b u t h e r e you will find t h e b e s t in&#13;
Toys, China, Post Cards,&#13;
Games, Books, Candles&#13;
5 c and 10c Goods and&#13;
Other Departments&#13;
C. S. LINE&#13;
THE HOME GOODS BAZAAR&#13;
Opposite Court House Howell Mich.&#13;
youp&lt;2f]ristmas Dinner C±&gt;ill ©e Complete&#13;
If y o u r B r o a d , p i e s amci O a r $ e s dip®&#13;
"PF£&lt;ad&lt;3 " P r o m&#13;
Phonographs&#13;
Yea, we have them, in all styles » ^ d prices. They HI*&#13;
THE WONDERFUL COLUMBIA&#13;
^PURITY FLOUR&#13;
in both hoi 11 HUII liornli'SB types. Hoar oue with the&#13;
new reproducer (just out) and you will be surprised.&#13;
Try one in your home. S o l d o n e a s y p a y m e n t s&#13;
OUR GRAHAM MAKES&#13;
NICE BROWN BREAD&#13;
O u r Buckwheat Flour M a k e s&#13;
the Good Old Fashioned P a n&#13;
C a k e s&#13;
John D i n k e l , rinckney&#13;
EGGS, POULTRY AND VEAL a a a&#13;
The H°yt ferother^&#13;
PlT2G"r^T2€:v;, ,Micf3igjaT2&#13;
Attention F a r m e r s !&#13;
D o n ' t forget t h a t we c o m e hen*&#13;
Every Wednesday A. M.&#13;
A n d will pay every r e n t t h e m a r k e t affords. W e will&#13;
a p p r e c i a t e a s h a r e of y o u r b u s i n e s s .&#13;
Cal i?s by p h o n e — N o . 33, e i t h e r p h o n e , for prices.&#13;
H. L WILLIAMS&#13;
T h e Store of the C h r i s t m a s Spirit&#13;
T H E R E ' S never beeu a time when this store entered the Holiday Keaaon BO splendidly&#13;
equipped and prepared to supply your wants or desire. Please remertiber, that we will&#13;
yladly give you any suggestions or information which will render your gift. choosiDg&#13;
easier and more erijoyablt . We're here to serve yon—the whole store is at your service.&#13;
The Post Card, Booklet&#13;
and Calendar Department&#13;
was never before as complete.&#13;
We were luoky enough to buy&#13;
our Holiday Cards much below&#13;
the regular wholesale price and&#13;
have decided to give oni customers&#13;
the benefit.&#13;
Splendid Liue of l c Post Cards&#13;
8 pi en-lid Line of 2c Post Cards&#13;
Splendid Line of 5c Post Cards&#13;
Be sure and see the Calendars.&#13;
Christmas Gifts would not&#13;
carry the right spirit without the&#13;
Xmas Boxes and Gift Cards. We&#13;
have a large assortment of both.&#13;
Hand Bags&#13;
25c $1.50&#13;
A fine selection to choose from.&#13;
Ladies and Children's&#13;
Umbrellas 50c to $2.00&#13;
These Ladies Umbrellas are the&#13;
the fatnons Hall removable handle&#13;
which are very convenient to put&#13;
in suit cases.&#13;
The E a s y Way To&#13;
Solve That Gift&#13;
Problem is Thvs Kodak&#13;
Way&#13;
Brother, sibter, uncle, aunt, cousin or chum&#13;
will appreciate a &lt;jift that means pleasure n!l&#13;
the year—the pleasure of takiuu pictures and&#13;
having a picture btory of all tin* peiso:;a! interest.&#13;
Selecting the Chri^tma^&#13;
KODAK&#13;
is a very simple&#13;
matter at our store&#13;
Our stock is complete, from the little oue&#13;
dollar Brownie to the most expeusive special&#13;
Kodak and we can explain clearly and simply&#13;
their various points of excellence. Let us&#13;
assist you in selecting the camera best suited to&#13;
the person ior whom you are buying.&#13;
Should you want to talk it over with the&#13;
family, we will gladly give you froe booklets&#13;
which will help you iu deciding.&#13;
Holiday Handkerchiefs&#13;
Headquarters&#13;
We have placed on display one&#13;
of the greatest collections of&#13;
Handkerchiefs ever shown in a&#13;
retail store in this country, ranging&#13;
in price&#13;
From 5 c to 5 0 c&#13;
Handkerchiefs make practical&#13;
aud highly appreciated gifts and&#13;
this store is the best place to purchase&#13;
Handkerchiefs of all kiuds.&#13;
Aprons of all Descriptions&#13;
Aprons ot' all •descriptions, our&#13;
own mako very pretty and well&#13;
made.&#13;
25c to 7 5 c&#13;
Knit Goods Department&#13;
Ladios and Childrens Sweaters&#13;
Caps, Scarfs Aviation Caps.&#13;
Remember that we can furnish&#13;
yon with anything in this tine&#13;
ma J» to order. Hand made.&#13;
Stationery&#13;
Fancy Holiday Boxes of go'&gt;d grades of&#13;
writing paper at very moderate prices. I&#13;
Infant Wear Department&#13;
Sacques, Bonnnts, Caps, Mifc-&#13;
Uiw, Stocking, Booties, Long and&#13;
Short Dr'cse*.&#13;
Crib Blankets&#13;
5 0 and 7 5 c&#13;
Mother, Wife&#13;
Sister or Daughter&#13;
con Id not be pleased more than tbey wonld be&#13;
with a dress or dress pattern. We have the&#13;
goods in all the leading shades. Always glad to&#13;
show them.&#13;
A n i c e l i n e of C h i l d -&#13;
r e n * a n d Mfftfte*&#13;
D r e s s e s In W o r s t e d&#13;
They make a nicf&#13;
Gift&#13;
(^hriMtua*&#13;
N i g h t G o w n s a n d&#13;
N i g h t S h i r t s&#13;
Are all appreciated when received&#13;
for Xmas. We have&#13;
the best that can be bought $1&#13;
Bath Robs and&#13;
Blankets&#13;
We have a large assortment of Bath Robes,&#13;
Blankets at $2.50, $3.00, $3.60. We also make&#13;
them np to measure in our dressmaking depart*&#13;
ment, This gives you a better choice and the&#13;
right size. $1.50 for making.&#13;
Kimonos and Dressing Saeques in Dueklin Fleece and Crepe&#13;
All Sizes in Handsome Patterns. -Prices Right.&#13;
JUST A FEW WORDS ABOUT OUR DRESSMAKING DEPARTMENT&#13;
Did you fcnow that we a w not otrty making Cnftdfens r&gt;reswH Md Hoiwe Dreasea bfft we' aro'mnltfbflrluT&#13;
kinds and styles of Ladies and Misses Dresden. Alt work guaranteed&#13;
Two Doors North of P . O. Lyndon's Department Store maim&#13;
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Jr» » *</text>
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                <text>December 19, 1912 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan, Thursday, December 26, 1912&#13;
H*&#13;
Ho. -5JM&#13;
M l l l i M N M * (MS0MMtlMi»MtM8MMMMM0M&#13;
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*~&#13;
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A -Merry Xmas&#13;
and* a&#13;
Have You&#13;
, ^ M « * :M^phj'«^^• ^ W r&#13;
Neatfng Stove&#13;
or that New Rand*? if not&#13;
i f n a v e&#13;
SeentJs &gt; s&#13;
&gt; • •&#13;
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3 Wet arc Headquartera for&#13;
all kinds of Hardware, E t c&#13;
» w e of Cuttera a n d S l e i g h a&#13;
» lompany&#13;
:xO- &lt; A Story ChrUtmw and a Happy New Year&#13;
Fins Mist Hepter&#13;
At eontj Ciirt't OfflM&#13;
Here's a mixup. Over at Howell,&#13;
two oases bave been decided&#13;
in justice court which have caused&#13;
merchants to scratch gravel for&#13;
county clerk's office to get registered.&#13;
A firm at Oak Grove&#13;
sought to collect a bill against a&#13;
customer. The prosecution proceeded&#13;
to tell its sad, sad story&#13;
when the attorney for the defense&#13;
jumpee} up and sprang a&#13;
surprise. Says he, sarcastically,&#13;
"This firm has not complied, with&#13;
the law and filed a list of its&#13;
members with their respective&#13;
interests with the county clerk."&#13;
f$l)e judge scratched his head,&#13;
looked wise, and says, "Old boy,&#13;
yon're right, you've got 'em&#13;
skiined," and threw the case&#13;
over the transom mnd took a&#13;
fresh chew of tobacco. A case&#13;
from Howell met the same fate.&#13;
Listen to this! The fileB ID the&#13;
county clerk's office shows that&#13;
only comparatively few firms&#13;
have made their filing and are&#13;
protected with any right in court.&#13;
This is serious, because the&#13;
same law includes a fiue of not,&#13;
less than 125 nor more than DlOO&#13;
against each member of a firm&#13;
doing bnsints* io Michigan,&#13;
which does not file as provided by&#13;
this act.—Are there any firms in&#13;
Pinckney not in the fold? Get&#13;
busy.&#13;
A Merry Christmas and a&#13;
Happy New Year to AH&#13;
'smaaaaaaaaaaaaaasamasaaa^&#13;
We Quote a Few Reductions on Mens Furnishings&#13;
R e d u c t i o n i n&#13;
P r i c e o n • • • MENS FURNISHINGS&#13;
Prom Today Until December 31&#13;
IIIftM&#13;
The Annual* meetiug of th*&#13;
Liviagston County Mutual Eire&#13;
I n j n r e j ^ ^ itatainirs U&amp;&amp;6J*«i^&#13;
tion of officers and for the traa&#13;
of such other business as may to&gt;&#13;
-•*: •: v.-...' m^Mssm&#13;
at the court hopse in the village&#13;
of Howell, in said couuty, on&#13;
Tuesday the 7th. Day of January,&#13;
A. D. 1913 at 1:00 o'clock p. m.&#13;
Dated Howell, Mich. December&#13;
16 1912. W. J. Larkin, Secretary&#13;
Notice To Taxpayers&#13;
f be township tax roll is now&#13;
in my possession and I am now&#13;
teady to receive taxes at any time.&#13;
Louis 0. Monks, Twp. Trees,&#13;
Jas. Tiplaiy of Detroit is speeding&#13;
the holidays with relalhWi&#13;
here.&#13;
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2.25&#13;
5.76&#13;
4.50&#13;
&lt;«&#13;
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50c Caps&#13;
1.45&#13;
1.65&#13;
1.80&#13;
2.20&#13;
1.40&#13;
. . . . . . S9o&#13;
1.10&#13;
1.26&#13;
. . . . . . 1.45&#13;
. ... 1.60&#13;
1.90&#13;
3.30&#13;
... . v 3.75&#13;
.. .. 39c&#13;
l.OOCajw H9c&#13;
2.00 Hate 1,60&#13;
50c Mufflers 39c&#13;
60c Overalls 39c&#13;
1.00 " 89c&#13;
50c Work Sh»rt« 39c&#13;
50o G4ove« or Mktoftt..... 48c&#13;
10c Work Hocka, per pair... 7c&#13;
3 pair for 20c&#13;
R e d u c t i o n on Rain C o a t s&#13;
which range in price from 93.00 to $12.60&#13;
Reduction on U n d e r w e a r&#13;
in piece and uniot&gt; Btnta&#13;
E D I S O N&#13;
PHONOGRAPHS&#13;
of Various Types&#13;
Fireside _. $27.00&#13;
Standard 35.00&#13;
Home _ 46.00&#13;
"Triumph ...; 65.00&#13;
Reduction on&#13;
Records&#13;
50c Amberol at Sic&#13;
30c Standard at.. 21c&#13;
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are to be sent. Baiter, lard, fish,&#13;
fresh meant, dressed fowls, vegegally&#13;
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No restriction ia placed on the&#13;
mailing of salted, dried, smoked&#13;
or cured meats, hot fresh meats&#13;
will be transported only within&#13;
the first zone.&#13;
Fragile articles, including millinery,&#13;
toys, musical instrument*,&#13;
and articles of glass in whole or&#13;
in part, mast be securely packed&#13;
and marked "fragile.*1&#13;
Articles that may not be sent&#13;
bv parcel post include intoxicating&#13;
liquors of all kinds, poisons, poisonous&#13;
animals, insects or reptile*,&#13;
explosives of every kind, inflam -&#13;
mable articles, including matches,&#13;
infernal maoaines, pistols or revolvers*&#13;
diaaase germs, any obscene,&#13;
defaautory or .ecnrriloaa&#13;
matter now prohibited by aw;&#13;
live or dead animals, or birds or&#13;
Hye poultry, raw hides or p^lts; or&#13;
anything having a bad odon&#13;
Books and printed matter may&#13;
rot be forwarded at pereaT post&#13;
rates, but only as third-class matter.&#13;
Servieesin the Ooogl* eburchr&#13;
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Envelopes Cards&#13;
Wedding Invttatfona&#13;
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tif' oaojiet, -atan^s Ptaos m Iromea&gt; Pleat Io tas Unrveiesw.&#13;
eociial invitation is extended io&#13;
~ to oitoe and hear thes^fejy&#13;
L^?S»1Wifcr7&#13;
' —mamesssasm " -&#13;
Ift Jenreys off&#13;
•ad Hrs* B.&#13;
w Irsae, of&#13;
at the home&#13;
U n e best and purest drags in the world [the kind we&#13;
keep] are of no service or are dangeronsv if taey are not&#13;
hsndfed carefully. This is a matter which is alfMhys nppeV '&#13;
most in our mind«~c«refuloess—the enooting oi tne dgbt&gt;&#13;
bottle, the measuring or weighing of the right doit. It n&gt;&#13;
oor oonstairt aimto he the right kind of druggiali W Mom&#13;
tae^wopU can co with confidencA wbfn th^ liven et loved&#13;
oaatcM^nponemrenn^^ perscriptions&#13;
:.' '-&lt;ifoy*"*i:&#13;
I ' • ' &lt; ' ' . # &gt; ( •&#13;
tmvrb? *«&#13;
. # • V a*d School Su^nUai '+&#13;
,'-•4&#13;
Wt wkkm* «erry Xmu «nd | « | f t&#13;
'.•..•(-.••"•.•Iji.Ynrv, '• ,;r-•*'" :"&#13;
-*H'-&#13;
.«r: -¾^)&#13;
. • / •&#13;
/s&#13;
'•' A ,&#13;
Qr&#13;
• * * ! ? ;&#13;
IV-V''"&#13;
Si&#13;
Se*dXtf frujl nuHer/ i&lt;t&#13;
other Jppnt plreduets for preps&#13;
m * v ^ . « i 4 U « ^ r r f B k the same coD-f&#13;
dJtSn*&#13;
dlafectlonery »n4 Soap&#13;
Candltft &lt;*X4K*\o*&amp;v*v***tj&amp;U&amp;&#13;
soap lirluud cakes, 4ic&gt;«ssust r&#13;
c ^ e d 1 in bb*e# a^so^JIWp*e«&#13;
prevent Injury to p t # r - m M , mat&#13;
ter. ;t;&gt;.^&#13;
• 5 5 S 5 * S 5 E&#13;
• a U n a ataea Aim&#13;
.be* done many wonderful fWnsw,&#13;
•meets t^«&gt;^'9fcpdnjj#4V ev&#13;
^ffiw&amp;d|rt«l Uk|n*jpgwd«r W*i&#13;
• Gntmet Baking Jh^mm-&#13;
Aajrou perhaps kMWftUen? yattr&#13;
experience—baki i 1¾ If&#13;
-if.'-fr*wv»&#13;
ini&#13;
• taar&#13;
;al»J&#13;
_ „p.o_w d,j erosr,.d ko», *stt are tm^oSraet Othiwa n PuMkeSjyt f*ptHit&gt;a*^ *&#13;
RATES ARE FIXED&#13;
Oisugts Are Regulated Under&#13;
fkt Zone System.&#13;
B16 EMTERPRISE • LAUNCHED&#13;
%aaat« far a Sir&#13;
the Limit in&#13;
ngle Package—&#13;
That Will Not In-&#13;
Mail Can&#13;
• M &lt;&#13;
0. CLARK.&#13;
ejff. the New Tear&#13;
government will en-&#13;
•«14 of enterprise—-&#13;
Of * merchandise - by&#13;
aa (the) pareel peat.&#13;
has fteea a demand&#13;
of Inexpensive&#13;
The estops&#13;
1 dNsfsvor of the parcel&#13;
fcawe traeu about' equally&#13;
Faasatrat the laat session,&#13;
of eaasjftssae a&gt; till waa pasted which&#13;
wttt an* ana ptaa let* operation, but&#13;
oaty It aaeast ffe said la Uttle more&#13;
then am sasaalSsetftaT way, . ^ ,&#13;
It 9a saw l«fiea\ttoa «ot Uncle Sam to&#13;
aftasrtgr rn the parcel poet&#13;
%ajirtta • to, flnd^ how popular&#13;
It wJM a*, now mfcch i t will coat&#13;
the ajwas assent, and whether there la&#13;
te&gt; he&gt; sv sssee* or tots ,et the. end qf&#13;
eaaa year. If-ft Is fcnrtfl that, the&#13;
plan la ssaceaasirat from the point of&#13;
'Haw a* cast people, which means the&#13;
ale*, the pareel post will&#13;
eaftll . finallyA it, reach**&#13;
which its proponents&#13;
U is destined to as- SI&#13;
•jyetetn Explained.&#13;
H aa aa&gt; exaggeration to say that&#13;
taoasannsBi aajon thousands of inquiries&#13;
hate* fessan tsade of the pbstmaster&#13;
gatrasat sat to Just what the parcel&#13;
•cat wflt aaaaa t o the people.. It'wai&#13;
tae law e f eDagrees establlsBln'g the&#13;
pTonsrdn for la&#13;
ffce country into tones&#13;
imtts which are to be&#13;
,t» describing; the clrtaars:&#13;
the boundaries of&#13;
has been no clear&#13;
apparently, of thli&#13;
A really it la a very&#13;
/ • •&#13;
i»&#13;
' • - . ' • . -&#13;
I map shows the&#13;
Into zones from the&#13;
, Washing ton is alt*&#13;
• « canter. : Accompanying&#13;
l e t t a b l e showing the rate&#13;
Bar Pouad for parcela from&#13;
to places within all the&#13;
contains an area thirty&#13;
Now each unit is a&#13;
. the tones are&#13;
unit In the couhtfcla.&#13;
situated will&#13;
from it Just exactly&#13;
tna thenV drawn frdtn&#13;
t a l e Keokuk, la.,&#13;
• §&gt;*&amp;&lt;&amp; tfce fifth zone.&#13;
HB %h * a w n circles exmej;&#13;
drinm from Washanunaered&#13;
from&#13;
one, just at they&#13;
from Washington a j&#13;
zone. The rates therefore are fixed&#13;
from the unit in which the postofSce&#13;
to located, opt they are the same&#13;
from that office to any point in any&#13;
one zone.&#13;
It will be seen by reference to the&#13;
table of rates of postage that it will&#13;
cost more per pound to send a package&#13;
a long distance than it doea to&#13;
send It a short distance. The* rate increases&#13;
for a package weighing one&#13;
pound at the rate of one cent1 for&#13;
each zone. No package weighing&#13;
more than 11 pounds can be sent under&#13;
the new parcel post law. it&#13;
should be said right here that on the&#13;
long hauls the parcel post may not&#13;
be able to compete with the express&#13;
companies, but that on shorter hauls&#13;
It can so compete. It was the expressed&#13;
desire of the legislators and&#13;
of the postofBce officials that the parcel&#13;
post system should be made of&#13;
particular use' to persons having farm&#13;
and factory products to transmit to&#13;
customers. It is probable that producers&#13;
must study the rates of postage&#13;
and the convenience of trjSntrulttal&#13;
and. compare them wtth the&#13;
cost and convenience under present&#13;
methods before individually a manftfean&#13;
determine whether he is to profit or&#13;
not by the change. Then there is another&#13;
thing to be considered and&#13;
which only can be known definitely&#13;
when, fuller regulations have been&#13;
made to specify exactly what kind of&#13;
things can be sent by parcel post. It&#13;
can be satd in a general way that anything&#13;
catr hw sent which is properly&#13;
wrapped and'which wVU not Injure&#13;
other mall matter with^which it may&#13;
come in contact. &gt;i * ' - V&#13;
Copy foreign Ceuntrlea. '&#13;
It Is probable that ihe government&#13;
will adopt a .means of. transportation&#13;
tot certain, ||n.ds.,Qf its merchandise&#13;
much like those which have been&#13;
adopted In parcel post countries&#13;
abroad.' What the English call hambasket-&#13;
like arrangements, proby&#13;
will be adopted, and ae these can&#13;
be, kept separate from the ordinary&#13;
mail matter it is believed that the&#13;
regulatlfnay-as finally adopted will allow&#13;
the sending of eggs, butter, dressed&#13;
poultry, live poultry, honey, fruit,&#13;
s,nd otheY prtduots of the country.&#13;
The ll-nott$d limit for a single package&#13;
may wotk at first agalnat any&#13;
very oextende4_ use of the parcel post&#13;
for some of the articles which have&#13;
been named.4 Of course, more weight&#13;
can be sent if 1t is sent In different&#13;
parcels, but the cost in that case&#13;
would be heavier because the t&amp;-&#13;
trease per pound on a single package&#13;
ta not great up to 11 pounds,, and&#13;
probably It would increase at no greater&#13;
rate If the government were to&#13;
raise the limit of weight which is now&#13;
fixed To make It simpler, it wilt&#13;
l o s t more to send two packages of 11&#13;
pounds than, tt ' would. ^ 1 send one&#13;
package of 22 pounds if the government&#13;
eventually should allow a hapvi&#13;
er single package to be carried and&#13;
should charge. In proportion Just what&#13;
it does now for one package of 11&#13;
pounds weight&#13;
Every postmaster in the United&#13;
States will have a parcel post map&#13;
like the one which is here reproduced&#13;
except that the zone lines, will be&#13;
shown with the unit of his poatoflce&#13;
as a center. AH that a postmaster&#13;
will have to do when a pareel ia presented&#13;
for transportation is to Bad&#13;
out in what tone the destination^ of&#13;
the package lies. His fable will show&#13;
him Instantly the rate per pound ftjom&#13;
:1&#13;
it. ''4.; t • * * •&#13;
wsM tarve a'dTfTerenf geoas&#13;
related to Keom&#13;
as related t o Waih-&#13;
H M rsdlmr 6t tte circlet&#13;
KaokHlc is, the same&#13;
radius of the circles&#13;
Washington, Kebaik'e&#13;
be Just as far'from its&#13;
lafton't Zone 8ix is.&#13;
Hates Are Fixed.&#13;
«nea from this readily.&#13;
*t**1**W ^ ratet * from;&#13;
to ttt •articsiiar toao wilt ? _&#13;
m dawpcsfal rats*i5ro«; '?2&#13;
Its xwrttcnmr zones. Bach&#13;
miles square&#13;
to inost casts a&#13;
^but eeob'*Boe&#13;
%&lt;ooastdered »g be*&#13;
^kr-^r^a^T*f**^y*}eav^'osaare&#13;
drawn. The&#13;
are rlxed^frorf the&#13;
v&#13;
^SBSJSI aa amm La«e are nxed from the 7 H 93 «Q&#13;
'•»•&#13;
the unit in which his postofflce lies&#13;
to the zone of the package's destinations,&#13;
the price as Las been explained&#13;
before, to every postofflce in any one&#13;
zone being the same. The parcel post&#13;
will take nothing but fourth-class mat&#13;
ter. Printed matter is still In the&#13;
third-class designation. Therefore&#13;
books cannot be sent by the parcel&#13;
post system. This the postofflce authorities&#13;
seem to think is in a way&#13;
unjust and may work a hardship. It&#13;
may be that in the future the law will&#13;
be changed so as to Include all printed&#13;
matter. It seems to be certain that&#13;
an attempt will be made to bring&#13;
about this change as speedily as possible.&#13;
Postmaster Qeneral Hitchcock has&#13;
ordered that postmasters be advised&#13;
that parcel post packages cannot be&#13;
accepted for mailing unless they beaj&#13;
a distinctive parcel post stamp and&#13;
have attached to them the return card&#13;
of the sender. A series of distinctive&#13;
stamps is now in course of preparation&#13;
for this class of mall as required&#13;
by the law creating the parcel post&#13;
system. Consignments of these&#13;
stamps will be ready for shipment to&#13;
all postofflcea in asaple time tor the&#13;
establishment of the new system oh&#13;
New Tear's day.&#13;
The poetofflce department has given&#13;
Instruction to every postmaster in the&#13;
country to enlighten his patrons as&#13;
much as possible on the general subject&#13;
of the parcel post and especially&#13;
on the use of the special stamps and&#13;
the necessary attachment of the return&#13;
card. The law requires that all&#13;
fourth-class matter mailed a'ier January''&#13;
1, Mt, without parcelr powt&#13;
stamps attached shall be treated at&#13;
"Held for postage" matter. Parcel&#13;
poBt packages will be mailable only&#13;
at poatofflceB, branch postofflcea, lettered&#13;
and local named stations, and&#13;
such numbered stations as may be&#13;
designated by the postmasters.&#13;
Rate on Seeds Not Affected.&#13;
U should be said that the act of&#13;
congress whloh putB a parcel post plan&#13;
into operation does not In any way&#13;
affect the postage rate on seeds, cuttings,&#13;
bulbs, roots, scions and plants&#13;
as fixed by section 482 of the postal&#13;
laws and regulations.&#13;
The classification of articles mallable&#13;
as well as the weight limit, the&#13;
rates of postage, zone or zones and&#13;
other conditions of mallabllity under&#13;
the act of congress, if the postmaster&#13;
general ahall find on experience "that&#13;
they or a n y of them are such as to&#13;
prevent the shipment of articles desirable,&#13;
or ahall permanently render&#13;
the coat of the service greater than&#13;
Che receipts of the revenue therefrom,&#13;
he la hereby authorized, subject to the&#13;
consent of the Interstate commerce&#13;
commission after Investigation, to reform&#13;
from time to time such classification,&#13;
weight limit, rates, zone or&#13;
zones or conditions* in order to promote&#13;
the aervice to the public or to&#13;
Insure the receipt of revenue from,&#13;
such service adequate to pay the cost&#13;
thereof.''&#13;
Through many yeara different mem*&#13;
hers of the house and senate have&#13;
been interested In prompting parcel&#13;
post legislation. Among the men most&#13;
active in securing the legislation&#13;
which soon Is to go Into effect as&#13;
law are Senator Jonathan Bourne of&#13;
Oregon, Representatives Davrd J.&#13;
Lewis of Maryland and William Gutter&#13;
of New York, who has just bean&#13;
elected governor of that state.&#13;
APPROVES RULES&#13;
FOR PARCEL POST&#13;
Postmaster General Issues Regulations&#13;
Governing System.&#13;
WHAT MAY BE SENT BY MAIL&#13;
Gives American People Opportunity to&#13;
Send Farm and Factory Producte&#13;
by Mail From and to Any&#13;
Point in United 8tates.&#13;
Postmaster General Hitchcock has&#13;
just approved the regulations which&#13;
cover In detail the articles which may&#13;
or may not be sent by parcel post&#13;
These regulations are now being&#13;
turned off at the government printing&#13;
office on a "rush order" and they will&#13;
be distributed as rapidly as possible.&#13;
The rules as to what can be sent&#13;
and what cannot be sent and the instructions&#13;
for the preparation of mallable&#13;
articles with other "official advice"&#13;
are given here as they have juat&#13;
been prepared by the postofflce department&#13;
In Washington.&#13;
The minimum rate will be five cents&#13;
for the first pound and three cents for&#13;
each additional pound to any point not&#13;
exceeding fifty miles from the office of&#13;
mailing; the local rate, watch la five&#13;
eents for the first pound and one cent&#13;
for additional pound, applies to aty.&#13;
mam+am'' #3*am* ^TtttE^OF POSTAGE&#13;
parcels the delivery of which does not&#13;
Involve their transportation on railway&#13;
lines. The rates increase for&#13;
each successive one of the eight zones,&#13;
the maximum rate being twelve cents&#13;
a pound, which will carry a tfarcet&#13;
across the continent or to any of out*&#13;
possessions. Parcels will be limited&#13;
to eleven pounds in weight and six&#13;
feet in length and girth combined.&#13;
Mailable PeHthabfc Articles.&#13;
Butter, lard and perishable articles&#13;
such as fish* fresh meats, dressed&#13;
fowls, vegetables, fruits, berries and&#13;
articles of a similar nature that decax&#13;
quickly, when ao packed or wrapped&#13;
as to prevent damage to other malt&#13;
matter, will be accepted for local da?&#13;
livery either at the office of mailing of&#13;
on any rural route starting therefrom&#13;
When Inclosed In an inner cover and&#13;
a strong outer cover of wood, met*'&#13;
al, heavy corrugated pasteboard or&#13;
other suitable material and wrapped&#13;
so that nothing can escape&#13;
from the package/ they will be ae*&#13;
cepted for mailing to any offioes with*&#13;
in the first zone or within a radius of&#13;
50 miles. Butter, lard, or any greasyor&#13;
oily substance Intended for dellv«&#13;
ery at offices beyond the first zone&#13;
must be suitably packed. Vegetables&#13;
and fruit that do not decay quickly&#13;
will be accepted for mailing to any&#13;
zone if packed so as to prevent damage&#13;
to other mail matter. Eggs will be&#13;
accepted for local delivery whan securely&#13;
packed In % basket or other&#13;
container. Eggs will be accepted for&#13;
mailing regardless of distance when&#13;
each egg is wrapped separately and&#13;
packed in a container.&#13;
There is no restriction on salted,&#13;
dried, smoked or cured meats and&#13;
other meat products, but fresh malt&#13;
in any tbrm' wilt be transported only&#13;
within the first zone. '&#13;
Parcels containing perishable articles&#13;
most be marked "PERISHABLE,"&#13;
and articles Uaary to spoil wtthia the .*. (fa^el»-weighing jour ounces or less are mailable at the ratt^jime reasonably raoutred^ for traaeof&#13;
one cent for each ounce or fraction of an ounce, regardless of '-"——- —-&#13;
distance. Parcels weighing more than four ounces are mailable&#13;
at the pound rate,as shown by the following table, and when mailed&#13;
at this; rate any fraction of a pound is considered a lull pound.&#13;
*Tst zone 2d 3d 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th&#13;
£ topa^erle • tort* zone zone zone- zone zone zone f f ^ ; rtrtet rtk,^ rate, rate rate rate rate rate&#13;
ISOGFmm to»* $o07 $o.os $009 $0.10 so.ii so.12&#13;
2... .06 .08 .10 .12 .14 .16 .19 .21 .24&#13;
22&#13;
3...&#13;
4...:&#13;
s:&#13;
JOt^ . I f&#13;
M M&#13;
.10 .20&#13;
.T8&#13;
.,56&#13;
.31&#13;
ti&amp;.&#13;
iSi&#13;
.20&#13;
26&#13;
22&#13;
.38&#13;
:44&#13;
.50&#13;
tilt ?atUS Of f M | t i | s \ a% P t , IWaV&#13;
portation and delivery will not be a *&#13;
cepted fot making.&#13;
, Manufactured Articles.&#13;
Manufacturers or dealers intending,&#13;
to transmit articles In considerable,&#13;
quantities are asked to submit to the&#13;
postmaster for approval a specimen&#13;
parcel showtng' the manner of packing.&#13;
' • " . . . , . • • • ,:&#13;
When sharp'potated instruments are&#13;
offered for nuUnat 4s* ootau lmist as*&#13;
rapped or* aneaaed. BMoss mast be&#13;
iwuns so that they will remain at*&#13;
taohed to each other or within thetr&#13;
handle* or, soakets. v T&#13;
• In* Powders, pepper, snuff, or other&#13;
M&#13;
:'js*. 2&#13;
ISt* Uft&#13;
w holeaoiwe * » A 4a*t&gt;r~4Ber-^*4wmet«4t&#13;
1M pure in the can and in the baking-&#13;
BO uniform in quality, s o ei&#13;
pared, Ubfct fanut^s arer'lm&#13;
t a n judge of its purity, too, when&#13;
know that it hag been gjven the highest&#13;
awards at two World's Pure Food E i&#13;
•itlons—one at Chicago in ISO? an&lt;~&#13;
other a t P a d s , France,' laat March.'&#13;
THE ONLY WAY.'&#13;
l»jma_ _&#13;
..,:- , . . -_ r - the to&amp;tn*B*m # ^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ **th,&#13;
etary agticlea, such as soaps, tobacco^ — - - - *&#13;
pills, tablets, etc.. put up in fixed&#13;
quantities by the manufacturer, and&#13;
not in themselves irnmailable,-wtil&#13;
be accepted for mailing when properly&#13;
wrapped.&#13;
Millinery/ ' •'•&#13;
Fragile articles, auctf air millinery,&#13;
tdys, musiearinstrumentt, etc., amlkartides&#13;
eonsisthtg wholly or in part«of&#13;
glass, or contained In glass, must be&#13;
securely packed and the pareel stamped&#13;
or labeled "FRAGILE."&#13;
Unmailabie Matter.&#13;
.The following matter lajtecUred ua*&#13;
mailable by law: r J * ^&#13;
Matter manifestly obscene, lewd, or&#13;
lascivious; artiolee lntended^for preventing&#13;
conception; articles intended&#13;
for indecent or immoral purposes; all&#13;
matter otherwise mailable by law, the&#13;
outside cover, _er wrapper ; of which&#13;
bears and delineation or language jof&#13;
a libelous, scurrilous, defamatory, or&#13;
threatening character. All such mat*&#13;
ter, when deposited in a post office or&#13;
found in the malls, shall be withdrawn&#13;
and Bent to the divisions'of dead letters.&#13;
Intoxicants, Poisons and inflammable&#13;
Materials.&#13;
Spirituous, vinous, malted, fenSented,&#13;
or other Intoxicating liquors of any&#13;
kind; polBons of every kind, and articles&#13;
and compositions containing poison,&#13;
^onsonous animals, insects and&#13;
reptiles: explosives of every kind; Inflammable&#13;
materials (which are held&#13;
to Include matches, kerosene oil, gasoline,&#13;
naphtha, benzine, turpentine, de*&#13;
natured alcohol, etc.), Infernal machines,&#13;
and mechanical, chemical or&#13;
other devices or compositions which&#13;
may ignite of explode; disease germs&#13;
or scabs, and other natural or artificial&#13;
articles, compositions or materials&#13;
of whatever kind which may&#13;
kill, or in any wise injure another or&#13;
damage the mail or other property.&#13;
Pistols, Animals arid Birds.&#13;
Pistols or revolvers, whether in detached&#13;
parts or otherwise; live or&#13;
dead (and not stuffed) animals, birds,&#13;
or poultry, except as elsewhere provided&#13;
; raw hides or pelts, guano, or&#13;
any article having a bad odor will&#13;
not be admitted to the malls.'&#13;
Treatment of Undellverable Paroele.&#13;
Perishable matter will be delivered&#13;
as promptly as possible, but if such&#13;
matter can not be delivered and becomes&#13;
offensive and injurious to&#13;
health, postmasters may destroy.-it or&#13;
the injurious or offensive torHon&#13;
thereof. • ' *&#13;
Parcels Improperly Packed,&#13;
.postmasters will refuse to receive&#13;
for mailing parcels not properly^ indorsed&#13;
or packed for safe shipment&#13;
When parcels, on which the postage&#13;
:w&#13;
.' v # •&#13;
^iwtf-^&#13;
.;/; ;v«&#13;
Orville Stpute--Have I my slippem.&#13;
or my shoes og, Maria? 3 p&#13;
Mrs. Stoute—Take 'em oft and seev&#13;
for yourself.&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle oxi&#13;
CA8TORIA, a safe and sure remedy fori&#13;
Infants and children, and see that It&#13;
Signature of Cm^/^y7^t^£ki&#13;
In TJse For OverSa Years. f&#13;
Children Cry for Fletchers Castoriav&#13;
All women are born free and equal f&#13;
—but they don't look It at the bathing'&#13;
beach. »&#13;
• Red Cross Ball Blue will wash double aef&#13;
many clothe* n« any other blue. Doa'tf&#13;
put your money into any ,#ber. Adv.&#13;
Bachelors are "women's rights." and'&#13;
widowers are women's lefts. '}&#13;
is wholly unpaid or insufficiently prepaid&#13;
is deposited for local delivery&#13;
and the sender ,Js unknown, notice of&#13;
detention need.not,.be sent but such&#13;
matter will be, delivered and the deficient&#13;
postage collected from tlje addressee&#13;
by the carrier. If t$e addressee&#13;
refuses to pay the postage&#13;
the matter will be sent to the Division&#13;
of!Dead Letters.&#13;
Insurance on Parcels.&#13;
A mailable parcel on which the&#13;
postage' Is fully prepaid may be Insured&#13;
against loss in an amount equivalent&#13;
to its actual value,, but not to&#13;
exceed ISO, on payment o t ' a i e e of&#13;
ten cents in parcel post stamps, such&#13;
stamps to be affixed.&#13;
.Forwarding of Pareels.&#13;
Parcels may be remaned or forwarded&#13;
on the payment of additional&#13;
postage at the rate which would be&#13;
chargeable If they were originally&#13;
mailed at the forwarding office. In&#13;
which case the neoesaary stamps will&#13;
be affixed by the forwarding postmaster.&#13;
Payment must be made every&#13;
time the parcel i s forwarded.&#13;
Preparation for Mailing.&#13;
Parcels must be prepared for mailing&#13;
In such manner that the contents&#13;
can be' easily examined. A parcel will&#13;
not be adrjtttbs* to* mailing unfcsalt&#13;
bears the x»m «*4 s d d w s s ^ ta«&#13;
sender preceded by the word "From.'*&#13;
Ittaddttton^Wthe name and address&#13;
of, the sender, whjcn Is requlrs4 ft&#13;
will be permissible to write or print&#13;
of a parcel, or on s, •ijtsrft&#13;
Uo^^Oa^ sender, and to&#13;
by means ol fnamsa or&#13;
descripildtt, the character of taw par*&#13;
eel. ^-aserpie spaeajnust be left o a \&#13;
j^and for&#13;
a stamps Ini'&#13;
cjBfjstmssi&#13;
da hit' opea lmtit Wtstmat/&#13;
I^^Vear" -Witft'hest wishes,1&#13;
tbe%l% may be placed on the VH*t&gt;r&#13;
I'OlstlntfBve Mmps. .&#13;
on.van &lt; matter 'MbW prapal* b *&#13;
distinctive&#13;
f^satsaatbaflsy&#13;
ttST5»*osji»&#13;
It's the easiest thing in the world to&#13;
go from bad to worse.&#13;
FOLEY KIDNEY MILS&#13;
Are Rlchtet ia Curative Quafttfe* }&#13;
FOR BAOKAGHI, RHEUMATtSM.&#13;
KIDNEYS AH* StUspDCfl&#13;
*&lt;i—— — r — t i i ^ y ^ 1 — • '— • * ABSCR Bir^E.;&#13;
WUll»dOC0_ . . ,&#13;
ftBanctaM/Care&#13;
lteoa aot*tea;r at*o*n* Aoftt lclbOia t^r&#13;
mtiee,e tv F?eaalnaf, a&#13;
a. 'frtiwliai^'fittfB&#13;
Jr oonr ewrriihter,. fialfTjm-'uwfisneiiaerue ar&#13;
•tt.F..3lO Temple 6t..tprin|SeM.&#13;
DR. J. D . KELLOa&lt;&#13;
A^ . :._ druggist for I t WHls let Pitt MS#U&#13;
MOBTHaOP aUTMsJIOO, U s . SWFALft *.Y.&#13;
- , , : , , . . • • • . , tu* . &lt;*•••.&#13;
The Army ^&#13;
Constipation&#13;
|a Ct^wissj'amaJiar^s^ssy'Pa^- CARTEK'S LITTLI ~&#13;
LIVER PflU are&#13;
notonly give relief^&#13;
-"•they pel ua*&#13;
nentlycureCae^&#13;
atisetieB. Mil-.&#13;
lions u s e&#13;
.them for&#13;
K i*»1&#13;
•M:&#13;
~:,m&#13;
feJlgestiasi. Ism Hsssatas, SaStw Ada. /r+.&#13;
Gefiuloe most bear Signatiiro&#13;
istmilar powders not explosive, or any. JOa.&#13;
. 6 1 r JS5(lilaaiiir puiverfsed dbrf eubstanee, not&#13;
'ls^ eases. me4» i»f ssstsJ, woo4«r other&#13;
ssaterlsl I n lanitar .lama^asllhaajaiu, a i .&#13;
^ss^sfw^ss^ e^s^sBssi^aBr^a^BSBBw* j*sssB^^^BBsssssBB*aaaj^Bssa«sr '^sawr }aape oi any^ot tha,&lt;sfl|ta^ ^^£*»J»*&#13;
yt.aa, )faHj*MMmt;t9b,m4L ttt at thetr cost, 71 osata, ^roagli taai&#13;
net •*£**•*&#13;
rSSm&#13;
matter ts&gt; which theyth earta p urposei dfcs&#13;
p# treated aa» -HebJ far&#13;
^ py - Masjs aai AisUtsav&#13;
'• paratJ aost.mapsv wttk a&#13;
^ ^ ^&#13;
B^sasst%sVAss^^esattac'* ISiai&#13;
, J BEEF&#13;
»£{8%eYa«&#13;
rug®?&#13;
1*1&#13;
nipa. T^-n ' ^ f^^j J M | oi ff WWt it'e-rewe (ce«edrl ii sntatTi&#13;
and pnxfoea) e Itae* eatV&#13;
m e n p i i t i i&#13;
elfotMe ii*so»)l&#13;
aa. v , saoffVrwav*^&#13;
We laflsisse Ass,, aalssltj aadl.&#13;
v"&#13;
: ^&#13;
*£&#13;
%&#13;
^TrSTTi i n m&#13;
PTABLB SMALL GIFT&#13;
MA^ OF BUSINESS&#13;
Mad* an Attractive :Uttla Ar-&#13;
Especially If ths initiate&#13;
of the Recipient ere Work*&#13;
^efWgfh f hea* of Donor .*v&#13;
t&#13;
aha'&#13;
»&#13;
-•*•.•» • / •.&#13;
.4 ..&#13;
waiftcoat pocket stamp case&#13;
in ^ aooompanyiiig sketch&#13;
wou|d w t e an acceptable little gift&#13;
for a man on an unimportant occa-&#13;
•Jon t^ J« made In two separate&#13;
pieces, and the portion containing the&#13;
stamps, shown In the upper sketch,&#13;
fits Jnto the lower portion&#13;
lit making it, two heart-shaped&#13;
pieces of thin cardboard are out out&#13;
in the size indicated, and neatly covered&#13;
with thin silk and then sewn together&#13;
at the edges to the points lndicated&#13;
by A'&amp;nd A, the upper part&#13;
being left open&#13;
For the pocket tor the stamps, a&#13;
piece of cardboard an inch and a&#13;
quarter in width, and sih inchand a&#13;
half In length, is covered*, with some&#13;
which are soft and most becoming.&#13;
Tha, muffs, too, are yery lovely", The&#13;
white fox is an especially appropriate&#13;
evening fur, and, in fact, all the members&#13;
of the fox famUy, art favorably&#13;
looked upon this season.^ A striking&#13;
combination of black and white furs&#13;
is produced by combining lynx with&#13;
ermine. Another effective combination&#13;
is that of black and gold brocade&#13;
with lynx trimmings.&#13;
THIN GOWN IS THE DECREE&#13;
W- ' ''' r&#13;
&amp;•'*&#13;
-:'«'&gt;; ;&#13;
v ' '••'-' 1 MSBi !Q .1&#13;
?%*****% ,—•&#13;
•i$$"'"&#13;
•X;'&#13;
?*•«£.&#13;
»'i;.'Si;.&#13;
of the tajse silk, and at the top a loop&#13;
'narrow ribbon is sewn on and'the&#13;
ket arranged across the lower half.&#13;
at the sketch will explain&#13;
initials of the recipient can he&#13;
upon osrt aide and perhaps&#13;
the donor on the other,&#13;
in some dark shade of color&#13;
^ selected, as it will show and&#13;
le»a ctJckrf tha» jnorel lightbr&#13;
d prljisiiy^sdt Hrt^caaV wouM&#13;
tatja ^vef^fjwpilveatried* oat; in grey&#13;
tUk with red ribbon and initials workadV]*&#13;
jfok*tofcatch the; latter. "&#13;
3fte Jfcitlal^^li^the wayt must, of&#13;
coo/ae, be worked upon the ^nateria,!&#13;
prior to covering the cardboard, and&#13;
acme pretty, little floral design might&#13;
he embroidered la place, of thanv if&#13;
preferred.&#13;
" . - ' * * ' • &gt; " r --&#13;
YeflftiMa-.-ifim. *aer*&gt;&#13;
With lojf^ut gowna.th^fy^scagf^&#13;
are mor«r*£feever In, devxairf. There&#13;
molsakla^berdeted&#13;
wllisT srmifie; SMTthere ar#, ttunnlngy&#13;
ione 0¾ ermine and ' chiffon&#13;
idea Certainly a Pretty One, Though&#13;
There SheuM Be Much Discretion&#13;
Exercised in Ita Wear.&#13;
Paris has decreed that once again&#13;
the winter gown shall be diaphanous,&#13;
carried out in chiffon or muslin Telvet,&#13;
or at very thickest crepe de Chine&#13;
or almost gauzy satin. Except in the&#13;
severest weather there Is something&#13;
to be said for these dresses, when&#13;
they are worn by the possessors of&#13;
magnificent furs, A long fur coat is&#13;
far too warm to be healthy, if worn&#13;
over a thick* dress, except on very exceptional&#13;
days.&#13;
Unfortunately a .fashion/may be intended&#13;
for, one class/but it will be&#13;
copied by others, and the result of&#13;
eueh a mode as that of the thin winter&#13;
gown spells pneumonia for a.good&#13;
many people However, at least the&#13;
frocks,are, pretty, especially when&#13;
trimmed, with fur. Pur and old lace&#13;
o»mhi&amp;ed. are a very fashionable trimming&#13;
at the moment,, although; a famous&#13;
French, dressmaker has denounced&#13;
the mixture as In bad taste,&#13;
and being; bad art.&#13;
For the evenings, of course, thin&#13;
gowns-have it all their own way. Bven&#13;
brocades have now been brought to&#13;
seek, a degree of lightness and cuppleKess&#13;
that they are practically like&#13;
gauze. Indoor gowns are still being&#13;
trimmed with pink or pale ground&#13;
cameos, and they were also seen on&#13;
hats a*4 coats, so those who possess&#13;
these fine ornaments can still wear&#13;
them In this very effective manner.&#13;
SMART CRAVATS AND STOCKS&#13;
Old Fashion, WMch Has Much to Recommend&#13;
It, Will Be Welcomed&#13;
Back to Favor.&#13;
One rejoices to see that again w«&#13;
_Are_ io_ wear -cravats and stocks of&#13;
folded black silk and satin, with small&#13;
turned-down stock collars of white&#13;
lawn showing narrow^ at the top.&#13;
Severe as it is, this t i t h e moat becoming&#13;
form Of neckwear possible, and&#13;
if the lawn 'turnover is not starched&#13;
(but the laundress will stiffen it if&#13;
she gem the chance) the severity is&#13;
by DO means too great. The finishing&#13;
toadies of the cravat, too/help to remove&#13;
the touch of sternness. Neat&#13;
and small the bow may be—but with&#13;
what pointed ends, and with how&#13;
much daah In its crisp lines! A very&#13;
smart' notion is'to Thave the boV?at&#13;
the base of the throat made of "narrow&#13;
ribbon, three-quarters of an inch&#13;
wide. This enables the bow to hare&#13;
the requisite spring In l u lines, and&#13;
also to be small, where ribbon of the&#13;
same wldth'as- that arotftta the neck&#13;
is altogether too" flowing For theT little&#13;
lawn turnovers, plain hemstitching&#13;
U the Ideal adornment, tubugh a n o r&#13;
rotf ejtfifcg of crochet is perhitssrsft1&#13;
or a little white embroidery. Smalt&#13;
pin-in Wwa la spotted^foulards' or soft&#13;
satin are,, also much worn just now.&#13;
i U f l H f l i T TOUCH WITH SNAKE EMBROIDERY&#13;
of Trailing Flowers&#13;
I •% . V&#13;
^ Those who admire dainty neckwear&#13;
' ""ill' embroider a collar, using net as&#13;
foundation,&#13;
careful when&#13;
y « t t s M a&#13;
iple&#13;
ing the net&#13;
ip-wwrifr&#13;
&gt;"..&#13;
&lt;&amp;V&#13;
' &amp; •&#13;
•rU\&#13;
design of trailing Bowers&#13;
atfettaoa of tiny blossoms&#13;
chain of daW hcada,0rap4ed&#13;
^ W ^ d « g J ^ . O t l M » . f ^ ^ l&#13;
' Pad m petals an* leaven 1&#13;
% i 4 pfaUrrOng cotton* mitd&#13;
across this, usteg soft Mercerised eotjj&#13;
3n./:»utt©nnole stitch, the cutsidi&#13;
! J ^ r ^ a ^ e ^ T ^ c ^ *&#13;
Bind-the iscfc Htte^^wfth a biaa&#13;
M lawn* wnich .aitpe 4en«adl&#13;
^ ; flbroriar^.'lTill-fHffcr col&#13;
a^^M»&lt; «^kL^a^sllsBB&gt;^bH^B^sft«&lt;-jeas^ssbft • e ^ s T ' i a ^ i Mfiaft a &gt; g &gt; ^ . ^ mi&#13;
^rr^jBf^pwWerorjs^ ^f&amp;mmntammr&#13;
- %4*:'i:&amp;M&amp; 9, p»efa»rair.i1feer^W&#13;
ity finish to the ooflar. -v-SqRtyii&#13;
7p, wssh a chenilla Ubleclolh bell&#13;
fessY'V pint of bran in two^flj&amp;arts of&#13;
Vajsr^fss; half an.hour. Ta th^addd&#13;
e a S ^ t W to make it inet the 1¾¾¾&#13;
far holding the hands in co&amp;v&#13;
r^aad tkea wash the ctttfr'ta it,&#13;
e | « f n^jc«.-4f:tha.cic&lt;lk^tnen«sr&#13;
•likid, aaka mora br|A „water aad&gt; net&#13;
*he« auJBcieaUr- oaol.&#13;
• • J i ^ ^ a f **aa^ehw *W U needwa\&#13;
basassadaailolhe^laa.ol tba sloitei&#13;
^^w^Fa^WB^easjB^^sp^^^iap&gt; '•^BP^- BBB^^^^ ^B^^^^^^W ^^W ^ ^ ^ - ^ ^^^^w^^^w&#13;
'gBst'e^ aaeaavA enpply say be had frtei&#13;
OOVERNOPL_FEJt«lt' INAUGU^Ai-&#13;
WILL BE tlNOBTENTATIOi/B A » - \ measures&#13;
HE WISHES IT&#13;
4 At W« , cipaa, Pi tnji. tast regular&#13;
session Asp. Ouc^s* dfM^iand, and;&#13;
Hep. Charles dulttr, i|£jU»tT» ****&lt;'&#13;
the only rep^bHc^aawjab •weae^vow^f '&#13;
&gt;p&lt;i*ndidat£s fi^ the Bpeakeratdp. it tg;&#13;
claimed that^BsaitJjilo«t som^sirength&#13;
because of his reactionary stand ea&#13;
several impotrant Dills, while Currie&#13;
took every precaution to fortify hkn-&#13;
•elf Jfey supporting all the progressive&#13;
THE SPEAKERSHIP, A PLACE OF&#13;
GREAT POWER, WILL BE T H E&#13;
BIG HOUSE PLUM.&#13;
fthe&#13;
ered thenV t f&#13;
graph aa#wi&#13;
aiTne pboteasaalag&#13;
wgloiia*!«f&#13;
The Matters qf Legislation That Art&#13;
of Special Intsreat to the Taxpayers&#13;
Briefly Referred To.&#13;
' 'is—-&#13;
[By Gurd M. Hayes.]&#13;
If the wishes of Governor-elect Ferris&#13;
are respected, and there is every&#13;
reason to believe that they will be, the&#13;
inauguration of the first democratic&#13;
governor elected in Michigan In more&#13;
than two decades will be entirely devoid&#13;
of ostentation or unnecessary display.&#13;
In keeping with the quiet, dignified&#13;
personality of the man who is to&#13;
preside over; the destinies of ths&gt;&#13;
Wolverine state for the nefcti two years,&#13;
Woodbridge N. Ferris will be ushered&#13;
into the executive chair without the&#13;
blare of trumpets or the flashing of&#13;
gold lace.&#13;
Plans for the inauguration have been&#13;
perpared by Edmund II. ShleldB,&#13;
chairman of the democratic State central&#13;
committee, at the request of the&#13;
governor-elect. Major itoy &lt;;. Vander-&#13;
.cock, commander of the flret battalion&#13;
of field artillery, and adjutant general&#13;
of the Michigan,National Guard, haa&#13;
been commissioned to extend an invitation&#13;
to the state officials and justices&#13;
of the supreme court to participate&#13;
iff he evens of he day.&#13;
As the clock tolls the'hoh'rof twelve&#13;
at noon on the first day of January&#13;
Governor-elect Ferris and the other&#13;
state officials will stand on the front&#13;
porch of the capitol building and re*&#13;
oelve the oath of office which will be&#13;
administered by Chief Justice Joseph&#13;
B. Moore of the supreme court. As&#13;
soon as the gray-haired jurist pronoupces&#13;
the words that will bind&#13;
Woodbridge N. Ferris to the people of&#13;
Michigan, the governor's salute of 17&#13;
guns will, be fired by the artillery. If&#13;
weather conditions prevent the holding&#13;
of this ceremony on. the. capitol&#13;
steps, the officers will receive the oath&#13;
of office in the senate -chamber.&#13;
In view of the fact that this is the&#13;
first time in more than twenty years&#13;
that a democratic governor is to be&#13;
inducted into office democrats from&#13;
far and wide In the state are planning&#13;
to come here for the inauguration and&#13;
special attention is to be paid to these&#13;
visitors. Patriot democrats have announced&#13;
that they are coming out in&#13;
two special trains.&#13;
After he has received the oath of of-&#13;
Oce Gov. Ferris will hold a reception&#13;
for half an hour to state officers and&#13;
members of the legislature, andthe has&#13;
extended an invitation to Gov. Osborn&#13;
to assist him. After the legislators and&#13;
state offiolala have passed through the&#13;
receiving line the ezcutive parlors will&#13;
be thrown open to the general public,&#13;
this reception being particularly for&#13;
the out of town people who will not&#13;
remain over night. In this feature an&#13;
entirely new custom is established,&#13;
previous governors not haying' invited&#13;
their predecessors of a different political&#13;
party to share wiih them in the&#13;
events of the day.&#13;
In the evening (fr$m 8 o'clock. Gov.&#13;
and Mr*, Ferris, thelf son, Carlton and.&#13;
wife, their son, Phelp's, the justices&#13;
of the supreme court, the state offloers&#13;
aad their wives, will hold a re*&#13;
caption in the excutive parlor. At both&#13;
receptions the First Battalion Field&#13;
Artillery, In full dress uniform, will&#13;
furnish the ushers and have control&#13;
of the crowd, while the artillery battalion&#13;
band will render a concert fn&#13;
the routunda of the capitol.&#13;
The Oil inspector.&#13;
Governor-elect Ferris-1s In favor of&#13;
abolishing two jobs that Governor OSborn,&#13;
looked upon with disfavor when&#13;
he came into office two years a g o -&#13;
state oil inspector anil state salt inspector.&#13;
The legilatiire refused to heed&#13;
the request of, Osborn that these two&#13;
departments be abollahfid* and it is extremely&#13;
doubtful whether the next&#13;
chief executive wil lbe able to aoconv&#13;
plish much along thialtee.&#13;
The democratic governor-elect says&#13;
that hit message will be brief and to&#13;
the point. If this Is true, it will be&#13;
somewhat of an Innovation, as it hat&#13;
required some governor* fn recent&#13;
years nearly an hour tov read their in*&#13;
augural at the first joint sesslon'of the&#13;
two housei. .^ ,,.&#13;
Governor Osborn, toon says that hit&#13;
last ineaaaga to the tiicbigan legislature&#13;
will be very short The retiring&#13;
chief executive claims rt*et iaaaaioch&#13;
' asdsmgfgi baaomaa tatfate «ttl£ea c*.&#13;
JSA. lp-he d»e» not gadlarg Onat the'&#13;
•aUmtnaad the peopla of-the state wilt&#13;
tafea a»much inttfNttt in hiaTWirtHst&#13;
aa In the metaage i&amp;Wmltir' stewn*&#13;
Of- • V'*&gt;r.. '-at -\:-JH &gt;•«*• &lt;-»»•&gt; .'v;"^-/ • X&#13;
... H I tha sjaak«aa|ilg&gt; ., v Jn mil peobmbUttr INni 04lber^ Car*&#13;
rtt. of Mldterd. wiftbe thw asm apeakar&#13;
ar^sa- stawatr At ^UNF preaWnt'Tftda&#13;
OarrM ) ^ % i w « a pledw^^froto the&#13;
In the'lowtf tonsirto ala&#13;
_Jssar&#13;
.til&#13;
When the special sessions wer«&#13;
called the republican candidates for&#13;
the speakership continued their casnpalgn&#13;
(or pledges, but many of the&#13;
members of the lower house who promised&#13;
to vote for Smith were defeated&#13;
In the election this fall, and a careful&#13;
canvass discloses the fact that Cujrle&#13;
will have at least 32 of the &amp;2 republican&#13;
votes at the caucaa the night&#13;
before, the contest is officially decided.&#13;
The progressives wil lhave a candidate&#13;
for the speakership in Rep. Mo*&#13;
BrAde, of Burton, Shiawassee county,&#13;
while Rep. GlaasneiS of Barry county,&#13;
and Rep. Farmer,'',of Liinvtngston&#13;
county wHl aspire to'the nomination&#13;
in the democratic caucaa There has&#13;
been some talk to the effect that the&#13;
democrats and progressives will align&#13;
themselves with the disgruntled republicans&#13;
In an effort to control the house&#13;
and elect a speaker, but little credence&#13;
is given to this in Btate political circles.&#13;
Whoever the speaker of the next&#13;
house may be, he will be able, if he&#13;
sprinkles his committee appointments&#13;
judiciously, to became a powerful factor&#13;
in the politics of Michigan. Some&#13;
of tl»e most important propositions&#13;
that have been considered in years&#13;
will be up to the 1913 legislature, and&#13;
as usual, the committees will be the&#13;
big factors in determining the fate of&#13;
some of the proposed measures.&#13;
Congressional Districts.&#13;
Under the provisions of the new constitution&#13;
adopted in 1908, it la required&#13;
that the legislature of 1913 shall reapportion&#13;
the congressional, senatorial&#13;
and legislative distracts of the state.&#13;
Therefore, if Is expected that there&#13;
will be a general scramble among the&#13;
mtmbersof the house to secure the appointment&#13;
as chairman of the committee&#13;
on apportionment. The present&#13;
congressmen will naturally want the&#13;
congressional districts arranged to&#13;
their best advantage, while the members&#13;
of the house who have ambitions&#13;
to become state eenatorsr will -endear*&#13;
or to have the senatorial districts&#13;
blocked out to suit their convenience.&#13;
When the last United tSates census&#13;
was completed, It was found that Michigan's&#13;
Increased population entitled&#13;
this state'to one additional congressman.&#13;
This condition was met by providing&#13;
a congressman to be elected&#13;
from the state at large and Patrick&#13;
H. Kelley, former lieutenant governor,&#13;
i$g chosen as the thirteenth congressman&#13;
at the recent election.&#13;
All indications point to some \lvely&#13;
wire pulling and intricate maneuvering&#13;
when the proposition of redisricting&#13;
the state comes up for consideration&#13;
at the next session. Because of its&#13;
population the city of Detroit will ask&#13;
that It be allotted two congressmen.&#13;
At the present time Wayne county Is&#13;
split Into three different congressional&#13;
districts,&#13;
It will be impossible to add to the&#13;
number of state senators or representatives&#13;
as the constitution provides&#13;
that there shall not be more than 82&#13;
senators or more than 100 representatives.&#13;
No changes have been made in&#13;
the congressional districts In more&#13;
than twenty years and the attempt&#13;
of the lawmakers to make a revision&#13;
is sure to bring on one of the warm*&#13;
est battles of the session.&#13;
Taxation of Mortgages.&#13;
Members of the Btatd grange, the&#13;
farmers' clubs, and many legislators&#13;
stand in favor of repealing the mortgage&#13;
fax law passed at the last regular&#13;
session two years ago, as it Is&#13;
pointed put that the act. has not fulfilled&#13;
the expectations, of those who&#13;
framed it and that it is generally unsatisfactory.&#13;
Use of &gt;uto License Monty.&#13;
Another Important proposition that&#13;
the legislature wRi be asked to consider,&#13;
will be a law authorizing the&#13;
use of money reecived from the sale&#13;
of automobile licenses, fp rthe construction&#13;
of good roads,. Secretary of&#13;
State Frederick ¢. M&amp;rtlndale used&#13;
this as. one of the planks la his platform&#13;
when he was a candidate for the&#13;
renublloan nomination for governor,&#13;
and he tayt that he will exert hit&#13;
Influence to have such a law passed&#13;
next year.&#13;
Automobllists are enthusiastic over&#13;
this proposition aa they feel that inasmuch&#13;
as, they are taxed for driving&#13;
their motor cars oycr^the public high*&#13;
Ways, that this money should "be used&#13;
in the 'construction of better roadt,Ifiteead&#13;
of tttrntng the fees received&#13;
from the sale; of Mcenses, into, the general&#13;
fund of the state treasury.&#13;
,U is expected that there will be at&#13;
ileaet 60.000 licensed automobiles and&#13;
motorcycles in Michigan next yaat&#13;
and as each machine adds f8 to tin&#13;
reHaiM of the state, such a change&#13;
la die law.would add mora than 1150.-&#13;
•000 annually to the good roads fond.&#13;
Pader such a statute the rural distrjets&#13;
woald receive tha benefH of&#13;
petterd highways without an tn&#13;
M t a a a ^ ^ i t e M l i r t&#13;
sejtstX to tarn the^money that raaahrad&#13;
t o l h e state llglrwaj( departmeat&#13;
Hircntt ilndgt rldsak B, staaoaas aaa&#13;
***• ^ ^ j j j j ? wjtftaf-^ addrew^ a s&#13;
^tuMtaati0a aws*afia&lt;aaid .taSitwaw&#13;
at Uwt laynttV atiielstlaii &amp; thar&#13;
iff mmAA**fl *^^M^^^*m*&#13;
•Mm* •&#13;
t • i r it 1 • IIU.I iM -jti' TTi—TlfTTf&#13;
This favorite tobacco 1s fr" old Virginia and North&#13;
r Carolina bright leaf that hat been thoroughly ,J&#13;
stemmed—and then granulated. It has the true&#13;
taste, for the, very simple reason that it is pure toboce*.&#13;
Pay what you will—It is impossible to get a purer or SM*e&gt;&#13;
likeable smoke than Duke's Mixture, it is aowa UggHtfJUgmm&#13;
leader* and is unsurpassed in quality.&#13;
In every 6c sack there is one and a half ounces of 1&#13;
tobacco—-and with each sack you get a book of cigarette&#13;
FR£B»&#13;
y * ' How the Boy Got Hia Air Rifle&#13;
In every sack of the UgtfUt 4* My*rt Duke's Mbtnrei&#13;
pack a Free Present Coupon. Tbe.e Coupons are good for * •&#13;
kind* of useful articles—something to please every member off&#13;
the family. There are skates, sleds, balls and bats,&#13;
brcllM, watches, fountain pens* pipes,&#13;
opera glasses, etc,,.ate&#13;
As a special offer, during January&#13;
and February only, we&#13;
ivill send you our new Utus»&#13;
irated catalogue of presents,&#13;
FREE. Just send us your name&#13;
and address on a postal.&#13;
, Co**om from Duki't M\&#13;
"•raW*™*&#13;
and otktrtmftoran^ontimndbym&#13;
Premium Dept.&#13;
_ j i r&#13;
Bt.l4&gt;«ksMo.&#13;
'v r.---^&#13;
Yon Could Do&#13;
It Too, in lbe&#13;
Fertile&#13;
^ ^ Northwest&#13;
QOne man mads a bountiful living for his family (he&#13;
haa 11 children) and put $2,3(85 in the bank at tbe fesmfc&#13;
of the aeaaon't yield from Us 40 acrea of irrigated laod m&#13;
this productive country. Tbit it not cited as an eaaxp*&#13;
tional case. 9Tbe "PRoePERiTY STATES OP AMBOCaV*&#13;
is the' name we apply to Wisconsin, Minnesota* KatfJi&#13;
Dakota, Montana,Idaho, Washington^ Ottgp^gggg^&#13;
Northern Pacific R V&#13;
&lt;*YTo locate akaig this line ia to assure ycurstsf ef fiectSe&#13;
soil, nearby markets, quick tranapxxrtatkm, good&#13;
bors, good schorjls, progressive communities and h&#13;
ing land values* Investigate how J&#13;
9Aek for free descriptive literature about&#13;
the state that most interests you. Let us&#13;
help you to locate m the Fertile Northwest&#13;
where you will prosper. Write today&#13;
L. J. BRICKEK. Goal iwsatoatlojs Agent&#13;
Ws wiU, be glad to advise you of low; rates&#13;
for winter or spring trips tf yon will stats&#13;
time you w4*h to.go and destination you&#13;
wish to reach or points you want totfovtr.&#13;
'XV&#13;
Tested the Whole World Over&#13;
and through three gjensrationt BeachamVt PfflS• &gt;T.i&#13;
vertilly looked upx?fi aa tbe best preventive andc&#13;
of ubordart of the organs of dtaufcen and ejjmJntlioB&#13;
known, They give speedy relief frora the headachav&#13;
stpnach, indigestion due to biliouanesa^ or constifintsogv&#13;
jv no. experiment. They ats too ^rsll knotwtt^iaf that*&#13;
and their mikhand gantls&gt; but sme actioa «0, the&#13;
howelt, liver, kidneys and rtnanatk, too welk--ati|Bisset\&#13;
If yea are out of sons take at once tab' tsaraam''&#13;
ramady sad you will endorse * * good opiston at tSsSt&gt;&#13;
saiasi ISJUU ilil hikW why Bttrhtai^ PPm to o&gt;wv&lt;s%&#13;
Hetv« UnequaUd ttcpiititiwi&#13;
11 tags 111 I a n&#13;
52 3J5S • W * f ^ W&#13;
»1 ft • • . —v — : — — —&#13;
sate&#13;
.4»&#13;
s&gt;&lt;&#13;
«c&#13;
Cm zJXmm B s s t t A P&#13;
AiLi-e_s1 a.&#13;
Mms.mvuiM '••*&lt;• *r; *,* •*+»*&gt;,&#13;
• ft&#13;
.- v:fsaw«,«&#13;
&gt;^v . ^ a s s s H&#13;
i i W ^ ^ ' t t R V I I , * fc.&#13;
/&gt;i : ' &lt;-,,&gt;- - ^ . - r - -&#13;
BSSSluftr'* J* '•• * ' ^4e^L MSauJkXu.' *jtm&#13;
\p.\W y^yP'-X-Tr',&#13;
.'» i.&#13;
a&#13;
irWi&#13;
k&#13;
&gt;&gt;•&#13;
•flyft&#13;
W '.y&#13;
r » n m at tto iMln H MM flnOMy, Miebif*&#13;
i.&#13;
Wm. Bftird of Dresden, Ontario&#13;
transacted business here the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Younglove&#13;
of Detroit are visiting his parents&#13;
near here.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McDougall&#13;
and daughter, Hazel, were Jackson&#13;
callere Saturday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John VanHorn&#13;
were guests of friends and relatives&#13;
in Howell Saturday.&#13;
Miss Fanny Swarthont of Big&#13;
Rapids is spending a short time at&#13;
the home of her parents,&#13;
Daring the month of October&#13;
there were 2,911 deaths and 4,780&#13;
births reported in the state.&#13;
Mrs. Agnes Harris who has&#13;
been visiting relatives at Eaton&#13;
RapidH returned home last week.&#13;
The Howell Gun Chb will hold&#13;
a big poultry shoot, December 27&#13;
begining at 10:00 a. m. on their&#13;
grounds.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Williston&#13;
are visiting at the home of their&#13;
daughter, Mrs. Arthur Allyn of&#13;
North Lake.&#13;
Dances are coming thick and&#13;
fast. The will be one at Gregory^&#13;
the 26, one here the 27 and one at&#13;
Dexter the 31.&#13;
Alice Roche of St Joseph's&#13;
Academy of Adrian is visiting at&#13;
the home of ber parents, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. James Roche. ,&#13;
Ohas. Smoyer, wife and two&#13;
children of Akron, Ohio are spending&#13;
a few days at the home of her&#13;
parent?, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas&#13;
Read.&#13;
P. M*y Teeple of the Martha&#13;
Washington Seminary at&#13;
Washington D. C. is spending&#13;
the holidays at the home of&#13;
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George&#13;
W. Teeple.&#13;
The police force of Jackson are&#13;
arresting all the small boys who&#13;
they catch smoking cigarrettes on&#13;
the streets of Jackson. They had&#13;
fetter go a little farther and arrest&#13;
the dealers who supply the&#13;
boys with the cigarrettes.&#13;
^ Can you beat this? James Shaft&#13;
the man who put the $haft in&#13;
Shaftsbuig, owns a farm near&#13;
Perry and according to his own&#13;
statement, employes a tennant&#13;
who works it on shares each furbishing&#13;
half the seed and the&#13;
crops are divided equally. A short&#13;
time ago the stork left a pair of&#13;
lively twins at the farm and now&#13;
Jim claims one of them. According&#13;
to the existing contract he insists&#13;
he that he is entitled to&#13;
half the crop and this is no ex*&#13;
ception—Tradesman.&#13;
Last Thursday evening about&#13;
dark, loud appeals for assistance&#13;
from a man apparently in deep&#13;
distress startled the citizens of&#13;
this village. The sounds appeared&#13;
to come from the direction of&#13;
^ the cemetery across the pond&#13;
. tod after considerable surmising&#13;
as to the origin of the sounds a&#13;
number of young men started out&#13;
* to Investigate the disturbance.&#13;
, Entering the place they found&#13;
Ohas. Carrol who appeared to be&#13;
. demented pleading to a bush for&#13;
meYcy. He was persuaded to return&#13;
to town with them where as&#13;
;;)»teemed to toe sane enough he&#13;
„vt* allowed to go home. 8atur-&#13;
'} ^ ¾ *bifc at the farm bones of N.&#13;
';- i*. E*^t&gt;ft the Reeves farm he&#13;
&amp;,' -f-::jd^l^9»mltM0^inewie,ioaUrm-&#13;
^ - ^ ^ ^ ¾ ^ psotrW in te«aeeotk&gt;n that&#13;
r 5e sherirFUsemmoiied and he&#13;
&lt;**t* removed so toe jail«t Bowell&#13;
.'. where be witt i&gt;e held until lt,.is&#13;
fc'&#13;
w*'.&#13;
Wa-&#13;
Th&#13;
town^psjuy.&#13;
PetvTglent of HoweU&#13;
town last weet^,^ ' * /&#13;
No«ma Cntlett bf^Meyville is&#13;
visiting her nerents. J '&#13;
Rev. Fr. Oeyle was &amp; Howell&#13;
and Dexter last week.&#13;
Ed Farnam was in Millville and&#13;
Gregory last week.&#13;
Mrs. A. M. Utley was in Detroit&#13;
on business last Friday.&#13;
Miss Lulu Ben ham of Ypsilanti&#13;
is home for the holidays.&#13;
When a man develops into a&#13;
growler it's time to rush hi- .&#13;
Mrs. Clarence Staokable and son&#13;
spent Sunday with relatives here.&#13;
Try a Back of Dexter Milling&#13;
Co's. Best Flour on sale at Monk's&#13;
Bros. 47tf&#13;
Irving Johnson of Webster was&#13;
in town on business one day last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Edna Maxwell of Bay City&#13;
is visiting at home ot C. V. Van&#13;
Winkle.&#13;
Mrs. Jas. Roche was the guest,&#13;
of friends and relatives in Howell&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. George Reason is visiting&#13;
her dauqbtex, Mrs. John Harland&#13;
of Marquette Mich.&#13;
All is lost save honor unless a&#13;
plan for making hens lay more&#13;
eggs can be devised.&#13;
Miss Leona Heine is spending&#13;
her holiday vacation at her&#13;
home in Mt. Clemens,&#13;
Ella Clare McClusky of Ypsilanti&#13;
is spending her vacation at&#13;
the ho*n&lt;eof her parents.&#13;
Fred Lake and wife spent the&#13;
first of the week at the home of&#13;
of R. W. Lake of Chelsea.&#13;
Miss Clara Dunn of Chicago is&#13;
spending her vacation at the&#13;
home of her parents, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. J. C. Dann.&#13;
The open season for sparrow&#13;
bunting extends from December&#13;
1 to March 1, and a number of&#13;
Pinckney youths are making a&#13;
little money bunting them.&#13;
As New Sears also falls on Wednesday&#13;
we will again go to press&#13;
one day earlier and request that&#13;
all country correspondence and&#13;
other people having news items&#13;
send them in on Monday.&#13;
Tell the editor when yon have&#13;
company. Don't take it for granted&#13;
that he knows all about it.&#13;
Even though he may see you and&#13;
your guests pass along the street&#13;
that woald not signify that he&#13;
knows their names and places of&#13;
abode.&#13;
A body was shipped to Howell&#13;
Sunday under the name of Henry&#13;
Williams from Pontiac and Joe&#13;
Williams of Marion, was notified&#13;
to meet the body of his father.&#13;
On opening the casket the bxly&#13;
wad that of a colored man and was&#13;
shipped back.—Republican.&#13;
There are people who grow eloquent&#13;
in their description of the&#13;
golden harps of a thousand strings&#13;
and the rapturous music of heaven&#13;
who would do well to make their&#13;
own life a little more melodious.&#13;
That wonld be a good thing in itself&#13;
and it would make more cer&#13;
tain their hope of joining the choir&#13;
celestial.&#13;
,The compilation of the carnalities&#13;
of the 1912 hunting season in&#13;
this country shows 88 men killed&#13;
and 52 seriously injured. Michigan&#13;
leads the list with 24 killed&#13;
and 18 injured. Any law or in.&#13;
stittttton which would require this&#13;
annual sacrifice would creat a&#13;
revolution, but where custom&#13;
leads men continue to follow.&#13;
R. E. Barron has made arrangements&#13;
with the Pere Marquette&#13;
Railroad Co. to stop their Detroit&#13;
special at Howell and Fowlerville&#13;
on January 1, 1918, so any one&#13;
wishing to attend the inauguration&#13;
of Gov. Ferris can do so and only&#13;
be away from some a abort time.&#13;
The train will leave Howell about&#13;
10:15 a. m. and leave Lansing for&#13;
home after the oeremonies&#13;
wilt not be latter than 8 p. m, "Tfce&#13;
Howell and Lhringatoo eonnty&#13;
people will nave separate eoaehee&#13;
aid writ be apart from the bataootoqtfe&#13;
crowd.&#13;
Mrs. C. L. Sigler was in Howell&#13;
last week.&#13;
The best .hook for Xmas is&#13;
check .book. 1&#13;
Norma Vaughn was in Hamburg&#13;
last Friday. . 4 ^.,&#13;
. Lee Tiplady was in Gregory&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
Mr. Oliver of Mason is baying&#13;
fur in this section.&#13;
Sadie Harris was a Howell visitor&#13;
last week.&#13;
Floris Moran of Grand' Rapids&#13;
is visiting his people here.&#13;
Joe Placeway is spending Xmas&#13;
with relatives in Fowlerville.&#13;
Dr. W. C. Wylie of Dexter was&#13;
in town one day the past week.&#13;
Mason, Ingham county, claims&#13;
to be about through with small&#13;
pox.&#13;
Miss Kate Brown was a Stockbridge&#13;
visitor one day the past&#13;
week,&#13;
Kitsey Allison has been clerking&#13;
for Mrs, Utley during the holidays.&#13;
Ella Blair of Iosco spent the&#13;
fore part of the week at the home&#13;
of Geo. Green.&#13;
Sheriff Wm. Stoddard and uuder-&#13;
sheriff John Stoddard were&#13;
in town Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. George Docking of Hamburg&#13;
spent Sunday with friends&#13;
and relatives here,&#13;
The M. E. church took in over&#13;
(65 at their chicken pie supper&#13;
and apron sale recently.&#13;
Miss Ella Black was an over&#13;
Sunday visitor at the home of&#13;
Michael Fitzsimmons of Jackson.&#13;
Lucy Culhane of Fostoria is&#13;
the guest of ber parents Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Robert Culhane of this village.&#13;
Miss Mable Clinton of Paw Paw&#13;
is spending a few weeks at the&#13;
home of her parents Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
R. Clinton.&#13;
The township treasurer is ready&#13;
to sign his name to your receipt.&#13;
But most of us will not be ready&#13;
to see his handwriting until a&#13;
little later, in the game.&#13;
Jan. Smith left last Thursday&#13;
for Richmond Virginia to spend&#13;
the balance of the winter with&#13;
Richard Baker. Daring his ab~&#13;
sene George M. Greiner, overseer&#13;
of highways, will act as highway&#13;
commissioner.&#13;
The Pinckney Dispatoh in its&#13;
handsome cover was well loaded&#13;
with Xmas advertising and was&#13;
a credit to Editor Caverly and&#13;
Pinckney alike—South Lyon&#13;
Herald. At that we do not&#13;
think we had anything on your&#13;
last issue Brother Pierce.&#13;
G. A. Sigler of Ann Arbor started&#13;
Monday on a trip to Scran ton,&#13;
Pennsylvania where he will spend&#13;
A .-few days looking after the interests&#13;
of Ayers &amp; Cbase in the&#13;
soal fields. Messrs. Ayers &amp; Chase&#13;
are one of the largest firms in the&#13;
state now operating in coals.&#13;
Hon. S. H. Munsei of Howell&#13;
township has a heifer be is proud&#13;
of on account the result of&#13;
testing at his farm recently.&#13;
Her name is Houwtje Wecht hilde&#13;
Calamity Wayne 2nd,and at 2 yrs.&#13;
and 24 days old,she gave 353.8 lbs.&#13;
of milk and 19125 pound of butter&#13;
in seven days. This record&#13;
has only been equalled by a two&#13;
year old heifer, by one of W. K.&#13;
Sexton's.&#13;
Automobiles, the luxury of yesterday,&#13;
are dearly following the&#13;
nsnal rule. The statistics of their&#13;
manufacture and sale show clearly&#13;
enough that they are today's necessity.&#13;
This te indicated not&#13;
alone by the number of motor&#13;
trtioks nor by the decision of cities&#13;
to abandon hone drawn ire appar.&#13;
stos altogeiheai It is shown in&#13;
the fact though last year was one&#13;
of slack trade, there was no dim*&#13;
{notion in the number of&#13;
oars marketed. A pure luxury&#13;
could bate made no swoh showing.&#13;
This toaW lnJa*wet&gt;» bArdly jmt&#13;
in its teens, is now already the&#13;
fourth industry el the United&#13;
States in volume. Already 11 has&#13;
overflowed In foreftn marked &gt; i&#13;
^tun*ofeboe*«Q^0CM)DQ. .&#13;
X&#13;
Big prices will be paid for all RED and &gt; *&#13;
WHITE OAK, TAMARACK and HEMLOCK,&#13;
BEECH, BIRCH, HARD MAPLE and&#13;
CEDAR TIES, also WHITE OAK Switch&#13;
Jies, produced and piled in Grand Trunk&#13;
Railroad Yard.&#13;
••I&#13;
i.,&#13;
SPECIFICATIONS:&#13;
PAGE THICKfJfibONG&#13;
No. I Pole Ties/ 6 to 12 in.-6 to 7 in.--8 ft.&#13;
No. 2 Pole Ties, 5 to 121(1.--5¼ to 7 in.-8 ft.&#13;
No. 1 Sqrd. Ties, 8 to 12 in. -6 to 7 in. • 8 ft.&#13;
No.2Sqrd. Ties, 7 to 12 in. -5¾ to 7 in.-8 ft&#13;
Bark must be removed fro mall ties&#13;
Por further INFORMATION call on or w r i t e&#13;
S. F. McCANDLESS,&#13;
ROOM 3 0 5 E D D Y BUILDING&#13;
S A G I N A W , MICHIGAN&#13;
-V&#13;
=rf&#13;
Faawu State BeutiM&#13;
!&lt; ok with horror on Skin Eruption?&#13;
Rlotcbes, 8ores or Pimples. They&#13;
don't have them, nor will any one,&#13;
who uses Bocklen's Arnica Halve. I,&#13;
irlorifier, the face. Eczema or Salt&#13;
Rbeura vanish before it. It cores sort&#13;
ups, capped hands, chilblains; healat&#13;
barns, cats and bruises. Uncqnaled&#13;
tor piles. Only 26c at Brown's Draft&#13;
Rror*»,&#13;
For Sale!&#13;
Hotel Tuomey&#13;
One Better—Or Trade!&#13;
What have you got ?&#13;
Who C a l l e d ?&#13;
Lock Box 40, Brighton.&#13;
LEAP YEAR&#13;
PARTY&#13;
H;&#13;
:*&#13;
LAST OP THE S E A S O N • • , - * !&#13;
TOUR LUN0IAN0TM0AT.&#13;
What Mrs. White aayi about&#13;
i l»or A u . IfUMO and THJLOAT TKOUBUB &lt;&#13;
Dfanondale, llich^ Sept. 9, 1912.&#13;
fiaar l b . ABBOTT*&#13;
l\ ^°°?...f7 &lt;" £* ***** ago that I ftr*&#13;
ttwd Mr. Wilaon's Remedy for tht Care, el&#13;
CoHwanption, which dkvaae WM faat fattening&#13;
Jtt baft apoa .n*. I « u tick About u u&#13;
Month* bffora I hard of tho HMdiefee, *ad&#13;
I n i « uudoui to try it It WAS th« fira&#13;
•eHriiii that oalpad mt. Tkt Doctor* mtditin*&#13;
rftf mt M j—4. . la a few dan 1&#13;
cooU breath* taaDr, and 1 tot better right&#13;
alma, aad «aad .bat tw» packaa«a&gt; About&#13;
•wfct yttra ago 1 waa running down fast.&#13;
XfeVMMH more* the aMdJetee; aad e*«i£&#13;
to a tosta, aad It was a wpmdtrfut mtditbu&#13;
"JM4 t* •». I caaaet Praia* ft eaoug'&#13;
tax WILSSA&#13;
8fL Jay-SfflBt aw&#13;
BA^anwSBTl.&#13;
«1 C JL A n o n . Ocsetal Aftat, 60&gt;&#13;
Aatft*^N*«Te*^wbowmtS&gt;gkd^&#13;
Will be ^Iven by the Juniors&#13;
of the Pinckney Hi^i School&#13;
-at the- ^.&#13;
3 PINCKNEY OPERA HOUSE&#13;
FRIDAYEVENIN&#13;
^ a&#13;
.;fl&#13;
D B C B M B B R 2 I&#13;
«sas&#13;
Electric&#13;
Bitters&#13;
•&#13;
aad&#13;
thay are tba&#13;
m'&#13;
•A- 'tvv&#13;
i 4, •» '«*,&lt; •tt.M*-* .',44.T'&#13;
k^.'.a^&#13;
*****m»+i»u***m++4i*,. " - . • . , ' • »&#13;
• % • ; , ty* mm lit \ : »/,&#13;
l «iI— i\ II IMilli II m&#13;
ftkyi&#13;
Christmas&#13;
Dry Goods&#13;
Handkerchiefs, a little different&#13;
and better thai* th* asual&#13;
kind at oar price. Holiday&#13;
Ribbons. Oar stock is largest&#13;
in Howell. Fancy dry&#13;
goods of every; description.&#13;
Come in and see.&#13;
EVERY DAY IS BABGAIN DAY&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN&#13;
HOWELL'S BUSY STORE&#13;
fe=—&#13;
mm&#13;
*-*&lt;&#13;
:t l- K •: .&#13;
• &lt; * '&#13;
i&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
4* • \&#13;
Does a Conservative Hanking&#13;
Business. :: ::&#13;
3 per c e n t&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
; P i n c k n e y&#13;
G. W. TBEPLB&#13;
Mich. !&#13;
'••••: f,&#13;
"... ,f**t iT&#13;
Si *.?&#13;
I I&#13;
L&#13;
T o o busy t o tell you about&#13;
the new styles in portraits,&#13;
but not too busy t o show&#13;
them, Cbtne and see.&#13;
Daisie B. Chapell&#13;
P h o t o g r a p h e r t&#13;
S f c e k &amp; r i d t e , M i c h i g a n&#13;
Xf-&#13;
&amp;;&#13;
••+ s:&#13;
v; , , to&#13;
:&amp;&#13;
• * :&#13;
o*e&#13;
Pain Pill,&#13;
thai&#13;
Take it&#13;
F » NsniswJjIa, Mlhteg Hi&#13;
bettsr tha*&#13;
Dr. M i l e s 9&#13;
A&amp;tl»Pai*. P i l l *&#13;
U s e d b y ffcotsawada&#13;
T b M i w#o h*vs itnlered fro*&#13;
«%ral&amp;ie7pain# need riot be tew&#13;
how necessary it is to secure relief.&#13;
The easiest way out of&#13;
neuralgia is to nse Dr. Miles'&#13;
A**pai**pais. p « y **»• **&#13;
terers for t o sttasJr&#13;
-s tftst they .bans become S&#13;
necessity.&#13;
t have taken Dr. Sines* Anti-Fain&#13;
FDJe for Ave years and they are the&#13;
only thin* thaitt vdedoe'&amp;s eatftera &amp;igajr Ingo mody.&#13;
bead In fifteen mlnates. I have also&#13;
taken them lor rheumatism, needache.&#13;
T»xln* to tbe breast, tocthaebe,&#13;
N»S*4 D*ift* tt.-tfct §»wels ****&#13;
'^enfknoV ther are&#13;
stalmed for them."&#13;
j W. 8SDGB, Blue Sprtags, Ho.&#13;
m s* tfrnggtats—&amp;&#13;
ffiftaS* at«©*OM. C*,Wk**n.km.&#13;
latfolfter thl Wre Fooanreaigw fdarny stralnins under his burden, and&#13;
dLrawm *i&lt; o1f« a nayb daeaeisetrsilpyt i frae.e from opiates or harmful&#13;
S o l a c e la * pat* speeifle In every way, and&#13;
bat b#ea.proven beyond quesUoa to b • the safest&#13;
and qnjckf»&gt; rem* » for Urle A eld Trouble* ssav. rTbSter^.'.nr; j&amp;gR iron to (Urle Add) aaj purifies tb* bio d.&#13;
T h « S o l o c e C o . o f r B » 1 t J « Cr*«kaseth*-&#13;
sole U. S »gaWai&lt; have thooaaa t of voletiary&#13;
testimonial Tetters which have b*en rare ved from&#13;
grauul peo le S o l a c e hie restored to health&#13;
Teetlaonial H(*m&gt; literature and P r e * B o x&#13;
seat spoa refsost.&#13;
K Lee laorrle. President ofthePir*t National&#13;
Beak otChtco, Texas, wrote the Solace Company&#13;
u talipes; j. M „ ,&#13;
"I want yon to atnd a box of Solace to my&#13;
lather In etapbis, Teon., for which I enolose fti.&#13;
Thlsremed baa been used to? some frlesae of&#13;
mlno here sad lauat aiy lu actios was wonder*&#13;
ml. (ttl^nrd) R L. Morris.&#13;
Put up in «6f, 60c, and »1.00 boxes.&#13;
Ita m i g h t y f i n e t o b e w e l l a n d y o u&#13;
c a n n o o n b e a o b y fa kind S o l a c e .&#13;
"Nospeciai trea ment schemes or few. J u s t&#13;
S o l a c e A l o n e does tie wor&lt;. W r i t e&#13;
t o d a y f o r t h e f r e e b o x . e t c .&#13;
S o l a c e R e m e d y Co.. B a t t l e C r e e k .&#13;
Advertising&#13;
i^Me^^sfgww^^wwsf^sf^-&#13;
We have a few&#13;
%&#13;
tTons of Bran&#13;
3&#13;
and Middlings&#13;
Whiba we ttill sell at a very&#13;
good figure/ If you are in&#13;
jj need of either kind please )J&#13;
5 call and get onr best'prices.&#13;
—Try a sack of oar Pare—&#13;
Buckwheat&#13;
Flour .&#13;
at 32c for 10 lbs.&#13;
The&#13;
Hoyt Bros.&#13;
/&#13;
e&gt;&#13;
* i Hills Wetu Store &gt;&#13;
H o w e l l , M i c h l s a n J,&#13;
% When in Howell don't forj{&#13;
get to Visit onr store. Every&#13;
£ department is filled with new&#13;
K goods. *&#13;
&lt;&#13;
4&#13;
Sweaters, Av i a t i o n&#13;
Caps, Gloves, Mitten*,&#13;
Etc*&#13;
A large stock of Oboice&#13;
China, Art Goods, Novelties,&#13;
(Dolls.) Hundreds of these&#13;
from lc to $3.00.&#13;
5 and 10c Goods of&#13;
All Kinds&#13;
t&#13;
i&#13;
a&#13;
GOITRE Now Curable&#13;
R e l i a b l e T r e a t m e n t Pound by&#13;
Bmlnejtt Doctor—You Can&#13;
Teat.lt Free&#13;
It Mems absotat*!? curtain that at last there baa&#13;
ifouadan afeetiiM f*fljejsf * * &lt;»oitie—&lt;h&lt;&#13;
ishhried mtftNOiitf' tsther* that dUarare&#13;
he Deof ied *\ the ttrenffi and vitality of&#13;
otherwise health and attractive mm and *i&gt;men;&#13;
Some years airo. Dr W. T. Bobo. of Battle&#13;
i reek, Michigan, discovered wh»tl&gt;e believed t&lt;&#13;
be a sncoeeeful tr a menf for &gt;*oltre, i h i b-'lef&#13;
w»» fur her sirenji^foed by th-1 fact t " t bun&#13;
drnls of eufler'n &lt;n«ted ttwy were prtDanemly&#13;
H .. nred iBjkvfew weekiby this rsmsrfc%eie remedy.&#13;
°"" fBvefsl wlnen writes that Ur fiobo's&#13;
eamptedihtatentcarvd er «eitr» Apothtr tells&#13;
«» f a t oae iroitVs treataaeat e mpletely an&gt;i&#13;
perasaneaily o red her goitre. Still asoth r write*&#13;
*Lm* irontbaeni&gt;t&gt;lyaatirely eared my goitre"&#13;
These its bat extracts fr.»- thv hundreds of&#13;
letters r celvedby l)r B^bo, from pa«ie»U wao&#13;
\ yon safer from Goitre will* today i» Dr,&#13;
Thoaptca Bwk^, Salt* &lt;&gt; is, Uinta Block, Betile j&#13;
Crei•», Mleh , end he wi ] aesd yua free a rtnntar&#13;
n 60 | ^ « a M f jUMf£U*o Goitre r SWdy, to&#13;
&gt;.: 'v '&#13;
• ^ ¾ ^ ^ ½ ½ ¾&#13;
[ ***•&#13;
$K&#13;
HWSB&#13;
•swUy reMeeee «t Fits, Epiieeey, HwnomjuA&#13;
wo»e« fad ehitdroo aavw&#13;
t•f^&gt;aa»d-&#13;
•^nefeat net&#13;
se&#13;
*es«. , _&#13;
after beglnalaf tee trees as* a t n A woosaa f gfbjs&#13;
-Tom have ew»d seeaftaast tarrlMa a i * . * ^ ^&#13;
sfaay ebow isrhed laiptgvvaieat I MM ih« free&#13;
rthia:&#13;
his misgivings seemed to get the better&#13;
of bixn.&#13;
"Here," he said, reaching out a hand,&#13;
"you better let me have that I am&#13;
stronger than you are."&#13;
But Bam sidled off, protesting.&#13;
"Yes, boss," he admitted hastily, "you&#13;
is stronger than me, a heap stronger,&#13;
bat you see, boss, you ain't dressed for&#13;
the part"&#13;
Needless to say he kept the bag,&#13;
and, whew he returned, his expressive&#13;
countenance was lighted by a 25-cent&#13;
grin.—New York Sun.&#13;
Craved 8afety.&#13;
"Captain," said a wealthy passenger&#13;
who was about to take hia first trip&#13;
across the ocean, "I understand this&#13;
ship hag got several water-tight compartments?"&#13;
"Yes, sir," was the reply.&#13;
"Captain," the passenger wont on&#13;
decidedly, "I want one o* those compartments—&#13;
I don't care what It&#13;
costal"—London Telegraph.&#13;
HE WA8 WISE.&#13;
DAKSA&#13;
Wise—I'm not going to run for the&#13;
nomination.&#13;
Smart—Why not?&#13;
Wise—I don't think my past life&#13;
would stand for it&#13;
A Qreat Adventure.&#13;
B*r little heart la beating hi**,'&#13;
Her.little feet are ©old;&#13;
She skips away where none may spy.&#13;
To have her fortune told.&#13;
In Lent&#13;
The following conversation was&#13;
overheard on a DorcheBter trolley oar&#13;
by the Looker-On: One girl was quistirig&#13;
another and she suddenly asked&#13;
her:&#13;
"Oh, what did yon give up through&#13;
Lentr&#13;
Judge of the surprise of the first&#13;
girl when the demure little maid from&#13;
Dorchester replied:&#13;
"Visits from my young man."&#13;
To Bad Usee.&#13;
Mr. Cutplug—Hlldegarde&gt; where Is&#13;
that bundle of pipe cleaners I had on&#13;
the mantel? * v&#13;
His Wife—There they are.&#13;
Mr. Cutplug—Where? I don't see&#13;
them.&#13;
His Wlfe-^Here, on my hat—I made&#13;
aa aigrette of them.&#13;
Knew His Tlmepleco.&#13;
"Hello, Rummel! I hear you had&#13;
your watch stolen the other day?"&#13;
"Yes, but the thief Is already caught.&#13;
Just think, the fool took it to the pawn&#13;
shop, and. there they immediately recognized&#13;
it as mine, and detained him."&#13;
—FUegende Blaetter.&#13;
IN DARKEST AFRICA.&#13;
King Tappyochre—I shall kssythass&#13;
boo** to use theth for a throaeX ;&#13;
^^k^aatr^Jlja^kj^waiBr&#13;
Tve bean trying to get&#13;
&gt;»:,'&#13;
* '&#13;
Flora, Dear: Your letter rather&#13;
piqued ma. Yaar swousatkms wtra&#13;
uncalled for. X am not secretive;&#13;
neither have I evaded your Questions&#13;
purposely. Jsdaon Bamet, or "Jack.**&#13;
as we now call him, la a wonderfully&#13;
clever, interesting man, and I admiro&#13;
him exceedingly. You may safely&#13;
gratify your curiosity with the Information&#13;
that X am not In love with&#13;
him.&#13;
Weren't you surprised to receive my&#13;
card postmarked Switzerland? This&#13;
has been rightly designated the "playground&#13;
of Europe." I have had such1&#13;
a perfect time and dislike to think&#13;
that but one more week remains to&#13;
enjoy the scenery.&#13;
I have actually climbed five giant&#13;
mountains of the Alps. Aren't you&#13;
envious? Our party arrived at Lucerne&#13;
during the late afternoon, and&#13;
when I viewed those majestic mountains,&#13;
hedged about with mystery—&#13;
the glaciers filling the neighboring&#13;
valleys—the snowpeaks, whose white&#13;
outline against the sky was cameolike&#13;
in J u clearness, I longed to&#13;
reach their summits. Jack and a few&#13;
others voiced the same desire, and&#13;
our consuming ambition became to&#13;
add notches to our alpenstocks.&#13;
Early next morning we ascended&#13;
Rlgi to see the sun rise. What an.&#13;
inspiring sight! Far below flowed&#13;
the River Reuse, and there was Lu-,&#13;
cerne surrounded with its wails and&#13;
nine toll houses, resembling a "fairy&#13;
city" held in the fastness of the mountains&#13;
by some powerful enchanter.&#13;
The pink-gold light of dawn heralding&#13;
the approach of day touched&#13;
; each tip of the towers, then spread&#13;
• over the flowery fields of the valley.&#13;
| This seemed strange when we were&#13;
] surrounded by snow fields.&#13;
! The following week we went to&#13;
Lake Brleng and crossed to inter-&#13;
{ laken. Here the incomparable Jung-&#13;
I frau loomed invitingly in the distance.&#13;
i The mountain would not come to us,&#13;
' so, like Mohammed, we went to the&#13;
mountain. At Lauterbrunnen village&#13;
i ire took the cable oars, which lifted&#13;
us 2,200 feet to the famous little alpine&#13;
village, ef Murren.&#13;
Here we had a wonderful view of&#13;
j Jnngfrau. This maiden of the Alps&#13;
j appeals strangely to one. She is' surpassed&#13;
in beauty by Monte Rosa and&#13;
In grandeur by the Matterhorn. To&#13;
me ahe is the loveliest of mountains.&#13;
| We reached the summit at sunset&#13;
i I never imagined such wonderful coloring&#13;
possible! The evening clouds&#13;
and shadows gathered, and finally&#13;
night enshrauded the peaks with its&#13;
dark, silent pall. We descended halfway&#13;
down the mountain and spent the&#13;
night at a picturesque Swiss Inn,&#13;
{ where we sat around the huge flre»&#13;
place relating strange experiences.&#13;
The following day we Journeyed to&#13;
Byaon's Lake Geneva, with Its romantic&#13;
castle of Chillon, spending two&#13;
weeks there. Then we came to Zeri&#13;
matt I am a real mountaineer now.&#13;
j You should see me attired in a rough&#13;
suit,, with spiked shoes, green hat&#13;
adorned with a sprig of edelweiss and&#13;
my "ruck-sack" strapped to my back.&#13;
I somewhat resemble Pilgrim on his&#13;
rough and weary way. First we ascended&#13;
Monte Rosa, and two days&#13;
later braved the Matterhora. I did&#13;
not enjoy climbing this mountain, sad&#13;
you will hardly blame me when you&#13;
have heard all.&#13;
Six of us started out, tied to the&#13;
same guide. After climbing for hours&#13;
and hours I became frightfully fatigued&#13;
and while scaling a rugged&#13;
crag I slipped and turned my ankle&#13;
again. To proceed was impossible.&#13;
The guide told us of several huts&#13;
built to shelter stormbound climbers,&#13;
Instructing us to remain there until&#13;
he returned, and not to attempt a&#13;
. descent Jack assisted me—in fact,&#13;
• I was almost helpless—to the hut, a&#13;
»suarter of a mils from the path. He&#13;
; built a fire and bandaged my ankle,&#13;
giving me instant relief, and I fell&#13;
asleep.&#13;
I awoke several hours later, to And&#13;
a tempting spread, the contents of our&#13;
ruck-saokv We were ravenously hungry&#13;
and ate everything In sight At&#13;
three o'clock a terrific snowstorm, in&#13;
all its fiendish fury, burst upon the&#13;
mountain. I tried my best not to appear&#13;
frightened, but as the hours wots&#13;
oh and Inky darkness enveloped us, I&#13;
wondered if the guide had forgotten&#13;
to come. All night long we strained&#13;
our ears for any sound which might&#13;
foretell the a*pproach of the party.&#13;
Morning found" the storm still raging.&#13;
Jack showed signs of worry. Our&#13;
food was entirely gone. At two&#13;
o'clock the sky cleared and we started&#13;
to descend. We badnt gone'far whan&#13;
wa were met by a searching party.&#13;
Two of tbsw escorted us to Zeros*.&#13;
It was a wonderfnl experlanoe, but&#13;
I naven*t the s W t e s t desire to re-&#13;
Jack lost brought the (ireadletoewa&#13;
that tour of the orlft»*l party were&#13;
lost in the atom. What a horrible&#13;
fats! : • • • - ' &lt; • '&#13;
Tonight ww stood upon the beioony&#13;
sod w*os*4 the calm sunset Jights&#13;
tern trpon the a^thort's orest Otib&#13;
fc^-'taftt-' rosy gjutnmer tatehed m*&#13;
FOP Sale by All Druggist*&#13;
... EGGS, POULTRY fflt?&#13;
Attention Farmers !&#13;
Don't forget that we come here&#13;
Eivery W e d n e s d a y A . Ma&#13;
A n d will pay every cent the market affords. We will&#13;
appreciate a share of your business.&#13;
Cal v s by phone—No. 33, either phone, for prices.&#13;
H. L WILLIAMS&#13;
Phonographs&#13;
Yes, we have them, in all styles and prices. They are&#13;
THE WONDERFUL COLUMBIA&#13;
in both horn and hornless types. Hear one with the&#13;
new reproducer (jaBt out) and yon will be surprised.&#13;
Try pne in your home. S o l d o n e a s y p a y m e n t s&#13;
J o h t l D i n f c e l , Hnckney&#13;
Either Phone Work Guaranteed&#13;
1588 ::&#13;
Office and Works&#13;
306 Cooper 8treet First Class&#13;
EMPIRE MARBLE AND&#13;
G R A N I T E W O R K S&#13;
J O H N - I J . LKST.IK, Prop.&#13;
Manufacturer i$ and Dealers in&#13;
M o n u m e n t s , S t a t u a r y a n d S t o n e B u r i a l V a u l t s&#13;
J A C K S O N , - - MICHIGAN&#13;
!&#13;
S P I N C K N E Y , - MICHIGAN&#13;
H 0 T £ b GRISWObD&#13;
2-d"dG?^S: Detroit, Mich.&#13;
Postal Hotel Co.&#13;
PR ED POSTAL, Pree. FRED A. GOODMAN, Secretary&#13;
Headquarters of the Wolverine Iiftomoitle Clilbl&#13;
Detroit'* Most Popular Hotel&#13;
European r*Ion Only Ratea $1.00 per day and up&#13;
$00,000 Bxpneded In Remodeling, Furnishing and Decorating&#13;
The Finest Cafe West of New York&#13;
j Service A L a Carte at Popular Prices ±^-—~\&#13;
A Strictly Modern and Up-to-date Hotel. Centrally located Jo the y%rj heart of the&#13;
city, ''Where Life is Worth Living." N o t h i n g b e t t e r a t o u r r a t e s&#13;
)flfta* all, get* par tail&#13;
Her was ssBoa^xLasnaasBBB&#13;
j f ' * : r"TT 7 " ™ ! ' .' ™ •!•&#13;
'&lt;^.' •" Oar sS3nal 'es»t£!an*t mt# tawa&#13;
t _ _ s g w « * &gt; * • — - — ;&gt;''•••'•&gt;•* -. -'.T^ff&#13;
*r,&#13;
fRADC MASK* CorrDmtaswtoTftsa Ae anAlojyk»lrn enMxSw&lt;n1ultnis oan srk sotjrnhn kainiid fdratsea twpbUsoiiMi araa*i). lmiovnwsn sMtrttmfl titsr peomnbitadbstnrt ii aont'frse. OMwt Mmney to,.&#13;
nwskuu&#13;
LeAal Advertlefrtg&#13;
of&#13;
St a t e o f M i c h i g a n , tea probate aoartler&#13;
tseeoaatf of LmagstOD.-- At aaesttoa of said&#13;
Uonrt. held at the PrtStf OSes Is the Village ef&#13;
Howell la satteenaty oa toe lTttHa&gt; of D "&#13;
*. m 1M2. Prssia&lt; Has. Arthur A. M&#13;
J udge of Probate. In tbe matter ef the&#13;
EDWABD U SCBLIMMEB,&#13;
IU'1 KesJlBmer harlag tied Is sail court&#13;
hUMtltloe ersytag taeTtae adaUattsfattoa of&#13;
said saute be (rrsated to bimeelf or le aosae&#13;
otber saltable o arson.&#13;
It la erdeted tkat tbe let*-day ef Jaaaary, A.&#13;
0. tsis at tea o'clock 1B tbe lessisus. at saMyrs&gt;&#13;
hate ofles, be and la hereby appotated tor&#13;
hf arias said pailtios*&#13;
lt&lt;se4orUtee ordered ttattpabue aotSee: taetesf&#13;
I&#13;
tIowt rwifistets b syS OpBtbotsoielfOeil ewae aekt ss M eeetpiyse so ft at isnoel i oSavyis to f aperataftraMla,audt aeeUroxaaloatsavla tny sxa&gt;tdW eAoeaeaattya. '&#13;
MasWrJOlFaV&#13;
ssasai&#13;
K.P.SMUS aKO. O.UaOCSJtM.O,&#13;
timi. ^SIGLER &amp; SIGLBR.&#13;
~ Fbj tkiaas aad flnr«eost.&#13;
mk taHi prais^aty s|tose|g«&gt;|ri&#13;
£ij ST ft^bt. ;0sVv ai M i -&#13;
}TAT« o r M1CSIOAJI, tbe *rfltete tibert foe&#13;
SASAH M. sroimrr,&#13;
m&#13;
'""7,.' •rv'J&#13;
4",&#13;
%&#13;
&amp;&#13;
vt.- •:r&gt;: S i&#13;
''i &lt;* ,^^^: vV&gt; V;V^ k V&#13;
J- \&#13;
mw^ ^wsw.&#13;
: • • • • . •• - . • ^ : • • ; ' " * • • • ' - - ^ T ' ^ ' • • •. , : ^ ^ ? ' ;-mr&#13;
?i*;&#13;
%&#13;
i-&gt;A&#13;
' f r ;&#13;
»**v&#13;
.:£&gt;'&#13;
!&lt;*;&#13;
\U&#13;
i«.«or-.V! .n pifrtiarryfir u* r vj&gt; -M« - • I » * M— - • t . ' " ' TT-'~'tTr" t V S X - t _ . _ . I i k ; i „ . 1 . A » . «**4_«4 tt r &lt;*A-\.&gt; i i « &gt; m t m i • — — '&gt; «ii *,I ;»WSMI»&lt;SM»&gt;JH»*»&gt;«*4»» w W m r S j M » * • ,&#13;
r i N C K N E T ,&#13;
1 • • •&#13;
JO TEACH LOVE Mftttllfta.&#13;
Aeaordinj; to reports a. professor in&#13;
^,J*er*n*ny propone* to open a echoor&#13;
wherein to teach, love making. Blew&#13;
the dear pre*eato&amp; what can he be&#13;
thinking about? What do*# he suppose&#13;
kr?e making la butt b e ^ u ^ U la&#13;
eom^thiag to be taught after the manner&#13;
of algebra, geography and cook*&#13;
lag? Love making decant have to&#13;
fee taught, aaya the Philadelphia Free*.&#13;
Vtom the palmy daya la the Garden of&#13;
'•den tt has been going on all over&#13;
the world amoqg all people*. TV haa&#13;
its different method*, grading trom&#13;
&lt;kt*k*rt*m to civilisation, bat it la&#13;
love, making all the aame. To the end&#13;
•Ttime, if there ia to be any end of&#13;
time, it wUl go on Ju*t a* the **£#*&#13;
«»d IncllnafJoM of the peopta direct&#13;
t t It la one of thoce diversion*, or&#13;
«o**«re», or essential* of human life&#13;
which no government haa yet attempted&#13;
to regulate, aa attempts&#13;
shelve been made to regulate so many&#13;
'other things, and it had never ocworred&#13;
to anybody that teaching It&#13;
|waa,nece»sary. Teaching boys to saw&#13;
wood and girls to make their own&#13;
jclothea is feasible enough, but teaching&#13;
them how to make love isn't &lt; Be*&#13;
aides, it's perfectly useless. They all&#13;
•know how already; the knowledge&#13;
was born with them.&#13;
c&#13;
Roland had his Durandal. Charlemagne&#13;
his Joyeuse, twin sisters of&#13;
glory, heroines of steel. Kaiser Wllhelm&#13;
IL of Germany is not ignorant&#13;
of this and to continue the tradition&#13;
he has given to his. sons arms upon&#13;
which are engraved glittering mottoes&#13;
of which he is the author. On the&#13;
•word which he has given to the&#13;
crown prince are the words, "Always&#13;
ready to serve his country;" on that&#13;
of his favorite, Prince Eltel, "Faithful&#13;
and without fear;" on that of Prince&#13;
Adelbert, on one side, "For all proofs"&#13;
and ogftfte other "My soul to God and&#13;
Germany;" on that of Prince Oscar,&#13;
"Rectitude and intrepidity." The&#13;
Princes August Wilhelxn and Joachim&#13;
will have their swords and mottoes'&#13;
When they are promoted to the guards! f .&#13;
A Paris town counsellor has conceived&#13;
and drawn up a scheme for&#13;
aaving from the perils of the street&#13;
both moral and physical, the poor&#13;
children ot parents forced* to work&#13;
out late* unable therefore properly to&#13;
feed and care for their children atjer&#13;
school hours. Widows and widowers&#13;
In particular are to benefit from the&#13;
scheme, and parents out of .work, try*&#13;
lng to get work, unable in the meantime&#13;
to provide good food for their&#13;
children or to keep regular hours.&#13;
It is proposed to set up a canteen in&#13;
certain available school buildings and&#13;
there the children unable to have,&#13;
home care are to be kept till bed&#13;
time under the eye of a number of&#13;
teachers temporarily unoccupied during&#13;
the day.&#13;
tv&#13;
SECRETARY OF NAVYM*THQW0HT&#13;
TO BE TRYING MR. ROOSE*&#13;
VELT'S RUSE.&#13;
Mere Sailors and Marines Also Are&#13;
Wanted—Tariff Board May Be Revived&#13;
After the Democrats Have&#13;
Revised the Schedules,.&#13;
There are now undtr construction in&#13;
Europe 84 sea-going vessels equipped&#13;
with internal combustion engines.&#13;
New and more economical methods of&#13;
producing the oil consumed in these&#13;
engines have been devised, and it is&#13;
predicted with confidence that they&#13;
•OCA'will become the standard for&#13;
oeean service. That is not all. There&#13;
- art confident predictions that Invention&#13;
before long will adapt the new oil&#13;
fuel* to use in the propulsion of autoasobUee.&#13;
This ia an age of frequent&#13;
retolutlotu in the mechanical world.&#13;
The demand for celluloid in Japan is&#13;
yearly increasing and the amount imported&#13;
is accordingly augmenting, but&#13;
only as raw material, the import of&#13;
finished material showing a gradual&#13;
doorcase, a fact which provea the&#13;
steady improvement of the Japanese&#13;
celluloid industry. The celluloid •factory&#13;
at Abashi, Harlma, now produce*,&#13;
€0,000 pounds a month, and the Sakai&#13;
Celluloid company 26,000 pounds, so&#13;
thit taking the price of one pound at&#13;
one' yen Japan produces 1,260,000 yen&#13;
worth of celluloid manufactures in a&#13;
year.. In the near future, says the JUL&#13;
Japan will sot only cease all importation&#13;
of the material.from Germany,&#13;
hot will rank as an exporting country,&#13;
her first cnktomer being China.&#13;
• u ' - ' ' ' ' • - -&#13;
Atf eoltntinent* in the regular army&#13;
software foy seven years Instead of&#13;
'four, eo that each recruit who serves&#13;
his full timo will be a new man when&#13;
no comes owt If there If truth in the&#13;
oWJheoty tnfct a man's physical charactf^&#13;
fttie* co*»let*ly change in seven&#13;
ly that owing to the lirgefrf^reaae in&#13;
the pemocrktlb membership;; in the&#13;
next house, 'that pairty's rejpfesontatioh&#13;
on the committees largely: will be&#13;
increased. This means that instead&#13;
of having a majority on .eacn/oommittee&#13;
of two or three members, the Democrats&#13;
in the next house will have a&#13;
majority in some instances reaching&#13;
as high as seven or eight. Tt is7 withsss*#&#13;
o^-r-r,.,^ . « - - . . n M M A M M - A ** t n e •S"1'6 o f possibilities, perhaps&#13;
MAY GET TWO AS COMPROMISE ProbahillLles, that the Pro,rea*ive&#13;
'* party members of the bouse, of whom&#13;
there will be nineteen or twenty, will&#13;
be given no committee representation.&#13;
Gloomy for the Progressive*.&#13;
The Republicans of the house will&#13;
meet in caucus and will decide on&#13;
the members who are to represent&#13;
their party in the committees. If the&#13;
Democrats, as it is said they are to&#13;
do, recognize only one minority party,&#13;
the fate of the Progressiva* so far as&#13;
committee representation is concerned,&#13;
will be entirely ID the hands&#13;
of the Republicans.&#13;
The Progressive members Intend to&#13;
hoM a? eancu* of their own and to demand'&#13;
committee Representation, but&#13;
being so greatljf In the minority and&#13;
A^so feeing under the handicap of the&#13;
determination of the Democrats not&#13;
to recognise them as a party, they&#13;
perhaps will be able to do nothing&#13;
more than merely tc demand committee&#13;
representation, for it is seemingly&#13;
inconceivable that the Progressives&#13;
will ask the Republicans to do anything&#13;
for their; In the matter of assignments&#13;
to the subsidiary bodies&#13;
of the house.&#13;
It is virtually certain that the Republicans&#13;
will have something to say&#13;
to the Progressives about this committee&#13;
membership matter, but as&#13;
there is a stronger partisanship feeling&#13;
between the Republicans and the&#13;
Progressives than there is between&#13;
either of them and the Democrats, the&#13;
chances are that the Progressives will&#13;
refuse to accept any favors at the&#13;
hands of the Republicans. If the Republicans&#13;
make up their. mlnd*:-4o offer&#13;
committee representation to the&#13;
Progressives it seems likely, human&#13;
nature being what it is, that they will&#13;
offer them only inconspicuous committees,&#13;
and the lowest ranking membership&#13;
places oo each;&#13;
Planning for Inauguration.&#13;
Washington already is . making&#13;
preparations for its "greatest show&#13;
on earth" Every fourth year&#13;
the capital for tv.o, months and&#13;
a half is la the proverbial, and&#13;
perhaps bromidic, "rush of preparation."&#13;
It is the intention of the&#13;
Pernocrats to make Woodrow Wilson's&#13;
inauguration a record-breaking event&#13;
and neither money nor pains will be&#13;
spared to accomplish the end in view.&#13;
Prior to every presidential inaugural&#13;
ceremony two committees are appointed&#13;
"to put the thing through."&#13;
There is the- congreastoual xommitte*&#13;
which tills year already has been authorized&#13;
and the local Washington&#13;
committee, much larger in member&#13;
ship than the other and which really&#13;
does a greater amount of work. Congress&#13;
ha* provided for the appointment&#13;
of three members of the senate&#13;
and three members of the house ot&#13;
representatives tc make the necessary&#13;
arrangements from the law makers'&#13;
point of view for the inducting into&#13;
office of the ttemocratic presidentelect.&#13;
Alt Kinds of Clubs Expected.&#13;
Already^it is known in Washington&#13;
that it is the Intention of the local&#13;
committee acting through leading&#13;
Democrats in all parts of the country&#13;
to have every state in the Union represented&#13;
by political organizations, by&#13;
marching clubs of ariy proper kind&#13;
which can make a good parade showing,&#13;
and by any business bodies&#13;
which can be represented properly&#13;
without giving the Impression that&#13;
their endeavors are partisan. It Is&#13;
held to be possible for almost any&#13;
kind of an organization to do honor&#13;
to a president of the United States&#13;
without being .subjects'to the charge&#13;
4 /HE MARKETS,&#13;
ffm\'ii\v&#13;
* lecturer wl»*#roc*teo the1 paintcherrios,&#13;
sU^wparrl**,&#13;
tcT s a k e then* more attractive.&#13;
JSsfi*jri&amp;0^*RO*B)-''&#13;
tn&gt;tho list. Perhap* he tMaks&#13;
B y / Q l o m i CLINTON.&#13;
Washington.—Secretary of the Na*y&#13;
Mey*r has asked for three new battleships.&#13;
Last year congress authorised&#13;
only one battleship, and did not authorise&#13;
that one until there had been&#13;
* pretty warm controversy on.the subject&#13;
in the house of representatives.&#13;
It is said that the Republican secretary&#13;
of the navy haa been prompted&#13;
torask for three battleship* by the&#13;
fact that the Democratic platform&#13;
adopted at Baltimore pledged the&lt;4&#13;
»*rty to care for the needs of the&#13;
navy.&#13;
Last year, when the naval bill was&#13;
before the house committee, it became&#13;
known that the members of the&#13;
majority party were divided as to the&#13;
advisability of adding battleships to&#13;
the navy. Most of the committee&#13;
members were in favor of the increase,&#13;
but the opposition was strong on the&#13;
floor of the house, and particularly&#13;
strong because some of the recognized&#13;
party leaders were very much opposed&#13;
to an enlarged building program. A&#13;
compromise was effected and one battleship&#13;
and several smaller ships were&#13;
authorized for construction.&#13;
' Trying Roosevelt's Method?&#13;
Tt is believed by many members of&#13;
congress that Secretary Meyer has in&#13;
mind Just what Theodore Roosevelt&#13;
had In mind some years ago. Mr.&#13;
Roosevelt wanted two additional battleships&#13;
built for the navy, but he&#13;
knew that congress was opposed to&#13;
any great increase in the naval&#13;
strength at that time. So it was that&#13;
Mr. Roosevelt, wanting two ships,&#13;
asked for four, and the two were&#13;
forthcoming ia the nature ot a compromise,&#13;
a compromise which probably&#13;
made the president chuckle, because&#13;
he. got just what he wanted and&#13;
just what he was afraid he would not&#13;
get It is suggested that Mr. Meyer&#13;
hopes, through the compromise plan,&#13;
to get two ships, whereas if he only&#13;
asked for two he might have to be&#13;
content with one.&#13;
Th« United State* navy Is today&#13;
third in strength among the naval&#13;
powers of the world. Great Britain&#13;
and Germany lead this country, and&#13;
Prance follows it as the possessor of&#13;
fourth place, although the French&#13;
navy is nearly as strong, on paper at&#13;
any rate, as the navy of Uncle Sam.&#13;
The navy department wftats more&#13;
sailor*, and it has asked congress,&#13;
through Senator Perkins of California,&#13;
who has introduced a bill to that effect,&#13;
to increase the enlisted strength&#13;
Of the navy by one thousand, bringing&#13;
the total strength up to 63,600 sailors.&#13;
An increase is asked for the marine&#13;
corps ot 20 per cent, and If it is&#13;
granted there will within the next&#13;
year be ten thousand five hundred marines&#13;
ia the service of the country.&#13;
May Revive Tariff Board.&#13;
The tariff board, which went out of&#13;
existence because of a refusal on the&#13;
part of congress to renew an appropriation&#13;
for its support, may possibly&#13;
come back Into being again after the&#13;
tariff has been revised by the next&#13;
congress.&#13;
There is a strong organisation,&#13;
known as the National Tariff Commission&#13;
association, which is working&#13;
hard to arouse public Bentlraent in&#13;
favor of a permanent commission,&#13;
which shall study business conditions&#13;
at home and abroad and make specific&#13;
reports on the schedules to congress,&#13;
with the view of having them adjusted,&#13;
so that from time to time the tarlffon&#13;
certain articles may be changed&#13;
without disturbing the whole tariff&#13;
list.&#13;
Already congress is being memorialized&#13;
by associations and by individuals&#13;
to give force and effect to a real&#13;
national tariff commission. It has just&#13;
been announced that there will be a&#13;
convention of the advocates of the&#13;
tariff commission, to be held in Washington,&#13;
probably simultaneously with&#13;
the opening of the extra session of the&#13;
new congress.&#13;
Only One Minority party?&#13;
There have been happenings&#13;
fithin A few day* in congress&#13;
which point to the injection^ of&#13;
trouble for the Republicans and Progressives&#13;
in the n&lt;xt house. It is&#13;
now currently reported and believed,&#13;
from what the Democratic leaders&#13;
have said privately, that it is the intention&#13;
of their party In the house and&#13;
senate, when congress meets in extra&#13;
session, W recognise only one minority&#13;
party, namely, the Republican.&#13;
Oh (he face of it, it would not seem&#13;
that this would create, any particular&#13;
amount, of trouble, hot when the matter&#13;
of the committee* is taken. Into&#13;
consideration and the present method&#13;
of appointing members to them is&#13;
thought on, trouble loonis largo. Under&#13;
the present system of committee&#13;
appointment* in the house, the majority&#13;
party and too minority party&#13;
OVER PART OF&#13;
TAFT 18 EXASPERATED iN EFFORTS&#13;
TO TREAT REPUBLIC&#13;
ON POLICY OF NON-INTERFERENCE.&#13;
MADERO rtfFUgeS TO CONHlPER&#13;
CLAIMS OF UNITED STATE*.&#13;
C&#13;
ft4¥^.^;;*v p*)|a*Jtw m-«o «**. remaps no t a w s&#13;
m^- The butt*T*silknon*» »oint&#13;
j g ^ a f t a * * a« ~TO&amp;*&amp;r ••mil ii tnsKr^&#13;
_««.J*,iS«*f tm**&#13;
f&#13;
^••»r»iVt**«M^i^&#13;
TholdrTca«i^g*ji^in^ ftoi bo&#13;
m oommitue membership. The Democrat*;&#13;
being in control, can do juat a*&#13;
13¾¾^¾¾¾ gSS*&lt;&#13;
Jrliig&#13;
The Roosevelt inauguration of 190&#13;
was one of the greatest affairs from a.&#13;
purely picturesque and perhaps spectacular&#13;
point of. view that ever had&#13;
the capital city for its setting. f)f&#13;
course the "Rough Riders." atid tfie&#13;
cowboy contingent from the west gave&#13;
particular interest to the evetii '&#13;
It is said to be the" determination&#13;
of the men who are to be In charge&#13;
of Mr. Wilson's inauguration' to make&#13;
the,celebration of March 4 next every&#13;
whit as.interesting and as picturesque&#13;
at that witnessed in March. 196s.&#13;
There will be a big military display&#13;
at Mr. Wilson's inauguration although&#13;
some of the. members of hi* party&#13;
are opposed to such use of the military,&#13;
holding that it is un-Democratic.&#13;
Already it has been arranged to have&#13;
the regular* from Fort My or. Fortress&#13;
Monroe, and frcm the forts farther up&#13;
the Chesapeake, in Washington on&#13;
March 4, and with these regular* will&#13;
he the cadet* from West point and&#13;
Annapolis- National Guard regiments&#13;
from all the states will be Invited to&#13;
participate and If the rule of former,&#13;
years ia followed it is virtually -certain&#13;
that at least a dozen state Organisation*&#13;
will, be represented by crack&#13;
regiment* of the guard.&#13;
At the preaant. time there ia the&#13;
usual controversy over ,th* u*e of&#13;
the penaicD building for th* inaugural&#13;
halt. Every four year* the pension&#13;
office official* *ay that .the neij must&#13;
Attempts at Friendly Adjustment of&#13;
Outrages Against American Life&#13;
and Property Have vFailetf.&#13;
, . -v • .&#13;
A protectorate over that portion of&#13;
Mexico in which American Interests&#13;
are tocated, it is believed will be es-&#13;
Ubiiched within the next 30 days, inv:&#13;
ie**_ Pfoeident Madero accedes to the&#13;
demandfc;of President Taft's ultimatum&#13;
s e p t i ^ : \ • •'&#13;
It is admitted by the state department&#13;
that attempts at friendly adjustment&#13;
of the outrages against American&#13;
life and property in Northern&#13;
Mexico have failed, and the president's&#13;
exasperation at Mexico's insolent attitude&#13;
culminated with that country's&#13;
answer on Dec. 14 to his demand for&#13;
redress, sent in September.&#13;
In his reply Madero admitted his&#13;
Inability to cope with the situation,&#13;
practicaly refused the consideration&#13;
of Indemnity for Americans whose property&#13;
had been destroyed, and Intimated&#13;
that the Americans who have&#13;
died there deserved their fate.&#13;
The reprisals threatened against&#13;
Mexico in Taft'3 ultimatum .would permit&#13;
revolutionists against Madero to&#13;
use this country as the base of their&#13;
operations, it was poipted OMt&lt; It would&#13;
inevitably mean the fall of the present&#13;
Mexican government.&#13;
However, officials figured out that in&#13;
such a case the United States probably&#13;
would be but little bettei* so far&#13;
as securing protection to American citizezns&#13;
and their property in Mexico&#13;
was concerned, than at present since&#13;
the 'revolutionary movement ih Mexico&#13;
Is more" 6r TesS disorganlged and includes&#13;
the very element against whose&#13;
outrages the United States Is complaining.&#13;
The Mexican situation was rendered&#13;
more acute by information to the&#13;
state department that Americans in&#13;
Cananea, Sonora, were In grave danger&#13;
from 1,000 Mexican miners, employed&#13;
in American mines, who have&#13;
gone on strike.&#13;
DETRftlT—Extra dry-jOd st*ers. $7.B*&#13;
9 8 ; s t e t t t an? faelfera.&lt;MMo 1.200 tbe...&#13;
$«.7(0)7.60; steers and heifers, ttOO to&#13;
1.000 lbs.. If CCS. 75; steers ana heifers t h a t&#13;
«re rat. 600 to 700 tbbs., f4.25CP4.76; choice,&#13;
fat cows, $6.604»5.75; good fat cows. $4.$6&#13;
G&gt;6; common cows, $3.25@&gt;4; c&amp;nnenp, W A&#13;
food beTo«n&gt;?, Hulls, $ 4 . 5 0 © ^ ? % bulls.&#13;
$.60; enssee heavy, fau&#13;
l.OOtr m*;. $ m « £ W ; * a V l e i t t t f p B t e e n&#13;
800 to t'.OOoTbB. » 6 6 6 6 0 ; choice etOcke&#13;
"";.» « ' •&#13;
600 to 1W tt«..i&amp;W.MiitoJr4toe*4*t.&#13;
to 700 lbs.. $404.76; stock heifers,^S.&#13;
4.25; milkers, Targe, yoyng, medium «ge,&#13;
140070: common milker*. $30040.&#13;
Vest C^c*^Recelpttf4$3;*rnarket dull&#13;
l e t last weelTi'Orlces; best, $ f c M 0 u : others,&#13;
NOV. Mtich cows \ and springers,&#13;
a?IK««P * n d lambii-RecelptB. 4.892; sheep&#13;
steady, fambs 26c iower than last week.&#13;
B«*t lambs. $s; fair to good lambs. $7.60, i** fWA6;. light to common lambs. $460© {**&#13;
; fair, t o good sheep, $3@4; culls and VU&#13;
AMAt^BT BXHIBtTt AT LIVst&#13;
8$$CK 4 &gt; ^ 1-ANP SHOWS CANTER&#13;
OF ATTRACTION.&#13;
commou, $2:7603.&#13;
Hogs— Receipt**, &lt;4,407; no hogs sold s i&#13;
noon; prospects are a s follows: Range of&#13;
prices—Light to good butchers, $7,460&#13;
7.16; ptgs. $*.0«O7; light yorkers. IW&#13;
7,10; roughs, one-tnlr* off.&#13;
• Note—There will be no market here&#13;
Christmas day.&#13;
V E A S T B U P F A L ^ m ; . Y ^ C a t t l e ^ D j i l i ;&#13;
Veals—Slow, $4© 11 H o g s — Active;&#13;
heavy mixed yorkers and pigs, $7; rough*&#13;
$6,7606.86; stags, $5.50 ¢6.25: darlri«sh $7.4007.«. Sheep ai^. l*mb»-&amp;ow;&#13;
lambs. $4.6008.60; yfarl!ng».7it5*: wettr-t&#13;
ers, $4.7606: ewes, $2.6004.60; sheep&#13;
mixed, $204.75.&#13;
U. 8. Enjoys Most of World's Trade.&#13;
The United States did more business&#13;
with the world, both in exports and&#13;
imports, in the month of November&#13;
than in any month previous in the history&#13;
of this country'a foreign commerce,&#13;
according to a statement by the&#13;
buteau of foreign ^tnd domestic commerce.&#13;
The value of goods imported&#13;
last month was $153,134,995, and of exports,&#13;
$277,898,681. This marked a&#13;
great increase oyer the business done&#13;
in November, 1911.&#13;
GRAIN, ETC.&#13;
WHEAT—Cash No. 2 red, $1,07 1-2;&#13;
December opened without change at&#13;
$1.07 1-2: declined to $1.07 1-4 and closed&#13;
at $1.07 1«2; May opened at $1.12. declined&#13;
to $1,113-4 and closed at $1.12; July&#13;
opened at 93 1-2, declined to 93 1-4 and&#13;
closed at Q3 1-2; No. 1 white, 01.08 1-2.&#13;
CORN—Cash No. 3, 49c; No. 3 yellow.&#13;
60c bid; No. 4 yellow. 48c.&#13;
OATS—Standard. S7c; No. 3 white, 3Gc;&#13;
No. 4 whit*. 1 car at 34 l-2c.&#13;
RYE—Cash No. 2. 62c.&#13;
KEANS—All shipments, $2.18.&#13;
CLOVER SEED—Prime Spot, $11.30;&#13;
sample, 10 bags at $8.76; prime alslkc,&#13;
$12.60; sample, 7 bags at $10.25.&#13;
FLOUR—In orie-elghth paper sacks, per&#13;
196 pounds, jobbing Jots; Best patent.&#13;
$5.00; second patent. $6.30; straight, $5.20;&#13;
clear. $4.90; spring patent, $5.10; rye,&#13;
$4.80 per bbl. , ,&#13;
FEED—In lOOhY sacks. Jobbing lots;&#13;
bran, $23? coarse middlings, $24; fine middlings,-$&#13;
29; command oat chop, $22 per&#13;
ton.&#13;
The hat* w to&#13;
during the two w&#13;
Show and th* weak&#13;
Show- at Chtoajo. '&#13;
*juio**to-l»*"th*&#13;
the central states *now •*•&#13;
Canada&#13;
of. the Land&#13;
tefLfre Btook&#13;
i &amp; t * dlapta*;&#13;
451&#13;
could&#13;
GENERAL MARKETS.&#13;
The poultry deal Is assuming quite Important&#13;
proportions and a feeling of firmness&#13;
prevails in nearly all lines. Fowls,&#13;
drag a little, but chicks are in good d e -&#13;
mand and there Is a firm market for turkeys&#13;
at another advance In .prices. Chick*&#13;
are in sood supply, but there 1B a scarcity&#13;
of turkeys. Dreaded hogs are dull and&#13;
easy, and dressed calves active. The .market&#13;
is steady, for dairy products and act-'&#13;
ive. Potatoes and vegetables are steady&#13;
and Jn good demand.&#13;
Butter—Fancy creamery, 33c; creamery&#13;
firsts. 35e; dairy. 22c; packing, 21c&#13;
per lb.&#13;
E&amp;gs—Current receipts, candled, caaeo&#13;
included, 2Sc per doc.&#13;
Will Carleton, Poet, Is bead.&#13;
Will Carleton, the noted poet and&#13;
journalist, who was born In Michigan&#13;
and rose to fame there, died of pneumonia&#13;
at his home in Brooklyn, at Itne&#13;
age of 67. tfla Illness was short.&#13;
Born in Hudson, Mich., 1845, educated&#13;
at Hillsdale college, Carleton broke&#13;
into regular newspaper work in Chicago.&#13;
Ho returned to Michigan In a&#13;
few;. months and continued writing&#13;
poems and giving lectures.&#13;
For Non-Partisans Game Comml**lon,&#13;
A non-partisan game cortmiaeion&#13;
with sufficient funds to make it operathat&#13;
it.is acting for political purposes.! tive and preservation of the game of&#13;
the state, was the PHncipal Tecon*&#13;
mendation offered at a "meeting of the&#13;
Southwestern Michigan Sportsmen's&#13;
association in Kalamazoo.&#13;
Tlie recommendations were drafted&#13;
Into; resolutions, which will be pre-&#13;
Bented to the state legislature -at the&#13;
next session in the hopes that some&#13;
action will be taken,&#13;
to make the cbangee n*ee**aryv&gt;i^&#13;
e m y four year* the ofiotaj* ara ©Vt$V&#13;
tbay cb^oa^ lit pretty aearly atl mat- ruled « 4 there the 1*« ia hejd. It&#13;
If 4$ N a^af«$af*je&gt;&#13;
Osbern toTake Vrlp Over the Worlds&#13;
For the first few moath* after he retires&#13;
from the executive office, Jan. 1,&#13;
Chase S. Osborh will travel throoKh&#13;
Eurdpe. He has visited practically&#13;
every section of the globe, and the&#13;
wanderlust has Seized him again. He&#13;
announces that tie will er\tov a long&#13;
vacation in foreign climates. \.&#13;
Turks 8!*y Christians.&#13;
According to * Port.Said dispatch to&#13;
Moyda. in London, &amp; wireless message&#13;
from the Greek government vessel/&#13;
Maeedona, say* Ubat the Turks have&#13;
massacred th«-Cbriatians in ifitylene.&#13;
Kalamazoo has'exrended an fnvl&#13;
Utten -to the Utofrtsan Retail Lumber"&#13;
Dealor*' association to mem in Kalamaseo&#13;
ftrifB."*^ : ^ - ^ -&#13;
'Tlie liquor forces stole the ballot&#13;
from the women ©J the state,in the&#13;
sgme way they kept prohibition on*,&#13;
ot Ore »tat*.ln 1&amp;87," *ays Mrs. E, L.&#13;
Calkin*, stau W±€*:.XrU^&#13;
" , * M l l p i t»;&#13;
APPLES—Baldwin. t225©2.50; green,&#13;
lng, $2.50@2,75; spy, $2.:5^)3: steel led,&#13;
$3^3.50; iNo. 2, 76cft)1.60 per bbl.&#13;
CABBAGES—$1® 1.25 per bbl.&#13;
DRESBBD CALVES—Ordinary. 10&lt;£&#13;
l i e ; fancy. 12 1-2(8)13 1-2¾ per tb.&#13;
ONIONS—56c per bu.&#13;
DRESSED HOOS~$9@9.50 per cwt. fo»&#13;
light to- medium.&#13;
DRESSED POULTRY — Spring chicken8,&#13;
14@)15c; hens, 13® 14c; old rooster;},&#13;
10®llc; turkeys. 21@23c; ducks, 16®&gt;19C;&#13;
g&lt;-ese, 14^15c per n&gt;.&#13;
POTATOBS—Mlchigsn, sacks, 65c bulk,&#13;
48c in car lots, and 55@60e for store.&#13;
HONEY—Choice fane ywhlto comb, 1«&#13;
@17c per lb; amber, 14®16c.&#13;
LIVE POULTRY—Spring chickens. 1 ^ )&#13;
13 1-2C per m; hens. 12U@&gt;12 l-2c; No. 2&#13;
hens, 9c; old roosters, 9@10c; ducks, 1C&#13;
@16c; geeae, 13'®lie; turkeys, 17(&amp;i2uc per&#13;
lb.&#13;
VEGETABLES—Beets, 40c per bu; carrots.&#13;
45c per bu; cauliflower, $2.25 per dos;&#13;
turnipB. fiOc per bu; spinach, 75c per bu;&#13;
hothouse cucumbers, )1.&amp;0®1.75 per bu;&#13;
watercress, 25&lt;&amp;70c per doz; head lettuce,&#13;
$1.S6@1.E0 per hamper; home-grown celery,&#13;
25®30c per bu; green peppers, 40c&#13;
per. basket; rutabagas, 40c per bu; hothouse&#13;
radishes, 2&amp;c per doe.&#13;
PROVISIONS—Mess pork. tl&amp;; family&#13;
t22«23; briskets, ll®12c; bacon 16@18c;&#13;
shoulders, 13 l-2c; picnic hams, 13c; pure&#13;
lard in tierces, 11 l-2c; kettle rendered&#13;
lard, 21 l-2c per tb.&#13;
HAY-^Car lot prices, track, Detroit:&#13;
No, 1 timothy. fieeiO.r.O; No. 2 timothy,&#13;
$14.60@16.60; No. 1 mixed, $14©14.G0; light&#13;
mixed, tiB@15.60; wheat and oat straw,&#13;
I'JG-IO; rye straw, $10./50(^11 per^ion.&#13;
8yffrage Lots* by 760 Majority.&#13;
Equal suffrage was defeated in Michigan&#13;
by a majority of "760. that is tho&#13;
result of the canvass made by the&#13;
state board of canvassers. The vote&#13;
was 247,375 for and 24&amp;,135 against.&#13;
The returns from Wayne county&#13;
were received, and show 84,930 for .the&#13;
amendment to 46,902 against. *&#13;
Just one month and 15 days elapsed&#13;
after election before the final result&#13;
was determined, approximately the&#13;
same as published: It is thought that&#13;
there will be no more efforts on the&#13;
part of equal suffrage workers to make&#13;
further attempts to change the result&#13;
of the election and the question only&#13;
remains as to when the question will&#13;
again be submitted to the legislature.&#13;
Tho recount returns from ^Vayno&#13;
county were not taken into consider^&#13;
atlon. owing: to the couri*S declajbnl&#13;
Had they been, J,SJ4&lt;) would have betjn"&#13;
added against the amendment, making&#13;
a totaT of 2,^00, ' .&#13;
Arkansas Govarnor Press 360 Fsotn*.&#13;
Gov. Georga W, Donaghey y^sterdayr&#13;
pardoned 316 state and 44 county coavlcts&#13;
and in a long statement said his&#13;
action was taken as a ptotest againwt&#13;
t&gt;e system of teasing convict* in&#13;
vogue in Arkansas. The governor&#13;
scored magistrate* forimporfltig km?&#13;
seBtaflces-for trivial offenses and told!&#13;
of what-lie termed disadvantage* of&#13;
the lease system. ; v *r&#13;
A* a r««ttlt of the pardons three'&#13;
state convict damp* will be aboijshac*&#13;
but several camp* where prisoners&#13;
working on theJroadk are hmrse* wltl&#13;
be/ continued in operatiort i«V«.&#13;
That every deja«* in the , *t*t*&#13;
•hould be compelled, to vote at f^neraJ,&#13;
election* Is the,contention of Wm, tC,&#13;
^9t,,is&gt;,i&gt;*toiyelact&#13;
tpr the acnookrait diatrtct.^w^&#13;
wtn,4nopjpora*e tW Maavta *»*ni. , -&#13;
' Ifrjk - «1****&gt; Hkile. matron of the&#13;
Oerea* Heme*' Owe»**v&gt; Relieve* tbM&#13;
tecal o*j»J*ajdfcnm*iwnm Hiulf M&#13;
^^t;**4ty:«»t»cU decide^ terpen&#13;
k municipal akatteg rtok 1B&gt; Ttoejs*.&#13;
Lake P*^*X *, *&lt;*^*1. w411&gt;Jsei|6&gt;*i4 *&#13;
jgee.sltii hailiHi iaftaetamtkmk *ba**s&#13;
f ^ ^ ^ ^ \^^^***T^^SaBB^aVr7Sja^*SSBBB»;^^B^i^BS^BBBBBBBBBa^BJB^BBBBJ| **********Jg**| y*k good. • "•. rt* •r**i"J**-v .«•&gt;•.&lt;&amp; ' . u '&#13;
n Oiiigfti— t«&gt;&#13;
k w Mfats ft** ^ p j ^ i ^ i j ^1^1^14101¾ t*i»ai%t*n7 f » gg#&gt;&#13;
be produced on Canadian farm land*w and jtbe quality of thS article, Hon+ D&amp; Eoche, minister of the lnte ' "&#13;
o r Canada, directed that sum&#13;
•pace be seeared at the U&#13;
atatea Land Jhaw\ recently h*ld.&#13;
f^ve some adequate Idea of the fieM&gt;&#13;
r«*dtirc«i' of w«4rt*ni C*n*xla. Th^oaV&#13;
ia charge bad *^*rio&gt;£cation&#13;
inetalled one of the n»o»t attracfltb,&#13;
grain«*td *raa« eabib^taevw&#13;
anywhere. Thouaand*. anxlou* to get&#13;
"back to the land," «aw the exhibit,&#13;
saw wheat that weighed 68 pounds to&#13;
the measured bushel, oat* that went&#13;
48 and barley that tipped the scale*&#13;
at 65 pound*. The clover, the alfalfa,&#13;
the wild pea vine and vetch, the rye'&#13;
grass, the red*top and many other succulent&#13;
and nutritious varieties of wild&#13;
graasea deosanded and deserved from&#13;
their prominence and quality the attention&#13;
they received. The grain lh&#13;
the straw, bright In color, and carry*&#13;
lng heads that gave evidence of the&#13;
truth of the statements of Mr. W. J.&#13;
White of Ottawa, and bis attendants,&#13;
that the wheat would average 28 to&#13;
36 bushels and over per acre, the oat*&#13;
55 to 105 bushels, the flax 12 to 28&#13;
bushels, were strongly In evidence,&#13;
and arranged with artistic taste on&#13;
the walls. The vegetable exhibit wae&#13;
a surprise to the visitors. 'Potatoes,&#13;
turnips^ «*bbege-**-ln fact, all , of i t&#13;
proved that not only in grains'w*tt&#13;
western Canada prominent, but in&#13;
vegetable* it could successfully com*&#13;
pete with the world.&#13;
One of the unique and successful&#13;
feature* of the exhibit was the «&amp;cceutut&#13;
and systematic dally distribution&#13;
of bread made from Canadian&#13;
flour. It was a treat io those who got&#13;
It. Canadian butter, Canadian flhec**'&#13;
and Canadian honey helped to complete&#13;
an exhibit that revealed in a&#13;
eplendid way the great resources of&#13;
a country in which so many American*&#13;
hare made their home.&#13;
A feature of the exhibit was the&#13;
placard*, announcing the several recent&#13;
successes of Canadian farm&#13;
produce and live stock in strong competition&#13;
with exhibits from- ecker&#13;
countries. There wa* pdsted the&#13;
Leager Wheeler champion*htc&gt; prise&#13;
for Marquis wheat-grown at Roatkara&#13;
In 1911, beating the world. Thvn I.&#13;
Holme* of Cardaton entered theheompetttive&#13;
fiefdMst Lethbrldge Dry Farrn^&#13;
lng Congress, and won the wheat&#13;
championship of 1*42, beating Mr.&#13;
Wheeler with the same variety of&#13;
wheat. Hill ft Son* ofOLloydmlnster,&#13;
Saskatchewan, in 1*11, wot* the Colorado&#13;
silver trophy tor beet oaU grcam;&#13;
competed for in a big competition at&#13;
Columbus, Ohio, in 1911. The produoe&#13;
of British Colombia at the New terk&#13;
Land Show in 1911 carried eS^fh*&#13;
world's championship for potatoes*&#13;
and incidentally won a 81,000 eilver&#13;
tronty, and tbeni but a few days fjgo,&#13;
the same province carr^df off ^ibe&#13;
world's prise for apple* at the Horticultural&#13;
Bhow in London, Eiwlfnd?&#13;
But that was not all. Theae Canadians,&#13;
who had the termerity to gtajp;&#13;
that corn wa* not the only ( ^ &gt; r&#13;
finishing high-grade beef cattia,&#13;
tared for the fat steer chj^pionsb^p&#13;
at the Live Stock Show, in CWcagjO,;a&#13;
polled. Angus—"Glencarnock' Yictpf.v'&#13;
Nearly 300 entries were in&#13;
"G'lencarnocJ|5 Victorf* di4*/t&#13;
kejnel of com from a B&#13;
nut. There -wen Iowa, Illinois, , ^&#13;
braaka, Kansas, Minnesota, Wiscc^n-,&#13;
sin and the&gt;r corn-fed artlcle^.detert1&#13;
mined to win, bound to beat thuj blaek,&#13;
animal from the north, and his "notjh;&#13;
ing but prairie grass, oat* and bar!&#13;
feed," as hi* owner rproudly sUtad, t&#13;
they didn't Canada and McQrtfgor&#13;
Son*, with their "Glencamock VlctO;&#13;
won, and today the swelldom of Am&#13;
lea, is eating of his steak* and&#13;
—the champion ateer of tin wO&#13;
But once more the herd of ca&#13;
that, won the Sweepstake* at the&#13;
same shbw wW bred an« ^wned by«&#13;
the owners of ^GlencainocI ^«rtot,^&#13;
fed only on prairie gra**, oaBF and*&#13;
barley, near Brandon, Manitoba. Tfed*&#13;
royal reception given t o r Mr. • Me^&#13;
Gregor 6n hU rettrra to h ^ k*m#&#13;
town'wa* well dtaerved,fl * * ^ *"?•&#13;
Ommsion most sot be mad* of tket&#13;
wonderful and besitfiful dlapTiy t *&#13;
apple* mad* hy British* ColnmWe,HdiT&#13;
cupying a full halt aeetioti of t l »&#13;
great Land Show. TliJ* wa« m pW*&#13;
sonal charge ot Mr. W.(fc 8e&lt;rtt, d*V&#13;
\iif minl»ter of mgrronlrure for tkat&#13;
province, who wa* nowOhly a boat iAt&#13;
tftoM whw*^1*itad 1&amp;*mn&gt;1&amp;+*t&#13;
wa* alsfr anr encyolop^lk of lnT6«»*8&#13;
Ue*f i***rtrng the r*eo*roe* or th*#&#13;
country. With 200,000 Amdricans go*v&#13;
ttf^ «om*tu~etlada tH* year, H h* :&#13;
pleaeinr to know that *o^many from* ; .,&#13;
fhsteid* of th* Une eaa pArttcipate4af: f ' ^&#13;
the honor* oomtog to that neir ed****'&#13;
tff.i Aidtdrtiaementr '&lt;&gt;•? «*»*4*o« ^-*v&#13;
*r&#13;
yw&#13;
-v:y^&#13;
'-•I.-1&#13;
•v»&#13;
m&#13;
• . j&#13;
^ • ' ^ • «&#13;
m&#13;
tm*m&#13;
5¾¾&#13;
- n. •.v&gt; i&#13;
-^*-&#13;
!'.&#13;
,----&lt; 'renaietf AittHmetle,&#13;
Atafv w**&gt;h»e a vwift&#13;
»*^ry IlltW o+bQi*r,'we* Wlttf * i P&#13;
throwgf^d leaeoe in artt*j***t1e t*&gt; heir&#13;
**»**sej*a^Ps Hw**"** a^^s^^es ^w^si^g^^^e^a^eBei es^styg' e*^^w^a^*we*&gt; ^n»^aw*&#13;
end end, hwi ****k *»fwo ««d ea*t&lt; a&#13;
i&lt;» U awdshad&#13;
* ' f&#13;
iW '•'•tiii&amp;.-'ii-1^(1^^-,^^^ ,¾&#13;
* l « H ! i ^ H&#13;
: • &gt; • . 1 t i t ' i J r . !*• - , (JV T1? - v •' &lt;-! ..•&#13;
6.a&#13;
-••5&#13;
'..tv&#13;
" leiij -frds^s^ssW^*^ « * - !%•!» I I W &gt; * » » ^ — « H » W , » I I ' » 1 . 1&#13;
4.--- 32 8&#13;
w y&#13;
L-.«r&#13;
HA'ZELTINB Co/*y/?/&lt;?//z w*t * epvrcit//?e &amp;. &lt;?a&gt;&#13;
.-:/-¾ ipr -t C lyCdaem, enroenw, spacpaeprit apliustb. li,s hceorn,s urlets- _ raecre iavneodn. ymThoue sf itrhsrte parteonminisge-s laet tsearms phlae eOff^rttthhea&amp; ^wiidiratyte .f» *t•a ep hoewaedr*; loar ij BaU iSseterittaaultsft yd teoyu.t&#13;
trhoaofta) thwea ap ourntoraccitu pwieads manudt iltahteed h aewadhi lela tthere ! brye&lt;mCofvtreadeY boy». km BeaVnesiy onf «ar* sytsrtimng. , Guanmnoertiocae'dv tnhieec eh,e awdi thof wChaomme rConly'ds ep olar trinai tl onvaei,l efdln tdoa ata. rtrgeeet, wChlyerdee ipt lewdagse sh aEdv eblyenen tou saedee raesc ya. . bCyly dPeh llelaetrunss tMhautr pahTCy,h ln«eAsf f bejotfl aetm pnlvoiynegd •neraqanr'tsy , lohdaxde kbeporerro. weCdl yade r ifmlea kfreosm a fCt amex.%- cHsei'e ptroet ecnadlls otno Mbeu rIpnhvye,satnigda t*ineg r eaplulelsgeedd -iontfurnadctri&amp;onts thoef tbhoew gl aomf ea nla owpsiu amn dp isppee uank-s iwtea*a tfhoeu ntdr.e e Twheh erCeh iCneasme erboony's i. spo froturnadit •dereband Inne xhti em dorrenssiningg. rWoohmil ea .v Nta*Um nGew Cyanmne- mbeircroomre !s8' Smeyrsioteursiloyu silny sahsa tet&gt;er reeds:u lCt amofer otnh e o•huosc Jk y. oTnh eC athmiredro nle'stt esric ka ppbeedar. s Imty smteraik-es •Cdilryedcet ttherllesa tsC aagmaeinras*t ;t htef rlei-feen ovfe lCopame erwoans. " " " ~ tny no ne vaer yytahcihntg tarnipd&#13;
empty. He ctaelmlee rEovite ly?n* e•v eenryvethiimingv ^*an»d•- plana to take Camerei&#13;
it CHAPTER VIII.&#13;
Hi"&#13;
been running fa thla line. Foolish&#13;
thoughts. they must seem to one who&#13;
reads of--them; worthy only- to be&#13;
classed with the Idle, superstitious&#13;
fears of young girls and old women,&#13;
and impossible to a well-balanced,&#13;
clearTfyeaked man of twenty-nine. It&#13;
may.; be; that I waa not well-balanced&#13;
and clear-headed. And" jr&gt;t the sequel&#13;
would tend rather to a contrary&#13;
conclusion.&#13;
Cameron was still reading the Herald,&#13;
and I sat.with a pair of binoculars&#13;
at my eyes sweeping the waters&#13;
fqr the trailing 'spioke of a liner or&#13;
some object of lesaer interest.&#13;
Presently the silence was broken&#13;
by my companion.&#13;
"I see," he began, dropping the paper&#13;
to his knees; "that China is really&#13;
in earnest in her anti-opium campaign.&#13;
Two Peking officials have died&#13;
from the. effects of a too-hasty breaking&#13;
of the habit. Men do not die in&#13;
the attempt to obey mere paper reforms.&#13;
The Chinese are a wonderful&#13;
old people, Clyde."&#13;
I lowered my glasses, all at once in-&#13;
• ' : &gt;&#13;
»1 1&#13;
m&#13;
m^: !»"&#13;
&lt;§ • ^&#13;
K •;•&gt;/.&#13;
• • &lt; ,&#13;
lev &gt;''.&#13;
*&amp;;&#13;
=^^---4-&#13;
*$m ' ; : • ; •&#13;
r*cM «&#13;
VJj&lt;.^ 13-_:1 -/:-&#13;
Somewhere East of Nantucket.&#13;
- The Sibylla under stress, .of her&#13;
powerful turbines waa racing easily.&#13;
reeling off her thirty knota with no&#13;
adorning effort and scarcely a perceptible*&#13;
vibration. There bad been a&#13;
*tlff breeae during the night, but it&#13;
bad died down at sunrise, and now, at&#13;
noon, the sea was calm as the bosom&#13;
of «. nun. The sun blazed on the&#13;
yaoht's polished brasses, intensifying&#13;
the? snowy whiteness of her glossy&#13;
painty and turning to Jewelled ahower*&#13;
the spray which fell away from&#13;
hereharp orow and caressed her long:,&#13;
sleek sides. It waa wonderful weather&#13;
for late October. On the nineteenth&#13;
the temperature had risen to ninety&#13;
in New York, breaking all records&#13;
tor that date; and now, two days&#13;
later, hate at the meeting of sound&#13;
and ocean, with Point Judith' just&#13;
doming into view over our port bow,&#13;
an&lt;L Block; Island a blur abaft our&#13;
ateffbeard beam, we sat, Cameron and&#13;
I, shaded by spread awnings, on the&#13;
after-de«k, as fchoagh it were mldaun&#13;
«Mr. For be bad been convinced&#13;
by ,jmr riguteoua untruth, after, repeated&#13;
and-emphatic dinning, and had |&#13;
daily- grown stronger; Teadtiy—agreeing,&#13;
at- length to a cruise along the j&#13;
coast, with Bar Harbor as objective.&#13;
•'That la precisely what I had the&#13;
Sibylla built for," he told me, when&#13;
my*' suggestion found aceeptaneav&#13;
"Did- you^ever notice the inscription&#13;
on the brass tablet over the fireplace&#13;
la the saloon? No? Well, it's this:&#13;
^sBtalla, when thou seeat me faynte,&#13;
adftreta thyseUe the gyde of ary comftls*&#13;
u*eV&#13;
"1 ftwnfl l^in an old book, published&#13;
in *€*&amp;,'%. ^poetic indttotloa' to 'The&#13;
Mtiror - of" •Ma#istrate»1• written- by&#13;
Thomas SackvUle. You can fancy&#13;
how my' amplication distorts the original&#13;
Intention; but Sackrllle isn't&#13;
nijstt to trouWomeorer It"&#13;
FtvJNiat ttits explanation now main*&#13;
ly to Hjdicato the- ImproYed temper of&#13;
tha it)e*Jper. - Hit nrlnd was placid&#13;
once aajdj^ and with this recovered&#13;
plactdtty had come a return of bU&#13;
ejulet humor. For tny" own part 1&#13;
waa'' not altogether^ happy. My dellalit&#13;
crtet my friend's recoTery, and&#13;
.•Xvetyn'a pleasure tlrereat, was cur* 1 died *hy aeTt-Tflproach regarding the&#13;
ia&gt;tram«nt I had employed to bring&#13;
tt about. A lie is to me, a most con*&#13;
tethpttbTe'agents and to make use of&#13;
Ojne baa been always abhorrent. In&#13;
tUi'mstance I had salted my conice&#13;
in i tteasnrt with the old exthat&#13;
the end justtfledthe means,&#13;
H waa cariy in a measure, and I&#13;
far from being .as happy as I&#13;
wps^mded..&#13;
Jlioreprar, I coiW not.rld myself of&#13;
•A uastujr^s^ d^jsiiarTr indeed, In&#13;
opuosriilng the day and its menace, v II&#13;
^•••:rm%^^^om^$vf'^' tor Camar*&#13;
00« of cowse, had' qulta dismissed the&#13;
sgiNf^ and. Svalyn, who previously&#13;
waa^ready partarbed, had seemed to&#13;
terested.&#13;
"You've been in China?" I asked.&#13;
"No, I haven't," waa his answer.&#13;
"I've always meant to go; but when&#13;
I was nearest, ill news drew me home;&#13;
hnd so I never gpt closer than Yokohama&#13;
on one side, and Srinagar, in&#13;
Kashmir, on the other."&#13;
"You've seen something of them in&#13;
this country, I suppose?"&#13;
"No, very little. I attended a dinner&#13;
once at which Li Hung Chang was&#13;
the guest of honor; and I've eaten&#13;
chop suey in cne of those Chinese&#13;
eating palaces they have in Chicago.&#13;
That's about the extent of my personal&#13;
Chinese experience. But I have&#13;
always been interested in the country&#13;
and HB people. I bare read about&#13;
everything that has been published&#13;
on the subject. By the way, did they&#13;
ever find out who killed that boy of&#13;
Murphy's?"&#13;
"Not yet," I answered. "They've&#13;
had some of his own kind under surveillance,&#13;
but no more arrests have&#13;
been made."&#13;
"Murphy was released?" v&#13;
"Yes." ' " ' . ' . .&#13;
He took up his paper again and&#13;
once more I applied myself to sea^&#13;
lazing.&#13;
Far away to the northeast I made&#13;
&gt;-f&#13;
Ml, awa* all v a » ; su dlasotly&#13;
of berae*&#13;
t signify-&#13;
1&#13;
. ! ' . , ' •&#13;
t ^npanyin*. ua, hirt&#13;
&amp;^ J«fcmy «sal rsasoa,&#13;
toTdisaitfpde her.&#13;
3 for iKf diaeu*atu4a thart waa oaf*&#13;
tataly no \pgH*i grosmd, I had ^ -&#13;
m^Mimim&amp;t ha»lni vthj&#13;
«bylla searched • from, niaathaad to&#13;
l)aalaon bafons, sailing The ooal waa&#13;
asjaminad as carefully at that of a bat*&#13;
«SabJp in time JC.JBM; &gt;*?•** locket&#13;
sps} cupboard was tnspected; evsm tba&#13;
TMBtttitirrr were metaphortcalljr turned.&#13;
Inside ost.and the record of #••&#13;
ery « a a of the eresr wae k)sssid into&#13;
With rlgorem scrutiny. 80 I could see&#13;
¢0 loophole unguarded. But the past&#13;
waa- an argasaent wbJca set tofjto at&#13;
«Mghe&gt; « eaeh thkagav eeuld he aft&#13;
thet wblckvhae happsasd^iaesisa ago&#13;
ftp eQuascpat Aroaaiag,, room, how&#13;
T » * -&#13;
maojVtnrtheT. smltH «M fesxpltcaet*&#13;
«Ot waM uae, waaa Mfmn-&#13;
They were lifting the fisherman&#13;
aboard when Cameron, at length&#13;
aroused by the unusual, strolled forward&#13;
and Joined me.&#13;
"There's your bit of wreckage," 1 ob- {&#13;
served, smiling.&#13;
"Poor devil!" he exclaimed, aym-"&#13;
pathetically. "He seems more dead,&#13;
than aljve.&#13;
"He's breathing, sir," announced&#13;
Brandon, the lirst officer, "and ndt&#13;
much more. We'll take him below,&#13;
and see what can be done for him,&#13;
sir."&#13;
He appeared to be about forty years&#13;
of age, a somewhat shrunken, weather-&#13;
beaten creature, with face deeply&#13;
lined and half hidden behind possibly&#13;
a week's growth of dark beard. It Is&#13;
not easy to read a man with his eyes&#13;
closed, but I was far from prepossessed&#13;
by what of this fellow's features&#13;
waa on view. Ordinarily I&#13;
should have given him scant heed, but&#13;
today was no ordinary day. and my&#13;
suspicions were superactiye. Even the&#13;
most trivial occurrences took on significance.&#13;
And this was not a trivial&#13;
occurrence. Certainly it was not&#13;
usual. Fishermen blown to sea In&#13;
storms and overcome by exposure,&#13;
hunger and thirst were common&#13;
enough, perhaps, but within the past&#13;
week there had been no storm; the&#13;
weather had been aa mild as that of&#13;
June, with an August day or two&#13;
thrown in. How was It possible, then,&#13;
for this bit of flotsam to have come&#13;
where it was and in the condition it&#13;
was?&#13;
To Cameron I gave no hint of my&#13;
reasoning, but to Captain MacLeod I&#13;
put the question without hesitation.&#13;
"It does seem a bit odd, Mr. Clyde,"&#13;
he returned, judicially, "but you see&#13;
his mast and sail had gone by the&#13;
board and his oars, too. It looks to&#13;
me, sir, as if he'd been run down, maybe,&#13;
and nigh swamped. Of course we&#13;
can't tell till he gets his senses and&#13;
lets us know."&#13;
Though this put the matter in a&#13;
new light, it did not by any means relieve&#13;
my anxiety; and I aBked Mac-&#13;
Leod to have a sharp watch kept on&#13;
the fellow, adding that I would come&#13;
to him later for anything he might&#13;
team. I took care, too, to caution him&#13;
to make no mention of the affair in&#13;
the presence of-Carperon.&#13;
It was not until after dinner that&#13;
evening that I found opportunity again&#13;
to question the captain. I came upon&#13;
him in his stateroom, a comfortably&#13;
commodious cabin, far forward on the&#13;
upper deck. On his table was spread&#13;
a chart, over which he was bending&#13;
when I entered. A briarwood was&#13;
gripped firmly between his teeth and&#13;
the grateful odor of clean pipe smoke&#13;
greeted me as I entered.&#13;
"He's come around, Mr. Clyde," be&#13;
informed me, turning about; in his&#13;
swivel chair, "and I'm just trying to&#13;
check up some of his statements by&#13;
means of this . chart here, and. our&#13;
weather record."&#13;
"And how do they check so far?"&#13;
I asked, a little dubiously.&#13;
"Quite to a dot, sir," was his answer.&#13;
"There's no breakdown anywhere,&#13;
so far. According to his story,&#13;
he sailed out of Oloucester harbor on&#13;
Monday morning. His name's Peter&#13;
Johnson, and he lives in East Gloucester.&#13;
He says the wind was strong from&#13;
the westward, and he made the banks&#13;
all right without rolahap. But about&#13;
noon, the wind died, and a thick fog&#13;
came in from the northeast, chill and&#13;
sopping, sir. . He kept moving about,&#13;
and finally in the thick of it lost his&#13;
bearings. It had clouded over and&#13;
after a little it began to rain. He&#13;
made a try for Gloucester harbor, but&#13;
must have sailed southeast Instead of&#13;
northwest. Then tht night came&#13;
down, and the fog was like a dosen&#13;
blankets, ha says. His food was gone&#13;
and most of his water, but he said&#13;
he'd seen worse than that many a&#13;
time, and judt prayed for the fog to&#13;
lift and give him a sight of the stats.&#13;
And the next thing that happened was&#13;
what I suspected, sir. He heard "a&#13;
steamer's whistle. He had bis sheet&#13;
out and was running before the wind,&#13;
arid that steamer coming upon him&#13;
out of the fog, caught his boom; ripped&#13;
out his mist and nearly capslsed his&#13;
dory. When she rltfnted, the steam*&#13;
el's lights were fadthg into the' fog&#13;
agaia^his boat wis half full of water&#13;
I and his oars were washed away. Well,&#13;
sfcv to make • long: story short, he&#13;
mast haee caught s* current that carried&#13;
him well out beyond Cape Cod,&#13;
and then slewed him around the&#13;
eouthermoet ead of 'Nantucket island.-|&#13;
r questioned him about lights and fog&#13;
fork hair mat- jetgnals, and making due allowance for&#13;
his condltioa, his yam works out pie*&#13;
if /jtnlgfct He'd been drifting about&#13;
for- three1 days When we picked him&#13;
up- and ^was half dead of thirst mid&#13;
out what appeared to me to be a sea*&#13;
going tug or pilot boat, steaming, I&#13;
thought, with rather unusual speed for&#13;
a vessel of her class, It was not&#13;
much of a •discovery, but the wateni&#13;
had been, very barren that morning,&#13;
especially for the last two hours, and&#13;
insignificant as this object was I felt&#13;
in a manner rewarded for my vigil.&#13;
Half an hour later she had slipped&#13;
out of sight and I was busy in an effort&#13;
to pick her up again, when a cry&#13;
from the lookout forward directed my&#13;
attention to a floating speck possibly&#13;
two miles or more dead ahead, and&#13;
not more than a point off our, course.&#13;
"Come," I said to Cameron, "let's&#13;
go up on the bridge apd have a look!"&#13;
"And have our trouble for ouV&#13;
pains?" he returned, incredulously.&#13;
"It's probably some bit of wreckage,&#13;
a box or a cask."&#13;
"Very well," I agreed, starting off&#13;
alone. "Even a box or a cask is worth \&#13;
while as a variation/'&#13;
When on nearer approach the drifting&#13;
object proved to be a fisherman's&#13;
dory, with a man, either dead or unconscious,&#13;
plainly discernible In the&#13;
bottom, I should hardly have been human&#13;
had I not experienced a degree&#13;
of, satisfaction over Cameron's failure&#13;
as a prophet. That, however, was the&#13;
least abiding of my sensations. In an&#13;
instant it had given way to anxiety&#13;
concerning the boat's occupant and&#13;
Interest in the business-like manner&#13;
in which MacLeod, the stocky young&#13;
executive officer of the Sibylla, was&#13;
preparing to pick up our And.4&#13;
The engine room had been signaled&#13;
half-speed aheed, and already a aailor&#13;
with a coll of rope In hand was stationed&#13;
at the forward gangway. I&#13;
have frequently seen rtver pilots make&#13;
ladings that were marvels of Clever&#13;
calculation, but I never saw any steer*&#13;
tag more accurately gauged than^hat&#13;
by which MacLeod* here in the ope*&#13;
sea, with the precarious swell and&#13;
surge of ocean to combat, brought the&#13;
yacht glldia* within a fear* Usee&#13;
lftcnetvof the roHln* dory's bow,,&#13;
I was leaning over the rail aa we&#13;
came thus upon the caataway. and&#13;
saw clearly enough for jaat a moment&#13;
the huddled creature in,oilgklna, aUeat,&#13;
and m&amp;ktim. tit the atom, with&#13;
cloeed eyaa and&#13;
ted npon hit forsheal. then » sailor,&#13;
dropping .ligbtlr,|ptfa the.boat, ghat&#13;
off tar View for a titjjte. there waft&#13;
a whir of flung line; an exchange of&#13;
qdekepbkam, aafl to me m x i n t e t t ^ ^ j hanger.&#13;
h'the seaman's quarte&#13;
?ard, sir.'* :&#13;
•^sfc-.thfct^ey-'kept there. Mr, Mac-&#13;
I^eod." T told" blm. "I'd feel better if&#13;
you put a watch on him tonight. Tomorrow&#13;
well run in to Gloucester and&#13;
look up(his people and friend^"&#13;
T^ery good, air."&#13;
"Thank you."&#13;
I thought of having a look at Peter&#13;
Johnson, myself, for I was somewhat&#13;
curious to study that face again when&#13;
it was sentient, and nad eyes open,&#13;
but on second thought I decided to&#13;
wait until morning. It seemed silly&#13;
to suspect thir seemingly honest but&#13;
Unfortunate fisherman.-&#13;
We had not been speeding so well&#13;
during the afternoon; there was some&#13;
trouble reported from the engine&#13;
room, and It was a question whether&#13;
we had made over fifteen knots an&#13;
hour since two o'clock. I know that&#13;
at ten o'clock that night, when the&#13;
moon went down, we were somewhere&#13;
oastrof Nantucket, and directly in the&#13;
path of the transatlantic liners.&#13;
The night was balmy as a night in&#13;
springtime, and Cameron and I in&#13;
light overcoats sat on the after-deck,&#13;
watching the moon slide slowly below&#13;
the dark horizon line. Our chairs, were&#13;
close together, facing the lee rail; his&#13;
the farther astern. We talked ofmany&#13;
things, I remember. He was always&#13;
interested in my work, and especially&#13;
in my ambitions to make The&#13;
Week a power for national good; and,&#13;
I remember that we discussed several&#13;
projects I then had in mind for bringing&#13;
about reform in high places. But&#13;
the subject which then interested me&#13;
most, and regarding which I still experienced&#13;
a vague, unreasoning uneasiness,&#13;
he had avoided throughout the&#13;
day and evening, with what seemed&#13;
to me studied Intent.&#13;
The sudden cessation of hostilities&#13;
on the part of those whom he had&#13;
been given every reason to look upon&#13;
as his implacable enemies, was certainly&#13;
strange enough to have Invited&#13;
endless debate; and I marveled that,&#13;
after having accepted my falsehood&#13;
as truth, he had not chosen to go over&#13;
with me the whole marvelously perplexing&#13;
business.&#13;
His mind, I knew, was relieved by&#13;
what I had made him believe, or he&#13;
would not now be the man he was;&#13;
but despite that, it appeared to mo.&#13;
it would be most natural for him, on&#13;
this day of all days—the twenty-first&#13;
of the month—to question, at least,&#13;
my previously emphatically stated&#13;
conclusions*&#13;
There had been a moment of silence&#13;
between us, and these reflections were&#13;
dominant with me, as six bells, ringing&#13;
out musically, announced that&#13;
midnight was but an hour distant. At&#13;
that instant, while in time to the&#13;
bell's strokes, there echoed in my&#13;
brain the1'words'? "Know then, that before&#13;
the morning of the efghth day&#13;
hence—" Cameron, lowering his cigar,&#13;
turned to me witbi&#13;
"Clyde, I wonder If you have forgotten&#13;
what day this is!"&#13;
I doh't know why, coming at Just&#13;
that particular Juncture, the question&#13;
should*he more upsetting than If it&#13;
had come at some other time of day,&#13;
but I know it seemed so to me.&#13;
For a little space my tongue refused&#13;
its office. There was a lump in ray&#13;
throat which demanded to be swallowed,&#13;
and 1 made a pretence of&#13;
coughing to hide my plight. At length&#13;
I answered, a bit lamely:&#13;
"No, I haven't forgotten. It's&#13;
Wednesday, the twenty-first of October."&#13;
He returned his cigar to his lips and&#13;
smoked in silence for a full minute.&#13;
Then, he said, quietly:&#13;
"It's seven days aince that empty&#13;
envelope came."&#13;
/'Yes," I returned.&#13;
There was another slight pause and&#13;
he went on:&#13;
"I have been thinking that possibly&#13;
you were wrong about the significance&#13;
of that empty envelope. Possibly&#13;
those enigmatical peraons Intended&#13;
that absence of a definite threat to&#13;
imply the inconceivably terrible."&#13;
Now that he had started to talk&#13;
about it, I wished that be had continued&#13;
his silence. 1 could not understand&#13;
how I had convinced him be^&#13;
fore, knowing all the while that I was&#13;
without truth to support me. Certainly,&#13;
now, pervaded as I was with&#13;
that grim disquietude, it would be&#13;
even more difficult to carry conviction&#13;
with my words.&#13;
"Whatever they intended," I ventured,&#13;
yielding a fraction of a point,&#13;
"it seems to me that they'll have some&#13;
difficulty in carrying it out. There&#13;
are no portraits hero to mutilate and&#13;
no mirrors to smash. For the previ-&#13;
I WM quite sure, of counev bujr i&#13;
^akwrfeo smoke*!, 0|.duletly; fo* a&#13;
while in'a ruminative mood,- Eventually&#13;
he threw the end of his cigar&#13;
over the rail, and leaned forward.&#13;
'TtfdfVt know,'" h*' said perplexedly.&#13;
"I don't know."&#13;
This I hoped was to be the end&#13;
of the matter, for tonight at least; but&#13;
presently he began to talk of those&#13;
first two letters, to conjecture, to wonder,&#13;
to dissect phrases, to dig out&#13;
subtleties of meaning from euphemistic&#13;
expressions. And then I knew that,&#13;
he had every word memorized, JuBt&#13;
as I had.&#13;
Seven bells had struck and we were&#13;
still talking. But now and then there&#13;
were pauses in our converse—Intervals&#13;
of silence of varying length—during&#13;
which I sat with my gaze stretching&#13;
out over the black waters and my&#13;
hearing strained for any unusual&#13;
sound. . More than once during the&#13;
evening I thought I had detected far&#13;
off the pounding note of a motor&#13;
boat's exhaust, but had put ths notion&#13;
aside as too Jmprobab.V (QT entertainment.&#13;
Now, faintly, I s*emed to hear&#13;
it again; not so distant, but muffled.&#13;
I got up and stood close to the rail,&#13;
and listened with ear Ijent. Then I&#13;
determined to go. to m&gt; cabin for a.&#13;
night glass which. I had included&#13;
among my traps. But at that moment&#13;
the sound, which I had made sure of,&#13;
ceased, and I stood a second or two&#13;
longer, expecting it to resume.&#13;
Altogether it was not over a minute&#13;
or two that 1 stood there. It seemed&#13;
much less than that. Then I turned&#13;
with a question for Cameron. I wondered&#13;
whether he had heard the sound&#13;
too.&#13;
"I say, Cam—" I began, and stopped,&#13;
startled, with his name half uttered.&#13;
His chair was empty. He was not&#13;
on deck. I ran to the saloon. He was&#13;
not there. I flung open the door of&#13;
his stateroom. He was not there, either.&#13;
I had the yacht searched for&#13;
him. ' He was not on the yacht.&#13;
CHAPTER IX.&#13;
A Craft Without Lights.&#13;
Composure is second nature with&#13;
me. I claim no credit for it; it is a&#13;
matter of temperament rather than&#13;
\ cultivation. But now my temperament&#13;
was all awry, and my composure fled&#13;
me. I waB excited. More than that,&#13;
I waa frantic, distracted, rattled. I&#13;
wanted to do a dosen things at once;&#13;
to get answers to a score of questions&#13;
in a single moment. And the&#13;
consequence may be Imagined. For&#13;
five—ten minutes, nothing waa done&#13;
whatever. Then the search-light was&#13;
got into play, sweeping the waters on&#13;
all sides, far and near; but with paltry&#13;
result. Five or six miles astern&#13;
we made out a power boat, similar to*&#13;
that which I had seen through the&#13;
glass earlier in the day. To the eastward&#13;
a steamer with two funnels was&#13;
just coming into range. The white&#13;
sails of a coasting schooner showed&#13;
to westward. Trailing in our wake&#13;
was our squalid salvage, the dory of&#13;
{the fisherman^&#13;
MacLeod, trained to coolness, ret.&#13;
talned his wits. Systematically he&#13;
set to work. Likely and unlikely&#13;
places aboard the yacht were looked&#13;
into. Before I knew what he waa&#13;
about, we were going back over the&#13;
way we had come with the searchlight&#13;
swinging in a circle and a halfdozen&#13;
sharp-eyed seamen scanning&#13;
every square foot of rolling wave.&#13;
"I can't understand it," I kept repeating&#13;
aloud, with senseless iteration.&#13;
"I can't understand it."&#13;
I was standing alone, well forward,&#13;
leaning over the rail. Presently Mac-&#13;
Leod laid a hand on my shoulder.&#13;
"We can't do anything more than&#13;
we are doing, Mr, Clyde," he said in&#13;
his matter-of-fact way. "For my part,&#13;
I can't understand it, either; but since&#13;
Mr. Cameron's not aboard, there's&#13;
only one conclusion, and that is that&#13;
he's overboard. And aince there was&#13;
no one interested in throwing him&#13;
there, then it seems very clear that&#13;
he must have jumped."&#13;
—^Jumped!" I cried, in • Irritation.&#13;
"My God, man! Don't I tell you that&#13;
I was not three feet away from him,&#13;
and only for a minute qr two? How&#13;
ceuld he have Jumped without my&#13;
bearing him? How could he even&#13;
have got out of his chair, without my&#13;
hearing him?"&#13;
The captain shrugged his shoulders.&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
z&#13;
HAD AO. TflE htvujfdirES,&#13;
'•'. • , v ; •; - '«• &lt; • j , . ' • ! ' J r I&#13;
Seemingly "extraordinary Essentials&#13;
Are Needed for tha Practice of&#13;
the Law to Florida.&#13;
Will Irwin, the author, was holding&#13;
forth upon the superiority of California&#13;
over Florida as a winter resort&#13;
"Florida," he aaid. "is too relaxing.&#13;
This is due to the fetid air of^ the&#13;
swamps.&#13;
"There's a story about ,A yot\ng jfnan&#13;
who was being examined for admission&#13;
to the Florida bar. The ejijfan|f*ti nation ran thus: '' • ' ( '•&#13;
"Young man are yon 'mafirfa-*&#13;
proof?' &gt; l&#13;
"'Yes/sir,' .. &lt;*•&gt;* i -&#13;
•• Can you. rldeT .., c . . • * • ' -&#13;
" Yes, sir.' ,... .&#13;
" 'Do you own a horse?' &gt;•/&gt;».&#13;
" 'Yes, sir,' } , #&gt; i " 'Is he a good swamp swimmer?*&#13;
"'Yes, sir' • '&#13;
"'Then, young man, I welcome 'you/&#13;
to the practice of law in this district.&#13;
" .; • t&#13;
tvrtA&#13;
RINGWORM ON CHILD'S FACE'&#13;
Stratford, Iowa.-r-"Threj&amp; years e#s&gt;:&#13;
this winter my seven-year-old eon had&#13;
ringworm on ljhe fage. First, it «aa;.}jnv*&#13;
small red spots which had a, roujft.&#13;
crust on the top'. When they started&#13;
they looked like little red dots and&#13;
then they got bigger, about the slse&#13;
of a bird's egg. They had a white&#13;
rough ring around them, and grew&#13;
continually worse and soon spread&#13;
over his face and legs. The child suffered&#13;
terrible Itching and burning, ee&gt;&#13;
that he could not sleep nights. He&#13;
scratched them and they looked fearful.&#13;
He was cross when he had them.&#13;
We used several bottles of liniment&#13;
but nothing helped.&#13;
"I saw where a child had a rash o*&#13;
the face and was cured by Cuticom&#13;
Soap and Ointment and I decided to&#13;
use them. I used Cuttcura Soap and&#13;
Ointment about one month, and they ,&#13;
cured my child completely." (Signed)..&#13;
Mrs. Barbara Prim, Jan: 30, 1912.&#13;
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Add rose&#13;
post-card "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston*&#13;
Adv.&#13;
THE CA8E.&#13;
w o t t r ^ W ^ ^ r s ^ in theYorrT'tJttm might be erpeetei a * S - *&#13;
aflsVa sailor stand1n% beaMe me Mf&#13;
the yaeiftl deck; atrf then, thb lm*&#13;
was taut and straJniag. and the dtfry.&#13;
which had sheeted off asterm. waa hetag&#13;
hsTOgfctjBfj"&#13;
4* M,&#13;
R and&#13;
Aad then 1 iaterTwpted hist&#13;
Three deye *«&amp;*** wAtaa^T 1&lt;ihemv&#13;
itJUssrsstthetit faod&gt; Yea? lfc» -1 ' -^&#13;
o'olook.sif.&#13;
they are being munched and put Into&#13;
oua performances there must be some | the paunches of the crab-eaters. Crabs&#13;
more or less simple explanation.&#13;
Neither yon nor X believe in the su- heats or dogs decaying in the ocean&#13;
pernatural; therefore the things that&#13;
happened st Craghblt were brought [md fed on the choicest of foods for&#13;
about by natural means, seemingly in&#13;
explicable as they were. Now no natural&#13;
means can be brought to hear]them of the filth they eat, than In a&#13;
to perform any such legerdemain on'&#13;
this yacht. You know that. There4!&#13;
not a man here, except that poor old&#13;
everything about. S o / I Ut, no mat&#13;
ter what they planned; this time they&#13;
are outwitted." And even as I said&#13;
it, 1 saw clearly before my vision&#13;
these words: "Say not Beaven is high&#13;
above! Heaven second* and descends&#13;
about oaf deeds, dctty inspecting u*&#13;
wheisbcevef we are."&#13;
;&gt;»sv&lt;'&#13;
PltoMoT' ,&#13;
*1 wouldn't pretend to interpret&#13;
their gythhaismr rahfwgree evaalvav&#13;
^"^••Sptt. s a v t l ^ l l l ^ r a i g e s t j&#13;
f —— ' A - . - - ^sssMslft' " - A s i l n Si T l&#13;
Dangsr in Crabs.&#13;
Crabs, no matter how fresh they be&#13;
make some fellows sick nearly ever?&#13;
time they eat them. Still they tak*&#13;
a chance on It every once in so often&#13;
just the same. Crabs, must be very&#13;
fine eating and have a lovely taste aa&#13;
will eat a dead horse, or rata, pigs,&#13;
Perhaps tf the crabs were penned up&#13;
some days, so as Co get a few of the&#13;
dirty germs out of them, aa well as rid&#13;
somewhat cleaner condition they might&#13;
not, after being eaten, turn the lnstdee&#13;
wrong side oat tad inside outward—&#13;
fisherman, that we don't know all a n d ] ^ ^ ways at the eame time Some&#13;
foolish1 fellows feel highly insulted&#13;
when told that they take a chance&#13;
every time,they eat crabs. Eat,&gt;m&#13;
and don't kick at the doctor blli—Bt,&#13;
change. . .,&#13;
• * , • * ' '&#13;
Value of swimming Leeeons,&#13;
Florence Shellard, a Windsor schoolrf&#13;
had s t t g a t t B o y af her i i s n n l n , w * . h*d already f&#13;
* * • * •&#13;
w ' • W ' . W "&#13;
" * • ' * * • If'&#13;
'Then'you efree with met Ttoietrt iwoently demonstrated the value] HtipoeBnooato&lt;tiH*eo.i«hoare wIMtagK&#13;
thfhk suuiethlng ma/ hate been [of swtorming being lneraded in the 1 to nay-fer 1 ^&#13;
school curriculum, when In a moot&#13;
plucky meaner she rescued another&#13;
lKtIe girt aged five years, from drown.&#13;
lag (h the Thama*. Without wetting&#13;
Bronson—You're not looking well,&#13;
old fellow.&#13;
Woodson—No, indeed. I'm always&#13;
feeling poorly before Christmas.&#13;
No Longer Interested.&#13;
Theodore Lane, who reaided at the&#13;
home of. bis parents, 7349 Hoi to a avenue,&#13;
had a toothache the other morning.&#13;
It was a bad toothache, too, and&#13;
Theodore let the neighborhood know&#13;
all about It, But when his father got&#13;
home that evening (this is according&#13;
to hia father) the boy waa calm and&#13;
seemed at peace.&#13;
"Has your tooth stopped aching.&#13;
Teddy?" naked Theodore, Sr. *&#13;
"I don't know," answered the&#13;
youngster.&#13;
"Dottt know. Why, what do you&#13;
mean?"&#13;
"It's out"—Cleveland Plain Dealer.&#13;
Mother Gray's ftweet Powders for CfcUdrss*&#13;
oBr«dUstSMTSso rMsvSsSrMttlt awsgsssl,a Bia«t4fc Ss taonseusefabs,i wVslM srSsisa.gft sOaSe&gt;' TMMtryw ssjtt*d rstoor W•!•o•r«s•M•». tPos std*kbor ocsKlMtbiwmat oUrka*r sSabsssss, .&#13;
Tk*v M**r /««1. At »11 drnggUU. SJe. tutpU&#13;
A40MU, 4t.8.01a»t*4, I*aay.2f. T. Adv.&#13;
Deceased.&#13;
"Unfortunately the girl In the boat&#13;
with him when he rocked the boat&#13;
did not know how to awim."&#13;
"That was unfortunate."&#13;
"For him, yes. You see, she etawwe&#13;
him under the surface and stood em&#13;
his fsce to keep her head above&#13;
ter/'&#13;
',- rM&#13;
* : . , &lt; ' • .&#13;
--. v *&#13;
/&#13;
v. •••it&#13;
m&#13;
&amp;&gt;-«&#13;
• $ &amp; • ,^«*^&#13;
I&#13;
•:m&#13;
Lucky Star.&#13;
"This is the third time you have .&#13;
been here for food," said the woman&#13;
at the kitchen door to the trim*. '&#13;
"Are you always out ° ' worfcf&#13;
•Term,'* repned the' Itinerant. • •*&#13;
guess I was horn under a lucky*&#13;
star." " ""' %,&#13;
Way of Some MjrUetere. -&#13;
Bishop W. F. McDowell, HethodHi&#13;
says some ministers are,,Hte some&#13;
horsee—theyil work all right in the&#13;
lead but will hilt When pUbed elsewhere.&#13;
•'•^ •**'.-*&#13;
' 'Ma "I i f ' ' 1 '• 't • Her DaiKriM Night*. 'w .&#13;
"Is your wife foal of dancing?* '&#13;
"Yes, especially 'the nights I pre&#13;
ffer to stay at'ho^Ssi&gt;-^Setrott Free&#13;
rPreaa.&#13;
m&#13;
**+*+*»&#13;
Give a eahy a tatrdliia^^afflsW&#13;
room to ktek aad he 'wiU be happy.&#13;
' ''•'•tf'W&#13;
Sei CreaafcftKee. afsse^ beet Ms«aa«t&#13;
eahks 1B tbsv wkosk wsaAsw jsaUhss assi Issaa* •&#13;
2 2 2 —-5»y "TaE•• iV. **1 s\Umnr fT€ &gt;rr• ^^^. W' 'O$&#13;
M*&amp;&#13;
r v' +'•&#13;
•V •;.'•;&#13;
, t , *&#13;
- " i ' ' ' ''-&gt; •&#13;
•,-vw «&gt;&gt;.-• »&gt;'•« J-l&#13;
'•V-".; &gt;\:«:- ff;'&gt;- Jft&#13;
- * •&#13;
$ &amp; '&#13;
lf-« * " • ' &amp; "&#13;
! • ( •&#13;
; • • ' * •&#13;
?V f&#13;
~N&#13;
and£kistomers I&#13;
A t Tttiis Season W h e n Every Heart S h o u l d Resp&lt;&#13;
1*© Tftose Finer S e n t i m e n t s T h a t Prom^Jjisffo B e&#13;
S o l k i t i o \ s Of T h e Happiness Of timers A n d T o&#13;
P r o m o t e Qheer, W e A r e Remin&lt;krfOf T h e W o r d s Of&#13;
T h e&#13;
"Peace Co&#13;
Happiness* Fr)&#13;
L&#13;
s FrpifiHaving Wronged No Man.&#13;
hi Having Friends About You,&#13;
Content In Having Done Y c r Part/'&#13;
May These Dwell With You Through The Coming&#13;
Year. " ^ \ -&#13;
%.&#13;
\£\.&#13;
,%-,&#13;
;^;&#13;
Mf-'-Vv-&#13;
?4&#13;
' • » . ' ,&#13;
i"'&#13;
Mary £, 'Joyie viaited friends and&#13;
relatives in Fowlerville the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Walter Collins ot Marion has been&#13;
visiting at the borne ot John Cbalker,&#13;
Qeorge Bui lard ot Soatb Lyon was&#13;
aTeoent visitor atthe borne of"Harry&#13;
Isbam.&#13;
W. |1. Leland and family were -lackson&#13;
visitors recently.&#13;
Mnrta YanBlancnm of Pinckney&#13;
spent Sunday witb her parents Mr.&#13;
aad Mrs. B. Ve^BUrioum,&#13;
Mr?. J. M. Harris and daughter,&#13;
Sadie, Were Howell visitors one day&#13;
*wa*k.&#13;
|Wa. Meyers spent several days last&#13;
&gt;k wiin relatives in Ann Arboi.&#13;
Ben Isbam and daughter, Vers, of&#13;
Obotsee ai e viBitiug at borne ol tiarry&#13;
fsbanv.&#13;
,, filmer Glenn and wife transacted&#13;
business in; Ann Arbor recently. t&#13;
Bflws Josephine Harris of Dundee is&#13;
ipaod(flg\ bef holiday vacation witb&#13;
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John M.&#13;
HarrU.&#13;
t-uV " ^&#13;
ur&#13;
How's This!&#13;
We offer $100 Reward for any case&#13;
of Catarrh that cannot be cured by&#13;
Ball's Catarrh Care&#13;
F. J. CrlENBY &amp; CO., Toledo 0.&#13;
We, Ifae undersigned, hsvj known&#13;
• P. 'J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and&#13;
believe him perfectly honorable in all&#13;
tuatness transactions and financially&#13;
Able to carry out any obligations made&#13;
4^bf his firm.&#13;
-" . WaidioK, Kinnan &amp; Marvin,&#13;
Whole* ile Druggists, Toledo, Ohio, after Christmas.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Core is taken internally,&#13;
action directly opon the blood&#13;
and ntacdms sormoas of the system.&#13;
Testimonials sent free, fries,&#13;
Sold by all druggists.&#13;
Take Halt* family pUls for&#13;
JWtlOff,&#13;
1 • A4f»rtWai '&#13;
Helen Monks spent Saturday in&#13;
Jack BOD.&#13;
Gregory Devereaux and wife&#13;
spent Saturday in Howell.&#13;
Miss Raohael Fitch visited the&#13;
High School last Friday.&#13;
H. D. McDougall and family&#13;
were Jackson visitors Saturday.&#13;
William Jeffreys and William&#13;
Darrow were High School visitors&#13;
Friday. _ __ __&#13;
Mies Mary McQuillan is spending&#13;
the Holidays at her home near&#13;
Howell.&#13;
Miss Heine is spending the&#13;
Christmas Holidays at her home&#13;
in Mt. Clemens.&#13;
Nellie Fisk underwent an op*&#13;
eration for appendicitus at the&#13;
Sanatorium last week.&#13;
76c oer&#13;
oonsti*&#13;
The ninth grade have completed&#13;
Physical Geography and will commence&#13;
the subject of Botany after&#13;
Christmas.&#13;
The tenth grade have completed&#13;
English History and will commence&#13;
the subject of Arithmetic&#13;
The Grammar d e p a r t m e n t&#13;
bought flowers for Miss Nellie&#13;
Fisk, their classmate, who is sick&#13;
at the Sanitarium.&#13;
* ' # •&#13;
MORTH HAMBURG.&#13;
'kirn Oyster sapper and: Sale at Clyde&#13;
ItaUiEjrVwas a socoesand ail reportj&#13;
. e d f i enjoyable time.&#13;
"tts* Oiara Garptitar is home trom&#13;
/i" y; Aletander Kidd ol Detroit is ristin*&#13;
^;J ^Jstiwr, Mrs. Clyde Dtramog.&#13;
Hsiph Bennett was a Pinckney oailer&#13;
v ' : ;&#13;
-¾&#13;
1*1&#13;
The Christmas ewsercises at the Cad?&#13;
SJ|M1 Friday eteniog were pronoiroe-&#13;
* a *&lt;»•« % all who attended.&#13;
Mark ^ath ia tm the «ck lUt.&#13;
Biehard fisvMook tad wife visited at&#13;
i^lsnSttBday.&#13;
W!?^&#13;
' &lt; • &lt; -V-&#13;
- i&#13;
\ m si m&#13;
fOtU i f M l Fist&#13;
When 'a bhaoaefct p)ot exUts' bo-&#13;
Jwmm lifer and bo»ei« to otose db&gt;&#13;
trsts by refntiap to set, take Or,&#13;
MkMg't New Ufa Pills, and end snoh&#13;
•bnss of yoor svstJaa. Tbej gontly&#13;
/ Maim riaht aetSon of ssowHMSv Hver&#13;
ola, aad reetorn tovr aoalth&#13;
good fooMnts. W i t W. f.&#13;
w- «Bf&gt; Aft aBJII SSI. &gt;&#13;
^ - . ' ' ii|ii«rtw«e»—hn mi i&#13;
Ht* BL W. QsNkr amT B. Toor&#13;
Ids of Tpoikiiti are ^siting s i j&#13;
The High School base ball team&#13;
are talking ol selling season&#13;
tickets lor home games in 1918.&#13;
The prospects of a strong team for&#13;
the coming season are bright&#13;
The following High School pop.&#13;
ila take port in the play, "Dust of&#13;
the Earth" to be given by S i&#13;
Mary's church: Helen Monks,&#13;
Josephine Colhane and Walter&#13;
Beasori.&#13;
The teachers were well remem.&#13;
bered by Santa Glaus last Friday.&#13;
8up't H. D. McDougall received&#13;
a fipedreaoed tnrkey; Miss Heine&#13;
was presented with a out glass&#13;
Bon Bon diah and a box of Confectionery;&#13;
Mr. Devereaux was&#13;
given a parasol and a box of Stat,&#13;
ionery; Mian Deverennx was the&#13;
recipient of a Toilet Set and Mrat&#13;
Green's pupils remembered her&#13;
with a fine box e l Stationery.&#13;
Santa didn't forget the ~p«$%&#13;
either, the bifher moms reoet1&#13;
|,Oiapges aad Oonfo and&#13;
BIHJ WORM OR STEM MAQQOT&#13;
UtOo test Works Its Way Downline&#13;
Crown of Wheat Plant and&#13;
Caueet Much Damage.&#13;
jflkewheat bulb worm or stem .magsjoteansos&#13;
much damage in the wheat&#13;
nekL These little green worms change&#13;
"^George Hobeo spent Saturday to a papal form in April and May. becoming&#13;
Utile yellow flies, much re-&#13;
: * - .&#13;
Under&#13;
i n Jackson.&#13;
Bex Read of New York City is&#13;
visiting bis parents,&#13;
K. C. Cobb of near Dexter wae&#13;
in town Saturday.&#13;
William Kennedy Jr. was in&#13;
Aun Arbor Monday.&#13;
Wm. Surdam of Detroit is visiting&#13;
relatives here.&#13;
Mrs. H. W. Orofoot spent Satnrday^&#13;
in Stock bridge.&#13;
The skating has been posponed&#13;
indefinitely by snow.&#13;
*Chas. Bycraft and wife of Webster&#13;
were in town Monday.&#13;
Mrs. Arvilla Placeway is the&#13;
guest of relatives in Perry.&#13;
Miss Backus of Pingree is working&#13;
at the home of Art FHntoft.&#13;
Leo Lavey of Detroit spent&#13;
Cbiistmse with his parents here.&#13;
Miss Garrity of Stockbridga&#13;
spent Sunday with Mrs. M. J.&#13;
Farley.&#13;
Mrs. R. K. Elliott of Swanton&#13;
Ohio is visiting at the home of&#13;
E. E. Hcyt&#13;
Mrs. Bezest and son of Mt.&#13;
Pleasant are visiting attbe home&#13;
of Frank Gay.&#13;
Harry Warner and family of&#13;
Jackeon are visiting at the home&#13;
of S. G. Teeple.&#13;
Miss Mame Fish of Cornnna is&#13;
visiting at the home of her&#13;
mother, Mrs. E. G. Fish.&#13;
Ben White and wife spent the&#13;
first of the week at the home of&#13;
Mrs. L. A. Devereaux.&#13;
Mrs. R. B . Eisby of Hamburg&#13;
spent tfye first of the week with&#13;
relatives here.&#13;
Mrs. C. Lynch and daughters,&#13;
Mary and Bernardino and Helen&#13;
Monks were in Jackson Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Dede Hinchey of Minneappoiie,&#13;
Minn, is visiting her par.&#13;
ents, Mr. and Mrs. C, G. Hinchey.&#13;
Miss Laura Lavey of Whiting,&#13;
Indiana is visiting at the home of&#13;
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Michal&#13;
Lavey.&#13;
starting Jan. 1st, the Fowlerville&#13;
Standard will be issued&#13;
twice a week, Tuesdays and Fridays&#13;
Cbribtmas exercises were held at&#13;
the Congregational and Methodist&#13;
churches Monday evening. A&#13;
large crowd attended at both&#13;
churches.&#13;
The play, "Dust of the Earth"&#13;
wtll be presented at the Pinckney&#13;
Opera House, Thursday evening&#13;
January 2, under auspices of the&#13;
St. Mary's church of this place.&#13;
Watch for cast of character*, etc.&#13;
in next weeks issue of the Dippatch.&#13;
Pneumonia is the king of all&#13;
diseases in Michigan when it&#13;
comes to fatalities. It cost a total&#13;
of 2,164 lives in the first ten&#13;
months of 1912. Tuberculosis was&#13;
a close second with 1,870 and cancer&#13;
was next with 1,796. Measels&#13;
were the mildest disease with bat&#13;
79 fatalities. There were 458&#13;
deaths from typhoid fever, Which&#13;
is the lowest in twelve years. E p -&#13;
idemics at Marquette ancT Port&#13;
Huron helped to make the number&#13;
larger or a record would have&#13;
been made that would stand for&#13;
years.&#13;
•enabling1 a small housefly, in June.&#13;
These flies lay th*ir eggs on the upper&#13;
wheat leaves. The eggs hatch, into&#13;
the little greenish-white worms with&#13;
the small black feeding hooka at one&#13;
end. These* worms crawl down the&#13;
wheat Jeaf and feed on the stalk, causing&#13;
the part of the stalk above where&#13;
they are feeding to turn white. This&#13;
brood ot worms stays in the straw till&#13;
July or August, when it changes into&#13;
another brood of flies. The flieB, by&#13;
laying eggs on volunteer wheat and on&#13;
grasses, produce another brood of&#13;
flies by September or October. It was&#13;
this third brood that laid the eggs&#13;
Which hatched into the little green&#13;
worms we speak ot This brood 'of&#13;
worms does damage by working its&#13;
way down into the crown of the wheat&#13;
plant, often cutting off the central&#13;
stem and in this way causing considerable&#13;
damage.&#13;
If it were not for the numerous parasitic&#13;
enemies of thls^ wheat pes4 J.t&#13;
might become more dangerous O n&#13;
the Hessian fly, which it resembies&#13;
very mucj in its general habits. In&#13;
one respect it is even worse than the&#13;
Hessian fly, in that it can f«cJ on&#13;
many other grasses beside wheat&#13;
There are few practical measures of&#13;
controlling the pest Rotation of crops&#13;
and late planting of winter wheat are&#13;
not as effective as with Hessian fly.&#13;
Wheat Bulb Worm or 8tem Maggot*&#13;
The most practical thing which man&#13;
can do to control wheat bulb worms is&#13;
to burn, the straw and stubble after&#13;
harvest, destroying the worms of the&#13;
second brood before they come out of&#13;
the straw to change into the fly form.&#13;
The Nebraska station suggests that&#13;
wheat planted in October Is less liable&#13;
to trouble, although not entirely free.&#13;
COUNTRY ROADS OF CONCRETE&#13;
One That Cannot Become Muddy and&#13;
at All Times Provide Secure Safe&#13;
Footing Is Desired.&#13;
It is becoming, more and more evidant&#13;
to farmers and those interested&#13;
fin good country roads that a more&#13;
lasting material than earth or the ordinary&#13;
macadam must be used. Near&#13;
Coshocton, 0., two concrete roads&#13;
have been built which have successfully&#13;
withstood one severe winter and&#13;
show no wear either from* traJflo or&#13;
weather.&#13;
The first view shows a 10-foot con*&#13;
Crete strip laid on the old roadbed.&#13;
The second shows an IMoot strip of&#13;
the full width of the road. The latter&#13;
Joins the macadam read which Is&#13;
deeply worn and rutted. Concrete in&#13;
the first case replaced a block stone&#13;
read, which had given away under&#13;
heavy floods and travel, and the other,&#13;
a limestone macadam road, whose life&#13;
was only one year, due to heavy traffic&#13;
At present the 18-foot strip road&#13;
carries all travel from the concrete&#13;
road and also from another brick road&#13;
and shows much less wear than the&#13;
brick.&#13;
• country road which cannot become&#13;
muddy, which will give at all&#13;
times a secure footing for horses and&#13;
which will need little or no repairs,&#13;
would be the greatest Improvement In&#13;
farm conditions that has been made&#13;
In recent years. Concrete seems to be&#13;
the only material combining these&#13;
qualities with low cost • decade&#13;
from now, our country roads of concrete&#13;
may equal our city pavements&#13;
In efficiency under all conditions of&#13;
weather.&#13;
CwldttlMet FerJey&#13;
"I want to thank yom from tbe hot*&#13;
torn or my heart," wrote C &amp; Badea&#13;
of Lswisbnrt, W, Virginia, for the&#13;
wonderful don bis benefit I got iron*&#13;
Biaotrie Bitters, ill wring mo o&gt; bolh&#13;
a ssv»re ease of stomaoh trouble ami&#13;
of rheumatism, fr«*m which i had been&#13;
an almost a*tpl*sR suffsrer W te»&#13;
years. It soiled my esse as though&#13;
made jest Jej ma," Per .dyspepata,&#13;
mdigestiop jaeedioe, aed to rid the&#13;
system of kidney nohaaa that oau«* __&#13;
rheumatism. Itsowo Bitters HITS nirlsesHsg on to.&#13;
eqqal. Try them, leery bottle k&#13;
ffuaraotesd to sittttv Opty 30p M&#13;
tBreee's Urit 8tsev&#13;
aseBsmesssMBssssBjBsnsj&#13;
AGFooodrm RNooatdess&#13;
Dont forget to slant a few pumpkin&#13;
leads. r4&#13;
A weedy pasture ls&gt; an unprofitable&#13;
piece of property.&#13;
A woodless oormfleld la the sign of a&#13;
fanner who is greed cc his oalBng. -&#13;
Alfalfa may he jet into the silo, aad&#13;
It produces a fair euality of silage.&#13;
Celery may be transplanted to the&gt;&#13;
any tin* from May i s to&#13;
"This is something like it,"&#13;
Young .Borgus with satisfaction.&#13;
"It sure 1st" agreed Miss ClaW*&#13;
She shrugged her shoulders as she&#13;
. glanced back at the lace curtains of&#13;
[ the boarding house window. Inside&#13;
I the parlor the gas glared hotly, lighting&#13;
up the hair wreath above the mantel&#13;
aad glittering on the gaudy vases&#13;
beneath.&#13;
"Now, that It's got warm enough to&#13;
ait, outdoors," pursued young Borgui,&#13;
stretching his long legs over three&#13;
steps below him, "we can shake the&#13;
parlor in there! .Gee, but it was&#13;
fierce last winter, never to get a word&#13;
with you without a lot of old women&#13;
butting in with, 'Excuse me, but I am&#13;
looking for my crochet work! Lovely&#13;
evening, isn't it, Mr. Borgusf or&#13;
glaring at us for being there at all!&#13;
Or having callers of their own! Nice,&#13;
chatty conversations we could carry&#13;
on that way, couldn't we? I—"&#13;
"Oh," said a voice behind them as&#13;
the screen door creaked, "is some one&#13;
out here? Oh, it'a you, Miss Clancy—&#13;
and Mr. Borgus, of course! Ahem—&#13;
not that I meant anything, at all! I&#13;
suppose I've interrupted your conversation,&#13;
but it was so hot la there—I&#13;
can go right in—" .&#13;
"Don't think, of it, Mrs. Miner," said&#13;
MIs« Clancy, airily, rising. "Yon can&#13;
ha: uie steps and welcome. We are&#13;
just going for a walk anyhow. Gome&#13;
on, Jimmy!"&#13;
"Wouldn't that frost you! ** exclaimed&#13;
young Borgus after they had proceeded&#13;
a safe distance. "Just wanted to&#13;
find out what we were talking about!&#13;
Catch her sitting out there by herself!&#13;
We'll circle the block and see!"&#13;
When they got near enough again&#13;
to see the steps young Borgus gave a&#13;
low gurgle of triumph. The steps&#13;
i were empty.&#13;
"Come on," he said. "Let's go get&#13;
some ice cream. Just as sure as we&#13;
go back there somebody else'll come&#13;
out!" r&#13;
In a sympathetic sort of disgust&#13;
they sought the brillmntlz lighted&#13;
candy store on the corner\and found e&#13;
vacant table.&#13;
"Strawb'ree for me," said Miss&#13;
Clancy. "I just wonder, Jimmy, that&#13;
you haven't got tired before this and&#13;
quit me. It's fierce, going to see a&#13;
girl that hasn't a parlor of her own to&#13;
entertain company in! We've sure&#13;
been chased around enough by them&#13;
other boarders!"&#13;
"Well, were's away from 'em right&#13;
now," said young Borgus. "Let's make&#13;
the most of it I—"&#13;
"Why, the idea!" broke in a highpitched&#13;
voice at the next table. "If&#13;
it isn't Miss Clancy! Oh—how do&#13;
you do, Mr. Borgus!" There was an&#13;
arch inflection to-the greeting—that&#13;
was Intended to carry the idea that&#13;
the speaker appreciated the sentimental&#13;
situation.&#13;
"How-do, Miss Binks?" said Miss&#13;
Clancy stonily.&#13;
Miss Binks was forty, dressed like&#13;
twenty and fondly thought .she looked&#13;
like sixteen. She made eyes at young&#13;
Borgus, who turned purple. Then, she&#13;
arose with her plate of ice cream and&#13;
fluttered into the vacant chair at their&#13;
table. 'It's so lonesome by myself,"&#13;
she purred apologetically. "I was so&#13;
thirsty I just had to come out after&#13;
something cold, but I shrink from going&#13;
out la the evening unescorted..It's&#13;
more sociable tills way, dont you&#13;
think?"&#13;
"Oh, my, yeB!" agreed Miss Clancy&#13;
with sarcasm that was totally lost.&#13;
"Sorry, we're just through. We've got&#13;
an engagement to meet some friends!**&#13;
"Let me slip back and stick some&#13;
cold poison in her Ice cream," growled&#13;
young Borgus throatlly after they had&#13;
escaped. "She's the limit! Another&#13;
second and she'd have asked to go&#13;
walking with us! Let's go down to&#13;
the little park. If s only a few blocks&#13;
awayi*&#13;
He tucked Miss Clancy's hand In the&#13;
crook of his arm and they walked on&#13;
with regained cheerfulness. It Was&#13;
not so bad to be out In the dusk with&#13;
the faint echoes of a street piano: in&#13;
the air and automobiles whirring; by.&#13;
Presently their feet crunched the gravel&#13;
of the walk that ran around the littie&#13;
park and they stroHed&gt;on till they&#13;
found a bench that was unoccupied.&#13;
A lilac bush In bloom waved above&#13;
them.&#13;
**Geat" breathed young potgoe wltis&#13;
a vast exhaling of breath signifying&#13;
peace of mind at last&#13;
He laid one hand over IHas Clancy's&#13;
and she did not&#13;
ADVERTISE if you waat to aeewe yoor&#13;
merchandise. Beech Use&#13;
bewesain.BMBrBMiSBsmSse«Msm&#13;
and on every doihu oooinlad&#13;
you'll reap a handsome&#13;
dividend.&#13;
'•If"; Real Estate Traisfers&#13;
.James H. Brian to Olarenoe&#13;
Preston, lets in Hsrtiand for W75,&#13;
Ellen Oronn Co Merritt N. Cook&#13;
and wife, 45 acres in H a n t y - f o t&#13;
«2660: , ^ 1&#13;
John Bergin to John V. O'Connor,&#13;
80 acres in Oceola for 18660.&#13;
Louise Brearley to Francis X&#13;
VoKts &amp; wife, 15 acres in UnadUle&#13;
for *600. t -&#13;
Ohab&amp;l Moore to Omnms V*&#13;
Backus and wife, land in Matron&#13;
for 1650. ' ' - : / - ¾ '&#13;
Conrad Webber to Bichard BEexr&#13;
bet, 40 acres in Genoa for $90?/&#13;
James Hart to Clarence W.&#13;
Bead ley, cottage lot its Deerfieid&#13;
forelOa .¾¾&#13;
Edward Dingman to Elian Sawyer,&#13;
40 acres in Coo way for $2800;&#13;
Eliza fclawy er to Joseph Sawyer*&#13;
20'acres in Conway lor. 1200.&#13;
Min«r Bergin to Ernest Kra&#13;
160 acres in Oceola for^lP,006.&#13;
Susan M. Parson to Freeley&#13;
and Barry H. Calkins, lots&#13;
Fowlerville for $1750. r&#13;
Brirss Of a Terror &gt;.&#13;
The chief executioner, tf death in&#13;
the winter and spring ro^tf||ispfieumooia.&#13;
Its advance agents are c6lds&#13;
and grip. In any attack by one of&#13;
tbH&amp;e maladies no time bbould be lost&#13;
&gt;» taking the best medicine.Oitainabie&#13;
to drve it off. Countless tbousettds&#13;
have found ib&gt;s to baDr. KIIJK V JT«*w&#13;
Discovery. "My Bushsnd believes i t&#13;
bas kept bim from having pj^najoijU&#13;
Uree or four times," wrtl*s Mfa,&#13;
George W. P aee,.. fia.wsonvilte, '"Cf*&#13;
"agdJ&lt;jL-Ofi"»h&gt;. lipids, and tTonp V&lt;we&#13;
have nev&lt;u (ounj its pqa&amp;l." Gosran*&#13;
read for aii bronphial atfectiops. Pti&#13;
60 t»s MBQ $1,00'' Trial bottle 4&#13;
* v ,v'*rc&#13;
' i N ,&#13;
* '&gt;&#13;
. ^ :&#13;
' . • . * • : •&#13;
'"•¥31 - &gt; , • ' * #&#13;
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penungiy.&#13;
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desperate tones of a nssm.et bay, T&#13;
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch December 26, 1912</text>
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                <text>December 26, 1912 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1912-12-26</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan, Thursday, January 9, 1913 No. 2 X&#13;
•mmmwmmm—mmmmm—m—mmm&#13;
OX&#13;
STOLES&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 11&#13;
Salmon&#13;
Baking Powder&#13;
Olives&#13;
Paii Syrup&#13;
Package Oats&#13;
Fur Mittens, the $1.00 kind&#13;
Fur Mittens. 50c kind&#13;
19c&#13;
7c&#13;
19c&#13;
ALL SALES CASH&#13;
W. 3ARANRD&#13;
Meeting of tie Putnam and&#13;
HamoDri Farmers Club&#13;
The Putnam HH-I Hamburg&#13;
Farmers Club were entertained at&#13;
the bom* of Mr. and Mrs. A. C.&#13;
Shoenhals on December 28.&#13;
About forty were preaent and&#13;
all enjoyed the social hour and&#13;
good dinner. Afterthe usual com&#13;
mittees were appointed by tbe&#13;
president the following program&#13;
was rendered:&#13;
Son* by club.&#13;
Recitation by Miron Schoenhals&#13;
Reading by Viola Bergin.&#13;
Hesitation by Murna Schoenhals&#13;
Song by Harold Bates.&#13;
The question box watt brought&#13;
forth and many lively discussions&#13;
followed on the Mortgage Tax&#13;
Law, State Be ward Roads, and&#13;
The Keeping of Farm Accounts.&#13;
After IIIH president bad appointed&#13;
the following committee; Mr.&#13;
Baker, Mr. Hendrick and Mr.&#13;
! | Conway to arrange a program for&#13;
| J each meeting of the coming year,&#13;
the club adjourned to meet with&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Chambers on&#13;
Jan. 26", 1913. At this meeting&#13;
!| members will respond to roll call&#13;
with current events. Topic,Growing&#13;
and Handling Dairy Cows.&#13;
Leader, W. C. Hendee. Discussion&#13;
led by 8. £. Swarthout.&#13;
l a i A a a i M i a i i A a a M i M A M A l i i M A i i M A i M i M I M I ^ M ^ M M^B^^^^^^M^B^^M^^MI^^tt^^M^^tf ^^MI^^MI^^^B^AAflttAttiBl1&#13;
m&#13;
M O N K S B R O T H E R S&#13;
FOB FBESZ3:&#13;
Butternut and Yery&#13;
B e s t Bread&#13;
R e c e i v e d Daily&#13;
Tip Top and Holsum with a full line&#13;
of specialties such as Salt Rising-,&#13;
Graham, Whole Wheat, Cakes, Cookies&#13;
and Buns, etc., or any special order&#13;
Saturdays.&#13;
Edison Phonographs&#13;
In any Model&#13;
Records at Reduced Prices&#13;
4 minute at 31c 2 minute at 21c&#13;
imummimiimn&#13;
)&#13;
1&amp;&#13;
Havjs You&#13;
Bought t h a t Heat in* S t o v e&#13;
or that N e w R a n g e ? If not&#13;
do n o t untt I y o u h a v e&#13;
Seen Us&#13;
W e a r e Headquarters f o r&#13;
all kinds of Hardware, B t c .&#13;
A full l i n e of Cutter* a n d S l e i g h s&#13;
T^epJe Hardware Co m pa n y&#13;
imiimmi&#13;
1 Gents Furnishings&#13;
I A Complete Line&#13;
Your Pancakes&#13;
Will be delightful if made of Hoyt&#13;
Bros. Pure Buckwheat flour, Henkel&#13;
or Old Tavern Prepared Mixture.&#13;
Use Blue Ribbon, Light House, Karo&#13;
or Golden Tree Syrup, Just fine&#13;
for Buckwheat Cakes.&#13;
Fish&#13;
Salt Mackeral, Whitefish, Halibut and&#13;
Herring.&#13;
Addison Cheese&#13;
Limburger or Brick on special order.&#13;
Fruits&#13;
Oranges, Bananas, Grape Fruit and&#13;
Lemons&#13;
«&#13;
i d&#13;
:it&#13;
A Full Line of National Biscuits&#13;
Had a Foil House '&#13;
The Columbian Dramatic Club&#13;
under the auspices of 8t. Mary's&#13;
church presented t h e play*&#13;
"The Dust of the Earth," before a&#13;
fnll house Thursday evening, Jan.&#13;
2. The play was exceptionally&#13;
well chosen and each and every&#13;
one of the cast lent themselves&#13;
well to the character they impersonated.&#13;
Father Coyle, tbe iustruotoras&#13;
well as the young people who&#13;
made up the repertoire worked&#13;
hard and faithfully to make the&#13;
play a success as indeed it was&#13;
beyond all question.&#13;
The total receipts amounted&#13;
to something over $117.00, about&#13;
sixty numbers being sold for the&#13;
dance whioh follow^ the play.&#13;
Notice To Taxpayers&#13;
The township tax roll is now&#13;
in my possession and I am now&#13;
ready to receive taxes during&#13;
banking hours.&#13;
Louis C. Monks, Twp. Tress,&#13;
riease Tate Notice&#13;
During the past two months,&#13;
several have called and settled&#13;
their subscription or mailed the&#13;
same to us. We wish to thank&#13;
all of them for their promptness,&#13;
and' at the same time say that&#13;
there are over 200 wboae subscription&#13;
expires with this number,&#13;
and againask^ thise to_ attend&#13;
to this small matter at once.&#13;
The amount is a small matter to&#13;
each one but the aggregate sum&#13;
means considerable to us. We&#13;
ueed the money in our business,&#13;
and besides tbe postal law either&#13;
compels us to stop the paper or&#13;
place a one cent stamp on each&#13;
paper mailed where the subscrib*&#13;
*»• is over n year in arrears. We&#13;
do not wish to stop your paper,&#13;
neither can we afford the extra&#13;
postage. Will each one in arrears&#13;
kindly help us out.&#13;
R. W, Oaverly.&#13;
•• ••'•••" - * J&#13;
Us&#13;
Before&#13;
Goinf&#13;
Ekewhen&#13;
We art here to&#13;
serve you with&#13;
anythmg in the&#13;
line of printed&#13;
stationery for&#13;
your business&#13;
and personal&#13;
use. D O O Q&#13;
Letter Heads Bill Heads&#13;
Eavelopea Cards&#13;
Weddin* Invitations&#13;
Posters or Announcements&#13;
Of An&#13;
The best quality of work&#13;
at prices that are RIGHT&#13;
EiDtietD BirtMay &gt;; &gt;;^^^^^K^^&gt;X'K^'/&lt;#^A'^'.^&#13;
H. G. Briggs is another Howell&#13;
man who reaohed earth on New&#13;
Years day in the morning. 1« I ^WlfffffWWWIff!??WWWW#WWW1&#13;
wae eighty years ago that Mr. **•&#13;
Briggs arrived in the first of tbe&#13;
seven ages. That was quite a time s&#13;
ago and in the mean time Mr.&#13;
Briggs has become a father and&#13;
a grandfather. So his sons and&#13;
daughters decided to show father&#13;
a good time on bis birthday. They&#13;
did. The family gathered from&#13;
Detroit, Lansing, Pinokney. Pingree,&#13;
and Oceola, took Mr. Briggs&#13;
and the bouse by storm, and bad&#13;
tbe jolliest kind of a time—Tidings*&#13;
CODI'1 ( M Notes&#13;
Services in the Coog'l. cbnrc&#13;
Sunday Jan. 12 as follows: Morniug&#13;
service at 10 a. a. Sobjeofe&#13;
"What Constitutes Life." Commonionwill&#13;
be administered after&#13;
Sanson.&#13;
Breftfag service at 7 p. tn. Sab-.&#13;
jeot, "ripirtaal Discontent/' To1&#13;
these service* we give all a oor-,&#13;
dial invitailon to attend. [&#13;
.m-&#13;
'.ViA&#13;
*PW'&#13;
M:i&#13;
; • • • " &lt;&#13;
. It.;&#13;
kind urs&#13;
s i s sot&#13;
| The beat and purest druirs in the world [tbe&#13;
E keep] are of no service or are dangerous, If taey&#13;
^ handled carefully. This is a matter which k stirsya trppat-&#13;
Z most in our miods-H»r#fuloeas~tbe ehoosiaf of lbs rjght&#13;
bottle, tbe measaringor weifrning of tne rigbt dose, U is&#13;
our oonstaat aim to he the rifcbi kind ol drnggiata is whosj&#13;
toe people ean &lt;^ wit* confidence, wseh ^be -f^m &amp; ^•••d&#13;
ones depend upon care sod aecnrscy in' i m g f psfSBf&#13;
with medicines wb^eb ars^nst a» tbey ssosid be,&#13;
f wish to thank tbe nti|^.&#13;
fabis ted f f l e n d a l o t tbe&#13;
nnmyWatifal postal cards, and&#13;
alss lof their kisdoasa to « s dnr»&#13;
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FEDERAL Pr|©y ECTION&#13;
OF BIRDS&#13;
By WILLIAM'i. HCRNADAY&#13;
Director of ttye Afetw York Zoological Park&#13;
&lt;Th« bijv*i poAJaiia with th la article are I&#13;
tYere the "American Natural History."&#13;
Oopyrivht, 1804, by Wiiliam T. Hornaday,&#13;
a n reproduced here by the perralaalon of&#13;
publishers, $ha*!ea §cribner*e Sons.)&#13;
BE United State* department&#13;
of agriculture&#13;
la responsible&#13;
for the s t a r t -&#13;
ling statement that,&#13;
in the year 1904, insect&#13;
pests cost this&#13;
country no leas than&#13;
1420,100,000. Here&#13;
are the figures of&#13;
^government experts:&#13;
Product.&#13;
--Cereals&#13;
Bay&#13;
Cotton&#13;
TObacco&#13;
Truck erops&#13;
Sugars&#13;
Fruits&#13;
Farm forests&#13;
Jffscellaneoua crops&#13;
Percentage Amount&#13;
of LOBS, o f L o s s .&#13;
10&#13;
10&#13;
10&#13;
10&#13;
20&#13;
10&#13;
20&#13;
10&#13;
10&#13;
smooo.ooo&#13;
53,000.000&#13;
60,000,000&#13;
5,300,000&#13;
53,000,000&#13;
5,000,000&#13;
27,000,000&#13;
11,000,000&#13;
5,800,000&#13;
3*&#13;
T o t a l $420,100,000&#13;
Keeping in mind this enormous&#13;
loss, consider also the following&#13;
Cacts:&#13;
(1) That insectivorous birds do&#13;
anore than all other agencies comtrfned&#13;
to keep down insect pests;&#13;
(2) That such birds undoubtedly&#13;
•mre rapidly decreasing in number;&#13;
•and that, therefore,&#13;
(3! Destructive insects are, In all&#13;
probability, increasing very rapidly,&#13;
J&#13;
W&#13;
xx&#13;
m&#13;
W&#13;
ii.&#13;
ftit&#13;
The Robin.&#13;
Blfhly Valuable as an Insect and Grub&#13;
Destroyer, But Murdered by the&#13;
Thousands for Pot-Pies&#13;
In the South.&#13;
•orlth the result that the damage they&#13;
•4o U mounting up, year by year.&#13;
It is perfectly apparent that here&#13;
4s ft situation which demands Immedia&#13;
t e action, and that this action should&#13;
fjring about the vigilant protection for&#13;
all time, and in all partB of the country*&#13;
of all insectivorous birds. Many&#13;
tX £he most useful of these birds are&#13;
already on the tobogganslide toerard&#13;
extermination, as the result of&#13;
atupld state legislation, or the lax enforcement&#13;
of such laws as have been&#13;
enacted. To be explicit:&#13;
There are seven states in which the&#13;
m&gt;bin is being legally killed by the&#13;
"tens of thousands annually as "game"!&#13;
"These states are Louisiana, Mississippi&#13;
pi, Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina,&#13;
Tennessee and Maryland.&#13;
The black bird is legalized "game,"&#13;
and suffers the same fate In four&#13;
fststes—Louisiana, South Carolina,&#13;
Tennessee and Pennsylvania—and the&#13;
^District of Columbia besides.&#13;
Dotes are slaughtered by the wholetsale&#13;
In 26 states, much to the loss of&#13;
"t&amp;e fanners, for this bird is .a great&#13;
•eater of weed seedB.&#13;
Cranes, which are also ver^ useful&#13;
larder are much hunted for food and&#13;
«wr; "sport".Jri Colorado, Nebraska,&#13;
North Dakota and Oklahoma.&#13;
Of the sixty-odd species of shoretrfrds&#13;
ft. e., *nlpe, curlews, plover,&#13;
aandpipers and the like), at least 30&#13;
feed on noxious Insects; yet all of&#13;
these *'blrds are rapidly disappearing.&#13;
Jsjoordlng to Mr. W. L. McAtee of the&#13;
-"J&amp;pBssssH&#13;
yP"#sy^^P ,&#13;
• &lt; &gt;&#13;
SBS^^20BVL&#13;
wJA ssssBB"r&#13;
a. m •*•* *+ ** ftrfJP&#13;
f a x &gt;aw&#13;
Wk&#13;
t^^BiK-T&#13;
The Jackgnipe.&#13;
A Useful Bird Which la Rapidly Becoming&#13;
Extinct.&#13;
exterminated, and other curlews greatly&#13;
reduced. . . . So adverse to the&#13;
shorebirds are present conditions'that&#13;
the wonder is that any escape. In&#13;
both fall and spring they are shot&#13;
along the whole route of their migration&#13;
north and south,&#13;
The accompanying illustrations present&#13;
portraits of a group of birds, most&#13;
of which the average person probably&#13;
knows by sight, though I fear that&#13;
only a small minority have a clear&#13;
idea of their very great economic&#13;
worth.&#13;
The jacksnipe (or Wilson's snipe) is&#13;
one of the shorebirds (referred to by&#13;
Mr. McAtee), which, as a family, are&#13;
being rapidly exterminated. It destroys&#13;
large numbers of worms and&#13;
larvae, for which it probes with its&#13;
long bill in the soft earth of corn and&#13;
potato fields—thereby doing the farmer&#13;
a great service—as well as along&#13;
the shores of ponds, lakes and&#13;
streams. It also feeds on grasshoppers&#13;
ahd other injurious insects. It should&#13;
be carefully protected, especially during&#13;
the breeding season.&#13;
The kildeer plover iB another valuable&#13;
and beautiful shoreblrd which&#13;
is being hunted to death, it frequents&#13;
meadows and pasture lands, as well&#13;
as shores, and devours great quantities&#13;
of moBquitoes, crane files, grasshoppers,&#13;
army worms, cut worms,&#13;
caterpillars, cotton-boll weevils, cloverleaf&#13;
weevils, rice weevils, marine&#13;
worms, wire worms and crayfish.&#13;
Doubtless everybody knows the robin,&#13;
perhaps the most democratic ef our&#13;
birds, beloved in the northern states&#13;
for his cheerful bong and hiB handsome&#13;
appearance, glad everywhere to&#13;
be the companion and the friend of&#13;
man when he is well treated, and highly&#13;
valuable a» a destroyer of harmful&#13;
gmfyt wogns aa£ jj}#ecu. Yet thie&#13;
bird*|e murdered lftenkllv $y the thousands&#13;
for&gt;'pot-pies by negroes and&#13;
poor whites in the southern states&#13;
above mentioned, and is more or less&#13;
hunted in other states. Mr. E. A.&#13;
Mcllhenny, who lives on Avery Island,&#13;
Le., says that during the ten jdays or&#13;
two weeks of the "robin season" (in&#13;
January when the berries are rrpe) at&#13;
least 10,000 of these useful and beautiful&#13;
birds are slaughtered dally for&#13;
the pot "Every negro man and boy&#13;
who can raise a gun is after them,"&#13;
says Mr. Mcllhenny.&#13;
Although this bird causes some loss&#13;
to small fruit growers, it certainly&#13;
does vastly more good than harm. It&#13;
is constantly at work on lawns and&#13;
fieldc hunting for destructive insects,&#13;
which it Is exceedingly difficult to&#13;
keep In control. It devours many&#13;
caterpillars, including hairy species,&#13;
which infest the orchard, woodland&#13;
and shade trees., Forty per cent, of&#13;
its food Is insects, and 43 per cent,&#13;
wild fruit. It would pay the farmer&#13;
well to go some expense in order&#13;
to keep the robins away from his&#13;
fruit trees and berry bushes rather&#13;
than shoot these birds which are so&#13;
useful to him In many ways. To murder&#13;
them for pot-pies is, of course,&#13;
nothing short of barbarous.&#13;
The purple martin is also fond of&#13;
the society of man, and when not&#13;
molested by the villainous English&#13;
sparrows—and still more villainous&#13;
men by whom it is shot for food,&#13;
chiefly in the south—it is glad to&#13;
breed in birdhouses near human habitations.&#13;
It ma'ies a charming neigh-&#13;
T..&amp; #ir*gfc&#13;
BSss^sJCPiuS£flRffi&lt;iBfaj£«''&#13;
• The KHdeer Ployer.&#13;
Another Valuable Shoreblrd Which Destroys&#13;
Great Quantities of Worms »&#13;
and Insects.&#13;
The Purple Martin.&#13;
An Industrious Hunter of Mosquitoes and&#13;
Other Dangerous Insects, Which&#13;
Itself Is Being Hunted to&#13;
Death as Food.'&#13;
bar and a very useful one, for it is remarkably&#13;
swift and graceful on the&#13;
wing, and is expert and persistent in&#13;
catching rose beetles, May beetles,&#13;
cucumber beetles, mosquitoes, house&#13;
flies and flies that trouble horses&#13;
and cattle. One observer records&#13;
that 32 parent martins made* 3,275 visits&#13;
to their young in one Jay, each&#13;
visit meaning, probably, anywhere&#13;
from one to half a dozen Insects.&#13;
The nlghthawk (also called "bullbat")&#13;
1" probably one of the most&#13;
useful of birds. It feeds exclusively&#13;
on Insects, and ranks next to the&#13;
golden-winged woodpecker (flicker) as&#13;
a feathered destroyer of ants, which&#13;
it takes when they are in the winged&#13;
stage. Potato beetles, cucumber beetles,&#13;
leaf hoppers, bugs of various kinds&#13;
and enormous quantities of gnats and&#13;
mosquitoes are found in their stomachs.&#13;
They are entirely harmless, -for&#13;
they never feed on fruit, grain, grass&#13;
or vegetables. Yet they are being&#13;
hunted for sport and are being exterminated.&#13;
The loggerhead (or southern) shrike&#13;
is a champion pest destroyer, a large&#13;
The Nlghthawk.&#13;
One of the Most Useful of Insectivorous&#13;
Bird-} Which Is Being Hunted for&#13;
"Sport" and Exterminated.&#13;
percentage of its food being harmful&#13;
rodents and destructive inserts,&#13;
the latter Including grasshoppers,&#13;
crickets and moths, which It frequently&#13;
impales upon thorns or sharp twigs.&#13;
It sometimes catches young birds&#13;
(though this'is more characteristic of&#13;
the northern shrike, or butcher bird,)&#13;
.but its diet is chiefly insects and small&#13;
rodents. It is, therefore, very valuable&#13;
to the farmer.&#13;
The golden-winged woodpecker&#13;
(also called "flicker," "highhole," etc.)&#13;
is an industrious tree protector, and&#13;
the most efficient of all feathered anteaterB.&#13;
It is also feeds freely upon beetles,&#13;
grasshoppers, crickets, caterpillars,&#13;
ano* other harmful insects, as well&#13;
as on weed seds. Yet it 1B rapidly&#13;
growing rare because it Is much&#13;
hunted for food. It should be protected&#13;
everywhere and at all times.&#13;
In view of the decrease already accomplished&#13;
in the general volume of&#13;
bird life in America, in view of the&#13;
enormous losses annually inflicted upon&#13;
the people of this country by the&#13;
ravages of insects, and in view of the&#13;
destruction of wild life which is now&#13;
furiously proceeding throughout America,&#13;
the McLean bill, which is now before&#13;
congress, to provide for the federal&#13;
protection of all migratory birds,&#13;
becomes the most important wild life&#13;
measure that ever came before that&#13;
body. In view of the annual economic&#13;
IOBS that will continue as long as a&#13;
federal migratory bird bill fails to&#13;
pass, it is impossible for anyone to put&#13;
forth one good reason—unless if. be on&#13;
purely technical groundp—against that&#13;
measure. The Weeks bill, before the&#13;
lower house of congress, is precisely&#13;
like the McLean bill, and it matters&#13;
not which one passes first.&#13;
Unless the people of this country&#13;
wish to shut their eyes to their own&#13;
interests, and pay out millions of dollars&#13;
annually in the form of increased,&#13;
cost of living due to the losses caused&#13;
by insect pests which would be&#13;
destroyed by the birds, they should&#13;
demand that a federal migratory bird&#13;
bill be at once enacted into a law. It&#13;
is Senate Bill No. 6497, and on the&#13;
senate calendar it is No. 60C. We cannot&#13;
afford to wait until 1914 or 1915,&#13;
and congress has full power to act&#13;
this winter.&#13;
HAREMS OUT OF DATE IN TURKEY&#13;
* •&#13;
. : » * * . ^¾&#13;
\ . j&#13;
f-\i&#13;
•:,-&#13;
. , ' " • '&#13;
! .&#13;
* ^am ' 1&#13;
jiftV t r, \ j&#13;
*V**v*. ' ^&#13;
« &amp; » &gt; • &gt; - ,&#13;
^ , - , - • •&#13;
,\;+y: ..^x" . ,&#13;
^Bs^^Lssm^r L ^^^^a||&#13;
as^^swasMbsV^.^&#13;
HSaa^BBvi^'^^K^ABaV sa&#13;
a a a a a a a a a a ^ r a S S 3 ^ ^ H a a a a 9 t x&#13;
**:*:4'\&#13;
Q*i&#13;
*&#13;
1 ? /:- •'^•^••mfil^ Tr*«-Prot&lt;rdE»t, and Champion&#13;
'^a*M&gt;«etroy«r Which Is B*ing Ex-&#13;
* tantteta* by JNK*Hunt«rs,&#13;
!».&lt;• .*&#13;
J&gt;* l . f i •i'l&#13;
' - v * * a * « t u «f&#13;
m tJftate* department of agrtcttlcwe): t&#13;
r^Ihe.bUck bellied, plover., or beetle-&#13;
«te*d, which occurred along the Atlasie&#13;
great numbers yemss.ago,&#13;
oaty «s s Mraffcte***!'!**&#13;
p1o*er. Ojjse wiqeedtn&#13;
ef&#13;
Only the Sultan Adheres to the Old&#13;
8tyle Oriental Institution—Modern&#13;
Turk Resorts to Divorce.&#13;
The domestic arrangements of the&#13;
sultan are entirely different from&#13;
those of his subjects. Most Turks&#13;
have one wife; the sultan has no&#13;
recognized sultana. Turks of high&#13;
rank .marry into their own class; the&#13;
sultan forma unionBV with women of&#13;
alave origin. The ordinary man may&#13;
not look upon an unveiled woman except&#13;
she be his relation or'servant;&#13;
the sultan has the right to talk with&#13;
any wotnan in the land face to face.&#13;
Turks of position model their households&#13;
more or less on the European&#13;
plan; the sultan's household is oriental.&#13;
That does not mean that in the imperial&#13;
palace you would find women&#13;
sipping sherbet or smoking narghilehs&#13;
or clad In baggy trousers. On the&#13;
contrary, you would niid them smok'&#13;
ing nothing more oriental than a&#13;
cigarette, sitting on a European chair&#13;
—and, yes, wearing corsets? But the&#13;
code of morals is entirely different,&#13;
says the New York Sun.&#13;
The imperial harem Is founded on&#13;
tfce old court system of the Byzantine&#13;
emperors and has an etiquette and&#13;
law of Its own. The first fact one&#13;
mast grasp (* that the wives or&#13;
favorite* of the sultan have no Importance&#13;
at all. They are noboiMes&#13;
The daughter of a Circassian peasant&#13;
n a y be Honored by the sultan's favor&#13;
and even bear him a child, but yet&#13;
bo distinguished by no other title&#13;
'%%&#13;
btologlosV sarrey (United ~tftaa tbe cott«onp*ace* "Kadia Effen-&#13;
^ ..^, .„.,. , ^ , , ^ l y ^ ujother of-ttar oldest.&#13;
son receives the'royal deifgaatioh of&#13;
"ssltan.n l e t whole titfe bttafg "Kb*&#13;
'' r?*r dlinlly only retolts frosi her&#13;
' V i * e the ttojnet of ft 90*s&lt;%!« hajr&#13;
•* ,•.'• * fbrdn*: that is, to' Href ;t*ent&#13;
^ ^ • S -»&gt;^r'a%-«BW^»ata7vf*r:&#13;
dence as the elder male descendants.&#13;
And the royal favorite of the moment&#13;
will have transitory importance on&#13;
account of the influence which she&#13;
may exercise over the sultan.&#13;
Royal princesses are considered inferior&#13;
to the mother of the sultan, who&#13;
is the real queen of the little world&#13;
of the harem, has absolute authority,&#13;
a large staff of officials and the supreme&#13;
title of "Valide sultan." Thus&#13;
it happens that a woman of slave&#13;
birth may, if she be the mother of an&#13;
heir to the throne, eventually become&#13;
the highest woman of the land.&#13;
Every royal princess has her daira,&#13;
or separate apartments, slaves, servants&#13;
and so on, the management of&#13;
the household being given over to her&#13;
kalfas, or ladies in waiting—that is to&#13;
say, Turkish women of good birth&#13;
who have remained unmarried.&#13;
Royal princesses rarely take a husband&#13;
of their own rank. They are&#13;
generally married by the sultan to&#13;
the sons of men of wealth and position,&#13;
such as pashas, officers of state,&#13;
high civil officials and the like, a&#13;
policy which is founded on a very&#13;
practical reason, namely, that the arrangement&#13;
makes the existence of a&#13;
heriditary aristocracy impossible.&#13;
One of the paradoxes in Turkey 1s&#13;
that the poorer a Turkish woman Is&#13;
the greater her freedom. The rich&#13;
woman canont move a step unaccompanied.&#13;
She sees Constantinople only&#13;
from the windows of her eloeed&#13;
brougham or through a roll thick&#13;
enough to act as a mask, She may&#13;
dress as exquisttetly as a mannequin&#13;
In • Parts dressmaker's showroom,-&#13;
but she must not display so m u A as&#13;
an inch of embroidery in ptfbtyf. &gt;&#13;
When her husband wants to take a&#13;
second wife, or grow* tired of her&#13;
ahd wishes to divorce; heir, lie has&#13;
both the opportunity anU the m e a n t&#13;
,tf he Is a rioh man. It is net chic&#13;
'among Turks of any edueatloa t o take&#13;
* second wfte; but divorce * la raV&#13;
The Loggerhead Shrike.&#13;
Fifty-nine Per Cent, of Its Food Is Insects,&#13;
and Twenty-eight Per Cent&#13;
Is Harmful Rodents.&#13;
placing polygamy—a simple repudiation&#13;
by the husband of his wife, provided&#13;
he is well enough off to pay the&#13;
nekyah or marriage settlement, which&#13;
he is legally bound to hand over to&#13;
her.&#13;
The woman of the poorest classes&#13;
can go out slope. Custom does not&#13;
oblige her to wear her veil down.&#13;
Should her husband, In a fit of anger,&#13;
wish to divorce her, he must first of&#13;
all produce the Nekyah, the dowry,&#13;
In ready money, not an easy matter&#13;
for a poor man.&#13;
The real danger to domestic happiness&#13;
in the great mass- of Turkish&#13;
homes is the growing tendeney of divorce,&#13;
and a divorce wholly favorable&#13;
to the man as against the woman.&#13;
The payment of the modest nekyah&#13;
arranged at the time of his marriage&#13;
is a simple affair, and it is seldom&#13;
enough to keep the divorced wife for&#13;
the rest of her days, s h e is forced to&#13;
take refuge with her parents or to&#13;
find shelter with some of her friends.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
Day on Which Women Rule.&#13;
Candlemas day Is not celebrated tn&#13;
Holland much more than in England,&#13;
but its place is taken by a festival unknown&#13;
in this country. Slipper day in&#13;
the Netherlands Is the one day In the&#13;
year In which the Dutch woman&#13;
claims superiority over her husbat&lt;&lt;L&#13;
On that day she rales him to her&#13;
heart's content, and he generally&#13;
obeys good humortdty enough. That&#13;
is, unless she is one of those ladles&#13;
not unknown is Holland or in aayother&#13;
country who aspire to oomplOe&#13;
rule over their ^inhapay nartaer*&#13;
throughout the year,—PhJladephla Xsv&#13;
onlrer. .;. ^ .•;.«*&#13;
• ' • ; , " ' • " , &gt; ,&#13;
., Jumped^ Ktyetfj Stayed, aaf*.&#13;
Ernest Woods, fireman,-Jumped and&#13;
was killed, whlls .Fred Lttmah, engineer,&#13;
stayed at hit neat and escaped&#13;
death when the train from S t Alhant,&#13;
which they were driving, collided with '&#13;
an eaffavfo thtfOrs^Trmn* yards • £ r&#13;
Montreal Weeds had.barily' leaped&#13;
float tae engine whan&#13;
4 S * tejpaioa a w e * . * * * - * * * »&#13;
ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT&#13;
AVctfttable Preparation fir As -&#13;
similatihg IheFood andBeguMling&#13;
me Stomachs andBoWUof&#13;
to and ChUdraiu&#13;
IN KAN 1 ^ (.H1LUK1.N&#13;
Promotes DtgcsHon;Cheerfulness&#13;
and Rest Contains neither&#13;
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral&#13;
N O T N A R C O T I C&#13;
Pc«ptc/-0l&lt;tDrSAMV£l/r7Ur£tt&#13;
JtmhtUiSufts-&#13;
Aniu $*td*&#13;
ApmtemM -&#13;
K n * ft*&lt;t -&#13;
CteriAtd $ug&lt;f&#13;
Wi'nkrfrrtti F/ttvor.&#13;
ind You Have&#13;
Always Bought&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
of&#13;
A perfect Remedy forConstipa&#13;
lion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,&#13;
Worms .Convulsions .Feverishness&#13;
and LOSS OF SlXltP&#13;
Fac Simile. Signatureof&#13;
THE CENTAUR COMPANY,&#13;
NEW VOftK.&#13;
j -&#13;
A t b m o n t h ' s «&gt;ld&#13;
35 D o s i i - J ^ C K N T * &gt;&#13;
Guaranteed under the Foodaiaj&#13;
• in i I .&#13;
Exact Copy of Wrapper.&#13;
THOUGHTFUL PAINTER.&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CASTORIA T M « O I N T A U R 6 0 M M N V , H I W V O N « 01TY.&#13;
tn the Night Editor's Room. -&#13;
"Here's a long story about that&#13;
Btorm on the lake the other day. Want&#13;
It cut down?"&#13;
"Does It begin, 'The storm beggars&#13;
description?-'" &lt; '&#13;
"Yes."-: '• ' • . - •&#13;
"Well, run that, and cut out the de-&#13;
4&#13;
"I see you are paying the hospital&#13;
expenses of that painter who fell off&#13;
the roof."&#13;
"Yes» he's too good a jman to_jose^&#13;
As he went down he touched up two&#13;
or three places which would have been&#13;
very hard to reach."&#13;
SKIN ERUPTION ON CHEEK&#13;
Kingsley, Mich,—"Last May my&#13;
thirteen-months-old baby had a sore&#13;
come on her cheek. It started in four&#13;
or five small pimples and in two or&#13;
three hours' time spread to the size of&#13;
a silver dollar. It spread to her eye.&#13;
Then water woukkrun from the pimples&#13;
and wherever that touched it caused&#13;
more sores until nearly all one&#13;
cheek and up her nostrils were one&#13;
solid sore. She was very fretful. She&#13;
certainly was a terrible looking child,&#13;
ahd nothing seemed to be of, any use.&#13;
"Then I got some Cuttcura Soap and&#13;
Cuticura Ointment, She tr|ed,tp rub&#13;
6ff everything we put on so that we&#13;
would sit and hold her Rands" iar two&#13;
hours at a time, trying to give the&#13;
medicine a chance to help her, but;&#13;
after I washed it with Cuticura Soap&#13;
and then put on the Cuticura Ointment&#13;
they seemed to soothe her and&#13;
she did not t r y to rub them off. It&#13;
was only a few days before her face&#13;
was all healed up, and there has been&#13;
no return of the trouble since. We&#13;
thought that baby's face would surely&#13;
be scarred, but it is not" (Signed)&#13;
Mrs, W. J. Cleland, Jan. 5, 1913.&#13;
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
free, with 82-p. Skin Book. Address&#13;
post-card "Cuticura, Dept L, Boston.*&#13;
Adv. '&#13;
- Distinction. *&#13;
"What have you ever done to claim&#13;
distinction? In other words, what&#13;
have you ever done that was original&#13;
or out of the ordinary?"&#13;
"I once had a part in the actual&#13;
.transfer o! several shares of 'stock&#13;
on the New York exchange," ..' .&#13;
The surest stepping stone to matrimony&#13;
is a solitaire. -&#13;
'-Liquid bine ?s a "weak solution. Avoid it.&#13;
Buy Red Cross fell Blue, the blue that's&#13;
all blue. Ask your grocer. Adv. f ,&#13;
— • • - •••—i • n . M r t M ^ M ,&#13;
Hpp^- i s ' a quality Of* t | e spirtjf: of&#13;
man more-stubborn oLlJ£ ground than&#13;
life " Itself. U dwells - not "in the&#13;
suburbs of the aouL .bOJL holds its&#13;
place rather as a wmdo^ through&#13;
which the- future may ^e oeen. It&#13;
lets.us i n to the dark places with a&#13;
confident stride that otherwise A we&#13;
would shuffle through by hatting&#13;
steps. It shown the little'things-by&#13;
wbifih.. we climb, so that we make&#13;
of hindrances a kind of lookout.from&#13;
which to take a survey of the land&#13;
beyond And if that land seems better&#13;
than it be, "we care not, because&#13;
;it never lets us near enough.to know&#13;
Its Class.&#13;
"That was a raw deal."&#13;
"What waB?"&#13;
"The plot they cooked up.*&#13;
Don't Persecute&#13;
Your Bov/ejs&#13;
. Cut out cathartics afcd,&#13;
brutal, bajrab, uanecea»arjr,&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS&#13;
gPeunrtelyr/ voeng etthaeb l"e. Act&#13;
They are&#13;
seoliomthinea tthee b dielelf,c ia nd bmoewmebl,r anetn orfe t.h i CMtiiyatfefa, JSkUkHJItem**n-tu, aobt^ei tailfatttoB, •«&#13;
SMALL PnX, SMALL DOSE, S3A£L PRlCR,&#13;
Qemiifie must hear Signatwre&#13;
DR. J. D. KELLOOO't&#13;
Remedy for t h e prompt relief of&#13;
Asthma and May Fever. Aek your&#13;
drugglei for ft. *H*«e* 9*0Ittni&#13;
NORTHROP a LYeHU CO^Ud, aW*10»».r&#13;
E l t a F E E T&#13;
ttoaorke ofo»ru Te htiasb T«rl wa4bee-a» sbruky. *P*i*e .&#13;
AtLEI^ F00T«€ASE&#13;
-Tbc Astiaavtle Fowder for 1&gt;ear&#13;
^ dec Athiss Feet totd eVerr-&#13;
•••'••'m&#13;
'••'•v?|&#13;
• -:."A&#13;
'i ' tt&#13;
••'', h-tl':&#13;
• • ' ' . " . ••• "&gt;n ; • ' • &gt; : - • • • ' &gt; • • . . 7 - -• • ' - '•••..&#13;
BiFlAMCI S T M B i - l L " —&#13;
V4.1;&#13;
PoYon Fed&#13;
This&#13;
It' 'Is" betfjWte ' of tostfe&#13;
dktiw^fimlriDi.^ W:&#13;
Paenlty st teW&amp;F***^&#13;
i •,/ -&#13;
aek* ^^^^r^!^^^^ *'r^e'&#13;
J*';}&gt;&#13;
or jflte||:.*; 4H&#13;
• ~ * .&#13;
6oofldoficflk&#13;
^ygereeV&#13;
1 *'*' &lt;l&#13;
—U*ju ^&#13;
&gt;t:&#13;
notora the health and spirits and removes those&#13;
pahaMsyTnptocisvjagntiomed above. Jt hasiwea, ^&#13;
druggists lor OveT^^eara, tt fluid i e t a ^ f&#13;
• c : * *&#13;
-I'i&#13;
I aa aoonsaea by a. v. Pieroa, M.TX&#13;
&gt;-*k..^ * * - o - W fc.- ••• T~r •s*y&gt;&gt;&#13;
,i&lt; ,-^v&#13;
•*.*"&#13;
't:*f*^v»»..-i i i : r V '. • ^it ^•^:-&#13;
; W&#13;
* " &lt; * • • . ^ s .j M&#13;
' % •&#13;
&amp; • • •w- ; * , &lt; &gt; . • • « - .&#13;
•*1 iMii • 1 ^ ; ^ : .&#13;
ifc..^mmitm a w mim'^w^j^ i # Tti&#13;
mmwtTi&#13;
&lt;.&#13;
V. 1\&#13;
fey&#13;
K&lt;^'.:&#13;
i &gt;.&gt; ^ •'&#13;
' T:-l4?::'v&#13;
iV-&gt;t&#13;
*&#13;
&amp;&#13;
fcl*&#13;
W:&#13;
' • % '&#13;
r-J-&#13;
. * • "&#13;
1 - /&#13;
gar&#13;
r?2,&#13;
; % ' !* #.&#13;
.1' *»&#13;
7Q*W&#13;
• &lt; . ' *&#13;
+{•:&#13;
•urny*^"&#13;
iesSSSBP 'W. 1il»l.. ! » . • - •&#13;
BOY W. CAVERLY, Piitw&#13;
g | M I l ! l l .fefcg&#13;
L ? » NEWSFRONUHE&#13;
see&#13;
SUgPENDERS.&#13;
Society has frof/ned on the maaojline&#13;
suspenders. So the suspender&#13;
must go—has gone almost, say those&#13;
who sell wearing apparel for men. It's&#13;
the age ^,^6,,^61^ Manjj: shpulders&#13;
must be ^unhampered by straps; only&#13;
the patient diaphragmjB to be subjected&#13;
to a, harness. Bo-passes smother&#13;
useful device, sacrificed to fastidiousness.&#13;
We used to eat mashed potato&#13;
with a knife till someone with supercilious&#13;
manners dame along and&#13;
told ns the fork was the proper utensil&#13;
for that important duty. Formerly&#13;
people'poured out their hot'coffee into&#13;
saucers, "blew" tt cold and then drank&#13;
it from saucers, all unconscious of the&#13;
terrible Impropriety involved. Nor&#13;
was it formerly considered an indication&#13;
of boorish origin for one to sip&#13;
tea from a spoon. Oh, these changing&#13;
times! Suspenders gone the way of&#13;
the bicycle and the crocheted necktie!&#13;
Is no one bold enough to do them reverence?&#13;
Fashion is a tyrant It takes&#13;
no cognisance of man's various&#13;
shapes—his embonpoint, his fullness&#13;
or deficiency of girth—it merely issues&#13;
a flat and expects all to obey. The&#13;
time is opportune for a new declaration&#13;
of independence. Let every man&#13;
who prefers suspenders to a belt buy&#13;
a pair forthwith and wear it in defiance&#13;
of the world.&#13;
Some people are determined not to&#13;
let Christopher Columbus reBt in&#13;
peace. Not long ago a celebrated&#13;
Jewish rabbi insisted that the great&#13;
explorer was a Jew, and now comes&#13;
a member of the Royal Geographical&#13;
aooiety with the claim that Columbus&#13;
was a Spaniard and not an Italian.&#13;
The Spanish scientist says that the&#13;
•ell of mystery that has for four centuries&#13;
enshrouded the cradle of Columbus&#13;
has at last been torn aside to&#13;
reveal hjm without doubt or argument&#13;
as a .Spaniard. Dr. Horta says that&#13;
the Italian lineage of the discoverer&#13;
was accepted because there was no&#13;
"authentic, respectable and authorized&#13;
hlBtorlc documents'! to prove to the&#13;
contrary. On the other hand, the&#13;
Spanish historian says the only accepted&#13;
proof of the Italian birth of&#13;
Columbus was his own statement that&#13;
he was born in Genoa.&#13;
An Englishman in Shanghai was&#13;
twitting the eldest son of Dr. Sun&#13;
Yetsen about his father's cosmopolitanism.&#13;
"Nobody knows for certain&#13;
where your father was born/' he said.&#13;
"Canton claims htm and so does Hon.&#13;
olulu. Before the revolution he had&#13;
not been here InOhina for-maay years.&#13;
The English port of Hongkong was&#13;
the nearest he ever approached. I&#13;
don't see how your father can call&#13;
himself a Chinaman, and in fact,, I&#13;
don't know what to call him." "Part&#13;
of what you say is true," answered&#13;
the son of the famous patriot "For&#13;
fifteen years my father was a man&#13;
without a country, but now," and the&#13;
bey smiled proudly, "a country has&#13;
been made for him."&#13;
Ireland Is to send a deputation to&#13;
this country to protest against the&#13;
landing at Queenstown of certain mentally&#13;
defective persons alleged to be&#13;
Irish and having Irish names, but declared&#13;
to be from other countries of&#13;
origin than Ireland. These objectionablet&#13;
are excluded from the United&#13;
States as undesirable immigrants. It&#13;
Hi said they have ao claim on Ireland.&#13;
Certainly they have no claim on the&#13;
United States.&#13;
The mines department of Canada Is&#13;
preparing an official announcement&#13;
that the effective smelting of Canadian&#13;
ores-is a commercial possibility.&#13;
The iron business has undergone a&#13;
resolution every few years for more&#13;
than a century. Is another due? Will&#13;
it result* in the general adoption of&#13;
eleotrla smettlnst&#13;
Scientific expertmenta demonstrating&#13;
the* osteins is fatal to rabbits&#13;
and that nicotine paralyses the optio&#13;
nerve, shotted impress the public,&#13;
r BO truly humane persons&#13;
&amp;e rabbits &lt;^ffee for'their&#13;
hit' 'yw ' pilfer}!, .smoking&#13;
swing, tobaccos in their own or&#13;
«w York there is a man who&#13;
-11 ttmes. • J«obody&#13;
rHew York waiter isesi* pay&#13;
^-is^wiwMft.'^*-;'"&#13;
•'..i H » i » j i i i i i i i &lt; r&#13;
London 8*1 a hotel that ha* gained&#13;
fS4asthT*t^ttsb*ft^"C^rtain^a&#13;
assert • lift • tor fessSv. -&#13;
k ftJBjMlfcft interns na4het the toe-&#13;
« M » &lt; * h«ijB*e «#%&#13;
&gt;f- - *'&gt;:?X£&gt;&#13;
*&gt;»&gt;»•&#13;
f&gt; . ' A&#13;
Ut&lt;» , w * * , •&#13;
: A oattege V* utosscir has;&#13;
ssyste- Of the estve hnB,&#13;
A, swry hsnded k^e«sw&#13;
wksrovthey a t r t -.^, ^ •&lt;%.*-.•..*•*•?.&#13;
;.+c&#13;
Bossy, A s hyglenlo oow, sow loots&#13;
taagrfly «W» 1 ^ flWflgf's, **•*;£**&#13;
•r&#13;
CIVIL S E R V l ^ i i w THOUGHT TO&#13;
BE CQMIN&lt;&amp;fttyd^W'*FFECT&#13;
•••*••&gt;*&amp;:.•&lt;'•%****»*• WW't0$. •:&gt;• ••&#13;
«oM»viMf0t»TANT Pi^oiee TO « e&#13;
FILLEO BY QOVENOR FERRIS&#13;
ANO Wa^Ok OBTa T H B M .&#13;
The Abolition of the Land Commission&#13;
and Some of the Appointments to&#13;
Be Made Are of Special&#13;
Interest&#13;
[By Gurd M. Hayes.]&#13;
There is every reason to believe&#13;
that the next legislature will enact a&#13;
civil service law for all state departments&#13;
and that an effort will be made&#13;
to eliminate politics to a large exetrft&#13;
in determining the class of men and&#13;
women who will transact the business&#13;
of the commonwealth.&#13;
Ever since he came into office two&#13;
years ago Governor Osborn has stood&#13;
for a civil Bervice law for all state&#13;
employes, in recognition of meritious&#13;
service. "Every employe in the state&#13;
should be under civil service rules&#13;
that are honestly made and honestly&#13;
enforced," said the governor. "However,&#13;
I am not speaking of a political&#13;
service that works solely to the advantage&#13;
of the parties. There is no&#13;
reason why competent help in the employ&#13;
of the state, after their duties&#13;
have been learned well, should be replaced&#13;
for merely political reasons,&#13;
than there is that business firms&#13;
should engage men for a short period,&#13;
to turn them loose after that time has&#13;
been served."&#13;
In his ex-augural message the retiring&#13;
chief executive will advocate the&#13;
passage of a civil service law, and the&#13;
newly elected governor, Woodbridge&#13;
N. Ferris says that he is heartily in&#13;
favor of such a measure, and niany&#13;
members of the legislature are already&#13;
pledged to support such a bill.&#13;
Some of the departments have already&#13;
inaugurated a civil service system.&#13;
State Treasurer^elect John W.&#13;
Haarer, has already announced that&#13;
he will appoint the present cashier in&#13;
the treasury department to the deputyship&#13;
the first of the year, while the&#13;
chief clerk will be advanced to cashier&#13;
and so on. Auditor General O. B.&#13;
Fuller has paid more attention to efficiency&#13;
than political pull, while Secretary&#13;
of State Frederick C. Martin*&#13;
dale has many employes In his department&#13;
whose political activities ceased&#13;
years agOi-Martindate says that a civil&#13;
service law would not cauae him to&#13;
make a single change in his office, as&#13;
he declares he would discharge a state&#13;
employe found to be incompetent as&#13;
quickly as he would turn a poor worker&#13;
out of a private enterprise.&#13;
For a man to run {or office on a&#13;
platform that he is to abolish that&#13;
office once he has been elected to it,&#13;
Is somewhat of an innovation in Michigan&#13;
politics, but that is what Augustus&#13;
C. Carton, secretary of the public&#13;
doman commission, and land commissioner-&#13;
elect, promised the people of the&#13;
state, and he proposes to make good&#13;
his pre-election pledge if the legislature&#13;
will assist him In the proposition.&#13;
Abolish Land Commission.&#13;
When the public doman commission&#13;
was created two years ago A. C. Carton,&#13;
then deputy land commissioner,&#13;
was elected its first secretary. Under&#13;
the statute creating the public domain&#13;
commission, its members are&#13;
composed o fthe board of state audit*&#13;
ors, including the secretary of state,&#13;
state treasurer and commissioner of&#13;
the land office, together with one regent&#13;
of the University, one member of,&#13;
the state agricultural board and one&#13;
member of the board of control of the&#13;
Michigan College of Mines.&#13;
Secretary Carton is an enthusiastic&#13;
adherent of the "back to the soil"&#13;
movement and has done much, during&#13;
the two years that he has been conlected&#13;
with the public domain commission,&#13;
to encourage immigration and&#13;
induce fanners from other states to&#13;
take np tracts of land in the northern&#13;
countte*of the state. Tb preserve the&#13;
natursr'resources 61 the state, to assist&#13;
in the development of the agricultural&#13;
lands of Michigan and to encourage&#13;
immigration, are among the&#13;
few things that the commision has endeavored&#13;
tb accomplish.&#13;
..Carton believes that the time has&#13;
errtvedrwhea voty .little stats Ian* will&#13;
he sold in MielHgsij and brieves that&#13;
the work-of the las* commission it&#13;
pra^JtlosJIy-finished. Therefore ho consented&#13;
to-nc a candidate for the place&#13;
with the understanding Uutt -the land&#13;
commission would bssooifshed and&#13;
the work should be turned over to the&#13;
pnbUo domsin commission. AMH for t * # f t H mm$. »;•**, Nlif framed sod&#13;
- "^lWW-1***^ AW'mi* set-&#13;
*m.y:-,.&#13;
fopertnteftdeat Clarence B. Holmos,&#13;
the Michigan School fur the Blind]&#13;
T^htm reooamonded to Gov. Osborn that&#13;
the chief exeottttvwmsk the legislature&#13;
to appropriate aprodamteiy rwo,oon&#13;
4D# thst institution next year. At the&#13;
sssksastit tfistft the&#13;
•yv-&#13;
Ik;&#13;
&gt;! w ^ A r f * •&#13;
fc^ueoftoaft&#13;
dreds of blind children in the state&#13;
who are unable to gain admission owing&#13;
to the limited facilities of the institution.&#13;
At a recent session of the legislature&#13;
a law was enacted requiring compulsory&#13;
education for all blind children&#13;
in the state, and Superintendent&#13;
Holmes points to this* as a sufficient&#13;
reason why sufficient money should be&#13;
appropriated to care fo rthose who are&#13;
being neglected at present. It 1B pointed&#13;
out that in many cases the parents&#13;
of these children are unable, because&#13;
of adverse financial conditions, to educate&#13;
them in private schools, and as&#13;
a result they grow* up and become objects&#13;
of charltyf&gt; where ^hey might be&#13;
developed into self supporting citizens&#13;
had they received the advantages afforded&#13;
at the Michigan School for the&#13;
Blind.&#13;
The educational course at the Michigan&#13;
School for the Blind compares&#13;
favorably with the advantage! afforded&#13;
In regular grammar and high&#13;
schools of the state, and in adltion,&#13;
each pupil IB taught some trade.&#13;
Superintendent Holme* wants to add&#13;
40 acres to the school property in order&#13;
that a course in agriculture may&#13;
be added to the curriculum. From observation&#13;
in other states he has&#13;
learned that agriculture is a pursuit&#13;
that may be followed to considerable&#13;
advantage by blind persons, and he&#13;
says that polltry arising is another&#13;
industry favorable to those who have&#13;
lost their sight. The legislature has&#13;
always dealt generously with the&#13;
School for the Blind and there is&#13;
every reason to believe that the arguments&#13;
of Superintendent Holmes&#13;
will carry considerable weight at tho&#13;
coming session.&#13;
A Warm Election.&#13;
There is sure to be a warm contset&#13;
over the election of a secretary of the&#13;
senate to succeed B. V. Chilson, who&#13;
has announced his retirement after&#13;
serving in that capacity for a number&#13;
of essions past Chilson says that his&#13;
business demands all his time and he&#13;
is forced to drop out of politics temporarily.&#13;
The secretaryship of the senate&#13;
is worth $10 per day and carries&#13;
with it considerable political prestige.&#13;
Consequently it is much sought after&#13;
and friends of the respective candidates&#13;
are already soliciting the support&#13;
ef the various members of the&#13;
upper house.&#13;
Dennis E. Alward, of Clare, for a&#13;
number of years secretary of the republican-&#13;
state centra! committee is&#13;
being prominently mentioned for the&#13;
position. Alward was secretary of the&#13;
senate for a great many years previous&#13;
to Chilson's election and It is&#13;
thought that his experience will militate&#13;
in his favor. During the last primary&#13;
campaign Alward was defeated&#13;
for the republican nomination for congress&#13;
in the eleventh district.&#13;
Sidney Hall, of Detroit, who has&#13;
been journal clerk in the house during&#13;
the past two seslons, announces&#13;
that he is in the race for secretary of&#13;
the senate and callms to have the solid&#13;
support of the Wayne delegation. The&#13;
election of a secretary will be one of&#13;
the first duties that the senate will be&#13;
called upon to perform and much wire&#13;
pulling iB expected before any of the&#13;
candidates secure the desired number&#13;
of votes.&#13;
New Man in Office.&#13;
Governor-elect Ferris has announced&#13;
that he will send the name of John&#13;
T. Winshlp, of Saginaw, to the senate&#13;
for confirmation as insurance commissioner&#13;
to succeed C. A. Palmer.&#13;
This position pays $3,500 annually&#13;
and is one of the best plums that the&#13;
democratic chief executive will have&#13;
at his disposal. Winshlp has for years&#13;
been one of the democratic stalwarts&#13;
and was the democratic candidate for&#13;
United States senator against Charles&#13;
E. Townsend two years ago.&#13;
It has also been definitely decided&#13;
that James Helme, of Adrian, will be&#13;
appointed dairy and food eommieioner&#13;
the first of the year. Helme was appointed&#13;
deputy dairy and food commissioner'&#13;
under Oilman Dame. Owing&#13;
to the fact that Helme was a democrat,&#13;
his appointment as deputy by&#13;
Gov. Osborn was entirely non-political.&#13;
Helme was picked because of his&#13;
fitness for the position and his expert&#13;
knowledge of the dairy business.&#13;
Ferris has officially decided upon&#13;
James Scully, of Ionia, as the successor&#13;
to George W. Dickinson, of Pontiac,&#13;
as a member of the state railroad&#13;
commission. This is another of&#13;
the choice pieces of patronage at the&#13;
'disposal of the new governor, as Scully's&#13;
term will be for six years, and the&#13;
salary Is $3,000. When the railroad&#13;
commission was created four years&#13;
ago, Scully was appointed one of the&#13;
commissioners by ex-Governor Fred&#13;
M. Warner.&#13;
Going Abroad.&#13;
When Governor Osborn retires from&#13;
the executive office the first of the&#13;
year, It may be some time before he&#13;
steps foot on Michigan soft again, as&#13;
he says that hie intends to spend much&#13;
Of his time in travel and wfl prdbsbfr&#13;
start for some foreign climate&#13;
si.enee.&#13;
The chief executive was a newspaper&#13;
pnlntshetrfor s&gt; great many years&#13;
and has waste* as-a reporter on&#13;
MISS HELEN GOULD AND HER FIANCE&#13;
Miss Helen Gculd, the phUanthroplcal daughter of the late Ja7 Gould,&#13;
Is to wed Finley J. Shepard, assistant to the president of the Missouri&#13;
Pacific railroad.&#13;
MEXICAN FEDERALS SLAIN.&#13;
Ascension Attacked and Captured by&#13;
Insurrectos.&#13;
Refugee federal soldiers arriving&#13;
in Juarez report that the 250 federal&#13;
Irregular troops garrisoning Ascension&#13;
practically were annihiliated when rebels&#13;
attacked the town.&#13;
The attack was made shortly after&#13;
midnight, and fighting continued only&#13;
for a few hourB. The garrison commander&#13;
reports by letter to General&#13;
Trucy Aubert at Juarez that he knew&#13;
of only fifteen of his men escaping&#13;
besides himself. He is hiding at a&#13;
ranch, he writeB.&#13;
The fate of 150 regulars at Guzman,&#13;
nearby, 1B not known, but it is believed&#13;
the town was taken by rebels&#13;
before Ascension. -- —&#13;
Through Consul Thomas Edwards,&#13;
at Juarez, the American state department&#13;
requested Mexican military&#13;
officials to rescue J. I. Morris, an&#13;
American railway man. Morris was&#13;
taken captive by rebels when he attempted&#13;
to save a bridge on the Mexico&#13;
Northwestern railway, which had&#13;
been flred by rebels. Since Morris carried&#13;
federal passports, it is feared he&#13;
will not be given any consideration at&#13;
the hftnds of the rebels. __&#13;
Pneumonia Causes 180 Deaths in State.&#13;
There were 2,830 deaths in Michigan&#13;
and 4,691 births during November, according&#13;
to the mortality report of the&#13;
secretary of state. By ages, there were&#13;
465 deaths of infants under one year&#13;
of age; 156 deaths of children aged&#13;
one to four years, both inclusive; and&#13;
957 deaths of elderly persons.&#13;
Important causes of death were pulmonary&#13;
tuberculosis, 175; other forms&#13;
of tuberculosis, 30; typhoid fever, 32;&#13;
diphtheria and croup, 48; scarlet fever,&#13;
11; measles, 10; whooping cough, 11;&#13;
pneumonia and broncho-pneumonia,&#13;
180; diarrhea, enteritis under two&#13;
years of age, 56; meningitis, 24; influenza,&#13;
7; cancer, 159; violence, 187.&#13;
Taft Escapes Big Explosion.&#13;
A few moments after President Taft&#13;
and his party entered the National theater,&#13;
in Panama, where they were&#13;
guests at a Christmas ball given by&#13;
President Porras, a terrific explosion&#13;
wrecked a kiosk in Central avenue, the&#13;
town's principal street.&#13;
The president had just passed that&#13;
way and the firemen and police guard&#13;
were still on duty.&#13;
Investigation showed that the explosion&#13;
was caused by dynamite. One&#13;
man was seriously hurt and many&#13;
persons slightly injured.&#13;
* The president and those with him&#13;
smilingly attempted to belittle the incident,&#13;
saying that they believed the&#13;
explosion had no connection with the&#13;
presence of President Taft Nevertheless,&#13;
a rigid investigation was begun&#13;
by the authorities at the command&#13;
of President Porras Immediately after&#13;
the cause of the disturbance became&#13;
known.&#13;
GOV-ELEGT FERRIS' MESSAGE.&#13;
Primary Reform Issue to Receive&#13;
Large Measure of Attention.&#13;
Gov.-elect Ferris has completed his&#13;
inaugural message—a document that&#13;
for brevity, straight-arm jabs, and incandescence&#13;
will rank with the strongest&#13;
documents of similar nature filed&#13;
in the capitol, it is declared.&#13;
Gov. Ferris has left the democratic&#13;
state platform to speak for itself, according&#13;
to close friends, and in his&#13;
message he does scarcely more than&#13;
mention most of the measures formally&#13;
advocated by the party. One of the&#13;
exceptions will be the primary election&#13;
laws, it Is announced, as Gov. Ferris&#13;
has always made the alleged lack of&#13;
worth in those laws a nobby.&#13;
CONGRESS WILL BE BUSY&#13;
Seven Important Hearings Scheduled&#13;
for Session After Holidays.&#13;
An Investigation possibly unprecedented&#13;
in the history of the house will&#13;
be ushered in when congress reassembles&#13;
in January.&#13;
Members of the house will divide&#13;
their attention among seven distinct&#13;
investigations scheduled to begin immediately&#13;
after the holidays. They are:&#13;
Inquiry into the so-called money&#13;
trust; hearings before the ways and&#13;
means committee preliminary to tariff&#13;
revision by the next congress; the&#13;
probe into the New Haven-Grand&#13;
Trunk railroad situation In New England;&#13;
the Judiciary committee's hearings&#13;
on general trust legislation; the&#13;
Inquiry into the ramifications of the&#13;
so-called foreign and domestic shipping&#13;
trust by the merchant marine&#13;
committee; the Glass sub-committee's&#13;
Investigation incident to the framing&#13;
of a currency bill, and the inquisition&#13;
Into the affairs of the office of superintendent&#13;
of insurance in the District&#13;
of Columbia. The Insurance inquiry&#13;
will begin Dec. 26, with the District of&#13;
Columbia commissioners on the witness&#13;
stand.&#13;
These committees will endeavor to&#13;
complete their work by the end of tho&#13;
session. It Is estimated that the investigations&#13;
wilt cost more than flOO,-&#13;
000.&#13;
et the Isigest papers .In.-Hit Msntryjf Tnent&#13;
Consequently* if he desires to enter&#13;
ftte jwtrtanttln —Id agst* he iNRnot&#13;
he out of s "job" as som%'bl &lt;h**»*&gt;&#13;
est aewsps»ers and mUgesfnsi ra the&#13;
tJntted S*st«s fcgve seed* him sftract.&#13;
tve off trs to sei as ws^ correspond-&#13;
Out of 730 postcard queries In regard'&#13;
to a commission form of government&#13;
for Bay City about 760 were returned,&#13;
and air were in favor of the&#13;
commission.&#13;
According to figures gathered by the&#13;
State Association of Farmers' dubs,&#13;
about three bill Jos. cigarette* are used&#13;
bv the state yearly. U is figured that&#13;
in eyery five smokes.&#13;
The Cheboygan council has adopted&#13;
on&gt;&#13;
use fit the streets.&#13;
Os Jan. 1 the Grand Tnosk ralroad&#13;
mm provide modern vestihaled eoUM&gt;&#13;
? w f ^ S S ? n W h S h , ^ S ! ! i " ? ^ 5 W o r t wse reectred in Port Hnroh&#13;
" m &amp;**y*** Teldphone-Oo; for the * « ^ eenthew grain eleva&#13;
" - ^ * * "**-*" owned hy the Botsford IT rinks&#13;
at S t Louis, Md., hid sttTtaed t&lt;&#13;
ground, the 1os# being eetimai&#13;
Jcaks,of&#13;
rpo. Is a prtadea! sftroj&amp;flsler.&#13;
owned ebont |40^0&gt; of the&#13;
Mayor auts, of Oread ~&#13;
tppolstsd * sfietfai .oomtUttee&#13;
veetis*te the advieabUity &lt;tf esaaeits*&gt;&#13;
C* 0. A B. eranch, between Bey CKy.&#13;
Saginaw and&#13;
dot. Osborn has received word thai&#13;
,the Chicago law and Order league h**&#13;
fungdrtted' * i c e W l g * agsinst&#13;
• ' &gt;•« , • /" &gt; I B M M H H I H .&#13;
To Provide Centrsl Stste Workhouse.&#13;
Representative Ashmon H. Catlln,&#13;
of Webbervllle, Ingham county, has&#13;
announced two bills which he is framing&#13;
to be presented to the next legisalture.&#13;
One. provides for the erection of a&#13;
workhouse in Lansing similar \p the&#13;
one in Detroit, to be used to house&#13;
prisoners from counties of central&#13;
Michigan. Such a structure Is In great&#13;
demand owing to the fact that Detroit&#13;
will no longer contract with counties.&#13;
Catlln's proposed second measure&#13;
would oausej the present mortgage tax&#13;
law to be repealed, substituting the&#13;
law on the statute books of 1891,&#13;
which provides mortgages to be deducted&#13;
from estates.&#13;
Trigonometry has been dropped&#13;
from the curriculum of the Negaimee&#13;
high school on the advice of Prof. G.&#13;
O. Davis, of the University of Michigan,&#13;
who says the subject is no longer&#13;
required for admlsstn te the engineering&#13;
department 5&#13;
sue 10 i.uuu nj», 99W&#13;
600 to 700 XbtuJSM&#13;
to 700 i N i - w K r f f i t&#13;
4.25; m l t t e r t . T a r i e ,&#13;
ac&amp;va&#13;
• t duU&#13;
iASeilv,Qthand&#13;
. springer-*.&#13;
n; »e«s9-&#13;
«t week,&#13;
lamb*. 17.60&#13;
^JA'Wd&#13;
V&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
D E T R O I T — H f t m dry-fed stserii, 17.60- 81; «u«ra a a « n s i f « r i . I M S to l,M0tbs.,&#13;
,75©7.60£ atser» and n w e r s v WO to&gt;&#13;
1.000 Tba., | f « « . 7 6 i .aUerl and heifers that&#13;
arc fat. 60Oto 70C tB*B.HM.3S&lt;KW; &lt;*&lt;&gt;lce&#13;
fat COWB, W.«0#$.T»i s o e d fat c o w * $4.25&#13;
0 6 ; c o m m o n &lt; 4 » 5 w t M M ? 4 ; cannery, 1 8 9&#13;
8.60: choice ie|vy-eJBM^Ij6-60dP«; fair to&#13;
f o o d b o i o M ^ ^ t t D f c i C t t 0 ! 6 ; stock bulla,&#13;
|3.75©4.25T'c1&amp;ioe r e t t i n s ateera. 8S0 to&#13;
1,000 It)a., W^ttSW/SOjraifJSedlnj steerts,&#13;
800 to 1.000 tffcTW&amp;oMTohojc* stoaksrs,&#13;
i.M; « 4 r atockera, 6 W&#13;
at l a S V w a e V * * * *&#13;
«r*. $flK9. 4foa*&#13;
steady, y W .&#13;
8 heap «uw} laiiai&#13;
Bteadyr lajjibS -&#13;
Beut Iambi*, $8;&#13;
€¢7.75: light to qommofi&#13;
6; fair to go*) Bheep, « # 4&#13;
common, |2.75®3. , •* - *s.&#13;
Ho**— Receipts, 4.107; no b**s wHfiv.fi.&#13;
noon; prospects are a s follows: Range af%.&#13;
prlcea—Lig-ht to good butchers, $7.45©,&#13;
7.25; piffn, $6.1)00/7; light yorkers, $ 7 0&#13;
7.10; loughB. one-third off.&#13;
Note—There will be no market h e r e&#13;
Christina* day.&#13;
East Buffalo. N. T.—Cattle—Seat 1.360&#13;
io 1,500-rb steers, '$8.76®9.25: good to&gt;&#13;
prime 1,200 to 1.300-tb steer*. $7.75©8.26; food to prime 1,100 tol,200-tb »ta«&#13;
7.25^7.76; coarse, plalnlsh 1,100 to 1,2&#13;
It) Bteern $7&lt;&amp;7.25; medium butoh&#13;
stem, 1,000 to 1,100 rt)B. $6.26@7; butch&#13;
steers. 960 to 1.000 Tbu, $6®6.50; llgi&#13;
butcher steers $5.25®5.7B; best fat cow;&#13;
$G.D0&lt;&amp;6; butcher cows, $4.50@5; Ugh1&#13;
butcher COWH $3.756&gt;4.25; cutters. $3.50^&#13;
3.7G; trimmers, $3.25(^3.50; best fat hel&#13;
ers, $7®7.5o; medium butcher heifers.&#13;
*5.75f&lt;J6.25; light butcher heifers, $4.60®&#13;
5: stock heifers. $4ft)4.25; best feeding*&#13;
steei'H, $6.25@6.76; fair to good stockers,&#13;
$.r&gt;(Ji5.25; light common stockers $4.25® •&#13;
4.50;; prime export bulls, $6.2B&lt;ii&gt;G.75; b e s t - / ,&#13;
buti-her bulla, $5.50@5.76; bologna bullSV h&#13;
$4.5U(;t5; stock bulls, $4.50(^5; be.U mUsW \&#13;
ers and sprlngfrs, $65@75; common SO1*&#13;
fair kind, $40®B5. \ T~&#13;
Hogs—Market 5c higher; hogs* Sf«SS(v&#13;
yorkers, $7.B5&lt;&amp;)7.70; piga, $7.60©.7.7S, - . . -&#13;
fchoep and lambs—Market active; t e s ^ '&#13;
lambs, $8.60(^8.65; culls to 0»k% IS.SS#'V&gt;&#13;
vi!5; yearlings, $5.50^0.50; VSjUlSte M J S # ' '&#13;
5; ewes, $4®&gt;4,25. » •-...• , f •&#13;
Calves—Steady; tops, SlS.tBe&gt;lSJK; -r&#13;
to good, $7.GOi8&gt;10; hearyi "'&#13;
v 1*4&#13;
***»v-^&#13;
.¾1&#13;
i-&#13;
•&lt;y&#13;
QRAIN^gtC:&#13;
i.t»enii6; &lt; , - _&#13;
M ^ E A T — C a s h up hy&#13;
at $1,14 1-2,' tywajSd fta&gt;tructed&#13;
vanced to $114 \4i JsCfeiiiplendid&#13;
declined to 94 and s^MssWv.&#13;
1 white, $1.0$ 1-1 - *r »&#13;
CORN—caeh No. s. been made&#13;
2 ocaArTs sa--ta t5s*jscdf aNPo«tv ft^;e iian deve lon-&#13;
nsked: NoTtwkite. to 4t.hae ,l a*rrgJel&#13;
^RY^iiK; "s5T"^g t 0 C a n a d a '&#13;
-HiMm-SnunS of th® railways&#13;
re'mber »Wpn»4' number to give&#13;
' " ' r S W SE The more these&#13;
sample, II S«S%1 t h e m o r e * 5 "&#13;
prime * ^ « T m t o n s and these&#13;
bags at $1LH. * , mM*m » h . f&#13;
FLOUIV-Sis oe&lt; reads what&#13;
per if*6 pounds, joV it. What the&#13;
ent, $5.60; •eOOaeT f e 1 ( 1 w h a t h i a&#13;
$5.20; clear, K t S l ^ 5 * ™* " •&#13;
rye, $4.80 par bet A. Flaherty,&#13;
Bran. $23; coafM s d e W L n . 4 B .&#13;
dilngs, $28; c o m a o S S f c P a n a d a *&#13;
ton. ' -'^X&#13;
+?*£,&#13;
' V * ?&#13;
W&#13;
yi&#13;
chts of Coi&#13;
' i&#13;
rt«rK,rr«^. . ^ ^ ^ . - WOttld&#13;
The poultry deal jft*j3ssjrtl&amp; t W 0&#13;
poitant proportlonrsasi% l i e f c a n a -&#13;
ness prevails In nearly- ell4S«ekt&gt;.&#13;
drag a little, but c h i c l e «#S ilVvev&#13;
mand and there is a firm i s a i g S r St&#13;
keys at another advance la t^MSSK Ci,&#13;
are in good supply, but these IS&gt; S&gt; WSv&#13;
ity of turkeys. Dressed hoS*JB*%JwLK&#13;
easy, and dressed calves actrvCfTSe TOar-1&#13;
ket Is steady, for dairy prodtis||iMpLi«iy«&#13;
Ivi). Potatoes and vegetables wm SSBMNT.&#13;
and In good demand.&#13;
&lt;%&#13;
33c;&#13;
pac&#13;
Butter-^Pancy creamery,&#13;
ery firsts, 36c; dairy, 22c;&#13;
per Tb.&#13;
Eggs—Current receipts, candl&#13;
Included, -2*o Iper&lt;i©s.-&#13;
4 * 1 . '&#13;
APPLEH—Baldwin, $2.26®2.50;&#13;
Ing, $2.5002.76; spy, $2.7603; i t&#13;
$3^3.50; No. 2, 76c^l,60 per bbl. yh.&#13;
S?fJ ;A&#13;
CABBAGES—$1® 1.26 per bbl. Wt » ^ i *&#13;
D R B 8 S E D C A L V E S — O r d i n a r y ^ H g ¥ , J&#13;
l i e ; fancy, 12 1-2@18 l-2c per ft. v ' • T O " "&#13;
ONIONB—66c per bu.&#13;
DRESSED HOQ8—$9®9.50 per&#13;
light to medium.&#13;
D R E S 8 E D POULTRY — 8prl&#13;
ens. I4©16c; bens, 13©14c; old&#13;
1 0 ® l l c ; turkeys. 21@23c; ducks,&#13;
geese, 14®l6c per rb.&#13;
POTATOES—Michigan, sack*, 660&#13;
48c In car lots, and 55@60c for store.&#13;
HONEY—Choice fane ywhite comb,&#13;
©17c per Tb; amber, 14©15c.&#13;
LIVE POULTRY—Spring chickens, 1&#13;
13 l-2c per tb; hens, 1 2 0 1 1 1 . 2 c ; No.&#13;
hens, 9c; old roosters, 9010c; ducks, II&#13;
0 1 6 c ; geese, 13014c; turkays, 17$2jpc per&#13;
VEGETABLES—Beets. 40c p e r l s *&#13;
rots, 46c per bu; cauliflower, $2.1&#13;
turnips, 60c per bu; spinach, V&#13;
hothouse c u c u m w r s , $1.6001&#13;
watercress, ISO 70c per doi; hi&#13;
$1.2601,60 per Samper; home*&#13;
ery, 25030c per bu; green _^&#13;
per basket; rutabagas. 40c par bu;&#13;
house radishes, 36c per do*.&#13;
PROVISIONS—Mess pork,&#13;
$22022; briskets. H 0 1 2 o ; bt&#13;
shoulders, 13 l-2c; picnic hams,&#13;
lard in tierces. 11 l-2c; kettle&#13;
lard, 21 l&gt;2c per ft.&#13;
HAY—Car lot prices, track,&#13;
No. 1 timothy. $1601 $.60; No, 2 t .&#13;
$14.50015.80; N a 1 mlaed, $14014.60;&#13;
mixed, $15015.60: w h e a t and oat&#13;
$9010; rye straw, $10.14)011 per&#13;
Want Bank Dipt Moved to Oe^reltv&#13;
That the state, banking commissioner's&#13;
office, now in the state capitol,&#13;
be moved to Detroit, is the hose of&#13;
Michigan bankers^ sod an effort toward&#13;
that end may be made whs** the&#13;
legislature convenes.&#13;
Banking Commissioner Doyle assets'&#13;
nine Michigan honkers at his private&#13;
office in Detroit where Deputy A. E.&#13;
Manning meets one in the maA office,&#13;
In Lansing, it is said* ' -,^&#13;
rhe executive ootmnlttee ol, the&#13;
State Tes^b^rsVejssoeistlon w m a e e t&#13;
in Tensing, Jan. ls\ to seleet the&#13;
place for the Ui$ teachers, eonsren^&#13;
tlon. KelamsToo sad Ann idrhof»sje&gt; . ,,&#13;
tavored^' ••- -DV '•• \- .' {•• -"'^'^m-&#13;
-Rumori regarding the absorption ot"'':: ]':&#13;
the Marquette OSunty Telephohe Co, u : ^1&#13;
by tb* Michigan State Telephone&#13;
are begtonlng,Jt6' take detelte&#13;
While trying their new&#13;
skates,;^ HIRman, aged 7, sUd&#13;
»$tf, i«, 6f Qladstone, feU&#13;
thin tee and were drowned.&#13;
•yM&#13;
*&#13;
* = * * ;&#13;
Um S |tt«nlo1nsi cosi yard. 1 &gt; plan&#13;
Wendaa Klaoe, o^'Cwoeso, believed&#13;
to he the oldest barbery fn no^nt oC&#13;
service, la Wobigan, eekbrated ^hie ^&#13;
en^eth, birthday oy entettsgafng^ •.&lt;#&#13;
hs»bersvoitlN oKji H»w heejueell&gt;&#13;
"He**" -Isrtl ^yamm:,. — -i—.-if' ; *'%«&#13;
Mf$u -sUaern&gt; Hale, matron of t ^ *&#13;
Dci^s* HonJSr ©wesso, believe* tftnt '&#13;
loosd os«toV (m flhle^aesee county m *&#13;
the osmse ef thV large lleereaee to f t -&#13;
e at the Institution. There?] "&#13;
n o w n ehJkfreh m ths hbme, ,&#13;
•y,*jt* jr.&#13;
e *&#13;
-4-&#13;
iSPJS.&#13;
%* &gt;Y'&#13;
\-,^t :-^^4 •i'fA.'&#13;
*^-$8$- :**1*i ,m •i -**A •vji&gt;»: &amp;? a*?; • '#&lt;&#13;
,v-&#13;
#S&#13;
.'.* '.fc»&#13;
.?"&#13;
^ • '&#13;
^ . ~!?v* ?:'.&#13;
TIT SMTiT Wr W »&#13;
Money saecJft f*©* A a y C a a a o f&#13;
« # $ /&#13;
Where It Pays to J ^ O a a f r&#13;
Christmas&#13;
Dry Goods&#13;
Handkerchiefs, a little ftiffer.&#13;
eot and better tbaL the usual&#13;
Mod at o a r price. Holiday&#13;
Bttboaft. Oar stock is largest&#13;
in Howell Fancy dry&#13;
1B of every description.&#13;
&gt;me in and see.&#13;
EVERY DAY IS BARGAIN DAY&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN&#13;
J HOWELL'S BUSY STORE&#13;
. nUmaisntasaaaartUia Par* Food and Dngt&#13;
U « t M aasatatHj tim horn opiatsa or harmful&#13;
dOrraarts or say datertptl a.&#13;
&gt; S o l « c c is spars apeeile In vretj way, aad&#13;
•*aa base i rorao M/nnd qusatioa to b • the s&amp;oot&#13;
sod quick* at rem* ^ for Uric A«*d Trouplaa&#13;
saawot- tasd-cahasietw*, so pit** how loaf&#13;
•fending. It laadbas w d isamwa too root of US&#13;
&lt;«r&#13;
. V ' . . ' ^ - » —&#13;
" ^&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
€xd*nge Bank&#13;
^ 4 —&#13;
A ^--&#13;
itive Bank'&#13;
•• •.&#13;
c e -:w*&#13;
' aw- '&#13;
« • » dissolves&#13;
..... ^iTod. it is&#13;
trott to (Urio Add) and parfasa th bio d,&#13;
"""_ *e&gt;r ~ . _ . . - .&#13;
l. 'ceai&#13;
testimonial tottsra wbiob h*va b&lt;wo rwo rod from&#13;
Th~ a*_ £ « l « c « idC"o . of Bait's Cntk ara tbe U. 6- * ceattMd h«Ti taoaasa • oi \oiawivj&#13;
ton wbiob hava b&lt;wo rwo rod from&#13;
&gt;SoUtC« bM rsstored to resJto.&#13;
imaaUl lattm, Utarstars tod t V e « B O X&#13;
asst apes rasas&#13;
I I^MonUProvUeat oftbeflrH National&#13;
Bank of ffetco, Tax«, wrota tbo Selaa* Company&#13;
•atoUopa:&#13;
"I wast jroo to wnd t box of Solace to my&#13;
latbar ta ewpbU. Tesru, for wbiab I eadoea$1.&#13;
Tbia raaasd baa baa* aaad b» aawe frtonda of&#13;
uiao bete aad I sanal aayttaasstoa vaa wonder*&#13;
laJ. (0Un*d) E L Morris&#13;
hot op la 25c, Me, aad ${.00 boxea.&#13;
It* m l i h t y f i n e to b a w e l l anal y o u&#13;
c a n a o o n b c a o b y t o kin A S o l a c e .&#13;
"Noapooia. treaneat •uaanwa or fees." «Juat&#13;
S o l a c e A l o n e doaa tf.e wor&lt;. W r i t e&#13;
f o d a y f o r t h e f r e e b o x , e t c .&#13;
S o l a c e R e m e d y C o * B a t t l e C r e e k .&#13;
Advortlalax&#13;
JinrsDrm&#13;
Albert Baarahnjl, Green Oak;&#13;
William Feathery, Hamborg; Julioe;~&#13;
Oarr, B M B ^ Loo*e~Mauus,&#13;
Hartland; Fred Streoker, Howell;&#13;
Henry Gebringer, Iosco, Fred&#13;
Rabbins, Marion; Henry Durfee,&#13;
Oceola; John Monks, Pat nam;&#13;
Onn Oamnn, Tyrone; William&#13;
Marshall, Unadilla; A. J, McClements,&#13;
Brighton; Leonard Hibbard,&#13;
Cohoctab; Fred Diabro, Gonway;&#13;
Oliver Branson, Deerfield; Frank&#13;
I'ilf'ii'ufci 3ES • J 'irif r'nTtlfSm; mm "m&#13;
*^r , •A?"'&#13;
* ^ # . ^ .A.- -^- a». \&#13;
.OLEYSHONFV- TAr&#13;
c h .&#13;
CT^••• •'V&#13;
%!:&#13;
• •if.&#13;
P.&#13;
: / *&#13;
I ife have a few&#13;
Tons of Bran&#13;
find Middlings&#13;
Which we will sell at a very&#13;
good figore. If you are in&#13;
need of either kind please jj&#13;
5 call and get onr best prices.&#13;
- Try a sack of our Pare—&#13;
Buckwheat&#13;
Flour&#13;
at 32c for 10 lbs.&#13;
The&#13;
HoytBros.&#13;
^ . ^ - - - . ¾&#13;
»ey to tell you about&#13;
styles in portraits,&#13;
rt too busy to show&#13;
Come and see.&#13;
lie B. Chapell&#13;
P h o t o g r a p h e r&#13;
rbrtdge, M i c h i g a n&#13;
'iff'--.&#13;
(IVr^&amp;SrVr!&#13;
•r^T?! •'&#13;
WOOMUI Finds&#13;
Many Years&#13;
iflfiio suffer from extreme&#13;
often endure much&#13;
re finding any rctte!&#13;
Kintner, of Defiance,&#13;
an experience, regardshe&#13;
says:&#13;
^ -&#13;
15/&#13;
»&gt;*&#13;
•1 had&#13;
trouble when X was&#13;
eiaThteen y e a n old&#13;
that broke down&#13;
my health, and for&#13;
•ears X suffered&#13;
with' narvotttiieasi&#13;
headache, lndtgestton&#13;
and nervous&#13;
s p a s m s . T h e&#13;
spasms got so bad&#13;
X would have them&#13;
three Or four times&#13;
4 week. After trying&#13;
nearly every&#13;
r e m e d y recommended,&#13;
X began&#13;
taking Dr. MUsa*&#13;
X must say It helped ma&#13;
X have had no severe nervsoveml&#13;
years.'*&#13;
, MRS. DAN KlNTNUt,&#13;
rteeaant 8 t , Deflanoa, O.&#13;
Many &gt;etne&lt;agt are recosttm^djal&#13;
tot ' a t w ^ ' tbe nervous system&#13;
tfcar £ail«o pfodnce results bectvaa.&#13;
tiny dojpei'reach the seat of the*&#13;
trouble } Br. Miles' Nenrifie '.be*&#13;
its &lt;*r»fi»4 mr'imeh cases sd\&#13;
W&#13;
M&#13;
•a***** IMDIQA1. 6 9 ^ aaaaeaa^JaaW&#13;
% Hills Variety Store&#13;
H o w e l l , M i c h i g a n&#13;
When in Howell don't forgnt&#13;
to visit oar store. Every&#13;
department is filled with new&#13;
goods.&#13;
Sweaters, Av i a t i o n&#13;
Caps, G l o v e s , Mittens.&#13;
Etc.&#13;
A large stock of Choice&#13;
Ohina, Art Goods, Nevelties,&#13;
(Dolls.) Hundreds of these&#13;
from l c to $3.00.&#13;
5 and 10c Goods of&#13;
All Kinds&#13;
K. Hacker, Genoa; Jasper D.&#13;
Brennan, Green OakftFred Lake,&#13;
Hamburg; O. E. Oarr, Handy;&#13;
Cntrles Lemmon, Hartland; Lyman&#13;
P. Blwell, Howell; William&#13;
Caasady, Iosco; Philip Smitb,&#13;
Marion; A. M. Hetchler, Oceola;&#13;
Oharlf a Henry, Putnam; Charles&#13;
Rosa, Tyrone.&#13;
Wm. Doyle and family spent Xmas&#13;
at the home-of Edward Spears.&#13;
Michael Harris of Jackson spent&#13;
Christmas with relatives here,&#13;
Irvm Kennedy and family and Jas.&#13;
Doyle and daughters Mary E. and&#13;
Ethel ate Christmas dinner at Patrick&#13;
Kennedy's.&#13;
Walter, Retta and Rath Collins of&#13;
Marion spent Christmas at John Cbalker's.&#13;
D. M. Monks and family ani John&#13;
M. Harris and family visited at Patrick&#13;
Kennedy's last Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Earl .Reason are visiting&#13;
tbe latter's parents Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Bert VanBlaricura this week.&#13;
Michael Murpby and wife, Andrew&#13;
Murphy and wile and John arid Frank&#13;
Donn of Jackson spent Christmas at&#13;
Wm. Murphy's,&#13;
Will and James Fi&amp;ke vimted at&#13;
John Cbalker's last Sunday.&#13;
SadteAnd Jo Harris spent Toursday&#13;
at tbe borne of O. M. Monk*.&#13;
"The following quests were entertained&#13;
at tbe borne of H, B. Gardner,&#13;
Christmas: Or. C. B. (Jardner and&#13;
family of Alma; Grace Carder; Mrs.&#13;
Bert Hoff and Mrs, R Backus and&#13;
daughter Corinne of Lansing; Otis&#13;
Webb and family of Unadilla and&#13;
Glenn Gardner and tamilv ot Stook-&#13;
« 4 f H h - ; — 7 -&#13;
Mrs. Michael Farley spent Christmas&#13;
at tbe home of D, M. Monks.&#13;
Mrs. John Uinkel visited her mother&#13;
Mrs. Wm, Gardner Thursday.&#13;
Mrs. Maria Harris, Lncy and John&#13;
Harris ate Christmas dinner with W.&#13;
E, Murphy and family.&#13;
Thomas Cooper and family of Jackson&#13;
spent Christmas at the home ot&#13;
M&lt;tria Cooper.&#13;
John M. Harris and family were&#13;
Bundav guests at tbe home of James&#13;
P, Harris of Marion,&#13;
Glen OB the sick list.&#13;
Loyd Mqfimrpt Dexter we* in&#13;
town datnrdaw,&#13;
Ed. Faronm *p«»t Sunday with&#13;
relative* in Dettolt&#13;
Lee Hopkina and wife ol Ana&#13;
Arbor were in town Monday.&#13;
Jas. Quiu of Jackson was a&#13;
Pinckney visitor Saturday.&#13;
B 0. Tiny of Toledo, visited at&#13;
the home of E, Et Hoyt lsat week.&#13;
Joseph Mackinder is spending&#13;
the week with relatives in Toledo.&#13;
Don't forget 'The Duet of the&#13;
Earth" at the opera house tonight&#13;
Boy Merrill of Hamburg visited&#13;
friends here the latter part of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Dr. A, B. Green aud family of&#13;
Jackson visited his parents here&#13;
last week.&#13;
Louis Stackable spent a few days&#13;
last week with friends in Whitmore&#13;
Lake.&#13;
T. Shehan and wife spent. Sunday&#13;
at the home of Wm. Steptoe&#13;
in Webster.&#13;
Rev. John Stackable of New&#13;
York O'ty is visiting relatives in&#13;
this section.&#13;
Try a sack of Dexter Milling&#13;
Go's. Best Flour on sale at Monk's&#13;
Bros. 47tf&#13;
F. Grieve and family of near&#13;
Stock bridge spent Sunday with&#13;
relatives here.&#13;
Mr*. Olin FiBbbeck and Vern&#13;
Fisk of Monroe are visiting at the&#13;
home of Wm. Bisk.&#13;
Wm. Lark in and wife of Howell&#13;
spent Sunday here at the home of&#13;
Alden Carpenter.&#13;
- Cbasv VanKenran and wife o f&#13;
Lansing are visiting at the home&#13;
of G. W. Teeple.&#13;
W. E. Murphy and family&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of J. P.&#13;
Harris of Marion.&#13;
Bernard McGlnskyand wife spent&#13;
a few days laat week with her sister,&#13;
in Mt. Peelier, Ohio.&#13;
Mra. W^^Glarkv waa_called _tft&#13;
For&#13;
jiiii ,i 'ijrV jnsju&#13;
... EG6S. POULTRY&#13;
Attention F a r m e r s !&#13;
Don't forget that we come bei* '.&#13;
Bvery Wednesday Ae M«&#13;
A n d will pay every cent t h e market affords.' We will&#13;
appreciate a share of your business. p ,&#13;
Cal us by phone—No. 33, either phooe, i o r prices,&#13;
H. I. WILLIAMS&#13;
• '••"• ' &amp;&#13;
: * ! •&#13;
w&#13;
Phonographs&#13;
Yes, we have them, in all sty lea and prices. Tbfcy are&#13;
THE WONDERFUL COLUMBIA&#13;
in both horn and hornless types. Hear one with the&#13;
new reproducer (just out) and yon will be surprised;&#13;
Try one in your home. S o l d o n e.a*y p a y m e n t s&#13;
John Dinkel. Pinckney&#13;
H&gt;I|&#13;
.•"V&#13;
V E.L&#13;
aHQWeajWOsWCiwCQtSittQsSQ WRtt©CPCiHi&#13;
ther Phone&#13;
1683 ::&#13;
Office and Works&#13;
306 Cooper Street&#13;
Work Guaranteed&#13;
:: First Class&#13;
/ Card of Thanis&#13;
Daring the weeks of my recent&#13;
iilueas I have been the recipient&#13;
of /over a hundred postal cards&#13;
from various friends. Those cards&#13;
have meant more to me than I can&#13;
express in mere words. They&#13;
have caused me to forget even the&#13;
torture of pain in my joy of tuern*&#13;
I Friendships, such as these, are&#13;
R e l i a b l e T r e a t m e n t Pound by j i n d t * d t h e « » • " » • of calamity,&#13;
« . M. •* . «, ~ i the bank of credit on whioh we&#13;
E m i n e n t Doctor—You Can&#13;
. Teat It r&gt;ee&#13;
It atema abaolut^ly owtala that »t laat there haa&#13;
baea foand an vSajsi«a f«pHuy *&lt;r ttult»e—la*&#13;
un*l#hiiand fiatrinin -^-* " "&#13;
adr si 4 P *N&#13;
so sUraoMvs » n ana n«maa.&#13;
GOITRE Now GJrable&#13;
b« naaft7 * ' d , - F&#13;
v tnofcr- that &lt;JNfl»ura&#13;
. „ atfatp anrl vital ty &lt;.f&#13;
otborwiaa'hMltii attd sUraoMvs »• n ana nm&#13;
a»maiy*&gt;ar» &amp;uo.,Dr W.."». Bobo. -t Battla&#13;
• nek, plebifaB, otMiimtd wh. t ta bailevad t"&#13;
ba a antc*aaftjt ir a awn* tor Goitre. &gt; b a b** laf&#13;
w«» tartar sfMBftSMMd srtB* fact t t i andwdsef&#13;
•uftWri Mstsa to»y ware a*^ir&lt;a»t*ily&#13;
«f*d t a a *••* waaka hf tbia ra«*rktbt« rama .r.&#13;
i Pi&#13;
oltAi&gt;i'tb«-latla&#13;
On- crswnil W&gt;»IMS wriiaa that t&gt;r Bobo^a&#13;
suppla #oetu*nt car. a sr « o l i » Aoiib^r tails&#13;
s^'t- at « t a n oi th'a treatnast o atplotaiy ami&#13;
" i "&#13;
Hy « rad t(ar juJtra. tMitl uaoth r write*&#13;
s&amp;fifiy st Ursly eared sty soitrs&#13;
TbSfss&lt;a bat sxtts&lt;ts ir th- hunart-da of&#13;
(attaiar catr^d by Or B&gt; bo, from »»a leu la wna&#13;
»vtaib#.' w*r* tntw1*&#13;
1 &gt;oa adfiwirorv th ltr* wilu» to-»v t Sr.&#13;
ihaas^an Bub' ,Saita r 1», MJata Bl^k, Bstils&#13;
tt»»jb)saoh , S ' 4 h s * 1 iHrsd v a » j « * ats&lt;alar&#13;
S2M&gt;ti«h«tt«a?of iRJsaaVtfVatteilvs r at«a&gt;, i«&#13;
ir» • what 1 ' a arsor pn«b ior y&lt; a.&#13;
draw supplies of sympathy, help&#13;
an J love.&#13;
"Frlendablp la not friandablp at its baat,&#13;
Ti 1 olrcBiitanoea pa It to thsVs*.,f*&#13;
" Thara are a thousand aaa&gt;a&gt;sas ttaa,&#13;
Wbiob«Dl]r i^eh sa fetl tbscs kaiw;&#13;
Orklodrad thoogtits, dasp aTapasbM,&#13;
Ai.dants d fauer apetls, whieh tlirow&#13;
O'er ardaat aaiada sad (aitbtal assrts&#13;
A ah- la wsoas ebarslad Uaka so Msa4&#13;
r at the Ileal clrsfat bat lataatta&#13;
Ita fores la tbsesf oad word*—oay frieaaV&#13;
' Sinoaraljr,&#13;
9. W. ALLWOK&#13;
merits lor^tfieti %~* * ' "Adt•afU-aMs—aat&#13;
bottk oi yow*mromm%&#13;
retara thf prtea. if yon&#13;
'•iHwefit"&#13;
ANPALHOT6&#13;
Oak Grove .last week by the death&#13;
of her aunt, Mrs, Pearco.&#13;
Mrs. John Damman and Miss&#13;
Freda Damman of Hamburg were&#13;
Pinckney callers Saturday.&#13;
Eugene Mclntyre of Milwaukee&#13;
is visiting at the borne of his parent,&#13;
M:. and Mrs. Alex Mclutyre.&#13;
About 40 cotiple attended the&#13;
leap year party here last Friday&#13;
evening and all enjoyed a fine&#13;
time.&#13;
We understand that A L.&#13;
Richmond has sold his village&#13;
residence to Fred Grieve—Stockbridge&#13;
Brief Sun. *-'.&#13;
Mrs. A. H. Gilchrist and son,&#13;
Winston, have been visiting at the&#13;
home oi her mother, Mrs. Elmer&#13;
Book of near Gregory.&#13;
Messrs. and Mesdamea Albert&#13;
Wlkon and James Marble were&#13;
goests at the home of /tin. £ , W.&#13;
Mat tin one day last Week.&#13;
Plana are under way to introduce&#13;
a biU at the next session of&#13;
tbe legislatnre establishing a state&#13;
house of correction at Lansing.&#13;
John Mclntyre and family;Mrs,&#13;
Oooley and daughter, CnoiJ^ of&#13;
Pontiac and Sydney Sprout spent&#13;
Christmas a | tbe home of Alex&#13;
Mclntyre.&#13;
E M P I R E MARBLE AND&#13;
G R A N I T E W O R K S&#13;
J0H9 G. L»BLIEf Prop.&#13;
Manufacturer* ot and Dealers in&#13;
M o n u m e n t s , S t a t u a r y a n d S t o n e B u r i a l Vaults)&#13;
JACKSON, - - - . - MICHIGAN&#13;
7*&#13;
I&#13;
\&#13;
w PINCKNEY, . MICHIGAN I&#13;
i p»BiiffH'»MeMis pats jisvai»a»i a m 9*mm9»m*!HmV*w»i »**&gt;**&amp; **&#13;
9- HOTEL GRISWObD&#13;
. K M : Detroit, Mich. ;&#13;
Postal Hotel Co.&#13;
i&#13;
PRBD POSTAl*9 Prea. FRED A . GOODMAN, S e c r e t a r y&#13;
HeadqUartBrs of "t|t Wolverine Iiffcomebile t\i\&#13;
D e t r o i t ^ iMLorit P o p u l a r XXotel&#13;
European r'lan Only Ratee ^1.00 perdsiy and up&#13;
^ 0 0 . 0 0 0 B x p n e d a d Jn Itajnedallng, FurnlaltfRa a n d P c c o s a t U ^ a&#13;
. j ^ . .^.,^&#13;
Tht nnttt Caft VVtti of Ntt» York&#13;
NT&#13;
Service A La Carte at Popular Prices&#13;
A Strietly Modern and Up-to-date Hotel* Oaatrally located in the v*tj heart of the&#13;
eity, "Where Life is Worth LiTing." N o t h l n f t b e t t e r « f o u r # a t e a \&#13;
a&#13;
TRAM MAIMS) s ^reiajta&#13;
GOWVMOHTS 4W&#13;
.i!NieA«sndtns atthatrh and dc&#13;
tffOLif wx*Hruim oiir OJUHIOD '&#13;
Inn la r&gt;rr»bnt)lr natant "&#13;
^cUJjcouSdatJtj * "*&#13;
&gt; / • ' • M i ' * m&#13;
ffr».&#13;
TV n&#13;
uaa^o^y. ^BBataaBadBm^BBBaW **" i^J^a^dakai^'^ M f 'TP * aoP'&#13;
Man a&#13;
fn»at&#13;
Kair»&#13;
Bate&#13;
S'&#13;
aaat,'&#13;
aft-r&#13;
Trlaf&#13;
SS® iB«r«o«;HJI«ba* sot a*&#13;
W* ttat 'WaaattrtT f#a%&#13;
: *n did t ot Sav* a ata*- -s spafl&#13;
i traaua** V W S B M S » #&#13;
l&gt;aaraeat Caaast Be Cared&#13;
Br local application*, at they oaano&#13;
reach the dsceaeed poftioa of tbs ear&#13;
Tbare is omy one way to bare dealnee*,&#13;
and that i%,by eowstitatioSal rem ^&#13;
edi*s. Ovalaasi ta eaoaaw oy*aa in*&#13;
I lie Annual meeting of the Earned condition of the m»oo»V lining&#13;
ui*^^. a«^{S^SsSftJS&amp; .%st&#13;
IuMHttuoe Company, for the eleo- WQad or napwfact aaariaH and whan&#13;
thin ot officers and tor ^ste Iran- \lis.aatiraty cloted, Daataass isiaa&#13;
Le4al Advertlaln^ yr&#13;
* * i&#13;
*}*^• *« o f^ M l_ b i a a « i tsa probate oosrt faf-&#13;
**m"—'T'? ^ i n i i ItasawJnii rr "&#13;
Ooim.baldattaa ProSSaOftaa&amp;V&#13;
awran la *aM atestr as tbe lftk da&gt;&#13;
?-&#13;
• i r ^ "&#13;
ofts-sa&#13;
k»dim&#13;
SM.«&#13;
provaBMVt frost *B • »F*S Viite tods* sw tail trss&#13;
a(,d. MUSS &gt;as stsri of&#13;
.&gt;/ • » •&#13;
2i*"&#13;
.,3 m '&amp;&amp;.&#13;
oi s^CoJw-boainefiili tm^f Hv&#13;
ghliv none before it Witt f* J^sd&#13;
tui^coott hcj&#13;
Sowcll, m&#13;
A. D. JWfl a t 1 IOO o'eteck&#13;
l&gt;nt*d Howail MMl. Btosnabnt&#13;
16 ldl«. W. lUrk^S***** be oared by aall's (^staft£9K&#13;
Mary MoOlaaky baa been .visitiog&#13;
frieods k H o w d a ^ ' SMk^&#13;
ifaviitiaJidQfileas toe iauamftion ean&#13;
^taaanoat sad this ttte*saWredto&#13;
l^npraial eosdition, baarins? wjll b#&#13;
eaatosed ferevar; aloe case* out ol&#13;
'M are sassaa ky Oalarrb.-whioa it&#13;
otaiag bniaa tafia*** eos^tioaal&#13;
ssat^a^ tertaesa. ^ ^ •&#13;
We wilt sjife One Hnndrfd&#13;
Dollars r^asry east- of Daetne#v&#13;
(oaaeed by Catarrh). 1tas4.tSCMSl .&#13;
*?•&#13;
i P. J. Onmtw * 0avTatf4e, OWe&#13;
4hiail,4rngirts^7ie4&#13;
^ Ta Faasi ly PitW for sea&#13;
H.P.Sa*M»l*f#&gt; ( &gt; f c&#13;
\r*'&#13;
..v&#13;
» '&#13;
&gt; ' ^ ^ &lt; / t ;&#13;
DR5.-SWLER * SlGLER,&#13;
.%* i .. &gt;•'•-. » ' * » ' + . . V . ' • ' '&#13;
AH otalt prootntly stttsws* Is&#13;
day ot nifs^ Oatua en Hata&#13;
direst. ••• '•''••.&gt;...;' :-'---"\ -.' r&#13;
PIKOKNEf, MICa;&#13;
.ws.} • V v •&#13;
V&#13;
i-n.&#13;
%* '•i" Ki&#13;
' * » . • • '&#13;
.^..w^LyofltyMtba^^-^^v! , ., ^&#13;
a* 8. i s l l .PjrssiaC Ron. ArtbarA. Mnntasas&#13;
Jsdfsef ttobatsTIni t t s T M ^ ^ t t e l S S e f ^&#13;
toWABP L. SOHT.niHTia, PinajiS&#13;
Krt Haftjjaoacr bariaf t l a d t e aald oaort ^¾^¾^¾¾¾^¾¾¾^ rrabST aaitsbts P srsoa. : ttWetawedthat the ISth day ef .JaaaaryJ&#13;
p. m s a t tea o'eleek to the foiSaon, saaSi vl&#13;
a B &amp; A A J B f c P » W ^ WOtoSSS&#13;
^ n S f S a W e t d s M d Stst pabos&#13;
Mttm^Ba^sallsBaC s oaj»r af&#13;
IsasssiatTswsakaBsaflaaa ta&#13;
;V/:iaaWMAls&gt; A.&#13;
a « s a w « i « B H eav&#13;
salTsoiit..&#13;
stflaTBaVBI^ m**m&#13;
XAT»0#&#13;
esaaUrttt&#13;
BAnaSLH;&#13;
The&#13;
t*1m&#13;
troskdw tttt&#13;
aimradl&#13;
AJ»» SBS Froat* Osart .¾&#13;
•&gt;:t.&#13;
Jaf.iC *mz&#13;
&gt; «!..&#13;
'-*r- ^ ?^&amp;yfc$&#13;
* * * •&#13;
'•Vl";&#13;
••'•&amp;?• w t * * - .&#13;
f-^A&#13;
.!•*. 'y.Y-~.*f&#13;
W&#13;
t'•*&gt;»•&#13;
JWW , ' * w &lt; » - • « .&#13;
•« ...«&gt;**» .,«•. ^M-...&#13;
»&#13;
, -&gt;.,c&lt;.""nPlfff!. '' r XMk^itCST*&#13;
« ^ ^ , T .&#13;
T 7:&#13;
~J&#13;
(W » - 7 -&#13;
i in&#13;
;**h:&#13;
H&#13;
-/&#13;
&amp;&#13;
i i&#13;
mmm •&#13;
EXTENDING THE AGRICULTURAL&#13;
AREA IN WESTERN CANADA.&#13;
HORACE&#13;
HA^EkTINE LORCHA&#13;
8YNOPSI8.&#13;
-.P Rhiollbipe rtC lyCdaem, enroenw,s pacpaepri tapliustb,l ishceorn, surlet-s nhrads lnreKce iavneodn. ymThoue st itnhtr epartoemniinsges laet tsearm*p hlee o~f tthhea, t^ wdaryite rth'se phoewaedr Iso nm ays tceerriotauisnly dcauyt. .,s tl aa Inpo trhtrea irto oomf C, amCelyrdoen whahsi lea ththee loarty- otmt t hwea sp ourntroacictu pwieads manudti ltahteed hweahdil el attheer ym Coavmede rboyn . mEeavnesly nof Gar aBytsroinng. , Cuanmneortoicne ds&#13;
'tt hleec eh,e awdi thof wChaomire rConly'ds ep, oisr trIani tl onvaei,l efdin dtos ata rtgreete,, wChlyerdee .pitl ewdgaese haEdv eblyenen t ou sseedc raesc ya. Cbyly dPeh lleleatrunss tMhautr pah Cy,h inaense baoryti setm plliovyinedg enreoanrb'sy ,t dhdagde kbeporerro. weCdl yad er ifmlea kfreosm a nC aemx-- cHues ep troet ecnadlls otno Mbeu ripnhvye satingda tiins gr epalulelsgeedd. ionff rfaincdtiionngs thofe tbhoew lg aomf ea nl aowpsiu man dp isppee aukns- dwears tfhoeu ntdr.e e Twhhe erCe hiCneasme erboony's isp ofroturnaidt :«dreoand Inne xhti sm dorrenssiningg. rWoohmil ea vNiseitlli nGg wCyanmne- binelcrormore sIs smeryisotuersiloyu s1l1y1 ashs atat erreedsu. lCt aomf ertohne oSuhsolcyk . onT hCea mtheirrdon l'se ttBeirc ka pbpeeda. rs Itm mysatekreis- **'W4,.$,S _£ Cdilryedcet ttherllesa tsC aamgaeirnosnt thteh eli fee novfe lCopame ewroans. ^&amp;¾&amp;¾*£^* ).»•:p elamnps tyto. tHakee teCllasm Eervoenly onn eav eryyatchhitn gt riapn.d dTrhieft inygac hhte lppilceksssl yu pI na af ibshoaetr.m aHne fgoiuvneds tpheea rsn afmroem oyf acJhoth nwsohni.le CCalymdeer'so nb adciksa pIs- turned.&#13;
CHAPTER IX.—Continued.&#13;
'There's no other explanation," he&#13;
decided, conclusively.&#13;
"You mean he committed suicide?"&#13;
^Call it what you like, sir."&#13;
"But there was no reason for him&#13;
to do such a thing," I objected.&#13;
"I understand he's been pretty ill,&#13;
sir."&#13;
"He was 111, yes. But he was on the&#13;
road to recovery." And then, with the&#13;
realization that I was speaking of&#13;
Cameron in the past tense, as though&#13;
it were already settled that I should&#13;
never see him alive again, a shiver&#13;
of horror swept over me. I know Mac-&#13;
Leod observed it, for he said:&#13;
"There's been a drop in the temperature,&#13;
In the last half-hour. It'll&#13;
be more comfortable in my cabin, sir,&#13;
If you don't mind coming in, and talkjjhe&#13;
thing over a bit."&#13;
Heavens, MacLeod," I exed,&#13;
turning on him with nervous&#13;
wmm ery, "do you expect me to sit&#13;
down and talk calmly at such a moment?&#13;
I can't It's all I can do to&#13;
stand -sttth here-, for a- minute at a&#13;
time. I feel I must do something. It's&#13;
torture to have ene's hands tied this&#13;
ay."&#13;
I^think I know how you fesl, sir.&#13;
" "Walking the deck will do ho good,&#13;
f you could calm yourself enough&#13;
k It over quietly, we might get&#13;
n to something that would guide&#13;
so to speak."&#13;
Guide us?" I repeated.&#13;
"Yes,5 sir. It's not Impossible, you&#13;
know, sir, that when he went overboafd&#13;
he was picked up."&#13;
The light from his cabin porthole&#13;
illuminated us both, and now as he&#13;
looked at me he must have seen my&#13;
perplexity.&#13;
"You said yourself, sir," he explained,&#13;
"that you thought you heard&#13;
the exhaust of some sort o' craft not&#13;
far away."&#13;
It was. this reminder, I think, which&#13;
brought back my wool-gathering wits&#13;
and steadied me to a perception of the&#13;
real importance of the captain's plea.&#13;
Of one ^hing, at least,. I was assured:&#13;
Cameron was not a suicide. How he&#13;
could have gone over the taffrail without&#13;
my seeing or hearing him, I: should&#13;
never taxable to understand. But gone&#13;
he was, and it lay upon me to discover&#13;
by whose assistance thia marvelous&#13;
disappearance was accomplished.&#13;
"And so 1t eame about that,&#13;
controlling my futile unrest, I was&#13;
presently seated in MacLeod'* swivel&#13;
chair, while he, from a place on the&#13;
aide of bis berth, fired pointed ques-|&#13;
tio** at^_ me, which I-either answered&#13;
as best t could or returned in kind..&#13;
"Kow maybe it'si none of my business,&#13;
Mr\ Clyde, but In view of tonight's&#13;
occurrence I think it's petti.&#13;
nent to know why there was such a&#13;
•I?.'-&#13;
V;?J&#13;
/&#13;
Sfc ;•*.&lt;.&#13;
r%xorougti inspection of the Sibylla before&#13;
we sailed, and such a lot of can-&#13;
Uon regarding the crew." That was&#13;
the first of hla TOttey, and for •» moment&#13;
U staggered me. f recognised,&#13;
&gt; however, that this was not a time for&#13;
quibbling; and as&gt; MacLeod had been&#13;
for years a staunch soldier in Cameron's&#13;
army of employees, I •** «o&#13;
in letting: him know the truth&#13;
odd,? And. thee* After *seo»J&#13;
s oot^deraUeji^ J*j»k*dic•nfew that* ofc" was tirrepry. *&#13;
^ t b a t - e * , o£,ooo^4fr.-*rim t»H*J» . "And I cast exfiein tbShV I tot*&#13;
^ took JJ*M,tcruisef?tit Vti;• j ^ •him, cfttfldry. *Yo« say yotf saw tk*&#13;
- N c / l t o l d him, IThoi wa*ne*bJe boat ' I didn't Tea say i t&#13;
.reason; toujrit^raf i ^ \ ' , ^ &gt;••• j m ^ ' * * * * * ^ ' * - .. I dttpitJSn/jgWsplgsMtli.Jsjt :«**heme b*en..\* 4m\jmm&lt;&#13;
A1 s^asx&gt;esae^^^sBswft4* ^^sPsWsw'Tii~s!^r'*eif i&lt;a^ss^^^B5BmBflKP ^a&gt;ke'^lsffiS^M^^s^, :«"&gt;I^iaV#j- ~"&#13;
plainly enough that he failed to understand.&#13;
"You see," i went o«, In-.elucidation,&#13;
"Mr. Cameron djtf ndti know.about this&#13;
last threat. JJe^atftll when the letter&#13;
came, andrwe^'fcepi ^ tron» him"&#13;
It was evident to ine tbsfcvthe captain&#13;
disapproved,, but _ he/Held his&#13;
peace. JV '&#13;
"What were the previous threats?"&#13;
he asked, presently. .&#13;
"Nothing definite," I answered.&#13;
"Simply that on certain fixed days the&#13;
writers would demonstrate their&#13;
power."&#13;
"And did they?"&#13;
"Most marvelously."&#13;
Again MacLeod was silent for a&#13;
space.&#13;
"Under the circumstances, Mr.&#13;
Clyde, don't you think It would have&#13;
been better if you'd told me about&#13;
thia?"&#13;
"Mr. Cameron was very anxious&#13;
that no one should know."&#13;
The captain compassed his right&#13;
knee with hiB locked hands.&#13;
"All the same," he said, "he'd never&#13;
have been spirited off this yacht if I'd&#13;
a' known what was in the wind."&#13;
This statement annoyed me, and I&#13;
resented it&#13;
"What could you have done?" I&#13;
asked. "I was with him almost continuously."&#13;
There came a strange, half-meditative,&#13;
half-bqld look in /the man's eyes,&#13;
and I was wondering what it portended,&#13;
when, quite ignoring my question,&#13;
he began speaking: '&#13;
"You see there oughtn't to be any&#13;
misunderstanding between you and&#13;
me, sir. This is too serious a business&#13;
to be bungled because I am only&#13;
captain of this yacht and you are the&#13;
owner's friend. So, If I speak plainly,&#13;
sir, you'll understand why, and not&#13;
think me disrespectful."&#13;
I smiled to reassure him, still puzfled,&#13;
and added:&#13;
"Go straight* ahead, captain. You&#13;
are perfectly right."&#13;
"Well," he began, "111 tell you, Mr.&#13;
Clyde. Your story, as you told it to&#13;
me, has some weak points in it. You&#13;
say, for instance, that you were with&#13;
Mr. Cameron almost continuously.&#13;
Now I'm not mentioning the little&#13;
while you were in here, early in the&#13;
evening, but during the last quarter&#13;
of an hour before you gave- the alarm,&#13;
you weren't with him, either."&#13;
I stared at the speaker for an instant&#13;
in absolute dumb amaze,&#13;
"I don't know why you say that," I&#13;
said, at length, more hurt than angered.&#13;
"I told you that from the moment&#13;
I last spoke to him, seated beside&#13;
him there on the after-deck, until&#13;
I turned from the rail and found&#13;
him gone, not more than two minutes&#13;
elapsed. And that was God's&#13;
truth."&#13;
"You said you were listening for&#13;
what you thought sounded like a motor&#13;
boat, didn't you?"&#13;
"I did."&#13;
"And you were leaning over the taffrail,&#13;
looking for it, weren't you?"&#13;
"I was."&#13;
"But you didn't see it?"&#13;
"No, I didn't See it; and I couldn't&#13;
hear It after the first few seconds."&#13;
The eaptain had fixed a gase on me&#13;
that seemed aimed to penetrate to my&#13;
soul's fiber. After my answer he was&#13;
silent a moment Then he said:&#13;
"Where were you, Mr. Clyde, when&#13;
that boat—motor, tug, or whatever&#13;
she was—crossed within ten feet of&#13;
the dory we are towing?"&#13;
Had he struck me in the face !&#13;
could not have been more dumfounded.&#13;
"What do, you mean?" were the only&#13;
words that came to me.&#13;
"I mean that the craft you have&#13;
been^alking about came up and went&#13;
astenr of us, ten or twelve minutls&#13;
before1 you gave the alarm that Mr.&#13;
Catneron bad vanished under your&#13;
eyes. I was on the bridge and saw it&#13;
myself—Just s bUck_|hape, without&#13;
lights, and, her exhaust muffled, Just&#13;
as you say* You tell me that you and&#13;
Mr. Cameron had been sitting there&#13;
for three hours, at least; that you&#13;
neartVoevefr belle strike; that It was&#13;
not moce than fifteen or twenty minutes&#13;
after thia that you.got up and&#13;
went to the rail, end that jou only&#13;
stood there two minutes."&#13;
went to the rail. My impression is f&#13;
that it was not. I'll admit it is mysterious.&#13;
The whole awful thing is&#13;
mysterious."&#13;
My candor seemed to relieve him.&#13;
"Well, Mr. Clyde," he said, with&#13;
equal sincerity, "maybe I was outspoken,&#13;
but I wanted to know what&#13;
you'd say.to the points that were&#13;
puszling me."&#13;
"You did perfectly right," I told&#13;
him. "As you have said, there must&#13;
be no secrets between ua." And then,&#13;
as-1 resumed my seat, I asked: "What&#13;
about the fisherman? He hasn't evaded&#13;
his guard, has he?"&#13;
MacLeod sat down again too.&#13;
"He's in where I put him, now," he&#13;
answered with a Bhade of reluctance,&#13;
"but—I'm not sure; it's almost aB&#13;
myBterious as the other—but I could&#13;
have sworn I saw him come up that&#13;
for'ard hatchway and go sneaking aft&#13;
while I was on the bridge."&#13;
"When was that?" I pressed, eagerly.&#13;
"About a quarter of twelve."&#13;
"What did you do?"&#13;
"Nothing, just then. I waited. And&#13;
while I was waiting I saw that black,&#13;
spooky craft, come out of the dark,&#13;
and go skimming astern of us. A&#13;
little after eight bells I came down&#13;
from the bridge—I stopped there for&#13;
just a minute to have a word with&#13;
Brandon when he came up—and then&#13;
I went myself to look after Johnson&#13;
and the man I'd set to watch him. The&#13;
fisherman was in a bunk sound asleep,&#13;
and the man swore he had been lying&#13;
there snoring, for the past two hours.&#13;
'Who was it came up the ladder twenty&#13;
minutes ago?' I asked. He looked&#13;
at me as if he thought I was gone&#13;
suddenly loony. 'Before the watch&#13;
changed?" he asked. I nodded. 'Not&#13;
a soul came or went,' he said, 'since I&#13;
been here.'"&#13;
"And the boat without lights?" I&#13;
questioned. "Did yon inquire about&#13;
her? Who else saw her?"&#13;
"I asked the lookouts; but—well,&#13;
no, Bir—and that's very strange to me&#13;
—neither of them saw her. I g&amp;ve&#13;
them both a rating. If they weren't&#13;
asleep I don't see how they could&#13;
have missed her."&#13;
The thing was growing more and&#13;
more baffling. MacLeod was the last&#13;
man to be accused of imaginative fancies.&#13;
He was thoroughly in earnest in&#13;
what he had told me; and yet for&#13;
neither of his statements had he the&#13;
smallest corroboration. For my own&#13;
part I was sure that, at the time he&#13;
mentioned, no vessel of any description&#13;
had passed anywhere near us.&#13;
"What did you make the craft out&#13;
to be?"&#13;
"Well, sir, I couldn't say exactly.&#13;
She was in sight only a minute, coming&#13;
in range of our own lights. She&#13;
looked more like a tug than anything&#13;
else;, but she had more speed than&#13;
any tug I ever saw. She hadn't the&#13;
lines of a yacht."&#13;
"She wasn't a pilot boat?"&#13;
"Oh, no, sir. New York pilots don't&#13;
cruise this far east, and the Boston&#13;
pilots wouldn't be so far away from&#13;
home either."&#13;
I offered the captain a cigar, which&#13;
he declined, filling his pipe in preference.&#13;
When I lighted a cigar myself,&#13;
I asked:&#13;
"I suppose you have some theory,&#13;
MacLeod. You don't seriously think&#13;
| l t was suicide?"&#13;
As usual he was slow to answer,&#13;
After a thoughtful second, he said:&#13;
"I'd be sorry to think that, Mr.&#13;
Clyde. Taking into consideration what&#13;
you told me about the threat, and&#13;
connecting that boat with it It&#13;
looks—" and then he paused, thoughtfill&#13;
again. "It's not in possibility," he&#13;
went on, after a second, "that they&#13;
could have plucked him off with a line.&#13;
But if that fellow I saw going aft—Oh,&#13;
Lord, no, sir! It's past me to see a&#13;
way out All the same, we are keeping&#13;
that craft in sight *o4 if we can&#13;
only get thirty knots out of the Sibylla&#13;
again, well find out what sire is and&#13;
what her business Is, before morning."&#13;
"1 told you \att of that end every&#13;
tell y«v* J re^turned^, irafklRj ^ort ^ tbw trutb\" I insisted, vene-&#13;
* not U&gt;n *JI}S?™^ l*ib* mint!* * --:,-.:-^:. ,ir. •••. t.-n&#13;
w e e n Mr. Cameron baa "And yet" h# retorted accosingl&#13;
vtog • serk* ^ . ^ t s s i i f l g ; ^ * T eV-ei«*l setts J m * struck beletter*,&#13;
Tb^ ftit one fene tftfa **•,#**. tkokktim"^^. v,- , ,&#13;
today; and In Hthis wsa | kad sot thought of the time., la&#13;
the date lor the alimax." my panic It had not occurred to me,&#13;
•Today, the letter tf»tedVMr. At tern they work; far dock. At eigkt&#13;
WWuM14is»pte&lt;r.7 i * 8 | the watch hadvt*«»tee% , . ,&#13;
*atiss fnleejMtlc you^cawftts, «MT 4«*, fellow," I exclaimed Hs»&#13;
attft B*ifc»xjfr*iW©w*l 4¾ 'fig, *you certainly cannot tot l i |&#13;
in thought &gt; v ' ""' "' "^ merit suspect toe et oompllcity:M&#13;
tt't odd," lie said, grevetyy &lt; Be stood up, toor imaesturbaWe. '&#13;
CHAPTER X.&#13;
A Woman of Intuition.&#13;
Ill tidings, always a heavy burden,&#13;
never .weighed more .heavily on any&#13;
one than, on me that • dismal, rainy&#13;
Sunday morning, on which I stepped&#13;
from the S,ibyllafe Isunch.to the stone&#13;
. I water step* of Cragnolt. For two days&#13;
y, wo bad searched the bays and Inlets&#13;
from ProvTBcetown to Plymouth and&#13;
fiotn ttttsco»*drto Providence; qtxes-&#13;
' tioning at*" •very pier' ami landing&#13;
stage; making iiKjairy in every town&#13;
smd hamlet; but w K t e t fetUmbteror&#13;
of profit tot our n*m6 &lt;** tliat Waok&#13;
craft, with dimmed light* and mufled&#13;
•ttgine*, ibad emuled otsf pursuit on&#13;
the sight ef&gt; Ganges) V4iis9$ejjaftCf&#13;
so for forty-eight kours&#13;
She had baJNd «pr quest. Ne&#13;
I knew her; no one had seen herv • &gt;t|&#13;
^Jge**w**t those thfiike amnietoOd, 1 As for that shaken, frayed, pallid&#13;
weak and wasted, and with as little&#13;
brains as sinew. So, with enough&#13;
money for a new mast and sail, we&#13;
had put him and hiB dory ashore at&#13;
our firpt landing, and had forthwith&#13;
forgotten him.&#13;
MacLeod had been inclined to continue&#13;
the search, but I argued that&#13;
any further efforts in that direction&#13;
would be only a waste of time. The&#13;
craft we were looking for might have&#13;
come from any one of a thousand&#13;
places and returned to any one of a&#13;
thousand more. Some more effective,&#13;
general and far-reaching atepB must&#13;
be taken, I held, and taken quickly.&#13;
Indeed I felt now that to keep secret&#13;
longor the conspiracy, as indicated in&#13;
those mystic letters, would be little&#13;
short of criminal. The aid of the police&#13;
and the press must be invoked at&#13;
once, and nothing left undone to trace&#13;
the crime to ItB source.&#13;
But my first and most onerous task&#13;
was to acquaint Evelyn GrayBon with&#13;
the facts as I knew them. How I&#13;
shrank from that duty is beyond anything&#13;
I can put into words. I know&#13;
it would have been far easier for me&#13;
to have carried her definite news of&#13;
her uncle's death. What I had to&#13;
tell was horrible in its stark obscurity.&#13;
And yet, If I could have foreseen just&#13;
what was to follow, I might have&#13;
spared myself a goodly share of distress.&#13;
I imagined I knew Evelyn Grayson,&#13;
before this. I thought I had sounded&#13;
the profundities" of her forWtude and&#13;
courage on the night that I spread before&#13;
her and read with her that third&#13;
and last letter. But my fancy did her&#13;
an.injustice. She wa3 even more of&#13;
a woman than I dreamed.&#13;
Recently I chanced upon these lines&#13;
by Thomas Dunn English, which must&#13;
have been inspired by such a one as&#13;
she:&#13;
Bo much &lt;• clear,&#13;
Though little dangers they may fear.&#13;
When greater perils men environ.&#13;
Then women show a front of iron;&#13;
And, gentle in their manner, they&#13;
Do bold things in a quiet way.&#13;
Evelyn Grayson did a bold thing in&#13;
a quiet way that morning. I have not&#13;
yet forgotten how marble white she&#13;
WBB, and yet how bravely she came,&#13;
with springing step and lifted chin&#13;
and fearless eyes. I had waited her&#13;
coming in the music room, with its&#13;
score of reminders of happy evenings&#13;
in which he had participated. The&#13;
chair he usually chose, in the corner,&#13;
near the great bow window against&#13;
which the east wind was now driving&#13;
the rain in gusty splashes, took on a&#13;
pathos which moved me to weakness.&#13;
The Baudelaire lyric, spread openpaged&#13;
upon the music rack of the piano,&#13;
stirred memories scarcely less&#13;
harrowing,. A photograph, an ash&#13;
tray, a paper knife, all commonplace&#13;
objects of themselves, but so linked&#13;
to him by association,! became, suddenly,&#13;
instruments of emotional torture.&#13;
In this environment, under these&#13;
influences, I rose to meet her, wordless.&#13;
Yet my expression and attitude&#13;
must have spoken loudly enough to&#13;
confirm the dread that was in her&#13;
heart, for even before she spoke 1 was&#13;
sure that she knew. And then she&#13;
had taken ray two outstretched hands&#13;
in hers and raised her brave eyes to&#13;
mine, and low-voiced, but sure and&#13;
tremorlesB, was saying:&#13;
"I feared it, Philip. From the very&#13;
first, I feared it."&#13;
And when I told her all, to the&#13;
smallest detail, it was as though she.&#13;
were the man and I the woman; for&#13;
the recital had been for me a very&#13;
painful confession of my own incompetence,&#13;
and its conclusion left me&#13;
more nervously unstrung than at any&#13;
time since the night of the strange&#13;
catastrophe. With what heroic fortitude&#13;
she heard the narrative may best |&#13;
be indicated by the statement that&#13;
throughout It all she sat calmly attentive,&#13;
but unquestioning, and with no&#13;
sign of emotion beyond her continued&#13;
pallor and a recurrent tensing of her&#13;
small, white hands. At the end I&#13;
leaned forward and* with left elbow on&#13;
knee rested my forehead in my palm.&#13;
She sat beside me on the same settee;&#13;
and now she drew closer, and laying&#13;
Her cool right hand over my own disengaged&#13;
one, began stroking my hair&#13;
with her left. For a full minute she&#13;
said' nothing, then, 1A soothing accents:&#13;
"I am glad you didn't find the boat&#13;
That means he Is on It. If you.had&#13;
found it, it would have been son* ordinary&#13;
thing having no connection&#13;
with this affair, whatever;* : It was odd reasoning, but.very feminine,&#13;
and in an esoteric way, forceful.&#13;
'But you made one mis take, Philip,*&#13;
I had not expected to find such development&#13;
of intuition regarding worldly&#13;
matters in one so young, and so&#13;
fresh from conventual seclusion. And&#13;
then her judgment seemed to keep&#13;
pace' with her auguries; for when I&#13;
Bpoke of Inviting the aid of detectives&#13;
and the newspapers, she begged me&#13;
to consider.&#13;
"I am afraid for him," she pursued&#13;
gravely. "Publicity might mean death.&#13;
If they discover they are being nought,&#13;
they may murder him. Somehow, I&#13;
fe-el he is still alive; and so we must&#13;
do nothing that will incite them to&#13;
further violence."&#13;
"But," I returned, conscious of the&#13;
force of her argument, yet failing to&#13;
see how this paution could very well&#13;
be axercised, "we can't find him without&#13;
seeking." wNo, but we can seek him in secret&#13;
The newspapers must not tell&#13;
ths world."&#13;
"The police would of course tell the&#13;
newspapers," I added.&#13;
"We can do some things, without&#13;
the police," was her next assertion.&#13;
"There are some things that I can do;&#13;
and there are more that you can do."&#13;
She was thoughtful for a moment, and&#13;
then: "I am so sorry about Peter&#13;
Johnson! You should never have lost&#13;
sight of him."&#13;
"We gave him money and God&#13;
speed," I reminded her.&#13;
"Captain MacLeod must go back&#13;
there, where you left him. Where&#13;
fwas It? Sinsconset? He must trace&#13;
him. His trail won't lead to Gloucester,&#13;
I'm sure cf that."&#13;
My self-esteem was not being vigorously&#13;
stimulated by the young lady&#13;
at this juncture. Indeed, I was being&#13;
made to feel more and more my strategical&#13;
lirferiority.&#13;
"And I," she continued, with the&#13;
methodical expediency of a commander-&#13;
in-chief, so curiously inapposite in&#13;
one so young and Inexperienced as&#13;
she: "and I shall find out about those&#13;
letters."&#13;
"Find out what?" I asked in astonishment.&#13;
"Find out what manner of man&#13;
wrote them," she amplified.&#13;
"But how can you?" I inquired.&#13;
"That seems a pretty big undertaking&#13;
of itself, for one so small."&#13;
"I have, thought of a way," she declared,&#13;
noncommlttally.&#13;
"And what am I to do?" was my&#13;
next question, feeling miserably small&#13;
beside this efficient child.&#13;
"You must give me the letter you&#13;
have, and help me look for the others."&#13;
The first part of the command was&#13;
easy enough of obedience; for&#13;
At this 1 raised my head a**&#13;
tod her with something, lis* ssfn^sje-{that ^fternooc, Just *• i w e * * • * * *&#13;
ready to run for my trote* I hoard&#13;
Bvelyn'e voice over the t a b o o s , I&#13;
f*&#13;
fisherman, Pster Johnson, h« appeared&#13;
below, seriat than above, oue&gt;J&#13;
pKrtou. ft my knowWswoT men went&#13;
tat anything he waa W M f e r i o ! both&#13;
W ^ * 1 * y j'eJe^g^^el^^eV e^gg ^^gge^g* ep^s^s^sa-, ge^sejs^r e^gj|Vgg4gejgg^ ^H^^RP',&#13;
i&#13;
iment.-&#13;
: "He was one of them," e&#13;
hi a tone of eonviction,&#13;
"How can you say tbatrvi ftefcad*&#13;
little netted. It annoyed m» tbst&#13;
ouid he so positive, knowing «e&#13;
• V the msn than that whtah 1&#13;
«aoet s t o O M l f g r n ,&#13;
For sometime past the Canadian&#13;
government has had surveyors at&#13;
work platting new areas for the accommodation&#13;
ofj the largely increasing&#13;
number of settlers coming in to&#13;
occupy the agricultural districts of&#13;
the three prairie provinces. There&#13;
were those connected with the work&#13;
of securing settlers for western Canada&#13;
who laut spring prophesied that&#13;
there would te as many as 175.0OQ&#13;
new Bettlera from the United States&#13;
to Canada during the present year,&#13;
and there were those who doubted&#13;
that the previous year's figures of&#13;
132,000 could bo increased. Recent&#13;
computation made by the officials of&#13;
the immigration branch at Ottawa&#13;
show that the largest estimates made&#13;
by officials will be 'beaten and that&#13;
the 200,000 mark from the United&#13;
States will be reached. As great an&#13;
increase will be shown In the figures&#13;
of those Who will reach Canada from&#13;
other countries this year. The results&#13;
of the year's work in Canadian&#13;
immigration will give upward of a&#13;
total of 400,000 souls.&#13;
But this is not to be wondered at&#13;
when It Is realized what is offering In&#13;
the three prairie provinces and also&#13;
in the coast province of British Columbia,&#13;
which is also bidding strongly&#13;
and successfully, too, for a certain&#13;
class of settler, the settler who&#13;
wishes to go into mixed /farming or&#13;
fruit raising. When the central portion&#13;
of this province is opened up by&#13;
the railway now being constructed&#13;
there will be large areas of splendid&#13;
land available for the settler.&#13;
Reference has frequently been made&#13;
of late by those interested in developing&#13;
the American west to the large&#13;
numbers who are going to Canada,&#13;
high officials in some of the railways&#13;
being amongst the number to give&#13;
voice to the fact. The more these&#13;
facts become known the more will&#13;
people seek the reasons and these&#13;
are best given when one reads what&#13;
prominent people say of it. What the&#13;
farmer thinks of It and what his&#13;
friends say of It. James A. Flaherty,&#13;
eupreme knight of the Knights of Columbus,&#13;
was In western Canada a&#13;
short time ago. He says:&#13;
"If I were a young man I would&#13;
sell out my Interests in less than two&#13;
months and come right to the Canadian&#13;
Northwest, where so many opportunities&#13;
abound."—Advertisement.&#13;
Patriotism.&#13;
A quaint little Incident Is related by&#13;
a French war correspondent, which&#13;
sheds light on the enthusiasm and&#13;
nervousness with which the Greeks&#13;
entered upon their war with Turkey.&#13;
When the mobilization orders reached&#13;
the little town of Chalkls, all owners&#13;
of horses and mules hastened to comply,&#13;
but there were no soldiers to escort&#13;
the animals to Athens, where&#13;
they were urgently needed, the military&#13;
being already on the frontier.&#13;
Thereupon the mayor of Chalkls set&#13;
an example, which was followed by&#13;
the j two or three of the oldest lawyers,&#13;
letter was in my pocket at the mo- pchool teachers, doctors and hotel&#13;
ment. But my assistance in searching keepers. All these notable and&#13;
for the first two communications was , learned men put their dignity en one&#13;
more energetic than successful. To-; Bi&lt;je, ami turned themselves for the&#13;
gather we ransacked desks, bureaus, , nonce Into grooms and stable lads.&#13;
tables, closets, trunks, clothes. In- After two days' Journeying they&#13;
deed, every possible biding place both gravely marched in procession through&#13;
at Cragholt and on the Sibylla was t n e p r in c ip a i streets of Athens, leadcarefully&#13;
and systematically delved i n g t n e j r t,eagts, and nobody laughed,&#13;
into and exhausted without reward.&#13;
Either Cameron had destroyed the letters,&#13;
or he had them on his person&#13;
when he vanished from the yacht.&#13;
At Evelyn's request, however, I&#13;
wrote copies of those two strangelycouched,&#13;
malevolent epistles, as nearly&#13;
as I could remember them; and&#13;
save, perhaps, for possibly two or&#13;
three verbal errors they were, I think,&#13;
quite accurate.&#13;
"And now," I asked again, "what am&#13;
I to do?"&#13;
It was nearly midnight, and I was&#13;
leaving her, my car waiting in the&#13;
sopping driveway to carry me borne.&#13;
"You are not to worry any more&#13;
than you possibly can help," she told&#13;
me, with a brave little smile, "for we&#13;
are going to succeed. And tomorrow&#13;
you must go to your office, and keep&#13;
very, very silent abort what has happened.&#13;
And then you are to come to&#13;
me again in the evening, and I will&#13;
tell you nil I have learned&#13;
With which she gave me her band&#13;
to kiss, in the odd little French way&#13;
she had—a way that could scarcely&#13;
have been a part of her convent teaching.&#13;
As I come to review these matters&#13;
now, It seems singular that I should&#13;
have so readily consented to be guld&#13;
ed by this girl's will In a case of such&#13;
grave Importance; yet I cannot but&#13;
believe there was something provlden&#13;
tial both In her assumption of leader&#13;
ship and In my own unquestioning ac&#13;
quiescence. For the' day of office&#13;
work and silence, which she enjoined&#13;
was exactly what 1 needed to restore&#13;
my nerves to their normal tension. It&#13;
was, in fact, a sort of counteMrrltaat, I&#13;
«Mfc ,~- _ . _ — „ which brought me up standing, with a&#13;
she went on. "You should not boveJ revived self-conn dence and recuperatm&#13;
t that nsherman, Peter Jnftwua, gov" | « d energy&#13;
which, Indeed, there was no reason to&#13;
do.&#13;
I '.to when, a little before five o'clock&#13;
was fairly tingling with g j i r f j ^ ihju&#13;
game; and her request tav^gJIoji Professor&#13;
Griffin, the expert.% Oriental&#13;
literature, who occupied a o«4fr fe Cc*&#13;
taabla college, and Uv#4 a&#13;
;ie«t« book from tie Oreel&#13;
l i t * WM 0 wQ4eoa» o»JI W&#13;
•-tin . .X . f¾. i ' . ^ ^ ' ; ^ * • • • 0 , , ' W , , l ^&#13;
Effective Personalities.&#13;
When you bring yourself to realize&#13;
how many different kinds of effective&#13;
personalities there are in the world,&#13;
you will have your own troubles trying&#13;
to pick out the wrong kind.&#13;
• ;«* &gt;,&#13;
••%m&#13;
Didn't Mesn to Say It&#13;
One beard ,an awkward speech at an&#13;
evening party last Friday. It was&#13;
one of those things a fellow says bo*&#13;
fore he thinks and then wishes he&#13;
hadn't. One of the gentlemen retired&#13;
with a smaH group to the smoking&#13;
room and didn't return until the lady&#13;
he was escorting grew anxious about&#13;
him.&#13;
"Where have you been?" she asked,&#13;
when she found him at last&#13;
"You must excuse me," he answered.&#13;
"I have been listening to a&#13;
very clever man for the last hour."&#13;
"Then 'I'm afraid you'll find my.oen*:". •£;*'&#13;
vernation rather dull." *&gt;**•*,*&#13;
"Not at all, not at an. One^ g s $ r V ?&#13;
too much of. that sort of thing; y e * - ^ '&#13;
know, and it's a relief to—er—that—.&#13;
Is—"&#13;
u'-1 "i&#13;
•v&lt;: V,V'&#13;
We left him floundering—©eir*' ^ /&#13;
tend Plain Dealer. .• •,-. .. .v&#13;
( -•!..&amp; #.:$&lt;?$*•'&#13;
tf'-&lt;8'-1$Xfa\&#13;
Sound.&#13;
Hub (angiily)-Heret . W l M | t ; ^ . ^&#13;
yoomeai! by waking me out , . 0 ^ ¾ ¾ ¾&#13;
sound sleep? ;...,•, v :., ;• ;^l...&#13;
Sftfi'&#13;
fWf)&#13;
;- j,s''&lt; W&#13;
Wlfe-HBscanso the M W ^ : ^ % ^ ^ ^ M ^ : ; \&#13;
distressing.—Boston Trknserlbt, ' ;\p?#k^- ."&#13;
Bobbie's •aroosni..***% traseimee*^&#13;
The visitor, "talking -'down^jo*;:*M*b74?&#13;
child beautifully, remarked.; ,, y%''v&#13;
••And you know, dear, tay fJrtk** : wM-li^ll^o^^a^rwltf,,,••l*^''^¢ w.'*-'*-^&#13;
'X&#13;
. 1. . A - ^ - .&#13;
'So ws* JftyvgreJaflmthw-" rMtfteoy&#13;
Bobby; Jtatte*"tf &amp;*?•&amp;*&amp;****.•&gt;" *};M'"""*''"{®'&#13;
"But my -fathers '4ee» ^wew -ee^- • • ^ .¾^&#13;
ftured "&#13;
"Gee!" cried Bobby, ovite uuintp&#13;
m i s s u d ore* fcQQrnfvk, "wh* ejjf;fa&#13;
r ksi lei Mmeerf be eaught bv Oft sfr&#13;
t e m y t My " " ^ '&#13;
• f c $ t ' V ^&#13;
• . . ' # • • ' •&#13;
$ ' •&#13;
I &amp;&#13;
• #&#13;
Pv&gt;&#13;
&amp;&#13;
1 «&#13;
• . . $&#13;
If the power proposition is bothering you, call and let us&#13;
explain the merits of the I H C line of gasoline engines. We&#13;
have an I H C gasoline engine to fill every need — tractors,&#13;
portable, stationary, air and water-cooled. In case you want&#13;
kerosene, gas, or alcohol attachments, we will be glad to supply&#13;
you. If you have a difficult power proposition to solve, call&#13;
and we will assist you to figure it out We not only have the&#13;
best engine on the market, but we have the size and style&#13;
you need. Call and look over our line, and whether you buy&#13;
or not we will be glad to see you. We want to number you&#13;
as one of our friends. Call today and get a catalogue. It's&#13;
yours for the asking, and we are anxious for you to have i t&#13;
WE DETEST PARASITES&#13;
Feeling of Inatlnotive Revulsion 1«&#13;
Justified, for Thsy Are Carrier*&#13;
of Disease.&#13;
The fooling of instinctive revulsion&#13;
against parasites of all kinda which&#13;
eharacterioea humanity generally, and&#13;
which la due to something mnoh more&#13;
than the mere pain or annoyance that&#13;
their bites might inflict, become more&#13;
interesting as further discoveries show&#13;
the role of Insects in the spread of&#13;
disease.&#13;
Unfortunately this natural abhorrence&#13;
has not been enough to protect&#13;
man under conditions of poverty and&#13;
uncleanliness from harboring such parasites,&#13;
and now thoBe who understand&#13;
how much more than a mere personal&#13;
annoyance is in question from the exlstence&#13;
of parasites most take up the&#13;
problem to eradicate them.&#13;
The possibility of the bedbug conveying&#13;
relapsing fever, typhoid and&#13;
leprosy has been suggested and apparently&#13;
there is no parasite of man&#13;
that may not be a mode of disease&#13;
conveyance. Flies, fleas, mosquitoes&#13;
and bugs not only are all under suspicion,&#13;
but most of them are also&#13;
actually demonstrated as ordinary and&#13;
frequent conveyors of diseases of various&#13;
kinds.&#13;
Health authorities must now take&#13;
up the problem of getting rid of insect&#13;
parasites in order to stamp out&#13;
disease. — From the Journal of the&#13;
American Medical Association.&#13;
MILK INSPECTION IS NO FUN&#13;
SOUTH IOSCO.&#13;
Toe Watters brothers and families&#13;
ate Xoaas dinner at Tim Isbam's.&#13;
Mr. andV-tlr*. 0. Wilkioson of Dakota&#13;
are visiting ber parents, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs Albert Ward at ore&amp;ent.&#13;
Ur and lira. Wm. Usskey eater-&#13;
Uined, Mr. and Mr*. B, W. Caskey of&#13;
Piainfieid, E d . Secor and family ol&#13;
Marion and Nick Burley and family&#13;
of luia place at tbeir borne Xmas.&#13;
The Misses Katbryn and Beatrice&#13;
Lam born are visiting tbeir sisters in&#13;
I'mcknsy at present.&#13;
Gladys and J. D. Roberts spent&#13;
t ittir vacation with tbeir grandparents&#13;
neat- Webberville,&#13;
Mr. and M-s. vvm Caakey of Anderson&#13;
and Bert Roberts and family&#13;
ateXmas dinner at tbe borne of T.&#13;
Wainwrigbt.&#13;
The, Wattars Brothers are entertiining&#13;
tbeir cousin from Dakota at&#13;
present&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. David Smith of Detroit&#13;
spent Xm&amp;s with relatives here.&#13;
.filter erawttiD fc.w lit&#13;
MENS BOYS SUITS ./1&#13;
OVERCOATS LADIES&#13;
MISSES COATS&#13;
To Reduce, We «Uail&#13;
Following* Diaooiinttt:&#13;
per cent Reduction&#13;
»n all M e n s and Boy,ar S u i t s&#13;
( B o y s $ 5 Blue S e r g e Except**})&#13;
20 per cent Reduction&#13;
On all M e n s and B o y s cloth o v e r c o a t s&#13;
$.&#13;
Resolve To Advertise&#13;
We believe our advertisers have&#13;
been getting their share of the&#13;
trade the past year. Some of them&#13;
bote been making an extra effort&#13;
to attract customers and the same&#13;
qff^taoxitimied will bring results.&#13;
By advertising and then having&#13;
the goods ty back it ap, neither&#13;
the parcelsjpost, the rural free delivery,&#13;
the city stores nor any of&#13;
the elements that the country&#13;
merchant has learned to look upon&#13;
with apprehension are likely to&#13;
hurt our advertisers. If the merchant&#13;
does not avail himsef of the&#13;
opportunity, where lies the btame?&#13;
It is a good idea to resolve, at the&#13;
beginning of year,to spend a reasonable&#13;
sum in -advertising your&#13;
JSlP^IJLas&#13;
w.&#13;
for&#13;
Earl Tupper is working for&#13;
W. Barnard.&#13;
Get one of those $15 suits&#13;
$12 rit Dancer's.&#13;
Rachel and Ella Fitch spent&#13;
Sunday with Gertrude White..&#13;
Joe Fitch spent tbe fore part of&#13;
last week with friends iu Marion.&#13;
£. L. Markey of Battle Creek&#13;
i was in town the first of the week.&#13;
J Men's $10 overcoats now $8 at&#13;
! Dancer's.&#13;
* $ r&#13;
• ^ • '&#13;
W. Ksunedy Jr. and Harold&#13;
business and to oarfr it through Swarthocrt were in Ann Arbor&#13;
the whole year. Insults will just- Tuesday.&#13;
ity tbe resolutions.&#13;
r^rr __ amHM MaSSe;&#13;
w,&#13;
FOUND—lo tbe village of Pincknej&#13;
a sura of money. Owner can have&#13;
by proving property and paying lor&#13;
this notice. J as. M. Harris, ltf&#13;
FOB SALE— Fixtures tor a Round&#13;
Oak stove No. 18 Inquire of Will&#13;
Miler. Its'.&#13;
Honey tor sale,&#13;
Swarttioot.&#13;
Inquire of Silas E.&#13;
It8&#13;
FOUND—A keyring containing five&#13;
keys. Owner can have by calling at&#13;
ibis office and paying tor this adv,&#13;
JfOB SALE—House and two lots&#13;
qoire of Mr*. Addie Pottertoo.&#13;
InltS.&#13;
ik:.&#13;
-M*r&#13;
a&gt;^'.: ;6&amp;'.&#13;
MM?&#13;
FOB HALE—114 acres ot land on Ibe&#13;
installment plan, small payment&#13;
down and long terms for balance,&#13;
Would take small payment in village&#13;
propsrtv. Address box 695,&#13;
Howell, Mich. It3&#13;
Left*! Advartlatng&#13;
• • • ' - : • : &gt; &lt;&#13;
^,-&#13;
Qtarteof Michigan, tat probate ooarifar&#13;
Si taacoanty of Lmafrteas-Ai a MIIOD of nJd&#13;
UMTl bSaal teo PraSaaiMM 1» tho Villas* of&#13;
Bewail la saleoseaty on the SO* *a» of DecaBber&#13;
a. a. tits. PreuBt, Boa. Aitsar A. Montage*&#13;
Jasfiot Probate. Iatasauttarottb* atfat* of&#13;
K.M. COLBY,&#13;
&lt; \&#13;
Uwb Colby bavtaf IM It N U court bU&#13;
petition srtyiag toat s owtata iastrunent ia&#13;
Mttag. parnorHaf tote ta» last wfll and tetfejaaat&#13;
oT •aioTdaanrta, aow an a» tat arid coert&#13;
- «e*aiaittet to probata and taat tbe esaUBlitra*&#13;
&gt;&lt; ;f MM of nel* ertete tefreatei to UamaUorto N M&#13;
" ether tattabls poreon&#13;
:--• it isotaenitaet tte etta day of Jaanarjr, A. aHIS st taa o&gt;elaek la taa fofaaooa, at MMpre*&#13;
•tU&amp;HU^.1 " *•** **"* —&#13;
aiortbaroreerad Ojatpabtts aotioa taanaf&#13;
bypebnastleaef a espy of tats ardtr&#13;
A: ppiiTwai aaniaiajf t iwata axavwus toiaUdar of&#13;
_ ^J ~.J ^aaaBiBB^aa^^Bff ai^v^P ^^sa^iwaa^a^^Baa a i v w a % s aoaaty. 'us&#13;
Incident Showing How Hard K la to&#13;
Force Sanitary Rules on Dirty&#13;
People.&#13;
The trials and tribulations of a milk&#13;
Inspector trying to force Insanitary&#13;
people to live according to sanitary&#13;
rules are shown In the Issue of the&#13;
Healthologlat, the official organ of&#13;
the Milwaukee health department.&#13;
The story follows:&#13;
A Milwaukee milk inspector during&#13;
a farm inspection, came upon a place&#13;
hopelessly filthy, disorderly and run&#13;
down. A motherly person with a big&#13;
heart, but firm and weird convictions,&#13;
listened to the young man's suggestions.&#13;
Then looking over her spectacles&#13;
pityingly, she said:&#13;
"Boy, my mother was ninety-seven&#13;
years old when she died. She was&#13;
dirtier than I am, and lived In a&#13;
dirtier house and drank dirtier milk.&#13;
If she could stand It I guess there,&#13;
ain't no'reason why I and the city&#13;
folks that get milk from this farm&#13;
can't stand It too."&#13;
And not being able to answer that&#13;
argument, the milk Inspector left her&#13;
—kindly withal, but yet voicing her&#13;
Indignation over "them there new&#13;
tangled ideas of cleanliness.**&#13;
FLAIHriELD&#13;
Mr. George Montague visited at&#13;
A»hel Duttons last Thursday,&#13;
Jetues (jaskey and wife ate Xraas&#13;
dinner at the borne ot Ira Kings.&#13;
Mra. Jernsba Isham is vUiting at&#13;
Mrs. Tait VanSyckle s »n Marion.&#13;
Mrs- Mary Bristol visited her mother&#13;
Mrs. Nettie Kellog last week.&#13;
Harvey Dyer and family visited at&#13;
the home of Geo. Bullis in Howell&#13;
last week,&#13;
J, G, Sayies and family of Stockspent&#13;
last Wednesday at Edgar Van-&#13;
Syckle's.&#13;
Frank Walters and family spent&#13;
Snnday with Wm. Walters.&#13;
Miss Irene Frazier is home from&#13;
Howell for her Xtnas vacation.&#13;
\&#13;
pep cent Reduction&#13;
On all L&gt;ad!es and M i s s e s $ a n c y and&#13;
Black Cloth C o a t s&#13;
Coii'l C M Notes&#13;
Morning service in tbe Cong'l&#13;
church Sunday January 5th at 10&#13;
a. m.. Subject, "Religion, What&#13;
It Is, What It Is Not." Sunday&#13;
School immediately after morning&#13;
service.&#13;
OQf«ltaoTaoEeO&amp;Vty t foitc .LHirTiBGsAMHoa.t .h e Probat-e C**o*u*r*t* f wot&#13;
- JAMU OUNSryQHAM, Paul I 111 *&#13;
aaviat Data appointed, b/&#13;
at aaW eomt.ii aailaUiiiniioa&#13;
ro**il4syakaa«fflar •**«{*•*&#13;
^^a* ja^^aaa^aa^a^^aja a^a# 9w* ara™a*a» a a a j i w a ^ m&#13;
9 ajaaafc^sj ^pa&gt; ai awsaaapaw ^^w ^ava&gt; 9^^^*&#13;
imtiat aam aitaH ta irtlai It&#13;
| *aa«H paPi.M a.»waH a&#13;
Rachel Fitch who is teaching in&#13;
Fowlerviile is home for a couple&#13;
of weeks.&#13;
Try a sack of Dexter Milling&#13;
Go's. Best Floor on sale at Monk's&#13;
Bros. 47tf&#13;
F. W. Wilcox of Jackson has exchanged&#13;
his 100 acre farm near&#13;
here with John H. Walsh of Detroit&#13;
for property in that city.&#13;
On Sunday evenings in the&#13;
Pinckney Methodist church, A&#13;
series of address*} will bejdelivered&#13;
by the pastor ou some o&lt;&#13;
the events which will transpire&#13;
daring the closing days of this&#13;
age.&#13;
Tbe first meeting of the Teacher's&#13;
Reading Cirole will be held in&#13;
the Pinckney high school room at&#13;
2 p. m. Satarday,Janaary 11,1913.&#13;
Subject for discussion, "Phelphs&#13;
and his Teachers." All progress&#13;
ive and prospective teachers are&#13;
earnestly requested to attend ami&#13;
enroll as members. The meeting&#13;
will be conducted by Supt. H. D.&#13;
MaoDongall. Books can be secured&#13;
of the conductor. Come&#13;
prepared for a lively discussion of&#13;
the subject.&#13;
Boy's $5 suits now H ^ D a n -&#13;
cer's.&#13;
NORTH HAMBOT3.&#13;
Albert Benham bas returned to Ann&#13;
Arbor after spending Xmas with bit&#13;
parents,&#13;
Mrs. C Carpenter was an Ann Arbor&#13;
and Ypsilanti visitor Tamrdsy.&#13;
D. J. Bennttt and family visited st&#13;
the borne of bis brother, Ralph, Sonday.&#13;
OrviUt Nash and family spent Xoiai&#13;
at tM boae of ajs parents.&#13;
The psttfHs of this vicinity have&#13;
a waiting room at&#13;
itaatwt wtUBwataatb* OresaiBg.&#13;
It, A. Davis tad wife spent Christwita&#13;
ralativae m HowalU&#13;
Jaisai Bnrroncbs aa4 wife vititeo&#13;
hisststto, Mrs. Oampbelt, of Brighton,&#13;
aUaniaalt. '&#13;
Definition of the Baau.&#13;
A beau Is one who arranges Ms&#13;
curled locks gracefully, who ever&#13;
smells of balms and cinnamon,&#13;
who hums the aoags of the Nile and&#13;
Cadis, who throws bis sleek arms into&#13;
various attitudes, who idles away the&#13;
whole day among the chairs of the&#13;
ladles, who Is ever whispering In soma&#13;
one's ear, who reads little bllletdotoc&#13;
from this quarter and that, and writes'&#13;
them in return; who avoids ruffling&#13;
his dress by contact with his neightor's&#13;
aleeve, who knows with whom&#13;
everybody Is in love; who flutters from&#13;
feast to feast; who can recount exactly&#13;
the pedigree of Hirplnus. What do&#13;
you tell me, Is this a beau, Cotllus?&#13;
Then a beau, Cotllus, is a very trifling&#13;
thing.&#13;
Filling the House.&#13;
The theatrical man just in off the&#13;
road waB recounting to the New Tork&#13;
manager bis qualifications for a boi&#13;
office post.&#13;
"I don't see that you are any better&#13;
than a dozen other men I can take my&#13;
pick from," said the manager. "You&#13;
say you can sell tickets. So can they.&#13;
Nobody can sell tickets If people don't&#13;
come to buy."&#13;
"No, they can't," said the man, "hut&#13;
I have the knack of seating people so&#13;
an audience of 60 people will look&#13;
Uke 400, and the house will never&#13;
look empty."&#13;
"There's a good deal in that," said&#13;
the manager^ and he gave the man&#13;
the Job.&#13;
How Ha Treated Her.&#13;
A certain osteopath was treating a&#13;
young woman who had very weak&#13;
ankles and wrists. As she lived in a:&#13;
town quite a distance from his ewn.&#13;
city, he waa forced to leave the city&#13;
Saturday of each week and go to the&#13;
town In which the yoong woman&#13;
lived, give her the treatment Sunday,&#13;
and return- to the office Monday. A&#13;
friend once asked the osteopath how&#13;
lie had arranged to give the young&#13;
woman the treatment for her ankles&#13;
and wrists when she Uvefl at such a&#13;
distance, and the osteopath replMt&#13;
"Oh, I go out and treat her week&#13;
,M—Lippincott'a Magaatae,&#13;
Ladies $7,50 Caracule Goats now&#13;
16. at Dancer's, Stock bridge.&#13;
20 per cent Reduction&#13;
On all Ladies and M i s s e s Plush and&#13;
Caracule Goats&#13;
Liberal reductions on dress goods, underwear, fur and&#13;
fur lined coats, etc.&#13;
These redaction*, mean more to tb*) purchaser than do&#13;
3 3 | per cent discount on city prices.&#13;
C a r P a r e P a i d o n $ 1 5 . P u r c h a s e s o r M o r e&#13;
W. J. DANCER &amp; COMPANY&#13;
S t o c k b r t d g e , M i c h .&#13;
NOTE:—Tbe parcels post takes effect January 1st and&#13;
we are prepared to take care of all mail orders. Our&#13;
stocks are complete aud our service will be prompt. Phone&#13;
or write us.&#13;
CO . c P : o-&#13;
BEGIN 1913 RIGHT&#13;
MR. MERCHANT&#13;
k&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
PartlemeMefy Law.&#13;
No one man Is responsible for parliamentary&#13;
law. It was' horn of do*&#13;
liberate exigencies. Ms nUes, preo*&#13;
eestaaad&#13;
In statuses&#13;
m&amp; Madttog when * deliberative bea&gt;&#13;
anaosaseoaahethemeo. Most of the&#13;
rales now accepted had their origin&#13;
^av —*-. —a*„#u - -&#13;
l S e a ^ f l B a S l e W l t&#13;
been made to meet the seeds of&#13;
legislative tioaisa.&#13;
weremaeehiahe&#13;
parliamentary law stowing frost the&#13;
simple procedure of the Anglo Satan&#13;
town mo* t»tl*&#13;
liberettve awetsneflr of&#13;
You&#13;
May&#13;
Talk&#13;
to One&#13;
Man&#13;
Bet an&#13;
this paper talks to flat&#13;
whoU community.&#13;
Catch the Ideat&#13;
:%\&#13;
'•&lt;' • January 1, 1913, Means Parcel&#13;
Post. Are you ready for It? Have&#13;
i • . . . .&#13;
you made arrangements with the&#13;
printer to advertise? This Space&#13;
,*'~,&#13;
&gt;Z*«:X-&#13;
'f' •jfc&#13;
S&#13;
• • : / /&#13;
:'*VV&#13;
T ' l •V f ,&#13;
&gt;'ir\''v ;".:•&#13;
aaa ^-:¾^1&#13;
-NdV r-•!•„••&#13;
&amp;';.,.WW ''A*' 1&#13;
• v • . . . • " / • * : • • ' , • • • • • . . • '••• .&lt;&lt;*' •".•-,.': •:.'•:••:•&#13;
wmtm'yrt&amp;tmtxx**** ••^r-ns^^-rT &gt;&lt;J . ' " ; , » M •&#13;
^ ¾ ¾ -&#13;
''A.***/&#13;
•Si'" V,*t,' "VVlifcM&#13;
•''. V t *&#13;
&lt;&gt;-&gt;&#13;
I ill I l &lt; I ,«c_«~&#13;
Doubly Glad is the Man W h o Stookes&#13;
I " •!•/&#13;
V&amp;jH&#13;
I&#13;
Glad to smoke this pure old Virginia and&#13;
North Carolina bright leaf— with its natural&#13;
tobacco taste. Aged and. stemmed and then&#13;
granulated. Tucks quickly in the pipe—rolls&#13;
easily into a cigarette.&#13;
With each sack a book of cigarette papers&#13;
JFREE.&#13;
4 n d smokers are glad to get the free present&#13;
coupons enclosed in each 5c sack. These&#13;
coupons are good -for a great variety of pleasing&#13;
articles'-*• cameras, talking machines, balls,&#13;
skates, safety razors, china, furniture, toilet&#13;
articles, etc. Many things that will delight&#13;
old or young. ' . » a&#13;
As a special offer, during January and&#13;
February only, we will send our new illustrated&#13;
catalog of these presents&#13;
FREE. Just send us&#13;
your name and address&#13;
on a postal. In every&#13;
sack of Liggett # Myers&#13;
Duke's Mixture is one&#13;
and a half ounces of&#13;
splendid tobacco and a&#13;
free present coupon.&#13;
Coupons from Duke''s Mixture may&#13;
be tatortttt with tags front HORSE&#13;
LEAF. GRANGER TWIST, and cow.&#13;
RETTES, and other toga or ant*m&#13;
ititudby MI.&#13;
Premium Dept*&#13;
•J&#13;
ij;;:|&#13;
St. Louis, Mo.&#13;
I&#13;
9&#13;
J!&#13;
8&#13;
I* I&#13;
i&#13;
i &amp;&#13;
Bet a Canadian Home&#13;
In Western Canada's&#13;
Free Homestead Area&#13;
THE&#13;
PROVINCE&#13;
OF ' Manitoba&#13;
;bi' *&lt;&#13;
•Cb ,.rff&#13;
•tfcST,&#13;
* * * * * , &lt;&#13;
stesAInfDlstricts that&#13;
, »ffor4 AT* opvortwriW&#13;
' to secure 169 sores o&lt; exf&#13;
t r Brain Browing&#13;
and Gittli Raising&#13;
itMs psfectaetvatbale*e i h|farsl eniol t.nsn»p esrtolowr sa anda naeroiMB penoeMoveraqaarteY&#13;
«t eOennry,&#13;
ptrfeeteMnate: good;n«tfe«tat&#13;
railways e»veal«M; toll tin very&#13;
b M l j ^ d soejal orattttons SK*t&#13;
* * further *arttccJa» «Hte to&#13;
N|. V. Motrmss,&#13;
[t78J«ft«r»tnA*.t Detrelt. SBek.&#13;
flnv&#13;
*v&#13;
X&#13;
Ifs&#13;
To Have * • • ready to « * *t ftwt sign oltuooble&#13;
1be best eorwctft*for any disorder&#13;
of the organs of digestkm. " t t e&#13;
e*rforyo«j seek relief the easier&#13;
it wttf * • to fret it—end the more&#13;
***** ^^ ** ^ fiyw*.&#13;
tt is tnwRMrssiry sABittetr that&#13;
—Made a Complete Job.—&#13;
"Mrs. Dungleford, has your husband&#13;
been cured of his cacoathes scribendi&#13;
yet?"&#13;
"I—I think so; the surgeon a took&#13;
that out when they removed his vermiform&#13;
appendix."&#13;
JUDGE CURED, HEART TROUBLE.&#13;
Judge Miller,&#13;
-well and hearty&#13;
'$'&#13;
•Y'&#13;
&amp;*»&gt;..&#13;
•)--\i&#13;
X'A&#13;
m #aft&#13;
correctiTe'of&#13;
. bowel, or liver teoftbietv&#13;
They b*Jng«boot recukr, natural,&#13;
kemlthfui aetion. AH tbrotafh the&#13;
&amp;*&amp;-&amp; • w «t"» 2SC ^1^&#13;
yt&gt;HS ectioft*, Tifor and eptTUs^ you&#13;
J^niU feel the benefit of Beeebea't&#13;
jam vovisiii ewttia&amp; If foer&#13;
^ Ready On Hand&#13;
**&#13;
I took about 6 boxes of Dodda Kidney&#13;
Pills for Heart Trouble from&#13;
which Z had suffered for 5 years. I&#13;
had dizzy spells, my eyes puffed,&#13;
my breath was&#13;
short and I had&#13;
chills and backache.&#13;
I took the&#13;
pills about a year&#13;
ago and have had&#13;
no return of the&#13;
palpitations. Am&#13;
now 63 years old,&#13;
able to do lots of&#13;
manual labor, am&#13;
and weigh about&#13;
200 pounds. I feel very grateful that&#13;
I found Oodds Kidney Pills and- you&#13;
may publish this letter ff you wish. I&#13;
am serving my third term as Probate&#13;
Judge of Gray Co. Tours truly,&#13;
PHILIP MILLER, Cimarron, Kan.&#13;
Correspond with Judge Miller about&#13;
this wonderful remedy.&#13;
Dodde Kidney Pllbv 60c per box at&#13;
your dealer or Oedds Medicine Co.,&#13;
Buffalo, N. 7. Write for Household&#13;
Hints, also music of National Anthem&#13;
(English and German words) and recipes&#13;
for dainty dishes. All 3 sent free.&#13;
Adv.&#13;
Roses In Medicine.&#13;
Rosea at one time figured prominently&#13;
In the pharmacopoeia. Pliny&#13;
gives 32 remedlee compounded of&#13;
rose leavea and petals. Sufferers&#13;
tram nervous complaints used to seek&#13;
relief by sleeping on rose pillows and&#13;
one is told teat Hetogabelns need to&#13;
Imbibe rose wine as a pick-me-up&#13;
after' his periodical gormandising&#13;
hours. The flower ,was also served&#13;
and fo»e water was largely need for&#13;
fiavfttn? *mmfiftM$ a* **o* Etrs&#13;
Wc*'fryer as—ug western) na?&#13;
XeilMossg»lM»tfealvaes seesjBSBllOjBddbtas. ipnja&#13;
1INAUGERATION&#13;
OF&#13;
FIRST DEMOCRAT GOVERNOR IN&#13;
T W E N T Y - T W O YEARS WOW I N&#13;
EXECUTIVE CHAIR.&#13;
T H E HOUSE A N D SENATE F U L L Y&#13;
ORGANIZED BEGINS WORK.&#13;
Weather Was Fine, No Fusat Feathers&#13;
Or Gaudy Display; Republican&#13;
Officials Take Oath With Governor,&#13;
at His Request.&#13;
settlsof water. Aatuer&#13;
Woodbridge N. Ferris is now governor&#13;
Michigan and the first democratic&#13;
chief executive to be at the head of&#13;
the state government since Edwin F.&#13;
Winaus assumed the reins of office 23&#13;
years ago.&#13;
In keeping with the personal request&#13;
of Governor Ferris the inauguration&#13;
was simple and devoid of unnecessary&#13;
display. Apparently the elements were&#13;
in sympathy with the occasion, for&#13;
the weather was ideal and the ceremony&#13;
waB conducted on the east portico&#13;
of the capitol building and several&#13;
thousand persons viewed the&#13;
event from the capitol lawn. At the&#13;
request of Governor Ferris the republican&#13;
state officials were sworn in with&#13;
him. This party included Lieutenant&#13;
Goveronr Ross, Secretary of State&#13;
Frederick C. Martindale, Land Commissioner&#13;
A. C. Carton, State Treasurer&#13;
John W. Haarer and Auditor General&#13;
O. B. Fuller.&#13;
Democrats from practically every&#13;
county in the state were on hand for&#13;
the ceremony and they made the most&#13;
of the occasion. It was the first opportunity&#13;
they have had to participate in&#13;
an event of this kind for many years&#13;
and they enjoyed themselves to the&#13;
very limit.&#13;
Currie Is Speaker of House.&#13;
Efforts to bring about a fusion of&#13;
progressives, democrats and republicans&#13;
who opposed the election of Rep.&#13;
Gilbert M. Currie, of Midland, as&#13;
speaker of the house, in an effort to&#13;
make Rep..Noble Ashley, of Detroit,&#13;
presiding officer, did not materialize&#13;
and when the roll was called Currie&#13;
received one of the 54 republican&#13;
votes. The democrats turned their ^4&#13;
votes over to Rep. Farmer, of Livingston&#13;
county, while Rep. McBride, of&#13;
Shiawassee, received the votes of the&#13;
12 progressives in the lower house.&#13;
When the republican caucus was&#13;
held the night preceding the election&#13;
14 representatives failed to attend, and&#13;
State's First Democrat&#13;
Governor in 20 Yean.&#13;
Woodbridge N. Ferris.&#13;
it was feared that some members of&#13;
the Wayne delegation fyuj succeeded&#13;
in their efforts to defeat Currie,' but&#13;
the differences were adjusted and Rep.&#13;
Currie wiH wieM the gavel during the&#13;
present session. Clerk Charles S.&#13;
Pierce, who has had experience in several&#13;
sessions was re-elected by unanimous&#13;
vote. Rep. Charles McBride, of&#13;
Ottawa county was elected speaker&#13;
pxotem of the house. Over in the senate&#13;
Dennis Alward, of Clare, was&#13;
chosen as secretary to succeed E. V.&#13;
Chilson, who voluntarily retired after&#13;
several years in that capacity. Senator&#13;
Frank Scott, of Alpena, was the&#13;
unanimous choice of the senate for&#13;
president pro tern.&#13;
Senate Bills Launched.&#13;
Republicans in the senate started&#13;
work early in launching their progressive&#13;
measures, as several bills&#13;
of considerable importance found their&#13;
way into the legislative hopper the&#13;
first day of the session. Senator Samuel&#13;
O'Dell, of Oceans county, sent up&#13;
bills covering the proposed short ballot,&#13;
which would eliminate from the&#13;
ballot the names of many state&#13;
officers; a bill providing for the direct&#13;
election of United States senators, under&#13;
a scheme whereby every legislator&#13;
would have to file a pledge to vote for&#13;
the men selected e t the primary, and a&#13;
bill to provide-for state life insurance,&#13;
limiting the amount of policy for&#13;
each insured to $3,000.&#13;
Full Australian Ballot&#13;
Senator W. Frank James, of Hancock,&#13;
followed with a bill to establish&#13;
the full Australian ballot system In&#13;
this state, under which party label&#13;
will not be used on ballots, on the&#13;
theory that it will make it easier for a&#13;
voter to avoid a mistake in marking&#13;
his ballot. James also presented a bill&#13;
to establish a mtoitmim wage scale'for&#13;
womenland a corrupt practices act1 intended&#13;
to put an end forever to the&#13;
use of money in election campaigns.&#13;
Senator Leonard Verdier, of Rent,&#13;
came forward with a resolution to approve&#13;
the proposed amendment to the&#13;
federal, conetlthttpn which could provide&#13;
for, the election by the people of&#13;
United State* senator*. ,,&#13;
Following is the list of senatorial&#13;
committees as announced by Lieutenant&#13;
Governor Ross:&#13;
Taxation—Wlpplns, Flzg-ibbons, W i n e -&#13;
gar, Hanley, Smith.&#13;
AKrlcultura,l College—YVoodworth, Odell,&#13;
McNaughton.&#13;
Apportionment—Ogs, Odcll, WuUttr,&#13;
J a m e s , Cuitia.&#13;
B a n k s a n d Corpora tionn—Iloaenkrans,&#13;
Powell, King, Kelley, Case.&#13;
Citie.s and Villages—Corliss, J a m e s ,&#13;
Haddun, O. C. Scott.&#13;
Constitutional Amendments—Wood, P\&#13;
D. Scott, Wood worth, Hutchins, Odell.&#13;
Elections—James, Straight, Wiggins,&#13;
Verdier, Corliss.&#13;
KxecutivR Business—Murtha, S t r a i g h t ,&#13;
Case, McNaughton, Curtis.&#13;
Finance a n d Appropriations—G. O.&#13;
Scott, Wiggins, Iloaenkraiis, Walter, Powell.&#13;
Fisheries—Walter, Weadock, H a d d e n ,&#13;
M u r t h a , l i u t c h l n s .&#13;
Forestry a n d S t a t e "Lands—rowell,&#13;
King, Odell, Alswede, Kelley.&#13;
Gaming Interests—King. C G, Scott,&#13;
Verdier, Amberson, McGregor.&#13;
Insurance—Fltzgibbons, Wood, Ogg,&#13;
Woodworth, W a l t e i .&#13;
Judiciary—F. D. Scott, M u r t h a , Smith,&#13;
Verdier, Wood.&#13;
. L a b o r Interests—Verdier, Ogg, W e a -&#13;
dock, J a m e s , Grace.&#13;
Kailroads—Smith, Corliss, W l n e g a r ,&#13;
Fltzgibbons, Gittlns.&#13;
S t a t e Affairs—Woodworth. M e N a u g h -&#13;
ton, Smith, lianley, Hosenkmns.&#13;
Agricultural Interests—Powell, Curtis,&#13;
H u t c h in a.&#13;
Kalamazoo Asylum—Case, H a d d e n ,&#13;
Wiggins.&#13;
Newberry Aayliim—Winegar, Wood, Mc-&#13;
Gregor.&#13;
P o n t l a e Asylum—Fltzgibbons, Corliss,&#13;
Smith.&#13;
Traverse City Asylum—Alswede, Walter,&#13;
F. I). Scott.&#13;
Claims a n d Public Accounts—GlttlriH,&#13;
Ca«e, King.&#13;
College of Mines—lianley, W l n e g a r , Al-&#13;
BWede.&#13;
Counties and T o w n s h i p s — M u r t h a , M o&#13;
Nuughton, Case.&#13;
Education a n d Public Schools—King,&#13;
Odell, Amherxon.&#13;
..•'•••:..* ,-. Tbe Wetleotleti. ••' ^ .&#13;
T d marry a s^en ne$ of werds/lat&#13;
of deads." * *1 ,&#13;
**&amp; Wlajhya goetbikg eym» gwr O g t w e&#13;
*4g^feAA^fl§iMln.*VtfMe-WtesftMlgslvflsl ft bgMla^djtj&#13;
V^S^BJHBSJjB^B9JpV«p^BW**1*w^^S^^^^™^^^V^W^^^"^V^ w H^VVB£^^^BJB^ t&#13;
4 , 0 ¾ .&#13;
il- •).&#13;
» * •&#13;
Federal Relations—Aznberson, F i t z g l b -&#13;
bojiB, H u t c h i n s .&#13;
Geological Survey—Gittlns, Ambcrson,&#13;
Roscukrans.&#13;
H o m e for Feeble Minded—Kelley, Corliss,&#13;
G. G. Scott.&#13;
Horticultural — McNaughton, llosen-&#13;
Urane, Woodworth.&#13;
Industrial H o m e for Glrjs- H a d d e n ,&#13;
Amberson, Ogg.&#13;
Industrial Home for Upya—Kosenkrarm,&#13;
Alswede, Grace.&#13;
Immigration—Curtis, Gittlns, Alswede.&#13;
Liquor Traffic—Grace, G. G. Scott,&#13;
Wood.&#13;
Employment Institution for the Blind—&#13;
Ogg, Kelley, McGregor.&#13;
Michigan Reformatory a t Jonla—Weadock,&#13;
Klnpf, F . I). Scott.&#13;
Mining I n t e r e s t s — J a m e s , Wiggins, Curtis.&#13;
Normal College a t Ypsilanti—Kelley,&#13;
Straight, Weadock.&#13;
Normal College a t Kalamazoo—Grace,&#13;
Straight, Winegar.&#13;
Normal College a t Mt. P l e a s a n t — W a l -&#13;
ter, F. D. Scott. M u r t h a .&#13;
Normal School a t M a r q u e t t e — W l n e g a r ,&#13;
Gittlns, Ogg.&#13;
Military Affairs — Odell, Verdier,&#13;
Straight.&#13;
PHnting—Corliss, Case, Powell.&#13;
Public Buildings—Wiggins, Weadocl/,&#13;
P. 1&gt;. Scott.&#13;
Public Health—G. G. Scott, Kelley, A m -&#13;
berson.&#13;
Roads a n d Bridges—Hutchins, Fltsglbbons,&#13;
McGregor.&#13;
Rules a n d J o i n t Rules—Straight, M u r -&#13;
tha, G. G. Scott.&#13;
Saline Interests—Hanley, W e a d o c k ,&#13;
Rosenkrans.&#13;
School for t h e Blind—McGregor, Curtl*.&#13;
K i n g .&#13;
School for t h e Deaf—Verdier, W l n e g a r ,&#13;
Powell.&#13;
Soldiers' H o m e — M c N a u g h t o n, Wood,&#13;
King1.&#13;
S t a t e Asylum—Caee. Gittins,&#13;
S t a t e Library—P. D. Scott, P,&#13;
Murtha, A r ~ 0&#13;
S t a t e . Prison at Jack«eW»H||ftslMi&#13;
Smith, Woodworth. »"" ^ T * t&#13;
' S t a t e P r i i o n at Mfriqeslljh l # * * o r&#13;
Winegar, Powell. j y 1&#13;
State Public School—Odell, Oaace,&#13;
gins. * I&#13;
Tabetculoels Sanitorlum — McQraM&#13;
Hadden. H a n l e y . I&#13;
Supplies and Expendrtures— 8 m i&#13;
Watterl. i&#13;
University—Weadock, Verdier, O. I&#13;
Scott. [&#13;
{ »&#13;
Hi z&#13;
Costs less&#13;
Bakes&#13;
Better&#13;
CALUMET&#13;
BAKING&#13;
POWDER&#13;
E C O N O M Y ~ * t h a t &gt; o n ° tbwBT you are&#13;
- ^ ^ ^ - - ^ - ^ - 1 ^ ^ looking for in these days&#13;
of high living cost—Calumet insures a wonderful&#13;
saving in your baking. But it does more.&#13;
It insures wholesome food, tasty food—uniformly raised food.&#13;
Calumet Is made right-to sell right-to bake right* Ask&#13;
one ol the millions of women who use it—or ask your grocer.&#13;
RECEIVED HIGHEST AWARDS&#13;
Wartfa Pur* Food Ftpoilrtwi, CUcate, DL&#13;
Pari* f i p u h i n n , Franco, Much, 1912.&#13;
Votf o W f «tf»* DMfMV vdhm you bag cheap or big-can baling powhr,&#13;
Don 'i be mtilead. Buy Calumet, tt 'a mere economical—more wMttone&#13;
gleet bett rtmiiU. Calumet U fat superior ta$eurmdk end toda*&#13;
Surprised Him.&#13;
There was a fellow who propose4 to&#13;
all the girls just for fun. He had no&#13;
idea of getting himself engaged, but&#13;
he enjoyed the preliminaries. So he&#13;
was disagreeably surprised once and&#13;
served him right.&#13;
"Miss Evelyn," he said eoulfully,&#13;
"do you think you could love me well&#13;
enough to be my wife?"&#13;
"Yes, darling," she cried.&#13;
"Well—er—now I know where to&#13;
come in case I should want to marry."&#13;
•—Detroit Free Press.&#13;
,7&#13;
Fire In Bank of England.&#13;
The first fire within memory occurred&#13;
at the Bank of England. London,&#13;
a few dayB ago. The fire broke&#13;
out in the southeastern portion of&#13;
the building. The flooring and Jolsting&#13;
were considerably damaged. The&#13;
outbreak was discovered by the Bank&#13;
of England authorities, and subdued&#13;
by their own appliances in 30 minutes.&#13;
A lieutenant and a dozen men&#13;
of the Irish Guards on duty at the&#13;
bank, with fixed bayonets, assisted&#13;
the police In keeping the crowd back&#13;
from the building.&#13;
Geography of Liquor.&#13;
Mayor Gaynor, discussing city government&#13;
in his wonted illuminating&#13;
and brilliant way, said in,New York:&#13;
"We must not have one reform law&#13;
for the rich and another for the poor.&#13;
It is as bad for the millionaire to gamble&#13;
in his club as for the laborer to&#13;
gamble in a stuss joint. It is as bad&#13;
to-become-lntoxlcatedon champagne&#13;
as on mixed ale.&#13;
"Too many reformers, so-called,&#13;
think that when a man is drunk on&#13;
Fifth avenue he is ill, and when a&#13;
man is ill on Third avenue he is&#13;
drunk."&#13;
Our Discontent.&#13;
Brand Wbltlock, the mayor of Toledo,&#13;
was talking about discontent.&#13;
"It Is our discontent, our divine discontent,"&#13;
he said, "that will make a&#13;
great nation of us.&#13;
"I believe In discontent. I can&#13;
sympathize even with the discontented&#13;
old farmer, who said:&#13;
•"Contented? When'll I be contented?&#13;
Wall, I'll be contented when&#13;
I own all the land adjolnin' mine—and&#13;
not befur, be gum!'"&#13;
To Her Incredible, Otherwise.&#13;
He—My brother is making more&#13;
money than he can spend.&#13;
She—GoodnesB! Wherfe's he working,&#13;
in the mint?&#13;
It in easier for love to find the way&#13;
than it is to pay the way.&#13;
Anyway, the wise man Is less of a&#13;
fool than the average.&#13;
THE BEST TEACHER.&#13;
Old Experience Still Holde the Palm.&#13;
- Mrs. Louisa Sandusky,&#13;
Creek, mother of August&#13;
leged to hate been killed fg/&#13;
Pttchferd, has been prr'&#13;
olon, to continue the r e m a U ^ ,&#13;
life, by the company of which&#13;
was an employe.&#13;
?aWFor&#13;
real practical reliability and&#13;
something to swear by, experienceplain&#13;
old experience—is able to eejrry&#13;
a big load yet without getti&#13;
backed.&#13;
A So. Dak. woman found&#13;
things about food from Old&#13;
Self-Appreciation.&#13;
"How do you know your speech&#13;
made such a profound impression?**&#13;
asked the doubting friend. "There*-&#13;
wasn't very much cheering."&#13;
"That'B just the point," replied Senator&#13;
Sorghum. "I am One of the brators&#13;
to whom my constituents would&#13;
rather listen than hear themselves applaud."&#13;
Crushing Rejoinder.&#13;
A workman sat on a curb nursiag an&#13;
injured foot which had been struck;&#13;
by an iron casting which had fallen&#13;
from the top of a building.&#13;
"Did that big thing hit you?" asked&#13;
a sympathizing bystander.&#13;
The workman nodded.&#13;
"And is It solid iron?"&#13;
"No," replied the victim, "half of It&#13;
is only lead."&#13;
Constipation oaoses many serious disease*.&#13;
It is thoroughly cured by Doctor Pierce's&#13;
Pleasant Pellets. Que a laxative, three far&#13;
cathartic. Adv.&#13;
Women who marry for a home pay&#13;
big rent.&#13;
FOLEY KIDNEY PUIS Art Richest in Curative Qualitloe&#13;
FOR BAOK.'.CHE. R H E U M A T I S M ,&#13;
K I D N E Y S AND BLADDER&#13;
D O N ' T OUT O U T A V A R I C O S E VElSf&#13;
^"AflSORBDOrar&#13;
A mild, safe, antiseptic,&#13;
discutient, resolverrt~&#13;
Hntmet»t, and ar&#13;
proven remedy for this*&#13;
and similar troubles*.&#13;
Mr. R. C. Keltogg, Becket, Mass.,.&#13;
before using this remedy, suffered"&#13;
intensely with painful and inflamed&#13;
veins; they were swollen, knitted&#13;
and hard. He writes: "After&#13;
using one and one-balf bottles of&#13;
A B S O R B I N E , JR., the vein*;&#13;
were reduced, inflammation aadV&#13;
pain gone, and I have had no recurrence&#13;
of the trouble during the past&#13;
six years." Also removes Goitre*.&#13;
Painful Swellings, Wens, Cysts*.&#13;
Callouses, Bruises, "Black and&#13;
Blue" discolorations, etc., in a&#13;
pleasant manner. Price l i . o o s n d&#13;
J&amp;2.00 a bottle at druggists or delivered.&#13;
Book 5 G Free. Write forte*&#13;
W.F.Yooit,P.O,F.(31uTt»pteSt&gt;Sfxh^^tHI Re&#13;
(&#13;
-y&#13;
fry^* *i&#13;
%«&#13;
m*&#13;
"' I-&#13;
&gt; ' ' ' • '&#13;
•••'K/ty&#13;
&lt;W&#13;
I&#13;
&lt;*2&#13;
•m&#13;
i£&#13;
Mnt frao. Oldest&#13;
Pmiente taken •ywrtdtootfce, without&#13;
^AjWwWbn Pat«k&#13;
PM4DU thrSuah Muun axSTinwel*&#13;
P o n t e s arte, la tee&#13;
Abft&amp;tfsomeiyiltaJitnted vaekif. li&#13;
ry&#13;
ne&#13;
"'SSEjff&#13;
^ M •*kfa&#13;
Th#-Theodore Roosevelt crtttlnaj&#13;
libel ease against George • . Newett,&#13;
editor-of Iron Ore, a paper published&#13;
St IghpMBiaV will be postponed. untH&#13;
the disposal of the colonel's ettti salt&#13;
against the editor The crtfl smt Is&#13;
&gt;6W«!Sd t^ be beard m^BSt^rnery.&#13;
'* *tWfooV.skeea and. a, most rlgM&#13;
as4 frequegit iSAaectloii of Misi. hotels&#13;
H,tkestate is the eeetre ofc the 7»00,&#13;
^#Q^aMSAbers el the United CoaMser-j&#13;
^ 'del Ti^aiett, sfv yiehigssj yheyi y «&#13;
^ ecttrely emdssTORte seooee teglstattssv : ^&gt;: ( /fast A k « ^ s*»eA these essls,. - &gt;, i&#13;
^^&#13;
-MX&#13;
Search is being made for Mi&#13;
tie Whitmore, of Hemfock, wl&#13;
last seen at the Pere MarQQef&#13;
Uon on the night of Dec 9,&#13;
drawn $186 from the Hemlool&#13;
and* foul play is feared.&#13;
Mrs. John C. Brighami *9,&#13;
lnaw, eenqnitted seJcide by fwal&#13;
two ounces of poison, with h&lt;&#13;
rhilena in the hessev&#13;
*Str Hofsee FtosfcetC ef&#13;
ehief ieeester M Imbfau&#13;
hit third visit 'Je-tt*r ls4tle&#13;
' . • ' . ; ; ; / . •&#13;
,$+.«:£&#13;
Nuts because the doctor told&#13;
epuld. not digest starchy food.&#13;
1 rape-Nuts food has been&#13;
lefit to me for I teal like a d&#13;
&gt;n since I befta to eat i t 1&#13;
wonderful to me how strong my&#13;
nerves have become. I adtlse everyone&#13;
to try it, for sxperienoe fa the&#13;
beet teacher. .&#13;
•T'ltyee hare any stouseh triable-^&#13;
esa't digest roar (cod, use Orspe*&#13;
Hpts food for sreskhtet at least, sad&#13;
iyoti woryt be able to praise it enoOftlt&#13;
J when you see bow dlffereAt y«e teei."&#13;
| Name gtren Jby Ppstua to,, Batde&#13;
| ^ r s^p^SRssf ^SSR&gt;si|RBe d w ^ H B H • • ^ • e * dp&gt;*Rld|RV /••^^Rss^sWS^ ••the JBos4&gt; WeUrlfle/ ^ 1 ^&#13;
rtftgfs/s, a eUhssA.'r. • • •&#13;
cured teriAle&#13;
humor on lace&#13;
T&gt;HILADELPHIA, bee. 6, tsl&amp;&#13;
'£; "In Deeember 1MB, my faeebe-&#13;
WZ'r+mmm. nor*. I tried •verytfcing&#13;
i reeotamessUd. sad my fees&#13;
worns* instead of better. I spent&#13;
HOP aad got no beaedt. Tbs&#13;
dad sues wets very ted sad the&#13;
gisp&lt;ksiliei1th»&gt;^g*atmnneofen¥a#:1&#13;
k Befla, whieh Itehed me terribly. tt\&#13;
^essist tell yeohow tetrPjle my &lt;sesV\X&#13;
^lssBj all I can say U, Kwatdrsedfif&#13;
B,ssdl suffered beyteddeserfptkelLj&#13;
*?*»€• Set pirn* ee the street cay'&#13;
19km ISSf «oMA«s4 *&gt; veil, m*l&#13;
'. JestfoersNttth^SsVafHeBd&#13;
las SSdJlei Heelnel a triel&#13;
p sad $!»?&amp;*$?•*«* a«bMl&#13;
seia#iteeiipBrteSw&#13;
jSTereptksvsodmyskia&#13;
is si elear sad eleese* esyehikl's.&#13;
UTX Bstsman, 4 « Vie* Street,&#13;
fer ever etshtaea smut Bestool aee&#13;
Ik':&#13;
m &lt;&gt;!c, O s H ;&#13;
m,-~Kw[&#13;
^'m&#13;
PWm&#13;
*A»»&#13;
M&#13;
?$**'&#13;
m**,. w&#13;
i ,&#13;
:*-: .&#13;
' V • . ' '&#13;
M&#13;
n?v&#13;
" - - ^ - 1 * &lt; . . • THE HKUEY DISPATCH&#13;
, * r&#13;
:j*s&#13;
&amp; ;&#13;
8T&#13;
$ ' •&#13;
1^^ ^&#13;
i&#13;
ft*&#13;
^ . . . • • "&#13;
flmuMUPSTB|iv*KVBapATaOBiya« sr&#13;
HOY W. CAVEftLY. •toffciTOft,&#13;
at the FoetottoeVMaekaey, Mlcai***&#13;
as secood-clsss Biatter&#13;
AaverUetaa: rates, a»4e I M I B •» sppUssUoa.&#13;
•• tr:.&#13;
^¾^.&#13;
•&amp;&#13;
Carleton Barnard and wife of&#13;
Chilsoo were iu town last Thursday.&#13;
Chas. Henry, John Monks and&#13;
Fred Lake are doing jury duty in&#13;
Howell.&#13;
Wm. Tiplady and wife of Web-&#13;
Bter spent last Thursday with relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
Maurice Oarrow Bpent Friday&#13;
and Sat a rd ay with friends and re U&#13;
atives in Jackson.&#13;
Frank Parker of Arcada, Mich.&#13;
baa been vipiting hia parents, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. J. Parker.&#13;
J«B. Harris ia attending the&#13;
the board of supervisors meeting&#13;
at Howell this week.&#13;
Jas. Henley and wife of Jackson&#13;
spent a few days the past week&#13;
at the home of John Monks.&#13;
Mrs. Alex Pearson of Hamburg&#13;
visited at the home of Dr. George&#13;
Pearson the latter part of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Brighton poultry dealers are&#13;
planning on holding a poultry&#13;
alow of local stock about the last&#13;
of January.&#13;
Howelle travelling men made&#13;
the circuit of that village Xmas&#13;
day in 4 autos distributing gifts&#13;
to needy people.&#13;
Maude, Mildred, Monaco and&#13;
Genevieve Knhn of Gregory attended&#13;
the play and dance here&#13;
last Thursday night.&#13;
The Baetcke Hardware Co. at&#13;
Brighton has been sold to E. F.&#13;
Gsmbel and H. C. Lown, posses-,&#13;
gton being given on January 1.&#13;
-Mi«rBHa_fiiTi:^rt"R©iloiiernM&gt;&#13;
turued to their home in Fenton&#13;
last .week after spending some&#13;
time with her parent*, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. B. VonBlaricum.&#13;
«&#13;
It is always a good idea to whistle&#13;
when you see trouble coming,&#13;
bat it takes a man who has fine&#13;
faith and courage to think of a&#13;
tune then.—Atlanta Constitution.&#13;
M. B. Darrow and wife who&#13;
have been visiting relatives, here&#13;
left Friday for Three Rivers,Mich.&#13;
•or a short visit with relatives&#13;
Shore before returning tor their&#13;
home at Lewiston, Montana.&#13;
A Lansing man recently lost a&#13;
valuable dog and advertised in the&#13;
paper to give a fifty dollar reward&#13;
for his return. A farmer living&#13;
near the capital city, who "does&#13;
not have time to read," found the&#13;
dog in his barn and shot him.&#13;
Governor Ferris in his message&#13;
to the legislature urged that the&#13;
office* of coroner and circuit court&#13;
conMaissipner be abolished and the&#13;
duties given to the justices of the&#13;
peace. This has caused quite a&#13;
little comment here but it sejfi*&#13;
to be favored by the maj&#13;
the people.&#13;
Beading the advertiaemen&#13;
hie paper and buying&#13;
where yon can buy the best _&#13;
tor the least money is just lik&lt;&#13;
finding good money. People w&#13;
•ever read advertisments are ju&#13;
Eke people-who would not take th&#13;
trouble to stoop down&#13;
up a dollar they saw&#13;
tfcegroond.&#13;
Jhe bartenders of Chicago&#13;
organized a tempetaaee oinb, Th*&#13;
secretary SHVS ufc go* in front&#13;
oan't tend bar sfcfl bit the boose&#13;
and stake good, It gets him just&#13;
asqukkastfceguf in front who&#13;
jejrafot it. While no apobt^es&#13;
are offered for thns iantilattng tbe&#13;
language there is donbfe&#13;
truth in the&#13;
Scarlet fever is raging in Whitmore&#13;
Lake.&#13;
Murta VonBlaricum has been&#13;
on the sick list.&#13;
Wm. Jeffries alteaded the deuce&#13;
at Hamburg last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Kice were&#13;
Detroit visitors recently.&#13;
Thomas Dolan of Detroit has&#13;
been visiting his people here.&#13;
Wm. Lavey of Fowlerville was&#13;
a Piuckney visitor last Friday.&#13;
F. £ . Dolan underwent a serious&#13;
operation at the Sanitarium&#13;
Monday.&#13;
JJ rs. Dora Davis of Howell is&#13;
visiting at the home of H. W.,&#13;
Crofoot.&#13;
Miss Bernice Hart of near&#13;
Howell spent last Thursday with&#13;
friends here.&#13;
Mis. Wm. Bell of near Bunke^&#13;
Bill spent a portion ot last week&#13;
with relatives here.&#13;
Miss Lulu Benham of Ypsi.&#13;
lanti was ihe guest of friends here&#13;
a portion of last week.&#13;
Norma Curlett returned to May&#13;
ville Saturday after spending the&#13;
past two weeks here.&#13;
Carl Bykes of Detroit visited&#13;
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Casper&#13;
Sykes several days last week.&#13;
Ella Mae Farley of near Howell&#13;
spent the latter part- of last week&#13;
at the borne of Mrs. M. Farley.&#13;
Max Martin cf Chelsea spent&#13;
a portion of last week at the home&#13;
of his mother, Mrs. E. W. Martin.&#13;
Guy, Paul aid Roy Euhn and&#13;
Vincent Young of Gregory were in&#13;
town one day the latter partof last&#13;
week.&#13;
John Bates and Donald Donaldson&#13;
of Leslie spent the past week&#13;
with their grandmother, Mrs. J.&#13;
A. Donaldson.&#13;
The January term of the circuit&#13;
court and the board of supervisors&#13;
are both in session at&#13;
Howell this week.&#13;
Farmers were out plowing yes&#13;
terday, January 2,1913. Cut that&#13;
on the bitching post for reference.&#13;
—Fowlerville Standard.&#13;
The Telephone gang who have&#13;
been working in tbis vicinity for&#13;
ifae past month "have polled up&#13;
stakes and gone to Dexter.&#13;
A Presidential inauguration&#13;
does not consider the health of&#13;
those connected with it to the extent&#13;
customary in great outdoor&#13;
sports.&#13;
Eighty-three people attended the&#13;
neighborhood oyster supper at the&#13;
home of Mr.and Mrs. B . D. Gauss&#13;
west of town Tuesday evening,&#13;
December 31.&#13;
Bogus five-cent pieces bearing&#13;
the date 1910 have recently put in&#13;
circulation at Dowagiac. The&#13;
counterfeits are thicker and lighter&#13;
than the genuine.&#13;
George Wimbles the new sheriff&#13;
elect has given oat the follow,&#13;
ing appointments: undersheriff,&#13;
£. Miller Beurman, deputies, Geo.&#13;
Snedicor and D. N. Weiand. The&#13;
other deputies will be appointed&#13;
later&#13;
B. B. Morgaj||Jof Howell townahip,&#13;
has figured but that an old&#13;
rail fence cut np in stove wood&#13;
and sold at- the present prices will&#13;
ing money enough to bay two&#13;
rwire fences of the same&#13;
with the fence posts throw*&#13;
-Hoi&#13;
meer&#13;
Historical Society is making&#13;
lection of early maps of Michiga .&#13;
with the purpose of obtaining as&#13;
complete a set as possible from&#13;
1885 down. The earliest maps&#13;
were those made by Bisdon and&#13;
the fanner and the Society appeals&#13;
to the families of the early&#13;
rtetdtotsofthe state in the hope&#13;
skat there may be foun d copies of&#13;
these maps and presented to the&#13;
Society for public near The Soeiety&#13;
wUl gladly receive these maps&#13;
' I M on*elsJlyptSfer?e them.&#13;
Glen Topper of Flint was home&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Dr. W. C. Wylie of Dexter wasj&#13;
in town Monday,&#13;
You cannot'reform a bad egg by&#13;
pnttin^it'i&amp; cold storage.&#13;
Wm. Ryan Jr. attended the&#13;
New Years Ball at Dexter.&#13;
Ella Blair of Iosco was the guest&#13;
of triends here the past week.&#13;
Miss Nellie Gardner ia the guest&#13;
of friends and relatives in Detroit.&#13;
Lewis Shehau has purchased&#13;
a driving horse of ex sheriff Stoddard.&#13;
Norbert Lavey left Monday for&#13;
Memphis, Tennesee, where he expects&#13;
to locate.&#13;
Sarah Brogan of Acfran spent&#13;
the past week with friends here&#13;
and in this vicinity.&#13;
Mrs. H. M. Williston slipped and&#13;
foil On an icy sidewalk Monday&#13;
breaking her arm.&#13;
Don Hause ot Ann Arbor spent&#13;
last week at the home of his grandmother,&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Brown.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. M, Dolan and&#13;
daughter, Ella are home from&#13;
from Pontiac for a short time.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Reason returned&#13;
from Marquette where she has&#13;
been visiting last Saturday night.&#13;
Geo. Green and family were&#13;
guests of friends and relatives in&#13;
Jackson the latter part of the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Claude White and wife of near&#13;
Howell spent a couple of days the&#13;
past week at the home of H. M&#13;
Williston.&#13;
Donald and Doris Carr of Detriot&#13;
spent the past week at th*&#13;
borne of their grandparents, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. W. A. Carr.&#13;
Gale Johnson and wife of Detroit&#13;
were guest of his parents,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. F. D, Johnson a&#13;
portion of the past week.&#13;
George Ratz, of Brighton, has&#13;
the agency for tbe Ford auto for&#13;
the townships of Brighton, Genoa,&#13;
Hamburg and Green Oak.&#13;
R. D. Roche of Howell was&#13;
presented with a large birthday&#13;
cake lastNew Years day at the&#13;
Hotel Liviugston, C. G. Jewelt&#13;
making the presentation speech.&#13;
Ex-sheriff William Stoddard and&#13;
wife and Mr. and Mrs John Stoddard&#13;
expect to go to Burley, Nevada,&#13;
about the middle of January&#13;
to engage in the garage business.&#13;
On New Years day at the home&#13;
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hal! in&#13;
Hamburg township occurred the&#13;
marriage of their daughter, Fran&#13;
cis Carpenter to Albert A. Symes&#13;
of Ohilson, Rev. W. H. Ripon&#13;
performing the cereuiouey.&#13;
An electric light bulb exploded&#13;
in the bean picking rooms at&#13;
Holly a short time ago, burning a&#13;
bole in two of tbe pipes where the&#13;
beans come down and shocking 3&#13;
girls across from it. One girl had&#13;
her arm slightly burned.&#13;
Holly is greatly excited over the&#13;
preparations for the drilling of oil&#13;
iu that vicinity. George M. Anderson,&#13;
an oil expert, has leased&#13;
over 4,000 acres of land in the&#13;
neighborhood of that village and&#13;
Fenton and he announces that&#13;
drilling will be started soon.&#13;
A petition signed by 47,00 perking&#13;
that the local option&#13;
ion be submitted to a vote&#13;
e people at the coming spring&#13;
election, was presented to the I&#13;
board of supervisors of Jackton&#13;
county in session at Jacks JU&#13;
last week. No action was taken&#13;
in regard to the mt tter, although&#13;
tbe board will have to vote to submit&#13;
the question.&#13;
hundred and twenty resi-&#13;
South Lyon, recently,&#13;
OJe per gallon for kerosene&#13;
$6.00 for a 50 gallon tank. The&#13;
hardware dealer there got a sample&#13;
of the cU which he bed tested&#13;
anii found it tasted two points be&#13;
low the oU he sells a t t e la barrel&#13;
lots. This same deaiwesjls ft 60&#13;
gallon tank v Isr • • $4 04 the&#13;
South Lyon people' wanted to&#13;
make some one an Xmas present&#13;
Moral dont bny of oofcsklsts until&#13;
yon see what yon .on* do at&#13;
home—Ex. f .&#13;
BROODER FOR LITTLE CHICKS&#13;
Illustration and Directions Given for&#13;
Constructing Cojwfortabie place&#13;
for YounipttaraK&#13;
This tireless brooder will accommodate&#13;
25 to W chicks, according to the&#13;
weather. &amp; the hover 1* removed It&#13;
makes an excellent brood coop for hen&#13;
and chicks, Make the bottom of brooder&#13;
2 feet 8 inches by t foot 30 Inches&#13;
of boards, sailed on 2 by 2-inch&#13;
scantlings. For the upper part use 2&#13;
by 2-inch posts for the uprights, those&#13;
in front 17 Inches long, and the rear&#13;
11 Inches. Make the coop 2 feet 10&#13;
inches long, 2 feet wide, 18 inches&#13;
high in front and 12 inches at the&#13;
back, writes Arthur S. Wenger of&#13;
Dayton, Va., In the Missouri Valley&#13;
Farmer. This will allow the coop to&#13;
set down over the floor, the posts resting&#13;
upon the floor boards. Make two&#13;
openings in front, one 8 by 8 inches,&#13;
the other 12 by 20. For the smaller&#13;
opening make a sliding door, and cover&#13;
the other with fine mesh wire netting.&#13;
Make a frame and cover with&#13;
muslin, to slide over this netting during&#13;
cold or stormy weather. For the ]&#13;
roof take two pieces of %-inch board&#13;
2 Inches wide and 3 feet long, and&#13;
three pieces of the same dimension 2&#13;
feet 2 Inches long. Notch the long&#13;
pieces at end and center to 1 inch&#13;
wide, so the crosspleces can be nailed&#13;
in—to make a flat frame. Cover this&#13;
frame with three-ply roofing stretched&#13;
tight and naiied around edge and&#13;
through center. Hinge the oover to&#13;
back of coop and put a small hook in&#13;
front to hold it shut&#13;
F01 the hover hake a box 18 laches&#13;
square and 8 inches high with a hole&#13;
4 inches aqaare la 02* aide for chleha&#13;
to go in and out Put in a bottom but&#13;
no top. Make a wooden frame to fit&#13;
rather loosely in this box and tack&#13;
FOLEY'S&#13;
- * &gt;- , -IT A r \&#13;
CONTAINS&#13;
WO.&#13;
oRiATie&#13;
POP S a l e By All Druggists 8&#13;
= E&#13;
M . $ M r&#13;
S u b s c r i b e Por Tile Dlsparf^lh &gt;•*,&#13;
A MODERATE DRINKER. •"ft For Safe f 1&#13;
Hotel Tuomey&#13;
On Better—Or Trad^&#13;
vVhat have you g o t ?&#13;
Who Called?&#13;
Lock Box 40, Brighton.&#13;
• B&#13;
tOUI UMtt M0 THROATS I Mrs. Jaggley—Drank nothing but&#13;
lemonade! A man can't get full drinking&#13;
lemonade.&#13;
Jaggley—Couldn't, eh? My d«ar, a&#13;
man could get full of anything; yesh—&#13;
even water, if he drinksh 'nough of it,&#13;
and don't drink it In moderation* ash—&#13;
( do.&#13;
Explanatory Sketch.&#13;
muslin on one side of frame with a&#13;
ploat in each corner so it will sag&#13;
about 2 inches. Put a nail in each&#13;
corner of box 4 inches from bottom&#13;
for frame to rest upon. Hare about&#13;
1 Inch of fine hay chaff in bottom of&#13;
box. Put in chicks and cover top of&#13;
muslin with burlap #acks or any soft&#13;
material. In warm weather they will&#13;
need very little cover.&#13;
Satisfied.&#13;
The fuzzy hat&#13;
Is on the wane.&#13;
Well, as for that,&#13;
We shan't complain.&#13;
Different.&#13;
Judge—Tou have been here twice&#13;
before, and twice I have sent you to&#13;
Jail. Have you anything to say why&#13;
I should not send you there again?&#13;
Prisoner—I have scruples agaliist a&#13;
third term, your honor.—Judge.&#13;
BEDBUGS IN CHICKEN HOUSE&#13;
Roots and Nette 8hould Be Removed&#13;
From Building and WMtewaah&#13;
Spray Thoroughly Applied.&#13;
Many poultry houses are Infested&#13;
with bed bugs and it is not an easy&#13;
matter to dislodge them.&#13;
Some people say that turning the&#13;
sheep into the poultry houses will induce&#13;
the bugs to attack the sheep&#13;
where they will be lost in the wool,&#13;
but this is a poor remedy.&#13;
Remove all the roosts and nests&#13;
from the house and spray with boiling&#13;
hot whitewash to which has been&#13;
added a pint of turpentine to a pailful.&#13;
Another food, remedy is to burn the&#13;
Interior of the house with tarollne&#13;
The Beaten Path.&#13;
Sergeant—Why do you think* this&#13;
dog was stolen from a lady?&#13;
Policeman—Because as I walked&#13;
down the street with it. It stopped in&#13;
front of all the department store windows.&#13;
'(Wh*t Mrs. White says about&#13;
Wll»—*&gt; rrcparattoB off&#13;
B^lspSsipfcHu mmA »Udo««f^ ~&#13;
(For A u . Lowo and THROAT TROUBXJNU&#13;
rHacmhte, Mich.. Sept. 9, 19«!&#13;
D w KB. ABBOTT?&#13;
It ia now 47 or 48 yctn ago that X 4n*&#13;
o»ed Mr. Wilaoa'a Remedy lor the Core oT&#13;
CooMuaptioo, which diaeate waa fast fastening) '&#13;
Ma {tag* upon me. 1 waa aide about nia»i^&#13;
•oaths before I heard of the medicine, soar .-&#13;
1 waa so aaxioua to try it. it waa the fintj \&#13;
easdicino that helped me. Th* Doctor* nwsVl&#13;
tin* did M# no good. In a few days I j&#13;
could breathe eaafly, and 1 got better dskij-r&#13;
«Jong» sad «ssd but two package*. Abeutn&#13;
eight rears age I was running down fat&#13;
1 got some note of the medicine, and us»i&#13;
for a tonic, and It waa a uowitrful m*dit&#13;
U bmiid up on, I cannot jpraiae it eno&#13;
^JKaUUL.BK NCT USE OT&#13;
JPIOPUC DYING WITH CONStfUFsj&#13;
' S l J ? . ! P COULD BE PERSUADED?&#13;
THY THK WILSON REMEDY,&#13;
wish you success. You can use my.naasy:,&#13;
festisiuiij Jf you Kkc Yours most trulfcj:&#13;
_MALINDA A WHITE. * " '&#13;
**«te J, Dtmoodalc. Mich. ;&#13;
Obtained at lending druggists or direct) "&#13;
«f C. A. ABBOTT. General Agent, 6*&#13;
Ann 84.. New York, who will also gl«&lt;U» •'&#13;
famish aay iofonoatioa desired., ^ '&#13;
Fighting Fire.&#13;
Mrs. Bacon—And is your husband a&#13;
fire fighter?&#13;
Mrs. Egbert—Is he? Well, I never&#13;
saw a man who could fight harder&#13;
against getting up in the morning to&#13;
start one.&#13;
If You Want&#13;
Let the Worst Come.&#13;
Hub (arriving home)—WelL I*ve&#13;
had my life Insured for 120,000.&#13;
Wife—Thank goodness! Now I&#13;
mixture which can be bought at any I shan't have to keep cautioning you to&#13;
drug store. Another effective remedy ! b« careful whenever you go any place,&#13;
is half a pint each of turpentine,&#13;
ammonia and kerosene to which add&#13;
about four ounces of gum camphor.&#13;
If more is needed double the quantity.&#13;
Apply with a bruBh.&#13;
The nests should be burned out over&#13;
a blazing fire and the roosts should&#13;
also be held over the fire and all&#13;
should be thoroughly whitewashed and&#13;
painted before putting them back.&#13;
Insect Powdsr for Fowls.&#13;
Here is a receipt for an insect powder&#13;
and it can be made a great deal&#13;
cheaper than It can be bought&#13;
Take one pint of crude carbolic&#13;
acid and three pints of gasoline. Mix&#13;
in an earthen crock or granite ware&#13;
dish. Sprinkle in plaster of Paris&#13;
and thoroughly stir so that every parttele&#13;
ot ft wttt bo wet Use enough&#13;
plaster of Parts to absorb an the liquid.&#13;
Spread out on a paper for extra&#13;
gasoline to evaporate, then run&#13;
through a sieve and the powder is&#13;
ready for use.&#13;
PouiTPYNgrgs&#13;
Don't raise scrub chickens.&#13;
Dont nse too heavy a cock bird with&#13;
roar females.&#13;
Poultry constitutes a very good miner&#13;
source ot farm profit&#13;
Barry tarltsys} are what pay and&#13;
these oan oalr be had from early laid&#13;
Condiments that stimulate egf production&#13;
are very much like anything&#13;
that stimulates a human being,.&#13;
Some tell tbe sex of the guinea fowl&#13;
by its wattles. Those of the male are&#13;
double the sise- of the female.&#13;
A chicken's stomach Is not made ot&#13;
iron, aad the same diet day after day&#13;
harms thorn a* sweh as It does a, hu-&#13;
Running tbe Inoobator Is like most,&#13;
other things, wis get resnlta largely fit&#13;
propoftJQ* to the work w* do oar*&#13;
stives. x Ventilation In tbe chieken boost k&#13;
a Tory 4sn&gt;QTtant oonsJderatknv sal&#13;
tbe health of tbe fowls, la a front&#13;
aaoaannsy daaendi oa i t&#13;
TBS) *f»sst of tbe Indian game Is&#13;
•try iamob Hke that of the ihssMmt&#13;
or the prtMt chtefceit Tat bstt af,T cat Saose had&#13;
titjMtft ttts oa tat arasst&#13;
*1v*"ux .«•%. %&#13;
No Worse Off.&#13;
Gtbbs—I've been fired without any&#13;
reason.&#13;
Dlbbs—Well, you didn't bare any&#13;
reason when they hired you.&#13;
Cooking food tor animals&#13;
pay*.&#13;
The stallion should show lots of&#13;
masculinity.&#13;
One hundred acres will carry forty&#13;
head of live stock.&#13;
Shear the sheep before their wool&#13;
gets to be a burden.&#13;
If yon havent a hog boast, prepare&#13;
to build one next falL&#13;
Ton can't be too particular la picking&#13;
sires for your herds.&#13;
Many stallions are used too much&#13;
to produce a large per cent ot colts.&#13;
Horses, cattle, hogs and chickens art&#13;
dirty if they are not bandied in an intelligent&#13;
manner.&#13;
The Ohio experiment station has&#13;
found taat rate is tat at tat very&#13;
best forage crops for bogs.&#13;
• Sell your wool on a rising market&#13;
Nine times oat ot ten you will miss U&#13;
if yon try to keep .It for something&#13;
better.&#13;
Pigs fed oa dirty, musty floors, art&#13;
apt to contract lung troable through&#13;
inhalliinn g dust, ohaff sad other clog*&#13;
'O U can get&#13;
tern by advertising&#13;
in this&#13;
paper* It reaches&#13;
the best class o t&#13;
people in this&#13;
community.&#13;
Use this paper if&#13;
you want some&#13;
of their business.&#13;
Use This Paper&#13;
EBlietctterrisc Ltacceed when everything else fcfls.&#13;
In nervous prostration and female&#13;
they are the&#13;
It is the best medtetoe eve»&#13;
ovev a draggisfn conntei.&#13;
Q&#13;
*&#13;
,'. (&#13;
glng material. . .&#13;
Dock every lamb, ewes whoa ther&#13;
art from tight to loarttta days old,&#13;
tad ram lambs from t f t to strsa days,&#13;
after castratioa. ~v *&#13;
People with a prejudice igltsat&#13;
sheep olalm &amp;ey at* dirt* Xfes g*&#13;
onlte true If they art bandied It saoa&#13;
a way that they cannot hab&gt; i t&#13;
Mootitig of she wsasftb •&#13;
From Oct «1 to Nor. 4, tftO. In&#13;
France the aaone poured Its waters&#13;
lata tbe Bheiie, biekejtt haasa, eaeV'&#13;
esad SOLQOO sores and Imsseniad a aam&lt;,&#13;
W^^^B^B* W^re^srer's^ •S^»PS»WJIBF VS^H^BW e^w^wjw^^^p^p^w^^pw W* ^^r^wn^mr&#13;
bar of cities and villages, ate baraway&#13;
sad eaany, Uvea stevtfeti. It&#13;
the $rst time % «sV yesas.tbat&#13;
Dr. MBes* AaSVPaia Pise rot HiHasdlty.&#13;
irisisSiisiff r. ,i&#13;
i'.y'-vi'i ^»&lt;P/ 4:*&lt; ''hMfri---i^ i-vr^.i- m •xt-tt&#13;
.aaal&#13;
^i-SifcaSftS&#13;
J S t ^ s t ^ * . . * '&#13;
-^••-4*ikw^{|^||(&#13;
'tPSjf&#13;
W^^^W^fi"'^^ *&amp;w '*F~ 'P*"&#13;
;A v '*'&#13;
• •*r*^m'nf *.••,**'&gt; •"J^^'W.^'-siH^KifiWWW^J ^ M»&gt; .p^ypiy.. f _|||||^jjjn[^ II&#13;
.¾ f :/&lt;%$*.&#13;
wvr&#13;
I ' * - . ' • '&#13;
* , &gt; : • • •&#13;
.&gt; • ; . r r ••&#13;
A &lt;&#13;
-.^-&#13;
Absence makes the heart grow&#13;
louder, we're told, but a good portrait&#13;
of the absent one will keep&#13;
the recollection more vivid—and&#13;
comfort many a lonely hoar of&#13;
separation.&#13;
We make a specialty of portraiture&#13;
and our studio is except&#13;
i o n ly equipped for fine portrait&#13;
work.&#13;
Daisie B. Chapell&#13;
P h o t o g r a p h e r&#13;
S t o c k b r i d g e , M i c h i g a n&#13;
.*&#13;
r&#13;
•i&#13;
Does a CoBRervatire&#13;
ipg Business. ::&#13;
e Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
I&#13;
Bank*&#13;
3 p e r c e n t&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
I n c k n e y&#13;
W. TEEPLE&#13;
M i c h .&#13;
Prop&#13;
TTT&#13;
i&#13;
jf/&#13;
1&#13;
! * • • '&#13;
Your Children&#13;
Against Bowel TroubU&#13;
any children at an early age&#13;
ome constipated, and frequently&#13;
ous consequences result Not&#13;
ng able to realize his own cooon,&#13;
a child's bowels should b t&#13;
stantly watched, and a gentk&#13;
tive given when necessary.&#13;
Miles7 Laxative Tablets arts&#13;
scially well adapted to womea&#13;
children. The Sisters af&#13;
istian Charity, 531 Charles S t ,&#13;
eerne. Pa., who attend many&#13;
is of sickness say of them:&#13;
3otne time ago we began usifif Dr.&#13;
Laxative Tablets and find that&#13;
a them very tnuoh. Their notion&#13;
leat mjaA **• cur* grnMfhtl Any&#13;
ig been made acqnaintod wtta&#13;
"We have had good retails la&#13;
•Very case and the Sisters are vary&#13;
antcfe plenaed."&#13;
The form and flavor of any medidflfc.&#13;
is very important, no matter&#13;
who,, is to take i t The taste and&#13;
appearance are especially important&#13;
whett'children are concerned. All&#13;
parents 'know how hard it is to give&#13;
the average child "medicine," even&#13;
.though the taste is partially disguiaed.&#13;
In using Dr. Milesr Laxative&#13;
Tablets, however, this difficulty,&#13;
fe overcome. . The shape of&#13;
the tablets, their appearance and&#13;
canjtiy-tike taste at once appeal to&#13;
any child,.with the result that they&#13;
arefltaken without objection.&#13;
T i e rich chocolate flavor and&#13;
absence of other taste, make Dr.&#13;
Miles' Laxative Tablets the ideal&#13;
remftdj^ior children.&#13;
Ifc the. first box fails to benefit,&#13;
the *pn.c* js returned. Ask your&#13;
druggist.- A box of 25 doses costs&#13;
onl&amp;ac cents. Never'sold in hulk.&#13;
M t L i r ttftDttAL CO., Klkhart, ! l a *&#13;
••y.}&#13;
$r PATENTS&#13;
Trj SOLACE At Our Sxpense&#13;
Money Back r o y A n y Caae of&#13;
R h e u m a t i s m * N e u r a l g i a o r&#13;
H e a d a c h e t h a t S o l a c e&#13;
Pal la t o r e m o v e&#13;
S b l a c a R e m e d y 1» a repeat medloel &lt;U**&#13;
0 »trr of three Merman SdentbU that dieeolvee&#13;
Uric Add Oryetab and poiifteotae blood. It la&#13;
MIJ to lake, and win sot effect the waftkest&#13;
otoKtsh. .&#13;
It is frnaxanteed under tbe Pure Food tad Drugs&#13;
Law to be abaoiataly free from opiates or harmful&#13;
inn of any deacrlpti n,&#13;
S o l a c e ia a pure specific, in every way, sod&#13;
baa been proven beyond question to b»the suieBt&#13;
and quickest reme'v for Uric A eld Troubled&#13;
Known tn medical aclenoe, no matt*r how long&#13;
standing. It reaches and removes the root of th?&#13;
trounle (Uric Acid) anil purines th«- bio d.&#13;
T h e S o l a c e C o . uf Battle Cxvek are the&#13;
aole TJ. 8. A geuiaand have thonaan a ol voluntary&#13;
terimonlsl Testers which have been reee ved from&#13;
grate'ul peo le S o l a c e h u restored to bealth. 1&#13;
Teatimonlal l-&gt;t»*r», literature and F r e e B o x&#13;
sent upon request.&#13;
B. Lee Morris, President of the Fir*t National&#13;
Bank of Chlco, Texas, wrote the Solace Company&#13;
aslollows; |&#13;
"I want you to B* nd a box of Solace to my l&#13;
lather in ' em phis. Ten n., for which I enclose $1. 1&#13;
Thlaremed- baa been used bv some friends of&#13;
mine here and I must say lta action waa wonderful.&#13;
(W^ned) R L Morris.&#13;
r*ut up in S9e, Me, and 11.00 boxes.&#13;
Ifa mlfthty f i n e to b e w e l l a n d y o u&#13;
TOAD IS FRIEND OF FARMER&#13;
Science Making Efforta to Show Tiller&#13;
of 80M That Humble Batrachlan&#13;
Should Be Encouraged.&#13;
Tbe toad i s one of t b e greatest&#13;
friends of t b e American farmer.&#13;
Science has proven this t o b e true and&#13;
i s making great efforta t o show t h f&#13;
tiller of the' soil h o w important It Is&#13;
t h a t t h e humble hatrmohlan fee&#13;
t / a v&#13;
01EYS HONEY TAR Compound&#13;
For by All&#13;
c a n s o o n b e a o b y taklnft S o l a c e .&#13;
Mo tra* ichemes fa&#13;
t&gt;:« "No special traa meat schemes or fees." Uuat&#13;
S o l a c e A l o n e does tte work.&#13;
W r i t e&#13;
t o d a y f o r t h e f r e e b o x , e t c .&#13;
S o l a c e R e m e d y C o . , B a t t l e C r e e k .&#13;
Advertising&#13;
We have a few&#13;
Tons of Bran&#13;
and Middlings&#13;
Which we will sell at a very&#13;
good figure. If you are in&#13;
need of either kim} please&#13;
J call and get oar best prices.&#13;
-Try a sack of our Pure —&#13;
Buckwheat&#13;
Flour&#13;
at 32o for l o lbs.&#13;
The&#13;
Hoyt Bros.&#13;
s&#13;
Farmer's Beat Friend.&#13;
Chances To Be Hade&#13;
Sporteemea ar«* denouncing&#13;
tbe present game laws, particularly&#13;
with regard to the opening of&#13;
the partridge and deer seasons.&#13;
Men hunting birds are placed at&#13;
a disadvantage because of the late&#13;
opening of the partridge season,&#13;
which commences tbe same day as&#13;
the deer season, October 15.&#13;
The state game department relizes&#13;
the folly of the statute&#13;
and an effort will be made to&#13;
change it at the session of the legislature.&#13;
The plan of State Game&#13;
Warden Otis is to open the bird&#13;
and rabbit season October 1, and&#13;
the deer season November 10. It&#13;
also probable that he will recobe&#13;
extended&#13;
to December 10, with a&#13;
lisenee good for twenty days.&#13;
Such a law would be approved by&#13;
... EGGS. POULTRY AND ^EAL ...&#13;
Attention Farmers!&#13;
Don't forget that we come here&#13;
Ewery Wednesday A. M.&#13;
And will pay every cent the market affords. We will&#13;
appreciate a share of your business.&#13;
Cal v s by phone—No. 33, either phone, for prices. _&#13;
H. L. WILLIAMS&#13;
aged in every possible way to multi*&#13;
ply and spread over the country.&#13;
This little chap who appears BO&#13;
lonely in the open field or in the rear&#13;
of the stable, is one of the greatest&#13;
bug fighters in the world. He is prowling&#13;
around the graBs after gafhe and mend that the deer season&#13;
he gets it in vast numbers from the&#13;
enterprising ant to the lazy slug that&#13;
crawls slowly from beneath a damp&#13;
stone.&#13;
It is estimated that over $800,000,000 \ tDWirnay.a ;„»ur t u„M»:„« *I„,:^„ «*&#13;
worth of crops are destroyed annually f a r m e r s m t h e h a n t m « r e ^ l 0 Q o f&#13;
by insect pests. This great sum t h e upper [.eninsnla.&#13;
would be doubled if it were not for the ! Ttie closed season for rabbits&#13;
toad and his allies, who keep up a ! , OH inna _,„«u ^ «.^i„«* 4.u„„~&#13;
constant warfare against the encroach- h a s d o , n e m r c h to P r o t e c t t h e 8 e&#13;
ing bug and worm, that are cheating animals. Rabbits are n o t tit to&#13;
the farmer out of his Just profits a s | e a t during t h e summer months,&#13;
t T c i t i e s . ^ m i d d l e m a n l 8 d 0 l D S i n j T h e season should however open&#13;
It is estimated that the average toad on October 1 instead of October&#13;
is worth at least five dollars a year to »15 declare all huntersthe&#13;
farmers, as the creature during that&#13;
period has destroyed insects and thus&#13;
saved crops that are worth that&#13;
amount A large toad has been known&#13;
to devour 100 rose beetles at a single&#13;
meal. In the stomach of one toad, 76&#13;
myriapods were found; in another, 65&#13;
army worms and another 65 gypsy*&#13;
moth caterpillars. At anether postmortem&#13;
it was shown that the batrachian&#13;
had just lunched upon 87 ants,&#13;
&gt;&#13;
2&#13;
\ . \ . \ .-v V.'v V-'v V-'v V-'v V v V \ V v V v&#13;
Hills Variety Store&#13;
H o w e l l , M i c h i g a n&#13;
Deafness Cannot Be Cared&#13;
tfy local a ppUcatiODP, as they can no&#13;
each the deceased portion of th« ear&#13;
There is only one way to core deafness,&#13;
and that is by constitutional rem&#13;
edieB. Deatnees is caused oy an in-&#13;
'lamed condition of tbe mucous lining&#13;
0} tbe Eustachian Tube. When this&#13;
19 sowbugs, 3 spiders, 1 caterpillar -tube is inflamed yon have a rumblioK&#13;
and 10 plant lice. At another time one 1 sound or imperfect bearing and when&#13;
1 l i s entirely closed, Deatneis is the&#13;
resnlt, and unless tbe inflamation can&#13;
on taken out and tbi* tube restored to&#13;
toad w a s seen to e a t 85 large and full&#13;
grown celery worms i n three hours,&#13;
while another accepted 86 files, fed t o&#13;
him in less than 10 minutes.&#13;
EXHIBITS AT ROAD CONGRESS&#13;
«K&#13;
robtelne.dc^nvvaaCatTa a n'El&#13;
3N'&gt;.:&#13;
'A?;.-&#13;
•teto, Mutfs&#13;
''.m^sroTM&#13;
n*U©7rvf&#13;
sj«Btetsev&#13;
VaieaWt&#13;
an* ecu. pet&#13;
When in Howell don't forg*&#13;
»t to visit our store. Every&#13;
department is filled with new&#13;
goods.&#13;
Sweaters, Av i a t i 0 n&#13;
Caps, G l o v e s , Mittens,&#13;
Etc.&#13;
A large stock of Choice&#13;
Ohina, Art Goods, Nevelties,&#13;
(Dolls.) Hundreds of these&#13;
from l o to $3.00.&#13;
5 and 10c Goods of&#13;
All Kinds&#13;
GOITRE Now CUrable&#13;
Reliable Treatment Pound by&#13;
Bmlnent Doctor—You Can&#13;
Test I t Pree&#13;
It eeeme abeolutolt certain that at last there has&#13;
beenfonndeo effective remedy for Oolwe—the&#13;
unsi*h'lyand diesmtlotf tumor* that dUfleure&#13;
he neck «od up the strefigi" end vitality of&#13;
otherwise health." and attractive m»n end women.&#13;
Some y^ars ago. Dr W. T. fiobo, nf Battle&#13;
(reek, Mkbljea, dUcovered whs* be believed t«&#13;
he a eneceenl tr a ment for Uottre, Ihts beMel&#13;
was farmer itreaftHea«d by th&gt; fact Ihrt Inndwds&#13;
of sufferers stated th#y were p»rnia»ienily&#13;
fared la it ttm weeks by thie remark w&gt;ie remeiy.&#13;
Oo« greiefol women writes that Dr Bobo's&#13;
eamnla treatment cor#d • er goitre Anotber telle&#13;
"" ' at one mouth's treatnient completely ami&#13;
Complete Demonstration of Gevertv&#13;
ment't Work on Publle Hlohwaye&#13;
Will Be 8hown to Parmer.&#13;
An Interesting exhibit at tbe American&#13;
Road congress to be held next fall&#13;
will be presented by the United&#13;
States department of agriculture. Sec*&#13;
retary Wilson of the department has&#13;
authorized Director Logan Waller&#13;
Page of the office of public roads to&#13;
give a complete exhibit of the gov*&#13;
ernment's work on the public roads of&#13;
the country, showing how unimproved&#13;
roads hurt the farmer anil how Improved&#13;
roads aid not only tbe farmer,&#13;
but the consumer.&#13;
Four of the biggest associations&#13;
which, are working for the Improve*&#13;
ment of public roads are consolidating&#13;
their forces in order to make the next j&#13;
American Road congress the biggest&#13;
affair of its kind In the history of this !&#13;
country; they are the American Road&#13;
Builders' association, the American&#13;
Association for Highway Improvement,&#13;
the American Automobile asso*,&#13;
elation and tbe National Association&#13;
of Road Material and Machinery&#13;
Manufacturers. All of these associations&#13;
have previously held separata&#13;
conventions. It Ss expected that farmers'&#13;
associations and other associations&#13;
Interested In the Improvement of&#13;
public highways will likewise take&#13;
part In the congress.&#13;
its normal condition, bearing will be&#13;
destroyed forever; nine cases out ot&#13;
ten are caused by Catarrh, which is&#13;
nothing but an inflamed condition ot&#13;
the mucons surfaces.&#13;
We will give One Hundred&#13;
Dollars for any case of Dealness&#13;
(caused by Catarrh) tbat cannot&#13;
be cored by Hall's Catarrh Care.&#13;
Send lor circulars, free,&#13;
F. J. CHENEY &amp; Co., Tolndo, Ohio&#13;
Sold by all drntrvists, 75e.&#13;
Take Hail's Family Pi Is for 000&#13;
itipation.&#13;
NEW MACHINE FOR THE FARM&#13;
Implement for Ditching and Distributing&#13;
Tliea Hag Been Invented by&#13;
an Iowa Man..&#13;
In describing a ditching machine&#13;
and tile distributer, Invented by A. H&#13;
Hanson of Mason City, Ia^ the Scientific&#13;
American says:&#13;
This Invention relates to the laying&#13;
_ of pipes or hollow tiles in ditches,&#13;
Theteer* hat extrwte fro- the hundrede of&#13;
l•ettetteer *th re* c ewiveerde ebny -vUf.r Bono, from patients who&#13;
Th1o mypoMnr aso Bfteorn ofr, oSmui teG fo it1rfet, Mwriintets tBoldoacyk , t&lt;B» aDttltev&#13;
Or*fk, Mleb , end he -HI send you free a rev nlar&#13;
M60 tmteMnt of this eftettte Goitre remedy,y.&#13;
pio-f whet it e*"n eeee-anlUh for yon. _&#13;
Dr, Bote gthnrlese a to 9 eke thie free offer&#13;
t (MCire sane est.&#13;
AdterttM meal&#13;
to&#13;
X T 0&#13;
___^l/ S&#13;
Ditching Machine and Tile Distributer&#13;
r;*.&#13;
\. &gt;&#13;
^!Stirl.0.&#13;
improved ditching machine and tile&#13;
distributer, arraased to readily 'ORB a&#13;
$ 2 . 0 0 T r e a t m e n t P R B B * * * to .**• •"«»* ** to P U « * t j *&#13;
dttek tor convenient forming ot tbe&#13;
&amp;m or pip«avto term a line ot sttck&#13;
UMk or pipes. The accompanying illustration&#13;
is a longitudinal central aea»&#13;
tfcam ot tae snaebzae and dlstrttratsr.&#13;
:^1 • $ :&#13;
\&#13;
il&#13;
S t a r am aale al B(mk*§&#13;
• : &gt; ' V V.'''''S.'&#13;
Ket, wo ee red ehfldtwe have eeee&#13;
awatty relWeed ef Frta7*pliee»y, Hw*&lt;t&#13;
ralrfng^rJslwthe ree«oratfveiofa ftc&#13;
. nee end Sthe teieoratfeee'of e y-oastaeet&#13;
kfe.)Deeter.&#13;
OM*otaeaw-lteeetlMteoa:MBebM set had&#13;
an sttaekHim tattee the trrt menth'e treat;&#13;
W l f T ILaJtlOl.&#13;
Over one hundred attended the New&#13;
Y*ars dinner at tbe home of M. Sopp&#13;
Proceeds over | 2 7 .&#13;
A number from this place attended&#13;
(be Cat re 11 and Milter at the M. P.&#13;
cbnrch at Flainfield January 1, 1913.&#13;
Singing school at tbe church every&#13;
Saturday evening; Lyle Gorton, teach&#13;
er.&#13;
Mirtie Weilman has returned to&#13;
Detroit for a few weeks visit with her&#13;
sister wbo is in poor health.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Bland oalled on friends&#13;
hire last Friday.&#13;
P. H.Smith is spending tbe week&#13;
in Howell&#13;
Harry Maycotk is on the sick list.&#13;
Tbe losers ot the hunting contest&#13;
«ave an oyster sapper at tbe home of&#13;
Shubei Moore last Saturday evening.&#13;
Mrs. Carrie May cock is on the tick&#13;
lUr.&#13;
Rev. Miller's son spoke at ths cbnreb&#13;
Sunday evening.&#13;
L. Pewless and daughter Eva of&#13;
Iosco are visiting at ths home of P&#13;
H. Smith.&#13;
ajees^aeseaierei-ldJdtotheveeslnsieepeO&#13;
after oee^ils*-MtMttsseat * a weeaan writes&#13;
^Tea k m ewe* ate ef tVee tentWe ite,"&#13;
Kewr rtoeeefc s h e e i e i a a s i fiesi taerree&#13;
rial t»atme-rt aloreTwilU, today CM iato tree&#13;
e W i e t (WM wwftkj) rmd^pftre the atert ef&#13;
'Pirn ef BsUslsn.&#13;
A definite phut ot rotation win tela&#13;
yon build up ito soil tad taereaja&#13;
laa yield from year «0 ftdr,&#13;
(Too Itte for l»«t week.)&#13;
Rov. Oatrell of Iowa preached&#13;
here Sunday. Six were ta£en in*&#13;
to thH ohnreh. Next Sunday evening&#13;
Rev. Miller's son • will preaoh&#13;
bore.&#13;
A New Yean dinner was held&#13;
at the tome of M. Sopp.&#13;
The young people gave a shower&#13;
Monday sight for Mr. and Mr*.&#13;
A. NiehNaoD. !&#13;
Mra. W. B. Miller and Mr*&#13;
Ella Oatotil ate at Jaokaoo attead.&#13;
ing thfe poultry show and visiting&#13;
friends, -&gt;&#13;
Ladies $15 nbilinei now « 1 . 2 5&#13;
at Dancer**&#13;
Phonographs&#13;
Yes, we have|them, in all styles and prices. They are&#13;
THE WONDERFUL COLUMBIA&#13;
iu both horn and hornless types. Hear one with the&#13;
new reproducer (just out) and you will be surprised.&#13;
Try one in your home. S o l d o n e a s y p a y m e n t s&#13;
John Dinkete Hnckney&#13;
^*s^etetf$^cre&amp;6e&amp;&amp;e« e»:«^fe&#13;
Either Phoue&#13;
:: 1583 ::&#13;
Office and Works&#13;
306 Cooper Street&#13;
Work Guaranteed&#13;
:: First Class »n&#13;
EMPIRE MARBLE AND&#13;
G R A N I T E W O R K S&#13;
4 JOHN (}. LESLIE, Prop.&#13;
Manufacturer* of and Dealer* in&#13;
M o n u m e n t s . S t a t u a r y a n d S t o n e B u r i a l V a u l t s&#13;
S JACKSON, MICHIGAN&#13;
I IF1- 3D- T O H I I J T S O I ? T , ^ . g r e n t , I&#13;
S PINCKNEY. . . . . MICHIGAN J&#13;
HOTBb GRISWObD&#13;
^dndG^we&#13;
o!dA^: Detroit, Mich..&#13;
Postal Hotel Co.&#13;
FRED POSTAL, Prea. FRED A. GOODMAN, S e c r e t a r y&#13;
Headquarters of ttie Wolverine Automobile Glifb!&#13;
D e t r o i t ' s M o s t P o p u l a r H o t e l&#13;
European flan Only Rates $1.50 per day and up&#13;
SBO.000 Bxpneded In Remodeling, Furnlahlna and Decorating&#13;
The Finest Cafe West of New York&#13;
Service A L a Carte at Popular Prices&#13;
A Strictly Modern and Up-to-date Hotel. Centrally located in the very heart of the&#13;
city, "Where Life is Worth Living." N o t h i n g b e t t e r a t o u r r a t e a&#13;
•OxOF iVmIAiNIIotPs -&#13;
TRADCiKa iMoaaaa aa&#13;
COPYftiaMTB •&amp;-&#13;
qoAlc.kirtffn au ssc-emrrtattinnir papark ortjHflbn taennd f rdaaet ewrtapaUtautrrr aaati tiBlofaesnsttlroln« t&lt;lr• ePmTinN^«bnlft UPlM. H^aUTMuH^NOQoRnnontrFeaiUaKnu- MPnittsfBnota. OtAldkeesnt ntMMoMacrtato rMa-uJutma nawxJroMTttaaoaeut.- 't tpxJKuwtiu, withowttbsTSft. intSa ScktilifR Hmencan. AJum«somel7»tli»stt-»taS wtMi&#13;
tnWon of Mtr fciaWiae JoorosJ rmn toarpoothaTU. foiabral&#13;
UeAal Advertlalng&#13;
«&#13;
aaiatttnait&#13;
i t&#13;
^ t t a t e o f M l c h l a a n , taa prorwta oorfirtSotV.&#13;
, / 5 «ba eonnty of LlvSgatony-At a aaailofrpf •*!*&gt; 7*&#13;
I Oooit, held * tb« PtoScla Ofloa la tha VUlat&#13;
Howell in said oooaty 00 th#80tb da&gt; of&#13;
k. v. 1112. Praaaat, Hoa.AnhorA. M&#13;
JnAfs ot FrobMta. In the nattar of ths) a*a*&lt;&#13;
H. M. COLBY, Paaaaaad&#13;
Lewis Colby havlag Had lo said ooort&#13;
petition praying tbat a oarteln InatrnaMBt&#13;
writing, purporting to be the last wtU~aa4&#13;
meat ot aata daesaaad, now on flte ia taML&#13;
baadtntttadtovrebataaadthat ton adalat&#13;
tlon of aatn aatale begraatad to hiaaair or ta&#13;
other raiwbl* paraon.&#13;
It la ordered that the UOk day of la-Mary,&#13;
», » t t at taa-a'doek la the forenoon, a; «5d p&#13;
bate ofloa, be and la hereby appolniad&#13;
b#arincseJd petition.&#13;
Itlarnrtherordered thatpnblla noiloa&#13;
ha vtrtm by pnbliaUiaa ei a oopy of taM&#13;
iat thraa anccaaalvawaahaprertoaa toaald&#13;
baariasrla taa Prncxn-rr DiarAToa,a&#13;
prlatafl and dfoalatad la said eoaaif,&#13;
AatTHOm aV HOaffAMaV&#13;
"Xa&#13;
J'J&#13;
. \&#13;
&lt;••••#' - r ' : * T ' 4 « J J&#13;
,-'•; ^ | v&#13;
'-• v i/3&#13;
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4*&#13;
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4¾¾&#13;
W.&#13;
\&#13;
M&#13;
M. P. HOUR M. D* c L, nana M. 0.&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Pb/iteiaM aad 8ur«eow.&#13;
crTATB o r XICBKJAM, the' rrbnasb ttooft j&#13;
Qtaa eooaty at Utrngsisa.&#13;
JAMB* CUJUONGHAIC&#13;
The andanianal mating been&#13;
" * *'oonn«y.&#13;
elalaia&#13;
tromtl&#13;
an appointed,&#13;
* * * " " * • " • * Baaaia n-^vtaaaaj-^eyu««aenjsaaalaa1a«tao0nVaa*rrwe Caft In tbe-natter01 aaid eaiak.aadtOBtsao-rtaa&#13;
from the Nth day of Daeember, A. u. 1913 bavlac&#13;
hawsilowtdbysmlLJodflavt Frebau to mi ps?&#13;
aani boldkt elal^aaSiat aaJsaaUU la wai&#13;
"St-aataWabyglvanthatws winajatAaataa&#13;
:?&amp;••;&#13;
si, of rabf-aafff A. &amp;&#13;
All eaUft ftrnttflj iite»awt\t*&gt;&#13;
4ay ar '&#13;
Strati.&#13;
FENCKHJBT,&#13;
Otaga on Hfia&#13;
afjOd&#13;
day ot Apttt, A. n. fwa, et&#13;
at tat lata natdanca ot J1&#13;
. Ilia and on&#13;
t«oUaak*i&#13;
Maar* •&gt;^*a&#13;
im&#13;
9=&#13;
i*'.&#13;
2 5 «&#13;
?-u w SS9B&#13;
We&#13;
:»v&#13;
• i is&#13;
. * • • ; ' &gt; • -&#13;
i. &gt;• A-; t&lt; &gt;:&#13;
.«»v:&#13;
* • •-. V: V f&#13;
tiu Ji x&lt;i. fkm^M^^^ •y&gt;i&#13;
I&#13;
&amp;&#13;
f W&#13;
. ! : &lt; • • '&#13;
rt*1&#13;
1--. "V/&#13;
• » * ; .&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
KOY W. CAVKULV, Pub.&#13;
PINCKNEY, - - - MICHIGAN"&#13;
SPOONING A FINE ART.&#13;
Spooning, by which is meant that&#13;
form of affection described by the sage&#13;
Noah Webster as "acting with demonstrative&#13;
or foolish fondness," hae&#13;
been placed upon a solid and responsible&#13;
bubie in the Lynn high school.&#13;
Hooks on etiquette for the young usually&#13;
deprecate spooning, or omit to&#13;
mention it at all, but in this high&#13;
school ooys and girls who deuire to&#13;
spoon have merely to get a permit&#13;
from their parents. To be more explicit,&#13;
the principal of the school, observing&#13;
some mushy scenes In the corridors&#13;
of the building, recently announced&#13;
that public lovemaking must&#13;
stop; but he added that pupils desiring&#13;
to spoon must bring a written permission&#13;
from their parents. Spooning&#13;
thus is reduced to a practical working&#13;
basis, says the Boston Globe. If&#13;
you produce the parental permit, presumably&#13;
you may spoon. So girls who&#13;
like spooning, and evidently there.are&#13;
some in Lynn who do, must produce&#13;
their permit or go unloved. "Mamma,&#13;
you haven't made me out a spooning&#13;
permit yet," may be heard in the&#13;
homes of Mary, Margaret and Estelle,&#13;
while In another part ot the city, Paul,&#13;
Henry and Oswald are saying, "Pa,&#13;
just sign this spooning permit, before&#13;
you go downtown." When the permits&#13;
are issued and have been O. K.'d&#13;
by the principal, there will be an opportunity&#13;
for organized labor to establish&#13;
Snoopers' Union No. 1 in Lynn.&#13;
T H E FINANCES OF T H E STATE&#13;
ARE IN BEST CONDITION AND&#13;
STATE PROSPEROUS.&#13;
MRS. WHITELAW REIO&#13;
FEW • RECOMMENDATIONS ARE&#13;
MADE TO LEGISLATURE.&#13;
In Leaving The Executive Office Ex-&#13;
Governor Qoborn Gives Advice&#13;
In Scriptural Quotation.&#13;
Every other nation except Great&#13;
Britain that has opera at all has it in&#13;
its native tongue. France, Spain,&#13;
Italy, Germany and even Russia have&#13;
the masterpieces of music sung in&#13;
words intelligible to the people that&#13;
bear them. Only we that speak English&#13;
are content to listen to songs we&#13;
do not understand and to follow emotions&#13;
that might as well be rendered&#13;
in pantomime. The assertion that&#13;
English is not a singing language was&#13;
born either of ignorance or of impudence,&#13;
says the New York World. Our&#13;
language contains some of the most&#13;
beautiful songs in the world, and some&#13;
of the greatest of singers have delighted&#13;
to render them, Any opera singer&#13;
could surely learn to sing English as&#13;
easily as Russian.&#13;
The first case of stealing an aeroplane&#13;
occurred the other day at the&#13;
Puchem aerodrome at Munich. When&#13;
the pilot, Belat, arrived In the morning&#13;
he found that some one had broken&#13;
into his hangar and that the monoplane&#13;
was missing. On inquiry he&#13;
found that several persons in the&#13;
neighborhood had heard the noise&#13;
of a motor, about 2 o'clock In the&#13;
morning. Apparently some enterprising&#13;
pilot had flown away with the&#13;
machine. In the suburbs of Munich&#13;
policemen were kept busy scanning&#13;
the horizon in search of the flyer. Up&#13;
to the present the" machine has not&#13;
been recovered.&#13;
For centuries before Marconi wireless&#13;
telegraph was known the mystery&#13;
of swift communication has puzzled&#13;
many civilized explorers of barbarian&#13;
regions. In the heart of Africa&#13;
a missionary discovered the method&#13;
of hollowing a large gourd, which was&#13;
then dried, and round it was stretched&#13;
the skin of a kid, hard and thin as&#13;
parchment Beaten with a padded&#13;
drumstick this instrument gives a&#13;
sound which can be heard eight miles&#13;
away. And each village contains the&#13;
expert who can tap the message and&#13;
send It on.&#13;
The specialists in tuberculosis, reporting&#13;
to the French Academy of Sciences,&#13;
declare that as long at a man&#13;
retains one-sixth of the lung capccity,&#13;
with which he is endowed by nature,&#13;
bit vltalitV remains unimpaired.&#13;
This la to be noted as encouragement&#13;
lor victims of consumption. As long&#13;
as one-third of the original tract of the&#13;
lungs remains, there is a chance that&#13;
(cicatrices may form and the wounds&#13;
of the disease may heal, and this onethird&#13;
will constitute lung capacity sufficient&#13;
for the patient to do business&#13;
upon to the end of a long life.&#13;
•'IC&gt; .'v:&#13;
If it Is id become the fixed custom&#13;
for the women to burn their hats&#13;
,when they gain the suffrage, a Question&#13;
arises which may affect masculine&#13;
votes. Of course the burning of&#13;
hats Involves the purchase of new&#13;
hats. Will the tyrant man be allowed&#13;
Jto continue his time-honored custom&#13;
of drawing checks to pay for the new&#13;
hat, or wilt the. newly enfranchised&#13;
«ttisens&gt;seorh that, dependence, and&#13;
furnish th« new millinery themselves?&#13;
"i ' ^'^— ••—&#13;
'i A doff with an eat in its mouth ere- &amp;a pans* in the barroom of a New&#13;
t hotel nan yelling and fleeing&#13;
| h r thatt Utss, This furnishes fine&#13;
for ratost by the woman who&#13;
rtaUoaJed beoause she runs from a&#13;
December 31, 1912.&#13;
To the People of the State of Michigan,&#13;
and their Forty-Seventh Legislature:&#13;
Section five ot Article six of the&#13;
Constitution of the State ot Michigan,&#13;
relating to the duties of the Governor,&#13;
it as follows:&#13;
"He shall communicate by message&#13;
to the legislature, and at the close of&#13;
his official term to the incoming legislature,&#13;
the condition of the state, and&#13;
recommend such measures as he may&#13;
deem expedient."&#13;
Obedient to that mandate of the people,&#13;
I find satisfaction in reporting&#13;
to you that, although the state had a&#13;
deficit two years ago to the amount&#13;
of near a million dollars and was conpequently&#13;
in diograce, it Is now out&#13;
of debt and has a surplus in the treasury&#13;
of near a million dollars. The&#13;
rate of taxation hae been lowered and&#13;
should continue to lessen Hundreds&#13;
of millions of dollars in property have&#13;
been added to the tax rolls, More&#13;
should bo added at once. Conditions&#13;
throughout the state are good. Institutional&#13;
and departmental efficiency&#13;
has increased. New economies are&#13;
bejng practiced and there are many&#13;
others that may be resorted to. Progressive&#13;
laws should be enacted comprehending&#13;
more equal taxation and&#13;
the assessment* of porperty tangible&#13;
and intangible now escaping taxation;&#13;
Insuring greater purity and honesty&#13;
in elections and returns; conserving&#13;
the rights of the masses and&#13;
improving their conditions; divorcing&#13;
the organised liquor interests from&#13;
politics; practically and effectively&#13;
checking the devastation of alcohol,&#13;
the too easy supply and consequent&#13;
excessive use of which cause measureless&#13;
misery; realizing the responsibility&#13;
of the strong to the weak, the&#13;
duties of public brotherhood and of the&#13;
state to all of its. citizens; concentrating&#13;
responsibility In visible officials&#13;
chosen by votes in wJeldy election&#13;
districts; and keeping step with&#13;
the onward march of better public&#13;
business, highe- humanism, applied&#13;
ethics and pure morals. There Is&#13;
little danger that such new and needful&#13;
legislation will be created too rapidly&#13;
for practical adjustment to it of&#13;
the life and affairs of the state, but&#13;
heed to this may well be given. It&#13;
may also be remembered that the form&#13;
of government Is best that is best administered.&#13;
I do not need to urge you, as legisaltors,&#13;
to whom has been delegated&#13;
all the power of the people of Michigan&#13;
whose average of citizenship is&#13;
ihe highest in the world, to be true to&#13;
your trust, because I have faith that&#13;
you will be. I do not need to suggest&#13;
to you that citizenship should&#13;
take precedure of partisanship and&#13;
that the welfare of the state is to be&#13;
thought of before any consideration&#13;
U given to party politics, because you&#13;
are as well seized of these axioms as&#13;
I am. I do not need to request your&#13;
respectful and patriotic co-operation&#13;
with the distinguished citizen who&#13;
bar just been inaugurated Governor&#13;
of the State, because you will contribute&#13;
such an attitude of your own&#13;
free will. And I do not need to obtrude&#13;
a long message of suggested&#13;
legislation which would only tend to&#13;
confuse the new order if remembered,&#13;
and be of LO 'value If forgotten, because&#13;
I have conferred with Governor&#13;
Ferris and he understands the needs&#13;
of the state as I see them. My administration&#13;
of affairs is my message&#13;
to the people.&#13;
Now permit me, in closing, to quote&#13;
the eighth verse of the fourth chapter&#13;
of the Epistle of Paul, the Apostle,&#13;
to the Philliplans, upon which may&#13;
rafely be builded the strong and permanent&#13;
structure of state and In which&#13;
may be discovered a safe rule of&#13;
guidance for every action:&#13;
. "Finally, brethren, whatsoever*&#13;
things are true, whatsoever things&#13;
are honest, whatsoever things are just,&#13;
whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever&#13;
things aw lovely, whatsoever&#13;
things are of good report; if there be&#13;
*ny virtue, and If there be any praise,&#13;
think on these things."&#13;
Respectfully,&#13;
CHASE S. OSBORN.&#13;
Mrs. Reld is the widow of the late&#13;
American ambassador to England.&#13;
Applauds Words of Ferris and Osborn.&#13;
Governor Woodbridge N. Ferris&#13;
made his initial bow to the legislature&#13;
of the state of Michigan Thursday. The&#13;
retiring governor, Chase S. Osborn, in&#13;
the same hour faced the legislature&#13;
in the administration of his office, yet&#13;
for the last time by right of his office,&#13;
^ n d delivered his final official&#13;
word to the people of Michigan.&#13;
The occasion was impressive chiefly&#13;
in the harmony which was shown in&#13;
the views of the two progressive governors&#13;
of opposite political allegiance,&#13;
and in the non-partisan spirit with&#13;
which each was applauded by the&#13;
crowd which packed the legislative&#13;
chamber to hear them. Gov. Ferris&#13;
repeated almost vebatim one of the&#13;
paragraphs in the inaugural message&#13;
of his predecessor and commented&#13;
on the fact. Mr. Osborn, with delicate&#13;
ethical restraint, refrained from&#13;
making any detailed recommendations&#13;
because, he said, if heeded, his views&#13;
might embarrass the new governor&#13;
and, because, he declared, he had&#13;
abiding faith that the new governor&#13;
will view public questions as he views&#13;
them.&#13;
Balkan League May Disintegrate.&#13;
Excitement is growing among the&#13;
Balkan allies, whese union, although&#13;
maintained in ail official manifestations,&#13;
is in reality threatened with disintegration.&#13;
The greatest fear is entertained that&#13;
Bulgaria, through her representatives&#13;
in the present peace conference, is&#13;
working chiefly for her own advantage.&#13;
Accordingly the series of conversations&#13;
between Hechard Pasha, head&#13;
of the Ottoman delegation, and Dr.&#13;
Daneff, leRder of the Bulgarian envoys,&#13;
are watched suspiciously. Moreover&#13;
Greece complains bitterly because&#13;
Bhe Is no* allowed to retain&#13;
Saloniki and the Chalcidice peninsula,&#13;
which is as Greek at Attica, and is&#13;
lorced to yield Monastlr to Servla, although&#13;
' that town contains 20,000&#13;
Greeks and only 150 Servians.&#13;
'*£•&#13;
J A Denver professor says the world&#13;
'.would be J« an awful fix if all went to&#13;
.&lt;. .^ j ^ ^ geif-mada&#13;
to endow the&#13;
H, W. Sawytr, who la interested In&#13;
Newaygo county lands, writing from&#13;
Albuquerque, New Mexico, says: "I&#13;
have spent $1,060 in traveling over the&#13;
west the past year and I know that no&#13;
state in the union offers so much for&#13;
the money as Michigan."&#13;
Attorney General Wyfcew soldi in aa&#13;
opinion that the state railroad commission&#13;
has supervision &lt;or«r the&#13;
Mackinac ^ Transportattosi Gov which&#13;
la chasgin* *0 e e n u tor trahspoMtag&#13;
passengers across the straits. Am tat&#13;
restlgatioo will be mad* at « a o i&#13;
Senator Jeff Davis Is Dead.&#13;
United States Senator Jeff Davis&#13;
was stricken with apoplexy at his&#13;
home in Little Rock, Ark. He died before&#13;
doctors who had been hurriedly&#13;
summoned could do anything to aid&#13;
him. He was born in Little Rock&#13;
county, May 6, 1862, and served as&#13;
district attorney, attorney general and&#13;
governor, and was elected U. S. senator&#13;
in 1890. He was married in October,.&#13;
1911, to Miss Celia Qarter. At&#13;
the time he was a widower. He is survived&#13;
by three sons and four daughters&#13;
by his first wife. /&#13;
As.governor "Jeff" was unwise and&#13;
extravagant and at times sensational&#13;
his popularity never failed him.&#13;
T H E J U L I A L U C K E N B A C H PRACT&#13;
I C A L L Y SPLIT IN T W O IN&#13;
CHESAPEAKE B A Y ; FOURTEEN&#13;
SAVED.&#13;
BRITISH STEAMER I N D R A K U L A ,&#13;
WAS GOING FAST DURING FOG.&#13;
George Howard, 28, sentenced to&#13;
JackBon prison for wife desertion from&#13;
Lenawee county last October to three&#13;
years, escaped from tHe prison.&#13;
There wHl be no hotel life for Gov.&#13;
Ferris in Lansing, he having arranged&#13;
to take up a quiet abode in a private&#13;
dwelling house with his secretary.&#13;
Auditor General Fuller reports that&#13;
a total of $24,000 was paid to the state&#13;
during 1912 by 55 foreign liquor dealers.&#13;
There are as many more who&#13;
either have not paid or cannot be located.&#13;
The Central Savings bank of Detroit&#13;
has filed with the state banking department&#13;
amended articles of incorporation&#13;
Increasing its capital stock/&#13;
from $100,000 to $500,000, with a surplus&#13;
of $100,000.&#13;
The Indrakula, W i t h a Big Hole in&#13;
' Her Side, Headed for the Beach&#13;
and Grounded In Time to Save&#13;
Her Crew.&#13;
After being rammed by the British&#13;
steamer Indrakula off Tangier bar in&#13;
the Chesapeake bay, the tramp steamship&#13;
Julia Luckenbach was practically&#13;
split in twain and foundered.&#13;
Though within easy wireless reach&#13;
of 10 steamers, 14 liveB were lost after&#13;
a desperate battle with the seas.&#13;
Among the drowned are Captain H. A.&#13;
Gilbert and Mrs. Gilbert.&#13;
Captain Gilbert and Mrs. Gilbert&#13;
lived at Itaspeburg, near Baltimore.&#13;
Nineteen of the crew, were lost. Eight&#13;
were saved by the steamer Pennsylvania,&#13;
and six others were rescued by&#13;
the Indrakula according to a wireless&#13;
message received at Newport News&#13;
from the revenue cutter Apache, which&#13;
went to the Indrakula'B assistance.&#13;
First Officer Hunt, half crazed by&#13;
his terrible fight for life, and by the&#13;
remembrance of the tragedy through&#13;
which he had passed, at first said that&#13;
22 persons had gone down with the&#13;
ship, but subsequently it was learned&#13;
that only 28 in all were on board the&#13;
Luckenbach including the crippled&#13;
wife of Captain Gilbert.&#13;
The Luckenbach sank five minutes&#13;
after the Indrakula, coming out of the&#13;
fog, dealt her a death blow.&#13;
Only those on the top deck had&#13;
time to escape. First Officer Frederick&#13;
Hunt and seven members of the crew&#13;
climbed into the rigging and hung&#13;
there for six hours in the terrible cold&#13;
until the Danish liner Pennsylvania&#13;
rescued them. The others, caught below&#13;
decks, died without knowing what&#13;
had happened.&#13;
The Indrakula, with a big hole in&#13;
her Bide, backed away from the sinking&#13;
ship and headed for the beach.&#13;
She was grounded in time for all of&#13;
her crew to be saved.&#13;
The Luckenbach reached the capes&#13;
late Thursday. She ran into the gale&#13;
blowing but was able to make the&#13;
passage into the Chesapeake bay. She&#13;
was slowly working her way up the&#13;
bay when the Indrakula, driven at a&#13;
high rate of speed by the gale, bore&#13;
down on the Luckenbach and the collision&#13;
occurred.&#13;
W2&amp;BMETKB H SUldDE.&#13;
Portugal Uneasy.&#13;
The political situation in Portugal&#13;
daily becomes worse and more threatening.&#13;
Rumors are current every hour&#13;
that one aide or the other intends to&#13;
overturn the government and force&#13;
either the proclamation of a dictatorship&#13;
or the appointment of a provisional&#13;
cabinet&#13;
The secret society of the Carbinierios&#13;
is increasing in strength. It now&#13;
numbers 30,600 members, virtually..all&#13;
of whom are socialists.&#13;
Michigan Wants $40,200 of tonde.&#13;
Information made public by Post*&#13;
master General Hitchcock shows that the lowest fire loss of any city in&#13;
the postal savings depositors In Michigan&#13;
have made application for $40,200&#13;
of the postal savings bonds to be distributed&#13;
Jan. 1. Ar*llcatam far this&#13;
amount has been mad* by 129 depositors&#13;
and. mora than taa.ejOO of/this&#13;
amount of bonds i t to ha isvthe ;«•*%&#13;
t*t&amp;g purchased ss a oarn*f»a»t lav&#13;
A bill for presentation to the legislature&#13;
has been prepared by a committee&#13;
of the Michigan district of the&#13;
United Iron Workers of America. It is&#13;
stated that an of the features of the&#13;
good mining laws in the various state&#13;
nave been embodied in the bill.&#13;
Saginaw's fire loss during 1912 was;&#13;
$$0,784; or about $1 per capita, practically&#13;
the same aa last year. This is&#13;
Ann Arbor Congressman Leaps&#13;
Ocean While Insane.&#13;
Into&#13;
Representative William W. Wedemeyer,&#13;
of Ann Arbor, ,Mich,.. who, suddenly&#13;
went insane a^ ColoftT Panama,&#13;
at the time of President Taft*« wcent&#13;
visit to the isthmus, jumped overboard A•&amp;««»»*»•. was. ,badly beaten by , a&#13;
from a ship on which he had been"&#13;
taken at Colon.&#13;
The vessel was the Panama of the&#13;
Panama-line.&#13;
The news was received by the war&#13;
department by wireless-&#13;
At the same tfme"tnat news was&#13;
received of Wedemeyer's death his&#13;
colleagues in the house received a cable&#13;
from Panama that he was en&#13;
route to Washington in charge of an&#13;
attendant. He was reported as having&#13;
suicidal mania.&#13;
Wedemeyer's close friends say that&#13;
a few days before leaving for the&#13;
Isthmus he fell and struck his head&#13;
on an icy sidewalk. It was not regarded&#13;
as serious and did not deter&#13;
him from going with the congressional&#13;
party.&#13;
DYNAMITERS TO GO FEEE.&#13;
If They Can Raise Sum Required-&#13;
Ryan Must Furnish $70,000 Bail.&#13;
Attorneys for the imprisoned dynamite&#13;
conspirators won a victory in&#13;
the U. S. court of appeals in Chicago&#13;
when a writ of supersedeas was&#13;
granted them and an order issued for&#13;
the release of the prisoners on bonds&#13;
from the federal prison at Leavenworth,&#13;
Kan.&#13;
All will be released, it is believed,&#13;
except Hockiu.&#13;
Attorney Zoline presented the petition&#13;
m behalf of the convicted ironworkers,&#13;
and argued in support of it,&#13;
aa did Attorney Krum. Zoline declared&#13;
that In cases such as the present&#13;
the prisoners have the right of&#13;
bail, particularly as the defendants&#13;
were sentenced and sent to Leavenworth&#13;
before a hearing on a writ of&#13;
eror had been held.&#13;
'rim' . « ' i»; T • V 'pfw* or&#13;
MICHIGAN&#13;
Three 3J*t tyers.—Joseph Cox, a po-i&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
March 15 for Extra Session.&#13;
As the result of the conferences between&#13;
President-elect Wilson and democratic&#13;
leaders in congress during the&#13;
holidays, these features of the democratic&#13;
legislative program have been&#13;
tentatively agreed upon:&#13;
Congress will be called in extraordinary&#13;
session March 15 to revise the&#13;
tariff. A complete scheme of tariff&#13;
revision will be laid before a caucus&#13;
of the democratic members of the&#13;
new house early next March by the&#13;
democratic members of the ways and&#13;
means committee.&#13;
This will include an Income tax if&#13;
the constitutional amendment on this&#13;
subject has been ratified by threefourths&#13;
of the states, and an excise&#13;
tax if it has not. It will- also include&#13;
the administrative features of&#13;
the new law embracing a substitute&#13;
for the present maximum and minimum&#13;
clause. Any changes in the internal&#13;
revenue taxes made necessary&#13;
by reductions in the customs tariff&#13;
also will be laid before the caucus.&#13;
The democratic caucus will decide&#13;
whether the schedules will be reported&#13;
and passed by the house separately&#13;
or as one bill&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
LTOBbar importations at Saginaw&#13;
and Bay City for the navigation season&#13;
of m * amounted to 88,727,141&#13;
feat or storoaimatoly ^OOOjOOO feet&#13;
less tha* in 1911.&#13;
Qrtef-strloke* oyer his. wife's death&#13;
Joar yet*a*W, ^chardWybeija, **&#13;
tered term* indicating, that U*y ar* _*ea« oid, hung himself m the banx&#13;
his farm w Camnop townalfe near&#13;
-... . .V*. *. . I | k ' ^ *Wf#&#13;
DETROIT—Cattle—Extra dryfed steera&#13;
$7.50(^8; ateers and heifers, 1,000 to 1,200&#13;
HJS., |7^7.50; steers and heifers 800 to&#13;
1,000 lbs., $61i6.75; steers and heifers that&#13;
are fat, 500 fo 700 lbs., $5&lt;g&gt;6.50; chbice&#13;
fat cows, ?5.60^6; good fat COWB, ¢4.50&#13;
&lt;y;5; common cows, $4@4.25; canners, $3®&#13;
3.85; choice heavy bulls, $6.50@6; fair £o&#13;
good bolognas, bulls, $4.75@5.25; stock&#13;
bulls, $4®4.25; choice feeding steers, 800&#13;
to 1,000 rbs., $6@6.50; feeding steers, 800&#13;
to 1,000 lbs., J5.50O-C; choice stockers, 500&#13;
to 700 rbs., $6.25@5.60; fair stockers, 500&#13;
to 700 lbs., $4.50@5; stock heifers, $4®&#13;
4.50; milkers, large, young, medium age,&#13;
S50tJt70; common milkers, |30@45.&#13;
Veal- calves—Market steady; best, |9(g&gt;&#13;
11; others, $4©8.50; milch cows and&#13;
springers, steady.&#13;
fcjheep and lambs—Market dull and 25©&#13;
G0c lower. Best lambs, $S.25(^8.50; fair to&#13;
good lambs, $7.25@&gt;7.75; fair to good&#13;
utieep, 13.75^4.26; culls and common, $2.50&#13;
Hogs—Llpht to good tfutohers, $7.50®&#13;
7.75; pigs, *7.G0®7..55; light yorkers, $7.45&#13;
©7.55; pigs, $7.50@7.55; light yorkers,&#13;
$;.45l^7.50; stags, 1-3 off.&#13;
BUFFALO, N. Y—Cattleheavy,&#13;
47.90; yorkers,&#13;
$S.50@8.75;&#13;
$5.25^5.50;&#13;
FiAST&#13;
Steady.&#13;
Hogs—Strong;&#13;
$8; pigs, $S&lt;8/8.16&#13;
Sheep—Lower; top lambs,&#13;
yearlings, ?7@7.&amp;0; wethers,&#13;
ewes, $4.50@4.75.&#13;
Calves—$5@12.&#13;
GRAIN, ETC.&#13;
DETROIT—Wheat—Cash No. 2 red,&#13;
$1.12 1-4; May opened at $1,161-2, advanced&#13;
l-4c and declined to the opening; July&#13;
opened at 95 l-2c, advanced to 96 3*4c and&#13;
declined to 95 l-2c; No. 1 white, $1.11 1-4.&#13;
Com—Cash No. 3, 48c; No. 3 yellow, 49c&#13;
JMo. 4 yellow, 47c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 35 l-2c; No. 3 white, 1&#13;
car at 34 l-4c, 2 at 34 l-2c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 62c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate and prompt shipment,&#13;
$2.20; January, $2.22.&#13;
alsCikloev, en$ 1S2.e7e5d. —Prime spot, $11.55; prime&#13;
GENERAL MARKETS.&#13;
The poultry market is a little firmer and&#13;
dressed chickens are In demand at an&#13;
advance of about a cent. Other lines of&#13;
poultry are steady and quiet. Fruits are&#13;
dull and steady. Offerings of apples are&#13;
quite large and demand is not active.&#13;
Butter is steady and the tone in the eggdeal&#13;
is easy. Dressed hogs are easy and&#13;
dull. Potatoes show little change and&#13;
buslnes is not active.&#13;
Butter—Fancy creamery, 35c; creamery&#13;
firsts, 32c; dairy, 32c; packing, 21o&#13;
per rb.&#13;
incEluggdse—d, C2u5r rce npte rr deoce*i.p ts, candled, cases&#13;
APPLES—Baldwin, $2.25@2.50; greening,&#13;
$2.50@2.76; spy, $2.75@3; steel red.&#13;
$3@3.50; No. 2, 75c@$1.50 per bbl.&#13;
CABBAGES—$1® 1.26 per bbl.&#13;
DRESSED CALVES—Ordinary, 10©llc;&#13;
fancy, 12 1-2—13 1-2 per ft.&#13;
DRESSED HOGS—$«®8.50 per cwt. for&#13;
light to medium.&#13;
DRESSED POULTRY—Spring chickens&#13;
13@16c; hens, 11013c; old roosters, 16®&#13;
17; turkeys, 21©24c; ducks, UQiftc;&#13;
geese, 14®15c per lb.&#13;
POTATOES—Michigan, sacks, 65c; bulk&#13;
48c in car lots and 66®60c for store.&#13;
HONEY—Choice fancy white comb, 1«&#13;
®17o per ft; amber. 14® 16c&#13;
,«L I TEo POULTRY—Spring chicken*,&#13;
12 1-2913 per ft; hens, U l-4@12c; No.&#13;
2 hens, 9c; old rosters, &amp;®10c; ducks, l&amp;O&#13;
16c; geese, 12®l4c;. turkeys, 17920c per'&#13;
H).&#13;
VEGETABLES—peets, 40c per bu; earota,&#13;
45c per bu; cauliflower. $2.25 per&#13;
doa; turnips, '60c per bu; spinach, 7*c&#13;
par bu; hothouse cucumbers, $2 per doa;&#13;
watercress, 25®70c per doa; head lettuce,&#13;
$2§2.26 per hamper; homegrown celery,&#13;
aW»i30c per bu; green peppers, 40c per&#13;
basket rutabagas 40c per wr, hothouse&#13;
radishes, 25c per doa. .'&#13;
PROVISION&amp;rMea pork. Sift; family&#13;
$22023; brlaketa, 11®1*V, bacon, leoiao;&#13;
shoulders. 13 l-8c; picnic ham*, Helper*&#13;
lard in tierces, 11 l-2c; kettle rendered&#13;
lard, 12 l-3c per ft. -&#13;
HAY—Car lot prices track, Detroit:&#13;
t$!1°4/..6.i0J0lm15o%; Ny'o'-. W1 nWTtWxed», ! »N1o4.# M2 ^timTloltghhyt, Sm9iGxe1d0,; r1y1e5 0s1tr5a.5w0;, $w1h0e4a0t« 1a1n dp eor atto ns.t raw.&#13;
_ i i ~ ^ — » » i i , ' Superintendent J. L. Hayes, of the&#13;
Saginaw district of the Pare Mar*&#13;
queue railroad appointed A. R. Dewee*&#13;
chief engineer and &amp; L. MoDermM&#13;
chief tnOn djsnatcner.&#13;
With the time of his wedding bat&#13;
a few hours away, peter Nelson, lit*&#13;
in* south of Grant, lost hte Ufa ID a&#13;
tratte ma«ne»7.wj&gt;«jaAr-rushed Into a|^'&#13;
bureins; bam to am** his esapioyer'B&#13;
»*&gt; stoeh. Me waa basoed to death.&#13;
Twenty betorofeattle and&#13;
a&#13;
number of^ottfcseas and lodged in tnaj&#13;
city jail, after he had fired two shots!&#13;
at Robert Keith, superintendent of the]&#13;
Sheffield machine Jhon»r. Neither bul-i&#13;
let fired by the Officer took effect,&#13;
Keith, and-% party of trends, who had!&#13;
attended a local daucing pfcr^, were;&#13;
lunching at a cafe, when tb^e oJRice/ ordered&#13;
hita to Ughi the IMDPU on his|&#13;
auto. Keith did not obey the order at&#13;
once, waiting until the party waa|&#13;
ready to start. Cox U alleged to* haveordered&#13;
Keith to halt. When the lat-i&#13;
ter turned around the officer fired two&#13;
shotB at him, both of them tearing&#13;
holes in Keith's overcoat. A crowd&#13;
Including Prosecuting Attorney George&#13;
Arnold, former Mayor Arthur W S&#13;
more, Alderman Fred Rohrer, T&#13;
Hogan and other prominent reaid&#13;
attacked the officer. Cox was&#13;
beaten and taken to the jail wher&#13;
Prosecuting Attorney Arnold turnedj&#13;
the key.&#13;
Hastings.—Breaking through thini&#13;
ice on the mill pond at Morgan,&#13;
Morley Mains, aged twelve, nearly&#13;
lost his life while skating. He and his&#13;
little sister and brother Bhouted for&#13;
help, but no one responded. While&#13;
the ice was breaking away beneath&#13;
Morley's grasp the other children took&#13;
off their skates and ran to a store 601 )&#13;
rods away, where they secured help.-^&#13;
In the meantime Morley was fighting&#13;
to keep the swift current from dragging&#13;
him under the ice, which kept&#13;
breaking as he clutched it. Just as&#13;
the boy was about to be drawn under&#13;
the ice James Howard slipped a pole&#13;
under him and hauled him out. The&#13;
boy dropped from exhaustion and was&#13;
carried to the store, where restoratives&#13;
were administered.&#13;
Battle Creek.—Two hundred professional&#13;
men and women from&#13;
every part of the. world met in conference&#13;
as the Medical Missionary society&#13;
at the sanitarium here. Dr. Robert&#13;
H. Gohen of Bombay was the prin-'&#13;
clpal speaker and discussed diseases&#13;
In the upper classes of society in India.&#13;
Miss Ellen M. Stone, former missionary&#13;
in Bulgaria, who was the subject&#13;
of world-wide attention because&#13;
of her capture by bandits, who held&#13;
her for ransom of $46,000, which was&#13;
paid by popular t subscription, also&#13;
spoke.&#13;
Lansing.—An obligatory list law&#13;
for township and village libraries&#13;
is toeing advocated by educators of&#13;
Michigan and the movement may culminate&#13;
in the matter being brought&#13;
to the attention of the legislature. The&#13;
idea is to purge rural libraries of&#13;
books unfit for reading. Michigan educators&#13;
would have the obligatory list&#13;
compiled by the superintendent of&#13;
public instruction and the state librarian,&#13;
the heads of these two departments&#13;
working together. As it la *&#13;
now the superintendent and the librarian&#13;
are In an advisory position'&#13;
only. *•&#13;
Niles,—Septimer S. Beal,!, member&#13;
of the board of supervisors^&#13;
for many years, and his wife were so&#13;
badly burned as the result of the explosion&#13;
of a gasoline stove that the&#13;
outcome In each case 1B doubtful. Mrs.&#13;
Beall is in a much worse condition&#13;
than her husband, who received his&#13;
injuries in trying to extinguish the&#13;
flames that enveloped his wife, and&#13;
which threatened to destroy their&#13;
home. Both are elderly persons.&#13;
Jackson,—Because of a change;&#13;
in the law relative to the sentencing&#13;
of women to Jackson prison*&#13;
Mrs. Allen Jackson, convicted of assault&#13;
with intent to do great bodily&#13;
harm, will have to be resentenced;&#13;
Warden Simpson refusing to receive&#13;
her when she was brought to the local&#13;
prison to begin a sentence of&#13;
two and one-half years.&#13;
Adrian.—Dr. Samuel Stevenson, an&#13;
aged physician of Morencl, died&#13;
at his home. Doctor Stevenson!&#13;
was a graduate of the U. of.M. and&#13;
the Detroit College of Medicine; H e&#13;
practiced in Morencl for over half acentury.&#13;
He leaves two sons who Uve&#13;
in Montana, a daughter in Morenoi*&#13;
and also a brother. Dr. W. o. flteten-.&#13;
son, of Morencl&#13;
"• (»Mlotte.-~Qscar Prahi; the Cf* *&#13;
houn county man charged with&#13;
having stolen furs from George Andrews&#13;
of Olivet, "was arrested and&#13;
brought from STarshall to this city.&#13;
Prahl pleaded not guilty, but after being&#13;
confined in Jafl several hoars*&#13;
changed bis mind and pleaded guilty.&#13;
He was fined, $30. "" " ""&#13;
at about 11,0601&#13;
Brighton.—John UW4 M VH^-v&#13;
mouth, who was making..his first try&#13;
aa a brakeman on a lo&lt;»l fere MaiO&#13;
quette freight train, fell from a W ' '&#13;
while- switching in the 'tedal yard,,&#13;
Both leg* were run ovef'aad ft W&#13;
feared be may lose the4'rts*? on*.&#13;
Lane WM taken to a Detrd&#13;
X.&#13;
-: m&#13;
i \ \&#13;
Calumet—Dttrtnr th&gt; fast y&gt;s*.&#13;
there were' # violent death/ !*.&gt;&#13;
Calumet, 4Vcot&gt;munJty ot 8%,000 peo.1&#13;
pis, wufo onir tWrty-sftwere due t*u&#13;
* tuberculoma m the sahie'period.'Tendeaths&#13;
Were ciuaed by'•dfiaV; SI by*&#13;
Thirteen ot the violent Heaths wers&#13;
caused by awicide, seven of the sui.&#13;
ctdes occurring within a juried of onw&#13;
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8YNOP8I8.&#13;
Robert Cameron, capitalist, consults&#13;
X»hillip Clyde, newspaper publisher, regarding&#13;
anonymous threatening letters he&#13;
h a s received. The flrHt promises a sample&#13;
of the writer's power on a certain day.&#13;
O n that day th* head is mysteriously cut&#13;
"" a portrait of Cameron while the latin&#13;
the room. Clyde has a theory&#13;
(the portrait w a s mutilated while the&#13;
i w a s unoccupied and the head later&#13;
vsd by means of a string, unnoticed&#13;
"Cameron. Evelyn Grayson, Cameron a&#13;
e, with whom Clyde is in love, finds&#13;
head of Cameron's portrait nailed to&#13;
tree, where it was had been used as a&#13;
'target. Clyde pledges Evelyn to secrecy.&#13;
Clyde learns that a Chinese boy employed&#13;
by Philetus Murphy, an artist living&#13;
nearby, had borrowed a rifle from Cameron's&#13;
lodgekeper. Clyde makes an exc&#13;
u s e , to call on Murphy and is repulsed.&#13;
H e pretends to be Investigating alleged&#13;
infractions of the game laws and speaks&#13;
•of finding the bowl of an opium pipe under&#13;
the tree -where Cameron's portrait&#13;
w a s found. The Chinese boy is found&#13;
&lt;lead next morning. While visiting Cameron&#13;
in his dressing room a Nell Gwynne&#13;
mirror 1B mysteriously shattered. Cameron&#13;
becomes seriously ill as a result of the&#13;
ehock. The third letter appears mysterio&#13;
u s l y on Cameron's sick bed. It make?&#13;
ftlrect threats against the life of Cameron&#13;
Clyde tells Cameron the envelope war&#13;
empty. He tells Evelyn everything anr&#13;
plans to take Cameron on a yacht trip&#13;
T h e yacht picks up a fisherman foun&lt;&#13;
drifting helplessly in a boat. He give'&#13;
the name of Johnson. Cameron disap&#13;
pears from yacht while Clyde's back u&#13;
turned. A fruitless search is made for n&#13;
motor boat seen by the captain just before&#13;
Cameron disappeared. Johnson Is allowed&#13;
to g o after being closely questioned.&#13;
Evelyn takes the letters to an expert In&#13;
Chinese literature, who pronounces them&#13;
of Chinese origin.&#13;
• " ' ^ • » . V "&#13;
Rs&#13;
•6-&#13;
CHAPTER X.—Continued.&#13;
Very briefly she explained that she&#13;
had seen the professor that morning,&#13;
and had laid before him the original&#13;
letter and my copies of the others,&#13;
and that he had kindly promised to&#13;
make a careful ctudy of them and acquaint&#13;
her with the result later in the&#13;
day. She thought It better, however,&#13;
that I stiould call upon him for his&#13;
conclusions, she said, as they would&#13;
probably be verbal, and she doubted&#13;
her own ability to convey them to me&#13;
"with entire accuracy. Of course she&#13;
had told him nothing as to the circumstances&#13;
surrounding the letters. As&#13;
they bore no dates, and were unaddreased,&#13;
she had him to infer that&#13;
they were autographic curiosities belonging&#13;
to her uncle, In which we&#13;
„were all three Interested.&#13;
I had met Professor Griffin on several&#13;
occasions. Once or twice he had {&#13;
contributed articles to The Week, and&#13;
while we were scarcely Intimate, we&#13;
were on terms of friendly acquaintanceship.&#13;
He was an oldish, whitehaired&#13;
gentleman, of rather the ascetic&#13;
type, with long, somewhat peaked&#13;
face, and light, watery blue eyes,&#13;
which seemed to bulge behind the&#13;
strong lenses of his gold-bowed spectacles.&#13;
He received me In his study, a spa-'&#13;
clous, book-lined room on the second&#13;
floor oft his old Colonial stone house.&#13;
"I have been deeply interested, Mr.&#13;
Clyde," he began, "in the autographs&#13;
and copies which Miss Grayson&#13;
brought to me. They are unique specimens&#13;
of English composition, in that&#13;
the Oriental Influence is so clearly&#13;
demonstrated throughout. Do you,&#13;
by any chance, know where Mr. Cameron&#13;
obtained them?"&#13;
I was hardly prepared for this question,&#13;
but I answered as promptly as&#13;
possible that they had recently come&#13;
into my friend's possession, I believed,&#13;
but from Just what source I&#13;
had not learned.&#13;
The three sheets lay before him on&#13;
the writing-shelf of his old-fashioned&#13;
mahogany secretary; and now he took&#13;
up one /ot the copies, holding it at&#13;
some distance from his eyes, as&#13;
though his glasses, thick as they were,&#13;
were not as powerful as his sight required.&#13;
' "The three writings," he went on,&#13;
in the tone of a class-room lecturer,&#13;
"evidently form a series, of which, I&#13;
take It, this Is the first"&#13;
, "The one which says, Take warning&#13;
of what shall happen on the seventh&#13;
4ayT' I queried.&#13;
T e a . That Is th* first. The other&#13;
of the copies, In which occurs the&#13;
phrase 'once more/ it, of course, the&#13;
second. And the original autograph&#13;
U the last?&#13;
"Exactly," I agreed. It teemed to f&#13;
me that all this was very obvious, but&#13;
i» cotirtesy X could not say so,&#13;
"AH three," he continued sagely,&#13;
"begin, at you mutt have observed,&#13;
wfth the'tame sentence, That which&#13;
you have wrought shall in turn- be&#13;
&gt;t upon you/ That it a quota*&#13;
quoUion!" I exclaimed, to sur-&#13;
;.4*&amp;&#13;
1&#13;
v-&#13;
•X.&#13;
quotation from Menoiut, the&#13;
expositor of C$nfnclut, who&#13;
lived £/Q«m V» 3tf. In the drigfngl,&#13;
* word meaning *Bewire&lt; precedes&#13;
the warning, and a more literal&#13;
traotlattoB of the. pateage would be:&#13;
•Beware! Vfrtt'prtceeds from you&#13;
wtt return t* you a g e h V -&#13;
It teetoed toMM t h * wit taking a&#13;
great deal for granted. I feared that&#13;
the profettor, like m*7 J f W t t ^ H&#13;
,ftbjehosed m* ,,,, r , .,, ;..... l &lt;&#13;
*»&#13;
i**"1&#13;
through the series, other quotations&#13;
that are unquestionably of Chinese origin.&#13;
The first letter, for example,&#13;
concludes with: 'The ways of our God&#13;
are many. On the righteous he showers&#13;
blessings; en the evil he pours&#13;
forth misery.' This is from the Book&#13;
of History, or 'Shu King,' in which are&#13;
the documents edited by Confucius&#13;
himself. It usually has been rendered&#13;
in this way: 'The ways of God are&#13;
not invariable. On the good doer he&#13;
sends down all blessings, and on the&#13;
evil doer he sends down all miseries.'&#13;
That is the more exact rendering.&#13;
And again, In the second letter&#13;
we find—" He paused a moment, takng&#13;
up the second sheet, and focusing&#13;
.lis dim eyes upon the lines. "We&#13;
Ind," he went on, ".'Fine words and&#13;
i smiling countenance make not virue,'&#13;
which Is from the Lunhu, or&#13;
Analects' of Confucius, In which the&#13;
lews and maxims of the sage are&#13;
etailed' by his disciples. 'Smiling&#13;
ountenance' is hardly the best transition.&#13;
'Insinuating appearance' is&#13;
lore nearly the English equivalent,&#13;
nd I should prefer/ 'are rarely connected,&#13;
or associated, with virtue' to&#13;
make not virtue.' "&#13;
"Those, of course, are unmistakably&#13;
rauslatlons," I agreed.&#13;
"And so are the concluding sentences&#13;
of the third, the autograph,&#13;
letter," he assured me. " 'Say not&#13;
Heaven is high above! Heaven&#13;
ascends and descends about our deeds,&#13;
daily inspecting us, wheresoever we&#13;
are.' I find it in one of the sacrificial&#13;
odes of Kau, and it is the best rendered&#13;
of all the excerpts."&#13;
"So your conclusion as to the authorship&#13;
is—?" I queried.&#13;
"Chinese, undoubtedly," he answered.&#13;
"These were written, I should&#13;
say, by a Chinaman, educated, probably,&#13;
in this country. His English 1B&#13;
the English of the educated Oriental,&#13;
but the quotations from Confucius and j&#13;
his commentators are characteristic.&#13;
With the average Chinaman, to know&#13;
Confucius is to know all; what he&#13;
said is all-sufficient; what he did not&#13;
say Is not worth saying. Another&#13;
identifying feature is the effort to&#13;
make afraid. Their religion is fear."&#13;
Having concluded his exposition,&#13;
Professor Griffin was disposed to enter&#13;
upon a more or less lengthy discourse&#13;
on Chinese character and literature&#13;
in general. However illuminative&#13;
this might have been under&#13;
ordinary conditions, I was assuredly&#13;
in no mood to listen to It at this time.&#13;
The information he had given me,&#13;
while it merely verified suspicions&#13;
which I had held from the first, set&#13;
me to speculating on the individual&#13;
source of the letters; and with so&#13;
modern an instance at hand I was naturally&#13;
disinclined to consider the authorship&#13;
of writings dating back often&#13;
a thousand years and more beyond&#13;
the Christian era.&#13;
With what grace I could, therefore,&#13;
I discouraged a continuance of the&#13;
theme, and having thanked him most&#13;
[.heartily, pocketed the notes with&#13;
which he was good enough to furnish&#13;
me, and prepared to depart. But as&#13;
I stood at his study door, his lean,&#13;
scholarly hand resting in mine, he detained&#13;
me for a final word.&#13;
"The symbol!" he exclaimed, his&#13;
pale eyes lighting at the recollection.&#13;
"We forget the symbol!" '&#13;
"Oh, yea," I returned, my Interest&#13;
revived, "that silhouette at the bottom."&#13;
"It is unmistakably Chinese," he&#13;
said. "I am not very familiar with&#13;
the symbolism of the East, not as familiar&#13;
at I should be, possibly; but&#13;
Chinese writing, you know, in its origin,&#13;
it picture writing with the addl*&#13;
tton of a limited number of symbolical&#13;
and conventional designs. This figure,&#13;
I should say, represents a lorcha, or&#13;
small Chinese coasting junk, and you&#13;
can rest assured that the threats contained&#13;
in the letters were with &amp; view&#13;
to reparation for tome crime or injury&#13;
connected In some way with such a&#13;
vestal. That it at near at I can interpret&#13;
i t But if you would like to&#13;
know more—if you would like to get&#13;
something more nearly definite—I can&#13;
refer you to one who can, I think, give&#13;
yon the information."&#13;
"By all meant," I implored, "I shall&#13;
appreciate it greatly."&#13;
"An authority on this subject it living&#13;
not very far from here. He spent&#13;
1 many years in China/ la something of&#13;
fan artist himtelf, and made, I understand,&#13;
a study of Oriental tymbolitm.&#13;
He lives at Cos Cob&gt; a»d his name&#13;
"MurphyV r interrupted, a t a flood&#13;
of illumination swept over me.&#13;
"Philetus Murphy. Yet. Do you&#13;
know M a t "&#13;
-1 have mot him," I returned short-)&#13;
iy." t- • • ' ' ^&#13;
And thaaWng the profester v once&#13;
more, I hurried away, with a coarse 61&#13;
action already shaping to my mind.&#13;
« /&#13;
CMAPTWt XI.&#13;
*&amp;.*:»&gt;&gt; ^ V „ *&gt;•&#13;
&lt; The 6ftlitt*» MeroJiant .&#13;
It was while Professor Grtffla was&#13;
tt^v«"g of Csiaste charactettttlet tfcftt&#13;
« *tO« Ms* &lt;%e* t t t i&#13;
something about the average Chinaman's&#13;
disinclination to speak of death,&#13;
directly, and how he invariably employed&#13;
some euphemism. The phrase&#13;
"pass from sight of men into torment"&#13;
the professor pointed out as an illustration.&#13;
And then I remembered little&#13;
Mow Chee, who was in my class at&#13;
Yale, and how, once, in speaking of&#13;
the demise of a fellow classman, he&#13;
had used the odd expression, "he has&#13;
saluted old age," which I afterwards&#13;
learned was quite a common form in&#13;
China.&#13;
It was now a year or more since I&#13;
had seen Mow Chee, but I recalled&#13;
that at our last meeting I had made a&#13;
note of his address; and so on reaching&#13;
my deBk the next morning I&#13;
looked it up. Curiously enough a private&#13;
detective agency which 1 had&#13;
arranged* to consult chanced to have&#13;
Us office in the same building ou lower&#13;
Broadway as the Pacific Transport&#13;
company, by which Mow. Chee was&#13;
employed; and thus the plan which&#13;
had been shaping mentally the previous&#13;
afternoon, as I hurried away from&#13;
Professor Griffin's, was readily set in&#13;
motion before noon of the day following.&#13;
In the evening I had discussed it&#13;
with Evelyn; and though the detective&#13;
feature did not at first meet with&#13;
her approval, she eventually conceded&#13;
that it was a necessary part of the&#13;
project. It was agreed, however, that&#13;
the real purpose for which that aid&#13;
was invoked should not be divulged.&#13;
Philetus Murphy was to be shadowed&#13;
and dally reports wero to be made to&#13;
me. That he had been under suspicion&#13;
of brutally murdering his Chinese&#13;
servant Was sufficient reason for&#13;
the proceeding, and to the detective&#13;
agency I gave no hint of any further&#13;
consideration.&#13;
As for my Celestial classmate, I waB&#13;
not by any means sure that I should&#13;
find him at the Pacific Transport offices.&#13;
I knew that for some time China&#13;
had been calling upon her sons of&#13;
western education to return to their&#13;
mother country for service, and I&#13;
feared that little Mow Chee might already&#13;
be customs taokai of Shantung,&#13;
or some other imperial province., But&#13;
my miBgivings were very promptly allayed;&#13;
for no sooner had I stepped&#13;
within the outer office than he saw&#13;
me. and came hastily forward, with a&#13;
smile of greeting on his square, flattened,&#13;
yellow face.&#13;
His desk was just back of the long&#13;
counter which ran the length of the&#13;
room, and a glance at its piled contents&#13;
showed me that he was very&#13;
busy. Moreover, there was no opportunity&#13;
here for the privacy which I&#13;
desired; so after an exchange of greetings,&#13;
and a few conventional inquiries*&#13;
I invited Mow to lunch with me at the&#13;
Savarln, at whatever hour would best&#13;
suit his convenience.&#13;
Somewhat to my dismay, he fixed&#13;
upon one o'clock. As it still wanted&#13;
ten minutes of noon I now had over&#13;
an hour of leisure, which, as may be&#13;
imagined, promised to hang rather&#13;
heavy* the more so, aB I was impatient&#13;
to make some real progress in&#13;
my quest.&#13;
Wall street being at hand, I concluded&#13;
to call on a friend there who usually&#13;
handles my investments, and&#13;
make a convenience of his office. On&#13;
the way, 1 bought an afternoon paper,&#13;
and as my broker happened to be at&#13;
the Stock Exchange, I had ample opportunity&#13;
to read it from first column&#13;
to last. It proved about as thrlllingly&#13;
interesting as the early afternoon reprints&#13;
of what one has already read&#13;
at breakfast usually are, and I was&#13;
about to drop it to the floor, when&#13;
my eye caught a group of headltnea&#13;
on the latt page, which, up to that&#13;
moment, had escaped me,* but which&#13;
now suddenly riveted my attention:&#13;
CELESTIAL CLAIMS -MYSTERIOUS&#13;
BOX ON FALL RIVER PIER.&#13;
Anything concerning Celestials, I&#13;
suppose, would have attracted me,&#13;
jutt then, but the burden of this was&#13;
so peculiarly pertinent, that it teemed&#13;
at if it mutt have Intimate connection&#13;
with the tangle I had undertaken to&#13;
unravel.&#13;
With the paper gripped tightly in&#13;
both hands, and my head bent intently&#13;
forward, I raced through t h e frtvo&gt;&#13;
loutly-written article which followed;&#13;
and from a superabundance of cheap&#13;
wit and East tide slang managed, to&#13;
extract the somewhat meager facts.&#13;
A truck, driven, by a Chinaman, it&#13;
teemed, had that morning taken from&#13;
the pier of the Fall River Line* a&#13;
square box, meaturing about Ave feet&#13;
each way, and perforated with a number&#13;
of auger holes. The brilliant&#13;
space-writer had 'given hit imagination&#13;
free rein as to the contents, speculating&#13;
as to the possibilities, from edible&#13;
Chinese dogs to smuggled opium,&#13;
but he had omitted \o furnish the&#13;
name and address of either the oon*&#13;
ttgao* of consignee. "The* truck/&#13;
draw* by the sltaJt-eyeA white horse,&#13;
aftfl drtven by the phlegmatic Chink,&#13;
clatter** away in the , direction, of&#13;
Mott street*" the account coucrsded.&#13;
After all, it was a very common&#13;
nation. Nevertheless, I thrust the paper&#13;
Into my pocket. Mow Chee might&#13;
throw some light on the matter. He&#13;
would know, in all likelihood, what&#13;
sort of goods were shipped by way of&#13;
the Fall River Line to his countrymen&#13;
in New York.&#13;
We secured a corner table in the&#13;
Inner room at the Savarln. It was&#13;
not so crowded there and it was less&#13;
bustling and noisy. My companion attracted&#13;
some little attention, of course,&#13;
but not sufficient to prove annoying.&#13;
New York, as a rule, pays small heed&#13;
simply to the unusual, and Chinamen&#13;
are common enough not to be absolute&#13;
curiosities even in the big downtown&#13;
restaurants.&#13;
A very dapper little fellow was Mr.&#13;
Mow; neatly and inconspicuously clad,&#13;
and well brushed and combed. He&#13;
was for recalling old college days,&#13;
when he was coxswain of the class&#13;
crew and.I pulled the stroke oar, but&#13;
my time was too precious for such&#13;
reminiscence, and as speedily as possible&#13;
I broached the subject I had at&#13;
heart.&#13;
"Now," I began, perhaps less delicately&#13;
than I should, "there's a saying,&#13;
you know, that the only good Indian is&#13;
a dead Indian. That wouldolt apply&#13;
to the Chinese, would it? And yet,&#13;
while there are some very excellent&#13;
Chinamen, there are some pretty, bad&#13;
ones, aren't there?"&#13;
He grinned, exposing his fine teeth.&#13;
"Oh, yes," he answered, "there are&#13;
good and bad, but the percentage of&#13;
had is less In my country than in&#13;
some others." I caught the significance&#13;
of IIIB remark, and realized that&#13;
I deserved the rebuke.&#13;
"And amongst the educated Chinese,&#13;
here in Now York?" I went on, without&#13;
stopping for comment, "There&#13;
are a few bad?"&#13;
He was still Bmiling.&#13;
"Bad?" he queried. "What do you&#13;
mean by bad? There are Borne who&#13;
have vices, yes. Some gamble, some&#13;
smoke opium; some get the best of&#13;
a bargain."&#13;
"Are there some who would kill?" I&#13;
asked, bluntly.&#13;
"Oh, no, no!" he protested, without&#13;
raising his voice. "I certainly should&#13;
hope there are none such among the&#13;
educated."&#13;
And then I told him about the three&#13;
letters, and what had happened, omitting&#13;
only Cameron's name and place&#13;
of residence. Imperturbable little&#13;
chap that he was, he listened without&#13;
emotion. When I concluded he said:&#13;
"You are sure they were Chinamen&#13;
who did this?"&#13;
"Would men of any other nationality&#13;
quote Confucius and Mencius?" I&#13;
asked.&#13;
"No, I think not," was his reply,&#13;
"and yet It might be done by crafty&#13;
persons to mislead."&#13;
But I could not agree with him.&#13;
"We are not revengeful as a nation,"&#13;
he said, "we are rather long-suffering.&#13;
If Chinamen did what you tell me, it&#13;
wa3 In return for some very great injury;&#13;
some crime, I should say,&#13;
against their parents or near kinsmen."&#13;
"But my friend was never In China,"&#13;
I declared. "And he was the last man&#13;
in the world to harm anyone."&#13;
For a little while Mow Chee ate In&#13;
thoughtful silence. Presently he&#13;
looked up.&#13;
"Clyde, my friend, I know so little&#13;
\ of my own people here in New York.&#13;
But one man I know, a merchant, who&#13;
is very prominent and very upright.&#13;
He is a big man in the Six Companies.&#13;
I will give you a card to bim; you&#13;
can speak to him in confidence, and if&#13;
he can help you, he will, not only because&#13;
I sent you, but because he&#13;
stands for all that Is beat, and- desires&#13;
that my countrymen In the&#13;
United States shall have the respect&#13;
they deserve from your cltiaent. I&#13;
would send you.to the Chinese Con&#13;
tul, but-my friend, Mr. Yup Sing, i*&#13;
better." &lt;&#13;
My hand was on the newspaper in&#13;
my pocket, but I did not ahow ff to&#13;
Mow Chee. I would reserve it for the&#13;
encyclopaedic Yup Sing, whose ud«&#13;
dress, at written on the card which&#13;
my classmate furnished me, was on&#13;
Mott street, a few doors from Pell.&#13;
New York's Chinatown it a much&#13;
more familiar locality to the transient&#13;
visitor than to the average citizen. In&#13;
all the years of my residence in the&#13;
metropolis, of which I am a native, 1&#13;
had never before had either th,e occasion&#13;
or the desire to dip into this mott&#13;
foreign of all the city's foreign sections.&#13;
. To me, Chinatown was as a&#13;
far country. Vaguely I had an idea&#13;
of its location It lay, I knew, east of&#13;
Broadway and west of the Bowery ;&lt;&#13;
but its latitude was not dearly defined.&#13;
My impulse was to hail a cab, give&#13;
the driver the number of the Mott&#13;
street establishment, and so, without&#13;
farther Individual effort, bo whirls?&#13;
away tenry dettmatioo. But there are&#13;
no cab stands on lower-Broadway;&#13;
and to walk to Broad,street, where&#13;
the cabman lift stl day fa wait for the&#13;
prosperous stock broker and bis sitsjstostsr,&#13;
MtBjgsrtsr tspra van&#13;
place, everyday occurrence, f»robably&#13;
, ^ a t ^ t r boles were omTy t?»o^ holes,, ...... . ^..^-.--,, -L&#13;
to grant. Therefore I boarded a Bxoadway&#13;
car and was drawn haltingly&#13;
northward, until, on reaching ) -Canal \&#13;
street, I alighted in sheer d&#13;
and turned eastwards *&#13;
Here a letter, carrier, of whom I Inquired,&#13;
Bpetl me straight to my goal—&#13;
a couple of blocks as I was going, a&#13;
turn to the right, a few blocks more,&#13;
and th&lt;? bulk windows of the Yup Sing&#13;
Company would come into view.&#13;
I found the establishment easily&#13;
enough. But had it not been for the&#13;
name printed in big Roman lettering,&#13;
I should never have imagined it a&#13;
Chinese business house. There waB&#13;
no display of goods in the big windows,&#13;
which were screened half way&#13;
up by light blue shades, giving the&#13;
front an appearance similar to that&#13;
of the average American wholesale&#13;
house.&#13;
Having passed inside, however,&#13;
there was no such illusion. All about&#13;
me were the characteristic products&#13;
of the Orient, from brilliant silken&#13;
embroideries, and exquisite gold and&#13;
silver and bronze work, to cheap cotton&#13;
and linen fabrics, lacquer furniture,&#13;
and straw slippers. And the atmosphere&#13;
was further enhanced by&#13;
the half-dozen or more Chinamen who&#13;
were lounging in the middle and far&#13;
distance, each with shaven crown and&#13;
coiled queue and each in the more or&#13;
less brilliantly colored native dress.&#13;
One of thetse, a comparatively darkly-&#13;
a-;tircd young man with full, round&#13;
visage, came forward as I entered.&#13;
"Is Mr. Yup in?" I asked.&#13;
He was inclined, I saw, to hesitation&#13;
and so I produced Mow's card.&#13;
"Oh, yes," he said, after studying it&#13;
for a moment. "Oh, yes. Mlsta' Yup!&#13;
Ho in." With which he left me, and&#13;
taking the card with bim disappeared&#13;
behind some draperies at the back of&#13;
the big crowded store.&#13;
Between the others, who regarded&#13;
me for a moment only with idle interest,&#13;
there was, while I stood there, a&#13;
rapid exchange of observations In&#13;
their native tongue, mingled with a&#13;
sort of high-pitched cackling which I&#13;
assumed to be laughter.&#13;
I had turned my back towards&#13;
them, but presently a shuttling of fe&lt;?t&#13;
along the floor informed me of the&#13;
approach of what I imagined was my&#13;
returning emissary. On whirling about,&#13;
however, it was to face an elderly man&#13;
in purple silk garments and a black&#13;
skull cap—a man of thin, almost cadaverous&#13;
yellow visage, whose upper&#13;
lip and chin were adorned with a&#13;
sparse growth of silky blue-black hair,&#13;
and upon (he bridge of whose nose&#13;
rested a pair of gold-rimmed spectacles.&#13;
"You would see me, sir?" he asked,&#13;
and I noted that there was scarcely&#13;
the slightest indication of tne foreigner&#13;
in cither pronunciation or accent.&#13;
"If you are Mr. Yup," I smiled,&#13;
"you can, I fancy, from what Mr. Mow&#13;
tells me, give me the Information I&#13;
am in search of."&#13;
Ho did not smile in return, but his&#13;
thin face assumed an expression of benignity&#13;
that was as much of an invitation&#13;
to lay my problem before him as&#13;
were his words.&#13;
"Anyway I can serve a friend of&#13;
Mr. Mow," he said, "will be a pleasure."&#13;
But, aB he spoke, the benign expression&#13;
passed. Once again that thin saffron-&#13;
hued face, with its hollow cheeks,&#13;
and small deep-set eyes, had become&#13;
unfathomable.&#13;
At least two of his partners or&#13;
salesmen were within car-shot, and I&#13;
turned a significant glance towards&#13;
them, as I said:&#13;
"The subject is a confidential one,&#13;
Mr. Yup. If I could speak to you—"&#13;
"In private?" he finished. "Certainly,&#13;
sir. Will you kindly step this&#13;
way?"&#13;
He led me to the rear of his store,&#13;
holding aside a curtain of heavy embroidery,&#13;
through which I passed into&#13;
a smaller room, furnished in carved&#13;
teak wood and ornamented with magnificent&#13;
specimens of Chinese porcelain&#13;
and pottery. A little Chinese girl,&#13;
not over eight years old, and wearing&#13;
a blouse and wide breeches of a pale&#13;
cerulean silk, stood beside a table.&#13;
Before her were several small sheets&#13;
of rice paper on- which she was makleg&#13;
designs in water colors.&#13;
Ignoring the child, he Indicated a&#13;
ohair near the only window, screened,&#13;
[Ike the windows In front, with a blue&#13;
shade. And when I had sat down, he&#13;
drew up a chair for himtelf opposite&#13;
me.&#13;
His manner, in spite of the benignity&#13;
of a moment before, waa not encouraging,&#13;
and for a little I was embarrassed&#13;
as to just where to begin.&#13;
At length, however, I said:&#13;
"I fear, Mr. Yup, that tome of your&#13;
countrymen have recently made a terrible&#13;
mistake."&#13;
"A mistake?" he echoed, gravely.&#13;
"A mistake that I trust it is not too&#13;
late to repair. Briefly, they have kidnapped&#13;
a gentleman of fortune and influence,&#13;
one o r my dearest friends, in&#13;
a manner most mysterious, after first&#13;
subjecting him to the annoyance of a&#13;
series of anonymous letters and a succession&#13;
of lingular, nerve-torturing&#13;
acta of trespass."&#13;
Mr. Yup glanced at Mow Chee's&#13;
card, which ho still held.&#13;
(TO BE COIfTINUED.)&#13;
GET THIS FOR COLDS&#13;
Prescription for Positive Resulu&#13;
Don't Experiment.&#13;
"X'Vom your druggist get two oum-t-s&#13;
of Glycerine nnd half an uuiicv of (Jluba&#13;
Pint) Compound (Concentrated Tine).&#13;
Take theue two ingredients home and&#13;
put them into u halt pint of good whiskey.&#13;
Shake well. Take one to two' tea-&#13;
Hpoonfuls after each meal and at bed&#13;
time. Smaller dobt-B to children a c -&#13;
cording to atfe." This is said to be t h e&#13;
quickest cough and cold cura known t o&#13;
the medical profession. Be »ure to g e t&#13;
only the genuine Globe Fine Compound&#13;
(Concentrated Pjne). Each half ounce&#13;
bottle comes in a tin screw-top sealed&#13;
ca*c If yuiir druggist Is out of stock&#13;
he will quickly get it from his whale-&#13;
Bale house. Don't fool with uncertain&#13;
mixtures. It Is risky. Local druggist*&#13;
say that for the past six years this h a s&#13;
had a wonderful demand. Published by&#13;
the rilobe Pharmaceutical laboratories of&#13;
Chi; ago.&#13;
TOLD HER LIFE'S AMBITION&#13;
§mall Girl Somewhat Crudely Expressed&#13;
Her Desire to Be a&#13;
Teacher When She Grew Up.&#13;
At one time or another during the&#13;
ward school life of a little girl there&#13;
prevalTs the -ambition to become a&#13;
teacher. Perhaps it is the Indisputable&#13;
authority possessed by the hand that&#13;
wields the rules or the nonchallant display&#13;
of wisdom on topics surrounded&#13;
by the moat inaccessible difficulties&#13;
to the small boy and girl. They will&#13;
nearly always tell their ambitions to&#13;
a well liked teacher, and one rather&#13;
surprising declaration was given by a&#13;
little maid in one of Miss Clara Townsend's&#13;
room before she became principal&#13;
of the James school.&#13;
Among the special favors coveted&#13;
by the youngsters is the permission&#13;
to stay behind after school and clean&#13;
the blackboards. One evening a little&#13;
girl was given the desired privilege,&#13;
and while engaged In the task she&#13;
struck up a shy sort of conversation&#13;
with Miss Townsend. Finally the&#13;
usual confession was made.&#13;
"When I grow up, I am going to be&#13;
a teacher," she announced.&#13;
"That so?" pleasantly asked Mist&#13;
Townsend. "And why do you want&#13;
to be a teacher?"&#13;
"Well," was the rather surprising&#13;
anBwer, "I'll have to be either a&#13;
teacher or a lady, and I would rather&#13;
be a teacher."—Indianapolis News.&#13;
Shopper's Cramp. ,&#13;
Simeon Ford, at a dinner of hotel&#13;
men in New York, discussed a new&#13;
disease.&#13;
"There's a new disease called shopper's&#13;
cramp," he said "It appears&#13;
early in December, becomes violently&#13;
epidemic about the middle of the&#13;
month und ends suddenly on the evening&#13;
of the 24th.&#13;
"Women feel shopper's cramp la&#13;
the arms, the limbs, everywhere; but&#13;
it attacks the husband only in one&#13;
place—the pocket."&#13;
Balanced.&#13;
Representative Pujo was talking In&#13;
Washington about the currency.&#13;
"It must balance," he said. "It&#13;
must balance automatically and delicately.&#13;
It must resemble the Christmas&#13;
husband."&#13;
" 'Oh, John, dear,' said this chap's&#13;
wife, 'I'm so sorry you've got all those&#13;
heavy parcels to carryt*&#13;
"'Well, you see,' John panted, reassuringly,&#13;
'my pocket is very much&#13;
lighter now.""&#13;
A Weakling.&#13;
"I am sorry to say," remarked the&#13;
young wife, "that my husband see ma&#13;
to lack initiative and decision."&#13;
"What has caused you to think so?"&#13;
her friend asked.&#13;
"I have to suggest It every time&#13;
when he asks for a raise In salary,&#13;
and then he hesitates for a long time&#13;
about doing it."&#13;
Keeping Her Word,&#13;
Josephine—Do you know to whom&#13;
Stella Is engaged?&#13;
Margaret—Yes, but 1 promlaed 1&#13;
would not tell. However, I don't&#13;
think there'll be any harm In my writ*&#13;
lng his name on a piece of paper t o r&#13;
you.—Satire.&#13;
4 • •&#13;
— — . - , 1 * — • • &gt; * 1 &gt; * - ^&#13;
:'*'.. &gt;.&#13;
Couldn't Miss Them.&#13;
A black broadcloth suit marked&#13;
"Rush order" lay on tho tailor's table&#13;
ready for cleaning and pressing. ,&#13;
"About the only kind of dirt f can&#13;
see on that suit It chelk^ a man remarked&#13;
"Looks ae ft ft had been&#13;
dragged through * chalk pit." '&#13;
'"The wtrmen ptrt rt there purposely,"&#13;
said the tailor. **aci chilk mark&#13;
It la the form of a ring ehateocrrdee&#13;
a grtaet spot . She heated oat each&#13;
spot in the ••Dttg** end marked H w&#13;
I oooldaVposothty ,mloe j y . fig*&#13;
o^^s^BPBje% ^sespeBj^ss , ^^^•••jfasF-^sftjr vs/ eB^seBBr^s^s^Bs^sBBfj^ ^ JMBSBV^BJ ^&#13;
* foQssi tmm «st Iwflfc n i l 4* d u m m * *&#13;
' , " ' . ; &gt; ••; -' '* ' / • : ' . • ' ' • . ' . ) •• ^ - '••ZT--&#13;
Substantial&#13;
Breakfast&#13;
Pleasure&#13;
in every package of&#13;
Post&#13;
• *&#13;
•••i]&#13;
Crisp, tweet bits of trotted;&#13;
Indian Corn, toI* aalVf^iiHsto&gt;?&#13;
cream or 'mQk. • '•' "•'••'•&gt; "&gt; '•'&#13;
Always&#13;
» • Ready to Eat&#13;
ii:&#13;
Aippajpa. Iy 9eM b y G r w r f tVtty- 4&#13;
'.,;1'd&#13;
\&#13;
%fif$#&#13;
"&lt;• &gt; 1&#13;
*,&gt; ¥&#13;
•**mmi&#13;
r: '&#13;
r i&#13;
'1 '„&#13;
• •i-ri'&#13;
•H-'&#13;
• &lt;&#13;
• X&#13;
\ 4&#13;
• &gt; » • '&#13;
;-#|8te'&#13;
':'-•#• i;- H&#13;
• • . • - * f * : * ^ ^&#13;
: ' ^ . ; . K ••*.*.'..•••!&#13;
Tfe* i^l&#13;
W :v2&gt;&#13;
* V 1&#13;
W '&#13;
.* ..*&#13;
..%&#13;
I T "&#13;
,-v'&#13;
*69&#13;
-'&lt;&#13;
*Z i-&#13;
• ^&#13;
S$&#13;
4&#13;
'%?&#13;
Ji&#13;
up*&#13;
i$:&#13;
*&#13;
# -&#13;
w&#13;
If the power proposition is bothering1 you, call and let us&#13;
explain the merits of the I H C line of gasoline engines. We&#13;
have an I H C gasoline engine to fill every need — tractors,&#13;
portable, stationary, air and water-cooled. In case you want&#13;
kerosene, gas, or alcohol attachments, we will be glad to supply&#13;
you. If you have a difficult power proposition to solve, call&#13;
and we will assist you to figure it out. We not only have the&#13;
best engine on the market, but we have the size and style&#13;
you need. Call and look over our line, and whether you buy&#13;
or not we will be glad to see you. We want to number you&#13;
as one of our friends. Call today and get a catalogue. It's&#13;
yours for the asking, and we are anxious for you to have it.&#13;
. ' . • * . ' *&#13;
, . . . If -.-1 'JJP&#13;
Mf-.'i$ £.:&#13;
I #«i&#13;
CHUBBS CORNERS&#13;
George Scbaler spent the week end&#13;
in Jackson.&#13;
F. W. Allison is Vw»tter a1 &gt;his wrt-&#13;
Margaret Faulus ot Jackson is visiting&#13;
at the home of M. Hoisel.&#13;
*Wirt Smith has moved bis family to&#13;
Ann Arbor.&#13;
Mrs. David Yelland and family of&#13;
Ann Arbor visited friends in this vicinity&#13;
last week.&#13;
Robert Entwisle spent the holidays&#13;
with relatives in Sontb Saline.&#13;
£. Hoisel and wife are visiting relatives&#13;
in Jaokson.&#13;
Mrs. T. Richards has returned home&#13;
after spending some time with re la*&#13;
tires in Northern Michigan.&#13;
The C C P P C m e t at Mark Allison's&#13;
New Tears evening, M. riot eel&#13;
was awarded first prize and 'ay Brigham&#13;
tbe consolation prize. Tae next&#13;
.meeting will be netd at the borne ot&#13;
U. Hoisel.&#13;
What the White&#13;
Rose Saw&#13;
The world teemed very fair and&#13;
beautiful that summer morning wben&#13;
I first awoke to a consciousness of lti&#13;
axiatence and of my own life and&#13;
fragrance, and thrust a tiny white&#13;
petal out from among tbe close green&#13;
leaves to take my flrat view of it I&#13;
was very. happy in those early days.&#13;
The bees and humming-birds kissed&#13;
me aa they floated lazily by and whispered&#13;
sweet messages of the garden&#13;
life. They flattered me until I thought&#13;
I was the most beautiful thing in the&#13;
garden until she came, and then I lost&#13;
my heart.&#13;
A dream of loveliness she was aa&#13;
she came down the path clothed all in&#13;
clinging pink, just the color of the&#13;
moss rosea that grow near me, with.&#13;
hair like the sunlight that Ilea sparkling&#13;
on the soft grass, and eyes like&#13;
dark violets. They told me ehe was&#13;
a human.&#13;
One day she stopped by the bush&#13;
and told us she was very happy, but&#13;
would soon be much happier; then&#13;
she patted us and called us her bridal&#13;
roses, and declared no one should&#13;
touch ns until she gathered us for her&#13;
wedding day.&#13;
The next thing I remember was one&#13;
beautiful night when I heard steps on&#13;
the gravel, and looking up saw my&#13;
' loved one coming, and with her anoth-&#13;
| er human, taller and not nearly so&#13;
' pretty; he did not look like a flower&#13;
I at all, unless it were to remind one of&#13;
the tulips. I never did care much for&#13;
them. My love was all in white, and&#13;
looked like the tall lilies that grow&#13;
near the gate.&#13;
He was speaking to her in low tones.&#13;
X could not hear what ne said, but I&#13;
could hear her voice plainly. She was&#13;
saying: "Maurice, if there is any truth&#13;
in this, tell me—I cannot, bear to think&#13;
you would deceive me." Then I looked&#13;
up in his face—it looked very white in&#13;
the moonlight. Then he said:&#13;
"Ruth, you do not understand; I&#13;
ASTOEUUS.&#13;
Aubrey Gilchrist and family ot&#13;
Pinckney visited at the borne of E.&#13;
Hook Sunday,&#13;
Agnes Brogan of Lansing was a&#13;
gueat ot Clare Ledwidge last week.&#13;
G. W. Crofoot and wife and A. 6.&#13;
Wilson and wite spent last Thursday&#13;
at the borne of Ohas. Ballis,&#13;
Chas Frost and family of Unadilla&#13;
were Sunday guests of 0. A. Frost and I realized, he plucked me, and I knew&#13;
Meu't $10 suits and overcoats&#13;
now 18 at Dancer's.&#13;
MiHtfGla.iye Fisk is vipitin^ relatives&#13;
iu Monroe.&#13;
Men's $18 suits now $14 40 at&#13;
Dancer's.&#13;
Geo, Sargeson of Howell 'was in&#13;
town Tuesday.&#13;
iiisa Norma Vaughn spent New&#13;
Years iu Hamburg.&#13;
G, P. Simerof Dexter was in&#13;
town on business Monday.&#13;
E. G. Carpenter and wife spent&#13;
New Years at Claude Reason's-&#13;
Wm. Duubarand family visited&#13;
relatives in Dexter last week.&#13;
Leo Monks transacted business&#13;
in Howell and Ann Arber Tuesday.&#13;
Miss May Teeple visited relatives&#13;
in Lansing a few days last&#13;
week.&#13;
I. J. Kennedy and family spent&#13;
New Years at the home of James&#13;
Doyle.&#13;
Mrs. N. T. McOleer of Gregory&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of M&gt;&#13;
Dolan.&#13;
Mrs. Abbie Little of Swanton,&#13;
Ohio is visiting at Jesse Richardson's.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bock of Detroit&#13;
have been visiting friends&#13;
here.&#13;
Mrs. Snyder of Jackson spent&#13;
the first of the week at A. B.&#13;
Greejgi&#13;
Rev. Fr. Wittliff ot Brighton&#13;
have only lived the life of the average | Wft8 t h e 8 t o f R e v F r C o y l e man." He paused then and came to- , _ , ° J&#13;
ward me—I felt .myself tremble with j Mouday.&#13;
apprehension—yes, my fears were&#13;
- • • • • • • -&#13;
10UTH KAJU01.&#13;
Mr, and Mrs. Wm. 8h«hen and son&#13;
visited at Jas. Harris' of Pinckney&#13;
last week.&#13;
The annual oyster "eat" held at the&#13;
pleasant home of Hart Gauss last&#13;
Tuesday night was well attended and&#13;
a royal good time was ei&gt;joyed by all.&#13;
John Carr spent Sunday with his&#13;
sister, Mrs. Irving Hart of Eist Marion.&#13;
Miss Kit Brogan spent a portion, of&#13;
last week with friends at Howell and&#13;
Obiiaon.&#13;
Mrs. M. Gallup entertained company&#13;
from Jackson a portion of last&#13;
week. |&#13;
John Gardner and wife entertained&#13;
toe following at New Years dinner:&#13;
Vera Demerest and wife, Hart Causa&#13;
and wife, and Bay Newcomb and wife ,&#13;
of Howell.&#13;
Airs. Learn Newman spent part of&#13;
last week with relatives at Fowlerville&#13;
Several from this vicinity attended&#13;
fee play at Pinckney last Thursday&#13;
ifcht&#13;
family.&#13;
Gene MoClear and family, Max Ledwidge&#13;
and family and Alike and Will&#13;
Roche ate New Tears dinner at the&#13;
home of Will Ledwige.&#13;
R. J. Edwards visited relatives in&#13;
Canada recently.&#13;
Mrs. Sharps or 8tockbridge is visit"&#13;
ing her daughter Mrs. Chas. Bui lie.&#13;
Ray Brogan of South Marion visited&#13;
visited at the home of Will Brogan&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Chas. Holmes and family and Kirk&#13;
V&gt;nWinkle and family of Lansing&#13;
4spenf the latter part of last week at&#13;
the home of Jas. Marble.&#13;
Mr*. Jennie Lavey of Pinckney&#13;
spent Thursday at Gene McOlearV&#13;
Will Caskey and wife spent New&#13;
Tears at the home ot flobt. Caskey of&#13;
PlainBeld.&#13;
A number from here attended the&#13;
play at the Pinckney opera house last&#13;
Thursday evening, All report it well&#13;
pi&amp;yed.&#13;
W. H. Crofoot and wife spent New&#13;
Tears in Pinckney.&#13;
Mary Conners spent a coo.pie of&#13;
days last week with ber grandparents&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Plnmmer of this&#13;
place.&#13;
Mrs. WLQ. Ledwidge and daughters&#13;
were in Ann Arbor Monday.&#13;
Glen a and Orla Hinehey ate New&#13;
Tears dinner with their brother Frank&#13;
and family.&#13;
Will Roche visited relatives in&#13;
Pinckney Snnday.&#13;
Mrs, Gene MoClear and children returned&#13;
to their school work in Ypsilanti&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
The wedding of Miss Prances Carpenter&#13;
of this place and Albert Symea&#13;
of Chilson took place on New Years&#13;
day at the home of her parents.&#13;
my fate was sealed—that I would nev&#13;
er he one of her bridal roses. I thought&#13;
she started when she saw what he had&#13;
done.&#13;
He handed me to Ruth. "Take this&#13;
little rose, dear, as a symbol of your&#13;
purity and nobleness and trust me—&#13;
cannot you do this?"&#13;
Her voice as she replied was cold&#13;
and hard—I scarcely recognised It as&#13;
the same, that had talked so lovingly&#13;
to us. "Maurice, I am not to be trifled&#13;
with. I want to know the truth, and&#13;
you must let me be the Judge aa&gt; to its . . t&#13;
•tgniflcanwlirtfie^ea^^&#13;
hereafter."&#13;
"Well, then, Ruth, I will tell you—"&#13;
Here I lost their conversation, for at&#13;
hie first words she dropped me on the&#13;
path and they walked on.&#13;
I lay a long while on the rough&#13;
E. J Briggs and family were&#13;
quests of relatives in Howell New&#13;
Henry Ewing Garingtoo N.D.&#13;
is visiting his mother, Mrs. Mary&#13;
Ewing.&#13;
Mrs. B. B. Sutton of Flashing&#13;
is a guest at the home of Mrs.&#13;
Mary Ewing.&#13;
Miss Grace Grieve of Stock&#13;
bridge spent the past week with&#13;
Marion A eh ley of Detroit is visitimr&#13;
&gt;r grandparents, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. M, Dolan.&#13;
Mr and Mr*. R. Read attended&#13;
gravel, feeling lonely and homesick for , the dancing party at Whitmore&#13;
my swaying bush, when I was aroused&#13;
SOUTH IOSCO,&#13;
Mrs Truman Wainwright and Mrs.&#13;
Iter Miller are on the siek list.&#13;
lira. Win. Caskey of Anderson visit-&#13;
||ef tenants here last week.&#13;
v 'Mm MasVf• Lsmborne bee reWn-&#13;
*4te s*r eeo» alter spending some&#13;
litjH witbner sister » Wnekney.&#13;
&amp;a**et Wainwrignt of Williamston&#13;
stent Sendty at T. Weinwrigfat's.&#13;
Ifiat Stw* Gtttoy ritaned home&#13;
'•?'•*•&#13;
vA«fy;'&#13;
on Hit* Wil*r4U "» * * * *&#13;
Mr. J. D. Boyiaa of Onilson passed&#13;
•way Satnrdny evening&#13;
^^w*sn* ST ^swe^s^BTes^s^BTn A wesss^^si^Bj™ SJBV&#13;
it-''**. B*«* •* # ^ H ^ * r &lt; &gt; ^ ^&#13;
efi*yf awiasra J * * ! * * * * * W«tvl»"*i waliom.&#13;
bstvttie were felltA U «• wlalrfje Mr* Mvrew Ily «a*&#13;
MiOJ«t^ 4 ^ *****&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG.&#13;
Miss Una Bennett and Miss Clara&#13;
Carpenter entertained a few fneadt&#13;
at the home of Mini Carpenter Tuesday&#13;
evening Dee. 81.&#13;
Erwio Nash m slowly regaining&#13;
histtrength,&#13;
The Ladies Aid will meet with Mrs,&#13;
Twittihel Thursday, for dinner.&#13;
Henry Boss of Brighton spent the&#13;
week end with Geo, VanHora. *&#13;
,L.XLa-aWme » d daughter . Mrt.0ht*8t*Hiern»tt last weak&#13;
\ % / • «»»&gt;.&#13;
ii$A%;i*i.&#13;
^FF.^j^Pt ^ ^ ^ ^ • ^ ^ • ^ • w&#13;
'»1. *•*$ i*&#13;
Xi'-r-t&#13;
'&gt;,'/'&#13;
.I" l.w .&#13;
by hearing Ruth say, In broken, tearful&#13;
tones: "Leave me, Maurice, for the&#13;
sake of my love for you, leave me."&#13;
I heard him plead with her—then he&#13;
turned suddenly and left her standing&#13;
quite near me. She stood motionless,&#13;
as though listening to catch the last&#13;
sound of his footsteps—the click of&#13;
the gate sounded in the distance, and&#13;
then all was silent At last she gave&#13;
one sob and fell aU In a heap on the&#13;
gravel near me.&#13;
How I longed to comfort her—and I&#13;
think she must have felt my sympathy,&#13;
for after a while she put out her&#13;
hand and raised me to her lips and&#13;
kissed me so tenderly, that even now,&#13;
though I am old and yellow and shriveled,&#13;
I thrill at the recollection. After&#13;
awrhtle she arose and carried me Into&#13;
the house and up to her ro^p—this&#13;
was a new world to me, and I wondered&#13;
what was coming next. She&#13;
stood for a long while looking out at&#13;
the moonlit garden, caressing me soft*&#13;
ly. Finally, she murmured: 'It la&#13;
no use, I cannot face it" Carrying: me&#13;
over to a closet she took out a tiny&#13;
bottle and slowly drank Its contents.&#13;
1 had a confused sense of her fingers&#13;
tightening around me, and then she&#13;
staggered backward and fen to the&#13;
floor, and I was still In her hand. All&#13;
through the night I lay there watching&#13;
her, wondering why she lay so still&#13;
and white. After a while a faint glimmer&#13;
of tijght came in at the windfw;&#13;
I heard the chirp of birds out In the&#13;
garden, and the old familiar morning&#13;
sounds, seeming so faint and far&#13;
away. How I longed to be down wtU&#13;
my companions breathing in the toft&#13;
sweetness of the summer morning.&#13;
Bverything was gloomy and unfamiliar&#13;
in the great room and Ruth lay&#13;
so still and white and did not apeak&#13;
to me.&#13;
Suddenly there wan a sound of other&#13;
human voices calling Ruth's name&#13;
londly; than a crashlag sound and two&#13;
e into the room and knelt&#13;
Lake last Wednesday.&#13;
Try having W, J. Dancer &amp; Co.&#13;
Stock bridge send yon goods on&#13;
approval by parcels post. Adv.&#13;
Fifty people attended the oyster&#13;
supper given at the home of R. G.&#13;
Webb last Saturday evening.&#13;
Mr. G. Mitchell and family of&#13;
Dansvi lie visited at the home of&#13;
Wm. Bollis the past week.&#13;
Mm. Walter Chapman a n d&#13;
daughter of Pontine spent the first&#13;
of the week with relatives "h«re.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Newman of&#13;
Ownsso spent New Years at the&#13;
hnrn* of her mother Mrs. L. A,.&#13;
Devereanx,&#13;
Mrs. E. G. Finn spent the past&#13;
week at th«» horn* «f h«rdanffbte*,&#13;
Mrs. BerVVXl.laham of Plainfield.&#13;
they rained her and laM ber&#13;
on Ae white bed. feme) one took me&#13;
out of ber hand and teenesfme en this&#13;
table, where I have been ever sflnee.&#13;
there were low sobs and I heard&#13;
to one whisper something ahoot&#13;
It&#13;
1 had teem lowers die bed oh, hew&#13;
dtterentlyt We dM tot taow Ihey&#13;
were gone) mini the lent soft petal&#13;
dropped treat the atom, f had 3m&#13;
;&gt;*'&#13;
The Mifuu*e Marv Coyle and&#13;
4line N*rm**v and Lew's foylp&#13;
nf JSortb field were guests of Rpv&#13;
•Toe. Coyle the Utter part of Inst&#13;
we«V,&#13;
Th* LadW Aid Rnrtefv A# fho&#13;
^roiff;'! &lt;*hnreh» will hoM their Jan&#13;
nary tea at tWr halt Wedneodma'temnnn&#13;
and evening Jannarv 35&#13;
from 5 r&gt;VWV nntil all are served.&#13;
Bvwryooe invited.&#13;
The n«rt meeting of the PinchneyTiitemr?&#13;
and Social d o b will&#13;
be herd at the home of Mine Kate&#13;
Brown, Friday evening Jap 10th&#13;
at 7 o'clock standard. AU infer.&#13;
ested are cordially invited t* attend.&#13;
Dr. an* Mr*. A. H. Pearson&#13;
*f Hambwrfe Wm. Sobifele&#13;
and famtiy ot Brighton, Mia*&#13;
Thing* Melvtft of Ann Arbor,&#13;
Glen Marlatt of Gregory e*d&#13;
•*.a&#13;
*^*e School Notes •sassBsisnnnsi&#13;
1 for iMilty&#13;
ii&#13;
__ _ Clyde Bmitfa of Dettoil woeggunihi&#13;
•i* w»V-g#*l#f fthe»i Mm 0. J, Ps^oon thejbo«M8a)enfdhy of toif wnoktesiai&#13;
l l i ^ B t t #H ate entf4&#13;
Lulu Benbam ot Ypsilanti, Don&#13;
Hause^of Ann Arbor and Walter Campbell&#13;
of Woodstock, Illinoia visttAd&#13;
School Monday,&#13;
Myron Dunning was absent Monday&#13;
on account of sickness.&#13;
Glen Fiak is still on the sick lut.&#13;
The Presbman Class have taken np&#13;
the snbject of Botany.&#13;
Miss Heine returned to Pinckney&#13;
Saturday after spending ber vacation&#13;
at her borne in Mt. Cltmenn.&#13;
Mias Agnes McClnskey entertained&#13;
a few friends at a progressiva carl&#13;
party, Saturday evening December 28.&#13;
School.commenced Monday atter—*&#13;
two weeks vacation.&#13;
Nellie FUk is improving rapidly.&#13;
Lorenzo Mnrphy and Lois Teeple&#13;
are absent on account ot illness,&#13;
CooM Froceedisp&#13;
Regular Jan. 6.1913&#13;
Conneil convened and was oailed at&#13;
order by Pres* Season.&#13;
Trustees Present—Flintoft, Clinton&#13;
Teeple, Don bar, Roche.&#13;
Absent—Monks,&#13;
Minutes or last meeting wttre read&#13;
and approved.&#13;
The following hills were road and&#13;
upon motion wers ordered paid and&#13;
orders were drawn.&#13;
Pinckney Ltg, Go. Deo. Ltg. * 949 50&#13;
W. A, Clinton withdrew bis application&#13;
presented last meeting lor an&#13;
electric light franchise.&#13;
S, Clinton tendered bis resignation&#13;
astrnstee in the following form:&#13;
To the Honorable Council of tbe&#13;
Tillage of Pinekney: I hereby ten*&#13;
der my resianation to the office of&#13;
trasUe of said village of Pinckney.&#13;
Dated Jan. 6,1913&#13;
Motion made by Teeple and, Dun*&#13;
bar that tbe resignation oe accepted.&#13;
Aye*;—Roche, Teeple, Dunbar and&#13;
Flintoft.&#13;
Tbe application for an sleetric light&#13;
franchise and contract was not voted&#13;
upon.&#13;
Upon motion conneil adjourned.&#13;
. W. A. Clinton, Tillage Clerg&#13;
Mrs. Jas. Mehan of Brighton&#13;
ie visiting friends here,&#13;
' We understand that Lewis Colby&#13;
hne sold his residence on Pearl&#13;
St. to John Molntyre,&#13;
The caeee of Ed. 8penra n Geoi&#13;
Poller, lor ajeempeitv end the peo»&#13;
piers Alma Bioe era booked for&#13;
thin term of thjecirenitooort&#13;
to the Martha Washington Semis.&#13;
ery, Washington D. O^sfter apenoV&#13;
iogthre* works in Lansing **dl form&#13;
Pinekney. • ~i. r * w w&#13;
The Ledies AidSoeieiy of the&#13;
M. B. ohnroh wfll ntrrn dtnaer si&#13;
ti»sirrooa» boaosk ike often&#13;
FifPrlw&#13;
BOWMAN'S ^^^••••^i^BnawassMHsiBHqnnineennnnnnslawSnnnBHawja^&#13;
Where It Pays to Pay Cash&#13;
We are making at.&#13;
tractive prices on all&#13;
kinds of merchandise&#13;
It is the popcy of the store to olnse.&#13;
_QJtt_aiLjwfttf-g»odVch»lng January, -&#13;
and February. We prive splendid1&#13;
bargain* at this seasoa of the yearl&#13;
Call and see us.&#13;
EVERY DAY IS BARGAIN DAY,*&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN&#13;
HOWELL'S BUSY STORE&#13;
Mi&#13;
fluslflia1 Adnrtlslig&#13;
POUND—Io ffae village of Pinekney&#13;
a snm of money. Owner oan have&#13;
by proving property and paying for&#13;
this notice. Jas. M. Harris. Uf&#13;
fc'OR 8ALE—Hard coal firtares&#13;
tor a Round Oak stove No 18 Inquire&#13;
of WUMiher, It8&#13;
Honey lor sale,&#13;
Swarttiont.&#13;
Inquire of Silas E.&#13;
It3&#13;
FOUNi^-A key ring containing five&#13;
keys. Owner eaa have by calling at&#13;
this office an l paying lor this adv.&#13;
FOR SALE—aonse and two lots Inqnire&#13;
of Mrs. Addis Potterton. lt&amp;&#13;
FOB SALE—1H acres of land on MM&#13;
iniunment plan, W l l payment&#13;
down and long terms for balance,&#13;
Would take small payment in ?w&gt;&#13;
sge pronertv. Aittress not&#13;
Howell, Mich. It3&#13;
•"•-t.'nl&#13;
&gt;&#13;
&gt;&#13;
...,It&#13;
^ • • * •.&#13;
PINOKMEY&#13;
4^^s^»e^s n^^^^i k^Jfs#hs^ni^snBaMyt^&#13;
W&amp;BAlUfl^g&#13;
jfCASfeVfUt) v i&#13;
ONIOK«-#I^0&#13;
POTATOKS-Me&#13;
He, Vet 104 •&lt;• v - '&#13;
»^&gt;sj*a**,&#13;
**&#13;
H &amp;&#13;
^:^2)&#13;
'.», H i / . - l ^ i J * ^M M&#13;
. ^ a . . * l j c ^ ^ 6 r f - ••; %£. 'M&gt; ; • • • ; / . » ^.:.%¾&#13;
/ * ' &lt;&#13;
t*«!lf</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch January 09, 1913</text>
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                <text>January 09, 1913 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="11015">
                <text>1913-01-09</text>
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                <text>Roy W. Caverly</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>Pinckney, L i v i n g s t a County, Michigan, Thursday, January 16, 1913 No. 3&#13;
»MN*Mt&#13;
You Can't Buy Inleiwity in a&#13;
Suit Made-to-Meastire by Ed. V.&#13;
Price &amp; Co., Chicago&#13;
«-Or Good workmanship, which is an assurance that the clothes&#13;
will retain their shapeliness, is distinctly evident in every&#13;
1 garment It matters not what standard yon measure Ed. V.&#13;
Price A. Co. tailoring—it has achieved an excellence that&#13;
challenges comparison with the creations of the most exclusive&#13;
tailoring shops and offers values that have never been duplicated&#13;
for the money.&#13;
Over 5 0 0 Samples of Handsome Spring and&#13;
Summer Patterns to Choose From.&#13;
Represented By&#13;
Parcels Post&#13;
Will Help TiM Local Merchant f Rlgltlj&#13;
Used&#13;
W. W. BARNARD&#13;
The new parcel post law has&#13;
been viewed with a great deal of&#13;
misgiving by retail merchants&#13;
everywhere. However, it should&#13;
give them new opportunities of&#13;
which they have had little conception.&#13;
It improves their position&#13;
as respects distant mail or&#13;
der houses. A mail order house&#13;
200 to 500 miles away must p*»y&#13;
62 cents to get a ten pound parse&#13;
mailed, The local merchant&#13;
serving the same article to a 50&#13;
mile territory, can get the same&#13;
thing carried for 32 cents. He&#13;
can send it for local delivery, including&#13;
such rural routes as may&#13;
start at the come postoffice for&#13;
14 cents. A mail order house&#13;
over 1,000 mile* away must pay&#13;
91 cents to get such a parcel&#13;
mailed.&#13;
It should be possible for the&#13;
local merchauta to develop %&#13;
good trade in the outlying country&#13;
for material to be delivered by&#13;
the parcel post. The possibilities&#13;
for the development of t,hi«&#13;
business are unlimited and in the&#13;
outlying country around this city,&#13;
there is thus a great potential&#13;
trade waiting for someone to get&#13;
it.&#13;
Have You&#13;
Bought t h a t Heating S t o v e&#13;
or t h a t N e w Range? If not&#13;
do nof untH you h a v e "&#13;
Seen Us&#13;
W e a r e H e a d q u a r t e r * f o r&#13;
a l l kinds of H a r d w a r e , E t c .&#13;
* A f u l l line of Cutters and Sleighs&#13;
Teep]e Hardware Compaq&#13;
Men's suits and overcoats now&#13;
sold at Dancer's at 1 5off.&#13;
lingular commpnication of Livingston&#13;
Lodge No 76, F. &amp; A. M.&#13;
Tuesday evening, January 21.&#13;
Work in theE. A. degree. Pay.&#13;
ment of dues will also be in order.&#13;
H. 0 . MaoDougall, Sec'y&#13;
The next meeting of the Pinckney&#13;
Literary and Social Clab will&#13;
"Be beldamtbe-bome of Mrs. D, &amp;&#13;
Lantisonthe evening of Friday,&#13;
Jannaiy 17th. All who are interested&#13;
are cordially invited to attend.&#13;
At the last meeting the&#13;
following subjects were discussed&#13;
in a general way: Vocational Education,&#13;
The Origin of Boast Pig,&#13;
The Venice of the West, The Late&#13;
A. K. Smiley, prominent in the&#13;
West Through His Canyon Crest&#13;
Park and in the East Through&#13;
Bis Peace Conferences at Lase&#13;
Mohonk, Helen Keller, her attainments,&#13;
J. A. Burns, the Modern&#13;
Lincoln. The program was&#13;
very entertaining and instructive.&#13;
MONKS B R O T H E R S&#13;
Butternut and Y e r y&#13;
Best Bread&#13;
Received Daily&#13;
Tip Top and Holsum with a full line&#13;
of specialties such as Salt Rising,&#13;
Graham, Whole Wheat, Cakes, Cookies&#13;
and Buns, etc., or any special order&#13;
Saturdays.&#13;
Edison Phonographs&#13;
In any Model&#13;
Records at Reduced Prices&#13;
4 minute at 31c 2 minute at 21c&#13;
eeea m9—mm—mmmmm— i n sisas&#13;
Gents Furnishings&#13;
A Complete Line i&#13;
Your Pancakes&#13;
Will be delightful if made of Hoyt&#13;
Bros. Pure Buckwheat flour, Henkel&#13;
or Old Tavern Prepared Mixture.&#13;
Use Blue RibVon, Light House, Karo&#13;
or Golden Tree Syrup, Just fine&#13;
for Buckwheat Cakes.&#13;
Pish&#13;
Salt Mackeral, Whitefish, Halibut and&#13;
Herring.&#13;
Addison Cheese&#13;
Limburger or Brick on special order.&#13;
Fruits&#13;
Oranges, Bananas, Grape Fruit and&#13;
Lemons&#13;
A Full Line of National Biscuits&#13;
isUetississMMtMiUMtM^ w f i f l f W f f f f * WWW W W WWWWWWWWWWWWWWW WWW W W WWW f f i f f f f f V t f f f V f f l f f f l l l f f l f f f W f l W W W i f f l W f i l f i l N N f f P V i W I&#13;
Annual MeetiDH&#13;
Of LlilftgstOR Gouty Mutiil&#13;
m&gt;-&lt;\&#13;
• &lt; * &amp;&#13;
ONE DAY ONLY,&#13;
SATURDAY, JANUARY 18&#13;
In order tu refute our stock before inventoring we offer the following bargains:&#13;
11:..&#13;
' JJene Wool Underwear, per garment&#13;
Mens Fleeced Underwear, par garment.&#13;
Mens Union Halt* ;&#13;
.79c&#13;
.39c&#13;
_79c&#13;
Men* 13.00 8weeters.__„&#13;
„ . . . # • • • ' •&#13;
*Meat* M ( b DreealSbirt*^&#13;
Heat 1.00 Cape.&#13;
00 Pair M»IM Qr*m* per fair.&#13;
•1.50 Q wtoTt*ito»U*Ju .w-. • * •&#13;
• M . •s«&#13;
Mew 4J» HfcoaV • &lt; w \ •;&lt;..*.&#13;
$&#13;
* • • * s * r *&#13;
fife Tea,fa? W.&#13;
So«p -tor^ i i — e&gt;i&#13;
4&amp;&#13;
• j . r . , "CJ&#13;
'4 '&#13;
the annual meeting of ihe Livingston&#13;
Gonnty Mutual Fire Insurance&#13;
Co., was held at the ooart&#13;
house at Howell last week and&#13;
was well attended, a great, amount&#13;
of interest being shown by tbe&#13;
members who all seemed satisfied&#13;
with tbe sonnd financial b&#13;
able management of the organization.&#13;
While fcue company the past&#13;
year met with some big loses, the&#13;
total loss exceeds but little over&#13;
former years and unless some other&#13;
losses occur between now and&#13;
tirne of making the yearly assessment&#13;
there will be no increased&#13;
assessment. The following are&#13;
abstracts from the secretary's report;&#13;
number of members Deo. 31,&#13;
1911, 3511, number of members&#13;
Dec 31,1912,3456, risks Dec. 31,&#13;
1911 $7,225,374, risks Dec, 31,&#13;
1912, £7,862,401, total receipts for&#13;
past year 118,789.91, total disembursmente&#13;
for the past year, $17,&#13;
943.12, cash on hand 1844.79.&#13;
The meeting was called to order&#13;
by the president, William Horton,&#13;
who made a few remarks relative&#13;
to tbe past years business.&#13;
All of the officials of tbe company&#13;
were re-elected as follows:&#13;
Pros. Wm. M. Horton, Handy;&#13;
Vice pres. Malacby Roche,Handy;&#13;
Sec., W. J. L»rkin, Howell;&#13;
Director, Wesley J. Witty, Mar&#13;
ion.&#13;
On motion F. E. Ives of Unadilla&#13;
and Clarence Fuller of Cohoctah&#13;
were appointed a committee&#13;
to meet with .the company's&#13;
officials to consider the question&#13;
of insuring automobiles aud other&#13;
needed changes to be reported at&#13;
next annual meeting.&#13;
See Us&#13;
m Before&#13;
Goiur "&#13;
Elsewhere&#13;
We are here to&#13;
serve you with&#13;
anything in the&#13;
prinwL&#13;
stationery for&#13;
your business&#13;
and personal&#13;
use. Q Q O Q&#13;
Letter Heads Bill Heads&#13;
Envelopes Cards&#13;
Wedding Invitations&#13;
Posters or Anootmcemente&#13;
Of An Bass&#13;
The best quality of work&#13;
at prices that are RIGHT&#13;
' ^^^-V&gt;.#;A&gt;##};^^^^^&#13;
IWfffWtTftffWWIfrltflfflffW*&#13;
5»&#13;
Hence ft I t y Q i r •&#13;
The township tax roll is now&#13;
in my possession M»d I am now&#13;
tsscry to receive taxes during&#13;
baoking hours.&#13;
r Louis 0. Monks, Twp. Tress.&#13;
**The Town M*trsfe«4", » four&#13;
aet rural drams, will bs presented&#13;
ander she snapioes of toe EpworUi&#13;
Laagoe of toe M. % Oborch at&#13;
tbe Pinckney opera house, Friday&#13;
evoaing, Jaooary 24. Head adv.&#13;
vj^sV .a^sa^BBS/ ftsaajaa^v^ ^,&#13;
/J' ' &gt;V-&#13;
^¾ t ^&#13;
V ..0"i&#13;
Tbe bee^. an J par nut drags in the world [the kind we&#13;
keep] art of no service or are dangerous, if they to not&#13;
handled carefully. This is a matter whieh k^hraya ^]spar&#13;
most in oar mind*—c«r#foloess—tbe sWling of tk%f|ght&#13;
bottle, the mwwarinir or weighlas; of liie rigat dsaf. I t ia&#13;
oar constant aim to n«* th^ right kind m jir^gglasi to whoan&#13;
the people can co with 'onfldenoe, when £he Mvee of iavad&#13;
ones depend upon car** and accaracj in fftfa£ peraorlptlons&#13;
with medicine whteb nr+ J0&gt;t as thay fhawM ba&gt; • A -' ^ •&#13;
S DRUG STORE V&#13;
\ «&#13;
iM School&#13;
'$*%** ^¾&#13;
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*•&lt; &gt;?&gt;.&#13;
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ORE than [),000 years ago there were&#13;
gathered at the command of Moses,&#13;
on the plains of Aasein blase in the&#13;
valley of Mount Sinai, all of the&#13;
children of Israel to listen to the&#13;
reading of the laws that were re-&#13;
\sf vealed to Moses during the "forty&#13;
days and forty nights" he npent in&#13;
the midst of a cloud communing with&#13;
the (Joel of the "chosen people."&#13;
Since that momentous and epochmaking&#13;
event nations have risen to&#13;
_ mighty power, only to go down to&#13;
•decay and oblivion. Unpeopled plains have been&#13;
converted into hives of induHtry, and hives of industry&#13;
have reverted back to unpeopled plains.&#13;
•New lands have -been discovered and peopled and&#13;
new seas have been navigated and charted. Everywhere&#13;
progress has changed the physical condition&#13;
of the people. Everywhere progress has changed&#13;
the historical and geographical importance of na-&#13;
Afcma and countries. Here, alone, in the Mount&#13;
Btatl Valley, where the nation that gave us the&#13;
Savior first sprang into prominence, progress has&#13;
stood still. Surrounded by the peaks ot the "Forty&#13;
Martyrs," all is hushed and still on the plain where&#13;
once the hum of thousands of voices was heard, and&#13;
Where the valley rang with the resounding march&#13;
of the hosts of Israel&#13;
&amp;&amp;***•&#13;
*K&#13;
••SM&#13;
OD the peak of Ras-es-Safsafeh, the cross, the&#13;
symbol of Christianity, has been planted on the very&#13;
•pot upon which Mo3es, the great law giver and&#13;
leader of the Jews, stood and gave to his people&#13;
itfc» ten commandments, the basis of all religious&#13;
(beliefs and the foundation of all law, moral and&#13;
cIvIL Now unpeopled and deserted, the very&#13;
loaesomeneflB of the place is awe-inspiring, and&#13;
Ihe "silence of the tomb" is not more impressive&#13;
tibeei tfre "veil of silence" that envelops Ras-cs-&#13;
BafcaFeh and its surroundings.&#13;
T%e mount on which God is said to have revealed&#13;
himself to Moses is situated in the southern&#13;
half of the so-called peninsula of Sinai, projecting&#13;
into the northern extremity of the Red&#13;
sea, between the Gulf of Suez on the west and&#13;
the Golf of Akabah on the east, This park of the&#13;
peninsula consists of a mass of granite and&#13;
VOfpftyry mountains which may be divided Into&#13;
yfase groups, a northwestern, reaching in Jebel&#13;
Ceibal a height of 6,712 feet; a central, includi&#13;
n g Jebel Musa (Mount of Moses). 7,363 feet.&#13;
Jebel Katerin, 8.537 feet; and an eastern&#13;
southern, whose highest peak is .lebel TJmm&#13;
_ . r . 8,449 feet. Whether the Biblical Sinai&#13;
Jebel Umm Shomer of Jebel Musa was long&#13;
by leading authorities. The former was&#13;
ited by Eusebtus, Jeromer^osmas Indlco-&#13;
», and in more moderjTtimes by Lepslus&#13;
Sbers Jebel Musa, however, is preferred by&#13;
authorities, and is favored by tradition&#13;
(which dates, however, only from Christian&#13;
times), indicated by the name "Mountain of&#13;
Mtsn*," and the erection of a monastery upon&#13;
It which goes back to the days of Justinian The&#13;
r peak of Jebel Musa, known as Ras-es*&#13;
'ftrfeafeh (6,540 feet), meets the conditions required,&#13;
since there is an open space at its base&#13;
^ to accommodate a large encampment.&#13;
Standing on the lofty summit of Mount Stnal,&#13;
IJlpat thoughts and visions are conjured up as&#13;
«B9S contemplates that there on the vast plain of&#13;
iblage that stretches before the eye huni&#13;
of feet below, fifty centuries ago. the com*&#13;
stents were deliverd to the assembled chilof&#13;
Israel.&#13;
. ;lag for the Mount Sinai monastery,&#13;
from these heights looks like a little toy&#13;
bntlt of blocks, the region is still and&#13;
, and almost deserted. The massive walls&#13;
monastery raised by the peace-loving and&#13;
. trlog monks under Justinian in 527 A. D.&#13;
a protection against the marauding bands&#13;
i that infeeted that part of the counwhem&#13;
the wealth of an empire was possessed&#13;
fit* builders and occupants of the monastery&#13;
re. tit the same condition as when built 1.500&#13;
v* age. Today, however, the Christian world&#13;
_ auwftAabial eye over this mountain monsssma&#13;
Rs contents, and the Bedouins, knowing&#13;
t o be the tact, keep on friendly as well ae&#13;
.. tern* with the monks.&#13;
the monastery are stored the priceless&#13;
_ narrating, the. history of Christianity in&#13;
tonga* of eitary Curisttan nation. Slowly&#13;
brathsrbood of Mount Sinai monks are dyoat;&#13;
there being bet twenty or twenty-five&#13;
it lime. The life and the pay—not&#13;
•—mi W f ^ % ^»bacco—areB*-v. eXifllcJent indiMiiiai&#13;
nl itfr jaunt; recruits to )Dtn the forces&#13;
er 4 y ^fss^ sre sroirtig smeltsr. In tin*&#13;
of a few years the terasnrer of ttffc&#13;
wUI reojtin but a mmrtfrto remin* '&#13;
i p i n m i i i o f lM;ieoaier, Ja^laMa-' r&#13;
ne*kwe*t,trom Jebel Muse to WadJ el&#13;
PHOTOS&#13;
©orutttxftWHiO&#13;
yfflmjtfaJ&amp;ORWZWCZZffl^&#13;
&gt;J5&amp;&#13;
'&lt;* :4'{'&#13;
h &gt; , -&#13;
s%&#13;
4&amp;&#13;
•//*&#13;
*r£M&#13;
F&amp;U&amp;5 a? Ad&amp;pvsi^G&amp;iTri^&amp;uyG^&#13;
Loja the traveler who for days has been wearied&#13;
by the sight of nothing else but they monotonous&#13;
blue of the burning sky and the dreary desert&#13;
all about him is exhilarated, pleased and rested&#13;
by the night of those beautiful cypress trees with&#13;
their cool, dark foliage down in the wadi—the&#13;
Arabic name for hollow or valley. One can&#13;
scarcely imagine anything more dreary than the&#13;
valley where these trees raise their heads above&#13;
the rock-bound hollow in the desert. They stand&#13;
in all their majesty in the gardens of the monastery&#13;
of the Sinaitic monks on St. Catherine, one&#13;
of the mountains of the range called the "Forty&#13;
Martyrs," and great pride is taken by these men&#13;
of Ood in these trees, which for a thousand years .&#13;
have broken the monotony of the desert waste&#13;
and have cast their welcome shade wherein the&#13;
weary traveler and the travel-stained caravan&#13;
may rest and take shelter.&#13;
For more than a year the Israelites were encamped&#13;
in the valley of Sinai when they again&#13;
took up their wanderings in search of the promised&#13;
land. Through Asia Minor they proceeded&#13;
to the land of Canaan, their great leader, Moses,&#13;
dying as they came in sight of the country&#13;
which God had promised to Abraham, Isaac and&#13;
Jacob.&#13;
One of the most Important places in Asia&#13;
Minor, on the road from Constantinople to Konia,&#13;
Is the ancient town of Aflum Kara-HisBar, whose&#13;
extraordinary citadel, rising 800 feet in its, very&#13;
center, was the Byzantine fortress of Aeroenas.&#13;
where in 730 A. D, the Arabs, under the leadership&#13;
of Sid el Battel el Qhazl, were defeated by&#13;
the Turks in its very shadow. To get a view of&#13;
this mogt picturesque town a climb up the stairway&#13;
cut in the rock of the citadel brings one to&#13;
the very summit where there still remain the mediaeval&#13;
Turkish fortifications &gt;•&#13;
Like all other towns in Asia Minor, Aflum&#13;
Kara-Hissar Is built of mud bricks. Its streets&#13;
run in every dfrection of the compass. Although&#13;
the language spoken there is Turkish, there is&#13;
a large Armenian population. It fa as dirty a&#13;
place as one can imagine. Overrun with halfstarved,&#13;
howling doga in the day, the night is&#13;
made hideous by their mad attempts to clean up&#13;
the refuse thrown in the streets. It is a good&#13;
place to be avoided by the fastidious. The town&#13;
boa8t3 of a fine basaar, churches for the Armenians&#13;
and mopques for the Turks, as well as&#13;
schools for both classes, The Armenians have&#13;
made a commendable effort to make their part&#13;
of the town Inhabitable and sanitary.&#13;
The story of the birth and infancy of the&#13;
founder and first legislator of the Israelite nation&#13;
Is one of the treasured gems of Hebrew&#13;
literature He was of the tribe of Levi, -and k&#13;
his mother. Jochebed (his father's name' wae&#13;
Amrantt. hid him three months in defiance of&#13;
the edict of Pharaoh, who, to prevent the growth&#13;
of his Hebrew slave population, had ordered all&#13;
thetr inale children to be put to, death at birth.&#13;
At* Mhe&gt; danger of discovery became great the&#13;
fnfant was placed in an ark on the Nile, was found and; adopted by the daughter of, Pbamoa,&#13;
and was trbught Up aa #n Egyptian trlncf- Bat&#13;
ate heart waa wit* alt enslaved brethren, aad&#13;
his slaying of one of their oppressors necessitated&#13;
his flight to Midian, where he received the&#13;
divine call to be the deliverer of his people from'&#13;
Egypt. After considerable trouble he led them&#13;
forth, crossed the Red sea, in which the pursuing&#13;
Egyptians were drowned, and then, during&#13;
a forty years' residence in the deBert, organized&#13;
the religious and social polity of the nation.&#13;
Moses stands out as a sublime and unique figure,&#13;
without whom neither Judaism, Mohammedanism,&#13;
nor Christianity could have been what they are.&#13;
BEAR WAS HIS INDIAN W I F E .&#13;
Where the Hunter Shot Her Is Now Called Bear's&#13;
House.&#13;
Along one of the branches of the Cheyenne&#13;
river in South Dakota there stands a bill called&#13;
Matoti, or Bear's House. Tradition tells this&#13;
Indian legend about it:&#13;
Once upon a time an Indian hunter was out&#13;
on the chase. He wandered for many a day&#13;
through forest and plain, over.hill and dale, till&#13;
he finally came to a spot, where Bear's House&#13;
now is. Here he hunted for a while until one day&#13;
he met a beautiful Indian woman.&#13;
As soon as he saw her he wanted to marry&#13;
her. Long and hard was the wooing, for the&#13;
Indian woman was unwilling to marry the&#13;
stranger. At last she consented, but she made&#13;
the stranger promise that he would never in the&#13;
future hunt or kill the hear. This animal waa her&#13;
totem, sacred to her and an object of her worship.&#13;
The hunter falthfuly promised to obey her&#13;
wishes and to hunt all other animals and leave&#13;
the bear unharmed. Then they were married&#13;
and lived on in happiness and contentment for&#13;
many a day.&#13;
Once it happened that the hunter started on the&#13;
chase. Early he went and roamed all through&#13;
the neighboring forest without killing a single&#13;
ihJng. At lastiae became weary and tired.from&#13;
lhe chase and resolved to return to his wigwam.&#13;
Aa he wae approaching his home he saw In the&#13;
dusky twilight the dark and shaggy form of a&#13;
huge bear making straight for the wigwam.&#13;
"Now my wife will be lost." he thought, "for&#13;
if the bear reachea there before me he wilt&#13;
surely kill her."&#13;
Doubt at first stayed hia hand, for he remembered&#13;
his marriage vow. But fear and anxiety&#13;
overcame hia doubts. He raised hie bow to his&#13;
shoulder and aimed at .the animal. One arrow&#13;
sent straight to the heart laid the animal low.&#13;
When the Indian came near he saw instead of&#13;
the bear the lifeless form of his wife. The Mil&#13;
where they lived is still called the Bear's House,&#13;
or Matoti Hill.&#13;
i . "*V&#13;
Not for Publication.&#13;
"Of course, you have some convictions 1A mat'&#13;
ters of public conearn.**&#13;
"Mebbe," replied Farmer Coratossel.&#13;
"Well, why s e n t yon come out aad rustesi&#13;
thjmr •stwws*&#13;
*fT dean*t We've got boarders from all pnlttlsal&#13;
paiM^-Waahtoftoa Star. ^ :&#13;
SHE KNEW.&#13;
"Big men are the best lovers."&#13;
"How do you figure that?"&#13;
"Why, they're so demonstrative In&#13;
their love-making."&#13;
"Never judge a lover by his aiguB."&#13;
Important to Mothers&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle of&#13;
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for&#13;
InfantB and children, and see that it&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature of _^__&#13;
In Use For 0~ver 30*yearsT&#13;
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria&#13;
No Money, No Marriage.&#13;
*£ fprt'une filler told me that Yo»&#13;
are i f l n f to ^martSr mefc&#13;
M ,i*id ,lha&#13;
yodng ^ man with »^e -'prominent&#13;
socks.&#13;
"Did she: also tell you that you are&#13;
(going to Inherit a very large fdrtune?".&#13;
ibquired the girl with the matted&#13;
hajr,&#13;
"fine didn't say anything about . a&#13;
fortune." '•&#13;
"Then Bhe is not much of a for-1&#13;
tune-teller, and you had better not&#13;
place any reliance in anything she&#13;
says."—Washington Herald.&#13;
Words of the Aviator.&#13;
"So you took a flyer in the stock&#13;
market?"&#13;
"Yes," answered the regretful-looking&#13;
man, "and hit an air pocket."&#13;
Dr. Pierce's Pellets, small, sugar-coated,&#13;
easy to take as candy, regulate and invigorate&#13;
stomach, liver and bowels 'aud cure cou-&#13;
Btipation. Adv.&#13;
Once in a great while a man comes&#13;
home as early as his wife thinks he&#13;
ought to, or the postman brings her a&#13;
letter that she expects.&#13;
OUt!&#13;
Mind Reader.&#13;
First Straphanger — Look&#13;
You're treading*on my feet!&#13;
Second Straphanger—Beg pardon?&#13;
I also prefer to ride in a cab.—Judge.&#13;
Don't buy water for bluing. Liquid blue&#13;
.i« ilnio-t all water. Buy Wed CYuta Bull'&#13;
Blue, the blue that's all blue. Adv.&#13;
It takes a good pugilist or a poor&#13;
minister to put his man to sleep.&#13;
To Mothers In This Town.&#13;
Children who nro delicate, feverish and cross&#13;
will get iniiiu'dialc relief from Mother Gray's&#13;
Swet't Powders for Children. They cleanse&#13;
the Ptoinaeh, act on the llvt-r and are recommended&#13;
for complaining children. A pleasant&#13;
remedy for worms. Used by Mothers for&#13;
22 years. At all Druggists. aSc. Sample F R E E&#13;
Address, A. S. Olmsted. Lc Roy. N; Y. Adv.&#13;
Question.&#13;
"Now a big Chicago firm complains&#13;
that its girls will not stay single."&#13;
"Well, will they stay married?"&#13;
Early Training.&#13;
Willis—Is that new young preacher&#13;
you hired iresh from college up to&#13;
date?&#13;
Gillis—You hot. He called out the&#13;
Easter choir squad last Sunday, and&#13;
has ordered practice behind closed&#13;
doors.—Puck.&#13;
A woman always seems to think a&#13;
man can make over his silk hat at*&#13;
easily as she can make a new bonnet&#13;
out of the one she wore last year.&#13;
W a t e r in bluinpf is a d u l t e r a t i o n . Olnssnnd&#13;
rt'.lter makes liquid blue cnsily. Buy Red&#13;
Cross Ball Blue, makes clothes whiter t h a n&#13;
•now. A d v .&#13;
His Guess.&#13;
"Wot's inflated curreucy,' BUI?"&#13;
"Dunno! 'lees it's money wot's been&#13;
'blown in.' "—Boston Transcript.&#13;
• • •„ - . . . .&#13;
Mrs. Winston'* Booth!OR S y r u p TOP C h l l d m&#13;
teething, soften., the g u m s , reduces inlliLmmn.&#13;
tlon, allays pain, cure*) wind colic. 25c a bottle./Uv.&#13;
And a baby would rather go to&#13;
sleep than listen to a lullaby.&#13;
Resinol stop:&#13;
skin troubles&#13;
IP you have eczema, ringworm,&#13;
or other itching, burning,&#13;
unsightly skin or scalp&#13;
eruption, try Resinol Ointment&#13;
and Resinol Soap, and see how&#13;
quickly the itching stops and&#13;
the trouble disappear^ even in&#13;
severe and stubborn caaes.&#13;
Pimples, blackheads ;..id red, sor*w&#13;
chapped faces and bands npaedily&#13;
yield to Resinol.&#13;
Resinol Ointment and Restnol Srvtp&#13;
heal skin humors, Borea, boila, bu .*,&#13;
acalds, cold-acrea, chaftog? And pile*.&#13;
Prescribed by physicians far over 1?&#13;
- year*. Atfdruy.,ists sell Kesinol Soap&#13;
(2Sc)and Resinol Ointment(60e and $2),&#13;
For sample of each write to Dept. 1V81,&#13;
Resinol Chemical Co. Baltimore, l i d .&#13;
Ovoid&#13;
When a woman suffering from some form of feminine&#13;
disorder is told that an operation is necessary, it of course&#13;
frightens her.&#13;
The very thought of the hospital operating table and iha&#13;
surgeon's knife strikes terror to her heart, and no wonder.&#13;
It is quite true that some of these troubles may reach a stags&#13;
where an operation is the only resource, but thousands c£&#13;
women have avoided the- necessity of an operation by takirg&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. This fact is&#13;
attested by the grateful Tetters they write to us after their&#13;
health has been restored.&#13;
These Two Women Prove Our Claim.&#13;
Gary, Maine.-*'I feel i t a duty I&#13;
owe to all suffering women to tell&#13;
what Lydia E. Fiakham's Vegetable&#13;
Componad did for me. One year ago&#13;
I fotmd myself a terrible sufferer.&#13;
I had paiaa ia both sides and such a&#13;
soreness l o o u l d scarcely stalghten&#13;
up at times. My bade aebed»l had&#13;
no appetite ana was so nervous I&#13;
eouM not sleep, then I would be so&#13;
tired mornings that I could soaroely&#13;
get around. It sseYwwd almost impossible&#13;
to move or do a bit of work&#13;
aad I thought 1 n e w would be any&#13;
better until 1 subasitted to an operation.&#13;
I commenced taking Lydia B.&#13;
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and&#13;
soon felt like a new woman. I sad&#13;
no pains, Slept welL had good&#13;
titaaad was fat and could do almost&#13;
all my own work- for a family o/&#13;
four. I s)ioll always feel that I owe,&#13;
my good health to your medioina."&#13;
—Mrs. HAYWABD SOWKBS, Cury, iu's.&#13;
Csarlotte, N. 0 - ^ 1 was i&lt; -id&#13;
health for two years, with p.% , , i&#13;
both sides and was very nervo &gt;i H&#13;
I e m lifted a chair i t would . ,&#13;
a hemorrhage. I had a grow th ••• -. &gt;&#13;
the doctor said was a tumor a.n.,-i&#13;
n e w would get weH unlfsa, i^hi.*&#13;
am operation. A friend advised rutj&#13;
to take Lydia K. Pinkhar^'H Vegetable&#13;
Compound, and 1 gladly say that&#13;
X am now enjoying fine health end&#13;
ant the mother of a nice baby girl;&#13;
Toucan use this letters* help other&#13;
attesting wonsem.'Vlfrs. Boat Sua,&#13;
M Wyoaa S»H GbesteUe, JC. jtV&#13;
Fo*p o0u0n dT tbaarat bLeyend itah eB w. PtmtwmlTAhatamd'a r eVmeegdetya fbolre f e&gt; &gt;^i ime^*lo, e tNoo h oenrsee lsft eIlft s whet tdbo weso nmoatn t'rsy a tihlmise fna*t* " ls»oe m na\andya a fartfoiemri nngx&gt;w«*im ane*d hto«brbjee,a ltttf e*&#13;
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Is&#13;
3d&#13;
l e&#13;
m-&#13;
.-y&#13;
)f&#13;
• - ' . &lt; • * "&#13;
• » .&#13;
as artd ^e'feef better every way. I iftwmrattr pravldrag hospitais fC are so well satisfied with Bostum , ^ ¾ Ml requiring saloo ^&#13;
we raoomaisad *t t*&gt; our Mead* ••#»•. all screens find "AV~"&#13;
&lt;va besaraadesielt mad nervous&#13;
and miserable toy t»«ee" NameH*&#13;
eaapoji retaest Reed the Ifctleaoosv&#13;
~r*s Road to WegrtUsy, to*kgf,. *»tav no* comes in cowjaSSttsd,&#13;
po%s*f form, tailed Wstaaf Postan*.&#13;
^K ta'Preftsn* by stirrms; *»ST*V tesr&#13;
spoonful in a cup of hot-wstsrfc sddlng&#13;
to-tssts. and snotHh eruptto&#13;
eajc&gt;tajs^*r»*a. _ ^ ^&#13;
Ubelleil * $ * tti5 sJ*CMc jrant)r.&#13;
carding to the BeaUtme^scals,,, .&#13;
ths&#13;
It is evident, judging by the way&#13;
things have lined up during the opening&#13;
days of the session* that the «*ak&#13;
cium light will be turned on the house&#13;
this year, as the senators have evidenced&#13;
a desire to pull together and&#13;
work for some good legislation. Not&#13;
so, however, with the members of the&#13;
house. Of such a progressive nature&#13;
during the last regular and special sessions&#13;
that it was willing to push&#13;
through any sort of a, measure, the&#13;
house attracted considerable attention&#13;
for its willingness to act, but this&#13;
year it i3 apparent that some of the&#13;
old time leaders are bucking over the&#13;
traceB. Already some of the progressive&#13;
republicans in the house are complaining&#13;
that the leaders of the G. O.&#13;
P. majority are not acting for the best&#13;
interests of the party and the people&#13;
of the state, and the whole trouble&#13;
has apparently arisen over the adoption&#13;
of the resolution introduced by&#13;
Rep. Farmer, the democratic leader,&#13;
that all recounts shall be discontinued&#13;
and no action taken. Rep. D. G. F.&#13;
Warner, who has been an avowed and&#13;
open supporter of the liquor interests&#13;
in the house for several years, aided&#13;
the democratic leader in the passage&#13;
of the resolution. Every democrat, a&#13;
number of progressives whoso seats&#13;
were to have been contested, and several&#13;
republicans, supported the resolution.&#13;
The republicans who were anxious&#13;
to have some of the districts recounted&#13;
allege that it was a move on&#13;
the part of the liquor interests.&#13;
This statement has apparently&#13;
caused a fine little split in the ranks&#13;
of the republicans in the low.er house&#13;
and there is no telling to what lengths&#13;
the controversy may be carried.&#13;
Calmer heads over in the senate are&#13;
already urging the recalcitrant members&#13;
of the house to bury the hatchet&#13;
and assist in putting through some&#13;
good legislation.&#13;
Shipments of Live Stock.&#13;
Rep. Dunn, of Sanilac, has prepared&#13;
a bill compelling railways to give live&#13;
stock precedence over ordinary freight&#13;
A movement ha3 been started in&#13;
Michigan and surrounding states by&#13;
live stock buyers and shippers, which&#13;
is based on the fact that the railways&#13;
have made stock shipments feel&#13;
the brunt of the delays. The bill establishes&#13;
a minimum rate of speed for&#13;
stock shipments of say 15 miles per&#13;
hour while in Michigan territory,&#13;
Shippers claim the railroads made it&#13;
a business to hold up stook in prder&#13;
to add feeding charges and then only&#13;
furnish feed enough for a tenth of the&#13;
number shipped.&#13;
State Tax Commlsslowo.&#13;
If the senate affirms the appointments&#13;
of Governor Ferris the democrats&#13;
will control the state tax commission&#13;
as the chief executive has&#13;
named Thomas Kearney, of Ann Arbor&#13;
and. Orlando, F» Barnes, of Roscomnlon&#13;
to succeed Thomas D. White and&#13;
W. B. Mershoa,—Barnes -has twice&#13;
been the democratic candidate for&#13;
land commissioner and a number of&#13;
year* ago was democratic mayor of&#13;
the city of Lansing. Kearney has&#13;
long been a prominent democrat in&#13;
Washtenaw county.&#13;
Free Text Books.&#13;
There Is considerable opposition already&#13;
being manifested againBt the&#13;
bills provid4ng for free text books and&#13;
uniform text books. One prominent&#13;
member of the legislature says that&#13;
If the present law was applied there&#13;
would be no demand for free text&#13;
books, as the law specifically provides&#13;
that school districts can purchase&#13;
books at wholesale and either sell or&#13;
give them away to school children.&#13;
Will Visit Departments,&#13;
predecessor, Governor&#13;
4SMndm«nt*vto4he aftnttot Jew*.&#13;
^ litspsttfefi * f «isdf*to-1;&#13;
fis*. u * J; Wtfcttt,'tot'Alston, presents*&#13;
a WH providing fee a&gt;e*tjtpt#s*&#13;
sad rtbo|4u|fe Inspection of gasoline&#13;
•old In Jflchliaa. It atso provides for&#13;
liDaMng ofVuVa^bami^ne series as&#13;
"naphtha" it they Call below eft degree*&#13;
a atoms, and as gasoline when they&#13;
. . _ _ , waste: and the later is&#13;
afwayt aatfornv aott tsjM green*&#13;
*e-enp tin 90 eta* tsXtas* tta tftftts.&#13;
&amp;4*a» trial it* •ssussi.ftfsrfesesi'*&#13;
tear&#13;
&gt;i&#13;
:«''»*^*&gt;r*,--.'v''tJ&#13;
.fsros sf Smptogss*&#13;
Unlike his&#13;
Ferris will visit all of the state departments&#13;
in the capitol. During the&#13;
two years that he occupied the executive&#13;
chair Osbt&gt;rn never visited the&#13;
apartments of any of the state's elective&#13;
officers and when hie presence was&#13;
required at a meeting of the board of&#13;
state auditors, the meeting was held&#13;
in the executive office. "I shall visit&#13;
all of the state departments, as I believe&#13;
that It is'the duty of the chief&#13;
executive to be on good terms with&#13;
the men who are transacting the&#13;
state's business," said Ferris. "I shall&#13;
visit the legislature sometimes. I do&#13;
not think that it is beneath the dignity&#13;
of a governor to call upon the lawmaking&#13;
body of the state. Even though I&#13;
might want to stay away, r am sure&#13;
that my curiosity would get the better&#13;
of me and I would visit both the&#13;
house and senate."&#13;
Per Hospitals, Ete.&#13;
If the bill introduced by Rep. Leonard&#13;
becomes a law, municipalities will&#13;
be established hospitals and industrial&#13;
colonies for the care and treatment of&#13;
inebriates and dope fiends,The bill provieafc^&#13;
hat a board of inebriety shall&#13;
* ished and allows police judges&#13;
abitual drunkards and percted&#13;
to the use of drugs, to&#13;
colonies Instead of imposing jail&#13;
tences.&#13;
Legislative Club.&#13;
If plans that are under consideration&#13;
at present matertattte, there will be a&#13;
lean organisation in the house&#13;
senate to be known as the "Login*&#13;
tatlve Republican Club.'' Any republican&#13;
who is interested la the work of&#13;
will be admitted^to&#13;
Membership and those who are not&#13;
messbsraof the house or senate win&#13;
epaertaatty avesseass proposed&#13;
MUs. Ths republican leaders fl*&gt;&#13;
* * * * * * ssaay i«rasMe afsme raiakt&#13;
tettttsvwey. , •••&gt; ?&amp;*y--&#13;
l%tvaw KIsaMiw Uav&#13;
"&gt;&#13;
w. i&#13;
HOW TO CURE RHEUMATISM&#13;
Prominent Doctor's Best. Prescription&#13;
Easily Mixed at Home.&#13;
JUVENILE LOGIC.&#13;
T h i s s i m p l e a n d h a r m l e s s f o r m u l a&#13;
h a s w o r k e d w o n d e r s for all w h o liava&#13;
tried It q u i c k l y curinj? c h r o n i c a n d&#13;
a c u t e rheunmUara a n d b a c k a c h e . " F r o m&#13;
y o u r druKKist g e t o n e o u n c e of Torla&#13;
c o m p o u n d (in o r i g i n a l s e a l e d packaKc)&#13;
and un« ouiu-e of wyrup of S a r s a p a r i l l a&#13;
c o m p o u n d . T a k e t h e s e t w o i n g r e d i e n t s&#13;
homo and p u t t h e m In a h a l f p i n t of&#13;
k'oud w h i s k e y . Sh;ike t h e bottle a n d&#13;
t a k e a t a b l e s p o o n t u i before e a c h m e a l&#13;
and lit iK'd-tiine." Cood results cnnie&#13;
after the Urst f e w d'&gt;ses. If your druj?-&#13;
K'at dni'tj n o t h a v e Torla c o m p o u n d in&#13;
btock he will Kit It for y o u In a ft'W&#13;
hours from h i s w h o l e s a l e h o u s e . Don't&#13;
be Influenced to t a k e a p a t e n t medicine&#13;
Instead of thlH. I n s i s t o n h a v i n g&#13;
the genuine T o r i s c o m p o u n d in the&#13;
original, o n e - o u n c e , scaled, y e l l o w&#13;
p a c k a g e . Thin w a s published h e r e last&#13;
winter and h u n d r e d s of the w o r s t c a s e s&#13;
w e r e cured b y it in u short time. P u b -&#13;
lished h y the G l o b e P h a r m a c e u t i c a l l a b -&#13;
oratories of C h i c a g o .&#13;
Suffer From Plague of Rats.&#13;
A "pied piper of Hamerlin" \a needed&#13;
at Santa Paula, Cal. Thousands of&#13;
rats, and all big wood rats, have in&#13;
vaded the place, and the situation la&#13;
such that women are afraid to go to&#13;
church. The rats seem to have a&#13;
preference for churches und on several&#13;
occasions have forced the feminine&#13;
attendance at services to take to the&#13;
high benches. The city authorities&#13;
are seeking means to abate the pest.&#13;
The rats are believed to have been&#13;
driven out of tho woods by recent fires&#13;
in the forests.&#13;
The Infant Terrible.&#13;
"Mr. Lilsbeau, is it true that you&#13;
hain't got sense enough to come in&#13;
out of the rain?"&#13;
"Yes, Miss Kitty; you must always&#13;
believe what papa tells you."&#13;
Proper Rescue,&#13;
"Howdid you come out of the tilt&#13;
you had with the beauty doctor?"&#13;
"Well, I managed to save my face."&#13;
"Do you belong to a brass band;&#13;
Mrs. Hlow?"&#13;
"No, dear. What put that idea into&#13;
your head?"&#13;
"Well, mamma said you were always&#13;
blowing your own horn, so I&#13;
thought you must belong to a brass&#13;
band."&#13;
The Right Lead.&#13;
Fond Mamroa (praising absent&#13;
daughter)—And I've always affirmed&#13;
that Sylvia's arniH are so well shaped&#13;
because I have made her do a great&#13;
deal of sweeping.&#13;
Bashful Young Man (striving wildly&#13;
to keep up his end of the conversation)—&#13;
Er—does the walk much, Mrs.&#13;
Jones?—Puck.&#13;
Cheer Up! You wont be bothered by ttsftblues&#13;
if you keep your liver active*&#13;
your bowels regular, and joar&#13;
stomach in good tone by tirachr&#13;
use of the time-tested, benefice^&#13;
and always effective family reroedv&#13;
BEECHAMS&#13;
PILLS Sold •verrwLare L&#13;
CANADA'S CFFERI&#13;
TO THE SETTLEB&#13;
Turn on the back-biter and say it&#13;
to his face.&#13;
A bird in the hand fails to catch the&#13;
early worm.&#13;
THE AMERICAN&#13;
WESTERN&#13;
IS IMCBI&#13;
t&amp;SSd&#13;
F r * « Horn&lt;&#13;
in the new District***]&#13;
Manitoba,&#13;
n a n and AV&#13;
are thousand! of&#13;
Uuatekteiuta l«f K «&#13;
UJ tlie BWD i B « u a g t ,&#13;
In 3 fears tlaw wUI&#13;
worth from W6 tdttSI&#13;
ucrn. Thmt l i p w I&#13;
well adapted V* «&#13;
growing und caul* ratnny.&#13;
KXCUABXT RAILWAY ViOUfSat&#13;
In munjr canes the railway* J«_&#13;
Cuntula liuTi) been built la BAvauco&#13;
&lt;&gt;t huUlcmoflt, a Ml i n »1&#13;
hlmrt time there will &amp;iiljMax|&#13;
«&lt;;ii)rr who noed ba nora U a&#13;
tt-iior iwiiWetntlm frota * Hi&#13;
oi'i-Bilwttjr. Hallway UatMtarwf&#13;
n-ifulatcti by UuTeroment V M B -&#13;
JUibbiuD.&#13;
S o c i a l C o n d i t i o n *&#13;
Tho Amorlcnn RrttlorlBatboxSw.&#13;
in Wt'siurn Cunuda. H c U n u i a&#13;
Ktratiifcrln UKiriiiige laMl. t t a v&#13;
ln« nearly a unlUon of hia u r n&#13;
pcuylu ttireitdy hiatlodUH'rw. U&#13;
you desire to know why iboeonditli.&#13;
nof th&lt;iC:mutllHn8rtt»eF*»&#13;
r&lt;js|K»r&lt;&gt;3H wrltu und hcnd tor&#13;
ttorutui'Ci riitcs, etc., to&#13;
M. V. Mclnnos,&#13;
176 JcJforson Ave., Detroit. Mieb.&#13;
CanurtliinfioYoninu'DtAgnnt, *&gt;* —&#13;
uitdrrss HiipBrlntonrlent i»^&#13;
liuuilKRitioiii O t t a w a , " Invalid Men and Women 1 will give you FREE a sample oi Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets that have brought&#13;
health and happiness to thousands—also a book on any chronic disease requested.&#13;
During many years of practice I have used numerous&#13;
combinations of curative medicines for liver ills.&#13;
I have kept a record of the result in case after case,&#13;
so that my staff of physicians and surgeons, at the&#13;
Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., are able to diagnose&#13;
and treat cases at a distance with uniform good results.&#13;
But for the permanent relief of blood disorders and kQpurities,&#13;
I can recommend my "Golden Medical Discovery'*&#13;
a blood medicine without alcohol or other injurious ingredients*&#13;
R. V. PIERCE, M.D., Buftalo, N. Y.&#13;
Natnre's Way Is The Best SawavaMa«awawawawaawaawa a w a w a f a awaaa mmmmmmm mmmmmmm&#13;
Bwriad Ammp la our Anaarfeaa foraat w a find blaodroot, qwaan'a toot, aaandfak*&#13;
;,aaJ •tone root, colaaa M « J , Oragoa t r a p s root and caerrybark. Of t»at« Dr.&#13;
R. V . Piarea mada a ptva alycaric aatraet which bat baan faTorablr Itaowa for&#13;
oVar forty r o a n . Ha callaa it "GpLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY." T h k&#13;
'DbooTarr" paviAaa (ha blood a ad toaa* up Uia ttonSch and tao aatira syaiam hm&#13;
| Nature*! o%ni w a r . It'a Just Uim tliiua bulldar a ad tonic you raooiro.&#13;
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery expected to cure consumption in its adhas"&#13;
the—endorsement oL many thoueands vanced Stages«-^no medicine will do that*&#13;
that it has cured them of indigestion, dyspepsia&#13;
and weak stomachy attended by sour&#13;
risings, heartburn, foul breath, coated tongue,&#13;
poor .appetite, gnawing feeling in stomach,&#13;
biliousness and kindred derangements of&#13;
the stomach, liver and bowels.&#13;
"In coughs and hoarseness caused by&#13;
bronchial, throat and lung affections, except&#13;
consumption, the 'Golden Medical Discovery*&#13;
is a most efficient remedy, especially&#13;
in those obstinate, hang-on-coughs&#13;
caused by irritation and congestion of the&#13;
bronchial mucous membranes. The 'Discovery'&#13;
is not so good for acute coughs&#13;
arising from sudden colds, nor must it be&#13;
but for all the obstinate, chronic coughs*&#13;
which, if neglected, or badly treated, lead&#13;
up to consumption, it is the best medicine)&#13;
that can be taken."&#13;
Sold in tablet or liquid form by all&#13;
principal dealers in medicines, or&#13;
send fifty one-cent stamps&#13;
for trial package of tablets*&#13;
\ To find out more about the above mentioned diseases&#13;
and all about the body in health and disease*&#13;
get the Common Sense Medical Adviser—the Peo*&#13;
ple't Schoolmaster in Medicine—revised and up-todate&#13;
book of 1,003 pages. Cloth-bound, sent postpaid&#13;
on receipt of 31 cents In one-cent stamps to&#13;
pay cost of wrapping and mailing only. Address:&#13;
Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
Personal Privilege.&#13;
"You sometimes contradict yourself&#13;
in your speeches."&#13;
"I know It," replied the positive candidate.&#13;
"And I want you to understand&#13;
that 1 am the only man in our&#13;
party who dares attempt such a&#13;
thing."&#13;
RASH ALMOST COVERED FACE&#13;
Warrenville, O.—"I have felt the&#13;
effects of blood poisoning for eighteen&#13;
years. I was never without some eruptions&#13;
on my body. The terrible itching&#13;
caused me much suffering and discomfort,&#13;
while the rubbing and&#13;
scratching made it worse. Last spring&#13;
I had a terrible breaking out of blis*&#13;
tery sores on my arms and limbs. My&#13;
face and arms were almost covered&#13;
with rash. I could not steep and lost&#13;
nineteen pounds In five weeks. My i&#13;
face was terrfbly red and sore, and&#13;
felt as if my skin was on fire. At last&#13;
I tried a sample of Cuticura Soap and&#13;
Cuticura Ointment and I found them&#13;
so cool, soothing and healing, that I&#13;
got some Cuticura Soap, Cuticura&#13;
Ointment, and Resolvent. I bathed&#13;
with hot water and Cuticura Soap,&#13;
then X applied the Cuticura Ointment&#13;
every night for two months, sad I am&#13;
cured of all skin eruptions." (Signed)&#13;
Mrs. Kat&amp;ryn Xrsfft, Nor, 28, 1911.&#13;
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
free, with 32*p. Skin Book. Address&#13;
postcard "Cuticura, Dspt L, Bostoa."&#13;
Adv.&#13;
For DISTEMPER Sara cart and potltlra&#13;
or"0ipna»d," Liquid.aireti on&#13;
i from tn«&#13;
Pink Eye, EpfsoeMs)&#13;
Shipping1 F e v e r&#13;
&amp; Catarrhal&#13;
tlTt.nomatter how annas a- a a j aaa «&#13;
• totwne i acta on taa lilood awl &lt;7laaofv&#13;
JtoraiiJiitaaipar »n IJojr* an&lt;r«h&lt;wpa&#13;
- Ourea J-a Urlppa axnoa% &amp;&#13;
po I too out jr eras from&#13;
Poultry. Carjtfwtaelling &lt;lvo.toefc remedy _&#13;
and li a fln« Kidney remady. SOo a ad It a bottle, *i an J 110 a desob.&#13;
CKaauaipaltta ndt-Cbouwr atao, "y ouBrp adcrtaoT« rAt«ff,ewntha( »W waailtle dM. tH for yotfc ViM SooUat&#13;
SPOHN MEDICAL CO., .c.^o«*.ne?s GOSHEN, IIK).t B. S. A.&#13;
BSSSSSSSJSSSaSBBSSBSSBSSSSSSSl&#13;
First Annual Nation&#13;
Auto Show&#13;
$&#13;
r&#13;
^¾&#13;
\&#13;
the&#13;
These Gridiron Pays.&#13;
Miss CuJchaw—Do you like&#13;
"Passing of Arthurr&#13;
Mr. Chumn*-l'm not up on football&#13;
players. What team is he on?&#13;
K you wast a rasa to deliver ths&#13;
goods, smplpy one who doesn't talk.&#13;
The Twelfth An/w*lAutomobtfeSh&amp;a&gt;—Detroit Automobile&#13;
DitroH, January 27 to Fsbmsry I, Is&#13;
Wayne Gardens and Anne&#13;
AsaoeUhtm&#13;
r Ranking in importance with the great New York and&#13;
shows. Every well known make of car will be shown,&#13;
of the newest and best in motor car manufacture,&#13;
and electric pleasure cars. Gasoline and electric&#13;
cial cars. Motor accessories in great number and&#13;
• • • • ' * A showatthe heart of theindustry atwMchthereissjeeoanritiaily&#13;
more new creations of the car builders' art than at any othear"&#13;
show. Decorations that rival those of othershowsmbeautTfaii&#13;
originality, cars unsurpassed in beauty and mcludmf at)-mmm&#13;
feature and innovatkms,andaweekof pleasurewjilc^&#13;
a trip to Detroit worth while durir^aiutoiitt^&#13;
Wayne Garden*, Detrali&#13;
Monday Night to Saturday&#13;
Jiutry 27 It UkttW| I, tatlMlv*&#13;
• • # ' - ,&#13;
,'3 . 't-j"'1 )'&#13;
w # • • '&#13;
f- ..^',&#13;
'.•J'f&#13;
,rv &gt; &gt; j W&#13;
PUTNAM FADE&#13;
\est&#13;
^¾&#13;
fc,fe:'a . • " . ' j ^ i ^ a4L&#13;
% •&#13;
m$ )&#13;
WEH'ty-^th*--&#13;
ffi&amp;iffr}&#13;
•fe?'V:'&#13;
0 ^ ^ ^ ^ - .&#13;
(fir* •;.' \ •'&#13;
ffii^iV;^:&#13;
fft-io '"' IK- i ' ^ ; ; . •&#13;
f.r:-\ •;&#13;
W$,\:i/. 1¾^^ ' '&#13;
$ ^ ' •&#13;
!.'.'«'&lt;\-&gt; *:&#13;
•*Ur'Y ' i' ffe Nv / •'&#13;
%^:&#13;
1¾&#13;
ire " Br&#13;
•mflfiir::&#13;
HK%&#13;
HIK".,".?&#13;
. i*"- ; -&#13;
; , ' • '&#13;
- :&#13;
•&#13;
'.&#13;
: «.' 1 1 1&#13;
,i&#13;
• • 1 *&#13;
• '1&#13;
' &gt;&#13;
4&#13;
« *&#13;
s,&#13;
fe&#13;
I •J'TJ',. i ;&#13;
•A&#13;
: » . - •&#13;
V&#13;
; /&#13;
fr&#13;
THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
rf«HM^»sir«irTacmeu«/aAMiui« BT&#13;
RO,*^ CAyeRLY.P*oe«itTon.&#13;
I l l f ^ l l , ' • I _ . . ! • 'il 1» I,,, II., I&#13;
•t tfce Prungw *l Hackney, JI4*U«t»&#13;
AAieKU*if »*•• **£• kMfi «B«s»u«ttet&#13;
• J ' • : * I&#13;
M»'&#13;
Eugene Dink el of Detroit has&#13;
been visiting friends and relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
Mrs, John Damman of Hamburg&#13;
was a Pirciney caller Sat*&#13;
urday.&#13;
J. H. Lyman of Jackaon apent&#13;
a few days last week at the home&#13;
of £. Farnum.&#13;
Mrs. H. D. Grieve visited rela&#13;
tivea in Slockbridge the latter&#13;
part of last week.&#13;
R. Sydney Sprout baa accepted&#13;
a position as pianist at the Crown&#13;
Theatre in Jackson.&#13;
John and Arthur Bell have purchased&#13;
a new gasoline engine and&#13;
wood-sawing outfit.&#13;
Mrs. W. H. Crofoot was the&#13;
guest of fr.enils and relatives in&#13;
Stockbridge last we*k.&#13;
Mrs. Samuel Placeway was call.&#13;
ed to South Lyon last Friday by&#13;
the death of her niece, Mrs. David&#13;
Wilson.&#13;
"We try to sir/' said Air. Mor&#13;
gan when a^ked if his firm did a&#13;
geiural ban kicgbueinees. There&#13;
is nothing like trying.&#13;
The autoists seem to go through&#13;
life on the theory that since they&#13;
pass through this world but once&#13;
they must pass through in a hurry.&#13;
Rev. W. H. Ripon left for Deerfield&#13;
Wednesday where he will&#13;
assist Rev. Albert Balgooyan in&#13;
conducting a series of revival services.&#13;
A. H. Gilchn'bt has purchased&#13;
the honse and lot on Unadilla St.&#13;
of Eugene Campbell also the barn&#13;
and lot on Putnam St. of H. H.&#13;
Swart bout.&#13;
Miss Kathleen Roche returned&#13;
to her school woik at Adrian last&#13;
week after spending tht* past two&#13;
months at the home of her parents,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J as. Roche.&#13;
Two Rochester men claim they&#13;
have 40 local players who can trim&#13;
any other 40 in the country play.&#13;
ing pedro or seven-up and are&#13;
williig to wager the sappers for&#13;
the crowd that they can.&#13;
Rev. L. M. Kaiser played Santa&#13;
at Fen ton. His whiskers caught&#13;
fire and he took just two bounds&#13;
to reach the back door and "fire"&#13;
those whiskers. It tickled the kids&#13;
—they thought Santa was having&#13;
a fit,—Fowlerville Standard '&#13;
L S. P. Johnson, a former Pinckney&#13;
resident, died at the home of&#13;
hie niece, Mr*. Mills, near Okemus&#13;
Saturday morning, January 10 of&#13;
pneumonia. The funeral services&#13;
were held at Okemus at 12:80&#13;
o'clock Monday. Interment in&#13;
Okemus cemetery.&#13;
By direction of Postmaster General&#13;
Hitchcock, the bureau of engraving&#13;
and printing Saturday in- i&#13;
pressed its daily output of parcels&#13;
posjfc stamps from 5,000,000 to 10,-&#13;
Fcom practically every&#13;
of the country, requisitions&#13;
mall and by telegraph are be.&#13;
made for more distinctive&#13;
stamps. Reports from postin&#13;
various partt of the&#13;
&gt;d States indicate a tramenfacreese&#13;
in fastness on a c&#13;
o | the paroal post.&#13;
Aeoord|%to the figures complied&#13;
by the state board of health,&#13;
t*n&gt;oat&lt;4tlM^profosBionel peoft*&#13;
*h© dis of tuberculosis are&#13;
ssfeool tcaoasrs. falsi* doe prinolpajly&#13;
to bad sanitation, according&#13;
to Asmstsot See'y. MeClure,&#13;
He to Ukin* sn# matter up with&#13;
tbeatoto gapmt an4 to ssatfog&#13;
tte^jwa^ss, ^ , cWdSran&#13;
are the eUaf petres*at rural&#13;
•*«-*-&#13;
^mmmmm&#13;
Arthur Shehan spent the past&#13;
week in Howell.&#13;
Florence Reason was a Detroit&#13;
visitor last week..&#13;
Fred feafee spent Saturday with&#13;
his parent* to Chelsea.&#13;
Mrs. Thos. Bead was a Detroit&#13;
visitor one day last week.&#13;
Max AleKee of Detroit spent a&#13;
few days here the past week. ,&#13;
James Doody and wife of near&#13;
Dtx'er were in town Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Cha8. Curtis of Dauaville&#13;
WHS a Pinckney caller Saturday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. A. Randall spent&#13;
Saturday with relatives in Howell.&#13;
Mrs. David Smith and daughter,&#13;
Mable, were in Jackson Satur&#13;
day.&#13;
E. J. Briggs and family spent&#13;
Sunday at the home of R. G.&#13;
Webb.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Sigler of&#13;
Ann Arbor were in town over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Ex-ebcriff Edwin Pratt of Cohoctah&#13;
fell one day last week,&#13;
breaking hi? hip.&#13;
Mrs. Thomas Shehan spent a&#13;
couple of days last week with&#13;
friends in Detroit.&#13;
F. G. Jackson was absent from&#13;
the store on account of sickness&#13;
The Newslxy&#13;
Cripple&#13;
ftoto anpafvieioa of&#13;
: »/*' i ib^'i **viJt'*fc \P-rn.- ttnP^.»&#13;
a part of last week.&#13;
Miss Irene Crabb of Grand&#13;
Rapids was a ^uest at the home of&#13;
Thomas Bead over Sunday.&#13;
Mr. Kanode was in town sever&#13;
al days last week in the interest*&#13;
of the Michigan State Telephone&#13;
Co.&#13;
Byron Kelsey was fortunate&#13;
encugh to secure $68 back pay&#13;
from the pension authoiities Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. A. H. Gilchrist and pon,&#13;
Winston, were ever Sunday visitors&#13;
at the home of her parents,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. E. Book.&#13;
Cigarette emoking increased 25&#13;
ptr cent last year- Takes $600,&#13;
000,000 000 to supply the dewand&#13;
now. That's a few.&#13;
Mrs. O. W. Fishbeck returned&#13;
to her home at Monioe last week&#13;
after spending pome time at the&#13;
home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs&#13;
Wm. Fisk.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pernert of&#13;
St. Louis, Mrs. Wm. Dnrkee and&#13;
children of Jackson and Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. S. Gilchrist were quests at&#13;
the home of A. H. Gilchrist recently.&#13;
Justice Black mnn of J nek son&#13;
made a good start in office by&#13;
sending two tough boys to jail for&#13;
smoking cigarettes, It should&#13;
prove a lesson to thpm, and to the&#13;
pernicious habit. But will it?&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Smoyer aud children&#13;
who have been visiting her&#13;
parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. Read re.&#13;
turned to her home at Akrcn,&#13;
Ohio last week. Miss Georgia&#13;
Martiu accompanied her home for&#13;
a visit&#13;
If yon have anything yon want&#13;
to sell, A Dispatch liner will find&#13;
yon a buyer; if there is anything&#13;
von want to buy a Dispatch liner&#13;
will find yon a seller; If yon hav&gt;&#13;
anything to rent a Diepatch liner&#13;
will find yen a tenant Try it.&#13;
The coal of a good quality in&#13;
paying quantities is to be found&#13;
near Webberville is an established&#13;
fact. In several places here the&#13;
veins are within a few feet of the&#13;
surface, and ccnld be mined at a&#13;
small expense. There is some talk&#13;
of forming a stock company and&#13;
sinking a abaft—Index* «&#13;
At the October session of the&#13;
board oi supervisors, a committee&#13;
was appointed with authority to&#13;
settle the tramp question by the isaociatea&#13;
Rev. Jos. Coyle was in Dexter&#13;
last Friday.&#13;
M. J. Reason was a Detroit visitor&#13;
last treel.&#13;
Arlo Ellsworth of Stockbridge&#13;
was in town Monday.&#13;
A. M. Roche was in Detroit on&#13;
business the past week.&#13;
Chas. Keunedy of Pontiac has&#13;
been visiting his parents.&#13;
A canning factory is again being&#13;
discussed for Howell.&#13;
Leon Stowe is now probate clerk&#13;
for his father, E. A. Stowe.&#13;
Mrs- A. H. Flintoft and son visited&#13;
relatives in Jackson last week,&#13;
Ed Farnum spent Friday and&#13;
Saturday with relatives in Detroit.&#13;
Monks Bros, have erected an&#13;
ice house at the rear of their&#13;
store.&#13;
The new 1913 automobile license&#13;
plates are green with white&#13;
letters. /&#13;
Mr. Dickenson of Detroit spent&#13;
Sunday at the home of V. G.&#13;
Dinkel.&#13;
Mrs. Gregory Devereaux visited&#13;
at the home of Max Ledwidge one&#13;
day last week.&#13;
Alden Carpenter visited friends&#13;
aud relatives iu Chilson several&#13;
days the past week.&#13;
H. H. Fowler and Mrs. O. J.&#13;
Head of Fowlervi le were Pinckney&#13;
visitors last week.&#13;
Mm. E. J. Hoisel of Howell&#13;
visited at the home of her mother.&#13;
Mrs. Ann Brady a portion of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Arthur AUrn of North&#13;
Lake is spending a couple of&#13;
weeks with her parents, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. H. M. Williston.&#13;
The board of supervisors again&#13;
out the doctor bills at the last session&#13;
causing another general protest&#13;
from the medical profession.&#13;
Mrs. )1. H. Fowler of Fowlervilie&#13;
underwent a surgical operation&#13;
at Sanitorinm last week aud&#13;
at the present time is doing nice- j&#13;
iy. ;&#13;
Mrs. J. A. Donaldson and grand&#13;
daughter, Georgia, attended the&#13;
funeral of the former's brother,&#13;
John Crofoot, at Fowlerville last&#13;
week- - . . , &gt; • * The people vs Alma Rice, defan&#13;
J.M entered a pie. ol Buiity ,o J S Z ^ ^ S ^ ^ ^ S&#13;
the charge of carrying concealed \ lockup."&#13;
weapons. Sentenoed to pay a finei F o r a n Instant a gleam of merrl-&#13;
~t *OK j .. e • . i nient beamed in the officer's eyes, and&#13;
of 125 and costs of justice court l t w a 8 w l t h dlfflculty ^ \B&gt; re,&#13;
examination, making a total of strained a burst of genuine laughter.&#13;
137.50&#13;
Thirteen is a lucky number for&#13;
Woodrow Wilson. In the 13th&#13;
year of professorship he became&#13;
the 13th president of Princetob&#13;
college. He will be officially de.&#13;
Glared elected president of the&#13;
Cni&gt;d States, January 13, 1913,.&#13;
There are 13 letters in his name.&#13;
An exchange saya, "Farm land&#13;
in this part of Washtenaw county&#13;
ft'ill continues to sell at a good&#13;
figure. Charles Paul, who lives&#13;
three miles east of here, sold his&#13;
farm of seventy acres—hay, grain,&#13;
stock and tools—Thursday at public&#13;
auction. The farm was sold to&#13;
Fred Frey, of Manchester, for&#13;
179.60 per acre, corn stalks at H&#13;
cents per bundle, ooro in the ear&#13;
32 cte, hay at $* and 19 per ton."&#13;
It was anronnced at Jackson&#13;
prison recently that in the&#13;
future all prisoners parried will&#13;
be ordered to return to the&#13;
t on nties, from which they were&#13;
sentenced. The step is so taken&#13;
because of the Urge number of&#13;
prisoners wbo remain in the city,&#13;
after being parole«i and the subsequent&#13;
danger of having these&#13;
men so near their former prison&#13;
"Cheese It, fellers, cheese it!&#13;
cop!"&#13;
There' was a scurrying of &lt;feet and]&#13;
a confusion of grimy hands in the!&#13;
struggle to recover the dice and pen-]&#13;
nies scattered within the snug circle]&#13;
of excited newsboys gathered far up]&#13;
D — lane enjoying, apparently heed-i&#13;
less of consequences, a midday1 gamef&#13;
of much-forbidden "crap."&#13;
In the wild scramble to save their]&#13;
''gambling Implements" and nevertheless,&#13;
escape the bluecoated official I&#13;
striding upon them, nobody thought of&#13;
pcor Billy. But, with his papers under&#13;
one arm, his crutch resting beneath&#13;
the other and an empty trousers&#13;
leg dangling in the breeze, Billy,&#13;
with hfe companions, sought selfpreservation.&#13;
D lane, for the surefooted was&#13;
none too good walking, and a treacherous&#13;
spot found Billy in his misfortune&#13;
and brought him heavily tothe&#13;
ground, his papers in an untidy&#13;
pile beside him an.d the crutch quitebeyond&#13;
his reach.&#13;
The corners of his mouth drooped&#13;
ever so little as he looked up from;&#13;
bis uncomfortable position and beheld&#13;
the officer towering above him.&#13;
"Well, my lad, you seem to be the&#13;
one to go along with me. All the&#13;
rest have made good to get out of the.&#13;
way. I'm mighty sorry I've got to&#13;
take you-^pne of the others would1&#13;
have suited me better—much better.&#13;
But the sergeant detailed me especially&#13;
to stop this crap shooting. Me says'&#13;
it can't go on."&#13;
The policeman spoke not unkindly,&#13;
but Billy, from his seat of earth,&#13;
heard, and knew that a plea for release&#13;
would be wasted,&#13;
"Here's your crutch, my boy. Come&#13;
-on " '&#13;
"Aw. let him off, can't yer?"&#13;
Billy and the policeman wheeled&#13;
about at this unexpected Interference&#13;
from the rear. There, crawling from&#13;
beneath an empty barrel set forth by&#13;
one of the many restaurants along the&#13;
lane, bis face and hair generously&#13;
streaked with a covering of flour taken&#13;
on In his place of refuge, came a&#13;
boy not much larger than Billy himself—&#13;
one of the circle of former "crap&#13;
shooters."&#13;
"I say, Billy ain't done nothing He&#13;
warn't ehootln' with the bunch. The&#13;
last I see of Billy he was settin*&#13;
there eatln' his handout Weren't&#13;
you, Billy?" Billy nodded complacently.&#13;
"Yer pinchin', a *nnooent man,&#13;
boss; straight goods.&#13;
"Now," the boy went on pushing his&#13;
hands deep into his pockets and broadening&#13;
his base, "now, Fm one of the'&#13;
bunch. I've got a pull with the gang.&#13;
If I do say it myself and If—if—-you-^j&#13;
could only let Biliy off—'cause he]&#13;
ain't done nothln' anyhow—I'll use my&#13;
'xrfpoence with the crowd to stop the&#13;
the&#13;
atone yard route. Hie committee&#13;
leased the lot back of his residence&#13;
from W. M. Beach and the&#13;
atone and the hammers will be&#13;
provided at once. The action haa&#13;
been ratified by the board at it's&#13;
aesaeon beginning last Monday.&#13;
Thisimeans growing unpopularity&#13;
for Lhringaton county as a winter&#13;
rest resort, and *ta* starvation&#13;
for Sheriff George Wimbles, But&#13;
the oonnty dads have no mercy&#13;
lft# beaBsi dsfsslmsnt for our tomriats friends and road bills by Utt iefhe»dir fbe&#13;
mighty Uttla for members of the&#13;
" sjaldssi union—Bx.&#13;
The state board of health has&#13;
approved of biUa doing away with&#13;
the railroad towel, prohibiting&#13;
spitting on floors of depots and&#13;
cars,giving tjaiiboard of health&#13;
enfotoemeni of thess taws, making&#13;
it necessary for bosssi to have firs&#13;
escapes, long sheets and sanitary&#13;
equipment Th#&gt; Jtotti bill also&#13;
does away with tfaa fetter tatej.&#13;
The hotel bllt » fathered 1 ^&#13;
the travettng » s $ **d taw rift.&#13;
state boardof heatt wiH aid&#13;
ties nasaasra o! bssjL&#13;
in&#13;
"But I can't do that for you; I&#13;
can't let either of you off," he said,&#13;
at last. "You know right from wrong&#13;
and—ah, here comes the sergeant—&#13;
well let him settle it."&#13;
Billy shrank closer to his champion&#13;
as he felt his own tiny atom of self&#13;
completely overshadowed by this formidable&#13;
giant with shining buttons&#13;
and chevrons. The contact lent the&#13;
Intercessor strength for a final appeal.&#13;
"Sergeant, can I speak to you for&#13;
Billy? I don't mind for myself, but&#13;
Billy just can't go to the lockup."&#13;
Nervously the child's fingers locked&#13;
and Interlocked, but his gaze met that&#13;
of the stalwart officer of the law unflinchingly.&#13;
Breathlessly, he rushed&#13;
on.&#13;
"Billy's mother 1B home sick In bed.&#13;
She's what you call an invalid. Sometimes&#13;
she can work and help out and&#13;
sometimes Billy's got to do lt all himself&#13;
'cause he ain't got no brothers&#13;
nor sisters, nor no father—Just his&#13;
mother. So we fellers found him a&#13;
good stand up in the square, but he&#13;
can't run after trade sinoe he's los&#13;
his leg. Some swell guy run over html&#13;
with his auto and never stopped t&#13;
say howdy or good-by, and Billy&#13;
been up against It ever since and&#13;
and—shall I tell it, Billy, 'bout slingin'&#13;
the dicer Billy hesitated. "Shall I&#13;
Billy? it's up to you*"&#13;
Billy tried to grasp the aignlfioanc&#13;
of this sadden bestowal of responsib&#13;
tty and bowed sr bewildered approvi&#13;
"Well, then, *bont this game o'&#13;
sergeant/* The boy lowered his&#13;
and poked the dirt with the toe of&#13;
mnddy boot&#13;
"About this game of crap—Billy'&#13;
business hasnt been nuhinjj latel&#13;
aad so we rather planned&#13;
a boost with a crap ,&#13;
till his ma got better,&#13;
crowd got SROre'n you'd tfcl&#13;
their papers aad they have a&#13;
ml left for themselves. So the!&#13;
a good bit of it up la a game &amp;&#13;
for Billy, Just to boost him&#13;
That's what we was doia' today, see?&#13;
•seat hut we got ptached. If yea&#13;
esald only let BUT/ off—if—yon—"&#13;
"That witt do, my bey." The sergeant's&#13;
vetee was very gentle.&#13;
Sell the rest of th* beye they&#13;
) \&#13;
}r!&#13;
^fs* * J f. t:&#13;
iU-*l&gt;+-'**'r&amp;'&#13;
• &gt; * . ;&#13;
• # ' » • imMM^^i&#13;
•* C'.i-l ;m&#13;
M&#13;
;rf?&#13;
. • ; &gt; - ; » • . , &lt;&#13;
: &lt;:-. R U M&#13;
M i l . * &lt;•«!•« in i , j q p i l ,.j.fJU&#13;
^¾&#13;
W ;&#13;
( • • . • - '&#13;
-.M'vj'ry, « * * i&#13;
- - : - ^ - : . ^ ^ : , ^ - ^&#13;
4if&#13;
'•fc:&#13;
f&#13;
&gt;?. 1&#13;
•S?.'&#13;
/:¾r&#13;
/ ' I&#13;
»&#13;
-. Absence makes the heart grow&#13;
bonder, we're told, bat a good portrait&#13;
of the absent one will keep&#13;
the recollection more vivid—and&#13;
comfort many a lonely honr of&#13;
separation.&#13;
We make a specialty of portraiture&#13;
and our stadio is exceptions&#13;
ly equipped for fine portrait&#13;
work.&#13;
Daisie B. Chapell&#13;
Photographer&#13;
Stockbrldge, Michigan&#13;
v&#13;
The Pinckney * Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative&#13;
ing Business. ;:&#13;
Back-&#13;
3 per cent&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
P i n c k n e y&#13;
G. W. TBEPleE&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Prop.&#13;
• »J&#13;
We have a few&#13;
Tons of Bran&#13;
and Middlings&#13;
v Which we will sell at a very&#13;
4 good figure. If you are in&#13;
,jj need of either kind ploase&#13;
j call and get onr best prices.&#13;
—Try a aack of our Pure—&#13;
Buckwheat&#13;
Hour&#13;
at 32o for 10 lbs.&#13;
The&#13;
Hoyt Bros.&#13;
n&#13;
i for Qulltj For Price&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
Where It Pays to Pay Cash&#13;
We are making attractive&#13;
prices on all&#13;
kinds of merchandise&#13;
It LB the policy of the stc*ajb&gt; ataae&#13;
out all winter goods during Jajaaar/&#13;
and February. We pive spfeaaai&#13;
bargain/* at this Mason of the year.&#13;
Call and Bee us.&#13;
EVERY DAY 18 BARGAIN DAY&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN&#13;
HOWELL'S BUSY 8TORE&#13;
% Hills Uarietu Store&#13;
Howell, Michigan&#13;
A&#13;
«*-...&gt;&#13;
Heart Disease Almost&#13;
Fatal to Youn* Girl&#13;
"My daughter, when thirteen yean&#13;
•Id, was stricken with heart trouMa.&#13;
•be was so bad we had to place her&#13;
bed near a wtadow&#13;
co she could git&#13;
bet breath,&#13;
doctor said,&#13;
child, rtji la Ukat»&#13;
to fall dead say&#13;
time.' A friend&#13;
told me Dr. Mile**&#13;
Heart Remedy hat&#13;
cured her father.&#13;
so I tried It, and&#13;
she began to la*&#13;
prove. She toot&#13;
a great many hot*&#13;
ties, but aha Is&#13;
•pared to M to*&#13;
«t*y, s fat, res*&#13;
cheeked girl. No one can Imagine the&#13;
confidence I have in Dr. Miles' Heart&#13;
Remedy." A. R. CANON, Worth, Mo,&#13;
The unbounded confidence Mr.&#13;
Canon has in Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy&#13;
ia shared by thousands of&#13;
others who kaow he value from&#13;
' experience. Many heart disorders&#13;
yield to-trt Atment, if the treatment&#13;
i» right If you are bothered with&#13;
short breath, tainting spells, swelling&#13;
of feet/or ankles, pah about&#13;
the heart and shoulder blades, palpitation,&#13;
weak and hungry spells,&#13;
you should begin using pr. Miles*&#13;
Heart Remedy at once. Profit by&#13;
the experience of others while yoa&#13;
may. / ' •&#13;
Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy Is sold and&#13;
guaranteed by nil druggieta.&#13;
MEDICAL CO., ftlkhart, Md.&#13;
When in Howell don't forget&#13;
to visit oar store. Every&#13;
department is filled with new&#13;
goods.&#13;
Sweaters, Av i a t i o n&#13;
Caps, Gloves, Mittens,&#13;
Etc.&#13;
A large stock of Choice&#13;
China, Art Goods, Nevelties,&#13;
(Dolls.) Huudreds of these&#13;
from 1c to $3.00.&#13;
5 and 10c 6oods of&#13;
All Kinds&#13;
DeafneHs Cannot Be Cured&#13;
By local application^ AS they canno&#13;
••each tbe deceased portion of tb« ear&#13;
There is only onn way to cure deafness,&#13;
and that is i*y constitutional rem&#13;
edits. D*ain*Rs is caused r&gt;y an inlanaad&#13;
condition of tbe mucous lining&#13;
of tbe Eustachian Tube. When this&#13;
tube is inflamed yon bave a rumbling&#13;
sound or imperfect bearing and when&#13;
it is entirely closed, Deafness is tbe&#13;
result, and unless the inflamation can&#13;
be taken out and this tube restored to&#13;
its normal condition, hearing will be&#13;
destroyed forever; nine cases out of&#13;
ten are caused by Catarrh, which is&#13;
nothing but an inflamed condition ot&#13;
tbe mucous surfaces.&#13;
We will give One Hundred&#13;
Dollars for any case of Dealness&#13;
(nanawd hy Catarrh) 4rbafe eannot&#13;
be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.&#13;
Send for circulars, free.&#13;
F. J. CHEN BY &amp; Co., Toledo. Obio&#13;
Sold by all druggists, 75c.&#13;
Take Hall's Family Pi.Is for constipation.&#13;
\^n%**»vus*M*«3wmaemg3V&#13;
•&#13;
tOUR lUNMiUllTHIOATa&#13;
&gt;What lis*. White says about&#13;
_ Winters f*n»••*!•• i&#13;
Per Au» I * v o SSM! T B S ^ T Taonaus)&#13;
Daaaaasle, Mica* Sept 9. 1911 *&#13;
Bear HE. ABSOTTI&#13;
oasIdt bU rBrOWWi t4e7m e'tr K41e ay»eea&gt;n at*to Tthtaht T1c iia™m tCeeaaa anaapgtiso an, owahi.cHh d. iaeJaa.e w «as ut ifcaks t afbaoautetn mmf at before I hoard of the nadidno, aad&#13;
SIM »owkta M•&gt; thaaata ihoealsp etdo atwry. hT.a tI tD wtiaesr *th em ain** e*e*a»M Mbre aMtlM Meta Dj—y. 4a.n d I2n gaot lboowtto dra yr*ig 1h t aP]toaatg , yeaanrds aaageoT Ijt awt atsw noo mpainckea gdeso,w nA btouutt ffajrM .a MtoOjtMfe ,a asamd fetf. wthaes aaa wsfinddnter,f uala de worotrciaiwS&#13;
WG WITH COMSUMP-&#13;
2p3£ trah».&#13;
Agent, 60&#13;
'Bitters, I bassiit when g^amhsag esse safla. 7&#13;
4 tar sawwoa* frntejaissa and fcmale 1 ^^y— ?"7 ** **• 225? 1&#13;
I rag KTDNCT^WIRAND '&#13;
• STOMACH TROUSlft&#13;
III Is tft» bee* i»edtesBf&#13;
9 e*sf s&gt; cnnifgjgi s so fmmmmmmSSmmm&#13;
WEST HARIOB.&#13;
Mrs. F. O. Bnach is on the sick list.&#13;
Hairy Biaycock is verv siok with&#13;
pneumonia and bij wite with lagrippe.&#13;
Roy Collins and Hettie are visiting&#13;
friends near Pinckney,&#13;
Gerald Woilman spent laat wejk at&#13;
tbe home of Mr. Hath.&#13;
Lyle'iorton teaches singing school&#13;
every Saturday evening at tbe eburcb.&#13;
A line opportunity to cultivate your&#13;
voice.&#13;
Tbe Ladies Aid will meet Thursday&#13;
Jan, 23d for dinner a t tbe home of&#13;
Mrs. John Clements.&#13;
SOUTH IOSCO.&#13;
Mrs Walter Miller is slowly recovering&#13;
lrom Ler illness.&#13;
Wm. C as key was in Howell serving&#13;
on the jury last week.&#13;
Ciara Harrington returned to bar&#13;
borne %t Webbervitle Tuesday.&#13;
fieoab Blair is assisting Mrs Walter&#13;
Miller with her bouse work.&#13;
Bert Roberts and family transacted&#13;
businesa in Howell Friday,&#13;
Mrs. John ftoberts,danghtert Daieey,&#13;
vl rs Frank Watt ere and daughter,&#13;
B e r t h , visited at Albert Poster's&#13;
r bo re day.&#13;
J D. Roberts returned boms Wedntsdav&#13;
after spending bis vaeafcion&#13;
with his grandparents la Webbarvilh-&#13;
Tbn Misses F. Beatrice and Katbryn&#13;
A. Umborne called on Mrs. Walter&#13;
vi'ilfr nafnrda* la*t,&#13;
MIN&gt; Lorna Roberts is visiting bar&#13;
graodoarents. .&#13;
» i - I j. T. bamnorns spent Monday&#13;
it W«iter Miller's.&#13;
Ahv« Blla Blair ia working ia Fowlenrllle,&#13;
• • • • — • — . '&#13;
Lame KotM of flowall gptot&#13;
a phnot ]nt; wi*k ksit, H*&#13;
baa miaped his poaitbn with&#13;
th# Democrat aa4 abeaptad one&#13;
with the BapabUotsV ittftuig&#13;
imrk Monday..&#13;
Ed Sprout and wife visited relatives&#13;
in Chelsea last weak.&#13;
Germaine Ledwjdge who hag been&#13;
spending the Xmaa vacation with her&#13;
parents btrn retomed to St. Josephs&#13;
Academy at Adrian Thursday,&#13;
Ben White of Piugree bought a&#13;
work team of M, J, Roche this week.&#13;
Will Brogan is logging for Will&#13;
Kennedy of Pinckney at P&amp;teraon&#13;
Lake.&#13;
Mrs, R. M. Ledwidge entertained at&#13;
dinner last Wednesday, Mrs. G. L .&#13;
Devereauz and Mrs. R. W. Caverly of&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
Veronica Brogan spent the week&#13;
end at Will BroganV&#13;
A social for the benefit of tbe Baptist&#13;
ehurcb of Gregory was- held at&#13;
the home of Cbas. Bnllis Wednesday&#13;
evening, January 15. /"*'*&#13;
Will Ledwidge and family'and Max&#13;
Ledwidge and family were Sunday&#13;
Sunday guests at the home of George&#13;
Greiner.&#13;
A novelty shower was given Mr.&#13;
od Mrs. Fred Wylie at their home&#13;
last Tuesday night.&#13;
A sleigh load of young people from&#13;
here attended the skating rink party&#13;
at Gregory Saturday night,&#13;
Alice Roche of Pinckney visited relatives&#13;
here Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Eunice Crane who has been&#13;
spending the past few weeks with her&#13;
daughter in Romuo returned home&#13;
last Wednesday.&#13;
A. G. Wilson has sold his farm to&#13;
Henry Kellenberger of Conortab.&#13;
Anna Fttzsimmons of Howell spent&#13;
unday with her mother Mrs. T. Fitzlmmons.&#13;
Bean picking is about to start in&#13;
he elevator fcere.&#13;
80TJTH M A U O I .&#13;
• Miss Mae Brogan is visiting friends&#13;
at Bowel I*&#13;
John Gardner and wife spent tbe&#13;
week end in Howell.&#13;
Hollis and Harlow Sbeban were&#13;
Anderson callers laat Thursday.&#13;
N. Pace? visited relatives in Fowlerville&#13;
last week,&#13;
A number ot the peop'e ot this v&lt;-&#13;
oinity attended tbe party at tbe skating&#13;
rink at Gregory last Saturday&#13;
night.&#13;
R. M. Glenn of Howell was a caller&#13;
here last week.&#13;
A number of friends and neighbors&#13;
of Mr. and Mrs Fred Wiley wbo were&#13;
recently njarried, gathered- at their&#13;
home here last Tuesday evening and&#13;
gave them a pleasant suprise. Refreshments&#13;
were served and a very&#13;
eujjyabie uiue was passed by all. Tbe&#13;
company on departing left behind&#13;
many tokens ot their esteem.&#13;
Cbas. Dey, wife and sou, Deo, were&#13;
Howell visitors last week&#13;
Geo Bland a„d wite entertained L.&#13;
H, Newman and wife for dinner last&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
Hartley Gauss and family spent&#13;
Friday at the borne of Chru Brogan,&#13;
^»- PULOTULP&#13;
Rev. Miller is holding meeting at&#13;
tbftjtt. P . churoh.&#13;
Irene Boise is sick with scarlet&#13;
fever.&#13;
Claude Stowe and wife spent Friday&#13;
in Fowlerrille.&#13;
Geo. Wright and wite of Fowlervilla&#13;
spent last Friday at the home of&#13;
Henry Luivwbite.&#13;
Geo. Montague is on the lick list.&#13;
Hive No. 511 will meet Jan. 22 for&#13;
installation ot officers.&#13;
SOUTH GREGORY.&#13;
Mr*.G, Bates is entertaining her&#13;
daughter from Detroit,&#13;
Thomas ..arksr visited at L. R.&#13;
William's Saturday.&#13;
L. H, Williams and wife were calleo&#13;
to Ubeisea last week by tbe illness&#13;
of their cousins, Ejmer Beach and&#13;
family wbo are ill with pneumonia.&#13;
Ray Cobb and wife and HasH Bates&#13;
called on relative* hers Sunday.&#13;
' Ruth Whitehead helped Mrs. Marsh&#13;
Friday and Saturday with ber work&#13;
' m mm&#13;
The establishment of tbe parcels&#13;
poat&gt;ill enabla tbe state of Michigantosave&#13;
110,000 in one item&#13;
tbw coming year. Secretary of&#13;
r^|ate Martiodale in whose department&#13;
the automobile liosnsa ia&#13;
handled, InTestigaiad t*» naa of&#13;
the parcels past m a BMaoa of&#13;
•hipping on| theliscensa tags and&#13;
found that he could aeod than&#13;
by parcels post for 11 eantf where&#13;
it haa been coating 80 orals by ei.&#13;
presa. The etata will issue over&#13;
60,000 licences the oatniog tear St&#13;
taeeiimated.&#13;
OLEYS HONEY TAR Com Douna&#13;
FOP S a l e by All Di»u&amp;i»i»&#13;
.. EGGS, POULTRY AND VEAL e i e&#13;
Attention F a r m e r s !&#13;
Don't forget that we come here&#13;
Every Wednesday A. Me&#13;
And will pay every cent the market affords. We will&#13;
appreciate a share of your business,&#13;
Cal; vs by. phone—No. ^3, either phone, for prices.&#13;
H. L. WILLIAMS&#13;
Phonographs&#13;
Yes, we have them, in all styles aad priceB. They are&#13;
THE WONDERFUL COLUMBIA&#13;
in both horn and hornless types. Hear one with the&#13;
new reproducer (just out) and you will be surprised.&#13;
Try one in your home. S o l d o n e a s y p a y m e n t s&#13;
John Dinkel, Pinckney&#13;
Either Phone Office and Works Work Quaranteed 5 ,&#13;
1583 30ti Cooper Street :: First CIHB* M&#13;
E M P I R E MARBLE AND&#13;
G R A N I T E W O R K S&#13;
JOHN (i. LKSI.IL, Prop.&#13;
Manufacturer* of and Dealers in&#13;
M o n u m e n t s , S t a t u a r y a n d S t o n e Burial V a u l t s&#13;
J A C K S O N MICHIGAN&#13;
\&#13;
PINCKNEY, • - MICHIGAN&#13;
^ H O T E b G R I S W O L D&#13;
And Griswold Hi. Detroit, Mich,&#13;
Postal Hotel Co.&#13;
F R E D POSTAL, Pre*. FRED A. GOODMAN, S e c r e t a r y&#13;
Headquarters of the Wolverine Automobile Cltlb!&#13;
I&gt;etroit'» Mo»t Popular Hotel&#13;
European r i a n Only R a t e s $ 1 . 5 0 per day and up&#13;
S0O,OOO Bxpncded In Rcmodellns* FupnlaJtlni and Decorating&#13;
The Finest Cafe West of New York&#13;
Service A La Carte at Popular Prices&#13;
A Strictly Modern and Up*tn-date Hotel. Centrally located in the very heart of the&#13;
city, "Where Life is Worth Living." N o t h i n g b e t t e r a t o u r r a t e a&#13;
-&gt;A*&#13;
&gt;m?•A A'&#13;
MJ T"&#13;
m,&#13;
eo&#13;
•XPKRIIIMtiV&#13;
} t -'''''V,&#13;
:.r**&lt;$&#13;
LeAal AdvertlalnA&#13;
»^3i ttbaetceo ouaft fM ©IfcLhlnlnsai n' , tbe prot»te eoa"n fo"r&#13;
' $&#13;
•»A3r W A N K S&#13;
T'c.taNa&#13;
Jo; . • •UHTaAC&#13;
artni&#13;
fpMtoi notU*. vii bout ou«r«*. tn tee&#13;
^ ^ a r T ^ r , , , HANDBOOK•. 1¾¾¾&#13;
P»u»nU taken tliroiivh Maun M.C*. mot"&#13;
Uonrt. held at the Pro&#13;
Hown&gt;#l\\ tn »ftld Mnoty on the 8&#13;
0(B«&gt; in tbe Vlllafe ef&#13;
Sckntiftc Jfmcrtcan.&#13;
'•••1 •^•''•t. _ mt __Z 5SS&#13;
H. p. swum *#. a. e. u SMUR M. O.&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLEF,&#13;
Faj sWsos asnt Ssaxaoas.&#13;
All aalls aromplfr attaaM la&#13;
Uf or aifM. O a f oi Maia&#13;
attest. *: • *&#13;
FllfOKNBT,&#13;
igetoo.- At % MMlon of eaM&#13;
ibatci 4. D. 1912. PrMeaifT, oHntohne. 8A0rttb&amp;tfatr)Aof. 1* €__._. JudffB of frobate. In too matter of the ertaeFef&#13;
H. M. COLBY, Deeeawd&#13;
peLtietiwoini pCr%olbyyin gb tshvalatg a l ioeedrl aiIon iMoaitdrn acoMuortt hitao wmreintitn ogt,— poidrp doarctloBafii itdo, bnoo wtn oen l afelito w ifnli aaaadid .teeoeataH- tbioo nad oml ietate'fdl etort apUro bbaetgen aaatded t htaot h itth*e* ' -,.,,__ otner anitablr pereoa. j&amp;HK&amp;LWk n.I t1 9i*» oartd teerae do 'tehloaetk t blae th9e4 1ibo rteKnfo oonfd &gt;™'••"'"•'»"" bbafater iaottstoabfd. tbaetl talaoda. is hereby ap*t heI rt llvee faa rbtyh epra boUrdeearteieda tohfa tap aoboUpye oafo ttkUea&#13;
eaeira rtaiarre,s l aaa tcheess Paltvaso wsaeaekrs pisMtiaa.'ai prlated aad eiroatated la r&#13;
ansa&#13;
JAMBS CtmirnfGILUI,I)e»saaat&#13;
JaT«biaeo fnl&gt;nrdoberasfteneSase iaba^afataaat« Lasea a aaSaJpaaiitwai Rfrtoamha *tb lea tShKeA s adtatyt sorfo tD eaassat aeai tiirwa, aadfottri taeaallowedbraaM Jadfsef Ptr eAb.a ute. tpo» a ll mm* sserayt nato tdtbla^ge ciiaallassaai afpol iasat amg ie aaai^mata altatejerTaaajp*tt*i^t&#13;
SMIRI KaasyX o&gt;f hFeerbarbaya trtrv.aaa, ath, alttl wa.e awaUf l oanw etta ae aa Smka day of AprU, A.o.lsiAat amoWeala.ava/ajaal)&#13;
^^^SjA| 4^ a, lsaf j|&#13;
^ -&#13;
• v ^ i&#13;
i-&#13;
&amp;*\l&#13;
W- * ^4. '&gt;*&#13;
&gt;; v^flty^ ..&#13;
" •• •• ,•£ ••;• v * : . v&#13;
'•.:••.? V ' i&#13;
. . - . . , , b , ; j . -y&#13;
• : : « , • • • &gt; • • : » ; • ' : •&#13;
K*^!&#13;
Sftii'-ir-"*&#13;
, « ' • » &lt; •&#13;
Pinckney bispntch HE MAY CZ&#13;
&gt; KOY W.&#13;
PXKCKNEY,&#13;
CAYKRLV, P u b .&#13;
MICHIGAN&#13;
Jgij-v;&#13;
J , J - - «&#13;
WILSCii'3 CACJNI&#13;
THE CHILD BEHIND.&#13;
Look about as you walk along the&#13;
street and see how many children you&#13;
Ran count chasing after or riding on&#13;
the endB of wi^ons in the streets. The&#13;
odds are heavy that you canuot fall to&#13;
Bee such a bight every time you take&#13;
the trouble to look Everybody sees&#13;
the sight and nobody does anything&#13;
about it. Would you believe that it is&#13;
just as much against the law for a&#13;
child to catch behind as it is for a&#13;
stranger from out of town to stop his&#13;
vehicle within ten feet of a hydrant.&#13;
Let the stranger try It on and he soon&#13;
finds himself in the clutches of the&#13;
law, says the Hartford Courant But&#13;
let a child try it on and there he is.&#13;
Now the inevitable result of thiB utter&#13;
neglect to enforce a law that makes&#13;
tor safety is simply to invite peril.&#13;
Pretty soon, possibly on another page&#13;
of the paper in which this article appears,&#13;
there will be an account of another&#13;
automobile accident. Some excitable&#13;
observers will likely call it an&#13;
automobile outrage. It will be the&#13;
story of how an automobile ran over&#13;
a child that had been playing catch&#13;
behind andshad jumped off the vehicle&#13;
It was stealing a ride on. The one&#13;
way to prevent these killings for&#13;
which drivers are not to blame is to&#13;
impress on the children and their parents&#13;
that this business, which the law&#13;
forbids, must stop. i&#13;
l*$f{&gt;&#13;
*L- V&#13;
fmS&#13;
/&#13;
' * ' •&#13;
A baby never laughs, an aged person&#13;
very rarely. But the smile, like&#13;
the pleasures of the palate, according&#13;
to Brlllat Savarin. belongs to all the&#13;
seven ages of man and with normal&#13;
persons it is universal. Imagine a never-&#13;
smiling human being, and you must&#13;
assume that he is either a physical or&#13;
a psychological eccentricity, or both.&#13;
The Greenpolnt youngster who shot&#13;
himself in Central park, Manhattan,&#13;
and died a few hours later, is said to&#13;
have been known among his schoolmates&#13;
as "the boy that never smiled."&#13;
He could work, he could study, he&#13;
could think. He appears not to have&#13;
been without affection. Yet suicide at&#13;
the age of sixteen was the climax of a&#13;
tort of abnormality which science never&#13;
had #an opportunity to analyze or&#13;
classify. The child that never smiles&#13;
demands scientific attention. In this&#13;
rather Jumbled up universe occasions&#13;
for smiling are everywhere. Breaks&#13;
in symmetry are everywhere. An eye&#13;
that does not see, a mind that does not&#13;
comprehend such breaks, is unusual&#13;
enough to be made a study of for the&#13;
TQlfinaTe benefitoTtherest of the race.&#13;
Napoleon was the greatest egotist of&#13;
history. He was not disposed to give&#13;
credit Unduly to other people. Vet he&#13;
wrote of his mother: "It is to ray&#13;
mother, to her good principles, that&#13;
I owe my succerrs and all I have that&#13;
is worth while. I do not hesitate to&#13;
aay that the future of the child depends&#13;
on the mother." All through life&#13;
he ordered his brothers and sisters&#13;
around, and paid slight heed to rela&#13;
tives of any sort. Yet he always treated&#13;
his mother with respect, and she&#13;
in her turn never lost her head, bu'&#13;
thriftily laid aside resources for the&#13;
days of adversity which she saw were&#13;
bound to come. This influence of&#13;
mothers is inevitable, sayB the Kansas&#13;
City Star. The father is away from&#13;
home a large share of the time. It Is&#13;
to the mother that the child turns. She&#13;
it his closest companion for the first&#13;
few years of his life. In all the period&#13;
when his habits are forming he is constantly&#13;
in association with her.&#13;
W &amp;i&#13;
i m.&gt;m$*mz^&amp;m2M &lt;m. -&#13;
MmmMmmmmmm'mm&#13;
^mmm&#13;
^ V a n iTh ill H I I I I I • • » ••» *&#13;
josepnus uaiiitsib, euuor 01 me jtv*.eigh (N. C) News aud Observe*&#13;
it is rumored, will DP a member of Woourow Wilson's cabiuet.&#13;
Refused Lease of State Lands.&#13;
Until Michigan has a "blue sky" law,&#13;
the Northern Development Co. or any&#13;
similar organization will not be able&#13;
to obtain leases from the public domain&#13;
commission of state landB to be&#13;
used for oil prospecting. Secretary of&#13;
State Martindale has refused to sign&#13;
the leaseB. He said that he with&#13;
other members of the commission had&#13;
discovered that practically the same&#13;
officers composing the present corporation&#13;
seeking leases had recently issued&#13;
a prospectus in which stock was&#13;
offered for sale in a similar company&#13;
and in his opinion the only&#13;
value there was to the stock was&#13;
based on certain leases the company&#13;
has acquired. „:,&#13;
The commission was afraid that if&#13;
granted the leases the development&#13;
company, now^cxpitatized~ar~tttr,00u7"&#13;
would proceed to Increase its capitalization&#13;
and other stock for sale, the&#13;
value based solely on the leaseB obtained&#13;
from the state. This is what&#13;
the domain commission has been trying&#13;
to avert, and at the last minute&#13;
made the discovery that led to refusing&#13;
the leaseB.&#13;
Despite reports to the contrary,&#13;
members of the public domain commission&#13;
have refused to annex their&#13;
signatures to leases giving the development&#13;
company the right to prospect&#13;
for oil on 135,000 acres of state&#13;
land in several counties in the state.&#13;
It is astonishing how prosperous we&#13;
jahould be if there were no waste and&#13;
flosses. We are now told that cattle&#13;
ticks cost the country 9100,000,000 a&#13;
Year. If we remember aright, the de-&#13;
.partment ot agriculture has told us&#13;
that rats coat us at much as that, and&#13;
^several other varieties of vermin and&#13;
'injurious Insects rob its of as much or&#13;
larger sums. The underwriters tell us&#13;
that nearly all the 1240,000,000 a year&#13;
we, lose in conflagrations Is prevent&#13;
*W«, tnd the doctors ten us that the&#13;
greater part of the sickness, which Is&#13;
&lt;av tremendous drain on Individual and&#13;
tionai resources, is preventable,&#13;
me time we may stop these leaks.&#13;
MS&#13;
' • $ • .&#13;
There 1» one district In China which&#13;
is going to reform the opium scandal&#13;
of the nation without any sentimental&#13;
aoosense. Ootam fiends under forty&#13;
are to be executed and those over that&#13;
age will be Imprisoned for life* which&#13;
is,rather reversing the Oslerian method.&#13;
So the habit is bound to be cured&#13;
without Ufeeome educational pro-&#13;
$250,000,000 in Stocks During 1912.&#13;
During 1912 Secretary of State Martindale's&#13;
department accepted articles&#13;
of association of new corporations representing&#13;
an authorized capitalization&#13;
of approximately $250,000,000. The&#13;
franchise fees amounted to $74,000.&#13;
The department accepted articles of&#13;
association of 1,550 new corporations;&#13;
1,146 manufacturing or mercantile&#13;
business; 351 incorporated not for&#13;
profit, 530 dissolutions, 41 mining companies,&#13;
five railroads and seven limited&#13;
partnerships.&#13;
Battle Creek May Buy Coal t&lt;&#13;
The city council of Battle&#13;
has sent Aid. W. N. Dibble, a former&#13;
coal dealer, to Buffalo* to Inspect coal&#13;
offered by the Scully company, of Detroit,&#13;
at $6.90 (egg) and $7.15 (chestnut),&#13;
a ton, delivered in Battle Creek.&#13;
If the coal is satisfactory, Dibble has&#13;
full authority to buy 25 carloads, for&#13;
Immediate shipment, and the city will&#13;
enter into the coal busines. The council&#13;
was not unanimous in sending Dibble.&#13;
The coal dealers, who are selling&#13;
at $8.75 and $9, don't like the innovation.&#13;
When the city recently asked&#13;
them to explain why they had to&#13;
charge such prices, they balked. This&#13;
balking did more to influence the aldermen&#13;
to buy and sell coal than any&#13;
of the arguments that had been presented.&#13;
Mrs. Catherine Burshaw, aged 93,&#13;
was burned to death in a Are which&#13;
destroyed her home in Petoskey.&#13;
The sale of Red Cross stamps in&#13;
Port Huron netted $370, of which&#13;
amount $166.50 will bo used in forming&#13;
a local society. A number of business&#13;
men have offered to support&#13;
to a proposed movement here to build&#13;
shacks and better care for tuberculosis&#13;
patients.&#13;
MAJ. W. V. JUDS0N&#13;
Jas. A. Patten Held to Trial.&#13;
By upholding certain disputed&#13;
counts against James A. Patten and&#13;
others, charged with a violation of&#13;
the Sherman anti-trust law in running&#13;
a so-called cotton corner, the supreme&#13;
court of the United States sent the&#13;
case against the men to trial in the&#13;
lower courts.&#13;
The decision of the court is to the&#13;
effect that a "corner" in any commodity&#13;
is a violation of the Sherman&#13;
law.&#13;
Patten is the former wheat king.&#13;
He was a broker in the Chicago market&#13;
when he obtained a corner in&#13;
wheat&#13;
Jr" ^tJtjHfOrnta gtri hsuugiven u» a;&#13;
* "HSW business worth flfyOOta yea&#13;
ivii*X ifcxyP&#13;
• , * :&#13;
y'Y.&#13;
milyear&#13;
to&#13;
go ea the stags as a ehorts girl at&#13;
, -, £ &amp; a week, says a theatrical «x&#13;
^Change. Perhaps she figures that with&#13;
ffi wtet Weome and the stage, a title lo&#13;
4»&#13;
Among the victims of the de luxe&#13;
to Td*« -sWected that *an? . ^ i S i a ,&#13;
laser* si d* Uua hooka ifcke »4 ut j^,-gfcgiai... , „ ^ .„„„„„,„ ^ .&#13;
^ h l i P f ^ y ^ ' f » "* wae aotborliad by tka- state railroad&#13;
or... . . - * . * . • * ~ oomfctoaloa to tatwe $10*000 preferred&#13;
stoat to replace surplus taken from&#13;
tUt treasury for bettermenta.&#13;
The proposition to move the county&#13;
seat of Bensie from Honor to Frankfort,&#13;
was voted down by the board of&#13;
supervisors.&#13;
Arrangements are being completed&#13;
for the twenty-ninth annual convention&#13;
of the State Dairymen's association,&#13;
which will be held in Saginaw, together&#13;
with the ice cream manufacturers'&#13;
meeting, Feb. 4 to .7&#13;
H. H. Ktttenthal k Co., of Battle&#13;
Creek have closed a deal whereby a&#13;
new cold storage plant estimated to&#13;
cost $200,000, will be erected at North&#13;
Bvrdiok and Ransom streets.&#13;
The Jackson county board of saporvisors,&#13;
by a vote' of 25 to 1, approved&#13;
a resolution abolishing the foe system&#13;
aad ptociag all county ofltoers on a&#13;
e&#13;
Tfto tturnav Valley Telephone Co.&#13;
,ND&#13;
TO&#13;
rom&#13;
IN SE3S1QF m t MAT.&#13;
• I S 1 "S" »&#13;
Legislature Would Provide for Referendum,&#13;
ftoon. After election.&#13;
While eome members of the legislature,&#13;
hope to finish by April 1, the&#13;
majority can't,see the end of business&#13;
before May 1.&#13;
Now that members aro paid $800 for&#13;
the session, no matter what its length,&#13;
there is a disposition to keep the sessions&#13;
as short as possible. A member&#13;
remarked to Secretary of State Martindale&#13;
he thought adjournment could&#13;
be had by April 1.&#13;
THE WORK OF 1913&#13;
CITY BUH-DINCL. l A i t W A Y BUILD.&#13;
INQ AND FARM OI»€RATI©NS&#13;
IN .WESTCItN CANADA.&#13;
BIGGEST £VCR.&#13;
The machinery-, the- Tnbney" *^d t n e&#13;
men for carrying on the $lg. w#rks in&#13;
Western Canada in lfij$ *ire already&#13;
provided for The spienlld harvest&#13;
"How about your initiative and ref- j w h i c h w a s 8UCCe8BfuHy garnerod, and&#13;
erendum that every party platforin b y t n l B t l m e m o 8 tly marketed, rein&#13;
the state indorsed in the last cam- j B P o n ( jed to the big hopes"''t^at were&#13;
paign?" inquired Martindale. j h a d f o r it early in the season, and ln-&#13;
"You will submit the constitutional gpired capitalists and railroads to&#13;
amendment to provide them at the further investment and building,&#13;
spring election, I suppose. Do you From lake ports to mountain base&#13;
think it is possible to BO frame the there will be carded on the biggest&#13;
amendments that they can go into operations in city" building anf "^&#13;
effect automatically without any ma- j w a y construction that has event*&#13;
chinery being provided for their op- place in that country. The &amp;&#13;
eration?" Pacific railway has everythltf1:&#13;
The representative doubted it. waiting to continue their great?]&#13;
of double tracking the system a ^&#13;
the time the Panama Canal i s open to&#13;
traffic there will be a double line of&#13;
steel from Lake Superior to the Pa«&#13;
ciflc coast. The cost will exceed&#13;
The Grand&#13;
Alpena to Get $1,500,000 Plant.&#13;
Construction work on a $1,500,000&#13;
quarry and stone crushing plant in Alpena&#13;
will be begun by E. P. Smith, of thirty million dollars.&#13;
Detroit, early next spring.&#13;
For nearly two years Mr. Smith&#13;
and his associates have been working&#13;
on the proposition. Mr. Smith recently&#13;
held several conferences with Mr.&#13;
Trunk Pacific plan of building a firstclass&#13;
trunk line and then feeders at&#13;
various points will be carried forward&#13;
with all the force that great company&#13;
can put into the work. The Canadian&#13;
Hawks of the D. &amp; M., relative to j Northern is prepared to put into mothe&#13;
extension of the railway com- , tion all the energy that young g i a n t ^&#13;
pany's tracks to the site of the pro- j of finance and railroad building car* "&#13;
posed industry. put into various enterprises of provid«";&#13;
Shtarting from Lake Erie ports, the j Ing and creating transportation facllH&#13;
steel trust boats will bring ocal to 1 t i e s - &lt; '&#13;
Sandwich and Alpena. Continuing Building operations in the several&#13;
their routes, they will go to the up- ' c i t i "«. t h a t n a v c already marked&#13;
per peninsula for iron ore, with which i tlKMnselvea a place in the list of s u c&#13;
they will return to the mill at Al- ^ s s f u I arttJ growing cities, will be&#13;
carried on more largely than ever.&#13;
i.*&#13;
-¾¾¾&#13;
eat, the&#13;
Balkan delegates are keeping fa closest&#13;
touch with the ambassadors, because&#13;
they are aware that some 0/ the&#13;
questions they have most at heart depend&#13;
almost entirely on the will of&#13;
the powers.&#13;
Meanwhile the ambassadorial conference&#13;
is doing little, hoping that&#13;
the Adrianople difficulty will solve itself&#13;
in some manner, and thus make&#13;
interference by the powers unnecessary.&#13;
The action of the ambassadors&#13;
is hampered by the previous agreement&#13;
that they must be unanimous in&#13;
any decision requiring active interference.&#13;
Should the fall of Adrianople still be&#13;
delayed, now that the conference is&#13;
suspended, it. might become inoperative&#13;
for Europe to intervene; otherwise&#13;
pena. The ore discharged, the vessels&#13;
will load Btone for Sandwich. Discharging&#13;
the cargo, they will return&#13;
to the more southern ports for fresh&#13;
oarfttas of coal, completing their cir-&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
'"Europe-"would looc the prestige enti- -heavy-graces,- which wag fuU-.strong-at --¾^&#13;
tling her to dictate her will in smaller !£8 L*I°n d ^£r&#13;
Q&#13;
. . . . . lb ateers, $8.75&lt;alJc9£.2B5;: gboeosdi Zto'3 5p0 r&lt;imto e W1,20; 0 nofr t1&#13;
matters, such as bringing into being&#13;
an autonomous Albania and partitioning&#13;
the Aegean islands.&#13;
One suggestion is that, failing a better&#13;
solution, Adrianople might be ceded&#13;
to the powers, who could transfer&#13;
it to the allies after permitting the&#13;
Turkish garrison to leave with the&#13;
honors of war, and guaranteeing other&#13;
conditions, as the reservation of religious&#13;
and property rights to the&#13;
Turks and the establishment of special&#13;
courts for the trials of civil disputes&#13;
arising between MusBelmans.&#13;
Take Constantinople.&#13;
Some of the delegates from the allied&#13;
states are of the opinion that now&#13;
that they have paved the way for the&#13;
expulsion of Turkey from Europe the&#13;
powers ought to complete the. work&#13;
by removing Islam from Constantinople&#13;
and transforming the Turkish capital&#13;
into an autonomous city under&#13;
European control, and that they&#13;
Bhould adopt means to give a really&#13;
civilized government to Asia Minor.&#13;
D E T R O I T — C a t t l e — E x t r a dry-fed s t e e r s&#13;
$X 50; s t e e r s arul heifers, 1,000 to 1,200,&#13;
56.75P7.75; steers a n d heifers 800 to 1,000 '&#13;
J6.50&amp;/7.50; steera and heifers t h a t a r e !&#13;
fat. 500 to 700, U.5Q&amp;K.5Q: choice fat cows i&#13;
$0.755/-0.50: good fat cows, $5.25fi&gt;5.60; j&#13;
common cows, $4&lt;fM.50; cannerB, $3.75@&#13;
4; choice heavy bulls. $6tfj/7: fair t o good&#13;
bolognas, bulla. $5.25@5.50; stock bulls, $5;&#13;
milkers, largre. young, medium age, S&amp;0&lt;&amp;)&#13;
70; common milkers, $30((1)45. \&#13;
Veal calves—Best, $10&lt;£ti2; others, $4.50&#13;
(&amp;9.60; milch cows a n d s p r l n g e r s s t e a d y . I&#13;
Sheep a n d lambs—Best lambs, $S 75(¾&#13;
!&gt;; fair to good lambs. $8.25fa&gt;8.6G; light to&#13;
common lambs. $G(U715; yearlings, $6¾) .&#13;
7; fair to yood sheep, $4.50W5; culls* a n d '&lt;&#13;
common, $2.50@3.50. j&#13;
Hogs—Lipht to good butcher*, $7.45(¾&#13;
7,50; pigs, $7.45; light yorkers, $7.46; s t a g s&#13;
1-3 off. I&#13;
E A S T RUFKALO: Cattle—Receipts, 105&#13;
cars; m a r k e t 10@)25a higher on all except&#13;
Schools, public buildings, parliament&#13;
buildings, colleges, business blocks,&#13;
apartments, private residences, banks,&#13;
street and other municipal improve*&#13;
inents have their appropriation ready,&#13;
and the record of 1913 will be some*&#13;
thing wonderful. Other places which&#13;
are towns today will make the rapid&#13;
strides that are expected and will become&#13;
cities. There will be other Edmontons.&#13;
Calgarys, Reginaa and Saskatoons,&#13;
other places that may In&#13;
their activity help to convince the&#13;
outer world of the solidity and permanency&#13;
of the Canadian "West. Thecountry&#13;
is large and wide and broad&#13;
and the ends of its great width and&#13;
lensth are but the limits of its agricultural&#13;
area. Its people are progressive,&#13;
they are strong, there is no&#13;
enervation there. The country teems&#13;
with this life, this ambition, this&#13;
fondness to create and to use tho&#13;
forces that await the settler. If they&#13;
come from the South, and hundreds&#13;
oi' thousands of them have, they are&#13;
now the dominant men of the North,&#13;
they have imbibed of the_ spirit&#13;
the North. Therefore it is fair to&#13;
say that no portion of the continent&#13;
will show such wonderful results as&#13;
Western Canada, and the year 1913&#13;
•will be but the beginning of a wonto&#13;
1.300-ib Bteers, $8@8.50; good to prime,&#13;
1,100 to 1,200-lb steers, $7.25(^)8.25; coarse&#13;
plain 1,100 to 1,200-lb steers, $7.35@7.75;&#13;
m e d i u m b u t c h e r steers, 1,000 t o 1,1000 lbs.&#13;
$6.5067.50; butcher steers. 950 to 1,009&#13;
lbs, $6.50@7; tight b u t c h e r steers, $5.75@ . , , . . . . . . . .. ,&#13;
6.25; best fat cows. $5.76@6.50; butcher derful and great future. And in this&#13;
cows, $5@5.50: light butcher cows, $4.26® future the 200,000 Americans who&#13;
4.75; c u t t e r s , $3.75@4; t r i m m e r s , $3.60® m a d e i t t h e i r h o m e a n d thnaft w h o&#13;
3.75; best fat heifers, $7.60@8; light « » " " » " tneir nome ana inose wno&#13;
butcher heifers, $5.25@5.75; stock heif- preceded them, will be a considerable&#13;
era. $4®4.25; best feeding steers, $6.25® portion of the machinery that will be&#13;
fl.75; fair to good stockers, $5.50(g&gt;5.75; „«._,. J _ K - * « « &lt; « » *».,*..&lt;. *i.„ . . « . . &gt; * .&#13;
light, common stockers. $4®4/25; prime u s e d l n bringing about the results&#13;
export bulls, $6.25@6.75; best butcher predicted.&#13;
x&#13;
bulls, $5.50&amp;5.75; bologna bulls, $4.50®&#13;
6; stock bulls, $4.50(35; best milkers a n d&#13;
springers, $65@75; common to fair kind,&#13;
$40@55. Hogs: Receipts. 125 cars; m a r -&#13;
ket 10® 15c lower; heavy, $7.80@7.85;&#13;
mixed, $7.90; yorkers, $7.80@7.90; pigs,&#13;
$!&lt;g)8.10. Sheep a n d l a m b s ; Receipts,&#13;
60 c a r s ; m a r k e t a c t i v e ; t o p lambs, $9.40®&#13;
9.50; yearlings, $7.50@8; w e t h e r s , $5.25®&#13;
6.75; ewes, $4.76®5,25. Calves, $5®12.&#13;
Major Jadaon, enginoer communioner&#13;
of tho District of Columbia, may&#13;
be mad* vtofrfovernor of tho canal&#13;
rone.&#13;
It was announced at the prison Monday&#13;
that ln future all prisoners paroled&#13;
will be ordered to return to the&#13;
counties from which they were sentenced.&#13;
This step is taken because of&#13;
the large number of paroled prisoners&#13;
who remain in Jackson. *&#13;
Tho Grand Traverse, Pair . association&#13;
has elected the following officers:&#13;
President, Robert Barney; first vice&#13;
president, J. K. Buell; second vice&#13;
president, M. 8. Hoamer, secretary, H.&#13;
B. Montague; treasurer, M. O. Robinson.&#13;
I^iffi&gt;: .K- •X*i. w*$** •JflT&amp;Ai&#13;
The report of tho state forester&#13;
shows that the state sow has on hand&#13;
opwatd of a.000,0*tj forest trees from&#13;
two to eight years old that have bees&#13;
nurtured In tho state nurseries and&#13;
aro for sale at prices varyla* from H&#13;
par 1,000 up to $1&#13;
* \ ^ * f i y ••••••&#13;
Military Reserve Favored by Wood.&#13;
That a reasonable strong reserve&#13;
may be established in the United&#13;
States with the least possible''delay,&#13;
all men who have served in the regular&#13;
army, marine corps, or militia,&#13;
and are ot proper age and physically&#13;
fit, should be authorized to enlist at&#13;
once" in the reserve and receive pay,&#13;
in the opinion of Maj. Gen. Leonard&#13;
Wood, chief-of-staff of the army. Gen.&#13;
Wood Indorsed the bill introduced by&#13;
Rep. Tilsen, of Connecticut, providing&#13;
for a nationa) military reserve.&#13;
G E N E R A L M A R K E T S .&#13;
P o u l t r y is in good d e m a n d a n d steady,&#13;
a n d t h e tone is steady for dressed calves&#13;
a n d hogs, Business ln fruits is n o t a c t -&#13;
ive. B u t t e r ajid eggs a r e firm. T h e cold&#13;
w a v e h a s a s t r e n g t h e n i n g effect on fresh&#13;
eggs, b u t receipts h a v e n o t y e t fallen&#13;
oft much. T h e produce m a r k e t is s t e a d y&#13;
ln t h e leading lines.&#13;
Rep. Jenison, of Escanaba, is preparing&#13;
a banking bill that will pot all&#13;
private banks under state supervision&#13;
and subject them to close scrutiny.&#13;
Ten thousand dollars was appropriated&#13;
by the supervisors to maintain a&#13;
hospital in Kalamazoo county. The city&#13;
has given 13,500. It is expected the&#13;
place will be opened in the spring.&#13;
Terms under which William R. Elliott,&#13;
of Grand- Rapids, a thirty-third&#13;
degree Mason, will take a bond issue'&#13;
of $36,500 were accepted by the Battle&#13;
Creek Masons and a $76,000 Masonic&#13;
temple will be built at once*&#13;
The Gratiot county hoard of supervisors&#13;
passed a resolution, to adopt&#13;
tho county road system.&#13;
Butter—Fancy creamery, 35c; creamery&#13;
firsts, 32c; dairy, 22c; packing, 21c&#13;
per lt&gt;.&#13;
Eggs—Current receipts, candled, cases&#13;
included, 26c per do*.&#13;
APPLES—Baldwin, |2.2B@2.50; greening-.&#13;
$2.50(^2,75; spy, 917803; steel red,&#13;
$3@3.6G; No.-2, 75c@$1.60 per bbl.&#13;
CABBAGES—$1# 1.26 per *bL&#13;
DRESSED CALVES—Ordinary, 11® 12c;&#13;
fancy, 14®14 l-2c per Ito.&#13;
ONIONS—55c per bU.&#13;
DRESSED HOQS—$8.50@e per cwt for&#13;
light to medium,&#13;
DRBSSBft P®tTLTRY—Spring chickens&#13;
13916c; hens, U#14c; old roosters, 1*9&#13;
lie; turkeys, ilg2£c; cuoks, 17618c;&#13;
geeise, 14®H per fe.&#13;
POTATOES—Michigan, sacks, 60c; bulk,&#13;
46c ln car lots, and 66®Wc for store..&#13;
HONEY—Choiee fancy white comb, 16&#13;
©17c per lb; ameer, 14#l5c.&#13;
LIVE POULTRY—Spring? chickens. 14@&#13;
18 1-2c. per lb; hens, 13T-2Q14c; No. 2&#13;
hens, 9c old reeaters, 9010c; ducks, 159&#13;
16c; geese, 13614c; turkeys, 17620c per&#13;
lb.&#13;
VEGETABLES—Beets, 40c per bu; carrots,&#13;
45c per bu; cauliflower, fi.ft per doa,&#13;
turnips, SOc per bu; spinach, $1.25 pe&gt; bu;&#13;
hothouse cucumbers, $2 per dos; watercress,&#13;
28670c per .doz; head lettuce, t?Q&#13;
2.25 per hamper; home-grown celery. 2$0&#13;
30c per bu; green peppers, 40c per basket;&#13;
rutabagas, 40c per bu; hothouse radishes,&#13;
28e per dos.&#13;
PROVISIONS—Mess pork, $18; family&#13;
$22623! brisket*. 116t2c; bacon, 16619c;&#13;
shouMers. 12 l«2c; picnto hams, 12c; pure&#13;
lard In - tierces, 11 l-3c; ketle rendered&#13;
lard, 12 l-2c per lb.&#13;
HAY—Car lot prices, track, Detroit:&#13;
No. 1 ttoothy, IW«M.50f No. 2 timothy.&#13;
$l«VWf l &amp; S o . f mixed. J U 6 K * ;&#13;
light mt*ed,^|lS61S.50: Wheat' and oat&#13;
•etrnw, $ft#Stto nrev straw, $10.50611 tper&#13;
4on- , , . , - , , - , r . •• ,&#13;
'_. •&#13;
More than $25,000 paid Into the city&#13;
ing * decision in tho suit tt*d * j Harry&#13;
C. Howard, who oeokt •» rooover&#13;
$*6*\lt, which ho contend* was Itlejally&#13;
collected"by &lt;Jky Troastrrhi -Toondor&#13;
nhd Iffthof* city eflWale, W~that&#13;
Willie Ffmuenrefoer, pi ICarshall; t€&#13;
years old^ 'wnile ptaylng wtfd We#t&#13;
with other youngsters, was shot to&#13;
treasury of Kalamaaoo, ao*t* protest #*• left oyo wltj aa air rifla. He wfll&#13;
by taxpayers wttl bo boM w ponding reWt^losOvtho Mgftt j*,&#13;
-. Sympathising srtth the police 4e»&#13;
partmeat, ot Battbr Crook, which has&#13;
more-business than Ma oooabtnatlon&#13;
e^tesaoblU aahoianoo aad patrol wap»'&#13;
they eased thoir valuattono ott tho re- ion WflHamooa-hat offorod h a pfpraa*&#13;
tuna made ^jhfm stato ta^ mrnl&amp;wmmiF+to to Oo&lt;4e»art»o*t «a«fl&#13;
aionort doring a oomploto rooaavaos&#13;
vunnor&#13;
a ttmo as a saw aa$pataass tjw&#13;
rtTOJs. Tho&#13;
The development of 1913 will not&#13;
be confined to the* prairie provinces.&#13;
Railway building and city building in&#13;
British Coltimbia will be supplemented&#13;
by the farm, the ranch and tho&#13;
orchard building of that province.&#13;
Vancouver will make great strides in&#13;
building, and Victoria, the staid old f&#13;
lady of so many years, has already '&#13;
shown signs of modern ways, and if&#13;
the progress made in 1912 may be accepted&#13;
as anything like what it will&#13;
be In 1913, there will he wonderful&#13;
developments there. During last&#13;
year the permits went over the ten&#13;
million dollar mark and much more is&#13;
promised for the year now entered&#13;
upon.—Advertisement&#13;
Collecting Antiquities.&#13;
Slopay I received" a card on • which&#13;
was engraved: "Professor Bryce,&#13;
Antiquarian."&#13;
He knew no such person, so his curiosity&#13;
led him to receive him.&#13;
"What is your business, professorT"&#13;
he asked politely.-&#13;
"I am a collector of antiquities," a»&gt;—-&#13;
swered the old man.&#13;
"So I imagined. And how can I&#13;
serve you?**&#13;
"By paying a deposit on this little&#13;
bill you have owed for more than&#13;
three years"&#13;
Took Load Off Mother's M*n4&#13;
£lx-year-old Cora returned unusually&#13;
early from school the other day.&#13;
She rang the door bell. There was n o&#13;
answer. She rang again, a* little&#13;
longer/ StH! ttfero Was trt response. K&#13;
third time she pushed tho button, lone&#13;
and-bare). Nobody came to thsrtdoorv&#13;
Then she pressed her nose againmthe&#13;
window screen and In a shrift&#13;
vffteof^pMoB carried t o thviieart o f&#13;
every aoighbor on the bloc*, oafledr&#13;
"IVs all right, mamma. tiSteVt' the&gt;&#13;
Instamoent « u » r *r&#13;
-• ' spoiled « o r 6 o » » i t • ' •&#13;
"My first husband and-: J kept o u r i&#13;
ntafrtago • secret for aeafly a year."&#13;
MDMat yon find it nufier dlfflcultr&#13;
X)h, no, not at siL Wo oould^ havo-&#13;
'^1&#13;
.i'»&#13;
horfiWo reporteri bjsiATt boon aopogtag&#13;
around whon La«slied,for mj dV&#13;
'•OtOOiV- -Si* ;••* •••'H .«* \t-&gt; • »&gt;''"••••S&#13;
&gt;J*1&#13;
Glbv4w &gt;IMaafw of &gt;lA«ocs, ,-,«-&#13;
-WooJd yon stic**&gt; yonjyjfcggiiaft&#13;
,lt hojitokLa.aHWon dsllar»rf'^ \&#13;
"""^' - ' i s keeattat at*&#13;
^&#13;
• • * ' •&#13;
-.V- &lt;*:*&#13;
A.K&#13;
in&#13;
it&#13;
i&#13;
if*&#13;
§K&#13;
V&#13;
8YN0P316.&#13;
Robert Cameron, capitalist, consults&#13;
Phillip Clyde, newspaper publisher, regarding&#13;
anonymous threatening letters he&#13;
has received. The first promises a sample &amp;,the writer's power on a certain day.&#13;
that day the head Is mysteriously cut&#13;
• a portrait of Cameron whilu the latte&#13;
In the room. Clyde has a theory&#13;
the portrait was mutilated while the&#13;
)m was unoccupied and the head later&#13;
removed by means of a string, unnoticed&#13;
by Oanuton. Evelyn Grayson, Cameron a&#13;
niece, with whom Clyde Is in love. timta&#13;
the head of Cameron's portrait nailed to&#13;
a tree, where It was had been used aa a&#13;
ta; *et. Ch'de pledges Evelyn to secrecy.&#13;
Clyde learns that a Chinese hoy employed&#13;
by Philetus Murphy, an artist llvlns&#13;
nearby, hud borrowed a rille from Cameron's&#13;
lodK^keper. Clyde makes an excuse&#13;
to rail on Murphy and is repulsed.&#13;
He pretends to be investigating alleged&#13;
infracfions of the game laws and apeaks&#13;
of finding the bowl of an opium plp« ur":&#13;
der the tree where Cameron's portrait&#13;
was found. The Chinese hoy is found&#13;
dead next morning. While visiting Ciunernn&#13;
In his dressing room a Nell Gwynne&#13;
tfilrror Is mysteriously shattered. Cameron&#13;
becomes .seriously 111 us a result or tne&#13;
•shock. The third letter appears niysteriously&#13;
on Cameron's *iuK bed. « makes&#13;
'direct threats against the life of Cameron&#13;
Clvdo tells Cameron the envelope wa.j&#13;
empty. He tells Evelyn everything andplans&#13;
to take Cameron on a yacht tr p&#13;
The vaeht picks up a fisherman found&#13;
drifting helplessly in a boat. He gives&#13;
the name of Johnson. Cameron dlsappenrs&#13;
from yacht while Clyde's back Is&#13;
turned. A fruitless search is mac]**av *&#13;
motor iKuit seen by the captain just before&#13;
Cameron disappeared. Johnson la fl'-&#13;
l o ^ d t o e : after being closely questioned.&#13;
Kvclvn take:* the letters to an expert in&#13;
ChWs-o literature, who pronov.ncea&#13;
n* PhineRe origin.&#13;
/&#13;
them&#13;
Clvdc Reeks assistance&#13;
from a Chinese fellow ^ W , n | t u £ %&#13;
who reeommends him to \ tp Mr.c. rmwt&#13;
prominent Chinaman In New TT&gt; »k. I ne&#13;
Inttpr promises to seek information or&#13;
Cameron among his countrymen.&#13;
CHAPTER X!.—Continued.&#13;
"Mr Clyde," he said, wtth no more&#13;
amotion than he might have exhibited&#13;
had I told him I wished him to sell for&#13;
me a Chinese bronze on commission,&#13;
"Mr. Clvde, I do not see, exactly, why&#13;
you come to me."&#13;
"I came at Mr. Mow's suggestion, I&#13;
exWainod. "He tells me you know the&#13;
Chinese of New York as&#13;
does."&#13;
"The police, I" should say,&#13;
turned "know the class you se*k bettar&#13;
than I. Why not go to the police9"&#13;
It was not easy to explain to&#13;
dreaded that&#13;
might preclpl-&#13;
/&#13;
'I.&#13;
v.*-&#13;
no one else&#13;
he rehim&#13;
^rfcv I had not Rone to the police, for I&#13;
•' ' « 4 pot care to reveal all that we&#13;
'feared, and how we&#13;
which police pursuit&#13;
tate.&#13;
"Bflef»"«p" T began* after j \ _ moj&#13;
ment's hesitation, "I believe the whole&#13;
thin? is a mistake. I believe that&#13;
those involved In the plot must Rooner&#13;
or later find out it is a mistake. If&#13;
the aid of the police is enlisted, the&#13;
fact that a mistake has been made&#13;
will not be any extenuation. My object&#13;
is to find the plotters, prove to&#13;
them that they are in error, promise&#13;
them immunity, and recover my&#13;
Triend."&#13;
"What you have told me," said Yup&#13;
Sing, speaking slowly, "is not enough,&#13;
If you will tell me everything. I wilt&#13;
let you know what I think. You must&#13;
glVe the names and the places and the&#13;
dates.**&#13;
r -did give him the names and the&#13;
places and the dates. Mow Chee had&#13;
toW toe I could rely upon him, Implicitly,&#13;
and I told him all, without&#13;
reservation. I gave him even the letter,&#13;
the only one of the three that remained&#13;
to us—the last letter in which&#13;
the final threat was made.&#13;
At I look back on it, now, I cannot&#13;
understand why I did this.. It was the&#13;
only piece of proof, the only clue left&#13;
And yet, when he asked to Keep it&#13;
for a little, I consented without so&#13;
much as a demur. I ,ajgued, I suppose,&#13;
that he was a reputable merchant,&#13;
with an established business,&#13;
and that, therefore, treachery on his&#13;
part was not to be considered.&#13;
"And your friend," he said, aB he&#13;
folded the paper, "was never In&#13;
China?"&#13;
'«N*v*r," I affirmed.,&#13;
"How do. you know?"&#13;
"He has told me so."&#13;
It was neither a smile nor a sneer&#13;
which floated for just a moment across&#13;
those sphinx-like feature*. It was a&#13;
look of pitying tolerance, a patronizing&#13;
gleam, merely, from the small, deeptat,&#13;
almond eyes. One of England's&#13;
greatest actresses, in speaking of the&#13;
ChiMte, ha* said: "They look as if&#13;
they are always thinking, 'I have Jived&#13;
before you; I shall live after you/"&#13;
Thai was how Tup Sing looked then.&#13;
Bat fee merely said:&#13;
*«*jr well. *I w » lear* what I oaji."&#13;
t&gt;$ "ioonr I begged, "Very scour&#13;
&gt;H* stood up, an. Imposing figure In&#13;
ipnrple silk.&#13;
•Com* to m+ totaorrow evening.&#13;
Not hate, bat at t i e Chi****, t***au-&#13;
&lt; &amp; &gt;&#13;
2#ABLrEr&#13;
HORACE&#13;
HiVZELTINE LORCIfA COPY/P/GJ17; J3/2, J C jy&lt;TCAL//?C &amp;. CO.,&#13;
tention was on the swiftly moving&#13;
brush of the little Chinese maid, as,&#13;
deftly handled, it now blocked out&#13;
with bold black strokes a silhouette&#13;
upon the piece of rice paper before&#13;
her—a familiar silhouette of a short,&#13;
clumsy curved boat with broad lugsail.&#13;
CHAPTER X l i .&#13;
"We Were in Peking Together."&#13;
At my evening conference with Evelyn&#13;
Grayson, reviewing the day's&#13;
events, I dwelt with some insistence&#13;
upon the singularity of that episode at&#13;
Yup Sing's.&#13;
"It was Impressively significant," I&#13;
maintained, "even if it was only a&#13;
coincidence. Incidentally it convinced&#13;
me .that nothing escaped Mr. Yup's observation.&#13;
I had no intention of referring&#13;
to my discovery. I chose rather&#13;
to have him think I had not noticed&#13;
the figure the child was painting. But&#13;
my choice was not to be gratified. He&#13;
knew that I had seen and noticed it;&#13;
and so, to relieve the situation, he&#13;
frankly directed my attention to the&#13;
symbol, explaining that what I had regarded&#13;
as mysterious was most commonplace.&#13;
'It is one of the first things&#13;
that Chinese babies learn to draw,'&#13;
he went on, 'it is like the pothook and&#13;
hanger of the American primary&#13;
schools. First they draw houses, then&#13;
ships, then men; and the houses, the&#13;
ships and the men are all alike, just&#13;
as are your A's, your B's, and your&#13;
C's. 'And when signed to a letter,' I&#13;
queried, 'what does your ship stand&#13;
for?' He shrugged his lean shoulders&#13;
in a manner almost Gallic. "Who shall&#13;
say?' he returned."&#13;
"And do you believe the pothook&#13;
and hanger explanation?" Evelyn&#13;
asked, pointedly. It was her way to&#13;
probe at once to the heart of a matter.&#13;
"I can't say that I am altogether&#13;
convinced," I answered, non-committally.&#13;
'In spite of Mow's enthusiastic&#13;
encomium, I was not very favorably&#13;
impressed by Yup Sing. His wall of&#13;
reserve is too high and too thick, It&#13;
is neither scalable nor penetrable.&#13;
And yet he stands' well; I believe, in&#13;
the community."&#13;
We sat in the music room, where a&#13;
fire of drift wood wove a woof of&#13;
"green nrrd violet strands through the&#13;
red warp of the blaze, for the weather&#13;
had turned chill. Evelyn wore a clinging&#13;
gown of black panne velvet, with&#13;
purple orchids at her waist. It had a&#13;
wonderfully mature Effect for one so&#13;
young as she, but it was not unbecoming.&#13;
Indeed it effectively accentuated&#13;
the deep ,raw gold tints of her hair&#13;
and added to the transparency of her&#13;
unwonted pallor. I was marvelling&#13;
once agfiin over her outwardly brave&#13;
upbearing in spite of the constant&#13;
anxiety of which, pallid cheeks were&#13;
the only visible sign, when she said:&#13;
"I was sure we should hear from&#13;
Captain MacLeod today."&#13;
"He has probably met vlth rough&#13;
weather," I consoled. "It isn't, child's&#13;
play rounding Point Judith 11 this season,&#13;
you know."&#13;
"Rough weather or not," she insisted,&#13;
"he must have reached Gloucester&#13;
by now. And if he found I eter Johnson,&#13;
or if he didn't, he was to telephone*&#13;
you remember."&#13;
"Gloucester Is something of a&#13;
place," I explained ,^ adopting the vernacular.&#13;
"It includes no less than&#13;
eight villages and five thousand men&#13;
are engaged there in the fishing Industry.&#13;
MacLeod can't be expected to&#13;
learn in five minutes whether a man&#13;
named Peter Johnson is one of the&#13;
five thousand."&#13;
"But the whole community would&#13;
know if one of their number had such&#13;
an experience as he Just passed&#13;
through." And for this argument I&#13;
had no answer ready.&#13;
Fortunately, however, none was required&#13;
of me, for at that moment&#13;
steps were audible crossing the hall,&#13;
and when our ayes turned downward&#13;
tb*y encountered the dapper figure of&#13;
Louis, Cameron's French valet, baiting&#13;
respectfully on the threshold.&#13;
"Mademoiselle." he said, bowing,&#13;
"mais void das lettres qui Jal trouve."&#13;
And we saw, then, that he carried a&#13;
tin despatch bos.&#13;
Evelyn directed him to place it upon&#13;
the table by whloh she sat. It&#13;
seemed that she had" not given over&#13;
the Idea that the letters for which we&#13;
had searched so diligently on Sunday&#13;
were somewhere In the house, and&#13;
had directed Louis to bring to her&#13;
anything in the way of writing that&#13;
r*st/oa Doyarg street. ,&lt;€*»• **&gt; nine he could lay hi* tends upon.&#13;
ft &lt;•*&#13;
•:/••&#13;
# /&#13;
4.&#13;
/From my pocket Ldfvw on* tb«&lt;*opy&#13;
of the afternoon paper, and pointed to&#13;
^ the artiets^b&lt;mtth»CiUiiUal and t*&gt;* j&#13;
—Da ye* suppose that omaeVaav*T'&#13;
bearing on thsj&#13;
'4"&#13;
matterr&#13;
• ' . ' , &gt; " . . ' . ' - . . &lt; • • &gt; ' •&#13;
. ft* wdjsvtad fete speetaOssvand Nad&#13;
t*«*l»lf-comma, slowly, trot* tret H-Lonia.&#13;
slat. 11i^ a» smlleC &gt;*•--- -&#13;
1 have that boa in my oaikw?&#13;
"rtTOttms&#13;
• v a t ' " *-v*&lt; K'4, ;r|tf(t'«&#13;
•A* m &gt; • , &gt;&#13;
.?.&#13;
Ha had fouad therdaapatch box, he&#13;
told- ats bfddeh away behind some seldom&#13;
employed volume* in the library,&#13;
and,thUklng it wight contain that of&#13;
which. Ills* Qrayson, was to $u**t /kad&#13;
foced the lock; to dkoever several&#13;
t oaraftttty-tted packets of fetters.&#13;
to her service. As for Louis bis respectful&#13;
homage and fidelity were almost&#13;
pagan. I verily believe he would&#13;
willingly have suffered martyrdom to&#13;
serve her.&#13;
As he withdrew we fell avidly upon&#13;
the contents of the box, yet with small&#13;
hope of finding what we sought; tor&#13;
the letters it contained were all, apparently,&#13;
of distant date; letters, for&#13;
the most part, of a private, personal&#13;
nature, carefully assorted, and arranged&#13;
in red-taped or elastic-banded&#13;
bundles.&#13;
It was no more Idle curiosity which&#13;
impelled us to read many of thorn.&#13;
We were in a position which may best&#13;
be described as anomalous, Though&#13;
Cameron was my dearest friend 1&#13;
knew little of his life prior to our&#13;
meeting, and Evelyn, his niece and&#13;
ward, was scarcely less uninformed&#13;
than myself. In the letters just&#13;
brought to light there might, we decided,&#13;
be found some clue of incalculable&#13;
service in the task now before&#13;
us. And so we untied the tapes and&#13;
stripped off the bands and set ourselves&#13;
to careful painstaking examination.&#13;
Seldom have I engaged in a labor so&#13;
deadly uninteresting at one moment&#13;
and so keenly engrossing at the next.&#13;
There was correspondence here which&#13;
meant nothing to us whatever, and&#13;
there was correspondence which threw&#13;
a search-light upon portions of Cameron's&#13;
career, baring good deeds and&#13;
follies alike, without discrimination.&#13;
It was only natural, I suppose, that&#13;
we should dig up a romance—a gem&#13;
of luster shining amidst dun, sordid&#13;
surroundings. Evelyn and I came upon&#13;
two of its facets, simultaneously,&#13;
and paused,in our work to question its&#13;
disposal.'It seemed to us a holy thing,&#13;
too sacred for a strange touch, and,&#13;
even at the risk of passing over what&#13;
might prove our one agent of revelation,&#13;
we folded it away again with a&#13;
sense of guilt at having dared to lift&#13;
even the corner of the veil.&#13;
For a full hour I had scanned one&#13;
letter after another in absorhed in"&#13;
tentness. but with small profit. Evelyn,&#13;
across the table, had been quite&#13;
as busy. Rarely had we interrupted&#13;
our employment, with exchange of&#13;
words. But now the writing which I&#13;
HterdTxrovoked-excrftmatteft.&#13;
"Addison!" I cried, so sharply exiting&#13;
the silence that the girl started.&#13;
"Addison! Rid you ever hear of him?"&#13;
She gestured a negative. "Not that&#13;
I remember," she qualified. "Why?"&#13;
"Because we must find him," I declared,&#13;
a little excitedly, I imagine;&#13;
for the letter seemed wonderfully important.&#13;
Instantly she was all alert.&#13;
"What is it?" she asked, springing&#13;
up and coming to my side. "What&#13;
have you found?"&#13;
"Look!" I commanded, the sheet of&#13;
paver *.n one upraised hand, a finger&#13;
of nr* other hand pointing to a passage.&#13;
"Look! In 1903, your uncle Robert&#13;
was In Peking; and yet he gave&#13;
me his word that he had never visited&#13;
China."&#13;
Resting an arm on my shoulder and&#13;
bending forward she read for herself:&#13;
"Jdst to think! We were in Peking&#13;
together and neither of us was aware&#13;
of It until too late! What a foregathering&#13;
we missed! Even five minutes'&#13;
chat would have been something; but&#13;
I no sooner saw you, than the crowd&#13;
on Legation street swallowed you up."&#13;
"Have you read it all?"&#13;
"Not to the end," I told her, "Just&#13;
the beginning and the signature.&#13;
Come," I added, "we'll read it from&#13;
first to last, together."&#13;
It was written from Cairo, and bore&#13;
date of December 7, 1903.&#13;
"My dear Cameron," it began, "I&#13;
am wondering whether ycu are back&#13;
In New York again. However, you&#13;
will probably be tfeere- ierCbristmaa&#13;
and therefore this letter wuhaot-long&#13;
await yon. We have been making a&#13;
rather leisurely tour of the «aat Arrived&#13;
here two days ago and shall remain&#13;
until some time in January."&#13;
The writer then gave a general outline&#13;
of his travels. "Yon will probably&#13;
be surprised to learn that once&#13;
yon and I passed each other as ships&#13;
in the night, save only that we did not&#13;
even speak each other In passing," he&#13;
went on. "It was my last day—indeed&#13;
my last hour—in northern China.&#13;
Otherwise I should have mad* search&#13;
for you. Just to think! W« were In&#13;
Peking together, and neither of us&#13;
wae aware of it until too late. What&#13;
a foregathering we missed! 8v*n five&#13;
minutes' chat would have been something;&#13;
but I no sooner saw you, than&#13;
the crowd on Legation street swallowed&#13;
yon up. Half an hour later I&#13;
was on the train for Tientsin,"&#13;
The rest of the totter was rather&#13;
confusingly personal in its reference*&#13;
to mutual friend* and interest*. It&#13;
RHEUMATIS Backache and Piles&#13;
quart idea of the way she thanked&#13;
It would add so ssuokwto a&#13;
of bar swsetne— withh*&#13;
4 out detracting at all s&gt;o» th* eavisitotsw4J*&#13;
vst*i # o&#13;
bar&#13;
i ^4^*or* ^to*t'isip*tt*d to oojs**ov*A* M*&gt;.&#13;
a*&#13;
"Several years."&#13;
"Several is Indefinite. Too Indefinite.&#13;
Too Indefinite. Suppose wc&#13;
have him in here and find out exactly.&#13;
Possibly be knows Mr. Addison."&#13;
When Louis came, however, be&#13;
knew nothing. lie had never heard of&#13;
a Mr. Addison or of a Mr. Addison&#13;
Something, in all the three years and&#13;
eight months of his service with Mr.&#13;
Cameron. So Evelyn thanked him&#13;
once more in her own gracious way&#13;
and we continued ouzvwork, directing&#13;
our efforts especially now to unearthing&#13;
further Addison-signcd letters&#13;
which might prove enlightening.&#13;
"Why hhould Fnclo Robert tell you&#13;
he had nrver been in China?" Evelyn&#13;
asked me, looking up suddenly and&#13;
dropping to lur lap the letter she was&#13;
at that moment examining. "I can't&#13;
understand that."&#13;
"Nor I," I admitted. "If I had asked&#13;
him out of idle curiosity he would&#13;
have been jusMlled perhaps in misleading&#13;
me; but he must have known&#13;
that it was in his interest I made the&#13;
inquiry."&#13;
For just a moment she sat in silence,&#13;
her narrowed gaze on the glowing&#13;
embers in the fireplace. Then she&#13;
turned to me again.&#13;
"Do you think. Philip, it was bocause&#13;
he iiad something to hide?" she&#13;
asked, seriously. "Something lie was&#13;
ashamed of and feared might become&#13;
known?"&#13;
Instantly I sprang to my friend's&#13;
defense.&#13;
"No," I assured her, with emphasis.&#13;
"No, Evelyn. Whatever his molive&#13;
was, I am satisfied it-had no dishonorable&#13;
basis. If he told mo a deliberate&#13;
falsehood it was not to spare himBelt'.&#13;
Possibly—yes, probably, it was to&#13;
shield others."&#13;
I was perfectly sincere in this, but&#13;
even had I believed otherwise I should&#13;
have been tempted to prevarication&#13;
could I have foreseen my reward. Hefore&#13;
1 quite realized her purpose Evelyn&#13;
was out of her chair, had slipped&#13;
over behind me, and encircling my&#13;
•-neck with her arms, had pressed her&#13;
llpfr-sqftly to my check.&#13;
"Oh/lrow glad 1 am to hear you say&#13;
that! YouS&lt;ievo in his bigness—in&#13;
his nobility, just-^3 I do, don't you,&#13;
Philip, dear?" \ .&#13;
—"I'm mire h&lt;: could~JH*ver-^have been&#13;
Euilty of anything dishonorable/.'^1 declared&#13;
again, imprisoning her hitrrtl^.&#13;
Rut the next moment, hearing steps&#13;
again crossing tho hall, I reluctantly&#13;
released (hem.&#13;
For a third time Ixmis stood in the&#13;
doorway. Now he upheld a small redhound&#13;
hook, and his face was beaming.&#13;
"Voila, mademoiselle!" he exclaimed,&#13;
delightedly. "Je vlcns de trouvant&#13;
co livre."&#13;
It was a hock of addresses, and the&#13;
valet, nervously turning the pages,&#13;
put his finger upon the name of Horatio&#13;
Addison, M. IX, with the air of&#13;
one who had discovered buried treasure.&#13;
I am Inclined to think that we&#13;
were ourselves almost as demonstratively&#13;
elated'as he, for though we&#13;
could not be sure that this was Cameron's&#13;
correspondent, the odds certainly&#13;
favored that conclusion; and&#13;
unless' the physician had died or&#13;
moved away since the entry was made,&#13;
we were now in possession of his address,&#13;
which chanced to be an apartment&#13;
house on Madison avenue^that&#13;
I knew to be given over entirely to&#13;
doctors' oflice*. v&#13;
- This time Evelyn assured Louis that&#13;
he was not merely a* "good boy" but&#13;
as Incomparable assistant, and the&#13;
richness of the reward came nign to&#13;
totally wrecking his composure, for,&#13;
a* he started to back from the room,&#13;
1 detected unmistakable tears glistening&#13;
on bis lashes.&#13;
^. '•Louis/' I checked him, with suddftf"&#13;
inspiration, "apportez-nous le dir*&#13;
cf.frtr*r telejjhonle, s'il votis plait."&#13;
sight of my own position. Now I asked&#13;
myself, on what ground was I to make&#13;
my plea for information? To tell this&#13;
Dr Addison the whole story would&#13;
certainly be inexpedieut. To hint even&#13;
at ularm concerning Cameron might&#13;
Involve the precipitation of that financial&#13;
disaster he had feared and regarding&#13;
which he had warned me. Indeed,&#13;
would not any effort to obtain the&#13;
facts I desired he likely to acouiso uus-&#13;
Dioion, no matter how delicately&#13;
made?&#13;
The more I pondered the uituation&#13;
sitting their thoughtfully while one&#13;
after another the put km! L; who'had&#13;
preceded me parsed into the physician&#13;
'H consultation roo..., the more beggarly,&#13;
it seemed to i.-e, became my&#13;
chances of success. rViul when, at&#13;
length, my turn camt to enter the&#13;
presence of my friend's friend, I was&#13;
about persuaded that I should very&#13;
soon be making an ignominious exit,*&#13;
branded as an impertinently meddling&#13;
busybody.&#13;
I have nlways contended that it was&#13;
I Dr. Addison's severely professional air&#13;
I which wan responsible for my inspiration,&#13;
for no thought of nidi a course&#13;
occurred to me, until l a n d i n g dumbly&#13;
hesitant before, him, I became, conscious&#13;
that he was making mental inventory&#13;
nf me with a view lu a diagnosis.&#13;
The penetration of&#13;
prei;t\'fl mo at once,&#13;
eyes W'MO like- a paii&#13;
probes; and iliey wer&#13;
feature. Aside from&#13;
was commonplace.&#13;
"Doctor," I :;ai(i. and Hie sound of&#13;
my voice was it relief to the strained&#13;
tension of i he moment, "I learned of&#13;
you through Mr. Cam'Ton—-Afr. Robert&#13;
Cameron, a mutual friend,''&#13;
I hoped to see his expression brighten&#13;
-it. the name, hut it did not. If&#13;
there was nay change whatever it was&#13;
in the reverse dtrceiicm. Alter a second's&#13;
ilel'hf ration he asked:&#13;
"You v.i..h to consult me regarding&#13;
yourself?"&#13;
On a sudden impulse I answered,&#13;
"Yes," though 1 had neither ache nor&#13;
pain, and, BO far as I could Judge,&#13;
was perfectly normal.&#13;
• "I fcce," lie replied. "Am 1 right&#13;
In assuming that your trouble is of&#13;
a n e r v o u s c h a r a c t e r ? " _&#13;
Heaven knows that, in spite oTrhy&#13;
fancied normality there had been sufficient&#13;
reason in the past few weeks&#13;
for my nerves to go awry. I confessed&#13;
that I had been under considerable&#13;
mental strain.&#13;
Thereupon, having bade me be seat-&#13;
We do not ask you to buy—send&#13;
your name and address and receive&#13;
a sample bottle free.&#13;
Z-M-O penetrates to bone thru&#13;
skiu and muscle and removes pain.&#13;
5 minutes after you apply it.&#13;
You may not need Z-M-O today,&#13;
&gt;Tf t tomorrow pay any price to&#13;
relieve pain.&#13;
iRMBOTTLE&#13;
If you iiave Rheumatism, Piles&#13;
or Backache write to M. K. Zaegel&#13;
&amp; Co., Q13 Main St., Shebov^an,&#13;
Wis., for a free bottle Z-M-O by&#13;
return mail. At dru^ stores, 25 cts.&#13;
'%&#13;
FORMALITY.&#13;
11 i:-i gaze im&#13;
liis steel gray&#13;
of converging&#13;
• !iis dominant '&#13;
them his face 1&#13;
"Will you take my card to your .sister&#13;
and tcH her i would like to&#13;
speak to her on u very important matter?"&#13;
"You'll probably have to tako is up&#13;
with her secretary."&#13;
ed&#13;
wfj&#13;
mc with questions&#13;
ml&#13;
rt AM when the book was brought the&#13;
fact t**t Dr. Addison's address had&#13;
not bejsn changed was promptly established.&#13;
1 was for calling him up,&#13;
then and ;&gt;£re, but Evelyn pointed to&#13;
jb* dock stnd advised patience. It&#13;
wa* already after midnight,&#13;
"Tomorrow," she said, in her wise&#13;
fashion, "you vrall call on him, and&#13;
Ieam, if possible, how Uncle Robert&#13;
replied to that ktcer. There is a dif&#13;
ference, you know, Philip, between betag&#13;
in a place and having some one&#13;
see yon there. No ^*fc's eyes are infallible."&#13;
CHAPTER X i l l .&#13;
When Damon Doubteo Pythlss.&#13;
Not until 1 "bad been pat^d Into an&#13;
elevator by a dainty young woman In&#13;
tha white habit of a trainuj nurse,&#13;
shot up four floors into the lands of&#13;
another who might have be«ji the&#13;
first's twin sister, and ushered by her,&#13;
I wish J conld gfv* *v«n a half ad*- rwas .signed: "Alwajw.wtth warn r* jin turn, Into a severely professional&#13;
-gsrd, Addiaon." 1 appearing waiting room, did it ociar&#13;
"Do yon Sttppo** that &gt; hi* flrM to me that I wa* upon an errand &lt;o-{&#13;
or hi* last T" Evelyn asked me i volving tho empfoymant of an ea*&#13;
a* weoaAO to it. traordlnary degree of tact. 80 in-&#13;
, Trefug* to sappo**&#13;
n '•X returned, boed bad I been with the Importance&#13;
.aosttog. ^U'aan eve* chance. WUV, ot H t « i « i &gt; h « t h ^ C a m o r o ^ d w&#13;
And that of late I am losing my power&#13;
«f mental co-ordination."&#13;
The ardor with which h« seized&#13;
upon this index of ray supposed malady&#13;
was amusing. Instantly he grew&#13;
obviously and deeply interested. I&#13;
have since learned that what is known&#13;
as confusionai insanity, a rare condition,&#13;
usually has its Inception in this&#13;
wTs^"4*4thout essential emotional disturbance,&#13;
if I may quote an authority.&#13;
At trie time, I believe he was&#13;
suspicious^OT a developing paresis.&#13;
What Mthought. however, or what&#13;
he did not, is aside from the story. •!&#13;
know only that his manner changed&#13;
abruptly, his object evidently being to&#13;
gain my full con fide 0 en. Whereupon,&#13;
the bars of reserve 1',-vered between&#13;
us, I ventured to revt-*^ "o our so-called&#13;
"mutual friend."&#13;
(TO BE CON'WUED.)&#13;
Faults of the Asroplane.&#13;
Commercially the prroplane is useless&#13;
in its present mte. It cannot&#13;
carry any great wf'#it, it will not&#13;
stand.any extra atr.*n and is unable&#13;
to fly unless the w&lt;ather be almost&#13;
perfect. Automatic s ability is still in&#13;
an Imperfect stage, and the motors&#13;
are not altogether rel-eble. Last, but&#13;
not least, it is a very expensive machine,&#13;
both in its first cost and in tho&#13;
outlay necessary to keep it in proper&#13;
condition. These faults, as well aa&#13;
many others, must tr» overcome before&#13;
we have a practical flying machine.&#13;
Danger must r&gt;* eliminated to&#13;
a greater degree, ard to do this it 1»&#13;
necessary to produce a machine that&#13;
will automatically balance Itself. A&#13;
thoroughly reliable motor and a machin*&#13;
capable of stsxdiig any *xtrt&#13;
•train suddenly tlroo* upon it *r*-&#13;
other r*a«lr*BMnt* nt th* Catoasr *****&#13;
Cough, Cold&#13;
Sore Throat&#13;
Sloan's Liniment gives&#13;
quick relief iur cou^h, cold,&#13;
hoanseiLes:*. s o r e t h r o a t ,&#13;
croup, asthma, buy fever&#13;
and bronchitis.&#13;
HERE'S PROOF.&#13;
MR. Ar.flrcjrr W, Piueii.of FrorlonJa,&#13;
K;in,, WI'JUM: " W«) UMS hiuau'M Lintmc-&#13;
nt, in tho family atut find it .111 nxcullont&#13;
relief for COUIH ami hay lovor&#13;
atUnk*. It Ht(j]JH coiixbiug and fiU'-K-'Z-&#13;
_hji{ aimewt lubtuiilly."&#13;
SLOANS&#13;
LINIMENT&#13;
RELIEVED SORE THROAT.&#13;
MHH. I.. Bmcwitk, of Mrxlollrt.Fl*.,&#13;
writ**: " I bought ono b&lt;&gt;Ul« of your&#13;
Liniment ami Itilhl inenll the good In&#13;
the world. My thront va* very Boro,&#13;
and It cured we of my trouble.&#13;
GOOD FOR COLD AND CROUP.&#13;
MR. W. ft. STRANG!'., 3721 Elmvood&#13;
Atoiiun, Chicago, III., writes; "A little&#13;
boy next dixir had croup. I gave&#13;
the mother Hloan'M I.iulmunt to try,&#13;
8ho gu?a htiu thre-o drop* on engar&#13;
before ROIIIK to bod, and ho fi' ' up&#13;
without tho i.vuup in tho morning."&#13;
Moo, 25c., 6O0., $1.00&#13;
Sloan's&#13;
Trent;.*&#13;
on tha&#13;
Horse&#13;
sentfree.&#13;
Addretf&#13;
Dr.&#13;
.ftUrlS. Sloan&#13;
:V&#13;
• H&#13;
&gt;&amp;&#13;
Av&#13;
•:&gt; % &lt;&#13;
&amp; &amp; i *&#13;
Constipation&#13;
Vanishes Forever&#13;
Prompt Retief—Perraaaeat C u m&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never&#13;
fail. Purely vegetable&#13;
— act surely&#13;
but gently on&#13;
the liver.&#13;
Stop after&#13;
dinner distress—&#13;
cure&#13;
mdige8tlon,, .-..^.,.&#13;
improve the cotnptoddttj btlglHisn tbgcyo,&#13;
SMALL POL, SMALL DO0K, SMALL HUCK.&#13;
. Genuine mutt bear Signature&#13;
FREETOJOXSOFFEREBS&#13;
'4. • M . *Y&amp; •'&amp;•&#13;
vv&#13;
**»*.—feint NUaotat. \&#13;
' V&#13;
w&#13;
/"&#13;
^^.:^^¾ * ^ ^ &gt; - r v - ^ M&#13;
):,&lt;u&#13;
T&gt; ' ft&#13;
fc&amp;rt*&#13;
VJ&#13;
W:&#13;
-..J ' • • wmmrw^^mian^m^fmm^^j i,i i -m i i*~~*mmimmmmmmmmmmmmmmmiBm'*m****lF'mim**immmimmjm&#13;
*»•-.-iiV&#13;
• » • * * • •*P&#13;
5&amp;r&#13;
"tf'&#13;
I*..:&#13;
.1&#13;
- - , 1 . -&#13;
3'''' •.*•&#13;
It-; •&#13;
If the power proposition is bothering you, call and let us&#13;
explain the merits of the I H C line of gasoline engines. We&#13;
have an I I I C gasoline engine to fill every need — tractors,&#13;
portable, stationary, air and water-cooled. In case you want&#13;
kerosene, gas, or alcohol attachments, we will be glad to supply&#13;
you. If you have a difficult power proposition to solve, call&#13;
and we will assist you to figure it out. We not only have the&#13;
best engine on the market, but we have the size and style&#13;
you need. Call and look over our line, and whether you buy&#13;
or not we will be glad to see you. We want to number you&#13;
as one of our friends. Call today and get a catalogue. It's&#13;
yours for the asking, and we are anxious for you to have it.&#13;
MODEL PEN FOR THE SWINE&#13;
Feed Trough Hae Swinging Gate,&#13;
Which May Be Dropped While&#13;
Feed la Being Prepared.&#13;
This model pig pes should be located&#13;
on level ground, built cold-tight.&#13;
on three sides and facing the south,&#13;
writes Carroll Murray of Wadhame,&#13;
N. Y., in the Missouri Valley Farmer.&#13;
K&#13;
B&#13;
i&amp;&#13;
t&#13;
C_TllEHQ«EflEGOOD600DSATTH£L0WE5TPRiCH&#13;
Dinkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
'in&#13;
The Country Town&#13;
Country towns do not differ materially,&#13;
That is to say, when one unrteruUndb&#13;
i.h(; oeulinieriL i&gt;,c&gt;vu;lin^ in one&#13;
small towij, he knows about all ot&#13;
them.&#13;
The cbifct eubject of conversation&#13;
when a fellow returns to the small&#13;
town in which he was born, is the&#13;
Change il;At has been wrought -l&gt;y&#13;
time, You will be informed that tb*re&#13;
are only one or two men in business&#13;
now, who were when you left. The&#13;
many deaths that have taken place&#13;
will be recounted to you—and the&#13;
characteristics of those who have passed&#13;
on.&#13;
Then, you will be informed that&#13;
"things are not like they used to be.'&#13;
The boys and girls do not have as&#13;
much fan as they bad when you were&#13;
a boy or girl. New tangled ways have&#13;
routed &lt;&gt;ut the good old ways which&#13;
you anderBlood~«r welV-yw~ willbe&#13;
informed-*and all of that,&#13;
Bat the tru n i&lt;, T&gt;aie makes precious&#13;
little d»ffer*nc«. The boys and&#13;
girls today do have just at&#13;
good a time as we had, although they&#13;
may have it in different ways in saase&#13;
respects. They may now ride in an&#13;
tos instead ot buggies; they may bate&#13;
fail dress ball instead ot the old lash&#13;
ioned dance*; tbey may dress differ&#13;
ently every day in the week. Bat i&#13;
tbe final analysis things are prett;&#13;
much the same.&#13;
There is btill tbe freckled face boy&#13;
aroand the corner giving big re&#13;
apples to the girl wbo lives down tb&#13;
ttreet. There is the bashful awkwar&#13;
fellow at whom tbe girls langb and,&#13;
wbo is destined to overcome b 8 bash&#13;
fulness and make as illustrious citize&#13;
There is tbl good mother whose so&#13;
has beeo missing a] I these years&#13;
tbe town drunkard, and tbe v&#13;
wit and the straggling pastor ot t i e&#13;
little church,&#13;
The town pump may have given&#13;
way to tbe Lydrant, bat tbe qaencfaf*&#13;
ing of tbe thirst goes on jast the same,&#13;
tameges take place a* of yore, and&#13;
r the straggle for existence is as fierce&#13;
Mil has ever been. Tbe old maid&#13;
who it called in every time any one&#13;
gets sick is still with us, God bless ber,&#13;
and the good grandmother still baa to&#13;
look after the children when daughter&#13;
goes for a visit. G. F. B.&#13;
Cross Section View.&#13;
Explanation: A, shed; B, platform; C,&#13;
driveway; D, feeding platform; E,&#13;
trough; F, swinging gate.&#13;
It is 12 by 15 feet in else, with a platform&#13;
(B) of heavy material built&#13;
about 12 inches from the ground and&#13;
extending 8 feet beyond the shed.&#13;
Another platform (D) 10 by 12 feet,&#13;
serves as a place for the pigs to stand&#13;
while feeding. The litter from the&#13;
two platforms can be scraped down to&#13;
the earth part (C), and a wagon&#13;
driven through to haul It out The&#13;
gates at each Bide sof the pen are divided&#13;
to drive through. The feed&#13;
trough has a swinging gate (F), which&#13;
may be dropped to position Q to keep&#13;
the pigs out while the trough is being&#13;
filled.&#13;
TRUTH&#13;
Don't Overt*&#13;
that sebscriptkw. If rot&#13;
are la arrears rasa ember&#13;
that we csa always find&#13;
good ose for&#13;
the MONEY&#13;
Action In Light Horses. ]&#13;
Action is extremely important in&#13;
light horses. It should be straight |&#13;
and true. At the trot it should be&#13;
what is known as&gt; the straight line&#13;
trot, no wabbling from one side to '&#13;
the other, or swinging the feet The :&#13;
action from behind should be straight,&#13;
the feet picked up amartlj^shocks |&#13;
well flexed and the feet ot both lore j&#13;
and hind legs at each step placed lm-|&#13;
mediately in front of tbe former no-,&#13;
sltlon.&#13;
Local Notes&#13;
Glen Fisk underwent an operation&#13;
at the Sanitarium Tuesday.&#13;
Mrs, Wm. Keunedy 8r. and&#13;
daughter, May, were Howell visitors&#13;
Tuesday.,&#13;
P?rry Towle aud son of Pontiac&#13;
are spending some time at their&#13;
farm south and west of town.&#13;
Leo Coyle wbo has been spendsome&#13;
time with brother, R^v. Fr.&#13;
Coyle returned to his home at&#13;
Northfield Monday.&#13;
Attend Dancer's sale nt Stock*&#13;
bridge, before it ends. You an)&#13;
sure to find some bargains thai&#13;
1! interest you.&#13;
Alfalfa Better Than Clover. |&#13;
As a food for all kinds of live stock, i&#13;
alfalfa has been found the "king of j&#13;
forage crops." It is rich in protein ;&#13;
and well adapted for the use in a '&#13;
feeding ration with corn. It makes&#13;
excellent hay, and is more digestible&#13;
than most forms of Tough feed. Nunv i&#13;
erous feeding records show that it Is |&#13;
worth fully a half more than olover&#13;
hay, and many feeders claim it to be&#13;
almost equal to such materials as,&#13;
wheat bran.&#13;
Classified Advertising&#13;
FOR SALE—Cut tint? box, buggy and&#13;
cutter Inquire it L E, Richards&#13;
FOUND—IQ *h« village of Fiocinoy&#13;
a buru ot money. Owner ^an have&#13;
by proving property and paying lor&#13;
this notice. Jas. VI. Harris, lti&#13;
FOR BALE—Hard coai fixtures&#13;
lor a Round Oak stove No 18 Inquire&#13;
of W 1! MiUr. It3&#13;
Henev lor sal*, Inquire of Silas E&#13;
Sw«t&lt;uout. Ira&#13;
FOUND—A kfy rinc containing five&#13;
key*. Owner can have by caflinpr atthis&#13;
office and paying tor this adv,&#13;
FOR SALE— .louse and two lots lo*&#13;
quire ot \lrs. Addie Potterton. It3&#13;
FOR SALE—1U acres ot land on the&#13;
instal ment plan, small payment&#13;
down and lontr terms for balance.&#13;
Would take small payment in vill&#13;
age propertv. Address bos 695,&#13;
Howell, Mich. It8&#13;
* If it is worth&#13;
doing at all,&#13;
it's worth doing&#13;
well&#13;
•D&#13;
Fust class work&#13;
•; at aO timet »&#13;
our motto.&#13;
D&#13;
Let us figure&#13;
with you on&#13;
fournett job.&#13;
I&#13;
Sec'y of State Marti ndale ca&#13;
attention to the fact'hat the board&#13;
of election inspector* in everyvoting&#13;
precinct in tbe state must&#13;
be in session January 25, the last&#13;
Saturday in tbe month, for the&#13;
purpose of conducting the enrollment.&#13;
S C H O O L&#13;
For Sale!&#13;
Hotel Tuomey&#13;
One Better—Or Trade!&#13;
What have you got ?&#13;
\&#13;
Who Called?&#13;
£ , 2 1 ¾ Lock Box 40, Brighton.&#13;
Tbe second arade bavs finished tbeir&#13;
maps of the village.&#13;
Anna Lennon visited school Monday.&#13;
Gertrude Green and fiose Flintoft&#13;
are absent on account of sickness.&#13;
Bessie Johnson visited school Tbnrs*&#13;
day.&#13;
LaBue Moran and Marios Reason&#13;
visited sobool Friday p. m. -&#13;
Myron Dunning was absent Monday&#13;
on account ot liokaeei.&#13;
Loin Benbam visited school Monday&#13;
The olastmatat of Glean Fiske&#13;
showed their sympathy by presenting&#13;
him wish a booqoat of flowers.&#13;
PINOKNEr&#13;
Corrected every Wednesday morning&#13;
WHEAT—f US&#13;
BYE-Mc&#13;
0\T8-tt&#13;
OHIONS-il.OO, v&#13;
roTATOM-tfc$$&#13;
BTJTTER-Me* Jtfi&#13;
EGGS-24c. 0 \&#13;
GHICKKfS-Uve., lie. nene40c.&#13;
"Let's play the game ot 'Truth,'"&#13;
said Marjory, as she poured the coffee&#13;
from her new percolator.&#13;
"I thought this society was formed&#13;
for the purpose of discussing topics&#13;
of the day and not for frivolous pursuits,"&#13;
declared the lofty browed,&#13;
spectacled Imogene.&#13;
"Well, it was," put in Amy, "but we&#13;
needn't be intelligent every second of&#13;
every meeting."&#13;
"Perfectly right," said Inez. "We've&#13;
sifted the tariff question, immigration,&#13;
municipal ownership and the&#13;
child's welfare this afternoon. If we&#13;
argue any more there won't he anything&#13;
left for next week's meeting."&#13;
"I don't know how to play 'Truth/&#13;
I never heard of such a game in&#13;
Bucyrus," said Bernice, the visiting&#13;
girl.&#13;
"Well, all you do is Just to tell&#13;
every girl here exactly what you think&#13;
of her," explained Edith. "You must&#13;
tell her good qualities and her bad&#13;
qualities. But it must be the plain,&#13;
unvarnished truth, Irrespective of anybody's&#13;
feelings."&#13;
"Oh, I couldn't do that In a million&#13;
years/' gasped Amy. "I think you are&#13;
all perfect dears."&#13;
"But everybody plays 'Truth,'" declared&#13;
Marjory. "It's fascinating. Besides,&#13;
it's good for any girl to learn&#13;
her faults. Some great philosopher&#13;
said, 'Know thyself.' I forget who he&#13;
was, hut he said it, anyway. And&#13;
none of us will get angry, no matter&#13;
what is said, will we, girls?"&#13;
"No, indeed," returned an emphatio&#13;
chorus. "We are too broadmlnded for&#13;
that."&#13;
"Come, Helen, you begin the game,"&#13;
suggested Marjory.&#13;
"All right, I'll start with Inez," assented&#13;
Helen, without hesitation.&#13;
"Inez, you have a sweet, lovely disposition,&#13;
and you are lots of fun, but you&#13;
have no idea of style or dress. It's&#13;
a pity. Amy said only yesterday, 'How&#13;
can that girl wear that impossible&#13;
white polo coat when she is so fat and&#13;
dumpy?'"&#13;
"Why, Helen, how dare you say&#13;
such a thing?" demanded Amy, indignantly.&#13;
"I never said that!"&#13;
"You know you did," calmly answered&#13;
Helen.&#13;
"It isn't kind to make fun of one's&#13;
physical imperfections," declared&#13;
Inez, haughtily. "I did'nt dream that&#13;
my dearest friend would do so ignoble&#13;
a thing. I'll never forget it."&#13;
"You know, Inez, we promised at&#13;
the beginning that we wouldn't get&#13;
angry," said Marjory, putting her arm&#13;
around the offended one.&#13;
"I'm not angry. No, indeed. Not at&#13;
all. F&amp;r from it. But I'll have to be&#13;
going. Goodby." And as Inez left she&#13;
slammed the door behind her,—&#13;
"Who will tell me the truth?" inquired&#13;
Edith, breaking the silence.&#13;
"I will," eagerly offered Imogene.&#13;
"You are a stunning looking girl, but&#13;
you can think and talk about nothing&#13;
except dress and men. You are man&#13;
crazy. It's absurd!"&#13;
"Well, thank goodness, I'm not always&#13;
quoting Latin that ^nobody cares&#13;
about or understands," snapped Edith,&#13;
"My brother said last night, 'Preserve&#13;
me from that walking bookshop.'" '&#13;
Imogene opened her mouth to speak,&#13;
then closed it firmly and held her&#13;
hands over it.&#13;
"Will some one tell me something?"&#13;
begged Bernice of Bucyrus. "I'm not&#13;
easily offended. I think this game is&#13;
awtully cute."&#13;
**If you really want me to, I'll say&#13;
that if you didn't whine so and if you&#13;
wore your skirts shorter and your&#13;
waists longer, and if you combed&#13;
your hair in 1911 style, instead of 1492&#13;
fashion, and if you didn't say 'How&#13;
cute!' a dozen times a minute, yon&#13;
might make a presentable visiting&#13;
girl," vouchsafed Edith.&#13;
"Oh, water, please—I'm faint,"&#13;
gasped Bernice of Bucyrus. "Now I'm&#13;
going home to mother."&#13;
Then Marjory was told that she&#13;
wasn't sincere because she was too&#13;
sweet to everybody, and Helen was faformed&#13;
that she bad no tact and that&#13;
she wasn't amiable enough to be popular.&#13;
When the last girl had departed&#13;
Marjory rushed into her mother's&#13;
room, threw her arms around her&#13;
mother's neck and promptly burst into&#13;
tears.&#13;
"Our club has disbanded," Bhe sobbed.&#13;
"Every girl is angry at every&#13;
other girl. "I haven't a friend in the&#13;
world. My heart is broken. OH, that&#13;
horrible, horrible. game! Why doea&#13;
anybody ever tell the truth?"&#13;
Found Riches In Australia.&#13;
How to become a millionaire It to&#13;
fol!ow«ln the footsteps of Sydney Kidman,&#13;
the Queensland cattle Una*, who&#13;
holds more land than anyone else in&#13;
Australia, his runs aggregating something&#13;
like 15,000 square miles, which&#13;
is, he confesses, "far too much for&#13;
any one man to have."&#13;
Leaving his parents' home near&#13;
Adelaide, 42 years ago, at the age of&#13;
IS, to seek his fortune, ho got employment&#13;
aa a cowboy on the Gipps&#13;
station at two dollars a wek. Then ha&#13;
carted wood and drove bullocks on the&#13;
Darling and was one of tbe first at&#13;
Oobarruah, With his brother George&#13;
l a want in for cattle and bona dealtag;&#13;
and, in partnership with othera,&#13;
took MovtbaokM mafl contract* in vartona&#13;
states In Australia. There was&#13;
A lot of money mado hi those daya&#13;
cad Kidman got ha ahara aMt&#13;
^ ' -•&gt;••+•*.,&#13;
Don't You Want To See The&#13;
Coats We Are Now Selling At -•;&#13;
$«.75 v*e,&#13;
Positively&#13;
Unmatchable&#13;
E l s e w h e r e&#13;
.-(&#13;
Cap Fare Paid on $15. Purchases or Mope.&#13;
W. J. DANCER &amp; COMPANY ) /&#13;
Stockbridge, Mich.&#13;
u m TOWN MARSHAL"&#13;
A Pour A c t Comedy Drama&#13;
Will be presented under auspices of the&#13;
V Eipworth League of the ML E . Church, at&#13;
* Pinckney Opera House , ^&#13;
1 ?.•*» .::^&#13;
Cast of Characters:&#13;
.ALGER HAI&#13;
_ E . E. HOY*&#13;
Harold Desmond, The Town Marshall&#13;
Mark Jamieson, A Lawyer of Evil Tendencies^.&#13;
Uucle JVb Jenkins, A South Dakota Farmer _ E A B L TUPPMI&#13;
Willis Hartley,*A Wealthy Grain Dealer_ L Y » N HENDBI&#13;
William Ton-euce, A Man With a Past..„ WARD SWABTHOUT&#13;
Ikey Levinsky, A Jewish Peddler ft. W. CAVEBLT&#13;
Laura Hartley, A Village Belle ... KITSEY ALLISON&#13;
Mary Ann Hartley, A Spinster BEULAH BURGESS&#13;
Lucy Ames, A Village Hoyden AATA BULLIS&#13;
Synopsis:&#13;
ACT I—Locy pmecoted. Jenkins tells Alary Ann. of his troubles. A wrongtd&#13;
man iu tbe clutches of a scoundrel. %jevinskey bears a joke which gets him into&#13;
trouble. Laura defends Lucy. Hartley's safe rifled and important documents stolen*&#13;
"You are a brava man Mr. Desmond." The plot. Jamieson springs his mine. "Be&#13;
bem-a an assumed name!" Desmond at Bay. "I am a man of honor. Farewell!"&#13;
ACT II—Levinsky confides a secret to Jenkins. "I am a Jew aud I never bujfl&#13;
hogs on a Saturday." Lucy fetches letter to Desmond The quarrel. "This is my&#13;
answer!" The story of a wronged man. "My father is inoo«*nt, though a. convict,"&#13;
Jenkins courts Mary Ann. Desmond goes to discharge.his duty. "I shall stand before&#13;
you tomorrow without shame or I shall have ceased to live!"&#13;
ACT III—Jenkins and Levinsky alone in the dugout. Jenkins explains the meaning&#13;
of the word "gissaro." Torrance a fugitive. Desmond recognises his father. Tna&#13;
story. "Arrest me, my son, it i» your duty!" "I sbaJl do my duty and free yon!" Tha&#13;
escape. «1 aloue am guilty I" A woman's sorrow. ''My heart is breaking!"&#13;
ACT rvWamitson threatens Laura. "I despise you!" The threat. Jenkins polls&#13;
Jamieson's nose, Mary Ann's wedding lingerie exposed. "A new saasiety cast word."&#13;
Desmond returns. Laura sees light at last. "He assumed his father's guilt to save aim!" &lt;&#13;
Jamieson unmasked. "My faith in you will endure forever!" The betrothal.&#13;
f&#13;
* . - i * i&#13;
. , ' • , . . / - "&#13;
Reserved Seats On Sale at Brown's Drug Store&#13;
Admission, 15 and 25 cents&#13;
{Electric Bitters&#13;
In&#13;
they am tfia&#13;
rORKIDNIY&#13;
tTOMAOH&#13;
IsNap • • asst&#13;
a&#13;
'KKSstf&#13;
X. .i.»-««ni.. • • &gt; * • • $ %&#13;
"ViAv'*;. •*•;•['•''•&gt;•• •&lt; ^ ¾ ^ %.'•''.&gt;&#13;
? • ' &lt; • &gt;'.&gt;•?&gt; v \ i</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch January 16, 1913</text>
              </elementText>
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              <elementText elementTextId="11018">
                <text>January 16, 1913 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="11022">
                <text>1913-01-16</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="11023">
                <text>Roy W. Caverly</text>
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        <name>pinckney dispatch</name>
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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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          <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="37332">
              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan, Thursday, January 23, 1913 No. 4&#13;
Jw^fi-7&#13;
mmm&amp;mmmmmmtmmmmm&#13;
You Can't Buy Inferiority in a&#13;
Made-to-fldeastire by Ed. V.&#13;
Priced Co., Chicago&#13;
!&#13;
_ Profressiyes Tate Notice&#13;
The enrol I meat board will be in&#13;
session from 7:00 a. m to 5:00 p.&#13;
m. ou Saturday, Jnn. 25,1913, in&#13;
every voting precinct in Michigan&#13;
and unless the u amber of Progressives&#13;
enrolled are equal to 15&#13;
percent of tbe vote cast for our&#13;
candidate for Secretary of State&#13;
at tbe last election we will be as*&#13;
able to have a state ticket in tbe&#13;
field at tbe spring election. Doo*j&#13;
forget the date. By order of Co^&#13;
Good workmanship, which is an assurance that the clotbjo. * ^ ' G e o r 8 e L* Fisber,Chair*sa&gt;&#13;
will retain their shapeliness, is distinctly evident in every&#13;
garment. It matters not what standard yon measure Ed. V.&#13;
Price &amp; Co. tailoring—it has achieved an excellence that&#13;
challenges comparison with the creations of the most exclusive&#13;
tailoring shops and offers values that have never'been duphcati&#13;
ed for the jaoney.&#13;
F. J. Fishbeek, Secretamj&#13;
| At this time of the year when you are experiencing such difficulties |&#13;
\ in choosing a Flour which will make first class pastry as well as |&#13;
| bread, we have secured the agency of two of the Best Brands on the |&#13;
market&#13;
iOvflr 5 0 0 Samples of Handsome Spring and&#13;
Summer Patterns to Choose From.&#13;
4&#13;
I*&#13;
Stott's "Columbus'* at 80c per 25 lb. sack has no superior&#13;
Thoman's "Moss Rose" at 80c per 25 lb. sack is second to none&#13;
W e also have in stock:&#13;
Berdan's Chef, at 85c per 251b. sack Henkel's Bread at 75c per 25 lb. sack&#13;
Parshall's Universal at 70c per 25 lb. sack Hoyt's Purity at 70c per 25 lb. sack&#13;
Dexter's Best at 70c per 25 lb. sack&#13;
Hoyt Bros. Buckwheat, White Fawn from Unadilla, Parshall's Buckwheat ^ g&#13;
Let us quote you quantity prices on these flours&#13;
Kara and Old Tavern Syrup in gallon and £ gallons&#13;
Hill's Little Peerless Broom (guaranteed to outlive 2 ordinary brooms) at 50c&#13;
Hi 11*8 Little Miss, Regular 50c Broom at 40c Hill's Flagship, Regular 35c Broom at 25c 3&#13;
Beardsley's Little Gem, Regular 45c Broom at 85c&#13;
Red Star Kerosene, AJdiaon Cheese, Sealshipt Oysters, Butter Nut and Very Best Bread,&#13;
Wholesome and Tip Top Bread. We guarantee onr goods to be of Highest Quality.&#13;
MONKS B R O T H E R S&#13;
!W. W. BARNARD&#13;
jj,^__„„ _ _ _ ___&#13;
LiUlliiUiUiUlUiUlUilUUiiiiUiUiUiUiUiUiiiiliiUiAliAaiAiiU&#13;
[Have You&#13;
Bought that Heating Stove&#13;
OP that New Range? If not&#13;
do not until you have&#13;
No Money Repired&#13;
e one s%id thnt it took&#13;
run a newspaper. Oh&#13;
^wbooper. It don't take&#13;
-^&gt;]Saaey tt&gt; roa a newspaper. It&#13;
The township tax roll is nowP» not a business venture. It is a&#13;
in my possession and I am now ebsjriteble organization, a begging&#13;
ready to receive taxes during concern, a highway robber. The&#13;
Notice Tt Taxpayers&#13;
banking hoars.&#13;
limite C. Monkg^Twp^TrniUL&#13;
We are Headquarter* for&#13;
. &lt;&#13;
all kinds of Hardware, Bf c.&#13;
A full line of Cutters) and Sleigh*&#13;
* •&#13;
T®«pJe Hardware Cefnpciny&#13;
, * » ^ S S w SSS^BBB^BSB^B*"VSnBIBSSaaSBef^BaF fcJS'&#13;
Robert Arnold of Brighten was&#13;
in town Tuesday.&#13;
Mrs. Julia Sigler of Detroit is&#13;
visiting friends and relatives here,&#13;
'Mrs, B. Spanning of Perry vi*&#13;
ited at the home of Mrs, E. W,&#13;
Martin last week. '&#13;
Miss Florence Kice of North&#13;
Hamburg is the guest of Miss&#13;
Blanche Martin for a few days.&#13;
Geo. F. Green who for the past&#13;
sixteen years has conducted a barbershop&#13;
here has purchased a half&#13;
interest in tbe PHhy Henry barber&#13;
shop at Howell and will move&#13;
there about March 1.&#13;
newspaper ie a child of the air, a&#13;
creature of a dream. We can go&#13;
on and on when other concerns&#13;
« *&#13;
9&#13;
Oradnate Optometrist&#13;
Howell, Michigan Certificate of Registeration No. 295&#13;
CENTRM. P&#13;
would be in tbe hands of a receiver.&#13;
It takes gall to run a newspaper,&#13;
it takes sand to run a news,&#13;
paper. It takes wind and H scintillating&#13;
imagination to run a&#13;
newspaper. Bat money, suffering&#13;
cats, no, never. If yon should&#13;
give an editor money ho might&#13;
pay some of bis debts, and an editor&#13;
wonld disgrace the profession&#13;
by doing so.&#13;
If yon have any letter heeds,&#13;
envelopes or any job work to do&#13;
send out of town or give it to a&#13;
travelling man to get printed for&#13;
you. Then when you die, be sore&#13;
and have yon; sorrowing widow&#13;
send one of your weeping children&#13;
over after three extra copies, so&#13;
she can see what a nice obituary&#13;
the editor gives you. Never mind&#13;
the fifteen cents to pay for the&#13;
papers the printer don't need it.&#13;
Will Be In Pinckney Thursday, February 6 , 1 3&#13;
*N&#13;
f a r * - . - •&lt;;.•,&#13;
t H - J &gt; &gt; •••$*••&#13;
I\CJW is a Good Time&#13;
JPo get the Spring sewmg done ^efore^ the real work of the seasun begins. We&#13;
have nice e m b r o i d e r y acid l a c e and the test Lonsdafe cotton&#13;
• m l c a m b r i c , as well as all sorts of d r e s s goods, ginghams, p e r -&#13;
c a l e s , c a l i c o , serge, e t c * G o m e In and look * h e m over*&#13;
If you have' not time nor inclination to make your garments, come and get them&#13;
*: ready made; all aorta of aammer under wear ready to put on. ^ ^&#13;
W&#13;
^t^Jmv^»§9odvon^ tt^ Sac. mmd m itHI l^tter^for 28«&#13;
tOtttmJ&amp;tor3SteMfrb3&lt;in • * « iMtter bow. particular you maj be&#13;
|p*Wf";."(:' - ^ ' • • • • • • • • • • ' • : - . ' • " • • • • ' •&#13;
guarantee a psrfect fit. Will visit your town once&#13;
a month, and strive to please&#13;
All headache caused by eye strain absolutely correct*&#13;
ed. Consultation and Examination Free&#13;
i eaHS«^a^aauBssaM9isaaMSiSs)s)s e^fcsass^ass^saaa^asissas^assiase^Bjfl mmwirrnrmr'mmmmmwIW&#13;
Wti? Fatreiiie Hint&#13;
IsflitotiMi?&#13;
1. Beeaaae the local store ie&#13;
near at hand and is for that reason&#13;
a convenience.&#13;
2. The goods are on display&#13;
and not "unsigbt and unseen."&#13;
3. Because the interests of the&#13;
local meronants are identical with&#13;
your own. . «&#13;
4 Whatever helps local fcoai.&#13;
ueee helpe the community and&#13;
wbst helpe the community helpe&#13;
o. If yoo^daal on the square the&#13;
merchant wittta emergency carry&#13;
70« for a reaeon^bletims.&#13;
16. Tbe^ loeal merebant live*&#13;
aoong his ooslpsjers and it to *;&#13;
food polioy for .#utt to grfe the&#13;
ecanfora^iMle/.&#13;
Don't Fall&#13;
7. , Ton mpf* foat joti vaai&#13;
wheo wani JVyAfa Ue loOe&gt;|w^&#13;
as »- enisapsw ^^s^iw^ssjav.. mh*. •ww1&#13;
eaaiityttem. 1&#13;
* • • ^ Take advaatage of the bcrgaine&#13;
oftered by R. Clinton. • -&#13;
"" Tftdfi-'. «*•&#13;
m*&#13;
'iV3&#13;
mV I&#13;
\&#13;
•Al&#13;
TH «J&#13;
M'^J&#13;
tit&#13;
- 4 ^ •&#13;
••"£&gt;:•&amp;'.&#13;
• • • • s . ; •&#13;
* • &gt; • &amp; : _ ; , * ( . *&#13;
•-N y -*T4&#13;
. T&#13;
w, &lt;**% &lt;: ' - r ^ - : r - •-&lt;&#13;
"n:&#13;
• * &gt;&#13;
^r-% A ;&#13;
ii *; •&#13;
=VK„-'&gt;&#13;
3?&#13;
ft'&#13;
fr*&#13;
?•&#13;
'•' • Tx'.&#13;
pains T*sTffis&#13;
s&#13;
E&#13;
end achea resulting&#13;
waaknew o« derangement&#13;
«f the ermna dietiactly famin&amp;M&#13;
sooner orlater leave their marie&#13;
Beauty Boon fades away. Now&#13;
fa tha time to restore health&#13;
and retain beauty.&#13;
DR. PIERCES&#13;
Favorite Prescription&#13;
That traat, pofemVatraortb-chriiMr&#13;
sartgemti*wma»b&gt;you7a»rt tM«*&#13;
i law fimibt wffl Sayply YaalUllll&#13;
A S E C R E T&#13;
A24Hb. sack of&#13;
Henkel'9 Bread Flour&#13;
will make over 37 lbs. of&#13;
bread Everything but&#13;
flour shrinks when cooked&#13;
but Henkel's Flour grows,&#13;
k costs less to begin with&#13;
than any other food vou&#13;
like; and what other food&#13;
do you like so well that&#13;
you must have it at every&#13;
meal in the year? Buy&#13;
HENKEL'S FLOUR&#13;
IT IS NEVER DEAR&#13;
Live and lei live is a poor motto for&#13;
butchers.&#13;
Red Cross Ball Blue will wish double as&#13;
•many clot lies as any other blue. Don't&#13;
pot your money into any-other. Adv.&#13;
The man who stands at the bottom&#13;
of the ladder and stteadles It is often&#13;
of more benefit to the country than&#13;
the one who climbs to the top.&#13;
The Proceifc.&#13;
"I am a bankrupt in love."&#13;
T h e n it is time for supplementary&#13;
proceedings."&#13;
Extremes.&#13;
"Why is Alexander so cut up?"&#13;
"Because his Balary has just been&#13;
cut down."&#13;
Better Way.&#13;
"Does your wife raise a rumpus&#13;
when you stay away from homo at&#13;
night?"&#13;
"No; but She does when I get&#13;
home."&#13;
Solved.&#13;
T w e l v e persons for dinner! Aren't&#13;
you crazy?"&#13;
"We might invite a thirteenth; that&#13;
would perhaps take away their appetite."&#13;
8wat Indirect.&#13;
Mandy—What foh yo ben gotn' to&#13;
4 e postoffice so reg'lar? Are yo' correspond&#13;
In' wtf some other female?"&#13;
Haetue—"Nope; but since ah been areadin'&#13;
In de papers 'bout dese 'conscience&#13;
funds ah kind of thought ah&#13;
might possibly git a lettah from dat&#13;
aataistah what married us."—Life.&#13;
Excellent Device.&#13;
An excellent device against slipping&#13;
•am your front-door steps these ley&#13;
mornings is to cover them from top&#13;
to bottom with your last summer's&#13;
acta cushions. These suitably placed&#13;
will prevent your falling and chipping&#13;
the brownstone or granite steps with&#13;
t h e back of your celluloid collar.—&#13;
Judge.&#13;
Breath Was "Out of Place."&#13;
Papa took Harry to the country to&#13;
•visit nlfi grandparents. They lived a&#13;
short distance from the village where&#13;
the train stopped. Harry Insisted on&#13;
Tunning as they approached the home&#13;
•ot hla grandparents. They had not&#13;
cone far, however, until Harry's&#13;
1&gt;reath was coming in short jerks and&#13;
fee could hardly talk.&#13;
"Walt—watt—a—minute—papa," he&#13;
"What's the matter, son?" asked the&#13;
"My—breath—is all out of place,"&#13;
the little fellow.&#13;
• •• • ' i&#13;
m&#13;
Handy&#13;
Breakfast&#13;
ftetdy to Serve&#13;
Direct From Package&#13;
Toasties&#13;
arid, cream&#13;
A 4fjnty,.daih of toasted&#13;
.vtwiet fevc&amp; 1m autajtjntau:&#13;
&lt;.. Poa^Tjpattiei in the pantry....&#13;
mean many deefetaaa&#13;
# • . . to your table in&#13;
^ttia* air-tight pndaejaa. *&#13;
-«oW by Oroosra avafgr*&#13;
.&#13;
..'/ ff'&#13;
•&lt;» s i -&#13;
ri M i * " * * '&#13;
BatV CaattV aafcaV&#13;
•aaaaaaaaaaaaaaa^aipaa^ajaai&#13;
- r — * • — * r -&#13;
stored your system with poisons.&#13;
'Then get rid of them," suggested&#13;
Thomas.&#13;
"Nothing but exercise will do that,"&#13;
was the serious response. "I do not&#13;
wish to alarm you, Mr. Maltby, but if&#13;
you want to shorten your life twenty&#13;
yeafav just keep on in the idle, uselataYeareer&#13;
you are now living."&#13;
Thomas Maltby's face shadowed a&#13;
. trifle. No one realized more fully&#13;
f •'-' " " • rofit-&#13;
Pecullar Effect of Lightning on a Chestnut Tree in Eastern New York.&#13;
(By F. G. PLUMMET*.) to the storm cloud&#13;
From early times there has been a&#13;
belief that certain trees more than&#13;
others are likely to be struck by lightning.&#13;
The elder Pliny said: "Lightning&#13;
never strikes the laurel." This&#13;
tree was also called bay, and wreaths&#13;
of Its leaves were worn by ancient&#13;
rulers both as a symbol of victory and&#13;
as a protection from the lightning of&#13;
the gods. Seneca and Plutarch held a&#13;
similar belief, which may be traced&#13;
down even to modern times, but the&#13;
theory as now held includes a number&#13;
of trees, different in various countries.&#13;
This belief was so firmly established&#13;
that such trees as the beech, locust,&#13;
holly, olive, walnut, birch, elder,&#13;
mistletoe and llve-for-ever, supposed&#13;
to be effective in warding off lightning,&#13;
were placed near dwellings.&#13;
To this day there are many who&#13;
still InBist that the beech is never&#13;
struck, while in parts of the United&#13;
States the aspen is considered Imjnune&#13;
from lightning.&#13;
On the other hand, it was believed&#13;
that such trees as the oaka, particularly&#13;
cork oak, had a very bad reputition&#13;
for attracting lightning, and&#13;
this belief prevails even now. There&#13;
is a proverb:&#13;
""Avoid the oak, -flee-from-the spruce^&#13;
but seek the beech."&#13;
And also:&#13;
"Beware the oak, it draws the&#13;
stroke.&#13;
Avoid the ash, it courts the flash.&#13;
Creep under the thorn, 'twill save&#13;
from harm."&#13;
Natives of South Africa have said&#13;
regarding the mopane tree, which 1B&#13;
often struck, "Lightning hates it;" but&#13;
they say that the morala tree is never&#13;
touched. The Portuguese share this&#13;
belief.&#13;
There was once a widespread belief&#13;
in Europe that conifers were almost&#13;
immune from lightning, but records&#13;
Yellow Pine, Arizona, Completely&#13;
Shattered by Lightning.&#13;
made there showed that conifers&#13;
rank third in liability to stroke. The&#13;
persistent popular .belief regarding&#13;
immunity of some trees and liability&#13;
of others have given rise to the following&#13;
theories regarding treat tooit&#13;
likely to be struck:&#13;
1. TaJl jfrrees; Becauta they reach&#13;
high .toward the electrically charged&#13;
cloud, arid therefore lessen tha distance&#13;
with the flash must traverse&#13;
through the dielectric (air). Such&#13;
trees are coneelvad to be a part of the&#13;
earth, extending upward and inviting&#13;
the stroke.&#13;
2. Treat with pointed crowns:&#13;
Because they invite, to their one apex,&#13;
a tingle full-pressure flash. Trees&#13;
with rounded crowns, favor tha diffatfoa&#13;
¢1 tha **ttttato»a spaay.&#13;
a. Treat with pointed leaves: Because&#13;
static electricity lumps moat&#13;
easily to and from pointed terminate.&#13;
4. Treat with smooth or shiny&#13;
leaves: Because a smooth surfaoe invitas&#13;
flashes, while a hairy or woolly&#13;
surface, presenting a multitude of flat&#13;
polnta, favors diffusion.&#13;
I. Treat with deeply grooved bark:&#13;
| Because bark deeply grooved longitudinally&#13;
guides tha current to tha&#13;
ground, aad- because tat moist septaaaaof&#13;
tha fletnree&gt;&#13;
' T T ^ f q m * |aoJatf4;. Jtoetate they&#13;
are t M only marka for the flash end&#13;
afeaV'V^aUtaatt^kav?***' ** '' * *'' '''&#13;
1 Treat m bigh groend&#13;
they are nearest&#13;
strata.&#13;
8. Trees on damp soil: Because&#13;
the moisture nfakes a good contact between&#13;
the tree and the earth.&#13;
9. Trees deeply rooted: Because&#13;
the long roets give a better grounding&#13;
and finish a more direct path to&#13;
deeper and moister earth strata.&#13;
10. Trees with dead branches:&#13;
Because they present alluring points.&#13;
11. Trees whose wood has high&#13;
electric conductivity: Because the&#13;
flash will select the path of least resistance.&#13;
12. TreeB whose tissues are. composed&#13;
mostly of longitudinally arranged&#13;
fibers and other elements:&#13;
Because this arrangement would favor&#13;
the transmission of the electric current.&#13;
13. Trees rich in starch: Because&#13;
starches and Bugars are better conductors&#13;
than OIIB, resins and waxes.&#13;
But years of careful study and experimenting&#13;
show that any kind of&#13;
tree is likely to be struck by lightning.&#13;
/^&#13;
In temperate climates thunderstorms,&#13;
with lightning, occur most&#13;
commonly during the summer usually&#13;
In the afternoon. In the United States&#13;
they are four or five times as frequent&#13;
east of the Rocky mountainsxr^est;&#13;
omitting from consideration parts&#13;
of Arizona and New Mexico. This is&#13;
due, as explained later, to the generally&#13;
mountainous condition of the west.&#13;
Lightning is most frequent In Florida&#13;
and Illinpis.&#13;
In Cuba severe thunderstorms are&#13;
rrequent, and treeB are often struck&#13;
and killed. The pine only is reported&#13;
ignited.&#13;
Lightning is extremely rare in&#13;
Alaska, and no forest fireB are known&#13;
to have resulted from it.&#13;
It does not follow that the trees&#13;
most liable to ignition by lightning are&#13;
the ones most responsible for forest&#13;
fires. While in general one species&#13;
may be more inflammable than another,&#13;
the degree of inflammability&#13;
varies with the locality and season.&#13;
The tree most often struck and ignited&#13;
in the west is the western yellow pine,&#13;
which grows in open, park-like stands,&#13;
where the fire hazard is Email.&#13;
A tree may be set on fire by lightning&#13;
and burn for days without the&#13;
flames spreading to other trees or to&#13;
the ground, and if the latter be free&#13;
from litter, as is often the case In&#13;
western yellow pine forests, the&#13;
chances of the Are spreading are&#13;
small. It is probable that the majority&#13;
of forest fires caused by lightning&#13;
striking trees is due to the presence&#13;
of dry duff, humus or litter at&#13;
the base of the tree. Another possibility&#13;
is that some forest fires are&#13;
started by lightning striking the&#13;
ground and igniting the soil cover.&#13;
OYSTER SHELLS&#13;
FURNISH LIME&#13;
New York Experimental Station&#13;
Proves That Food Is Quite&#13;
Beneficial to Hens.&#13;
Soma years ago a than well-known&#13;
writer condemned the ate of oyster&#13;
shell as a food for_furalsbing lima to&#13;
necessary in the construction of egg&#13;
shall Hla contention was that the&#13;
oyster shell did sot contribute lime&#13;
sufficient for that purpose. However,&#13;
the New York agricultural experiment&#13;
station hat vetoed that by proving&#13;
that a pound of oyster shell contains&#13;
suUcient lima to manufacture about&#13;
eevan doaeat of eggs.&#13;
Tha proper way to feed oyster that&#13;
is to have a avail box of it within&#13;
reach to the fowit may help them&#13;
serves at will M a l a r It ia tb^saoro&#13;
ing math It risky, as these It a 1IW&#13;
Ubood that the heat, will eoatuav&#13;
_ mora than it required, tad ia « o a a * , , r ^ _&#13;
J ^ i l S T t i 0 X * ? * ^ * ** ^4*««"» £•• *•*»•* *• • » • *mr*I fc*» U waartaa a j0j|ilte, uwlaan baoome loo hard. Tbe haaa kaowbajrt&#13;
whan their syttasa damaada mora&#13;
nme. It it a vary rare oata whan a&#13;
haa gats tot maoavit,&#13;
la reaeh.&#13;
7! j TZ mm&#13;
SOLVING A P R O M&#13;
Rich Young Bachelor Regains&#13;
Healtfe and Finds a Wife at&#13;
Strange Resort.&#13;
By WALTER J08EPH DELANEY.&#13;
"Lungs inactive, heart insipid, brain&#13;
torpid," reported Dr. Philetus Derringer,&#13;
and he tapped his patieyt,&#13;
Thomas Maltby, three times and made&#13;
a mental note of a fifty dollar bill for&#13;
his advice.&#13;
"Humph!" observed the wealthy old&#13;
bachelor—"generally laty, eh?"&#13;
"Worse than laziness, my friend,"&#13;
responded the notable physician gravely.&#13;
"Your late suppers, lack of exercise&#13;
and indolent ways generally have j a whitehead and eat—why, that mogrouoiLj&#13;
Wt9*lte^&amp;*grf,he*lAt&#13;
arouaf to tha kttfcherf andhras given a&#13;
.treat Alice., at bread aatt butter. By!&#13;
nijrhtfili he haj reall*.«ot interested&#13;
fc jgattes of nj|rblesr and rah himself&#13;
out of ^breath ehaalag * runaway kite.&#13;
"It's great!" he oJpcUad, aa ho&#13;
rolled onto the trundle? bed that nitfht,&#13;
healthily tired out for the first time ia&#13;
ten years.&#13;
Inside of a week Thomas Maltby had&#13;
forgotten the club, late dinners and&#13;
his automobile. The "boys" went fishing,&#13;
swimming. They played one old&#13;
cat,- mumbiety-pea;, bi-apy. They got&#13;
up big healthy appetites. Tttomaa&#13;
cherished two "mlba," a glass alley&#13;
and a "faisle" agate with more pride&#13;
that he had a 11,000 profit on the&#13;
stock exchange.&#13;
"It's famous," he told an august&#13;
comrade, an astronomical student, foi&#13;
the time being a frisky, delighted lad.&#13;
No more dizzy spells; I canvrun like&#13;
lasses cake and those flapjacks take&#13;
me back 30 years and make life worth&#13;
living."&#13;
On one side of the resort was a&#13;
high brick wall. Strolling near it one&#13;
day Thomas caught a tennis ball that&#13;
came over its top. There were feminine&#13;
cries of distress. Then a ladder&#13;
top . appeared.- Peering over It&#13;
wat a fair, mischievous face, half hidden&#13;
la a quaint childish sunbonnet.&#13;
yoa tee the ball, Mattie?" askbelow,&#13;
you, boy," called out the&#13;
3h Mattie to the astonished&#13;
ias—"toss that lost ball over&#13;
will you?"&#13;
ten Thomas found out that the&#13;
Ik wall enclosed the domain of&#13;
Prof. Gregg, who superintended&#13;
'girls'department" of the juvenile&#13;
[venation system. He got to thinkconstantly&#13;
of Mattie. One day&#13;
(limbed a tree to view over the&#13;
ie half a dozen "girls" attired in&#13;
^eful tennis dress, with flowing&#13;
dgear, skipping rope and playing&#13;
dolls,&#13;
'homas hovered many a time outthe&#13;
walls of that feminine para:&#13;
He got to writing poetry. Once&#13;
iw "his Mattie" through a barred&#13;
He flushed like a conscious&#13;
^oolboy. She smiled b.ewitchingly&#13;
waved her pretty, Blender hand at&#13;
in a girliBh, tantalizing way.&#13;
'hey have a regular party here&#13;
[a a month," "a "boy" friend told&#13;
mas next day. "There is music,&#13;
ig and a supper."&#13;
idles, too?" Inquired Thomas&#13;
•fully.&#13;
es, Mrs. Professor Gregg and her&#13;
. The old life togs for tonight,&#13;
kaow. Very formal and dignl-&#13;
Ler^'MQD'-'CtlM^CHF Br&#13;
, Bluffers Had*r*erfeet Right to Be Mad,&#13;
{Jonalderlng; the Extremely Unfortuifata&#13;
Circumstances.&#13;
Blatters bottnaad into the club,&#13;
jammed bis hat down on a table with&#13;
a flerdb, reaOjandlng bang, and flung&#13;
himself into an easy chair/&#13;
"What's wrong todays Bluffera?&#13;
You'look bad." *&#13;
"III never forgive myself, I kicked&#13;
a man out of my house last night!"&#13;
"Humph! I've kicked out many a&#13;
One. Young-fellow, I suppose?'&#13;
"No; past middle age."&#13;
"Well, these old codgers hav* qp&#13;
business to be coming round oourttng&#13;
young girls. 1 would have kicked him&#13;
OTuy myself."&#13;
"Yet, but I have found out since&#13;
that this man waan't courting my&#13;
daughter. He was after my raotheriu-&#13;
law."&#13;
"Here, You Boyi"&#13;
regime you're past hope Want to try&#13;
him?"&#13;
"You advise it?"&#13;
"Strongly."&#13;
"All right then," said Thomas. *&#13;
"You will come back with your&#13;
youth renewed. Then, if you take my&#13;
advice, get married and borne life will&#13;
do the rest."&#13;
Thus it was that two mornings later&#13;
Thomas Maltby was introduced - to&#13;
Prof. Septimus Gregg at the doctor's&#13;
office. He found the latter to be a&#13;
great, fierce, bearish old fellow.&#13;
"Tommy Maltby, e a r he spoke.&#13;
"Well, Tommy; if you're ready, toddle&#13;
along with me. Fve a few purchases&#13;
to make and you can carry the&#13;
bundles." .:&#13;
Thomas stared. He got ready to resent&#13;
such familiarity. Then he remembered&#13;
that the doctor had told&#13;
him that the professor wat an eccentric,&#13;
and had exacted a promite that&#13;
he would obejr bis direction to the&#13;
smallest detail.&#13;
Thomas stared ttiil mora atrangely&#13;
at tha ptofataor entered a department&#13;
store and parcaated: &lt;t&gt; halt a doten&#13;
ahoefly kitet; &lt;J&gt; aa many bumming&#13;
top*; (3) a dotea '.age of marbles;&#13;
(4) a box of bubble pipes.&#13;
•Ton mutt have a lot of chUdran t o&#13;
provide far, professor r ventured&#13;
Thomas.&#13;
"H'ml yooHl toon Had out," wat tha&#13;
gruff retfoiader.&#13;
When they reached\ walled-in country&#13;
plaee a t noon tBat day, Tbomat&#13;
Maltby wondered If he bad entered aa&#13;
atyrottt. A dotea men at old or older&#13;
than feimeeit greeted their arrival&#13;
boistenmtly. Soane af them were barefooted.&#13;
All of them wore katekarr&#13;
bookart. They capered around like&#13;
boya on a vaoatioa. BJagerly they :&#13;
scrambled for the doctor's purchase*&#13;
Ttan they hooted and frisked about [i&#13;
Hk« mere kida They played martlet; s a M t o r ^&#13;
Maw bubbles, spun tops, flaw ktleev |&#13;
"Now thes, make believe yatrra a&#13;
boy agata. forgat aaarythsog toman*&#13;
tor, and Thotaat wat eeoortad to&#13;
roam with a truadle&#13;
h |lke tha othert. Tbot^lriaaed mi tban laaghod&#13;
fMrlglrl tar ba gat oata the tiaattie&#13;
wttt&gt;] Ha wat ta alaf bay far a aajalte Ha&#13;
«U baflac #j "tmT * m Hater&#13;
enjoyed himself as&#13;
sit ftie function announced.&#13;
Thtta ware friendly introductions and&#13;
a gaat^aimt time all around. Despite:&#13;
the\ia#bventionalities, however, ruddy&#13;
cheeks, the glow of health, gay boy&#13;
and girl laughter made the affair delightful.&#13;
Vf course Thomas met Mattier-Siiewas&#13;
a city stenographer who had&#13;
taken the cure, to come out bright&#13;
and vivacious and restored to health.&#13;
When Thomas returned to the city&#13;
he sought her out. He called on her&#13;
twice, but only had he to tell her his&#13;
love to win her._opmplete acceptance&#13;
of his suit.&#13;
Returned from a year's tour of Europe,&#13;
one day Dr. Philetus Derringer&#13;
chanced to meet Thomas. The latter,&#13;
smiling, brisk and happy, hailed him&#13;
with a healthy handshake that made&#13;
the physician wince.&#13;
"It is plain to see that you took the&#13;
juvenile cure," said the doctor.&#13;
"Yes, and won a splendid wife and&#13;
a comfortable home through tt all,"&#13;
declared Thomas. "We live next door&#13;
to a glorious family with 11 children,&#13;
and we're all just like kids.&#13;
Going home now to fly kites fox&#13;
them."&#13;
"You have certainly solved the&#13;
great problem of health and happl-W&#13;
ness," proclaimed, the delighted doe^f.&#13;
tor.&#13;
(Copyright,' 1913, t&gt;y W. G. Chapman.)&#13;
Fattened^; b&gt;?jDaiin I bale.&#13;
Guy de ViH%pfcaV%/former teacher&#13;
at San Francjaco Academy, returning&#13;
ECZEMA CAME ON SCALP&#13;
Lebanon, O.—"My eczema started&#13;
on my thfgh with a email pimple. It&#13;
also came on my scalp.. It began, to&#13;
itch and I began ^ to scratch. For&#13;
eighteen or twenty years I could not&#13;
tell what I passed through, with that&#13;
awful jtchlng. I would scratch Until&#13;
the blood would soak through my underwear,&#13;
and I couldn't talk to my&#13;
friends on the street but I would be&#13;
digging and punching that spot, until&#13;
I was very much ashamed. The itching&#13;
was so intense I could no^ sleep&#13;
after once in bed and warm. I certalnly'suffered&#13;
torment with that eczema&#13;
for many years.&#13;
"I chased after everything I ever&#13;
heard of, but ail to no avail. I saw&#13;
the advertisement for C^ticura Soap,&#13;
and Ointment and sent for a sample.&#13;
Imagine my delight when I applied the&#13;
first dose to that awful itching fire&#13;
on my leg and scalp, in less than a&#13;
minute the itching on both places&#13;
ceased. I got some more Cuticura&#13;
Soap and Ointment After the second&#13;
day I never had another itching spell,&#13;
and Cuticura Soap and Ointment completely&#13;
cured me. I was troubled with&#13;
awful dandruff all over my sqalp. The&gt;&#13;
Cuticura Soap has cured that trouble.'*&#13;
(Signed) L. ^ pink, Jan,. 22, 1912.&#13;
Cuticura Soap and Ointment told&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address&#13;
post-card "Cuticura, Dept L, Boston."&#13;
Adv.&#13;
PROPER WORD.&#13;
• ^&#13;
&gt;&#13;
It aviation expensive?".&#13;
MYes, tha upkeep is quite consider'&#13;
able."&#13;
A CLERGYMAN'S TESTIMONY.&#13;
"The Rev. Bdmvnd Heelop of r Wig*&#13;
ton, Pa,, suffered •from Dropsy for a&#13;
year. His limbs andfeet were* swollen&#13;
and puffed. He had heart buttering,&#13;
wat dizzy&#13;
and exhausted at&#13;
the least exertion.&#13;
Hands and&#13;
feet; were ,flpld&#13;
arid he had * | c h&#13;
a draggla* tarnation&#13;
tcrott tite&#13;
loins that i t ua»*&#13;
difficult *to tnove.&#13;
-^Att*r ".mate*-- (&#13;
J;&#13;
??&#13;
J1 . v ^ l S - r ^ ^ ^ S r V u ^ l S , ™ 8 Kldaey^PtUtrthe awetffaa;&#13;
from th^wea^coattof South America, ^ed aa«%e fettbhateU again H » t * r *&#13;
ftoorld a afe atsatl eb yo fc ahnanvibinaiga wbeheiale afatttetemnpetd' , h g has b a e a . ^ e ^ | e j l a « d o l i t a d h y t h e it&amp;^&amp;dtittfay&amp;hd.&#13;
Ing to cross from^Cludad to Baeao. e r t i ^ 5 n t h a tetar^Soia^I^W&#13;
Aires. He escaped after many adve* ^ c s ^ g e d my lat&amp;Hi:&gt;our l^tiedy&#13;
tureaand fowMTbta w ^&#13;
'They were a ttrange tfeopte," he H%it Corfaaaoad with Rev/TO^ Hat&gt;&#13;
said, "and appeared to be half xnaayj^p iboai^tbit woadarfal ^aiad»i &gt;&#13;
and Half ape. I have no doubt t b a # o b ^ ' $ B w * 9 S % &amp; *&#13;
they meant to eat me. I wat mniAwJS^S^^^Sb^^,Sm ~&#13;
fled by aH,their Uadattt until I saw l Ruffaln * KL Y f W&#13;
that it was til dai^otedito^la^oHa atd S S S ^ S T S j a t l a&#13;
y&gt;&#13;
of getting me f a t Then i thought 1&#13;
had better leave* aad I did."&#13;
De Villeplon w t t a newspaper cor&#13;
respondent during the Rustian-Japtr&#13;
WWaon PUyt Santa.&#13;
• When Charlie Conroy of Stat&#13;
Orange, N. 3n 8 yeart -old. got trp&#13;
Christmas WBOtaMJ* faaaa that the&#13;
letter be teat to "Santa.Clans, State&#13;
House, Trenton,'* had been aaswered&#13;
by Governor Wilson. Charlie aaked&#13;
for a sweater: a pair of gloveev a aaek*&#13;
tie. a cap, tiro bookt,k trateet-atra,&#13;
a box of bteckt t a 4 aeme a a a d y « 4&#13;
trait/ PmideaUleet Wtteoa wat ao is&#13;
. , - • - Tatte.---.&#13;
' *Whlch.ha« the beat t a i t ^&#13;
foarwjftr* '"•"'" '•"rS-'-s.**&#13;
*t am sure lay-wija^baa^i^.'.ii^"&#13;
"That is very ge«Mrtt)us,aWP30^.^v&gt;t&#13;
-J oottld not rnib dear A fctj f*m&#13;
61 tba^nataoo aaaat^f .ut 'iwfcrrlail,^-. •&#13;
. • • • j . •J&gt;I.'. r t &gt; . &lt; •&#13;
FlYt Hundred Cues Worde.&#13;
For every swear word spoken this&#13;
m e n u but laat tbaV" taM tha profet- f year by membert of U»« elerioal force&#13;
aja aittpawbilA Ore |actorr,at Mi«V&#13;
town, N. 1^ a flat of one oent bat baas&#13;
droVped ia the -profant box" fol the&#13;
tbea MHSmV^tm*** « a b f tka •W eaatwa Taera ar&gt;&#13;
^-:. {-i V&#13;
&lt;&#13;
eipee&#13;
fnd. Gennan&#13;
dain^ ditaea.&#13;
_-. _ avtry* botua tfv^K&#13;
CABTORIAVa e ^ a a a , m M &lt; e * e d y Jbf • V-••&#13;
aataata and abflktean^Eaad bat that la&#13;
w*e^^^^^^^s&gt; ^^aw^*i _ ^^^^^^^agg.^aaaaj^MWSistt^w . ^^^av^ * w ^ ^ i a v w^s1&#13;
Bears tha&#13;
K 3 » a m * ? 3 a ? * a w ^&#13;
«t- •»-# ».*'.&#13;
* ^Why do you Tatar to tbjtt-otMaw'&#13;
^ b a huataa high ekpiosiver v T - J&#13;
**Pt6tTsMT he'tt alwaya-«getttaa tbav-' ^ S j a f M l ' wttk the c^biray^&#13;
. m •- V .'*• 4 ¾&#13;
nbl^.baejbW ......&#13;
v£&#13;
J t b a t * ^&#13;
^ . « .&#13;
M:&#13;
r,VJ V*,' .„r .*•&#13;
.s ^ Y" -¾^¾¾¾¾^ '•fr.'',i^'^&#13;
';^CV&#13;
•HP mmpmmmmmimmmmmmmw &gt; ' • ^ I P&#13;
. &gt; * ' . " ' . • • • '&#13;
i ^ v •••&#13;
2_^^«5*&#13;
* &gt; • •&#13;
:**.:.&#13;
"From, your drugget get two ounces&#13;
jpt Glycerine and half an ounce of Globe&#13;
n n e Compound (Concentrated Pine).&#13;
Tako these two Ingredients home and&#13;
.out tbem into a hair pint of good whls-&#13;
%ey; Take one to two teespconfuls after&#13;
•acfc meal aad at bad time/ Smaller doeei&#13;
to children according to age." Thle la the&#13;
.beat formula known to science. There&#13;
are many cheaper preparations of large&#13;
quantity, but It don't pay to experiment&#13;
with a bad cold. Be sure to get only&#13;
the genuine Globe Pine Compound&#13;
(Concentrated Pine).' Eadi half ounce&#13;
bottle comes In a sealed tin screw-top&#13;
case. If your druggist does not have&#13;
it In stock be wlil get 1t Quickly—from&#13;
his wholesale house. This has been&#13;
published here every winter for six&#13;
are and thousands of families know&#13;
value. Published by the Globe Pharutlcal&#13;
laboratories of Chicago.&#13;
4?&#13;
* ' #&#13;
&lt;VS&#13;
J I D N T NEED TO READ LINES&#13;
Amateur Palmlat Had Other Lines of&#13;
Information Which Aided Her&#13;
In Revelations.&#13;
The fair amateur palmist looked »1&#13;
fte left hand of the sweet girt kmg&#13;
and earnestly. Breathlessly abe waited&#13;
for the palmist's next TOTS*.&#13;
"Ah? \ *ee by your has* ***** T«u&#13;
are engaged to be married,1' said the&#13;
palmist. *And,^ conttnaeal the reader&#13;
of the fatere and the past, te a more&#13;
cutting tone, "I see that yon are engaged&#13;
to Mr. Mooney/*&#13;
"Oil ft^s perfectly (extraordinary,"&#13;
burst -out the blusfctag girt. "How&#13;
can yoa ifanow that?"&#13;
"By my long study df 'the science,"&#13;
was fbe reply.&#13;
"But surely the lines on my hand—&#13;
cannot tell yon the n a - — "&#13;
"Who said anything about, lines?"&#13;
replied the prophetic one, with withering&#13;
scorn. "You are wearing the engagement&#13;
ring I returned to him three&#13;
weeks ;ago."&#13;
RRCHBUDJS GUILTY&#13;
Senate Hoi da Commerce Court, Jurist&#13;
rfrfluenced Officers^©/ ErI* R. R.&#13;
TURKEY IN REPLY TO POWERS&#13;
8TILL FLATLY REFU8E3 TO&#13;
GIVE UP AORIANOPLE,&#13;
ALLIED POWERS&#13;
SEND DEFINITE&#13;
PROPOSE TO&#13;
ULTIMATUM.&#13;
Nice 'Distinction.&#13;
*tPa, what is a patriot?"&#13;
"That depends, my son. In the tirat&#13;
of George Washington, he was a man&#13;
who walked barefoot on snow and Ice&#13;
to serve his country. Now he is one&#13;
Who does it by getting a job."&#13;
f THOSE RHEUMATIC&#13;
TWINGES&#13;
Much of the rheumatic&#13;
pain that&#13;
comes in damp,&#13;
changing weather is&#13;
the work of uric&#13;
,acrd crystals.&#13;
Needles couldn't&#13;
•cut, tear or hurt any&#13;
worse when the affected&#13;
muscle joint&#13;
isuwed.&#13;
llf such attacks are&#13;
•marked with headfacke,&#13;
backache, diz-&#13;
. tineas and disturbaace&#13;
of the urine,&#13;
;lt% fitte tojjilajtae&#13;
weaken editidneys.&#13;
JDoao's Kidney&#13;
rPflU qnickly help&#13;
. jntk^ kidneys.&#13;
, Ja&gt; M l e k l g a i t C&lt;&#13;
H*to»hl*.,h sHayoso:T e"rM.ar3 9b8a-c«k» Mgoite rBlaOe b aSdt. , IB caoyu Cldittryt, rfed«o«a0« aonTd«rre, etI. ofDteonc tboresc ahmade fnaoi ldedlr ijtro Ih toealpd t too ea, lt rjiwratrt 1P twllsu wgreonwt inrgig thhti nto a atdh ew sepaokt., tDhoraene 'ba oKxeids- ••aconrwineg" 'm e completely. 1 have aad no trouble&#13;
•CeajDesaVa a* Aft? Store, 50c a Boa DOAN'S SMI"&#13;
fraaTKR-MlLBURN CO., Baft ale, New Yoeh&#13;
A -&#13;
Seldom See _aTa« lebanllafcoebt.kelraajr baulate y oounr hbio* nAen mklaer :Hock, eusevKaeeer Throat.&#13;
/\BSCRBINE&#13;
Ierajtjfo) nSeo.t&#13;
.wnl:«toan'ttMm.qff *rttbo« taf In* tbe&#13;
ikown.ep. -No!bHetM*»oi»a4rfoi&#13;
SMI per bottle delivered. xtacrij* jrovr&#13;
_ aplaetSratffclrby&#13;
Would Allow Ottomans Two to Three&#13;
Pays for Fln»r Decision as to&#13;
Their Terms of Peace.&#13;
Turkey's decision, as indicated by&#13;
dispatches from Constantinople, refusing&#13;
to cede Adrlanople and the Aegean&#13;
islands, it is believed will lead&#13;
to the resumption of hostilities within&#13;
a week.&#13;
The Balkan allies, after considering&#13;
the whole situation among themselves&#13;
decided to wait until the middle&#13;
of next week for. the answer of&#13;
the Porte to the joint note of the powers,&#13;
and if then the reply was not&#13;
received or was unsatisfactory, to address&#13;
a communication to the Turkish&#13;
delegation in the form of a definite&#13;
ultimatum, allowing Turkey 48 to 72*&#13;
hours for a final decision.&#13;
Should Turkey at that time be unable&#13;
or unwilling to come to the allies&#13;
terms, the Balkan plenipotentiaries decided&#13;
that a rupture of the peace&#13;
conference was inevitable. Sofia, Belgrade&#13;
and Cettlnje would denounce&#13;
the armistice and four days later the&#13;
war would be resumed.&#13;
All Support Bulgaria*&#13;
The allies do not admit, or to be&#13;
more exact, do not see the possibility&#13;
of such proposals from Turkey or&#13;
the powers as would allow of a resumption&#13;
of negotiations! unless the&#13;
Porte openly declared its readiness to&#13;
give up . Adrianoplef So far, the instructions&#13;
of the Bulgarian delegates&#13;
do not admit of a discussion of a proposal&#13;
that Turkey retain Jidrlanople,&#13;
even dismantling the fortifications or&#13;
conditions of peace leaving the question&#13;
of Adfianople to be disposed of&#13;
last.&#13;
Servia, Monfengro and Greece all&#13;
support Bulgaria in this attitude. The&#13;
success of Bulgaria would mean an&#13;
easier accomplishment of their wishes,&#13;
especially in the case of Greece which&#13;
in the conquest ©1 Adrlanople by Bulgaria&#13;
sees the Greek occupation of&#13;
Saloniki less likely &lt;to be disputed. In&#13;
addition, the -allies feel that the time&#13;
will never be more favorable for tbem&#13;
to act.&#13;
TurkAjrmy In~&lt;Fcolv5ftape.&#13;
It is evident that the Turkish' resources&#13;
are not in the best of condition,&#13;
while on the other hand the&#13;
allies, as the result of their long preparation,&#13;
are nerved to a high pitch.&#13;
The seven weeks' armistice has restored&#13;
their armies and .they have&#13;
been gathering their forces at ;the .Independent&#13;
points.&#13;
Throughout all the Balkan states, according&#13;
to the plenipotentiaries in London,&#13;
from the largest towns tto the&#13;
humblest hamlets -only one -cry goes&#13;
up:&#13;
"War to the bitter end—until «our&#13;
eternal enemy is driven out off JKnrope&#13;
forever."&#13;
Judge Robert W. Archbald of the&#13;
eonunerce court was voted guilty of&#13;
graft by the United States senate, sitting&#13;
as &amp;• court of impeachment&#13;
This means his expulsion from office&#13;
and that he never again can hold&#13;
any office of public trust or honor in&#13;
this nation.&#13;
There were 13 articles of impeachment&#13;
sent by tbe house of representatives&#13;
to the senate to be voted on&#13;
separately by the senators.&#13;
It was only necessary that the accused&#13;
be found guilty on one charge&#13;
to expel him. Thus when the first&#13;
vote was announced his fate had been&#13;
sealed.&#13;
A two-thirds vote was necessary on&#13;
each ballot to sustain the charge then&#13;
being voted on.&#13;
.Archbald was found guilty on the&#13;
firBt charge by a vote of 68 to 5.&#13;
The impeachment proceedings against&#13;
Judge Archbald were started&#13;
early In 1912, when complaint was&#13;
made to the interstate commerce commission,&#13;
and later to Attorney General&#13;
Wickersham and President Taft,&#13;
that Judge Archbald had been concerned&#13;
in influencing railroads to&#13;
grant him certain favors in, connection&#13;
with coal land deals, and the settlement&#13;
of cases Involving coal properties.&#13;
A new clothes pin plant has been&#13;
completed by the Oval Wood Dish Co.&#13;
in Traverse City.&#13;
T H E MARKETS.&#13;
DETROIT—Cattle—Best steei* $7,801&#13;
Steers and heifers, 1,000 to l^&amp;OG TOB, JG.50&#13;
$7.()0: steers and heifers, 8f&gt;0 tx 1,000 rba.&#13;
$6@7; steers and heifers that aro fat, 500&#13;
to 700 lbs. $5®6? choice fat cows, $5.50®&#13;
6; good fat cows, $4.75(^5; common cows,&#13;
$4.25&lt;&amp;H.60; canners. $3,50&amp;4.20; choice&#13;
heavy bulls, $6@6.25; fair to good bolognaa,&#13;
bulls, $5.50(fi&gt;6; stock bulls, $4.50®&#13;
5; milkers, large, you-ng medium age,&#13;
450^)65; common milkers, $35@45.&#13;
Veal calves—Best, f9.50®)llMothers. $4&#13;
@8.76; milch cows and springers, steady.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Best lambs, $8.60;&#13;
fair to good lambs. $7.50^/8.; light to common&#13;
lambs, $5.60©7; fair 1o good sheep,&#13;
$4.B0@5; culls and common, $2(^3.50.&#13;
Hogs-^Range of prices: Light to good&#13;
butchers, $7.50; pigs, $7.50; light yorkera,&#13;
$7.50; stags, 1-3 off.&#13;
EAST -BUFFALO, SLY.—Oattl* slow;&#13;
best 1,350 to 1,500 Tb steers. $8.75©$9.25;&#13;
good'to prime 1.200 to-1,300 it) steers, $8©&#13;
8,60; good to prime 1,100 to 1,200 it) steers&#13;
$7.73@$8.25; coarse, plalnieh, 1,100 to 1,200&#13;
lb steers, $7.25fi&lt;&gt;$7.75; medium butcher&#13;
steers, 1,000 to T.WfO tb $6.75(3&gt;$7.50; butcher&#13;
steers, 950 to 1,000 tt&gt; $6.50 G&gt;$7;&#13;
light butcher steers, $5.75¢¢$6-25; best fat&#13;
cows, $5.750&gt;$«.6O; 4mtcher cows, $5@&gt;$5.-&#13;
50; light butcher cows, $&lt;.26@$4.75; cutters,&#13;
$3.75®$4; trtmmehf, $3.50@&gt;$3.75;&#13;
best fat heifers, 97.50&amp;)$g; medium butcher&#13;
ttelfera. $6.25&lt;apt0.70; Hffht butcher&#13;
heifers, $y.25©$5,75; stock heifers $4®&#13;
14.25; best feeding ntemru, dehorned, $6.25&#13;
¢¢$6.75: filr to good stockers, $6.60&amp;|fi.7S;&#13;
light common- stackers, $4.50©$6; prime&#13;
export bulls, $€.2S®$6.75; best butcher&#13;
bulls. $5.75©)$&lt;};• bologna bulls, $4.75®$5,50&#13;
stock bulls, t4.75®45.50; best milkers and&#13;
sorlngers, $05@$7B; Common to fair kind,&#13;
3¾. t«l(S*Sf&gt;. -&#13;
Hogs—steady; heavy $7.60; yorkers,&#13;
$7.60®$7.70; plf% $7.«50$7.75: .&#13;
Sheer^-WSaSyr^op lambs, $9.40&lt;5)$9.50;&#13;
yearlings, $7 # $8.25; wethers, $6® $6.25;&#13;
Calves— $5©|12.&#13;
QRAfN, E T C .&#13;
The open board: Wheat—Cash No. 2&#13;
red, $1.15 3-4; May opened at $1.2Q 1-4 and&#13;
declined 'to $1.20; July opened at £7 l-4c&#13;
and declined to 98e; No. 1 white, $1,14 3-4.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, 60 8-4; No. 3 yellow,&#13;
61 3-4; No. 4 yellow, 49 3-4.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 86 l-2c; No. 3 white,&#13;
86 l-2c; No. S white, U l-&gt;c.&#13;
Rye—Cash, 34 l-2c&#13;
Beans—Immediate, -prompt and January&#13;
shipments, $2.18; Feeroary, $2.10.&#13;
Clover seed—Prime «pot, $12; prime al-&#13;
•ike, $13.&#13;
Polncare Elected President of Franc*,&#13;
Raymond Poincare, republican, was&#13;
elected president of the Republic at&#13;
France. He's the present prime minister&#13;
and was the most popular of the&#13;
•even orginal candidates.&#13;
Polncare is thus made ninth president&#13;
of the third republic, succeeding&#13;
President Armand FaUleres*&#13;
poincare was chosen t n the second&#13;
feaiiot amid scenes of the wildest coniwtoir,&#13;
after he bad chaflenged to a&#13;
AMI Georges Oleare&amp;ceanv a former&#13;
atwehier, and after a ee*»nVauel chal-&#13;
Uttgebas been sent try Deputy Mojxle,&#13;
a IW»eare supporter, to format Minister&#13;
awcour; an adherent W Jules&#13;
Pama, eecretary of agriculture.&#13;
. The Incident between Polncare and&#13;
Clemenceau arose out of a letter east&#13;
•py the former premier, to Mr. Ppltv&#13;
care, t b * contents of which were 4xmsidered&#13;
offensive by Mr. Poineare.&#13;
GENERAL MA1tlCET8.&#13;
Poultry is coming in freely and demand&#13;
Is enough to make an aotlve market. The&#13;
tone is easy In chickens -a*4 steady in&#13;
other lines. Dressed hogs asd calves are&#13;
In good supply and stoato. There is a&#13;
brisk demand for calves. Efeg* are e^My&#13;
owing to the mild weather, and the butter&#13;
.market is steady. Potatoes are quiet&#13;
afiff steady. Offerings are large and deouBcd&#13;
moderate. General trading in pro*&#13;
daoe Is quiet&#13;
Butter—Fancy creamery. 34c; creamery,'&#13;
firsts, 32c; dairy, 22c; packing, 21c&#13;
pet It.&#13;
Hggs—Current receipts, candled, caaea&#13;
included. 221-2c ped doz.&#13;
••. It ia-eaaie^to wttte Watery than it&#13;
"^0:-m*f '"^f&gt;ertlal %ccsm ;• • ;'^vj ' f&#13;
^ . ' l r ^ W « &gt; l . thOM t^aith&#13;
, ^&#13;
• - ¾&#13;
*; ii%i^x tSn^^&#13;
rv ..-V:','. .1"! .f am&#13;
LV 7f% ' -.it.-,'. .^;r.:AfBrBitiMStla gamlw Qasuuse - t L&#13;
^ . ' ' -«mmmm ft m n&#13;
Hty* RWsrs in Oeorflla. .-&#13;
A panic baa been created among the&#13;
people in the southern portion of&#13;
Whitfield county, Georgia, by night riders&#13;
whe^are whipping men and women&#13;
for alleged immorality and for&#13;
other offense&gt;&#13;
Th* night riders have been at work&#13;
for some time and they have wbJp»&#13;
^ped inany" persons gnd hate warned&#13;
^jOiera ,ta*t-tb«y win be whipped nntoaa&#13;
t h n me#d^air w#ya.&#13;
APPL1»—Baldwin, $2.2(0)2.(0: green.&#13;
Inge, $2.iO#s.78; spy, $2,750$; steel red,&#13;
IS03.SO: lf«. 2, 75c©$l-W per bbl.&#13;
CABBAOE8—$1©1.35 per bbi&#13;
DKBS8SS CALVEJ3--Ordlnary, ll«l2c;&#13;
fancy, 14014 l-2c per lb.&#13;
ONION0-&gt;SSc per bu.&#13;
DRESSED HOQ8— $8.50®9 per ewt, for&#13;
light to tnedhuM.&#13;
DBBS8BD POULTRT—Spring chickens&#13;
l*Oi*c» hens, HOHc; old roosters, 10O&#13;
l t d turkeys, ttOMc; ducks, 17011c;&#13;
geese, 14011c per lb.&#13;
POTATOES—Michigan, sacks, 50c; bulk&#13;
46c in car lots, and (5066c for store.&#13;
HONSY-^ChoJee fancyjrhtte comb 160&#13;
17c per lb.; amber 14015c.&#13;
LIVE POULTRY—Spring chickens. ISO&#13;
16e per th; hens, l49l6crNo. IThehe, 9c;.&#13;
oUJ «&gt;6st*rs. soiOe; dueks; l ( | l $ « ; geese,&#13;
VBairrABUCfi—Beet*. 66o, per bu; caraos.;&#13;
twraips. fie p«r tm; sptoacb, gi.gf&#13;
' hamper^hejtaV'growh celery!&#13;
STATE NEWS&#13;
IN BRIEF&#13;
Jackson.—Walter Kolenda, eighteen&#13;
months old, was burned, to death&#13;
and BroniBlaw Kolenda, seven&#13;
months old, wua terribly burned, while&#13;
the mother, Mrs, John Kolenda, was&#13;
overcome by smoke in a fire which destroyed&#13;
the home of the family at 112&#13;
Sweet avenue. The steamer from engine&#13;
houee No. 3 waa wrecked when it&#13;
skidded while answering the call, and&#13;
Driver Anthony Haraeh was thrown&#13;
to the ground and injured. How the&#13;
fire started is not known. Mrs. Kolenda&#13;
left home to go to a grocery&#13;
store on an errand, and left the two&#13;
children in the house. Neighbors discovered&#13;
the Are and turned in an&#13;
alarm. Mrs. Kolenda arrived on the&#13;
acene shortly after the Are department&#13;
responded and she rushed shrieking&#13;
into the burning house. Before the&#13;
firemen could drag her from the&#13;
building she had been overcome by&#13;
smoke.&#13;
Bay City.—The numerous plac.es in&#13;
the city known as "near beer&#13;
joints," which are said to include practically&#13;
all of the saloons which were&#13;
supposed to have been put out of business&#13;
last spring, will be compelled to&#13;
take out licenses at a cost of $1,000&#13;
per year by the terms of the new ordinance&#13;
published. The ordinance&#13;
originally provided for a license fee of&#13;
$300, but it was raised to $1,000 for&#13;
the express purpose of eliminating the&#13;
business.&#13;
Jackson—Convicts who escape&#13;
from Jackson prison in the future&#13;
will be trailed by bloodhounds,&#13;
the prison management having decided&#13;
to purchase two animals. As&#13;
most escapes are discovered within &amp;.&#13;
very short time after they occur, it is&#13;
believed tlra&lt; with the aid of the dogs&#13;
the fleeing man can bo captured lyefore&#13;
he has gotten beyond the d;ty&#13;
limits.&#13;
Mason.—The supervisors have instructed&#13;
the prosecuting attorney&#13;
to draft a resolution to present to&#13;
the legislature asking action to allow&#13;
the placing of Ingham county officers&#13;
on the sajaiy system. The board! also&#13;
voted to Join with the board of Huron&#13;
county in asking that the fees of probate&#13;
Judge he.turned over to county&#13;
treasurers.&#13;
Pontlac,—The Berni-annual report&#13;
of Prosecutor Pelton 8ho»ra that&#13;
in the last six months there were 630&#13;
arrests, the largest for any similar&#13;
period in th« county's history. Of this&#13;
number 552 were convicted. For the&#13;
whole year there were only 84 more&#13;
arrests for drunkenness than the year&#13;
before, despite the big growth in population.&#13;
The number for the year was&#13;
557.&#13;
Vassar.—Frank B. Moderow, a dentist&#13;
employed by Dr. Ralph K.&#13;
Watklns, was found unconscious on&#13;
the floor of the office and was dead&#13;
when medical attendance reached him.&#13;
Death is supposed to have resulted&#13;
from a fit of some kind, ^oderow&#13;
was twenty-eight, years old, and bis&#13;
mother lives In Reese.&#13;
Jackson. — Harry C. llartlett,&#13;
charged with larceny from a store in&#13;
the daytime, was permitted to plead&#13;
guilty to a charge of simple larceny in&#13;
police court and was sentenced to 65&#13;
days in the Detroit house of correction.&#13;
Bartlett was charged with having&#13;
stolen $20 from the cash register&#13;
in the Paltfenghi saloon.&#13;
Cadillac.—Charles Madines of Marion&#13;
was fatally shot while hunt*&#13;
lng with a friend, George Robinson,&#13;
seventeen years old. The latter was&#13;
loading a' shotgun, preparing to shoot,&#13;
when tbe hammer slipped from his fingers&#13;
and discharged the cartridge,&#13;
Madines getting the full charge in his&#13;
back and side. He was carried home,&#13;
where he died.&#13;
Ann Arbor.—The election of # six&#13;
new student council men has brought&#13;
about a charge of campaigning&#13;
which la likely to start a merry&#13;
fight in the law department, as it waa&#13;
charged that law candidates for that&#13;
honor had solicited votes and peanut&#13;
politics is not allowed at Michigan.&#13;
Jackson—Anthony Lebecz, charged&#13;
with violating the liquor law,&#13;
ay selling Honor without having a&#13;
Hoehse, pleadett guHty in circuit court&#13;
and waa sentenced to pay a fine of&#13;
126, together with costs of $35.&#13;
# A&#13;
&gt; -&#13;
Have You Seen .'•,«* * -- '' '•*.'&#13;
the Coupon No* h* ^&#13;
^Q^^^^dU^&#13;
Sk&amp;L&#13;
Liggett (¾ Myers Duke's Mixture makea a&#13;
great pipe smoke—and rolled into a cigarette&#13;
nothing can beat it. ^&#13;
I t is the favorite smoke of thousands of&#13;
men who want /selected, pure, Virginia and&#13;
North Carolina bright-leaf tobacco.&#13;
If you have not smoked Duke's Mixture,,&#13;
made by Liggett &lt;$ Myers at Durham, N. C.&#13;
—try it at once. , . •* *&#13;
Each sack contains one and a half ounces of&#13;
tobacco thatisequal to any 5cgranulatedtobacco&#13;
made—and with each sack you get a book of&#13;
cigarette papers F R E E and&#13;
A Coupon That is a Dandy.&#13;
These coupons are good for many*&#13;
^valuable presents—such as watches,&#13;
cameras, jewelry, furniture,razors,&#13;
china, etc, ^&#13;
As a special offer, during r • © •&#13;
ruary and March only*&#13;
we will gend yoa oar iZfag*&#13;
trated catalog of present*&#13;
FREE* Justsendusyuurname&#13;
and address on a postal.&#13;
Coufiens ttom Duke's Mimturt may b*&#13;
tutor Udxvtth tag* /rom HORSE tHQE.&#13;
J. T , TINSIXY'S NATUItAL LEAF;&#13;
GRANGER TWiftT, coupons&#13;
from VOVRmStSV&amp;'fin dtmbU&#13;
cmiton)jJHGK PLUGCUT, ftC|D&gt;&#13;
MONT CIGARETTES, CLIX&#13;
CIGARETTES. andotJUr lagtm&#13;
amfrms tutud by ut.&#13;
Premium D«pt«&#13;
ST. LOUIS, MO.&#13;
2 L&#13;
n&#13;
SS4SRWSSl§S9SSXkt$&#13;
UNDER THE CJRC4JM8TANCE8.&#13;
•f Sort*&#13;
Your Liver&#13;
Is Clogged Up&#13;
That's Why You're T«*&amp;-&#13;
—Have No Appetite.&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE.&#13;
LIVER PILLS&#13;
will put you fight&#13;
in a few days.&#13;
T h e y d&lt;&#13;
their duty^,&#13;
CureCon-f&#13;
stipation, i&#13;
Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick 1&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL HUG*&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
loosing.—One of tbe biggest single&#13;
appropriation bills ever Introduced&#13;
in the legislature made its&#13;
appearance when Senator Francis&#13;
King submitted a measure asking for&#13;
fltlOMOO tor good roade. Of this&#13;
amount $60,060 la to be raised by taxfatten,&#13;
during 1014 and 1660,000 during&#13;
ttaVtt^fc^f&amp;wVHS?*'* SJ&amp;Pi *•**• Of the 1»H moneys, $160,000 1«&#13;
SWiiffi ^ : Fi^&amp;»lj!i2St to otrer the deficiency that will exist&#13;
•2Wl22' t. ., ,ol ,r,ew aStrUa:w v;.£$i!o£a&gt;.Hiejof p**e*r t*e*n*. "• ^fr a*t* aep •p**r*o*p rriaotaidon f ulnad a vbayi ltahbele t.i me the&#13;
* W * e per be; green psppefs Wc p«r&#13;
basket; nttobagas, 4*c per bnLhoUwpM&#13;
radlslM*,JSe nsr doe.&#13;
FftOVl*IoHS~Mess por*. tlS.W; family,&#13;
mot*: otoar back* $tea)**;.terns/&#13;
irni#t?d: saoMders, liT-tc; picnic hams, i l i - i c ; pore laMin tier***,.lie;&#13;
kettto reindersd lard, l i s pee 4b.&#13;
The Michigan etate hospital com*&#13;
mlttee of th* atatfie anaotmced that&#13;
they would report hi faro* of Improve*&#13;
meats and additions to the aeyrom at&#13;
KaJamaaoo, to coat $1S7,M1. Th* lav&#13;
orentents wilT Include a motor fir*.&#13;
~\ v ;&gt; r k4 f&#13;
engine, nurses' homo for Hale attend"-&#13;
ajrte, phyalciaha* nonage, and porehas*&#13;
M three acres of Und-TW eoontt» f tee It oonipoaed.orLern D. Ceee, of&#13;
"Now, Willie, If the minister comes&#13;
to dinner tonight you are not to ask&#13;
for a'second piece of pie."&#13;
"Why, Is dat wicked?"&#13;
Dr. PierceV Pleasant Pellet* regulate &amp;n&lt;l&#13;
iDvlgoNWstoroseh. liver and bowels. Sagaroosted,&#13;
tlnv grsaoies, euy to uke. Do uot&#13;
gripe. Adr.&#13;
Its Popularity.&#13;
"What poblic board Is most in favor&#13;
in a munclpality?"&#13;
"I rather tbink it is the festive&#13;
board?"&#13;
ALLEN'S&#13;
FOOT-EASE,&#13;
The Antiseptic powder&#13;
the iboea~TIWfllaSM_&#13;
etfjr far the feet for a&#13;
century 30400 U&#13;
Kuk. everywhere. 2ftc.&#13;
Addreu, Allen S, OltrMted. K ^. The Man who IflScEKaJsi V i:&#13;
lira. Wlnslow*n tootting Syrup for Children&#13;
tMtntng, aoftena tbe g-vma, reduces lnflamm»«&#13;
tton,altarspsln.eurMWiadcolle.SSe a bottle.^*.&#13;
The detective may be an earnest&#13;
seeker, but be doesn't always find.&#13;
DR. J. D. KKLLOOa1*) ASTHMA Remedy for trie) prompt r a M Ok&#13;
Asthma and Hay ravor. JGMtirpue)&#13;
drugglet for It. «Mki far f9Mwm&amp;&#13;
NORTHROP li LY«AH Cft. Uj. BWFilMtaig&#13;
PATENTSS^L&#13;
DEHMUCt STUftCfl VSS^SSUSSt&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, HO«&lt;hm*-&#13;
wted for the taeamaog of&#13;
f S W » boada U&gt;&gt;mcm% aew fcoteriew&#13;
for tho city. .^ "v ••&#13;
Thi oMtnefl of Bay pity adopt** m&#13;
» Beam fad' af&#13;
i1m^¾J^^b^¾ZJ^¾^^t¾^ t^ow• ^- u &lt;** **»•t* e« wU* C-rM lwamd et for&#13;
«^^ewaai*owa»gf!a; gi Kmyn&gt; ^ ^^gaOm eheek^on WOUaa Mo-&#13;
^ ^ \ _ '• \\^ - _ Orafor of tho Cleveland aonse. He&#13;
^ ****** ot Bt /OMph alrno^lowiy t smaH htfl at tho bar and la&#13;
payment tendered a $Jt ebook&gt;&#13;
-Grand Raplde —Jaasee FMpe, lootl&#13;
delhaijaiai, wnoee wtfo mm ar*&#13;
rooted whflo ettemyttog to pawn jew-&#13;
-etry idosiffied gg IbsThbg heeei letatoh&#13;
giwEi?**^"&#13;
a^iaTleT.tffhl; '"' ^....^1&#13;
I. M&#13;
c 1 . » In Wages or Profft&#13;
health, sooner or later, shows its value. No man can expect to g»&#13;
very far or very fast toward success uo woman eithcr who&#13;
suffers from the headaches, the soor ftomach aad poor digestion,&#13;
the unpleasant breath and the goc«JcfoT-»otriinf feeltt%g which&#13;
result from constipation And billonsneis.. But }ost learn fbr&#13;
yocrteTf what a difference will be made by a few doner of&#13;
-^:^&#13;
Tested through threo generaUoM • • nworably known the epoiid ower&#13;
thia perfect ttgoiable and always eB6kanhmfifroamdfU nnWersally&#13;
acceptedoa the beat preientire or correcttre o^dtsorders of tho&#13;
orfaMc^dhjestkm. Beechem'aBlktreftil«io4fa«b&lt;&gt;weU(stirtbc^¥»&#13;
tonatanl attivHy—enable yon to^eiaU the wrwrlehmwH and blood*&#13;
•Mkiago^rmeairomytwfbod. Assntnasyoatry^Mmyoaw^know&#13;
""" ' ~ VWas&#13;
.vv&#13;
Pay^Big Dlvi&#13;
., V~'&#13;
'ijAJStiHf,&#13;
w^r- &gt;m10ff&#13;
i*:r' %m • " % '&#13;
^l &lt;&lt;*&amp;aw&#13;
^mv ^M&#13;
r ' h .-&lt;&amp;»• &lt;&#13;
Fit S i . * ..-.-&#13;
iVrJVji.&#13;
. • &amp; ? • &gt;*s&#13;
I&#13;
• : • * &gt;&#13;
*$£:&#13;
* l&#13;
m&#13;
toe have a few&#13;
Tons of Bran&#13;
and Middlings&#13;
Which we will sell at a very&#13;
good figure. If yon are in&#13;
seed of either kind please&#13;
call and get our beat prices.&#13;
—Try a sack of out Pure—&#13;
Buckwheat&#13;
Flour&#13;
at 32c for 10 lbs.&#13;
The&#13;
Hoyt Bros.&#13;
THE PIHCKHET DISPATCH&#13;
r0aUU«J»STMTT*OMl&gt;AYXQafem« »T&#13;
ROY W. CAVCftLY.PtoriUfTOJt,&#13;
iAttrea at tfcft, PoatoS*o» et rack*a&gt;, Mia»l*at&#13;
SSlM«OS4t&lt;&#13;
4dv*rtt»t»t Vatw&#13;
"ft*"'&#13;
ti&gt;ew*«a applieatt**.&#13;
here own.&#13;
them last&#13;
Wm. Detroit&#13;
Absence makes the heart grow&#13;
fonder, we're told, but a good portrait&#13;
of tho absent one will keep&#13;
tbe recollection more vivid—and&#13;
comfort many a lonely hour of&#13;
separation.&#13;
We make a specialty of portraiture&#13;
and our studio is exoeptiona&#13;
ly equipped for fine portrait&#13;
^ork.&#13;
Daisie B. Chapell&#13;
Photographer&#13;
Stockbridge, Michigan&#13;
|jsOQa*s«s*«Os*ejc%«tfS^&#13;
Hills Variety Store&#13;
H o w e l l , Michigan&#13;
When in Howell don't forget&#13;
to visit our store. Every&#13;
department is filled with new&#13;
goods.&#13;
Sweaters, Av i a t i o n&#13;
Caps, G l o v e s , Mittens,&#13;
Etc.&#13;
A large stock of Choice&#13;
China, Art Goods, Novelties,&#13;
(Polls.) Hundrede of these&#13;
from lc to 13.00,&#13;
$ and 10c Goods of&#13;
All Kinds II&#13;
f * f l UWiiMW TWOAtt&#13;
Qafctt Mrs. WWu says about&#13;
_ WHiJisii t l i i M s M s i st&#13;
+m m, Uao —d Trnxut TaocmaM&#13;
^ . r—Miiti, MUk. as*, t, mi.&#13;
P S i ate. ABBOTT)&#13;
^ ^ ^ SMI" I «ta sit&#13;
_,_,__ I kssrd et the •_ .&#13;
[' ptsatk* ssjsBf i ead l got lesser -tvst&#13;
SM ft was a mmdttfwt tnrf rtm&#13;
A number of people&#13;
iug ice houses filled&#13;
week.&#13;
Don't fail to tak advantage of&#13;
the -bargains at Clinton' closing&#13;
our sale.&#13;
Miss Genivieve Alley of Dexter&#13;
spent one day last week with&#13;
friends here.&#13;
LaVerne Fiek of Monroe has&#13;
been spending some time with his&#13;
parents here.&#13;
S. E. Swarthout baa purchased&#13;
a new Ford touring car of W. G.&#13;
Reeves of Stockbridge.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. C. Lynch and&#13;
daughter Bernardiue were Jackson&#13;
visitors Saturday.&#13;
The total value of poultry and&#13;
eggs raised in Michigan last year&#13;
is estimated at $17,000,000.&#13;
Marvin Swarthout and wife of&#13;
Detroit are visiting at the home&#13;
of his brother, Mark Swarthout.&#13;
C Ernest VanArsdale of Gregory&#13;
spent the latter part of last week&#13;
at the home of Alden Carpen&#13;
ter.&#13;
Mrs. Brownell of Stockbridge&#13;
visited at the borne of her daughter&#13;
Mrs. D. R. Lantis a few days&#13;
last week.&#13;
The Mich, state prison turn out&#13;
its fust brick and tile on the firnt&#13;
day of February, according to the&#13;
officials of the prison.&#13;
Mrs. Albert Jackson, Mrs. L.&#13;
Wilcox, Mr. and Mrs. Will Miller&#13;
and son Clare and Earl Baughn&#13;
were Ann Arbor visitors one day&#13;
the past week.&#13;
- The—Towa-Marshall at the&#13;
Pinckney opera bouse Friday eve&#13;
ning, January 24. Curtain rises&#13;
at 8 o'clock p. m. Don't forget&#13;
the time the date or the place.&#13;
O. C. Burkhart on Wednesday&#13;
of las* week sold to Frank Leach&#13;
for ¢100 a bullook that weighed An&#13;
ev&gt;n 2000 pounds. Mr. Leach*&#13;
bought the animal on a lump guess&#13;
and according to the weight paid&#13;
five cents per pound 1 ve weight.&#13;
—Chelsea Standard.&#13;
Dr. Andrew C. Roc be of Eearsarge,&#13;
Mich, baa been appointed&#13;
to a place on the pardon board by&#13;
Governor Ferris to succeed Dr.&#13;
Bradley of Eaton Rapids who has&#13;
resigned. Dr. Roche is a former&#13;
Pinckney boy and his many&#13;
friends here arc much pleased dy&#13;
the honor which Governor Ferris&#13;
has shown him.&#13;
The old saying,"Langh and the&#13;
world laughs with yon ;weepaudyou&#13;
weep alone," baa got to be changed.&#13;
According to a Danish professor&#13;
at Copenhagen,tear8 are&#13;
antiseptic. So now it will be,&#13;
"Laugh and the world laughs with&#13;
youj weep and yon kill microbes,&#13;
Over at Holly tbe limit of a&#13;
conversation over a rural tele*&#13;
phone line is five minutes, according&#13;
to a recent ruling there.&#13;
A pretty good ruling for any&#13;
country town.&#13;
Supt. Wright of the state department&#13;
of public instruction^**&#13;
drafted &lt;be following bill which&#13;
tbe legislature will be aaked to&#13;
paas: Tbe district board of education&#13;
in all primary, graded aid&#13;
township unit districts of tbe atate&#13;
may use money in general fond of&#13;
said district for tbe purpose of&#13;
paying tntitioa and transportation&#13;
to some other district or districts^&#13;
children woo have not completed&#13;
eight grades of work, in oases&#13;
where such children ire nearer to&#13;
tbe school bouse ia another dietriel,&#13;
t*eak&gt; the school house \n&#13;
thekaam district, and may&gt;ote a&#13;
Surdam&#13;
Sunday bare.&#13;
Dr. H. F. Sigler was in Detroit&#13;
oa\ business tfctuiday.&#13;
- Clyde Molntyre is spending&#13;
some iimejat Ann Arbor.&#13;
OUudoMiHer of DSxte*was in&#13;
town on bnsiaeas last Friday.&#13;
L. W. Hoff and wife of Flint&#13;
were over Sunday visitors here.&#13;
Chas. Kraase of near Howell&#13;
spent the week end with friends&#13;
here.&#13;
If n't it remarkable bow many&#13;
men in this world are living on&#13;
bluff.&#13;
John Dinkei spent the latter&#13;
part of last week in Detroit on&#13;
business.&#13;
Clare Skinner of Howell was&#13;
the guest of friends here last&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
George Leofflor visited relatives&#13;
in Ann Arbor a few days&#13;
last week.&#13;
V. Ostrander of Stockbridge&#13;
was a Pinckney caller the latter&#13;
part of last week.&#13;
Chas. Campbell was the guest&#13;
of his son, Fred Campbell in Ann&#13;
Arbor over Sunday.&#13;
Tbe Annual Old Folks Mas -&#13;
querade will be pulled off at&#13;
Brighton on Jan. 24.&#13;
The offices and halls of the&#13;
court house at Howell are being&#13;
painted and decorated.&#13;
Helen and Walter Reason spent&#13;
several days last week with relatives&#13;
at Whit more Lake.&#13;
Miss Kate Connors of the State&#13;
Sanitarium near Howell visited&#13;
her people near here over Sunday.&#13;
Wm. Tiplady and son of Webster&#13;
was the gnest of friends and&#13;
and relatives here one day last&#13;
week.&#13;
Miss Florence Doyle of Jackson&#13;
spent Monday and Tuesday&#13;
at the home of her father James&#13;
Doyle.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Dunbar and children&#13;
spent several days last week at&#13;
the home of her parents, Mr. and&#13;
and Mrs. V. G. Dinkei.&#13;
As tbe auction season is now at&#13;
hand let UK remind you that we&#13;
can furnish you with bills and advertising.&#13;
Give us a calI7&#13;
It's a curious thing how a womam&#13;
can be perfectly comfortable&#13;
in kid wlippers and spiderwebb&#13;
stockings if she only has a nice&#13;
warm muff.&#13;
P. G. Hart man &amp; Son havfi on&#13;
their hooks a hog which weighed&#13;
alive just 630 pounds. It was pur&#13;
cha»ed of Frank Rickett and coat&#13;
over $44,00,—Brighton Argus.&#13;
Tbe Washtenaw county board of&#13;
supervisors w i l l r e s u b m i t&#13;
tbe good roads proposition to tbe&#13;
voters at the spring election on&#13;
April 7. The proposition was&#13;
defeated last year by a large majority.&#13;
Alta Bnilis. Rose Jeffreys, Ann&#13;
Leunon, Bernardino Lynch,Heleu&#13;
VI00k8, Florence and Helen Reason,&#13;
Norma Vaughn, Willie Darrow,&#13;
Maurice Darrow, Wm. Jeff&#13;
rey*, Norbert Lavey, Louis and&#13;
Leo Monks, Thoa. Mo ran and Lee&#13;
iptady attended the dance at&#13;
Hamburg last Friday evening.&#13;
A large percentage of youthful&#13;
criminals are the result of lack of&#13;
care, No resttant haa been placed&#13;
upon them in their home life aud&#13;
the free access to bad literature&#13;
perverted both minds and moralsi&#13;
In this day of abundant literature&#13;
there is no excuse for parents who&#13;
fail to supply their children with&#13;
plenty of wholesome stimulating&#13;
books and papers. It is a mistake&#13;
Be and read R. Clinton's&#13;
a Jack-&#13;
&lt;?*r'&#13;
I K lor that purpose,&#13;
sure&#13;
adv.&#13;
Margaret Greiner was.&#13;
son visitor Satuiday.&#13;
Norbert Lavey spent ^everajt&#13;
days last weektfo Jaojaonv ;i •&lt;' %&gt;&#13;
A. M. Roche 1B working" in a&#13;
wholesale house in Detroit.&#13;
Oh, yes a little winter now and&#13;
then is relished oy the fuel men.&#13;
Mathew Renchler of Dexter&#13;
transacted business here last Friday.&#13;
V. G. DiuKel spent several days&#13;
last week in Detroit with relatives.&#13;
^ Ruel Cadwell of Detroit spent&#13;
Friday and Saturday with friend*&#13;
here.&#13;
Geo. Reason was an over Sunday&#13;
visitor in Howell and Fowlerville.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Irwin of Lansing has&#13;
been spending some time here&#13;
with relatives.&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Joe Kennedy&#13;
of Battle Creek, Thursday&#13;
Jan. 3, a son.&#13;
W, G. Reeves of Stockbridge&#13;
was in town on business one day&#13;
the past week.&#13;
John Coyle of Whitmore Lake&#13;
was the guest of Rev. Jos. Coyle&#13;
the fore part of the week.&#13;
117,000 has been raised towards&#13;
the ¢40,000 Presbyterian c lurch&#13;
whioh will be erected at Howell.&#13;
Chas. Morau of Cincinnatti, Ohio&#13;
is spending some time at the home&#13;
of his mother, Mrs. EuimaMoran.&#13;
John and Lee Tiplady were the&#13;
guests of friends and relatives in&#13;
Toledo a number of days the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Ed Borers of Kansas C;ty spent&#13;
tbe latter part of last week at the&#13;
home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs&#13;
Jacob Bowers.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. VanBlaricum&#13;
of Detroit spent several days&#13;
last week at the home of the&#13;
former's brother, Bert Van-&#13;
Blaricum.&#13;
During the past three months&#13;
William Sharp, drover, has purchased&#13;
from Edward Crawford of&#13;
Iosco live stock amounting to&#13;
l6,197.61.-B^lerdlk^ioaQl§rd.&#13;
Now that crates of eggs and&#13;
beef sttaks are held up in the&#13;
parcels post because of wrong addresses&#13;
or insufficient postage, the&#13;
dead letter office will have to build&#13;
a cold storage annex.&#13;
Mrs. Flora A. Skinner as administratrix&#13;
of the estate of Bnrrill&#13;
Skinaer has started suit for $8,000&#13;
against the village of Howell.&#13;
Burrill was killed last summer by&#13;
coming in4Q0tact with a live wire&#13;
from which it is claimed the insulating&#13;
had worn off.&#13;
Secretary Charles Pierce of&#13;
Lansing, Secretary of the Republican&#13;
state central committee, has&#13;
sent out the call for the spring&#13;
convention of the Republican&#13;
party to be held in Lansing February&#13;
11. Contrary to th* expectations&#13;
the appointment of delegates&#13;
has not been made 0)0 the&#13;
vote at tbe last election, but I s&#13;
based on the vote cast for seore&#13;
taiy of state in 1910. The law&#13;
does not require that the apportionment&#13;
of delegates be changed&#13;
at the convention this spring, so&#13;
tbe old one will stand..&#13;
The Woman's suffrage amend&#13;
ment is to come before the legislature&#13;
again this session and the&#13;
suffragists hope to secure for it&#13;
immediate effect so that it may Devoted&#13;
on at the spring election].&#13;
The vote at the fall election was&#13;
very close and it was though&#13;
"TIE TOWN MARSHAL&#13;
'fa % A Four A c t Gomedy Draina&#13;
j * .&#13;
Will be presented under auspices o f t h e&#13;
E p w o r t h League of t h e M . E« C h u r c h , a t&#13;
Pinckney Opera House&#13;
Friday Evening January 24&#13;
C a s t of C h a r a c t e r s :&#13;
Harold Desmond, The Town Marshall&#13;
Mark Jamieson, A Lawyer of Evil Tendencies..&#13;
Uncle Jeb Jenkins, A South Dakota Farmer&#13;
Willis Hartley, A Wealthy Grain Dealer&#13;
William Torrence, A Mau With a Past&#13;
Ikey Levinsky, A Jewish Peddler&#13;
Laura Hartley, A Village Belle _ _ _„__._&#13;
Mary Ann Hartley, A Spinster&#13;
Lucy Ames, A Village Hoyden „&#13;
.ALGEBHUjjf.&#13;
E. E. How&#13;
EARL TUPPII&#13;
LYNN HBNDEB&#13;
.WABD SWARTHOUT&#13;
R. W. CAVEBLT&#13;
KITSEY ALLISON&#13;
BEULAH BtJ»3E88&#13;
ALTA BULLIS&#13;
Synopsis: i&#13;
and vicious reading matter is attractive.&#13;
That which is pure,&#13;
wholesome and entertainly written&#13;
is just as attractive to the average the cause is losing ground&#13;
child and perhaps more so than&#13;
the sort that is flashy and perverting.&#13;
Sufficient oam in the selection&#13;
of literature for ohildren and&#13;
young people is not always shown.&#13;
In truth it may be said that in&#13;
many households no attention&#13;
what*?** is paid to the matter&#13;
with the result that a lot of trash&#13;
and even visions reading Ands^its&#13;
srsy into ths heads of yoosg&#13;
people.&#13;
to think that onlytv soggsstivo sentiment for the amendment&#13;
would be greatly strengthened&#13;
thereby, but strsnge $» it&#13;
appear there is now evidence&#13;
ially among woman. Many&#13;
nent and intelligent womsn&#13;
arrayed thenMaTvasoo the&#13;
side and it is by no mesfo*&#13;
bet that it will carry next&#13;
The farmers voted heavily&#13;
suffrage and they are expected&#13;
be out full force at the.&#13;
election because supervisors&#13;
voted for si that time sad&#13;
said the laadeneoontoB th&#13;
helpthem win,—Ex.&#13;
ACT I—Lncy pirMcnted. Jenkins tells Mary Ann of bis troubles. A wronged&#13;
man in tbe clutches of a scoundrel. Lennektj beajps a joke which gets bim'into&#13;
trouble. Laura defends Lncy. Hartley's safe rifled and important documtnts stolen.&#13;
"You are a brave man Mr. Desmond." The plot. Jamieson springs his mine, ,"He&#13;
bears an assumed name!" Desmond at Bay. "I am n man of honor. Farewell!'.'&#13;
ACT II—Le?insky confides a secret to Jenkins. "lam a Jew and I never-buys&#13;
hogs on * Saturday." Lucy fetches letter to Desmond. The quarrel. "This is1 my&#13;
answer!" The story of a wronged msn. "My father is inoocent, though a convict."&#13;
Jenkins courts Mary Ann. Desmond goes to discharge bis duty. "I shall stand' before&#13;
you tomorrow without shame or I shall have ceased to Jive!"&#13;
ACT III—Jenkins and Levinsky atone in the dugout. Jenkins explains the mteaning&#13;
of the word "gissard." Torrance a fugitive. Desmond recognises his father, The&#13;
story. "Arrest me, my son, it i« your duty!" "I shall do my duty and free you 1 "The&#13;
escape. "I aloue am guilty!" A woman's sorrow. "My heart is breaking!"&#13;
ACT IV—Jamieson threatens Laura. "I despise you!" The threat. Jenkins palls&#13;
Jamiesou'e nose. Mary Aun's wedding lingerie exposed. "A new sassiety cuss word."&#13;
Desmond returns. Laura sees light at last. "He assuitied his father's guilt to save him!"&#13;
Jamieson unmasked. "My faith in you will endure forever!" The betrothal.&#13;
Reserved Seats On Sale at Brown's Drug Store&#13;
,, &gt;&#13;
Admission, 15 and 2 5 cento&#13;
H O T E L G R I S W O L D&#13;
artSKrfB!: Detroit, Mich.&#13;
Postal Hotel Co.&#13;
FRED POSTAL, Pre*. FRED A. GOODMAN Secretary&#13;
Headquarters of the Wolverine Iiltemobile Clilbl&#13;
Detroit*® Most Popular Hotel&#13;
European r*lan Only Rate* $1.00 per day and up&#13;
$ 0 0 , 0 0 0 Bxpneded In Reittodcllnfc Furnlahlnfl and Decorating&#13;
Tht Finest Cafe West of New York&#13;
Service A La Carte at Popular Prices&#13;
A Strictly Modern and Up-to-date Hotel. Centrally located in the-very heart of the&#13;
city, "Where Life is Worth Living." N o t h i n g b e t t e r a t o u r r a t e *&#13;
sea EGGS, POULTRY AND VEAL eea&#13;
Attention Farmers !&#13;
Don't forget that we come here •&#13;
Every Wednesday A. M.&#13;
And will pay every cent the market affords. We wiH&#13;
appreciate a share of your business,&#13;
Cal: «a by phone—No. 33, either phone, for prices.&#13;
«- H. L WILLIAMS&#13;
rtfd'j :¾&#13;
/ * •&#13;
t '••"•&#13;
mM.&#13;
Ffy&#13;
• ' " . - • * &gt;&#13;
;-.*ft*&#13;
•••*!&gt;£.. •c:!''-.&#13;
*&#13;
; »&#13;
•f&#13;
.$'.:&#13;
Manage&#13;
Things&#13;
"1 really don't tUak we're going to&#13;
•are enough tables for all the people,"&#13;
oenplalned Miss Jotes ai*~th*&gt; eauroh;&#13;
tinner, with a deepening of the&#13;
wrinkle* of many caret. "I dont lee&#13;
waj the minister made It such a pot*&#13;
tto a^ssmoeaeni He might hare&#13;
known thai we have to borrow dishes&#13;
for the dinner."&#13;
"Hftjer mind," toothed Mrs. Bur.&#13;
pushing ohalrt into the varioui&#13;
meanwhile glancing complaat&#13;
the dock. "It's about time&#13;
and we're all ready.'&#13;
Milt Jones moved nervously over to&#13;
one of the tablet. "I really don't think&#13;
these flowers are fresh enough, do&#13;
your she asked of any one who might&#13;
to answer as the fussed over&#13;
and replaced several stems. "The&#13;
promised faithfully that he'd&#13;
out perfectly fresh ones—but I&#13;
&lt;** knew we couldn't trust him!"&#13;
"Oh, did you buy the flowers?" some&#13;
one inquired politely.&#13;
"No; tbey didnt put me on the committee.&#13;
But I know that florist of old,&#13;
to I just called him up this afternoon&#13;
and told him that I wouldn't tolerate&#13;
any tricks. I told him that he'd better&#13;
send fresh flowers or he'tUose our&#13;
trade!"&#13;
Miss Jones moved away, greatly agl-&#13;
* tated over the falseness of the word&#13;
of florists.&#13;
| / "Oh, are you going to wear, that big&#13;
&gt;., apron?" she inquired, stopping a small&#13;
. girl who was hurrying in with a tray&#13;
of dishes. "I thought all the girls&#13;
were going to wear small round&#13;
-h aprons. I suppose it's all right,'.but I&#13;
think uniformity is much better. Didn't&#13;
any one tell you? But, of course, no&#13;
one did. It seems that if I don't take&#13;
hold and do things nothing ever gets&#13;
done!"&#13;
She darted over to a far corner, as&#13;
she spied the minister approaching.&#13;
°Oht I'm so glad you've come!" She exclaimed.&#13;
"I'm sure I don't know who&#13;
is in charge—but there ought to be&#13;
tome head, that's sure! Who is going&#13;
to take the tickets? We ought&#13;
to station some one at the door. People&#13;
are just thronging in, 4nd you&#13;
know that some people can't be trusted!&#13;
"By the way," as he turned to leave,&#13;
"you'd better announce at the beginning&#13;
of the dinner that everybody must&#13;
hurry ami get through, for we've got&#13;
a lot of business to attend to—and betides&#13;
all the dishes have to be wash- v ed and put away!&#13;
&gt; - '. "What!" she cried a little later, as&#13;
•fee watched the service. "Are you&#13;
. ^gatting all that meat on one plater"&#13;
y.^**j|er tone was horror struck. "Oh, of&#13;
course, they're hungry, tut church it&#13;
no place for them to come to stuff&#13;
themselves! I'd just put about half&#13;
as much meat ._on_eac. hplate—you'iL&#13;
never have enough at that rate. .Oh,&#13;
ff course, you2know what you're doing,&#13;
• *„ fut I'll warrant that you'll regret it!"&#13;
* She moved away huffily to see how&#13;
ithe tables were progressing.&#13;
~\ "Good evening, Mrs. Grey," she ea-&#13;
* :.„ tlaiined, bending cordially over one of&#13;
the diners, "Aren't you lucky to sit&#13;
at the first table! I thought you were&#13;
•' going to take charge of a table, but&#13;
I.suppose }oa weie too buo/ wltu your&#13;
home duties. I really ought to have&#13;
ttayed at home this evening—I've&#13;
quantities of mending to do, and my&#13;
room is growing fairfy strange. I so&#13;
teldom remain there long enough to&#13;
look around! But then, since the&#13;
church really needs my help, it's the&#13;
least I can do to be here! If I manage&#13;
t &gt; get any supper at all, I'm lucky.&#13;
There's so much to look after!&#13;
"You want some more cream?" she&#13;
inquired at a table that she was passing&#13;
on her way to new fields. "Well,&#13;
- JP11 see what I can do for you. Here,"&#13;
the called to a girl who was hastening&#13;
by with a tray of hot potatoes, "won't&#13;
you fill this pitcher? They want more&#13;
cream.' They've had only one cup of coffee&#13;
apiece so far, hut their cream is&#13;
allgonef' Cream is so expensive, too!&#13;
Til sea taai you get it in a minute/'&#13;
$7,000 Stock of Dry Goods, Boots and&#13;
S h o e s , R u b b e r s , Groceries,&#13;
Furniture, Etc., to be Closed Out Regardless&#13;
of Pricee&#13;
EVERYTHING MUST GO POSTIVELY NO RESERVATIONS&#13;
S a l e Commences Monday January 27fh9'13&#13;
Space does not permit our mentioning prices on every article In&#13;
our large stock but we mention a few that you will realize are rock&#13;
bottom prices. Now is your opportunity to stock up. Read!&#13;
•'4**i&#13;
*&#13;
batfies Shoes&#13;
A11 Ladies 53.50 Shoes at *2 50&#13;
ti « 3 0 0 " •' 2 00&#13;
u « ' 2 60 " " . 1 75&#13;
Ladies Comfort Shoes 2 00 quality at 1 10&#13;
«' FlexibleToe8hoe8 2 25 " 1 60&#13;
Misses Shoes&#13;
All Misses 12 50 Shoes at&#13;
« « 2 00 " '&#13;
1 60 " '&#13;
1 25 « '&#13;
i f&#13;
1 75&#13;
1 25&#13;
1 00&#13;
90&#13;
75&#13;
Girls Shoes&#13;
All Girls 2 00 Shoes at $1 25&#13;
" " 1 50 " • 1 10&#13;
' " M M " ' 75&#13;
All 8oft Sole Baby Shops at 18c per pair&#13;
Mens Shoes&#13;
AH Mens $4 00 Dress Shoes at&#13;
« «• 3 00 " . " '&#13;
&lt;&lt; «• 2 50 " " '&#13;
a&#13;
tt&#13;
13 00&#13;
2 00&#13;
1 75&#13;
• " &lt; 1 50&#13;
3 50 Henv? Work Shoes a t . 3 00&#13;
3 00^ •« " 4• . ' 2 25&#13;
' " 2 50 " " " ' 1 75&#13;
All Odds and Ends at prices to suit&#13;
Boys Shoes&#13;
Rubbers&#13;
Men's&#13;
Lumber jacks, Lambertville $2 20&#13;
" Bait-Band 2 00&#13;
*' Woonsocket 1 90&#13;
" Bull-Baud Gum 1 80&#13;
Perfections Lambertville 2 00&#13;
'• Lan-Band 1 75&#13;
Leather Tops American 16 in 2 86&#13;
" «« Para 12 in 2 25&#13;
" Ball-Baud 12 in 2 50&#13;
Rubber Tops LainbTtvUle for (*ock 2 80&#13;
«• " Ball-Band Lace for sock 2 50&#13;
Arctics Lambertville 4 Buckle all Rubber&#13;
2 75&#13;
« «&lt; it u c i c t b 2 75&#13;
a u i " " 1 70&#13;
" Ball-Band 1 bkle all rubber 1 60&#13;
" " " ctoth 1 30&#13;
•' Ex Tap Sole 1 45&#13;
" Rhode Island 1 buckle&#13;
" Para 1 bkle Tup Sole&#13;
— " E m p i r e "Mrkte _&#13;
Boys'&#13;
Arctics Ball-Bund size 5 to 6 heavy&#13;
" «• 11 to 2&#13;
" Para 11 to 2&#13;
" •'* 2i M - H&#13;
Lumberjacks • 13 io 2 Gum&#13;
" ! 6 to G &lt;l&#13;
1 25&#13;
1 35&#13;
851T&#13;
1 10&#13;
85c&#13;
80c&#13;
1 00&#13;
1 26&#13;
1 45&#13;
I&#13;
All B6ys $2 60 Dress Shoes at $1 75&#13;
« " 2 00 " " ' 1 25&#13;
•All Odd and Ends at prices to suit&#13;
All Rojs$2 60 Work Shots at $1 90&#13;
u a i 75 .&lt; u 1 20&#13;
All Odds and Ends at price* to suit&#13;
All Elkskin 12 25 Shoes at 1 76&#13;
". " 2 00 ** * 1 40&#13;
** '« IH5 . »« * 1 25&#13;
All Youths 75c Shoes at 5oc&#13;
Mens LainbriTviiie MTHJ Ball Band Boots&#13;
»t H 0 0&#13;
Boys Rubber Boois 12-55&#13;
Boys Frtis and Rubbers ¢1.50&#13;
Rubber F o o t w e a r&#13;
All Mens II (KJ Robbers at 85c&#13;
" " 00&lt;i * ' 80c&#13;
" Boys 90c Rolled Edge Rubbers at v 75c&#13;
i&lt; «&lt; 7o0 «i i( K 55c&#13;
Ail Children* Storm Rubbda at 45o&#13;
All Ladies »nd MisH^s 75c Rubbers at 65c&#13;
Mens and Boys Sbirt* -&#13;
:t&lt;r&#13;
% •&#13;
giau if© O O B T n m i i p i i&#13;
•uppers very often,** gne re;"'"'~&#13;
A woman sitting near-her when they&#13;
were assembled after dinner for the&#13;
church meeting. "If we did I'd be in&#13;
my grave—I'm perfectly sure of thati&#13;
/¾ second the motion," she , ceiled&#13;
out an instant later as the caught the&#13;
final words of the speaker. "What are&#13;
.they.voting on?" she inquired of her&#13;
neighbor. "I think we ought to show&#13;
our interest by voting, don't yooT&#13;
» 'Tm glad It's over. I'm all worn&#13;
«ufc—and here I'm the last to leave, as&#13;
usual," she said, wearily to the janitor,&#13;
who ^waited .patiently ae she put' on&#13;
Mr hat.and coat "YouH be sure to&#13;
lock up everything good and tight,&#13;
• jwpn'fc your—Chicago Daily News.&#13;
•ameOldYem.&#13;
II roe that your small boy&#13;
mrnlw hi* lateatr&#13;
&gt;. " . .. -j&#13;
you *erer met aim."&#13;
tTfem&lt;laJotoif»dsj&#13;
tell thwHUM&#13;
ftaM&#13;
•u &lt;Mw*m*0**mm^ wn* at&#13;
i &gt;l&#13;
Mittens&#13;
•*w&#13;
Underwear&#13;
All Underwear will be disposed of at way&#13;
below cost&#13;
Ladies &amp; Misses Corsets&#13;
Ladies $1 50 Corsets at&#13;
" 1 25 •' '&#13;
ii i Qo i. «&#13;
ii 5 0 " '&#13;
L»ace Curtains&#13;
f-3 00 quality at $1 50&#13;
2 00 1 00&#13;
2.50 " 1 2 5&#13;
1 5 0 " 75c&#13;
100 " 66c&#13;
25c&#13;
About 250 yards &lt;if 10c i»nd 15r&#13;
erips anH insertion -it p^r ysrd&#13;
Enobrnid-&#13;
5c&#13;
All Lpc&gt;;»t Hnlf Price&#13;
AM Ribbons nt one third off&#13;
Girls Cnstn at Hilf Price&#13;
only n few left&#13;
The halsnce of onr stock of L«^e« Hreas&#13;
Goods wjll be sold at Co«t and L*M&#13;
Mens O v e r a l l s&#13;
Mens 91 00 Overalls at&#13;
i i 50c •• » i*' ,;Jv&#13;
*•'*«".•-.- if -:M-- 75&#13;
" yW '» • ' .. ' 38&#13;
Ail Meus 50c Q\nven and Mittens at 38&#13;
15c Tick Mitten* at lie per pair&#13;
Boys S u i t s&#13;
Boys $.') oo Suiu, nli wool ;&#13;
•« 6 00 " •• " (&#13;
" 7 00 '• I&#13;
Groceries&#13;
Royal Valley Coffee, 40c quality at&#13;
II ( &lt; &lt; . 3 5 c II&#13;
i. a &lt;&lt; ; g c a «&#13;
" " Teas 50c "&#13;
II ii i&lt; 4()g &lt;i i&#13;
•1 Caus Tcmiatuen&#13;
Best ('oro, 4 c in- tor&#13;
Succotusb, 4 caus&#13;
livbt Red Salmon per can&#13;
Be«t String Beans, 4 cau« for&#13;
Peaches, per can&#13;
2 cuns Light lluuse Cleanser&#13;
Tomato Cateu[), per bottle&#13;
Mustard Pickles, per buttle&#13;
1 can Critico&#13;
Yeast Foam, 2 cukes&#13;
lUc Spices at&#13;
Best Tooth picks at&#13;
26c can of Dried Beef at&#13;
15c cuim &lt;l 2 cans for&#13;
C&lt;irn«d Beef per can&#13;
&amp;tt*l&gt;8, A4i Kinds, per carr&#13;
Calumet Baking i'owder, 25c cuns&#13;
" " " 15c "&#13;
.1 ,. 20c •'&#13;
*• " " 10c "&#13;
Sapolio, 4 cakes&#13;
Argo titarch ut&#13;
Snow Boy Washing Powder&#13;
Leader Milk&#13;
Pel Milk di&#13;
Cocoa, at per can&#13;
Jtliyccn at per pkg&#13;
Tapioca&#13;
Hviilcle's Bread Flour, 261b sack&#13;
Pinckiiey Flour 25 lb sack&#13;
7c Rice&#13;
Baiter Crust Bread at&#13;
Crackers per pound&#13;
Rolled Oats, bulk per lb&#13;
4 pkg* Toasted Corn Flukes for&#13;
Kellogg's " " " Spkga,&#13;
6 bars White Fiak« Soap&#13;
7 " Queen Ann "&#13;
8 bars Lenox&#13;
, S W S o ^ &gt; e r &lt; e * | _&#13;
•rsTimct HaoMMr Iteim * - - ^&#13;
Rnek!|o*Mope Wtthfef Powder&#13;
3 boxt-B Matches&#13;
Granulated Sugar 10 lbs for&#13;
Best Seeded Raisins&#13;
Best Seedless "&#13;
, , , ^&#13;
1&#13;
n&#13;
J»'&#13;
.*, Watch For bar^e Price Ulst on Furniture Next Week&#13;
CLINTON, i PINCKNEY Show C a s e s and Fixtures a r e Also For Sale ;•• -ft "'*•!• I&#13;
•rn.iurt&#13;
( ^ &gt; ^S^S^a 9m9m0-&#13;
tit?^*afc-»' f. •»&#13;
4 « WlfU#t&lt;&#13;
.*&#13;
J*&#13;
CUPJIMSiV'&#13;
* * * * * *&#13;
*\t&#13;
For Ssile by All Dpu^tftts&#13;
mil • i. ,'K ' • rrr&#13;
).»-&#13;
: ^ - V - • , ^ n * - * * n t ••* 4 r Subscribe fop The Dispatch&#13;
Yet, we have them, in nil styles and prices. Tbey are&#13;
$HE WONDERFUL COLUMBIA -&#13;
• k. . • ...! 1. . . . •• f&#13;
in both korn and horolet* types. Heat one wifch ibe&#13;
«•# repredtwer (jatt out) and yon will bf anrpdaedr&#13;
Try oie fit yoor borne. Sold oh eeisy IWwisAlta*&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
mint&#13;
ITifA jIfri' .wvn.&amp;w a&#13;
'Ohtr*taJa»j&#13;
atui»4T.J&#13;
**•* BrCi&#13;
IAN.,&#13;
;v •JA„ &gt;K&#13;
^ • V ' , '&#13;
• , *&#13;
i * ' \ V&#13;
^&#13;
:.£&#13;
&amp;&#13;
27&#13;
m ,¾&#13;
*****&#13;
Dispatch&#13;
MICHIGAN&#13;
BOY W. CAVKHLV, Pub,&#13;
FJNQS^SX. - - -&#13;
' YOUNGEST EUROPEAN CITY.&#13;
Odessa is one of the youngest ot&#13;
B|uroi&gt;ea'n cities. Only 120 years ago.&#13;
Hdji Bey, a little Turkish settlement,&#13;
nestled ou the cliffs that overlook the&#13;
harbor and dozed und.r the sultan&#13;
across the Black sea, writes Sydney&#13;
Adaimson in Harper's Magazine. The&#13;
long uriu of Hussiu reached out and&#13;
took it, and planted there, upon the&#13;
plateau overlooking the bay, the beginners&#13;
of a commercial city that now&#13;
holds between 500,000 and 600,000. The&#13;
revolution in France soon sent refugees&#13;
scattering over the world, and&#13;
noble names came to Odessa, and one&#13;
may read them still on street corners&#13;
—Daribas, Richelieu and Langeron.&#13;
Later Englishmen came and brought&#13;
ships to carry away Russian grain, and&#13;
then the Crimean war swept across&#13;
this friendly relation. But the English&#13;
staid when the war had passed, and&#13;
then Germany came, md afterward&#13;
Americans, with reapers and plows&#13;
and steam traction engines, to help&#13;
the Russians to. grow more richly the&#13;
grain that the English and the German&#13;
ships carried out to the world.&#13;
Last of all came the Jews, and they&#13;
cut the business so fine thnt the English&#13;
starved and gave up; so the business&#13;
of exporting today is mainly in&#13;
the hands of the Jews. A few hardy&#13;
Germans and English are left.&#13;
The Mercury de France has been&#13;
making some inquiries as to the respective&#13;
popularity of the various modern&#13;
languages in the schools of&#13;
Europe, and it finds that French is&#13;
still far ahead of all competitors. It&#13;
says that in England German finds&#13;
less and less favor, and that pupils&#13;
who have at/y optipn in regard to a&#13;
modern language always choose&#13;
French. in France, however, since&#13;
1870, German has perhaps secured a&#13;
preponderance over English in the&#13;
Lycees, says the Westminster Gazettre.&#13;
In Germany the study of&#13;
French has progressed to the detriment&#13;
of English, but the government&#13;
has intervened in order to develop the&#13;
teaching of English, which it regards&#13;
as of great Importance in commercial&#13;
matters. French 1B now taught in&#13;
Italy more than ever before, but German&#13;
Is also gaining some ground, especially&#13;
in the north. In Spain&#13;
"F-rench-h** more-pupila. than any other&#13;
foreign language, and English&#13;
comes next.&#13;
The passion for censorship seems to&#13;
be on the increase It may properly&#13;
be considered as a by-product of the&#13;
NEWS FROM THE&#13;
STATE&#13;
BASIC 8YSTEM OF T R U N K LINE&#13;
STATE ROADS TO BE B U I L T&#13;
BY CONVICT LABOR.&#13;
B I L L FOR STATE WIDE PROHIBITION&#13;
COMING UP.&#13;
The Session of the Legislature Is Now&#13;
Growing More and More Interesting&#13;
to the People Each Day.&#13;
I By Gurd M. Hayes.]&#13;
William H. Allsweed, national progressive&#13;
senator from the twentyfourtli&#13;
district, will be the good roads&#13;
advocate of the present session. His&#13;
ideas on the need of good highways&#13;
are a little advanced of even the average&#13;
enthusiast on good roads and&#13;
his scheme for a basic system of&#13;
trunk line state roads is attracting attention&#13;
and general commendation.&#13;
lie has been busy for some time preparing&#13;
measures to pave the way for&#13;
a system of Michigan trunk line highways.&#13;
He has the plan worked out&#13;
and is now getting bills ready for introduction&#13;
to put them into execution.&#13;
His scheme calls for three trunk line&#13;
highways in the lower peninsula. One&#13;
of these is the Western Michigan lake&#13;
shore line project to extend from&#13;
Niles to Mackinac, another is a central&#13;
north and south line on the meridian&#13;
and another across the state line&#13;
from Detroit to St. Joseph. Another&#13;
project calls for an upper peninsula&#13;
road. The idea is to construct this&#13;
1,000 miles of state road, using convict&#13;
albor and drawing upon half the&#13;
automobile tax to cover the expense.&#13;
He claims it will cost about $2,000,000&#13;
and can be completed in two or three&#13;
yean.&#13;
Changes In Compensation.&#13;
Important changes in the workingmen's&#13;
compensation act are advocated&#13;
by Senator Frank James, of Hancock,&#13;
in a bill introduced in the upper&#13;
house. The changes have been approved&#13;
by the labor leaders of the&#13;
state and are well received by the&#13;
members of the _legislatur-e-—One&#13;
post office bill we have the first stages&#13;
of a censorship of the press. There Is&#13;
-also a censorship of the moving picture&#13;
Industry, which will doubtless in&#13;
time bo extended to the whole theatrical&#13;
field. Already this is true in England,&#13;
says Life. What is really needed,&#13;
however, Is a censorship to suppress&#13;
the truth. The truth is getting very&#13;
bold In these days, and unless some&#13;
measures are taken to curtail her activities,&#13;
lamentable results will follow.&#13;
The governor of Michigan urges a&#13;
sort of church uniform dress for women,&#13;
plain and inexpensive, which all&#13;
can wear. So guileless a theory ought&#13;
to be followed up by a proposal that&#13;
horse races should be conducted with&#13;
a view of affording artistic enjoyment&#13;
by the easy grace of horses, with all&#13;
betting eliminated.&#13;
change provides that no compensation&#13;
shall be paid for an injury which does&#13;
not incapacitate the employe for more&#13;
than one week. Under the present&#13;
law the limit is two weeks. Another&#13;
provision sets forth that compensation&#13;
shall begin growing paternalism on the part of on the eighth day after the&#13;
—ear- government. -In the -newspaper:\ 1 njuryr instead ot 15 day's", as under&#13;
A great joke was played upon President&#13;
Hadley at the recent banquet ft*&#13;
the Harvard football team by th#\Jtat&gt;&#13;
ton alumni. A_ jtedeet, cleverly df»&#13;
fulaeds-^mf speaking broken English,&#13;
•aslntroduced to the '"Prexy" as&#13;
"Herr Baron von Keppel," Just over&#13;
from Germany. President Lowell lent&#13;
himself to the foreigner's entertainneat,&#13;
recalling other distinguished foreigners&#13;
who had shown Interest in the&#13;
university. When the stranger asked,&#13;
"What time do they chase the eats on&#13;
boardr' the president promptly recognised&#13;
him as a Harvard man by hit&#13;
university-English.&#13;
Allhougn -ite tf^y,. „&#13;
it would not' °r" t V j&#13;
!«v&#13;
. At a Lacrosse poultry show a $200&#13;
prise hen swallowed a $200 ruby,&#13;
which accidentally dropped into her&#13;
CBOf&gt;and Unit Increased her value to&#13;
1400» This blue-ribbon poultry-show&#13;
basinets Is making the hens too vain&#13;
and high-minded for ordinary use*. A&#13;
ttSO hen ought to be satisfied with htr&#13;
pstocratlc position, but the female&#13;
sated ever aspires to what is ftnolful&#13;
tn? *****&#13;
tt it aald that the sultan of Turkey&#13;
t* akftltd^as a pianist Most of hit&#13;
•would prefer to be matter&#13;
&gt;tbey ttijr tb«t the new $10,000 bOl&#13;
|p ft wot* of aft But only the mOttoa*&#13;
afford to havt tt&#13;
A Seattle bet of twelve hat a bt*t&gt;&#13;
tsfst erofr «1 w^Wstm Wonder *&#13;
&lt;b**«re * e * # * I M *&gt;*&#13;
the present law, and if tho injury continues&#13;
so as to incapacitate and employe&#13;
for four weeks or longer, compensation&#13;
shall start at the date of&#13;
the injury, Senator James has introduced&#13;
another bill giving the employer&#13;
th6 right to pay the employe compensation&#13;
direct, in case the employer&#13;
carries insurance and also gives&#13;
the employers the right to receive the&#13;
amount of the compensation direct&#13;
from the insurance company.&#13;
Governor Favors Suffragists.&#13;
Governor Ferris gladdoned the&#13;
hearts of the suffragists of this state&#13;
when he declared at the annual meeting&#13;
of the Michigan Equal Suffrage&#13;
Association that he was absolutely&#13;
in favor of their cause and that he&#13;
would do everything In his power to&#13;
assist them when the constitutional&#13;
amendment is submitted to a vote&#13;
in this state again. The democratic&#13;
chief executive declared to the women&#13;
that victory would come to them either&#13;
at the n « t election or in some&#13;
rteti* *© ttltfW.&#13;
prsssia the belief that&#13;
be possible for him te take the stump&#13;
In their behalf, owing to pressing duties&#13;
in the executive office, Governor&#13;
Ferris informed the delegates that&#13;
they could call On him for assistance&#13;
in any other way.&#13;
Contests AH Settled.&#13;
All ot the contests in the house and&#13;
senate reaulted In favor of the candidate!&#13;
to Whom certificates of election&#13;
had previously been Issued. However,&#13;
the battle in the senate between SenatOi&#13;
James McGregor ,the democratic&#13;
member from Ypsialntl, and Frank&#13;
Covert, the defeated republican from&#13;
Ponttac, nearly reaulted in a fine little&#13;
row. Many republican stalwarts&#13;
came here to intercede in Covert's&#13;
behalf, but the senate held that the&#13;
intent of the voters was clear despite&#13;
the apparent irregularities in conducting&#13;
the election in one precinct, and&#13;
by a vote of 22 to 9, McGregor was&#13;
permitted to retain his seat&#13;
Stenograph le Reports&#13;
There ie a possibility that the proceedings&#13;
of the Michigan legislature,&#13;
including all the debates will be recorded&#13;
by tteaograthers and that the&#13;
report will be at complete at the congressional&#13;
record at Washington, Son.&#13;
ator Jama* Murths, tbe democratic&#13;
noor leads* Introduce* a resdhition to&#13;
make a eomplett report of the session,&#13;
but Inserted A provlatoato the-effect&#13;
thai no ^utfttfeerew^ attaches ootid&#13;
be read tat* the record.&#13;
State WWe Prohibition.&#13;
Despite the fact that many members&#13;
were anxious to avoid It there ie every&#13;
Indication that the liquor question will&#13;
play a prominent pert in the deliberations&#13;
of present legislature. Rep.&#13;
Dunn of Sanalac county, Btarted the&#13;
ball rolling when he introduced a concurrent&#13;
resolution to be submitted to&#13;
the electors of'Michigan'at the fall&#13;
election in l e t 4 : providing for state&#13;
wide prohibition. One of the great&#13;
features qt tht* Dunn resolution is the&#13;
unqualified support given the state&#13;
wide prohibition movement by .the&#13;
Michigan Anti-Saloon leagued Here tofore&#13;
the league and the prohibitionists&#13;
of the state have not worked in harmony,&#13;
the league leaders claiming that&#13;
prohibition was sought after, but was&#13;
not practical.&#13;
This year the leaders are evidently&#13;
Inclined to the belief that the time is&#13;
ripe for success and the league is willing&#13;
to devote itself to prohibition for&#13;
the whole state instead of confining&#13;
its efforts to local option.&#13;
The method of submitting the matter&#13;
as an amendment to the constitution&#13;
is deemed to involve more work&#13;
but if successful is certain to be more&#13;
secure. In a long interview J. F.&#13;
Burke, state superintendent of the&#13;
Anti-Saloon league commends the resolution&#13;
and the state wide prohibition&#13;
However, it is not expected that the&#13;
Dunn resolution will have an easy&#13;
time going through the two houses and&#13;
it would not be surprising if the measure&#13;
is killed outright. It is known&#13;
that there will be strong opposition to&#13;
it and it is doubtful whether the supporters&#13;
of the stato wide prohibition&#13;
movement will be able to muster two&#13;
thirds of the upper house in its favor.&#13;
Re-elected U. S. 8enator.&#13;
United States Senator William Alden&#13;
Smith has been re-elected by the&#13;
republicans of Michigan to Berve another&#13;
term of six years as one of Michigan's&#13;
representatives in the upper&#13;
house of congress. Party lines were&#13;
closely drawn when the legislature&#13;
ratified the primary vote. Each of the&#13;
74 republicans stood firmly for Senator&#13;
Smith, the 40 democrats rallied&#13;
to the support of Alfred Lucking,&#13;
while the 17 national progressives&#13;
voted as a unit for Theodore Joslin.&#13;
Lucking's vote was the largest that&#13;
any democratic candidate for United&#13;
States senator in Michigan has received&#13;
in a great many years. As a&#13;
gejieral rule there is a top heavy republican&#13;
majority in the legislature&#13;
and democratic candidates for_ this&#13;
henor-have stood little^or'no chancer&#13;
When the final decision was rendered&#13;
at the joint session Senator Smith&#13;
was present and addressed the members.&#13;
It was not so very many years ago&#13;
that Senator Smith, then "Billy"&#13;
Smith, was a page in the legislature,&#13;
TWO WAIFS OF THE CARIBBEAN SEA THE BAROMETEB OF THE «&#13;
OFFICE, THE**64NNe OF&#13;
WHICH SH0W&amp;. fESTER*&#13;
CAWttA*&#13;
ft&#13;
•Vfc A . 1 *&#13;
has been elected by the legislature to&#13;
serve the people of Michigan as the&#13;
United States senate. It is generally&#13;
believed that a Michigan legislature&#13;
has performed this function for the&#13;
last time as it is the opinion of a majority&#13;
of the lawmakers that United&#13;
States senators will be elected by&#13;
direct vote, before 1917 when Senator&#13;
Charles E. Townsend's term expires.&#13;
Repeal of Telephone Law.&#13;
Some of the small, Independent telephone&#13;
companies through the state&#13;
have already learned that the celebrated&#13;
Giles law, passed at the session of&#13;
1911, was not the peoples' measure it&#13;
was painted. The public is awakeningvto&#13;
the fact that some one slipped&#13;
one over in the Interests of the telephone&#13;
mergers, and the freezing out&#13;
of the little companies, and Rep. John&#13;
Schmidt of Osceola county haa introduced&#13;
a bill for a repeal of the law.&#13;
Schmidt says the little companies'&#13;
have gotten the worst of the deal and&#13;
he claims that the grange influence&#13;
that was directed in favor of the Giles&#13;
•":'- ago ^tf*y.j\ipnds for Ita&#13;
repeal.&#13;
Various Bids.&#13;
Willie Gee of Jamaica is a verlUble "waif of the sea." Down where&#13;
Willie lives the bathing Is always fine, and he "takes to water like a fish."&#13;
While the old eteamer the Foxton Hall was plowing along near the, Windward&#13;
passage Mate Donnelly eBpled a monster cocoa&amp;ut tree, to which a&#13;
human being was clinging. The being turned out to be a little ten-yearold&#13;
Jamaican pickaninny, almost starved to death, but clinging to his dog,&#13;
They had been blown 100 miles out to sea Jn &amp; hurricane.&#13;
Inequality Found in Parcel Post.&#13;
Patrons of the parcel post in the&#13;
northern part of the United States&#13;
have discovered they are unable in all&#13;
cases td send packages the full fifty&#13;
miles prescribed as the extent of the&#13;
first zone.&#13;
This is due to the fact that a degree—&#13;
of- longitude-, -ts considerably&#13;
shorter in the northern than in the&#13;
southern part of the country.&#13;
The phenomenon has led to the complaint&#13;
that parcel post patrons are&#13;
being overcharged on first zone distances&#13;
and to the suspicion that a mis-&#13;
, . , take was made in the working out of&#13;
r u n m n g - t h e ^ w ^ - i h e ^ n e m b s ^&#13;
of the house. For the second time he ^ho wever, itUh„a»t ^th e var,i«a*t&lt;io n ii.s unavoiud -&#13;
able and that no Injustice is involved.&#13;
Power Firms Liable to Fines&#13;
The state of Michigan, through the&#13;
state railroad commission, is in a&#13;
position to pick up about $100,000 a&#13;
day in penalties from power and light&#13;
companies in the state. Only 34 had&#13;
filed tariff schedules with the commission,&#13;
and all had been ordered to&#13;
have their rates on file by Jan. 15.&#13;
There is a penalty of $300 for disobeying&#13;
this order of the commission&#13;
and the law states that each day shall&#13;
be considered to constitute a separate&#13;
offense.&#13;
U. S. interested In P. M.'s T r a i n .&#13;
Postmaster General Hitchcock is g o -&#13;
ing to take a hand in the proposal by&#13;
the Pere Marquette railway to discontinue&#13;
train No. 1, running between Detroit&#13;
and Saginaw.&#13;
If the Pere Marquette persists it&#13;
may forfeit every mall-carrying.con&gt;^&gt;.&#13;
tract It now has with the United&#13;
States.&#13;
The head of the postoffice depart*&#13;
ment is known to take the stand that&#13;
it is not proper for railroads, for the&#13;
sake of escaping a temporary loss, to&#13;
discontinue the operation of federal&#13;
mail trains, - :&#13;
It is further known that Postmaster&#13;
General Hitchcock is of the opinion&#13;
that railroads should not be allowed&#13;
thus to disarrange the mail service on&#13;
one route without being made to suffer&#13;
on other routes. Many mail contracts&#13;
are renewable about this.time&#13;
and if the train in question, which carries&#13;
heavy mails, is withdrawn. It is&#13;
likely to affect negotiations as to other&#13;
routes in the state.&#13;
25,000 Albanians 8laln by Serbs.&#13;
Twenty-five thousand Albanians&#13;
have been "more or less wantonly"&#13;
killed in the Turkish province of Kos-&#13;
80vo by the Servian' regulars and irregulars&#13;
since the invasion by them&#13;
of European Turkey, according to the&#13;
Reichpost of Vienna.&#13;
The newspaper demands the dispatch&#13;
of a European, commission to In-&#13;
RMtte?,*? -£v ? *!3»ar!*paBpf horrible&#13;
atrooltleB. vy'i-'. "%•&gt; .• ^U;'k&#13;
••• ^ * . , - • &gt;&#13;
Rep. Follette introduced a bill compelling&#13;
railways carrying live stock to&#13;
give precedence over all other freight&#13;
Rep. Catlin of Ingham has introduced&#13;
a bill placing all county officials on a&#13;
salary basis and eliminating the fee&#13;
system. It is not thought tbat this&#13;
bill will pass, as the oflttce of sheriff;&#13;
county clerk and register of deeds are&#13;
fixed by the constitution which provides&#13;
that they may rece'vt feet and&#13;
it would require a constitutional&#13;
amendment to change the present&#13;
system.&#13;
Rep. Whelan of, Hillsdale has introduced&#13;
a bill providing for the pensioning&#13;
of school teachers. Rep. McBride&#13;
of Shiawassee haa presented a bill requiring&#13;
Itinerant creamery projects to&#13;
file evidence of respofttftmitjr with the&#13;
state dairy and food department before&#13;
they are permitted to establish t&gt;&#13;
line of credit in the purchase of milk.&#13;
Stats Ttx Committtoito.&#13;
tt tht senate affirms tht appointments&#13;
of Governor Ferris the democrats&#13;
will control tht state tax torn*&#13;
mittlon at the chief txecutiye hat&#13;
named Thomas Kearney, of Ann Arbor&#13;
and Orlando F. Barnes, of Rotoomtnon&#13;
to succeed Thomas D.JSVhite and&#13;
W. B, Merahon. Barnes hat twice&#13;
bets tht democratic candidate tat&#13;
land commissioner aad a nusabtr of&#13;
years ago wat demooraile paytr of&#13;
the city 4&lt; Lansing. Kaamty *•*&#13;
lost bst* a KtJtlMfc tsiMtsjtt to&#13;
Wathttwrw county.&#13;
Michigan .Electors&#13;
Rottevett.&#13;
Michigan't Bull Moots on the 14th&#13;
of January entered into the fottnesa&#13;
of their national victory to this statet&#13;
when 16 presidential electors assembled&#13;
In the senate chamber in Lansing&#13;
and oast their votes for Theodore&#13;
Roosevelt for president of tht United&#13;
Statet.&#13;
No.Inaugural Ball for Wilson.&#13;
"There will be no inaugural ball,"&#13;
declared William C. Eustic, chairman&#13;
of the inaugural committee, after an&#13;
informal conference with several members&#13;
over President-elect Wilson's letter&#13;
requesting that the committee consider&#13;
the feasibility of omitting the&#13;
function.&#13;
"The wishes of President-elect Wilson&#13;
will be complied with," said Mr.&#13;
Eustis. "The* committee will take official&#13;
action later."&#13;
Gov. Wilton pointed out that use ot&#13;
the pension office building, where the&#13;
inaugural balls have been held for gen*&#13;
orations, would mean a costly stoppage&#13;
'^government work.&#13;
4 ^ e suggestion was made that, inc^&#13;
a ball, PresYo%ffA«nd Mrs. »»J&#13;
son receive at a formal reception, to&#13;
be held In the rotunda.of the eapitoL&#13;
Auditor-Gen. Wantt Changes In State&#13;
' ^- ..,^Laws.""&#13;
Auditor* General O. B. Fuller hat&#13;
sent to the legislature several tug*&#13;
gettiont and recommendations at to&#13;
what he thinks are good changes to i e&#13;
made in. several of tht tows, now on&#13;
the statute books. He also recommends&#13;
the repeal of some laws.&#13;
Rolled 80 feet along the traok, Oscar&#13;
Shmaa, aged 6, barely escaped&#13;
death under a street ear in Kaltmaten.&#13;
Work of raising the $280,000 bonoa&#13;
fund for the Muskegon * Manistee&#13;
three day f soBcJtingv In three townships&#13;
along tbe route. Tse township&#13;
ot TAketon raited more then e^OAfc&#13;
Whitehall i L m - j u * Hatl H O * . ^&#13;
The Lake Carriers* aasooJtttoa-otab&#13;
ttoese 1« Pert Bsro*. ton bees&#13;
pitted. The stjrvotavt Is est t t tits&#13;
finett-of the kind en the great lakes,&#13;
tjl j^t^^tefsVsnfSt&#13;
ttj$st*f OB great&#13;
a n t * * * *&#13;
SevetssV^f* JWtenaVCan&amp;aa^news'&#13;
papers coming to hand during the&#13;
last pari et;tfce year 1912 contained&#13;
items of newt such, as the following*&#13;
•peaking r^fj the Christmas work in&#13;
earftfcave been heavy and&#13;
the employees nave had plenty of opportunity&#13;
of learning what it was towork&#13;
overtime, b u t ^ e :»aat has had&#13;
nothing equal to tb^present. Forty&#13;
extra men have beaii emftlo*ed (in&#13;
Winnipeg), and noaiVtraihs have been&#13;
inspecial.' The Increase in tfie mail&#13;
iis" year fcas been c$e tp tbj Jhormous&#13;
influx-*£ p e o p l e d m o M m s m&#13;
Canada during the season, and also&#13;
tbe general prosperity which the&#13;
prairie provinces have enjoyed. To&#13;
the latter cause haa been due theheavy&#13;
increase in the number of par*&#13;
celt whioh tuye been shipped to&#13;
old country and Eastern Canada^*&#13;
The above extract taken l&#13;
Winnipeg paper gives a fair id\_ _ t the great work that the CaixatpftV '&#13;
postofficeB have had all through tiie&#13;
western prairies. During the pastyear&#13;
hundreds of new postoffices were&#13;
established, many of them at remote&#13;
points from the railway, but all forced&#13;
upon the country on account of the&#13;
new settlements that have taken&#13;
place during the year. It ia said, of&#13;
the Canadian government that in itsimmigration&#13;
and settlement policy&#13;
there is nothing left undone to take&#13;
care of the people and their welfare,&#13;
whether it be in the new town along&#13;
a new line of railway or in the remotest&#13;
hamlet This solicitude and&#13;
care are not confined to the postoffice,&#13;
but with every branch that hat&#13;
to do with, organizing new districts.&#13;
Bridges have been, built, roads con*&#13;
structed, the district policed, and a&#13;
dozen other things have to be done&#13;
and are done. Is it any wonder that&#13;
with the splendid land, the' high&#13;
yielding land, the land that is free to&#13;
the homesteader or open to purchase&#13;
at reasonable prices from the railway&#13;
and land companies, that the Canadian&#13;
immigration records for 1912&#13;
will Bhow arrivals of upwards of&#13;
400,000, one-half of this being from the&#13;
United States. The new literature&#13;
being sent out by the immigration&#13;
branch at Ottawa, and its agencies&#13;
throughout the United States dealt&#13;
with many of the new and interesting&#13;
features that will mark the work of&#13;
that branch for the year 1913.—Advertisement.&#13;
i&#13;
UNKIND INFERENCE.&#13;
Prosperity Oreatter Svtr.&#13;
Prosperity never before equaled In&#13;
the history of the country marked the&#13;
manufacturing induttrlsVdf the United&#13;
States,during the calendar year of&#13;
1912, according to a statement issued&#13;
by the federal bureau of foreign and&#13;
domestic commerce in Washington.&#13;
. The bureau't statisticians .based&#13;
their declarations on the importations&#13;
of material used in manufacturing and&#13;
on the movement of domestic mater*&#13;
ials from the points of production to&#13;
tht factories.&#13;
The Northers Gas A Oil Co-, owning&#13;
and opefatinr the newly struck oB&#13;
field at Allegan, has InereeaeeFtttfcap.&#13;
ital 6ojB,t».00* te; 1 » ^ t'»* ^&#13;
te the recount in 8ag^uwir« flentjtor&#13;
^eadeo* In 3t oot^X. 4T weeds end. %*?Z2TwmZZ&amp;^&#13;
-9*-r&#13;
Walter Sautter, SOB of form ST&#13;
Chief of P o ^ i t M i y t n ^ &gt; 8 t J t y B ,&#13;
^PtSStP SS'^tSSB'^^tJtBS^P^t^SS* SMP ^f^^W^^^tt^^^tj • tBV tMtVFSsU - Jt)tiSB»&#13;
twe* t» IS years for the killing of iGth&#13;
SOB JL Crests; of Colosss, late lev SfStV&#13;
He was eosvleted of ms*s)eusBter bya&#13;
Jury br drewJt otttt le 81 Joeeps* I wsy ostntr for me the temt-wts/V.&#13;
Tfce t * * &gt; s j t ^ tttjsstejsfcis obtitltfa I e«d 1 * est* »•» tas)ss1ti-4» li#itt&gt;' '""&#13;
\.;&gt; f J.&#13;
"My husband*and I never quarrel."&#13;
"Where does he live? In Europe?"&#13;
Touching the Cardinal.&#13;
At the Democratic convention in&#13;
Baltimore last summer two of the sergeants-&#13;
at-armt were Ohioans, Col. John&#13;
Bolan of Toledo and Capt Joseph&#13;
Dowling of Dayton. Bolan Is the Wit&#13;
who laid down the maxim that "anny&#13;
man who parts hit hair in the middle&#13;
it no Dimmycrat,"&#13;
When Cardinal Gibbont hadf finished,&#13;
the opening prayer, he descended&#13;
from the rostrum and made hie way&#13;
toward the door. At he neared the&#13;
exit where the two Ohioans were tm&#13;
guard, Bolan whispered: •'-"'•• '&#13;
"Joe. touch him whtn be pastes&#13;
ye." -;.*: "AP -*ta*ft ^*ftm*t,'reptted DowfiwtU'&#13;
with an fnocent air, "What poeket&#13;
has he got it in?"-—Popular Mags?&#13;
sine. *&#13;
clairvoyant* •*«* '&#13;
Familiar to "Mllct." ^&#13;
A negro clairvoyant wno for some&#13;
time" mssflueraded as t Htato©-&lt;wt*v&#13;
recently visited by a collector, MikOO'Connor.&#13;
— - • &gt; • • ;&lt; MAh,-smiled the&#13;
genjwlmanr wentsse palm rttdtf&#13;
"No," said Mike, "«e geMtima* has :&#13;
se Wk for ye*.* -.- ^ -•.&#13;
When the bin waa pl-edacesr the •&#13;
palm reader forgot km- ^Hmdoo • SJK&#13;
cettors and a-streejevof pen tot Bnt&gt;&#13;
Uah' swear word*. poessd.fwnv,;k4»&#13;
u p s i . ••••-•'•.:'••••• +•.. :'•'••*:;:-^.+.•&amp;.&amp;.'.?*..••&#13;
"Ah," said kHke, smBtasv^e»4P»^&#13;
telman somsd* more like to dadlafltv&#13;
avenue xan s o Htodoo/K-indianaooUo&#13;
News. - .-v-:-?y.-.&gt;'-is?'/..*-«. -.^^^&#13;
:••••• " * • • ' - ••• star AS«4«tf ^ ;.-,-," ,v^.;&#13;
"If&#13;
m&#13;
. ^ - i&#13;
• : • • •• ' &amp; ' .&#13;
• &gt; " " • • &gt;&#13;
H&#13;
^lUtlnaW* etys the keeoteoos oh- .&#13;
Ject of hit adoration, 'ThAppeoeoYto&#13;
read In tht peoevthet tusjer has gone&#13;
'«tmj UP to prtoev' and ftr tbat tetiort';&#13;
• esady it«more«xt«strfTtr limt,tbk*&#13;
fes&gt;«re txtre#agemt to keep kiitspss**&#13;
ate a eouad tvttr Uttt ftwMtffijg^» -&#13;
"t^tjas g'nd'lr^ rti dfTUBS'*TM^tf'&#13;
J v * - ^ . +&lt;K* •&amp;•*• ' A * , / &gt; • ^ • T ' • : &lt; • r ,n:kSjow you are, but yon mutt 1«&#13;
to. be ecoBOstioal. Pspe told&#13;
W-bmy. tugar by the- berrti aedget IT&#13;
«bjtepe*vse maybe you voejd betltsv&#13;
- I •*-.&#13;
. / • * • - ^ - %&#13;
• *jk, ' '•&lt;••:&#13;
• - T 4 " V ' i - . i . . ,.•&#13;
* « • • wefitsi ^fmmtikm. ^ mmm^mm mm. J#O«M&#13;
^l-'- * ( « : ' • -TTT ssssA-es%stasli4attle sssmate.t&#13;
• y &lt; . ^ ' - • • . W . * . "&#13;
'&lt;}.• £&amp;&amp;**&amp;*• &amp;&#13;
FP ' ' .4-- ''' '&#13;
*&#13;
^ ^4*fc'' %fe*&#13;
.%'&#13;
fcr^jf '&#13;
1»^: •f-Vr&#13;
¥•&#13;
HORACE&#13;
:*f*&gt;J SYNOPSIS. 1&#13;
* » £ i r t Cameron, capitalist, consult*&#13;
iFhttlp Clyde, newspaper publisher, rsrdfns&#13;
anonymous threatening letters n»&#13;
enred. The first promises a sample&#13;
writer's power on a certain day.&#13;
_ ; day the ,head Is mysteriously cut&#13;
^portrait of Cameron while the tat-&#13;
'ln the room. Clyde has a theory&#13;
Be portrait was mutilated while the&#13;
, was unoccupied and the head later&#13;
ved by means of a string, unnoticed&#13;
Cameron. Evelyn Grayson, Cameron s&#13;
_ . , j e . with whom Clyde is tn love, flnas&#13;
the head of Cameron's portrait nailed to&#13;
* tree* where It was had been used as a&#13;
jtarget, Clyde pledges Evelyn to Becrecy.&#13;
iClyde learns that a Chinese boy employed&#13;
1&gt;y Pbilatus Murphy, an artist living&#13;
(nearby, had borrowed a rifle from Camerons*&#13;
lodgekeepr. Clyde makes an excuse,&#13;
to call on Murphy, and is repulsed.&#13;
S e pretends to be Investigating alleged&#13;
fractions of the game laws and speaKS&#13;
t f i n d i n g - t h e bowl of an opium pipe w&#13;
^ the tree where Cameron's portrait&#13;
8 found. The Chinese boy Is found&#13;
id next morning. While visiting Cam-&#13;
~ an in his dressing room a Nell Gwynne&#13;
fror Is mysteriously shattered. Cameron&#13;
comes seriously 111 as a result of the&#13;
ock. The third letter appears mysterljsly&#13;
on Cameron's sick bed. It makes&#13;
rect threats against the life of Cameron.&#13;
Clyde tells Cameron the envelope was&#13;
«mpty. He tells Evelyn everything and&#13;
plans to take Cameron on a yacht trip.&#13;
The yacht picks up a fisherman found&#13;
cofi&gt;Y/?ic/trt &amp;/At/i cstrat/fic* ea.&#13;
•u&#13;
i drifting helplessly in a boat. He gives&#13;
|th« name of Johnson. Cameron disappears&#13;
from yacht while Clyde's back Is&#13;
iturned. A fruitless search is made for a&#13;
(motor boat seen by the captain just be-&#13;
Ifore Cameron disappeared. Johnson is allowed&#13;
to go after being closely questioned.&#13;
Evelyn takes the letters to an expert in&#13;
tohinese literature, who pronounces them&#13;
V Chinese origin. Clyde seeks assistance&#13;
Rfrom a Chinese fellow college- student,&#13;
who recommends him'to Yip Sing, most&#13;
tpromlnent Chinaman In New York. The&#13;
flatter promises to seek Information of&#13;
'Cameron among his countrymen. Among&#13;
[Cameron's letters is found one from on*&#13;
Addison, who speaks of seeing Cameron&#13;
'In Pekin. Cameron had frequently deiclarea&#13;
to Clyde that he had never been in&#13;
-China. Clyde calls on Dr. Addison,&#13;
CHAPTER Xtll.—Continued.&#13;
"This isn't anything like beri-bert,&#13;
1B It, doctor?" I began. My ideas of&#13;
the disease I mentioned were of the&#13;
ihtelest character. I knew, however,&#13;
jthat it was common in the Orient, and&#13;
ithither I would lead him.&#13;
"Oh, no, Mr. Clyde," he answered,&#13;
jauavely enough, now. "Beri-bert is&#13;
»&lt;«"*#&gt;&#13;
E&amp;y,&lt;:?-* &lt;. r.&#13;
X&#13;
You haven't a neuritis or&#13;
ould know it. t u ^ a great deal&#13;
-beri tn China and OB the Malay&#13;
fpelalnsttla." ,,&#13;
! "Do 1 remember to have heard Cameron&#13;
say he contracted it in the «ast?"&#13;
(I asked, plunging fbr a connection. -&#13;
; _^I don't recall that Cameron ever&#13;
had it," was his response. And then&#13;
s brow grew thoughtful. "Are you&#13;
e he told you_tbat_he had; and that&#13;
. was attacked while in—in Asia?"&#13;
noted hishesitation over fixing the&#13;
and wondered. At all events 1&#13;
„ad arrested bis interest. Purposely&#13;
I adopted a tone of uncertainty,&#13;
, "N-h*no.: X can't say definitely. But&#13;
II had an impsetwlon that—" And there&#13;
&lt;X paused. When 1 continued it was&#13;
rwith the direct question-: "Do you happen&#13;
to know, doctor, whether, Cameron&#13;
jwaa ever in Peking? It aeems to me&#13;
it was—"&#13;
"I do know that he was in Peking,"&#13;
^&#13;
e Interrupted, almost savagely. "He&#13;
rat in Peking, in September, 1003. To&#13;
•be exact, he was there on the fourteenth&#13;
day of that month. I have reason&#13;
to know it—&amp; particular reason&#13;
to know it."&#13;
After all, how easily the information&#13;
I craved had come to me! And yet&#13;
I would have bean glad to hear.the&#13;
contrary; for Cameron bad assured&#13;
gne, in all solemnity, that be bard never&#13;
been in China, and it jarred upon my&#13;
conception of the man's character to&#13;
discover that be had tried, to deceive&#13;
me. I could only conclude that bis&#13;
* " cs*h&amp; -&#13;
of individual* and vehicles. I was&#13;
In a. carriage, myselfr and Cameron&#13;
was afoot, walking in the opposite&#13;
direction. As we passed eaah other,&#13;
he did not seem to see me, though 1&#13;
called 0 film loudly; This, however,&#13;
did noviuTprise in*, for there was an&#13;
ungodly racket in progress. Instantly,&#13;
I had the carriage turned about, but&#13;
before I could overtake him, he was&#13;
lost in the crowd. I was leaving Peking&#13;
that afternoon, and so had no&#13;
chance to look him up. I--wrote" him&#13;
afterwards and told him of the incident,&#13;
and how I regretted having to&#13;
go away without exchanging at least&#13;
a word with him, To my amazement&#13;
he not only denied havinS ^ 6 1 1 i n&#13;
Peking, but in.the Chinese empire at&#13;
all.. When we met in London, the following&#13;
spring, and I recalled the matter,&#13;
asking "Why he had refused to&#13;
admit what-1: knew to be the truth,&#13;
he became icily indignant; and that&#13;
was the beginning of the end. If I&#13;
had conceded the possibility of mistake&#13;
on my part, all might'have been&#13;
well, I suppose; but there was no euch&#13;
possibility. I had known Cameron for&#13;
twenty-odd years, and I could not have&#13;
made an error. I had seen him distinctly,&#13;
clearly, at midday in the open.&#13;
It was he beyond all peradventure,&#13;
and from that time to this I have been&#13;
unable to conceive why he lied to me,&#13;
and why he choso to end our friendship&#13;
rather than admit what was Indubitable&#13;
fact."&#13;
-His explanation finished, he reached&#13;
for a pen, and, as he dipped it in the&#13;
ink, he added:&#13;
"I trust you will pardon me, Mr.&#13;
Clyde. I have detained you."&#13;
"You have interested me," I assured&#13;
him. "And that more than I can tell&#13;
you." Which was quite true; yet I&#13;
was even more perplexed than interested.&#13;
To the maze of circumstances&#13;
there was now added another baffling&#13;
feature. ,&#13;
tlon he had written, v "wt J~~ Ji tw_ TVL»*M mi I sat — - - 1&#13;
"After m e f l ^ ^ f * b ^ ^ * t b * D ? * W * *~*&#13;
directed, wl$*r * *•*•*• *• *** * * • %&#13;
sional manner, "ft yen oa *•* * • •&#13;
yourself much better at the end of&#13;
a week, come in again."&#13;
On the sidewalk I tore the little&#13;
square of paper into bits which the&#13;
wind carried" In a "tiny flurry across&#13;
Madison avenue.&#13;
ietus Murphy had furnished a report.&#13;
"Yea," I told her, "it came in my&#13;
morning's mail. Murphy is still at&#13;
Cos Cob. lie didn't leave his bungalow&#13;
all day yesterday, and he had&#13;
no callers."&#13;
"I'm crazy to know what you learn&#13;
tonight from Yup Sing," she went on,&#13;
eagerly. "Oh, how I do hope it will&#13;
give us some hint! It seCma terrible&#13;
tp think of Upcle RobeiV in^tbe hands&#13;
of those unconscionable 'Chinamen.&#13;
And, Philip, don't you think you had&#13;
better take some ono with you? I&#13;
suppose Mr. Yup is to be trusted, but&#13;
at the same time, you must remember&#13;
you. are going into the enemy's camp,&#13;
and you should be careful."&#13;
But I laughed at the notion of taking&#13;
a body-guard.&#13;
"I'm to meet him at nine o'clock," I&#13;
told her, "in a public restaurant. Besides,&#13;
there'll bey a crowd* of those&#13;
'Seeing New York' people down there&#13;
about that time, and Chinatown will&#13;
be on its best behavior. So never fear,&#13;
little girl. Do you want";me to telephone&#13;
you when I get uptown? You&#13;
know I'm going to stop tonight at my&#13;
rooms in the Loyalton."&#13;
"Of course I want you to telephone&#13;
me," she returned, emphatically. "It&#13;
shouldn't take you very long to hear&#13;
what Mr. Yup has to tell, should it?&#13;
I shall be expecting you to call me up&#13;
between ten and half-past, or by eleven&#13;
at the latest; so don't dare to go&#13;
for supper first."&#13;
"As if I could think of supper," I&#13;
said, looking at her in a way I fwiL&#13;
/'when I might be hearing your&#13;
voice!"&#13;
Could I have foreseen what tbe&#13;
night was to bring forth I certaialy&#13;
should have discouraged her waiting,&#13;
for my message. But the power of provision&#13;
is given to few of us, and of&#13;
those few I am not one.&#13;
Assuredly I had no misgivings as,&#13;
after dining at the University club&#13;
stepped. Intn an &lt;kKV&#13;
CHAPTER XIV.&#13;
The Dark of Doyera fttrtet;&#13;
At one o'clock that day, Evelyn&#13;
Grayson joined me at luncheon at&#13;
Sherry's. She bad been in no mood&#13;
to wait any longer4han was absolutely&#13;
necessary for tidings of my visit to&#13;
Br. Addison; and, moreover, she had&#13;
news of her own which she was&#13;
anxious to convey to me.&#13;
I have often wondered why it is&#13;
Chat the I-told-you-so passion is Inherent&#13;
in all woxnftn. There are those&#13;
who manage to control it with admirable&#13;
success under average circumstances,&#13;
but soooner or later, even the&#13;
most courageous battlers against this&#13;
maternal heritage succumb, and indulge&#13;
in a sort of disguised orgy of&#13;
reproach.&#13;
Evelyn might have told toe, for instance,&#13;
that Captain MacLeod, after&#13;
careful investigation, bad been unable&#13;
to discover either hair or hide of Peter&#13;
Johnson in Gloucester or elsewhere,&#13;
and stopped there. That is&#13;
what a man would hove done,&#13;
together admirable though&#13;
wot* Wfc*t«vtr~Tt way »**• bees tft&#13;
Hit pptt, t b « e &gt; e d * i Cbtailmrn of&#13;
Ifrii •««•—* to hit, •et^rardly at least, a&#13;
reasonably law-abiding section of the&#13;
borough of Manhattan. And was not&#13;
1 that night the guest of one of its&#13;
most honored dtisens? What, there-^&#13;
fore, had I to fear? .&#13;
On the contrary, as we turned from&#13;
the Bowery into that little semicircular&#13;
thoroughfare which is perhaps the&#13;
most characteristic of Chinatown's&#13;
three principal streets, I was pleasantly&#13;
interested. This was quite a&#13;
different place from that which I had&#13;
visited the afternoon before. Then, a&#13;
sort of brooding quiet reigned over&#13;
what was so ordinary as to be scarcely&#13;
distinctive; for that part of Mott&#13;
street on which the Yup Sing establishment&#13;
is located, I have since learned,&#13;
is merely one of the gates of the&#13;
iee into the" comparatively glowing&#13;
radios of the street lamp opposite.&#13;
I taw then that it was a man, thin&#13;
to emaciation, round-shouldered, and&#13;
crooked limbed. Whether some one&#13;
jostled him, or a voice from the roadway&#13;
startled him, I don't know. But&#13;
for some reaaoa be turned his head&#13;
sud4«s3r, and the lfght from the lamp&#13;
foefl IW itfOtt a face, stubble-bearded,&#13;
deep4toed^mdTe»«ll€nt, the jace not_&#13;
ot a Chinaman but of a white man;&#13;
* tafce fhto which I had looked but&#13;
twice, and then but for a brief moment;&#13;
yet a face as indelibly nxid in&#13;
my 'memory as were the grim fronts&#13;
of the buildings now behind it—the&#13;
face of Peter Johnson, tho pretended&#13;
castaway.&#13;
ter I should bo set upon, was nervous&#13;
torment so hideous that in sheer despeitttlon&#13;
I plucked my match box from&#13;
my pocket, drew forth a match and&#13;
straek it to a blaze. As It flared forth,&#13;
routing the shadows in disorderly, if&#13;
but temporary, retreat, I made quick&#13;
searching survey of my dungeon. To&#13;
my amazement I was apparently quite&#13;
alone.&#13;
Relieved, in a measure at least, I&#13;
employed another match and still an-&#13;
)ther, hobbling painfully about the&#13;
rimy, low-oeiled basement, in diligent&#13;
inspection. My first thought was that&#13;
rohnson was In hiding, and having lo-&#13;
:ated me by my own lighted matches,&#13;
waited now only an opportunity to&#13;
throw himself upon me from behind.&#13;
But I very soon discovered that he&#13;
had fled. Evidently he had retraced&#13;
is steps up the rude ladder to the&#13;
street, closing the doors after him to&#13;
|check my further pursuit.&#13;
The place into which I had followed&#13;
liii was evidently a Chinese candy&#13;
lanufactory and cake bakery. To the&#13;
light of the entrance were rows of&#13;
^helves containing Jars of what 1&#13;
[ecognized as sweetmeats peculiar to&#13;
is celestial. In a large bowl on a&#13;
^ough table or counter was the granutted&#13;
flour with which these confec- I;ons are invariably powdered; und&#13;
[ere, too, were boxes of roucd, jumbleike&#13;
eakeB. I saw now that the apace&#13;
Ipon which I had fallen was so restricted&#13;
that I wondered how it was&#13;
osBible for my quarry to have reaclithe&#13;
steps and renscerided without&#13;
&gt;uching me or at least acquainting&#13;
ie with hlB movement. And I maraled,&#13;
too, that twisting my ankle as I&#13;
d, 1 bad not plunged at a slant and&#13;
ruck my head upon one or another&#13;
the crowding tables and boxes with&#13;
bleb Hie cramped basement was fur-&#13;
Lsbed.&#13;
My third match disclosed a narrow&#13;
Dor in the broad partition at the rear,&#13;
[id fancying thut perhaps the elusive&#13;
eter Johnaon had escaped by that&#13;
ieans while I was getting to my feet,&#13;
[lost no time In seeking to investigate&#13;
[hat was beyond. I waB somewhat surrised&#13;
to find the door unfastened.&#13;
Kice open, It revealed a Bmaller and&#13;
\ore crowded room, warm and fetid,&#13;
^to which were packed no less than&#13;
ilf a dosen barrels of raw and cook-&#13;
|l peanuts, arranged about a low&#13;
?ve oc which a pcanut-fllled cauldron&#13;
was slowly steaming.&#13;
Curiously interesting as all this&#13;
Would have been under ordinary circumstances,&#13;
I experienced only a Burprised&#13;
relief, for with my injured ankle&#13;
1 was in no fettle to cope with&#13;
even the weakest adversary. Indeed,&#13;
now that this easement was afforded&#13;
me, my sprain suddenly asserted Itself&#13;
with renewed exacerbation, sharp&#13;
twin&amp;es of pain shooting to my knee&#13;
FARMER'S WIFE&#13;
ALMOST A WRECK&#13;
Restored to Health by Lydia&#13;
£. Pinkham'ft Vegetable&#13;
Compound—Her&#13;
Own Story.&#13;
Westwood, Md.—"I am a farmer's&#13;
wife and do moat of my own work when&#13;
I am able. I bad&#13;
nervous spells, female&#13;
weakness and&#13;
t e r r i b l e bearing&#13;
down pains every&#13;
month. 1 also Buffered&#13;
much with my&#13;
right Bide. The pain&#13;
started in my back&#13;
and extended around&#13;
my right side, and&#13;
the doctor told me it&#13;
was organic inflammation.&#13;
I was sick every three weeks&#13;
and had to stay in bed from two to four&#13;
days.&#13;
"It is with great pleasure I tell yow&#13;
what Lydia E. Pinkham's Veget^bl*&#13;
Compound has done for me. I have followed&#13;
your directions as near as possible,&#13;
and feel much better than I have&#13;
felt for year3. When I wrote you before&#13;
I was almost a wreck. You can&#13;
publish this letter if you like. It may&#13;
help to strengthen the faith of some&#13;
poor suffering woman."—Mrs. JOHN F.&#13;
ItlCHAKDS, Wectwood, Maryland.&#13;
Women who suffer from those distressing&#13;
ills peculiar to their sex should&#13;
not doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound to restore&#13;
their health.&#13;
If you have the slightest donbt&#13;
that Lydia £ . Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound will help you,write&#13;
to Lydia E.PinkhamrfedicineCo.&#13;
(confidential) Lynn, Mass., for ad*&#13;
vice. Your Jotter will be opened*&#13;
read and answered by a woman,&#13;
and held in strict confidence.&#13;
.Li . J , ;&#13;
There's nothing better than marriage&#13;
for bringing out all the temper&#13;
there is in red hair.&#13;
1 think I"&#13;
to pick him up bodily and carry him&#13;
away with me that I might by Inquisitorial&#13;
torture wring from him a confession.&#13;
Otherwise I should have&#13;
adopted a less eager and more subtle&#13;
method of bringing the miscreant to&#13;
book than that which I rashly at*&#13;
tempted. Before I considered the situation&#13;
I was across the street and at&#13;
his heels. My ringer tips, indeed,&#13;
were at his shoulder. In the fraction&#13;
of a second I should have had him&#13;
gripped and have been hustling him&#13;
| through tho crowd as my prisoner.&#13;
and demanding instant relief.&#13;
In front of the low Btove I had noticed&#13;
a stool, and for this I groped&#13;
with the eagerneas of the drowning&#13;
man after a straw. To my Joy I laid&#13;
hands upon it, and drawing it nearer&#13;
sank down with a sigh of gratification&#13;
comparable only to that with which a&#13;
-H-to-m^-l-Mttratfaun victor -dTops-tcr earth aft*"&#13;
Queer Sex.&#13;
"Yes," said the man at the end of&#13;
tho bar, as he ordered his Kecond&#13;
drink, "women sure are queer creatures.&#13;
I came home tonight and&#13;
thought ray wife looked a little down&#13;
in.the mouth. So I Bald: 'After supper&#13;
let's go to the theater.' And she&#13;
burst into tears and said: 'Mo b\izy&#13;
all day ilolng up preserves and you&#13;
come home and ask me to go to tho&#13;
theater.' She was still crying when I&#13;
came out. It beats all, doesn't it?&#13;
-tlarlfitder, I thrrrfc-I'll -take- just ono&#13;
more.&#13;
real Chinatown, of which Doyera But at the Instant of seeming success,&#13;
street is the heart and center—and he eluded me. In some strange 7/ay&#13;
w_ .h.i-c.h. awak, ens onl1y.. .a»f*te«r. MniiBgKhftff„anll he caught alarm and, shrinking be-&#13;
Now the place was alive and ajlght.&#13;
Narrow roadway and Btlll narrower&#13;
sidewalks were thronged with a combination&#13;
of denizens and sightseers.&#13;
Shop fronts and upper windows glowed&#13;
with varying degrees of brightness.&#13;
Prom the Chinese theater on the left&#13;
came a bedlam of inharmonious&#13;
sounds: the brazen crook of Cymfcaia,&#13;
that be wMMrtbwV&#13;
•Ofew I com* te-tMsk.-oC it," I *+&#13;
*araift.£lM-*i«»'(* B*M *»4 **• tolermatiou&#13;
from S O B * on*, I * » pretty&#13;
turo.'V . .•'•. .-.-; .-•-.;*&lt;•'. :'..?9f-i&lt;-.v&#13;
&gt; Wtth an effort tbe phytlei**: •«•**&#13;
tt»a4t* fctotelf. When he spoke «f»J»&#13;
1* w «* «nnparatlvely oojapooodv ^&#13;
; "it*. CUr*»V bo t*id.tpa*at*Uc*liy,&#13;
T « B T not given to diaewaiint ptntnal&#13;
matttfc wltk mypatieuta, out t$e tact&#13;
Hbat Tou and Caujeron am frtepHUr&#13;
*md tbo fact *3M* this tubjoct- hat&#13;
tidtM»ttft aak»-tt ahnoat imperative,&#13;
4 suppose, that I should explain briefly&#13;
tfce^eeltaf J have just exhibited,&#13;
pive *em» **» * ° * C a n e m aad I&#13;
ere about »• Mar • counterparts of&#13;
When, you. toU me how you picked&#13;
that- nan' up, 1 was confident that he&#13;
war fioatinf o«t**fcere in year path&#13;
JHsMor that-very purpose.",&#13;
: I had no Inclination to dispute the&#13;
point with«her. That war the, most&#13;
painful -part of i t I knew thai she&#13;
was rlght-^hM lh putting titer John-&#13;
*m ashore^ instead of to irons,! had&#13;
ooMmrtted an error that mlsht prove&#13;
rrremedlahta Bot why coaldnt She&#13;
see that rrealised it, and-was smarting&#13;
under my own oondenmation, and&#13;
so hate spared ma this added torture&#13;
of here! 'Why? Because she was her&#13;
mother? daughter. That Is the only&#13;
» * 5 ^&#13;
As for my tatetrlew with "Pythias'*&#13;
.men end Pythias as oyer- existed. Addison* we discussed U In all its&#13;
uile Cameron was In Burope, I had puaseh, without reachhaf anything&#13;
opportunitr to ge awtad the worW like a deanjte $m)*^^l!Wm&#13;
dense osrteUdfr Msmed * oWtnetog&#13;
tBaV Cameron, to spite of M« denlalf,&#13;
_ces. ^ h e w r knew -iusHhalbeen m Ohtes te l ^ y u p m&#13;
1 theuld he at any # v » time, we U d » . ^ ^ M M e t t i J M f ^ B ^ f J&#13;
uy, a nwnher :M ietters ataist laastioai hrreot truth whteh&#13;
miasetbyhsthof us. J.wasstffl'^re knew to he-hisr- — -: r •&#13;
_ of Oamerott as in Bngland or "Oouldnt Dr. Addison have&#13;
the Buropean oontlnent, when k) mlslahenr Evelyn asked. ,&#13;
%ehe!d; i saw W» « • • metniagj "&amp; is posstkltv «f cawaa/&#13;
and, yon understand how&#13;
rrespondeipse Js.nnder those&#13;
igmjiifUfl saonc the pstoeiss^street&#13;
T C ^ a a e r d t r o*-Pekla*. I eoot&#13;
I M.&#13;
"fst OamecrnVs face, and a#\&#13;
ijhvow whether yon bate ever heeni&#13;
- fthere or not, hat if you have, yon}&#13;
know what that thoroughfare is. It&#13;
was an husUe and aotrvUy that-day&#13;
aboat ta croweed as ilffoaiway at f years*&#13;
neen hour, but with much&#13;
f'4&#13;
uretaiwast Bat&#13;
fser*&amp;&#13;
laughter, echoed from wall to&#13;
of the street's encroaching&#13;
uatrd buildings.&#13;
Before the least unpretentious of all&#13;
these structures, my bsnsom stopped,&#13;
and at I stepped to the curb I got a&#13;
gftmnse of its banner and lantern&#13;
itruni balcony, giving to the street&#13;
a touch of color that helped to lift it&#13;
into sn atmosphere which, if not&#13;
Oriental, was at least vividly un-American.&#13;
Finding now that I had anticipated&#13;
my appointment by something like ten&#13;
minutes I chose to watch further the&#13;
kaleidoscopic scene without, rather&#13;
than ftess the time' waiting at a table&#13;
within; and to this end took up s posltlon&#13;
of vantage cm the resUursnt's&#13;
low step. .&#13;
Whether X am more or lest keenly&#13;
observant than, the average man I do&#13;
not know. Probably any one as fascinated&#13;
by the general scene as was 1,&#13;
would have noted as closely Us Individual&#13;
elements. I am not sire. But&#13;
the truth is that in a very few moment*&#13;
I bad scQuired a mental photograph&#13;
of the opposite side of the&#13;
I street, in so far as it came within my&#13;
I direct yi»loo. &amp; • ^ • f ^P1 0 * •*•*»&#13;
detail of the backgronnd of the moving&#13;
picture before me was indelibly&#13;
printed upon my mind's retina. .There&#13;
waa the nTayhouSe, wltjits plain, rectangular&#13;
doorway, unadortiad, save by&#13;
a quartette of rude slgawj two above,&#13;
skwtte*-*etw*rd&gt; and one on etthet&#13;
aides. 1 don't-betteve rn doohies, I side, all annowciat /Chinese&#13;
hsvs heard of e04*Uedw&lt;mde?f*! like- ter," and one giving the current r £ M tetrhaef#s^l^sj^thgi tf^pwtkmlnjOh^^^ •4^imwit;4t,--twigdr; ^ ^ ^ ' ^ S ? iSPtS^TSS1^!&#13;
w^ "• * ,;.• Ameriojms.^ $o the left of ^towas&#13;
I"little «hsr she Inonired whether a irakJi:.hg«gjt reetanraa*, witti wjtts&#13;
a ^ co»trastii»» asrre»4r the #soMdtrw?^i««st4^rtli^ *»&#13;
neath my hand, darted sinuously orT,&#13;
between this pedeBtrian and that, with&#13;
the flashing speed of a lizard.&#13;
But, though he escaped my clutch,&#13;
my eyes were more nimble. With&#13;
them I followed him until I saw him&#13;
drop between the cellar doors which&#13;
gaped beneath the white bulk window&#13;
of the quick lunch ropm. And where&#13;
my eyes went, I went after. Another&#13;
brfef moment and, without thought or&#13;
head, Vwai pienging te&#13;
that shsttseisf Paw?&#13;
ing from a XtM/mt W*&#13;
lie street into the collied gloom and&#13;
grim silence of a low underground&#13;
basement.&#13;
And, as misfortune would have it, I&#13;
must needs catch my heel on the edge&#13;
of one of the treads, and go sprawling&#13;
on"my hands and knees; while a&#13;
poignant pain shooting cruelly&#13;
through my ankle told me that a&#13;
sprain was added to myjalahap.&#13;
For a minute I lay as I had fallen,&#13;
prone and motionless; and in that&#13;
space I realized the foolhardtneoi of&#13;
my whole course of action. My very&#13;
intrepidity had contributed to disaster.&#13;
Instead of accomplishing a capture I&#13;
had cast myself, disabled, into the.&#13;
mesh of the. enemy. "" .&#13;
The inky darkness and profound silence&#13;
of the place augmented, of&#13;
course,.my sWBenension. In vain J&#13;
strained my eyes, tp distinguish sn object,&#13;
my ears to detect a sound, yet I&#13;
knew that the uncanny creature I had&#13;
followed must be close to me; lurking,&#13;
possibly, .with raised or pointed&#13;
weapon to mete out my fate once he&#13;
made sure of my position.&#13;
The minuter-it could hardly have&#13;
been more, though, as I think of it, It&#13;
•earned imfnttely prolonged—ended tn&#13;
a sound shove and behind me. Very&#13;
softly/ csxefuliy, some one was dosing&#13;
the eeltnr doors. Stealthily mnmed&#13;
though ft was,*'the faint creaking of&#13;
the hinges shattered the spell which&#13;
held me; and in spite of my tortured&#13;
ankle, lilsaaged to gain my feet But&#13;
nVnow t i e silenee reigned ones again&#13;
«*d hi the engsJtog bis shales I lost&#13;
eTsow»otdU&lt;eSoi.&#13;
The sMMsnsa of the moment war&#13;
a hotly-contested race.&#13;
Gradually, now that my weight was&#13;
removed, the pain lessened, and a&#13;
sense of comfort ensued. Content&#13;
ment enfolded me, which, if I thought&#13;
of it at all, I attributed, I suppose, to&#13;
the reaction from the agony which I&#13;
had Just been suffering. I remember&#13;
thinking that I would rest a few minutes&#13;
and then take my departure as I&#13;
had entered, for I realized that cellar&#13;
doors are fastened only from within,&#13;
and that there could, therefore, be no&#13;
impediment to my going when 1 chose.&#13;
I.distinctly recall that I was conscious&#13;
of a crrtain strange incongruity&#13;
of situation, but could hardly comprehend&#13;
in Just what the incongruity con.&#13;
srsted. I knew only that 1 ftlt pleasantly&#13;
warm and drowsy; and my&#13;
sprained ankle had ceased altogether&#13;
to pain or annoy.&#13;
And then, I was sailing in an open&#13;
boat In midoceau, and Peter Johnson,&#13;
in oilskins, sat at the helm, with a&#13;
saturainatoer on bis fecf, and tugged&#13;
at etlef'Intervals, always longer and&#13;
what satis 11 to be the i&#13;
_ had become wrapped&#13;
throat and chest and which,&#13;
by degrees, was crushing my windpipe&#13;
and lungs, so that my breath came&#13;
only in sharp, shuddering, aching&#13;
gasps.&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.) ,&#13;
8low Chap.&#13;
"Yes," laughed the girl with the&#13;
pink parasol, "he is the slowest young&#13;
man I over saw."&#13;
"In what way, dear?" asked his&#13;
chum^&#13;
7W h y~Tie asked for srktsr end~Me4dhim&#13;
I wore one of those knotted veils&#13;
that took so long to loosen."&#13;
'And what did he do?"&#13;
"Why, the goose took time to untie&#13;
the knot."—Mack's Monthly.&#13;
HI8 ONE FAULT.&#13;
»• '$smendrmhli To stand there waitls*&#13;
net knowlmf whom of fro* who* «a*t&gt;&#13;
Woman Bank president.&#13;
Mrs. Elizabeth Davidson has the distinction&#13;
of being the only woman bank&#13;
president in the state of Maine and&#13;
the fourth In thla country. The bank&#13;
was founded 19 years ago and for 13&#13;
years continued under the same, management&#13;
and in the same small rented&#13;
room. The first president dying, the&#13;
directors elected Mrs. Davidson to&#13;
take bfs place. It was su'ch a small&#13;
matter that tbey were wining to trust&#13;
.-it to n woman. Mrs. Davidson y*ent&#13;
{into the business with such vim that&#13;
the deposits increased from hundreds&#13;
to thousands and tens of thousands.&#13;
Prom one rented room the bank quarters&#13;
increased steadily, and a short&#13;
time ago it was moved into a fine new&#13;
bwUding erected for i t Mrs. Davidson&#13;
attends every meeting of the directors&#13;
and, keeps in dose touch with every&#13;
detail of ths business.&#13;
Neatly Csught.&#13;
An angler once missed his goleV)&#13;
dgarett+case, and, beta* very much&#13;
upset about it, hut hod botef quite&#13;
certain whether It bad been lost or&#13;
stolen, resolved not to- mention the&#13;
matter iota soul—not events hie wife,&#13;
Twojpsaiihad passed by when, on hta&#13;
sogShlngio meet with n:pijcatorfa|&#13;
by the riverside, thh&#13;
him by remarktayt -&#13;
yea find thai&#13;
time sgof*&#13;
n t o / rggmtas **» *nglef IS the&#13;
'it your husband a good niaop^v ^ -&#13;
"Yes; he's a good man. 1 emwt&#13;
complain. But he always sneaks out&#13;
whenever tho clergyman calls."&#13;
A GOODTREAKFAST.&#13;
Some Persons Never Know What ft&#13;
Mesne,&#13;
A good breakfast, a good appetite&#13;
and good digestion mean everything&#13;
to the man, woman or child who has.&#13;
anythlng to do, and wajsts to get a&#13;
good start toward doing ft&#13;
A Mo. man tells of his wife's "good&#13;
breakfast" and also slipper, made out&#13;
of Grape-Nuts and dream. He sty si&#13;
"1 should like to tell yon how much&#13;
good Grape-Nuts has dens for my wife.&#13;
After being in poor health fbr theiam&gt;&#13;
18 years, during part of the " '"&#13;
scarcely anything would stay on&#13;
stomach long enough to nourish hat,&#13;
anally at the suggestion of a ""&#13;
the tried Orape-Nnta&gt;&#13;
"Now, after about tour weeks on&#13;
this delicious and nutrition*^^ food; stfiF&#13;
has picked up most^wonderfnBy **•&gt;&#13;
seems as well as anyone can be.&#13;
"Every morning the makes a good .;&#13;
bfVahfhst onQraee^tute eatenynetaa&#13;
It comes from the package with crease ;&#13;
or mint added&gt;end the* again the (&gt; •&#13;
same at sapper i » ^ tha jshsj^e J^Jbas ^&#13;
la wonderfnt ^-.--";'; ":r,&lt; • •;•;•' . ...v^v*&#13;
. -We oh»%.;si*sj^.,ts»:;his^ o f , ^ .&#13;
&lt;Jrar^N^seTlbod srter onr nfi r&#13;
markabls expertesee," Name gtrehi&#13;
by Postnai-Otr; Battle Creek,- sflehv-^ ,&#13;
Bead the ltWe noek, *The Road to&#13;
WettviDe,^ In ph^s..* -There's a ^ss&gt;&#13;
X#! ••.•c&#13;
**1&#13;
w w c . ,&#13;
lettgrt^ A j g g&#13;
3 k m s m &gt; 5 g &gt; mVsmmmmmm&#13;
t"g^pmWJ' ^SSm 4 ^smsmsage^mn&#13;
Y.&#13;
• ^&#13;
I&#13;
i.-r&#13;
s^Mj;,. •7- *•.&#13;
:^&#13;
• : • &amp; MV^A'&#13;
' " ' ,'&lt;,vV '&#13;
•' '. v •• ' .«11&#13;
• v&#13;
V ^ / v ' • ' ' n . ' ^ i JSf.ip...&#13;
fete:-; ¥-&#13;
R;'Jt^-"K-;.v&#13;
If the power proposition is bothering you, call and let us&#13;
explain the merits of the I H C line of gasoline engines. We&#13;
have an I H 0 gasoline engine to fill every need—tractors,&#13;
portable, stationary, air and water-cooled. In case you want&#13;
kerosene, gas, or alcohol attachments, we will be glad to supply&#13;
you. If you have a difficult power proposition to solve, call&#13;
and we will assist you to figure it o u t We not only have the&#13;
best engine on the market, but we have the size and style&#13;
you need. Call and look over our line, and whether you buy&#13;
or not we will be glad to see you. We want to number you&#13;
a s one of our friends. Call today and get a catalogue. It's&#13;
yours for the asking, and we are anxious for you to have it.&#13;
THEHO«EOFGO0DG00D5ATTttEL0WE5TPRiaS&#13;
ZK Dinkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
§£*&amp;&lt;&#13;
•s*e&#13;
:'v&#13;
*s£L&#13;
r"K,&#13;
SOUTH M A J I O * .&#13;
Me«dames Gardner and Oemerest&#13;
ware Howell shoppers last Wednesday,&#13;
34. Hallnp and family visited at Ibe&#13;
borne of Hartley Gauss cJunaay.&#13;
Hazel Brnffis visiting at ibe borne&#13;
of Wm. Bland.&#13;
•&#13;
Laverne Demerit spent a portion&#13;
ot last week with relatives at Fowlervilla.&#13;
Paul Brogan of Cbilson was a week&#13;
and guest at the borne of Chris Brogan.&#13;
Wm. Br off of West Marion spent&#13;
Sunday at tbe borne of G. D. Bland.&#13;
Mrs. Alfred Mot pan and Mra, Fred&#13;
*t&#13;
Uorgeee were Jackson shoppers last&#13;
Friday,&#13;
Mrs. Wilt Dunbar and daughter* of&#13;
Pines nay spent several days last week&#13;
at the home of ber parents Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. V. G. Dink Ie.&#13;
Jlra. Mnringhain Br. fall last weak.&#13;
and sprained her wrist and ankle.&#13;
MM-&#13;
&amp; • •&#13;
V'C:&#13;
.- .. I, •'&#13;
Deafness Cannot Be Cared&#13;
By local application?, as they canno&#13;
reach tbe deceased portion of tbe ear&#13;
There is only one way to cnre deaf*&#13;
nets, and that is by constitutional rem&#13;
edits. Deafness i s caused by an inflamed&#13;
condition of tbe mucous lining&#13;
of the Eustachian Tube. When this&#13;
tube is inflamed yon have a rumbling&#13;
sound or imperfect hearing and when&#13;
I t i l entirely closed, Deafness is tbe&#13;
result, and unless the inflamation can&#13;
be taken out and this tube restored to&#13;
its normal condition, bearing will be&#13;
destroyed forever; nine cases out ot&#13;
ten are caused by Catarrh, which is&#13;
Bathing but an inflamed oondition ot&#13;
the mucous surfaces.&#13;
We will give One Hundred&#13;
Dollars for any ease of Deafness&#13;
(caused by Catarrh) that cannot&#13;
V be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.&#13;
Send for circulars, free.&#13;
P. J. CBBVBT &amp; Co., Toledo, Ohio&#13;
eonoom&lt;&#13;
"H G R E G O R Y .&#13;
Mrs. G. W, Bates entertained&#13;
ip&amp;&amp;uriay evening.&#13;
• r Mr. Merrltta was in Lansing last&#13;
weekrabusiness.&#13;
fo&amp;latioa at the Maccahaa Hall in&#13;
Xhogoif Saturday afternoon Jan. 25.&#13;
I t 1..WiUianas and wife ate Snnday&#13;
4^1s|r Witb Frank OviU and wife.&#13;
• &gt;«»•&#13;
r;\&#13;
HifhtMUkr and family risiUd at&#13;
Frank Tttaw'ttiaiday, "'&#13;
Barve Dyer and wile wart in Detroit&#13;
on toaioajs lost Wtdneaday awl&#13;
limds;. ..•__'.'•.&#13;
Fred Hofaeyer atteedei bit annt's&#13;
raatrel « t Ann Arbor laat week,&#13;
- v ltfcel Lilly white Tisttad aft Addie&#13;
^ t i n a i a n s 8 e t n r d a y . '&#13;
, . : l e w . Millar and family vWWd a t&#13;
- M a r Cfcipmea's laet TtuHtafef, :&#13;
lelaihgs hiti thai foro uairl of&#13;
Millet of Detroit ia here&#13;
rtniniiiotlnaT a mfsirsnei i t&#13;
• « s W l w t ^ ^ ^ ; : : ^ " ' v ^ : '&#13;
Be sure and read Clinton's&#13;
EAST LYNDON&#13;
Eotfpne Heatley has put a new wb&#13;
on bis windmill to replace the on&#13;
wbicb was damaged during a recen&#13;
windstorm.&#13;
Tbe lumber which has bsvftv af&#13;
in tbe woods of W. B. Collins) M&#13;
LUte is being banted to Gregory fait&#13;
shipment,&#13;
Mrs. Lon Clark is on tbe sick lijtj*&#13;
Lee Had ley and family are visiting&#13;
at tbe home of Roy Hadley in Green&#13;
Oak.&#13;
PoWtirof-tmrMillvilie Witt&#13;
move bis portable saw into tbe woods&#13;
of Elmer Jaycon sometime neit week&#13;
idrs. Arthur Alijn has returned&#13;
home lrom Pinckncy where she has&#13;
been caring tor ber mother wbo ha*&#13;
suffering with a broken arm.&#13;
—George ChaliuergTficTfamny orTpsilanti&#13;
are visiting the home ot Harrison&#13;
Hadley.&#13;
L. K. Hadley ani wife wer« guebt&#13;
at the borne ot Jay Hadley Sunday.&#13;
Michael 8o Hi van's barn is nearly&#13;
completed.&#13;
Cbas. Doody is hauling wood to&#13;
Chelsea.&#13;
James Biloh is under the doctor's&#13;
care.&#13;
Miss Helen Mobrlok wbo teaches in&#13;
district Mo. 10 serves bot coffee to her&#13;
pupils at noon.&#13;
L. K. Hadley visited relatives near&#13;
Fowlervilie last week.&#13;
Lottie Allen took dinner with Sir..&#13;
and Mrs. Fred Hadley one day last&#13;
week,&#13;
Frank Hinchey recently purchased&#13;
a fine cow of W. Collins.&#13;
It is reported that Chas. Frost who&#13;
has been living on t b%~J as v Little term&#13;
will move to Detroit in the near&#13;
future.&#13;
'• w-- mm-.•;?. **: mw^ ^ : ¾ -jMRi&#13;
• nnnnnnnnnp- • • ^..-^-^^--- "•:.•- ^-^-..&gt;•*&lt;&lt;' ftf"-»-. ^-^'-&gt;-..• .^iic^nnnnl&#13;
&gt; . - - . : • • • : - • ' • ' • • •••• - ' - " . - ' ' - . - ' ^ „ - + - . • " r \&#13;
*m&#13;
amen&#13;
Pursuit&#13;
Economy by doing one's own&#13;
baking: is shown by tbe following&#13;
4»timate_4ir^are6Lb3^^^^&#13;
Don't fail to tak advantage of&#13;
the bargains at Clinton* closing&#13;
ont sale.&#13;
The guard force of the Miebt&#13;
gas state prison at Jackson will&#13;
be augmented within a few days&#13;
by tbe arrival of thoroughbred&#13;
man-trailing blood bounds. Kennels&#13;
for the animals hare been&#13;
erected on the lawn near the east&#13;
guard tower, and the animals will&#13;
be hoofed there under tbe care of&#13;
one of the gnarda, who has had&#13;
mneh experience in training the&#13;
anisaala.&#13;
TJje Putnam and Hamburg Farmet*&#13;
Olnb will meet with Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. John Chambers Saturday,&#13;
J«ft 26. Topie, Orowiug and Ran*&#13;
deling Dairy Cattle. Leader, W.&#13;
Cf. HenJee, Diaonatloii led by 8.&#13;
MM Sack Of Flour I I&#13;
Do&#13;
idfciv' Falton left the trust comp&#13;
«ny*a*lMsUdiaf with quick, springing&#13;
steps. He M d much to think of In&#13;
his half-hour walk to the station of&#13;
lila suburban train. If his story la a&#13;
current magazine had been a aurprlse&#13;
to his friends, it had been, m a waj,&#13;
none tbe leaa ona to himself. It was&#13;
not remarkable that the story should&#13;
be ona of finance; his position with&#13;
the trust company gave him a knowledge&#13;
of the theme and an acquaint*&#13;
ance of many men.&#13;
A man back of him touched his&#13;
shoulder.&#13;
How are you, Faltonr"&#13;
John swung around and caught the&#13;
man's hand.&#13;
"You, Sea bury? Well, this Is good.&#13;
I didn't know thatyou were at home."&#13;
"I've Just come in. Ah—does this&#13;
in here mean you, Falton?" Ha tapped&#13;
significantly a magazine under his&#13;
arm,&#13;
John nodded with a little embarrassment&#13;
"What do you think of it,&#13;
Seaburyr&#13;
"Great, aa a story. But—er—a bit&#13;
too much from life, Falton. Looks as&#13;
though you'd taken it from—er—-that&#13;
cotton deal.'&#13;
That's nonsense, Seabury. Tour&#13;
cotton deal was wholly legitimate,&#13;
wasn't it? And I did not know enough&#13;
about it to write it up. The story is&#13;
fiction."&#13;
John entered*the station with an indescribable&#13;
Irritation coursing through&#13;
his veins. "I didn't know that Seabury&#13;
could be so foolish," he muttered.&#13;
His train did not go out for five&#13;
minutes, so he made no attempt to&#13;
pass the man who stepped out of the&#13;
crowd to speak to him.&#13;
"Hello, Falton, so you've been BcrlbbMng,&#13;
I s#e."&#13;
"A little," John admitted. Ha tried&#13;
to forget Seabury and to act naturally.&#13;
"Have you read it?"&#13;
"p, yes; very good, very good, indeaf,&#13;
but Just—er—Just er—. You—&#13;
ave any particular person in&#13;
tfas a creation, pure and aim-&#13;
M ^ j b H s U e d John. "You could hard*&#13;
^ J ¥ expect me to write of finance aa 1&#13;
wen Id of engineering, a thing I know&#13;
nothing about f&#13;
"0, no, of course not You have,&#13;
quite a gift—no doubt—no doubt of&#13;
i t Falton."&#13;
/&#13;
&gt;iOTtsj&gt;si|i • t if si m i&#13;
PHOM OficMed Works Wot* _ „ .._..&#13;
806 Cooper Street . * » first Ola#&#13;
Either Pbooe&#13;
1988&#13;
EMPIRE MARBLE AND&#13;
S JOHN Q. LasuB, Prop,&#13;
J MaturfaeturetM ot and Dtaltrfln&#13;
2 Monuments, Sfatiiary and S t o n e Burial Vanl*§&#13;
* • • • «&#13;
$ J A C K S O N ,&#13;
\&#13;
*•* aaBaenaM&#13;
P I N C K N B Y , MIGHIGA&#13;
•• . v&#13;
&amp;•&#13;
; *t&#13;
"'-&#13;
• &gt;&#13;
• .&#13;
^, -,j£&#13;
' ynM&#13;
M&#13;
&amp;.&#13;
Edward Van Horn and Earl Tapper&#13;
were absent Monday on account of&#13;
sickness.&#13;
Cat men Lai and and Lottie Blades&#13;
a. ted ss substitutes 14 tbn i;rammer&#13;
and intermediate rooms Mop day a. m.&#13;
Tbe reading circle clsss meets Saturday&#13;
January 25 at two a. m\&#13;
Mae'Drosran and Ruth Frost visited&#13;
school Tnesdav&#13;
Clmlflrt AJftrtitiig&#13;
E. Hendershot, 149 Baldwin aven&#13;
uft, a member of the East Side&#13;
housewives* league of Detroit, wbo&#13;
is prepared to fnrnish club members&#13;
with flour at wholesale prices&#13;
One sack of flour, weighing 24½&#13;
pounds can be made to provide&#13;
the housewives' family with the&#13;
following:&#13;
14 two-pound loares of bread at 9 cenU&#13;
v A c n • • « • • ' • • • • • • • • « • « • • * • « *&#13;
2 coffee ctkst at 10 cents&#13;
2 layer cakes at 25 cents&#13;
9 pies at 12 cents&#13;
4 down cook en at 10 cents&#13;
4 down muffin* at Id cents&#13;
5 doxen waffles at 10 cents&#13;
A O u &amp; l • • • ! • » • * • » * • • • •&lt; • • t • • •&#13;
.. 81.26&#13;
20&#13;
.. 50&#13;
»• • l*v*3&#13;
40&#13;
40&#13;
..... 50&#13;
..$4.34&#13;
The total a it of msking^ the abo're at&#13;
hone is *s follows:&#13;
1 sack floor 24½ pounds...&#13;
3 pounds flour at Id cents&#13;
4 pounds sugar at 8 cents&#13;
} ponnd hotter at 88 cents&#13;
1 doscn eggs «•••••••.•••••••..•&#13;
8 qnsrts milk at 8 cents&#13;
Baking Powder&#13;
Seasoning&#13;
J O w l 1 . . « • • * » • • * * . . ~ T - « * . « * . » . . »&#13;
Total saving to the housewife.&#13;
. . . $ • 15&#13;
48&#13;
. . . . 24&#13;
» • • • l o&#13;
. . . 28&#13;
. . . . 24&#13;
. - . . 10&#13;
10&#13;
...82 87&#13;
..^1.07&#13;
- ,. Be-aure and read E. Clinton's&#13;
adv. '";" f r /&#13;
Mrs. A. K. Pierce of^outh 'Lyon&#13;
spent Tuesday here.&#13;
Mrs. Agnes Andrews of Detroit&#13;
is visiting relatives here.&#13;
Kate, Ella and Michael Boon of&#13;
Detroit were fn town Tuesday.&#13;
Win. Kennedy 8r. is in Detroit&#13;
and Canada this week. *&#13;
Mrs. W. Clark and Mr*. H. W.&#13;
Orofoot were to Stockbridge Tqes-&#13;
The North Lake Orange will&#13;
genre a fiah rapper at tbe North&#13;
Lake Grange Hall Friday, Jan 24&#13;
It is absolutely ntamary that&#13;
all offleers of tbe O. £. fih be prevent&#13;
at the reftolar meeting Friday&#13;
evening of this week to be in*&#13;
structed in their dotiee «t the&#13;
meetiog of the cototy aggoeiation&#13;
bald here Febraary 21. By order of&#13;
Worthy Matron.&#13;
E.Swarthont. Arnangements are\ A box social will be held at tbe&#13;
being made 1o have Frank Oran^ toomeof Ed 8prcut for toe benefit&#13;
dall, tbe raojaaajiil breeder and&#13;
weU. known asthority on dairy&#13;
oasUe, preaptil to ghro&#13;
thU intereatiBg&#13;
will reepoad to f&#13;
**&#13;
ot tbe Spront and t^kia. aehoolsv&#13;
Thnrailaytfeajtog,Jan, |0. Mag.&#13;
oial selection*by aydnoy Sproii,&#13;
Maude Kohn and Nellie Grafdnor.&#13;
BsyUog by Qt«i?ie^% K«bo. A&#13;
piomiawd^fall&#13;
"Excuse me," said John, 'Til miss&#13;
« 7 train."&#13;
But his fame still pursued. As the&#13;
train pulled out &gt;a fellow-townsman&#13;
settled himself beside John.&#13;
"Well, Falton, you're bean roasting&#13;
'em, eh? I suppose you've known of&#13;
more than one deal of that start?"&#13;
—"None at all/' snapped Joan.&#13;
"O, I thought you'd taken It from&#13;
something that you'd got on to."&#13;
"It's a story, fiction, every word."&#13;
Forty minutes later John closed the&#13;
door of bin home with a aigh of relief.&#13;
-Mother," he called, and she&#13;
came hurrying to him.&#13;
"0, John, I've so much to tall you.&#13;
First, Mrs. Elswood came here this&#13;
morning. She was so surprised, John.&#13;
But she thinks the story—r-"&#13;
"Hearer," h» Interrupted, "let ns&#13;
baw^ftnser and not the story. Do&#13;
yon know, honey, I'm a bit tired of it."&#13;
"O, I suppose you've heard nothing&#13;
else all day, poor boy. Well, if&#13;
you will be so clever, you must take&#13;
the consequence. But come, I'll say&#13;
not another word about it until yon&#13;
are rested. Maggie has the loveliest&#13;
surprise for dessert"&#13;
John had just finished the surprise&#13;
when tbe doorbell rang. Maggie show*&#13;
ed the man into the little room where&#13;
John sometimes smoked and wrote,&#13;
and John held Stanton Wilson's card&#13;
in his hand when, he enter** the room.&#13;
Re had known* "WHson at college.&#13;
Their paths flwafrcrossed more than&#13;
once since, but the men had never&#13;
been friends.&#13;
T o n are -surprised," Wilson said'*&#13;
coming forward, "and I beg your par* •&#13;
don for the intrusion." j&#13;
"Not at all, not at all," said John, j&#13;
His offer of a Chair seemed to escape&#13;
WHson. " i&#13;
1 felt as though I must sea yon,"&#13;
began Wilson, "and I dldnt with to&#13;
go to your office. I wanted to see yon&#13;
here ami tall yon what you've done&#13;
forjssjo&gt;&#13;
Falton looked at him Inquiringly, «1&#13;
—what have I doner&#13;
"tour story—you know. I read it&#13;
last night and Z dldnt attempt to go&#13;
to bed. I just thought of things all&#13;
night"&#13;
"H? storyr gasped John. Then&#13;
he added in rebellion: "Patience, man,&#13;
•tit yofre « Uwyer."&#13;
T e e W know that I am a lawyer,&#13;
but wa*t diflertmee does ttJneke what&#13;
a men Is doing, if he's on the^ereoked.&#13;
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in mind—erobaWy bad no one ta&#13;
mhssWtat something la that story was&#13;
rOmM mirror to me. I've never realhied&#13;
what X was coming to before,&#13;
Tosr&gt;e stopped me Just a time. ltew.&#13;
Tve eniy time to shake yow head, if&#13;
foil will let are, aad ease* the tajftl&#13;
tetheoKy." - - ^&#13;
falton laughed tightly, bat he&#13;
scared his shoulders. *lou're pot*&#13;
tasg.it too strong; Wilson," he said,&#13;
as he held out his hand. T e a r debt&#13;
te me, W there w » one, is istfeVV&#13;
roe realty mean that r&gt;s maai alggf&#13;
to yea tntko vagae befera, wtqr,&#13;
tktm. baJaaeed oaf' ae&gt;&#13;
FORSALE—Beau Pods, also Marsh&#13;
hay. Wm. Kjan.&#13;
FOR SALE—Cutting box, bu?gy and&#13;
cutter Inquire ot L E, Richards&#13;
3t8&#13;
FOUND— Io tbe village of Ftnckney&#13;
a sum of money. Owner can have&#13;
- *by proving property and paying for&#13;
this notice. Jas. M. Harris, ltf&#13;
FOB SALE—Hard coal fixtures&#13;
tor a Round Oak store No 18 Inquire&#13;
of W 11 Mil.er. IrS&#13;
FOUND—A key ring containing five&#13;
keys. Owner can have by calling at&#13;
this office and paying for ibis adv.&#13;
FOR SALE—douse and two lots Iuquire&#13;
of Mrs. AddjeJ^)ttertani_ ljj&gt;&#13;
FOR SALE—My barter shop and&#13;
residence. Must be sold at once*.&#13;
Inquire of George F. Groen 4 »&#13;
FOR SALE—Art Laucel range and&#13;
Round Oak heater at a bargain^ W.&#13;
D. amitfa. Inquire of F. W. Allison.&#13;
Fit (Mitt! FMrFrM&#13;
Where It Pays to Pay Cash&#13;
' . . • ' I • ", H t l , | . i i . i . Wem m&#13;
tractive prices on alt&#13;
kinds of men&#13;
It is thtea ppool the store Unclose&#13;
out til mjptofgood* during J*»6ary&#13;
atid^February. We rive spleadid&#13;
btrgsisM at fob season of the year.&#13;
Caused see u*.&#13;
EVERT DAY 18 BARGAIN BAY&#13;
30WELLN8 BUSY 8TORE&#13;
Ms«B«sVBs«gsVsVsbVs«s^&#13;
-j/m^&#13;
• V - ^ u " $&#13;
4- 4tt&#13;
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installment plan, small payment&#13;
down and long terms for balance,&#13;
Would take small payment in village&#13;
pronertv. Address box 695,&#13;
Howell, Mich. ltS&#13;
PINOKNEY&#13;
Corrected every Wednesday morning&#13;
WHEAT-tl.C'?&#13;
SYE-Mc&#13;
OATfe^-82&#13;
ONIONS-fl.00&#13;
POTATOBd-Wc&#13;
BUT^ER-fldc.&#13;
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CarCKENS-llve„ l i e hens 10c.&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative BaOeS&#13;
tyag Bnsinesa. i: • , ::&#13;
3 p e r c e n t . .-•'&#13;
paid on all Time Depoeitsv&#13;
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bed near a window&#13;
so she oantt gat&#13;
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g a ^ s ^ w a e ^ a e a a p e a a f&#13;
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to nanV dead seat&#13;
tana.1 • fttaat&#13;
teld me St. MO*&#13;
Beast Ramadr n e |&#13;
eared her Hi&#13;
so I tried tt,&#13;
prove. She .&#13;
a great many ess* _.&#13;
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aoaasd to sat -l&amp; •&#13;
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cheeked girl. No one oan Imagtoa tae&#13;
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Canon has in Dr. Mies' Heart Renv '&#13;
tdy is shared by thooSanola of ' '-&#13;
others who know its value front &gt;&#13;
•xpeileiite. Many heart dlsordaff&#13;
yield to tit atment, if the tmtmeai&#13;
it right If you are bothered f r i A \ '&#13;
short braa4b|*iaiiiting tJWls» swesV&#13;
ing ef feet ot ankles, pel* abos*&#13;
the hae^ e©4 shoulder bla^ias, paj-^&#13;
.. pitdtion, w t e i aa^ htmgty epefla, :&#13;
i yew should fee^ oslo^ Df. MBss*~ "&#13;
tHeart R e m e ^ 4 u u o n % v f r o ^ *"'&#13;
the expwrJesmar* - ^ - ^ *-"--*^&#13;
,insy. • '.;:^*f*-^&#13;
gesreetasd ay 'ill " "k" '•&#13;
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• MONEY&#13;
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•^%Hm*mj &gt;., ••»</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch January 23, 1913</text>
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                <text>January 23, 1913 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>Pinckuey, Linngston County, Mrbijao, Thursday, February 6. 1913 No. 6&#13;
H W O l I I I n&gt; , II in ' '&#13;
vmmmmmmmmmmm*****&#13;
.. SPO'SsT&#13;
Jne Waak, Commencing Thurtday, February 8&#13;
«w&#13;
AgM^WHe«^ Giovnt an 1 WH en§ at Goat&#13;
A# Ladies Hfavv Glovea aocMittens at Coat&#13;
All Qoilte at Coat&#13;
All M««ni Wool Cnd»TWPaf at Coat&#13;
A l i e n s 25- Wool Socka *U9c .&#13;
A&amp;ai*nsW&lt;m1 Overahirtsat Cost&#13;
All Ladies 50, Heavy tfifftcfcd Uu erwear at 42c&#13;
All Ladies 30e Heavy Fleeced Underwear at 21c&#13;
All Meoe Wool Pant* at Cost&#13;
All Odds and Ends in Shoes at Lesa the WholeatUCost&#13;
Saturday&#13;
KadSahnon, 2 cans for_27c Yens* Cakes ._I&#13;
find* 5o Soars Lenox Soap..&#13;
1 gal. Beat Molasses.&#13;
4 cans Ooi&#13;
3 page. Toasted Corn Flukes.&#13;
*Sgkga. Sugared Com Flakes.&#13;
A L L S A L E S CASH&#13;
5 lb. p&lt;g. Oat Meal.&#13;
2 cans Best Peas .__&#13;
Teata Mite&#13;
JPVbrssry 13th.&#13;
Howell High '*• b« ol B ail a in g&#13;
Program "***"*&#13;
9r00 to 9:16 , . . . .DejvtsSoeal Exetabm&#13;
9:15 to lU:00-"Tbe Old and New JEdnc*.&#13;
tion" B. B. Laird, Ypettanti&#13;
10:00 to 10:20 Music Prof. Bart*,&#13;
Mt. Pleaaaot&#13;
10:20 to 10:30 ..B*0*t&gt;&#13;
10:30 to l l $ o "Advantages of Gmutry&#13;
Teavhtre"... ...Dr. i oreon, Colambue&#13;
11^510 1 ) : 4 0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •- Manic&#13;
U ^ i t&lt;&gt; 12HHI ,0rgaaiaauwi&#13;
Noon li&lt;termii»ion&#13;
l:8()to 1:45 ...Moalo&#13;
1:46*t«» 2#0 "Uorraeiiv* Dicipliue". .Pr»i.&#13;
S. B. Laird&#13;
2:30 t(r 2:43.. &gt;..Altaic&#13;
2:46 to 3:00 Keceaa&#13;
3:00 u» 4KX) "The Teacher in and oat of&#13;
School" Dr. Corson&#13;
Eveniug&#13;
8»na&gt; Prof. Rauch&#13;
Lecture, ''How ihe Home Helps the&#13;
School" Dr. Coraoa&#13;
3c i Cttifeeita and teachers of Living-&#13;
,25c st«»u cosaifr are invited to *tfend&#13;
19c these meetiuga aud directors are&#13;
16c ' BBP^cifclly urged to be present.&#13;
* , Come hud be convinced teat U&#13;
pay* to have your teachers come&#13;
together for a i»y at each a meetiug&#13;
Maude Benjamin, Com'r.&#13;
To Mj Patrw&#13;
Having disponed of my store&#13;
and acquired the electric lightiug&#13;
plant, i wisb to thank the people)&#13;
o Pinckiiey and viciuity for their&#13;
patronage during tbff -past two&#13;
aA^kS) BAAssBBBiBBBaftaasiAaBAsiaBaial saass4sss)saslsaaBsttsaslBsAa^BaaB^^a^BaAss^ss^ssMsattasAsaaaaaaaaaaaiasMi&#13;
Fish Pish Fish&#13;
We Have Salt Mackerel, Whitefiish, Herring and Halibut on hand9&#13;
also several grades of Choice Sardines and Salmon.&#13;
Fresh Sealshipt Oysters&#13;
A Large Assortment of&#13;
MENS FURNISHINGS&#13;
Including Sweater Coats, Jackets, Trousers, Wool Shirts, Hats, Caps, Gloves&#13;
J and Mittens, Wool Socks, Etc.&#13;
v Kara aud Old Tavern Syrnp in gallon and \ gallons&#13;
Hill's Little Peerles* Broom (gnaranteed to outlive 2 ordinary brooms) at 50c&#13;
Hill's Little Mi«s, Regular 50c Broom at 4Jo Hid'* Flagship, Regular 35c Broom at 25c&#13;
B'ard*le&gt;'s Little Gem, Regular 45c Broom at 86c&#13;
Bed Htar Kerosene, Aidiwn Cheese, Butter Not and Very iWst Bread, Wholesome and Tip&#13;
Top Bread.&#13;
We Guarantee Our Goods to be of HighesfQuality&#13;
MONKS B R O T H E R S&#13;
LiAilUAUJ&#13;
9 e^B^BnPeJFs^ejsjsj sj ^J^^iUl4iaiiriii^aUlUi.iilii.ii.ia.i&gt;aiaa&lt;&#13;
Pffirreswe Cini) GiBfeitiiii&#13;
A conuty couveutiou of the Nat*&#13;
y ears aud I trust that otor dealinga; ioual Progeaeive voters of Lir&#13;
An^ for every thing under the sun.&#13;
Every h^rne has need of paint.&#13;
E-ach one of ,.&#13;
SftERwm-WiUMm&#13;
Pt/irrs&#13;
it epeciaUy auhcd to aome home uie—either outside or inside.&#13;
It's knowing the right kind of paint, and potting a oo tat rid*&#13;
place that makes painting a lacceaa. Ten us wMt-yoti want to pafift,&#13;
and we'll tell yod the right kind to use.&#13;
iauurnew basiness will be as iugstoo County is hewby called&#13;
satisfactory co all. to meet in mass couveation at the&#13;
-• I will a^k that you be patient \ omrt bouse in the village of How.&#13;
.%£ju»*wd^ ^*4,ii&lt;4fcft*r^»y» ***&gt;. 14,1919 at 1:30&#13;
•aflnl spring, wheo we will install&#13;
out water power plant at Heave's&#13;
nil pood. Lheu we mil give you&#13;
Teep Je Hard ware Company&#13;
*il night and ,.robably couttnuous&#13;
service and will alc»o gaarautee to&#13;
give yon at that lim* a lower rate*&#13;
We are ready to w:r* r&gt;" *&#13;
now and if any are expect. »g&#13;
to have wiring done, I would suggest&#13;
tuat you do not put it off until&#13;
we are busy installing our new&#13;
plant as we wit I tn unable to do&#13;
it then.&#13;
o « 0 « p/ri.Wetl)irrjr tMsajaaes&#13;
to attend the state convention to&#13;
be held&gt; at j M y f e f f - Miob.&#13;
Wedoesday, .B^WmmmM • %ii«i to&#13;
transact&#13;
may propsW^HW* -s*fore said&#13;
)uventioo^ ^1¾^ apportionment&#13;
having been made to the several&#13;
townships, all progressive voter*&#13;
wid be entitled *o a seat in ibis&#13;
oouveutiou and are earuestly reqaested&#13;
to attend.&#13;
;;, By order of Oouoty Oum.&#13;
U C L t K l ^ r George L.Fiaher, Ohairmam.&#13;
g » * &lt; ^ ^ i ^ ^ w e m &lt; l u J FishOeck, Seo'y.&#13;
Mrs, G. Pearaou is visiting:aiajijrliw^"« "" ngut- a«^&#13;
Stives iu Sagiusw. ''::k&#13;
&gt; MisB Nellie Gr^rJner returned&#13;
home Friday from au extended&#13;
visit witn friends and relatives in&#13;
•Detroit.&#13;
44 T H E T R A L 99 f&#13;
m&#13;
, . 'it'&#13;
kfy •&gt; t'-?. '•'• '.••y i t &gt;&#13;
•.&gt;,' - ' -i.&#13;
Wotih of Grocmss to bs ^old at Once&#13;
12 Persons can get $100.00 Worth of Groceries at RocV Bottpm Prices&#13;
24 persons can get $50.00 Worth of Groceries at Roct Bottom Prices.&#13;
48 x4r^o» can gtt 12» 0^^&#13;
Or if 96 pTOple^hould happen to w^nt groceries at the'-best prices every there&#13;
would b*\,nly il250 worth for aach one, so you see m*order^tojfcet afl you want&#13;
4on*t delay, ^^erythtog&#13;
»-&#13;
That saft-&#13;
Is one of na&#13;
vanished b«&#13;
otsregaxu tt&#13;
the time to&#13;
Dr. Fieri&#13;
NO&#13;
Has been recommended&#13;
.Mi&#13;
:ft&#13;
Hardware&#13;
Parm Machinery «*•*•&#13;
W:&#13;
'%&#13;
m Literary aid&#13;
QA&#13;
utlcry, Sporting Goods&#13;
ifcyou happen to want $25.00 or $50^00 worth, fresh.&#13;
•- X&#13;
^We wwtrt to isaakt ftwrn for 5)tbar gooda; w» want mooay tp pay bills and era are taking this&#13;
^Uo «a to i*m^^**+fo* $&amp;**** w^H aise be ptft at the lowest notch during thU&#13;
Mfe^MNe sot / .&#13;
fi • nii»»i&#13;
• % • 3Wa&gt;-'^: I^CIoflBStef^I&#13;
*&#13;
Sfe-&#13;
'ClfCSfS At? .^.^.&#13;
60o Brooms lor:&#13;
J6aB*iiag&#13;
•J.-^V.^V-.,• JBs&gt;^ 25-/0oflee£or.&#13;
Pearl Tintoss sir&#13;
• ^ " " * ^TjpM^*™~ »-JWf*« food Oorp for.&#13;
ilfe.oaa:&#13;
l^;sMI^&#13;
8o l,V&lt;7&#13;
lie ,'"'&#13;
The next meeting of the Pit&#13;
ney Literary snd Social&#13;
.#111 be he1d st the&#13;
of Mrs.. Ernest Hoyt Tut&#13;
Pebrnary 11 s i two o'c&#13;
sttmiard tlm»*. . All jol&#13;
are eordislly Ufit^cl to at&#13;
At the )ssr aeetipg the foil&#13;
lag sorjects were discussed \\&#13;
general way;&#13;
Two Mo#rn Spanish Ai&#13;
Wisooostn, its growth ii&#13;
•aanulacturiog etate,&#13;
t^wOhissgo Qowe for&#13;
tHhnte to **msll Towns.&#13;
p^P. S. Paint s9 Yarnlshes&#13;
Furniture •v.;.... -i.-?« h T "&#13;
V.o.''-.:- ' - - ¥ 7 V.'T •'•• » ' ;&#13;
. - . : • . . r . • • • • , ? • . &gt; •&#13;
/ : ' ^ &gt;&#13;
.•'.-f'.&#13;
**^iL • • &amp; , . ""'2s •' .1&#13;
.v*1&#13;
^f.&#13;
*4.&#13;
•V , !&#13;
I&#13;
"(&#13;
./&#13;
A&#13;
A:&#13;
*ri&#13;
Call and art our prim oa aty af taa&#13;
' ^ ^ r ''•^.);a^'^"^a^^^'^rSJ5^fasjBPj^^iBj^v^r.sawei|a^^-' MRS. : % ¾&#13;
K&#13;
A*; I wish to&#13;
few resaemberisg tnw whh a&#13;
tiful psti cari sHpwsr snd^&#13;
[tasigttms tor Jhefc&#13;
^aBW»» •. ••^a^s» saw ^^p&gt;»., w^ajsfla^t&#13;
• 4&#13;
&gt;'-:A"-''. ^, f .^ '&#13;
• ViM, A A&#13;
«siu.&#13;
• i":&#13;
v^ »•;». ^•r w;r \fr&gt;". JfSgMSaS &gt;13&#13;
*lWyfW'J"u.*-- ip. fc&gt;r&gt;&#13;
&lt;•!. u '&#13;
'V ' •&#13;
H&#13;
Lfti:&#13;
OT as the great who grow more great&#13;
Until from us they are apart—&#13;
He walks with us in man's estate;&#13;
We know his was a brother heart.&#13;
The marching years may render dim&#13;
The humanness of other men,&#13;
Today we are akin to htm&#13;
A3 they who knew him best were then.&#13;
Wars have been won by mail-clad bands,&#13;
Realms have been ruled by sword-hedged kings.&#13;
But he above these others stands&#13;
As one who loved the common things;&#13;
The common faith of man was bis,&#13;
The common faith in man he had—&#13;
For this to-day his grave face is&#13;
A face half joyous and half sad.&#13;
A man of earth! Of earthy stuff,&#13;
As honest as the fruitful soil,&#13;
Gnarled as the friendly trees, and rough&#13;
As hillsides that had known his toil;&#13;
Of earthy stuff—let it be told,&#13;
For earth-born men rise and reveal&#13;
A courage fair as beaten gold&#13;
Ami the enduring strength of steel.&#13;
»&#13;
So now he dominates our thought,&#13;
This bumble great man holds us thus&#13;
Because of all he dreamed and wrought,&#13;
Because he is akin to us.&#13;
He held his patient trust in truth&#13;
While God was working out His.plan,&#13;
And they that were his foes, forsooth,&#13;
Come to pay tribute to the Man.&#13;
Not as the great who grow more great&#13;
Until they have a mystic f a m e -&#13;
No stroke of fortune nor of fate&#13;
Gave Lincoln his undying name.&#13;
A common man, earth-bred, earth-bom,&#13;
One of the breed wflo work and wait—&#13;
Hia was a soul above all scorn,&#13;
His was a heart above all hate.&#13;
Coldwater.—Herman Kebler, seventeen&#13;
years old, s o n of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Charles Kebler of Batavia&#13;
township, while hunting with two companions&#13;
was accidentally a hot. He&#13;
died. Kebler and Roy Sampsell sat&#13;
down on a log to rest. Sampsell stood&#13;
his gun against the log, leaving it&#13;
cocked. As he reached tor it the butt&#13;
ot the gun struck the log, firing one&#13;
barrel, Kebler receiving the charge in&#13;
his left side. A large number of shot&#13;
I penetrated the left lung. Doctor Holbrook&#13;
of this city and Doctor Turner&#13;
of Batavia township worked over the&#13;
boy tor hours, but Internal hemorrhage&#13;
caused his death.&#13;
Detroit.—George Bastine, charged&#13;
with the killing of Russell Rogers,&#13;
was bound ever to the recorder's&#13;
court to await -trial by Justice. N o&#13;
bail was granted and Bastine was remanded&#13;
to the county jail, Bastine Is&#13;
alleged to have stabbed Rogers during&#13;
a fight on the night of. January 12 in&#13;
a saloon on West Fort street. Rogers&#13;
lived for several days, but later died&#13;
and a warrant was sworn out for Bastine&#13;
charging him with murder in the&#13;
ilrst degree. &lt;&#13;
Flint. — Roy and Leon Burch,&#13;
brothers and Saginaw men, are lodged&#13;
in jail to await examination in February&#13;
on a charge of carrying concealed&#13;
weapons. They were arrested&#13;
in Montrose township where, it is alleged,&#13;
they appeared at the home of&#13;
James Mottle and held him up at the&#13;
point of a gun, demanding their&#13;
clothes, held as security for an unpaid&#13;
board bill, it is Bald.&#13;
Eaton Rapids.—An automobile driven&#13;
by William Moore of this city&#13;
was thrown down a steep embankment&#13;
and turned turtle three miles&#13;
west of town, when the steering gear&#13;
broke. Moore was the only one of the&#13;
three occupants of the car t o sustain&#13;
injury, although the machine was almost&#13;
a complete wreck. He was badly&#13;
bruised about the head and body.&#13;
Potterville.—When the wife of&#13;
Elmer E, Knapp, well known resident&#13;
of this place who died, Baw that&#13;
her husband was breathing his last,&#13;
she ran out of the room and swallowed&#13;
a Quantity of morphine tablets. Luckily,&#13;
the family physician was present.&#13;
and quick work with a stomach pump&#13;
saved her life.&#13;
Battle Creek.—^A boom has been&#13;
started by Calhoun county Progressives&#13;
for Prof. Henry Woolbert of&#13;
Albion for Progressive candidate for&#13;
superintendent of public instruction.&#13;
LINCOLN'S FAME&#13;
FOREVER FIXED&#13;
IN HISTORY&#13;
i*.&amp; • ) . ' ; • &gt; • •&#13;
ffi&#13;
• . &gt; , » ' ' • iv..&#13;
sir &lt;i v&lt; -&#13;
E flood of orations and editorials&#13;
throughout the land, in&#13;
which t h e loved and honored&#13;
name of Abraham Lincoln appears,&#13;
has for many years passed be-&#13;
..fore our: eyes, and the reader of them&#13;
tfs able to see what an immense fame&#13;
the name of Lincoln has already&#13;
achieved, and to what an extent the&#13;
popular estimate of the man verges&#13;
•upon hero worship, For if wo wuold&#13;
know popular feeling concerning a&#13;
great name, these public memorial addresses&#13;
and newspaper editorials, for&#13;
t h e most part attuned to the public&#13;
pulse, are a better guide than the&#13;
mora cautious andv unemotional estimates&#13;
to be found In the works of the&#13;
teat* .historians. The mass of the&#13;
.people do not read the ponderous histories;&#13;
they do read the newspapers&#13;
and listen to the glowing periods of&#13;
the popular orator on ceremonial or&#13;
commemorative occasions.&#13;
A' prominent western paper has declared&#13;
that Uncola Is universally regarded&#13;
a s "the one indispensable&#13;
man* of the Civil war period. Rev.&#13;
Br. Edward Bfetett R a t * took oeas&gt;&#13;
• i o n to condemn certain»,phases or&#13;
Ithe Lincoln portrait as presented in&#13;
« certain popular novel of t h e Civil&#13;
w s * period, o o the ground that they&#13;
unaeeeseariij vulgarised Lincoln's&#13;
«haracter. Oniy pne newspaper editorial&#13;
has come to our attention which&#13;
In Any way tried to exhibit some of&#13;
tot, possible defects of Lincoln a s a&#13;
crteietman, and that was unmistakably&#13;
designed t o exouse certain "faults of&#13;
politicians in general, by enveloping&#13;
t h e * with the halo that surrounds a&#13;
*reat name. T h e tendency to regard&#13;
Xmcoln a s the ofte essential man,&#13;
w h o s e wisdom w a s of^en a t fault,&#13;
a o * whose name deservedly gathers&#13;
to Itself the exclusive veneration of&#13;
t b * people, even t o the point of WOT-&#13;
•hip, fa unmistakable and the qeesarlees&#13;
whether a period of reeeoaa&#13;
possfWy follow this phase la&#13;
ideyelopment of what one df our&#13;
* ieaaocktstip historical scholars&#13;
oaOed "the Lincoln legend."&#13;
seems probable that the reaction&#13;
never ha,. ?ery sert&amp;ps o f proneed.&#13;
Bowk* * n 'The True Abra-&#13;
Lincoln" wtU undoubtedly begin&#13;
_ _ r a generation or two honea,-)&#13;
•as they have appeared in our&#13;
^aomemt - sra^k#A__ omtfA ^ n * ^flstsntAt^BBte^sfSBBs^k'1' ' \&#13;
m ttTpaia*-&#13;
..'.ifc'.'i' »'' '•'•.'«-' ; ' ' • ' • • .&#13;
action is seen in "the true" class of&#13;
biographical studies. But Lincoln,&#13;
however much he-may suffer-In the&#13;
future from overpraise, Is still fortunately&#13;
fljed on the stage of the world's&#13;
past, and whatever reaction there may&#13;
be, even in the minds of scholars, Is&#13;
not likely to assume the dimension*&#13;
of real controversy. Historians will&#13;
never quarrel over him as they do&#13;
over Cromwell and Napoleon, or even&#13;
Jefferson. We shall never have a&#13;
Clarendon writing down Lincoln, as&#13;
the English Clarendon did Cromwell;&#13;
nor a Taine, who, though a Frenchman,&#13;
devoted all the extraordinary&#13;
power of an analytical and scholarly&#13;
IN THE NATIONAL CAPtTOU&#13;
Jf we were all a i good sa we"&#13;
others to be, heaven "would be&#13;
here ou earths H&#13;
Acid Kills Waterfowl. ,&#13;
That sulphuric a d d , discharged into&#13;
the water of Great Salt Lake,. tJtah,&#13;
is responsible for the death of t w o&#13;
xnttllon water fowl last year has been&#13;
ascertained by Dr. Buckley of the&#13;
pathological division of the bureau of&#13;
anmfel industry. The American Game&#13;
Protective Association sent Dr. Buckleyv-&#13;
gp Salt Lake City, thinking that&#13;
some? contagious disease caused t h e&#13;
death of so many birds.&#13;
.4&#13;
*, JManyon&gt;P»w-l&#13;
,e*ljLtativ««orj&#13;
tics. ffeaJM&#13;
•liver intONSctivky&#13;
gwtl^a^taoda. th«y&#13;
'do pot scour; the* do&#13;
oWfcipe;tfa&lt;tf*frex*&#13;
w«ttee; bat they go&#13;
etar^thoaicretyE&#13;
of the liver sjad&#13;
aeaiaswavtbetj&#13;
MUNYON'5&#13;
PAW-PAW&#13;
PILL 5&#13;
,*-n*f i&#13;
cexTecnT^coBfltijaujoAr&#13;
Pills;**** topic to the stomach, UvWaVtd&#13;
nerves. Tbeyhtvigoowtola«MW #sjikefe;&#13;
they «ridk ih^i^lo^^aUfld, cTiinpwVishing&#13;
it; they eaabte the Xomtttft* sit&#13;
the aoorbluaintiromfood taalil Mot into&#13;
it Rie«8Scea^'^I2ffaMJ||gL^K&#13;
&gt;&#13;
•- /&#13;
.•*•.&#13;
l * r '&#13;
FADE A SIQHTJUftTH TETTERfc&#13;
erly, Mo,—"My trouble begajfr&#13;
wlUfth small pimple on the l#ft eldgof&#13;
my free and it spread aJr.oyeYJljiy&#13;
face and to my neck. It wpuj^d be a£|&gt;&#13;
let red when I got warm. Ity face'&#13;
was a sight. It looked very unpleasant,&#13;
and it f«lt i^comTbrtlble, My&#13;
face was Bomefhlng^awfulritlrjBt kept&#13;
me in agony all the time. Some said&#13;
it was tetter, and some said it was&#13;
that awful eczema, but I rather think&#13;
it was tetter. I had been troubled&#13;
with it for about two years and tried&#13;
many remedies, but got no relief until&#13;
( used Cutlcura Soap and Ointment&#13;
"When I would wash my face with&#13;
the Cutlcura Soap and apply the Cutlcura&#13;
Ointment it would cool my skin&#13;
and draw grew, big drops of matter&#13;
out of the akin. You would think I&#13;
was sweating; it would run down my&#13;
face just as though I had washed It&#13;
It itched and smarted and I suffered&#13;
in the day time most I used the Cutlcura&#13;
Soap and Cutlcura Ointment for&#13;
a month and I was cured of it" (Signed)&#13;
|irs. J. Brooksher, April IS, 1912.&#13;
Cutlcura 8oap and Ointment sold&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address&#13;
post-card "Cutlcura, Dept L; Boston."&#13;
Adv.&#13;
Hit the paoser Spot » v*&#13;
A tippler with*, a, vary i*4 nose-got&#13;
aA day's work aa^a Jaboxer htjt Jboihjr&#13;
works. The s aW day hri jfepea:&#13;
before the surgeon 'at £hje&amp;/&#13;
wit^'hls noae slaashea. **•* ¥&#13;
Y "Good gracious!" eiohirme4&#13;
%eom -MHow did you manage&#13;
your nose smashed lik$ tjiat?"&#13;
"Oh. cried the suffeter.f*! put&#13;
nose through a hole Uu the boilpr for&#13;
a sniff of fresh air, and the man outside&#13;
with the hammer mistook'it for&#13;
a red-hot rivet. And be only bit once&#13;
—that's all."&#13;
Significant&#13;
"Albert, what did your sister say&#13;
when you told ber I was 1n the parlor&#13;
waiting?" inquired the hopeful young&#13;
man.&#13;
"Nothin'. But sne took a ring off&#13;
one -finger an' put Jt on another."—&#13;
Lippincott's.&#13;
Constipation c&amp;aseB and ag^rsvates many&#13;
serious disease*. It is_thorougbly eased by&#13;
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets,&#13;
family laxative. Adv. The favorite \&#13;
High Cost of Living.&#13;
Madam—Were you downtown today,&#13;
Mary?&#13;
Maid—Yes, mum; an' things cost so,&#13;
mum. I spent 17,, mum. ah' only got&#13;
a hat, a pair of shoes, an' some long&#13;
gloves.—Judge.&#13;
is not so likely to be sharply Aeffned&#13;
for posterity.&#13;
Perhaps the reason »why- Lincoln&#13;
will never arouse much controversy&#13;
like these other towering historical&#13;
figures is that the work he wrought&#13;
and the cause he personified are less&#13;
open to honest differences of opinion.&#13;
For two centuries after Cromwell's&#13;
head was hacked from his dead body&#13;
and made a public show as a mock to&#13;
his name, good men were sharply divided&#13;
«as to whether the anti-monarchical&#13;
cause in England had been in any&#13;
way grounded in reason or Justice.&#13;
Over the work of Napoleon men today&#13;
violently differ, and centuries may&#13;
have to elapse before a final cpnaeasus&#13;
of opinion regarding him wtU b e 4 *&#13;
possible. In Lincoln's case, the&gt;att-|&#13;
Port Huron.,— It is understood&#13;
that Prank Schell of this city received&#13;
115,000 from the Detroit&#13;
United railway for the loss of 'a-leg&#13;
in an accident near St. Clair a year&#13;
ago. Schell refuses to deny or affirm&#13;
the report. It is known that he turned&#13;
down an offer of $12,000 by the company&#13;
and held out for a larger amount.&#13;
Flint.—Charles F. Buehler, fiftyseven&#13;
years old, president and&#13;
treasurer of the Flint Brewing company,&#13;
died of cancer of the stomach.&#13;
He had been ill several months. He&#13;
had been proprietor of the brewery for&#13;
the last ten years. He leaves one son.&#13;
ReftJIea of the Figure of&#13;
Seated, by 8 t Oaudene^&#13;
&lt;&lt;v&lt;at»'i.-«wj&#13;
elgners who may write on Aine&#13;
, history will be more likely to&#13;
* him without the bias of nation&#13;
ing. In any event, hostile eri&#13;
oaaont leave Lincoln's fame in a ai&#13;
of collapse. He must remain one of&#13;
the great men of modem times—one&#13;
{of the very greatest ranking in the&#13;
l&amp;h century with Just two others&#13;
Bismarck and Napoleon* In the :4m&gt;&#13;
nortaooe of the issues he embodied&#13;
And atill It is a mistake to assume&#13;
that Lincoln wan *indiip«nsabj4'&#13;
Without blm the north would sarily&#13;
have won the fight, because of its own&#13;
pnparior strength. It is no disparageent&#13;
of great men to say that tfteir&#13;
amet come to represent far tHft&#13;
than anything they actually were, is&#13;
the flesh. The labels of these historic&#13;
flgnrea assume abstraotr impersonal&#13;
attributes, they stand for caaset ,*ud^&#13;
gam on the eaergles. the hopei, tb*&#13;
struggles of whole peoples. It is only J&#13;
iJalaraazoo.—Charles White, who&#13;
-few months ago returned to&#13;
fcfyiBMiazoo after serving a sentence In&#13;
fcisV'Detroit workhouse for assault, was&#13;
landed in jail again on a charge of&#13;
beating Julius Jaelnek with a gas pipe&#13;
joint, tied in a leather casing. The injured&#13;
man was struck over the temple&#13;
from behind, a severe gash being&#13;
cut in his head. He wandered about&#13;
for nearly an hour in a dated condition&#13;
before being able to notify the police.&#13;
Dowagiac—There is a hot fight&#13;
on in the public schools of this&#13;
city. Principal C. L. 'Austin, with Edna&#13;
Ballard of the English department;&#13;
Amelia Kirkland, history teacher, and&#13;
E. L, O'Brien, teacher of mathematics&#13;
and athletic director, have resigned.&#13;
The teachers declare that the entire&#13;
trouble lies In the interference In discipline&#13;
on the part of the sueerintendent,&#13;
who came to Dowagiaeaess than&#13;
a year agp from Paw Paw.&#13;
ktoh Rapids.—"^The town hall at&#13;
laga has been converted into&#13;
the &gt; building bating been&#13;
out with steel cages which gives&#13;
mdaga its first experience in owng&#13;
a real jail, although the village Is&#13;
one of the old**t_in southern Michigan.&#13;
Onondaga Is Just over the line&#13;
from Eaton in Ingham county'.&#13;
Kalamasoo. — Advices have been&#13;
received la Kalamasoo of the death&#13;
of David Bumham, %. pioneer merchant&#13;
of Kalamaaoo and Lansing.&#13;
Mr. Bumham was spending the winter&#13;
in the west and he died alone in a&#13;
hotel. At different times he owned&#13;
stores In Saginaw and Hillsdale. The&#13;
body will be taken to his birthplace&#13;
in New York for burial&#13;
Friendly Blow.&#13;
Louis Brownlow, Washington newspaper&#13;
man, paused in a drug store iu&#13;
Greensboro, N. C, not so long ago, to&#13;
askfcfor a match. While he was there&#13;
a young colored chap came running&#13;
in with a big gash the whole length&#13;
of his skull, and apparently a good&#13;
deal put out about some accident that&#13;
had befallen him. ,^&#13;
"flat's happened to you?" asked&#13;
Brownlow, excitedly but sympathetically,&#13;
**A friend hit me with a hatchet,"&#13;
replied the bleeding stranger.&#13;
Naughtiness.&#13;
Mother Caumiaoned.,. by » defeased4&#13;
nik*e))-4&gt;n, Mauris, * darling, bow&#13;
can you be so haughty?&#13;
Maudie-^Basilyi—-Pupchi&#13;
, Enough to Scare Anybody. '&#13;
"I had an awful scare last night"&#13;
"What happened?"&#13;
"My husband had been ' reading&#13;
about the war in the Balkans and he&#13;
mentioned the names of a loVef Ihoae&#13;
Turkish towns in his sleep. "A.&#13;
A cloth Jacket is warmer than a fur&#13;
lined coat, there being less temptation \&#13;
to leave it open.&#13;
• .. '-'ill.&#13;
^ FOLETS %&#13;
COMPOUND&#13;
STOPS COUGHS - CURES COLDS&#13;
C»«telM Wo OaUtt* k Swim For CfclWwJ&#13;
OLD SORES CURLQ&#13;
iwn'» u L6e« ac_B» ir*.«^a rSaVwein f «oic u •rovrtel ?••&#13;
BMIU frM. J . ¥ . ALLSiM. Uvpt. AS). St. P«ttl, MhUk&#13;
Pettits 1EL&#13;
RE0&#13;
80REI&#13;
EYES! Salvo&#13;
Restored to&#13;
mind to demolishing the N a&#13;
legend which other French&#13;
bad constructed. The bi _&#13;
partisan malice which have characterised:&#13;
the warfare of historians overffnlr t o common humanity thai \&amp;\x\&#13;
the life worav of the stout Englishman,&#13;
who ent off Charles' head, and the&#13;
^ f f l t ^ g p h j h ^ th»,, work o t ejfther&#13;
a tnarrei tke weaker aide ot&#13;
• J-' r l&#13;
and euffere.that this he not torgoMsj*.&#13;
—8pringfleM Republican.&#13;
ty--' C V&#13;
*-,W'^irtfyjf&amp;fr»»ii-/i/g; itt*- • &amp; OUv thought&#13;
*To rea^ve iores^ U 4h# ^aat&#13;
anka for a good thiag\*--Ooorie&#13;
Donald. •.,.,, ,"• v........&#13;
Monroe.—George OodfrledV a farmer&#13;
livtag In Raiainville town*&#13;
nhln, was seriously Injured when "the&#13;
binding nolo on 'a lead o t hay broke&#13;
and he feH 38 -feet to t h e csment goor&#13;
of hts barn. Ho sustained several&#13;
btokeas ribs, a dislocated shoulder sand&#13;
injuries about t&amp;a head.r ,, a ,&#13;
Mfnominee.-«Jchn' t^otiy biothor&#13;
I of, AWewnaa ^etar iLhote, waa la*&#13;
) farad when hia hOTse ran away cm a&#13;
iraw bridge Lhote's^ skull was frao-J&#13;
tred. I«sfoo&gt;yenisold1^sw«fbo.wi» Imthorn; ""^ -'^---w ^&#13;
Wotoen Are Constantly&#13;
Health by Lydia EL Pi&#13;
Vegetable Compound&#13;
* Worth mountains of gold," says one woman. Another&#13;
says, "I would not give Lydia E. PInkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound for all the other medicines for women in the&#13;
fWorWr Stffl another writes, UI should like to have the&#13;
merits of Lydia E. PinkhanVs Vegetable Compound thrown&#13;
on the sky with a searchlight so that all suffering women could&#13;
j^ea«J and be convinced that there is a remedy for their illsA..&#13;
We oonld fill a newspaper ten times the size of this with such quotations&#13;
taken from the letter* we have received from gratefed women&#13;
whose health has beexirajtored and cuflering banished fy&#13;
^v^hyto lS^» ^ ^^a^Ve^e^ble Cbr^&#13;
•uoh a aniverBai auccwaf Why has St fived and thrived and Kept on- -&#13;
doing Its glortowwor^ among the tick women of the world fox mots&#13;
than,30years? , ,••:,•. - ••-• ;- ,:-- ---^-&#13;
Simply, and surely because of its sterling worth. The reason no&#13;
other mediotoe has ever^ approached to anocese te plainly «nd aim*&#13;
ply becanse there is no other mtdieinw so Jood fog women» lite,&#13;
^fereart two lettors that Jast oame to the Writer's &lt;le*a&gt;-&lt;)itiy twr/&#13;
of thousands, out both tell a ooinforting story to every saflexintfwov&#13;
man who wiu read them • •ted hagaided by mem.&#13;
WBUL W I L L I A M S S A T l f&#13;
, BIkhartr lad. -•* I suffered for H,..&#13;
t fat»*PomorgeAtelatoamaUon, «e&gt;&#13;
'saalo weajosiee* naiti atMs farraMHazw^&#13;
ilo*. The pains *m my aides wore&#13;
iasreaosd by waBtiaf ar ataadteg un&#13;
&lt;my feaiaadl hadsodhawfolbeafttg,&#13;
down, leettnga, was depreased m&#13;
apirita aad Secaaoe thm&gt;aad pale&#13;
with duU, heavy oyea, 1 had six&#13;
doetora Iroin whom I received oni;&#13;
iSSS^&#13;
.AFBOMMBS.&#13;
IXH.B^OW^.&#13;
Inli TTineia "TYiirliifrfhaftharirti&#13;
of Life I Was alekfprtwoyears. » i -&#13;
fora 1 took yoar ttedSohao I eoold&#13;
not bear the weight of my olpthoa&#13;
and was oloaAed 9ery badly. I doatored&#13;
Wflh throe dfcoJonW they&#13;
did a a no good. The* said nature&#13;
most have its'way. Hy efcrtfer ad&gt;&#13;
vised ma to take Lyetta &amp; Plakham V&#13;
I I&#13;
Before It wee'gooe4ho*| asm&#13;
Idbattag left me aad 1 w i s »ot ao ~&#13;
sore, 1 eoitthroed taking ft imtlT I&#13;
had taken IS botelea" Now I •»»&#13;
vs*ront«r thai I have been mryoata&#13;
. and oaa do an my^work, oven the&#13;
WaeUagv Towr aaeCetaw la worth, f&#13;
Ua walgAt la fald. X eeJuaof&#13;
St enough. If mora wiemn&#13;
take your meaieroa tkarowoold&#13;
more healthy woaaan. goo may-wea&#13;
Sareet, lola, Kam.&#13;
TAW&#13;
;$0ti&#13;
• • &amp;&#13;
Hra&gt;SaiaaWi^&#13;
f^&amp;tty&#13;
f..&lt;&lt;*t -K:-&#13;
p: &lt;Jv\- •h&gt;~&amp;-&#13;
., V(;' '^sk *.'&gt;.&#13;
•VsJK,&#13;
*1&#13;
/ " • &lt; * • . ' + W T V?&#13;
«- »i'V&#13;
'•»,&gt;&#13;
mm&#13;
/A&#13;
^srs&#13;
» • - .&#13;
S3 &amp;&#13;
#^ Tu&#13;
**^"V A.-!&#13;
1¾&#13;
fa&gt;&#13;
Duki&#13;
Mixture Sack&#13;
Many men ore&#13;
getting e n t o l d&#13;
pleasure out cf&#13;
t &amp; 2 ^ « t f c^itfyerj&#13;
Puke's Mixture sack.&#13;
One 5« package holds&#13;
• many pipeftds of pure, mild&#13;
smoking — or, if you please,&#13;
.-/1 it will male© many cigarette* of&#13;
the good okl-ipflhkmed kind that you&#13;
wH yourself.&#13;
* " " * * i •&#13;
v,&#13;
' -O. •o&#13;
1»&#13;
.'&gt;•&#13;
o«v&#13;
*4»&#13;
3&amp; *6\ ,4 3&#13;
$&#13;
•M&#13;
Duke's Mixture, made by the&#13;
Liggett &amp; Myers Tobacco Co. at Durham,&#13;
N. C , is the favorite with cigarette&#13;
smokers. It's the tobacco that&#13;
makes rolling' * popular with men&#13;
who want the true taste of pure,&#13;
mild, selected tobacco.&#13;
We're making this brand the leader of&#13;
its kind. Pay what yon will, you cannot&#13;
-get better granulated tobacco than Duke's&#13;
Mixture.&#13;
You still get the same big one and a&#13;
half ounce sack—enough, to make many&#13;
cigarettes—for 6c And with each sack&#13;
you get a book of cigarette papers and a&#13;
present coupon, FREE.&#13;
Save the Present Coupons&#13;
_ With the coupons you can get many&#13;
handsome, desirable presents •** articles&#13;
suitable for men, women, boys and girls.&#13;
Something for every member of the&#13;
household.&#13;
Special offer for February and&#13;
March only—&#13;
Our new illustrated catalogue of presents&#13;
will be sent Free to anyone who&#13;
sends us their name and address.&#13;
TWjSJ. «!*wu from FOUR&#13;
uETtmTmESi, oa?n du so. ther tog•t *or • c oupon*&#13;
*::*_«&amp;? oV&gt;&#13;
Premium Dapt,&#13;
St.LDols,Mo.&#13;
-—•" j.-t...-k-i....&#13;
'ft'""&#13;
WHY THE MEAL WAS HALTED&#13;
Nothing 8erlous1y Wrong, but Old&#13;
r Qsntlaman Had Soma Trsupls&#13;
With the Elusive Onion.&#13;
An aged country couple, on the&#13;
urgajrt; iuvlta«s&gt;«'*ta grandson who&#13;
lived Jnttfi dty.^ere d&amp; for a vlaU.&#13;
The drnqpson.'* wire was very anxjqua&#13;
that she. first meal should be one&#13;
which t H aged couple would enjoy&#13;
after- thetrUdfeg ride in the train, and&#13;
accordingly the table groaned under&#13;
Its burden ot good things to eat. •&#13;
In the course of Che repast she noticed&#13;
several-timet that the old man&#13;
seemed to be making little progress&#13;
with the meal.&#13;
"What is t W matter, grandfather?"&#13;
she asked, "don't you like my dinner?"&#13;
"No, no, grandfather," mumbled&#13;
the old man, "it isn't that. Only I've&#13;
a pickled onion in my mouth, .and I&#13;
hain't got but one tooth left, so It's&#13;
hardWn 8am H1H to catch it, it's so&#13;
lively. Just rest easy a apell til I git&#13;
« holt on It and n i be all right!"&#13;
Good Oaute.&#13;
"Will yon donate something to a&#13;
good cause?" aaid the caller, as* be&#13;
lard « paper on the business-man's&#13;
d e c k . ••;.-..•&gt;;••&#13;
1 PRIME NECI88ITY.&#13;
$ * ! • , • • • • -&#13;
• ^ * " • " &gt; •&#13;
*&gt;.&#13;
man.&#13;
"One of the tenants In thia building&#13;
killed a book agent tale morning,"&#13;
replied the caller, "and- we are, takfe*&#13;
up a .aabseription to reward a W * '&#13;
"Put me down- for tttfj&amp;OOV' replied&#13;
the business man.&#13;
. FoUovsJsf Orders.. .&#13;
Doctor (to Mrs..J*, wnoaamaabaad&#13;
is very Ul&gt;—Ha»,he had any lweid i%&#13;
tetvaie? . ..,. y..&#13;
Mrs. J.-K's 'ad nothing except&#13;
what yon ordered, d^ctox,--Uipthcottfs.&#13;
/ ' - ~ ^ ' - •*&#13;
[m, i,'"'T'i" Hl.'O,' -J, 1,.¾&#13;
Old Saw—It's money&#13;
mare go,&#13;
Tbung Buck—And it takes big wade&#13;
of It to make my automobile go.&#13;
Thsfteat Villain. MAre yon. the villain of this troupe?"&#13;
asked the aeggagenian who was handling&#13;
theatrical trunks. "No," replied&#13;
the youth with black, early hair. Mt&#13;
need to be, but the real villain \* the&#13;
treasurer of the company, and by this&#13;
"What it it?" asked the business-J t"i*mZe° h"e" m™u""s*t b«e•» a•b»o»u•t» -f™ive «h"d"n"d•r"e*d• «-»«. x- o«««u u*e&#13;
WUWIW^' miles on We way to somewhere west"&#13;
-Washington Star. n'-.&gt;&gt;,,,,&#13;
To*SVCor*. •:';"'&#13;
Very often corn win slot pop Quickly,&#13;
even oter -a very hot «re. If yon&#13;
wim pet tlrev corn to be popped^ a&#13;
sieve and pour cold water over H, not&#13;
allowinr the water to stand on the&#13;
oorn, it-Wifl fiot only pop ejuiehly, but&#13;
the open kernels will he larger and&#13;
'lighter and nfore «alfy then they otaerwise&#13;
would have been.&#13;
IWISTRIAL BOARD'S GROWTH&#13;
Tobai Of *,«44 Bmploysrs pperetlng&#13;
vUnds^r Accident Insurance Law.&#13;
That the state industrial accident&#13;
aoard is fast, assuming large proportions&#13;
is shown by statistics compiled&#13;
by Secretary Drake.&#13;
The figures show a total of 5,644 em-,&#13;
ployers in the Btate operating under&#13;
the act. These employers represent a&#13;
total of 363,608 employes.&#13;
The statistics prepared by Secretary&#13;
Drake show that up to Jan. 13 there&#13;
were 8,159 accidents ,in the state and&#13;
i total of 2,946 settlements since the&#13;
week beginning Nov. 30. Of the injured&#13;
persons 7,591 were males and 208&#13;
females. The accidents classified are&#13;
is follows: Fatalities, 168; amputations,&#13;
936; serious injuries, 2,708, and&#13;
minor injuries, 4,347. Employes classified&#13;
as to division of. industry are as&#13;
follows: Manufacturing, 221,3½ ;&#13;
transportation (steam and eleetrie),&#13;
28,622; public utilities, 3,511; realty&#13;
and management, 4,711; mining, 39,-&#13;
551; merchandising, 28,750; publishing,&#13;
7,095; construction, 30,273.&#13;
Secretary Drake finds that 4,920&#13;
employers are carrying liability insurance,&#13;
142 are having the state insurance&#13;
department administer their&#13;
insurance, while 485 carry their own&#13;
risks, and 119 are in mutual companies.&#13;
Employes of state, county, municipal,&#13;
township and school districts,&#13;
whose number is estimated to exceed&#13;
100,000, and who are automatically&#13;
brought within the operations of the&#13;
law are not included in the above&#13;
statistics.&#13;
A reward of $1,000 has been offered&#13;
for the capture of Phillip H. Galvick,&#13;
who is alleged to have defrauded&#13;
Charles McGinn, of Kalamazoo, out of&#13;
$3,500 through a mortgage.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
DETROIT—Cattle—Beat - steers, $7#&#13;
S; steels and heifer*. 1,000 to 1,200, |6fe)&#13;
7.25; steers and heifers, 800 to 1,000, )6&#13;
f^G.75; steers and heifers, that are fat&#13;
BOO to 700, $5@«; choice fat cows, $5.50&#13;
&lt;g&amp;6.26;; good fat cows, $4.75@6.50; common&#13;
cows, $4.25&amp;4.S0; canners, $3.60©)&#13;
4.25; choice heavy bulls, 9ti@&gt;6.25; stock&#13;
bulls $4.&amp;0@5; milkers, large, young, medium&#13;
age, $50@65; common milkers, $35©&#13;
66; common milkers, $SE@4B.&#13;
Veal calves—Best, 9l0@ll; others. $4.50&#13;
@9.60; milch cows and sprinters, tseady.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Beat lambs, $8.50&lt;f&lt;j&#13;
8.60; fair to good lambs, $7.75i#8.25;&#13;
light to common lambs. $8.750)7.25: fair&#13;
to good sheep, &gt;4.50&lt;g'5.26; culls and common,&#13;
$300)4.&#13;
Hogs—Light to good butchers, $7.70;&#13;
pigs. $7.«0@7.80; light yorkers, $7.6&amp;gjJ&#13;
7.70;v stags, 1-3 off.&#13;
KAST B W F A L . C N . J—Cattle—Marr&#13;
ket opened 10c higher; prime 1,350 to&#13;
1,500 rX. sleers, $8.60@8.75: good to prime&#13;
1,200 to 1,300 lb steers, $7.75®8.15; prime&#13;
1.100 to 1,200 !b steers, J7.2508; medium&#13;
butcher steers, $6.0097.25; butchers'&#13;
steers, 960 to 1,000 lbs. $«.35^7.10; light&#13;
butcher steers, $5.50@6; best fat cows.&#13;
$5,$0®6,35; butcher COWB, $4.GO&lt;g&gt;5.40; light&#13;
butcher cows, $4.10424.60; cutters, $3,75^&#13;
4.10; trimmers. $S.ftO&amp;3.75; heifers, $5'&#13;
7.75; stock heifers, $4®4.25; feeders, $60&#13;
6.60; best butcher bulls, $6.60@6.9Q; bologna&#13;
bulls. $4.7506.25; stock bulla, $4.60®&#13;
5.15; mlrkers .and springers, $40©&gt;75.&#13;
Hoga—Steady; heavy. $7.65^7.70;; yorkera,&#13;
$T.TO®7.80; pigs, .$7.76®7.86.&#13;
Sheep—Steady; top lambs. $9@9.15; a&#13;
few, .$9.25; yearlings. $7.BO©8.26; wethers.&#13;
$698.26; ewes, $6.2696.46.&#13;
Calves—$6®1X.&#13;
GRAIN ETC.&#13;
DETROIT—Wheat—Cash No. 2 red.&#13;
$1,14 1-4; May opened at $1,14 1-2, lost&#13;
l-4c and recovered to $1.14 1-2; July opened&#13;
at 95 S-4c, lauched 96 l-2c artd advanced&#13;
to 95 3-4c; September opened at&#13;
94c, declined to 98 3-4c and advanced to&#13;
Me; No. 1 white, $1,101*4.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3. 40 l-2c; No, 3 yellow,&#13;
501 -2c; No. 3 yellow, 40c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 35c; No. 2 white, 34c;&#13;
No. 4 yellow, 88c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 63c.&#13;
Beans—All deliveries, $2.10.&#13;
Clover seed—Prime spot, $12,40; prime&#13;
alslke, $13.40.&#13;
GENERAL MARKETS.&#13;
Potatoes are very slow and so are apples.&#13;
The mild weather has lasted so long&#13;
that farmers have been able to make de&gt;-&#13;
liveries at the city markets much later&#13;
than usual, and this has held back demand&#13;
for cold storage supplies, which are&#13;
still large. Wholesale business is very&#13;
slow. Poultry is steady and In food demand,&#13;
with no change In prices. Butter&#13;
and eggs are steady and in ample&#13;
supply-&#13;
Butter—Fancy creamery, 33c; creamery,&#13;
firsts, Sic; dairy, 22c; packing, 21c&#13;
per lb.&#13;
fig**—Current receipts, candled, cases&#13;
Included, 2$c per "do*.&#13;
CABBAGES—$1^1.26 per bbL&#13;
VRBBSBB CALVES—Ordinary, 11012c;&#13;
fancy. 1 4 e i * l - 2 c per » .&#13;
ONIONS—60QMc per bn.&#13;
DRB8SSD H0O8—*$» l-2c per cwt. for&#13;
Ught to medium.&#13;
IJRJUH3ED POUL-TRT-Sprtng chickens,&#13;
lSl'-SOlfc; bene, 14018c; old roosters,&#13;
lOOHc; turkeys, 21021c; ducks, 17018c;&#13;
teem, 17011c pei-tt&gt;.&#13;
. POTATOES—Michigan, sacks, 60c; bulk&#13;
4*0 in car 16ts, and 660fOc for tsore.&#13;
HONfiT«»-43hotce fancy whit* comb, 180&#13;
17c per lb; amber, 14011«,&#13;
U X I POllLTRY—Spring chickens, 16&#13;
0 l $ l - 2 c p e W : hens, f4T*t0ifie: No. l&#13;
ktfns, its; eld roosters, »016«; dafcks, %$&#13;
01«; gsese, ^2014c; turksys, 17020c per&#13;
ib. *&#13;
V.pGETABL'KS—Beets, 40e per by; car-&#13;
CUT THIS OUT&#13;
Recipe that streaks a Cold la a Day&#13;
and Cures Any Curable Cough.&#13;
"Prsm your druggist get half ounce&#13;
of Globe Pine Compound (Concentrated&#13;
Pine) and two ounces of Glycerine.&#13;
Take these two ingredients home and&#13;
put them Into a half pint of good whiskey;&#13;
shake well and use in doses of one&#13;
to two teaapoonfuls aftor each meal&#13;
and. at bedtime." Smaller doses to childrsn&#13;
according to age. But be sur« to&#13;
get only the genuine Globe Pine Compound&#13;
(Concentrated Pine). Each half&#13;
ounce bottle comes in a sealed tin screwt&lt;&amp;,&#13;
case. If your dniKglwt does not have&#13;
it he will quickly get it. Many mixture*&#13;
are of large quantity and cheaper.&#13;
but it is risky to experiment. Thin&#13;
formula comes from a reliable doctor&#13;
and is certain. This waB first published&#13;
here six years ago and focal&#13;
druggists- say it has been In constant&#13;
demand ever since. Published by the&#13;
Globe Pharmaceutical laboratories of&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
8PITEFUL.&#13;
Beatrice—Kitty's trousseau will fill&#13;
17 trunks.&#13;
Lillian—The poor girl. Jack hasn't&#13;
money enough to pay overweight&#13;
charges on more than two.&#13;
SUFFERED FOR 25 YEARS.&#13;
R. M. Fleenor.&#13;
Mr. R. M. Fleenor, R. F. D. 39, Otterbein,&#13;
Ind., writes: "I had been a sufferer&#13;
from Kidney Trouble for about 25&#13;
years. I finally got so bad that I had&#13;
to quit work, and&#13;
doctors failed to do&#13;
me any good. I kept&#13;
getting worse all the&#13;
time, and it at last&#13;
turned to inflammation&#13;
of the Bladder,&#13;
and I had given up&#13;
all hope, when one&#13;
day I received your&#13;
little booklet advertising&#13;
your pills, and&#13;
resolved to try them. I did, and took&#13;
only two boxes, and I am now sound&#13;
and well. I regard my cure as remarkable.&#13;
I can recommend Dodd's Kidney&#13;
Pills to any one who Is suffering from&#13;
Kidney Trouble as I was." Write to Mr.&#13;
Fleenor about this wonderful remedy.&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills, 60c. per box at&#13;
your dealer or Dodd's Medicine Co.,&#13;
Buffalo, N. Y. Write for Household&#13;
Hints, also music of National Anthem&#13;
(English and German words) and recipes&#13;
for dainty dishes. All 3 sent free.&#13;
Adv.&#13;
Nb.&#13;
"Mrs. Plodgitt gets all her gownB&#13;
from Paris."&#13;
"She doesn't get her French accent&#13;
from there."&#13;
Mrs. WUMIOW'S Soothing Syrup tor Children&#13;
teething, softens the gums, reduces InflammatiOBtallays&#13;
pain.curea wind collc,26c a bottleU*.&#13;
Modern Pugilism.&#13;
Father—I can't understand why&#13;
you want to be a prize fighter!&#13;
Son—Elasy! Because it's alt prize&#13;
and no fight.-—Judge.&#13;
•e-est ;*\&#13;
Acta*! Rogers Sttver Given Away&#13;
with&#13;
Galvanic Soap Wrappers&#13;
These teaspoons are the kind&#13;
that you'll be proud to own&#13;
They are the genuine 1881&#13;
Rogers ware, heavily triple pla«&#13;
ted silver on a-white metal&#13;
base. The pattern is the famous&#13;
Lavigne, or Grape,&#13;
with the beautiful French gray&#13;
finish. With ordinary wear&#13;
thoa* spoons will last a life&#13;
time.' Start saving your&#13;
wrappers today, or&#13;
better still buy a&#13;
box of Galvanic and&#13;
you'll have 190&#13;
wrappers. Just&#13;
Here Is&#13;
the Offer&#13;
For each teaspoon de»&#13;
Bjred send us one two*&#13;
cent stamp and twenty Gal&#13;
vanic Soap wrappers (front&#13;
panel only) or coupons from John'&#13;
son's Washing Powder.&#13;
Special Offer for Six Teaspoons&#13;
Send 100 Galvanic Soap wrappers and&#13;
two-cent stamps to pay postage; we will send&#13;
you a set of six Teaspoons ABSOLUTELY FREE.&#13;
GALVANIC SOAP IS KNOWN AS&#13;
"The Famous Easy Washer*'&#13;
It's 9 white Soap and the cocoanut oil In k makes&#13;
it the easiest lathering soap on the market Test it&#13;
out your next wash day and don't forget to save the&#13;
wrappers. Mail them to the Premium Department of&#13;
B. J. JOHNSON SOAP COMPANY&#13;
MILWAUKEE WISCONSIN&#13;
enoughpc •&#13;
Biliousness Is Bad Enough&#13;
in itself with its headaches, sour stomach, unpleasant breath&#13;
and nervous depression—bnt nervousness brings a bad train&#13;
of worse ills if it is not soon corrected. But if you will clear&#13;
your system of poisonous bile you will be aid of present&#13;
troubles and be secure against others which may be worse. BEECHAM'S PILLS&#13;
act quickly and surely—they regulate the bowels, stimulate&#13;
the liver and kidneys—tone the stomach. Then your&#13;
blood will be purer and richer and your nerves won't bother&#13;
you. The whole world over Beecham's Pills are known as a&#13;
most efficient family remedy, harmless but sure in action. For&#13;
all disorders of the digestive organs they are regarded as the&#13;
Best Preventive and Corrective&#13;
The direction* with STMT hem. v * TtlatUi »••—ilsBr ft*'&#13;
Sold «r«rrwlMr«. Is box** 10c.&#13;
,&#13;
25*.&#13;
Watered Stock.&#13;
Two old Cronies had been sitting in&#13;
cafe on Cortlandt street one Saturday&#13;
afternon for several hours and were&#13;
pretty much the worBe for their&#13;
lengthy tete-a-tete.&#13;
"What is your nationality, aayway,&#13;
.Tim?" asked one.&#13;
"Well, I'll tell you, Dob. xMy father&#13;
came from Glasgow, so you aee I'm&#13;
half Scotch—"&#13;
"And the other half seltaer, 1 guess,"&#13;
put in his companion.—Saturday Evening&#13;
Font.&#13;
Get a Canadian Home&#13;
In Western Canada's&#13;
Free Homestead Area&#13;
T H I&#13;
PROVINCE&#13;
OP Manitoba&#13;
Serious Matter.&#13;
Griggs—I saw the doctor's carriage&#13;
at your door yesterday. Anything serious&#13;
?&#13;
Briggs—I should say so! He wanted&#13;
to collect his bill.—Boston Evening&#13;
Transcript.&#13;
Depends.&#13;
Belle—Do you thing it is unlucky to&#13;
marry in 1913?&#13;
Nell—Sure thing, if he's a poor man.&#13;
NotaooftlitlUptfScaasstllrattbroe. It'ss&#13;
plneh ofbrae n a large bottle of water. Ask for&#13;
R^CrossBaUBliie,atsblaathat'saUblQS.AdT&#13;
There isn't much use&#13;
over a new leaf unless&#13;
weight on It.&#13;
in turning&#13;
you put a&#13;
* * * * * *&#13;
•IItMa rstienrgen rDi UKt«rwt ct_o_ U, *S_ laoff oisrodn nrar aie gojMpprtoMrtpmf n«t-v*&#13;
For OralaQrralag&#13;
and Outfit RaMag&#13;
ttoh ips ip*rfo tv*iSnJg#*f fb raalc aBUO asrn*p swfelooiMr • nafr&amp;mpmiil el ont» q\&#13;
raPil* wrfaNrt*« l«tMooMv«Unl:« frot;o dfo il« t•t:* »« , bMt, mod toel*! oondlUoas mmk&#13;
dMlrtbl*.&#13;
HVooaioMMteta tdesn dBsM ajrd fio«e raBta rtooh STjMnmd alanndd sa losaoa inb rttboso goMlde ar t driatwukafiMe* •*!• prist**;&#13;
for fattftwr parUdulan witta t»&#13;
M* V» Molnn#6a&#13;
17SJ««srsM«f*., Ottrsiuatah.&#13;
laamigT»TuS, O t f w , ft 1111&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 6-1913.&#13;
ghfeoawdn l ectteulecrey,, 942O003t£tSc ppeer:r .bhuam; pgreer,e nh opm«pe- pert, 40c per basket; rates**** He pet bJuftrA hYo—thCouart* lroaVd isphreicse. st, fet&gt;rtawck ,p eDr edloraovt f: m. V timothy. $f4.i0*»; No. 2 timd$y, $nb«c©edljtu.i 0t;t tNsooe.n 1;, 4nwlxh«e4avt ^|a1nLd» ©oa1t». ;t rUtsagwht. |».MB&gt;|; rye straw, $l««I«.ia pertonT^ f&#13;
i n » a'i ii ii• '&#13;
GOT. W. N. Ferris was named an&#13;
honorary member «f ~ilk# Sagburw&#13;
board of trada at a vaatHuj'of tfce&#13;
directors. Ho firlbto tftir* torn tohon-&#13;
_ orad by the local heart to tha Uut&#13;
,*^ftodtto#f^ cantory, .,..;,,; ;: -f; : &lt;&#13;
&gt; Charbjr IfoOinn, a Mttrai fartaar of&#13;
- Kakamasoo, la-owt #*99-e**ime4 toy&#13;
•ft unldetttiflsd man by nxaas of a&#13;
wertMasa soorlsag*. Taa sum arrange&#13;
•Mb' lay-m* farm: fwhs Wtmam Cabte&#13;
fti J1^aao«i^abtoiA4«««&gt;aDatn^ta3M&#13;
ma«4M* t* !•&gt;***. :&#13;
Addressed to Women&#13;
aaaflaaasaaasBBsaamaVBasasssi sssasi amssBSaaaasjaasaBBaaa That Backache of Yours Is one of nature's warning* when all the joy of living has&#13;
vanished because of troubtejpeculiar to womankind. Don't&#13;
disregard this warning. Don't ptrjerastinate. Now is&#13;
the tine to take steps,lo isgain health and strength*&#13;
Dr. Pierces Favorite ftescriDtton&#13;
«*f.&#13;
for a ttfal saa*&#13;
NO ALCOHOL NO NARCOTICS&#13;
Has been recommended for over forty years as a remedy for ailments peculiar to women,&#13;
ThoutarKlscrfgratefalwonvmha^e testified to i u e Yon, too, will find h beneficial*&#13;
As made up by improved and exact processww, the "Fkfrorite Prescription* is a most efBrieot&#13;
remedy for ragulating all the womanty fonddons, correcting diaplacements, as prolapsus,&#13;
ssteversJon and retroversion, ovesveeaing pateftU periods, toning up the nerves sad bringing&#13;
about a perfect stale of health.&#13;
40yaan atja for tba waaamaly aysssss, by R.V.&#13;
i t c a a a l s o W ' *&#13;
TUstaalB, la ttqatf fWsa,&#13;
gtatcai as* D«, asd fcaa * tolaUsI&#13;
Every woman ought to&#13;
Pferc^s great book, t h s "&#13;
Senss Medical Adviser, a&#13;
thoosand-page flhistiatad v o l o m s . It&#13;
teaches mothers how to case for their&#13;
children and thanjetvts. It is the best&#13;
doctor to have in tha house m case of&#13;
emergency. Over half a million copies&#13;
were sold at #1^each,hut baa frsseopy&#13;
ID eJoth covers wOl ha asst on fsompt of&#13;
91 ofsvcaot stamps to pay tea east cs&#13;
. * • •&#13;
*&#13;
i-&#13;
"5lii .1&#13;
f&#13;
Address&#13;
Dr. Pierced Invalids Hotel&#13;
Bufi&amp;^o, New York'&#13;
to jwa about&#13;
7*w&#13;
Uatf adtiM taragard lo&#13;
• V «*9K.wtUsajars,&#13;
n&amp;iti^n •a&#13;
pafs ette aebo a&#13;
keooMfiavs. Had&#13;
• very bad esse of atarfcu r&amp;&#13;
• &gt; ; &gt; .&#13;
loo««rtd«gT»atd«1wttto&#13;
laSiS&amp;HEIsaS^ :*£&#13;
.•iSVdq&#13;
•V'&#13;
.iScj&#13;
"•*&#13;
•K&#13;
•*: 1&#13;
fa&#13;
. . -wJil' :,&#13;
www&#13;
hi%&#13;
•¥*• *pwwi ^pw TP&#13;
jmwir;WM''i»&lt;i,y ,*,,Ji'.r&lt;i'jiryitite "r- -y- -j- - ^ - ^ ^ - ^ ^ - »•—•—.• ---..--^. ....- -.^^^,/.^• —•HI—H^KWW^.IWM—i |&lt;HW '!•' • njin^i nwm&#13;
m&#13;
Diamond Floor&#13;
We're mighty particular about&#13;
the grade of wheat we use&#13;
and the way it is milled. Diamond&#13;
Flour is made especially&#13;
for bread making purposes.&#13;
It's not only a superior quality&#13;
flour—making beautiful tweet&#13;
bread, but it will actually go&#13;
further than other flours.&#13;
Buy a sack of Diamond Flour&#13;
today from your Grocer—it&#13;
will please you.&#13;
DAVID STOTT, KDer&#13;
Detroit, Midi.&#13;
• J Monks Bros.&#13;
THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Francis Harm is wonting&#13;
Whitmore Lake.&#13;
A primary flection will take&#13;
plac#- on March 5.&#13;
K. O. Cobb of near Dexter waa&#13;
Dexter&#13;
waa&#13;
rOBUSBmO CTBBTTHUBBDAYlfOKMM^ BY&#13;
ROYW. CAVERLY. PROPRIETOR.&#13;
Entered at the PoBtottce at Plnckney, AUchlfru&#13;
M Mcond'ClM* TH attar&#13;
Advertising ratf i ma&lt;l# knows oa applioatlor&#13;
Mrs A. 5 . Gilchrist an I BOD&#13;
spent several days laat week "with&#13;
friends in Stock bridge.&#13;
T. Read and wife visited rela*&#13;
Uvea in Detroit and attended the&#13;
automobile show while there last&#13;
week.&#13;
After March 4, judging from&#13;
Preaident elect Wilson'a advance&#13;
statement, Washington society&#13;
Unit be iirbed-at10 v/clock.&#13;
Chas. Moran returned to his&#13;
home at Cincinnati! 1MH »ee» niter&#13;
spending a few weeks with&#13;
relatives here and in this vicinity.&#13;
The Congregational ohnrch will&#13;
- pat on the pi ay, "Breezy Point" at&#13;
1 the Pinckney opera house the 1stiter&#13;
part of the month. The cast&#13;
. |a composed of tourtf*m ladies.&#13;
- The Albion Leader, in speaking&#13;
. of a citizmi of that city who has&#13;
left there for Marshal), says: "Mr.&#13;
dtewart is a competent undertaker&#13;
and the Leader wishes him sue*.&#13;
«i&#13;
aw.M'&#13;
BBK$'v.&#13;
BBTKy ^ •&#13;
; • # ' ' '&#13;
, ^''v&#13;
HEA- ' • &gt; ! . • •&#13;
b'&lt;:-&#13;
The second annual meeting of&#13;
the Livingston County Asao.&#13;
of ihe 0 . E. 8., will be held here&#13;
February 11, 1913. afternoon and&#13;
evening. ^.11 members of the 0&#13;
£, 8. are invited to be present&#13;
.. The gasoline engine whioh has&#13;
anperseeded the poor horse in the&#13;
operations of the Toledo Ice Co.&#13;
at Whitmore Lake skidded on&#13;
thie ice and went to the bottom&#13;
of the lake and according to the&#13;
last reports all the Toledo lee&#13;
Oompanie's. menwere engaged in&#13;
trying to fish it out. We wonder&#13;
wbo bad hold of the choke rope.?&#13;
John Tiplady of Leslie, formerly&#13;
of Pinokney, began work for the&#13;
Shroeder-Butka Hardware Co.&#13;
Mo*4ay aoraiug. He will be on&#13;
tba Nasi* oovetwg, V * nortairestars&#13;
part of the state. Mr. Tiplady&#13;
iath*. tfcird member of this firm's&#13;
ttawoting force. The foartb one&#13;
will be pot on next month.—Tid.&#13;
inpja*&#13;
Tba beat money maker on -the&#13;
fiarm » lhs&gt; ken. She tarns grass&#13;
insOfjpassfabaoka,grain into gold and&#13;
tram sand and graver aha eoina.&#13;
sttvaa^Olsaavts K*h(a* «la# on&#13;
/t|»'-CarjB la. compare with Jwr. [supported home newspaper&#13;
l i s ) b n a s * ^ , o a t t l a . m ^ r y&#13;
aveayy nnfuaanitaad to mat' tfcetr&#13;
flske oat araai fait with them,&#13;
boa aotao with hW. I B bar way&#13;
I t * iaogeJd taisjooj) faoe of aha&#13;
aarth, a^arfr * » grinds ,wb.t&#13;
tiaiaata^aw^sihpt s^j»*a%aa&gt;. '&#13;
in town last Friday*»&#13;
P. H. Swartbout waa in&#13;
last week on business.&#13;
Dr. W. L\ W&gt; He of Dexter&#13;
in town last Thursday.&#13;
Mrs. Agnes Andrews is seriously&#13;
ill at the Sanitarium.&#13;
Miss Rose Dunn haa bean helping&#13;
out at the Sanitarium.&#13;
Mrs. H W. Crofoot spent Thur&#13;
day and Friday in Stockbridge.&#13;
Dale Chappel of Webbervill*&#13;
spent last week with friends here.&#13;
Mrs. 0 Lutz»r and daughter,&#13;
Clare, of Dexter were in town Friday.&#13;
Cbas. Krause of Parkers Corners&#13;
was in town last week on business.&#13;
Mr. Lee of California is visiting&#13;
at the home of his uncle, Mark&#13;
Bell.&#13;
M rs. D. D. Smith and daughter,&#13;
Mabel were Howell visitors&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Frank Boylan and family of&#13;
Chilson spent Sunday with Mrs.&#13;
W. H.Placeway.&#13;
A woman is not like a tree;&#13;
y. u cannot tell how old ahe ia by&#13;
couotiug her rings.&#13;
Mrs. Margaret Black was the&#13;
guest of Mrs. M*x Ltdwidge of&#13;
Anderson last Friday.&#13;
Mrs. Irving Keuuedy under&#13;
Trent an operation for appendicitis&#13;
at the Sanitarium last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Hendee and&#13;
son were quests at the home of&#13;
Co). J. £. Rice of 8outh Lyon recently.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Claude White of&#13;
near Howell were guests of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. H. M. Williston one day&#13;
last week.&#13;
Ellen Fitzsimmons of the State&#13;
Sanitarium near Howell has been&#13;
visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
John Fitzsimmons.&#13;
Local merchants, by advertising&#13;
their goods can derive the same&#13;
benefits thronuh * he pan-els post&#13;
as the mail order booses.&#13;
Mrs. Martha Wood died at the&#13;
Home of her nephew, John Wylie,&#13;
Thursday, January 30. The funeral&#13;
and burial took plaee at&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Turkey is still receiving ulti&#13;
mamma nt the old stand, which&#13;
makes war no longer what Gen.&#13;
Sherman said it was, but a contin&#13;
uos ultimatum reception day.&#13;
E l B.owaof Hannibal; N. T,&#13;
Chas, Beardeley of Charlotte and&#13;
Frank Aseltine of Unadilla were&#13;
guests last week at the home of&#13;
S. J. Beardsley north and west of&#13;
town.&#13;
By refusing the povermental&#13;
expenditure of close to 1100,000&#13;
for an inaugural ball at Washington,&#13;
President - elect Woodrow&#13;
Wilson shows conclusively that&#13;
he is a man of the people from&#13;
every standpoint.&#13;
Charles W. Close of Hartland,&#13;
waa sentenced to St) days in the&#13;
Detroit House of Correction and&#13;
to pay a fine of $500, by Judge&#13;
Tattle of the federat court, last&#13;
Saturday. Close pleaded guilty to&#13;
sending an obscene letter to a&#13;
woman school teacher of Clyde.&#13;
The old line Ufa insurance com.&#13;
panies are working oa a plan for&#13;
"group plan" of insurance, that is&#13;
tbey will insure the entire mem*&#13;
£erafcip of any factory or or&#13;
ganizatkm without individual policies&#13;
or without personal examination.&#13;
Mutual companies wil»&#13;
fight the plan, as it means. the&#13;
wiping out of all mutual companlea.&#13;
If tb'e reader wants to settle in&#13;
a wide awake community, all be&#13;
haa to do ia to look at the local&#13;
newspaper. A wide-awake, wall&#13;
ia elways&#13;
associated with good echoes,&#13;
ohurehea, active business and is&gt;&#13;
teltigeot people. It never, fails.&#13;
Ho business man or pioneer in&#13;
aaycommunity, makes no butter&#13;
investment than in tho* anpport of&#13;
aha hossa newspaper—Bx&#13;
at j E. £. lloyt transacted business&#13;
in Jackson Monday.&#13;
Rjy Merrill of Webster apent&#13;
Friday with friend* hero.&#13;
Alfred and Lewis Monks were&#13;
Howell visitors Thursday.&#13;
Lent began yesterday and will&#13;
continue for seven weeks.&#13;
A. H. Flintoft attended the auto&#13;
show at Detroit last week.&#13;
Fred Grieve of Stockbridge was&#13;
in town the first of the week.&#13;
Mrs. Guy Tee^ie waa in Ann&#13;
Arbor and Hamburg last we»k.&#13;
Mrs. Rosins Mercer visited in&#13;
Howell a few days the past week.&#13;
Cnas. Kennedy attended the&#13;
dance at Dexter last Friday evenin*?:&#13;
Rev Fr. McCabe of Hubbardston&#13;
was the gueat of Rev. Fr. Coyle&#13;
last week.&#13;
Ernest VanArsdale of Gregory&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of Allien&#13;
Carpenter.&#13;
Mrs. Ben White has been visit&#13;
ing at the home of Ernest Wbitr&#13;
east of town.&#13;
Mrs. Emma Moran spent a few&#13;
days laat week with friends and&#13;
relatives in Howell.&#13;
Clare Reason spent the /reek&#13;
end with his sister, Mrs. John&#13;
Rane of Whitmore Lake.&#13;
Fifty out of fifty four wbo enrolled&#13;
at Chelsea last registration&#13;
day enrolled as progressives.&#13;
Amos Lindeman and Samuel&#13;
Stadle of near Dexter were iu town&#13;
on business one day the past week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs, H. G. Briggs of&#13;
SUMMER HOUSE FOR POULTRY&#13;
i . *• Ooop Shown In ths Illustration Will&#13;
Provide Comfortable Plaoe for&#13;
Hstis In Hot Weathar.&#13;
Good poultry quarters are needed,&#13;
and for warm weather the bouse&#13;
shown in the accompanying picture&#13;
will answer the purpose exceedingly&#13;
well. It is built eight feet wide, 13&#13;
feet long, seven feet high in front&#13;
and 4½ feet at the rear. It should&#13;
have a light framework, consisting of&#13;
2x4*8, for the, sills and caps, and aid*&#13;
ing of inch stuff,'preferably matched,&#13;
V&#13;
8ummor House for Hena.&#13;
nailed on perpendicular as indicated,&#13;
writes Fred O. Sibley in the Farm and&#13;
Home.&#13;
The front, which is to face toward&#13;
the south, has a good-sized window,&#13;
and at each corner are two openings,&#13;
12x16 inches, for the hens to pass. In&#13;
the end opposite the door there is a&#13;
wooden shutter about two feet square&#13;
for air and ventilation, and this, as&#13;
well as the window, should have&#13;
strong, fine meshed wire nailed on the&#13;
outside.&#13;
The roosts are located in the rear,&#13;
up under the roof,, with a platform&#13;
below to oatch the droppings, 3½ feet&#13;
wide, extending the whole length of&#13;
the house. Beneath this is another&#13;
, platform, three feet wide, for the&#13;
Howeli have been spending borne, nests. For hens on the range such a&#13;
time here with fnends and rela- i house is Just the thing, and needs no&#13;
Getting Ready for the Olds r"S comingl The time is coming when&#13;
you'll justhave to have an engine to help&#13;
you do your work; grind your feed, shell&#13;
your com, pump your water, tun your cream separator&#13;
and a lot of other machinery around your farm.&#13;
Better begin to think about it—better come here&#13;
and look at the Olds Engines we're got No matter&#13;
how many others you see, or read about or hear&#13;
about, an Olds Engine will do your work better, with less trouble&#13;
and will de It longer than an/ other engine made.&#13;
Whether yon want an engine or not, this store is here for&#13;
make it your store.&#13;
If you can't find time to come and see us, ask us to come&#13;
and see you or send you a free catalog of&#13;
Olds Engines.&#13;
JP«V» idrw J* jenw&#13;
jAwav tht&#13;
joa&#13;
1&#13;
A H. FLINTOFT,&#13;
P I N C K N E Y , MICH.&#13;
/&#13;
"I&#13;
»-**. • &gt; • ; .&#13;
tivee.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Green and&#13;
daughter Gertrnd* w#»r* gnoste st&#13;
the home of Wm. Blair in Iosco&#13;
over Sunday. *&#13;
Tht* fatness of the fst woman&#13;
was the chief complaint against&#13;
the shows here laat Thursday,Friday&#13;
and Saturday.&#13;
Norman Reason and wife visited&#13;
friends and relatives in Detroit i&#13;
conple of day the past week.&#13;
WeldoL Myloe, son of Dr. and&#13;
Mrs. J. F. Mylne of Parma had&#13;
the misfortune to break his leg re&#13;
cently while coasting down hill.&#13;
There isn't ambition enough&#13;
among the poultry raisers in this&#13;
vicinity to get up a poultry show&#13;
this winter and the exhibition will&#13;
go by default.&#13;
George Green's barber shop&#13;
changed bauds aeonpl«* of times&#13;
last week. F. G. Jackson purchased&#13;
t and sold it to Chas. Krause&#13;
the real estate man, who now has&#13;
it for sale attain.&#13;
, Ten out of seventeen Chinese&#13;
students who h»v* been sent to&#13;
this country for an education arrived&#13;
in Awn Arbor Monday t^&#13;
enter • he University of Michigan&#13;
Thev have been traveling fir two&#13;
months.&#13;
' A bill has been 'ntrodnced in&#13;
the Wislature to orevent saloons&#13;
flfllinp liquor in sWll quantities&#13;
on cred *. This scheme is to save&#13;
to the farailv the laborer's pay&#13;
rh»»ck rather than to have it turn.&#13;
ed over* to the saloonkeeper.&#13;
If the present, legislature would&#13;
pass a law requiring: that all veal&#13;
calves should b* «lsu?htered be&#13;
fore shipping th»y would do n&#13;
very humane act. The calves can&#13;
not be fed and oHer go from three&#13;
to six days without anything to&#13;
eat before they are ki'led.—Ex&#13;
One of oar exchanges is of thp&#13;
the opinion that Livingston conn*&#13;
ty it hogffMJg alt the state appoint,&#13;
ments and wanta to know why the&#13;
Oakland eonoty Democrats failed&#13;
to gat aa# plnms. I t says that&#13;
the talVjuU Ed Shielda was responsible&#13;
tor the sieetiofi of Qc*.&#13;
Ferris, ia all moonshine.&#13;
The centennial of the s^aataere&#13;
of the River Baisoo, which occurred&#13;
January 22 and 28 is to be&#13;
celebrated in Monroe, June 4, at&#13;
tbeeaaae tea as "Custer day."&#13;
The reason far the paatponnMat&#13;
from the real day tkiev nsontfc&#13;
hseanaa the probably aJataaftiSle&#13;
weather oonditiowJ^ah^ mifhi&#13;
prevail&#13;
s&#13;
******i , »#rw*nVHiiJ&gt; * * * * * &lt;-«*&#13;
floor If the location is well drained&#13;
and dry. It will shelter from 60 to 60 ,&#13;
fowls comfortably. The interior oughty\N to be kept well whitewashed, and if&#13;
the house m set in the shade of a large&#13;
tree it will be all the more pleasant&#13;
for the hens to go Into on a hot day.&#13;
The cost of building this kind of&#13;
summer "cottage" will be from t i t&#13;
to $15. It pays to use good lumber,&#13;
and two or three good coats of paint&#13;
should be applied.&#13;
PREPARE FOWLS FOR MARKET&#13;
Apparatus Invented by Indians Msn&#13;
rer Injeetlno Water Into - M y&#13;
After Killing.&#13;
Experts have discovered that fowls&#13;
and animals are better fit for food if&#13;
about 8 per cent, of their weight in&#13;
water be Injected into their bodies&#13;
just after they are killed. This must&#13;
be Asa*, before the animal heat has&#13;
left nam body, and the water, which&#13;
Pipe Plerees Fowl's Breast&#13;
must be at a temperature of between&#13;
60 and 70 degrees Fahrenheit, is kspt&#13;
there for an hour or more. Two Indiana&#13;
msn have invented an attachment&#13;
for a water spigot, or which&#13;
may have its own pipe leading into&#13;
It. The attachment oomrists of a&#13;
length of hose with a sharp, hoflow&#13;
metal point on the free end. This&#13;
point can be thrust through the&#13;
breast of the chicken^ *or whatever&#13;
fowl or animal it may be, and the requisite&#13;
amount of water* injected into&#13;
it in this fashion. •-'&#13;
«T. O XXTTJEt O H ,&#13;
Oradnate Optometrist .&#13;
Howell, Miohin«D Certificate of Reei»t*ra'tion Nr&gt;. 29fi&#13;
Will Be In Pinckney Thursday, February 6,13&#13;
V&#13;
guarait22 a pjrh;t fit. Will visit your t^wn once&#13;
a mofttb, and ^triv^^please -&#13;
/&#13;
/ •• • ' ' ' ' All headache caused by eye strain absolutely corrected/&#13;
Consultation and Examination Free&#13;
Phonographs&#13;
Yrti, we have them/in all styles and pric^. "I hV&gt; are&#13;
THE WONDERFUL COLUMBIA&#13;
iu both hornJand horpless types. Beat one with the&#13;
* J~ new reproducer (jnst ont) and yon will be surprised.&#13;
&lt;* Try one in yoor home. S o l d o n e a i y p a y m e n t *&#13;
• * \&#13;
9 Plnckney&#13;
A h&#13;
&gt;&#13;
• i •«&lt;••.Mf-fc ««.»,, *fi-&#13;
•yetem m the Pa^tfUtf.&#13;
Fowls should have empty crops ta&#13;
the morning and the crop should never&#13;
be quite full until it is flas tb go to&#13;
roost For the first feed grain soaV&#13;
tared in the Utter ia the morning ss&#13;
prefsfred, the sooner the better. This&#13;
induces them to exercise. Ia the middle&#13;
at the day a warm, moistened&#13;
mash should be given, about what&#13;
they will eat And at night before&#13;
they go to roost a liberal feed of&#13;
grain should be scattered in the m&gt;&#13;
tar. fowls sbeuld be kept busy*&#13;
Oyster Shells far Fowls.&#13;
Ths feeding of oyster sheUl is&#13;
claimed to supply Iks Wrds with grtt,&#13;
bat experiments show that under ek&gt;&#13;
oamstanoss in any ether manner eye*&#13;
tar •toUM"*** Wltlasd, by the&#13;
•JaT as^sg^iT^vT saaw^asaaF* aassa; aaasav ssssary to feed&#13;
the fowls sea&#13;
varied food, as the&#13;
4*&#13;
ff E Office ami Works&#13;
Either Phone SpBOoopsrHtrvet&#13;
1588 ::&#13;
fir fTiififfsrjfimiiinrf iriiti i&#13;
Worh (4 ox motf&gt; PirM Cte«. J&#13;
BMFIRBvMARBleB AND |&#13;
G 1¾ A N I T B W O R K 2&gt;&#13;
" • •••*••'- A"•' ^ Jomr U. Lssux, Prop.&#13;
X &lt; . *', M»aaf»et«m*oi switbelswio&#13;
Monumcjitw* BMitstry a « * Stan* DuHal Vaults&#13;
JACKSON, • • • - * * atitHIOAW&#13;
• " • • • - * ^ . ^ M ''17M.&#13;
mi \u\:&#13;
What&#13;
1913&#13;
DfiGfORS&#13;
SPECIALIST&#13;
K.-&#13;
V {&#13;
%&#13;
r.&#13;
(:&#13;
TK&#13;
&lt;4&#13;
isfet&#13;
i V&#13;
WomanJl Didwa .Oh, how do you&#13;
do? I've boon so Anxious lo sot yon&#13;
ever since I'first ^eard about your&#13;
friends the DrSpersT * fc&lt;&#13;
Woman in Qn^JHaaae to not call&#13;
them my friends. I think so much of&#13;
that word that.I hat©-to hear it used&#13;
-to such a cgnnecygjo. Wasn't it dreadful?&#13;
Ton know] they say that be spec&#13;
slated terrlbiy! And I really believe&#13;
•he knew ali about It all "the time.'&#13;
Honra, from IO *• m. t o * i » m j Would yott beTleBe Ht She is such&#13;
Hero's Mrs.&#13;
Ifeafness Cannot Be Cared&#13;
By local a rplioetionp, as tbev can no&#13;
reach the oWeeted portion; of the ear&#13;
Tberes is ahiy Own way 4&amp;&lt;*»*&gt; deal&#13;
i n*»», and tbat is by constitutional reni&#13;
nrrrgr OHSU^WS 1B can3ed"oy airrcr&#13;
i^'i;«&lt;J.'^.adiUoa ot the mnoea»4iainir&#13;
&gt;'; the Eustachian Tube. Wb*a tbj*&#13;
tu&gt; e'tf inflamed you nave-a Vumblip*&#13;
-odod or «»|M»rfect Bnarlmt tni wbeo&#13;
• is entirely closed, Deatos*s is th*&#13;
,*sult, and unless the infix mat ion van&#13;
'« taken out and this tube r«»tared to&#13;
W l b t » » &amp; A T THB , . • - , . ... •. , „&#13;
Hilrst HoUse, One Day Only&#13;
Kem ark able Success o&#13;
Talented Physicians in the&#13;
Treatment of Chronic t&#13;
Bisteases , , . \&#13;
flf f er Their Servioe$2Free&#13;
Of Charge&#13;
The United States Doctois, licensed by&#13;
the State of Michigan for ttie treatment ot&#13;
defoririitories and a11 uerv ns and rbronudisetnea&#13;
&lt;if men, wnnen and ^children&#13;
offer t«» all who ctil on thin visit, consultation&#13;
eumjnati &gt;n «nH a i vice free, waking&#13;
no charge whatever except the iciUa'P cut&#13;
of treatment ,for the purpose of ttfaving&#13;
that th&gt;y h*ve &gt;&lt;t last • Uncovered a aystpm&#13;
and method of t rem men sth &gt;t are reasonably&#13;
sute and certain in their results.&#13;
The Doctors*™ »m nig America's, leading&#13;
stomach ind necv- hoecialints, a ad1* are&#13;
experts HI the treatment &lt;*£ chronic di«-&#13;
ea-eeof the htood, liver, stomach, intestine.&#13;
skin, nerves, hetrt, suleen, kidneys or&#13;
bladder, rbmmitism, sciatica, diabetes,&#13;
bed-wetting, leg ulcers, weak lungs, and&#13;
tbosj oifliutel with long standing,, deep&#13;
seated chronic disease*, that have b*ffled&#13;
the skill of other, physicians should not&#13;
fail t» call.&#13;
According to their system no more operations&#13;
for rtppen liclii*, gall stones, tumor?&#13;
goiter, piles, e,c. By tnefr method these&#13;
cases uncomplicated are irented Without&#13;
operation or hypodermic injectio i. They&#13;
were among the firm in America to earn&#13;
the nameo?"BI»»od e*»« Surgeons," by doing&#13;
away witti the knife, with, blood and&#13;
with pain in ih* tucc^sful treatment of&#13;
these dangerous diseases.&#13;
If you tuvH i i t«y i bhdd &gt;r troubles&#13;
bring a two ounce bottle of your urine for&#13;
chemical analysis and microsopie examination.&#13;
Dea'Dess has often been cured in sixty&#13;
days.&#13;
Worn-out and run-down men or women,&#13;
no matter what your (iilmrnt may be no&#13;
matter what you IMV^ h"*n told, or the&#13;
experience you luve had with other phsi-&#13;
.ciana, settle it forever m *our mind, If&#13;
your case is incurable they will tell you so.&#13;
Consult them upon this visit. It costs you&#13;
nothing. t&#13;
Remember this free offer is for this visit&#13;
only.&#13;
Married ladies mast come with (heir&#13;
husband* and minors with their parents,&#13;
tU Herd lo Step Work&#13;
Wb*D U,* urn-lot in n»-jB JTIU to at&lt; j&#13;
work it xUityqrt- \on, IcauH. vru *at&#13;
Y &lt;9 KO"w &gt;ou a e tv^tiM, ruu dowi&#13;
Mtid (ail'iw H&gt; hHttlto day h.v fi«y, bu'&#13;
t*»^-ftotMtt wr»rH m«-ttmir as y«« &lt;M«&#13;
»tat&lt;d. / ^ b-it vou n c d la Elnc'i,&#13;
Bit er«,t4&gt; wive tlfjf*, i*Jren^tb and v u&#13;
o r b * . o u r *t»rrui^ &gt;u preveut tue^i&#13;
down «n&gt;i ouild you uH, Don't u&#13;
*»mk, H MM&gt; or »Mtn. wn**n £tec'r •&#13;
hitters «jlj Voz-ht yi&lt;n |r«&gt;ui the tir»&#13;
doof I h&lt; o^ands Me-» tb'in ior tti^i&#13;
ts normal cosdvfioo, keariwi will h* «• T«no&gt; hwltn and Htreutfia. Tr&#13;
• tiem Lv-rv bmu^ ia vuaran'eed i&#13;
-«M ty. Only 50o at Brown's Utui&#13;
l ¥ a #&#13;
" Hills Variety Store I&#13;
H o w e l l , M i c h i g a n y&#13;
Whan in Hi*«H rJoo't forget&#13;
to visit oar store. Every&#13;
dep»rtmeut is fillet with new&#13;
goods.&#13;
Sweaters, Av i at i o n &gt;&#13;
Caps, Gloves, Wfttens.&#13;
Etc.&#13;
A Urge etofk ot Choice&#13;
CJfiinat"iR Crootls, fleveftiee,&#13;
(Dolls ) HQinheds of these&#13;
fromloto&amp;OO.&#13;
Ml&#13;
a smilinf crenturo!&#13;
Prontico. •'•&#13;
Mrs. Prentioa—-aawdoyoubota'doT stipation.&#13;
My only reason for comintT to teas ••&#13;
like this is to get a chance to see my&#13;
friends. Nobody ever calls any more.&#13;
Or, at least, nobody ever comes to my&#13;
^,4 house. Ill -wag» » cooky that you&#13;
were talking ajhas^tlie Btrnu Do yon&#13;
know, I'm not surprised a hit I've&#13;
'laid so right along. -Why, Mr. Burr&#13;
used to Mt on the porch without a collar&#13;
on! He did! You can atsk anybody.&#13;
Ami fhe; tales they tell! Dear&#13;
me, I wouldn't'repeat them for mil*&#13;
lions of dollars, even to dear friends&#13;
hike you. Her hats!&#13;
Woman inBrovjfn—I never knew her,&#13;
but when I moved into this neighbor*&#13;
hood first I was told,about the woman&#13;
who Wore the queer hats.&#13;
• Woman in Blue^—Oh* yes, indeed.&#13;
Why, she never seems to consult the&#13;
fashions at all. Just wears what she&#13;
thinks 1B becoming, that's all, and it's&#13;
always the aajne scjrt of hat every season,&#13;
I don't wiKBJii that her husband&#13;
gdt tired of iNflr. "&#13;
Woman in Gray—They say that&#13;
when the Drapers moved away you&#13;
could have taken a wagonload* of rubbish&#13;
out of their basement alone. They&#13;
didn't pretend to c!6an things up. The&#13;
Janitor told me he never had so much&#13;
work. He wouldn't come up and do&#13;
anything for me until I offered him&#13;
dbnhto the nsnaTaiftaoh&amp;t because he&#13;
w*t sollred carting e«t the trash*&#13;
Woman In Brown—:They threw away&#13;
such good things, too. My little boy&#13;
found lots of things to play with there&#13;
—an almost good egg "beater, a flower&#13;
pot and a lot of other things. They&#13;
were both of them so extravagant!&#13;
Mrs; Prentice—Oh, dreadfully.' But&#13;
even they did not hold a candle to&#13;
that young widow on our street, Mrs.&#13;
Duvall.&#13;
Woman in Blue—Is she a widowt X&#13;
was wondering.&#13;
Mrs. PrenUc*-~8h* said SO. That's&#13;
all I know abont it.&#13;
Woman in Gray—Tou can't tell by&#13;
what people say about themselves.&#13;
Isn*t she just back from the west?&#13;
Reno or somewhere?&#13;
Mrs. Prentice—She has a niece out&#13;
west whom she was visiting, so she&#13;
says.&#13;
Woman in Brown—It must he convenient&#13;
to have relatives all over the&#13;
countrythatway.&#13;
Woman in Blue—Aren't you dreadful?&#13;
That makes me think. I saw&#13;
Miss Lane downtown Monday. She always&#13;
gets down bargain day*, yon&#13;
know. She was in the tea room. I&#13;
couldnt see that she had anythln£but&#13;
toast and tea, so I wondered whether&#13;
fflr^lSAWrtsWE^--^&#13;
., W^&gt;mnn in,BrQwn=-#o, she resigned&#13;
this time. She's going to he married.&#13;
Mrs. Prentice—How romantic!&#13;
Woman in Brown—No, it isn't a hit&#13;
romantic It's a fcian she -has -known&#13;
for years and they're frit making up&#13;
an old quarrel. I suppose she thinks&#13;
he's better than nothing *ow. Do try&#13;
one of these little eakea. They are&#13;
lebirojed tbr&gt;v«r; nine cases oat o&#13;
*T&gt; »re caused by Catarrh, which is&#13;
toihiiitf but an in darned condition ot&#13;
thf mapvui surJaor!'.&#13;
t.Ve Wtii |t&gt;vu OPA Hundr«d&#13;
Dollars for any &lt;-u8&gt;- of Deato*ss&#13;
(canMtd by Gatsnb) tbat cannot&#13;
b*t cured by flan a (!siairb Cur*.&#13;
,Send if&gt;r oireolsrs, free. '&#13;
F J. Unwii &amp;0o„ Toledo, Ohu&#13;
Sold nv all.dreinrutts, 76o.&#13;
T^i^e Hall'-j Family Pi.Is for con&#13;
M &lt; . i &gt;&#13;
MAKING FIGHT ON HOG UCE&#13;
P»I • i w m — &gt; — —&#13;
Excellent Remedy Is tard and Kero-i&#13;
. aene 011» Abovt Equal Parte—&#13;
Will Net Injure the Skin.&#13;
sasastt&#13;
Where It Pays to Pay Ca*&gt; I&#13;
| We are making attractive&#13;
prices on all&#13;
kinds of merchandise&#13;
It is *he Doiky of the store to close&#13;
out ell winter geods during January&#13;
%*d February'. We give splendid&#13;
%twntiMaarfMareason of the year.&#13;
Caih&#13;
EVERY DAY l£*AfcGAlN DAY&#13;
E A.BOWMAN&#13;
HOWELL'S BU^Y STORE&#13;
(By A, J. LEGG.)&#13;
It has been a continuous fight with&#13;
against the hog lice. When I think&#13;
i have them killed out some neighbor&#13;
brings a lousy sow for breeding&#13;
and aa % result there are plenty of lice&#13;
left to stock the entire herd. Then&#13;
1 have to make a fight against hog&#13;
J lice again.&#13;
If the sows have only a few lice&#13;
when the pigs are farrowed the entire&#13;
litter will eoon be polluted with^lce.&#13;
1 have seen numbers of half grown&#13;
lice on the pigs before they were a&#13;
week old. ^&#13;
Last spring I mixed hog's lard and&#13;
kerosene oil, about equal parts, and&#13;
greased the sows with It about ten&#13;
days before they were due to farrow,&#13;
then in a few days I went over them&#13;
again with the grease.&#13;
This killed the lice out so there&#13;
was not a louse found on the pigs&#13;
from the time they were farrowed&#13;
until they were weaned.&#13;
Either the kerosene oil or the lard&#13;
will kill the lice all right, but the&#13;
kerosene by itself win irritate the&#13;
skin and will soon evaporate while the&#13;
lard will stay on the hogs for several&#13;
days. This mixture will not injure the&#13;
akin.&#13;
I&#13;
mnmsmm&#13;
Mulh TN Csfl safely Buy&#13;
Or. ' inv&#13;
It *0 thn l»H M&#13;
sufferi'itf *v11 • -.&#13;
lubtf ttvni»i'-K&#13;
fln&gt;!* used' H 'i&#13;
Crawford o&#13;
3"Dr Kind's&#13;
Ne&gt;* l&gt;isi-overy anil yive&#13;
tiwK wn*n ailintr an'.&#13;
&gt;• &gt; d*. coiwbs, 'uciat or&#13;
trf-tes nicrt.narnil«!»s.&#13;
v ys U^ed Mrs B'-nce&#13;
Nia«*r4, Mo., 'VIMHS,&#13;
NHW Uihoverv changed&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
tjur bov toiu i pa j ve.ik sick^ioj to&#13;
the p»«tore of t i - i b a WHVS b«lps&#13;
Buv it at v. E B vn&#13;
COMPEL HORSE EAT SLOWLY&#13;
Doee a Conservative&#13;
ing Business. ::&#13;
Bank-&#13;
3 per c e n t&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
Habit of Bolting Food by Animal May&#13;
• e Remedied by Conetruotlng&#13;
•eH^Feed Box.&#13;
If your horse has the habit of bolting&#13;
his toed you can easily remedy It by&#13;
making a self-feeder on his feed box,&#13;
J says the Iowa Homestead. The accom- 1 ponying illustration shows how a feed- §er may be made similar to a poultry&#13;
feed hopper. The contrivance may be&#13;
„ made of inch boards large enough to&#13;
i&#13;
P i n c k n e y M i c h .&#13;
G. W , T B B P L E Prop.&#13;
5 and 10c Soods of&#13;
All Kinds \&#13;
i *&#13;
Sen Us&#13;
ps|sls^ia^a»«imaips»ws«&#13;
We an here to&#13;
terveyw with&#13;
anything in the&#13;
ine of printed&#13;
stationery for&#13;
your kpii&amp;ft*&#13;
£nd personal&#13;
LeAal Adverrleln^&#13;
Juf1!&#13;
H. M. COLBY, Deoeaasd&#13;
tntedDy&#13;
) of Probata of wUd'conaty, 'OomnUationsrs&#13;
The undertUned hartng been appointed by ttas&#13;
iM of Probata of said eonftty, Commissi&#13;
as Claims in the matter of said estaU, a*d four&#13;
nontha from tbe^th day nf Jaaaary, A, D. 1S18&#13;
having b««n allowed by said Judge of Ptobate to&#13;
«)1 person* holding claims against said estate la&#13;
which to proatnt their claims to as for examiaa-&#13;
MOD and adjastaeat.&#13;
NoticeisbersSf gives tbat'&#13;
im MaKfe, we will meat on the&#13;
day of MaMi, A, 0.1918&#13;
and on the Nth day&#13;
of June A. it. lflS at ten o'clock a. m. of seen&#13;
•IHJ, at the P-idmay Exchange Baak la tea&#13;
VHIagfl of PlDokney in said eonnty to jeselve&#13;
aad •xaattsaeoeb euUms,&#13;
Dated: Hoirell, Jaaovy iMtb, A. D. 1913, J&#13;
it. W. rttBle ' ConmiaaiwisTaon&#13;
H.a. Sew f Oalma , ^«&#13;
positively the worst tasting things I oTATE OP MICHIGAN, county of Livingston,&#13;
eveir atneW. ^&gt; I pJob»t« court For 8ald Connty. Ektateot'&#13;
Woman ih Bine—They never have&#13;
anything very good to eat here. It&#13;
isn't worth coming far for. Youll notice&#13;
that every body here has corns&#13;
from Just around the neighborhood.&#13;
Woman in tf ray—Sh* calls It a neighborhood&#13;
party, I believe. Is that Miss&#13;
Vance over-ther*? How thin she is!&#13;
Why hasn't somebody tangtt her to&#13;
bdld her sbonldere haelt^aithat she&#13;
won't look so dreaethlly awkward?&#13;
Mrs. PjenUce—That makea me think&#13;
of yonr aunt&#13;
Woman in Gray—My annt is not&#13;
awkward. I assure yon she is quite&#13;
graceful.&#13;
Mrs. Prentice—Oh, my dear, yon&#13;
misunderstand ma. im,eant the shawl&#13;
that wdman ( ^ t » f o fs wearingwhite&#13;
crepe, ish*l KJ What i s : yonr&#13;
aunt busy with no*? Ine is always&#13;
doing something fcn^reafaig, ^&#13;
Won^n in Gray—the has been working&#13;
on our family tree and has only&#13;
few a s i f branches to took up. She&#13;
has been reading me some old letters&#13;
written' from smw tewu OTeV a hun*&#13;
drcd years -ago.&#13;
Woman in ,Blner-They must be Interesting.&#13;
• ~* '&#13;
- Woman in Orhy—They are. Bat yon&#13;
have 'no Idea how narrow people' were&#13;
then. . "•;••/"&#13;
Woman J* Bins . They,were dreadfnfiy&#13;
narrow. Teg, in a and, And w&gt;&#13;
Pftty!&#13;
Woman in Gray—Oh, yes. And so ,&#13;
critical! How they picked people to&#13;
s^dcJttkfredthejal Df«aJnMll&#13;
'a&#13;
STATE Oi&gt; KIOBI^ANt tt&gt;? 'frobass Court for&#13;
the ooanty oi Livingston. 'Estate o*&#13;
,^u »*ARAB M,BO*lfBTT»psei|tsa; -4 The nsaeiefsBSd having bees amptnted, by&#13;
id«e«f Probawet said eonaty, ouaiedaetdaert oa&#13;
alms iMlMawttarei •»id«stite,andtoor ejoatbi&#13;
tOeeenbAr, A. it *&#13;
the SthdayofJ &gt;OBede4een boAf rP,t aAD. aute J91Sbavlnt&#13;
byaatd -a4«eof PtaDate to atlMrelates&#13;
agate* said estate (a wiuehte&#13;
ran&#13;
«en allowed b&#13;
jeaenVfta^ &lt;M**f*s V&gt; us for eawniaactoa; sa/i&#13;
A . ' ITotwls nereby 0ves that we will meet oa tse&#13;
* htB oay ot Maf«k\. D. 1019,, aad os tat Mb&#13;
* lay of April, *. »TI«18, at oae k/etoefe p sr ef saeb&#13;
ay at the stof a si Jne. IKmraay a m, the Ullage of&#13;
Haobar 4tf»aliWioty io reetive aaC eataaio.&#13;
••uoSctsiSM,&#13;
, USMO; HuwelV Mieb., Jaaaaryatsl, A,P.1»S&#13;
Jo a Baasuaa , \ • _ .&#13;
&lt; Coatniaatoaen on Claiias&#13;
4^Ms assert '••• i • • «&#13;
' v • ' ' • ' ' :&#13;
in-1 datawm*&#13;
^r iMhs, nOflot on Main t&#13;
•ty. . . 7 i -. 1 a ; L , i . ,: . i . » / , '&#13;
'l,".&gt;",&#13;
"t&#13;
•V&#13;
i t s •»•' • L. SOU* *&gt; 0.&#13;
tetf-feed Sex&#13;
hold one feed. The horse can get the&#13;
grain only in small quantities and so&#13;
cannot eat it more rapidly than he&#13;
shoukL The bottom must he made&#13;
with enough slant to insure all of the&#13;
feed coming out. In the trough.&#13;
Are Tim g Cold Suffer**!&#13;
Takn \)r Kii&#13;
The h**t HInv" *&#13;
m*d«fin»' t m ^&#13;
tattH '&lt;&gt; I&gt;II&#13;
tak*» »r -it ur. r&#13;
J. !{. VV . .«•)&#13;
•Dr K • V N -&#13;
terri ••. n&lt;i&#13;
ponn »' " B , »»&#13;
*^ S • o I&gt;t«fovery&#13;
on y 'ivi i-A if it&#13;
h-»«.•»' \ e—&#13;
The man was going to get married.&#13;
He had sown his wild oats, and now&#13;
he meant to settle down. Well oif,&#13;
good looking, a first-rate sportsman, a&#13;
favorite with men and women alike,&#13;
the Fates spinning busily had smiled&#13;
upon him at birth and had woven only&#13;
gold threads in the woof of bis life*&#13;
For years he had lived the life of&#13;
the smart young man about town. Be&#13;
had dene the same thing In the usual&#13;
?ay,'he,had been neither very good,&#13;
tfor bad; in his own Words, the favorite&#13;
words of British youth, he had always&#13;
"tried to play the game."&#13;
It was because he felt it incumbent&#13;
upon him to ylay the game that he&#13;
decided to tell the woman he waB going&#13;
to marry of a certain newly closed&#13;
episode in his life. The consideration&#13;
that perhaps It would be aa well for&#13;
her to-'hear the tale from him firsthand,&#13;
instead of embroidered with lies&#13;
on a foundation of truth, as she might&#13;
hear It from some one else.gnay have&#13;
counted for something, too.&#13;
But the reason he gave himself aa&#13;
he knotted his tie carefully before the&#13;
mirror on the fateful morning of confession&#13;
was that he "must play the&#13;
game."&#13;
"I hardly know how to tell you,&#13;
dear/i'he began awkwardly, standing&#13;
tall and, perfectly groomed on the&#13;
hearthrug tbat afternoon. It's so difficult&#13;
to speak to women—pure women,&#13;
like you—about certain things, but&#13;
the fact of the matter is, I've been, an&#13;
awful rotter, Evelyn, and I feel It's up&#13;
to me to own it. You're not marrying&#13;
a saint, you know."&#13;
The fair-haired woman In the big&#13;
big armchair looked up at him sweetly&#13;
out of innocent blue eyea: "Dear,&#13;
I do know," she said gently.&#13;
He moved uncomfortably. "But it's&#13;
just what you don't know," he told&#13;
her, "that I'm worrying about I'm&#13;
not thinking of cards and racing, and&#13;
things like that It's about women&#13;
I want to speak to you. Especially&#13;
one woman." He paused, and bit his&#13;
lip nervously.&#13;
"Ah!" said the woman Boftly, looking&#13;
down,&#13;
"She was a nice little thing," went&#13;
on the man. "Not quite a lady, you&#13;
know, but very pretty and all that.&#13;
. . . Her father drank. She ran&#13;
away from home. Hadn't a friend in&#13;
the world when I picked her up, Only&#13;
the streets in front of her. A good&#13;
woman like you, Evelyn, can't realize&#13;
what the horror of that means. . . .&#13;
I took a flat for her."&#13;
"Ah!" said the woman softly, looking&#13;
down.&#13;
"I lived with her more or less for&#13;
three years,' 'went on the man, gathering&#13;
courage from her passlveness.&#13;
"She was very grateful for all I had&#13;
done for her; she was really quite a&#13;
nice little thing. Bat, of course, that's&#13;
all-over and done with now. I settled&#13;
up finally with her today. I shall&#13;
never see her again. There was no&#13;
reason for you erer to know, Evelyn,&#13;
only that I felt it wouldn't be quite&#13;
playing the game not to tell you."&#13;
"What has beoome of the glrir&#13;
asked the woman, still softly and still&#13;
looking away.&#13;
The man shrugged his shoulders.&#13;
"Still in the flat, I presume," he said&#13;
carelessly. "The rent is paid up till&#13;
December." Hit voice became persuasive.&#13;
He bent down so that his faee&#13;
was very near the coils of fair hair&#13;
wound smoothly round her head.&#13;
"Don't let's talk about her any more,"&#13;
he urged. "It's aU finished and done&#13;
with. Now, don't frown, but just kiss&#13;
me, and aay yon forgive me."&#13;
"You're a very naughty boy, Jack,"&#13;
said the woman reprovingly, but she&#13;
let him wind her smooth white arms&#13;
round hie neck* an he knelt beside her&#13;
on the floor. IPhen if you promise&#13;
never, never to do it again, I'll forgive&#13;
yon,** ahe said prettily.&#13;
He caught her, flushed and1 smiling&#13;
to him fiercely. "My saint!" he breathed&#13;
upon her mouth.&#13;
Absence makes the heart n o w&#13;
fonder, we're told, bat a good portrait&#13;
of the absent one will keep&#13;
the recollection more vivid^acd&#13;
comfort many a lonely boot of&#13;
separation.&#13;
We make a specialty of portraiture&#13;
aud oar studio is exceptionally&#13;
equipped for fine portrait&#13;
work.&#13;
Daisie B. Chapelt&#13;
P h o t o g r a p h e r&#13;
StockbridsJe, M i c h i g a n&#13;
&amp;&#13;
W\&#13;
jti&#13;
1 »i ftrtv-rv ur&lt;&#13;
Mr&#13;
"&lt;' m*&#13;
d 15&#13;
WB*8.&#13;
Counting&#13;
Tonr&#13;
Money&#13;
\&#13;
In a daintily furnished room of a lit*&#13;
tie flat in Queen's Club Gardens, a&#13;
woman lay dead upon the bed with an&#13;
empty phial m her hand. There were&#13;
traces of tears upon her white, oeld&#13;
cheeks; her closed eyelids were swollen.&#13;
'Her lover had failed her. There&#13;
nothing before hsr but the streets.&#13;
Bo she, toe, had "played the game."&#13;
God will decide who played it heat&#13;
Hibernation of Mosquitoes.&#13;
, Dr. Howard of the department of&#13;
agHonttare, who probably known as&#13;
much df ine mosquito and its habits&#13;
aa aay other man in the world, ooaV&#13;
tends that this cosmopolitan peat&#13;
does not necessarily perish with the&#13;
doming of winter. On the contrary,&#13;
•Ave been observed to&#13;
adult specimens living&#13;
" t o&#13;
dfM'wttm r^isssejM a&#13;
resji^a4v4Trtj|f|TiilTtf}t&#13;
anen^iawtl»V^ishiVvo#&#13;
we*fr!»0Wt«ew«Weft4&#13;
os**&#13;
T S saw&#13;
'&#13;
Sii&#13;
from November until the succeeding&#13;
April at Hay with all their powers of&#13;
torment unimpaired, although their&#13;
eetrvHy lg suspended la winter. The&#13;
•oaanHa needs but little food, aad&#13;
tt u t t e female that thirsts for blood,&#13;
the^maled oantentlrg themselves wit*&#13;
fater and vegetable fluids.&#13;
fact that moocmitoea art ofteu&#13;
i-afjen dry prairies fanny afleaj&#13;
*•*•? la aaerlh«4,.ta tae4oaa&gt;&#13;
^ * - . * the ednlU of certain tpedea.&#13;
walth enables (hem to survive eeeejsja&#13;
ad tsottght Raflroads hare f i A '&#13;
far the transmiiiiori&#13;
mosquitoes into&#13;
were previously&#13;
regions Where&#13;
M&#13;
Dr. Miles'&#13;
Anti-Pain Pills&#13;
w i l l h e l p y o u , a s t h o y&#13;
h a v e h e l p e d o t h e r s .&#13;
Good for all kinds of pain.&#13;
Used to relifye Neuralgia, Headache,&#13;
Nervousness, Rheumatism,&#13;
Sciatica, Kidney Pains, Lumbago,&#13;
Locomotor Ataxia, Backache,&#13;
St^vachache, Carsickncss, Irrk&#13;
"taliility and Tor pain in any part&#13;
of the body.&#13;
"I have always been subject to&#13;
neurnl«lu. and have suffered from&#13;
It for yr&gt;ars. While visiting* my sen&#13;
and mifferlng from one of the old&#13;
nttnrks, he hrotpht me a box of&#13;
Ur. MiloH" Antl-l'nln Pill*. I used&#13;
thorn iiR riliwtod .ind after taking&#13;
thom It was t\, • first time In years&#13;
the nnurHiglri &lt;ren»&lt;-d from the uae of&#13;
medicine.' MitH. 15. C. HOWARD,&#13;
402 Greene St.. ttowagiao, Mich.&#13;
At all druggiats. 25 doses 28s.&#13;
MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, ind.&#13;
:t'*&#13;
Mi&#13;
v.)&#13;
YOUR lUMjUND THROAT.&#13;
What Ifrs. White says about&#13;
Wl&amp;werw&#13;
For Au. Loao and Tanoar Tnounuat)&#13;
Oia#a4alc, Mica.. Sept. 9, IM4,&#13;
Ocsr Ma. ABBOTT:&#13;
li ^.110¾.^7 f 2* 9nn ago that J am •C•uoseasm Marerd., eWa, ilwsoWn^ca Kenedy (ot lb* Cott *i &gt;u fangs apoa at. 41MI SwMa sw assic kfa sat bloeaMt snatiomg mI »wtaasi seb ffaoaraat eoIs bteoa rdu ye f ttt.h^et mweadatc itahee, faiardst medtdne Oat helped a* The 0«rf«r/ • * #&#13;
for a teaie, aad h was a w*4*rfml mtSUk&#13;
\&#13;
of C A. Asserr,&#13;
fondah any buSBJSSmwEBBEEFr^^&#13;
L'fjff*&#13;
&gt;*-»r&#13;
rir-&#13;
Yliaag Majsga)&#13;
Dcsiona^ --&#13;
»4«f *•' 'r&#13;
• ^&#13;
m* mm —rr&#13;
*5g$*&#13;
* ? W ,'"'7,'"tt'T"-^&#13;
MM " W i l l ny »i,»wiiwflti»i ii^»w,i||iwp»p»w«wwij|pyiwN&#13;
PJ|^"l'^&#13;
• * : v&#13;
j #&#13;
?&lt; ,,&#13;
" --^¾¾¾^ V 4 -• '» ^ " " ^ '4'.' !i&#13;
^-&gt;v&#13;
"V"'-- '•'•-&lt;• &gt; - ^ f ^&#13;
ska „..&lt;- .. ,.. A -C&#13;
Pinckney Bispateh&#13;
ROV W. CAVKRLY, Pub.&#13;
PINCKNEY, - - - MICHIGAN&#13;
The California beau trust la bust&#13;
ed—beaned. as It were.&#13;
Neither, fond dreamer, does one&#13;
seed catalogue make a spring.&#13;
A Chicago man is going to walk to&#13;
St. Louis and asks the best way to&#13;
do it. Answer: Don't&#13;
California's orange crop appears to&#13;
be infringing on the vested rights of&#13;
the Michigan peach crop.&#13;
Imagine the quantity of 6-cent cigars&#13;
that Frank Chance could. If he wo*M.&#13;
buy with that {25,000 a year.&#13;
"Eggs and Publicity" Is a headline&#13;
in an eastern paper. But the less publicity&#13;
some eggs have, the better.&#13;
We have small sympathy for the&#13;
gentleman or lady who acquires chilblains&#13;
through excessive devotion to&#13;
silk hose.&#13;
Having bis eye on the front page,&#13;
the New Hampshire's pet goat naturally&#13;
butted into print by way of a&#13;
rear admiral.&#13;
Some of the educators have determined&#13;
that examinations are no good.&#13;
The schoolboys could have told them&#13;
that long ago.&#13;
If the ruin of the lemon crop has no&#13;
111 effect on the lemon pie of commerce&#13;
one will be justified in harboring&#13;
suspicions.&#13;
I&#13;
The people of the Netherlands lend&#13;
the world in coffee drinking. Who&#13;
now will dare to say that coffee makes&#13;
people nervous?&#13;
What has become of the fussy old&#13;
gentleman who laments the inability&#13;
of the present generation to make&#13;
buckwheat cakes?&#13;
Somebody has Invented a waist for&#13;
feminine wear that fastens together&#13;
in the back with only two hooks. What&#13;
a pity It has no chance!&#13;
WILL FIGHT FOR&#13;
MORTGAGE TAX LAW&#13;
A Vienna physician says two persons&#13;
can be grown together by skin&#13;
grafting. Watch the Siamese twins&#13;
Increase now In the sideshows.&#13;
A Harvard professor says there will&#13;
soon be a permanent cure for the gout&#13;
Still, the market price lists seem to&#13;
answer the purpose very well now.&#13;
It Is too bad that the suspender&#13;
company that failed the other day&#13;
could not have held up a lltle longer&#13;
Suffragettes advocate wearing them.&#13;
It is rather hardato understand why&#13;
evefr a wealthy Chicago woman_should&#13;
pay $5,000 for a dog, unless, perchance,&#13;
It was a solid, tenderloin dog.&#13;
A minister In rhe east has his sermons&#13;
printed and sent to each sick&#13;
member of his flock. That at least,&#13;
should insure against any feigned&#13;
Illness.&#13;
A Philadelphia man has succeeded&#13;
in hatohing eggs of the diamond-back*&#13;
e4 terrapin In an incubator. Next&#13;
thing they'll have them In cold storage,&#13;
too.&#13;
One French woman playwright who&#13;
killed a woman friend Is to dramatize&#13;
the little incident If the habit&#13;
spreads ft lends of other dramatists&#13;
will begin to worry.&#13;
With a bulldog under one arm and&#13;
a crate of eggs under the other, the'&#13;
Induitrlous postman Is not required to&#13;
lift his cap In salutation as the fair&#13;
mistress of the house comes to gat&#13;
her morning letter a&#13;
p- '4&#13;
A contemporary remark! naively on&#13;
the death of the composer of the&#13;
M 'Sweet Bye and Bye' and otter war&#13;
ballads." By the way, what constitute*&#13;
a. war ballad?&#13;
The prlnoe of Wale* has been ordered&#13;
by his father to resign from an&#13;
Oxford d u b because he participated&#13;
in a frolic knewar as a "rag." Evidently&#13;
the king la opposed to ragtime.&#13;
Tha. fishermen of British Columbia&#13;
find tile whale very useful in herding&#13;
aboala of herring toward the shore.&#13;
Bmce tip* days of Jonah the whale has&#13;
a knack of figuring in tall tales.&#13;
An investigator -asserts that New&#13;
~ * hJ*jfeJiau#tad hc**ea. The intoJItftMnceia&#13;
that translated&#13;
don't want to come hack&#13;
next world even if it it&#13;
• *&#13;
The foot of a Philadelphia hotel Is&#13;
efutpped with a landing for&#13;
&gt;»0r*n1ans«. It will keep the manage-&#13;
,^$%mm boar~w»en fly-by-night tbeetrl-&#13;
" ' vfo"&#13;
LEGISLATIVE COMMITTEE DETROIT&#13;
REAL ESTATE BOARD&#13;
PLANS'FOR CAMPAIGN.&#13;
SAYS LAW SHOULD HAVE MORE&#13;
" THOROUOH TRIAL.&#13;
Claim to Repeal Present Mortgage Tax&#13;
Law Would Work Hardship to'&#13;
Many People. •&#13;
Discussion of plans for resisting efforts&#13;
to repeal the state's mortgage&#13;
tax law engaged the attention of members&#13;
of the legislative committee of&#13;
Detroit real estate board.&#13;
Definite lines for the campaign&#13;
were not decided on, but the sentiment&#13;
expressed Indicates the board&#13;
will make a strong fight in defense&#13;
of the tax law, on the ground that the&#13;
interval during which it has been in&#13;
operation has been too short for a/fair&#13;
test of its merits.&#13;
The legislative committee of the&#13;
board includes C. M. Harmon, chairman;&#13;
Walter C. Woolley, William&#13;
E. Roney, Homer Warren and Richard&#13;
Q. Lambrecht. President Judson Bradway,&#13;
Secretary E. B. Tyrrell and others&#13;
participated in the conference. In&#13;
reference to the attitude of the real&#13;
estate board President Bradway says:&#13;
"We feel that the law has not been&#13;
in operation long enough to be tried&#13;
out properly. It has worked very satisfactorily&#13;
in other states and we believe&#13;
the least we can do is to Bee that&#13;
it is given a chance in Michigan."&#13;
"To repeal the mortgage tax law&#13;
will simply make a let of liars and&#13;
crooks out of people, because no man&#13;
will allow anyone to rob him if he&#13;
knows about it," says Thomas H.&#13;
Welch, of Welch Bros. "It is simply&#13;
legalized highway robbery when the&#13;
law requires a full rate of taxation on&#13;
land and a full rate of taxation on the&#13;
mortgage covering the same land."&#13;
Figures from the auditor general's&#13;
office show that since the mortgage&#13;
tax law has been in operation, about&#13;
15 months, the aggregate value of&#13;
mortgages on which the filing tax is&#13;
paid has been increased to approximately&#13;
three times what it was before&#13;
the law became effective," says&#13;
Secretary Tyrrell, of the real estate&#13;
board.&#13;
In the conference, Homer Warren&#13;
pointed out that since the tax law has&#13;
been in force, many persons have&#13;
bought mortgages and that should the&#13;
law now be repealed, considerable&#13;
hardship would be inflicted on widows&#13;
and: others, who have placed their&#13;
funds in that form of security.&#13;
\W&#13;
It aw** be awftl to get into a&#13;
tttHob «4 jCMnot* political reformers&#13;
who ara baseball fans and listen to&#13;
the*&gt; oommente on the. new govern i**16 campaign&#13;
,jaaj».'*»&lt; *h» latiprttoMOn of toe dssVf force* of Montcalm county&#13;
.IBM* at t l * MUM time.&#13;
; *&#13;
rV"&#13;
A Kansas City saloonkeeper, » a 0 B«v»f bad a cash register but tract&#13;
Ms bartender Implicitly, died&#13;
iSttV&#13;
B?8$»^j*V&amp;4&#13;
Time for Recall, Says Martindale.&#13;
In an address before the members&#13;
of Capitol Orange, in LanBing, Secretary&#13;
of State Martindale declared&#13;
himself in favor of the initiative, referendum&#13;
and recall. He said the time&#13;
has passed in Michigan when the- politician&#13;
can tell the people what measures&#13;
are best for them.&#13;
"I believe the time has arrived&#13;
when the electors should have the&#13;
right to recall any official who Is derelict&#13;
in his trust of conserving their&#13;
beat Interests," said Martindale. "and&#13;
at any time when the legislative power&#13;
does not respond to the demand of the&#13;
people in regard, to the enactment of&#13;
legislation essential to the conservation&#13;
of their property and well being&#13;
then I believe the people should have&#13;
the right to initiate such legislation.&#13;
"I do not think, however, that the&#13;
initiative should be the usual way of&#13;
promoting legislation, but it Bhould&#13;
certainly be a means by which the&#13;
people can secure deBired legislation&#13;
when their represetnatives either refuse&#13;
to act or are ignorant of the people's&#13;
real needs.''&#13;
Probe of Phone Tolls la Ordered.&#13;
The house tackled the question of&#13;
long distance telephone rates and by a&#13;
vote of 68 to 21 decided that there&#13;
should be a legislative Investigation&#13;
by a special committee of three membera&#13;
of the house into what was represented&#13;
to be a substantial increase&#13;
in rates in the past several months.&#13;
Inquiry at the railroad commission offices,&#13;
revealed the fact that while the&#13;
legislature years ago provided for comprehensive&#13;
supervision of the 1,100 telephone&#13;
systems of the state by the&#13;
railroad commission, including, the regulation&#13;
of rates, it did npt vote so&#13;
much as one dollar to pay for the.&#13;
work.&#13;
. Scientific agriculture is being studied&#13;
by farmers and fruit growers of&#13;
western Michigan, under the auspices&#13;
of the Michigan Agricultural college.&#13;
Rev. C. A. Watson, pastor of the&#13;
Free Methodist church, of Howard&#13;
City, has been chosen to direct the&#13;
of the anti-saloon*&#13;
• v . •".&#13;
MV'jftft*&#13;
The council will request the city attorney&#13;
to investigate the licenses of&#13;
160 aaloonskeepere in Saginaw and&#13;
find oat if the cards they hold are&#13;
legal. The council will also be aaled&#13;
to raise the city license fee. , {&#13;
At a&gt; meeting of two Grand Rapids&#13;
lodges of Loyal Americans, it was decided&#13;
to merge too lodges, making the&#13;
lartfwst toriaw of that order In »W «*•&gt;.&#13;
N E W S O F MICHIGAN, u&#13;
Teaching Farmers. •&#13;
The subject of scientific agriculture&#13;
has taken such a hold upon the farmers&#13;
and fruit growers of western Michigan&#13;
that classes are being organized&#13;
for the purpose of systematic study.&#13;
Short courses under the auspices of&#13;
the agricultural college have been&#13;
announced tor five hi^h schools. But&#13;
even these courses do not seem to be&#13;
sufficient, and Snpt. A. H, Clark, &lt;tfi*iiN€&#13;
the Kingstey school has evolved 4?&#13;
plan which, he believes, will hOjh&gt; fll^t;&#13;
the demand. Beginning with Februarytf&#13;
3, he will conduct a Monday night&#13;
school for the farmers living close to&#13;
Kingsley. The course will be made to&#13;
appeal to practical men and will be&#13;
arranged to meet their specific ne,eds.&#13;
To start, stress will be placed upon&#13;
those parts of chemistry, mineralogy,&#13;
zoology, plant life, and physical geography&#13;
as relate to farming, that the&#13;
farmer may see the value of these sciences&#13;
in connection with his vocation.&#13;
This is the first night school for farmers&#13;
in the western Michigan territory&#13;
and the result of the experiment will&#13;
be closely watched that other sohools&#13;
may be started if this is a success.&#13;
Says State Can't Own Railway.&#13;
A resolution offered in the house of&#13;
representatives that a committee of&#13;
five be named to confer with the attorney&#13;
general as.to the steps to be&#13;
taken for. the state of Michigan to&#13;
own and operate the Pere Marquette&#13;
railroad, caused a furore in the house.&#13;
The resolution was offered by Rep.&#13;
Henry Glasner, of Barry, and followed&#13;
the statement of Gov. Ferris in&#13;
The Journal Monday that he would&#13;
like to see this railroad under state&#13;
ownership. The house adopted the&#13;
resolution first, but Rep. Charles Flowers,&#13;
of Detroit, moved that it be reconsidered.&#13;
Flowers asserted that the state&#13;
has not the rlght.to own and operate&#13;
railroads.&#13;
After some confusion the house reconsidered&#13;
the Glasner resolution and&#13;
then tabled it. A fight to take it off&#13;
the table is said to be certain.&#13;
wwifltr MJJUltS WurnUoLtll!&#13;
BAND PLAYS H0RI»JBLE;M6C0RQ&#13;
TO - R E ^ e a i N f jtELjkTIONS&#13;
( iETNA^ErTTWdr''&#13;
«BRVANS" £ £&#13;
CABIN ET&gt;&#13;
'WILSON'S&#13;
Burlesque . on Woman's Suffrage and |r.&#13;
Democracy Feature Frolicsome&#13;
Evening in Washington.&#13;
Call for Oleo In State Institutes.&#13;
There Is a possibility that an attempt&#13;
will be made during the present&#13;
session of the legislature to repeal the&#13;
law prohibiting the use o^ oleomargarine&#13;
in state institutions.&#13;
Secretary Marl T. Murray of the&#13;
state board of corrections and charities&#13;
has made inquiries throughout the&#13;
country and finds that only six states&#13;
in the union, including Michigan, have&#13;
laws prohibiting this use of oleomargarine.&#13;
With the. exception of Dr. Pierce of&#13;
the state sanitorium and Quartermaster&#13;
Phillips of the soldiers' home, the&#13;
officers of most of the state institutions&#13;
believe that it would be better&#13;
to use a high grade of oleo rather than&#13;
cheap butter.&#13;
A rollicking farewell was given to&#13;
the Tait administration at the annual&#13;
dinner of the Gridiron club. , ,&#13;
At, the same time the club mem&gt;&#13;
bera took advantage of their last&#13;
opportunity to play another joke on&#13;
President Taft and those associated&#13;
with him in his administration of&#13;
the national government. With&#13;
"Uncle Joe" Cannon, and others&#13;
whose official days In Washington&#13;
end March 4, the president was made&#13;
the target for many a witty shaft. The&#13;
president was honored with a great&#13;
ovation, however, and invited to attend&#13;
every future dinner of the club.&#13;
Both President Taft and former&#13;
Speaker Cannon opened their hearts&#13;
to the club members and spoke feelingly&#13;
of their days in Washington,&#13;
now so nearly at an end.&#13;
The adventure of the Bull Moose,&#13;
and the probable fate awatttog Preident-&#13;
elect Wilson and his advisers&#13;
were portrayed in the absurd funny&#13;
fashion which originated with the&#13;
Gridiron club.&#13;
There were even an inaugural parade,&#13;
and it was witnessed by a splendid&#13;
array of cabinet officers, foreign&#13;
ambassadors and others. i&#13;
The guests had hardly seated&#13;
themselves at the tables In the&#13;
beautifully decorated * ball room of&#13;
the New Willard hotel, and admired&#13;
the mortarboard cap inkstand souvenirs&#13;
in reminder of President Taft's&#13;
new role as Yale professor when a tremendous&#13;
boom, boom of bass drums&#13;
was heard from behind the scenes and&#13;
the fun was on.&#13;
PASSES SIX YEAR TEBM.&#13;
Senate Takes Action That Will Shut&#13;
Out Teddy, Taft and Wilton,&#13;
Laud Cong. Wedemeyer for Hia Work.&#13;
Eloquent, impressive and solemn&#13;
were the exercises held Sunday afternoon&#13;
in University hall in a n n Arbor,&#13;
in honor of the memory of the&#13;
late Congressman W. W. Wedemeyer,&#13;
who died at sea, Jan. 2.&#13;
Every seat in the great auditpriuw&#13;
was filled and people stood for two&#13;
hourd to hear their dead townsman&#13;
eulogized by the statesmen of the nation.&#13;
Judge J. H. Grant Diea in Manistee&#13;
Probate Judge John H. Grant, one of&#13;
the most prominent .citizens of the&#13;
western section of the state, and a&#13;
member of the board of regents of the&#13;
University of Michigan, was found&#13;
dead in bed at his home in Manistee.&#13;
It was evident he had been dead several&#13;
hours. He was 65 years of age.&#13;
STATE BRIEFS.&#13;
The State Association- of Superintendents&#13;
and Keepers of the Poor met&#13;
in Kalamaaoo in its ninth annual convention.&#13;
Fire of an unknown origin destroyed&#13;
$10,000 worth of property at the Ludington&#13;
county farm, five miles north of&#13;
Menominee.&#13;
Mrs. Cora Eieenbrex connected with&#13;
the state insurance department in&#13;
Lamiing has tendered her resignation&#13;
and has been appointed assistant secretary&#13;
of the Michigan state fair at&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Prof. F. A* Updyke, of Dartmouth&#13;
college, and Prof. M. Pannelee, of the&#13;
University of Missouri have been en*&#13;
gaged to teach in the summer session&#13;
of the U. of M.,.in Ana Arbor. Prot&#13;
Updyke will teach political science,&#13;
while Prof. Parmelee will teach socio!*&#13;
The Branch County Teachers' institute&#13;
met in Col water, over 250 taac&gt;&#13;
ers being In attendance, Addresses,&#13;
were made by Prof. C. S. Landers, of&#13;
the Central Normal school; Miss Mar-&#13;
The first step was taken in the senate&#13;
toward the adoption of a constitutional&#13;
amendment flying the term of&#13;
president of the United States at six&#13;
years and making the chief executive&#13;
Ineligible to succeed himself.&#13;
By a vote, of 47 to 23, the Jfifftrkft.&#13;
single term resolution was adopted&#13;
by the senate. The advocates of the&#13;
reform succeeded in mustering just&#13;
two more than the necessary twothirds.&#13;
Under the terms of (he resolution&#13;
as it passed the senate, Colonel Roosevelt,&#13;
Mr. Taft and Woodrow Wilson&#13;
are eliminated from the field of possibilities&#13;
for the presidency in future&#13;
contests. The resolution, if it should&#13;
he ratified by three-fourths of the&#13;
states before the expiration of Mr.&#13;
Wilson's term will, however, have the&#13;
effect of adding two years to his tenure,&#13;
giving him a six instead of a four&#13;
year term.&#13;
The resolution now goes to the house&#13;
and the likelihood is that it will be&#13;
passed by that body by a more decisive&#13;
vote than resulted in the senate.&#13;
2,000,000 Britons to--Strike for8 Hours.&#13;
A resolution calling for an eighthour&#13;
day foi ail classes of wvKmou&#13;
and work-wonioi was adopted oy the&#13;
Trades Union Congress, at which over&#13;
2,000, Jt)0 Lritisb workingmen and* women&#13;
are repreiented.&#13;
The agitation for an eight-hour day&#13;
without any overtime has been in pro*&#13;
gross fo.Botne time under the1 auspices&#13;
of the parliamentary committee of the&#13;
Trades Union Congress, whose intention&#13;
is to gain an eight-hour day or&#13;
48-hour week for every member of&#13;
every union allied with the congress.&#13;
This means practically an the organised&#13;
labor in the United Kingdom.&#13;
The miners already have an eighthour&#13;
day fixed by the law, but outride&#13;
of Umdon nearly all workmen&#13;
have longer hours of labor. ...&#13;
At a meeting Of the local option&#13;
forces m sfarsfciH,&#13;
Dickie, of AIMOW&#13;
president; ReV.&#13;
secretary, and H. G; Butter, of B a &amp; o a csjtt W ft»\*ty of , f l&#13;
Creek, treasurer. J t&#13;
R. J. Quail, an attorney* of. Ludiagton,&#13;
has announced his oandjdaoy on&#13;
the republican ticket as regent of the&#13;
University of Michigan,&#13;
A special effort fill being made to&#13;
safe the Ionia fair grounds, against&#13;
which there is a 16,000 mortgage. The&#13;
Elks gave a minstrel show and raised&#13;
M0*&#13;
The state tax commission has notified&#13;
City Assessor SplndJer that' Saginaw's&#13;
city assessment mosf be bodstd&#13;
-*i. tm"-'&#13;
BU&#13;
E*i»i.ArSrW&gt;. •'•&#13;
18&#13;
"m&#13;
'*V #?*%,&#13;
John D, Rockefeller, Jr., Tells of Its&#13;
Qrigiav Work, and Plana for the&#13;
^ I nyef ligation of Vice&#13;
Conditions,&#13;
,New York,' Jan. 27-—In order that&#13;
the pttbllC might better understand&#13;
the Bureau of Social Jtiygjejie, John&#13;
. 'HockafeUert Jry spd^y^gave • out a&#13;
atement expljlni*g»%|he «^J||p» work&#13;
and plans of' that institution. .The&#13;
bureau, he said, came into existence&#13;
abcVt two years ago as a result of the&#13;
work of a special grand jury ap-'&#13;
pointed to investigate the white slave&#13;
traffic ,in New York city. This jury&#13;
recommended that a public commission&#13;
be appointed to study the social&#13;
evil.&#13;
Mr. Rockefeller was foreman of&#13;
that grand jury and he thereafter&#13;
gave the eubject deep thought and&#13;
conferred with a large number of leading&#13;
men and women. "These conferences,"&#13;
says Mr. Rockefeller, "developed&#13;
the feeling that a public commission&#13;
would labor under a number of&#13;
disadvantages, such as the fact that&#13;
it would be short lived; that its work&#13;
would be done publicly; that at best&#13;
it could hardly do more than present&#13;
recommendations. So the conviction&#13;
grew that in order to make a&#13;
real and laBtlng improvement in conditions,&#13;
a permanent organization&#13;
should be created, the continuation of&#13;
which would not be dependent upon a&#13;
temporary wave of reform, nor upon&#13;
the life' of any man or group of men,&#13;
but which would go on generation&#13;
after generation, continuously making&#13;
warfare against the forces of evil. It&#13;
also appeared that a private organization&#13;
would have, among other advantages,&#13;
a certain freedom from publicity&#13;
and from political bias, which a&#13;
publicly appointed commission could&#13;
not so easily avoid.&#13;
"Therefor*?, as the initial step, in&#13;
the winter of 1911 the Bureau of Social&#13;
Hygiene was formed. Its present&#13;
members are Miss Katharine Bement&#13;
Davie, superintendent of the New&#13;
York state reformatory for women&#13;
at Bedford Hills, N. Y.; Paul M. Warburg,&#13;
of the firm of Kuhn, Loeb &amp; Co,;&#13;
Starr J. Murphy, of the New York bar,&#13;
and John D. Rockefeller, Jr. As the&#13;
work develops new members may be&#13;
added.&#13;
"One of the first things undertaken&#13;
by the bureau was the establishment&#13;
at Bedford Hills, adjacent to the reformatory,&#13;
, of a laboratory of social&#13;
hygiene, under Mies Davis' direction.&#13;
In this laboratory it is proposed to&#13;
„gtjudy_fjnm the physical, manlaC social&#13;
and moral side each person committed&#13;
to the reformatory. This Btudy will&#13;
be carried on by experts and each&#13;
case will be kept under observation&#13;
for from three weeks to three months,&#13;
as may he required. When the diagnosis&#13;
is completed, it is hoped that the&#13;
laboratory will be in position to&#13;
recommend the treatment most likely&#13;
to individual, or, if reformation&#13;
is impossible, to recommend&#13;
permanent custodial care. Furthermore,&#13;
reaching out beyond the individuals&#13;
involved, it Is believed ihat 1! us important&#13;
contributions may be made to&#13;
a fuller knowledge of the conditions&#13;
ultimately responsible for vice. If&#13;
this experiment is successful the principle&#13;
' may prove applicable to all&#13;
classes of criminals and the conditions&#13;
precedent to crime, and lead to lines&#13;
of action not only more scientific and&#13;
humane but also less wasteful than&#13;
those at present followed•'*..&#13;
. That its work might be done intelligently&#13;
the bureau employed George J.&#13;
Kneeland to .make a comprehensive&#13;
survey of vice conditions in New&#13;
York, and Abraham Flexner to study&#13;
the social evil in Europe, and their&#13;
reports are now being prepared. These&#13;
stodiee will be followed by others in&#13;
various American cities, and it is the&#13;
hope of the bureau that based upon&#13;
aH of them, may be devised a practical&#13;
plan for dealing with t i p social&#13;
ovfl.&#13;
In conclusion Mr. Rockefeller's&#13;
statement saya: "It cannot be too&#13;
strongly emphasisad that the spirit&#13;
which dominates the work of the bureau&#13;
is not sensational or sentimental&#13;
or hysterical; that it Is not a spirit&#13;
of criticism of public officials; but&#13;
that it Is essentially a spirit of constructive&#13;
suggestion and of deep scientific&#13;
as well as humane Interest in&#13;
a great world problem " '&#13;
ed or the commission win .kentf ^ wmhurt yon M&gt; fatt.&#13;
vestlgatora to that «**, W c j i a r g e ^ ;» **» ?&lt;*?*JM ?«? ^ettsy, .the fob*&#13;
__ __ n «a4« that Saginaw i a t « ^ ^&#13;
garerwise, orYpslfs^Ncrmai, aadH ^ 0 0 0 *•** Le*tfing*,tlfb^h two?.! Diplomas from tfe* sokool.of exper-&#13;
Dr. 8. B. Fees, of Antioch cole**, ****• l » W p ******* etptfcL.gHjfr and&#13;
A n t k W o . ^ •-.•,.&gt; v -that busasess property is a—used&#13;
muesv lower taaa&gt;iwsMes»ee. &gt; »&#13;
It nan, President Samuel' to e nerooent oihwo vdotttye ro tfa K aa'pla*tetUciB*oc*&lt; &gt;hlVi - ¾ ¾ ^&#13;
m college, was elscUd" bdtif the oo*y votar earellei There JJ*JZ*&#13;
C. r. Helfe*7of AJWoa, was a toejfl.of lift votM c*rafed ak- y ? g&#13;
If you can't do, any good yourself,&#13;
pemuade your neighbor to do all tho&#13;
good he can. , Drowned bodies -are&#13;
often used asa.hrklge ios the living&#13;
t* escape the-flood, • - v&#13;
No^good maa will stay in a bad^bmK&#13;
lness. , • &gt;••• *;.'''.••. &lt; . v";•••»••&#13;
T h e h i g h e r y o u c M m b t h e harder f t&#13;
^ » * H&#13;
Than* wedding* toor bad ended, a a d taer&#13;
entered their M W home to settle dawn to&#13;
what they hoped to be one long uninterrupted&#13;
blissful feeaeymoon. i&#13;
But thoffttasfc bride's troubles&#13;
tried td j»ducd the&#13;
big can baidng&#13;
it alaat&#13;
•qon begat*,&#13;
cost of ilvfct&#13;
powders.&#13;
She soon&#13;
a lot for&#13;
baktng po&#13;
cheap mate&#13;
power., Such&#13;
whor'&#13;
sen©&#13;
two&#13;
or b&#13;
Powi&#13;
,,..,/«*•* that all she got was&#13;
mopiy,_ Mrt Jt was not all&#13;
bulk of tt was&#13;
no leavening&#13;
make light,&#13;
.regi nouf the ab- ftio-rai&#13;
•to&#13;
mora ls$tar$:&#13;
eUjaliaeJiaod lofttn Tuijoalatable.&#13;
Now^the brte&gt;*AuW*CBlBWie4»tj^PgrfecUsgN^&#13;
I«Bozr^jaaklng powder, foefttrate&#13;
in price. anVTO1w«y«'«fril»ra*^md reliable.&#13;
Calumet keep* indefinitely, makes&#13;
good cooking easy* and Is certainly the&#13;
tost economical after all. Received&#13;
Highest Awards: World's Pure Food BxpoeUlon,&#13;
Chicago. HL: Paris Exposition,&#13;
France, March, IStf.-Adv.&#13;
BOY OBEYED ORDERS GIVEN&#13;
Meant Wall, but information Was'&#13;
Welcomed by Hotel' Manager&#13;
Just at That Time.&#13;
A certain New York hotel manager&#13;
Is one of those nervous men who constantly&#13;
warn their employes against&#13;
keeping them in ignorance of any&#13;
happening around the place. He hired&#13;
a new* bell boy recently, and gave&#13;
him the usual warning:&#13;
•Remember," he warned, "if anything&#13;
happens around here I'm to be&#13;
the first person to know about It"&#13;
Soon after that he was showing&#13;
three haughty Daughters of the Confederacy&#13;
one of the best rooms in the&#13;
place, when the new bell boy rushed!&#13;
in with his hair on end.&#13;
'Something's happened!" he yelled.&#13;
The three Daughters of the Confederacy&#13;
turned coldly, and the manager,&#13;
anxious to get rid of the boy,&#13;
demanded to know the trouble.&#13;
"That old cat down stairs," said&#13;
the boy, "has just had kittens! What&#13;
shall we do?"&#13;
The manager's suggestion was&#13;
rough. '&#13;
Not a Complaint.&#13;
"Miss Brown," said the art inspector,&#13;
pausing before a student's easel,&#13;
"you might with all propriety worship&#13;
that drawing of yours."&#13;
The poorest pupil in the clasB looked&#13;
up, surprised and pleased.&#13;
"I'm so glad you like It, sir. But&#13;
why—why—"&#13;
"The Bible expressly commands us&#13;
not to worship the likeness of anything&#13;
In the heavens above or in the&#13;
earth beneath, does It not?"&#13;
Think Before You Speak.&#13;
If thou thinkest twice before thou&#13;
speakest once thou wilt speak twice&#13;
the better for it. Better say nothing&#13;
than not to the purpose. And, to&#13;
speak pertinently, consider both what&#13;
1B fit and when it is fit to speak. In&#13;
all debates let truth be thy aim, not&#13;
victory, or an unjust interest; and endeavorto&#13;
gain rather than to&#13;
thy antagonist.—William Penn.&#13;
Higher Up.&#13;
"I suppose you have tried motoring,&#13;
Judge?? he asked.&#13;
"No, I have not," replied the judge,&#13;
"but I have tried a lot of people who&#13;
have."—Pathfinder.&#13;
His Status.&#13;
"Is that druggist well thought of In&#13;
the community?" '&#13;
"Sure Isn't he a pill-er of the&#13;
church?"&#13;
Anyway, the leap year girl who proposed&#13;
to a man was merely trying to&#13;
make a name for herself.&#13;
lence are generally worth all they&#13;
cost. . , «•* &gt;- . •. -• •&lt; «•&#13;
.Ma**v* mam hag too awe*^thimderT.&#13;
fir *b&gt;. reHsjto* as^BSH^ssUt enough; ;-J?| P , 'f™, 5' 8 o M ** P ^ C M » ' &gt; «&#13;
COFFEE THRESHED HER.&#13;
15 Long Years.&#13;
"For over fifteen years," writes a&#13;
patient, hopeful little Ills, woman,&#13;
"while a coffee drinker, I suffered from&#13;
Spinal Irritation and Neyons trouble.&#13;
I was treated by good physicians, but&#13;
did not get much relief. ,&#13;
"I never suspected that coffee might&#13;
be aggravating by condition. (Tea 1»&#13;
just as injurious, because it contains&#13;
caffeine, the same drug found in oof*&#13;
fee.) I was down-hearted and discouraged,&#13;
but prayed daily that 'I&#13;
might find something to help me,&#13;
^Several years ago, while tt a&#13;
friend'* house I drank a oup of'Posturn&#13;
and though I had never tasted&#13;
anything more delicious.&#13;
"From that time on I used Postum :&#13;
Instead of coffee and soon begaavtoimprove&#13;
in health, so that now I dual&#13;
walk half a dosen blocks or more wtth.i&#13;
egee* and do many other things that C&#13;
never thooght I would be able to da; again in this world. ,- ~.&#13;
"My appetite is good, I sleep well,&#13;
and find Jifg is. worth living. A lady,&#13;
of my acQaaintaooe said she did. jot,&#13;
like Postum, it wsa so weak and tajt*-&lt; &lt;&#13;
"I explained to her. the different**&#13;
when tt is nude righ**~boiled aoeordV^r&#13;
lag to directions. She wag glad toknow&#13;
this because coffee did not agree&#13;
with her,, Now her folks, say thgyJ&#13;
expect to use,Postum.^ho rest Of their&#13;
lives.'1 Name given upon request.&#13;
WTflJ«|* &gt; pfegsv "There's a Rag,,&#13;
^Postnm nosy apnea in oc»cenjrated^&#13;
powder Jogm, called Instant iNsBtunu-&#13;
It U prsejared *y stirring a level ms&gt;«:&#13;
spoonful in s - e ^ o^kotNavatar^*#lagr,J •ngar to tas^taad.ofmg)) cream ^¾&#13;
bftngts^color to goUejt brown. ( f InstaM ;:ft»ett» • U oonvenssnt&#13;
thete'e n« * a a ^ and £h* ftavosy hv&#13;
* * * * *&#13;
*o bo a lever la thet&#13;
«t V&#13;
. U -&#13;
Kkju* tiki 80 o t e v t * to Iffecmj,&#13;
;sej w a&#13;
•**s4*anpJor _&#13;
•j*&gt;*.&#13;
• ^&#13;
y&#13;
- r - f f t r&#13;
,J-*W&#13;
t*i&#13;
^&#13;
%&#13;
•••• ; . *&#13;
••%.;•&#13;
Vi&#13;
» • A;.&#13;
i&#13;
A-*te&#13;
0&gt; ••*}*&#13;
ski&#13;
«•&#13;
&amp; ' • * ' * M w 1...1:1. .&#13;
•• • w IS&#13;
s k B « B B S l l l s l&#13;
I^^f • -/WW :W&gt;~ T5T?J ^??&#13;
&lt;*&#13;
:.ft&#13;
HORACE&#13;
HA3ELTINE LORCHA&#13;
points the moral of the unscrupulous&#13;
capitalist and his heinous crimes.&#13;
When, therefore, long, bold-face type&#13;
attracted my eye with the announcement.&#13;
"Fall in Crystal Consolidated,"&#13;
i^, "%©,a^i^mkA vsainpie [I started to read the subjoined article,&#13;
Hfe^^ew«r.tta.a iirtaln ^ [ c o n f i d e n t enough that some director&#13;
5&#13;
r&#13;
%&#13;
8YNOP8r8.&#13;
^Robeft Cameron, capitalist, consults&#13;
Plulip Clyde, newspaper publisher, regarding&#13;
anonymous threatening letters he&#13;
has recelv - — - -&#13;
w&#13;
t d a y the'head. is mysteriously cut&#13;
rait of Cameron while the late&lt;&#13;
soon. Clyde has a theory&#13;
rtrait was mutilated while the&#13;
. unoccupied and the head later&#13;
, _ _,., by means of a string, unnoticed&#13;
by Coasfron. Evelyn Grayson, Cameron's&#13;
niece, with whom Clyde Is in love, finds&#13;
the head of Cameron's portrait nailed to&#13;
a tree, where it was had been used as a&#13;
target. Clyde pledges Evelyn to secrecy.&#13;
Clyde learns that a Chinese boy employed&#13;
by Philatus Murphy, an artist living&#13;
nearby, had borrowed a rifle from Camirons'&#13;
lodgekeepr. Clyde makes an, excuse&#13;
to call on Murphy and is repulsed.&#13;
He pretends to be investigating alleged&#13;
infractions of the game laws and speaks&#13;
of finding the bowl of an opium pipe under&#13;
the tr«?e where Cameron's portrait&#13;
was found. The Chinese boy is found&#13;
dead next morning. While visiting Cameron&#13;
in his dressing room.* Nell Owynse&#13;
mirror is mysteriously shattered. Cameron&#13;
"becomes seriously ill -as- a result of the&#13;
shock. The third letter appears mysteriously&#13;
on Cameron's sick bed. It makes&#13;
dir*ct threats against the life of Cameron*&#13;
Clyde tells Cameron the envelope was&#13;
empty. He tells Evelyn everything and&#13;
plans to take Cameron on a yacht trip.&#13;
The yacht picks up a fisherman found&#13;
drifting helplessly in a boat. He gives&#13;
the name of Johnson. Cameron disappears&#13;
from yacht while Clyde's back is&#13;
turned. A fruitless search is made for a&#13;
motor boat seen by the captain just before&#13;
Cameron disappeared. Johnson is allowed&#13;
to go after being closely questioned.&#13;
Evelyn takes the letters to an expert in&#13;
Chinese literature, who pronounces them&#13;
of Chinese origin. Clyde seeks assistance&#13;
from a Chinese fellow college student,&#13;
who recommends him to Yip Sing, most&#13;
prominent Chinaman in New York. The&#13;
latter promises to seek information of&#13;
Cameron among his countrymen. Among&#13;
Cameron's letters Is found one from one&#13;
Addison, who speaks of seeing Cameron&#13;
in Pekin. Cameron had frequently declared&#13;
to Clyde that he had never been- in&#13;
China. Clyde calls on Dr. Addison. He&#13;
learns that Addison and Cameron were at&#13;
one time intimate friends, but had a falling&#13;
out over Cameron's denial of having&#13;
been seen In Pekln by Addison. Clyde&#13;
goes to meet Yup Sing, sees Johnson, attempts&#13;
to follow him. falls Into a basement,&#13;
sprains his ankle and becomes unconscious.&#13;
Clyde is found by Miss Clement&#13;
a nilseolnary among the Chinese, He is&#13;
Kick several days as a result of inhaling&#13;
oharcosl fumes. Evelyn tells Clyde of a&#13;
peculiarly acting anesthetic which renders&#13;
•A person temporarily unconscious. Murphy&#13;
Is discovered to have mysterious relations&#13;
with the Chinese. Miss Clement&#13;
promises to get information about Camtron.&#13;
CHAPTER XVI.—Continued.&#13;
It was now my turn to be thoughtful.&#13;
Evelyn believed 1n the woman's&#13;
ability to aid. She had said as much&#13;
to me. And I myself possessed a certain&#13;
degree of faith in feminine Intuition.&#13;
Aside from that, though, Miss&#13;
Clement had jJemonalruteU that-she |4or tho treatment of nei voua diseases,&#13;
r«-&#13;
• « ! » " •&#13;
wielded a certain power in her bailiwick—&#13;
waa not my watch, at that moment,&#13;
in my pocket?—and her whbje&#13;
personality proclaimed r Inherent capacity&#13;
for accomplishment.&#13;
,,'"Very well, Miss Clement," I agreed,&#13;
"f win wait three day*. It Is now Saturday,&#13;
November 14« If by this time&#13;
Tuesday afternoon-we are not, at&#13;
least, on the track of something tangible,&#13;
I shall be on my way to Mulberry&#13;
street."&#13;
Sunday was with me a day of impatience.&#13;
I fretted now at confinement,&#13;
for my ankle was quite strong&#13;
again, and I was perfectly well inother&#13;
respects, too. But my physician&#13;
had set Monday for hay first day out,&#13;
and he refused to concede even a&#13;
twenty-four-hour change of plan. But&#13;
I chafed more even at the inactivity&#13;
to which I had agreed concerning&#13;
Cameron than at the confinement. All&#13;
at once, I had become Imhued. with a&#13;
necessity tor prompt and strenuous&#13;
measures. Some awful thing. I knew&#13;
not what seemed ominously imminent,&#13;
i*nd remorse tore at me tormentingly.&#13;
Early Monday, I telephoned Miss&#13;
Clement for tidings of her progress,&#13;
but she could only implore me to wait.&#13;
She bail nothing to report, but she&#13;
was encouraged. With my hands thus&#13;
tied diversion was my only refuge, and&#13;
an accumulation of office work Into&#13;
which X plunged served. In part at&#13;
least, this purpose.&#13;
EVelyn and Mrs. Lancaster had&#13;
come in from. Greenwich and openedtho&#13;
Cameron town house, a ' great'&#13;
white granite Renaissance affair, on&#13;
upper Fifth avenue, facing the pari}}&#13;
and because the girl had made me&#13;
promise, I lunched there; but I went&#13;
with less grace than ever before, uncertain&#13;
as I was of my self-control.&#13;
ever, was contagious. She spoke of&#13;
little else, and when 1 cams away M&#13;
was with strengthened hope of speedy&#13;
reiulteV&#13;
It Is my habit to glance over the&#13;
per* before leaving my office, and later,&#13;
akher on the train to Greenwich&#13;
or, when in town, at my club; to read&#13;
mow carefully the later issue* of tbe&#13;
Hows and Star. On this particular&#13;
•#'&#13;
r-t&gt;' % ' . • •&#13;
day, however, a succession of matters) oal^ aiooe to the. treat bowerae*1&#13;
of more Importance prtreiited my&#13;
looting at so nmo* as * neadrme, un-&#13;
Uirsestec" 'at eminef, in the dub fsei&#13;
^ tauTUrt, I saw on * wtodow ledge bev&#13;
TO'ttsJdrme one of the more senMttOnal&#13;
of thr afternoon daltteii and* appropriated&#13;
it, m&gt; lie* t#*bette* omnpaniap-&#13;
% was one of those journals whlca,&#13;
te catering to the tastes of tbe projsv&#13;
mrt^cowceiv* ft-wtee to1 miurmHe&#13;
tea* iwJs^snbss^^ # * Watt strsjet save&#13;
- • - - • V i * * * * *&#13;
3&#13;
•:&lt;•&#13;
or directors had been spitted for barbecue.&#13;
And before I had read five&#13;
lines I came upon-the name of Robert&#13;
Cameron.&#13;
If I was to believe this introductory&#13;
paragraph, my friend was tc Crystal&#13;
Consolidated what John D. Rockefeller&#13;
was to Standard Oil, yet in the&#13;
monthB of our intimacy he had made&#13;
no reference to this connection; and,&#13;
though I was thoroughly familiar with&#13;
the "great glass trust," as it was&#13;
called, and with the name of its multimillionaire&#13;
master, strangely enough I&#13;
had never connected the Cameron I&#13;
knew with this Cameron, the Captain&#13;
of Industry.&#13;
"I am," he had said, in all modesty,&#13;
"largely interested in a certain line of&#13;
industrial enterprises." That was all.&#13;
I suppose I should have known; and&#13;
yet, "no prophet is without honor,&#13;
save in his own country."&#13;
The newspaper article I now read,&#13;
however, left no room for doubt on, the&#13;
subject; and, incidentally in a single&#13;
sentence, revealed the secret of how&#13;
Cameron had succeeded in escaping&#13;
that general recognition which is usually&#13;
the penalty of greatness. "He&#13;
has never sat for a photograph."&#13;
But, while this part of the article&#13;
interested, that which followed startled&#13;
and perplexed me:&#13;
"Crystal Consolidated fell to 103&#13;
today," it went on, "because of a persistent&#13;
rumor that Robert Cameron&#13;
is seriously ill, in a New England sanitarium.&#13;
The greatest secrecy has been&#13;
maintained as to his malady and his&#13;
whereabouts by those who are in a&#13;
position to know. It has been ascertained,&#13;
however, that after spending a&#13;
quiet -ttmmer at his country place,&#13;
Cragholt, on Long Island sound, near&#13;
Greenwich, he started on October 21,&#13;
on his fast steam yacht Sibylla for a&#13;
cruise along the New England coast.&#13;
Ten days later the Sibylla returned,&#13;
but Mr. Caraeron^sMs not on board.&#13;
"It is known^tbat he has been in&#13;
ill health for months, and there are&#13;
those who now declare that he baa&#13;
sought the seclusion of an institution&#13;
near Boston, his condition being critical.&#13;
"Inquiry, today, at his Fifth avenue&#13;
home in this city, and at his Connecticut&#13;
country seat, was fruitless. Mr.&#13;
Cameron was£t neither place, and ihe&#13;
servanda expressed ignorance concerning&#13;
his present address. I&#13;
"At the offices of the Crystal Consolidated&#13;
Manufacturing company and&#13;
at those of the missing financier's&#13;
brokers. Hatch. A Hastings, evasion&#13;
was the keynote of the answers to all&#13;
questions.&#13;
"Whether Mr. Cameron is as ill as&#13;
is reported, or whether he Is quite&#13;
robust, the &gt; effect of the gossip on&#13;
Crystal Consolidated was disastrous.&#13;
A slump of fifteen pointB in two hours,&#13;
this afternoon, wiped put many weakly&#13;
margined accounts, and spread ruin&#13;
among a number of speculators who&#13;
fondly. Imagined this lav-defying&#13;
trust, of which Cameron Is the supporting&#13;
Atlas, as firmly intrenched as&#13;
is ihe government itself.&#13;
"Unless something definite is forthcoming&#13;
regarding Mr. Cameron's condition&#13;
before the market opens tomorrow,&#13;
a panic in Crystal Consolidated&#13;
is predicted. It closed today at 102¾&#13;
bid, 103.asked; the lowest figures recorded&#13;
this year."&#13;
It startled me, because it showed&#13;
that at least a part of the secret we&#13;
were guarding was a secret no longer;&#13;
and it perplexed me* because I could&#13;
not fancy through what channel these&#13;
somewhat distorted facte had filtered&#13;
Into.pnbltotty. I had no doubt that&#13;
the Vfly having been set rolling In&#13;
this fashion, would gain both in volume&#13;
«o4 momentum unless some ener*&#13;
to check i t And yet, what, under the&#13;
circumstances, could we do? Subterfuge,&#13;
I knew, would be useless, and&#13;
Evelyn's faith in Miss Clement, how-[the troth must prove an accelerant*&#13;
In hsste and with diminished appetite&#13;
1 rushed through my dinner, and&#13;
a moment later was speeding up toe&#13;
avenue as fast as a taxteap could ear*&#13;
ry me^with the Cameron mansionmy&#13;
earlier editions of all thojsy**lng pav|des*inatSoo and a consultation with&#13;
Evelyn. Osayson my abject.&#13;
It most not be imagmed that-in this&#13;
matter I expected any weighty sestetanoe&#13;
from a yoong woman of sucb-lfm-&#13;
Hod esperiSBoe; hot *fe*&gt; was prscticould&#13;
well Imagine low aires*?, reporters&#13;
«u*t fte vytag one with aoo*h&lt;&#13;
er to wVing from her adntlsslons concernmsj^&#13;
fr uncle. \&#13;
To m r infinite reMef I found that&#13;
she had returned the word, "Not rt&#13;
home/* to all such callem Ingotofea&#13;
$rom -otneV sources had'~be«t^*Wcr la&#13;
such a surprise to me. I had no notion&#13;
your uncle was at all active in any corporation.&#13;
I fancied him a director,&#13;
probably, in a score or more of companies,&#13;
but that he was the so-called&#13;
'GlasB King/ I never for a moment&#13;
suspected. Under the circumstances,&#13;
he must have a private secretary&#13;
somewhere, who might have been of&#13;
inestimable aid to us."&#13;
"He has a private secretary, it&#13;
seems," she replied, "though even I&#13;
never knew It until I read It in the&#13;
News this evening. I am sure he&#13;
never came to Cragholt. His name is&#13;
Simms—Howard Simms— and he was&#13;
interviewed at the Company's office.&#13;
Didn't you see It?"&#13;
I confessed that I had missed every&#13;
evening paper but one.&#13;
"It was he, I think," she went on,&#13;
"who, becoming alarmed at Uncle&#13;
Robert's long silence, mentioned It to&#13;
some one,, who In turn spread the damaging&#13;
reports."&#13;
"Then he is a very incompetent private&#13;
secretary," I commented, "if not,&#13;
Indeed, a dangerous one. I shall make&#13;
a point of seeing Mr. Simms as early&#13;
as possible tomorrow. Tonight I am&#13;
going to call on Tony Hatch—I have&#13;
a nodding acquaintance with him—and&#13;
assure him that when I last saw Robert&#13;
Cameron less than a month ago&#13;
he was in perfect health, and that&#13;
I am satisfied he is not in any sanitarium&#13;
or suffering from any mental or&#13;
physical disorder. If he approves of&#13;
tbe idea I shall give out a statement&#13;
to the newspapers, implying that your&#13;
uncle has gone on a -little journey of&#13;
which his family are entirely cognizant,&#13;
and that his return* may be expected&#13;
almost any day, I think that&#13;
ought to turn the tide in Wall street&#13;
tomorrow. Meanwhile^ my dear Evelyn,&#13;
continue to be 'not at home.'"&#13;
But neither at his home nor at any&#13;
of his clubs could I find Mr. Hatch,&#13;
though I searched for him diligently&#13;
until long after midnight. Evidently&#13;
he was intent on evading the sleuth&#13;
hounds of the press, and had successfully&#13;
taken to cover.&#13;
And then, Jpn my way back down the&#13;
avenue, to the Loyalton, that happened&#13;
which made all subterfuge, all&#13;
tact, all dissembling, unnecessary. For&#13;
on the sidewalk, opposite the cathedral,&#13;
I found the best of answers to&#13;
all the questions raised by tbe rumor&#13;
monjgers—the animate^ refutation of&#13;
every disturbing waif word.&#13;
CHAPTER X V I I .&#13;
Opposite ths Cathedral.&#13;
Fifth avenue at two o'clock in the&#13;
morning is fast asleep. There are localities&#13;
in New York which are more&#13;
widely awake at that hour than at&#13;
any other time of day, but the highway&#13;
of fashion is not one of them;&#13;
and in the neighborhood of Fiftiefti&#13;
street, its repose "is, as profound as at&#13;
any point of its long, undeviatingly&#13;
straight course.&#13;
For over an hour I had waited in&#13;
that sumptuous white marble club edifice&#13;
of the plutocrats which ostentatiously&#13;
punctuates the avenue at Sixtieth&#13;
street, and, tired of sitting, nervous&#13;
and disappointed, I had chosen to&#13;
walk down to my rooms, believing&#13;
that the exercise in the clear, frosty&#13;
air would serve to counteract, in a&#13;
measure at least, all three of these&#13;
vexations. .&#13;
To the limit pf sight there stretched&#13;
away a double, converging chain of&#13;
twin lights marking the curb line for&#13;
endless blocks, and illuminating the&#13;
nearer sidewalk and roadway, if not&#13;
to effulgence, certainly with a clearly&#13;
defining radiance. Now and then I&#13;
met • a o.ulc*&gt;tteppjmg pedestrian; usual&#13;
ly in evening dress with cigar alight;&#13;
and at more or less brief intervale&#13;
limousined motors and taxlcabs with&#13;
gleaming lamps sped by me at top&#13;
speed. Once a hansom pasted, the&#13;
sounding jarringly against the night&#13;
silence.&#13;
At Fifty-fourth street 1 cut diagonal-&#13;
^*i^ - ^ . . ly across the avenue to the west side,&#13;
? U i l 5 ? * f u r ? L w ! ! ! K 2 ^ 5 * H « * . eontrnulnr my^ way southward!&#13;
{absorbed in the problems confronting&#13;
me, had been for a little quite lost to&#13;
encodrpassing objects. Then, suddenly&#13;
tearing lest In my abstraction 1&#13;
should pass -the street on which mjM&#13;
rooms wens located, I aroused myself&#13;
to get an idea of my location.&#13;
Across the way the grim facade of&#13;
the Cathedral rising dark and »1100&#13;
as a fortress made an clear. But, on&#13;
my own side of the areata there had&#13;
been no such distinguishing mark. The&#13;
brown stone, dwellings, monotonously&#13;
{ugly. wttK their high stoops and bsluav&#13;
traded areas, were no more enlightening&#13;
than the stone ifestfa* of. the side*&#13;
walk or the asphhlfof the roadway.&#13;
Scores of blocks presented practically&#13;
the same aspect as this. But at with&#13;
crftical gene I measured one after another&#13;
of these combinations t was air&#13;
from intemperance. At closer view,&#13;
however, I tempered my judgment.&#13;
The possibility of illness or injury intervened,&#13;
and I paused Samaritan-like&#13;
to offer succor. The wayfarer was evidently&#13;
a man of middle age, if I might&#13;
judge from the contour of hie back,&#13;
which was towards me, and I saw at&#13;
once that he was struggling to keep&#13;
upon his feet by sheer muscular handhold&#13;
of the railing's iron uprights, for&#13;
his knees were bent threateningly and&#13;
his arms were extended and tense.&#13;
Until I was cloBe beside him he gave&#13;
no sign of realizing my presence. Indeed&#13;
I think it was not until I spoke&#13;
that he half turned his head towards&#13;
me, and, for the first time, I got sight&#13;
of his features.&#13;
Whether or not I uttered a word, or&#13;
made a sound, or stood for a long moment&#13;
silent, I cannot say. I know only&#13;
that I doubted my eyes and questioned&#13;
my reason; for, if these were not&#13;
playing me false, the profile thus revealed&#13;
to me waB the profile of Robert&#13;
Cameron.&#13;
To try to set down in detail just&#13;
what followed must be an idle effort,&#13;
with fancy providing the bulk of the&#13;
ingredients. Surprised, amazed, astounded&#13;
even, are all too feeble terms&#13;
to apply to my emotional condition.&#13;
Dazedlyy I was floundering in what&#13;
seemed a veritable sea of unreality.&#13;
When the commonplaces began to readjust&#13;
themselves, I was standing at&#13;
the curb, my arm wound supportingly&#13;
about Cameron's waist and, his arm&#13;
pressing heavy on my shoulder. Drawing&#13;
in to us was an empty hansom&#13;
cab, provided by Providence, and&#13;
hailed, 1 suppose, by me, though I&#13;
swear I have no recollection of it.&#13;
The cabman helped me to lift him&#13;
in, and at this the pity of his plight&#13;
smote me, tempering the Joy of having&#13;
found him, and quickening within me&#13;
a spirk of angry retaliation against&#13;
his enemies For the man now at my&#13;
side was far different from that man&#13;
who had sat with me on the after deck&#13;
of the Sibylla, only four weeks ago. He&#13;
was, Indeed, it seemed to me little&#13;
more .than the busk of the Cameron I&#13;
had known. In facial conformation the&#13;
chsAfe was not so marked, though his&#13;
expression was pathetically at variance&#13;
with anything I had ever before&#13;
seen him wear. The lines of his face&#13;
were drawn, as wi{h pain, and his eyes&#13;
were dull to vacancy. He Iplied,&#13;
REALLY NAMED FOR STATE&#13;
Miwionippi ~R4ver Stcamerg Originated&#13;
Cognomen That Has Now&#13;
Become Universal.&#13;
sieazily, in a crumpled heap in his corner,&#13;
like a spineless manikin; and&#13;
though I plied him eagerly with a flood&#13;
of questions, he might have been a deaf&#13;
mute for all the answers he accorded&#13;
me. Once I thought he shook his&#13;
head in negation, but I was later&#13;
forced to conclude that this was involuntary,&#13;
being caused by the roll of the&#13;
Cab as one of its wheels encountered a&#13;
depression in the roadway.&#13;
Yet In Bplte of his sorriness of pres-'&#13;
ence and demeanor—In spite too of the&#13;
tormenting mystery of his return,&#13;
which was scarcely less baffling than&#13;
the mystery of his departure^—it was&#13;
at least a relief to know that he was&#13;
alive and out of the power of those&#13;
that were bent upon his harm. Good&#13;
nursing, coupled with skilful medical&#13;
attention, had just worked wonders&#13;
for me, and I was confident that it&#13;
would do the same for him; and then&#13;
we should have facts and not theories&#13;
to aid us In our quest for the culprits,&#13;
and, eventually, in the administration&#13;
of justice jo, the guilty.&#13;
I had given the cabman, the number&#13;
of the Cameron house and admonished&#13;
him to make all possible speed; so,&#13;
the morning, greeted me with becoming&#13;
imperturbalillty. I recognized him&#13;
as one of the men from Cragholt, and&#13;
called him by name.&#13;
"Stephen," I said, with an effort to&#13;
disguise the excitement with which&#13;
my every pulse was throbbing, "your&#13;
master is outside in a cab. He is very&#13;
weak and will need assistance. Get&#13;
another man to aid me, and then&#13;
awaken Mr. Checkabeedy and Louis.&#13;
And make haste. No, I can't come in;&#13;
I'll wait outside." He turned away in&#13;
obedience io my directions, but I&#13;
checked him. "And, Stephen," I&#13;
charged, "no word to any one else, as&#13;
you value your position; especially no&#13;
word to Miss Grayson."&#13;
I marvelled at tho man's preserved&#13;
unemotion. His "Very good, sir," was&#13;
uttered with all the stolidity which&#13;
marks a response to the commonplace;&#13;
and yet I knew that he was fully conscious&#13;
of the eventfulness of this late&#13;
and unlooked-for home-coming. And&#13;
the footman who joined me a few minutes&#13;
later was not less well-trained.&#13;
Together, he and I lifted Cameron&#13;
from the, hansom and carried him up&#13;
the broad flight of granite steps, between&#13;
the massive guarding lions, and&#13;
placed him in a great chair in the&#13;
hall, before the wide, sculptured fireplace.&#13;
And though this would probably&#13;
prove the moBt exciting topic of the&#13;
servants' hall for weeka to come, he&#13;
gave not the smallest sign that he was&#13;
taking part in other than the usual.&#13;
Checkabeedy, the butler, however,&#13;
though no leaf? perfect a servitor, was&#13;
more privileged; and Louis, volatile&#13;
as the most characteristic: of his countrymen,&#13;
collapsed utterly, without effort,&#13;
apparently, at any restraint whatever.&#13;
The former's interest was evidenced&#13;
in a commlseratingly lugubrious&#13;
visage and a few blunt questions,&#13;
but the Frenchman wept and sobbed&#13;
in wordless sympathy. And I had it&#13;
not in my heart to blame either, for a&#13;
more pitiful picture than the one presented&#13;
by the restored Cameron as he&#13;
sat there in his own spacious ball,&#13;
gazing with lack-luster eyes at the&#13;
dead and dying embers on the hearth&#13;
before him, I hope never to see.&#13;
The butler, ruddy and rotund, and&#13;
looking for all the world like a wellfed&#13;
monk, for he wore a bathrobe of&#13;
somber hue and his crown was barer&#13;
than any shaven^ tonsure, stared" fi&#13;
moment in sad silence. Then,&#13;
to me, he asked:&#13;
"£?ut what has happened to Mr.&#13;
ero'n, sir?"&#13;
"I wish I cohld tell you, Checkabeedy,"&#13;
was my unguarded reply. "I&#13;
wish he could tell us himself."&#13;
"But he is so wasted, sir! And his&#13;
clothes. I never saw Mr, Cameron la&#13;
such clothes."&#13;
It was quite true. They were of&#13;
what Is galled, I believe, a pepper-andsalt&#13;
mixture, coarse of texture and illcut,&#13;
yet not much worn.&#13;
"He does not recognize us," Checkabeedy&#13;
went on, "and still he is conscious.&#13;
May I afik you, sir, where you&#13;
brought him from?" '&#13;
I chose .to Ignore the question, m&#13;
sudden realization of the neocfsity Of'J&#13;
caution.&#13;
"And he has been missing a month,&#13;
they say, sir. Is that true, Mr. Clyde?"&#13;
"Missing!" I repeated. "Who says&#13;
lie has been missing?"&#13;
"The servants all say so, sir."&#13;
"Then the servants must get rid of&#13;
the idea, at once," I said, sharply. "Mr.&#13;
Cameron has merely been out of town&#13;
for a while. He went away for his&#13;
On the Mississippi river in olden&#13;
days the passenger steamboats went&#13;
very ornate affairs, vying with each&#13;
other in garish glory. One owner hit&#13;
on the idea -of naming his steamboat's&#13;
cabiuu instead of numbering&#13;
them. So he named them in honor of&#13;
the states of the union, each havfng&#13;
above the door the gfit title of some&#13;
stute, the big central cabin being called&#13;
tho "Texas," after the largest&#13;
.state. Other boat owners took up the&#13;
idea, and thus the word cabin was&#13;
gradually alternated by "state" room.&#13;
For years the best cabin was still&#13;
known aB the Texas. Then that sobriquet&#13;
died with the ebbing glory of&#13;
the old river steamers. But tb» word&#13;
"Ktateroom" became incorporated into&#13;
our language, and in time even broke&#13;
into the dictionary, as doea many another&#13;
catch phrase. Not one person&#13;
in a thousand who occupies a stateroom&#13;
knows the term once meant "a&#13;
room named for a state."&#13;
Brightening Flower Pots.&#13;
Flower pots frequently fade into a&#13;
dingy color from their original bright&#13;
and cheerful brick red. They may bo&#13;
easily brightened again by putting ordinary&#13;
red ochre in water until it is&#13;
about as thick as paint, then painting&#13;
the flower i pot, which absorbs the&#13;
"olor and holds it.&#13;
BACKACHE IS&#13;
DISCOURAGING B a c k a c h e&#13;
makes life a&#13;
burden. Headaches,&#13;
d i z z y&#13;
spells and distressing&#13;
u r i -&#13;
nary disorders&#13;
are a oonstant&#13;
trial. T a k e&#13;
warning! Suspect&#13;
k i d n e y&#13;
trouble. Look&#13;
a b o u t f o r a&#13;
g o o d k i d n e y&#13;
remedy.&#13;
Learn from&#13;
one whoi has&#13;
f o u n d relief&#13;
from the same suffering.&#13;
Get Doan's Kidney Pills—the&#13;
same that Mr. Harris had.&#13;
A n Ohio Cava*&#13;
Fr*d W. TUrrU, Jtffenon, Ohio, my*: "POP Un&#13;
yean I luffered from kldn»y trouiilo. I h«l conaunt&#13;
b*ck*rh0, •bowed ojtnpt'iniH of dm|*y.&#13;
arid txw?amo no IMUI I waft laid up In b*d. After&#13;
doctors )md fallal t hewin taking Doan'i Kidney&#13;
Fill* Tbojr cured $j« coropl«t«lr."&#13;
Cat Do*a'» at Any Store, BOo • Box D O A N ' S VAW*&#13;
POSTm-MLBURN CO* BUFFALO, N. Y.&#13;
'finrry Picture&#13;
Tells A Story"&#13;
SwpHen Varicose Veins,&#13;
Painful, Knotted, Tortuous,&#13;
Ulcerated, Ruptured,&#13;
Bad Legs, Milk&#13;
Jeg, Thrombosis, EteplMntiasis.&#13;
It takes out the&#13;
Inflammation, soreness and diswith&#13;
the long lash of the whip snap&#13;
ping sharply at brief Interval! and the | health, and now he has returned, benejaded&#13;
horse, thus urged, bounding at a&#13;
[clumsy, lumbering gallop, we rolled&#13;
noisily northward. Having given over&#13;
the effort to obtain from my fellow&#13;
passenger even a geatured answer to&#13;
my most pertinent Inquiries, I. turned&#13;
. my mind to what lay before us, The&#13;
hoof-beatt of the hard-driven hone re- ] Cameron establishment would doubtless&#13;
be faat locked in slumber as well&#13;
as otherwise, but I made small question&#13;
of my ability to rouse some of the&#13;
servants. My hope, however, was not&#13;
to awaken Evelyn. It conld mean only&#13;
a night's rest lost for her, for she&#13;
conld gain nothing by seeing her unci*)&#13;
at this hour, considering his condition.&#13;
I was still busy planning when a&#13;
mighty hand on the linos brought our&#13;
horse to his haunches, and ourselves&#13;
nearly out tfcrodgh the suddenly parted&#13;
apron; and the Cameron residence&#13;
loomed massive and dark on our right&#13;
As 1 stepped to the sidewalk the&#13;
driver descended, too," out 1 motioned&#13;
him back. ,&#13;
"Never mind, thank you," I said.&#13;
'Ill get some one *rotn Inside to help&#13;
carry him.** And in a moment my&#13;
thumb was on the .4 posh-button sad&#13;
faintly there came bac* to me through&#13;
heavy double doors thelar-off echo of&#13;
the bel|, Jdrrteg against tbe silence of&#13;
the great house. ^&#13;
similar fash&#13;
©any bad&#13;
been almost&#13;
fleers ef tfe&#13;
or feed tttat&#13;
ot»o* arrested by -stght of a tatf,' feU and bolts were draws surprised&#13;
be»t nguro etatefetatf tho Mgk fro* rt!F me. And yet I suppose, it was merotng*&#13;
wjaieh^gvaeded tho evenoo fros*- ly an eridooco.of the perfect man-&#13;
^ 0 ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ ^ ^ « f l « « w - U » j ^ « W B t « M B establishment wherein&#13;
only rosily mdfr1d*el house in t*e- w r y mttng*ncy Is provided agatnet.&#13;
fifed. Do you understand, Checkabeedy?&#13;
He has returned, benefited.&#13;
And- now, you and Louis will get him&#13;
to his room, while 1 telephone for Dr.&#13;
Mastey."&#13;
Checkabeedy bowed, assenting, and&#13;
Louis, still whimpering, wiped his&#13;
eyes.&#13;
It was nearly four o'clock when the&#13;
physician left his patient and joined&#13;
me in the library downstairs. His face&#13;
was very grave.&#13;
"1 have examined Mr. Cameron thoroughly,"&#13;
be said, "and I can assure&#13;
you that he Is not seriously Injured/'&#13;
The phrase opened up a new line of&#13;
thought to me.&#13;
"Seriously-Injuredr I repeated. "I&#13;
don't understand, Doctor; Do yon&#13;
mean that—"&#13;
"I mean," he interrupted, "that the.&#13;
blow on the back of the head caused&#13;
no fracture."&#13;
"Then he was struck V&#13;
"Undoubtedly. Probably with *&#13;
sandbag. Hence his present dased condition.&#13;
Had the blow been delivered&#13;
with more force, it might have resulted&#13;
In complete lost of memory. You&#13;
have heard, of course', of instaacet&#13;
where men have forgotten even their&#13;
own names?"&#13;
H 4 ^ r , g * l M * W - . .&#13;
!t» lBsestes*.••_ p . ify f*st rodgfc concent wig that&#13;
"U* it aU &lt;ha*«oa*ttnfl«&#13;
!&#13;
I nodded.&#13;
Th* promptness with which c h a i n s ^ "Mr, Cameron will regain his mem***!&#13;
ory. it's merely a temporary matte* I&#13;
have telephoned for a man nnree for&#13;
hlto—one who understands such mif.&#13;
He will be hereln^wenty minutes. At&#13;
present Mr. Camerougis sleeping. I&#13;
&gt; '&#13;
A footman; i s irroproeehably liveried ittto bopWthAt s h s g 1 ! _&#13;
•adjgroottdd M tfcmgUbe time were mind will bo comparatively^&#13;
mm*, iasutA of • * * two o'cloek laj m m co*nNuip.&gt;&#13;
__ tions, reports on recent cases&#13;
and Book o G free on request&#13;
an«1P.D.F.l310TerapliSt1SprIigfleW)l(b«,&#13;
The Army of&#13;
Constipation&#13;
1» Growing Smaller Every Day.&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE ~&#13;
LIVER PILLS are&#13;
responsible—- they&#13;
not only give relief A — they permanently&#13;
cure Csa-i&#13;
•dpafea. Mil:&#13;
lions u s e .&#13;
them io£&#13;
Isisiftlai] Ska Reassess^' Ststo Jsm*&#13;
SMAIArai*SMAII,DOe*«AUHuX*.&#13;
Genuine mat bear Signature&#13;
DR. J. D. KELLOOa't&#13;
'Rsvftody to* ttis&gt; BMBfi)Sjf&#13;
Aothma M H I Hsry Wiew«r. As* your&#13;
d r u « * l « t lot H. BMetfc* M S I SAwftff&#13;
moral&#13;
TM sttau* Ws*&gt; r*. da*&#13;
s ¥ s T t a r E E T&#13;
_ TWs Tnde.lt*i* » * ,&#13;
fh*Lat«1irlMabiiyias&#13;
WOT-EASE&#13;
iJ?«"&#13;
tteepst iFcf cPeotw dSeorM fa r« *T«a7s&lt;- 1« FaBJt Add&#13;
mm* »—w«»»»i«&#13;
tworrutio akan oVwlo trhld«/^ eAaaaa * t»a'ilk mt w*iflfl- .;&#13;
T&#13;
A&#13;
i&#13;
•v.f-'tyjm&#13;
• * • • * • •&#13;
'SSSwHC&#13;
' • ) - '&#13;
Lt'JLi. • K &gt; • rtf •&#13;
d'&amp;.f •&#13;
•&lt;w. ••:••• i'M&#13;
* t•••" .&#13;
» ; • ' • &gt; &gt; ; • :&#13;
. I ' U&#13;
r ,**&#13;
• « PEOPLE&#13;
a!'&#13;
i?v.. -&#13;
* » . i&#13;
/ * « #&#13;
r'#»&#13;
^11¾¾&#13;
H. D. Grieve is seriously HI.&#13;
Leo Monks attended the dunce&#13;
in Dexter Friday evening.&#13;
Panl Miller and'Albert Dinkel&#13;
were Dexter visitors Friday.&#13;
Mies Feme Hendee is visiting&#13;
relatives in booth Lyons.&#13;
Richard Jeffreys attended the&#13;
dance in Dexter last Friday evening.&#13;
Miss Genevieve Alley of Dexter&#13;
was iu town the first of the&#13;
week.-&#13;
Mrs. Fields of Hamburg spent&#13;
Monday at the home of Will Dunning.&#13;
Ed Famum, and Boss Bead&#13;
were in Detroit the latter part of&#13;
list week.&#13;
Patrick Kennedy visited his&#13;
daughter, Mrs. Robert Fox of De&#13;
troit last week.&#13;
Mrs. M. Wilkinson of Vernon&#13;
spent a few days with ber daughter,&#13;
Mrs. II. Carr the past week.&#13;
" Thomas Van Ai'sdale of Marion,&#13;
Oceola county is visiting at the&#13;
home of Alden Carpenter.&#13;
Norbert Lavey and Thomas&#13;
Moran attended the dance in&#13;
Stockbridge Friday.&#13;
Miss Ella Murphy of Spokane,&#13;
Washington is visiting at the home&#13;
af her mother, Mrs. Wm. Murphy.&#13;
The North Hamburg Ladies&#13;
Mite 8ociety will meet with Mr.&#13;
and Mrs, George Van Horn, Tburs&#13;
day February 13, for dinner.&#13;
Next Easter falls on March 23.&#13;
Not since 1817 did it arrive sooner&#13;
i n the year. In that year it,&#13;
came on March 22..; Not art;' z*&#13;
&gt; r the year 2000 will it dome so&#13;
early. •&#13;
Mrs. Miobael Lavey, James,&#13;
Michael and Williant Boofae and&#13;
Mrs. William Ledwidge visited at&#13;
the home of If. Boohs , of F o v -&#13;
lerviMe the latter part of last week.&#13;
lit. A. 0 . Boeho of Kearsage was&#13;
aiao there.&#13;
Tbe # 1 » ©' Armstroog 4^ Barrx*&#13;
o l ^ f c w e M have dissolved&#13;
"jttjritaeiujswilv I*V*h ^Be*&#13;
ing ore* the interest of Mr.&#13;
strong,wiH cootino© the&#13;
He Coiiin Bon Creeft^ 1 . „ * ? ? " « • • »&#13;
I M i ~ , , m• t t e c. ount.r-*y , w*Ui Af .nu£n"s b*re*ga*a •wh•o *new* s s*as2e*Tn£ae*er2T&#13;
Gcid made » m ^ b e a u t i f a l ti**\v» tc*u&gt;n w* im all fetaagatoeg&#13;
Mrs.L. H Newma* attended the&#13;
Abbott-Bla^r wedding u | ths home or&#13;
I. J. Abbotf ot Uoiing'ldat Wednes&#13;
(*ay. •''&#13;
Claude White and wife returned laat&#13;
week from a yUit with relatives at&#13;
Bancroft.&#13;
Mies A Pocking resumed ber work&#13;
at tbe Pinekney iobo?ls Monday.&#13;
L. H, Nswrnao ana wife were Few*&#13;
lervills visitors tbe first of tbe week.&#13;
H. Gao*t and wits entertained at&#13;
dinner last Thursday be., following:&#13;
Mr. and Mrs, Jobs Gardner; Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Chris Brosren and Mr. and Mrs&#13;
Lavrrn Deinerett and daughter Lucile&#13;
Qaite a number frcm bars attended&#13;
tbe box social held at the borne of Ed&#13;
Sprout of Anderson for tbe benefit of&#13;
tbe Labia anl Sprout schools. All re&#13;
port t fins time.&#13;
Clarence 8mttb of West tiarion is&#13;
viaitiDfil bis seat, Mrs, Will Blaod.&#13;
Tbos. n*eh*a and wife of Pinckney&#13;
vUitedef the borne of Will Sbeben&#13;
last Taesdsy.&#13;
Mia* Sally Holland, as oW resident&#13;
ot Sostb Marion, passed away last Friday&#13;
after a short illness. Her funeral&#13;
was held at tbe Hollano borne Sunday&#13;
A number of theyoneir people from&#13;
bere attended tbe pafty at Btockbridfte&#13;
last Friday atgbt&#13;
n&#13;
..t&#13;
Qn&#13;
tamed on th&#13;
tvricneat the Edison C&#13;
iilasa up the Huron river&#13;
^^ Ann, Arbor laat week adding&#13;
#00 horee power to the current&#13;
arsifcible for that city. Tbe large&#13;
Utorttnes will, be started in about&#13;
^Mfjrswl^.isssl^wltt increase the&#13;
total output at power available&#13;
£ to about 1 ^ * ^ 1 6 * 0 0 n o r i e P°w -&#13;
s«^ This oompatty will erect a&#13;
ttaa u w t b of Beater on the Huron&#13;
State G a s m a n Shields reported&#13;
ibat a speoial train for tbe inau&#13;
gentian ot Prewkieot Wilson&#13;
ooold be sheared if 75 fares aie&#13;
teed for the round trip&#13;
Detroit to be * H berths *x&#13;
While there were no postbre.&#13;
raopM tba*tt Michigan DimiriK^&#13;
fl^ the committee in-,&#13;
y agreetI that snob a num.&#13;
if Botsfiore would ettend and&#13;
(»isirf|B«i fcmields to go&#13;
sjbead and attaage tor the train.&#13;
^ 1%e farmer who owns a farm is&#13;
1b* partionlar uerson who is fixed&#13;
Btsnce itwy fta^ttd factorieeelose,&#13;
sjoriwsfti strata und miaet Onepaodp&#13;
nMiehaate sail aaoV towns&#13;
bttrn, ttmee may bt&gt; panicky, and&#13;
c*opa may haebort--bat toe- «Mw&#13;
auyg who ©was his e a r n wiH gwt&#13;
..^atag. Ha wffl ttta in oouifect&#13;
'apjt^let, with pienty to sa# aad&#13;
" " and wear. He: is -tbe - ttost&#13;
dent "MsrtL Tet&#13;
lots of them wJ»o do&#13;
the'eitj which man made; that&#13;
life out-of-doors and in touch&#13;
with the earth is the the natural&#13;
life of man. I believe that work&#13;
it* work wherever **e find it, but&#13;
that work with nature is more inspiring&#13;
than work with the most&#13;
intricate machinery. X believe&#13;
that the dignity of labor depends&#13;
uct on what you 'do br*t on how&#13;
wel) yon do it; that opportunity&#13;
comes to tbe boy on the farm as&#13;
often as to the boy in the city;&#13;
that life is larger, happier and&#13;
freer on the farm that in town;&#13;
that my success depends not upon&#13;
my location but upon my self—&#13;
not upon my dreams, but upon&#13;
wbat I actually do, not lock but&#13;
upon pluck, I beliefs in working&#13;
wbeo I work and in playing&#13;
when I play and in giving and&#13;
demanding a square deal in life.&#13;
Ciu'l Cbirek Nitet&#13;
Servioes in the Congregational&#13;
church February 9 as follows:&#13;
Morning service at 10 a, m., subject,&#13;
"Divine Insight." Evening&#13;
service at 7 p. m, subject/'The&#13;
Puroose of Christ's Mission on&#13;
Earth."&#13;
i • m . i —&#13;
AJTOllaoi:&#13;
Max Ledwidire was tbe guest of Tim&#13;
Have* ot Jacksoe tee first otjthe week.&#13;
Doane Lavey of Pinckney visited&#13;
bete Tbuiadsy.&#13;
Will Brotrsa spent Friday and 8at&gt;&#13;
orday with friends in Jackson,&#13;
The school social held at tbe bomc&#13;
of Ed Sprout la&lt;r Wednesday evening&#13;
was well attended and was a success&#13;
bott socially and financially.&#13;
* Mrs. ft M. Greioer and daughter&#13;
Mary were Howell visitors Saturday.&#13;
Liam Ledwidtfe wbo has been Buffering&#13;
trcm an attack of articular&#13;
rbannaati-m is slowly recovering.&#13;
Myra Marshall end Addie Bott werr&#13;
guests ot Mrs. Artdtxfiswe a portion&#13;
of la«t week.&#13;
Jfri. Margaret Black" of Pisekney&#13;
n^ited at tbe bom*, of R. M. Ledwidge&#13;
Urs. E'soer Reads of Hsmborii&#13;
spent tbe last nt tbe weei with relativei&#13;
bere.&#13;
Tbemjant_son Mr. and Mrs. John&#13;
lis is serioualy ill. ~~&#13;
BoetH* aad Mrs. Wm. Led&#13;
among those entertained&#13;
e£, Masssay Jtsshs ^ei&#13;
ille is*t Friday in honor of Or&#13;
A ILche ot Kearaajire.&#13;
Will Brogaa has rented tbe &lt;/nds»&#13;
Grant tarm near Island Lake and wilt&#13;
move there in ^be spring.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Bradley.of Walled Lake&#13;
spent Muuday with relatives bere.&#13;
Q**ay &gt;1c0l«ar an &gt; I'Lhael Roche&#13;
viiilad Jhax»Haokable of Gregory tins&#13;
d Raymond Brogaa spent&#13;
itb their brother, Will, and&#13;
' -9 •&#13;
their sitaetinii&#13;
W Hr. Kltt»s Hew Discovery&#13;
Voorb** irriured tbroat and aud long*,&#13;
^topscbronio and backlog cougb, re*&#13;
i*-v»*M iKKiihg tbroat, ia&gt;tes nice.&#13;
eke eo other: once us*0 always used,&#13;
luj it at W.£. Browne.&#13;
COIDGU Froceediiiss&#13;
Segnler PfU.6.1913&#13;
Cooncil convened and wee eatled at&#13;
order b? Pres- Reason&#13;
Trnstess Preseut—Flint oft, Teeple.&#13;
Oanb4r, Kocb*&gt;,Monka.&#13;
.VI mo tea of last meeting were lean&#13;
and approved.&#13;
TbV tallowing huls ware read and&#13;
upon motion wen ordered paid ana&#13;
frdera wsiv drawn.&#13;
Pieeirssy BlsctrieUo, - 149 60&#13;
Mdtioa made by Tesph and Dunns r&#13;
that the name in tbe street lighting&#13;
contract be obaoged from Jaeksoa&#13;
Lighting Co to Oliatoa llsofcric Oo.&#13;
The- following apfoitttmeatu were&#13;
nude by Pres. Reason aad approved&#13;
byrhe cooacih&#13;
; Far Board ot Rsan&gt;trstieai M. J.&#13;
Rsssoat 8, G. Teeple aad A. 0 . Pda*&#13;
tell.&#13;
For Board Of llestiea, M. J, Beaeos&#13;
W. A.OHntoa, A. M. Rasas, W. Doabar&lt;&#13;
-:.&#13;
Pot Beard Oosumssion*, John Monks&#13;
1^11. Boob*. A. d. Pliaroft.&#13;
, Far Gate ftisuers, d, G. Teeple and&#13;
.i^ki(ka*'4a^a*i« \&#13;
rjata saotJea aeuatU sdjoaraed.&#13;
W. A. Ofiatoa, Tillage Oktk&#13;
a&#13;
Xataers Can Safely l a y&#13;
Dr. King'a New Discovery and give&#13;
it to tbe little ones wbeo ailing aao&#13;
Dufferiog witb colds, eoagbs, tnroat or&#13;
long troubles, tastes ai**,nsraile«8,&#13;
once nsed always used. . Mrs. Brace&#13;
Crawford of Niagara, Mo., writes,&#13;
*Dr. King's N**w Diseovsty ebsnged&#13;
mr bov from a pale weak, jick boy to&#13;
the picture ot beaftb. \*JWtyi helps&#13;
Boy it at W. E.Brown's.&#13;
m i i y -y •&#13;
w*/ *ssla*&lt;s\ e••aa•B•aWBa*^aur•&#13;
The little infant of'sfr" and Mrs.&#13;
Basler of Detroit waTiroogbt bere&#13;
Wednesday for funeral ssrvieet and&#13;
bnnal. ^ ^ ^ ^ :&#13;
Mrs. W. B. Miller and.'^otber and&#13;
\trs. Jeroiba 18bam'' of Tlaiofleld&#13;
spent Tuesday at tbe home of Mr*.&#13;
Geo. Bland. '&#13;
There wars, large atiendanoe at the&#13;
Parmers Olnb Thursday. Good speaking&#13;
aod a general good iiore was rV&#13;
ported by all. -r '&#13;
Mrs. Phil Smith is fnits s^i,n st&#13;
tbis writing..&#13;
— Miss Mildred Hath Vr speed in* s | ^&#13;
few weeks at tbe bceae of Mrs. Ray&#13;
Jewell &gt;&#13;
Mrs. Martha Woof, sntgatft ofiJoba&#13;
Wylie,died at his borne'Wednesday&#13;
Her remain* were sent to bar some in&#13;
Obiesgo. «&#13;
Rev. ikbeimnger preached at Plain"&#13;
field, Parkers Corners and W. Marion&#13;
dnnda.y ID th)e iniereat of- iur«iga mi^-&#13;
sioni.&#13;
Hsrprlss Year Friends.&#13;
-| For four week* re* n'arly DM Dr&#13;
King's New Life Pilis Tbey stima'ate&#13;
tbe liver, itnprov dtuettioa, rem&lt;&gt;v*-&#13;
olood imparities, pimples and erup&lt;&#13;
tiona disappear front yonr face and&#13;
nody and you |eel netter Begin&#13;
onte,&#13;
h&#13;
• * ; « ! •&#13;
HVJ.&#13;
*\0 • * ; •&#13;
of Dexter was in&#13;
osV baainesa. ''&#13;
it* l/»r w- • , " ., ( , • ,&#13;
f feel better Begin at&#13;
). Buy at Mrown's Drug Store,&#13;
"~^"***essjaai^^Bja#*gsjg^^B.&#13;
NORTH P.AMBURS.&#13;
Mrs. Cl«ra Benbso and nephew&#13;
01areac« Bhaabtand have been ranting&#13;
her parents.&#13;
W fabler Martin i» visiting relatives&#13;
in New York »tate,&#13;
MiMGrvia Martin of Ann Arbor&#13;
vie ted Miss Hasel 8«rttzer Tbnrsda«&#13;
and Friday.&#13;
Fran* A^eltinn o&lt; Doadilla baa beep&#13;
visiting el A. B. VaoHom^.&#13;
Jobn VanHom and wife, Peter Cob&#13;
way and wit« and Crarlss Swiiser&#13;
And a|le were entertained at tbe home&#13;
•&gt;t rk'•&amp; IKiee Thursday;&#13;
hVilph Bepnstt and wife have beta&#13;
visiting at tbe home ot C. 1 . Arms ot&#13;
Scuta Lyon. &gt;,&#13;
e&gt;i e m ,&#13;
SOOTH I O S C O .&#13;
, L T Lxmt'omV an4 tasSiiy enter&#13;
tsiasd at thei« bosnsp^aadayt Mr. and&#13;
Urs. Jee Rtbertk Gladys, J. D. aad&#13;
UwcilGotte. h &gt;..'•' ^&#13;
, The! P PC met witb Mr. and Mr&gt;.&#13;
liater Vaa Bsarea. aalarday eveaiag.&#13;
David ttossrtssad wflb eneatSae*&#13;
day at the home ot John Roberta,&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Green, aad daughter Oartreds&#13;
of Pinckney visited liia BWr&#13;
tbe last of the* wpe. *&#13;
, Urs. Bertsnibsftsaad eattdrsa Tis»&#13;
ItstatT.Wskwiit^^teaaar.&#13;
AsMrrmberirosi atre sttaadsd tee&#13;
lamsfs TastMati-at Grsgory Thurr&#13;
By MURPHY 6e JACKSt3N S*&#13;
Who Will Close Out the Entire Stock of&#13;
Goods, Boots/Shoes and Furnishings&#13;
REGARDLESS OF&#13;
K : — ' • — r - — • •&#13;
This Stock Must Be Sold or Moved By March 1st 13&#13;
m—&#13;
This Sale will open at 9 a. m. and&#13;
X . sold Must Be For Cash&#13;
Our Grocery Specials For Saturday In&#13;
pounds of Sugar for -&#13;
4 packages Corn Flakes for&#13;
^¾ Jt% &lt;^h^^^»^.JL &lt;^n^^^am^aafvjM^BsnaafttesfSF*,SsV^&#13;
^ij a\saHS)4K&gt;'t'^w&gt;'- •jp^e'a^r^^^j^k ^^*"^^y»jwap**^a^sjF a ~ ^^ •&#13;
Mrs. A. Donaldaoa au*4 Oeorgia&#13;
visited at the borne of Ed Bpeare&#13;
from Saturday no til Monday.&#13;
Weil the ground bo£ didn't used&#13;
his specks to see hia, owa shadow&#13;
so we are evidently tn&gt;'-lur^rtr.&#13;
The townehtp tax roll is now&#13;
iu my possession and I am now&#13;
redly to receive taxes doriug&#13;
banking hours.&#13;
Louis C. Monks, Twp. Tr«;as.&#13;
Arte Ellsworth of JStockbridge&#13;
will still continue to come here&#13;
**very Wednesday evening with a&#13;
first class motion picture show.&#13;
Good musis is promised.&#13;
Several people have been here&#13;
recently looking at the hotel »fth&#13;
a view to renting it. A Mrs.&#13;
Stadman of ftjntiac was here look,&#13;
iug it «iv**r Tuewiey. bo it will&#13;
probably soou be reopened.&#13;
, '• f.&#13;
•y-\&#13;
m&#13;
m*&#13;
Having: sold my feafm T will sell at public «|ctiont on .tbiti&#13;
premises, 1-2 mile west and 3-4 mile north of Anderson, oar:&#13;
February 12th,&#13;
at 10.-00 sharp, the following described property to^wk:&#13;
Harses&#13;
^' '%''&#13;
^ ^ ^&#13;
^&#13;
•A*&#13;
Matched teem, bUck Oelditige» S-yearolda&#13;
welgbtaWO .&#13;
Bonn mare, w»if ht 1300&#13;
Pair of Colts, 2 and 8 year old&#13;
Cattle&#13;
i%&#13;
PINOKNEf&#13;
Correeted every Wednesday momiaf-&#13;
WUEAT-I1.H&#13;
ttYs&gt;Me&#13;
OAT8-W&#13;
&gt; K A W 8 - m s&#13;
ONiON8~fI 00&#13;
POTATOKM-^Oc&#13;
BT/ITKR-iUs.&#13;
JtWAS-iie.&#13;
l'HiGKtK»-Ufe.v laa bass lie&#13;
Bolstein sow, new oalteb, 8 years&#13;
Hoteteiaeow, D#wn»ileb*iyrsrs t&#13;
HolKteia euwf new mJteb,* yearn&#13;
Uektem new, new aalleb, fcyeaif&#13;
HFolefela cow, new. milch, 2 yesit _&#13;
»heitera,countsyten old &gt;&#13;
Calffllwrntasold .&#13;
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y - ; * . j ) •,;•&amp;*</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch February 06, 1913</text>
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                <text>February 06, 1913 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan, Thursday, March 27, 1913 N * 13&#13;
I NEW PRICES&#13;
»*-&#13;
• ^ • l::&#13;
- 1 *'•&#13;
^V ?&#13;
That are Being Charged&#13;
By the Pinckney Black-&#13;
Smiths&#13;
AMENDMENT&#13;
Owinfir to the advance in price&#13;
6f material the blacksmiths ail&#13;
over the state have been obliged&#13;
to raise their prices. The Pinckney&#13;
blacksmiths have accordingly&#13;
fallen into line and the follow,&#13;
ing is a list of their prices:&#13;
Setting Shoes.. 20c&#13;
ew Shoes 35c&#13;
_„.-40c&#13;
_ 50c&#13;
Pertaining to Woman&#13;
Suffrage To Be Voted&#13;
Upon April 7&#13;
o. Sixes and Sevens.&#13;
nd Turned Shoes&#13;
'our New Shoes .$1.40&#13;
•KPT;&#13;
Neverslip Shoes, per pair ..$5.00&#13;
No. Sixes and Sevens .$6.00&#13;
Tire Setting $2.00&#13;
Truck Tires *2.60&#13;
7-8 Baggy Tires, New... _...„$4.00&#13;
Truck Tues, New $7.00&#13;
A proposed amendment to section&#13;
I, Article III of the Constitution&#13;
will be submitted to the&#13;
electors at the election to be held&#13;
Monday, April 7, 1913.&#13;
The effect of the proposed&#13;
amendment to Section I Article&#13;
III, is to extend the right to vote&#13;
to every woman, a citizen of the&#13;
United States and of the State of&#13;
Michigan, above the age of twenty&#13;
one years.&#13;
ADVICE AG00D MEETING&#13;
Concerning the Desti&#13;
nation of the Dollar&#13;
GOOD&#13;
ATTENDANCE&#13;
At the Meeting of the&#13;
Livingston County Hoistein&#13;
Breeders&#13;
» ^ .&#13;
A&#13;
TO LOSE&#13;
FIRST PLACE&#13;
\&#13;
Never send a dollar away from&#13;
home when the article the dollar&#13;
will purchase can be bought at&#13;
home. Money is our financial&#13;
blood. Its circulation keeps "the&#13;
business body alive. Bleed that&#13;
body by bending mouey away and&#13;
business will soon put on a look&#13;
of lethargy. Always trade at home.&#13;
Watch the bargains offered by&#13;
enterprising advertisers in this&#13;
paper and you will learn -he best&#13;
places to earn tbose home dollars.&#13;
Republican Party Will&#13;
Yield First Place to the&#13;
, National Progressive&#13;
iv*.'&#13;
•'s».&#13;
ITJiwjd representation of the&#13;
county Holetein breeders&#13;
met at tbe court house at How*&#13;
ell Saturday and organized a&#13;
county association with ^he^following&#13;
officers: Mark Curdy,&#13;
Ooeola, president; Horace W.&#13;
Norton Jr., Mariou, secretary;&#13;
Silas H. Munsel), Howell township,&#13;
vice president; Harry Reed,&#13;
1 Marion, treasurer. Board of Directors,&#13;
A Pfau, Iosco, Robin Carr,&#13;
Handy; W. B. Jones, Deerfield;&#13;
Fred Pleas, Genoa, and Freeman&#13;
J. Fishbeck, Howell.&#13;
tt&gt;&#13;
I Florence Sell man of Ann Arbor&#13;
is the guest of her uncle, J. C.&#13;
Dunn.&#13;
Daniel Freiermuth and wife o?&#13;
Fttchburg were guests at the borne&#13;
of El A. Fick last Thursday.&#13;
Send to Dancer's, Stock bridge,&#13;
for .samples of Ratines, Ratinettes&#13;
and corded thin goods. New&#13;
weaves, new colors. adv.&#13;
At the coming spring election&#13;
the Republican party will lose the&#13;
first place on the ticket, which it&#13;
has held without a break since&#13;
1856. The National Progressive&#13;
party polled the greatest number&#13;
of votes in the state for presidential&#13;
electors, at the recent election&#13;
and will take the first place, Republicans&#13;
taking the second column.&#13;
NEW RULING&#13;
Physicians May Write&#13;
Directions on Medicine&#13;
Sent By Parcels Post&#13;
ARE YOU&#13;
INSURED&#13;
Be Warned By the Recent&#13;
Cyclyne and Protect&#13;
Yourself&#13;
Don't fail to insaxe your property&#13;
with a responsible insurance&#13;
company.&#13;
Michigan State Cyclone Oo.&#13;
Represented by MONKS BIWTS.&#13;
Notice has been given of a new&#13;
ruling whereby a physician may&#13;
write directions for taking medicine&#13;
on a bottle or package containing&#13;
the same and send u by&#13;
parcel post without the classification&#13;
of the package being affected.&#13;
For Sale at Meyer's Drug Store&#13;
The Detroit Free Press.&#13;
'•I&#13;
•V&#13;
• Upon embarking in business the first problem that faces the merchant&#13;
ie how to get customer*. He starts out after business. That i8&#13;
advertising. He personally solicit* trade or adopts some other means&#13;
of advertising his business. Bnt one thing is certain, if any business&#13;
is ever built up it is built up through the medium of adverising.&#13;
Every business man must admit this, or why not start a business&#13;
under ground and the proprietor sit down waiting for business to&#13;
to oome to him? A well kept store in a good location, stocked with&#13;
good goods at reasonable prices is an advertisement. A ' merchant&#13;
cannot hide his light under a bushel and be a success. He must advertise.&#13;
There are vorious ways of advertising, and for the sake- of convenience&#13;
and in the order of their importance we give them here:&#13;
1st Personal Advertising—where the merchant personally solicits&#13;
business,&#13;
2nd Personal Letter Advertising—where the merchant write*&#13;
pgiiosrtl letters to stiimnlate business.&#13;
3rd—Newspaper Advertising— where through tbe newspaper the&#13;
indiehsfit gives business news each week to thousands&#13;
4th Circular and Other Advertising—where through circulars,&#13;
bills, bill boards and all other means of publicity effort is made to infiaeaoe&#13;
the trading public.&#13;
$here is no denying the advantage to a merchant in personally&#13;
soUeUing business, either visiting prospective customers personally&#13;
or writing tfceai personal letters. These are very effective ways of&#13;
advertising, and at the same time very expensive ways of advertising.&#13;
1U w a i t e r advertising ie the next beet means of advertising and, prise&#13;
eqsrideted, it to *f far the fret advertising.&#13;
Copyright 1919 by Geo. S. Pattawm.&#13;
REGISTRATION&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN,&#13;
to the qualified electors of&#13;
the Township of Putnam, COUNTY&#13;
OF LIVINGSTON, STATE&#13;
OF MICHIGAN, that a meeting&#13;
of the Board of Registration of&#13;
said Township will be held at the&#13;
town hall, within said county on&#13;
Saturday, March 29, A. D. 1913&#13;
For the purpose of registering&#13;
the names of all such persons who&#13;
»hall be possessed of the necessary&#13;
qualifications of electors, who&#13;
may apply for that purpose.&#13;
Said Board of Registration will&#13;
be in session on the day aud the&#13;
place aforesaid from 9 o'clock in&#13;
the forenoon until 5 o'clock in the&#13;
afternoon for tbe purpose aforesaid.&#13;
Dated this 20th day of March&#13;
A. D. 1912.&#13;
W. A. Clinton, Clerk of said&#13;
Township.&#13;
Of the]Put nam and Hamburg&#13;
Farmers Club&#13;
The Putnam and Hamburg&#13;
Farmers Club met at the home of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Van Horn, Saturday,&#13;
March 22. After appoint'&#13;
ing committees for the next meeting,&#13;
the company gathered around&#13;
the tables and enjoyed a fine dinner.&#13;
The program began by singing&#13;
'Blest Be tbe Tie That Binds';&#13;
reading by Myron Hendricks;&#13;
recitation by Myrna Schoenhals;&#13;
song by E. N. Ball who responded&#13;
to an encore; recitation by Julia&#13;
Ball; selection on the graphonola;&#13;
members responded to roll call&#13;
with current events. The topic of&#13;
the day, The Initiative, Refferendum&#13;
and Recall, was brought up&#13;
and discussed by A. Schoenhals.&#13;
L, E. Howlett of Howell gave a&#13;
very able and interesting talk on&#13;
the subject in which he pointed&#13;
out many of the benefits but did&#13;
not think it would remedy all ills&#13;
of our state. The club gave Mr.&#13;
Howlett a rising vote of thanks,&#13;
after which Miss Julia Ball gave&#13;
a recitation, "The Dutchman at a&#13;
Telephone." The club then adjourned&#13;
to meet with Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. W. Hendee, Saturday, April&#13;
26. Topic for the next meeting:&#13;
"Preparation for the Corn Crop."&#13;
Discussed by Wm. Nash and P.&#13;
Ooniway. Members will respond&#13;
to roll call.&#13;
SOME WIND&#13;
V&#13;
NEW COURSE&#13;
To Be Added at&#13;
U. of M.&#13;
the&#13;
The University of Michigan will&#13;
offer to her students next fall, the&#13;
only fnll course in automobile engineering&#13;
ever given at any uni-&#13;
I varsity in the United States. This&#13;
step was decided upon by the engineering&#13;
faculty at a meeting las&#13;
Monday night.&#13;
High Wind Friday Does&#13;
Considerable Damage&#13;
The miniature cyclone which&#13;
struck Southern Michigan last&#13;
Friday did not alight Pinckney.&#13;
A number of chimneys were blown&#13;
down,roofs torn off and signs blown&#13;
away. The electrtc light service&#13;
in certain parts of the village had&#13;
to be discontinued owing to broken&#13;
wires and many telephone&#13;
lines especially in the rural districts&#13;
were put out of commission.&#13;
The Mag pole at the school house&#13;
was blown down and the front of&#13;
one of the stores owned by George&#13;
Heasou torn off. At one time it&#13;
was thought that the steeple of the&#13;
Catholic church would fall. Although&#13;
quite a little damage was&#13;
done here still in comparison to&#13;
the losses suffered in other towns,&#13;
it must be admited that Pinckney&#13;
was indeed fortunate in escaping&#13;
so easily.&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc&#13;
WANTED—Washing to do.&#13;
Antome, widow, Piaekasy&#13;
Mrs.&#13;
12td&#13;
4~&#13;
WANTED-A frasb cow&#13;
12t3 Bay Baker, Pieekney&#13;
FOR SERVICE - Registered fork&#13;
Shire Boar. Terms $1.00 &gt; 12t8&#13;
Hoy^ Bros. Pinckney&#13;
WANTED—Local representative tor&#13;
Empire Automobiles, Waul Motor&#13;
Sales Co., Detroit, itch, 8t8*&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
To the Ladies of Pinckney&#13;
and Surrounding&#13;
Country&#13;
We have come to your town&#13;
with the intention of running a&#13;
first class and ufc to date millinery&#13;
store,and with the intention&#13;
of remaining permanently here.&#13;
You are respectfully invited to&#13;
call and look over our line of&#13;
mods and see our work; courteous&#13;
treatment and right prices to all.&#13;
Very respectfully&#13;
Misses Zupp &lt;fc Favorite&#13;
FOR SALE—A quantity of &gt;«f on&#13;
tbe Joseph MODks farm. Inquire of'&#13;
Patrick Kennedy. JflfJ*&#13;
: r in&#13;
FOR BALE-All kinds of fret} jmA&#13;
salt nab. 1 clean them for the, pan.&#13;
A. Alexander, fisk market Piaekasy.&#13;
DRESSMAKING—tjlain and fancy&#13;
sewing. 18t8*&#13;
Mabel. E, Brown, Pusekaey&#13;
FOR SALE—Good tains nay, also&#13;
some white oak fenos posts. 13t8&#13;
J, R. Martin, Pinckney&#13;
FOR SALEr-A quantity of good bay.&#13;
Inquire of J. R. Martin, Pineksey.&#13;
* 8 *&#13;
FOR SALE-A matched pair el Geldlogs,&#13;
3 and 4 years old, wt. 2400.&#13;
12tS Aobt Kelly, Piaekasy&#13;
FOR SALE— 20 bead of good ..farm&#13;
norses and mares from 8 to Iff years&#13;
of age. Ail borsss sold witfe 4 Written&#13;
guarantee. lOtS&#13;
E. P. Mereer, Pettysvill*&#13;
FOR SALE—lara of 116 acres,&#13;
tooth of Boa^lftsaenws as the E.&#13;
Hinckley farm, at #40.00 per sere.&#13;
8tS Mrs. E. IV Hfaetley, Howell t&#13;
WANTED-Girl for general housework&#13;
at Lakeland Bummer Resort,&#13;
also help in ster#r-»o washing or&#13;
ironing; family of two. Address,&#13;
Mrs. C. Oollnm, Lakeland, Mich.&#13;
mm&#13;
OLD VIOLIN&#13;
Dexter Man is the Owner&#13;
of an Ancient One&#13;
T.T.Phelps has in his poeaeassion&#13;
what is perhaps the oldest violin&#13;
in the United States. L. P. Leas&#13;
who recently made some repairs&#13;
on it found the name and date secure&#13;
on the inside: Caepard Darsso&#13;
Pruggene, Bononiefis, A n n o&#13;
1614,"—Dexter Leader.&#13;
Silo Facts&#13;
If jion wish the beet silo made,&#13;
investigate the Noodg Bros. Hinge&#13;
Door. It is in a class byiiteeif and&#13;
is the strongest, most durable and&#13;
far in advance of any «ther silo on&#13;
tbe market and yon will make a&#13;
mistake if you buy before yon ate&#13;
the Noode Bros. Hinge Door.&#13;
'Adr. B.B,Barron, Howell&#13;
DEMOCRAT&#13;
CAUCUS&#13;
The Democrats of Putnam&#13;
Township will meet in caucus at&#13;
the Town Hall, Saturday March&#13;
29, at 2 p. m. for the purpose of&#13;
placing in nomination a township&#13;
ticket and to transact snob other&#13;
business as may come before tbe&#13;
meeting.&#13;
By Order of Com.&#13;
t —&#13;
REPUBLICAN&#13;
CAUCUS&#13;
The Republicans of Putnam&#13;
Township will meet in caucus at&#13;
the Town Hall, Pinckney, March&#13;
29 at 3 p. m. for the porpoee of&#13;
placing in nomination a township&#13;
ticket and to transact suoh other&#13;
bnaioees as may oome before tbe&#13;
meeting.&#13;
. By Order of Com.&#13;
Notice&#13;
The Bennett Hardware Co. of&#13;
Howell having told out, an aarly&#13;
settlement of its outstanding accounts&#13;
ia requested; we would&#13;
appreciate yonr calling at the&#13;
store as soon ss poesibte. ^..-^-,&#13;
Adv. The Bennett Hardware Oft. I ladles spring ©nets!&#13;
ANNUAL&#13;
TOWNSHIP&#13;
MEETING&#13;
NOTICE is hereby given to&#13;
the qualified Electors of the&#13;
township of Putnam, COUNTY&#13;
OP LIVINGSTON, STATE OF&#13;
MICHIGAN, that tbe next ensning&#13;
Annual Township Meeting&#13;
will be held at the town hall,&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan, within said&#13;
township, on&#13;
Monday, April 7, A. D. 1913&#13;
At which election the following&#13;
officers are to be elected, viz:&#13;
TOWNSHIP—One Supervisor,&#13;
Township Clerk, One Township&#13;
Treasurer, One Highway Commissioner,&#13;
One Justice of the&#13;
Peace, full term; One Member&#13;
Board of Review, full term; One&#13;
Overseer of Highways; four Con*&#13;
stablos.&#13;
The polls of said election will&#13;
be open at 7 o'clock a. m. and will&#13;
remain open until 5. p. m. of said&#13;
day of election.&#13;
Dated this 20th day of March&#13;
A. D. 1913.&#13;
W. A.' Clinton, Clerk of said&#13;
Township.&#13;
HAVE A GA80LINE BAWING OUTfit&#13;
and can saw yonr wood on short&#13;
notice. 8atiifaction guaranteed.&#13;
10t3 Fred Mackiodir, Anderson&#13;
Lyndilla Phone.&#13;
FARM FOR SALE OR RUNT—88&#13;
acres. 3 mdea N. I, of Pinckney on&#13;
road j QSI east of the Kics farm—"&#13;
known as oart of the Gallagher&#13;
Write Jamei A. Gallagher&#13;
West Grand Boulevard,&#13;
"•U'.H" ' — FOR SALE—Owing to s scarcity of&#13;
feed, I most dispose of part of a*y&#13;
floek of sheep consisting of lift fiUgiatered&#13;
and Grade Black Ton and&#13;
Delaine Ewes, rams and lamb*. Will&#13;
rice them worth tbe money.&#13;
f Fred Teeple, Pinekae v rice&#13;
ltf&#13;
W*. Buhl ot Gwgor, w. _a s „in WD»fc*M0&#13;
town Tneaday. RYS-ees&#13;
Daily and Sunday Free Press OAT8-SS&#13;
Frank Hinckey sold a fine, pair POTATOB8-ieo&#13;
of horses to Detroit parties lag* sWTTIR-ftfo,&#13;
week. : -v'laMlaVias.&#13;
W.aT. Panoer A Co, Stock, ^ ^ 1&#13;
bride* will save you 18. to f&amp; oo [ Leftist etyja* of&#13;
FARM BAKGAIN-Farm o* (804)&#13;
acres known as the Felix Danlavev&#13;
farm, tor sals, located 5 miles north&#13;
or Dexter and 4 miles south of Ham -&#13;
bars; 30 acres ot g&#13;
ance of farm, gcod&#13;
good bouse*; 6 Urge&#13;
small fcoildings; two&#13;
windmill; two good&#13;
variety of otbsr fmill only teres!&#13;
quarters of a mils from wheafoura&#13;
ronte, etc. Nearly one saiiSTrnW'&#13;
age on Base Lake, one ot the&#13;
snmmsi resorts in &gt;*ooUkerm Jstiehi&#13;
gan. Will tell at a bargain t^etttti&#13;
estate Also tillage property ii&#13;
Dexter an1 Pinckney. For iartien&#13;
lars, mqatrs of W, J. Tioteey, Dex&#13;
ter, Mkhigan; If. J. Gavanaogh,&#13;
SJh?ie*l,dfsr, fHro' we^ll., ilol&amp;iefWe. .or8bi«ej35 4&#13;
&gt;P&#13;
"mi&#13;
! •&#13;
k&#13;
ft-&#13;
PDUC3K&#13;
Corrected etery Wsdsjnsa&gt;&#13;
,C/«&gt;&gt;&#13;
• • • / - * ' - &gt; \ ;tm» .&#13;
• • • * ' : . '&#13;
V.dV'.f*&#13;
f h .'*s&#13;
(. :•«- V'&#13;
•?r ; # I&#13;
Us. kens lie&#13;
» m » 9&#13;
^ / » -&#13;
:m A/ ,#&#13;
r»&#13;
at&#13;
. i&#13;
titiMF*&#13;
»i i&#13;
it' .: . : ?.- XfM•«&#13;
--'• .Kv4i&#13;
ii*,utw -"^WiW4^*flfe-:.'4aV&#13;
* , t,.-s-&#13;
-•')*••&#13;
^B8pSySiy"*rT w . p™&#13;
^.-&#13;
u&#13;
s V&#13;
r&#13;
y.. .•*&#13;
• I . ' 1 ' '&#13;
S it possible to make a ship unsinkable?&#13;
At least, can't a craft be made&#13;
far less likely to founder than under&#13;
present systems of construction and&#13;
yet be fit for the service for which&#13;
she. is designed? The sinking of the&#13;
Tttalnlc brought these questions before&#13;
the public sdme months ago.&#13;
Since then the skill of one man has&#13;
. . developed a method which bids fair&#13;
4 w f 1 to add greatly to the margin of safe-&#13;
JLSSJ ty"to any steel ship which may suffer&#13;
serious damage below the water*&#13;
line. The invention is a new application of prin*&#13;
•ciples which have been employed for other purposes&#13;
for many years.&#13;
In 1908 the cruiser Yankee hit the Hen and&#13;
•Chickens reef, Just outside of Newport. Various&#13;
well-known salvage companies tackled the wreck,&#13;
•but abandoned the work, declaring that It was&#13;
•'.•Hxk'^M'-M\&#13;
• * ' - " 'f,.*.**-&#13;
#&#13;
m&#13;
V&#13;
rnr&#13;
:¾¾¾-. m&#13;
owe&#13;
iil&#13;
(&#13;
r&#13;
':i a&#13;
IS&#13;
•quite impossible to refloat thfe cruiser. Then two&#13;
young engineers, W. W. Wotherspoon and R. O.&#13;
King, attacked the task along new lines, obtaining&#13;
the financial assistance of the late John Arbuckle.&#13;
These enthusiasts—for such was the spirit in&#13;
which they approached what others had pronounced&#13;
hopeless—broke away from traditional&#13;
practice and resorted to the use of compressed air&#13;
« s a medium for salving the Yankee.&#13;
The ship had landed high on the reef, and the&#13;
jagged rocks had torn her bottom plating in many&#13;
places, making it impossible to pump her out In&#13;
the usual way. These innovators sealed up the&#13;
'hatchways leading to the various holds. Then&#13;
4hey pumped compressed air into the compartanents,&#13;
and the sea was driven out again through&#13;
t h e rents by which It had entered. The ship was&#13;
thus made buoyant enough to be dragged from&#13;
the rocks. Unfortunately she was run into and&#13;
• o a k while being towed to harbor.&#13;
An entirely new problem then presented Itself.&#13;
lastead of making use* of cumbersome pontoons&#13;
and other external buoyant auxiliaries, Messrs.&#13;
Wotherspoon and King eettled upon the plan of.&#13;
t u n i n g the Yankee into her own salvage apparat&#13;
v * In other words, it was decided to utilise ^he&#13;
snip's own compartments as buoyancy chambers&#13;
toy draining them of the very Water which had&#13;
carried the craft to the bottom.&#13;
Ton will probably declare offhand that there is&#13;
nothing original In this; anybody knows that a&#13;
foundered vessel would rise if you could get the&#13;
water out of her. But don't be too hasty In your&#13;
eoftClusiont. The difficulty lies in the danger&#13;
£hat when the air has forced the water out, the&#13;
treasure of the overlying water will crush the&#13;
*uH. How, then, did these young engineers -guard&#13;
•against this danger?&#13;
They did not try to pump out the cruiser in the&#13;
'literal sense of the word; they drove the water&#13;
•out under the Impulse of compressed air and they&#13;
^balanced the contending forces so nicely that the&#13;
*afclp's structure was substantially a neutral dlvtia)&#13;
kM between them, the air pressure being just&#13;
av trite in excess of the pressure of the water&#13;
which' It forced outward from the buoyancy1 comapartments.&#13;
Do you realise the engineering cunusing&#13;
involved here? The compressed air actually&#13;
^constituted a stronger support for the burdened&#13;
&gt;;&lt;4eck than the water whieh had previously filled&#13;
t h e underlying space! As the cruiser rose to&#13;
t h e surface &gt; the pressure was progressively re*&#13;
ftnced so that it Just maintained an excess of&#13;
force against the exterior water.&#13;
This method of floating the Yankee suggested&#13;
to Mr. Wotherspoon a medium by which the&#13;
tttfuettrre trt a vessel not yet sunk could be utiliz*&#13;
Isje to keep her afloat when otherwise lnruahing&#13;
'water would certainly carry her to, the bottom.&#13;
Wotherspoon's first adaptation of this syswaa&#13;
for naval purposes, to provide means by&#13;
which ma injured ship of war could survive the&#13;
wader water attack of either torpedoes or subsnartne&#13;
mines, and probably be kept on an even&#13;
start eo that she eould still fire her guns effecttirel*&#13;
against an enemy.&#13;
ferom- the keel of a fighting ship up to a height&#13;
of stvvral feet above the water line it is the prac-&#13;
•fk* to subdivide her as far as possible into a&#13;
lasts number of separate water-tight compartjprata,&#13;
the idea, of course, being to confine the&#13;
of injury. By making use of these o«rapait«&#13;
]&amp;&amp;*&amp;&amp;&amp;? &lt;3* JV&amp;? j4A7S-JZXtV0B&amp;0U3 &lt;&amp;47tyf&#13;
was finished, to surrender to the navy department&#13;
a large percentage of the weight allowance&#13;
originally granted him.&#13;
Take an empty tumbler, turn It bottom upward&#13;
and press it down into a basin of water. The&#13;
further you submerge it the smaller grows the air&#13;
space, the air becoming more and more compressed.&#13;
If you could slightly Increase the prassure&#13;
of the confined air the encroaching r^ater&#13;
would be driven outward. If the bottom of the&#13;
tumbler were pierced, on the other hand, the&#13;
air would escape and the water would rise and fill&#13;
the space. Substitute a pipe instead of a free&#13;
opening in the bottom of the glass and lead this&#13;
pipe to a reserveir of compressed air. When this&#13;
compressed air is poured into the tumbler the&#13;
water will be driven out or the glass will rise and&#13;
free itself of water. In either case then the space&#13;
will be filled with air.&#13;
This is substantially what Mr. Wotherspoon&#13;
has planned shall happen when a ship's compartment&#13;
or compartments are flooded through under&#13;
water damage of any sort. Air will displace the&#13;
water due to leakage and make the craft float&#13;
well nigh as If she had not been injured. Of&#13;
course this is upon" the assumption that the&#13;
wound has occurred at the bottom and not the.&#13;
top of a watertight subdivision; otherwise the&#13;
'chamber will remain flooded.&#13;
But it takes a good deal of air to All most of&#13;
the big divisions of a fighting ship, and there&#13;
must be piping to carry the air to these hundreds&#13;
of separate chambers. How did Mr. Wotherspoon&#13;
provide for all these and yet not exceed the&#13;
weight allowed him by the naval officials? He&#13;
did it by making use of facilities actually already&#13;
provdled for other services.&#13;
Foul air, gases and heat beyond a fixed degree&#13;
must be guarded against in a man-of-war wtthln&#13;
the various under water compartments. To accomplish&#13;
this end two pipes lead to each of these&#13;
chambers, one to carry fresh air and the other&#13;
to drain off the foul. Also every fighting ship is&#13;
furnished with air compressors and there are a&#13;
number of tanks in which this air is stored at&#13;
a very high pressure. Normally this air is for the&#13;
charging of the torpedoes, for some kind of mechanical&#13;
work and for blowing the residual gases&#13;
and bits of smoldering remnants of the powder&#13;
bags out of the big guns before the breeches&#13;
are. opened for reloading l The very fundamentals&#13;
of Mr. Wotherspoon's system were thus already&#13;
installed and a few inexpensive connections alone&#13;
were needful to complete his requirements. All&#13;
that was necessary was to tap the air supply system&#13;
by flexible hose and Join the connection to&#13;
the supply duct leading to any desired compart*&#13;
ment, at the same time closing the exhaust -vent&#13;
Thus compressed air under perfect control could&#13;
be led intc the flooded chamber and the water&#13;
quickly expelled.&#13;
That is not all; the system makes it possible&#13;
to enter the injured subdivision through a neigh-&#13;
\zroe7y? CMJKKSA&gt;#&#13;
7&amp;e jzp££&gt;//%&amp;r/w&#13;
boring intact compartment&#13;
for the&#13;
purpose of effecting&#13;
repairs. The&#13;
workmen go into&#13;
the c o n n e c t i n g&#13;
chamber, dose it;&#13;
and air is then admitted&#13;
until the&#13;
pressure equals that&#13;
of the flanking dama&#13;
g e d o n e . T h i s&#13;
done, the dividing&#13;
door is opened and&#13;
the workmen can&#13;
proceed with their&#13;
task.&#13;
Theoretically all&#13;
the compartments&#13;
of a fighting ship&#13;
are supposed to be&#13;
water-tight; practically&#13;
some are not&#13;
so. Here is where&#13;
the safety system&#13;
which Mr. Wotherspoon&#13;
provides has&#13;
another field of usefulness. Compressed air is&#13;
very searching, much more so than water, and it&#13;
has the added advantage of sounding an alarm&#13;
wherever it manages to work its way through,&#13;
even in a small measure. Dry air, unlike water.&#13;
Is not destructive, and a compartment full of&#13;
stores, electrical apparatus of any other things&#13;
sensitive to water could be flooded with compressed&#13;
air for test without doing the least harm&#13;
to the contents.&#13;
The value of this has already been proved in&#13;
a number of instances recently and upon one&#13;
occasion the draining of a leaking comparement&#13;
and the charging with air of the surrounding&#13;
compartments filled with stores resulted in the&#13;
saving of probably $12,000 or $14,000 worth of&#13;
property. In a few moments after the automatic&#13;
alarm gave warning of the flooding the compressed_&#13;
jajr was in_serylce_ and the water ^JrWen overboard&#13;
again.&#13;
Perhaps the most striking example of Ihe effectiveness&#13;
of this system for keeping an injured&#13;
ship afloat and making it possible for her to proceed&#13;
to port was that of the U. S. 8. collier Nero.&#13;
The vessel Btruck Brenton's Reef, Rhode Island,&#13;
in July of 1909. Ordinary salvage operations&#13;
failed to dislodge her from the rockB, and it was&#13;
not until certain of her decks were sealed hermetically&#13;
and a number of the intervening spaces&#13;
turned into closed compartments and compressed&#13;
air pumped into her that she was released and&#13;
floated. She reached the Brooklyn navy yard.&#13;
Difficult.&#13;
Representative Dudley M. Hughes of Georgia&#13;
is called a farmer statesman and devotes much&#13;
of his time to the agricultural Interests of hie&#13;
district.&#13;
He has requests for many nev? linds of seeds,&#13;
and a time ago received this letter?&#13;
"Dear Dud:—-Sam Yopp's been *.ellin' me of a&#13;
new seedless tomatter the Guvmftnt is growin';&#13;
I'm writing to you in hopes you will send me&#13;
some of the seeds."—Saturday Fvoaing Post.&#13;
, An Exception.&#13;
"How did you find the roads uj* around Jingleville&#13;
Corners?" asked Billkins o # Slathersberry,&#13;
who had just returned from a motor trip.&#13;
"Oh, I wasn't particularly stuek on them," said&#13;
Slatherberry.&#13;
"Really?" said Billkins. "Will I guess you're&#13;
the only man that wasn't. I was rtack on 'em for&#13;
a whole day last year."—Harper's Weekly.&#13;
All Needed Vacation.&#13;
Said Jones to the deacon: "I *«e you are going&#13;
to give your minister a ttr/f-month* vacation."&#13;
"We are," said the deacon to .Vaes.&#13;
"Isn't that a long time?"&#13;
"Maybe. But we need a rest. Jist as much as&#13;
the preacher does."—-Cleveland Plain Dealer.&#13;
&lt;*4 Under Coat of London Soot&#13;
m : * •&#13;
k/t&#13;
^ • • v ^&#13;
IMhts. JtrT Wotherspoon'* invention has robbed&#13;
' tiki under water weapons of much of their terror;&#13;
t t has reduced the dangers incident to hitting an&#13;
4 sjMharbsd rock; and it furnishes the commanding&#13;
5/oftoer at a batt* craft with a means by which&#13;
He can aaattfw himself at any time that; his ship&#13;
. i s structurally sound.&#13;
.- ^Twf naval constructor Is a miser when it comes&#13;
t o ^ p w r t l o e i a g pounds of a ship's displacement&#13;
for auxHiafy feature*. This attitude Is really ex-&#13;
^casebtAt beeaese etray pounds here and stray&#13;
pounds there very soon rewch the aggregate dignky&#13;
df tons. When Mr. Wotherspoon submitted&#13;
&gt;\ his proposition to the navy department the offl-&#13;
" claif there grudgingly allowed him a very small&#13;
t « m weight within which he waa to make his&#13;
«y*te*'applicable to two-thirds of the 1.300 water*&#13;
, t l i b t oompartnenu of. one of our armored cruisfctt&#13;
.-v' • r&lt; On the face of It the prospect dMt not look en-&#13;
: v courewiBg, but U waa right here that Mr. Wotherv-.%&#13;
bppoe's; tc«4*filty met the dlmcuUy. He^chote to&#13;
- ' - t&lt;|aoHitfes already- provided&#13;
This i^eouroefulnsbs on h i t&#13;
%\&lt;&#13;
a*&#13;
* » l*:*W?*»*;P* when fefeworfc-wf iaataihvUap&#13;
America was discovered all over again in London&#13;
recently, says the Washington Star's correspondent&#13;
At least a long-hidden statue of America&#13;
was. It is really no use putting up a statue&#13;
or any other kind of memorial in London, for in&#13;
a year or two unless seen to right along, it will&#13;
be practically enveloped in a pitch black cloak&#13;
of London soot, some 6,000 tons of which, according&#13;
to an engineer's recent estimate, is always&#13;
hanging in the atmosphere of this metropolis.&#13;
The statue of "America" which has just been&#13;
discovered adonis the front of the Cannon street&#13;
hotel, which adjoins one of the biggest of London's&#13;
railway stations and is a favorite place for&#13;
big political and other gatherings. It was put&#13;
up in 1866, since when its walls have not been&#13;
cleaned, hence for forty years or more all of the&#13;
rather elaborate decorations which cover them&#13;
hare been hidden from sight ss completely as if&#13;
they never had existed. The pail of mingled soot&#13;
and grime which covers them several inches deep&#13;
la places, but it fall off almost at a touch, and&#13;
after What is known as "wire bruehisg" the sur&gt;&#13;
becomes sairty olean.&#13;
roar statues. It appears, representing the four&#13;
/sV^''-'"&#13;
tff*'&#13;
Tr-,|&#13;
LAPYS TMft€«QOAEQ SKIRT.&#13;
^continents, besides some balustradlng and arching&#13;
with decorative panels, compose the longshrouded&#13;
facade of the Cannon Street hotel. Of&#13;
these statues, two, Europe and Asia, have now&#13;
been brought completely to light, America has&#13;
Just been located and partly unveiled, and Africa,&#13;
appropriately enough, is still the "dark" continent&#13;
Hearing of the discovery of America in&#13;
Cannon street, the writer hastened to the spot&#13;
and after mounting to dizzy heights, by means of&#13;
a ladder, and crawling along a stone ledge some&#13;
eighty feet above the level of the ground, was&#13;
rewarded with a sight of the partly oxhumed&#13;
statue, which stands some fifteen or sixteen feet&#13;
high&#13;
Remembering that this effigy of "America" waa&#13;
designated in the mid-Victorian period, it was no&#13;
surprise to find it lacking in any special beauty.&#13;
It is the figure of a woman—possibly a militant |&#13;
suffragette—holding in oae hand a gun and tn&#13;
the other some ears of corn. On the ground la&#13;
something which may represent either a torn*-,&#13;
hawk or the ax of the pioneer, and underneath,&#13;
in letters that once were gilt, appear* the word&#13;
"Ameriom"&#13;
_-.... *».;-t'&#13;
ts,Bnris(&#13;
6169'&#13;
Here Is a pretty model for an e v e *&#13;
ing skirt The garment is cut in three&#13;
gores and Is one of the most delightful&#13;
styles of the season, and despite&#13;
its elaboration of detail is quite easy&#13;
to carry,out The tunic is a fashioneble&#13;
feature and the draped effect is&#13;
(juite fetching.&#13;
The patten* (6169) Is cut. in sizes&#13;
22 to 30 Inches waist measure. Medium&#13;
size will require 2% yards of 36&#13;
inch goods. Width of lower edge is&#13;
3 yards.&#13;
To procure this pattern send 10 cents&#13;
to "Pattern Department." of this paper.&#13;
Write nam* and address plainly, and be ( sure to give size and number of pattern. \&#13;
HO, 6189. SUB—.-&#13;
NAME&#13;
TOWN&#13;
STREET AND NO&#13;
STATE&#13;
LADY'S SHIRT WAIST,&#13;
are relieved^ once by an applic^&#13;
-gDapf Sloan's liniment. Doi&#13;
. tiib, just lajr on lightly.&#13;
«* Sloan's Liniment bat done note&#13;
geod than anything I have «»er trUM&#13;
tor utUX join*. .1 got »y U*m hnrt#&#13;
badly that I had toatop nor* right to&#13;
the buAteet time of tha year. ItboudU&#13;
at fliat that 1 would, have fc&gt;Ji»»e ntfr&#13;
hand taken off, but I got a l»ttie«&#13;
Sloan'* Liniment and oared mi hand?*&#13;
WXLTO* WttSJtuta, Mortis, Ala;&#13;
- (f6od for Broken 8hsssrs •&#13;
G. O. JOKXS, Baldwin, L. I., writes &gt;&#13;
—"I used Sloan'aLinliueat for broken&#13;
slnewa above the knee eapcuuMd by m&#13;
fail and to my great •aUafaeViOO jrae r&#13;
able to reeotuo work in lea* than s|ret -'&#13;
weeks alter the accident.* SUSANS&#13;
LINIMENT Floe for Strain&#13;
Ms. HSKVY A. Voxat, Si Somerset&#13;
St., Plain Held, N. J., writes: — « A,&#13;
friend sprained bit ankle so badly'&#13;
that It went black. He laughed when&#13;
X told him that I would have hlm-ont.&#13;
in a week. I applied Sloan's XJniment&#13;
and in four day» he was working an*&#13;
said Sloan's was a. right good xJnlmeat.*'&#13;
Price as*..&#13;
80«*, aad 41.00&#13;
Sloea'i Book&#13;
on hones, cattle,&#13;
sheep and&#13;
poultry lent free.&#13;
Address&#13;
Wk&#13;
$%#9m&#13;
;t:-^&#13;
U.S. A.&#13;
Not Quite.&#13;
"Is he what you might call a pohce&#13;
captain at large?"&#13;
"No; he's only out on bail."—^own&#13;
Topics.&#13;
Be thrifty on little thing* like bluincr. Don't&#13;
sooept water for bluing'. Ask for Red Cross&#13;
Bell Blue, the extra good value blue. Adv.&#13;
BIGGEST RACE PROBLEM.&#13;
6t32&#13;
This Is one of the newest style&#13;
shirt waists, and may be used for&#13;
wear with separate skirts or as part&#13;
of a complete costume. It closes at&#13;
the front and may be made with or&#13;
without the front drapery. The neck&#13;
Is finished with or without a collar.&#13;
and the long sleeves are perfectly&#13;
plain.&#13;
The pattern (6132) Is cut in sixes&#13;
34 to 42 inches bust measure. Medium&#13;
size will require 1¼ vards of 36&#13;
inch figured goods and 1% yards of 36&#13;
inch plain material. If one material&#13;
lo used 2½ yards of material 36 inches&#13;
vide is needed.&#13;
toT o* *Ppartotecrunr e Dtehpias rtpmaettnetr,"n oafe ntdh i1s 0p caepnerts. sWurreit et on agmivee aelnsde aandddr enausm pbleari nolyf .,p aanttde rbne.&#13;
NO. 6132.&#13;
NAME ....&#13;
BUS.&#13;
TOWN.&#13;
AND NO. •••«••••«••••»•««&#13;
STATE&#13;
Cplgram of Tally rand.&#13;
The duchess of Laurajuata, who&#13;
was somewhat given to making. poetry,&#13;
could not think of a word to&#13;
rhyme with coiffe. Turning to Tallyrand,&#13;
who chanced to be by her&#13;
side, she said: "Prince, give me a&#13;
rhyme to coiffe." "Impossible, duchess,"&#13;
replied Talleyrand, without a&#13;
moment's delay; "for that which pertains&#13;
to the head of a woman has&#13;
neither rhyme nor reason."&#13;
Why They Don't Marry.&#13;
Miss Leftover—You are a woman&#13;
hater, 1 hear.&#13;
Mr. Slimpurse—That is a mistake;&#13;
I merely cannot afford to marry.&#13;
Miss Leftover—Cannot you support&#13;
a wife? ,&#13;
Mr. Slimpurse—Oh, yes, I could&#13;
support a wife easy, enough, but I&#13;
have't enough to support' the two or&#13;
three other wotnea she would need&#13;
to wait on her.&#13;
Alive, but Non-existent.&#13;
"Ton cannot - be married, mademoiselle,&#13;
you do not exist." wrote the registrar&#13;
of Lorient Prance, to Mile. Kerguel&#13;
who applied for a civil marriage&#13;
license, and whose hirth entry was&#13;
found »o have been omitted from the&#13;
register.&#13;
Too Muoh Rowing.&#13;
Patteoos—TbH paper says the htlge&#13;
keels on battleships i M Utng-ssad»&#13;
larger to prevent ussastyisj roimsy&#13;
Patrtoe—Why doat ttMf* t » that&#13;
scheme o* the eiftfrstt* flttW ' '&#13;
£•'••&#13;
:»£.&#13;
€2+~&#13;
"Bre'er Jones, does you think de&#13;
devil is a black man or a white man?"&#13;
"I dunno; an' all I does know is—de&#13;
biggest race problem Is how ter, keep&#13;
ten yards ahead of him!H&#13;
Perfectly Clear.&#13;
"I wonder why so many trains are&#13;
late?" said young Mrs. Torkias as she&#13;
watched the man chalk up the figures&#13;
on the blackboard.&#13;
"Well," replied her husband, "for&#13;
one thing, traffic is much heavier: than&#13;
it used to be.&#13;
"Of course! And the heavier; a load&#13;
is, the harder work a locomotive has&#13;
to pull it!"&#13;
•i-r. 1 And a woman&#13;
poses or imposes.&#13;
either poses, sup-&#13;
A Jolly&#13;
Good Day&#13;
Follow* * - 3&#13;
Good Breakfast&#13;
Try a dish of&#13;
Post&#13;
- * ' - . &lt; " .&#13;
tomorrow morning.&#13;
These sweet, thin 1¾¾&#13;
from Indian Com ate1&#13;
toasted and sealed m tight&#13;
packages without die toiler*^&#13;
of human hand.&#13;
They reach you fresh am&#13;
crisp—ready to eat from the&#13;
package by ada^r^rftWuVor&#13;
miHt and a tprinlding o^tugar,&#13;
if desired. _&#13;
Tc*stje* arc a jolly&#13;
4&#13;
• a.&#13;
&lt;£*-&#13;
1 ^ ^ . ^ 1 ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾&#13;
* ' • ' mmmmbmmm&#13;
.•^fSi^rt.-&#13;
/ J&#13;
•nj&#13;
' 4!&#13;
*R&#13;
ft*'&#13;
*$.,*&#13;
toes of Power&#13;
*t*rt&#13;
N&#13;
Dl*a FfefOS^S&#13;
felfa Mcdtal Discovery&#13;
enttvsos a torpid nvsr—snriebsB thf&#13;
blood' "Stops wo wsstsof stHBUftaaBdl&#13;
S w i i d boUdi up haafthyTHS-'to&#13;
tk*proper•odrWffht. Asa&amp;apps*&#13;
tbatr, rsstanrtlv. tonic, it ssts to&#13;
work att «S* proems*, of dttwHoa&#13;
•ad nutrition, roOasa ovory o n u into&#13;
natural sctton. and hrlnti hsrTr haalth&#13;
•sdctMxurtk,'&#13;
DISFIGURED BY&#13;
v SKIN ERUPTION • • » • — IfvThat Is Yoer Plight, l e t&#13;
•Reaindl dear It Away!&#13;
Pubpfes, blackheads, rashes, ringworm&#13;
«Kprst of all, that red, itching, scaly&#13;
~#txKm&amp;, vanish when you use&#13;
S'Ointment and Resinol Soap.&#13;
^BsBStV/s no doubt about i t Even,&#13;
3Ssflpfyo\ir skin is so unsightly with&#13;
eruption that you shun your friends and&#13;
your friends shun you, Resinol makes it&#13;
elear and healthy, quickly, easily and at&#13;
trifling cost. When you are sick of wasting&#13;
time and money on tedious, expensive&#13;
treatments, get Resinol Ointment and&#13;
Resinol i Soap from the nearest druajrist&#13;
and you will quickly see why it has been&#13;
prescribed for eighteen years for just fucb&#13;
troubles as yours.&#13;
Tbe Resinol treatment works so gently,&#13;
and *tj» to* absolutely free from anything&#13;
tftAt could injure even the tenderest skin,&#13;
fit is perfect for healing the -skin&#13;
ilea of infants and children, You can&#13;
sinol Ointment and Resinol Soap&#13;
expense. Write to Depti 5-K, Reeidthnore,&#13;
M6V and we will send, you&#13;
&amp; 'generous trial. Resinol Ointment {50c and&#13;
f i r f t i d Resinol Soap (25c), by parcel post&#13;
on receipt of price.&#13;
. +—••• — ' • - i Make the Liver/&#13;
Dc&lt; its Duty&#13;
Nine times in ten when the liver is&#13;
light the stoxriach and bowels are right.&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
UVER PILLS&#13;
, gentlybutfirmly com&#13;
! pel a lazy liver to&#13;
do its duty.&#13;
i Cures Constipation,&#13;
Id'&#13;
r digestion,&#13;
(Sick&#13;
' Headache,&#13;
'and Distress After Eating,&#13;
,b£IAIX PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.&#13;
*' vjGenuine muat bear Signature&#13;
now In the Provlnoo of Saskatchewan Western Canada&#13;
_PDroos' Hyoonm dee Msireea dto o fs 1e6t a0 kAnCowRnB S wobf eatht atL awnedl?l tint naor eleas ia •v bikeclaoambll ne.g moro limited o. ave rNecEeWntl,y DbeIeSnT oRpeInCeTd Su p for r•eotatdlesf taernet ,n oawnd beIinntgo bthueislte. rTahile- dwaiyll bwe ilnl os oon come when there ^ £ « e H o » e s t e « U n *&#13;
faArm Sewr ifwt rCituersr:e n"t,1 B caaakmaeta foanew many, 1ta1,o00m0 ewaotretahd o, fM boanrceha 1a8n0d6, wmiathch ainb-out ehrayv,e a 9n0d0 sJea»ntt © o»f Iwn hceaaath, .8 0T0o adcarye tI obfa do afour, aalnz dy 0e1a anc,r eb*u to of nfllya xa,"n NIno-t stance of jrhiasic am aiyn b"e" done in SWasekstaetrcnh ewCaann! o r AJbarMta.a nitoba,&#13;
MBarpasd, B aatl l owaaye eRfaotre s, eLtcit.e, rtaot ure,&#13;
M, V. Molnnes,&#13;
176 Jeffsrson A«., DstroK, Mkh.&#13;
Canadian Government Agent, or&#13;
t^-&#13;
Don't Put Off&#13;
seeking relief from the unesses&#13;
caused by defective action of the organ*&#13;
of digestion, Most serious sicknesses&#13;
get their start in troubles of&#13;
the stomach, liver, bowels—trouble*&#13;
quickly/saldy, surely relieved by&#13;
BEECHABTS&#13;
PILLS Said 10*-&#13;
i"'*f,.&#13;
nortER awrs SWOT rMmBnmoflHMQi Vtoerlshnessj Coostlna* tids^oldss^cotf^ disorders of&#13;
the stomach and bowels. VMb»&#13;
MPtitrtAr32ymrs. AtallPrtq&#13;
'^ists 28c Sample mailed FXS]&#13;
\dOnm a,*. - - - - - -&#13;
URGJNQ GREAT SALS&#13;
OF CANNED FOOOS&#13;
Dealers, grocers, Wbaore and mawifacturera&#13;
alt over the country are Joining&#13;
hands during the week of March 31st to&#13;
April 6th in an effort to acquaint houses&#13;
ss •trim. t-J*-H&#13;
writvve s with the economy and quality of&#13;
canned foods.&#13;
It Is now a well known fact that heat&#13;
la the only preservative used in preparing&#13;
these economical foods. The cans are&#13;
sealed and vterillzed at a temperature of&#13;
260 degrees, which prevents any contamination&#13;
and keeps the contents fresh and&#13;
wholesome as the day the tins were filled&#13;
In the canneries,&#13;
National Canned Foods Week, during&#13;
which dealers and grocers will make&#13;
canned foods their sales-features, Is for&#13;
the purpose of demonstrating to housewives&#13;
that the cost of living can be cut&#13;
with such foods, and that they may be&#13;
served in hundreds of delightful ways,&#13;
and thus served dally without monotony.&#13;
The farmer's wife especially finds it advantageous&#13;
to relieve herself of all the&#13;
cooking possible and Canned Foods enable&#13;
her to do this and at the same time&#13;
improve the quality of her meals.&#13;
women in every community should observe&#13;
National Canned Foods Week by&#13;
going to th« dealers and putting in a suply.&#13;
The saving and general satisfaction&#13;
the use of Canned Foods Is entirely&#13;
worth whUev-^Adv. . fi&#13;
VCHY TRUC&#13;
What kind of a season are we going&#13;
to have, Uncle Abner?"&#13;
"Well, It's awful hard to say as to&#13;
that You know it depends a hull lot&#13;
en the weather."&#13;
"Improved" But! Floht.&#13;
A bull fight in Tokio is quite as&#13;
much excuse for a* gala day as a bull&#13;
fight In Madrid. Business men leave&#13;
their offices;, and women and children&#13;
their hoihes, to.r_burry to the arena&#13;
Stripped ot.^lt the less exciting, or&#13;
less horrible, preliminaries which&#13;
characterise the Spanish bull flght, the&#13;
animals are brought in and sent at&#13;
each other at once. So the battle is&#13;
shorter, and two or three more fights&#13;
will follow in quick succession during&#13;
the course of an afternoon's "entertainment"&#13;
GRANULATED&#13;
tTCHlMa U M&#13;
W. N. 11., DETftdtT, WO. 1^-1913.&#13;
HOW TO TREAT PIMPLES AND&#13;
BLACKHEADS&#13;
For pimples and blackheads the following&#13;
is a most effective and economical&#13;
treatment: Gently smear the&#13;
affected parts with Cuticura Ointment,&#13;
_onthe end of the finger, but&#13;
do not rub. Wash off the Cuticura&#13;
Ointment in five minutes with Cuticura&#13;
Soap and hot water and continue&#13;
bathing for some minutes. This treatment&#13;
is best on rising and retiring.&#13;
At other times use Cuticura Soap&#13;
freely for the toilet and bath, to as*&#13;
slst in preventing inflammation, irritation&#13;
and clogging of the pores, the&#13;
common cause of pimples, blackheadB,&#13;
redness and roughness, yellow, oily,&#13;
mothy and other unwholesome conditions&#13;
of the skin.&#13;
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
free with 32-p. Skin Book. Address&#13;
post-card "Cuticura, Dept L, Boston."&#13;
Adv.&#13;
Like an Old Fool.&#13;
StlllcuB—What is the age of discretion?&#13;
Cynicus—There ain't any. I know&#13;
a man over seventy who married his&#13;
fourth wife the other day.&#13;
Important to Mothers&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle of&#13;
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy (or&#13;
Infants and children, and Bee that It&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature of&#13;
In /Use For Over 30'Yfars,&#13;
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria&#13;
When some men- get interested&#13;
politics they forget all about labor.&#13;
In&#13;
No 8ympathy.&#13;
"ffe lost money in a wheat deal."&#13;
"Then I haven't a grain of sympathy&#13;
for him."&#13;
A man's children, like their mother,&#13;
are apt to ask a lot of embarrassing&#13;
questions.&#13;
Bed Cross Ball Blue fives doable rata*&#13;
for year money, goes twice, as. far as any&#13;
«t£*r. Ask year grocer., Adv. .\&#13;
. The greatest loss to any mac is his&#13;
self-respect&#13;
v»&#13;
WO R M 8 .&#13;
IATE WASHINGTON&#13;
MATTERS OF NOTE&#13;
THE PRESIDENT WILL TRY TO&#13;
HARMONIZE FACTIONS ON&#13;
THE TARIFF BILLS.&#13;
TrtE INCOME TAX WILL CAUSE&#13;
SOME HARD FIGHTING.&#13;
Why the Policy Toward China Was&#13;
Changed by the New Administration&#13;
Is Cleared Up,&#13;
The struggle within the ways and&#13;
means committee for control between&#13;
the conservatives and the radicals&#13;
continues to be the subject of greatest&#13;
interest to the politicians in Washington&#13;
for on the outcome will depend&#13;
the general character of the forthcoming&#13;
tariff bills. President WUson has&#13;
been appealed to. and during the next&#13;
week it is expected that he will confer&#13;
with all Interests, to arrive at&#13;
some position where the factions may&#13;
meet harmoniously, if such a thing is&#13;
now possible.&#13;
The situation as a whole so strikingly&#13;
resembles that of four years ago,&#13;
preceding the special session of congress&#13;
called by President Taft, alsofor&#13;
tariff revision, as to give it unusual&#13;
significance. What the outcome will be&#13;
nobody pretends to know, but everybody&#13;
is watching developments from&#13;
day to day, and doing his best to get at&#13;
ail the facts.&#13;
That Income Tax.&#13;
A fight on income tax legislation,&#13;
which may equal the coming battle on&#13;
the tariff, is fomenting in Washington,&#13;
and will break with the convening of&#13;
the sixty-third congress, according to&#13;
those conversant with the situation- .&#13;
Behind the fight are believed to be&#13;
some of the most wealthy men in the&#13;
United States—men whose fortunes&#13;
run into the hundreds of millions and&#13;
whose share of the income tax rayst&#13;
necessarily be heavy."&#13;
As the matter now stands the democrat&#13;
party has gone on record aa&#13;
favoring the enactment of this legislation,&#13;
but there is yet to be drafted&#13;
a bill defining the nature and amount&#13;
of the tax to be levied upon fortune*.&#13;
Knox's Policy Changed.&#13;
The purposes which actuated the&#13;
Wilson administration, in repudiating&#13;
Secretary Knox's policy with regard&#13;
to the proposed six power loan to&#13;
China, have been clarified in the last&#13;
few days.&#13;
_ • Briefl y stated _th_e _ad m in i st ration 'a&#13;
attitude with regard to the proposed"&#13;
loan is this:&#13;
Once the bargain with the five other&#13;
powers had been entered into the&#13;
bargain would have to be kept. Possibly&#13;
eventualities might have put this&#13;
country into the position of being a&#13;
party in a scramble for Chinese territory,&#13;
in the event of failure on the&#13;
part of China to fulfill the conditions&#13;
of the loan. The administration desires&#13;
to remain able, if such a scramble&#13;
comes, to deter these ambitious&#13;
powers, acting as the friend of the new&#13;
republic.&#13;
Germany and the United States&#13;
each without territorial ambitions in&#13;
China, long have been the restraining&#13;
influence in the Chinese situation, according&#13;
to administration officials.&#13;
Russia and Japan, once this influence&#13;
were removed, might feel free to satisfy&#13;
ambitions for expansion which&#13;
they are now said to entertain.&#13;
President Wilson and his advisers&#13;
concluded that the maintenance of this&#13;
restraining influence on the other&#13;
powers is far more important from&#13;
the standpoint of friendliness to&#13;
China than would have been the financial&#13;
benefits which would have accrued&#13;
to American commerce and&#13;
banking from participation in the loan.&#13;
Funeral of King George.&#13;
The funeral of the late King George,&#13;
it is officially announced, will take&#13;
place March 30.&#13;
A funeral service for the late King&#13;
George of Greece -was held Saturday at&#13;
the Greek church in London. It was&#13;
attended by representatives of King&#13;
George of England, Queen Mother&#13;
Alexandra and ssost of tba members&#13;
of the diplomatic corps/' '&#13;
••Wortty tcsttnai&#13;
to feed&#13;
that's what's the matter of 'sea. Stomach and in-&#13;
I worms. Nearly aa had as distemper. Cost you too moeh.&#13;
1 'em. Look bad-are MM. Dtrat "physic &lt;em to osata,&#13;
Spoag*s Cof» wlH remove the worms, Improve the appetUs, and&#13;
tons *em op all foond, and dost "physic." Acts on jrlsnda and blood.&#13;
Fuliairsetioas with ea«b bottle, and sold by all dtugglsts.&#13;
SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. Chemists. deeh*n.Isd..U.S,A.&#13;
The Balkan War.&#13;
The developments of the last week&#13;
appear to make the conclusion of the&#13;
Balkan war a matter of only a few'&#13;
days.&#13;
Turkey, having no hopes of obtaining&#13;
more money, has entrusted her interests&#13;
to the good offices of the powers,&#13;
and the allies have accepted the&#13;
powers' offer of mediation.&#13;
Announcement has been made that&#13;
the Pete Marquette system will lay 177&#13;
miles of new rails this spring and summer.&#13;
New stations will be built at&#13;
Port Huron and Valley Center, and an&#13;
addition at Alma.&#13;
Mrs. Louis Chriftjancy, of Lansing,&#13;
was. probably fatally burned, when&#13;
she mistook a can of gasoline for kef-&#13;
.oseos, and poured the contents onto a&#13;
fire*- Hor clothes watt- nearly burned,&#13;
from her body before tha Are was e *&#13;
tina-uiahed. 0ae was taken to a hospital,&#13;
where H If bettered she will die.&#13;
•SJMMSl&#13;
WOLVERINE&#13;
NEWS BREVITIES&#13;
Benton Harbor.—Five students have&#13;
been expelled from the high&#13;
school because they indulged in&#13;
a hazing prask. As a climax to a war&#13;
that waged between seniors and underclassmen,&#13;
five of the latter caught&#13;
Oscar Hennes, a senior, ripped his&#13;
clothes off and paraded him about the&#13;
building. Not until the police were&#13;
called was HenneB rescued. Hennes&#13;
and classmates have sworn vengeance&#13;
on the boys who subjected him to&#13;
such humiliating treatment.&#13;
Charlotte.—Nearly 200 persons attended&#13;
the Progressive banquet at&#13;
the Masonic temple here. The&#13;
banquet was served by the women of&#13;
the SunBhlne club and was one cf the&#13;
finest held here in years. Dr. A. H.&#13;
Miller of Olivet college WSB toastmaster&#13;
and the speakers were Rev. C. T.&#13;
Ps.tcb.ell of this city, William Odlln.&#13;
Andover, Mass.; F. Chaddock, Chicago;&#13;
Horatio 8. Earle, Detroit, and E&#13;
N. Dingley, Kalamazoo.&#13;
Saginaw.—Because there is no&#13;
money in the city fund for the&#13;
pursuit, arrest and trial of criminals,&#13;
(Jordan Raymond and John Taylor,&#13;
wanted here for a charge of burglary,&#13;
will probably go free when finishing&#13;
out sentence imposed by a Judge in&#13;
St. Cloud.&#13;
Hastings. — Officers have arrested&#13;
Dr. G. Wilkle Shipman, charged&#13;
with a third offense SB drunkard&#13;
and tippler, and Ruse Scheib, accused&#13;
of furnishing whisky to a seventeen-&#13;
year-old lad. Scheib has a wife&#13;
and four children. Shipman, formerly&#13;
of Detroit, has frequently served sentences&#13;
for drunkenness.&#13;
Holland.—Percy Mayhew was arraigned&#13;
. before Justice Sooy on&#13;
the charge of keeping a gambling&#13;
house, and William Witt, William Leebouse,&#13;
Archie Rosseau and Edward&#13;
Wallnder were arraigned on the&#13;
charge of disorderly conduct for alleged&#13;
participation in a game of cards.&#13;
The men pleaded not guilty. Their&#13;
trial was set for March 21.&#13;
Cadillac—Nine-yeftr-old. Percy Sinkler&#13;
of Merrtlt was shot in the&#13;
head and nearly killed by Ray&#13;
Parish. Parish, with Sinkler's brother,&#13;
were shooting at a target with a&#13;
rifle, when a bullet penetrated the Bide&#13;
of the house hitting the boy close to&#13;
the eyes.&#13;
SB get&#13;
The chap who Is an expert at soakog&#13;
excuses can never draw large fees&#13;
or his skill.&#13;
Sault Ste.&#13;
Howes Lord&#13;
church, baB&#13;
pastor of St.&#13;
kee, Wis., and&#13;
duties May 1.&#13;
Marie.— Rev. Arthur&#13;
rector of St. James&#13;
accepted a call as&#13;
James church, Mllwauwill&#13;
take up his new&#13;
Sturgis.—The German church in&#13;
Sherman township was unroofed&#13;
during a wind storm, a part landing&#13;
on some trees several rods&#13;
away. The other half crashed to the&#13;
ground. Straw and hay stacks In the&#13;
vicinity were scattered about, as were&#13;
smaller buildings. This is the second&#13;
time in six years the church has been&#13;
unroofed.&#13;
Charlotte.—The Grand Trunk eastbound&#13;
passenger crashed Into a&#13;
freight near the Shaw street&#13;
crossing. A number of the passengers&#13;
received bad bruises. The .fireman&#13;
and engineer stuck to their posts and&#13;
escaped with slight injuries. The pay&#13;
car of the freight was telescoped and&#13;
the passenger engine demolished.&#13;
Flint.—Overcome by heart trouble&#13;
while he was passing the Court&#13;
Street M. E. church, Robert Rockefeller,&#13;
seventy, of Atlas, dropped in the&#13;
street. He was carried into the church&#13;
where he died just as a physician&#13;
reached his side. Rockefeller was a&#13;
carpenter and had lived in Atlas 50&#13;
years. He leaves two children.&#13;
Allegan.—Leading members of the&#13;
Woman's History class have organized&#13;
a Civil Improvement league.&#13;
Mrs. H. C. Weeks, Mrs. A. E.&#13;
Calkins, Mrs, Newton Evans and Mrs.&#13;
C. O. Messenger were chosen as the&#13;
committee. The first work will be to&#13;
improve the streets and yards of the&#13;
city.&#13;
Eaton Rapids.—The body of C. M.&#13;
Letts, who died by his own band&#13;
at Flint after shooting his wife&#13;
to death in the basement of their&#13;
home in that city, was brought to&#13;
Eaton Rapids by his son, Grover Letts.&#13;
Ann Arbor.—More than 200 applications&#13;
have come to the engineer*&#13;
ing department, from manufacturing&#13;
and engineering concerns of&#13;
the country, for senior engineering&#13;
students. D. R. Stevens of the Peerleas&#13;
Motorcar company of Cleveland,&#13;
0., was in the city to address the engineering&#13;
students, and incidentally,&#13;
to engage eight or ten men for his&#13;
plant as soon aa they shall have received&#13;
their diplomas.&#13;
Holland—Easter Sunday will have&#13;
a double significance for Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Harm Plagfermans of Holland&#13;
township, as it marks not only&#13;
the date, but also the day, upon which&#13;
they were married by the late Dr. A.&#13;
C. Van Raaila, founder of the Holland&#13;
college, 63 years a«t&gt;. They also hate&#13;
the distinction of being the oldest&#13;
couple among the survivors of pioneer&#13;
day*. Mr. and Mra. vPJaggennans are&#13;
etai&gt;ty.flve and aighty-fc r yearn of&#13;
age. Bom art In fa^ly good health.&#13;
They are the parents of 1« children,&#13;
atf en of whom art living.&#13;
Jfr. Plaresjts Pellets, small, sugsr-eoaied,&#13;
y to take as candy, regulate sod Inviforvts&#13;
itomaoh, liver and bowels and oure oonitipstlop.&#13;
Adv.&#13;
Good Question.&#13;
Sunday School Teacher—And the&#13;
lerpeat, for tempting Eve, was made&#13;
o crawl all the rest of his life.&#13;
Small Girl—Please, sir, an' how did&#13;
te get along in the world before?"&#13;
-•w- •nfr .- mmm,&#13;
WTTl&amp;rb&#13;
Have Been Restored to Health By&#13;
ftildiam9s Vegetable Compouod&#13;
/There is no doubt about this fact. Why! during"thelast&#13;
30 years we have published in the newspapers of t i l s&#13;
country volumes of letters from women who have been;re*-&#13;
lieved of all their suffering by the timely aid of this gnlivl&#13;
old medicine. Letters like the following, true, genuine i n d&#13;
honest expressions of gratitude coming from grateful heart*. Surely you can believe these women. \ \&#13;
Mrs. L. S. BREXtfER, Hudson, Mich.,eajrai—&#13;
»' Sometime ago I was taken with a terrible pain in my right side,&#13;
sharp pains just like a knife sticking me. J tried hot applications but&#13;
did no good, I went to our family doctor (we were living in Fayette* 0&#13;
atthattime)afidhesa^ltwaao)rgjuakiihnUammtlon. I doctored wifch&#13;
a while bat kept getting worse. The pain waa so terrfbla I eoold tatdiv&#13;
stand on my feet I would have that sharp pain in say right aUua,.asd a&gt;-&#13;
dull heavy pain the whole length of my limb. I realized that eotaethii&#13;
had to be done quickly, so Z looked up all of your advertisements I oaq&#13;
find, and saw several that described my case. 1 got a bottle of Ityd^s:&#13;
Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound and it helped me from the first dose*-j"&#13;
when I had taken two bottles my trouble was gone. Yonr medietnt&#13;
done so much for me that I am willing you should publish this letter for t | $&#13;
aakeof other suffering women."—Mrs. L. 8. BaxmrKB, Hudson, Michigan.•,-.&#13;
Mrs. L. E . BO W E B S , Girard, Pfl^aays:— ' '&#13;
" I take pleasure in informing you of what Lydla E. Pinhhsaa'a Vegetable&#13;
Compound haa done for me. 1 had a sick spell last Pebwary, aSMt'ior&#13;
some months after that I was not regular and had many had feetihjpv-£&#13;
-was tired all the time, had dull headaches, not much appetiea, aad ajeo&#13;
what the doctor called organic inflammation. Your Vegetable Compound&#13;
has entirely cured me and I feel that too much cannot be said in Its praise&#13;
as I am now able to do my own work. You are perfectly welcome to ttee&gt;&#13;
zny testimonial for the benefit of others."—Mrs. L. E. Bowwss, R&gt;F.D. No. 1^&#13;
Girard, Pa.&#13;
Mrs. E L I Z A B E T H GEXT1XCORE, Buffalo* N.Y^assjf t - '&#13;
" I feel that I must write to you about your wonderful swmedjas. Abpat&#13;
ten years ago I was troubled with female weakness and waa au rtm down.&#13;
I was tired all the time and could hardly walk without feeling diasy. J&#13;
heard about Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, took It, and alio&#13;
used the Sanative Wash. I got stronger, and have not had those di«sy&#13;
spells since. I feel that I owe my health to yon, and hope yojsr remedies&#13;
will help others as they have me. I tr'.ad moat everything_I hesud of,_and&#13;
yours are the beat medicines for women's ailments."—'Mis*&#13;
Tocons, 36 Glor Street, Buffalo, New York.&#13;
4 For 3 0 rears Lydla E . P!nkham*s Vegetable&#13;
Compound haa been the standard remedy for female&#13;
ills. N o one sick with woman's ailment*&#13;
does Justice t o herself if she does not try this f a -&#13;
m o n s medicine made from roots and herba. It&#13;
lias restored so many suffering worn e n to health,&#13;
•Write to LYD1A E.P1NKH AM MEDIGUTS OO.&#13;
:M&#13;
*-*&#13;
QMMr&#13;
- w • (COmDENTLLL) LYKff, MASS., for advlee.&#13;
our letter will be opened, read and a n s w e r e d&#13;
by a w o m a n a n d held in strict confidence*&#13;
Win. A. Rogers Silverware&#13;
given away&#13;
Absolutely Free&#13;
for wrappers from&#13;
GALVANIC SOAP&#13;
or coupon* from Johnson '* Washing Powder&#13;
This Is Our Offer. Read It:&#13;
For each teaspoon desired send us one two*&#13;
cent stamp and twenty Galvanic Soap wrappers&#13;
(front panel only) or coupons from&#13;
Johnson's Washing Powder. /&#13;
SPECIAL OFFER FOR SIX TEASPOONS&#13;
Send 100 Galvanic Soap wrappers an&amp; 5 two-cent stamps&#13;
to pay postage; we will send yon a set of SIX TEASPOONS&#13;
ABSOLUTELY FREE. -&#13;
These spoons are Wm. A. Rogers silverware, the name&#13;
stamped on every piece. They are the Lavigne or Grape&#13;
Pattern, Heavy A-l Silver Plate and guaranteed You'll&#13;
be proud to own them. Go to your grocer today and Soy&#13;
Galvanic the soap need by a million housewives, This&#13;
offer absolutely expires May 1st, 1913. Mail wrappers to&#13;
B. J. Johnson Soap Co., MiJwiikoe, Wis.&#13;
W. L. DOUGLAS&#13;
^ »a.ob *a.qo «*;ff.p ^"^&#13;
4t&amp;o AND *6,S&amp;&#13;
SHOES&#13;
FOR MEN AND;&#13;
'SSHOfaiitttoWOMtOl&#13;
awyeat aaalsars &lt;&#13;
' s t l W sad $41&#13;
B187BOYBSMC&#13;
- &gt; ' • ' «&#13;
' ^ : ,&#13;
slwseils^tkajjofi&#13;
i»ewr4eatar_tosa©w&#13;
MaiMesT Jaw/ass***&#13;
ee*~M etht? saaWsStlat as,CO to S7.M •afy Jlffeveswo *s «Se psiesT Show In an&#13;
a, stytM sdadahaJHS f smit #9fjho4j,&#13;
soold visit W. I* ItaMlaa teif* trntUhi&#13;
a* BMefceoa, Hassw aswl i s * for y**MS|r,wi&#13;
how —rstaBy W. L» Deogtai ahees are asadsv&#13;
w a i tfcsy saewarfaeafil&#13;
M BseSt shsae sad weagj&#13;
rersbai&#13;
tarsajalsyflpfMnltr. _.&#13;
~ ^ f * .&#13;
- ^ )&#13;
.x.toO&#13;
WHY mm ow* « ~£ « r 1 r&#13;
"»; *•*&#13;
•mm&#13;
TOWN&#13;
• &lt; ' • • - $ [ * • BOWMAN'S&#13;
Where It Pays to Pay Cash&#13;
The new spring merchandise&#13;
is flowing in and we are&#13;
showing some live snappy&#13;
goods. Buying direct from&#13;
large eastern importers, we&#13;
are able to show the live&#13;
ittmsaod name prices that compare&#13;
with the very best stores. New laces,&#13;
embroideries, fancy trimmings, etc.&#13;
D. M* C. and material for fancy&#13;
ork. Largest ribbon stuck in the&#13;
oaoty. Sale on Children's ready-to&#13;
Wear dresses at 50c.&#13;
BV£RY D A Y I S B A R G A I N D A Y&#13;
A. BOWMAN&#13;
HOWELL'S BUSY jfORE I&#13;
Don't fail to attend the caucus&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Margaret Brogan was a Howell&#13;
visitor Saturday.&#13;
George Roche was a Fowlerville&#13;
visitor recently.&#13;
Ruel Cadwell of Detroit was an&#13;
over Sunday visitor here.&#13;
Vern Deraerest was in Detroit&#13;
on business one day recently.&#13;
Earl Baughn was in Howell on&#13;
busines one day the pa^t week&#13;
F. A. Howlett of Gregory was&#13;
in town on business last Friday.&#13;
L. G. Gorham of Detroit spent&#13;
Sunday at the home Mrs. Jennie&#13;
Barton.&#13;
Miss Norma Cnrlett of Mayville&#13;
is visiting at the home of&#13;
her paxents.&#13;
Mrs. Andrew Bates of Leslie&#13;
visited Mrs. J. A. Donaldson&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
The Livingston Tidings have installed&#13;
a new lynotype machine in&#13;
their office at Howell.&#13;
James Heffernon and Lucile&#13;
Doyle of near Gregory spent Sunday&#13;
with friends here.&#13;
Miss. Georgia Martin who has&#13;
been visiting relatives in Akron&#13;
Ohio has returned home.&#13;
According to reports from Ann&#13;
Arbor dogs are being poisoned at&#13;
a lively rate in that city.&#13;
Fred Campbell of Ann Arbc%&#13;
was an over Sunday guest at the&#13;
home of his parents here.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bnllis and&#13;
daughter, Alta, were Fowlerville&#13;
visitors one day the past week.&#13;
I DOWN LOW THE LITCHFIELD DOWN-LOW Spreader gives a Low Top Rail—&#13;
•boot waist kighf winch make* it, extremely easy to load. A man in handling&#13;
v the ordinary pitchfork, raises the load on the fork waist high in order that he&#13;
may throw it from him. This meaus that it would be useless to make a lower&#13;
top rail than what we build, as there would be no advantt ge in loading.&#13;
OUR MACHINE LOADS easily from any direction—the seat turns over&#13;
I out ot the way in front and ics just as easy to load onto this machine as it is to&#13;
• throw it in another pile on the ground.&#13;
i DON'T FORGET. The Self-Cleaning apron, No-Choke box, Bull Dog&#13;
cylinder and Oil Packed main bearings are exclusive Litchfield features You&#13;
•till look for them in vain on any other spreader.&#13;
High Under C l e a r a n c e&#13;
A PECULAR FACT. The LitchBeld Down-Low baa substantially the&#13;
'• same Under Clearance that our High Standard machines have. We use (he&#13;
:• tame site wheels—the axles are the same distance from the ground. This gives&#13;
. Ds from sixteen to eighteen inches of general clearance under the machine, and&#13;
•ame clearance under the front axle that we have always had in the high machines.&#13;
Just compare this with the eight or tea inches clearance found under&#13;
othsr low down spreaders.&#13;
i&#13;
, * . *&#13;
&lt;'•.*/!&#13;
! » • • * • i * . r&#13;
PON'T MAKE THE MISTAKE of buying a Sled when you pay your&#13;
money for a manure spreader. Any machine soon becomes a sled in muddy&#13;
and rough ground if It does not have sufficient' uuder clearance. Like every-&#13;
Jfeiagelae, the tendency toward low down manure sqreaders has gone in most&#13;
a little to far and this is a serious objection—Too Close To The Ground.&#13;
Short Wheel Base&#13;
•"WE MOUNT" OUR SPREADERS on the rear wheels so that these traction&#13;
wheels take a sufficient proportion of the load and have sufficient traction&#13;
Improperly operate the unloading machinery. We get away fiom the heavy&#13;
«mft that if a part of all long coupled wagons and spreaders. We turn in a&#13;
Spotter circle and in a smaller place and our machine hat much more activity&#13;
a^ai if moeh stronger and more substantial than a machine that is hung between&#13;
tfoiroot and the rear wheels instead of being mounted on the rear axle. This&#13;
faeana light draft, strength, durability and convenience. _ , ,&#13;
v| We have samples of the Litchfield and New Idea&#13;
f;J^anure Spreaders for inspection and will take pleasttre&#13;
in showing and will make better terms than you&#13;
W get elsewhere.&#13;
•SXeepje }{ardware Company&#13;
/.&gt;.'•*. mm&#13;
mm&#13;
• • " • ^ v .&#13;
I&#13;
OlEYS HONEY TAR C impound&#13;
&gt; / ** i, f».&gt;•..&gt;*..'&#13;
&gt;A fo* Sule by W. B. Brown&#13;
Eugene Reason of Detroit was&#13;
home over Sunday.&#13;
John Chambers was in Detroit&#13;
on business last week.&#13;
L. E. Smith and Orla Tyler&#13;
were in Gregory last week,&#13;
Horace Sayles and wife of Chilson&#13;
were in town Saturday.&#13;
W. Bueil of Ann Arbor was a&#13;
Pinckney caller last Friday.&#13;
Mrs. Julia Monroe is the guest&#13;
of friends in Detroit this week&#13;
The auctioneer is the only gny&#13;
who can sell goods with a hammer.&#13;
The M. E. church is erecting a&#13;
new barn at the rear of their parsonage.&#13;
E. J. Briggs and family were&#13;
guests at the home of R. G. Webb&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mark Wilson and J/S. Jenkins&#13;
of Flint have been visiting relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
A New and Up to Date Line of&#13;
Millinery now on sale in the Post&#13;
Office building.&#13;
Mr. Lecree of Fitchburg visited&#13;
at the home of E A. Fick the&#13;
fore part of the week.&#13;
Miss Jennie Blades was the&#13;
guest of friends and relatives in&#13;
Jackson over Sunday.&#13;
Chas- Field and wife of Hamburg&#13;
spent a portion of last week&#13;
at the home of W, 0. Dunning.&#13;
Harley JBell of Xpsilantj was&#13;
the guest of friends and relatives&#13;
in Pinckney the first of the week.&#13;
Mrs. Oleve Pool of Gregory visited&#13;
at the home of A. H. Gilchrist&#13;
the latter part of the past&#13;
W v v s i •&#13;
• Nellie Fish who has been taking&#13;
treatment at the Sanitarium&#13;
for the past three months has returned&#13;
home.&#13;
John VanHorn and wife attended&#13;
the Putnam ' and Hamburg&#13;
Farmers Club at the home of S.&#13;
E. VanHorn last Saturday.&#13;
Miss Anna Fitzsimmons of the&#13;
State Sanitarium at Howell spent&#13;
Sunday at the home of her&#13;
mother, Mrs. T. Fitzsimmons.&#13;
Claude Monks, who is attending&#13;
school in Detroit spent the&#13;
the past.week at the home of his&#13;
parents, Mr, and Mrs. John&#13;
Monks.&#13;
Joseph Dixon and family of near&#13;
Dexter will soon move on the Fred&#13;
Grieve farm north of town. The&#13;
present tenant, Theo. Miller, expects&#13;
to move on a farm near Dundee,&#13;
Mich. ,&#13;
A young Fowlerville damsel&#13;
who is learning to play .her piano,&#13;
received an axe by parcel post.&#13;
What made her indignant were&#13;
the words on the handle: "Try&#13;
this on your piano."&#13;
It is claimed by meat packers&#13;
that beef will be a luxury before&#13;
May and that pork will shoot to&#13;
a price that will be almost&#13;
prohibitive to the table of the&#13;
ordinary wage earner.&#13;
It must be a case of true love&#13;
to make a girl enjoy a kiss strained&#13;
through whiskers backed up&#13;
with a monthfnl of "Honest scrap"&#13;
Men how would yoy like to kiss&#13;
the front door of a garbage tank.&#13;
There are fifty-two Sunday&#13;
schools enrolled in the Washtenaw&#13;
connty Sunday school association&#13;
and last Thursday evening&#13;
through delegates, district superintendents&#13;
and township presidents&#13;
twenty-one of them were represented&#13;
at a meeting of workers in&#13;
Ann Arbor.&#13;
If a bill is passed by our legislature&#13;
creating one or a dozen new&#13;
jobs, the question is never raited&#13;
about the constitutionality and it&#13;
is most always given immediate&#13;
effect, but that is taken for granted.&#13;
Bo, if a bill is passed favoring&#13;
a reform the people ask for,&#13;
why then it is at onee pronounced&#13;
unconstitutional, at least to give&#13;
it immediate effect.—Ex.&#13;
AT last spring '&amp; here and soar.* we with one of; the Purest,&#13;
Freshest an4 Most Compete Stoek of Groceries it has *ver&#13;
been your privilej? to choose from. WE GUARANTBSI QUALITY.&#13;
Saturday, March 29th, We p i Offer:&#13;
Sunny Monday Soap, Fairy, T a r or Puramo, (Fairbanks&#13;
Grade Soaps 7 bars of any one kind for&#13;
3 cans Polly Prim [w hKe&#13;
f Kaf} r%5l m ] for - : &gt;&#13;
7 lbs. Rolled Oats for - - - " - -&#13;
3 pkgs. Jellycon [pr S?f KSlor] f ° r&#13;
3 cans Good Corn or Peas for&#13;
2 cans A N o . 1 Red Salmon for - • *.&#13;
2 cans Karo Syrup for -&#13;
Try a sack of Stott's Columbus, o r T h o m a n ' s Moss .Rose,&#13;
grade guaranteed flours for your Easter Pastry&#13;
%h&#13;
25c&#13;
25c&#13;
25c&#13;
25c&#13;
i&#13;
c&#13;
high&#13;
A New Stock of Spring Hats&#13;
&gt;&#13;
A New Stock of Mens Trousers&#13;
A New Stock of Mens Work Shirts {ideal Brand&#13;
A New Stock of Mens Overalls&#13;
Addison C h e e s e , Buttep Nut and V e r y B e s t&#13;
Bread, W h o l e s o m e and Tip Top Bread on s a l e a t&#13;
MONKS BROTHERS&#13;
f&#13;
* A&#13;
iuJUJUJUJUittJUlulUittJUJuJUiuiU^&#13;
Ed. Drewery and wife of Howell&#13;
were over Sunday visitors at the&#13;
home of C. J. Teeple.&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Nash is visiting at&#13;
the home of her daughter, Mrs.&#13;
Harry Ayers of Detroit.&#13;
WjWthe' farmers sell potatoes&#13;
for on^, dollar per bushel this&#13;
spring? Don't look like it now,&#13;
Mrs. Ray Culhane of Webberville&#13;
visited at the home of her&#13;
parents, Mr, and Mrs. Mark Sell.&#13;
Dr. Wm. Monks of Howell was&#13;
over Sunday visitor at the home&#13;
of his mother, Mrs. Margaret&#13;
Monks.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Buhl and Mrs. Lillian&#13;
Burden visited at the home&#13;
of Mr. and Mrs, G. D. BlancT recently.&#13;
Mrs. Glen Gardner and children&#13;
of Stockbridge visited last&#13;
week at the home of her parents,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Sprout.&#13;
John Mclntyre has been making&#13;
extensive repairs ou the house&#13;
which he recently purchased of&#13;
Lewis Colby. It will be occupied&#13;
J&gt;y Wm. Bullis.&#13;
Ten townships iu Oakland&#13;
have made arrangements to put&#13;
Bull Moose tickets into the field&#13;
at the township elections.&#13;
The state railroad commission&#13;
has granted a franchise to the&#13;
Stockbridge and Fitchburg Wayside&#13;
Telephone Company ot Stockbridge.&#13;
The new company has&#13;
a capital of $900.&#13;
Wear your brow high, part your&#13;
voice in the middle, tack four initials&#13;
on the front end of yourojame&#13;
and people will know you are&#13;
from Boston and that your culture&#13;
is bean deep.&#13;
A black eyed man is always&#13;
jealous of his wife, a grey eyed&#13;
one the most faithful a brows&#13;
eyed one the best provider, and a&#13;
bine eyed one always henpecked,&#13;
Take your choice girls.&#13;
"Am I very sick, doctor," she&#13;
asked, in a note of sad eyed entreaty.&#13;
"Yea, you have se- !et&#13;
fever." "Just my luck," she said,&#13;
"can't yon make it yellow feverto&#13;
match the wall paper?"&#13;
If you are so anxious to see&#13;
somebody roasted and hauled over&#13;
the coals, get busy, write your&#13;
opinion, bring it to this office, pnt&#13;
yoar name on it and we will print&#13;
i t Yon won't do it? Don't talk&#13;
to somebody else about getting&#13;
cold feet.&#13;
The village authorities last&#13;
Wednesday morning started work&#13;
on the streets with - the township&#13;
split log drag. The village has&#13;
ordered three of these drags to be&#13;
made and the streets of the village&#13;
will be worked with them the&#13;
coming season. The so-called split&#13;
log drag is one of the best tools&#13;
known for road work and Is&#13;
endorsed by all practical public&#13;
highway builders,—Ohslsee, Tri.&#13;
bane.'&#13;
SB&#13;
God Liver Oil&#13;
. . . \&#13;
without that awful taste is what you get, when&#13;
you buy a bottle of&#13;
Rich fields Extract, Cod&#13;
Liver Oil&#13;
W i t h Hypophosphites&#13;
T h e active principles of Cod Liver Oil are combined&#13;
with a very fine grade of Port Wine, making a&#13;
most palatable reconstructive tonic; very beneficial&#13;
to those w h j have suffered a severe cold or other&#13;
bronchial affection. Sold under a guarantee.&#13;
y&#13;
I&#13;
MEYER'S DRUG STORE&#13;
£ PINCKNEY^&#13;
FOR A SQUARE DEAL&#13;
MICHIGAN&#13;
Drugs, Wall Paper, Crockery, Cigars, Candy,&#13;
Magazines, School Supplies, Books&#13;
rfn «.&#13;
Low biff I&#13;
• .K • Made In&#13;
V 6 Manure Spreaders&#13;
' - * « * *&#13;
A S i z e Fop Bvery Farrtir ] )&#13;
Made in Wide and Narrow Types&#13;
\y*&gt;»A&#13;
Just received a car load of the above machines,&#13;
Drop in and. look over&#13;
Sample Msohine&#13;
Dihkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
•'• * ' : * ' ,&#13;
j&#13;
T&#13;
y&#13;
&gt;&#13;
*.-vl&#13;
:&lt;*w.)r.' :M • • ( : • &gt;&#13;
' • • • . ; • «&#13;
' » '. ^&#13;
**• ' • • : . ' '&#13;
' • • V « &lt;&#13;
&gt; "?j*&#13;
' • • Y,&#13;
• • - a . : ' '&#13;
'• &gt;''.M* m&#13;
• • ^ * 7 »&#13;
•ri'.f :.-^: - / ' - •&#13;
1¾&#13;
'•£':.. rrK'*y„ -,&#13;
•it':'-i:\%f-r-:- •&#13;
MM&#13;
t&#13;
Purchase of&#13;
Mens Blue Serge&#13;
.... Suits . . . .&#13;
allows, usXo put out a limited&#13;
number of fine weave, all&#13;
wool suits of $20. value at&#13;
FITFORM&#13;
A r e y o u i n t e r e s t e d ? IF s o , c o m e u p&#13;
t h i s w e e k ; w e ' l l p a y y o u r f a r e&#13;
W. J. DANCER &amp; COMPANY&#13;
Stockbrfdge, Mich.&#13;
4-&#13;
^ • A t t W W W ^ ^ THE CENTRAL'&#13;
mm mm&#13;
&lt;v- ¥•:-.&#13;
J&#13;
^ ^ »&#13;
An elaborate display of beautiful&#13;
creations for spring and summer.&#13;
Clever combinations of smart style&#13;
and becomingness at reasonable&#13;
prices&#13;
MRS- C- W. -KRAUS&#13;
rywttwtt&amp;w^^^&#13;
*r&gt;*.?j&#13;
i&#13;
VT'&#13;
*L.&#13;
• &lt; * • ' • . *&#13;
f tir-&#13;
• . &gt; -&#13;
,i.V'&#13;
1 '&gt;• L&#13;
Olds Engine Shelling Corn&#13;
SHELLING corn isn't such a hard job if&#13;
you do it with an Olds Engine. Neither&#13;
is your other work; the Olds mil do a lot of&#13;
i it for you; better and quicker.&#13;
Let's get together and talk this engine matter over&#13;
'some day; let us tefi you about the Olds; that's really :*v| j the engine you ought to have. We've aahetienior&#13;
you, toa&#13;
Make this your store; you'll get what yottwant here.&#13;
If yoa can't find tine to come and gee ns, ask nt to OOBM&#13;
and fee yea or tend yon • free catalog of&#13;
Olds Knghw.&#13;
W$*r$ h*r§ to mrv yom;&#13;
g^JeJw^sv ^S*# ww99 SJ^VSjjSs^Sj^Ha,&#13;
H. FLINTOFT,&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
rtffcv&#13;
* . • ' • $&#13;
• ' f v&#13;
••:•&lt; ^ ™J-&#13;
'•&amp;•••: .¾&#13;
i-j(: f :&#13;
• V.:'&lt; ••'..&#13;
GBEOOET. &gt;*r^'i*?H&#13;
, Thomas Harker spent amp£*tof&#13;
last week ID Jackson and Lansing.&#13;
Thoe. Williams, wife and bro?&#13;
the*, John Sedlemaier, spent ihe&#13;
week end with the former's parents.&#13;
B a t h Whitehead is on the sicV&#13;
list.&#13;
Hazel Bates is home on a vacation.&#13;
A. J. Harker and family spent&#13;
Sunday at the home of L . R. William's.&#13;
Clyde VanGorder is better at&#13;
this writing.&#13;
It is estimated that about 25&#13;
chimneys in this locality were destroyed&#13;
by the high wind last Friday.&#13;
Considerable damage was&#13;
also done to the silos.&#13;
Rebah Blair was home over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Miss Allie Drown spent Easter&#13;
with her parents.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Smock&#13;
have been visiting at the home of&#13;
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. G.&#13;
Ward.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Whittaker and her&#13;
mother, Mrs. Johnson visited Mrs.&#13;
Henry Dewey one day last week.&#13;
L. Gallup and wife spent Sunday&#13;
at the home of H. Dewey,&#13;
Mr?. Louie Oatrander was the&#13;
guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs&#13;
L. Gallup last week.&#13;
Mrs. A. Gates was the guest of&#13;
Mrs. W hi ted one day the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Thos. Williams and wife and&#13;
her brother came from Jackson&#13;
Saturday to spend Easter with&#13;
friends and relatives here and in&#13;
this vicinity.&#13;
2. A&#13;
as&#13;
Beet Known Cough Remedy&#13;
For forty-three years Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery has been known&#13;
throughout the world as the most reliable&#13;
cough remedy. Orer three&#13;
million bottles were used last.year&#13;
Isn't this proof? It will get rid or&#13;
your cough, or we will refund your&#13;
money, J. J. Owen's, of Allendale, S.&#13;
C„ writes tbt way hundreds of others&#13;
have done: "After twenty years, I find&#13;
that Dr, King's New Discovery is the&#13;
best remedy for coughs and golds I&#13;
have ever used." For coughs or colds&#13;
and all throat and lung troubles, it&#13;
has no equal. 50c and 11.00 at W.&#13;
E. Brown's Drugstore.&#13;
» •«»&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG.&#13;
Erwin Nash visited bis brother,&#13;
Orville, Monday.&#13;
Mrs. M. A. Davis is ill at this writ*&#13;
ing.&#13;
Mrs. It. Bennett and daughter vis*&#13;
ited friends ip Hamburg Wednesday.&#13;
J as, Burroughs and wife were&#13;
Brighton visitors Thursday.&#13;
Orviile Nash and family visited at&#13;
the home of Earl Davenport of Whitmore&#13;
Lake Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
Wm. Jarvis formerly of North&#13;
Hamburg, was ser&lt;ouslyMinjured Sat*&#13;
urday when his team ran away at&#13;
Brighton.&#13;
Friday's wind storm did much&#13;
damage through out this vicinity.&#13;
Deafaess Cannot Be Cared&#13;
By local application!), as they canno&#13;
reach the deceased portion of the ear&#13;
There is only one way to cure deafness,&#13;
and that is by constitutional rem&#13;
edits. Deafness is caused by an inlamed&#13;
condition of tbe mucous lining&#13;
of the Eustachian Tube. When this&#13;
tube is inflamed yon have a rumbling&#13;
sound or imperfect hearing and when&#13;
it is entirely closed, Deafness is the&#13;
result, and unless tbe inflamation can&#13;
be taken out and this tube restored to&#13;
its normal condition, hearing will be&#13;
destroyed forever; nine cases out of&#13;
ten are caused by Catarrh, which is&#13;
nothing bat an inflamed condition ot&#13;
the mucous surfaces.&#13;
We will give One Hundred&#13;
Dollars for any case of Diainess&#13;
.(caused by Catarrb) tbst cannot&#13;
be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cnre.&#13;
Send for circulars, free.&#13;
F. J. GBKVIY &amp; Co., Toledo, Ohio&#13;
Sold by all druggists, 75o.&#13;
Take Hall's Fimily Pills for constipation.&#13;
Red Cob Silo Corn&#13;
I have received my supply of&#13;
Bad Cob Bilo Corn, Prices $1.00&#13;
March, 1145 April. $156 May'&#13;
delivery. B . E.Bu?on,Howell. id?.&#13;
Are Tea CsMlipetedl&#13;
if so, get a-box of Dr. King's New&#13;
Life Pills, takt then regularly and&#13;
your trouble will disappear. They&#13;
will stimulate tbe liter, improve your&#13;
digestion and get rid of all the poisons&#13;
fHtm yoer system. Tbsy will surely&#13;
get yon well agaii, 2Se at Brown's&#13;
Drag Store.&#13;
•OUTH MA1X0*.&#13;
Mr. Laverne Deroereet was in Detroit&#13;
last weak.&#13;
John Gardner and; wife spent&#13;
day at tkfrb'tfaeof Bart Gauss* ,&#13;
Wm. Chambers fttd wjf6|s Mrs?^.&#13;
Pacey and Mrs. Cfcrii Brogan and&#13;
daughters were Howell visitors Saturday.&#13;
Art LaRowe and wife and Will&#13;
Caskey and wife of Anderson spent&#13;
Tuesday at tbe home of Chris Brogan.&#13;
Geo. Bland and wife were recent&#13;
visitors at tbe borne of R. M. Glenn&#13;
of Howell.&#13;
Miss Anna Gilks who bas been&#13;
spending the winter in Fowlerville&#13;
has returned home.&#13;
The Misses Beulab Burgess and&#13;
Eva Docking are borne with the measels.&#13;
Frank and Roy Treavers of Detroit&#13;
are visiting' in this vicinity.&#13;
Kitsey Allison of Chubbs Corners&#13;
spent a portion of last week at the&#13;
home of L. Demerest.&#13;
Hollis Sheban was an Anderson&#13;
caller one day last week.&#13;
The Cans*? of Khenmatism&#13;
Stomach trouble, lazy liver and deranged&#13;
kidneys are tbe cause of rheumatism.&#13;
Get your stomach, liver,&#13;
kidneys and bowels in healthy condition&#13;
by taking Electric Bitters, and&#13;
you will not be troubled with the&#13;
pains of rheumatism Charles B. Allen&#13;
a school principal, of Sylvania, Ga.,&#13;
who suffered indescribable torture&#13;
from rheumatism, liver and stomach&#13;
trouble and diseased kidneys, writes:&#13;
"All remedies failed until I used Electric&#13;
Bitters, but four bottles of this&#13;
wonderful remedy cured me completely."&#13;
Maybe your rheumatic pains&#13;
come from stomach aud kidney troubles.&#13;
Electric Bitters will give you&#13;
prompt relief, 50c and 11.00. Recommended&#13;
by W. E. Brown the druggist.&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I — — — — — — —&#13;
CI&#13;
FOB&#13;
rday Mar. 2 0&#13;
t&#13;
; 3 0 c Brooms&#13;
i 8 lbs. Rolled Oafs&#13;
; 4 lbs. Best Crackers 2 5 c&#13;
| 3 Cans of Corn 2 5 c&#13;
I Yeast Cakes - 3 c&#13;
| h Gal. 4 0 c Molasses 16c&#13;
| 2 Cans Baking Powder 7 c&#13;
| 1 lb of Soda&#13;
i Brown Sheetings 6 3-4c i&#13;
: - " • • - • • • • • - '&#13;
I A L L S A L E S CASH.,&#13;
i ' . • . • . '&#13;
Call and s e e o u r n e w c a r p e t sampfeli&#13;
W. W BARNARD&#13;
- • m.i.m.M.rtM.....&#13;
\ 4&#13;
5 - -&#13;
Subscribe FOP The Dispatch 14&#13;
Proof from Michigan Farmers ! • ' *&#13;
. * ft ;f&#13;
The Great Worm Destroyer and Conditioner&#13;
The results Michigan farmers are getting from "Sal-Vet" and the way&#13;
they endorse it is proof conclusive that this great worm destroyer and conditioner is&#13;
the greatest boon to farmers ever discovered. Here are a few of the hundreds of letters written&#13;
to me by grateful Michigan farmers relating their experiences and results from "Sal-Vet". You&#13;
may possibly know some of them personally. Read what they say:&#13;
v..&#13;
"I have fed SAL-VET to »11 my »bM&gt;p. hwjt&#13;
and pig*, and alto to one of ray «ork hone* that&#13;
wax not in condition. Yhe bone* have&#13;
rounded out •plendidjy, my sheep never looked&#13;
•o well at thin time of of the rear and my host"&#13;
and Kpnnit pig* are in the best of nealth. 1&#13;
have nluay* been nlnw to feed any of iho itock&#13;
food* or medicine*, believing that tood feeding*&#13;
and ordinary conditions oooht to keep «tock in&#13;
good health, but f am wen aatitfled with the&#13;
re«uli:«obtained from8AL-vET; ithat pertainly&#13;
Improved to a marked dectren. the condition of&#13;
my Htock."-W. H. HOHANTZ. 8upt. Sheep Dept.&#13;
Michigan Agricultural Society, Batting*. Mtcb.&#13;
"SAL-VET 1« giving Bne rennlto. T loot fewer&#13;
Itimbit by H0% thin year while feedlne HALVET&#13;
than in cither of the two fncrerdlnB year*&#13;
when Ht »•»« not fed. ' - £ . J. DOWNING. 8t&#13;
Ghaflea, Micb.&#13;
"My SALVET If aJI uonr. hti'i u» common&#13;
•alt doea not bf«m to take it* plare I uunt yoa&#13;
to eend me another keg at nnco I am M I * that&#13;
»5.00 worth of HAL-VET naves me MO.W worth&#13;
of feed; all my libeop, cows ant! bom-* are&#13;
doing remarkably well. My experience haa&#13;
be«n that 8AL-VICT and worrr.n cannot dwell&#13;
to«eiher."-E.A.BONTHAOER.Fairview,Mlch.&#13;
. "Affer having naed a KO-pound keg of voor&#13;
BAf.-VFT nmong our ,icir*e". .'attie and •lieep&#13;
*lth KrutifylBB n*nlt". t ran .icurttly rwnm-&#13;
« e n d a l l •tockmf-n nn'l &lt;-*pt&gt;c\n Iv nhwrnni to S K* it a trial. "-HAfiftV FOT'iKK. Davlaon.&#13;
ich.&#13;
•'! find SAL-VET »11 that It 1« claimed&#13;
be/'-JAHEHNIOOLL, gaoduaky. Mich.&#13;
to&#13;
"T have given your 8AL-VTT » good trial&#13;
and find it ta ulI right. WiHwaatmore-wh«i&#13;
tbit W gone. I woold rather pave It Utia a a /&#13;
Ptock food or remedy that t i a v * t r l i P - w .&#13;
E, MCHULA8, Bangor, Ml on.&#13;
tuy recommena icto every anew&#13;
irely ha*.my «been in the plmk&#13;
'arm, Hoaebwb. illeh.&#13;
"Your "SAL-VET la all that von olala H ton*&#13;
and I beartily recommend it to wry aj^wp&#13;
raider. It wreiy_ha*,put mj&#13;
of .'ondltion." "' ~&#13;
ford Stock farm.&#13;
/ _ J&#13;
"Having thoronghlrteeted voor 8AX-VET. X&#13;
have fouijd it to be oiactlv aa yo« aajr jt 1« I&#13;
'iog« and coll* and nev&lt;&#13;
my life Man; hopw&#13;
/&#13;
renulto in&#13;
lx&gt;rhood&#13;
here.'&#13;
Byron Center, Mich. .&#13;
in the neighronble&#13;
v\\\\\\\Vi&#13;
i WW&#13;
Y*k£fr2&#13;
V&#13;
3J&amp;&amp;2J*;&#13;
"Sal-Vet" is a wdnderfuhmedicated salt — a preparation which is saving formers&#13;
hundreds of thousand* of dollars. It is not only t h e surest and quickest remedy for worms; but .&#13;
also a tonic, digestive and conditioner which puts all farm animals in excellent condition, thus providing tht.fBOflt&#13;
efficient tdisease preventive you can pet. No trouble to feed it. Yon simply place it where all yonr fantt«s£&#13;
mals can run to it freely—no'drenching, no handling—no bother at all—Mo? doctor themuUM, ., s&#13;
CHEAPEST and BEST&#13;
It is inexpensive—costing only one-twelfth of a cent a day for each sheep or hog and only *&#13;
trifle more for larger animals. It saves feed—PREVZNTS DISEASE-makes stock thrive and gam fetters-tot'&#13;
fact repays you its small cost many times over. It is from 100% to 400% cheaper than other Uye stock]**para- ,&#13;
tions and far more efficient. The fact that it is sold ta a "Money-back Guarantee" PROVES all tbif. v&#13;
Here Is My Money-Back 0§§ef&#13;
Simply call at my dealer's store and get enough "Saf-Ver1 Co last&#13;
your stock 60 days. Take it home with you and place it where *H yew&#13;
animal A can run to it freely, then watch results. If "Sal-Vet11 doaft 4o 1*&#13;
claim, if it don't rid your stock of the deadly stomach and intestinal worms&#13;
prove a paying- investment for you, simply notify the dealer and he will refold&#13;
your money in full. You won't be out a single penny* I tafc* aU tte«rkik.&#13;
Remember you get ALL your money back if you are not pleated* ' " ' &gt;&#13;
h ^ H&#13;
•{ i :&lt;&#13;
mm *. FOr fm* V* t. t f i l w 4&#13;
To Omr Cumtemmr*G se t rid of the worms in your stock and watch your profits&#13;
and wiH&#13;
* ' •&#13;
•\\ • ¥ :&#13;
ink Don't wait until yoar bogs or other stock 4ei&#13;
loe#. and hare thrifty, fine* snore profitable**©**. It ta tbe cbaapett a a d . b ^ eof4M0stiT4fi«&#13;
• AS: • V Dinkel &amp; Dunbar, \ .' A '&#13;
-¾¾^¾&#13;
i&#13;
A B C MCN WE88 CHAR&#13;
$*fce adjective is not ours,&#13;
lit*. Charles Henrotln pt&#13;
Very emphatically assert* tltf&#13;
of today are. In matters &gt;T coejtanjT&#13;
charm, in no way. five! to&#13;
men with whom her father and&#13;
associated 50 years ago- 1%«&#13;
•J "behavior," she Bay a, seem* to&#13;
,ve been, dropped out ol the language,&#13;
y-ttoe years ago the men were beteducated,&#13;
they knew literature,&#13;
war* better conversationalists,&#13;
nderfully well read, had a leisurely&#13;
pad good breeding that now&#13;
seems, she thinks, to have passed out&#13;
oJC existence, says the Pittsburgh Dispatch.&#13;
Big cities and the modern&#13;
civilization, in their tendency to part&#13;
the sexea, and the influx of, foreigners,&#13;
the causes she offers In solution.&#13;
a i t are her charges true? Grant that&#13;
the greater strain of life has crowded&#13;
out courtliness, that few men can afford&#13;
a leisurely bearing in these days&#13;
«f increased cost of living, and that&#13;
modern manner* are more abrupt than&#13;
; those of the old'school, what of her&#13;
\ other specifications? Are men less&#13;
' -well educated, less well read, less able&#13;
; to converse intelligently? Of course&#13;
.not Education, reading and lntelll-&#13;
--yajence were never so generally diffused&#13;
as today, and the broadening&#13;
as has not lessened the propor*&#13;
•^^eOHMtttcatetJ, well-bred awi *xally&#13;
Intelligent men, compared&#13;
60 year* a*o, but rather the" re*&#13;
e, because' the natural effect of&#13;
der diffusion has been to create a&#13;
r proportion of leaders.&#13;
. ^ -&#13;
\ * * * • • . _ •&#13;
|ho New York board of superintendhas&#13;
issued formal instructions to&#13;
hers in the high schools of'that&#13;
to do all in their power to improve&#13;
tlsl oral English of the pupils. It is&#13;
declared that the use by high school&#13;
pfjplls of "t'row" for throw, "toin" for&#13;
tirn, "foil" for girl, "erster" for oyster,&#13;
4-Uwr" for law, "thoyd" for third, and&#13;
OMr similar expressions no longer&#13;
,Wll be tolerated. If, as seems to be&#13;
^psoplied, it prevails at the present&#13;
jLtme, the fact would seem to indicate&#13;
Bot only a lack of diligence on the part&#13;
of the teachers of the grade schools as&#13;
WSH as the high schools, but also&#13;
flovenly pronunciation on the part of&#13;
time of the teachers themselves.&#13;
ferigut pupils usually imitate the pronunciation&#13;
of their teachers. Milwaukeeans&#13;
are aware from observation&#13;
of this tendency. Children belonging&#13;
to homes where a foreign language&#13;
was habitually employed bave&#13;
grown up with a good idiomatic English&#13;
because the} imitated the speech&#13;
ot$helr,teachers In the public schools.&#13;
% the onslaught on systematized&#13;
anssn having a deterrent effect? The&#13;
flr*;lo»8 in the United StateB and Canada&#13;
was $20,193,550 for January, 1913,&#13;
compared with 135,653,160 In the corresponding&#13;
January, 1911. But climatic&#13;
conditions are to be taken into&#13;
int, and these in the first month&#13;
present year were favorable to&#13;
»&gt; reduction in the fire loss. January,&#13;
1U|, was marked by the most protrs^&#13;
ted periofl of extremely cold weath-&#13;
-e«t'^iHbseh has occurred since the establishment&#13;
of the weather bureau,&#13;
aheTwhen the mercury 1B very low fire&#13;
departments work at great, disadvantage.&#13;
In January, 1912, there were&#13;
Mt fires causing a toss of $10,000 or&#13;
over, and in January, 1S13, only 365.&#13;
T»* largest fire of January, 1913, was&#13;
(fe^Lwhich destroyed the Calgary meat&#13;
packing plant in Alberta, Canada,&#13;
; • * ' * « :&#13;
. *nrgical treatment to turn a confirmed&#13;
criminal into a useful cititen&#13;
received a bad setback in a case&#13;
wfcere * great apparent change after&#13;
(suck an operation led to the pardon&#13;
the remade man. His release was&#13;
by a series of burglaries&#13;
^ necessitated his return to dur-&#13;
^ssttsj.4rills. Perhaps one of the reforms&#13;
to come wfll be the better protection&#13;
ofsociety from theory and experttttnt&#13;
connected with the criminal&#13;
classes* So far, the experiments made&#13;
prove that morality is merely a&#13;
of physiolofy have not been&#13;
Btty aaeeeufnl&#13;
-&gt; .,&#13;
.if.&#13;
S1.it*&#13;
&lt; ! • » • '&#13;
&amp;&#13;
fccoUege paper denounces the dec*.&#13;
v 1e*e# of students in allowing the oldtlfee&#13;
rough-and-tumble rush to be sue*&#13;
.ymf*6*'br "sappy, effeminate teas&#13;
a*d dinners,'' and pleads for the res-&#13;
'tp^ay^ 0¾ k*nd-to-hand battles to try&#13;
their mrttle. Probably thus did the&#13;
bje*9arla.ta look upon the first en*&#13;
eroacbrisfrts M civilization. The; cotestimate&#13;
of manliness&#13;
bafily to be revised.&#13;
•esjSWnMBjSn&#13;
• i r w h&#13;
:/}• • A doctor in Borne caused a riot&#13;
and then was kept busy patching up&#13;
4h* wottaded. It was rather a strenu-&#13;
( o n and^rlasT way of dramming np&#13;
; trade, bet that business energy 1* sc-&#13;
-eeented £he best which gets a market&#13;
Jet it* supply by creating a demand.&#13;
Jfeass*. professor has"~dlscoTefed&#13;
^ r ' ^ . * v - W t o egbr la to try Maty. ; A*y* rimnagw who&#13;
to fere* any of hie stage&#13;
U f a op to their contrasts&#13;
BILL TO INCREA8E T H E STATE&#13;
COLLEGE ALLOWANCE MAY&#13;
GO THROUGH, IT 13 SAID.&#13;
THERE IS A DIFFERENCE OF&#13;
OPINION, HOWEVER.&#13;
Short Ballot Bill Beaterw-That Boxno&#13;
Commission—Federal Patronage&#13;
and the Governor.—Other&#13;
Legislative News.&#13;
[By Gurd M. Hayes.]&#13;
The bill Increasing the mill tax appropriation"&#13;
of the Michigan Agricultural&#13;
College from one-tenth to onefifth&#13;
of a mill, which it is estimated&#13;
will increase the allowance for the college&#13;
from 1250,000 annually to about&#13;
$500,000, has been reported out favorably&#13;
in the senate and is said to&#13;
stand an excellent chance of passing&#13;
Lhe upper house.&#13;
Whether the bill stands any show is&#13;
a question over which there is a difference&#13;
of opinion, some members&#13;
claiming that in view of the attack on&#13;
President Snyder there is small&#13;
chance for success, while. others&#13;
claim sufficient votes can be rallied&#13;
to push the bill through.&#13;
Students and the college and alumni&#13;
In various parts of the state are sending&#13;
letters to members of the legislature,&#13;
urging them to lay aside any&#13;
prejudice they may have against President&#13;
Snyder and use their influence&#13;
to advance the best interests of the institution&#13;
by voting the school more&#13;
money.&#13;
It will be some time before a governor&#13;
of Michigan appoints the various&#13;
state officers. The proposed amendment&#13;
to the constitution providing for&#13;
the short ballot has been beaten&#13;
again in the house and no further attempts&#13;
will be made to raise the question&#13;
during the present session. Rep.&#13;
Jensen, who made a stirring speech&#13;
against the proposed amendment declared&#13;
that the people of the state&#13;
have never made any demand for this&#13;
innovation in the government and&#13;
declared that if they adopt the initiative&#13;
and referendum at the spring election,&#13;
they will have the power to initiate&#13;
such an amendment if they think&#13;
such a change is really needed.&#13;
Speaker Currie and other progressive&#13;
republicans voted against the amendment,&#13;
and the friends of the bill were&#13;
unable to register the two-thlrda majority&#13;
necessary for its adoption.&#13;
y&#13;
Governor Ferris does not take&#13;
kindly to the proposed bill of Rep.&#13;
Martz creating a boxing commission&#13;
and legalizing ten-round bouts in this&#13;
state.&#13;
"Boxing as it should be conducted,&#13;
suitable for the Y. M. C. A. and the&#13;
gymi\aslum is permitted under the&#13;
present law," said Gov. Ferris, "I&#13;
would not endorse anything more than&#13;
this. I am unalterably opposed to prize&#13;
fighting and from the investigations I&#13;
have been making, I am inclined to&#13;
believe that many of the so-called boxing&#13;
contests are nothing but prize&#13;
fights. Anyway, since there is no law&#13;
preventing decent boxing contests, I&#13;
fail to see the need of a boxing commission&#13;
or any law to legalize prize&#13;
fighting and I would be opposed to any&#13;
such proposal."&#13;
The question of federal patronage is&#13;
a problem that is causing considerable&#13;
discussion among the democratic&#13;
members of the legislature and Gov.&#13;
Ferris has had numerous callers who&#13;
wanted his indorsement for postmasterships&#13;
and various other jobs.&#13;
"There will be no repetition of the&#13;
obnoxious 'referee' system as far as&#13;
the federal patronage is concerned,"&#13;
said Gov. Ferris. "Of this I am assured&#13;
by both members of the national&#13;
committee and the state chairman. I&#13;
have been asked to make suggestions&#13;
and I am informed that information&#13;
and recommendations as to the fitness&#13;
and efficiency of the candidates, aa&#13;
well as party service, will be solicited&#13;
and welcomed from every source.&#13;
"I cannot in Justice t othe duties of&#13;
this office give the time necessary to&#13;
make the required investigations for&#13;
all of the hundreds of offices in Michigan.&#13;
I was elected governor of Michigan&#13;
and not the official dispenser of&#13;
patronage. 1 will do »11 I can for&#13;
worthy democrats and will conform&#13;
to the policy of the administration and&#13;
use my best efforts to promote harmony&#13;
and advance the welfare of&#13;
Michigan as well as to uphold the&#13;
president in his ideals and standards&#13;
aa to principles and appointees."&#13;
At the election this spring the people&#13;
of Michigan will be asked to pass&#13;
judgment on several Important amendments&#13;
to the state constitution. The&#13;
equal suffrage amendment is the one&#13;
that is attracting the most attention&#13;
at present&#13;
The Initiative on constitutional&#13;
amendments, initiative on state statutes,&#13;
the referendum and the1 amendment&#13;
providing for the pensioning of&#13;
members of city fire departments, will&#13;
also he on the ballots.&#13;
•Jt&#13;
Senator Robert Walter, chairman of&#13;
the fish committee appointed to meet&#13;
with the Wisconsin legislature to&#13;
{rame uniform fish legislation for Lake&#13;
Michigan, has just received word from&#13;
the game warden of Wisconsin, commending&#13;
the Clark commercial fisheries&#13;
bill which just passed the house.&#13;
The Wisconsin expert says it is the&#13;
best measure of its kind he has ever&#13;
seen bearing on lake fisheries and rill&#13;
ask the Wisconsin legislature to adopt&#13;
it for that state as the basis for uniform&#13;
fish laws.&#13;
Michigan and Wisconsin never before&#13;
have been able to agree absolutely&#13;
on the commercial fisheries legislation&#13;
and the difference has been a&#13;
source of no little trouble to the game&#13;
wardens of the two states and the&#13;
commercial fishing interests representing&#13;
the two sides of Lake Michigan.&#13;
The complications have been so&#13;
numerous and troublesome that Senator&#13;
Walter determined this year to&#13;
make a light for uniformity.&#13;
With but little opposition the house&#13;
committee on revision and amendment&#13;
of the constitution reported out the&#13;
resolution to Bubmit state wide prohibition&#13;
to the people of Michigan. It&#13;
cannot be said that the members of&#13;
the house received the measure with&#13;
great glee for many have asserted&#13;
their personal disinclination to support&#13;
such a measure but adding thereto a&#13;
statement that probably they would&#13;
vote for the bill if the committee&#13;
turned it loose, and the indications&#13;
now are better for success for the resolution&#13;
than in any previous session,&#13;
In both houses.&#13;
The action of the committee this&#13;
session comes as something of a surprise,&#13;
observers point out, in view of&#13;
the fact that such other measures such&#13;
as equal suffrage, the initiative, referendura&#13;
and recall, have the call on public&#13;
attention, while in other years delegation&#13;
after delegation came here to&#13;
fight for such a measure, and petitions&#13;
by the thousand were filed without&#13;
effect. This year with little or no&#13;
agitation the resolution is placed in&#13;
position where'it is generally admitted&#13;
there is a chance for its passage.&#13;
The committee was not agreed on the&#13;
matter, and the report is without favorable&#13;
recommendation for the resolution&#13;
by the committee. On the question&#13;
of reporting out the bill the following&#13;
members voted in favor: Reps. Skeels,&#13;
Hulse, Flowers, Middleton, Pray, Wieland,&#13;
C. H. McDride, Stevens, Rice,&#13;
while Chairman Ashley and Reps. Suttari,&#13;
Freeman and Foote favored indefinitely&#13;
postponing consideration of&#13;
the matter.&#13;
raitCTIVE STORM SWEEPS&#13;
MANY UVES ARE LOST AND TOWNS ARE LAID IN&#13;
RUINS BY DESTRUCTIVE TORNADO.&#13;
OMAHA AND TERRE HAUTE SUFFER HEAVILY&#13;
FROM RAGING ELEMENTS.&#13;
Fires Follow Wind in Stricken Cities and Destruction by Fire&#13;
Is Great Owing to Inability of the Firemen to&#13;
Work Effectively During die Storm.&#13;
Better and cream must hereafter be&#13;
All doubts as to the progressive&#13;
nature of the senate were dispelled&#13;
when the upper bouse in a single afternoon&#13;
passed the resolutions providing&#13;
for the submission of constitutional&#13;
amendments that would give the people&#13;
of the state, the initiative and referendum&#13;
on legislation, the recall, the&#13;
initiative and referendum on constitutional&#13;
amendments and the short ballot.&#13;
Five years ago there measures would&#13;
have been considered fit only for the&#13;
discussion of statesmen of socialistic&#13;
tendencies. And yet, such changes have&#13;
been wrougt, that all these measures&#13;
hardly brought out an antagonistic&#13;
comment from the floor. In this day of&#13;
primaries when every aspirant to publie&#13;
office must explain his action and&#13;
his vote to the folks at home, the&#13;
people really have come to rule. "The&#13;
people want ft," is excuse enough for&#13;
anything in this progressive day.&#13;
Old legislators who had in the house&#13;
and senate of five and ten years ago&#13;
fairly gasped aa the. initiative and referendum&#13;
slipped -through the senate.&#13;
There was no further discussion of&#13;
the short ballot proposal of Senator&#13;
QdeTl. Some of the members of the sen*&#13;
ate did not want It, but they were of&#13;
the opinion that it would be killed in&#13;
the house.&#13;
A terrific windstorm causing widespread&#13;
destruction and loss of life and&#13;
practically wrecking the already demoralized&#13;
telegraph service raged&#13;
over the central west and middle&#13;
states late Sunday.&#13;
Reports from Nebraska, Kansas,&#13;
iowa and Indiana indicate heavy damage,&#13;
but owing to the wrecking of the&#13;
telegraph lines, the reports are fragmentary&#13;
and lacking in detail.&#13;
Omaha, Berlin, Ashland and Yutan,&#13;
Neb.—the latter towns near Omaha—&#13;
Marshalltown, Ackley, Woodbine and&#13;
Carroll, Iowa; Terre Haute, Ind., and&#13;
Abilene, Kan., are places from which&#13;
scattering messages carrying news of&#13;
grave destruction have been received.&#13;
The death list at Yutan was placed&#13;
at 15 and the injured at 50.&#13;
For more than four hours no word&#13;
was received from stricken Omaha.&#13;
Tate bulletins report that half the&#13;
city was swept by a tornado. All wires&#13;
were down, and Berlin, a neighboring&#13;
town, was said to be in flames. The&#13;
message was received over a single&#13;
long distance telephone wire, which&#13;
worked at intervals.&#13;
Terre Haute Hard Hit.&#13;
Terre Haute. Ind., suffered severely.&#13;
Scores of persons were injured, an&#13;
unknown number were' overwhelmed&#13;
in the ruins of houses blown down&#13;
by the wind, and many fires were&#13;
started in different parts of the city.&#13;
First reports from Nebraska were&#13;
that the towns visited by the storm&#13;
had been wiped out and that the wreck*&#13;
age was on fie. Trains loaded with&#13;
rescuers, nurses and physicians were&#13;
struggling toward the scene, being&#13;
compelled to feel their way without&#13;
running orders, owing to the paralysis&#13;
of the telegraph service.&#13;
Iowa Escapes Worst.&#13;
The loss of life and property in&#13;
Iowa was less severe, according to&#13;
messages from the swept district. Dust&#13;
storms, rain, hail and tremendous,&#13;
electrical disturbances prevailed over&#13;
Kansas and Nebraska thegreater part&#13;
of the day. Where railroad service&#13;
was impossible motor cars were pressed&#13;
into service and surgeons and supplies&#13;
were rushed to the wrecked&#13;
towns at the best speed possible over&#13;
the washed out roads.&#13;
With no warning the terrific gale&#13;
swept down upon the district. Parts&#13;
of the Root Glass company's plant&#13;
were flattened. The end of the foundry&#13;
room of the Garland factory, a solid&#13;
brick wall 18 inches thick, was caved&#13;
in. Brick and stone structures suffered&#13;
alike.&#13;
Lightning set fire to many houses.&#13;
Men, women and children were&#13;
crushed to death in bed. Some escaped&#13;
to the cellars. Whole structures&#13;
were blown away by the force of the&#13;
tvind. The- maimed were rushed to hospitals&#13;
as fast as they were extricated.&#13;
Rain Saves Scores.&#13;
Difficulty was experienced in obtaining&#13;
doctors and the firemen frere un&#13;
ablr to cope with the flames which&#13;
swept the district. The heavy downpour&#13;
of rain is all that prevented&#13;
scores of injured from being burned&#13;
in the debris of their homes.&#13;
II""!IHIUW&#13;
Llvi »tMk, Qrvln «R4 QtMnl Farm&#13;
Petrolt—guttle—Trade was not as&#13;
brisk aa4t was a week ago, and everything&#13;
wtth the exeception of bulls was&#13;
10 to 20^oente lower, bulls selling fully&#13;
as well. Several buyers from the country&#13;
were on hand looking for something&#13;
to feed, and a few loads went&#13;
back to the farmers. Milch cows and&#13;
springers averaged about $3 per head&#13;
lower. Receipts, 565; market JO to 15c&#13;
lower than last week,, we quote best&#13;
steers, $8@6.25; steers and heifers,&#13;
1,000 to 1,206, }7.50®8; steers and&#13;
heifers, 860 to 1,000, |7@7.50; steers.&#13;
and heifers, that are fat, 600 to 700 $6&#13;
@7; choice fat .cows, S6@6.25; good&#13;
fat cows, S5.25@6;. common cows,&#13;
$4.50@4.75; canners, |3.75@4.25;&#13;
choice heavy bulls, $6.50®7; fair *•* "&#13;
good bolognas, bulls, $5.75@6.26; stqKfcJf*&#13;
bulls, $5.26@5.75; milkers, large, yo&gt;tt|gt£T&#13;
medium age, $50@75; common mVp**?&#13;
ers, $55® 65. l ^ •....'•&#13;
Veal calves—Receipts, 183; market&#13;
strong, last week's close; best $11®&#13;
12.50; others, $5@10; milch cows and&#13;
springers steady.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 1,108;&#13;
market steady at last week's prices;&#13;
beet lambs, $8.75; fair to good lambs,&#13;
$8@8.50; light to common lambs,&#13;
$6.75@7.506 yearlings, $7.75@8.10; fair'&#13;
to good Bheep, $5.25@5.50; culls and&#13;
common, $3.75@4.50. a&#13;
Hogs—Receipts. 974; market steady&#13;
at last week's close. Range of pricey&#13;
Light to good butchers, $9.15@9.20;&#13;
pigs, $9.25; mixed, $9.10®9.15; stags*&#13;
pne-third off.&#13;
A' -:&gt;3&gt;&#13;
Mr, Stevens on P. M. Debt.&#13;
That innocent stockholders would&#13;
above reproach as the-result ol a- bill4-&amp;uit£r .and the repulation of the state&#13;
passed in the house. The Rayburn&#13;
measure which requires that butter&#13;
must contain at least 81 per cent of&#13;
butter fat ^nd cream at least 18 per&#13;
cent of milk fat, was passed by a vote&#13;
of 87 to 2 and sent to the senate.&#13;
Advocates of the measure asserted the&#13;
standards required are those adopted&#13;
by the general government, and it is&#13;
declared the bill will bring prestige&#13;
to Michigan butter as well as to protect&#13;
the buyer from purchasing a large&#13;
quantity of water in his butter.&#13;
would be blVghted if the state~made&#13;
a reduction by force in the debt of&#13;
the Pere. Marquette railroad was the&#13;
declaration made by Frederick W.&#13;
Stevens, former general counsel for&#13;
the road and now with J. P. Morgan&#13;
A: Co.. at the close of Friday's testimony&#13;
before the legislative committee&#13;
investigating the increase of the&#13;
funded debt of the Pere Marquette&#13;
from $25,000,000 to $70,000,000 in 14&#13;
years.&#13;
He said that all of the stock issued&#13;
by the Pere Marquette had the stamp&#13;
of approval of the state of Michigan&#13;
uopn it and was bought by the holders&#13;
with the assurance of its legality.&#13;
If the state attempted a forceful&#13;
reduction of the debt, the common&#13;
stock would be the first item that&#13;
would have to be reduced, next would&#13;
be the $5,000,000 in debentures issued&#13;
to the stockholders who contributed&#13;
that sum to the road in 1904, and&#13;
next would come the $8,000,000 In&#13;
notes issued in 1911 to defray legitimate&#13;
expenses, making a total of close&#13;
to $39,000,000, all of which would&#13;
pome from people who had acted in&#13;
godd faith with the road.&#13;
Senator Allswede's horse power tax&#13;
on automobiles which is a preliminary&#13;
or auxiliary measure to the trunk line&#13;
highway now pending in the senate&#13;
has been passed by the senate on third&#13;
reading. This carries a tax of 50 cents&#13;
per horse power on pleasure vehicles&#13;
and 25 cents per horse power on com*&#13;
mercial cars. The difference is accounted&#13;
for by the fact that commercial&#13;
vehicles practically are limited to&#13;
the use of streets in cities and do not&#13;
contribute to the wear on country&#13;
roads.&#13;
The senate has agreed to (he, semimonthly&#13;
pay D|11. This ts a compromise&#13;
between the monthly pay day request&#13;
of employers and the weekly&#13;
pav day demands of employes.&#13;
The Eaton Case.&#13;
More testimony showing that Mrs.&#13;
Jennie Eaton, widow qf Rear Admiral&#13;
Joseph G. Eaton, whom she is accused&#13;
of having poisoned, possessed what&#13;
may have been a hallucination In regard&#13;
to his dabbling with deadly&#13;
drugs, has been brought out.&#13;
Charles E. Nordstrom, a*private de&gt;&#13;
tectlve, say3 that last June Mrs. Baton&#13;
made an effort to engage him to&#13;
shadow her husband and obtain evidence&#13;
for his arrest upon the ground&#13;
that the admiral was trying to poison&#13;
his family. Mrs. Eaton is held as the&#13;
poisoner of the rear admiral.&#13;
Women of Allegan nave organised&#13;
a civic Improvement league. Their first&#13;
work will be to clean np streets and&#13;
yards. ^&#13;
The proposition of giving $10,000 to&#13;
- No Justjee in Bessemer.&#13;
W. J. Haggerson, a justice of the&#13;
peace, in Bessemer, for the last 25&#13;
years, filed ~hts resignation with the&#13;
city council and It was promptly accepted.&#13;
Charges against him had been&#13;
filed with the governor, which, upon&#13;
investigation, were substantiated, and&#13;
a peremptory notice to either resign&#13;
or be removed followed.&#13;
The city's other justice, Andrew Anderson,&#13;
also resigned a month ago,&#13;
which leaves the city without any&#13;
justice at all until after this spring&#13;
election.&#13;
Boy Electrocuted.&#13;
George Morris, aged 24, son of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Emerson Morris, of Carmel,&#13;
was almost instantly killed at the&#13;
Charlotte plant of the Commonwealth&#13;
Power Co. He was taking the temperature&#13;
of the oil tank when he received&#13;
a shock of 4,500 volts. A similar accident&#13;
at the plant a few duys ago&#13;
nearly cost the life of Marco Martin,&#13;
of Jackson, another employe, who received&#13;
2,300 volts.&#13;
Weather Man Resigns.&#13;
Willis L. Moore, chief of the weather f *11,60« 8 a* HO-25.&#13;
bureau-, resigned. - '&#13;
Secretary Houston accepted the&#13;
resignation, after a talk wtth President&#13;
Wilson, to become effective July 31.&#13;
Professor Moore, is a democrat and&#13;
was a candidate for* appointment as&#13;
secretary of agriculture.&#13;
Secretary Houston explained that&#13;
the office was not covered by civil&#13;
service and was a presidential appointment.&#13;
At a conference of the progressive&#13;
party leaders of Baton county it was&#13;
decided to put a city and county ticket&#13;
in the field this spring.&#13;
Germans of eastern Michigan will&#13;
gather in Port Huron this summer to&#13;
participate in a mammoth celebration,&#13;
under the auspices of the local Gen&#13;
man Aid society.&#13;
The committee appointed by the&#13;
board of ' directors of the Saginaw&#13;
West Side Rescue mission to investigate&#13;
rumors current regarding Supt&#13;
George Newberry, of the mission, have&#13;
East Buffalo, Cattle—Receipts, 145&#13;
cars; market 10@20c lower; best 1,350"&#13;
to 1.500-!b steers, $8.6508.90; good&#13;
to prime 1,200 to 1,300^lb steers, $8.35&#13;
@8.60; good to prime 1,100 to 1,200-lbsteers,&#13;
$8@8.25; coarse, plainish, 1.10O&#13;
to 1,-200*tb steers, $7.50&lt;§&gt;7.86; medium&#13;
butcher steers, 1,000 to 1,100 lbs-&#13;
$7.50@8; butcher steers,, 950 to 1000-&#13;
Ibs. $7(3)7.50; light butcher steers,.&#13;
$6.50@7.25;' beBt fat cows, $6.75®&#13;
7.25; butcher cows, $5,25&lt;S)6.25; light&#13;
butcher cows, $4.50@5.25; cutters,&#13;
$4.26@4.75; trimmers, $3.25@3.75; best&#13;
fat heifers, $6@6.25; stock heifers, $5&#13;
@6; best feeding steers, $7@&gt;7.50; lightcommon&#13;
stockers, $6.50@6.75; prime&#13;
export bulls, $7@7.25; *best butcher&#13;
bulls, $6.5Q@7; bologna bulls, $5.75®&#13;
6.25; stock bulls, $5@6.B0; beBt milkers&#13;
and springers, $65@80; common&#13;
to fair kind do, $40@50.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 70 cars; market 15&#13;
@25c higher; heavy, $9.60@9.C5; mixed.&#13;
$9JB0@9.70; yorkers and pigs,&#13;
$9.70®9.75; roughs, $8.50@8.75; stags*.&#13;
$7@8.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 70 cars;&#13;
market-slow; top lambs, $9® 9.26; oullav&#13;
to fair, $6®9; yearlings; $8®8^50;&#13;
wethers, $?@7.35; ewes, $6@6.75;&#13;
Calves—$5@13. '&#13;
%sw.&#13;
ir&#13;
GRAINS, ETC.&#13;
Wheat—Cash No. 2 red, $1.08; May&#13;
opened with an advance of l-4c at.&#13;
$1,05 3-4 and advanced- to $1.06)1-2;&#13;
July opened at 92 3-4, advanced to 93&#13;
and closed at 92 3-4; September opened&#13;
at 921-2 and closed at the same&#13;
figure; No. 1 white, $1.05.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, 1 car at 501-2c;&#13;
No. 3 yellow, 2 cars at 511-2c; No.&#13;
4 yellow, 50c.&#13;
Oats—Standard oats, 34 1-2c; No»&#13;
3 white oats, 2 cars at 331-2c; No. 4&#13;
white, 32 l-2c asked; sample, 1 car at-&#13;
31c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2&gt; 62c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate and prompt, shipment,&#13;
$1.80; May, $1.00.&#13;
Clover seed—Prime spot, 75 bags at&#13;
$11.60; Bample, 20 bags at $|1, 24&#13;
at $10,25, 14 at $9.25; prime alsike,&#13;
$12.60; sample alsike, 12 bags at&#13;
the Holland fair grounds for cemetery _ _&#13;
purposes will be submitted to the votr \ made" their report. They exonerate Mr!&#13;
ers at the municipal election in April.' Newberry.&#13;
Senators Smith and Townsend sent William Hinton Is detained by State&#13;
word to the common council of. Saginaw&#13;
that they will aid in the plan of&#13;
a Saginaw-Grand Rapids canal system&#13;
from Lake' Huron to Michigan. Mayor&#13;
Tausend was authorised to take the&#13;
matter up with mayors of Bay City&#13;
and Grand Rapids.&#13;
A hill of several thousand dollars for&#13;
Timothy seed-r-Prime spot,-100 bags&#13;
at $1.70/&#13;
PRODUCTS QS? T H E FARM.&#13;
Apples — Baldwin, ^12.^02.75^&#13;
greening, $2.50@2.75; spy, $2.76@3^;&#13;
steel Red, $3®3.50; common, 75c®&#13;
$1.50 per bbl. v .,&#13;
Cabbage—Home-grown, $i®1.26 per&#13;
DMDressed&#13;
hogs—Light, 10O10d-2e;^&#13;
heavy, 8®9c per lbr ' ••-• ;\£&#13;
Dressed calves—Choice, 14® 14 l-2&lt;ryf-'&#13;
fancy, 15@151-2c per lb.&#13;
Potatoes—Michigan, car lots in.&#13;
sacks, 43®45c; store lots, 45®50c,&#13;
.per bu/&#13;
Honey—Choice to fancy white comb,&#13;
18® 19c; amber, 14® 16c; extracted*&#13;
,.91-201Oq per. lb, ,&#13;
Dmsed Paultiy-^Spj^njg.'* chickens,.&#13;
16@17c; hens, 16&lt;fi&gt;17c; old roosters,.&#13;
ll@12c; turkeys, 21®j22o; ducks, 170&#13;
18c; geese, 14® 15c per lb.&#13;
Live Poultry—Sprint chickens, 161-2:- &lt;&#13;
017c; hens, 161-2017c; No. 2 h e n v&#13;
11012c; old roosters, 10011c;. turkeys,&#13;
W02Oc; geese, 12014c; duckv&#13;
1S017O per lb.&#13;
Hay—Carrot, track Detrttltf *1lo. t&#13;
tlnrdthy, $13.50® 14; No. 2, tlmotsjv&#13;
$11012; light mixed, $12.50013; No.&#13;
1 mixed, 111012; rye straw, »&gt;01B;&#13;
wheat and owt straw, $808.50 per tosW&#13;
Onions—r4505Oc per bu.&#13;
Cheese—Wholesale lots:' Michigan."&#13;
expenses entailed in the grajrt jury I through £he city,&#13;
investigation at Jackson prison !«w*\,'Contracts have bsenletfor U» conyears&#13;
ago will be prssentssV !• the ttrnettoB of the new high ssfaoot, »*&#13;
board of state eudKofs soon. The Utti ^toshey, ftftd imfr TrUl bssjtn trrooa&#13;
also embraces the court costs of '*]» the weather permits. The building&#13;
number of prison oases that were tried. wUl cost $17,729.&#13;
ai&#13;
W&#13;
Trespass Agent Woodbury on the&#13;
charge of removing timber from stats&#13;
lands in the vicinity of Harrietts*&#13;
Battle Creek is to adopt a novel'&#13;
plan of advertising, in formsbf givtnsj&#13;
a, bouquet of sweet peas, pansiss or&#13;
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*&#13;
8 Y N 0 P 3 I 3 .&#13;
Robert Cameron, capitalist, consult*&#13;
"Philip Clyde, newspaper publisher, regarding&#13;
anonymous threatening: letters he&#13;
M&lt; received. The first promises' a sample&#13;
-©T, the writer's power on a certain day.&#13;
that day the head 1« mysteriously cut&#13;
a portrait of Cameron while the latin&#13;
the room. While visiting; Camh&#13;
r i&#13;
% t h&#13;
w is in tne vlsitlnf&#13;
•STon in his dressins room a Nell Owynne firror is mysteriously shattered. Cameron&#13;
*omes seriously lft as a result of the&#13;
lock. The third letter appears mysteriously&#13;
on Cameron's sick bed. It makes&#13;
cirect threats against the life of Cameron.&#13;
Clyde tells Cameron the envelope was,&#13;
•empty. He tella Evelyn everything and&#13;
plans to take Cameron on a yacht trip.&#13;
The yacht picks up a fisherman found&#13;
•drifting- helplessly in a boat He gives&#13;
the name of Johnson. Cameron dlsapjpeare&#13;
from yacht while Clyde's back is&#13;
turned. A fruitless search Is made for a&#13;
motor boat seen by the captain Just before&#13;
Cameron disappeared. Johnson is al-&#13;
' lowed to go after being closely questioned.&#13;
Evelyn takes the letters to an expert in&#13;
Chinese literature, who pronounces them&#13;
-of Chinese origin. Clyde seeks assistance&#13;
from a Chinese fellow college student,&#13;
. who recommends him to Yup Sing, most&#13;
, .(prominent Chinaman in New York. Clyde&#13;
.goes to meet Yup Sing, sees Johnson, at-&#13;
'tempts to follow him, falls into a basement,&#13;
sprains his ankle and becomes unconscious.&#13;
Clyde is found by Miss Clenv-&#13;
-eat, a missionary among the Chinese. Ho&#13;
Is sick several days as a result of inhaling&#13;
charcoal fumes. Evelyn tells Clydo&#13;
of a peculiarly acting anesthetic which&#13;
renders a person temporarily unconscious.&#13;
Murphy is discovered to have mysterious&#13;
relations with the Chtnese. Miss Clement&#13;
promises to get information about Cameron.&#13;
Slump In Crystal Consolidated, or&#13;
which Cameron is the head, is caused by&#13;
a rumor of Cameron's illness. Clyde finds&#13;
Cameron on Fifth avenue in a dased and&#13;
omaclated condition and takes him home.&#13;
•Cameron awakes from a long sleep and&#13;
••peaks in a strange tongue. Evelyn declares&#13;
the man is not her uncle. Evelyn&#13;
and Clyde call on Miss Clement for promised&#13;
information and find that the Chinaman&#13;
who was to give It has Just been&#13;
murdered. Miss Clement gives Clyde a&#13;
note, asking him to read it after he&#13;
leaven tto&gt; mission and then destroy It.&#13;
It tells of the abduction of a white man&#13;
"by Chinese who shipped him back to&#13;
China. The man is acoused of the crime&#13;
•of "Sable Lorcha" in which 100 Chinamen&#13;
were, killed. The appearance In New York&#13;
of the man they supposed they had shipped&#13;
to China throws consternation into&#13;
the Chinese. The brougham in which&#13;
Clyde and Evelyn are riding in held up&#13;
by an armed man. Clyde la seized by&#13;
Murphy and a fight ensues. Evelyn and&#13;
Clyde are rescued by the police and return&#13;
home. They find Yup Sing and the&#13;
Chinese consul awaiting them. Yup tells&#13;
Clyde the story of the crime of the "Sable&#13;
Lorcha," in which 97 Chinamen were&#13;
•deliberately sent to their death by one&#13;
JDonald M'Nish, whom they declare is&#13;
(Cameron. They declare that M'Nleh can&#13;
,be identified by a tattoo mark on his arm.&#13;
". -Clyde declares that Cameron has no such&#13;
mark. The nurse is called in and describes&#13;
a tattoo mark on his patient's&#13;
i-arm. Clyde roes to Investigate and&#13;
finds the patient attempting to hide a letter.&#13;
It is addressed to Donald M'Nish.&#13;
The letter is from the man's mother In&#13;
Scotland and Identifies the patient as&#13;
^-IfNtBfh. C6riffohtecT~by the sole survivor&#13;
•of the 'Sable Ixircha"—who, it develops,&#13;
is Soy, a half-breed Chinaman, recognised&#13;
by Clyde as Johnson, the flBherman-—&#13;
M'NUh shoots him and kills himself.&#13;
CHAPTER XXVI.—Continued.&#13;
When he rejoined m« in the library,&#13;
half an hoar later, It was with the&#13;
Clad news that she had responded&#13;
s^ratlfyingly to treatment, and was&#13;
Sleeping calmly. After thanking him&#13;
for his' promptness and efficiency. I&#13;
*aid:&#13;
"You do not remember me?"&#13;
"Oh, yea, I do," he returned, almost&#13;
•brusquely, fixing me w*&gt;f*l» . ga»e.&#13;
r Y o t i a m Mr. Clyde. 1****« sfet any&#13;
relief from tea p r e s e n t * * ^ gave&#13;
' I had net ssaooSsd t * ^ S w t i d n and&#13;
•was unpfQp«ss)sV4ft* ft In venturing&#13;
* n evasive reply I nsajajbered.&#13;
"I don't suppose yoU even had it&#13;
filed," he declared, with a grim smile&#13;
thai was at least partially reassuring.&#13;
And I admitted that bis surmise was&#13;
accurate. Moreover I begged him to&#13;
sit down.&#13;
'1 have a confession to make. Doctor,"&#13;
I said, a little shamefacedly.&#13;
"It is unnecessary, Mr. CJlyde," w u&#13;
Ibisi half-polite rejoinder, as be sank into&#13;
a ohalr before the fireplace. "I&#13;
read the newspapers, and I hovw corn*&#13;
to understand many things in the&#13;
past few days,"&#13;
As I took a seat'opposite to him, I&#13;
&lt; * • • • *&#13;
*»v&#13;
The newspapers have bean misleading,&#13;
I fear, Dr. Addison.**&#13;
i*' "No," he contradicted, his tout&#13;
ned. "On the* contrary they have&#13;
ned my eyes to a truth, that was&#13;
g hidden; they have made a&#13;
contrite and, I must confess, a&#13;
•unhappy man of me."&#13;
"Unhappy?"&#13;
"More unhappy than you.can&#13;
celve, Mr. Clyde. For years I&#13;
misjudged one of the beat&#13;
Heaven ever privileged a&#13;
have."&#13;
"But, my dear Doctor,* I began,&#13;
"you were not at fault, altogether;&#13;
very&#13;
very&#13;
conhave&#13;
friends&#13;
man to&#13;
m.&#13;
. &amp; •&#13;
l i e raised a deprecatory hand. "No,&#13;
8¾¾ Jtmse d o n V he pleaded. "You can-&#13;
^ ½ ¾ temper it. I should have taken hla&#13;
without question. I knew his&#13;
e of troth—I probably more than&#13;
one else. What right bad I to&#13;
conclude then, because of certain apparently&#13;
Irreconcilable happenings,&#13;
that his word was false?"&#13;
"We are all fallible," I said.&#13;
bat he," was hi* prompt reply:&#13;
then, leaning forward, with a&#13;
eager look in those piercing&#13;
his voice vibrant* he asked:&#13;
it tree that he is very ill? That&#13;
ot be •seal"&#13;
a scrnyl* T hesitated,&#13;
newspapers have ^oeen mis-&#13;
1 fear," I said id 1&#13;
*¥*»&#13;
#^,, V ^¾&#13;
• '' ' " ' *&#13;
ft*.&#13;
•!,&gt;;•&#13;
ia\ seven&#13;
.-• • • ' . • . • ' &gt; '&#13;
" • * , , , , ' / . * •&#13;
\K,'^r&#13;
Jtor'a look changed Instantly to one of&#13;
dire perplexity.&#13;
"He la not ill?" he questioned.&#13;
"lYou mean—"&#13;
"Confidentially, Doctor," I admitted,&#13;
"we haven't the faintest notion juBt&#13;
how he is. He may be in excellent&#13;
health or he may have ceased to&#13;
exist."&#13;
"Good God!" he exclaimed, and his&#13;
face was as white as his linen.&#13;
"Our best Information is that he Is&#13;
on a steamer—a tramp—bound for&#13;
China, but we have no particulars, and&#13;
worse still, no verification."&#13;
It was neither fair nor consistent to&#13;
conceal longer from one so Justly interested&#13;
the whole truth, and so, without&#13;
reservation, I told Dr. Addison the&#13;
story.&#13;
Before I had quite concluded, Miss&#13;
Clement was announced, and when&#13;
she was shown into the library, instead&#13;
of permitting the physician to&#13;
leave, as he made offer of doing, I&#13;
presented him and insisted upon his&#13;
remaining.&#13;
"I want you to tell Miss Clement&#13;
about your patient, Doctor," I said.&#13;
"Miss Clement is a very good friend&#13;
of Miss Grayson's."&#13;
Graciously he complied, making it&#13;
quite clear that sedatives and sleep&#13;
would undoubtedly effect a prompt recovery.&#13;
"And now Miss Clement will tell us&#13;
something," I added. "She has had a&#13;
patient, too, who died this morning, as&#13;
you may have seen by the afternoon&#13;
papers—the Eurasian who was shot&#13;
by McNish."&#13;
Up to that moment I knew but little&#13;
of what Soy had divulged, for the missionary,&#13;
in her two or three brief telephonic&#13;
talks, had given us scarcely&#13;
more than promises of important revelations&#13;
when opportunity could be&#13;
made for a meeting; and I was impatient&#13;
for the fulfilment. ,&#13;
She had chosen a seat at some little&#13;
distance from us, but now, at my solicitation,&#13;
she accepted a more comfortable&#13;
chair, which I placed in confidential&#13;
Juxtaposition with our own.&#13;
"Itj's rather a long story," she began,&#13;
in her sweetly quiet voice. "And&#13;
as It came to me piecemeal, I'm afraid&#13;
it will be rather disconnected. You&#13;
see this poor fellow suffered horribly&#13;
at times and when he-was hot suffering&#13;
he was under the influence of opiates,&#13;
so ordinarily I doubt that it&#13;
would be safe to accept as fact a good&#13;
deal said under such circumstances. It&#13;
appears to me, however, that in hie&#13;
case, these very conditions only&#13;
strengthen the probabilities; for his&#13;
njind seemed to hold only the one&#13;
theme, and his statements could hardly&#13;
have been either spontaneous or&#13;
studied fnventions. On the other&#13;
hand, they were rather a sort of involuntary&#13;
recital of the particulars of a&#13;
subject which had engrossed him for&#13;
years to the exclusion of almost everything&#13;
else."&#13;
Dr, Addlscn nodded his head, encouragingly.&#13;
"I quite understand,&#13;
Miss Clement," he said. And I, too,&#13;
assured her that her reasoning appeared&#13;
to me logical&#13;
"It was significant," she continued,&#13;
"that so far as I could fix dates, he&#13;
made no references at all to any happening&#13;
prior to sixteen years ago. The&#13;
tragedy of that time was the begin*&#13;
ning of what I think I may call his&#13;
mania. Everything he told me had to&#13;
do with i t It came at the beginning,&#13;
at the apex, and at the end of every&#13;
revelation."&#13;
"The tragedy of sixteen years ago?"&#13;
inquired the physician.&#13;
"The tragedy of what has been&#13;
called T h e Sable Lorcha,'" X reminded&#13;
him.&#13;
"Oh, yes, of course."&#13;
"Yon know of that, then?" asked&#13;
Miss Clement. And briefly I ran over&#13;
what Yup Sing had told me.&#13;
"John Soy, I understand, waa the&#13;
cook whom McNish imprisoned In the&#13;
galley," I added.&#13;
"It seems he broke his way out Just&#13;
as the lorcha was sinking. McNish&#13;
had waited until he had gone to his&#13;
bunk for his usual hop, and had&#13;
chosen the hour he was sleeping to&#13;
get away and scuttle the vessel. For&#13;
five days Soy floated about on a bit of&#13;
wreckage without food or drink, and&#13;
was finally picked up by a proa and&#13;
taken back to Macao at the mouth of&#13;
the Canton river, where, after weeks&#13;
of delirium, he, told his story of the&#13;
lorcta's fate. From that day tb* search&#13;
for McNish began. It seems that he&#13;
had a partner, an Irishman, named&#13;
Moran. who for a time waa suspected&#13;
of having been la the conspiracy; for,&#13;
yon moat remember, it was thought&#13;
then that the sinking of the lorcha had&#13;
been planned from the first, the idea&#13;
being that it was simply a scheme to&#13;
get the passage money from the poor&#13;
coolies, and then drown Uiem."&#13;
"Horrible!" ejaculated the physician.&#13;
"But the Chinese are Just," the missionary&#13;
continued. "They discovered&#13;
that a certain United States cruiser&#13;
that had been warned Of the attempted&#13;
smuggling, did, om that particular&#13;
day. f t o sheas to a tarobe, which&#13;
and, ultimately, this same Moran became&#13;
the most openly bitter of all the&#13;
avenging horde that for over a decade&#13;
and a half scoured the four corners of&#13;
the globe; for it seems that McNish&#13;
had not only made off with his share&#13;
of the receipts of their Joint enterprise,&#13;
but had left him with a ruining&#13;
lot of debts to settle as well. There&#13;
was something, too, I believe, about a&#13;
Chinese woman whose loyalty to Mcran,&#13;
McNish undermined, but I cor*&#13;
fess that part of the story was no*:&#13;
very clear to me: At all events Soy.&#13;
the half-breed, and Moran, the Irish&#13;
man, who appears to have been a rov&#13;
ing blade, a sort of soldier of fortune&#13;
with some talent for painting, becam?&#13;
the prime movers In this relentleef&#13;
quest, in which they were backed hy&#13;
what is known as the Six Companies&#13;
All the tongs, no matter how much it&#13;
variance on other points, were a uili&#13;
in this instance, and unlimited mousy&#13;
was always available to prosecute the&#13;
search."&#13;
A footman, appearing at this Juncture&#13;
with the inevitable tea paraphernalia,&#13;
interrupted temporarily the current&#13;
of Miiss Clement's narrative. Birt&#13;
our Interest was such that we limited&#13;
the cessation to the briefest possible&#13;
period. Dr. Addison, whose-professional&#13;
engagements were being toppled&#13;
over one after another, politely&#13;
urged her. to continue, directly her d p&#13;
was In her hand.&#13;
"Think, Miss Clement," he said,&#13;
with an Ingratiating smile, "of the rapt&#13;
audience you have! I trust it is at&#13;
once an inspiration and a compensation."&#13;
"It surely is," was the good lady's&#13;
prompt acknowledgment. "And, by the&#13;
way, I must not forget to tell you how&#13;
this man, McNish, actually had the&#13;
temerity to return to China a few&#13;
years ago. He appeared to think&#13;
either that his crime had been forgotten&#13;
or that knowledge of It was limited&#13;
to the Southern provinces, for in&#13;
the early fall of 1903, under one of his&#13;
many aliases, he arrived at Peking,&#13;
by way of the Trans-Siberian Railway."&#13;
,&#13;
The doctor and I exchanged glances.&#13;
It was odd how confirmation of the&#13;
error he had already avowed should&#13;
thus come about from the lips of one&#13;
who knew nothing of his story of a&#13;
shattered friendship.&#13;
"Oddly enough, Moran happened to&#13;
be in the city at the time and every&#13;
arrangement was made to capture the&#13;
long-sought prey and convey him to&#13;
Canton for some exquisite torture devised&#13;
especially to fit his crime. In&#13;
some way, howeyer, the Intended victim&#13;
got wind of what was proposed,&#13;
and came within an ace of escaping&#13;
unscathed from under their very fingers.&#13;
Indeed, he did escape in the end,&#13;
but not before Moran had very nearly&#13;
put a finish to him by a knife thrust&#13;
in his back."&#13;
Once more I exchanged glances with&#13;
the physician, for scarcely half an&#13;
hour before, I had told him of the scar&#13;
under McNlsh's left shoulder blade, received&#13;
as I had been told, in Buffalo.&#13;
"Moran fled from Peking after this&#13;
encounter, not knowing whether his&#13;
enemy were dead or alive, and for&#13;
awhile, I believe, latd very low,' as&#13;
they aay. In spite of all the efforts&#13;
of the combined Chinese organizations,&#13;
McNish, warned now of bis constant&#13;
danger, eluded their search, but&#13;
at length Soy himself succeeded in&#13;
tracing him to Canada and thence to&#13;
Buffalo. There Moran came, posthaste,&#13;
and once more there waa a&#13;
street encounter. Moran was arrested,&#13;
and McNish charged him with assault&#13;
with intent to kill. The result&#13;
was that Moran waa convicted and&#13;
sent to prison for a term of years;&#13;
and once again the earth seemed to&#13;
close over McNish."&#13;
The discrepancies between Mis*&#13;
Clement's narrative and that of Yup&#13;
Sing 1 did not regard as sufficiently&#13;
vital to raise a question ever, yet I&#13;
must admit that I could hardly foresee&#13;
a conclusion without a much&#13;
graver antagonism of facts as'I knew&#13;
them.&#13;
The missionary having paused to&#13;
sip her tea, Dr. Addison asked permis-&#13;
^sion to smoke a cigarette, which she&#13;
readily granted.&#13;
"On Moran'* release from prison,"&#13;
Miss Clement continued, fortified by&#13;
the fragrant Oolong, "be appears for&#13;
the first time to have considered the&#13;
advisability of adopting some sort of&#13;
an incognito. Prior to this time he&#13;
had. Soy told me, been carefully clean&#13;
shaven and close-cropped. Now he&#13;
grew a beard and wore his hair long,&#13;
and, in addition, be doctored it with&#13;
henna until it became a fiery red. He&#13;
also changed his name from Moran to&#13;
Murphy, and instead of frequenting&#13;
the busy marts of mefe, he retired to&#13;
an isolated /country place on the Cos&#13;
Cob river and posed as an artist. He&#13;
employed always a Chinese servant,&#13;
and at least once a week, without fail&#13;
he visited Chinatown, keeping always&#13;
in touch with the powers there, which&#13;
west still unrelenting in their efforts&#13;
to trace McNish."&#13;
She same now to Murphy's so-ceilel&#13;
himself bad already told rae. I would&#13;
have savc3*h«e!r this recital, but It was&#13;
new to Dr. Addisou and BO I allowed&#13;
her to proceed.&#13;
"It was plainly evident to Moran,"&#13;
she pursued", "that McNish—or at&#13;
least the gentleman he supposed was&#13;
McNish—did not recognize hira, and&#13;
his delight at this discovery was unbounded;&#13;
for it gave him opportunity,&#13;
quite unsuspectedly, to arrange all his&#13;
plant] for a most ingenious campaign&#13;
of torture. What that campaign consisted&#13;
of, of course, you already know,&#13;
Mr. Clyde, and I presume Dr. Addison&#13;
does, too."&#13;
"Yes," I replied, "I have told the&#13;
doctor."&#13;
"What you don't know, though," she&#13;
added, "Is how it was managed."&#13;
"We have been told something about&#13;
amyl pearls," I suggested.&#13;
"Amyl pearls?" queried Dr. Addison,&#13;
curiously.&#13;
With as much clearness as possible&#13;
I explained to him what I meant by&#13;
using thlB admittedly Inaccurate term.&#13;
"Incredible!" he exclaimed. "Can it&#13;
be possible that there is such an anaesthetic&#13;
as this, and we have never&#13;
even heard of it before?"&#13;
"There can be no doubt about its&#13;
existence," I answered. "I myself have&#13;
experienced its effects, though 1 have&#13;
never actually seen it put in operation."&#13;
But it was Miss Clement who was&#13;
most convincing.&#13;
"I have never seen either it or its&#13;
effects, Doctor," she said, "but I am&#13;
willing to believe even more marvellous&#13;
things than that where the Chinese&#13;
are concerned. You must remember&#13;
that as a race they are most Jealous&#13;
of their knowledge as well as&#13;
their possessions. Just now, after all&#13;
their many centuries of a civilization&#13;
greater In some respects than our&#13;
own, we are beginning to learn something&#13;
of them and their ways, and I&#13;
should not be at all surprised to discover&#13;
that in chemistry, in medicine&#13;
even, they have forgotten more than&#13;
we know. Soy assured me that not&#13;
only for days, but for weeks, he himself&#13;
came and went about Mr. Cameron's—&#13;
or, as he called it, McNlsh's—&#13;
country place without being either&#13;
Been or heard, simply by using this&#13;
ether of invisibility. It was he who&#13;
delivered the three letters. It was he&#13;
who cut the head from the portrait,&#13;
and it was he who broke the mirror;&#13;
and yet no one saw him on the&#13;
grounds or in the house, and Indeed&#13;
there were very few who saw him in&#13;
the vicinity. Again and again, he assured&#13;
me, he could have taken his victim's&#13;
life but that he was intent on&#13;
Inflicting a punishment more protractedly&#13;
horrible than mere Budden death."&#13;
"Who wroto the letters?" I asked.&#13;
"Moran."&#13;
"I thought so. And Moran killed&#13;
the Chinaman who worked for him."&#13;
"No; there you are wrong, Mr,&#13;
Clyde."&#13;
"Then who did?"&#13;
"Soy himself. He learned of how&#13;
that boy, unable to control his hatred&#13;
ofjhe man who h a d s I a i n some oneor&#13;
'more^-of his klnspeople, carried back&#13;
the hea,d that had been cut from the&#13;
portrait, borrowed a rifle from Mr.&#13;
Cameron's own gamekeeper, and shot&#13;
the canvas full of holes. It seemed to&#13;
Soy, then, that in spite of all his and&#13;
Moran's careful preparation this would&#13;
surely involve trouble, and that once&#13;
more their quarry would slip through&#13;
their Angers. And to prevent the possibility&#13;
of any more unrestrained fervor&#13;
on the boy'B part, Soy beat him to&#13;
death."&#13;
"I know Soy, or Peter Johnson as&#13;
he called himself, managed the kidnapping&#13;
from the yacht," I said, "but 1&#13;
shall never understand how it was&#13;
done. Did be speak of that?"&#13;
"Over and over again, ft was he&#13;
who learned of the intention to take&#13;
the cruise. At first they thought they&#13;
would have to change their plans and&#13;
carry their enemy off before he had a&#13;
chance to take to his yacht. But Soy&#13;
maintained that that would be too&#13;
crude a method; whereas to let him&#13;
think that he had escaped and was&#13;
safe away, and then, at the very moment,&#13;
of bis triumph, to snatch him&#13;
from seeming security, would be the&#13;
very refinement of cruelty the avenger&#13;
so much desired. And so the properties&#13;
were secured at some fabulous&#13;
figure—1 forgot Just what they paid&#13;
for that fast power boat—the scene&#13;
was set, and the great act of the&#13;
drama, with Soy still the star, was&#13;
carried to a successful- climax."&#13;
"But," ! made question, "I don't see&#13;
how Soy could take such a risk. If it&#13;
had been McNish instead of Cameron,&#13;
be certainly would have recognised&#13;
him, when he was brought aboard&#13;
from the disabled dory."&#13;
sesntasny dlsapgssred in the lag.&#13;
en* -&#13;
iO cb&#13;
"He thought of that, but yoir must&#13;
remember- th*t*-t* ..all-v.ihes*. *.U£*$tt&#13;
years McNish had never once seen&#13;
Soy. He fought be had f i s h e d&#13;
with the rjsl whe^une Sable torchA*&#13;
went down! And so*Boy deeded that?&#13;
in oilskins, apparently unconscious, In&#13;
an open boat Off tqe. New , England&#13;
coast, there v»* not One chance in ten&#13;
thousand that McNish would connect&#13;
him with the cook he hud left for dead&#13;
in the South China Hea."&#13;
*'But McNish did recognize hira as&#13;
soon as he laid eyes on him in this&#13;
house. I saw that myHelf, you know,&#13;
Miss Clement. He recognised him and&#13;
was terror stricken."&#13;
Miss Clement smiled tolerantly. She&#13;
was armed at all points.&#13;
"You did not know, I suppose, Mr.&#13;
Clyde, that that was not their first&#13;
meeting," she explained. "Soy met&#13;
McNish on the night you found him.&#13;
It was he who assaulted him, somewhere&#13;
about Seventh avenue and I'^iftleth&#13;
street, and would have killed h/m&#13;
then had not the police arrived at the&#13;
moment. The officers probably thought&#13;
McNish was intoxicated and let him&#13;
go, seeing that he could stand, and so&#13;
he staggered on to Fifth avenue; and&#13;
there you discovered him."&#13;
"No, I did not know that," I admitted,&#13;
a little crestfallen. "What followed?"&#13;
"You remember I told you that&#13;
Chinatown was in a state of frenzy,&#13;
the next day? You can understand&#13;
now, why. Soy, of course, reported&#13;
that McNish had escaped from the&#13;
steamer—"&#13;
"What steamer?" I cried, suddenly&#13;
realizing that the one really vital piece&#13;
of information we should have obtained,&#13;
had all this while been delayed.&#13;
"What steamer? Did he give&#13;
you the name of it?"&#13;
"In just a moment, Mr. Clyde," she&#13;
said, with a smile that I confess exasperated&#13;
me.&#13;
"Pardon me," I returned, Insistently,&#13;
"but you do not realize, I tear, what&#13;
minutes even may mean in this matter."&#13;
"No," 3till very calm, "I really don't.&#13;
The steamer has been at sea now&#13;
twenty-five days. It is bound for Hong&#13;
Kong. If there was a chance of overtaking&#13;
it. I—"&#13;
"There's every chance of overtaking&#13;
it," I interrupted onoe again. "Tomorrow,&#13;
or next day, or even today, it&#13;
may put into Rio. We must telegraph&#13;
the United States Consulate at every&#13;
possible port."&#13;
And then, for the first time, apparently,&#13;
Miss Clement seemed to appreciate&#13;
there was a real urgency.&#13;
"The steamer is the Glamorganshire,"&#13;
she said, quickly: "A freighter;&#13;
a tramp, I suppose; ho u n d for&#13;
Hong Kong. She sailed on Wednesday,&#13;
the twenty-eighth of last month,&#13;
and Mr. Cameron was put aboard, halfdrugged,&#13;
as one of the crew."&#13;
Monyon's Paw-Paw&#13;
Hi«i asp unlikeailotsQ&#13;
er lasatfvesor cathat*&#13;
tics. They coax die&#13;
liver into activity by&#13;
gentle methods, iheg&#13;
do u&lt;&amp;seprc t$Bg dj)&#13;
nut grips; tKeydq not&#13;
weaken;'*Ut « • ? do&#13;
start ail the sectetioos&#13;
of O i e l j ^ a n d stops*&#13;
ach in a way that sooa&#13;
puts these organs $n§&#13;
healthy COO&lt;Utk» and&#13;
corrects constipation. Munyoo^sPas^Paw '&#13;
Pills are a tonic to the stomach, iiwsr sod&#13;
nerves. They invigorate iosteadWwssuts*;&#13;
they enrich the blood instead &lt;4Jm|*ow'&#13;
ishing it; tbey enable the stomach to get aV&#13;
the nourishment from fond that ts not into&#13;
it Price »5 cents. All Druggista A&#13;
_ — , — , • - • • • — - •• n jinn—«n—e»ssj|y»&#13;
W^M^£&lt;&#13;
Another Secret&#13;
Frequent tests sh&lt;ygr4&#13;
that a 24i lb. sack of ,¾.&#13;
Henkel's [&#13;
Bread Flow&#13;
will make .37 delicious loaves.&#13;
At 5c per loaf this gives .you&#13;
$L85 worth of bread. Ask your&#13;
grocer how, much this flour will&#13;
cost you. Ybu will know why&#13;
good housewives tray&#13;
HenkeTs Bread Flour&#13;
I I la M v e r d o e *&#13;
.11&#13;
\&#13;
*.v:&#13;
P I S O ' S R F M r ' D V&#13;
S«* Osss^ *J**&amp; 090«. 9M&#13;
( I U M . Sold by&#13;
J TOR C O U G H S AND COLDS&#13;
Put off until tomorrow the worrying&#13;
you might do today- *&#13;
Mrs. WlasMWs SooMtta* Byrnp for&#13;
t««tfctag-. softsa* th« fwsts, rsSaess inOassi&#13;
Uosj^Ulays p»t*Mmr— w1asle»»&gt;jsea botUsJs*&#13;
When an actress dies or Is sued for&#13;
divorce her real name, comes out.&#13;
Only Omm "BEOMO QVIXIHK"&#13;
Thst It LAXATIVSJ.Bl *—&#13;
for tti« •IgnMDr*&#13;
la On* U»r, OHMS&#13;
VBI BKOMO) ODiMIHSL £/»«&#13;
so fO ari. sw iTs qTBirOoV MJD. sfos.v mS o». oois&#13;
4i&#13;
• U&#13;
Untold agony is what a woman suffers&#13;
from tight shoes.&#13;
CHAPTER X X V I I .&#13;
The Tortoise and the Hare.&#13;
Although Miss Clement's interesting&#13;
-.-chapter" of disclosures was by no&#13;
means ended with the name of the&#13;
steamer and its date of sailing, it&#13;
there came, so far as I was concerned,&#13;
at least, to an abrupt intermission.&#13;
For, as though the delay and inaction&#13;
of the past month but served to swell&#13;
the flood of my eager energy, the tide,&#13;
so )6ng checked but now set free,&#13;
careering like an unleashed spring&#13;
freshet, overrode all barriers. With&#13;
scant apology, I sprang to the telephone,&#13;
and if Miss Clement continued&#13;
her conversation with Dr. Addison, I&#13;
was deaf to what she said.&#13;
What I sought, first of all, was corroboration&#13;
Did a steamship, named&#13;
the Glamorganshire, sail for Hong&#13;
Kong on October 28th? In less than&#13;
five minutes, the facts were mine.&#13;
Such a steamer had sailed for the&#13;
east on that date. Her agents were&#13;
Bartlett Brothers. Their offices were&#13;
in the Produce Exchange Building.&#13;
Another minute, and Bartlett Brothers&#13;
were on the wire. No, the Glamorganshire&#13;
did not take the South American&#13;
route. Her course was through&#13;
the Mediterranean and the Sues Canal.&#13;
She carried no passengers. She was&#13;
British, She was very slow. She had&#13;
called at the Azores and then at Gibraltar,&#13;
where she had been delayed&#13;
In coaling. Yes, she would make several&#13;
Mediterranean ports. If all went&#13;
well, she would reach Port Said about&#13;
December 6th. Certainly not before&#13;
that. Probably a day or so later.&#13;
I dare-say it was exceptional that I&#13;
secured all this information with so&#13;
little trouble, and wttfriut giving any&#13;
hint as to why I desired it, but merely&#13;
on the statement that I was Mr. Clyde,,&#13;
of The Week. ,, ^&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
Race Not Going Backward&#13;
i*~&#13;
sasstlsg srtth Casaeroa ©a the&#13;
Proof That the Men of Today Are at&#13;
Least Taller in Stature Than&#13;
Their Ancestors.&#13;
Some time ago when it was wished&#13;
to use some ancient suits of English&#13;
armor for a pageant it was found that&#13;
they were all too-small for the use of&#13;
the average man. Now conies a aim*&#13;
ilar story from Germany. Tbe custodian&#13;
of a castle near Innsbruck, a&#13;
man slightly under the average&#13;
height, says that he has tried on every&#13;
suit of armor in the castle and that&#13;
they are ail too small for him. The&#13;
custodian of the castle of Voduz, who&#13;
Is of still lesser stature, says the same&#13;
'thing of the armor underlie oars, and&#13;
we ere reminded of the low doors and&#13;
short beds that are so distinguishing&#13;
a feature of old Got die houses.&#13;
Is it possible that the human race&#13;
iacj-eeslttg la staure? It would&#13;
-,.;»,' * » ' W » -&#13;
:y&#13;
Poait* of Mrj of which Caaurca *•*» »*&gt; We oaa hardly aooowrt for&#13;
this on the ground of athletics, seeing&#13;
that the old knightly titrates of the&#13;
days of chivalry were athletic enough.&#13;
Physical vigor was their stock In&#13;
trade.&#13;
It is said that very &lt;ew men now*&#13;
adays can draw the old long bows of&#13;
tbe English archers, the hows that&#13;
were capable of sending an arrow&#13;
through, a steel breastplate. Bat so&#13;
far as stature is concerned we seem&#13;
to have the better of our buccaneering&#13;
ancestors.&#13;
Real Economy.&#13;
"Tankerly says he gets drunk simply&#13;
to save time."&#13;
"To save time?"&#13;
"Yes. You see, he ^SJV tSsH whfn&#13;
he gees to bed sober Ijtfsjl ,ss *othei&#13;
to dress a*4 put his ""*""&#13;
tbe aext n^oyntsgy w«*ls&gt;a if' he&#13;
doesat g o ^ e h e d ja*sjsUsii be'ha* te&#13;
do neat a*mm*nm&lt;mM hls^aoe.''&#13;
"How did yo' all got yo'&#13;
e d r .&#13;
I done slipped down an' afosafc Ut&#13;
on my back."&#13;
"But, name o' goodness, sab,!—ye*&#13;
nose isn't located on yo' haok.*'&#13;
"No, sah; as/ needer; waw tomdder&#13;
Jones,'* ' •'&#13;
THE KNOW HO&#13;
To Peed Children and&#13;
suite.&#13;
Turn About Is Pair Play.&#13;
Farmer Beetroot (back from th»&#13;
metropolis)—I had a bniry time, I till&#13;
you.&#13;
Si feckins—Didn't the waiters'&#13;
tssjfce trouble at meal times?&#13;
' Seetroov-Not ler^saai | a *&#13;
si ^ '•r™tlTlff wss*n^u^awer* h r ^ 1 ***&#13;
i4 «";i&#13;
There are mora&#13;
made so by undigested-food Iftsg tn&#13;
the stomach than the asarags i;&#13;
vidual would snppose, ,'&#13;
If food remains undigestBd^Sv t&#13;
stomach, it begins to&#13;
gas and a large, portion is t s j w c o a w ^ ,&#13;
verted into poison. '&lt;T $v'v!r&#13;
That's why imperfectly dlgealOd foes? '&#13;
may, and often does, ceflse Irrttatiow.^&#13;
of the nerves and stttpof Of the m i n d -&#13;
brain and nerves are&gt; Teally poisoned.&#13;
"My daughter had oompiained for&#13;
some time of a durtressed tealiog in&#13;
the stomach, after ea&#13;
me thinking that her&#13;
right/' writes an a^aJoua*&#13;
gent mother,&#13;
"She had been fond of &lt;&#13;
had never tried Grape-Notav f&#13;
reading the aooount of tfclTtaptoest*&#13;
ed food, it seemed l ^ a d M * . * ^ try&#13;
Grape-Nuts for her c**tV r&#13;
T h e results were rosflifr wwadsiful&#13;
Tbe little brato that sjsjsjsjtd a t timet&#13;
unable to do Ws work, | 6 e k oa * e w&#13;
life and vigor. Bvery Morning* now*&#13;
before going to scaoolJshe eats the)&#13;
crisp little, ssorseta assf is now m&#13;
pleteiy and entirely w e l t she seeing tn\\*&#13;
have a new, laase on Uta—no *o*fSx.?&#13;
distress to the stoxnach, net head* ^&#13;
acne, but sound , a a * watt erenrwa/.^&#13;
Name/ given^ by Psstnm Co* Battle*&#13;
Creek. Wen. Read taw bmk, **%+&#13;
Hoad t o WeUvflleMa pfcsjft.&#13;
-There's a Reason/*&#13;
Bver&#13;
' « • • &lt; • '&#13;
-¾&#13;
•;..V&#13;
3ft y^M&#13;
: P&#13;
• « . l ;&#13;
+*&#13;
kf.&#13;
tmi&#13;
i*t'w$&gt;i',&#13;
.&lt;«,'V. * | . ^ •V&gt;&#13;
t» ^&#13;
•. * . •&#13;
riutely Pure&#13;
baking powder&#13;
t Royal Qrapa&#13;
of Tartar&#13;
UM£ PHOSPHATE&#13;
Ella Clare Fitch, Roy Hick^e&#13;
and Myron Dunning are absent on&#13;
account of sickness.&#13;
Heleu Monks, Aria Gardner&#13;
and Harold Swarthout returned to&#13;
school Monday after a few weeks&#13;
illness.&#13;
Duriag the strong wind last&#13;
Friday the school lost its flag pole.&#13;
A good time was reported at the&#13;
Senior dance; about 35 couple&#13;
attended.&#13;
Florence Burgess visited school&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Viola and Albert Mack entered&#13;
the Intermediate Room, Monday,&#13;
making the total enrollment 34.&#13;
i, Lorenzo Lavey is in school&#13;
again after several days absence&#13;
on account of sickness.&#13;
Local News&#13;
L e g a l A d v e r t i s i n g&#13;
\&#13;
Q T A T E OF MICBIOAN, County of Livingston,&#13;
Probate Court For Said County. EBtate of&#13;
JAMES SPKARS, Deceased&#13;
F. Q. Jackson was in Detroit&#13;
Taegday. )&#13;
About 35 couple attended the&#13;
Senior dance Monday night.&#13;
Joe Kennedy of Battle Greek is&#13;
visiting his parents.&#13;
Mrs. H. A. Fick visited Stockbridge&#13;
friends Tuesday.&#13;
See the new line of millinery&#13;
at Zupp &amp; Favorites before you&#13;
buy.&#13;
Miss May Brogan is attending&#13;
the Ferris Institute at Big Rapids.&#13;
Paul McCreary of Fitchburg&#13;
WBB an over Sunday visitor at the&#13;
home of H. A. Fick.&#13;
Make W. J. Dancer &amp; Co.,&#13;
Stockbridge, a call before you buy&#13;
that new rug. They save you&#13;
dollars. adv.&#13;
Ellen Fitzsimmons of Howell&#13;
was the guest of her parents, Mr/&#13;
and Mr*. John Fitzsimmons, the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
Men—Our stock of mens suits&#13;
at $15. is large in size and the&#13;
values are the very best. W. J.&#13;
Dancer &amp; Co. adv.&#13;
'^sST&#13;
&gt;&gt;•.. i*H*&#13;
»&lt;*«&#13;
m •&gt;,&#13;
»'•"1 • a* • I t i n *&#13;
. . . . . . . • $ " &amp;&gt;?*&gt; .ffl'&#13;
v*W®*&#13;
*0 m&#13;
SSSMSS&#13;
The uadersijroed baving bem appointed by th«&#13;
utjftnt Probate of eaid county, Commiwfonero&#13;
on Claims in the matter of said estate, and four&#13;
ft&#13;
m ' \&#13;
r_I shall mifls you&#13;
»U ymx are groflfn."&#13;
ii+&gt;-'&#13;
;VK&#13;
, if:&#13;
i-y-iyfaWfat the poet e«uj&gt;, every tnoth-&#13;
^tetMftArt has felt. Babp's photo.&#13;
•I RTBpk taken now and then will&#13;
t ^ye»erve the image and memory&#13;
'tffiiq&amp;fy d«ys for all time.&#13;
i- ••y.mtipto long since yon have had&#13;
f o a r baby'B picttte taken?&#13;
jftfcieB. Chapell&#13;
mouths from the 22nd day of March, A. D. 1918,&#13;
bavinu been allowed by said Judge of Piobate to&#13;
all ptrnoaa holding claims against said e»iat« in&#13;
which to present their claims to us for examination&#13;
and adjustment.&#13;
Notice is hereby given that we will meet on the&#13;
Ztoi day of May, A. D. 19l3 and on the 22nd day&#13;
of.Tnlj, A. D. 1918, at ten o'clock a.m. of each&#13;
day, at the Piocltney Exchange Bank in the&#13;
Village of Pincltney in said oonnty to receive&#13;
and examine such claims,&#13;
Dated: Howell, March 22, A. D. 1913.&#13;
(i. W.Twple&#13;
Jamea Marble&#13;
1 Commissioners on&#13;
f Claims 13t3&#13;
W&#13;
I Photographer&#13;
ridge, Michigan&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN, tue froDate Court for&#13;
the county of Livingston, Estateof&#13;
ELIZABETH SPEARtf, Deceased&#13;
The undersigned having been appointed, by the&#13;
Judge of Probate of eaid County, Commissioners&#13;
ou Claims in the matter of said estate, and fonr&#13;
months from the 22ud day of March, A. D. 1018&#13;
having been allrwed by said Judge ot Probate to&#13;
all persons holding claims against said estate in&#13;
whfcq to present their claims to us for examination&#13;
and adjustment;&#13;
Notice Is hereby jiiven that we will meet on the&#13;
Si day of Mar, A. D. 1013. and on t^e «8 day of&#13;
Jul*, A. D. 1913, at ten o'clock a. m. of each day&#13;
at the Plnckney Exchange Bank tn the village of&#13;
Pinckney, in said County, to receive and examine&#13;
such claims. y •'&#13;
Dated, Howell, March 22nd, A. D. 1023. ,&#13;
(i. W. Teepte ( Comrrissioners&#13;
.lamas Marble on Claims 13tS&#13;
rol*aipe4ln;iU&lt;HH:n'"ti^o*uo. **•&#13;
kl'aw*»iMiflCoi.r»Y,,»«'i'*&#13;
irofr Mcicli, Modi-' or ntoK*. tvn' is - _ . . . . . . . .&#13;
MMexenJdo ssoiveenltrM. ivIitA *NmK miiir. '&gt;" * ** i-t'.w« o« «ifw, oluuM? -M•oTokIsIi wWi hMliMOM' Tif *••» &gt;• volmi: ./,iiiry . \i:io;&lt;wv&lt; i,t&gt; rnut n^ Ap;T,r-t- n*r,piiMetlav. ami W i ^i&lt;.«U.elntLimi\tio!i. B. SWIFT h £0, PAT1MT tA\%YXRS,&#13;
STATE OV MICHIGAS, tae frobate Court of&#13;
the County of LlTlngston,&#13;
At a session of said court held at the Probate 1. Office In the VMate of Howell in said County, on&#13;
(the a«b7d¥y ~oTir*r«h7A; DrlMSr&#13;
Present, Hon. J£ugene A. Ptowe, Jud^e of&#13;
1 Probate, In the matter of the estate ot&#13;
AUSTIN WALTEBS, Deceased&#13;
Oeorge D. Walters having filed In said court his&#13;
petition prating that the administration&#13;
of said rstate be granted to Louise Marble&#13;
or to some other suit able person.&#13;
It la Ordered, That the lath day of April,&#13;
A. D. 1918._at top o'clock In the forenoon, at said&#13;
probate ofllce, be and is hereby appointed for&#13;
] bearing said petition.&#13;
It is further ordered that public notice thereof&#13;
be given by publication of a copy of tbla order, for&#13;
' three auocesalrr weeks previous tp said day of&#13;
hearing in the Plnokney DISPATCH a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated in said county. ldt8&#13;
EUGENE A. 8TOWE&#13;
Judgt oC Probate.&#13;
s/f-wmY&#13;
m&#13;
. . , .&#13;
r&#13;
A&#13;
Join the "don't worry club!" Buy&#13;
your Ford today. Thousands were&#13;
disappointed last year. Don't take&#13;
a chance this time. And remember&#13;
that the more we make the better&#13;
we make them. Insist on an immediate&#13;
delivery.&#13;
There are more than 220,00b Fords on the world's&#13;
highway—the best possible ce*t?roouj to their unexcelled&#13;
worth. Prices—runabout $525— touring car&#13;
$600—town car $800 f. o. b. Detroit with complete&#13;
equipment. Catalogue from&#13;
Flmtoft &amp; Read&#13;
LOCAL AGENTS PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
AVBKB80S. •&#13;
Harry Williams visited at tin home&#13;
of Fred Mackiuder the first of the&#13;
week.&#13;
Harry and Geo. Lavey came home&#13;
from Jackson Saturday where they&#13;
have been spending the winter.&#13;
M. J.fioche sold to Mr. Hets of Wis.&#13;
consin this week a eow for which he&#13;
received |400.&#13;
Fred Mackinder has traded his farm&#13;
here to Mr. Ader ot Detroit for a&#13;
house and lot there. Mr. Ader will&#13;
take posessioh at once.&#13;
Mervin Nile and family of Jackson&#13;
were over Sunday visitors at the home&#13;
of P. Lavey. Mr. Nile returned home&#13;
leaving his wife to assist in caring for&#13;
her sister, Mrs, John White, who has&#13;
been very ill.&#13;
Geo. Fitzsirornons and friend of&#13;
Jackson visited his mother here over&#13;
Sunday.o;&#13;
A company of guests were entertained&#13;
at the home of Will Ledwidge&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Gene McClear spent Sunday at the&#13;
home of E, A. Kubn in Gregory.&#13;
Germaine Ledwidge returned to&#13;
Adrian Monday,&#13;
Richard Grainer is the owner of a&#13;
tine new buggy. Watch out for the&#13;
*Smiles Richard.&#13;
The high wind of lait Friday did a&#13;
good deal of d*mage here.&#13;
The Lean pickers are enjoying a vacation&#13;
owing to the wind carrying&#13;
away the beaa room chimney.&#13;
Mrs. G. Brogan and daughter, May,&#13;
visited at Max Ledwidges Wednesday.&#13;
'' V&#13;
m&#13;
COLUMBUS FLOUR&#13;
FOR BISCUITS&#13;
jer Today With Your&#13;
f '*&gt;£#&#13;
Red Cob Silo Corn&#13;
I have received my supply of&#13;
Red Cob Silo Corn, Prices $1.00&#13;
March, 11.15 April, $1.55 May*,&#13;
delivery. R. E. Barron, Ho well, adv&#13;
Best For Skin Diseases&#13;
Nearly every skin disease yields&#13;
quickly and permanently to Bucklen's&#13;
Arnica Salve, and nothing is better&#13;
tor burns or braises. Soothes and&#13;
beaU. John Oeye of Gladwin, Mich,,&#13;
?ays, after suffering twelve years with&#13;
skin ailment and spending $400 in&#13;
doctors' bills, Bucklen's Arniea Salve&#13;
cured him, It will help you. Only&#13;
25c. Recommended by W. E. Brown.&#13;
M. P. S!QL£R M. 0- C. L, SIQLER M. O.&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Pbysioiani and Surgeons. .&#13;
All calls promptly attended to&#13;
day or night. Office on Main&#13;
Street.&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
' • - • ' ^ - " ' ^&#13;
fll^• SJ: Hncjknejr&#13;
ATENTS&#13;
e«P7rt«hM.«t&lt;v. , N t l . CQUHtniCt). . ,&#13;
Stal00t dirt A nvUU Y.'~u&lt;t»/.»&gt;t ttn&lt;*a muA&#13;
mtontf and often ik* f*: * Hi. ' &gt;&#13;
PitMl M4 laMaftmMt PneHoi ExolttlvSk&#13;
WrH»WMMt«W«t •t$ «a«a am*, «»e. VSIM flum:&#13;
UTASMItNQTON, O. C.&#13;
ASNOW&#13;
Murphy 6 r&#13;
Specials at their Corner Store&#13;
Saturday, March 29,1913&#13;
Embroideries, Laces, Ribbons at Cost&#13;
Mens Fancy Shirts, $1.00 values at79c&#13;
40 prs. Mens 5 0 c and 60c Overalls at 3 9 c&#13;
40 Mens Work Shirts, 5 0 c values 3 9 c&#13;
12c L&gt;inen Crash? per yd. - 9%c&#13;
11c bleached Sheeting, per yd. 9 c&#13;
Ladies 15c Hose, per pair - 10c&#13;
Boys $ 6 . 0 0 Suits - $ 3 . 9 8&#13;
Best Prints - - 6 c&#13;
All Corsets, Gloves, Hair Fins, Barretts,&#13;
Ladies, Misses and Childrens Shoes, at&#13;
Wholesale P r i c e s&#13;
This Sale will open at 9 a. m. and all goods sold Must Be For Cash&#13;
Our Grocery Specials For Saturday at Both Stores Includes&#13;
25 lbs. pounds Sugar for $1.19&#13;
100 cans Peas, 12c quality, per can 9 c&#13;
3 cans for 2 5 c&#13;
5 pkgs. Corn Plakes for&#13;
m&#13;
t&#13;
" * &gt; • •&#13;
\ '4&#13;
Braying of all kinds&#13;
D ^ n e ^ r r o n i p f l y a n d a t t h e R I S M&#13;
Price*&#13;
The team when not busy will always be found&#13;
N on Main street&#13;
P h o n o JSo. 6 8 , 3 i&gt;. '&#13;
PAUL MILLER&#13;
• • « * $ '&#13;
Pain Flit.&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
Are Getting The Premiums Ail The&#13;
Time And Ate Praising Purity Flour&#13;
Dr. Miles9&#13;
Anti-Pain Pills&#13;
will help you, ti» the&#13;
have helped others.&#13;
Good for all kinds of&#13;
Used to relieve Neuralgia,&#13;
ache, Nervousness, Rheur&#13;
Sciatica, Kidney Pains, Lu&#13;
Locomotor " '&#13;
am.&#13;
Ataxia, ' Bad&#13;
y » w t&#13;
Stc/machacli«&#13;
tattlity ^ ^&#13;
of the&#13;
"l hart - *imflt,j\IUm^J+hl*ct to&#13;
neuralffia. and n M ^ j M p r e d from&#13;
It for y**n. While rtrnmlps my&#13;
and suffering from one of the&#13;
attacks,- he brought me a box&#13;
Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain PlHs. I^uped&#13;
them aa directed and after taking ,.&#13;
th«m It was the first time In y«ar»1&#13;
the neuralgia ceased from the use of&#13;
mediome." MRS. E. C. HOWARO,&#13;
402 Greene S t ^ fiovaglad» Mien.&#13;
At all druggls«^»^toM»»^tBo. a&#13;
M I L t t MCDICAlf Od.^&#13;
i Hi I 1¾ i, I f l&#13;
Try a. Few Sacks of&#13;
Cobs POP Kindling at 5 c&#13;
pep ba^&#13;
delivered in lO ba^lotsormore&#13;
and see if they are not the best you ever had&#13;
Try a little OraJham Flour for&#13;
breakfast and see if* you do not&#13;
#feel better&#13;
T H ^ H O Y T BROS.&#13;
fJttSMMtT&#13;
COI»TIV4NTS 4 (&#13;
Avirmie Mndlnc a taettfb end ""&#13;
qtnekt? muntrnnfn tmr oWntan&#13;
tfktinTu*atictrlMtot]i rt«o ojnmn*dfectiintrtPai*.t e.j.Q. H&amp;&#13;
•eat f»ea, OWe»t namef tor&#13;
sjFejiuutnwttsi iitiai,k ewni tht^oruato cfrwhp ,S i m_ $MMft Ahsn4»omeirat«iifv»te4 wnekty^ T«&#13;
aalatlon o; anr ecieotlOo JoorneJ. T&#13;
W f ; Joar woota«,ai. 6ouxb$t^m i ^ "&#13;
ir?r.'&#13;
Sale Bills Printed attJ&#13;
Office al Rl^ht&#13;
GOING&#13;
.1 * ' or^&#13;
TOBUHHIW&#13;
TEST ^ J&#13;
SEE L fcilUuKIi&#13;
i * OSKOOBT B K y l&#13;
taTBm- mrm you •MMg.mHI&#13;
•^HQP&#13;
1P 1 1 , " '&#13;
f m d « pianoa.&#13;
l*;^*&#13;
V&#13;
»V.'&#13;
n&amp;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch March 27, 1913</text>
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                <text>March 27, 1913 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1913-03-27</text>
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                <text>Roy W. Caverly</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan, Thursday, April 3, 1913 No. U&#13;
K&#13;
[£&amp;&gt;•.'&#13;
I .-^4-&#13;
r ^&#13;
Township Tickets&#13;
PUTNAM&#13;
RBFUBUOAH&#13;
Supervisor Fred N. Burgess&#13;
Cterk ....E. W. Caverlv&#13;
Trass E. £ . Hoyt&#13;
Highway Com John Dlnket&#13;
Overseer of Highways. ...Frad Mackiader&#13;
JwtJoe of Peace John Chambers&#13;
Messtor Board of Beriew.... Will MUler&#13;
Constables.. Arthur LeBue, Dell Hell,&#13;
ie Henry, Gay Hall.&#13;
Cooaittee— R. W. Caverly, G. W. Teeple,&#13;
H. W. Crofoot&#13;
DKMOCKAT&#13;
JSapeMisor,,,,. Jesses M. Harris&#13;
Clerk Axaos Clinton&#13;
Trees.. Norman Reason&#13;
Highway Com . Jsmes Smith&#13;
Overseer of Highways .K. G. Webb&#13;
Justice of Peace . . . . W. B. D arrow&#13;
Member Board of Renew Bob Kelly&#13;
Constables. .Irvin Kennedy, Sylvester Harris,&#13;
Bert VanBlaricum, Caaper Volmer&#13;
Coomittee—JauM Harris, W. E. Murphy,&#13;
Geo. Greiner&#13;
MABION&#13;
REPUBLICAN&#13;
Supervisor G. B. Smith&#13;
Clerk. Chas. Hanson&#13;
Trees....».. . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . »JK&gt; J• Hart&#13;
Highway Com H. Mayoecfc&#13;
Overseer of Higbwayt Wirt Smith&#13;
Justice ot Peace H. C. BackaeJJ&#13;
Member Board of Review.. H. W. Norten&#13;
Mem. B. of R. to fill vacancy&#13;
Constables.. Ed Allen, Geo. Griffen, Ed&#13;
BwbMna, Will Allen&#13;
DEMOCRAT&#13;
Swpervisor R.J.Wright&#13;
G*era. Mott Wilcox&#13;
Treee. B.-H.Gorton&#13;
Bijfbmay Com. Aden Gehringer&#13;
Overseer of flighweys Fred Amos&#13;
Justice vl Peace , S. G. Knight&#13;
Member Board of Review. .Thos. McGoire&#13;
Mem. B. of R to 611 vacancy Ed Nash&#13;
Constables. .Chris. Brogao, Jas. Harris,&#13;
Lewis Wilhelm, Thos. Ross&#13;
HAMBURG&#13;
flBvtnrttCAi?—&#13;
Supervisor Jas. Stackable&#13;
Clerk Caw Gittins&#13;
Treasurer-.&#13;
Highway Oom Wm. Knight&#13;
Overseer,of .Highways Lee GartfeU&#13;
Justice of Peace' Grover Lsmberuon&#13;
Member Board of Rexiew. .H. D. Pryor&#13;
Coa*Mbles..J. Weinman, E. G. Carpenter,&#13;
Joh» Case, 'W. Grisooo.&#13;
DEMOCRAT&#13;
Supervisor,. Arthar Shehan&#13;
Clerk John Demms*&#13;
Treaa Harry MOOS&#13;
Highway Com Ray Hinckley&#13;
Overseer of Highways L, Gsrtrell&#13;
Justice of Peace.... R. Bennett&#13;
Member Bonrd of Review.,M. H. Twitch el&#13;
Constables. J. W. Bennett, Joe Blades,&#13;
Fred FoJandrGeo. Schafer&#13;
VNADILLA&#13;
RxrimxiQAjr&#13;
Supervisor E. N. Braley&#13;
Clerk Fred Avrault&#13;
Treaa .,... .. ."V .Wm. beige&#13;
Highway C o m . . . . . . . . . . . . J a s . Evermore&#13;
Overseer of Highways....... ..Jas. Foster&#13;
Jostiee of Pence Harlow Isham&#13;
Member Board of Review. Cyreae* Mapes&#13;
CaawtaMet...I. Williams, Otto Arnold, VV.&#13;
Croeaman, L. E. HadJey&#13;
DajigCBAT&#13;
rHmevyisor. ....Harry ttogleton&#13;
OerJc. L. U. McClesr&#13;
Tteas.... Adalbert Brearley&#13;
Hjgbway Com............Eugene Gallup&#13;
Ovevseer of Hitfhwsys.,. .Albert Roepeke&#13;
Jostise of Peace, Kenneth Kohn&#13;
af ember Board of Review. .John Roberts&#13;
CoBatoMet..Harry Jacobs, P. G Hoard,&#13;
Frank Bayer, Forrest Aaeltine&#13;
were&#13;
L©*&#13;
:;%ji&#13;
K ^ '&#13;
$ : ' $ " • • ' •&#13;
UW"&#13;
J. Stacks We-and. wife of Gxego&#13;
Sunday guests at the heme of Gel&#13;
Clear Sydaev Ssrbat was home ov&#13;
~ i a y . . . . . Ralph Plammer of Parkers&#13;
teraspenf last week with relatives here&#13;
.^Mary GreJaer and Clare Ledwidje&#13;
callers at the Scbrotsberger home&#13;
....George Crane and Bob Edward&#13;
attended the dance at UnadUla Fridavoifai,-....&#13;
Mrs, Wane McClear and&#13;
aUIsVtft of Ynatlaati are speadleg the&#13;
JSastsr vacation at their home here&#13;
Percy Sashay of Party spent part of last&#13;
week wkh his brotber hare. :77.. M.J.&#13;
Boafae is testiag thrte of his sows, seriated&#13;
bwlis; De^ferborn of Paoton^.....Clare&#13;
Ledwidgeapest a portion of last week in&#13;
Tfslsssssns... .Katie- Causers of the&#13;
State Sanitarinm in Howell vatfssdattbe&#13;
home of Fred Wylia the flat of the week*&#13;
M*m&gt;soi* *t ttt.iy e4 Dancer's, Smek-&#13;
&gt;, T^ey are special vetoes. a d *&#13;
the Pla*taeyj&gt;pera hooso Friday ov&gt;&#13;
B o * Fred W. Carbett will talk on&#13;
•fastness Men's Asso.&#13;
T h e second meeting of the Pinckney&#13;
Business Men's Asso. was held i n the&#13;
Masonic Hall Tuesday evening,April 1. A&#13;
sumptions repast WAS served by the Ladies&#13;
of the Cong'l. church. The meeting was&#13;
called to order by the Pre*., G . W . Teeple.&#13;
T h e by-laws and regulations of the asso.&#13;
were read and discussed and a committee&#13;
appointed to revise same i n time for the&#13;
next meeting. The meetings will now be&#13;
held the first Wednesday of every month&#13;
The sec'y was instructed to write the&#13;
officials of the Grand Trunk Railroad r e -&#13;
questing them to see if electric lights cannot&#13;
be installed in the Pinckney depot.&#13;
Committee were then appointed to arrange&#13;
for a Fourth of J u l y celebration as&#13;
follows:&#13;
Com. on Arrangements: R . W. Caverty,&#13;
R. Clinton, Thos. Read. *&#13;
Com. on Sports: Ross Read, P a n ! Miller&#13;
H . D . McDougal.&#13;
Finance Com.: E . E . H o y t , Will Dunbar,&#13;
L e o Monks.&#13;
After the business was transacted the&#13;
Cong') Ladies were given a vote of thanks&#13;
for the fine supper.&#13;
To The Subscribers of&#13;
The Liv. Mutual Tel. Co.&#13;
The new directories which will be mulled&#13;
to subscribers before April 6 will contain&#13;
the names of all subscriber* in Livingston&#13;
county, both *'Home and Bell."&#13;
Mutual subscribers will be able to get connection*&#13;
with "Home "subscribers throughout&#13;
the county&#13;
Bubecribcrs will plesse note that the&#13;
Company has adopted a ringing code,&#13;
numbers for calling in place of long nnd&#13;
short rings and it nae beeu necessary to&#13;
to change some of the rings ou party lines&#13;
in order to use this code. Ail subscribers&#13;
will please look op their numbers that they&#13;
may familiarise themeelvea with the rings&#13;
by which they will be called, before the&#13;
change takes place. Give the number to&#13;
the operator in the order printed, una:&#13;
Five-six, Ring Three-Two, which will be&#13;
translated by the oner*tor-ss4iae56V Ring&#13;
3 long 2 short, the first figure representing&#13;
the long ring and the second the short. All&#13;
subscribers must call by number as the op*&#13;
erator wil^ot be allowed to pot up any&#13;
&lt;e^nn«ti6flPrtthout. No director* wiH be&#13;
in the hands, of the operator, rfo Hue&#13;
must be held longer than (5) five minutes.&#13;
F. H. Lsre, Mg'r.&#13;
— — • • — a —&#13;
School Notes&#13;
Jacob, Viola and Albert Mack entered&#13;
school last week Ambrose Murphy&#13;
spelled the grammar school down in a&#13;
spelliag contest Friday afternoon&#13;
Roy Baltic entered the primary room and&#13;
Lucile Bullis the intermediate room this&#13;
week .Donald Poole of Leslie is visit*&#13;
rag his sister Georgia Pool ... Bernardino&#13;
Lynch visited school Wednesday after&#13;
noon... .Lucile McQuillan visited school&#13;
Shared ay April Fool Jokes ware the&#13;
fashion Tuesday Edna and Dorothy&#13;
Darrow are absent on account of sickness&#13;
The Senior class received their announcement&#13;
parts Friday.&#13;
MUTE MAJUOr.&#13;
Will Docking is quite sick at this writing&#13;
O. Farley and Emmet fftssimmons&#13;
visited st the home of Mrs. Thos.&#13;
Fitzsimmons last Sunday. .Guy&#13;
Blair and wife were Gregory visitors last&#13;
Monday...... Msdeline Mersn of Pinckney&#13;
visited Lucile Brogaa last Sunday....&#13;
Percv Daley was a Pinckney visitor last&#13;
Sunday Mr. G ffrey of Lake City,&#13;
who bought theWirt Smith farm at Chubb*&#13;
Corners about a year ago, is nicely located&#13;
there now.&#13;
J. CHURCH&#13;
l!t*JH&#13;
The mdias spring coats at Dancer's,&#13;
ftasinVUaasrtteudfoJ and wo»d*fol&#13;
- ' — f s o o , la.totJtt. , adv.&#13;
r separate hsilots are to bo voted&#13;
. They saw the state ticket, the&#13;
ftfcstotJstt•*«» a * " — ~ ~ ~ ~ *&#13;
l ^ f w &lt;"#^s» ^r*sasa^Pf&gt;Bteian"&#13;
J. Church, graduate optomerist will be&#13;
In Pinckney Friday April 4.&#13;
For fire insurance, sea Monks Bros.&#13;
x*oys suits, $8. to $8., st Dancer's, Stockbridge,&#13;
adv.&#13;
Soda FouuUln now open. Full lias of&#13;
soft drinks. Mayer's Drug Store.&#13;
Fliatoft A Rasd have disposed of Ford&#13;
automobiles to Messrs. E. E. Frost and&#13;
H. Hoieel.&#13;
The Juniors of the Pinckney High&#13;
School will give a dance st too opera&#13;
house Friday evening, A prlt 4*&#13;
The Ladies Aid of the M. E . church&#13;
will serve dinner and-snppat i s thwir rooms&#13;
under too opera house, Monday, April 7th.&#13;
A cosapleto lino of Northrup, King aV&#13;
Co. and P. M. Ferry A Co. pkev seeds, elso&#13;
IebaU Bulk Seeds at Monks Bros.&#13;
The mdias of the CongM. efeorch will&#13;
serve dianer and swjMr. election day,&#13;
Monday, April 7th, atlhair hall ia the&#13;
[Cwdwaa block, i&#13;
Special eosBtMidoaiioa of Livingston&#13;
LodgeNo,767 F. A. A. M., ToesdsJ&#13;
8th. Work i s the P. d&#13;
J.RTMarda^W.M.&#13;
Lewis Colby died at the hosna of Jacob&#13;
Friday npridi* March J t .&#13;
aval strvioss wets hold stasia* at&#13;
Oo-st/1&#13;
dacrae. m&#13;
tt&#13;
R E M O V A L&#13;
Murphy &amp; Jackson&#13;
The 8¾ Store &lt;&gt;n the Corner&#13;
Saturday, April 5th* 1913&#13;
With 4% F^wll and Complete rStc&gt;ck of Staple Dry&#13;
Goodai, Mensi Furnishings, Grocerie*, Etc., Etc.&#13;
GOODH! WE^W GOODW!&#13;
Come in and See Them and&#13;
I^ote the inifly l^sovr I*rioe«&#13;
Space is limited, but we quote a few prices that we are convinced will attract&#13;
you to the BIG STORE ON THE CORNER&#13;
25 His. Suftr $1.17&#13;
5 pfcgt. Com Flakes 25c&#13;
8 bars Lenox Soap 25c&#13;
Wedding Bell, 50c Tea 4 2 c&#13;
60 prs. Mens Overalls&#13;
Per Pair 39c&#13;
Best Prints 6c&#13;
Apron Ginghams 7c&#13;
36 in. Brown Sheetings 6%c&#13;
36 in. Bleached " 8^c&#13;
Big Values in Ribbons for Saturday&#13;
Only 10c per yd.&#13;
Many more bargains throughout our large stock. Come in and let us convince&#13;
you that we can save you dollars&#13;
Gan We Interest Yoii -&#13;
Mr. Farmer?&#13;
Read the List of Goods Below and Then&#13;
Come To Our Store and bet Us&#13;
C O N V I N C E OXJ&#13;
That These Goods Qmn Be Bouflht a t the Right Price&#13;
I. H. C. Low Down Spreader&#13;
I. H. C. Gasoline Engines and Tractors&#13;
\ Star Wind Mills&#13;
Gaie and Oliver Sulkey and Gang Plows&#13;
Gale 7 and 8 ft. Rollers and Tillage Implements&#13;
Superior, Hoosier and Ontario Grain Drills in Plain Disc and Fertilizer Types&#13;
Rex Lime Sulphur Solution and Arsenate of Lead For Spraying&#13;
Farm and Garden Seeds&#13;
Furniture and Rugs&#13;
Complete Line of Shelf Hardware /.&#13;
We buy the moat of theae good* In car load Iota wMcb&#13;
|lve» ua a better opportunity to l e t low prlcea* We Suftraatee&#13;
to give better gooda for the price than you can get&#13;
elaewherc. AT LEAST LET US SHOW Y0W&#13;
•4.&#13;
t&#13;
"•t&#13;
i&#13;
t&#13;
i&#13;
• » ' •&#13;
&gt;* fc*&#13;
DIIVKBL &amp; DJJ1HBA ' 1&#13;
.- • )&#13;
\*&#13;
•,?,"J!N.&#13;
•,i . - . . ^&#13;
,W V f - ; : ^ ^ •&#13;
:: *&#13;
..VV;'&#13;
:.c.„&#13;
Jeae* -£&#13;
WOMEN m DEATH&#13;
IttfelANA L I F E 8AVER T E L L S A&#13;
GRAPHIC STORY OF T H E&#13;
FLOOD A T PERU.&#13;
HE FERRIED MANY TO SAFETY&#13;
Thrown Into Water Several Times by&#13;
Despairing and Frenzied Passenger*—&#13;
Paddled Three Mllei Through&#13;
the Tree Topa.&#13;
Plymouth, Ind.—Graphic description&#13;
of the horrors of the flood at Peru,&#13;
Ind., waB given by Qilbert Kessler,&#13;
one of the heroes of the calamity.&#13;
Weary, tired eyed and almost unnerved&#13;
from the loss of sleep and&#13;
the sights he had witnessed, young&#13;
Kessler, a muscular product of a&#13;
northern Indiana farm, staggered from&#13;
a relief train from the stricken city&#13;
at Plymouth. Here he recounted the&#13;
terrors of the inky nights when the&#13;
Wabash river drowned the piercing&#13;
cries of the frantic and the groans of&#13;
the perishing. To board the relief&#13;
train Kessler had paddled three miles&#13;
in a boat through the protruding treetops&#13;
and debris that momentarily&#13;
threatened to wreck him.&#13;
Crazed Woman Leaps to Death.&#13;
Kesbler's most vivid picture was&#13;
the suicide of several fear crazed&#13;
women, who leaped from the rescue&#13;
boats. The roaring current and the&#13;
terrible sights, he declared, had maddened&#13;
them.&#13;
"It was too awful ever to forget,"&#13;
said Kessler with a shudder. "It was&#13;
cold and damp and misty, and the&#13;
sight of that black water rushing on&#13;
pitilessly Just seemed to take the&#13;
heart out of most of us, especially the&#13;
women.&#13;
"Night and day you could hear the&#13;
shrieks of the women. And the conduct&#13;
of some of them! I was piloting&#13;
one of the rescue boats to our landing,&#13;
the court house, and the boat was&#13;
pretty well filled. One of our passengers&#13;
was a woman.&#13;
"We were moving rather shakily&#13;
through one1 of the main streets when&#13;
all of a sudden I saw this woman rise&#13;
from her seat and begin to wail: "Oh,&#13;
what is the use! We'll all be drowned&#13;
anyway,' and she plunged from her&#13;
seat Into the torrent.&#13;
Tossed Overboard; Regains Boat&#13;
"The next moment I found myself&#13;
in the water. I saw a little arm stick&#13;
up for a moment. I made a grab for&#13;
it, but it went down. There was no&#13;
chance to swim in that Niagara. I&#13;
struck the stern of our rowboat and&#13;
Beized it with one hand. Then I gradually&#13;
drew myself aboard.&#13;
"I picked up one of our oarsmen a&#13;
little later. He was still alive.&#13;
"But the circumstances considered,&#13;
you could scarcely blame the woman.&#13;
A great many of them, though, suffered&#13;
with a stoicism that had to be&#13;
admired.&#13;
"Then again, I had a similar occurrence.&#13;
We were bringing another&#13;
•boatload to the coi«*t house when a&#13;
woman ltfo&amp;dd out despairingly and&#13;
all of us went over. Again it was a&#13;
fight and I managed to save myself.&#13;
Four times, altogether, I was thrown&#13;
out into that muddy stream and I am&#13;
still wondering how I managed to escape.&#13;
"The current swept around street&#13;
corners with tremendous force and&#13;
only the most experienced oarsmen&#13;
could propel those craft with any degree&#13;
of safety. One of the life savers&#13;
from Michigan City took too wide a&#13;
turn and they all landed in the treetops."&#13;
"Were as many lives lost in the capsizing&#13;
of boats as in the flood itself?"&#13;
he was asked.&#13;
"Yes. but the boats were not to blame,'&#13;
because it required great experience to&#13;
handle a boat in that current," he answered.&#13;
"We had 200 boats, but&#13;
there was BO much loss of life that&#13;
finally the women refused absolutely&#13;
to enter the boats. They preferred&#13;
to stick to roofs and second floors."&#13;
Bursting of Dam Described.&#13;
Kessler then gave a description of&#13;
the flood on the first night.&#13;
"It was 7:30 p. m. when the water&#13;
burst upon the city," he said. "A temporary&#13;
dam had been constructed by&#13;
the lighting company and because of&#13;
the threatened condition of the Wabash&#13;
planr were made to break a hole&#13;
in the dam and let the water out&#13;
gradually. Instead the dam gave out&#13;
and the water came with a roar.&#13;
"Families had just finished supper&#13;
when the fire whistle sounded. Simultaneously&#13;
all lights went out. People&#13;
ran out to see what had happened&#13;
and soon cries of anguish were heard.&#13;
In the rain and darkness you could&#13;
not see the water until it was almost&#13;
upon you. I felt It swishing about&#13;
my ankles and ran for my girl cousin.&#13;
When I 'got to her house I was waist&#13;
deep in water. Cries, shrieks and the&#13;
reports of revolvers rent the air.&#13;
Swifter, swifter ran the water. My&#13;
cousin and I were almost swept off our&#13;
feet. A bore the din I could hear:&#13;
To the courthouse! To the courthouse&#13;
!* Half swimming, halt floundering,&#13;
we reached there.&#13;
"We found thousand* of men, women&#13;
and children. Families were separated.&#13;
Women were crying for their&#13;
children, men for their wives and&#13;
wives for their husbands.&#13;
Roar o f Circus Beasts Terrible.&#13;
"Then came the roaring of lions and&#13;
the neighing of horses. We realized&#13;
in a moment that the Wallace circus,&#13;
which has winter quarters at Peru,&#13;
had been engulfed.&#13;
"The lions and other animals were&#13;
In cages and died In the trap, roaring&#13;
until the water swallowed them.&#13;
"But not so the elephants. These&#13;
huge beasts tore and lashed their&#13;
stakes until some of them got away.&#13;
Several boats saw them trudging and&#13;
swimming, roaring and lashing their&#13;
trumpets in the stream. That was&#13;
the last we saw of them.&#13;
"While the work of rescue was going&#13;
on a great glare lit the sky. We&#13;
saw that the Miami County Lumber&#13;
company was ablaze. The reflection&#13;
In the sky and on the water gave new&#13;
terror to the refugees in the courthouse,&#13;
but it aided the relief parties&#13;
in their work.&#13;
"The next day I saw bodies in the&#13;
water. One sight wrung my heart.&#13;
I saw a couple go floating by—a husband&#13;
and his wife—locked in each&#13;
other's arms. For fear they might&#13;
be separated they had bound themselves&#13;
together with cord.&#13;
Babe Torn From Mother.&#13;
"Another time a woman in our boat&#13;
was carrying her baby when the boat&#13;
was brushed through the tree tops&#13;
and. the branches tore the baby from&#13;
her arms. It disappeared in the&#13;
water.&#13;
"A towerman on one of the railroads&#13;
that overlooked the Wabash"&#13;
river said he had counted more than&#13;
200 bodies as they were swept into&#13;
the river and toward the- south. If&#13;
that Is true, the death list will be&#13;
larger because nobody has heard from&#13;
the lowest or south side of the city,&#13;
where 1,000 people lived."&#13;
Plight of Youngstown.&#13;
Chicago.—J. M. Goodnight, a resident&#13;
of Youngstown, 0., arrived in&#13;
Chicago over the Lake Shore.&#13;
"Youngstown is under eight feet of&#13;
water," he declared. "The Mahoning&#13;
river has risen ten feet higher than&#13;
it ever attained. Its two wagon&#13;
bridges have been washed away and&#13;
the railroad bridges are abandoned.&#13;
The last train over them threatened&#13;
to collapse the structure. The waterworks&#13;
and electric lighting plants&#13;
have given out. Youngstown supplies&#13;
natural gas to the surrounding territory.&#13;
This plant was feeble when I&#13;
left and probably has cut off light&#13;
from the territory by this time.&#13;
"Most of the inhabitants succeeded&#13;
in reaching high ground out of the&#13;
reach of the water. Youngstown is&#13;
built on a scries of ridges. Between&#13;
these dozens of people swam to safety.&#13;
Others were lost In the swift&#13;
current. Near Ashtabula, looking out&#13;
of the car window, I saw a family attempting&#13;
to get into a boat from the&#13;
attic window of their home. The boat&#13;
overturned as the train rolled away."&#13;
Die In Last Embrace.&#13;
Wrhen the residence of W. D. Axline&#13;
at Tiffin, 0., was picked up by the&#13;
flood and started careening down the&#13;
river, watchers saw Axline and his&#13;
wife standing in the window of the&#13;
second story. Her head was pillowed&#13;
on his shoulder. The cries of the wife&#13;
could be heard above the rushing&#13;
water.&#13;
Axline patted his wife on the back&#13;
and kissed her. A moment later the&#13;
house crashed into the Baltimore &amp;&#13;
Ohio bridge. It was splintered like a&#13;
bundle of sticks. With their arms&#13;
about each other, husband and wife&#13;
disappeared beneath the raging waters.&#13;
When the home of Jacob Kenecht&#13;
was swept away Mrs. Kenecht and&#13;
her five children were in the dwelling.&#13;
Kenecht was outside. When he was&#13;
picked up by the current he grabbed&#13;
the limb of a tree. He held on for&#13;
fifteen minutes. Rescuers attempted&#13;
to throw him a line. Each time the&#13;
wildly running &lt;water held the rope&#13;
within a few inches of his outstretched&#13;
arms.&#13;
Finally, exhausted and numbed by&#13;
the cold, Kenecht gave up the fight&#13;
against death. "Thanks, good-by,&#13;
boys, I'm—" his last words were swallowed&#13;
by the water that engulfed&#13;
him.&#13;
"Bailor Jack'1 Is a Hero.&#13;
Until Monday morning, "Sailor&#13;
Jack" Willis was an Inconspicuous&#13;
character in Columbus. Today he is&#13;
the city's hero. He took charge of&#13;
the rescue work. The life-Raving&#13;
baskets and cables were made and operated&#13;
under his orders. By stretching&#13;
cables to a water-surrounded&#13;
house, the occupants, one by one,&#13;
were brought to places of safety. "Sailor&#13;
Jack" personally saved ten people.&#13;
And after sixty hours of work, with&#13;
no rest, he dropped exhausted. A&#13;
movement has already been started to &lt;&#13;
obtain for him a Carnegie medal.&#13;
Four women, two of whom were&#13;
Mrs. A. W. Knott and daughter, were&#13;
rescued from the roof of A barm on&#13;
Water street by telephone linemen,&#13;
who clung to the topi of the poles and&#13;
swung Uses to the women. The four&#13;
were hauled to safety, hand over&#13;
hand.&#13;
Practical Fashiioonnss J&#13;
CHILDREN'S CRfcEPINQ APRON.&#13;
*mi&#13;
This pattern provides for a creep*&#13;
ing apron for a baby and also for a&#13;
plain sack tpron for the older tot&#13;
The creeping apron is gathered at the&#13;
knees. The sack apron has belt at&#13;
back and turn down collar.&#13;
The pattern (6137) Is cut in sizes&#13;
% to 3 y&lt;«ars and reauires for ere eking&#13;
apron 3% yards of 27 inch goods&#13;
and for sack apron 1¾ yards of 27&#13;
inch material.&#13;
To procure this pattern send 10 cents&#13;
to "Pattern Department," of this paper.&#13;
Write name and address plainly, and be&#13;
sure to give aize and number of pattern.&#13;
NO. 6137. «ZB&#13;
TOWN •—&#13;
STREET AND NO - ~ .&#13;
STATE -&#13;
LADY'S FOUR GORED SKIRT&#13;
6*43&#13;
This skirt can be used to complete&#13;
a coat suit, or it can be used for costume&#13;
development. It can be made&#13;
with either the empire or regulation&#13;
waist line. The closing is made at&#13;
the left side of the back. Serge or&#13;
broadcloth can be used to make this&#13;
skirt.&#13;
The patern (6143) Is cut In sizes 22&#13;
to-30 inches waist measure. Medium&#13;
size requires 3% yards of 36 inch material.&#13;
toT o" Pparttoecrunr e Dtehpisa rptmatetnert,n^, osfe ntdh i1s0 pcaepnerts. sWurreit et on agmivee sainzde aanddd rnesusm pbleari nolyf , paanttde rbne.&#13;
NO. 6143. 8JZB.&#13;
NAMB ~&#13;
TOWN&#13;
STREET ANDV NO.&#13;
STATE ~&#13;
Mountain Fever.&#13;
Miss Dora Keene was talking at a&#13;
tea at the Acorn club in Philadelphia,&#13;
about mountaineers' enthusiasm.&#13;
"The frenzy to get higher, higher,&#13;
higher," she said, "1B quite incredible&#13;
to those who have done no mountaineering.&#13;
"There's a story, doubtless true,&#13;
about a girl who climbed the Schreck&#13;
horn, a difficult rock-scramble. When&#13;
the summit was reached the head&#13;
guide, wiping his brow, panted:&#13;
'"Well, here we are, men. up on&#13;
the top at last'&#13;
"But the girl said, fretfully:&#13;
'"Oh, guide, can't we go any high*&#13;
e r r&#13;
'"Not unless you climb this alpenstock,&#13;
miss,' the guide answered*&#13;
thrusting it into the frozen snow."&#13;
Simple Remedy for Burnt,&#13;
Common whiting, mixed with water&#13;
to the consistency of a thick cream&#13;
spread on linen, forms an excellent local&#13;
application to bums and scalds.&#13;
The whole burnt surface should be&#13;
covered, thus excluding the action of&#13;
the air. The ease It .affords la instantaneous,&#13;
and J t only requires to be&#13;
kept moist by ocofttlonaj sprinkling&#13;
of cold water.&#13;
ALL SAVE LABOR JN KITCHEN&#13;
t i t t l e Helps That W i l l Leave the&#13;
Housewife Less Tired When&#13;
Day's Work Is Ended.&#13;
A shelf back of the kitchen table on&#13;
which to place cupB, spoons and small&#13;
vessels that are used frequently, the&#13;
wash basin, within reach of the roller&#13;
towel, a drinking cup near the water&#13;
pall, all Bave needless exertion and&#13;
time that may be utilized for something&#13;
else or rest.&#13;
The very best stove holder can be&#13;
made of an old, stocking by cutting&#13;
off the foot at the ankle and folding&#13;
it Into the leg, fastening it well as it&#13;
is folded over and over until it is the&#13;
square shape of the common ironing&#13;
holder. A brass ring in one corner is&#13;
a great convenience for hanging and&#13;
such a holder can be laundered.&#13;
In the sewing room, patterns should&#13;
have their place of quick and easy&#13;
access and if each one is marked it&#13;
will often prove a blessing. A bag&#13;
fastened on the lower part of the sewing&#13;
machine for scraps will likewise&#13;
be a comfort, and sharp scissors and&#13;
a work table are absolute necessities.&#13;
OLD BREAKFAST TABLE DISH&#13;
Spanish Omelet, When Properly Made,&#13;
Deserves All the Popularity I t&#13;
Has Attained,&#13;
Cut foui ounces of bacon in very&#13;
thin slices and then into one-half inch&#13;
squares. Fry gently until crisp, then&#13;
add one small onion, a medium sized&#13;
tomato and five mushrooms, all chopped&#13;
rather fine. Rub a freshly cut&#13;
clove of garlic upon the spoon for stirring&#13;
while cooking 15 minutes. Meanwhile&#13;
break six eggs fhto a bowl,&#13;
season with a saltspoonful of salt, onefourth&#13;
saltspoonful of white pepper.&#13;
Give them a dozen good strokes and&#13;
turn into a perfectly smooth frying&#13;
pan, in which a teaspoonful of butter&#13;
has been melted, and well spread. Do&#13;
not stir, but shake constantly until&#13;
the omelet is nearly set. Spread the&#13;
bacon and vegetables quickly over the&#13;
omelet, fold over and set it in the&#13;
oven for about one minute. Then slip&#13;
It upon a hot platter and serve at&#13;
once.&#13;
Our Cook Says&#13;
That in filling a cake pan It is well&#13;
to remember that the center of the&#13;
cake is the part which will be the&#13;
highest. If the batter is spread as&#13;
much to the sides as possible, leaving&#13;
a depression in the center, then the&#13;
cake when baked will be level.&#13;
That a cheap and durable toaster&#13;
for a gas stove is a piece of sheet&#13;
iron. Over this is a five-cent fire&#13;
toaster can be used without danger&#13;
of burning or blackening the bread.&#13;
That when baking or scalloping&#13;
potatoes, chops can be baked in a pan&#13;
In the oven, steak broiled underneath&#13;
or pudding or pie cooked at the same&#13;
time. It saves gas.&#13;
Warm Slaw.&#13;
Select a nice solid head of winter&#13;
cabbage and cut it up very fine. Put&#13;
into a hot frying pan a piece of butter,&#13;
the size of a walnut, and when&#13;
melted put in the cabbage with a very&#13;
little water; let it simmer till well&#13;
done. Then beat up one egg very&#13;
light and stlr_Jn slowly; lastly, add&#13;
one-half cup of sour cream; salt and&#13;
pepper to suit the taste. Another&#13;
method for "hot slaw" is to simply&#13;
make a boiled dressing of two egg&#13;
yolks, two tablespoons of sugar, two&#13;
tablespoons of sour cream, one cup&#13;
of vinegar, and a rounded teaspoonful&#13;
of butter, and pour this over the finely-&#13;
cut cabbage&#13;
Rice Pudding With Fig Sauce.&#13;
Press hot boiled rice into buttered&#13;
cups; then slip out on a hot dish and&#13;
pour the sauce over. Look carefully&#13;
over the flgB to be used; place them&#13;
in a pan and cover with cold water;&#13;
cook until tender; chop very fine and&#13;
press through a coarse sieve. To this&#13;
pulp add the juice of one-half lemon&#13;
and sugar if not sufficiently sweet&#13;
To Restore a Faded Carpet.&#13;
To revive the colors in faded carpet&#13;
which is still good for further&#13;
wear. Take half a pail of warm water&#13;
and add to it either a handful of&#13;
salt or a half cup of turpentine, or half&#13;
a cup of vinegar, or a good-sized lump&#13;
of alum, or on dark colors, four tablespoonfuls&#13;
of ammonia, any of which&#13;
helps to brighted the colors. Wring&#13;
out a flannel cloth and wipe off the&#13;
whole surface of the carpet without&#13;
really wetting it through, and let it&#13;
dry thoroughly before using.&#13;
To Clean Satin Shoe.&#13;
Take a piece of flannel and dip it&#13;
into spirits of wine, rub the satin the&#13;
way of the nap; turn the flannel as it&#13;
gets soiled. Any light color may be&#13;
cleaned this way. White satin shoes&#13;
should always be kept In blue paper,&#13;
or the satin gets discolored.&#13;
When to Buy Shoes.&#13;
To get comfortable fitting shoes,&#13;
buy themiate In the afternoon, when&#13;
the exercise of the day has spread&#13;
the muscles of the feet to their, largest&#13;
extent&#13;
, Munyon'ePaw-Paej&#13;
PUls are unlike all otV&#13;
ac laxatives arcathar*&#13;
tic* They coax that&#13;
liver Into activity bfv&#13;
gentle methods, they*&#13;
da not scour; they dd&#13;
not gripe; they sit '&#13;
weaken; but they&#13;
start all the sect "&#13;
of the liver and&#13;
acb in a way theft,&#13;
puts these, orgaas in „&#13;
healthy condition and&#13;
corrects constipation. Munyon's Paw-Paw&#13;
Pills are a tonic to the stomach, lis-ay andl&#13;
nerves. They invigorate instead of weak**&#13;
they enrich the blood instead of itnpov '&#13;
ishing it; they enable the stomach to get r&#13;
the nourishment from food that Is put iftts&#13;
it Price as cents. All Druggists.&#13;
4 4&#13;
PAW-PAW&#13;
PILLS&#13;
" ^ M ^&#13;
jtuninuiwiKiffliifTrfTTtimnt • » * •&#13;
You can farm all&#13;
the year 'round&#13;
in Arkansas PRACTICALLY&#13;
every month is a&#13;
productive month.&#13;
No long, hard winters to&#13;
require expensive clothing&#13;
for the family or long feeding&#13;
seasons for stock.&#13;
There is plenty of land&#13;
Deep, rich soil, and at very&#13;
low prices. It will pay&#13;
you to investigate.&#13;
We have just published six illustrated&#13;
folders on Arkansas. Send&#13;
for the one that interests you*&#13;
1. Central Arkansas&#13;
2. Northeastern Arkansas&#13;
3. Southeastern Arkansas&#13;
4. Southwestern Arkansas&#13;
3. White River Country&#13;
6. Arkansas Valley&#13;
The way there !•&#13;
vie the&#13;
Iron&#13;
Mountain&#13;
Route&#13;
MISSOURI&#13;
PACIFIC&#13;
IRON&#13;
MOUNTAIN,&#13;
Let ue tell you about low&#13;
fares for hozneeeekere&#13;
Mr. J. N. Andmon, Imwdgnttion Agewi*&#13;
hon Momdam, St LomU&#13;
Pitas* und mt Arkmmm Land Folder&#13;
NP.-&#13;
AidrtttliiiiiHnnHiiiiiiHiiimiiiiiiiniimtiiiiiiiDiHiuiiiiiiinii&#13;
Appreciation Coming.&#13;
"You'll never realize your husband's&#13;
true value until he has gone," counseled&#13;
Mrs. Goodman. "I know It," replied&#13;
Mrs. Nagg "His life is insured."—&#13;
Cincinnati Enquirer.&#13;
Good for Small Towns.&#13;
A few big shoe manufacturers art&#13;
fighting us bacause we have always refused&#13;
to give them better terms than&#13;
we give to the small manufacturer.&#13;
The little fellows stand with us because&#13;
we treat all manufacturers&#13;
alike, no matter how many machines&#13;
they use. Hence, competition in the&#13;
shoe business and prosperous factories&#13;
in small towns!&#13;
Write us and we will tell you all&#13;
about it.&#13;
The United Shoe Machinery Co., Boston,&#13;
MasB.—Adv.&#13;
The Result.&#13;
EngliBh Friend—That gown you&#13;
have on Is ripping!&#13;
American Duchess—Then I am undone!&#13;
Hrs. Wlnaiow's Bootmng Syrup for CUUflren&#13;
teething, softens the gnma, reduces inflamm**&#13;
Uon.allays paln.cures wind coifc^Sc a bottle***&#13;
Natural Supply.&#13;
"What's the use of ail the sand on&#13;
the seashore?" . ., '&#13;
"That's what they scour the seas&#13;
with."&#13;
&amp; '&#13;
inch of blue in a large bottle 61 water. JTJkfoe&#13;
Cross I^UBlu^Uie blue that'sallbtae. Ad?&#13;
No thoughtful person uses Hquklhtua, It's a&#13;
lohoibluelni " - - -&#13;
H&#13;
It Depends.&#13;
"Do you favor the open door policy?"&#13;
"Not if I am on the warm side."&#13;
I TO WOMEN HI&#13;
N»w Js The Time&#13;
those pains and aches resufcmf&#13;
from weakness or derangement&#13;
of the organs distinctly iemiame&#13;
sooner or later leave their mark.&#13;
Beauty soon fades sway. Nov&#13;
Is the time to restore health&#13;
sad retain beauty.&#13;
flfevMk es^eieae&gt;^^^^feaMBMBMi •¥• DR. PIERCES&#13;
Favorite rVescripfoB&#13;
That tree*, potent.&#13;
restorative will beipyoo.&#13;
Tear Drstskt vflssfery Tea&#13;
* - *&#13;
\&#13;
\&#13;
IGBMUpM&#13;
» &amp; *&#13;
'«31 fc.f(-&#13;
ft&#13;
W E DEAREST&#13;
BABY&#13;
M r t , WUkea' Fondett Hopes&#13;
Reftlized—Health, Hap.&#13;
*• pines* and Baby.&#13;
fcnrg, Miss.—"Lydia E. Pink*&#13;
Tegetable Compound hat proved&#13;
Qeflcial to me, for now I am well&#13;
have a sweet, healthy baby, and&#13;
home to happy.&#13;
" I waa an invalid from nervous prostration,&#13;
indigestion and female troubles.&#13;
" *&#13;
^ ' %&#13;
&amp;&#13;
f&#13;
*'I think I suffered every pain a woman&#13;
could before I began taking Lydia&#13;
B. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and&#13;
I think it saved this baby's Ufa, as I&#13;
lost my first one.&#13;
"My health has been very good ever&#13;
since, and I praise your medicine to all&#13;
tny friends,"—Mrs. VERNA WILKES,&#13;
B. F. D. No. 1, PUttsburg, Miss.&#13;
The darkest days of husband and wife&#13;
are when they come to look forward to&#13;
a childless and lonely old age.&#13;
If any a wife has found herself incapable&#13;
of motherhood owing to some&#13;
derangement* of the feminine system,&#13;
often curable by the proper remedies.&#13;
In many homes once childless there&#13;
are now children because of the fact&#13;
that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound makes women normal.&#13;
^ H you want special advice write to&#13;
JLydia £• Plnkham Medicine Co. (confldeatlal)&#13;
Lynn, Mass, Tour letter wiU&#13;
l)e opened, read and answered by a&#13;
woman and held in strict confidence.&#13;
Between Women's&#13;
Health or Suffering&#13;
The main reason why so many&#13;
women suffer greatly a t times&#13;
to because of a run-aown condition.&#13;
Debility, poor circulation&#13;
show in headaches, languor,&#13;
nervousness and worry.&#13;
BEECHAM'S&#13;
PILLS (Hi Latfttt Salt sf say MseMsi Is *»«MM)&#13;
'are the safest, surest, most&#13;
convenient and most economical&#13;
remedy. They clear the&#13;
system of Doisons, purify the&#13;
blood, relieve suffering and&#13;
ensure such good health and&#13;
strength that all the bodily&#13;
organs worknaturallyandprope&#13;
r a . In actions, feelings and&#13;
looks, thousandsofwomenhave&#13;
proved that Beecham's Pills&#13;
Make All&#13;
The Difference&#13;
Sold —ijwhsis. la boxes, 10*. S e .&#13;
Posssa wOl a«4 to directions with svsty bee&#13;
very rateable.&#13;
RESINOL STOPS&#13;
SKIN TROUBLES&#13;
If you have eczema, ringworm, or&#13;
Ither itching, burning, unslghUy skin&#13;
ir scalp eruption, try Reslnol Ointment&#13;
and Resinoi Soap, and see how&#13;
Krickly the itching stops and the&#13;
vouble disappears, even in severe and&#13;
stubborn cases. Pimples, blackheads&#13;
ind red, sore, blotchy faces and hands&#13;
ipeedily yield to Resinoi.&#13;
Resinoi Ointment and Resinoi Soap&#13;
leal skin humors, sores, boils, burns,&#13;
icalds, cold-sores, ehaflngs and piles.&#13;
Prescribed by physicians for eighteen&#13;
fears. All druggists sell Resinoi Soap&#13;
(26c) and Resinoi Ointment (50c and&#13;
$1). Sent by parcel post on receipt of ece. For sample of each write to&#13;
p t 6-K, Resinoi Chem. Co., Baltimore,&#13;
Md.&#13;
FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS,&#13;
• C m * fee* UDKST. BLASDSB, NERVOUS DtSSAaSS,&#13;
f ^-F t_w-_,W- f c rraatt MMOOSSTT mwntTwwwrcw vi&#13;
I kyoecandedde&#13;
n-JI fo* roouMuw&#13;
oSo^stKoKa,VBe*ttrtomaluair&gt;*,. LDOKaXOlOCMX.SiHaoO..&#13;
F&#13;
A HIGHER STAGE OF W A T E R&#13;
T H A N LAST SPRING IS&#13;
PREDICTED.&#13;
GOV. DUNNE RUSHES M E N AND&#13;
SUPPLIES TO SCENE.&#13;
All Along the Mississippi Watero Are&#13;
High and People Are Fleeing&#13;
From Their Homes In&#13;
Terror.&#13;
Tralnloads of persons left Cairo following&#13;
%receipt of news that the Ohio&#13;
river was expected to reach a higher&#13;
stage than during the disastrous flood&#13;
of last spring. R. T. Lfodley, the local&#13;
weather forecaster, issued a statement,&#13;
saying:&#13;
"With weather conditions becoming&#13;
somewhat unsettled in this river&#13;
district and rapid rises continuing in&#13;
the Ohio and Wabash rivers, a 54-foot&#13;
stage is regarded as certain at Cairo if&#13;
the levees below hold. Fifty-six feet&#13;
is regarded as a strong possibility&#13;
here. As a prudential (measure it is advisable&#13;
that women, children and the&#13;
infirm seek more secure refuge."&#13;
The Ohio has reached 51.3 feet. Every&#13;
attention is being given the levees&#13;
.here. Labor is scarce and an appeal&#13;
was sent to Governor Dunna for help&#13;
and he responded that he would send&#13;
1,000 men, 200 national guardsmen,&#13;
10,000 rounds of rations and 200,000&#13;
sacks.&#13;
On the Missouri side of the Mississippi&#13;
river water is reported everywhere.&#13;
Hundreds of refugees have&#13;
come into Cairo. Conditions in this&#13;
entire district and are very serious.&#13;
News of State University.&#13;
Dr. H. H. Cummings, assistant to&#13;
Dr. Reuben Peterson, was appointed&#13;
university physician by the board of&#13;
regents at. their meeting last night,&#13;
and Dr. Elsie &amp;. Pratt, of Denver, was&#13;
appointed physician to the women.&#13;
Dr. S. C. Lind was granted a leave&#13;
of absence for next yoar that he may&#13;
work with the Unite-d States government&#13;
in the new laboratory of the bureau&#13;
of mines at Denver on radioactivity,&#13;
in an effort to obtain a means&#13;
of supply of radium from existing&#13;
American ores. The $1-60 grant from&#13;
the bureau of classic fellowships was&#13;
given to Amos^Weigel, of Dover, Pa.,&#13;
who obtained h'is A. B. degree at the&#13;
same meeting.&#13;
Tour "master" degrees were granted,&#13;
three masters of art, as follows:&#13;
Robert,Clark, of Ann Arbor; Helen&#13;
•Parry, Ann Arbor; Robert Smith, Durand,&#13;
and master of civil engifiteriag,&#13;
Ralph Goodrich, Ana Arbor. Assistant&#13;
Dean W. H. Butts, of the engineering&#13;
department, was grafted a leave of&#13;
absence from April 15 to 30, tb eaaole&#13;
him to inspect the Panama canal before&#13;
its completion '&#13;
Loss of Life at Peru.&#13;
• An official report received by Mayor&#13;
Charles E, Goetz, of South Bend, said&#13;
that 300 persons were drowned, at&#13;
Peru, that no bodies had been recovered&#13;
and that there was less than one&#13;
block of the entire city that was not&#13;
under water.&#13;
The report was telephoned to Mayor&#13;
Goetz by the relief party sient from&#13;
South Bend, which reached the outskirts&#13;
of Peru. It stated further that&#13;
only two feet of the upper parts of&#13;
the houses in the submerged dlsstrtots&#13;
could be seen ;tbat the court house,&#13;
the hospital and some fact* try buildings&#13;
were crowded with survivors in&#13;
need of food and that Gov. Ralston&#13;
had been asked to send mors* supplies&#13;
from Tort Wayne.&#13;
iPSpk u&#13;
"f+&#13;
• M i l B a w l 9mmimmamK%STimSi&#13;
rwf*«i««ft P. Sold direct from&#13;
*&gt;. Kk*uttratSor ahastoMjsdfc sosapts ry.e JaMro. nLuouduls e*a lsinfts Uwrrno*f.- ..&#13;
Miss Maude Gilchrist, wbo has been&#13;
dean of women at the Agricultural college&#13;
at Bast Lansing, for some years&#13;
has been notified of her appointment&#13;
to a placs on the faculty of Welleslsy&#13;
college.&#13;
Attractive prists have been offered&#13;
by business men and aianafaeturers&#13;
of Hastings, to the Juaaur Civio grammar&#13;
grades, to encourage* tfcsm to raise&#13;
all kinds of flowers and vegetables.&#13;
A monument and mar?cer will be&#13;
placed on the trail of Fr. Marquette&#13;
through the Arlington Par!*, according&#13;
to the decision of Petosega chapter,&#13;
Daughters of the American Revolution.&#13;
Wmiam Barnes, of Lansisig, awaiting&#13;
a decision of the supremn court in a&#13;
case la which he was convicted on a&#13;
charge of killing a little girl with an&#13;
automobile, confessed td the police&#13;
that he waa one of a party of three&#13;
young men who palled- several fire&#13;
alarm boxes, causing she firs department&#13;
to make four unatpessary runs.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
Live 8tock, Qrain and General Farm&#13;
Produce.&#13;
Detroit—Cattle—Receipts 848; market&#13;
steady; best steers, |8©8.15;&#13;
steers and heifers, 1,000 to 1,2000 lbs.&#13;
|7.50@8; steers and heifers, 800 to&#13;
1,000 lbs, |T®7.50; steers and hellers&#13;
that are fat, 500 to 700 lbs, *607;&#13;
choice fat heifers that are fat, 500 to&#13;
700 lbs., $607; choice fat c o n %*&amp;&#13;
6.75; good fat oows, $5&lt;&lt;z6; common&#13;
cows, |4.50 &lt;Q&gt; 4.75; canners, N/75®&#13;
4.25; choice heavy bulls, $6.60@7; fair&#13;
to good bolognas, bulls, $5.76@6.26;&#13;
stock balls, 9605.50; choice feeding&#13;
steers, 800 to 1,000 lbs., $7©7.60; fair&#13;
feeding steers, 800 to 1,00 lbs., $6®&#13;
6.75; choice stockers, 500 to 700 tbl.,&#13;
$6.5007; fair stockers, 500 to 700 lbs.&#13;
95.5006; stock heifers, 9505.50; milkers,&#13;
large, young, medium age, 9500&#13;
65; common milkers, 935045.&#13;
Veal calves—Receipts, 408; market&#13;
good grades, 25c to 50o higher than&#13;
the close last week; common, eteady;&#13;
best, 910011.50; others, $609.50.&#13;
Milch cows and springers, steady.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 2,281;&#13;
market, steady; best lambs, 98.75; fair&#13;
to good lambs, 9808.50; light to common&#13;
lambs, 9607.50; yearlings, 97.75&#13;
08; fair to good sheep, 95.5006.50;&#13;
culls and commons, 9405.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 2,869;; range of&#13;
prices: Light to good butchers, 99.60,&#13;
pigs, $9.60; light yorkers, 99.4009.50;&#13;
Stags one-third off.&#13;
East Buffalo—Cattle—Receipts, 120&#13;
cars; market generally steady except&#13;
common cows and heifers, which sold&#13;
10016c lower; best 1,M0 to 1,500-tb&#13;
steers, 98.7509; good to prime 1,200&#13;
to l,300»fc steers, 98.5008.65; good to&#13;
prime 1,100 to 1,200-lb steers, 9808.25;&#13;
coarse, plainish, 1,100 to 1,200-ft&#13;
steers, 97.7507.85; medium butcher&#13;
steers, 1,000 to 1,100 lbs, $7.2507.75;&#13;
butcher steers, 950 to 1,000 lbs. $70&#13;
7.50; light butcher steers, $6.5007.25;&#13;
best fat. cows, $6.7507.25; butoher&#13;
cows, $606; best fat heifers, $7,850&#13;
8.26; medium butcher heifers, 96.750&#13;
7.10; light butcher heifers, 9606.25;&#13;
light butcher cows, 94.2505; cutters,&#13;
94.2504.75; trimmers, 93.5003.75;&#13;
stock heifers, 9506; best feeding&#13;
steers 9707.50; light common stockers,&#13;
96.2506.50; prime export bulls,&#13;
9707.25; best butcher bulls, 96.500&#13;
7; bologna bulls, 95,7506.25; stock&#13;
bulls, 95.7506.25; best milkers and&#13;
springers, 966080; common to fair&#13;
kind do, 940060.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 60 cars; market 10c&#13;
higher; heavy, 99.8609.70; yorkers,&#13;
and pigs, 99.7009.75; roughs, $8.70;&#13;
stags, 9708.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 60 cars;&#13;
market fairly active; top lambs, 99.10&#13;
09.25; culls to fair, 9709; yearlings,&#13;
9808.50; wethers, 9707.26; ewes, 96&#13;
0&amp;5O.&#13;
Oalves, 96011.75.&#13;
Grains, Etc&#13;
Wheat—Cash No. 2 red, 9107; May&#13;
opened without change at $1.08 and&#13;
declined to $1,071-2; July opened at&#13;
93o and declined to 921-2e; September&#13;
opened at 93c, declined to 9B l-4c,&#13;
advanced to 93c and closed at 92 Mo;&#13;
No. 1 white, $1.06.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, 52 l-2c; No. 3 yellow,&#13;
1 oar at 531-2o; No. 4 yellow,&#13;
52c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 351-2c; No. 2 white&#13;
1 car at 341-2c; No. 4 wake, 1 oar&#13;
at 331-2c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 60c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate and prompt shipmeat,&#13;
$1.85; May, $1.96.&#13;
Clover seed—Prime spot, 60 bags at&#13;
$12.40; sample, 16 bags at $11.50, 27&#13;
at $9.60; prime alsike, 812.60; sample&#13;
alsike, 15 hags at $11.50.&#13;
Timothy seed—Prime spot, 40 bags&#13;
at $1.70.&#13;
Feed—In lvO-lb sacks, jobbing-lots;&#13;
Bran, $23; coarse middlings, $28; fine&#13;
middlings, $27; cracked corn, $25;&#13;
coarse cornmeal, $22.60; corn aad oat&#13;
chop, $32 per ton.&#13;
GsrNBRAL MAR KITS.&#13;
Apples—Fancy, psr bbl. 92.5008; or*&#13;
dinary $101.26 psr bbl; box apples,&#13;
91.6001.25. j&#13;
Butter—Creamery extras, 36c; firsts,&#13;
331-2c; packing stock, 22o; dairies,&#13;
24o psr lb. N&#13;
Cheese—Michigan tats, new,' 1 5 0&#13;
151-2c; old, 17017 Mo; New York&#13;
flats, new, 17017 l-2c; New York flats&#13;
new, 1701714c; old, 181-2019c; brick&#13;
160161-2; llmbnrger, 181-2019 l-«c;&#13;
domestic Swiss, 21022; imported&#13;
Swiss, 28029c; block Swiss, 201-20&#13;
22c per tt^t^r-'&#13;
Dr^sed citse&gt;-Fancy, 150161-20}&#13;
common, 120140 per lb.&#13;
Egg*—Fresh arrant receipts, eases&#13;
included, candled 17 3-4e psr dor.&#13;
Onion*—New Spanish, 11.25 per&#13;
crate; fellow, ear leu, i*0«#o par *o»&#13;
lbs* on* of store, 4f06Oo pes bo;&#13;
jnuoa, $2.60 per feu, ._&#13;
mm •MM&#13;
l&amp;\&#13;
V„w&#13;
?i. 'r=-.&#13;
• • • » Summer and Winter&#13;
and in Between—&#13;
/&#13;
••ifi^rjj&#13;
— - • ? «&#13;
•4&#13;
RSS (Poiarine T P i C T l O N R E D U C I N G M O T O R OIL&#13;
•yjB?*&#13;
Wherever you gd^-ln tropical or zero weather—and&#13;
whatever the make or type of gasoline car you drive,&#13;
there is on* oil that reduces the motor friction to the&#13;
point where the greatest power develops and cuts down&#13;
the upkeep cost by eliminating unnecessary repairs.&#13;
That oil is Polarine and it is told everywhere.&#13;
Always flows freely—even at zero—and maintains&#13;
the correct lubricating body for any motor speed or heat.&#13;
Made by the world's oil specialists after 50 years of&#13;
experience in scientific lubrication.&#13;
Use it and add to your motoring pleanxr*.&#13;
STANDARD OIL COMPANY&#13;
(AX nrozAXA ooarotATxoB)&#13;
Makers of special lubricating oils for leading engineering&#13;
and industrial works of the world. (86)&#13;
Queer Ironing.&#13;
A writer in the Wide World magazine&#13;
eays that the most curious sight&#13;
he say at Cairo was men ironing&#13;
clothes with their feet! The men&#13;
were employed in the native tailoring&#13;
establishments.&#13;
Except for the long handle, the&#13;
Iron were shaped like the ordinary&#13;
flat-iron, only larger. A solid block&#13;
of wood rested on the top of the iron,&#13;
and on this the men placed one foot,&#13;
guiding the iron in the desired direction&#13;
by means of the handle. For the&#13;
sake of convenience, Ironing boards&#13;
were raised only a few Inches from&#13;
the ground, and, however strange the&#13;
method may seem to us, the work&#13;
waa done very well and very expeditiously.&#13;
BABY IN MISERY WITH RASH&#13;
Monroe, Wis.—"When my baby was&#13;
six weeks old there came a rash on&#13;
his face which finally spread until it&#13;
got nearly all over his body. It formed&#13;
a crust on his head, hair fell out&#13;
and the itch was terrible. When he&#13;
would scratch the crust, the water&#13;
would ooze out in big drops. On face&#13;
and body it was In a dry form and&#13;
would scale otT. He was in great misery&#13;
and at nights I would lie awake&#13;
holding his hands so that he could not&#13;
scratch and disfigure himself. I tried&#13;
simple remedies at first, then got&#13;
medicine, but it did no good.&#13;
"Finally a friend suggested Gutlcura&#13;
Remedies, so I sent for a sample to&#13;
see what they would do, when to my&#13;
surprise after a few applications I&#13;
could Bee an improvement, and he&#13;
would rest better. I bought a box of&#13;
Cuticura Ointment and a cake of Cutlcura&#13;
Soap and before I had them half&#13;
used my baby was cured. His head Is&#13;
now covered with a luxuriant growth&#13;
of hair and his complexion is admired&#13;
by everybody and has no disfigurements."&#13;
(Signed) Mrs. Annie&#13;
Saunders, Sept. 29, 1911.&#13;
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address&#13;
post-card "Cuticura, Dspt L, Boston."&#13;
Adv.&#13;
Somewhat Contradictory.&#13;
I have often wondered how it* is&#13;
that, while each man loves himself&#13;
more than bis neighbors, he yet pays&#13;
less attention to his own opinion of&#13;
himself than to that of others.—Marcus&#13;
Aurelius.&#13;
SECRET&#13;
A 24* lb. sack of&#13;
Henkel's Bread Flour&#13;
will make over 37 lbs. of&#13;
bread. Everything but&#13;
flour shrinks when cooked&#13;
but Henkel's Flour grows.&#13;
It costs less to begin with&#13;
than any other food you&#13;
like; and what other food&#13;
do you like so well that&#13;
ydu must have it at every&#13;
meal in the year? Buy HENKEL'S FLOUR&#13;
IT IS NEVER DEAR&#13;
*y^S*1s^s**y|^o**siowy|^swsie«*y&#13;
Don't Persecute&#13;
Your Bowels&#13;
Cut out cathartics and purgatives, They an&#13;
brutal, harah, unnecessary. Trj^&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS&#13;
Purely vegetable. Act&#13;
gently on the liver,&#13;
eliminate bile, and&#13;
soothe the delicate^'&#13;
mem brane of the^&#13;
bowel. C u r %A&#13;
CMSHMUSO,&#13;
•llloiisatM,&#13;
Sick Headseas&#13;
aaa* ladigtttisn, as millisos kaow.&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICK*&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
The Man Wit* P»t fJe*&#13;
E E s l i f E l T |&#13;
Look for This Trade-Mark Pic&#13;
ture oa the Label when buying&#13;
ALLEN'S F00T-EASE m M ^ H The Antiseptic Powder for Ten*&#13;
Trada-iurk. der, Aching Feet. Sold every.&#13;
where, 25c. Sample FRRR. Address.&#13;
ALLEN S. OLMSTED. Lc Roy, N. Y.&#13;
DR. J. D. KELLOGG'8 ASTHMA Remedy for the prompt relief of&#13;
Asthma and Hay Fever. Aek your&#13;
druggist for It. Writ* Itr FREE SAMPLE&#13;
NORTHROP * LYMAN CO. Ltd. BUFFALO, NX&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 14-1913.&#13;
Children!&#13;
CONTAINS&#13;
NO&#13;
OPIATES&#13;
FO LEYS&#13;
HONEYS TAR&#13;
For Coughs and Cold&#13;
W. L. DOUGLAS $3t2fl $3iafi f4*ofi&#13;
AND&#13;
S H O E S&#13;
FOR MEN AMDJrVOMEN&#13;
Bt8TB0Y*8HO£Un tkeWOtUf&#13;
$2.00, $2.601*4 $MMO.&#13;
Tb* largsat nak*r» of&#13;
Mtm'a$&amp;50aad$400&#13;
&gt; to tW workl&#13;
dm I t to i h a w m&#13;
SIUtO shoes. J«tt M good faa styl*. -t bS*H&gt;S4 e wmeiat r4 MUt emtftcms*m s«a*a•k s1*» stokeatt npfrft oa*f.t jSSSh toe&gt;e *S Tta all lIsfs trbeamr, se,o satlydle r*i salat dW sh. aLp» —Dc tmog siws*i tl aairwasr jfbaoedtoy-.j vbioew* aota rBtrrfaaellWy Wo*., LK.a aDwo.,a aol»a4s sssh*o foasr « r7o« *mrsa*dloT, wottld thorn oohdso3rttf#rTndh «wldhjhyo tihro syi ar» wamuitod&#13;
&amp;&#13;
! &amp; • • •&#13;
.mT .;.*(*&#13;
Local News&#13;
' $&#13;
• ' •&#13;
I*&gt;&#13;
r,&gt; -&#13;
I&#13;
Monday, April 7, is township&#13;
election day.&#13;
JBeruardine Lynch has been on&#13;
the sick list.&#13;
Geo. Roche is Working for W.&#13;
C. Dunning.&#13;
Moses Lyons was a Howell visitor&#13;
recently.&#13;
Detroit Free Press on Bale at&#13;
Meyer's Drug Store.&#13;
Roy Darwin of Lansing was in&#13;
Pinckney over Sunday,&#13;
Geo. Sargeson of Howell was a&#13;
Pinckney caller Monday.&#13;
G. 4. Sigler of Ann Arbor was&#13;
in town Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. S. E. VanHorn has been&#13;
spending some time in Howell.&#13;
William Darrow Jr. was the&#13;
guest of Brighton friends Friday,&#13;
evening.&#13;
Oliver plows are always sold on&#13;
on their merits by Dinkel &amp; Durbar.&#13;
Clarence Stackable and family&#13;
spent Sunday with relatives in&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
The indications are that Pinckney&#13;
will have a Fourth of July&#13;
celebration.&#13;
It's c good plan to believe one&#13;
half you hear and forget two&#13;
thirds of it.&#13;
Ruth Cole of near Hamburg&#13;
was a Pinckney visitor one day&#13;
the past week.&#13;
Jefferson Parker slipped on an&#13;
icy*sidewalk Friday and fell breaking&#13;
his collar bone. t&#13;
Dr. R. G. Sigler of South Lyon&#13;
spent Sunday with friendp and&#13;
relatives in this village.&#13;
There is a close affiliation between&#13;
the high cost of living and&#13;
the cost of high living.&#13;
Miss Lela Monks and Miss&#13;
Hughes of Lansing spent Sunday&#13;
at the home of John Monks,&#13;
Miss Colby of Normal, Illinois,&#13;
was called here last Friday by&#13;
the death of her father, Lewis&#13;
Colby.&#13;
John £. Monks of Lansing was&#13;
an over Sunday visitor at the&#13;
home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
John Monks.&#13;
Bray ton Placeway, who is in&#13;
Gablonz, Bohemia, Europe bad&#13;
fys foot .srrip^islyjjrjured by the&#13;
fftliBg^t* j j e | of&gt;rn).&#13;
The f &amp; i f | otLivingston&#13;
bounty !dutttal Fir* Insurance&#13;
Company have appointed Will&#13;
Nash receiver of Hamburg township.&#13;
Murphy &amp; Jackson will move&#13;
their stock of groceries, shoes and&#13;
gents furnishings to the corner&#13;
store formerly occupied by R.&#13;
Clinton, opening day April 5.&#13;
Owing to the disinclination of&#13;
the young men of to day to learm&#13;
trades, the Livingston Tidings is&#13;
of the opinion that the poor house&#13;
of the future will ha?e to be ten&#13;
stories high.&#13;
The firm of Swarthout &amp; Dunning&#13;
has dissolved by mutual consent,&#13;
Mr. Dunning purchasing the&#13;
interest of Mr. Swarthout and the&#13;
livery barn will now be conducted&#13;
by W. C. Dunning &amp; Son.&#13;
Many people do not realize the&#13;
great danger done by the stomach&#13;
and intestinal worms that infest&#13;
farm animals. They do not only&#13;
breed disease but steal the animal's&#13;
food and lower its vitality.&#13;
They are dangerous profit eaters.&#13;
Sal Vet the wonderful medicated&#13;
salt advertised on another page,&#13;
quickly destroys these pests.&#13;
A number of farmers ia this&#13;
vicinity have been drawing culled&#13;
onions from the warehouses at&#13;
this place to their farms this week&#13;
which they will use as fertilizer,—&#13;
Chelsea Standard&#13;
Rev. Jeei-Ceyle was in Gregory&#13;
Friday.&#13;
W. C. Dunning was in Piugree&#13;
j Saturday.&#13;
Frsd Lake was a Chelsea visitor&#13;
recently.&#13;
Percy Swarthout was a Dexter&#13;
visitor Sunday.&#13;
John Tiplady of Howell was&#13;
home over Sunday.&#13;
Claude Rollison of Brighton&#13;
was in town Monday.&#13;
The April term of circuit court&#13;
begins Monday April 14.&#13;
Esther Barton spent Saturday&#13;
in Detroit with her father,&#13;
Wild deer have been seen in the&#13;
northern part of the county.&#13;
Ernest Hopkins of near Dexter&#13;
spent Saturday in Pinckney.&#13;
John Hughes of near Dexter&#13;
was a Pinckney caller Saturday.&#13;
Ray Brogan attended the dance&#13;
at Brighton last Friday evening.&#13;
Roy Merrill of Webster spent&#13;
Sunday with friends in Pinckney.&#13;
Jas. Wilcox and family spent&#13;
Sunday at the home of the Clark&#13;
Sisters.&#13;
Harlowe Munsell of Gregory&#13;
was a Pinckney caller one day&#13;
last week.&#13;
J. C. Durkee acd wife of Fenton&#13;
are visiting at the home of&#13;
Will Clark.&#13;
Mrs. Robert Fox and son of&#13;
Detroit are visiting relatives in&#13;
this locality.&#13;
For quality Oliver plows lead&#13;
all others see Dinkel &amp; Dunbar,&#13;
local dealers.&#13;
This Misses Walz of Chelsea&#13;
have been visiting at the home of&#13;
their aunt, Mrs. Sarah Brown.&#13;
Percy Teeple of Marquette,&#13;
Mich, visited friends and relatives&#13;
here several days the past week.&#13;
W. E. Murphy and H. R. Geer&#13;
left Sunday for a trip to Mackinac&#13;
in the interests of the Yoe~&#13;
man.&#13;
Dale Chapel of Webberville&#13;
spent the latter part of last week&#13;
at the home of friends in this village.&#13;
Mrs. L. Cadwell who has been&#13;
spending the winter at the home&#13;
of her son, Will, in Stillwater,&#13;
Minn, is the guest of friends here.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. G. G. Hoyt who&#13;
have been visiting relatives at&#13;
Sutton'? Bay and Holland, Mich,&#13;
returned home Thursday morning.&#13;
Don't fail to hear Hon. Fred W&#13;
Corbett talk on "Woman Sufferage"&#13;
Friday evening, April 4th at&#13;
the Pinckney Opera House. All&#13;
are invited.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Love returned&#13;
to their home Wednesday&#13;
evening after spending three&#13;
months with their children in&#13;
Marquette, Mich.&#13;
A. J. Wilhelm who has been unable&#13;
to get out, except as he was&#13;
helped into a wheel chair, for a&#13;
long time, suffered another severe&#13;
stroke of paralysis last Saturday.&#13;
—Tidings.&#13;
F. W. Com mis key visited his&#13;
parents on Snnday last. For the&#13;
past 2years he has been salesman&#13;
in Wisconsin fcr a Detroit firm&#13;
bat is now given Pennsylvania in&#13;
which to work. This move as a&#13;
promotion.&#13;
The canenses last Saturday called&#13;
a large crowd to town. The&#13;
Democrat canons was unusually&#13;
large. Only one ballot was required&#13;
to nominate any candidate&#13;
with the exception of treasurer&#13;
where Norman Reason won over&#13;
W. E. Murphy on the fourth ballot,&#13;
109 votes being cast on this&#13;
ballot.&#13;
MONKS BROTHERSare&#13;
ready with a complete line pi j&#13;
M g N S F U R N I S H I N G S&#13;
INCLUDING&#13;
Latest Styles in Mens and Boys Hats and Caps&#13;
Latest Styles in Mens and Boys Trousers&#13;
New Line of Smart Set Cravars Latest in Dress Shirts, Collars, Etc.&#13;
New &amp;tock of Overalls and Work Shirts—Ideal-Brand&#13;
Biggest Assortment of Groceries&#13;
Ever Shown in Pinckney, including Tip Top and Butter Nut Bread, Addison&#13;
Cbee6e and a complete line of National Biscuit Go's. Cookies, Etc, Etc.&#13;
Will Duplicate Any Offer Made By Any Competitor Sat., April 5&#13;
Our Ice Cream Parlors will be opened Saturday, April* 5&#13;
And we wish to announce that we will again serve. Connor's Delicious Ice&#13;
Cream; Vernor's Ginger Ale and Allen's Cherry Cheer.&#13;
^iUUtlMiu^uiUiuiiiiu^iUiUiUiUiUiUiUiaiumiiiiuiuiuiuiuiuiumiUiUiUiiiiaiuiu.&#13;
DOWN LOW THE LITCHFIELD DOWN-LOW Spreader gives a Low Top Rail—&#13;
about waist high, which makes it extremely easy to load. A man in handling&#13;
the ordinary pitchfork, raises the load on the fork waist high in order that he&#13;
may- throw it from hna. This meaus that it would be useless to make a lower&#13;
top rajlthan what we build, as there would be no advantage in loading.&#13;
OUR MACHINE LOADS easily from any direction—the seat tumB over&#13;
out bt the way iirfront and its just as easy to load onto this machine as it is to&#13;
throwi^ in another pile on the ground,&#13;
DON'T FORGET. The 8*1 f-Cleaning apron, No-Choke box, Bull Dog&#13;
cylinder and Oil Packed main bearings are exclusive Litchfield Features You&#13;
will look for them in vain on any other spreader3.&#13;
High Under Clearance&#13;
A PECULAR FACT. The Litchfield Down-Low has substantially the&#13;
same Under Clearance that our High Standard . machines have. We use the&#13;
same size wheels—the axles are the same distance from the ground. This gives&#13;
us from sixteen to eighteen inches of general clearance under the machine, and&#13;
same clearance under tbe front axle that we have always had in the high machines*&#13;
Just compare this with the eight or ten inches clearance found under&#13;
other low down spreaders.&#13;
* • \&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative Bank- j&#13;
ing Business. t •&#13;
3 per cent&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
&lt;. i '&#13;
DON'T MAKE THE MISTAKE of buying a Sled when you pay your&#13;
money for a manure spreader. Any machine soon becomes a sled in muddy&#13;
and rough ground if it does not have sufficient uuder clearance. Like everything&#13;
else^ the tendency toward low down manure sqreaders has gone in most&#13;
cases a fittle to far and this is a serious objection—Too Close To The Ground.&#13;
' * *&#13;
S h o r t W h e e l Base&#13;
WE MOUNT OUR SPREADERS on the rear wheels so that these traction&#13;
wheels take a sufficient proportion of the load and have sufficient traction&#13;
to properly operate the unloading machinery. We get away fiom the heavy&#13;
draft that is a part of all long coupled wagons and spreaders. We turn in a&#13;
shorter circle and in a smaller place and our machine has much mote activity&#13;
and is much stronger and more substantial than a machine that is hung between&#13;
the front and the rsar wheels instead of being mounted on the rear axle. This&#13;
means light draft, strength, durability and convenience.&#13;
We have samples of the Litchfield and New Idea&#13;
Manure Spreaders for inspection and will take pleasure&#13;
in showing and will make better terms than you&#13;
can get elsewhere.&#13;
Teep]e Harclware Co r n Pa n y&#13;
Pinckney&#13;
G. W. T E E P L B&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Prop&#13;
**g*yy« '.• y i * j T f . ^ » y f | p&#13;
Draying of all kinds&#13;
Done Promptly and a t the Right&#13;
Prices&#13;
Qat&amp;m ?\ow&amp;, fata* VwxVed, *\c.&#13;
The team when not busy will always be found&#13;
on Main street&#13;
Phone IVo. OS, 3 r.&#13;
PAUL MILLER&#13;
for Quality For Price&#13;
BOWMAN'S&#13;
Where It Pays to Pay Cash&#13;
The new spring merchandise&#13;
V is flowing in and we are&#13;
showing some live snappy&#13;
goods. Baying direct from&#13;
large eastern importers, we&#13;
are able to show the live&#13;
items .and name prices that compare&#13;
with the very best stores. New laces,&#13;
embroideries, fancy trimmings, etc.&#13;
D. M. C. and material for fancy&#13;
work. Largest ribbon stock in the&#13;
' county. Sale on Children's ready-towear&#13;
dresses at 50c.&#13;
EVERY DAY IS BARGAIN DAY&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN&#13;
HOWELL'S BUSY STORE&#13;
•~&gt;-.:'n ;W'-&#13;
t&#13;
L&#13;
piftCKMBY, men.&#13;
GOING TOBUY A PIANO&#13;
OR SEWING MACHINE&#13;
YES?&#13;
SEE L. R. WILLIAMS. \&#13;
GREGORY&#13;
e saves yon money on hi^h&#13;
grade pianos.&#13;
— » ^ — • — — — — — — — — — • — • — —&#13;
Oakland connty fishermen are&#13;
son at Detroit fisherm to #too&#13;
come out to tbe many lake* in&#13;
the vicinity of Pontiac and get&#13;
big strings of fish regftfdleet of&#13;
the law, and so have organised a&#13;
connty organization and will&#13;
assist the officers 4* asking **•&#13;
rests for illegal fishing. ~&lt;; \&#13;
' : *&#13;
-"-&lt;"&#13;
4&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
.yw&#13;
tifefl&#13;
'K-'&#13;
• H I&#13;
I&#13;
*&#13;
- ^&#13;
4&#13;
/&#13;
•J&#13;
When You Want That&#13;
New Aug or Carpet&#13;
Come where the assortment is large and your money goes&#13;
the farthest. Let ue ehow you the beautiful patterns in both&#13;
floral and oriental designs. Owing to the many qualities and&#13;
sizes that we handle, we are unable to quote the prices of but a&#13;
few of a kind.&#13;
9x12 Axminister rugs, 20, 21, and 23 Dollars&#13;
9x12 Brussel rugs, 12, 15, a ad 26 Dollars&#13;
9x12 Fibre rugs, 8, 10, and 12 Dollars&#13;
3 ply all wool Ingrain carpets, 90c per yard&#13;
2 ply all wool Ingrain carpets, 65c, 69c, 75c per yard&#13;
2 ply wool and cotton mixed, 39c, 45c, 50c per yard&#13;
Granite carpets, 25c per yard&#13;
Rubber Matting, [for stairs] $1.65 per square yard&#13;
Lace Curtains, $1. to $8. per pair. Shades in all sizes&#13;
Remember—We specialize in large sized rugs&#13;
C a p F a r e P a i d o n $ 1 5 . P u r c h a s e s O r M o r e&#13;
W. J. DANCER &amp; COMPANY&#13;
S f o c k b r i d g e , M i c h . *&#13;
"SVT&#13;
Legal Advertising&#13;
STATE OP MICHIGAN, County of LivingetoD,&#13;
Probate Court For Said County. Estate of&#13;
J.AM KB SPEARS, Deceased&#13;
The undersigned having been appointed by the&#13;
Judge of Probate of said county, CommisBionerB&#13;
on Claims in the matter of said estate, and four&#13;
mouths from the 22nd day of March, A. D. 1918,&#13;
having been allowed by said Judge of Piobate to&#13;
all persons holding claims against said estate in&#13;
which to present their claims to us for examination&#13;
and adjustment. ww&#13;
Notice is hereby given that we will meet on the&#13;
2«nd day of May, A. D. 1913 and on the 22nd day&#13;
of Jtily, A. D. 1918, at ten o'clock a. m. of each&#13;
day, at the Pjnckney Exchange Bank in the&#13;
Village of Pinekney in said county to receive&#13;
and examine euch claims.&#13;
Dated: Howell, March 22, A. D. 1913.&#13;
G. W.Tetple { Commissioners on&#13;
James Marble { Claims 13t3&#13;
S TATE OF MICHIGAN, tlie irooate Court&#13;
the csunty of Livingston. Estate ot&#13;
ELIZABETH SPEARS, Deceased&#13;
for&#13;
The undersigned having been appointed by the&#13;
Judge of Probate of said County, Commissioners&#13;
on Claims in the matter of said eBtate, aod foor&#13;
months fjom the 22nd day of March, A. D. 1013&#13;
having been allc wed by said Judge ot Probate to&#13;
all persons balding claims, asrainst said estate in&#13;
whfcq to present their claims to us lor examination&#13;
and adjustment:&#13;
Netlce Is hereby given that we will meet on the&#13;
2¾ day of May, A. L&gt;. 1918, and on the 22 day of&#13;
Julv, A. ©; 1918, at ten o'clock a. m, of each day&#13;
at tl^ Pinekney Exchange Bank in the village of&#13;
Pinekney,-in said County, to receive and examine&#13;
sueb claims.&#13;
Dated, Howell, March 22nd, A. D. 1913.&#13;
O. W. Teeple f Com nr issionera&#13;
James Marble 1 on Claims 1313&#13;
SOUTH GREGORY.&#13;
Mr. Ferrea and family of Detroit have&#13;
moved into Tom Stones house . . . .L. R.&#13;
Williams and wife visited at ParKers Corners&#13;
Friday and Saturday Deseie&#13;
Whitehead and son, Chas., were in Stockbridge&#13;
Saturday C, I. WilliamB and&#13;
sister visited Olin Marshall and family&#13;
last Thursday Harrison Bate's children&#13;
with the exception of Lester were&#13;
home Sunday Rfcy Cobb and wife of&#13;
Stockbridge were home Monday The&#13;
Williamsville school is out for a w e e k . . . .&#13;
..Harry Bowen visited the Whitehead&#13;
boys Saturday.&#13;
S TATE OF MICHIGAN, the Probate Court of&#13;
the County of Livingston,&#13;
At a session of said court held at the Probate&#13;
Office in the Village of Howell in said County, on&#13;
the 35th day of March, A. D. 1913.&#13;
Present, Hon. JCugene A. stowe, Judge of&#13;
Probate, In the matter of the estate oi&#13;
AUSTIN WALTERS, Deceased&#13;
George D. Walters having filed in said court his&#13;
petition prating that the administration&#13;
of said ret ate be granted to Louise Marble&#13;
or to some other suitable person.&#13;
It is Ordered. That tbe 18th day oi April.&#13;
A. D. 1913, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at said Erobate office, be and is hereby appointed for&#13;
curing said petition.&#13;
it is further ordered that public notice thereof&#13;
be given by publication of a copy of this order, for&#13;
three successive weeks previous to said day of&#13;
hearing in the Pinekney DISPATCH &amp; newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated in eaid county. 1313&#13;
EUGENE A. STOWE&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
CJTATB of MicHra-Aif. The Probate Court tor the&#13;
O«onnty of Livingston. At a session of said&#13;
eeurt, held afethe probate office in the village of&#13;
Howell in said county on the 8th day ol March,&#13;
*. 9-191% Present, Hon. Eugene A. Stowe,&#13;
Judge ot Probate. In the matter of the estate of&#13;
MART A FARLEY, Deceased&#13;
John McKeman having filed in said court his&#13;
petition praying that a certain in»trum«nt in&#13;
wtitingk purporting to^he the Jast will and testament&#13;
of said deceased, now on file in eaid court&#13;
he admitted to probate, and that the admioiBtratioBiofsaidettHtebe&#13;
granted to John McKeman&#13;
t r to some other suitable person.&#13;
it is ordered that the 8rd day of April,&#13;
A. J&gt;. 191«, at ten o'clock in the tore*&#13;
nosn, at saia probate offloe, be and is hereby appointed&#13;
for hearing setd petition.&#13;
It is further ordered, that public notice thereof&#13;
be given by publication of a copy ot this order&#13;
for three suoeewsive weeks previous to said day of&#13;
bearing in the Pinekney Dispatch, a newtntper&#13;
printed and circulated in eaid county. lit J&#13;
EUGENE A. STOWE,&#13;
Mta Judge of Probate&#13;
£ | t a t c * f M i c h i g a n , the probate court for&#13;
iy Ike county of Livingston,- At a session of eaid&#13;
tftnrtft held at the Probate Office in the Village of&#13;
Howell in said county on the Slstdajof March&#13;
a. D. 19U.t Present, Hon. Eugene A. Stowe&#13;
Judge of Probate. In the matter of the estate of&#13;
LEWIS COLBY, Deceased&#13;
J. TK Colby having filed in said ceurt hie&#13;
petition praying that the administration of&#13;
said estate be granted to George W. Teeple or, tqr&#13;
sosae other suitable person.&#13;
It is ordered that the &lt;6th day of April, A.&#13;
x&gt;. 1918 »t ten o'clock in tbe iorenoo*, at said probate&#13;
offief, be and is hereby appointed for&#13;
beatific said petition.&#13;
It is further ordered tbatpnblio notice thereof &amp;given by publication of a copy of this order&#13;
three successive weeks previous to said day of&#13;
bearifef r la the PncxxiY DISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
prialei and circulated in said bounty. let a&#13;
EUGENE A. STOWE&#13;
Coughs and Coasumption&#13;
Coughs aud colds, when neglected;&#13;
always,lead to serious trouble of the&#13;
lungs. Tbe wisest thing to do when&#13;
you have a- cold that troubles you is&#13;
to get a bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery.&#13;
You will get relief from the&#13;
first dose, and finally tbe cough will&#13;
disappear. O. H. Brown of Muscadine,&#13;
Ala., writes: "Afy wife was down in&#13;
bed with an obstinate cough and I&#13;
honestly believe had it not been for&#13;
Dr. King's New Discovery she would&#13;
not be living today." Known for forty&#13;
three years as tbe best remedy tor&#13;
coughs and colds. Price 50c and $1 00.&#13;
Recommended by C. G. Meyer, the&#13;
druggist.&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG.&#13;
The Ladies Aid will meet at the home&#13;
of Jae. Nash Tuesday, April 4 for dinner&#13;
Mrs. M. A. Davis is gaining&#13;
The North Hamburg Sunday School will&#13;
have election of officers next Sunday&#13;
Lee VanHorn was home from echool last&#13;
week with the measels Miss Lulu&#13;
Ben ham who has been in Howell returned&#13;
home Tuesday Mrs. S. VanHoa was&#13;
in Howell last week caring for her son who&#13;
had the measele.&#13;
SOUTH IOSCO.&#13;
Wm, Caskey and wife df Anderson visited&#13;
relatives here over Sunday Mrs.&#13;
Geo. Harford returned home Saturday&#13;
morning after visiting relatives in Detroit&#13;
Nick Bur ley and family spent Sunday&#13;
at the home of W. S. Caikev&#13;
The Misses Lam borne spent Saturday and&#13;
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Robert*&#13;
and family Millie VanKeuren is&#13;
assisting Mrs. Arthur Mitchell with her&#13;
housework at present Wednesday,&#13;
March 26, at 11 o'clock at the home of the&#13;
brides parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Caskey,&#13;
occured the marriage of their youngest&#13;
daughter, Miss Elva, to Martin Anderson.&#13;
The ceremony was performed by&#13;
Rev. McCallum of Webberville, in the&#13;
presence oi a few relatives and friends.&#13;
The bride was beautifully attired in a&#13;
white messaline gown and the groom wore&#13;
a suit of navy blue serge. After congratulations&#13;
were offered, all partook of a&#13;
bountiful wedding dinner. The bridal&#13;
party left on the three o'clock train for&#13;
Gowen. Mr. and Mrs. Anderson will&#13;
be at home to their many friends on the&#13;
farm of the brides parents aft* r April 4,&#13;
1913.&#13;
Drives Sick Headaches Away*&#13;
Sick headaches, sour and gassy&#13;
stomach, indigestion, biliousness disapAar&#13;
quickly alter you take Dr Kings&#13;
Ne* Life Fills They purity the blood&#13;
and pwt new life and vigor in the system-&#13;
Try them and you will be satisfied&#13;
Every pill helps every box guaranteed&#13;
Price 25c Recommended bv&#13;
W (i Meyer&#13;
ECI&#13;
Saturday, April 5th, 1913&#13;
All Odds and Ends in Shoes at Less Than Cost&#13;
Mens ^3.00 Heavy Work Shoes 12.29&#13;
Mens $4,00 Fine Shoes $3.49&#13;
8c Brown Cotton 6Jc&#13;
Best Bleached Cotton _ 9Jc&#13;
30c Brooms _ _ __ . 19c&#13;
25 pounds Granulated Sugar 11.19&#13;
16c can Peas, the best _ l i e&#13;
Best Can Coin _ _ _ _ 10c&#13;
7 Bars of Big Master Soap , _ _ 25c&#13;
1 pound Best Soda _5c&#13;
1 gallon Best Molasses _ „ _ _30c&#13;
ALL S A L E S CASH&#13;
Go-to Monks Bros, for onions&#13;
and potatoes.&#13;
W. W BARNARD&#13;
Subscribe FOP The Dispatch&#13;
How IVI gan Farmers Are Successfully&#13;
Fighting Live Stock Diseases&#13;
Jadtoeot Prcfcat*&#13;
as&#13;
Gr*en Oak township will vote&#13;
to bond at: the April election in&#13;
th*4wm of $9,900 to be need in&#13;
the b«ildiitg.of bridges oyer the&#13;
Hiroariftr.&#13;
Pains in the Stomach&#13;
If ycu continually complain of pains&#13;
in tbe stomach.your liver or your kidneys&#13;
are out of order. Neglect may&#13;
lead to dropsy, kidney trouble, diabetes&#13;
or Brisbt's disease. Thousands&#13;
recommend Electric .Bitters as tbe very&#13;
best stomach and kidney medicine&#13;
made. H. T Alston of Raleigh N.O.,&#13;
who suffered with a pain in tbe stomach&#13;
and bach writes:"My kidneys were&#13;
deranged and my liver did not work&#13;
ri«ht, I suffersd much,but Electric&#13;
Bitters was recomended and I improve&#13;
ed from tbe first dose. I now feel&#13;
like a new man.1' It will improvyou,&#13;
too. Only 50c and $1.,00, Recomended&#13;
by W. G. Meyer,&#13;
• • m ' «»•'&#13;
W S f T B A S I U .&#13;
The Farmer's Clnb meeting held at H.&#13;
Norton's Thursday was well attended A~.&#13;
lady from Kentucky spoke on woman&#13;
sufftrage. There wad a good attendance&#13;
born to Mr. and Mrs. Byron Wellman,&#13;
Friday, March 24, a ten pound boy&#13;
Clarence Smith has the raeasels^...&#13;
. .Bettie Collins U having trouble with her&#13;
neck and ear caused by measels Byron&#13;
White was quite sick last week but is&#13;
on the gain now t Walter Collins has&#13;
hired out to John Gardner.&#13;
For Bursa, Braises and Sp*aiM&#13;
The quickest and surest cure for&#13;
burns, bruise*, boils, sores, ioflamltion&#13;
and ail akin diseases is Buckltn's&#13;
Arnica Salve. In four days it cured&#13;
L, H. flaflin of tredelJ, Texas, of a&#13;
SON. on his ankle which pained lift so&#13;
be oonld hardly walk. Should bo in&#13;
•very bouse. Only 25c fiecom mended*?&#13;
W AMeyer&#13;
*^e^*ey^*^'^' -"&#13;
Latest style* of- nttfrfoery at&#13;
Znpp &amp; Favorites.&#13;
If you are not doing something to rid your farm animals of t h e&#13;
deadly stomach and intestinal worms you are simply Letting Down the Bars to h o g&#13;
cholera and all the other fatal diseases which have cost the farmers of this country over fifty&#13;
millions of dollars the past year. YQU can't afford to run this risk. YOU can't afford not to take&#13;
preventive measures. The best way of preventing these deadly plagues from getting a foothold&#13;
among your stock is to keep every animal worm free and in the best possible condition.&#13;
Worms are the cause of 90 per cent of live stock losses. Thousands of&#13;
Michigan --rmers have learned this fact and by effectually striking at the cause have&#13;
successfully won their fight. They have found "an ounce of prevention is better than a pound of&#13;
cure." Read how they have stopped the loss and improved the value of tfceir live stock.&#13;
"I have fed SAL-VET to all my sheep, how&#13;
jujd pifcH. iind al»o to one of my work hortu's&#13;
that WHB not hi condition. The horncm have&#13;
roundf*] out Bpi^ndidb; my ehecp never looked&#13;
so well lit thin tlpie o* the year and my hogs&#13;
and soring pig« arf in the bent of health. I&#13;
have HT*ny« (wen stow to teed any of the stock&#13;
foods or medicine*, believing tlmt good feeding,&#13;
and ordinary conditions ought tr\ keepsthcMn&#13;
pood health, but I am well Hatl«lio&lt;l with the&#13;
reBiiltsolttalnedfrom SAL-VET; It ha*certainly&#13;
improved to a marked depree, the condition of&#13;
tnystock.'-W.H.SOHANlZ. 8upt. SheepDept.&#13;
Michigan Agricultural Society. Hastings. Mich.&#13;
"SAL-VET is a flno thin«. It was well worth&#13;
the price for my cows alone, I h.ive Holsteln&#13;
nnd wrao of them have hail trouble with their&#13;
rmfrs becoming caked. This spring they w«re&#13;
free fmm it. with a single exception and I attrim&#13;
rhc-ir improvement to S^L-VET." —&#13;
EHiN^-i r\ JLIAWUEU. brltton, Mich.&#13;
"We keep SAL-VET accessible to onr^ht» p iiil&#13;
the time and have found its use wry effect ive in&#13;
keeping out worm**, and the tiheep iu a &gt;:enrrally&#13;
healthy condition We have alM&gt; found&#13;
it an exoelluit conditioner and worm &lt; l&lt;;iuer&#13;
for horses. OUT experience is that oT mar,y of&#13;
the oe*t farmers in this locality,"-A. A. WOOD&#13;
&amp; SONS, I'er HOKW M. Wood. Saline. Mich.&#13;
"I have been feeding your SAL-VET to my&#13;
shee?),hogs.horses and cattle for wime time.and&#13;
feel that I would notw Jlinglydo&gt;&gt;iif-inesswithoiit&#13;
it. It keeps all njy stock in flno condition and&#13;
inahigh stale of thrift, and finoe ftedinK your&#13;
remedy,Ihave wen no evidence of paranitir infection.&#13;
Icansonndently recommemi HAL-VET&#13;
to every stockmnn."-WM. H, ANOEUKON.&#13;
Pres.Fourth&gt;'aiioiiulx$&lt;uU£,GrufidhapidtsAlicb.&#13;
"Our horses are free from worms, and look&#13;
Meek unce giving them HAL-VET. I feed it&#13;
ju«t as 1 do HuJf-jiiHt keep it before them constantly."-&#13;
FHED MANKEH, H 2, White Ctond,&#13;
Michigan. „&#13;
"Having thoroughly tested your "8AL•YET.',&#13;
I liuv fonnc it to l&gt;e exactly as yon say it is. 1&#13;
feed it to hogs and coltn and never hail better&#13;
results in m v life. Many hogs in the neighl&gt;orbond&#13;
died of (tiolcra I have had no trouble&#13;
here."-JOHN H. LEYENDECKEH, Ht. 63.&#13;
Byron Center, Mich.&#13;
"My KAL-VET Is all Kone. and as common&#13;
salt docs not u-gin to take its place. I want yon&#13;
to »«nd me anottier ken at once. J am sure that&#13;
SMHi *orth oT SAL-VET saves mo $10.(10 worth of&#13;
fifd; all my sheep, cows aud horses are drring&#13;
remarkably well. &gt;!v experience has boon that&#13;
HAL-VET rnifi "orniH e-mnot dwell together.*'&#13;
- L . A. BUN'JIiAOEtt, Fairvlew, Mich.&#13;
The Great Worm Destroyer and Uve Stock Conditioner&#13;
Look Out for These Danger Signs&#13;
Coughing, rough coats, laggard steps, poor appetites and dull eyes.&#13;
T h e s e are the c o m m o n symptoms of w o r m infection and should disease break out in&#13;
your neighborhood the chances are a hundred to one against you, and your entire herds may bo&#13;
swept away with a -suddenness that will appall you. You can greatly lessen this danger from&#13;
disease if not altogether avoid these heavy losses simply by letting your stock run &lt;b "Sal-Vet'*&#13;
—the cheapest and greatest worm destroyer as well as the best preventive of live stock diseases.-&#13;
*'Sal-Vet0 is a medicated salt which works a wonderful change in all live stock.&#13;
It first destroys and expels the deadly worms and gives nature a chance to put every animal you&#13;
own in a healthy, vigorous condition. It is the best stock insurance you can get because it costs so little and&#13;
does so much. For one-twelfth of a cent a day any hog or sheep can run to it freely and will doctor themselves.&#13;
It costs only a trifle more for larger animals and requires no mixing, no dosing, no drenching, no starving—no&#13;
bother at all. I prove all this or no pay.&#13;
Here Is Afg Money-Back Trial Offer&#13;
Simply call at my "Sal-Vet" dealer's store and get enough "Sal-Vet"&#13;
to last all your stock 60 days. Take it home with you and place it where all&#13;
your farm animals can run to it freely. Then watch results. If "Sal-Vet" does&#13;
not do what I claim—if it doiTt rid your stock of the deadly stomach and intestinal worms&#13;
and prove entirely satisfactory TO YOU, simply notify the dealer and he will refund your&#13;
money in full. You won't be out a single penny. I take all the risk. Remember, you get&#13;
ALL your money back if you are not pleased. You certainly can't afford to risk the loss of&#13;
a single animal when such a fair, square, liberal offer like this is made to you. Yon know&#13;
your dealer—he accepts your word as to the results. You take no risk whatever.&#13;
SUMY H FEtt, Pre*., Tie S. K. FeB Cfc, Oudmi, 0M»&#13;
To Our Patrons:&#13;
onr customers.&#13;
Get rid of the worms in your stock and watch your&#13;
frofitd grow. "Sal-Vet" is giving wonderful satisfaction to&#13;
will gladly arrange to let any farmtr in this vicinity try it 60 days on&#13;
Mr. Feil's liberal money-back offer. Come in and get a-supply the nest time you come to town. We guarantee 4'Sal-Vet'1 and back np every statement in this advertisement. You take no risk. You'll find it the cheapest&#13;
stock conditioner yon ever used. M . - ^ M ^ ^-^....-. ^^ |&#13;
Dinkel 6t Dunbar, r'•**"** M^b f • •• i» i . i . « i i ii • m i l&#13;
^ . "V ;•:*&amp;»&amp; £ - ^ tm\*\ti\\\lfmto&lt;\m\&#13;
HWjPftWPwp i r.^^m^m^—mm&#13;
' 1 - *&#13;
fc-.V&#13;
\ * *&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
ROY W. CAVERLY, Pub.&#13;
PINCKNEY, - - - MICHIGAN&#13;
A new motto: "Don't take care of&#13;
your health—to exceBs."&#13;
Speaking of Btrlkes. they have never&#13;
been popular with ball players.&#13;
Coal was once used as money. It&#13;
is nearly worth its weight in gold to&#13;
day.&#13;
Nothing but kind words for the hen&#13;
will do. Fresh eggs are available&#13;
dally.&#13;
That new nickel may serve to teach&#13;
a careless public that a bison la not a&#13;
buffalo.&#13;
The air cocktail, with its oxygen&#13;
flavor, is the most invigorating drink&#13;
these days.&#13;
^ • • • • - i&#13;
A New Yorker says that stingy&#13;
men are always poor. Now, who wants&#13;
to be poor?&#13;
The gross debt of the city of New&#13;
York Is $1,082,662,851. This is also a&#13;
new altitude record.&#13;
SCENE ON THE MIAMI AT DAYTON&#13;
Though the new nickels are In demand,&#13;
they are still twenty times less&#13;
popular than the old dollar.&#13;
A 13 cent piece is now recommended.&#13;
We may yet have 13 cent stores&#13;
or "superstitious" establishments.&#13;
The Chicago burglar who robbed the&#13;
sheriff's office Is entitled to a Carnegie&#13;
medal for his high attainment&#13;
"Resolved, That the tipless barber&#13;
shop has been tried and found wanting."&#13;
By whom, gentlemen, by whom?&#13;
Somebody Is going to explore the&#13;
Amazon river, evidently being fired&#13;
with a desire to discover the torrid&#13;
pole.&#13;
The English poet, who declared that&#13;
he has supported himself by bis&#13;
poetry alone, has attained a high ambition.&#13;
The color of hair Is due to Iron,&#13;
which further emphasizes why advice&#13;
fails to enter the brains of many&#13;
people.&#13;
There are better authorities than a&#13;
Harvard professor to tell us just how&#13;
many hours of sleep will do us the&#13;
most good.&#13;
There will be more money to Jingle&#13;
In the pockets if the bill for the coinage&#13;
of,M cents in the United States&#13;
gx&gt;es through.&#13;
Somebody says that there is a general&#13;
art awakening in America Yet&#13;
the low crowned darby persists and&#13;
even flourishes. .&#13;
Biological experts declare that the&#13;
Intellectuality of the female is superior&#13;
to the male dog. But the male dog&#13;
runs the kennel.&#13;
All doubt of progress in aviation Is&#13;
set aside by the fact that an aviator&#13;
has just succeeded In falling 1.000 feet&#13;
without getting hurt&#13;
A cburt has ruled that a brass band&#13;
Is not a necessary part of a funeral.&#13;
Literally speaking, they are "out of&#13;
tune" with the occasion.&#13;
As for the patriotic citizen who Is&#13;
to lead a donkey 4,500 miles across&#13;
the continent in payment of en election&#13;
bet—well, two is company.&#13;
An Italian count was discovered !n&#13;
the role of a waiter in a Baltimore&#13;
hotel the other day Having no other&#13;
means of visible support, he was kept&#13;
on the job.&#13;
California Is to have a "Father's&#13;
day." The "head of the house" is&#13;
not being forgotten after all&#13;
This is a scene on the raging Miami river at Dayton,&#13;
dreds of lives have been lost in the floods.&#13;
where&#13;
LU 5R D&#13;
AND PESTILENGE IS NOW FOUGHT&#13;
WARMER WEATHER HELPS TO CHEER THE CHILLED&#13;
A N D HOMELESS SURVIVORS IN OHIO&#13;
AND INDIANA.&#13;
RELIEF TRAINS COMING IN FROM EVERYWHERE&#13;
WITH FOOD A N D SUPPLIES.&#13;
Martial Law Is Maintained—Ohio River On Rampage, Drives&#13;
Thousands From Homes in Valley But Loss of Life Is&#13;
Small Owing to Ample Warning.&#13;
T h e average life of a $10 bill is a&#13;
little more than twelve months " That&#13;
man must live in Philadelphia&#13;
Now Vesuvius shows sign of br :&#13;
Ins out. The volcano can aluay. ir,&#13;
depended on to threaten an erupt lot.&#13;
when other big world matters get tutu&#13;
the limelight&#13;
A Brooklyn court has ruled that a&#13;
Sandwich Is not a meal The court&#13;
graft hare been visiting some popular&#13;
restaurant at its busy hour to get data&#13;
for Its decision&#13;
There is no truth in the report 'h -&lt;&#13;
theaters will equip seats with Maxim&#13;
Silencers to that, in the event of to-&#13;
Bet BOt pleasing, all that is required&#13;
t» to turn on the switch.&#13;
' A s aviator In England has made th&lt;&#13;
astonishing speed of ninety-four tri)e&gt;&#13;
•ft feoar Boon a flight Is enousr. to&#13;
takt »way contemporary breath, to&#13;
£•&gt; jMtM&amp;f of the aviator's.&#13;
Latest investigations tend to confirm&#13;
the estimates of fewer than BOO&#13;
.deaths in the floods that swept over&#13;
i score of cities in Ohio and Indiana&#13;
last week.&#13;
As the waters receded from Dayton,&#13;
•Columbus and other places, leaving a&#13;
thick coating of mud, alarm was caused&#13;
by a rapid rise of the Ohio and&#13;
the Mississippi rivers, inundating&#13;
parts of cities along their banks.&#13;
There is not much danger of loss Of&#13;
life in these places, however, as the&#13;
Inhabitants have hills to flee to and&#13;
are used to floods.&#13;
Revised reports Indicate that the&#13;
number drowned in Dayton may not&#13;
exceed 150. The death list at Piqua,&#13;
Ohio, fell from the estimate ot 50 to&#13;
13 known dead.&#13;
Sanitary experts from the United&#13;
States public health service are ordered&#13;
to Dayton by Secretary of War&#13;
Garrison to protect city from pestilence.&#13;
The Water has receded in&#13;
Dayton and rescuers in some sections&#13;
use canoes and flat bottomed boats,&#13;
while in other sections relief squads&#13;
wade.&#13;
People throughout country are urged&#13;
by Dayton relief committee not to&#13;
send messages of inquiry, as they cannot&#13;
be delivered because the wire capacity&#13;
is taxed to the utmost by official&#13;
and public business.&#13;
Brookville, Indiana, Is practically&#13;
under martial law and 20 men have&#13;
been driven out of the city after loot&#13;
ing damaged homes and buildings. T c&#13;
hundred and fifty children rescued&#13;
from the flood have only night clothes&#13;
•and wagon trains carried food and&#13;
clothing from Connersville to the&#13;
3tricken people.&#13;
The work of rehabitation began at&#13;
Day Ion and other flooded oitles as&#13;
the work of rescue approached Its&#13;
end. The all important weather&#13;
showed improvement as viewed by&#13;
refugees, for it was warmer and pleasant&#13;
to frost and water-chimed bones.&#13;
Sanitary experts accepted the rise in&#13;
temperature with mixed feelings, for&#13;
the cold had retarded decomposition&#13;
of animal matter and refuse.&#13;
Members of the citizens' relief com*&#13;
mittee at Dayton, are apprehensive&#13;
af a water famine. , It Is believed there&#13;
boil the water for drinking pur&#13;
poses.&#13;
Medical supplies were reported woefully&#13;
short. Drug stocks were largely&#13;
destroyed, and the chests of the militia,&#13;
as well as supplies sent by other&#13;
cities, have in many instances been&#13;
delayed by washouts and other mishaps&#13;
of the flood.&#13;
Access to Dayton is now comparatively&#13;
easy and relief trains are arriving&#13;
nearly every hour with food, clothing,&#13;
medical supplies, physicians, and&#13;
Red Cross nurses.&#13;
No city even in war times was ever&#13;
under stricter martial law. The provost&#13;
guard sounds the curfew at 8&#13;
o'clock. With it all passes are revoked&#13;
automatically and none permitted&#13;
on the street. The sleep of the&#13;
exhausted stricken was interrupted&#13;
continually by the boom of guns. Despite&#13;
the drastic military measures&#13;
many attempted to pass the lines and&#13;
looters were busy. The militia had&#13;
orders to shoot to 'kill after one warning&#13;
and the continual crash of the&#13;
muskets was evidence that the warnings&#13;
would not stop the marauders.&#13;
With nearly 15,000 persons in the&#13;
towns along the Kentucky side of the&#13;
Ohio river driven from their homes&#13;
by the rising yellow tide sweeping&#13;
down the Ohio valley, and with more&#13;
than 3,500 homes altogether or partly&#13;
submerged, the .flood situation in that&#13;
icinity is assuming graver proporions&#13;
at Cincinnati, the water front&#13;
buildings are all partly under water&#13;
.nd much damage has been done.&#13;
One life has been lost as a direct&#13;
result of the high water here. Miss&#13;
\nna Smith, the first victim drowned,&#13;
lost her life in an attempt to reach&#13;
Newport in a skiff that capsied in mid*&#13;
stream. Her three men companions&#13;
were rescued.&#13;
Newport and Coving*on, virtu-lly are&#13;
suddounded by water. Condition!&#13;
there are worse than elsewhere and&#13;
nearly 10,000 persons have been driven&#13;
from their homes.&#13;
Relief measures, however, are adequate.&#13;
In these two cities the onlv&#13;
fear is that health conditions would&#13;
be seriously affected because of the&#13;
clogging of the sewage system and the&#13;
stagnation of backwater. As yet' the&#13;
". &lt;• w m 'i ; '.-ms&#13;
MICHIGAN&#13;
BREVITIES&#13;
Ann Arbor.—Wednesday, June 25,&#13;
alumni day of commencement week,&#13;
is the day selected for the dedication&#13;
of the Hill Memorial building&#13;
at the University of Michigan. Senator&#13;
Charles Townsend will deliver the&#13;
principal address. This building will&#13;
be accepted on behalf of the state. It&#13;
Is said to be the finest building of its&#13;
kind on any American university&#13;
campus. The auditorium will seat 5,-&#13;
100. The building was made possible&#13;
through a bequest to the university&#13;
of $200,000 by the late regent, Arthur&#13;
Hill of Saginaw. President Hutchins&#13;
has also selected a commencement&#13;
day orator, President Vincent, of the&#13;
University of Minnesota.&#13;
Ann • Harbor.— Dr. H. H. Cumming'a,&#13;
assistant to Dr. Reuben&#13;
Peterson, was appointed university&#13;
physician by the board of regents and&#13;
Dr. Elsie S. Pratt 'of Denver, Colo.,&#13;
was appointed physician to the women.&#13;
Four "master" degrees were&#13;
granted, three masters of art, as follows&#13;
: Robert Clark of Ann Arbor,&#13;
-I Helen Parry, Ann Arbor; Robert&#13;
Smith, Durand and master of civil engineering,&#13;
Ralph Goodrich, Ann Arbor.&#13;
Monroe.—Unable to pass over&#13;
the Waterloo dan. the River&#13;
Raisin took to the old bed of Minnow&#13;
brook. Willow and Vine streets&#13;
for a distance of five blocks are inundated&#13;
to a depth of half a foot and residents&#13;
are purchasing rubber boots.&#13;
The river, however, 1s believed to have&#13;
' reached its highest stage, and no great&#13;
danger appears to be imminent&#13;
Jackson.—John Siermlnski, charged&#13;
with killing his fourteen monthsold&#13;
baby by beating it, through&#13;
an interpreter, pleaded guilty when arraigned&#13;
in circuit court. After he had&#13;
pleaded guilty the court held an interview&#13;
with the prisoner, but owing to&#13;
his conflicting statements, another interview&#13;
will be held before sentence is&#13;
pronounced.&#13;
Escanaba.—While attempting to&#13;
board a moving train Andrew&#13;
Johnson, lumberman, fell beneath the&#13;
wheels and both legs were amputated&#13;
above the ankles. He lies in a critical&#13;
condition in a local hospital.&#13;
Flint.—A. M. Lyons, Beventy&#13;
is dead as a result fcf injuries&#13;
sustained in a D. U. R. wreck at Ortonvllle&#13;
three years ago. He was a retired&#13;
music teacher.&#13;
Petoskey.—Two boys brought&#13;
here from Alanson, believed to&#13;
be the Cone brothers, slayers of&#13;
John Thrush at Buckley, were released.'&#13;
Grand Rapids.—Divorce from the&#13;
bride with whom he eloped to&#13;
Detroit several years ago, is given&#13;
by relatives as the reason for the&#13;
suicide here of Thomas G. O'Donnell,&#13;
Jr., thirty, former deputy city clerk.&#13;
He swallowed carbolic acid. O'Donnell,&#13;
while attending a local business&#13;
university, fell in love with Miss Kathleen&#13;
Boland.- They eloped to Detroit&#13;
and were married in the Griswold hotel.&#13;
She recently divorced him. He&#13;
formerly was a clerk in the state land&#13;
office at Lansing. He was the son&#13;
of Thomas G. O'Donnell, formerly&#13;
heavyweight pugilist of Michigan and&#13;
a]so a nephew of Sheriff Edward&#13;
O'Donnell.&#13;
Hastings.—State Railroad Commissioner&#13;
C. L. Glasgow of Nashville,&#13;
and former State Senator W. W.&#13;
Potter of Hastings, were speakers at&#13;
the annual banquet of the Knights of&#13;
Pythias here, Glasgow lauding the purposes&#13;
of the order and Potter relating&#13;
its history. The banquet was followed&#13;
by dancing.&#13;
„JBay City.—George Strevel, twenty&#13;
years old, son of Dr. George&#13;
la little chance that the present sup- water works have continued in operaply&#13;
can be made to last until the wa- tlon. /The electric light giants alter&#13;
mains are in use again. R. H. ready have had to cease, but gas plarts&#13;
Grant, head of the relief supplies com* are not Interrupted.&#13;
mittee, issued an appeal to all cities In the Kentucky towns of Dayton.&#13;
In the country, aaking that aa much Ludlow, Bellevue and Bromley, Id enbottled&#13;
water as posiible be shipped tleal conditions exist, but in their&#13;
to Dayton immediately. It is especial- cases all communication with Clncinly&#13;
desired that this water be strictly uatL NewpoH and Covington has been&#13;
pure, at it is practically impossible to , suspended. ••* A&#13;
Beaver township, 1B suffering from&#13;
serious burns and his father's home&#13;
and the barn and an automobile were&#13;
destroyed as a result of an explosion&#13;
of gasoline. The Strevels were preparing&#13;
to go to church. George, after putting&#13;
on a heavy fnr coat, went to the&#13;
barn to start the automobile. He was&#13;
forced to "prime" the carburetor. The&#13;
next time he attempted to crank the&#13;
machine the explosion occurred.&#13;
Hasting*—Following drunkenness&#13;
among boys in Nashville Mrs.&#13;
Martha t Kaiser, a middle-aged woman&#13;
whose husband operates a cider&#13;
mill In Nashville. Is accused of Illegal*&#13;
T r r 55 " * • ! * '»'—&#13;
OH! MY BACK! I&#13;
A stubborn backache that hangs&#13;
on, week after week, la cause to&#13;
suspect kidney trouble, for when&#13;
the kidneys are inflamed and swollen,&#13;
bending the back brings a&#13;
sharp twinge that almost takes the&#13;
breath away.&#13;
It's hard to work and Just as&#13;
hard to rest or sleep.&#13;
Doan's Kidney Pills revive sluggish&#13;
kidneys—relieve congested,&#13;
aching kidneys. The proof is an&#13;
amazing collection of backache&#13;
testimonials.&#13;
AN INDIANA&#13;
CASE&#13;
8M. eBr.i dBleacnkSduorlot,r t9l6aSn Bd,. laacdh.,e d« ayteesr r"ibMlyy, bamcky bbaanddly* sawnodl lfeene, t Iw hearde tanedr rniobrlnei chs eimadyabcahaek* wa* lo had I had to&#13;
hgaent d9s« a ondf bed pdottcit ournedti lw 1i tbheoguatn t uttok-- iPnlau s. DIo anI'mi oKriodTnetyl lsotenagd iwly u anean tbi refeolrye cored." 'XMyJfcttrv&amp;Uta*?**&#13;
Get Doejft at A*y Stove, 80« a Bos DOAN'S SPAS*&#13;
FOSTER-MILBURN CO. Buffalo, New Ye*k&#13;
8 A D PREDICAMENT.&#13;
"I have come your daughter's&#13;
wing."&#13;
"Alas! Mr. Drake, I'm afraid you&#13;
will have to wait until some new ones&#13;
grow in* The farmer clipped our wings&#13;
this morning."&#13;
Profound Criticism.&#13;
Kin Hubbard, the Indiana humorist&#13;
—one of them, that is to say—once&#13;
was assigned to cover a performance&#13;
of "Uncle Tom's Cabin " Hubbard&#13;
had his brain-child, old "Abe Martin,"&#13;
report the play. This was the critique:&#13;
" 'Uncle Tom's Cabin* played down t'&#13;
Melodeon hall las' night. Th' dogs&#13;
was good, but they had poor support."&#13;
—Everybody's Magazine.&#13;
Lamentable Ignorance.&#13;
Mrs. Kaller—Cooks are Buch ignorant&#13;
things, nowadays. Mrs. Juttwed-—&#13;
Aren't they? They can't do the simplest&#13;
things. I asked mine to make&#13;
some sweetbreads the other day and&#13;
she said she couldn't—McCall's Magazine.&#13;
For Curling Feathers,&#13;
To curl a feather that haa become&#13;
damaged with rain or dew sprinkle&#13;
It thickly with common salt and shake&#13;
beforo a bright lire until dry, when&#13;
you will find it as good i s new.&#13;
But it isn't every&#13;
reaches the top.&#13;
high flyer who&#13;
FLY TO P1BCE8.&#13;
The Effect of Coffee on r-Ughly Organized&#13;
People.&#13;
"I have been a coffee user for&#13;
years, and about two years ago got&#13;
into a very serious condition of dyspepsia&#13;
and indigestion. It seemed to&#13;
me I would fly to pieces. I was so&#13;
nervous that at the least noise I was&#13;
distressed, and many times could not&#13;
straighten myself up because of the&#13;
pain."&#13;
Tea is Just as injurious, because it&#13;
contains caffeine, the same drug found&#13;
in coffee.&#13;
"My physician told me I must not&#13;
eat sny heavy or strong food, and or*&#13;
dered a diet, giving me some medi-&#13;
Strevel, a veterinary surgeon o^Ju*t* k epJ tf ooUno wuesidn gO cpotffieoen as noda rdeifdu lnlyo, t&#13;
get any better.&#13;
"Last winter my husband, who was&#13;
•iway on business, had Postum served&#13;
to him In the family where he board*&#13;
ed. He liked it so well that when he&#13;
came home he brought some with h|m,&#13;
We began using it and I found it&#13;
most excellent.&#13;
"While 1 drank it my stomach never&#13;
bothered me In the least, and I got&#13;
over my ntrvoui troubles. When the&#13;
Postum was gone we returned to coffee,&#13;
then my stomach began to hurt&#13;
me as before, and the nervous 00»&#13;
ditions came on again.&#13;
"That showed me exactly what was&#13;
ly selling hard cider and maintaining tqhueit cdaurtsnel doifg t^hfef wwh^olae lt^roSubel^e, swo dT a place of bale. She gave bonds for&#13;
her appearance for examination.&#13;
Pontlac.—The home of Representative&#13;
A. 0. Griggs, In Bloomfleld Highlands,&#13;
was visited by burglars during&#13;
the absence of the family and robbed&#13;
of money and Jewelry,&#13;
kept on using Postum. The old troubles&#13;
left again and have never returnedY-&#13;
"There'i a reason," and it is explained&#13;
In the little book, Mthe Road to.&#13;
WeUville, In pkgs.&#13;
• • • , A - •a-fan eC&#13;
0&#13;
£•'&#13;
r&#13;
I&#13;
T&#13;
» . - &lt; • • • • ' ananaaaaa* 5C&#13;
USEFUL RACK LIFTERS&#13;
Aotematio Unloader that Any&#13;
One Can Easily WorkfJluitratlona&#13;
and Description of Con*&#13;
trlvanco That Wilt Ba Found Advantageout&#13;
on Any Farm—&#13;
Racka Will Not Slip.&#13;
1 have an automatic unloader for&#13;
heavy bay racka and other wagon&#13;
bodies that any one can operate who&#13;
knows how to drive a team, writes F.&#13;
Hathaway of Fort Smith, Ark., In the&#13;
Farmers Mail and Breeze. Fig. 1&#13;
shows one section of the frame- as&#13;
it appears before unloading while Fig.&#13;
2 shows the position of the frame with&#13;
the rack on i t The posts A are 4 by&#13;
4's set firmly into the ground. These&#13;
posts should be set about 6½ feet&#13;
apart crosswise. The length and&#13;
height of the frames depend on the&#13;
racks used. BB are the lifting braces&#13;
which muBt be well made and secure-&#13;
How Lifter Does Its Work.&#13;
ly bolted to the posts, yet not so tight&#13;
as to hinder them from moving freely&#13;
in loading or unloading a rack. The&#13;
pieces C are 2 by 6's bolted to the lifting&#13;
braces. At their forward ends two&#13;
short pieces of 2 by 4's (E) are bolted&#13;
that strike against the rack as it Is&#13;
being driven between the frames, thus&#13;
bringing up the lifting frames and&#13;
raising the rack off the wagon. Two&#13;
crosspieces of 2 by 4s (D) are bolted&#13;
lengthwise to the posts to give the&#13;
frames rigidity. Two blocks (F) are&#13;
bolted at the forward ends of D to&#13;
stop the forward movement of the&#13;
lifting frame. These are placed a little&#13;
past the center so as to lock the&#13;
frame while up. Two pawls notched&#13;
at one end are bolted underneath the&#13;
rack frame with the notched ends&#13;
against the rear bolster of the wagon&#13;
This prevents the rack slipping back&#13;
as It rises from the wagon.&#13;
STAPLE FOOD FOR CHICKENS&#13;
Hens Cannot Give Best Results When&#13;
Fed Grain Alone—Fowls Demand&#13;
Variety of Feed.&#13;
Grain is the staple food for poultry,&#13;
And will be used for that purpose as&#13;
long-as fowls are kept on farms, but&#13;
hens cannot give good results on grain&#13;
alone. It Is beneficial to them and will&#13;
be at all times relished, but the demands&#13;
of the hens are such as to call&#13;
for a variety. In the shells of eggs&#13;
as well as their composition are several&#13;
forms of mineral matter and nitrogen,&#13;
which can only be partially obtained&#13;
from grain.&#13;
Even grains vary in composition,&#13;
and when fowls are fed on one kind&#13;
for a long time they will begin to refuse&#13;
It, as they may be oversupplied&#13;
with the elements of the food partaken&#13;
and lack the elements that are best&#13;
supplied from some other source. For&#13;
this reason they will accept a change&#13;
of food, which is of itself an evidence&#13;
that the best results from hens can&#13;
only be obtained by a variety of food&#13;
Corn and wheat may be used as food&#13;
with advantage, but must be given 'as&#13;
a portion of the ration and not made&#13;
exclusive articles of diet.&#13;
Fighting Ringworm.&#13;
Ringworm is A contagious disease&#13;
due to a fungas. Man, horses and cattle&#13;
are commonly affected, and It is&#13;
easily transmitted from one animal to&#13;
another. The affection first asserts&#13;
itself as a ringlike patch, with the&#13;
hair broken off. The usual location&#13;
is on the skin around the eyebrows,&#13;
or muzzle, scattering from there over&#13;
different parts of the body. Treatment&#13;
is sometimes easy, more often difficult&#13;
to completely eradicate. All brashes&#13;
and utensils in contact with infected&#13;
animals should be sterilised. Wash the&#13;
patch with soap and water, and apply&#13;
tincture of Iodine or lard and salicylic&#13;
acid* six part to one of salicylic acid.&#13;
— ^ ^ — — — —&#13;
Good Combs and Brushes.&#13;
Are your curry combs and brushes&#13;
In good condition? Tou just can't afford&#13;
to C M poor one*. New ones cost&#13;
but little.&#13;
Swlna for Breeding.&#13;
Whan the pure-bred swine are kept&#13;
for breeding purposes they should be&#13;
given every opportunity for bono and&#13;
muscle development rather than production&#13;
of fat&#13;
HOW TO PREVENT OAT SMUT&#13;
Grain Should Be Treated With Formalln&#13;
8olutlon In Morning and&#13;
Drilled In Same Day.&#13;
To prevent oat smut, the grain&#13;
should be treated with formalin It&#13;
takes about one ounce of formalin for&#13;
every five bushels of grain to be treated.&#13;
Clean a space on the barn floor and&#13;
thoroughly sprinkle it with the formalin&#13;
solution before spreading the&#13;
seed grain. The oats should be run&#13;
through the fanning mill twice to remove&#13;
all light grain, as only heavy&#13;
clean seed should be sown. Spread&#13;
down the seed grain, then sprinkle the&#13;
grain with the formalin solution made&#13;
as follows: Formalin, one ounce; water,&#13;
two and one-half gallons; mix&#13;
thoroughly. The solution can be applied&#13;
with a fine rose watering pot;&#13;
shovel the grain over so that every&#13;
seed is coated with the solution. When&#13;
all the grain is coataed, shovel the&#13;
grain into a round pile and cover with&#13;
sacks for not more than two or three&#13;
hours, then spread out, and as soon&#13;
as the oats will not stick together it&#13;
Is fit to sow or drill. The gTain should&#13;
be treated In the morning and drilled&#13;
in the same day. The drill should be&#13;
set to drill two and one-fourth to two&#13;
and one-half bushels to the acre, as&#13;
the oats, having absorbed considerable&#13;
water are larger than dry oats. Have&#13;
the ground thoroughly mellowed;&#13;
drill the oats in with 250 pounds to&#13;
the acre of some good bone fertilizer.&#13;
Even If the ground is in good order, it&#13;
will pay to use the fertilizer. The fertilizer&#13;
will ripen the grain early, the&#13;
straw will stand up stiff and cannot be&#13;
blown down by summer storms and&#13;
the yield will be^increased fully 10 to&#13;
12 bushels per acre.&#13;
FOR CUTTING PRICKLY PEAR&#13;
Implement Invented by Texas Man&#13;
for Qufckly Clearing Land for&#13;
the Purpose of Cultivation.&#13;
In describing an implement Intended&#13;
for- cutting and handling prickly&#13;
pear, Invented by R. H. Brown of San&#13;
Antonla, Tex., the Scientific American&#13;
says:&#13;
This invention pertains to Implements&#13;
for clearing the ground for purposes&#13;
of cultivation, the object .teing&#13;
to provide an implement wbicb&gt;,may&#13;
be easily and quickly handled for the&#13;
A W F U t .&#13;
"I don't wemember what I ate, but&#13;
1 had an awful dweam."&#13;
"What was ft, old chap?"&#13;
"I dweamed my valet went away&#13;
without lacing my shoes."&#13;
No Little Girl for Him.&#13;
The six-year-old son of a well-known&#13;
Indianapolis family attends a dancing&#13;
school. He is a chubby little fellow&#13;
who has not begun to stretch out yet,&#13;
and he keenly feels his "shortage."&#13;
He demands that he be recognized as&#13;
a little "grownup." Several days ago&#13;
the teacher planned to instruct her&#13;
pupils in dancing "the Butterfly." A&#13;
five-year-old girl who is small for her&#13;
age, and just a trifle stouter than our&#13;
hero, but an adept at dancing, was&#13;
assigned as his partner. He gazed at&#13;
her iu silence. Then he took hold&#13;
of her hand and, with his mouth set&#13;
firmly, walked straight over the the&#13;
teacher.&#13;
"Don't you think you'd better give&#13;
me a bigger girl?" he asked.—Indianapolis&#13;
News.&#13;
Rheumatism&#13;
Backache and ••*&#13;
@9HLEs&#13;
We do not ask you to buy—&#13;
just send your name and address and&#13;
receive a sample bottle free.&#13;
Z-M-O penetrates to bone thru skin and&#13;
muscles and removes pain 5 minutes after&#13;
you apply it.&#13;
Y o u may not need Z - M - O today, yet tomorrow&#13;
pay any price to relieve pain. FREE BOTTLE If you have Rheumatism, Backache or Piles write M. R. Zae^el&#13;
&amp; Company, 901 Main Street, Sheboygan, Wisconsin and receive&#13;
a free bottle of Z-M-0 by return mail. At drug stores, 25 cts.&#13;
Prickly Pear Implement.&#13;
purpose of cutting and handling prickly&#13;
pear. Broadly, the improvement&#13;
consists in the provision of an implement&#13;
which embodies a handle and a&#13;
transversely elongated head at one&#13;
end of the handle, having an outer&#13;
cutting edge and an engaging prong&#13;
or tine extending from one side&#13;
thereof.&#13;
Most Serious Problem.&#13;
Infectious abortion among cattle&#13;
bas become one of the most serious&#13;
problems for cattle owners so far as&#13;
infectious diseases are concerned.&#13;
It is well entitled to rank in Importance&#13;
with tuberculosis, hog cholera,&#13;
and Texas fever. Two new medical&#13;
treatments have recently appeared,&#13;
either one of which may possibly&#13;
prove to be of very great Importance.&#13;
One, abortin, is used like tuberculin,&#13;
as a diagnostic; and the other is a&#13;
vaccine, which it Is hoped will immunize&#13;
heifers against the infection.&#13;
There is not sufficient reliable Information&#13;
available as yet, upon which&#13;
to Justify any definite statement.&#13;
Breeders should keep these things in&#13;
mind and watch for future developments.&#13;
Stringent Austrian Building Laws.&#13;
Austrian laws require that dwellings&#13;
and business houses be built of solid&#13;
materials from interior to exterior.&#13;
Building regulations in Austria are&#13;
very strict and are rigidly enforced.&#13;
Interior walls there are chiefly of plaster&#13;
and concrete, but bricks and laths&#13;
are much used.&#13;
Actaal&#13;
• y w B&#13;
regalar&#13;
ux&#13;
iach&#13;
bagta.&#13;
After Material.&#13;
Editor—"Why do you persist in coming&#13;
here? I tell you I don't buy fiction."&#13;
Author—"Oh, I don't wish to&#13;
sell any of my stories. I am writing&#13;
a short serial, entitled 'The Ugliest&#13;
Man on Earth," and came in merely to&#13;
obtain local color."&#13;
Liquid blue is a weak solution. Avoid it.&#13;
Buy lied Cross Ball Blue, the blUe that's all&#13;
blue. Ask your grocer. Adv.&#13;
Speaking of square deals, a corner&#13;
in food products is something else.&#13;
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and&#13;
Invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugarcoated,&#13;
tiny granules, easy to take. Do not&#13;
jripe. Adv.&#13;
First acquire a business of&#13;
own, then learn to attend to it.&#13;
your&#13;
Here Is&#13;
the Offer&#13;
Rogers Silver Given Away&#13;
with&#13;
Galvanic Soap Wrappers&#13;
These teaspoons are the kind&#13;
that you'll be proud to own&#13;
They are the genuine 1881&#13;
Rogers ware, heavily triple plated&#13;
silver on a white metal&#13;
base. The pattern is the famous&#13;
LaVigne, or Grape,&#13;
with the beautiful French gray&#13;
finish. With ordinary wear&#13;
these spoons will last a life&#13;
time. Start saving your&#13;
For each teaspoon desired&#13;
send us one two*&#13;
cent stamp and twenty Galvanic&#13;
Soap wrappers (front&#13;
panel only) or coupons from John&#13;
son's Washing Po* der.&#13;
Special Ofter for Six Teaspoons&#13;
Send 100 Galvanic Soap wrappers and 5&#13;
two-cent stamps to pay postage; we will send&#13;
you asetofsix Teaspoons ABSOLUTELY FREE.&#13;
GALVANIC SOAP IS KNOWN AS&#13;
"The Famous Easy Washer"&#13;
It's a white Soap and the cocoanut oil in it makes&#13;
it the easiest lathering soap on the market Test it&#13;
out your next wash day and don't fen get to save the&#13;
wrappers. Mail them to the Premium Department of&#13;
B. J. JOHNSON SOAP COMPANY&#13;
MILWAUKEE WISCONSIN&#13;
wrappers today, or&#13;
better still buy a&#13;
box of Galvanic and&#13;
you'll have 100&#13;
wrappers, juit&#13;
enough for a&#13;
aet of&#13;
•poena.&#13;
WHY INCUBATOR CHICKS DIE Write for book Baring young1 chicks. Send tt*&#13;
name* of 7 friends that use incubators and n t&#13;
book free. Ralsall Remedy Co., Blackwell.Oua*&#13;
Value of Education.&#13;
The question is often asked, "Of&#13;
how much value is school training to&#13;
farmers from a business standpoint?"&#13;
A recent agricultural survey of several&#13;
townships of Tompkins county, New&#13;
York, made by the College of Agriculture&#13;
of Cornell University has revealed&#13;
many interesting and suggestive&#13;
facts bearing upon rural sociology. To&#13;
quote from the summary: "The survey&#13;
shows that a high school education&#13;
Is worth as much to a farmer as&#13;
$6,000 worth of 5 per cent, bonds. A&#13;
college education la worth nearly&#13;
twice as much."&#13;
Good Milk Recordt.&#13;
It Is worthy of notice that within&#13;
12 months the Ayrshire Breeders' Association&#13;
had three cows qualify for&#13;
advanced registry with records of&#13;
over 20.000 pounds of milk each, and&#13;
this, too, under widely different conditions,&#13;
two from the favorable locality&#13;
of the state of Washington and one&#13;
from the hills of Vermont&#13;
Cost of Production.&#13;
Cut the cast of production by using&#13;
machinery wherever yon can.&#13;
ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT&#13;
AVe^eteWe Preparation for As -&#13;
simitating foe Food and Regulating&#13;
the Stomachs and Bowels of&#13;
¥&#13;
51&#13;
Promotes Dige$Kon,Cheenfulness&#13;
and Rest.Contains neither&#13;
Opium.Morphine nor Mineral&#13;
N O T N A B C O T I C&#13;
p«fpt croiH DrSAtn/uwvra&#13;
fttmpJtin Stsd '&#13;
AtxSumm *&#13;
/?btktU*S*Ht •&#13;
Anis* S**d *&#13;
AuptrmiiU -&#13;
HimSt,d -&#13;
CtmrifttdSufmr Winkfftrtm ffnvor&#13;
A perfect Remedy for Constipation&#13;
, Sour S to rr^ch, Diarrhoea,&#13;
Worms .Convulsions .Feverishness&#13;
and LOSS OP SLEEP&#13;
• M ^ i ^ a M M M M M • I M*BSSSMaSM&gt;^*&#13;
Fac Simile Signature of&#13;
THE CENTAUR COMPANY,&#13;
NEW YORK.&#13;
CASTORIA For Infants and Children.&#13;
The Kind You Have&#13;
Always Bought&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
of&#13;
A t 6 m o n t h s o l d&#13;
35 B O N U S J J L t&#13;
[Guaranteed under the Food;&#13;
Exact Copy of Wrapper.&#13;
In&#13;
Use&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CASTORIA Tit* Mamma MMMmr, « n voa« OITV.&#13;
^AflSORBDIEJL^rf&#13;
Goitre, Swollen Glands,&#13;
Cysts, Varicose Veins,&#13;
Varicosities anywhere.&#13;
It allays pain and takes&#13;
out inflammation promptly, A&#13;
safe, healing, soothing, antiseptic.&#13;
Pleasant to use—quickly absorbed&#13;
into skin. Powerfully penetrating&#13;
but does not blister under b a n d a g e&#13;
nor cause any u n p l e a s a n t n e s s .&#13;
F e w drops only required at e a c h&#13;
application. A B S O R B I N E , J R . ,&#13;
$ i . o o and $2.00 a bottle at drugg&#13;
i s t s or delivered. B o o k 2 G f r e e .&#13;
W.F.Young.P.0.F.,310Temp!eSLpSprlngfleld,l«ii(&#13;
Get a Canadian Home&#13;
In Western Canada's&#13;
Free Homestead Area&#13;
THI&#13;
PROVING!&#13;
OF&#13;
Manitoba tbtaeaa d8«thrfe f»Dl URatrwtc Hti otmhaat- taoff otarden riiar a16 0o pacproarat mofd atsj* c a 11 e a tMtminual&#13;
jandran*&#13;
For Qraln Browing&#13;
and Cattle Raising&#13;
tinbl ap rporfiotratbnloea a gbarale aalota arvap aabrloovre a ansd unbroken period of orara&#13;
LMfutSrkvatSti too* atost&#13;
of a Century.&#13;
raPilewrafeyc*t ooHoomreantalat tffot:o tdo.l.l __. bdaeaatir, aabnlda. social oondittoaa HVomaoeaatsataldaaa dmt aayd jbaaae sp*v troeHTraaada alanndd *a tcoaon Inb at hbeo aofbld*a afa d riaatnaotaau aola prloat.&#13;
to&#13;
M. V. IHolMMjft,&#13;
176 JtffwiM A * , ft**. • ! * .&#13;
• 11 * PUTNAM F A D E L E S S DYES&#13;
. ^ - . .&#13;
&lt;w&#13;
BAKING&#13;
POWDER&#13;
Absolutely Pure&#13;
Economizes Butter, Flour,&#13;
Eggs; makes the food more&#13;
appetizing and wholesome&#13;
The only Baking Powder made&#13;
from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar&#13;
Stott's&#13;
DIAMOND&#13;
FLOUR&#13;
Best&#13;
For&#13;
Bread&#13;
and&#13;
Rolls&#13;
D I A M O N D FLOUR is&#13;
especially milled f o r&#13;
home baking. You'll&#13;
enjoy your Bread and&#13;
Rolls more if you make&#13;
them yourself f r o m&#13;
Stott's Diamond Flour.&#13;
ASK Y O U R GROCER&#13;
to send you Stott's Diamond&#13;
Flour today.&#13;
DAVID STOTT,&#13;
Milltr, Detroit, Mich,&#13;
W. W. BARNARD&#13;
Pinckney Market Reports&#13;
Corrected every Wednesday morning&#13;
WHEAT—¢1.00&#13;
RYE—52c&#13;
OATS—32&#13;
BEASS-I1.T0&#13;
ONIONS—$1.00&#13;
POTATOES—50c&#13;
BUTTER-28c.&#13;
EGGS- 16c.&#13;
CHICKENS—live., 13c. hens lie&#13;
! STATE OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO [&#13;
\ LUCAS COUNTI f&#13;
Frank Cheney makes oath that be is&#13;
| .s senior partner of tbe firm of P J&#13;
i Cheney &amp; Co, dcin : business in tbe&#13;
City of Toledo, County and State of&#13;
aforesaid and that said firm will pay&#13;
the sum of ONE iiUNLRED DOLLARS&#13;
for each and every .&gt;;ase of Catarrb&#13;
that cannot be cured t&gt;y the use&#13;
of Hall's Catarrab Cure&#13;
FRANK J CHENEY&#13;
Sworn to before me and subscribed&#13;
in my presence, tbis sixth day of December,&#13;
AD 1886&#13;
(Seal) A W GLEASON&#13;
Notary ot Public&#13;
Hall's Catarrh C ure is taken intern -&#13;
ally, and aot^ directly on the blood&#13;
and raucous surfaces" of the system&#13;
Send tor testimonials tree&#13;
P J CHENEY &amp; Co Toledo, Ohio&#13;
Sold by alt Druggists, 75c&#13;
Take Hail's Family Fills for constipation&#13;
A lnrjje stock of latest oatterm in Wall&#13;
Paper, just received. Prices from 10c to&#13;
40o. Meyer's Drug Store.&#13;
corywcHTifii&#13;
rmopucraccwiK&#13;
Olds Engine Husking Corn&#13;
iTl^fE'LL help you get the kind of an en-&#13;
* " gine you ought to have, if you'll let us.&#13;
(That's what we're here for—not merely to sell you&#13;
j goods for the sake of the sale, but to sell you something&#13;
[that is going to satisfy you whether it's an engine or anything else*&#13;
The engine you'll be best satisfied with in the long run—the&#13;
one that will do your work as you want it done for a long time is&#13;
the Olds Engine—that's the kind we have here—but yon don't&#13;
hare to take onr word for it; we'll show you that it's the best engine for you.&#13;
If yon can't find time to come in and see us, ask us to come and see&#13;
^ ^ ^ - yon or send you a free catalog of Olds engines.&#13;
[ • H H B Maybe we can please you with a husker, too*&#13;
We're here to serve you;&#13;
give us the chance.&#13;
A. H. FLINTOFT,&#13;
\. : C m l -&#13;
h I l.l: .-n&#13;
OLEYS HONEY 'TAR Compound&#13;
POP Sale by W . &amp;• Brown&#13;
Attention, Voters&#13;
Pinckney, March 31&#13;
Editor of Dispatch,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Dear 8ir:—&#13;
Through the colamDs of your&#13;
paper I wish to explain to each&#13;
and every voter of Putnam township,&#13;
the present existing condition&#13;
of the roads throughout this&#13;
township.&#13;
First—The township money&#13;
during the past two years has all&#13;
been expending on a. mile or two&#13;
of highway, making it the most&#13;
perfect road in the township. To&#13;
further this point.—If a farmer&#13;
living on the southwest line of&#13;
tbe boundaries of Putnam wishes&#13;
to haul a load of wood or wheat&#13;
to town he cannot do it with the&#13;
best team in the county. Take a&#13;
look at the roads in the central&#13;
and north part. There are a number&#13;
of bridges within tbe radius of&#13;
Putnam which are now and have&#13;
been in a dangerous condition for&#13;
years.&#13;
It is up to you Mr. Voter to&#13;
look out for your own interests&#13;
and to see to it that a Board is&#13;
elected that will so plan the outlay&#13;
of the money that two or three&#13;
roads will not receive all the benefits&#13;
and more than that, the&#13;
township is now in debt on the&#13;
state roads built last year. From&#13;
said roads the minority .and not&#13;
the majority are receiving the&#13;
benefit.&#13;
There will be another big tax&#13;
this year, but I would no fault&#13;
whatever if every taxpayer would&#13;
share their just proportion of the&#13;
taxes, but such is not tbe case.&#13;
Too much local money in&#13;
the form of bonds and commercial&#13;
stock escapes taxation, which&#13;
causes the largest proportion of&#13;
the taxes to fall on the small&#13;
farmer who has only 40 or a 100&#13;
acres to his credit. He pays from&#13;
$25.00 to $118.00 every year for&#13;
taxes. As a result, a farmer told&#13;
me the other day that it took&#13;
everything he could sell except&#13;
$2.00 to pay his taxes this year.&#13;
I wish to ask you Mr. Voter, is&#13;
this justice?&#13;
The Postmaster General has issued&#13;
orders to postmasters to discontinue&#13;
all mail routes where the&#13;
roads are in an impassible condition.&#13;
Now Mr. Voter and Mr. Taxpayer&#13;
don't you think that right&#13;
now is the time to begin that improvement?&#13;
Let us band together&#13;
and elect a Township Board with&#13;
Commissioner that will go forth&#13;
and repair ALL the roads in the&#13;
Spring as the law juBtly requires.&#13;
Very truly yours,&#13;
H. B. GARDNER.&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
mrmwwmmmmmmwvimwmmimwm&#13;
Signs of Spring&#13;
Convey a warning that certain ailments—general debility,&#13;
dyspepsia, skin diseases, rheumatism, liver complaints, etc,&#13;
need attention. There isn't anything better for a blood&#13;
purifier than our&#13;
KichfielcTs Blood Purifier&#13;
Nothing secret or mysterious about it—simply Sarsaparilla,&#13;
Iodide of Potassium, Dandelion, Stillmgia, etc.—drugs you&#13;
perhaps know something about, and which are recommended&#13;
by all medical works and physicians. Then it is honestly&#13;
and carefully made of the best drugs—like everything else&#13;
that we make—and we give you a'bigger bottle than you&#13;
usually get, and charge but $1.00 for it.&#13;
MEYER'S DRUG STORE&#13;
FOR A SQUARE DEAL&#13;
PINCKNEY, - - - MICHIGAN&#13;
^ Drugs, Wall Paper, Crockery, Cigars, Candy,&#13;
£ Magazines, School Supplies, Books&#13;
f \&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
WANTED—WasLing to do. Mrs.&#13;
Antoine, widow, Pinckney 12t3&#13;
FOR SALE OR RENT—Good bouse.&#13;
14t3 ' Inquire of Ross Read&#13;
FOR SALE—Work team, Geldings.&#13;
5 and 8 yrs. old. Clayton Placeway&#13;
LOST—Horse blanket between the&#13;
Barton farm and town. Finder&#13;
plea3e return to this ogee. Ht2*&#13;
DRESSMAKING—Flaiu and iancy&#13;
sewing. 13t3* Mabel E, Brown, Pinckney&#13;
FOR SALE—Good tame bay, also&#13;
some white oak fence posts. 13t3&#13;
J, R. Martin, Pinckney&#13;
FOR SALE—Several Grade Durham&#13;
cows, Young and all right. Soon&#13;
to be new milch. 14t2*&#13;
J. E, and H. O. Kirtland&#13;
WANTED—A ma^d, wages $18 per&#13;
month; also a night watchman.&#13;
14t3 Michigan State rtamtarinm&#13;
Howell, Michigan&#13;
FOR SALE—Span of five-year old&#13;
mares, weight 22G0. Sound, kind,&#13;
well broken, double or single 14t2*&#13;
J.E. and H. D. Kirtland&#13;
FOR SERVKJE—Fall|Blooded Jersey&#13;
Ball. Formerly owned by Will&#13;
Dunning. Terms $1. aae at time of&#13;
service. Also have a new milch cow&#13;
for sale. Ut3* B.|Mc01oskey&#13;
. . I *&#13;
*&#13;
'THE CENTRAL'&#13;
Have you seen the finest liqe of millinery goods ever brought to Pinckney?&#13;
If not, call at The Central and as* to see them. We have hats from $1.&#13;
up, so if you want a cheap street hat, no fear but we can furnish it for you.&#13;
Of course, we have to hire a trimmer, but theu we have one that can be&#13;
depended on and coming right from the city she is on to all the latest kinks&#13;
of fashion and you will find that no two hats iu our shop are trimmed the&#13;
same; in that way you need have no fear of someone else coming out in a&#13;
hat exactly like yours unless some other shop duplicates us. No hats are&#13;
factory trimmed.&#13;
Our dry goods line is as complete as it is possible to keep it: we may ow.&#13;
ing to illnesa, not be able to keep our stock up as well as formerly, but we&#13;
are doing the best we can and hope to soon be able to fill in all vacant lines.&#13;
You will find our goods fresh and new, and as cheap as anyone else can sell&#13;
the same kind of goods.&#13;
Don't forget that we carry a full line of groceries. We want your butter&#13;
and eggs and will pay you as much or more than anyone else, and we&#13;
promise you a fair deal always.&#13;
Yours for trade.&#13;
MRS- C- W- KRAUS %&#13;
jobrd&#13;
\ \ \ \ M &gt; \ . &lt;&#13;
Now and here—not then and there&#13;
—lies your opportunity. The Ford&#13;
product has been multiplied by twoand-&#13;
a-half—but the demand has&#13;
been multiplied by four.'lf you want&#13;
one for Spring service you must get&#13;
it now. Don't delay.&#13;
There are more than 220,000 Fords on the world's&#13;
highway—the best possible testimony to their unexcelled&#13;
worth. Prices—runabout $525— touring car&#13;
$600—town car $8C0 f. o. b. Detroit with complete&#13;
equipment. Catalogue from&#13;
Fhntoft &amp; Read&#13;
LOCAL AGENTS PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
(•/•&#13;
K#tf*0.^^ EB O&#13;
Are Getting The Premiums All The&#13;
Time And Are Praising Purity Flour&#13;
Try a Few Sacks of&#13;
Cobs For Kindling at 5 c&#13;
per bag&#13;
delivered ip. lO "bag lots or more&#13;
and see if they are not the best you ever had.&#13;
T H E H O Y T BROS.&#13;
r-;.'A-.V\\'*&gt; -.y-VA-.V./V-.. /&#13;
4~&#13;
• • ' « * • • , • •&#13;
••l'A&#13;
•*&#13;
• ; •••.'&amp;&lt;&#13;
'V&#13;
. « -&#13;
' - * ' JMC V&#13;
t^^kLlhi^k^l- ''&amp;ia»&gt;4:/3&#13;
•r i&#13;
&lt;*" .&#13;
, :$?•..•••* Ife&#13;
• * ^ B H&#13;
. • &amp; . . . . * '•&#13;
BnSSSH^SSSB&#13;
K B ^ B ^ B ^ B ^ B B »</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch April 03, 1913</text>
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                <text>April 03, 1913 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1913-04-03</text>
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                <text>Roy W. Caverly</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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              <text>Pinckney, Livinorston County, Michigan, Thursday, April 10,\1913 No. 15&#13;
Township Elections&#13;
The fine weather Monday drew&#13;
a large crowd to the polls, 299&#13;
votes being cast of which 118 were&#13;
straight Democrats, 58 were&#13;
straight Republicans and the rest&#13;
splits. On the state ticket the&#13;
vote was 166 straight Democrat,&#13;
79 straight Republican,26 National&#13;
Progressive and the remainder&#13;
splits and scattering. I t was a&#13;
democratic landslide in Putnam,&#13;
every man on that ticket being&#13;
elected by majorities ranging&#13;
from 39 to 112, The following&#13;
are the majorities for this township&#13;
also Unadilla, Hamburg and&#13;
Marion:&#13;
PUTNAM TOWNSHIP&#13;
Supervisor, James Harris, d 75&#13;
Clerk, Amos Clinton,d *.85&#13;
Treasurer, Norman Reason, d 112&#13;
Highway Commissioner, Jas. Smith, d. .39&#13;
Overseer of Highway, R. G. Webb, d.. .82&#13;
Justice ot Peace, W. B. Darrow, d . . . . .73&#13;
Member Board Review, R. Kelly, d,. ,.61&#13;
Constable, Irvin Kennedy, d . . . . . . , . . . .95&#13;
Sylvester Harris.d 64&#13;
Bert VanBUricum, d 89&#13;
Casper Volmer, d 85&#13;
The amendments were all defeated by&#13;
the following majorities: Woman Suffrage,&#13;
96; Referendum, 30; Recall, 25; Initiative,&#13;
46 and Fireman's Pension by 103.&#13;
UNADILLA TOWNSHIP&#13;
Supervisor, Elmer Braley, r 100&#13;
Clerk, Lawrence McClear, d 4&#13;
Treasurer, Adelbeit Brearly, d 23&#13;
Highway Cora., Eu?ene Gallup, d 1&#13;
Overseer of Highway, Jae. Foster, d. . . 12&#13;
Justice of Peace, Milo Isham, r .30&#13;
Member Board Review, C. A. Mapes,r...38&#13;
Constable, I. Williiims, r 51&#13;
Constable, O to Arnold, r 41&#13;
Constable, Wilber Crossman, r 44&#13;
Constable, L. E. Hadley, . r 48&#13;
In Unadilla woman suffrage was defeated&#13;
by 62 majority.&#13;
HAMBURG TOWNSHIP&#13;
Supervisor, Arthur Shehan, d 74&#13;
Clerk, John Damman, d 79&#13;
Treasurer, Harry Moon, d . . . . . . . . .124&#13;
Highway Com., Ray Hinckley, d 66&#13;
Oveneer of Highway, T. Burfce,d 43&#13;
Jtratiee ot Peace, Ralph Bennett, d 58&#13;
Member Board Review, M. Twitchell, d.47&#13;
Constable: J . W. Bennett,d, Joe Blades,&#13;
d, Fred Poland, d, Geo. Schafer, d, received&#13;
a majority of 50. Woman suffrage lost&#13;
by a majority of 50.&#13;
MARION TOWNSHIP&#13;
Supervisor, GusSmith, r 22&#13;
Clerk, Mott Wilcox, d 15&#13;
Treasurer, R. H. Gorton, d 15&#13;
Highway Com., H. Maycocks, r 2&#13;
Overseer of Highway, Wirt Smith, r. ...11&#13;
Justice of Peace, H. C. Bucknell, r..*. .11&#13;
Member Board Review,H. W. Norton,r.l9&#13;
Mem. B. of R.(vacancy) Ed Nash, d t . . . .1&#13;
Constable*. Ed Allen, Geo. •Griffen, Ed&#13;
Rubbins, Will Allen, all republicans.&#13;
Warren Curtis Lewis&#13;
Warren Curtis Lewis was born&#13;
in New York May 15, 1831 and&#13;
died in Putnam April 5, 1913,aged&#13;
81 years and 11 months.&#13;
At the age of 4 years he cftme&#13;
to Michigan with his parents&#13;
where his childhood days were&#13;
spent and he grew to manhood.&#13;
On March 31, 1861 he was united&#13;
in marriage to Wilmina Wooden&#13;
of Iosco. To this union were&#13;
born three children, Leon and&#13;
Guy at home and Mrs. John&#13;
Chambers of Putnam. After his&#13;
marriage he resided in Iosco&#13;
for a. few years, moving from there&#13;
to Emmett county where he lived&#13;
for twelve years. He then moved&#13;
to Lenawee county from whith&#13;
place he removed to the farm in&#13;
Putnam where he died. For a&#13;
number of years he has been ai&#13;
patient sufferer but always trusted&#13;
in his Savior for help. Besides his&#13;
wife.and'children he leaves three&#13;
grandchildren, two sisters, Mrs.&#13;
M. Stout of Putnam and Mrs. C.&#13;
Gould of Conway and one brother,&#13;
Theodore, of Fen ton, and a host&#13;
of other relatives and friends.&#13;
Funeral services were held Tuesday&#13;
afternoon at Pinckney Cong'l.&#13;
church. Rev. Ripon officiated. #**&#13;
School Notes&#13;
JEJ 11a Fitch returned to school&#13;
after two weeks illness.&#13;
Ruth Clark was absent last week&#13;
on account of sickness.&#13;
LaVeru Fisk visited school&#13;
Monday afternoon.&#13;
Edna Webb visited school Monday&#13;
afternoon,&#13;
About forty couple attended the&#13;
Junior dance last Friday evening.&#13;
M. L. Hiuchey entered the P r i -&#13;
mary department this week.&#13;
LaRue Moran and Raymond&#13;
Fick were school visitors oue day&#13;
this week.&#13;
Notice&#13;
I will pay 15 cents for good fat&#13;
hens delivered at my poultry&#13;
house in Pinckney, Wednesday,&#13;
April 16th.&#13;
If you have any to self, call me&#13;
on Livingston or Lyndilla phones&#13;
or bring them in on the above&#13;
date and receive the above price.&#13;
Am always in the market for&#13;
both poultry and eggs delivered&#13;
at my poultry house and will pay&#13;
cash six days of the week, and&#13;
will pay all the marknt affords at&#13;
all times. adv. E. FARNAM&#13;
J. Bowler aud wife&#13;
Ohio, spent Saturday&#13;
tives in Pinckney.&#13;
of Toledo,&#13;
with rela-&#13;
Ladies coats at Dancer's, $10.&#13;
to «18.&#13;
W. C. Dunning &amp; Son have added&#13;
several new horses to their&#13;
stable and are prepared to ofter&#13;
the public an f.ffrcieut livery service.&#13;
Jurors Drawn&#13;
The following are the Livingston&#13;
county citizen's who have&#13;
been summoned to serve as jurors&#13;
at the 4pril term of court which&#13;
convenes April 14.&#13;
Brighton ;Edwin Hyne,A. Sharp&#13;
Cohoctah;Wm. Line, H. Lewis&#13;
Couway; C. Sherwood, C.Bessert&#13;
Deerfield; T. McKeon, F. Jones&#13;
Genoa; A. Sein, B. Beurmann&#13;
Green Oak; F.Fohey,J.Monahan&#13;
Hamburg; Fred Moon .&#13;
Haudy;G.Gibson,J. McDonough&#13;
Howell; W. Hildebrand,T.Gilks&#13;
Hartland; M.Burgees, J. Devereaux&#13;
Iosco; George Ruttmann&#13;
Marion; Fred Amos&#13;
Oceola; Austin Kimberiy&#13;
Putnam; George Bland&#13;
Tyronne; Clarence Bristol&#13;
Unadilla; F. Resico, H. Sharp&#13;
Teachers Examination&#13;
The Teachers examination will&#13;
be* held at Howell April 24th &amp;&#13;
25th, in the ceutral building. The&#13;
Examination wilt begin promptly&#13;
at 8 o'clock standard time. Every&#13;
teacher and principal of this&#13;
cdunty we*e notified by personal&#13;
letter early last fall that it would&#13;
be impossible for anyone to pass&#13;
either the April or August examinations&#13;
without having done the&#13;
Reading Circle work, as one half&#13;
the grammar questions are based,&#13;
on, WicheV'Great Stories and&#13;
How to tell them" and one half of&#13;
the Geography questions will be&#13;
based on Sutherland's "Teaching&#13;
of Geography." Those expecting&#13;
to take the April examination&#13;
must have their Reading Circle&#13;
work handed in in time to be looked&#13;
over before the examination.&#13;
Maude Benjamin, Com'r&#13;
Notice&#13;
All those interested in the Place*&#13;
way cemetery are requested to be&#13;
at that place Saturday, April 12,&#13;
at 8 o'clock a, m.&#13;
By Order of Com.&#13;
at&#13;
m&#13;
Mens and young mens suits&#13;
Dancer's, Stockbridge.&#13;
G. W. Hendee and wife of Howell&#13;
were in town the first of the&#13;
week.&#13;
* The West Marion singing school&#13;
will hold aclothes-pin social at&#13;
the home of Lyle E. Gorton Friday&#13;
evening April 11. Ladies&#13;
please bring clothes-pins. Everyone&#13;
invited.&#13;
The firm of Swarthout &amp; Donning&#13;
having dissolved by mutual&#13;
consent, all outstanding accounts&#13;
a r e p a y a b l e t o W. C.&#13;
Dunning. A prompt settlement&#13;
is desired.&#13;
Rev. G. W. Mylne spent a few&#13;
days here on his way to Canada&#13;
where be commences his labors&#13;
Sunday next at Evanville,Ontario.&#13;
Mr. Mylne was formerly Congregational&#13;
pastor at Pinckney and&#13;
subsequently at Sainsburg, Mich.&#13;
He has been at Landstone, Minn,&#13;
the past year and resigned there&#13;
aeeept a call to Ontario,&#13;
$he last number on the Citi-&#13;
•'• W ^ W * footnre Coarse, The Euclid&#13;
f \ m i e Q t i a r t e t t e , will be given at&#13;
tie Pinckney opera house Moo*&#13;
day evening April 14. The • program&#13;
will commence promptly at&#13;
7:90, on account of Sharpsteen'a&#13;
Concert and Comedy Co., whose&#13;
show will start immediately after] wonder&#13;
and if free of charge.&#13;
For Sale or Rent&#13;
Good store building on Main&#13;
street and house and lot on Putnam&#13;
street, -, 15t3&#13;
W. E. Murphy, Pinckney&#13;
DO MOT FORGET&#13;
I T H A T Murphy &amp; Jackson&#13;
m . A-RIS. HEADQUARTERS l^OR.&#13;
Staple Dry Goods, Shoes, Groceries,&#13;
Candies and Cigars* - Peterman's Bread&#13;
Bargains to be Poilni 8 Dap Oift of the Week *J at Oifr Store&#13;
New Goods Arriving Daily&#13;
A Pew Specials Por Saturday, A p r i l 12:&#13;
§&#13;
25 lbs. Sugar $1.17&#13;
5 pkgs. Corn Flakes 2 5 c&#13;
8 bars Lenox Soap 25c&#13;
6 0 prs. Mens Overalls&#13;
Per Pair 3 9 c&#13;
36 in. Bleached Cotton&#13;
10c values at 8%c&#13;
Apron Ginghams 7c&#13;
*&#13;
Big Values in Ribbons&#13;
10c per yd.&#13;
AS&#13;
&lt;*v *•*&#13;
For cyclone insurance consult&#13;
Monks Bros.&#13;
Bev. Jos. Coyle was in Detroit&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
A. M. Roche has sold his honse&#13;
on Unadilla St. to Moses Lyons.&#13;
Rev. W. H. Ripon was a Jackson&#13;
VIM tor last Thnrsday.&#13;
Mrs. F. K. Shackleton wishes&#13;
to express her heartfelt thanks to&#13;
the many friends who remembered&#13;
her with post cards aud flowers&#13;
sent her recently. .&#13;
Tbe Livingston county board of&#13;
supervisors stands 10 republicans,&#13;
5 democrats and 1 progressive,&#13;
Genoa being doabtful. A, D.&#13;
Thompson was elected supervisor&#13;
of Howell.&#13;
The Department of Agriculture&#13;
has just issued a report showing&#13;
the average farm wages to be&#13;
¢20.81 including , board for farm&#13;
labor by the month and $1.14 for&#13;
day labor, except during the barvest.&#13;
According t o this report&#13;
some parts of the country must&#13;
have had a very low wage to&#13;
bring it to so low an average. No&#13;
farmer in Michigan is able to s e -&#13;
cure help at such prices.&#13;
There's a smudge in the garden,&#13;
a smoke in the air; a smell combined&#13;
of bnrnt leather and hair.&#13;
There's a girl on the lawn with a&#13;
rake iu hand; there's, woe and disall&#13;
over the land. There's carpets&#13;
to beat and rags to shake; enough&#13;
of such work to make a man&#13;
quake. There's stoves to be mov~&#13;
ed and carpets to-put down, no&#13;
a man -wants to leave&#13;
town.&#13;
MONDAY, APRIL 14th, 1913&#13;
Opera House, Pinckney, One Week&#13;
SHARPSTEENS COMEDY AND CONCERT CO.&#13;
Bigger And Better Than E v e r&#13;
A MAN DFKTSmiT&#13;
Is among you. He has more surprise for you than&#13;
any other man ever in town before. Go and see for&#13;
yourself. A surprise every night. Don't miss it.&#13;
Money is no object. I stand the expense. Have also&#13;
a refined, clean entertainment, catering to ladies and&#13;
gentlemen. Be present on the opening night—two&#13;
hours of solid fun. Farce-comedy show. Vaudeville&#13;
4 . .&#13;
between acts. v ^ v&#13;
M O N D A Y N I G H T F R B B -'•-o&#13;
Sable&#13;
Lorcha&#13;
BT&#13;
Horace&#13;
(Copyright, 1S12, • . 0. MeOlarg * Cm.)&#13;
8YNOP8I3.&#13;
Robert Cameron, capitalist, consults&#13;
Philip Clyde, newspaper publisher, regarding&#13;
anonymous threatening1 letters ha&#13;
has received. The first promises a sample&#13;
of the writer's power on a certain day.&#13;
On that day the head Is mysteriously cut&#13;
from a portrait of Cameron while the latter&#13;
Is In the room. While visiting Cameron&#13;
In his dressing- room a Nell Gwynne&#13;
mirror Is mysteriously shattered. Cameron&#13;
becomes seriously ill as &amp; result of the&#13;
shock. The third letter appears mysteriously&#13;
on Cameron's sick bed. It make*&#13;
direct threats against the life of Cameron.&#13;
Clyde tells Cameron the envelope was&#13;
empty. He tells Evelyn everything and&#13;
plans to take Cameron on a yacht trip.&#13;
The yacht picks up a fisherman found&#13;
drifting helplessly in a boat. He gives&#13;
the name of Johnson. Cameron disappears&#13;
from yacht while Clyde's back Is&#13;
turned. A fruitless search fs made for a&#13;
motor boat seen by the captain Just before&#13;
Cameron disappeared. Johnson !•&lt; allowed&#13;
to go after being closely questioned.&#13;
Evelyn takes the letters to an expert In&#13;
Chinese literature, who pronounces them&#13;
of Chinese origin. Clyde seeks assistance&#13;
from a Chinese fellow college student&#13;
who recommends him to Tup Sing, most&#13;
prominent Chinaman in New York. Clyde froes to meet Yup Sing, sees Johnson, atempts&#13;
to follow him, falls Into a basement,&#13;
sprains his ankle and becomes unconscious.&#13;
Clyde is found by Miss Clement,&#13;
a missionary among the Chinese. He&#13;
is sick several days as a result of InhaJ:&#13;
Ing charcoal fumes. Evelyn tells Clyde&#13;
of a peculiarly acting anesthetic which&#13;
renders a person temporarily unconscious.&#13;
Murphy is discovered to have mysterious&#13;
relations with the Chinese. Miss Clement&#13;
promises to get information afeout Cameron.&#13;
Slump In Crystal Consolidated, of&#13;
which Cameron Is the head, is caused by&#13;
a rumor of Cameron's Illness. Clyde finds&#13;
Cameron on Fifth avenue !n a dased and&#13;
emaciated condition and takes him home.&#13;
Cameron awakes from a long sleep-.-and&#13;
speaks in a strange tongue. Evelyn declares&#13;
the man Is not her uncle.. dsvelyri&#13;
and Clyde call on Miss Clement for promised&#13;
information and find that the Chinaman&#13;
who was to give it haw Just been&#13;
murdered. Miss Clement gives Clyde a&#13;
note, arking him to read it after he&#13;
leavps the mission and then destroy i t&#13;
Tt tells of the abduction of a white man&#13;
by Chinese who shipped him back to&#13;
China. The man is accused of the crime&#13;
of "SalHe I«orcha" In which 100 Chinamen&#13;
were killed. The appearance In New York&#13;
of the man they supposed tbey had shipped&#13;
to China throws consternation Into&#13;
the Chinese. The brougham in which&#13;
Clyde and Evelyn are riding in held up&#13;
by an armed man. Clyde Is seised by&#13;
Murphy and a fight ensues. . BvelyJa send&#13;
Clyde are rescued by the police and return&#13;
home. They And Yup Wnjrjang the&#13;
Chinese consul awaiting them, xup tells&#13;
Clyde the story of the crime of the "Sable&#13;
Lorcha," in which ¢7 Chinamen were&#13;
deliberately sent to their death by one&#13;
Donald M'Nlsh. whom they declare is&#13;
Cameron. They declare that M'Nlsh can&#13;
be identified by a tattoo mark on his arm.&#13;
Clyde declares that Cameron has no such&#13;
mark. The nurse 1« called In and describes&#13;
a tattoo mark on his patient's&#13;
arm. Clyde goes to investigate and&#13;
finds the patient attempting to hide a letter.&#13;
It is addressed to Donald M'Nlsh.&#13;
The letter Is from the man's mother In&#13;
Scotland and Identifies the patient as&#13;
M'Nlsh. Confronted by the sole survivor&#13;
of the 'Sable Lorcha"—who. It develops.&#13;
Is Soy, a half-breed Chinaman, recognised&#13;
by Clyde as Johnson, the fisherman—&#13;
M'Nlsh shoots him and kills himself. Miss&#13;
Clement gets the whole story from Boy&#13;
before he dies. Murphy, whose right&#13;
name is Moran. had been a partner of&#13;
M'Nlsh In the nefarious Chinese trade and&#13;
later became his most relentless pursuer.&#13;
He was the author of the threatening letters.&#13;
8oy was responsible for the mysterious&#13;
happenings at Cameron's home by&#13;
the aid of the ether of Invisibility. Cnm-»&#13;
eron was drugged and shipped as a member&#13;
of the crew of a tramp steamer bound&#13;
for Hongkong.&#13;
CHAPTER XXVII.—Continued. ,.&#13;
So far as I could judge, the Glamor*&#13;
ganshire would call at Algiers In a&#13;
few days; and for a while I considered&#13;
the advisability of communicating&#13;
with the United States Consul at that&#13;
port, through the State Department at&#13;
Washington. But a knowledge of tbe&#13;
tortuous involutions of official red tape&#13;
deterred me. After all, I believed&#13;
that if Cameron was to be rescued&#13;
from the gruelling slavery of servitude&#13;
on this British freighter, the work&#13;
must not be intrusted to tbe personally&#13;
disinterested.&#13;
Thereupon I consulted calendars,&#13;
steamer schedules, and Continental&#13;
time-tables. By tbe fast transatlantic&#13;
liner sailing on the morrow, I coald&#13;
make Paris in six days. Forty-eight&#13;
hours later I could be in Brlndisi. If&#13;
good fortune followed, less than four&#13;
days more would land me at Port Said.:&#13;
It was now Monday, November 28.&#13;
Twelve days hence would be December&#13;
Sth, and the Glamorganshire, her&#13;
agents bad told me, could not possibly&#13;
reach there before December 6th. Tbe&#13;
margin waa not wide, but It seemed to&#13;
me sufficient, and the thought of fur&#13;
ther inaction, now that tbe trail lay&#13;
bare, was nothing less than unendurable&#13;
torment.&#13;
Wisdom, I suppose, would have dictated&#13;
the advisability of securing soma&#13;
badge of authority from my own government&#13;
before setting forth on a mission&#13;
involving, so delicate a point of&#13;
international maritime law at that&#13;
mbich was here embraced; but the&#13;
siring of time waa wKh me, just then,&#13;
tbe paramount c6utideratlotj;'Tbe lota&#13;
of a day meant the possible missing&#13;
not only of connections, but of the&#13;
main objeet of my journey; and so,&#13;
armed with nothing more potent than&#13;
good health, strong determination, and&#13;
a well-filled puree I boarded the Kronprins&#13;
Wtlheim and started on, my diagonal&#13;
race to bead off a quarry which&#13;
already had twenty-five days' start of&#13;
me.&#13;
Speed being all-Important, my wish&#13;
was to travel alone and unencumbered,&#13;
but at the last moment I was&#13;
persuaded to consent to the company&#13;
of both Evelyn Grayson and Dr. Addison.&#13;
Realising the brave, unfaltering&#13;
assistance watch the young woman&#13;
had afforded me from the first, I could&#13;
hardly refuse to gratify her wish to be&#13;
preeent at what we both hoped would&#13;
be tbe victorious end. Moreover, the&#13;
thought of absence from her for a&#13;
month at least, and probably much&#13;
longer, was far from the most pleasant&#13;
contemplation; my yielding, therefore,&#13;
waa not altogether unselfish.&#13;
Dr. Addison's case was different At&#13;
the last moment he decided to go&#13;
abroad by the same ship; and, on the&#13;
way over, touched by his contrition&#13;
and his almoat pathetic desire to&#13;
make amends to his quondam friend&#13;
at the earliest possible minute, I myself&#13;
invited him to go with us the rest&#13;
of tbo wsy.&#13;
Evelyn had proposed that Mrs. Lancaster&#13;
should also be included in tbe&#13;
Party, but this I would not hear of. If,&#13;
for propriety's sake, another presence&#13;
was necessary, her maid, and. ultimately,&#13;
Dr. Addison, afforded all the&#13;
security the conventions could demand.&#13;
The fever of haste waa upon all of&#13;
ua from the start Th* time on shipboard,&#13;
in spite of qur, common subject&#13;
of converse dragged eternally.&#13;
Should we reach Cherbourg in time&#13;
to connect with the P. ft. O. Express&#13;
at Paris r that was the one constantly&#13;
recurring question, to be speculated&#13;
upon with varying degrees of hope and&#13;
despair.&#13;
As good fortune would have It, we&#13;
made the train with fifteen minutes to&#13;
spare, and the run to Brlndisi was accomplished&#13;
without accident or unseemly&#13;
delay.&#13;
Here, however, we were compelled&#13;
to wait six hours. The steamer was&#13;
late, owing to some seismic disturbance&#13;
off the coast of Malta, and fear&#13;
of encountering new and necessarily&#13;
uncharted volcanta islands, bad demanded&#13;
slow and cautious sailing.&#13;
However sinister bad been the game&#13;
Fate played with us in the earlier&#13;
stages of our quest, the favor of its&#13;
present mood could not be gainsaid.&#13;
That we were now reasonably sure of&#13;
reaching Port Said in advance of the&#13;
Glamorganshire was in itself a welcome&#13;
relief from trying anxiety; but&#13;
that waa only a small part of the&#13;
banquet of good things provided for&#13;
us.&#13;
I was still exercised in a measure&#13;
over the steps which must be taken to&#13;
secure Cameron's release. Without&#13;
proper Introduction to the authorities,&#13;
it was becoming more and more a&#13;
question in my mind whether, after&#13;
all, I should be able to accomplish my&#13;
end In the brief time to which I was&#13;
restricted.&#13;
With this fell possibility of failure&#13;
dinging In my reflections, I was striding&#13;
the white deck of the P. and O.&#13;
steamer, in the early morning followlng&#13;
tbe night of our departure from&#13;
Brlndisi, when a hand, dropped heavily&#13;
on my shoulder, spun me round to&#13;
face a laughing, sun-browned, young&#13;
Englishman in white flannels.&#13;
For just a moment I waa literally,&#13;
as well as figuratively, taken aback,&#13;
for the tone of the ringing voice which&#13;
greeted me carried me five years at&#13;
least Into the past, when Lionel Hartley&#13;
and I had ridden to bounds together&#13;
at Melton Mowbray, while fellow.&#13;
guests at a house-party in the&#13;
neighborhood. &lt;&#13;
"You bally Yankee!" he was shouting.&#13;
'Taney running Into you in this&#13;
fashion! I'm jolly glad to see you,&#13;
old chap!M&#13;
Though my delight at seeing him&#13;
was at that moment tempered by absorbing&#13;
interest In my mission, ft rose&#13;
a few minutes later to unadulterated&#13;
ecstasy, whan I discovered that he was&#13;
stationed at Port Said, and occupied&#13;
what seemed to me just then one of&#13;
the most important posts In the British&#13;
Foreign Service—secretary to tbe&#13;
Governor General for tbe Sues Canal.&#13;
"You're going to Cairo. I suppose f&#13;
he hisnrded. ,&#13;
••No/ I replied. Tm. going with&#13;
you, and I shall not let you out of my&#13;
sight, lay friend, until you have proved&#13;
you're something more than a figurebead&#13;
Stuck up in the Egyptian, sand* "&#13;
"If there's any little thing I can do&#13;
—M he began; hut I Interrupted him.&#13;
"There's a very big thing you ean&#13;
do." I corrected. And then I toM htm,&#13;
"What a lark!" be cried, refusing&#13;
to recognise the serious tide at it.&#13;
"Fancy one of your American multimillionaires&#13;
passing coal on a British&#13;
fMtgfcttfV* . . , ^ W&#13;
^Passing coal!** I exetaimed. "What&#13;
rot! . Surely they wouldn't—"&#13;
"Oh, wouldn!t tbeyr he) broke in.&#13;
"That's jus| what they would do. He&#13;
isn't an ebfebodted twnfcn, ts he?&#13;
You can safely^ wager he's an expert*&#13;
•need stoker/or at &amp;m *v trimmer by&#13;
this time.- :;&#13;
"Dent, Hartley, don't," I protested.&#13;
•Wlo*WlBm»^tw«n%o**^.&#13;
-Never mind, old chap," was his re&gt; I "1 should like to see you in your for sgalnst the sudden stillness there&#13;
joinder "There's a good time com- cabin. Captain." Hartley proposed, and j now rang out a weird. paluitast cry;&#13;
ing. We'll have him out and washed when we were closeted there, he eon-1 born of surcharged emotion, *a Cats*&#13;
and dressed and sitting at table with tinned: "There is a report that you expfc casting whaseif forward into my&#13;
us an hour after tbe old tub leu her have amosg your ciMa United 8tatee arms, buriedj^sis face in the angle ot&#13;
anchor drop. And 111 wager you a subject who wM^Mought aboard*&#13;
tenner that there won't be a miss in drugged* and farced id remain aboard&#13;
any part of the programme."&#13;
When, at breakfast, I told Evelyn&#13;
the good news—omitting, of course,&#13;
all reference to the coal-handling suggestion—&#13;
she demanded that I hunt up&#13;
Hartley, at once, and present him.&#13;
Discretion, however, seemed to me In&#13;
this instance, tbe better part of obedience.&#13;
I did hunt Hartley up and I&#13;
did present him, but not until I had allowed&#13;
time for the first flush of Evelyn's&#13;
fervor to cool.&#13;
He was a very good-looking young&#13;
chap; Evelyn was both grateful and&#13;
impulsive, and I—was in love.&#13;
Our landing at Port Said was made&#13;
on the morning of Saturday, the fifth&#13;
of December, and all that day and tho&#13;
next, we waited in more or less constant&#13;
expectancy and a boiling temperature&#13;
for tidings of tbe tardy Glamorganshire.&#13;
Hartley, meanwhile, was a model of&#13;
hospitality, but Port Said is primarily&#13;
a coaling station on the sea*dge of&#13;
the desert, and aside from the concrete&#13;
docks, the ships, the light house/&#13;
and tbe nearly naked Nubians that&#13;
swarmed everywhere, it proved utterly&#13;
lacking in objects of interest&#13;
Sunday night brought some small&#13;
relief from the Intolerable heat, and&#13;
grateful for the respite, all four of our&#13;
little party were early to bed. Gradually&#13;
we had come to believe that our&#13;
waiting was likely to be prolonged.&#13;
Tbe earthquake at Malta having delayed&#13;
one vessel would in all probability&#13;
delay others as well, including that&#13;
which we had come so far to intercept.&#13;
So, utterly worn out by nervous tension&#13;
and tbe fatigue of tbe tropical climate,&#13;
we found rest grateful, and slept&#13;
soundly. Just bow soundly was demonstrated&#13;
when, at an hour after midnight,&#13;
three resounding knocks on my&#13;
hotel chamber door only roused me,&#13;
dully, and left Evelyn and her maid&#13;
and Dr. Addison, who occupied adjacent&#13;
rooms, in deep slumber, totally&#13;
undisturbed.&#13;
With what seemed almost superhuman&#13;
effort, I spurred myself to consciousness&#13;
and struggled up on elbow.&#13;
"Who's there?" I called.&#13;
"Hartley," came the answer. "Open&#13;
the door. I thought you'd died of Port&#13;
Said ennui." And when I had sleepily&#13;
risen and admitted him he went on&#13;
hurriedly. "Make baste, now, old&#13;
chap! The bally freighter baa just&#13;
come in, and I don't propose to lose&#13;
that tenner through dilatory methods&#13;
on your part."&#13;
But I needed no urging. Wide awake&#13;
at his first sentence, I was already&#13;
flinging on my clothes. He still chattered&#13;
on In his chaffing way, but I&#13;
scarcely heard him. Conscious only&#13;
of the murmur of his pleasant, cheery&#13;
English voice/my thoughts were out&#13;
in the night, across the waters of the&#13;
harbor, down in the Inferno of a rusty&#13;
ocean tramp, where a sweating stoker&#13;
was giving battle to despair—a sweating&#13;
stoker who, In far-away America,&#13;
owned a pleasure craft almoat as big&#13;
as the ship whose fires be had been&#13;
feeding for forty days across two seas.&#13;
"How about tbe doctor!" Hartley&#13;
asked, as I slipped my arms Into my&#13;
coat sleeves and snatched a cap from&#13;
a closet peg.&#13;
"It's too late now," was my answer.&#13;
"You should have reminded me.&#13;
I forgot all about him." And It was&#13;
true. I had forgotten everything, except&#13;
the imminence of the rescue and&#13;
the urgency of haste. To one In Cameron's&#13;
plight every fretting minute&#13;
must count a drop of torture.&#13;
Tbe heavens were splendid with&#13;
tropic stars, and a faint breete from&#13;
the sea gently ruffled the spangled&#13;
black harbor waters, aa Hartley's&#13;
launch, guided by. a pilot of experience,&#13;
headed for the twinkling lights&#13;
of tbe recently anchored freighter.&#13;
Silently I sat, with gate straining,&#13;
watching tbe indicated sparks grow&#13;
larger and brighter, moment by moment,&#13;
until at length their gleams reflected&#13;
in the waves, and their hackground&#13;
emerged in a great dark&#13;
shadow, which silhouetted itself&#13;
against the less opaque sky.&#13;
"There she Is!" Hartley cried In enthuslaam,&#13;
as her funnel and masts&#13;
somberly defined themselves shove&#13;
the black of her bull. "We'll be able&#13;
to hall her in another minute."&#13;
Then I heard the voice of our&#13;
helmsman ring Out, and. presently&#13;
there was an answering shout from&#13;
above, and an exchange of greetings,&#13;
succeeded by directions; and the next&#13;
moment, I was following Hartley up&#13;
a swaying rope-ladder to where an&#13;
outheld lantern glowed overhead.&#13;
"Yes, Secretary to tbe Governor&#13;
General," I heard my friend saying, as&#13;
I pat foot op the iron deck. "You're&#13;
Captain Murchison. I suppose.? .&#13;
The captain's affirmative was mors&#13;
than deferential it was obsequious.&#13;
He waa not a tall man, hut broad, rug*&#13;
ged and bearded, with long, powerful,&#13;
gorilla-like amis out of all proportion&#13;
to his statursv I could readily fancy&#13;
him an ugly antagonist Unaided by&#13;
Hartley, I concluded, I should have&#13;
had •mall chance indeed oT suetoas.&#13;
But the tow-horn Briton V reepeet for&#13;
against his will. His government baa&#13;
interested Itself in his behalf, and unless&#13;
he is restored at ones to his&#13;
friends serious complications win undoubtedly&#13;
ensue."&#13;
Tbe captain, despite his respect for&#13;
authority, frowned,&#13;
"There's nothing to that report, sir."&#13;
be said, boldly. T m not shanghaiing&#13;
men in these days, sir. Every mother's&#13;
son I've got on this boat shipped&#13;
for Hong Kong, sir, of his own free)&#13;
will and accord."&#13;
"I dare say you fully believe that.&#13;
Captain Murchison," f was Hartley*&#13;
diplomatic rejoinder, "but this time&#13;
you happen to be mistaken. 1 dost&#13;
suppose you have any objection to our&#13;
Inspecting your crew, have yout Suppose&#13;
you have both the watches piped&#13;
forward, and well settle this little&#13;
business for ourselves. Mr. Clydevhere,&#13;
knows the man."&#13;
Captain Murchison** glanos at me&#13;
waa uudlsgulsedly venomous. Reluctantly&#13;
he rang for bis steward.&#13;
"Send tbe bo'suu here," he directed,&#13;
doggedly,&#13;
"We'll begin at the bottom, Captain,"&#13;
Hartley suggested, when the&#13;
boatswain, cap in hand, stood in the&#13;
doorway. "First, I want to see every&#13;
man Jack you have working in the&#13;
stokehold."&#13;
Although the master gave the necessary&#13;
directions I mistrusted him. Between&#13;
the boatswain and himself I felt&#13;
that there was an understanding&#13;
which required neither, voicing nor&#13;
signal. And as, a little later, we stood&#13;
on tbe forward deck, under the bridge,&#13;
and by the light of a lantern viewed&#13;
one after another of those swarthy,&#13;
grimy laborers who had crowded up&#13;
from below, I was convinced of the&#13;
correctness of my intuition. For Cameron&#13;
was not among them.&#13;
And then a chill fear gripped me.&#13;
Could a man of bla habits and train*&#13;
lng, suddenly called upon to assume)&#13;
such labor, survive Its rigors? He was&#13;
naturally robust but he bad been&#13;
weakened by an Illness. Might he not&#13;
therefore have succumbed to the&#13;
strain, died, and been burled at sea?&#13;
But one consideration sustained me.&#13;
In their cunning cruelty, the Chinese&#13;
who had arranged for bis traneposta-'&#13;
tlon must have stipulated that he be&#13;
delivered In China alive* Otherwise&#13;
their vengeance wosjld not he complete.&#13;
It was not likely that anything&#13;
bad been left to mere chance. The&#13;
probabilities ware &amp;at Murchison&#13;
knew definitely what was required of&#13;
him and waa to be well paid for his&#13;
servjoes. . ': '' ..::^&#13;
Upon his seamed face, how; there'&#13;
was something of a sneer a* our ex&#13;
amination concluded, he said:&#13;
"What next1 Mr. ^aVtteyt'&#13;
But for a moment Hartley, who&#13;
was standing thoughtfully with brow&#13;
contracted, hia lower Up gripped between&#13;
finger and thumb, made no response.&#13;
Before-he spoke hli attitude&#13;
changed. Quickly ho had assumed a&#13;
pose of listening tntentness. Behind&#13;
us, somewhere, -a clamor had arisen.&#13;
Voices, excited, hoarse, fremescent,&#13;
yet muffled by distance, echoed dully.&#13;
"That man, next Captain," he said,&#13;
coolly.. "The man they're try lag to&#13;
keep below."&#13;
It may have been that hit hearing&#13;
was more acute than mine, or It may&#13;
only have been a guess. I don't know.&#13;
But, whichever It was. It hit tha mark.&#13;
It scored s bull's ey* at long range.&#13;
Captain Murchleon's Indifference&#13;
gave way instantly to palpable uneasiness.&#13;
His hands, which had been&#13;
deep in his coat pockets, came out as&#13;
though jerked by springs. One of&#13;
them canted hia cap from his brow to&#13;
his crown and the other clutched agitatedly&#13;
at his heard. And in that moment&#13;
the riot advanced, the voices&#13;
waxed louder and more distinct; scurrying&#13;
feet resounded oh the metal deck,&#13;
I saw the captain start hurriedly&#13;
toward the starboard rail, Intent evidently&#13;
on meeting the rabble which&#13;
was approaching on that side, and I&#13;
saw Hartley boldly block bis way.&#13;
And then, almost at the same instant&#13;
I saw a tall figure with naked torso&#13;
as black and shining as polished ebony&#13;
—black with grime and shining with&#13;
sweat—come , running backward&#13;
around the corner of the deck house.&#13;
Saw it with an iron bar held menacingly&#13;
aloft again** its pressing pursuers;&#13;
and eve* W tho uncertain light&#13;
of the deck toaterne^raeothlnsd It at&#13;
once, by tts«uUtne and tho characteristic&#13;
set of its head upon its shoulders,&#13;
nude to the waist and. collied as&#13;
it was, as tho ftgwro of the man 1&#13;
sought&#13;
"Cameron!" I cried, chokingly, ray&#13;
fast-beating heart crowding my utteranoe.&#13;
And all unmindful of the dirt&#13;
whleh covered him t flung my arms&#13;
about his waist from behind; "Cameron!&#13;
Cameron! Thank God! Thank&#13;
God!* *-'" * • - *?e-&#13;
! beards the Iron bay drop resoundingly&#13;
to- the dectu-j Jstftrd Hartley's&#13;
votes raised la SJtsjsp, strident staoeaon&#13;
tad * hoard the^reoedinc shwflte&#13;
of feet as tboee-who j*d a«rs*sd now&#13;
my neck and shoulder. *&#13;
;w&#13;
tacked away^ Th^rs followed then&#13;
official authority wal evidently strong nwe*sni,of sUtnea, white the body I&#13;
lb him. and I felt that if Cameron was had held twisted out of my arms, an*&#13;
aboard we should be able to offset hit having released ltsehf.&#13;
rsscue with a minimum--esVeflBs**«'&lt;}»**•* «*• a moms»i of&#13;
'..&#13;
••&amp;. d&gt;MArTER xxvni.&#13;
A Final Problem.&#13;
It is doubtful whether in all Egypt,&#13;
there was ever such another period of&#13;
joyous thanksgiving aa that wBTch fol» J&#13;
lowed tbe bringing of Cameron to tfcd&#13;
little hotel in Port Said. I am In- .&#13;
dined to question, too, whether in tbe# space of a single waking day four persons&#13;
ever talked more, or with mom&#13;
mutual interest, than did the four of&#13;
us there gathered. The heat, the dies,&#13;
the poor food, and the miserable accomodations,&#13;
generally, were not&#13;
merely gladly tolerated, but absolutely&#13;
disregarded. In the exuberance of our&#13;
rejoicing, annoyances which badloomed&#13;
large on the preceding day&#13;
dwindled to the lmperoeivable; and&#13;
from early morning until lata night experiences&#13;
were exchanged, adventures&#13;
told and speculations Indulged in.&#13;
Washed, scrubbed, shaved, shot*&#13;
and clad in raiment put ct hia disposal&#13;
by the Indefatigable Hartley, Caateros&gt;&lt;&#13;
appeared, wonderfully well-looking. Indeed&#13;
I was amazed by bis appearance&#13;
and by his condition. I bad feared td&#13;
find him a mental and physical ruin.&#13;
I had feared even for his life. And&#13;
he had come to us, if we might judge&#13;
by outward seeming, stronger, mons&#13;
robust, less nervously relaxed than&#13;
when he disappeared.&#13;
"At first," he told us, as we sat at&#13;
breakfast In a little upper room of tbe&#13;
hotel, Evelyn close on his right. Dr.&#13;
Addison at his left, and I opposite&#13;
him, "I suppose I did suffer, whenever&#13;
I was conscious, which, fortunately*, I&#13;
think, was comparatively seldom.&#13;
They dosed me almost continuously&#13;
with what I believe to have been some&#13;
attribute of opium, so that even in my&#13;
waking moments I was not wholly normal.&#13;
In this way, of course, I lost all&#13;
count of time. And so, too, I am unable&#13;
to give events in sequence. My&#13;
first conscious moment after being on&#13;
the deck of the Sibylla found mo&#13;
strapped In a narrow berth on a rapid,&#13;
but rather rough-riding craft of apparently&#13;
much smaller dimension^Jhaa&#13;
tbe yacht, and with a Chinese boy sitting&#13;
beside me. You can fancy my&#13;
startled amazement at the sudden&#13;
transition. In vain I asked questions.&#13;
In vam I struggled to rise. Then I&#13;
shouted, and the Chinese boy lighted&#13;
what appeared to be an ordinary jossstick&#13;
on a stand at the head of my&#13;
berth, and withdrew from the tiny&#13;
cabin. Insensibility followed quickly&#13;
After that I have a vague, dreamy&#13;
recollection of eating something with&#13;
a strange, spicy flavor, which seemed&#13;
only to add to my stupor. Once I ^&#13;
dreamed—at least I think It must bava&#13;
been a dream—that I was In a dark&#13;
box, so cramped that my bones ached, ,&#13;
and that far away above me were little&#13;
holes through which the light&#13;
came In luminous fan-like rays that&#13;
glowed against the black."&#13;
"I'm inclined to think It Was no&#13;
dream," I put In, recalling the newspaper&#13;
story I had read in my broker's&#13;
offlos, in Wall street. "The probabilities&#13;
are that you were shipped in&#13;
that box from Fall River to New York,&#13;
and a certain Influential Chinaman,&#13;
called Yup Sing, knew all about it"&#13;
"It's quite possible." Cameron went&#13;
on. "I know that it was very difficult&#13;
to distinguish/In those days, between&#13;
dreams and realities. Eventually, however,&#13;
I awoke to find myself on the&#13;
Glamorganshire, quartered with the&#13;
men in tbe forecastle, a beard well&#13;
grown and my clothes the coarsest&#13;
sort of mariner's outfit For a while&#13;
I was far too ill for labor. Tbe reaction&#13;
from the drugs which had been .&#13;
administered caused me the keenest&#13;
suffering. But, gradually, I cpme&#13;
about, and was set to work with paint&#13;
pot and brush. The humanity shown&#13;
me at this time was surprising. I&#13;
couldn't comprehend it. But I realized&#13;
eventually that my strength was being&#13;
fostered for future tortnent."&#13;
(TO BB CONTINXraD.)&#13;
Orsat Painter's 8tudlo.&#13;
Cecilia Beaux, whom most people&#13;
credit with being the best known&#13;
woman portrait painter in; the world,&#13;
has built herself a remarkable house&#13;
at Gloucester, Mass. It's such a wonderful&#13;
house that people write it up&#13;
and print pictures oT it and of ths&#13;
equally interesting garden Which runs&#13;
down to the sea. And yet no one ever&#13;
seems to think of writing up an&#13;
equally important place. Miss Beaux's&#13;
city atudlo. She paints all winter, &lt;-*&gt;&#13;
long In a high place overlooking Gramercy&#13;
park. Having the top apartment,&#13;
her view is unobstructed. There&#13;
is no.ocean to be sure, but it Is a&#13;
splendid studio.—New York Press.&#13;
T » w&#13;
Ths Lost Is Found.&#13;
When you lose a thing It Is usually&#13;
gone for good—especially if tt 1» worth&#13;
much. A man who lives in a town&#13;
in Pennsylvania lost, a plain gold ring:&#13;
tt years ago. His name was engraved&#13;
inside tt, but no one ever brought i t&#13;
back to him. So he jsve It upland r&#13;
forgot it But last month it waa at- •;&#13;
turned to him. A neighbor found it *&#13;
in his pigeon loft It is supposed that' *&#13;
_ a plgw.found the ahiotng bit an* o*r •'&#13;
turned an* rted it to'the loft, where it lay unno-&#13;
•UencVoairjdoed until a — *&#13;
1&#13;
!&#13;
I mont*. ago.&#13;
u\&gt;&#13;
I K&#13;
i&#13;
;&#13;
*?..&#13;
•« c' -.-vA.-. *&#13;
s&#13;
A HIDDEN DANDER&#13;
J t it i dutj of&#13;
tha ajoaejs to iM&#13;
the blood of uric&#13;
add, an Irritating&#13;
poiaon that la coastaatly&#13;
forming inaide&#13;
Whan tho aid-&#13;
•07a foil* uric add&#13;
oxuaoa rheumatic&#13;
attack*, headaches,&#13;
durstaess, grav*el,&#13;
urinary troubles,&#13;
weak eye*, dropsy&#13;
or heart disease,&#13;
Doan'a Kidney&#13;
Wis help tho kidney*&#13;
fight off uric&#13;
add—bringing new . _&#13;
strength to weak kidney* and rottef&#13;
from backache and urinary Ule,&#13;
A n Issdlasa* C&#13;
SMocMpTossTy, and I have&#13;
Get D«4k'i at any State. 10a a Baa DOAN'S SWlf*&#13;
1&#13;
Constipation&#13;
Vanishes Forever&#13;
Prompt ReUef—Pennanaat Curt&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE "&#13;
UVER PILLS never&#13;
faU. Purdyvegetabio—&#13;
act sorely&#13;
out gently on&#13;
tho kW.&#13;
Stop after&#13;
dlnaor dla*&#13;
•BjaajieeQwwU&#13;
tape** the compleakm, brighten the eye*.&#13;
WML POL. SMALL DOSE, SMALL FsUCat&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
Sherthand Typewriter.&#13;
A now machine, called the ateno*&#13;
typo, has been invented, which enable*&#13;
the shorthand writer to get&#13;
from 400 to 600 words a minute upon&#13;
paper in an absolutely correct and&#13;
accurate form. The basis of opera*&#13;
Ing a machine Is phonetic spelling. It&#13;
Is but a shorthand typewriter. While&#13;
the work done is virtually the same a*&#13;
done by shorthand it has the advantage&#13;
of being recorded in plain En*?&#13;
Ush characters.&#13;
SHOWING HIM UP.&#13;
That ia Duke de Bluffer. He sty*&#13;
STerythlng bo gate to O. *V&#13;
n thought It was 0. T,"&#13;
*0. T.r&#13;
Too)! ipattoV*&#13;
Solves the&#13;
Breakfast&#13;
Problem&#13;
A bowl of crop, tweet&#13;
Post&#13;
* .,-. Toasties&#13;
mikes a most delicious&#13;
meeL&#13;
+&#13;
These crinkly bits of&#13;
toasted white com* ready&#13;
to serve direct from pack*&#13;
age, m i tempting break*&#13;
fast whan served with&#13;
cieam or mm* oc tnat'&#13;
Urn Teastiea Amur is&#13;
^ 4 , pleasant surpdsa at list;&#13;
tkeo a bappy. healthful&#13;
t*i&#13;
»,'&#13;
!!•*• Me^apry 1 fagtri*&#13;
: r • . *&gt;&lt;&lt;&#13;
J l * . Ji-n/1 1 i l . . , ^.¾.-. feia "1'.&#13;
BALKAN STATES SUBMIT TERMS&#13;
OF PEACE TO EUROPEAN&#13;
POWERS.&#13;
VICTORS ADOPT AN INDEPENDENT&#13;
POLICY.&#13;
Seam to Wleh War Prolonged Until&#13;
Scutari la Capture* by Monte**&#13;
egro Nations )n a 011* me.&#13;
2&#13;
The progroas of Balkan affairs to&#13;
giving European diplomacy some oneas?&#13;
moment*. -&#13;
The allies have taken a stiffnecked&#13;
independent attitude and refuse to accept&#13;
orders from the powers. Tho&#13;
question is. if it becomes necessary to&#13;
coerce them, how can that be done.&#13;
The alllea recognise this dilemma&#13;
and realise that the concert of Europe&#13;
la not as harmonious aa a month ago.&#13;
The present policy of the Balkan&#13;
state* is to debate the peace terms&#13;
and continue) the war at least until&#13;
Montenegro baa captured Scutari.&#13;
The smallest kingdom in Europe&#13;
continue* to defy tho six great powers.&#13;
King Ntcboiaa talks freely to interviewers,&#13;
declaring that he will take&#13;
and keep the town, which he considers&#13;
necessary to the prosperity of hi*&#13;
kingdom.&#13;
T%a allies have submitted to the&#13;
powers their formal reply to the suggested&#13;
basis for peace negotiation*&#13;
with Turkey.&#13;
The reply purports to be an acceptance&#13;
of the mediation conditions, but&#13;
the acceptance is subject to reservat.&#13;
tone which practically repudiate the&#13;
proposed terms,&#13;
To Debate New Constitution&#13;
Arraagemottta wore completed at&#13;
Columbus, Ohio, for a series of Joint&#13;
debate* to bo delivered from coast to&#13;
coast neat fail between Rer. Herbert&#13;
S. Bigalow of Otacioeatl, president of&#13;
Ohio's feces* constitutional convention,&#13;
aad former Governor Frank&#13;
Hanly of Indiana, on the question: MR6*oWed, thai the federal const!- SUoa to outgrowti and1 obselete and&#13;
ouli be amended or altered * in Its,&#13;
fundamental*, or a new one substitute&#13;
aAmaUY| ajie\ former (fey^rnor Hanly&#13;
the n e g a t e side of ,tbe question.&#13;
Labor Leadera are Liberated&#13;
William D. Haywood, leader of the&#13;
International Workers of the WorW,&#13;
and Adolph I*sslc strike leader, walked&#13;
out of t^a supreme oourt house at&#13;
Patience, N. ^., free men. He and&#13;
his comrade bad been liberated from&#13;
the charge of unlawful assembly, for&#13;
which more than S00 strikers are now&#13;
awaiting trial At the eight of tbeir&#13;
leadera a vaat throng of striker* set&#13;
up a mighty shout; The Judge bold&#13;
that in thin country people have a&#13;
right to gather to discuss their grievance*&#13;
with certain restriction*, whet*&#13;
her these grievance* gave any basis or&#13;
not*&#13;
Two killed in B. and O, Wreck ~&#13;
Two men were killed, four scalded,&#13;
two of them severely, and five others&#13;
injured whoa eaatbeund pa**enger*&#13;
train No. S, on tho Baltimore a Ohio&#13;
railroad, ran through aa open switck&#13;
at North Baltimore, Ohio, and the&#13;
engme torn loose from the root of tho&#13;
train, crashed through the depot at&#13;
HoytvUle, four miles west&#13;
Fireman Jackson waa killed instant*&#13;
ly. Grant Mason Ike other dead mag,&#13;
waa in the depot waiting room. Hto&#13;
entire body was scalded by escaping&#13;
180,600,000 Parcels Handled.&#13;
Mors than IIO.OOOJKW parcels post&#13;
package* wore mailed during the first&#13;
throe months the ayatem waa in opera*&#13;
tkw. aooordlng to comaotation* aa*&#13;
nnoonoed by postai expert*, and based&#13;
on reports from the H largest po*t&gt;&#13;
oflee*. Approximately IS per coat&#13;
mors busismss waer handler in March&#13;
than in January. Chicago lead* all&#13;
other cities, 1.1*6.744 parcels being&#13;
handled in two months; Now Tort&#13;
handled 1,171,171, and Boston l,tS7,-&#13;
SIS.&#13;
Would Drtve Out Lean Sharks&#13;
Stoty fees** of bfc Chiosgo Jaduet&gt;&#13;
tint ontsriilssi, essgdaytaganr aggrogats&#13;
of l«s\SSt foresee, navs subeoribed&#13;
funds wlbsreby they Oknoot to drtvw&#13;
Steal tssa ^ • s r t s " Out ot bestoos*.&#13;
The sokinis to the stmsto one of&#13;
sjafihltshtis a lean dasnnT of thatr nun&#13;
^BS*S»^^S^^B^^*^»^*&gt;^PBSBBSS^PS; w w w^w^^e^a ^sssy^'we^'*'0y, w * ^SBJBW**PSBB&gt; ^*r ^w a w and for ikto mrtesi flfrits&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
Live a$ook, Grain and General Farm&#13;
Produce.&#13;
Detroit-—Cattle: Receipts, 745; market&#13;
steady; best steers and heffec*i$S&#13;
OPS 26; steers and heifers, 1,000 to 1,-&#13;
200, |7 50(96; do 800 to 1.000, «707 SO;&#13;
do that are fat 500 to 700 I6@7; choice&#13;
fat cows, 96t$6 60; good fat cows, 15 @&#13;
5 SO; common cows, S4£0.&amp;)4 75; canaera,&#13;
S3 76©4 25; choice heavy bulla,&#13;
IS 50 9 7 ; fair to good bologna bulls,&#13;
95 75OS 26; stock bulls, S595 50:&#13;
choice feeding steers S00 to 1,000,17©&#13;
7 60; fair feeding steers, 800 to 1,000,&#13;
IS OS 75; choice stockers 500 to 700,&#13;
1*5007; fair stockers, 600 to 700,15 60&#13;
OS; stock heifers, 9506 50; milker*,&#13;
large, young, medium age, 950 065;&#13;
oomon milkerfv|35045. Veal calves:&#13;
Receipt*, 829; market steady, bestSlO&#13;
OU; others 9608 SO; milch cows and&#13;
springers steady. Sheep and lambs:&#13;
Receipts, 10015c lower; beBt lambs,&#13;
|8 65; fair to good lambs, 8808 50;&#13;
light to common lambs, 9707 50;&#13;
yearlings, 97 50®8; fair to good sheep,&#13;
96 2608 75; cull* and common, 94 60&#13;
0 5 50. Hogs: Receipts, 2,398; market&#13;
for pig* 15025c higher; other grades&#13;
6c higher; light to good butchers, 99 60&#13;
pigs, 99 6609 75; mixed, 99 60; stags&#13;
one-third off.&#13;
tkstrownj&#13;
jsaasew BwlPwJSmr I&#13;
,.'*•*•• f\m. 4&#13;
EAST BUFFALO—Receipt* of cattle&#13;
145 cars; market 10O15c lower2&#13;
be*4 1,360 to 1,600-lb steers, 98.650&#13;
8.95; good to prime 1,200 to 1,300-lb&#13;
steers, 68.6008.60; good to prime 1,-&#13;
100 to 1,200-lb steers, 9808.26; coarse,&#13;
plainish 1,100 to 1,200-lb steers 97.250&#13;
7.76; medium butchers steers, 1,000 to&#13;
1,100 lbs, 97.2607.76; butchers steers,&#13;
500 to 1,000 lbs, 9707.60; light butcher&#13;
steers, 98-80O7.25; best fat cows,&#13;
9508; butcher cow*, |4.25©4.75; cut*&#13;
tor*, 9404.65; trimmers, 93.50©3.76f&#13;
best fat heifers, 97.75^8.25; medium&#13;
butcher heifers, 98-5007; light butcher&#13;
heifers, 9608.25; stock heifers, 95.25©&#13;
6; best feeding steers, 6707.26; light&#13;
common stockers, 86 ©6.25; prime export&#13;
bulls, 9707.25; best butcher bull*,&#13;
96.60O7; bologna bulls, 95,5506.26;&#13;
stock bulls, 85 ©5.50; host milkers and&#13;
springer*, 966 ©80; common to fair&#13;
kind do, 940O50. Hogs: Receipts, 80&#13;
cars; market opened 9t per hundred&#13;
lower, closed steady; heavy, 99.76©&#13;
9J0; yorkers, 99.85© 10; pigs, 89.90©&#13;
10; rough, 88.50©8,75. Sheep and&#13;
lambs; Receipts, 70 cars; market low*&#13;
or; top lambs, 98.90®9; culls to fair,&#13;
S7©8.75; yearlings, 88©8.25; wethers,&#13;
87©7.25f ewes, 1608,75. Calves, 850&#13;
ILSo,&#13;
ORArNS, ETC.&#13;
Wheat—Cash Nov 2red, 91 08 3-4;&#13;
May opened with an advance of l-4q&#13;
at 91 09 and advanced to 81 09 1-4(&#13;
July opened at S3 l-4e and advanced to&#13;
53 l*8e; September opened at 93 14e&#13;
and advanced to 93 l*2c; No. 1 white*&#13;
II OS 3 4.&#13;
Com—Cask No. 3, 58 l-2c; No. 8&#13;
yellow, 1 car at 54c I at 64 «Hc, 6 at&#13;
54 V2e; No. 4 yellow 53c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 36 l-2c; No. 3 white&#13;
36 1-lc; No. 4,1 ear at 84 l-2c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 60c.&#13;
Bsans—Immediate and prompt ship*&#13;
ment, H 80; May, 9} 95. s&#13;
Clpverseed—Prims spot, 50 bags at&#13;
911 10; sample, 18 bags at 111 50, 14&#13;
at 110 26, 10 at 99 SO; prime alsike,&#13;
94» 60 jaample atoine, 6 bags at 91150,&#13;
6 at 110 60.&#13;
Timothy Seed—Prime spot ,60 bags&#13;
at 91 ^70,&#13;
Flour—In onotelght paper sacks, per&#13;
196 pounds, jobbing lots: feat patent,&#13;
|6 60; second patent, 85 20; straight,&#13;
9* 90; spring patent; 15 10; rye, 84 60&#13;
per bbl&#13;
Feed—In 100.1b sacks, Jobbing lotas&#13;
Bran, 823; coarse middling*, 988; lino&#13;
middlings, 987; cracked corn and&#13;
coarse oorn-meal, 122 60; corn and&#13;
oat ebop, |28 per ton.&#13;
GENERAL MARKETS&#13;
Apples—Baldwin, 83 50©3 76; Green*&#13;
ing, 98 6903 76; Spy, |3 75©3: steels&#13;
Red, 83 ©8 50; common, 75o©91 60 per&#13;
bbl.&#13;
Disssed Hogs—Light, 10©10 l-2o&#13;
heavy, 8©9c par lb,&#13;
8woet Potatoes—KUn-dried Jerseys,&#13;
11 75 per crate.&#13;
Dressed Calves—Choice, 12©13c;&#13;
fancy, 14 l-2©15c per lb.&#13;
Tomatoes—Hothouse, 15©20c per lb&#13;
Florida, |2 75 ©3 per crate.&#13;
Potatoes Michigan, ear lota in&#13;
sacks, 48045c; store lots, 45©50o&#13;
per bu,&#13;
Honey—Choice to fancy white comb,&#13;
18080c; amber, 14© 16c; extracted;&#13;
7©Sc pot lb&#13;
Uve PoiUtry—Bprlng chickens 171-t&#13;
©18c; hone, 17 13©18c; No, 2 kens,&#13;
11012c; old roostsrs, lOOUc; to&gt;&#13;
keys, 17©20c; goose, 12©14c; duck*,&#13;
16SK7e per la,&#13;
Ha#-Cark&gt;L No* timothy, 13 50O14;&#13;
Nav 3 timothy, 8U©Uj light mtoed,&#13;
IIS 60O18; No. 1 mixed, 311013; rye&#13;
straw, 98018; wheat sad oat straw,&#13;
yw#rlwwtswt••'•i^B•&gt;',&gt;,••&#13;
CHARGE ON fHE COMMUNITY&#13;
Care of Those Afflleted With TUiserculosls&#13;
Plainly a Drag on the&#13;
General Welfare,&#13;
Br. H. L. Barnes, superintendent Of&#13;
the Rhode Island state aanltarinm.&#13;
haa recently demonstrated by acme&#13;
interesting studio* of patients discharged&#13;
aa "apparently cured" from&#13;
that institution, that a sanatorium is&#13;
a sound investment for any state or&#13;
city. The gross earnings of 170 axpatients&#13;
obtained in 1911 amounted to&#13;
9102,752, and those of 211 cases in&#13;
1812, to 9113,021. By applying the&#13;
same average earning* to all ex-patients&#13;
of the sanltortum living in 1911&#13;
and 1912. Dr. Barnes conclude* that&#13;
their income In those two years was&#13;
9551,000. This sum to more than throe&#13;
time* the cost of maintenance of tho&#13;
sanatorium, including interest at four&#13;
per cent on the original Investment&#13;
and depreciation charges. Dr. Barnes&#13;
concludes, however, "While institutions&#13;
for the cure of tuberculosis are&#13;
good investments, there is good reason&#13;
for thinking that Institutions for&#13;
the isolation of far advanced cases&#13;
would be still better Investments."&#13;
!&#13;
BREAKING OUT ON LEO&#13;
Hilltop, Kan.—"About two years ago&#13;
I began to notice a breaking out on my&#13;
leg. At first it was very small but&#13;
soon it began to spread until it formed&#13;
large blotches. Tho Itching waa terrible&#13;
and almost constant Many&#13;
nights I could not sleep at all. After&#13;
scratching it to relieve the Itching it&#13;
would burn so dreadfully that I&#13;
thought I could not stand i t For nearly&#13;
a year I tried all kinds of salves&#13;
and ointment, but found no relief.&#13;
Some salvo* seemed to make it worse&#13;
until there were ugly sores, which&#13;
would break open and run.&#13;
"One day I saw an adverttoement of&#13;
Cutlcura Remedies. I got a sample of&#13;
the Cutlcura Soap and Cutlcura Oint&gt;&#13;
ment and began by washing tho sores&#13;
with the Cutlcura Soap, then applying&#13;
the Cutlcura Ointment twice A day.&#13;
I noticed a change and got more Cutlcura&#13;
Soap and Ointment and in a few&#13;
weeks I was cured. It haa healed so&#13;
nicely that no scar remain*^ (Signed)&#13;
Mrs. Anna A. Lew, Dec. 17, 1911.&#13;
Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
free, with 88-p. Skin Book. Address&#13;
post-card "Cutlcura, Dipt U Boston/'&#13;
Adv.&#13;
The Course of Love.&#13;
"First, he sued for love."&#13;
"Then what happened?"&#13;
"She sued for damages.''&#13;
_ Importanv to Mothoro&#13;
Bxamine carefully •rty bottle of&#13;
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for&#13;
Infants and children, and see that it&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature of&#13;
In Us* For Over&#13;
Children Cry f or Fletohsr's Osstoris&#13;
Called for Blood.&#13;
"Sandy looks aa if he had keen&#13;
fighting."&#13;
"He ha* been fighting; a fellow said&#13;
something in his presence about 'musicians&#13;
and bagpipers,' and Sandy sailed&#13;
into him."&#13;
fKta eltUaer?a OFmiarr*tSth Sawaeefe,t _ , , aDrtat eard Sparlaai, pwrt as* ru"v UUthi Bewflf aad afaoara atts rra*aaa?eSa.r fTohre Wy eorram **o pUTaataee biiyit&#13;
to taka ehildrralaat . IlHk*a t.h aSaat.j ^ At all Dtosfitalmt, sltela*.. La hay&#13;
A, S. Oil ~ ',»?. ivSdv.&#13;
$rue|.&#13;
Chappy—l am going to try the mind&#13;
cure.&#13;
Daffy—What's ft got to work on?&#13;
••eVa* a* SW#S7^SSS S t S&gt;^Bl*&gt;a*PSSBe^ SSSSSSS*)*}* BnBJSK^SB*T^^SWSBeWSWe*M easy to take ss eaady, re*^lat*saCmvlgorats&#13;
ttomaoh.UTeraad bowel*. Po act gripe. Adv.&#13;
What a woman doesn't know about&#13;
a neighbor to just what she wanta to&#13;
find out.&#13;
Women may look good without being&#13;
accu*ed of good looks.&#13;
mm&#13;
F01EY KIDNEY PUIS * » ^ e w i^w^^Me^w^^* SW*&lt; ^i^e^w^^'eww^^ Vg*W^SWe^BW^B^P yon sAOKaoHa, nMgMafATigm,&#13;
KIDNEYg AMS&gt; 8)4&gt;a&gt;DBa .&#13;
CONSTIPATION&#13;
30*&#13;
PAW-PAW&#13;
PILLS&#13;
. Jdttnyon'f Paw-Paw&#13;
Pills are unlike all other&#13;
laxatives or cathartic*.&#13;
They coax the&#13;
liver into activity by&#13;
Sentle methods, they&#13;
0 not scour; they do&#13;
not gripe; they do not&#13;
weaken; but they do&#13;
start all the secretions&#13;
of the liver and stoxn*&#13;
ach in a way that aooa&#13;
puts these organs in a&#13;
healthy condition and&#13;
corrects constipation. Maayon's Paw-Paw&#13;
Pills are a tonic to the stomach, liver and&#13;
nerves. They invigorate instead of weaken;&#13;
they enrich the blood instead of impoverishing&#13;
it; they enable the stomach to get all&#13;
the nourishment frocri food that is put into&#13;
it Price as cents. All Druggists.&#13;
SPECIAL TO WOMEN&#13;
Do you realize the fact that thousands&#13;
of women are now using&#13;
A Soluble Antiseptic Powder&#13;
aa a remedy for mucous membrane affections,&#13;
such as sore throat, nasal or&#13;
pelvic catarrh, Inflammation or ulceration,&#13;
caused by female Ills? Women&#13;
who have been cured say "it is worth&#13;
lta weight In gold." Dissolve in water&#13;
and apply locally. For ten years the&#13;
Lydla B. Plnkham Medicine Co. has&#13;
recommended Paxtlne in their private&#13;
correspondence with women.&#13;
For all hygienic and toilet uses it has&#13;
no equal. Only 50c a large box at Druggists&#13;
or sent postpaid on receipt of&#13;
price. The Paxton Toilet Co., Boston,&#13;
Mass.&#13;
CANADA'S OFFERING&#13;
TO THE SETTLER&#13;
THE AMERICAN RUSH TO&#13;
WESTERN CANADA&#13;
OO^CKt IS INCREASING&#13;
m&amp;&#13;
'-=•: i*?&#13;
F r e e H o m e s t e a d s&#13;
In the new Pistriou of&#13;
Manitoba, Saskatchewan&#13;
and Alberta there&#13;
are thoutandi of Free&#13;
Homestead** left, which&#13;
to the m&amp;nmaklnsentrj&#13;
In I /ear* time will be&#13;
worth from HO to Eft per&#13;
•ere. These laadi are&#13;
well adapted to grain&#13;
fro wing and eattle raisin*.&#13;
IKSXUtST BllLWiY FAOUTISS a many case* the railway* tn&#13;
nada hare been boUt in adtahce&#13;
of settlement, and In a&#13;
abort time there will not be a&#13;
settler who need be more than&#13;
ten or twelre miles from a line&#13;
ofratlwav. Railway Rates are&#13;
regulated t&gt;j Government Commission.&#13;
Social Condition*&#13;
The American Settler Is at borne&#13;
in Western Canada, He is not a ft ranger tn a straase land, bar*&#13;
OS nearly a million of his own&#13;
people alreadr settled there. If&#13;
fon desire to snow why the condition&#13;
of the Canadian Settler li&#13;
prosperous write and send for&#13;
literature, rates, etc, to&#13;
M. V. Molnnee,&#13;
fneiaffarsoR Ave., Detroit, Mich. ¾MdleaOoTernment Agent, or&#13;
dress Superintendent of&#13;
[snmtsjrmtloo, Ottawa, Ceases.&#13;
Henkel's&#13;
BREAD FLOUR—Very Best&#13;
for Bread. You csn buy&#13;
none batter, no matter what&#13;
the name or price.&#13;
GRAHAM FLOUR—msks* delicious&#13;
Qerns.&#13;
CORN MEAL—beautiful ool*&#13;
den meal scientifically rnadf&#13;
from the choicest corn.&#13;
BBLF RAISING PANCAKg&#13;
FLOUR—the household fs&gt;&#13;
yorlte. Flour&#13;
FOR SALE CHEAP 2 S T £ T , £ m&#13;
fwlo^Ussbar. WtU US* part pay meat In lambet.&#13;
SjaH|Mr rmtaa. Leak? roefs. Step Then. E-L&#13;
ltooT&gt;ai*t Is your Head. Net Dope t u t&#13;
relet. 10 raara satisfaction. One contract&#13;
neerlr HUlies) t*. f t That's Proof. Ellsworthl&#13;
e w s B e e f ratat Co., Shaheygasu Wisconsin.&#13;
W. N. Uf DETROIT, NO. 15-1913. '&#13;
W. L. DOUGLAS s3i&amp;A *3t&amp;fi *4tSS&#13;
4tft2AND«8£S&#13;
8 H O E 8&#13;
FOSMENWe.WOMEH&#13;
ml&#13;
J&#13;
»w:&#13;
'SSWBST'v&#13;
- • ^ A " ViSJs?^'&#13;
* * s • • ^,y)f^»•v '— .'r*-v«&gt;*&gt;^.,^4*"J*i £% ',rW*l?^.&#13;
Local News&#13;
Mary Johnson is working at the&#13;
Hotel Steadman.&#13;
fiwhe McClear of Ypsilanti&#13;
Was in town Monday.&#13;
Rev. JOB. Coyle was a Jackson&#13;
caller last Thursday.&#13;
Henry and Francis Harris are&#13;
working in Detroit,&#13;
Wilber Arnold of Howell was in&#13;
town one day recently.&#13;
About 35 couple attended the&#13;
Junior dance Friday evening.&#13;
Mrs. W. A. Carr spent the past&#13;
week with relatives in Howell.&#13;
Josephine Harris of Dundee&#13;
spent last week with her parents.&#13;
Mrs. H. R. Geer and son have&#13;
been visiting relatives in Ypsilanti.&#13;
Mrs. Jacob Mack was the guest&#13;
of relatives in Sunfield, Mich.over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Floris Moran of Grand Rapids&#13;
has been visit ng his mother, Mrs.&#13;
Emma Moran.&#13;
Ed Drewery of Howell spent a&#13;
a number of days last week with&#13;
Pinckney friends.&#13;
Miss Neva Lasher of Howell&#13;
spent a couple of days last week&#13;
with friends heia&#13;
Mrs. A. B. Green and sou of&#13;
Jackson spent the week end with&#13;
relatives in Pinckney&#13;
Mrs. Emma Brown has moved&#13;
into part of the resident owned&#13;
by Mrs. Ellen Richards.&#13;
John Coyle of Northfield visited&#13;
at the home of Rev. Jos. Coyle&#13;
the latter part of last week.&#13;
C. V. VanWinkle visited his&#13;
brother, C. V. VanWinkle, of&#13;
Howell one day the past week.&#13;
Mesdames Marrs and O'Connor&#13;
of Detroit have been visiting at&#13;
home of Mrs. Margaret Monks.&#13;
Mrs. Wra. Shehan was called to&#13;
Chicago last Thursday by the&#13;
death of her brother-in-law John&#13;
Foran.&#13;
Fred Grieve is now a resident of&#13;
Stookbridge having moved into&#13;
the residence which he recently&#13;
purchased there.&#13;
This winter has been especially&#13;
hard on elderly people. The prolate&#13;
-court has com men eed -fifty&#13;
new cases since January first&#13;
Mrs. Eliza PJaceway and daughter,&#13;
Fraukie, who have been viaiting&#13;
at the home of D. G. Wilson&#13;
of South Lyon have returned&#13;
home.&#13;
Township Clerk Ferren of Handy&#13;
has received a check from the&#13;
state for $483.00, the state award&#13;
for seyen eights of a mile of state&#13;
road east of Fowlerville.&#13;
Joseph Clark died at his home&#13;
in Marion Monday, March 31 after&#13;
a slioit illness. He was 75&#13;
years old. The funeral services&#13;
were held Friday at 2 p. m..&#13;
Mrs. Joe Kennedy and 1 lttlescn&#13;
who have been spending some&#13;
time with relatives in Unadilla&#13;
visited at the home of Wm. Kennedy&#13;
Sr. several days last week.&#13;
The spring equinoxial period of&#13;
1013 will go down in history as&#13;
one long to be remembered for&#13;
severity of storms throughout the&#13;
entailing heavy loss of life and&#13;
property.&#13;
i&#13;
Two lively runaways occured&#13;
last Thursday. While at the&#13;
freight house in the morning&#13;
Paul Miller's team ran away demolishing&#13;
the draw but otherwise&#13;
doing no damage. The same&#13;
morning on the way to Marion&#13;
P. H. Swarthouts team made a&#13;
break for liberty* throwing Mr.&#13;
Swarthout out, scratching up his&#13;
face and breaking a bone in his&#13;
hand. H. A. Fick who was also in&#13;
the rig was uninjured,&#13;
Married at high noon Thursday,&#13;
Afcril 3,1913. at the home of the&#13;
brides parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eu- Sene Smith, of Cavanauujh Lake,&#13;
Lisa Ffoss*e" Smith and Mr. Geo.&#13;
M. Martin of Howell. The couple&#13;
were attended by Mips Edith&#13;
Johnson of Chel«e%, and Mr. Geo.&#13;
Smith, brother of the bride. Rev.&#13;
Irittlejohn of Howell officiating.&#13;
TJje ceremony was witnessed by a&#13;
^number of relatives and a wedding&#13;
,:# «no*r was served —Chelsea Stan&#13;
J S r a t Mr Martin is a son of Mrs.&#13;
of this place. ^&#13;
Joe Kennedy was in Jackson&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Wm. Darrow Jr. spent Friday&#13;
in South Lyon.&#13;
Gov. Ferris has named May 9&#13;
as Arbor day.&#13;
Dr. C. Darling spent one day recently&#13;
in Pinckney.&#13;
L E. Smith has moved into W.&#13;
C. Dunning's house.&#13;
Steve Jeffreys of Detroit spent&#13;
Friday in Pinckney.&#13;
Frank Gay has moved into his.&#13;
residence on Mill St.&#13;
RooS Read and A. Flintoft were&#13;
in Stockbndge Monday.&#13;
Mrs. Alexis Mclntyre is visiting&#13;
relatives in Pontiac.&#13;
Arthur Rice of Hamburg was a&#13;
a Pinckney caller Saturday.&#13;
Dr. Brigham of Howell was in&#13;
Pinckney one day the past week.&#13;
Lucile Krause of near Howell&#13;
spent a portion of last week in&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
Geo. Smith of Brighton was in&#13;
Pinckney on business one day the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Geo. Green of Howell was the&#13;
guest of friends and relatives&#13;
here Friday.&#13;
Mrs. H. G, Gauss underwent an&#13;
operation at the Sanitarium one&#13;
day last week.&#13;
John Van Horn, son, Edward,&#13;
and Harold Swarthout were in&#13;
Aun Arbor Monday.&#13;
Mrs. Ann Wilcox of Dansville&#13;
spent one day last week at the&#13;
home of H. J. Clark.&#13;
LaRue Moran of Howell spent&#13;
Sunday at the home of his mother,&#13;
Mrs. Emma Moran.&#13;
Marvin Swarthout moved into&#13;
the house he recently purchased&#13;
of L. E. Smith Saturday.&#13;
A. M, Roche has purchased a&#13;
grocery store at St. John's, Mich,&#13;
and expects to move there soon.&#13;
Mrs. Ed. Drewery of Howell underwent&#13;
a serious operation at the&#13;
Pinckney Sanitarium one day last&#13;
week.&#13;
C. G. Meyer has rented p&amp;tt&#13;
of the Teeple double houefe&#13;
and will occupy it as soon as it is&#13;
vacated.&#13;
Mrs. L. E. Hpwlett has_xeeeivedj&#13;
word that her brother, Sam Wilson&#13;
Has escaped the Dayton flood.&#13;
—Republican.&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Harry&#13;
Moor of Fenton, Mouday, March&#13;
31 a son. Mrs. Moor was formerly&#13;
Minnie VanBlaricnm.&#13;
W, E. Brown has sold his stock&#13;
of goods here to Dan Lantis and&#13;
C. L. Brownell, who will take immediate&#13;
possession.—Brief Sun&#13;
Born to Mr, and Mrs. Geo. Devine,&#13;
Sunday March 30, a son.—&#13;
Dexter Leader. Mrs. Devine was&#13;
formerly Florence Monks of this&#13;
place.&#13;
Word comes that William Sayles&#13;
and wife, formerly of Unadilla&#13;
now of Washington, were in a bad&#13;
runaway accident recently, Mr,&#13;
Sayles being severely hurt.&#13;
At the state convention of the&#13;
Xpeman held at Mennominee last&#13;
week W, E. Murphy was elected&#13;
delegate to the supreme conclave&#13;
to be held at Oklahoma City, Okla&#13;
John Foran died at his home in&#13;
Chicago Thursday, April 3. The&#13;
funeral was held there Friday and&#13;
the remains were brought here&#13;
Saturday for interment in St.&#13;
Mary's cemetery.&#13;
Ctom'r Maude Benjamin has received&#13;
notice from Pres, McKmny&#13;
of Ypsilanti that this county is to&#13;
be affiliated with the Normal College&#13;
again this summer and is&#13;
called to meet with the other commissioneraat&#13;
Ypsilanti April 10&#13;
to make arrange me nta for the&#13;
summer's work.&#13;
Three township treasurers,Phil.&#13;
liphs* of Brighton, Murray of&#13;
3-nejKi Oak and Moon of /EUmbujg,&#13;
all had large sums of money&#13;
dlfjfosited in the Baetke bank at&#13;
Brighton, not having, made their&#13;
final settlement with the county&#13;
treasurer. Mr. Philliphs had&#13;
nearly $4030 and Mr. Murray&#13;
about 93000 and both mast vacate&#13;
the office to a new man in April.&#13;
The townships will have to decide&#13;
how the settlement with the com-&#13;
1iytpes^i»f'wisMst*nuKiW .&#13;
MONKS BROTHERSare&#13;
ready with a complete line of&#13;
M E N S F U R N I S H I N G S&#13;
INCLUDING&#13;
Latest; Styles in Mens and Boys Hats and Caps&#13;
Latest Styles in Mens aud B03 s Trousers&#13;
New Line of Smart Set Cravats , ' Latest in Dress Shirts, Collars, Etc.&#13;
New IStock of Overalls and Work Shirts—Ideal Brand&#13;
££&#13;
£&#13;
£&#13;
£&#13;
5=&#13;
(D&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
H h&#13;
H&#13;
JJ&#13;
0 h&#13;
4-&gt; ri d&#13;
Biggest Assortment of GroeenefS&#13;
Ever Shown in Pinckney, including l i p Top and. -Butter Nut Bread, Addison&#13;
Chee&amp;e and a complete line of National Bisctfit Co's. Cookies, Etc, Etc.&#13;
Will Duplicate Any Offer Made By Any Competitor Sat., April 12&#13;
Our Ice Cream Parlors Are Now Open&#13;
And we wish to announce that we will again serve Connor*3 Delicious Ice&#13;
Cream; Veruor's Ginger Ale and Allen's Cherry Cheer.&#13;
DOWN LOW 'i&#13;
THE LITCHFIELD DOWN-LOW Spreader gives a Low Top R a i l -&#13;
about waist high, which makes it extremely easy to load. A man iu handling&#13;
the ordinary pitchfork, raises the load ou the fork waist high in order that he&#13;
may throw it from him. This meaus that it would be useless to make a lower&#13;
top rail than what we build, as there would be no advantage in loading.&#13;
OUR MACHINE LOADS easily from any direction—the seat turns over&#13;
out ot the way in front and its just as easy to load onto this machine as it is to&#13;
throw it in another pile on the ground.&#13;
DON'T FORGET. The Self-Cleaning aprou, No-Choke box, Bull Dog&#13;
cylinder and Oil Packed main bearings are exclusive Litchfield Features You&#13;
wiFl look for them in vain on any other spreader.&#13;
High Under Clearance&#13;
A PECULAR FACT. The Litchfield Down-Low has substantially the&#13;
same Under Clearance that our High Standard machines have. We use the&#13;
same size wheels—the axles are the same distance from the ground. This gives&#13;
us from sixteen to eighteen inches of general clearance under the machine, and&#13;
same clearance under the front axle that we have always had in the high machines.&#13;
Just compare this with the eight or ten inches clearance found under&#13;
other low down spreaders.&#13;
W*i*m S^r&#13;
DON'T MAKE THE MISTAKE of buying a Sled when you pay your&#13;
money for a manure spreader. Any machine soon becomes a sled in muddy&#13;
and rough ground if it'does not have sufficient under clearance. Like everything&#13;
else, the tendency toward low down manure spreaders bus gone in raoet&#13;
cases a little to far and this is a serious objection—Too Close To The Ground.&#13;
Short Wheel Base&#13;
*&#13;
WE MOUNT OUR SPREADERS on the rear wheels so that these traction&#13;
wheels take a sufficient proportion of the load and have sufficient traction&#13;
to properly operate the unloading machinery. We get away fiom the heavy&#13;
draft that is a part of all long coupled wagons and spreaders. We turn in a&#13;
shorter circle and in a smaller place and our machine hag much more activity&#13;
and is much stronger and more substantial than a machine that is hung between&#13;
the front and the rear wheels instead of being mounted on the rear axle. This&#13;
means light draft, strength, durability arid convenience,&#13;
We have samples of the Litchfield and New Idea&#13;
Manure Spreaders for inspection and will take pleasure&#13;
in showing and will make better terms than you&#13;
can get elsewhere.&#13;
Teep]e Hardware Company&#13;
^W^^^WXSWX^^&#13;
Mm i i M&#13;
Done Promptly and a t t h e Right&#13;
Prices&#13;
Qartatts ?taooe&amp;, fatas Ytautad, etc.&#13;
The team whetrnot busy will always be found&#13;
on Main street&#13;
P h o n e ISTo. G8, 3 r .&#13;
PAUL MILLER&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative Banking&#13;
Business. :: ::&#13;
3 per cent&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
P i n c k n e y&#13;
G. W. TEEfLB&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Prop&#13;
ftMflca&#13;
Where It Pays to Pay Cash&#13;
The new spring merchandise&#13;
is flowing in and we are&#13;
showing some live snappy&#13;
goods. Buying direct from&#13;
large eastern importers, we&#13;
are able to show the live&#13;
it^msand name prices that compare'&#13;
with the very best stores. New laces,&#13;
embroideries, fancy, trimmings, etc.&#13;
D. M. C. aud material for fancy&#13;
work. Largest ribbon stuck in the&#13;
county. Sale on Children's ready-towear&#13;
dresses at 50c.&#13;
EVERY DAY IS BARGAIN DAY&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN&#13;
HOWELL'S BUSY STORE&#13;
PMCKNgY, MICH.&#13;
» r *. * n p « mm ~ m. _&#13;
GOING TO BUY A PIANO&#13;
OR SEWING MACHINE&#13;
YES4?&#13;
SEE L. R. WILLIAMS.&#13;
GREGORY&#13;
e saves you money on ht^h&#13;
grade pianos,&#13;
For Bonn, Braises and Spiring&#13;
• The quickest and sorest cure; far&#13;
boms, bruises. bolls, sores, inflate!-&#13;
tion ind all akin diseases n BoakUnJe&#13;
Arnica 8alye. In four days it c w S&#13;
L, H. fiaflin of IredeU, Texas, of *&#13;
sor*. on bis ankle which pained trim &amp;&#13;
be could hardly walk. 8bo«hJ b* S&#13;
• • w j Sjoif- Onlj 25c Recommend&#13;
£' Hot, Tired, Perspiring, Played Out&#13;
That's What Ails You!&#13;
YOU NEED SOMETHING&#13;
Cool, Healthful, Refreshing, Invigorating&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
*&gt;£ You Will Find It At v/ur&#13;
S O D A FOUNTAIN&#13;
We are not stiugy with our ice, therefore our Soda Water is&#13;
always as cool as ice can make i t We use the beet natural&#13;
£ : fruit juicee, consequently our drinks are delicious.&#13;
MEYER'S DRUG STORE 1&#13;
FOR A SQUARE DEAL&#13;
PINCKNEr, - . . MICHIGAN&#13;
Drugs, Wall Paper, Crockery, Cigars, Candy,&#13;
Magazines, School Supplies, Books&#13;
191»&#13;
[Makes Splitting Wood Easy&#13;
IT won't do any harm, and it will do you&#13;
&gt; a lot of good to come here and let us show&#13;
you these Olds Engines we've got to save your muscle.&#13;
T You know 82 years is a long time to do one thing&#13;
•nought to know pretty nearly how to do it in that&#13;
length of time. The people who make Olds Engines have been&#13;
doing nothing else for 82 years; they know how to make engines.&#13;
If the Rumely mark of quality is on an engine you buy,&#13;
then you've got as good an engine as there is—an engine with 82&#13;
years of engine-making experience back of it. You can get this&#13;
[kind of an engine here*&#13;
If yon can't find time to come and see us, ask us to come&#13;
and see you or send you a free catalog of&#13;
Olds Engines.&#13;
We're here to serve you;&#13;
give us the chance.&#13;
A. H. FLINTOFT,&#13;
'THE CENTRAL'&#13;
Bargain Sales at The Central&#13;
• » '&#13;
i&#13;
Best percales, the kind others ask 12Jc and 15,1 for, we&#13;
are selling for a limited time for l i e .&#13;
Best calicoes for 6c.&#13;
Bleached muslin: for 8c and 10c. ^&#13;
v, , Challies for 5c.&#13;
u&#13;
In groceries we have the best red Alaska salmon fcr 18c&#13;
A good coffee for 25c.&#13;
With $1.00 worth of other ^oods we will sell 25 lbs.&#13;
sugar on Saturday for $1.15.&#13;
We are furnishing you city styles in Millinery Goods&#13;
and hope you will appreciate our efforts to bring a city shop&#13;
right to your home. Our styles are. E I G H T ; our prices are&#13;
R I G H T and we know you will be treated right, so give us&#13;
your trade.&#13;
We want your batter and eggs; highest market prices&#13;
paid.&#13;
MRS. C- W- KRAUS&#13;
ttf^frBOF MICHIGAN, tne Probate Court of&#13;
}tb» County of Livingston,&#13;
AtftMeeion of aaid court held at the Probate&#13;
Office in the Village of Howell la said County, on&#13;
the 96th day of March, A. D. 1913.&#13;
Present, Hon. Kugene A* Stowe, Judge of&#13;
Probate, In the matter of the estate ol&#13;
AtfSTHf WALTERS, Deceased&#13;
* Georie O. Walters baring filed in said court his&#13;
T- petition prajing that the administration&#13;
of said fstate be granted to Louise Marble&#13;
. 4, iff to eome other sail able person.&#13;
L? It Is Ordered, That the 18th day of April. 9 A. D. 1918,at ten o'clock In the forenoon, at said&#13;
proMto oAoe, be and is hereby appointed for&#13;
ketrfpf said petition.&#13;
It 6 farther ordered -that public notloe thereof&#13;
be given by publication of a oopy of this order, for&#13;
tbjsja anjussali e weeks' previous to said day ef&#13;
hawing la the Pinekney DISTATCB a newspaper&#13;
yrimted and Circulated in-said county. idts&#13;
BUQSKB ATSTOWE&#13;
A 4 ^ y » * \ M e t *&#13;
Sl a t e of M i c h i g a n , tne probate court for&#13;
the county of Livingston,- A t a session of said&#13;
Uonrt held at the Probate Office in the Village of&#13;
Howell in said county on the Sletdajof .March&#13;
a. D. 1914, Present, Hon. Eugene A. Stowe&#13;
Judge of Probate. In the matter of the estate of&#13;
LEWIS COLBY, Deceased&#13;
J. R. Celby having filed in said court his&#13;
petition praying that the administration of&#13;
salrt estate be granted to George W. Temple or to&#13;
some other suitable pereo n.&#13;
It is ordered that the ?8th day of April, A.&#13;
D. 1918 at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at said probate&#13;
office, be and is hereby appointed for&#13;
hearing said petition.&#13;
It is farther ordered that public notice thereof&#13;
be siren by publication of a oopy of this order&#13;
for three successive weeks previous to said day of&#13;
hearins, in the FXXCTCHY DISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated in said county. I4t 8&#13;
EUGENE A, 8TCWE&#13;
WZiT FUT*AJL&#13;
Mrs. Jobn Dunbar who was quite&#13;
sick last week is better at this writing.&#13;
fill* Murphy visited in Detroit last&#13;
week.&#13;
Josephine Harris returned to Dundee&#13;
the rirst of the week after spending&#13;
% week with her parents here.&#13;
Mrs. Bert Hofl of Lansing spent a&#13;
portion of last week with her parents&#13;
B, B. Gardner and wife.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Kennedy of Detroit is&#13;
visiting relatives here.&#13;
Fred Wylie and wife visited at the&#13;
home of John Chambers Monday,&#13;
Mrs. Maria Harris spent the week&#13;
end with her daughter Mrs. W. E.&#13;
Murphy in Pinekney.&#13;
ECI&#13;
lr" O I*&#13;
i&#13;
-++.++.,&#13;
SOUTH I O S C O .&#13;
The relatives and neighbors of Mr,&#13;
and Mrs. Martin Anderson gave them&#13;
a miscellaneous shower at W, S. Caskey's&#13;
Saturday evening. The presents&#13;
were beautiful and useful.&#13;
Martin Anderson and wife visited&#13;
at Fred Anderson's Sunday.&#13;
Millie VanKeuren is working for&#13;
Mrs. John Roherts.&#13;
Lorna Roberts spent the week end&#13;
with her aunt Mrs. Wm, Gaskey of&#13;
Anderson.&#13;
Coughs and COHsumption&#13;
Coughs aud colds, when neglected,&#13;
always lead to serious trouble of the&#13;
lungs. The wisest thing to do wheu&#13;
you have a cold that troubles you i^&#13;
to get a bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery.&#13;
You will get relief from the&#13;
first dose, and finally the cough will&#13;
disappear. 0. H. Brown of Muscadine,&#13;
Ala., writes: "My wife was down in&#13;
bed with an obstinate cough and I&#13;
honestly believe had it not been for&#13;
Dr. King's New Discovery she would&#13;
not be living today." Known for forty&#13;
three years as the best remedy tor&#13;
coughs and colds. Price 50c and $1 00.&#13;
Recommended by (J. G. Meyer, the&#13;
druggist.&#13;
Saturday. April 12th, 1913&#13;
1 Lot of Mens Surmoer Underwear, all new, at 21c per garment&#13;
Call ami see them&#13;
A few sizes in §1.00 Corsets 10 clone out, fcizes 19 to 20, at 69c&#13;
Brown Cotton at ~^c&#13;
Apron Ginghams at __ -7c&#13;
I pound Best Pepper _ _ H e&#13;
1 pound Rumford Baking Powder 20c&#13;
2 cans Red Salmon _ _ _ . — 2tic&#13;
10 pounds Rolled Oats..„ _ - 25c&#13;
i pound Ground Mustard. _ H e&#13;
I pound 50c Tea 20c&#13;
1 pound 28c Coffee 24c&#13;
Will Duplicate All Price Made By Competitors&#13;
I ALL SALES CASH&#13;
|W. W BARNARD&#13;
WEST MARIO*.&#13;
Misses Ruth Collins and Mildred&#13;
Hath were Pinekney visitors Monday.&#13;
Joseph Clark died Monday night at&#13;
nis home. The funeral services were&#13;
held at the church Friday afternoon,&#13;
Rev. Miller officiating. Interment in&#13;
the Green cemetery.&#13;
Mr. Scripture and fimiiy are moving&#13;
into Will Chamber's tenant house.&#13;
There will be a social Friday night&#13;
at the home of Walter Gorton for the&#13;
benefit of the Singing School.&#13;
Pains in the Stomach&#13;
If ycu continually complain of pains&#13;
in the stomach,your liver or your kidneys&#13;
are out of order. Neglect nay&#13;
lead to dropsy, kidney trouble, diabetes&#13;
or Britfbt's disease. Thousands&#13;
recommend Electric Bitters as the very&#13;
best stomach and kidney medicine&#13;
made. H. T4 Alston of Raleigh N.C.,&#13;
who suffered with a pain in the stomach&#13;
and bach writes:uMy kidneys were&#13;
deranged and my liver did uot work&#13;
riijht, I suffered much,but Electric&#13;
Bitters was recomended and I improve&#13;
edfrom the first dose. I now feel&#13;
like a new man," It will improvyou,&#13;
too. Only 50c and $1.00. Reco&#13;
mended by W. G. Meyer.&#13;
Spring days are Ford da vs. When&#13;
the open road allures, you'll want&#13;
and nead a light, right and economical&#13;
Ford, But unless you get&#13;
yours today you'r almost sure to be&#13;
disappointed". The supply is big&#13;
but the demand is bigger.&#13;
There are move than 220,00'J F&lt;&gt;r&lt;ls&gt; on ;he world's&#13;
highway—the best possible lesiiroony t&gt; their unexcelled&#13;
worth! Price*—runabout 1025— louring car&#13;
$600—town car $800 f. o. h. Detroit with complete&#13;
equipment. Catalogue from&#13;
Flmtoft &amp; Rea&lt;T&#13;
LOCAL AGENTS I'lNCKNKY, MICH.&#13;
S TATE OF MICHKiAIS, tlie fronate Court I( r&#13;
the county of Livingston. Estate ol&#13;
ELIZABETH SPEARS, Deceased&#13;
! The undersigned having been appointed, by tne&#13;
! Judge of Probate ol said Countv, Commissioner?&#13;
on Claims In the matter of said estate, and four&#13;
months from the ?2nd day of March, A D, 191;&#13;
having be&lt;»n allowed by said Judge ot Probate to&#13;
I ail personB holding claims against eaid estate in&#13;
whicq to present their claims to us for examina*&#13;
tion and adjustment:&#13;
I Notice is hereby given that we will meet on the&#13;
! 22 day of May. A. D. 1913, and on tne 22 day of&#13;
; July, A. D. 1913, at ten o'clock a. m. of each dav&#13;
| at the Pinekney Exchange Bank in the village of&#13;
I Pinekney, in said County, to receive and examine&#13;
I BUCD claims.&#13;
Dated, Howell, March 32nd, A. T&gt;. lfllM.&#13;
tVoTirr) v:ho hive headache, should&#13;
uso Dr, Mile*' AnH-Fnin Pills&#13;
«. W, Teeple&#13;
James Marble&#13;
f Commissioners&#13;
\ on Claims l f t S&#13;
STATE OF YilCLilSAN, County of Livingston,&#13;
Prnha'e Court For Said County. Estate of&#13;
JAMES SPEARS, Deceased&#13;
Tue undersigned having been appointed by thw&#13;
Jurige of Probate of said county, Commissioners&#13;
on Claims in the matter of said eatate, ard four&#13;
moi;ths from the 22nd day of March, A. I). 11)13,&#13;
having been allowed by stud Judge of Probate to&#13;
all persons holding claims against said estate in&#13;
which to present their claims to us for examination&#13;
and adjustment.&#13;
Notice is hereby given that we will meet on the&#13;
2*2nd dav of May, A. U 1013 and on the 22nd day&#13;
of July, A. 1», 'ifll* at ten o'clock a. m. of cacti&#13;
day, »1 the I' neKuey Exchange Bank In the&#13;
YUlage (if Pinckm'? in said county to reeeiv«&#13;
f&gt;&amp;(! 'x amine Siich claims.&#13;
Dated: Howell, Marc); 22, A. 1 &gt;. 11*13.&#13;
'•;. "A . 'Jf&lt; pie ' Commissioners on&#13;
.lames Marti* ' Claims Hit:'.&#13;
Wc have just received an extra&#13;
large shipment of&#13;
LADIES COATS&#13;
•&#13;
in newest cut-a-way effects and&#13;
in the seasons best colorings.&#13;
The selection at 312.50 isTespecially&#13;
beautiful and w e want&#13;
every woman in Pinekney who&#13;
intends purchasing a spring coat&#13;
to come up and look them over.&#13;
We pay your fare on $15. purchases or more&#13;
W. J * Dancer &amp; Co 0&#13;
*3toekt&gt;ridjre, IVXioh.&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
KOY W. CAVERLY, Pub.&#13;
PINCKNEY, - - - MICHIGAN&#13;
The new nickels are DO easier to&#13;
get than the old ones.&#13;
Our Idea of the "perfecV gown Is&#13;
one that can-be wishtd on&#13;
Hasty marriages are proverbially&#13;
likely to lead to long repentance&#13;
Many men take their work more&#13;
seriously than others do their loafing.&#13;
Lipton cannot lift the cup, but all&#13;
true sports lift their hats to Liptoa.&#13;
Get busy Did you ever notice what&#13;
hard work it is to keep on doing noth-&#13;
In?&#13;
A California scientist says the sun&#13;
Is a magnet It certainly does draw&#13;
attention.&#13;
A Japanese expert has arrived to&#13;
study the New York police. Possibly&#13;
for points to avoid.&#13;
Adding insult to injury is where a&#13;
mun asks for a light and then blowB&#13;
the cigar smoke in your face.&#13;
Now a scientist has risen up to say&#13;
that cheese causes appendicitis. But&#13;
Borne cheese can do worse than that.&#13;
Insects have one advantage in that&#13;
many of them mature thirty minutes&#13;
after birth. Some men never mature.&#13;
Disapproval of the deBign of the&#13;
new nickel is becoming general. Why&#13;
so much fuss over a lowly half dime?&#13;
The clergyman who said; "Let your&#13;
enemies kiss you," evidently has never&#13;
felt the smarting effect of a brick&#13;
wound&#13;
Now we know why the "turkey trot"&#13;
has been discarded by society The&#13;
dance is too rough for corsage bouquets&#13;
to Btand the shock.&#13;
No one but dentists will worry over&#13;
the statement made by a Tniversity&#13;
of Chicago professor that the human&#13;
race will some day be toothless&#13;
King George is to wear a crown It&#13;
It has an open top doubtless its use&#13;
will tend to prevent baldness, but&#13;
there is litle excuse for it otherwise,&#13;
The burglar who entered a Los An&#13;
geles home and forgot the purpose ol&#13;
his visit long enough to aid In com&#13;
forting a sick baby, is not beyond redemption.&#13;
The Minnesota legislator who Is&#13;
after a law to make it a felony for a&#13;
housewife to "steal" the servant of&#13;
another, must have had a good cook&#13;
In his family at some time&#13;
The professional burglar has qui'&#13;
wearing gloves to avoid leaving ringer&#13;
prints He has discovered that a&#13;
much easier method is to wash off the&#13;
safe after he is through with It.&#13;
The Indian chiefs of the west found&#13;
nothing else in New York so interesting&#13;
as the buffalo at the Bronx Can&#13;
It be that buffaio are scarcer than sky&#13;
scrapers in Kuffalo Bill's country'7&#13;
A member of the Albany legislature&#13;
has been seized with the brilliant idea&#13;
of taxing city cats. It Is but a measure&#13;
of retribution; for lo, these many&#13;
moons city cats have been taxing people.&#13;
The butcher classifies his customers&#13;
this way: ThoBe who never buy beef*&#13;
Bteak are poor, those who buy beefsteak&#13;
twice a week are well to do,&#13;
and those who have it oftener are&#13;
rich.&#13;
One of the writers in the Pittsburgh&#13;
Chronicle-Telegraph compares George&#13;
Washington to Honus Wagner; show&#13;
lng that Pittsburgh people FMII have&#13;
a high regard for the first president&#13;
It has b*»en determined that the&#13;
average lifetime of a United States&#13;
$1 silver certificate Is a trifle more&#13;
than a year. We can cite numerous&#13;
cases where it hasn't lasted a minute.&#13;
The hoboes' union proposes to petition&#13;
the president for more freedom.&#13;
More freedom In what? Chicken&#13;
houses, or freight trains, or simply&#13;
emancipation from compulsory baths?&#13;
The widow of a New York policy&#13;
king signed a check for $30,000 for&#13;
a spiritualistic medium at the orders&#13;
of her husband's ghost Mighty poor&#13;
policy to have the ghost walk In&#13;
that fashion&#13;
Jtom* times it does not pay to emu&#13;
lat* great men of the .past. A Vlrgiafl&#13;
youth, while trying a Benjamin&#13;
Printltl txperiment in flying a kite&#13;
through an electrical storm, was in&#13;
fteatty electrocuted.&#13;
CANADA WINS AGAIN&#13;
THE COLORADO SILVER TROPHY&#13;
FOR OAT8 WON A SECOND&#13;
TIME BY CANADA.&#13;
The most recent achievement of&#13;
Canada's West Is winning for the second&#13;
time the magnificent $1,500 silver&#13;
trophy awarded by the State of Colorado&#13;
for the best peck of oats. At&#13;
Columbus, Ohio, In 1911, J. C. Hill 4k&#13;
Sons of Lloydminster, Saskatchewan*&#13;
placed a peck of oats grown on their&#13;
farm in competition, with oats from&#13;
every part of the world. The judges&#13;
had no difficulty in deciding, and the&#13;
Award was given to the Saskatchewan&#13;
frown oats. In 1912, the Corn Exposition&#13;
had no exhibition, and our Canadian&#13;
friends, although ready for a&#13;
second contest had no opportunity.&#13;
In 1918, the exhibition of the Society&#13;
was held at Columbus, 8. C. and it is&#13;
said of it that it was one of the best&#13;
yet held. At tikis exhibition, which&#13;
comprised corn and all the smaller&#13;
grains, Hill &amp; Sons of Lloydminster&#13;
had on exhibition for the contest another&#13;
peck of oats grown on their&#13;
Saskatchewan farm, In 1912. There&#13;
was no trouble for the judges, no time&#13;
necessarily lost in reaching a decision,&#13;
Hill &amp; Sons won, and for the second&#13;
time their name will appear on the&#13;
crest of the cup. The third space will&#13;
doubtless be occupied by their name,&#13;
and then this splendid trophy will be&#13;
theirs.&#13;
During the past few years Western&#13;
Canada grains—wheat, oats, barley and&#13;
flax—have been in competition with&#13;
grains from all other countries, and la&#13;
every case their superiority has been&#13;
shown. It is not only in oats, but It&#13;
Is in wheat, in barley and in flax, that&#13;
Canada more than holds its own, when&#13;
placed side by side with grains from&#13;
other parts.&#13;
Mixed farming Is taking a strong&#13;
hold not only in those parts of Manitoba,&#13;
Saskatchewan and Alberta,&#13;
which up to the present have been devoted&#13;
solely to grain growing, but also&#13;
in the districts contiguous, where the&#13;
conditions of climate, shelter, water,&#13;
grass and hay make farming of this&#13;
kind, easy to prosecute and large in&#13;
profits. It was in the Province of&#13;
Manitoba that the steer was raised&#13;
that carried off the Championship of&#13;
the Bteer class, at Chicago last December.&#13;
This beast had been fattened&#13;
on the grass and hay of the Province&#13;
and the only finishing grain It had was&#13;
barley; not an ounce of corn.&#13;
Western Canada presents innumerable&#13;
opportunities for the big farmer&#13;
who wants to cultivate his thousands&#13;
of acres, the medium man satisfied&#13;
with a few hundred acres, the man&#13;
who Is content to farm his free homestead&#13;
of one hundred and sixty acres;&#13;
it has opportunities for the investor,&#13;
the capitalist, the business man, the&#13;
manufacturer and the laborer.&#13;
Agents of the Canadian Government&#13;
located at different points in the United&#13;
States will be pleased on application,&#13;
to give any desired information,&#13;
free of cost.—Advertisement&#13;
PIRATE TREASURE NOT FOUND&#13;
PRESIDENT AGREES TO SMALL&#13;
DUTY ON SUGAR EVENTUALLY&#13;
TO BE FREE&#13;
TARIFF TO BE REMOVED FROM&#13;
WOOL AND 8TEEL RAILS&#13;
The Estimated Loss of Eighty Millions&#13;
In Revenue is to be Made Up by&#13;
Graduated Tax on Incomes&#13;
With President Wilson and congressional&#13;
leaders practically agreed upon&#13;
free wool and a low duty on sugar,&#13;
eventually to become free, the ways&#13;
and means committee began drawing&#13;
its report on the new tariff bill, estmating&#13;
the loss of revenue from the&#13;
new rates at $80,000,000 a year.&#13;
The revenue from the income tax&#13;
will be estimated at a like amount, to&#13;
be derived in this way:&#13;
Incomes of $4,000 up to but not in*&#13;
eluding $20,000, to be taxed at 1 per&#13;
cent; $20,000 up to $50,000 2 per cent;&#13;
$50,000 to $100,000, 3 per cent; all over&#13;
$100,000, 4 per cent&#13;
Flat tax on corporations, 2 per cent.&#13;
The exemption will be on all incomes&#13;
under $4,000. The income tax&#13;
provision now stands this way and is&#13;
not expected to be changed. Among&#13;
the numerous additions to the free list&#13;
will be steel rails. Cuts will be made&#13;
all along the line on the metal schedule.&#13;
Two Men Swept Over Dam.&#13;
Two men were drowned at Chesaning&#13;
when the boat from which th.y&#13;
were fishing was swept over the dam&#13;
here. They are Bert Ormes and Guy&#13;
Miller.&#13;
Miller dUappeared, but Ormes&#13;
clung to the overturned craft. Rescurers&#13;
put out for him In a boat and&#13;
succeeded In hauling him aboard.&#13;
Fearing that the boat would sink on&#13;
account of the overweight one of the&#13;
men jumped out. The boat jumped&#13;
when relieved of his weight and&#13;
Ormes fell overboard and could not&#13;
b-&gt; found.&#13;
Well-Furnished Expedition Returns&#13;
Without the Riches tt Had Been&#13;
In 8sarch Of.&#13;
The treasure-hunting party from&#13;
Plymouth, England, which has been&#13;
searching Cocos island in the Pacific&#13;
for treasure supposed to have been&#13;
buried there by pirates many years&#13;
ago, has arrived at Panama on board&#13;
the steamer Melmore without the&#13;
hoped for pirate spoils. The Melmore&#13;
sailed from Barry in September last,&#13;
carrying in addition to the officers&#13;
and crew, two London ladies and&#13;
three gentlemen financially Interested&#13;
in a venture which was fondly hoped&#13;
to return 100 per cent profit&#13;
Two other unsuccessful attempts to&#13;
locate the burled gold and jewels of&#13;
the buccaneers made by Earl Fits*&#13;
William and Mr. Harold Gray did not&#13;
diminish the faith of the members of&#13;
the Melmore expedition, who declared&#13;
they had specific Information of the&#13;
exact position of the accumulated&#13;
hoard.&#13;
One treasure was actually brought&#13;
from Lima in 1820, consisting of gold&#13;
bullion and articles teethe value of&#13;
about $25,000,000, and the other treasure,&#13;
which is placed at an even higher&#13;
figure, was taken to Cocos Island&#13;
by the famous pirate Bonito. Despite&#13;
the care with which the Melmore was&#13;
fitted out—the expedition waa estimated&#13;
to cost $500,000—the search appears&#13;
to have been fruitless.&#13;
Bear's Grease and Baldness.&#13;
In a recent volume of reminiscences&#13;
the writer states that baldness is&#13;
much more common now than in his&#13;
early days, and ascribes the modern&#13;
man's loss of hair to the decrease la&#13;
the use of "bear's grease." This&#13;
pomade was made principally of lard&#13;
colored and scented, but "hatrdree*&#13;
era, many of whom called themselves&#13;
'professors,' need to ; advertise the&#13;
slaughter of another fine beer£ «*&#13;
hiblting a canvas screen dassuMag ta&#13;
glaring- colon a brown animal of d *&#13;
phantjnc proportion expiring tft a&#13;
sea of gore."&#13;
Former Governor Lost in Desert.&#13;
Letters which have been received&#13;
from former Qovernor Chase S. Osborn,&#13;
now In Egypt, by friends tell of&#13;
a dangerous experience which Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Osborn met while crossing the&#13;
Sahara desert. On March 6, while&#13;
crossing the desert with their caravan,&#13;
a fierce sandstorm arose and Mr.&#13;
Osborn and his wife became separated&#13;
from their party. For a whole&#13;
day their camels circled the desert&#13;
fiannly makin camp at an oasis.&#13;
That night the remainder of the caravan&#13;
overtook them there.&#13;
Turkey Accepts Peace Plan Gladly.&#13;
The Turkish government declared&#13;
that tt unreservedly accepted the&#13;
terms of peace proposed by the European&#13;
powers.&#13;
The foreign office handed the Ottoman&#13;
acceptance to the dean of the diplomatic&#13;
corps, accompanied by an expression&#13;
of thanks to the powers for&#13;
their mediation*&#13;
O S . PANKHURST GUILTY&#13;
INoted English Mliiunt Suffragette&#13;
Scaleo. cd to Pr.son far&#13;
Thiee Years.&#13;
Mrs. Emmellne Pankhurst, the leader&#13;
of the English militant auifragfcUes,&#13;
waa found guilty and sentenced to&#13;
three years' penal servitude at the Old&#13;
bailey sessions in Lonuon on the&#13;
charge of inciting persons to commit&#13;
ds-ma^e.&#13;
The trial had lasted two days. The&#13;
jury added to its verdict of guilty a&#13;
strong recommendation for mercy, and&#13;
when the judge pronounced the heavy&#13;
ientence of three years the crowd&#13;
of women In the court room rose In&#13;
angry protest&#13;
As Mrs. Pankhurst stood up in the&#13;
prisoner's inclosure her sympathizers&#13;
cheered wildly, and then filed out of&#13;
court singing "March On, March On"&#13;
to the tune of the "Marseillaise."&#13;
Mrs. Pankhiirst's closing address to&#13;
the jury lasted 60 minutes. She Informed&#13;
the court that she did not wish&#13;
to call any witnesses. In her address&#13;
she frequently wandered so far from&#13;
the matter before the court that the&#13;
judge censured her.&#13;
In impassioned tones she declared:&#13;
"Whatever may be my sentence, I&#13;
will not submit. From the very moment&#13;
I leave the court I will refuse&#13;
to eat I will come out of prison dead&#13;
or alive at the earliest possible moment."&#13;
Justice Lush, in summing up ,told&#13;
the jury that Mrs. Pankburst's&#13;
speeches were an admission that she&#13;
had Incited to the perpetration of Illegal&#13;
acts.&#13;
Mrs. Pankhurst almost broke down&#13;
when the jury pronuonced its verdict&#13;
I;-.L..-;'&#13;
» 1 1 All ,\\\\i ^&#13;
strength, comfort and cheerfulness&#13;
which depend on thecondi*&#13;
tion of health—are the famous,&#13;
time-tested, safe and. speqfr&#13;
BEECHABTS&#13;
PILLS&#13;
fywfcf. ask—M.1&#13;
THE REASON.&#13;
Wilson to Address Reporters.&#13;
Convinced that public business&#13;
would be expedited by the practice,&#13;
President Wilson has decided to set&#13;
aside two hours each week for "heart&#13;
to heart" talks with the newspaper&#13;
correspondents.&#13;
One hour will be devoted to the writers&#13;
each Tuesday morning and another&#13;
hour will be given over to the&#13;
same purpose Thursday afternoons.&#13;
The pres'dent will discuss administration&#13;
policies and sketch his official&#13;
programs, muoh of the matter discussed&#13;
necessarily being In confidence&#13;
and solely for the guidance of the writers.&#13;
Militant Suffragettes on Rsmpage&#13;
The campaign of revenge for the&#13;
long sentence imposed upon Mrs. Emmellne&#13;
Pankhurst wh.ch the suffragettes&#13;
threatened, is proceeding actively&#13;
and seems likely to spread. Many&#13;
outrages have been committed. These&#13;
included the complete destruction of&#13;
the grandstand of the Ayr Race Course&#13;
in Scotland, where the principal Scottish&#13;
meetings are held, the damage&#13;
being estimated at $15,000, and an attempt&#13;
to burn the new grandstand of&#13;
the Kelso race course, also in Scotland.&#13;
Connecticut Votes Down 8uffrage.&#13;
Woman suffrage in Connecticut will&#13;
not be a possibility for two years more*&#13;
a. the bill providing equal suffrage&#13;
In this state was defeated in the lower&#13;
branch of the legislature by a vote of&#13;
loO to 74. Suffrage leaders through*&#13;
oat the state are bitterly disappointed&#13;
at they have waged a long campaign&#13;
to win votes for women.&#13;
Socialist Editor In Trouble.&#13;
Alexsl E. Georgian, editor of a&#13;
weekly socialist newspaper, was called&#13;
Into court at Minneapolis to stand&#13;
trial on a charge of printing criminally&#13;
libelous articles involving P. V. Collins,&#13;
progressive candidate for governor&#13;
of Minnesota, In the campaign last&#13;
fall Three weeks ago Georgian was&#13;
convicted and fined for criminally&#13;
libeling Mayor Nice of Minneapolis,&#13;
Strike Breakers Refuse to Work&#13;
The 44 Gloucester fishermen who&#13;
were brought by train from Massachusetts&#13;
to man halibut vessels plying&#13;
out of Seattle and refused to work&#13;
when they found they were to be used&#13;
as strikebreakers, were taken immediately&#13;
into the halibut fisherman's&#13;
union. The strike was won and all&#13;
the newcomers got work, as well as&#13;
the strikers.&#13;
fr&#13;
Airship as Means of Suicide.&#13;
Lieut Perlovski, of the Russian&#13;
army, committed suicide at Warsaw&#13;
by delibereately shutting off the motor&#13;
of an aeroplane in which he was fly*&#13;
lng and dropping from a height of 600&#13;
feet to the ground, according to a dispatch.&#13;
In a letter Lieut Perlovski expressed&#13;
his intention of committing suicide in&#13;
mid-air, and gave as a reason that he&#13;
had been the victim of many intrigues.&#13;
"Why are yon going to church 10&#13;
early, Mildred ?*&#13;
"To pray for my sweetheart"&#13;
"But I didn't know you had one,**&#13;
"I haven't—that's why."&#13;
A CLERGYMAN'S TESTIMONY.&#13;
The Rev. Edmund Heilop of Wlf&gt;&#13;
ton. Pa., suffered from Dropsy for" a&#13;
year. His limbs and feet were swollen&#13;
and puffed. He had heart fluttering,&#13;
was dlssy&#13;
and exhauated. at&#13;
the least exertion.&#13;
Hands and&#13;
feet were cold&#13;
and he had such&#13;
a dragging sensation&#13;
across the&#13;
loins thai it waa&#13;
difficult to mora,&#13;
_R ev.B- .c Huets lop. A^tfetie r u^si-n1g ¾ ^I&#13;
Kidney Pills the swelling disappeared&#13;
and he felt himself again. He says&#13;
he has been benefited and blessed by&#13;
the use of Oodds Kidney Pills. Set*&#13;
eral months later he wrote: I haft&#13;
not changed my faith in your remedy&#13;
since the above statement waa antaef-&#13;
Ized. Correspond with Rev. B. He*»&#13;
lop about this wonderful natedy.&#13;
Dodds Kidney Pills, 60c. per box at&#13;
your dealer or Oodds Medici** Cev,&#13;
Buffalo, N. Y. Write for Household&#13;
Hints, SIBO music of National 4nthe»&#13;
(English and German words) and recipes&#13;
for dainty dishes. All 8 sent fire*.&#13;
Adv.&#13;
Mount Royal Onee Active Voice**.&#13;
In the work on the Canadian Northern&#13;
railway tunnel the engineers hat*&#13;
found that Mount Royal, under which&#13;
the line will pass, waa at on* Use*&#13;
either an active volcano or waa mad*&#13;
by lava being forced through the&#13;
ground.&#13;
An interesting proof of the fact that&#13;
at one time a great glacier flowed&#13;
from the Laurentlan mountains to th*&#13;
St Lawrence river was found la th*&#13;
small heading on Ste. Monique street&#13;
This was a piece of Laurentlan gneiss,&#13;
a rock peculiar to the Laurentlan&#13;
mountains, and it Is believed that In&#13;
the past this rock was carried down&#13;
by a glacier, which probably emptied&#13;
into the St. Lawrence river not fa?&#13;
from the present harbor.&#13;
Apache Indians 8et Free.&#13;
The Apache Indians, who have been&#13;
maintained on the Fort Sill military&#13;
reservation for nine years as prisoners&#13;
of war, left for the Mescalero Apache&#13;
reservation in New Mexico, where&#13;
they will be turned over to the care of&#13;
in* interior department free men.&#13;
MaJ. George W. Goods accompanied&#13;
them.&#13;
Canada Ends Prosperous Year.&#13;
Canada closed a year of unprecedented&#13;
prosperity In all branches of&#13;
administration. The trade of the&#13;
Dominion for the first time in its history&#13;
has reached the billion mark,&#13;
showing an increase of $150,000,000&#13;
over last year. The revenue of $170,-&#13;
000,000 exceeds that of last year by&#13;
$35,000,000.&#13;
Water in bluing is adulteration. Glass sad&#13;
wnter makes liquid blue costly. Buy Red&#13;
Crora Bail Blue, makes slothes whiter than&#13;
snow. Adv.&#13;
Many ainan saves money by not&#13;
using tobacco, but it la doubtful if th*&#13;
money has the same soothing effect&#13;
Mrm. wiastews *ootataf Symp S»&#13;
teetblna*, •often* the run* rad-wes&#13;
Appropriate.&#13;
"What did the railroad&#13;
his birthday present r&#13;
"Some new ties."&#13;
man get&#13;
Don't bay water for Maine. .Lkjtdd Ms*&#13;
i* n)mo«t all water. Buy Red CMS* Bel&#13;
Bliw, the blue than all tte* V f ^ ~&#13;
Explosion Kills Pour Men.&#13;
Four men were burned to death and&#13;
others fatally Injured in an explosion&#13;
at the Homestead steel works of th*&#13;
United States Steel corporation near&#13;
Pittsburg,&#13;
When you feel Ilk* calling a&#13;
liar go,to the telephone and&#13;
change your mind.&#13;
SUCCESS&#13;
The Michigan Home missionary convention,&#13;
in annual session at Grand&#13;
Rapids, chose Pontine fpr the next&#13;
meeting, place.&#13;
• The Man ion Commercal club la completing&#13;
negotiations for a canning factory&#13;
to be erected the present spring. ,&#13;
The factory is to can peas, corn and j&#13;
such other vegetables as can be grown&#13;
.at a profit in the Manton section of&#13;
I Wexford county.&#13;
Or.PierceV&#13;
Me&amp;tl&#13;
t*a£&gt;&#13;
X&#13;
»*«•*» wrs^JS* *****-. —. **&gt;.*ti*&lt;*. * v . " -*?•* • • • » • • ' ' Y i * . &lt;&#13;
--J&#13;
,x*/&lt;&#13;
&gt; •&#13;
e m SUFFERED&#13;
I TERRIBLY&#13;
At Rifolar Intervals—Sayi&#13;
" M i a L Pinkham't Vego^&#13;
; table Compound com*&#13;
pktely cured her.&#13;
Adrian, Texas.—"I take pleasure la&#13;
• " s a y testimonial to the great list&#13;
and hope that it will&#13;
be of interest to suffering&#13;
women. For&#13;
[four yean I suffered&#13;
untold a g o n i e s at&#13;
r e g u l a r intervals.&#13;
S u c h p a i n s and&#13;
cramps, severe chills&#13;
andaicknessat stomach,&#13;
then finally hemorrhages&#13;
u n t i l I&#13;
would be n e a r l y&#13;
blind. I had five&#13;
doctors and none of them could do more&#13;
UMB relieve me f or a time.&#13;
" I taw your advertisement In a paper&#13;
and decided to try Lydia E. Pinkaam'a&#13;
Vegetable Compound. I took&#13;
seven boxes of it and used two bottles&#13;
of the Sanative Wash, and I am completely&#13;
cured of my trouble. When I&#13;
began taking the Compound I only&#13;
weighed ninety-six pounds and now I&#13;
Weigh one hundred and twenty-six&#13;
pounds. If anyone wishes to address&#13;
me in person I will cheerfully answer&#13;
all letters* as I cannot speak too highly&#13;
of the Pinkham remedies. "-Miss JESta&#13;
&amp;U18Q, Adrian, Texas.&#13;
Hundreds of such letters expressing&#13;
gratitude for the good Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound has accomplished&#13;
are constantly being received,&#13;
proving the reliability of this grand old&#13;
FIRST MESSAGE IN&#13;
W I L 8 0 N WA3TE3 FEW WORDS IN&#13;
TELLING CONGRESS W H A T IT&#13;
8HOULO DO.&#13;
TARIFF REVISION HIS TOPIC&#13;
President Says the Schedules Must Be&#13;
Radically Changed to 8quare With&#13;
Present Conditions, but Work Requires&#13;
Careful Consideration.&#13;
„ ftyoti want special advice write to&#13;
lydia B, Pimkham Medicine Co. (confidential)&#13;
Lynn, Mass. Tour letter will&#13;
be opened, read and answered by a&#13;
and held In strict confidence&#13;
«ESiN0L RELIEVED&#13;
ITCHING INSTANTLY&#13;
Ami Cesapletely Cured Skin Humor.&#13;
if yon have, eczema or any other&#13;
Hehlng, burning skin trouble, the best&#13;
evidence of what Resinol Soap and&#13;
Resinol Ointment can do for you Is&#13;
the word of one who was cured by&#13;
them after weeks of suffering. Adolph&#13;
Bchoen, 742 Shepherd Ave., Brooklyn,&#13;
writes:&#13;
»or. 1, 194«.—"At first little red&#13;
spots were seen on my arms and body,&#13;
which I noticed were getting larger&#13;
every day. They itched me so much&#13;
that I scratched myself until I bled.&#13;
There were times when I stood up all&#13;
night and scratched. I was troubled&#13;
about three weeks, during which time&#13;
I ased — , which seemed to do me&#13;
no good whatever. Then, finally, I&#13;
thought of trying Resinol Soap and&#13;
Resinol Ointment. As soon as I applied&#13;
Resinol Ointment I felt much re*&#13;
lief. After using; it a few times, I noticed&#13;
the sore spots slowly fading&#13;
away, and in about a month I was&#13;
cured completely."&#13;
The soothing, healing balsams in&#13;
Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap,&#13;
penetrate every tiny pore of the skin,&#13;
clearing it of all Impurities, driving&#13;
away eczema, rashes, ringworm, psoriasis,&#13;
and other eruptions, and making&#13;
pimples and blackheads impossible.&#13;
Proscribed by physicians for eighteen&#13;
years. For free samples write to Dept.&#13;
$4C, Resinol, Baltimore, Md. Every&#13;
druggist sells Resinol Ointment (50c)&#13;
and Resinol Soap (25c), or sent by&#13;
parcel post on receipt of price.&#13;
Great Texas&#13;
A farm and urban home in the&#13;
cream of the fertile highlands of&#13;
Great Texas for £10.00 per month.&#13;
Mild clima e. N o excessive heat er&#13;
cold. Abundant rainfall. Markets&#13;
the best. AH conditions most&#13;
favorable. Community well settled&#13;
and cultured. Comfort, prosperity&#13;
S,rid i n d e p e n d e n c e a w a i t you.&#13;
Write for full particulars.&#13;
JNO. T. LOGAN, Texarkana, Tex.&#13;
Agents Wanted&#13;
Big money for battlers.&#13;
We return your postage&#13;
with pardculars of the&#13;
Best Vacuum Cleaner and&#13;
Ike Eefipts Vacuum Washer&#13;
jJcmOBStfatfon with sanv&#13;
I tee cost you nothing. We&#13;
DELIVER THB GOOM.&#13;
Catt) Buyers Mfg. Co.&#13;
raotouirr, INDIUM&#13;
1-+--&#13;
ut IUIU paper desirtaw&#13;
to bnj aa/thlng&#13;
» Setoff wkftt they&#13;
e#e«Mmesortmft»UoM&#13;
Washlngton, April 8.—President&#13;
Wilson's first message to the Sixty*&#13;
third congress, assembled in extraordinary&#13;
session, was read in the senate&#13;
and house today. It was surprising'&#13;
ly short, being in full as follows:&#13;
To the Senate and House of Representatives:&#13;
I have called the congress together&#13;
In extraordinary session because a&#13;
duty was laid upon the party now in&#13;
power at the recent elections whkh it&#13;
ought to perform promptly, in order&#13;
that the burden carried by the people&#13;
under existing law may be lightened&#13;
as soon as possible and in order, also,&#13;
that the business Interests of the&#13;
country may not be kept too long in&#13;
suspense aswto what the fiscal changes&#13;
are to be to which they will be re*&#13;
quired to adjust themselves. It is clear&#13;
to the whole country that the tariff&#13;
duties must be altered. They must&#13;
be changed to meet the radical altera,&#13;
tlon in the conditions of our ecnomic&#13;
life which the country has witnessed&#13;
within the last generation.&#13;
While the whole face and method of&#13;
our industrial and commercial life&#13;
were being changed beyond recognition&#13;
the tariff schedules have re*&#13;
mained what they were before the&#13;
change began, or have moved in the&#13;
direction they were given when no&#13;
large circumstance of our industrial&#13;
development was what it is today.&#13;
Our task is to square them with the&#13;
actual facts. The sooner that is done&#13;
the sooner we shall escape from suffering&#13;
from the facts and the sooner&#13;
our men of business will be free to&#13;
thrive by the law of nature (the nature&#13;
of free business) Instead of by&#13;
the law of legislation and artificial arrangement.&#13;
Business Not Normal.&#13;
We have seen tariff legislation&#13;
wander very far afield in our day—&#13;
very far indeed from the field in whicn&#13;
our prosperity might have had a nor*&#13;
mal growth and stimulation. No one&#13;
who looks the facts squarely in the&#13;
face or knows anything that lies beneath&#13;
the surface of action can fail to&#13;
perceive the principles upon which&#13;
recent tariff legislation has been&#13;
based. We. long ago passed beyond&#13;
the modest notion of "protecting" the&#13;
Industries of the country and moved&#13;
boldly forward to the idea that they&#13;
were entitled to the direct patronage&#13;
of the government. For a long time—&#13;
a time so long that the men now active&#13;
in public policy hardly remember the&#13;
conditions that preceded it-rrwet have&#13;
sought in our tariff schedules to give&#13;
each group of manufacturers or pro*&#13;
ducers what they themselves thought 1 that they needed in order to&#13;
maintain a practically exclusive&#13;
market as against the rest of the&#13;
World. Consciously or unconsciously,&#13;
we have built up a set of privileges&#13;
and exemptions from competition behind&#13;
which it was easy by any, even&#13;
the crudest, forms of combination to&#13;
organize monopoly; until at last nothing&#13;
1B normal, nothing is obliged to&#13;
stand the tests of efficiency and economy,&#13;
in our world of big business, but&#13;
everything thrives by concerted arrangement.&#13;
Only new principles of&#13;
action will save us frcm a final hard&#13;
crystallization of monopoly and a&#13;
complete loss of the influences that&#13;
quicken enterprise and keep independent&#13;
energy alive.&#13;
It is &gt; plain what those principles&#13;
must be. We must abolish everything&#13;
that bears even the semblance of privilege&#13;
or of any kind of artificial advantage,&#13;
and put our business men&#13;
and producers under the stimulation&#13;
of a constant necessity to be efficient,&#13;
economical, and enterprising, masters&#13;
of competitive supremacy, better&#13;
workers and merchants than any in&#13;
the world. Aside from the duties laid&#13;
upon articles which we do not, and&#13;
probably cannot, produce, therefore,&#13;
and the duties laid upon luxuries and&#13;
merely for the sake of the revenues&#13;
they yield, the object of the tariff duties&#13;
henceforth laid must be effective&#13;
competition, the whetting of American&#13;
wits by contest with the wits of&#13;
the rest of the world.&#13;
Development, Not Revolution.&#13;
It would be unwise to move toward&#13;
this end headlong, with reckless&#13;
haste, or with strokes that cut at the&#13;
very roots of what has grown up&#13;
amongst us by long process and at&#13;
our own invitation. It does not alter&#13;
a thing to upset it and break it and&#13;
deprive it of a chance to change It&#13;
destroys K. We must make changes&#13;
in our fiscal laws, in our fiscal system,&#13;
whose object Is development, a more&#13;
free and wholesome development, net&#13;
revolution or upset or contusion. We&#13;
must build up trade, especially for&#13;
eign trade. We need the outlet and&#13;
the enlarged field of energy more&#13;
than we ever did before. We must&#13;
build up industry as well and must&#13;
adopt freedom in the place of artificial&#13;
stimulation only so far as it will&#13;
build, not pull down. In dealing with&#13;
the tariff the method by which this&#13;
may be done will be a matter of judgment,&#13;
exercised item by item.&#13;
To some not accustomed to the excitements&#13;
and responsibilities of&#13;
greater freedom our methods may In&#13;
some respects and at some points&#13;
seem heroic, but remedies may be&#13;
heroic and yet be remedies. It is our&#13;
business to make sure that they are&#13;
genuine remedies. Our object Is clear.&#13;
If our motive Is above just challenge&#13;
and only an occasional error of Judgment&#13;
la chargeable against us, we&#13;
shall be fortunate.&#13;
We are called upon to render the&#13;
country a great service In more matters&#13;
than one. Our responsibility&#13;
should be met and our methods should&#13;
be thorough, as thorough as moderate&#13;
and well considered, based upon the&#13;
facts as they are, and not worked out&#13;
as If we were beginners. We are to&#13;
deal with the facts of our own day,&#13;
with the facts of no other, and to&#13;
make laws which square with those&#13;
facts. It is best, indeed it is necessary,&#13;
to begin with the tariff. I will&#13;
urge nothing upon you now at the&#13;
opening of your session which can ob&#13;
scure that first object or divert our&#13;
energies from that clearly defined&#13;
duty. At a later time I may take the&#13;
liberty of calling your attention to re&#13;
forms which should press close upon&#13;
the heels of the tariff changes, if not&#13;
accompany them, of which the chlet&#13;
is the reform of our banking and currency&#13;
laws; but Just now I refrain.&#13;
For the present, I put these matters&#13;
on one side and think only of this one&#13;
thing—of the changes in our fiscal&#13;
system which may best serve to open&#13;
once more the free channels of prosperity&#13;
to a great people whom we&#13;
would serve to the utmost and&#13;
throughout both rank and file.&#13;
WOODROW WILSON.&#13;
The White House, April 8, 1913.&#13;
FAMILY NAMES OF ROYALTY&#13;
Royal Personages Descended Mostly&#13;
From Counts, Existing Long Before&#13;
Surnames Came Into Use.&#13;
The royal families of Europe have&#13;
not generally a surname because&#13;
mostly (unlike the English houses of&#13;
Stuart and Tudor, which were the respective&#13;
surnames of the first king of&#13;
each house before he ascended the&#13;
throne) they are descended in the&#13;
male line from some territorial&#13;
counts existing long previous to the&#13;
period in which4 the somewhat modern&#13;
custom of surnames prevailed-&#13;
King Georoge V derives In the male&#13;
line from the ancients counts of Wettin&#13;
(flourishing in the tenth century),&#13;
afterwards electors of Saxony, dukes&#13;
of Saxe Coburg, Ootha, etc. His an*&#13;
cestors in the male line were of the&#13;
house of Este, one of whom, Axo of&#13;
Este, married early In the tenth century&#13;
the daughter and heiress of&#13;
Ouelph, duke of Bavaria, from which&#13;
match sprang in the male line the&#13;
dukes of Brunswick-Lunenburg, afterwards&#13;
electors of Hanover, and kings&#13;
of Great Britain. The members of&#13;
the royal family are described by&#13;
their princely titles in proceedings&#13;
in the house of lords, and no allusion&#13;
is made to any surname—-for instance,&#13;
they sign the test roll merely&#13;
by their personal or Christian name.&#13;
and we know nothing of any surname&#13;
which appertained by right or by&#13;
usage, to her late majesty, Queen Victoria,&#13;
or to his majesty King&#13;
George V.&#13;
Bermuda Pish.&#13;
At the market during a recent week&#13;
many handsome fish were to be .teen,&#13;
several of them taken by American&#13;
tourists, and afterward presented to&#13;
the fisherman who "took them out"&#13;
Large amber-jacks and bonitoes, splendid&#13;
game fish and chubs, as plucky&#13;
and "flghty" a fish as ever took bait,&#13;
were well represented.&#13;
Among the others seen on the market&#13;
hooks and elsewhere were binefish,&#13;
yellowtails, red snappers; gray&#13;
snappers, butterflsh, gags, hamlets,&#13;
"nines," salmon and black rockfsh,&#13;
porgies and red rockflsh. "Nigger&#13;
fish," the long ago despised finny&#13;
midget, has been metamorphosed to&#13;
the now much sought after "choicest&#13;
of the choice" of sea delicacies, the&#13;
"butter fish."—Bermuda Colonists.&#13;
"Soft" Job for Constable.&#13;
Pension are not tbe only things commanded&#13;
and forgotten. An inquisitive&#13;
member of the British house of commons&#13;
was struck one day by the presence&#13;
of a policeman in one of the lobbies.&#13;
He wondered why this particular&#13;
lobby should always have a guardian&#13;
strolling up and down, and mads&#13;
inquiries. The records of the house&#13;
were searched and it was found that&#13;
60 years previously, when the lobby&#13;
wss being decorated, a policeman had&#13;
been stationed there to keep members&#13;
from soiling their clothes. The order&#13;
never having been countermanded, the&#13;
constable had kept hit beat far half&#13;
a century, •"•*-&#13;
• • • &lt; »&#13;
Bakes&#13;
Belter&#13;
CALUMET&#13;
BAKING&#13;
•X&amp; POWDER&#13;
ECONOMY"~that's o n o thing you are&#13;
n ii — — — looking for in these days&#13;
of high living cost—Calumet insures a wonder- Jpjmmmt&#13;
ful saving in your baking. But it does more.&#13;
It insures wholesome food, tasty food—uniformly raised food.&#13;
Calumet it made right—to sell right—to bake right. Ask&#13;
one of the millions of women who use it—or ask your grocer.&#13;
RECEIVED HIGHEST AWARDS&#13;
World's Par* Food Exposition, Chicago. 0 1&#13;
Pari* Fwporitinn. Franco, March, 1912.&#13;
V « don't **e money when yoa buy cheap or big-can baking potodet.&#13;
Dan *l ha tmUimad. Buy Calumet, it '* more economical—more wholesome—•&#13;
fees beat rssdtev Calumet U far superior to tour aulJf, and soda.&#13;
Galvanic&#13;
Soap is&#13;
Known as&#13;
Free Free&#13;
Six .Genuine Rogers Silver&#13;
Teaspoons for only 100&#13;
Galvanic Soap Wrappers&#13;
or coupons from&#13;
Johnson's Washing&#13;
Powder.&#13;
Here is the Offer&#13;
i W&#13;
For each teaspoon desired send&#13;
us one two-cent stamp and&#13;
twenty Calraok Soap wrapper! (front&#13;
panel only) or coupon* from John*&#13;
IOO'I Waahlof Powder.&#13;
Actual&#13;
Spoon Regular&#13;
6-in. length&#13;
"The Famous&#13;
Easy Washer"&#13;
It's a white Soap&#13;
andthe cocoanut&#13;
oil in it makes it&#13;
the easiest lathering&#13;
soap on the market-&#13;
Test it out your&#13;
next wash day and&#13;
d o n ' t f o r g e t t o&#13;
save (he wrappers.&#13;
Mail them to the&#13;
Premium Department of&#13;
Special Offer for&#13;
Six Teaspoons&#13;
Send 100 Galrank Soap&#13;
wrapper! and 5 Z-&lt;xnt&#13;
etanpt to pay pofUtei&#13;
we will tend you a&#13;
•et of lix teaspoon*&#13;
ABSOLUTELY&#13;
FREE.&#13;
V&#13;
These teaspoons&#13;
are&#13;
t h e k i n d&#13;
that you'll be&#13;
proud to own.&#13;
They are the genuine&#13;
1881 Rogers&#13;
ware, heavily tripleplated&#13;
silver on a&#13;
white metal base. The&#13;
pattern is the famous&#13;
La Vigne, or Grape,&#13;
with the beautiful&#13;
French Gray finish.&#13;
With ordinary wear&#13;
these spoon* will last a&#13;
life time. Start urine your&#13;
wrapper* today, or better Will&#13;
ya box of Galvanic and you'll have 100&#13;
wrapper*, just enough for a aet of ipoona.&#13;
B. J. JOHNSON SOAP CO., MUwaukee, Wisconsin&#13;
COLT. DISTEMPER bai bandied very eaalfr. The tick are cored, and all othen la&#13;
- atable.no matter how "expoaed," kept from har&amp;ur tba di»&#13;
by aiiof 8POHH* LIQUfDDISTEMPER C U R E T W e on&#13;
—_ .onfae.or la feed. Act* on tbe blood and expela m m i oj&#13;
all forma of dlttemper. Bast remedy erer known for maree la foal&#13;
""•*" - - - - - - - - • - — s a j&#13;
. „. _„ Lama? Milina&#13;
horao remedy laexlateaoe—twelve year*,&#13;
•P-OHM M I D I O A t , C O . , *•*»!*• a^taifcrWetWe, OOwhwn, IncL, If. 8 . A .&#13;
Stops Backache&#13;
Sloan's Liniment is a splendid remedy for backache, stiff&#13;
joints, rheumatism, neuralgia and sciatica. You don't need to&#13;
rub it in—just laid on lightly it gives comfort and ease at once.&#13;
Best for Pain and Stiffness&#13;
M1.G10. BUCHANAN, of Welch, Okla,, writes:—"I have used your Liniment&#13;
lor the past ten years for pain in back and stiffness and find it the best&#13;
Liniment I ever tried. I recommend it to anyone for pains of any kind." SLOANS&#13;
LINIMENT Is good for sprains, strains, bruises, cramp or soreness of the&#13;
muscles, and all affections of the throat and chest&#13;
Cot Entire Relief&#13;
R. D. BUROOYNB, of Maysville, Ky., RR. r, Box&#13;
c, writes: —"I had severe pains between myahoulders;&#13;
I got a bottle of your Liniment and had entire&#13;
relief at the fifth application."&#13;
ReBeved Severe Pafai in Shoulder*&#13;
M*. J. UNDEKWOOD, of 2000 Warren Are.,&#13;
Chicago. HI., writes: — u I am a piano polisher&#13;
by occupation, and since last September have&#13;
suffered with severe pain in both shoulders.&#13;
I could not rest night or day. One of my&#13;
friends told me about your liniment.&#13;
Three applications completely cured&#13;
me and I will never be without it"&#13;
Price a5c.,50cM and $1M&#13;
at All Dealers.&#13;
/Bead for Sloan'* free book on korses.&#13;
Dr. Earl S. Slots*.&#13;
Boston, Maw. I1&#13;
m mmm CHICKS DIE aSasassBBtSU &amp;&#13;
-i." J*%&#13;
' -i y ».." i\&lt;»&#13;
•j&amp; Mr'&#13;
1 * • b" *#•'&#13;
I&#13;
THE EUCLID MALE QUARTET&#13;
Local News&#13;
THE EUCLID MALE QUARTET.&#13;
EUCLID MALE QUARTET.&#13;
These College-Bred Young Men Will&#13;
Appear in Lyceum Course.&#13;
Nearly every Lyceum course and&#13;
Chautauqua offers a male quartet&#13;
•very season, for no popular musical&#13;
attraction Is quite BO popular as a&#13;
company of four young men who are&#13;
good singers and entertainers. For&#13;
this season the Euclid Male Quartet&#13;
has been engaged. These four young&#13;
men are college-bred, were known as&#13;
the Antioch Glee club when they first&#13;
began to sing together six years ago,&#13;
and are graduates of Antioch college,&#13;
founded and made famous by Horace&#13;
Mann. They are good singers and&#13;
their ensemble numbers are very well&#13;
done, for they have sung together for&#13;
six years. One rjember is a good&#13;
reader, presenting some of Riley's&#13;
best known poems. A feature is the&#13;
playing by the quartet on the largest&#13;
set of aluminum organ-chimes that is&#13;
nsed in Lyceum work. They produce&#13;
tones like a fine pipe organ, and with&#13;
four good musicians playing, the most&#13;
beautiful tones and effects are secured.&#13;
The program of this company&#13;
Is varied and satisfying. Each memher&#13;
is a soloist and the personnel Is:&#13;
Mr. O. W. Beaver, second tenor and&#13;
The average income of a man is&#13;
about 3 a. m,&#13;
Walter Mulhollaud and wife of&#13;
Ann Arbor were recent visitors at&#13;
J. K. Martin's.&#13;
Mrs. Margaret Black and daughter,&#13;
Ella, are visiting at the home&#13;
of John R. Martin.&#13;
Regular couiiaunication of Livingston&#13;
lodge No. 70 F. A. A. M,&#13;
to be held Tuesday evening. April&#13;
15, Work in M'. M. degree. 3rd&#13;
degree banquet at the close,&#13;
J. R. Martin, W. M.&#13;
When you go into the postoffice&#13;
and inquire for mail, don't try to&#13;
fill up the delivery hole with the&#13;
south end of your body. If you&#13;
merely stand off and fire your request&#13;
those whom you address&#13;
wM ^ respond promptly. After&#13;
receiving your m*iil, don't stand&#13;
monopolizing the delivery while&#13;
you look to see the postmark and&#13;
guess who t h e letters* are from.&#13;
Let those behind you have a&#13;
chance, for life is short and time&#13;
is fleeting.&#13;
COLUMBUS FIOUR&#13;
. FOR CAKES&#13;
Order Today With Your&#13;
Groceries&#13;
•i*#.&#13;
ufiwur&#13;
il&#13;
Monks Brothers&#13;
S3&#13;
reader; Mr. W. C. Shade, basso; Mr.&#13;
II. E. Haines, first tenor; Mr. C. J.&#13;
Beaver, baritone and pianist.&#13;
The last number ou tl-e Pinokuey Lecture Course at the Pmckney&#13;
Opera House, Monday evening April 14.&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
WANTED—Was.ias to do. d r s .&#13;
Antoine, widow, Pinckney 12t3&#13;
"How I shall mifts you&#13;
When yon are grown."&#13;
b'ORSALEOR RENT-Goqd house.&#13;
14t8 Inquire of Ross Read&#13;
FOR SALE—Work team, Geldings.&#13;
5 and 8 yrs. old. Clayton Placeway&#13;
What the poet san^, every moth- j LOST—Howe blanket between tbe&#13;
er'a heart has fVH. Babp'a photograph&#13;
taken now and then will&#13;
preserve the imHge aud memory&#13;
of baby days for all tiuio.&#13;
How long ^ince you liMVt* had&#13;
your baby's picture taken?&#13;
DaisieB. Chapell&#13;
Photographer&#13;
Stockbridde, Michigan&#13;
Barton farm and town,&#13;
please return to this office.&#13;
Finder&#13;
Ht2*&#13;
DRESSMAKING-PIaiu and fancy&#13;
sewing. 13:3*&#13;
Mabel E Broitfn, Pinckney&#13;
FOR SALE—Good ta me bay, PISO&#13;
some white oak fence post^. 13t3&#13;
J, R, Martin, Pinckney&#13;
FOR SALE-Early&#13;
and notatoes&#13;
Seed Potatoes&#13;
15t3*&#13;
G, M. Greiner&#13;
K&#13;
8&#13;
H. F. S'GLER M&lt; D- C. L, SIGLER M. D.&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp;' SIGLER, |&#13;
Physicians and burgeon?. ?&#13;
All calls promptly attended to&#13;
day or night. Office on AJain&#13;
Street.&#13;
PINCKNEY, -*r":*- MICH.&#13;
STATS of MicHioAH. The Prolate Conrt lor t he&#13;
county of Livingston, At a session of said&#13;
court, held at the probate office in the village of&#13;
Howell in aaidcounty on tbe 8th clay oi March,&#13;
A. ». 1?I3. Present, Hon. Rages* A. Stowe,&#13;
Judge oi Probate. In tbe matter of the pat ate of&#13;
MARY ,T. PARLE V, Deceased&#13;
John McKeman having filed in aaid court hia&#13;
petitlrn praying that a certain intrum &gt;nt in&#13;
writing, purporting to be the last will and testa*&#13;
flteat oi aaid deceased, now on file io ssiri court&#13;
oe admitted to probate, and that the adtniriatratton&#13;
of aaid estate be granted to John MoKeraan&#13;
or to some other suitable ptrson.&#13;
It U ordered that the 8rd day of April,&#13;
A. D. 1*1 a, at teo o'clock la the torenoon,&#13;
at aaia probate office, be and la hereby ao.&#13;
pdttatf for hearing aaid petition.&#13;
It U further ordered, that public notice thereof&#13;
boflten by pnblfcation of a copy oi thin order&#13;
fortbrceooooewalve weeks previousto aaid day of&#13;
Bomriog la tbe Piackney bUpatch, a newtr*per&#13;
priatoa and circulated in aaid connty. lit \&#13;
LOST—A winter rooe between tbe&#13;
J. McCluskey farm and Pinckney.&#13;
Finder please leave at this office.&#13;
FOR SALE—Good store building,&#13;
large hotel barn, picture gallery&#13;
and seyeral good lota.&#13;
Inquire of tlohn Tuome/, Brighton.&#13;
WANTED—A raa'd, wages |18 per&#13;
month; also a night watchman.&#13;
14t3 Michigan State Sanitarinm&#13;
Howell, Michigan&#13;
FOR SERVICE-Full Blooded Jersey&#13;
Hull. Formerly owned by Will&#13;
Dunning. Terms $1. due at time of&#13;
service. Also have a new milch cow&#13;
for sale. 14t3* B. McCluskey&#13;
FOR SERVICE - Registered fork&#13;
Sbire Boar. Terms $1.00 12t3&#13;
•/A Hoyt Bros. Pinckney&#13;
uu EIQE5JE A. 8TOWE,&#13;
Jadge of Probate&#13;
Btffn siek Htfttahes Away&#13;
Hick beadachet, sour and gassy&#13;
stomach, indigestion, biliousness disapear&#13;
quickly alter.jou take Dr Kings&#13;
New Life Pills Tbey parity tbe blood&#13;
and pot new life and vigor io the system&#13;
Try them and yon will be satisfied&#13;
Every pill helps every box guaranteed&#13;
Price 25c Reeemmended bv&#13;
W (i Meyer&#13;
STATE OF OHM, CITY OF TOLEDO /&#13;
LUCAS COUNTY \&#13;
Frank Cheney makes oath that he is&#13;
is senior partuer of the firm of F J&#13;
Cbeney &amp; Co, dcing business in tbe&#13;
City of Toledo, County and State of&#13;
aforesaid and that said firm will pay&#13;
the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS&#13;
for each and every case of Catarrh&#13;
that cannot be cured by the use&#13;
of Hall's Catarrab Cure&#13;
FRANK J CHENEY&#13;
? worn to before me and subscribed&#13;
in my presence, this sixth day of December,&#13;
AD 1886&#13;
(Seal) A W GLEASON&#13;
Notary ot Public&#13;
Hall's Catarrh (Jure is taken internally,&#13;
and acts directly on the blood&#13;
and mucous surfaces of the system&#13;
Send for testimonials free&#13;
F J CHENEY &amp; Co Toledo, Ohio&#13;
Sold by all Druggists, 75c&#13;
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation&#13;
Pinckney Market Reports&#13;
Corrected every Wednesday morning&#13;
WHEAT—11.03&#13;
RYE~52o&#13;
OATS—32&#13;
B E A N S - ¢ 1 . 7 5&#13;
ONIONS—$i:00-&#13;
POTATOES—5Qc&#13;
BUTTER - 2 8 c .&#13;
EGGS-16c,&#13;
CHICKENS—live&#13;
Are Getting The Premiums All The&#13;
Time And Are Praising Purity Flour&#13;
Try a F'ew S»cl«s of&#13;
Cobs FOP Kindling at 5 t&#13;
per bag&#13;
delivered in IO baglotsormore&#13;
and see if they are not the best you ever had.&#13;
T H E H O Y T B R O S .&#13;
K.'-Couch's&#13;
,&lt;nwl Loiojij&#13;
h I -i &gt;o ic 1« • -&#13;
S O , : Mr* TV&#13;
OIEYS H0NEY./TAR Cora&#13;
For S a l e b y W . B . Brown&#13;
Doun&#13;
13c, bene l i e&#13;
:%WtfAt#?.t^^^^&#13;
Sale Bills Printed at the&#13;
Dispatch Office at Right&#13;
Prices.&#13;
Boys Xtra good suits a t Dan&#13;
cer's for $5.&#13;
Gan W e Interest You&#13;
Mv. Farmer?&#13;
Read the List of Goods Below and Then&#13;
Come To Our Store and bet Us&#13;
CONVINCE YOU&#13;
That T h e s e Goods Gan Be Bought at t h e Right P r i c e&#13;
I. H. C. Low Down Spreader&#13;
I. H. C. Gasoline Engines and Tractors&#13;
Star Wind Mills&#13;
Gale and Oliver Sulkey and Gang. Plows&#13;
Gale 7 and 8 ft. Rollers and Tillage Implements&#13;
Superior, Hoosier and Ontario Grain Drills in Plain Disc and Fertilizer Types&#13;
Rex Lime Sulphur Solution and Arsenate of Lead For Spraying&#13;
Farm and Garden Seeds&#13;
Furniture and Rugs&#13;
Complete Line of Shelf Hardware&#13;
W e buy the most of these goods In cap load lots which&#13;
gives us a better opportunity to get low prices* W e guara&#13;
n t e e to give better goods for the price than you can get&#13;
elsewhere. A T L E A S T L E T U S S H O W Y O U&#13;
DIIMKEL &amp; DUNBAR -&#13;
i'.&#13;
i&#13;
&gt;r\&#13;
;_»&#13;
x- • % » ' * •</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch April 10, 1913</text>
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                <text>April 10, 1913 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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                <text>Roy W. Caverly</text>
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        <name>pinckney dispatch</name>
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