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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, September 4, 1913 No. 36&#13;
Great National Movement&#13;
Charches, schools, labor unions,&#13;
fraternal orders and other organizations&#13;
to the number of 200,000&#13;
at least will be asked to join the&#13;
anti-tuberculosis workers of the&#13;
country in the observance of the&#13;
Fourth National Tuberculosis&#13;
r, which has been designated&#13;
member 7tb, according to an&#13;
i nee men t issued to-day by&#13;
the National Association for' the&#13;
study and prevention of Tuberculosis.&#13;
The movement will be furthered&#13;
throughout the country by* more&#13;
than 1,600 anti-tuperculosis sc-&#13;
. cietiea working through various&#13;
state organizations aud the National&#13;
Association. Personal appeals&#13;
will be made to clergymen, school&#13;
principals and leaders of various&#13;
organizations urging ihem to set&#13;
aside a definite time during the&#13;
week preceding or the week&#13;
following December 7th, for a&#13;
lecture on tuberculosis.&#13;
Last year over 60,000 churches&#13;
gave attention to this subject on&#13;
Tuberculosis Day. . It is hoped&#13;
this year to swell the number of&#13;
churches to 100,000 and to urge&#13;
similar action besides in a large&#13;
number of the schools and other&#13;
societies. The Tuberculosis Day&#13;
Campaign will come this year during&#13;
the Red Cross Christmas Seal&#13;
Sale. It is planned to urge the&#13;
churches of the country to take a&#13;
definite part in this movement.&#13;
The observance of Tuberculosis&#13;
Day was endorsed last year by&#13;
President Taft, Cardinal Farley,&#13;
Col. Roosevelt and many other&#13;
prominent churchmen and public&#13;
officials. Proclamations calling&#13;
upon the people to observe this&#13;
day were issued by governors of&#13;
more thau a dozeu states and by&#13;
the mayors of a considerable number&#13;
of cities.&#13;
The Newspaper Exchange&#13;
There is no section of a newspaper&#13;
that comes home closer to&#13;
the real life of the people thau the&#13;
classified advertising.&#13;
The classified advertising tells&#13;
of things that closely affect the&#13;
daily lives of home people.&#13;
One learns more of what is going&#13;
CJU in a town from reading&#13;
these columns than from the best&#13;
edited news stores. The houselocal&#13;
News&#13;
Fay your subscription this month.&#13;
Mrs. Emma Brown is visiting&#13;
relatives at Brooklyn, N. Y.&#13;
Marion Reason and family spent&#13;
Saturday at Whitmore Lake.&#13;
Helen Dolan spent the past&#13;
week with relatives in Detroit.&#13;
W. C. Caffery of Kansas City,&#13;
Mo., is visiting relatives here,&#13;
Kathleen Roche spent Sunday&#13;
wife is arxious to see who is ad-! with friends in Ef\ton Rapids.&#13;
Mail Delivery in Villages&#13;
It looks kow as though free mail&#13;
delivery in villages will become&#13;
general in the future. Satisfactory&#13;
reports having been received&#13;
from the villages in which free ^ e p t i o n a i merest is&#13;
mail delivery service was provided] *£ow*\ uo* ^ , ^ , t b e P«°ple of&#13;
office&#13;
It&#13;
. ;,«§B"an experiment, the post&#13;
5^^ / ¾ department is planning to extend&#13;
^ ^* 1 r that branch of its work materially.&#13;
Last year congress appropriated&#13;
$100,000 to test the practicability&#13;
of giving to towns, too small to be&#13;
eligible for city delivery service,&#13;
the service of one or two carriers&#13;
and one. or. two deliveries* a day.&#13;
y Several smalls towns in each state&#13;
was selected, the five in, Michigan&#13;
being Durand, Fremont, Morenci,&#13;
Be^d City and Painwell. From&#13;
all parts of the country favorable&#13;
* 1 reports have been received.&#13;
fc&#13;
IN&#13;
How About That Watch?&#13;
Learning that there is an opening&#13;
for a jewelry repair man in&#13;
this A'icinty, I h*ve arranged to&#13;
be at Monks Bros, store one day&#13;
each week, Wednesday, for the&#13;
pnrprosepf doing jewelry work.&#13;
Work guaranteed.&#13;
Edw A. Clark.&#13;
vertising for positions as servant.&#13;
Working people want to know&#13;
who desire help. People who&#13;
own, or who want to buy or sell&#13;
real estate, are interested in the&#13;
tranbfers that are going on. It&#13;
is hard to find a class of people&#13;
who do not follow these notices&#13;
Hence it is perfectly astonishing&#13;
how many answers one can&#13;
often get from a single little&#13;
notice in the To Rent, For Sale or&#13;
Want columns. Anything you can&#13;
do by personal inquiry is multiplied&#13;
a hundredfold through the&#13;
newspaper press.&#13;
Some people will put in hours&#13;
or days making inquires and running&#13;
around haphazard when they&#13;
want to rent a place or sell a piece&#13;
of property. They devote dollars&#13;
worth of time, when a few cents&#13;
spent in the newspaper would&#13;
reach a hundred times as many&#13;
people.&#13;
The Dispatch is strong on this&#13;
kind of advertsing and has always&#13;
enjoyed a liberal patronage along&#13;
in the "For Sale" and "Wanted"&#13;
column and yet there are hundreds&#13;
of people in Livin^ton County&#13;
who could make many dollars by&#13;
spending a few cents in the classified&#13;
columns. The price 5 cents&#13;
per line is very low. Those who&#13;
use the columu once universally&#13;
come back if they have anything&#13;
to buy or to sell.&#13;
Revival Meetings&#13;
Howell's great evengelistic campaign&#13;
which was started last week&#13;
bids fair to be a general religious&#13;
awakening of the whole county.&#13;
Exceptional interest is being&#13;
Howell, but all thrqnghout the&#13;
adjoining townships. A ma/nmoth&#13;
tabernacle has been erected for&#13;
the meetings which so far has&#13;
jf V v Tax Notice&#13;
I am a t * ready to oolleot all&#13;
Tillage taxes and wjroao wishing&#13;
to pay tbem can call at +he 4ull&#13;
and do eo at any tine.&#13;
B. B. HoyttJQHige Treasurer, Tn&#13;
nights all seats have been taken,&#13;
Evangelist Hicks is a man of&#13;
power. He anticipates great results&#13;
from the revival and solicits&#13;
the co-operation of all christian&#13;
people.&#13;
A revival, he says, means much&#13;
to a community. It is a benefit to&#13;
the business man in that it starts&#13;
debt paying and stops dead beating.&#13;
It stops trouble between&#13;
man and man, bringing love into&#13;
the heart to displace hatred and&#13;
enmity. It is one of the best&#13;
agents for moral reform? better&#13;
than local option or prohibition.&#13;
It restores bible reading and the&#13;
family altar, awakens dead church&#13;
members and sets them to wort.&#13;
It brings Jiarmouy and peace to&#13;
the whole community.&#13;
A. H. Gilchrist and family spent&#13;
Sunday and Monday in Jackson.&#13;
Mrs. Edward Read of Detroit&#13;
is visiting at the home of Thomas&#13;
Read.&#13;
Robt. Grice and family of Pontiac&#13;
spent the past week at N. P.&#13;
Mortenson's.&#13;
H. Ayers and family of Detroit&#13;
spent Sunday and Monday at Mrs.&#13;
S. 0. Nash's.&#13;
Several parties from here attended&#13;
the Knight Templar Labor&#13;
Day celebration at Howell. All&#13;
reported a good time.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. C. VanKuren and&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J. VanKuren of&#13;
Lansing spent a few days the past&#13;
week at the home of G. W. Teeple.&#13;
Regular communication of Livingston&#13;
lodge No. 76, F. &amp; A. M.,&#13;
Tuesday evening, September 9th,&#13;
Work in the first degree.&#13;
J. R, Martin, W. M.&#13;
An ice cream social will be held&#13;
on the St. Mary's church lawn,&#13;
Friday evening, September 5th.&#13;
At that time the Bed Davenport&#13;
and Sofa Pillow will be given&#13;
away. Everyone cordially invited.&#13;
V, W. Davis, for many years a&#13;
resident of this place, recently&#13;
died at his home in Lebo, Kansas.&#13;
Mr. Davis was well and favorably&#13;
known by the older residents here&#13;
who will regret to learn of his&#13;
death. —&#13;
The crowd at the annual Labor&#13;
Day celebration at Baxter was added&#13;
too by a goodly number of&#13;
Pinckney people. The ball game&#13;
be ween Chelsea vs. Pinckney was&#13;
the biggest event of the day and&#13;
was a real game from start to&#13;
Power Plant Completed&#13;
The new water power plant at&#13;
Reeves mill pond, -U miles south&#13;
of town, recently purchased by&#13;
the Clinton Electric Light aud&#13;
Power Co,, was completed last&#13;
week and Sunday evening the&#13;
juice was turned on for the firjst&#13;
time under the new system. The&#13;
lights at present are not up to&#13;
standard owing to the use of an&#13;
old pulley which had to be pressed&#13;
into service until a new one&#13;
which was ordered some time ago&#13;
arrives, It is expected that by&#13;
the last of the week that everything&#13;
can be put in the best of&#13;
order.&#13;
We have been informed through&#13;
Mr. Clinton, that nearly fifty patrons&#13;
are at present payiug fiat&#13;
rates. Under the new management&#13;
these patrons must install&#13;
meters at a cost to them of $7.00&#13;
each. Heretofore a rate of 16c per&#13;
V. w. has been charged. Beginning&#13;
September 1st, the rate will be&#13;
lowered to 12c per k. w. This&#13;
change wiil doubtless be universally&#13;
appreciated.&#13;
All-night service will be commenced&#13;
some time this month.&#13;
Mr. Clinton and those who aided&#13;
him are to be complimented on&#13;
the work they ha?e so faithfully&#13;
carried through and completed,&#13;
even though they worked at times&#13;
with great odds against their progress.&#13;
«%%%%«%%%%%%%%%*%*%%%%%^%*%%*%%«9&#13;
AUTOMOBILE&#13;
TIRES&#13;
From Factory To You&#13;
*&#13;
Bought direct from one of&#13;
the best factories in the business.&#13;
I am not boasting&#13;
when I state that no man&#13;
owns tires cheaper than I do.&#13;
I am pricing them the "Bowman&#13;
Way,"&#13;
Cong'l. S. S. Picnic&#13;
Last Thursday the Cong'l. S. S.&#13;
picniced at Silver Lake. In spite&#13;
of the threatening weather a large&#13;
number were in attendance. After&#13;
the usual fine dinner the crowd&#13;
accompanied by the Y. M. C. A.&#13;
boys went out to the ball grounds.&#13;
Two fine games were played between&#13;
the Pinckney boys and the&#13;
Y. M. C A. boys. Bottr gamer&#13;
were won by Pinckney. Juniors&#13;
8-7; Seniors 14 0. The boy scouts&#13;
then gave an exhibition drill and&#13;
an outline of each days program.&#13;
The hours from nine to ten a. m.&#13;
are always devoted to bible study.&#13;
Three cheers were given for the&#13;
finish the score standing 3 to 2 I Pinckney Cong'l. church and 8. 8.&#13;
in favor of Chelsea when the game' W l t ^ aQ invitation to join the boys&#13;
Tires are&#13;
first qualit;&#13;
teed.&#13;
new fresh stock,&#13;
r, bur. not guaran-&#13;
3 0 x 3 FOR FORDS $ 8 . 4 - 8&#13;
30x3^&#13;
32x3^&#13;
32x4&#13;
34x4&#13;
Carried&#13;
{&#13;
4 ' ' 9.98&#13;
11.98&#13;
14.98&#13;
16.98&#13;
in stock at the&#13;
store of&#13;
W. D. ADAMS&#13;
HOWELL, MICH.&#13;
All Sales Spot Cash&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN CO.&#13;
DISTRIBUTERS&#13;
IOOLIRNEDST.W.fDETRfl||yMICH.&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
was called in the seventh inning&#13;
on account of darkness. Although&#13;
Chelsea had as many as three&#13;
been well filled and on some f local men on their team, the&#13;
balance being all outside men&#13;
with an Ann Arbor pitcher, our&#13;
boys put up a stiff game and&#13;
would have probably won out if&#13;
the game had not been called.&#13;
The batteries for Pinckney were&#13;
McCrear and McClear.&#13;
again next year. The 8. 8. ex&#13;
tends a vote of thanks to the two&#13;
gentlemen who so kindly took the&#13;
loads out to the lake.&#13;
Mrs. G. D. Bland visited her&#13;
mother at Plain field the latter&#13;
part of last Week. „&#13;
Harry Crippen. and family of&#13;
Detroit were ov:r Sunday guests&#13;
at the home of Wm, Gawley.&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
FOR SALR—Tomatoes.&#13;
John Dinkel, Pinckney.&#13;
FOR SALE—Gravel pit, about tour&#13;
acres, also 14 ocres ot good land,&#13;
E. J. Bripgs, Piockney.&#13;
FOR SALE—Three Daroc boars.&#13;
Spring piffB. 34t2,&#13;
Frank Mackinder, Pinckney.&#13;
LOST STRAYED OR SfOLEN-Red&#13;
and whit* Durham yearling heifer,&#13;
short horns&#13;
36t3* Wm. Gawley, Pinckney&#13;
FOR SALE—One brood sow and five&#13;
pics by her side eight weeks oid.&#13;
price $35.00 if taken at once. W.&#13;
B. Opdycke, Unadilla, Mich.&#13;
» • • * " ' •&#13;
0. Lynch and faaii it Sunday&#13;
in Gregory.&#13;
' Several correspondents reached&#13;
this office too late for publication&#13;
last week and of course were left&#13;
« • oat. Correspondents please tend&#13;
in news so as to reach this offi&#13;
not later than Monday night&#13;
"" ' y morning.&#13;
I Murphy^ &amp; Jackson&#13;
I Saturda ecials&#13;
75c&#13;
September 6th, 1913&#13;
Chef Flour, per sack&#13;
Regular price 8 5 c&#13;
2 5 pounds H. et B. Sugar - $1.35&#13;
Above prices for Saferdsy and for Gash Only v&#13;
if&#13;
' ^ , ¾ ^&#13;
f&#13;
•m.&#13;
vl&#13;
..ftfc&#13;
: £ &amp; *&#13;
&lt;•% . . w ? •ev*»*&#13;
'•x&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
rW&#13;
It&#13;
N the third act of a play&#13;
produced some time ago&#13;
before a critical New&#13;
York audience a fussy old&#13;
bachelor decided to dash&#13;
out into the cold night air&#13;
7m a noble act. As he rushes&#13;
otf the stage he cries: "Where is my&#13;
shawl? Where is my Bhawl? I&#13;
cant go out without a shawl. Ah!"&#13;
The "Ah!" indicates his satisfaction&#13;
at finding the desired article. Then&#13;
he leaves the stage.&#13;
At one performance of the play the&#13;
property man neglected to put the&#13;
shawl in its proper place, and when&#13;
the bachelor uttered the word "Ah!"&#13;
he was embarrassed to find that there&#13;
was no shawl in sight. He cast a&#13;
hasty glance about him, hoping that it&#13;
might be found, but after what must&#13;
havto been to him a long and painful&#13;
wait he turned up his-eoat collar, and&#13;
so went out to brave the storm.&#13;
Now this hitch in the performance,&#13;
apparent as it was, remained undetected&#13;
by all but two or three in the&#13;
large audience. The other spectators&#13;
showed no sign of suspecting that&#13;
something had gone wrong, even when&#13;
the bacueior returned later with&#13;
the shawl around his shoulders,&#13;
buch nuches occur often enough&#13;
in the best managed plays, yet perhaps&#13;
only one person in 600 ever detects&#13;
them.&#13;
It wouid be a mistake to conclude&#13;
from this that audiences, however&#13;
critical they may be, are unob&#13;
servant. It is a case not of lack 01&#13;
power of observation but of an overabunaance&#13;
of faith. The :actts that&#13;
they have become so accustomed to&#13;
absolute perfection in the production&#13;
of plays that It seems almost inconceivable&#13;
to them that an actor&#13;
should be found wanting or that the&#13;
smoothness of a performance should&#13;
be hindered by human fallibility.&#13;
This faith in the absolute perfection&#13;
of the machinery 01 the theater has&#13;
resulted in a delicate but powerful&#13;
term of tyranny which has, unknown&#13;
to the audiences that exercise it,&#13;
caused pain and terror and grief&#13;
Innumerable performers. Slaves of&#13;
this relentless tyranny, they have&#13;
been compelled to appear as usual in&#13;
spite of tragedies and ailments unsuspected&#13;
by the public. Sometimes&#13;
the circumstances have been tragic&#13;
and at times they have "been rather&#13;
comical.&#13;
Last summer Jack Nor worth, the&#13;
husband of Nora Bayes, was taken&#13;
seriously ill and the doctors sent&#13;
him off to Europe in haste. While her&#13;
hubbanc: was racing with death across&#13;
the seas Nora Bayes was obliged to&#13;
go on with her performance at the&#13;
New Brighton theater, where the pair&#13;
uau been appearing. When seen by&#13;
tut writer a few minutes before her&#13;
ehe was almost in a state of col-&#13;
.., *« from anxiety and grief. Her&#13;
u^u was dishevelled, her eyes were&#13;
r d with crying, and she seemed a&#13;
A lew minutes later she apt&#13;
D - . L O the audience, gayly be-&#13;
...u fcuiilin* as though she&#13;
w ua»t4a»i w uuaan in the world.&#13;
it aappefied tfrat many in the audiz&amp;&#13;
ro /goes sroo&amp;s jfoje&amp;&#13;
^ ¾ ^ jWrf^sj&amp;s _&#13;
ence knew about her husband's condition&#13;
and sympathized with her, being&#13;
aware of how attached to each&#13;
other they were. Yet she was permitted&#13;
to go on with her act.&#13;
In the absence of her husband, the&#13;
original act had to be abandoned, and&#13;
Miss Bayes called upon the audience&#13;
to name any song they might like her&#13;
to sing. Some one called for a popular&#13;
melody. Miss Bayes hesitated.&#13;
The tears gathered in her eyes.&#13;
"I can't sing that without my darling!"&#13;
she exclaimed as she bit&#13;
her lip.&#13;
Another song was called for. Again&#13;
the eyes of Miss Bayes tilled with&#13;
tears, and they came BO freely this&#13;
time that she had to turn her back&#13;
on the audience.&#13;
"I can't sing that without my darling,&#13;
either," she stammered.&#13;
It was evident that she was lzl no&#13;
condition to go on with her performance.&#13;
Yet she continued to the end. It&#13;
seemed cruel to allow her to go on, bui&#13;
the audience had to be served. Miss&#13;
Bayes would no doubt have preferred&#13;
to cancel her engagement and remain&#13;
by the side of her sick husband, but&#13;
the tyranny of the audience was not&#13;
a thing to be trifled with. They had&#13;
come from all parts of tfie city to see&#13;
MisB Bayes and they must not be&#13;
disappointed. It is one of the unpleasant&#13;
duties of managers to enforce this&#13;
rule.&#13;
The point of this episode is somewhat&#13;
weakened by later events, including&#13;
the separation of Nora Bayes and&#13;
her husband, but the fact remains&#13;
that the Incident is a good illustration&#13;
of what actors and ac&lt;.re*:&gt;e&amp; iiuve to&#13;
go through to serve lbs tyrant&#13;
known as the public.&#13;
Laurette Taylor, who has scored a&#13;
success in ."Peg o' My Heart," was the&#13;
victim of an odd experience when she&#13;
was appearing at the Maxine Elliott&#13;
theater in "The Bird or rvradise.&#13;
One evening, a little wh.t b* ore ihe&#13;
rise of the curuiL, the . ^ .,•&gt; j a&#13;
nate warning her thai &amp;hc uuu um&gt;&#13;
iiv* weeks to live, it wgb «lg&amp;t &gt;i&#13;
with, a skull aud wo«»bonk&gt;*.' Mu»&#13;
Taylor was alarmed by the tone ot&#13;
the note and became hysterical. Howi&#13;
ever, she received her cue and bracing&#13;
herself she made her way to the&#13;
stage.&#13;
la the first act of this play Miss&#13;
Tayior had a little speech in which&#13;
she said: "Why should 1 be a princess?&#13;
I want to live, to swim, to run,&#13;
to play; 1 want to live, live, live!"&#13;
Miss Taylor remembered the note she&#13;
had received threatening her life. She&#13;
became terrified again and her speech&#13;
emphasizing her wish to- live became&#13;
bo hysterical that it was necessary tor&#13;
her to rush off the stage. The manager&#13;
came out promptly, aad, not&#13;
knowing what explanation to give,&#13;
baid that Miss Taylor had -been seized&#13;
with an attack of ptomaine poisoning.&#13;
After some delay the performance&#13;
was continued. In the last act Miss&#13;
Taylor was to chmb up a mountain&#13;
and jump into a burning pit. When&#13;
she reached the top of the incline on&#13;
this occasion she was once more overcome&#13;
by the terror of impending&#13;
death, and ran back in full view or&#13;
the audience.&#13;
For more than a fortnight Miss Taylor&#13;
was in a nervous condition. One&#13;
evening during the play a man arose&#13;
to take off his overcoat. Miss Taylor,&#13;
thinking it might be the writer of the&#13;
mysterious note, screamed. On an&#13;
other occasion a small ball rolling&#13;
onto the stage from behind the wings&#13;
set her in a panic.&#13;
Mine. Frances Alda was attacked&#13;
with appendicitis several seasons ago&#13;
during a periormunce of "Othello.&#13;
She was seized in the first act, but&#13;
went through the entire performance&#13;
bravely. When the curtain went aowu&#13;
on the last act she was rushed to the&#13;
hospital and an operation was performed&#13;
without delay.&#13;
Whatever terrors such contingencies&#13;
have for most actors and actresses&#13;
they beeui to Margaret Mington&#13;
only trifles compared with&#13;
a greater proDiem WHICH yub.i,&#13;
penormers have to lace. She uii&#13;
derrates the inconvenience oi pivycieui&#13;
disability and emyhusu-ts tile u&lt;ui0ej&#13;
of temporary spniiudi or uicuui uu&#13;
htness. There ia a great source oi&#13;
danger to the artist and to dramatic&#13;
art, she thinks, in the common prac&#13;
tice of allowing stars to play a s|ngu&#13;
role eight times a week and for a*&#13;
many performances as the public win&#13;
patronize, wUncut considering wheth&#13;
er the actor or decress is in me mooi.&#13;
or condition to oiler the public tht&#13;
best that is in her.*&#13;
This practice of working a bin^i.&#13;
play and a single actor to death" it&#13;
one of the dan&amp;erb linemen n0 tit nof&#13;
the American theater, she instsu&#13;
This condition can be iinproveu UM.&#13;
by training spoiled American uuu.&#13;
tnc&amp;B to the point where tiu&gt; AIIbe&#13;
prepared to ste a star role interrunted&#13;
"by any ajou arm-: v :•&lt; ^..-&#13;
uanud i.'i. iho pu-.w; in oi ..i .&#13;
c?'- ' '.- - ' ~ *rr».&#13;
tia • . u .:;. n? : u,: -\4,\r. yo.i ... .&#13;
trout,'**?!* Uj a;i.iiii&gt;t!j ifc.Iiu &gt;ou ;;e.&#13;
to worry about 'em."&#13;
CHARACTER IN DRESS&#13;
ATTIRE 8HOUUD BE CHOSEN TO&#13;
DENOTE INDIVIDUALITY.&#13;
Slavish Attachment to Style Never&#13;
Desirable—Every Woman Should&#13;
Be True to Herself and Her&#13;
Character of.Beauty.&#13;
Why, if a fashion is pretty and beaming&#13;
to a number of women, should&#13;
It be abolished forever after it has&#13;
been popular for a certain length of&#13;
Lime simply to make way for a new&#13;
fad. which may be neither pretty nor&#13;
becoming? This is the law which&#13;
governs clothes, a law for which there&#13;
seems to be no good reason.&#13;
What person with any feeling for&#13;
clothes has ever ransacked some old&#13;
worm-eaten chest full of old lace and&#13;
quaint jewelry and heavily flowered&#13;
or lavender color gowns all made in&#13;
the fashions of years ago without experiencing&#13;
some sensation of regret?&#13;
It was, of course, absurd at any&#13;
time in the history of the world for&#13;
old women to wear ringlets, but it is&#13;
just as absurd for no women to wear&#13;
ringlets because somebody or other&#13;
says they have gone out of fashion.&#13;
Certain peach-bloom cheeks were&#13;
made to be shaded by the soft.dusk&#13;
of black curls, just as certain heads&#13;
were borr to look perfect under the&#13;
latest hat in black straw and paradise&#13;
plumes. There is the woman who&#13;
never looks so handsome as In hard,&#13;
plain tailor made costumes, and her&#13;
sister who turns us dizzy when she&#13;
appears in loose draperies of ivory&#13;
tinted lace sprayed with flowers.&#13;
In fact, it should be the aim of life,&#13;
not to stunt character or destroy individuality.&#13;
There should be a thousand&#13;
fashions, where now there are&#13;
only a hundred, and all these fashions&#13;
should be on show at one and the&#13;
same time. And every woman should&#13;
be true to herself and her character&#13;
of beauty. She should change her&#13;
fashions every hour of the day If she&#13;
were so disposed until she had succeeded&#13;
In finding the exact fashion&#13;
which made her a thing of perfection&#13;
And then, by law, she would be allowed&#13;
to change no more.&#13;
In choosing the individual note in&#13;
dress it should be done with an eye&#13;
to color. Every woman has- her own&#13;
particular shade, suggested perhaps&#13;
by her hair or eyes, and it is the&#13;
shade that suits her best once she&#13;
knows it. She should let her dressmaker&#13;
or tailor do the rest for the color&#13;
harmony. What prettier picture&#13;
could be imagined than the woman&#13;
with the curious touch of amber in&#13;
her eyes in a white gown with amber&#13;
beads and amber waistbelt?&#13;
GIVES CHOICE OF MATERIALS&#13;
Model That Will Make Up Attractively&#13;
in Blue Gingham or Other&#13;
Similar Fabrics.&#13;
The model shown may be made up&#13;
Attractively in many materials. If a&#13;
e i m pi e morning&#13;
froek Is desired, a&#13;
plain blue gingham&#13;
may be used&#13;
w i t h bordering&#13;
bands of figured&#13;
- or checked gingham&#13;
in the same&#13;
shade. The blouse&#13;
is gathered into a&#13;
shallow shoulder&#13;
yoke and opens in&#13;
irregular line over&#13;
a fulled vest of&#13;
white net. The&#13;
elbow sleeveB are&#13;
-slashed in eimilar&#13;
style, displaying a&#13;
dainty cuff of&#13;
white net. The&#13;
skirt has three&#13;
flounces, each finished on the lower&#13;
edge by a narrow band of the figure.d&#13;
material. A dainty girdle and sash&#13;
ends of Dresden ribbon In shades or&#13;
blue adds a further desirable touch to&#13;
this dainty frock.&#13;
* &amp; •&#13;
•\?-&#13;
S-X-&#13;
' ! • • • :&#13;
, , ' • ; • # ?&#13;
A . *&#13;
Upturned Heme.&#13;
The innovation in'upturned hemB on&#13;
the outside of the skirt has^ given the&#13;
colorists another chance to put in a&#13;
dash of tone that will contrast with&#13;
the rest of the skirt. As Roman&#13;
stripes and Scotch plaids continue to&#13;
reappear, on the best of the new&#13;
clothe8. it is only natural that tfcey&#13;
should find an abiding place at the&#13;
bottom of the skirt or at the edge of&#13;
one of those wired tunics that are&#13;
made of all kinds of thin materials.&#13;
There is a dark blue coat suit of&#13;
gabardine which has a two-inch hem&#13;
of red, white and blue plaid bound&#13;
with a black velvet ribbon at the top;&#13;
the coat does not have a collar of the&#13;
plaid, which is the first thing one&#13;
thinks of Its having, but the Scotch&#13;
silk shows up as envelope flaps to the&#13;
three pockets, which are edged with a&#13;
black velvet ribbon and fastened over&#13;
a black velvet button.&#13;
WIDE GIRDLtS OF BEADWORK&#13;
Fashion That Lerids Itself to the Conversion&#13;
of Old Gowns Into Good-&#13;
Looking New Ones.&#13;
The shops are offering artlstle&#13;
pieces of brilliant beadwork, usually&#13;
cut steel or jet, which may be used for&#13;
wide girdles, and if a woman can at*&#13;
ford less than a yard of this she can&#13;
convert an old gown into an exceedingly&#13;
good-looking new one. m&#13;
The trimming is placed high on the&#13;
figure, and it is often placed upward&#13;
in points so the effsct may not be too&#13;
thick or solid. There are also beaded&#13;
trimmjfigs with one edge on the selvedge&#13;
and the other arranged in battlements.&#13;
The latter run well up toward&#13;
the bust and hold into place the&#13;
folds of tulle which now go around.&#13;
and up and down, the figure.&#13;
This crosswise method of managing&#13;
thin drapery is fashionable and effective,&#13;
for it holds the figure securely&#13;
in place as a brassiere does.&#13;
The one thing that every woe*ft€&#13;
should learn in the use of Jewess, real&#13;
or' false, is their color relation te •&#13;
gown One should be as careful abeet,&#13;
this as about harmonizing hats to&#13;
frocks, and yet the majority of women&#13;
wear any jewelry they happen to possess&#13;
at all times and with all costumes.&#13;
BEAUTIFUL FALL GOWN.&#13;
Model of black satin with four bands&#13;
of green velvet. Yoke of green erriffon&#13;
wlth.Bulgarian embroidery.&#13;
New G'ovts. •&#13;
The newest gloves of whits glace&#13;
kid have diamond-shaped insets of&#13;
pale blue, pink or^tan kid at the top.&#13;
MASSAGE FOR THE ELBOWS&#13;
General Rule That If Persevered In&#13;
Will Shortly Produce a Most Desirable&#13;
Improvement&#13;
In using any sort of cold cream on&#13;
the elbows fill the palm of one hand&#13;
with a Httle, place the opposite elbow&#13;
in it and rub around and around; this&#13;
will, bring about a sbfteuing and&#13;
smoothing of the skin, especially it&#13;
first the process recommended for the&#13;
skin of the face is carried out; soft&#13;
cloths wrung out of warm water; applied&#13;
until the skin feels warm and is&#13;
pink; then the scrubbing with a Medium&#13;
brush,, whieh is good for the elbows,&#13;
if not always right for the face,&#13;
and then the rinsing and drying,^ollowed&#13;
by the cold cream well rubbed&#13;
in. " &gt;&#13;
A fortnight would show improvement;&#13;
a month a deckled change for&#13;
the better and so.on until the toaghT&#13;
red, bony elbows are rounded, dimpled,&#13;
white and a great beauty.. .&#13;
If cocoa butter must 'bet use£ to&#13;
make them plumper, use that in&#13;
place of the cold cream, but always&#13;
finish with a spray ot-cologne ot to!*&#13;
let vinegar which prevents Ike growth&#13;
of the superfluous hair. But the massage&#13;
is just the same, no matter&#13;
which emollient is used. The rubbing&#13;
If the arms, are too thin, should be&#13;
.from the wrists upwards to the thou!*&#13;
ders, never downward, aad .while&#13;
about it, begin at the tins of tb^e fingers&#13;
and rub clear to the shoulder, going&#13;
around and around with plenty of&#13;
cocoa butter which should be slightly&#13;
warmed on the palms of the bands, '&#13;
Such measures should always be taused,&#13;
should be aUowsd to rental*^**;&#13;
it will soon be entirely absorbed' by&#13;
the ory, thirsty pores.&#13;
t&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
x/&#13;
c&#13;
. /&#13;
f&#13;
'-••••rwstjJR&#13;
• W&#13;
-&lt;\ * » * ' - ; •*•*&#13;
'*. * f - .. t&lt; ' •"• &lt;*.'.• „•** *- * ' v , v-V&#13;
.-&lt;«. "&gt;".:. • &gt; . * :A - • *&#13;
»&#13;
\&#13;
K'&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
WOMAN IN&#13;
TERRIBLE STATE&#13;
Finds Help in Lydia ELPinkham's&#13;
Vegetable&#13;
Compound.&#13;
. * . * . • ' &lt; •&#13;
h&#13;
* ,&#13;
•„&gt;* •*&gt;•&#13;
BellevHe, Ohio.—"I was to a terriUj&#13;
state before I took Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
V e g e t a b l e Compound.&#13;
My b a c k&#13;
ached until I thought&#13;
it would break, I had&#13;
pains ajl over me,&#13;
nervous feelings and&#13;
periodic troubles. X&#13;
was very weak and&#13;
run down and waa&#13;
losing hope of evec&#13;
b e i n g w e l l a n d&#13;
strong. After taking&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound I improved&#13;
rapidly and today am a well woman. I&#13;
cannot tell you how happy I feel and I&#13;
cannot say too much for your Compound.&#13;
Would not be without it in the house if&#13;
It eostjthree times the amount"—Mrs.&#13;
CHAS. CHAPMAN, W F. D. N O . 7, Belle-&#13;
Tue, Ohio.&#13;
Because your c^se is a difficult one,&#13;
doctors having dot e you no good, do not&#13;
continue to suffer without giving Lydia&#13;
XL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a&#13;
trial. I t surely mas remedied many&#13;
cases of female t&gt;s, such as inflammation,&#13;
ulceration, displacements, tumors,&#13;
Irregularities, peUodic pains, backache,&#13;
and it may be exactly what you need*&#13;
The Pinkham * ecord is a proud and&#13;
peerless one. It js a record of constant&#13;
Victory over the cos tin ate ills of woman&#13;
—ills that deal o\,t despair. It is an established&#13;
fact Out Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound has r e s t o r e d&#13;
health to thousands of such suffering&#13;
women. Why won't you try it if you&#13;
tssed ««AK *&gt; medicine?&#13;
The Army of&#13;
Constipation&#13;
U Growing Se&gt;aUer Every Day. CARTER'S UTTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS are&#13;
responsible—they&#13;
not only give relief&#13;
,— they permanently&#13;
cure C«&#13;
•tisanes. Millions&#13;
u s e&#13;
them for&#13;
i Practical Fashions&#13;
CHILD'S NIGHT GOWN.&#13;
lawfessttei. Ska HaaJaea*, SaJkw Skbu&#13;
SMALL PttL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.&#13;
G e m i i H e must bear S i g n a t u r e&#13;
SI&#13;
O p e n i n g&#13;
Fort P e c k&#13;
* Indian&#13;
Reservation&#13;
&lt;ii!iiiiiiiiuiim !IM nii»&#13;
Uncle Sam's last big land&#13;
opening—1,345,000 acres of rich&#13;
prairie land thrown open to white^&#13;
settlers. 8*406 homesteads of 160-acre*&#13;
each are waiting. Located in Northeastern&#13;
Montana, jnst north of the Missouri&#13;
River, on the main Has of the Great&#13;
Northern Railway. Rich, sandy, loam&#13;
soft capable of raising- 20 to 30 bushels of&#13;
Wfiaatand40 to 60 buphel&amp;o£e*tsper acre.&#13;
Roeklerat&#13;
Classen-, Htvrt er Great FsB*, Mettana&#13;
M y S s f L 1 to 20 iedetift&#13;
v -ihwefter «t Olaesv*, Sep*. 23&#13;
an se steank easp&gt;porpa iusendd eart U$Sn.Mite dta S 1ta7t.0e0*&#13;
feWS.&#13;
CeilKrCLLT «!9tiMMr aaMboa«siatfpa&gt;taf ebUig« rlaanBdd ofapHeniiBnfge mw-ill rsttfyoa write stonee. Send-spoaUl&#13;
This dainty garment la made with&#13;
body and sleeves in one and ia to be&#13;
slipped on over the head The neck&#13;
may be high and finished with a col&#13;
lar or low in round or square ouilmv&#13;
Nightgowns are made of nainsoo'.i&#13;
lawn, batiste, cambric, sateen, outing&#13;
flannel and wash silk.&#13;
The night gown pattern (6321) is&#13;
cut Ju sizes 4. 6, 8, 10 and 12 years&#13;
Medium size requires 2% yards of&#13;
36 inch material, with 3¼ _yards of&#13;
edging and \% yards of ribbon&#13;
To procure this pattern send 10 cents&#13;
to "Pattern Department," of this paper.&#13;
Write name and addre.ss plainly, and be&#13;
sure to give size and number of pattern.&#13;
* ^ »&#13;
NO. 6 3 2 1 ' SIZE&#13;
NAMB&#13;
TOWN&#13;
STREET AND NO,&#13;
STATE&#13;
MISSES' DRESS.&#13;
,'JJA ^ S *&#13;
PEE TO ALL SUFFERERS. tarumi&gt;efa»a» traoynTrOB»J»Do*wTm»"S aLuAKDD DEKO,w Nn'Eoca'ovooTusT HDItS EBALTSEJSST, cemomer W mSrMPMWMfS** .s Usofgcc. ssw^s»a mHO BSBT vimxsonKtsv,ncrLntar»s . aoot BTta«ajT¥tiMr TELLS AIL about SMM&#13;
klal kyoocaadecide&#13;
_ Wm rot YOUSSBIP&#13;
IOW*s1ta»oBsite. rOso. a'teesdsceirt. DELECLS«O&#13;
TKAD.LOKDOM.KMO*&#13;
DR. J. D. KELLOQQ'S ASTHMA : Hamady far tho&gt; prompt rolipf of&#13;
ftotfunt) otxr May Fovor. Aok your&#13;
d n m l f t tor it. wwe tor n t i SMIPLI ^mmm * vtwm co. USVBUFFALO, N.Y.&#13;
I1H&#13;
••V&#13;
.1, V this&#13;
' . % •&#13;
4saaTing to bey any.'&#13;
" i h i columns should&#13;
: what fbay ask for,&#13;
or Imltatiook&#13;
• •&#13;
This design Is Intended especially&#13;
for embroidered flouncing. The waist&#13;
has bodice and sleeve cut In one, witb&#13;
a handsome and novel collar at tbi&#13;
neck. The skirt has three flounces&#13;
and under them a one piece foundation&#13;
skirt In addition to embroider;&#13;
any soft material may bd used for&#13;
this dress, cotton erepe being especially&#13;
yretty.&#13;
The dress pattern (6298) Is cut In&#13;
sizes 14, 16 and 18 years. Medium&#13;
size requires 3½ yards of 36-Inch&#13;
plain goods, 8 yard* of 18-lnch flouoo&#13;
ng, 6½ yards of narrow edging or,&#13;
if of one material, 5% yards of 36&#13;
Inch.&#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 else and number of pattern.&#13;
i HO. 62M.&#13;
' " ' *&#13;
IlAMK • w . m i w n i M n m w ,&#13;
STREET AND IfO. •••••••..&#13;
• » » .&#13;
STATaV**.. &gt; • * • • • « • •&#13;
AN IMMENSE NEW INDUSTRIAL PLANT FOR CHICAGO&#13;
When completed, the new plant of&#13;
he Calumet Baking Powder Company,&#13;
now under course of construction, at.&#13;
South 41st avenue and Fillmore&#13;
street, will prove a Utting monument&#13;
to the ability, honesty and progressiveness&#13;
which have rendei id possible&#13;
the tremendous growth of one of&#13;
Chicago's most prominent industrial&#13;
institutions.&#13;
This immense plant, the estimated&#13;
cost of which is $250,000, is a strictly&#13;
modern five-story and basement, fire&#13;
proof, re-enforced concrete building.&#13;
Size, 260x100 feet. One of the novel&#13;
and interesting features of this, the&#13;
largest and most efficiently equipped&#13;
Baking Powder plant in existence,&#13;
will be a cantilever shipping platform&#13;
projecting over to a switch track on&#13;
a level with the second floor.&#13;
Automatic machinery, modern appliances&#13;
and passenger and freight&#13;
elevators of the latest type will be&#13;
installed and employed in manufacturing&#13;
and handling the company's&#13;
product.&#13;
Plans which make possible a maximum&#13;
amount of glass area and the&#13;
highest degree of sanitation have&#13;
been carefully and scientifically prepared.&#13;
Spacious and splendidly appointed&#13;
rest rooms are provided for&#13;
employes.&#13;
One entire floor will be devoted to&#13;
laboratory and research equipment.&#13;
The installation of a modern bakery&#13;
for experiment purposes insures the&#13;
maintenance of the high standard oi&#13;
excellence for which (Salumet Baking&#13;
Powder is famed.&#13;
The Calumet Baking Powder Com&#13;
pany was organized a quarter of a&#13;
century ago by Mr. Wm. M. Wright&#13;
The company first began the mam&#13;
facture of baking pftwder in a cor&#13;
paratlvely small wayi with limitea&#13;
capital. Modern methods, combined&#13;
with high grade materials and an un&#13;
wavering determination to product&#13;
an article of superior quality have&#13;
created a demand which necessitate*&#13;
the erection of the new Calumet plar&#13;
—have made the Calumet Company&#13;
substantial factor in the_ industri;.&#13;
life of Chicago, and won for it a pat&#13;
ronage which is a benefit and a cred-&#13;
I it to the city.—Adv.&#13;
And she who loves and runs away&#13;
may have a fit oi regret later.&#13;
Many birds form their sounds without&#13;
evening their bills. The pigeon&#13;
is a well-known instance of this.&#13;
Beth Ways.&#13;
"Young Jinks is a coming man."&#13;
"Yes, he'll set things going."&#13;
Somewhat Previous.&#13;
"What sort of people are the Twot&gt;-&#13;
bles?"&#13;
"When invited for a week-end visit&#13;
they show up bright and early Tuesday&#13;
morning."&#13;
Large by Comparison.&#13;
"I have nothing to wear."&#13;
"You have plenty to wear," declared&#13;
her husband. "Just compare your&#13;
wardrobe with that of girl in a comic&#13;
opera."&#13;
Some Blarney.&#13;
Woman of house (to tramp)—What&#13;
do you mean by coming to the front&#13;
door?&#13;
Tramp—Sure, mam, it's not the&#13;
foine lady loike yourself Oi'd be seein'&#13;
in the kitchen.&#13;
Who Does the Washing?&#13;
Precocious . Child (to Friend)—I&#13;
notice a clothes basket going back&#13;
and forth between your house and&#13;
Scrubbins' every day.&#13;
"What of it?"&#13;
"Do you Vash for them or do they&#13;
wash for you?"&#13;
LIGHT BREAK8 IN&#13;
Thoughtful Parmer Learns Abou&#13;
Coffee.&#13;
/ Author Poor Judge of Hta Work.&#13;
/ If John Keble had had his way it is&#13;
possible that his famous "Christiaa&#13;
if ear" might never have been publish'&#13;
ed. He waa extremely averse- to it.&#13;
and only yielded to too importunities&#13;
of hit friends audi the pleadings * ' his&#13;
father. Even so, ho refused to have&#13;
his name in the title D U O . Is 46 years,&#13;
tt wont through 1W\ editions, and&#13;
•tact ft went out of eopyright # M f&#13;
bat* O—JOd to b t OOttftlOd, . ^ - %&#13;
: « &amp; ' * " ^ :&#13;
Many people exist in a more or less&#13;
hazy condition and it often takes years&#13;
before they realize that tea and coffee&#13;
are often the cause of the cloudiness,&#13;
and that there is a simple way&#13;
to let the light break in.&#13;
A worthy faftner had such an experience&#13;
and tells about it, in a letter. He&#13;
says:&#13;
"For about forty years, I have had&#13;
indigestion and stoniach trouble in&#13;
various forms. During the last 25&#13;
years I would not more than get over&#13;
one spell of bilious colic until another&#13;
would be upon me.&#13;
"The best doctors I could get and&#13;
all the medicines I could buy, only&#13;
gave me temporary relief.&#13;
"Change of climate was tried without&#13;
results. I could not sleep nights,&#13;
had rheumatism and my heart would&#13;
palpitate at times so that it seemed&#13;
it would jump out of my body.&#13;
"I came to the conclusion that there&#13;
was no relief for me and that I was&#13;
about wound up, when I saw a Postum&#13;
advertisement I had always been a&#13;
coffee drinker, and got an idea from&#13;
the adr that maybe coffee was the&#13;
cause of my trouble.&#13;
"I began to use Postum instead of&#13;
coffee and in less than three weeks I&#13;
fett like a new man. The rheumatism&#13;
left me, and I have never had a spell&#13;
of bilious colic since.&#13;
"'My appetite is good, my digestion&#13;
•never was better and I can do more&#13;
work than before for 40 years.&#13;
"I haven't tasted coffee since I began&#13;
with Postum. My wife makes it&#13;
according to directions and I relish it&#13;
as well as I ever did coffee, and I was&#13;
certainly a slave to coffee."&#13;
Name given by Postum Co., Battle&#13;
Creek, Mich. Write for copy of the life&#13;
tie book, "The Road to Wellville."&#13;
Postum comes in two forms:&#13;
^ Regular Postum—must be well boiled.&#13;
Instant Postum It a soluble powder.&#13;
A teaspoonful dissolves quickly in ft&#13;
in of hot water and* with the addien&#13;
of cream and sugar, make* a do*&#13;
sltfous beverage Instantly. , "There's ft m m " for Pottoa.&#13;
PLAN FOR TUBERCULOSIS DAY&#13;
December 7 Set Apart as Peri6d of&#13;
Special Effort in the Combating of&#13;
The White Plague.&#13;
Churches, schools, labor unions,&#13;
fraternal orders and other organizations&#13;
to the number of 200,000 at least&#13;
will be asked to join the anti-tuberculosis&#13;
workers of the country in the&#13;
observance of the Fourth National&#13;
Tuberculosis day, which haB been designated&#13;
for December 7, according to&#13;
an announcement issued by the National&#13;
Association of the Study and&#13;
Prevention of Tuberculosis.&#13;
The movement will be furthered&#13;
•&#13;
throughout the country by more than&#13;
1,000 anti-tuberculosis societies working&#13;
through various state organizations&#13;
and the National association.&#13;
Personal appeals will be made to&#13;
clergymen, school principals and leaders&#13;
of various organizations urging&#13;
them to set aBide a definite time during&#13;
the week preceding or the week&#13;
following December 7, for the lecture&#13;
on tuberculosis.&#13;
Last year over 60,000 churches gave&#13;
attention to this subject on Tuberculosis&#13;
day. It is hoped this year to&#13;
swell the number of churches to 100.&#13;
000 and to urge similar action besides&#13;
in a large number of the schools&#13;
and other societies. The Tuberculosis&#13;
day campaign will come this year during&#13;
the Red Cross Christmas seal sale.&#13;
t\i is planned to urge the churches of&#13;
the country'to take a definite part in&#13;
this movement.&#13;
Profitable Meeting.&#13;
"Did you have a profitable discussion&#13;
at the literary club today?"&#13;
"Oh, very. Mrs. Wombat got confidential&#13;
and told why her sister left&#13;
her husband."&#13;
"Examinitis."&#13;
Let us remember that there is such&#13;
a thing aB examinitis, and that a&#13;
brain crammed with a multitude of&#13;
useless factB may show up brilliantly&#13;
on an examination, but be so&#13;
clogged as to be unable to put the&#13;
knowledge to practical use. We know&#13;
we are raising the pedagog's ire by&#13;
thus stating that there is such a&#13;
thing as too much knowledge, but as&#13;
a fact the world's work is being done&#13;
by specialists, who are densely ignorant&#13;
of everything outside their respective&#13;
narrow spheres—and of&#13;
many things inside, too.—American&#13;
Medicine.&#13;
Summer Annoyances&#13;
such as prickly heat, ivy poisoning,&#13;
insect bites and offensive perspiration&#13;
are quickly relieved by applying&#13;
^Tyree's Antiseptic Powder. 25c. at&#13;
druggists or write J. S. Tyree, Washington,&#13;
D. C, for free sample.—Adv.&#13;
Avoiding Disappointment.&#13;
"Why not go to Bosco beach? The&#13;
place looks very, very good in the&#13;
booklet."&#13;
"So good that I don't want to spoil&#13;
the illusion by going there."&#13;
ERUPTION ON ANKLE BURNED&#13;
Kingsville, Mo.—"My trouble began&#13;
eighteen years ago. Nearly, half of&#13;
the time there were running sores&#13;
around my ankle; sometimes it would&#13;
be two years at a time before they&#13;
were healed. There were many nights&#13;
I did not sleep because of the great&#13;
suffering. The sores were deep running&#13;
ones and so sore that I could not&#13;
bear for anything to touch them.&#13;
They would burn all the time and&#13;
sting like a lot of bees were confined&#13;
around my ankle. I could not bear to&#13;
scratch it, it was always so sensitive&#13;
to the touch. I could not let my&#13;
clothes touch it. The skin was very&#13;
red. I made what I called a_cap out&#13;
of white felt, blotting paper and soft&#13;
white cloth to hold it in shape. This&#13;
I wore night and day.&#13;
"I tried many remedies for most of&#13;
the eighteen yearB with no effect.&#13;
Last summer I sent for some Cutlcura&#13;
Soap and Ointment. The very first&#13;
time I used Cutlcura Soap and Ointment&#13;
I gained relief; they relieved the&#13;
pain right then. It was three months&#13;
from the time I commenced using&#13;
Cutlcura Soap ^hd Ointment until the&#13;
sores were entirely healed. I have&#13;
not b/en troubled since and my ankle&#13;
seems perfectly well." (Signed) Mrs.&#13;
Charles B. Brooke, Oct. 22. 1912.&#13;
Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
free.wlth 32-p. Skin Book. Address postcard&#13;
"Cutlcura, Dept. L, Boston."—Adv.&#13;
1 " ' " i u i&#13;
There may be fun in doing the&#13;
things you can afford.&#13;
&lt;*&#13;
Important to Mothers&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle of&#13;
CA9TORIA, a safe and sure remedy for&#13;
infants and children, and see that It&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
In Use For Over 30 Years,&#13;
Children Cry for Fletcher's Caitori*&#13;
*U&amp;&amp;&amp;%23fo&#13;
Had to Have It.&#13;
"I must have a wig."&#13;
"Why must you?"&#13;
"Because it is a bald necessity."&#13;
Red Cron Bait Blue will wash double at&#13;
many elothes *« any other blue. Don't&#13;
put your money into any other. Adv.&#13;
More matches are used in the&#13;
United rttafiasBj than in any other&#13;
country i f f * v i r l d .&#13;
- Ifci 'J^£i-&#13;
FEEL ALL USED UP?&#13;
Does your back ache constantly? Do&#13;
you have sharp twinges when stooping or&#13;
lifting? Do you feel all used up—as if&#13;
you could just go no further?&#13;
Kidney weakness brings great discomfort.&#13;
What with backache, headache,&#13;
dizasiness and urinary disturbances it is&#13;
no wonder one feels all used up.&#13;
Doan's Kidney Pills have cured thousands&#13;
of just such cases. It's the best&#13;
recommended special kidney remedy.&#13;
An Illinois Case&#13;
1&#13;
"TTelilws rva PStioertyiu.''r e WEedswtienr n QuAckveer.,, IRIIo.,a da, ayt: M"»It tohound. mteyrr ibble» ckp.f ttnIt loIent falpepshet, ithea d aa pnoodr cDooucldtonr'st ssalide epI. Ccomu ldtank'tlt tflfiv eD oloanng's. gKaiidnneedy hePalitlhls . andI sftoireen gltohn ga, ndI wbea*s cinu redt.h e I baemat noowf health."&#13;
Get Dessrs aft Asy Sttte, ftos a Best DOAN'SV.Itt*&#13;
FOSTBtMBJIUBN CO, BUFFALO. N. Y.&#13;
i&#13;
\&#13;
1¾&#13;
+.&amp;4f*.&#13;
ftwVwlof)lM| «iy&#13;
MtJtMltV i f ) SMBSlaV&#13;
SB^^r*S^s^a^Swwearf^ V ^ F VJP^SjpvejBV&#13;
&lt;*' « • ' • • ' - . . '&#13;
vx.&#13;
•"i^^BBST&#13;
W '».'" ' W*&gt; - -« , •--&#13;
r :&#13;
i&#13;
si&#13;
4&#13;
V'^.'.^'vW P'&#13;
.-****. • " ^&#13;
r » * &lt;4*^, *fc-.-t*. »*• * * ifr%m»~-VM ?&amp;• -flS*&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
P m c k n e ^ D i ? p a t c h i Mrs. H. W. Crofoot visited in&#13;
1 Entered at the Postoffice at Pinck- Detroit over Sunday.&#13;
ney, Mich., as Second Class Matter&#13;
R. W. CWBU, EPITQR MP PUBLISHER&#13;
Subscription, ft. Per Year iu Advaue?&#13;
Advertising rates made ku;wu on&#13;
apolication.&#13;
Cards of Thauke, fifty cents.&#13;
Resolutions of Condolence, one dollar.&#13;
Local-Notices, in Local c..lumus five&#13;
cent per line per each insertion.&#13;
All matter intended to berutit the personal&#13;
or Lusiness interest of any individual&#13;
will be published at regular "advertiseing&#13;
rates.&#13;
Announcement of ent&lt; rtainments, etc.,&#13;
must be paid for at regular LOCH! Notice&#13;
rates.&#13;
Obituary and marriage notices are published&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
Poetry must be paid for at the rate of&#13;
live cents per line.&#13;
Local News&#13;
Roger Carr and family were&#13;
Howell visitors Monday.&#13;
Mrs. G. J. Pearson spent last&#13;
Friday and Saturday in Ann&#13;
Arbor.&#13;
Roy and ftm ftloran of Detroit&#13;
were Snnday and Monday visitors&#13;
here.&#13;
Mrs. Laura Bennett of Saginaw&#13;
visited relatives here a portion of&#13;
last week.&#13;
Paul Curlett of Howell spent&#13;
Sunday and Monday with his&#13;
parents here.&#13;
Miss Sarah Buxton of Milan&#13;
spent last Wednesday at the home&#13;
of Arthur Vedder,&#13;
A large number from this vicinity&#13;
attended the picnic at Whitmore&#13;
Lake last Saturday.&#13;
Alvin Buck and wife of Flint&#13;
visited at the home of W. H. Clark&#13;
and wife the last of last week.&#13;
JSlla Mae Farley of Pinckney&#13;
will trim at Lyndon's Department&#13;
Store in Howell the coming season.&#13;
Up in the wilds of Montcalm&#13;
county a new bug has been dis«&#13;
covered. It feeds upon the potato.&#13;
The new one is something shaped&#13;
like the "stick bug" but has&#13;
streaks of yellow down its back,&#13;
though dosen't show them when&#13;
in the presence of the enemy.&#13;
The biggest ball ^ame of the&#13;
season at Stock bridge will be&#13;
played on Booster Day, September.&#13;
11, Leslie vs. Stockbridge.&#13;
Each merchant will Bell some&#13;
article at a very low price on this&#13;
day only.&#13;
If grease is spilled on the kitchen&#13;
floor, pour ice water on it at&#13;
once. This makes the grease cake&#13;
on top of the floor and it can be&#13;
easily washed off with soda and&#13;
cold soapsuds, whereas boiling, or&#13;
even hot water, will drive it into&#13;
the pores, of the wood.&#13;
A clever author says that there&#13;
Ed. Farnam spent Saturday and&#13;
j Sunday in Jackson.&#13;
| Mrs. Nettie Vaughn spent Wed-'&#13;
nesday of last week iu Howell.&#13;
Mrs. flattie Hoff of Lansing&#13;
spent several days here last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Placeway&#13;
were Detroit visitors over Sunday.&#13;
Dr. G. J. Pearson was a Whitmore&#13;
Lake visitor last Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Daisy King and Mrs. J.&#13;
Harlaud were Ann Arbor visitors&#13;
last Thursday.&#13;
Fred Read of Detroit spent&#13;
Sunday and Monday with his&#13;
parents here.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Buxton of&#13;
Ypsilanti spent Sunday with&#13;
relatives here.&#13;
Shirley Anderson of Jackson&#13;
spent the first of the week with&#13;
relatives and friends here.&#13;
Norma Curlett has returned to&#13;
Mayville, Mich., to again take up&#13;
her duties as Latin teacher in the&#13;
schools there.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ferris Fick of&#13;
Detroit were over Sunday guests&#13;
at the home of his parents, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. H. A. Fick.&#13;
Auto license No 49906 has been&#13;
found and left at this office. Owner&#13;
can have same by calling and&#13;
paying for this notice. ^&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. I J. Abbott of&#13;
Marion and Mrs. Nora Gallagher&#13;
of Lansing spent Sunday at the&#13;
home of E. L. Thompson.&#13;
Mrs. W. A. Carr has been spending&#13;
several days with her daughter&#13;
Mrs. J as. Green of Lansing. Her&#13;
granddaughter, Miss Doris Carr,&#13;
accompanied her.&#13;
John Croupe and family of near&#13;
Webbervillo and Will Miller and&#13;
family were pleasantly entertained&#13;
at the home of Dr. G. J. Pearson&#13;
last Saturday evening.&#13;
The state fire marshal's advice&#13;
to school authorities is most timely.&#13;
Fire drills and the enforcement&#13;
of laws demanding adequate&#13;
%re"pfoteotiofrst school buildings&#13;
is imperative.&#13;
C. S. Line has been in New&#13;
York buying new fall and winter&#13;
goods. Mr. Line is a hustling&#13;
business man who always treats&#13;
you right. He runs an up-to-date&#13;
bazaar store which it would pay&#13;
you to visit when in Howell.&#13;
Norman Reason left Saturday&#13;
evening for Detroit where ha&#13;
commenced his duties as a Cartersalesman&#13;
Monday morning.&#13;
Just Received&#13;
Our Fall Line of Hats and Caps 1 ™ 8 Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank in stock and&#13;
Come in.&#13;
we want to&#13;
/&#13;
have just been placed&#13;
show 'em.&#13;
Also a shipment of Mackinaws, Sweaters, Jerseys&#13;
are ready for inspection.&#13;
Pickling Season&#13;
Pure Cider Vinegar, Mason Fruit Jars and&#13;
Supplies&#13;
Pickling Spices including Tumeric, Celery Seed,&#13;
Mustard Seed, Etc.&#13;
Butter Krust&#13;
has more than doubled our bread sales.&#13;
There must be a reason.&#13;
I MONKSBR OS, 1&#13;
P r o m p t Delivery P h o n e No. 38&#13;
Does a Conservative Bank*&#13;
ing 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. TBBPLE&#13;
M i c h .&#13;
r*4&#13;
*%%*SW%*W\*S***%%A*\H*ty%*SH%%!%\ +%&gt;**V%\V&gt;A***A*%+H%A***%^*S*^S\ WE&#13;
car&#13;
Last week he resigned as township&#13;
treasurer of Putnam and Lincoln&#13;
£. Smith was named as 'he new&#13;
treasurer by the township Board.&#13;
The Detroit Journal will treat&#13;
its readers to an extrordinary lot&#13;
are three kinds of men in the!of 8e*ial B t o r i e s during the next&#13;
WOrld--'The wills, the wont's and »i* or eight months. The first one,&#13;
the cant's." The first effect every | w h i c h w i U 8tarfc September 15, is&#13;
thing, the next oppose everything i " L o v e U o d e r Fire&gt;" by Randall&#13;
and the laBt fails in everything. Perish. Others that will follow&#13;
"I will" builds our railroads and j are: "In the Hollow of Her Hand,"&#13;
steamboats; "I won't" don't be \hJ George BarrMcCutcheon;"The&#13;
Herein experiments and nonsense; M a i d s o f Paradise," by Robt. W.&#13;
always carry the finest and most complete line&#13;
of Hardware in Livingston county.&#13;
D O T&#13;
ARE&#13;
you in need of anything in otar line? If so, we&#13;
invite you to call and get our prices as&#13;
THE PEOPLE&#13;
who trade with us are always satisfied. Our&#13;
prices are right and we deal,square.&#13;
P i n c k n e y , I * I i o l i .&#13;
trust to memory to preserve the&#13;
changing likeness of growing boy&#13;
or girl. Memozy plays &amp;ttange&#13;
tricks sometimes. r "*&#13;
A\ good photograph or 'so ;ievery&#13;
year will keep an accurate record&#13;
of subtle changes in their development&#13;
And what a satisfaction that&#13;
little collection will be to yon and&#13;
to them in after years.&#13;
DaisieB. Chape 11&#13;
S t o c k b r i d g e , M i c h i g a n&#13;
Let's Go In Here&#13;
while "I canV grows weeds for&#13;
wheat and commonly ends his&#13;
days in a court of bankruptcy.&#13;
The only way to bnild up a&#13;
town is for everyone to go hand in&#13;
Chambers; "Parrott &amp; Co.," by&#13;
Harold McGrath,and "The-"£artier,"&#13;
by Rex Beach. -&#13;
The village council does not&#13;
publish its proceedings because it&#13;
hand—e*ery man to the wbtel. &lt;?08ts a dollar every time they are&#13;
Banish all feeling of discord, if | Polished. But they are glad to&#13;
any; let harmony prevail and pros- 8 Pe n d $3 6 / 7 5 *° Polish the notice&#13;
perity will follow. Talk about o! letting of a drain that nobody&#13;
your town, write about it, speak wants.-Webberville Index. The&#13;
well of it, encourage yonsmea at Pinckney council does not publish&#13;
the head of municipiil affairs; i t 8 proceedings' either. Not beohoke&#13;
the croakers, gag the grumblers&#13;
and squeloh the scolders.&#13;
Beattjtfy the streets in everyway,&#13;
pstr^iam its^ merchants, refrain&#13;
±jpm iri&amp;ng outside for foods,&#13;
S^f* horns siftsfprises always,&#13;
a*(fei&gt;fift'can't think of "some&#13;
f /^Uw a«4 kesp it. up, .&#13;
cause they want to save that one&#13;
dollar William, however—No one&#13;
ever accused the present council&#13;
of being economical. This is the&#13;
only village in Livingston county&#13;
whose council does not let the&#13;
people know: through the local&#13;
newspaper how it is spending their&#13;
money.&#13;
&gt;* •THEY'VE GOTConnor'S&#13;
World's Best Ice Cream&#13;
This is what you hear folks say who appreciate good,&#13;
delicious Ice Cream&#13;
FOR SALE B Y — ^ -&#13;
M O N K S B R O S . Ice Cream Parlor 4&#13;
riMP&#13;
AWING NiRvous V O U R KIDNEYS&#13;
... • cause that awful&#13;
B r c k a c h e ^ That&#13;
dragged downneavy&#13;
feeling. That Nervous&#13;
Headache and&#13;
Weariness. Yducan&#13;
not feel better till&#13;
yoorkidneyaarewefl&#13;
YOU CAN BE CURED QUICKLY&#13;
AND AT. U T T L B COST. If you got&#13;
at the Nearest drug store and begjtCon&#13;
them TO-PAY, They are the beet kUaey&#13;
and bladdef' medicine made, and* they ALWAYS CURB. They cotttistthan&#13;
tbeMoctor and dpjno^s, Thsaagalne&#13;
I^W Kidn^ 1 ^ are » l d S y toths&#13;
YELLOW PACKAGE, Try ikm.&#13;
M e y e r ' s Drug Sio^re&#13;
^&gt;;*:*totf*^^^^&#13;
NO CHANCE FOR A KICK&#13;
When You BuyJParity Flour&#13;
Looking backward over the past, yon may recall instances&#13;
of dissatisfaction with the quality of the flour which you&#13;
bought. If this is so, "it should certainly interest you to&#13;
know that we have a flour from which you caft get the kind&#13;
of bread that suits you, at prices no greater, sua often less,&#13;
than you will have to pay for unsatisfactory stutf at other&#13;
places. When we sell yon flour we expect you to come again.&#13;
This being the case, why shouldn't we do all we can to please&#13;
you in quality, price and treatment?&#13;
FOR SALE AT ALL GROCERIES&#13;
THB JiOYT BROS.&#13;
Copy jn&amp;KTB va\c •&#13;
qaAlc.jykAlrH l6u rKeenn.dimnis f^f&gt;an srh oetferfnt tMantdtf rdwetJciroivl^Otoimift n1aL}* tilnovnesn atitoHnc tlIB j peorujihiirtjfiolyjj tMpn-t,e fj itople. Commt tecPnnatt fUrenet*i OtaKkVeen*t ntT^tni.rp.o ouyi.r tlto rM I aim A . tpecutl «otic&lt;?, wlfliow charge, in th« ScMieJf A bntidtomety «iu.itv«te»»&#13;
jnlathrti of any i^lontlBo t»n&#13;
rear; fonr poAtv^JU Suftl&#13;
,oa-P|&#13;
18ttM«e*t&gt;&#13;
I T * "&#13;
•Iff- •&lt;&#13;
**.:'*'%?: A'-&#13;
'•ii&#13;
'if-"&#13;
' • ' : • • * • • * • " " ;&#13;
, * * »&#13;
• V , ' ^&#13;
'^&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
„•* *.»s&#13;
School D a y s&#13;
The Happiest Days of Your Life&#13;
Vacation is now over and Young America starts back to&#13;
school. We want every boy and girl and every father and&#13;
mother to know that we can supply everything the new&#13;
school year demands.&#13;
We are Headquarters For School Books&#13;
and everything needed whether Pens, Inks, Pencils, Pads,&#13;
Crayons, Rulers, Tablets, etc. Children will get the same&#13;
good treatment, courteous attention and low prices as they,&#13;
would receive if the parents came with them.&#13;
J^"As the profit of school books has been cut to 10 (per&#13;
cent, please do not ask for credit as one badj account kills&#13;
all our profit, %&#13;
MEYER'S DRUG STORE&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
RECORDS WILL&#13;
GO JHIS YEAR&#13;
Michigan State Fair Will Be&#13;
Greatest Ever Held.&#13;
T h e T V y a l S t p r e&#13;
p£ For a Square Deal "Plnckney, Mich.-3&#13;
Drugs, Wall tftper, Crockery, Ui&amp;aro, Candy, Magazines, : 3&#13;
School Supplies, Bjoltg ^&#13;
1¾&#13;
There'll Be Plenty&#13;
to go round and plenty of "go around" if your cider mill is&#13;
turned by a Rumely-Olds gasoline engine. It neither shirks&#13;
nor tires. It pumps water, grinds feed, shells corn, saw! wood&#13;
and does dozens of big jobs on the farm. We can give you a&#13;
Rumely-Olds in any size to suit your needs. They come in&#13;
sises from 1½ to 65 h. p.&#13;
Drop in soon and see our Rumely-Olds engines. Or&#13;
let us know and we'll send a catalog to yon.&#13;
We're here to serve you.&#13;
Give us a chance.&#13;
A.H.FMNTGFT,&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
&lt; &lt;&#13;
\-ttSm- ' " Mother&#13;
j&amp;&gt;#r «*««*&#13;
wants a package of&#13;
Tzar&#13;
Coffee"&#13;
Nttstat Vdkr Teas, 50c, 60c, 80c&#13;
They'ra always pure and fresh.&#13;
Let vv send you some of this&#13;
delicious tea and coffee today.&#13;
When the little fellow forgets the&#13;
name, he points to the package. It's&#13;
Ta^ar Coffee he wants and we know that&#13;
another kind will do.&#13;
*TW€offeeH has a distinctly rich&#13;
flavor—a flavor that never changes.&#13;
You can buy it for 35c a pound but its&#13;
worth 50c Other choice blends are&#13;
Nero ~ 30c&#13;
Marigold 32c&#13;
Pleasant Valley 40c&#13;
trVluitphy 6c Jackson, Flnckney&#13;
i A y ^ i i 9 f &amp; Bollinger, Gregory&#13;
^Subscribe For The Dispatch&#13;
&gt; .&#13;
PREMIUMS TOTAL $100,000.&#13;
Increased Interest Shown by Exhib*&#13;
itors—Program Entertaining as Wsl!&#13;
as Instructive—Lofty Aim of Management.&#13;
THOSE in a position to know are&#13;
unanimously predicting . thai&#13;
the 1913 State Fair will sur&#13;
pass anything of Its nature&#13;
ever before staged in Michigan by an&#13;
enormous margin. It will be Michigan's&#13;
greatest agricultural and Indus&#13;
trial exposition. AH the pleasing feat&#13;
u r e of last year's Fair will be emphasized&#13;
to a greater degree and new&#13;
ones introduced that cannot help but&#13;
meet with the sound—indorsement of&#13;
progressive Michiganders. Fair week&#13;
will be from Sept. 15 to 20.&#13;
The educational efficiency of the Fail&#13;
will be elevated to a far greater extent&#13;
than in previous years, and the entertaining&#13;
and instructive standards will&#13;
be higher.&#13;
All of the big attractions are notready&#13;
for announcement as yet, but&#13;
tnererls positive assurance that 1913&#13;
State Fair visitors will be furnished&#13;
with the most sensational and at the&#13;
same time most instructive entertainments&#13;
ever exhibited in the west.&#13;
There will be actual working demon:&#13;
strations at this year's State Fair&#13;
which will be of great practical value&#13;
to every class of people. These exhibitions&#13;
will convey knowledge to thousands&#13;
of persons who could not posni&#13;
bly obtain it without the expenditure&#13;
of thousands of dollars.&#13;
No matter in which direction a visitor&#13;
cares to- focus his view at the coming&#13;
Fair, he will observe something&#13;
worth seeing and thinking about. It&#13;
will be the state's show window stocked&#13;
with the resources of one of the&#13;
richest commonwealths in the Union.&#13;
$100,000 Premium Lift.&#13;
The premium list alone, that of $100,-&#13;
000, is in itself enough to justify the&#13;
success of the 1913 Fair. This amount&#13;
is far in excess of that offered by any&#13;
similar institution of the same size in&#13;
existence.&#13;
This huge sum of money will be devoted&#13;
toward encouraging production&#13;
along the lines which will help solve&#13;
the -many problems which confront&#13;
farmers and the business interests&#13;
which are dependent upon agricultural&#13;
productions.&#13;
It is the resolve of a thoroughly organized&#13;
and smooth working management&#13;
to make the 1913 Fair a powerful&#13;
factor in the Improvement of live&#13;
stock, farm efficiency and country&#13;
citizenship. Clean, substantial informa-&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 6th, 1913&#13;
ii t&#13;
5 packages Corn Flakes for.&#13;
1 pound Soda&#13;
4 pounds Crackers&#13;
10 bars Acme Soap&#13;
1 can 15c Peas .....&#13;
1 can 13c Corn&#13;
25c&#13;
_ _^5c&#13;
.25c&#13;
25c*&#13;
10c&#13;
A L L S A L E S CASH&#13;
New Fall Woolens&#13;
Just received from Ed. V. Price &amp; Co. of Chicago.&#13;
Over 5 0 0 samples to choose irom.&#13;
W. W. BARNARD Produce Wanted&#13;
Try a Dispatch Want Adv.&#13;
They Get Quick Results.&#13;
tlon and entertainment for all classes&#13;
and all ages will be the lofty aim of&#13;
those in charge of Michigan's greatest&#13;
Fair.&#13;
The number of exhibitors, which can&#13;
be taken as a good barometer of&#13;
healthy growth, is now far ahead of&#13;
last year's array. With the premium&#13;
list just circulated the heads of the&#13;
various departments are confident of&#13;
bigger and better exhibits. Even this&#13;
early adequate space for exhibitors is&#13;
a "problem.&#13;
In short, the management will endeavor&#13;
to supplant the idea that the&#13;
Michigan State Fair, Sept 15 to 20.&#13;
Is going to be a-superficlal entertainment&#13;
or a home of country vaudeville&#13;
and show the visitors that It does and&#13;
will continue to exert a broadening&#13;
influence throughout the length and&#13;
breadth of the fairest state in the&#13;
Union.&#13;
Farmer* Progress.&#13;
Farmers' clubs are springing np in&#13;
different parts of the state, and more&#13;
interest is being awakened in better&#13;
farming rqethods than ever before.&#13;
The farmers are taking an intelligent&#13;
Interest in the best methods to pursue&#13;
so that the boys tnd girls will remain&#13;
on the farms.—Minneapolis Journal.&#13;
Don't Let Baby Suffer With&#13;
Eczema And Skin Eruption!&#13;
Babies need a perlect ekin-covering.&#13;
\i •&lt; in ei uptions cause toem not only intense&#13;
suffering, out .hinder their&#13;
g r o w t h . OB. HOBSOX'8 ECZEMA OHmjKNT can be relied on tor relief and permanent&#13;
cure of fcufferintf baues whose&#13;
skin eruptions have made their life&#13;
miserable. "Oar baby was afflicted&#13;
with breaking out of the skin all over&#13;
the face and scalp. Doctors and&#13;
skin specialists failed to help. We&#13;
tried Dr, Hobton'&amp; Eczema OinAment&#13;
and were overjoyed to tee baby completely&#13;
cared before one bo* was&#13;
nitd" writes Mrs, Strabler. Dobnqae,&#13;
Iowa. All drtggist or by mail,, 60c.&#13;
Pbeiffer Chemical Company&#13;
8t Loui#,l4&gt;. ...,; jFJuJaoVpbhr^P*&#13;
The Bean Harvest Season Will Soon&#13;
Be With Us • • • • •&#13;
We have samples of the Little Jiant and Universal&#13;
Bean Pullers on hand also repairs for the same.&#13;
Agents for the Genuine American Clover Seed&#13;
Buncher of Indianopolis, Ind.&#13;
Why Every Farmer Should Have an&#13;
American Clover Buncher&#13;
It eaves more seed.&#13;
It excludes trash, sticks, stones and dirt.&#13;
It gets all the seeds, no matter how hghc or short. *&#13;
It leaves the hay in finest condition.&#13;
It handles the seed without loss when dead ripe.&#13;
It saves its price in one day's ase.&#13;
It is well made and durable; and easily attached to any mower.&#13;
It is the easiest %nd simplest to operate.&#13;
It has a new lock and dumping device for this year.&#13;
DHEHOMEOFG00D600DSATTIl[l0W[5IPilld5&#13;
TL -&#13;
Dinkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
" i r * .&#13;
I « B5-S&#13;
NI B:T* Is.*&#13;
V: . '&#13;
* • .&#13;
.*•**.•&#13;
i&#13;
t.&#13;
jr.&#13;
If&#13;
M&#13;
•m&#13;
ii&#13;
c'M&#13;
4-&#13;
"t.&#13;
PINCKNEV DISPATCH i • - - - - »&#13;
#&#13;
' &gt; • "•&#13;
•DEMOCRATS OF HOUSE PLEDGE&#13;
SUPPORT TO ADMINISTRATION&#13;
MEASURE.&#13;
B U T&#13;
/&#13;
NINE MEMBERS DISSENT&#13;
FROM DECISION.&#13;
After Nearly Three Weeks of Discussion&#13;
the Bill is Declared a Party&#13;
Measure and Majority Will&#13;
Pass It.&#13;
The administration currency bill, after&#13;
nearly three weeks of discussion,&#13;
was finally approved by the house&#13;
Democratic caucus, by a vote of 163&#13;
to 9.&#13;
The nine dissenters were Representatives&#13;
Henry, Eagle and Calloway, of&#13;
Texas, Hardwick, of Georgia, Lobeck,&#13;
Of Nebraska, Buchanan and Fowler,&#13;
of Tllinois, Neely, of Kansas, and Sisson,&#13;
of Mississippi.&#13;
After agreeing to the bill, the caucus&#13;
adopted a resolution by an almost&#13;
unanimous vote declaring the bill to&#13;
be a party measure and that "members&#13;
of this caucus are pledged for&#13;
the bill to its final passage without&#13;
amendment, provided, however, the&#13;
banking and currency committee may&#13;
offer amendment in the house."&#13;
LOUIS G. GRAMPTON&#13;
Three Drown at Battle Creek.&#13;
Crowded into a small canoe to watch&#13;
a balloon ascension, four young people&#13;
were thrown into 25 feet of water&#13;
at Lake Goguac, at Battle Creek,&#13;
when the canoe capsized, and three&#13;
of them drowned.&#13;
The dead:&#13;
Miss Lotar Mitchell, 17 years old,&#13;
204 West Jefferson avenue, Ann Arbor.&#13;
R. C. Warner, son of ^ Daniel Warner,&#13;
the Coldwater electric road promoter.&#13;
Frank J. Plunkett, 247 Stanton avenue,&#13;
Detroit, employed by the Michigan&#13;
Lubricator Co.&#13;
Miss Virginia A. Raab, formerly of&#13;
Ann Arbor, but now of Battle Creek,&#13;
was rescued.&#13;
Warner had been employed for several&#13;
years in the auditor general's&#13;
oflice at Lansing.&#13;
Miss Mitchell is the -daughter of&#13;
Mrs. Guorge Currey, of Ann Arbor.&#13;
New Bird Laws Announced&#13;
The secretary of state announces&#13;
modifications in the Michigan law&#13;
relative-«to rnigratory birds, as made&#13;
by an act df congress effective Oct. 1,&#13;
1913. The Michigan law provides an&#13;
open season on duck, geese, plover,&#13;
brant and jacksnipe from Sept. 1 to&#13;
Dee. &amp;1-.The general law, which will&#13;
govern,,, protects wood duck after&#13;
Sept. 30 this year, making a closed&#13;
season until 1918. The open season&#13;
for duck, geese and brant is Sept. 1&#13;
to Dec. 15. The open season for rails,&#13;
coots and gallinules is Sept. 1 to Nov.&#13;
30. The open season for black-breasted&#13;
and golden plover, Wilson or jacksnipe&#13;
and greater or lesser yellowlegs&#13;
is Sept. 1 to Dec. 15. All other&#13;
shore birds are protected until 1918&#13;
after Sept. 30.&#13;
Veterans to Dedicate Boulder.&#13;
The Twenty-third Michigan Volunteer&#13;
infantry will hold its 48th annual&#13;
reunions at Birch Run, September 10&#13;
and on the following day will go to&#13;
Saginaw to dedicate a barge boulder&#13;
marking the location of the encampment&#13;
where the soldiers were mustered&#13;
in.&#13;
The dedication will take place on&#13;
the 51st anniversary of the mustering&#13;
in on the grounds of what is now&#13;
known as Ezra Rust park, where is&#13;
also located the site of the first- Indian&#13;
settlement in the Saginaw valley.&#13;
IS&#13;
SWEPT BY FIRE&#13;
LARGEST PA8SENGER BOAT&#13;
SEAS IS DAMAGED 1 Y&#13;
FLAMES.&#13;
ON&#13;
Popular Editor-Congressman from&#13;
Lapeer, was unanimously chosen by&#13;
the Michigan delegation in the&#13;
lower house to membership on the&#13;
republican national congressional&#13;
committee.&#13;
Tr AW CASE TIED UP&#13;
Up to New York Lawyers to T r y&#13;
Some New Method to Get Re*&#13;
lease of Prisoner.&#13;
The case of Harry K. Thaw, so far&#13;
as Sherbrooke is concerned,, entered&#13;
temporary doldrums.&#13;
The court victory of his lawyers in&#13;
quashing their own writ of habeas&#13;
corpus and having him recommitted&#13;
to jail, means either that he will remain&#13;
there until tried by the king's&#13;
bench, criminal side, in October, or&#13;
that New York state, outflanked to&#13;
date in legal skirmishes, must make&#13;
some new move looking to his liberation&#13;
and seizure by the immigration&#13;
authorities for deportation1.&#13;
They were working along two tines.&#13;
William Travers Jerome conferred&#13;
with the attorney-general of the province&#13;
of Quebec, seeking some means&#13;
of obtaining his authority for getting&#13;
Thaw out of his cell. Other counsel&#13;
for New York continued their efforts&#13;
to persuade Alexis Dupuis, a magistrate&#13;
or justice of the peace at Coati-&#13;
CQQk, to withdraw the commitment&#13;
which he issued after Thaw's arrest&#13;
there 12 days ago and on which tha&#13;
fugitive is held in the Sherbrooke&#13;
jail.&#13;
Big Steamship War In Sight.&#13;
The passenger and freight war between&#13;
the North German Lloyd and&#13;
Hamburg-American Steamship companies&#13;
will disorganize the Atlantic&#13;
shipping pool and force all the English&#13;
lines into the fight as well, according&#13;
to information obtained at&#13;
New York.&#13;
Both Carl Von Helmont, general&#13;
manager of the North German Lloyd,&#13;
and Juliue T. Meyer, vice-director of&#13;
the Hamburg-American, have been in&#13;
Germany for four weeks at the request&#13;
of the home offices. Confidential&#13;
^notices already have been sent to&#13;
their agents throughout the United&#13;
States and Canada, and sweeping reductions&#13;
in Cabin, steerage and freight&#13;
rates may be announced. &gt;&#13;
• • » * i&#13;
-&gt;f&#13;
About 200 veterans attended the&#13;
twenty-first annual reunion of the&#13;
Northeastern Michigan Soldiers and&#13;
Sailors association at Mt Pleasant.&#13;
Gov. Ferris has tentaively. accepted&#13;
an invitation to attend a meeting&#13;
of the Tribe of Ben Hur in St Joseph&#13;
next month. The members will&#13;
initiate the governor into the oVder.&#13;
Busines men of Howell will appeal&#13;
to the state railroad commission petitioning&#13;
better telephone service.&#13;
The' Michigan State Telephone company&#13;
recently took over the independent&#13;
holdings.&#13;
i (Herbert B. Aldrich, a former Holland&#13;
boy, if charged with desertion&#13;
from the marine corps by MaJ. Butler,&#13;
„ stationed at Camp Elliott, Panama.&#13;
Aldrich enlisted in Grand Rapids&#13;
about a year ego.&#13;
Ed. Rowley was killed and the 13-&#13;
year-old son of Charles Root will die&#13;
as the result of a carriage in which&#13;
they were riding being hit by a Grand&#13;
Trunk passenger train near Potterville.&#13;
TWO little girls, listers of the&#13;
Jfcgot lad, escaped&#13;
j-&#13;
Jolnt Penology Commission Meets.&#13;
The joint penology commission&#13;
created by the last legislature held its&#13;
first meeting at the executive .oflice&#13;
and organized. The commission is&#13;
composed of the wardens anil members&#13;
of the boards of control of various&#13;
Michigan penal institutions. All&#13;
wardens and most of the members of&#13;
the control boards were present. The&#13;
act provides that the secretary shall&#13;
be the secretary of state board of&#13;
corrections and charities and Marl T.&#13;
Murray, who is that official, was la&#13;
attendance. -&gt;&#13;
John F. Bently, chief marshal of&#13;
the Calhoun County Agricultural society,&#13;
was kicked in the face by a&#13;
horse at the fair ground and received&#13;
injuries which may cause his death.&#13;
He fell as he tried to mount the animal.&#13;
Reports from various parts of the&#13;
upper peninsula bring the information&#13;
that harvest hands are badly needed&#13;
in all parts of the territory. Thousands&#13;
of dollars^worth of timothy Is&#13;
standing uncut in the fields and will&#13;
probably be a waste for tha lack of&#13;
men to cut it Laborers art getting&#13;
big wages as a result of the shortage&#13;
of men. .&#13;
ONE OFFICER L 0 8 E S HIS&#13;
CLOSING DOORS.&#13;
LIFE&#13;
Panic Breaks Out Among Twelve&#13;
Hundred Passengers and Many&#13;
Are Hurt in Attempting&#13;
Escape From Steerage.&#13;
MARKETS&#13;
Live Stock, Grain and General Farm&#13;
Produce*&#13;
The Hamburg-American liner Imperator,&#13;
the biggest passenger-carrying&#13;
ship afloat, which arrived in port&#13;
with 3,100 passengers on bosjrd, was&#13;
awept by fire as she lay at her pier&#13;
in Hoboken, N. J.&#13;
Second OfHcer Herman Corbrecht&#13;
lost his life while trying to close the&#13;
fire doors and confine the flames to the&#13;
fifth deck, or provision room. It was&#13;
reported that two seamen had been&#13;
burned to death, and for a long time&#13;
they were missing, but subsequently&#13;
were found.&#13;
Panic broke out among the 1,200&#13;
steerage passengers, and many were&#13;
hurt. The damage is estimated at&#13;
$350,*O0.&#13;
While half of the crew of 1,180 men&#13;
fought the spreading blaze, the balance&#13;
got all the steerage passengers&#13;
to safety on the pier.&#13;
The fire was discovered in the provision&#13;
room on the ehip about 5&#13;
o'clock. Fed by the oils of the foodstuffs,&#13;
it spread rapidly and at 7:30&#13;
some expressed fears that the luxurious^&#13;
f7,500,000 liner was doomed. At&#13;
that hour the crew was assisted by&#13;
trained fire fighters from Hoboken,&#13;
Jersey City and New York, and Capt.&#13;
Ruser, commander of the giantess,&#13;
said the loss would not be complete,&#13;
but would be very serious.&#13;
Precancelled Stamps to Be 8old.&#13;
Postmaster General Burleson signed&#13;
an order which provides that precancelled&#13;
postage stamps may be sold to&#13;
the public, on and after September 1.&#13;
Precancelled stamps have printed on&#13;
tbem the name of the post office before&#13;
they are sold. Such stamps will&#13;
be valid for postage on second, third&#13;
jfnd fourth class mail—newspapers&#13;
and magazines mailed by the public,&#13;
books and other printed matter and&#13;
merchandise or parcel post matter.&#13;
The stamps will be recognized only&#13;
at the oflice named on them.&#13;
By the use of precancelled stamps,&#13;
not only will the transportation and&#13;
delivery of mall bearing them be expedited&#13;
greatly, iratr ftr is estimated&#13;
that the government will save in expense&#13;
of labor in cancellation $250,-&#13;
000 a year.&#13;
Druggists Complain of Doctors.&#13;
At a session of the National Association&#13;
of Retail Druggists' convention&#13;
in Cincinnati, the members went&#13;
on record as favoring a federal law&#13;
changing the selling of narcotics and&#13;
poisons. The druggists claim that dispensing&#13;
physicians are allowed* to sell&#13;
narcotics and poisons without any&#13;
legal restraint and claim that this is a&#13;
source of great harm.&#13;
The law which they favored would&#13;
confine the sale of these drugs to regular&#13;
pharmacists and they could sell&#13;
them only on a physician's prescription,&#13;
each sale requiring a new prescription.&#13;
The druggists also passed&#13;
resolutions condemning the sale in&#13;
drug stores of alcoholic beverages.&#13;
Governors Meet In Colorado.&#13;
Madison, Wis.; was selected as the&#13;
next convention city for the conference&#13;
of governors of the United&#13;
States, at a session at Colorado&#13;
Springs.&#13;
The time of meeting was left to the&#13;
executive committee.&#13;
The entire executive committee, consisting*&#13;
of Governors McGovem, of&#13;
Wisconsin; O'Neal, of Alabama, and&#13;
Amnions, of Colorado, was re-elected.&#13;
The office of secretary-treasurer was&#13;
abolished, separate offices being ere&gt;&#13;
ated.&#13;
if. C. Riley was re-elected secretary,&#13;
and J. F. Fort treasurer for tha com*&#13;
ing year.&#13;
by the Interior department through&#13;
Catb. Sella, Indian commissioner,&#13;
The leases will be for tracts of&#13;
the, privilege of boxing holes in search&#13;
of riches will be compelled to make&#13;
seaiad proposals, Commissioner&#13;
Sells incidentally remarks that the&#13;
lands lie dot* to iargo watts now&#13;
in operation, "wbien now have a net&gt;&#13;
DETROIT—Cattle: Receipts, 90Q*&#13;
market dull; extra dry-fed steers ajbd&#13;
heifers, $8; steers and heifers, 1,090&#13;
to 1,200, 17.50@8; steers and helfefs,&#13;
800 to 1,000, |6.76® 7.60; grass steers&#13;
and heifers that are fat, 800 to 1,000,&#13;
$6.7507.50; grass steers and heifers&#13;
that are fat, 500 to 700, $5.50® 6.50;&#13;
choice fat cows, S6; good fat cows,&#13;
$5.50@5.75; common cows, S4.6O06;&#13;
canners, |3@4; choice heavy buils,&#13;
16.25 @6.60; fair to good bologna,&#13;
bulls, »5.75(g)6; stock bulls, $4.5005;&#13;
choice feeding steers, 800 to 1,000,&#13;
$6.2506.76; fair stockers, 500 to 700,&#13;
$5.75(g&gt;6; stock heifers, $5@6; mllkera,&#13;
large, young, medium age, $75®&#13;
85; common milkers, $40®50.&#13;
Veal calves: Receipts, 297; market&#13;
for best, $11.50@ 12; ethers, $8.50®&#13;
9.00.&#13;
Sheep and lambs: Receipts, 2,181;&#13;
market for lambs 75c higher; sheep&#13;
steady; best lambs, $7.75; fair to good&#13;
lambs, $6.75@ 7.25; light to common&#13;
lambs, $5.75@6.25; fair to good sheep,&#13;
$4@4.25; culls and common, $303.25.&#13;
Hogs: Receipts, 978; light to good&#13;
butchers, $9©9.25; pigs, $9; light&#13;
yorkers, $9.1509.25; stags, 1-3 off.&#13;
EAST BUFFALO: -Cattle, receipts,&#13;
130 cars; market 10c higher; best 1,-&#13;
350 to 1,500-lb steers, $8.7609.10; best&#13;
1,200 to 1,300-Ib steers, tf.5008.75;&#13;
best 1,100 to 1,200-lb steers, $8.15 @&#13;
8.60; coarse and plain heavy steers,&#13;
$7.7508; choice handy steers, $8®&#13;
8.40; fair to good 1,000 to 1,100-lb&#13;
steers, $7.7508.10; grassy, 800 to 1,-&#13;
000-lb steers,'$7.2607.75; best cows,&#13;
$6.5007; butcher cows,, $5.5006;. cutters,&#13;
$4.60 ©5; trimmers, $3.7504;&#13;
best heifers, $7.760)8; medium butcher&#13;
heifers, $6.5007; stock heifers,&#13;
$5.25®7; stock heifers, $5.2605.50;&#13;
best feeding steers, $7.25 @ 7.5*0; fair&#13;
to good, $6.75® 7; common light stockers,&#13;
$«©6.26; best butcher bulls, $6®&#13;
7; best bologna bulls, $5.2506.75;&#13;
stock bulls, $5®5.50; best milkers and&#13;
springers, $70®80; common to good,&#13;
$50060.&#13;
Hogs: Receipts, 55 cars; market active;&#13;
heavy, $9.25®9.50; mixed/&gt;$9.60&#13;
«4*9.65; yorkers, $9.65@9.75; pigs, $9.25&#13;
©9.50; roughs, $808.25; stags, $7®8.&#13;
Sheep and lambs: Receipts, 40&#13;
cars; market strong; spring lambs,&#13;
$8®8.26; culls to fair, $6®7.25; yearlings,&#13;
$5.50(5)6.50; wethers, $6.25®&#13;
®5.50; ewes, $404.75.&#13;
Calves strong, $5©IS.&#13;
Grains, Etc.&#13;
Wheat—Cash No. 2 red, 91 l-2c;&#13;
September opened at 92 l-2c and declined&#13;
to 91 3-4c; "December opened at&#13;
96 l-4c and declined to 95 l-2c; May&#13;
opened at $1.02 and declined to $1.01&#13;
i-2c; No. 1 white, 90 l-2c. /&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, 76 l-2c; No. 2 yellow,&#13;
1 car at 78c; No. 3 yellow,&#13;
77 l-2c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 2 cars at 42c, 1 at&#13;
42 l-2c; old, 45c bid; September, 42&#13;
l-2c; No. 3 white, 42c; No. 4 white,&#13;
41c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 69c bid.&#13;
Beans—Immediate and prompt shipment,&#13;
$1.80; October, $1.85.&#13;
Cloverseed—Prime October, 50 bags&#13;
at $7.20; December, $7.20; August alsike,&#13;
$11; sample alsike, 25 bags at&#13;
$10, 15 at $9.26.&#13;
Timothy—Prime spot, 30 bags at&#13;
$2.60.&#13;
Alfalfa—Prime spot, 10 bags at&#13;
•8.25. m 1&#13;
Barley—Good samples, $1.2601.40&#13;
per cwt&#13;
Hay—Carlote track Detroit; No. 1&#13;
timothy, $15®15.50; standard, $14®&#13;
14.50; No. 2 timothy, $12.50® 13; light&#13;
mixed, $14® 14.60; No. 1 mixed, $12.50&#13;
13; rye straw, $8®9; wheat and&#13;
oat straw, $707.60 per ton.&#13;
Flour—In one-eighth paper sacks,&#13;
per 196 pounds, jobbing lots: Best&#13;
patent, $6.60; second patent, $5.20;&#13;
straight, $5; spring patent, $5.10;&#13;
rye, $4.60 per bbl. P&#13;
Feed—In 100-tb sacks, jobbing lots:&#13;
Bran, $23; coarse middlings, $24; fine&#13;
middlings, $26; cracked corn, $28;&#13;
coarse cornmeal, $29; com and oat&#13;
chop, $26.60 per ton. -&#13;
Oil Lands Thrown Open.&#13;
Oil lands to the extant of 12,000&#13;
aores in the Osage Indian reservation&#13;
in Oklahoma were offered for lease 110125 per bu; white, $1®1J6 per&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
Plume—$1.2501.50 per bu.&#13;
Huckleberries—$4.2504.50 per bu.&#13;
Grapes—Early varieties, 26®30c per&#13;
8-tt&gt; basket&#13;
Apples—Michigan, 60®75c per bu;&#13;
No. 1, $2.75®$ pw bbl; No. 2, $1.50©&#13;
2 per bbl.&#13;
Peaches—Island AA, $2; $1.75; B,&#13;
bu and 20®40c par 1-4 bu.&#13;
Oreen Corn—20e per doe.&#13;
Cabbage $2.2602.60 per bbl.&#13;
from 40 to 160 acres, and bitter* for ' . Potatoes— $16002,60 per sack of&#13;
* M bushc*.&#13;
Dreaeed Calves—Choice, 10011c;&#13;
TOttT, 1$ 1-2014* per lb.&#13;
Onioae^tfeir eouthetn, $126 pa?&#13;
bu; Spanish, H45 par orate.&#13;
Honey—Choice to fancy new white&#13;
ECONOMY IN THE HOME&#13;
HOUSEWIFE M U 8 T APPROACH&#13;
IDEA W I T H COMMON SEN8E, t&#13;
Marty Methods of Avoiding Wast*&#13;
Really Are More Costly Than the&#13;
Ways They Supplant—Saving&#13;
Must Be Worth While.&#13;
there fs a great deal of talk about&#13;
the waste which constantly occurs In&#13;
the household. Housewives, some&#13;
critics assert, do not understand the&#13;
fundamental principles of economy.&#13;
Waste which would never be tolerated&#13;
in the running of a big business&#13;
goes on in the homes of the land&#13;
every day.&#13;
In a bis rubber factory a little while&#13;
ago there was a chemist who though*&#13;
that he could obtain sulphur, which It&#13;
needed in the manufacturing carried!&#13;
on in this plant, from old rubber. The&#13;
sulphur used* cost a few cents *&#13;
pound.-The chemist finally perfected&#13;
a method of extracting sulphur from&#13;
the old rubber, and he submitted his&#13;
method to the factory heads.&#13;
It was a perfect method*. The sulphur&#13;
WEB perfect sulphur. But the&#13;
method necessitated the expenditure&#13;
of a couple of dollars for every pound&#13;
of sulphur saved. And the factory&#13;
heads, remembering that sulphur cost'&#13;
only a few cents a pound, refused to&#13;
consider the young man's plan.&#13;
It is Just this sort of wasteful economy&#13;
which goes on in some households—&#13;
and which should be condemned&#13;
much more energetically than '&#13;
the actual waste that occurs.&#13;
A certain housewife heard that&#13;
dried potato parings made excellent&#13;
kindling for fires, and she spent an&#13;
appreciable amount of time each day&#13;
rescuing the skins from oblivion and&#13;
spreading them out BO' that they&#13;
could dry properly. '&#13;
The woman who knows how to distinguish&#13;
between real' wastefulness&#13;
and expenditures for legitimate needs&#13;
Is the really good housewife.&#13;
usel deUy flow of from 640 to 1,0001 comb, 140114; amber, 100»«;. a*&#13;
Creamed Eggs on Toast.&#13;
Take two tablespoonfuls of butter*&#13;
two tablespoonfuls (scant) of flour,&#13;
one pint of milk, four eggs, one tea'&#13;
spoonful of salt, one-fourth teaspoonful&#13;
of pepper one-half of-a small onion,&#13;
six slices of toast. Boil the eggs&#13;
twenty minutes and lay them in cold&#13;
water. When cold, remove the shells&#13;
and cut each egg into six pieces. Cut&#13;
the onion fine. Place the butter in *&#13;
small frying pan, and when it Is not&#13;
slowly cook the onion in It until of a&#13;
light yellow hue, taking care, however,&#13;
not to brown either butter or on-^ -&#13;
ion at all. Remove the onion, adcK'^v&#13;
the flour and stir until the paste Is , ^&#13;
smooth and frothy, but do not let It&#13;
brown In the least Draw the pan *&#13;
back, gradually add the milk, return&#13;
to the heat, and when the sauce boils&#13;
put in the salt, pepper and eggs. As&#13;
soon as the eggs are well heated*&#13;
turn all out upon buttered toast, and&#13;
serve at once. A few drops of onion&#13;
juice may be used instead of the&#13;
onion. -&#13;
To Remove Mildew. '&#13;
Take one teaspoonful of chloride of&#13;
Ime and one teaspoonful of washing&#13;
ioda. Put this and the mildewed ar-&#13;
JcTe Into two quarts of cold water and&#13;
et It boil for about four hours;'then&#13;
iklm off the scum, add two pailfuls of&#13;
soleVwater and let it stand over night,&#13;
vith the article well covered. If this&#13;
s not long enough, put the article&#13;
tack again and soak it until thtf millew&#13;
entirely- disappears; then rinse&#13;
veil and wash in the usual way. Be&#13;
wre to take off the scum, for that la •&#13;
^hat bums the material in so many&#13;
\i the recipes given.&#13;
Carrot end Pea Salad.&#13;
Seasoning Vegetables.&#13;
A teacher of cooking says that tor&#13;
*very quart of cooked vegetables tour&#13;
even tablespoonhils of butter, a teaipoonful&#13;
of salt and an eighth ot m teaspoonful&#13;
of pepper should be used tor&#13;
seasoning&#13;
V&#13;
-English BlsciJO* v -&#13;
Sift together one and one-half pint*&#13;
of flour, one cupful of corn starch, -&#13;
three tablespoonfuls of sugar, two tea* "" ^&#13;
spoonfuls of salt Rub in three-tablcl" _,-,Jk..:&#13;
spoonfuls of butter, add one well&#13;
en egg, one cupful of milk, on&#13;
cupful of currant* and one tabiespoo&#13;
ful of coriattter seed. .Mix Into&#13;
smooth, soft dowghvrroll one*hatt tooV&#13;
thick, cut in r^unds^and bake in-buttered&#13;
Una In a*ot&gt;oTBn for 20 minutee,""&#13;
When done, rub over with a little bo&gt;&#13;
tor on a clean bjtof cloth.&#13;
Rise With Bacon and Tomato.&#13;
Spanish rice with bacon and b&gt;&#13;
mato. Cut up two or three small&#13;
slioess ot bacon &gt;lnto small bite an4&#13;
fry until crisp, but not ~ blsckened.&#13;
Cook with the bacon a half oTa smeJI&#13;
onion also sliced fine, but be easeful&#13;
Jt does not get scorched. Now ao*&#13;
one cupful of ooW toauto, «*%&#13;
enne pepper and enK, to* teste. '&#13;
until not and well blended. T y e . *&#13;
fine fo* breakfast or funoneciir 4~"&#13;
"tie green pepper chopped ume«e*&#13;
«i to* onion, .&#13;
)&#13;
v &gt; " f :-,*-•&#13;
» • * &gt; • &gt; * . i '*-&gt;.&#13;
•9 V v /&#13;
A&gt;. T V ,&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
'*#&lt;&#13;
/&#13;
Washington, Aug. 28.—Emphasizing&#13;
the fact that the United States must&#13;
remain the Arm friend of the people&#13;
of Mexico in their present stress and&#13;
trouble, President Wilson today read&#13;
his long-awaited message on Mexican&#13;
affairs to congress.&#13;
The massage was distinctly specific&#13;
in tone and contains little in the way&#13;
of recommendation for future policy&#13;
except the single one that this government&#13;
must urge earnestly that all&#13;
. Americans Bhould leave Mexico at&#13;
4&gt;ia**a and that the United States&#13;
assist them to get oat of Mexltvery&#13;
way possible,&#13;
president counsels delay before&#13;
fnrtlMr action is taken, and says:&#13;
Impatience Would Be Childish.&#13;
"impatience on our part would bo&#13;
childish and would be frought with&#13;
every risk of wrong and folly. The&#13;
door Is not closed against the resumption,&#13;
either upon the initiative of Mexico&#13;
or upon our own, of the effort to&#13;
bring order out of the confusion by&#13;
friendly co-operative action, should&#13;
fortunate occasion offer.&#13;
"So long as the misunderstanding&#13;
continues we can only await the time&#13;
of their awakening to a realization to&#13;
the actual facts. We cannot thrust&#13;
our good'offices upon them. The situation&#13;
must be given a little more time&#13;
to work itself out in the new circumstances,&#13;
and I believe that only a little&#13;
while will be necessary. The circumstances&#13;
are new. The rejection of our&#13;
friendship makes them new and will&#13;
Inevitably bring its own alterations in&#13;
the whole aspect of affairs. The actual&#13;
situation of the authorities at Mexico&#13;
City will presently be revealed."&#13;
Text of President's Message.&#13;
The message follows:&#13;
"Gentlemen of the Congress: It is&#13;
clearly my duty to lay before you very&#13;
fully and without reservation the facts&#13;
concerning our present relations with&#13;
the republic of Mexico. The deplorable&#13;
posture of affairs in Mexico I need&#13;
not describe, but I deem it my duty to&#13;
speak very frankly of what this government&#13;
has done and should seek to&#13;
do in fulfillment of its obligation to&#13;
Mexico herself, as a friend and neighbor,&#13;
and to American citizens whose&#13;
lives and vital interests are daily affected&#13;
by the distressing condition&#13;
which now obtain beyond our southern&#13;
border.&#13;
U. 8. a Friend of Mexico.&#13;
"Those conditions touch us very&#13;
nearly. Not merely because they lie&#13;
at our very doors. That, of course,&#13;
makes us more vividly and more constantly&#13;
conscious of them, and every&#13;
Instinct of neighborly Interest and&#13;
sympathy is aroused and Quickened by&#13;
them; but that is only one element In&#13;
the determination of our duty. We&#13;
are glad to call ourselves the friends&#13;
of Mexico, and we shall, I hope, have&#13;
many an occasion, in happier times, as&#13;
ell as In these days of trouble and&#13;
confusion, to show that our friendship&#13;
Is genuine and disinterested, capable&#13;
of sacrifice and very generous manifestation.&#13;
The peace, prosperity, and&#13;
.contentment of Mexico mean more,&#13;
much more, to us, than merely an enlatged&#13;
field for our commerce and en-&#13;
Iprprise They mean an enlargement&#13;
-.of the field of self-government and&#13;
the realization of hopes and rights of&#13;
a nation with whose best aspirations,&#13;
too long suppressed, and disappointed,&#13;
we deeply sympathize. We shall yet&#13;
prove to the Mexican people that we&#13;
know how to serve them without first&#13;
thinking how we shall serve ourselves.&#13;
World Wants Mexican Peace.&#13;
"But we are not the only friends&#13;
of Mexico. The whole world desires&#13;
her peace and progress, and the whole&#13;
world Is Interested as never before.&#13;
Mexico lies at last where all the world&#13;
looks on. Central America is about&#13;
to be touched by the great routes of.&#13;
. the world's trade and intercourse running&#13;
free from ocean to ocean at, the&#13;
isthmus. The future hat much in&#13;
store for Mexico, as for all the states&#13;
of Central America, but the best gifts&#13;
can come to her only if she be ready&#13;
and free to receive them and to enjoy&#13;
them honorably. America in particular—&#13;
America, North and South, and&#13;
upon both continents—waits upon the&#13;
development of Mexico; and that development&#13;
can be sound and lasting&#13;
only If It be the product otm genuine&#13;
freedom, a Just and ordered government&#13;
founded upon law. And so can&#13;
it be peaceful aid fruitful of the benefits&#13;
of ifeaoe. Mexico has a great and&#13;
envtabli future before her, if only-she&#13;
choose and attain the paths of honest&#13;
^constitutional government&#13;
Ne Psaoe Is 1» Sight.&#13;
: T h e present circumstances of the&#13;
republic I deeply regret to say, do not&#13;
to promise even the foundations&#13;
3&gt;C&#13;
WILSON DECLARES "HANDS OFF" TO&#13;
DE THE POLICY TOWARD MEXICO&#13;
Nonintervention, Neutrality, and Stoppage of All Shipments of&#13;
Arms Declared For by the Executive—Will Protect All&#13;
Americans—Talks Kindly of Nation.&#13;
ety, for the conditions there to improve,&#13;
and they have not improved.&#13;
They have grown worse, rather. The&#13;
territory in some sort controlled by&#13;
the provisional authorities at Mexico&#13;
City has grown smaller, not larger.&#13;
The prospect of the pacification of the&#13;
country, even by arms, has seemed to&#13;
grow more and more remote,*and its&#13;
pacification by the authorities at the&#13;
capital is evidently impossible by any&#13;
other means than force. Difficulties&#13;
more and more entangle those who&#13;
claim to. constitute the legitimate government&#13;
of the republic. They have&#13;
not made good their claim in fact&#13;
Their successes' In the field have&#13;
proved only temporary. War and disorder,&#13;
devastation and confusion, seem&#13;
to threaten to become the settled fortune&#13;
of the distracted country. As&#13;
friends we could wait no longer for a&#13;
solution which every week seems further&#13;
away. It was our duty at least&#13;
to volunteer our good offices—the offer&#13;
to assist, If we might, in effecting&#13;
some arrangement which would bring&#13;
relief and p e a o end set up a uniformally&#13;
acknowledged political authority&#13;
there.&#13;
Teff* of Instructions to ttnd.&#13;
"Accordingly I' took the liberty of&#13;
sending the Don. John Llnd, formerly&#13;
governor of Minnesota, as my personal&#13;
spokesman and representative to&#13;
the City of Mexico with the following&#13;
instructions:&#13;
"Press very earnestly upon the attention&#13;
of those who are now exercising&#13;
authority or wielding influence&#13;
jn Mepico the following consideration&#13;
and advice:&#13;
"The government of the United&#13;
states' does not feel at liberty any&#13;
longer,to stand inactively by while it&#13;
becomes daily more and more evident&#13;
that no real progress Is being made&#13;
towards the establishment of a government&#13;
at the City of Mexico which&#13;
the country will obey and respect.&#13;
"The government of the United&#13;
States does not stand In the same&#13;
case With the other great governments&#13;
of the world in respect to what Is hap&#13;
pening or what is likely to happen in&#13;
Mexico. We offer our good offices, not&#13;
only because of our genuine desire&#13;
to play the part of a friend, but also&#13;
because we are expected by the powers&#13;
of the world to act as Mexico's&#13;
nearest friend.&#13;
Acts In Interest of Mexico.&#13;
"We wish to act in these circumstances&#13;
in the spirit of the most ear&#13;
nest and disinterested friendship, it&#13;
is our purpose'in whatever we do.or&#13;
propose; in this perplexing and distressing&#13;
situation not only to pay the&#13;
most Scrupulous regard to the sovereignty&#13;
and independence of Mexico—&#13;
that we take as a matter of course,&#13;
to which we are bound by every obligation&#13;
of right and honor—but also&#13;
to give every possible evidence that&#13;
we act In the interest of Mexico alone,&#13;
and not In the interest of any person&#13;
or body of persons who may have personal&#13;
or property claims in Mexico&#13;
which they may feel that "they have&#13;
the right to press. We* are seeking to&#13;
counsel Mexico for her own good and&#13;
in the Interest, of her own peace, and&#13;
not for any other purpose whatever.&#13;
"The government of the United&#13;
estates would be Itself discredited if&#13;
it had any selfish or ulterior purpose&#13;
In transactions where the peace, happiness&#13;
and prosperity of a whole people&#13;
are involved. It is acting as its&#13;
friendship for Mexico, not as any&#13;
selfish interest, dictates.&#13;
All Amerloa Cries fer Settlement.&#13;
"The political situation in Mexico&#13;
is Incompatible with the fulfillment&#13;
of international obligations on the&#13;
part of Mexico, with the civilized development&#13;
of Mexico herself, and wttn&#13;
the maintenance of tolerable political&#13;
and economic conditions in Central&#13;
America. It is no common occasion,&#13;
therefore, that the United States offers&#13;
her counsel and assistance. All&#13;
America cries but for a settlement&#13;
"A satisfactory settlement seems to&#13;
us to be conditioned on: (a) An Immediate&#13;
cessation of fighting throughout&#13;
Mexico, a definite -armistice, solemnly&#13;
entered into and scrupulously&#13;
observed!;&#13;
"(b)—Security given for an early&#13;
and free election in which all will&#13;
agree to take part&#13;
Huerta Must.Net Be Candidate.&#13;
"(c)— The consent of General Huerta,&#13;
to bind himself not to be a candidate&#13;
for election as president of the&#13;
republic at this election; and&#13;
"(d)—The agreement of all parties&#13;
to ablda by the results of the election&#13;
and co-operation in the* most loyal .way&#13;
in organising and eupportinf she new&#13;
administrate*.&#13;
"The^govetnment of the United&#13;
States trill be glad to pUy any part in&#13;
tbia-settlement or in tyL carrying oat&#13;
ofsaeb a peace. We ha,ve waited many-4wb*eh * teneyable *»4 eoaatstent&#13;
mootha, months Mi t t peril and anal with internatkmal right It pledge*&#13;
itself to:' recognise and in any way&#13;
proper to assist the administration&#13;
chosen and set up in Mexico In the&#13;
way and on the conditions suggested.&#13;
Taking all the existing conditions&#13;
into consideration the government of&#13;
the United States can conceive of no&#13;
reasons sufficient to justify those who&#13;
are now attempting to shape the policy&#13;
or exercising the authority of Mexico&#13;
in decling the offices of friendship&#13;
thus offered. Can Mexico give the civilized&#13;
world, a satisfactory reason for&#13;
rejecting our good offices?&#13;
Llnd Showed Great Tact&#13;
Mr. Llnd executed his delicate and&#13;
difficult mission with singular tact,&#13;
firmness, and made clear to the authoritiea^&#13;
of the city of Mexico, not&#13;
only the*purpose of his visit, but also&#13;
the spirit in which it had been undertaken.&#13;
But the proposals he submitted&#13;
were rejected, in a note, the&#13;
full text of which I take the liberty&#13;
of laying before you.&#13;
"I am led to believe that they were&#13;
rejected partly because the author!&#13;
ties at Mexico City had been grossly&#13;
misinformed and misled upon two&#13;
points. They did not realize the spirit&#13;
of the-American people in this matter,&#13;
their earnest friendliness and yet&#13;
sober determination that some just solution&#13;
be found for the Mexican difficulties;&#13;
and they did not believe that&#13;
the present admlnlstrtlon spoke,&#13;
through Mr. Llnd, for the American&#13;
people.&#13;
"Meanwhile, what is It our duty to&#13;
do Clearly, everything that we do&#13;
must be rooted in patience and done&#13;
with calm and disinterested deliberation.&#13;
Impatience on our part would&#13;
be childish, and would be fraught with&#13;
every risk of wrong and folly, We&#13;
can afford to exercise the self-restraint&#13;
of a really great nation which&#13;
realizes its own strength and scorns&#13;
to misuse it It was our duty to offer&#13;
our active assistance. It is now our&#13;
duty to show what true neutrality will&#13;
do to enable the people of Mexico to&#13;
set their affairs in order again and&#13;
wait for a further opportunity to offer&#13;
our friendly counsels. The door is not&#13;
closed against the resumption, either&#13;
upon the initiative of Mexico or upon&#13;
our own, of the effort to bring order&#13;
out of the confusion by friendly cooperative&#13;
action, should fortunate occasion&#13;
offer.&#13;
Urges Americans to Leave.&#13;
"We should earnestly urge all Americans&#13;
to leave Mexico at once, and&#13;
should assist them to get away In&#13;
every way possible. Not because we&#13;
would mean to slacken In the least&#13;
our efforts to safeguard their Uvea&#13;
and their Interests, but because it Is&#13;
imperative that they should not take&#13;
any unnecessary risks If it is physically&#13;
possible for them to leave the country.&#13;
We should let everyone who&#13;
assumes to exercise authority In any&#13;
part of Mexico know in the most unequivocal&#13;
way that we shall vigilantly&#13;
watch the fortunes of those Americans&#13;
who cannot get away, and shall&#13;
hold those responsible for their sufferings&#13;
and losses to a definite reckoning.&#13;
Will Remain Neutral.&#13;
"For the rest, I deem it my duty to&#13;
exercisevthe authority conferred upon&#13;
me by the law of March 14, 1912, to&#13;
see to it that neither side to the&#13;
struggle now going on in Mexico receive&#13;
any assistance from this side of&#13;
the border. I shall follow the best&#13;
practice of nations In the matter of&#13;
neutrality by forbidding the exportation&#13;
of arms or munitions of war of&#13;
any kind from the United States to&#13;
any part of the republic of Mexico.&#13;
"I am happy to say that several of&#13;
the great governments of the world&#13;
have givpu this government their generous&#13;
moral support In urging upon&#13;
the provisional authorities at the city&#13;
of Mexico the acceptances of our&#13;
proffered good offices in the spirit in&#13;
which they were made."&#13;
Mexico's Side cf I t&#13;
Washington, Aug. 28—The following&#13;
is a synopsis of the reply of&#13;
Senor Oamboa to the proposals of&#13;
the American government conveyed&#13;
through Hon. John Llnd, as transmitted&#13;
to congress by the president:&#13;
In his reply to the American proposals&#13;
Senor Gam boa, the Mexican&#13;
minister of foreign affairs, urges the&#13;
following points:&#13;
That'President Wilson's imputation&#13;
that no progress is being made toward&#13;
the restoration of peace in Mex&#13;
lco is not true.&#13;
That the fact the Mexican* govern&#13;
ment enjoys the recognition of nearly&#13;
all tbie great nations of the world Is&#13;
proof that It la a true and honorable&#13;
administration&#13;
That1 the proposal of an armistice Is&#13;
impossible, because nations do not&#13;
propose armistices with bandits. To&#13;
grant an armistice would be to recognise&#13;
the belligerency of the rebels&#13;
That the request that General Huer&#13;
to should not be a candidate for the&#13;
presidency la "strange and anwarrant&#13;
ed,M ,,&#13;
That the election of General Huerta&#13;
**T• aIilf iaCLh e American proposals are&#13;
^humiliating and unsound.-&#13;
That Mexico's ambassador should&#13;
be received In Mexico and that the&#13;
Ucdted SUtai should send a hew ambasaador&#13;
to Mexico.&#13;
m When Run Down&#13;
in physical condition it is usually because tke action of the&#13;
organs of digestion has become irregular or defective.&#13;
Then there is need for a safe and speedy medicine to relieve&#13;
the ills which occasionally depress even the brightest and&#13;
strongest The one remedyyou may take and feel safe with is&#13;
BEECHAM'S PILLS (The Largest Sale tit Any Medicine in the World)&#13;
The first dose gives speedy relief in sick-headache, biliousness,&#13;
constipation, lack of appetite, heartburn, dyspepsia,&#13;
and lasting improvement follows the timely use of this favorite&#13;
and reliable home remedy. You will become healthier&#13;
and stronger, and more cheerful if you let Beecham's Pills&#13;
Pick You Up Sold everywhere. In boxes, 10c, 25c.&#13;
Directions with every box point the way to health and arc especially valuable Co women.&#13;
f X ^ / f J a r i d~*S aO»."rhvT ST* TTSxT &lt;"-»t the State Fuirs un exhlbii f the farm prixluctts of the&#13;
WW I t ^ h m • • # l ^ i i ^ h f l 1^1 cheap land districts of ipper WiHi'onsiu maybe seen at. w w &lt;»*"•*^-4^-^A VKWM.X 1 t h e T.udittaa, state Fair, pteinbur 8-12, and Michigan&#13;
Stat© Fair, September 1^20. Be sure see '.i. In meantime y. u intuit write for literature to&#13;
WISCONSIN ADVANCEMENT ASSOCIATION. 3 1 aswell Block. MILWAUKEE. WIS.&#13;
Upper Wisconsin took World' Alfalfa prize UUS.&#13;
THE GREATEST LIGHT-PRODUCING INVENTION OF THE AGE&#13;
THE IMPROVED JENNE PIT ACETYLENE GENERATOR&#13;
THE UP-TO-DATE LIGHTING SYSTEM FOR COUNTRY HOMES&#13;
- Installed In the ground and covered over likeacistern, beingrfar removed from the building,&#13;
where it is safe, convenient, froat-proof and fool-proof. J&#13;
The best lighting system on earth for the&#13;
least money. Backed up with an iron-clad&#13;
guarantee. Permitted by the National Board&#13;
cf Fire Underwriters. Special inducements&#13;
made to the first purchaser in each locality.&#13;
We arc the owners of fundamental patents&#13;
covering tlie construction and installation of&#13;
acetylene generators installed in the cround&#13;
like a cistern, lie ware of imitations. If it 18&#13;
not a "Jenne," it is an infringement of our&#13;
patents. Sales a fronts and dealers wanted in&#13;
•** *•" *~: "•' • i — I' • .TVXIH - - every locality. Write us for particulars.&#13;
The Jenne Acetylene Gas Machine Company&#13;
Meridian Life BId£., Indianapolis, Ind.&#13;
WW"*»'i&#13;
20 GAUGE&#13;
1TAMMERLESS REPEATING SHOTGUN&#13;
The Model 1912 Winchester is the lightest, strongest&#13;
and handsomest repeating shotgun on the market. It&#13;
weighs only about 5 ¾ pounds, yet it has great strength,&#13;
because its metal parts throughout are made of nickel steel.&#13;
It is a two-part Take down, without loose parts, is simple to&#13;
operate and the action works with an ease and smoothness&#13;
unknown in gun3 of other makes. See one at your dealer's or&#13;
Send to Winchetter Repeating Arms Co., New Haven, Conn., tor circular,&#13;
THE IIGHT WEIGHT, NICKEL STEEL REPEATER.&#13;
An Exceptional Shoe&#13;
This shoe is cut on that comfortable bicycle&#13;
pattern, but out of stock that is&#13;
especially intended for hard service. This&#13;
is a special tannage, a product of our own&#13;
tannery, called "re-tanned chrome."&#13;
The soles are of first quality sole&#13;
leather. The outsoles of "Indestructible"&#13;
chrome stock, the best wearing&#13;
sole leather ever made.&#13;
For genuine shoe satisfaction&#13;
there is nothing on the market that&#13;
excels this shoe.&#13;
Ask your dealer for No. 470 tan,&#13;
or No 472 black t.nok for the&#13;
trade-mark on&#13;
the sole,&#13;
Write Dr&gt;pt.~n&#13;
fur Free Rou^e&#13;
K.:x Book.&#13;
HIRTH - KRAUSE COMPANY&#13;
Hide to Shoe Tanners and Shoe Manufacturers&#13;
GRAND RAPIDS MICHIGAN&#13;
The native of India has an average&#13;
life of twenty-four years, as against&#13;
forty-four in England.&#13;
Red Cross Ball Ulite. r»ll blue, best bluing&#13;
value in the whole world, inakeB the laundress&#13;
smile. Adv. ,&#13;
On an average no fewer than 200&#13;
people are killed by lightning every&#13;
year.&#13;
Kra.Wlne)ow1s Soothing Syrup for Children&#13;
teething, softens the Rramtt, reduces lnflammati0B,&amp;&#13;
ll*jr8 p*ln,cures windcoiU't25c a bottle***&#13;
Among Other Things.&#13;
"I suppose you saw many ancient&#13;
jMngs In Egypt."&#13;
"Yes, sir. They had a trolley line&#13;
:here tnat must have been a thousand&#13;
years old."—Louisville Courier-&#13;
Journal.&#13;
A B S 0 R B , N E&#13;
w* il^l reducTeR A0iCn MflAaRmK eBdK.,.U .Ss.PwATo. lOleHn.&#13;
Joints, Sprains, Bruises, Soft&#13;
inches; Heals Boils, Poll&#13;
' Evil, QuJttor, Fistula, Of&#13;
any u n h e a l t h y t o r e&#13;
quickly aa it i« a positive antiteptft&#13;
and germicide. Plrmant TOUK; doM&#13;
not blister under bandage or remove&#13;
the hair, and you can work&#13;
the home. 12.00 per bottle. dtUr-&#13;
«rerf. Book 7 K free.&#13;
ABSOttniNE. JR., antiieprtc Hniment for minlrin*.&#13;
Redtrei painful. Swollen Veini. Goitre. Weni, Straitw,&#13;
RruiK-J. stop* pain and inflammation. Price II.00per bottle&#13;
atdraien nr delivered. Will tell rou more if y»u write.&#13;
ManuHaufed only by&#13;
W.F.YOUNG. P.O.F.. 310 Twrels St., SsrlnflReld, M u t .&#13;
TYPEWRITERS KCLcl\l«B«&#13;
Mfr.'s Sale MOO, rebuilt, jroarnjteod.&#13;
Oliver JO*), fo.ft n&amp;St&#13;
ttp. Rcra'R |WwTV!«1ble JBJS.&#13;
Boy a I «.00: Special tTTOMmltJa&#13;
Pw ler iiMrf; Visible SMA&#13;
Underwood Rft.00; Hpe^utl mW&#13;
L. O. Smith ICT.00; Spoilt) W.M.&#13;
C»*h with orrtor or 0. O. D.&#13;
Trial. Order Catalogue No. «1.&#13;
U.S.TrpeirtterSrodtoito.fliiiar Bij(.p Detroit, Mleh.&#13;
iMTENTSSSS*^^&#13;
W, N. U., DETROIT, NO. 39-1913.&#13;
fo " ^mi"^' *^m&#13;
„**&#13;
AS SA^^&gt;l i-i;l k; : ^ ; ^ ^ % , . , .&#13;
v y ,.-&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
• *&#13;
Local News&#13;
Mrs. R. Darwiu I.« viaitiug relatives&#13;
at Lanpiug,&#13;
Geo. 8ykes auri'w'fe of Detroit&#13;
are visiting his p« ci.ts here this&#13;
week.&#13;
C. V. Van Winkle a:-, it wife are&#13;
attending the LaD'aiuu' home-coming&#13;
this week.&#13;
E. T. Bush aud wife uf Plaiufieid&#13;
are visiting relative in Lau&amp;w&#13;
ing this week.&#13;
Chas. Miller ot; Howell is the&#13;
new chamber-maid at Dfmning's&#13;
livery bam. He will move his&#13;
family here and occnpy the Graham&#13;
house on Mill street.&#13;
Mrs. Oliver Hammond, a life&#13;
long resident of Gregory, died at&#13;
her home there Tuesday, August&#13;
26.&#13;
Auto license No 49906 has been&#13;
found aud left at this office. Owner&#13;
can have same by calliug aud&#13;
payiug for this notice.&#13;
Mrs. Chas- B. Eaman of Garden&#13;
City, Kansas, and Mrs. Roy H.&#13;
Teeple of Mauistique, Mich., are&#13;
visiting at the home of their&#13;
mother, Mrs. E. W. Martin. •&#13;
Michigan's Greatest Fair&#13;
»».&#13;
4 mP?&#13;
• * *&#13;
m - i * «&#13;
*&#13;
, i , v&#13;
-•••?,l::&#13;
In Detroit&#13;
. 15.-20&#13;
$100,000 In Premiums&#13;
and Purses&#13;
One Solid Week of&#13;
Pleasure and Profit&#13;
MICHIGAN'S EDUCATIONAL OUTING&#13;
BIGGER AND BETTER THAN&#13;
.EVER IN 1913&#13;
Some of the Many Attraction!:&#13;
ENORMOUS AGRICULTURAL and&#13;
HORTICULTURAL and Industrial Exhibits.&#13;
Demonstrations of Michigan's Soil, Hand and&#13;
Brain wealth. Look into the Wolverine State's&#13;
shop window at the Michigan State Fair.&#13;
COLOSSAL LIVE STOCK and Horse&#13;
Shows. Greatest exhibition of pure bred horses,&#13;
cattle, sheep, hogs and poultry in the Fair's history.&#13;
AUTO RACES. GALAXY of speed&#13;
Celebrities. 1 he world's most powerful machines&#13;
(-'riven by the world's most daring pilots: Oldfield.&#13;
Burman, Mi.l.ord, Disbrow, Tetzlaff and Endicott.&#13;
Don't miss these Kings of the Speedway.&#13;
CONQUEST OF THE AIR. Daily trips&#13;
to ;he clouds m Korn's Tractor Biplane. • Latest&#13;
French Typ«'._ Passengers carried on every Flight.&#13;
Practicability of the Air Machine shown for the&#13;
first time at the 1913 Fair. Spectacular and&#13;
Instructive.&#13;
RACING PROGRAM. Grand Circuit&#13;
Races with $40,000 in purses. Champions of&#13;
the t'.irf to compete. Foremost Remsmen : "Pop"&#13;
Geers, Murphy, Cox and many others. Rich&#13;
Stake feature decided Daily.&#13;
EVENING HORSE SHOW. All the thrilling&#13;
features of the New York Show Rings.'&#13;
Sensational feats of Horsemanship. Equine Aristocracy&#13;
in Novel jumping and Parade stunts.&#13;
Unique attractions every evening.&#13;
- MUSIC. Weber's Prize Band. 60 Gifted&#13;
ArtiaTs in a varied program. Popular and Classic&#13;
musicales Afternoon and Evening. Talented Soloists&#13;
and other Entertaining sidelights.&#13;
SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS. Wortham &amp;&#13;
Allen's combined shows. No Fakes. Clean,&#13;
Wholesome amusement Spectacular Fireworks&#13;
display every evening. Gigantic Michigan Wild&#13;
Fowl exhibition.&#13;
ACCOMMODATIONS. Tented City with&#13;
all Sleeping Comforts and Properly Policed&#13;
Hospital a'nd Rest tents for Women folks and&#13;
Little Ones. ' Expert attendants in charge.&#13;
Write to 501 Bowles Building, Detroit, for&#13;
Premium List and further information.&#13;
P L A N Y O U R V A C A T I O N I N&#13;
DETROIT&#13;
AT THE&#13;
MICHIGAN STATE FAIR&#13;
Sept. 15-20&#13;
% \&#13;
*f\&#13;
* « • -&#13;
«**s&gt;0..&#13;
. » • / '&#13;
^ ^&#13;
*m\&#13;
Strenghtea Weak Kidneys&#13;
Don't suffer longer with weak kidneys.&#13;
You east fret prompt relief by&#13;
taking Electric Bitiers, that wonderful&#13;
remedy praised by women everywhere.&#13;
Start with a bottle today, you&#13;
will soon feel like a new women with&#13;
ambition to work, without fear of&#13;
pain. Mr. John Dowling of JSan&#13;
Francisco, whites: — "Gratitude for&#13;
tb e wonderful effect of Electric Bitters&#13;
prompts me to write. It cured ray&#13;
wife when ail else failed." Good for&#13;
the liver as well. Nothing better for&#13;
indigestion or biliousness. Price50c.&#13;
and $1.00, at Meyer's drug store.&#13;
South Iosco&#13;
Martin Anderson and wife called at&#13;
the home of Vern Coffee last Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Isaac Hay of Webberville returned&#13;
hq/ne Tuesday after spending&#13;
the week with relatives here.&#13;
F. Beatrice Lam borne commenced&#13;
school Tuesday in the Wright district&#13;
where she will teacb the coming year.&#13;
Joe Roberts aud wife entertained&#13;
company from Lansing the last of the&#13;
week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Lamborne and&#13;
daughters entertained the following&#13;
at their borne Sunday: Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Jesse Henry and son and Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Mowers and daughter of&#13;
Finckney, Mrs. Isaac Ray ol Webberville&#13;
and Mr, and Mrs. Waiter Miller&#13;
of Iosco.&#13;
Mrs. Eliza Kuhn visited relatives in&#13;
Webberville and Fowlerville over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Isaac Ray and Mrs. L. T. Lamborne&#13;
spent Monday at the home of&#13;
Walter Miller.&#13;
~Don Martin and wife ol Webberville&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of T.&#13;
Wainwright. ,&#13;
Mrs. Martin Anderson called on the&#13;
Misses Lamborne's Monday afternoon.&#13;
\ Come to Stock-bridge Sept. 11th t&#13;
[BOOSTER]&#13;
DAY I&#13;
i Plan to do some fall t r a d - j&#13;
8 m&#13;
1 ln&amp; on this day and see the 5&#13;
ii spo_rxt_s andi ib aliil SJLa m: e xt oo 4&#13;
s&#13;
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that&#13;
Contain ftercurr.&#13;
as mercury wili surely destroy the&#13;
sense of smell and completely derange&#13;
the whole system when entering it&#13;
through the mucus surfaces. Such articles&#13;
should never be used'except on pre&#13;
scriplions from reputable physicians,&#13;
as the damage they do is ten fold to&#13;
the good you can possibly derive from&#13;
them. Hall's Uatarrh Cure, manufactured&#13;
by F J Cheney &amp; Co, Toledo,&#13;
0 contains no mercury, and is taken&#13;
internally acting-directly upon the&#13;
blood and mucus surfaces of tbe&#13;
system. In buying Halt's Catarrh&#13;
Cure be sure you get the genuine. It&#13;
-is taken internally and made in Toledo&#13;
Ohio, by F J Cheney &amp; Co., Testimonials&#13;
free. Hold by 'Druggist*&#13;
Price 75c. per bottle. Take Hall's&#13;
Family pills for constipation&#13;
Unadilla&#13;
Orrie Hague and family of North&#13;
West Stockbridge spent part of last&#13;
week at tbe home of A. J. Holmes.&#13;
W. T. Barnum attended the funeral&#13;
of Martin Messenger at Stockbridge&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
Ed. Cranna and wife and Wm. Marshall&#13;
and wife visited in Detroit a few&#13;
day8 last week.&#13;
School opened Monday with Miss&#13;
Belle Coates instructor.&#13;
Wm. Stevenson and Miss Becker of&#13;
Dexter spent Sunday at tbe home of&#13;
Janet Webb.&#13;
Ralph Gorton and wife attended&#13;
the funeral of Mrs. Milton Reitbmiller&#13;
at Waterloo last. Saturday.&#13;
Mrs, L Gallop entertained the&#13;
Missionary society for supper last&#13;
night.&#13;
Mrs. Olin Marshall and daughter&#13;
spent Tbnrsday with Mrs, Jno. Webb.&#13;
Frank May and family were oat&#13;
from Jackson over Snnday.&#13;
Miss Freda Roepcke is enjoying a&#13;
few weeks vacation.&#13;
Dorothea Hadley spent the last of&#13;
tbe week with her grandparents.&#13;
Do Ton Jt*ear Consumption!&#13;
So matter how chronic yJur ceugb&#13;
or bow severe your throat or lung&#13;
ailment is, Dr. King's New Discovery&#13;
will surely help yon; it may save your&#13;
lite. Shilman Green, of Mai white,&#13;
Col. writes: "Two doctors said I had&#13;
consumption and could not ijye two&#13;
yean. 1 used Dr. King's New Dttvj&#13;
^overy and am well and alive," Your1&#13;
money refunded if it fails to benefit&#13;
yon. Tbe best home remedy for&#13;
oonghs, colds, throat and lnng troubles.&#13;
Pride 80s. and $100. Guaranteed by&#13;
0. G. Meyer the druggist, v ' ^&#13;
Pinckney Hotel Again&#13;
Changes Hands&#13;
It is reported that tbe Pinckney&#13;
hotel has again changed hinds. A. K.&#13;
Steadman is packing up his bousehold&#13;
goods this week preparatory to leaving&#13;
town. Rumors are that Cbas.&#13;
Morse ot Jackson will a^ain return to&#13;
Pinckney and conduct the hotel.&#13;
Dr. Miles'&#13;
Anti-Pain Pills&#13;
will help you, as they&#13;
hare helped other*.&#13;
Good for all kinds of pain.&#13;
Used to relieve Neuralgia, Headache,&#13;
Nervousness, Rheumatism,&#13;
Sciatica, Kidney Pains, Lumbago,&#13;
Locomotor Ataxia, Backache,&#13;
Stomachache, Carskkness, Irritability&#13;
and for pain in any part&#13;
of the body.&#13;
"I have used Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain&#13;
Pills when troubled with headaohe,&#13;
and find that one pill infallibly&#13;
effects relief in a very short time.&#13;
I am considerably affeoted with neuralgia&#13;
in the head at timet, and&#13;
find the Anti-Pain P1U» of much&#13;
benefit. The Dr. Miles' Remedies&#13;
are beyond comparison and I recommend&#13;
them to all my friends."&#13;
GBOftQB COLGATE,&#13;
211 Oakland St, San Antonio, Tex,&#13;
At all' druggists.: 29 doses 28c a&#13;
MILES MIOICAL CO., Klkhart, Ind.&#13;
M+B+tt^+B+»i«rtiWBHss^^&#13;
^ H. F. S'GLER M. D- C. L, SIGLER M. D. £ 2 s&#13;
? DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER, i&#13;
g Physicians and Surgeons. $&#13;
•&#13;
S3&#13;
? All calls promptly attended to M&#13;
8 day or night. Office on Main ?&#13;
y Street. 2&#13;
? PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
*R**fr«S*SH8*»«&amp;«s^^&#13;
GOING TO BUY A PIANO&#13;
OR SEWING MACHINE&#13;
YES1?&#13;
SEE L, R. WIUIAIYIS.&#13;
GREGORY&#13;
ttlTHe saves you money on hi^h&#13;
grade pianos.&#13;
Grind Trunk Time Table&#13;
For t»p convenience of our readers&#13;
Train* Ea,4 . Train* West&#13;
No. 28—X :39 a. m. No. 27—10:23 a. m.&#13;
No. 3&lt;W:.4» p. m. No. 29—7:12 p. m.&#13;
' Safest Laxative For Worn*&#13;
Nearly every wrbmen needs a "stood&#13;
laxative. Dr. King's New Life Pills&#13;
are good because they are prompt,&#13;
safe and do not cause pain. Mrs. M. C,&#13;
Dtjnlap of LeadUl, Tenn. says: "Dr.&#13;
King's New Life Pills helped her&#13;
troubles -greatly." Get a boa to-day.&#13;
Pries, 25c. Becoso mended by 0. U.&#13;
Meyer, the druggist. ~&#13;
YOU can get&#13;
them hj. advertising&#13;
in this&#13;
paper. It reaches&#13;
the best class of&#13;
people in this&#13;
community.&#13;
*S*..-HV„.-^&#13;
Use this paper if&#13;
you vyaat some&#13;
of their business.&#13;
This Paper&#13;
If You Want&#13;
7?F?&#13;
r*""For relief&#13;
Dr. Mil&#13;
setter n«&#13;
teumatie pains try&#13;
In Pills. Do net&#13;
T? [Advtrtlssasntl&#13;
• ~ • M ^ l "&#13;
'^f&#13;
/.&#13;
• ~ 4 I&#13;
»A1</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch September 04, 1913</text>
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                <text>September 04, 1913 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="11204">
                <text>1913-09-04</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="11205">
                <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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            <elementText elementTextId="37358">
              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="40679">
              <text>Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan, Thursday, September 11, 1913 No. 37&#13;
To Prevent Tuberculosis&#13;
Iu order to keep from getting&#13;
tuberculosis, the first and most&#13;
important rule is to keep as strong&#13;
and healthy as possible. When&#13;
the tubercle bacilli gets into the&#13;
body or lungs of a healthy person&#13;
they do not multiply but are soon&#13;
killed, while in the lungs of a&#13;
weak or sickly person they increase&#13;
in numbers and produce tubeiculosis.&#13;
Of great assistance in keeping&#13;
well and strong are quantities&#13;
of fresh, pure air both in the daytime&#13;
and at night, in the home,&#13;
in the school-room, and in the&#13;
work-room, together with proper&#13;
food, cleanliness, aad temperance.&#13;
One can get fresh, pure air by&#13;
keeping the living rooms during&#13;
the daytime well ventilated, and&#13;
by keeping the windows of the&#13;
bedrooms wide open all night.&#13;
Dust may be largely avoided by&#13;
cleaning with damp cloths and&#13;
brooms (nevar use a dry broom&#13;
or duster.)&#13;
Children should be taught not&#13;
to put anything in their mouths&#13;
except food. Putting pencils,&#13;
coins, or playthings in the mouth,&#13;
or eating candy or chewing gum&#13;
which other children have had in&#13;
their mouths are dirty, dangerous&#13;
habits, and should be avoided.&#13;
Overindulgence in whiskey or&#13;
other forms of alcohol predisposes&#13;
one to tuberculosis, and the use of&#13;
intoxicants of any kind in tuberculosis&#13;
is distinctly injurious.&#13;
Alcohol weakens the body so that&#13;
it cannot resist the disease germs.&#13;
Every person should take a warn&#13;
bath with soap, at least once a&#13;
week, and if possible should have&#13;
a cold bath every morning.&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Read, Then Feed&#13;
One night last winter a group&#13;
of mueical artists sent out by tHe&#13;
Coit Lyceum Bureau shivered and&#13;
shook, both cold and hungry as&#13;
theie was no hotel in town open&#13;
for theii accomodation, To-day&#13;
conditions are somewhat reversed.&#13;
Pinckney, for the present at least,&#13;
is.well equipped with eating and&#13;
sleeping conveniences. George&#13;
Morross of Detroit opened the&#13;
hotel Tuesday, recently vacated by&#13;
A. -E, Stead man, and proposes to&#13;
ran an up-to-date place. Chas.&#13;
Morse of Jackson, formerly proat&#13;
jfre hotel, will return to&#13;
Besides this we have SmfCtfg res&#13;
taurant and several private boarding&#13;
houses. Pinckney always gets&#13;
there on the home run and can&#13;
usually show up pretty strong for&#13;
a town of her size, *&#13;
: How About That Watch?&#13;
m Learning that there is an opening&#13;
for a jewelry repair man in&#13;
this vicinty, I have arranged to&#13;
fee at Monks Bros, store one day&#13;
each week, Wednesday, for the&#13;
jrarprose of doing jewelry work.&#13;
' Work guaranteed.&#13;
Edw A. Clark.&#13;
o&#13;
, /&#13;
Tax Notice&#13;
I am now ready to collect all&#13;
jr|Pagi taxee and anyone wishing&#13;
&gt; ^ nay .tj*m can call at the mill&#13;
aj»To&gt; eo at any tine.&#13;
ft B, Hoyi Tillage Treasurer.&#13;
Percy McClear of Detroit spent&#13;
the first of last week at the home&#13;
of E. T. McClear.&#13;
G. M. Greiner visited relatives&#13;
in Detroit last week.&#13;
Sam Wilson and wife of Dayton,&#13;
Ohio, were gue3ts at the home&#13;
of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. G.&#13;
Wilson, last week.&#13;
Mae and Martin Brennan of&#13;
Detroit and Kate Greiner of Mt.&#13;
Clemens returned to their homes&#13;
the first of last week after an extended&#13;
visit with relatives here.&#13;
Chester Wood who has been&#13;
spending the summer with his&#13;
aunt, Lucia Hiuchey, has gone to&#13;
Lansing,&#13;
Hoy Placeway, wife and daughter&#13;
Eleanor, were Hartlaud visitors&#13;
recently.&#13;
Fred Mackiuder who has been&#13;
North for the benefit of his health&#13;
returned home last week.&#13;
Dr. and Mrs. A. C. Roche and&#13;
three daughters of Kearsarg are&#13;
guests of relatives here.&#13;
Sydney Sprout of Stockbridge&#13;
spent last week with his parents,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Sprout.&#13;
Mrs. Arthur Bullis and daughter&#13;
spent a portion of last week at&#13;
the home of Chas. Bullis.&#13;
Will Caskey and wife visited at&#13;
Truman YVainwright's Saturday.&#13;
Miss Mollie Wilson is the guest&#13;
of her sister, Mrs. L. E. Hewlett&#13;
of Howell.&#13;
G. W. Crofoot has been very&#13;
poorly the past week.&#13;
Pearl .Hanes^ Joseph Greiner&#13;
and Mary Conners are attending&#13;
school at Pinckney.&#13;
Miss Hertz of Detroit who has&#13;
been visiting at the Schrotzberger&#13;
home returned &lt;home last Saturday&#13;
accompanied by her sister,&#13;
Mrs* Ered Schrotzberger. _ -&#13;
Cnas. Bullis and wife and Mrs.&#13;
A. G. Wilson visited at the home&#13;
of G. W. Crofoot Sunday.&#13;
Will Ledwi.lge, wife and daughter&#13;
Clare, • and Duane Lavey of&#13;
Pinckney spent Sunday at the&#13;
home of R. M. Ledwidge,&#13;
A. G. Wilson and son Lucius of&#13;
Detroit art spending a few days&#13;
at Washington, D. C.&#13;
Geo. Crane and Robt. Edwards&#13;
were Detroit visitors Saturday&#13;
and Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Mike Lavey of Pinckney&#13;
and Mrs, Jamee Stackable of&#13;
Gregory spent Friday at E. T.&#13;
McCl ear's.&#13;
Germaine Ledwidge and Faye&#13;
McClear went to the St. Joseph&#13;
Academy at Adrian last Thursday.&#13;
Anderson sent out seven teachers&#13;
last week to begin duties for&#13;
the year. Mrs. E. T. McCkar in&#13;
the Liver more, Clare Ledwidge&#13;
in the Eamann, Mary Fitzsimmons&#13;
in the Hause, Mary Greiner at&#13;
Parkers Corners, Roche McClear&#13;
in the Green, Richard Greiner in&#13;
the Mansel, Veronica Progan of&#13;
S. Marion in the Sprout and&#13;
Eilieen McClear at Cadillac.&#13;
Robt Edwards sold over $1400&#13;
worth of hogs recently. The&#13;
stock buyer said it was the largest&#13;
sum of money he ever paid to one&#13;
man for stock.&#13;
Will Ledwidge spent Saturday&#13;
and Sunday of last week in Ithaca.&#13;
Local News&#13;
Percy Swarthout transacted&#13;
business in Gregory Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Morse and daughter&#13;
of Jackson spent last Saturday&#13;
here.&#13;
Some men are entitled to a lot&#13;
of praitte for the things they&#13;
haven't done.&#13;
Percy Swarthout and wife and&#13;
Miss Lulu Benham were Howell&#13;
visitors Sunday.&#13;
Miss Margaret Ashford of Ann&#13;
Arbor was a week end guest at&#13;
the home of Dr. H. F. Sigler.&#13;
The Teeple Hdw, Co. are installing&#13;
a hot air furnace at the&#13;
home of Kate Brown this week.&#13;
Messrs. Wm. McPherson, Emil&#13;
Bode and Charles VanWinkle of&#13;
Howell were Pinckney visitors&#13;
Monday.&#13;
If the present tendency in women's&#13;
dress is carried much farther,&#13;
it will put the ballet shows out of&#13;
business.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Monks&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of their&#13;
daughter, Mrs, Chas. Doody, of&#13;
near Gregory.&#13;
A Complete Surprise&#13;
Monday, September 8th, relatives&#13;
numbering about twenty-five&#13;
met at the home of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
H. D. Grieve to celebrate Mr.&#13;
Grieve's 75th anniversary, A&#13;
bountiful dinner was served at&#13;
noon after which E. L. Topping,&#13;
in a few well chosen remarks,&#13;
presented Mr.'Grieve with a purse&#13;
of gold and bills from those present,&#13;
also from relatives unable to&#13;
be present His son Fred, thinking&#13;
of the days soon to come, gave&#13;
him a fine overcoat. A large&#13;
package of poet cards from old&#13;
friends and neighbors was also&#13;
received, #hich in these days&#13;
makes one glad to be thus reminded.&#13;
The afternoon was pleasantly&#13;
spent with visiting, music, taking&#13;
pictures, and last but not least, a&#13;
watermellow feast on the lawn.&#13;
*" To Mr, Grieve it was a surprise&#13;
from start to finish. For some&#13;
reason he did not make a speech&#13;
after all this had happened, but&#13;
some one has rightly said, "Actions&#13;
spaak louder than words."&#13;
To all who remembered him with&#13;
a card of good wishes he wishes to&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
t.&#13;
FOR SALE- •Tomatoes.&#13;
John Dink**], Pinckney.&#13;
FOR SALE—Gravel pit, about tour&#13;
acres, also 14 ocres ot tfood land,&#13;
E. J. Bripgs, Pinckney.&#13;
LOST SPRAYED OR STOLEN—Red&#13;
and white Durham yearling heifer,&#13;
short horns.&#13;
36t3* Wm. Gawley, Pinckney&#13;
It Certainly Was&#13;
Embarrassing&#13;
thank them as they are greatly&#13;
Rev. J. W. Mitchell and wife' appreciated,&#13;
left for Tpsilanti Wednesday&#13;
where they will attend the annual&#13;
Methodist Conference.&#13;
Rev. Fr. W. P. Considine of&#13;
Chelsea and Miss Mary Dunn of&#13;
Detroit visited Mrs. Marcellus&#13;
Monks one day last week.&#13;
Walter Reason returned to his&#13;
home in Detroit Monday after&#13;
spending a week at the home of&#13;
his parents near Pinckney.&#13;
Fall Fashion Exhibition and&#13;
moving pictures showing of ladies&#13;
fall coats at Stockbridge, Friday&#13;
evening. Tickets are free at&#13;
Dancer's Cloak Dept. adv.&#13;
Try a liner in the&gt;" Wanted and&#13;
J?or Sale" column of the Dispatch.&#13;
They get results. For a few cents&#13;
you can get more calls than you&#13;
could hnnt up in days of travel-&#13;
Call, write or phone copy.&#13;
Hundreds of school children&#13;
and teachers are wearing glasses&#13;
today because schoolrooms of this&#13;
state are improperly lighted.&#13;
Hundreds of others need to wear&#13;
them from the same cause.&#13;
Pay your subscription this month.&#13;
Quite a number from here attended&#13;
a ball game at Collins&#13;
Plains, near Stockbridge, Sunday.&#13;
Get samples of Dancer &amp; Co,—&#13;
Stockbridge, of fall dress goods&#13;
and irimmings. They are always&#13;
glad to mail them. adv.&#13;
Mrs. Henry Harrisand daughter&#13;
Florence spent a few days last&#13;
week visiting friends and relatives&#13;
in Ann Arbor and Toledo, Ohio.&#13;
Mrs. Ella Hayward and little&#13;
sons, Harold and Howard, returned&#13;
to their home in Durand last&#13;
Saturday after a weeks visit with&#13;
reTativertere"&#13;
Mrs. I. J. Abbott while out in&#13;
the bean field Tuesday where the&#13;
men were harvesting beans picked&#13;
up a stalk of beans and brought&#13;
it to her invalid husband who says&#13;
that it contained 32 pods and&#13;
shelled-oat 141 choice beans. Mr.&#13;
Abbott has been an invalid for 4J&#13;
years but cheerfully spends a large&#13;
part of his time in his wheel chair.&#13;
to David Kerr, boss of Belmont,&#13;
when his channrn^,&#13;
motherless daughter Gloria&#13;
unexpectedly returned from&#13;
school and a European trip,&#13;
which, combined, had kept&#13;
her away from home (or&#13;
many years and deprived&#13;
her of all knowledge of the&#13;
occupation of her father,&#13;
whom she supposed to be&#13;
a real estate operator, high&#13;
in society. But that was&#13;
but the beginning of embarrassments.&#13;
Kerr was a&#13;
typical boss of the most&#13;
brutal type, far removed&#13;
from "society," determined&#13;
to use Ms power to make a&#13;
place for Gloria. Gloria's&#13;
bitterawakening to the truth,&#13;
her falling in love with a&#13;
young editor who opposes&#13;
her father, and many other&#13;
incidents make up a drama&#13;
of absorbing interest and&#13;
power. You wffl enjoy every&#13;
instalment of our next serial&#13;
in which the above is told,&#13;
The Daughter&#13;
of David Kerr&#13;
BeSuretoReadltl!&#13;
•w&#13;
41&#13;
«&#13;
$&#13;
First installment of the above&#13;
story begins in this issue. I&#13;
- Just Received at -&#13;
3£3£3£&#13;
&amp; Jackson's . • * NEW PALL* LINES&#13;
Dress Poplins, Ginghams, Percales, Seersuckers, Outing&#13;
Flannels, Blankets and Comfortablos&#13;
. .-.*&#13;
• j a : r i j&#13;
Yonntf DMU mite M* daily wri?-&#13;
'ing at DUMW**—Stockbridge, «dy,&#13;
I&#13;
New styles in Kabo Corsets&#13;
Mens and Boys Sweaters&#13;
Price $1.00 to $3.00&#13;
Ranging from 50c to $4.50&#13;
/ K,&#13;
OUR S A T U R D A Y S P E C I A L S&#13;
60 only - 3 0 c Brooms for&#13;
pounds H.H E. Sugar&#13;
2 0 c&#13;
$1.35&#13;
Above prices for Saturday and for Cash Only&#13;
\&#13;
'1,* ..*«-.'.''**?&gt;.J&#13;
' &gt; i i&#13;
-,*1!&#13;
fofotiM.&#13;
"I 1* •••*•"&#13;
« •"•aafclft^Vlkt-'1- ***-&gt;a»W ' ;*V*i -v -f k-.* : ^ . : : «dC»i«»-, , **J » —. '•»• ••• J •&gt;**? ^.--^^xwt-^Ktw^^Jitwio.^a..,-^,.^^, i ^ | ignnniimii myimi i&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
I&#13;
i!&#13;
Si&#13;
Si'&#13;
It &gt;.»&#13;
I; .** 1&#13;
• ?*&#13;
'&#13;
V . •&#13;
GREAT FIRE IN KISS JESSIE WILSON&#13;
MORE T H A N T H I R T Y BLOCKS IN&#13;
H E A L T H RESORT SWEPT&#13;
BY FLAMES.&#13;
LOSS ESTIMATED A T&#13;
FOUR MILLION.&#13;
OVER&#13;
Many Public Buildings Destroyed As !&#13;
Block After Block of Famous&#13;
"City of Vapors" Goes Up&#13;
in Smoke.&#13;
Hot Springs, Ark. Mori? than 30&#13;
bluetts on the easUTii edge of thr?&#13;
business elk-mot of Hot Spring.-* had&#13;
been swept clean by a tire \Uiich at U&#13;
o'clock threatened to eat its way toward&#13;
(V'liiral avenue, the main business&#13;
thoroughfare. A high wind was&#13;
blowing- and the Hot Springs an:l Lit&#13;
tie Rock tire d e p a r t m e n t s , the latter&#13;
hurried to this city aboard s;e&lt;-ial&#13;
irains, had made but little headway&#13;
in checking the flames. At 9 o'clock,&#13;
Sidney IJiUon, commissioner of public&#13;
utilities, estimated that at least $4,-&#13;
U00,l&gt;ue&gt; oi' properly had been destroyed.&#13;
• Aiming the buihliiig^destroyed were&#13;
The city's light, w a l r r and power&#13;
id a n is, the county court hnnse; the&#13;
l a r k , .JelVersou, Princcius and Moody&#13;
hotel!-, ihe city high school, Iron&#13;
i\Iolint.ai!! railroad su.it :oa and shops,&#13;
Ozark sanitarium, People's l.'undry,&#13;
Crystal theater and Hi.'ou rink, besides&#13;
a hundred or more smaller business&#13;
buildiims and many residences,&#13;
including some c-f the best in the&#13;
ch v.&#13;
MARKETS&#13;
Llvo Stock, Grain a n * Central farm&#13;
Produce&#13;
It has just been announced by Mrs.&#13;
Woodrow Wilson that the marriage&#13;
of her daughter to Francis B. Sayre&#13;
will take place at the White House&#13;
on Tuesday, November 25.&#13;
DETROIT—Cattle: Receipts, 376;&#13;
strong. Best dry-fed steers and heifers,&#13;
$8; steers and heifers 1,000 to 1,-&#13;
201) lbs. f7.25@7«75; steers and heifer*&#13;
S00 to 1,000 lbs. $7@7.50; grass steers&#13;
and heifers that are fat, 800 to 1,000&#13;
lbs. $ . # 7 . 5 0 ; grass steers and heifers&#13;
tibat are fat, 600 to 700 lbs. »5.50®&#13;
6.25; choice fat cows, |6@6.25; good&#13;
fat cows, $5.50@'C\75; common cows,&#13;
$4.50®4.75; canners, | 3 @ 4 ; choice&#13;
heavy bulls, 16.50; fair to good bologna&#13;
bulls, $6(¾ 6.25; stock bulls, |5@&#13;
5.50; choice feeding eteers, 200 to 1,-&#13;
000 !bs. $6.75^)7.25; fair feeding&#13;
steers, 800 to 1,000 lbs. $2.50@b\75;&#13;
choice atockers, 500 to 700 lbs. $6.50&#13;
@6.75; fair blockers, 500 to 700 lbs.&#13;
$5.75® 6; stock heifers, $5@5.60;&#13;
milkers, large, young, medium age,&#13;
$60(g)80; common milkers, S40@50.&#13;
Veal Calves—Receipts, 131; marhet&#13;
steady; best $11® 12; others* $8®&#13;
10.50.&#13;
She.^p and Lambs—Receipts, 1,814;&#13;
market slow; best lambs, $7; fair to&#13;
good lambs, $6.25®6.75; light to common&#13;
lambs, $5@6; fair to good sheep,&#13;
$4®4.25; culls and common, $2.50®&#13;
3.00.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 901; very few sold,&#13;
packers bidding a s follows: Light to&#13;
good butchers, $8.50®8.65; pigs, $8®&#13;
8.25; mixed, $8.40®8.65; heavy, $8.25&#13;
@8.50; c a s e s ; stags one one-third&#13;
off.&#13;
Michigan Pythians Elect Officers.&#13;
Kalamazoo The annual meeting&#13;
Michigan P y t h i a n s &lt; los, d at Kalama-&#13;
,'itli a parade and big«s;reet dtjm-&#13;
... at ion. the al'iernuon Katon Kaj ids took&#13;
A1 b i u J i second, and Mar-&#13;
^•S ....! :.,&#13;
of&#13;
/ ( ) t ) \ \ 1 H i Ll | / L U I I M U t* I I Vl I J l ^ ' . U M ' I V» .. i A*&#13;
c a s t r a t i o n . In the comp; titive&#13;
drillst&#13;
in •' - . . . , . '&#13;
first prize, .i l L ,.U J I .„ ,„1 1 U , tl..v. ......&#13;
Mhull thirl. Xi^ie teams took part in&#13;
t h e conte;•[.&#13;
T h e P \ t h i a n Sisters elected&#13;
lowing oMicers: .Mrs. Anna denn*1,&#13;
E&#13;
d the following&#13;
ouicers: .Mrs. Anna aenn*1,&#13;
E a t o n Kapids, grand chief; Mrs. Rose&#13;
( i a t r s , Morenci, grand junior; Mrs.&#13;
Ijrraa,. M-M.. Ilityaan,, CLaarro,, grraandu maanaagee rr ;;&#13;
Mrs. Jennies Doyle, Poi.tiac, m i s t r e s s&#13;
of records and c o r n .jpoiideuce; Mrs.&#13;
E t t a Jordan, Detroit, mispress of lin-&#13;
Jinceu-; Mi's, Amelia Itix, Sault Ste.&#13;
Maiie, grand protector; Mrs. Kmma&#13;
Lovelaiid, Kalamazoo, grand outerg&#13;
u a u i , Mrs. Mary Lockiiead, Flint, sup&#13;
r e m e reprosf nt a five.&#13;
Next year's nuu ting will lie held in&#13;
Saginaw.&#13;
Darrow Fails to End Strike.&#13;
-"--Oarhmrct, Mich. - A r r o n I e y C1 a re nee&#13;
S, Darrow, famous for the legal batt&#13;
l e s he has waged in the interests of&#13;
labor, signally failed in an effort to&#13;
convince the Calumet &amp; Hecla Mining&#13;
company, through its chief counsel, A.&#13;
F. Rees, of Houghton, that the copp&#13;
e r strike should be settled by arbit&#13;
r a t i o n .&#13;
Although n e i t h e r Mr. Darrow nor&#13;
Mr, Itees would divulge the result of&#13;
t h e conference if is generally conceded&#13;
t h a t it proved of no avail, Mr. Darrow,&#13;
who reached Calumet with President&#13;
Charles Moyer of the W e s t e r n&#13;
Federation of Miners Friday morning,&#13;
Bought the conference with Mr. Rees&#13;
on t h e suggestion of Governor F e r r i s ,&#13;
tihe governor believing that the mine&#13;
o p e r a t o r s should be given a n o t h e r&#13;
c h a n c e t o end t h e struggle without&#13;
(further waste of lives and resources.&#13;
CITIZENS CHEER HARRY THAW&#13;
Coaticook Crowd With Band Give&#13;
Demonstration and Slayer Gives&#13;
Brief Talk.&#13;
Coaticook, Que. While the town&#13;
band played '"God Save the King"&#13;
great t h r o n g s surged about H a r r y K.&#13;
T h a w ' s q u a r t e r s in the i m m i g r a t i o n&#13;
detention station here Saturday night,&#13;
a n d . in t w o languages shouted their&#13;
admiration for the millionaire slayer&#13;
of Stanford White.&#13;
Plans for a celebration of Thaw's&#13;
eleventh hour escape from the&#13;
clutches of William T r a v e r s J e r o m e&#13;
had been under way all day. W h e n&#13;
Uie band c a m e inarching briskly up&#13;
with the music so dear to t h e h e a r t s&#13;
of the F r e n c h Canadians r e s o u n d i n g&#13;
on the (dear night air, the pent-up&#13;
emhusiafcm of T h a w ' s well w i s h e r s&#13;
broke loose. They cheered him again&#13;
and again and finally the crowd became&#13;
so e n t h u s i a s t i c that the prisoner&#13;
appeared an his window and delivered&#13;
a brief speech of t h a n k s .&#13;
"I am glad t h a t you are glad t h a t&#13;
British fair play h a s finally won my&#13;
fight," he said. " J e r o m e is a t l a s t unveiled&#13;
to the people of Canada In his&#13;
t r u e light, l i e now knows that he&#13;
lva.3 been b e a t e n and he may as well&#13;
go home."&#13;
To Test Blue Sky Law.&#13;
Lansing, Mich.—Attorney Hal H.&#13;
Siwiih, of Detroit, in behalf of Burton,&#13;
H o w e &amp; Carrigan, of Grand Rapids,&#13;
filed a bill in the Ingham circuit court&#13;
he»re to test t h e validity of the blue&#13;
sky law. A similar bill was filed by&#13;
him in United States court hi Detroit&#13;
a few weeks ago. The bill Is filed In&#13;
circuit court here to -specifically teet&#13;
the question of whether the blue sky&#13;
law is not the delegating of greater&#13;
police powers 'to a state board than&#13;
the constitution warrants. This Is a&#13;
point which Smith says can be better&#13;
raised in a state court than ft federal&#13;
court.&#13;
Convention of Humane Association.&#13;
Hillsdale—J. C. Richardson, of Jackon,&#13;
was elected president of the Michigan&#13;
State Humane association at the&#13;
eighth annual convention in this city.&#13;
Other officers chosen were: Secretary,&#13;
Mrs. E. B. Shannon, Bay City,&#13;
jand treasurer, Mrs. Carrie A. Barre,&#13;
Hillsdale. The 1914 convention will be&#13;
jheld in Muskegon.&#13;
President J. W. Hauck, of Hillsdale&#13;
college, sudd there would be fewer&#13;
crimes if humane principles were in-&#13;
Btrtled in the youth. Oihers who&gt;&#13;
• p o k e were: Edward Frensdorf, of&#13;
Hudson; Carl S. Klelnstuck, of Kalama?&#13;
oo, and Jefferson Butler, of Detroit.&#13;
Rey. John I. Wheeler, who recently&#13;
resigned as pastor of the Church of&#13;
Chriet at Dowagiac, to nter the evangeMetic&#13;
field, has changed hid mind&#13;
4pd left for Milwaukee to become a&#13;
field representative for the Socialists&#13;
there.&#13;
V o r the flmt time eince t h t "blue&#13;
aky" -law went into effect, the Michigan&#13;
aecurKie* -commission has disapproved&#13;
the applications of James L.&#13;
Vaterbury company, of Minneapolis,&#13;
Minn,, and the Breitung Mines corporation,&#13;
of N#w York to sell stock in&#13;
Prize Hogs Have Cholera.&#13;
Columbus, Ohio—Prize stock, t h e&#13;
estimated value of which is half a&#13;
million dollars, was quarantined', at&#13;
the Ohio State fair here by the state&#13;
board of health, when it was discovered&#13;
that a cholera epidemic had&#13;
broken out in t h e hog exhibit.&#13;
Several high priced hogs died from&#13;
the disease before the epidemic was&#13;
discovered. A meeting of the .health&#13;
board was called immediately and action&#13;
taken.&#13;
Thirteen hundred hogs, constituting&#13;
the "swine aristocracy" of Ohio, a r e&#13;
affected by the quarantine.&#13;
Drew Caminetti Found Guilty.&#13;
San Francisco.—Farley Drew Caminetti,&#13;
son of the commissioners general&#13;
of immigration, was found guilty&#13;
Friday on one count of t h e indictment&#13;
ohargin-g. him with violation of&#13;
the Mann white slave a c t&#13;
The Jury w a s out three hours, and&#13;
took eight ballots. From the first,&#13;
the vote etood 10 to 2 for conviction&#13;
and finally t h e t w o recalcitrants&#13;
agreed to compromise by finding a&#13;
verdict of guilty on one of t h e four&#13;
counts charged.&#13;
E A S T BUFFALO: Cattle, receipts,&#13;
130 cars; market 10c higher; best 1,-&#13;
350 to 1,500-lb steers, S8.75@9.10; n&gt;est&#13;
1,200 to 1,300-lb steers, $8.50@8.75;&#13;
best 1,100 to 1,200-Ib steers, $8.15®&#13;
8.60; coarse and plain heavy steers,&#13;
?7.75@8; choice handy steers, $8®&#13;
8.40; fair to good 1,000 to 1,100-lb&#13;
steers, 17.75@8.10; grassy, 800 to 1,-&#13;
000-!b steers, |?.25@7.75; best cows,&#13;
$6.50@7; butcher c o w s / $5.50@6; cutters,&#13;
$4.50@5; trimmers, $3".76@4;&#13;
best heiferB, $7.75(gp8; medium butcher&#13;
heifers, $6.50@7; stock heifers,&#13;
$5.25@7; stock heifers, $5.25(^5.50;&#13;
best feeding sUers, S7.25®&gt;7.60; fair&#13;
to good, $6.75@7 common light Btockers,&#13;
$6@6.25; b e n butcher bulls, $6®&#13;
7; best bologna bulls, $5.25@5.75;&#13;
stock bulls, $5@5.50; best milkers and&#13;
springers, $70@80; common to good,&#13;
$50® 60.&#13;
Hogs: Receipts, 55 cars; market active;&#13;
heavy, $9.25®9.50; mixed, $9.60&#13;
^9.65; yorkers, $9.65@&gt;9.75; pigs, $9.25&#13;
®9.50; roughs, $8®8.25; stags, $7@8.&#13;
Sheep and lambs:_ Receipts, 40&#13;
cars; market strong; spring lambs,&#13;
$8®8.25; culls to fair, $6@7.25; yearlings,&#13;
$5.50®6.50; wethers, $5.25®&#13;
@5.50; ewes, $4®4.75,&#13;
Calves strong, $5@13.&#13;
The thirtieth annual reunion, of the&#13;
Michigan battalion regiment, rM«tr%&#13;
Horse, will be held in Battle Cr*ek,&#13;
September 24. Battle Creok Is the perjBsnen*&#13;
haadquarteri of the batteitta,&#13;
Grains, Etc.&#13;
Wheat—Cash No. 2 red, 95c; September&#13;
opened with a n advance of&#13;
l-4c at 92 3«3c and advanced to 95c;&#13;
December opened at 96 3-4c and advancel&#13;
to 98 3-«c; May opened at $1.02&#13;
1-2 and advanced to $1.04; Not&#13;
white, 95c. ..&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, 77c; No. 2 yellow,&#13;
1 car at 78 l-2c; No. 3 yellow,&#13;
78c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 1 c a r at 43c; 3 at&#13;
43 l-2c, closing at 43 3-4c; old 45 l-2c&#13;
bid; No. 3 white, 1 c a r at 42 l-2c, 2&#13;
at 43c, closing a t 43 l-4c; No. 4 white&#13;
42 l-4c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 70c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate a n d prompt shipment,&#13;
$1.80; October, $1.85.&#13;
Clovereeed—Prime OctobeT, 60 bags&#13;
at $6.85; December, $6.85; October&#13;
alsike, $10.25; aample alslke, 15 bags&#13;
at $9, 8 at i$9.75."&#13;
Timothy—Prime spot, 40 bags at&#13;
$2.60.&#13;
Alfalfa—Prime spot, $8.25 nominal.&#13;
Barley—Good samples; $1.30®1.50&#13;
per c w t&#13;
Hay—Ca/lots, track Detroit: No. 1&#13;
timothy, $16® 16.50;- standard, $15®&#13;
15.50; No. 2, $14® 14.50; light mixed,&#13;
$15® 15.50; No. 1 mixed, $13.50®14;&#13;
rye straw, $ 8 ® 9 ; wheat and oat&#13;
straw, $7@7.50 per ton.&#13;
Flour—In one-eighth paper sacks,&#13;
per 196 pounds, jobbing lots: Best&#13;
patent, $5.50; second patent, $5.10;&#13;
rye, $4.60 per bbl.&#13;
Feed—In 100-lb sacks, jobbing lots:&#13;
Bran, $23; coarse middlings, $24; fine&#13;
middling*, $26; cracked corn, $26;&#13;
coarse cornmeal, $29; corn and oat&#13;
chop, $25.50 per, ton.&#13;
35&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
Grapee—Delaware and Niagara,&#13;
®40c per peck basket.&#13;
Pears—Clsvpp'r Favorite, $1®1.25;&#13;
Bartlett, $1.25®1.50 per bu.&#13;
Apolee—MlchJian, 50®75c; per bo;&#13;
No. 1, $2.75®3 'per bbl; No. 2, $1.50&#13;
12 per bbl. -&#13;
Peaches—IelaUd AA, $2.25; A, $2;&#13;
B, $1.35«91.5'4'jper bu; white, $1®&#13;
1.26 per bu and]j$3O06Oc per peck.&#13;
Green corn—ifcc per dos.&#13;
Cabbage—$fj*6®2.80 per bbl.&#13;
Potatoes—$2&amp;0®2.6O per *ack of&#13;
\ let bushels. ,m Dressed oalre*v-Cho4os, 10®lie;&#13;
fancy, 18 1-14914c per lb.&#13;
0*toaWNew southern, $1 per bu;&#13;
Soa&amp;ish, $1.50 par crate.&#13;
Towsstosi Home-grown,&#13;
Mr bu.&#13;
Money is the root of all evil—and&#13;
many a family tree springs therefrom.&#13;
Southern Italy, including Sicily,&#13;
dominates the lemon markets of the&#13;
world. California is the only rival&#13;
Italy has in the business.&#13;
R«J Cross Hall JSlue jfiveB double vfllue&#13;
for your money. Roe« twice ns far at any&#13;
Ciher. A»k yuur ifroeer. Aviv.&#13;
His Social Status.&#13;
"I don't know thajt make."&#13;
"Why do people look down on the&#13;
Pullman car porter?"&#13;
"Why, indeed! I am sure be is a&#13;
man of berth"&#13;
Why They Clutch.&#13;
He—Why does an actor, to portray&#13;
deep emotion, clutch at his bead, and&#13;
an actress at her heart?&#13;
She—Each feels it most in the weakest&#13;
point.—Judge.&#13;
He Got His.&#13;
"Miss Gladys, can you cook?" inquired&#13;
the prospective suitor cautlous-&#13;
17.&#13;
"I can," she answered sweetly, "but&#13;
the young man I am engaged to as&#13;
sures me that I won't have to."&#13;
SUFFERED&#13;
AWFUL PAINS&#13;
For Sixteen Year*. Restored&#13;
To Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable&#13;
Compound.&#13;
Moretown. Vermont—"I was Jm* s bled with pains and irregularities for&#13;
BS4i!;iaiu.iiim,M!i!i!,H«,;;ii^!,iM^teen years, and&#13;
was thin, weak and&#13;
nervous. When I&#13;
would lie down it&#13;
would seem as if 1&#13;
was going right&#13;
down oat of sight&#13;
in co some dark bole,&#13;
and the window curtains&#13;
had faces that&#13;
would peek out at&#13;
me, and when I was&#13;
out of doors it would&#13;
igpf|l|&#13;
good&#13;
Different Proposition,&#13;
"Can your wife make up a&#13;
batch of bread?"&#13;
"No; but she can handle the dough&#13;
all right."&#13;
Joys of Convalescing.&#13;
The Doctor—Every man needs a&#13;
fad. It's a mental safety valve. Better&#13;
cultivate one. .&#13;
The Patient—I have mine.&#13;
The Doctor—What is it?&#13;
The Patient—Collecting unpaid bills.&#13;
Perhaps you'll add one?&#13;
Efficiency.&#13;
T h e police cannbt be excessively&#13;
anxious to come into close quarters&#13;
with any suffragette. "Have you any&#13;
bruises?" asked one of the prisoners&#13;
on Monday, anxious to know whether&#13;
she had in vain battered the policeman&#13;
with her umbrella.—Loudon Saturday&#13;
Review.&#13;
Important to Mother*&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle of&#13;
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for&#13;
infants and children, and s e e that it&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
In Use For Over 30 Tears.&#13;
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria&#13;
aa cnnuren, unu s e e m a t i&#13;
Mere Formality.&#13;
"Well, we have had the infant fitted&#13;
with glasses, his appendix removed&#13;
and his stomach re-enforced. Have&#13;
we overlooked anything?"&#13;
"Just one Item."&#13;
"What is that?"&#13;
"We have forgotten to name the&#13;
child."—Judge.&#13;
The hobo's idea of a helping hand is&#13;
one that holds a handout.&#13;
1&#13;
Backache Warns You&#13;
- Backache is one of Nalureiwarninga 4--&#13;
of kidney weakness. Kidney disease&#13;
kills thousands every year.&#13;
Don't neglect a bad back. If your back&#13;
is lame—if it hurts to stoop or lift—if&#13;
there is irregularity of the secretions—&#13;
suspect your kidneys. If you suffer headaches,&#13;
dizziness and are tired, nervous&#13;
and worn-out, you have further proof.&#13;
Use Dean's Kidney Pills, a fine remedy&#13;
for bad backs and weak kidneys.&#13;
An Indiaaa Cast&#13;
Mra. John D&#13;
P"iEcvtwtrry* Telta a&#13;
Stwy."&#13;
Whitaker, 405 N.&#13;
Bast St., Madison,&#13;
Ind., aaya: "Dark&#13;
circles appeared&#13;
under my eyes and&#13;
my ankles were&#13;
Inflamed and swollen.&#13;
I was all&#13;
crippled up with&#13;
rheumatism. My&#13;
back ached constantly&#13;
and I was&#13;
a physical wreck.&#13;
Doctors ami expensive&#13;
treatment&#13;
of specialists failed.&#13;
Doan's Kidney&#13;
X Pills helped me&#13;
from the first and&#13;
before lout, restored&#13;
me to rood&#13;
health."&#13;
Get Do*a*B «1 Aay Store. 80c a Boa D O A N ' S Vft-iV&#13;
FOSTER-MILBURN CO* BUFFALO, N.Y.&#13;
seem as if something was going to happen.&#13;
My blood was poor, my circulation&#13;
was so bad I would be like a dead&#13;
person at times. I had female weak*&#13;
ness badly, my abdomen was sore and I&#13;
had awful pains.&#13;
"I took Lydia E. Pinkham't Vegetable&#13;
Compound and used the Sanative&#13;
Wash and they certainly did wonders&#13;
for me. My troubles disappeared and I&#13;
am able to work hard every day/'—Mrs.&#13;
W. P. SAWYER, River View Farm, Moratown,&#13;
Vermont.&#13;
Another Case*&#13;
Gifford, Iowa.-*' I was troubled with&#13;
female weakness, also with displacement.&#13;
I had very severe and steady&#13;
headache, also pain in back and was&#13;
very thin and tired all the time. I commenced&#13;
taking Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound and I am cured of&#13;
these troubles. I cannot praise your&#13;
medicine too highly."—Mrs, INAMOS&gt;&#13;
SLAGLE, Gifford, Iowa.&#13;
— , , , — , — — ^ - — - - ^ - • — — — — — — - i i i • i n - ^ i - ^&#13;
Certain Relief&#13;
from headaches, dull feelings, and&#13;
fatigue of biliousness, comes quickly&#13;
—and permanent improvement in&#13;
bodily condition follows—after vour&#13;
stomach, liver and bowels have&#13;
been toned and regulated by BEECHAM'S&#13;
PILLS Sold ayary where. la boxet, 10a*!&#13;
THE NIW FRENOH REMKDY. N»1 N«2. MA THERAPION Hospital* with.&#13;
Sreat luccets, CURES CHRONIC W£AJINKSS, LOST vtooa&#13;
VIM. KIDNKY. BLADDER, DI»KA8*6. BLOOD POISOK,&#13;
PILH8. SITHXa NO. DRUGGISTS or MAIL 11. POST 4 OTS&#13;
POUOSRA CO. W. BKKXMAN 8T. HEW YORK orLVM A f f i a n t&#13;
TORONTO. WRtTB FOR P i t K B BOOK TO DR. LB CLBBO&#13;
MED.CO, H A V B R S T O C K R O , HAMPSTBAD, LONDON, BMO.&#13;
TRY NSW DRAGEE lTASTBLBSS)FORMO* EASY TO TAKS&#13;
T H E R A P I O N LA^NODCU&gt;«.&#13;
SEX THAT TRADE MARKED WORD ' THERAFIO* * IS « •&#13;
•JUT. &amp;OVT.STAMP AFFIXED TO ALL OSNOINB PACkETS.&#13;
BLACK&#13;
£STff. I860 -DETROIT&#13;
OPTICIAN&#13;
/56 WOODWARD AVE&#13;
HAIR BALSAiW&#13;
A toilet preparation of merlfc&#13;
Help* to eradicate dandruff.&#13;
... For Reatottas Color aad&#13;
Boaaty to Graf or Fa4ad Hair.&#13;
60c. and ILOOat DraCTtoaj.&#13;
IQ&gt; J oftmspaper Readers &amp;£•* * advertised in its columns s&#13;
insist upon having what they ask for,&#13;
refusing all substitutes or imitations.&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 37-1918.&#13;
BIG GAMM CARTRIDGES&#13;
The time of all others when reliable cartridges are invaluable Is m&#13;
big-gasM hunting. A mia*-Are,-an inaccurate cartridge, or oat&#13;
having poor penetration may meanthe tow of a coveted trophy or&#13;
svtn injury to the hunter. Wmchestat, the W brand of carttWfa**&#13;
•msttfiiji or black powder, can always be relied on to be rai&#13;
fire, sveurats, aad to have speed and penstattao* You eta help / '&#13;
~~AXM rOtTK BVKT A 9UCCZ83 BY U0ZXQ&#13;
«&#13;
« A T W C A O s f \ i % I G sti%I A * «bs Stau 1% 1« an exhibit ofjaa fana prodaaU of tke WISCONSIN sn&amp;snssrasnsss"" State Fair, Sapiaaibsr Jft-sO.' Be sere to sao It, la aoaaattaa rva ariglil WMCOI^R^VAR^M^^gOCMJ^V&#13;
lead distriota of apoer Wiseoaata mmr be aaea a*&#13;
an* sHate yalr.^ipi^mbaT +**&gt;*** MlasJsjSsy&#13;
itwrtte&#13;
•V.:&#13;
:^^as^^iMaig^:^iu^ ^ r-^^iitv,;'i flr;&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
— i&#13;
y^s v&#13;
J : . . - ' ••&#13;
INCREASES EGG YIELD&#13;
Salt in Proper Quantities of Material&#13;
Benefit to Hens.&#13;
Food Prepared for Human Taste With&#13;
Mineral Is Not Injurious or Repellent&#13;
to Poultry—Result a New&#13;
York Station.&#13;
It is a tradition that salt 1B craved&#13;
by, and is beneficial, to all domestic&#13;
and many wild animals, with the exception&#13;
of poultry, and that to these it&#13;
is poison. That in large quantities&#13;
this is true is an undoubted (act, as&#13;
has often been tested.&#13;
Some years ago the writer was quite&#13;
horrified upon going to the barnyard&#13;
one afternoon to find a dozen or&#13;
more fine hens lying about dead. In&#13;
looking for the cause of this sudden&#13;
t mortality one of the cow's messes&#13;
was found to be uneaten, and a close&#13;
examination showed that the attendant,&#13;
either through ignorance or carelessness,&#13;
had dumped upon it a pint of&#13;
salt—too much to be relished even&#13;
by bossy—and after the cattle had&#13;
been turned into the pasture, the&#13;
chickens, that had free range, discovered&#13;
the bucket of bran, and ate from&#13;
it freely, and so rapid was the action&#13;
of the salt that some hens died but&#13;
a few feet away. An examination of&#13;
the crops confirmed the supposition&#13;
that it was the heavily salted bran&#13;
that had proved fatal, says a writer in&#13;
the Farm Progress.&#13;
That food salted to the human taste&#13;
Is not, however, injurious or repellent&#13;
to poultry of nearly all kinds&#13;
is proved by the avidity with which&#13;
the latter eat and thrive upon the&#13;
table scraps, which include, besides&#13;
bread and meat, all kinds of vegetables&#13;
and bits of pastry. Close observers&#13;
contend that chickens, especially,&#13;
seem to need small quantities&#13;
of salt in their, food, and when given&#13;
a chance, will prefer this to unseasoned&#13;
grain.&#13;
What the exact effects of the slightly&#13;
salted ration might be on the general&#13;
health and productiveness of hens&#13;
was made the subject of experiment&#13;
two or three years ago at the New&#13;
York experiment station.&#13;
The feeding trial was made upon a&#13;
dozen mature hens, especially to ascertain&#13;
the approximate limit of the&#13;
feeding. For one lot of hens salt was&#13;
mixed in the food in increasing quantities,&#13;
day after day, until it was fed&#13;
at somewhat more than six-bimdredths&#13;
of an ounce per fowl, or about onehalf&#13;
pint per day for 100 hens. More&#13;
than this produced diarrhoea in some&#13;
which disappeared when the excess of&#13;
salt was withdrawn.&#13;
The test was made at the unproductive&#13;
time of the year, but an unexpected&#13;
and gratifying result was&#13;
that double the number of eggs were&#13;
laid by the hens fed on rather oversalted&#13;
food than by any other dozen&#13;
fowls fed on unseasoned grain and&#13;
other rations.&#13;
DIP FOft SCABIES IN CATTLE&#13;
Secretary of Agriculture Amends Order&#13;
by Permitting a Stronger&#13;
•'.••. Solution of Tobacco.&#13;
The secretary of agriculture has&#13;
amended Order 143, effective August&#13;
15, 1913, relating to dips for scabies&#13;
fhrcattlr by permitting the use of the&#13;
tobacco dip prepared from tobacco&#13;
and suitable tobacco products, provided&#13;
it contains not less than seven&#13;
htflSdredtus of one per cent *ot nicotine;&#13;
Heretofore, the requirements&#13;
hive been that the tobacco dip should&#13;
• contain not less than five hundredths&#13;
of one per cent of nicotint and two&#13;
per cent flowers-of sulphur. The to-&#13;
JMCCO dip of the new strength heed&#13;
q * eoaUifl the svtgftur. Ts»««gula-&#13;
J M unehafcged rt«ardiag the&#13;
a*d eelptetr 41», wfcjcfc may be&#13;
« e i d a a 4toeeted to tam^ritor.&#13;
T S -&#13;
Selecting Male Hog.&#13;
fh selecting a male hog, good bone&#13;
is a very desirable thing to look for. A&#13;
heavy boned hog weighs better than&#13;
a light boned one, and its costs no&#13;
rtigre -to raise him. -Breeding weight&#13;
in'jgfre form of bone 1s cheaper than&#13;
fe*|ta* earn to -~'i on fat A good&#13;
Uone*. hog- is also less liable to "go&#13;
dawn", when finished.&#13;
r.- Profitable. Turkey^ Hen*.&#13;
Turkey hens are profitable until&#13;
five years of age, but it is a good&#13;
- plan t» change the gobblers, every&#13;
' year. It requires twenty-eight days&#13;
.1 to h a t c h * turkey egg, and seven eggs&#13;
t At considered &amp; setting. The nests&#13;
* ' should be pn the ground* -&#13;
Building Up Farm.&#13;
t n e surest a n d beat way* tcr&#13;
fMHeT/tp a nin-out farm is -to keep a&#13;
Jltfd of cows and to put every&#13;
h%atftrre back on the land.&#13;
£*•**•' ^Troubles for Plga.&#13;
: rr you permit the beds of your Uttfr&#13;
jrtfi to become wet, damp and uni&#13;
"changed, your pigs will soon be trou-&#13;
. Wed with sore tails and scours.&#13;
SPRAYS TO DESTROY WEEDS&#13;
Application of Destroyer Should Be&#13;
Made on Hot Oayt^-Exercisa&#13;
Care in Handling Poisons.&#13;
(By JULIUS KRDMAN. Colorado Agricultural&#13;
College.)&#13;
It is a rather tedious process, and&#13;
hard on tools to remove weeds or&#13;
grass from walks by hoeing or cutting&#13;
them out between the stones, but&#13;
there are a number of chemicals or&#13;
sprays which can be used with good&#13;
success.&#13;
1. Salt. Take one pound of salt to&#13;
one gallon of water, boil and apply&#13;
while still hot, or dry salt may be&#13;
used and then watered in; but this&#13;
will color the walk more or less and&#13;
is not quite so effective.&#13;
2. Crude carbolic acid, oie-half&#13;
ounce of the liquid to one gallon of&#13;
water will also destroy anta.&#13;
3. Sulphuric acid, four-fifths ounce&#13;
of the acid to one gallon of water.&#13;
Best applied with a wooden pail. "&#13;
4. Take one pound of powdered&#13;
arsenic to three gallons of cold wa-&#13;
DR. J. D. KELLOQQ'8 ASTHMA Remedy for the prompt relief of&#13;
Asthma and Hay Fever. Aek your&#13;
dru«ai»t for It. Writt for FREE SAMPLE&#13;
NORTHROP &amp; LYMAN CO., Ltd., BUFFALO, N.Y.&#13;
Much greatness is submerged by the&#13;
overflow of egotism.&#13;
Cockte Bur.&#13;
ter, boll and stir well. Then add&#13;
seven gallons of cold water with two&#13;
pounds of sal soda.&#13;
5. Lime and sulphur, ten gallons ol&#13;
water, twenty pounds of . quicklime&#13;
and two pounds of flour of sulphur&#13;
are boiled in an iron vessel. After&#13;
settling, the clear part is dipped off&#13;
and used when needed.&#13;
There are also a number of commercial&#13;
weed killers in the market&#13;
which can be bought at seed stores.&#13;
Applications of weed destroyers&#13;
should best be made on a hot day,&#13;
or right after a rain, with a watering&#13;
pot (sprinkler), and one good application&#13;
is usually sufficient for the&#13;
season. As the most of them contain&#13;
poison, either arsenic or acids, great&#13;
care should be exercised in handling&#13;
them.&#13;
Xrt.Wiaalow's Soothing Syrup for Children&#13;
teething1, soften* the f utaR, reduce* in flaw mation,&#13;
»Uays pmln,eur«H wind coiic,Sftc » baillcA*&#13;
When a woman makes a strenuous&#13;
effort to iearn a secret it isn't for the&#13;
purpose of keeping it.&#13;
A potato shortage in England caused&#13;
prices to advance June 1 in Manchester&#13;
to $30 a ton, against $12.90 at the&#13;
same time last year.&#13;
Twenty-five million tons of shipping&#13;
rounds Cape Cod annually&#13;
Be thrifty on little things like bluinjr. Don't&#13;
aooept water for blulnjf. Ask for Red Cross&#13;
Ball Blue, the extra, good value blue. Adv.&#13;
More than 3.500.000 acres of land&#13;
are held as game preserves in Scotland.&#13;
Some men look us though they hud&#13;
the world on their shoulders, ami&#13;
were afraid it was going to blip oft'.&#13;
When a man proposes to a girl flitcan&#13;
act just as surprised as if she&#13;
hadn't done it herself.&#13;
Make the Liver&#13;
Do its Duty&#13;
Nine times in ten when the liver la*&#13;
right the stomach and bowels are right*&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS&#13;
gently but dimly com&#13;
pel a lazy liver tu&#13;
do its duty.&#13;
Cures Con&#13;
•tipation, In&#13;
digestion,&#13;
Sick&#13;
Headache,&#13;
and D i i t r e n After Eating,&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSK, SMALL PRICE*&#13;
Genuine nmst bear Signature&#13;
/ &amp; ^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ ¾ ¾ ^&#13;
Men must work and women must&#13;
weep, but the women seem to get&#13;
more pleasure out of their end of the&#13;
Job.&#13;
Many a woman never knows her&#13;
own mind because she has never had&#13;
a formal introduction to it.&#13;
Shop.&#13;
Inquisitive Friend—How is your&#13;
new business venture starting out?&#13;
Bathing Beach Proprietor.—Swimmingly.&#13;
You can't convince a young widow&#13;
that lightning won't strike twice in&#13;
the same place&#13;
Installed in the Ground Like a Cistern&#13;
Far removed from the building, Fool-Proof. Frost-&#13;
Proof, Safe and Convenient. Permitted by The&#13;
National Hoard of hire Underwriters. Hacked up&#13;
with an iron-clad guarantee. The best lighting&#13;
system on earth for the least money. The Improved&#13;
Jenne Pit Acetylete Generatjr—The up-to-date&#13;
lighting systt-tn for country homes, Th usands in&#13;
successful operation. Special inducements made to&#13;
the niit purchaser in each locality. Attractive&#13;
sales proposition to farmers and dealers. Protected&#13;
by patents. Infringers liable to prosecution.&#13;
Full particular^ for the asking&#13;
J E N N E ACETYLENE G A S MACHINE CO.&#13;
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA&#13;
Stepped Occasionally for Rest.&#13;
Two small neighbors of mine were&#13;
playing close to our boundary line.&#13;
Robert was telling Walter, who is a&#13;
little over three and has the face of&#13;
a seraph, that his mamma will not&#13;
allow him to play with Roland,&#13;
"Georgia, and several others, because&#13;
they swear. Walter made no response&#13;
and Robert inquired: "Do you swear,&#13;
Walter?" "Not all the time," answered&#13;
angel face with the solemnity of&#13;
an owl.—Chicago Tribune.&#13;
Feeding Is Important.&#13;
If the chioken that you intend to&#13;
exhibit could have as much time in&#13;
the coops before the show as they do&#13;
during it they would pose much better&#13;
for the* judge and would be in just&#13;
B.b good condition providing of course&#13;
if they were fed right^&#13;
Cause of Failure.&#13;
The unsuccessful poultry raiser&#13;
does n o r think about the ti.me that&#13;
should be consumed in feeding and&#13;
cleaning the houses and he also fails&#13;
to notice that his methods of housing&#13;
are wrong.&#13;
To Study Forestry.&#13;
The University of Washington has&#13;
secured the use of two sections of&#13;
land on the Snoqualmie national forest&#13;
in connection with its forestry&#13;
courses.&#13;
Producting of Mutton.&#13;
The time has come , when every&#13;
farmer who is in the sheep business&#13;
should preserve a part of his corn&#13;
crop in the silo, it means much in&#13;
the efficient production of mutton.&#13;
Wedding Solemnity.&#13;
There is no ,talk, no levity, and&#13;
much crying at a Chinese marriage&#13;
ceremony, and the solemnity of a funeral&#13;
prevails. After the exchange of&#13;
presents the bride is dressed with&#13;
much care. A feast is spread upon a&#13;
table, to which the bride is led by five&#13;
of her intimate female friends. They&#13;
are seated at the table, but no one&#13;
eats. Absolute silence prevails. Suddenly&#13;
the bride's mother begins crying,&#13;
the maids follow, and the bride&#13;
joins in the dismal chorus. Then all&#13;
the bridesmaids leave the table and&#13;
the disconsolate mother takes a seat&#13;
beside the chair of state where the&#13;
bride sits. The bridegroom now enters&#13;
with four of his best men. The&#13;
men pick up the throne on which the&#13;
bride sits, and, preceded by the bridegroon,&#13;
form in procession and walk&#13;
around the room or into an adjoining&#13;
parlor, signiiying that he is carrying&#13;
her away from her home.&#13;
THE&#13;
MERIDIAN LIFE BUILDING&#13;
Music's Meat and bread.&#13;
The truth is that the public taste is&#13;
not as degraded as theatrical managers&#13;
and others who cater to the general&#13;
public would have us believe&#13;
There is a desire for the better things&#13;
which is far greater than the ability&#13;
of the producer to. give them. In the&#13;
theater the immodest "revue" and the&#13;
suggestive play find existence not so&#13;
much by reason of the demand of the&#13;
public as because of the limitations,&#13;
mental and moral, of the purveyor.&#13;
In light music ragtime has its place&#13;
just as fudge is regarded as an edible&#13;
without entering into the category of&#13;
substantial food. Hut the public has&#13;
the taste for the meat and- bread of&#13;
music which it will gratify according&#13;
to the supply.—Cincinnati Times-Star.&#13;
Mean {suggestion.&#13;
"Maude says t h a t in this bazar&#13;
v\ork, 5-he has an elephant on her&#13;
h-uids."&#13;
"It's lucky they're bi^ enough."&#13;
T h e A l i b i .&#13;
"lt;»siu^, w h a t ' s a alibi'.'"&#13;
"Dat's pro vial dat yoh w a s a t . a pray^-&#13;
or-meetin' whar yoh wasn't in order to&#13;
show dat yoh wasn't, at de crap game&#13;
wall yoh was,"----Lite.&#13;
Used to Such Whining.&#13;
The real estate agent, tired and&#13;
peevish, arrived at his home in the&#13;
suburbs.&#13;
"Oh, George," greeted his wife, "the&#13;
dog has been whining all day long!&#13;
What do you suppose is the matter?"&#13;
"Why," growled George, "the darn&#13;
kicker probably wants his house papered!"—&#13;
Judge.&#13;
Its Extent.&#13;
"I knew of a diamond ring onco too&#13;
lar&amp;e to be worn."&#13;
"What kind of a diamond ring wa?&#13;
it9 "&#13;
"A baseball cabal."&#13;
Pick Out the Place.&#13;
n i l l - ; I t is said that the Atlantic&#13;
ocean has an area of 2 l,io.'Pi,0()() squaro&#13;
miles.&#13;
Jill—When a fellow tells you to&#13;
swim oul. you MH&gt; you have a large&#13;
nrea to choose from.&#13;
is&#13;
low for&#13;
What Was Left.&#13;
"Did your husband leave you all his&#13;
money?"&#13;
"Well, all that 1 hadn't spent before&#13;
he died."—Detroit Free lJress.&#13;
K n e w the Erand.&#13;
Customer -You say my size&#13;
'! ive rue a size larger -to al&#13;
shrinking.&#13;
Clcrk--I&gt;nt these are the "unshrinkable&#13;
.fabric."&#13;
Customer—Then you'd ne&#13;
:ne I wo sizes larger,- Puck.&#13;
better give&#13;
Play is merely w_ark._that you don't&#13;
have to do.&#13;
Cruel Insinuation.&#13;
'('holly says he m-ver rr.ts h&gt;b&gt;&#13;
rTtr"(Tiy^Ti rnnr.ibnl if he did '&#13;
' e l ' S .&#13;
&gt; ^&#13;
-&#13;
/ 21&#13;
\v* ;..&lt;&#13;
/ h y*\ m-&#13;
•***..&#13;
m &lt;$&amp; r//u *w^vv&#13;
Increased Forest Sales.&#13;
In an increase fn timber sales this&#13;
year and in a decrease In receipts from&#13;
timber trespass as compared with last&#13;
year, national forest officers see a&#13;
growing use of the forests and respect&#13;
for the. federal forest policy.&#13;
"*• r Trapping ^nalrs.&#13;
"Smatle • cans!-* damage in gardens&#13;
may be trapped by placing pieces of&#13;
poisoned turnip, cabbage or potatoes&#13;
about covered with board so as sot to&#13;
kill tbe;fowls.&#13;
No Fear of Adulteration.&#13;
The man who lives largely from hit&#13;
garden ha* no fear of adulterated&#13;
products, l i e gets the Tery best and&#13;
can proudly invite a king to his table.&#13;
- ^ Training a Celt* *fe&#13;
In* tni^X^lt^p tiot try to&#13;
at r&#13;
_ _ _ _ _ „ _ .. W n g&#13;
i\&#13;
- A* Russian scientist&#13;
'discovered an Inoculation&#13;
against forest insects.&#13;
A Delightful&#13;
Treat&#13;
Post Toasties&#13;
and cream&#13;
Dainty, delicious morsels of white Indian corn,&#13;
toasted to a delicate brown* An appetizing dish&#13;
served with cream or crushed fruit.&#13;
"Toasties" are ready to eat direct from package-*&#13;
Breakfast, lunch or supper—Enjoyed by old&#13;
and young, and&#13;
it The Memory Lingers&#13;
Grocers everywhere lell Post Toasties.&#13;
ip&#13;
U • :' H / . «&#13;
*£2&#13;
-*'&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
mm**m&#13;
jr i n o k r tCv - J ) i s p a t c h ' ^0Hietimee 9 (pord to the wise is&#13;
'•• *"x" •'' v * itoo much, ~ '&#13;
Entered at the Postoffice at Pine*-. ^Irs ^aj?t B^rtou of nH1 §toc^"&#13;
ney, Mich., as Secgu^ Clasjj JIftttef k * L %t 1 Y&#13;
uridge spent Monday here.&#13;
R. \N. CAVERLY, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER&#13;
Subscription $1. Per Year in Advance&#13;
Advertising rates made knowu on&#13;
application.&#13;
Cards of Thanks, fifty cents.&#13;
Resolutions of Coudolence, one dollar.&#13;
Local Noti( ee, in Local columns five&#13;
cent per line per each insertion.&#13;
All matter intended to benefit the personal&#13;
or business interest of any individual&#13;
will be published at regular advertiseing&#13;
rates.&#13;
Announcement of entertainments, etc.,&#13;
must be paid for at regular Local Notice&#13;
rates.&#13;
Obituary and marriage notices are published&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
Poetry must be paid for at the rate of&#13;
five cents per line.&#13;
Local News&#13;
This month fcke oysters R with&#13;
us.&#13;
E. J. Briggs transacted business&#13;
in Flint Monday.&#13;
Gerald Reason spent Saturday&#13;
at Whitmore Lake.&#13;
Norman Reason of Detroit&#13;
spent Sunday here.&#13;
Dave Smith and wife were Howell&#13;
visitors last Friday.&#13;
Norma Vaughn was an Ann Arbor&#13;
visitor last Thursday.&#13;
John Monks was a Jackson visitor&#13;
a portion of last week.&#13;
John VanHorn and family spent&#13;
last Saturday in Ann Arbor,&#13;
Gladys Chubb of Howell spent&#13;
the past week with Fern Hendee.&#13;
The Pinckney ball team will&#13;
play ball at the Fowlerville Fair&#13;
this year.&#13;
Miss Hazel Kiaby of Hamburg&#13;
spent last Friday with relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
Miss Mae Teeple is visiting relatives&#13;
in Marysville, Mich., this&#13;
week.&#13;
Fannie Swarthout left Saturday&#13;
for Beaverton, Mich., where she&#13;
will teach the coming year.&#13;
Wm. Surdam and wife of&#13;
Detroit were over Sunday guests&#13;
at the home of her parents, Mr*&#13;
and Mrs. W, H. Swarthout.&#13;
Whatever man doubted that&#13;
women had courage has had his&#13;
doubts by the recent developments&#13;
in slot lies.&#13;
Mrs. John Rane of Whitmore&#13;
Lake and Eugene Reason of Detroit&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of&#13;
Fiord Reason.&#13;
The following farmers near&#13;
Pinckney have built silos during&#13;
the past two weeks: Lewis Bros.,&#13;
Wirt Hendee, Bert Nash, Wm.&#13;
Schrotzberger, Jas. Fitch, Frank&#13;
Hinchey and Montague &amp; Schafer.&#13;
Yourself and friends are cordially&#13;
invited to attend a dancing&#13;
party to be given at the Pinckney&#13;
opera house, Friday evening,&#13;
September 12, Barnard's orchestra&#13;
will furnish the music. Bill&#13;
75c. Everyone invited.&#13;
Hog cholera is reported to exist&#13;
in the following counties by the&#13;
September bulletin issued by Secretary&#13;
of State, Martindale. Barry,&#13;
Branch, Calhoun, Cass, Genesee,&#13;
Gratiot, Ingham, Ionia, Jackson,&#13;
Lenawee, Livingston, St. Joseph&#13;
and Saginaw.&#13;
A newspaper can print the&#13;
grandest sermon that ever fell&#13;
from inspired lips and not 20 per&#13;
cent of the professedly pious will&#13;
read it; bat should it print a detailed&#13;
account of some female bunco&#13;
game or a sensational divorce&#13;
in high life, 90 per cent of toe&#13;
very elect will make a dive for&#13;
that paper as soon as it is o f the&#13;
press, swoop down on it like a&#13;
hungry wolf, devou r every word,&#13;
th#a roll their eyes heavenward,&#13;
like a calf with the colic, and&#13;
wonder what this wicked old&#13;
world is coming to.&#13;
Harold Swarthout was iu Fowlerville&#13;
one day last week-&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Fick were&#13;
Howell visitors Sunday.&#13;
Paul Curlett of Howell spent&#13;
Sunday with his parents here.&#13;
Mrs. Ernest Carr of Detroit is&#13;
visiting relatives here this week.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Teeple and daughter&#13;
Lois spent last Friday in Howell.&#13;
H. H. Swarthout transacted&#13;
business in Howell last Thursday.&#13;
Morrice Dorrow was a Howell&#13;
visitor a couple of days last week.&#13;
Miss Beulah Morton of Bay&#13;
City is a guest of Miss Kitsey Allison&#13;
this week.&#13;
Chas. Campbell and wife and&#13;
Mrs. Anna Frances were Ann Arbor&#13;
visitors over Sunday.&#13;
Miss Florence Harris left last&#13;
Friday for Boyne City where she&#13;
will teach for another year.&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Brown and Miss&#13;
Kate Brown are visiting in Chelr&#13;
sea and Ann Arbor this week.&#13;
A. M. Roche and family of St.&#13;
Johns have been spending a few&#13;
days with friends and relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
Geo. Sykes and wife of Detroit,&#13;
C. P. Sykes and wife and J. J.&#13;
Teeple aie camping at Portage&#13;
lake this week.&#13;
Ray Kennedy aud wife of&#13;
Detroit were over Sunday guests&#13;
at the home of his parents, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Wm. Kennedy Sr.&#13;
Now comes a scientist who- says&#13;
that baldness is due to cutting&#13;
the hair. He must have a grudge&#13;
against barbers.&#13;
Kathleen Roche left Monday&#13;
for Adrian where she will atterid&#13;
the St. Joseph Academy f o r&#13;
another year,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Read and&#13;
Miss Georgia Martin left Monday&#13;
morning for a ten days sight seeing&#13;
trip to New York City and&#13;
other .Eastern points.&#13;
Charles Burden of Gregory and&#13;
Fred Campbell of Putnam are&#13;
the first in the county to take out&#13;
licenses under tke new law to&#13;
hunt outside the county.—Democrat.&#13;
The attorney general has ruled&#13;
that all persons driving automobiles&#13;
for hire must, in additiou to&#13;
the machine license number, obtain&#13;
a license as chauffeur. The&#13;
fee for this is $2. Police officers are&#13;
charged with the enforcement of&#13;
this law which applies to all sections&#13;
of the state.&#13;
When a man is nearly frozen&#13;
from a ten mile drive on a cold&#13;
winter day, he will hardly stop to&#13;
read a plank advertisement. But&#13;
at home in his arm chair with his&#13;
legs crossed before a cheerful fira,&#13;
he reads his local paper, and has&#13;
plenty of time, picks out the live&#13;
business men of the town from&#13;
the advertisements in tha paper&#13;
and makes up his mind where he&#13;
will trade on his next trip to&#13;
town.&#13;
Do not underestimate the value&#13;
of leisure monents, The use you&#13;
make of them determines what you&#13;
are going to be. The difference between&#13;
one who is a failure and one&#13;
who is a success, is emphasized not&#13;
so much in the working hours of&#13;
their time, as in the leisure hours.&#13;
In the business office the most indolent&#13;
mast measure up to a certain&#13;
standard or get o u t But&#13;
when the time of recreation comes&#13;
one forges ahead, while the other&#13;
spends his time in suoh a way as&#13;
to lessen his future efficiency and&#13;
cripple his powers. I t makes all&#13;
the difference in the world with&#13;
your future how you use your&#13;
leisure momnets,— Ex.&#13;
^!Tf!TfWW??f!ffWfWFtTr!TfT?rtTf#W!Tr!TfW!TFWfWWWWfTfWfy&#13;
! Make Aim For i m Our Store!&#13;
If your aim is to economize and to have for your everyday&#13;
use dependable goods at the lowest possible price we aBk&#13;
you to make aim for our store and hit the center of&#13;
economical buying.&#13;
A Splendid Showing of New Fall Hats and&#13;
Caps, Mackinaws, Sweaters, Jerseys, Etc.&#13;
33&#13;
Pickling Season i&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative Banking&#13;
Business. :: ::&#13;
3 per cent&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
Pure Cider Vinegar, Mason Fruit Jars and&#13;
Supplies&#13;
Pickling Spices inghiding Tumeric, Celery Seed,&#13;
Mustard Seed, Etc. 3&#13;
Butter Krust&#13;
has more than doubled our bread sales. 3&#13;
There must be a reason. 3&#13;
I MONKS BROS,!&#13;
(•j P i n c k n e y&#13;
G. W. TEEPLE&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Prop&#13;
Prompt Delivery Phone No. 38&#13;
^Wuium^miiwaauiuaii^iiiiuawaiumiiliii^iUiUiiiR&#13;
WE&#13;
always carry the finest and most' complete line&#13;
of Hardware in Livingston county.&#13;
ARE&#13;
you in need of anything in our line? If so, we&#13;
invite you'to call and get our prices as&#13;
THE PEORLED&#13;
O N ' T ,ys&#13;
who trade with us are always satisfied. Our&#13;
prices are right and we deal square.&#13;
Teepje H a r c l w a r e C o r n P a n y&#13;
J P i n c l c n e y , 3 £ i e l i .&#13;
trust to memory to preserved the&#13;
changing likeness of growing]boy&#13;
or girl. Memory plays stelnge&#13;
tricks sometimes.&#13;
A good photograph or so every&#13;
year will keep an accurate record&#13;
t)f subtle changes in their development&#13;
;&#13;
And what a satisfaction that&#13;
little collection will be to you and&#13;
to thein in after years.&#13;
DaisieB. Chapell&#13;
S t o c k b r i d g e , M i c h i g a n&#13;
NO CHANCE FOR A KICK&#13;
When You Buy Purity Flour&#13;
Looking backward over the past, you may recall instances&#13;
of dissatisfaction with the quality of the Flour which you&#13;
bought. If this is so, it should certainly interest you to&#13;
know that we have a flour from which you can get the kind&#13;
of bread that suits you, at prices no greater, aud often less,&#13;
than you will have to pay for unsatisfactory stuff at other&#13;
places. When we sell you flour we expect you to come again.&#13;
This being the case, why shouldn't we do all we can to please&#13;
you in quality, price and treatment?&#13;
FOR SALE AT ALL GROCERIES&#13;
THE HOYT BROS.&#13;
xwy&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;itiz&amp;i^&#13;
A Nervous Woman Finds&#13;
Relief From Suffering.&#13;
I Women who suffer from extreme&#13;
j nervousness, often endure much'&#13;
j suffering before finding any relief.&#13;
Mrs. Joseph Snyder, of Tiffin, 0.,&#13;
| had suck an._ experience,_regarding&#13;
which she says: &gt;,&#13;
"Six months X&#13;
was bedfast with&#13;
nervous prostration.&#13;
I had sinking:&#13;
spells, a colt,&#13;
clammy feelingv—&#13;
could not stan#&#13;
t h e slightest&#13;
noise. "'At times&#13;
I would almost&#13;
fly to pleeei;&#13;
stomach v e r y Seak. My htwtnd&#13;
insisted on ;&#13;
my taking: Tbr.&#13;
Miles' Nervine, and I be*an to improve&#13;
before I had finished the flrat bofjtU&#13;
until I was entirely cured." :'%&#13;
MRS. JOSEPH SNTDESBi "'jt&#13;
W2 Hudson St., Tiffin, OljlSj*:&#13;
Many remedies are reeommentfed'*'&#13;
for diseases of the nervous system'&#13;
that fail to produce results because&#13;
they do not reach the seat-of the&#13;
trouble. Dr. MU*#' Nervine has&#13;
proven its value in such cases so&#13;
many times that it is unnecessary&#13;
to make claims for it. You can&#13;
prove its merits for yourself by4&#13;
getting a bottle of your druggist*&#13;
who will return the price if yotf&#13;
receive no benefit t&#13;
MILKS MIDICAL CO., Mlkhart/lAd.&#13;
M$&#13;
' i i&#13;
L\&gt;&#13;
wrim** 1 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ % ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
• - -r*:&#13;
. ^ . . - - J&#13;
School D a y s |&#13;
The Happiest Days of Your Life&#13;
Vacation is now over and You tig America starts back to&#13;
school. We want every boy and girl aud every father and&#13;
mother to know that we can supply everything the new&#13;
Bchool year demaude. ^&#13;
We are Headquarters For School Books 3&#13;
and everything needed whether Pens, Inks, Peucils, Pads, : ¾&#13;
Crayons, Rulers, Tablets, etc. Children will get the same&#13;
good treatment, courteous attention and low prices as they&#13;
would receive if the parents came with them. ~ j&#13;
%W~As the profit of school books has been cut" to-10 "per ^ 2&#13;
cent, please do not ask for credit as one bad^ account kills ^&#13;
^ - all our profit. : ¾&#13;
MEYER'S DRUG STORE %&#13;
T l i e I V y a l N t o r e ^&#13;
For a Square Deal Pinckney, Mich. 3&#13;
Drugs, Willi Paper, Crockery, Cigars, Candy, Magazines, ^&#13;
School Supplies, Books ^&#13;
South Iosco&#13;
John Roberts and wife and Beatrice&#13;
Lamborne were Pinckney callers&#13;
\ Tuesday evening,&#13;
Wm. Caskey and wife of Anderson&#13;
and Bert Roberts and family spent&#13;
Sunday at Truman Wainwright's.&#13;
Katbryn Lamborne spent the last of&#13;
the week with relatives near Pinckney.&#13;
Rose Jefterys of Pinckney is visiting&#13;
at the home of John Roberts.&#13;
Mrs. Tryan of Fowlerville is visiting&#13;
at tbe home ot (jr. A, Kirkland.&#13;
Joe Roberts and wife called on Mr.&#13;
and Airs. L. Lamborne and daughters&#13;
Sunday evening.&#13;
The L. A. S. will meet with Orpha&#13;
and Cora Watters, Wednesday, Sept.&#13;
17th.&#13;
J H. Buckley and family and Mrs.&#13;
Calkins visited at the borne of John&#13;
j Robarts Sunday.&#13;
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that&#13;
Contain fcercury.&#13;
as mercury will surely destroy the&#13;
sense of smell and completely derange&#13;
the whole system when entering it&#13;
through the mucus surfaces. Such articles&#13;
should never be used except on pre&#13;
scriptions from reputable physicians,&#13;
as the damage they do is ten fold to&#13;
the good you can possibly derive from&#13;
them. Hall's Catarrh Cure&gt; manufactured&#13;
by F J Cheney &amp; Co, Toledo,&#13;
0. contains no mercury, and is taken&#13;
internally acting directly upon the&#13;
blood and mucus surfaces of the&#13;
system. In buying Hall's Catarrh&#13;
Cure be sure you get the genuine. It&#13;
is taken internally and made in Tolecto&#13;
Ohio, by F J Cheney &amp; Co., Testimonials&#13;
free. Sold by Druggists.&#13;
Price 75c. per bottle. Take HalFs&#13;
Family pills for constipation&#13;
There'll Be Plenty^&#13;
to go round and plenty of "go around*' if your cider mill fa&#13;
turnecT by a Rumely-Olds gasoline engine. I t neither shirks&#13;
nor tires. I t pumps water, grinds feed, shells corn, saws wood&#13;
and does dozens of big jobs on the farm. We can give you a&#13;
Bumely-Olds in any size to suit your needs. They come in&#13;
sizes from 1 ½ to 65 h. p. ^&#13;
Drop in soon and see our Rumely-Olds engines. Or&#13;
let us know and we'll send a catalog to you.&#13;
WeWe Here to serve you.&#13;
Give us a chance.&#13;
\ A. H. FLINTOFT,&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
Is Best"&#13;
&gt; .&gt;&#13;
;M •&#13;
, £ • " • • • • • »&#13;
« « t f r •••"•&#13;
• . • &gt; • ' «&#13;
we »»y Tzar Coffee U best you may&#13;
hf MM we know.&#13;
Y«ttr own good judgement will tell you that&#13;
Tzar Coffee haa a delicious, rich flavor that&#13;
ordinary coffee has not The moment you get&#13;
the fragrant aroma from Tzar Coffee you'll pronounce&#13;
it excellent coffee.&#13;
Tzar Coffee is only 35c a pound but you'll&#13;
agree, it is worth more. Three other good&#13;
blends are;&#13;
Nero 3 0 c&#13;
Marigold 3 2 c&#13;
Pleasant Valley 4 0 c&#13;
Pkajant Valley Teu, 50c,60c,80c&#13;
Make Tzar Coffee and Pleasant Valley&#13;
Tea part of your order today.&#13;
35c — try it with a convenient&#13;
T[rriki olator.&#13;
r..&#13;
Murphy 6c Jackson, Pinckney&#13;
Ayrault 6t Bollinger, Gregory&#13;
* r"&#13;
If r .&#13;
:8fe.&#13;
W7 SB •*»•-&#13;
S3 **:&#13;
' i f * . ? Subscribe for The Dispatch&#13;
it* m&#13;
North Hamburg&#13;
The Misses Whitney of Reading returned&#13;
home Monday after an extended&#13;
visit with Mrs. Clyde Hinkle.&#13;
Several from this vicinity spent&#13;
Labor Day at Howell.&#13;
Miss Vina Travis of Chicago is visiting&#13;
friends here,&#13;
Miss Gracia Martin of Ann Arbor&#13;
spent Sunday with Hazel Sweitzer.&#13;
Clyde Hinkle and family spent Sunday&#13;
in Howell.&#13;
The Ladies Aid will meet at the&#13;
home of Mrs. J. D, Boy Ian, Thursday,&#13;
for tea, Everyone invited.&#13;
Miss Viola Bergin spent the week&#13;
end at the'home of Geo. VanHorn,&#13;
DouH Let Baby Suffer With&#13;
Eczema And Skin Eruptions&#13;
Babies need a perfect skin-covering.&#13;
Skin eruptions cause them not only intense&#13;
suffering, but hinder their&#13;
growth, DR. HOBSON'S ECZEMA OINTMENT&#13;
can be relied on for relief and permanent&#13;
cure ot suffering babies whose&#13;
skin eruptions have made their lite&#13;
miserable. "Our baby was afflicted&#13;
with breaking out of the skin all over&#13;
the face and scalp. Doctors and&#13;
skin specialists failed to help. We&#13;
tried Dr, Hobaon's Eczema Ointment&#13;
and were overjoyed to see baby completely&#13;
cured before one box was&#13;
used" writes Mrs. Strubler. Dubuque,&#13;
Iowa. All druggist, or by mail, 50c.&#13;
Pheiffer Chemical Company&#13;
St. Louis, Mo. Philadelphia Pa&#13;
North Putnam&#13;
Mrs. Gallup spent Thursday with&#13;
her sister at Gregory.&#13;
We are sorry to learu. that Mrs.&#13;
Jas. Hoff had all her peaches stolen&#13;
one night last week.&#13;
Nellie Smith is staying with her&#13;
aunt, Mrs. Wm. Bland, and is attending&#13;
school here,&#13;
Biulah Burgess was a Gregory visitor&#13;
one day last week,&#13;
Teddy Keinney of Ann Arbor is visiting&#13;
his aunt, Mrs. M, Gallup.&#13;
School began here last week .with&#13;
Mildred King as teacher.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Bland called on Mrs.&#13;
Dinkel' Friday.&#13;
Mrs. Burgess visited Mrs. J . Hoff&#13;
one day last week.&#13;
Safest Lax ail re For Women&#13;
. Nearly every women needs a uood&#13;
laxative. Dr, King's New Life Pills&#13;
are good because they are prompt,&#13;
safe and do not%cau3e pain. Mrs. M. C.&#13;
Dmlap of Lead ill. Tenn. says: "Dr.&#13;
King's New Life Pills helped her&#13;
tnmble|^greatly." Get a box to-day.&#13;
Price, 26e. Recommended by 0. G.&#13;
Meyer,, tne druggist.&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 13th, 1913&#13;
5 packages Com Flakes for_„&#13;
1 pound Soda _&#13;
4 pounds Crackers__ „&#13;
10 bars Acme Soap&#13;
1 can 15c Peas&#13;
25c&#13;
_5c&#13;
25c&#13;
....-25c&#13;
_ 1 0 c&#13;
.. _ 9 c&#13;
ii&#13;
1 can 13c Corn _ „ „ _ _&#13;
ALL SALES CASH&#13;
N e w Fall Woolens&#13;
Just received from Ed. V. Price &amp; C o . of Chicago.&#13;
Over 5 0 0 samples to choose from.&#13;
W. W. BARNARD&#13;
Produce Wanted&#13;
wwwwwwwuuwwwmwwHU^wwvwwww&#13;
You Need a Dependable Corn&#13;
. . . Harvester...&#13;
Your success at this busy season depends chiefly&#13;
upon your corn binder. .._&#13;
If it iB not in perfect working order to handle the corn you&#13;
loss part of your crop—part of your profit. Corn goes to waste&#13;
instead of being turned into golden dollars.&#13;
After you have worked hard all Spring and Summer why&#13;
take chances—why risk a machine that may not work carefully?&#13;
Let us show you our mechanically perfect corn harvesting&#13;
machinery.&#13;
They take care of your corn crop quickly and thoroughly,&#13;
They are built from the best materials by' skilled workmen.&#13;
Their design is the result of years of knowing how. Do not&#13;
delay. Call and see us now,&#13;
Dinkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
Pinckney&#13;
South Marion&#13;
Gay Blair and wife were guests ot&#13;
friends and relatives at Lansing a tew&#13;
days last week.&#13;
M, Allison and wife and P . Snider&#13;
and wife visited at the home of La-&#13;
Verne Demerest Sunday.&#13;
Olin Marshall and family of Gregory&#13;
spent Sunday with M, Gallup and&#13;
family.&#13;
Bernard ilcCluskey and wite of&#13;
Hamburg and Paul Brogan of Uhilson&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of Chris&#13;
Brogan.&#13;
Misses Eva and A, Docking spent tbe&#13;
last of the week at the home of Will&#13;
Allen of N.'Marion.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Allen of North Lake&#13;
were entertained at the home of Wm.&#13;
White Sunday.&#13;
Chris Brogan Jr. visited his brother&#13;
Will of Brighton the last of the week,&#13;
Percy Daley wa9 a Gregory visitor&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
West Marion&#13;
Hev. Miller is back again (or anoth-&#13;
A Crop Bulletin.&#13;
Five-year-old Ella had been enthusiastically&#13;
engaged in garden work all&#13;
the spring. She was especially inter*&#13;
ested in planting seed and watched&#13;
anxiously for sprouts to appear above&#13;
the ground.&#13;
One day while visiting a neighbor&#13;
•who possessed a six-months-old baby&#13;
Ella was delighted to see two tiny&#13;
front teeth displayed when the baby&#13;
smiled.&#13;
"Oh, Mrs. May," the little girl cried&#13;
excitedly, "the baby's teeth have come&#13;
up!"—Tooth's Companion.&#13;
year and filled his appointment"Bere&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
School began last Monday with&#13;
Roche McClear as teacher. About&#13;
thirty pupils are in attendance.&#13;
Mrs. McCavett and Daisy returned&#13;
to their home in Detroit Wednesday&#13;
alter a two months visit with friends&#13;
here.&#13;
Sneak thieves entered the cellar ot&#13;
Fred Moore and took thirty quarts of&#13;
canned fruit.&#13;
Tommy Agreed.&#13;
Tommy had been tardy at school,&#13;
and this was the excuse he handed in:&#13;
"miss M'lnornoy picas Exkuse tommy&#13;
for Being late he was Kep out&#13;
on account of Sixnoss in the Fambly&#13;
yours Respect Nicodemus Tucker."&#13;
"Thomas," said the teacher after she&#13;
had read it, "I have serious doubts&#13;
about the genuineness of this. It 1 looks very suspicious."&#13;
"I know it. ma'am," he replied, sniffing.&#13;
"I told paw I could write better'n&#13;
he could, but he would do It"—&#13;
London Answers.&#13;
Do Yon tear Consumption!&#13;
Mo matter bow chronic your cough&#13;
or how severe your throat or lung&#13;
ailment is, Dr, King's N*w Discovery&#13;
will surely help you; it may save yoar&#13;
Irfe. Stillman Green, of Mahcbite,&#13;
Col. writes: "Two doctors said I had&#13;
consumption and could not live two&#13;
years. ( used Dr. King's New Discovery&#13;
and am well and alive," Your&#13;
money refunded if it fails to benefit&#13;
you. Tbe best home remedy for&#13;
coughs, colds, throat and Inn* troubles.&#13;
Price 50c, and $1.00 Guaranteed by&#13;
0. G. Meyer the druggist.&#13;
A Financial Tip.&#13;
"If I should put $1,000 in a bank&#13;
that paid compound interest at the&#13;
rate of 3 per cent, how long would&#13;
it take for the principal to double?"&#13;
"It never would double. The bank&#13;
would bust."—Chicago Record-Kcrnld.&#13;
Strenghten Weak Kidneys&#13;
.Dun't euffer longer with weak kidney*.&#13;
You can sret prompt relief by&#13;
taking Electric Bitters, that wonderful&#13;
remedy praised by women everywhere.&#13;
Start with a bottle today, yon&#13;
Will soon tee', like a new wonieu with&#13;
ambition to work, without fear ot&#13;
pain. Mr, John Dowling of San&#13;
Francisco, writes: — "Gratitude for&#13;
the wonderful effect of Electric Bitters&#13;
prompts me to write. It cured my&#13;
wife when all else failed." Good, for&#13;
tbe li?er as well. Jfotbing better for&#13;
^digestion or biliousness. Price 00c.&#13;
and $1.00, at Meyer's drug store; ' ;&#13;
Pay your lubecrlption tfcia month.&#13;
• ',J^""' * % ' " * * , « -&#13;
MMm&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
mm~&#13;
U&#13;
I&#13;
&gt;&#13;
I&#13;
rr&#13;
^ - *&#13;
^ ^ M .&#13;
• * 1&#13;
'"I&#13;
. : ; *&#13;
• X&#13;
DAVID KERR&#13;
&amp;£ Harp; Kin^ Tootle&#13;
lllusfiraf ions W / t ^ l$AlT*R&amp;&#13;
COPYRIGHT BY A.CM*CUI^CS* CO., /91A&#13;
CHAPTER I.&#13;
Tha surprise which Gloria knew her&#13;
unexpected arrival would occasion&#13;
was even greater than she could imagine.&#13;
Several things bad happened&#13;
In Belmont recently to disturb David&#13;
Kerr, and he was in no frame of mind&#13;
for further complications.&#13;
The stock-yards company was beginning&#13;
to hint at certain favors It&#13;
wished extended, and with an election&#13;
coming on. Kerr was in no mood for&#13;
such, concessions. Worse still, the&#13;
Belmont News had just changed ownership,&#13;
and the new editor was not&#13;
displaying that subservient fealty&#13;
which had characterized all Belmont&#13;
papers in the past. Already the News&#13;
was snapping at his heels and asking&#13;
questions which were extremely pointed.&#13;
To have Gloria descend upon him&#13;
at each a time was too much for even&#13;
David Kerr. His mastery of the situation&#13;
caused him to have no great&#13;
fear for the stock-yard demands and&#13;
the newspaper outcry, vexing problems&#13;
though they were, but Gloria—&#13;
Gloria in Belmont—was quite another&#13;
proposition.&#13;
"Father, this is Gloria," explained&#13;
David Kerr's daughter when she had&#13;
\stabli8hed telephone connection with&#13;
Locust Lawn.&#13;
"Gloria!" he exclaimed. "Where&#13;
are you?"&#13;
"Here, In Belmont, at the station.&#13;
I Just came."&#13;
"How did it happen? I wasn't looking&#13;
for you."&#13;
' "Aren't you glad to see me?"&#13;
"Glad to see you? Of course I am,&#13;
but it's a surprise. When did you&#13;
come? How do you happen to be&#13;
here? Why didn't you let me know?"&#13;
"I wanted to surprise you," she&#13;
laughed. "Annabel Hitchcock's aunt&#13;
died, so we couldn't go to California.&#13;
I had nothing else to do, so I came&#13;
home. Wasn't that right?"&#13;
"Exactly, exactly. But it's a bad&#13;
time to come to Belmont."&#13;
"I don't care, I'm BO glad to be&#13;
home. How do I get out to Locust&#13;
Lawn?"&#13;
"You can't well wait there for rae&#13;
to come in for you. Take a carriage&#13;
and tell the driver you want to go to&#13;
the end of the Townsend Park car&#13;
-Hnsr—Walt for me~tn the drug gtore.&#13;
I'll get there almost as soon as you&#13;
do."&#13;
"Hurry, father, because I'm so anxious&#13;
to see you. It's been an age&#13;
since I taw you, and you know I don't&#13;
know a thing about Belmont. I'm just&#13;
dying to raeet everybody, and then&#13;
I'll ask some of the girls out to visit&#13;
me."&#13;
"We'll talk that over alter-awhile,'-&#13;
was his noncommittal response. "Wait&#13;
for me at the drug store." Good by."&#13;
The carriage drive through Belmont&#13;
and Townsend Park, a suburb, was of&#13;
educational value. It gave her an increasing&#13;
respect for Belmont. Althougu&#13;
there was no remarkable resilience&#13;
district, there were, ucca* onal&#13;
- •&#13;
"You Old Dear!"&#13;
hemes Which denoted refinement as&#13;
well as comfortable circumstances;&#13;
This was not in keeping with what&#13;
DavM Kerr's daughter -. had been&#13;
taaght about her father's town. The&#13;
number ot automobiles- also surprised&#13;
her. B j the time she reached the&#13;
place appointed for her meeting with&#13;
her father there was not so much of&#13;
condescension In her attitude toward&#13;
what she had been led to expect, Just&#13;
how much oniy a dip into the social&#13;
whirl could reveal. The pleasurable&#13;
part of it all was that Gloria was still&#13;
quqen by right of inheritance. If the&#13;
kingdom was more extensive than she&#13;
had thought, the court life would also&#13;
be more brilUaat. .&#13;
Gloria had not long to wait for ||er&#13;
father. An old-fashioned carriage cov&#13;
ered with mud and drawn by fat bay&#13;
horses drew up before the drug store.&#13;
Out of the vehicle a somewhat ponderous&#13;
Individual pulled himself—a&#13;
smooth-shaven man who appeared to&#13;
be something over fifty, with heavy&#13;
jaws and piercing eyes which looked&#13;
clear through you-from under beetling&#13;
eyebrows. With a crjf the girl flung&#13;
herself upon him and smothered him&#13;
with kisses. - -j •-• i&#13;
"You old dear!" she exclaimed&#13;
"You haven't changed a bit. I'm so&#13;
glad to be at home with you. Isn't&#13;
it just dandy to be bafck in Belmont!"&#13;
The man smiled. Even if he had&#13;
not changed, as she had sworn, he&#13;
recognized that she had changed. In&#13;
the two years since he had seen her.&#13;
out of the chrysalis had come the butterfly;&#13;
and this radiant girl was his&#13;
daughter. For one brief instant he&#13;
unlocked the neglected chamber of his&#13;
heart which was the prison of the&#13;
past, and thought of Glorias mother.&#13;
Then the present with its obligations&#13;
and its stern realities recalled him to&#13;
the life that was from the days that&#13;
once had been.&#13;
"Welcome home, daughter," he said,&#13;
making a peck in the general direction&#13;
of her mouth do duty for an answering&#13;
kiss. With David Kerr kissing&#13;
had long ago become an obsolete&#13;
custom. Then, too, no one had ever&#13;
accused him of being unduly demonstrative.&#13;
Seeing the negro driver bowing and&#13;
scraping, Gloria left her father to&#13;
speak to him. She might have forgotten&#13;
Locust Lawn, but she had not&#13;
forgotten Locust Lawn's chief factotum.&#13;
Old Tom, who had been in&#13;
Kerr's employ for a generation, had&#13;
been her constant companion when&#13;
she had outgrown the^ continuous&#13;
vigilance of her nurse.&#13;
"How d' you do, Tom," she said, extending&#13;
her hand. "I don't believe&#13;
you remember me. Now, cTo~you7tT~"&#13;
"Bless yo' heart, Miss Glory,''&#13;
grinned the old negro, "I'd sho'ly know&#13;
you anywharee. An' it does me a&#13;
pow'ful sight o' good to see you. Why,&#13;
chile, when you went away you wuz&#13;
jes' a little gal. An' now look at you;&#13;
you's a reglar growed-up woman. Ah&#13;
reckins you'll want to git mahried&#13;
soon. Hey?"&#13;
—Gloria Jaugbedt- that same freso^-infectious&#13;
laugh of hers which had&#13;
warned many a wary suitor that he&#13;
had not found the combination to her&#13;
heart and had brought him to that&#13;
plane of friendship on which he was&#13;
always welcome. As well try to describe&#13;
Patti's singing, tn the days&#13;
when her charm was greatest, as try&#13;
to describe Gloria's laugh. There be&#13;
those persons so presumptuous that&#13;
on hearing it would aver she had&#13;
never loved. Whether David Kerr was&#13;
one ofjEhose his countenance did hot&#13;
betray. As he waited for her answer&#13;
to the question put her by the old&#13;
negro, a privileged servitor, his face&#13;
was as impassive as ever it was on&#13;
the night of an election.&#13;
"Why, Tom." she explained when&#13;
she had ceased to laugh at the foolishness&#13;
of the question, "I love everybody,&#13;
of course, but nobody in the&#13;
wide, wide world like that. I'm never&#13;
going to marry any one; do you think&#13;
so?"&#13;
"Miss Glory, you neveh do know&#13;
what de Lordlf pervide. Look at me.&#13;
Ah done say dat, too, when I wuz&#13;
young lak you; but Ah's had fo' wives&#13;
already, an' man time ain't came to&#13;
aleylt." -?" -i ~t %~&#13;
"All right, Tom. 1 doa't knojf what&#13;
the Lord will provide, wit Im^ot go*&#13;
Ing out of my-way to Wtp^Providence."&#13;
The words of this colloqtffr were&#13;
neither more nor less than David Kerr&#13;
had anticipated. It waa from the&#13;
This changing viewpoint did not&#13;
a tfmiiittUon of , enthusiasm.&#13;
ltoff*JtfeftJi anything else it spurred&#13;
ker curiosity. She realised that the&#13;
reel ^BeUnont waa an advance over&#13;
one hope that somewhere on her&#13;
travels she would meet a man wcathy&#13;
the love of a woman such as she, f|Mt&#13;
she would marry him and never^S&#13;
turn to Belmont Almost un&#13;
ly, with that end vaguely lB'xtefcyvfWt&#13;
had been diminishing his a$flrMe#~&#13;
He had money eltfugB for&#13;
ture, already she had her&#13;
and bis age made even&#13;
some. He would move a&#13;
Belmont when GtorU&#13;
when she came to visit him ^&#13;
be to some charming rural spot*&#13;
spirit rather than from the- warding&#13;
of her reply that the father sought U J ifc&#13;
ascertain the answer. It had been IfjiV gfoftMsolute ignariyiea off politics,&#13;
east she loved so well. Other men&#13;
of his type.had retired, why uot he?&#13;
One had even raised a horse which&#13;
had won the greatest classic of the&#13;
English turf. But for him, he had&#13;
mused, there would be no such pursuits&#13;
to bring him into the public eye.&#13;
That he wished to avoid for Gloria's&#13;
sake. And now all his plans seemed&#13;
to be coming to naught—Gloria had&#13;
come home, free of heart and anxious&#13;
to mingle in Belmont society.&#13;
The drive to Locust Lawn was uneventful.&#13;
Gloria watched for landmarks&#13;
along the way, and commented&#13;
on the changes twelve years had made&#13;
Ivocust Lawn seemed closer to town&#13;
than in the old days. Most of her remarks&#13;
about places they passed were&#13;
addressed to Tom, because together,&#13;
when she was a child, they had been&#13;
ovqr the road many times. David&#13;
Kerrt never much of a conversationalist,&#13;
was content to listen, hoping&#13;
some chance speech might aid in clearing&#13;
up the situation. Everything&#13;
Gloria said, however, seemed only a&#13;
confirmation of her determination to&#13;
enter at once into Belmont's gayeties&#13;
"Dar's de first sight o' Locust Lawn.&#13;
Miss Glory."&#13;
They had just reached the top of a&#13;
hill and Tom pointed with his whip&#13;
to a house on the next eminence&#13;
Looking up. Gloria Eaw, not the estate&#13;
of her imagination, but a square red&#13;
brick house looking rather desolate&#13;
through the bare branches of many&#13;
trees. Locust Lawn at the end of&#13;
winter was no enchanted fairy bower;&#13;
but she was far too clever a girl, and&#13;
far too good at heart, to betray any&#13;
disappointment. To her the place was&#13;
home, and she was anxious to recognize&#13;
it as such.&#13;
The interior of the house was no&#13;
more inviting. As soon as possible&#13;
Gloria wandered from room to room,&#13;
her inspection making her give silent&#13;
thanks that she had not asked any of&#13;
her friends to join her in her descent&#13;
on Belmont. The wall paper with big&#13;
yellow flowers, the carpets with big&#13;
red flowers, the rocking chairs with&#13;
the crocheted tidies, and the marbletopped&#13;
table in the parlor with the&#13;
inevitable plush album upon it, were&#13;
no less distressing than the wax flowers&#13;
under the glass case, the steel engraving&#13;
of the Scotch Covenanters&#13;
worshiping in a mountain glen, and&#13;
the tin bathtub. She even gave thanks&#13;
that she had not brought a maid.&#13;
"Mistah K," said a negro mammy,&#13;
putting her head in the door of the&#13;
living room after Kerr and his daughter&#13;
had finished going over the house.&#13;
"Tom wants to knew ef you Is goin'&#13;
to town dls mawnin'."&#13;
"No. Lily, 1 ain't going to town today.&#13;
Teil Tom to send Yellow Sam&#13;
with the spring wagon for Gloria's&#13;
trunks.&#13;
"Dey's ben telephonin' you from&#13;
town. Dey say it's pow'ful impo'tant&#13;
business MissGlory, she-done-witt*&#13;
in' to stay wlf me, jes' lak she use'&#13;
to. Ain't you, honey?"&#13;
To this Gloria gave laughing assent,&#13;
but her father shook his head.&#13;
"I'm not going to town today. And&#13;
tell the telephone operator not to connect&#13;
any one with Locust Lawn all&#13;
day. I ain't going to be disturbed.&#13;
D' you understand?"&#13;
AuntJ-ily, who probably was given&#13;
that name by some ante-bellum joker&#13;
because of her ebon hue, nodded her&#13;
acknowledgment of the order and withdrew.&#13;
The reasons David Kerr had for not&#13;
wishing to get into communication&#13;
with any one in Belmont were several,&#13;
but the most potent was his desire to&#13;
be uninterrupted while engaged in&#13;
studying his daughter and evolving&#13;
some platr whereby she could be taken&#13;
from Belmont before her slightest&#13;
suspicion had been aroused.&#13;
One episode-in their^our of the&#13;
house had given him much comfort&#13;
Gloria had paused in the old-fashioned&#13;
parlor and gazed long at his life-sized&#13;
portrait, done in oils, over the marble&#13;
mantel. Then she had looked about&#13;
the room, and not finding what she&#13;
sought, had asked:&#13;
"Where is one of my mother?"&#13;
"There is none," he confessed, and&#13;
added quickly, "but I'm going to have&#13;
one painted for you. That was given&#13;
me recently by the First Ward club."&#13;
"What's the First Ward club?"&#13;
"A political organisation.".&#13;
"Politics! Do you know anything&#13;
about poUtlca?"&#13;
David'IterV almost smiled;&#13;
"l^don't JODow whether the presidenMa&#13;
a Dajjiocrat^or a .Republican,"&#13;
shev added, ' .&#13;
"Don't bother about it."&#13;
"Oh, I'm not going to. I don't want&#13;
to be a suffragette and march In a&#13;
parade an^ he patjhi Jail on bread&#13;
and waterr t^oo'HfcveV read about&#13;
For some tlnre~They tat in silence&#13;
in the living room,, gating into the&#13;
open wood fife. More than once Kerr&#13;
thought: Jris. daughter,.was about to&#13;
speak, but each time she seemed to&#13;
think Better of it or else lose her&#13;
courage. He knew that something&#13;
weighed on her mind.&#13;
"I know L'm going to like Belmont&#13;
very much," she ventured at last&#13;
"And I want Belmont to like me. My&#13;
coming home is different from that of&#13;
other girls I know. At Annabel's or&#13;
Jaue Leigh's or any of the girls' homes&#13;
we haven't been in the house ten minutes&#13;
before the telephone begins to&#13;
ring. In hajf an .hour there are enough&#13;
engagements to last a week. In Belmont&#13;
I don't know any one yet."&#13;
This was not said In any tone of&#13;
complaint. She could not dream of&#13;
such a thing, because her father's position&#13;
was such- that her lack of&#13;
friends was only a temporary embarrassment.&#13;
She knew that well enough&#13;
"If 1 had known that I was coming&#13;
home I would have brought some of&#13;
the girls with me." She did not allow&#13;
him to know that the house had&#13;
not come up to her expectations. "I'm&#13;
glad I didn't because I don't know any&#13;
one here yet, and although we'd all&#13;
be received at once I couldn't make&#13;
it as pleasant for them as 1 can after&#13;
I have had an intimate knowledge of&#13;
things. After you once introduce me&#13;
I think I can begin, to plan for the&#13;
girls. I'm under obligations to every&#13;
single girl I know. 1 don't mean single—&#13;
unmarried. But I might a9 well,&#13;
because married girls den't go visiting&#13;
around the country."&#13;
"I thought you entertained in the&#13;
east."&#13;
"I did, but girls like to get to.a new&#13;
place. They're not looking for anybody,&#13;
but the wider your territory the&#13;
more certain it is that lightning will&#13;
strike you."&#13;
"You've had a pretty wide territory,"&#13;
was her father's dry rejoinder.&#13;
"But I always ran for cover when I&#13;
saw a storm coming."&#13;
"I thought you'd come home engaged&#13;
to a duke or a count at the&#13;
i4.&#13;
aotbisfr remarkable Jn a gjift of her&#13;
-and training, W'a* no small grain&#13;
*$*&amp;&amp;§&amp; •fe^^^.S*!^*1 th&amp;t&#13;
. . _ y , ^ . *L~ . . A n &lt; , a r e g t&#13;
wise&#13;
fopen the&#13;
'*• b*eo s&#13;
then was&#13;
ture of the&#13;
her batteries&#13;
s engaged, be&#13;
a; bjwigjt-Ms own ^slde into ac&#13;
- • £ ¥ : "jssra*'&#13;
"We're Going to the Theater Tonight."&#13;
least--Didn't you see arty men you&#13;
liked?"&#13;
"I liked them all, father, but 1&#13;
haven't seen a foreigner I'd marry.&#13;
They're nice enough to talk to and&#13;
dance with and to bring an ice at a&#13;
ball, but no more than that. But nothing&#13;
worries me; I'm going to stay&#13;
here and keep house for you."&#13;
"It ain't much of a house, Gloria.&#13;
You see, I ain't ever had any women&#13;
folk around here, and the place 'bout&#13;
runs—Itself, 'cept what the niggers&#13;
do. You won'l like it, I'm afraid."&#13;
"I'll like it well enough. You don't&#13;
know how I've envied other girls their&#13;
homes."-&#13;
"I tell you what you do. Go on to j&#13;
California now—I'll go with you, if ,&#13;
you Fay so, and stay till you git set- j&#13;
tied with some of your friends. Then I&#13;
I'll come back and have the house j&#13;
fixed up so's when you come again I&#13;
it'll be jnst what you want." I&#13;
Kerr felt that if he could get her j&#13;
away he could, see to it that she did&#13;
not return, even at the cost of h*.s&#13;
leaving Belmont a year or two sooner&#13;
than he had planned. To this suggestion&#13;
Gloria did not accede.&#13;
"What! go away and miss all the&#13;
fun of fixing up the house!" she exclaimed.&#13;
"No, sir, daddy. I'm going"&#13;
to stay right here and make pies In&#13;
the morning* have teas in the., afternoons&#13;
and go to the theaters at night.&#13;
And you're going with me." Kerr&#13;
made &lt;a deprecating gesture, but she&#13;
quickly overruled him. "Don't say a&#13;
word. You're going, and tonight's&#13;
the night we start. We're going to&#13;
the theater tonight."&#13;
Then Gloria told of a girl she had&#13;
seen on the train who had come to&#13;
Belmont to a theater party. She explained*&#13;
to- her father that no occasion&#13;
would give her a better opportunity&#13;
t o eeeHhe Belmont of which she was&#13;
to be a part than that offered vthat&#13;
evening. In an likelihood she would&#13;
meet a number of persons between&#13;
the acts. Frontaer point of view she&#13;
suggested J** many good reasons that&#13;
her father was afraid to interpose&#13;
any objection at the time.&#13;
" V &lt;TOM' CONTINUE©.)&#13;
GOOD USE FOR CRABAPPtt&#13;
Made Into Preserve* to S«*r *y e Vrfltn&#13;
Coid Meat in Winter, There ift» ,&#13;
Nothing Nicer.&#13;
One peck of crabanples w^l Hake&#13;
*bout six quarts. 1 usfe 1¾^ i4|ular&#13;
5lase fruit Jars and my fruit1 is kept&#13;
In a cellar, where there is a furnace,&#13;
ind never spoils. Fifty crabapples and&#13;
rtve measuring cu; s of sugar, 1¼&#13;
cups hot water, will just fill a quart&#13;
jar and also a pint. I find It convenient&#13;
to know about the number, as&#13;
it saves time for me First wash and&#13;
pick over fruit. Do not peel, but cut&#13;
out blow end and stem, also any bad&#13;
spots, put on eugar and water to&#13;
slowly dissolve. When It is hot put&#13;
n the desired quantity of fruit and&#13;
:ook till a silver fork will pierce ess*&#13;
ly, which will take about 20 to 30&#13;
minutes. Fill your JarB while mixture&#13;
8 boiling hot, and cover tightly. I&#13;
rjick out any that may be bruised or&#13;
specked and put them Into spiced vinegar.&#13;
For one quart take 1½ eups of&#13;
lugar, one-half cup vinegar, one-half&#13;
:up water, one-half teaspoon cinnanon,&#13;
one-quarter teaspoon cloves. Dissolve&#13;
sugar in vinegar, put in the&#13;
spice and water when hot. Put in&#13;
'ruit and cook till it can be pierced by&#13;
i fork. Can when hot. Nice to eat&#13;
#ith cold meat.—Exchange.&#13;
D fflNBSNMKffl&#13;
^^^H^^MMMV- sVm M 1 sT • ! mm mm. mmT*&#13;
When you can not have an egg beat"&#13;
er try using three forks Instead of&#13;
one.&#13;
A coat of clear varnish Is a good&#13;
thing to give straw matting before it&#13;
is laid.&#13;
When cooking beef in a flreless&#13;
cooker do not put salt on until the&#13;
beef is done.&#13;
Jf fruits are canned as soon.as they&#13;
are picked there will be less loss by&#13;
fermenting.&#13;
Let the white woodwork have plenty&#13;
of sunshine. - Too much shade makes&#13;
it yellow.&#13;
To save both time and the cream&#13;
in whipping it, whip cream in a pitcher&#13;
instead of a bowl, There Is no&#13;
chance of a spattering.&#13;
When a cloth dress becomes spotted&#13;
sponge it with equal parts of hot water&#13;
and turpentine. Iron the parts&#13;
when dry over a damp cloth&#13;
Pieces of old kid gloves are excellent&#13;
for mending the back seam of&#13;
children's shoes. Sew the patch neatly&#13;
on the Inside of the worn place.&#13;
To clean lacquered articles, brush&#13;
with hot water and mild soap, wiping&#13;
and drying before the fire and finish*&#13;
ing wkh-a eef\-etotfei—Do not iii&#13;
kali or soda. It will remove the It&#13;
quer.&#13;
*r &gt;v&#13;
Bed Linen Economy.&#13;
It pays to turn sheets at the first&#13;
sign of wear in the middle. It also&#13;
pays to make sheets at home and to&#13;
get a rather light-weight muslin,&#13;
choosing exactly the same/weight, for&#13;
pillowy cases. The unworn parts of&#13;
sheets may then be made into pillow&#13;
cases. The making of sheets and pillow&#13;
cases is a trifling matter, and the&#13;
saving on a single sheet Is at least&#13;
20 cents, to say nothing of the.fast&#13;
that the quality of the muslin you&#13;
buy is better than the average material&#13;
used for ready-mrde bed linen. If&#13;
you have linen sheets-and pillowcases&#13;
the saving is more marked. Aside&#13;
frcm the comfort of sheets three yar.de&#13;
long they were better as they are&#13;
not torn or strained in the constant&#13;
effort to pull them up.&#13;
Towels Cleaned.&#13;
Dingy towels may frequently be restored&#13;
to normal whiteness by putting&#13;
in a kettle of cold water, adding&#13;
white soap shavings and lemon Juice&#13;
and letting come slowly to a boJ(.&#13;
Rinse In tepid water, then blue water&#13;
and hang in the sun.&#13;
* C&#13;
Ochre in Starch.&#13;
To keep the color of ecru lace when&#13;
washing it, add a little yellow ochre&#13;
oil paint to the starch. Mis a small&#13;
amount of the ochre with boiling wa»&#13;
ter and add it to the starch^ or to&#13;
the last rinsing water if starch is not&#13;
used. '. - ""&#13;
- 'it&#13;
To Renovate Leather. •,-&#13;
For renovating mildew oa leather, I&#13;
find the following Is very good; Use&#13;
a piece of flannel with a Itttle vaseline&#13;
and rub the mildewed parte/ &gt;&#13;
Restoring Oil* Braitf.&#13;
Gilt braid easily becomes tarnished.&#13;
When this happens brush the braid&#13;
free from dust and rob a ftttte powdered&#13;
alum well into iL Leave rt for&#13;
a few hours, then btaehoff.-awfcyoeTl&#13;
find the braid as bright as new.&#13;
Li C M , tu't&#13;
•l ; s:\* Foaming Sauce.&#13;
Beat one half cun better j o &gt; Ctajm&#13;
add one cup sugar, g t a n u ^ ^ j a o d&#13;
stir til} white and f cam ing Just before&#13;
serving pour on 6u« cup boiling&#13;
water and stir a moment.&#13;
j t a&#13;
/ %&#13;
v.*;&#13;
s - *."' "f.&#13;
, -f&#13;
V r&#13;
k*LV2&#13;
&lt;&lt;£&amp;* :&amp;kMJVta&lt;': Siui&amp;Z .**- ••-*•*&lt;•* ••*•• • " *» - . •••«.- «• -**.—m*-*jy+, v/wiw^w iJ&amp;&#13;
&gt;.A«fW*!n*&#13;
* :&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
-i- A&#13;
riS* . . 1 1 . , - ^&#13;
L t E U T . A.COSTA FIRES R I F L E AT&#13;
U. S. INSPECTOR A N D IS&#13;
K I L L E D .&#13;
WAS CROSSING BRIDGE LOOKING&#13;
FOR T R O U B L E .&#13;
Member of Gen. Salarar's Command&#13;
at El Paso Loses His Life As Resuit&#13;
of Determination to " K i l l&#13;
a Gringo."&#13;
El Paso, Tex.—Lieutenant F. A costs*&#13;
an Officer *in General Salazar's federal&#13;
command at Juarez, crossed the&#13;
Stanton fflreet internu, ioml bridge&#13;
Saturday afternoon and was killed by&#13;
United States Customs Inspector T.&#13;
F. Jonah and Immigration Inspector&#13;
Thomas N. Heifron, after he had opened&#13;
fire on them with a rifle.&#13;
He was shot through the mouth and&#13;
arm, and bis horse, from which he&#13;
bad dismounted, was shct through the&#13;
aide. The American officers were uninjured.&#13;
Before crossing the bridge&#13;
the Mexican had .remarked that he&#13;
was "going to kill a gringo."&#13;
Heifrph was standing at the American,&#13;
e n d o f the bridge when Acoita&#13;
firat opened fire at him. He fired&#13;
back, using a pistol. Jonah then began&#13;
firing. The Mexican officer was&#13;
within 30 feet of the Americans before&#13;
he was killed.&#13;
Practical Fashions&#13;
C H I L D R E N ' S DRESS.&#13;
Opium at San Francisco.&#13;
San Francisco—Opium .worth more&#13;
than $250,000, local valuation, has&#13;
been seized by customs officers at this&#13;
port in the last three years. Under&#13;
federal statutes, masters of ships on&#13;
which contraband is found are liable&#13;
to fines and the penalties levied&#13;
against the skipper of trans-Pacific&#13;
craft under this law in the three-year&#13;
period total $65,071. As yet Uncle&#13;
Sam has failed to collect a dollar.&#13;
One trans-Pacific company, the&#13;
Toyo-Kisen-Kaiaha, a Japanese line,&#13;
pays a bonus to any employe on its&#13;
liners who discovers opium or other&#13;
contraband and reports it to'the master.&#13;
The contraband is promptly&#13;
thrown overboard.&#13;
Mrs. Pankhurst Is Coming.&#13;
London—Mrs. Pankhurst has decidirtake&#13;
a lecturing tour of&#13;
States for the purpose of&#13;
the recent development&#13;
•f tths saflitant campaign. She will&#13;
pay special attention to the connection&#13;
of the militant cause with the fight&#13;
acalnet white slavery and the spread&#13;
of certain social diseases.&#13;
Mrs. Pankhurst intends to speak in&#13;
New York, Chicago, Boston, Phil ad elptoai_&#13;
and othercities, Mlaa Jean_&#13;
Wtakham, one of the W. S. P. U. organizers,&#13;
sails on September 11 for&#13;
the purpose of arranging meetings&#13;
arfcfch the cooperation of American&#13;
sympathizers of Mrs. Pankhurst.&#13;
Mrs. Young Wins In Chicago.&#13;
*: Chicago—Mr*. Ella Flagg Young,&#13;
•wperintendent of schools, whose recent&#13;
reai«natdon, tendered because of&#13;
the opposition of a few male members&#13;
*bf :'4be hoard of education, was rejected&#13;
when a public demonstration was&#13;
made In her behalf, is to be absolute&#13;
"boas" of the city's educational ays*&#13;
tern. That its the way Mayor Carter&#13;
H. Harrison put it, following a oonilansnce&#13;
with Mrs. Young.&#13;
^'*4^ftli*s&gt; the superintendent of&#13;
be superintendent in&#13;
to in name—should, in&#13;
sftort, %*&gt; %«s»&gt;of the works," asserted&#13;
the mayor.&#13;
r Bla Money ts Cut Up.&#13;
'''&amp;L Louis—Two million and a half&#13;
?*:&#13;
-v&#13;
dollars, in currency was partly deatroyed&#13;
here at the United States sub-&#13;
^treasury by order of the treasury de-&#13;
°partmeot a t Washington.&#13;
Roles big enough to put a finger&#13;
through ware punched into the notes&#13;
and they were then divided length-&#13;
• .wlsa hy an electric cutter. The notes&#13;
itera goJd and silver certificate* of&#13;
the fs.oOO and $10,000 denomination&#13;
put up In packets of $500,000. About&#13;
Il,500,00&lt;Lof tha $5,000 notes and $1,-&#13;
* .000,000 of the $10,000 were sacrificed.&#13;
fcVs c •» • &gt;'. ;•:-,• -j,; , . .,&#13;
• U ' * • • • . : • • * . . . ' • • •soks Sear Out Mulhall.&#13;
* Waabanspton—J). X. Frawley, employ*&#13;
v .&gt;»&gt;dy-hy. &lt;fca seaass lobby committee to&#13;
*~ ejodH tha books of the National Aaso-&#13;
•Nation of JtfanJifacturara, testified to&#13;
4be committee that between 1903 and&#13;
1913 the Macctetkm; paid $245,000 to&#13;
'Mh Malhatt for letf s4*tiv%.and&#13;
work-"The audit confirmed&#13;
n**y particulars Mulha»rt testt-&#13;
«iony to the oomarrttee. The assorts&#13;
ciOB speat mors) than $«,000,000 in&#13;
those tea years, tor all of its vartou*&#13;
flivtqr- ftpajta*.&#13;
Worth That, Anyway.&#13;
Mr*. Exe— How could you lie so to&#13;
Mr. Dauber about that absurd plctura&#13;
he has at the exhibition. You told him&#13;
his picture was worth the price of&#13;
admission alone.&#13;
Exe—Well, great Scott, the frame&#13;
is worth more than 50 cents, isn't It?"'&#13;
•-Hostou Transcript.&#13;
A pretty design, which may be as&gt;&#13;
plain or as dressy as one desires is&#13;
BLOWN' in this illustration The con&#13;
trasting yoke and the smart iittlt&#13;
tabs holding the sash may be omitied&#13;
if one wishes an extremely plain little&#13;
dress. These add greatly ;o the&#13;
efiect, however, when a more dressy&#13;
appearance is desired. Body of ihp&#13;
dress and sleeve are cut in one. and&#13;
there is a pretty turned back cuff&#13;
Figured crepe is used here, but the&#13;
design is suitable for any favored material.&#13;
The children's dress pattern (G3I0)&#13;
i° cut in sizes 2 to 8 years. Medium&#13;
size requires 2½ ydrds of 36 inch material.&#13;
To procure this pattern send 10 centa&#13;
to "Pattern Department," of this paper.&#13;
Write name and address plainly, ami be&#13;
sure to give size and number ox pattern.&#13;
NO. 6340. SIZE.&#13;
NAME&#13;
TOWN&#13;
STREET AND NO.&#13;
STATE&#13;
GIRL'S DRESS.&#13;
This little dress shows the stylish&#13;
low-belted effect which is the newest&#13;
thing in children's fashions. The shori&#13;
skirt is kilted and the blouse Is fulle&lt;-&#13;
slightly into the stitched belt.&#13;
A long or short sleeve may be used&#13;
and the shield may be worn or omitted.&#13;
A patent leather belt may replace&#13;
the one of the material if preferred.&#13;
Serge, linen, pique and cotton&#13;
or wool ratine can all be used with&#13;
this design effectively.&#13;
Girl's dress pattern (6355) Is cut in&#13;
sizes 4 to 12 years. Medium size re&#13;
quires 2% yards of 36 inch material&#13;
To to '' Ppartotecrunr e Dtehpias rtpmatetnetr,n" osefn tdh i1s0 p caepnetrs. sWurreit et on agmivee jalnsed aandddr nesusm pbleari nolyf , paanttder bne.&#13;
NO. 6366.&#13;
NAMK&#13;
TOWN— ;.&#13;
8TXSBT AND NO...&#13;
VTATes**** • • • • • • • « •*•! • • • « • • ess* • • • • »••••**&#13;
His Individual Cloak.&#13;
A gentleman in a crub in Grand Rap&#13;
id*Y Mich., has formed the hopeless&#13;
and harmful habit of taking too much&#13;
to drink—alcoholtcaily speaking—before&#13;
he went home every evening;&#13;
"How does he know what thus to&#13;
go home?" asked a stranger In the&#13;
club one night&#13;
"It's this way,1* exclaimed a-mem&#13;
bar. "He goes to the head of thai long&#13;
flight of stairs leading to the street&#13;
it he falls down them, ha knows it's&#13;
time to-go home."—Popular Magnates&#13;
Adapted for It.&#13;
l«% » dec* of a* girl.*&#13;
ten she'ought to be able to get&#13;
in the ewlm."&#13;
TT&#13;
The average woman Je more apt to.&#13;
worry about her complexion than&#13;
about hef conscience.&#13;
Foley Kidney Will Sscattd&#13;
becausethey arc a good honestfnedicine&#13;
that cannot help but heal kid-*&#13;
ney and bladder ailments and ufmary&#13;
irregularities, rf they axe once'lakea&#13;
into the system. Try them now&#13;
for positive and permanent help*&#13;
WATERY BLISTERS ON FACE&#13;
Smithville, Ind.—-"Six months ago&#13;
our baby girl, one year old, had a f"w&#13;
red pimples come on her face wh;co&#13;
gradually spread causing her face To&#13;
become very irritated and a fiery reu&#13;
color. The pimples on the child's face&#13;
were at first small watery blisters, just&#13;
a small blotch on the skin. She kent&#13;
scratching at this until in a few days&#13;
her whole cheeks were fiery red color&#13;
and instead of the little blisters tne&#13;
skin was cracked and scaly looking&#13;
and seemed to itch and burn very&#13;
much.&#13;
"We used a number of remedie?&#13;
which seemed to give relief for a shorr&#13;
time then leave her face worse than&#13;
ever. Finally we got a cake of CuUcura&#13;
Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment.&#13;
I washed the child's face with&#13;
very warm water and Cuticura Soap&#13;
then applied the Cuticura Ointment&#13;
very lightly. After doing this about&#13;
three times a day the itching and&#13;
burning seemed entirely gone in two&#13;
days' time. Inside of two weeks' time&#13;
her face seemed well. That was eight&#13;
months ago and there has been no return&#13;
of the trouble." (Signed) Mr*.&#13;
A. K. Wooden, Nov. 4, 1912.&#13;
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of eaon&#13;
free.wtth 32-p. Skin Book. Address posecard&#13;
"Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston."—Adv.&#13;
Too Much Like Slaughter.&#13;
It is the habit of the blackcock to&#13;
strut and fight- with his rivals in an&#13;
open arena, while the gray hens sit&#13;
round as queens .of the tournament.&#13;
The Russian sportsman builds a rough&#13;
hut of boughs right on the spot, whioh&#13;
does not seem to scare the birds.&#13;
Then he sleeps there and waits till&#13;
the tournament begins in the morning,&#13;
when he may blaze away at any&#13;
of the coeks except the old one, whose&#13;
death causes the spot to be deserted.&#13;
An English traveler in Russia says&#13;
that he knew of Russians who had&#13;
shot five or B!X cocks at one place several&#13;
mornings running, but having&#13;
bagged one himself, he never had the&#13;
heart to kill another.—Chicago News.&#13;
Watch Your Colts For Coughs, Colds and Distemper, and at the Stat symptoms of muf&#13;
stusucUh waielmd elnat , ex*U-ivuem esem, all doses ut that wonderful remedy, now the)&#13;
SPOHN'8 DISTEMPER COMPOUND&#13;
60 oenu and I! a bottle; M and f 10 the do*ea_an/ drafglat,&#13;
dealer.&#13;
_ &lt;1"H"I of&#13;
or delWered by BPOltN MEDICAL CO.,&#13;
CbeaaUU and Bacteriologist*, GoMben, In&lt;L„ 17. 8. A .&#13;
W. L. DOUGLAS&#13;
*3.oo $ 3t50 &lt;4..do&#13;
»4.50 AND $fi.oo&#13;
SHOES&#13;
MEN AND WOMEN&#13;
*Mt toys' 8*0*1 In tht World&#13;
12.00, $2.50 and 93.00&#13;
Bxaaa m i n t s nr i m&#13;
lOASEJOITBBST C aKtXATXAXLB. 0M7O V$8 T»H«X *&#13;
AK*k.o Tt Msaro aitsM ule rr atso wahooawx sr o*&#13;
W.L.boMla»$S.M,|4.eOaDd S4.60&#13;
"MM. Jatt an fOM (a ntylit, St • • !&#13;
wear as ether Hake* eewtlag $e.00 te $7.OS — the&#13;
ealf dUfertare It the erlre. Khoe* In all&#13;
leetkers, etjrlea and •hapes to unit evtrffeedjr.&#13;
If yen eoald vliit W. L. Doaf las large faeferlee&#13;
at Breektaa, lam., sad tee for joirself hew&#13;
earefniiy W. L. Domrlaa sheet are made, jren&#13;
weali then nnderataad why they are warranted te&#13;
i t hetter, leek tietter, held their nhape and wear lonffer&#13;
than any ether make for the price.&#13;
If W. I.. Dooclaj inoreare not for trnle la yonr Tldnliy,&#13;
order cttre^t from th* factory. Sbo«s for erery iiietn-&#13;
e. .a^v.n, ^ea. .i -^^W^.t.e.M- 0 ^ fIr**e eo. f w111?» tittm*i lnj.» r a1t aiilMl er»iotreus,i b«ai PCwMroeUl rkoieota, Tpoltswtadnle DSeoen tirhUats Wna.mL.e ^!•S S^Sf^J ithaorwe myoonae yh oonw y tooii ro rfdoeortw beya rm. all, and why you oan stamped otube bottoaa* W. f4. 0MM«lt«a. Ml aparti Street. Sreektea,&#13;
TASS MO&#13;
SMSSTItUTt&#13;
The Lord loves a cheerful giver, and&#13;
everybody loves a cheerful loser.&#13;
Naturally.&#13;
"This is a hosiery establishment."&#13;
"1 suppose that is why they seem to&#13;
be stocking up."&#13;
Cheap Daylight Job.&#13;
A girl from the country who had recently&#13;
come to town to work and who&#13;
was busy all day went to a dentist one&#13;
evening to have him extract a tooth&#13;
which had been troubling her. She&#13;
asked him what he would charge for.&#13;
the "operation".'""'&#13;
"Five dollars with gas, $2 without,"&#13;
was the answer.&#13;
"Oh," said the girl, "then I'll drop in&#13;
tomorrow and have it out by daylight."&#13;
The Caller.&#13;
The Caller—How's dear little Fido?&#13;
The Hostess—Nicely, thank you.&#13;
"And the children?"&#13;
"Bless me, I forgot to ask— the&#13;
nurse."—Cleveland Plain Dealer.&#13;
After a minister has preached his&#13;
congregation to sleep the sermon is&#13;
followed by a great religious awakening.&#13;
Nothing Hard About Task.&#13;
It was not without just cause that&#13;
Mr. Gladstone's name was given to&#13;
the handy "Gladstone Bag." The&#13;
grand old man was master of every detail&#13;
of the art of packing. At a country&#13;
house they were discussing at&#13;
breakfast the right way to pack a&#13;
sponge bag when the sponge had&#13;
been used and was constantly waterlogged.&#13;
Mr. Gladstone, who apparently&#13;
had been wholly absorbed in his&#13;
morning's correspondence, suddenly&#13;
closed the discussion by informing the&#13;
party that they were all wrong. "The&#13;
only proper method," said he, "is to&#13;
wrap It in your bath towel and stamp&#13;
upon it Then put it in your sponge&#13;
bag. You will find it perfectly dry."&#13;
South African creameries produce&#13;
8,000,000 pounds of butter yearly.&#13;
Both.&#13;
She—I am at liberty to marry now.&#13;
He—All right. If you have the liberty,&#13;
then I'll get the license.&#13;
Wanted to Make a Killing,&#13;
A drill sergeant was drilling the recruit&#13;
squad in the use of the rifle.&#13;
Everything went smoothly until blank&#13;
cartridges were distributed. The recruits&#13;
were instructed to load their&#13;
pieces and stand at the "ready," and&#13;
then the sergeant gave the command:&#13;
"Fire at will!" Private Lunn was puzzled.&#13;
He lowered his gun. "Which&#13;
one is Will?" he asked.&#13;
Waiting for the Spur.&#13;
Maud—So he's been calling on you&#13;
regularly for ten years. Why do you&#13;
suppose he hasn't proposed?&#13;
Beatriz—Oh, you see, he's the sort&#13;
of man who always does things on the&#13;
spur of the moment.—Judge.&#13;
Its Kind.&#13;
"I suppose that Indian scalping mel*&#13;
odrama 1B a thriller."&#13;
"Well, it is somewhat hair-raising."&#13;
Horrors.&#13;
"Have the Jinxes a family skeleton?"&#13;
"Yes, and she's wearing one of&#13;
these silhouette gowns, too."&#13;
Driven to It.&#13;
"My husband doesn't care for grand&#13;
opera."&#13;
"But I notice he applauds vigorously."&#13;
"He does that to keep awake."&#13;
Cab Humor.&#13;
Qld Lady—Does your horse ever&#13;
shy at motors? — - —-&#13;
Cabby—Lor' bless yez, no, lady; 'e&#13;
didn't even shy when railway trains&#13;
fust come in.—Punch.&#13;
Important Question.&#13;
The old-fashioned farmer, who liked&#13;
nothing more than to dicker, bobs up&#13;
now and then rub elbows with the&#13;
moderns.&#13;
In a department store recently one&#13;
of the old-fashioned kind approached&#13;
the clerk and inquired:&#13;
"How much are you asking for rub*&#13;
ber boots today?"&#13;
Then, when he was told the price,&#13;
he looked wise and queried:&#13;
"And how much are you get tin'?"&#13;
Does not come from exercise alone,;&#13;
but also from the food one&#13;
eats. ,&#13;
For real strength there is no bet'&#13;
ter food than&#13;
• *l*^&gt;'&#13;
moaBSl&#13;
Determine* Dfreotien .of Sous*.&#13;
A patent has bean smitad aa ap&#13;
paratus tor daterafol&amp;f the direottor&#13;
of sources -of sounds by dividing the&#13;
soon4 wavrta a a * tha* receiving tost&#13;
M l that th* othar.&#13;
r* *&#13;
• " . ' • £ •&#13;
e-Nut s A breakfast dish of Grape-&#13;
Nuts and cream is the regular&#13;
morning custom of a mighty host&#13;
who know the value of right food*&#13;
Being partially, predigcited,&#13;
Grape-Nuts is ouicUy converted&#13;
into strength for body and brain—&#13;
the power to "do things."&#13;
u7hm'9 a Aagsofi M J -1&#13;
-&#13;
i&#13;
f&#13;
i&#13;
5&#13;
t&#13;
I&#13;
tf&#13;
&gt;*.&#13;
. •*•£$«&#13;
• ; • , -f ft&#13;
* » ' • &gt;&#13;
*&lt;enr&#13;
J' ;i &gt;: * c&#13;
,' .&#13;
'aatanixvw^Mn t n 'tuntf. '\r&gt;- —&gt;!*•* &gt;«». * » « W . • * » , v j « r - - - . 'r.- ft- 4&lt;n~u mmmw^mtrvrnftm-&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
i &lt; v&#13;
•f1&#13;
:f&#13;
i OUR&#13;
Boys School Suits&#13;
Stookbridge, Mioli. p&#13;
are the best wearing suits&#13;
made—Strong woolen cloths&#13;
—Finely sewed&#13;
New Fall Ones Now In&#13;
Tans&#13;
Browns&#13;
Grays&#13;
Blues&#13;
We will send 2 or 3 suits on approval,&#13;
postpaid ?-*-'&gt;•&#13;
W. J . Dancer &amp; Company&#13;
The Great Serial Story, "The Daughter of&#13;
David Kerr," Begins in This Issue. Read it.&#13;
~&#13;
• • " * &amp; * $ •&#13;
At Detroit&#13;
Sept. 15-20&#13;
- ¾ Ay Michigan&#13;
State Fair Mammoth Exposition&#13;
Of the Wolverine&#13;
State's Industrial&#13;
And Agricultural&#13;
Interests&#13;
$100,000 In Premiums and Purses&#13;
Some of the many Interesting Attractions:&#13;
&gt;m%&#13;
mm&#13;
Li&#13;
CONQ1&#13;
Giant T:&#13;
VEST OF THE AIR. Korn's&#13;
factor Biplane will carry&#13;
fassengefi on daily trips to the clouds.&#13;
racticability of the air machine at&#13;
last demonstrated,&#13;
iastructke.&#13;
Thrilling and&#13;
HORSE SHOW. All the spectacular&#13;
features of the Eastern Show Rings.&#13;
Semsational feats of horsemanship.&#13;
High steppers. Chariot Contests.&#13;
Something worth while every evening.&#13;
AUTO RACES. Most powerful&#13;
machines. World's most famous&#13;
pilots. Oldfield, Mulford, Burman,&#13;
Tetziaft, Disbrow, Endicott. Competitions,&#13;
and not merely, exhibitions.&#13;
Electrical timing Device* used Insuring&#13;
authentic time.&#13;
S P E C I A L A T T R A C T I O N S .&#13;
WORTHAM &amp; ALLEN'S enormous&#13;
circus. No fakes. Clean, wholesome&#13;
entertainment. Music by WEBER'S&#13;
Prize band every Afternoon and&#13;
Evening. Thrilling fireworks display.&#13;
Live stock competitions and parade.&#13;
Gigantic exhibit of Michigan game&#13;
birds in wooded surroundings.&#13;
RACING PROGRAM. Grand Circuit&#13;
Races. With $40,000 in purses.&#13;
World's greatest Pacers and Trotters.&#13;
Foremost Reinsmen, "Pop" Geers,&#13;
Murphy, Cox and many others.&#13;
ACCOMMODATIONS. T e n t e d&#13;
City with all Sleeping Comforts and&#13;
Properly Policed. Hospital and Rest&#13;
Tents for, the women folks and little&#13;
ones.&#13;
Wrttt t* 501 BOWIM BaiUing, Dttroit, Car Frarivm LMU *wl fertks* leieie»n&gt;a.&#13;
.Plan Your Vacation In Detroit at the&#13;
Michigan State Fair&#13;
Sept 15-20, 1913&#13;
Vlicli&amp;aifs (inaicsl&#13;
Local News&#13;
Henry 16ha 111 has accepted a&#13;
position in Ann Arbor.&#13;
Rev. Tkos. Smith of Brighton&#13;
will preach at the N'. Hamburg&#13;
church, Sunday, September 14, at&#13;
three o'clock.&#13;
Mrs. G. W. Teeple and daughter&#13;
Mae will be guests of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Myron Millie on an auto trip&#13;
to Chicago.&#13;
Married at Howell, Wednesday,&#13;
September 10, 1913, Mies Maude&#13;
Campbell of Armada to Mr. Chae.&#13;
Manska of Pinckney, Rev. Wilfrie,&#13;
officiating, Mr. and Mrs, Manska&#13;
will occupy the Colby house on&#13;
Pearl St. Mr. Manska has only recently&#13;
came to Pinckney and has&#13;
made many friends who extend&#13;
congratulations.&#13;
Already the migration of birds&#13;
to their southern haunts during&#13;
the cold term at the north, has&#13;
set in, and as a consequence but&#13;
few robins, blue birds, bob-o-links&#13;
and other species of the feathered&#13;
tribe, are to be seen about tjie&#13;
woods and fields. The blackbirds&#13;
will soon gather in flocks and take&#13;
their departure also. It was notable&#13;
that more robins were seen&#13;
in this section this year than last,&#13;
the scarcity last year being attributed&#13;
to the wholesale slaughter in&#13;
the rice fields* of the souib. At&#13;
Atlanta, Ga., the market was&#13;
glutted with them, the birds bringing&#13;
only a cent apiece.&#13;
&amp;* Fair's Ambition&#13;
A&#13;
By FRED POSTAL,&#13;
E x - p r e s i d e n t of t h e Michigan&#13;
State Fair.&#13;
PERFECT working board of di&#13;
rectors, headed by President \&gt;&#13;
D. Aitken, is striving to givi&gt;&#13;
Michigan its greatest State Fair tins&#13;
year. It •might be well to enumerate&#13;
some of the ambitious objects the pros&#13;
ent Michigan State Fair administration&#13;
is attempting to accomplish.&#13;
A few of these wor thy- objects --a'rV&#13;
as follows:&#13;
Make the Michigan State Fair the&#13;
greatest educational power for good In&#13;
the Wolverine State.&#13;
Make it the people's convention,&#13;
where all classes can come, enjoy and&#13;
instruct themselves, paying only a&#13;
nominal entrance fee for maintenance&#13;
and upkeep of the grounds and buildings.&#13;
"Help the farmer and city man to&#13;
solve some of the practical living problems&#13;
which face him in his daily routine&#13;
of life.&#13;
Make it not only the biggest but the&#13;
best exposition In the world.&#13;
Make it the greatest advertisement&#13;
that the Wolverine State has by showing&#13;
the outside visitors its wonderful&#13;
Industrial and agricultural resources.&#13;
SURE OF "POP" GEERS.&#13;
Veteran Reinsman Will Appear In&#13;
State Fair Races.&#13;
Of course' no Michigan State Fair&#13;
horse race would be quite complete&#13;
without the genial face of old "Pop'*&#13;
Geers, America's foremost reinsman.&#13;
and the race committee is glad to announce&#13;
that this light harness institution&#13;
will compete for the rich grand&#13;
circuit meeting purses this year Sept.&#13;
15 to 20.&#13;
Every year brings the prediction that&#13;
"youth will be served" and a younger&#13;
man will snatch the crown the old&#13;
gentleman has worn so long, but at&#13;
the close of the season his name invariably&#13;
tops the money winners.&#13;
Ed ("Pop") Geers has inaugurated a&#13;
system of training which is distinctly&#13;
his own. and his record bears out the&#13;
belief that it is a mighty good one.&#13;
The old master has the uncanny art of&#13;
selecting green horses which invariably&#13;
turn out to be stars. He literally&#13;
seems to smell n future big line campaiffiior.&#13;
Old "POT:V latest sensation, Rirney&#13;
Giblis. will be K.M&gt;U at the Fnir this&#13;
year. :ind i.\ hen To blir fall classic is&#13;
over it Is •: safe prediction th;it the&#13;
name of (ieers will be mntmg those&#13;
drivers prominently present.&#13;
WILL ACTUALLY&#13;
CARRY_PEOPLE&#13;
Korn's Giant Biplane at the&#13;
State Fair.&#13;
LATEST FRENCH MODEL.&#13;
Demonatratee Practicability of A i r Machine—&#13;
Aviator Has Startled the People&#13;
of Two Continents With Daring&#13;
Exhibitions—Will Give Daily Flight*&#13;
Korn, the aviator who has thrilled&#13;
the people of two continents with his&#13;
daring work up in the clouds, has betm&#13;
secured to give daily exhibitions at the&#13;
Michigan State Fair, Sept. 15 to 20.&#13;
Korn and his giant Benoist tractor&#13;
biplane have gone the other bird men&#13;
better in carrying a passenger aloft in&#13;
each flight. It is Korn's idea to show&#13;
State Fair visitors that the biplane aa&#13;
a vehicle of travel is a practical one.&#13;
For years people have contended&#13;
that the air craft would never be perfected&#13;
"to~tj*e extent that any but the&#13;
pilot couldfJTcarried and he only with&#13;
extreme danger. This year, however,&#13;
Korn has startled the scientific world&#13;
with the announcement that with his&#13;
powerful machine he can.take, a com&#13;
panion on every flight. This does not&#13;
mean when the air conditions are per&#13;
feet, but he asserts it can be done under&#13;
any sort of reasonable climatic&#13;
circumstances.&#13;
Mr. Korn asserts that the people are&#13;
tired of seeing bird men glide around a&#13;
few feet from the ground, barely skimming&#13;
over the housetops. What they&#13;
want is a practical demonstration of&#13;
air machines. At first they interested&#13;
them as wonderful,scientific toys, frail&#13;
and fragile. Now you have to do something&#13;
more to hold their gaze.&#13;
The wonderful Benoist biplane is the&#13;
latest craft turned out by French experts&#13;
and is so strong that it is as neat&#13;
independent of weather conditions as&#13;
any device which travels the air could&#13;
possibly be.&#13;
Although Mr. Korn has participated&#13;
in all the leading air contests in the&#13;
United States and Europe, still he has&#13;
never been hurt—that is, seriously.&#13;
He is carefulness itself when preparing&#13;
for a flight, refusing to go until&#13;
every,little delicate adjustment is perfect&#13;
and his motor hitting in a manner&#13;
which he knows will see him safely&#13;
through his exhibition.&#13;
G en era 1 Man ager~ ©teki&#13;
Korn because he was conJMhMt tfeilfct&#13;
would do what he said ^fetf;&#13;
actually carry passenger^,, up&#13;
startle the crowds with his daring&#13;
feats in the air.&#13;
H. f . SIGtER M. 0« C, L, S1QLER M. D.&#13;
DRS. SIGLER •&amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons.&#13;
All calls promptly attended to&#13;
day or night. Office on Main&#13;
Street.&#13;
PINCKNEY, - MICH.&#13;
&gt; ,&lt; ' &gt;'&#13;
#,;F—.&#13;
Night Horse Show.&#13;
Remember that there is some novel&#13;
event staged every evening at the&#13;
Hone Show. All the big eastern show&#13;
ring thrillers on tap.&#13;
First Botanical Garden,&#13;
Matthaeu* Sylvaticna established the&#13;
world's Ant botanical garden at Saleroom&#13;
Italy, in 1800.&#13;
GOING TO BUY A PIAM&#13;
OR SEWING M A C H U&#13;
YES?&#13;
SEE L. R. WILLIAMS.&#13;
•GREGORY&#13;
MtifHe saves y'on money on hi^h&#13;
grade pianos.&#13;
i&#13;
Grand Trunk Tlmt Tablt-&#13;
For the convenience of our readers&#13;
Trains East Trains West&#13;
No. 28—8:39 a. m. No. 27—10:23 a. m,&#13;
No. 80—4:49 p. m. No. 29—7:12 p. m.&#13;
•&#13;
• • * » - ' .</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch September 11, 1913</text>
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                <text>September 11, 1913 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1913-09-11</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="11212">
                <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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          <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="37359">
              <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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          <description>Enter Search Text that is always hidden except to edit.</description>
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              <text>Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan Thursday, September 18, 1913 No. 38&#13;
A Breath of the West&#13;
We received the following letter&#13;
from Chas. Grimes one day this&#13;
week and as Mr. Grimes was a&#13;
former Pinckney boy we thought&#13;
his friends here would be as interested&#13;
in the letter as we were&#13;
and so are taking the liberty of&#13;
publishing it.&#13;
Dear Caverly:— «&#13;
A change having come over the&#13;
spirit of my dreams, the new&#13;
school year finds me in northern&#13;
Wyoming, superintending the&#13;
schools of Gillette, the:^ounty seat&#13;
of Campbell county, 500 miles&#13;
north-west of Republican City,&#13;
my location the past three years,&#13;
and about half as far from our&#13;
home, on Willow Ranch, South&#13;
Dakota.&#13;
Gillette is a town of 1000 people&#13;
in life and habits, a frontier town,&#13;
in a typical ranch and range&#13;
country, where cattle and sheep,&#13;
the chief products, are counted by&#13;
the thousand.&#13;
I have a splended new school&#13;
building, just built, modem and&#13;
up to date in every respect, including&#13;
flowing water thoughout,&#13;
drinking fountains in the halls, and&#13;
a nice gymnasium.&#13;
Mrs. Grimes and our little Mae&#13;
will remain on the ranch the&#13;
greater part of the school year, so&#13;
that we may be able to "prove up",&#13;
next year, fulfil our obligations to&#13;
the government, and its homestead&#13;
laws.&#13;
The summer was a strenuous&#13;
-one for Mrs. Grimes and myself&#13;
as we tore down the most of our&#13;
buildings, aud built a new house&#13;
and barn, a h a l f mile away." I n&#13;
addition to this, building fences&#13;
and taking care of our crops, kept&#13;
us "going some".&#13;
We have as pleasant a home as&#13;
we have seen in the homestead&#13;
country. From the door, we can&#13;
see the city of Chadron, Nebr.,&#13;
eighteen miles to the south, and,&#13;
both east west of Chadron, for&#13;
seventy-five miles, we . have a&#13;
beautiful view of Pine Ridge,&#13;
that lost rauge of the Rockies,&#13;
which wanders eastward 150 miles&#13;
through northern Nebraska, until&#13;
it is finally lost, in% the desolate&#13;
Sand Hill Region.&#13;
Lloyd was elected to a position&#13;
in the graded school* of Heildreth,&#13;
southern Nebr., last spring, but&#13;
resigned, that he might spend the&#13;
next year in ths State Normal, at&#13;
Chadron, where he has been&#13;
studying during, the summer&#13;
and at the same time, be will hold&#13;
as he has held daring the summer,&#13;
a position in the office of the city&#13;
Y. M. C. A /&#13;
One year ago to-day in response&#13;
to a message, I hurriedly left for&#13;
Pinckney to see oar sick mother.&#13;
Since that day, fate has donbly&#13;
afflicted ns, hr.3 enshrouded onr&#13;
lives with deeper and darker&#13;
shadows. But, though the last&#13;
link of the chain, w^icb, though&#13;
far away, has ever bound our&#13;
.hearts to the dear old home of&#13;
oar earlier years, has finally been&#13;
severed, in the death of onr father,&#13;
in our hearts there shall ever live&#13;
a deep affection, which not even&#13;
time can dim, for the old home&#13;
town, the town of onr birth and&#13;
bojrhcod years.&#13;
Yours sincerely,&#13;
"' . OHAS. L. GBIMES.&#13;
I Want The Dollars?&#13;
The following is taken from the&#13;
FowlerviHe Review und is well&#13;
worth the space given here;&#13;
"It is not uncommon to see a&#13;
man searching for money he nas&#13;
dropped along the road side. In&#13;
fact, iu the past men have been&#13;
know to take up several securely&#13;
fastened plauks from a sidewalk i &gt;&#13;
get a dime that had dropped&#13;
through a crack. Half an hour's&#13;
time and the damage ta the plank&#13;
are sacrificed for the sake of getting&#13;
the dime.&#13;
"Not a week passes that special&#13;
bargains are not offered in this&#13;
paper. Not only dimes, but dollar's&#13;
may be saved by taking advantage&#13;
of these bargains. In this age&#13;
of intelligent advertising, merchants&#13;
haveJearned that they get the&#13;
confidence of their patrons by&#13;
making a clear statement in black&#13;
and white of the bargains they&#13;
have to offer. The merchants&#13;
who advertises has something a&#13;
little better or a liLtle cheaper to&#13;
offer you. He is the one that&#13;
saves yon money.&#13;
South Marion&#13;
Guy Blair.and wife spent Sunday&#13;
at the home of his parents in&#13;
Unadilla.&#13;
Mrs. Irving Hart and son Meivin&#13;
of Chubbs Corners speat Sunday&#13;
at the home of John Carr.&#13;
Mrs. Clyde Line and son spent&#13;
the week end with her sister Mrs.&#13;
Havens of I03C0,&#13;
Miss Mae Brogan is spending&#13;
the weekwith her parents here,&#13;
Walter Dinkel of Detroit spent&#13;
Sunday with his parents, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. V. G. DinkeL&#13;
P. Smith and family of West&#13;
Marion spent Sunday at the home&#13;
of Will Bland.&#13;
Wm. Buhl and family of Gregory&#13;
and Fred Burgess aud family&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of Geo.&#13;
Blaud.&#13;
West Marion&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wylie are&#13;
the prond parents of a son, born&#13;
September 13.&#13;
W. Hath, W. Vines, P. HSmith&#13;
and W. B. Miller attended&#13;
church at Howell Sunday.&#13;
Jesse apd Foster White are&#13;
mm&#13;
working at Flint.&#13;
The L. A. S. meets this afternoon&#13;
at the home of Mrs. Hnbbel.&#13;
Mrs. W. B. Miller and daughter&#13;
visited friends' near" Plainfield,&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. A. M. Rockwood was a&#13;
gnest of Mrs. E. Catrell the last of&#13;
last week.&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Roy Boweu spent last week at&#13;
the home of his uncle, Dr. Wylie,&#13;
of Dexter. ,&#13;
Mrs. Roy Placeway and daughter&#13;
Eleanor spent part of last&#13;
week with Detroit relatives at&#13;
Portage Lake.&#13;
Martin Greiner of Detroit visited&#13;
his people here last week.&#13;
Paulino Gardner of S' Dckbrid^e&#13;
is visiting her grandparents, Mr.&#13;
aud Mrs. E. Sprout,&#13;
Mrs. A. C. Roche and daughter&#13;
and Mike Lavey, wife and son&#13;
Lorenzo of Pinckney \ laited at&#13;
the Jiome of E. T. McClear Sunday.&#13;
A. G. Wilson returned borne&#13;
Saturday after a ten days visit&#13;
with relatives in Detroit Rnd other&#13;
southera points.&#13;
Julia Wvlie returned to her home&#13;
in Dexter Sunday after a few days&#13;
visit with relatives here.&#13;
Mrs. Fred Schrotzberger visited&#13;
her, people in Detroit the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Will Roche is cutting cora for&#13;
J, L. Roche of Pinckney.&#13;
Mrs. J..H. Connors is spending&#13;
the week at the home of Fred&#13;
Wylie.&#13;
Mary Greiner and Clare Ledwidge&#13;
spent feunday at the home&#13;
of Chris Brogan of S, Marion.&#13;
Asel Carpenter is spending the&#13;
week with his people here.&#13;
Liam Ledwidge' who has been&#13;
racing his horse at Ithaca end Mt.&#13;
Pleasant came home Friday. He&#13;
carried off third money at_ both&#13;
places.&#13;
Mrs. R. M. Ledwidge and son&#13;
Hubert and Mrs. A. C. Roche and&#13;
daughter Betty Mae were Pinckney&#13;
visitors Thursday.&#13;
$&amp;X&amp;88X£3tt«8rc8S&amp;X&amp;^^ Coal Coal&#13;
We Have it in Stock&#13;
9*~STRICTLY HIGH GRADE&#13;
Chestnut and S t o v e&#13;
In Hard Coal&#13;
K e n t u c k y and Ohio Soft&#13;
Coal-Tennessee Cannel&#13;
W. Virginia Pocahontas&#13;
T. READ. Pinckney&#13;
KXJi w t V V V V W W&#13;
Second-Hand Bidwell W A N T C O L U M N&#13;
Bean Thresher&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
I have a bargain in a secondhand&#13;
Bidwell bean thresher. This&#13;
machine is in elegant condition&#13;
and some one will get a big bargain.&#13;
R. E. BARRON,&#13;
adv. Howell, Mich.&#13;
Fay your suDBcriptlon this month.&#13;
Did you get that new Fall Hat&#13;
at Monks Bros? Pretty-neat, adv-&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Willis Clark visited&#13;
in Detroit the first of the week.&#13;
Get your fall clothes at Dancer's&#13;
—Stockbridge, you will save&#13;
money. adv.&#13;
Mrs. C. J. Teeple and daughter&#13;
Lois spent Saturday and Sunday&#13;
in Howell.&#13;
H. Gregory of Detroit is visiting&#13;
friends here.&#13;
Mrs. M. Eagon spent the first&#13;
of the week in Jackson.&#13;
S. G. Teeple &amp; Son and George&#13;
"VtmHoia loadecUa.- car load, of&#13;
»&#13;
choice fine wool rams here Tuesday.&#13;
They go to Texas for breeding&#13;
purposes.&#13;
During our recent work among&#13;
the people selling soap we find 57&#13;
per cent of the people are useing&#13;
Flake White, 13 per cent Sunny&#13;
Monday, 10 per cent Lenox soap&gt;&#13;
8 per cent Fels Naptha, 6 per cent&#13;
Qaeen Anne, 3 per cent Galvanic,&#13;
2 per cent Export Borax and 1&#13;
per cent Deans Family, which convinces&#13;
us that we are backing the&#13;
best soap product on the market.&#13;
Our Flake White shipment will be&#13;
ready for distribution next week.&#13;
adv. Monks Bros.&#13;
FOR RENT—Grimes house on Main&#13;
street. A'so good wood and coal&#13;
stove rnd some lurniture tor sale.&#13;
38t3 H. W. Urofoot, Pinckney&#13;
LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN—Red&#13;
and white Durham vearlingj heifer,&#13;
short horns. $5.00 Reward. 36t*&#13;
VVin,Gawley, Pincknay&#13;
FOUND—Hhandkerchief with a am a I&#13;
amount tied in one end. Owner enn&#13;
ing property .^nd paying for (his&#13;
notice.&#13;
Grand Trunk Time Table&#13;
For the convenience of our readers&#13;
Trains East Trains West&#13;
No. 2S—H :39 a. m. No. 27—10:23 a. m.&#13;
No^CO—Mi) p,-nw — Xa.-29=I:1 2-p.-mi&#13;
Second-Hand&#13;
^Steam Engine&#13;
If you want a bargain in a 12&#13;
H. P. Port Huron, come to me. I&#13;
have it and will give it tD you.&#13;
adv, R, E. BARRON, Howell. r asaEataeaeasassi^aeasaeaeaeasatafe^tay&#13;
# so o?o Murphy 6c Jackson&#13;
For Dry Goods, Furnishings, Shoes and Groceries&#13;
North Hamburg&#13;
The Ladies Aid at Mrs. J. D.&#13;
Boylan's was not largely attended,&#13;
on account of the busy time, bat&#13;
those present had a very enjoyable&#13;
time.&#13;
R. C. Haddock transacted business&#13;
in Howell Saturday.&#13;
Albert Ben bam spent Saturday&#13;
and Sunday with his parents.&#13;
Una and Clyde Beonett attend*&#13;
ed the' Tabernacle meettng at&#13;
Howell Sunday.&#13;
_.__ Mrs, Qlara Benham and Robert&#13;
L w H e ^ I o u will tad. at D t t J j f ? ^ ^ SkaaNajd °* M* At-.&#13;
oer's a choice selection o« fill'bor wi*» ovet SunJaJr guests at|&#13;
^ Largest Stpck Lowest Prices&#13;
§ itt.&#13;
NBW PALL. U1NES RECEIVED&#13;
Dress Poplins, Ginghams, Percales, Seersuckers, Outing Flannels, Comfortables,&#13;
Underwear and Hosiery&#13;
Mens and Boys Sweaters&#13;
coats. .110. to 125. adv the home qf Ohas. Sweitzer.&#13;
Ranging from 50c to $4.50 ™&#13;
— # OUR S A T U R D A Y S P E C I A L S&#13;
$1.25 value Bed Blankets&#13;
3 0 c Brooms&#13;
2 5 pounds H. &amp; E. Sugar&#13;
9 8 c&#13;
2 0 c&#13;
$1.35&#13;
Above prices for Sfeturdfty and for Cash Only&#13;
• t&#13;
f&#13;
l&#13;
4-^&#13;
• » ** '&#13;
v,/&#13;
&gt;•'' •&#13;
.'••"J,.' .1 »*&#13;
^i^^i*&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
/ 1&#13;
WATER IN FARMHOUSE TREATING "ASES 0F CH0LERA&#13;
Northwestern Farmer Describes&#13;
His Milkhouse and Tank.&#13;
Walls of Structure Were Built of Stone&#13;
Taken From Field—Floor Has&#13;
Drain In the Center and Is&#13;
Sanitary and Clean.&#13;
(By R. O. WKATHE11STONE.)&#13;
In writing of the grteat..,. changes&#13;
which he made in his farm within a&#13;
t£\v years, a northwestern farmer&#13;
mentions one thing which should interest&#13;
every farmer. The man thus&#13;
describes his milkhouse and water&#13;
tank:&#13;
"A water tank holding 3t&gt; barrels&#13;
has been mounted in the tower of the&#13;
windmill and pip^s laid to the house,&#13;
barn and sheep shed. Below this tank&#13;
and over the purnp was built a stone&#13;
milkhouse. The fank was incorporated&#13;
into the roof of this house as a tower.&#13;
To protect the tank against freezing&#13;
it was hoarded in, leaving an air&#13;
space which was filled with cut straw.&#13;
The outside was papered and shingled.&#13;
This has proven entirely satisfactory.&#13;
"The walls of the milkhouse were&#13;
built of stone, taken from the field,&#13;
laid with their rounded surfaces exposed,&#13;
giving a very pretty effect. The&#13;
lloor, with a drain in the center, is&#13;
cemented, which makes it sanitary&#13;
and easy to keep clean. This house,&#13;
which is thus in direct connection&#13;
Milkhouse and Water Tank,&#13;
with the water supply, is used in separating&#13;
the cream and in churning,1'&#13;
The above is a splendid convenience&#13;
for every one on the farm. The fact&#13;
that there is running water in the&#13;
house, makes bathroom conveniences&#13;
possible, and to say i othing of the&#13;
comfort and saving of labor by having&#13;
water in the kitchen. We call the&#13;
man who thought up the scheme and&#13;
carried it to a successful conclusion,&#13;
~an-44gal farmer;—You can dcpontHtp^&#13;
on it, he is a successful one, too.&#13;
Pigweed.&#13;
Prevent pigweed from going to seed,&#13;
and avoid sowing the seed in grain and&#13;
grass seeds. Frequent and thorough&#13;
cultivation of the seed bed before&#13;
sowing the seed will cheek growth in&#13;
grain fields. Good plowing, thorough&#13;
enttivattoTi, wilh some hand Tineing&#13;
and pulling, will eradicate the weed&#13;
from cultivated crops. It does not&#13;
give serious trouble in fields where&#13;
crops are grown in a good rotation. It&#13;
is most troublesome in gardens, but&#13;
shallow cultivation and hoeing or pulling&#13;
by hand will eradicate it.&#13;
Easy Victim for Sharper. '&#13;
The man who does not read up on&#13;
his business is blind to his own interests,&#13;
and is "an easy victim to the&#13;
sharper who wants to get money without&#13;
giving anything of value in return.&#13;
Making Pastures.&#13;
If the woodland pasture has only a&#13;
few scraggly trees, cut them down.&#13;
They will not pay as timber and they&#13;
only serve to cast shade which retards&#13;
the grass. Make it all pasture&#13;
or a'l wcodlot.&#13;
Signal of Danger.&#13;
As F.oon as a cow shows signs of&#13;
sickness it is the safe thing to stop&#13;
using her milk until an investigation&#13;
has been made.&#13;
Rounding Up Dairy Herd.&#13;
Picking up a promising heifer calf&#13;
wr^erever one is purchasable, is a good,&#13;
inexpensive way to round up a dairy&#13;
herd.&#13;
Ashes at Fertilizer.&#13;
A few- wagon loads of ashes scattered&#13;
anywhere on the farm makes&#13;
an immense amount of difference In&#13;
the crop.&#13;
Prevents Cream Splashing.&#13;
A sheet of paper folded ond pinned&#13;
about the top of the dash churn keeps&#13;
the cream from splashing out.&#13;
* — &gt; • » i . . 1 . . « . . . . .&#13;
Bor.« Food Needed.&#13;
All kiflds of Y^ung fowls need bone&#13;
food. * Neglect this and something is&#13;
bound^to go wrortg with your profits.&#13;
'Jar r&#13;
Make* Gentle Cow.&#13;
cow,&#13;
Tbe*s«*tt«kneife*. become a i gsntle&#13;
Animals Afflicted Should Be Isolated&#13;
a* Completely as Possible—Prevent&#13;
Spread of Disease.&#13;
Immediately disinfect the premises&#13;
thoroughly. Separate the well hogs&#13;
from the sick ones, and divide the&#13;
healthy anlmalB in two or more&#13;
groups and isolate them as completely&#13;
as possible. All carcasses of hogs&#13;
which have died from cholera should&#13;
be burned or burled deeply and covered&#13;
with quicklime.&#13;
As the germs of cholera gain access&#13;
to the Bystem through feeding, the&#13;
way of prevention is well marked.&#13;
Alt feeding troughs and utensils&#13;
should be thoroughly* cleaned and&#13;
fumigated, the yards plowed and preferably&#13;
planted with forage crop&#13;
In season. Feed sparingly, using a&#13;
laxative, easily digested and nourishing&#13;
ration. When hog cholera&#13;
serum is used the hogs treated&#13;
should rjjmain together in the infected&#13;
yards. The possible introduction&#13;
of the disease into the pens by&#13;
people, dogs, birds, etc., should be&#13;
guarded against especially if hog cholera&#13;
is in the neighborhood.&#13;
Whenever it is necessary for a person&#13;
to enter a hog lot when the disease&#13;
is present the shoes should be&#13;
thoroughly cleaned and disinfected.&#13;
Persons taking care of diseased animals&#13;
should take necessary measures&#13;
to prevent the spread of the disease,&#13;
and see that others take similar precautions.&#13;
WAY OF SQUARING A CORNER&#13;
Infallible Method Given for Finding&#13;
Perfect Square on Corner Wmjre&#13;
Some Doubt Exists.&#13;
Sometimes we are in doubt as to&#13;
whether a corner is square, even after&#13;
we have had the steel square on it.&#13;
Sometimes the square has been&#13;
knocked out of square, and many other&#13;
things that could cause the corner&#13;
to be wrong.&#13;
To get the square by this method,&#13;
measure off six feet from the corner&#13;
Color of Eggs.&#13;
The first eggs of the brown-egg layers&#13;
are generally of a good color, but&#13;
as the hen increases her laying she&#13;
decreases the amount of color, owing&#13;
to the gradual loss of the pigment&#13;
which colors the eggs.&#13;
on one side and eight feet on the&#13;
other side. Then lay a ten-foot measuring&#13;
pole, as shown in the drawing,&#13;
and adjuBt the corner until the arrows&#13;
point at 1. and 10.&#13;
BG sure and have the arrows pointing&#13;
on the same side of the measuring&#13;
pole. This method is infallible.&#13;
Testing Eggs.&#13;
During incubation eggs should be&#13;
tested on the seventh and fourteenth&#13;
days. *At the first test the air cell&#13;
should measure about a quarter of&#13;
an inch, on the tenth day a half inch,&#13;
fifteenth day five-eighths inch, nineteenth&#13;
day three-quarters inch. The&#13;
measurement should be taken from&#13;
the middle of the large end.&#13;
Effective for Vermin.&#13;
When whitewashing the inside of&#13;
the poultry house don't forget .o add a&#13;
little crude carbolic acid. It makes&#13;
the wash more effective for vermin.&#13;
Poultry Grains.&#13;
Rye is the poorest of poultry grains&#13;
Corn and buckwheat should be fed&#13;
sparingly. Wheat leads as a well balanced&#13;
food, and barley is a close second.&#13;
Feeding too much buckwheat&#13;
has a tendency to produce a white&#13;
skin and light colored yolks in eggs.&#13;
Profitable Duck*&#13;
The duck generallylaya at'night It&#13;
thrives best on semfsuceulent food.&#13;
Strong, vigorous ottwean be successfully&#13;
bred jtottur ytttrs of age. When&#13;
properly f|| at eight months of age&#13;
green ducks will weigh nine pounds&#13;
per pair. The best inHteea for green&#13;
ducks is given about May 1.&#13;
Counting Profit*.&#13;
in counting the profits from your&#13;
flock, do not fait to count the value&#13;
of the fat Jamb* killed during* the&#13;
twelve months for family use and&#13;
the high value of all the manure.&#13;
•**•&#13;
fitook Oats for Stray*. --, L&#13;
It payi to stack oata for the straw.&#13;
The straw is of much better quality&#13;
and will of course keep better stacked&#13;
than if threshed.&#13;
Physicians Recommend Castoria&#13;
CASTOEIA his met with pronounced favor on the part of physicians, pharmaceutical&#13;
societies andsmedical authorities. It is used by physioians with&#13;
results most gratifying. The extended use of Castoria is unquestionably^the&#13;
result of three facts: fa**—The indisputable evidence that it is harmlessi&#13;
Second—That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, but assimilates&#13;
the foods Third—H is an agreeable and perfect substitute for Castor OiL&#13;
It is absolutely safe. It does not contain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotio&#13;
and does not stupefy. It is unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman's Drops, Godfrey's&#13;
Cordial, etc. This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Our duty, however,&#13;
is to expose danger and record the means of advancing health. The day&#13;
for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end/ To&#13;
our knowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by&#13;
regulating the system—not by stupefying it—and our readers are entitled to&#13;
the information.—Hall's Journal of Health* •&#13;
Letters from Prominent Physicians&#13;
addressed to Chas. He Fletcher*&#13;
\&#13;
• * / , .&#13;
1¾&#13;
Utitomi&#13;
ALCQJloL-3 PEK CENT.&#13;
A\foelab!e Pr-cparalion forAssimilailn^&#13;
licFoodandRegulatin*&#13;
U ic S toinachs artlBowelsof&#13;
$$5Mto»REN&#13;
Promotes DigestioruCkerrur&#13;
ness and Rest.Contalns neither&#13;
Opiinu.Morphine norMucraL&#13;
N O T N A R C O T I C ,&#13;
' • ! • • • - i &lt;m • * • • ^ o * " • • • • »&#13;
Plmiptii Scedm&#13;
jfix.Se/uta *&#13;
M'M/cS£sjtuiseSeal&#13;
•&#13;
ihpermiot» .&#13;
DiiurtmncieSm*&#13;
li'j.vt Seid'&#13;
ClmifitdSlmr •&#13;
Jlia&amp;jywrnofij' taw.&#13;
Apcrfecr Remedy for Consflpa&#13;
t ton, Sour Stomach.Dlarrtoea&#13;
Worms .ConvulsionsJFcvBnsa&#13;
ucs3audLoss OF SLEEP.&#13;
facsimile Signature of&#13;
THE CENTAUR COMPATQ&amp;&#13;
L NEW YORK.&#13;
Dr. B. Halstead Scott, of Chicago, Ilia., says: "I have prescribed yojir&#13;
Castoria often for infants during my practice, and find it very satisfactory."&#13;
Dr. William Belmont, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: "Your Castoria stands&#13;
first in its class. In my thirty years of practice I can Bay I never have&#13;
found anything that so filled the place."&#13;
' Dr. J. H. Taft, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: "I have used your Castoria and&#13;
*ound it an excellent remedy in my household and private practice for&#13;
many years. The formula is excellent."&#13;
Dr. R. J. Hamlen, of Detroit, Mich., says: "I prescribe your Castoria&#13;
extensively, as X have^ never found anything-to equal i^ for children**&#13;
troubles. I am aware that there are imitations in the field* but I alwayssee&#13;
that my patients get Fletcher's."&#13;
Dr.Wm.J MoCrann, of Omaha, Neb., says: "As the father of thirteen&#13;
Children I certainly know something about your great medicine, and aside&#13;
from my own family experience I have in my years of practice found Castoria&#13;
a popular and efficient remedy in almost every home."&#13;
Dr. J. R. Clausen, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: "The name that your Castoria&#13;
has made for itself in the tens oi' thousands of homeB blessed by the&#13;
presence of children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by the endorse*&#13;
ment of the medical profession, but I, for one, most heartily endorse it and&#13;
believe it an excellent remedy."&#13;
Dr. R. M. Y.Tard, of Kansas City, Mo., says: "Physicians generally do not&#13;
prescribe proprietary preparations, but in the case of Castoria my experience,&#13;
like that of many other physicians, has taught me to make sin exception.&#13;
I prescrlhe-your Castoria In my practice because I have found it&#13;
to be a thoroughly reliable remedy for children's complaints. Any physician&#13;
who has raised a family, as I have, will join me In heartiest recommendation&#13;
of Castoria."&#13;
GENUINE C A S T O R I A ALWAYS&#13;
Bears&#13;
*^os^sV}5 CENTS&#13;
(jTuavanteed under the *oc&#13;
Exact Copy of Wrapper.&#13;
The Kind You Have Always Bought&#13;
In Use For Over 3 0 Years.&#13;
T H B C I N T A U R C O M P A N Y . N K W Y O R K C I T Y ,&#13;
Model of Housefly.&#13;
A housefly "as big as a cat," exhibited,&#13;
at the recent International Congress&#13;
or n.v'gie'iur and Denrograptry&#13;
at Washington, I). C, is now permanently&#13;
on exhibition at the American&#13;
Museum of Natural History. This,&#13;
however, is not. the real thing, but a&#13;
model 15 inches in length and 64,000&#13;
times the size of a living fly. This&#13;
model, the making of which required&#13;
a year of patient labor, is the most&#13;
adequate representation of the external&#13;
anatomy of the common&#13;
house fiy In existence.—Popular Mechanics&#13;
Magazine.&#13;
Managerial Dilemma.&#13;
Friend—What's the matter?&#13;
Theatrical Manager—I'm debating&#13;
w hether to put on a play that-s-recora—&#13;
mended by doctors or one that's ap&#13;
proved by the clergy:—Judge.&#13;
Doubts About It.&#13;
"Jimson is rather a negative sort&#13;
of character, isn't he?"&#13;
"Well, he is a camera fiend."&#13;
, 1 - - .&#13;
THE BEST TREATMENT FOR&#13;
ITCHING SCALPS, DANDRUFF&#13;
AND FALLING HAIR&#13;
To allay itching and irritation of the&#13;
scalp, prevent dry, thin and falling&#13;
hair, remove crusts, scales and dandruff,&#13;
and promote the growth and&#13;
beauty of the hair, the following special&#13;
treatment is most effective, agreeable&#13;
and economical. On retiring,&#13;
comb the hair out straight all around,&#13;
then begin at the side and make a&#13;
parting, gently rubbing Cuticura Ointment&#13;
into the parting* with a bit of&#13;
soft flannel held over the end of the&#13;
finger. Anoint additional partings&#13;
a*bout half an inch apart until the&#13;
whole scalp has been treated, t h r purpose&#13;
being to get the Cuticura Ointment&#13;
on the scalp skin rather than on&#13;
the hair. It is well to place a light&#13;
covering over the hair to protect the&#13;
pillow from possible stain. The next&#13;
morning, shampoo with Cuticura Soap&#13;
and hot water. Shampoos alone may&#13;
be used as often as agreeable, "but&#13;
once or twice a month is generally&#13;
sufficient for this special treatment&#13;
for women's hair.&#13;
Cuticura Soap and* Ointment sold&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post&#13;
eard "Cutietira, Dept. L, Boston."—Adv.&#13;
Wise Chefige.&#13;
5'I understand that your friend, the^—&#13;
fastidious Mr. Blxley, didn't marry hia&#13;
anolady's daughter?" _ :&#13;
. rry'o, he thought better of it and war&#13;
fled ber mother."—Cleveland Plain !&#13;
&gt;fclefi&#13;
^.• * - &lt; , % - •- ; m . l&#13;
Foley Kidney Pills Succeed&#13;
becatsse they are a go'od honest medicine&#13;
that cannot help but heal kidney&#13;
andbladderailmerrts and urinary&#13;
irregularities, if they are once taken&#13;
into the system. T r y them now&#13;
for positive and permanent help.&#13;
FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS. JfyoufeeJ,OUTOFSOKlS"KUN UOWN'or'QOT I H k B L U U '&#13;
• UPPER from KIDNEY, BLADDER, NERVOUS DISEASE!,&#13;
CHRONIC WEAKNKSSES.ULCEKS.SKIN ERUPTIONS.PILES.&#13;
write for my P R e f e book, THE MOST INSTRUCTIVE&#13;
MEDICAL BOOK EVER WRrTTEN.1T TELLS ALLabOUtlhCM&#13;
DISEASES and the REMARKABLE CURES EFFECTED by&#13;
T H E N E W F R E N C H R E M £ D Y . N * 1 . N a 2 / N « a , THERAPION K g if It's the remedy for YOUR OWN sllment. Don't tend a cent.&#13;
Absolutely F R E E . No'followup'circulan. DR LECLERC&#13;
H*D.CO. HAVERJ.TOCK KD, HAMMTfcAD, LONDON,EMO.&#13;
DR. J. D. KELLOQG'S AST HMA Remedy for the prompt relief of&#13;
Asthma and Hay Fever. Ask your&#13;
druggist for It. Writ* lor FREE SAMPLE"&#13;
NORTHROP &amp; LYMAN CO. Ltd., BUFFALO, NX&#13;
SELDOM SEE&#13;
a big knee like this, but your horse&#13;
may have a bunch or bruise on hit&#13;
Ankle, Hock, Stifle, Knee or Throat.&#13;
ABSOR BINE TRADE MARK R16.US.PAT. OFF.&#13;
will clean it off without laying the&#13;
horse up. N o blister, no hair&#13;
gone. Concentrated—only a few&#13;
drops required at an application. $2 per&#13;
bottle delivered. Describe year c«&lt;e for tpeci*! Inttroctiow&#13;
and B o o k 8 K frfe. A B S O R B I N E , JR., «ntljepd«&#13;
lioiaeat for mankind. Reduces Painful Swellings, Salaried&#13;
Glands, Goitre. Wens, Braises, Varicose Veins,&#13;
Varicoaitiee, 014 Bores. Allays Pain. Price S1 and S2 s&#13;
bottle at drufkists or delivered. Manufactured only by&#13;
W.F.YOUNe,P.D.F.,310Ttmpta8t,SDrirH3Jlotd,rililt,&#13;
EYE WATER^m^"^&#13;
JOHN L. THOMPSON SUX3&amp; C C T r o y . N . * .&#13;
PATENTS WnraanE.roletnnn.Wswb&#13;
lngtoit.U.C. Book*Xrt*. Highest&#13;
references. Bmt rtsutt*.&#13;
r&#13;
Developing my etze Ball Film,&#13;
poetpeid, 10 ceate* DETROIT.&#13;
Those Who Rely on the great home remedy which h a s moved its power t o&#13;
relieve safely and speedily t h e minor ailments arising&#13;
from defective- or irregular action of the organs of&#13;
digestion, find themselves spared hours of suffering k&#13;
and able to ward oft t h e attacks of serious sicknesss. BEECHAM'S PILLS&#13;
never disappoint those w h o take them. They help the&#13;
digestion, stimulate the liver, clear t h e kidneys and regulate&#13;
t h e bowels. B y purifying t h e blood they increase&#13;
cheerfulness^and create confidence. A s actions depend&#13;
on health and strength, those who know Beecham's Fills&#13;
Enjoy Life&#13;
'• tttoVL m^mSStJlitt £*&amp;++* **+&#13;
*-'#&#13;
isfe'&#13;
*&#13;
• -; t. "w&#13;
^-¾&#13;
^ . ,&#13;
4...'' .&lt;} _**"&#13;
A'&gt; m L itaMitfilatfb&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
- &amp;&#13;
u' •&#13;
!*•(•; V * * ^ -&#13;
1&#13;
r&#13;
. . * * •&#13;
PRESIDENT OF MICHIGAN FEDER-&#13;
. ATION QF LABOR 13 REFUSED&#13;
CONFERENCE.&#13;
IS DENIED ADMISSION TO T H E&#13;
MANAGER'S OFFICE.&#13;
Last Chance for Arbitration of Strike&#13;
Seems to Be Gone and Both Sides&#13;
Prepare for Fight to a&#13;
Finish.&#13;
CafcHfttt. Mich.—President Claude&#13;
, O. TjkFior, of -the Michigan Federation&#13;
«f Lmibor, was denied admission to&#13;
the office of General Manager James&#13;
MacNaughton, of the Calumet &amp; Hecla&#13;
coimpany, when he sought an interview&#13;
with Mm to lay before the magnate&#13;
a plan tor a possible settlement&#13;
of the strike which includes the arbitration&#13;
of the question as to whether&#13;
the mining companies should 'recognize&#13;
local unions. Taylor saya he&#13;
will not again attempt to see Mac-&#13;
Naughton.&#13;
The mining companies evidently&#13;
determined to stand by their first decision&#13;
to recognize no union^jto confer&#13;
with no anion or federation men,&#13;
and to hold out no promise to the&#13;
strikers for a. settlement of the labor&#13;
dispute. They have announced 'their&#13;
willingness to treat with the men personally&#13;
and individually.&#13;
The strikers look upon this incident&#13;
as a victory because they believe It&#13;
will gain adherents to their cause.&#13;
The Federation of Miners la angered&#13;
and say they will not give the&#13;
companies another opportunity to arbitrate,&#13;
but will fight to a finish.&#13;
Motorman Hero Savea Child.&#13;
Saginaw, Mich.—The heroism of&#13;
Jesse Ladue, of Olio, motorman on a&#13;
Detroit-Saginaw intemrban, saved the&#13;
life of a 2-year-old child which had&#13;
wandered upon the car tracks.&#13;
As hte car rounded a ourve just outside&#13;
the city limits, and while traveling&#13;
at the rate of 50 miles an hour,&#13;
Ladue -saw the child between the rails&#13;
only a few rods ahead. Shutting off&#13;
power and applying, the brakes, he&#13;
flung open the vestibule door and&#13;
climbed out upon the fender. Reaching&#13;
forward at a perilous angle as the&#13;
-kea v y- car *wept down* upon the child,&#13;
• t i e nervy .motormah flung out his free&#13;
* hand, grasped the baby's clothing and&#13;
Hfted it to safety,&#13;
TThe car came to a stop about 100&#13;
* feet beyond the place where the child&#13;
had stood.&#13;
WILLIAM J. 6AYN0R&#13;
New York's famous mayor who died&#13;
on board the steamer Baltic while&#13;
on way to Europe.&#13;
SIMPLE FUNERAL FOR GAYNOR&#13;
WIDOW OF MAYOR SAYS HE&#13;
WOULD NOT WISH M I L I T A R Y&#13;
DISPLAY NOR OSTENTATION&#13;
Report of 8tate Sanatorium.&#13;
Howeill, Mich.—^The annual report&#13;
for the State Sanatorium flor Tttber^&#13;
culosis, located at Howell, has been&#13;
made by Dr. Eugene-B. Pierce, the&#13;
superintendent. It shows that during&#13;
la«t year the average number of patients&#13;
has been 78, and average weekly&#13;
cost for each patient was $11.27.&#13;
The patieats stay so long that it is&#13;
difficult to estimate the total number&#13;
during the year, but the records show&#13;
that 144 were admitted who came from&#13;
43Tcounties, Forty-seven per cent of&#13;
the patients were discharged as cured,&#13;
wayne county furnished the largest&#13;
number from any county last&#13;
year, 25 persons being admitted.&#13;
Treatment cost the 43 counties $21,*&#13;
194.&#13;
Only Woman Llghtkeeper Resigns.&#13;
Petoskey, Mioh,—Mrs. Daniel Wflitems,&#13;
for 29 years keeper of the Harbor&#13;
r\rfnt light on littto Traverse Bay,&#13;
said to' be Jthe opiy woman Wghtkeeper&#13;
on Labe Hiobigan, has ree!£n^g&gt;&#13;
For |5 yearf .prior to assuming. char««&#13;
of the Hariop Point iight. «fco aerved&#13;
hi ft vt&amp;Uar capacity on,Beaver Island.&#13;
She^author of a book, "Child&#13;
of the Seat" which deals with her lite&#13;
among the Mormons tinder the reign&#13;
of Xing Strang on Beaver Island. She&#13;
and her husband will reckle at Cfcarle&gt;&#13;
vote after November 1.&#13;
I T - * * ! '&#13;
^¾ :^iBeeause of the great growth of St&#13;
nlnthony, a school established at Com-&#13;
•atock tome time ago by Monsignor F.&#13;
A. O'Brien, tt has been found necee*&#13;
earyto purchase additional ground, IS&#13;
acres having been added to the property.&#13;
A man identified by a bank book&#13;
found in hit packet at Ike Snyder, of&#13;
8 t Louis, aid:; was struck and' Instantly&#13;
killed by a D. U. R. oar near&#13;
Monroe, Monday. The book showed&#13;
deposits'in a St Louis bank amount-&#13;
' ^4nt to f 1,100. Ths man was shabbily&#13;
t: treesed, He bad no money. ..&#13;
One of the two bungalows &amp; Fotus&#13;
nth street Ann Arbor, reeently pur*&#13;
ohaeed by Hie waAret***- sfcas^heen&#13;
tarnet into a temporary home for&#13;
nnrset for the usdTsrafty Jtn&amp;atog&#13;
. 1 «&#13;
•«?• 4iwitttty tfef§ ksjngsInn" ssaw- be&#13;
^•s^s^Ugs^, M l W * V ^ ^Mr ^maV^ ^HrJP^^HV* VsmaS' '••&#13;
New York—The funeral of William&#13;
J. Gaynor on Monday, September 22,&#13;
will be without mJitary display. The&#13;
mayor would have wished it so, Mrs.&#13;
traynor said at a conference in the&#13;
(*aynor home.&#13;
With Mayor Kline and.other official*&#13;
she approved »tihe plans* for the&#13;
obsequies that had been arranged. Ostentation&#13;
was not to the mayor's liking.&#13;
He was a lover of simplicity and&#13;
during the public tribute to the dead&#13;
executive of the city that will be begun&#13;
on the arrival of the Lusltania&#13;
the only escort of his coffin will be&#13;
mounted ' police.&#13;
Carrying out the idea of simplicity&#13;
at the funeral it has been decided&#13;
that the offers of many orchestras to&#13;
render the music at Old Trinity shall&#13;
be declined and that the musical part&#13;
of.the service be carried out only by&#13;
the—Tr4n4ty— choir- and organ. Mrs.&#13;
G-aynor has chosen only one number,&#13;
the Bach-^ounod "Ave Maria," of&#13;
which the mayor was very rfond.&#13;
Ban Antonio, Tex.—Mexican ammunition&#13;
smugglers, captured after a&#13;
battle with-United States cavalrymen&#13;
near Alim+to crossing at the Rio&#13;
Grande rlver^_were_ led by an American,&#13;
Barney OHne, an automobile driver&#13;
of £1 Paso, as he described himself&#13;
to imiilitary authorities.&#13;
Cline and the other prisoners were&#13;
taken to Carrizo Springs, near where&#13;
Deputy Sheriff Ortiz was killed Thursday&#13;
in the first engagement with the&#13;
band.&#13;
Further details of the battle given&#13;
by the returning soldiers, placed the&#13;
number of Mexican dead at two, with&#13;
three seriously wounded and 14 captured.&#13;
Carranza to Run for President.&#13;
Mexico City, Mexico—-That Venustiano&#13;
Carranza will be a candidate at&#13;
the October elections for president, if&#13;
given full guaranties by the administration&#13;
and will abide by the result&#13;
whether he wins or loses, was the&#13;
statement made by a representative&#13;
of the northern rebels who is here to&#13;
see General Huerta, but who desires&#13;
that hie name be withheld. He states&#13;
that General Carranza's trip to Sonora&#13;
was tor the purpose of persuading&#13;
Sonora rebels to agree to this arrangement.&#13;
McAneny Named for Mayor.&#13;
New York—George McAneny, president&#13;
of the borough of Manhattan,&#13;
waa designated by the Gaynor campaign&#13;
managers as their candidate for&#13;
mayor, to take the place made vaoaa#&#13;
by the death of Mayor Gaynor, whom&#13;
the whole city mourns. McAneny at&#13;
present ts on the Fusion ticket for&#13;
the presidency of the board of aldermen.&#13;
He 4s a Roosevelter.&#13;
Manual training classes of the public&#13;
schools, of Grand Rapids, will be&#13;
opened for the students of the parochial&#13;
schools of this dity if plans of&#13;
Supt Gleason are carried out&#13;
Acting under instructions from the&#13;
board; of police and fire commissioner*,&#13;
every patrolman in Grand Rapids&#13;
must learn how to operate an auto-&#13;
^phfla ^.1*% order is the result of the&#13;
exneneaoe of "Patrolman Edward Jannenga,&#13;
who wftft taken on a wild rids&#13;
•by- ame-*Siis?ii two weak* —o» in&#13;
wait* be was nearly killed, and which&#13;
could bare bean avoided had h* known&#13;
bjow to operate the car,&#13;
arV^ .-.&#13;
/&#13;
For Sunburn, lni«ot Sites,&#13;
ITJ Poison or any other skin inflammation&#13;
us Tyree's Antiseptic Powder&#13;
and get quick relief. 25c. at druggists.&#13;
Sample sent free by J. S. Tyree,&#13;
Washington, D. C—Adv.&#13;
Too much charity is nearsighted.&#13;
No thoughtful person uses liquid blue. It's a&#13;
pinch of bl uo la a large bottle of water. Ask fur&#13;
Red Cross Ball Blue,the blue that's all blue. Adv&#13;
Peru exported over y.UOO.oOO pounds&#13;
of rice in 1911.&#13;
Liquid blue is n wenk solution. Avoir! it.&#13;
Buy Red Cross Hall Mine, the blue thut'i&#13;
all blue. Ask your grocer. Adv.&#13;
The First Question.&#13;
Wiggs—Young Sillicus says his&#13;
heart is lacerated.&#13;
Waggs—Who's the lass?&#13;
MrrWinslow'a Soothing Syrup for Children&#13;
teething-, softens the gums, reduces intlammation.&#13;
allays pale,cures wind coilc,25c a bottle.**&#13;
Honkl&#13;
"Your COWB moo in a most peculiar&#13;
way."&#13;
"The instinct for self-preservation&#13;
develops animals," remarked the farmer.&#13;
"Them cows don't want to be&#13;
run over by the pesky autos, so they&#13;
are learning to honk."—Judge.&#13;
He Was Sure.&#13;
"Sir.^said a smart lawyer, "do you,&#13;
on your, oath, swear that this is not&#13;
your handwriting?"&#13;
"I reckon not," was the cool reply.&#13;
'Do you swear that it does not resemble&#13;
your writing?"&#13;
"I do."&#13;
"You take your oath that this writing&#13;
does not resemble yours in a&#13;
single letter?"&#13;
"Yes, sir."&#13;
"Now, how do you know?"&#13;
" 'Cause I can't write."&#13;
BSTER&#13;
:-&gt;-: * &gt; •U!&#13;
M 7&#13;
/&#13;
REPEATING RIFLES FOR HUNTING&#13;
No matter what you hunt for or where you hunt, the answer&#13;
to the question "What rifle shall I take ?" is—a Winchester.&#13;
Winchester Repeating Rifles are made for all styles of cartridges,&#13;
from .22 to .50 caliber. Whichever model you select you will find&#13;
it an accurate shooter, reliable in action and strong in construction.&#13;
Winchester Guns and Ammunition—the Red W Brand—are made for each other.&#13;
WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO.. - NEW HAVEN. CONN.&#13;
HOUSEHOLD WORD WITH HER REBUKE THAT WAS DESERVED&#13;
Small Girl's Idea of Gem Was the i No t c d Author's Cutting Answer War.&#13;
Familiar Article on the&#13;
Dining Table.&#13;
Real Miser.&#13;
William Corcoran Eustis, the eminent&#13;
chairman of the Washington inaugural&#13;
committee, said the other day&#13;
of a proposed inaugural economy:&#13;
"No; that would look odd. It would&#13;
look too much like Scrooge.&#13;
"Scrooge, at a board meeting, cut&#13;
his finger and asked for a piece of&#13;
sticking plaster. Nobody had any&#13;
plaster, but a merchant handed&#13;
Scrooge a two-cent stamp.&#13;
" 'Put that on,' he said. It will stop&#13;
the flow of blood.'""&#13;
" 'Oh, thank you,'said Scrooge; and,&#13;
drawing forth his wallet, he deposited&#13;
the two-cent stamp therein, taking out&#13;
a one-cent stamp of his own, which&#13;
he proceeded to affix to his hurt."—&#13;
Manchester Union. , "&#13;
It was in a rural district and they&#13;
were having a spelling bee for the&#13;
youngest members of the class.&#13;
The teacher departed a little from&#13;
the usual custom and each pupil was&#13;
required to spell and define the word&#13;
given him.&#13;
"Jewel," said the teacher. Oue little&#13;
rosy-cheeked maid spelled it correctly,&#13;
and then gave the definition&#13;
"Gem."&#13;
"How does a gem look?" the teacher&#13;
asked. "What is a gem?"&#13;
The little girl did not know. The&#13;
entire class looked puzzled. Finally&#13;
one little maid brightened, and raised&#13;
her hand triumphantly. When she was&#13;
called on she almost shouted out in&#13;
the excess of her zeal:&#13;
"A gem is-a little cake baked in a&#13;
gem pan!"&#13;
ranted by the Exigencies of&#13;
the Case.&#13;
In the Stone Age.&#13;
"Here are sign words, professor, on&#13;
the walls of this cave."&#13;
"So I see."&#13;
"They tell, no doubt, a tale of great&#13;
historical value."&#13;
"Not exactly. This is Just the lease&#13;
of the cave. Says the tenant must&#13;
pay forty clam-shells per month in&#13;
advance and isn't allowed to keep&#13;
dinosaurs, pterodactyls or sabretoothed&#13;
tigers."&#13;
Amelia E. Barr, in her autobiography,&#13;
tells of her experience in looking&#13;
for a "church home" in the big&#13;
city. She enjoyed a sermon by a famous&#13;
preacher and wrote to ask about&#13;
joining his congregation. An officer&#13;
of the church called. After the polite&#13;
preliminaries he said: "Doctor C.&#13;
would like to know the name of your&#13;
banker." "My banker," she replied&#13;
in amazement. "I have no banker."&#13;
"You see," he continued, "ours is a&#13;
very extravagant church—I mean in&#13;
good works—and our members must&#13;
be looked to for large subscriptions.&#13;
Doctor C. is acquainted with your&#13;
name, .and thinka highly of you, but&#13;
he is afraid you would not be able&#13;
to give as—as liberally as our church&#13;
expenses demanded." Mrs. Barr looked&#13;
at him silently while he floundered in&#13;
explanations. Finally she said: "You&#13;
had better make no more explanations,&#13;
sir. I understand that only the&#13;
rich can be members of Doctor C.'s&#13;
church. The Lord Christ also is therefore&#13;
ineligible. I will remain outside&#13;
with him."—San Francisco Argonaut.&#13;
A telephone system, American&#13;
throughout in every particular, has&#13;
been installed at Bahia, Brazil.&#13;
Its Advantage.&#13;
"Fog has one advantage in the language&#13;
UKed about it."&#13;
"What might that be?"&#13;
"It is correct to talk about its taking&#13;
people in its mist."&#13;
A woman can beat a man at an argument,&#13;
but that proves very little.&#13;
-••{&#13;
. &gt; • • •&#13;
,rV- \&#13;
v &lt; * • • ..v : , .&#13;
" ; • • • &gt; • ' ? • &gt;&#13;
Pv-i*'"&#13;
• »• ** f 1 ,T,y ,',""'VM&#13;
i.&lt;:L&#13;
wrS5S*SG&amp;T!SC3!aTE&#13;
- • * • • - » . - , -&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
? *&#13;
ft&#13;
I) i 1&#13;
,&gt;•,'&#13;
pinckney £)ippatch&#13;
Entered at the Postoffice at Pinckney,&#13;
Mich., as Second Class Mutter&#13;
Advertising rates made known Oil&#13;
apniieationr&#13;
Cards of Thank?, fifty cents.&#13;
Resolutions of Condolence, one dollar.&#13;
Local Notices, in Local columns five&#13;
cent per line ner each insertion.&#13;
All matter intended to benefit the personal&#13;
or business interest of any individual&#13;
will be published at regular advertising&#13;
rates.&#13;
Announcement of entertainments, e t c ,&#13;
must be paid for at regular Local Notice&#13;
rateb.&#13;
Obituary and marriage notices are published&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
Poetry must be paid for at the rate of&#13;
five cents per line.&#13;
Local News&#13;
Pay your subscription this month.&#13;
VValter Reason was in Howell&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Fr. Coyle was a Jackson visitor&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Geo. Reason was a Howell visitor&#13;
last Friday.&#13;
T, Read has an adv. in this&#13;
issue. Be sure and read it.&#13;
Boys fall suits now shown -at&#13;
Dancer's. 82.50 to $7.50. adv.&#13;
Chas. \shley of Detroit spent a&#13;
few days of last week with relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
The suitor who declares he&#13;
would die for a girl often lives to&#13;
spite her.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. L. F, Hoag of&#13;
Saginaw were Sunday guests at the&#13;
home of G. G. Hoyt.&#13;
O. M. Sigler and family have&#13;
returned home after spending&#13;
several weeks at Bay View.&#13;
S. W. Swarthout and wife and&#13;
P. H. Swarthout, wife and son&#13;
Don spent Sunday in Brighton.&#13;
Ella Dolan is spending the week&#13;
in Toledo.&#13;
Helen Monks was a Dexter visjitor&#13;
last Thursday.&#13;
Subscription, $1. Per Year iu AU»auc3 Chas. Kennedy was a Howell&#13;
visitor last Saturday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Lavey were&#13;
Dexter callers Friday.&#13;
W. E. Murphy transacted business&#13;
in Detroit last Friday.&#13;
Dr. O. L. Sigler and wife were&#13;
Jackson visitors last Saturday.&#13;
Dr. H. F. Sigler transacted business&#13;
in Ann Arbor last Thursday.&#13;
Mrs. C. G. Stackable of Chilson&#13;
spent last Friday with relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
Mrs. W. H. Clark and Mrs. H.&#13;
F. SigUr were in Howell Saturday.&#13;
Malachy Roche of Fowlefville&#13;
visited friends and relatives here&#13;
last Friday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs J. McManus of&#13;
Jackson spent the past week at j&#13;
home of Ed. Breningstall.&#13;
Mrs. D. A. Quelette of North&#13;
Maldren, Ontario, visited friends&#13;
and relatives here the past week.&#13;
Stockbridge, Gregory and Dexter&#13;
was well represented at the&#13;
dance here last Friday evening.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Blades and Mrs. J.&#13;
VanHorn spent last Friday and&#13;
Saturday with relatives in Jackson.&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Glenn&#13;
Gardner of Stockbridge, Wednesday,&#13;
September 10, a twelve pound&#13;
boy.&#13;
Mrs. J, Tipiady, Rose Lavey&#13;
and Mrs. E. Farnam attended the&#13;
funeral of Mrs. C, Lavey of Dexter&#13;
last Thursday.&#13;
A man doesn't discover that&#13;
there is a boundary line between&#13;
his own lot and his neighbor's&#13;
Make Aim For&#13;
Wirt Barnum, wife and daught&#13;
er Mary of Brighton spent Sun- j until the first snow falls and he&#13;
day at the home of Will Dunning.&#13;
t'-i&lt;. ' " * •&#13;
• . N ;&#13;
.Li.'jfc.&#13;
The ladies of the Oong'l. church&#13;
WtHliave bttked^.goods for sale,&#13;
Saturday, September 20, in the&#13;
post office blocK.&#13;
It will pay you to see Dancer &amp;&#13;
Go's, choie^showings of Printzess&#13;
garments for ladies. The same&#13;
styles you get in cities, but at a&#13;
different price,_ adv,&#13;
Norman Reason and family left&#13;
for Detroit Saturday evening&#13;
where Mr. Reason will assume his&#13;
dutioB as salesman witk the&#13;
Carter-car Co.&#13;
Miss Mary D, Eaman of Garden&#13;
City, Kansas, who has been taking&#13;
a trip around the world, the past&#13;
year, enroute to her home, is visiting&#13;
at the home of her grandmother,&#13;
Mrs. E. W. Martin.&#13;
Did it ever occur to you what a&#13;
similarity there is between boots&#13;
and men ? Boots go on the feet,&#13;
so do men. A hoot sometimes gets&#13;
- tight, so do men. Some boots&#13;
have red tops, so do men. Some&#13;
boots are imitation calf, some men&#13;
are the same article. Some boots&#13;
can't stand water, neither can&#13;
some men. When a boot is well&#13;
soaked it is a bad case, so is man.&#13;
A boot to be of much account&#13;
needs a mate, eo does man. A&#13;
boot when well healed is comfort*&#13;
able, so is man.&#13;
Owing to the fact that the last&#13;
legislature passed a law requiriug&#13;
physicians to treat the eyes of&#13;
newly born infants with a prophylaxis&#13;
approved by* the state board&#13;
of health, within one hour after&#13;
birth, it has been necessary for&#13;
* •Jtoewtary of State, Martindale, to&#13;
make a change in the prjacribed&#13;
-form of birth certificate*. The&#13;
- sew birth certificate makes provi&#13;
«ion for a statement from the&#13;
phyaiciair that the eyes of the&#13;
child have- been treated in the&#13;
manner prescribed by law.&#13;
has to clean the walks.&#13;
Wells Bennett has accepted a&#13;
position with the hardware firm&#13;
ihaT~He~ formerly worked for at&#13;
Sault Sainte Marie and will move&#13;
to the "Soo" in the near future.—&#13;
Republican. Mr. Bennett is a&#13;
former Pinckney boy and has&#13;
many friends here who wish him&#13;
success.&#13;
The vil 1 age ^ f Perry haTvoted&#13;
to bond for the sum of $15,000 for&#13;
the purpose of putting in water&#13;
works. The vote was 254 "yes"&#13;
and 34 "jjo.'^The reason of this&#13;
overwhelming vote in favor of the&#13;
proposition was the fact that&#13;
Perry was practically without fire&#13;
protection. Her awful loss a few&#13;
weeks ago awakened ber citizens&#13;
to action.&#13;
The new Mothers' Pension act&#13;
is now in effect. This bill provides&#13;
for the care ot children of widows&#13;
who are worthy but which would&#13;
otherwise have to be sent to the&#13;
State Public School at Coldwater,&#13;
and the keeping them in the&#13;
homes. By the way the applications&#13;
are rushing in in some&#13;
counties it looks BB if the new law&#13;
would proye the most expensive&#13;
piece of legislation which the state&#13;
has passed in some time. The pay&#13;
comes from the general fund of&#13;
the county.&#13;
There are merchants who take&#13;
the wrong course in order to head&#13;
{he farmers off from going to the&#13;
mail order houses by trying to&#13;
club them back. Won't do. They're&#13;
from Mifsouri and will have to&#13;
be eonvicfoced there are bargains&#13;
for them here at home, and that&#13;
means persistence, patience, good&#13;
salesmanship anS the expenditure&#13;
of a little' money. Farmers nor&#13;
nobody else it- coming here because&#13;
they love the merchants.&#13;
It's a business deal and a number&#13;
of contractors in the field after&#13;
the job.&#13;
Our Store!&#13;
If your aim is to economize and to have for your everyday&#13;
use dependable goods at the lowest possible price we ask&#13;
you to make aim for our store and hit the center of&#13;
economical buying.&#13;
A Splendid Showing of New fall Hats and&#13;
Caps, Mackinaws, Sweaters, Jerseys, Etc.&#13;
Pickling Season&#13;
P u r e Cider Vinegar, Mason F r u i t J a r s and&#13;
Supplies&#13;
Pickling Spices including Tumeric, Celery Seed,&#13;
Mustard Seed, E t c .&#13;
Butter Krust&#13;
has more than doubled our bread sales.&#13;
There must be a reason.&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
33&#13;
•MP&#13;
3&#13;
=3&#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. T E E P L E&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Pl*&gt;p&#13;
I MONKS BROSi&#13;
^ P r o m p t Delivery Phone No. 38 3&#13;
WE&#13;
always carry the finest and most complete line&#13;
of H a r d w a r e in Livingston county.&#13;
ARE&#13;
you in need of anything in our line? If so, we&#13;
invite you t o call and get our prices as&#13;
who trade with u s are always satisfied. O u r&#13;
prices are right and we deal square.&#13;
Teepje H a r d w a r e C o r n P a n y&#13;
Pinckney, M!ieli.&#13;
D O N ' T&#13;
trust to memory to preserve the&#13;
changing likeness of growing boy&#13;
or girl. Memory plays.strange&#13;
tricks sometimes. \&#13;
A good photograph or 80&gt;;;fevery&#13;
year will keep an accurate Record&#13;
of subtle changes in their development&#13;
And what a satisfaction that&#13;
little collection will be to you and&#13;
to them in after years.&#13;
DaisieB. Chapell&#13;
S t o c k b r i d ^ , M i c h i g a n&#13;
se#&#13;
NO CHANCE FOR A KICK&#13;
When You Buy Purity Flour&#13;
Looking backward over the past, you may recall instances&#13;
of dissatisfaction with the quality of the Flour which you&#13;
bought. If this is so, it should certainly interest you to?&#13;
know that we have a flour from which you can get the kind&#13;
of bread that suits you,-at prices no greater, aud often less,&#13;
than you will have to pay for unsatisfactory stuff at other&#13;
places. When we sell you flour we expect you to come again.&#13;
This being the case, why shouldn't we do all we can to please&#13;
you in quality, price and treatment? • ••'&#13;
FOR SALE AT ALL GROCERIES&#13;
THE HOYT BROS.&#13;
j&#13;
Guard Your Children *&#13;
Against Bowel Trouble&#13;
Many children at an early age&#13;
become constipated, and frequently&#13;
serious consequences result. Not&#13;
being able to realize his own condition,&#13;
a child's bowels should be&#13;
constantly watched, and a gentle&#13;
laxative given when necessary.&#13;
Dr. Miles' Laxative Tablets are&#13;
especially well adapted to women&#13;
and children. The Sisters of&#13;
Christian Charity, 531 Charles St./&#13;
Luzerne, Pa., who attend many&#13;
cases of sickness say of them:&#13;
"Some time ago we T&amp;egan using Dr.&#13;
Miles' Laxative Tablets and find that&#13;
we like them very much. Their aotlon&#13;
Is excellent and we ar« grateful for&#13;
having been made acquainted with&#13;
them. We have had good results In&#13;
every case and the Sisters are very&#13;
much pleased."&#13;
The form and flavor of any medicine&#13;
is very important, no matter&#13;
who is to take it. The taste and&#13;
appearance are especially important&#13;
when 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 disguised.&#13;
In using Dr. Miles'= Laxative&#13;
^abletSj however, this • diflv&gt;&#13;
curty i^'OvertfOfee. The shape of&#13;
the tablets^ their appearance and&#13;
candy-like taste at once appeal to&#13;
-any child, with the result that they&#13;
are taken without objection.&#13;
The rich chocolate flavor and&#13;
absence of other taste, make Dr.&#13;
Miles' Laxative Tablets the ideal&#13;
remedy for children. t&#13;
If the first box fails to .benefit,&#13;
the price is returned. Ask your&#13;
druggist. A box of 25 doses costs&#13;
only 25 cents. Never sold in bulk.&#13;
MILEa MEDICAL CO., Ilkhart, l a *&#13;
f *&#13;
^*V&#13;
#&#13;
J&#13;
1&#13;
* • :&#13;
P1NCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
r..&#13;
Hog Cholera&#13;
A n d How To Prevent It %&#13;
So far Livingston county has been free from the&#13;
ravages of hog cholera, but you can never tell, Mr.&#13;
Farmer, how long you will be free from it, so buy&#13;
a pail of Sal-Medico and begin feeding it.. Prevent&#13;
your hogs from the cholera. Sold under an absolute&#13;
guarantee to prevent hog cholera.&#13;
Sold in $1.00 and $1.50 Pails, at&#13;
MEYER'S DRUG STORE ]&#13;
Tlie IVyal Store ^&#13;
fc For a Square Deal Pinckneyf Mich. 3&#13;
fcr Drugs, Wall Paper, Crockery, Cigars, Candy, Magazines, ^&#13;
» - School Supplies, Bjoks ^&#13;
WEBSTER A GREAT ORATOR&#13;
- T t i i * m m i " 1&#13;
He 8poko With Impassive DdiberatoneM&#13;
and Really Had Something&#13;
to 8ay.&#13;
A few years ago one might occasionally&#13;
meet an old man, who, in his&#13;
youth, had heard Daniel WebBter, who&#13;
remembered and could quote much of&#13;
that great man's utterances. The day&#13;
has gone by for any such efforts of&#13;
memory. The orator of today does&#13;
not feel that he is "delivering the&#13;
goods" unless he it rattling off two&#13;
hundred words a minute, a rapidity&#13;
that puts it beyond the power of the&#13;
hearer to remember anything but the&#13;
idea sought to be conveyed, and that&#13;
too often not any too clearly. The&#13;
great Daniel spoke with impressive&#13;
deliberateness, for when he spoke he&#13;
really had something to say and his.&#13;
Bpeed was not above 120 words a min&gt;&#13;
ute. He would have been considered&#13;
"easy" today, even by a stenographic&#13;
beginner.&#13;
Webster was born at Salisbury, N.&#13;
H., Jaauary 18, 1872. His most remarkable&#13;
efforts 'were his speeches&#13;
In the senate on the Greek revolution,&#13;
and in his debate with Hayne of South&#13;
Carolina. He also acquired great&#13;
fame by two orations—one at the lay-&#13;
Mng of the corner stone of the Bunker&#13;
Hill monument, on the anniversary of&#13;
the battle, June 17, 1825, and the other&#13;
on the completion of the monument,&#13;
in 1843. One of his greatest utterances,,&#13;
which may be looked upon as&#13;
a prophecy of the conflict that came&#13;
near to the destruction of the Union,&#13;
may be cited as the best remembered&#13;
of his utterances: "When my eyes&#13;
shall be turned to behold for the last&#13;
time the sun in"heaven, may I not see&#13;
him shining on the broken and dishonored&#13;
fragments of a once glorious&#13;
Union; on states dissolved, discordant,&#13;
belligerent; on a land rent with civil&#13;
feuds, or drenched, it may be, in fraternal&#13;
blood."&#13;
r.&#13;
There'll Be Plent?&#13;
to go round and plenty of "go around" if your cider mill Is&#13;
turned by a Rumely-Olds gasoline engine. I t neither shirks&#13;
nor tires. It pumps water, grinds feed, shells corn, saws wood&#13;
and does dozens of big jobs on the farm. We can give you a&#13;
Rumely-Olds in any size to suit your needs. They come in&#13;
sizes from 1 ½ to 65 h. p. 3 ^&#13;
Drop in soon and see our Rumely-Olds engines. Or&#13;
let us know and we'll send a catalog to you.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
k We're here to serve you.&#13;
7w Give us a chance.&#13;
A. H. FLINTOFT,&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
DouH Let Baby Suffer With&#13;
Eczema And Skin Eruptions&#13;
Babies need a perfect skin-coverinp:.&#13;
Skin eruptions cause them not only intense&#13;
suffering, out binder their&#13;
gr'OWth. DK. HOBSON'S ECZEMA OINTMENT&#13;
can be relied on tor relief and permanent&#13;
cure ot suffering babies whose&#13;
skin eruptions have made their lite&#13;
miserable. "Our baby wa9 afflicted&#13;
with breaking out of the skin all over&#13;
the face and scalp, Doctors and&#13;
skin specialists failed to help. We&#13;
tried Ur, Hobson's Eczema Ointment&#13;
and were overjoyed to see baby completely&#13;
cured before one box was&#13;
used'Avrites Mrs. Strubler. Dubuque,&#13;
Iowa. All druggist, or by mail, 50c.&#13;
Pheiffer Chemical Company&#13;
St. Louis, Mo. Philadelphia Pa.&#13;
r&#13;
ift&#13;
•MiMIMllillUH'lllil,&#13;
»:!T'i!minjrmi«riTv»:&#13;
"Gee, I Smell&#13;
Tzar&#13;
Coffee"&#13;
8tages Built to Last.&#13;
The old stages were a triumph of&#13;
the wagon maker's art; most of them&#13;
were built by John Stephenson of this&#13;
oity, and all were built on the principle&#13;
of the one hoss shay. The bodies&#13;
and running gear were made to last,&#13;
and these old Broadway Mends seem&#13;
to have been as widely scattered oyer&#13;
the world as were later the locomotives&#13;
of the elevated railroads. We&#13;
have memoranda of two Broadway&#13;
stages still running in Peru in the first&#13;
years of this century. In the early&#13;
SO's one was encountered in suburban&#13;
service at Cape Town with the Wall&#13;
street ferry inscription still discernible&#13;
under coats of later paint—New&#13;
York Press.&#13;
- » • • * - • -&#13;
5r' That appetizing aroma that cornea&#13;
from "Tzar Coffee" gets the boys&#13;
out of bed in a hurry. Try it&#13;
And it'a tha smooth, delicious flavor that adda the real pleasure to the&#13;
breakfast Tzar Coffee it distinctly high grade but not high price—35c a&#13;
pound tor this moat excellent blend ol fresh roasted coffee.&#13;
All tastes are not alike—so here .are three other blends if Tzar is not&#13;
what you want&#13;
Nero 30c&#13;
Marigold 32c&#13;
Pleasant Valley 40c illAWfWIf.Y:&#13;
convesinpnieieenentUt TlrCrr ioco*l aCtoorf.f se at 35c-tay k wfck a&#13;
4&#13;
Pleasant ValUy Tea*&#13;
are intended for you—50cbclude&#13;
these in your order today.&#13;
•Oca pound. :/., ' AN i ; A&#13;
*1»'J&#13;
Murphy &amp; Jackson, PInckney&#13;
Ayrault &amp; Bollinger, Gregory&#13;
/ 'WsawaiaeaKSSs-ss^^&#13;
Subscribe For The Dlspatciji^fc'?«w P^&#13;
Strengthen Weak Kidneys&#13;
Dun't suffer longer with weak kidneys.&#13;
You can get prompt relief by&#13;
taking1 Electric Bitters, that wonderful&#13;
remedy praised bv women everywhere.&#13;
Start with a bottle today, you&#13;
will soon fee! like a new women with&#13;
ambition to work, without fear ol&#13;
pain. Mr. John Dowling of San&#13;
Francisco, wntes: — "Gratitude for&#13;
the wonderful effect of Electric Bitters&#13;
prompts me to write.* It cured ray&#13;
wife when all else tailed." Good tor&#13;
the "liver as we!!. Nothing better for&#13;
indigestion or biliousness. Price 50a.&#13;
and $1.00, at Meyer's drug store.&#13;
Rough on the Aviator.&#13;
The physician turned to the office pa&#13;
tfent in the canvas coat and leggings.&#13;
"You must follow my directions im&#13;
plicitly," he said, handing him a smull&#13;
vial of liquid. "You are to take thret&#13;
drops in water every four hours."&#13;
"Three drops in water every four&#13;
hours!" ejaculated the patient In a be&#13;
wilderecT manner. "And I'm an aria&#13;
tori"—Lippincott's Magazine.&#13;
Do Yon rear Coogamptlonf&#13;
Mo matter bow chronic your cough&#13;
or bow severe your throut or tun&amp;r&#13;
ailment is, Dr. King's-K'w Discovery&#13;
will surely helnvoo; it may save yoar&#13;
life. SHllmauUreen, of Malicbite,&#13;
Col. writes: "Two doctors said I bad&#13;
consumption and conld not live two&#13;
yean. I used Dr. King's New Discovery&#13;
and am wall and alive," Your&#13;
money refunded if it fails to benefit&#13;
yon. The beat home remedy for&#13;
coughs, coldt. throat and lung troubles.&#13;
Price 50c. and $100 Guaranteed by&#13;
IT O IT&#13;
Saturday, Sept. 20th, 1913&#13;
Apron G i n g h a m s . ; . 7c&#13;
Bost Outing F l a n n e l . _ 9c&#13;
Crackers, per lb. 6c&#13;
Yeast _ _ __ 3c&#13;
25 pounds granulated Sugar _$1.35&#13;
ALL SALES CASH&#13;
New Fall Woolens&#13;
Just received from Ed. V. Price &amp; Co. of Chicago.&#13;
Over 5 0 0 samples to choose from.&#13;
W. W. BARNARD,&#13;
Produce llVanted |&#13;
i&#13;
f&#13;
^ % * * » % » * » » » % % % » » » % % » % » % » » » * % % » » » » V V » % % % » » » % » % % » » % M * » » A % % % % % » » » % » » »&#13;
You Need a Dependable Corn&#13;
. . . Harvester..., -&#13;
m *&#13;
Y o u r success at this busy season*depends chiefly&#13;
upon your corn binder.&#13;
If it is not in perfect working order to handle the corn you&#13;
loss part of your crop—part of your profit. Corn goes to waste&#13;
instead of being turned into golden dollars.&#13;
After you have worked hard all Spring and Summer why&#13;
take chances—why risk a machine that may not work carefully?&#13;
Let us show you our mechanically perfect corn harvesting&#13;
machinery.&#13;
They take care of your corn crop quickly and thoroughly,&#13;
They are built from the best materials by skilled workmen.&#13;
Their design is the result of years oi knowing how. Do not&#13;
delay. Call and see us now.&#13;
Dinkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
Pinokney&#13;
TERRORS OF WARS OF OLD [ a**+«^tmfitoMM3*m»+K*«&gt;&#13;
Doubtful If Battles of Today Make 5&#13;
Greater Demands on Courage Than&#13;
In Ancient Times.&#13;
Much Is written of the terrors of&#13;
modern war. Little Is written of the&#13;
terrors of the wars bToTd7~'" "Yet it"is&#13;
doubtful If war today makes greater&#13;
demands on human courage than war&#13;
in the time of Grant, of Washington,&#13;
of Turenne, of Caesar, of Alexander.&#13;
Consider a stand-up infantry fight&#13;
in the days of the*, revolution. After&#13;
the preliminary cannonade and long*&#13;
distance musketry practice, the two&#13;
regiments marched toward each other&#13;
in closed ranks. At a given distance,&#13;
frequently at 80 yards, there was a&#13;
halt, a smashing volley, and then a&#13;
bayonet charge through the smoke.&#13;
Bullets those days were large and&#13;
of solid lead, and the man who was hit&#13;
went down. Over him tramped his&#13;
comrades and the enemy, shooting and&#13;
stabbing. , *&#13;
That was tlie type of Infantry battles&#13;
for 150 years. To minimize the&#13;
courage needed to make a good sol*&#13;
dier under such circumstances is to&#13;
fly in the face of comoxnn sense.&#13;
Modern war requires a different&#13;
type of courage from that needed of&#13;
old. The old touch of elbows is lacking.&#13;
The old feeling of companionship&#13;
is gone. The modern soldier&#13;
must be more alert, better taught,&#13;
keener witted than the olden soldier of&#13;
equal valor. But it does not follow&#13;
that the modern soldier is the braver&#13;
man.&#13;
The men who fought at the "bloody&#13;
angles" Of Chickamauga and Spotsylvania,&#13;
at Bunker Hill and Oriskany, at&#13;
Rivoli, Zorndorf and Malplaquet, had&#13;
so need to learn heroism in any matera&#13;
school. It was theirs already.&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M. D- C, L. SIGLER M. 0 .&#13;
| DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Sur^eoas,&#13;
All calls promptly attended to&#13;
day or night. Office oa Mail&#13;
Street.&#13;
PINCKNEY, - MICH.&#13;
GOING TO BUY A PIANO&#13;
OR SEWING MACHINE&#13;
YES?&#13;
SEE L. R. WILLIAMS.&#13;
GREGORY&#13;
toy He saves you money on high&#13;
grade pianos.&#13;
/s&#13;
•*&#13;
Owitt Independsnoe.&#13;
Switzerland secured lt^ndependence&#13;
In the Auatro-Swiss war. It commenced J&#13;
In 1385 and peace came in 1389.&#13;
Safest Laxttlre For Women&#13;
••" Nearly every women needs a wood&#13;
laxative. Dr. King's New Life pills&#13;
are pood' because they are prompt,&#13;
safe and do not earns pain. Mrs. M, C.&#13;
Donlap of Uftdil), Tetm. says: "Dr.&#13;
Knur's New Life Pills helped ber&#13;
troubles greatly:' Get a bos to-day.&#13;
Price, 25V Becowm sided by C. (J.&#13;
Meyer, toe druggist.&#13;
iftAoc MARKS&#13;
-.k^„. COPYRIGHT* 4a.&#13;
Ifcr HBtC from rheuaatlQ fsdM-'tf&#13;
PR KUseVAnti.pun M b . Do * J |&#13;
mm*ti* [Advartisanwntl&#13;
..•£"4 ,. ..'et&gt; ;V-k*.• A-,-?*&#13;
mmmm^m&#13;
*S*» **"*kw*-.K*«~&gt;«-»»r«/ •a^MW^.y yj :&amp;**&gt;-^ .'*&gt;: - ^ 3 ^ ^ 1 . . ^ . % ¾ ^ ¾ ^ ^ ^ V&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH T *&#13;
.&amp;*&#13;
*&amp;&#13;
SCULLY IS DEAD&#13;
A HEAVY COLD RESULTING IN&#13;
PNEUMONIA CAUSES DEATH&#13;
OF STATE OFFICIAL*&#13;
WAS PROMINENT IN POLITICS OF&#13;
MICHIGAN.&#13;
Declined Democratic Nomination for&#13;
Governor in 1912 and Gave Support&#13;
to Ferris Who Honored&#13;
Him With Appointment&#13;
Ionia, Mich.—James Scully, state&#13;
railroad commissioner, died at (Ms&#13;
home here at 6:30 o'clock Saturday&#13;
afternoon. His death was tine direct&#13;
result of a heavy cold which he contracted&#13;
while at work in Saginaw the&#13;
latter part of August, Pneumonia developed&#13;
and he took to his bed on&#13;
September 1. For several days his&#13;
&gt;ife was prolonged by the use of oxygen.&#13;
He was 51 years old.&#13;
Mr. Scully was one of the best&#13;
known democrats in Michigan. He refused&#13;
an offer of the nomination for&#13;
governor on the democrat ticket In&#13;
1P12, supporting Gov. Ferris. He was&#13;
appointed railroad commissioner by&#13;
the latter January-! for « six-year&#13;
term* Many of his friends already&#13;
were booming him for the democrat&#13;
nomination for governor in 1916.&#13;
He first attracted state-wide attention&#13;
in 1007, when as a member of the&#13;
ligislature he waged a battle for progressive&#13;
legislation and carried on a&#13;
brilliant fight against the men in control&#13;
of the lower branch of the legislator*.&#13;
Mr. Scully was born In Oscoda townsoip,&#13;
near Howell, January 13, 1S62.&#13;
He was educated In the Howell&#13;
Bchools and the Fen ton Normal, and&#13;
taught in the Oscoda county schools&#13;
until he oame to Ionia and entered&#13;
the law office of A. A. Ellis. He was&#13;
admitted to the Ionia bar and in 18S0&#13;
formed the law partnership with John&#13;
B. Chaddock, now of Detroit. In 1894&#13;
Mr. Cihaddock withdrew and the firm&#13;
was Davis &amp; Scully until last September,&#13;
when E. M. Davis moved to Grand&#13;
Rapids and F. 0. Eld red became a&#13;
member of the firm. Mr. Scully was&#13;
an Elk and Knight of Columbus.&#13;
Village of Hooper Burned.&#13;
Kalamazoo, M'loh.—Only one house&#13;
and a saw mill remain standing In&#13;
Hooper, a Httle settlement 20 mdles&#13;
north of this city In Allegan county,&#13;
flames having destroyed the general&#13;
store, the depot, a crate factory, the&#13;
freight house and nine homes.&#13;
The fire started, it is said, from&#13;
•parks from a freight engine and set&#13;
fire -to dry grass. Driven by a strong&#13;
_wind that was blowing, It rapily crept&#13;
to a small shed, then leaped to a&#13;
email lumber yard owned by the railroad.&#13;
Railway laborers, women and&#13;
turners fought the fire by hand, but&#13;
could not stop its progress and by&#13;
Midnight only a smoldering mass&#13;
»arked the place where the little place&#13;
had once stood. The loss will probably&#13;
reach 112,000.&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS IN BRIEF&#13;
Appointments By the Governor.&#13;
Lansing, Mich.—Acting on the recommendation&#13;
of Judge Clement Smith&#13;
Of the fifth judicial circuit, Governor&#13;
Ferris 'has appointed Chas. H. Bauer,&#13;
of Hastings probation officer for Barry&#13;
county, and James H. Brown, of Charlotte,&#13;
probation officer for Eaton&#13;
county.&#13;
Judge Peter F. Dodds, of the twenty-&#13;
fifth circuit recommended the following&#13;
appointments, which the governor&#13;
confirmed: Wllbert E. Preston,&#13;
Mt. Pleasant, chief probation officer&#13;
for the circuit; William Murphy,&#13;
Harrison, assistant probation officer&#13;
for Clare county; James Lamy, Midland^&#13;
Assistant probation officer for&#13;
Midland county.&#13;
Tallest Man It Insane.&#13;
Houghton, Mich.—Louis Moftanen,&#13;
beMeved to be the tallest man In the&#13;
world, living on a farm with bis parentp&#13;
north of Houghton, became violently&#13;
insane and had to be taken to&#13;
the insane ward of the county jail.&#13;
/Us condition is caused by illness.&#13;
Moilanen is a Finn. He is seven&#13;
feet, eight Inches tall. For several&#13;
seasons ne traveled with a circus, but&#13;
found the *freeJtM business unpleasa&#13;
n t Though 'perfectly proportioned&#13;
ftfofitnen alwaye has been weak phyrtfeftHy.&#13;
' Two TwtarCtty residents Monday&#13;
Oelebrated the forty-fifth anniversary&#13;
1 of ths4r,sso*pe from one of the great-&#13;
«et o M 4 U MJohigap tragedies. They&#13;
* r e C*9t Charles Morrison, of S t&#13;
Jtoeeph, and Cyrus Rittenhouse, of&#13;
U l i t o n Harbor, the only living survir!^'&#13;
r" at the Hippocampus, which&#13;
1n inkWake. ffjMttty^ight per-&#13;
"V&#13;
&gt;'&amp;'?:•&#13;
Alma was selected for the spring&#13;
meeting of the Saginaw Presbytery,&#13;
wfylch closed its fall session at Alpena&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Peter ArendB, 21, of Sturgis, was&#13;
killed when he attempted to block a&#13;
separator. He Intended entering college&#13;
the next day.&#13;
Several medals won at stock exhibitions&#13;
by W. H. Sonants, former state&#13;
representative, of Hastings, 'have&#13;
been stoilen from his home,.&#13;
James Graham, a woodsman employed&#13;
at the camp of the 1. Stephenson&#13;
company near Escanaba, was in*&#13;
stantly kdilied by a falling tree.&#13;
The Western Michigan Normal of&#13;
Kalamazoo has purchased 10 acres&#13;
opposite the college grounds to be&#13;
converted into an athletic field.&#13;
The International Milk Products&#13;
company of Detroit, has decided to locate&#13;
a factory in Bad Axe. Thirty&#13;
tons of milk a day will be used.&#13;
Battle Creek will be obliged to&#13;
abandon plans for an apple snow this&#13;
year, because the apple crop in this&#13;
vicinity threatens to be a failure.&#13;
Christopher Yaudes, 86 years old, a&#13;
retired German farmer, Was Instantly&#13;
killed, while crossing a track in the&#13;
Michigan Central yards, at Marshall.&#13;
W. E. Elliott will apply for a charter&#13;
to permit the construction of an&#13;
electric road between Hillsdale and&#13;
Pioneer. O. He already has the right&#13;
of way, ho says.&#13;
The first examination by applicants&#13;
for the office of postmaster at Twining,&#13;
a fourth class office, will be held&#13;
October 11. Fred Twining, former&#13;
postmaster, has resigned. Compensation&#13;
last year was $778.&#13;
At tihe annual reunion of the Soldiers'&#13;
and Sailors' association of Macomb,&#13;
Sanilac and St. Clair counties,&#13;
held at Lexington, Oliver Yates, of&#13;
Lexington, was elected president, and&#13;
W. Lee, of Port Huron, vice-president.&#13;
Dr. Hattie G. Schwendener, one of&#13;
the best known women physicians In&#13;
southeastern Michigan, and prominently&#13;
identified with social welfare&#13;
work, was struck by an interurban&#13;
car near St. Joseph and fatally injured.&#13;
Rev. Francis R. Godolphin, for seven&#13;
years rector of Grace church, and&#13;
one of the best known Episcopal ministers&#13;
In western Michigan, has accepted&#13;
a call to Grace church, Oak Park,&#13;
Chicago, where he will go November&#13;
1.&#13;
The new $25,000 home of the local&#13;
Arbeiter society was dedicated. Michael&#13;
Reigle, of Salsburg, president of&#13;
the state Arbeiter Bund, made the address.&#13;
About 3,000 members of the society,&#13;
including several from other&#13;
cities, were present.&#13;
Joseph Brown, of Kalamazoo, was&#13;
saved from being burned to death&#13;
by his 12-year-old daughter. Brown&#13;
went to bed and took his pipe with&#13;
him. He fell asleep and the bedding&#13;
caught fire. The girl smothered the&#13;
fire with a blanket.&#13;
Work on the extension of the Interurban&#13;
line from Romeo to Almont&#13;
will be started at once, D. U. R. officials&#13;
say. The line is expected to be&#13;
in operation by the first of the yea*.&#13;
Almont citizens purchased the right&#13;
of way for the company.&#13;
Archie McDougall, an aged man of&#13;
Capac, was thrown from his wagon on&#13;
Sunday night, receiving injuries from&#13;
which he died in a few hours. His&#13;
team became frightened at a bicycle&#13;
and ran away. For years McDougall&#13;
ran a blacksmith shop in Capac.&#13;
Former students of the "Little Red&#13;
School House," built In New Haven&#13;
township, Shiawassee county in 1845,&#13;
have been asked to meet in reunion&#13;
there on September 25. Nathan Findlay&#13;
and George Irland, of New Haven,&#13;
attended the first session of the&#13;
school.&#13;
State Trespass Agent Jesse G.&#13;
Woodberry died at Grand Haven of&#13;
pleurisy after being ill five months.&#13;
He served two terms as sheriff of Ottawa&#13;
county and was later given hia&#13;
land office appointment by Huntley&#13;
Russell. The funeral was held under&#13;
Masonic auspices.&#13;
Both Clifford Kaiser, aged 18, a high&#13;
school student, and O. A. Byrns, aged&#13;
74, were drowned in Macatawa bay.&#13;
Mr. Byrne fell from a boat while fishing,&#13;
and Kaiser, trying to save him,&#13;
lost his life in the attempt, Mr. Byms&#13;
w«is an old resident of Holland and&#13;
an Odd Fellow and Masron.&#13;
Marshall company No. 22, of the uniformed&#13;
rank, Knights of Pythias, not&#13;
only won third prize, $60, in the drill&#13;
contest a*, the convention of the grand&#13;
lodge in Kalamazoo but also $50 for&#13;
b*\ing the Inr^rst number of members&#13;
present. The Marshall company&#13;
Is the youngest in the state.&#13;
The fight between the good roads&#13;
men and the ant is wa* renewed at&#13;
Grand Haven when attorneys for the&#13;
latter commenced suit for the cancellation&#13;
of the temporary order issued&#13;
against the county clerk and board of&#13;
election" commissioners, restraining&#13;
them from calling an election for a&#13;
rote on the rescinding of the $000,000&#13;
bonding proposition voted in 1912,&#13;
•&lt;..*r-~ . - :&#13;
MARKETS&#13;
Uve Stock, Grain ana Cenersl Fsrm&#13;
Produco,&#13;
DETROIT—Cattle: Receipts, 774;&#13;
bulls 25® 35c lower; all other grades&#13;
steady; best dry-fed steers and heif&#13;
era, 18.25^8.50; steers and heifers 1,&#13;
000 to 1,200, £7.50@7.85; do 800 to 1,&#13;
000, ?7@7.50; grass steers and heifers&#13;
that are fiat, 800 to 1,000, $7®7.50; de&#13;
500 'to 700, $6.25®6.75; choice fa&#13;
cows, $6@6.25; good fat cows, |5.50@&#13;
5.75; common cows, $4.50(g5; can&#13;
ners, ?3@4; choice heavy bulls, $6®&#13;
6.25; fair to good bologna bulls, $5.5(&#13;
@5.75; stock bulls, f,4.50@5; choice&#13;
feeding steers, 800 to 1,000, $7®7.25;&#13;
fair feeding steers, 800 to 1,000, ¢6.75&#13;
@7; choice stockers, 500 to 700, |6,5C&#13;
«^7; fair stockers, .500 to 700, $6@&#13;
.G50; stock heifers, |5.50@6; milkers&#13;
large, young, medium age, ?60@85;&#13;
common milkers, $35@50.&#13;
Veal calves: Receipts, 187; marken&#13;
iteady; best ?11@12; others, $8®&#13;
10.50.&#13;
Sheep and -lambs: Receipts, 2,976;&#13;
best lambs 25c higher; sheep and&#13;
other grades of lambs steady; best&#13;
lambs, $-7®7.35; fair lamb3, ?6.25®&#13;
6.75; lihgt to common lambs, $5@6;&#13;
yearlings, $5@5.50; fair to good&#13;
sheep, $4®4.25; culls and common,&#13;
$2.50@3.26.&#13;
Ho?s: Receipts, 984; light to good&#13;
butchers, $9.35®9.40; pigs, $8.75;&#13;
miixed, $9.25®9.40; heavy, $9@9.25;&#13;
stags one-third off.&#13;
HANDLE MONEY AND HATE IT&#13;
EAST. BUFFAL0—Cattle, receipts,&#13;
210 cars; market generally 15®25c&#13;
lower; best. 1,350 to 1,500-lb steers,&#13;
18.75®9; best 1,200 to 1,300-lb steers,&#13;
$8.50@8.75; best 1,100 to 1,200-lb&#13;
steers, $8®8.50; coarse and plain&#13;
heavy steers, $7.25®7.75; choice handy&#13;
steers, 1,000 to 1,100 lbs., $8@8.25;&#13;
fair to good do, $7® 7.50; grassy, 80C&#13;
to 1,000-lb steers, $7®7.35;, best cows,&#13;
$6.50®7; butcher cows, $5.50@6; cutters,&#13;
$4@4.50; trimmers, $3.25@3.'J5;&#13;
best heifers, ?7.50@7.75; medium&#13;
butcher heifers, $&gt;.50@7.25; stock&#13;
heifers, ¢5.25 @ 5.75; best feeding&#13;
steers, $7®7.35; fair to good do,&#13;
$6.50® 6.85; common light stockers, $6&#13;
®6.25; best butcher bulls, $6@6.60;&#13;
best bologna bulls, $5.25@5.50; stock&#13;
bulls, $5@5.50; best milkers and&#13;
springers, $70®80; common to good&#13;
do, $50®GO.&#13;
Hogs: Receipts, 85 cars; market&#13;
10®15c lower; heavy, $9.15@9.25;&#13;
mixed, $9.50@9.65; yorkers, $lh60®&#13;
9.70; pigs, $8.75@9; roughs, $8@8.25;&#13;
stags, $7-®7.50.&#13;
Sheep and lambs: Receipts, 70&#13;
cars; market active; top lambs, $7.75&#13;
@7.90; culls to fair $6®7.50; yearlings,&#13;
$5.75@6.25; wethers, $5@5.25;&#13;
ewes, $3.85®4.75.&#13;
Calves steady; choice, $12® 12.50;&#13;
fair to good, $10@11.50; heavy, $5.50&#13;
@8.50.&#13;
Grains, Etc.&#13;
Wheat-—Cash No. 2 red, 95c; September&#13;
opened with a drop of l-4c at&#13;
94 3-4c, declined to 94 l-4c and closed&#13;
at 95c; December opened. at~98c, declined&#13;
to 97 l-2c and advanced to&#13;
98 l-4c; May opened at $1.03 l-4c, declined&#13;
to $1.02 3-4 and closed at&#13;
$1.02 3-4 and closed at $1.03 1-2; No.&#13;
1 white, 95c.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 2, 78c; No. 2 yellow,&#13;
2 oars at 79c; No. 3 yellow, 1 car at&#13;
78 l-2c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 2 cars at 45 l-2c, 1&#13;
at 45 l-4c, 1 at 45c, closing at 45 l-2c&#13;
bid; No. 3 white, 2 cars at 45c; No. 4&#13;
white, 1 oar at 44c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 70c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate and prompt shipmenu&#13;
$1.80; October, $1.85.&#13;
Cloverseed—Prime October, $6.75;&#13;
December, $6.85; March, $695; sample&#13;
red, 10 bags at $6.50 8 at $6; October&#13;
alsike, $10.25; sample alsike, 5&#13;
bags at $10.65, 12 at $10.&#13;
Timothy—Prime spot, 50 bags at&#13;
$2.60.&#13;
Barley—Good sample, $1,30® 1.50&#13;
per cwt. * .&#13;
Hay—Carlots, track, Detroit: No. 1«&#13;
timothy, $J6®16.50; standard, $15®&#13;
15.50; No. 2, $14@14.50; light mixed,&#13;
$15@15.50; No. 1 .mixed* $13.50@14;&#13;
rye straw, $8@9; wheat at oat straw,&#13;
$7®7.50 per ton.&#13;
Flour—In one-eighth paper sacks,&#13;
per 796 pounds, jobbing lots: Beat&#13;
patent, $5.40; second patent, $5.10;&#13;
straight, $4.90; spring patents, $5.10;&#13;
rye, $4.€0 per bbl.&#13;
Feed—In 100-lb sacks, Jobbing lots:&#13;
Bran, $26; coarse middlings, $27; fine&#13;
middlings, $29; cracked corn, $33;&#13;
coarse corn meal, $31; corn and oat&#13;
chop, $27.50 per tono.&#13;
Peculiar State of Mind That Comes&#13;
of Employes of the Most Noted&#13;
Gambling Resort.&#13;
Probably no one hates the sight of&#13;
money as do the croupiers at Monte&#13;
Carlo, through whose hands thousands&#13;
and thousands of pounds pass ever/&#13;
year.&#13;
It is not everyone- who can be a&#13;
croupier. Fingering and counting&#13;
money at the casino requires special&#13;
training, and, accordingly, (here is a&#13;
school of croupiers In Monaco. Here&#13;
there are tables similar to those used&#13;
in the gambling rooms, and each&#13;
"scholar" is taught by * "master"&#13;
how to become a croupier.&#13;
The "masters" and the '.'scholars"&#13;
personate players, while one "scholar"&#13;
takes the part of croupier. The money&#13;
used Is sham, metal discs being substituted&#13;
for coins, and Blips of paper&#13;
for bank notes. Within a given time&#13;
the croupier-scholar must .calculate&#13;
and pay out the winning stakes, and&#13;
he must make no mistakes. He has&#13;
to learn how to pitch money from&#13;
one end of the table to a precise spot&#13;
at the other end, and a good many&#13;
other things.&#13;
When a "scholar" is passed as perfect&#13;
he enters the service of the&#13;
casino under an agreement which&#13;
stipulates that he can be dismissed&#13;
at a moment's notice without any&#13;
reason being given him.—London Tit-&#13;
Bits.&#13;
Prince Charming.&#13;
"And you really once saw a prince?*'&#13;
"Yes."&#13;
"Oh," she exclaimed, clasping her&#13;
hands and gazing with awe into the&#13;
eyes that had looked upon - royalty, J'what was he doing?"&#13;
"Trying to balance a chair on his&#13;
chin to amuse a chorus girl."&#13;
Quite So.&#13;
"Everything is done how by machinery."&#13;
m&#13;
"Yes, I notice that even children are&#13;
brought up by elevators."&#13;
Its Oddity.&#13;
"There is one thing very paradoxical&#13;
about bread."&#13;
"What is it?"&#13;
"We want bread before we knead&#13;
it."&#13;
Cold and Warm Affection.&#13;
"Don't you like a man to tell you of&#13;
his burning love for you?"&#13;
"I would rather have him treat me&#13;
to ice cream."&#13;
Its Character.&#13;
She—I waive all claim to you miserable,&#13;
undesirable affections.&#13;
He—Well, you needn't make it such&#13;
a hot waive.&#13;
The Test.&#13;
"How can you tell if a purse is real&#13;
alligator skin?"&#13;
"I don't know, but I suppose you&#13;
ought to be able to tell by the snap."&#13;
The Method.&#13;
"I'm afraid we can i send a telegraph&#13;
message if we have no cash."&#13;
"Nonsense! Alj ~ telegraphic messages&#13;
are sent on tick."&#13;
Its Advantages.&#13;
"There is one very good thing about&#13;
a circus."&#13;
"What is that?"&#13;
"A man can 'see the elephant' without&#13;
having a lot of fuss made about&#13;
it."&#13;
Agreeable Change.&#13;
First Clubman—I've been watching&#13;
Blowhard over there smoking.&#13;
Second Clubman—Where's the interest?&#13;
First—It's such a pleasant change to&#13;
find him puffing something else besides&#13;
himself.&#13;
Impossible.&#13;
"Your old clock Is good for a long&#13;
life yet."&#13;
"How can it be when I can see for&#13;
myself that its hours are numbered?"&#13;
Berlin in 1911 consumed 577,537,791&#13;
pounds of milk.&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
Pears—Clapp's Favorite, $1®1.25;&#13;
Bartlett, $1@1.10 per bu.&#13;
Grapes—Delaware and Niagara, 40&#13;
®45c; blue, 20® 26c per stock basket.&#13;
Apples—Michigan, 50c®fl psr bu;&#13;
No. 1, $2.75^3 per bbl; No, 2, $1.50&#13;
0 2 psr bbl.&#13;
Peaches—Island AA, $2.26; A, $2;&#13;
B, $1.60® 1.75 per bu; white; $1,250&#13;
1.50 per bu and 30060c per peck.&#13;
Green Corn—15c per doz.&#13;
Cabbage—$2.2502.50 per bbi.&#13;
Potatoes—$2.25 per sack ot 2 1-2&#13;
bashes*.&#13;
Toinetc^s—Hotne-frown, 90s 0 1 per&#13;
bustoet&#13;
A Suggestion&#13;
for Digestion&#13;
Many persons suffer more or less from headache,&#13;
dizziness, biliousness, and symptoms common to indigestion.&#13;
There are various causes, such as over-starchy&#13;
or greasy foods, improper mastication, or bad cooking.&#13;
Grape=Nuls&#13;
Solves the digestion problem.&#13;
This food, made from prirpe whole wheat and&#13;
barley, is- perfectly baked until the starch cells are either&#13;
converted into easily digested grape sugar, or thoroughly&#13;
broken down for quick digestion—generally in&#13;
about one hour.&#13;
. There is no animal fat in Grape-Nuts.&#13;
The crisp granules of Grape-Nuts come to your&#13;
table ready-to-eat direct from package, invite thorough&#13;
mastication and have a peculiarly sweet, nut-like flavor.&#13;
Grape-Nuts, containing all the rich elements of&#13;
wheat and barley, including the vital mineral salts, is&#13;
a perfectly balanced food for building muscle, bone,&#13;
brain and nerve.&#13;
Grape-Nuts is probably the longest&#13;
baked, the Jbcst balanced, arid the most&#13;
easily digested of all cereal foods. Wonderftilly&#13;
appetizing with cream and sugar.&#13;
"There's a Reason" for Grape-Nuts&#13;
. -ST&#13;
! "&#13;
s " .«? 3&#13;
p¥*m&#13;
•A •&#13;
IV&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
*s&#13;
V . * &gt;&#13;
&gt; : /:%,.; «§i;.. tip&#13;
ter •••;: -Hw*' •• *&#13;
• - i C ' / .. '&#13;
r''--.r&#13;
- « £ v •" .'• *&#13;
- ; , # * • • • .&#13;
. » " * ' » '&#13;
^ , * • * * * •&#13;
LB*-' :&#13;
PJS^.",.". ..&#13;
M ^ ^ V&#13;
S^S•&lt;K- --' *•••-....¥, . *•&#13;
^•^^H* '' '. - ' '"*'. BSB&gt;fe- V''.'r -v*&#13;
*&#13;
&gt; '&#13;
•&#13;
.- r •&#13;
ALL SIMPLE OF CUT&#13;
BLOUSE EFFECTS IN ORDER FOR&#13;
SEASON'S GARMENTS.&#13;
Smart Little Coat Suit Illustrated May&#13;
Bo Taken as Design That Will&#13;
Have the Sanction of Those&#13;
Who Know.&#13;
Delightful and more UBeful than&#13;
ever are the coat and skirt suits of&#13;
the coming season, the majority of&#13;
which are suitable for dress wear or&#13;
street In a wide range of handsome&#13;
materials. The blouse effects are constantly&#13;
growing in favor—in fact, they&#13;
are the preferred designs for the soft,&#13;
supple goods like the velour surfaced&#13;
ones and the new cheviot weaves.&#13;
All tailored suits are extremely simple&#13;
of cut, but more or less complex&#13;
of silhouette, and, contrary to preceding&#13;
seasons, very little trimming Is&#13;
ms*4 the success of the costume deftOSjilag&#13;
largely on graceful draping&#13;
tmi swathfug of materials.&#13;
The smart lfttle coat suit of the&#13;
iket.r.h ia representative of the simpler&#13;
models. The coat is what is known&#13;
as a Russian cutaway, an attractive&#13;
Compromise between two of the season's&#13;
favorite whims. Its material Is&#13;
one of the pebble-finished woolen&#13;
weaves in mole brown. The skirt is&#13;
rather long and plain, with the tunic&#13;
IN BLUE VELVET.&#13;
Costumes of this Type Are Fashionable&#13;
for Early Fall.&#13;
fastened across the front at the knees&#13;
by a square tab held in place with&#13;
oval buttons, and trimmed with&#13;
soutache motifs in purple and black.&#13;
Mole brown satin is used for the under&#13;
plain skirt and only needs a panel&#13;
of the suit material down the center&#13;
front to fill in the space above and&#13;
below the buttoned-over section of the&#13;
tunic.&#13;
In the blouse the fullness is distributed&#13;
across the sides, which pouch a&#13;
trifle over the crushed satin belt. The&#13;
fronts cross each other, the right side&#13;
over the left, in a tab that reproduces&#13;
the one of the tunic, and similarly&#13;
is trimmed and held In place&#13;
With the ovel-shaped buttons.&#13;
The soft collar rolls up high about&#13;
the neck, and the soft purple satin tie&#13;
running under the tab hangs out below&#13;
it in a loop and tasseled end. The&#13;
three-quarter-length sleeves are set&#13;
Into dropped shoulders finished with&#13;
soft roll-back cuffs and trimmed with&#13;
the soutache motifs.&#13;
Smoking Table.&#13;
A smoking table made of lacquered&#13;
brass stands on a high standard which&#13;
brings the table just about the level of&#13;
tfce arm of a chair. It Is equipped&#13;
With the usual cigar Jar, ash tray and&#13;
match box holder. In the center of&#13;
the table is a long-armed electric light,&#13;
which bends to any angle and is&#13;
•haded with a brass shade. The wire&#13;
runs through the leg of the table, and&#13;
wbte&amp;Jls screwed .Into a convenient&#13;
socket Surely this table suggest* a. At the moment tfcsy. seem inclined to&#13;
comfortable u*?e with cigars sad&#13;
Bfwvtypet or magaitoe.&#13;
Model of blue velvet with tunic of&#13;
embroidered tulle. High satin belt.&#13;
Sleeves of Moussellne de Sole.&#13;
WHITE DECORATION ON GREEN&#13;
Effective Ornaments That May Be Applied&#13;
on the; Simplest of&#13;
Costumes.&#13;
A stunning dress can be made from&#13;
oyster-white linen embroidered in a&#13;
rather subdued row of green. Buttonhole&#13;
a diagonal row of green scallopping&#13;
from the neck to the bottom of&#13;
the skirt and place from six to twelve&#13;
white crochet buttons, the number depending&#13;
upon the size, along the row&#13;
of scalloping on the waist and continuing&#13;
on down below the waist line&#13;
for some distance on the skirt. Each&#13;
white crochet button should have in&#13;
its center a large green French knot.&#13;
The lay-down collar and turn-back&#13;
cuffs of the dress are scalloped in&#13;
green, and in the curve of each of the&#13;
collar and cuff scallops is nestled a&#13;
group of three green French knots.&#13;
One large knot may be used if preferred.&#13;
A spray of green leaves&#13;
worked solidly on the front of the&#13;
waist, or a soft green silk tie slipped&#13;
under the collar and knotted in front*&#13;
carries out the color scheme. Wear&#13;
with the dress a crush green silk&#13;
girdle with the popular ends at the&#13;
side back or a green suede leather&#13;
belt. This costume over a green silk&#13;
underskirt occasionally peeps out&#13;
above white-shod feet should make, at&#13;
the very least, an" "impression."&#13;
Heavy, clinging linen should be used,&#13;
and no starch should be used in&#13;
laundering i t&#13;
OF DAINTY CREPE DE CHINE&#13;
Charming Frock That J• Fresh From&#13;
_ the Hands of One of the Most&#13;
Famous Designers.&#13;
Crepe' de chine, which is the most&#13;
beautiful of the silks for draping and&#13;
shirring, has been&#13;
fashioned into the&#13;
above charming&#13;
frock. The blouse&#13;
portion was gathered&#13;
into two&#13;
shirred puffs forming&#13;
a bolero over&#13;
a dainty vest of&#13;
cream s h a d o w&#13;
lace with little&#13;
pointed yoke of&#13;
the same. The&#13;
sleeve is similarly&#13;
treated at the elbow&#13;
and a little&#13;
cuff of the lace&#13;
shows below. Satin-&#13;
covered buttons&#13;
of the shade&#13;
of the crepe,&#13;
which is a soft&#13;
gray, trim bodice&#13;
and underskirt; the latter with this&#13;
exception being perfectly plain.&#13;
Latest French Makeup.&#13;
French women have abandonee&#13;
their purple powder which was specially&#13;
manufactured for electric light&#13;
make-up. Nor are they as keen about&#13;
toe saffron powder that made them&#13;
i l there run into a silk-covered cord, j took as If they had just returned from&#13;
Rheumatism Is Torture&#13;
Many pains that pass as rheumatism&#13;
are due to weak kidneys—-to the failure&#13;
of the kidneys to drive Off uric acid&#13;
thoroughly.&#13;
When you suffer achy, bad joints,backache&#13;
too, dizziness and some urinary&#13;
disturbances, get Doan's Kidney Pills,&#13;
the remedy that is recommended by over&#13;
150,000 people in many different lands.&#13;
Doan's Kidney Pills help weak kidneys&#13;
to drive out the uric acid which&#13;
is the cause of backache, rheumatism&#13;
and lumbago.&#13;
Here's proof.&#13;
"Every Picture&#13;
2***1* a Story.''&#13;
AN INDIANA&#13;
CASE&#13;
M. C. Walker,&#13;
983 Grand Ave.,&#13;
Conneraville. Ind.,&#13;
says: "For ten&#13;
yeara I had muscular&#13;
rheumatism.&#13;
I waa laid up in&#13;
bed and couldn't&#13;
move tf—-''limb.''&#13;
Plasters and hot&#13;
application* failed.&#13;
The first box of&#13;
Doan's K i d n e y&#13;
Pills helped me&#13;
and two more&#13;
boxes permanently&#13;
cured me."&#13;
&lt;Ut Doan's «t Any Store. 50c a Box DOAN'S"%%%''&#13;
FOSTER-MIUBURN CO.. BUFFALO, N. Y.&#13;
Don't Persecute&#13;
Your Bowels&#13;
Cut out cathartics and purgatives. They are&#13;
brutal, harsh, unnecessary. Trj&amp;&#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;
membrane of the^&#13;
bowel. Care.&#13;
Cemliptllen,&#13;
Biliousness.&#13;
Sick Held*&#13;
ache and Indifeitlon, as millions know.&#13;
SL1ALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
Positively Remove Superfluous Hair—Send&#13;
for free sumpl« und particulars. Satisfaction guaranteed.&#13;
Neshkoro Specialty Co., Weenkoro, YH»&#13;
m Bad, but All Well.&#13;
The sa'ying "the good funeral of the&#13;
bad woman," may be apocryphal, but&#13;
It Is attributed to the duke of Buckingham,&#13;
not otherwise noted for the&#13;
exercise of functions proper to the&#13;
clergy. In the wicked London of the&#13;
restoration an evil woman aamed&#13;
Crestwell ordered the payment of £10&#13;
for a funeral sermon In which no 111&#13;
should be spoken of her. Buckingham's&#13;
sermon was: "All I shall say&#13;
of her is this, she was bom well,, aahh&lt;e&#13;
married well, lived well and ddTieed(&#13;
well; for she was horn in Shadwell,&#13;
married in Creswell, lived at Clerkenwell&#13;
and died at Bridewell"&#13;
Baby's Deduction.&#13;
A well known clergyman tells this&#13;
story to illustrate the early age at&#13;
which children learn to "notice."&#13;
A young father, not ordinarily given&#13;
to profanity, had slipped into the&#13;
habit of using bad words when, as&#13;
too frequently happened, his collar refused,&#13;
to fasten easily. One day tire&#13;
collar—impatiently discarded—fell upon&#13;
the floor and later was retrieved by&#13;
the baby, just beginning to creep and&#13;
talk. ^ ~&#13;
"Dada, dada," cried the baby, waving&#13;
the rejected article of apparel.&#13;
"Yes, it belongs to dada," said the&#13;
proud parent, snatching up his son&#13;
and heir. "Now, baby, tell papa its&#13;
name." •&#13;
"Dada's damn," came the cooing reply.&#13;
long holldayi and -were nicely tanned.&#13;
tarn to pin* and w b i t e n e s s / ^ t t o&#13;
itfttchM and powdared nalj* ^ v*V.&#13;
^¾&#13;
**•.,.... x&#13;
'•.'•Wt-'i. „&#13;
\&#13;
GROWING STRONGER&#13;
Apparently, with Advancing Age.&#13;
"At the age of 50 years I collapsed&#13;
from excessive coffee drinking," writes&#13;
a man in Mo. "For four years I shambled&#13;
about with the aid of crutches or&#13;
cane, most of the time unable to&#13;
dress myself without help.&#13;
"My feet were greatly swollen, my&#13;
right arm was shrunken and twisted&#13;
inward, the fingers of my .right hand&#13;
were clenched and could hot be extended&#13;
except with great effort and&#13;
pain Nothing seemed to give me more&#13;
than temporary relief.&#13;
"Now, during all this time and for&#13;
about 30 years previously, I drank&#13;
daily an average of 6 cups of strong&#13;
coffee—rarely'missing a meal.&#13;
"My wife at last took my case into&#13;
her own hands and bought some&#13;
Postum. She made it according to directions&#13;
and I liked it fully as well&#13;
as the best high-grade coffee.&#13;
"Improvement set in at once. In&#13;
about 6 months I began to work a little,&#13;
and in Jess than a year I was very&#13;
much better, improving rapidly from&#13;
day to day. I am now in far better&#13;
health than most men of my years&#13;
and apparently growing stronger with&#13;
advancing age.&#13;
"I am busy every day at some kind&#13;
of work and am able to keep up with&#13;
the procession without a cane. The&#13;
arm and hand that were once almost&#13;
useless, now keep far ahead in rapidity&#13;
of movement and beauty of penmanship."&#13;
Name given by Postum Co., Battle&#13;
Creek, Mich. Write for copy of the little&#13;
book, "The Road to Wellville."&#13;
Postum comes in two forms:&#13;
Regular Postum—must be well boiled.&#13;
Instant Postum is a soluble powder.&#13;
A teaspoonful dissolves ouickly in a&#13;
cup of hot water and, with the addition&#13;
of cream and sugar, makes a delicious&#13;
beverage Instantly.&#13;
There's a reason" tat Postum. "&#13;
'*&gt;:£&#13;
&gt; ' V.&#13;
..-*&gt;'&#13;
Most men spend more time talking&#13;
it over than working It out.&#13;
Literally So.&#13;
"There goes a man of sterling&#13;
worth."&#13;
"Who is he?"&#13;
"He is a silversmith."&#13;
The Reason,&#13;
"I wonder why London is so damp&#13;
and foggy?"&#13;
"I guess it is on account of the long&#13;
reigns they have had there."&#13;
Considerably Removed.&#13;
"Rather nifty looking dairy maids&#13;
in this musical comedy."&#13;
"Yes, but I dare say the nearest&#13;
they ever got to a dairy was a dairy&#13;
lunch."&#13;
Father Would Understand.&#13;
This is the letter a boy away at&#13;
boarding school for the first time" Js&#13;
said to have written home:&#13;
"Dear Parents: I hardly think I&#13;
will be able to send you many letters&#13;
while here. You see, when things&#13;
are happening, I haven't time to&#13;
write, and when they aren't happening,&#13;
I haven't anything to write&#13;
about. You'll understand how it is,&#13;
won't you, father? And, mother,&#13;
dear, you just ask father to explain&#13;
to you how it is. So now I'll Bay&#13;
good-by, with lots of love and sign&#13;
myself, in haste. Your&#13;
"LOVING SON.".&#13;
First in&#13;
Wad-* F7nt in QaaBty&#13;
Firtt in Rtxdtm&#13;
Fint in Purity&#13;
Fint in Economy&#13;
and for these reason*&#13;
C a l u m e t Baking?&#13;
Powder is first in the&#13;
hearts of the millions&#13;
of housewives who&#13;
use it and know it,&#13;
1ECETVED HIGHEST AWAIDS&#13;
•World's Pj» Fwi&#13;
Fanaticism and Progress.&#13;
Without fanaticism of a certain&#13;
sort, progress would be Impossible.&#13;
The minds of men and women must be&#13;
surcharged with love of a cause, or&#13;
hatred of a wrong, else they will not&#13;
put their all into the fighting. The&#13;
very origin of the word "fanatic"&#13;
connotes absorption in a single idea,&#13;
for the word is derived from the Latin&#13;
"fanum" (a temple) and the "fanaticus"&#13;
was supposed to be maddened by&#13;
the divinity whose fane he frequented.&#13;
And it is quite certain that now, as of&#13;
old, the motive power of every great&#13;
propaganda is essentially religious,&#13;
even though the leaders call themselves&#13;
agnostics or atheists. No absolutely&#13;
selfish or absolutely skeptical&#13;
person, can lead either the masses or&#13;
the classes. At the core of the true&#13;
leader's being there must be an idea&#13;
to which he clings and to which he&#13;
will sacrifice all else with a light heart,&#13;
Parnell was cold, but he loved Ireland&#13;
with an all-consuming passion; William&#13;
III. was cold, but he loved Holland&#13;
with a devotion that knew no&#13;
bounds.—New Orleans Times-Democrat.&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 38-1913.&#13;
QvoicL&#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 tho&#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 stage&#13;
where an operation is the only resource, but thousands o£&#13;
women have avoided the necessity of an operation by taking&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. &gt; This fact is&#13;
attested by the grateful letters they write to us after their&#13;
health has been restored.&#13;
These Two Women Pfrove Our&#13;
Cary, Maine.—'11 feel it a duty I&#13;
owe to all suffering women to tell&#13;
what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound did for me. One year ago&#13;
I found myself a terrible sufferer*&#13;
I had pains in both Hides and such a&#13;
soreness 1 could scarcely staighten&#13;
up at times. My back ached, I had&#13;
no appetite and was so nervous I&#13;
could not sleep, then I would be so&#13;
tired morning's that I could scarcely&#13;
get around. It seemed almost impossible&#13;
to move or do a bit of work&#13;
and I thought 1 never would be any&#13;
better until I submitted to an opera*&#13;
tion. I commenced taking Lydia E.&#13;
PinkhamTs Vegetable Compound and&#13;
soon felt like a new woman. I had&#13;
no pains, slept well, had good appetite&#13;
and was fat and could do almost&#13;
Now answer this question if you can* Why should a wc*&#13;
man submit to a surgical operation without first giving Lydia&#13;
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial? You know that&#13;
it has saved many others—wny should it fail in your case?&#13;
all my own work for a family of&#13;
four. I shall always feel that I owe&#13;
my good health to your medicine,*&#13;
—-Mrs. HAYWABD SOWKBS, Cary, Me*&#13;
Csarlotte, 27. 0 - ^ 1 was in bad&#13;
health for two years, with pa*as In&#13;
both sides and was very nervous. If&#13;
I even lifted a chair It would cause&#13;
a hemorrhage. I had a growth which&#13;
the doctor said was a tumor and I&#13;
never would get well unless I had&#13;
an operation. A friend advised ma&#13;
to take Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound, and I gladly say that&#13;
I am now enjoying fine health and&#13;
am the mother of a nice baby girl*&#13;
You can use this letter to help other&#13;
suffering women."—Mrs. Bos* Sua,&#13;
16 Wyona S t , Charlotte, N. CL&#13;
CoFmorp o3u0n dy ehaarss bLeyend itah eE s. tPatnndkanrodn rVesm Vedeyg efotarb flee- dmoaelse J iullsst.i ceN too hoenres eslifc kif wshiteh d woeosm naont 'tsr ayi tlhmise nfats- , hmaoso rse smtoerdeidci snoe m maandye s ufrfofemri nrgo owtos manend toh%erebasl,t hi»t&#13;
Yb/oauwr oleotutemr wanildl hbee lodpiennsetdr,i cret ac-t- a"n»d• "a"ns•w*»er•e•d»&#13;
&amp;&gt;/" .*&gt;»&gt; '- • • &gt; . '?:.w*-~&#13;
*.y. LLJ&amp; J!.J£.; &gt; #.'* 1¾¾¾¾&#13;
•, JJi: , _ - , * &gt; . - k ' . * V f&gt;&#13;
1 ' '&#13;
.. K V. .•.,&#13;
I.I my . t f v j i :&#13;
Wi'*i»»WI«lMil«Hmjl,HiWIOl»,-..j«|«»a-, u^SflK)'&#13;
X&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
'•.'9-&#13;
.*&#13;
£&#13;
#:&#13;
IMFORTArlL&#13;
Having decided to discontinue&#13;
farming, I offer&#13;
POP S a l e&#13;
10 to 15 head of young&#13;
serviceable short horn&#13;
cows and heifers at&#13;
about beef prices. Also&#13;
4 to 6 young Clydesdale&#13;
colts and fillys&#13;
from 1 to 3 years old.&#13;
Will give time to responsible&#13;
purchasers.&#13;
* Dipkett&#13;
Local News&#13;
y£i?- Pede Maim of kyje, Wnsh.,&#13;
is spending a few tfaya with friends&#13;
and relatives here.&#13;
T. Biikett is deposing of his&#13;
horses and cows. Read adv. on&#13;
this page.&#13;
E. J . Briggs, having decided to&#13;
leave town, will hold an auction&#13;
I There Is No Misery&#13;
In This Factsale&#13;
of tools, household furniture,\4 t h a t s e a s o n after .s, easonetc.,&#13;
at his residence here, Satur- j y e a r a f t e r y e a r — o u r c u s t o m -&#13;
day, September 20, at one o'clock J e r g r e t u r n t Q u g f o r t h e i r&#13;
sharp. R. Clinton, auctioneer.&#13;
Read adv. on this page.&#13;
Geo. Morross, the new manager&#13;
of the Pinckney hotel, wishes to&#13;
announce to the people of Pinckney&#13;
and vicinity, that commencing&#13;
Sunday, September 21, the hotel&#13;
will serve chicken dinners. Also&#13;
that every Friday a fish dinner&#13;
will be served. Sunday dinner 50c.&#13;
Week-day meals 35c. Special attention&#13;
will be given to the town&#13;
and farmer patronage.&#13;
e r s&#13;
clothes-&#13;
| And Here's Why,&#13;
i — Because&#13;
Electric Line Tkromk Hoi ell&#13;
Rumors of an electric line between&#13;
Detroit and Lansing, passing&#13;
through Brighton, Howell and&#13;
Fowlerville are asjain rife after a&#13;
silence of several years. Henry&#13;
M, Wallace a wealthy Detroiter is&#13;
the promoter of the project for the&#13;
company which has already put so&#13;
much money in it and has a right&#13;
of way surveyed from Detroit&#13;
through South Lyon, following&#13;
the Grand River road.&#13;
Deeds for the various parcels of&#13;
land in Brighton township which&#13;
the road will require have been&#13;
sent to W. L. Stuhrberg, says the&#13;
Brighton Argus. These deeds&#13;
are filled out ready for the amount&#13;
and signature of the owners and&#13;
it is expected they will be visited&#13;
in a few days.&#13;
Beautifying the City.&#13;
"Mister." inquired Dusty Rhode*,&#13;
"would you contribute a dollar to help&#13;
beautify your thriving city?'&#13;
"What's the idea?"&#13;
**A dollar will buy me a ticket to&#13;
the neiTTdwnTrt—Kansas City JourtoT'&#13;
Mrs. Dave Smith and daughter&#13;
Mabel were Howell visitors Wednesday.&#13;
North Putnam&#13;
Mabel Smith of Pinckney spent&#13;
the week end with Beulah Burgess.&#13;
Geo. Bland and wife entertained&#13;
an auto load of relatives from&#13;
Detroit from Saturday until Monday.&#13;
Mrs. D. E. Stockton and children&#13;
who have been visiting her&#13;
sister, Mrs. M.Gallup,have returned&#13;
to their home in Albion.&#13;
The school girls went to the&#13;
home of Grace Campbell, Saturday&#13;
afternoon, and formed a sewing&#13;
circle. The next meeting will&#13;
be held at the home of Florence&#13;
Burgess.&#13;
Will Dunbar and family of&#13;
Pinckney spent Sunday at- the&#13;
home of V. G- Dinkel.&#13;
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that&#13;
Contain Mercury.&#13;
as mercury will surely destroy the&#13;
sense of smell and completely derange&#13;
the whole system when entering it&#13;
through the mucus surfaces. Such articles&#13;
should never be used except on pre&#13;
scriptions from reputable physicians,&#13;
as the damage they do is ten fold to&#13;
the good you can possibly derive from&#13;
them. HalTs Catarrh Cure, manufactured&#13;
by F J Cheney &amp; Co, Toledo,&#13;
0. contains no mercury, and is taken&#13;
internally acting directly upon ^he&#13;
blood and mucus surfaces of the&#13;
system. In buying Hall's Catarrh&#13;
-thrre-be-sure you get the $eauine. It&#13;
is taken internally and made in Toledo&#13;
Ohio, by F J Cheney &amp; Co., Testimonials&#13;
free. Bold by Druggists&#13;
Price 75c. per bottle. Take Hall's&#13;
Family pills for constipation&#13;
we have learned where and&#13;
how to select the clothes we&#13;
5 sell. We have proved through&#13;
years of experience that&#13;
Michaels-Sterns Clothes I g Fall Glote Now In&#13;
at moderate prices will look&#13;
better and wear longer than&#13;
the others.&#13;
$10.00 to $25.00&#13;
WILL PAY YOUR FARE ON $15. PURCHASES IW . J. Dan_cer 6-c Co.mp.any.^&#13;
i&#13;
'THE CENTRAL'&#13;
UK Millinery&#13;
at prices about one-half what you would have to pay in the&#13;
city, and just sg good too. The very latest styles.&#13;
It is about time to think of Fall Underwear&#13;
and we have it. Also a new line of ginghams and other dre*8B&#13;
.goods in cotton and wool. We will mention a few things&#13;
that we are selling cheap to close out and now is the time to&#13;
buy them:&#13;
A glove for 98 cts. that should sell for $1.25.&#13;
A skirt for $1.00 that ought to be $1.25.&#13;
A skirt for 49 cts.; waists for 70 cts. and others&#13;
for 98 cts.&#13;
These are the same that yon will go some places and pay&#13;
$1.50 for.&#13;
In Groceries we will sell&#13;
at cheap as anyone can and get enough ont of them to pay&#13;
the freight. A 30 ot. coffee for 27 cts. 5 pkgs. com flakes&#13;
for 25 cts. 3 email caus salmon for 25 cts. HF"Give ns a call&#13;
*"*- f Yours respectfully,&#13;
The Central Store&#13;
White Staff of Life.&#13;
* The physicians have a way of balancing&#13;
the good against the bad that&#13;
endears them to the general public.&#13;
They hate enabled us to worry over&#13;
countless new diseases by discovering&#13;
new germs that our forefathers wot&#13;
not of. Their benevolent activity&#13;
sometimes makes us uncomfortable.&#13;
Bat, on the other hand, they reassure&#13;
us in other matters. Especially are&#13;
they Inclined to hold nowadays that&#13;
the appetite is an excellent guide as&#13;
to what one should eat. And as long&#13;
as we are allowed to eat what we&#13;
like we are able to reconcile our*&#13;
Belves to lesser ills. An editorial in&#13;
the current Journal of the American&#13;
Medical association gives us back&#13;
provsicians&#13;
tell us to follow our natural&#13;
Inclinations at the table, we are bound&#13;
to admit that we forget all the grievances&#13;
we may have secretly chertBhed&#13;
against them.&#13;
white bread, Btamped with its approval.&#13;
Welcome gift! When the&#13;
Dachshund Disappearing.&#13;
The dachshund three feet long In&#13;
reality and six or more in the eyes&#13;
of the caricaturist, is slowly but surely&#13;
disappearing from the pavements&#13;
and from the pages of the comic papers&#13;
in Berlin. The new style of&#13;
Viennese cafe, into which no dogs are&#13;
admitted, Is against him, and so, too,&#13;
Is the fashion which calls with constantly&#13;
increasing force for Russian&#13;
wolfhounds and toy dogs.&#13;
"But the greatest enemy of the&#13;
dachshund is the dog tax," says the&#13;
Berlin correspondent of The London&#13;
Telegraph. "This year the tax was&#13;
raised from 20 shillings to 30 shillings&#13;
($5 to $7.50). The result is that in&#13;
Berlin the number of these dogs has&#13;
diminished by 4,600 in the course of&#13;
the twelve months. In contrast the&#13;
number of dogs free of tax obligation&#13;
has increased, and 1B now .6,600, as&#13;
against 85,000 paying the 30 shillings.&#13;
Among the dogs paying no duty are&#13;
forty-six nolle e dogs."&#13;
*&#13;
Touchina.&#13;
Mr. Newlywed (reading letter from&#13;
his wife at seaside)—My own darling—&#13;
a thousand kisses*—could you send me&#13;
$60 at once? Thank you so much. I&#13;
won't ask for any more until I write&#13;
again. I will try and make that last&#13;
until I need some more. If you could&#13;
•end me $75 instead of $60 it would&#13;
save me writing before next week. I&#13;
have to pay 2 cents for every stamp&#13;
I use. The extortion of these hotel&#13;
keepers is something frightful. Goodby,&#13;
lovey.—Brooklyn Citisen.&#13;
Auction Sale!&#13;
Having decided to leave town, I will sell the following&#13;
articles at my residence in Pinckney, on&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
SEPTEMBER 20&#13;
at one o'clock sharp&#13;
Buggy,L c u t t e r , 1 set of heavy&#13;
sleighs, light driving harness,&#13;
single harness, set of wagon&#13;
springs, one f r a m e c u l t i v a t -&#13;
or, new, 5 o r 6 tons fo hay, 1&#13;
steel dump s c r a p e r , n e w , 1&#13;
steel range, 1 oil stove, dining&#13;
table, 10 ft., 6 dining c h a i r s ,&#13;
bedroom suit, couch and other&#13;
a r t i c l e s too numerous to&#13;
mention.&#13;
TERMS CASH&#13;
/&#13;
Limited Experience.&#13;
The W^idow—I suppose yon are" fa&#13;
miliar with warfare in all its wirto»*&#13;
forms, major?,&#13;
The Major—Not all. madam; not all.&#13;
I am still in the bachelor ranks.—Exchange.&#13;
Pay yemr subscription thl t9ap?r ' ^&#13;
E. J . BRIGGS&#13;
K. Clinton, A u c t i o n e e r&#13;
[WANTED! i&#13;
£ POULTRY, EG6S AND VEAL1&#13;
1 Will pay the highest market price at all times.&#13;
I Call us up before you sell. Bell phone No. 7 4&#13;
IJUOHIM D I N K E L&#13;
* $ ;tv ;•¥&#13;
£ ** -¾&#13;
••; , V - —&#13;
' • .Jfe J&#13;
&gt;::?«&#13;
41&#13;
fc^a</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch September 18, 1913</text>
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                <text>September 18, 1913 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1913-09-18</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="45">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11219">
                <text>Roy W. Caverly</text>
              </elementText>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="40681">
              <text>intkntn&#13;
Vol. XXXI&#13;
• I M M M f P V M M t a f P W P P&#13;
•**«*&gt;&#13;
Pinckney, Livingston&#13;
The House that You Built&#13;
The latest ady. of Montgomery,&#13;
Ward &lt;fc Company shows a picture&#13;
of their building and under this&#13;
are the words, "The House That&#13;
You Bailfc". This is the truest adv.&#13;
they have ever sent pat Every&#13;
community has contributed to this&#13;
magnificent building and what has&#13;
it received in dividends? Absolutely&#13;
nothing. While on the other&#13;
hand your community is poorer.&#13;
All will admit that a good market&#13;
is the best resource for any&#13;
community. If a good market is&#13;
maintained the town has got to&#13;
have the united support of the&#13;
community. If they do have this&#13;
every farm and every piece of&#13;
village property in that section is&#13;
increased in price,-If your money&#13;
goes to build homes in your own&#13;
community, what you receive back&#13;
in dividends helps to pay your&#13;
taxes, build your roads, chinches,&#13;
schoolhouses and an increase in&#13;
price for your real estate. On the&#13;
other hatd your home merchants&#13;
have a duty to perform. It is their&#13;
duty to keep on their shelves the&#13;
goods of the quality and kind Chat&#13;
the people of the community want&#13;
and not only to sell them at a&#13;
price as low as the mail order&#13;
houses fcit also to let the people&#13;
of the community know that they&#13;
have the goods and will sell tnem&#13;
for what they are worth.&#13;
No man can make a success of&#13;
business today who does not advertise.&#13;
If you want trade let the&#13;
people know what you have got to&#13;
sell- That is the secret of the&#13;
ss of the big mail order&#13;
if you are going to comwith&#13;
them you must use their&#13;
Methods.—Ex,&#13;
mm mmmmm&#13;
1&#13;
School Notes&#13;
Mrs. St7 Lavey, Mrs.Charles&#13;
Teeple, the Misses Ruth Potterton,&#13;
Beruardine Lynch and Mae&#13;
Kennedy and Gregory McQluskey&#13;
were among the high school callers&#13;
last week.&#13;
A. High School Glee Club is being&#13;
organized and it is expected&#13;
that a larger interest in musical&#13;
affairs will grow up among the&#13;
pupils.&#13;
The upper-lower tlass rush of&#13;
last Friday morning resulted in a&#13;
complete victory for the lower&#13;
clansmen.&#13;
Owing to the state fair, the cold&#13;
epidemic and the' busy season in&#13;
the rural districts, the attendance&#13;
in the high room has been very&#13;
irregular daring the past week.&#13;
Miss Mary Eatnen of Garden&#13;
City, Kansas, gave a very interesting&#13;
talk on^tor trip abroad at the&#13;
high room 0¾ Tuesday.&#13;
Tike seniors have elected the&#13;
following officers: Ona Campbell,&#13;
president; Bernard McCluskey,&#13;
•ice president; Paul Clark, treasurer&#13;
and Helen Monks, secretary.&#13;
The olaes in physics have oompleted&#13;
mechanics of fluids and&#13;
they are now solving mechanics of&#13;
•olid*. I&#13;
The juniors have organized under&#13;
the following officers:'Alger&#13;
mtt; prudent; Clair Reaeon, vice&#13;
president; Chmde Kennedy, treaturer&#13;
aSf Madeline Monro, score-&#13;
Capti^Kennedy has his fool.&#13;
TOrwaWbTt- in excellent shape,&#13;
ant baa boon unable to secure&#13;
dates lor games.&#13;
Lpcal News&#13;
Chas. Henry is spending t&#13;
week in Detroit.&#13;
Nellie Fisk spent Sunday at&#13;
home of George Clark. .&#13;
Boy Darwin of Lansing spen&#13;
Sunday with relatives here. "&#13;
Louis &lt;y lie to Lk of Detroit WOO&#13;
Pinckuey visitor one day last&#13;
,Mr, and Mrs. 0. Tyler viti&#13;
relatives in Bermingbam, Mi&#13;
last week.&#13;
Mrs. T. Shehan is visiti&#13;
friends and relatives in Detr&#13;
this week.&#13;
James Green and wife of La&#13;
sing spent Sunday at the home&#13;
W. A. Carr.&#13;
N. T. McClear and family '&#13;
Gregory spent Sunday at the ho&#13;
of M. Dolan.&#13;
Geo. Green and Ed. Garland&#13;
Howell transacted business he&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Plan to do more of your ga&#13;
ment trading at Dancer's, Stoc&#13;
bridge, adv.&#13;
A good many from Pinckne'&#13;
were in attendance at the state fai&#13;
at Detroit last week.&#13;
Rev. J. W. Mitchell end wft&#13;
are spending their vacation wit&#13;
relatives iu Canada.&#13;
Miss Mae Teeple is enbertaini&#13;
Miss Marion Woodbury of Hover'&#13;
hill, Massachusetts.&#13;
Mrs. Rt F. Sigler spent las&#13;
Wednesday at the home of Chasi&#13;
Woodworth of Gregory.&#13;
John Marlatt and family o&#13;
Gregory were guests of Dr. G. J&#13;
Pearson and wife last Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. John Ledwidge, son an&#13;
daughter of Dexter visited at th&#13;
home of -Bernard McClusEeyj&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Miss Josephine Harris of Dn&#13;
dee spent Sunday at the home&#13;
her parents, Mr. and Mrs* J.&#13;
Harris.&#13;
Elmer Welier and wife and Mo;t"&#13;
Weller and wife of Fow1*r*ifl#&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of t,&#13;
L. Thompson.&#13;
The ladies of the M. E. church&#13;
will hold a Bale of baked goods in&#13;
their rooms below the opera&#13;
house, Saturday, September 27.&#13;
Fred McGrain of Oceola, Miss&#13;
Rose Smith of Howell and Herman&#13;
Smith and wife of Howell&#13;
spent Sunday with Bernard Mc-&#13;
Cluskey and family. v&#13;
Big shipment received each&#13;
week now at Dancer's of mens&#13;
and boys suite and overcoats.&#13;
They plan to have the biggest&#13;
stock this season they eyer had. ad&#13;
Mrs. Addie Potterton has sold&#13;
her residence on Livingston street&#13;
to Mise Katie Marr of Detroit&#13;
and Mrs. Potterton has purchased&#13;
the Graham property on Mill&#13;
street.&#13;
At Detroit^ Sunday, September&#13;
14, was announced the banns of&#13;
marriage of Miss Stella Clinton of&#13;
Detroit, daughter of Mr. and Mrs,&#13;
R. Clinton of this place and Mr.&#13;
Martin Gremer, sop of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. George Greiner, west of&#13;
town.&#13;
There will be an important&#13;
meeting of the Pinckney Business&#13;
Mens Association in their rooms&#13;
^ a y ™ning, SeptemSlr 26, at&#13;
t m tfeloW m vmabm -and&#13;
osbtsa are requested to be present.&#13;
0. L. Sigler, Sec'y.&#13;
an Thursday, September 25, 1913 No. 39&#13;
JWAN TEDl]&#13;
J POULTRY. EGGS AND VEAL$ 9 9&#13;
8 Will pay the highest market price at all times. %&#13;
9 Call us up before you sell. Bell phone No. 74 \ UOHIM DIIMKEM&#13;
Fatal Accident&#13;
Last Saturday night as James&#13;
Ryan and L. Sweetland of Hamburg&#13;
were leaving Whitmore&#13;
Lake they were accosted by Jno.&#13;
Kearney who asked the priveledge&#13;
of riding with them. The request&#13;
was granted and in driving home,&#13;
when about half a mile from Hamburg,&#13;
the horse left the road and&#13;
horse, buggy and passengers went&#13;
rolling down an embankment a&#13;
distance of about 16 feet.&#13;
In falling down the bank Mr,&#13;
Kearney was thrown in such a&#13;
way that when the horse came&#13;
rolling down the bank it fell on&#13;
him, killing him instantly. Both&#13;
Mr. Ryan and Mr, Shetland were&#13;
badly shaken up and bruised but&#13;
esoaped any serious injury.&#13;
The road makes a very sharp&#13;
turn at this point and it was this&#13;
that led to the accident. Tracks&#13;
showed that the horse left the&#13;
road some distance before the rig&#13;
reached the point where the accident&#13;
occurred.&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
FOR RENT—Rooms over Monka^tore&#13;
Inquire of Mrs. Jas. Wilcox,&#13;
Pinckney. 39t3*&#13;
FOUND—A rubber auto lap robe.&#13;
Owner can have same by calling at&#13;
this office and paying for this notice&#13;
Mr. aftdMrs Noble and Clyde&#13;
Oseeare geee^s at the home of&#13;
Freif ffettfftgway. Clyde hee&#13;
been in a*J)etroit hospital siaee&#13;
last June with typhoid fever. At&#13;
soon as the young man is able&#13;
they will return to their home in&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
A Farewell Surprise&#13;
Last Monday evening a large&#13;
mpany of friends and old neighbore&#13;
gathered at the home of Mr.&#13;
nd Mrs. K, G. Webb, as a lareetinsiirpTtse^&#13;
oT Mmmd-Mrsi—E-.-&#13;
. Brigge and family.&#13;
Refreshments were served after&#13;
which in behalf of the company&#13;
Mr, J. Martin presented them a&#13;
silver bread tray.&#13;
Mr. Briggs and family expect&#13;
to leave for Flint where they will&#13;
make their home in the future.&#13;
Pay your suoscriptlon this month.&#13;
FOR RENT—Grimes house on Main&#13;
street Also good wood and coal&#13;
stove and some turniture lor saie.&#13;
38t3 H. W.Crofoot, Pincfcney&#13;
LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN—Red&#13;
and white Durham yearling heifer,&#13;
short horns. $5.00 Reward, 36t*&#13;
Wm, Gawley, Pinckney&#13;
FOUND—Handkerchief with a small&#13;
amount coin tied in end. Owner can&#13;
same by calling at this office, proving&#13;
property and paying for this&#13;
notiW.&#13;
Grand Trunk Time Table&#13;
For the convenience of our readers&#13;
Trains East Trains West&#13;
No. 28—K :39 a. m. No. 27—10:23 a. m.&#13;
No. 30—4:49 p. m. No. 29-7:12 p. m.&#13;
M. E. Appointments&#13;
The M. E. conference held at&#13;
Ypsilanti last week made the following&#13;
appointments f o r this&#13;
county:&#13;
Fowlerville—R. T. Kilpatrick&#13;
Howell—D. C. Littlejohn&#13;
Brighton—John Bettes&#13;
Pinckney—J. W. Mitchell&#13;
Unadilla—Fred Coats&#13;
Hartland—G. A. Beacock '&#13;
Parsballville—Arthur Tarmand&#13;
For Dry Goods, Furnishings, Shoes and Groceries&#13;
Largest Stock Lowest Prices&#13;
FOR PALL*&#13;
tiL We are showing new lines of Mens, Ladies, Misses and&#13;
Childrens Underwear, Mens and Boys Sweaters, New&#13;
Ginghams, Percales, Blankets, Comfortables, Hosiery, Etc.&#13;
•&#13;
OUR SATURDAY S P E C I A L S&#13;
It Extra S i z e Bed Blankets, $1.25 values at 9 6 c&#13;
ed Comfortables at 9 8 c , $1.39, $2.0Q&#13;
enox S&#13;
itfuii&#13;
P1NCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
KILLED AT ! MICHIGAN MAN H3N03ED&#13;
BANDITS ENTER JEWELRY STORE&#13;
AND MURDER&#13;
CLERKS.&#13;
THREE" SHOT AS THEY DEFEND&#13;
STORE.&#13;
Robbers Escape After Murderous Attack&#13;
With Several Thousand&#13;
Dollars' Worth of Valuable&#13;
Jewels.&#13;
Cirand Rapids, Mich.—The murder of&#13;
two jewelry store clerks and the ser Chattanooga, Tenn. — Washington&#13;
MARKETS&#13;
Live Stock, Grain and General Farm&#13;
Produce.&#13;
Detroit Stock Markets.&#13;
Cattle: Receipts, 998; market steady&#13;
Beet steers and heifers, J8.25@8.50,*&#13;
tf steer* and heifers, l.OOO to 1,200 lbs.,&#13;
|7.W^7.85; s&#13;
h&lt;&#13;
i;&#13;
ai&#13;
n&#13;
The Sensation.&#13;
Knlcker—Thete are said ' to be&#13;
timeB of great moral uplift.&#13;
Bocker—I knoyv it; but I don't like&#13;
to ride in an elevator all the time.—&#13;
Judge.&#13;
ions wounding of another by robbers ,..,.. ,., ! Gardner, of Albion Mich., was Friday !»o enlut .r._eodH Ma„nAd r.i~fl ed, +t,h ne atsntyo.nr e llTwh!h!iQ e: e• lected commander-in-chief for the en- g u i L G E A d d o f N e&#13;
the streets were alive with people | b r a 8 k a &gt; w a g t h e c a r ] d i d a t e a g r e € d o a&#13;
Ihursday afternoon is the latest and hv a fa,w ,l M l l i i r s nf t h p n.rand Armv&#13;
most serious of a series of crimes&#13;
which have kept ^the people of Grand&#13;
Rapids in terror throughout the summer.&#13;
Shortly before 6 o'clock two men&#13;
walked into the jewelry store of J.&#13;
J. Thomson, on Monroe avenue, and,&#13;
with drawn revolvers, demanded that&#13;
the employes throw up their hands.&#13;
John T. Thomson, a cousin, of the&#13;
proprietor, sprang forward and a hulby&#13;
a few leaders of the Grand Army&#13;
at the last encampment, and the election&#13;
of this year came after one of the&#13;
hardest fights ever waged in a national&#13;
encampment. Michigan gained a&#13;
double victory, procuring not only the&#13;
commander-in-chief, but the next encampment&#13;
also, the delegates votingto&#13;
me-et in 1914 at Detroit.&#13;
Gen. Gardner's first official act was&#13;
to appoint Oscar A. James, of Detroit,&#13;
adjutant general.&#13;
Commander-in-chtef "Gardner wai m ended Iiis life. Ed. Smith also j b o r n I n Morrow County, Ohio, in Feb&#13;
started for the men and he, too, fell [ ruary,-1945. At -the age of 16 he ento&#13;
the floor, mortally wounded. Paul 1 listed in Companl D, Srtxty-flfth Ohio&#13;
Townsend, a watchmaker, formerly&#13;
01' Detroit, started from the workshop&#13;
and received a bullet in the neck. He&#13;
was taken to Butterworth hospital&#13;
in a critical condition.&#13;
The robbers then dashed from the&#13;
store and along Monroe avenue to&#13;
Crescent street, where they disappeared.&#13;
They took several thousand&#13;
dollars' worth of jewels.&#13;
Anti-American Mexican Resigns,&#13;
Mexico City—Dr. Aureliano Urrutia.&#13;
Mexican minister of the interior,&#13;
has left tlie cabinet, saying he has not&#13;
the qualifications for the post.&#13;
Dr. I'rrutia is under charges preferred&#13;
by Senator Manuel Calero, former&#13;
Mexican ambassador at Washington,&#13;
for arresting him in defiance of hia&#13;
immunity as senator.&#13;
Dr. I'rrutia is a surgeon and had&#13;
never before had experience in politics,&#13;
His anti-American sentiments&#13;
have not been disguised during his&#13;
Term of oflice and the foreign diplomats&#13;
here were opposed to his retention&#13;
in the cabinet. Dr. Urrutia was&#13;
the author of the so-called Ihierta ultimatum&#13;
to the U. S,, which was&#13;
promptly repudiated by the foreign&#13;
minister.&#13;
Arabs Kill Italian General.&#13;
Bengazi, Tripoli.- The Italian commahder,&#13;
General Tore Ml and 3!l Italian&#13;
officers and men were killed in a battle&#13;
Tuesday with Arab tribesmen.&#13;
The Italian column, which had been&#13;
operating for some time against the&#13;
tribesmen, found them strongly entrenched&#13;
on a hight commanding the&#13;
Valley of Tecniz. When attacked, the&#13;
Arabs resisted with great stubbornness,&#13;
being aided by the nature of the&#13;
ground. But the Italian artillery&#13;
served with remarkable precision,&#13;
pouring a hail of shell onto the position&#13;
and compelling the Arabs'to retreat&#13;
to the desert.&#13;
General Torelli fell at the head of&#13;
his troops while urging them on to&#13;
the attack. -&#13;
volunteer infantry. He was on duty&#13;
continuously from 1861 under Buell&#13;
in the army of the Ohio, under Rosecrans&#13;
in the army of the Cumberland&#13;
and under Thomas and Sherman in&#13;
the campaign against Atlanta until&#13;
disabled by a gunshot wound during&#13;
the balde Of Resaca, in May, 1864.&#13;
New Camera Is Invented.&#13;
Vallejo, Cal.—A wireless photographic&#13;
instrument, which works only&#13;
at night and is said to reflect everything&#13;
within a radius of several miles,&#13;
has been invented, it is declared, by a&#13;
local inventor, formerly an expert in&#13;
the government employ.&#13;
Secretary of the Navy Daniels has&#13;
invited the inventor to take the machine&#13;
to Washington for inspections&#13;
by the navy department. The impressions&#13;
are made from a screen of&#13;
wire on top of a tall mast.&#13;
Slavery in Islands Again Charged.&#13;
Washington—Selling of boys and&#13;
girls for from $60 to $100 and regarding&#13;
the practice to sell native women&#13;
to the highest bidder as a right were&#13;
told of in a report from W. H. Phipps,&#13;
auditor of the islands, to Secretary&#13;
Garrison.&#13;
"I have no hesitancy in saying that&#13;
the charges of Secretary Dean Worcester&#13;
that slavery in its worst forms&#13;
exists in the Philippines are true,"&#13;
hj said.&#13;
It is probable that a formal investigation&#13;
will be ordered.&#13;
MWLES ON FACE AND ARMS&#13;
• t t Howard St., Dayton, Ohio.—&#13;
a year ago my face, neck, arms&#13;
id tack were beginning to become&#13;
lict«4 wife lUtples and blackheads&#13;
pjmgin wottM get very large and&#13;
to «00» to a head. If I tried&#13;
oeea tfccuv the pain would be terri-&#13;
»ttt BOthing could be taken from&#13;
Tbey itched very badly; I suf- j&#13;
terribly from itching. After&#13;
Patching, the pimples would swell&#13;
after the swelling was" gone my&#13;
|ce would] become very red and re-&#13;
•o for some time. My clothing&#13;
[wed the Itching to be worse. When&#13;
warm it was utterly impossible&#13;
sleep.&#13;
used a cream and the more I&#13;
the worse they got. Shortly after,&#13;
(ad the advertisement of Cuticura&#13;
and Ointment and determined to&#13;
them. The itching stopped almost&#13;
mediately. This was about three&#13;
iths ago and I am entirely cured&#13;
(Signed) Miss Marguerite E.&#13;
M&gt;s, Jan. 13, 1913.&#13;
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold&#13;
jughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
[e.with 32-p. Skin Book. Address posted&#13;
"Cuticura, Dept L, Boston."—Adv.&#13;
ove based on pity is apt to come&#13;
in the laundry;—&#13;
iVater in bluing is adulteration. Glass and&#13;
ter makes liquid blue costly. Buy Red&#13;
$8 Ball Blue, makes clothes whiter than&#13;
w. Adv.&#13;
Which?&#13;
["Here's an account of a girl hugged&#13;
a bear."&#13;
'Did it happen at a mountain ret&#13;
or in Wall street?"&#13;
Important to Mothers&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle of&#13;
STQRIA, a safe and sure remedy for&#13;
fants and children, and see that it&#13;
Bears the&#13;
gnature of&#13;
ji Use For Over 80 Years,&#13;
ildren Cry for Fletcher's Castoria&#13;
A kiss In the dark may he a divine&#13;
ark, or it may be a mistake.&#13;
WOMAN FEELS&#13;
10 YEARS&#13;
YOUNGER&#13;
Since Lydia. E. Pinkham'a&#13;
Vegetable Compound Re*&#13;
stored Her Health*&#13;
Uric Acid Is Slow Poison&#13;
Excess uric acid left in the blood by&#13;
weak kidneys, causes more diseases&#13;
than any other poison.&#13;
Among its effects are backache, headache,&#13;
dizziness, irritability, nervousness,&#13;
drowsiness, "blues," rheumatic attacks&#13;
and urinary disorders. Later effects&#13;
are dropsy, gravel or heart disease.&#13;
' If you would avoid uric acid troubles,&#13;
keep your kidneys healthy. To stimulate&#13;
and strengthen weak kidneys, use&#13;
Doan's Kidney Pills—the best recommended&#13;
special kidney remedy.&#13;
A Wisconsin Case&#13;
mvtTV rtCVurf Ttll* « Story."&#13;
Two More Treaties Signed);&#13;
Washington—Secretary Bryan&#13;
ed treaties putting into effect kbit&#13;
Important Appointments in Ohio.&#13;
Columbus, 0.—Governor Cox appointed&#13;
Hugh L. Nichols, of Batavia,&#13;
as chief justice of the Ohio supreme&#13;
court. Mr. Nichols, who was serving&#13;
•his second term as lieutenant governor,&#13;
is succeeded in that office by State&#13;
Senator W. A. Greenlund, of Cleveland,&#13;
who also was appointed by the&#13;
governor.&#13;
Harvey C. Taft, thirty-third degree,&#13;
one of the best-'known Masons in&#13;
western Michigan, died at Grand Rapids,&#13;
aged t&gt;8 years.&#13;
President E. G. Lancaster, of Olivet&#13;
college, Tuesday announced that Andrew&#13;
Carne#ie has given the institution&#13;
an endowment of $25,000. A Saginaw&#13;
man has offered to give $50,000&#13;
if an endowment of $200,000 can be&#13;
reached by Dec. 1. The college now&#13;
has $85,000.&#13;
By a vote of 41 to 4 the United&#13;
Brethren conference la session in&#13;
Grand Rapids favored merging with&#13;
the Methodist Protestant denomination.&#13;
In the event of consolidation&#13;
Adrian college and Methodist Protest*&#13;
arit church in Detroit, Grand Rapids,&#13;
Lansing, Saginaw and Flint would be&#13;
affected.&#13;
A new German Evangelical church&#13;
has been dedicated at Elk ton, taking&#13;
the place of a new edifice destroyed&#13;
lift January by-Are resulting from&#13;
lightning.&#13;
peace proposals between the United^ • J * 0 1 0 8 ^ *} ?7, $**}*** ° ? e n ? d a t&#13;
Ht*3, gained l-4c and declined tc&#13;
fl.03; #0. 1 white, 94 1*#T .&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, 76 l-2c; No. £&#13;
yellow, 1 car at 77 l-2c; No7 3 yellow,&#13;
1 car at 77c.&#13;
States and Panama and Guantamala.&#13;
Like treaties now have been negotiated&#13;
between this country, and three&#13;
other nations, while Honduras has&#13;
agreed to sign a similar pact, and it&#13;
is expected that a similar agreement&#13;
soon will be reached with Costa Rica&#13;
Secretary Bryan's plan has been accepted&#13;
in principle by 29 nation's.&#13;
Heads of Commissioners Appointed.&#13;
Washington—Secretary Bryan has&#13;
appointed Henry St. George Tucker,&#13;
of Virginia, formerly president of the&#13;
Jamestown exposition, as the head of&#13;
a commission on behalf of the&#13;
Panama-Pacific exposition to visit&#13;
China and Japan.&#13;
The secretary also announced the&#13;
appointment of former Gov. Alva&#13;
Adams, of Colorado, as the head of an&#13;
exposition commission to visit Australia,&#13;
New Zealand and the East In*&#13;
dies and the Strait Settlements.&#13;
British R. R. Strike Settled.&#13;
London—The strike of the railroad&#13;
men in the British Isles was practically&#13;
brought to an end Saturday.&#13;
Officials of the companies reached&#13;
an agreement with the representatives&#13;
of the men's unions on the basis of&#13;
the reinstatement of all strikers "Who&#13;
agree to handle all the traffic which&#13;
the railroads are bound to carry undeT&#13;
the law.&#13;
Col. J. L. Smith, 69 years oM, of&#13;
Detroit, retained the speed championship&#13;
title by winning a sprint and a&#13;
long distance race from seven challengers&#13;
at the Chattanooga G. A. R.&#13;
reunion. The Michigan champion, took&#13;
the 100-yard daeh In 17 seconds. In&#13;
the two and one-half mile contest, Col.&#13;
ahead 0* H. G. Bama, of Pittsburg.&#13;
The elapsed time WM 16 minutes 10&#13;
second*,&#13;
94 l-2s; advanced to 95c and declined&#13;
to 94 l-2c; December opened at&#13;
97 8-4c, lost l-2c, recovered to 96c&#13;
Oats—Standard, 44 l-2c; No. 2&#13;
white, 44c; No. 4 white, 43c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 69 l-2c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate and prompt ship&#13;
ment, $1.80; October, $1.85.&#13;
Clovrseed—October, $7.10; Decern'&#13;
ber, 50 bags at $7.20; March, $7.30;&#13;
sample, 15 bags at $6,75, 24 at $6.50.&#13;
12 at $6; October alsike, $10.25; sample&#13;
alsike, 18 bags at $9.50, 12 ai&#13;
$8.75.&#13;
Timothy—Prime spot, 40 bags ai&#13;
$2.60.&#13;
Alfalfa—Prime spot, $8.&#13;
Barley—By sample, 1 car at $1.5C&#13;
per cwt.&#13;
Hay—Carlots, track Detroit; No. 3&#13;
timothy, $16^16.50; standard, $15©&#13;
15.50; No. 2, $14©14.50; light mixed&#13;
$15@t5.50; No. 1 mixed; $13.50 @ 14;&#13;
rye straw* $18@9; wheat and/oat&#13;
itraw, $7^7.50 per ton.&#13;
Feed—In 100-lb sacks, jobbing lots:&#13;
Bran, $26; coarse middlings, $27; fini&#13;
middlings, $29; cracked corn, $33;&#13;
coarse corn-meal, 681; corn and oal&#13;
chop, $27*50 per ton. .&#13;
Detroit General Markets.&#13;
Plume—61.3001.75 per bu.&#13;
Pfjars—Clapp's Favorite,- 750$1;&#13;
Bartlett, 1(1^601.50 per bu_ ''&#13;
Apples—Michigan* 50c® $1 per bu;&#13;
No 1, 62.750¾ per bbl; No. 2,^1.600&#13;
2perbbl. .&#13;
Green Corn—10 011c fc&gt;er doz.&#13;
Cabbage—$20125; per bbl&#13;
Potatoes—$202.25 per sack of 2 1-*&#13;
bushels.,&#13;
TOToatoef^Home-grown, 90c pei&#13;
bushel&#13;
Smith crossed the tape 800 ^ » r d i ^ ^ ^ ^ N e w acuthern, $1 per bo;&#13;
Spanish, $1.40 per crate.&#13;
Honey—Choice to fancy new yhitc&#13;
1 comb, 14016c; amber, 10At|K' M&#13;
tnctid, 706c pet lb. * . 1&#13;
• ^ • ' " " • ' V i i . ' h •'••••• *&#13;
Mrs. Jane Smith,&#13;
fl Ctay—St., -Me- f&#13;
nauha, Wl»., aay*:&#13;
"I could hardly&#13;
get out of bed. My&#13;
back ached, my&#13;
body bloated and&#13;
my anklet were&#13;
swollen. I lost 46&#13;
pounds In weight.&#13;
D o c t o r g didn't&#13;
know what ailed&#13;
me and couldn't&#13;
help me. Finally,&#13;
1 took Doan'a&#13;
Kidney Pilla and&#13;
they cured me, AH&#13;
the •welling* disappeared.&#13;
Doan's&#13;
Ktdney Pilli iave*&#13;
my life."&#13;
C«t Doafi't at Any Store, 50e • Box DOAN'-S VATiV&#13;
FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO, N. Y.&#13;
Louisville, Ky. — "I take great pleas*&#13;
ure in writing to inform you of what&#13;
:,.,,81.1,,¾ Lydia E. Pinkham'a&#13;
!«:«:;:i«.i V e g e t a b l e - Compound&#13;
has done for&#13;
me. I was weak,&#13;
nervous, and cared&#13;
for n o t h i n g b u t&#13;
jjj!l| sleep. Now I can,&#13;
go ahead with my&#13;
work daily and feel&#13;
ten years youngec&#13;
than before I started&#13;
taking your medicine.&#13;
I will advise&#13;
any woman to consult with you before&#13;
going to a doctor. "—Mrs. INIZE WILLIS,&#13;
2229 Bank S t , Louisville, Ky.&#13;
Another Sufferer Relieved.&#13;
Romayor, Texas.—"I suffered terribly&#13;
with a displacement and bladder&#13;
trouble. I was in misery all the time&#13;
and could not walk any distance. I&#13;
thought I never could be cured, but my&#13;
mother advised me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound and I did.&#13;
tl I am cured of the displacement and&#13;
the bladder trouble is relieved. I thinlc&#13;
the Compound is the finest medicine on&#13;
earth for suffering women." — Mrs.&#13;
VIOLA JASPER, Romayor, Texas,&#13;
If you want special advice write to&#13;
Lydia £• Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential)&#13;
Lynn, Mass* Your letter will&#13;
be opened, read and answered by ft&#13;
woman and held in strict confidence*&#13;
DR. J. D. KELLOQG'S ASTHMA Remedy for t h e prompt rSllef of&#13;
A s t h m a a n d Hay Fever. Ask your&#13;
druggist for It. Write for FREE SAMPLE&#13;
NORTHROP &amp; LYMAN CO.. Ltd., BUFFALO, N.Y.&#13;
B L A C K&#13;
CSTB. /850 -DETROIT&#13;
OPTICIAN&#13;
IS6 WOODWARD AVE.&#13;
THE NSW FRENCH REMIDY. N«1..,-_, THERAPION ' H ^&#13;
greVaIMt ,m KccIDeNssE,Y C, OBRLEASD CDHERRO, NDICiS^BWAJSAEKSN, MBLSO, tOoDa _r.y&#13;
PILK9. BITHRR No. DKUOGISTSOr MAIL t l . FOgf .&#13;
FOUGBRA CO, 90, BERKMAN ST. NEW YORIOR LYMAW — ._&#13;
TORONTO. WRITE FOR FFTSB BOOK TO DR. LB CLBRQ&#13;
MED. CO, HAVBRSTOCKRD,HAJIPST«AD, LONDON, ENO.&#13;
TRY_NEWDRAO£BTTASTBLBSS)RORMOR EASY TO TABS&#13;
** —' * "^" •" " SAFE AND&#13;
_ LASTING CURS.&#13;
H E THAI IKAU1 n n n n s v ..„...., TXBRAPION ' IS ON&#13;
B U T . GOVT. STAMP A f V U E D TO ALL GENUINE PACKETS*&#13;
TRY NEW DRAGEE tTASTSLBSS) PORK OP THERAPION SSB THAT TRADEMARKW^WORS/TH&#13;
—rannnrs—&#13;
HAIR BALSAM&#13;
A toilet preparation of merit.&#13;
Help* to eradicate dandruff.&#13;
For Reatorinf Color *nd&#13;
B«auty toGrajr or Faded HalrJ&#13;
60o. and tl-t» *t Prnggurta,&#13;
1T3) JI of ^58 Pap** Keaders g$$&amp;£ advertised in its columns should&#13;
insist upon having what they ask for,&#13;
refusing all substitutes or imitations.&#13;
W. N. U., rJETROIT, NO.,39-1913.&#13;
TheUp^o-DateLighdngSystemforCountryHomes&#13;
The Improred JennePit Acetylene Generator&#13;
Installed in the ground and covered over like a astern.&#13;
Far removed from tlie building. Fool-Proof,&#13;
Frostproof, Safe and Convenient Permitted by&#13;
The National Board of Fire Underwriters. Guaranteed&#13;
absolutely. The best lighting system on&#13;
earth for the least money. Hundreds of fanners&#13;
have become agents after installing our generator&#13;
in their homes. Write for our special inducements&#13;
to the first purchaser in each locafity.&#13;
Protected by patents. Infringers liable to proeecu*&#13;
tion. Full particulars for the asking.&#13;
The Jenne Acetylene Gil Maxhine Co., Meridian Life BUg., Iiulianapofia, Ind.&#13;
W.L. DOUGLAS&#13;
^«3£ft «3^25 f 4 £ 2&#13;
AND *5££ -SHOES&#13;
FOR MEN A W WOMEN&#13;
8£8TBOY88H0E8 ft tht WORLD&#13;
$2.00. $2.50 and $3.00.&#13;
Tee largest makers of&#13;
Men's t&amp;BOaad $4.00&#13;
sboss m the world.&#13;
L£j.r oDuro udgelaalse ren s&gt;o5 0s,0h4oUwO Oyo aun d . Maln dsh woee*a.r J aue sot tahs egro moda Ikne ss toyoles,t t^eg^ f0a^.0^0 to ( the only dlfferem Is the iplot? fheeeln&#13;
Xf yen oeefdt evsi asint dW . IZ X&gt;teeeg sJuasit l aerrogpey fbaoedte * at Brjeektoa, Mass., and see for yourself&#13;
bow^eseafuOy W. 1» Douglas shoes are made.&#13;
, loo* better, hold tWrstaepe a&#13;
any ether make for the pSee,&#13;
feetor•rye ssaodtfoTaaaatafOJttTloWty.orSst SETS tb« uHBm&amp;fi aro"&#13;
[TAiaitO etieorrrurt&#13;
It muL show »00 how to&#13;
SMS BK)IM7 on you&#13;
&amp;&gt;&#13;
e . *.«&#13;
*r &gt;&#13;
{ i&#13;
i&#13;
1&#13;
t /&#13;
*+»?•••&#13;
• «.'i&#13;
*•&#13;
MV&gt;k to*- '&#13;
si!- '.'&#13;
.-*&#13;
- A&#13;
^ ^ • l i l h * - * « &gt; i * *••• \ , .&#13;
J.BK^&#13;
:-if - •;•&#13;
~ -Ml&#13;
*&#13;
• * w&#13;
1..&#13;
*&#13;
•- v..&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
BUTTONS. IN VARIETY (TRIMMINGS MAKE THE GOWN&#13;
D I S T I N G U I S H I N G M A R K O F COMING&#13;
SEASON'S G O W N S .&#13;
Wonderful Assortment of the Decorative&#13;
O n c i Are Shown, and No&#13;
:r Costume Is Complete Without&#13;
the Fullest Quota.&#13;
&lt;TJntil one examines a dress in detail&#13;
it is not recognized how important a&#13;
part buttons are playing in the prevailing&#13;
modes, or what interesting effects&#13;
may be accomplished with them.&#13;
The shops display a wonderful assortment&#13;
of decorative buttons, and very&#13;
often these are responsible for the success&#13;
of otherwise simple frocks. Setf&#13;
covered ones are still used, but their&#13;
glory is distinctly dimmed by the more&#13;
artistic examples in China, crystal,&#13;
cloisonne and all the metals, in each&#13;
of which the variety is overwhelmingly&#13;
great.&#13;
In the pretty frock of the accompanying&#13;
sketch the buttons are not by&#13;
'any means the least feature. They&#13;
are medium sizee} balls of silver oddly&#13;
arranged on sleeveB and skirt.&#13;
The frock itBelf is of plaited white&#13;
crepe de chine and has a novel arrangement&#13;
of the sash, which is of&#13;
black charmeuse, wide and crushed&#13;
about t h e waist, with a&#13;
short overlapping loop to , t h e&#13;
h i p r another almost to the knee, and&#13;
one longer end embroidered and furnished&#13;
with tassels, reaching well&#13;
down the skirt.&#13;
The sleeves are cut in one with the&#13;
yoke pf the blouse, and to this" the&#13;
plaited front and back portions are attached&#13;
in an arched line under a selfcovered&#13;
cording. The round neck has&#13;
a narrow fichu collar of net and the&#13;
ruffles at the wrist are of net.&#13;
The skirt consists of two short&#13;
plaited -crepe de chine flounces and a&#13;
pj^in .lower part, which is the foundation&#13;
skirt and trimmed with an appilqued&#13;
border done in black. Some of&#13;
this black design is applied to t h e&#13;
sleeves around the elbow where it puffs&#13;
between the buttoned upper and lower&#13;
pdrts.&#13;
Rose and Yellow Both Leading Shades.&#13;
Rose and yellow shades from t h e&#13;
patest flink and lemon.to the damaBk&#13;
red and coppery yellows lead the way&#13;
among colors in the newest silks and&#13;
satins, corded crepes de sole and other&#13;
fashionable fabrics, while among the&#13;
materials which will make some of&#13;
the prettiest of garden party and&#13;
afternoon frocks are the many_ varie-&#13;
* ties of chine and pompadour" crepe&#13;
silks and delaines patterned with the&#13;
little floral bouquets that were popular&#13;
in thjff $0«.&#13;
Thfr woman, ho were/, who has but a&#13;
limited dress* allowance or who Is&#13;
snort^nrould be wiser to have her tailor-&#13;
made of one material only, and if&#13;
for afternoon wear It might be of soft&#13;
broche^ crepe or corded silk, if not pf&#13;
chiffoa^moir*. ; £*'&#13;
Winged Creatures on Parasols.&#13;
Birds are one of the artistic and&#13;
beautlfuUsu^ects-for parasoMestxns.&#13;
One charming parasol shows a- flock&#13;
of bttdB in black Chatitnty lace fry.&#13;
lag over a fight silk ground. Another&#13;
nhows circles of bluebirds and&#13;
btttterflet'forever flying abovt t b e&#13;
, odft of a white silk background.&#13;
• * • * • ' " " ' - A&#13;
Plain Gray Cotton Voile Set Off by&#13;
Handsome Arrangement of&#13;
Pink and White.&#13;
A charming idea is the color scheme&#13;
of this plain gray cotton voile with&#13;
trimming of pink&#13;
and white. A continuous&#13;
band of&#13;
pink and white&#13;
cotton embroidery&#13;
outlines the&#13;
bottom of the elbow&#13;
sleeve, continues&#13;
over t h e&#13;
s h o u l d e r a n d&#13;
forms a V-shaped&#13;
neck beneath a&#13;
yoke of white&#13;
tulle crossed surplice&#13;
fashion and&#13;
fastened with tiny&#13;
pink buttons. The&#13;
neck and sleeves&#13;
are piped with&#13;
pink, the latter&#13;
being softened by&#13;
two-inch pleated&#13;
frill of net. The&#13;
crushed girdle Is&#13;
of pink and gray&#13;
silk. The skirt is cut in two pieces&#13;
and is plain except ior groups of&#13;
pink buttons.&#13;
MOST SUITABLE FOR HOUSE&#13;
Hardy Fern an Ornament That Will&#13;
Show Its Beauty for Many&#13;
Months.&#13;
The hardy fern with glossy leaves is&#13;
a much better plant for the table than&#13;
the delicate fernlike ferns. It becomes&#13;
a "life struggle" for any variety&#13;
of fern in the dry and heated atmosphere&#13;
of a house, and so one&#13;
should select only the hardiest for table&#13;
decoration.&#13;
It is well to be sure that there are&#13;
enough holes in t h e receptacle in&#13;
which the fern is planted to afford&#13;
good drainage.&#13;
Ferns thrive best in a moist atmosphere,&#13;
and this congenial atmosphere&#13;
can, with very little trouble, be provided&#13;
for even the table fern. Have&#13;
a case made of four pieces of window&#13;
glass set in a wooden frame, sufficiently&#13;
large to cover one or more ferns&#13;
without brushing their sensitive&#13;
fronds. After sprinkling t h e leaves&#13;
(do not pour water on the soil in this&#13;
instance) plentifully with water, place&#13;
the case, which has no bottom, over&#13;
the fern, and allow it to remain thus&#13;
over night. In the morning take the&#13;
fern out and place near an open window&#13;
for a few minutes, so that it may&#13;
"breathe" the fresh air. A small&#13;
glass showcase, a large glass bowl or&#13;
an aquarium would, of course, serve&#13;
the same purpose.&#13;
Foley Kidney Pills Succeed&#13;
because t h e y a r e a good h o n e s t m e d -&#13;
icine t h a t c a n n o t h e lp b u t heal kidney&#13;
a n d bladder a i l m e n t s a n d u r i n a r y&#13;
irregularities, if they a r e once t a k e n&#13;
into the s y s t e m . T r y t h e m now&#13;
lor positive a n d p e r m a n e n t help.&#13;
Constipation&#13;
Vanishes Forever&#13;
Prompt Relief—Permanent Cure&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
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;
indigestion,"&#13;
improve the complexion, brighten the eyes.&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
Many a brave man is apt to fear a&#13;
silent woman.&#13;
Don't buy water for bluing. Liquid blue&#13;
is nhnost all water. Buy Red Cross Ball&#13;
Blue, the blue that's all blue. Adv.&#13;
Sooner or later the man with a&#13;
swelled head will get what's coming&#13;
to him.&#13;
FOR HOLDING THE MATCHES&#13;
Handy Box That May Be Made an.Ornament&#13;
with a Little Time&#13;
and Work.&#13;
A box of matches should find a&#13;
place in every room, and if it is fixedto&#13;
the wall near the gas bracket, espe_-&#13;
cially in bedrooms, it will always be&#13;
at hand when needed. The little holder&#13;
we show here is very easy to make;&#13;
it has a foundation of cardboard cut&#13;
about eight Inches long and three&#13;
and one-half inches wide. Cover the&#13;
card with some pretty pieces of silk&#13;
or satin and bind the edges all round&#13;
with ribbon; for our model, ribbon&#13;
with picot edge was used, the little&#13;
picots giving a nice finish. Turn one&#13;
end sharply up about three inches,&#13;
then in the spaces at sides put a&#13;
Comfort for Night Workers.&#13;
_ In one of the New York hotels a&#13;
floor is arranged for the use of those&#13;
who work a t night and sleep during&#13;
the day. The "Sleepy Sixteenth," as&#13;
the floor ic nicknamed, is run on an&#13;
inverted time table, with a separate&#13;
staff, and its own restaurant, lift and&#13;
telephone service. No one sleeping on&#13;
this floor is called, except under special&#13;
orders, until late in t h e day&#13;
Breakfast is served in the afternoon&#13;
and the other meals are put back in&#13;
the same way. All the routine work of&#13;
cleaning and bedmaking is done after&#13;
nightfall.&#13;
Cultivate Originality.&#13;
President Wilson,*' as his ambassadorial&#13;
appointments show, is no mean&#13;
literary critic.&#13;
The president is a great believer in&#13;
originality, and In an al fresco luncheon&#13;
in Cornish last month he couched&#13;
in a neat epigram a word of advice&#13;
to a young poet.&#13;
"Never," he said to this young poet&#13;
—"never follow the crowd*f you want&#13;
the crowd to follow you."&#13;
Adding Fuel.&#13;
"John, if I should die, would you&#13;
marry again?"&#13;
"I might, but not until I had had a&#13;
good long rest."—Houston Post.&#13;
Some people have a streak of bad&#13;
luck and then change for the worse.&#13;
As Good As It Looks&#13;
and Better&#13;
R o u g e Hex sho^s h a v e p r o v e d tht-ir&#13;
worth to t h o u s a n d s .&#13;
T h i s one is especially worthy of your considrratiuu,&#13;
if you a r e lookiu^ for a shoe that is huitcd&#13;
to the season.&#13;
No. 408 is 12 inches high, with full bellows&#13;
toogue, and full vamp u n d e r the toe cap, giving&#13;
double wear at that point.&#13;
T h e soles are of three thicknesses&#13;
of sole leather, the outsole being of&#13;
water-proot stock of extra wearing&#13;
quality.&#13;
KverythinR about this shoe is&#13;
soli&lt;l l e a t h e r , a n rl i t i s p u t&#13;
together A-ith&#13;
long service&#13;
in view.&#13;
Ask your d e a l e r for these shoes. If he does not&#13;
handle them, send for our free Rouge Rex Book, and&#13;
we will give you the name of our nearest agent&#13;
HIRTH - KRAUSE COMPANY&#13;
Hide to Shoe Tanners and Shoe Manufacturers&#13;
G R A N D RAPIDS M I C H I G A N&#13;
No oculist can do anything for the&#13;
blindness of self-love.&#13;
Love knows no locksmith, but niotli-&#13;
; er often proves a very effectual substitute.—&#13;
Atchison Globe.&#13;
Mrs.Wiaalow's Sootlilnjj Syrup for Children&#13;
teethioK, softens the giiins, reduces inflauimation,&#13;
allays pain,cures wind coiic,25c a bottLe.JUv&#13;
Realistic.&#13;
"Is the story of that foreign wedding&#13;
etabbing affray in the papers?"&#13;
"Yes; illustrated with plenty of&#13;
cuts." —&#13;
It has gotten so that a girl isn't&#13;
considered a good dancer if the can't&#13;
throw her hips out of joint and then.&#13;
throw them back again.&#13;
Reminding Him.&#13;
The engagement was broken.&#13;
"And so it is all over?" spake a sympathetic&#13;
friend.&#13;
"Yea," answered the ex-fiance; "she&#13;
said she would never have anything&#13;
to do with me again."&#13;
"Then why this distraught mien,&#13;
seeing that the damsel appealed not&#13;
unto thee?"&#13;
"She writes to me every day asking&#13;
me to try to forget her."&#13;
Complimentary.&#13;
"I tell my wife all I know."&#13;
" ' rrYe's,"'she told my wife that you&#13;
hardly say a tiling to her."&#13;
But Not Musical.&#13;
Knicker—What is a harmonica?&#13;
Rocker—Corn on the cob set to music.—&#13;
New York Sun.&#13;
Sleuthing.&#13;
"I asked her if her husband&#13;
smoked," said the woman with an inquiring&#13;
mind; "and what do you&#13;
think! She said she didn't know!"&#13;
"I don't see what difference it&#13;
makes to you."&#13;
"Oh, I don't care whether he smokes.&#13;
I wanted to find out if he kisseB her."&#13;
—Washington Star.&#13;
Self-Evident Fact.&#13;
"Are you going to attend Mrs.&#13;
Snapper's musicale?1'&#13;
"Do you observe any strong-armed&#13;
individuals propelling me by main&#13;
force in the direction of Mrs. Snapper's&#13;
villa?"&#13;
"1 do not."&#13;
"Then jyou may surmise that I am&#13;
not going to attend Mrs. Snapper's&#13;
musicale."&#13;
Literal.&#13;
Sentimental Sue—Did you have a&#13;
woman come stealing gent!}' into your&#13;
; life?&#13;
i Practical Pete—Yes. She was a&#13;
! lady pickpocket.&#13;
Just Like Her.&#13;
i "He had his wife talk into a graphophone&#13;
to remind him of her while she&#13;
was away."&#13;
"He carripd out the illusion porfoct-&#13;
* ly," said a neighbor. "He kept it, going&#13;
all the time." -Louisville Courier-&#13;
Journal.&#13;
1&#13;
Prudish Priest.&#13;
Prudery knows 110 frontiers. T h e&#13;
^historic and valuable frescoes in the&#13;
j church of Henouville, Calvedos, have&#13;
just been ruined by Hie misplaced zeal&#13;
of a parish priest. The frescoes rep-&#13;
! resented the Day of Judgment and&#13;
j scenes from an old French parable.&#13;
and the priest's action is due lo the&#13;
fact that the painter clothed his fig-&#13;
I ures after the fashion of our first&#13;
parents.--London (Hobo.&#13;
The Food Route&#13;
To Steady Health&#13;
1&#13;
wedge-shaped piece of sfik bound at&#13;
top with ribbon, it can be slip-stitched&#13;
inside the holder; the width of the&#13;
wedge at top should be enough to allow&#13;
of the box being slipped easily&#13;
inter the .holder. A Do.w*&gt;f ribbon, with&#13;
loops by Vhlch it may be suspended&#13;
is sewn to the top. ' "&#13;
•r-r- Japanese Lampshade.&#13;
A novel and attract!**, lampshade&#13;
ctrnien' from' Jspnr. The frame is&#13;
made of white wood lacquered black&#13;
tern with attractive" design*-bf ilffwera&#13;
and birds.&#13;
r:&#13;
Many people are kept ill because they do&#13;
not know now to select food that their own&#13;
particular bodies will take up and build upon.&#13;
What' will answer for . one will not do&#13;
for another. »&#13;
If one is ailing it is safe to change food&#13;
entirely and go en a plain, simple diet, say:&#13;
S o m e fruit&#13;
Dish of Grape-Nuts a n d Cream&#13;
Soft-boiled e g g s&#13;
Crisp Toast&#13;
A C u p of Postum&#13;
no more.&#13;
Man I But a diet like that makes one&#13;
feel good after a few clays' use*&#13;
The most perfectly made&#13;
food for human use is&#13;
Grape-Nuts&#13;
"There's a Reason"&#13;
Get the little book, "The Road to Well,&#13;
title," in pkgi.&#13;
S U P P O R T E D H I M&#13;
Food That Saved When Everything Else&#13;
Failed.&#13;
The" food route is a safe and very sure&#13;
road back to health.&#13;
"For six years I was a serious sufferer&#13;
from indigestion and general stomach troubles,&#13;
from the improperly cooked food in&#13;
boarding houses and restaurants of which I&#13;
was a victim.&#13;
"During three of the six years T was so&#13;
bad off nervous prostration set in and I&#13;
sought relief of a specialist without success.&#13;
I had gotten BO that I could eat almost nothing&#13;
and was steadily losing flesh.&#13;
"Many different foods and preparations&#13;
were recommended for a trial, without success,&#13;
and I had become indifferent to all&#13;
food.&#13;
"Some months after seeing your ad in the&#13;
daily papers about the scientifically prepared&#13;
food. Grape-Nuts, and its good qualities,&#13;
and being driven almost to despair over&#13;
my plight, I skeptically resolved to give&#13;
Grape-Nuts a trial as a last resort. And I&#13;
thank God that 1 did.&#13;
"From my first meal of Grape-Nuts 1 felt a&#13;
great change for the better; the knot that&#13;
arose in the chest after meals disappeared;&#13;
stomach ceased its uneasiness and gradually&#13;
the nervousness disappeared.&#13;
"For about a year I ate Grape-Nuts and&#13;
cream three times a day and have gained&#13;
F»4 pounds of lost weight and weigh 5 pounds&#13;
mojte than I ever did and now do not find&#13;
any trouble in using my old-time relishes&#13;
with my Grape-Nuts.&#13;
"I expect to be married soon and I do not&#13;
expect Grape-Nuts to be eliminated from my&#13;
bill of fare as long as I live. If my testimony&#13;
will help some poor mortal, place my&#13;
letter conspicuously where it can be read."&#13;
Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek,&#13;
Mich.&#13;
"Grape-Nut* contain all the constituents&#13;
of a complete food and fn a highly assimilable&#13;
state." says the "London Lancet."&#13;
Potfm CWMI Company, UaML B*ttU Cratk* Mkh.&#13;
-*a^B&lt; 'rfiCTyw. £*&amp;•:'» •^&amp;l.&gt;t- W^»- V. :.. .¾^ • -&#13;
•,.••... \ V&#13;
tn4—4UI&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
*&#13;
P i n c k n e y £)ippatch&#13;
Entered at the Postoffice at Piuckney,&#13;
Mich., as Second Class Matter&#13;
R. W. CAVERLY, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER&#13;
Subscription, $ i . Per Year iu Advauce&#13;
Advertising rates made known on&#13;
application.&#13;
Cards of Thanks, fifty cents.&#13;
Resolutions u£ Condolence, one dollar.&#13;
Local Notices, in Local columns five&#13;
cent per line per each insertion.&#13;
All matter intended to benefit the personal&#13;
or business interest of any individual&#13;
will be published at,regular advertiseing&#13;
rates.&#13;
Announcement of entertainments, etc.,&#13;
must be paid for at regular Local Notice&#13;
rates.&#13;
Obituary and marriage notices are published&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
Poetry must be paid for at the rate of&#13;
five cents per line.&#13;
Local News&#13;
Pay your subscription this month.&#13;
Mrs. H. W. Crofoot spent last&#13;
Saturday in Howell.&#13;
Cecil Sigler was a Lansing&#13;
visitor over Sunday.&#13;
H. H. Swarthout transacted&#13;
business in Howell last Saturday.&#13;
Ptrry Towle has sold his farm&#13;
south of town to Mr. Louglin of&#13;
Jackson.&#13;
Mrs; Sarah Nash "is visiting at&#13;
the home of her son Bert, in N.&#13;
Hamburg,&#13;
Mrs. Addie Potterton and&#13;
daughter Ruth spent last Saturday&#13;
in Howell.&#13;
Will Steptoe and daughter of&#13;
Dexter visited at the home of T.&#13;
Shehan Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. John Monks and Mrs. L.&#13;
E. Smith were Howell visitors&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
Madeline Moran and Laura&#13;
Burgess were Howell visitors one&#13;
day last week,&#13;
How happy the Jear children&#13;
are to be in school again, Readin',&#13;
'ritin' and 'rithmetic.&#13;
Miss Helen Dolan is spending&#13;
some time with relatives and&#13;
friends at Cleveland,&#13;
Chas. Teeple and family spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday with friends .&#13;
and relatives in Detroit.&#13;
Clajwton Placeway and family&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of&#13;
Fred Grieves at Stockbridge.&#13;
With potatoes high and scarce,&#13;
who will dare speak of ' them&#13;
disrespect fully as ^spsds" 2-&#13;
Mrs. Brock Cole and daughter&#13;
of Racine, Wis., are guests this&#13;
week at the home of Wm. Kennedy&#13;
Sr.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs, M. Nowlin of&#13;
Cleveland Ohio are visiting at the&#13;
home of her parents, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. M. Dolan.&#13;
This season's most popular&#13;
dance iu the east is called fhe&#13;
."Hesitation Glide," and if it is&#13;
anthing like the Tango or Turkey&#13;
Ttot he who hesitates is lost.&#13;
I wish to thank neighbors and&#13;
friends for the beautiful cards&#13;
they seat me on my birthday. I&#13;
alao received 16 from my grandson&#13;
in Portland, Oregon,&#13;
Mrs. D. F. Ewen.&#13;
The man who would undertake&#13;
to eat thirty quail in thirty days&#13;
was once regarded as a marvel.&#13;
Now he is classed with the endseat&#13;
hog.&#13;
Two strong points of the amendment&#13;
to the nuisance law made&#13;
by the legislature last winter are&#13;
that the property owner alone is&#13;
responsible to the health department&#13;
for the abatement of a&#13;
nuisance, and that if the property&#13;
owner refuses to pay the expense&#13;
incurred in abating a nuisance,&#13;
the game shall be charged against&#13;
the property/ In event that the&#13;
nuisance tfcatised by a tenant or and care. If the country had a&#13;
person other than tbe property system oif smooth and hard .high&#13;
owner for the expense incurred in&#13;
the abatement of the nuisance.&#13;
Fr. Coyle visited iu Detroit&#13;
last week.&#13;
Paul Curlett of Howell was&#13;
home Sunday.&#13;
Miss Norma Vaughn spent Friday&#13;
in Detroit,&#13;
Mrs. A. M. Utley spent Thuisday&#13;
in Detroit.&#13;
James Smith attended the fair&#13;
at Detroit last week.&#13;
Ruth Potterton spent Monday&#13;
with relatives at Jackson.&#13;
Mrs. J. S. Harland visited relatives&#13;
in Detroit last week,&#13;
R. Clinton and wife visited relatives&#13;
in Detroit last week.&#13;
Walter Dinkel of Detroit visited&#13;
bis parents-here last week.&#13;
Bernardino Lynch spent the&#13;
past week with relatives at Gregory.&#13;
Miss Katherine Marr of Detroit&#13;
is visiting at the home of Mrs. M.&#13;
Monks.&#13;
John VauHorn and family spent&#13;
a few days the past week in Detroit.&#13;
Miss Florence Reason spent a&#13;
few days the past'week[|at Whitmore&#13;
Lake.&#13;
Frank Newman and Mrs.J M.&#13;
Wheeler visited friends in Detroit&#13;
a few days last week.&#13;
Gregory is the next village to&#13;
get electric lights. A. water power&#13;
there is to be utilized for the power.&#13;
MrB. A. C, Roche and children&#13;
of Kearsage, Mich., spent a few&#13;
days the past.week at the home of&#13;
M, Lavey.&#13;
Two runaways and a dog fight&#13;
one day last week at Holty caused&#13;
the people there severe heart trouble.&#13;
Too much excitement is bad&#13;
for quiet people—South Lyon&#13;
Herald.&#13;
Glen White and Clayton Berry,&#13;
two Stockbridge young men, have&#13;
been arrested iu Jackson charged&#13;
with burglary. Both young men&#13;
come from good families.&#13;
A new Jaw went into effect on&#13;
August 15, which prohibits one of&#13;
selling a horse or mule, which is&#13;
in anyway incapacitated for work,&#13;
unless it be to some institution or&#13;
place maintained for the humane&#13;
keeping, treating or killing of such&#13;
animals.&#13;
The gents furnishing store of&#13;
Satterla &amp; Scully, it is reported&#13;
has been sold to Homer N.-Beach,,&#13;
who recently retired from the&#13;
firm of Goodnow &amp; Beach, he will&#13;
add his portion of the stock taken&#13;
from the other store to the stock&#13;
just purchased.—Livingston Tidings.&#13;
David Smith and wife have&#13;
purchased the E. J. Brigg's place.&#13;
Mr. Briggs will be engaged in the&#13;
auto truck business in Flint&#13;
where he and his family will reaide&#13;
in the future. Both Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Briggs are well known in&#13;
this community and both will be&#13;
greatly missed. May success attend&#13;
them in their new venture.&#13;
The Putnam and Hamburg&#13;
Farmers Club will meet Saturday,&#13;
September 27, at the home of M&amp;&#13;
and Mrs. Wm, Blades. A good&#13;
programJs prepared and roll call&#13;
will be answered with current&#13;
events. Topic for the day will be,&#13;
"Modern Methods of Harvesting&#13;
the Corn Crop", by S. E. Van-&#13;
Horn and Frank Mackinder.&#13;
Tbe farmer actually pays a premium&#13;
for bad roads. He pays it&#13;
in time expended in getting to&#13;
market; in value of draft animals&#13;
and the food they eat, and in the&#13;
extra hand for their care and&#13;
handling, in increased number of&#13;
vehicles and wear and tear on&#13;
them, and in the decreased product&#13;
of land that has lea* attention&#13;
^mmwmmmmwimmmmmimwsi\&#13;
Goods&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
It is, and always has been otir aim to furnish our&#13;
customers with fresh goods of very best quality at&#13;
prices that are reasonable and we wish t o emphasize&#13;
the fact that we guarantee our goods&#13;
"Your Money's Worth or Your&#13;
Money Back". (Our Motto)&#13;
Get our prices on Mens and Youths Furnishings&#13;
including Hats, Caps, Gloves, Mittens, Mackinaws,&#13;
Raincoats, Trousers, Jackets, Sweaters, Jerseys,&#13;
Underwear, E t c .&#13;
Fresh Groceries 3&#13;
We will duplicate any offer for Saturday 3&#13;
MONKS BROS, J&#13;
Prompt Delivery Phone No. 38 3&#13;
^ — — — — ^ ^ 1 — • — — — w w w — — — — ^ - ^ m&#13;
Important Notice!&#13;
r •W&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative Banking&#13;
Business.&#13;
3 per cent&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
1&#13;
Pinckney&#13;
G. W. T E E P L E&#13;
~&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Prop ;&#13;
~~ff&#13;
October will bring to us great need&#13;
of MONEY which will require all&#13;
that have unpaid accounts and&#13;
notes due to see us promptly.&#13;
Thanking all for the liberal patronage,&#13;
we respectfully ask all to&#13;
oall and see us.&#13;
Teepje Hardware (Jompany&#13;
P i n c k n e y , ]%ffioli«&#13;
NO CHANCE FOR A KICK&#13;
When You Buy Purity Flour&#13;
Looking backward over the past, you may recall instances&#13;
of dissatisfaction with the quality of the Flour which you&#13;
bought. If this is so, it should certainly interest you to&#13;
know that we have a flour from which you cap get the kind&#13;
of bread that suits you, at prices no greater, aud often less,&#13;
than you will have to pay for unsatisfactory stuff at other&#13;
places. When we sell you flour we expect you to come again.&#13;
This being tbe. case, why shouldn't we do ail we can to please&#13;
you in qualify, price and treatment?&#13;
FOR SALE AT ALL GROCERIES&#13;
T H E HOYT BROS.&#13;
V&#13;
ways it would witneat a ^av*&#13;
prosperity. • : f&#13;
of&#13;
D O N ' T&#13;
trust to memory to preserve the&#13;
changing likeness of growing boy&#13;
or girl, Memoiy plays strange&#13;
tricks sometimes.&#13;
A good photograph or so* every&#13;
year will keep an accurate record&#13;
of subtle changes in their development&#13;
And what a satisfaction that&#13;
little collection will be to you and&#13;
to them in after years.&#13;
DaisieB. Chapell&#13;
Stockbridge, Michigan&#13;
Heart Disease Almost&#13;
Fttal to Young Oirl&#13;
"My daughter, when thirteen yeara&#13;
old, was stricken with heart trouble.&#13;
She was so bad we had to place her&#13;
bed near a window&#13;
so Bhe could get&#13;
her breath. One&#13;
doctor said, 'Poor&#13;
child, she Is likely&#13;
to fall dead an?&#13;
time.' A friend&#13;
told me Dr. MUST&#13;
Heart Remedy had&#13;
cured her father,&#13;
so I tried it, and&#13;
she began to improve.&#13;
She took&#13;
a great ma»y bottles,&#13;
but ehe f*&#13;
spared to me to*&#13;
cheeked girl. No one can imijkie S i&#13;
confidence I have in Dr. Miles'&#13;
Remedy." A. I*. CAWON, Worth,&#13;
The unbounded confideace&#13;
Canon has in Dr. Mileg' Heart&#13;
edy is shared by thousand! ©f&#13;
others who know its value;*;fr&lt;Wtt&#13;
experience. Many heart disorders&#13;
yield to treatment, if the treatjpejnt&#13;
is right. If you are bothered|witfe&#13;
short breath, fainting spells, iWi*&#13;
tag of feet or ankles, pains *&gt;o\ft&#13;
the heart and shoulder blades;] palpitation,&#13;
weak and hungry ^SJfepHi,&#13;
you should begin using Dr. 9*ltjf&#13;
Heart Remedy at once. Projt bjr&#13;
the experience of otnWs wtftte yd*&#13;
may. - 4 ,&#13;
Dr. "Miles' Heart RejMtfy !• sold an*&#13;
guaranteed by all drfltfVste. %&#13;
MIL.lt MIDIOAL CO., • » * • * / I s *&#13;
&gt;.&#13;
M&#13;
-•'• • - : &gt; ' v ' .&#13;
1&#13;
S&#13;
I&#13;
b&gt; &lt;&#13;
&lt;•*«','&#13;
\&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
.&lt;•':&#13;
Hog Cholera&#13;
fAnd How To Prevent It %&#13;
So far Livingston county has been free from the ^&#13;
ravages of hog cholera, but you can never tell, Mr.&#13;
Farmer, how long you will be free from it, so buy&#13;
^ • a pail ot Sal-Medico and begin feeding it. Prevent&#13;
^ your hogs from the cholera. Sold under an ab- 3 £ " 3&#13;
^ solute guarantee to prevent hog cholera. ^&#13;
I Sold in $1.00 and $1.50 Pails, at 3&#13;
* MEYER'S DRUG STORE %&#13;
T l i e I S y a l S t o r e 3&#13;
For a Square Deal Plnckney, Mich. 3&#13;
Drugs, Wall Paper, Crockery, Cigars, Candy, Magazines, r ^&#13;
£ . School Supplies, Bjoks ^&#13;
34umu4U4ttittMUuiiUu'iUilUttJUiUiUMUttMlia$?&#13;
s&#13;
)&#13;
•j*Z. *&#13;
South Iosco&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Elliott&#13;
aud Ralph Bradley spent Sunday&#13;
at the home of Joe Roberts.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Edd. Wilson of&#13;
White Oak visited at L. T. Lambdrne'a&#13;
Thursday last.&#13;
Mrs. Hugh Ward and Miss Edna&#13;
Ward were Jackson callers&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Eliza Euhn is visiting her&#13;
daughter in Detroit at present.&#13;
Mrs. George Mowers and&#13;
daughter Lucy of Pinckney spent&#13;
the first of the week at the home&#13;
of L. T. Lamborne.&#13;
Miss Rose Montague spent the&#13;
last of the week at the home of&#13;
Bert Roberts.&#13;
Mrs. Bert Roberts and daughter&#13;
Lorna were Stockbridge visitors&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Mrs. Alice Calkins spent the&#13;
last of the week with Mrs, John&#13;
Roberts.&#13;
{ Saturday, Sept. 27th, 1913&#13;
Apron Ginghams^.&#13;
Boat Outing Flannel&#13;
Crackers, per lb.&#13;
Yeast _&#13;
25 pounds granulated Sugar.&#13;
_7c&#13;
9c&#13;
6c&#13;
3c&#13;
11.35&#13;
ALL S A L E S CASH&#13;
Mew Fall Woolens&#13;
Just received from Ed. V. Price &amp; Co. of Chicago.&#13;
Over 5 0 0 samples to choose from.&#13;
W. W. BARNARD&#13;
Produce Wanted&#13;
i&#13;
JWMB.Y&#13;
It's N o Humming Bird&#13;
THE merry hum of a Rumely-Olds Engine is music to these&#13;
boys. Since it came to the fa»m there's no more need for&#13;
"elbow grease'* on any kind of work. All work looks like&#13;
play to them now and the Rumely-Olds is the busiest *beeM&#13;
around the place.&#13;
Now instead of having to turn any of the machines for shelling, grinding&#13;
or for any-other purpose they simply belt up the Rumely-Olds and are&#13;
ready for business. You'll own one some day.&#13;
If you can't find time to come in and see of,&#13;
ask us to come and see you or send you a&#13;
catalog of Rumely-Olds Engines.&#13;
We're here to serve you;&#13;
Give us a chance.&#13;
A; H. FLINTOFT&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH,&#13;
DouH Let Baby Suffer With&#13;
Eczema Anil Skin Eruptions&#13;
Babies need a perfect skin-coverinsr.&#13;
rSkin eruptions cause them not only in-&#13;
I tense suffering, out hinder their&#13;
g r o w t h . DR. HOBSON'8 ECZEMA OINTMENT&#13;
can be raited on tor relief and" permanent&#13;
cure ot suffering babies whose&#13;
ekin eruptions have made their lite&#13;
miserable. "Our baby was afflicted&#13;
with breaking out of the skin all over&#13;
the face and scalp. Doctors and&#13;
skin specialists tailed to help. We&#13;
tried Dr, Hobson's Eczema Ointment&#13;
and were overjoyed to see baby completely&#13;
cured before one box was&#13;
used" writes Mrs. Strubler. Dubuque,&#13;
Iowa. All druggist, or by mail, 50c.&#13;
Pheiffer Chemical Company&#13;
St. Louis, Mo. Philadelphia Pa.&#13;
South Marion&#13;
Beulah Burgees visited friends&#13;
at Howell a few days last week&#13;
* John Gardner and wife visited&#13;
Ray Newcomb and family of&#13;
Howell Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. George Bland and&#13;
Mrs. Harriet Bland visited relatives&#13;
at Hartland Sunday.&#13;
Josephine Culhane of Pinckney&#13;
was a guest of Margaret Brogan&#13;
the latter part of last week.&#13;
Wm, Chambers and w i f e&#13;
attended the State Fair Thursday&#13;
and Eriday.&#13;
Mrs. N. Pacey spent Monday&#13;
and Tuesday with Mrs. Walter&#13;
GloverofFowlervUle,&#13;
Mrs. Emily Bruff of Oohoctah&#13;
visited her sister Mrs. Rose Bland&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
&gt;*»*»%%»»»%%»%%v»**»»»»*»*»%%*»*%%vv%»*%*v»»»»v»%%%%*%*v%%*v»»»v»»%»&#13;
You Need a Dependable Corn&#13;
.. Harvester...&#13;
Your success at this busy season'depends chiefly&#13;
upon your corn binder.&#13;
If it is not in perfect working order to handle the corn you&#13;
loss part of yoar crop—part of your profit. Corn goes to waste&#13;
instead of being turned into golden dollars.&#13;
After you have worked hard all Spring and Summer why&#13;
take chances—why risk a macffine that may not work carefully?&#13;
Let us show you our mechanically peifect corn harvesting&#13;
machinery.&#13;
They take care of your corn crop quicklyand thoroughly.&#13;
They are built from the best materials by skilled workmen.&#13;
Their design is the result of years of knowing how. Do not&#13;
delay. Call and see us now. ^&#13;
Dinkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
Pinokney&#13;
A&#13;
*&amp;*L "Tzar of the Breakfast Table"&#13;
The real delight of the breakfast table ia the sipping of&#13;
richly flavored Tzar Coffee.&#13;
It's the tonic for the day—the drink that invigorates&#13;
and refreshes. Tzar Coffee comes to you fresh roasted and&#13;
pure—35c ft pound. Our three other well known brands are&#13;
Nero 30c&#13;
Marigold 32c&#13;
Pleasant VaBey 40c&#13;
Pleasant Valley Teat&#13;
«35e—tiyiFwttfc • conveai«at&#13;
KoUtor.&#13;
'llAWiyAUtY'l&#13;
are unmistakably high grade and the&#13;
^favorite ia thousands of h oxneSy oue*"&#13;
' 6dc—80c a pound.. Begin enjoying&#13;
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• - . * . • ' . . • • • . ' . "&#13;
* i . &amp; - . • . • • * • • ' ' • . • ' . ' • • . :&#13;
•v....•'•Hi&#13;
M-/VN 1 . . !'r&#13;
&amp; Jackson ckney&#13;
yrault &amp; BollioSer, &lt;&gt;re$ory&#13;
Subscribe Por The Dispatch&#13;
Strenghten Weak Kidneys&#13;
Dun't suffer longer with weak kidneys.&#13;
You can pet prompt relief by&#13;
taking Electric Bitters, that wonderful&#13;
remedy praised bv women every*&#13;
where. Start with a bottle today,you&#13;
will soon tee1, like a new women with&#13;
ambition to work, without fear ot&#13;
pain. Mr, Jobn Dowling of i$an&#13;
Francisco, wntes: — "Gratitude for&#13;
tbe wonderful effect of Electric Bitters&#13;
prompts me to write. It cured my&#13;
wife wben all else tailed." Good for&#13;
tbe liver as well. Nothing better for&#13;
indigestion or biliousness. Price 50o.&#13;
and $1.00, at Meyer's .drug store.&#13;
A Stock Story.&#13;
"When J was &gt;\ barefoot lad." said&#13;
DustinStax, "I had to spend a good deal&#13;
of time minding the stock on-father's&#13;
farm. I'll never forget the day when&#13;
father told me to take a rope and hold&#13;
a conple of bull calves."&#13;
"What did they do?"&#13;
"They scorched ray hands with the&#13;
rope and then turned around and step,&#13;
ped on me."&#13;
"Unruly disposition?"&#13;
"No; wonderful instinct They recognized&#13;
me at a glance as a small&#13;
stockholder."-Washington Star. .&#13;
Do Too Fear Consumption!&#13;
Np matter how chronic your cough&#13;
or how severe yonr tbront or long&#13;
ailment is, Dr, King's New Discovery&#13;
will sorely help yon; it may save yoar&#13;
file Ht ill man Green, of Mahcbite,&#13;
Co*, writes: "Two doctor* said 1 bad&#13;
gojwunption sad conld sot live two&#13;
fSfttei I tiled Dr. King's New Die*&#13;
••"•rviri-,&#13;
l i e ' best' tons remedy for&#13;
soldi, throat and long troubles,&#13;
and $1.00 Guaranteed by&#13;
sr the drtggtit,&#13;
North Hamburg&#13;
Mr. and Mrs, Bert Appletou&#13;
attended the State Fair Saturday.&#13;
Rev. Smith of Brighton will&#13;
preach here again next Sunday at&#13;
3 o'clock.&#13;
Miss Laura Hildebraudt visited&#13;
at the home of Franc Dunning,&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. J. S. Nash visited her&#13;
daughter Mrs. Wirt Hendee a&#13;
couple of days last week.&#13;
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that&#13;
Contain Mercury*&#13;
as mercury -will surely destroy the&#13;
sense ot smell and completely derange&#13;
the whole system when entering it&#13;
through the mucus surfaces. Such articles&#13;
should never be used except on pre&#13;
scriptiona from reputable physicians,&#13;
as tbe damage they do is ten fold to&#13;
the good you can possibly derive from&#13;
them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured&#13;
by F J Cheney &amp; Co, Toledo,&#13;
O. contains no mercuiy, and is taken&#13;
internally acting directly upon the&#13;
blood and mucus surfaces of the&#13;
system. In buying Hall's Catarrh&#13;
Cure be sure you get the genuine. It&#13;
is taken internally and made in Toledo&#13;
Ohio, by F J Cheney &amp; Co., Testimonials&#13;
free. Sold by Druggists&#13;
Price 75c. per bottle. Take Hall's ( Family pills tor constipation j&#13;
Not What It Sotmed.&#13;
In the founry of Somerset, England,&#13;
there is'a village called Hatch. The&#13;
clergyman in nn adjoining parish was&#13;
named Du^k. One Sunday morning&#13;
the congregation at the latter place being&#13;
assembled tb».» curate did not appear.&#13;
The "clerk" rose and said:&#13;
"I hereby give nottee that there will&#13;
be no service today, as Mr. Duck has&#13;
gone to Hatch."&#13;
M4«+fiH&amp;+&amp;f&amp;W2rofrf&amp;t*^^&#13;
M. F. SIGLER M. D- C. L. SIGLER M. D.&#13;
DHS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons.&#13;
All calls promptly attended to&#13;
day or night. Office on Main&#13;
Street.&#13;
PINCKNEY, - MICH.&#13;
GOING TO BUY A PIANO&#13;
OR SEWING MACHINE&#13;
YES?&#13;
SEE L. R. WILLIAMS.&#13;
GREGORY&#13;
t&amp;*He saves you money on hi^h&#13;
grade piano*.&#13;
6 0 Y E A * *&#13;
EXPIRIENCS&#13;
Safest Laxative For Women&#13;
Nearly every women needs a good&#13;
laxative. Dr. King'tNew Life Pills&#13;
. . . . „ - /are gcod because they are prompt,&#13;
^ d * ? 7?l\?nf ,aU7*» u Y o 2I '»'• " * d&lt;&gt; ^funded Jf it fail* to benefit Dniilap of Lnoe*a dciailu, wT Pen*in*.. Msaryts.: M".D Cr..&#13;
*v- _ . , . ^ , M j ^ ^ ^ ^ U f e p . n | ^ ^ h w&#13;
trouble* greatly." Get a box to-day.&#13;
Price, 26c. Recommended by C. G.&#13;
Meyer, the druggist.&#13;
ITR*DE M A I M&#13;
2Efc 3N»&#13;
COPYRiCHTt 4fc«X&#13;
q»'., kij ;i .:-.: r.«.t ( , i oi'iii'.wn frw. wutt^er M.&#13;
(iivptnii.T. ],i ].;-., hi.; •pr.(«ifab|e. Oo'nmutju'fi&#13;
Mouesti.v.i.y('.iiftcit, ,tlal. IUMWMOK&lt;&amp;Pnt*oti&#13;
scjit f rM. otrtust ncoitry (or (wrutlBRj&gt;ftt«nu.&#13;
Pntenu tokpn ihmiiffh Mnnn k 4¾ leoot'**&#13;
tpecial notiu, v. rt hout OIMUIT^ m ib« Sdentint JtoMtm.&#13;
TOT rttief from rheanuttlo patet t*f&#13;
Dr. If lies' Anti-Pain Pilte. fift a t l&#13;
•after nwllesaly. [AdverflMmeBtl&#13;
«*$**}&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
ISM&#13;
: X&#13;
y *&#13;
-!&amp;••&#13;
- . f t * - - '&#13;
U t&gt;&#13;
'•lb: ••&#13;
IheDAUGHTERof&#13;
DAVID K E M&#13;
&amp;% Harp; KmjJ tootle&#13;
Ulusfraf ions W Ttty l#AlT*(*3&#13;
CCTTWiCflT BY A.CM*CUJKC*&lt; CO.. *913&#13;
8YNOP8I8. trol of the sheet without Kerr's knowledge.&#13;
That Kendall might see for himself&#13;
and meet on friendly ground the&#13;
new and disturbing factor in Helmont&#13;
politics, Judge Gilbert invited Joe&#13;
Wright, the new owner of the paper,&#13;
to dinner. It was just by accident,&#13;
apparently, that Mr. Kendall had been&#13;
picked up at almost the last minute.&#13;
The only othsrB present were Dv&#13;
and Mrs. Hayes. Sam Hayes, a rising&#13;
young physician and surgeon, was&#13;
coroner of Belmont county, an office&#13;
which his society friends joked him&#13;
about, but one which Hayes recognized&#13;
and accepted as a political stepthe&#13;
letter. But here was a campaign.&#13;
If he Bhould undertake it, which would&#13;
be different. He would not be fighting&#13;
on his own ground where he was sure&#13;
'of himself; and into it would enter&#13;
those unknown, unstable factors—&#13;
women.&#13;
Kerr was proud of his daughter.&#13;
He recognized that she deserved to&#13;
Associate with the best families. If&#13;
she was to remain in Belmont he&#13;
would see to it that she had a social&#13;
position which would be above cavil.&#13;
This much decided, there came the&#13;
question of how it could be brought&#13;
to pass. The fire had burned low in&#13;
(the grate before he had considered all&#13;
eides of the question. When he rose&#13;
from hlB chair and went to the telephone&#13;
he had determined upon the&#13;
only coarse which would have as its&#13;
Result the launching of Gloria as a&#13;
debutante in Belmont's exclusive circles.&#13;
Great was the surprise In the box&#13;
office of the Belmont opera house&#13;
when there came from David Kerr a&#13;
request for a box. He telephoned to&#13;
set it aside for him, that he did not&#13;
know whether or not he would use It,&#13;
but that he would send a check for&#13;
the* amount in the morning. The&#13;
much flustered treasurer stammered&#13;
that he would be most happy to put&#13;
the box at Mr. Kerr's disposal and&#13;
have him as a guest of the theater,&#13;
but Mr. Kerr inquired the price of&#13;
the box and closed the conversation&#13;
by repeating that he would send a&#13;
check for the amount in the morning.&#13;
And great waa the surprise of the&#13;
servants when at dinner the master&#13;
of Locust Lawn appeared in evening&#13;
clothes.&#13;
CHAPTER II.&#13;
The English surpass Americans in&#13;
at least one respect; they have learned&#13;
as a nation far better than has this&#13;
newer country the possibilities of a&#13;
dinner party. Perhaps it is their higher&#13;
developed social system, more likely&#13;
it is the general interest which is&#13;
taken in governmental questions,&#13;
which gives the dinner table an important,&#13;
if unofficial, place in political&#13;
life. A brilliant hostess, with heart&#13;
and soul wrapped op in her husbands&#13;
advancement, can do much to aid him&#13;
as he' toils up the ladder of political&#13;
preferment by gathering at her board&#13;
the leaders of her husband's party and&#13;
also prominent men of the opposition.&#13;
One need have only a superficial&#13;
knowledge of American politics&#13;
and .American leaders to understand&#13;
why this is not generally possible&#13;
here/ But there be some here, taking&#13;
a leaf from England's book, who make&#13;
the dinner party serve purposes not&#13;
apparent to all the guests. Judge&#13;
Amos Gilbert was one of these. ""&#13;
Fond, ambitious mothers held up to&#13;
their sons as an example the rise of&#13;
Amos Gilbert from an humble home&#13;
tn a frontier village to a position as&#13;
the leading corporation lawyer of Belmont&#13;
He represented the electric&#13;
light company, the street railway&#13;
•pGealotr iam oKaet rro,f ah emr oltihfee rl1e«s ss cghirolo, l,w ahror ihvaess aKte rhre r! •f atthheer '*p ohliotimcael ibno mBe lmofo ntht.e Dtoawvind, laenadr niian ga onfx lhoius* r etaol pchreavreanctt erh. is daughter&#13;
CHAPTER 1.-Continued.&#13;
The arrival of Gloria's trunks put&#13;
an end to further conversation, as she&#13;
went to superintend their unpacking.&#13;
Long after she had gone, David Kerr&#13;
aat gazing into the fire. Many a time&#13;
he had sat in that room and planned&#13;
eaoh move of a political campaign&#13;
from its inception to final victory and&#13;
had seen those plans carried out to \ ping stone. Then, too, it gave him op&#13;
portunities to repay his political&#13;
friends. David Kerr liked to have&#13;
such young men hold office.&#13;
Dinner over, Gilbert and Kendall&#13;
withdrew to the library for a final&#13;
conference over the stock-yards situa&#13;
tion. Again they tried to telephone&#13;
David Kerr, only to receive the in&#13;
formation that he was not at home.&#13;
"You _really think the iielmojit&#13;
News having been bought by this outsider,"&#13;
queried Kendall, "puts a different&#13;
aspect on the present situation?"&#13;
"Judge for yourself," answered the&#13;
Belmont attorney. "I had Mr. Wright&#13;
to dinner tonight so that you could&#13;
meet him without arousing his suspicions.&#13;
1 wanted to help you that&#13;
much."&#13;
What Kendall really thought he evidjyjced&#13;
by his indirect reply.&#13;
"I don't blame Dave Kerr for being&#13;
angry because Wright slipped in and&#13;
bought the paper."&#13;
For a minute or more the two men&#13;
smoked in silence. Kendall was wondering&#13;
what he could say to his Chicago&#13;
principals which would make&#13;
them understand that Belmont was&#13;
not now the Belmont of the old days,&#13;
that although to all appearances it&#13;
was the same the practiced eye could&#13;
detect the vague unrest which pervaded&#13;
it.&#13;
Judge Gilbert had been too long in&#13;
the harness to wince at a corporation&#13;
request for the vacation of a principal&#13;
thoroughfare and a public park, but&#13;
he was tired of the long fight for&#13;
grasping masters whose one demand&#13;
was always, for more, more, more.&#13;
And yet he had no sympathy with&#13;
such men as Joe Wright. He had&#13;
made up his mind, however, that he&#13;
would not aid the company in this&#13;
new franchise grab. He was partly&#13;
led to this conclusion, all unconsciously,&#13;
because he knew David Kerr was&#13;
not betraying any interest in it.&#13;
"The river eats up our tracks on the&#13;
west," protested Kendall. "The stockyards'll&#13;
never be safe while we depend&#13;
on the one line." Then he added&#13;
with emphasis, "Wre must come down&#13;
Maple avenue on the east and use&#13;
Benton Park for switching yards."&#13;
"It can't be done."&#13;
"It can be done. Dave Kerr can do&#13;
anything he pleases. lie's the absolute&#13;
boss of Belmont."&#13;
This was said with such a tone of&#13;
finality that Judge Gilbert saw no&#13;
need ol replying! He knew that Kerr&#13;
was the absolute boss of Relmont.&#13;
There flashed through the minds of&#13;
both men the thought that the Belmont&#13;
News might have something to&#13;
say. It couldn't prevent a franchise&#13;
being passed, of course, but publicity&#13;
at times was unpleasant. This was&#13;
something Kerr did not court, Gilbert&#13;
knew. He was the easy bos3. letting&#13;
every one have a share of the spoils,&#13;
and thus all were satisfied. Few indeed&#13;
had been the times when the&#13;
town had attempted to revolt.&#13;
"You'd have the whole town up in&#13;
arms," remonstrated Gilbert. - '&#13;
company, the water company and the "They've been up in arms before.&#13;
stock-yards company. A-person w!tft-j.Once they brought ropes to harig the&#13;
an analytical turn of mind, after&#13;
studying a list of his clients, might remark&#13;
.that each and every qne, individual,&#13;
partnership or corporation.&#13;
could be favored by some political&#13;
turn or damaged by some political&#13;
machination. They found it better to&#13;
employ Judge Gilbert than to trust to&#13;
lack that all would go well.&#13;
All day Judge Gilbert Jiad been tryfag&#13;
to get in touch with David Kerr&#13;
by telephone. Kendall, who representee!&#13;
tke Chicago packers, had been&#13;
called &gt;ack to that city .and was anxious&#13;
to see Ktrr before he left that&#13;
night FWhhg-In this, Gilbert could&#13;
make.no definite promise as to, Mr.&#13;
Kenr$s\ attitude on certain proposit&#13;
i o n ^ ibrth ft* the astute Chicago&#13;
U»J*JB&gt; *ija*y Mi own authority he did&#13;
tW.J&amp;maauJtot the master of L *&#13;
euBt^m^fu interested 1* ;wa$bjj&amp;g&#13;
the i a K t i t N#ws develop 1 5 I M » '&#13;
Dull mlMm!**'*** owner5au«'e^f&#13;
ttor wftfrlupdwmaged to secure con&#13;
"You're still Kerr'B right-hand adviser."&#13;
"Pardon me, his legal adviser.t" tr?&#13;
Kendall did not pause to acknowledge&#13;
the distinction, but went on. this&#13;
time straight to the heart of the mat&#13;
ter.&#13;
"I made what the stock-yards people&#13;
consider a good oiler. If that isn't&#13;
enough, what's his price?"&#13;
This point-blank question Irritated&#13;
Gilbert. He much preferred to call a&#13;
spade an agricultural implement even&#13;
when talking with those who stood&#13;
close to him in his manipulation's for&#13;
the various corporations he represented.&#13;
He therefore ignored the ques&#13;
tion, preferring to tell why the matter&#13;
could not be taken up at present&#13;
"The election's coming on in a&#13;
couple of. months, and your franchise&#13;
would be made an issue. We can't&#13;
afford it with the News in a position&#13;
to boost the opposition party."&#13;
"I've got to get it through as soon&#13;
as possible. There's nothing raw in&#13;
this franchise, is there?"&#13;
"That's the Chicago point of view,"&#13;
answered Kendall. "Stripped of legal&#13;
verbiage, what you want is to lay railroad&#13;
tracks, on which will run cattle&#13;
trains, down a pretty residence street&#13;
and use a park for terminals, all-withcut&#13;
giving property owners or the city&#13;
adequate compensation for ruining or&#13;
confiscating their property. I call that&#13;
pretty raw."&#13;
"Well, it's bur best and certainly&#13;
our cheapest way if Kerr will put&#13;
through a franchise for us," Kendall&#13;
maintained stubbornly. "I'll come back&#13;
next week, and take the matter up&#13;
again. In Ihemeantimc ycu can.tajb&#13;
it over" thoroughly with Kerr. He may&#13;
have something to say by that time."&#13;
"It hardly seems likely. He seldom&#13;
changes his mind."&#13;
"He may this time. I've got to get&#13;
away now and go by the hotel before&#13;
I go to the train. Let's go back to&#13;
the drawing-room, where I can have&#13;
a few more words with Wright. We&#13;
may be able to win him over."&#13;
"That's what I'm going to try to&#13;
do," replied Judge Gilbert, as they&#13;
rose to rejoin Mrs. Gilbert and her&#13;
guests.&#13;
The attorneys entered the drawingroom&#13;
to find a discussion regarding&#13;
newspapers just drawing to a close&#13;
with victory still uncertain on which&#13;
standard to perch.&#13;
"You just missed hearing Dr. Hayes&#13;
pay his respects to newspapers, Judge&#13;
Gilbert," said Joe Wright with a smile.&#13;
council, but Kerr put through the&#13;
water works deal. You're toe attorney&#13;
for the street railway company;&#13;
you &gt;know what he did there."&#13;
"Yes, yes l'ltnow/' Gilbert admitted&#13;
hastily.^ Then with: a sigh of .relief,&#13;
"That's all past."&#13;
He ran bis hand through his halT.&#13;
gray long before the frost of age&#13;
could come to silver it, and was&#13;
thankful that such episodes were&#13;
things of the past. He was weary of&#13;
it all. Kendall's next rem ark.'delivered&#13;
with the chill incisiveness oY a&#13;
lawyer cross-exan^iiiiBg^ia belligerent&#13;
witness, brought him once mpre to the&#13;
defense of the man who had made his&#13;
success possible, \&#13;
"Is Dave Kerr ,keeping out of the&#13;
deal only thronghi tear of young&#13;
Wright and the-BelMont *tew«r-&#13;
"He isn't afraid of jpn/thing. Mr&#13;
Kerr merely pays that it doesn't interest&#13;
h'ira at the present time. As&#13;
fur me, I'm out of It"&#13;
"He May This Time."&#13;
The layman's opinions always interest&#13;
and usually amuse a journalist.&#13;
"What's the matter? Have^you told&#13;
him you won't publish the box scores&#13;
of the ball games this year?"&#13;
"I'll do that for him, and gladly."&#13;
"Then there's no occasion to kick.&#13;
That's the only thing that can trouble&#13;
a fat man."&#13;
"This time I was speaking generally,"&#13;
explained Hayes. "I don't like&#13;
some of the way,s reporters have."&#13;
"That's only a small part of the&#13;
business," laughed Wright. "If you&#13;
complain only about that I shall have&#13;
you for a staunch adherent."&#13;
Mrs. Hayes saw that Kendal! was&#13;
at a loss to understand the drift of&#13;
tlie conversation, and accordingly&#13;
faid, "Dr. Hayes is coroner, Mr. Kendall,&#13;
and the Banner man calls us up&#13;
at ihost unearthly hours."&#13;
The -Deimorit Banner was the morning&#13;
paper, and its editor, Deacon&#13;
Jerry Withrow, was always at the&#13;
beck and caH of the boss. Kerr let&#13;
him think-that he bad-something to&#13;
do with, directing the affairs of the&#13;
city. This was a harmless' delusion,&#13;
since its pliant attitude always made&#13;
him ^consider a. suggestion ret fall by&#13;
the boss-as a scheme which he himself&#13;
bad hatched.&#13;
"I think H i s dreadful for nice men&#13;
to be miked up in politics^ skid Mrs.&#13;
Gilbert. ' ' --; J ,-.-.-• &lt;&#13;
Perhaps it was no^moie dreadful&#13;
than was the laek &lt;ofc knowledge of&#13;
politics displayed by the nJce^women&#13;
of Belmont. This wofcld ibava been&#13;
difficult to Impre8t^utaJjpa.'Gr!lbert.&#13;
She knew.-wen* eaough^taat bar husband&#13;
was consulted by that odious&#13;
David Kerr, but that was Ui 4 legal&#13;
way a n a V K e r K ^ * ^ w W « N i V advice&#13;
he received. Even tite'^ssj* In&#13;
Practical Fashions&#13;
LADY'S ONE PIECE DRE88.&#13;
which ene spoke showed how thank&#13;
ful she was her husband was not in&#13;
politic*. Mrs. Hayee was quick to say&#13;
what she thought along the same line&#13;
by adding:&#13;
"And Dr. Hayes doesn't have to at&#13;
all, you know. He says he does it for&#13;
the good of the party."&#13;
This would have been all very interesting&#13;
to Kendall if he had had the&#13;
entire evening to spend in such pleasant&#13;
company. Time was pressing,&#13;
however, and in the few minutes still&#13;
at his disposal he wished to sound&#13;
Wright at greater length about the&#13;
Belmont News.&#13;
Kendall looked closely at the young&#13;
man whom he had already set down&#13;
as an opponent. Physically Wright&#13;
seemed no shirker of a combat. His&#13;
shoulders were broad and his body&#13;
well developed. Led to believe from&#13;
his knowledge of the reformer type&#13;
that he would find Joe Wright a longhaired&#13;
theorist and Utopian dreamer,&#13;
the lawyer found instead a selfposeessed,&#13;
well-balanced young man. The&#13;
newspaper owner's manner, even in&#13;
repose, was judicial. To Kendall's&#13;
thinking he had the air of a man who&#13;
would not be swayed by prejudice or&#13;
liking. It was his part, however, as&#13;
a special pleader, to make Wright&#13;
think himself too much an idealist—&#13;
if he could—in opposing the just&#13;
claims of the stock-yard company.&#13;
"I suppose you found the News&#13;
somewhat run down when you took&#13;
hold of it," Kendall remarked casually.&#13;
"Yes, the name was about all 1&#13;
bought."&#13;
"I thought the paper had a pretty&#13;
good mechanical plant," interjected&#13;
Gilbert.&#13;
Instinctively Wright felt the c**ngsrted&#13;
action masked under the iniio- *•**&gt;&#13;
cent question and the remark by GIL, J £his design is very effective made&#13;
• • &amp; * .&#13;
)&#13;
bert. Just what Kendall had to gain&#13;
he did not know, but since he recognized&#13;
him as a representative of large&#13;
interests he thought best to let him&#13;
know what stand the News might be&#13;
expected to take. It was just aB well&#13;
that Gilbert should have it clearly In&#13;
mind also. If the clients of these men&#13;
were playing the game fair and&#13;
square they would welcome his kind&#13;
of newspaper. If they weren't, and&#13;
Wright knew there had been lapses&#13;
from grace on the part of some of&#13;
them, he hoped they would recognize&#13;
in the paper the power which would&#13;
first seek to prevent, and, failing in&#13;
this, then try to correct. Judge Gilbert's&#13;
allusion to the good mechanical&#13;
plant he seized upon for a text.&#13;
"That's true, the News has a good&#13;
mechanical plant." He paused to let&#13;
that sink in before he continued^&#13;
"Somehow or other when I think of a&#13;
newspaper I never think of that side&#13;
of it. I have in mind only the feeling&#13;
of confidence with which a newspaper&#13;
inspires its readers."&#13;
"What do you think the ideal newspaper&#13;
is like?" asked Judge Gilbert.&#13;
He wanted to know to what kind of&#13;
star this young man had hitched his&#13;
wagon.&#13;
"The ideal newspaper is one which&#13;
has no ax to grind, and no personal&#13;
animus in the discussion of private affairs&#13;
or public questions, but only a&#13;
constant regard for the truth and the&#13;
lasting welfare of the state."&#13;
Kendall went to what he considered&#13;
the heart of the matter.&#13;
"Aren't you leaving out of consideration,&#13;
Mr. Wright, that everything—&#13;
this government, even—is but a compromise?"&#13;
"No, I recognize that, and I believe&#13;
in compromise. Without it we would&#13;
still be cave dwellers It is exactly&#13;
because of this everpresent compromise&#13;
that an honest newspaper is so&#13;
valuable. It must see to it that this&#13;
compromise is open and above board.&#13;
It mustn't be the give-and-take trade&#13;
of low politicians in the back room of&#13;
a saloon or the far more dangerous&#13;
trades of men higher up and powerful&#13;
interests; not that kind of compromise,&#13;
which after all Is a sale of something&#13;
one does not legally own to one'&#13;
who cannot or will not secure it honestly.&#13;
I tell you that the majority&#13;
must rule fairly and with a proper&#13;
deference for the rights of the minority,&#13;
that's where a newspaper can be&#13;
of service."&#13;
Having decided to deliver a broadside,&#13;
Wright had gone about it with&#13;
great enthusiasm. The sight of Mrs.&#13;
Hayes gazing wonderingly at him, for&#13;
she did not understand what be&#13;
meant, caused the editor to break off&#13;
with a laugh. He recognized' that&#13;
Judge Gilbert's drawing-room was not&#13;
the proper place for a lengthy exposition&#13;
of his views.&#13;
"I'm afraid I'm preaching," he apologized,&#13;
"and there's nothing I hate&#13;
more than that"&#13;
"Not at all," protested Kendall;&#13;
"Your views Interest me greatly, Mr.&#13;
Wright. When 1 come again I am going&#13;
to see how far along you are on&#13;
the road to the ideal."&#13;
WUh this Kendall announced that&#13;
he mutt be going, and made his&#13;
adleux. To have a. few last words&#13;
about Wright, Judge Gilbert accompanied&#13;
-tjie visiting attorney even to&#13;
the front gate. Hie very last assertion&#13;
was that he himself would have&#13;
nothing to do with the proposed franchise&#13;
grab and that he was morally&#13;
certain Daxld, Ker^,wa* of the same&#13;
frame of mind/&#13;
(TO BK CONTINUED.)&#13;
up in one of the new rough materials&#13;
combined with broadcloth or fine&#13;
serge. Collar and cuffs show a bit of&#13;
colored embroidery which Is very pretty.&#13;
An inset of the plain materia) fills&#13;
in the opening in the skirt. Small&#13;
crystal buttons extend down the&#13;
front or the blouse and skirt. Broadcloth,&#13;
serge or wool ratine can all be&#13;
used with this design.&#13;
The lady's one piece dress pattern&#13;
(6349) is cut in sizes 34 to 42 Inches&#13;
bust measure. Medium size requires&#13;
6 yards of 36 inch material.&#13;
t*o T o".P,TatOtecrunr eJDtehp,8a rtPmatetnetr,n" osef ndth iWs p caepnetr*. sWurreit et on agmivee sainzde aanddd rnesusm pbleari nolyf , paantdte rbne.&#13;
NO. 6349. SIZE&#13;
NAME&#13;
T O W N -&#13;
STREET AND NO&#13;
LADY'S FIVE GORED SKIRT.&#13;
6324&#13;
Straight lines are favored In the&#13;
uew separate skirts which have become&#13;
so popular this season. This flye&#13;
gored model may be made with high&#13;
or regulation waist line, and close&#13;
either down the back or on the left&#13;
side. It will be found an excellent design&#13;
for broadcloth, serge, and any pt&#13;
the novelty suitings. To give an effectively&#13;
tailored finish the seams may&#13;
be stitched. %&#13;
The ladles' five gored skirt pattern&#13;
(6324) is cut in sizes 22 to SO Inches&#13;
waist measure. Medium site requires&#13;
2% yards of 44 JLch material ~&#13;
to JTfcttern Department," of thle paper?&#13;
Write name andaddrets pkUnSTaBoTbe&#13;
sure to give slse and aumibl er of pattern.&#13;
-e&#13;
NO. 6324.&#13;
STREET AND HO.&#13;
• e . ;-. •;.,&#13;
H e w a e a e t e e e a e t e s s e e e 1&#13;
• • • • • • • e w M i ••&gt;•&gt;• • • • • # • • » * &gt; # • -&#13;
9i A f . » » « m , w « , i w « , » — » » • » , „ • tmjm" '&#13;
Stomach Overworked/&#13;
Eating -hetjreen meal* i«Vi a- -hahH&#13;
usually left over from childhood.&#13;
Growing things need nourishing In&#13;
small ao&lt;Hret*uent doses, H&gt; Gro^n-upt&#13;
merely require to repair 4he *rajts&gt; M&#13;
the body—and the stomach Is a comparatively&#13;
small organ. Undoubtedly&#13;
in many bodies it is kept stretched&#13;
and in the same qonditkm of an abased&#13;
piece of rubber, i^pw cju3,{trdp&#13;
Its work?&#13;
w,r'-&#13;
' • t . ' . * •&#13;
*&#13;
• * ? .&#13;
",.-£#&#13;
• • : - * = • , " «&#13;
'• . y i ' ••.&#13;
•.•»!. v'&gt;tfflJ&gt;?&#13;
• H&#13;
S * *•' ,^ ••&#13;
M'J(£-&#13;
' i f&#13;
k * " * * '&#13;
tV&lt; •*!:?''"&#13;
•£!!r•'•"•, 9Km "T."1&#13;
irv»&#13;
• w ^ •Piwpp » j e W » * P » a » a ^ a ^ » f a a p&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
. /&#13;
•v&#13;
*v.&#13;
. . &lt; *&#13;
«25 M l&#13;
SULZER IS STILL&#13;
FULL OF FIGHT&#13;
FIRST S T A T E M E N T MADE BY ACCUSED&#13;
OFFICIAL SINCE&#13;
TRIAL BEGAN.&#13;
FRIENDS SAY HE W I L L T E S T I F Y&#13;
BEFORE COURT.&#13;
Says He Hat No Idea of Resigning&#13;
and That H t I t Perfectly Well&#13;
in Spite of Contrary&#13;
Report.&#13;
Albany, N. Y.—Gov. Sulzer Saturday&#13;
broke hit long silence, which he has&#13;
maintained since his impeachment&#13;
trial began, and declared he had no&#13;
intention of resigning and would fight&#13;
the bajbtte &lt;to (the end.&#13;
"Resign?" he ejaculated.-"I have no&#13;
more Idea of doing that than I have&#13;
of committing h&amp;ra-kari."&#13;
And then the governor thumped his&#13;
Interviewer on the chest and gave&#13;
other evidences of the fact that he is&#13;
in e&gt; fighting mood.&#13;
Also the governor is not in such illhealth&#13;
a* baa been rumored. The&#13;
fact that be had not—seen any on«&#13;
-within the last two days led to the&#13;
report that he was in a weakened condition.&#13;
He is sleeping late mornings,&#13;
but he also la working late at night.&#13;
"Well?" said the governor. "Yes, indeedv&#13;
I am."&#13;
The governor's formal statement&#13;
that he would not resign was not issued&#13;
untH after he had argued at&#13;
great length with his counsel.&#13;
Throughout the case they have been&#13;
opposed to hit saying anything for&#13;
publication. But he hats overruled&#13;
them a few times, though not since&#13;
the trial began.&#13;
Counsel for Gov. Sulzer refused to&#13;
discuss whether he would take the&#13;
witness stand, but it is said by close&#13;
friends that he has no other thought.&#13;
He feels, they say, that he has a story&#13;
to tell that the people should hear and&#13;
he is going to tell it.&#13;
One Killed in Kantat Wreck.&#13;
Manhattan, Kan.—Twenty passengers&#13;
-were injured one was killed,&#13;
when passenger train No. 20, on the&#13;
Chicago, Rock Island &amp; Pacific railroad,&#13;
bound from Denver and Colorado&#13;
Springs to St. Louis, was derailed&#13;
on a curve a mile west of here.&#13;
Eight coaches left the rails, one&#13;
of them, the combined steel baggage&#13;
and smoking car,'rolled down a 20-&#13;
foot embankment, turning over three&#13;
timet and landing upside down. The&#13;
smoking compartment was full of passengers,&#13;
most qf whom were injured,&#13;
but none seriously save J. P. Baldy, of&#13;
Herrlngrton, Kan., who was crushed by&#13;
t. falling trunk.&#13;
A defective rail is- said to have&#13;
caused the accident. The train was&#13;
running about 20 miles an hour when&#13;
It left the rails.&#13;
Auto Bandita Plead Guilty.&#13;
Toledo, O.—Waiving all right to&#13;
counsel, Robert Duffey, alias Dwyer,&#13;
21 years old^ o l BufCalo^^Arthur Gi*&#13;
roud, alias Gerow, 20 years old, of New&#13;
York, and William Justice, 20 years&#13;
oM, of Philadelphia, auto bandits who&#13;
held op an automobile party near&#13;
here early Thursday, pleaded guilty&#13;
to all Indictments.&#13;
Four indictments of robbery were retiirned&#13;
against each! On each count&#13;
Gilround and Justice were sentenced&#13;
to from one to 15 years in the Mansfield&#13;
reformatory.&#13;
Duffey, who was also indicted on a&#13;
charge of shooting Sheriff Winel and&#13;
Ttfith Intent to kill, was sentenced to&#13;
th&gt; penitentiary for from one to 15&#13;
years on each of the robbery charges,&#13;
and. from one to 20 years on the shooting&#13;
charge.&#13;
Jf the youths serve the full time,&#13;
Justice and G-iround will be locked up&#13;
60 years each and Duffey 80 years.&#13;
; Cholera Scare In Europe.&#13;
^Belgcade^jServia.—The cholera, epidemic&#13;
da causing consternation in&#13;
M southeastern Europe, its extension&#13;
53* north of the Danube being especially&#13;
alarming.&#13;
* The hot weatber hat had much to&#13;
do with increasing the number of&#13;
oases. The disease bat spread, not so&#13;
much through actual contagion, as&#13;
diKUirfi driaWng from tainted streams&#13;
on tbe border. Fieid fruit is another&#13;
source of infection. Moslems celes*&#13;
e*4ng th* fctaa of Bairam art not&#13;
ovir particular when they eat after&#13;
an att-day &lt;***.&#13;
r Preen-ease* are reported from&#13;
nmntttma fca&amp;rtrtt. Bosnia, but they&#13;
ex* relatively mrtd.&#13;
A newborns for incorrigible and&#13;
kesseles* boy*, to tag* tba piace of&#13;
* e Betflab bone at Boyne City, disorganised,&#13;
fct betoej established on the&#13;
•tore* «f Mi. Ceisa Jake, two miles&#13;
west of&#13;
METHODS THAT -ARE NOVEL&#13;
Beat Way of Cooking Ham—Suggestion&#13;
for Improving the Flavor&#13;
of Pickles, Etc.&#13;
Before cooking a ham,, take off *&#13;
thin "shaving," also the rtnd. and see&#13;
how much nicer flavored your han*&#13;
will be.&#13;
To clean black chip hats, rubbing&#13;
with sweet oil is an excellent way:&#13;
but- be careful not to use too much,&#13;
and then rub with a pie&lt;,e of black&#13;
velvet till all the oil is removed.&#13;
AH pickles should be kept at least&#13;
one month before opening the Jars&#13;
for use. By opening them sooner they&#13;
lose much of the delightful flavor&#13;
which would otherwise be theirs.&#13;
Paste labels on the inside of glass&#13;
Jars used to hold food supplies, such&#13;
as rice, tapioca, spices, etc. Thus labeled,&#13;
the jar can be washed without&#13;
soiling the label or pulling it off.&#13;
The best way to warm up a joint Is&#13;
to wrap it in thickly greased paper&#13;
and keep it coVered while in the oven.&#13;
By having It covered the steam will&#13;
prevent the meat from becoming hard&#13;
and dry.&#13;
Fold a piece of emery paper in the&#13;
center and draw the knife rapidly&#13;
back and forth several times, turning&#13;
it from side to side. This Is an excellent&#13;
sharpener for paring knives.&#13;
The pulverized washing powders&#13;
fast much longer if used from a talcum&#13;
powder shaker. A baking powder&#13;
can with holes punched through&#13;
the lid may be utilized lor the purpose.&#13;
— — -. -&#13;
MAKES A DELICIOUS DESSERT&#13;
Cherry Bread a Dish That Hoatett&#13;
May Offer Her Guettt With&#13;
Every Confidence.&#13;
Fill a deep earthen pudding ditb&#13;
iwo-thlrds full of cherries, blackberries&#13;
or" green apples; add a little&#13;
sugar, but not enough to make very&#13;
3weet. Then add lust enough water&#13;
to keep them from%tlcklng and little&#13;
grated nutmeg. A .piece of bread&#13;
dough just ready to knead into loaf&#13;
is then pulled and patted out the size&#13;
of top of dish and about half an Inch&#13;
thick, laid over the fruit and a soup&#13;
plate or another pudding basin fitted&#13;
closely on the top. Place the pudding&#13;
back on the range of coal or wood&#13;
fire and bake or steam for an hour at&#13;
ieast When done, turn out on to a&#13;
large round platter, upper side down&#13;
and the fruit heaped on top. Serve&#13;
sugar and cream with it while hot&#13;
The bread is spongy and light and tender&#13;
and soaks up lots of cream or&#13;
milk, and is delicious.&#13;
Corn Fritters.&#13;
These are a favorite garnish for&#13;
fried or roast chicken or Belgian hare.&#13;
To one cupful fresh sweet corn cut&#13;
from the ear all a half cupful crack*&#13;
er crumbs mixed with a half cupful&#13;
of milk. Add two well beaten eggs,&#13;
yolks and whites, whipped separately,&#13;
and season with salt and pepper. Have&#13;
repdy a hot sheet-Iron spider or pancake&#13;
griddle, well greased with butter,&#13;
pork drippings or oil, and drop in the&#13;
batter a spoonful at a time. When the&#13;
fritters, are browned on one side turn&#13;
the other so they may be well cooked&#13;
through. Four minutes will make&#13;
them a golden brown.&#13;
Peach Leaf Flavor.&#13;
If you find a leaf in the next basket&#13;
of peaches that comes from the&#13;
grocer, don't throw it away. Use It&#13;
for flavoring*. It gives a delicious almond&#13;
flavor, pungent, yet delicate. If&#13;
you are making custard, boll it In the&#13;
milk to bring out the extract For&#13;
blanc mange or any other milk dessert&#13;
use it in the same way.&#13;
Three-in-One Pie.&#13;
Steep one cup seedless raisins until&#13;
soft, then cool; add one cup cranberries,&#13;
one cup rhubarb or chopped&#13;
apples, one cup sugar, a little grated&#13;
nutmeg, sprinkle two tablespoons of&#13;
flour, place.bitt of butter on top. Bake&#13;
between two crusts.&#13;
Dinner Nuts,&#13;
Salted Brazil nuts and salted pistachio&#13;
nuts are In great favor for dinners.&#13;
The pistachios have .a pleasant&#13;
quality, almost as acid ac a lemon,&#13;
which Is particularly satisfactory with&#13;
fish served as a second course.&#13;
Washing Lace Collars.&#13;
When washing lace collars always&#13;
baste them on a piece of white muslin&#13;
to dry.&#13;
This is very good, as they can be&#13;
ironed without difficulty and do not&#13;
tear from being washed.&#13;
lee Cream Cake.&#13;
One cup sugar, 8 eggs, ft cup butter,&#13;
i spoon cream tartar, safe out&#13;
two whites for frosting, H teaspoon&#13;
soda, t cups floor, ft cap milk, 1 small&#13;
teaspoon vanilla m the cake and else&#13;
small tsaspoon of vanilla in* the frost&#13;
ing. Frost with I whites, beaten sttt,&#13;
powdered sugar and | r little coooaarft&#13;
Pat nut meats on the) frostiig.&#13;
• » . V , Far areas* •set*&#13;
Sucalyptas oil will&#13;
spots wftbont tnjirliic tha&#13;
et*otebrlo.&#13;
WINCHESTER&#13;
REPEATING S H O T G U N S .&#13;
Winchester Repeating Shotguns are&#13;
not only safe to shoot, but sure to&#13;
shoot. They are easy to load or un*&#13;
load,easy to take down or put together,&#13;
and strong and reliable i n every&#13;
way. That's why the U. S. Ordnance&#13;
Board endorsed them as being safe,&#13;
sure, strong and simple. Over 450,000&#13;
satisfied sportsmen are using them.&#13;
Slick to a Winchester and Ycu Won't Get Stuck&#13;
Winchttttr Guns and Winchester Ammunition—the Red&#13;
Broad—are Made for Each Other and Sold Everywhere&#13;
Don't Put Off seeking relief from the fi In notes&#13;
causedby defective action of the organs&#13;
of digestion. Most series* sicknesses&#13;
get their start in troubles of&#13;
the stomach, liver, bowsJs^trooMeS&#13;
quickly, safely, sorely relieved by*&#13;
BEECHABTS&#13;
PILLS Sold 10a*&#13;
Pink E y e , Epizootic&#13;
Shipping F e v e r&#13;
£1 Catarrhal F e v e r&#13;
Furwonreand positive preventlTe.no matter bow honwe a t any ajre are Infected&#13;
or "fXiKKwil." Liquid, fnvr-n on OJ&lt;- (un^ue; acts on tbu Hlood and Glands: exp«l* the&#13;
Mil;«jnuuij«corniB from tlie tiixly. Cares iJiBteinper in Do^u and tsheep and Cholera lu&#13;
•'oultry, Jjirvetit »ellinK Hventock rooiedr. Oir** J.a tirlppe amonK human l&gt;elnp»,&#13;
and taa flrie Kutney remedy. fuMJ and 111 a botrle; tb and *1U a dor.en. ( ut tlitxnut.&#13;
Ki'ejilt. •- bow toyour ilnitrH'ts-t. who will pot lv for you. Free Booklet, "i&gt;Utemper«&#13;
Cau&amp;eaand L'ureii. bpeuiul Agents wuuu»T.&#13;
SPOHN MEDICAL CO., B ^ I V ^ S ? . GOSHEN, IND., 0. S. A.&#13;
DISTEMPER&#13;
Vague Comment.&#13;
"I've got one of those new vacuum&#13;
washers."&#13;
"That's nothing."&#13;
Problem.&#13;
"There is one argument that in trying&#13;
toput down^ it is .useless to set&#13;
pur face against."&#13;
"What argument is that?"&#13;
"Kissing."&#13;
The Similarity.&#13;
"Many a poor fellow in proposing&#13;
finds himself like a champagne bottle."&#13;
"How is that?"&#13;
"First he pops and then he effervesces,&#13;
only to find it is all a fizzle."&#13;
Something Else Again.&#13;
"How's the doctor today?"&#13;
Gardener—Very poorly, sir.&#13;
"Has he got a locum tenens?"&#13;
Gardener—No, sir. I think he has&#13;
got a touch of Influenza.&#13;
When a man has a cold In the head&#13;
he reeds a sheet. But a girl can&#13;
make out with a handkerchief as big&#13;
as a postage stamp.&#13;
In the Police Court.&#13;
"Were you intoxicated?"&#13;
"No, your honor; on the contrary,&#13;
[ was ostentatiously sober."&#13;
Fithlng for Fish.&#13;
Many people there are who delight&#13;
in just fishing for fish. Such a one&#13;
was John Quincy Adams. The story&#13;
was told by one of his clients, whose&#13;
case was to be tried on a certain&#13;
morning, that he could not get his&#13;
counsel to leave his fishing boat except&#13;
long enough to write a note to&#13;
the judge which read: "Dear Judge—&#13;
For the sake of Izaak Walton please&#13;
continue my case, until Friday. The&#13;
•melt are biting, and I can't leave."&#13;
And the judge having read the note,&#13;
announced to the court: "Mr. Adams&#13;
is detained on important business."—&#13;
Christian Herald.&#13;
One Obstacle to Happiness.&#13;
"No," declared the young man, with&#13;
a tcuch of sadness in his voice—"it&#13;
may be that some day I shall be happy,&#13;
but at present it is beyond me."&#13;
His companions were interested.&#13;
"There is a girl I love dearly," he&#13;
continued. "She would have me if I&#13;
asked her, but I dare not. I really&#13;
cannot marry and live on $10,000 a&#13;
year."&#13;
Consternation and pity were depicted&#13;
on the faces of his friends.&#13;
"You can't marry on $10,000 a&#13;
year?" asked one. "Why not?"&#13;
"Why not?" echoed the youth.&#13;
"Simply because 1 haven't the $10,-&#13;
000!"&#13;
Turkish Crops All Good.&#13;
Turkish crops this year are to be&#13;
exceptioally. good. In the farmer districts&#13;
the crops have already been&#13;
gathered in and in the hilly parts of&#13;
Asia Minor a beginning Is now being,&#13;
made. Although nearly all the males&#13;
capable of bearing arms in Asia Minor&#13;
were called to the front, 20 per cent,&#13;
more land was put under cultivation&#13;
than in 1912 and many of the grain&#13;
crops will be four or five times ras big&#13;
as last year.&#13;
It is natural for some women to act&#13;
unnatural.&#13;
HIDES TANNED&#13;
For Robes and Coats Bead aayovrOatUe and Hon*&#13;
aBnidd ewt,* o vr1 aUn~yB atatkla_Ts Oyo«« a b Palraee,&#13;
Oott, Bob* or A Vtoor-Bncftt&#13;
^w.T Sar. ?. t OoB *p oiife etf. ej torrat&#13;
Fur Ooftt «ad Bob* netorlw&#13;
In UM eoaniry, and tan and&#13;
draft*., la oar own plant, ail tka&#13;
bldaft and aklat » • tua. Wo&#13;
can tharofoM haodla TOOT custom work la ta* Tory boat&#13;
manner, a i l allot aro aoft&#13;
and pUablo whoa tnUbad.&#13;
WogttaraateooorwortL Sond&#13;
tor oar circular. Write MM*.&#13;
HUGH WALLAOS! OO.&#13;
Custom Department&#13;
S e s S E. Grand Boulevard&#13;
Detroit, Michigan&#13;
In the Singular.&#13;
George Ade, at the Chicago Athletic&#13;
club, listened to a youth's passionate&#13;
panegyric on lova.&#13;
"Walt till you'vs married her," said&#13;
Mr. Ade. "Walt till you've beed married&#13;
to her fifteen or twenty years.&#13;
Then you'41 be like Sinnlekson.&#13;
"Sinnickson's wife looked up from a&#13;
novel the other evening and said&#13;
dreamily:&#13;
"I've been thinking, dear, of our&#13;
courtship—those ecstatic days!"&#13;
"'Humph!' said Sinnickson, shaking&#13;
his fat, bald head. 'That ecstatlo&#13;
daze, you mean.'"&#13;
Paw Knows Everything.&#13;
Willie—Paw, when a baby gets sick,&#13;
why do they call the doctor?&#13;
Paw—To cure It, my son.&#13;
Willie—Well, why don't they send&#13;
for the curate instead of the doctor?&#13;
Paw—You go to bed, Willie.—Cincinnati&#13;
Enquirer.&#13;
Lucky.&#13;
Hobo—I've eatsn nothing but snowballs&#13;
for three days.&#13;
Lady—You poor man! What would&#13;
you have done had it been&#13;
time?&#13;
Industry Denied.&#13;
"Your husband says he has to sit&#13;
at a desk all day."&#13;
"Yes," replied the energetic woman;&#13;
"but most of the time he keeps bis&#13;
feet on the desk."&#13;
Its Proper Designation.&#13;
"Is that what you call a dirigible V*&#13;
"No, it t'ain't. It's whatcher call a&#13;
b'loon."&#13;
Post Toasties&#13;
Bully Good—Breakfast, Lunch or Supper&#13;
Ready to eat direct from package with&#13;
cream and sugar—sometimes add fruit&#13;
A genuine treat that meets favor&#13;
with guests and home folks.&#13;
Sold by Groeen&#13;
Everywhere!&#13;
^ T * * r***2-&#13;
K3&#13;
• » &gt; • :&#13;
M&#13;
i&#13;
iva&#13;
••.t r«&#13;
/*:"&#13;
' " .1,&#13;
m&#13;
k !•**•,£!&#13;
.-. ^ : ^&#13;
t .&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
i&#13;
• » | i « n ^&#13;
i8r^i&gt;&#13;
fc ' &lt; • * ,&#13;
^ .&#13;
**Vf'&#13;
miM W*s$-&#13;
!&amp;.'*&#13;
&amp;&#13;
k&lt;iT .v.1 ' ^ ,&#13;
PT &lt; * • » •&#13;
Pinckney Lyceum Course&#13;
The Piockuey Citizen's Lecture&#13;
Course for the cowing yem- will&#13;
be as follow .&#13;
The Raweis, October 14.&#13;
Dr. Wm. A. Colledge, November&#13;
11.&#13;
Mrs. L. M. Lake, December 5.&#13;
Dr. Huekter, January 15&#13;
. Barnard's Orchestra, F e b -&#13;
ruary 4.&#13;
Reserved seats will be placed&#13;
oji tale at Meyer's Drug Store,&#13;
Saturday afternooD, October 14,&#13;
at 3 o'clock. Seasou tickets are&#13;
now on sale and may be secured&#13;
at the Drag Store or of any member&#13;
of the committee.&#13;
The price of the season tickets&#13;
this year are $1.25, the same as&#13;
last year. The course provided&#13;
lor this season is one of the very&#13;
beat and includes much expensive&#13;
talent.&#13;
Detailed programs ot. each lecture&#13;
will be printed in this paper&#13;
as each number occurs on the&#13;
course. The following will give&#13;
you an idea of what the Raweis&#13;
program consists. .&#13;
THE KAV/EIS.&#13;
The Raweis coinini.st' ;t nm j&gt;any of&#13;
three native New Zeiihinilei's uhu [(re-&#13;
Bent in music, pktuivs ;iml story a&#13;
fascinating portrayul of native life in&#13;
the sp-uth sea islands. In this interesting&#13;
company are Mr. and Mis. Rmvei&#13;
and their son. They have been iu this&#13;
country "three years, speaking to great&#13;
audiences everywhere. They have appeared&#13;
twice in the Art Institute, Chicago,&#13;
and in widely known Lyceum&#13;
courses.&#13;
The Rawei family are native Maoris&#13;
and are handsome specimens of their&#13;
sace_ In their public exhibitions they&#13;
# M ^ t t a e queer but picturesque costiHMll&#13;
Of the native islanders. Mr.&#13;
JMrapl himself was born in the wilds&#13;
Of iwthern Zealand, anfrong the most&#13;
Savage people, was adopted by an English&#13;
lady of vfealth when about twelve&#13;
years old, given a thorough education&#13;
and -enabled to graduate with high&#13;
honors and the degree of master of&#13;
arts from GhrMte-hurch University,&#13;
The presentation of "From Savagery&#13;
to Culture" is so cleverly and artistically&#13;
done and is so full of the interest&#13;
of novelty and wonder that it compels&#13;
the utmost eetfcfeiaHh It ir««pttratlng&#13;
to tte last degree, ftyl of '&amp;+.&#13;
Ught and fflrprtw* / £•*'":&#13;
The audience is held under a spell&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Bora to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Killenberger,&#13;
Saturday, September 20, a&#13;
daughter.&#13;
All are cordially invitdd to be present&#13;
at a pumpkin pie and fruit social&#13;
at the home of Roy Planeway, Friday&#13;
evening September 26.&#13;
Mrs. G. M. Greiner went to Detroit&#13;
Monday to attend the wedding of ber&#13;
nephew, Henry Brennan, Itoesday,&#13;
and tbat ot ber son Martin, Saturday.&#13;
Miss Vina Woodruff was married&#13;
at the borne ot her parents, Wednesday.&#13;
Andrew Greiner of Jackson spent&#13;
last week at bis borne here.&#13;
Mrs. A. C. Roche and daughters are&#13;
spending a few days at tbe home of&#13;
J. L. Roche of Pinckney&#13;
John Greiner ol Jackson spent Saturday&#13;
with relatives here.&#13;
Malacby Roche and wife of Powlerville&#13;
visited nere Thursday.&#13;
Mrs. K M. Ledwidge and children&#13;
spent a couple of days last week at&#13;
the borne ot her parents of 8, Marion,&#13;
J. Church&#13;
Graduate Optometrist, of Howell,&#13;
Mich., will be&gt; in Pinckney,&#13;
Thursday, October 2, at the Hotel&#13;
Steadman. Mr. Church guarantees&#13;
a perfect fit. All headache&#13;
caused by eye strain absolutely&#13;
corrected. Consultation and examination&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
How Thackeray Regarded Scott.&#13;
Though Thackeray thought Dumas&#13;
greater than Scott, yet for the lattei&#13;
he felt much admiration and even rev&#13;
erence. When a popular novelist on€&#13;
day justified himself for something hthad&#13;
written by urging that Scott had&#13;
written it also Thackeray replied: "1&#13;
do not think that it becomes either you&#13;
or me to speak of Sir Walter Scott as&#13;
if we yere his equals. Such men as&#13;
you or I should taIre off our hats at th«&#13;
very mention of hU name."—"Some As&#13;
pects of Thackeraj/' Louis Melville.&#13;
LADIES&#13;
It will pay you to s e c our beauti-i&#13;
ful PAbL, COATS. Newest fall \&#13;
f a b r i c s , Astrakhan, Boucles,\&#13;
Matelasses, Etc., in the seasons (&#13;
most approved colorings. |&#13;
We mention but a few:—&#13;
Navy and Black Astrakhan.&#13;
Gray, all wool Chinchilla&#13;
Black Persiaina&#13;
Mole and Navy&#13;
Brown and Navy (plain or striped) Zibeline.&#13;
Brown Astrakhan..&#13;
In Som# Plaoee.&#13;
"Men can't be always strictly guard&#13;
ed in everything they say or do."&#13;
"I have known it to be done."&#13;
"Where, pray?"&#13;
"In the penitentiary." — Baltimore&#13;
American.&#13;
Not What She Expected.&#13;
Clara (fishing for a compliment)-&#13;
Thia Js yeur fourth dance with me.&#13;
Why don't you dance with some of the&#13;
other girls?&#13;
Charlie—Well, the fact is I dance so&#13;
badly I hate to ask them.&#13;
Reversed.&#13;
Rodrick — Say. old man, you him&#13;
been through the ordeal of proposing.&#13;
What does a fellow do after be pops&#13;
the question? Van Albert—Why. he&#13;
questions pop. of course. — Chicajjo&#13;
News.&#13;
The Future.&#13;
We can never find out what the future&#13;
has in store for us until we have&#13;
paid the storage charges.—Puck. -&#13;
Write Dancer and Co., Stockbridge,&#13;
for liberal samples of&#13;
their fall dress goods, adv.&#13;
Fr. Cahalan of Marshall and&#13;
Fr, James Haley of Milford and&#13;
Fr. John Haley of Dexter and&#13;
Miss Nellie Haley of Dexter visited&#13;
Fr. Coyle Tuesday afternoon.&#13;
C h i c k e n&#13;
"As You Like It"&#13;
The men folks of the M*. E. church&#13;
will serve a Chicken Sapper in&#13;
the rooms below the Opera House&#13;
Saturday Evening&#13;
October 4th. 13&#13;
Silk Phishes&#13;
Garacules $6, to 10."&#13;
Black Cloth&#13;
Coats $10 to 20.&#13;
....•10.00&#13;
.... 13.50&#13;
... lS.OO&#13;
„ 15.00&#13;
_ 16.50&#13;
„. 16.50&#13;
... 16.50&#13;
_, 18.00&#13;
- 18.00&#13;
„ 20 00&#13;
.... 20.00&#13;
__ 22,50&#13;
Plain Astrakhan, Black or Mole „.„ „_. 25.00&#13;
Brown and Cadet Eponge 25.00&#13;
Beautiful Black Matelasse . ., 25.00&#13;
Gray and Brown Striped Chinchilla.&#13;
Fine Black Matelasse 1_&#13;
Brown Striped Astrakhan „&#13;
Striped Niggerhead&#13;
Brown Brocaded Astrakhan^&#13;
Fine Navy Boucle „&#13;
A Big Line of&#13;
Stout Sizes&#13;
We pay your fare&#13;
on $15. purchases&#13;
! W. J. Dancer 6c Company \I&#13;
8tockbridge9 Miohu&#13;
'THE CENTRAL'&#13;
Our Millinery Trimmer is Here and Ready&#13;
For Business. Gall and see the beautiful&#13;
hats. All shapes, sizes and prices.&#13;
We also have an entirely n*ew line of dry goods;&#13;
Corduroy, wool ratine, serges, silks, a dandy navy&#13;
blue that would make a beautiful suit. Also a lot&#13;
of fancy vesting that is now in vogue, and the most&#13;
beautiful Bulgarian silk and velvet for trimmings.&#13;
Also kid gloves, laces, etc.&#13;
New groceries just in and plenty of bacon and&#13;
picnic hams; also salt pork, lard, etc.&#13;
Respectfully,&#13;
The Central Store&#13;
IMPORTANT!&#13;
Try a Liner Advertisement in the Dispatch&#13;
$m&amp;a%aaax^^ V v V O A V V V Coal Coal&#13;
Having decided to discontinue&#13;
farming, 1 offer&#13;
For Sale&#13;
10 to J5 head of young&#13;
serviceable short horn&#13;
cows and^ heifers at&#13;
about beef prices. Also&#13;
4 to 6 young Clydesdale&#13;
colts and fillys&#13;
from 1 to 3 years old.&#13;
Will give time to responsible&#13;
purchasers.&#13;
T. Birkfctt&#13;
We Have it in Stock&#13;
STRICTLY HIGH GRADE&#13;
•f.&#13;
:r4*%&#13;
of fascin«d»&amp;-.'&amp;#* the.' &lt;*»lrd bofeds, j&#13;
^ the love jonfc, ttm ^iK»jciwru»s4, tb« i The snpper wUi be served f*om&#13;
•,"£•&#13;
If- •&lt;&#13;
•v*..&#13;
# • :&#13;
«rar chants *4i Incintatiow and. the/i |&#13;
«ipnaroo« beitfttfil *et*m of tt*r&#13;
"fUmUraa Jetae* see**?.&#13;
¥&#13;
W I ml&#13;
If'.*'':.'&gt;:/&#13;
*€&#13;
five noiil all are served.&#13;
Everyone Invited.&#13;
Chestnut and Stove&#13;
In Hard Coal&#13;
Kentucky and Ohio Soft&#13;
CoaI - Ten nessee Cannel&#13;
W*VIr$i&#13;
^ * ^ : c l ^ ^ ^ % ' &gt;•« . n .. i''4\ - i .«,,««.,»«&#13;
;i*«&#13;
Job&#13;
S N U I&#13;
ftmttmm&#13;
ueiuie&#13;
GoiAf EbeT&#13;
woatfe&#13;
Printing&#13;
Wtarrhtnlto&#13;
serve you with&#13;
anything in tht&#13;
Ime of printed&#13;
station $ryr/or&#13;
your business&#13;
and ptttonal&#13;
• #&#13;
:4&#13;
V&#13;
Ji&#13;
'f- .^*&gt;&#13;
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan, Thursday, October 9, 1913 No. 41&#13;
Obituary&#13;
Deo Dey, son of Mr. Charles 0.&#13;
Dey and Mrs. Olive M. Dey, died&#13;
Friday, Sept. 27,,1913, at the home&#13;
of his parents in Putnam township&#13;
After an illness extending over&#13;
three years of spinal schlerosis,&#13;
aged 15 years, 10 months and 17&#13;
days.&#13;
Deo was an unusually bright,&#13;
winsome boy, much loved by his&#13;
school mates and friends.&#13;
All was done for him that willing&#13;
hands- and loving hearts could&#13;
desire through his long painful illness&#13;
which he bore with great&#13;
patieice, thoughtful and uncomplaining&#13;
always.&#13;
"Though over your home a dark cloud of&#13;
sorrow&#13;
Has settled in deeper than midnight gloom,&#13;
The bright shining light of the face of our&#13;
Sayior&#13;
Has pierced through the dark silent tomb.&#13;
And bids you look to him (father, mother,&#13;
brother and sister dear) for death's&#13;
fetters he broke,&#13;
And has risen to the realms of bright glory;&#13;
His words of Bweet peace to your saddenid&#13;
hearts speaks.&#13;
As he tells you the old sweet story of the&#13;
i city that hath no n^ed of the sun;&#13;
HIB gloom to dispel or its sorrow&#13;
Where your loved one is basking in the&#13;
light of his love&#13;
With no fear of a sad coming morrow. .&#13;
The old sweet story of the beautiful door&#13;
Of the bright resurrection from sorrow,&#13;
"Where you'll meet darling Deo on the&#13;
evergreen shore&#13;
In the beautiful glory world over yonder.&#13;
The funeral services were held&#13;
at the South Handy M. E. church&#13;
pear his old home, Monday afterloon,&#13;
Rev. G. L. Adams, officiating,&#13;
and the remains interred id&#13;
Greenwood cemetery.&#13;
Card of Thanks&#13;
We wish to thank the neighbors&#13;
and friends for their kindness&#13;
shown us during the sickness and&#13;
death of our dear son.&#13;
Cbfte. Dey and Family&#13;
*•%.&#13;
Howell Business Changes&#13;
Howell has been subjected to&#13;
many businebs changes during the&#13;
past week, more than have taken&#13;
place at one time for a number of&#13;
yewflr—Xhe well known firm of&#13;
Goodnow &amp; Beach have dissolved&#13;
partnership, Mr. Beach has purchased&#13;
the Satterla, Scully &amp; Ratz&#13;
stock and* leased the building at&#13;
present utilized by them. Messrs.&#13;
Goodnow, Satterla, Scully &amp; Ratz&#13;
have formed a business corporation,&#13;
firm name not made known&#13;
as yet, anil will occupy the Goodnow&#13;
store with ati up-to-late dry&#13;
dry goods stock.&#13;
Brooks &amp; Ourran, the former&#13;
from the Hornung tailor shops and&#13;
the latter from the Garland shops&#13;
.have united to form a new tailoring&#13;
firm which will occupy the&#13;
old town house which was recently&#13;
purchased at auction and completely&#13;
remodeled.&#13;
Leslie Oaaady has sold his&#13;
blacksmith business to Theodore&#13;
Shindorf of Dexter. Mr. Oasady&#13;
has no immediate plans as to what&#13;
he will do in the future. Mr.&#13;
Shindorf's father from Belding&#13;
will be associated with him in the&#13;
business.&#13;
• Harry, Pajker formerly a mem-&#13;
*ber of the 6 . J. Parker Drug Oo.&#13;
has leased a building west of the&#13;
craayttkheu on Ckand River Si&#13;
md will start an up-to-date grobnsinass&#13;
• * •&#13;
. • * * * . * • fax TOST sumttpUosi this noftta.&#13;
Local News&#13;
Fred Read of Detroit was home&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Fred Catrell spent Sunday with&#13;
friends here.&#13;
Clair Skinner of Detroit visited&#13;
here last Friday.&#13;
Mrs. fl. F. Sigler is visiting in&#13;
Lansing this week.&#13;
Be sure and read the "Central"&#13;
store adv. ou inside page.&#13;
Fr. Coyle was a Dexter visitor&#13;
Monday afternoon.&#13;
Fall carpets and rugs ^ now&#13;
shown at Dancer's. adv.&#13;
Ed. Breningstall spent several&#13;
days of last week in Jackson.&#13;
Esther Barton spent the week&#13;
end with relatives in Detroit.&#13;
Mrs. C. G. Meyer visited relatives&#13;
at Jonesville the past week.&#13;
Mrs. Margaret Black is spending&#13;
the week with relatives in&#13;
Jackson.&#13;
Give us your boy to clothe and&#13;
we will save you money.—W. J.&#13;
Dancer &amp; Co. adv.&#13;
Dick Wright and wite of Bowell&#13;
were Pinckney visitors one&#13;
day last week.&#13;
Geo. Mann of Detfoit spent the&#13;
latter part of last we*ek with&#13;
relatives here.&#13;
The men of the M. E, churoh&#13;
took in $30.20 at their chicken&#13;
supper Saturday night.&#13;
Wilnot Reeves of Detroit visited&#13;
at the home of C. V. Van-&#13;
Winkle the latter part of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs, John Harland and son&#13;
Jack who have been spending the&#13;
summer here have returned to&#13;
their home in Marquette.&#13;
Ernest C. Morgan, district manager&#13;
of the Brotherhood of America&#13;
Yeomen for this county, was&#13;
in town on business of the order&#13;
Monday.&#13;
The Rfcweis, the first number on&#13;
the lecture course, at the Pinckney&#13;
opera house, Tuesday evening&#13;
October 14. Have you secured&#13;
your season ticket?&#13;
The Superintendent of the&#13;
Methodist Sunday School wears&#13;
a broad smile on his face, to the&#13;
effect that the Sunday school&#13;
attendence last Sunday totaled 93.&#13;
Dave Smith recently purchased&#13;
the building west of the Pinckney&#13;
House and is having it completely&#13;
remodeled and fitted in every particular&#13;
for an up-to-date meat&#13;
market.&#13;
The enrollment at University of&#13;
Michigan is 5,226 as follow:&#13;
Literary, 1,492; engineering, 1,370;&#13;
law, 514; medio, 271; dents, 258;&#13;
graduate department, 144; homeopaths,&#13;
85.&#13;
Mrs. Frank Boylan of Chilson,&#13;
Mrs. Minnie Kanouse of Perry,&#13;
M. J. Burgess, Mary Openo and&#13;
J. W. Bargees and wife of Hartland&#13;
and Mrs. Alta Wood of&#13;
CrotoD, South Dakota were Sunday&#13;
guests at the home of Mrs.&#13;
Arvilla Placeway.&#13;
The Tiding's last week's grist of&#13;
Pinckney news was as usual taken&#13;
from the Dispatch. The item in&#13;
the Howell leaflet about Mrs. Geo.&#13;
Teepte and daughter Mary, however,&#13;
did not come from this paper&#13;
and no one in Pinckney knew&#13;
that Mrs. Teeple had a daughter&#13;
Mary; at least Mrs. Teeple does&#13;
not know it. Better rely entirely&#13;
I on these columns for anthenti&#13;
Pinckney news, Mr. Tidings man.&#13;
A. Mclntyre% and wife have&#13;
moved to town.&#13;
L. E. Richards is painting the&#13;
Grimes house on Main Btreet this&#13;
week.&#13;
C. V. VanWinkle and wife are&#13;
in Saginaw today attending tbe&#13;
state convention of the O. E. S.&#13;
It is reported that the Bowers&#13;
property on W.'Main St. has been&#13;
sold to a Mr. Carr of Portage&#13;
Lake.&#13;
Regular communication of Livingston&#13;
Lodge, Mo. 76, F. &amp; A. M.,&#13;
Tuesday evening, October 14.&#13;
Work in the M. M. degree.&#13;
Roy Morau of Detroit, son of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Moran of this&#13;
place, has entered the U. of M.&#13;
and will take up dentistry.&#13;
All those desiring to become&#13;
members of the Pinckney Literary&#13;
Club will please meet Monday&#13;
evening, October 13, at the home&#13;
of Mrs. Sarah Brown at seven&#13;
J o'clock sharp. The club this year&#13;
will take up a literary course&#13;
under direction of the Bay View&#13;
Literary Association on L i v e&#13;
Questions of the Day, if the work&#13;
seems satisfactory to all members.&#13;
Friday and Saturday, October&#13;
17 and 18, at their hall in the&#13;
Cadwell block, the society of&#13;
the Congregational church will&#13;
give their 13th annual chicken pie&#13;
and fried chicken supper and&#13;
novelty sale including a Japanese&#13;
Art Exhibit and sale, from one of&#13;
the largest Japanese wholesale&#13;
houses in Chicago. We will guarantee&#13;
this to be one of the finest&#13;
exhibits of the kind ever shown in&#13;
this vicinity. A fine opportunity&#13;
to purchase your ChristmaB presents&#13;
at reasonable prices. There&#13;
will also be booths where wearing&#13;
apparel and vegetables caa be&#13;
purchased. Friday evening the&#13;
"Japanese Ladies" will serve tea.&#13;
Ice cream, candy and popcorn for&#13;
Mrs. James Henry&#13;
Mary Elizabeth Weller was&#13;
born February 25, 1850, in Ann&#13;
Arbor, Washtenaw county, Mich.,&#13;
and departed this life Monday,&#13;
September 29, 1913, being 57&#13;
years, 7 months and 4 days of age.&#13;
When a mere child she moved&#13;
with her parents to Livingston&#13;
county where she res:dtd all her life&#13;
with the exception of a brier peried&#13;
spent near Hudson, Mich.&#13;
At Dexter, at the age of 18, she&#13;
was married to James flenry,&#13;
August 29, 1974. To this union&#13;
were born two" children, Mrs. Wni.&#13;
Cady of Lakeland and Jesse C. of&#13;
this place. These, with three&#13;
grandchildren, Ella and Bernice&#13;
Cady and L. J. Henry, are left to&#13;
mourn their loss of a most devoted&#13;
wife and mother, and the community&#13;
a christiancitizen.&#13;
Possessing a loving, charitable&#13;
and an appreciated disposition,&#13;
Mrs. Henry was held in highest&#13;
esteem by all who knew her. At&#13;
an early period in her life she&#13;
was converted to the christian&#13;
faith and united with the M. E,&#13;
church of this place, being a most&#13;
ardent member and punctual attendant;&#13;
her life was a Kving&#13;
prayer and an impersonation of&#13;
the Golden Rule.&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
FOUND—A rubber auto lap robe.&#13;
Owner can have same by calling at&#13;
this office and paying for this notice&#13;
FOK SALE—Holstein heifer, also sowr&#13;
with nice pigs. 40t3*&#13;
J. A. Tread way, Pinckney&#13;
Card of Thanks&#13;
We wish to thank our friends&#13;
and neighbors for their kindness&#13;
during our sad bereavement, also&#13;
those who sent the beautiful flowers,&#13;
the choir for the singing and&#13;
the minister for his kind words.&#13;
James Henry&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Cady&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Henry.&#13;
FOR SALE—Thoroughbred Holstein&#13;
Hull, seven months old, also 1400 lb.&#13;
horse, sound and right. 40(3*&#13;
O. M. Greiner, Pio^kney&#13;
FOR SALE CHEAP—Second-hand 4&#13;
roll McCormick corn husker. 40t3&#13;
Dinkel &amp; Dunbar, Pinckney&#13;
FOR SALE—The farm known as the&#13;
Lavey farm in the township of Dexieiv&#13;
166 acres. Inquire of Jobn&#13;
Gallagher or H. B. Honey, Dexter,&#13;
Mich. 41t4&#13;
FOR SALE—Art Laurel base burner&#13;
coal stove, A bargain for someone.&#13;
41t3 Robt. Kelley, Pinckney.&#13;
FOUND—A package containing underwear.&#13;
Found near depot. Owner&#13;
can get same at this office.&#13;
Mrs. Anna Francis is visiting&#13;
relatives in Webberville and Fowlerville.&#13;
Rev. Lincoln Ostrander of Flint&#13;
sale both evenings. You will makej will preach in the Cong'l. church&#13;
no mistake in making your pur-1 next Sunday morning and evenchases&#13;
at this bazaar. Everybody&#13;
invited. adv.&#13;
iag and at North Hamburg&#13;
three o'clock.&#13;
at&#13;
\\^il 28i?*^&#13;
You&#13;
May&#13;
Talk&#13;
to One&#13;
Man&#13;
&lt;&#13;
But an advertisement in&#13;
this paper talks to the&#13;
whole community.&#13;
Catch the Idea t&#13;
V rl&#13;
Murphy &amp; Jackson I&#13;
Staple^5 Fancy Groceries, Dry Goods, Shoes iP Furnishings m&#13;
Largest Stock •- Lowest Prices jj&#13;
POR PAUL* #&#13;
We are showing large lines of Underwear, Mackinaw a&#13;
Coats, Sweaters, Blankets, Comfortables, Hosiery, Gloves&#13;
and Mitts&#13;
IN FALL P 0 0 T W B A R&#13;
We carry the celebrated Mishawaka and Lambertville&#13;
Rubbers for Men and Boys, also a complete line of Mens,&#13;
Ladies, Misses and Childrens Arctics and Light Rubbers&#13;
OUR SATURDAY S P E C I A L S&#13;
1 0 0 d o z e n C a n v a s G l o v e s , 15c values, heavy-ducjt,&#13;
the blue knit wrist, For Saturday Only, per pair 10c&#13;
2 5 lbs. H. &amp;,E. Sugar - $ l i&#13;
r&#13;
y&#13;
• . * ' " ' •&#13;
- - . * » — - • &gt; *&#13;
: , * • ; « &gt;&#13;
, • ••"• *X?1&#13;
•'•••: ; . , ' ' w ( " - i&#13;
E&#13;
5A&#13;
rVf&#13;
H f!V&#13;
'«&amp;'•*••'&#13;
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&amp;&#13;
* • *&#13;
#A&#13;
.&amp;&#13;
**J*»':^^*«^,&#13;
\ .&#13;
M&gt;&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
'A&#13;
» * . '&#13;
f*&#13;
PANAMA CANAL PRACTICALLY COMPLETE&#13;
^ * • • - — • - • • — — —&#13;
Destruction of Gamboa Dike Permits Waters of Gatun Lake to&#13;
Fill Culebra Cut—Boats Soon to Pass Through the&#13;
Waterway.&#13;
ESfiBCsaeg^^g^^gss^^sjjgQ&#13;
How the Floor of Culebra Cut Was Cleaned In Readiness for the Flooding&#13;
of the Panama Canal.&#13;
Colon, Panama, Oct. 1.—The Panama&#13;
canal was pronounced practically&#13;
finished today when preparations&#13;
were made for the removal of the&#13;
Gamboa dike, which has held the'&#13;
waters of Gatun lake out of the Culebra&#13;
cut, the only part of tho canal in&#13;
which, up till the present time, there&#13;
has been no water.&#13;
The waters of Gatun lake were permitted&#13;
today to run into the Culebra&#13;
cut through big pipes that had been&#13;
pushed through the Gamboa dike.&#13;
This is done as a preliminary to the&#13;
complete removal of the dike in order&#13;
that the water may rise gradually in&#13;
the cut and eliminate the possibility&#13;
of damage.&#13;
The final destruction of the big dike&#13;
Is scheduled for October 10, wheF&#13;
charges of dynamite placed in holes&#13;
already drilled in the dike will be&#13;
exploded. The explosion of these&#13;
charges will not completely destroy&#13;
the dike, but will weaken it and loosen&#13;
the dirt so that the force of the&#13;
waters from Gatun lake will carry it&#13;
away. Steam shovels will remove the&#13;
remnants of the dike, leaving an open&#13;
passageway from ocean to ocean.&#13;
Canal Really Complete Now.&#13;
Although the canal will not be officially&#13;
declared completed for some&#13;
time, and the formal opening of the&#13;
waterway to the commerce of the&#13;
world more than a year distant, the&#13;
canal engineers look upon the destruction&#13;
of the Gamboa dike as marking&#13;
the real completion of the canal.&#13;
The big engineering feats have all&#13;
been accomplished, the excavation&#13;
work practically has been completed.&#13;
and the great locks have been constructed.&#13;
The work that remains to&#13;
be done 1B largely detail, and is but&#13;
child's play as compared with that&#13;
which has been done. More dirt is&#13;
to be removed from the channel, but&#13;
this will be done with suction dredges&#13;
floating upon the waters of the canal.&#13;
There still remains some finishing&#13;
touches to be placed upon the locks,&#13;
but this work will take comparatively&#13;
little time and presents no engineering&#13;
difficulties such as have been encountered&#13;
in the past.&#13;
The fact that the canal stands practically&#13;
complete more than a year before&#13;
the time originally set as the&#13;
date for its completion is one of the&#13;
remarkable features of the work:&#13;
When Count de Lesseps, the great&#13;
French engineer, abandoned'' his efforts&#13;
to build the Panama canal after&#13;
eight years of labor, he had scarcely&#13;
made a beginning upon the gigantic&#13;
task. In nine years, the American engineers,&#13;
starting almost at the same&#13;
point as de Lesseps, for the latter's&#13;
work was of little value to the Americans,&#13;
have virtually completed the&#13;
undertaking. When the work was&#13;
started the world scoffed at the idea&#13;
that it could be completed within the&#13;
- time limit set, but hats are now off&#13;
to the American army engineers who&#13;
have more than kept their word, despite&#13;
unforeseen difficulties that have&#13;
beset them at every hand.&#13;
Qoethalt to Make Final Test.&#13;
The first* vessel to pass through the&#13;
canal probably will be a boat of the&#13;
Isthmian canal commission, Col.&#13;
George W. Goethals. chairman of the&#13;
commission and chief engineer of the&#13;
canal, and his principal assistanta&#13;
The final voyage through the canal is&#13;
scheduled for some time during this&#13;
month. Within another month it is&#13;
expected the waters in Gatun lake&#13;
will have risen high enough to bring&#13;
the waters in the entire canal up to&#13;
the deep water level required for the&#13;
passage of the largest ships.&#13;
It is said that as long ago as the&#13;
early part of August, assurances were&#13;
given Washington officially that If the&#13;
emergftpej. should- arise, the entire&#13;
Atlantic battleship fleet could be put&#13;
t h r o n g the canal into Pacific waters&#13;
wlthtn 60 aaVs from that date. The&#13;
work baa been hurried with that end&#13;
In tiew&gt;* IC is said, as no emergenc?-&#13;
haa QTKiT liUt tliln assiiraaee Is an&#13;
Indication of the belief or the engineers&#13;
that their work Is now practically&#13;
finished.&#13;
Culebra Cut Caused Trouble.&#13;
, The excavation of the Culebra cut,&#13;
into which the water has just been&#13;
turned, has been one of the engineering&#13;
feats connected with the building&#13;
of the canal, and has caused the engineers&#13;
more trouble than any other&#13;
portion of the big "ditch." To&#13;
Col. D. D. Gaillard, the engineer of&#13;
the central division, is given the&#13;
credit for carrying this portion of the&#13;
work through to a successful termination.&#13;
The disastrous slides in the cut&#13;
were discouraging to the engineers,&#13;
nullifying in a few hours the work of&#13;
many weeks, but Colonel-Gaillard and&#13;
his assistants have kept untiringly at&#13;
their work, and at last have conquered&#13;
the treacherous banks of the deep&#13;
cut.&#13;
A little more than a month ago the&#13;
giant steam shovels finished their&#13;
work in the Culebra cut. Since thai&#13;
time the workmen have been busy&#13;
removing the shovels, the railroad&#13;
tracks and other machinery used in&#13;
the excavatiow work. There is still&#13;
some dirt to be removed from the cut&#13;
before the channel is finished, but&#13;
this work will be done by suction&#13;
dredges floated on the waters of the&#13;
canal, and will not interfere with navigation&#13;
of the waterway by 6uch boats&#13;
as may be allowed to pass through.&#13;
Immense Artificial Lake Created.&#13;
Gatun lake, the waters of which are&#13;
now flowing into the Culebra cut, is&#13;
the pivotal point about which the entire&#13;
canal system revolves, and the&#13;
creation of that lake, together with the&#13;
construction, of Gatun dam, constituted&#13;
another great engineering feat&#13;
in the construction of the canal.&#13;
Gatun lake is an artificial body of&#13;
water covering about 164 square miles&#13;
of territory, and was created by the&#13;
building of the immense Gatun dam&#13;
and the impounding of the wild waters&#13;
of Chagres river. Beneath the&#13;
waters of Gatun lake lies what a few&#13;
months ago was the valley of the&#13;
Chagres, dotted with native villages&#13;
and plantations. The channel of the&#13;
canal passes through this lake for a&#13;
distance of 23 miles with a width varying&#13;
from 500 to 1,000 feet.&#13;
At the northern end of the lake&#13;
is the Gatun dam, which is in reality&#13;
a*n artificial ridge more than a mile&#13;
and a half long. Figures alone give&#13;
an adequate idea of the magnitude of&#13;
this dam. Nearly half a mile wide at&#13;
its base, about 400 feet wide at the&#13;
water surface, and 100 feet wide at&#13;
the top, the dike which many engineers&#13;
predicted would never withstand&#13;
the rush of the Chagres' waters,&#13;
is admitted now to be so strong&#13;
that nothing short of an earthquake&#13;
such as has never been known in the&#13;
Central American region, can harm&#13;
it. The Gatun dam, Gatun lake and&#13;
the Culebra cut, so gigantic are the&#13;
proportions of each, dwarf the . other&#13;
engineering works of the canal that&#13;
in themselves have challenged the admiration&#13;
of the world.&#13;
World Gives Goethals Credit.&#13;
To Col. George Goethals, chairman&#13;
of the Isthmian canal commission,&#13;
chief engineer of the commission and&#13;
governor of the canal zone, the world&#13;
will give the credit for the successful&#13;
completion of the Panama canals Colonel&#13;
Goethals could not have accomplished&#13;
his task without the assistance&#13;
of such men as Col. H. P.&#13;
Hodges, Lieut. Col. David Du B. Bail*&#13;
lard and Lieut. Col. William L. Sibert,&#13;
army engineers, who have had charge&#13;
of various phases of the work, but&#13;
Colonel Goethals is recognised aa the&#13;
real builder of the canal.&#13;
When Colonel Roosevelt, then president,&#13;
first sought a chief engineer for&#13;
the canal, he picked Wallace, a civilian,&#13;
but Wallace soon resigned. It la&#13;
said that he almost worried himself&#13;
into a decline because of the iear that&#13;
the canal would finish him feefore be&#13;
could finish the canal. John B\ Stevens,&#13;
a noted engineer, also a civilian,&#13;
succeeded Wallace, but he quit within&#13;
a year.&#13;
President Roosevelt then announced&#13;
that, having had two civilians, both of&#13;
whom resigned, he would give the&#13;
Job of building the canal to a man&#13;
who couldn't quit, and Colonel Goethals,&#13;
then attached to the general&#13;
staff of the army at Washington, waa&#13;
selected for the post&#13;
Colonel Goethals would not have&#13;
quit if he could, once the job was&#13;
undertaken, for the word is not in&#13;
his vocabulary. He plunged into his&#13;
work with all the enthusiasm that he&#13;
possessed, and Boon created a working&#13;
organization that has been the wonder&#13;
of the world.&#13;
Under Colonel Goethals the greater&#13;
part of the $375,000,000 which the&#13;
canal would have cost when it is completed&#13;
has been spent. It has been by&#13;
far tho costliest engineering project&#13;
in the world. Nearly three-fifths of a&#13;
billion dollars has been spent in digging&#13;
a 40-mile "ditch." This means&#13;
that the Panama canal has cost the&#13;
United States $10,000,000 a mile.&#13;
Over $16,000,000 of the total amount&#13;
spent has been used to make the canal&#13;
zone habitable and sanitary. It has&#13;
been suggested that this is an enormous&#13;
amount of money to spend in&#13;
cleaning up a place in which few people&#13;
will reside permanently, but the&#13;
engineers say that the sanitation of&#13;
the canal zone was the chief factor in&#13;
making the canal a reality. The failure&#13;
of the French has been attributed&#13;
to a large extent to the fact that&#13;
the workmen could not Burvive in the&#13;
fever and pest ridden country.&#13;
The building of the great locks&#13;
which raise a vessel to a height of 87&#13;
feet above sea level at one end of&#13;
the canal and lower it the same distance&#13;
at the other end, has been in&#13;
charge of two of Colonel Goethals'&#13;
assistants, Colonel Hodges and Lieutenant&#13;
Colonel Sibert. Colonel Hodge's&#13;
work in installing the immense lockgates&#13;
that form so important a part&#13;
of the operating machinery of the&#13;
canal and his ability to overcome all&#13;
obstacles had led Colonel Goethals to&#13;
call him a genius. The building, poising&#13;
and operation of the lock-gates&#13;
constitute one of the delicate problems&#13;
of lock canal construction, and&#13;
the proper handling of this problem&#13;
has been Colonel Hodge's contribution&#13;
to the work of construction of&#13;
the canal.&#13;
Lieutenant Colonel Sibert has had&#13;
charge of the building of the great&#13;
dam an locks at Gatun, Ink addition&#13;
to other duties. He saw long, active&#13;
service in the Philippines, and&#13;
he is known in the army as a fighter&#13;
as well as an engineer. His fighting&#13;
qualities have enabled him to&#13;
carry through the great work of&#13;
which he has had charge in the canal&#13;
zone.&#13;
Realize Dream of Centuries.&#13;
Through the work of these men—all&#13;
of them members of Uncle Sam's&#13;
fighting body, the United States has&#13;
been able to attain what has been in&#13;
truth the dream of centuries. In nine&#13;
years these men have carried through&#13;
an undertaking that was first thought&#13;
of several hundreds of years ago.&#13;
There is evidence that the idea of an&#13;
isthmian canal was born as early as&#13;
the sixteenth century, for history records&#13;
the fact that the Inquisition&#13;
declared such a project to alter the&#13;
face of the earth to be impious and&#13;
further discussion of the matter was&#13;
forbidden by Philip II. of Spain, whose&#13;
reign began in 1556. More than a century&#13;
later a Scotchman named Patterson&#13;
revived the scheme, established a&#13;
colony on the shores of the Isthmus,&#13;
and made a crude sujrvey of the route.&#13;
During succeeding century the&#13;
project was considered at various&#13;
times by French, Spanish and Americans.&#13;
The United States government first&#13;
took definite action looking toward&#13;
tne construction of an isthmian canal&#13;
in 1834, when the senate voted for&#13;
the building of a Nicaraguan canal.&#13;
An expedition was sent to Nicaragua&#13;
to make an investigation,-and reported&#13;
that the canal could be constructed&#13;
for $25,000,000, hardly one-twentieth&#13;
of the amount that the Panama&#13;
canal will have cost when completed.&#13;
De Lesseps First to Dig.&#13;
The matter rested until after the&#13;
Civil war, when negotiations for a&#13;
canal commission were entered into&#13;
by the United States government. Before&#13;
anything had been accomplished&#13;
the. concession for a Panama canal&#13;
hat! been given to Lucien Napoleon&#13;
Bonaparte Wyse, a Frenchman, " He&#13;
organized a company, which sold out&#13;
later to the financiers associated with&#13;
Ferdinand de Lesseps. The company&#13;
organized with de Lesseps at Its head&#13;
was the first one to actually begin operations&#13;
on the isthmus. For eight&#13;
years de Lesseps struggled manfully&#13;
against the greatest odds that man&#13;
ever was called upon to face. Then&#13;
he was forced to give up the fight&#13;
his company collapsing as a result of&#13;
dishonesty and extravagance on the&#13;
part of its promoters,.and de Lesseps,&#13;
driven insane by the scandal, ended&#13;
his days In an asylum.&#13;
Such was the history of the isthmian&#13;
canal project for some 300 or&#13;
400 years, until the day in 1904 when&#13;
Uncle 8am undertook the task.&#13;
In nine years the dream of the can&#13;
turiee haa been realized.&#13;
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CHAPTER III.—Continued.&#13;
"I've fought many a fight, Amos,&#13;
but never one like this. If it develops&#13;
into a real fight, I still hold the whip&#13;
hand." He raised his right arm menacingly,&#13;
his hand clenched to a pugnacious&#13;
fist. "Let any silly girl sneer at&#13;
my daughter, let any ninny of a boy&#13;
be uncomplimentary, and I no sooner&#13;
hear of it than I'lf put the screws on—&#13;
and then God help 'em. They don't&#13;
know met Well, they may yet"&#13;
"When can Mrs. Gilbert meet&#13;
Gloria?"&#13;
''I brought her with me—she's in&#13;
the carriage."&#13;
"She came with you!"&#13;
"Ye&gt;, I told her we were going to&#13;
the theater. Then we stopped here on&#13;
important business."&#13;
"Brings her in. I'll call Mrs. Gilbert."&#13;
\&#13;
While Kcrc went for his* daughter,&#13;
the lawyer called his wife into the 11*&#13;
brary and explained the situation to&#13;
her as best he could in so brief a&#13;
time. He onli( told of Gloria's belief&#13;
in her father's social importance,&#13;
nothing of how he had promised to&#13;
introduce her. Of course his wife&#13;
would never know his wages for acting&#13;
as Gloria's sponsor.&#13;
"What a remarkable thing to do!"&#13;
exclaimed Mrs. Gilbert when she finally&#13;
realized Gloria's position.&#13;
"I think Kerr was crazy, Julia, ever&#13;
to start it, but here she is in our&#13;
house and we must help carry out the&#13;
deception."&#13;
"But Dr. and Mrs. Hayek?"&#13;
"Who made Hayes coroner?"&#13;
"But Mr. Wright? Will he meet&#13;
David Kerr?"&#13;
"Mr. Wright's our guest and he's a&#13;
gentleman, dear."&#13;
Here was something Gilbert had not&#13;
^thought of. Perhaps fate was playing&#13;
into hie hands. He hoped so anyway.&#13;
David Kerr would meet on neutral&#13;
ground the man who had already&#13;
caused him some uneasiness. Since&#13;
the boss never called on any one, and&#13;
since Wright surely would not go to&#13;
see him, this was, when all was said&#13;
and done, to be an Important meeting.&#13;
CHAPTER IV.&#13;
Gloria could not understand why&#13;
she was not of most importance, and&#13;
was not a little piqued at the long&#13;
wait in the cold while her father was&#13;
/ •They Dent Knew Ms."&#13;
wtta Judge Gilbert Her only consolation&#13;
tor beinf late-to the theater&#13;
wee that ever* on* wojtfd be there te&#13;
eee her arrive.. She knew that when&#13;
she entered.the box every one would&#13;
4* torn to look at A, harmless little&#13;
&gt;fc&#13;
* £&#13;
4 • ' &amp; * * *&#13;
2^:&#13;
f. thoojht ojegaiBly^lor so pretty: ft girt;&#13;
^fts sttt She trfs4 to begun* the time*&#13;
^toy qoeetiofittig Torn, but the driver&#13;
**had foAAs&amp;lyloot his tongue, doe to&#13;
K * r r V ^ t o issued privately, and&#13;
tatted only indifferently on indifferent&#13;
topics/'Re^gnrtHMeUr ignorant ooneernintvaattefft&#13;
wfeleh to Mies Xow&#13;
s o o t i e s t fttftl «MK*jtse€&#13;
At ttsreem* her father with the annovneement&#13;
that she wee to ooaee la&#13;
J^w, 0)^j^jgB»w/ w *oejBsa^s? SBBBJSSSV owjew JPt ^stewsw^sjKjejBj * • ew^s*&#13;
girl was torn with conflicting emotions,&#13;
being anxious to get to the theater&#13;
and at the same lime, desirous of&#13;
seeing how many years ahead of Locust&#13;
Lawn was this house which she&#13;
had been Invited to .eater. There was&#13;
no reason why she could not do both,&#13;
since meeting Judge and Mrs. Gilbert&#13;
could mean only a few minutes' more&#13;
delay. They could then hurry tojthe&#13;
theater, and if she was pleased with&#13;
these new acquaintances she would&#13;
urge them to join her. Loyal though&#13;
she was, she would welcome any one&#13;
who would be a diversion. Gloria&#13;
was quick to notice a faux pas, and&#13;
certain of her father's slips of grammar&#13;
and lapses from punctilious etiquette&#13;
had made her wish some companionship&#13;
less blunt&#13;
At the door she was met by Judge !&#13;
Gilbert, who welcomed her to Belmont&#13;
with great cordiality. Here was a&#13;
man who understood the niceties of&#13;
life. Gloria's heart went out to him&#13;
almost as much for the manner of his&#13;
welcome as for its genuine warmth.&#13;
As David Kerr had done when he had&#13;
entered the house, the daughter gazed&#13;
about her as she passed through the&#13;
hall, and all that she saw was given&#13;
the stamp of her approval. It was&#13;
juBt another step, in her growing appreciation&#13;
of Belmont as It really was.&#13;
She noted also the familiar terms on&#13;
which Judge Gilbert and her father&#13;
were. She had never doubted her&#13;
father, yet this was a pleasing affirmative&#13;
vqte fa her theory of Belmont&#13;
life which had not been without its&#13;
contradictions that day.&#13;
"I wonder if you remember Mrs.&#13;
Gilbert?" said the judge as he&#13;
ushered Gloria into the library. At&#13;
her entrance, Mrs. Gilbert, a really&#13;
gracious woman, came forward to&#13;
greet her.&#13;
"How do you do, Miss Gloriaf- she&#13;
said, "it's a pleasure to find that&#13;
you've come back to Belmont."&#13;
"I'm charmed to meet you, Mrs!-. Gilbert.&#13;
Indeed it is nice to be at home&#13;
once more and I'm so glad to have&#13;
you say so."&#13;
The next bit of conversation puzzled&#13;
Gloria not a little. She remarked&#13;
it at the time, and even thought of it&#13;
once after she had returned to Locust&#13;
Lawn that night.&#13;
Judge Gilbert said quietly to his&#13;
wife, "Mr. Kerr, dear."&#13;
At this Mrs. Gilbert turned, bowed&#13;
slightly and merely said, "Good evening,&#13;
Mr. Kerr."&#13;
"How d'ye do, ma'am," - replied&#13;
Gloria's father, to his daughter's surprise&#13;
and also somewhat to her disgust.&#13;
Mrs. Gilbert's greeting had been&#13;
extremely brief, but her father's had&#13;
been extremely provincial Not only&#13;
was it a slipshod manner of speaking,&#13;
but it bad been accompanied by a bow&#13;
which Gloria thought uncouth. Her&#13;
father hid written once or twice&#13;
about Mrs. Gilbert, and Gloria, after&#13;
the manner of society, was fain to&#13;
enlarge upon the number.. —&#13;
'It's been my one wish to meet&#13;
you, Mrs. Gilbert" said the girl.. "I&#13;
went away when I was so young that&#13;
I can't honestly say that I remember&#13;
you, but in his letters father spoke so&#13;
often of you and of visiting here.&#13;
Didn't you father?"&#13;
Thus appealed to, Kerr was forced&#13;
to reply.&#13;
"Yee—Oh, yes, Gloria, but never&#13;
mind that now."&#13;
Judge Gilbert was quick to come to&#13;
the rescue, and forestalled further&#13;
embarrassing remarks by saying:&#13;
1 suppose it will be a novelty for&#13;
you, Mies Gloria—living in the country."&#13;
Gloria laughed, and her answer con*&#13;
tained due notice of what she intended&#13;
to have in the immediate future.&#13;
•father hasn't a motor car—yet&#13;
and I don't know how 111 like it"&#13;
TonTl gef need to lC* was Hrs*&#13;
Gilbert's comment ''Locust Lawn is&#13;
lovely tn summer.'*&#13;
"But it isn't summer yet And it&#13;
makes it inconvenient when one wants&#13;
to go out in the evening. Fve often&#13;
wondered why father didn't have a&#13;
town house. He goes out so much&#13;
and must be In Belmont so late at&#13;
night that to my mind a town house&#13;
would be a necessity* But there he&#13;
sticks m the country like an old&#13;
poke."&#13;
Bee Idem of ;*•£. father's duty to&#13;
himself ws* so strong tsttt'shc f i n e d&#13;
to him *fo tell him yast wftet sbo&#13;
thought ^ of htm# Purine; Jier sf^epjv&#13;
Kerrhad been erceee^ntfy uncomtort&#13;
able, hut there was no way to atop"&#13;
"Thafe Jawt what you are,' father,"&#13;
Gloria assert** stoutly, "tor aHoking&#13;
in the country when yon go so much&#13;
in sodety—en old poke."&#13;
Aaain - Judani (Ifihert came to the&#13;
rescue. "You forget he doesn't go out&#13;
as much as when he was younger."&#13;
"Exactly. I don't git out like I did&#13;
when I was younger," Kerr repeated.&#13;
"I think ^very one will have to like&#13;
me very much," Gloria complained&#13;
with a whimsical air of doubt, "to&#13;
come 'way out to Locust Lawn to see&#13;
me." She knew well that they would&#13;
come, but a town apartment, something&#13;
modern, loomed large in her&#13;
mind. These remarks were only the&#13;
pioneer work preliminary to a siege.&#13;
"I'm afraid Belmont will Beem mean&#13;
compared to the placeB you have&#13;
lived," suggested Mrs. Gilbert. In the^&#13;
short time she had been with Gloria&#13;
she had seen enough to make her certain&#13;
that there were breakers ahead.&#13;
"Not at all," answered the girl.&#13;
Judge Gilbert was talking earnestly&#13;
with her father, and this gave her a&#13;
Chance to confess privately to Mrs.&#13;
Gilbert.&#13;
"It seems good to me because it is&#13;
home, and I can do as I please without&#13;
comment. I mean to live my life&#13;
to the full, just as do other girls&#13;
whom I visit. Except when I've been&#13;
with them, it's been chaperon and&#13;
school, school and chaperon for so&#13;
long that I'm honestly glad to get into&#13;
a house where no one rushes in every&#13;
few minutes to see if I'm reading a&#13;
French novel or writing love letters&#13;
to the chauffeur."&#13;
Mrs. Gilbert laughed heartily at the&#13;
martyrdom Gloria had suffered, and&#13;
promised that such would not be her&#13;
tot in Belmont. When Mr. Kerr joined&#13;
them she went to summon her other&#13;
quests.&#13;
"Judge Gilbert has been telling me,&#13;
Gloria," Kerr began, "that things was&#13;
quiet here just at this season. Now&#13;
California—"&#13;
. "Telling you!" repeated Gloria. Why&#13;
did her father need to have any one&#13;
tell him anything about Belmont?&#13;
Then wasn't she excuse enough for&#13;
all the gayety possible?&#13;
"Ain't got nothin' against California,&#13;
have you?" Kerr asked, ignoring her&#13;
exclamation.&#13;
"I don't know." She turned away&#13;
from him, conscience-stricken at her&#13;
tone of indecision. "I wanted to come&#13;
home, yet—"&#13;
"Don't you like Locust Lawn, girl?"&#13;
"Yes, yes," she answered quickly.&#13;
"But—Everything 1B BO different from&#13;
what I imagined it would be. Give&#13;
me a little time to think about the&#13;
California trip."&#13;
At that moment Mrs. Gilbert returned&#13;
with the guests who for some&#13;
little time had been entertaining&#13;
themselves in the drawing-room.&#13;
Mrs. Hayes and her husband were&#13;
first introduced to Gloria. While they&#13;
exchanged a few pleasantries, Wright,&#13;
in charge of Judge Gilbert, was meeting&#13;
David Kerr. It was not until Mrs.&#13;
Gilbert called him to her to present&#13;
him to Miss Kerr that the editor of&#13;
the Belmont News and the daughter&#13;
of David Kerr came face to face.&#13;
To the surprise of the others present&#13;
Gloria gave a little scream of delight&#13;
and came forward with both&#13;
hands outstretched to greet the'young&#13;
man. He no less gave evidence of his&#13;
pleasure at the meeting. His face&#13;
lighted up with a smile and the way&#13;
he grasped both her hands betokened&#13;
his happiness at seeing her again. If&#13;
the, others could not share their gratification,&#13;
they could at least share&#13;
their surprise.&#13;
"Joe Wright, of all persons!" exclaimed&#13;
Gloria, shaking his hands&#13;
heartily, her face radiant with smiles.&#13;
"Miss Kerr! You here!" It was&#13;
all he could say, but he put into It a&#13;
wealth of feeling which made it impossible&#13;
to mistake his meaning. He&#13;
forgot David Kerr, he forgot every&#13;
one but this girl whom now he met&#13;
again after so long a time.&#13;
"You're the last person I'd expect&#13;
te find In Belmont."&#13;
"But you're not the last person I'd&#13;
hope to find here," he replied.&#13;
Whereupon they both laughed and&#13;
shook hands again, %&#13;
Mrs. Gilbert was the first of the&#13;
others to recover the power of&#13;
speech. "You know each other!"&#13;
"Indeed we do," replied Gloria, "We&#13;
traveled abroad for a time in the same&#13;
party. How do you happen-to be&#13;
here?" asked Wright "Ten me all&#13;
about it"&#13;
There isn't much to tell. I live&#13;
here now."&#13;
"How funny!"&#13;
I'm not apologising for it," he&#13;
laughed.&#13;
'1 dont mean it that way. Belmont&#13;
is my home, too. I was born here."&#13;
"Here! In Belmont!" He made no&#13;
effort to conceal his surprise.&#13;
"Yes," she said proudly; 1 am the&#13;
daughter of David Kerr."&#13;
Had she struck him a blow full in&#13;
the face ehe could not more have staggered&#13;
him. In the joy of meeting her,&#13;
Wright had forgotten everything but&#13;
the pleasure of seeing her again and&#13;
the memories her presence conjured&#13;
up of what he called their mad eld,&#13;
glad old Parle days when they had&#13;
been so much together. He had forgotten&#13;
the sordid present with the&#13;
fight to make friends for his kind of&#13;
newspaper, the effort to meet the pay&#13;
roll, and the continuous struggle&#13;
against what he knew to he the evil&#13;
influences of David Kerr. David Kerr,&#13;
her father I With Gloria's explanation,&#13;
rained by her pride la te* JMfcer a*&#13;
most to a boaBt, all this was brought&#13;
back to him. He still smiled, but his&#13;
heart went dead within him. The sun&#13;
which had shone for him so gloriously&#13;
only a minute ago was now hidden behind&#13;
the blackest cloud in the heuvus.&#13;
Selfish as they wished to be, for a&#13;
time they were forced to join hi the&#13;
general conversation and satisfy the&#13;
curiosity of the others concerning previous&#13;
acquaintanceship.&#13;
"When did you and Gloria meet?"&#13;
Kerr asked the newspaper man.&#13;
"First on a steamer going to Europe."&#13;
"And then accidentally any number&#13;
of times on the continent," added&#13;
Gloria.&#13;
"There's no need now of your fearing&#13;
you will be lonesome, Miss Gloria,"&#13;
was Mrs. Gilbert's comment. "How&#13;
lucky to find an old friend."&#13;
"Yes, indeed," replied Gloria, with&#13;
such spirit that no one could believe&#13;
she" was merely saying the polite&#13;
thing. "I command you to come to see&#13;
me at.once, Mr. Wright. I know hardly&#13;
a soul in Belmont. You see I just&#13;
came home this morning."&#13;
Thus within a quarter of an hour&#13;
after meeting the boss of Belmont,&#13;
Wright found himself invited to-.his&#13;
home. The circumstances that had&#13;
brought about the invitation he would&#13;
have considered out of the range of&#13;
all reason half an hour before. He&#13;
knew the game too well not to understand&#13;
how the easy boss works and all&#13;
unconsciously Gloria was seeking to&#13;
further her father's plans.&#13;
Through friendship, loyalty and a&#13;
sense of obligation which one is not&#13;
permitted to forget, the political leader&#13;
obtains active co-operation where&#13;
to deny him would appear base ingratitude.&#13;
To keep from being placed in&#13;
such a position was Wright's one aim.&#13;
Consequently, to Gloria's invitation he&#13;
merely murmured a polite assent, inwardly&#13;
resolving to find sufficient excuses&#13;
to make it Impossible for him&#13;
to be a visitor at Locust Lawn. Yet&#13;
something within him at the same&#13;
time was telling him that he must see&#13;
Gloria often.&#13;
As they were now leaving, Dr. and&#13;
Mrs. Hayes came to say good night&#13;
" I Am the Daughter of David Kerr."&#13;
to Gloria. Gilbert and Kerr found this&#13;
the favorable moment to Blip out of&#13;
the library unobserved.&#13;
"I've told Mrs. Gilbert how sorry we&#13;
are we have to be going, because I&#13;
so wanted to have a little chat with&#13;
you," began Mrs. Hayes. "I'll give you&#13;
only a day or two to unpack before I&#13;
come to call."&#13;
"Please don't wait for that to happen,"&#13;
urged Gloria. "I've lived in&#13;
trunks so long that I'd feel like a&#13;
motor without gasoline if I should take&#13;
all my things out and hang them on&#13;
hooks like civilized people do."&#13;
"I wonder if you could be interested&#13;
in some settlement work I'm doing,"&#13;
continued Mrs. Hayes.&#13;
"Don't let her rope you into that,&#13;
MisslCerr," protested the doctor.&#13;
"Isn't it fashionable?" inquired&#13;
Gloria cautiously.&#13;
"Not fashionable and highly insanitary,"&#13;
was his verdict. "A germ Is no&#13;
respecter of persons. My wife's liable&#13;
to bring home anything from measles&#13;
to socialism."&#13;
"But think of the poor, unfortunate,&#13;
ignorant people," pleaded Mrs. Gilbert,&#13;
who with Mrs. Hayes was interested&#13;
in a mission established in a poor&#13;
quarter of the town by |he Presbyterian&#13;
church.&#13;
"That's what I tell him," said Mrs.&#13;
Hayes.&#13;
"It isn't our fault, is it?" asked&#13;
Gloria. To her, settlement work was a&#13;
sealed book. Slatternly women with&#13;
troops of dirty, sniveling brats repelled&#13;
her. Were she ever to develop&#13;
any philanthropy along these lines,&#13;
she was sure that the work would be&#13;
carried on vicariously.&#13;
&lt;TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
High Priced Sermon.&#13;
Perhaps the highest price paid for a&#13;
sermon goes every year to a German&#13;
.preacher, who discourses on the good&#13;
deeds of a French baron named Favart,&#13;
who dled*ln Elberfeld in 1690. Favart&#13;
left money for this purpose, and&#13;
the interest now amounts to £930&#13;
per annum, which goes to the preacher&#13;
a* his reward&#13;
NAIL AS KNOWN TO COMMERCE&#13;
Some Few FacU With Which Users&#13;
of the Article* W i l l Be Mors&#13;
or Lest Familiar.&#13;
A nail is a short piece of iron which&#13;
a man uses to aim at while he is hammering&#13;
his thumb.&#13;
Nails come in various sizes. A tack&#13;
is a baby nail which is fond of standing&#13;
upon its head in the dark when&#13;
you are turkey-trotting around the&#13;
room in bare feet, trying in vain to&#13;
locate an electric button. An adult&#13;
nail iB two or three Inches long and&#13;
comes in boxes which are sent to you&#13;
by express upon which you have to&#13;
pay the charges, which have already&#13;
been collected by the express company&#13;
at the other end. Not being able to&#13;
find the hammer, you vainly endeavor&#13;
to extract this nail and others of its&#13;
kind from the box, both with* and&#13;
without prayer, until you finally succeed&#13;
in wrenching the top off the box&#13;
with superhuman strength while your&#13;
wife looks on with superb disdain.&#13;
Nails are also used to build houses,&#13;
as Binkers on fish lines, and when applied&#13;
internally to the feet, to promote&#13;
and foster lockjaw.&#13;
They come in vast quantities in&#13;
hardware and department stores, but&#13;
when you want just one to drive into&#13;
the bathroom wall during your wife's&#13;
absence to hang a razor strop on, you&#13;
might as well look for a needle In a&#13;
haystack or a square deal in a state&#13;
legislature.—Life.&#13;
Good Guess.&#13;
Bacon—I see a man up in a Vermont&#13;
town says his horse knows the days&#13;
of the week.&#13;
Egbert—Because he never stops in&#13;
front of a saioon on Sunday, 1 suppose.&#13;
Zs&#13;
WOMAN *&#13;
GREAT SUFFERER&#13;
Tells How She Was Restored&#13;
To Health by Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham's Vegeta*&gt;&#13;
ble Compound*&#13;
Grayville, HI.—"I was a great sufferer&#13;
of female complaints for a year&#13;
•liiiii^'.iitiiiiiihiiHiHiHiiMiii'i'iijaePd I got nothing&#13;
ili!!i!iliiili|ii!iii! that helped me unh:::,;:,^&#13;
M^S»:i,p tij j b e g a n ^ - ^ iHI Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
V e g e t a b l e Compound.&#13;
I was irregular&#13;
and had cramps&#13;
£!S!ij|j!li!|i!| so bad that I had to&#13;
111(11 go to bed. Now I&#13;
^ 1 have better health&#13;
than I have had for&#13;
years and I cannot&#13;
speak too highly of&#13;
your medicine. "—Mrs. JESSIE SCHAAB,&#13;
413 Main S t , Grayville, 111.&#13;
Case of Mrs. Tolly.&#13;
Chicago, 111.—"I take pleasure In&#13;
writing to thank you for what Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has&#13;
done for me. I suffered with such awful&#13;
periodic pains, and bad a displacement,&#13;
and received no benefit from tha&#13;
doctors. 1 was advised to take Lydia&#13;
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and&#13;
am now as well as ever."—Mrs. WILLIAM&#13;
TUIXY, 2062 Ogden Avenue,&#13;
Chicago, 11L&#13;
If you have t h e slightest doubt&#13;
t h a t Lydia £ . P i n k h a m ' s Vegetable&#13;
Compound will help you, write&#13;
t o Lydia E.PinkhamMedicine Co.&#13;
(confidential) Lynn, Mass., for ad*&#13;
vice. Y o u r letter will be opened,&#13;
read and answered b y a woman*&#13;
a n d held In strict confidence*&#13;
The Wretchedness&#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;
Heada&#13;
c h e ,&#13;
Dizziness,&#13;
and Indigestion. They do thdr duty.&#13;
SMALL POX, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.&#13;
Genuine most bear Signature&#13;
B L A C K&#13;
/&#13;
r-ti^d^iii&#13;
mm&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
P i n c k n e y £)ippatch&#13;
Euteied at the Postoffice at Piuckney,&#13;
Mich., as Second Class Matter&#13;
R. W. CAVERLY, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER&#13;
Subscription, $1. Per Tear iu Ad vane 3&#13;
Advertising rates made known on&#13;
application.&#13;
Cards of Tliaukp, fifty cents.&#13;
Resolutions of Condolence, one dollar.&#13;
Local Notices, in Local columns five&#13;
cent per line per each insertion.&#13;
All matter intended to benefit the personal&#13;
or business interest of any individual&#13;
will be published at regular advertiseing&#13;
rates.&#13;
Announcement of entertainments, etc.,&#13;
must be paid for at regHlur Local Notice&#13;
rates.&#13;
Obituary and marriage notices are published&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
Poetry must be paid for at the rate of&#13;
five cents per line.&#13;
TJocal N e w s&#13;
James Smith spent Sunday in&#13;
Lansing.&#13;
Mrs. C. P. Sykes is visiting relatives&#13;
in Detroit.&#13;
Mae Teeple visited relatives in&#13;
Detroit last week.&#13;
Ross Read transacted business&#13;
iu Detroit last Friday.&#13;
Miss Clare Ledwidge of Anderson&#13;
spent Saturday at M. Lavey's.&#13;
Mrs. John Jeffreys spent the&#13;
past week with her daughter, Mrs.&#13;
R. Chandler, of Kalamazoo.&#13;
Mrs. D. M, Hodgman of Howell&#13;
visited at the home of her mother&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Brown a few days the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Mrs. Kirk Van Winkle and&#13;
children, Mrs. Clarence Bennett&#13;
and Chas. Holmes and wife spent&#13;
Sunday at the home of C. V. Van&#13;
Winkle.&#13;
Mrs. M. Cooiey and daughter&#13;
of Pontiac are visiting at the&#13;
home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
A.^ Mclntyre.&#13;
A card from Mrs. J. A. Cadwell&#13;
of Chelsea wishes us to announce&#13;
that she is now at home to her&#13;
many Pinckney friends.&#13;
P. H. Swarthout and family and&#13;
W. 8. Swarthout and wife spent a&#13;
few days the past week with relatives&#13;
at Jackson and Parma.&#13;
Young Men:—We show the&#13;
best line of FITFORM suits in this&#13;
section. They are strictly young&#13;
men's cuts. $10 to $22 50. W. J..-go to Dancer's Stockbridge. adv&#13;
For Overcoats, see Dancer's,&#13;
Stockbridge. adv;&#13;
Geo. Green and family of Howell&#13;
spent Sunday here.&#13;
John Gallagher of Dexter was&#13;
in town one day last week.&#13;
Dr. Will Monks of Howell spent&#13;
Sunday with his mother here.&#13;
G. W. Dinkel and wife spent&#13;
Sunday with Detroit relatives.&#13;
Mrs. W. A. Carr visited relatives&#13;
in Detroit the past week.&#13;
Mrs. pan Richards is visiting&#13;
relatives in Grand Rapids this&#13;
week.&#13;
H. H. Swarthout and Dr. H. F.&#13;
Sigler were Ann Arbor visitors&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Patrick McCabe of Detroit&#13;
spent the first of the week at&#13;
I. J. Kennedy's.&#13;
A new electric piano now furnishes&#13;
music for patrons at the&#13;
Pinckney House.&#13;
Wm. Doyle of Sioux City, Iowa,&#13;
spent the past week with friends&#13;
and relatives here.&#13;
Chas. Doody and family of near&#13;
Gregory spent Sunday at the&#13;
home of Alfred Monks.&#13;
Harry Shankland and wife of&#13;
Jackson were over Sunday guests&#13;
at the home of Wm. Blades.&#13;
Paul Curiett-of the Howell^ridings&#13;
and LaRue Moran of the&#13;
Republican spent Sunday here.&#13;
N. Reason and wife of Detroit&#13;
spent Saturday and Sunday with&#13;
Pipckney friends and relatives.&#13;
Will Dunning is exhibiting his&#13;
Belgian and Percheron stallions&#13;
at the Fowlerville fair this week,&#13;
Geo. Crofoot of Anderson has&#13;
rented the Grimes house on Main&#13;
street and is moving thereto this&#13;
week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Dunning&#13;
and son- Myron and Miss Ruth&#13;
Potterton spent Saturday and&#13;
Sunday in Detroit.&#13;
Ruel Cadwell and wife of Detroit&#13;
and Mrs. J. A. Cadwell of&#13;
Chelsea spent Saturday and Sunday&#13;
with friends and relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
If you want an extra nice&#13;
Mackinaw, if you want an extra&#13;
bis; line ton choose from, and if&#13;
you want to buy it for $4.50 to 8.50,&#13;
^^•^gtft^a^B ga^K^pt^k^k-ah-^-^^g* v A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A ^ ^ A A A A A A A A A A A A A U A A A A I wf!fff!fifffTf#ifrffnfnffWfffWWiffiffffnffi&#13;
Hats -d Caps&#13;
Overalls and Jackets&#13;
Neckties and Suspenders&#13;
For fear you have forgotten or overlooked the fact&#13;
that we carry splendid lines we call your attention&#13;
to it with large letters at the head of this adv.&#13;
Smart Set Neckwear in latest styles and patterns.&#13;
Broom Corn is high again this fall and the price of&#13;
brooms is bound to advance. Get yours now.&#13;
We have a splendid line of Cookies and our Butter&#13;
Krust Bread is fresh daily.&#13;
££ MONKS BROS,&#13;
Prompt Delivery&#13;
m&#13;
3&#13;
Phone No. 38&#13;
Important Notice!&#13;
Dancer &amp; Co. adv.&#13;
The heavest state tax ever levied&#13;
in Michigan is what the people of&#13;
Michigan will be called upon to&#13;
pay next December. The total of&#13;
that tax has been figured out by&#13;
Auditor General, O. C. Fuller, at&#13;
$8,589,520.78. This is $3,137,212.63&#13;
more than the tax for last year and&#13;
fcbout two million dollars more&#13;
than the highest tax ever levied in&#13;
this state.&#13;
Did you ever notice what interesting&#13;
thing* the liner ads. in your&#13;
local paper really are? It makes&#13;
no difference what big things&#13;
there are in the news columns,&#13;
you are more interested in learning&#13;
what some of your neighbors&#13;
or friends have to sell or "swap,"&#13;
you must not lose sight of the fact&#13;
that everybody else reads the&#13;
liners just like you do. Is it any&#13;
wonder that the results from liner&#13;
advertising are so bounteous. See&#13;
the point?&#13;
The dancing party held at the&#13;
Pinckney-House ball room last&#13;
Friday evening was largely attended&#13;
and a general good time&#13;
The Livingston Republican says&#13;
that E. J, Briggs has sold his auto&#13;
dray business at Flint a,nd is now&#13;
at Howell to remain until he finds&#13;
something else to engage in.&#13;
Henry Ford, Detroit's autombile&#13;
king, has agreed to purchase&#13;
$1,000,000 worth of the city's 4&#13;
per cent bonds at par. Other rich&#13;
firms wanted to purchase these&#13;
bonds at a discount, but Ford&#13;
comes to the rescue of the city&#13;
by taking them at their face value.&#13;
A young fellow from Howell&#13;
way claimed to have lost $105 at&#13;
one of the gambling games Wednesday&#13;
afternoon at the fair. The&#13;
secretary and marshal forced the&#13;
operator to return the "sucker"&#13;
150. If he lost more than that he&#13;
paid the difference for his experience&#13;
which should be a lesson to&#13;
him. He was lucky to get off as well&#13;
as he did—Milford Times.&#13;
Near this place the other day a&#13;
man wanted bis son to get up&#13;
early and go to work. The boy&#13;
had a habit of answering "yes sir"&#13;
and going to sleep again. On this&#13;
no&#13;
October will bring to us great need&#13;
of MONEY which will require all&#13;
that have unpaid accounts and&#13;
notes due to see us promptly.&#13;
Thanking all for the liberal patronage,&#13;
we respectfully ask all to&#13;
call and see us.&#13;
Teepje Ha r c lware Company&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
NO CHANCE FOR A KICK&#13;
W hen ITou Buy Puri ty Flour&#13;
Looking backward over the past, you may recall instances&#13;
of dissatisfaction with the quality of the Flour which you&#13;
bought. If this is so, it should certainly interest you to&#13;
-know that we have a flour from which you can get the kind&#13;
of bread that suits you, al prices no greater, aud often less,&#13;
than you will have to pay for unsatisfactory stuff at other&#13;
5laces. When we sell yon flour we expect you to come again,&#13;
'his V^eing the case, why shouldn't we do all we can to please&#13;
you in -quality, price and treatment?&#13;
FOR SALE AT ALL GROCERIES&#13;
THE, H O Y T B R O S .&#13;
W t o * W t f ^&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative Bank*&#13;
ing Business. . *&#13;
was reported by aH. An excellent, occasion last week, to make&#13;
chicken supper was furnished by mistake the father called the boy,&#13;
our new landlord, Geo. Morross,' got the "yes sir" and then slid up&#13;
and those who attended the party&#13;
are loud in their praises for Mr.&#13;
Morrow who not only is right&#13;
ttifefr with fair treatment bat&#13;
•hows up a shining light as to the&#13;
"eats." The hall has been recently&#13;
remodeled and- now affords an&#13;
•soellent |&gt;laoe for Pinckney's&#13;
popular pastime, the dance.&#13;
stairs, turned the covers down and&#13;
gave the person a good spanking.&#13;
It happened on that night that the&#13;
hired girl had been given the boy's&#13;
room. When the tumult was over&#13;
the old man sat down behind the&#13;
barn and drafted a written apology&#13;
to the hired girl—Belleville Entorpriaoi&#13;
3 " '* * '&#13;
3 per cent&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
P i n c k n e y&#13;
G. W. TEEPLE&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Prop&#13;
1&#13;
ARE YOU AWAKE&#13;
to the fact that your boy is growing&#13;
yesterday—Just a little fellow.&#13;
Tod*y—A big boy.&#13;
Tomorrow—A man.&#13;
Today you are sorry you haven't a&#13;
photograph of him as he looked&#13;
yesterday. — Tomorrow you will&#13;
value the one you have today.&#13;
Don't put it off.&#13;
DaisieB. Chapell&#13;
S t o c k b r i d g e , Michigan&#13;
%&#13;
WANTED!!&#13;
POULTRY, EGGS AND VEAL ^&#13;
Will pay the highest market price at all times, i&#13;
Call us up before you sell. Bell phone No. 7 4 £&#13;
JOHN DINKEL{&#13;
Try a liner Advertisement in the Dispatch&#13;
To Head-Off&#13;
a Haadacha&#13;
Notfclnf i . BaHar t b u&#13;
Dr. Mile.' Ao&amp;Pain M b&#13;
hate&#13;
"I can say that Dr. Milee*' R e v&#13;
•dies have teen a fWswd t*&#13;
and my family. I used to*&#13;
such terrible headaches I would almost&#13;
be wild for days at a tJma, I&#13;
began using Dr. Miles' AntbPaia&#13;
Pills and never have those&#13;
aches any mora, I oan spoil*&#13;
of Dr. Miles' Xervine also&#13;
cured one of my children ef a&#13;
nervous disorder. Jt •saa'&#13;
•peak a good wo*i.farj^or&#13;
•dies and have recommended&#13;
to a good many of my fries&#13;
have boon well yfeaced with&#13;
MRS. O l o . H.&#13;
« Jan&#13;
For Safe by AH Brufofrtfc&#13;
25 Dosea, 2t Cents.&#13;
MILE8 MIDICAL CO., tlkhart,&#13;
•v i&#13;
'•J&#13;
$ •&#13;
II&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
»&#13;
| These Kidney Pills Will Do You Good&#13;
Neglect is responaible for much of our ill-health. Prompt treatment results&#13;
in relief, not only from the minor ailments but from the resulting complications.&#13;
If you value permanent good health you cannot afford to neglect&#13;
the slightest trace of kidtie* weakness; the important duty of filtering the&#13;
blood; cLeaniing the system of impurities, falls upon the kidneys; they require&#13;
constant attention and demand it; they must be assisted. If they fail&#13;
in their duty the certain result is impure blood, loss of all nourishment,&#13;
and a poisoned system. Don't allow it to go that far.&#13;
Nyal's Kidney Pills insure certain action of&#13;
the kidneys—rich red blood and the&#13;
proper nourishment&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
They are not a "cure-all"-just a kidney medicine—one that we personal.&#13;
^ ly recommend. F i f t y c e n t s t h e b o x . When we had a chance to&#13;
^ *get the exclusive selling agency for Nyal's Family Remedies we jumped at.&#13;
g : They are known among all druggists as the highest quality line on the mark-&#13;
^ eU and are prepared by a great firm of manufacturing chemists, famous for&#13;
^ ~ fifty years.&#13;
§ MEYER'S DRUG STORE&#13;
^ The JVyal Store&#13;
^ For a Square Deal Pinckney, Mich. 3&#13;
g= Drugs, Wall Paper, Crockery, Cigars, Candy, Magazines, =¾&#13;
fc School Supplies, Bjoks ^&#13;
'THE CENTRAL'&#13;
Men's $1.00 hats and caps for 65 cts.&#13;
Boy's caps for 35 cts., the regular 50 ct, caps.&#13;
One pr. boy's shoes left, No. 1}4 for $1.00; these&#13;
are regular $1.60 shoes, so one boy will get a&#13;
bargain.&#13;
Our Millinery Department&#13;
is in full bla8t with Miss Howard as trimmer. Do not delay,&#13;
but come now before things are picked over and secure your&#13;
choice. Prices are about one half oH city prices and values&#13;
just as good; in fact our trimmer has already trimmed over&#13;
some city purchases.&#13;
See Our Fine Line of Dress Goods&#13;
in the latest materials; people tell us we have a good enough&#13;
stock for a much larger sized town aud we know that our&#13;
prices are way below other places for the same goods, so&#13;
why go to help build up Jackson and Detroit when your&#13;
own little town needs building up and you are actually increasing&#13;
the value of your own property just that much,&#13;
more. Our goods are bought direct "from the city, altho&#13;
some appear to think we manufacture them. Wish we could.&#13;
Do not forget that we have Groceries.&#13;
Also bacon, ham, lard, etc.&#13;
Very respectfully,&#13;
Mrs. A. M. Utley&#13;
„ v- I*-&#13;
"Good-You've&#13;
Brought&#13;
the Right Kind-&#13;
TZ AR"&#13;
She knows Mamma won't&#13;
, have any other kind. And you'll&#13;
find when you've need Tzar&#13;
Coffee, no other kind will tuit&#13;
One large dealer aava he featuree Tzar Coffee becauee he haa never&#13;
round its equal It sells for 35c * pound but tfi worth more. Other good&#13;
brands •*•&#13;
{%*»/: 30c Marigold 32c Pleasant Valley 40c&#13;
Ptaatant VaDcy Teat&#13;
t U ikk flaw of Pleasant Valley Tees&#13;
w|iaf aakee them so popular. Try a&gt;5c-orgwkh a ewusnisin&#13;
EricoUtor.&#13;
&gt;v*&#13;
•Y • «*&#13;
Murphy &amp; cJackson, Plnckney &gt; • . * • &gt; - AyrauH; &amp; Bollinger, Gregory&#13;
Subscribe For The Dispatch&#13;
Good Roads and the '&#13;
Lincoln Highway&#13;
United States Representative&#13;
Dorsey W. Shackleford, chairman&#13;
of the house committee on roads,&#13;
iu an address before the Amerioaii&#13;
Jrt&gt;ad Congress at Detroit adojitted&#13;
that he is not in favor of Uncle&#13;
Sam building the proposed Lincoln&#13;
Highway. He also said that&#13;
when congress looked closely into&#13;
the real estate lobbyists who are&#13;
working for tbo measure, it&#13;
found that the roadside had already&#13;
been covered with options&#13;
by the road-house fraternity, and&#13;
everyone saw at once that to&#13;
construct such a highway would&#13;
simply mean to build a pretentious&#13;
joy-road, lined with saloons and&#13;
resorts of all shades of non-respectability,&#13;
and cover with shame&#13;
the name of Lincoln.&#13;
The cross-country highway offers&#13;
no such objections, though&#13;
there is a large measure of truth&#13;
in the statement that it will be&#13;
largely useful to automobilists in&#13;
the sections through which it runs.&#13;
) Perhaps, too, there may have&#13;
been some opposition aroused by&#13;
the manner in which the proposal&#13;
h&amp;s beeir advertised. It virtually&#13;
presents a new test of patriotism.&#13;
"Are You a Patriot?" read the&#13;
posters. The implication is that&#13;
if you are a patriot you will subscribe&#13;
to the road fund, and that&#13;
if you don't so subscribe your&#13;
patriotism is doubtful. A good&#13;
many patriots will not subscribe.&#13;
A good many will withhold subscriptions&#13;
because they may feel&#13;
that patriotism demands such&#13;
with-holding.&#13;
The Family Cou&amp;*h Medicine&#13;
In every home there should be a&#13;
bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery,&#13;
ready tor immediate use when any&#13;
member of the family contracts a cold&#13;
or a cough, Prompt use will stop the&#13;
spread of sickness. S. A. Sttd, ot&#13;
Mason, Mich., writes: "My whole&#13;
family depends upon Dr. King's New&#13;
Discovery as the best cough aud cold&#13;
medicine in the world. Two 50c.&#13;
;botths cured me of pneumonia.'&#13;
Thousands of otherjamtlies have been&#13;
equally benefited and depend entirely&#13;
upon Dr. King's New Discovery to&#13;
cure their coughs, colds, thoat and&#13;
lung toables. Every dose helps.&#13;
Price 50c. and 11,00 at Meyer's Drug&#13;
Store,&#13;
Mew She Spelled Alice.&#13;
When Alice Jones was eighteen she&#13;
became Miss E. Alysse Jones. When&#13;
•he went to enter a normal school she&#13;
was asked her name by the dean.&#13;
She replied. "Miss E. Alysse Jones—&#13;
iA-j-B-B-e"&#13;
"Yes," said the dean. "And how are&#13;
jon spelling 'Jones' now r'-Ladies'&#13;
Home Journal.&#13;
Women Who Get Dizzy&#13;
Every women who is troubled with&#13;
tainting and dizzy spells, backache,&#13;
headache, weakness, debility, constipation&#13;
or kidney troubles should use&#13;
Electric Bitters. They give reliet when&#13;
nothing else will, improve the health,&#13;
adding strength and vigor from the&#13;
first dose. Mrs- Laura Gaines, of&#13;
Avoca. La., says: "Four doctors had&#13;
given me up and my children and all&#13;
my friends were looking for me to die&#13;
when my son insisted that I use Electric&#13;
Bitters. [ did so, and they have&#13;
done me a^worid of good." Just try&#13;
them. 50c. and $1.00. Recommended&#13;
by 0, G. Meyer the druggist.&#13;
Otherwise He Wee a Fine Golfer.&#13;
McFoozle—What the deuce am I do&#13;
lng wrong, caddie?&#13;
The Caddie (In his element)—Why&#13;
yer stance is rotten, an' yer pallln' yei&#13;
drive, an' slicin' yer brassy. Yer tor&#13;
low wl* yer Iron, an' yer toppin' wi&#13;
yer - mashle. Yer fallin' hack anc&#13;
drawin' in, yer don't keep yer eye^n*&#13;
tb« ball, and yer can't putt fer toffee.-&#13;
L^odcn Sketch.&#13;
Emma and Itching Cared&#13;
The soothing, healing medication in&#13;
Dr. HobBon's Ectemk Ointment penetrates&#13;
every tiny pore ot the skin,&#13;
clears it ot all' imparities—stop* itching&#13;
instantly. Dr. Hopeon'a Eczema&#13;
Ointment is guaranteed to speedily&#13;
heal eczjma, rathee, ringworm, tetter&#13;
and other unsightly eruptions, Eczema&#13;
Ointment is a doctor's preteription, sot&#13;
an experiment. AH druggist or by&#13;
mail. 60c Pfeiffer Chemical Co.,&#13;
Philadelphia and St. Louis.&#13;
C I A I J S&#13;
F" O R \&#13;
Saturday, October 11,1913&#13;
Beat Bleached Cotton_ __ _ ___. 9Jc&#13;
Beet Outing Flannel _ . . . _ ^c&#13;
All Odds aud Ends iu Shoes at Cost&#13;
Yeast " 3c&#13;
J pound Baking Powder 4c&#13;
10 bars Acme Soap 25c&#13;
8 bars Lenox Soap __ 25c&#13;
3 quarts of Cranberries 25c&#13;
25 pounds granulated Sugar _ $1.35&#13;
ALL SALES CASH&#13;
W. W. BARNARD&#13;
roduce Wanted&#13;
F A L L BILLS&#13;
DUE&#13;
We have a great many large bills falling due&#13;
this month and take this method of asking our&#13;
patrons who owe us to help out with remittance&#13;
as soon as possible. We will greatly&#13;
appreciate promptness and a continuation of&#13;
your business.&#13;
Dinkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
Pinokney&#13;
HONESTLY MADE MEDICINE&#13;
SUCCEEDS IN HEALING&#13;
The value of Foley Kidney Pills&#13;
over all other kidney medicines is due&#13;
to their honest make, and to tbfe wise&#13;
selection ot potent and restorative&#13;
drugs used in their make up. Foley&#13;
Kidney Pills act in harmony with&#13;
nature and are a genuine "first aid''&#13;
in restoring the kidneys and promoting&#13;
thoroughly healthy action ot the&#13;
kidneys and bladder. Those fortunate&#13;
ones who have used Foley Kidney&#13;
Pills are now rid of their ailments.&#13;
Try them, and they will succeed&#13;
in helping your case of kidney&#13;
trouble. C, G. Meyer.&#13;
SB&#13;
H. F. SIQLER M . D- C . L, SIGLER M. D.&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
'^Physicians and Surgeons.&#13;
All calls promptly attended to&#13;
day or night. Office on Main&#13;
Street.&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
IMPORTANT!&#13;
Having decided to discontinue&#13;
farming, I offer&#13;
FOP Sale&#13;
10 to 15 head of young&#13;
serviceable short horn&#13;
cows and heifers at&#13;
about beef prices. Also&#13;
4 to 6 young Clydesdale&#13;
colts and fillys&#13;
from 1 to 3 years old.&#13;
Will give time to responsible&#13;
purchasers.&#13;
T. Birkett&#13;
+&amp;t&amp;K&amp;tK4*WS5+&amp;ti?^^&#13;
GOING TO BUY A PIANO&#13;
OR SEWING MACHINE&#13;
YES? K&#13;
SEE L R. WILLIAMS.&#13;
GREGORY&#13;
ftg^He saves you money on hi^h&#13;
grade pianos.&#13;
SO YEA*»&#13;
KXPIRIENGI&#13;
TRADE MARKS&#13;
DtstdNS CopymoNrs &amp;e A.iT*n* *«nrtir&gt;g A sUef &lt;*ti nr.6 rtoscrtptJou oi»*&#13;
Qulnkiy fi'.'\"rt.-.;u our &lt;i-ii»i?..n free wli«tb*r *L&#13;
invention in'-••.••ir.Myp.'i'.arfi.ahle. Comniantf*.&#13;
Hon««riur ly c..i-.r.&lt;:»i,: iai. NAMD6Q0K on Pnt*nU&#13;
K£t ires, oldest iwM-.crtoi Mcnrlu* pj^Mtnu.&#13;
Pat«nt,ii uken thrtMurh Mann k cU. reoel—&#13;
fperial notice, withoat churpft, m ttaa Sckmlfk American. MAhlaatakdmto ooMr alyn ir&#13;
Itor r*ll« from rhtnmatlo ptlM M&#13;
Dr. Un** Anti-PWn pill* p » M |&#13;
Mffar nfttdleiity. rAdvertlwmtnt)&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
iF&#13;
•&#13;
w*&#13;
.¥••&#13;
Yi" • y '•* -&#13;
r&#13;
?&gt;,-&#13;
$ •&#13;
JOSSMAN TELLS&#13;
T&#13;
CLARKSTON BANKER M A K E S A&#13;
S T A T E M E N T REGARDING&#13;
HIS LOSSES. .&#13;
SUNK FUNDS IN T H E MICHIGAN&#13;
STEAM MOTOR CO.&#13;
Confessed Bank Wrecker Arranged&#13;
to Acquire Substantial Interest&#13;
In Saginaw Concern and&#13;
Start Plant&#13;
MRS. ELLA FLAGS YOUNG&#13;
Pontiac, Mich.—For the first time&#13;
since his arrest, charged with wreck'&#13;
ing the E. Jossman State bank a(&#13;
Clarkston, Ralph E. Jossman, cashier&#13;
of the bank, gave out the detailed&#13;
story of his peculations Friday. Many&#13;
of the depositors of the bank have&#13;
been maintaining that Jossman must&#13;
have "salted" a portion of the deficit&#13;
of the bank, and several Unes of Inquiry&#13;
have been started in the attempt&#13;
to locate a possible "plant" of&#13;
part of the bank's shortage.&#13;
"My losses of the money coming under&#13;
my control," said Jossman, "may&#13;
be almost wholly credited to my connection&#13;
with_the Michigan Steam Motor&#13;
Co., of Saginaw. I arranged to&#13;
acquire a substantial interest in the&#13;
enterprise, with a view to establishing&#13;
a plant for its manufacture at Clarkston.&#13;
By September, 1907, I had advanced&#13;
upward of $20,000, and at the&#13;
same time there were due over $6,500&#13;
for machinery, tools, material and fuel&#13;
I kept up the pay roll of the shop for&#13;
several months. This was running at&#13;
the rate of $125 a week-end took a&#13;
couple of thousand dollars more. Besides,&#13;
I made loans on stock aggregating&#13;
$3,000. I spent nearly $5,000&#13;
more on travel and entertainment of&#13;
prospective Investors."&#13;
The bank's stockholders themselves&#13;
have been drawing out 10 per cent on&#13;
their stock, or $2,000 for each of the&#13;
eight years covered by Jossman's&#13;
speculations, or $16,000 in all, and for&#13;
about six years Jossman has been&#13;
paying about $5,000 a year interest&#13;
on the money of depositors which&#13;
was not credited to them on the&#13;
banks' books. This would account&#13;
for $30,000 or more, or $46,000 in all,&#13;
which, with Jossman's losses of $50,»&#13;
000 or $55,000, represent about the aggregate&#13;
loss to stockholders and depositors.&#13;
Noted Chicago educator who will address&#13;
the teachers of Michigan at&#13;
the state m e e t i n g ^ Ann Arbor this&#13;
month.&#13;
VILLAGE IS OFFERED TO STATE&#13;
Marlborough In Lake County Can Be&#13;
Secured for Epileptic Colony&#13;
for $55,000.00.&#13;
Will Abolish Commerce Court&#13;
Washington.—Abolition of the commerce&#13;
court and legislation of its five&#13;
judges out of existence was approved&#13;
by a sub-committee of the senate appropriations&#13;
committee, considering&#13;
the urgent deficiency bill. The report&#13;
of the sub-committee carries with it&#13;
the assured support of the full appropriations&#13;
committee, and practically&#13;
seals the doom of the commerce court.&#13;
Judge Mack, of the commerce court,&#13;
was assigned by Chief Justice White&#13;
to the United States district court of&#13;
appeals at Chicago, because of congestion&#13;
of litigation there. The assignment&#13;
is for the months of October,&#13;
November and December.&#13;
Lansing, Mich.—Fourteen hundred&#13;
acres xof land, a hotel all furnished&#13;
that will care for 42 guests, an opera&#13;
house, dozens of small buildings, including&#13;
more than 40 cottages suitable&#13;
to live in, a horse and cow, 40 chickens&#13;
and farm tools and many other&#13;
articles are offered the state for $55,-&#13;
000 for a farm colony for epileptics,&#13;
at Marlborough, Lake county. The selection&#13;
of a site has been postponed&#13;
pending an investigation of this property.&#13;
The site is what remains of what&#13;
was once a $6,000,000 cement plant.&#13;
Capitalists erected the plant there a&#13;
number of years ago, but were forced&#13;
by competition to abandon it.&#13;
President Wants Anti-Fraud Bill.&#13;
Washington—A comprehensive antifraud&#13;
bill, based on the British fraud&#13;
laws and similar to the pure food and&#13;
drugs act, through extending, to all&#13;
products entering Interstate commerce,&#13;
is being prepared by Rep. William&#13;
C. Adamson, of Georgia, chairman&#13;
of the house committee on interstate&#13;
and foreign commerce. The&#13;
measure will have the majority party's&#13;
support, for it is on President&#13;
Wilson's wishes that Judge Adamson&#13;
is preparing his bill.&#13;
Baldwin To Run for Senate&#13;
Hartford.—Gov. Simeon E. Baldwin,&#13;
who, before his election, engaged in&#13;
a vigorous controversy with Col&#13;
Roosevelt, at one time threatening a&#13;
libel suit because Roosevelt declared&#13;
he favored the "interests," has announced&#13;
his candidacy for the United&#13;
States senate, to succeed Frank B.&#13;
Brandegee, republican, whose term&#13;
will expire in 1915. His friends regard&#13;
the governor as the strongest&#13;
candidate the democrats could nominate,&#13;
and declare that his record as&#13;
the state's executive would insure his&#13;
election.&#13;
Underwood After Senatorial Togs.&#13;
Washington — Democratic House&#13;
Leader Oscar W. Underwood, father&#13;
of the tariff bill signed by President&#13;
Wilson, formally announced his candidacy&#13;
for the United States senate to&#13;
succeed the late Senator Joseph F.&#13;
Johnston, of Alabama, for the long&#13;
term beginning 1915,&#13;
There Is no intention on Mr. Underwood's&#13;
part to resign from the&#13;
house during his present term.&#13;
Eighteen 8e«men Are Drowned.&#13;
Yarmouth—Eighteen seamen of the&#13;
crew of the British steamer Gardenia&#13;
were drowned when that vessel foundered&#13;
after a collision in a fog with&#13;
the British steamer Corn wood. Four&#13;
others of the Gardenia's crew were&#13;
picked up alive. The collision occurred&#13;
In the North sea off this port.&#13;
Alleged Dynamiter la Arretted&#13;
New York.—George B, Davis, alias&#13;
George O'Donnell, was arrested by a&#13;
United States marshal here on a&#13;
charge of blowing up with dynamite&#13;
a New Haven railroad bridge at Mt.&#13;
Vernon, N. Y., in September, 1911.&#13;
Davis is also charged with having&#13;
conspired with the McNamara brothers,&#13;
Frank M. Ryan, and other officials&#13;
of the International Bridge aad&#13;
Structural Iron Workers' Union to&#13;
wreck the Mt Vernon and other bridges.&#13;
The marshal asserts that Davis&#13;
has confessed.&#13;
Announcement was made at Sagimaw&#13;
that the Pere Marquette has&#13;
bought four Mikado locomotives, cost*&#13;
ing $26)400 each, for service this fall.&#13;
They are en route from Schnectady,&#13;
N. Y., and are 11 per cent more powerful&#13;
than any in use.&#13;
Cari.JL Wagner, has been appointed&#13;
city probation officer, at Port Huron,&#13;
under a recent act of the legts»&#13;
latum., Ha also will serve fit Clair&#13;
SQttttr la tta Mini capacity.&#13;
-.-&gt;..' . * &gt; -&#13;
David Vereekey, 24 years old, a&#13;
lineman in the employ of the city, of&#13;
Grand Rapids, died after receiving&#13;
frightful burns from a live wire Wednesday.&#13;
Injuries received by Foma Yurenka,&#13;
while helping to unload a boat at Port&#13;
Huron &amp; Duluth Steamship Co.,&#13;
proved fatal. He died at the Port Huron&#13;
hospital.&#13;
The Jewish New Year's eve was&#13;
celebrated In Saginaw by the opening&#13;
of the orthodox temple B'nat Israel,&#13;
which cost $25,000. October 19 the&#13;
temple will be formally dedicated.&#13;
.Almost every school in Wexford&#13;
county is closed for a two weeks' vacation&#13;
to permit the students to help&#13;
harvest the potato crop^ SchooK&#13;
opened in August, so the students&#13;
will lose no time.&#13;
~ Robert Udy, 19 years old, a freshman&#13;
at the University of Xflchigan,&#13;
died at University hospital from blood&#13;
poisoning. He came to Ann Arbor&#13;
about 10 days ago from Bluefields, w /&#13;
Va. A pimple on his face developed&#13;
blood poisoning after he was shaved&#13;
4&gt;y &amp; barber there.&#13;
Unable to find any clues in Grand&#13;
Rapids which might assist in locating&#13;
the murderers of Edward Smith, J. N.&#13;
Thompson and Paul Townsend, Chas.&#13;
at Veeta, superintendent of a Chicago&#13;
detective bureau, have returned to&#13;
Chicago. C. O. O'Brien^ another member&#13;
of the agency, left the city several&#13;
daya ago.&#13;
\&#13;
MARKETS&#13;
Live Stock, Grain and General Farm&#13;
Produce.&#13;
Love levels afl things, except the&#13;
head.&#13;
Live Stock.&#13;
DETROIT—Cattle: Receipts, 1,657a&#13;
canuers steady; all other grades 25o&#13;
lower; extra dry-fed steers and heifers,&#13;
$8; steers and heifers, 1,000 to 1,-&#13;
2bo, $7.25@7.50; do 800 to 1,000, $6.50&#13;
@7; grass steers and heifers that are&#13;
fat, 800 to 1,000, $6.50@7; do 500 to&#13;
700, $6@6.50; choice fat cows, $6;&#13;
good fat cows, $5.25@5.50; common&#13;
cows, $4.50 @5; canners, $3.50@4.35;&#13;
choice heavy bulls, $6.50; fair to good&#13;
bologna bulls, $5.75@6; stock bulla,&#13;
*5@5.50; choice feeding steers, 800 to&#13;
1,000, $6.8527; fair feeding steers, 800&#13;
to 1,000, $6.50@6.75; choice stockers,&#13;
500 to 700, $6.50@6.75; fair stockers,&#13;
500 to 700, $5.75@6.25; stock heifers,&#13;
$5@5.75; milkers, large, young, medium&#13;
age, $6G@90; common milkers,&#13;
$40@50.&#13;
Veal calves: Receipts, 239; good&#13;
grades 50c@$l and heavy $1@1.50&#13;
lower; best, $10.75@11.50; heavy, $5&lt;g&gt;&#13;
6; others, $7@9.50.&#13;
Sheep and lambs: Receipts, 4,162;&#13;
lambs slow, sheep steady at last&#13;
week's prices; best lambs, $6.75@7;&#13;
fair to good lambs, $6.25®6.50; light&#13;
to common lambs, $5@6; fair to good&#13;
sheep, $3.75@4.25; cults and common,&#13;
$2.75@3.25.&#13;
Hogs: Receipts, 1,452; market&#13;
steady to 5c lower; light to good&#13;
butchers, $8.80@8.90; pigs, $7@8;&#13;
light yorkers, $8.50@8.9Q; heavy, $8.25&#13;
@8.75.&#13;
East Buffalo Markets.&#13;
Cattle—Receipts, 200 cars; heavy&#13;
grades 25@40c lower; butchers 15®&#13;
25c lower; stockers and feeders steady&#13;
best 1,350 to 1,500-lb steers, $8.50®&#13;
8.75; best 1,200 to 1,300-lb steers,&#13;
$8.25@8.50; best 1,100 to 1,200-lb&#13;
steers, $8@8.25; coarse and plain&#13;
weighty steers, $7.25@7.50; choice&#13;
handy steers, 1,000 to 1,100 lbs, $8®&#13;
8.35; fair to good do, $7@7.50; grassy,&#13;
800 to 1,000-lb steers, $6.75@7.25; best&#13;
cows, $6.50@7; butcher cows, $5.25®&#13;
6; cutters, $4.50(g&gt;4.75; trimmers, $3.76&#13;
®4.25; best heifers, $7.50®7.75; medium&#13;
butcher heifers, $6.25®7; stock&#13;
heifers, $5@5.25; best feeding steers,&#13;
$7®7.50; fair to good steers, $6.25®&#13;
6.75; common light stockers, $6.50®&#13;
6; best butcher bulls, $6.75@7.25;&#13;
stock bulls, $5@5.50; best bologna&#13;
bulls, $5.50@6; best milkers and&#13;
springers, $70@80; common to good&#13;
milkers and springers, $50@60.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 85 cars; market active&#13;
and higher; heavy, $9:15@9.30;&#13;
mixed, $9:40@9.50; yerkers, $9.45®&#13;
9.50; pigs, $8@8.50; roughs, $8@8.60;&#13;
stags, $6.50@7.50.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 70&#13;
cars; market 10c higher; top lambs,&#13;
$7.50@7.60; culls to fair, $6®7.40;&#13;
yearlings, $5.50@6; wethers, $5@5.25;&#13;
ewes, $4@4.75.&#13;
Calves slow; tops, $11.50® 12; fair&#13;
to good, $10@11; heavy, $5®6.&#13;
Grains, Etc.&#13;
DETROIT—Wheat—Cash No. 2 red,&#13;
94c; December opened with a drop of&#13;
l-2c at 95 l-2c, declined to 95c and&#13;
closed at 95 3-4c; May opened at $1,&#13;
declined to 99 l-2c .and closed at $1;&#13;
No. 1 white, 94c.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, 73c asked; No.&#13;
2 yellow, 74c asked; No. 3 yellow, 73&#13;
l-2c asked.&#13;
.-'Oats—Standard, 1 car at 44 l-2c;&#13;
No. 3 white, 44c; No. 4 white, 43c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 68c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate and prompt shipment,&#13;
$1.90; October, $1.85; November,&#13;
$1.80.&#13;
Cloverseed—Prime October, 50 bags&#13;
at $7.50;. December, $7.60; March,&#13;
$7.75; sample red, 80 bags at $7, 15&#13;
at $6.25; October alslke, $10; sample&#13;
alsike, 50 bags at $8.75, 5 at $9.50.&#13;
Timothy—Prime spot, 50 bags at&#13;
$2.50.&#13;
Alfalfa—Prime spot, $7.50.&#13;
Barley—By sample, 1 car at $1.50.&#13;
Hay—Carlots, track Detroit: No. 1&#13;
timothy, $16@ 16.50;. standard, $15®&#13;
15.50; No. 2 $14@14.50; light mixed,&#13;
$15® 15.50; No. 1 mixed, $13,50@14;&#13;
rye straw, $8®9; wheat and oat straw,&#13;
$7®7.50 per ton. i&#13;
Flour—In one-eighth paper sacks,&#13;
per 196 pounds, jobbing lots: Best&#13;
patent, $5.40; second patent, $5.10;&#13;
straight, $4.90; spring patent, $6.10;&#13;
rye, $4.60 per bbl.&#13;
Feed—In 100-Ib sacks, jobibng lots:&#13;
Bran, $26;~ coarse middlings, $27; fine&#13;
middlings, $29; cracked corn, $27;&#13;
coarse corn meal, $31; corn and oat&#13;
chop, $27.50 per ton.&#13;
At an elevation of 100 feet at sea the&#13;
horizon is a little more that 13 miles&#13;
away.&#13;
Be thrifty on little tilings like bfulng. Don't&#13;
accept water for bluing. Ask for Bed Ousa&#13;
Ball Blue, the extra good value blue. Adv.&#13;
Net Gain.&#13;
"Did your son take anything at college&#13;
this year?'*&#13;
"He did—the mumps."&#13;
per&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
DETROIT—Plums—$1.50 ©1.75&#13;
bushel.&#13;
Apples—No. 1, $3.50©8.75 per bbl;&#13;
No. 2, $2.2502.75 per bbl.&#13;
Pears—Bartlett, $1.5001.75 per bu;&#13;
Duchess, $8.2603.60 per bbl.&#13;
Grapes—Delaware and Niagara, 40&#13;
@45c; blue, 20® 25c per pk .basket;&#13;
Delaware, 4-lb baskets, 20c; Niagara,&#13;
4-lb baskets, 20c; Michigan, 8-ft baskets,&#13;
21® 22c.&#13;
Cabbage—$2@2.25 per bbl.&#13;
Tomatoes — Hjbme-grown, 90c @$1&#13;
per sack of 2 1-2 ^bu.&#13;
Onion—$1®1.10 per bu; Spanish,&#13;
11.40 per crate.&#13;
Knew the Sex.&#13;
Wiseman—What did she say when&#13;
you proposed?&#13;
Young—No, a thousand times, no!&#13;
Wiseman—Huh! All the same, I&#13;
wouldn't risk asking her a second&#13;
time if Z were you.&#13;
"**W&#13;
Statement of the Ownerahtp^ *))Warf&#13;
agement, Circulation; Etc., *&#13;
The Difference.&#13;
Mrs. Sturvesant Fish, at one of&#13;
those sumptuous Newport entertainments&#13;
that have made her famous,&#13;
talked with her shrewd humor of a&#13;
mercenary marriage.&#13;
"And *that man," said Mrs. Fish's&#13;
interlocutor, in a shocked tone—"and&#13;
that man to marry that beautiful&#13;
girl! But isn't there a tremendous&#13;
difference in their ages?"&#13;
"Yes," said Mrs. Fish, "about $32,-&#13;
000,000."&#13;
Needle Travels Fifty Jfeara.&#13;
L. G. TibbalB, sixty-one years old, of&#13;
Norfolk^got a needle in his body more&#13;
than half a century ago. A doctor has&#13;
just extracted it in two parts from&#13;
TibbalB' right elbow. It was corroded;—&#13;
In traveling through his body the&#13;
needle had never given him any trouble&#13;
until last spring, when he experienced&#13;
a pricking sensation in the arm&#13;
when he lifted anything. Recently the&#13;
elbow began to swell. — Winsted&#13;
(Conn.) Dispatch to the New York&#13;
World.&#13;
of Pinckney Dispatch published week&#13;
ly at Pinckney, Mich, required by' tht&#13;
Act of August 24, 1912.&#13;
NOTE:—This statement is to bf&#13;
made in duplicate, both copies to b*&#13;
delivered by the publisher to the'post&#13;
master, who will send one copy to th.&#13;
Third Assistant Postmaster Genera&#13;
(Division of Classification), Washing&#13;
ton, D. C, and retain the other in th*&#13;
Hies of the postofflce.&#13;
Editor, R. W. Caverly, Pinckney&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Managing Editor, R. W. Caverly&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Business Manager, R. W. Caverly,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Publisher, R. W. Caverly, Pinckney&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Known bondholders, mortgages, am&#13;
other security holders, holding 1 pet&#13;
per cent or more of total amount of&#13;
bonds, mortgages, or other securities;&#13;
Mrs. Florence Ratz, Detroit/Mich.&#13;
R. W. CAVERLY.&#13;
Sworn to and subscribed before m&#13;
this second day of October, 1913.&#13;
H. WILLIS CROFOOT,&#13;
Notary Public, Liv. Co., Mich. :&#13;
(My commission expires April 13&#13;
1914.&#13;
RASH ITCHED AND BURNED&#13;
400 South Hermitage Ave., Chicago,&#13;
HI.—"I was attacked with a breaking&#13;
out on the inside of my arms. It was&#13;
a small rash or pimples and it itched&#13;
and burned, especially at night, so&#13;
that before I knew it I had made myself&#13;
sore. I had to wear the finest&#13;
kind of cotton underwear, no woolen&#13;
at all, because the least thing Irritated&#13;
it and made it much worse. The&#13;
rash itched and smarted until at timeB&#13;
. I got no sleep at all.&#13;
"I had this trouble and took treatments&#13;
for about one year, but they&#13;
only gave me relief while taking&#13;
them. Then I began using Cuticura&#13;
Soap and Ointment and I got relief&#13;
right away. In three months I was a&#13;
well man again." (Signed) H. W.&#13;
Foley, Nov. 6, 1912.&#13;
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post&#13;
card "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston."—Adv&#13;
The Sensation.&#13;
Upon returning from the city, Farmer&#13;
Green said to his friend;&#13;
"Say, Aaron, I had a ride in my&#13;
cousin's automobile while I was up to&#13;
the city."&#13;
"Wa-al," replied Farmer Green, "it&#13;
seemed a good deal like fallln' into a&#13;
mighty deep well, only ye dropped&#13;
straight ahead Instead of down'ards."&#13;
Probably Notr&#13;
Sir Abe Bailey has a baby. If Sit&#13;
Abe Bailey's baby is an able baby, it&#13;
will be an ailing baby Bailey, will itt&#13;
—London Globe.&#13;
Lowest Human Habitation.&#13;
The lowest human habitation is&#13;
said to be that of the coal miners in&#13;
Bohemia, some of whom make their&#13;
dwellings at a point over 2,000 feet be*.&#13;
low the level of the sea.&#13;
Great Users of Sugar.&#13;
It Is no surprise to learn that Amer*&#13;
leans are the greatest consumers of&#13;
sugar in the world; we use a great&#13;
deal o' It in our politics.—Philadelphia&#13;
Press.&#13;
Protect the Landscapes.&#13;
Prussian police are empowered tfl&#13;
prohibit the defacement of landscapes&#13;
by the erection of billboards an&lt;&#13;
other signs and pictures.&#13;
Obedience Woman's Sole Lot.&#13;
In Japan man is the master and&#13;
woman, if not the slave, his inferior&#13;
moiety. There is an old precept muoh&#13;
quoted in the land of the mikado,&#13;
"Woman must obey her father when&#13;
she is a child; her husband when she&#13;
is married; her son when she is a&#13;
widow;" and although the time has&#13;
gone when the Japanese male declared&#13;
"woman has no soul" she is&#13;
a long way from her emancipation.&#13;
JUDGE CURED, HEART TROUBLE.&#13;
Judge Miller,&#13;
wen and hearty&#13;
I took about 6 boxes of Dodds Sidney&#13;
Pills for Heart Trouble from&#13;
which I had suffered for 5 years. I&#13;
had dizsy spells; my eyes puffed,&#13;
my breath was&#13;
short and I had&#13;
chills and backache.&#13;
I took the&#13;
pins 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 ol&#13;
manual labor, am&#13;
and weigh about&#13;
200 pounds. I feel very grateful thai&#13;
I found Dodds Kidney Pills and yoi&#13;
may publish this letter if you wish. X&#13;
am serving my third term as Probate&#13;
Judge of Gray Co, Yours truly, *&#13;
PHILIP MILLER, Cimarron, Kan.&#13;
Correspond with Judge Miller about&#13;
this wonderful remedy.&#13;
Dodds Kidney Pills, 50c per box at&#13;
your dealer or Dodds Medicine Co.,&#13;
Buffalo, N. T, Write for Household&#13;
Hints, also music of National Anthem&#13;
(nmglish and German words) and recipe*&#13;
tor dainty dishes. All 8 sent free,&#13;
Adv.&#13;
Malicious.&#13;
"I don't feel quite well, doctor. Do&#13;
you think I could go to a coffee party&#13;
this afternoon?"&#13;
"Certainly, Miss. Your tongue is ail&#13;
right,"—Fliegende Blaetter (Munich).&#13;
Franklin's Coat.&#13;
When Benjamin Franklin, as minis-.&#13;
ter to France, was formally presented&#13;
to Louis XVI. he gained admiration&#13;
for republican simplicity by appearing&#13;
in a plain, ordinary suit. But when&#13;
Nathaniel Hawthorne made the discovery&#13;
that Franklin's tailor had disappointed&#13;
him of the gold-embroidered&#13;
costume he had ordered, simple-minded&#13;
republicans were considerably dis&gt;&#13;
contented.&#13;
Worth Knowing.&#13;
If a package of value is to be sent&#13;
a great distance, it is an excellent&#13;
idea to provide the box with a cover&#13;
of unbleached -mniHn securely sewed&#13;
in place. If the shelves and floors of&#13;
closets are wiped with water which lei&#13;
hot with cayenne pepper, insects will&#13;
be kept away. Borax and alum are&#13;
good to put into the cracks. - *&#13;
Church Articles Long Hidden;&#13;
A secret chamber was found byworkmen&#13;
while engaged in the belfry4&#13;
of St. Sampson's church, Guernsey,,&#13;
the .Channel islands containing a high&#13;
altar, candlesticks, and the base Of&#13;
a censer. It. Is presumed that the articles&#13;
were hidden at the time of the*&#13;
reformation and have remained theft&#13;
over 800 years. -&#13;
Not Involving Real Work.&#13;
Sometimes a man's idea oMooataj&#13;
for work is going on a tour of inspeo&#13;
tlon to ascertain whether there u any&#13;
position available which he wouK&#13;
condescend to accept&#13;
I&#13;
/&#13;
T"Vf»"&#13;
^^ iitipe&gt;ftant to Nrattissfs)&#13;
Bxamine carofully every bottle of&#13;
CA8TORIA, A safe and sure.remedy foi&#13;
infants aad oalQtoa&gt; aad see that it&#13;
Beantha ~&#13;
Sigaataroof&#13;
In TJso For Over&#13;
Children Cry for jftetcher'i Cattoria&#13;
Woman must make her way in the&#13;
world; man has hie.&#13;
Words Needing. Refernv Jf&#13;
When the •imp-lifled ^ '&#13;
around to it, win they kindly aflm*&#13;
to all those peeudo&#13;
ptarmigan down to&#13;
Transcript&#13;
?*;&lt;&#13;
Yeare, Idle Years.&#13;
"Tears have really very little to aej&#13;
with age. Soma people are » * «&#13;
twenty-six, and others rather ehftdlsfei&#13;
a* sixty-nve."—'IttohaeL Ferrya," bf&#13;
lira, Henry da la PeatM*. •.&#13;
/ •&#13;
/ •&#13;
i. H&#13;
—«~nnmti Montana Sapphire tup—mo.&#13;
Ilia Togo Woe sapphire of Montana&#13;
la worth mora to the marMsTof««&#13;
rope than the Oriental sappldra. Thto&#13;
gem is said to be wofth |M a harai *&#13;
Iks Qaltad Statea* ^&#13;
W . - - 1 .&#13;
' * • • &amp; *&#13;
iaW&#13;
!•«£•'&lt; ltt^;*^M&gt;r:%&amp;*&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH l *&#13;
I&#13;
PRET^STO&#13;
" " • . M '•'•'&#13;
Famous&#13;
Family Remedies&#13;
The Presto line of old, tried remedies&#13;
offer* 70a relief from those ailments&#13;
which: can be treated without taeattention&#13;
of a physician. Erery one la guaranteed&#13;
under the Food and Drugs Act&#13;
Of Jnne 80th, IMS, Serial No. 60061.&#13;
These reliable remedies have helped&#13;
thousands and will relieve you.&#13;
Mailed everywhere by parcel post,&#13;
Immediately upon receipt of order.&#13;
P r e s t o Kidney Pills&#13;
Contain only pare Ingredients, which have&#13;
been thoroughly tested in the world's greateat&#13;
hospitals and by the world's greatest&#13;
fpselaluts for kidney and bladder ailments.&#13;
They relieve the congestion and prevent&#13;
accumulation of poisons. II per box.&#13;
Presto Cold Tablets&#13;
Offer quick relief from colds, la grippe,&#13;
ooughs, nearalgia, acute catarrh and bron-&#13;
. ehltis. They are laxative and put the svstem&#13;
tn good condition. One box is sufficient&#13;
for ordinary cases. 60c per box.&#13;
P r e s t o Headache Wafers Eor all forma of nervous, neuralgic and sick&#13;
sadaobea. Quick action—contain absolutely&#13;
Bomorphlneoropiatesofanykind. 60ca box.&#13;
P r e s t o Pile Ointment&#13;
Burns-, Sunburns, etc. II per box.'&#13;
P r e s t o Corn Solvent&#13;
Will remove the most troublesome corn in a&#13;
few days. Requires no cutting. Will also&#13;
remove bunions, warts and callouses. 60c.&#13;
P r e s t o Laxative Tablets&#13;
A, general corrective of the system. For&#13;
Constipation, Biliousness, Liver Complaint,&#13;
Headaches, Impurities of the Blood, etc. A&#13;
good laxative to keep on hand at all times.&#13;
ft per box.&#13;
Remember, these remedies are all guaranteed&#13;
to be absolutely pure and safe for anyone&#13;
to take. They have long ago proven&#13;
their value and their timely use may prevent&#13;
many big Doctor bills.&#13;
Send for free booklet describing the complete&#13;
Presto line of remedies.&#13;
Pretto Chemical Co., Inc.&#13;
Detroit, Michigan&#13;
His Little Fiction.&#13;
"You said at the social table, Mr.&#13;
Oberforster, that I had given you • a&#13;
kiss. That is not true."&#13;
"Don't worry, Lena. Nobody believed&#13;
me!"—Meggendorfer Blaetter.&#13;
Red Cross Ball Blue jrives double value&#13;
for your money, goes twice as far as any&#13;
other. Ask your grocer. Adv.&#13;
Stable Locked.&#13;
"When did you learn that he" was&#13;
one of the bank's most trusted employes?"&#13;
"The day after he absconded with&#13;
the funds."&#13;
For the treatment of colds, sore throat,&#13;
etc., Dean's Mentholated Cough Drops give&#13;
sure relief—oc at all good Druggiate.&#13;
Paw Knows Everything.&#13;
Willie—Paw, what is a pointed argument?&#13;
Paw—One In which both sides refuse&#13;
to see the point, my son.&#13;
Tuberculosis&#13;
Chooses Its Victims&#13;
from among those who lack pure, virile&#13;
i blood .The astounding results which have&#13;
attended the use of Nature's Creation&#13;
In cases of tuberculosis of the lungs,&#13;
boneSj, glands, eto., are entirely due to&#13;
the Tact that Nature's Creation makes&#13;
pure, virile blood.&#13;
Write for Free Booklet, containing&#13;
photossad testimonials of Michigan persons&#13;
who have Securedhnarvelous results&#13;
from our treatment for tuberculosis.&#13;
Careful consideration and thorough&#13;
Investigation of our cases will convince&#13;
; you that we have the only successful treat-&#13;
I sent for tuberculosis yet discovered.&#13;
1&#13;
• f- OaU on or address&#13;
* • * &lt; . - CHAS. A. BARNES&#13;
M a s « , Varpey BttlUm*&#13;
t i * Woodward Ave. Detroit. Mich,&#13;
HIDES TANNED&#13;
For Robes and Costs Bead as your Cattle and Bone&#13;
Hides, or any skins yon have,&#13;
and we will ntak vyou a Fine&#13;
Coat, Robe or a Floor-Bug at&#13;
a reasonable price.&#13;
_We have one of the largest&#13;
For Goat and Robe Factories&#13;
ta the country, and tan and&#13;
dress, in our own plant, alitb©&#13;
hides and skins we use. We&#13;
eesVbnt^onT?B the very^Mst&#13;
JmTpli'able waetT fladsbed.&#13;
Wetnaranteeouwork. Send&#13;
for our-etrcnlar. wnt$nov&gt;.&#13;
B I J G B W A I A A C S OO.&#13;
Cnstom Department '&#13;
M M E. Onuur Botilevstfd&#13;
n Detroit, Mich$ajen&#13;
four Bent erder. epeeial asleasttc&#13;
ftvstt-to Kail Orders and we guarantee otn&#13;
wot* to be sftttafaetory. Send eitfeer sternpf&#13;
of aeoney order. Price lie* on nanest .. pats! n,ArnNG tem3ars*s.ss|&#13;
TARIFF CHANCES IN THE NEW&#13;
REVISION MEASURE ARE MANY&#13;
Special Session of Congress Has Produced a Bill Which Makes&#13;
for Reduction in a Number of Important Duties-&#13;
Income Tax to Produce Revenue.&#13;
afrs.Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for Children&#13;
teething-, softens the g-ums, reduces tnflamma-&#13;
Uon,allays pain,cures wind collc^&amp;c a bottle.Mv&#13;
A man Is never so willing to do&#13;
the square thing as when he gets in&#13;
a hole.&#13;
folty Kidney Pills Relieve&#13;
promptly the suffering due to weak, inactive&#13;
kidneys and painful bladder action.&#13;
They .offer a powerful help to nature&#13;
in building up the true excreting kidney&#13;
tissue, in restoring normal action 1&#13;
and in regulating bladder irregularities.&#13;
Try them.&#13;
Washington.—The Democratic tariff&#13;
revision bill arrived at Its last congressional&#13;
stage when it came back&#13;
to the house from the final conference&#13;
committee with the unanimous Indorsement&#13;
of the Democratic conferees.&#13;
The measure, of course, has both Its&#13;
friends and enemies. According to&#13;
the administration, it carries out&#13;
four of the party promises. Tariff reform,&#13;
reduction in the high cost of&#13;
living, campaign against the trusts, in&#13;
that duties have been taken off of&#13;
many trust made article, and the income&#13;
tax.&#13;
The measure, consequently, has a&#13;
larger importance than that of a mere&#13;
tariff reform bill, aiyl Its effect must&#13;
be widespread, both on business and&#13;
Industry, and also in connection with&#13;
politics. Democratic leaders are confident&#13;
that business will suffer no untoward&#13;
effect; that consumers will be&#13;
benefited.&#13;
The bill imposes an average ad&#13;
valorem rate of from 27 to 29 per&#13;
cent. The average for the present&#13;
Aldrlch law is 40.12 per cent The&#13;
average for the Wilson-Gorman act&#13;
was HWM per cent.&#13;
Duties generally have been reduced&#13;
on all of the articles that enter into&#13;
the necessaries of life, including the&#13;
products of the farm as well as manufactured&#13;
products.&#13;
Trust made products in many cases&#13;
have been transferred to the free list&#13;
or the duties at present Imposed have&#13;
been substantially reduced.&#13;
The income tax feature of the bill is&#13;
expected to net some $83,000,000. It&#13;
will call for a tax on net incomes of&#13;
unmarried persons of $3,000 and upwards&#13;
and on net incomes of married&#13;
persons living together, where the&#13;
wife or husband is dependent, of $4,-&#13;
000 and upwards.&#13;
Experts' estimates indicate a surplus&#13;
of $16,000,000 over all expenditures&#13;
at the end of the present fiscal&#13;
year.&#13;
A rate of 40 per cent, is Imposed&#13;
on stockings and half hose valued at&#13;
not more than 70 cents a dozen pairs.&#13;
For stockings between 70 and $1.20&#13;
a dozen pairs a duty of 40 per cent,&#13;
was agreed upon.&#13;
The conferees eliminated the provision&#13;
Inserted by the senate denying&#13;
entry into the American market of&#13;
goods manufactured by children under&#13;
14 years of age.&#13;
The final agreement provided' that&#13;
any person employed to collect the income&#13;
tax may be utilized by the secretary&#13;
of the treasury In the general&#13;
service of the Internal revenue bureau.&#13;
Agricultural Products and Previsions.&#13;
Cattle, sheep and other domestic animals&#13;
suitable for use as food, wheat&#13;
and wheat products and eggs, have&#13;
been transferred to the free list. Reductions&#13;
have been made on oats, butter,&#13;
beets, frozen eggs, peas, greenhouse&#13;
stock, zante currants, chocolate&#13;
and cocoa sweetened and extracts&#13;
of meats from the rates provided by&#13;
the house. The rates have been increased&#13;
over those provided by the&#13;
house on broken rice, fish packed in&#13;
oil and ground spices. A rate of 20&#13;
per cent, ad valorem is placed on&#13;
ground spices in addition to the specific&#13;
rate provided by the house on&#13;
unground. The senate receded from&#13;
the reduced rate placed on flaxseed&#13;
and its amendment placing a duty on&#13;
bananas. The bouse classification on&#13;
lemons and other citrus fruits is accepted.&#13;
v Papers and Books.&#13;
The house rates have been reduced&#13;
on common paper, box, boards, papers&#13;
partly covered with metal leaf or&#13;
gelatine and plain basic papers for&#13;
clbumenising for photographic printing.&#13;
The rates provided by the house&#13;
for surface-coated papers suitable for&#13;
[ covering boxes has been increased&#13;
from 35 to 40 per cent The senate&#13;
amendments placing specific rates&#13;
graduated according to thickness and&#13;
size have been agreed to with several&#13;
reductions in the rates provided. The&#13;
rates agreed to are approximately&#13;
equivalent to the ad valorem rates&#13;
provided in the house bill. A specific&#13;
rate has been placed on lithographic&#13;
views of scenes and buildings located&#13;
in the United States instead of&#13;
the advalorem rate provided by the&#13;
bouse. This amendment results in an&#13;
increase In the rate of duty.&#13;
Cotton Manufactures. *&#13;
, The.senate classification of cotton&#13;
cloth, according to the average nam*&#13;
bsT of the yarns contained therein,&#13;
• a s accepted, instead of the house&#13;
j&gt;rc^tlod for the-*ighsst number. Thii&#13;
sfiffcdy decreases the - rate of some&#13;
fancy wda^s/abd-novelty doth, bat&#13;
on the greater hatkvof esttoe^ejot* the&#13;
rats is net offsets*. Ths rates on&#13;
bleached and dyed colored yams are&#13;
increased and on cotton yarns and&#13;
cloth made of yarn, from numbers 79&#13;
to 99. The rates on handkerchiefs or&#13;
mufflers, not hemmed, have been deduced&#13;
from 30 per cent., as provided&#13;
by the house, to 25 per cent.&#13;
POINTS ABOUT INCOME TAX.&#13;
It has been figured that a revenue&#13;
of $82,298,000 will be afforded by the&#13;
imposition of the income tax, of which&#13;
the following is the schedule:&#13;
$3,000 to $20,000 1 per cent&#13;
$20,000 to $50,000 2 per cent&#13;
$50,000 to $75,000 3 per cent&#13;
$75,000 to $100,000 4 per cent&#13;
$100,000 to $250,000 5 per cent&#13;
$250,000 to $500,000 6 per cent&#13;
More than $500,000 7 per cent&#13;
So far as the taxable American is&#13;
concerned, the income tax law is now&#13;
practically In force against him. While&#13;
the tariff law in which the law is embodied&#13;
will not be signed until next&#13;
week, the first returns do not have to&#13;
be made to the internal revenue collectors&#13;
before March 1, 1914. But when&#13;
the returns are made they will cov^&#13;
er the income of citizens from March&#13;
1, 1913, to December 31, and the first&#13;
payment of tax will be for money received&#13;
during this period.&#13;
Bver^ single person (citizen or foreign&#13;
resident) whose annual income&#13;
exceeds $3,000, and every married person&#13;
with an income above $4,000, is&#13;
expected to report his or her receipts&#13;
in detail to the government&#13;
agents March 1 of each year.&#13;
President Wilson, the federal judges&#13;
of the Supreme court now holding office&#13;
and employes "of a state or any&#13;
political subdivision thereof," are the&#13;
only persons specifically exempted&#13;
from the tax by the new law. The&#13;
president and judges now in office&#13;
were made exempt to escape any questions&#13;
of the constitutionality of the&#13;
law, and their successors in office will&#13;
be compelled to pay the tax.&#13;
First Burden Is on Citizen.&#13;
The general public is expected to&#13;
give close study to the new law in&#13;
the next few months, as the first burden&#13;
of the tax payment rests with the&#13;
Individual citlzan, and his failure to&#13;
report his Income Is punishable by a&#13;
fine.&#13;
It is admitted that when first returns&#13;
are made many taxable persons&#13;
probably will escape payments, but&#13;
with each year the government's lists&#13;
of persons with taxable Incomes win&#13;
be made more nearly complete,&#13;
s&#13;
Methods of Collecting Tax.&#13;
Two primary methods of collecting&#13;
the tax are contained in the law. One&#13;
Is that the individual return made by&#13;
the citizen; the other the returns by&#13;
corporations and other employers whs&#13;
pay their employes' taxes "at the&#13;
source." Under the law as it will be&#13;
signed by President Wilson next week,&#13;
every large company employing labor&#13;
will be compelled to report any regi*&#13;
lar salaries it pays in excess of the&#13;
$3,000 figures, and will pay the taxes&#13;
for its employes and deduct the tax&#13;
from their pay envelopes.&#13;
This "payment at the source" win&#13;
apply to salaries, rents, Interests, royalties,&#13;
partnership profits and some&#13;
other sources of income, and persons&#13;
receiving such incomes must be prepared&#13;
to show that the money has&#13;
paid its tax at its source.&#13;
In figuring tip his net Income for&#13;
the taxpayer, the American business&#13;
man, after deducting $3,000 for kinsself,&#13;
or $4,000, if married, will have&#13;
the right to claim the following additional&#13;
exemptions:&#13;
Necessary expense of carrying on&#13;
business, not Including personal, living&#13;
or family expenses.&#13;
Interest paid out of In iebtedness.&#13;
National, state, county, school or&#13;
municipal taxes paid within the year.&#13;
Trade losses, or storm or - fire&#13;
losses, not covered by insurance.&#13;
Worthless debts charged off during&#13;
the year.&#13;
A reasonable allowance for the depreciation&#13;
of property.&#13;
Dividends from companies whose incomes&#13;
have already been taxed.&#13;
Interest from state, municipal or&#13;
government bonds.&#13;
Must be Entire "Net Income."&#13;
It is a clear provision of the law,&#13;
however, that the taxable person must&#13;
make a return to the internal revenue&#13;
collector for his entire "net Income,"&#13;
and exemptions claimed under the law&#13;
must be submitted to the federal officers&#13;
for them to determine upon their&#13;
reasonableness or legality.&#13;
Ready to Answer Questions.&#13;
The treasury department Is preparing&#13;
for a flood of questions about the&#13;
new income tax, realizing that this&#13;
feature of the tariff bill about to become&#13;
law strikes more Intimately at&#13;
the tax paying citizen than do the&#13;
indirect taxes collected through the&#13;
customs duties.&#13;
For the first year the citizen will&#13;
make return to the local Internal revenue&#13;
collector before March 1, 1914,&#13;
as to his earnings from March 1, 1913,&#13;
to the end of this year. The collector&#13;
will notify him June 1 how much&#13;
he owes and the tax must be paid&#13;
by June 30. After next year the tax&#13;
will apply on the full calendar year.&#13;
IIIII&#13;
TARIFF CHANGES FOR HOUSEWIFE TO NOTE&#13;
3&#13;
Washington.—Following are the changes made by the new tariff&#13;
bill in the rates charged for imports of household necessities:&#13;
Present law. New law.&#13;
Sugar 48.5 per cent Free after March 1*&#13;
1914.&#13;
Tea Free. Free.&#13;
Coffee Free. Free.&#13;
8alt 1 pound 7 cents. Free.&#13;
Bread .* 25 per cent. 25 per cent&#13;
Milk Gallon, 2 cents. Free.&#13;
Cream 5 cents. Free.&#13;
Eggs Dozen, 5 cents. Free.&#13;
Butter Pound, 6 cents. 2 ½ cents.&#13;
Oatmeal ...Pound, 1 cent 1-3 cent&#13;
Flour Barrel, 45 cents. Free.&#13;
Cheese Pound, 6 cents. 2½ cents.&#13;
Meat 10 per cent. Free.&#13;
Wool yarns 79.70 per cent. 18.90 per cent&#13;
Wool blankets 72.90 per cent. 30*90 per cent&#13;
Wool underwear 93.90 per cent 35.70 per cent&#13;
Wool clothing - . . . 7 9 per cent 36 p e r c e n t&#13;
Wool dress goods for&#13;
women and children.99.7 per cent 36 p e r c e n t&#13;
Cotton clothing 50 per cent. 30 per cent&#13;
Cotton table damask..40 per cent 26 per cent&#13;
Cotton collars and&#13;
cuffs 64 per cent 30 per cent&#13;
Cotton stockings 75 per cent 40 per cent&#13;
Cotton underwear 60 per cent 30 per cent&#13;
Trimmed hats 50 per cent 40 per cent&#13;
Broome 40 per cent 16 per cent&#13;
Oil cloths 44 per cent. 20 per cent&#13;
Wheat Bu., 25 cents. Free.&#13;
Potatoes Bu., 25 cents. Free.&#13;
Cabbage 2 cents apiece. Pree.&#13;
Beans and lentils Bu., 45 cents. 26 cents.&#13;
Beets 25 per cent 6 per cent&#13;
Nearly all other vegetables,&#13;
natural state.25 per cent 16 p e r c e n t&#13;
Vegetables sliced or&#13;
otherwise prepared..40 per cent 26 per cent&#13;
Pickles 40 per cent 26 per cent&#13;
Vinegar, gallon 7½ cents. 4 cents.&#13;
Apples, peaches, quinces,&#13;
plums, and&#13;
pears, green or ripe.25 cents. 10 cents.&#13;
Edible berries, quart.. 1 cent. /a cent&#13;
Lemons, limes, grape- •&#13;
fruit oranges, pound. 1 cent Vt csnt&#13;
Molasses- ..48.6 per cent. Frss after Marsh 1»&#13;
1114&#13;
Cattle, each $3.75. Free.&#13;
Sheep, each 75 cents to $1. Free.&#13;
Barley, bushel 30 cents. 15 cents.&#13;
Macaroni, lb i i / 2 cents. 1 cent&#13;
Poultry, lb 3 cents. 1 cent&#13;
Raw wool 43.90 per cent Wv* after Dee. f.&#13;
* &lt; • : * • : • • , , • + . , .&#13;
' * * * " " • • ^&#13;
All Round&#13;
aids to good health—and to the&#13;
strength, comfort and cheerfulness&#13;
which depend on the condition&#13;
of health—are the famous,&#13;
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A s t h m a a n d Hay Fever. Ask your&#13;
drugs-let for it. Write for FREE SAMPLE&#13;
NORTHROP a LYMAN CO, LtdL BUFFALO, N.Y.&#13;
Dr. Navaun's Kidney Tablets&#13;
Believes quickly all Hidney complaints such&#13;
ae Backache, Rheumatism, NervoUHuess,&#13;
Dtislneee, etc. Thousands of sufferers have&#13;
been cured by this remedy and if you or any&#13;
member at your family are Buffering1 from&#13;
Kidney ailment send your name and address&#13;
on a postal for FREE sample ami our&#13;
booklet of testimonials and be convinced.&#13;
BOTANIC DRUG C O , Detroit, Mich.&#13;
We Will PaT^oii~$l20.00&#13;
to distribute religious literature to your com 1 unity.&#13;
• days' work. Sxperience not required Man or wossen.&#13;
Opportunity for promotion. Spare time may be&#13;
ased. btrftHfil Blfcte rnw. 1014 Ares SL. PUUdelphl*&#13;
And the Blind Could See/&#13;
That the day of miracles Is not&#13;
pasted is the belief of a man who sat&#13;
in upper Broadway, with green goggles&#13;
on his eyes and a placard bearing&#13;
the-words "I am blind" hung on.&#13;
his neck. Pennies and nickels were&#13;
being dropped into his tin cup by&#13;
sympathetic passersby. Finally a&#13;
woman dropped a quarter into the&#13;
cap. A hobo standing near by saw&#13;
the blind man, also the quarter that&#13;
the woman dropped into the tin cup.&#13;
And he deftly picked the quarter&#13;
ont Then the "miracle" was performed.&#13;
The goggles were thrown off&#13;
and the blind man gave chase to the&#13;
thief. It was a good race. The hobo&#13;
was no slouch of a runner, but the&#13;
blind man caught him after two&#13;
blocks' run and got his quarter back.&#13;
Then, with "I am blind" dangling&#13;
from his neck, he Btarted back to his&#13;
stand. "Say, you can see pretty well&#13;
for a blind man," said a man who&#13;
had invested a nickel's worth of pity.&#13;
"It's a miracle, that's what It are,"&#13;
said the blind man solemnly. "The&#13;
shock of losing-that quarter brought&#13;
back my sight. It's just plumb wonderfuL"&#13;
Theory and Fact.&#13;
"What subject have you taken for&#13;
your address at the Civic club?"&#13;
"Woman's moral obligations as a&#13;
citizen."&#13;
"What a lovely subject! And what&#13;
are you going to wear?"&#13;
"That new gown I brought home&#13;
with me from Paris. And, just think,&#13;
I had it so cleverly packed in with&#13;
my old clothes that the custom house&#13;
inspector never discovered it was&#13;
there."&#13;
Defined.&#13;
"Pa, what is a mlsogymist?"&#13;
"A mlsogymist, son, Is a man who&#13;
would rather Rtay out in the rain than&#13;
seek shelter where there is a woman."&#13;
A woman is always interested in&#13;
what a man Is saying when she pretends&#13;
that she isn't.&#13;
Well Met—&#13;
A Good&#13;
Appetite&#13;
And&#13;
Post&#13;
Toasties&#13;
A dainty, nourishing&#13;
dish for breakfast, lunch&#13;
orsupper ready to sarve&#13;
direct from the package&#13;
with cream and sugar.&#13;
"Toasties" are thin bits&#13;
of choice Indian Com—&#13;
skilfully cooked and toasted&#13;
to an appetizing golden&#13;
brown.&#13;
Wholesome&#13;
Nourieriiing&#13;
Easy to Serve&#13;
sold by grocers everywhere.&#13;
» &gt;.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
'\ Anderson&#13;
Mrs. L. E. Howlett of Howell&#13;
spent Tuesday at the home of her&#13;
parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Q.&#13;
Wilson,&#13;
Mrs. Orla Han eg of Gregory&#13;
visited her sister Mrs. Art La-&#13;
Ifrwe Monday,&#13;
E. T. McClear and family Yiwited&#13;
Gregory relatives Sunday.&#13;
C. Brogan and family of Marion&#13;
were Sunday visitors at the home&#13;
of Max Ledwidge.&#13;
Andrew Greiner was home&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
The Mackinfler children entertained&#13;
company from Stockbridge&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
J. D. White and wife of Pingree&#13;
and P, Lavey and wife were guests&#13;
at the home of M. Nile of Jackson&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
In compliment to Mrs. A. C.&#13;
Roche, Mrs. Wm. Ledwidge entertained&#13;
Saturday, the following&#13;
at a dinner party: Mrs. E. A.&#13;
Kuhn, Mrs. J. Stackable, Sarah&#13;
McClear of Gregory, Mrs Mike&#13;
L'avey of Pinckney and Mrs. E.&#13;
McClear.&#13;
Miss Mollie Wilson of Detroit&#13;
visited her people here from Saturday&#13;
until Monday.&#13;
Harry and Raymond Lavey visited&#13;
Raymond Brogan of South&#13;
Marion Sunday.&#13;
W. H. Jacobs of Pingree moved&#13;
his family into Mrs. Pangborn's&#13;
house last week.&#13;
Messrs. Frank Hoff, Clarence&#13;
Bennett, Kirk VanWinkle and&#13;
Chas. Holmes and their families&#13;
of Lansing were entertained at&#13;
the home of A. G. Wilson Sunday.&#13;
Jack Hayes spent Sunday in&#13;
Jackson.&#13;
The Home Man&#13;
It is true today as it waB 1900&#13;
years ago that /a prophet is not&#13;
without honor save in his own&#13;
country." Tbe lack of appreciation&#13;
by home people has caused&#13;
many a man to leave a town and&#13;
seek a new community in which&#13;
to begin an enterprise. Thus a&#13;
new industry which might have&#13;
helped this town to glow was&#13;
lost because its people lacked&#13;
faith in the home man. The man&#13;
who goes away and succeeds 19&#13;
readily acknowledged by the&#13;
pqojjle of his home town as a&#13;
genius. Many an inventor and&#13;
many a projector of new enterprises&#13;
has had this experience; it&#13;
is common, indeed, to all mankind.&#13;
Persons in many communities&#13;
have not sufficiently&#13;
appreciated what their neighbors&#13;
were accomplishing or could&#13;
achieve and so mauy a man has&#13;
gone elsewhere and found the recognition&#13;
that was denied him at&#13;
home. Give credit and backing&#13;
to the home man. Have faith in&#13;
him and encourage him. If this&#13;
is done fully and freely it will go&#13;
a long way toward keeping at&#13;
home many a man who otherwise&#13;
will go elsewhere to find moral&#13;
and financial backing.&#13;
There is genius in this town as&#13;
well^s in any other. If yon know&#13;
of a man who has something to&#13;
develop, don't let him go elsewhere.&#13;
Help him to get a start&#13;
right here. Commercial enterprises&#13;
are a benefit to any town,&#13;
and we should have sufficient pride&#13;
in this town to want it to grow.&#13;
| Will You Gome tyhe Greatest Apparel |&#13;
| Store in This Section to Supply Your |&#13;
\&#13;
Fall Garment Needs?&#13;
« Where S t o c k s are Immense&#13;
and Prices Right&#13;
Our ladies coat room is brim&#13;
full of the newest cuts and&#13;
fabrics—&#13;
B o u c l e s \&#13;
M a t e l a s s e s&#13;
F a n c y C l o t h s&#13;
3-4 and 7-8 lengths&#13;
JPKINTZESSCOATS&#13;
$12.50 to 30.&#13;
JEFFEAS COATS&#13;
#6., 8.50, lOc&#13;
njflJJJTIWme&#13;
Big Assortment of Stout&#13;
Sizes&#13;
44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 4^&#13;
Our Mens Suit and Overcoat&#13;
Stock is-the largest in years.&#13;
Suits in beautiful fall shades&#13;
of browns, d a r k grays,&#13;
blacks and white effects and&#13;
blue serges, and overcoats&#13;
that are warm and stylish,&#13;
both&#13;
$7.50 to $25.&#13;
Boys XTRA-GOOD Suits&#13;
$5. to $8.50&#13;
Other Grades'at7&#13;
# 2 . 5 0 t o 4 . 5 0&#13;
NORFOLK COATS Copyright, 1913.&#13;
sntarla. Mm ft *&#13;
iZllU.lTJJT.: W . J . Dancer &amp; Company \&#13;
Jurors Drawn&#13;
The following are the Livingston&#13;
county cititzens who have&#13;
been summoned to serve as jurors&#13;
at the October term of court which&#13;
convenes October 20th.&#13;
James Foster, John Coles, Iosco&#13;
William Fuller, Albert Roberts,&#13;
Marion.&#13;
Samuel Legg, Thomas Devereaux,&#13;
Oceola.&#13;
P. H. Swarthout, Jesse Richardsou,&#13;
Putnam.&#13;
Delbert Farnham, Fred Hicks,&#13;
Tyrone.&#13;
John Barge&amp;B, W. C. Pyper,&#13;
Unadilla.&#13;
F. Sands, A. Webber, Brighton.&#13;
J. B. Brown, Mathew Finley,&#13;
Cohoctah.&#13;
F. N. Parsons, W. N. Kelley,&#13;
Conway.&#13;
Clark Hall, 8. Dean, Deerfield.&#13;
J. G. Grostic, Genoa.&#13;
R. N. Clark, Green Oak.&#13;
' E. Stewart, "Hamburgi&#13;
C. H. Lemmen, Hartland.&#13;
H. S, Rogers, Handy.&#13;
W. H . P e a v y , Howell.&#13;
PLUMBER HAD HIS REVENGE&#13;
Nettled by the Espionage of an Offlolous&#13;
Butler, He Playt a&#13;
Clever Trick.&#13;
The frost had frozen some of the&#13;
taps In a gentleman's house and burst&#13;
a few pipes, so that a plumber had to&#13;
be called in. The plumber was shown&#13;
round by the coachman, but as soon&#13;
as he commenced, work an officious&#13;
butler kept close watch over him.&#13;
He didn't like the treatment, and determined&#13;
to play a trick on the butler.&#13;
In the bathroom he found a&#13;
burst pipe, and, after cutting out the&#13;
ice, he quickly popped his thumb oyer&#13;
the hole.&#13;
"Here, mate," he said, turning to the&#13;
butler, "hold yer thumb over this hole&#13;
while I fetch my solderin'-iron. Don't&#13;
shift, or there'll be a flood."&#13;
An hour went by, but the plumber&#13;
had not returned. Then the butler&#13;
called a servant who was passing, and&#13;
told him to fetch him up. She found&#13;
him enjoying lunch in the kitchen.&#13;
"The butler wants to know when&#13;
you're going to release him," she said.&#13;
"Go an' tell the fool" to shift his&#13;
thumb. I turned the water of before&#13;
I started on the job," replied the&#13;
plumber, grinning.&#13;
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that&#13;
Contain Mercury.&#13;
as mercury will surely destroy the&#13;
sense of smell and completely derange&#13;
tbe whole system when"* entering it&#13;
through the mucus surfaces. Such articles&#13;
should never be used except on pre&#13;
scriptions from reputable physicians,&#13;
as the damage they do is ten fold to&#13;
the good you can possibly derive from&#13;
them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured&#13;
by P J Cheney &amp; Co, Toledo.&#13;
0 contains no raercuiy, and is taken&#13;
internally acting directly upon the&#13;
blood and mucus surfaces of tbe&#13;
system. In buying Hall's Catarrh&#13;
Cure be sure you get the renuine. It&#13;
is taken internally and made in Toledo&#13;
Ohio, by F J Cheney &amp; Co., Testimonials&#13;
free. Sold by Druggists&#13;
Price 75c. per bottle. Take Hall's&#13;
Family pills tor constipation&#13;
• • " • -&#13;
A tientle and Effective Laxatire&#13;
A mild, gentle and effective laxative&#13;
it what people demand when suffering&#13;
from constipation. Thousands swear ¾Dr. King's New Life Pills. Hngh&#13;
llmao, of San Antonio, Tex. writes:&#13;
"They are, beyong question, tbe best&#13;
pills my wife and 1 have over taken."&#13;
They M?er cause pain. Price 26o.&#13;
Recommended by 0. G. Meyer, the&#13;
draggist&#13;
South Marion&#13;
Miss A. Z. Docking visited&#13;
friends and relatives- in Flint last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Gibson and Mrs.&#13;
L. Newman of Fowlerville spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday with I. J.&#13;
Abbott and family.&#13;
Geo. Younglove visited relatives&#13;
in Detroit last week.&#13;
Mrs. Nina Gardner of Plaiufield&#13;
spent Wednesday at the home of&#13;
Geo. Yonuglove.&#13;
Mrs. R. M. Glenn and little&#13;
grandson visited her sister at&#13;
Waterloo Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. I. J. Abbott and Mrs. Gay&#13;
Blair were Howell visitors Monday.&#13;
»&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Bland visited her&#13;
mother, Mrs. Bash of Plain field, a&#13;
few days last week. /&#13;
John Bane and family of Whitmore&#13;
Lake "are visiting at the&#13;
home of F. Reason. .&#13;
Happiness Made Up of Little Things.&#13;
It Is no new discovery that a&#13;
woman's happiness is often the sum&#13;
total of little things. A word, a look,&#13;
a gesture, goes to the making or marring&#13;
of the entire day. A single buzzing&#13;
mosquito may create a sleepless&#13;
night. A solitaray flower may bring&#13;
a message of delight.&#13;
The largeness or the littleness of&#13;
spiritual things cannot be measured&#13;
with a foot rule, and something of the&#13;
smallest consequence to UB because&#13;
!t is not our own concern may be tremendous&#13;
to another. To a bird that&#13;
builds its nest a string is as much ae&#13;
a hawser to a sailor. . Her doll is at&#13;
big to the comforting arms of Saman*&#13;
tha Jane upon the doorstep as&#13;
Samantha Jane herself is to the lap&#13;
of her own mother. An ant toils&#13;
bravely with an egg thrice its size;&#13;
it is as though you or I were dealing&#13;
with a piano or . sideboard singlehanded.&#13;
What is little and what is&#13;
large? It is sometimes very hard to&#13;
say. Much depends upon the sizes of&#13;
our own bodies, and still more upon&#13;
the dimensions of our souls! It Is&#13;
the little things that tell, because&#13;
very often they are not so little as&#13;
we think. The man or woman who Is&#13;
careful of tha llttje things is pre&amp;y&#13;
likely to be right on the bigger&#13;
things.&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN, the Frobate Court for&#13;
the County of Livingston,&#13;
At a session of said court held at tbe Probate&#13;
Office in the Village of Howell in said County, on&#13;
the 4th day of October, A. D. 1913.&#13;
Present, Hon, ifiugene A. Stowe, Judge ol&#13;
Probate, -In the matter of the estate ol&#13;
MARY J. FARLEY, Dtceased&#13;
John McKernau having filed in said court hie&#13;
annual a'count as executor of eaid &lt;Btate and his&#13;
petition praying for tie allowance thereof.&#13;
It is Ordered, That the 80th day of October,&#13;
A. D. 1913, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at said&#13;
Lncilel. Weatby,&#13;
Complainant,&#13;
vs.&#13;
Edward A. Westby,&#13;
Defendant.&#13;
probate office, be and is hereby appointed for&#13;
hearing eaid 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 ol&#13;
hearing in the Pinckney DISPATCH a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated in said county. 4lt3 /&#13;
EUGENE A. STOWE&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN&#13;
Thirty-fifth Judical Circuit in Chancery&#13;
Suit pending in&#13;
the Circuit Court&#13;
for the County of&#13;
i Livingston- in chanf&#13;
ery at Howell on&#13;
the eighteenth day&#13;
of September, A. D.&#13;
J 1913.&#13;
In this cante, it appearing from affidavit on&#13;
file that the defendant; Edward A, Westby, fa not&#13;
a resident of this state but is a resident of the&#13;
city of Missoula, »tate of Montana and that his&#13;
post office address Is Missoula, Montana,&#13;
it^ On motion of Arthur K. Cole, solicitor for com-.&#13;
plainant.it bordered that the appearance-of Bald&#13;
non-resident, defendant, Edward A. Westby, be/&#13;
entered therein within four months from the date&#13;
of this order and in case of hie. appearance he&#13;
reuse his answer to the bill of tompTafht to be&#13;
filed and a copy thereof to be served within fifteen&#13;
days after service on him or his solioltor of a&#13;
copy of said bill, and In defan t thereof that said&#13;
bill be taken as confessed by the sard defendant,&#13;
Edward A. Westby.&#13;
And it is further ordered that the said com-&#13;
Advertise&#13;
r IT YOU&#13;
Want a Cook&#13;
Want a Clerk&#13;
Want a Partner&#13;
Want a Situation&#13;
Want a Servant Girl&#13;
Want to Sell a Piano&#13;
Want to Sell a Carriage&#13;
Want to Sell Town Property&#13;
Want to Sell Tour Groceries&#13;
Want to Sell Yonr Hardware&#13;
Want Customers for Anything&#13;
Advertise Weekly in This Paper.&#13;
Advertising Is the Way to Socceaa&#13;
Advertising Brings Customer*&#13;
Advertising Keep* Cuslomera&#13;
A d v e r t i n g Jbsnsire* Snccesa&#13;
Advertising: Skowe Energy&#13;
Advertising Shows Pluck&#13;
Advertising la "Biz"&#13;
A d v e r t i s e or Bant&#13;
A d v e r t i s e Long&#13;
Advertise Well&#13;
ADVERTISE&#13;
•At O n e *&#13;
plainant carse this order to be published in tbe&#13;
Hnckuey Dispatch, a newspaper printed, publish&#13;
ed and circulating In Mid county ana that such'&#13;
Mrs. E. W. Martin is visiting&#13;
friends and relatives in North&#13;
Hamburg.&#13;
Pay your subscription this aoattv&#13;
publication be ooam eooed witbln twenty days&#13;
from the date of this order and that nic'i publication&#13;
be or ntinutd tfu rein onde tn eacii week lor&#13;
six weeks in saccetelon or that tbe said complainant&#13;
cause a copy of this ord«r to be personally&#13;
served on the said defendant, Edward / . Westbv,&#13;
at least twenty days before the ti e above pre&#13;
scribed for his sppearan e.&#13;
Beldan.8. Miner, Circuit Judge&#13;
Examined, countersigned, and entered by me,&#13;
Clark H. Miner, Register&#13;
Arthur S. Cole. Complainant's Solioltor,&#13;
4018 Business Address, PewlerriUt, Michl&#13;
Grind Trunk Tlmt TabU&#13;
For tb* con?enitnoe of our readers&#13;
Train* East Traina West&#13;
No. 28—8:39 a. m. No. 27—10:23 a, m.&#13;
No. 30—4:49 p. m. No. 29—7:12 p. m.&#13;
KILLTHI C O U G H&#13;
ANDCURKTHtUINCS!&#13;
kss» MAUTHAOAT,&#13;
BO*a*L0O&#13;
GUA#A#TM£D SATrSTACrOA&#13;
OB MON£Y #sru/*0*D&gt;&#13;
PROCURED AMD D r r * « M 0 . " f ^ " 8 &gt;lnn7ine©rpli&lt;,' i.'.jrov" mTUttiulviot rooo*r*t Ftvo advice, h;:&gt;/ *o • "on.•••• • awnta, tnvto tnsraa,&#13;
copyrights, etc., ; N .4t '-OUNTfUtS. .&#13;
Buxtiifss dir,.t itxth 1. i.sIiiMffM.1 savtt timtA&#13;
money and often th« pa^nt.&#13;
fttmt and InWifsnwrt PnctJos Eaciwlvtly,&#13;
Write or eome to oa at&#13;
•U Snttk asms. ops. faH* stasis rates*&#13;
WASHINGTON.©, C. A-SNOW&#13;
»&gt;.&#13;
i&#13;
.-8.&#13;
r '•&gt;'•&#13;
•••• -&gt;-A&#13;
m^»&#13;
••%&#13;
\ ; .jr, ' ^ , . •*&#13;
. : : • • • • " • $ $ ? ' • ;&#13;
.*•*&#13;
#x:*i&#13;
:i*&lt;&#13;
}%&#13;
Tor relief from rheumatic paJfta&#13;
Br. Miles* Anti-Fain Pilla, Be&#13;
noocBessly. C Advert hiaaiantl</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch October 09, 1913</text>
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                <text>October 09, 1913 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1913-10-09</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, Livingston County, Michigan, Thursday, October 16, 1913 No. 42&#13;
- 0&#13;
i&#13;
^ • s -&#13;
It''*. •-*&#13;
^ ^ The Fowlerville Fair&#13;
The crowd of spectators at the&#13;
Fowlerville World's Fair was vieably&#13;
increased in size by a vast&#13;
number of Pinckney people interdsted&#13;
in the various phases put&#13;
forth for attraction by the Fair&#13;
committee. Even the grouchy&#13;
weather man did his part for the&#13;
J'air this year by predicting such&#13;
^delightfully bright days, giving&#13;
the ladies in attendance full&#13;
chance to show their new fail hats&#13;
and frocks without endangering&#13;
the.beauty of the same by rain.&#13;
The floral halls contained many&#13;
au exquisite piece of embroidery&#13;
and hand-painted china aud pictures.&#13;
The men were allowed to&#13;
show the fruit of their summer's&#13;
toil in the vegetable lines aud&#13;
certainly the exhibit did full justice&#13;
to the privilege.&#13;
,. Sftll Dunning from Pinckney&#13;
took first prize on his Peroheron&#13;
stallion and second prize on Belgian&#13;
stallion. Both horses are&#13;
beautiful specimens of their breed.&#13;
The up-to-date farmer of today&#13;
is alive to the fact that money invested&#13;
in labor-saving machinery&#13;
is a benefit not only to himself&#13;
and wife but to the products of&#13;
the farm as well. The workings&#13;
of machinery of this kind was&#13;
demonstrated on the Fair grounds.&#13;
The automobile, the coming meaii3&#13;
of transporation of the day, was&#13;
also there. Every man of course&#13;
shouted the merits of his own car&#13;
but Norm Reason's voice soared&#13;
above all the rest in his demonstration&#13;
of the Carter-car.&#13;
Great interest was manifested&#13;
in the ball games this year as usual.&#13;
A purse of $200. was put up&#13;
for the various teams. The Pinckney&#13;
ball team was defeated by&#13;
the Howell boys, Wednesday&#13;
by a score of 4-2, Stockbridge&#13;
won from Williamston, Thursday&#13;
to the tune of 6-1. On Friday the&#13;
two winning teams were pitted&#13;
against each other and after a hard&#13;
and well fought battle, Stockbridge&#13;
won over Howell by a score of 7-6.&#13;
The fair closed Friday night&#13;
and has proven to be one of the&#13;
most successful in a number of&#13;
years.&#13;
Auto Turned Turtle&#13;
A narrow place in the road just&#13;
is side of Stockbridge was the&#13;
scene of an untimely accident last&#13;
Sunday afternoon. The auto owned&#13;
by £ ? E. Frost of Putnam&#13;
township and containing as passengers,^&#13;
E. E. Frost and wife,&#13;
Fred Grieves, wife and daughter&#13;
Isabelle, in trying to pass the&#13;
Grieves car owned by Fred Grieves&#13;
of Stockbridge and containing as&#13;
passengers, Harold and Grace&#13;
Grieves and Rath Frost, turned&#13;
t u r t l e , spilling a frightened&#13;
bunch of men and women unceremoniously&#13;
to Mother Earth.&#13;
In the general confusion resulting&#13;
from the accident, ail were found&#13;
suffering from bad' braises. &gt;f rs.&#13;
Fred Grieves was the most seriously&#13;
injured of any of the crowd,&#13;
sustaining a broken collar bone&#13;
and several broken ribs. The&#13;
greatest wonder is, that no one&#13;
was killed. Such accidents are&#13;
not common.&#13;
• E. E. Hoyt transacted business&#13;
in Jackson Tuesday.&#13;
• • * . • Floris Moran of Grand Eapida&#13;
spent Tuesday with his mother&#13;
here.&#13;
*M». Jas. Markey of Port Huron&#13;
is visiting at the home of F,&#13;
Reason.&#13;
Local News&#13;
Miss Norma Vaughn is visiting&#13;
relatives in Jacksou.&#13;
Mrs. George Sigler is visiting&#13;
relatives in Lansing.&#13;
Kichard Jeffreys spent Sunday&#13;
with Dexter friends.&#13;
Mrs Guy Teeple spent Thursday&#13;
and Friday in Detroit.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Leoffler spent Sunday&#13;
witE relatives in Ann Arbor.&#13;
Ella Blair of Fowlerville spent&#13;
the week end with friends in this&#13;
vicinity.&#13;
Chas, Manska and wife are&#13;
spending a few days with relatiyes&#13;
at Armada.&#13;
Miss Viola Peters of Jackson&#13;
was aa over Sunday guest of&#13;
friends here.&#13;
* Mrs. Ray Kennedy of Detroit&#13;
is a guest at the home of Wm-&#13;
Keunedy Sr.&#13;
Jas. Green and wife of Lansing&#13;
were over Sunday guests at the&#13;
home of W. A. Carr.&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Garner&#13;
Carpenter, Sunday, October 12, a&#13;
14 pound daughter.&#13;
Mrs. W. H. Place way spent&#13;
several clays last week with Howell&#13;
friends and relatives.&#13;
Dale Darrow and family and&#13;
Clyde Darrow of Allegan are visiting&#13;
at the home of W. B. Darrow.&#13;
Mrs. Jennie Farnum and granddaughter&#13;
Katherine Fitzpatrick of&#13;
Detroit are spending several days&#13;
with relatives here.&#13;
Miss Helen Dolan who has been&#13;
spending some time with relatives&#13;
in Cleveland returned home Tuesday&#13;
night.&#13;
Mrs. John Chambers Sr. entertained&#13;
her brother and wife, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. John Brown of Marion,&#13;
Iowa and sister, Mrs. Mary Warner&#13;
of Sac City, Iowa, last week.&#13;
Rev. Lincoln Ostrander of Flint&#13;
occupied the pulpit Sunday in the&#13;
Cong'l. church, preaching very&#13;
helpful sermons to an appreciate&#13;
audience. Those failing to be&#13;
there missed a rare treat.&#13;
Fdward Van Horn, familiarly&#13;
known as "Eddie," son of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. John Van Horn of this place&#13;
lies critically ill at his home, having&#13;
undergone a serious operation&#13;
Monday morning. He is generally&#13;
well liked and all his friends&#13;
ara yery anxious for his quick&#13;
recovery.&#13;
Hon. G. W. Teeple gave a very&#13;
interesting talk to the pupils of&#13;
the high school last week Tuesday&#13;
morning. In conclusion, he gave&#13;
the students a problem, promising&#13;
a reward to the first one to leave&#13;
*&#13;
a correct soluction of the same at&#13;
the Bank. The reward was won&#13;
by Herman Vedder of the Sophomore&#13;
Class.&#13;
The owners of the Tidings, a&#13;
two by twice sheet printed at their&#13;
expense for advertising their goods&#13;
,in Howell, have apparently been&#13;
prodding the aged and senile fossil&#13;
who for the past few months has&#13;
been living on their money and&#13;
whom they charitably call their&#13;
editor. One result of the goading&#13;
process shows a better front&#13;
page, for instead of a few stickfulls&#13;
of what he has been trying to&#13;
convince bis owners was "verse"&#13;
they nojw print the local church&#13;
news in the Friday issue, thus&#13;
giving the proprietors something&#13;
worth while to read. This is the&#13;
first display of newspaper ability&#13;
that the leaflet has exhibited since&#13;
tbey bad a real editor.&#13;
Harry Leavey visited relatives&#13;
in Jackson Sunday.&#13;
Sarah Ledwidge of Dexter visited&#13;
friends here Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schrotzberger&#13;
are visiting relatives in Detroit.&#13;
Nellie Donohue of near Gregory&#13;
spent Sunday at C. Lynch's.&#13;
B. Fitch and family of Pontiac&#13;
are visiting at the home of B. M.&#13;
Hicks.&#13;
Geo. H. Stocken of Durand&#13;
spent the past week at the home&#13;
of Jas. Fitoh.&#13;
Geo. Green and Arthur and Ed.&#13;
Garland were Pinckney visitors&#13;
Tuesday at'teruoou.&#13;
B. M. Hicks and wife were entertained&#13;
at the home of Gregory&#13;
Devereaux and wife Sunday.&#13;
H. A. Ayers and family of Detroit&#13;
spent Saturday and Sunday&#13;
at the home of Mrs- S. C. Nash.&#13;
Helen and Phylis McClear of&#13;
Gregory spent the first of the&#13;
week with their grandparents, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. M. Dolan.&#13;
James Jeffreys has rented the&#13;
house formerly occupied by Jas.&#13;
Docking on the Dexter road aud&#13;
is moving thereto this week.&#13;
Ladies — Don't pay the city&#13;
prices on your fall coats. See&#13;
Dancer's big showing of Printzess&#13;
garments. $10. to $25. adv.&#13;
Tuesday evening, October 14,&#13;
The Raweis, native New Zealanders,&#13;
presented the first number on&#13;
the Pinckney Lecture Course. If&#13;
their delightful entertainment is a&#13;
sample of those yet to come,&#13;
people not now holding lecture&#13;
course tickets are missing an intellectual&#13;
feast such as is seldom&#13;
offeredyin towns of this size. Space&#13;
will not permit a lengthy description&#13;
of the entertainment witnessed&#13;
Tuesday evening, but one and&#13;
all were fascinated with the musical&#13;
voices, charming manners,&#13;
unique pictures and picturesque&#13;
discriptions given by the Raweis.&#13;
Tickets for the remainder of the&#13;
course may be obtaiued for $1.00&#13;
at Meyer's drug store.&#13;
George W. Crofoot&#13;
George W. Crofoot was born&#13;
in Pavilion, Genesse county, N.&#13;
X , March 21, 1834 and died at&#13;
the home of his son iu the village&#13;
of Pinckney, October 10, \\m.&#13;
He came to Pinckeny in the&#13;
fall of 1852 and taught in village.&#13;
school during the winter of 1851-3.&#13;
October 8, 1855, he was united in&#13;
marriage to EHza A., daughter of&#13;
Freeman and Sophia Webb. To&#13;
this union were born three children,&#13;
H. W. of Pinckney and Wirt&#13;
W. of San Antonio, Texas, Little&#13;
Carrie died in infancy.&#13;
Mr. Crofoot was actively identified&#13;
with the business interests of&#13;
this community for many years,&#13;
both as a merchant -and farmer.,&#13;
He held several positions of trust,&#13;
having been supervisor for a number&#13;
of years, a representative in&#13;
the legislature in 1870-71 aud was&#13;
Probate Judge of this county from&#13;
1880 to 1884. He was thoroughly&#13;
progressive in every sense of the&#13;
word.&#13;
He leaves a deyoted wife, two&#13;
sons and a large circle of friends&#13;
to mourn their loss.&#13;
Funeral services were held at&#13;
the house Monday afternoon, Rev.&#13;
A. G. Gates of Rochester, officiating.&#13;
Interment in the Pinckney&#13;
cemetery.&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
FOR SALE—A mare and colt. Inquire&#13;
of Harrv Storey, Oexttr Mich.&#13;
Phone No. 784. " 42t3*&#13;
KCXi SALE — Larcje Fine Wool&#13;
Rams. 42t3*&#13;
J. ,). Donohue, Gregory&#13;
FOR SALE—Holstein beifer, also sow&#13;
with nine pigs, 40t3*&#13;
J. A. Treadway, Pinckney&#13;
FOR S A LE--Thorough bred HoUtein&#13;
Uull, seven months old, also 1400 lb.&#13;
horse, sound and right. 40t3*&#13;
U. M. Greiner, Pinckney&#13;
FOR SALE—Art Laurel base burner&#13;
coal stove, A bargain for someone.&#13;
41t3 Robt. Kelley, Pinckney.&#13;
FOR SALE — Chestnut mare, 9&#13;
months old, weight about 1,300&#13;
pounds. Also 10 Delaine Rams.&#13;
F. A. Rarton, Pinckney 42t3*&#13;
FOR SALE—Six Blacktop Rams, extra&#13;
good ones; will be sold reasonable.&#13;
Also 4 year old mare, broke&#13;
single and double; good worker.&#13;
Mutual phone. 42t*&#13;
Also a second-hand wood heating&#13;
stove for sale cheap.&#13;
John T. Chambers, Pinckney&#13;
Card of Thanks&#13;
We wish to thank our friends&#13;
and neighbors for their kindness&#13;
and sympathy during the sickness&#13;
and death of our husband and&#13;
father.&#13;
Mrs. G. W. Crofoot&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Crofoot&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Crofoot.&#13;
FARM FOR SALE—166 Acres in&#13;
• section 27, Dexter Township, 2\ mites&#13;
northwest ot Dexter village, known&#13;
as the Livey (arm. Good buildings,&#13;
well lenced and the best ot land.&#13;
Must be sold to close the estate of&#13;
the lat3 Mrs. C. Gallagher. Inquire&#13;
of Dr. R. B. Honey or John Gallagher,&#13;
Dexter Mich.&#13;
Mrs. H. Jones is visiting at the&#13;
home of her sister, Mrs. 8. Blunt.&#13;
Don't forget the chicken pie&#13;
supper and novelty sale given by&#13;
the ladies of the Cong'l. cnurch in&#13;
their hall in the Cadwell blocki&#13;
Friday and Saturday, October 17-&#13;
18.&#13;
J. M. PHILLIPS'&#13;
BUSINESS CONTINUED&#13;
The undertaking business formerly&#13;
conducted by the late James M,&#13;
Phil'ips at South Lyon will hereafter&#13;
be carried on under the personal&#13;
direction of Mr. H. L. Richardson, Mr.&#13;
Phillips' able assistant in whom he&#13;
reposed his ^reatt st confidence, and&#13;
myself.&#13;
Mrs. J. M. Phillips, South Lyon&#13;
Special communication of Livingston&#13;
Lodge, No. 76, F. &amp; A. M.&#13;
will be held Tuesday evening Oct.&#13;
21. Work in M. M. degree. A&#13;
large attendance is desired.&#13;
J. R. Martin, W. M.&#13;
Murphy &amp; Jackson |&#13;
Stapled Fancy Groceries, Dry Goods, Shoes s*&gt; Furnishings&#13;
Largest Stock Lowest Prices&#13;
POR FALL&#13;
We are showing large lines of Underwear, Mackinaw&#13;
Coats, Sweaters, Blankets, Comfortables, Hosiery, Gloves&#13;
and Mitts&#13;
IN FALL FOOTWEAR&#13;
We carry the celebrated Mishttwaka and Lambertville&#13;
Rubbers for Men and Boys, also a complete line of Mens,&#13;
Ladies, Misses and Chiidrens Arctics and Light Rubbers&#13;
OUR S A T U R D A Y S P E C I A L S&#13;
100 dozen Canvas Gloves, 15c values, heavy duck,&#13;
the blue knit wrist, For Saturday Only, per pair 10c&#13;
2 5 lbs. H. &amp; B. Sugar - $1.21&#13;
5 0 c Wedding Bell Tea&#13;
Lonsdale Sheeting, per yard&#13;
m&#13;
#&#13;
# I&#13;
. 3&#13;
y.r v&#13;
':V!'*W- **£!ll^ ,^*X- , **.'*u' . ..I,.*/.,&#13;
^&#13;
%&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
+~mm ThcMUGHTERof&#13;
DAVID KERR&#13;
h% Harpr RiijJ Tootle&#13;
llhis£vations W /t&lt;&lt;/ ipAtftn*&#13;
COPYRICMT DY A.CM^CUJftC 6*C0*« 1*1*&#13;
8YNOP8I8.&#13;
Gloria Kerr, a motherless girl, who has&#13;
e p i n t most of her life In school, arrives&#13;
at lier father' s homo In Belmont. David&#13;
K f i r la the political boss of tj\e town,&#13;
ami Is anxious to prevent his d a u g h t e r&#13;
learning of his real character. Kendall,&#13;
ivpivsi-ntinji Uie Chicago packers, lb ne-&#13;
KotlatinK with JmlKf Gilbert. K e r r ' s chief&#13;
advl-scr, for a valuable franchise. Theyfear&#13;
the opposition of Joe Wright, editor&#13;
of the reform paper. Kerr asks the assistance&#13;
of JiulKe Gilbert In Introducing&#13;
Gloria to Belmont society, and promises&#13;
to help him put through the p a c k e r s '&#13;
franchise and hit him have all the graft.&#13;
Gloria meets Joe Wright at the Gilberts.&#13;
It appears they are on Intimate terms,&#13;
having met previously In a touring . p a r t y&#13;
in Europe. Gloria twits Wright, on hlB&#13;
failure to keep an engagement, to meet&#13;
her in Paris. He explains t h a t the d e a t h&#13;
of his mother prevented his going to&#13;
P a j in.&#13;
CHAPTER VI.—Continued.&#13;
Gilbert was glad that bis wife entered&#13;
at this minute, for a discussion&#13;
of Gloria's social future probably&#13;
would not bring out all sides to the&#13;
question without a woman being, a&#13;
party to the conversation.&#13;
"I, just have To taik to some one,"&#13;
Mrs. Gilbert confessed Immediately,&#13;
"and I didn't have the heart to gd&#13;
Into the library. I peeped in Just now&#13;
and they were sitting in front of the&#13;
lire laughing and talking and appearing&#13;
to be having the best time In the&#13;
world. I don't know why, but it made&#13;
me think of the times when you used&#13;
to come to see me, Amos."&#13;
Husband and wife smiled at each&#13;
other, and he said:&#13;
"You were a beautiful girl, Julia,"&#13;
"I'll tell you what," Mrs. Gilbert&#13;
went on, conscious of the compliment&#13;
but not desirouB of herself making a&#13;
comparison. "Gloria is a beautiful girl,&#13;
and what Is tnore, I can see that she&#13;
has a beautiful character. I'm so sorry&#13;
she has been away so long."&#13;
"What could I do, ma'am?" asked&#13;
Kerr. "I couldn't take care of her at&#13;
Locust Lawn."&#13;
Locust Lawn had been In Gilbert's&#13;
mind all the time, and he had waited&#13;
only to sound his wife before speaking.&#13;
Her enthusiasm was such, as evidenced&#13;
in what she had just said, that&#13;
he thought now was the proper time to&#13;
broach the subject.&#13;
"There's only one thing to do, Mr.&#13;
Kerr," he said. "Gloria must come in&#13;
and stay with us. Locust Lawn is all&#13;
right as a home for you, but as it&#13;
stands it is no place for a young lady&#13;
in society; especially, since you want&#13;
me to be plain spoken, no place for a&#13;
young lady who has had such advantages&#13;
as your daughter."&#13;
"Exactly, exactly," asserted Kerr.&#13;
He had seen that, and It had been one&#13;
of the thorns in his flesh all day.&#13;
Mrs. Gilbert was quick to see that&#13;
It. was the only .thing to be done. She&#13;
had become as much interested in&#13;
Gloria as had her husband, and now&#13;
she added her own invitation to his.&#13;
"The judge has expressed my own&#13;
ideas exactly," Bhe said. "Mr. Kerr,&#13;
*Vr*««&#13;
"Make the Invitation for a Month.1*&#13;
you must let her come to us. We have&#13;
fallen in love with her already,"*&#13;
"Have you, ma'am?" Kerr asked.&#13;
"Then I'm awfully glad."&#13;
"Make the Invitation for a month,"&#13;
Gilbert directed, "and then we can ask&#13;
her to stay on."&#13;
"I'll do nothing of the kind," said&#13;
his wife airily, as she started on what&#13;
was to her a pleasant errand; "111 ask&#13;
her for the rest of her natural life,&#13;
and if she wants to stay that long&#13;
•he's Welcome."&#13;
) &gt;v CHAPTER VH.&#13;
rying with her magazines containing&#13;
pictures and descriptions of beautiful&#13;
homes. When the plans for the alterations&#13;
were finally approved, David&#13;
Kerr learned with a sigh of relief that&#13;
the changes could be made without&#13;
driving him from the shelter of his&#13;
own roof.&#13;
At the same time Gloria was planning&#13;
for the changes In the country&#13;
place she and Mrs. Gilbert were also&#13;
busy preparing for the ball which&#13;
would serve as her formal Introduction&#13;
to Beimont society. Her time waa so&#13;
engaged that she thought the suggestion&#13;
of her hostess ah excellent one&#13;
when Mrs. Gilbert said that it might&#13;
be better not to become tangled up&#13;
with too many social engagements at&#13;
a time when it was more vttai to see&#13;
that the Locust Lawn alterations were&#13;
properly under way. The girl was&#13;
aware, from what she had heard her&#13;
father and others say, that things&#13;
were dull -at present, and she did not&#13;
wish to spur them into a premature&#13;
activity. When the ball was given for&#13;
her it would be time enough to begin.&#13;
Mrs. Gilbert was not letting things&#13;
drift, although the daughter of David&#13;
Kerr waa hot aware of it Elvery one&#13;
In Beimont knew what Gk&gt;ra did not:&#13;
That she was about to make a great&#13;
effort to secure fecdgnitiOri. Belmont&#13;
WaB not in a receptive mood. Its first&#13;
thought was that she was the child of&#13;
a shrewd political trickster who had&#13;
fattened at the expense of the t6wn.&#13;
The Offspring of the' leopard should&#13;
not hope to be without spots.&#13;
Mrs. Gilbert was clever enough to&#13;
have girls to luncheon whom she&#13;
thought might become Interested In&#13;
Gloria, They came, and in the majority&#13;
of cases surprised Gloria by their&#13;
charming manners and their beautiful&#13;
clothes. Her court was to be even&#13;
more brilliant than she had dreamed.&#13;
The girls were invited one at a time,&#13;
to give both Gloria and the visitor&#13;
the opportunity Of becoming well acquainted.&#13;
The luncheon guests came to call&#13;
afterward, but by a strange mischance&#13;
It was always when Gloria was not at&#13;
home. She would go to the architect's&#13;
office with Mrs. Gilbert, and would&#13;
find on her return that several cards&#13;
had been left for her. The ball was so&#13;
near that she made no attempt to pay&#13;
any calls herself. She was too busy.&#13;
Although railing at the fate which&#13;
took him away most of the time, the&#13;
first three weeks after Gloria's removal&#13;
to town were spent by Judge&#13;
Gilbert In Chicago. Occasionally he&#13;
ran over for a day, but even then bis&#13;
wife and their guest saw little of hi iff.&#13;
This would have made their evenings&#13;
hang heavy on their handB had it not&#13;
been for JOe Wright. He got Into the&#13;
habit of dropping in after dinner overy&#13;
evening and several times a week Mrs.&#13;
Gilbert had him to dine with them.&#13;
Late In the afternoons he and. Gloria&#13;
often drove together, the season of&#13;
the year keeping them most of the&#13;
time on the city streets. Once he&#13;
drove with her to Locust Lawn, but&#13;
as it was late when they reached there&#13;
he did not get out, sitting in the runabout&#13;
while Gloria ran into the house&#13;
for a few minutes.&#13;
Neither Wright nor Gloria ever made&#13;
an effort to direct the conversation&#13;
into the Intimate channel it had taken&#13;
the night they first had met in Belmont&#13;
One might almost have thought&#13;
they had agreed to consider themselves&#13;
merely good friends, so impersonal&#13;
were they in what they said.&#13;
For this there was a reason; rather,&#13;
there were two reasons, his and hers.&#13;
Wright was keeping a firm grip on&#13;
himself because he knew the truth and&#13;
was afraid. Gloria was self-possessed&#13;
and would not have permitted him to&#13;
pass the border of friendship, had he&#13;
dared, because she wished to know&#13;
Belmont well. Even a hint of an entangling&#13;
alliance would prove a hindrance.&#13;
Thus it was that each was&#13;
happy in the other's company. And If&#13;
perchance they looked the sentiment&#13;
that each had Inwardly resolved not to&#13;
breathe, they were happier still in the&#13;
thought that some day their dreams&#13;
would come true.&#13;
The paper waa occasioning Wright&#13;
no great anxiety. Somewhat to his&#13;
surprise the advertising revenue was&#13;
showing most gratifying gains caused&#13;
by the increase of local business. The&#13;
Banner had more advertising, but the&#13;
new owner Of the afternoon paper had&#13;
no cause to complain. Even his advertising&#13;
menajer could not explain it&#13;
Main street aewhsmti who had been&#13;
out of the paper for years began to&#13;
send in fibpjf wTthont solicitation&#13;
This made the head of the advertising&#13;
Dave Kerr had sent out the tip for&#13;
them to throw some of their patronage&#13;
to the News.&#13;
This was a shrewd move on the part&#13;
of Kerr. He wanted Wright to have&#13;
such a volume of business that if he&#13;
should order all the advertising he&#13;
could Influence cut off, the paper would&#13;
be instantly crippled. If the News&#13;
had not much business, then anything&#13;
Kerr might cause to be dropped out&#13;
would only show that his power was&#13;
slight If he had to strike a blow he&#13;
wanted it tp be with a sledge hammer.&#13;
Another important consideration&#13;
which led him to take this step was&#13;
that the merchants might believe, and&#13;
he tipped it off in a manner which&#13;
would be most apt to make them jump&#13;
to that conclusion, that he was himself&#13;
Interested In the News. This would&#13;
tend tb minimize Wright's influence if&#13;
he should attempt a crusade, since the&#13;
public would wink and say: "It's all a&#13;
bluff, old man Kerr himself is interested&#13;
in the paper." The boss even&#13;
calculated that this would be strengthened&#13;
by the frequency with which&#13;
Wright was Been in his daughter's&#13;
company. He was not looking for&#13;
trouble, he never welcomed it, but he&#13;
sought always to be prepared when it&#13;
came.&#13;
During her first weeks At Mrs. Gilbert's&#13;
Gloria saw little of her father.&#13;
She had at first frequently dropped In&#13;
at his office, but he had intimated that&#13;
It was no place for her. Sometimes she&#13;
would be at Locust Lawn when Tom&#13;
brought him home in the afternoon.&#13;
When Judge Gilbert was home from&#13;
Chicago once he dined with them.&#13;
Every day, however, she talked to him&#13;
for some time over the telephone. He&#13;
always seemed interested, apologized&#13;
for not Seeing her more, and let her&#13;
rattle on untii she had quite exhausted&#13;
the news of the day. Occasionally he&#13;
complained tb her of his rheumatism&#13;
—no otie had ever heard him speak of&#13;
it before—-and she would beg him to&#13;
take good care Of himself, since it waB&#13;
with him that she wished to dance&#13;
first at her ball.&#13;
There was one girl whom Mrs. Gilbert&#13;
sought as a friend for Gloria. She&#13;
mentioned It to her husband the first&#13;
day their guest arrived, and he suggested&#13;
that she be invited to lunch the&#13;
next day. Accordingly Mrs. Gilbert&#13;
telephoned Miss Laura Piper and&#13;
asked her. For the following day.&#13;
however, Miss Piper had an engagement.&#13;
When Beveral other days were&#13;
mentioned she had engagements for&#13;
those also. Could she have been made&#13;
to accept Gloria, the task of conquering&#13;
Belmont would Instantly become&#13;
less arduous. Her father was head of&#13;
the great Piper Mining company, and&#13;
her family was looked upon as one of&#13;
the most exclusive in the whole state.&#13;
If Laura Piper would, she could make&#13;
It extremely pleasant for Gloria. But&#13;
Laura Piper had her own way and her&#13;
family's ideas about the Kerr breed,&#13;
and no matter how nice Gloria might&#13;
be, she was still her father's daughter.&#13;
Mrs. Gilbert reported her lack of&#13;
success to her husband on his return&#13;
from his first trip to Chicago, and he&#13;
mentioned'it, almost casually, to David&#13;
Kerr when they met the next day.&#13;
The bOBS inquired the particulars, but&#13;
made no comment. That he*was not&#13;
unmindful of the episode developed&#13;
two days later when the Piper Coal&#13;
company received a complaint from&#13;
the secretary of the school board that&#13;
there was an undue quantity of slate&#13;
In the last coal furnished the public&#13;
schools. While worrying with this, the&#13;
company's legal department sent word&#13;
to the president that the city solicitor&#13;
had just notified the company that one&#13;
of the Important spurs into an uptown&#13;
coal yard crossed a street without authority&#13;
of law.&#13;
Old man Piper swore by all the gods&#13;
in mythology that it was the worst&#13;
outrage ever perpetrated upon him In&#13;
all his business life. He had but a day&#13;
or two to catch his breath before Mrs.&#13;
Gilbert telephoned at the dinner hour&#13;
asking Laura to luncheon the next day.&#13;
The whole thing dawned on him when&#13;
Laura flounced back from the telephone&#13;
and announced petulantly that&#13;
she would not meet that odious Gloria&#13;
Kerr. He said nothing until after dinner,&#13;
then calling Laura aside he ordered&#13;
her to telephone Mrs. Gilbert&#13;
and withdraw her refusal. His pocketbook&#13;
having been hit, Piper was willing&#13;
to make some sacrifice to determine&#13;
the reason and what he was to&#13;
expect in the way of further attack.&#13;
He kept his mouth closed, and waited.&#13;
Laura returned from the luncheon&#13;
with a favorable opinion of Gloria, but&#13;
she could not forget her parentage.&#13;
Upon being questioned she told her father&#13;
she did not care to put Gloria on&#13;
her visiting list&#13;
"Suppose rhave some one to visit&#13;
me who asks: *Who is that girl you&#13;
Introduced me to?' complained Lausa.&#13;
'And I'll have to say: 'That's Gloria&#13;
Kerr, the boss' daughter.' Then what&#13;
will the visiting girl thick of Belmont&#13;
society, and what will she think of&#13;
me? I'm sure I wouM be surprised if&#13;
I went ta *lfih anyone and they introducetLJne&#13;
to the son or daughter of a&#13;
man ttke Kerr J* -&#13;
Gloria plunged into the work of ma 'Laura,'*" answered her father, "I&#13;
J h , o f t r t ^ u s t f ' l i f c w i i * ^ M t»tm*ttjt^ * j £ r , ^ ^ ¾ . ^ **"&#13;
&amp;*%»* IdeJT w ^ * e r usttaWfejisk 3»V atjut 0 ¾ ¾ ¾ * # * « % * * * * * '&lt;*£ «"#ft oflnonth&lt;&gt; - |&#13;
S g ^ A c c o T p a n i S by Mr*. Gilbert, e S p a T t o svsry © 3 s&amp;ept th/mer. And twt&gt; days later Leurir Vent, aft.&#13;
eh* haunted the architect's office, OAT- ' chant* receiving the message, waa that er having called when Gloria waa not&#13;
at home. She never knew why her father&#13;
urged-her to)90. '' .\ \&#13;
Piper felt it would be cheaper to pay&#13;
the expense of a New York trip than&#13;
to have his company stand the continuous&#13;
annoyance by which it could be&#13;
worried, if what he suspected was true.&#13;
When he Inquired about coal for the&#13;
school board the complaint department&#13;
reported that the secretary had&#13;
been mollified but hoped it would not&#13;
happen again. As for the city solicitor,&#13;
the legal department refrained from&#13;
asking anything about the track across&#13;
the street and that official never wrote&#13;
again.&#13;
Old man Piper kept his mouth shut&#13;
but he knew he had been taught a&#13;
lesson.&#13;
Kerr was keeping a sharp eye on&#13;
things, but his hand was suspected&#13;
rather than Been in any move that was&#13;
made. As the time for the ball approached,&#13;
his rheumatism troubled&#13;
him more and more, and upon tin advice&#13;
of Dr. Hayes he decided to go to&#13;
Esmeralda Springs to drink the water.&#13;
Sam Hayes took him down and&#13;
came back with the comforting report&#13;
that he was already better. He was&#13;
not well enough, however, to return&#13;
for the ball.&#13;
The bail given in honor of Mies&#13;
Gloria KerT at the Beimont club by&#13;
Judge and Mrs. Gilbert was a memorable&#13;
affair. The ballroom was crowded,&#13;
and Gloria deserved the praise she&#13;
received from every quarter On her&#13;
beauty, her cleverness, and her lighthearted&#13;
temperament She did not hear&#13;
the expressions of regret that she was&#13;
the daughter of David Kerr. The next&#13;
morning the-Belmont Banner had a&#13;
two-column head over the story, anj3&#13;
The Ballroom Was Crowded.&#13;
gave a long list of names preceded by&#13;
"among those invited were," instead&#13;
of by the usual "among those present&#13;
were." There were a number notable&#13;
by their absence, but there being a&#13;
large crowd present and she being a&#13;
stranger, Gloria did not know this.&#13;
She was too busy with the men to&#13;
think of what girls were present.&#13;
Truth to tell, it was a fairly representative&#13;
assemblage, drawn together&#13;
out of regard for Judge and Mrs. Gilbert&#13;
and also by curiosity to see what&#13;
kind of girl Gloria Kerr was. If the&#13;
president of the Piper Coal company&#13;
had Btopped the poker game at the&#13;
Belmont club the night before to tell&#13;
his experience there would have been&#13;
several young ladies among thooe at&#13;
the ball who did not lend the charm&#13;
of their presence to that occasion.&#13;
When Gloria danced with Wright,&#13;
she searched the line to find a Belmont&#13;
man to compare with him, and&#13;
to her thinking there was not one in&#13;
the same class. As for Wright his&#13;
search was over the night they had&#13;
met again in Belmont&#13;
In their first dance, holding hei&#13;
close as if to shield tier from all the&#13;
world, he called to mind the day at&#13;
Versailles when together they had&#13;
wandered through the gardens. Then&#13;
he had repeated some verses from the&#13;
book he had given her oh her birthday.&#13;
Now as they danced he whimpered:&#13;
^&#13;
"Do you remember&#13;
Spring in the hfns, Beloved,&#13;
On the side of a meadowed slope;&#13;
And love in our hearts, Beloved,&#13;
Love and Spring and Hope."&#13;
"I remember. We were going out&#13;
there again, but you never came back;&#13;
and so I went alone."&#13;
"I wish you had taken our book," he&#13;
said. He always referred to the book&#13;
of verses as being their joint property.&#13;
"It would have told you what I waa not&#13;
there to say."&#13;
Gloria smiled. Never a word had&#13;
been said, but each understood.&#13;
(TO BB CONTINUED.)&#13;
Advance Without an Equal.&#13;
It is 23f years since La Balle built&#13;
and launched the historic Griffin 01&#13;
the hanks of the Niagara- This little&#13;
cockleshell was the first boat to be&#13;
constructed on the Great*' Lakes t&gt;y&#13;
white men, and* the first to navigate&#13;
the inland teas', en Its voyage through&#13;
river and over take. Today fully&#13;
one-third 0t the total tonnage of&#13;
North America 1* contained in tb*&#13;
vessels that ply among the lake pitta.&#13;
A^hem «&#13;
What a pity that so many persons past&#13;
middle age are worried with lame backs,&#13;
aching kidneys, poor eyesight, sick headache?,&#13;
dizziness, graveL jpropsy or distressing&#13;
urinary ills. Kidney weakness&#13;
brings these discomforts in youth or age&#13;
and Is a dangerous thing to neglect, for it&#13;
leads to Blight's disease and urio acid&#13;
poisoning. Doan's Kidney Pills have&#13;
brought new strength to thousands of&#13;
lame backs—have rid thousands of&#13;
annoying urinary trouble.&#13;
Ass I n d i a n * C&#13;
antts* Samuel Baler,&#13;
grocer, 121 W.&#13;
Race fit, Portland,&#13;
In«L, lays:&#13;
"My kidneys and&#13;
bladder were In&#13;
terrible condition.&#13;
My kldneyi acted&#13;
too frequently and&#13;
my back ached&#13;
terribly. Nothing&#13;
helped me until I&#13;
used Doan'e Kidney&#13;
P11H. It didn't&#13;
take them long to&#13;
cure me and I believe&#13;
they saved&#13;
^ my life."&#13;
Get Doaa*s at As* Store. 80c a Box D O A N ' S "WW.*.*&#13;
FOSTEft-MILBURM CO., BUFFALO, N. Y.&#13;
DR. J. D. KELLOQQ'8 ASTHMA Remedy for the prompt relief of&#13;
Asthma and Hay Fever. Ask your&#13;
druggist for It. Write for FREE SAMPuJ&#13;
NORTHROP &amp; LYMAN CO., Ltd, BUFFALO, HX&#13;
Developing any size Roll Film,&#13;
poalpald, 10 cents* DETROIT.&#13;
High Finance.&#13;
"Say, BinkB."&#13;
"What is i t r&#13;
"If you'll loan me $10, I'll pay you&#13;
Ave on that amount I already owe&#13;
you."&#13;
Exception.&#13;
"It is all very well to talk of moderation,&#13;
but did you ever hear of a&#13;
war which could be carried on with&#13;
soft measures?"&#13;
"Certainly; a pillow fight."&#13;
Tokens of Trade.&#13;
"I went to the Bootmakers' Union&#13;
dinner last night."&#13;
"What were the eats?"&#13;
"Sole tongue, shoestring potatoes&#13;
and peach cobbler."—Yale Record.&#13;
Force of Habit.&#13;
"Why the noise?"&#13;
"The barber is shaving himself?'*&#13;
"But why the argument?"&#13;
"He Is trying to persuade htmsell&#13;
to have a shampoo.'&#13;
Goats may be raised profitably on&#13;
land which Is unsulted for any kind ol&#13;
cultivation.&#13;
Tes, Alonzo, it's better to have poor&#13;
relations than to be one.&#13;
Only a Private.&#13;
"I am the captain of my soul."&#13;
"Are, eh? Well, I have a wife and&#13;
a mother-in-law. I'm only a corporal,"&#13;
The pulgat, a Burmese measure. Is&#13;
the only foreign measure exactly cor&#13;
responding to our inch.&#13;
One boy can do an errand in Just&#13;
half the time it will take two boys&#13;
to do It.&#13;
A FOOD DRINK&#13;
Which Brings Daily Enjoyment&#13;
A lady doctor writes:&#13;
"Though busy hourly with my own&#13;
affairs, I will not deny myself the pleasure&#13;
of taking a few minutes to tell of&#13;
my enjoyment daily obtained from my&#13;
morning cup of Postum. It is a food&#13;
beverage, not an Irritant like coffee.&#13;
"I began to use Postum 8 years ago,&#13;
not because I wanted to, but because&#13;
coffee, which I dearly loved, made my&#13;
nights long, weary periods to be dreaded&#13;
and unfitting me for business during&#13;
the day.&#13;
"On advice of a friend. I first tried&#13;
Postum, making it carefully as sug&#13;
gested on the package. As 1 had al&#13;
ways used 'cream and no sugar.* ]&#13;
mixed my Postum so. It looked good,&#13;
was clear and fragrant, and it was a&#13;
pleasure to see the cream color it ai&#13;
my Kentucky friend, wanted her coffee&#13;
to look—'like a new saddle.'&#13;
"Then I tasted it critically, for I had&#13;
tried many 'substitutes* for coffee. 1&#13;
was pleased, yes, satisfied with mj&#13;
Postum in taste and effect, and am yet&#13;
being a constant user of It all thesi&#13;
years. I continually assure my frjendi&#13;
and acquaintances that they will like it&#13;
in place of coffee, and receive benefit&#13;
from Its use. I have gained weight&#13;
can sleep and am not nervous"'•&#13;
Name given by Postum Co., Battli&#13;
Creek, Mich. Write for the little book&#13;
"The Road to Wellvflle." ,&#13;
Postum comes in two forms:&#13;
Regular Postum -must be wel&#13;
boilej.&#13;
Instant Postum is a soluble powder&#13;
A teaspoonful dissolves quickly in f&#13;
cup of hot water and, with cream «n*&#13;
sugarr makes a delicious beverage In&#13;
ttanttjr. Grocers sell both kinds, i&#13;
"There's a reason" for Postum.&#13;
y&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH • T&#13;
•Wl&#13;
m-&#13;
ONE HUNDRED AND THIRTY-SIX&#13;
LIVES LOST ON* LINER&#13;
VOLTURNO.&#13;
TEN VESSELS UNABLE TO HELP&#13;
IN HEAVY SEA.&#13;
When Waves Recede Next Morning&#13;
Over Five Hundred Passengers&#13;
Are Picked Up From&#13;
Small Boats.&#13;
•tl Mi-\-M&#13;
SOME MEXICAN DISHES&#13;
CONCOCTIONS IN FAVOR WITH&#13;
OUR SOUTHERN NEIGHBORS.&#13;
Easily Prepared and Should Prove a&#13;
Welcome Change—Stuffed Peppers&#13;
Excellent for Thoee Who&#13;
Like Hot Food.&#13;
There cornea a time in the life of&#13;
every housekeeper when she Is dlssatifled&#13;
with the dishes she has made&#13;
for years and longs for new ones.&#13;
The following Mexican recipes have&#13;
been tried, are easily prepared and&#13;
not only will be a change but are also&#13;
palatable.&#13;
Chiles Rellenos (stuffed peppers).-—&#13;
Select as many bullnose green peppers&#13;
as are necessary, one for each person.&#13;
Scald In salt water and then In fresh&#13;
until the thin outer skin may be slip*&#13;
ped off* leaving the plush exposed.&#13;
Open carefully and remove seed. Prepare&#13;
a mixture of grated cheese.&#13;
Parmesan preferred; bulk pork sausage&#13;
that has been seasoned and fried,&#13;
chopped boiled eggs, fine chopped&#13;
onion and a bit of a clove or garlic if&#13;
liked. Stuff the pepper with the mixture,&#13;
close the end with bread, dip&#13;
In batter made of the yolk of egg and&#13;
flour and fry In a deep pan in which&#13;
the lard is sizzling hot Remove with&#13;
a colander spoon, place on a napkin&#13;
to drain off superfluous grease, and&#13;
serve on a hot plate.&#13;
Huevos Rancheroe (Country Eggs).&#13;
—Break six fresh eggs in a deep&#13;
dish. Beat into them six small chopped&#13;
onions, two chopped green peppers,&#13;
two ripe tomatoes that have&#13;
been skinned and ground to a pulp&#13;
in a mortar. Have a deep pan wUh&#13;
hot lard, fry until done and serve In&#13;
hot dish.&#13;
Frljoles (BeeaeK—This la a delicious&#13;
variation of the usual tasteless&#13;
bean. Soak, the beans over night, or&#13;
tt canned boll them until easily&#13;
mashed with a pestle. Chop two&#13;
white onions and boil with the beans.&#13;
When the beans can be mashed between&#13;
the fingers remove from the&#13;
fire, strain off the liquor, season with&#13;
a pinch of cayenne pepper, black pepper&#13;
and salt to taate, mash until they&#13;
are of the consistency of dough, mold&#13;
in form of chicken croquettes and fry&#13;
in a small quantity of hot lard, browning&#13;
the croquettes on all sides. Mexicans&#13;
serve beans as the last course&#13;
before dessert and at luncheon and&#13;
dinner, be the dinner never so formal.&#13;
Sopa de Arros (Creole Rice).—&#13;
Clean and wash half a cup of rice;&#13;
place in a shallow dish and let it thoroughly&#13;
dry in the sun. Have ready&#13;
a Boston bean pot in which two tablespoonfuls&#13;
of lard is boiling. Stir in&#13;
the rice and let it fry gently until&#13;
the lard is absorbed. Mash two ripe&#13;
tomatoes with a pestle, removing the&#13;
skins. Pour into the rice a cup and a&#13;
Captain Barr of the Carmania, half of boiling water, stir In the tomawhose&#13;
wireless message to the offices, toes, add salt; let the mixture boll&#13;
Fishbuard, England—One hundred&#13;
and thirty-six passengers of the Uranium&#13;
liner Volturno perished in mid-&#13;
Atlantic Thursday night when flames&#13;
ffom the engine room Bwept through&#13;
the ship-&#13;
There were 657 persons on board. Of&#13;
these 24 were cabin passengers, 540&#13;
were in the steerage, and 93 belonged&#13;
to the crew. Wireless S. O. S. calls&#13;
brought ten ships to the rescue but the&#13;
high seas and heavy gale prevented&#13;
early assistance. However, 521 passengers&#13;
have been reported saved.&#13;
"The Vulturno was bound for Halifax&#13;
and New York from Rotterdam. There&#13;
were no Americans on the passenger&#13;
list, the bulk of the passengers being&#13;
composed of immigrants going to&#13;
Canada. Among those on the ship&#13;
were Russians, Germans and Poles.&#13;
It .was not until Friday morning&#13;
that the rescuers were able to transfer&#13;
the Volturno's passengers, and it&#13;
was a matter of two or three hours&#13;
at the least that meant the difference&#13;
between life and death to the 521&#13;
persons who had been driven to the&#13;
stern by the growing flro.&#13;
On Thursday night, as It fell dark,&#13;
the 5,00? passengers of the ten ships&#13;
that had ©&lt;ome up to deliver Vulturno's&#13;
people, had one of the most remarkable&#13;
experiences that ever fell to people&#13;
that sail the sea. They saw a&#13;
ship burning in the center of a fleet&#13;
unable to help. The flames leaping&#13;
from the Volturno illuminated the&#13;
great waves that daunted the rescuing&#13;
vessels.&#13;
These ten ships were the Carmania&#13;
of the Cunard line, the Grosser Kuerfurest&#13;
of the North German Loyd, the&#13;
Happahannock, the Kroonland of the&#13;
Red Star line, La Touraine of the&#13;
French line, the Minneapolis of the&#13;
Atlantic Transport line, the Czar, the&#13;
Narragansett, the Devonian and the&#13;
Ceydlitz. Early on Friday morning&#13;
the weather having moderated; these&#13;
ships were able to lower small boats&#13;
and take off the Volturno's passengers.&#13;
of the Cunard line in Liverpool gave&#13;
the first news of one of the greatest&#13;
marine disasters In history, placed the&#13;
number that had been rescued as follows:&#13;
Carmania, 11; La Touraine, 40;&#13;
Minneapolis, 30; Rappahannock, 19;&#13;
Czar, 102; Narragansett, 29; Devonian.&#13;
59; Kroonland, 90; Grosser Kueruerst,&#13;
105, and Seydlitz, 36, making&#13;
821 in all.&#13;
Bankers Close Boston Meeting.&#13;
Boston—The American Bankers' association&#13;
closed its thirty-ninth annual&#13;
convention here Friday. Further adverse&#13;
criticism of the pending congressional&#13;
plan of currency and banking&#13;
reform developed from James J.&#13;
Hill, of St Paul, Minn.&#13;
Arthur Reynolds, of Des Moines,&#13;
Iowa, first vice president, was elevated&#13;
to the presidency, and W. A. Law, of&#13;
Philadelphia, succeeded to the first&#13;
vice presidency without contest* the&#13;
name of James K. Lynch, of San Francisco,&#13;
having been withdrawn. It was&#13;
deoided to hold the next convention in&#13;
Richmond, Va.&#13;
a ahort time, stirring occasionally;&#13;
place at the back of the stove and&#13;
let it steam done, taking care not to&#13;
touch the* rice. Each grain will be&#13;
"thoroughly cooked and will be separate.&#13;
To be eaten at luncheon or dinner,&#13;
with a fried egg served on each&#13;
plate.&#13;
Enchiladas (Sandwiches).—Halve a&#13;
Vienna roll, place on It a lettuce leaf,&#13;
and use the following mixture as filling:&#13;
Sausage meat fried and stirred&#13;
until the meat does not cling together;&#13;
chopped red tomato, chopped&#13;
boiled egg, chopped green peppers,&#13;
grated cheese, a pinch of cayenne pepper,&#13;
salt to taste. Mix thoroughly&#13;
and fill each lettuce leal Cut and&#13;
ring small white onions on top.&#13;
Land Found North of Siberia.&#13;
St Michael, Alaska—The Russian&#13;
governments steamers Taimyr and&#13;
Waygatch, under Commander Wilitsky,&#13;
which have been engaged in Arctic&#13;
exploration north of Siberia for&#13;
three years, arrived here for coal, and&#13;
Captain Wilitsky reports the discovery&#13;
of a body of land as large as&#13;
Greenland, extending beyond latitude&#13;
81 nerth and longitude 10$ east&#13;
Russian Potatoes.&#13;
Slice raw potatoes as for frying and&#13;
let them stand in cold water for half&#13;
an hour, then put la a nappy with pepper&#13;
and salt and one-half pint sweet&#13;
milk to an ordinary sised dish. Put in&#13;
the oven and bake an hour. When taken&#13;
oat cut a tablespoon of butter into&#13;
small bits and scatter over the top.&#13;
Jelly Coverings.&#13;
When using, paraffin for covering&#13;
jellies, possibly you have been troubled&#13;
by seeing the preserve work up&#13;
at the side of the glass. To prevent&#13;
this be sure to tip the glass lightly&#13;
all around while the paraffin is hot*&#13;
Sixteen Killed In Panic&#13;
Lefnburg, Austria-Hungary — The&#13;
fainting of a woman in a crowded&#13;
synagogue at Chodorow, Galicla, caused&#13;
a panic. Hundreds of women rushed&#13;
to the doors and sixteen of them&#13;
were crushed to death. Scores were&#13;
injured.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Hicks, of S10 Church&#13;
street, aged 80 years^ was the winner&#13;
of the lawn contest inaugurated by&#13;
the "Pity Beautiful" committee of Ann&#13;
Arbor. Despite her age the gardens&#13;
of Mrs.-Hiokr were found to be the&#13;
best laid out and most artistic of any&#13;
1&amp; the city,&#13;
Cream Candy.&#13;
Two cups brown sugar, one cup&#13;
sweet cream. Boil till it rolls into a&#13;
soft ball when dropped in cold,water.&#13;
Take from fire, beat tUl creamy, add&#13;
one teaspoon of vanilla and one-naif&#13;
pound of finechopped walnuts.&#13;
. Sandpaper Baby Shoes.&#13;
Always -sandpaper the soles of&#13;
baby's now shoes before they have&#13;
been worm. This keeps her from slipping&#13;
on the bare or polished floors,&#13;
and prevents many « bad fall which&#13;
could easily result in a sprain or&#13;
broken bone.&#13;
To Keep Lemons.&#13;
Place lemons in a vessel filled with&#13;
cold water a* soon as they oome beat&#13;
4ke grocer's. Keep in an ordinarily&#13;
cool place, and they win remain good&#13;
lor a. surprisingly long tUne*&#13;
WAS PAYING A SECOND DEBT&#13;
Little Incident That Well Illustrates&#13;
the Way of the World In&#13;
Such Casta.&#13;
"I was walking down the street&#13;
with a friend of mine the other morning,"&#13;
relates a man who is more than&#13;
ordinarily observant. "And on our way&#13;
me met another man, who was evidently&#13;
acquainted with my friend. My&#13;
friend addressed him cordially, I&#13;
thought But I said nothing about it&#13;
"The next morning I again walked&#13;
down town with the same friend. And&#13;
again we met the man we had met&#13;
the day before. This time it was he&#13;
who spoke cordially, and my Mend&#13;
who answered coldly. Indeed, my&#13;
friend came very near to cutting him&#13;
dead. This time I needed an explanation&#13;
of the mystery.&#13;
" 'Are you paying him back for his&#13;
coldness of yesterday?" I asked. M 'No,' answered my friend. 'You see&#13;
I have owed him money for some time.&#13;
And last night I paid it"&#13;
Not Much Light&#13;
Secretary Bryan at a luncheon in&#13;
Washington said of a man who&#13;
through simulated modesty, had declined&#13;
an important and useful office:&#13;
"So he wants to hide his light under&#13;
a bushel, eh? Then perhaps the&#13;
country is just as well off without his&#13;
servlcea."&#13;
The secretary smiled and added:&#13;
"When a man talks of hiding his&#13;
light under a bushel X usually think&#13;
that a thimble would answer the purpose&#13;
just as welL"&#13;
Marks of Social Distinction.&#13;
"The Hugginses," said Sherlock&#13;
Holmes, "are very popular with the&#13;
wealthy classes."&#13;
"How do you know?" I queried, confident&#13;
of a brilliant answer.&#13;
"Because there are so many grease&#13;
spots on the pavement in front of&#13;
their house."&#13;
"I don't see the point" Bald L&#13;
"You auto," said Sherlock.&#13;
Advantage of Culture.&#13;
'What a lovely complexion your&#13;
yoingest daughter has!"&#13;
"Yes," replied Mrs. Cumrox. "She&#13;
seems to get better color effects than&#13;
the other girls. She took lessons In&#13;
art"&#13;
Some Solaoe.&#13;
"I called on the father of my heiress&#13;
this morning."&#13;
"Ah, duke. And did you get the&#13;
girl?"&#13;
"No; but he gave me a $5 bill"&#13;
Right Man.&#13;
"So plain, outspoken, domineering&#13;
Kale is married at last? Well, well!"&#13;
Yes; she marrleod a drummer."&#13;
"A man used to taking orders. Ah,&#13;
that's very fortunate."&#13;
*fra.Winsloir'e Soothing1 Syrup for Children&#13;
teething, soften* the gums, redacts inflamm*-&#13;
Uon,*Jlays psin,curs* wind colle,*5c a. boetleJb*&#13;
An Appropriate Boat&#13;
"I am afraid for the boya withithai&#13;
sea PUBB about here."&#13;
"There's no danger. They \went in&#13;
a catboat"&#13;
Reassembled.&#13;
"So, when you broke thevnews tov&#13;
her she went all to pieces?"&#13;
"Yes, but it didn't take herilong to&#13;
collect* herself."&#13;
Liquid blue is a weak solution. Avoid* St&#13;
Bay Bed Crow Ball Blue, the Uuo»Uuu's,ail&#13;
blue. Ask your grocer. Adv. k&#13;
Men 8hould Vote, Too.&#13;
"Do you believe that women* ought&#13;
to vote?"&#13;
"Sure! And, what's more, rethink&#13;
men ought to, too."&#13;
Don't leglect&#13;
tion or Pneumonia. Dean's Mentholated&#13;
a cold. It means Conaump-&#13;
~ . _^_-—rflj«. Dean's Mentholated&#13;
Cough Drops check colds—6e at Druggists,&#13;
Tee Deep. .«*•&#13;
Senator TilBnaa, who-Is an antisuffragist,&#13;
listened calmly, at a dinner&#13;
in Washington, to an impassidned&#13;
speech- by a brother senator in suffrage's&#13;
behalf.&#13;
At the end of this speech a diner,&#13;
as be applauded enthusiastically, said&#13;
to Senator Tillman:&#13;
"He's a deep thinker, ain't he?"&#13;
"Yes," was the reply; "he can't talk&#13;
three minutes without getting beyond&#13;
his depth."&#13;
Hia Last Vlait&#13;
She had seen some springs, also remembered&#13;
some summers, had known&#13;
a variety of winters, and had a few&#13;
hard autumns. The young man who&#13;
was coming round seemed to be serious,&#13;
but slow, so she said:&#13;
"I want to show you my rings.&#13;
Papa has given me one on each of&#13;
my birthdays." She exhibited about&#13;
twenty rings. "Now," she said, airily,&#13;
"you can't guess my birthday?"&#13;
"Oh, yes I can. It's February 29!"&#13;
He never called again.&#13;
If a man is willing to admit it when&#13;
he is wrong he is all right&#13;
\&#13;
The Army of&#13;
Constipation&#13;
Ii Growing Smaller Every Day*&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
L1YER PILLS are&#13;
responsible — they&#13;
not only give relief&#13;
— they perma&#13;
nentlycure Co*&gt;&#13;
stisatioa. Mil&#13;
lions u s e&#13;
them for&#13;
Bilionf II.&#13;
Isdiscstioa, Skk Headache, Sallow Skin.&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
CARTER'S&#13;
ITTLE&#13;
IVER&#13;
PILLS.&#13;
Dr. Navaun's Kidney Tablets&#13;
Relieves quickly all Kidney couiplaititH such&#13;
»s Backache, Rheumatism, Nervousness,&#13;
Dlnineus, etc. Thousaodtiof sufferers have&#13;
been cured by tbia remedy and if you or any&#13;
member of your family are Huiterin? from&#13;
Kidney ailment send your name and address&#13;
on a postal for FREE sample and our&#13;
booklet ot testimonials and be convinced.&#13;
BOTANIC DRUG CO., Detroit, Mich.&#13;
From 40 to 50 Woman's Critical Period&#13;
Such warning symptoms as sense of suffocation, hot&#13;
flashes, severe headaches, melancholia, dread of impending&#13;
evil, palpitation of the heart, irregularity, constipation and&#13;
dizziness are promptly treated by intelligent women who&#13;
are approaching the period of life.&#13;
This ifl the most critical period of woman's life and she&#13;
who neglects the care of her health at this time invites incurable&#13;
disease and pain* W h y not be ffuided by the experience&#13;
of others and take Lyaia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound? It is an indisputable fact that this grand old&#13;
remedy has helped thousands of women to pass through&#13;
this trying period with comfort and safety. Thousands of&#13;
genuine and honest testimonials support this fact.&#13;
From Bin. HENRY HEAVILIX, Cadiz, Ohio.&#13;
Fort "Worth, Texas. — u I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound and derived great benefit from its use. It carried me&#13;
safely through the Change of life when I was in bad health. I had&#13;
that all gone feeling most of the time, and headache constantly, I was&#13;
very nervous and trie hot flashes were very bad. I had tried other&#13;
remedies and doctors, but did not improve until I began taking Lydia&#13;
£. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It has now been sometime since&#13;
I took the Compound and I have had no return of my old complaints.&#13;
I always praise your remedies to weak women."—Mrs. Huarar&#13;
HBAVTLIN, JR. F. t&gt;. No, 5, Cadiz, Ohio.&#13;
From Mrs. EDWARD B. HILBERT, Fleetwood, Pa.&#13;
Fleetwood, Pa.—" During the Change of life I was hardly able to&#13;
be around at alL I always had a headache and I was so dizzy and&#13;
nervous that I had no rest at night The flashes of heat were so bad&#13;
sometimes that I did not know what to do. u One day a friend advised me to take I&lt;ydia E. Pinkham's Vege«&#13;
table Compound and it made me a strong, well, woman. »1 am very&#13;
thankful that I followed my friend's advice, and I shall recommend it&#13;
as long as I live. Before I took the Compound I was always sickly&#13;
and now I have not had medicine from a doctor for years. You may&#13;
publish my letter.*—Mrs. EDWARD B. HILBEBT, Fleetwood, Pa,&#13;
From Mrs. F. P. MULLENDORE, Munford, Ala.&#13;
Munford, Ala.—" I was so weak and nervous while passing through&#13;
the Change of life that I could hardly live. My husband had to hail&#13;
rubber on all the gates for I could not stand to nave a gate slam.&#13;
** I also had backache and a fullness in my stomach. I noticed that&#13;
lydia S. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was advertised&#13;
for such cases and I sent and got a bottle.&#13;
No, Cynthia, marrying an. artist or&#13;
sculptor does not make one, a model&#13;
wife.&#13;
Self-interest Is the motive&#13;
that requires the least oil. power&#13;
It did me so much good that I kept on taking it and&#13;
found it to be all you claim. I recommend it to&#13;
all women afflicted, as I was."—Mrs, F. P. MUIXKNPOBJB,&#13;
Munford, Ala.&#13;
-&gt;Wrlte to LYDI1 E.PIHIH1MMEDICIKECO.&#13;
' (C0HPIDE5TLAX) LYNN, XAS&amp;.foradvice.&#13;
Jour letter will be opened, read and answered&#13;
by A woman and held In strict confidence.&#13;
To Absorb Dampness.&#13;
A quantity of quicklime put into a&#13;
damp clipboard for a few days will absorb&#13;
the dampness.&#13;
It's usually the fast young man who&#13;
is left at the post&#13;
There Is Comfort In knowing that yoa-can obtjrin one tried and proved remedy&#13;
thoroughly well adapted to your needs. Every woman&#13;
who te troubled with headache, backache, languor,&#13;
extreme nervousness aoddepreesion of spirits ought to try&#13;
•* 3&gt;M tofeWeeU)&#13;
and learn what a dfflsrene* they will make. By parlfying&#13;
the system they insurree bbeetttteerr f&lt;B$ggeesettfkoniv. ssooosandeeerr sslleeeepp,, qquuiieetteerr&#13;
nerves, end bestow the charm of sparkling eyes; a spouses rosy&#13;
complexion and vrredooe spirits. Thoneendtonon thousands of&#13;
women have learned; hsApfy,that Beeefcan's Puis are reliable and&#13;
The. Unfading Home Remedy&#13;
- n' l1tlM *jy •• •'{j** f^FTl***? m-h -&#13;
ABSORBINE&#13;
* ^ TSADf MAKK, REG.'J S.PAT. Off.&#13;
Removes Bursal Enlargements,&#13;
Thickened, Swollen Tissues,&#13;
Curbs, Filled Tendons, Soreness&#13;
from any Bruise or Strain;&#13;
Stops Spavin Lameneu. Allays pain.&#13;
Does not Blister, remove the hair or&#13;
lay up the horse. $2.00 a bottle,&#13;
delivered. Book 1 K free.&#13;
ABSORBINE, JR., the antiseptic liniment&#13;
for mankind. For Synovitis, Strains,&#13;
Gouty or Rheumatic deposits, Swollen,&#13;
Painful Varicose Voire, Will tell you&#13;
more if you write. Jl and f 2 per bottle at&#13;
dealer* or delivered. Manufactured only by&#13;
W.P.YOUNS, P. 0. F., 110 Ttatfe It, SprlnsfltM. I&#13;
BUTTON COVERING Ootr dreoro*t aMnda tw oer dgeura. raSnpteecei aola art wteonrtkio tno gBiev eeant ltso- try. Send eltbef etaaape or money order. Prtoe&#13;
Uit on reqseet. DBBSS PLAITING&#13;
NEW YORK TRIMMING * LINING HOUSE&#13;
IS Jeks H. Stow* Detroit, Mkk&gt;&#13;
VIOLINS »•»» SUPPLIES Zma««fa«t«roa«ddoal tn Violin*, Bowa.Caeea,&#13;
StrlniTMoa. and So Repairing. SstabltahedlBST.&#13;
1. Adolpn Krmg, M ChaaipUln St,, Detroit, ttkss, PATEOTS3S!»r&#13;
W. N. U„ DETROIT, NO. 42-1913.&#13;
- i PUTNAM F A D E L E S S DYES&#13;
&amp;&#13;
fSe i dye any and faster tolors than" Wifts&amp;smsfe colors aH fibers. Tney MONSjQg eeue COMFANT« ejeiesp»wejj&#13;
!4c.a».ft««u£i;ir.^'.*. .»44-+*•;--^-«-•-;—&gt;••: - -&#13;
' . - * £ •&#13;
i&#13;
PINCKNkY DISPATCH&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
Entered at the Postoffice at Piuckney,&#13;
Mich., aa Second Class Matter&#13;
P, W. CMRIY, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER&#13;
Subscription, f 1. Per Year in Atfwuice&#13;
Advertising rates made known ou&#13;
application.&#13;
Cards of Thaukc, fifty ceuts.&#13;
Resolutions of Condolence, one dollar.&#13;
Local Nptit.es, in Local columns tive&#13;
cent per line per each insertion.&#13;
All matter inteuded to benefit the personal&#13;
or business interest of any individual&#13;
will be published at regular advertising&#13;
rates.&#13;
Announcement of entertainments, etc.,&#13;
must be paid for at regular Local Notice&#13;
rates.&#13;
Obituary and marriage notices are published&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
Poetry must be paid for at the rate of&#13;
five cents per line.&#13;
Local N e w s&#13;
Pay your subscription this moatL&#13;
Claude Monks of Detroit was an&#13;
over Sunday guest of his parents&#13;
here.&#13;
Norm an Reason is demonstrating&#13;
the Carter-car in Duraud this&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Matt Brady of Howell was&#13;
a Pinckney visitor one day last&#13;
week.&#13;
Homer N. Beach of Howell has&#13;
a half-page adv. in this issue. Be&#13;
sure and read it-&#13;
A miss may be as good as a&#13;
mile, but a grass widow thinks&#13;
she is better than either.&#13;
A. D. Edgar and wife of Masou&#13;
were over Sunday guests at the&#13;
home of James Docking.&#13;
Norris Wilcox and wife of&#13;
Dansville spent the week end at&#13;
the home of Hugh Clark,&#13;
Seethe pure wool blue Chinchilla&#13;
overcoats at Dancer's.—&#13;
Shawl collar, belt back. $16.50,&#13;
adv.&#13;
Getting married in Esperanto&#13;
may be all right but one suspects&#13;
that in the fervor of courtship the&#13;
lovers relapsed into their mother&#13;
tongue once in a while.&#13;
It won't be long until the San&#13;
Francisco Exposition opens, and&#13;
it is about time for you to open&#13;
up a correspondence with your&#13;
relatives on the Pacific coast,&#13;
Mr. Burgwin of the central telephone&#13;
office informs us that a&#13;
gentleman is reported making the&#13;
rounds soliciting advertising for&#13;
the Michigan State Telephone&#13;
office without any authority from&#13;
the company.—Livingston Demorcrat.&#13;
Pinckney business men&#13;
should take notice.&#13;
There's nothing which will pay&#13;
as good interest on the money invested&#13;
as a year's subscription to&#13;
the-k&gt;cal paper. How? By watching&#13;
tire display and local advertisements&#13;
and taking advantage of&#13;
the bargains which may be picked&#13;
up in this way. Not a subscriber&#13;
but what has an opportuiity during&#13;
the course of a year to save&#13;
from two to ten times the subscription&#13;
price of the paper. Ever look&#13;
at it in this light? It is a fact that&#13;
will not down. And yet, occasionally&#13;
some can be found who would&#13;
not have the paper as a gracious&#13;
gift.&#13;
The first meeting of the Pinck-&#13;
Mrs. G. W. Teeple spent Thursday&#13;
in Detroit.&#13;
Miss Mae Teeple is visiting relatives&#13;
in Lausiug.&#13;
C. V. VanWiukleand wife spent&#13;
the past week in Lausing.&#13;
Mike Harris of Jackson visited&#13;
friends here the past week.&#13;
Mrs. A. Monks and Helen were&#13;
Howell visitors last Wednesday.&#13;
'Mrs. O. M. Morse of Jackson&#13;
spent the past week with htr Bon&#13;
of this place.&#13;
Mrs. L. G. Devereaux ana Mrs.&#13;
Louis Monks were Howell callers&#13;
lust Wednesday.&#13;
Those $12.50 fall suits at Dancer's,&#13;
Stockbridge, are the equa^l&#13;
of many $15. ones. adv.&#13;
Wm. Darrow Jr. left Wednesday&#13;
for Sioux City Iowa where he&#13;
expects to remain for some time.&#13;
About this time people are beginning&#13;
to lose the sunburn they&#13;
paid $15. a week to acquire last&#13;
August.&#13;
Mrs. Walter Snyder of Jackson&#13;
spent the past two weeks with her&#13;
parents, Mr. and Mrs. A, B. Green&#13;
of this place.&#13;
When two girls of the same dimensions&#13;
and general style of&#13;
architecture are cbums they syndicate&#13;
their clothes.&#13;
A Chicago physician's wife&#13;
thinks there ought to be a school&#13;
to teach wives kissing. Home&#13;
training, sister, home training's&#13;
the thing.&#13;
Mrs. J. L. Noble who has been&#13;
spending the past few weeks at&#13;
the home of Fred Hemingway returned&#13;
to her home at Fair Water&#13;
Wis., Friday.&#13;
While preparing the Graham&#13;
house for a new home, Mrs. Addie&#13;
Potterton of this place, tripped on&#13;
a rope and fell, bruising herself&#13;
severely about the face and shoulders.&#13;
The banquet given by the&#13;
Pinckney Business Mens Association&#13;
last Thursday evening at the&#13;
Pinckney House was attended by&#13;
a delightful number of men and&#13;
women who enjoyed the social&#13;
hour.&#13;
Chas. Morse and wife who now&#13;
occupy the Wilcox house, will&#13;
open up a first class lunch room&#13;
and restaurant in the Reason&#13;
building at present occupied by&#13;
D. D. Smith's meat market, as&#13;
soon as Mr. Smith can arrange to&#13;
move his market into his new&#13;
building near the Pinckney House.&#13;
The Negro Minstrels from the&#13;
Fowlerville Fair appeared in a&#13;
show at the Pinckney opera house&#13;
Saturday night. A slim crowd&#13;
was in attendance and are now&#13;
wishing they had their money&#13;
back. The show practically disbanded&#13;
here, two goi:ag to Lansing&#13;
and four to Gregory where&#13;
they put on a show Monday night.&#13;
Clayton Placeway witnessed their&#13;
first appearane here Friday.—Ask&#13;
Clayton all about it.&#13;
Friday and Satarday, October&#13;
17 and 18, at their hall in the&#13;
Cadwell block, the society of&#13;
the Congregational churph will&#13;
give their 13th annual chicken pie&#13;
and fried chicken supper and&#13;
&amp;wmwwmmmti*wimfmmmMm&#13;
ney Literary Club was held at the , ,&#13;
home of Miss Kate Brown last I n o v e l t v 8 a l e including a Japanese&#13;
Monday evening and a delightful'Arfc E x h l b i t a n d 8ftle&gt; f r o m o n e o f&#13;
gathering it was. The time pass- t h e l a r 8 e g t Japanese wholesale&#13;
ed pleasantly in discussing the h c m 8 e 8 i n Chicago. We will guar-&#13;
Bay View association literary ,BDfcee t h i s t o b e o n e o f t b e finesfc&#13;
work to be taken up by the exhibits of the kind ever shown in&#13;
society this year. Officers for the t h l 8 vicinity. A fine opportunity&#13;
coming season were elected as t o P^chaee vour Christmas presfollows:&#13;
Mrs. G. G. Hoyt, p r e 8i-, euts at reasonable prices. There&#13;
dent; Mrs. H. F. Sigler, vice presi- j w i l 1 al«° b e b o o f c h 8 * h e r e wearing&#13;
OentjMrs. R. W.Caverly, secreta- apparel and vegetables can be&#13;
| Did You Ever&#13;
Stop to Think&#13;
that among- any class of goods there is always one&#13;
article that is more suitable for the needs for which&#13;
it was designed. Knowing this t o be a fact we'&#13;
have always chosen for our customers the&#13;
Highest Quality of Merchandise&#13;
33&#13;
•INCLUDING-&#13;
3&#13;
=33 33 3&#13;
"Smart Set" Neckwear&#13;
"Newland" Hats and Caps&#13;
"Ideal" Work Shirts and Overalls &amp; Work Jackets&#13;
"Rose Bros." Trousers and Raincoats&#13;
Butter Krust Bread Addison Cheese&#13;
Red Star Oil and Gasoline&#13;
Connor's "World's Best" ICQ Cream&#13;
^ Vernor's Ginger Ale and&#13;
£s Sealshipt Oysters in Season&#13;
jf; Jteg^Will meet all competitive prices for Saturday.&#13;
i M O N K S BROS,!&#13;
^ Prompt Delivery Phone No. 38 ^&#13;
Important Notice!&#13;
October will bring to us great need&#13;
of MONEY which will require all&#13;
that have unpaid accounts and&#13;
notes due to see us promptly.&#13;
Thanking all for the liberal patronage,&#13;
we respectfully ask all io&#13;
call and see us.&#13;
Teep]e Ha r c lware C o m P a n y&#13;
Pinckney, l^Iieli.&#13;
HBAf?YB HEAR Y B 4&#13;
The Pinckney mills are making a flour that is second to&#13;
none on the market, and is as cheap as you can buy any&#13;
good flour. Why not try a sack?&#13;
&lt;&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative Bank*&#13;
ing Business. :: ::&#13;
3 per cent&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits j&#13;
Pinckney&#13;
G. W. TEEPLE&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Prop&#13;
ARE YOU AWAKE&#13;
to the fact that your hoy is growiug&#13;
yesterday—Just a little fellow.&#13;
Tod.iy—A big boy.&#13;
Tomorrow—A man.&#13;
Today you are sorry you haven't a&#13;
photograph of him as. he looked&#13;
yesterday. — Tomorrow you will&#13;
value the one you have today.&#13;
Don't put it off.&#13;
DaisieB. Chapelt&#13;
Stockbridge, Michigan&#13;
We would be pleased to have all who have&#13;
accounts with us to call and straighten&#13;
them as we have to pay cash for everything we get and&#13;
can't do it without the cash.&#13;
THB HOYT BROS.&#13;
rj; Miss Kate Brown, treasurer.&#13;
The Club will hold its next meeting&#13;
at the home of Mrs. L. R.&#13;
JBcharde on Thursday afternoon,&#13;
October 23, at three o'clock, standard&#13;
time.&#13;
purchased. Friday evening the&#13;
"Japanese Ladles" will serve tea.&#13;
Ice cream, candy and popcorn for&#13;
sale both evenings. Yon will make&#13;
no mistake in- mating your parchases&#13;
at this bazaar. Everybody&#13;
invited. adv.&#13;
Constipation, if Neglected,&#13;
Causes Serious Illness&#13;
Constipation, if neglected, leads&#13;
to almost innumerable complications&#13;
affecting the general health.&#13;
Many cases of&#13;
typhoid fever,&#13;
appendicitis an j&#13;
other severe diseases&#13;
are tradable&#13;
to prolonged&#13;
clogging of thfc&#13;
bowels. Regardt&#13;
h e effects o f&#13;
constipation, C.&#13;
E. Ay4rs, 6 Sabin&#13;
St., Montpelier,&#13;
Vt„ sags:&#13;
wi'tTh. meo*n sUaj/MjatleOtend yean?, and at tiatesa ibmec abmilieo ueson ebssa dfo rX wfoouunldd binec omthea tu nccoonndciteiornns . mIa hnayv eti mbeee*n. dPoh ysmiceia nasn yd idf onbodt. SeeIm w toou lHde baebcloem; ia» •w neoa kw aonrnd. foNr odt tfylosn ea;t aag ot imIe g octo uaid :&lt;ld%t)a x aofft erD r.u siMngil esth' emLa xfaotuivned TIa hbaledts ,n ea&gt;nedr tmriieldd aanndy theifnfegc titvhea tm aaontnefetr . fnI sbueofjlfpcv ae Isu hitasv em yat claasset. "f ound tha remedy f|| ia"t&#13;
Thousands of people are sufferers&#13;
from habitus^ constipation and&#13;
while possibly realizing sometn»g&#13;
of the danger of this condition, &gt;et&#13;
neglect too long to employ li'SJOf&#13;
curative measures until seriouslalness&#13;
often results. The adVftt* of&#13;
all physicians is, "keep your fcfewtll&#13;
clean, and it's good advice.&#13;
Dr. Miles' Laxative Tablets are&#13;
sold by all jdruggists, at as cents a&#13;
box containing 2$ doses. If net&#13;
found satisfactory, your money it&#13;
returned. »&#13;
MILIS M1D10AL «0\, •Ikhart, In*&#13;
POULTRY, EGGS AND VEALj&#13;
Will pay the highest market price at all times. *&#13;
Call us up before you sell. Bell phone No. 74-1&#13;
'JOHN DINKBL WWDSlwsjsjHSJilWSSa^BSOjBSSMBOjiss^a^Bj^a^a^a^BeMe^^&#13;
-»s-r Try a Liner Advertisement in the Dispatch&#13;
• * « .&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
\ " • • : ' . .&#13;
Sm*wiitwwmmmiirmw#wwmmffiirwwmww^&#13;
| These Kidney Pills Will Do You M&#13;
Neglect is responsible fur much of out' iil-healih. P r o m p t t m i t u i e u t results&#13;
in relief, not only from the miuoi- aliments but from t h e resulting complications.&#13;
If you value permanent $&lt;oud health you cannot afford to neglect&#13;
the slightest trace of kidney weakness; the important d u t y of filtering the&#13;
blood; cleansing the system of impurities, falls upou the k i d n e y s ; they require&#13;
constant attention and d e m a n d i t ; they must be assisted. If they fail&#13;
in their duty the certaiu result is impure blood, loss of all n o u r i s h m e n t ,&#13;
»nd a poisoned system. D o n ' t allow it to go that far.&#13;
NyaPs Kidney Pills Insure certain action of&#13;
the kidneys—rich red blood and the&#13;
proper nourishment&#13;
T h e y are not a " c u r e - a l l " — j u s t a k i d n e y m e d i c i n e — o n e that we personally&#13;
recommend. F i f t y c e n t s t h e b o x . W h e n we had a c h a n c e to&#13;
get the exclusive selling agency for N y a l ' s F a m i l y r e m e d i e s we j u m p e d a t .&#13;
T h e y are known among all druggists as the highest quality line on the market,&#13;
and are p r e p a r e d by a great firm of m a n u f a c t u r i n g chemists, famous for&#13;
fifty years. ; ^ 2&#13;
MEYER'S DRUG STORE 1&#13;
T l i e I X y a l S t o r e ff&#13;
For a Square Deal Plnckney, Mich. 3&#13;
Drugs, Wall Puper, Crockery, Ci&amp;ars, Candy, Magazines, = ^&#13;
Suliool Supplies, Books ^&#13;
Legal A d v e r t i s i n g&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN, the rTobate Court, /or&#13;
the County of Livingston,&#13;
At a session of said court held at the Probate&#13;
Oftiee In the Village of Howell in said County, on&#13;
the 4th day of October, A. D. 1913.&#13;
Present, Hoa. Hiugene A. s*towe, Judge o&#13;
Probate, In the matter of the estate of&#13;
MARY J. FARLEY, Deceased&#13;
John McKernau having tiled in said court his&#13;
annual a-count as executor of said estate and his&#13;
petition praying for the allowance thereof.&#13;
It la Ordered. That the 30th day oi October,&#13;
A. D. 1&amp;13, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at said&#13;
probate office, be and is hereby appointed for&#13;
hearing said petition.&#13;
It ie further ordered that public notice thereof&#13;
' he given by publication of a copy of this order, for&#13;
three successive weeks previous to said day ai&#13;
hearing in the Pinckney DISPATCH a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated in said county. 41t3&#13;
EUGENE A. STOWE&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN&#13;
Thirty-fifth Judical Circuit in Chancery&#13;
i Suit, pending in&#13;
Luclle I, Westby, I the Circuit Court&#13;
Complainant, ] for the County of&#13;
, Livingston in chanvs,&#13;
j ery at Howell o^n&#13;
I the eighteenth day&#13;
Edward A. Westby, j of September, A, I),&#13;
Defendant. j 1913.&#13;
In this cause, it appearing from affidavit on&#13;
tile that the de endant, Kdward A. Westby, '8 not&#13;
a resident of this state but is a resident of the&#13;
city of Mls-oula, • tuto of Montana and that his&#13;
post o'Ne addr«ps is Missoula, Montana,&#13;
On motion of Arthur E. Cole, solicitor for com-&#13;
Vlainant, it is ordered that the appearance of said&#13;
non-resident, defendant, Edward A . Westby, be&#13;
entered therein within four months from the date&#13;
of this order and in case of his appearance he&#13;
cause his answer to the bill of complaint to be&#13;
filed and a copy thereof to beaarved within fifteen&#13;
days after service on him or his solicitor of a&#13;
copy of said bill, and In defau t thereof that said&#13;
bill be taken as confessed by the said defendant,&#13;
t'dwgrd A. Westby.&#13;
And it is further ordered that the said complainant&#13;
ca1 se this orde to be published in toe&#13;
iJinckuey Dispatch, a newspaper printed, publish&#13;
ed and circulating In said county ami that such&#13;
publicaton be commenced witnin twpnty days&#13;
from the date of this order and that such publication&#13;
be continued therein once in each wetk for&#13;
six weeks in aucce-sion or that the said complainant&#13;
cause a copy ot this order to be personally&#13;
served on the said defendant, E J ward i . Westby,&#13;
at least twenty days bekre the ti •» e above pre&#13;
Bcribed for his appearance..&#13;
selden S. Miner, Circuit Judge&#13;
Examined, countersigned, and entered by me,&#13;
Clark H. Miner, Register&#13;
Arthur E. Colo, Com lainani's Solicitor,&#13;
4013 Business Address, K\ wlerville, Michigan&#13;
Grand Trunk Time Table&#13;
For th&lt;&gt; convenience of our readers&#13;
Trains East Trains West&#13;
No. 28—8:;« a. m.&#13;
No. 30—4:49 p. m.&#13;
No. 27—10:23 a. ra&#13;
No. 29—7:12 p. m.&#13;
Road Fund Exhausted&#13;
Auditor-General Fuller has notified&#13;
the ..state highway department&#13;
that the state is not in aposition&#13;
to pay any more state highway&#13;
awards until next January,&#13;
when state taxes will be paid in&#13;
and the general fund of the state&#13;
treasury will be reimbursed.&#13;
So far this year #153,000 has&#13;
been paid for state award roads&#13;
and $41,000 from the trunk line&#13;
highway fund. T h e legislature&#13;
appropriated $450,000 last season&#13;
for the highway fund, to be used&#13;
in paying state awards.&#13;
Auditor Fuller has received replies&#13;
from 12 state institutions in&#13;
answer to his letters, suggesting&#13;
that they do not draw on their&#13;
funds any more than ts absolutely&#13;
necessary, and all the replies are&#13;
favorable.&#13;
Women Who Ret Dizzy&#13;
Every women who is troubled with&#13;
tainting and dizzy spells, backache.&#13;
headache, weakness, debility, constipation&#13;
or kiduey troubles should USB&#13;
Electric Bitters. Tbey give relief when&#13;
nothing else will, improve the health,&#13;
adding strength and vigor from the&#13;
Hist dose,, Sirs Laura Gaines, of&#13;
Avoca. La,, says: "Four doctors had&#13;
tfiven me up and my children and all&#13;
New M. A. C. Course&#13;
Specialists were never quite so&#13;
much needed as at the present&#13;
time, and especially is this true&#13;
along agriculture lines. Trained&#13;
men are in demand everywhere&#13;
aud along all lines of this most&#13;
important profession. The wideawake&#13;
young farmer of today is&#13;
•ever on the lookout for ways and&#13;
means of bettering himself aud of&#13;
making a greater success of his&#13;
work, and numerous avenues are&#13;
now open to him for the accomplishment&#13;
of the same.&#13;
One of the best opportunities&#13;
ever offered to the young farmers&#13;
of the state for practical training&#13;
will be the Two Year Agriculaural&#13;
Course ofiered at the Michigian&#13;
Agricultural Colledge begining&#13;
November 3. This has been arranged&#13;
because of the demand on&#13;
the part of t h e farmers of the&#13;
state for a more extended course&#13;
in practcai agriculture and will&#13;
afford a splendid opportunity for&#13;
the young man who caunot take&#13;
the regular course leading to a&#13;
degree.&#13;
The new course opens November&#13;
3. No entrance examination will&#13;
be required and expenses are reasonable.&#13;
Those interested should&#13;
write to President J , L. Snyder at&#13;
Eaot Lansing for full particulars.&#13;
Thtt Family Cough Medicine&#13;
In every home there should be a&#13;
bottle of Dr. Kind's New Discovery,&#13;
ready for immediate use when any&#13;
member of the family contracts a cold&#13;
or a cough, Prompt use will stop the&#13;
spread of sickness. S. A. SStid, -of&#13;
Mason, Mich., writes: "My whole&#13;
f'am.ly defends upon Dr. King's New&#13;
Discovery &gt;as the best cough a.jd cold&#13;
medicine in the world. Two 50c.&#13;
bottl '8 cured me of pneumonia/&#13;
Thousands of other families have been&#13;
equally benefited and depend entirely&#13;
upon Dr. King's New Discovery to&#13;
cure their coughs, colds, thoat and&#13;
lung roubles. Every dose helps.&#13;
Price 50c. and $1.00 at Meyer's Drug&#13;
Store,&#13;
$ 8 0 , 0 0 0 A Year Saved&#13;
That purchasers of school books&#13;
in Michigiau will save annually at&#13;
least $80,000 . is the opinion of&#13;
State Superintendent of Public&#13;
Instructions L. L. Wright, in discussing&#13;
the new King bill recently,&#13;
a measure passed at the last session&#13;
my friends were looking tor me to die of the legislature which provides&#13;
when ray son insisted that t use Elec-, , . . ,&#13;
trie Bitters. I did so, and they havelt h a ^ n o dealer shall charge in exdone&#13;
me a world of good." Just try jcess of 15 per cent over the wholetbhyu&#13;
Cm,. G.5 M0ce. yaenrd t h$e1 .d0r0u. gRgiescto. mmended i 8 a ] e c o s ^ _^&#13;
When a man who has laboriously&#13;
learned the waltz and the twostep,&#13;
ha3 the tango thrown at him&#13;
how can he help feeling discouraged?&#13;
TZAR&#13;
COFFEE&#13;
Win Plea* You&#13;
T h e particular women says&#13;
Tzar Coffee pieaset her b e a t&#13;
And this U because of its rich, smooth flavor. Youll find&#13;
it always the same. Tzar Coffee is carefully selected, scientifically&#13;
blended, and roasted by experts. It sells for 35c but&#13;
is worth more. W e have other good brands.&#13;
Ro-Vi\cj;o &amp; Kg?&#13;
»t35c-t»y*with • convenient&#13;
TrieoUtor. ,&#13;
Nero - •&#13;
Marigold&#13;
Pleasant Vallay&#13;
•&#13;
.&#13;
•&#13;
30c&#13;
32c&#13;
40c&#13;
!• .i!TV&lt; i i i&#13;
'AH i : .- if&#13;
Pleasant Valley Teas&#13;
80c - 60c - 80c&#13;
The^sarne vigilance is exercised i n t h e&#13;
•election of Pleasant Valley Teas. Only the&#13;
choice grades are used i n these blends and&#13;
au guaranteed. Let a s have your order today*&#13;
#&#13;
Murphy &amp; Jackson, Flnckney&#13;
Ayraulf €k Bollinger, Gregory&#13;
Superintendent Wright estimates&#13;
t h e amount spent io one&#13;
year for school books will be approximately&#13;
$425,000. There are&#13;
555,137 children enrolled in the&#13;
Btate, and Wright, in his estimates'&#13;
says he has figured on an average&#13;
of 25 per cent profit among all the&#13;
dealers. Some, he says, have charged&#13;
in the past 100 per cent profit,&#13;
while others haved charged only a&#13;
small margin.&#13;
The state department has been&#13;
required to hire a store building&#13;
here to display school books, which&#13;
publishers offer for sale in t h e&#13;
state, The new law requires publishers&#13;
to not only furnish samples&#13;
ot all school books, b a t to name&#13;
the wholesale price.—State&#13;
Journal.&#13;
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that&#13;
Contain Aercurf.&#13;
as mercury will 8urely destroy thu&#13;
senne of smell and completely derange&#13;
the whole system when entering it&#13;
through the mucus surfaces. Such articles&#13;
should never be used except on pre&#13;
scriptions from reputable physicians,&#13;
as the damage they do is ten fold to&#13;
the good you can possibly derive from&#13;
tbem. Hall's Catarrh Care, manufactured&#13;
by P J Cheney &amp; Co, Toledo,&#13;
O. contains no mercuiy, and is taken&#13;
internally act in j? directly upon the&#13;
blood and mucoa surfaces of the&#13;
system. In buying Hall's Catarrh&#13;
Curs be sure you get the genuine. I t&#13;
is taken internally a a i made in Toledo&#13;
Ohio, by P J Cheney &amp; Co., Testimonials&#13;
free. Sola by Drapgiste.&#13;
Price 75c. per bottle. Take Hall's&#13;
Family pills for constipation&#13;
a Lenox Soa]&#13;
3 quarts of Cranberries_&#13;
25 pounds granulated Sugar&#13;
25c&#13;
*1.35&#13;
A L L S A L E S CASH&#13;
W. W. BARNARD Produce Wanted&#13;
F A L L BILLS&#13;
DUB&#13;
We have a great many large bills falling due&#13;
this month and take this method of asking our&#13;
patrons who owe us to help out with remittance&#13;
as soon as possible. We will greatly&#13;
appreciate promptness and a continuation of&#13;
your business.&#13;
Dinkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
aPinolcney&#13;
H H » H W i U &lt; l » % % % % H U % » H H H % H H H » \ H H I » »&#13;
HONESTLY MADE MEDICINE&#13;
SUCCEEDS IN HEALING&#13;
The value of Foley Kidney Pills&#13;
over all other kidney medicines is due&#13;
to their honest make, and to the, wise&#13;
selection ot potent and restorative&#13;
drugs used m their make up. Foley j j£&#13;
Kidney Pills act in harmony witbi*&#13;
nature and are a genuine "first aid''19&#13;
in restoring the kidneys and pro mot- 5&#13;
ing thoroughly healthy action cf the , ±&#13;
kidneys and bladder. Those fortn- j •&#13;
nate ones who have used Foley Kidney&#13;
Pills are now rid of their ailments.&#13;
Try them, and they Will succeed&#13;
in helping your case of kidney&#13;
trouble. C. G. Meyer.&#13;
K H. F. S!GLER M. D- C. L, SIGLER M. D,&#13;
DHS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons.&#13;
All calls promptly attended to j£&#13;
day or night. Office on Main £&#13;
Street.&#13;
FINCKNEY, - MICH.&#13;
IMPORTANT!&#13;
Having decided to discontinue&#13;
farming, I offer&#13;
For Sale&#13;
10 to 15 head of young&#13;
serviceable short horn&#13;
cows and heifers at&#13;
about beef prices. Also&#13;
4 to 6 you£g Clydesdale&#13;
colts and fillys&#13;
from 1 to 3 years old.&#13;
Will give time to responsible&#13;
purchasers.&#13;
T# Birkett&#13;
GOING TO BUY A PIANO&#13;
OR ^ W I N G MACHINE&#13;
YES?&#13;
SEE L. R. WILLIAMS.&#13;
GREGORY&#13;
JttiTHe saves you money on high&#13;
grade pianos.&#13;
Y E A * » .&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
TRADE MAHKS&#13;
DEMONS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS 4te&#13;
A&gt;iT(:net,t&gt;hr..^a! mItcf^J: nr.e, descriptu-ti am?&#13;
i"Ti free wuettiof *L •nreirfv-ij, » ;,•.•( Tt . ..,&gt;r?;'v ? . !.v,(;,i,jn f&#13;
:iou«stnor:&gt;; .:.:;'.So'.rur,. HAK0800K on P.tt«iU&#13;
8t-.it iro.i. &lt;.&gt;!'.•.-.-: nvi:.)cy l^f •eourjnr patent*.&#13;
i'ni.«ntB taken u.miJtrh Matin &amp; Co. ^eoei""&#13;
tpecialnotice, without &lt;:hnrg&lt;». tnttw Scientific American A. hvotoomttr tUiMtratfa wteklf. Lnrcctt fltrfiniatlon&#13;
of any fct«aetfl# joarnaL T e r m * , 0 t&#13;
N i r : f oar months, |L Sow brafiiMWtfmtoM.&#13;
TtfT r*li«f from rheumatgo pftlm fef!&#13;
&amp;fr. M1W An ti-Pain pitfe Do Ml&#13;
•offer needlessly rAdvcrtlwment.]&#13;
&lt;r&#13;
• &lt; # ' : • • , -&#13;
it- . 4 ( , _• _• ,j ...i J&#13;
V&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
i&#13;
X&#13;
*&#13;
ri'v&#13;
J&#13;
i^; 4--/ *.-i&#13;
TOUCHES BUTTON T H A T SETS&#13;
OFF DYNAMITE AT GAMBOA&#13;
DIKE.&#13;
CURRENT TRAVELS OVER LAND&#13;
AND UNDER SEA.&#13;
Estimated That in Four Seconds After&#13;
Wilson Presses Button Last&#13;
Obstruction to Water in Canal&#13;
I t Blown Up.&#13;
Washington—A little electric spark&#13;
which originated when President Wilson&#13;
pressed the button in the White&#13;
House Friday at 2 p. m., was the silent&#13;
agent which sped more than 4,000&#13;
miles over lard and under water and&#13;
ignited the immense charges of dynamite&#13;
which practically removed the&#13;
last obstruction in the Panama canal.&#13;
Electrical experts calculated that&#13;
within four seconds after President&#13;
Wilson pressed the button in Washington,&#13;
the current threw a small&#13;
switch on an apparatus at the Gamboa&#13;
dike, which, in turn, set in motion&#13;
other apparatus which furnished&#13;
the current for exploding the charges.&#13;
Elaborate preparations had been&#13;
made by the Western Union Telegraph&#13;
Co., for the practically instantaneous&#13;
transmission of the president's signal.&#13;
From Washington to Galveston, Tex.,&#13;
1,556 miles, a single wire carried the&#13;
spark. There it was taken up instantaneously&#13;
by sensitive repeating instruments&#13;
and sped over the cable&#13;
along the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico&#13;
to Coatzacoalcos, Mexico, 793 miles&#13;
further. From that point it sped overland&#13;
across the isthums of Tehuantepac&#13;
over wires on the line of the Tehuantepec&#13;
National railway, 188 miles&#13;
more on its journey, to another cable&#13;
station at Salina Cruz, on the Pacific&#13;
ocean, where other sets of sensitive&#13;
telegraph instruments snatched it up&#13;
and hurried it 766 miles along over&#13;
another cable along the bottom of the&#13;
Pacific ocean to San Juisjj, del Sur,&#13;
Nicaragua, a cable station where other&#13;
delicate machines transferred it to&#13;
still another cable and shot it along&#13;
718 miles more to Panama. There the&#13;
spark emerged from its long submarine&#13;
journey to the overland telegraph&#13;
wires of the Panama Railroad Co., and&#13;
completed its mission at the Gamboa&#13;
dike.&#13;
Great Damage By Storm.&#13;
Harbor Springs, Mich,—A tornado,&#13;
the worst storm ever recorded here,&#13;
struck this city Friday night, and besides&#13;
doing thousands of dollars'&#13;
worth of damage in the city tore up&#13;
orchards by the acre, blew down electric&#13;
and telephone wires and took the&#13;
roofs off of many buildings. The heaviest&#13;
individual loser by the storm is&#13;
the Northern Michigan Transportation&#13;
company, whose warehouse was burned&#13;
and blown into the lake. James&#13;
Roe, the local agent for the transportation&#13;
company, was working in the&#13;
warehouse office at the time the storm&#13;
struck and hearing the back door&#13;
pushed in, ran for the front door, but&#13;
was unable to open it. Then the building&#13;
crashed in, pinning Roe beneath&#13;
the debris, where after some time he&#13;
escaped unaided. The warehouse was&#13;
filled with fruits and vegetables which&#13;
are a total loss.&#13;
Wife of Prisoner Legal Widow.&#13;
Jackson, Mich.—That Mary Sierminski&#13;
on the 5th day of last April, when&#13;
he was sentenced to Jackson prison&#13;
for murdering their baby, but is now&#13;
a widow by reason of such imprisonment&#13;
and entitled to a mother's pension&#13;
is the opinion of Attorney General&#13;
Fellows handed down to Probate&#13;
Judge Clarence M. Russell, who presented&#13;
the question before him on application&#13;
of Mrs. Sierminski a short&#13;
time ago.&#13;
The baby Sierminski so brutally&#13;
killed was the only child at the time,&#13;
but another child has been born since&#13;
he has been in prison.&#13;
Strikers Confess Killing Pollack.&#13;
Calumet, Mich.—Confessions of complicity&#13;
in the slaying of Deputy Sheriff&#13;
Pollack, were obtained from three&#13;
more copper 'mine strikers, making&#13;
confessions from six of the eight men&#13;
held under arrest, besides the partial&#13;
confession of the dead striker, Jos.&#13;
Manerlch, who was wounded by Pollack&#13;
and died later. The six confessions&#13;
are practically Identical, Manerich&#13;
being blamed for the killing and&#13;
it being claimed Pollack was ambushed,&#13;
but that he flrod the first shots&#13;
f&gt;h€n attacked, wounding Manerich.&#13;
'x-i.&#13;
^ kf^r '&#13;
CoisldeTable excitement has b*en&#13;
eanaed at Cadillao over the discovery&#13;
of gas on th* farm of Sidney Cridermai^&#13;
in S«taut_ township.&#13;
Civil serrioe examinations will be&#13;
beld November* at Peacock for postmaster&#13;
at Irons and at Defiance for&#13;
potlsMtter it Rot*&#13;
PRINCE TARO KATSURA MARKETS&#13;
For many years premier of Japan&#13;
died Friday after a long illness. He&#13;
will be remembered in America&#13;
principally as for the part he took&#13;
. in bringing abou*. the Anglo-Japanese&#13;
alliance.&#13;
DEPUTIES R LEASED FROM JAIL&#13;
Resignation of Huerta Is Demanded&#13;
and Election On October 26 May&#13;
Not Oe Held.&#13;
Washington—State department advices&#13;
from Mexico City announce that&#13;
the 110 members of the Mexican&#13;
chamber of deputies who were thrown&#13;
into prison Friday night by order of&#13;
Provisional President Huerta, were released&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
The deputies had been arrested and&#13;
lodged in the pen for signing resolutions&#13;
or warning to General Victoriano&#13;
Huerta because of the disappearance&#13;
of the senator for Chiapas, Dr. Bel-&#13;
Isero Dominguez.&#13;
A proclamation was issued Just before&#13;
midnight calling for new elections&#13;
of senators and deputies October&#13;
26, which date is coincident with&#13;
the presidential election.&#13;
Additional advices to the state department&#13;
were that in the turbulence&#13;
that attended the dissolution of the&#13;
congress a petition was circulated calling&#13;
on Provisional President Huerta&#13;
to resign. All the signers were arrested.&#13;
Many officials regarded the developments&#13;
as bearing out predictions that&#13;
no election day would be held October&#13;
26.&#13;
To Harness Falls For Light&#13;
Washington—Great Fails, one of the&#13;
historic and picturesque spots in the&#13;
environments of Washington, will be&#13;
harnessed and made to furnish the&#13;
power for light and power to the national&#13;
capital, ^provided congress 1B&#13;
favorable to a recommendation to be&#13;
made to it by the commissioners of&#13;
the District of Columbia. The commissioners&#13;
included in the district appropriation&#13;
bill an item jof $3,000,000&#13;
to provide for the purchase of the&#13;
Potomac river water falls and the&#13;
commencement of the work of controlling&#13;
the racing stream.&#13;
Live Stock, Grain and General Farm&#13;
Produce.&#13;
Live Stock.&#13;
Detroit — Cattle — Receipts, 1,386;&#13;
choice steers, 17.50&lt;&amp;%; good to choice&#13;
butcher steers, 1,000 to 1,200 pounds,&#13;
$7@7.50; light to good butcher steers&#13;
and heifers, 700 to 900 pounds, «6.50&#13;
@7; mixed butchers' fat cows, $6®&#13;
6.25; canners, $3@4; common bulls,&#13;
$4.75@5.25; good shippers' bulls, $6.25&#13;
@6.50; common feeders, $6.25@6.5Q;&#13;
light atockers, $6@6.25.&#13;
Veal calves—Receipts—470; best,&#13;
$6&lt;g)ll; others, $7@9.50.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 6,230;&#13;
good lambs, 10@15c lower; common&#13;
sheep and lambs, $10; best lambs, $7;&#13;
fair to good lambs, $6.50@6.85; light&#13;
to common lambs, $5.25@6.25; fair to&#13;
good butcher sheep, $3.75&lt;g)4.25; culls&#13;
and common, $7.50@8.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 5,210; light to good&#13;
butchers, $8.40; pigs, $6@7.50; mixed,&#13;
$8@8.40; heavy, $8.2508.40.&#13;
East Buffalo Markets.&#13;
EAST BUFFALO — Cattle — Receipts,&#13;
230 cars; market steady; best&#13;
1,350 to 1,500-lb steers, $8.50(g&gt;8.75;&#13;
best 1,200 to 1,300-lb steers, $8.25®&#13;
8.50; best 1,100 to 1,200-lb steers, $8®&#13;
8.25; coarse and plain weighty steers,&#13;
$7.25@7.50; choice handy steers, 1,-&#13;
000 to 1,100 lbs, $8@8.35; fair to good&#13;
steers, 1,000 to 1,100 lbs. $7.25@7.65;&#13;
grassy, 800 to 1,000-tb steers, $6.75®&#13;
7.25; best cows, 800 to 1,000-lb steers,&#13;
$6.75&lt;g&gt;7.25; best cows, $6.50@6.75;&#13;
butcher cows, $5.25 ©6.25; cutters,&#13;
$4.75; trimmers, $3.751b4; best heifers,&#13;
$7.50@8; medium butcher heifers,&#13;
$6.25&lt;g&gt;7; stock heifers, $5@5.25;&#13;
best feding steers, $7&lt;g&gt;7.50; fair to&#13;
good steers, $6.25@6.75; common light&#13;
stockers, $5.50@6; best butcher bulls,&#13;
$6.75@7.25; best bologna bulls, $5.50®&#13;
6; stock bulls, $6@5.50; best milkers&#13;
and springers, $70®80; common to&#13;
good, $50®60.&#13;
Hogs: Receipts, 120 cars; market&#13;
10®15c lower; heavy mediums and&#13;
yorkers, $9; pigs, $7@7.50; roughs,&#13;
$7.75@8.25; stags, $7@7.50.&#13;
Sheep and lambs: Receipts, SO cars;&#13;
marke* strong; top lambs, $7.70®7.80;&#13;
culls to fair, $6®6.50; yearlings, $5.50&#13;
®6.26; wethers, $5@5.25; ewes, $4.50&#13;
5.C .&#13;
Calves slow: tops, $11@.12; fair to&#13;
good, $10®11; heavy, $5.50@8.&#13;
Loan Shark Is Sentenced.&#13;
New York—Daniel H. Tolman,&#13;
known as the "King of Loan Sharks,"&#13;
and proprietor of a chain of loan offices&#13;
extending across the continent,&#13;
was Thursday convicted of usury and&#13;
sentenced tb six months in the penitentiary&#13;
by Justice Zeller in the court&#13;
of special sessions.&#13;
Although, numerous actions have&#13;
been brought against Tolman, this Is&#13;
the first time that he has been directly,&#13;
connected with the making of&#13;
any loan through his offices. In all&#13;
previous cases he has escaped by&#13;
placing the responsibility on a woman&#13;
manager.&#13;
Detroit Grain Market&#13;
Wheat—No. 1 white, 94 l-2c; Xo. 2,&#13;
red, 94 l-4c; December opened steady&#13;
at 95 3-4c, eased off to 95 l-2c, and&#13;
closed without recovery; May opened&#13;
highest at 99 3-4c and closed lowest&#13;
at 99 l-2c per bu.&#13;
Corn—No. 2 mixed, 72 l-4c; No. 2&#13;
yellow, 73 l-4c; No. 3 yellow, 72 3-4c&#13;
per bu.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 1 car at 43 l-2c;&#13;
No. 3 white, 43c; No. 4 white, 42c per&#13;
bu.&#13;
Rye—No. 2, 68c per bu.&#13;
Beans—Immediate shipment, $1.80;&#13;
October, $1.75; November, $1.70 per&#13;
bu., country points.&#13;
Clover seed-rOctober, December,&#13;
and March, $7.75; by sample, 30 bags&#13;
at $7.75; 20 at $7, and 14 at $6.60 per&#13;
bu.; prime alsika, October, $10; by&#13;
sample, 5 bags at $9 per bu.&#13;
Timothy seed—Prime, 50 bags at&#13;
$2.40 per bu.&#13;
Alfalfa seed—Prime, $7.50 per bu.&#13;
The five weeks' chrysanthemum exhibition&#13;
of the University of Michigan&#13;
will open in Ann Arbor, Saturday,&#13;
October 25, in Alumni Memorial hall.&#13;
This is the second annual exhibition.&#13;
One shoulder, an arm, and two ribs&#13;
broken, and many cuts and bruises&#13;
and Internal Injuries caused by a fall&#13;
through a skylight taken by Allin Parker,&#13;
52, of Ann Arbor, at the Lusk&#13;
foundry, resulted in his death.&#13;
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PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
1&#13;
v&#13;
The Daughter of David Kerr&#13;
no&#13;
By Harry King Tootle&#13;
- DD : DD&#13;
Illustrations by Ray Walters&#13;
8YNOP8I3.&#13;
Gloria Kerr, a- motherless girl, who has&#13;
spent most of her life In school, arrives&#13;
at her father's home In Belmont. David&#13;
Kerr 1B the political boss of the town,&#13;
and li anxious to prevent his daughter&#13;
learning of his real character. Kendall,&#13;
representing the Chicago packers, Is negotiating&#13;
with Judge Gilbert. Kerr's chief&#13;
adviser, for a valuable franchise. They&#13;
fear the opposition of Joe Wright, editor&#13;
of the reform paper. Kerr asks the as.&#13;
sistance of Judge Gilbert In introducing&#13;
Gloria to Belmont society, and promises&#13;
to help him put through the packers'&#13;
franchise and let him have all the graft.&#13;
Gloria meets Joe Wright at the Gilberts.&#13;
It appears they are on intimate terms,&#13;
having met previously In a touring party&#13;
ha Europe. ,&#13;
CHAPTER IV.—Continued.&#13;
"Of course it isn't our fault," added&#13;
Dr. .Hayes emphatically. **l still say,&#13;
Rose,** turning to his wife, "that I&#13;
have no sympathy for people who use&#13;
the bath tub for a coal bin,"&#13;
•*•• **ni • tell yon about it some other&#13;
time," said Mrs. Hayes to Gloria, not&#13;
despairing of making her a worker.&#13;
"I'm afraid you'll find me hard to&#13;
convert."&#13;
"Then I'll appeal to Mr. Wright to&#13;
feelp me."&#13;
"I have no influence with her,"&#13;
laughed Wright.&#13;
"Not since you ran away from us in&#13;
fraris," pouted Gloria.&#13;
Dr. Hayes and his wife left the library&#13;
convoyed by Mrs. Gilbert&#13;
For the first time that evening&#13;
Gloria and Wright found no one to Interrupt&#13;
their conversation.&#13;
He was standing in front of the&#13;
.grate, his admiration for the girl shining&#13;
honestly forth from his eyes as he&#13;
watched her say the last good-byes.&#13;
Kvhen the others had gone, she turned&#13;
to Wright with a smile. Walking&#13;
across the room to him she held out&#13;
her hand, and said simply:&#13;
"You don't know how glad I am to&#13;
find you here."&#13;
t "Are you?" he replied, retaining her&#13;
hand while he spoke. "Since that's&#13;
the case I wouldn't care to be anywhere&#13;
else In the world."&#13;
Then they sat down to talk of other&#13;
days.&#13;
CHAPTER V.&#13;
There was so much to be said that&#13;
Wright and the girl were at a loss to&#13;
know where to begin now that they&#13;
had an opportunity to talk without interruption.&#13;
With Gloria there was an&#13;
undercurrent of unrest caused by the&#13;
fact that she feared he had carelessly&#13;
broken the promise made on the Rhine&#13;
to meet her again In Paris. She had&#13;
waited and he had not come.&#13;
Wright was no less Interested in&#13;
what they were about to say. In the&#13;
first place, after a long absence, he&#13;
was again with the girl whom he had&#13;
made It a point to meet at various&#13;
places in Europe. To add confusion&#13;
to their friendship, which he had highly&#13;
prized, had just come the astounding&#13;
revelation that she was David&#13;
Kerr's daughter. How could he be a&#13;
friend of the daughter and an enemy&#13;
of the father? Then, too, what did&#13;
she knew of her father's methods, and&#13;
of Ms own attitude toward the boss of&#13;
Belmont? And if she knew, what did&#13;
she think? These things made conversation&#13;
rather an exhausting mental&#13;
exercise.&#13;
«&lt;WeIl?" Gloria smiled, inviting him&#13;
to begin the story of all that had happened&#13;
since they had shaken hands&#13;
and parted/ he to go to London and&#13;
eh* baok to Paris where she was -to&#13;
see him later but where disappointment&#13;
awaited her.&#13;
"Well," he answered. He wanted&#13;
her to begin, and thus give him the&#13;
one to her line of thought&#13;
„ "This isn't much like Paris."&#13;
.•You're here."&#13;
"Yea," Bhe laughed, "and you're&#13;
too. That's why it isn't like&#13;
Paris "when I saw it last."&#13;
At any rate, I'm glad we're both&#13;
here." He was anxious to have her&#13;
I n t e r p r e t ^ present&#13;
"For me it is the first time in twelve&#13;
- This came as a glad surpriss, to&#13;
Wright Then she cannot know much,&#13;
he thought Her remark emboldened&#13;
him to say:&#13;
"Didn't you tell me your father was&#13;
a real estate operates?"&#13;
"Yes. Didn't you know that?"&#13;
"I had almost forgotten. You see,&#13;
I am practically a stranger here. Yon&#13;
and I are alike in that respect if you&#13;
have not been here for a dozen years."&#13;
&lt;.«"Qbr I wouldn't say that" she r.epsed&#13;
aufeMy. "My, father knows every-&#13;
-body and everybody knows father. I&#13;
shall know every one in a week."&#13;
. "Yes, that's true," he said cautiously.&#13;
,\&gt;t "flow Jong have you been in BelfMAtr&#13;
asked Gloria, seeking to satis-&#13;
Cop/rlgfrt bf A. C, McClurg a Co., 1611&#13;
fy her own curiosity now that she had&#13;
told him something about herself.&#13;
"Only a month or so."&#13;
"I think it's the queerest thing in&#13;
the world that we should meet here&#13;
of all places. What are you doing&#13;
here?"&#13;
And then Wright lied. He did not&#13;
have time to consider what might be&#13;
the ethics of the case. He listened to&#13;
his heart, which may have made him a&#13;
traitor to himself, and answered&#13;
promptly:&#13;
"I've been doing some magazine'&#13;
writing and an occasional bit of newspaper&#13;
and similar work."&#13;
Had he been asked he could not&#13;
have explained why h« had not replied&#13;
Just as promptly that he was the owner&#13;
of the Belmont News. What th*&#13;
real reason was he cguld not even explain&#13;
tft? himself. Ea/lier in the evening&#13;
he "had talked glibly of a newspaper&#13;
and Its duty, md here an hou/&#13;
later he was denying his own under&#13;
the fire of a pair of iaughing eyes.&#13;
. Gloria, whose ideas of business were&#13;
as vague as her notions of politics or&#13;
esoteric Buddhism, accepted his explanation&#13;
as adequate; especially since&#13;
she recalled that when in Europe he&#13;
had been writing some magazine aJjticles&#13;
about the tariff. Since she never&#13;
thought about the matter at all she&#13;
never thought it strange that Belmont&#13;
should be the place ter such labors.&#13;
"Have you ever b«en to . Locust&#13;
Lawn ?" was her next question.&#13;
"I have that'pleasure in store for&#13;
me."&#13;
This pleased her. Even before he&#13;
came there were many little things&#13;
she could do to make the house appear&#13;
to better advantage. Although he had&#13;
not yet made explanation of his failure&#13;
to come to Paris, she found herself&#13;
anxious to have him once more&#13;
on the old footing of Intimate friendship.&#13;
"Are you the same as in the mad&#13;
old, glad old Paris days?" he asked.&#13;
She parried the question with another.&#13;
"Are you?"&#13;
"Invsome respects—only more so."&#13;
"That's a riddle. I hate riddles."&#13;
As he made no reply to this, she went&#13;
on after the pause of which he had not&#13;
taken advantage. "I hope we meet&#13;
accidentally as often .as you met our&#13;
party abroad."&#13;
"Was it accident?" he made bold to&#13;
ask.&#13;
"Wasn't It? You pretended it was."&#13;
Then the mischievous little spirit that&#13;
ruled her tongue forced her to say, "I&#13;
don't blame you; I think Annabel&#13;
Hitchcock is a beautiful girl. We all&#13;
know you were crazy about her."&#13;
"Was I?" Rising inflection.&#13;
"Weren't you?" Also rising inflection.&#13;
"Hi admit I followed your party,"&#13;
he conceded.&#13;
"Now we're getting at the truth of&#13;
the matter," she replied triumphantly.&#13;
She felt she waB teasing him, and she&#13;
enjoyed it. "But why didn't you come&#13;
on to Paris as you promised us? I'd&#13;
like to know why we suddenly loBt&#13;
you. Was it another girl even prettier&#13;
than Annabel?"&#13;
He did not Join her when she&#13;
laughed at the picture she had painted.&#13;
All the light Joyousness, the first&#13;
which had been his since he had come&#13;
to Belmont, died out of hie face as he&#13;
answered:&#13;
"After the Rhine I had hoped to&#13;
meet you in Parle again. I looked&#13;
forward to it as the beginning of another&#13;
happy time. And then, in London,&#13;
I received a cable—my mother&#13;
was dying." ^&#13;
"No," protested the girl, her eyes&#13;
wide with pity.&#13;
"I had Just time to catch the express&#13;
for Liverpool that would pat me&#13;
aboard a liner an hour before the&#13;
sailed. Miss Kerr, I know I thought of&#13;
Paris, but things all seemed blurred&#13;
to- me, and so the- message I had&#13;
planned to you—not to Miss Hitchcock&#13;
—was never sent* ;&#13;
"My poor friend.**&#13;
"I reached America too late."&#13;
"I'm so sorry/* she sighed.&#13;
He had told the whole story. There&#13;
was nothing more to say.&#13;
Both sat gazing Into the open fire,&#13;
busy with the thought* of life and&#13;
death. At last Gloria said quietly,&#13;
with no more movement than \t her&#13;
thoughts had of themselves become&#13;
vocal: " •&#13;
"Tell me of .yarn*, mother. 1 never&#13;
knew my mother; and so I envy you.&#13;
You loved her?"&#13;
' 3 : i o m $ &gt; W ***&gt;eja»r^Of his&#13;
own affairs he seldom spoke, yet here&#13;
was one who by her very presence&#13;
made him glad to tell his story, and&#13;
gtad that It was a story he eould tell&#13;
with pride, "ton never loved mother&#13;
more. And never did a son owe a&#13;
mother more than I owed mine. • I&#13;
never knew my father. He waa a good&#13;
man, but not provident When he died,&#13;
mother found she had to support herself&#13;
and me, an only child. 0 Miss&#13;
Kerr, if you knew the bitterness of&#13;
that struggle as I know it your heart&#13;
would ache, too, at thought of it"&#13;
He paused, but something clutched&#13;
at Gloria's throat She could not&#13;
speak.&#13;
. "If mother could have a fault it&#13;
was her pride of me. I suppose when&#13;
all the things she had planned for herself&#13;
came to naught at my father's&#13;
death she centered everything on me.&#13;
It wasn't right of course, because I&#13;
wasn't worth it, but I tried, always&#13;
tried to be worthy of that pride. And&#13;
when she came to die—she wrote—"&#13;
He couldn't go on, and Gloria, respecting&#13;
his grief, was silent, too.&#13;
"I'm so glad she lived to see ft all&#13;
come true," Gloria said finally in a&#13;
low tone. "It makes me think of what&#13;
sacrifices my father has made for me.&#13;
Just because he loved me and wanted&#13;
me to have everything, he haa given&#13;
up what Joy I might have been to him.&#13;
Your story has taught me what I owe&#13;
to him." &gt;&#13;
At this a sudden pain shot through&#13;
the man's heart It made him pledge&#13;
himself before heaven to, protect her&#13;
from the truth.&#13;
"My "mother died when T was a&#13;
baby, Just as your father did,' «he explained&#13;
wistfully. "And, as I tola you,&#13;
I envy you your mother. I wish you&#13;
had written me. I could have at least&#13;
sent my sympathy."&#13;
Now Gloria understood. All that&#13;
year her thoughts had presented him&#13;
other than in the true light.&#13;
. "I wrote to you," he said gravely,&#13;
"as soon as I wrote to anyone. I didn't&#13;
know your address, and ventured letters&#13;
at Brown, Shipley's in London,&#13;
and the American Express company in&#13;
Paris. I had heard you speak of both&#13;
places, I thought Both letters came&#13;
back."&#13;
"Give them to me. I want to keep&#13;
them. We left Paris before you&#13;
wrote, and hurried to Japan. Our mall&#13;
was sent in care of Cook's. What did&#13;
you do—afterward ?"&#13;
"I took a long rest There was not&#13;
a relative to share my sorrow with&#13;
me. Now that I've come down out of&#13;
the mountains and taken stock of life 1&#13;
find I haven't a soul'In the world—"&#13;
"Don't say that, Joe." She felt irresistably&#13;
drawn to him and put forth&#13;
her hand and laid it on his sympathetically.&#13;
He turned his own and let&#13;
hers nestle within it.&#13;
"You're still the same Gloria."&#13;
"A year isn't BO long a time."&#13;
And so they sat, with never a word&#13;
to say, just that hand clasp of silent&#13;
sympathy as they gazed into the fire.&#13;
CHAPTER VI.&#13;
In the diawlng-room, Kerr and Gilbert&#13;
were just beginning a convcrsa-&#13;
"I Had Hoped to Meet You In Parle&#13;
Again."&#13;
tion which had for its theme the new&#13;
turn affaire had taken, when Dr.&#13;
Hayes passed through the hall on his&#13;
way out with his wife. Sam Hayes&#13;
was a member of the ring's inner&#13;
shrine, and when the opportunity arose&#13;
for what was termed a quick clean-up&#13;
he was always a member of the syndicate.&#13;
Therefore, the die having been&#13;
cast the judge called him in and announced&#13;
the determination to push the&#13;
franchise, a deal with which the coroner&#13;
waa already familiar Far more&#13;
than for any other reason Kerr waa&#13;
always willing to include him beeuse&#13;
hit Belmont connections were so&#13;
strong that he really lent an air of respectability&#13;
to any undertaking.&#13;
"We are going to put a line to the&#13;
Btock yards down Maple avenue, Sam,"&#13;
began the attorney.&#13;
"So it's settled, is l t r&#13;
"Yes. You remember that vacant&#13;
tract beyond Benton Park? The on*&#13;
that the Belden Brothers are thinking&#13;
of cutting up for a residence addiDoa!&#13;
Well, you can't build a house in a&#13;
mile of it when the road's through&#13;
there, but it'll be worth a great deal&#13;
more for factory sites:&#13;
"You'll have railroad connections,&#13;
see?" explained Kerr.&#13;
"What's doing?" asked Sam, always&#13;
keen for a dollar.&#13;
"Get an option on it," continued&#13;
Gilbert, "and we'll cash in big."&#13;
"How long an option?"&#13;
The attorney looked at Kerr.&#13;
"Sixty days," said the latter.&#13;
"In that time we can ram the franchise&#13;
through the council, and when&#13;
that's done any bank'll lend us the&#13;
money to take over the property."&#13;
Hayes went out to rejoin MB wife,&#13;
after promising to take the matter up&#13;
In the morning.&#13;
Gilbert was Just on the point of beginning&#13;
a discussion of Gloria's future&#13;
when a reporter from the Banner was&#13;
announced.&#13;
"I'll come out to see him," said the&#13;
lawyer, rising.&#13;
"No," objected Kerr, "have him in. 1&#13;
want to see him, too."&#13;
So Mr. James Wlnthrow, the young&#13;
political reporter for the Belmont Banner,&#13;
was admitted.&#13;
Wlnthrow, like the usual run of star&#13;
reporters in a town the size* of Belmont,&#13;
was not only a shrewd young&#13;
American, but he was also well aware&#13;
of his great shrewdness. He had&#13;
made as many political prognostications&#13;
as any young man in the country,&#13;
and they were quite as misleading&#13;
in the main as were any of the others.&#13;
Being on the machine paper and a&#13;
loyal reporter, It followed as of course&#13;
that he was a loyal machine man. Old&#13;
Jerry Wlnthrow, the editor, was a distant&#13;
relative, but friendly enough and&#13;
interested enough in the youth 10 explain&#13;
to him some of the turnings of&#13;
the political wheels.&#13;
When Wlnthrow saw Kerr closeted&#13;
with his legal adviser he could not&#13;
suppress a whistle of surprise.&#13;
"Evening, Judge. Good evening, Mr.&#13;
Kerr."&#13;
"How are you, Jim?" said Gilbert.&#13;
The boss merely nodded an acknowledgement&#13;
of the greeting. "What can&#13;
I do for you?"&#13;
"Some stock-yard terminal rumors,&#13;
in the air, Judge; Just rumors, and I&#13;
can't find out a thing."&#13;
"I haven't heard a thing about it,"&#13;
the lawyer assured him. Then to Kerr,&#13;
"Have you?"&#13;
"Not a word," answered the boss.&#13;
"Where did you get it?" queried Gilbert.&#13;
"Floating 'round town. I met Mr.&#13;
Kendall Just now going to the station,&#13;
but he wouldn't talk. I know&#13;
that the surveyors have been out.&#13;
When Mr. Kendall said he'd been here&#13;
to dinner, Bilby, he's our city editor,&#13;
told me to see you."&#13;
Gilbert turned to Kerr. The leader&#13;
was a man of few words. He disposed&#13;
of the matter under discussion with&#13;
one sentence.&#13;
"Tell Bilby, Dave Kerr said not to&#13;
print a line; he'll understand."&#13;
That was all. It was an order, and&#13;
the reporter accepted It as such.&#13;
Things in Belmont were so well regulated&#13;
that there was no danger from&#13;
any source which would cause Kerr to&#13;
think twice before sending his order&#13;
to the city editor of the Banner by the&#13;
reporter of that paper.&#13;
As Wlnthrow rose to depart, Kerr&#13;
asked: "You have anything to do with&#13;
the society columns?"&#13;
"Occasionally stumble on a Btory."&#13;
"Tomorrow put In that Miss Gloria&#13;
Kerr has returned from a trip around&#13;
the world."&#13;
Wlnthrow put it down, and then&#13;
asked with pencil pofsed: "Is she at&#13;
Locust Lawn?"&#13;
"Yes," said Kerr.&#13;
"Don't write the item until I telephone&#13;
you later in the evening," interrupted&#13;
Gilbert He had been plotting&#13;
and planning along social lines ever&#13;
since Kerr had told him of Gloria's&#13;
return. Several things he had already&#13;
thought of flashed through his mind.&#13;
The impossibility of Locust Lawn as&#13;
a social center was one of these, and&#13;
Gilbert had something to suggest before&#13;
having the Banner write the story&#13;
which would herald her return. "You&#13;
can add this, though. Say that Judge&#13;
and Mrs. Gilbert will issue invitations&#13;
next week for a dance to introduce&#13;
Mies Kerr."&#13;
No sooner had the reporter gone&#13;
than Kerr turned to Gilbert and said&#13;
with what waa for him unaccustomed&#13;
warmth:&#13;
"That's mighty good of you, Amos."&#13;
"Not at all." Then the lawyer went&#13;
on in an injured tone, "I'm only sorry&#13;
that you put the franchise up to me at&#13;
a trade. I'm not doing it for that."&#13;
"I knew you'd do it for the girl's&#13;
sake, but I want you to get what you&#13;
can out of it Amos. I owe you that&#13;
much."&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
The tobacco of New England generally&#13;
commands a higher price than&#13;
the average of the other states.&#13;
Practical Fashions&#13;
MISSES' AND 8MALL WOMEN'S&#13;
DRESS.&#13;
The smart feature of this frock la&#13;
the back closing, which is somewhat&#13;
unusual in this day of front and side&#13;
closings. Another pretty point is the&#13;
draped sash. Draped shoulders are&#13;
seen and the only trimming is the frill&#13;
of lace outlining the neck and trimming&#13;
the sleeves. Long sleeves and a&#13;
round embroidered collar may be used&#13;
if desired. Charmeuse, crepe de&#13;
chine, cotton crepe or thin serge would&#13;
all be attractive In this design.&#13;
The pattern (6341) is cut in 3 sizes,&#13;
14, 16 and 18 years. Medium slse&#13;
will require 4 yards of 86 inch&#13;
material.&#13;
To procure this pattern send 10 eetttS&#13;
to '"Pattern Department," of thl» paper.&#13;
Write name and address plainly, and bo&#13;
sure to give size and^numoer of patter"&#13;
NO. 6341. SIZE.-&#13;
I&#13;
NAME - —&#13;
TOWN--..1&#13;
STREET AND NO.&#13;
LADY'S COMBINATION.&#13;
A perfectly plain combination with&#13;
smooth lines over the hips and no extra&#13;
fullness is shown in this design.&#13;
French batiste, nainsook or cotton&#13;
crepe may be used to advantage, and&#13;
the garment may be trimmed with narrow&#13;
lace and insertion. A pretty fad&#13;
Just now is to have underwear of&#13;
tinted or flowered stuffs. The crepes&#13;
are excellent for combinations, night&#13;
gowns and negligees, as It Is dainty&#13;
and washes so well.&#13;
Lady's combination pattern (63501&#13;
Is cut in sizes 34 to 42 inches, bust&#13;
measure. Medium slse requires 1%&#13;
yards of 36 inch material&#13;
To woctirs this pattern fend 10 oontS&#13;
to "Pattern Department." of this paper.&#13;
Write name and address plainly, and bo&#13;
sure to give size and number of pattera*&#13;
NO 6350. H Z * — .&#13;
NAME -•«•&#13;
TOWN ~ ~ . . _ .&#13;
STREET AND NO.-.&#13;
STATE.... •»•••••.——.&#13;
Summer Features,&#13;
"Wombat hat some nice features on&#13;
the roof of his new apartment hou**."&#13;
'What sort of featurear*&#13;
•'Every apartment it entitled to&#13;
posts and » latamock."&#13;
t^u.*** &lt;r*v « c / n w * * * r- --» *% • » • * » • " - —-• * -•»-*»•«(*•»- «&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
4"*&#13;
.&amp;&#13;
• I • -&#13;
• V ' - ^ ^ ^ - , : .&#13;
••"vf/&#13;
ft*** * , » • . • • • • * »&#13;
' -.^: •&#13;
r-4&#13;
Gasoline House Fire&#13;
Last Thursday eveuiu^ about&#13;
7:ii0 o'clock as Frank Keuueily&#13;
was pumping gasoline in the gasoline&#13;
house used iu connection&#13;
with Fliutoft'tt garage, the hose&#13;
became ^Gohi^Ctci H1K1 a stream&#13;
of gaBoline Bhot out, striking the&#13;
lights of an auto standiLg just&#13;
outside the door. Immediately&#13;
the whole place was ablaze both&#13;
inside and out. Due to the quick&#13;
work of the by-stauders, the conflagration&#13;
was smothered in a few&#13;
momenta by means of flour aud&#13;
sand. The house contained a&#13;
sunken tank having a capacity of&#13;
500 gallons of gasoline besides a&#13;
200 gallon tank on the ground&#13;
surface, so the accident was a&#13;
lucky one indeed for all concerned.&#13;
An Editor's Prayer&#13;
Winter is approaching slowly&#13;
but surely and the Editor of this&#13;
paper finds himself in need of&#13;
funds. He cannot keep warm on&#13;
air and subsist on water any more&#13;
than any other human beiug, It&#13;
takes cold cash to buy a winter's&#13;
supply of coat and potatoes, so unless&#13;
our subscribers and others&#13;
w sh to fiud us stark a n d&#13;
stiff on some cold frosty morning,&#13;
,ve would kindly hint that they&#13;
attend to any account they might&#13;
owe us. While you may only&#13;
owe a dollar or so and think'it a&#13;
trivial affair not worth bothering&#13;
about, you must also remember&#13;
that to ns, when summed up, it&#13;
means about three or four hundred&#13;
of those dollars. We would&#13;
greatly appreciate such attention&#13;
on your part.&#13;
SOUTH IOSCO.&#13;
Ray Wainright and wife of Webberville&#13;
spent Saturday and Sunday at Truman&#13;
Wainright's.&#13;
Martin Anderson and wife spent Sunday&#13;
at tilt huiue of Mr. Pardy in Handy.&#13;
A la rue number fruffl here attended the&#13;
Fair at Fowlerviile last week.&#13;
Dr. Snencer Sr., wife and daughter and&#13;
Dr. Spencer Jr. culled at Truman Wainright's&#13;
last Friday.&#13;
Alta Bullie of Pinckney spent the last of&#13;
the v»eek with her sister, Mrs. John Roberts.&#13;
The L. A. S. met with Mrs. Amy Van-&#13;
Keuren, Wednesday, for dinner.&#13;
Hugh Ward and wife haye purchased a&#13;
new piano from L. K. Williams.&#13;
Juliau Bull, wife and daughter entertained&#13;
company from Detroit the last of&#13;
the week. •&#13;
Geo. Mowers, wife aud daughter Lucy&#13;
visited at the home of L. T. Lamborne&#13;
Thursday and also attended the Fowlerville&#13;
Fair.&#13;
Whilft lie was attending the Fowlerville j&#13;
Fair John Kuttman's auto caught fire and&#13;
much damage was done.&#13;
Eczema and Itching- Cured&#13;
TIIP sootbinsr, hea^inc? niedication in&#13;
Dr. Hobsoa1!* Eczema Ointment penetrates&#13;
every tiny pore of the skin,&#13;
clear* it of all impurities—stops itcbinsr&#13;
instantly. Dr. Hopson's Eczema&#13;
Ointment is guaranteed to speedily&#13;
heal eczema, rashes, nngworm, tetter&#13;
and other unsightly eruptions. Eczema&#13;
Ointment is a doctor's prescription, not&#13;
an experiment. All druggist or by&#13;
mail. 50c Pfeiffer Chemical Co.,&#13;
Philadelphia and St. Louis.&#13;
WEST PUTNAM&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Erwin of Owosso is visiting&#13;
her sister Mrs. Wm. Doyle.&#13;
i Mike Murphy and wife of Jackson and&#13;
John Plancey of Grass Lake visited at the&#13;
'home ol Mrs. Wm. Murphy Sunday.&#13;
i Patrick Kennedy spent the week end&#13;
with relatives in Detroit and Drydeu.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Kennedy of Detroit spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday with relatives here.&#13;
Mrs. Ann Herd of Elmira is visiting relatives&#13;
in this vicinity.&#13;
Thoa. Cooper of Jackson visited his&#13;
mother, Mrs. Wm. Cooper, the past week.&#13;
Cha's. Dyer and Peter Berger of Dryden&#13;
called on friends here the past week.&#13;
N. W. Knight and wife spent Sunday&#13;
with rtlatives in Howell.&#13;
Mary E. Doyle visited friends in Jackson&#13;
the past week.&#13;
The Misses Myrta and Nina Wellman&#13;
visited their parents one day last week.&#13;
Perry Towle of Pontiac spent Saturday&#13;
at the home of W. H. Leland,&#13;
Wm. Doyle has returned to Sioux City,&#13;
Iowa, after spending several weeks with&#13;
his parents here.&#13;
A Gentle and Effective Laxative&#13;
A mild, gentle and effective laxative&#13;
is what people demand when suffering&#13;
from constipation. Thousands swear&#13;
by Dr. Kind's New L'.le Pills. Hugh&#13;
Tallman, ot San Antonio, Tex. wntea:&#13;
"Tbey are, beyong question, the best&#13;
pills my wife and 1 have ever taken."&#13;
They never cause pain. Price 25c.&#13;
Recommended by 0. G. Meyer, the&#13;
druggist.&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
I • \ . ;-s^&#13;
| THIS is Overcoat Week&#13;
Now that cold weather .may be looked for almost daily, we've made&#13;
special preparations to display and try on overcoats I ^ A S S O R T M E N T I S B I G&#13;
fW. J . Dancer &amp;&#13;
S h a w l collars, reversible collars and plain collars. Belt backs—or plain. N e w grays,&#13;
Oxford blues, browns and blacks in Chinchillas, Weltons, Niggerheads, E t c . , E t c .&#13;
$10., $12.50, $15., $16.50, $18., $25.&#13;
Company&#13;
We pay your fare on a #15. pureliase&#13;
&lt;P c° c°&#13;
$15,a00-STOCK&#13;
ID&#13;
HI&#13;
HI&#13;
HI&#13;
HI&#13;
I&#13;
II&#13;
*&#13;
«1&#13;
HI&#13;
HI&#13;
#&#13;
WILL BE S O L D A T PUBLIC AUCTION&#13;
Sale Commenced Saturday, October 11th&#13;
Afternoon sale from 2 to 6 o'clock. Evening sale, 7:30 to 10:00&#13;
At the Store Formerly Occupied by Satferla 6s&gt; Sculley, Howell&#13;
This stock c o n s i s t s of Men's and Boy's S u i t s , Overcoats,&#13;
Shoes, Hats, Caps, Fancy Shirts and V e s t s , Winter and Summer&#13;
Underwear, Ladies' Suits, Coats, Furs and Fur Coats, Waists,&#13;
Shoes, Etc., Cotton, Wool and Sflk D r e s s Goods, Cloves, Carpets,&#13;
Rugs, Curtains, Etc., E t c .&#13;
S i n c e the dissolution of the firm of Goodnow &amp; Beach, I have&#13;
secured the Safferla &amp; Sculley store for the purpose of disposing&#13;
of my one-half of said stock.&#13;
I gladly give the public the benefit of this great sale which will&#13;
go down in the history of Livingston County a s one of the great&#13;
events, and coming a s it does at this time of the year will prove itself&#13;
a grand opportunity to those buying the n e c e s s i t i e s of life.&#13;
This stock will positively be sold in lots to suit the purchaser.&#13;
The sale continues every afternoon and evening until the entire&#13;
stock is sold.&#13;
HOMER N. BEACH&#13;
Thomas J. Faussett, Auctioneer HOWELL, MICH.&#13;
ur*•*f.l&#13;
• * # * &gt;&#13;
s&#13;
&lt;*&#13;
• — I I . 11¾ I&#13;
. - *&#13;
4 ¾&#13;
.«srw*-w&gt;"- *«&amp;££.</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>Pinckney, L i v i n g s t o n C o u n t y , Michigan, T h u r s d a y , October 23, 1913 No. 43&#13;
mm*&#13;
1 ^ - ..7-:-.¾^&#13;
A Realastic R. R. Play&#13;
Containing its most successful&#13;
. invasion of the central section of&#13;
the country, "Midnight Express"&#13;
sensational B. R. comedy drama&#13;
is headed this way and will be&#13;
with us foi one night only, Saturday&#13;
evening, October 25. I t is&#13;
; his company of players that has&#13;
•b e e n capturing theatre goers&#13;
throughout the entire country and&#13;
by virtue of the genuinally clever&#13;
performace rendered is meeting&#13;
with great success. The amusement&#13;
public is clamoriDg for just&#13;
sueh attractions as the "Midnight&#13;
Express," and its startling and&#13;
sensational scenes which is a relaxation&#13;
from, the cares and worry&#13;
of the day; I*fo frale purpose being&#13;
to entertain and amuse its&#13;
patrons as a vehicle of realism and&#13;
merriment. The play is one of&#13;
the most startling attractions on&#13;
the road and absolutely nothing&#13;
lias been left undone to give the&#13;
production proper settiug3 and&#13;
effects and the result has brought&#13;
forth words of high commendation&#13;
from the press and public to&#13;
the strong acting company that&#13;
Mr. Edwin Gary, the popular producer,&#13;
has given "Midnight Express,"&#13;
in his great success. Bear&#13;
the date in iniud, Pinckney opera&#13;
house, Saturday evening, October&#13;
25, as this will be its only visit to&#13;
this city this season. adv.&#13;
A Class Picnic&#13;
Saturday afternoon about six*&#13;
teen or seventeen of the pupils in&#13;
E. 0. Glenn's Sunday school class,&#13;
"Este Fideles/'gathered in Pinckney&#13;
and were driven out to the&#13;
Glennbrook farm behind the staid&#13;
old farm horses *ho pricked up&#13;
their ears in response to the frolic&#13;
of the crowd-and appeared to fully&#13;
appreciate the fun. The ride in&#13;
itself was thoroughly enjoyed by&#13;
all fortunate enough to be members&#13;
of the clas%. Upon their arrival&#13;
at the farm, the young people&#13;
found that a Nutting Bee was to&#13;
be the order of the day. Thus&#13;
they speut the afternoon and toward&#13;
dusk returned to the farm&#13;
house where Mrs. Glenn had prepared&#13;
a delicious nut supper.&#13;
Games and music were indulged&#13;
in .during the, evening/ All good&#13;
times must have an end however,&#13;
and a ride along the moon-lighted&#13;
road toward home in the lwee&#13;
sma' hours certainly was a most&#13;
fitting close to the delightful hours&#13;
spent under the hospitable roof of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. E* C. Glenn.&#13;
New Milk Prices&#13;
We, the undersigned, believing&#13;
that with the. high price of cows,&#13;
cow feed, labor and living in general,&#13;
that milk cannot be sold at&#13;
any profit for less than 7 (seven)&#13;
ceits per quart, hereby agree to&#13;
sell milk at this price from November&#13;
1,1913 nntil June 1, 1914.&#13;
C. L. Sigler&#13;
W. C. Dunning&#13;
P. H. Swarthout&#13;
Mriittvey&#13;
D. D. Smith&#13;
0. J. Teeple&#13;
0 . 0. Plaoeway&#13;
J. 0. Dinkel&#13;
J, J. Teeple&#13;
H(MMMfc*4taift to bay «ht*p&#13;
•ooks. Bead the "Central" adv.&#13;
The Ne^ Game Law&#13;
Thfc h u n t i n g season is open.&#13;
Already sportsmen are renovating&#13;
hunting clothes, oiling guns and&#13;
preparing camping outfits for a&#13;
long sojourn in the woods.&#13;
Likewise the farmer is nailing&#13;
up signs reading; "No trespass."&#13;
And so the old squabble between&#13;
the city hunter and thev farmer&#13;
will continue.&#13;
But the farmer is now placed&#13;
in a better position than former,&#13;
The last legislature passed an act&#13;
which giveB him the much-sought&#13;
Unadilla&#13;
A. 0. Watson was home over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Rev. Horace Palmer and wife&#13;
are spending a few days with&#13;
friends here.&#13;
S. E. Nelson and wife spent&#13;
Tuesday in Chelsea.&#13;
The Pricilla ' club met with&#13;
Emma Webb last Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Gorton of Waterloo is vis--&#13;
itini$ her sons here this week.&#13;
Mrs. Ed. Cranna has been on&#13;
the sick list the past week.&#13;
»*»**%%%%»»%%»*%%»»»»%%»%%%»»»»%»»&#13;
method of holding the hunter at&#13;
bay. The farmer under this act»| Stephen^ Hadley_ and family&#13;
may establish a game refuge on&#13;
his land by* filing with the state&#13;
game warden at Lansing a written&#13;
application to come under the&#13;
law.&#13;
Under the provisions of this&#13;
law he can retain control of the&#13;
hunting privileges on his land,&#13;
up to 640 acres in any one township.&#13;
Upon receipt cf the farmer's&#13;
application to set aBide certain&#13;
lands as a game refuge, the state&#13;
game warden will take instant&#13;
action to that end, and thereafter&#13;
it will be unlawful for anyone to&#13;
hunt, trap or shoot game within&#13;
150 feet of the boundaries of the&#13;
farmer's game refuge.&#13;
Under the law the farmer may&#13;
foster his own game, and squirrels,&#13;
chipmunk, wild duck and&#13;
other species of game are privileged&#13;
to cayort right under the&#13;
nose of the city man with a gun&#13;
with the full protection of the law&#13;
thrown around them.&#13;
However, the farmer is not allowed&#13;
to hunt at will in his own&#13;
game refuge. He is restricted by&#13;
the game laws just the same as if&#13;
he were not the owner of a patch&#13;
of woods, and likewise all the&#13;
game therein.&#13;
Men Who Make the World&#13;
Men who make the world of today&#13;
are making The Youth's&#13;
Companion what it is to-day. It&#13;
is very much more thau The&#13;
Companion you may rememeber;&#13;
DO higher in purpose, bat more&#13;
lavish in material—larger and&#13;
improved with special Family&#13;
Pages, Boy's Pages, Girl's, and a&#13;
constant supply of serials and&#13;
shorter stories.&#13;
The editorial page of information,&#13;
comment, science and events&#13;
well informed, while the Family&#13;
Page helps on home improvements&#13;
and ideas, and both boys and girls&#13;
have special pages for themselves.&#13;
You do the family a good turn&#13;
when The Youth's Companion "as&#13;
it is to-day" is sent to the home.&#13;
Fifty-two issues a year — n o t&#13;
twelve. More reading than is&#13;
found in any magazine at any&#13;
price.&#13;
You may not know The Companion&#13;
as it is to-day. Let us send&#13;
you the Announcement for 1914,&#13;
with sample copies containing the&#13;
opening chapters of A. S. Pier's&#13;
fine story of St. Iimoth's School-&#13;
"His Father's Son."&#13;
New subscribers who send $2&#13;
for the fifty-two issues of 1914&#13;
will receive free the remaining&#13;
issues of 1913, and a copy of the&#13;
€*mpa*ioi Braotical Home Calendar&#13;
in addition.&#13;
J s s YOUTH'S COMPANION, 144&#13;
Berkeley St., Boatoo, Mass.&#13;
Lucila Pkk visited her aunt,' New Subscriptions Received at&#13;
Mrs. John Chalker, the put weekr this Office.&#13;
spent Sunday at E. L. Hadley's.&#13;
Mrs. Ed. May is able to be out&#13;
again.&#13;
Otis Webb and family are&#13;
spending the^wenk with relatives&#13;
in Alma and Lansing.&#13;
The M. E. society are planning&#13;
for their annual fair and chicken&#13;
pie supper for Nov. 20th which&#13;
will be, held in the basement.&#13;
Further announcement will be&#13;
made later.&#13;
Prof. Webb Pierte of Ypsilanti&#13;
is expected here Friday evening,&#13;
November 7th and will give his&#13;
famous address on "Pa, Ma, and&#13;
the Baby," at the M. E. church,&#13;
He will also bring other local talent&#13;
with him which will provide&#13;
for a pleasant evenings eutertainment.&#13;
Admission l*3ff.&#13;
s X 77&#13;
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5*&#13;
Grq&#13;
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WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
FOR SALE—A mare and colt. Inquire&#13;
of Harry Storey, Dexter Mich.&#13;
Phone No.'784. 42t3*&#13;
K03 SALE&#13;
Rams.&#13;
J&#13;
— Large Fine Wool&#13;
42t3*&#13;
J. Donohue, Gregory&#13;
"Smart SefNeelewear at Monks&#13;
Bros. adv.&#13;
J. R. Martin made a buaiuess&#13;
trip to Alma last week.&#13;
I herewith desire to thank my&#13;
schoolmates, teachery and all other&#13;
friends who have remembered me&#13;
with flowers and in various other&#13;
delightful ways during my illness.&#13;
I hope I may soon be with you all&#13;
1 again. Ed. VanHorn.&#13;
AMY D A Y&#13;
Leave your w a t c h , clock or jewelery for repair at&#13;
Monks Bros. Store&#13;
....WILL BE THERE EVERY WEDNESDAY....&#13;
Have a nice line of watches and jewelry at Lowest Prices&#13;
BDW. A. CLARK&#13;
CLOTHES CLEANED and pressed at&#13;
reasonable prices. 43tf&#13;
Mrs. W. B. Darrow, Pinckney&#13;
FOR SALE—Holstein heifer, also sow&#13;
with mue pigs. 40t3*&#13;
J. A. Tread way, Pinckney&#13;
FOR SALE—Driving mare 4 yrs. old,&#13;
carriage and two single harnesses, 1&#13;
new. Inquire of Jay Howard&#13;
43t3* Dexter, Mich. R F D 2&#13;
FOR S.iLE—Thoroughbred Holstein&#13;
Bull, sey^n months old, also 1400 lb.&#13;
horse, sound and right. 40t3*&#13;
(T. M. Greiner, Pincknev&#13;
FOR SALEcoal&#13;
stove,&#13;
41t3&#13;
•Art'Laurel base burner&#13;
A bargain lor someone.&#13;
Robt, Kelley, Pinckney.&#13;
FOR SALE — Chestnut mare. 9&#13;
years " old, weight about 1,300&#13;
lbs. Also 10 choice Delaine Rams.&#13;
F. A. Barton, Pinckney 42t3*&#13;
FOR SALE—Six Blacktop Rams, extra&#13;
good ones; will be sold reasonable.&#13;
A!«o4year old mare, broke&#13;
single and double; good worker.&#13;
Also a second-hand wood heating&#13;
stcve for sale cheap.&#13;
Mutual phone. 42t*&#13;
John T. Chamber*, Pinckney&#13;
SALE—166 Acres in&#13;
Township, 2\ miles&#13;
FARM FOR&#13;
tection 27, Dexter&#13;
northwe-t ol DeAter village, known&#13;
as the Livey farm. Good buildings,&#13;
well lenced 4nd the beat ol land.&#13;
Mur-t be sold to close the estate ot&#13;
the lata Mrs, 0 Gallagher. Inquire&#13;
ot Dr. R. Ii. Honey or John Gallagher,&#13;
Dexter Mich.&#13;
D e x t e r J B W B b B R Mich.&#13;
J. M. PHILLIPS'&#13;
BUSINESS CONTINUED&#13;
The undertaking business formerly&#13;
conducted by the late James i\l.&#13;
PhiTips at South Lyon will hereafter&#13;
be carried on under the personal&#13;
direction of Mr. H L. Richardson, Mr.&#13;
Phillips' able assistant in whom he&#13;
reposed his yreat&lt; st confidence, and&#13;
myself.&#13;
Mrs. J. M. Phillips, South Lyon&#13;
Murphy &amp; Jackson&#13;
Stapled Fancy Groceries, Dry Goods, Shoes S" Furnishings&#13;
Largest Stock Lowest Prices&#13;
POR PAUL&#13;
We are showing large lines of Underwear, Mackinaw&#13;
Coats, Sweaters, Blankets, Comfortables, Hosiery, Gloves&#13;
and Mitts&#13;
IN FALL FOOTWEAR&#13;
We carry the celebrated Mishawaka and Lambertville&#13;
Rubbers for Men and Boys, also a complete line of Mens,&#13;
Ladies, Misses and Childrens Arctics and Light Rubbers&#13;
OUR SATURDAY SPBC1AUS&#13;
3 lb. Gotten Batts 4 8 c , 59x:, 6 9 c&#13;
$1.25 Grey and Tan Bed Blankets 9 8 c&#13;
4 0 c Bulk Tea, per pound - 3 0 c&#13;
2 5 lbs. H. fit E. Sugar - $1.20&#13;
m&#13;
•!?fl&#13;
1 1&#13;
2 "^iy&#13;
§ s #&#13;
V-f \'r&amp;&gt;-JQZf*&#13;
•&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
t • '•ir- &gt; • '• .•• • ;• .1 W W W&#13;
The Daughter of David Kerr&#13;
DD&#13;
By Harry King Toetle&#13;
• DD DD&#13;
Illustrations by Ray Walters&#13;
SYNOPSIS,&#13;
Gloria Kerr, a motherless srlrl. who has&#13;
spent most of her life in school, arrives&#13;
at her father's home In Belmont. David&#13;
Kfrr is the political boss of the town,&#13;
and 'a anxious to prevent his daughter&#13;
learning of his real character. Kendall,&#13;
representing the Chicago packers, is ne-&#13;
Kotiiitin&gt;f with Judffe Gilbert, Kerr's chief&#13;
advisor, for a valuable franchise. They&#13;
Tear the opposition of Joe Wright, editor&#13;
t&gt;f the reform paper. Kerr asks the assistance&#13;
of Judge Gilbert in Introducing&#13;
Gloria to Belmont society, and promises&#13;
to help him put through the packers'&#13;
franchise a.nd let him have all the graft.&#13;
Gloria inlets Joe Wright at the Gilberts.&#13;
It appears tliey are on intimate terms,&#13;
having met previously in a touring party&#13;
In Europe. Gloria twits Wright on his&#13;
failure to keep an engagement to meet&#13;
her in Paris. He explains that the death&#13;
of hie mother prevented his going to&#13;
Paris. The Gilberts invite Gloria to stay&#13;
with them pending the refurnishing of the&#13;
Kerr home. One society bud who refused&#13;
to meet Gloria is forced to do *o when&#13;
her father is made to feel Kerr's power.&#13;
CHAPTER Vlf.—Continued.&#13;
"F knew one thing the book said,"&#13;
she confessed- "It was what I &amp;aid—&#13;
and said mere times than one:&#13;
Come over the sea to me, to me,&#13;
Come over the sea to me.&#13;
The little ships go sailing by&#13;
But never a ship brings thee!"&#13;
They danced, forgetful of everything&#13;
t'lt that they were together. A man&#13;
'.ad cried in the wilderness of the&#13;
world for his mate and she had answered.&#13;
Wright would have gone further,&#13;
have made a formal declaration, but&#13;
first he wanted several things settled.&#13;
He felt that he could not stay in Belmont&#13;
if he married Gloria. How to get&#13;
rid of the paper was a question. He&#13;
hoped through a newspaper broker to&#13;
trade it for one in some other place.&#13;
Then he and Gloria could begin life&#13;
there together. The News was beginning&#13;
to make money, paying its way&#13;
and leaving something for future payments&#13;
on the property. Best of all,&#13;
there was no fight on his hands which&#13;
would hold him in Belmont.&#13;
Mrs Gilbert came into Gloria's room&#13;
to kiHS her good night after the ball.&#13;
When they had talked over the affair&#13;
for a,n hour the girl cried In the ecstasy&#13;
of her joy.&#13;
"Oh, Mrs, Gilbert, tonight I am the&#13;
happiest girl in the whole wide world."&#13;
On that very night Alderman GrunewrJd&#13;
introduced an ordinance giving&#13;
the Belmont Interurban Railway, a&#13;
new corporation, right of way down&#13;
Maple Avenue and making provision&#13;
that a small depot should be provided&#13;
for the convenience of patrons at Benton&#13;
Park.&#13;
CHAPTER VIM.&#13;
When Wright reached his office the&#13;
morning after the ball, he found his&#13;
attorney, Arthur Morrison, waiting for&#13;
him. He had been drawn to Morrison&#13;
the first time he had met him and&#13;
had asked him to take care of the paper's&#13;
legal business, In this his Judgment&#13;
had not been warped by a sudden&#13;
friendship, for the young lawyer&#13;
was worthy of his confidence. Like&#13;
Judge Gilbert, he had risen from an&#13;
humble home, but unlike the adviser&#13;
of Belmont corporations he had made&#13;
his way independently of the malign&#13;
Influences which constantly seem to&#13;
seek to attract young men of talent&#13;
who follow the law as a ' profession.&#13;
To him both as his legal adviser and&#13;
his friend, Wright had talked freely&#13;
and had rejoiced to learn that Morrison's&#13;
ideals and hopes for Belmont&#13;
were the same as his own.&#13;
"Even if you hadn't asked me to&#13;
watch things with you while you are&#13;
still a stranger to Belmont," Morrison&#13;
began, "I think I would have come&#13;
to you. Last night while we were enjoying&#13;
ourselves a bill was Introduced&#13;
In the council for a car line down&#13;
Maple Avenue."&#13;
"I saw an account of it In the Banner,&#13;
and thought It strange nothing&#13;
had been made public before it was&#13;
introduced. Who wants the franchise?"&#13;
"They're under cover. It's the Belmont&#13;
Interurban Company, a New&#13;
Jersey corporation, and the men&#13;
named as incorporators are only dummies."&#13;
"That isn't usual, is it, with honest&#13;
men?"&#13;
"I don't know any more about it&#13;
than you do, but you'd better investi&#13;
gate."&#13;
"When does the bill have its next&#13;
reading?" asked Wright, after consid&#13;
ering what was the paper's best&#13;
move.&#13;
"Not until Tuesday night" , ,&#13;
"That gives us five days. If We&#13;
make a noise won't they call a spec)**&#13;
meeting and push it through?"&#13;
"Kerr isn't likely to do that He's&#13;
Interested, I suppose, but how?"&#13;
"We'll get busy today," Wright said&#13;
Cop/right by A. 0. HcGlurg * Co., Wit&#13;
decisively. "A few pointed questions&#13;
on the front page may bring them out&#13;
from under cover."&#13;
In the conference which ensued the&#13;
two men discussed every possible&#13;
phase of the question, yet they never&#13;
dreamed that it was part of the stockyards&#13;
scheme. What aroused suspicion&#13;
as much as anything else was&#13;
that there was nothing they could find&#13;
on which to base suspicion. When&#13;
Morrison left it was with the intention&#13;
of scrutinizing a copy of the proposed&#13;
ordinance carefully.&#13;
Wright sent a reporter to interview&#13;
Alderman Grunewald, and all other reporters&#13;
were instructed to find out&#13;
what the public thought of it and any&#13;
definite facts that could be brought to&#13;
light. The city editor himself took&#13;
an hour off to go to the office of Rosenbaum&#13;
&amp; Rosenbaum, who It was&#13;
learned had given Grunewald the bill&#13;
to present for them.&#13;
The drag net which the News spread&#13;
did not seem productive of results calculated&#13;
to bring anything to light. Alderman&#13;
Grunewald had introduced it&#13;
at the request of his good friends&#13;
Rosenbaum &amp; Rosenbaum and knew&#13;
nothing about it.&#13;
Rosenbaum &amp; Rosenbaum said that&#13;
the proposed franchise spoke for itself,&#13;
and that the road would prove of inestimable&#13;
benefit to Belmont, since In&#13;
the near future it would be extended&#13;
to Corona, and all the people of that&#13;
little town and the villages along the&#13;
line would do their shopping in Belmont.&#13;
The Incorporators were Chicago&#13;
men with plenty of capital back of&#13;
them.&#13;
Wright telegraphed a Chicago news&#13;
agency to find out who the incorporators&#13;
were. At his suggestion the city&#13;
editor tried to get Kerr at Esmeralda&#13;
Springs by telephone, but was unsuccessful.&#13;
Only one clue was found which of&#13;
itself was suspicious, and it was not&#13;
one which could be used that afternoon.&#13;
The courthouse reporter had&#13;
dropped into the county surveyor's office,&#13;
and talked about surveying in&#13;
general and the work In Belmont county&#13;
in particular. Was anything going&#13;
on just then? This elicited the reply&#13;
that the spring was not far enough&#13;
advanced for the* usual work, but that&#13;
the stock-yards company had had men&#13;
out. What were they doing? They&#13;
were seeing how they could save their&#13;
tracks along the river and rearranging&#13;
the quarantine tracks for Texas&#13;
cattle which were by, themselves to&#13;
the east of the main yards. This was&#13;
all the courthouse man brought back&#13;
to the office, but it was duly presented&#13;
to Wright by the city editor.&#13;
That afternoon Belmont rubbed its&#13;
eyes as it looked at the front page of&#13;
the News. In the last column under&#13;
an extended head was a story about&#13;
the proposed car line down Maple avenue.&#13;
It was not replete with facts and&#13;
figures, but It asked a great many&#13;
questions and contained several inter&#13;
views which said nothing. Even the&#13;
property owners along Maple avenue&#13;
who had consented to the lino and&#13;
then been pledged to secrecy until the&#13;
matter was made public by the introduction&#13;
of the bill in the council, knew&#13;
nothing more than that Rosenbaum &amp;&#13;
Rosenbaum bad secured their consent.&#13;
The Chicago news agency did not&#13;
send what information it gathered until&#13;
too late for use on that day.&#13;
Sam Hayes bought a paper on the&#13;
street, read the story, and rushed for&#13;
a telephone. He paid two dollars and&#13;
thirty cents for the privilege, one&#13;
could not call it pleasure, of talking&#13;
with Kerr at Esmerelda Springs. He&#13;
read the paper to the boss, the front&#13;
page story and the trenchant short&#13;
editorial in Inquiry- Kerr asked that&#13;
he be connected with Gilbert, but already&#13;
the Judge was trying to get Esmeralda&#13;
Springs, having seen the&#13;
News just a few minutes after Hayes.&#13;
Their conversation was short • 'Kerr&#13;
knew the facts, and it was mainly a&#13;
discussion of how the Banner should&#13;
treat the matter in the morning.' "he&#13;
boss decided bis paper should Insist&#13;
that the News was trying to knock&#13;
the town. The attack was to be upon&#13;
the News, thus diverting attention&#13;
from the real issue. This command,&#13;
properly phrased, was dropped into&#13;
the eager ear of Deacon Wtnthrow,&#13;
and he proceeded to write a scathing&#13;
editorial holding up to scorn the paper&#13;
which would try to barricade the&#13;
path of the car o f progress. The) deacon&#13;
felt proud ot his editorial whan&#13;
be read it in the proof/ and) was&#13;
warmed with a self-satisfied glow to&#13;
think that he had thought of it Ha&#13;
still lived in the age of personal Journalism&#13;
and to ^ b a s t , ,th,e -other fellow&#13;
personally was part of ,hU editorial&#13;
creed.&#13;
Before the paper came out, vvright&#13;
telephoned Gloria that he would be unable&#13;
to drive with her but that he&#13;
would call in the evening. They had&#13;
reached the point in their fast friendship&#13;
where she was not unwilling to&#13;
pout and let him know how disappointed&#13;
she was.&#13;
* ft was four o'clock when Morrison&#13;
arrived at the News office with a copy&#13;
of the proposed franchise. As he&#13;
threw it on the table in Wright's private&#13;
office be exclaimed:&#13;
"If that goes through, the company&#13;
can.do anything according to Its provision&#13;
except commit murder."&#13;
"I suspected as much," replied&#13;
Wright "What right of way have&#13;
they?"&#13;
Morrison went to the map of Belmont&#13;
on the wall and located the city&#13;
terminus of the proposed line.&#13;
"Here's where they start on their&#13;
own tracks," he explained. "You see,&#13;
there's a provision in the charter of&#13;
the. Belmont Traction Company whereby&#13;
any interurban line can use its&#13;
tracks into the heart of the city upon&#13;
payment of a fair rental. Here's the&#13;
Townsend Park Line coming down&#13;
Bluff Street, and right here where&#13;
Bluff Street crosses Maple Avenue the&#13;
Interurban's own tracks will start"&#13;
"Then how does it run?"&#13;
"South on Maple Avenue and Maple&#13;
road, to a private right of way which&#13;
begins eist of the stoci-yards and parallels&#13;
the county road to Corona."&#13;
Wright studied the map earnestly.&#13;
"You see, fm too new to know that&#13;
neighborhood,"~ he Said. "Why did&#13;
they pick Maple Avenue?"&#13;
"It's the only street they can use in&#13;
that part of town. It's the natural&#13;
artery for that hew district out there.&#13;
'Since there are bills on both sides&#13;
of It"&#13;
Wright still puzzled over the map.&#13;
"What are those' red lineB crossing&#13;
Maple Avenue about two blockB south&#13;
of Bluff Street?" was his next 'Question,&#13;
"Those? They are the railway tracks&#13;
of all the lines entering Belmont except&#13;
those that come down the river&#13;
from the north." ""•&#13;
"Are they going to build a viaduct&#13;
there?"&#13;
"Nothing is said about it."&#13;
The new venture would be a good&#13;
thing for Belmont—if the company&#13;
would confine Itself to good works.&#13;
The most objectionable thing was the&#13;
lack of frankness on the part of the&#13;
men tack of the enterprise. Here was&#13;
a corporation seeking to serve the public&#13;
and not taking the public into its&#13;
confidence.&#13;
While Morrison and the publisher&#13;
of the News were canvassing the sit&#13;
"Art They Going to Build a Viaduct&#13;
There?"&#13;
uation, a telegram from the Chicago&#13;
News Agency was delivered to Wright&#13;
It read:' v , '&#13;
"Hammersley is the private secretary&#13;
of Adolph us Koerner, Koerner &amp;&#13;
Co, packers. Others are clerks in law&#13;
office of Kendall, 8trang A Kendall."&#13;
"By QeorgeJ" exclaimed Wright&#13;
"The stock-yards company!"&#13;
Then he remembered what the&#13;
county surveyor had Innocently told.&#13;
There could be no doubt of i t The&#13;
stock-yard** company was making some&#13;
move wb, leh, it-did no* dare make&#13;
opener.&#13;
"It Jocks like I f assented Morrison.&#13;
"Have you any idea whi^t they want?"&#13;
"Not the slightest They're not&#13;
fighting the tra$tJonv company, , I&#13;
know." "..„'*' *&#13;
This, thought, Wright, explained Oilhart's&#13;
many visits to Chicago recently,&#13;
The.atoak-yardV ^attorney had apparently&#13;
no connection with the new company,&#13;
but Wright and Morrison, too,&#13;
when It was explained to him, were'&#13;
both of the opinion that he was directing&#13;
qyery move. If he was in It, David&#13;
Kerr was in it; and if Darid Kerr was&#13;
in k, be was not In it for his health&#13;
In seeking to-unravel the tangled&#13;
skein they now had a loose end to&#13;
work with. They could not Imagine,&#13;
however, why .the stock-yards company&#13;
was enterlng^tb^ street car field&#13;
in such a pecullattoanuer.&#13;
Wright sat wttb/bis chair tilted back&#13;
against the wall, his hands behind his&#13;
head, gazing at the map on the wall&#13;
opposite.&#13;
"Morrison, a newspaper man has to&#13;
trust in many cases to his sixth sense;&#13;
that's his nose for news, for the big&#13;
story. Often he misses-ftre, but when&#13;
he does hit the bull's-eye everybody&#13;
knows it" Such was Wright's preamble&#13;
as he brought his chair down on&#13;
the floor and prepared to tell the lawyer&#13;
what his sixth sense had made&#13;
him feel was the real object of the&#13;
game. "The stock-yards company is&#13;
preparing to steal a street"&#13;
"What!" gasped Morrison'; -t#4What&#13;
makes you think so?"&#13;
"Everything See how the river Is&#13;
eating up the only tracks to the stockyards.&#13;
They've got to get to the yards&#13;
farther east. Maple Avenue is the&#13;
easiest way. The franchise says nothing&#13;
about what kind of cars are to run,&#13;
how they are to be propelled, or what&#13;
they are to carry. I'll bet they are&#13;
going to run cattle cars filled with&#13;
hogs and sheep and cattle down Maple&#13;
Avenue, and pull them with steam engines,&#13;
too."&#13;
"I won't believe it," protested the&#13;
lawyer. "Maple Avenue is a residence&#13;
street!"&#13;
"The stock-yards company is a foreign&#13;
corporation Interested only in&#13;
dividends/'&#13;
"Look at Benton Park!"&#13;
"Yes,, take a good look; you won't&#13;
want to in a year from now."&#13;
"I don't believe it"&#13;
"Anyway, that's, the theory I'm going&#13;
on. If it is correct, I've struck&#13;
the nail on the bead with my first&#13;
guess. If it is wrong, I'll keep hammering&#13;
away until the public demands&#13;
and is given the truth. If I'm wrong,&#13;
then they'll soon be smoked out. They&#13;
can't stand being so misinterpreted&#13;
when asking.the public for a favor.&#13;
But I'm right, I tell you. They're going&#13;
to connect with the railway '.racks&#13;
where they cross Maple Avenue two&#13;
blocks below Bluff Street. Such a belt&#13;
line railway will be extremely valuable."&#13;
*&#13;
It was after six o'clock before they&#13;
decided to leave the office. As every&#13;
pro and con of the situation had not&#13;
been exhausted, they adjourned to the&#13;
Belmont Club for dinner and there&#13;
continued "puzzling over the franchise&#13;
and its meaning.&#13;
Shortly before eight o'clock Wright&#13;
drained his coffee cup and looked&#13;
across the table at his companion&#13;
"Doing anything tonight?" he inquired.&#13;
"No. Nothing on hand that 1 know&#13;
of."&#13;
"I'm calling on Miss Kerr tonight. I&#13;
want you to go with me; I can't go&#13;
alone."&#13;
"I shall be very glad to," replied the&#13;
young lawyer, successfully concealing&#13;
his surprise.&#13;
Wright realized the fight was on.&#13;
He also knew what Gloria had come&#13;
to mean to him, and after what *hey&#13;
had said last night he was afraid to&#13;
see her alone. Now his first duty was&#13;
to the public, that public which so&#13;
often accepts benefits and sacrifices&#13;
all unconscious of its own gain and&#13;
what the cost has been. For the general&#13;
good, for an ideal, for his belief&#13;
in what a paper should be, he was putting&#13;
aside—Just for the time, his heart&#13;
told him—the one woman who could&#13;
make him supremely happy.&#13;
The deferring of hope was heavy&#13;
upon Wright's heart as with Morrison&#13;
he walked in silence to Gilbert's&#13;
house.; To himself he kept repeating&#13;
some verses from their "birthday&#13;
book:"&#13;
In the twilight we parted,&#13;
In the plght broken-hearted&#13;
We dreamed a sweet dream.&#13;
Then we met and we parted&#13;
Again broken-hearted.&#13;
But dreams come again.&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED:)&#13;
Golgotha.&#13;
The one spot which more than any&#13;
other has controlled the history, of&#13;
Europe lies, strangely enough, not in&#13;
Europe itself, but in Asia. For tad&#13;
possession of the site where Christ&#13;
^'suffered, was burled* and rose againmore&#13;
blood has been shed than for&#13;
any other. An Immense number of&#13;
lives' were laid down during the Crusades;&#13;
and for 600 years before the&#13;
Crusades, and even to the present&#13;
time, a/ constant stream of pilgrims&#13;
has poured Into Jerusalem to worship&#13;
at the spot made sacred by the cruel*&#13;
flxlon of Christ &lt;&#13;
From the fourth century after&#13;
Christ unUV fifty years ago this site&#13;
was generally conceded to Joe within&#13;
the Church of the Holy Seputchra,&#13;
Now two sites dispute the claim of&#13;
being the actual Golgotha The latter&#13;
claimant is known as "Gordon's Calvary,"&#13;
thonsh to an American. Dr.&#13;
Harlan P Beach of Yale university, Is&#13;
due. the actual discovery *oMt Gen.&#13;
Gordon, the hero of Khartoum, having&#13;
first secured for it general reoogn&gt;&#13;
tion;—Christian Herald.&#13;
SURELY HAD DOWE MS M S *&#13;
This Husband, Like Mfty 0tkers| Unable&#13;
to Reason VyhyWhts *ho«*lf .(&#13;
Make Any Complaint&#13;
A| typical "mover" of the ultra-shiftless&#13;
type was passing a few days at a&#13;
cow camp in Arizona, preparatory to&#13;
going intp the desert on a prospecting&#13;
trip. His wife, a tired-out, faded-oat&#13;
creature, complained to some of the&#13;
cowhands of the hardness of her lot;&#13;
and the foreman took it upon himself&#13;
to remonstrate with the husband far&#13;
his shlftleasness and his indifference&#13;
to his wife's welfare.&#13;
"The old woman ain't got no kick&#13;
comin't" said the husband when he&#13;
had heard the foreman's remarks.&#13;
"She ain't got no kick at all. Why,&#13;
Stranger, when we wux flxin' to camp&#13;
of a night many a time i've driv* the&#13;
team half a mile out of the way ao'a&#13;
wood and water would be handy far&#13;
the old woman to fetch!"—Saturday&#13;
Evening Post.&#13;
RED, ROUGH HANDS MADE&#13;
SOFT AND WHITE&#13;
For red, rough, ehapped and bleeding&#13;
hands, dry, Assured, Itching, burning&#13;
palms, and painful finger-ends,&#13;
with shapeless nails, a one-night Cuttcura&#13;
treatment works wonders. DV&#13;
rections: Soak the hands, on retiring,&#13;
in hot water and Cuticara Soa*&#13;
Dry, anoint with Cuticura Ointment&#13;
and wear soft bandages or old, loose&#13;
gloves during the night These pure,&#13;
sweet and gentle emollients preserve&#13;
the hands, prevent redness, roughness&#13;
and chapping, and impart In a single&#13;
night that velvety softness and whiteness&#13;
so much desired by women* For&#13;
those whose occupations tend to injure&#13;
the hands, Cuticura Soap and Cuticura&#13;
Ointment are wonderful&#13;
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold&#13;
throughout the world. Sample, of each&#13;
free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address postcard&#13;
"Cuticura, Dept L, Boston."—Adv.&#13;
Golden Key of Brick.&#13;
Prof. Stephen H. Langdon, an Oxford&#13;
specialist In old-world lore. Is&#13;
coming here to examine the "Sumer-&#13;
Ian" tablets In the museum of the&#13;
University of Pennsylvania. This heap&#13;
of brick fragments Is esteemed as of&#13;
more value than its weight in diamonds.&#13;
Scientists the world oyer have&#13;
an eye upon this precious pile. It la&#13;
composed of what are known as Babylonian&#13;
tablets—little oblong tiles of&#13;
ridged and sunbaked clay so ancient&#13;
and weather-beaten they would never&#13;
be noticed among the mortar scrape&#13;
of an old Philadelphia house dismantled.&#13;
Yet these museum treasures dug&#13;
up from Nippur and other burial spots&#13;
of ancient libraries situate In the&#13;
neighborhood of modern Bagdad contain&#13;
the secret of remotest civilisation.&#13;
In them lies the golden key to&#13;
knowledge of the most primitive commerce,&#13;
sciences and arts, possibly including&#13;
the invention of figures and&#13;
letters and the first attempt at making&#13;
a language—Philadelphia Press.&#13;
Rev. E. Heslop.&#13;
A CLERGYMAN'S TESTIMONY.&#13;
The Rev. Edmund Heslop of Wigton,&#13;
Pa., suffered from Dropsy for a&#13;
year. His limbs and feet were swollen&#13;
and puffed. He had heart fluttering,&#13;
• was diaiy&#13;
and exhausted at&#13;
the least eiertion.&#13;
Hands and&#13;
feet were cold&#13;
and he had such&#13;
a dragging sensation&#13;
across the&#13;
loins that it was&#13;
difficult to move.&#13;
After using * S&#13;
boxes of Doejde&#13;
Kidney Pills the swelling disappeared&#13;
and he felt himself again. He says&#13;
he has been benefited and blessed hy&#13;
the use of Oodds Kidney Pills. Several&#13;
months later he wrote: I have&#13;
not changed my faith- in your remedy&#13;
since the above statement was-author-&#13;
Ized. Correspond with Rev. 8. lieslop&#13;
about this wonderful remedy.&#13;
Oodds Kidney Pills, 50c, per hot at&#13;
your dealer or Dodds^ Medicine Co.,&#13;
Buffalo, N. T. Write for Household&#13;
Hints, also music of National Anthem&#13;
(English and German words) and recipes&#13;
for dainty dishes. Ail 8 sent free,&#13;
Adv.:&#13;
A Chrome ThlrSt&#13;
"There is nothing in a name.**&#13;
"Certainly not I known man, named&#13;
Sprinkle whose throat is invariably&#13;
dry."&#13;
\&#13;
Water in bluing Is adulteration. Glass sad&#13;
water makes liquid blue costly. Buy Red&#13;
Cross Ball Bine, makes clothes whiter than&#13;
snow. Adv.&#13;
t . . - , •&#13;
The giddy old world laughs openly&#13;
at a man and wife who are In lota&#13;
with each other—but secretly it *»&gt;&#13;
vies them.&#13;
Bronchia! troubles; weaken the system.&#13;
Pneumonia sometimes follows. Dean's Mentholated&#13;
Ceug* Drops prevent trouble.&#13;
W** &lt;» I S * * *&#13;
bills."&#13;
"Humph 1 You're lucky! My'wife&#13;
keeps on expahdbig fctfsVt.r.B 1&#13;
I--*Z3"1*U. - *M PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
V ' •&#13;
i&#13;
^:&#13;
3 3 =&#13;
; &gt; . - i * * . &lt; * - .&#13;
MOTHERS! Why Let Your Children Dlt for Want&#13;
of Remedies That Would Save&#13;
Tholr Llvss?&#13;
Thousands have died from what the&#13;
.thjMlclans call f«v#r. .You eanploy a&#13;
^ physician. He say* It it not worm*&#13;
that ails your oaruoa; «hild. He oons^&#13;
Unuea to call. Your child is not cured.&#13;
It waa worma and worm fever that&#13;
ailed your child. It waa a great expense;&#13;
t o you and the child was not&#13;
cured. 'Children have died from&#13;
WORM FEVER. SPASMS. FITS. .FOUL&#13;
BBJ&amp;ATH. RESTLESS AT NIGHT, and&#13;
many times starts frequently when&#13;
asleep. Worms cause your child to be&#13;
mervous. All these symptoms are of&#13;
worms. And many times it's the PIN&#13;
or SEAT WORM that causes you or&#13;
your child to have rectal trouble. 8oon&#13;
after retiring- for the night the pin&#13;
worm appears. It bites and stings and&#13;
causes scratching—scratching and aching.&#13;
This makes the child nervous and&#13;
many times the child Is. punished for&#13;
not .going to sleep. And the mother&#13;
. who reads this knows what it means&#13;
when her child cries out: "Mamma,&#13;
something Is biting me!" And sure&#13;
enough, upon examining her child she&#13;
finds the naughty white pin worm,&#13;
sharp pointed at both ends, imbedded&#13;
In toe child's anus. This worm causes&#13;
mar* nervousness to young and old&#13;
Sersons .than any other disease. The&#13;
armless remedy for this is STEKETEE'S&#13;
PIN WORM DESTROYER.&#13;
Has Your Darling Child a FeverT&#13;
First of all #ivo It Steketee's Worm Destroyer.&#13;
„ .&#13;
HAS IT A FOUL BREATH?&#13;
- 01*«, It Steketee's Worm Destroyer.&#13;
It Cleanses the stomach.&#13;
HAS XT SPASMS?&#13;
Give It Steketee's Worm Destroyer.&#13;
IS YOUR CHILD RESTLESS AT NIGHT?&#13;
It Is worms that alii your child.&#13;
' HAS IT FAINTING FITS? "&#13;
}' A.sure sign of.worma&#13;
,The child Is restless at night and starts&#13;
reqttently when asleep. Itchlnr and&#13;
.crafconfag of the ANUS Is a sure sign of&#13;
pin worms. Tonne; and old are troubled&#13;
with-worma Use no lalvt. Use 8TEKETB87S&#13;
WORM DESTROYER.&#13;
Steketee's Pin Worm Destroyer, in powdered&#13;
form, 4n tablets, chocolate coated.&#13;
When you call at the drug store or when&#13;
ordering direct from the undersigned, state&#13;
thevklnd wanted.&#13;
-, Price for each, Me. By mail 25c. Ask&#13;
'drag-gifts for Steketee's Pin Worm De-&#13;
-stroyer. s Address! GEO. G. STEKETKX. Prep.,&#13;
y Grand Ban!At. Mich*&#13;
«• Chejory St~ S. W.&#13;
Eat the Egg Sheila.&#13;
A teaspoonful of chloride of calcium,&#13;
three times a day, dissolved in&#13;
water, is healthful and nourishing, according&#13;
to the German professors,&#13;
Emerich and Leow. Lime, If taken in&#13;
slight quantities as food, they contend,&#13;
is ft preventive and a cure of nanr&#13;
physical ills which now afflict humanity,&#13;
increasing the vitality of the organism,&#13;
protecting it from harmful&#13;
microbes and curing inflammatory affections.&#13;
Instead of throwing away the shells&#13;
when one eats eggs, it would he better&#13;
to eat the shells and discard the yolk&#13;
and white, according to the personal&#13;
view of these professors.&#13;
Practical Fashions&#13;
Ml 8819' DRESS.&#13;
«11&#13;
The End of the Romance*&#13;
"Poor thing. Only married&#13;
months and her husband in jail."&#13;
"Yes, and he s&amp;ys he'll die there before&#13;
he'll come across with a cent of&#13;
alimony."—St. Louis Republic.&#13;
Getting the Best of the Grouch.&#13;
' Herbert Casson says "The way to&#13;
get the better of a grouch is to let&#13;
him talk himself out." Try it, I have&#13;
and it works.—Exchange.&#13;
The New Parental Assent. M0h, Harold, papa says he'll consent&#13;
to our marriage Just as soon as&#13;
you pass the board of eugenics."—&#13;
Life,&#13;
What has become of the old-fashioned&#13;
woman who had a bad omen for&#13;
every dream T&#13;
Everything is grease to the woman&#13;
who is getting fat&#13;
M i&#13;
V&#13;
'it&#13;
V&#13;
,e-&#13;
K'i&#13;
•ftrh&#13;
Breakfast *&#13;
Sunshine&#13;
I Post&#13;
Toasties&#13;
and Crtjam&#13;
There*, a deHdout txnack&#13;
in thfJM crisp, appetizing bits&#13;
of toaitod com that brings&#13;
brighlDsssand gopd chscr.to&#13;
many and many a breakfast&#13;
Toasties are untouched by&#13;
hand in irtalritig? and come in&#13;
tfcmly aealrt paclDqpfr--cIeafi&#13;
and awtct "ready to cat with&#13;
w V aeas^a'aw^^aB^BaTaw^a^ajas&#13;
v Nourishing&#13;
Easy toSttro - . 1 ' ' o •&#13;
t.J&#13;
8old by grocers arwywhers.&#13;
81mple and youthful, this dress tt&#13;
ideal for school and college wear. It&#13;
has a blouse plain front and back,&#13;
with side front closing, an open neck&#13;
trimmed with a fancy collar. The one&#13;
piece skirt also opens In front and is&#13;
attached to the blouse with raised or&#13;
regulation waist line. This style is&#13;
suitable for serge, velveteen and elm&#13;
liar fabrics.&#13;
The dress pattern (6386) is cut In&#13;
sizes 14, 16 and 18 years. Medium&#13;
size requires 3 yards of 44 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 else and number of pattern.&#13;
H a 6386. SUB.&#13;
NAMX -»~&#13;
TOWH — .&#13;
STREET AKD NO&#13;
8TATB#.»- -».- .— --— .. •_»&#13;
LADY'S FIVE GORED SKIRT.&#13;
60E3&#13;
This skirt can be need to complete&#13;
A cost suit or it can be worn with&#13;
separate shirt waists. It can be made&#13;
with either the Umpire or regulation&#13;
waist line and the closing is made at&#13;
the front Serge, cheviot or broadcloth&#13;
can be used to make this skirt&#13;
The pattern (6023) Is cut in sixes 22&#13;
to 20 inches waist measure. Medium&#13;
sises require 2% yards of 44 inch material.&#13;
t^o T 'o•iPpartoteerunr eD tehpias rptmatetnert"n osef ntdh is1 0p acpenert,s wsurriet et on agmivee aalnede aandddr nesusm pbleari nolyf, paanttder nb. e&#13;
NO. 602*.&#13;
MAMS .—..».—»—...&#13;
TOWlf •*•-.••— - »&lt;—.&#13;
STSXET AMD NO...&#13;
«•••••••«••&#13;
Lending a Name.&#13;
"Welter," asked the important customer,&#13;
"do yoa call this an oyster&#13;
i t e w r ?&#13;
Teasir." replied Mr. Brastu* Pinkley.&#13;
"Why, the oyster la this stew lent&#13;
bif enough to flavor K.»&#13;
"It waea't put in to flavor ft, sub.&#13;
Be la lea* supposed to christen it"&#13;
« « S » « e « S M M &gt; a s e w « W M M&#13;
"•*' i • Same Mfnd.&#13;
Patienoe—6o Jack kissed yost&#13;
Patrice—Why, certainly.&#13;
"And what did yos s a y r&#13;
"What wosld yos say tt Jack; tossed&#13;
y o u r&#13;
"Nothing."&#13;
"Well, that's Just what 1 laid."&#13;
MOW THAT AUTUMN IS HERE&#13;
Soros Good Ways of Taking Advantage&#13;
of Up Season's fruits and&#13;
/ Vegetables.&#13;
Instead of the cool greens of summer,&#13;
so refreshing and grateful during&#13;
the extreme heat and dryness, In the&#13;
markets we now find the Late peach&#13;
and pear, Che pumpkin and sweet po&#13;
tato, the luscious tomato and all the&#13;
other vegetables and fruits M&gt; abuu&#13;
dant in autumn.&#13;
Baked Beets.—Take well-grown new&#13;
beets and bake instead of boiling them&#13;
Take off the hard outside and you wtii&#13;
be agreeably surprised with the sweet&#13;
ness of the beet. Slice into a heated&#13;
vegetable dish and pour over them&#13;
two tablespoonfuls of melted bultei&#13;
(not oily), mixed with the Juice of hait&#13;
a lemon and half a teaapoonrul of salt&#13;
ai.d a dash of pepper.&#13;
Sugar Beet Pudding,—Here \% a fa&#13;
vprite Carolina dlsb: Boll the heet*&#13;
until just tender; pee) and cut in small&#13;
dices. Allow a pint of milk to a pin&#13;
of beets, two or three well-beaten egg^&#13;
Bait and pepper to taste and a li«h&#13;
grating of nutmeg. Put all into an&#13;
earthen or heavy baking dish that cat&#13;
be sent to the table, and bake until th.&#13;
custard is set in the middle. £ervt&#13;
hot, as a vegetable.&#13;
Holland Cabbage.—A Dutch bouse&#13;
wife contributes this good, substantial&#13;
dish: Take a email head of white cab&#13;
bage; cut it in fine shreds; four tart&#13;
apples, peeled and sliced; one large&#13;
tableBpoonful of butter or drippings; a&#13;
tablespoonful of salt half a teaspoon&#13;
ful of pepper, a sprinkling of cheese or&#13;
nutmeg. Stir over a slow fire for at&#13;
least three hours. Mix together on*&#13;
tablespoonful of vinegar, a little flour&#13;
(not more than a level teaapoonful)&#13;
and a tablespoonful of Jelly. Just be&#13;
fore taking from the fire add this mix&#13;
ture to the cabbage; let It boil up once&#13;
or twice, and serve.&#13;
MEASURING POTS AND PANS&#13;
Knowledge of Just How Much Each&#13;
Holds Will Be Found to Make&#13;
for Economy.&#13;
It seems that only in catalogues do&#13;
we know or learn how large our pans&#13;
are But the housewife who really&#13;
measures the quantity held by her&#13;
pots and pans will be a better cook&#13;
and more efficient housewife. What&#13;
do you wish.this pot for? Merely to&#13;
warm a can of tomatoes, or to cook&#13;
two quarts of spinach? How much&#13;
should this pot hold to be Just the&#13;
right sfze for- your purpose? Do you&#13;
know how much, for instance, your&#13;
yellow mixing bowls hold? Have you&#13;
ever been deceived, and prepared to&#13;
use a bowl for a certain purpose and&#13;
find you had to take a larger one?&#13;
Are you sure that your .frying pan is&#13;
the best depth for your special purpose?&#13;
Is it nine, or ten, or eleven&#13;
Inches across? If ypu knew Just bow&#13;
big it was, perhaps you wouldn't need&#13;
two pans, or three or five, if you could&#13;
estimate Just the best depth and diameter&#13;
for your needs.&#13;
* «* %•« a&#13;
.!&gt;&#13;
5&#13;
ft&#13;
J\ oo DROPS&#13;
« . ^ = »"5 , ' i . &lt;= -&#13;
ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT&#13;
AVegctabie Preparation fur As -&#13;
siimlafmg the Food and Regula&#13;
ring fh* Stomachs and Bowels of&#13;
•&amp;J CHILD RtN i&#13;
Promotes Digestion,CheerfulnessandResl.&#13;
Cgntains neither&#13;
Opium.Morphine nor Mineral&#13;
N o T ^ A 1 R C O T I C&#13;
fkttf* c/OM Dr$AM'£imC#£/l&#13;
PiimfJtim StoH -&#13;
R«h*Uc Softs -&#13;
Anit* S&lt;*d *&#13;
ftppert»im£ r&#13;
Him* Setd -&#13;
Clv'fmt Supar&#13;
Wtobrprrt* /favor&#13;
A perfect Remedy forConstipa&#13;
}ion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,'&#13;
Wprros .Convulsions, Fever i sh&#13;
ness and LOSS OF SLEEP&#13;
Facsimile Signature of&#13;
THE CENTAUR COMPANY,&#13;
N E W Y O R K .&#13;
For Infants and Children.&#13;
The Kind You Have&#13;
Always Bought&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
of&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
E*a£t Copy of Wrapper. T M I 0 « K T * U H O O M M N V , M a * YORK 01 TV-&#13;
•^Ht--^-^ :-. V-«w. •-&#13;
Shipping Fever lufluema, rinfc ey«, eplxootic, distemper, and all nose and throat diseases cured,&#13;
and all others, no matter how "exposed," kept from IIUVLTIC any of these&#13;
dlsaasSB with S P O H N ' S I IOUII&gt; J J l S T E M P K R C I ' K K , Tbn&gt;o to six&#13;
dosoa often euro a case. One bU-eent bottle guaranteed to &lt;1o so. Hist tiling&#13;
for brood mure«. Act* on ih« blood. JSUL1 and ¢1 a battle. t6 and 8)1 a&#13;
dozen bottles. }&gt;rnggista and harness shops. Distributors— ALL WliOLH-&#13;
8AJLH DlLUUG 18¾¾.&#13;
8 P O I I N M E D U A I , CO.,&#13;
C h e m i s t s s a d B a c t e r i o l o g i s t s , Gonlieti. J J M J . , U. S. A .&#13;
Hindu Curried Potatoes-&#13;
Cut two large potatoes in cubes&#13;
about an inch square, place in saucepan&#13;
with one tab^spoon melted butter.&#13;
Season to taste with salt, cayenne&#13;
pepper and one teaspoon curry&#13;
powder. Stir thoroughly, then add&#13;
one pint hot water. Let cook tilt potatoes&#13;
are well done, but not mushy&#13;
Leave enoegh liquid to farijo a gravy&#13;
when they are served. If you like s&#13;
milk sauce an Bast Indian would put&#13;
one-eighth cup of milk in a bowl, add&#13;
one-half cup of cold water and with&#13;
his fingers he would blend in two&#13;
tablespoons of fldthr. Pour this over&#13;
the potatoes and cook till quantity of&#13;
liquid Is reduced about one-halt&#13;
When Sprinkling Clothes,&#13;
If you wish to iron your clothes immediately&#13;
after you ( sprinkle them,&#13;
try dampening them with hot water.&#13;
Roll them tightly for a moment or&#13;
two, shake them oui well and iron&#13;
with a hot Iron.&#13;
Shrimp Wiggle.&#13;
Three tablespoons or melted butter,&#13;
two tablespoons of flour stirred in, 1K&#13;
cups of milk; cook until it thickens,&#13;
then add two cans of shrimp and one&#13;
can of peas; drain the liquid off of&#13;
each and add them to the mixture,&#13;
then stir aU together; salt to taste;&#13;
serve on toasted bread. But we have&#13;
ours with mashed potato.&#13;
Bureau Drawers.&#13;
To make bureau drawers slide easily&#13;
rub the pans that catch with common&#13;
yellow soap.&#13;
To Flatten Hug.&#13;
Ruga often become turned up at the&#13;
edges. To Improve the appearance,&#13;
fold an old towel or piece of cloth&#13;
and ring oat of water aad lay along&#13;
edge of rug a*d then take a flatlron&#13;
(not hot) sttd press oatll cloth Js dry,&#13;
when the edge will be straight and&#13;
Bat'is whee *ewv&#13;
To Make Carpets Wear Longer.&#13;
Ob over yomr carpets once a week&#13;
*ith a broom dipped In hot water to&#13;
which a little turpentine has beer&#13;
idded. /&#13;
The&#13;
Red Cross&#13;
Boot This Over with a heavy wool sock makes&#13;
an ideal combination for winter wciur \\\&#13;
the forest or on the farm.&#13;
The bottoms arc Glovo Brand Lumbermen's&#13;
Overs made especially for tins tcp.&#13;
The top is a combination of Waterproof&#13;
canvas and leather. The canvas is 16&#13;
inches high, and runs down inside the&#13;
leather to the rubber, being covered bv the&#13;
leather to a height of about four inches&#13;
above the rubber.&#13;
This outfit gives all the protection from cold and snow that is afforded&#13;
by a full leather top, and at considerably less cost.&#13;
Ask your dealer for the Red Cross Combination. The red cross on '.ha&#13;
side of every rubber is a guarantee of its genuiness.&#13;
Made Solely By&#13;
Hirth-Krause to., Grand Rapids, Mich.&#13;
fri •-" r&#13;
The Glow of Warmth&#13;
in Winter Homes!&#13;
M O K t&#13;
Don*t shiver, this yearl&#13;
Don't put up with cold rooms to&#13;
go to bea in, and draughty rooms to&#13;
sit in. Enjoy true wiuter comfort,&#13;
Instead.&#13;
Withthedandy&#13;
Perfection&#13;
Smokeless Oil&#13;
Heater in your&#13;
home, you can&#13;
have heat where you »vaat i&#13;
Lights on the instant,&#13;
carried from room to room.&#13;
Gives forth no sm&gt;&gt;fce or ofVr.&#13;
Warms things tip for ten hours&#13;
on one single gallon of oil.&#13;
&gt;£fSFECH©&#13;
Dandy in appearance.&#13;
Handy to have about in case of&#13;
sickness.&#13;
Indispensable where there's a baby&#13;
in the home.&#13;
Will save its&#13;
ccst during the&#13;
first cold suap&#13;
of winter.&#13;
King of Oil&#13;
be&#13;
H". ate/s—because the r lost practical,&#13;
the most economical to operate and&#13;
most satisfactory in general rtst:lt3.&#13;
See the different rroclels at your&#13;
dealer's. Descriptive booklet mailed&#13;
free upon request.&#13;
STANDARD OIL COMPANY&#13;
(AN INDIANA&#13;
CORPORATION)&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
ILLINOIS&#13;
• %&#13;
M ^ i *j&amp;j saBBrr-rv . .**•&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
P i n c k n e y D i s p a t c h&#13;
Entered at the Postoffice at Pinckney,&#13;
Mich., a« Second Class Matter&#13;
R. W. CAVERLY, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER&#13;
ISubscriptioD, $1. Per Year iu Advauc^&#13;
Advertisjiug rates made known on&#13;
apuliuilion.&#13;
Cards of Thanks, lifty cents.&#13;
Resolutions of Condolence, one dollar.&#13;
Local Notices, in Local columns five&#13;
cent per line jier each insertion.&#13;
All matter intended to benefit the personal&#13;
or business interest of any individual&#13;
will be published at regular advertiaeing&#13;
rates.&#13;
Announcement of entertainments, etc.,&#13;
must be paid for at regular Local Notice&#13;
rateB.&#13;
Obituary and marriage notices are published&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
Poetry must be paid for at the rate of&#13;
five cents per line.&#13;
Local News&#13;
Boy's fall suite at Dancer's $3.00&#13;
to $8.00. adv.&#13;
Chas. Morse spent Sunday in&#13;
Jackson.&#13;
Nellie Fiske is taking treatment&#13;
at the Sanitarium.&#13;
Mrs. Julia Sigler of Detroit visited&#13;
relatives here the past week.&#13;
Mrs. H. D. Grieves spent the&#13;
past week with Stockbridge relatives.&#13;
Miss Visa Cole and Miss Lou&#13;
Haze spent several days last week&#13;
in Howell. *&#13;
It won't do to judge a man by&#13;
his automobile. Some mighty&#13;
cheap men ride in high priced cars.&#13;
Mrs. Albert Doe and children&#13;
of Detroit were Saturday and Sunday&#13;
quests at the home of Floyd&#13;
Reason.&#13;
D. P. Markey and wife, G. L.&#13;
Markey and wife and L. K.. Markey&#13;
of Detroit spent Sunday a F.&#13;
Reason's.&#13;
Mrs. H. F. Sigler has returned&#13;
to her home here after making an&#13;
exteuded visit among Lansing&#13;
friends and relatives.&#13;
Don't forget that the Ladies of&#13;
the M. E. church will hold a fair&#13;
Nov. 7th aud 8th. Chicken pie&#13;
supper also, Nov. 8th.&#13;
While hanging a picture the&#13;
other day a New York man fell&#13;
and broke his neck. Husbands,&#13;
tell your wives about this.&#13;
Burr Fitch and family of Poutiac&#13;
spent last week at the home&#13;
of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J as.&#13;
Fitch.&#13;
Discovery of a. joker in the&#13;
hosiery rates of the new tariff&#13;
bill indicates that Miss Democracy&#13;
wears a split shirt.&#13;
Bring in your list of magazines&#13;
and get my price, I will meet any&#13;
Fall Rugs aud Carpet* now in&#13;
Stock at Dancer's. adv.&#13;
Mr. Paul Curlett of the Tidings&#13;
spent Sunday here.&#13;
Dr. Will Monks of Howell spent&#13;
Sunday with relatives here.&#13;
Percy Mortensou of Detroit is&#13;
visiting his parents "here.&#13;
Miss Kathleen Roche of Adrian&#13;
is visiting her parents here.&#13;
LaRue Moran of the Howell&#13;
Republican spent Sunday here.&#13;
Jeff. Parker and wife were Howell&#13;
visitors one day last week.&#13;
Mrs. M, J. Reason spent Thursday&#13;
and Friday with relatives at&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Irwin of Owosso is&#13;
visiting at the home of Wm.&#13;
Doyle.&#13;
Claude Black of St. Johns was&#13;
an over Sunday guest of relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
Shiiley Anderson of Jackson&#13;
visited friends here Saturday and&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Norma Vaughn attended the&#13;
foot ball game at Ann Arbor Saturday.&#13;
If beef ever goes to $51. a pound,&#13;
hash will become more of a mystery&#13;
than ever.&#13;
Mrs. M. Birney of Jackson spent&#13;
a few days the past week at the&#13;
home of Mrs. A. Harris,&#13;
Mrs. Birney of Eaton Rapids&#13;
spent a few days the past week at&#13;
the home of Mrs. A. Harris.&#13;
If you are contemplating holding&#13;
an auction why not get your&#13;
bills printed at the Dispatch office?&#13;
Fred Campbell and wife of Ann&#13;
Arbor spent Sunday with his parents,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Campbell.&#13;
Mrs. Claude Danforth of Saginaw&#13;
is caring for her mother, Mrs,&#13;
Emma Moran, who is quite ill at&#13;
her home here.&#13;
Pansie Breningstall of Eloise,&#13;
Mich., is visiting at the home of&#13;
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed.&#13;
Breningstall.&#13;
Thos. Moran of Detroit and Roy&#13;
Moran of the U, of M. spent Sunday&#13;
with their parents, Mr, and&#13;
Mrs. W. Moran.&#13;
Without desiring to start anything&#13;
we merely remark that the&#13;
best time to look for Indian&#13;
summer is late in October or&#13;
early in November.&#13;
Scientists point out that the&#13;
Indian while livinga wild nomadic&#13;
life, knew nothing of tuberculosis.&#13;
So steam heat even has its draw&#13;
back.&#13;
The petitions of James Roche&#13;
aud M. B. Markham of Pinckney&#13;
printed list on'clubing offers and ito the Board of Supervisors askmay&#13;
be able to save you money. I ing that their farms be set outside&#13;
Did You Ever&#13;
Stop to Think&#13;
t h a t a m o n g any class of g o o d s there is always one&#13;
article t h a t is more suitable for t h e needs for which&#13;
it was designed. K n o w i n g t h i s t o be a fact we&#13;
• have always chosen for o u r c u s t o m e r s t h e&#13;
Highest Quality of Merchandise&#13;
— I N C L U D I N G —&#13;
1 " S m a r t S e t " Neckwear&#13;
" N e w l a n d " H a t s and C a p s&#13;
" I d e a l " W o r k S h i r t s a n d Overalls &amp; W o r k J a c k e t s&#13;
" R o s e B r o s . " T r o u s e r s and R a i n c o a t s&#13;
B u t t e r K r u s t B r e a d A d d i s o n Cheese&#13;
^ R e d S t a r Oil a n d Gasoline&#13;
^ C o n n o r ' s " W o r l d ' s B e s t " Ice Cream&#13;
£ V e r n o r ' s G i n g e r Ale and&#13;
fc Sealshipt O y s t e r s in Season 3&#13;
S i J6T*WiU meet all competitive prices for Saturday, ^&#13;
I MONKS BROS,!&#13;
E P r o m p t Delivery P h o n e N o . 38 ^&#13;
^ — — • ~ — — — m&#13;
C. G. Meyer.&#13;
The Putnam and Harabu g&#13;
Farmer's Club will meet with Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Ray Baker, Satutday,&#13;
October 25th for dinner. Topic,&#13;
"Farm Book Keeping," discussed&#13;
by Clyde Dunning and Mr.&#13;
Twitchel, The roll call will be&#13;
responded to with jokes and clippings.&#13;
A short program will be&#13;
rendered and a good attendance&#13;
is desired. The 3rd annual corn&#13;
show will be held the last Saturday&#13;
in November. Secy.&#13;
One hundred and thirty foreign&#13;
stadents representing 27 different&#13;
nations, are registered in the various&#13;
departments of the Univerthe&#13;
village corporation lines .hava&#13;
been grauted aud hereafter this&#13;
property will not be assessed for&#13;
village taxes.&#13;
Oar readers have heard of wonders&#13;
untold, but we are sure they&#13;
would be glad to learn also of a&#13;
miracle working red raspberry&#13;
bush on the farm of John Rczek&#13;
near Chubbs Corners. During&#13;
this delightful warm fall weather&#13;
we have been enjoying, this raspberry&#13;
bush concluded that it must&#13;
be Spring again and proceeded to&#13;
produce a jecond growth of lovely&#13;
red berries. This is not a dream, as&#13;
we have seen the fruit.&#13;
Say, young man, yes and&#13;
Important Notice!&#13;
October will bring to us great need&#13;
of MONEY which will require all&#13;
that have unpaid- accounts and&#13;
notes due to see us promptly.&#13;
Thanking all for the liberal patronage,&#13;
we respectfully ask all to&#13;
call and see us.&#13;
are (jompany&#13;
I?inol*ney% IVCioli.&#13;
HEAR Y B HEAR Y B&#13;
The Pinckney mills are making a flour that is second to&#13;
none on the market, and is as cheap as you can buy any&#13;
good flour. Why not try a sack?&#13;
old&#13;
sity. China heads the list with 53 man too, a9 you stand on the&#13;
students, while Porto Rico follows ; corner making impolite remarks&#13;
with 24. Holland is represented ab~nt young girls as they pass by,&#13;
by 12 students, Poland by 10 and do you realize that some other&#13;
South Africa and Armenia by 9 foul-mouthed puppy may be standeach.&#13;
Other nations represented ing on the other corner making&#13;
are Turkey, Persia, Egypt, Ger- similar remarks about yoar siller,&#13;
We would be pleased to have all who have&#13;
accounts with us to call and straighten&#13;
them as we have to pay cash for everything we get and&#13;
can't do it without the cash.&#13;
THE HOYT BROS.&#13;
\&#13;
.--^- ***~,Jt tt miO^'Jfci f ji**0k9m**+&#13;
many, India, Cuba, Hawaii, Soot&#13;
land, Switzerland, Australia, Argentina,&#13;
Bulgaria, Columbia, Brit&#13;
ish Columbia, Brazil, Rojsia, Oan&#13;
ada, Jamaca and Panama.&#13;
daughter or mother? Never&#13;
thought of it, did yon? Treat&#13;
every women aa a lady nntil yon&#13;
know she doesn't deserve it-then&#13;
keep your month shut&#13;
[WANTED!!&#13;
\ POULTRY, EGGS AND VEAL |&#13;
j Will pay the highest market price at all times. I&#13;
2 Call us up before you sell. Bell phone No. 74 i&#13;
J O H N DIIMKEL&#13;
as * - m*rm met&#13;
Try a Liner Advertisement ifl the Dispatch&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative Banking&#13;
Business. • •&#13;
• •&#13;
3 p e r c e n t&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
P i n c k n e y&#13;
G. W. T B B P b E&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Prop&#13;
ARE YOU AWAKE&#13;
to the fact that your boy is growing&#13;
Yesterday—Juet a little fellow.&#13;
Tod^y—A big boy.&#13;
Tomorrow—A man.&#13;
Today you are sorry you haven't a&#13;
photograph of him as he looked&#13;
yesterday. — Tomorrow you will&#13;
value the one you have today.&#13;
Don't put it off.&#13;
Darsie B. Chapell&#13;
S t o c k b r i d g e , M i c h i g a n&#13;
Anti-Pain Pills&#13;
w i l l h e l p ymu, a s t h e ?&#13;
h a v e h e l p e d o t h e r * .&#13;
Good for all kinds of pftia.&#13;
Used to relieve Neuralgia, Headache,&#13;
Xeryousniss, Rheumatism,&#13;
Sciatica, Kidney Pains,Xumbago,&#13;
Locomotor A****** Backaeho,&#13;
Stomachache, Cartfclmcfs, Irritability&#13;
and for pain in amy part&#13;
of the bodj. , .- . ; \&#13;
"I have used-Dr. Milea' Anti.Pain&#13;
PUls when troubled wltn hea&#13;
and find that «&amp;• ~frUI ln4&#13;
effects relief in a very ihort&#13;
I am considerably affetted *4fh&#13;
ralgia in the head at timet,&#13;
find the Anti-Pain Pllla *ef&#13;
benefit. The Dr. JillesV R©i&#13;
are beyond com»ariaen and J i&#13;
mend them to all my friend*.&#13;
oBOftQB ooiaAtm&#13;
IW Oakland St., San Antonio, f i x .&#13;
At «H druggist* AS dote* fte* c&#13;
MILES MEDICAL CO., Blknar^ Ind.&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • j B B B B B l&#13;
*&#13;
romjitly obutned In all countries o r «K&#13;
" C»*Wtf»«,mU;op/iJivW|&#13;
tie.&#13;
of*&#13;
Head 4 cent* t«u&#13;
books on HOW&#13;
Iff, WMri? ow„y&#13;
&gt;• f jr -.Or '.wo Invalnabie&#13;
fTAW and ttLIL PATi&gt;&#13;
'.. i.r&#13;
wmmmm wm wmm m&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
mrnmwmmmwmmmmmmm&#13;
3=3&#13;
• • * ?&#13;
' • &gt; * • '&#13;
Hot&#13;
Fountain&#13;
N O W O P B N i&#13;
m£ Hot Chocolate&#13;
§: Hot Coffee&#13;
H Beef Tea&#13;
5c&#13;
5c&#13;
5c&#13;
Tomato Boullion 5c&#13;
Chicken Boullion 5c ^&#13;
Celery Boullion 5c z^&#13;
E T C .&#13;
MEYER'S DRUG STORE&#13;
T h e I^Tyal H t o r e&#13;
£ Plnckney, Mich. 3&#13;
£= Drugs, Wall Paper, Crockery, Cigars, Candy,'Magazines, ^&#13;
ST School Supplies, Books ^&#13;
cornocm i»n&#13;
W h e n t h e Rush is O n&#13;
WHEN it seems that you are being crowded t o the&#13;
limit and there are twenty jobs to be done in t h e time&#13;
for one, don't spend a minute worrying about help.&#13;
Immediately get a Rumely-Olds Engine on the job and wear&#13;
the glad smile. A Rumely-Olds Engine will run the corn&#13;
sheller, the pump, the feed mill, the cream separator or any&#13;
machine you have or ever get and will patch over t h e&#13;
"leaks'* in your profits.&#13;
If you can't find time to come and see us, ask us to come and see you or&#13;
send you a catalog of Rumely-Olds Engines.&#13;
We're here to serve you;&#13;
Give us a chance.&#13;
A H. FLINTOFT,&#13;
PINCKNEY MICH,&#13;
!••!&#13;
"I Like To Grind&#13;
Tzar Coffee-&#13;
It Smells So Good"&#13;
The rich fragrant aroma from Tzar&#13;
Coffee pleases everybody. You know&#13;
it is good the minute you smell i t&#13;
You'll like it much better as soon as&#13;
you taste i t&#13;
Tzar Coffee is a high grade coffee at&#13;
35c—'blended a n d roasted by experts.&#13;
N e r o 3 0 c&#13;
Marigold 3 2 c&#13;
Pleasant Valley 4 0 c&#13;
is a special Cut Coffee at 35 c—try it with a&#13;
convenient Tricolator.&#13;
Pleasant Valley Tea*&#13;
50c - 60c - 80c&#13;
II you are particular about your tea you&#13;
t.ikowd tar Pleasant Valley Teas. They're&#13;
Mightnugr delicious* Order Today.&#13;
ITOirYAUtY&#13;
KA..4&#13;
•1APAN I I A it&#13;
Murphy6eJackson, Finckney&#13;
Ayrault $*.Bollinger, Gregory&#13;
Subscribe Por The Dispatch&#13;
South Iosco&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Oaskey entertained&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Anderson&#13;
and Mr. and Mrs. Edd&#13;
Secor at their home Sunday.&#13;
Mr, and Mrs. Harry Wainwri^ht&#13;
of Webberville and Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Wm. Caskey of Anderson spent&#13;
Sunday at Truman WainwrightV&#13;
John Roberts and wife and N.&#13;
Watters and wife spent Saturday&#13;
and Sunday with relatives in Jackson.&#13;
Bert Roberts and wife transacted&#13;
business in Howell last Saturday.&#13;
Herbert Lane and grandson,&#13;
Arnold, of Jackson visited at the&#13;
home of Julian Bull last week.&#13;
J. W. and Daisy Roberts spent&#13;
the last of the week with their&#13;
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm.&#13;
Bullis of Pinckney.&#13;
Millie VanKeuren visited at E.&#13;
VanBeuren's the last of the week.&#13;
• • • - • •&#13;
The Family Cough Medicine&#13;
In every home there should be a&#13;
bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery,&#13;
ready lor immediate use when any&#13;
member of the family contracts a cold&#13;
or a cough, Prompt use will stop the&#13;
spread of sickness. S. A. Stid, of&#13;
Mason, AJicb., writes: 4\\ly whole&#13;
family depends upon Dr. King's New&#13;
Discovery as the best cough aad cold&#13;
medicine in the world. Two 50c.&#13;
Dottl s curbd me of pneumonia.'&#13;
Thousands of other families have been&#13;
equally benefited and depend entirely.&#13;
upon Dr. King's New Discovery to&#13;
cure their coughs, colds, thoat and&#13;
lung toubles. Every dose helps.&#13;
Price 50c. and $1.00 at Meyer's Drug&#13;
Store.&#13;
South Marion&#13;
Walter Glover and wife of Fowlerville&#13;
were Sunday visitors at&#13;
the home of N. Pacey.&#13;
Mark McOleer of Brighton spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday with Chris.&#13;
Brogan and family.&#13;
Chas. Dey spent last'Friday in&#13;
Fowltrville.&#13;
Lyle Younglove and wife of Detroit&#13;
were over Sunday guests at&#13;
the home of Geo. Younglove.&#13;
LaVerne Demerest and family&#13;
were Sunday callers at the home&#13;
of John Gardner.&#13;
Mrs. Ray Newcomb aud daughter&#13;
Harriet of Howell visited John&#13;
Gardner and family the past week.&#13;
Beware or Ointments for Catarrh that&#13;
Contain Mercury.&#13;
as mercury will surely destroy th«&#13;
sense ot smell and completely derange&#13;
the whole system when entering it&#13;
through the mucus surfaces. Such articles&#13;
should never be used except on pre&#13;
scriptions from, reputable physicians-',&#13;
as the damage they do is ten fold to&#13;
the good you can possibly derive from&#13;
them. Hall's Oatarrh Cure, manufactured&#13;
by P J Cheney &amp; Co, Toledo,&#13;
O contains no mercuty, and is taken&#13;
internally acting directly upon the&#13;
blood and mucus surfaces of the&#13;
system. In buying Hall's Catarrh&#13;
Cure be sure you get the genuine. It&#13;
is taken internally and made in Toledo&#13;
Ohio, by F J Cheney &amp; Co., Testimonials&#13;
free. Sold by Druggists&#13;
Price 75c. per bottle. Take Hairs&#13;
Family pills tor constipation&#13;
CI&#13;
V O.R,&#13;
urday, October 25,1913&#13;
i&#13;
Ladies 25c Hosiery, the Black Cat kind, per pair 16c&#13;
Childrens 15c Stockings, Black Cat kind, per pair 10c&#13;
Best Outing Flannel., _ ___._ 9c&#13;
Best Raisins _ _ . 9c&#13;
Two 5c Cans Baking Powder . 5c&#13;
1 lb. Soda _ _ _ 5C&#13;
rar" Will Meet All Prices on Sugar&#13;
ALL SALES CASH&#13;
, W. W. BARNARD&#13;
I IProdLuee Wanted&#13;
Cassimer and Martin Clinton of&#13;
Detroit visited at the home of&#13;
their parents here Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. H. F. Sigler picked strawberries&#13;
from their garden on&#13;
Tuesday, October 21. Will wonders&#13;
never cease?&#13;
The fall garment season has began&#13;
and many more each year are&#13;
finding it profitable to go to&#13;
Dancer's, Stockbridge. adv.&#13;
Women Woo Get Dizzy&#13;
Every women who in troubled with&#13;
lainting and dizzy spells,I backache,&#13;
headache, weakness, debility, constipation&#13;
or kidney* troubles should use&#13;
Electric Bitters. They give relief when&#13;
nothing else will, improve the health,&#13;
adding strength and vigor from the&#13;
first dose. Mrs Lanra Gaines, of&#13;
Avoea. La., says: "Four doctors had&#13;
given me np and my children and all&#13;
my friend* were looking tor me to die&#13;
when my ion insisted tbat I ate Electric&#13;
Bittert. f did so, and tbey hare&#13;
flone me a world of good." J ait try&#13;
them. 60o. and $1.00. Recommended&#13;
by 0, G. Meyer tbe drngftiit.&#13;
FALL BILLS&#13;
DUB&#13;
We have a great many large bills falling due&#13;
this month and take this method of asking our&#13;
patrons who owe us to help out with remittance&#13;
as soon as possible. We will greatly&#13;
appreciate promptness and a continuation of&#13;
your business.&#13;
Dinkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
IPindcney&#13;
HONESTLY MADE MEDICINE&#13;
SUCCEEDS IN HEALING&#13;
The value ot Foley Kidney Pills&#13;
over all other kidney medicines is due&#13;
to their honest inaKe, and to the wise&#13;
selection ot potent and restorative&#13;
drutfs used tn their make up. Foley&#13;
Kidney Pills act in harmony witc&#13;
nature and a.e a genuine "first aid1'&#13;
in restoring tbe kidneys and promoting&#13;
thoroughly healthy action ot the&#13;
kidneys and bladder. Those fortunate&#13;
ones who have used Foley Kidney&#13;
Pills are now rid ot their ailments.&#13;
Try them, and they will succeed&#13;
in helping your case of kidney&#13;
trouble. C. G, Meyer.&#13;
IMPORTANT!&#13;
Having decided to discontinue&#13;
farming, 1 offer&#13;
For Sale&#13;
10 to 15 head of young&#13;
serviceable short horn&#13;
cows and heifers at&#13;
about beef prices. Also&#13;
4 to 6 young Clydesdale&#13;
colts and fillys&#13;
from 1 to 3 years old.&#13;
Will give time to responsible&#13;
purchasers. *&#13;
T« Birkett&#13;
H. F. SfGLER M. D- C. L, SIGLER M. D. •&#13;
$&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surpeo.is.&#13;
All calls promptly attended to &amp;&#13;
day or night. Office on Main 3&#13;
Street.&#13;
£ PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
^&gt;5^fi^f«^^»^fC^«s&gt;s&gt;r.^w&gt;«^&amp;«&#13;
kmJAHiim^kmMki&#13;
GOING TO BUY A PIANO |&#13;
OR SEWING MACHINES&#13;
YES?&#13;
SEE L. R. WILLIAMS. &amp;&#13;
GREGORY&#13;
S 6 f He saves you money on hi^h&#13;
grade pianos.&#13;
6 0 YEAft*&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
TRADE MARKS&#13;
'2EV.3NS Cor-* ^QHT» Ac&#13;
QtildfH ,•'-•! ,v :•&lt;)',,:•;. n lrcfc whether *L&#13;
inrcmilfti i • w ,,.••• - •;• iintpniHhle. (ViinmuniW&#13;
tjoriiisiriof: w ^ i l r l . ••rial. I'ANMttW &amp;n P*te&gt;U&#13;
icjrt f«rc trMt*** mwruT ror mmrvng patent*.&#13;
tptcuUlMtto-: &lt; 'l.'jtitclifUirti. Uitluj Scientific fltncim A handsomely Uhntnte4 weekly. Largest air&#13;
ifelon o? anyjd^tlflgjoarng. . ¾ ¾ . ¾&#13;
Iter relief from rheumatic pains Iff&#13;
Dr. Mile*' Antl-Faln Pills. Do&#13;
•offer needlessly, r Advertisement!&#13;
•:J? V&#13;
PJNCKNEY DfSPAtd4&#13;
+* •r" *»T ' i urn"&#13;
WENTY-EIGHT DIE&#13;
DESTRUCTION OF ZEPPELIN AIR&#13;
SHIP COSTS LIVES OF PROMINENT&#13;
GERMANS.&#13;
ONLY ONE PASSENGER&#13;
VIVES DISASTER.&#13;
SUREntire&#13;
Admirality Trial Board of Germany&#13;
Wiped Out When New Dirigible&#13;
Burns and Falls Near&#13;
Johannisthal.&#13;
Berlin- - The new naval Zeppelin&#13;
airship, " 2," exploded in the air near&#13;
Tohiiniiistlutl Friday and was completely&#13;
wrecked.&#13;
01 2\) on board 28 were killed.&#13;
Lieut. Uaron Von Bleul, of the&#13;
Queen Augusta Grenadier Guards, who&#13;
was making the trip as a guest, was&#13;
the only survivor of the wreck. He&#13;
•was badly injured.&#13;
The party included the entire admiralty&#13;
trial board, headed by Commander&#13;
Benisch, conducting the final&#13;
trials prior to the acceptance of the&#13;
new craft as part of the new German&#13;
aerial navy.&#13;
"The crew" was under command of&#13;
Lieut. Kreyer of the navy and Capt.&#13;
Glund, of of Count Zeppelin's veteran&#13;
dirigible pilots.&#13;
The airship exploded while it was&#13;
over the outskirts of Johannisthal,&#13;
sailing at a height of about 900 feet.&#13;
The craft fell on the main highway&#13;
leading inio Johannisthal, its blackened&#13;
wreck of twisted aluminum&#13;
framework blocking the road.&#13;
The exact cause of the accident is&#13;
unknown. The dirigible had just left&#13;
its shed and had traversed barely a&#13;
quarter of a mile in the direction of&#13;
lierlin.&#13;
Spectators suddenly saw a mighty&#13;
pilhir of fire shoot from the middle of&#13;
the balloon, and the next instant the&#13;
craft was a mass of flame, plunging&#13;
IO earth, burying those aboard beneath&#13;
its wreckage,&#13;
Following so shortly upon the disnster&#13;
of Sept. 9 last, when a similar&#13;
craft just launched for the navy as&#13;
"I, 1" was destroyed in a hurricane&#13;
with the loss of 15 men, the,news of&#13;
today's catastrophe has caused consternation&#13;
in aeronautical circle.&#13;
Huerta W i l l Not Resign.&#13;
Mexico City—Provisional President&#13;
Huerta has not resigned, nor has be&#13;
fled from the capitol. When seen at&#13;
the national palace at 5 o'clock Saturday&#13;
afternoon he said he had no intention&#13;
of doing either.&#13;
"When I resign," said Gen. Huerta&#13;
"it will be to seek a resting place six&#13;
feet in the soil. When I flee the&#13;
capitol it will be to shoulder a rifle&#13;
and take my place in the ranks to&#13;
fight the rebels."&#13;
This was his answer to queries as&#13;
to whether there was any foundation&#13;
for the reports which have freely circulated&#13;
in the capitol and found their&#13;
way to the United States.&#13;
New Court House Dedicated.&#13;
Cadillac, Mich.—Wexford county's&#13;
new $S"),000 courthouse was dedicated&#13;
Friday, Gov. W. N. Ferris delivering&#13;
the principal address. It was a public&#13;
holiday in the city and business&#13;
was suspended during the afternoon&#13;
in order to give an opportunity to attend&#13;
the exercises. Hundreds of people&#13;
were present.&#13;
Judge Fred S. Lamb officiated as&#13;
chairman. Charles C. Dunham, former&#13;
probate judge ,and sheriff for&#13;
many years, made the final report of&#13;
the building committee. A large silk&#13;
American flag was presented to the&#13;
county by Mrs. C. E. Miller for the&#13;
local chapter, Daughters of the American&#13;
Revolution.&#13;
MARTIN H. GLYNN&#13;
Becafoe governor of New York when&#13;
Sulxer was found guilty by judges&#13;
and removed from office.&#13;
SUIiER GIVEN LOVING CUP&#13;
Crowd of Admirers Call On Deposed&#13;
Governor and Give Expressions&#13;
of Confidence.&#13;
Missouri Is Getting Rich.&#13;
Jefferson City, Mo.—The state board&#13;
of equalization fixed the valuation of&#13;
property in Missouri at 11,756,000,000.&#13;
This is an increase of $20,800,000 over&#13;
the property assessment of last year.&#13;
Railroads and other public utilities&#13;
are valued at $188,700,000, and increase&#13;
of nearly $5,000,000. Nearly&#13;
half the increase In valuation of real&#13;
and personal property fell on Kansas&#13;
City and St. Louis.&#13;
Last Officer of Light Brigade.&#13;
London—The death Friday of Sir&#13;
George Orby Wombell removes the&#13;
last of the heroic officers who led the&#13;
desperate charge of the Light Brigade&#13;
at«Balaklava, the most famous of modern&#13;
English feats of arms, and relegates&#13;
to the pages of history, without&#13;
a living link to the present, that splendid&#13;
and useless sacrifice.&#13;
The Davidson-Wonsey salt plant at&#13;
Marine City, has been purchased by&#13;
the Marine City Salt Co., composed.of&#13;
Canadian capitalist!,&#13;
Albany, N. Y.—There, was red fire,&#13;
oratory and music by a brass band&#13;
over at the executive mansion Saturday&#13;
night when fifteen hundred admirers&#13;
of William Sulzer called to&#13;
present him with a loving cup.&#13;
A driving rain fell while the marchers&#13;
were en route to the mansion.&#13;
Sulzer started to shake handB with&#13;
all of his callers, but he never completed&#13;
the task. They crowded around&#13;
him and refused to move. Some one&#13;
said a few words of consolation to&#13;
him only to be interrupted by Mrs.&#13;
Sulzer.&#13;
"The action of the court is the least&#13;
of our troubles," she said.&#13;
The crowd began to cheer. "We'll&#13;
have you back here next year, Bill!"&#13;
one man yelled.&#13;
Chester C. Piatt, Sulzer's secretary,&#13;
read a speech asssuring Sulzer that&#13;
he had been removed because he&#13;
would not obey the bosses. Mention&#13;
of the name of Charles F. Murphy&#13;
brought hisses. "Lynch him," shouted&#13;
one man, at the mention of the name&#13;
of an assemblyman. The cup presented&#13;
to Sulzer was inscribed, "To&#13;
William Sulzer. A victim of corrupt&#13;
bossism, October 17, 1913."&#13;
Mrs. Sulzer was presented with a&#13;
bouquet.&#13;
Hooper Wins in Tennessee.&#13;
Nashville,—Legislation prohibiting&#13;
inter-county liquor shipments in Tennessee&#13;
and a prohibiting interstate&#13;
shipments in quantities over a gallon&#13;
for personal use became effective with&#13;
the signing of two bills by Gov. Hooper.&#13;
They were passed at the extraordinary&#13;
session of the legislature.&#13;
Another law which makes saloonB,&#13;
disorderly houses or gambling places&#13;
nuisances, to be abated on the motion&#13;
of 1C property holders, ^ill become&#13;
effective March 1.&#13;
Thus Hooper, the young republican&#13;
governor of a democratic state—a man&#13;
who was once a nameless waif—has&#13;
won his spectacular fight against the&#13;
liquor interests of his state. Defeated&#13;
in the regular session. Hooper called&#13;
a special session.&#13;
Rodman Law Nearly Killed.&#13;
New York—Rodman Law, the raredevil&#13;
aviator and parachute jumper,&#13;
again narrowly escaped death while&#13;
attempting a stunt for a moving picture&#13;
concern. Law had contracted to&#13;
dive from a flying aeroplane and "rescue"&#13;
a "drowning" man. He neglected&#13;
to take the speed of the machine&#13;
into his calculations, and when he&#13;
dove from the hydroplane, operated&#13;
by William Thaw and Steve MacGorden,&#13;
he was whirled headlong, striking&#13;
on his back in the water..&#13;
Chinese Brigands Kill 300.&#13;
Pekin—Chinece brigands commanded&#13;
by Gen. Hwang Li-Ang have slain&#13;
300 persons in the province of -Fo-&#13;
Kien and also burned two mission&#13;
churches, the property of American&#13;
sionary societies.&#13;
The American missionaries from the&#13;
disturbed district are still in Fu-Chow,&#13;
where they took refuge during the recent&#13;
trouble.&#13;
The annual assessment of the Citizens'&#13;
Mutual Fire Insurance Co., of&#13;
Marshall, which suffered the heaviest&#13;
losses in the last year since Ka organisation,&#13;
is 44 cents on each $100.&#13;
Fire did $20,000 damage at Brimley,&#13;
a village 22 miles west of Sault Ste.&#13;
Marie. Alex. Clark suffered the&#13;
heaviest loss, his hotel, home and&#13;
sales stables being destroyed. A, J.&#13;
Bel anger was seriously burned while&#13;
fifbtinf the fire.&#13;
ENGINE TENDER JUMPS TRACK&#13;
AND T H R E E COACHES PLUNGE&#13;
TWENTY-FIVE FEET.&#13;
MEMBERS OF COMPANIES 29 AND&#13;
170 COAST ARTILERY KILLED.&#13;
Terrible Loss of Life When Train On&#13;
Which United States Regulars&#13;
Travel to State Fair Is&#13;
Derailed.&#13;
Meridan, Miss.—Twenty soldiers of&#13;
Companies 39 and 170, United States&#13;
coast artillery, were killed and about&#13;
one hundred others Injured Sun£/y&#13;
afternoon when special troop train on&#13;
the Mobile &amp; Ohio railroad crashed&#13;
through a trestle near State Line,&#13;
Miss. Division SupL Pigford, of the&#13;
Mobile &amp; Ohio, in a report sent to&#13;
headquarters of the road at Mobile,&#13;
gives this number as the extent of&#13;
the casualties.&#13;
The wreck was caused by the engine&#13;
tender jumping the track when&#13;
about 200 feet from a trestle. The&#13;
engine was not derailed and passed&#13;
over the trestle. The tender broke&#13;
loose from the engine, however, and&#13;
with the baggage car and three&#13;
coaches, plunged 25 feet to the&#13;
ground.&#13;
Some of the dead are: Joseph&#13;
Teben, Ernest Parquette, Clyde Teel,&#13;
H. B. Bishop, G. C. Burleson, Joseph&#13;
Provence, W. H. Brin, Goodes, Remsen,&#13;
Gruckle Acres. Capt. Johnson,&#13;
of Eighth Regiment band.&#13;
One hundred and seventy-nine soldiers&#13;
were on the special train. They&#13;
were from Fort Morgan and Fort&#13;
Parancas, and were on their way to&#13;
Meridian to participate in the Mississippi-&#13;
Alabama joint state fair.&#13;
The men had gone to Mobile early&#13;
Sunday and at noon their ill-fated&#13;
special left Mobile. AB meager news&#13;
of the wreck filtered into Meridian a&#13;
special relief train bearing physicians&#13;
and nurses left for the scene. Other&#13;
trains left from Mobile and Whistler,&#13;
Ala.&#13;
The coaches were well filled and&#13;
when the three cars plunged through&#13;
the trestle the men had little chance&#13;
to escape: The dead and Injured were&#13;
mangled in a twisted mass of wreckage,&#13;
making it difficult to remove&#13;
dead bodies or rescue injured.&#13;
Senate Passes Clapp Bill.&#13;
Washington—The first direct results&#13;
of the congressional investigation of&#13;
campaign expenditures came when the&#13;
senate passed Senator Clapp's bill&#13;
prohibiting the sending of campaign&#13;
funds from one state to another.&#13;
The bill prohibits the carrying or&#13;
sending of funds from one state to&#13;
another, to be used in the election of&#13;
president, vice president, presidential&#13;
electors, or congressmen. The senate&#13;
passed the bill without debate. In&#13;
previous discussions it was made&#13;
clear that its purpose was to prevent&#13;
the financing of campaigns in a secret&#13;
manner by organizations or individuals&#13;
who did not come directly under the&#13;
campaign publicity laws.&#13;
Last Zulu King Is Dead.&#13;
Cape Town—Dinizulu, the last of&#13;
the warrior kings of the former Zulu&#13;
nation of South Africa, is dead.&#13;
He was a son of Cetywayo, the king&#13;
who led the Zulu nation against the&#13;
British troops in the war of 1879.&#13;
Cetywayo was eventually defeated after&#13;
he had inflicted a crushing blow&#13;
on the British army at the battle of&#13;
Isandhlwana, when practically the entire&#13;
Twenty-fourth infantry regiment&#13;
was massacred. -&#13;
Dinizulu led two or three rebellions&#13;
against the British. He was once captured&#13;
and exiled to the island of St,&#13;
Helen*.&#13;
MARKETS&#13;
Prospects Bright for Currency Bill.&#13;
Washington—President Wilson has&#13;
further .-cleared the path for currency&#13;
reform in the senate through conferences&#13;
opened with the republicans on&#13;
the senate committee now in charge&#13;
of the bill. As a result of a conference*&#13;
with Senator Nelson, the president&#13;
has received assurances that the republican&#13;
menbers are not holding up&#13;
legislation, nor trying to Impede action&#13;
on the currency bill in the senate.&#13;
It is believed that it will not he made&#13;
a party measure and will be supported&#13;
by republicans and democrats alike. ~&#13;
Mrs. Lissie A. Daucky, whose husband,&#13;
Edward Daucky, was killed in&#13;
the Kellogg Food Co., factory, at Battle&#13;
Creek, settled in circuit court with&#13;
the company for $400.&#13;
Live StocK, Grain and General Farm&#13;
produce.&#13;
Live Stock Markets.&#13;
DETROIT—Cattle — Recoipis, 795;&#13;
market dull and slow; dry-led steers&#13;
and heifers, $8; steers and heifers,&#13;
1,000 to 1,200 $7(07.60; do 800 to 1,000&#13;
$6.60@7; grass steerB and heifers that&#13;
are fat, 800 to 1,000 lb, »6.50 @7; do&#13;
500 to 700 »5.50®6.50; choice fat oows,&#13;
$b"; good fat cows, 5.25(9)5.60; common&#13;
cows, |4.25®4.50; canners, $3©&gt;4;&#13;
choice heavy bulls, $6.25® 6.50; fair to&#13;
good bologna bull*, $5.60@)t); stock&#13;
bulls, $5&lt;&amp;)6.25; .choice feeding steers,&#13;
800 to 1,000, $b\50@7; fair feeding&#13;
steers, 800 to 1,000, 16.40®6.75 choice&#13;
stockers, 500 to 700, $t&gt;.25@6.75; fair&#13;
Blockers, 500 to 700, $b@&gt;625; stock&#13;
heifers, $5@5.50; milkers, large, young&#13;
medium age, |75@)85; common milkers,&#13;
$40(S&gt;60. veal calves: Receipts,&#13;
226; market 50c lower; best, $10 (g)&#13;
10.50; others, $7@9.50. Sheep and&#13;
lambs: RecelptB, 3,153; market for&#13;
sheep steady; lambs, 10@&gt;15c lower;&#13;
best lambs, $«.50(8)6.60; fair lambs,&#13;
56(8)6.25; light to common lambs, ¢5.50&#13;
@6; fair to good sheep, $4@4.25; culls&#13;
and common, $3@3.25; Hogs. Receipts,&#13;
1978; market 5c lower than&#13;
Tuesday; Jightlo good butchers, $8.35&#13;
®)8.40; pigs, $7@7.75; mixed, $8.25@|&#13;
8.40; heavy, ¢8.26(08.40.&#13;
East Buffalo Markets.&#13;
EAST BUFFALO—Cattle—Receipts,&#13;
260 oars; choice fat grades sold&#13;
steady; common and grassy kinds sold&#13;
15@25c lower; best 1,350 to 1,600-Ib&#13;
steers, ¢8.50^)8.75; best 1,200 to 1,300-&#13;
1b steers, ¢8.25©8.50; best 1,100 to&#13;
1,200-lb steers, $8(g)8.25; coarse and&#13;
plain weighty steers, ¢7.2507.50;&#13;
choice handy steers, 1,000 to 1,100-lb&#13;
steers, ¢808.35: fair to good 1,0J)0 to&#13;
1,100-lb steers, ¢7.2507.65: grassy 800&#13;
to 1,000-lb steers, ¢¢.6007; best cows,&#13;
¢6.5006-75: butcher cows, ¢ 5 0 6 : cutters,&#13;
¢4.2504.50: trimmers, ¢3.750&#13;
3.85; best heifers, ¢7.2507.75: medium&#13;
hutcher helferSp ¢6.2506.60: stock&#13;
heifers, ¢4.5005: common stock heifers,&#13;
¢40^.25: best feeding steers, ¢ 7 0&#13;
7.50; fair to good steers, ¢6.2506.60:&#13;
common light stock steers, ¢505.25:&#13;
best butcher hulls, ¢6.5007: best&#13;
bologna bulls, $p.25 (g 5.75; stock bulls,&#13;
¢505.50: Best milkers and springers,&#13;
¢70080: common- to good springers,&#13;
¢66340.&#13;
Hog*: Receipts, 110 cars; market&#13;
10015c. higher; heavy, ¢8.7009-,&#13;
mixed, $S.$0; yorkers, ¢8.5008.90:&#13;
pigs, U.7QO8.25.&#13;
Sheep and lambs; Receipts, 95 cars;&#13;
lambs 10O15c lower; sheep steady;&#13;
best lambs, ¢7.1607.25: yearlings,&#13;
¢5.5006: wethers, ¢505.25: ewes,&#13;
¢4.5005.&#13;
Calves slow, $5011.75.&#13;
To Pipe Smokers&#13;
• CHI-WING OK SMOKING ITOBACCO&#13;
We Are Independent&#13;
and have no one to please but our customers.&#13;
We have been making highgrade&#13;
smoking tobacco for more than&#13;
half a century and "Wild Fruit" is our&#13;
best effort. It is Union Made. Packed&#13;
in five cent foil packages, ten cent&#13;
cloth pouches, eight and sixteen ounce&#13;
tins. Premium coupons in all packages.&#13;
Should you fail to find the "Wild Fruit"&#13;
in your dealer's stock, send us five&#13;
cents in postage stamps and we&#13;
will mail you an original package.&#13;
Jflo.J.Bagley &amp; Co.Detroit,Mich,&#13;
BLACK&#13;
CSTB. 1850 -DETROIT&#13;
OPTICIAN&#13;
156 WOODWARD AVF.&#13;
BUTTON COVERING Send u s your next order. Special attention given to&#13;
Mail Orders and we guarantee oar work to 5e satisfactory.&#13;
Send either stamps or money order. Prloe&#13;
Uat on request. DRESS PLAITING&#13;
NEW YORK TRIMMING &amp; LINING HOUSE&#13;
16 John R. Str«et Detroit, Mick.&#13;
We Will Pay You $120.00&#13;
to distribute religions literature In your community,&#13;
40 days'work. Experience not required. Manor woman.&#13;
Opportunity for promotion. Spare time may bo&#13;
Used. UUr»»Uo«»l Blbl* Prwt, 1014 Area St., raiUaWfkla&#13;
Immense Output of Linen.&#13;
The 12,000,000 pounds worth of&#13;
linen which is the average yearly output&#13;
of the United Kingdom would&#13;
wrap the earth at the equator seven %&#13;
times.&#13;
Straight Up.&#13;
"They say he's a fine, upstanding&#13;
fellow."&#13;
"Every bar within a radius of a&#13;
mile of here knows it!"—Judge.&#13;
Detroit Grain Market&#13;
Wheat—Cash No. 2 red 1 car at 93c;&#13;
December opened without change at&#13;
94 1-^c, declined to 94c and advanced&#13;
to 94 l-4c; May opened at 98 l-2c, declined&#13;
to 98c and advanced to 98 l-4c;&#13;
No. 1 white, 93C.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 2, 71 l-2c; No. 2&#13;
yellow, 1 car at 73c; 1 car at 72 l-2c;&#13;
No. 3 yellow, 1 car at 72 l-2c; closing&#13;
at 72c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 1 car at 42 l-»c;&#13;
closing at 42 l-4c; No. 3 white, 1 car&#13;
at 42c; No. 4 white, 40 3-4c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 69 l-2c bid.&#13;
Beans—Immediate, prompt, and October&#13;
shipment, 51.96; Novembef,&#13;
11.80.&#13;
Cioverseed—Prime October and December,&#13;
|7.70; March, ¢7.76; sample&#13;
red, 10 bags at 16.50, 15 at $6.75, 12 at&#13;
$7; October alsifce, $10; sample alsike,&#13;
25 bags at $8.76.&#13;
Timothy—Prime spot, 25 bagB at&#13;
$2.46.&#13;
Alfalfa—Prime spot, 10 bags at&#13;
$7.25.&#13;
Hay—CaTlots, track, Detroit: No. 1&#13;
timothy, $16(8)16.60; standard, $15®&#13;
$15(8)15.50; No. 2, $14{pl4.50; light&#13;
mixed, 5i5@15.60; No. 1 mixed $13:50&#13;
f#M; rye straw, $8® 9; wheat and oat&#13;
straw, ^7^7.50 per ton.&#13;
Flour—In one-eighth paper sacks,&#13;
per VM pounds, Jobbing lots: ' Best&#13;
patent, $6.40; second patent, $5.10;&#13;
straight, $4.90; spring patent, $5.10;&#13;
rye. $4.60 per bbl.&#13;
Feed—In 100-Ib sacks, Jobbing lots:&#13;
Bran, $26; coarse middlings, $27; fine&#13;
* middlings, $29; cracked corn, $27;&#13;
coarse oommeai, $31; corn and oat&#13;
chop, $27.60 per ton.&#13;
. Don't buy water for bluing. Liquid blue&#13;
is nlmoM all water. Buv Red Cross Ball&#13;
Blue, the blue that's all blue. Adv.&#13;
A woman seldom hits anything she&#13;
aims at—especially when she throws&#13;
herself at a man's head.&#13;
If it is the right kind of a home a&#13;
boy will never run away from tt.&#13;
General Markets&#13;
_ Detroit Apple*—No. l^$3®3.2b; No.&#13;
2, $202.50 per bbl.&#13;
Peachea—island, AA, $1.75; A $1.60;&#13;
B, $1 per bn.&#13;
Pears—Bartlett, $1.2591.(0 per on.;&#13;
Duces*. $3.26t?*\60 per bbl; Keefer,&#13;
75c© $1 per bn.&#13;
C*bbe*e—$a€p2.aft per bbL *»&#13;
Tomatoes — Home-grown, 90c (p$V&#13;
per bu.&#13;
Onions—$i.l5 per* Ira,; Spanish,&#13;
71.40 per erate.&#13;
Potatoes— in bulk, 60©65c per DO.&#13;
* In tacks, w07Oe p*r bu. for carton*&#13;
TORTURING TWINGES&#13;
Much so-called rheumatism is caused&#13;
by weakened kidneys. When the kidneys&#13;
fail to clear the blood of uric acidV&#13;
the acid forms into crystals like bits&#13;
of broken glass in the muscles, Joints&#13;
and on the nerve casings. Torturing&#13;
pains dart through the affected ;~part&#13;
whenever it is moved. By curing, the&#13;
kidneys, Doan's Kidney Pills liave&#13;
eased thousands of rheumatic cases,&#13;
lumbago, sciatica, gravel, neuralgia&#13;
and Urinary disorders. *?&#13;
AN ILLINOIS CASE&#13;
Charles Batter, E.&#13;
Walnut St, Wataeka,&#13;
IH., says: "I bad aclatie&#13;
rheumatism ani&#13;
kidney trouble for&#13;
year*. I wai laid tip&#13;
for months and spent&#13;
hundreda of dollars&#13;
unsuccessfully f o r&#13;
doctors' treatment..&#13;
After hope had fled,&#13;
Doan's Kidney Pills&#13;
came to my aid. They&#13;
cured the awful misery&#13;
and I have never&#13;
suffered since."&#13;
nutiSurS^&#13;
Get Decafs a* Any Stem. SOe a Bex D O A N ' S %\BESV&#13;
FOSTERJnTLBURN CO, BUFFALO, N. T»&#13;
* * • • £ is&amp;&#13;
-in);.&#13;
Tuberculosis&#13;
Chooses Its Victims&#13;
from among those who lack* pure, virile&#13;
blood. The MtoandlngresiUtawhjkwhave&#13;
attended the use of Nature's Creattot&#13;
la oases of tubertmloti* of the H a f t ,&#13;
bones, glands, eto., are entirely doe to&#13;
the fact that Nature's Creation makes&#13;
pwa, virile blood*&#13;
Write for Free Booklet, ooatarnlnf&#13;
photos and testimonial* of Mloaigaa persons&#13;
who have secaxeCrWrvelotttresuUe&#13;
from our treatment for taberottiosfcw&#13;
Careful consideration tadthorottft&#13;
investigation of our eases will eo&amp;vnoa.&#13;
OaB on or address&#13;
rV-?'&#13;
££%.b*HZ££&#13;
• ' » . * .&#13;
\ P1NCKNEY DISPi^FCH&#13;
,„cr&gt; **.-&#13;
r&#13;
PRE^STO&#13;
Famous&#13;
Family Remedies - T h e Preuto Hue of old, tried remedies&#13;
•40tn you relief from those ailments&#13;
JHkich caa be treated without the atteu-&#13;
•ftsflfcof a phyaiclau. Every one is guar*&#13;
#S»TTrii under the Food and Drugs Act&#13;
of -June 80th, 1W6, Serial No. 60061.&#13;
Thane reliable remedies have helped&#13;
thousands and will relieve you,&#13;
Hailed everywhere by parcel poet,&#13;
immediately upon receipt of order.&#13;
' P r e s t o K i d n e y P U U&#13;
Contain only pure InKrediunm, which have&#13;
been thoroughly tested in the world's great*&#13;
est hospitals and by the world's area tost&#13;
specialists for kidney and bladder ailments.&#13;
They relieve the congeatien and prevent&#13;
accumulation of poisons. |1 per box.&#13;
P r e i t o C o l d T a b l e t s&#13;
Offer quick relief from colds, la grippe,&#13;
coughs, neuralgia, acute catarrh and bronchitis,&#13;
'f bey are laxative and put the system&#13;
In good condition. One box is sufficient&#13;
for ordinary cases. 50c per box.&#13;
P r e s t o H e a d a c h e W a f e r s&#13;
For all forms of nervous, neuralgic and slek&#13;
headaches. Quick action—contain absolutely&#13;
no morphine or opiates of any kind. 60c a box.&#13;
P r e s t o P i l e O i n t m e n t&#13;
Composed largely of wool fat, with great&#13;
healing and untlseptic properties. Excellent&#13;
for Piles, Kuiteiua, Scalds, Blisters,&#13;
Burns, Sunburns, etc. II per box.&#13;
P r e s t o C o r n S o l v e n t&#13;
Will remove the most troublesome corn in a&#13;
few days. Kequires no cutting. Will also&#13;
remove bunions, warts and callouses. 5Uu.&#13;
P r e s t o L a x a t i v e T a b l e t s&#13;
A general corrective of the system. For&#13;
Constipation, Biliousness, Liver Complaint,&#13;
Headaches, Impurities of the Blood, etc. A food laxative to keep on hand at all times.&#13;
1 per bux&#13;
Remember, these remedies are all guaranteed&#13;
to be absolutely pure and safe for anyone&#13;
to tuko. They have long ago proven&#13;
their value t&gt;nd their timely use may prevent&#13;
many big J&gt;&gt;etor bills.&#13;
Bend for free booklet describing the complete&#13;
Presto line oi remedies. ^&#13;
Presto Chemical Co., Inc&#13;
Detroit, Michigan&#13;
W&#13;
Sprains, Bruises&#13;
Stiff Muscles&#13;
are quickly relieved by Sloan's&#13;
Liniment. Lay it on—no rubbing.&#13;
Try i t&#13;
Ankle Sprain and Dislocated Hip.&#13;
" I sprained my ankle and dislocated&#13;
tnr hip by falling out of a third story&#13;
wfruow. Went on crutches for four&#13;
months. Then I started to use your&#13;
Liniment, according to directions. I&#13;
must say it is helping me wonderfully.&#13;
We will never be without Slonn's Liniment&#13;
anymore."—Chat, fohtuon. Latino*&#13;
Station, AC Y.&#13;
SLOANS&#13;
LINIMENT&#13;
Kills Pain&#13;
Splendid for Sprains.&#13;
*' I fell and sprained my arm a week&#13;
ago and was in terrible pain. I could&#13;
not use my hand or arm until I applied&#13;
your Liniment. I shall never be without&#13;
a bottle of Sloan's Liniment."—Aft*&#13;
B. B. Springer, Elunbeth, N.J.&#13;
Fine for Stiffness.&#13;
"Sloan's Liniment has done mora&#13;
food than anything I have ever tried&#13;
For stiff joints. I got my hand hurt so&#13;
badly that I had to stop work right In&#13;
the busiest time of the year. I thought&#13;
at first that I would have to have my&#13;
hand taken off. but I got a bottle of&#13;
Sloan's Liniment and cured my hand,**&#13;
—Wilton Wh—ler,Morris, Ala.&#13;
At all Dealers. 26c*&#13;
60c and $1.00&#13;
Send for Sloan's&#13;
free, instructive&#13;
book on horses,&#13;
cattle, hogs and&#13;
poultry. Address&#13;
LV.EMLS. SLOAN J o e&#13;
nsioiiuss.&#13;
Make the&#13;
Do its Duty&#13;
Nine times in ten when the liver hi&#13;
right the stomach and bowels are right&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LUfER PILLS&#13;
geatly butfirmly com'&#13;
pel a lazy liver to&#13;
do Its duty.&#13;
. tures Constipation,&#13;
In&lt;&#13;
digestion,&#13;
Headache,&#13;
and Distress After Earing.&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE, Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
CARTERS&#13;
ITTLE&#13;
IVER&#13;
P I U S .&#13;
Dr. Navaun's Kidney Tablets&#13;
Believes quickly all Kidney, com plaints such&#13;
M Backache, Rheumatism, Nervousness,&#13;
Disslness, etc. Thousand* of sufferers-have&#13;
: been cured b&gt; tb Is remedy and if you o* any&#13;
' member of your family are suffering from&#13;
Kidney ailment send jonr name and address&#13;
on a postal for FREE sample and our&#13;
booklet of teltlmonials and be convinced.&#13;
•OTAN1C DRUG CO. Detroit&#13;
P 1 S 0 S P L M L D Y&#13;
Osatatynsv TsatasOsod.&#13;
tattSM. SoU by DrttfCtatk&#13;
Vss&#13;
COUCiLS AND COLDS&#13;
NEW TAILORED SUITS&#13;
HAVE MARKED DJ8TINCTNE8S IN&#13;
CUT AND FINISH.&#13;
Departure From the Mannish Feature&#13;
Is Noted—Tendency to Drapery&#13;
on Both 8klrts and Coata—&#13;
Much Fur Will Be Used.&#13;
Fall tailored suits will be characterized&#13;
by various eccentricities of cut&#13;
and finish. Occasionally a mannish&#13;
model is to be noted among the new&#13;
consignments, but for the most part&#13;
they are more on the costume order,&#13;
and, although plain and exceedingly&#13;
well tailored, nevertheless have a&#13;
more formal appearance than the coat&#13;
and skirt of other seasons.&#13;
Much fur will be used, and there&#13;
Is a decided tendency to drape not&#13;
only the skirts but the coats, Or at&#13;
least to have them bint Of drapery. «Jrts are still narrow at the foot, but&#13;
ually have some fullness, variously&#13;
arranged, at the top—that is, there&#13;
may be a few gathers distributed&#13;
along the sides only or across the back&#13;
and front or strung unlformally around&#13;
the top, and there is usually a break&#13;
in the folds at the knee line or ankles,&#13;
caused by raising or lowering the material&#13;
where it Is attached to the waistband.&#13;
Generally this marks the extent&#13;
of attempts at draping.&#13;
Today's sketch shows a suft that&#13;
Is typical of fall's fashion. It is developed&#13;
in the wedgwood blue velours&#13;
de lalne, and has for trimming band&#13;
cuffs and a rolling collar of gray fox&#13;
fur.&#13;
The cutaway Jacket is extremely&#13;
smart, fitting smoothly In front and&#13;
blousing a little In back. A sash of&#13;
black moire is run through an eyelet&#13;
on either side of the front at the&#13;
bust line, and from there is carried&#13;
downward and tied in a bow below the&#13;
New Tailored Model In Wedgwood&#13;
Blue Velours de Lalne.&#13;
waist In back, with two not very long&#13;
sash ends.&#13;
The fronts are left open for a space&#13;
of five or six inches, disclosing a&#13;
crossed vest of white wool ratine, with&#13;
a row of tiny steel buttons In the&#13;
center.&#13;
The material Is used diagonally&#13;
throughout, and in the skirt there are&#13;
just two seams, directly in front and&#13;
In back. The lower part of the front&#13;
of the skirt Is lifted up In draped&#13;
folds that are held in place under a&#13;
narrow perpendicular band of selfmaterial,&#13;
and there is a small curved&#13;
opening above the feet.&#13;
At the raited waist line In back a&#13;
row of gathers is covered by another&#13;
narrow band of self-material, finished&#13;
at either end with a steel button.—&#13;
Washington Star.&#13;
Flower and Fruit Fad.&#13;
We are to have a fruit and flower&#13;
autumn, say the sartorial authorities.&#13;
Small blossoms are painted, embroidered&#13;
or appllqued on our chiffons and&#13;
nlnon gowns. Rosea, orchids or Iris&#13;
we wear in our waistbands, and something*&#13;
that might be apricots or&#13;
peaches garnishes our hats, to say&#13;
nothing of clusters of cherries and&#13;
the grapes In poet-impressionist purples&#13;
and greens.&#13;
Place for Pockets.&#13;
Latest fashion advices grant women&#13;
pockets of afl sorta, sisee and variety&#13;
of placing. So oddly draped are some&#13;
of the late Paris race track, gowns&#13;
that the appearance te suggested of&#13;
sockets over each htp In true) troumer&#13;
pocket style.&#13;
EASY TO WWD THE SKEIN&#13;
Little Contrivance Does Away With&#13;
the Necessity of impressing&#13;
8rhall Boy or Girl.&#13;
It is unnecessary to dwell upon the&#13;
difficulty of winding a skein of wool&#13;
Into a ball without the aid of a second&#13;
pair of hands, but with the simple little&#13;
contrivance shown in our sketch,&#13;
this may be done with ease, and the&#13;
hdlder can be made in a few moments.&#13;
It merely consists of a piece of&#13;
board in which a number of boles have&#13;
been made and into which pegs (ordinary&#13;
clotheB pegs will answer the purpose)&#13;
can be firmly Inserted.&#13;
Two picture rings can be screwed&#13;
Into the upper edges of the wood and&#13;
the holder can be hung upon the wall,&#13;
and in that case, the pegs should be&#13;
fastened in the holes at an angle pointing&#13;
upwards or the board with the&#13;
skein placed round the pegs can be&#13;
held in the lap or on the table and&#13;
so UBed, and the small sketch on the&#13;
right illustrates It in this position.&#13;
The object of having holes in the&#13;
board at various distances apart is&#13;
that the pegs can be placed at different&#13;
distances apart, so that the holder&#13;
will take a skein of any size.&#13;
WEAR YOUR CLOTHES EASILY&#13;
Getting This Effect Is More to the&#13;
Purpose Than 8lmply the Wearing&#13;
of Rich Clothing.&#13;
A little while ago a Frenchman&#13;
said that English women were getting&#13;
so that they wore their clothes&#13;
more easily than they used to. He&#13;
rejoiced at the fact. Women should&#13;
wear their clothes easily. A beautiful&#13;
gown worn stiffly is no better&#13;
than an ugly gown worn graciously.&#13;
In fact, the beautiful gown In this&#13;
case is not so good as the other.&#13;
Was there ever any sight more distressing&#13;
than that of a simple woman&#13;
dressed in all her Sunday best? Her&#13;
clothes were well enough. They were&#13;
well made and of good material. But&#13;
she looked afraid of them and wore&#13;
them stiffly. How much better she&#13;
looked in gingham house drees, With&#13;
apron and sun bonnet, perhaps to&#13;
match.&#13;
And then there is the economical&#13;
young girl who wears her "best"&#13;
clothes always as if she had their&#13;
value in mind and was trying to take&#13;
care of them. She smoothes them&#13;
out and holds them well away from&#13;
furniture and neighbors, that they—&#13;
the clothes—may not be contaminated&#13;
by touching anything. A young girl&#13;
always looks better in a simple frock,&#13;
comfortably and therefore gracefully&#13;
worn, than In a really elaborate frock&#13;
which she wears stiffly.&#13;
Lovely clothes should be worn Joyously,&#13;
even Indifferently. It is not&#13;
hard to do this now, for clothes are&#13;
soft and clinging and graceful, and refuse&#13;
to let their wearers look stiff&#13;
and "careful." So now, while fashion&#13;
is with you, cultivate the art of wearing&#13;
your clothes as If they were glad&#13;
you had them, as If they were a Joy,&#13;
not a burden, to you.&#13;
BETTER THAN OLDER STYLES&#13;
Frock for Small Qiri Is a Compromise&#13;
Between Two Blo«*ee Effects&#13;
Long Popular.&#13;
A frock for a girl of eight to ten appears&#13;
in the accompanying drawing.&#13;
It Is a sort of compromise&#13;
between&#13;
the Balkan and&#13;
Russian blouse&#13;
styles, both of&#13;
which are so becoming&#13;
to children&#13;
of this age.&#13;
This may be made&#13;
up in wool material,&#13;
6r if the&#13;
d a y s of tub&#13;
dresses have not&#13;
yet been passed,&#13;
a dainty linen,&#13;
chambray or pther&#13;
washable material&#13;
would be pretty.&#13;
The blouse hat&#13;
slightly more fullneat&#13;
than the Russian&#13;
stylet and joint a thort and&#13;
rather leant skirt under a broad task&#13;
of plaid silk, if the frock hat been&#13;
made of wool material The wide collar&#13;
it of the sflk, .faced with the m*&gt;&#13;
teriaL The plaid plpet also the drop&#13;
shoulder seams, front closing and&#13;
cliffs.&#13;
Cincinnati's new hospital will hart&#13;
courting nooks for the benef t of&#13;
spoony nurses.&#13;
Had Its Advantages.&#13;
Mr. Cohen—"De modern sgool-teachlngB&#13;
are no goodt. Dose pubilB haf to&#13;
forget schoost about halluf vot dey&#13;
learns ven dey goes Into peesness.&#13;
Here's Ikey learnin' percentage at von,&#13;
two, dree, four, fife, undt six per&#13;
cent, ven he'll neffer haf to use leas&#13;
dan.sefen ven he goes into peesness."&#13;
Little Ikey—"Yes, fadder; but It'll&#13;
gome in handy ven you seddlea mid&#13;
your greditorB."—Puck.&#13;
Mr*.Wiaalow's Soothing Syrup for Children&#13;
teething-, Moftena the (ruma, reduce* innamma-&#13;
Uon,allaya paln.curea wind coilc,25c &amp; bottle.JUv&#13;
Lamps and Safety.&#13;
Be sure that no bit of charred wick&#13;
or burned fly or moth is left In the&#13;
lower part of the burner. There la&#13;
danger of these igniting and setting&#13;
fire to the oil in the reservoir. If a&#13;
lamp has been left standing with' a&#13;
little oil in it, it should not be lighted&#13;
until filled and the burner carefully&#13;
wiped. It is possible that gas may&#13;
have formed, making the lamp unsafe&#13;
to light before refilling.&#13;
MRS. M A N 0&#13;
ESCAPES&#13;
OPERATION&#13;
A Soft Answer, Etc.&#13;
Young Wife, pettishly—You always&#13;
seemed to have plenty of money before&#13;
we were married.&#13;
Loving Husband—It was only seeming.&#13;
I had very little.&#13;
Young Wife—And you told me you&#13;
expected to be rich.&#13;
Loving Husband—1 am rich, my&#13;
dear. I've got you.&#13;
She subsided.—Yonkers Statesman.&#13;
so&#13;
Distinguished Lineage.&#13;
It was in 1950.&#13;
"What makes Mrs. Wombat&#13;
proud ataout her ancestry?" -&#13;
"She is the descendant of a member&#13;
of the original Floradora sextet."&#13;
For Not Coming Across.&#13;
Wife—You saw the landlord. Did&#13;
he come down on the rent?&#13;
Hub—No, but he came down on&#13;
me for not paying It.—Boston Transscript.&#13;
The Proof.&#13;
"You can see that boy of mine has&#13;
vaulting ambitions."&#13;
"I haven't seen him show it anywhere&#13;
else than In leapfrog."&#13;
How She Was Saved From&#13;
Surgeon's Knife by Lydia&#13;
E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound.&#13;
Mo£adore,0hio.—"The first two years&#13;
I was married I suffered so much from&#13;
female troubles and&#13;
bearing down pains&#13;
that I c o u l d n o t&#13;
stand on my f e e t&#13;
long enough to do my&#13;
work. The doctor&#13;
said I would have to&#13;
undergo tin operation,&#13;
but my husband&#13;
wanted me to try&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
V e g e t a b l e Compound&#13;
first I took&#13;
three bottles and it made me well and&#13;
strong and I avoided a dreadful operation.&#13;
I now have two fine healthy children,&#13;
and I cannot say too much about&#13;
whatLydiaE.Pinkham'sVegetable Compound&#13;
has done for me. " — Mrs. LEE&#13;
MANGES, R. F. D. 10, Mogadore, Ohio.&#13;
Why will women take chances with&#13;
an operation or drag out a sickly, halfhearted&#13;
existence,missing three-fourths&#13;
of the joy of living, when they can find&#13;
health in Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound ?&#13;
For thirty years it has been the standard&#13;
remedy for female ills, and has restored&#13;
the health of thousands of women&#13;
who have been troubled with such ailments&#13;
as displacements, inflammation,&#13;
ulceration, tumors, irregularities, etc.&#13;
If you want special advice write to&#13;
Lydia E. PInkhatn Medicine Co. (confidential)&#13;
Lynn, Mass. Your letter will&#13;
be opened, read and answered by a&#13;
woman and held in strict confidence.&#13;
D R . J . D . K E L L O G G S&#13;
Nature Study.&#13;
"Pop, tell me one thing."&#13;
"What Is it, my boy?"&#13;
"Is a spider web-footed?"&#13;
AST Remedy for t h e p r o m p t reliof of&#13;
Asthma and Hay Fever. Ask your&#13;
druggist for It. Writo for FREE SAMPLE&#13;
NORTHROP &amp; LYMAN CO., Ltd., BUFFALO, N.Y.&#13;
Foley Kidney Pills Relieve F R E E T 0 A L L SUFFERERS.&#13;
promptly the suffering due to weak, inactive&#13;
kidneys and painful bladder action.&#13;
They offer a powerful help to nature&#13;
in building up the true excreting kidney&#13;
tissue, in restoring normal action&#13;
and in regulating bladder irregularities.&#13;
Try them.&#13;
Women's&#13;
Confidence in&#13;
the efficacy of this thoroughly tried&#13;
home remedy is never misplaced. In&#13;
every way—in health, strength, spirits&#13;
and in looks—women find themselves&#13;
better after timely use of&#13;
BEECHAM'S&#13;
PILLS&#13;
Sold «T«rrwher*. | n bos««, 10c, 28e* "^&#13;
i t yOU feel 'OL' T Oh Si M&lt; I l"h: I ' N HOW N'ui&#13;
6UPFF.K f r o m KIlJN'lY, HI M U X " , NI.KV&#13;
C H R O N I C W E A K N K S S r . S . M . C L k s , ,KIN I '&lt; I T 1 If&#13;
write for my F R f i E ix-nk, i n i ; •&gt;:&lt;:', r [•••&#13;
MEDICAL HOOK KVKIt W K l l i h N . M II 1.1/, AI ;&#13;
Disr'-ASKH and the K H U I I I ' A H I . I ' CI KI;S. !• i : T H I NEW FRENCH REMEDY. ltf«1&#13;
THERAPION (V VI ) ! If It's the romcily for Yoi' K n \ v \ ,-nli&#13;
l'''i!&lt;&#13;
• f t . !•&#13;
A b s o l u t e l y F R E E . N n ' f ^ l n w i i ; \ m i i c . l u l l ' [ . m f j&#13;
k t K D . C o . HAVLKiiTUCK KlJ, i I AM l'a 1 i.AD. L &gt; IVOO.,, l: N Q.&#13;
P A R K E K ' t )&#13;
HAIR B A L S A M&#13;
A tolU't prriWHl i'lii of in,•.• it.&#13;
IJulpn to r r m l i i v . t c il,-&gt;i&gt;r.li-i:tr.&#13;
For Restoring Colr.r &amp;I,%1&#13;
B e a u t y to C r a y or T'ldr ci 1 iair.&#13;
600. and $1.Wat fin;'::. ' ;.&#13;
VIOLINS «&gt;° SUPPLIES I m ami frwt turn and &lt;lp;tl in Violin.-;, How .I'HHCH,&#13;
StrinjrH.etP. anritlo R»-pairing, Ksi,-1 M i--1" • I IKW.&#13;
J. Atlolph K m y , 1 j CI) a in pi a in,St., IH-I ;•... i, Midi.&#13;
BOY OTNHIkU iif-ik'lil'ot 1),1(1,1. I.UIPII p a y .&#13;
8 i ^ n w s u r e l a l l y (lainicfl w i: li y o n r iKiiim.&#13;
A . I I , J . , ISox lt$:U', l ' h i l i u i t I p h i a . P a .&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 43-1913.&#13;
W.L.DOUGLAS&#13;
* 3 . 0 0 $ 3 J 5 0 $4..00&#13;
*4.5o AND $B-oo&#13;
SHOES&#13;
FOR MEN AND WOMEN&#13;
Beat Boys' 8ho*a In tht World&#13;
$2.00, 92.60 and $3,00&#13;
sioAif BtreiMxss nr l m&#13;
0K J87» CAPITAL. ROW THE&#13;
LAXOS8T MAXES. OF IS »0 *&#13;
«4.00 SHOES Xtf TBS WOfcLD&#13;
Aftk roar rieiler to dhow yon&#13;
W.L.DOHKIM $3.50, $4.00and $4.50&#13;
shoe*. Jatt •* food In *tyl&gt;, fit «n&lt;t&#13;
wnr M oilier muktm eofttintr $6.00 to $7.00 — th«&#13;
only difference I* the price. Hhocn in all&#13;
leathern, ntyle* and «H»p«« to *nlt ereryhnrly.&#13;
If you could ?J«lt TV. L. Dongla* Urge f*ctorJ&lt;&gt;i»»&#13;
at Brockton, Ma**., And aw for yourself hot* *&#13;
esrefally W. L. Doirla* nhoeK are made, rou&#13;
would then •nrieratand why they are warranted 1O&#13;
flt better, look better, hold their nhape and near longer&#13;
than any other make for the price.&#13;
If W. K. T)oaglaa aho** are not for wile In yonr vlclnltv,&#13;
order Direct from th* fiwrtory. Shoes for every tnmiher&#13;
of the family, at all vriotn, hy Puree! Tost, postal;&#13;
free. W r i t e »W I l l u s t r a t e d Outnlon. It will&#13;
dhow yon how to order by mall, and why you can&#13;
•are money on yonr footw«tf,&#13;
CATJT10HI&#13;
gee that W.L&#13;
Doa«laa name la .. . . . . . . _&#13;
stamped on the bottom. W . 1,. Unmtlm*, Ml Spark ttnmt, IrMUti, • * » .&#13;
en's&#13;
TAKE NO&#13;
•uarriTUTi&#13;
\V "v ^ - ^ I/*W&#13;
' X - ^&#13;
Rifles Shoot Well, Work Well and Wear Well&#13;
The rough, hard usage that hunting rifles often receive&#13;
requires them to be constructed on sound mechanical&#13;
principles and of the best materials. All Winchester&#13;
rifles are so made. Nothing is left undone that will make&#13;
them shoot well, work well, look well and wear well.&#13;
WiBdmUr GMt tnd A*m*nltiom—Th4 fed ) * / Brand—w mads for all kind* of HnnUne&#13;
WtMOMBSTtR rUPCATtMO ARM* OO., • • NKW HAVEN, CONN.&#13;
''.:..'v&#13;
Miistsisi •MUMS* Stt-fcih^ ^ ^ ^ ^ j i y ^ l ^ l&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
'THE CENTRAL'&#13;
Headquarters For Millinery&#13;
New Ginghams, 8, 10 aud 12¾ cts.&#13;
New prints for 6 cts.&#13;
New house dres&amp;es and aprons.&#13;
New goods for all sorts of dresses-&#13;
Some of the prettiest new waists just received.&#13;
New all-over lace for yokes just received.&#13;
New line of hair ribbons at 10 cts. per yard.&#13;
All wool underwear for men and women.&#13;
Fleeced liked underwear for men, women and children.&#13;
While they last we will sell five pairs of men's wool&#13;
socks, either light or heavy weight for $1.00. These would&#13;
be cheap at 25 cts, a pair, but we offer five pairs at the price&#13;
of four. In less quantities they are 25 cts. per pair.&#13;
We carry gloves in sf ver'al grades, cotton, wool, silk and&#13;
kid. Also mittens for men, women and children.&#13;
We have dishes, a new supply. Also groceries of all&#13;
kinds, and hundreds of things that we cannot enumerate&#13;
Give us a call.&#13;
The CENTRAL, S T O R E&#13;
Mrs. -A.. JM. Utley, Prop.&#13;
Legal Advertising&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN , trie probate Court for&#13;
the County of Livingston,&#13;
At a session of eaid court held at the Probate&#13;
Office in the Village of Howell In said Coutty, on&#13;
the 4th day of October, A^D, 1913.&#13;
Present," Hon, Kugene A. stowe, Judjje of&#13;
Probate, In the matter of the estate ol&#13;
MARY J. FARLEY, Deceased&#13;
John Mc Kern an having filed in said court hia&#13;
annual account as executor of eald fstate and his&#13;
petition praying for tie allowance thereof.&#13;
It w Ordered, That the 30th day of October.&#13;
A. D. 1918, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at said&#13;
probate office, be and is hereby appointed for&#13;
hearing said petition.&#13;
It is Turther ordered that public notice thereof&#13;
be given by publication of a copy of this order, for&#13;
three successive weeks previoue to said day of&#13;
hearing in the Pinckney DISPATCH a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated in eaid county. 41t3&#13;
EUGENE A. STOWE&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
STATE of MICHIGAN. The P*oi)ate l&gt;ourt tor the&#13;
county of Livingston. At A session of said&#13;
eourt, held at the probate office/ in the village of&#13;
Howell in saidcounty on tha4£th day of October&#13;
x. D. 1W13. Presont, Hon, Eugene A, Stowe,&#13;
Judge ol I'rohate. In the matter of the estate of&#13;
MANY C, WESTON, r&lt;*ea&lt;ed.&#13;
Martha M. Palmer bavins filed in said ccurt&#13;
hsr petition praying that the administration of&#13;
eaid ettate be granted to Horace Palmer or to&#13;
some other suitable person.&#13;
It is ordered that the 15th day of November&#13;
A. D. 1913, at ten o'clock in the torenoon,&#13;
at said probate office, be and is hereby appointed&#13;
for heating said petition.&#13;
It is further ordered, that public notice thereof&#13;
be given by publication of a copy of this order&#13;
for three successive weeks previous to said dBj of&#13;
hearing in the Pinckney Dispatch, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated in said cennty.&#13;
EUGENE A. STOWE,&#13;
4U3 Judge of Probate&#13;
COMING&#13;
United Doctors Specialist&#13;
T Will Make Their Regular Visit To&#13;
STOGKBRIDGE&#13;
HURST HOTEL&#13;
Thursday, November 6th&#13;
Remarkable Success of These Talented&#13;
Physicians in the Treatment&#13;
of Chronic Diseases&#13;
St a t e o f M i c h i g a n , the probate court for&#13;
the county of Livingston,— At a session of eaid&#13;
Uourt. held at the Probate Office in the Villain of&#13;
Howell in said county on the 21st day of Oct ber,&#13;
a. D. 191¾. Present," Hon. Eugene A. Stowe&#13;
Judge of Probate. In the matter of the estate of&#13;
MARY L. SPBOUT, Deceased&#13;
Edwin Sprout having filed in raid court his&#13;
petition praying that the admit isr ation of said&#13;
estate be granted to F. A. Bsiton or to some other&#13;
eaitabe person.&#13;
It is ordered that the 15th day of November, A.&#13;
D, 1913 at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at said probate&#13;
office, be and is hereby appointed tor&#13;
hearing said petition.&#13;
It ie 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 the PINCKNEY DISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated in said county. 43(3&#13;
EUGENE A. STOWE&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN&#13;
Thirty-fifth Judical Circuit in Chancery&#13;
Lucile I. Westby,&#13;
Complainant,&#13;
vs.&#13;
Edward A. Weetby,&#13;
Defendant. J&#13;
Suit pending la&#13;
the Circuit Court&#13;
for the County of&#13;
Livingston in chancry&#13;
at Howell on&#13;
the eighteenth day&#13;
of September, A, D.&#13;
1918.&#13;
In this cause, it appearing from affidavit on&#13;
tile that the deiendant, Edward A, Westby, &lt;s not&#13;
a resident of this state but ie a resident of the&#13;
oily of Missoula, ttate of Montana and that his&#13;
post offce address is Missoula, Montana&#13;
On motion of Arthur K. Cole, solicitor for complainant,&#13;
It is ordered that the appearance of eaid&#13;
non-resident, defendant, Edward A. Westby, be&#13;
entered therein within four months from the date&#13;
of this order and in case of his appearance he&#13;
oanae his anawer to the bill of complaint to be&#13;
nlad and a copy thereof to be aarvtd within fifteen&#13;
daya after service on him or his solicitor of a&#13;
copy of said bill, and In defau t thereof that said&#13;
bin be taken aa confessed by the said defendant.&#13;
Edward A. Westby.&#13;
And it Is further ordered that the said complainant&#13;
ca'set his orde to be published ir tfce&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch, a newspaper printed, publish&#13;
•d and circniaiing In said county and that tnoh&#13;
pnblicat on be commenced within twenty days&#13;
from the date of this order and that fucb publication&#13;
be continued therein once in each wctk tor&#13;
six weeks in succession or that the aald complainant&#13;
cause a copy of this ordtr to be personally&#13;
•arvsjd on the eaid defendant, Edward A. Westby,&#13;
atbaasttweatv days before the tine above pre-&#13;
•erikwdfor his appoaranos. _&#13;
Soldsn 8. Miner, Oronit Jndge&#13;
Dunterstgsed. and entered by ma,&#13;
Oark H. Minor, BogtsUr&#13;
Aftfcw I . Oole, Complainant's Solicitor,&#13;
StS Bosiaoes Aidrees, KowkrriUe, Michigan&#13;
Fall Bags and Carpet* now in&#13;
Stock at Dancer*s. ad?.&#13;
The United Doctors, licensed by the&#13;
State of Michigan for the treatment of deformities&#13;
and all nervous and chronic diseases&#13;
of m^n, women and children, offer&#13;
to all who call on this visit, consultation,&#13;
examination and advice free of charge.&#13;
These Doctors are among America's&#13;
leading stomach and nerve specialists, and&#13;
are experts in the treatment of chronic&#13;
diseases of the blood, liver, stomach, intestines,&#13;
skin, nerves, heart, spleen, kidneys&#13;
or bladder, rheumatism, sciatica, diabetes,&#13;
bed-wftting, tape worm, leg ulcers,&#13;
weak lungs, and those afflicted with long&#13;
standing, deep seated chronic diseases,&#13;
that have baffled the skill of other physitians,&#13;
should not fail to call. Deafness&#13;
has often been cured in sixty days.&#13;
According to their system no more operations&#13;
for appendicitis, gall stones, tumors,&#13;
goiter, piles, etc. By their method these&#13;
diseases are treated without operation or&#13;
hypodermic injection. They were among&#13;
the first in America to earn the name of&#13;
"Bloodless Surgeons," by doing away with&#13;
the knife, with blood and with pain in the&#13;
successful treatment of these dangerous&#13;
diseases.&#13;
If you have kidney or bladder troubles&#13;
bring a two ounce bottle of your urine for&#13;
chemical analysis aud microsopic examination.&#13;
Worn-out and run-down men or wom&gt;n,&#13;
no matter what your ailment may be, no&#13;
matter what you have been told, or the&#13;
experience you have had with other physicians,&#13;
settle it forever in your mind. If&#13;
your case is incurable they will tell you so,&#13;
Consul tthem upon this visit. It costs you&#13;
nothing.&#13;
Married ladies must come with th.3ir&#13;
husbandsand minors with their parents.&#13;
Advertisement&#13;
Local News&#13;
Call at the "Central" for all&#13;
sorts of dry goods and groceries.&#13;
adv.&#13;
John White and family of Marion&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of&#13;
VV. E. Murphy. ,&#13;
Fresh Sealehipt Oysters, (those&#13;
large whole meats) at Monks&#13;
Bros. adv.&#13;
Mrs. A. R. Hurd of Elmira visited&#13;
last week at the home of her&#13;
brother, W. E. Murphy of this&#13;
place.&#13;
The ladieB of the Cong'l. church&#13;
report $130. as the proceeds of&#13;
their Fair and Chicken Pie Supper&#13;
last Friday and Saturday.&#13;
Railroad connections are fine&#13;
for spending part of the day at&#13;
Dancer's Stockbridge, buying fall&#13;
garments. adv.&#13;
Yourself and friends are cordially&#13;
invited to atteni a dancing&#13;
party to be given at the Pincknny&#13;
opera house, Friday evening, Oct.&#13;
24. Barnard's orchestra. adv.&#13;
The Literary society will meet&#13;
at the home of Mrs. LaVerne&#13;
Richards, Thursday afternoon,&#13;
October 23. Every member please&#13;
be in attendance.&#13;
The young people of the Cong'l.&#13;
Sunday school will give a Hallowe'en&#13;
social, Friday evening, Oct.&#13;
31, in their rooms in the Cad well&#13;
block. Everyone invited.&#13;
There will be a special Maccabee&#13;
meeting Friday evening,&#13;
October 24. Business of importance&#13;
to be transacted. A large attendance&#13;
is desired.&#13;
Record Keeper.&#13;
On Monday, October 20, a large&#13;
number of friends and neighbors&#13;
gathered at the pleasant borne of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Martin to remind&#13;
them of their sixteenth wedding&#13;
anniversary. The evening&#13;
was pleasantly spent with music&#13;
and other amusement after which&#13;
a sumptuous supper was served.&#13;
Before returning to their homes,&#13;
Mrs. David Beaudin, in a few well&#13;
chosen words, presented in behalf&#13;
of the company, tokens of esteem&#13;
consisting of silverware and table&#13;
linen. The company then departed&#13;
leaving their best wishes for&#13;
many returns of the day.&#13;
W. S. Swarthowt has received&#13;
instructions from Washington, D.&#13;
C, wbich state that the post-office&#13;
at Anderson is to be discontinued&#13;
after November 1st and thereafter&#13;
all mail directed to Anderson shall&#13;
be sent out from the Pinckney&#13;
post-office direct. The post-office&#13;
at Anderson has been for a number&#13;
of years past in the store owned&#13;
and operated by Max Ledwidge&#13;
and Mike Roche who have proven&#13;
themselves to be efficient servants&#13;
of the government in every respect.&#13;
The discontinuance of the&#13;
office is due to the fact that the&#13;
Government have decided that the&#13;
maintenance of all smaller postoffices&#13;
is a needless expense and&#13;
they are placing their patrons on&#13;
rural routes.&#13;
Eczema and Itching Cored&#13;
The soothing, healing medication in&#13;
Dr. Hobsoo1:* Eczema Ointment penetrates&#13;
every tiny pore ot the skin,&#13;
clears it ol a!! impurities—stops itching&#13;
iilstantly. Dr. Hopson's Eczema&#13;
Ointment is guaranteed to speedily&#13;
heal eczema, rashes, ringworm, tetter&#13;
and other nnsigLtly eruption a, Eczema&#13;
Ointment is a doctor's prescription, not&#13;
an experiment. All druggist or by&#13;
mail. 50c Pfeiffer Chemical OoH Philadelphia and St. Louis.&#13;
If yon are contemplating holding&#13;
an auction why not get yonr&#13;
bill* printed at the Dispatch office ?&#13;
North Hamburg&#13;
D. J. Bennett and family were&#13;
Sunday guests at the home of his&#13;
brother, Ralph Bennett.&#13;
R. C. Haddock and Harold transacted&#13;
business in Howell Friday.&#13;
Hazel Sweitzer spent the week&#13;
end With Hamburg friends.&#13;
School opened here last week&#13;
with Miss Elizabeth Harris as&#13;
teacher.&#13;
Una Bennett visited South Lyon&#13;
friends a few days last week.&#13;
Clara Carpenter visited Florence&#13;
Kice Saturday.&#13;
The Tri-Mu Glass of the North&#13;
Hamburg Sunday school will hold&#13;
a Hallowe'en social November 1,&#13;
at the home of Clarence Carpenter*&#13;
Everyone invited.&#13;
| Say,&#13;
\ If you will come&#13;
Men|&#13;
\ and take a look&#13;
iS at those new 2&#13;
\ Overcoats at—&#13;
$15.&#13;
!&#13;
O XX&#13;
vf will agree with us that they are t h e equal of most 5&#13;
5 $18. ones. Newest styles. Chinchillas, Astrachans, i&#13;
I Niggerheads, Fancy Cloths. T h e assortment is large 4&#13;
\ —and you'll like the wear vou can g e t o u t of them. 5 i: i». J. DANCER &amp; COMPANY)&#13;
\ S t o c k b r i d g e , M i c h . 5&#13;
8 igpCar Fare Paid on $15. Purchases or More. E&#13;
O N E N I G H T O N L Y&#13;
Big Line of Boys Overcoats&#13;
#4. to #©.&#13;
Something flew and Novel. The Season's Great R. R, Comedy Drama&#13;
I I I . I • • ! • • • ••• I - • • • . . , . , . , . , • • - - • . , • , , . - . , - 1 . . . , . ^ , . . . 1 , . 1 - . - . . 1 . . 1 . 1 - , . , . . . . ^ — — — * »&#13;
M"r. JRdwin Gary&#13;
Presents the greatest sensational R. R. comedy ever presented&#13;
on the American stage, entitled the&#13;
'Midnight Express'&#13;
The Big Scenic R. R. Sensation of the Age&#13;
Pinckney Opera House&#13;
Saturday Evening, October 25.13&#13;
I ,&#13;
Something Doing all the Time and a Laifgh Every MiniJte&#13;
The great seusational flight of the Midnight Express&#13;
The Great Pier Scene in New York City at Night&#13;
Admission, 15 and 2 5 c e n t s&#13;
Reserved Seats 35 cents&#13;
V v V f c v \ AColdWave&#13;
Is due here most any time now. Don't wait until it actually&#13;
hits your back yard before getting in that COAL, or maybe&#13;
you'll have "a hot bill" from the plumber, and "a long wait"&#13;
from the coal man, besides.&#13;
You know how it is. Putting off ordering your Coal until&#13;
the last minute means you've got to take yonr chances with&#13;
others, who also put it off, and it's a case of waiting yonr&#13;
turn. ^.&#13;
So be wise in season—order your Coal NOW.&#13;
And order it from us, if the cleanest, brightest, hottestheating&#13;
and longeBt-lastina; Opal ie what yon want.&#13;
We carry the beat coals in their class that are obtainable—&#13;
both hard and soft, and onr prices are right.&#13;
T. RBAD. Finckri'&#13;
«i**"* '•s^fi''.-^1&#13;
• * % * ,&#13;
- • * *&#13;
New and Catchy Specialties. A Perfect Cyclone of Fun ,;&#13;
*&#13;
**&amp;.&#13;
'.v/ 4&#13;
&lt; - - • • : * % ; • &gt; . • • ' •&#13;
' - " ^ • ; J ? - " V •••&#13;
f\. v "w,- /9.&#13;
•Vs."&#13;
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch October 23, 1913</text>
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                <text>October 23, 1913 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1913-10-23</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>ttrn&#13;
Vol. X X X I&#13;
"The Floartmenuloan,,&#13;
Oa November 7th and 8tb, the&#13;
Pinckney opera house wiH be the&#13;
scene of the annual M. E. Church&#13;
Fair. The articles sold at this&#13;
Pair are made or collected by&#13;
those interested in this branch of&#13;
the church work, and this year an&#13;
earnest effort has been made to&#13;
make the occasion an enjoyable&#13;
social affair as well as a profitable&#13;
one for the treasury.&#13;
Friday evening November 7, the&#13;
first night of the Fair, one booth,&#13;
the "Floartmenuloan" will be devoted&#13;
to the serving of a 15c&#13;
"Dutch Lunch" by ladies gowned&#13;
in appropriate costume. A musical&#13;
program consisting of a lullaby&#13;
to be sung by Lois Teeple and&#13;
solos and duets on the piano and&#13;
mandolin will also be one of the&#13;
special features of the evening.&#13;
A stroll about the hall will reveal&#13;
a handkerchief and 'fancy&#13;
work booth in which all sorts and&#13;
sizes of this much needed article&#13;
will be sold, and, also many beautiful&#13;
fancy articles . which may" be&#13;
used appropriately as Christmas&#13;
gifts, a domestic booth from which&#13;
one can obtain rugs, comfortables,&#13;
aprons, etc., a fruit and vegetable&#13;
booth from which the housewife&#13;
may purchase canned fruit, jelly,&#13;
etc., as well as all kinds of vegetables.&#13;
,&#13;
Saturday evening November 8,&#13;
a chicken pie supper, which will&#13;
begin at five o'clock and continue&#13;
until all are served, has been arranged&#13;
for. Music will be rendered&#13;
during the serving of the&#13;
supper thus making time pass&#13;
more enjoyable for all those people&#13;
who must hungrily stand and&#13;
watch their fellow beings devour&#13;
goodies while patiently waiting&#13;
for an empty place at the laden&#13;
board.&#13;
E. E. Hoyt has offered a fifty&#13;
pound sack of Hoyt Bros. Purity&#13;
Flour, Free, as a prize to any lady&#13;
who makes and brings the best&#13;
loaf of bread to the sale which she&#13;
has made from Purity Flour. The&#13;
bread is to be sold from one of the&#13;
booths, the proceeds therefrom to&#13;
be given to the ladies of the Al. E.&#13;
church as a part of the proceeds&#13;
of their Fyair. The quality of the&#13;
bxead will be jadged by a committee&#13;
consisting of three business&#13;
men.&#13;
Everyone, big and little, old and&#13;
young, are cordially invited to attend&#13;
this Fair which will continue&#13;
Friday and Saturday afternoons&#13;
and evenings. Remember t h e&#13;
dates, Friday, November 7th and&#13;
Satnrday, November 8th.&#13;
J. Church&#13;
Graduate Optometrist, of Howell,&#13;
Mich., will b* in Pinckney,&#13;
Thursday, Nov. 6th, at the Pinckney&#13;
House. Mr. Church guarantees&#13;
a perfect fit. All headache&#13;
caused by eye strain absolutely&#13;
corrected. Consultation and examination&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
Rev. Lincoln Ostrander of Flint&#13;
will preach in the Oong'l. church&#13;
next Sunday morning and at N.&#13;
[amburg at three o'clock.&#13;
Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan, T h u r s d a y , October 30, 1913 No. 44&#13;
Care of Packing Parcels&#13;
Loss by breakage of articles sent&#13;
through parcel post mail is made&#13;
the subject of an important communication&#13;
from the federal postal&#13;
department urging that staffs of&#13;
Local News&#13;
Fay your suDscrlption this month.&#13;
All holders of tickets on the&#13;
China Cabinet at Murphy &amp; Jacfc.&#13;
son's are requested to hand them&#13;
i n signed with customers name on&#13;
Putnam and Hamburg&#13;
/ Farmer's Club&#13;
posjoffices and patrons of parcel back, not later than Monday, Nov.&#13;
post service use greater care to see 3rd, as the cabinet will be "given&#13;
that all parcels are properly pack- away Tuesday, Nov. 4th.&#13;
ed and wrapped before being en-1 T h e y o u n g p e o p l e o f t h e Cong&gt;j&#13;
tered at the receiving office. Sunday school will give a Hollow-&#13;
Attention is called to section 37 L ' e n s o c ia if Friday evening, Oct.&#13;
of the parcel post "red book" reg- 3 1 | i n t h e i r r o o m 8 i n t h e Cadwell&#13;
ulations which provides, that post- b l o c k &lt; A p r o g r a m containing&#13;
offices must refuse for mailing all&#13;
parcels not properly indorsed or&#13;
packed for safe shipment. Postmasters&#13;
and clerks are informed&#13;
that whenever loss or damage is&#13;
clearly the result of insufficient&#13;
packing, the person responsible for&#13;
the acceptance of the package in&#13;
the mails will be held accountable.&#13;
The public is urged that all such&#13;
at tides as umbrellas and canes,&#13;
golf stickes and articles of like&#13;
character should be wrapped with&#13;
a stiff piece of wood or other substance&#13;
to prolect them from breaking&#13;
under the weight of other&#13;
mail. Berries aud ripe fruit and&#13;
like perishable substances as well&#13;
as oils and sharp articles which&#13;
from their nature are apt to injure&#13;
other mail, should be protected by&#13;
similar precautions and encased in&#13;
wrappings sufficiently secure to&#13;
insure their safe shipment, A&#13;
growing carelessness on the part&#13;
of patrons is thought to be the&#13;
cause for the order.&#13;
Our Rivals&#13;
This community must compete&#13;
with other rural communities and&#13;
with the largest cities for population&#13;
as well as trade. Other communities&#13;
are offering social advantages,&#13;
educational facilities and&#13;
financial opportunities that are&#13;
bound to make strong appeals to&#13;
our wideawake people, both young&#13;
and old, who are on the lookout to&#13;
better themselves.&#13;
We can have all that any similar&#13;
community can have and we&#13;
must have all the up-to-date&#13;
facilities that the city and our&#13;
neighboring rivals have if we&#13;
are to increase or even to hold&#13;
our population and trade. As a&#13;
community we can decide whether&#13;
we shall be up-to-date or out of&#13;
date,, but if we decide to stay behind&#13;
the times we need not expect&#13;
to cut much of a figure in the&#13;
business and professional world of&#13;
today,&#13;
a&#13;
ghost walk begins at eight o'clock.&#13;
Fortunes told by geunine fortune&#13;
tellers. Refreshments, ice cream&#13;
or hot coffee and sandwiches 10c.&#13;
Home made candy for sale.&#13;
Everyone invited.&#13;
Willamette now has a new registrar,&#13;
A. V. Swarthoutvap O. A. C.&#13;
graduate. Mr. Swarthoufc originally&#13;
came from Michigan and has&#13;
spent much time in learning the&#13;
rudiments of bookkeeping, and&#13;
will help things in Willamette&#13;
considerably. He comes to Willamette&#13;
from an excellent position&#13;
with Whitfield, Whitcomb &amp; Co.&#13;
public accountants, of Portland,&#13;
Oregon. He is recognized as a&#13;
man of an up-to-date business&#13;
type.—Willamette Collegian, Mr.&#13;
Swarthout is a son of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. H. H. Swarthout of this&#13;
place and has many friends here&#13;
who will be glad to learn of his&#13;
advancement.&#13;
The Putnam and Hamburg&#13;
Farmer's Club met fit the hotne of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ray B*ker, Saturday,&#13;
October 25th. A good attendance&#13;
was noted aud after a&#13;
fine dinner, Pres. VanHorn called&#13;
the club to order. A short program&#13;
began by singing "My Old&#13;
Kentucky Home," followed by a&#13;
reading by Marie Baker, recitation&#13;
by Myrna Shoeuhals and&#13;
readings by Mrs. S. Swarthout&#13;
and F. Mackinder. The topic,&#13;
"Farm Book Keeping," was diecussed&#13;
by various members and all&#13;
agreed that the farmer should&#13;
keep a book account of his business&#13;
in some manner or other.&#13;
The question box was opened and&#13;
several questions were discussed.&#13;
Frank Mackinder was appointed&#13;
to get a copy of the game laws&#13;
and other literature with regard&#13;
to having our farms set aside as&#13;
game preserves. It was decided&#13;
to have chicken pie at the next&#13;
meeting after which the club adjourned&#13;
to meet with Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Silas Swarthout the last Saturday&#13;
in November. The 3rd annual&#13;
corn show will also be held that&#13;
day. The prizes for the corn are,&#13;
$1.00 for the best six ears of Dent&#13;
corn and 50c for the second best.&#13;
Everybody is requested to come&#13;
early as dinner will be served at&#13;
12:00 o'clock sharp. Cor. Sec'y.&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
FOR SALE—A mare and colt. Inquire&#13;
of Harry Storey, Dexter Mich.&#13;
Phone No. 784. 4213*&#13;
FOR SALE— Large Fine Wool&#13;
Rams. 42t3*&#13;
J. J. Donohue, Gregory&#13;
CLOTHES CLEANED and pressed at&#13;
reasonable prices. 43tf&#13;
Mrs. W. B. Darrow, Pinckney&#13;
FOR SALE— Holstein heifer, also sow&#13;
with niDe pigs. 40t3*&#13;
J. A. Treadway, Pinckney&#13;
FOR SALE—Driving mare 4 yrs. old,&#13;
carriage and two single harnesses, 1&#13;
new. Inquire of Jay Howard&#13;
43t3* Dexter, Mich. R F D 2&#13;
FOR SALE—Thoroughbred Holstein&#13;
Bull, seven months old, also 1400 lb.&#13;
horse, sound and right. 40t3*&#13;
G. M. Greiner, Pinckney&#13;
ANY DAY&#13;
Leave your watch, clock or jewelery for repair at&#13;
Monks Bros. Store&#13;
....WILL BE THERE EVERY WEDNESDAY....&#13;
Have a nice line of watches and jewelry at Lowest Prices&#13;
BDW. A. CLARK&#13;
FORSALEcoal&#13;
stove,&#13;
4113&#13;
•Art Laurel base burner&#13;
A bargain tor someone.&#13;
Robt. Kelley, Pinckney.&#13;
FOR SALE —Chestnut mare, 9&#13;
years old, weight about 1,300&#13;
lbs. Also 10 choice Delaine Rams.&#13;
F. A. Harton, Pinckney 42t3*&#13;
FOR SALE—Six Blacktop Ram?, extra&#13;
good ones; will be sold reasonable.&#13;
Also 4 year old mare, broke&#13;
single and double; good worker.&#13;
Also a second-hand wood beating&#13;
stove for sale cheap.&#13;
Mutual phone. 42t*&#13;
John T. Chambers, Pinckney&#13;
Dexter J E W E L E R Mich.&#13;
FARM FOR SALE—166 Acres in&#13;
tecfion 27, Dexter Township, 2£ mites&#13;
northwest ot Deiter village, known&#13;
as the Lavey farm. Good buildings,&#13;
well fenced and the beat of land.&#13;
Must be sold to close the estate of&#13;
the lats Mrs, C. Gallagher. Inquire&#13;
of Dr. R. B. Honey or John Gallagher,&#13;
Dexter Micb,&#13;
J. M. PHILLIPS&#13;
BUSINESS CONTINUED&#13;
The undertaking business formerly&#13;
conducted by the late .lames M,&#13;
Phillips at South Lyon will hereafter&#13;
be carried on under the personal&#13;
direction of Mr. H. L. Richardson, Mr.&#13;
Phillips' able assistant in whom he&#13;
reposed his greatest confidence, and&#13;
myself.&#13;
Mrs. J . M. Phillips, Booth Lyon&#13;
Notice&#13;
We wish to inform all&#13;
^hose owing ua on account&#13;
that we with to have a settlement&#13;
of same by Nov. 15&lt;jh^&#13;
MONKS BBOS.&#13;
School Notes&#13;
Viola and Albert Mack spent&#13;
the past week in Sun field.&#13;
Mrs. Louis Monks and Mrs. L.&#13;
G. Devereanx visited school Monday.&#13;
Grace Breningstall is visiting&#13;
relatives in Petersburg.&#13;
The 5th. grade did some nice&#13;
work in'Geography last month.&#13;
Leon and Grant Miller entered&#13;
the Int. Dept., last week.&#13;
School closes Thursday and&#13;
Friday for the M. 8. T. A. which&#13;
is held in Ann Arbor.&#13;
Physics class is solving the advantages&#13;
obtained by the various&#13;
machines.&#13;
Murphy &amp; Jackson&#13;
Stapled Fancy Groceries, Dry Goods, Shoes tP Furnishings&#13;
Largesjt Stock Lowest Prices&#13;
FOR FALL&#13;
We are showing large lines of Underwear, Mackinaw&#13;
Coats, Sweaters, Blankets, Comfortables, Hosiery, Gloves&#13;
and Mitts&#13;
The Knights and Lady Macw&#13;
^ hoM an auction sale at&#13;
their ha u Saturday evening Nov.&#13;
Is*. No one except&#13;
will be admitted.&#13;
Maccabees&#13;
IN FALL FOOTWEAR&#13;
We tarry the celebrated Mishawaka and Lambertville&#13;
Kubbers for Men and Boys, also a complete line of Mens,&#13;
Ladies, Misses and Childrens Arctics and Light Rubbers&#13;
OUR SATURDAY SPECIALS&#13;
Boys Cotton S w e a t e r s , sizes 28, 30, 32, and 34&#13;
-» T o close a t 3 9 c each&#13;
Large size blankets 9 8 c , $1.15,1.39,1.69&#13;
M e n s Rubber Boots $ 2 . 9 8&#13;
2 5 lbs. H . fit B . Sugar . $1.19&#13;
• • ' ' - • »&#13;
ma £&lt;&amp;^^SJM**»L&gt; am&#13;
•• r&#13;
m m a t m — -^iBMttlH^^nHiiii -' i i I -ilf •' YiiWriiiiAiln 'iMfin4 ^-' - - ^ ^ -&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
T&#13;
8 0 C I E T Y FOR PROMOTION OF&#13;
I N D U S T R I A L EDUCATION&#13;
ENDS MEETING.&#13;
CABINET MEMBER RE-ELECTED&#13;
PRESIDENT.&#13;
Many Prominent People Speak at&#13;
Grand Rapids Meeting. Next Session&#13;
will be Held In Southern&#13;
City.&#13;
Grand Rapids, Mich.—Seeking t h e&#13;
co-operation of the chambers of commerce&#13;
and other commercial bodies&#13;
of t h e country in bringing about the&#13;
adoption of laws creating vocational&#13;
education, Friday night's session of&#13;
the Society for the Promotion of Industrial&#13;
Education, under the auspices&#13;
of the Grand Rapids Association of&#13;
Commerce, was given over to a discussion&#13;
of methods which might be&#13;
employed in the respective communities.&#13;
Friday aftermoon Ida M. Tarbell,&#13;
Mrs. Eva White, Boston, and Miss&#13;
Cleo Murtland, of New York, addressed&#13;
the conference on "Vocational training,&#13;
for women and girls." At the&#13;
closing session Saturday afternoon&#13;
officers were re-elected as follows:&#13;
President, William C. Redfield&#13;
Washington, secretary of commerce&#13;
and labor; vice-president, George C.&#13;
Warner, New York; treasurer, Fred&#13;
B. Pratt, New York; board of managers—&#13;
J. W. Lieb, jr., V. Everett Macey.&#13;
Frank Duffy, James P. Monroe, C. H.&#13;
Winslow, A. Lincoln Filene, Charles&#13;
R. Richards, Miss Edith Campbell and&#13;
Miss Virginia Potter. To fill vacancies&#13;
—Miss S. N. Breckenridge and Howell&#13;
Cheney.&#13;
Next year's convention will probably&#13;
be held in a southern city, to&#13;
be determined later by the board of&#13;
managers.&#13;
Charles E. Prosser, national secretary,&#13;
serves tinder a five-year contract&#13;
which began April 1, 1912. To&#13;
establish ttie society nationally Frederick&#13;
Pratt, of New York, provided a&#13;
fund of $30,000 with which Mr. Prosser&#13;
was engaged; he had to resign the position&#13;
with the Massachusetts state&#13;
board of education to which he had&#13;
been taken by David Snedden of that&#13;
state, one of the leading factors in&#13;
the national movement.&#13;
The most important action taken by&#13;
the convention was the adoption of&#13;
the report on selection and training&#13;
of teachers for state-aided industrial&#13;
schools for boys and men. It will&#13;
have a bearing on educational systems&#13;
in all parts of the country.&#13;
Marshall County Declared Wet.&#13;
Marshall, Mich.-—The local option&#13;
vote of last spring was canvassed by&#13;
the board of supervisors at its closing&#13;
session, there being 6,806 votes for and&#13;
6,950 against using the correct figures&#13;
from the lirst preclnot of the first&#13;
ward of Battle Creek. This will cause&#13;
the injunction case pending in circuit&#13;
court to be dismissed.&#13;
The county on the face of the returns&#13;
wenj wet but the election board&#13;
of the first precinct of the first ward&#13;
of Battle Creek reversed the wet and&#13;
dry vote, which would make the county&#13;
dry if their figures on the original&#13;
returns were convassed.&#13;
The board later filed corrected returns&#13;
and Judge North issued an Injunction&#13;
restraining the board from&#13;
Canvassing the original returns until&#13;
the case was heard in court, in the&#13;
meantime saloons in the county took&#13;
out licenses and have been operating&#13;
ever since.&#13;
Michigan Rebekahs Elect Officers.&#13;
Kalamazoo, Mich.—Miss F. Irene&#13;
Bpice, of Boyne City, was elected&#13;
president of the Michigan Rebekahs.&#13;
Others officers: Vice-president, Mrs.&#13;
Libby Tutewiler, Leonidas; warden,&#13;
Mrs. Jessie Thompson, Williamston;&#13;
secretary, Mrs, Hannah Balllargeon,&#13;
Detroit; treasurer, Mrs. Addle Smith,&#13;
Detroit; member of the home board,&#13;
Mr*. Olive Ewing, Harbor Springs.&#13;
Flint was elected for the next con-&#13;
Tention city by the Odd Fellows and&#13;
Rebekahs.&#13;
Berrien county will vote at the next&#13;
general election whether or not the&#13;
people want a farm expert. A resolution&#13;
to that effect has been adopted&#13;
by the board of supervisors.&#13;
Thf state highway commission recominemled&#13;
that taxes in Clinton county&#13;
be raised two mills to raise $40,-&#13;
000 for building highways and presented&#13;
the recommendation to the&#13;
board of supervisors. The commission&#13;
also recommended that a highway&#13;
be built from St. Johns to Fowler.&#13;
The supervisors adopted the recommendation&#13;
that taxes be raised.&#13;
JJHN M. MUNSON&#13;
Harbor Springs man who was the urv&#13;
successful candidate for superintendent&#13;
of public instruction last spring&#13;
has been appointed deputy to that&#13;
position.&#13;
SAMUEL E. GROSS IS DEAD&#13;
Noted Real Estate Dealer Who Gained&#13;
Fame by Charging Rostand with&#13;
Pfagarism.&#13;
Battle Creek, Mich.—Samuel Eberly&#13;
GroBS, the former wealthy Chicagoan&#13;
who attained international fame by&#13;
claiming to be the original author oi&#13;
"Cyrano de Bergerac," at the time ths&#13;
late Richard Mansfield was playing it,&#13;
died here in a sanitarium, following&#13;
a three weeks' illiness.&#13;
Gross, who formerly lived on fashionable&#13;
Sheridan Drive, Chicago, and&#13;
engineered big real estate deals, wroti&#13;
a play. "The. Merchant Prince ol&#13;
Cornville," which was similar to M,&#13;
Rostand's "Cyrano". He claimed Rostand&#13;
stole his plot, scenes and situa&#13;
tons, and an interesting legal entanglement&#13;
developed. Later he lost the&#13;
bulk of his fortune, separated from&#13;
his wife and married Miss Ruby&#13;
Haughey, a Battle Creek girl, many&#13;
years his junior. They have spent&#13;
much time abroad, finally locating&#13;
here and establishing a home.&#13;
Honor for Admiral Clark.&#13;
Washington.—Rear Admiral Charles&#13;
E. Clark, retired, commander of the&#13;
battleship Oregon when she made her&#13;
famous trip around Cape Horn at the&#13;
opening of the Spanish war, has&#13;
accepted the invitation of Secretary&#13;
Daniels to be on the bridge of his old&#13;
ship to lead the international fleet&#13;
through the Panama canal early in&#13;
1915.&#13;
American Capital In Canada.&#13;
Washington.—Uarefully prepared&#13;
reports indicate that the amount of&#13;
American capital now invested in&#13;
Canada aggregates, in round numbers,&#13;
$600,000,000. The total seems to be&#13;
growing quits rapidly. In 1909 it was&#13;
$279,000,000, and in 1911, $417,000,000.&#13;
The belief of Canadian statisticians is&#13;
that the figures for the coming year&#13;
will show a good increase over those&#13;
for 1913.&#13;
Express Companies will Comply.&#13;
Washington.—Official announcement&#13;
from the express companies of their&#13;
intention to comply without further&#13;
delay after Dec. 1 with the order of&#13;
the interstate commerce commission&#13;
for revision of their system of rates&#13;
and methods, came from Walker D.&#13;
Hines, general counsel for the five&#13;
largest express companies and was&#13;
concurred in by the others.&#13;
Another Wreck on New Haven.&#13;
Westerly, R. I.—Fifteen persons&#13;
were injured, one woman secriously,&#13;
when the Gilt Edge express, from New&#13;
York for Boston, over the New York,&#13;
New Haven &amp; Hartford railroad, went&#13;
off the track on a curve a mile and a&#13;
half east of Westerly. Heavy rain Is&#13;
believed to have undermined the roadbed,&#13;
causing the rails to spread.&#13;
Episcopal Close Meeting.&#13;
New York,—The triennial convention&#13;
of the Protestant Episcopal&#13;
church adjourned Saturday afternoon&#13;
after a session which had brought few&#13;
of the important results anticipated,&#13;
although many matters were disposed&#13;
of. Others were definitely put over&#13;
till the next convention.&#13;
Far Tsan Sung, director of the Chinese&#13;
mint, is a guest at the home of&#13;
Rev. Eugene Yeager, of Oxford who&#13;
was acquainted with him when he was&#13;
a student at Delaware, 0., University.&#13;
The Chinese official is to be in this&#13;
country on a tour of inspection of&#13;
United States mints, and will oome&#13;
here from Chicago.&#13;
VOTE LIGHT IN&#13;
U N L I K E L Y T H A T ELECTION IS&#13;
V A L I D ON ACCOUNT OF&#13;
FEW VOTERS.&#13;
GEN. F E L I X DIAZ RUNS A H E A D I N&#13;
T H E CAPITOL.&#13;
Little Disorder Is Reported Although&#13;
Many Are Supposed to Have&#13;
Been Intimidated Into Staying&#13;
at Home.&#13;
Mexico City—Although the districts&#13;
outside Mexico City where elections&#13;
were held Sunday for president and&#13;
vice-president of the republic are being&#13;
heard from it is doubtful, judging bythe&#13;
result of the polling here, whether&#13;
enough votes have been cast to make&#13;
the election valid.&#13;
General Felix Diaz is conceded to&#13;
have obtained more votes in the capital&#13;
than any of the other candidates,&#13;
with Frederico Gamboa, the candidate&#13;
of the Catholic party, second. The&#13;
polling in the city was conducted in&#13;
accordance with the law and there&#13;
were no disturbances. Despite the importance&#13;
of the election the citizens&#13;
displayed indifference. Troops and&#13;
police patroled the city throughout t h e&#13;
day and the national palace was guarded&#13;
by several companies of artirTery.&#13;
Voting throughout the country has&#13;
been light. In some places there was&#13;
no voting a t all. Diaz appears to be&#13;
running ahead of his three rivals, but&#13;
the indications are that not sufficient&#13;
votes will be case to validate the election.&#13;
In that event President Huerta&#13;
will continue a s provisional president.&#13;
Another election would have to wait&#13;
for his proclamation.&#13;
Little interest was manifested in&#13;
the election in Mexico City. There&#13;
was the usual Sunday crowd in the&#13;
streets, but little talk of politics or&#13;
the possible results of the election.&#13;
Everywhere voters are apathetic. Reports&#13;
from a dozen, precincts in which&#13;
more than 1,000 voters were registered&#13;
show that only 95 ballots have been&#13;
cast. Hundreds of voters who are unfriendly&#13;
to the Huerta government are&#13;
remaining at home and the belief is&#13;
that they have been intimidated.&#13;
Mrs. Pankhuret at Cleveland.&#13;
Cleveland, O.—Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst,&#13;
the British militant suffragette,&#13;
spoke Saturday night to an audience&#13;
which taxed the capacity of Gray's&#13;
armory. Although Cleveland suffragists&#13;
refused to take part in arrangements&#13;
for the meeting, many crowded&#13;
into the hall to listen to her address&#13;
on "The Humanitarian Aspect of&#13;
Suffrage."&#13;
Governor Cox, who was here, was&#13;
asked to introduce the famous militant,&#13;
but he was forced to return to&#13;
Columbus early and was unable to&#13;
attend. Lieut.-Gov. W. A, Greenlund&#13;
introduced her a t t h e governor's request.&#13;
Woman May be Police Chief.&#13;
Chicago.—A woman for chief of&#13;
police is being seriously considered&#13;
by Mayor Harrison. The mayor h a s&#13;
not made known his choice for successor&#13;
to Chief McWeeny, resigned, but&#13;
it is stated that Mrs. Gertrude Howe&#13;
Britton looms large in the mayor's&#13;
convas.&#13;
Mrs. Britton is a woman of independent&#13;
means, who has for years&#13;
been prominent as a social worker.&#13;
She is familiar with police work; is&#13;
a member of t h e police examining&#13;
board of the city civil service commission,&#13;
and lectures in t h e police&#13;
schools.&#13;
Wsr 8hlpt Start on Curise.&#13;
Hampton Roads,—Bearing the greetings&#13;
of the new world to the old, nine&#13;
dreadnoughts of the Atlantic fleet&#13;
started Saturday on their way from&#13;
Hampton Roads to the Mediterranean.&#13;
The sombre garbed war machines,&#13;
-carrying thousands of the American&#13;
jailor men, received the final nod of&#13;
farewell from the Dolphin, bearing&#13;
Assistant Secretary of the Navy&#13;
Franklin D. Roosevelt, and slid slowly&#13;
rat between the protecting capes into&#13;
ha open sea—the course due east&#13;
8panlsh Cabinet Tender Reslgnatiene.&#13;
Madrid.—At the opening of the&#13;
Spanish parlament a .vote of confidence&#13;
in the government was rejected&#13;
106 to 100. A number of the deputies&#13;
abstained from voting. Marquis&#13;
Manuel Gracla Prieto and other&#13;
Liberals refused to support Premier&#13;
Romanones.&#13;
As a result of the vote the premier&#13;
endered to King Alfonso the resigna-&#13;
:ion of himself and the members of&#13;
nis cabinet.&#13;
MARKETS&#13;
Live Stock, Grain and General Farm&#13;
Produce.&#13;
I Practical Fashions&#13;
U v e Stock.&#13;
DETKOIT—Cattfe. Receipts, 612;&#13;
canners and bulls steady; others 10c&#13;
higher. Best steers and heifers, $8;&#13;
steers and heifers, 1,000 to 1,200 lbs,&#13;
?7.50(^8; steers ami heifers, 800 to&#13;
1,000 lbs, ?ti.75@7.25; steers and heifers&#13;
that are fat, 500 to 700 lbs, $6@&#13;
6.50; choice fat cows, |5.75^)6.25; good&#13;
fat cows, $5.25(¾)5.50; common cows,&#13;
?4.25^)4.f&gt;0; canners, $3&amp;)4; choice&#13;
heavy bulla, $6.25(^6.50; rair to good&#13;
bologna bulls, $5.50^)5.75; stock bulls,&#13;
$4.75(¾)5.25; choice feeding steers, 800&#13;
to 1,000 lbs,$6.75@7.25; fair feeding&#13;
steers, 800 to 1,000 lbs, $6.50^)6.75;&#13;
choice stockers, 500 to 700 lbs, $6.25©&#13;
6.75; fair stockers, 500 to 700 lbs, $6®&#13;
6.25; stock heifers, $5.25@5.75; milkers,&#13;
large, young, medium age, $75®&#13;
85;; romnu&gt;u milkers, $40@5t&gt;.&#13;
Veal cal-es—Receipts, 225; market&#13;
strong; be^, $ i u @ l l ; others, $0@9.50.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 2,388;&#13;
market 25c higher; best lambs, $7®&#13;
7.25; fuir to good lambs, $6.50@7;&#13;
light to common lambs, $5@6.25; fair&#13;
to good sheep, $4^4.50; culls and&#13;
common, $3(^)3,50.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 1,763; market 15®&#13;
20c lowe/. Range of prices; Light to&#13;
good butchers, $8&amp;p8.10; pigs, $7¾)&#13;
7.25; mixed, $8@&gt;8.10; heavy, $8(0)8.10.&#13;
East Buffalo Markets.&#13;
EAST BUFFALO—Cattle; Receipts,&#13;
250 cars; cattle with good quality&#13;
and finish, weighing from 1,300 to 1,-&#13;
400 lbs., sold from 5c to 10c lower;&#13;
handy weight butchers' cattle that&#13;
showed good finish and good heifer&#13;
stuff sold 10c to 15c higher; cow&#13;
stuff steady; best l,o50 to 1,450-lb&#13;
native steers, $8.50@8.75; best&#13;
1,200 to 1,300-lb native steers, $8.25@&#13;
8.50; best 1,100 to 1,200 native steers,&#13;
$8@8.25; coarse and plain weighty&#13;
steers, native, • $7.25@7.50; best&#13;
Canada steers, 1,150 to 1,250-lbs.,&#13;
$7.25 @7.75; choice handy steers,&#13;
1,000 to 1,100 lbs, $7.75@8; fair to&#13;
good, 1,000 to 1,100 lbs, $7.25@7.50;&#13;
grassy, 800 to 1,000-lh steers, $6.25®&#13;
6.75; best cows, $6.25@6.75; butcher&#13;
cows, $5®6; cutters, $4.25@4.50; trimmers,&#13;
$3.S5@3.90; medium butcher&#13;
heifers, $6.50@7; best heiferB, $7.50®&#13;
7.75; stock heifers, $4.50@5; common&#13;
stock heifers, $4@4.25; best feeding&#13;
steers, $7@7.25; fair to good do, $6.25&#13;
@6.75; common light stock steers, $5&#13;
@5.25; bBSt butcher bulls, $6.50@7;&#13;
bologna bulls, $5.25@5.75; stock bulls,&#13;
$5@5.50; best milkers and springers,&#13;
$70@80; common to good do, $50®&#13;
60.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 125 cars; market&#13;
5@10c lower; heavy, $8.40@8.55; mixed,&#13;
$8.40@8.45; yorkers, $8.25@8.40;&#13;
pigs, $7.50@7.75; roughs, $7.50@7.75;&#13;
stags, $6.50@7.50.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 70 cars;&#13;
market strong, 15®25c higher; top&#13;
lambs,- $7.65@7.75; yearlings, $5.50®&#13;
6.25; wethers, $5@7.40; ewes, $4.50®&#13;
5.00.&#13;
Calves, $8; tops, $11@11.50; fair&#13;
to good, $9.50@10.50; grassers, $ 4 0&#13;
5.50.&#13;
Grains etc.&#13;
DETROIT—Wheat—Cash No. 2 red&#13;
92c; December opened with a drop of&#13;
1-4-c at 92 l-2c and vanced to 93c; May&#13;
opened at 96 l-2c And advanced to 97c;&#13;
No. 1 white, 3 cars a t 92c.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 2, 72c; No. 2 yellow,&#13;
1 car at 73c; No. 3 yellow, 72 l-2c.&#13;
Oats—standard, 3 cars at 41 5-8c,&#13;
closing at 42c; No. .3 white, 1 car at&#13;
41 l-8c, closing at 41 l-2c; No. 4 white&#13;
40 l-2c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 69c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate, prompt and October&#13;
shipment, - $1.95; November,&#13;
$1.85; January, $2.&#13;
Cloverseed—Prime October and December,&#13;
$7.80; March, $7.90; sample&#13;
red, 30 bags a t $7.30, 15 at $6.75; October&#13;
alsike, $10.50; sample alsike, 20&#13;
bags at $9, 15 a t $8.50.&#13;
Timothy—Prime spot, 20 bags at&#13;
$2.45.&#13;
Alfalfa—Prime spot, $7.25.&#13;
Hay—Cariots, track Detroit: No. 1&#13;
timothy, $16®16.50; standard, $15®&#13;
15.50; No. 2, $14®14.50; light mixed,&#13;
$15®15.50; No. 1 mixed, $13.50@14;&#13;
rye straw, $8$p9; wheat and oat straw&#13;
$7®7.50 per ton.&#13;
Flour—In One-eighth paper sacks,&#13;
per 196 pounds, jobbing lots; Best&#13;
patent, $5.30; second patent, $4.90;&#13;
straight, |4.f«0; spring patent, $5.10;&#13;
rye, $4.60 pef bbl.&#13;
Feed—In 100-lb sacks, Jobbing lots;&#13;
Bran, $25; coarse middlings, $27; fine&#13;
middlings, $27; cracked corn, $31;&#13;
coarse cornmeal, $3«; corn and oat&#13;
chop, $26.50 p e r ton.&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
DETROIT—Apples^-No. 1, |3©&gt;3.25;&#13;
No. 2, $2®2.50 per bbl.&#13;
- Pears—Duchess, $3.25©3.50 per bbl;&#13;
Keefer, 75c©&gt;$l per bu.&#13;
Tomatoes—Home-grown, |1.60®1.75&#13;
per bushel.&#13;
Onions—$1.15 per bu; Spanish, $1.40&#13;
per crate.&#13;
Potatoes-^-Jn bulk, 60®65c per bu;&#13;
in sacks, 6007Oc per bu for cariots.&#13;
LADY'S P L A I N S K I R T .&#13;
This three gore skirt is in strictly&#13;
tailored style. It has either ralBed or&#13;
regulation waist line and fits snugly&#13;
by means of seams and darts. It&#13;
closes in the back and has small plaits&#13;
at the lower edge of each front seam.&#13;
This style is suitable for all tailored&#13;
fabrics, broadcloth, velveteen, cheviot,&#13;
serge, etc.&#13;
The skirt pattern (6369) is cut in&#13;
sizes 22 to 30 inches waist measure.&#13;
Medium size requires 3¼ yards of 44&#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;
euro to give size and number of pattern.&#13;
NO. 6369. 81ZE —&#13;
NAME M . . . .&#13;
TOWN -&#13;
STREET AND NO ~ .&#13;
STATE . \ .&#13;
GIRL'8 COAT.&#13;
A smart box coat, cut with body and&#13;
sleeves in one, a seam running along&#13;
the outside of the arm and also along&#13;
the shoulder. There is a small gusset&#13;
under the arm to prevent pulling&#13;
or tearing. The sleeve extends to the&#13;
wrist, where a wide cuff provides a&#13;
finish and a collar to correspond&#13;
trims the neck. The belt is of t h e&#13;
material, but may be of leather.&#13;
The coat pattern (6379) is cut In&#13;
sizes 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 years. Medium&#13;
size requires 2% yards of 44 inch material.&#13;
•^MJ5 ??0 1 1™ t h ! s &amp;„ l P a t t e r n Depar tPmatetnetr,n" soefn dth i1s 0p caepnetrs. swurriet et on agmivee asinzde aanddd rensusm pbleari nolyf, paatntedrbne.&#13;
NO. No. 6379. 8XZB..&#13;
TOWN&#13;
STREET AND NO. . . . .&#13;
STATE. • • • • • • * « • &gt; • • • &gt; • &gt; • • • • • • •&#13;
Bubonic Plague on West Coast.&#13;
The bubonic plague has reappearcu&#13;
on the Pacific coast and Californians&#13;
are being urged by the government to&#13;
kill all plague carriers and species of&#13;
rodents, Including rats and ground&#13;
squirrels. It was only by extraordinary&#13;
effort that this terrible disease&#13;
was kept away from the east coast,&#13;
which was threatened from Porto&#13;
Rico and South America last year. It&#13;
has existed for some years on the&#13;
west coast, however, although n o ,&#13;
deaths have occurred for a long period&#13;
until quite recently.&#13;
Forgotten Musicians.&#13;
Few but those who have studied&#13;
musical history know that the name&#13;
John Bull, was borne by one of the&#13;
most famous musicians of the six- ,&#13;
teenth century. He was as famous&#13;
a harpischord player in bis day as "•,&#13;
Liszt was a pianist, but as a composer&#13;
he lacked the creative power .&#13;
of Liszt, the result being that Bull&#13;
Is practically unknown to the gtnersJ&#13;
public today, even in England.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
PROPOSE to revolutionize&#13;
warfare on land and&#13;
eea!" •«&#13;
This 1B the confidently&#13;
calm, wholly matter-offact&#13;
prediction made by&#13;
Ulivi, the Italian engineer&#13;
and chemist. In&#13;
a word, he flatly declares&#13;
that he has perfected an&#13;
apparatus by means of&#13;
which he can project wireless waves&#13;
at an enemy's ships and blow them off&#13;
the face of the waters!&#13;
These are not the idle mouthings of&#13;
an irresponsible dreamer. Were they&#13;
uttered by any one less Important perhaps&#13;
little heed would be given to&#13;
them by officialdom abroad. Not so&#13;
with the talented Italian. All Europe&#13;
Is watching his every move, and even&#13;
now the government of France is considering&#13;
whether of not it is advisable&#13;
to pay the vast sum the wireless expert&#13;
demands for a monopoly of his&#13;
invention.&#13;
Imagine what it means to be able&#13;
to blow up a battleship or a cruiser&#13;
without t h e firing of a single shot!&#13;
Warfare will be revolutionized indeed!&#13;
A steel-sided leviathan of the deep can&#13;
do no harm far out at sea if the enemy&#13;
has no ships, but let it once approach&#13;
the coast and threaten to lay low some&#13;
great port—behold!&#13;
The press of a button in a shore&#13;
station, the instant crackle of the&#13;
wireless a s it zips through the blue&#13;
ether and instantly the great thing pf j&#13;
steel parts amidships with the roar of&#13;
a thousand guns and sinks to t h e&#13;
ocean'B floor, a broken, distorted mass.&#13;
No dream, this.&#13;
It has gone beyond the experimental&#13;
stage. For weeks past a mysterious&#13;
yacht, fitted with powerful wireless&#13;
apparatus, has been hovering off t h e&#13;
Norman coast ok France. Aboard has&#13;
been a notable party and—Ulivi. Now&#13;
the secret is out. They have been&#13;
blowing up submarine mines by wireless&#13;
as a preliminary to more drastic&#13;
experiments.&#13;
The yacht is the rakish Lady Henrietta,&#13;
flying the British flag, but under&#13;
French ownership. Within her sharp&#13;
lines is- hidden t h e revolutionizing&#13;
secret which not only France but the&#13;
government of the United States and&#13;
all the powers of Europe have been&#13;
seeking ever since wireless waves&#13;
have been a fact and wireless poder&#13;
a possibility. And this secret is&#13;
the new Invention—as yet in its infancy—&#13;
for exploding at any desired&#13;
distance from 630 to 6,000 yards by&#13;
wireless infra-red solar spectrum&#13;
waves all explosive substances in contact&#13;
with metal.&#13;
-Briefly this means that Ulivi says&#13;
he can detonate the guncotton or the&#13;
powder contained in a warship's magazine&#13;
by means of wireless, and the&#13;
French Government Is seeing If it can&#13;
be done.&#13;
"The Infra-red rays of t h e solar&#13;
spectrum are those mysterious beams&#13;
beyond the edge of the red, invisible&#13;
to the human eye but nevertheless&#13;
there. For. convenience Ulivi calls&#13;
them "F-rays." They a r e akin to&#13;
X-rays in that they can penetrate&#13;
metal, but instead of making objects&#13;
visible they develop force beyond the&#13;
barriers which can deflect the most&#13;
powerful projectile, but a r e as glass&#13;
to the potent force of the little known&#13;
rays beyond the red, whatever unthinkable&#13;
color they may be.&#13;
How they work or in what manner&#13;
TlUvi haa controlled them nobody but&#13;
he knows. But that they have worked&#13;
he himself frankly states and the official&#13;
commission which went to sea&#13;
with him solemnly fives assent. Ulivi&#13;
did not go about his work under any&#13;
ctoaJt -of secrecy of mystery. With&#13;
hiss on the Lady Henrietta went Gen&#13;
de Castelnau, assistant chief of the&#13;
general staff of the French army;&#13;
Commander Ferrie, director of the&#13;
wireless telegraph station on .top of&#13;
the Eiffel tower, Paris, and Captain&#13;
Cloitre, representing the French minister&#13;
of marine.&#13;
"We have reported to our government,"&#13;
said General de Castelnau&#13;
seriously, "and everything we have&#13;
said must be kept a profound state&#13;
secret."&#13;
It is no breach of confidence to say,&#13;
however, that the commission has&#13;
unanimously reported in favor of&#13;
France securing the invention without&#13;
delay, no matter what the price. This&#13;
consists, stripped of technicalities, of&#13;
a special projectile emitting return infra-&#13;
red rays which find the exact distance&#13;
and the exact radio-magnetic&#13;
capacity of metallic objects. When&#13;
these are determined with precision&#13;
the Ulivi "F-ra,y" is then shot out&#13;
from its station afloat or ashore and a&#13;
long distance explosion takes place instantly&#13;
with mathematical accuracy.&#13;
This is not merely Ulivi's hope of&#13;
revolutionize warfare. Experiments&#13;
made near Villers prove that it can be&#13;
done even with the imperfected ap&#13;
paratus already put together. So accurately&#13;
has the projector worked that&#13;
two mines were placed five yards&#13;
apart at 1,000 yards' distance and&#13;
either one exploded at will, the other&#13;
remaining intact.&#13;
It works as well by land as by sea;&#13;
it can-be applied to dirigible balloons&#13;
like the German Zeppelins.&#13;
"And," declares Ulivi confidently&#13;
"it will render a ship Weighted with&#13;
explosive ammunition more dangerous&#13;
to those aboard her than to their own&#13;
enemies!"&#13;
Dictated by Commander George W.&#13;
Williams, U. S. fA.&#13;
Inspector in Command U. S. Torpedo&#13;
Station, Newport, R. I.&#13;
If t h e Italian, Ulivi, has devised&#13;
something by which he can explode a&#13;
magazine at a distance by the Hertzian&#13;
rays then we will surely get&#13;
something to combat it. If projectiles&#13;
can be deflected by shields surely&#13;
wireless power can be deflected too.&#13;
But this new power—if there is sUcn&#13;
a power—will not alone be used for&#13;
war; its use in the arts would be far&#13;
too Important to be overlooked. And&#13;
if it has been discovered at last I am&#13;
not at all surprised—nothing would&#13;
surprise me in this age of miracles!&#13;
*&#13;
I hgve not the slightest doubt that&#13;
at this time Signor Ulivi has been able&#13;
to construct antennae and specially designed&#13;
receiving Instruments and relays&#13;
by which he can explode at a&#13;
considerable distance ah especially&#13;
prepared charge of guncotton or other&#13;
explosive. In fact, I have seen&#13;
the thing done here already—the idea&#13;
is not altogether new.&#13;
This working apparatus is the Shoemaker&#13;
torpedo. It is a full-sized torpedo&#13;
wirelesBly controlled. This formidable&#13;
weapon can be started,&#13;
stopped, steered and exploded by an&#13;
operator at a distance, but it requires&#13;
special receiving apparatus In the torpedo&#13;
itself. It can perform what is&#13;
expected of it, but it is not practical&#13;
for the very good reason that the&#13;
operator cannot see far enough to exercise&#13;
his judgment in the control of&#13;
the instrument. Take a motor boat&#13;
2,000 yards away—you can't tell exactly&#13;
how she is heading. How much&#13;
harder then to judge the steering of&#13;
a distant torpedo! The French navy&#13;
has already had trials with wireless&#13;
torpedoeB, and what Ulivi has accomplished&#13;
is probably an extension of&#13;
these experiments.&#13;
Now, what mysterious power is it&#13;
that he has? Or, better, what is Ulivi&#13;
trying to obtain?&#13;
Briefly this: Some means of projecting&#13;
energy through space that will&#13;
detonate some explosive at a given&#13;
place, subject to t h e control of the&#13;
operator.&#13;
As I have said, this is no new idea.&#13;
Frank R. Stockton has it in his story,&#13;
"The Great War Syndicate," and H.&#13;
G. Wells used it in "The War of the&#13;
Worlds." The same scheme has already&#13;
been proposed at the bureau o&lt;&#13;
Ordnance of the navy, too. One Inventor&#13;
asserted that he had effected&#13;
a combination of mechanism that&#13;
could project the Hertzian waves or&#13;
other wireless waves generated by&#13;
electricity and explode a designated&#13;
charge at a distance.&#13;
Gathered Smiles&#13;
A Real Attraction.&#13;
Caroline, aged sixteen, was busily&#13;
engag-ed placing pretty cushions about&#13;
the porch when her Cousin .Joe, who&#13;
is a couple of years older, arrived on&#13;
the scene.&#13;
"What are you doing, sis?" the cousin&#13;
inquired.&#13;
"Just making the porch attractive&#13;
for company," the girl answered.&#13;
"Chuck the cushions," grinned the&#13;
youth; "what you want is a hammock."—&#13;
Ainslie's Magazine.&#13;
Pleasant Diversion.&#13;
Bacon—Doesn't your wife get very&#13;
Impatient when you're buttoning up&#13;
her dress behind?&#13;
Egbert—No; she used to, but she&#13;
doesn't now.&#13;
"How do you account for that?"&#13;
"Oh, I have her stand in front of&#13;
the mirror now."&#13;
Help for the Poor.&#13;
Bacon—I see by this paper that&#13;
Pittsburgh may supply free tennis&#13;
courts for the poor.&#13;
Egbert—I'm glad t o hear tliat. Da&#13;
you know when a poor man is good&#13;
and hungry there's nothing he likes&#13;
offered him more than a nice Juicy&#13;
tennis court.&#13;
Perfectly 8afe.&#13;
"Better lap up that spilt milk," tatd&#13;
the first cat. "If the missus seet&#13;
the mess you'll catch fits."&#13;
"Not me," said the second feline.&#13;
"The woman I live with blames everything&#13;
on her husband."&#13;
Worked Day and Night&#13;
"Why did you break into the house&#13;
in the middle of the day?" asked the&#13;
magistrate.&#13;
4 "Well," said the accused, "I had aev&#13;
era! other* to cover that evening^&#13;
An Ambush.&#13;
"The leaves are turning early. See&#13;
that clump of red by the wayside?"&#13;
"I think them a r e the local constable's&#13;
whiskers." declared the chaf&#13;
feur, putting on extra speed.&#13;
Down to Earth.&#13;
"When is the honeymoon over?**&#13;
"When the bridegroom begins to&#13;
bring home tripe and limburger ID&#13;
atead of bonbons and violets,"&#13;
FOR THE BEDROOM CLOSET&#13;
Row of Shelves Easily Arranged That&#13;
Will Be Found Most&#13;
Valuable.&#13;
The bedroom closet is frequently a&#13;
secondary consideration, although it&#13;
may be made an economic and artistic&#13;
portion of the house. The perfect&#13;
closet should have a window which&#13;
readily opens. Under thlB a chest of&#13;
drawers Is arranged. If the room be&#13;
sufficiently wide, a portion of these&#13;
drawers can be built to accommodate&#13;
hats, after the fashion of the hat-boxes&#13;
purchased in furnishing stores. Provision&#13;
for shoes and slippers in a shallow&#13;
drawer is a convenience often&#13;
overlooked.&#13;
Whenever possible, the clothes-closet&#13;
should be easily thrown open to outdoor&#13;
air and light. The linen-close&#13;
»1 H&#13;
ca C3&#13;
nt ta&#13;
ex a&#13;
Drop Doors Cover Shelves.&#13;
does not need such an arrangement&#13;
to so great an extent; but clothes&#13;
that are frequently worn and used&#13;
should be cared for in a well-ventilated&#13;
room, and sunlight also is a wise provision.&#13;
Mirrors are frequently placed&#13;
In closet doors, occasionally on the inside,,&#13;
where the effect of the woodwork&#13;
iinish is not interrupted by&#13;
the mirror-paneled door; but, more&#13;
often, they are placed on the bedroom&#13;
side.&#13;
Shallow closets, or wardrobes, while&#13;
not so hygienic, are sometimes a necessity,&#13;
and they may be made most&#13;
convenient. When built along one&#13;
side of a room with mirror doors, they&#13;
make an attractive feature. Shallow&#13;
drawers are frequently built below the&#13;
main clothes space, and a cupboard&#13;
above for hats. There a r e firms&#13;
which manufacture fixtures for closets&#13;
of this type. The fixture consists&#13;
of a pole, which pulls out and exposes&#13;
the clothes placed on hangers. This&#13;
shallow closet takes up more wallspace&#13;
in a bedroom; but, where compression&#13;
of floor space is a necessity,&#13;
It may be easily arranged and made&#13;
very convenient.&#13;
Fruit Salads.&#13;
Take a ring of fresh pineapple and&#13;
fill the center with sliced banana and&#13;
strawberries and serve with French&#13;
dressing or mayonnaise. OrangeB and&#13;
watercress make another good salad&#13;
Remove the fiber from the orange and&#13;
cut* into sections. Place on lettuce&#13;
leaves with a portion of watercress. A&#13;
French dressing is best for this.&#13;
Scrambled Eggs.&#13;
Cut fine three tomatoes and cook&#13;
for ten minutes in two tablespoonfuls&#13;
butter, one-half teaspoonful salt and" a&#13;
few grains of paprika; then drop in&#13;
three unbeaten eggs. Cook, stirring&#13;
constantly, until the eggs are cooked.&#13;
Serve at once on hot toast.&#13;
Keep Refrigerator Clean.&#13;
** Great care should be taken to keep&#13;
the refrigerator fresh and clean. It&#13;
should be thoroughly washed every&#13;
week with soap and water in which&#13;
borax has been dissolved, and it 1s&#13;
well to have a certain day for the&#13;
cleansing.&#13;
Varnish the Case.&#13;
Straw matting suitcases and shopping&#13;
bags can be very much improved&#13;
in looks and usefulness by a coat of&#13;
wagon varnish, which makes them waterproof.&#13;
A good wetting will generally&#13;
spoil them, but 'be varnish causes&#13;
them to shed water like a duck. This&#13;
should be done once a year.&#13;
Liver Fried in Bread Crumbs,&#13;
Cut the liver in slices, sprinkle with&#13;
salt and pepper, dip in beaten egg and"&#13;
very fine cracker crumbe. Fry six&#13;
minutes in boiling lard.&#13;
Corn, Eggs and Bacon.&#13;
Fry eight slices of bacon and take&#13;
out on the platter, then fry in the fat&#13;
one-half can of corn until slightly&#13;
brown; pour Into this four eggs well&#13;
beaten, with a little milk; add a bit&#13;
of butter and stir until eggs are&#13;
cooked.&#13;
When Milk Curdlea.&#13;
Should you ever have trouble with&#13;
milk curdling hvhen you put It on to&#13;
boil try adding a liberal pinch of bi&#13;
carbonate of soda to each quart o&#13;
milk before putting it on the stove.&#13;
One-tenth of the a u t o m o b i l e s oi tliia&#13;
country are o w n e d in N e w York.&#13;
Red Cross Ball Rlue will waHh double as&#13;
many clothes as any other blue. Don't&#13;
put yuur money into ;uiy other. Adv.&#13;
A m b i g u o u s .&#13;
"How was that overcoat o f y o u r s&#13;
that t h e tramp s t o l e ? "&#13;
"I g u e s s it w a s on the bum."&#13;
Break up that couRh. A single dose of&#13;
Dean's Mentholated Couyh Drops bring*&#13;
prompt relief—6c at all Drug Stores.&#13;
Local Color.&#13;
"Get me a cop," panted the exctted .&#13;
stranger. "Somebody stole my coat!"&#13;
"Sh!" cautioned the New Yorker,&#13;
glancing fearfully about, "do you want&#13;
to lose your shirt?"—Cornell Widow.&#13;
The Only Way.&#13;
"How are courts to aBsesB stolen&#13;
kisses?"&#13;
"The only way is by their face&#13;
value."&#13;
Important to Mothers&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle of&#13;
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for&#13;
infants and children, and see that i t&#13;
Bears the ^ - / / p / ^ „&#13;
Signature of Cjca/^yf/^icZlM&#13;
In Use For Over 30 Years.&#13;
Children Cry for Fletcher's Caatorig&#13;
Pete's Responsibilities.&#13;
John Ransome's son Pete had quit&#13;
school and "accepted a position" in&#13;
Martin's store.&#13;
"What is Pete doing down there?"&#13;
asked his uncle.&#13;
Pete is superintendent of the cracker&#13;
and cheese department," said&#13;
John. "He has entire charge of&#13;
wrapping up the cheese."—New York&#13;
Evening Post.&#13;
[U5HSHSES15HSZ5S5Z5HSZSSSZJrafEff[5|&#13;
To Pipe Smokers&#13;
We Are Independent&#13;
and have no one to please but our customers.&#13;
We have been making highgrade&#13;
smoking tobacco for more than&#13;
half a century and "Wild Fruit" is our&#13;
best effort. It is Union Made. Packed&#13;
in five cent foil packages, ten cent&#13;
cloth poucheB, eight and sixteen ounce,&#13;
tins. Premium coupons in all packages.&#13;
Should you fail to find the "Wild Fruit"&#13;
in your dealer's stock, send us five&#13;
cents in postage stamps and we&#13;
will mail you an original package.&#13;
Jno,J.Bagiey&amp; Co,, Detroit, Mlcb,&#13;
CANADA'S OFFERING&#13;
TO THE SETTLER&#13;
THE AMERICAN RUSH TO&#13;
WESTERN CANADA&#13;
IS INCREAS1NS&#13;
F r e e H o m e s t e a d s&#13;
In the n«w Districts of&#13;
Manitoba, Saskatchewan&#13;
and Alberta there&#13;
are thousands of Free&#13;
Homesteads left, which&#13;
to the man making entry&#13;
in 8 fears time will be&#13;
worth from •» tof» per&#13;
ncre. These lands are&#13;
well adapted to grain&#13;
growing and cattle raising.&#13;
KXmLEST RAILWAY fAClUTIal&#13;
In many cases the railways In&#13;
Canada bare been built In advance&#13;
of settlement, and In a&#13;
short time there will not be a&#13;
&amp;euler who need be more than&#13;
ten or twelve miles from a line&#13;
of railway. Railway Kates are&#13;
reflated by Govsraiaent Commission.&#13;
Social Conditions&#13;
The American Settler is at bone&#13;
in Western Canada. He is not a&#13;
stranger in a it range land, baring&#13;
marly a million of his own&#13;
people already settled there. If&#13;
yon doslro to know why toe condition&#13;
of the Canadian Settler Is&#13;
prosperous write and send for&#13;
literature, rates, irtc, to&#13;
M . V . Molnnes,&#13;
»76 Jefferson Ave., Detroit, Mlek.&#13;
Canadian Government Agent, or&#13;
address Hnpexintendent o f&#13;
"mmlffratlon, Ottawa, Cseaea.&#13;
RAW FURS We pay highest market&#13;
p r i c e s , give yon a n&#13;
H O N X S T AssoRTKjort&#13;
and remit the aame day goods are received. If&#13;
yon so request we will hold your fnrs separate&#13;
for yonr approval of our valuation. Write&#13;
today for Price List, shipping tags, etc.&#13;
BEHR B R O T H E R S&#13;
dew Pur Depsnmant, H. W SLAKE, Mffr.&#13;
357 Gratiot Ave., Detroit, Mich.&#13;
HIDES PELTS WOOL TALLOW&#13;
DsvsloplM M y site Rod TUwu&#13;
fMtpsM, 10 0 M t * DCTtOITs&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
_pinckney £)ippatch&#13;
Entered at the Poatoffice at Pinckney,&#13;
Mich., as Second Class Matter&#13;
R. W. CAVERLY, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER&#13;
Subscription, $ 1 . Per Year in Advance&#13;
Advertising rates made known on&#13;
application&#13;
Cards of ThUukf, fifty cents.&#13;
x\esoh;tions of Condolence, one dollar.&#13;
Local Notices, in Local columns, live&#13;
cent per line per each insertion.&#13;
All matter intended to benefit the personal&#13;
or business interest of any individual&#13;
will be published at regular advertiseing&#13;
rates.&#13;
Announcement of entertainments, etc.,&#13;
must be paid for at regular Local Notice&#13;
rates.&#13;
Obituary and marriage notices are published&#13;
tree of charge.&#13;
Poetry must be paid for at the rate of&#13;
five cents per line.&#13;
Local News&#13;
Wallace Welsh of Dexter visited&#13;
relatives here last week.&#13;
Ray Reason of Detroit visited&#13;
his parents here over Sunday.&#13;
Eugene Dinkel of Detroit spent&#13;
Sunday with his parents here.&#13;
Frank LaRua of Howell was a&#13;
Pinckney visitor last Thursday.&#13;
Mildred Palmer Si Hamburg&#13;
visited Rose Jeffreys last Friday.&#13;
Mrs. Jas. Roche and daughters&#13;
were Howell visitors last Saturday.&#13;
C. S. Line of Howell has an ad.&#13;
in this issue. Read , what he has&#13;
to say.&#13;
Miss Ruth Potterton is spending&#13;
several days in Jackson this&#13;
week.&#13;
H. H. Swarthout and Adrian&#13;
Lavey were Ann Arbor visitors&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Mrs. W. S. Caskey of Gregory&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of H.&#13;
M. Williston.&#13;
Mrs. A. H. Gilchrist entertained&#13;
her sister, Miss Gladys Pool, from&#13;
near Gregory, the past week.&#13;
Ladies—You will save money on&#13;
your fall coat if you buy it at&#13;
Dancer's. adv.&#13;
Mrs. E. Kuhn and daughters&#13;
Norine and Margaret of Gregory&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of John&#13;
Monks.&#13;
Bring in your list of magazines&#13;
and get my price, I will meet any&#13;
printed list on clubing offers and&#13;
may be able to save you money.&#13;
C. G. Meyer.&#13;
Saturday afternoon, November&#13;
1st, at the P. 0. block, the Cong'l,&#13;
eociety will place on sale all articles&#13;
not sold at their Japanese&#13;
and novelty sale.&#13;
Howard Pratt, eldest son of Ex-&#13;
Sherifl and Mrs. Ed. Pratt, was&#13;
drowned in Crooked Lake last&#13;
Friday afternoon whilesduck shooting.&#13;
With his wife and Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Bert Tooley, he was enjoying&#13;
a campiDg excursion at Crooked&#13;
Lake. Daring the afternoon&#13;
the men of the party rowed out on&#13;
the lake in regulation duck boats&#13;
to hunt up game. Howard was&#13;
alone in his boat when the sad accident&#13;
occured. In some way his&#13;
gun exploded, shooting a hole in&#13;
the canoe, Immediately the boat&#13;
began to fill with water. The&#13;
doomed man cried alond for help,&#13;
but it is thought that the weight&#13;
of his shell jacket and water filled&#13;
boota palled him down. At the&#13;
last his heart failed him, as the&#13;
coroner's inquest revealed the&#13;
fact that his lungs were not filled&#13;
with water. Howard was married&#13;
in May, 1912, to Miss Lncile&#13;
Tooley. The young people were&#13;
popular iu Howell society and&#13;
deep sympathy is extended to the&#13;
girl widow, bereft, after one short&#13;
year of happy married life. Besides&#13;
this wife there remains to&#13;
mourn his loss, his father, mother,&#13;
grandmother, several brothers and&#13;
one sister,&#13;
Fay your bubscriptlon this month.&#13;
Mrs. Guy Teeple Bpent one day&#13;
last week in Howell.&#13;
A meat famine is near and the&#13;
vegetarians should worry.&#13;
Mable Smith is visiting relatives&#13;
in Detroit this week.&#13;
John VanHorn transacted busings&#13;
in Howell last Thursday.&#13;
Miss Catherine Howard spent&#13;
last Thursday in Ann Arbor.&#13;
New lot of boy's overcoats at&#13;
Dancers. $4. to $10. adv.&#13;
H. W. Crofoot and wife were&#13;
Howell visitors last Thursday.&#13;
Jas. Tiplady Jr. of Detroit was&#13;
an over Sunday guest of relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
E. E. Hoyt made a business&#13;
trip to Stockbriige last Wednesday.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Manska was called&#13;
to Armada Saturday by the illness&#13;
of her mother.&#13;
Preston Packard of Wayne was&#13;
an over Sunday guest at the home&#13;
of Thos. Read.&#13;
R. H. Teeple of Manistique&#13;
visited relatives here last Thursday&#13;
and Friday.&#13;
Miss Lula Benham spent the&#13;
week end with her parents in&#13;
North Hamburg.&#13;
If it's a blue serge suit you want&#13;
—see Dancer's fall showing. $10.&#13;
to $25. All pure wool. adv.&#13;
A girl never accuses the "right&#13;
young man" of petty larceny when&#13;
he tries to steal a kiss, No never.&#13;
Miss Margaret Bradley of Lansing&#13;
was an over Sunday visitor&#13;
at the home of Dr. H. F, Sigler.&#13;
If you are contemplating holding&#13;
an auction why not get your&#13;
bills printed at the Dispatch office?&#13;
The trouble with some men is&#13;
that they never learn how little&#13;
they know until it is too late to&#13;
learn anything else.&#13;
About twenty-five couple were&#13;
in attendance at the dancing party&#13;
at the opera house last Friday&#13;
evening. A gooil time was reported&#13;
by all.&#13;
The Pinckney Literary club&#13;
will meet at the home of Miss&#13;
Kate Brown, Wednesday evening,&#13;
November 5th, at 6:30 o'clock&#13;
standard time. Leader, Miss Kate&#13;
Brown.&#13;
Rev. E. S. Lyons, a Methodist&#13;
Missionary from the Philippine&#13;
Islands will speak on tho people&#13;
and conditions in the Islands, at&#13;
the Pinckney M. E. church, Saturday,&#13;
Nov. 1st, at eight p'clock,&#13;
Everyone is invited to hear him.&#13;
Secretary Newman is unable to&#13;
give an exact statement of the fair&#13;
on account of a few little matters&#13;
yet to be adjusted, the books on&#13;
Wednesday showed the reeeipts to&#13;
have been the largest ever received,&#13;
the total being $4,785.03 and&#13;
the disbursements $3,682.28 making&#13;
the net balance $1,102.75.—&#13;
Fowlerville Review,&#13;
It is alleged, rumored, reported&#13;
and stated by those who are in a&#13;
position to speak with authority&#13;
that the tango is being danced in&#13;
the servant's hall at Buckingham&#13;
Palace. What effect this news&#13;
will have on the dancing customs&#13;
of the English-speaking world is&#13;
of course problematical.&#13;
Munith suffered a severe loss of&#13;
fire last Monday night, when nine&#13;
business places were wiped out.&#13;
The fire is thought to have started&#13;
from a gasoline lamp, and so&#13;
quickly did the flame spread it&#13;
was beyond control in a f e w&#13;
minutes* A call was sent to Leslie,&#13;
Jackson and Qtookbridge who responded&#13;
promptly. ; The town WAS&#13;
without water pressure/and a&#13;
brigade was the only means in&#13;
fighting it. The two'banis Were&#13;
burned. The loss&#13;
the thousands of dollars r&#13;
A&#13;
0J9&#13;
I Pi&#13;
Highest Quality; [ t a t a f e -&#13;
This cool weather reminds everyone of&#13;
winter wear and we wish t o call your&#13;
attention t o the fact t h a t we have a fine&#13;
line of&#13;
Mens Furnishings&#13;
Including H a t s and Caps, Gloves a n d&#13;
Mittens, Trousers, Wool Shirts a n d&#13;
Sweaters, Underwear and Hosiery, E t c .&#13;
in readiness for your inspection.&#13;
r Everything Fresh&#13;
in Groceries, Candies a n d Cigars,&#13;
Sealshipt Oysters, B u t t e r K r u s t Bread,&#13;
Addison Cheese and a Targe assortment&#13;
of National Biscuit Co's. Goods always&#13;
on hand.&#13;
Will duplicate competition prices for&#13;
Saturday&#13;
MONKS BROTHERS&#13;
P r o m p t Delivery Phone No. 38&#13;
TiaUiuiiiiiiUuiiuauumiiuii^uiUmuiiumiiuuii^aiiuuR&#13;
M H H n U H U H V H U H H H H H V M m H H H H V H H H H H H V H H V H U&#13;
Important Notice!&#13;
October will bring to us great need&#13;
of MONEY which will require all&#13;
that have unpaid accounts and&#13;
notes due to see us promptly.&#13;
Thanking all for the liberal patronage,&#13;
we respectfully ask all to&#13;
call and see us.&#13;
Teepje H a r d w a r e C o r n P a n y&#13;
Pinckney, IMicIt.&#13;
HEAR Y B HBAR Y B&#13;
The Pinckney mills are making a flour that is second to&#13;
none on the market, and is as cheap as you can buy any&#13;
good flour. Why not try a sack?&#13;
We would be pleased to have all who have&#13;
accounts with us to call and straighten&#13;
them as we have to pay cash for everything we get and&#13;
can't do it without the cash.&#13;
T H E H O Y T BROS.&#13;
WANTED!&#13;
POULTRY, EGGS AND VEAL&#13;
Will pay the highest market price at all times.&#13;
Call us up before you sell. Bell phone No. 74 5 J O H N DIIMKELJ&#13;
S C S S B I&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative Banking&#13;
Business. i&#13;
3 p e r c e n t&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
P i n c k n e y&#13;
G. w . TEEPLE&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Prop&#13;
Try a Advertisement in the Digpatcfr&#13;
ARE YOU AWAKE&#13;
to the fact that your boy is growing&#13;
Eesterday—Just a little fellow:*&#13;
Today—A big boy.&#13;
Tomorrow—A man.&#13;
Today you are sorry you haven't a&#13;
photograph of him as he looked&#13;
yesterday. — Tomorrow you ;#ill&#13;
value the one you have today,';&#13;
Don't put it off. :.j&#13;
DaisieB. Chapell&#13;
Stockbpidge, Michigan&#13;
Finds Cure for Epilepsy&#13;
After Years of Suffering&#13;
"My daughter was afflicted with&#13;
epileptic fits for three years, the attack*&#13;
coming every few weeks. We employed&#13;
several doctors but they did her no&#13;
good. About «&#13;
year a g o " w e&#13;
h e a r d of Dr.'&#13;
Miles' Nervine,&#13;
and It certainly;&#13;
h a s proved a&#13;
blessing to our&#13;
little girl. She 1«&#13;
n o w apparently&#13;
cured and la enjoying&#13;
the best&#13;
of health. It 1»&#13;
over a year sinoe&#13;
she has had a&#13;
fit. We cannot&#13;
speak too highly,&#13;
of Dr. Miles' Nervine."&#13;
MRS. FRANK ANDBRSON, }&#13;
Comfrey,; Mintt.&#13;
Thousands of children; in the&#13;
United States who are suffering&#13;
from attacks of epilepsy ;are a&#13;
burden and sorrow to their parents,&#13;
who would give anything to restore&#13;
health to the sufferers.&#13;
Dr. Miles' Nervine .&#13;
is one of the -heat remedies known&#13;
for this affliction. It has prdven&#13;
beneficial in thousands of cases&#13;
and those who have used it have&#13;
the greatest faith in it. It is not&#13;
a "cure-all," but a reliable remedy&#13;
for nervous diseases. You need&#13;
not hesitate to*give it a trial.&#13;
Sold by all Druggists. I f t h t flrtf&#13;
bottle falls to benefit your money Is&#13;
returned! - ' #&#13;
MILES MEDICAL OO., Elkhart, Ins).&#13;
r W i 'r^ ^vi^&#13;
!~J»JW '• 'U^H|PL.- TT;.&#13;
,. WW- a^r^w*-*-**,- tA \ . ^.s-fSXji^.^ - •1,1 •' lit&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Hot&#13;
Fountain&#13;
N O W O P E N&#13;
Hot Chocolate&#13;
Hot Coffee&#13;
Beef Tea&#13;
5c Tomato Boullion&#13;
5c Chicken Boullion&#13;
5c - Celery Boullion&#13;
E T C ? .&#13;
DC&#13;
5c&#13;
5c&#13;
§ MEYER'S DRUG STORE 1&#13;
£j T h e l \ y a l S t o r e ^&#13;
% Pinckney, Mich. 3&#13;
fc Drugs, Wall Paper, Crockery, Ci&amp;ars, Candy, Magazines, ^S&#13;
^- School Supplies, Book* [ 3&#13;
DAVID STOTT&#13;
Guarantees&#13;
1L0J&#13;
f|,P&#13;
Your Grocer Will Endorse&#13;
This Guarantee&#13;
He'll tell you that if for any reason you are not entirely&#13;
satisfied with the Stott Flours purchased from him, he&#13;
will take back the flour and refund the money without a&#13;
question. David Stott authorizes every Grocer to follow&#13;
this policy.&#13;
The reason for this unqualified guarantee is the fact that&#13;
we know the superior quality of Columbus Flour. It is&#13;
the result of the most careful selection of the very choicest&#13;
grades of wheat and the scientific milling of it.&#13;
Columbus Flour is an all-purpose flour. You're just as&#13;
sure of crisp, delicate pie crusts, fancy cakes, etc. as you&#13;
are of Bigger, Sweeter and Whiter loaves of bread.&#13;
Add Columbus Flour To Your Order Today&#13;
DAVID STOTT, MUler, Detroit, Mich.&#13;
Monks Brothers, Pinckney&#13;
Aypault 6e Bollinger, Gregory&#13;
¥.;s&#13;
Tz ar&#13;
Coffee&#13;
In This&#13;
Package Only&#13;
THia package contain* the&#13;
Coffee (or your breakfast&#13;
When you have used one package of Tzar Coffee you'll be to completely&#13;
won over by it* rich* smooth flavor that no other coffee will do.&#13;
Tzar Coffee has been on the market for years—the quality is uniform—&#13;
you can depend on the same satisfaction in each package. Tzar Coffea&#13;
costs 33c * pound. If you've been using a different price coffee, try one of&#13;
these.&#13;
Nero . . . 30c&#13;
Marigold • - 32c&#13;
Pleasant Valley . - 40c&#13;
Pleasant Valley Teat are distinctly Hi ;h Grade but not high&#13;
priced. SOe • 60c * 80c a pound. Order today.&#13;
R0-VA££0 i _n&#13;
at 35c.—T*y it with • conv«8i«&#13;
tit Tricolator. .&#13;
u a sMciil&#13;
Cut Ctff-p&#13;
W&amp;&amp; Murphy &amp; J a c k s o n , Pirrckney&#13;
Ayraulf 6« Bollinger, Gregory&#13;
'^';''. &gt;'^'v ' v &gt; ^ ' ^&#13;
Sale Bills Printed at the&#13;
[Dispatch Office at Right&#13;
w &gt; •».:&#13;
t* v Prices.&#13;
South Marion&#13;
I. J. Abbott and wife were&#13;
visitors at the home of Wm. Caskey&#13;
last" Wednesday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. La Verne Demerest&#13;
and Lucille were over Sunday&#13;
guests at Mark Allison's of&#13;
Fowlerville.&#13;
Mrs. V. G. Dinkle v i s i t e d&#13;
Pinckney friends Sunday.&#13;
Ona Campbell spent Sunday&#13;
with Irving Campbell and family.&#13;
The Misses Mae and Kit Brogan&#13;
of Howell and Paul Brogan of&#13;
Chiison spent the last of last week&#13;
at Chris Brogau's.&#13;
Chas. Dey and family were&#13;
Fowlerville visitors Sunday.&#13;
Clyde Line and family were&#13;
Howell shoppers Saturday.&#13;
Tile Family Cough Medicine&#13;
In every home there should be a&#13;
bottle of I)i*. King's New Discovery,&#13;
ready lor immediate use when any&#13;
member of the family contracts a cold&#13;
or a cough. Prompt use will stop the&#13;
spread of sickness. S. A. Stid, of&#13;
Mason, Mich., writes: "My wbole&#13;
family depends upon Dr. King's New&#13;
Discovery as the best cough aad cold&#13;
medicine in the world. Two 50c.&#13;
bottles cured me of pneumonia.''&#13;
Thousands of other families have been&#13;
equally benefited and depend entirely&#13;
upoa.Dr... King's New Discovery to&#13;
cure their coughs, colds, thoat and&#13;
lung toables. Every dose helps.&#13;
Price 50c. and $1 00 at Meyer's Drug&#13;
Store.&#13;
West Marion&#13;
The LT A. Society will meet&#13;
the second Thursday in November&#13;
at the home of Mrs. Henry Love.&#13;
Quarterly meeting will be&#13;
held at Plainfield November 1-2.&#13;
Miss Mirtie Wellman spent&#13;
Sunday at the home of Ruth and&#13;
Rettie Collins.&#13;
Mrs. E. Catrell and Mrs. Steveson&#13;
took dinner at the home of&#13;
Mrs. W. B. Miller Friday.&#13;
Mrs. W. Bland and niece were&#13;
guests of Mrs. P. H. Smith the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
Henry Collins visited h i a&#13;
brother and sisters at the home of&#13;
VV. H. Plummer Sunday,&#13;
Henry Smith and wife are visiting&#13;
at the home of their daughter&#13;
in Cohoctah.&#13;
Mrs. Backus entertained her&#13;
mother, Mrs. Secord, of Iosco last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Rockwood returned home&#13;
Friday after a three weeks visit&#13;
with friends at Plainfield, Jackson&#13;
and Unadilla.&#13;
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that&#13;
Contain .Uercury.&#13;
as mercury /71U surely destroy the&#13;
sense of smell and completely derange&#13;
the wbole system when entering it&#13;
through the mucus surfaces. Such articles&#13;
should never be used except on pre&#13;
scriptions from reputable physicians,&#13;
as the damage they do is ten fold to&#13;
the good you can possibly derive from&#13;
them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured&#13;
by F J Cheney &amp; Co, Toledo,&#13;
0. contains no mercury, and is taken&#13;
internally acting directly upon the&#13;
bk&gt;od and mucus surfaces of the&#13;
system. In buying Hall's Catarrh&#13;
Cure be sure you get the genuine. It&#13;
is taken internally and made in Toledo&#13;
Ohio, by P J Cheney &lt;fe Co., Testimonials&#13;
free. Sold by Druggists.&#13;
Price 75c. per bottle. Take Hall's&#13;
Family pills for constipation&#13;
LIFE AND LIVING&#13;
We reduce life to the pettiness&#13;
of our daily living. We should&#13;
exalt our living to the grandeur of&#13;
hfe-Phillip. Brooks.&#13;
Women Who Get Dizzy&#13;
Every women who is troubled with&#13;
tainting and dizzy spells, backache,&#13;
headache, weakness, debility, constipation&#13;
or kidney troubles should use&#13;
Electric Bitters. They give relief when&#13;
nothing else will, improve the health,&#13;
adding strength and vigor from the&#13;
hist dose. Mrs Laura Gaines, of&#13;
Avoca. La., says: "Four debtors bad&#13;
given me up and my children and all&#13;
my friends were looking for me to die&#13;
when my ton insisted that tute Electric&#13;
Bitters. I did so, and they hare&#13;
done me a world of good." Just try&#13;
them. 60c, aad $1.00. Recommended&#13;
by C, G. Meyer the druggist.&#13;
OX&#13;
S" O.R&#13;
upday, November 1,1913&#13;
Ladies 25c Hosiery, the Black Cat kind, per pair .10c&#13;
Childrens 15c Stockings, Black Cat kind, per pair _ 10c&#13;
Best Outing Fluunel__ _ _ 9c&#13;
Best Raisins 9c&#13;
Two 5c Cans Baking Powder „&#13;
l i b . Soda „ _ _.._&#13;
fcgrWill Meet All Prices on Sugar&#13;
A L L S A L E S C A S H&#13;
5c&#13;
i! W. WP r o.d uBc eA ARVanNtedAL RD&#13;
avorite se Burner&#13;
e &lt;sooner&#13;
OU do aTO&#13;
he trooner&#13;
Mr Coal Sills&#13;
111 (Shrinks&#13;
Pretty soon the leaves will begin to&#13;
turn scarlet and yellow and brown.&#13;
The cold days are coming---are you ready for&#13;
them?&#13;
It's not too early to plan for heating during&#13;
the cold months. You'll probably need a new&#13;
stove---and you want the best one.&#13;
You can have every&#13;
room in your home&#13;
warm and comfortable&#13;
day and night&#13;
this winter---and&#13;
with less e x p e n s e&#13;
than you paid last&#13;
year for h e a t i n g&#13;
one or two rooms---&#13;
if you buy a Favorite&#13;
Base Burner.&#13;
The Favorite is the&#13;
only base burner&#13;
that pours heat into&#13;
the house from&#13;
every square inch of its&#13;
surface. Every nook and corner—upstairs and down&#13;
—may be luxuriously and evenly warmed with a&#13;
Favorite.&#13;
^ S S ^ y You cannot afford to buy a stove without&#13;
investigating the Favorite. Come and see&#13;
us now, and we will show you why the base burner&#13;
that bears this mark will throw out more heat, and&#13;
consume about half as much fuel as other makes.&#13;
'••*»««••*• y v*-"*'*"" » - " ~ ' -**»&gt;"W .tfj.-. .,. ,,».:» v—» ^ . - ~ ~ ~ • * * * ? » - *..*,. -^6-, :.^-. - *iUW.«Si JSttWTiBBZ&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
tmmmmm&#13;
TheMUGHTERoJ&#13;
DAVID KERR&#13;
AJJ HSLTT^ KinJ Tboile&#13;
lVlus£rafions W 7t^/ WUT-zr^&#13;
COPYRIGHT BY A.C.K9CU1KC £&lt; CO., »913&#13;
8YNOP8IS.&#13;
•Gloria K e r r , a mother!* SH girl, who h a s&#13;
s p e n t most of her life In school, arrives&#13;
at her father' s home In Belmont. David&#13;
K o r r Is thu political buss uf the town,&#13;
and Is anxious to prevt-nt his duutfhter&#13;
l e a r n i n g of his real c h a r a c t e r . Kendall,&#13;
representing the Chicago packers, Is negotiating&#13;
with Judge Gilbert, K e r r ' s chief&#13;
adviser, for a valuable franchise. They&#13;
fear the opposition of Joe Wright, editor&#13;
of the reform paper. Kerr asks the assistance&#13;
of Judge Gilbert in Introducing&#13;
Gloria to Belmont society, a n d promises&#13;
to help him put t h r o u g h the packers'&#13;
franchise and let him have all the graft.&#13;
Gloria m t e t s Joe Wright a t the Gilberts.&#13;
It a p p e a r s they a r e on Intimate terms,&#13;
h a v i n g met previously In a touring party&#13;
in Europe, Gloria twits W r i g h t on his&#13;
failure to keep an engagement to meet&#13;
her in Paris. He explains t h a t the death&#13;
of his mother prevented his going to&#13;
P a r i s . The Gilberts invite Gloria to stay&#13;
with them pending the refurnishing of the&#13;
K e r r home. One society bud who refused&#13;
to meet Gloria Is forced to do so when&#13;
her father is made to feel K e r r ' s power.&#13;
Wright begins his fight against the proposed&#13;
franchise in the columns of his paper,&#13;
the Belmont News.&#13;
CHAPTER IX.&#13;
The story Wright had printed the&#13;
first day and the reply it drew from&#13;
the Banner the next morning caused&#13;
the News to be awaited with undisguised&#13;
eagerness on the second afternoon.&#13;
This was heightened on the&#13;
part of the men in the syndicate in-&#13;
. terested in the franchise by the pertinent&#13;
questions put to them in the&#13;
morning by News reporters. D^vid&#13;
Kerr was called on the telephone half&#13;
a dozen times by his lieutenants, and&#13;
arrangements wore made to have a&#13;
line open to Esmeralda Springs at&#13;
three-thirty, the hour when the News&#13;
was issued.&#13;
Although they were prepared to discount&#13;
some of the story because of&#13;
the questions asked them, yet none of&#13;
the ring men was prepared for a revelation&#13;
of the scheme such as Ute News&#13;
made. Black headlines ran across&#13;
four columns and the story also look&#13;
up most of the second page. There&#13;
was a map of the proposed tnterurban&#13;
route, and pictures of pretty homes on&#13;
Maple Avenue. But from one end of&#13;
the story to the other there was no&#13;
mention of David Kerr or of the local&#13;
backing being given the bill before&#13;
the council, It was expressly slated&#13;
that the incorporators of the new company&#13;
were merely dummies and that&#13;
they were acting in the interest of the&#13;
stock-yards company.&#13;
Amos Gilbert in an interview denied&#13;
any knowledge of the transaction, saying&#13;
that his connection with the nt.ockyards&#13;
company was merely nominal&#13;
and that he did not even know if the&#13;
company was interested in the line&#13;
proposed. He did not see how, as a&#13;
company, it could be.&#13;
Gilbert sat in his office as soon .is he&#13;
secured a paper and read the story&#13;
word for word over the telephone to&#13;
Kerr. The latter promptly announced&#13;
that he would be home the next day.&#13;
and ordered that Gloria be taken from&#13;
Belmont on any pretext whatever for&#13;
a few days until the fight had been&#13;
allowed to die down. The next day&#13;
was Sunday, on which Wright published&#13;
no paper, and Kerr would be&#13;
home before another issued appeared.&#13;
He agreed with Gilbert that the Banner&#13;
ought to ridicule the alleged expose.&#13;
Sunday night, much to her surprise&#13;
b u f n o t much against her will, Gloria&#13;
went to St. Louis with Mrs. Gilbert to&#13;
pick out furniture for Locust Lawn.&#13;
She did not know that her father had&#13;
returned from Esmeralda Springs that&#13;
morning and had been closeted all afternoon&#13;
with Gilbert and John Kendall,&#13;
who had hurried to Belmont in&#13;
response to a telegram. The girl had&#13;
not Been Wright all day, nor had she&#13;
seen^him Saturday, but £here came&#13;
from him a box of roses at noon.&#13;
Little witch that she was, she meant&#13;
to surprise him hy sending him a note&#13;
of thanks from St. Louis. She knew&#13;
he would join her and Mrs. Gilbert&#13;
there on her hint that they would be&#13;
glad to see him.&#13;
Wright received her note and perceived&#13;
the slightly veiled invitation,&#13;
but he waB too busy even to answer.&#13;
It was a week that contained more excitement&#13;
than Belmont had seen since,&#13;
a frontier Tillage, it had struggled&#13;
with the question of whether the state&#13;
should secede or remain In the Union.&#13;
David Kerr found himself confronted&#13;
by a formidable line of battle. The&#13;
Banner kept pounding away at the&#13;
Newt, but the afternoon paper was&#13;
not to be diverted from Its purpose.&#13;
The citizens on Maple Avenue formed&#13;
the Maple League, and wore buttons&#13;
on which were a maple leaf and the&#13;
legend, "Help us save our homes."&#13;
The car line was to run through the&#13;
seventh and eighth wards, and the&#13;
aldermen in those wards were deluged&#13;
with letters, post cards, telephone&#13;
calls and personal visits. Finally&#13;
they went to David Kerr and&#13;
begged him that if he had enough&#13;
votes without them to let them oppose&#13;
the franchise as they were In the&#13;
midst of their canvass for re-election.&#13;
The boss held them in line.&#13;
The bill had its second reading at&#13;
the council meeting Tuesday, but un&#13;
der orders from Kerr nothing further&#13;
was done with it at that time. He began&#13;
to worry about the approaching&#13;
election. What to him was the passing&#13;
of the bill at that time compared&#13;
to the control of the city for the next&#13;
two years? If he let It sleep now&#13;
and the election went his way then it&#13;
could be passed eoon after. By the&#13;
time another election rolled around,&#13;
Belmont would have forgotten.&#13;
So U came about that the Kerr adherents&#13;
tried to forget the franchise.&#13;
When the bill disappeared they were&#13;
loud in their denunciation bf the opposition&#13;
thieves who had stolen it.&#13;
With this outburst they were willing&#13;
to subside and forget the matter, but&#13;
this the News would not permit.&#13;
Wright kept it to the front and they&#13;
were forced to accept it as~~ah Issue.&#13;
The continuous attitude bf apology&#13;
necessitated by this WAS Weakening&#13;
them every day. The independent&#13;
wave which had been sweeping over&#13;
the country had been late in striking&#13;
Belmont, there having been no newspaper&#13;
to marshal the forces, but now&#13;
it was increasing to the volume of a&#13;
tidal wave which Kerr would have&#13;
hard work pouring oil upon.&#13;
The editor of the News recogulzed&#13;
that it was only a Pyrrhic victory he&#13;
had won by securing the shelvibg of&#13;
the franchise for the present. He was&#13;
not blind to the fact that the franchise&#13;
would bob up serenely after election.&#13;
Now that he had aroused the&#13;
town and had committed himself to a&#13;
fight against the ring, he determined&#13;
to carry it on. It had not been his&#13;
purpose, before the franchise bill had&#13;
drawn his fire, to enter with -great&#13;
her.t into the coming election campaign,&#13;
but he saw that the impetus&#13;
given the opponents of the machine&#13;
would carry them well on toward victory&#13;
at the polls. Carrying the election&#13;
would be a great advertisement&#13;
for the paper. If it lost, the News&#13;
could not be any worse off than it waB&#13;
now.&#13;
Kerr forgot none of the precautions&#13;
he had taken in being prepared to embarrass&#13;
Wright In his work if the occasion&#13;
should arise. The merchants&#13;
who, through Kerr's Influence, had patronized&#13;
the News, suddenly withdrew&#13;
their advertising. Many who had been&#13;
in before the paper had changed hands&#13;
now ceased to use Its columns. If a&#13;
store was using the News and furnishing&#13;
supplies to the workhouse 01 the&#13;
jail, it faced the alternative of '.osing&#13;
a fat account or confining its advertising&#13;
to the Banner. The proprietor,&#13;
bring part of the machine, else nothing&#13;
would ever have been purchased&#13;
from him for the city's use, promptly&#13;
gave up the News. It was the same&#13;
with meat markets. Other lines of&#13;
business were approached in other&#13;
ways, but the result was always the&#13;
same—a loss of advertising revenue&#13;
to the News. Even the railroads »vere&#13;
derelict in delivering his white paper,&#13;
and Wright spent many an anxious&#13;
hour tracing cars from the mill to&#13;
find them lost in the Belmont yardB.&#13;
One valuable source of information&#13;
was developed by the News in a former&#13;
machine hanger-on named Jack&#13;
Durken. He came to work in the circulation&#13;
department of the paper, and&#13;
Wright first heard of him through the&#13;
circulation manager. At Wright's request&#13;
the man came to his office and&#13;
from his story the editor gathered&#13;
that he had not received fair treatment&#13;
at the hands of the other gangsters.&#13;
He had lived in the disreputable&#13;
first ward, and had had trouble&#13;
with Mike Noohan, a ward leader.&#13;
For hiB work he had been made a&#13;
street cleaning inspector, but after&#13;
having incurred the ire of Noonan had&#13;
lost his job.&#13;
Nothing the enemy did was able&#13;
to keep Wright from publishing a paper&#13;
every day. Every issue was a&#13;
constant reminder to Belmont that&#13;
things were not as they should be and&#13;
that the way to remedy conditions was&#13;
to defeat the city machine at the polls.&#13;
The editor spent all his daylight hours&#13;
at his office, and often was there until&#13;
late in the night In conference with&#13;
various leaders. The opponents of&#13;
Kerr had some old scores to" settle,&#13;
and this was their chance. The postmaster&#13;
was usually to be found on&#13;
Kerr's side, although under cover, but&#13;
this time He could not afford to use&#13;
his influence for his party in city af*&#13;
fairs—even for a consideration,. T^e&#13;
boss knew the game too well"tb press&#13;
him.&#13;
In the last days of the campaign the&#13;
antl-Kerr leaders learned with surprise&#13;
that Senator McMinitry, their&#13;
state boss, was coming to Belmont for&#13;
a day. They had not Bent for him,&#13;
and were at a loss to account for th#&#13;
visit. He had not taken any one into&#13;
his confidence, merely saying ho was&#13;
coming on business. Why he should&#13;
Journey from Washington to Belmont&#13;
for so short a stay they could not understand.&#13;
He gave it out that he was&#13;
making a flying visit to his home, but&#13;
he came Straight to Belmont. Only&#13;
two men besides the senator knew his&#13;
mission, the emissary who carried the&#13;
message to Washington and the man&#13;
who sent for him. David Kerr wanted&#13;
to see him.&#13;
It was only three days before election&#13;
when 8enator McMinitry vinited&#13;
Belmont. He went to the Hotel Belmont&#13;
and took a suite of rooms, but&#13;
did not register. After talking to David&#13;
Kerr over the telephone, he ordered&#13;
ah early luncheon for two served&#13;
in his private parlor. Kerr arrived&#13;
before the table was spread and immediately&#13;
began to explain the situation.&#13;
AH through the meai the two&#13;
men talked, McMinitry questioning&#13;
and Kerr explaining.&#13;
Practical politics was the business&#13;
of Senator James McMinitry just as&#13;
it was bf Mr. David Kerr. Jim Mc-&#13;
Minitry liked tb pose before the pub&#13;
lie and to make flamboyant speeches&#13;
Kerr preferred tb sit in his dingy real&#13;
estate office and pull the strings that&#13;
toade the puppetB dance. To him&#13;
speech making and posing were like&#13;
the tinsel oh a drum major's uniform&#13;
He Cared only for power, it was irn&#13;
material to him hdw gaudy glory was&#13;
apportioned. .._.&#13;
"It iooks like he's got you in bad.&#13;
Dave/' said the senator. "I don't see&#13;
how \ bah help you this trip."&#13;
Kerr slowiy set down his glass of&#13;
water and straightened up in his&#13;
chair, for he knew that the deal was&#13;
nq,w under way. He had played fair&#13;
with Jim McMinitry and told him just&#13;
the exact situation.&#13;
"Lots o' things can happen, Jim.&#13;
I've decided to get his paper, but I&#13;
need votes. It's too close to election.&#13;
Yon ain't going to let him play you&#13;
for a sucker. We've got to clean him.&#13;
or he'll turn on you just as he has&#13;
on mo,"'&#13;
"I guess I ought to wait till he&#13;
does," was the cautious response.&#13;
"I've got enough troubles without going&#13;
out and lassoing a young grizzly&#13;
bear."&#13;
"He ain't got no party," urged Kerr,&#13;
"and you know how it happens in&#13;
them towns where such a paper gits&#13;
a start. He's got these fools in Bel&#13;
mont believing he's George Washington&#13;
come to life again."&#13;
"I'm sorry for you, Dave, but honestly&#13;
I don't see where I can help&#13;
out any. It would give me too black&#13;
an eye, because the boys here have&#13;
set their hearts on winning this time."&#13;
Kerr saw that McMinitry was fore&#13;
ing his hand, and he decided to approach&#13;
the situation from another&#13;
side.&#13;
"The next legislature '11 elect your&#13;
successor," he suggested.&#13;
"I'm going to be my own successor,"&#13;
asserted the senator.&#13;
"It's going to be a hot fight," continued&#13;
Kerr, unmindful of MeMinitry's&#13;
remark. "The state will swing&#13;
A Former Machine Hangar-on Named&#13;
Jack Ourken.&#13;
back to our party, but nobody knows&#13;
how/the legislature '11 be on joint bal&#13;
lot^&#13;
"It's going to be for me if I can&#13;
have anything to say about it."&#13;
"Well, you don't seem to be going&#13;
about it very actively," retorted Kerr&#13;
with the nearest approach to sarcasm&#13;
he permitted himself during the interview.&#13;
"Even if the legislature is controlled&#13;
by your party, you've got o&#13;
fight on your hands. There's Congressman&#13;
Jenklnson and old man Graham&#13;
down in Washington County.&#13;
He's almost as strong as you are. and&#13;
his part of the state ain't had no rec&#13;
ognition for a long time."&#13;
' McMinitry did not answer at once.&#13;
He* got np from the table and walked&#13;
to the window. When at last hr&#13;
turned to Kerr the question had b;&gt;er&#13;
gone over thoroughly in his mind&#13;
•'Well, Dave," he asked with a eniiie,&#13;
"what's the answer?"&#13;
"You've got to knife your ticket,&#13;
so's these fool reformers can't carry&#13;
Belmont."&#13;
"What'd I get out of it?" drawled&#13;
out the senator.&#13;
"Seven votes in the house and two&#13;
in the Benate."&#13;
Again the apostle of practical politics&#13;
sat back and took stock of the&#13;
situation. Belmont was nothing to&#13;
him. It mattered nothing at all to&#13;
him how the town went as far as city&#13;
affairs were concerned. Nine votes&#13;
were not to be despised. He was cautious,&#13;
however, and wanted particulars.&#13;
"How you going to deliver?" he&#13;
asked.&#13;
"We've got that many to run this&#13;
fall and i'll let the opposition have it&#13;
their own way. Name your men now&#13;
if you want to."&#13;
"That many's bound to make the&#13;
legislature ours on joint ballot."&#13;
Korr knew this, but he was quite&#13;
willing to change the political complexion&#13;
of the legislature of a great&#13;
state, perhaps hamper the governnor&#13;
in wise and necessary legislation and&#13;
keep the state from having a senator&#13;
of its own choice, all to hold Belmont&#13;
for his own. McMinitry was no less&#13;
willing to change victory into defeat&#13;
and hand the city over to the j/apacity&#13;
of the Interurban Railway Company,&#13;
only to retain his senatorial office.&#13;
"All right," he consented, "but&#13;
you've got to do two things: take&#13;
care of some of the boys and muzzle&#13;
the News. I can't have that paper&#13;
making trouble for me."&#13;
"I'll take care of the boys all right,&#13;
and I've told you what I'm going to&#13;
do—I'm going to buy the News."&#13;
"Can you?" ._ -&#13;
"I've got to have it, and I don't care&#13;
how, but it's got to be mine."&#13;
"Got any idea?" asked the senator.&#13;
"No, but every man's got his price,&#13;
Jim, in some form or other." If he&#13;
had time for reflection, David Kerr&#13;
would have enjoyed this remark, since&#13;
it was given a humorous turn by the&#13;
fact that he had just discovered the&#13;
price of the junior senator from his&#13;
own state.&#13;
"I'll go up to the postofflce and call&#13;
on some of the boys," said McMinitry&#13;
as Kerr rose to go. "I'll have to tell&#13;
Davidson and Peake. When you get&#13;
word to them that the News is friendly,&#13;
they'll pass the word along. You've&#13;
got three days; that ought to be&#13;
plenty of time, but you must have the&#13;
paper or the1 deal's off. Who'll take&#13;
it?"&#13;
"I don't know yet who we'll get to&#13;
take it."&#13;
"I'll take it."&#13;
'Not much," Kerr replied grimly.&#13;
"I'm going to put it where it 'Von't&#13;
be no more trouble to me, and it's going&#13;
to be run fronvmy office."&#13;
Less Drinking, by College Boys. '-&#13;
Drinking is on the decrease at Cornell—&#13;
which is a significant argumtartt&#13;
against it. According to a wellkhowli&#13;
professor, a graduate himself and a&#13;
man who keeps informed on undergraduate&#13;
matters, there is only onequarter&#13;
of the drinking among Oorneilians&#13;
now that there was ten years ago.&#13;
That is encouraging, but there is still&#13;
too much.—Cornell Sun.&#13;
ECZEMA ON BACK AND CHEST&#13;
Pierson, N. Dakota.—"The eca&#13;
started on my scalp. It finally&#13;
on to the back of ray neck, then oil I t&#13;
my back, arms and chest. It brake)&#13;
out in pimples first and then seemed&#13;
to run together in some places, making&#13;
a sore about the size of a dime.&#13;
At times the itching and burning were&#13;
80 intense that it seemed unbearable;&#13;
The more I scratched it the worse it&#13;
became, and there would be a slight&#13;
discharge from it, especially on my&#13;
scalp, so as to make my hair matted&#13;
and sticky close to the scalp. T h e ,&#13;
hair was dry, lifeless and thin. My&#13;
hair was falling so terrjbly that I had&#13;
begun to despair of ever finding relief.&#13;
My clothing irritated the eruj*&#13;
tion on my back. The affected parts&#13;
were almost a solid scab.&#13;
"I had been bothered with eczema&#13;
for about a year and a half. Then I&#13;
began using the Cuticura Soap and&#13;
Ointment. I used them daily for two&#13;
months and I was cured." (Signed)&#13;
Miss Mildred Dennis, Apr. 30, 1913.&#13;
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address postcard&#13;
"Cuticura, Dept L, Boston."—Adv.&#13;
Boredom of Perfection.&#13;
"Well, what was Prau Roth's afternoon&#13;
like yesterday?"&#13;
"The tea was good; the cakes delicious,&#13;
the tableclothes exquisite—in a&#13;
word, it bored me to tears."—Fliegende&#13;
Blaetter.&#13;
Red Cross Ball Blue, nil blue, best bluing&#13;
value in the whole world, makes the laundress&#13;
smile. Adv.&#13;
Naturally.&#13;
"How did that spirit exhibition&#13;
strike you?"&#13;
"It was only the ghoBt of a show."&#13;
Mrs.Winalow'a Soothing Syrup for Children&#13;
teething, softens the jrums, reduces,Inflammation,&#13;
alltvyH pain.eures windcoiic,25c&amp; bottleJKv&#13;
CHAPTER X.&#13;
When Gloria Kerr returned from&#13;
St. Louis she found half a hundred&#13;
calling cards awaiting her. The women&#13;
she was anxious to meet had called&#13;
while she was out of town. Those&#13;
who delayed their visits until her re&#13;
turn were people whom she readil;&#13;
recognized as being quite on the&#13;
outer fringe of society. In them she&#13;
was not interested. When Gloria went&#13;
to return the calls of those whom she&#13;
had come to know were regarded ap&#13;
the first families of Belmont, shf&#13;
found no one at home.&#13;
Somewhat mortified, but making nc&#13;
confession of her feelings even tc&#13;
Mrs. Gilbert, Gloria threw herself intr&#13;
the work of remodeling Locust Lawr&#13;
with all the vigor she wculd other&#13;
wise have expended upon social du&#13;
Mes. Her active superintendence kep'&#13;
her a good part of the time in tin&#13;
country, although ehe still mads he*&#13;
home with Mrs. Gilbert. Sometimes&#13;
she would pass the night at Locus&#13;
Lawn out of a sense of duty to hei&#13;
father. The evenings spent In hif&#13;
company were not ones of unalloyec&#13;
oleaeure. More and more she waf&#13;
i&#13;
coming to acknowledge to herself.tha'&#13;
her father did not, could not ente&#13;
into her life, into the activities &lt;\hicl&#13;
gave her pleasure.&#13;
Kerr honestly tried, but it was im&#13;
possible. For one thing, he was en&#13;
gaged in a heated political campaign&#13;
fighting to retain supremacy. Gloria&#13;
on her side, saw that she had beei&#13;
rebuffed socially, and was not on clost&#13;
enough terms of intimacy with he&#13;
father to tell him about it. The gir&#13;
knew that he had been the social leae&#13;
er in Belmont, and Ehe was asharaei&#13;
that she had not been able to win al&#13;
hearts as he had done&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
Even a lazy man will hustle when&#13;
he sees a chance to work an easy&#13;
mark.&#13;
Housework Is a Burden&#13;
It's hard enough to keep house if in&#13;
perfect health, but a womaa w h o is&#13;
weiiU, tired nnd suffering from an aching&#13;
back has a heavy burden.&#13;
Any woman in this condition has good&#13;
cause to suspect kidney trouble, especially&#13;
if the kidney action seems disordered.&#13;
Doan's Kidney Pills h*»ve c u r e d thousands&#13;
of suffering women. It's the best&#13;
r e c o m m e n d e d special kidney remedy.&#13;
"75 very Picture&#13;
Tells a&#13;
Start/."&#13;
AN OHIO CASE&#13;
Mrs. Salina Stealer,&#13;
1770 E. 33(5 St.,&#13;
Cleveland, O., says:&#13;
"I suffered f r o m&#13;
backache for a long&#13;
time, especially on&#13;
'wash day*. One day&#13;
I had to give up all&#13;
my work on account&#13;
of the (hooting&#13;
pains In my&#13;
back and shoulder*.&#13;
I had headaches and&#13;
dizzy spells and was&#13;
nervous. Finally, I&#13;
started taking Doan's Kidney PfTts and siaoe&#13;
I used two boxes 1 havenX suffered at all.0&#13;
Gal Doan's at Any Store, S0« a Bo* D O A N ' S V M V&#13;
FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N . Y .&#13;
Contradictory Termt.&#13;
An American visitor to Cambridgr&#13;
Fngland. sought explanation of som&#13;
unfamiliar terms, which a genial Do&gt;&#13;
was delighted to elucidate. " 'Fu!&#13;
term,'" he explained, "is three-qua'&#13;
ters of a term, and the 'May weeN&#13;
is the first fortnight in June. A du&#13;
of General admission is t*,e day o&#13;
which men leave the un'Versity. t\&#13;
ordinary degree is one conferred "&#13;
a special exam., and an inspector «&#13;
art Is one who i n s been an arts «•.&#13;
dent frr at least six years."&#13;
vhp-Yankee passed a hand acrr&#13;
I&gt;?i w*ary b: ow&#13;
"And will they." he queried, "r»'&#13;
me in the l^ndon train if 1 aak for :&#13;
ticket to Cambridge?"&#13;
The&#13;
World's Remedy&#13;
You make no risky experiment&#13;
when you use occasionally—&#13;
whenever there is need—the&#13;
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test of time with absolute sue*&#13;
cess and their world-wide fame&#13;
rests securely on proved merit.&#13;
V PIUS relieve the numerous ailment*&#13;
caused by defective action of&#13;
the stomach, liver, kidnt&#13;
and bowels, Cleansing 1&#13;
system, they purify tpe Bl&lt;&#13;
and tone body, brain and&#13;
nerves. Beecham's Pills act&#13;
quickly; they are always&#13;
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nay depend upon it tney&#13;
Wm Benefit Yoa SoU&#13;
i&#13;
«&#13;
*£&#13;
t&#13;
\&#13;
m m m m&#13;
r&#13;
V -&#13;
..--&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
'-'"*.&#13;
tin&#13;
:: li&#13;
Tiiin tfi ^ ^ ^ ., / , .&#13;
KSM'Mncav «-ih»..-'&#13;
•#*&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH M&#13;
r&#13;
.*&#13;
V&#13;
&gt;&#13;
^vW**-&#13;
« ' j "&#13;
IOCTORS DID&#13;
NOT HELP HER&#13;
But Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound Restored&#13;
Mrs. LeClear's Health—&#13;
Her Own Statement*&#13;
JaniahiHiiSi'-iJii;;:::;?&#13;
jiJiiye^^PaHsgS&#13;
wH ^ 1&#13;
Wm T ' * / / i f f *&#13;
P*n;:&#13;
§j|g&#13;
^ ^ ^ * U » ! T&#13;
tfw&#13;
Detroit, Mich. — " I am glad to discover&#13;
a remedy that relieves mo from&#13;
m y suffering a n d&#13;
pains. Fortwtfyear3&#13;
I suffered bearing&#13;
down pains and got&#13;
'«'1 run down. I was&#13;
under a n e r v o u s&#13;
strain and could not&#13;
sleep. at night. I&#13;
went to doctors here&#13;
in the city but they&#13;
did not do me any&#13;
good.&#13;
"SeeingLydia E.&#13;
Pink ham's Vegetable Compound advertised,&#13;
I tried i t My health improved&#13;
wonderfully and I am now quite well&#13;
again* No woman suffering from female&#13;
ills will regret it if she takes this&#13;
medicine."—Mrs. JAMES G. LECLEAR.&#13;
836 Hunt S t , Detroit, Mich.&#13;
A n o t h e r Case*&#13;
Philadelphia, Pa. —"Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound is all you&#13;
claim it to be. About two or three&#13;
days before my periods I would ^et bad&#13;
backaches, then pains in right and left&#13;
sides, and my head would ache. I called&#13;
the doctor and he said I had organic Inflammation.&#13;
I went to him for a while but&#13;
did not get well so I took Lydia E. Pinkbarn's&#13;
Vegetable Compound. After taking&#13;
two bottles I was relieved and finally&#13;
my troubles left me. I married and&#13;
have two little girls. I have had no return&#13;
of the old troubles. "—MrSi CHAS.&#13;
BOBLL, 2650 S. Chadwick S t , Phila.,Pa.&#13;
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Write for Free Booklet, containing&#13;
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Investigation of our cases will convince&#13;
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Call on or address&#13;
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Cut out cathartics and purgatives. They are&#13;
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Purely vegetable. Act&#13;
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Will reduce Inflamed, Strained,&#13;
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Side Boue or Bone Spavin. No&#13;
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ASSQRBINE, JR,, the antiseptic!linimentfor&#13;
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fc_ «, . , _ ,&#13;
- Dr. Naraun s Kidney Tablets&#13;
Believes quickly»11 Kiduey complaint* snch&#13;
asjAaekaehe, Rheumatism. Nenrousiieas.&#13;
•tu|&amp;esa&amp;tc. Tb«M»nd*6f sufferers hat*&#13;
MfeB eared by tbta remedy and if yon or any&#13;
member of your family are suffering from&#13;
Kidney aliment aend yoar name andad&gt;&#13;
dress on a postal for FBKE sample and one&#13;
booklet of teetimoalala and be convinced.&#13;
BOTANIC DRUG C O , Detroit, Mkk&#13;
IOLIHSAN" SUPPLIES w e and deal in Violins, Bows,Cauaa,&#13;
s*d do Repair In*. Established 1867.&#13;
g, lOChaatplainSt., Detroit, Mich.&#13;
!V, ; -,. •.:&#13;
, • &gt; ' • • : • • . ;&#13;
onlOalgns in bis letter*&#13;
ftea. Good pay fortaokand&#13;
address for partten*&#13;
M , P h l l a d e l p h U . P a .&#13;
I S l f l -Mr J f c X d«nTerT»nd collect. JNo&#13;
mmm^m m • » _ • » boose to bpose^cnvaarTnc&#13;
W&lt;u* asmanaat. VAN AI&gt;. OOJLan*lA#;,Mlcb.&#13;
- ' • % .&#13;
CK&gt;&lt;X&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;X&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;X&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;0&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&#13;
ALL THERE WAS TO IT&#13;
By GRACE KERRIGAN.&#13;
When Miss Lizzie Carrord entered&#13;
upon her duties ae Bteuogrupher and&#13;
cypewriter with Amea &amp; Co. she didnt&#13;
-ook for any social side of it. There&#13;
:ouldn't be any in a business oillce&#13;
She would ask for the rebyect that la&#13;
Jue any girl or woman, no matter&#13;
vvhether she has money and bocial&#13;
standing or must earn her living&#13;
Ames &amp; Co. were middle-aged men&#13;
and both married. Uoth were workers,&#13;
ind both quiet men. They had a small&#13;
business, but a paying one, and their&#13;
bookkeeper was also their cashier. He&#13;
was a young man of twenty-four, and&#13;
;he newcomer was not favorably impressed&#13;
with him. it is none of the&#13;
stenographer's business whether the&#13;
jookkeeper in his den is young or old —&#13;
^ood looking or ugly—social or surly.&#13;
Neither Mr. Adams nor his partner&#13;
were good at dictating, and they put&#13;
die work off on th3 bookkeeper.&#13;
Again, -they would be the only occupants&#13;
of the business for hours at a&#13;
ime, and if he was surly and gruff it&#13;
vvould make things lonesome.&#13;
Mr. Watler Bardsley, the said bookkeeper,&#13;
was in his den when Miss Cari"&#13;
ord called and was hired. There had&#13;
not been a girl in that ofiice in the five&#13;
years he had been there, but he never&#13;
turned from his desk to look. She had&#13;
a pleasant voice, but he didn't seem to&#13;
hear it. After she had gone, and he&#13;
wasi_ tojd__by...Ames that_she. was to take&#13;
the place, his only comment was:&#13;
"Very well, sir."&#13;
She was waiting for him next morning&#13;
when he arrived.&#13;
Mr. Bardsley did not bow. He did not&#13;
introduce himself. He did not look at&#13;
her.&#13;
He picked r? the morning mail and&#13;
carried it into his den and the-girl was&#13;
left for half an hour to twiddle her&#13;
thumbs. Then he came out and sat&#13;
down by the machine and started off&#13;
with:&#13;
"Mr. H. 0. Wharton'—Dear Sir: Your&#13;
letter of the 9th inst. at hand."&#13;
Miss Lizzie picked up pad and pencil&#13;
and wrote. There were five letters&#13;
in all. He never paused to say "comma,"&#13;
"period" or "paragraph," but&#13;
drove straight ahead, and whtn^ finished&#13;
got up without a word and went&#13;
back to his den She typed the letters&#13;
and laid them on the desk and&#13;
when Mr. Ames came in they were&#13;
signed and sent out to be mailed.&#13;
"Very well done," said Mr. Ames,&#13;
and that's all there was to it.&#13;
At noon Mr. Bardsley went out to&#13;
lunch.&#13;
When he had disappeared Miss Lizzie&#13;
went out to lunch. She was back&#13;
first, and when he came in she did not&#13;
look at him nor he at her. He could&#13;
have said: "Nice day, Miss Carford?"&#13;
And she could have answered: "Yes,&#13;
very nice."&#13;
But he didn't say and she didn't say.&#13;
From her place by the machine she&#13;
could look into the bookkeeper's den&#13;
and she his back—always bis back.&#13;
After she had surveyed that back for&#13;
three mortal hours, and could have&#13;
drawn a war-map of every line and&#13;
wrinkle, she turned and looked out&#13;
upon the roof of the adjoining building.&#13;
There was a clothes-line stretch&#13;
ed across it, and on that line hung an&#13;
old red flannel shirt. It flapped in the&#13;
breeze. It fluttered like a wounded&#13;
bird. There were moments when it&#13;
almost ceased to breathe, as it'were.&#13;
That shirt when new was a bloodred&#13;
in color. It was now faded to the&#13;
color of an old brick house in Tarrytown—&#13;
the one where General Washington&#13;
once stopped after licking the&#13;
British to ask the owner for the temporary&#13;
loan of his boot-jack. The&#13;
shirt had four patches on it to cover&#13;
four holes. The buttons were missing&#13;
and with increasing age it had shrunk.&#13;
What was the romance—what the mystery&#13;
of the old red shirt?&#13;
"Why, I thought you'd gone."&#13;
It was the voice of Mr. Ames at her&#13;
elbow. The girl had fallen asleep.&#13;
The bookkeeper had departed without&#13;
awakening her. Wasn't that the trick&#13;
of a mean man?&#13;
Each day for the next month was&#13;
HXe every other day. Outside of the&#13;
dictation not ten words passed between&#13;
the stenographer and the bookkeeper.&#13;
They came and went wtthout&#13;
noticing each other. It vexed&#13;
and annoyed her for the first week&#13;
and then she said to herself:&#13;
"He's probably mad because some&#13;
one he recommended wasn't taken&#13;
on Instead of me, but If he thinks&#13;
he'll get rid of me by playing the&#13;
bear he'll find himself mistaken. I'm&#13;
real glad to find, one man in the city&#13;
who isn't smirking around and bragging&#13;
how smart he is!"&#13;
Then a son of Mr. Ames' partner&#13;
came home on his vacation from college.&#13;
He was a very fresh young&#13;
man. He wanted to be a high roller&#13;
but his father was tight with money&#13;
matters. He hung about the office a&#13;
good deal, though neither the bookkeeper&#13;
nor the stenographer was&#13;
more than barely civil to him.&#13;
At the end of a week. Miss Liuie&#13;
noticed that the two partners were&#13;
anxious and perturbed and held cotv&#13;
sultutiona. Some exeitemem auu&#13;
seemed to have got hold of the book&#13;
keeper. There were three days of&#13;
ihia, and then he disappeared and&#13;
Mr. Ames took his place, it wasn't&#13;
cor the girl to ask why, but she naturally&#13;
wondered over i t The rou'&#13;
tine continued about the same. At&#13;
noon ail went to lunch. The door of&#13;
the bookkeeper's den, in which was the&#13;
bale, WUB locked at such times.&#13;
At noon one day, Instead of going&#13;
out to lunch, the stenographer munch&#13;
ed a big apple and buried her nose&#13;
wi a book she had brought down. A&#13;
quarter of an hour had passed when&#13;
the door briskly opened and the fresb&#13;
voung man entered He looked towards&#13;
the der but not around the&#13;
room When he was sure no one&#13;
was inside he produced a key and&#13;
entered the den. He was inside not&#13;
over two minuteB, and when he re&#13;
appeared he was stuffing greenbacks&#13;
into his pockets. He locked the dooi&#13;
behind him and then passed out ol&#13;
the cilice without having glimpsed tht&#13;
watcher.&#13;
For a moment the girl reasoned&#13;
that he was the son of the partner&#13;
and had a right to go and come. Then&#13;
.she scented something wrong and put&#13;
on htr hat and hurried down to tht&#13;
street. The young man was just en&#13;
tering an auto in which sat waiting&#13;
another young man.&#13;
"Get it?" queried the latter.&#13;
"You bet!"&#13;
"How much?"&#13;
"Two hundred!"&#13;
"Bully! We'll have a devil of t&#13;
Lime!"&#13;
The stenographer was in the of&#13;
fice when Mr. Ames returned from&#13;
his lunch. He smiled amiably anc&#13;
passed into the den, but a moment&#13;
later reappeared, white-faced and&#13;
trembling. He looked at the girl and&#13;
tried to speak, but could only stam&#13;
mer.&#13;
"Have you missed some money?*&#13;
she asked.&#13;
"Y-yes!"&#13;
"How much?"&#13;
"Two hundred dollars! I counted&#13;
it out just before going to lunch&#13;
Were you out to lunch?"&#13;
"Not today."&#13;
"Then—then—"&#13;
"Then I saw it taken! Had you&#13;
missed money before?"&#13;
"Three times. Didn't you know&#13;
that was why we turned away Mr.&#13;
Hardsley? We couldn't say he em&#13;
bezzled it but we were forced to sus&#13;
pect."&#13;
"As that son of your partner ^ook&#13;
the money today he probably Jook&#13;
the others. He has a key to the den.&#13;
I sat right over there and saw him&#13;
operate."&#13;
The partner was called in and informed&#13;
of what had occurred, and together&#13;
the two men took up the chase.&#13;
The young man was run down and he&#13;
made no denials. In fact, he laid the&#13;
blame all on his father.&#13;
Miss Lizzie took the half-day off.&#13;
In going home she saw Mr. Bardsley&#13;
in a doorway. He looked at her but&#13;
did not bow She walked straight up&#13;
to him and said: "You are the biggest&#13;
cad and snob in the state, but&#13;
you come along with me!"&#13;
He followed her to her home without&#13;
asking a question, and -when they&#13;
were seated she asked: "Were you&#13;
miffed because they gave me the&#13;
place?"&#13;
"Why, I was glad of it!" he exclaimed.&#13;
"But you never spoke to me."&#13;
"You didn't ask me to lunch."&#13;
"i—I dasn't!"&#13;
"1 was afraid you'd snub me!"&#13;
"Couldn't you have given me a good&#13;
morning?"&#13;
"I wanted to awful bad, but— but—"&#13;
Mr. Bardsley dared not look her in&#13;
the face He was blushing like a&#13;
maiden over a marriage proposal He&#13;
was fumbling his hands—and moving&#13;
his feet as It he would run away.&#13;
"1 see," mused the girl as she studied&#13;
bim. "I have found a shy man—&#13;
the only one in the world! That&#13;
changes everything. You will get&#13;
your place back, and in time—if you&#13;
are not too shy—"&#13;
And in time she became the wife of&#13;
a shy man, and be was not exhibited&#13;
at a museum.&#13;
fCopyrlght, 1913. by the McCiure Newspaper&#13;
Syndicate.)&#13;
Waitress Had Net Aged.&#13;
He had just reached the philosophical&#13;
stage when he slipperd into a res&#13;
taurant between bars for a* bit to eat.&#13;
He ordered. Then he sat staring ahead.&#13;
quietly thoughtful In expression and&#13;
waited.&#13;
It Is admitted he did some waiting,&#13;
too. What happened to hie order&#13;
couldn't be understood outside the peculiar&#13;
convolutions of a restaurant&#13;
kitchen, but he spent half an hour sit*&#13;
ting there staring ahead of him.&#13;
At last it came. As the waitress put&#13;
the order before him. he started from&#13;
hie deep study, as if he had forgotten&#13;
he had an order coming. Then, took&#13;
Ing up at the fair transporter of edibles,&#13;
he said:&#13;
"You don't look a day older!**—Be*&#13;
erybody's Magaslne.&#13;
Much Monty for Canada.&#13;
Europe, mainly Great Britain, is believed&#13;
to have invested not lees than&#13;
$130,000,000 In Canada in the first half&#13;
of tfet present yesr&#13;
LUMET IMG POWDER&#13;
The cook is happy, the&#13;
other members of the family&#13;
are happy—appetites sharpen, things&#13;
brighten up generally. And Calumet&#13;
Baking Powder is responsible for it all.&#13;
For Calumet never fails. Its&#13;
wonderful leavening qualities insure&#13;
perfectly shortened, faultlessly raised&#13;
bakings.&#13;
Cannot be compared with&#13;
other baking powders, which promise&#13;
without performing.&#13;
Even a beginner in cooking&#13;
gets delightful results with this neverfailing&#13;
Calumet Calving Powder. Your&#13;
grocer knows. Ask him.&#13;
RECEIVED HIGHEST AWARDS&#13;
World's Pur« Food Exposition, Chicago, IS*&#13;
Paris Exposition. France, March, 1912.&#13;
wfesa yon bvr cscsp or big-esa bskiu powdtr. Don't bs Busied. Bo? CsJsmL&#13;
wbols—»s—tjrss bt*t resits. Caluut it isx sspsrior to so«r milk i cffzsrm k~i&#13;
• v&#13;
"REPEATER"&#13;
Smokeless Powder Shells&#13;
These shells cost a little more than black powder loads,&#13;
but for bird shooting they are worth many times the difference,&#13;
as there is no smoke to hinder the second barrel. They are&#13;
by far the best low priced smokeless load on the&#13;
market When you buy, insist upon having them.&#13;
, , _ T H E RED W BRAND&#13;
*.&gt;.'-iA-\'Sr&#13;
I'm \&gt;'&#13;
W. L. DOUGLAS&#13;
*3.00 *3.50 $4..00&#13;
$4t§o AND $ft-oo&#13;
S H O E S&#13;
FOR MEN AND WOMEN&#13;
Btst Boys'Shoes In the World&#13;
92.00, ¢2.60 ana 93.00&#13;
BE0AX BffBIXEBS IK 1J76&#13;
0» »876 CAPITAL. NOW THE&#13;
LARGEST MAKER Of S3 SO &amp;&#13;
«4.00 SHOES IH THE WOELO&#13;
Auk your rt«s1*r f 0 »h&lt;w yon&#13;
L.Doafrla»tU.6O,$4.00aiM) «4.fiT)&#13;
shoes. Just sx good In NtyK fit unri&#13;
wear ss other make* rooting; $o.00 to $7.00 —the&#13;
only differ en re IK the prlre. Shoes in all&#13;
leathern, styles snd shapes to salt everybody.&#13;
If you fouid ylslt W. I.. I)oaff!a* lar^e factnrie*&#13;
st Brockton, Mans,, and see for yourself hoir&#13;
carefully W. L. Done lis shoes are made, you&#13;
would then understand nliy they are warranted ID&#13;
fit bettor, look Letter, hold their shano and wear loncer&#13;
than any other make for the price. •&#13;
If W. 1.. Douglfis aho-sire not for n\\e !n yonr vicinity,&#13;
onler &lt;ilr**m from \b^ facttry. Shoes for every in»'in&#13;
her of Hi" family, at »1! j.rli'UH, by I'urce! l'ost, pojitstjru&#13;
Q A T m o m " ^ s K f c i ^ / free. W i - i t f l o r IHuatftittMi C a t n l o g . It will&#13;
gee that W . L . ^ ^ 8 3 » »!«ow J"11 'tow to order by in»ul,aod wliy you «an&#13;
Donglas name !• ^ ^ ^ v e money .m your footwKir.&#13;
•tamped on the bottom. W . 1.. l»o»«. I••&gt;*. ?')l »pwk « r e &lt; BroeWos. USM.&#13;
The Right Way.&#13;
"I want to tell you about my aypen&#13;
dlx operation.'&#13;
"Oh, cut It out!"&#13;
pCflfiSf WCSMASJKOU*&#13;
PROFITS WITH YOU&#13;
59R .row ran&#13;
rpoHMl&#13;
_p fhoWmhU«yst, copy for ; trstm&#13;
4»&#13;
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arrwhar*. &amp;MM •&#13;
*fOW for r»or *«w.&#13;
ca-sraurm u« rm et, j&#13;
*n., DfTtWT.&#13;
Pain In Back and Rheumatism&#13;
are the daily torment of thousands. To effectually&#13;
cure these troubles you mu.st remove&#13;
the cause. Foley Kidney Pills b«^in&#13;
to work for you from the first dose, and exart&#13;
so direct and beneficial an action in the&#13;
cidneys and bladder that the pain and torment&#13;
of kidney trouble soon disappears.&#13;
^ _. „ .. | Ladies' Hair Goods. Wholesale and Retail&#13;
D R . J . D s K E L L O G G ' S Established in present Hair Store 1879,&#13;
Wm. A. Haines, 7 6 Graad Rivsr Av We»|&#13;
Near Ba*lcy Av. Detroit, Mick,&#13;
HAINES WI0S aM&#13;
TOUPEES&#13;
ASTHMA Rtmidjf for th« prompt relief of&#13;
Aetftme and Hey Fever. Ask your&#13;
df-umtst for H- Wrist IN FREI MMPLI&#13;
mStSm ft tYWU. CO* UdL8UFFAL0,IUr.&#13;
PIS O S RTMF.DY&#13;
BUTTON COVERING Send nsynvr next order. Special attention given to&#13;
Mai 1 Orders and we guarantee oar work to bo satisfactory.&#13;
8*nd either stamps or iaot&gt;«y ord«*r. Fries&#13;
uatonresnest. DRK8S PLAITING&#13;
NEW YORK TRIMMING ft UNItfC HOUSK&#13;
It Joaa R. street&#13;
ft A T C U T O Watan &amp;nsta»sma,Wfta»A&#13;
K A I e l l 1 0 1 ^ » . i^'. &gt;*i*j»f **. h**&#13;
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~ 0 " * * » ^ - »'« " '*» WMfc"\&gt;» . W . •».• "".J!*,*!* ' ''V- •"*«* -«i* »• ~*&gt;I'M. liOHfniM^'**.-; M»l .lirmmw * » &lt; M W M M M M M M l M M M l&#13;
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PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
:. &amp; !&#13;
'*"&#13;
C O M I N G&#13;
United Doctors Specialist&#13;
Will Make Their Regular Visit To 7&#13;
STOGKBRIDGE&#13;
HURST HOTEL&#13;
Thursday, November 6th&#13;
Remarkable Success of These Talented&#13;
Physicians in the Treatment&#13;
of Chronic Diseases&#13;
* The United JJoctors, licensed by the&#13;
StHte of Michigan for the treatment of deformities&#13;
and all nervous and chronic diseases&#13;
of men, women and children, offer&#13;
to all who call on this visit, consultation,&#13;
examination and advice free of charge.&#13;
These Doctors are among America's&#13;
leading stomach and nerve specialists, and&#13;
are experts in the treatment of chronic&#13;
diseases of the blood, liver, stomach, intestines,&#13;
skin, nerves, heart, spleen, kidneys&#13;
or bladder, rheumatism, sciatica, diabetes,&#13;
bed-wetting, tape worm, leg ulcers,&#13;
weak lungs, and those afflicted with long&#13;
standing, deep seated chronic diseases,&#13;
that have baffled the skill of other physicians,&#13;
should not fait to call. Deafness&#13;
has often been cured in 6ixty days.&#13;
According to their system no more operations&#13;
for appendicitis, gall stones, tumors,&#13;
goiter, piles, elc. By their method these&#13;
diseases are treated without operation or&#13;
hypodermic injection. They were among&#13;
the first in America to earn the name of&#13;
"Bloodless Surgeons,*'by doing awaywifh&#13;
the knife, with blood and with pain in the&#13;
successful treatment of these dangerous&#13;
diseases.&#13;
If you have kidney or bladder trouble!&#13;
bring a two ounce bottle of your urine for&#13;
chemical analysis and microsopic examination.&#13;
Worn-out and run-down men or women,&#13;
no matter what your ailment may be, no&#13;
matter what you have been told, or the&#13;
experience you have had with other physicians,&#13;
settle it forever in your mind. If&#13;
,your case is incurable they will tell you so.&#13;
Consul tthem upon this visit. It costs you&#13;
nothing.&#13;
Married ladies must come with their&#13;
husbands and minors with their parents.&#13;
Advertieement&#13;
Legal A d v e r t i s i n g&#13;
STATB of MICHIGAN . The Probate court tor the&#13;
county of Livingston. At a session of said&#13;
court, held at the probate office in the village of&#13;
Howell in said county on the 18th day of October&#13;
A. D. 1913. Present, Hon, Eugene A. Stowe,&#13;
Judge oi Probate. In the matter of the estate of&#13;
MARY C. WESTON, Deceaied.&#13;
Martha M. Palmer bavins filed in said court&#13;
her petition praying that the administration of&#13;
eald eitate be granted to Horace Palmer or to&#13;
some other suitable person.&#13;
It is ordered that the 15th day of November&#13;
A. D. litta, at ten o'clock in the lorenoon,&#13;
at said probate office, be and is hereby appointed&#13;
for hearing said petition&#13;
It is further ordered, that public notice thereof&#13;
be given by publication of a copy oi this order&#13;
for three successive weeks previous to said day 9!&#13;
hearing in the Pinckney Dispatch, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated in eaid county.&#13;
EUGENE A. STOWE,&#13;
43t3 Judge of Probate&#13;
St a t e of M i c h i g a n , the probate court for&#13;
thecounty of Livingston.— At a session of said&#13;
Court, held at the Probate Office In the Villas of&#13;
Howell in said county on the 21st day of Oct &gt;ber,&#13;
A. i&gt;, 1913. Present, Hon. Eugene A. Stowe&#13;
Judge of Probate. In the matter of the estate of&#13;
MARY L. SPROUT, Deceased&#13;
Edwin Sprout having filed in raid court his&#13;
petition praying that the adnsiLiattation of said&#13;
eitate be granted to F. A, Barton or to some other&#13;
snitab'e person.&#13;
It la ordered that the 15th day of November, A,&#13;
n. 1918 at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at said probate&#13;
office, be and is hereby appointed for&#13;
hearing eald petition.&#13;
It Uiurther 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;
hearing, in the PINCKNEY DISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated in said county. 43t8&#13;
EUGENE A. STOWE&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
North Hamburg&#13;
Do not forget to come to the&#13;
Hallowe'en social November 1, at&#13;
Clarence Carpenter's given by the&#13;
Tri-Mu class of the North Hamburg&#13;
S. 8. A splendid program&#13;
will be rendered. There will be&#13;
other Hallowe'en attractions.&#13;
Supper 10c. Everyone invited.&#13;
Harold Haddock transacted&#13;
business in Howell Thursday.&#13;
Mrs. Clyde Hinkle and Marlin&#13;
are visiting her parents in Heading.&#13;
Clarence Shankland and family&#13;
of Ann Arbor spent Sunday at&#13;
Charles Sweitzer's,&#13;
There will be preaching here&#13;
again utxt Sunday. Everyone is&#13;
requested to bring the "International&#13;
Praise" "song book.&#13;
Clyde Bennett was a Howell&#13;
visitor Saturday.&#13;
The Ladies Aid will be at&#13;
Ralph Bennett's Thursday for&#13;
dinner.&#13;
Eczema and Itching Cured&#13;
The soothing, healing medication in&#13;
Dr. HoUon's Eczema Ointment penetrates&#13;
every tiny pore of the skin,&#13;
clears it ot all impurities—stops itching&#13;
instantly. Dr. Hopson's Eczema&#13;
Ointment is guaranteed to .speedily&#13;
heal eczema, rashes, ringworm, tetter&#13;
and other unsiglitly eruptions. Eczema&#13;
Ointment is a doctor's prescription, not&#13;
an experiment, All druggist or by&#13;
mail, 50c. Pfeiffer Chemical Co.,&#13;
Philadelphia and St. Louis.&#13;
Williamsville&#13;
Robert Brearly and Mrs. Taylor&#13;
took dinner with Mrs. Whitehead&#13;
Sunday,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Farmer&#13;
called on Mrs, Whitehead Sunday.&#13;
Elmer Beach and family of&#13;
Chelsea made a short call at the&#13;
home of L. R. Williams Sunday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
Mrs. C. I. Williams spent Saturday&#13;
evening with Belle Coates&#13;
The Unadilla band started their&#13;
regular practice work Saturday&#13;
nigfct.&#13;
LaVerne Sheets has returned&#13;
to Pontiac after a short vacation&#13;
with his father and grandmother.&#13;
Miss Belva Denton made a&#13;
short call on Mrs. C. I. Williams&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Harrison Bates and wife spent&#13;
one day last week at the home of&#13;
their daughter in Stockbridge.&#13;
The community was very nauch&#13;
gratified by the entertainment given&#13;
by Miss Koch, vocalist, of&#13;
Jackson assisted by Miss Beulah&#13;
Smith last Friday evening.&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN&#13;
Thirty-fifth Judical Circuit in Chancery&#13;
Lucile I. Westby,&#13;
Complainant,&#13;
vs, , Edirard A.W«rt5y, j1&#13;
'•'• .'•.,. Defendant. •J&#13;
Suit pending in&#13;
tfohre tCbeir cCuoitu nCtyo uorft&#13;
Livingston In caanery&#13;
at Howell on&#13;
the eighteenth day&#13;
of September, A. D.&#13;
1918.&#13;
In tJHs cause, it appearing from affidavit on&#13;
file that the defendant, Edward A, Westby, 1s not&#13;
a resident of this state but is a resident of the&#13;
city of Missoula, »tate of Montana and that his&#13;
peifcoflp* address Is Missoula, Montana&#13;
Oa motion of Arthur K. Cole, solicitor for complainant,&#13;
It is ordered that the appearance of said&#13;
non-resident, defendant, Edward A. Westby, be&#13;
entered therein within four months from the date&#13;
of this order and in case of his appearance he&#13;
cause hte atawer to the Mil of complaint to be&#13;
filed and a copy thereof to be served within fifteen&#13;
days after service on him or his solicitor of a&#13;
copyjpf said bill, and In defin't thereof that said&#13;
bulft taken as confessed by the said defendant.&#13;
Edward A. Westby. '&#13;
And tt is further ordered that the said complatnaat&#13;
catse this order to be published in the&#13;
i lttkaey Dispatch, a newspaper-printed, pnbllth&#13;
ed and circulating la said county am that anch Snbllcattoa be -commenced witoin twenty days&#13;
rem the date ofthts order and that rucapablienflbn&#13;
be continued therein once in each week for&#13;
fix weeks In succession or that the said complainant&#13;
cant e a eopy of this ordf-r to be personally&#13;
served on the said defendant, Edward / . Weetby,&#13;
at least twenty daye belore the tin-e above preaeribed&#13;
for his appearance.&#13;
Selden 8. Miner, Circuit Judge&#13;
Exaalned, countersigned, and&lt;stared oy me,&#13;
Clark H. Miner, Becker&#13;
Arthur S. Cole, Complainant's Solicitor,&#13;
Business Address, Powlervllls, Michigan&#13;
BE&#13;
Qrand Trunk Tint Tabl*&#13;
For the oonrenitsce of oar readers&#13;
Stores Will Close&#13;
We, the undersigned business&#13;
men of Pinckney, having decided&#13;
that we and our clerks are entitled&#13;
to a few leisure hours, hereby&#13;
agree to close our stores at 6:00&#13;
o'clock standard time, beginning&#13;
Monday, November 3rd and each&#13;
succeeding evening, Saturday's&#13;
and lecture course nights excepted,&#13;
until December 15th. Then&#13;
from January 5th until the 1st&#13;
Monday of April.&#13;
W. W. Barnard&#13;
Dinkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
D. D. Smith&#13;
C. G. Meyer&#13;
Murphy &amp; Jackson&#13;
Tdeple Hdw. Co.&#13;
Monks Bros.&#13;
\ It's Not Too Bar&#13;
| To Buy That&#13;
-*•++•+•*-&#13;
Train* Bast&#13;
*/• v,: Ko. 28—8:89 a. m.&#13;
*g^B#3Q—4:49 p. m.&#13;
Trains Wert&#13;
No. 27—10:28 t. m«&#13;
No. 29—7:12 p.m.&#13;
New Milk Prices&#13;
We, the undersigned, believing&#13;
that with the high price of cows,&#13;
cow feed, labor and living in general,&#13;
that milk cannot be sold at&#13;
any profit for less than 7 (seven)&#13;
ceats per quart, hereby agree to&#13;
sell milk at this price from November&#13;
1,1913 until June 1, 1914.&#13;
C. L. Sigler&#13;
W, C. Dunning&#13;
P. H. Swarthout&#13;
M. Lavey&#13;
D. D. Smith&#13;
C. J, Teeple&#13;
O. C. Place way&#13;
J. C. Dinkel&#13;
J. J. Teeple&#13;
Richard Jeffreys was a Dexter&#13;
caller Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. L. A. Devereaux visited&#13;
Mrs. John Harris last Friday.&#13;
J as. Harris and wife and Mrs.&#13;
Hausher spent Sunday with Mrs.&#13;
L. A. Devereaux.&#13;
Bring in your list of magazines&#13;
and get my prioe, I will meet any&#13;
printed list on clubing offers and&#13;
may be able to sare yon money.&#13;
0. Gr. Meyer.&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Miss Ethel Cantrell of Stockbridge&#13;
is visiting at the home of&#13;
E. A. Sprout.&#13;
Mrs. G. M. Greiner and daughter&#13;
Julia, Mrs. Wm. Ledwidge&#13;
and daughter Clare, Mrs. A. C.&#13;
Roche and daughter Rebecca were&#13;
Jackson shoppers the last of the&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Meryin Kile and son MaynarcLof&#13;
Jackson, are visiting her&#13;
parents, Mr. and Mrs, P. Lavey.&#13;
Sydney Sprout spent a portion&#13;
of last week with his parents here.&#13;
M. J. Roche was in Bunkerhill&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Lucile Driver of Gregory spent&#13;
Monday with her sister Catherine&#13;
of this place.&#13;
After a weeks visit with their&#13;
people here Faye McCIear and&#13;
Germaine Ledwidge returned to&#13;
their sckool work at St. Joseph's&#13;
Academy, Adrian, Friday.&#13;
Mrs. G. W. Crofoot has moved&#13;
her goods to Pinckney where she&#13;
will spend the winter at the home&#13;
of her son, Will. She will be&#13;
missed by her many friends here&#13;
and all wish her happiness in her&#13;
future life.&#13;
R. M. Ledwidge, wife and son&#13;
Hubert visited at the home of C.&#13;
Brogau of S. Marion Sunday.&#13;
| Thanksgiving&#13;
?&#13;
Overcoat&#13;
—&#13;
4 We have an assortment&#13;
5 that is larg*e and snappy&#13;
i BEST VALUES EVER&#13;
\&#13;
8 Browns, Grays, Blacks I" "—&#13;
S Shawl or convertible colj&#13;
lars, plain or belt backs,&#13;
5 short or full lengths&#13;
\ $10., $13.50&#13;
\ 15., 18., 22.50&#13;
2&#13;
Copyright. 1911.&#13;
fltdptla. fttfftt a SW&#13;
\ W. J. DANCER &amp; COMPANY'}&#13;
S t o c k b r i d g e , M i c h .&#13;
5^~Car Fare Paid on $15. Purchases or More.&#13;
• « ' *&#13;
HONESTLY MADE MEDICINE&#13;
SUCCEEDS IN HEALING&#13;
Tbe value of. Foley Kidney Pills&#13;
over all other kidney medicines is due&#13;
to their honest make, and to thfe wise&#13;
selection ot potent and restorative&#13;
drugs used in their make up. Foley&#13;
Kidney Pills act in harmony witb&#13;
nature and are a genuine "first aid"&#13;
in restoring the kidneys and promoting&#13;
thoroughly healthy action of tbe&#13;
kidneys and bladder. Tbose fortunate&#13;
ones wbo bave used Foley Kidney&#13;
Pills are now rid of their ailments.&#13;
Try them, and they will succeed&#13;
in helping your casts of kidney&#13;
trouble. C. G. Meyer.&#13;
West Putnam&#13;
W. fl. Leland and family were&#13;
Jackson shoppers Saturday.&#13;
L. Chalker o f Fowlerville&#13;
spent the first of the week with&#13;
relatives here.&#13;
W. H. Gardner was a Howell&#13;
visitor one day last week.&#13;
D. M. Monks and family spent&#13;
Saturday at the home of Will&#13;
Dunning.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Mc-&#13;
Cluskey of North Hamburg and&#13;
Mrs. M. Monks of Pinckney called&#13;
on friends in this vicinity Sunday.&#13;
W. H. Leland was ib Howell&#13;
Friday. _&#13;
A tieotle and Efteetive Laxative&#13;
A mild, gentle and effective laxative&#13;
i$ what people demand wben suffering&#13;
trom constipation. Thousands swear&#13;
by Dr. King's New Life Pills. Hugh&#13;
TaHmao, ot San Antonio, Tex. writes:&#13;
"Tbey are, beyong question, tbe best&#13;
pills my wife and 1 have ever taken."&#13;
They never oanse pain. Price 25*.&#13;
Recommended by 0 . G. Meyer, the&#13;
druggist.&#13;
Itor relief from rheumatic tains tsff&#13;
Br. XOM* Antl-FUn PUto. Do ast&#13;
SWffer BeeflteMiy. CAdrertlsfeaeotl&#13;
)&#13;
Line's Bazaar&#13;
HOWELL, MICH.&#13;
"The Popular Store"&#13;
Our stock for the fall trade was&#13;
never larger or variety more complete.&#13;
Many new lines added and&#13;
our usual assortment of&#13;
5 and 10 Cent Goods&#13;
is always kept up to city standards.&#13;
We always welcome people from&#13;
every part of tbe county to drop in&#13;
and look over our goods even though&#13;
they may not wish to buy. It costs&#13;
us nothing and advertises our store.&#13;
Come in,-.when you are in Howell.&#13;
C. S. LINE&#13;
Howell, Mich. Opp. Courthouse&#13;
%%*«*%%%%*%%%%%%%%*%%%%%«%*%%%*•%%&#13;
IMPORTANT!&#13;
Having* decided to discon^ ^ ^ ,&#13;
tinue farming, 1 offer&#13;
For Sale&#13;
10 to 15 head of young&#13;
serviceable short horn&#13;
cows and heifers at&#13;
about beef prices. Also&#13;
4 to 6 young Clydesdale&#13;
colts and flllys&#13;
from 1 to 3 years old. •M&#13;
6 0 YEAR*&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
Will give time to responsible&#13;
purchasers.&#13;
T . Birkett&#13;
^ • , v i&#13;
•4&#13;
•'wf|&#13;
' - *&#13;
4&#13;
o*-..&gt; I&#13;
:^41&#13;
• V I&#13;
W&#13;
Mr. „•&#13;
f V&#13;
• " * i I&#13;
• w »&#13;
!';'i.j&#13;
-•I ' j &gt; V&#13;
TRADE MARKS&#13;
&amp;ESIQNS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A C&#13;
quAicjkylsyn ea sscoenrrttafninff oau srU ortpoihn ioRnnd f dreeesc rwiphteitohne rm BaL) itnlovnegn stttorinc tliys cpornobfird.belnyt ipala. teHnAtaNbDlBeO. OKC oomnm Puantelcnat s sefttfree. Oldest nofrncr for seouringpat«nts.&#13;
Patents taken-through Mulm £ Co. reeol"*&#13;
rpecizl notice, without cbarge, intha Scientific American.&#13;
M^V££M8rt&#13;
GOING TO BUY A PIANO&#13;
OR SEWING MACHINE&#13;
YES* I&#13;
SEE L R. WILLIAMS.&#13;
GREGORY&#13;
He MVM you money on hi^h&#13;
grade pianos.&#13;
f H W I W I l l i l l l W i l P I W t i !&#13;
5=&#13;
iaiAfaiAtiiAtMAHB4tmt^4CTAmariftaffitiMiiAMi&#13;
H. F. 9IQLER M. D- C, L. 3IQLER M. D. $&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons.&#13;
All calls promptly attended to&#13;
day or night. Office on Main&#13;
Street.&#13;
FINOKNEY,&#13;
»«»KfBWy&gt;+»»»+&#13;
*&#13;
^ •&#13;
-«*&lt;IWJUU&gt;-.*. -i ^mmtik.^J^Ma^ '.\ wMlMMtMK: M I I I M I &lt; M » l l l l&#13;
•''*.&#13;
, «&#13;
t ^ ^ m tiMfa •^taMitfM^ MisWal&#13;
t •&#13;
"*i&#13;
K~V -•&#13;
&gt;-f.&gt; IX- • ,1&#13;
V A .&#13;
; .&lt;/</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch October 30, 1913</text>
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                <text>October 30, 1913 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1913-10-30</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>Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan, T h u r s d a y , November 6, 1913 No. 45&#13;
An Explanation&#13;
There are alwajs two sides to&#13;
any question and altho people&#13;
generally acknowledge this, they&#13;
fail to apply it unless it suits them.&#13;
Regarding the closing the&#13;
stores at six o'clock, it is all right&#13;
for the ones that want to do so,&#13;
and it sounds liberal to say that&#13;
they want rest for themselves and&#13;
their clerks, but the other side of&#13;
it is this: The good Lord appointed&#13;
oue.day to rest and believing&#13;
that He kuew what is best we keep&#13;
our store closed Sunday and rest&#13;
as much as we possibly can; then,&#13;
as this store is as much a home&#13;
for us as any we have, here and as&#13;
trade is not so rushing but what&#13;
we have ample time for rest hours,&#13;
we agre#(my clerk and I) that&#13;
we are not over-doing ourselves&#13;
to keep the store open until we&#13;
see fit to close it at a reasonable&#13;
hour. I am not trying to fix any&#13;
limit to - my neighbors time nor&#13;
strength, but kindly ask them to&#13;
not try to limit me. adv.&#13;
MRS. A. M. UTLEY.&#13;
State School for Farmers ' &amp;',•» /. - MichigRn farmers are to be given&#13;
the opportunity by the Michigan&#13;
Agricultural College to go to&#13;
school at home. Plans have been&#13;
completed looking to the establishment&#13;
in each county where&#13;
l i t farmers desire it of a county&#13;
•chool to last a week, with discussions&#13;
of each tooics as live&#13;
stock, crops, soil, dairying, bee&#13;
keeping, etc., led by college instructors.&#13;
To put the plan in operation 25&#13;
or more farmers in each county&#13;
must agree to pay $1 each for the&#13;
instruction, and a local organization&#13;
must make all the arrangements&#13;
and obtain a room suitable&#13;
for holding the school session.&#13;
Soil will be examined, special&#13;
local conditions will be studied&#13;
and efforts will be made to make&#13;
the course of specific rather than&#13;
general interest. President Synder&#13;
is urging the farmers to write&#13;
their congressmen urging the&#13;
passage of the Lever bill, which&#13;
will obtain for Michigan within&#13;
ten years an annual income of&#13;
$100,0tK) for farm extension work.&#13;
\' j&#13;
Fay your •UDScrlptlpn this month.&#13;
Fall carpets and rugs at Dancer's,&#13;
Stock bridge. adv.&#13;
\ ..Will Black of St. Johns visited&#13;
V friends and relatives here the first&#13;
of the week.&#13;
Mre. George Pearson* and Mies&#13;
Blanche Martin were Ann Arbor&#13;
visitors Monday.&#13;
Found—A sum of money in the&#13;
store of Murphy &amp; Jackson. Owner&#13;
can have same by calling at&#13;
that store and proving property.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Brogan of&#13;
S. Marion were guest*, in honor&#13;
of their 38th wedding anniversary&#13;
at a house party given by Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Win. Brogan of Brighn,&#13;
Saturday and Sunday. Relatives&#13;
were present from Detroit,&#13;
Howell, Anderson and Chilson.&#13;
W s.&#13;
,¾&#13;
^ V :&#13;
*P&#13;
A Notice&#13;
^ 'We wiah to inform all&#13;
those owing us on account&#13;
J that we wish to have a settle-&#13;
~ ment of same &gt;y NOT. 15th.&#13;
3H«Sfr MONKS BROS,&#13;
•:w&#13;
• • * • ; • • . .&#13;
Local News&#13;
Mrs. H. R. Geer of Freesoil is&#13;
visiting f rieuds here.&#13;
Miss Myrta Hall of Williamston&#13;
spent Saturday at the home of&#13;
Ed. Cook.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Coyle of&#13;
Northfield visited at Fr. Coyle's&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Boys Xtra-gjod suits and overcoats&#13;
for Thanksgiving. $4. to 19.&#13;
at Dancer's. adv.&#13;
The annual meeting of the&#13;
Cong'l church, will occur Saturday&#13;
November 15th, beginning at two&#13;
o'clock.&#13;
Roy Caverly of the Pinckney&#13;
Dispatch was the guest of his&#13;
parents Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
He and his mother made a trip to&#13;
Howell Saturday but he didn't calt&#13;
on Tilings.—Brighton Argus.&#13;
Right-o, Seth, but at that he called&#13;
on every NEWSpaper i n&#13;
Ho.velJ.&#13;
Keep the dates of the M. E.&#13;
Fair in miud, Friday, November&#13;
7th and Saturday, November 8th.&#13;
You can buy Christmas gifts, food&#13;
products and household necessities&#13;
at the optra house those two&#13;
days. Friday evening there will&#13;
be a "Dutch Lunch" to which all&#13;
may come. Music will be furnished&#13;
during the evening also. Saturday&#13;
night there will be a big&#13;
chicken pie supper beginning at&#13;
five o'clock and coutiuuina uaAilL&#13;
all are served. Price 25c for the&#13;
supper, Mr. Henry Isham and&#13;
son will furnish the music.&#13;
It has long been a pet scheme&#13;
of Dr. H. F. Sigler that some one&#13;
would make a motor buggy that&#13;
would run in winter when the&#13;
road conditions are such that it&#13;
would be too expensive to nla the&#13;
ordinary automobile. 0, E. Duryea&#13;
of Saginaw makes a rig that&#13;
seems to fill the bill and Sunday&#13;
morning Art Flintoft and the&#13;
doctor came into town in fine style&#13;
with a Duryea motor buggy, having&#13;
run the same from Saginaw.&#13;
Mr. Flintoft says we knowing&#13;
nothing of bad roads here. The&#13;
car came through in good shape&#13;
aud seems to have power to go&#13;
anywhere. It is easily managed&#13;
and there is but little more to it&#13;
than the ordinary carriage. The&#13;
Duryea Motor Co. are selling all&#13;
they can make. 0&gt;J2. Duryea is&#13;
a pioneer in auto building and an&#13;
expert in the busiuess, also consulting&#13;
engineer to the American&#13;
Automobile Association.&#13;
When death comes to a family&#13;
after a long sickness, the grief is&#13;
hard to bear, but when the grim&#13;
reaper takes a life in the midst of&#13;
apparent good health, as he did&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Hassenchal, the shock&#13;
is almost beyond bearing at all.&#13;
Mrs. Hassenchal and a little girl&#13;
were gathering hidkory nuts in a&#13;
field on their farm last Sunday afternoon,&#13;
when the former complained&#13;
of feeling so queer and in&#13;
less than a second afterward fell&#13;
over dead. The little girl at once&#13;
called to theyonng husband farther&#13;
back in the field but when he&#13;
reached his wife's side, she was&#13;
beyond human aid. The deceased&#13;
was born in St. Johns, New Brunswick.&#13;
Fnneral services were held&#13;
at the Oong'L ohurcu, Tuesday afternoon,&#13;
Rer. Mitchell, officiating.&#13;
Interment will be made in Detroit.&#13;
The sympathy of the entire&#13;
commnnitT is extended to the&#13;
grief stricken husband and relatives.&#13;
HOUSEKEEPERS&#13;
Must be Watchful&#13;
For great efforts are being made in&#13;
this vicinity to sell baking powders of&#13;
inferior class, made from alum acids&#13;
and lime phosphates, both undesirable&#13;
to those who require high-grade&#13;
cream of tartar baking powder to&#13;
make^leanandhealthful food.&#13;
The official Government&#13;
teste have shown Royal&#13;
Baking Powder to be a&#13;
pure, healthful, grape&#13;
cream of tartar baking&#13;
p o w d e r , of h i g h e s t&#13;
strength^ and care should&#13;
be taken to prevent the&#13;
s u b s t i t u t i o n of any&#13;
other brand in its place.&#13;
Royal Baking Powder costs only a&#13;
fair price per pound, and is cheaper&#13;
and better at its price than any&#13;
other baking powder in the world.&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
CLOTHES CLEANED and pressed at&#13;
reasonable prices. 43tf&#13;
Mrs. VV. B. Darrow, Pinckney&#13;
FOR SALE—Thoroughbred Holatein&#13;
Hull, seven months old, also 1400 lb.&#13;
horse, sound and right. 40t3*&#13;
G. M. Greiner, Pinckney&#13;
FOR SERVICE—Poland China boar,&#13;
terms 50c. at the time of service or&#13;
$100 if charged with return privilage.&#13;
J. 11. Martin 45t3*&#13;
FARM FOR SALE—166 Acres in&#13;
tection 27, Dexter Township, 2£ miles&#13;
northwest ot De&amp;ter village, known&#13;
as the Lavey tarm. Good buildings,&#13;
-well lanced and the be*t ot land.&#13;
Must be sold to close the estate ot&#13;
the lati Mrs, C Gallagher. Inquire&#13;
ot Dr. R. B Honey or John Gall-&#13;
a&lt;jher. Dexter Mich.&#13;
W U U U H % U H U H U U V » U » » H H&#13;
Subscribe FOP The Dispatch&#13;
Line's Bazaar&#13;
HOWELL, MICH.&#13;
"The Popular Store"&#13;
Our stock for the fall trade was&#13;
never larger or variety more complete.&#13;
Manv new lines added and&#13;
our usual assortment of&#13;
5 and 10 Cent Goods&#13;
is always kept up to city standard*.&#13;
We always welcome people from&#13;
every part of the county to drop in&#13;
and look over our goods even though&#13;
they may not wish to buy. It costs&#13;
us nothing and advertises our store.&#13;
Come in, when you are in Howell.&#13;
C. S. LINE&#13;
Howell, Mich. Opp. Courthouse&#13;
^° TO Murphy &amp; Jackson&#13;
Headquarters For Groceries, Dry Goods, Shoes, Eubbers,&#13;
Furnishings, Etc.&#13;
Largest Stock Lowest Prices&#13;
NEW LINES R B C B I Y B D&#13;
Ladies and Childrens Handkerchiefs, ranging from 1c to $1.00 each&#13;
Best Grade Outing Flannels, per yard - - 10c&#13;
Latest Styles in Mens and Ladies Shoes&#13;
Large assortment of Mens, Ladies, Misses and Childrens Cotton and&#13;
Wool Underwear&#13;
•«&#13;
»v&#13;
This season we are showing the largest assortment of FALL AND&#13;
WINTER FOOTWEAR ever shown in Pinckney. Our basement is&#13;
chuck full of bargains. Come and get our prices before buying.&#13;
OUR S A T U R D A Y S P E C I A L S&#13;
Our Blue Wrist 15c Canvas Gloves Is a&#13;
winner at' - • 10c&#13;
$1.25 Bed Blankets at&#13;
25 lbs. H. &amp; B. Su jar&#13;
HI&#13;
II&#13;
f&#13;
#&#13;
#&#13;
4&#13;
V&#13;
'&gt;. *&#13;
~l&#13;
^ v&#13;
M • &lt; * - • -&#13;
\&#13;
.-• • • * . &lt;' ' ,&#13;
. • « •&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
The Daughter of David Kerr&#13;
DD&#13;
By Harry King Tootle&#13;
DD an&#13;
Illustrations by Ray Walters&#13;
SYNOPSIS.&#13;
Copyright by A- a KcClurg * Co., IMS&#13;
a knowledge of bis family affairs&#13;
which astonished Gloria. After they&#13;
Gloria Kerr, a motherless jjirl, who has | had passed, the girl questioned her&#13;
about the workman and bow she came&#13;
to know him.&#13;
epent rno^t of her life in school, arrives&#13;
a t her father' s home in JLJclmoiit. David&#13;
X e r r la tht? political buss of the town,&#13;
a n d 1s anxious to prevent his d a u g h t e r&#13;
l e a r n i n g of his rt-al chsiractcv. Kendall,&#13;
representing the Chicago packers. Is negotiating&#13;
with JIKIKV (lilliert, K e r r ' s chief&#13;
adviBer, for a valuable franchise. They&#13;
fear the opposition of Joe Wright, editor&#13;
of the reform paper. Kerr asks the assistance&#13;
of Jiultfe (rilh'-rt. In introiiuHiiff&#13;
Gloria to Belmont socieiy, ami protjiises&#13;
to help iihn put through the packers'&#13;
franchise and let him have all the Kraft.&#13;
Gloria meets Joe Wright at the (rilherts,&#13;
It a p p e a r s t i n y are on Intimate terms,&#13;
h a v i n g met previously in a touring party&#13;
in Europe, The Oilhi rts invite fllor'a to&#13;
utay with them pending the rcfurtiiv'dnff&#13;
of the K e r r home. Wru-l.t levins his fight&#13;
a g a i n s t the proposed franchise in tlie colu&#13;
m n s of his paper, the IVhnont News.&#13;
K e r r , through his henchni'-n, e x e r t s , eve&#13;
r y influence to h a m p e r W r i g h t in the&#13;
publication of his papt r.&#13;
CHAPTER X.—Continued.&#13;
Gloria's admiration of her father's&#13;
powers did not lessen upon their better&#13;
acquaintance. Strange as it may&#13;
a e e m r h e r loyalty-to him was strengthened&#13;
by each turn of fortune's wheel&#13;
which thrust her back upon herself&#13;
The frivolouB veneer in hen nature&#13;
was being worn away, and the real&#13;
Gloria was beginning to appear.&#13;
Kerr's was indeed a powerful personality,&#13;
and Gloria was coining to see&#13;
why he was so successful. A woman's&#13;
intuition and not an understanding of&#13;
the facts in the case was the girl's tutor&#13;
She hugged to her heart the comparison&#13;
of Joe Wright and her father.&#13;
In the younger man she saw some of&#13;
the traits which made her father a&#13;
power—magnetism, reserve strength,&#13;
and a logical mind. Wright had that.&#13;
and more: he had all the social&#13;
graces. To her, however, his greatest&#13;
appeal was that lie was youth,&#13;
eternal youth, and love.&#13;
What Gloria could not understand&#13;
was why Wright was avoiding her. In&#13;
her ears she could hear him whisper&#13;
a* he had that night:&#13;
Spring on the hills, Beloved,&#13;
On the side of a tin'jnlowed slope;&#13;
And Love in our ln-ftrts, H&gt; lo\ cd,&#13;
Love, and Spring and Hope.&#13;
Now was spring here, and hope and&#13;
the promise of love, but he did1 not&#13;
come, After her return from St.&#13;
Louis she had waited in vain. Then&#13;
she had asked to have him invited to&#13;
dinner. When Mrs. Gilbert telephoned&#13;
him he refused owing to press of&#13;
business, but asked to speak to Gloria.&#13;
She came to the telephone and&#13;
they had a pleasant chat. He told her&#13;
that he was busy finishing some magazine&#13;
articles which the editor was&#13;
pressing him for, and that he was&#13;
working night and day. For the time&#13;
being Gloria accepted this explanation.&#13;
The day of their telephone eon-&#13;
"Stopped to Talk to Him."&#13;
versatlon there came from him a box&#13;
of red roses at the dinner hour.&#13;
It must not be thought that Gloria&#13;
was entirely cut off from society.&#13;
It was the society she craved, the intimate&#13;
association with certain ones,&#13;
which she was not finding. To all the&#13;
formal functions Gloria was invited,&#13;
out she no longer cared for big bails&#13;
aa formerly. Her danced were all&#13;
taken, hut there was something in the&#13;
atmosphere which dampened her spiri&#13;
t * . Although every one was superficially&#13;
pleasant, there was no cordial&#13;
ity in It at all. So she busied herself&#13;
more and more with remodeling her&#13;
country home.&#13;
One day at Locust Lawn a man en-&#13;
7 gajfed in digging the foundation for&#13;
the new porch touched his hat and&#13;
- nailed^\Mri. Hayes by name. She&#13;
• t o p p e d \ e ~ U l k to him and betrayed length&#13;
"His wife came to the mission for&#13;
help last winter when he waB sick,"&#13;
Mrs. Hayes explained.&#13;
Gloria looked at the man in the&#13;
trench, bending his back in pain that&#13;
she might have a place to serve tea in&#13;
the afternoon and loll in a swinging&#13;
seat in the moonlight. He was but a&#13;
unit out of those teeming millions of&#13;
units to whose existence she had always&#13;
been indifferent. Had she been&#13;
told in other days that this man's&#13;
family had almost died of want she&#13;
would have let it stay in her mind no&#13;
longer than the news that a hundred&#13;
poor girls had been burned to death&#13;
in a Are trap a bribed factory inspector&#13;
had branded as safe. In other&#13;
words, she would not have considered&#13;
the matter at all. To have dominion&#13;
over palm and pine to Gloria meant&#13;
only that "from"these lands should be&#13;
gathered the best there was for the&#13;
lords of the earth. And of that order&#13;
she knew herself to be one.&#13;
Sin and suffering were familiar to&#13;
her in the abstract, sodden wretches&#13;
she had seen invade even Fifth avenue,&#13;
but that back of all were stories&#13;
of weaknesses, misfortunes, oppression,&#13;
inhuman exploitation, and man's&#13;
inhumanity to man she had not considered.&#13;
She believed they were born&#13;
into their caste just as she was born&#13;
into hers.&#13;
Now as she listened to this workman&#13;
talk, heard his story from Mrs&#13;
Hayes, learned that he had little children&#13;
dependent upon him just as she&#13;
had been dependent upon her father&#13;
before he had made a settlement upon&#13;
her, making her independent, Gloria&#13;
began to realize that there was such&#13;
a thing as the fellowship of man, She&#13;
was not uncharitable. Whenever any&#13;
appeal had been made to her she had&#13;
always emptied her pocketbook&#13;
thoughtlessly and considered her duty&#13;
done. Now the thought of personal&#13;
service came to her. She was ignorant&#13;
of what she could do, even of its&#13;
power to bring her any measure of&#13;
happiness, but it was worth trying&#13;
They had driven in silence almost&#13;
to town before Gloria turned to Mrs.&#13;
Hayes and said:&#13;
"Mrs. Hayes, the next time you go&#13;
to the mission I want you to take me."&#13;
Several days later Gloria went with&#13;
Mrs. Hayes to view at close range the&#13;
work being done in the poorer quarters'of&#13;
Belmont by the Presbyterian&#13;
Mission. She met Mrs. Wallace, the&#13;
matron, and from her learned the&#13;
story of the humble but unfortunate&#13;
toilers, and the evils to which they&#13;
were constantly a prey through their&#13;
ignorance and inability to protect&#13;
themselves. Gloria then accompanied&#13;
her on a round of visits, and soon the&#13;
girl's interest was such that on the&#13;
.days Mrs. Hayes went to the mission&#13;
she was glad to go with her.&#13;
The boss was disturbed at his&#13;
daughter's trip into the lowest quarters&#13;
of Belmont.&#13;
"This ain't no kind o' play, girl,"&#13;
he complained. "Why don't you stick&#13;
to society?"&#13;
"Society!" she replied with fine&#13;
scorn. "Why doesn't society stick to&#13;
me?"&#13;
"What's the matter?"&#13;
He had been quick to catch the note&#13;
of unhappiness. His daughter had not&#13;
meant to say anything, but the words&#13;
had slipped out before she could think.&#13;
She now tried to erase the impression&#13;
by saying:&#13;
"Matter? Nothing. Why?"&#13;
The boss' suspicions were not to&#13;
be so lulled.&#13;
"You're keepin' somethin' back from&#13;
me, Gloria. What is it?"&#13;
"No, I'm not," she Insisted.&#13;
"Has anyone done anythln' or said&#13;
any thin' to%you?"&#13;
"Nothing."&#13;
"But somethin's back o' all this. You&#13;
ain'f happy. Anybody can see t h a t&#13;
Now what's It all about?" He waited&#13;
for her to reply, but she would&#13;
not speak. " C a n t you answer?'*&#13;
"It's—it's—well—It's just an atmosphere."&#13;
"You go every place."&#13;
"To all the big things, yes."&#13;
"People are nice to you."&#13;
She hesitated, but finally said,&#13;
"Ye-es."&#13;
' "Ain't they?" '&#13;
"Oh, I suppose so," she admitted in&#13;
a lifeless manner. "Perhaps I'm not&#13;
used to western ways, yet the nice&#13;
people look just like nice people look&#13;
back East."&#13;
"What's different, t h e n ? *&#13;
"They seem to keep me at arm's&#13;
) biggest man in Belmont, and yet 1—"&#13;
She did not finish the sentence.&#13;
'"Yet—I—what?" he urged.&#13;
"I don't understand, that's all."&#13;
"Who, for instance?"&#13;
Gloria thought for a moment, and&#13;
resolved only to name persons in a&#13;
general way.&#13;
"Well, Letty Loomis."&#13;
"Old John Loomis' daughter?"&#13;
"Is he the big wholesale grocer?"&#13;
"That's him. What 'd she do?" v&#13;
"I tell you—she didn't do anything.&#13;
It's just—an atmosphere."&#13;
"Huh! A beautiful lot o* airs she's&#13;
got a right to put on," snorted the&#13;
boss. "D' you know how old LoomiB&#13;
made his money?"&#13;
"Out of groceries, didn't he?"&#13;
"Groceries, nothin'. That's just a&#13;
stall. He's got a warehouse cnuck&#13;
full of rotten whisky he sells in prohibition&#13;
Kansas. That's his real business.&#13;
He don't sell enough groceries&#13;
in a year to feed a first class boardin*&#13;
houBe. I wouldn't let him sell anything&#13;
to the poor- farm. Don'l J e t&#13;
that girl o' his put it over you any.&#13;
And they say he passes the plate&#13;
in church! Gad, I hate a hypocrite.&#13;
I'll make him sweat for it."&#13;
Her father was so wrought up that&#13;
Gloria was afraid to speak further,&#13;
but when he insisted she told of several&#13;
instances of which she had been&#13;
pleased to term antagonistic atmosphere,&#13;
and in each case Kerr related&#13;
some disgraceful characteristic of the&#13;
head of the family. Once he did not&#13;
hesitate to give his opinion of a society&#13;
woman whose history he knew&#13;
well. This intimate knowledge of Belmont&#13;
affairs and his belittling references&#13;
to leading citizens made Gloria&#13;
reach the conclusion that In some way&#13;
he was in a class by himself. This&#13;
caused her to soothe him with the&#13;
remark:&#13;
"Father, I think they're jealous because&#13;
you're head and shoulders above&#13;
them all."&#13;
She might not love him, but her&#13;
pride in him and her loyalty to him&#13;
were all the greater for the lack of&#13;
love. She felt that she was at fault&#13;
for not having that true filial regard&#13;
which other daughters had for their&#13;
fathers, and therefore whenever she&#13;
could she strengthened her faith in&#13;
him as Belmont's leading citizen.&#13;
I don't ace why. You're the&#13;
CHAPTER XI.&#13;
On the day of his interview with&#13;
McMtnitry Kerr had asked Kendall&#13;
and Dr. Hayes to meet him at Judge&#13;
Gilbert's office directly after luncheon.&#13;
At this conference he intended to tell&#13;
them they would have to acquire the&#13;
News. The transfer of the property&#13;
need not be made until after the&#13;
ejection, but he wanted to know at&#13;
once .that it was his.&#13;
The boss was laie, and the ihree&#13;
men had to wait some time for him.&#13;
"I wouldn't want the boys to know&#13;
It," said Gilbert disconsolately, "but&#13;
I'm afraid he's got us beat."&#13;
Kendall was hopeful still.&#13;
"It's three days till election," he&#13;
urged. "Anything can happen in that&#13;
time."&#13;
"I wish I believed in miracles like&#13;
you do," was Dr. Hayes' rueful comment.&#13;
"Only a miracle can save us," added&#13;
Judge Gilbert gloomily.&#13;
"I tell you, gentlemen," insisted&#13;
Kendall, "I still think Dave Kerr can&#13;
swing it."&#13;
"All the same," answered the coroner,&#13;
"when I went out to stick my&#13;
good money in real estate options on&#13;
factory sites I wash I'd been riding&#13;
Balaam's ass."&#13;
The others' laugh at his expense&#13;
was cut short, by the entrance of David&#13;
Kerr.&#13;
"How 's it look, Mr. Kerr?" asked&#13;
Gilbert.&#13;
"It might be worse," was the reply.&#13;
"We count the votes, don't we?"&#13;
Gilbert was not optimistic.&#13;
"I'm afraid it isn't going to he that&#13;
close."&#13;
"Have you heard anything from the&#13;
eleventh?" queried Kendall.&#13;
J'l had a . talk with Sweeney this&#13;
morning, and he said he could put&#13;
enough stock-yards people in the 'leventh&#13;
to deliver the ward all right.&#13;
Bauerschmidt was in my office at the&#13;
same time. He's up against it in the&#13;
sixth."&#13;
''Then we can't count on much outside&#13;
the river wards," said Kendall.&#13;
Kerr nodded his head. He could&#13;
have added that the river ward men&#13;
would vote early and often, but that&#13;
there was no-occasion for it. It was&#13;
an open secret that for several weekt&#13;
floaters had been colonized In the&#13;
levee district,&#13;
"We can't count on much besides&#13;
them wards," explained Kerr, "unless&#13;
the Belmont News goes out of business."&#13;
"What can we do about It?" inquired&#13;
Hayes. He saw defeat staling&#13;
them in the face.&#13;
"Sam," replied the boas after a moment's&#13;
silence, "every man's got ols&#13;
price—In some form or other."&#13;
"News or no News, we've got to&#13;
win," exclaimed Kendall desperately.&#13;
"I've staked everything on it in Chicago&#13;
and I must get results—and that&#13;
means a franchise and nothing but a&#13;
franchise." . ,&#13;
"Then we've got to "nave that paper&#13;
at any cost."&#13;
"It's mortgaged for all it's worth,"&#13;
said Gilbert. &lt;•&#13;
"That won't help us in the next&#13;
three days," snapped Kendall.&#13;
"There ain't no use mincing matters,"&#13;
concluded the boss. "We're up&#13;
against It. There's -only one thing to&#13;
do; Bee what he'll sell for, and pay&#13;
him his price."&#13;
Judge Gilbert looked at the matter&#13;
from the point of view of a nuslness&#13;
lawyer.&#13;
"It won't be cash down for the&#13;
whole thing. We merely assume the&#13;
mortgage, and then pay him whatever&#13;
he'll take to clear o u t "&#13;
Kerr had figured all this o u t With&#13;
him time was the most important&#13;
consideration.&#13;
"We've got to get busy mighty&#13;
quick," said the boss.&#13;
"When a r e you going to see him?"&#13;
asked Kendall.&#13;
"Right away."&#13;
"We can't very well go to his office,"&#13;
said Gilbert. "Even that little move&#13;
"Them Mission . Things&#13;
Fakes."&#13;
would give him more of an advantage."&#13;
"Get him over here," ordered Kerr.&#13;
"Telephone him. H e l l come. You&#13;
needn't say who's here."&#13;
Judge Gilbert picked up the telephone&#13;
on the table and asked Williams,&#13;
his secretary, who sat in the&#13;
outer office, to get Mr. Wright at the&#13;
Belmont News on the line for him.&#13;
Judge Gilbert's offices consisted of&#13;
an outer room where sat his secre*&#13;
tary; within, where Kerr and his lieutenants&#13;
were in conference, was the&#13;
library, a large room looking out on&#13;
the main thoroughfore of Belmont;&#13;
and from this, opposite the outer reception&#13;
room, then opened, two&#13;
smaller rooms, one of which Gilbert&#13;
used as his private office, the other&#13;
as a room for consultations.&#13;
When Gilbert finished telephoning,&#13;
he said, "He's busy going over the&#13;
proofs of some late stuff for this afternoon's&#13;
paper, but he'll be over in half&#13;
an hour or so."&#13;
CHAPTER XII.&#13;
When Gloria found that the Presbyterian&#13;
Mission was in need of money&#13;
in order to extend Its work, she suggested&#13;
to Mrs. Hayes that they go&#13;
among their friends, explain the situation&#13;
and ask money for their charity.&#13;
One of the first upon whom they&#13;
called was Judge Gilbert. Williams&#13;
explained that the judge was busy&#13;
for a few minutes and asked them to&#13;
be seated. He did not know If the&#13;
men cared to be bothered with mere&#13;
women cm such a day.&#13;
When Williams announced that Miss&#13;
Kerr and Mrs. Hayes wished to see&#13;
him, Judge Gilbert asked Kerr if he&#13;
knew t h e meaning of the visit.&#13;
"They got some sort o' mission&#13;
work they're beggln' for. It's just a&#13;
polite shake down."&#13;
"I didn't know she had taken it up&#13;
that seriously. I just thought she went&#13;
down with Mrs. Hayes out of \curiceptton&#13;
room, there opened two&#13;
osity." ^&#13;
"Women is queer creatures, Amos.&#13;
Gloria's spendin' lots of her time witH&#13;
Sam's wife savin' souls. You're tn for&#13;
I t She got me to subscribe a hundred&#13;
dollars. Wanted my name to head&#13;
the list. I told h e r to put me down&#13;
as Cheerful Giver. Said I was caatin*&#13;
oread on the water without any hope&#13;
o' gittln' it back. Them mission&#13;
things Is usually fakes.'*&#13;
'(TO BB CONtttfTJED.)&#13;
Married, of Qftarat;&#13;
"She disturbed toy peace of mind/*&#13;
"How?"&#13;
"By giving « i pteoe «f hare."&#13;
To Pipe Smokers&#13;
We Are Independent&#13;
and have no one to please but our customers.&#13;
We have been making high*&#13;
grade smoking tobacco for more than&#13;
half a century and "Wild Fruit" is our&#13;
beat effort. It is Union Made Packed&#13;
in five cent foil packages, ten cent&#13;
cloth pouches, eight and sixteen ounce&#13;
tins. Premium coupons in all packages.&#13;
Should you fail tofind the "Wild Fruit"&#13;
in your dealer's stock, send us five&#13;
cents in postage stamps and we&#13;
will mail you an original package,&#13;
JHO. J.Baglei &amp; Go.vDetroltf Mlth.&#13;
lSH5E5H5H5ZScSHS25Z5Z5H52Sa525|&#13;
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and preventive of the numerous&#13;
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SoU everywhere* In boxes* 10c, 2Se&gt;&#13;
Insupportable.&#13;
"Well, Henry," said the fair maid,&#13;
"did popper ask you if you could support&#13;
me in the style to which I am&#13;
accustomed?" "No, dear," said Henry.&#13;
"He merely informed me that he&#13;
couldn't, and gave me his blessing."&#13;
—Judge.&#13;
SCALP ITCHED AND BURNED&#13;
Greenwood, Ind.—-"First my hair began&#13;
to fall, then my scalp itched a a 4&#13;
burned when .I became warm. I had&#13;
pimples on my scalp; my hair&#13;
falling out gradually until I&#13;
scarcely any hair on my head. I&#13;
couldn't keep the dandruff off at all.&#13;
My hair was dryyand^lifeless and I&#13;
lost rest at night~Tro"m the terrible&#13;
itching sensation. I would pull my&#13;
hat off and scratch my head any place&#13;
I happened to be.&#13;
"For several yearB I was bothered&#13;
with pimples on my face.. Some of&#13;
them were hard red spots, some were&#13;
full of matter, and many blackheads.&#13;
I was always picking at them and&#13;
caused them to be sore. They made&#13;
my face look so badly I was ashamed&#13;
to be seen. ^&#13;
"I tried massage creams for my face&#13;
and all kinds of hair tonic and. homemade&#13;
remedies, but they only made&#13;
things worse. Nothing did the work&#13;
until I used Cuticura Soap and Ointment.&#13;
I washed my face with the&#13;
Cuticura Soap, then put plenty of&#13;
Cuticura Ointment on. Three months'&#13;
use of Cuticura Soap and Ointment&#13;
has made my face as smooth and&#13;
clean as carr be." (Signed) C. M.&#13;
Hamilton, Sept. 24, 1912.&#13;
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
free.with 32-p. Skin Book. Address postcard&#13;
"Cutlcura,T)ept. L, Boston."—Adr.&#13;
A bride thinks her husband unreasonable&#13;
if he expects her to be reasonable.&#13;
f&#13;
V&#13;
STOP THAT BACKACHE&#13;
There's nothing more discouraging&#13;
man a constant backache. You are lame&#13;
when you awake, pains pierce you when&#13;
you bend or lift It's hard to rest and&#13;
next day it's the same old story.&#13;
Pain in the back is nature's warning&#13;
of kidney ilia Neglect may pave the&#13;
way to dropsy, gravel, or other serious&#13;
kidney sickness.&#13;
Don't delay—begin using Doafit Kidney&#13;
Pills—the remedy that has been caring&#13;
backache and kidney trouble |or&#13;
fifty years.&#13;
A MICHIGAN CASK&#13;
^JNsrv Pietw IVW« a Story." P&lt;ftt?l&amp;?*lB&gt;f&amp;°'&#13;
wa_s_ ioft: utunn*e a*a«&#13;
COMQ tbeemd.e lj.&#13;
e;fdc«. dIo e.ttorfi*e&lt;d,a «D4 efafattrl*s Kidney ttftj sad stt&#13;
Pet P—rs si Aay gene, Wjs'a l e a DOAN^SVaXV&#13;
M f n f c M U U K N CO. WFXAIAsVtY&#13;
• &lt; • » . • * . # '&#13;
''~r5!&#13;
.. #? - It&#13;
i&lt; -&#13;
. v: * " * • &gt; .&#13;
i&gt;v&#13;
# • " 11¾ • • s&#13;
'*;.-&lt;-v:* /&#13;
• M L * ? - •'&#13;
W -&#13;
s%r&#13;
ml*^&#13;
v Ai.&#13;
I - ' v&#13;
-*-t-&#13;
• t i PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
MOST POPULAR AND DELICIOUS VEGETABLE&#13;
To have success with this fastidious vegetable requires a high degree&#13;
9f soil fertility, plenty of moisture and proper drainage. They must be&#13;
protected from excessive sunshine. The cabbage root maggot Is the worst&#13;
*nemy of the cauliflower. Plant lice bother it some, but dusting with fine&#13;
Jobacco dust will be found an effective remedy.&#13;
PUN FOR ICE HOUSE&#13;
Building Should Be Located on&#13;
EasilyDrainedGround.&#13;
Protection From Scorching Rays of&#13;
8un is Also of Importance—Sawdust&#13;
is Considered Best Material&#13;
for Packing Walls.&#13;
The location of the ice house is important.&#13;
It should be placed on ground&#13;
iiat is easily drained, and if possible&#13;
jocated beneath the shade of some&#13;
arge tree that the beaming rays of&#13;
the sun may not beat on it in the&#13;
lot summer time. Here is a good&#13;
?lan for building an ice house which&#13;
las been used by a number of farmers;&#13;
Make an excavation three feet deep&#13;
end 12 by 12 feet. Wall this up&#13;
*ith brick or cement blockB, letting&#13;
jhe wall extend two feet above the&#13;
ground. Dig a trench and put in a&#13;
lie drain. Now put up the house,&#13;
ising two by ten studding ten feet&#13;
the ice. Cut the cakes o{ ice the&#13;
size to fit your ice box or refrigerator,&#13;
and be certain to secure the purest&#13;
ice possible. At the ice house the&#13;
cakes can he slided down a long&#13;
board into their places. I .believe&#13;
it Is best to set the ice up edgewise,&#13;
says a writer in the Iowa Homestead.&#13;
The cakes are easier to get out and&#13;
they retain their usual thickness. Pack&#13;
the ice to within five inches of the&#13;
wall all around the building and pile&#13;
ten or twelve feet high. The ice&#13;
should be packed as solidly as possible,&#13;
therefore all cracks should be&#13;
filled with small chunks and particles&#13;
of ice. Put eight inches of sawdust&#13;
over top of the ice, packing it down&#13;
in the five-inch space all around the&#13;
house.&#13;
REVIVING DEAD SOIL SPOTS&#13;
Inexpensive Ice House.&#13;
tong for the walls. Place the studiing&#13;
two feet apart. Then board up&#13;
the building inside and out. A cheap&#13;
trade of lumber may be used for intide&#13;
work . A hollow space ten inches&#13;
wide will be left in the walls, and this&#13;
ihould be filled with sawdust Straw&#13;
fe not good for this purpose, and&#13;
-ihould not be used. Either shingle&#13;
or felt roofing may be used for cover-&#13;
&lt;ftig, but one should be certain to get&#13;
ihe roof high enough so that he will&#13;
&gt;not strike his head when putting in&#13;
(the ice. The door to ice house should&#13;
Ibe two feet eight inches by six feet&#13;
sight inches or close to .these dimension.&#13;
Cleats should be nailed to the&#13;
Inner and outer edges of the door facing&#13;
to hold ends of boards that may&#13;
be slipped in and sawdust tamped&#13;
down between them. Put coarse&#13;
cinders over the floor of ice house&#13;
and cover them with eight inches of&#13;
sawdust Now the house is ready for ]&#13;
FEEDING THE PREGNANT EWE&#13;
Lack of Plant Growth Sometimes At&#13;
trfbuted to Want of Water—Manure&#13;
Is Lacking Essential.&#13;
(By H. P. FISHBUI^N, Assistant Chem*&#13;
1st, Idaho Experiment Station.)&#13;
On land devoid of sufficient organic&#13;
matter or sand, there sometimes oo&#13;
cur spots that are apparently dead 01&#13;
unresponsive to water and plant life&#13;
to any marked degree. Lack of plant&#13;
growth Is sometimes attributed to&#13;
want of water, and oftentimes such&#13;
may be the case, but the spots in&#13;
question are of a different nature from&#13;
the surrounding soil, usually very compact&#13;
and most impervious to water,&#13;
indicating a too large percentage ot&#13;
clay.&#13;
Experiments have shown that these&#13;
spots can readily be brought to a high&#13;
state of fertility by the proper incorporation&#13;
of manure. Such a condition&#13;
could not easily be remedied If it were&#13;
a case of alkali, which answers the&#13;
question several times asked, whether&#13;
or not this be a case of alkali.&#13;
&gt;.'&lt;&lt;&#13;
. -ML'&#13;
Should Be Supplied With Seme Kind&#13;
of Supplementary Feed to Maintain&#13;
Suitable Condition.&#13;
It Is very important in the growth&#13;
and development of the unborn lamb&#13;
that the pregnant ewe be maintained&#13;
In a healthy, flesh-forming condition&#13;
during the winter months.&#13;
As soon as the cold weather cornea&#13;
and fenders succulent crops of forage&#13;
and pasture infra less plentiful the&#13;
ewes should be supplied vita some&#13;
kind of supplementary food m order&#13;
that they may maintain a suitable&#13;
flesh condition,&#13;
The owes shottld&gt;be allowed to run&#13;
outside and obtain plenty of fresh&#13;
«ir and exercise until early i» the&#13;
^rtntsr, providing th&gt;y are fed a little&#13;
tfov*v hay and #3*&amp; food In this&#13;
way the change from grain, feed to&#13;
4ry feed is modified by ihe succulent&#13;
fee* obtained about the farm daring&#13;
*J:&#13;
MlStS tO&#13;
of the moat important&#13;
he ohaorfod In eaansdnc&#13;
fffw w w w w e 9 w ^ e eansi ^s^ssssjBjsss^gjassaa^ps&#13;
Study Your Cows.&#13;
In learning about the individual&#13;
cows In your herd you are studying&#13;
a problem that is of much interest,&#13;
deeper and greater than simply look&#13;
lng at the animal. You are endeavoring&#13;
to find out some of the hidden&#13;
forces of nature that produce these&#13;
different results. Get acquainted with&#13;
your cows^todlvidually. Get acquainted&#13;
with their different wants, theii&#13;
different tastes; and also find what results&#13;
are obtained from the individual&#13;
cows, so that you can treat them according&#13;
to their deserts, dome of&#13;
them deserve the very best of treatment&#13;
because they are doing good and&#13;
profitable work. Others should be&#13;
sent to the butcher, because they are&#13;
leeches on the good work of the&#13;
others.&#13;
pregnant ewes from the pasture to&#13;
dry winter ration.&#13;
' A roughage ration of any kind is not&#13;
sufficient to maintain the ewes in&#13;
good flesh condition and properly&#13;
nourish the growing fetus. For winter&#13;
rations many good feeders prefer to&#13;
feed ^ewes a grain ration made up&#13;
largely of such home-grown feeds as&#13;
oats, barley, peas and a limited&#13;
amount of com Corn should be fed&#13;
with judgment, as it has a tendency&#13;
to make a surplus fat which is more&#13;
mjnrlona than beneficial to pregnant&#13;
ewes. For a roughage ration clover&#13;
hay and corn silage will give the&#13;
ewes a diet that will stimulate their&#13;
appetites and promote their health.&#13;
Salt as a Fertilizer.&#13;
Almost any tort of material that&#13;
contains soluble potash, phosphoric&#13;
acid, or nitrates has more or less fer-&#13;
UEslng value, but salt has not a trace&#13;
of any of these. Sodium and chlorine&#13;
ere aH it has to off** Salt might posslbey&#13;
have eome little effect on the&#13;
physical condition of the sofl under&#13;
sc^s^soodUiooo, s«t even this would&#13;
be too sUgftt t» warrant Its nam&#13;
Education enables a young man to&#13;
ihow how clever he Isn't.&#13;
Even a woman seldom has cause to&#13;
repent because she said too little.&#13;
Coughs vanish in a night. Dean's Mentholated&#13;
Cough Drops iwothe the throat, effecting&#13;
a speedy cure—5c at all Druggist*.&#13;
Daily Thought.&#13;
Faith is a higher faculty than reason.—&#13;
Bailey.&#13;
Red Cross Ball Blue gives double value&#13;
for your money, goes twice as far as any&#13;
other. Ask your grocer. Adv.&#13;
Woisey's Luxurious Retinue.&#13;
Lord Haldane traveled from England&#13;
much more Bimply than did Cardinal&#13;
Wolsey. Haldane was accompanied&#13;
only by his sister and his private&#13;
secretary, whereas Woisey's retinue—&#13;
apart from that of his royal master—&#13;
consisted/)f 12 chaplains, 50 gentlemen,&#13;
238 servants and 150 horses. The&#13;
channel crossing was done in the&#13;
Harry Grace a Dieu, England's first&#13;
two-decker, of 72 guns and a tonnage&#13;
of about 1,000.&#13;
Important to Mothers&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle of&#13;
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infants and children, and see that it&#13;
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Children Cry for Fletcher's Caatoria&#13;
How It Was Done.&#13;
"Your hardwood floors are always&#13;
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Jones, j How do you manage it?"&#13;
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the children and let them play in the&#13;
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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;
well and hearty and weigh about&#13;
200 pounds. I feel very grateful that&#13;
I found Dodds Kidney Pills and you&#13;
may publish this letter if you wish. I&#13;
am serrlng my third term as Probate&#13;
Judge of Gray Co. Yours truly,&#13;
PHILIP MILLER, Cimarron, Kan.&#13;
Correspond with Judge Miller about&#13;
this wonderful remedy.&#13;
Dodds Kidney Pills, 50c. per box at&#13;
your dealer or Dodds 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;
AdT.&#13;
Nice and Easy.&#13;
"Is It hard to learn to swim?"&#13;
asked the sweet young thing. "Dear&#13;
me, no," replied the more experienced&#13;
sweet young thing. "I learn&#13;
every year."—Detroit Free Press.&#13;
This is the heater that has&#13;
won the throne through the&#13;
popular vote of the people.&#13;
King of Oil Heaters—because&#13;
the most pleasurable&#13;
to own and the most economical&#13;
to maintain.&#13;
Approver! by over half a&#13;
million families in theUnited&#13;
States last year— enjoying&#13;
twice the sale of any other.&#13;
Because it isapracticalneces*&#13;
sity and a positive economy.&#13;
Andbyfar.thebestof itskind. TheMPerfection"&#13;
Smokeless Oil Heater is needed in every&#13;
home, no matter what its heating facilities&#13;
are. Handy to carry from room to room,&#13;
you can have heat where you want it,&#13;
when you want it, And in the mild days&#13;
of Fall and Spring it saves the cost of&#13;
keeping up furnace fires. It will save its&#13;
small cost during the first cold spell of&#13;
winter.&#13;
Smokeless! Odorless!&#13;
Ten hours' warmth from one single gallon&#13;
of oil. N o smoke, no odor and no&#13;
danger to contend with.&#13;
An ornament to any room and a necessity&#13;
in every home.&#13;
Ask your dealer to show you the various&#13;
Z, j models. Descriptive booklet mailed free.&#13;
' STANDARD OIL COMPANY&#13;
(AN INDIANA CORPORATION)&#13;
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS&#13;
oiinniiiiiiimimnaiitiniiiiiM m&#13;
For PINK EYE DISTEMPER&#13;
CATARRHAL rCVCR&#13;
AND ALL NOSE&#13;
AND THROAT OI9CX9C9&#13;
Cures the sick and acts as « preventive for others. Liquid given on tbm&#13;
tongrue. 8afe for brood mares and all others. Best kidney remedy; Mo »o4&#13;
Si a bottle; 15 «nd tlO a dosen. Sold by all druggists and hora* foods&#13;
houses, or sent, express paid, by the manufacturers.&#13;
SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists, GOSHEN, INDIANA&#13;
Rheumatism, Sprains&#13;
Backache; Neuralgia&#13;
"Yes, daughter, that's good stuff. The pain in&#13;
my back is all gone-—I sever taw anything work&#13;
as quickly as Sloan's Liniment'' Thousands of&#13;
grateful people voice the same opinion. Here's&#13;
the proof.&#13;
tUIiersftl Pala la Back.&#13;
w fe£ S t .&#13;
* I was troubled with a very bad pain In my&#13;
back for some time. I went to a doctor but be&#13;
did not do me any good, so I Enrchased a bottle of Sloan's&#13;
iniment, and now I am a well&#13;
woman. I always keep a bottle&#13;
of Sloan's Liniment in the&#13;
botwe."—Hi— Matilda Cotton,&#13;
U4 MynUAv*, Brooklyn, A'. Y.&#13;
Sciatic Rheumatism.&#13;
"We have used Sloan'* Liniment&#13;
for over aix years and&#13;
found it the best we ever used.&#13;
When my wife had sciatic&#13;
rheumatism the only thing that&#13;
did her anygood waa Sloan's&#13;
liniment. We cannot praise it&#13;
DWotihMSo iMenio, uIgohw.a",— •»•• *"%*&#13;
HAINES wTO,fiUSP E•E"S Ladies' Hair Goods. Wholesale and Retail.&#13;
Established in present Hair Store 1879,&#13;
Wia. A . Haines, 7 6 Grand River Av. West&#13;
Near Barley Av. Detroit,&#13;
TACKER WANTED 5 ¾ ^ ¾ ¾ onfa mAe.H on.J K.,I JJTBIHo xm 1 6b32is, lPethteilrasd. ePlpahritaic, uPlaar,s 400,000 Settlers a Year&#13;
Spraiaed Aaale tUBere*.&#13;
„ **! was fll for s long time with a severely sprained ankle. I got a bottle of Sloan's&#13;
Liniment and now 1 am able to be about and can walk a great deal. I write this becaoae&#13;
I think yon deserve a lot of credit for putting iucn a fina Liniment on the&#13;
nyrket_and I'j}*1'*1*.*?* take time to recommend Dr. Sloan's Liniment, "—Jfo. SLOANS&#13;
LINIMENT AaaBDealte gBe.t s^e.sssdll^8Uaa&gt; s&lt;&#13;
Address Dr. Earl S. Shorn, lee. Beaton, Mass.&#13;
Immigration figures&#13;
show that the population&#13;
of Canada Increased&#13;
during 1013.&#13;
by the addition of&#13;
400,000 new settler*&#13;
from t h e United&#13;
States »nd Europe.&#13;
Most of these have&#13;
gone on farms in the Sevinces of atanlba,&#13;
Saskatchewan&#13;
and Alberta.&#13;
William Percy, an English&#13;
Nobleman, says: "The&#13;
possibilities and opportunities&#13;
offered by the Canadian&#13;
.7est are so infinitely greater&#13;
than those which exist in Bog*&#13;
land, that it seems absurd to&#13;
think that people should be&#13;
impeded from coming to the&#13;
country where they can most&#13;
easily and certainly IsaproTe&#13;
their position."&#13;
New districts are being opened&#13;
np, which will make accessible&#13;
a great number of homesteads&#13;
in districts especially adapted&#13;
to mixed farming- and grain&#13;
raising.&#13;
dFuocre Idl lursatirlwataeyd rlaitteersa, atuprpely a ntod Srue-- pwear, iCntaennaddean,t o rI mmigration, Otte*&#13;
M. V. Mclnnee,&#13;
176 Jefferson Ave., Detroit, Mica,&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 45-1913.&#13;
PUTNAM F A D E L E S S DYES Oc*jr more goods brighter and fatter colors than any other dye. One 10c package colors all fibers. They dye in cold water better tham 1&#13;
Yea can dye say garment without rfrotng span. ^wTJTB FOR FREE booklet, calendar, blotters, etc. MONROE DRUG COMPANY*&#13;
• • * * *&#13;
1 ' rv .«t&lt;rj£'^A.k .&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
P i n c k n e y J)i^patch&#13;
Entered at the Postoffice at Pinckney,&#13;
Mich., as Second Class Matter&#13;
R. W. MVERIY, EDITOR.AND PUBLISHER&#13;
Subscription, $1. Per Year ia Advanca&#13;
f&#13;
Advertising rates made known on&#13;
apolicatinn.&#13;
Cards of Thauke, tifty cents.&#13;
Resolutions of Condolence, one dollar.&#13;
Local Notices, in Local columns five&#13;
cent per line per each insertion.&#13;
All matter intended to benetit the personal&#13;
or business interest of any individual&#13;
will be published at regelar advertiseing&#13;
rates.&#13;
Announcement of entertainments, etc.,&#13;
must be paid for at regular LOCHI Notice&#13;
rates.&#13;
Obituary and marriage notices are published&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
Poetry must be paid for at the rate of&#13;
five cents per line.&#13;
Local N e w s&#13;
Pay your subscription this month.&#13;
Raymond Litchfield of Dexter&#13;
. apent Sunday here.&#13;
Mrs. Dora Davia of Howell is&#13;
spending some time here.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Kisby of&#13;
Hamburg spent Sunday here.&#13;
F. Fullerton of Jackson was in&#13;
town on business Monday,&#13;
Mrs. H. D. Grives spent a few&#13;
days the first of the week with&#13;
relatives in Stockbridge.&#13;
Mrs. Thos. R. Elliott of Detroit&#13;
is spending a few days with her&#13;
sister, Mrs. Axie Randall.&#13;
Misses Fae Brockway and Bernics&#13;
Hart of Howell took dinner&#13;
with Pinckney friends Friday.&#13;
Mrs. R. J. Carr and son Wayne&#13;
are spending several days with&#13;
Mrs. Carr's mother at Vernon.&#13;
Dwight Butler, wife and son&#13;
Gerald of Hamburg spent Sunday&#13;
at the home of Willis Tupper.&#13;
Miss Leona Nash and friend cf&#13;
Howell spent Sunday with the&#13;
former's cousin, Miss Edua Webb.&#13;
Professor Doyle attended the&#13;
teacher's state institute at Ann&#13;
Arbor last Thursday and Friday.&#13;
Theyoung people of the Congi.&#13;
Sunday school give $12.00 as the&#13;
receipts taken.in at their Hallowe'en&#13;
social last Friday evening.&#13;
Bring in your list of magazines&#13;
and get my price, I will meet any&#13;
printed list on clubing offers *and&#13;
may be able to save you money.&#13;
C. G. Meyer.&#13;
Regular communication of the&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 76, F. and&#13;
A. M., Tuesday evening, November&#13;
11. Work will convene at&#13;
7:30 o'clock sharp.&#13;
J. R. Martin, W. M.&#13;
Norbert Lavey, brakeman on&#13;
the Grand Trunk, with headquarters&#13;
at Richmond, was an over Sonday&#13;
gueBt of his pareDts here.&#13;
"Bun!' says he likes the work and&#13;
has made "good." Here's hoping&#13;
for his promotion.&#13;
The housewife is always busy,&#13;
but if she is a careful buyer, she&#13;
is not too busy to look over the&#13;
advertisements in the local paper&#13;
before she starts for town to purchase&#13;
supplies for the family.&#13;
They tell her where she can expend&#13;
her money to the best advantage,&#13;
thereby enabling her to&#13;
save many times the cost of the&#13;
paper during the year.&#13;
The village of Stockbri dge is to&#13;
take a boom m population. The&#13;
State Bank of that place advertise&#13;
to give a saving book containing&#13;
a deposit of 11.00 to every new&#13;
Mrs. Louis MonkB spent Saturday&#13;
in Ann Arbor.&#13;
Read Dancer's adv. this week,&#13;
and then think it over.&#13;
Gertrude and John White were&#13;
Detroit visitors last week.&#13;
Mrs. A. Monks visited relatives&#13;
in Jackson the past week.&#13;
John Lynch of Jackson spent&#13;
Friday with friends here.&#13;
W. E. Murphy and wife spent&#13;
last Saturday in Ann Arbor.&#13;
M. Dolan and wife spent Sunday&#13;
with lelatives in Scio, Mich.&#13;
Miss Gladys Fisk is visiting at&#13;
the home of her sister at Owosso.&#13;
New lot of ladies Printzess&#13;
coats at Dancer's. $10. to $25. adv.&#13;
Miss Esther IJarton spent Saturday&#13;
and Sunday with friends at&#13;
Jackson. *&#13;
Miss Lucy Cook of Howell&#13;
spent the week end with her parents&#13;
here.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Coyle of&#13;
Northfield visited relatives here&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Farnam visited&#13;
relatives in Detroit a portion&#13;
of last week.&#13;
Miss Gladys Marstpn_gf Detroit&#13;
was the guest of Mae Teeple the&#13;
past week.&#13;
H. A. Ayers and* family of Detroit&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of&#13;
Mrs. S. Nash.&#13;
Mabel Clinton of Ann Arbor&#13;
spent a few days the paBt week&#13;
with her parents here.&#13;
Paul Curlett of Howell and Miss&#13;
Norma Curlett of Mayville visited&#13;
their parents here Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Robt. Fox and daughter of&#13;
Detroit are visiting her parents,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. P. Keunedy.&#13;
Miss Josephine Culhane of Ypsilanti&#13;
spent a few days the past&#13;
week with her parents here.&#13;
Joie Devereaux was in Ann Arbor&#13;
Thursday and Friday to attend&#13;
t h e Michigan Teacher's&#13;
Association.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Colegrove and son of&#13;
Remus, Mich., are visiting her&#13;
parents and brother, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
G: G. Hoyt and Mr. and Mrs. E.&#13;
E. Hoyt, for several days.&#13;
The Standard Oil company is&#13;
going to manufacture automobiles.&#13;
This is the first time, we believe,&#13;
the auto has been regarded as a&#13;
by-product of gasoline.&#13;
Rev. Lincoln Ostrander of Flint&#13;
has accepted a call as pastor of&#13;
the Coug'l. church of this place,&#13;
and will take up bis new work&#13;
about November 23rd.&#13;
All auto owners will be required&#13;
to swear to fourteen questions&#13;
before tbey will be granted a&#13;
license number the coming year.&#13;
Most of them have already done&#13;
considerable swearing about the&#13;
law, and this is adding insult to&#13;
injury.&#13;
Just to prove how careless the&#13;
American people are in addressing&#13;
their U. S. Mail the department&#13;
at Washington rocieved over&#13;
13 million pieces of matter at the&#13;
dead letter office last year, a large&#13;
portion of which is still undelivered.&#13;
k&#13;
£&#13;
£&#13;
Highest (Jilalitj Itatiante&#13;
T h i s cool weather r e m i n d s everyone of&#13;
winter wear and we wish t o call your&#13;
a t t e n t i o n to t h e fact t h a t we have a fine&#13;
line of&#13;
fc £&#13;
f£c £ Pi&#13;
o&#13;
H&#13;
(3&#13;
&lt;D&#13;
H&#13;
% K&#13;
f£c&#13;
Mens Furnishings&#13;
Including H a t s a n d C a p s , Gloves and&#13;
Mittens, T r o u s e r s , W o o l S h i r t s anil&#13;
Sweaters, U n d e r w e a r a n d Hosiery, E t c .&#13;
in readiness for your inspection.&#13;
Everything Fresh&#13;
in Groceries, Candies a n d Cigars,&#13;
Sealshipt Oysters, B u t t e r K r u s t B r e a d ,&#13;
A d d i s o n Cheese ancji a large a s s o r t m e n t&#13;
of N a t i o n a l Biscuit C o ' s . G o o d s always&#13;
on h a n d .&#13;
Will duplicate competition prices for&#13;
Saturday&#13;
T~~nVmi"-^ ' -~*' •••^m=^ •M«JyW&#13;
0&#13;
MONKS BROTHERS&#13;
P r o m p t Delivery P h o n e N o . 38&#13;
THat&#13;
Will it&#13;
Spread?&#13;
There is no other paint,&#13;
either prepared or hand&#13;
made from lead and oil,&#13;
that will spread as well&#13;
under the brush and cover&#13;
as much surface to the&#13;
gallon as&#13;
THE&#13;
SHERWIN-WILLIAMS&#13;
PAINT.&#13;
Figure 300 square feet,&#13;
two coats, to the gallon&#13;
and you'll probably have&#13;
some paint left over.&#13;
There are many other&#13;
good points in its fjivor.&#13;
Ask us about them.&#13;
According to an order by the&#13;
post office department the rural&#13;
carriers are obliged to count,&#13;
weight and list everything they&#13;
handle for two months and they&#13;
will be glad when November is&#13;
baby born in the tillage a n d i f * 6 ' / 0 ' that reasou. I t makes a&#13;
vicinity. The offer iu all likehood&#13;
will reach out to include the&#13;
village of Gregory and Bunker&#13;
Hill center.-Livingston Democrat.&#13;
We wonder, just wonder, that U&#13;
all, if Teddy Roosevelt in disguise&#13;
is one of the banks offioials at&#13;
Stockbridge. He evidently has&#13;
influence there on the race&#13;
suicide question.&#13;
lot of extra work.&#13;
The 7th annual convention of&#13;
the Michigan Association for&#13;
the prevention aad relief of tuberculosis&#13;
will be held in the Western&#13;
State Normal at Kalamazoo,&#13;
November 4th and 7th. The State&#13;
Board of Health will have an exhibit&#13;
in the Gymnasium of the&#13;
school.&#13;
SOLD BY&#13;
Teeple Hardware Company&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative Banking&#13;
Business. :: ::&#13;
3 pep c e n t&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
P i n c k n e y&#13;
G. W. T E E P L E&#13;
M i c h .&#13;
Prop&#13;
ARE YOU AWAKE&#13;
to the fact that your boy is growing&#13;
Yesterday—Just a little fellow,&#13;
Today—A big boy.&#13;
Tomorrow—A man.&#13;
Today you are sorry you haven't a&#13;
photograph of him as he looked&#13;
yesterday. — Tomorrow you will&#13;
value the one you have today.&#13;
Don't put it off.&#13;
DaisieB. Chapell&#13;
S t o c k b r i d g e , M i c h i g a n&#13;
Leftal Advertising&#13;
STATE of MICHIGAN . The Probate Oonrt lor the&#13;
county of Livingston, At a session of salt!&#13;
court, held at the probate office In the vlllajte of&#13;
Howell in said county on the 18th day of October&#13;
A. D. 1913. Present, Hon. Eugene A. Stowe,&#13;
Judge ol Probate. In tbe matter of tbe estate of&#13;
MARY C. W£8TON, Deceased.&#13;
• Martha M. Palmer bavins filed in said court&#13;
her petition praying that the administration of&#13;
paid estate be granted to Horace Palmer or to&#13;
some other suitable person.&#13;
It is ordered that the 15th day of November&#13;
A. D. 191!), at ten o'clock la tbe forenoon,&#13;
at said probate office, be and Is hereby appointed&#13;
for hearing said petition. ,&#13;
It Is further ordered, that public notice thereof&#13;
be given by publication of a copy Ql this drder&#13;
for three successive weeks previous to said day of&#13;
bearing in the Pinckney Dispatch, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated in said county.&#13;
EUGENE A. STOWE,/&#13;
4'it3 Jaffge of Probate&#13;
St a t e o f Michigan* the probate, court for&#13;
the county of Livingston,—At a session of said&#13;
Court, held at the Probate Office in the Village of&#13;
Howell In said county on the 2lBt day of Oct &gt;ber,&#13;
k. D. 191«. Present, Hon. Eugene 'A'; Stowe&#13;
Judge of Probate, In the matter of the estate of&#13;
MARY L. SPBOUT, Deceased&#13;
Edwin Sprout having filed in said court his&#13;
petitJonpraying that the administration©!said&#13;
estate be granted to F. A. Bsiton or t&amp;some other&#13;
en table person. ,•&lt;;&#13;
It is ordered that tbe 15th day of November, A.&#13;
D. 1913 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 further ordered that public notice Hereof&#13;
be riven by publication of a copy of this order&#13;
for three successive weeks previous to said fey of&#13;
hearing, in the PIKCKXET DISPATCH,:* %ew5&gt;aper&#13;
printed and circulated in said county. 4313 '&#13;
EUGENE A, STOWE '; j *&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
• nfl&#13;
STATBJ3F MICHIGAN •**&#13;
Thirty-fifth Judical Circuit in Chancery&#13;
Lncile I. Westby, Suit pending la&#13;
Complainant,&#13;
vs,&#13;
Edward A. Westby,&#13;
Defendant.&#13;
the CircnltiiiCourt&#13;
for tbe Couhty of&#13;
Livingston in ohanery&#13;
at Howsll on&#13;
the etfthteeaih day&#13;
IWANTEDl)&#13;
(POULTRY, EGGS AND VEAL |&#13;
Will pay the highest market price at all times.&#13;
Call us up before you sell. Bell phone No. 74 1JOHIM D1NKEL.&#13;
» Oay&#13;
of September, A. D.&#13;
19187&#13;
In this cause, it appearing from affidavit on&#13;
file that the de endant, Edward A, Westby, is not&#13;
a resident of this state but is a resident of the&#13;
oltyot Misrowla, ttate of Montana and that all&#13;
post office address is Missoula, Montana,&#13;
On motion of Arthur K. Cole, solicitor for complainant,&#13;
it is ordered that the appearance of said&#13;
non-resident, defendant, Edward A. Westby, be&#13;
entered therein within four months from the date&#13;
of this order acd in case of Ms appearance he&#13;
cause h's answer to tbe bill of oomplalnfcjb I r&#13;
filed and a copy thereof to be served wtthialMt&gt;&#13;
B dajs after service on him or his soUoltoFwftft&#13;
copy of said bill, and In doftto'.t .ihTWtttm^m'&#13;
bin be taken as confess** by the s a l d ^ t n f i S *&#13;
Edward A. Westby. 7 -;^-.T;-&#13;
. AD d It is farther ordered that the&#13;
plainant caise this orde&lt; to be pnbUsL&#13;
ilnckney Dispatch, a newspaper printed,&#13;
ed and eucaJatiog la said county and t&#13;
n*bUcation^jB5m«enoed frtf''&#13;
oation beoontinu _&#13;
six wests in aircceision or that the&#13;
•V&#13;
r&#13;
K&#13;
'1&#13;
f €&#13;
Jndfe&#13;
- : »W* ' b&amp; rI3&#13;
Supplement to the Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
17&#13;
&amp;M';£&amp;$&#13;
WRECK OF THE 10:10&#13;
BY HAROLD CARTER.&#13;
After Dark&#13;
Chores are&#13;
Easy for Jones&#13;
Jones has a big enclosed&#13;
(Acetylene light in bis barn.&#13;
A big, round, brilliant,&#13;
(white light.&#13;
A light he calls " t h e&#13;
[sun's little brother."&#13;
This big light is solidly&#13;
[Fastened to a heavy timber/&#13;
'and unlike Jones' old oil&#13;
lantern, it can't be tipped&#13;
Lover.&#13;
Jones turns this high&#13;
'candle power light on—&#13;
^without a match, by simply&#13;
pulling a little wire rod t h a t&#13;
tiangs from the light.&#13;
On cold winter nights&#13;
(when its dark at 4:30.&#13;
When he gets home from&#13;
|[town late—&#13;
Or when he has a sick&#13;
iMcritter" to look after, Jones&#13;
[finds his big barn light a&#13;
[great convenience.&#13;
He says he wouldn't&#13;
take $1,000 for it. _&#13;
Mrs. Jones too, shares irxj&#13;
fthe good thing.&#13;
,, She has acetylene light&#13;
^n every room in her house,'&#13;
a n d her light fixtures are;&#13;
Tiandsome ornaments of brass&#13;
and bronze.&#13;
These Pilot&#13;
Lighting Plants&#13;
Are not storage tanks.&#13;
They make Acetylene—a j&#13;
very little at a time—as the&#13;
burners use it,&#13;
The Pilot is one of hundreds&#13;
of patented Acetylene&#13;
machines.&#13;
All built on different prin*&#13;
ciples to do the same worK.&#13;
The test of time has&#13;
brought " T h e Pilot" out on&#13;
top.&#13;
The principle on .which it&#13;
works has proved to be the&#13;
correct one.&#13;
Today we sell more Light&#13;
machines than all other manufacturers&#13;
in , this A country&#13;
put together.&#13;
. We sell these Pilot plants&#13;
complete—through three factories&#13;
and 3,000 local representatives.&#13;
.&#13;
We have a big eastern&#13;
factory in Newark —a big&#13;
central factory in Chicago and&#13;
a Western Warehouse in Los&#13;
Angeles.&#13;
o o o&#13;
A complete plant includes&#13;
the macrrme, gas pipes,&#13;
light fixtures and the cooking&#13;
range.&#13;
-Such a plant costs much&#13;
lesr T» \n a water or heating&#13;
sys. * It is as permanent&#13;
as e.tner, and as necessary to&#13;
make your home modern.&#13;
Our 3,000 representatives&#13;
are reri-Jsnt", in the districts they serve.&#13;
Mrs. Jones cooks also on a big gas range . . . , a , • a „o r ..^.A ,.M&#13;
, ~ m acetylene range that furnishes heat Each ono established in a p e r ^ a ^ . u&#13;
' y , T.\Z .,.- s r i c nf _ a c growing business.&#13;
(0.-. tap •— just like millions ot gas o &amp; &amp;&#13;
!ranges in big cities. K ^ &lt; ; They are en the grounds to see to&#13;
feedTs hteh is acreatnyglee ne which }f \^ - ^&#13;
and the lights on&#13;
one.&#13;
c o u r s e ,&#13;
(home m?.de.&#13;
J ) | PILOT LIGHTING PLANTS [Q&#13;
HOME MADE&#13;
y o r LIGHTING ^&#13;
ACETYLENE&#13;
C O O K I N G -&#13;
it herself with the aid of a Pilot Lighting&#13;
PL,-.&#13;
o o o&#13;
He tU,r,&gt; tV" ".Rht m achine with U N I O N&#13;
C A R B I D E ni\d plain water, once a month.&#13;
o o o&#13;
This Pilot Limiting Plant gives Jones&#13;
[tin safest and most pr-etical light and cook-&#13;
Ijn- fu,l avnllablJ for country home use.&#13;
it personally that purchasers&#13;
of Pilot plants get&#13;
"value received"&#13;
for their money.&#13;
In your district&#13;
we are represented&#13;
b y ^&#13;
R. B. WRIGHT&#13;
56 Regular Street, D E T R O I T , MICrA.&#13;
Salesman&#13;
3XWELD ACETYLENE CO.&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
MTfUrf.4 M M * . .&#13;
It was a slack evening in the oilice,&#13;
I r e m e m b e r , and a group of us were&#13;
sitting chatting around the r e p o r t e r s '&#13;
table f a r t h e s t from Dunning, the night&#13;
editor, who had looked around r a t h e r&#13;
frowningly once or twice, as if the&#13;
conversation disturbed him&#13;
Broad's fiancee was to arrive t h a t&#13;
evening on t h e 10:10 from Washington,&#13;
a n d Broad, who had been celeb&#13;
r a t i n g in honor of t h e event, w a s&#13;
telling us all t h e details of their recent&#13;
q u a r r e l and reconciliation.&#13;
" S h - h ! " said s o m e , o n e ; and just.&#13;
t h e n a boy e n t e r e d with a late edition&#13;
of the " P l a n e t , " wet from t h e&#13;
press, and branded it t o Dunning&#13;
"Mr. B r o a d ! " he said sharply, and&#13;
then, c h a n g i n g hiB mind, left his s e a t&#13;
and hurried toward us. "Mr. Broad,&#13;
I w a n t you to go out to Crayfield in&#13;
stantly. The 10:10 from Washington&#13;
h a s been wrecked outside the station.&#13;
H u r r y , and t e l e p h o n e all the news.&#13;
And say, try to get a list of the dead."&#13;
"My God!" said Broad, and s a n k&#13;
down into his seat. He buried his&#13;
face in his h a n d s and his shoulders&#13;
shook convulsively. Somebody explained&#13;
the situation in a few words,&#13;
and Dunning's face took on an expression&#13;
of intense s y m p a t h y . He placed&#13;
one a r m about Broad's shoulders and&#13;
drew him to his feet.&#13;
"Too bad, old m a n , " he said. "But&#13;
I g u e s s you'll b e _ c r a z y n o w unless, you&#13;
get to Crayfield as soon as possible,&#13;
so p e r h a p s it would be the kindest&#13;
t h i n g to let you cover t h e assignment."&#13;
"Yes, I'll go," cried Broad, pulling&#13;
himself together.&#13;
Then, one after another, he derailed&#13;
u s ; one to the railroad offices, another&#13;
to the president's house, a n o t h e r to&#13;
catch the general m a n a g e r a t his club.&#13;
I was among the few not assigned&#13;
and, r e t r e a t i n g to my desk, waited.&#13;
We did not like to think about the&#13;
subject It was too ghastly for con-&#13;
T n e " p a s i n g e r s air escaped" witB&#13;
minor injuries except one unidentified&#13;
man who—"&#13;
Suddenly Dunning pitched over and&#13;
fell to the ground. He had fainted.&#13;
Kemp ran to raise him, and, temporarily&#13;
diverted from the telephone by the&#13;
occurrence, I found myself glancing a t&#13;
.he copy of the "iJ lanet" in Dunging's&#13;
halt-opened d r a w e r of his desk.&#13;
Du the page facing me I read, a m o n g&#13;
:he list of the d e a d :&#13;
"Mrs. George Dunning of Washingion."&#13;
( C o p y r i g h t . 19K5, by W. &lt;\. C h a p m a n . )&#13;
TRUE ART OF ADVERTISING&#13;
Man In b u r g l a r ' s Mask W a s Only Introducing&#13;
P a t e n t Safety Alarm |&#13;
and P r e v e n t e r . |&#13;
As I opened the door I saw a m a n&#13;
with a burglar's musk kneeling before&#13;
t h e safe. T h e n e x t m o m e n t h e had (&#13;
t u r n e d and shoved a revolver Into m y&#13;
face. ;&#13;
" T h r o w up your h a n d s ! " he said. ]&#13;
I did so. |&#13;
" "You u n d e r s t a n d , " he r e m a r k e d&#13;
pleasantly, " t h a t I can in t h e p r e s e n t&#13;
circumstances loot t h e p r e m i s e s a t m y&#13;
p l e a s u r e ? "&#13;
I confessed t h a t h e could.&#13;
"You realize t h a t you a r e a t m y&#13;
m e r c y ? "&#13;
"I do," I replied.&#13;
"You acknowledge t h a t I can blow&#13;
you to kingdom come if I l i k e ? " he&#13;
persisted.&#13;
"Certainly," I admitted.&#13;
"Well, then," he said,' (iyou will b o&#13;
i n t e r e s t e d to know t h a t I got in without&#13;
difficulty t h r o u g h your parlor window.&#13;
Had it .._been equipped with&#13;
Smith's patent safety b u r g l a r a l a r m&#13;
and preventer this could not h a v e happened.&#13;
Installed, complete with batteries,&#13;
for $25. Allow me to h a n d you&#13;
a circular. Good night, sir."&#13;
Then, pocketing his revolver, h e&#13;
withdrew.&#13;
Business Man Praises&#13;
Dr. MUes' Heart Remedy&#13;
Successful Merchant After Investigation&#13;
Found a Remedy That Restored&#13;
Hie Health.&#13;
"This is Thanksgiving day in the&#13;
Btate of Fennbylvania, and I want to&#13;
d«vote a part of&#13;
It in- writing a&#13;
tetter to you*&#13;
On tht- litJth day&#13;
of November, '10,&#13;
I WUH striakaa&#13;
w i t h h e a r t&#13;
t r o u b l e . H |&#13;
family phyn4ela»&#13;
called it Anflna.&#13;
Pectoris. 1 had&#13;
teem one to Sv*&#13;
attacks In la&#13;
hours, i n t h o&#13;
latter p a r t of&#13;
Deeember, 191b&#13;
I wrote to till&#13;
Miles Medioal Co., for information concerning&#13;
my cause, aad In repiyt I ceceived&#13;
a very kind a*t instructive letter,&#13;
which 1 hs-nded to my family doctor,&#13;
and he told me to use your Remedies&#13;
in connection w*th the medichie ha&#13;
gave me, so I did. I used five bottlea&#13;
of Dr. MHow' Heart Remedy and seven&#13;
bottles of Dr. Mile*' Nervine. I was&#13;
confined to the house for about four&#13;
months. The act4wi of my heart la&#13;
now, and has been normal for the last&#13;
aix months. I oan truly recommend&#13;
Dr. Miles' Nervine and Heart Remedy&#13;
to do what they are intended, for, If&#13;
used according to directions. I thank&#13;
you kindly for your advice in answer to&#13;
my monthly reports. I am now sixtyseven&#13;
years of age, have be»'n in tho&#13;
mercantile business for thirty-five years&#13;
and lived retired for the last thirteen&#13;
years." A. B. HOLLJNOBR,&#13;
Lincoln, Penna.&#13;
Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy Is aold and&#13;
guaranteed by all druggists. io&#13;
MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind.&#13;
4.&#13;
6 0 YEAS?t&gt;&#13;
E X P E R I E N * ^&#13;
WHY THE PRICE WAS HIGH&#13;
8 l r Joshua Reynolds' Notice of Sketch&#13;
MacPe It Worth Vastly More,&#13;
S a i d ' Dealer.&#13;
When You Need Help&#13;
YOU can always get the kind of help you need in a&#13;
Rumely-Olds Engine. It will be on the job for you&#13;
early or late, day or night and as long at a stretch as&#13;
you care to use it.&#13;
I t will r u n any kind of a machine from a cream separator to a hay baler&#13;
Itnd can be used any place on t h e farm.&#13;
If you don't need a big one get a small one; we sell sizes from 1 ½ H .&#13;
P . . up t o 65 H . P .&#13;
If you c a n ' t find time to come in and see us,&#13;
ask us t o come and see you or send you a&#13;
catalog of Rumely-Olds Engines.&#13;
We're here to serve you;&#13;
Give us a chance.&#13;
A. H. FLINTOFT,&#13;
" W h a t do you ask for this sketch?**&#13;
said Sir J o s h u a Reynolds to a picture&#13;
dealer whose portfolio he was examining.&#13;
" T w e n t y guineas, Sir J o s h u a . "&#13;
" T w e n t y pence, I suppose you m e a n . "&#13;
"No, sir; I would have taken t w e n t y&#13;
pence for It this morning, but if you&#13;
think the d r a w i n g worth looking at&#13;
all t h e *world will t h i n k It w o r t h buying."&#13;
A Bondon d e a l e r who had m a d e a&#13;
few trifling p u r c h a s e s at a secondh&#13;
a n d furniture shop in t h e country&#13;
w a s leaving It, when he caught his&#13;
foot in the s t r i n g of a picture and fell.&#13;
H a v i n g picked himself up, he examined&#13;
the picture to see if it had been&#13;
damaged. It had escaped injury, and&#13;
he found, to his surprise, t h a t in thus&#13;
tripping he had—literally—stumbled&#13;
upon a print of the duchess of Rut&#13;
land, after Reynolds, by Valentine&#13;
Green, In its first state. T h e dealer&#13;
bought the print for £ 4 and afterward&#13;
disposed of it for £ 1 , 0 0 0 . - F r o m&#13;
J e r n i g h a m ' s "Bargain Book."&#13;
T P A D E M A R K *&#13;
fJUl&lt;:i;iv a;&lt; ' &gt;;uu &lt;n:r o\n:nou free w h e t h e r ttt n'.vcn: ion i n;'• " ' ; . r / i i;iK"i:nMe. ('ominumr'it&#13;
' . l u i i a m n c t i y &lt; "i M loutinl. MAND80JK &lt;&gt;n Patent-'&#13;
J l . ' - t . : I ! ! ! ' . ' ' I ' ' ' 1 ' - : i ' ! i ' , I O f f f ' I J I l ; ) , , ' i i l l U ' T I I I. p!»L&lt;."lt:t i " .t i i • L _' J i .Mtli.i. V : ,'•. „'"*&#13;
Tpecinlvoth:c w:t:,,i .&lt;. i.lmriH. -.U'.i).:&#13;
.' onn '•'.&lt;; ,.'.\y ,,,.,.7 \u-a tvooiuv i,:)«,iif.3t &lt;!ir&#13;
...Jatiou i-; :;n\- :.i' oni ,*io luiirmu I *;:TIIS %'A t&#13;
fenr • [oi,:1 t.iii'rli.j ',l. ;iold b y a l i (irwHdutticris&#13;
''•nuoQOfl* i' *j&amp; b tft.. *V'Mfi«uBtr&lt;n.. li,*.;&#13;
A4*, A ^ ^ A ^ A ^ A i&#13;
I GOING TO BUY A PIANO&#13;
1 OR SEWING MACHINE&#13;
. YES?&#13;
| SEE L. R. WILLIAMS.&#13;
I J G R E G O R Y *&#13;
-5 8fe3&gt;"'He saves you money on hi^h&#13;
I $&#13;
«1&#13;
^rude pianos.&#13;
AMY D A Y&#13;
Leave your watch, clock or jewelery for repair at&#13;
Monks Bros. Store&#13;
....WILL BE THERE EVERY WEDNESDAY....&#13;
Have a nice line of watches and jewelry at Lowest Prices&#13;
BDW. A. CLARK&#13;
Dexter JBWBUBR Mich.&#13;
"Yea, I'll Go."&#13;
versatlon. T h e r e was nobody but liked&#13;
Broad, big, generous-hearted, freebanded.&#13;
T h r e e - q u a r t e r s of an hour elapsed.&#13;
Dunning sat stiffly at his desk, writing&#13;
indefatigably, glancing over flimsies&#13;
and casting copy aside. His face&#13;
was blanched; the situation seemed&#13;
to h a v e affected him as much as any&#13;
of us. Once in a while t h e telephone&#13;
would ring, but it was always local&#13;
news or a r e p o r t from some of t h e&#13;
men on a s s i g n m e n t . T h e r e was no&#13;
word from Broad.&#13;
"If she's a m o n g t h e m , " began K e m p&#13;
—and we k n e w he m e a n t the dead—&#13;
"Broad won't t e l e p h o n e . "&#13;
"O yes, he will," I a n s w e r e d confidently;&#13;
and a t t h a t m o m e n t tho telephone&#13;
r a n g so s h a r p l y t h a t somehow I&#13;
knew It was Broad calling from Crayfield.&#13;
D u n n i n g t o o k up the receiver&#13;
and held It to his e a r a moment. T h e n&#13;
ae called me.&#13;
* " I t ' s Broad," h e said. " H e ' s calling&#13;
and says h e 1 h a s a good ^fitory. Don't&#13;
go into a b o o t h ; t a k e It down h e r e&#13;
I've told him to go slow. And say,"&#13;
he added, "don't let him get away&#13;
without giving you t h e list of t h e casualties."&#13;
I t o o k u p t h e r e c e i v e r and a t t h e&#13;
first sound I k n e w t h a t Miss P h a y r e&#13;
was safe.&#13;
" H o w is s h e ? " I called. " F i n e , " answered&#13;
Broad's voice. I t h o u g h t&#13;
there w a s t h e suspicion of a sob in ft.&#13;
"Are you r e a d y ? O, Miss P h a y r e ?&#13;
J u s t a trivial injury, t h a n k s , old m a n .&#13;
The ' P l a n e t ' story w a s Incorrect. Now&#13;
then." I began t a k i n g down t h e story,&#13;
while D u n n i n g looked o v e r my shoulder.&#13;
' T h e 10:10 t r a i n from W a s h i n g t o n&#13;
to N e w Y o r k w a s ditched on t h e far&#13;
t i d e of Crayfield a t 10:02," I w r o t e . " A&#13;
broken rail is believed to h a v e b e e n&#13;
t h e c a u s e of t h e a c c i d e n t T h e e n g i n e&#13;
and t h e first t h r e e c a n plunged d o w n&#13;
an e m b a n k m e n t ; t h e r e m a i n i n g c a r e&#13;
Ifift thj&amp; metaJa. b n i ^ d l d not a™rjnjrflf&#13;
OLD PUFFS AND SWITCHES «f " ^ % ^ I P ^ 1 ¾ V^H?V ? r f ? * »&#13;
Ladies of Twenty-Five C e n t u r i e s Afl*&#13;
Made Liberal Use of Borrowed&#13;
Hair.&#13;
Caesar's wife ma^y have been above&#13;
suspicion so far as her morals w e r e&#13;
concerned, but t h e s a m e could not&#13;
h a v e been said about her hair, a n y&#13;
m o r e t h a n it could about t h e h a i r of&#13;
t h e fashionable m a t r o n of today.&#13;
T h e Greek, Egyptian, C a r t h a g i n i a n&#13;
| a n d Roman ladies of twenty-five centuries&#13;
ago m a d e use of t h e most astonishing&#13;
quantities of borrowed hair,&#13;
i and t h e R o m a n w o m e n of t h e t i m e of&#13;
Augustus w e r e especially pleased&#13;
' when t h e y could outdo t h e i r social&#13;
j rivals by piling upon t h e i r h e a d s a&#13;
] g r e a t e r t o w e r of additional t r e s s e s ,&#13;
i T h e y also a r r a n g e d curls formally&#13;
i around t h e h e a d .&#13;
1 An extensive c o m m e r c e In h u m a n&#13;
h a i r was carried on, and after t h e conq&#13;
u e s t of Gaul, "blond hair, such aa&#13;
grew originally on t h e h e a d s of Germ&#13;
a n girls along t h e Rhine, b e c a m e&#13;
v e r y fashionable in R o m e . C a e s a r did&#13;
not disdain to mix a little commercialism&#13;
with his military e n t e r p r i s e s and&#13;
collected a v a s t a m o u n t of h a i r from&#13;
t h e vanquished Gauls, which he s e n t&#13;
t o m a r k e t a t R o m e , and in t h e R o m a n&#13;
provinces a cropped head w a s regarded&#13;
a s a badge of slavery or a t l e a s t&#13;
of subjection.&#13;
T h e h a i r d r e s s e r s of R o m e w e r e per*&#13;
sons of r e a l I m p o r t a n c e a n d c h a r g e d&#13;
e x o r b i t a n t prices for forming t h e h a i r&#13;
Into fanciful devices, such aa h a r p s ,&#13;
t h s and d i a d e m s .&#13;
«•4^a&gt;K4^HS-^a«•^^M^^^«^^ffifrfK4¾:&gt;&#13;
H H. F. S'GLER M. 0. C. L. SIGLER M. D.&#13;
? DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and b u r g e o n s .&#13;
B&#13;
8&#13;
All calls p r o m p t l y a t t e n d e d to&#13;
day or nigbf. Office on Main&#13;
Street.&#13;
F I N C K N E Y , - M I C H .&#13;
\ PROCURED AN D O r . r B N D C O . , ^ t n o d ^ ^&#13;
I riiawiutf&lt;&gt;rjjfK.to.lofCx x-ilnturehaii'iTrooreport. 1&#13;
t Kr»&gt;i» julvirc, how */&gt; iu,in pBtenU. 1....I0 rajutag&#13;
t copyrights, etc, ; N 4.1. COUT!TRIES). , %&#13;
Business tUrr.-tvnih. Waxlib;::.on saves tir,u.\&#13;
j a inonry aiut of'rn t/t? Client,&#13;
\ 2 Patent and Infringement Practice Exclusively,&#13;
• *"J Wrltf: o f cr&gt;lr.&lt;: io us &lt;,'&#13;
1 K t&gt;M Kiath BtrMt, opp. United 9iW*t Fateat Oftc . - ,&#13;
j g WASHINGTON, D . C . W\ 4&#13;
Grand Trunk Time Table&#13;
For the convenience of our readers&#13;
T r a i n * East&#13;
No. 28—8:39 a. m.&#13;
No. 30—4:4« p . m.&#13;
T r a i n s W e s t&#13;
No. 27—10:23 a. m.&#13;
No. 29—7:12 p . m.&#13;
JCSfW-11 •••^•'•'."'^"•••••••••ssjp mm&#13;
. c cur- :~z ;.„ * •-"*• •-**V&lt;»* *S«V. '' " '^ ' — Til l u ' . , *&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
I f&#13;
•K&#13;
rv 1$&#13;
it&#13;
11&#13;
r&#13;
&amp;i&#13;
i ^ . -&#13;
i&#13;
I • » • ' •&#13;
! f&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
Eutered at the Postoffice at Pinckney,&#13;
Mich, as Second Class Matter&#13;
R. W. CAVERLY, EDITOR.AND PUBLISHER&#13;
Subscription, $1. Per Year ia Advance&#13;
, f&#13;
Advertising rates made known cm&#13;
application.&#13;
Cards of Thauks, fifty cents.&#13;
Resolutions of Condolence, one dollar.&#13;
LOCHI Notices, in Local columns tive&#13;
cent per line per each insertion.&#13;
All matter intended to benefit the personal&#13;
or business interest of any individual&#13;
will be published at regalar advertiseing&#13;
rates.&#13;
Announcement of entertainments, etc.,&#13;
must be paid for at regular Local Notice&#13;
rates.&#13;
Obituary and marriage notices are published&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
Poetry must be paid for at the rate of&#13;
live cents per line.&#13;
bocal N e w s&#13;
Pay your subscription this month.&#13;
Raymond Litchfield of Dexter&#13;
spent Sunday here.&#13;
Mrs. Dora Duvia of Howell is&#13;
spending some time here.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Kisby of&#13;
Hamburg spent Sunday here.&#13;
F. Fullerton of Jackson was in&#13;
town on business Monday.&#13;
Mrs. H. D. GriveB spent a few&#13;
days the first of the week with&#13;
relatives in Stockbridge.&#13;
Mrs. Thos. R. Elliott of Detroit&#13;
is spending a few days with her&#13;
Bister, Mrs. Axie Randall.&#13;
Misses Fae Brockway and Bernica&#13;
Hart of Howell took dinner&#13;
with Pinckney friends Friday.&#13;
Mrs. R. J. Carr and son Wayne&#13;
are spending several days with&#13;
Mrs. Carr's mother at Vernon.&#13;
Dwight Butler, wife and son&#13;
Gerald of Hamburg spent Sunday&#13;
at the home of Willis Tupper.&#13;
Miss Leona Nash and friend cf&#13;
Howell spent Sunday with the&#13;
former's cousin, Miss Edna Webb.&#13;
Professor Doyle attended the&#13;
teacher's state institute at Ann&#13;
Arbor last Thursday and Friday.&#13;
The young people of the Cong'l.&#13;
Sunday school give $12.00 as the&#13;
receipts taken in at their Hallowe'en&#13;
social last Friday evening.&#13;
Bring in your list of magazines&#13;
and get my price, I will meet any&#13;
printed list on clubing offers »and&#13;
may be able to save you money.&#13;
C. G. Meyer,&#13;
Regular communication of the&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 76, F. and&#13;
A. M., Tuesday evening, November&#13;
11. Work will convene at&#13;
7:30 o'clock sharp.&#13;
J. R. Martiu, W. M,&#13;
•&#13;
Norbart Lavey, brakeman on&#13;
the Grand Trunk, with headquarters&#13;
at Richmond, was an over Sunday&#13;
guest of his parents here.&#13;
"Bun" says he likes the work and&#13;
has made "good." Here's hoping&#13;
for his promotion.&#13;
The housewife is always busy,&#13;
but if she is a careful buyer, she&#13;
is not too busy to look over the&#13;
advertisements in the local paper&#13;
before she starts for town to purchase&#13;
supplies for the family.&#13;
They tell her where she can expend&#13;
her money to the best advantage,&#13;
thereby enabling her to&#13;
save many times the cost of the&#13;
paper during the year.&#13;
The village of Stockbridge is to&#13;
take a boom in population. The&#13;
State Bank of that place advertise&#13;
to give a saving book containing&#13;
a deposit of 11.00 to every new&#13;
baby born in the tillage&#13;
Mrs. Louis Monks spent Saturday&#13;
in Ann Arbor.&#13;
Read Dancer's adv. this week,&#13;
and then think it over.&#13;
Gertrude and John White were&#13;
Detroit visitors last week.&#13;
Mrs. A. Monks visited relatives&#13;
in Jackson the past week.&#13;
John Ljnch of Jackson spent&#13;
Friday with friends here.&#13;
W. E. Murphy and wife spent&#13;
laBt Saturday in Ann Arbor.&#13;
M. Dolan and wife spent Sunday&#13;
with xelatives in Scio, Mich.&#13;
Miss Gladys Fisk is visiting at&#13;
the home of her sister at OWOSBO.&#13;
New lot of ladies Printzess&#13;
coats at Dancer's. $10. to $25. adv.&#13;
Miss Esther Barton spent Saturday&#13;
and Sunday with friends at&#13;
Jackson. "&#13;
Miss Lucy Cook of Howell&#13;
spent the week end with her parents&#13;
here.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Coyle of&#13;
Northfield visited relatives here&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Farnam visited&#13;
relatives in Detroit a portion&#13;
of last week.&#13;
Miss Gladys Marston of Detroit&#13;
was the guest of Mae Teeple the&#13;
past week.&#13;
H. A. Ayers and* family of Detroit&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of&#13;
Mrs. S. Nash.&#13;
Mabel Clinton of Ann Arbor&#13;
spent a few days the past week&#13;
with her parents here.&#13;
Paul Curlett of Howell and Miss&#13;
Norma Curlett of Mayville visited&#13;
their parents here Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Robt. Fox and daughter of&#13;
Detroit are visiting her parents,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. P. Keunedy.&#13;
Miss JoF^phine Culhane of Ypsilanti&#13;
spent a few days the past&#13;
week with her parents here.&#13;
Joie Devereaux was in Ann Arbor&#13;
Thursday and Friday to attend&#13;
t h e Michigan Teacher's&#13;
Association.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Colegrove and sou of&#13;
Remus, Mich, are visiting her&#13;
parents and brother, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
G: G. Hoyt and Mr. and Mrs. E.&#13;
E. Hoyt, for several days.&#13;
The Standard Oil company is&#13;
going to manufacture automobiles.&#13;
This is the first time, we believe,&#13;
the auto has been regarded as a&#13;
by-product of gasoline.&#13;
Rev. Lincoln Ostrander of Flint&#13;
has accepted a call as pastor of&#13;
the Cong'l. church of this place,&#13;
and will take up bis new work&#13;
about November 23rd.&#13;
Highest Qihllty flerGtianiiise&#13;
This cool weather reminds everyone of&#13;
winter wear and we wish to call your&#13;
attention to the fact that we have a fine&#13;
line of&#13;
Mens Furnishings&#13;
Including Hats and Caps, Gloves and&#13;
Mittens, Trousers, Wool Shirts anjl&#13;
Sweaters, Underwear and Hosiery, Etc.&#13;
in readiness for your inspection.&#13;
Everything Fresh&#13;
in Groceries, Candies and Cigars,&#13;
Sealshipt Oysters, Butter Krust Bread,&#13;
Addison Cheese an$ a large assortment&#13;
of National Biscuit Co's. Goods alwavs&#13;
on hand.&#13;
Will duplicate competition prices for&#13;
Saturday&#13;
E ©&#13;
MONKS BROTHERS&#13;
Prompt Delivery Phone No. 38&#13;
All auto owners will be required&#13;
to swear to fourteen questions&#13;
before they will be granted a&#13;
license number the coming year.&#13;
Most of them have'Ulready done&#13;
considerable swearing about the&#13;
law, and this is adding insult to&#13;
injury.&#13;
Just to prove how careless the&#13;
American people are in addressing&#13;
their U. S. Mail the department&#13;
at Washington recieved over&#13;
13 million pieces of matter at the&#13;
dead letter office last year, a large&#13;
portion of which is still undelivered.&#13;
fc&#13;
According to an order by the&#13;
post office department the rural&#13;
carriers are obliged to count,&#13;
weight and list everything they&#13;
handle for two months and they&#13;
will be glad when November is&#13;
a n d ' o v e r *or t^&amp;t reason. It makes a&#13;
vicinity. The offer in all likehood ;lofc o f e x t r f t w o r k -&#13;
will reach out to include the&#13;
village of Gregory and Bunker&#13;
Hill center.-Livingston Democrat.&#13;
We wonder, just wonder, that i*&#13;
»11, if Teddy Roosevelt in disguise&#13;
i§one of the banks officials at&#13;
Stockbridge. He evidently has&#13;
tofhttooe tbere on the race&#13;
tokide* question.&#13;
The 7th annual convention of&#13;
the Michigan Association for&#13;
the prevention and relief of tuberculosis&#13;
will be held in the Western&#13;
State Normal at Kalamazoo,&#13;
November 4th and 7th. The'State&#13;
Board of Health will have an exhibit&#13;
in the Gymnasium of the&#13;
school&#13;
1 *^V&#13;
- ;v&#13;
,?-.. THE&#13;
Will it&#13;
Spread?&#13;
There is no other paint,&#13;
either prepared or hand&#13;
made from lead and oil,&#13;
that will spread as well&#13;
under the brush and cover&#13;
as much surface to the&#13;
gallon as&#13;
THE&#13;
SHERWIN-W/LLIAMS&#13;
PAINT.&#13;
Figure 300 square feet,&#13;
two coats, to the gallon&#13;
and you'll probably have&#13;
some paint left over.&#13;
There are many other&#13;
good points in its ijLvor.&#13;
Ask us about them.&#13;
SOLD BY&#13;
Tceple Hardware Company&#13;
- • l a . WT.TH. agp&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative&#13;
ing Business.&#13;
Bank-&#13;
• a&#13;
3 per cent&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
Pinckney&#13;
G. W. TEEPLE&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Prop&#13;
ARE YOU AWAKE&#13;
to the fact that your boy is growing&#13;
Yesterday—Just a little fellow.&#13;
Today—A big boy.&#13;
Tomorrow—A man.&#13;
Today you are sorry you haven't a&#13;
photograph of him aB he looked&#13;
yesterday. — Tomorrow you will&#13;
value the one you have today.&#13;
Don't put it off.&#13;
DaisieB. Chapel!&#13;
Stockbridge, Michigan&#13;
Legal Advertising&#13;
STATE of MICHIGAN . The Probate Oourt tor tbe&#13;
county of Livingston. At a session of said&#13;
court, held at the probate office In tbe village of&#13;
Howell In said county on tbe 18th day of October&#13;
A. 0. 1918. Present, Hon. Eugene A. Stowe,&#13;
Judge of Probate. In tbe matter of tbe estate of.&#13;
MARY C. WESTON, Decewed.&#13;
Martha M. Palmer having filed in said court&#13;
her petition praying that tbe administration oi&#13;
paid estate be air an ted to Horace Calmer or to&#13;
some other suitable person,&#13;
It ia ordered that the 15th day of November&#13;
A. D. mbt at ten o'clock la the lorenoon,&#13;
at aald probate office, be and ia hereby appointed&#13;
for hearing said petition. &lt;&#13;
It is further ordered, that public notice thereof&#13;
be given by publication of a copy oi this drder&#13;
for three successive weeke previous to said day of&#13;
hearing in the tinckney Dispatch, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated in said county.&#13;
EUGENE A. STOWE,/&#13;
4'iia Juffge of Probate&#13;
St a t e of M i c h i g a n , the probata ootyrt for&#13;
the county of Livingston,—At a session of Mid&#13;
Uonrt. held at the Probate Office in the Village of&#13;
Howell in said county on tbe 2isst day of Oct &gt;ber,&#13;
a. D, 191M, Present, Hon. Eugene A. Stowe&#13;
Judge of Probate. In the matter of the estate of&#13;
MARY L. SPROUT, Deceased&#13;
Edwin Sprout having filed In said, court his&#13;
petition praying that the adminiatraSibnof said&#13;
estate be granted to F. A, Barton o* tfesoxne other&#13;
sn table person.&#13;
It is ordered that the ISth day of November, A.&#13;
0. 1913 at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at said probate&#13;
office, be and ia hereby appointed for&#13;
hearing Bald petition. ;..;&#13;
It is further ordered that public notice Hereof&#13;
be piven by publication of a copy of this border&#13;
for three successive weeks previous to said; day of&#13;
faearintr, in the PIKCKNKY DISPATC%* %ewfi&gt;aper&#13;
printed and circulated in said county. J3t3 -&#13;
EUGENE A. STOWE ' l $&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
STATE J) F MICHIGAN&#13;
Thirty-fifth Judical Circuit in Chancery&#13;
Lnclle I. Westby,&#13;
Complainant,&#13;
vs,&#13;
Edward A. Weatby,&#13;
Defendant.&#13;
Suit pending in&#13;
the Circolt-itCourt&#13;
for the Couijty of&#13;
loninohan-&#13;
How^aU on&#13;
Livtnfato&#13;
ery at H&#13;
the eighteenth day&#13;
of September, A. B.&#13;
191B.&#13;
I POULTRY, EGGS AND VEAL&#13;
fj Will pay the highest market price at all times.&#13;
Call us up before you sell. Bell phone No. 74&#13;
J O H N DINKEL.&#13;
1&#13;
**&#13;
In this cause, it appearing from affidavit on&#13;
rile that the de endant, Edward A. Weatby, is not&#13;
a resident of this state but is a resident of the&#13;
oltyof Missottla, ttate of Montana and that his&#13;
post office address is Missoula, Montana,&#13;
On motion of Arthur K. Cole, solicitor for complainant,&#13;
it is ordered that the appearance of said&#13;
non-resident, defendant, Edward: A. Westby, be&#13;
entered therein within fonr months from the date&#13;
of this order acd in case of his appearance he&#13;
cause h's answer to the hill of oomplatnCtt t l :&#13;
filed and a copy thereof to beearred wrthlnHetfc&#13;
days after service on him or hit so4kslto7VAs&gt;&#13;
copy of said bill, and In defift.t .thareoft "**&#13;
bill be taken at confessed by the ssteK&#13;
Edward A. Westby. '&#13;
. Aod li Is further ordered that the .&#13;
plainest ca-iae tbia orde.. to be publish&#13;
1 iockpey Dispatch, a newspaper printed,&#13;
ed and arouJattng la said county an* ti abUo^ou t« wm«enoed wi '&#13;
»m tto date oft*!* order *&#13;
oatlon be oontlnuel therein o a c . .&#13;
six weeki In streeeision or that the aw scribed for his appearance&#13;
Tilde* 1&#13;
eonnte&#13;
Arthur X. Cole, Com&#13;
e0t« Business A "&#13;
r&#13;
%*?&#13;
fc*&#13;
ft&#13;
*&#13;
*s&#13;
I-&#13;
. • * *&#13;
VI-&#13;
&gt; &gt;'. •••?. vO hr&#13;
^7*y&#13;
:¾ r&#13;
i.v:'&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
I PREP ARE -&#13;
Y O U R S E L F |&#13;
I; Against Colds and Lagrippe 3&#13;
£ . 3&#13;
fc Buy a hot water bottle, it will save you dollars in ^&#13;
£ : medicine bills. If you feel chilly at night take it to =2&#13;
bed with you, it will keep you cozy. We have the 3&#13;
dependable kind at from ^J&#13;
l l . O O t o $ 3 . 5 0 3&#13;
Guaranteed from one to two years ^&#13;
MEYER'S DRUG STORE f&#13;
Tlie ^Tyal JStore %&#13;
^ Plnckneyf Mich. ^&#13;
fc: Drugs, Wall Paper, Crocker/, Cigars, Candy, Magazines, ^&#13;
«*. School Supplies, Books ^&#13;
^iUiUiUtUiUiiUuiUiaiiiiiliU^aiUiUilUUiaiUiUiuiUiUiU^&#13;
For Best&#13;
Results in&#13;
Baking&#13;
Use&#13;
Diamond&#13;
Flour&#13;
UIMHHHM*&#13;
STOTTSl&#13;
Diamond Flour&#13;
With your ability and skill as a bread-maker&#13;
Diamond Flour will give you the keenest&#13;
satis faction. It is milled from the very choicest&#13;
grade of wheat and is particularly a bread&#13;
flour.&#13;
Diamond Flour is uniform in quality. You&#13;
can be absolutely sure of getting the same&#13;
giade every time. Diamond Flour has won&#13;
its way into the favor of many thousands&#13;
of homes. Better begin using Diamond&#13;
Flour today. You'll be delighted with&#13;
results.&#13;
Order Diamond Flour to-day from your Grocer.&#13;
DAVID S T O T T , Miller, Detroit, Mich.&#13;
W. W. Barnard, Pinckney&#13;
M. Es. K u h n , Gregory and Unadilla&#13;
*. \ / i&#13;
sreiir&#13;
11 Where Mamma Buys&#13;
Izar&#13;
5 Coffee"&#13;
It's great the way the children remember the package.&#13;
And why not? Tzar Coffee has been used in thousands of&#13;
homes for years. The quality is the highest and always the&#13;
same.&#13;
Tzar Coffee has a distinctly smooth, rich flavor. It sells&#13;
at 35c a pound. If you want a different price coffee, try&#13;
either of these—they're all leaders at their price.&#13;
Nero 30c Marigpld Pleasant Valley 40c&#13;
D A A/A r. ft\ ** * special Cut Coffee at 35c—toy&#13;
K v V ^ U l V it with a ceawaient TrieoUtor&#13;
Pleasant Valley Teas are teas of quality at 50c, 60c,&#13;
80c a pound. You'll like them—order today.&#13;
Murphy &amp;Jackson, Pinckney&#13;
Ayrault c* Bollinger, Gregory&#13;
Sale Bills Printed at the&#13;
Dispatch Office, at Right&#13;
Prices;&#13;
Williamsville&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Williams of Lansing&#13;
is spending' a few days at the&#13;
home of her son, L. K, Williams.&#13;
Frank Goodwin has returned&#13;
home from Detroit.&#13;
Li. N. McCleer set his last pole&#13;
for electric lights Saturday.&#13;
Miss Coates of Unadilla spent&#13;
Sunday afternoon with Mrs. (J. I .&#13;
Williams.&#13;
Mrs. Lizzie Taylor called on&#13;
Mrs. Sheets Friday.&#13;
Thos. Harker of Gregory spent&#13;
Friday night with L. R. Williams.&#13;
The Gleaner social a t Unadilla&#13;
Hallowe'en established a record&#13;
for the eating of buckwheat cake's.&#13;
The meeting of the Gleaner society&#13;
of Unadilla Tuesday night&#13;
promises to be especially interesting.&#13;
A debate, "Has the woman&#13;
as much right to the pocket&#13;
book as the man? Led by L. R.&#13;
Williams and opposed by Al. Piper's&#13;
band.&#13;
ECIALi »&#13;
F o.I* -—- ^&#13;
urday, November 8, '13&#13;
Nearly Erery Child has Worms&#13;
Paleness, at times a flushed face, unnatuial&#13;
hunger, picking the nose,&#13;
great thirst, etc., are indications ot&#13;
worms. Kickapoo Worm Killer is a&#13;
^reliable, thorough medicine for the&#13;
removal of a)! kinds of worms from&#13;
children and adults. Kickapoo Worm&#13;
Killer in pleasant candy torm, aids&#13;
digestion, tones system, overcoming&#13;
constipation and increasing the action&#13;
of the liver* Is perfectly safe tor even&#13;
the most delicate children happy and&#13;
healthy. 25c. Guaranteed. Try it.&#13;
Drug stores Or by mail. Kickapoo&#13;
Indian Medicine Co., Philadelphia&#13;
and St. Louis. Also at Meyer's Drug&#13;
store.&#13;
South Iosco&#13;
Mr. and Mrs, W. 8, Caskey and&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Anderson&#13;
spent Sunday at R. W. Caskey's&#13;
near Plainfield,&#13;
Pauline and Margaret Burley&#13;
spent the last of the week with&#13;
their graudparents Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
W&gt; S. Oaskey,&#13;
Mrs. Black of St. Johns is visit-!&#13;
15c Corn, the beet, 3 cans for^&#13;
1 can of good Salmon._&#13;
1 can of Medium Red 8almon.&#13;
7 pounds of Rolled Oats&#13;
__25c&#13;
.10c&#13;
15c, 2 for 25c&#13;
25c&#13;
Ladies 25c Hosiery, the Black Cat kind, per pair_ 16c&#13;
Childrens 15c Stockings, Black Cat kind, per pair , 10c&#13;
Best Outing Flannel 9c&#13;
^ W i l l Meet All Prices on Sugar&#13;
ALL SALES CASH&#13;
W. W. BARNARD&#13;
Produce Wanted&#13;
ing at the Watters Brothers at&#13;
present.&#13;
Mrs. Jesse Henry and son L. S,&#13;
of Pinckney spent the last of the&#13;
week at the home of L. T. Lamborne.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Roberts attended&#13;
the funeral of E. Beach&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
Mrs, Martin Anderson, Kathryu&#13;
Lamborne and L. J. Henry called&#13;
at F . Beatrice Lamborne's school&#13;
last Friday afternoon.&#13;
Alta Bullts of Pinckney is visiting&#13;
her sister Mrs. John Roberts.&#13;
Nervous and Sick Headacncs&#13;
Torpid liver, constipated bowels and&#13;
disordered stomach are the causes of&#13;
thesa headaches. Take Dr. Kind's&#13;
New Life Pills, you will 0e surprised&#13;
how qaickty you will get relief. They&#13;
stimulate the different organ* to do&#13;
their work properly. No better regulator&#13;
for 1 ivor and bosvels. Tak« 25c.&#13;
and invest in a box to day. Recommended&#13;
bv C. G. Meyer, the druggist.&#13;
West Putnam&#13;
Mrs.'Kobt. Kelley was a Stockbridge&#13;
visitor one day the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Mr._and Mrs. J. A._ Tread way&#13;
and daughter Gale, spent Friday&#13;
in Howell.&#13;
Patrick Murphy of Detroit is&#13;
visiting his mother, Mrs. Wm.&#13;
Murphy.&#13;
Bruce YauBlaricum was i n&#13;
Jackson Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Fred Wylie of Anderson&#13;
visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
John Conners the past week.&#13;
Sadie, Raymond and Roy Harris&#13;
were Howell shoppers Friday.&#13;
Chas. VanBlancum of Detroit&#13;
visited his brother Bert, the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Orville Nash and wife spent&#13;
Sunday at the home of Jas. Fitch.&#13;
We Can Save You Hundreds ammmmmmmmm wmmmmmmmmmmm rmmmmmmmmmmmm m^mmammamm mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmimmmmmmmmmmmm of Dollars on Coal-Bills&#13;
* V**&#13;
We can do it with a Favorite&#13;
Base Burner. The&#13;
Favorite will save at least two&#13;
tons of coal every year it is in&#13;
use. Two tons of hard coal cost&#13;
$14.00. If properly taken care&#13;
of, the Favorite will last atleas'j&#13;
25 years. Total saving, $350.00.&#13;
Perfectly clear, isn't it, and more&#13;
than that, perfectly true.&#13;
The Favorite has features that&#13;
make it the most wonderful and&#13;
economical heating stove in existence&#13;
»-and these features are&#13;
all patented.&#13;
You may now have some other&#13;
base burner in your home. Never&#13;
mind that. Come to us, and we&#13;
will exchange it for you, allow&#13;
you a good price and put in one&#13;
of the Favorites. You may as&#13;
well save the price of two tons of&#13;
coal this winter as not, and the&#13;
Favorite will do it for you. It is&#13;
the only base burner that will.&#13;
We will back all of these statements&#13;
and claims with a personally&#13;
signed guarantee—put it in&#13;
black and white if you want it.&#13;
Place the Favorite in your&#13;
home. Try it all winter if you&#13;
want to. If you do not find it&#13;
just what we have represented&#13;
it to be, and what others have&#13;
found it to be—bring it back.&#13;
We will refund your money.&#13;
Ask any other dealer to put&#13;
their stoves to such a test. They&#13;
would not dare do it. We can,&#13;
because we know what the Favorite&#13;
will do, and we know what&#13;
it has done in scores of homes&#13;
right here in this vicinity. That&#13;
is why we can make such a liberal&#13;
offer and know positively the&#13;
stove will make good.&#13;
Come and see us and we will&#13;
talk it over. Remember, we are&#13;
willing to let you have the use&#13;
of the Favorite all winter for&#13;
nothing if you do not find everything&#13;
we have said about it to&#13;
be true. We will make terms to&#13;
suit—cash or easy payments.&#13;
Dinkel &amp; Dunbar, Pinckney&#13;
PlNCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
ATF&#13;
ROBBERS GET T H R E E T H O U 8 A N O&#13;
DOLLARS A N D M A K E&#13;
ESCAPE.&#13;
ONE 8TANDS GUARD W I T H GUN&#13;
W H I L E PAL WORKS.&#13;
Officers Believe That Job W a t Dona&#13;
By Same Men Who Robbed the&#13;
Bank at Harrletta Several&#13;
Weeka Previously.&#13;
Cadillac, Mich.—A well planned&#13;
bank robbery similar to that of the&#13;
bank of Harrletta seven weeka ago,&#13;
was successfully pulled off at Falmouth,&#13;
Missaukee county, when the&#13;
Bank of Falmouth waa blown and&#13;
about $3,000 and all else of value in&#13;
the safe was obtained by two supposed&#13;
yeggmen.&#13;
While one was working on the in*&#13;
side the second, eafely barricaded behind&#13;
large piles of grindstones and&#13;
roll of wire, stood guard in front of&#13;
the bank door with a gun. The inside&#13;
of the bank waa reduced to&#13;
kindling.&#13;
A. J. Bunning, president of .the&#13;
bank, was awakened by the explosions&#13;
and reached the bank in time to see&#13;
the robbers running towards McBain.&#13;
Bunning realized the men would try&#13;
to make the southbound Ann Arbor&#13;
train which leaves McBain at 5 o'clock&#13;
He aroused the town and pursuit was&#13;
started. Telephone communication&#13;
had been cut by the robbers, who also&#13;
stole a team of horses from James&#13;
Meyering on the outskirts of the&#13;
town.&#13;
The bank Is owned by A- J. Bunning&#13;
of Falmouth, F. O. Gaffney and&#13;
Thomas Kelly of this city, and U&#13;
capitalized at |100,000. The officers&#13;
believe the men who did the Job are&#13;
the same as those who blew the bank&#13;
at Harrletta.&#13;
Fire Lose Smallest In History.&#13;
Lansing, Mich.—"Never since the&#13;
organization of the state fire marshal's&#13;
department has there been so few&#13;
fires reported to the department during&#13;
any one month as in October,"&#13;
said John T. Winship, state fire marshal.&#13;
Commissioner Winship says&#13;
that during the month there were only&#13;
136 fires reported as compared to 249&#13;
for the preceding month, and 236 of&#13;
the corresponding month a year ago.&#13;
Fifty-three of the 136 fires were caused&#13;
by defective chimneys, careless&#13;
use of matches, etc Property valued&#13;
at $487,883.01 was involved with&#13;
damage amounting to $113,878.19 and&#13;
Insurance on the same amounting to&#13;
$402*576.03. Fifty fires were of unknown&#13;
origin, 10 were caused from&#13;
lightning and two were caused from&#13;
candles. In October the department&#13;
made 170 inspections of moving picture&#13;
theaters, issued 124 orders, approved&#13;
111, issued 104 licenses, making&#13;
the total number of licenses issued&#13;
to date, 336. Thirteen theaters&#13;
were closed.&#13;
Federation to Open Stores.&#13;
Calumet, Mich.—Officials of the&#13;
Federation of Miners are making&#13;
efforts to keep their men in line and&#13;
checkmating, &amp;a far aa possible,&#13;
efforts of the ^Commercial club to induce&#13;
the men to return to work. They&#13;
are establishing stores at Calumet,&#13;
Laurium, Ailouez and Painesdale,&#13;
where goods will be sold strikers at&#13;
cost They claim they' can support&#13;
5,000 strikers and families through the&#13;
winter.&#13;
Fearing they will be discriminated&#13;
against the non-socialistic Finns,&#13;
headed by Finnish business men of the&#13;
district, have applied to the companies&#13;
for re-employment They have&#13;
been assured they will not be discriminated&#13;
against if they renounce the&#13;
federation.&#13;
Judge O'Brien has decided to admit&#13;
affidavits aa testimony in cases against&#13;
strikers charged with violation of&#13;
the injunction.&#13;
At.the annual convention of the&#13;
third district W. C. T. U. at Mason,&#13;
Maude Holmes, of Eaton Rapids, waa&#13;
elected president Grand Ledge waa&#13;
chosen aa the place for the next coneentlon.&#13;
The Independent Congregational&#13;
church of Battle Creek, announcea&#13;
that as soon aa &amp; booth can be built&#13;
for the machines, it will enter the&#13;
"movies" field and ahow only high&#13;
class film*.&#13;
Carl Pearsall, 18 years old, son of&#13;
v a (armer.east ot Benton Harbor, while&#13;
vhuntrng With ether boys, fell from a&#13;
•tump on which he was standing and&#13;
In the fall discharged the gun, the&#13;
full charge entering his breast. He&#13;
mM a few minutes later.&#13;
WILLIAM BRAMWELL BOOTH&#13;
PUT INTO EFFECT&#13;
CONVICTS IN ATLANTA W I L L BE&#13;
KNOWN CY NAMES HEREAFTER.&#13;
LETTERS ON UNIFORM ALSO&#13;
ACOLISHED.&#13;
Head of the Salvation Army has arrived&#13;
for his first visit In America.&#13;
He is 67 years of age and was his&#13;
father's chief lieutenant for a number&#13;
of years.&#13;
AUTO CRASH KILLS THREE&#13;
Motor Party at Bay City Ends in&#13;
Tragedy When Machine Runs&#13;
Into Row of Trees.&#13;
Bay City, Mich.—Alex. Turpin, night&#13;
clerk at the Forest City house, died&#13;
at the West Side hospital Saturday&#13;
morning from injuries received a few&#13;
hours earlier is a motor car accident&#13;
in which Marvin Luke and George&#13;
Jones of Detroit were instantly killed.&#13;
Olive Lee, Kate Paplinski and Mary&#13;
Milliams, dining room girls, were all&#13;
badly bruised, and Miss Lee sustained&#13;
a, broken arm. J. Greeley,&#13;
driver of the machine, and C. F.&#13;
Dittman, also of Detroit, escaped&#13;
without injury.&#13;
Creeley invited the party for a ride,&#13;
promising to bring them back in an&#13;
hour. They were driving in Marquette&#13;
avenue when the machine left the&#13;
pavement and ran into a row of trees&#13;
"sideswiping" two or three of them&#13;
before it stopped, a mass of wreckage&#13;
with the victims caught beneath it.&#13;
Luke was crushed under the steering&#13;
apparatus and Jones had a fractured&#13;
skull.&#13;
The Detroit men were employed by&#13;
the Vinton Co. and had been engaged&#13;
in decorating Trinity Episcopal church&#13;
here for several weeks.&#13;
Measure to Remove Humiliation From&#13;
Men in Penitentiary, Long Advocated&#13;
by Warden Moyer,&#13;
Is Sanctioned.&#13;
Atlanta, Ga.—Prisoners at the Atlanta&#13;
federal penitentiary hereafter&#13;
will be known by names instead of by&#13;
numbers, and their letters "U. S. P."&#13;
Announcement of this radical departure&#13;
from prison custom was made&#13;
by "Good Words", the paper which&#13;
is edited and published in the penitentiary.&#13;
Ever since the establishment of the&#13;
federal prison here convicts have lost&#13;
their identities immediately on entering,&#13;
being designated only by registration&#13;
numbers. They also have&#13;
been requested to wear on their&#13;
clothing the prominently displayed&#13;
lettering branding them as United&#13;
States prisoners.&#13;
For more than a year ^Warden&#13;
Moyer has urged upon the officials of&#13;
the department of justice at Washington&#13;
that these degrading marks&#13;
of prison life he abolished and recently,&#13;
according to "Good Words",&#13;
his plan was given official sanction.&#13;
Hereafter, while his registration clothing&#13;
will bear his registration number&#13;
it will be for identification only and&#13;
will be concealed from sight.&#13;
STATE NEWS IN BRIEF.&#13;
Receipts Show Little Decrease.&#13;
Washington.—Although the new&#13;
tariff act with its lowered rates of&#13;
duty has been in effect practically a&#13;
month, the customs receipts have so&#13;
far shown little falling off. According&#13;
to the treasury statement November&#13;
1, the customs receipts for October&#13;
amounted to 130,138,000, just&#13;
about $80,000 less than those of October,&#13;
1912. The deficit for the fiscal&#13;
year to date, the statement shows, is&#13;
$5,757,627, about $3,900,000 more than&#13;
the deficit at the corresponding period&#13;
last year.&#13;
Pension payments under the Sherwood&#13;
act are apparently largely responsible&#13;
for the larger deficit.&#13;
The payments in 1912 through October&#13;
amounted to about, $52,500,000&#13;
and for the same period this year&#13;
nearly $57,000,000, an increase of&#13;
more than $4,000,000 in this one&#13;
disbursement item.&#13;
At the bankruptcy hearing in the&#13;
case of the defunct Fox &amp; Mason Furniture&#13;
Co., of Corunna, it was decided&#13;
to sell the plant to the highest bidder,&#13;
Nov. 19.&#13;
The three-year-old daugter of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Fred Stevens, of Rochester,&#13;
was burned to death in an upper room&#13;
of the family home. The child was&#13;
plaing alone and it is believed she&#13;
got hold of marches and set her clothing&#13;
afire.&#13;
The law making it a misdemeanor&#13;
to have dogs in the woods during the&#13;
deer-hunting season will be rigidly enforced&#13;
from now on, according to&#13;
Wil.iam R. OateS, state game warden.&#13;
Dogs found running at large will be&#13;
shot on sight.&#13;
Thomas Roberts, one of the four&#13;
survivors of the 15 men who were In&#13;
the cage that dropped from the top&#13;
of the Jones &amp; Laughlin mine shaft&#13;
to the bottom in 1907, a distance of&#13;
662 feet, died at Iron River. Roberts&#13;
never walked after the accident on&#13;
account of injuries sustained.&#13;
Precautions for the stilling and care&#13;
of cows during the winter have been&#13;
summed up on printed instructions&#13;
and are being distributed to the farmers&#13;
of the state by State Dairy and&#13;
Food Commissioner Helme. The instructions&#13;
make clear the importance&#13;
of clean stalls In relation to pure&#13;
milk.&#13;
The Michigan Central railroad has&#13;
announced that it intends to construct&#13;
new car shops and build a new freight&#13;
depot at Bay City and that ground will&#13;
be broken in a few weeks. The work&#13;
will cost more than $500,000. The road&#13;
has just spent about three-quarters&#13;
of a million for new round houses and&#13;
yards at this point&#13;
President W. S. Linton, Saginaw&#13;
board of trade, ha* appointed a committee&#13;
of 15 to promote a campaign&#13;
for pure water. The common council&#13;
committee has started a movement to&#13;
obtain a filtration plant, and both business&#13;
and municipal bodies promise&#13;
to unite to ttya Saginaw public shall&#13;
not depend on corner pumps for drink*&#13;
lug water.&#13;
Judge Lindsey is Vindicated.&#13;
Denver.—After six weeks of search&#13;
for proofs and many sessions given&#13;
over to quizzing of witnesses who refused&#13;
to indorse their statements with&#13;
their signatures, the committee appointed&#13;
by the Taxpayers' Association&#13;
to probe the record of Judge Lindsey&#13;
of the juvenile court, which has formulated&#13;
and signed a report which is&#13;
a complete vindication. Judge Lindsey&#13;
-as accused by the Woman's Protecive&#13;
league of mismanagement and&#13;
ax methods in conducting the juvenile&#13;
court.&#13;
Governor Ralston Refuses Aid.&#13;
Indianapolis, Ind.—Gov. Samuel M.&#13;
Ralston emphatically refused Saturday&#13;
to take any action in the street ,&#13;
ar strike, which completely tied up&#13;
:e service here. He toid Mayoi&#13;
hank, who admitted that the situaion&#13;
was beyond control by the city&#13;
authorities, that the police were not&#13;
doing their full duty and that if they&#13;
would not do their duty to appeal to&#13;
SherifT Theodore Portteus, of Marion&#13;
county, for aid.&#13;
Great Coal Fields are Sold.&#13;
Charleston, W. Va.—Control of--the&#13;
vast output of the New River, coal&#13;
field amounting to 7,000,000 tons&#13;
annually, passed from American to&#13;
Englslh hands when, according to&#13;
advices received here by interested&#13;
coal operators from London, England,&#13;
negotiations for the sale of 500,000&#13;
acres in Fayette, Raleigh and Nicholas&#13;
counties to an English syndicate were&#13;
completed by the New Virginia syndicate,&#13;
headed by Morgan Davis, of&#13;
Scranton, Pa.&#13;
United States Senator Charles E.&#13;
Townsend was the principal speaker&#13;
at the ceremonies attending the laying&#13;
of the cornerstone of the Carnegie&#13;
library at Owosso.&#13;
Hal Warner, 21 years old, of Kalamatoo,&#13;
is dead as the result of being&#13;
hurt in a football game. The boy's&#13;
heart was iujnred by a fall, say physicians.&#13;
MARKETS&#13;
Live Stock, Grain and General Farivt&#13;
Produce.&#13;
Live Stock.&#13;
DETKpiT—Cattle: Canners, bulls&#13;
fltockers and feeders steady; all others&#13;
15@25c lower. Best steers and&#13;
heifers, $7.50@7.75; steers and heifers,&#13;
1,000 to 1,100 lbs, $7.25®7.50;&#13;
steers and heifers, 800 to 1,000 lbs,&#13;
$6.75@7; steers and heifers that are&#13;
tat, 500 to 700 lbs, $5.50@6.50; choice&#13;
fat cows, $5.75@6; good fat cows,&#13;
$5/5@5.50; caramon cows, $4.25@5;&#13;
canners, $3@4; choice heavy bulls,&#13;
$6.25@6.60; fair to good bologna bulls&#13;
$5.75@6; stock bulls, $4.25@5; choice&#13;
feeding steers, 800 to 1,000 lbs, $6.75&#13;
@7; fair feeding steers, 800 to 1,000&#13;
lbs, $6.25 @6.50; choiee stackers, 500&#13;
to 700 lbs, $6.25@6.75; fair stockers,&#13;
500 to 700 lbs, $6@6.25; stock heifers,&#13;
$4.50(¾)6.50; . milkers, large, young,&#13;
medium age, $75@80; common milkers,&#13;
$40@50.&#13;
Veal calves—Receipts, 229: market&#13;
steady; best, $10@11; others, $7&#13;
@9.50.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 3,996;&#13;
best lambs, $7; fair to good lambs,&#13;
$6.50@6.75; light to common lambs,&#13;
$5.75(0)6.25; fair to good sheep, $4®&#13;
4.50; culls and common, $2.75(g)3.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 3,050; market&#13;
steady. Range of prices: Light to&#13;
good butchers, $8@8.15; pigs, $7.50&#13;
@7.75; mixed, $8@8.15; heavy, $8®&#13;
8.15.&#13;
East Buffalo Markets.&#13;
EAST BUFFALO—Cattle: Receipts,&#13;
350 cars; market dull, 15@25c lower;&#13;
best 1,350 to 1,450-lb steers, $8.25®&#13;
8.50; best 1,200 to 1,300-lb steers, $8&#13;
@8.25; best 1,100 to 1,200-lb steers,&#13;
$7.80(®8.25; coarse and plain weighty&#13;
steers, $7@7.25; best fat cows, $5,75(g)&#13;
6.25; butcher cows, $4.75@&gt;5.75; cutters,&#13;
$4.40@4.50; trimmers, $3,750)&#13;
3.90; medium butcher heifers, $6.25 @&#13;
6.75; best heifers, $6.75(g&gt;7.25; stock&#13;
heifers, $4.25@4.75; common stock&#13;
heifers, $4@4.15; best feeding steers,&#13;
$7@7.25; fair to good, $6.25@6.50;&#13;
common light stockers, $5@5.25; best&#13;
butcher bulls, $6.50(g)6.75; bologna&#13;
bulls, $5.25@5.75; stock bulls, $5®&#13;
5.50; milkers and springers, $50@80.&#13;
HogB: Receipts, 140 cars; market&#13;
10c lower; heavy, $8.40@8,55; mixed,&#13;
$8.40; yorkers, $8.30@8.40; pigs, $7.50&#13;
@8.00.&#13;
Sheep and lambs: Receipts, 80 cars;&#13;
market active; top lambs, $7.25*@7.35;&#13;
yearlings, $5.50©6; wethers, $5@5.40;&#13;
ewes, $4@4.75.&#13;
Calves steady; tops, $12; fair to&#13;
good, $9.50 @ 10:50; grassers, $4®&#13;
5.50.&#13;
Grains Etc.&#13;
DETROIT— Wheat—Cash No. 2 red&#13;
94 l-2c; December opened with a jump&#13;
of l-2c at 94 3-4c and advanced -to&#13;
95 3-4c; May opened at 98 3-4c and advanced&#13;
to 99 l-2c; No. 1 white, 94 l-2c.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, 74c; No. 2 yellow&#13;
2 cars at 75c; No. 3 yellow, 74 l-2c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 1 car at 43c; No. 3&#13;
white, 42 l-2c; No. 4 white, 1 car at&#13;
40 l-2c, closing at 40 3-4c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 69c.&#13;
Beans—immediate and prompt shipment,&#13;
1.90; November, $1.85; January,&#13;
$1.95.&#13;
Cloverseed—Prime spot and December,&#13;
$8.20; March, $8.30; sample red&#13;
25 bags at $7.50, 14 at $7; prime alsike&#13;
$10.50; sample alsike, 8 bags at $9.&#13;
Timothy—Prime spot, $2.50.&#13;
Alfalfa—Prime spot, $7.25.&#13;
Barley—Sample, 1 car at $1.50, 1 at&#13;
$1.55, 1 at $1.40 per cwt.&#13;
Hay—CarlotB, track Detroit; No. 1&#13;
timothy, $16® 16.50; standard, $16®&#13;
15.50; No. 2, $14^)14.50; light mixed,&#13;
$15@15.50; No. 1 mixed, $13.50@&gt;15;&#13;
rye straw, $8(g)9; wheat and oat straw&#13;
$7@7.50 per ton.&#13;
Flour—In one-eight paper sacks, per&#13;
196 pounds, jobbing lots; Best patent,&#13;
$5.30; second patent, $4.90; straight,&#13;
$4.50; spring patent, $5.10; rye, $4.60&#13;
per bbl.&#13;
Feed—In 100-lb sacks, jobbing lota;&#13;
Bran, $25; coarse middlings, $27; fine&#13;
middlings, $2Z; cracked corn, $31;&#13;
coarse corn meal, $30.; corn and oat&#13;
chop, $26.50 per ton.&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
DETROIT—Apples—Snow, $4©4.50;&#13;
Spy, $3.50¾ 3.75; Greening, $3.60@)3.75&#13;
King, $3.50©4; Twenty-ounce, $3.50©&#13;
3.75 per bbl; No. 2, $1.75^2.26 per bbl;&#13;
bulk, $1.25^1.60 per cwt.&#13;
Grapes—Concord, 32c per 8-lb basket;&#13;
Malaga, $5 ©6.50 per bbl.&#13;
Nuts—Chestnuts, ltic per lb; Shellbaric&#13;
hickory, $2 ©2.50 per bu; large&#13;
hickory, $1.50©1.76 per bu.&#13;
Cabbage—$2©2.25 per bbl.&#13;
Hickory Nuts—$2.50 per bu.&#13;
Tomatoes—Hothouse, 18©20c per lb.&#13;
Onions—$1.16 per bu; Spanish, $1.40&#13;
per crate. .&#13;
Potatoes—In bulk, 60®70c per bu;&#13;
in sacks, 66® 76c'per bu for carlots.&#13;
Sweet Potatoes—Virginia, $1.85©&#13;
1.90 per bbl and $1 per bu; Jersey, $3&#13;
©3.25 per bbl, $1.25 per bu and 90c©&#13;
| l per hamper.&#13;
MOTHERS!&#13;
READ THIS&#13;
Steketee's Worm&#13;
Destroyer In&#13;
Chocolate&#13;
Syrup&#13;
. * * .&#13;
for special benefit of children that?&#13;
cannot take the worm powders or the&#13;
tablets—Steketee's Worm Destroyer&#13;
is not Intended for the cure of worms&gt;&#13;
alone—but it is used for the following&#13;
ailments: ~~~&#13;
Has your darling child a fever!&#13;
First of all, give it Steketee's Worm&#13;
Destroyer.&#13;
Haa It foul breath?&#13;
Has it spasms ?&#13;
Give it Steketee's Worm Destroyer.&#13;
Is your child restless at night?&#13;
Is it worms that alls your child?&#13;
Has it fainting fits! . -&#13;
A sure sign of worms.&#13;
Steketee's Worm Destroyer&#13;
is considered the best worm remedy&#13;
on the market and very few people,&#13;
young or old, but what are troubled&#13;
with worms in one form or another.&#13;
People's stomachs are lined with&#13;
phlegm and the use of this remedy&#13;
cleanses the stomach and purifies the&#13;
blood.&#13;
Price for the powdered by mall, 2Bcr&#13;
for the tablets by mail, 25c. We can- -&#13;
not send the syrup by mall for less .&#13;
than 35c, owing to the weight of the ,&#13;
bottle. Postage stamps may be sent:&#13;
in payment. Ask druggists for Steketee's&#13;
Pin Worm Destroyer.&#13;
Address Geo. G. Steketee, Prop.,&#13;
49 Cherry St., S. W„ Grand Raptdtj.&#13;
Mich.&#13;
For Sale by All Druggists.&#13;
However, the suffragette will never&#13;
insist on the privilege of being bald.&#13;
Mrs.WlnBlow's Soothinjr Syrup for Children&#13;
teething', softens the gums, reduces Inflama**&#13;
tioQ.&amp;UftjTB paln,cure» wind colic JSe a bottleiS)&#13;
But occasionally it is easier to bear&#13;
it than it is to grin.&#13;
Be thrifty on littie things like bluing. Don't&#13;
accept water for bluing. Ask for Red Crow&#13;
Ball Blue, the extra good value blue. Adv.&#13;
Strategist&#13;
"That's a great general!" said one&#13;
Mexican.&#13;
"A very great general!" replied the&#13;
other.&#13;
"But he never fights."&#13;
"That is what proves his greatness&#13;
as a general."&#13;
Wild Honey.&#13;
The honey that comes out of a bee &gt;&#13;
tree is not always as sweet as the old*&#13;
time compliment, "sweet as a beetree,"&#13;
might lead one to suppose, Thebees&#13;
that run wild do not seem to have•&#13;
the fine taste in nectar that their domesticated&#13;
cousins have. Sometimes-,&#13;
there are poisonous spots in wild honrey—&#13;
at least there are legenda to tha*&#13;
effect—and often, if the colony Is old&#13;
and the comb large, the honey Is&#13;
black as night.&#13;
But the bee-hunter now, alee, to be&#13;
classed with professionals that have&#13;
passed on, cared little about dlBcoloration&#13;
and worried not at all about pot«&#13;
son. To find a bee tree meant the e*.&#13;
erciae of keen eyesight, woodcraft,, patience&#13;
and Judgment The wandering&#13;
bee seemed to have a prejudice&#13;
against going straight to the hive.&#13;
He moseyed along from flower to&#13;
flower, stopped to talk or fight with a&#13;
fellow bee, or, if he knew he was being&#13;
followed, dived Into thickets and&#13;
hummed straight across some bottom-.&#13;
less bog. So when the right tree was •&#13;
located, and the comb laid bare, It \&#13;
was well won. It was as treasure .&#13;
trove, earned by the blisters on the,&#13;
Bhoveler's hands.&#13;
8PEAK3 FOR ITSELF&#13;
Experience of a Southern Man.&#13;
"Please allow me to thank the ori*&gt;.&#13;
nat6r of Postum, which in my case*.&#13;
speaks for itself," writes a Fla. mam.&#13;
"I formerly drank so much coffes&gt;&#13;
that my nervous system was almost a&#13;
wreck," (Tea is just as injurious because&#13;
it contains caffeine, the druf&#13;
found in coffee.) "My physician told;&#13;
me to quit drinking it but I bad to&#13;
have something, so I tried Postum&#13;
"To my great surprise I taw on*te&gt;&#13;
a change in my nerves to about 16&#13;
days. That was a year ago and now&#13;
my nerves are steady and 1 don't have&#13;
those bilious sick headaches which X&#13;
regularly had while drinking coffee.&#13;
"Postum seems to have body-building&#13;
properties and leaves the head&#13;
clear. And I do not have the bad&#13;
taste in my mouth when I get up taor&gt;&#13;
Ings. When Postum Is boiled - good&#13;
and strong, It is far better 111 taste&#13;
than coffee. My advice to coffee drinkers&#13;
is to try Postum and l b&gt;&#13;
Tinced."&#13;
Name given by Postum CoV Battle&#13;
Creek, Mich. Write for cop? of the.&#13;
little book, "The Road to Wellvtlle,"&#13;
Postum'comes in two forms:"&#13;
Rsgular Poetum—must W weft&#13;
boiled.&#13;
Instant Postum is a soluble bowder..&#13;
A teaspconful dissolves fafefir tea&#13;
cup of hot water and, wiUrcreem aaeVi&#13;
sugar, makes a delicious&#13;
Instantly. Grocers «eU botfc ktadt,&#13;
. Taere'a a ntaeV tor&#13;
U&#13;
a&#13;
t&#13;
;v ,.,&#13;
•h&#13;
"*««•&#13;
^ f c&amp;*:-¾ 1 '• j&#13;
*-...&#13;
'tt»j**dia&amp;A&#13;
A&#13;
:;&amp;&amp;M&amp;*±&#13;
&lt;+*. «r&#13;
* * • « * •&#13;
WP&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
, J&#13;
s.&#13;
v&#13;
I&#13;
n&#13;
;x&#13;
%r&#13;
#*.&#13;
Jifcf&#13;
%&#13;
Opium Culture Practical Fashions&#13;
MISSES' DRESS.&#13;
HE cold season In southern&#13;
Persia Is short, but&#13;
occasionally so severe&#13;
that snow falls plentifully&#13;
round about Shlraz,&#13;
the capital of Fars; but&#13;
in most winters only&#13;
heavy rains prevail-&#13;
There is a considerable&#13;
7 variation in the tempera-&#13;
'tnr©on the coast and on the lofty&#13;
plateau in the interior of the country.&#13;
A beautiful spring follows the Intense&#13;
cold, and in the month of March, while&#13;
•the highest mountains still carry white&#13;
snowcaps, the valleyB are growing&#13;
green; wild flowers blossom everywhere,&#13;
and the well-known roses in&#13;
the gardens round about Shlraz are&#13;
already in bud. Very soon the refreshing&#13;
spring showers cease, summer&#13;
approaches rapidly, in this part&#13;
of the world, and with the hot weather,&#13;
gusts of wind, driving before them&#13;
clouds of dust, rush through the partly&#13;
cultivated plains and over the ripening&#13;
fields. When this time arrives, the&#13;
popples are in full blossom and the&#13;
breeze is laden far beyond "these pretty&#13;
poppy plantations with the narcotic&#13;
odors of the large, delicate white flowers&#13;
that are mixed here and there&#13;
with beautiful shaded violet ones. After&#13;
a favorable rainy season the poppy&#13;
fields are a lovely sight, and a beautiful&#13;
feature in the landscape. The&#13;
flowers stand high and healthy on&#13;
their tall, straight stems, and within&#13;
them soon appears a large fleshy&#13;
poppy-head Which contains the opium&#13;
juice, and also later, when dry, the&#13;
valuable poppy seeds. Such a sight&#13;
is a delight to the owner of the plantation,&#13;
for he sees in prospect a glorious&#13;
harvest. Round about Shlraz as&#13;
far as Ispahan, southward to the country&#13;
of the date palm, a great deal of&#13;
opium is grown, and several thousand&#13;
chests are shipped from Shlraz to&#13;
China and various places in Europe,&#13;
every season. The collecting of the&#13;
opium juice begins in June, when, the&#13;
flowers having faded and the leaves&#13;
fallen, the poppy heads are ready to&#13;
be "bled."&#13;
For this purpose a peculiar knife Is&#13;
employed. It has a thick handle in&#13;
which several thin, short blades, an&#13;
Inch in length, are set and with which&#13;
several parallel cuts may be made&#13;
with one stroke. When the sun&#13;
stands low on the western horizon, the&#13;
men with the above-mentioned tools.&#13;
start their work, making one or two&#13;
Incisions in the fleshy green skin of&#13;
the headB on the side towards the setttng&#13;
sun. During the cool night hours&#13;
the brown, strong-smelling, viscous&#13;
juice oozes out and collects in pearllike&#13;
drops on the surface of the seed&#13;
vessel. Before the rising sun gainH&#13;
sufficient power to dry or crystallize&#13;
the sticky substance, the gathering is&#13;
in full swing. Stepping carefully&#13;
from plant to plant, the men gather&#13;
the opium on the broad blades of their&#13;
crescent-shaped collecting knives,&#13;
which have an upturned back about&#13;
an inch high to prevent the juice from&#13;
dropping off. As soon as a knife is&#13;
fall it la handed to the owner of the&#13;
field or his foreman, who stands&#13;
among the collectors to see that none&#13;
of the precious drops are hidden away&#13;
by tha workers to increase their daily&#13;
wages. As soon as the morning's&#13;
work is over, the fields are, deserted&#13;
tmtfl the afternoon, when new incisions&#13;
have to be made. Each plant is&#13;
. tapped twice, and a large poppy-head&#13;
* give* from twenty to thirty grains of&#13;
"opium. A few days are sufficient to&#13;
finish a field; then the poppy heads&#13;
are left alone and, robbed of their&#13;
nourishing juice, the sun dries them&#13;
lip. In a jfaw daya they begin to&#13;
shrink and change color, and when&#13;
they are rauite withered and have assumed&#13;
a yellow brownish tint they are&#13;
gathered by children, collected in&#13;
heap* o^ a suitable spot and threshed&#13;
out with long stick* by women. The&#13;
seed 1s then winnowed preparatory to&#13;
it* sale and export It contains about&#13;
forty per cent, of oil, which Is largely&#13;
used, in- Prance and other countries in&#13;
th* place of olive oil, which It reaamblea&#13;
cloaely. It contains no opim$&#13;
TZOW&amp;L cty oztyiwarr*&#13;
um, The juice is sold in large copper&#13;
vessels by the grower to the merchant,&#13;
in whose hands it undergoes&#13;
several processes in order to preserve&#13;
it from fermentation and decay.&#13;
On sunny, fine, hot days the Persian&#13;
caravanseri where opium dealer*&#13;
have their offices present an interesting&#13;
feature. The juice is brought out&#13;
l? be made into cakes for export. On&#13;
large wooden boards, two and a half&#13;
feet long ana one and a half feet&#13;
broad, the sticky mass is spread out&#13;
with spade-like tools to permit the&#13;
water it contains to evaporate. Experienced&#13;
workers move from board to&#13;
board, turning over the layers, every&#13;
now and then that the heat and sun&#13;
may dry up the exposed surfaces and&#13;
render the opium fit for making Into&#13;
cakes. In favorable weather this process&#13;
takes only an hour or so, and the&#13;
opium Is ready for the next manipula-'&#13;
tion. Tt Is now scraped off and is&#13;
rolled into stiff dough like lumps and&#13;
handed to a man, who divides it into&#13;
smaller portions, weighing one pound&#13;
each, which he passes on to&gt;the molder,&#13;
by whom they are pressed Into the&#13;
wooden forms and then laid on a&#13;
large board for the final drying process.&#13;
When this is completed the&#13;
cakes are rolled up In red paper imported&#13;
specially from China, and are&#13;
then tied up with red strings. The&#13;
cakes are then ready for packing. One&#13;
hundred and forty-four are put in tinlined&#13;
wooden cases with poppy-stem&#13;
chaff as packing. The wooden cases&#13;
are covered with stong hides and sacking.&#13;
Two cases form a mule load.&#13;
The percentage of morphia in Persian&#13;
opium varies from nine per cent, to&#13;
twelve per cent. In former years the&#13;
Persian opium had a very bad reputa-&#13;
SHAKESPEARE A POACHER&#13;
tion In the London market, for it was&#13;
frequently adulterated with a substance&#13;
named "Gunjedah," but the&#13;
fraud was, of course, easily detected,&#13;
and a good many dealers were ruined&#13;
Much opium is used in Persia itself;&#13;
in fact, the consumption has grown&#13;
to a» deplorable extent, which causes&#13;
considerable anxiety to the authorities.&#13;
There are opium dens in every large&#13;
town, and the sickening sweet smell&#13;
arising from the opium pipes streams&#13;
out of every tea an€ coffee house in&#13;
the country. The distressing spectacle&#13;
of intoxicated opium smokers may&#13;
be seen everywhere in Persia, and&#13;
those who do not care to smoke the&#13;
drug have taken to the small pill box&#13;
found in every Persian's breast pocket&#13;
Now and then efforts are made to put&#13;
a stop to this excessive use of opium.&#13;
but in vain; and so long as the highest&#13;
officials indulge In its abuse, no restrictions&#13;
will be effective in preventing&#13;
the lower classes from ruining&#13;
themselves. Persia is doomed, and its&#13;
downfall cannot be arrested.&#13;
mm-?,,, *&amp;•&#13;
Charlecote Park, Warwickshire, England,&#13;
is the place in which, according&#13;
to tradition, William Shakespeare indulged&#13;
in poaching. The^ great gates&#13;
of the park are here pictured.&#13;
SOME POSTSCRIPTS&#13;
The German army expects to spend&#13;
nearly $25,005,000 in the next five&#13;
years for dirigible balloons and aeroplanes&#13;
and the navy half as much.&#13;
More than 2,000,000 American farmers&#13;
are now using telephones in their&#13;
homes, more than 100,000 having installed&#13;
Instruments within a year.&#13;
An Italian scientist has succeeded&#13;
In telephoning with wireless apparatus&#13;
between Rome and Tripoli, a dls&#13;
tance of 600 miles, mainly over sea.&#13;
A new bayonet lies along the bar&#13;
rel of a rifle normally, but is thrown&#13;
into position for service by pressing&#13;
a button on the stock of the weapon&#13;
Electric production of ferro-silicon&#13;
as well as potash will be carried out&#13;
by a new method in Sweden employing&#13;
current from hydro-electric plants&#13;
A lock which, when the key is&#13;
turned, shuts off the gasoline and disconnects&#13;
the battery and magneto is&#13;
a new invention to foil automobile&#13;
thieves.&#13;
A window recently patented by a&#13;
French inventor consists of a number&#13;
of pivoted sections, which may be&#13;
moved to any desired angle by pulling&#13;
a chain.&#13;
Government horticulturists at Washington&#13;
are trying to develop a rose&#13;
that will grow in the United States&#13;
from which attar of rose can be distilled.&#13;
How the End Will Come.&#13;
The professor of natural phenomena&#13;
had acquired a gasoline car. "The day&#13;
is coming," he said to hia class a few&#13;
weeks later, "when the tire will ssg&#13;
and punctures pierce the Inner tub**&#13;
and the casing blister—and then this&#13;
old earth of ours will have a blowout&#13;
that may shake the Dog Star from Its&#13;
kennel and hurl the Dipper to kingdom&#13;
come!"&#13;
Excellent Precept*.&#13;
If you would relish your food, iabo*&#13;
for it: if you- would enjoy the raiment,&#13;
pay for it before you wear It; if you&#13;
would sleep soundly, take a clear conscience&#13;
to bed with. you.&#13;
One of the most comfortable of&#13;
the simple models Is shown in&#13;
this design. The plain blouse opens&#13;
In front, the neck is low, the armhole&#13;
extra large and the sleeve short or&#13;
long. A three gore skirt, with either&#13;
raised or regulation waist line completes&#13;
the costume.&#13;
The dress pattern (6293) is cut In&#13;
sizes 14, 16 and 18 years. Medium&#13;
size requires 4½ yards of 36 inch material,&#13;
with % yard of 24 inch satin&#13;
for t h e , girdle.&#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 size and number of pattern.&#13;
NO. 6293. SIZENAME&#13;
TOWN&#13;
8TREET AND NO&#13;
STATE&#13;
LADY'S OVER8LOUSE.&#13;
635'&#13;
The pretty cut of this blouse gives&#13;
it an unusually dressy effect and when&#13;
fashioned of rich stuffs, such as matelasse,&#13;
brocaded silk or satin the result&#13;
is a blouse which is suitable for almost&#13;
any ocasion. A long or short&#13;
sleeve may be used. Two large molds&#13;
covered with the material of the&#13;
waist serve to close .it. Any of the&#13;
new silks or brocaded novelties may&#13;
be used with good results.&#13;
The lady's overblouse pattern (6351)&#13;
Is cut in sizes 34 to 42 inches bust&#13;
measure. Medium size requires 2&#13;
yards of 36 inch material.&#13;
To to " Pparttoecrunr e Dtehpias rtpmaettnetr,n" osef ndth i1s0 p caepnerts. sWurreit et on agmivee sainzde aanddd rnesusm pbleari nolyf , paanttde rbne.&#13;
NO. 6351. BZB •-&#13;
NAME ^&#13;
TOWN -. —&#13;
STREET AND NO —&#13;
Have a Fire-Extinguisher.&#13;
A reliable fire-extinguisher, which&#13;
throws chemicals Instead of water,&#13;
should hang in every home, in the&#13;
barn and in the stable. Seconds are&#13;
precious when fire breaks out, and&#13;
the small, inexpensive extinguishers&#13;
are so simple of use and quick of action&#13;
that they at once arrest the progress&#13;
of a small blaze. Motorists have&#13;
found the little extinguisher Jnvalu*&#13;
able.&#13;
WOMAN ESCAPES&#13;
OPERATION&#13;
By Timely Use of Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham't Vegetable&#13;
Compound.&#13;
H e r e la her o w n s t a t e m e n t .&#13;
Cary, Maine.—" I feel it a duty I owe&#13;
to all suffering women to tell. what&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
V e g e t a b l e Compound&#13;
did for me.&#13;
One year ago I found&#13;
myself a terrible sufferer.&#13;
I had pains&#13;
in b o t h sides and&#13;
such a soreness I&#13;
c o u l d s c a r c e l y&#13;
s t r a i g h t e n up at&#13;
times. My b a c k&#13;
ached, I had no appetite&#13;
and was so&#13;
nervous I could not sleep, then I would&#13;
be so tired mornings that I could scarcely&#13;
get around. It seemed almost impossible&#13;
to move or do a bit of work and I&#13;
thought I never would be any better until&#13;
I submitted to an operation. I commenced&#13;
taking Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound and soon felt like a&#13;
new woman. I had no pains, slept well,,&#13;
had good appetite and was fat and&#13;
could do almost all my own work for a&#13;
family of four. I shall always feel&#13;
that 1 owe my good health to your medicine.&#13;
"—Mr* HAYWXBJD SOWERS, Cary,&#13;
Maine. _&#13;
If yon are ill do not drag along until&#13;
an operation is necessary, but at once&#13;
take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound.&#13;
If y o u h a v e the slightest doubt&#13;
that Lydia E . P i n k h a m ' s Vegetable&#13;
Compound will help you,write&#13;
to Lydia E . P i n k h a m MedicineCo.&#13;
(confidential) Lynn,Mass., for a d -&#13;
vice. Your letter will be opened,&#13;
read and answered by a w o m a n ,&#13;
a n d held in strict confidence.&#13;
W.L.DOUGLAS&#13;
WOMB'S !Ul J $ 13&#13;
Ml«*as, Boys. Children&#13;
SI.*OSI.7S$2S2.50S3&#13;
B i | u bathim ID&#13;
LIT*: now tat&#13;
lftrfwt m*k«r&#13;
of $ t , fs.eo&#13;
sad i t ihoM&#13;
Is u * world.&#13;
Ovr ISO tiMlt,&#13;
in all letUnc...,&#13;
SHOES&#13;
•vWer. yLw.h Deroeu. glWas htyh onront galvn* ftahmamou as&#13;
Vifaorl Ty ouTrh me ovnaelyu ew yilol ua swtoUnl isrhoo ysoivus.&#13;
Ittb yeo lua rwgeosutl dI nv itshite owuorr lfda cutnodryer, Won.e L r.o oDf,o uwgadls ss eseh obeosw a craer mefuadllye,&#13;
yowaa rwraonutledd utnod leoroskta nbdet twerb, yf itt hbeeyt taerre, boothlde rtb metarkabesa fpoer atnbde wpreiacre .l onger loan&#13;
Your dealer (bould supply you wtth&#13;
them. Don' t take a •uMUtute.None&#13;
genuine without W. h. Douglas&#13;
name stamped on bottom. Sboee&#13;
_ sent everywhere, direct from factory,&#13;
by Parcel Poet, postage free. Now&#13;
Is tbe time to begin to save money on&#13;
your footwear. Writ* today for Illustrated&#13;
Catalog showing how to order&#13;
by mall. W. 2* D0TJOlA%&#13;
SIO Spark St., BrocatoaTlCaas.&#13;
CARTERS&#13;
ITTLC&#13;
IYER&#13;
PIUS.&#13;
a&#13;
Constipation&#13;
Vanishes Forever&#13;
Prompt Relief—Permanent Cure&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS never&#13;
fail. Purely vegeto'&#13;
ble — act surely&#13;
but gently on&#13;
the liver.&#13;
Stop after&#13;
dinner distress-&#13;
cure&#13;
indigestion,&#13;
improve the complexion, brighten the eyes.&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.&#13;
, Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
Dr. Navaun's Kidney Tablets&#13;
Relieves quickly »11 Kidney complaints such&#13;
as Backache, Rheumatism, Nervousness,&#13;
Dizziness, etc. Thousands of sufferers hare&#13;
been cured by this remedy and if you or any&#13;
rnember of your family are suffering; froa»&#13;
Kidney ailment send yonr name and B4*&#13;
dress on a postal for FREE sample and am*&#13;
booklet of testimonials and be convinced.&#13;
BOTANIC DRUG CO, Detroit, fVlck&#13;
HiCHpSTF&#13;
PRIGE-§&lt;&#13;
•^O.RV,' FURS [ca-tmsTmuwi&#13;
Readers of this paper&#13;
desiring to&#13;
buy anything&#13;
advertised in its columns ahoull&#13;
insist upon having what they ask fas)&#13;
refusing all substitutes or Imitatiom&#13;
*»»'&#13;
PettitS Kvo-Valve mnetmis&#13;
PISO'.S RtMr'DY.&#13;
t o l l ay Bract***.&#13;
I OR C P U ' t ^ ' A H D COLDS&#13;
i\&#13;
•i&#13;
V&#13;
*-&gt;f^'&#13;
v v&#13;
' Sfl&#13;
,&lt;-*»"&#13;
0&#13;
*a"ttt'?&lt;*&#13;
•V ,&#13;
•w&#13;
/ * •&#13;
r,\ t"$L i!i»t&amp;&#13;
,#**•£..•»?&#13;
%n&#13;
mrw— *-^mm*m*mmmmm&#13;
mx &lt;te&#13;
[7.' -if ' - A •••&#13;
4&#13;
,1&#13;
fc^^^;::^^:^&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
WE'VE SHOUTED&#13;
Por Five Seasons&#13;
FOP Clothing Trade From&#13;
rilNieKINlBY and Vicinity and&#13;
/&#13;
JO.&#13;
7&#13;
Each Successive Season Has&#13;
Brought Mope Business&#13;
WE appreciate this steady patronage very much,&#13;
BUT we believe the feeling should be mutual&#13;
FOR we have saved you money on your purchases,&#13;
AND given you values, not obtainable in cities.&#13;
s h t S 2 2 Msgfong Mb and Overcoats&#13;
O U P Showing is Immense&#13;
" \ ^&#13;
' * : • .&lt;&#13;
i&#13;
Wf&#13;
i- v&#13;
-v $h&#13;
O&#13;
Belt back or plain back overcoats,&#13;
shawl collars, velvets and convertibles,&#13;
English lengths or full lengths&#13;
Chinchillas, #Vicunas,&#13;
Cheviots, Niggerheads&#13;
English suits—Medium short coats,&#13;
soft roll lapels—and shoulders not&#13;
padded—They're the kind. New&#13;
browns, gray mixtures, black and&#13;
white effects and blue serges.&#13;
$10, 12.50, 15., 18., 22.50 $7.50,10., 12.50,15,, 18, 22.&#13;
Copyright, 1913,&#13;
Uttrbarla. Stern &amp; ffla.&#13;
Gome Up as Soon as Convenient&#13;
W . J . Dancer 6c Company&#13;
Car fare paid on $15. purchases or more. Stockbridge, Michigan&#13;
/-.--&#13;
*jSS&amp;&gt;&#13;
f l&#13;
t i&#13;
tr * i'SF'--&#13;
'J'' &gt;'&#13;
«-&#13;
.* " »•'*.,&#13;
:&lt;mi&#13;
;&lt;1 * i '&gt;-&#13;
i,- •*&lt;»&#13;
• • * '&#13;
South Marion&#13;
• Clyde Line and family were&#13;
entertained at the home of Hart&#13;
Gauss Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mre*- Job£~Gardner&#13;
gpent Sunday with Vern Demerest&#13;
and family.&#13;
John Ledwidge and wife of&#13;
Dexter were guests at Chris Brogan's&#13;
Monday. '&#13;
Mary Fifzsimmous wa3 an Ann&#13;
Arbor visitor the last of last week.&#13;
Wm. Chambers and wife spent&#13;
Sunday with Goody Dinkle and&#13;
family of Pinckney.&#13;
I. J. Abbott and family entertained&#13;
friends from Lansing over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
How's This?&#13;
We offer f 100. Reward for any case&#13;
of Catarrh tbat cannot be cured by&#13;
B«lVs Uatarrb (Jure&#13;
-&gt; ., P J CBENEY &amp; CO, Toledo 0.&#13;
;!.'.$&amp;» the undersigned, hev* known&#13;
F&lt;T0heney for the last 15 years, and&#13;
belHrre him perfectly honorable in all&#13;
bQ§M4#t%''trau5aotions and financially&#13;
able ft) &lt;&amp;rr/ o u t *ny obligations made&#13;
byfifcjkfc -pi&#13;
WaWRtt^Kurm^A Marvin,&#13;
Wbolet J* Bra^tfe'Tolado, Ohio&#13;
Ball's Catarrb Care fr taken internally,&#13;
acting directly upon ifie blood&#13;
and mucous surfaces of tb»~.system.&#13;
TetfcimoaiaU sent tree, f rice,' 75c per&#13;
bottle Sold by all druggists.&#13;
Take Hall's family pills for conttipat&#13;
ion.&#13;
' • ^ » &lt; » «&#13;
tf&#13;
Mayme Fiih of Oorunna was&#13;
AOVI6 over Sunday.&#13;
' , Whoever e&amp;rted the rumor that&#13;
winter ii approaohing hat a great&#13;
toaaewer'for.&#13;
State Sanitorium Report&#13;
Dr. E. B, Pierce, superintend,&#13;
ent of the Michigan State Sanitorium&#13;
at Howell reports that there&#13;
Are 38 beds for men. And 48 l&gt;edi&#13;
for women i n the sanitorium.&#13;
There were 79 cases Sept. 1, and&#13;
the number of applicants waiting&#13;
Was 24.&#13;
The average number of patients&#13;
for the year ending June 30, 1913.&#13;
was 7815, and the average net&#13;
cost per patient per,, week was&#13;
$11.27.&#13;
Sixty-six were admited between&#13;
21-30 years; 128 between 16-40&#13;
years of age. ' Sixty-four -had the&#13;
disease from 4 to 12 months before&#13;
entering, while 21 had had the&#13;
disease from 1 to 12 years.&#13;
The records show that 8 per&#13;
cent of the patientaare discharged&#13;
apparently well, i u 35 per cent&#13;
the disease is arrested; 32 percent&#13;
are improved. These reports show&#13;
that there ia great delay in getting&#13;
patients under treatment early.&#13;
This of course retards the work of&#13;
the sanitorium in benefitting the&#13;
patients. N o records are made&#13;
of patients remaining at the sanitorium&#13;
less than 80 days.&#13;
Saved His root&#13;
H, D. Ely, of Ban ton, 0., suffered&#13;
from a horrible nicer on bit tool lor&#13;
fooryeart. Doctors a6?Ued amputation,&#13;
but he refused aad relnctattly&#13;
triad Baeklen's Araica Salve as a last&#13;
He then wrote. n I used your&#13;
North Hamburg&#13;
The Hallowe'en social given by&#13;
the Tri-Mu class at Clarence&#13;
Carpenter's was well attended and&#13;
a good time reported by all. _&#13;
The Misses Lois Parker of&#13;
Howell and Carmen Case of&#13;
Brighton were week end guests&#13;
at the home of Clyde Dunning.&#13;
Mrs. Ed. Sweitzer of Detroit&#13;
spent a few days at the home of&#13;
Charles Sweitzer.&#13;
Miss Queena Quigley of Owosso&#13;
was the guest of Clara Carpenter&#13;
a few days last week.&#13;
Mrs. Myron Ely and daughter&#13;
spent a few days last week at the&#13;
home of her parents here.&#13;
Lee VanHorn entertained&#13;
Horald Hardy of Howell over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Clayton Carpenter of Pontiac&#13;
and Frank Carpenter and family&#13;
of Dexter spent the week end at&#13;
the home of Clarence Carpenter.&#13;
A Consanptlvtt Cough&#13;
A cough that bothers yon continually&#13;
is one of the danger signals&#13;
which warns of consumption. Dr:&#13;
King's New Discovery stops tbe ccagh&#13;
loosen the chest, banish fever and let&#13;
you ttatp peaeefoily.' The first dose&#13;
okeeks see inrnptons and gives prompt&#13;
relief. Mrs. A. F. Merit, of Glen Ellyn,&#13;
lows, writes: "Dr. Kiag's New Die*&#13;
ooverj oarsd a stnbbcrn oongb after&#13;
stx weeks doctoring failed.** Try it,&#13;
eared." Best remedy for bums, eate»&#13;
brnises aid eesema. Qet a box to-day.&#13;
Recommended by C. O. Meyer, the&#13;
drngjritt Only 36c, . * - &gt;&#13;
resort.&#13;
salve and my ioot WMIOOB completely ee it will medieiae fdoor tehoeu staonitee ofldotr, vthornoa.t Banesdt&#13;
Innff troobles. wonsy back if it fails&#13;
Fries We, asd I L BeeomsMBded by&#13;
4T. G. Meyer, the 4 « i f f i e t&#13;
'THE CENTRAL'&#13;
Some of the latest styles in diagonal weaves,&#13;
serge, broadcloth, ginghams, outing and fleeced lined goods.&#13;
New all-over lace, velvet, ribbon, etc.&#13;
We have a new line of sweaters and knit&#13;
goods. Sweaters for the little ones, ae well as older folks.&#13;
Also woolen underwear and fleece lined. Woolen bose for&#13;
women and men, all at the lowest prices.&#13;
We have added a new line of jewelry; this&#13;
is not cheap skate stuff, but is protected by a ieliable guarantee&#13;
that protects both the purchaser and myself and as I&#13;
am personally acquainted with the firm from whom it was&#13;
bought I can vouch for them and know that they will J o&#13;
just as they agree and they agree to exchange any piece of&#13;
jewelry tbat fails to give entire satisfaction. Anything in&#13;
this line that yon purchase here is absolutely all right or&#13;
will be made so.&#13;
The millinery season will soon close and&#13;
anyone iu need of hats will please call soon. W e are making&#13;
a reduction on anything in this line now.&#13;
Groceries, Dishes, Candies and Cigars.&#13;
GIVE US A CALL&#13;
Store Open livening1*&#13;
The CENTRAL S T O i m&#13;
I ^ E M U ' J L * IMF. U t l e y , P r o p ,&#13;
Try a liner Advertisement in the Dig]&#13;
v&#13;
v- %..«*.&#13;
~ ^ " T HKr?*-J~ "tor ..*#&amp;r. ••••&#13;
- .«15&#13;
•¥?•»*• ••-. » A : •i*. 'J- • V,&#13;
^ - ^ - - -- s^st^asu*&#13;
M *•. y~ ^ * ^ 1&#13;
• . • V - i ; * t ^&#13;
. ' * &gt; '&#13;
-_.»», tmwt, ' *#nm*+u**+$.iqr •MP* *rKummw+*4m^»&#13;
# ^&#13;
'&#13;
• _&#13;
Supplement to the Finckney Dispatch&#13;
WRECK OF THE 10:10&#13;
BY HAROLD CARTER.&#13;
After Dark&#13;
Chores are&#13;
fcasy for Jones&#13;
Jones has a big enclosed&#13;
(Acetylene light in bis barn.&#13;
A big, round, brilliant,&#13;
(white light.&#13;
A light he calls " t h e&#13;
[sun's little brother."&#13;
This big light is solidly,&#13;
[Fastened to a heavy timber,1&#13;
'and unlike Jones' old oil&#13;
[jantem, it can't be tipped&#13;
[over.&#13;
Jones turns this high&#13;
[candle power light on—'&#13;
[without a match, by simply&#13;
[pulling a little wire rod that&#13;
(hangs from the light.&#13;
On cold winter nights&#13;
(when its dark at 4:30.&#13;
When he gets home from&#13;
(town late—&#13;
Or when he has a sick&#13;
^critter" to look after, Jones&#13;
jfinds his big barn light a&#13;
(great convenience.&#13;
He says h e wouldn't&#13;
(take $1,000 for it. '&#13;
-Mrs. Jones too, shares inj&#13;
(the good thing.&#13;
„ She has acetylene light&#13;
Bn every room in her house,&#13;
and her light fixtures are:&#13;
"handsome ornaments of brass!&#13;
and bronze.&#13;
Mrs. Jones cooks also on a big gas range&#13;
— -in acetylene range that furnishes heat&#13;
&lt;c\ t a p — j u s t like millions of gas&#13;
'ranges in big cities.&#13;
The acetylene&#13;
feeds this range&#13;
and the lights on&#13;
These Pilot&#13;
Lighting Plants&#13;
Arc not storage tanks.&#13;
They make Acetylene—-a&#13;
very little a t a time—as the&#13;
burners use it,&#13;
T h e Pilot is one of hundreds&#13;
of patented Acetylene&#13;
machines.&#13;
All built on different principles&#13;
t o do t h e same wor£.&#13;
The test of time has&#13;
brought " T h e Pilot" out on&#13;
top.&#13;
The principle on .which !t&#13;
works has proved t o be the&#13;
correct one.&#13;
Today we sell more Light&#13;
machines than all other manufacturers&#13;
in .this.£country&#13;
p u t together.&#13;
.. We sell these Pilot plants&#13;
complete—through three factories&#13;
a n d 3,000 local representatives.&#13;
We have a big eastern&#13;
factory in Newark —a big&#13;
central factory in Chicago and&#13;
a Western Warehouse in Los&#13;
Angeles.&#13;
o o o&#13;
A complete plant includes&#13;
the machine, gas pipes,&#13;
light fixtures and t h e cooking&#13;
range.&#13;
Such a plant costs much&#13;
les' *» \n a water or heating&#13;
sys. * It is as permanent&#13;
as e.* ner, and as necessary to&#13;
make your home modern.&#13;
Our 3,000 representatives&#13;
; in the districts they serve.&#13;
; established in a penvian-.r'.&#13;
are rerr'ont&#13;
Each on&#13;
growing1 business.&#13;
^N? T h e y a r e :«n t h e grounds t o sec J;o&#13;
V it personally that purchasers&#13;
PILOT LIGHTING PLANTS U&#13;
&lt; ^ ink&#13;
one: p1?."^&#13;
\::, of c o u r s e ,&#13;
ihome im\de.&#13;
which&#13;
HOME MADE&#13;
fbr LIGHTING &amp;&#13;
^ 3 3 ^ ACETYLENE&#13;
C O O K I N G -&#13;
lit himself with the aid of a Pilot Lighting&#13;
PL.z*.&#13;
o o o&#13;
Ho til1^ th" "rent machine with U N I O N&#13;
C A R B I D E ia\d plain water, once a month.&#13;
o o o&#13;
This Pilot Lighting Plant gives Jones&#13;
the safest and most practical light and cooking&#13;
fu:l available for country home use.&#13;
of Pilot plants get&#13;
"value received"&#13;
for their money.&#13;
In your district&#13;
we are. represented&#13;
by/" "&#13;
R. B. WRIGHT&#13;
56 Regular Street, D E T R O I T , MICr..&#13;
Salesman&#13;
OXWELD ACETYLENE CO.&#13;
CHIGAOO&#13;
rnjvt i . * * « » . . , ^ , , ) 1 1 .i»\.',%/."** i&#13;
cofYworrnii&#13;
ftMEU PRODUCTS C O J H .&#13;
When You Need Help&#13;
YOU can always get the kind of help you need in a&#13;
Rumely-Olds Engine. It will be on the job for you&#13;
early or late, day or night and as long at a stretch as&#13;
you care to use it.&#13;
I t will run a n y kind of a machine from a cream separator to a h a y baler&#13;
And can b e used any place on t h e farm.&#13;
If you don't need a big one g e t a small one; we sell sizes from 1 ½ H .&#13;
P . , u p t o 65 H . P .&#13;
If you can't find time to come in and see us,&#13;
ask u s to come and see you or send you a&#13;
catalog of Rumely-Olds Engines.&#13;
We're here to serve you;&#13;
Give us a chance.&#13;
A. H. FLINTOFT,&#13;
A N Y D A Y&#13;
Leave 5rour watch, clock or jewelery for repair at&#13;
Monks Bros. Store&#13;
....WILL BE THERE EVERY WEDNESDAY...&#13;
*&#13;
, Have a nioe line of watches and jewelry at Lowest Price*&#13;
EDW. A. CLARK&#13;
Dexter JBWBUBR Mich.&#13;
It was a slack evening in t h e ollice,&#13;
I r e m e m b e r , a n d a group of us wer«&#13;
sitting c h a t t i n g around t h e r e p o r t e r s '&#13;
table farthest from Dunning, t h e night&#13;
editor, w h o had looked a r o u n d r a t h e r&#13;
frowningly once o r twice, a s if t h e&#13;
conversation disturbed h i m&#13;
Broad's fiancee w a s to a r r i v e t h a t&#13;
evening on t h e 10:10 from Washington,&#13;
a n d Broad, who h a d been celeb&#13;
r a t i n g in honor of t h e event, w a s&#13;
telling u s all t h e details of their recent&#13;
quarrel a n d reconciliation.&#13;
"Sh-h!" said s o m e ^ o n e ; a n d just&#13;
then a boy entered with a late edition&#13;
of t h e " P l a n e t , " w e t from t h e&#13;
press, a n d handed it t o Dunning.&#13;
"Mr. B r o a d ! " h e said sharply, a n d&#13;
then, changing h i s mind, left his s e a t&#13;
and hurried toward us. "Mr. Broad,&#13;
I want you to go o u t to Crayfield instantly.&#13;
T h e 10:10 from Washington&#13;
h a s been wrecked outside t h e station.&#13;
Hurry, a n d telephone all t h e news.&#13;
And say, t r y to g e t a list of t h e dead."&#13;
"My G o d ! " said Broad, a n d s a n k&#13;
down into his seat. He buried his&#13;
face in h i s h a n d s and h i s shoulders&#13;
shook convulsively. Somebody explained&#13;
t h e situation in a few words,&#13;
and Dunning's face took on a n expres'-"&#13;
sion of i n t e n s e s y m p a t h y . H e placed&#13;
one a r m about Rroad's shoulders a n d&#13;
drew h im to his feet.&#13;
"Too bad, -old m a n , " h e said. " B u t&#13;
I guess you'll b e crazy now unless you&#13;
get to Crayfield a s soon a s possible,&#13;
so p e r h a p s it would be t h e kindest,&#13;
thing to l e t you cover t h e a s s i g n m e n t . "&#13;
"Yes, I'll g o , " cried B r o a d , pulling&#13;
himself together.&#13;
Then, o n e after another, h e det.ailed&#13;
us; one to t h e railroad offices, another&#13;
to t h e president's house, a n o t h e r to&#13;
catch t h e general m a n a g e r a t his club.&#13;
I w a s among t h e few not assigned&#13;
and, r e t r e a t i n g to my desk, waited.&#13;
We did not like to think about t h e&#13;
subject I t w a s too ghastly for con-&#13;
T n e "basTVengers a i r escaped* with&#13;
minor injuries except one unidentified&#13;
man who—"&#13;
Suddenly Dunning pitched over a n d&#13;
fell to tiie ground. 1U&gt; h a d fainted.&#13;
Kemp r a n lo raise him, and, temporarily&#13;
diverted from t h e telephone by t h e&#13;
occurrence, I found myself glancing a t&#13;
:he copy of the " P l a n e t " in Dunaing's&#13;
half-opened drawer of his desk.&#13;
Dn t h e page facing me I read, a m o n g&#13;
:he list of the dead:&#13;
"Mrs. George Dunning of Washing-&#13;
Son." ,&#13;
( C o p y r i g h t , 191:!, b y W. (J. iMiuprnuu.) |&#13;
TRUE ART OF ADVERTISING'&#13;
nuk(*-ias&gt;&#13;
"Yes, I'll Go."&#13;
versation T h e r e w a s nobody b u t ilked&#13;
Broad, big, generous-hearted, freehanded.&#13;
- T h r e e - q u a r t e r s - of-• an h o u r - ©lapsed.&#13;
Dunning s a t stiffly a t h i s desk, writing&#13;
indefatigahly, glancing over flimsies&#13;
and c a s t i n g copy aside. His face&#13;
was b l a n c h e d ; t h e situation seemed&#13;
to have affected h im a s m u c h a s a n y&#13;
, of us. Once in a while t h e telephone&#13;
would ring, but it w a s always local&#13;
news or a r e p o r t from s o m e of t h e&#13;
men on a s s i g n m e n t . T h e r e w a s n o&#13;
word from Broad.&#13;
"If she's a m o n g t h e m , " began K e m p&#13;
—-and we k n e w h e m e a n t t h e dead—&#13;
"Broad w o n ' t telephone."&#13;
"O yes, h e will," I a n s w e r e d confidently;&#13;
a n d a t t h a t m o m e n t t h e telephone&#13;
r a n g so sharply t h a t somehow I&#13;
knew it w a s Broad calling from Crayfield.&#13;
D u n n i n g took u p t h e receiver&#13;
and held it to h i s e a r a m o m e n t . T h e n&#13;
he called m e .&#13;
• " I t ' s Broad," h e said. " H e ' s calling&#13;
and says h e h a s a good story. Don't&#13;
go into a booth; t a k e it down h e r e&#13;
I've told h i m to go slow. And s a y , "&#13;
he added, "don't let h i m g e t away&#13;
without giving y o u t h e list of t h e casualties."&#13;
I took u p t h e r e c e i v e r a n d a t t h e&#13;
first sound I k n e w t h a t Miss P h a y r e&#13;
was safe.&#13;
"How is g h e ? " I called. " F i n e , " answered&#13;
Broad's voice. I thought&#13;
there w a s t h e suspicion of a s o b in ft.&#13;
"Are you r e a d y ? 0 , Miss P h a y r e ?&#13;
Just a trivia! injury, t h a n k s , old m a n .&#13;
The ' P l a n e t ' story w a s incorrect. Now&#13;
then." I began t a k i n g down t h e story,&#13;
while D u n n i n g looked o v e r my shoulder.&#13;
" T h e 10:10 t r a i n from W a s h i n g t o n&#13;
to N e w Y o r k w a s ditched on t h e f a r&#13;
lide of Crayfield a t 10:02," I w r o t e . "A&#13;
broken rail is believed t o h a v e been&#13;
the c a u s e of t h e a c c i d e n t T h e engine&#13;
t n d t h e first t h r e e c a r s plunged down&#13;
i n e m b a n k m e n t ; t h e r e m a i n i n g c a r s&#13;
tfitt tfcfi m e t a l s , b u l d i d n ^ t o v e r t u r n .&#13;
Man in Burglar's Mask W a s Only Introducing&#13;
Patent Safety Alarm&#13;
and Preventer.&#13;
As I opened t h e door I saw a m a n&#13;
with a burglar's mask kneeling before&#13;
t h e safe. The next m o m e n t h e h a d&#13;
t u r n e d and shoved a revolver into m y&#13;
face. '&#13;
" T h r o w up your h a n d s ! " he said.&#13;
I did so.&#13;
* "You understand," h e r e m a r k e d&#13;
pleasantly, "that I can In t h e p r e s e n t&#13;
circumstances loot t h e premises a t m y&#13;
p l e a s u r e ? "&#13;
I confessed t h a t h e could.&#13;
"You realize t h a t you a r e a t my&#13;
m e r c y ? "&#13;
"I do," I replied.&#13;
"You acknowledge t h a t I c a n blow&#13;
you t o kingdom come if I like?" h e&#13;
persisted.&#13;
"Certainly," I admitted.&#13;
"Well, then," he s a i d , ' " y o u will b e&#13;
i n t e r e s t e d to know t h a t I got in withi&#13;
out difficulty through your parlor win-&#13;
' dow. ffadr it been " equipped with&#13;
j Smith's patent safety burglar a l a r m&#13;
and preventer this could n o t have happened.&#13;
Installed, complete with batteries,&#13;
for $25. Allow m e to hand you&#13;
I a circular. Good night, sir."&#13;
Then, pocketing his revolver, h e&#13;
withdrew.&#13;
Business Man Praises&#13;
Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy&#13;
Successful Merchant After Investigation&#13;
Found a Remedy That Restored&#13;
His Health.&#13;
"This Is Thanksgiving day in t h e&#13;
state of Pennsylvania, and I want t o&#13;
dwvotb a part of&#13;
it in writing- a&#13;
letter to you*&#13;
O n t h n liiith d a y&#13;
•~—. ^ ^ - . •• of Novc'i'hhisr.'lO,&#13;
^ : l l V • * ' ' w i t h h e a r t&#13;
t r o u b l e . M y&#13;
family phys4eian&#13;
called It Angina&#13;
Peotoria. I had&#13;
from one to five&#13;
attacks' In Zl&#13;
hours, i n t h e&#13;
latter p a r t o f&#13;
Deeeniber, 1910w&#13;
I wrote to t « 0&#13;
Miles Medioal Co., for information concerning&#13;
my case, and in reply* I received&#13;
a. vpry kind a** instructive latter,&#13;
which I handed tt&gt; my family doctor,&#13;
and he told me to use your Remedies&#13;
In connection. wKh the medicine ha&#13;
gave me, so I did. I us«d five bottle*&#13;
of Dr. jiilw' Heart R«medy and seven&#13;
bottli'H of Dr. Miles' Nervine. I was&#13;
confined to the bouse for about four&#13;
months. The action of my heart la&#13;
now, and hits been normal for the last&#13;
six months. I can truly recommend&#13;
Dr. Miles' Nervine and Heart Remedy&#13;
to do what they aro intended for, If&#13;
used according to directions. I thank&#13;
you kindly for your advice in answer to&#13;
my monthly rnporte. I am now sixtyseven&#13;
years of age, have been in tho&#13;
mercantile business for thirty-five years&#13;
and lived retired for the last thirteen&#13;
years." A. B. ITOLUNCrER,&#13;
Lincoln, Penna,&#13;
Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy is sold and&#13;
guaranteed by all druggists. 10&#13;
MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind.&#13;
60 YEA*t»&#13;
WHY THE PRICE WAS HIGH&#13;
8lr Joshua Reynolds' Notice of Sketoh&#13;
Macfe It Worth Vastly More,&#13;
Said Dealer.&#13;
" W h a t d o you ask for this s k e t c h ? "&#13;
said Sir Joshua Reynolds to a picture&#13;
dealer whose portfolio h e was examining.&#13;
"Twenty guineas, Sir Joshua."&#13;
" T w e n t y pence, I suppose you mean."&#13;
"No, s i r ; I would have taken t w e n t y&#13;
pence for It this morning, but if you&#13;
think t h e drawing worth looking at&#13;
all t h e *world will think it worth buying."&#13;
A Bondon dealer who had m a d e a&#13;
few trifling purchases a t a secondh&#13;
a n d furniture shop in t h e country&#13;
w a s leaving It, when he caught his&#13;
foot in t h e string of a picture and fell.&#13;
H a v i n g picked himself up, he examined&#13;
t h e picture to see if It had been&#13;
d a m a g e d . It had escaped injury, and&#13;
he found, to his surprise, t h a t in thus&#13;
tripping he had—literally—stumbled&#13;
i upon a print of t h e duchess of Rut&#13;
j land, after Reynolds, by Valentine&#13;
i Green, i n its first state. T h e dealer&#13;
bought, t h e print for £ 4 and afterward&#13;
disposed of it for £1,000.—From&#13;
J e r n i g h a m ' s "Bargain Book."&#13;
T R A D E */IARK»&#13;
A.iV'iTif1' 'rim. • . I'M .w.i ii v ;-,'.t.! &gt;i .MH;&#13;
rjutci;i&gt; ,'i;. ' n i l ('::;• (11.1:1 imi I'roo whether Hi.&#13;
niveis: inn ! !.:••:" .r.' i MI c:: nl&gt;!e ( ommuriifji&#13;
'„ioiis&lt; nt riui iy M I ' ! (r-i,t in!. llANUBOUK &lt;&gt;ti Patriit-'&#13;
3 1 . "'. t ' I &lt;•'.&lt;'. : » ! ' ' ' • ' M l ' l M . 1&lt; i f H C ' l l l 1;' .' j i u U ' T l l f ,&#13;
P i l . &lt; " i t : l 1 •• .i 1 1 I „ : I M i l , . : , v, . ,• , • ! »&#13;
*pmitt V)t &gt;[:•:, u-;f',i. v 1 Iniri.'f '.ti'.li.j Sefeni"-: jiitKiican. • nan ••;&lt;,•,,&lt; \y ,.,.,/1 iii-n wrvjiav j.nriif-tt oir&#13;
, . . l ; i t i , u l i ' i :: MY ... / M , ] ) ; ; | . . ; i r n u j 'I I ' l T I l S ¥'4t.&#13;
your1 f'n,: ' u n ' i i u . ' ; , ;ioldbyuli nowMdeaicns&#13;
I GOING TO BUY A PIANO |&#13;
C OR SEWING MACHINE |&#13;
. YES? i?&#13;
SEE L. R. WILLIAMS.&#13;
3 G R E G O R Y *&#13;
•$ Bfe$''Hi' snves you money on hi^li&#13;
k'rude pianos.&#13;
OLD PUFFS AND SWITCHES • f f r f ^ f # H l f ? r;flfT^Wr&#13;
Ladies of Twenty-Five Centuries A g *&#13;
Made Liberal Use of Borrowed&#13;
Hair.&#13;
a M. F. S'GLER M. D. C. L, StGLER M. D. ?&#13;
—f5aesar1 s wife ra^y have been ahoYe&#13;
suspicion so far a s h e r morals w e r e&#13;
concerned, but t h e s a m e could n o t&#13;
h a v e been said about h e r hair, a n y&#13;
m o r e t h a n it could about t h e hair of&#13;
t h e fashionable m a t r o n of today.&#13;
T h e Greek, Egyptian, C a r t h a g i n i a n&#13;
and R o m a n ladies of twenty-five cent&#13;
u r i e s ago made u s e of t h e most ast&#13;
o n i s h i n g quantities of borrowed hair,&#13;
and t h e Roman w o m e n of t h e t i m e of&#13;
A u g u s t u s were especially pleased&#13;
w h e n .they could outdo t h e i r social&#13;
rivals by piling upon their h e a d s a&#13;
g r e a t e r tower of additional t r e s s e s ,&#13;
t h e y also arranged curls formally&#13;
around t h e head.&#13;
An extensive c o m m e r c e in h u m a n&#13;
hair w a s carried on, a n d after t h e conquest&#13;
of Gaul, blond hair, such a s&#13;
grew originally on t h e heads of Germ&#13;
a n girls along t h e Rhine, b e c a m e&#13;
very fashionable in Rome. Caesar did&#13;
not disdain to mix a little commercial,&#13;
ism with his military e n t e r p r i s e s a n d&#13;
collected a v a s t a m o u n t of hair from&#13;
t h e vanquished Gauls, which h e s e n t&#13;
to m a r k e t a t Rome, and in t h e R o m a n&#13;
provinces a cropped h e a d w a s regarded&#13;
a s a badge of slavery or a t l e a s t&#13;
of subjection.&#13;
T h e h a i r d r e s s e r s of R o m e w e r e persons&#13;
of real Importance a n d charged&#13;
e x o r b i t a n t prices for forming t h e h a i r&#13;
Into fanciful devices, s u c h aa h a r p s ,&#13;
tths a n d d i a d e m s .&#13;
^5&#13;
% DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER, |&#13;
Physicians a n d S u r g e o n s .&#13;
All c/aWfi p r o m p t l y attended to&#13;
day or nifthl. Office on Main&#13;
Street.&#13;
F I N C K N E Y , - M I C H .&#13;
, 1 r - H O C U R E D A N D O f ; r e N D E O . | ^ n d m o d ^ H&#13;
i ft 1 Jiv/nitfoj pii'ito.i.ivex nit M%airhaii'i *&gt;(•&lt;•• report m&#13;
I Free (iilvtro, ImW '.o -t:1111 fintent*, 1,.-lu m*rta,B&#13;
_; .•opyritfhts, etc., -fl 4.L COU " TRI E ^ . It' t flu«inr.\x iUrctvj'uh Wash\&gt;, .&lt;&gt;;; saws thu.,1&#13;
MOW-/ a tut of'.rn th • t\nt-,it. L&#13;
i. Patent and Infringement Practice Excluilvdy. i,&#13;
VJ W r i t e : n r f f i ' i ' . i : \\&gt; yy. ',' W&#13;
1 M o23 Stath Btrwt, opp. UnlUd StutM Pit*at OftC *&#13;
1 '.-'• W A S H I N G T O N , D. C.&#13;
Grand Trunk Time Table&#13;
For the convenience of our readers&#13;
Trains Eaat Trains West&#13;
No. 28—8:39 t . m. No. 27—10:23 a. m.&#13;
No. 3 0 - 4 : 4 9 p. m. No. 29-7:12 p . m,&#13;
Don't Overlook&#13;
art to arrtart rat&#13;
that w CM »lw&#13;
fta*«atfor&#13;
the MONEY&#13;
i&#13;
t M&#13;
i-3&#13;
t t \&#13;
^ ^ tjif&#13;
I -&#13;
i&#13;
|&#13;
f\-&#13;
i&gt;-&#13;
•*-i&#13;
\&#13;
S&#13;
:4 I&#13;
•MS&#13;
• •&#13;
- I&#13;
- I&#13;
c&#13;
&lt;. krt'l.&#13;
,«**&gt;&#13;
,f ; ^ - ^ ' -&#13;
• &gt;-.*»: -r .«$1»'-</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch November 06, 1913</text>
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                <text>November 06, 1913 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>Roy W. Caverly</text>
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                  <text>Newspaper</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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      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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          <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="37366">
              <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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          <description>Enter Search Text that is always hidden except to edit.</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="40687">
              <text>Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan, Thursday, November 13, 1913 No. 46&#13;
Obituary I&#13;
Saturday, November 8th, the&#13;
friends of Joseph Kennedy, son&#13;
of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Kennedy&#13;
Sr., were sorry to learn of his&#13;
leath. "Joe" as he was familiarly&#13;
known among his most intimate&#13;
friends has been seriously ill,&#13;
with no hope of Tecovery, for some&#13;
weeks at his father's home in this&#13;
village. Everything possible has&#13;
been done by loving relatives and&#13;
kind friends to relieve his suffering,&#13;
but all to no avail. Although&#13;
in active life the greater part of&#13;
his years, he has been a patient&#13;
suflerer and was resigned to die.&#13;
"Jos" was well liked among his&#13;
home people and has and will be&#13;
greatly missed in his large circle&#13;
of friends. The sympathy of the&#13;
community is extended to his surviving&#13;
relatives who will greatly&#13;
miss his sunny character.&#13;
Joseph Kennedy was born in&#13;
Detroit, Mich., March 6,1890 and&#13;
at the time of his death was 23&#13;
years, 8 months and 2 days of age.&#13;
The funeral was held from St.&#13;
Mary's church Monday morning,&#13;
Rev. Fr. Coyle saying the mass.&#13;
He leaves a wife and baby, father&#13;
and mother, four brothers and&#13;
four sisters, besides a host of&#13;
friends to mourn his loss.&#13;
A Farmer's Dream&#13;
We want to tell onr readers the&#13;
story of a faimer's dream.&#13;
This farmer dreamed that he&#13;
raised 1,000 bushels of wheat one&#13;
year and nothing more. He sold&#13;
the wheat to 1,000different people&#13;
at 11.00 a bushel. The purchasers&#13;
did not pay for the wheat when&#13;
they got it, in fact the sum being&#13;
only a small one, many of them&#13;
forgot it and others simply neglected&#13;
payment till a more convenient&#13;
season. The man who&#13;
sold the wheat having no other&#13;
income, was soon in need of money.&#13;
He had plenty coming but to&#13;
get it he must see a thousand different&#13;
men. He hated to speak&#13;
about so small an amount for fear&#13;
A Pre-Nuptial Event&#13;
Wednesday evening November&#13;
5th, the home of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Guy Teeple was hospitably opened&#13;
to about fifty guests f o r a&#13;
kitchen shower in honor of Miss&#13;
Norma Vaughn, soon to become&#13;
the bride of Mr. George Roy&#13;
Merrill of Webster.&#13;
A "Shirt Waist Romance",&#13;
guessing contest occupied a portion&#13;
of the evening and caused&#13;
much merriment among t h e&#13;
assembled company. Miss Blanche&#13;
Martin was the fortunate winner&#13;
of the first prize which proved to&#13;
be a huge iron spoon. To Miss&#13;
Jessie Green was awarded the&#13;
booby prize, a tiny spoon tied&#13;
with blue ribbon.&#13;
After the contest a daint&gt; buffet&#13;
luncTieib^^as^l^rved^THe dining&#13;
room being tastefully decorated&#13;
for the occasion with pink and&#13;
white hearts and candles. The&#13;
enjoyable event closed after the&#13;
bride-to-be had been presented&#13;
with her gifts which consisted of&#13;
everything imaginable for an upto-&#13;
date kitchen. Miss Vaughn&#13;
thanked the donors of so many&#13;
useful presents in a very graceful&#13;
manner, and after congratulations&#13;
were offered, the guests departed&#13;
all having enjoyed an exceedingly&#13;
fine time.&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
CLOTHES CLEANED and preyed a t&#13;
reasonable prices. 43tf&#13;
Airs. W. H. Darrow, Pinckney&#13;
FOK SALE—Thoroughbred HoUtem&#13;
Bull, seven months old, also 1400 lb.&#13;
horse, sound and right. 4CM3*&#13;
(i. M. Greiner, Pinckney&#13;
FOR SERVICE—Poland China boar,&#13;
terms 50o. at the time of service or&#13;
$1.00 if charged with return privilage.&#13;
•). It. Martin 45t3*&#13;
ANY&#13;
An Up-to-date Question&#13;
The South Lyon Herald is agitating&#13;
the question of water works&#13;
for fire protection in that village&#13;
and here is hoping the Herald gets&#13;
it going. A few years since Fowl-&#13;
Leave y o u r watch, clock&#13;
Monks Bros. Store&#13;
....WILL BE THERE EVERY WEDNESDAY.&#13;
Have a nice line of watches and jewel&#13;
B D W . A . CL&#13;
Dcxtcp JEWELER&#13;
FARM FOfcl SALE—166 Acres in&#13;
fcection 27, Dexter Township, 2 i miiei&#13;
northwest ot Dexter village, known&#13;
as the Lavey tarm. Good buildings,&#13;
well lenced and the beat of land.&#13;
Must be sold to close the estate ot&#13;
the lata Mrs. C. Gallagher. Inquire&#13;
of Dr R. B Koney or&#13;
agher, Dexter Mieb.&#13;
Inqu&#13;
John Gall-&#13;
Mabel Srniih is on tke sick list.&#13;
Ida Clemo of Ann Arbor is&#13;
visiting friends here this week.&#13;
Dr. H. F. Sigler was in Dexter&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Ladies winter coats in splendid&#13;
assortments, at Dancer's $6 to $25.&#13;
The bans of marriage of Miss&#13;
Agnes Walsh of Dexter and Mr.&#13;
erville installed a system and its Clyde Mclntyre of Pinckney were&#13;
strongest opposers at that time are i proclaimed from St. Mary's church&#13;
his , neighbmor,s would think him , . , ., , .., hard-up. -^fee -resulut w a ^ n e a.c tw- ^a ter_-w~o rks sy' st.em, ,f o,r that. vill oo&#13;
ually came to want with $1,000&#13;
due him and all the debtors were&#13;
"good."&#13;
Awakened he was relieved to&#13;
find thai it was only a dream but&#13;
he at once made a vow and as&#13;
" soon as breakfast was over, hitched&#13;
up Old Dobbin and drove to&#13;
town. Bight straight to the printing&#13;
office he went and paid the&#13;
dollar that he kuew was past due,&#13;
with the remark, ''Hereafter I pay&#13;
in advance. ^&#13;
now among its strongest st^fpprters.&#13;
I t has saved its cost at different&#13;
fires many times and we&#13;
don't know if there is a single citizen&#13;
that would be willing to be&#13;
without the system.—Fowlerville&#13;
Keview. If we are at all a judge&#13;
of the results usually obtained&#13;
from newspaper agitation, t h e&#13;
South Lyon Herald is surely doing&#13;
its part in trying to.obtain a&#13;
here last Sunday.&#13;
Oflrl Meyers aud wife are&#13;
spending a few days in Detroit.&#13;
Dan Lantis of Stockbridge will&#13;
run the drug store in their absence.&#13;
Mrs. Lantis is also visiting&#13;
friends here.&#13;
Although the train which bore&#13;
Dr. Wm. A. Colledge to Pinckney&#13;
where he appeared on the Lecture&#13;
Course Tuesday evening was a&#13;
"creeping thing", being one hour&#13;
late, the discourse he gave hia&#13;
audience possessed no sucb qualities,&#13;
but was full of vim, and energy,&#13;
an inspiration to bigger,&#13;
better things. Following the lecture&#13;
a musical was given by&#13;
members of the Austin family&#13;
concert troupe. Only a part of&#13;
their regular performance was given&#13;
owing to the lateness of the&#13;
hour, but from what they gave we&#13;
judge their regular program to be&#13;
a very entertaining one indeed.&#13;
Advertise&#13;
IF YOU&#13;
Want a Cook&#13;
Want a Clerk&#13;
Want a Partner&#13;
Want a Situation&#13;
Want a Servant Girl&#13;
Want to Sell a Piano&#13;
Want to Sell a Carriage&#13;
Want to SellTownProperty&#13;
Want to Sell Your Groceries&#13;
Want to Sell Your Hardware&#13;
Want Customers for Anything&#13;
Advertise Weekly in This Paper.&#13;
Advertising la the Way to S i&#13;
Advertising Brings Custoi&#13;
Advertising Keeps Customers&#13;
Advertising Insures Success&#13;
Advertising Shows Energy&#13;
Advertising Shows Pluck&#13;
Advertising Is "BizH&#13;
Advertise or Bust&#13;
Advertise Long&#13;
Advertise Well&#13;
ADVERTISE&#13;
At Once&#13;
In This Paper&#13;
age. W e a r e right here to say]1U&#13;
that we hope they geo it, and we J flf&#13;
might also add that a water-works ! lii,&#13;
system in Pinckney is sorely need- j y[(&#13;
ed for fire protection. If a fire&#13;
were to start in the business portion&#13;
of this town it would b e&#13;
"Good Night" to Pinckney as we&#13;
do not even posses a trained&#13;
"bucket brigade".&#13;
^° T O Murphy &amp; Jackson&#13;
-£V&#13;
Card of Thanks&#13;
We desire to express our sincere&#13;
thanks to all those who so&#13;
kindly assisted ns during the&#13;
sickness and death of our beloved&#13;
husbanoVson and brother, and also&#13;
for the beautiful floral offerings,&#13;
Mrs. Joseph Kennedy.&#13;
Wm. Kennedy Sr. and Family.&#13;
Overcoats, overcoats, overcoats&#13;
and Dancer's is the place. adv.&#13;
When you need fresh groceries,&#13;
be sure to call at Monks Bros. ad.&#13;
The ladies of the Methodist&#13;
church estimated their Fair proceeds&#13;
to be $167.88&#13;
Another spasmodic attack on&#13;
this paper by the choleric noteven-&#13;
has-been on the try weakly&#13;
adds spice to its half baked bill of&#13;
fare.&#13;
A box social will be held at the&#13;
home of Mr. and Mr». Alfred&#13;
Monks, to-night, Thursday, Nov.&#13;
IB, under auspices of St. Mary's&#13;
church. Everyone is cordially invited.&#13;
The ladies of the M. E. church&#13;
* &amp; • • '&#13;
Gents furnishings at the lowest&#13;
prices. Monks Bros. adv. »&#13;
-A.Amos Clinton transacted business&#13;
in Uetroit the first of the&#13;
.week.&#13;
Special communication of Liv-| wish to thank all those who addingston&#13;
Lodge, No. 76, F. A A. M., ©d to the success of their Fair by&#13;
Wednesday evening, November their donations, music, liberal&#13;
19. Work in the 1st degree. , patronage and help along every&#13;
J. R. Martin, W. M. line.&#13;
Headquarters For Groceries, Dry Goods, Shoes, Bubbers,&#13;
Furnishings, Etc.&#13;
Largest Stock Lowest Prices&#13;
NEW L.INBS RECEIVED&#13;
Ladies and Childrens Handkerchiefs, ranging from 1c to $1.00 each&#13;
Best Grade Outing Flannels, per yard • - 10c&#13;
Latest Styles in Mens and Ladies Shoes&#13;
Large assortment of Mens, Ladies, Misses and Childrens Cotton and&#13;
Wool Underwear&#13;
i H B B S S B S B S B B B B S H P H B B S M B H H H M V i MMSl^^BBBIBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBHBSSSSBBBSBBBBSSSSSBBBSBSBlBBBIBBS&#13;
This season we are showing the largest assortment of FALL AND&#13;
WINTER FOOTWEAR ever shown in Pinckney. Our basement is&#13;
chuck full of bargains. Come and get our prices before buying,&#13;
OUR SATURDAY SPECIAUS&#13;
Mens S w e a t e r s , $1.00 values .&#13;
2 7 x 6 3 Rugs, 31*00 values&#13;
^1.25 Bed Blankets at&#13;
2 5 lbs. H. St B. Sugar&#13;
•&lt;;&#13;
* \&#13;
: • • ' ' • • ' ' *&#13;
. * "-ftj&#13;
-•£*\i&#13;
P1NCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
TheDAUGKTERoj&#13;
DAVID KERR&#13;
h% Hax-g^ Ktn£ tootle&#13;
lllus£raftons 3&gt;jr 7t&lt;&lt;/ WAlUna&#13;
10&#13;
COPYRIGHT BY A.CMfCLUrtG 6* CO. I9IA&#13;
SYNOPSIS.&#13;
Gloria Kerr, a motherless girl, who h a s&#13;
•pent most of h*-r life in school, arrives&#13;
a t her father's home in Belmont. David&#13;
K e r r is the political boss of the town,&#13;
a n d 1B anxious to prevent hiB d a u g h t e r&#13;
learning of his real character. Kendall,&#13;
representing the Chicago packers, is negotiating&#13;
with Judge Gilbert, K e r r ' s chief&#13;
adviser, for a valuable franchise. They&#13;
fear the opposition of Joe Wright, editor&#13;
of the reform paper. K e r r asks the a s -&#13;
sistance of Judge Gilbert In introducing&#13;
Gloria to Belmont society, and promises&#13;
to help him put through the packers'&#13;
franchise and let him have all the g r a f t&#13;
Gloria meets Joe Wright at the Gilbert*.&#13;
Tt a p p e a r s they are on intimate terms,&#13;
having met previously in a touring p a r t y&#13;
in Europe. The Gilberts invite Gloria to&#13;
stay with them ponding the refurnishing&#13;
of the K e r r home. W r i g h t begins his fight&#13;
a g a i n s t the proposed franchise in the colu&#13;
m n s of his paper, the Belmont News.&#13;
Kerr, through his henchmen, exerts every&#13;
influence to hamper W r i g h t In the&#13;
publication of his paper. Gloria realizes&#13;
she is not being received by the best society&#13;
and Is unhappy. She takes up settlement&#13;
work. Kerr and his lieutenants&#13;
decide to buy K e r r ' s paper and ask t h e&#13;
editor to meet them at Gilbert's office.&#13;
C H A P T E R XII.—Continued.&#13;
The boss' further opinion concerning&#13;
settlement work was not voiced&#13;
because, while Kerr was talking, Judge&#13;
Gilbert had telephoned Williams to&#13;
usher Mrs. HayeB and Miss Kerr into&#13;
the library.&#13;
Followed by the other men, Gilbert&#13;
advanced to meet them, and after the&#13;
usual greetings had been exchanged,&#13;
offered them chairs.&#13;
"You must pardon us," began Mrs.&#13;
Hayes. "We did not expect to find&#13;
you so busy. To tell the truth, we&#13;
didn't expect to find two persons&#13;
here whom we have already visited."&#13;
She looked at Kerr and her husband.&#13;
"I'm the Cheerful Giver," said Kerr&#13;
with a humorous grimace which pretended&#13;
to show that the donation was&#13;
not so cheerfully parted with.&#13;
"I'm not so cheerful, but I was a&#13;
giver," added Dr. Hayes.&#13;
"I told Judge Gilbert to lock the&#13;
safe, that I knew you would be after&#13;
money," Kerr continued.&#13;
"Highway robbers, I call them," was&#13;
Dr. Hayes' testimony this time.&#13;
"A bad reputation they've given us,&#13;
Judge Gilbert," laughed Gloria, "and&#13;
vtp don't deserve it, indeed we don't."&#13;
"~ Kerr walked into the private office&#13;
and Gilbert, catching his eye, followed&#13;
him. The boss said something; Gilbert&#13;
looked at the women and then&#13;
nodded his head in assent. Dr. Hayes,&#13;
also catching the boss' eye, strolled&#13;
away from the group casually as the&#13;
judge rejoined it. A word with him&#13;
was all that Kerr required. The master&#13;
of Locust Lawn was setting the&#13;
stage with an eye that overlooked no&#13;
detail. There was too much at stake&#13;
for him to neglect to interpolate anything&#13;
effective which chmce might&#13;
throw in his way.&#13;
As the two men walked back into&#13;
the library, Mrs. Hayes was saying:&#13;
"Dr. Hayes and I have had quite an&#13;
argument, and here are the lawyers,&#13;
Gloria, who can settle the question for&#13;
us. Can a woman steal from her husband,&#13;
Mr. Kendall?" __&#13;
Ken3alT knitted his brows in perplexity.&#13;
"Really, Mrs. Hayes, that is&#13;
a question I shall have to take under&#13;
advisement."&#13;
"But a man can steal from his wife,"&#13;
Gloria put in. There waB a general&#13;
laugh at this which she did not relish.&#13;
' T m talking seriously. If it weren't&#13;
BO, we mightn't be here begging&#13;
money."&#13;
"So you are after money," said&#13;
Judge Gilbert lightly. "Then you must&#13;
tell me why I should contribute to&#13;
keep men from stealing from their&#13;
wives, you who have no one to steal&#13;
from you."&#13;
Gloria was not to be diverted .from&#13;
what she had to say. These men to&#13;
whom she was talking represented to&#13;
her what was best in Belmont, what&#13;
was best in manhood. She wished&#13;
them to see the truth as she saw it&#13;
"It Isn't that kind of stealing," she&#13;
"went on; "it's worse than that. Till I&#13;
went with Mrs. Hayes to visit the&#13;
mission I had no idea of the degradation&#13;
and misery in a town even like&#13;
Belmont. When I say men steal from&#13;
their wives I mean they take money&#13;
they should spend on their families&#13;
and spend it for whisky and gambling.&#13;
"I think It's a shame that such men&#13;
as you, Judge Gilbert, and you, Dr.&#13;
Hayes, and you, Father, of all persons,&#13;
permit euch things to happen here In&#13;
Belmont I.wiBh I were a man!"&#13;
"You can't keep people from spending&#13;
their money," said Kerr, as he&#13;
looked at his watch.&#13;
Dr. Hayes caught the slight nod the&#13;
boss gave, and said something to his&#13;
wife. Then, interrupting the discussion,&#13;
he said to Gloria:&#13;
"I'm already on the list of cheerful&#13;
givers, Miss Kerr, and I'm going to&#13;
ask If you'll let me carry off Mrs.&#13;
Hayes for half an hour or so,"&#13;
"But I'm only assisting her," she replied&#13;
in surprise.&#13;
"You can tell Judge Gilbert about It&#13;
even better than she can. I know how&#13;
it Is when married ladies come to my&#13;
office and when unmarried ladies&#13;
come."&#13;
"Yes," laughed his wife, "he keeps&#13;
me poor, contributing to things that&#13;
are none of our business juBt because&#13;
pretty girls come in and he can't re--&#13;
fuse -them. Dr. Hayes says we won't&#13;
be long, Gloria. You don't mind, do&#13;
you?"&#13;
"Of course not. Where shall I meet&#13;
you?"&#13;
"We'll come back here."&#13;
Gloria turned from saying goodby to&#13;
Mrs. Hayes to find only her father In&#13;
the room with her. Kendall and Judge&#13;
Gilbert had withdrawn to the latter's&#13;
private office.&#13;
"Where's Joe Wright been . keepin'&#13;
himself?" asked Kerr suddenly.&#13;
The girl did not betray the slightest&#13;
interest in the quegtion. She took her&#13;
time about answering, and when she&#13;
spoke it was in the most nonchalant&#13;
manner.&#13;
"Mr. Wright? Oh, he's in Belmont."&#13;
"You don't go with him like you&#13;
used to. He ain't been to Locust Lawn&#13;
once."&#13;
"He aays he's busy whf.n I see him.&#13;
I meet him occasionally."&#13;
"I thought you and him was good&#13;
friends."&#13;
"Oh, we are."&#13;
Although she answered his questions&#13;
in an off-hand manner, her father was&#13;
not deceived. From what he had been&#13;
told and also from what he had observed,&#13;
he felt that his daughter had&#13;
a genuine regard for the owner of the&#13;
Belmont News. Of its depth he could&#13;
not decide.&#13;
"He ain't been near you for a long&#13;
time."&#13;
"I'm not bothering about him. I'm&#13;
not bothering particularly about anyone."&#13;
The girl was glad that at this moment&#13;
Judge Gilbert came from his private&#13;
office. Her father was questioning&#13;
her about matters she preferred to&#13;
keep to herself.&#13;
"If Miss Gloria can spare you, Mr.&#13;
Kerr," said the judge, "Mr. Kendall&#13;
would like to see you in my office. I've&#13;
come back to be persuaded that I&#13;
ought to join the cheerful givers."&#13;
"I'll tell Kendall, Gloria, that he's&#13;
got to join the lodge," were Kerr's&#13;
parting words as he went into the inner&#13;
office.&#13;
Remembering that Miss Kerr had&#13;
not been given the chance to explain&#13;
her visit fully, Judge Gilbert took a&#13;
chair beside her and said:&#13;
"Now, I'm at your service, prepared&#13;
to believe the most terrible things&#13;
about our fair Belmont."&#13;
"When you talk like that, Judge&#13;
Gilbert, I'm afraid you're laughing at&#13;
me."&#13;
Of late Gloria's seriousness had far&#13;
outweighed her old mood of joyousness.&#13;
and she now insisted on being;&#13;
taken seriously.&#13;
"You've lectured me so long for being&#13;
shocked at what I've found that&#13;
I'm afraid to say any more."&#13;
Judge Gilbert was seeking in his&#13;
mind for some plausible reason to advance&#13;
which would be sufficient to remove&#13;
Gloria from the work she had&#13;
undertaken, when WilliamB entered.&#13;
"I beg your pardon, sir," said the&#13;
secretary, "but Mr. Wright is here."&#13;
"Mr. Wright," exclaimed Gloria. She&#13;
almost rose from her seat, but feeling&#13;
the eyes of the lawyer upon her, sank&#13;
back again and tried to appear quite&#13;
at her ease.&#13;
"Tell him I'll see him in a minute."&#13;
"Yes, sir."&#13;
Williams went out, and left Gloria&#13;
feeling as if she were on the stand, a&#13;
witness hi her own defense. She was&#13;
provoked because she knew the attorney&#13;
had heard her exclamation. Something&#13;
within her made her wish to rush&#13;
away. But this wish in an Instant&#13;
gave place to one more ardent. She&#13;
would see him, speak to him, learn the&#13;
truth from his own lips if he were&#13;
man enough to speak, and then go&#13;
away forever. Deep down in her heart,&#13;
however, she heard a whisper out of&#13;
the leaves of their "birthday book,"&#13;
words he had whispered:&#13;
Sprint* In the hills, Beloved,&#13;
On the side of a mead owed slope;&#13;
And Love In our hearts, Beloved.&#13;
Love and Spring and Hope.&#13;
CHAPTER X I I I .&#13;
Wright had no means of knowing&#13;
what It was Judge Gilbert had to propose&#13;
to him, but he felt certain that it&#13;
had some connection with his newspaper&#13;
and with the campaign now ending&#13;
4n a lurid blase of political pyrotechnics.&#13;
Gloria Kerr was the last&#13;
persoti he would have thought of meeting&#13;
in Gilbert's office. He had promised&#13;
himself that after the election, no&#13;
matter whether it went his way or not,&#13;
he would see her and make his excuses&#13;
for not having had the time to&#13;
be with her as he had wished. He&#13;
would also begin to look about for a&#13;
purchaser for the News. He hoped he&#13;
would have no difficulty in getting Gloria&#13;
to leave Belmont. Then for the&#13;
new life with her where they could be&#13;
ever together, one in heart and hope&#13;
and happiness.&#13;
When Williams told Wright that&#13;
Judge Gilbert was ready to see him,&#13;
he opened the door and saw the lawyer&#13;
advancing to meet him with extended&#13;
hand. The adviser of Belmont&#13;
corporations knew the value of a handshake&#13;
and a cordial greeting. It made&#13;
a visit to his office take on the air of&#13;
a social affair.&#13;
"I'm so glad you came," he said to&#13;
the editor, shaking hands heartily.&#13;
"I came as soon as I could." Wright&#13;
was not going to be outdone, and&#13;
therefore used his most genial tone,&#13;
although the shaking hands on his&#13;
side was a perfunctory performance.&#13;
He knew Judge Gilbert's real attitude,&#13;
and undue cordiality under the circumstances&#13;
savored too much of the&#13;
Greeks bearing gifts.&#13;
"Miss Kerr and I have just been&#13;
speaking of you."&#13;
"What!" exclaimed Wright. Looking&#13;
past the judge, for the first time&#13;
he saw Gloria. At mention of her&#13;
name the girl rose from her chair. She&#13;
really thought she merely wanted to&#13;
speak to him, once more look into his&#13;
eyes, and then take her departure,&#13;
At sight of her, Wright stepped forward&#13;
and said, "How do you do, Miss&#13;
Kerr? It's a great pleasure to see&#13;
you. I certainly did not expect to&#13;
find you here."&#13;
They shook hands in rather a constrained&#13;
manner, Gilbert watching&#13;
them closely the while.&#13;
"Naturally not," she replied. "I&#13;
came to see Judge Gilbert on a matter&#13;
of business and am just leaving."&#13;
Despite herself she could not help&#13;
adding, "My friends find me most of&#13;
the time at Locust Lawn."&#13;
Something in her manner brought&#13;
the lawyer at once into the conversation&#13;
with a turning of the subject.&#13;
"I couldn't tell you very well over&#13;
the 'phone what I wanted," h^ explained&#13;
to Wright. "It'll be a little&#13;
while before I can talk to you. r&#13;
need a few minutes more to ascertain&#13;
fully the wishes of my clients."&#13;
The conversation was so businesslike&#13;
that Gloria forced herself to say:&#13;
"I must be going. Please don't let&#13;
me keep you from your work."&#13;
But at this Gilbert held up his hand&#13;
appealingly and begged "Please don't&#13;
go. I want yiSi to &amp; me a favor,&#13;
Wait for Mrs. Hayes. Until I've finished&#13;
this conference, won't you be&#13;
so good as to act as hostess here and&#13;
entertain Mr. Wright?"&#13;
"Really, Judge Gilbert, I—"&#13;
"I'm sure Mr, Wright wishes it.'' He&#13;
interrupted her because he did not&#13;
know what she might say, and he&#13;
knew his remark would bring from the&#13;
newspaper man a request that she remain,&#13;
"I wouldn't have Miss Wright make&#13;
a martyr of herself," Wright said with&#13;
"Yes," She S-'ald.&#13;
quiet dignity, "but if-she would be so&#13;
kind—"&#13;
"Didn't I tell you," the judge said to&#13;
the girl. "Not a word. You must&#13;
take my place until I return. If you'll&#13;
pardon me, I'll be with you agaiu in&#13;
just a few~minuteB."&#13;
There was no time for them to protest.&#13;
He slipped into the office where&#13;
Kendall and Kerr were closeted, and&#13;
closed the door quietly after him.&#13;
The situation was not without its&#13;
embarrassment. • Taking into consideration&#13;
everything which had happened&#13;
in the last month, there was little wonder&#13;
that each felt constrained. In addition&#13;
to that, Gloria felt as (f she&#13;
had Just been figuratively thrown at&#13;
his head. To a high-spirited girl this&#13;
in itself was mortifying. They sat&#13;
without a word until the silence became&#13;
painful. Wright was desperate.&#13;
Here was the one woman in all the&#13;
world, and he was afraid to open his&#13;
mouth. At last he mustered sufficient&#13;
courage to remark:&#13;
"Beautiful spring weather we're&#13;
having."&#13;
This remark served only to punctuate&#13;
the silence. It seemed to him,&#13;
from the length of time before she replied,&#13;
that Gloria was mentally Inspecting&#13;
the records of the weather bureau&#13;
for the last twenty years.&#13;
"Yes," she said, a word that did not&#13;
appear so ponderous as to require all&#13;
that time to bring it forth.&#13;
ThiB did not prove conducive to further&#13;
conversation. He felt that the&#13;
weather had not been exhausted by&#13;
her voluble reply, however, and used&#13;
it again.&#13;
"They tell me it's liable to be bad&#13;
for another month."&#13;
Again Gloria seemed to make a mental&#13;
survey of all the weather records&#13;
of the last twenty years. Wright had&#13;
almost forgotten what he had said&#13;
when she at last gave the conversation&#13;
football a dainty kick by saying:&#13;
"Yes."&#13;
This time he was ready for her. His&#13;
embarrassment was wearing off and&#13;
he began again promptly:&#13;
"Don't the rains make the road pretty&#13;
bad out your way?"&#13;
"My friends manage to get out to&#13;
see me."&#13;
This was a chill rejoinder, and&#13;
Wright felt he had lost several points&#13;
in their game of indirection.&#13;
"Locust Lawn is quite a distance&#13;
out," he ventured.&#13;
"Not far enough to discourage my&#13;
friends."&#13;
This goaded-him to an apology. He&#13;
regretted that she was not making it&#13;
easy for him, but he forgave her because&#13;
he knew she did hot understand.&#13;
"Because I've been so busy, please&#13;
don't think that I'm discouraged."&#13;
"Why should I think of it at nil?"&#13;
she replied with spirit.&#13;
Her remark hurt him, both her words&#13;
and her manner of speech. If tore&#13;
away his reserve and made hlro burnt&#13;
forth in protest.&#13;
"That's not like you, Gloria. We've&#13;
been such good frlendB."&#13;
"We have been good friends," she&#13;
admitted promptly. "Is there any&#13;
reason, Joe, why we should not be&#13;
now?"&#13;
His heart beat high within him at&#13;
her words. They were so direct, BO&#13;
honest, so like the one woman of his&#13;
dreams. It grieved him that he could&#13;
not be as direct with her; but that&#13;
was impossible, for over them was the&#13;
sinister shadow of David Kerr, her&#13;
father, the boss of Belmont.&#13;
"There's no reason why we shouldn't&#13;
be good friends, Gloria. What put&#13;
that idea into ycHir head?"&#13;
"My circle of friends in Belmont&#13;
seems to have grown smaller and&#13;
smaller."&#13;
"Please don't put me on the outside."&#13;
"You seem to have put yourself&#13;
there."&#13;
The conversation lagged. There was&#13;
so much to think about. Gloria was&#13;
Keeking to reconcile his explanations&#13;
with her own observations. Looking&#13;
at him closely she saw that he did not&#13;
have that fresh, robust look which a&#13;
month ago had made him seem fit for&#13;
a gladiatorial contest. As he sat in&#13;
the big office chair he seemed to&#13;
relax with fatigue. His face was thinner,&#13;
and there were little lines of&#13;
worry about his eyes. Between his&#13;
brows and on either side his mouth&#13;
were to be seen creases which the&#13;
girl thought proclaimed to the world&#13;
his strength of character. A month&#13;
ago she had not noticed them. She&#13;
had felt he was such a,man, but the&#13;
wrinkles, ciaifirmLngJoer belief, could&#13;
almost be called a source of Joy to&#13;
her. They had made away with some&#13;
of the youthfuiness, but in his face&#13;
she now saw something which more&#13;
than compensated. It had greater&#13;
strength now, strength such as was&#13;
written on her father's countenance.&#13;
"You look tired." Her low, sympathetic&#13;
tones and her solicitous look&#13;
did what nothing else could do. They&#13;
melted his stern purpose to bear it&#13;
all in silence for yet a few days into&#13;
a desire to take her as much as he&#13;
dared into his confidence. With a&#13;
woman's quick perception she would&#13;
understand that he was unhappy. Her&#13;
sympathy and her confidence In him&#13;
would nerve liim to fight the good&#13;
fight as nothing else could and his&#13;
heart was stirred by the possibility."&#13;
"YeB," he admitted, "I'm tired and&#13;
sick at heart.'&#13;
"Why don't you take a vacation?&#13;
Go tn Europe."&#13;
"I can't pick up and run away like&#13;
that; but I'd do it anyway if it would&#13;
bring back the dear old days."&#13;
"The days I knew?" the girt made&#13;
bold to ask.&#13;
"The days you made so—delightful/&#13;
"Can they be gone forever?"&#13;
"You mean—" Wright did not dare&#13;
to put hi8 hope in words.&#13;
Carried farther than she had in&#13;
tended, Gloria beat a retreat by say&#13;
ing;&#13;
"Who knows? We may meet In Parli&#13;
again some day."&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
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Menu.&#13;
Enormous numbers of oranges are&#13;
being imported into our markets now;&#13;
and they are of the greatest value to&#13;
us, for their wholesome acids are&#13;
greatly needed by persons who eat as&#13;
much meat aa we do.&#13;
This month we find many blood&#13;
oranges and these are of extra fine&#13;
flavor. They are produced by grafting&#13;
orange slips into pomegranate stocks&#13;
and this fruit Is greatly prized by epicures;&#13;
unfortunately these grafts do&#13;
not bear so profusely as the true&#13;
orange tree.&#13;
Orange marmalade is the favorite&#13;
preserve of orange lovers; the Scotch&#13;
recipe for this dainty has been given&#13;
in this column before, but the following&#13;
recipes will be found to be superlatively&#13;
good.&#13;
English grated orange marmalade:&#13;
Grate the yellow rind off the orange,&#13;
but do not grate in any of the bitter&#13;
white lining. Press the orange pulp&#13;
through a sieve and add a pint of water&#13;
to every four pounds of fruit Mix&#13;
a pound of sugar in for every pound&#13;
of fruit and boll thirty minutes.&#13;
Small oranges crystallized: Remove&#13;
the skin and white lining from small&#13;
oranges and take care not to break the&#13;
sections apart or to puncture the skin&#13;
for all the Juice may stay in.&#13;
Thread a sterilized needle with&#13;
white linen thread and run through&#13;
the center of each orange BO it may&#13;
be suspended.&#13;
Make a heavy frosting with powdered&#13;
sugar and the white of eggs and&#13;
dip the oranges into it by the thread&#13;
so every part is covered.&#13;
Now hang the frosted oranges on a&#13;
stick so they do not touch one another&#13;
and suspend in a hot oven to dry.&#13;
When the frosting is firm they are&#13;
done. These little comfits are very&#13;
pretty In boxes of homemade sweet&#13;
meat. &gt;&#13;
Two recipes have been received for&#13;
using lemons from a reader of this&#13;
section who is so fortunate as to own&#13;
a lemon grove in California. One is&#13;
for preserved lemon peel. Peel the&#13;
yellow rind from the lemons with as&#13;
little white fiber as possible. Make a&#13;
thick sirup of sugar and water and&#13;
simmer the peel in it. In a half hour&#13;
the rind will be tender and may be&#13;
put in small glasses and covered with&#13;
the sirup and then sealed with paraffin.&#13;
The other recipe will be useful&#13;
when lemons are at their lowest price;&#13;
it is for preserving lemon juice.&#13;
Roll the lemons and squeeze all the&#13;
Juice from them; strain it through&#13;
very fine muslin so no pulp goes&#13;
through. Have perfectly clean bottles&#13;
waiting, with new corks. Pour the&#13;
Juice in until within half an inch from&#13;
the top. Now pour on a thin layer of&#13;
paraffin; when this hardens cork tightly&#13;
and keep in a cool place.&#13;
This correspondent says that the&#13;
Juice will keep perfectly fresh until&#13;
used.&#13;
Matted Milk.&#13;
If one uses a great deal of malted&#13;
milk, it is a wise plan to buy the&#13;
largest, or-hoapltal Blze~Jar7~nbt only&#13;
because of the economy in price, but,&#13;
because of the varied uses to whichh&#13;
the jars may be put when emptied. For&#13;
keeping cereals, cornmeal or other&#13;
dry groceries nothing better could be&#13;
devised.&#13;
In the latest style this coat can be&#13;
made of cloth, silk or velvet and trimmed&#13;
with satin or"with fur. It closes&#13;
quite up to the throat where there is&#13;
a small collar. The sleeves are regulation&#13;
and plain, and there is a peplum,&#13;
which has a panel cut in the&#13;
back. Fur may replace the collar if&#13;
preferred.&#13;
The coat pattern (6414) is cut in&#13;
sizes 14, 16 and 18 years. Medium&#13;
size requires 2¼ yards of 54 inch material,&#13;
with 1 yard of 24 inch velvet to&#13;
trim.&#13;
To procure this pattern send 10 cent*&#13;
to "Pattern Department," of this paper.&#13;
Write name and address plainly, and be&#13;
sure to give size and number of pattern.&#13;
NO. 6414. SIZE&#13;
s&#13;
NAME&#13;
TOWN&#13;
STREET AND NO&#13;
STATE&#13;
GIRL'S PRINCESS SLIP.&#13;
Vegetable 8alad.&#13;
Lay lettuce leaves on your dish,&#13;
then cold potatoes sliced fine, onions&#13;
chopped fine. Ton can use at different&#13;
times beets, carrots, turnips or any&#13;
other vegetable sliced, with hard-boiled&#13;
eggs and salad dressing. We do not&#13;
like lettuce, bat we have salads Just&#13;
the same.—Boston Globe.&#13;
&lt;&gt; C n u ' J i . S AW[) COI [)5&#13;
Pumpkin Pie,&#13;
Stew pumpkin, cut Into small&#13;
pieces, In half pint of water, and,&#13;
when soft, mash with a potato masher&#13;
very fine; let the water dry away,&#13;
watching closely to prevent burning&#13;
or scorching. For- each pie take one&#13;
well beaten egg, half cop sugar, two&#13;
tablespoonfuls pumpkin, half pint rich&#13;
milk (a little cream will Improve It),&#13;
a little salt, stir well together, and&#13;
season with cinnamon or nutmeg;&#13;
bake with a good under crust In a hot&#13;
oven. Some steam the pumpkin instead&#13;
of stewing It&#13;
Plekla Secret.&#13;
At last has been disclosed the secret&#13;
of a housewife famous for her&#13;
well-flavored, crisp pickles. She has&#13;
herself divulged the secret of their&#13;
crispness, which proves to be nothing&#13;
mora than the addition of fresh grated&#13;
horseradish to tfce_ooctents of the&#13;
pickle Jar.&#13;
To Soak Ham.&#13;
Whan soaking salty ham, add a&#13;
tablespoon of molaaaes to the water.&#13;
It Improves the taste and snakes the&#13;
ham fry a nice brown.&#13;
dainty" garment may serve as&#13;
a petticoat or as a slip for wear under&#13;
dresses of sheer materials, it has&#13;
princess front and back, the wide portion&#13;
Joined by seams extending from&#13;
shoulder to hem. It is provided with&#13;
full length sleeves which may be&#13;
shortened or omitted altogether. There&#13;
Is also a small ruffle which need not&#13;
be used. -&#13;
The slip pattern (6360) is cut In&#13;
sizes 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 years. Medium&#13;
size requires 2½ yards of 36&#13;
inch material.&#13;
To procure this pattern send 10 cents&#13;
to "Pattern Department," of this paper.&#13;
Write name and address plainly, ana be&#13;
sure to give *\r' and number of pattern.&#13;
NO. 6360. SIZE&#13;
N A M E . . . .&#13;
TOWN-~ ~ -&#13;
•TRSET A1HD NO* •»*•••••**•*&gt;*•»•••• •••*&#13;
STATE M . M . M . ^ . . . . .&#13;
Cecil Rhodes a Good Feeder*&#13;
Cecil Rhodes' latest biographer says&#13;
that Rhodes was a valiant trencherman—"&#13;
one might almost call him a&#13;
gross feeder"—and liked getting the&#13;
joint in front of him and cutting off&#13;
great hunks of meat Thr-igh "no&#13;
drunkard," he also liked his champagne&#13;
in a tumbler, tossed off the&#13;
glass absent-mindedly and would have&#13;
five or six liqueur glasses of bis favorite&#13;
Russian kuemmel after meals.&#13;
At eleven In the morning he usually,&#13;
"like Bismarck," had a flagon of&#13;
champagne and stout, or light, Pilsener&#13;
beer, then Pilsener or hock for&#13;
lunch, and, with the exception of a&#13;
gin and soda sometimes at sundown.&#13;
nothing until dinner. After dinner&#13;
ha oftan sat at the dining room table&#13;
talking and smoking innumerable el*&#13;
garottes until bedtime,&#13;
Many a man gets turned down while&#13;
waiting for something to turn up.&#13;
As a matter of fact, most women&#13;
wouldn't want their own way if they&#13;
could have it.&#13;
No thoughtful person uses liquid blue. It's a&#13;
pinch of blue In a large bottle of water. Ask for&#13;
kt*l Cross Ball Blue,the blue that's all blue. Adv&#13;
A Temperance Note.&#13;
"I hear the temperature is going to&#13;
take a drop or two."&#13;
"Oh, naughty, naughty!"&#13;
Every girl wants to marry rich.&#13;
GirlB don't believe in love as much as&#13;
men suppose they do.&#13;
- More Than Her Share.&#13;
"She's awfully happy, isn't she?"&#13;
"Well, why shouldn't'she be? Every&#13;
time she's married for love."&#13;
Have You a Bad Back?&#13;
Whenever you use your back, does a&#13;
sharp pain hit you? Does your back&#13;
ache constantly, feel sore and lame?&#13;
It's a sign of sick kidneys, especially if&#13;
the kidney action is disordered too, passages&#13;
scanty or too frequent or off color.&#13;
In neglect there is danger of dropsy,&#13;
gravel or Bright's disease. Use Doan's&#13;
Kidney Pills which have cured thousands.&#13;
AN IOWA CASE&#13;
ultTI PirtHY&#13;
Ida •Mary'&#13;
ERUPTION ON CHILD'S BODY&#13;
R. F. D. No. 2, Jackson, Mo.—"Our&#13;
daughter who is ten months old was&#13;
suffering from an eruption all over&#13;
the body.. In the beginning they were&#13;
small red spots and afterwards turned&#13;
to bloody sores. We tried all sorts&#13;
of ointments but they did not procure&#13;
any relief for our child. She cried&#13;
almost day and night and we scarcely&#13;
could touch her, because she was covered&#13;
with sores from head to foot.&#13;
"We had heard about the Cuticura&#13;
Soap and Ointment and made a trial&#13;
with them, and after using the remedies,&#13;
that is to say, the Soap and the&#13;
Ointment, only a few days passed and&#13;
our child could sleep well and after&#13;
one week she was totally well."&#13;
(Signed) August F. Bartels, Nov. 25,&#13;
1912.&#13;
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
free.with 32-p. Skin Book. Address postcard&#13;
"Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston."—Adv.&#13;
Quite Royal.&#13;
Rebecca—I don't pelteve you lofe&#13;
me. You never think of anything but&#13;
tollars.&#13;
Silverstein (appealingly)— Vould yx&gt;u&#13;
vant a man dot vas all der tiwe&#13;
chanching his mindt?—New Orleans&#13;
Picayune.&#13;
Mrs. J.IIont lOSSonth&#13;
Sixth St.. Fairfield, I*.,&#13;
,yjj: "My back was so&#13;
Uue and sore 1 couldnl&#13;
do my huubework. 1 was&#13;
rentiers and the pains&#13;
wereuwful. 1 bad to go&#13;
to bed a Lid I oouldnl&#13;
tarn over without help.&#13;
My llmbe were terribly&#13;
swollen and I&#13;
thought I was going&#13;
f| \ to die. When 1 had&#13;
If \ almost given up, I&#13;
/ I heard about Doan's&#13;
I / K i d n e y Pills and w vied them. They&#13;
permanently oared me and today I am In the&#13;
beat of health."&#13;
Get Doan's at Any Store. SOc a Bos DOAN'SVffiLV&#13;
FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO, N.Y.&#13;
DR. J. D. KELLOGG'S ASTHMA Remedy for t h e prompt relief of&#13;
A a t h m a and Hay Fever. Ask your&#13;
drugglet for It. Write (or FREE SAMPLI&#13;
NORTHROP A LYMAN CO.. Ltd.. BUFFALO, N.Y.&#13;
BUTTON COVERING&#13;
Send nayonr next order. Special attention given to&#13;
Mail Orders and we guarantee our work to be satisfactory.&#13;
Send either stamps or money order. Price&#13;
list on request. DRESS PLAITING&#13;
NEW YORK TRIMMING &amp; LINING HOUSE&#13;
16 John R. Street Detroit, Mich.&#13;
HAINES WTOI8USPE *E"S '&#13;
Ladies' Hair Goods. Wholesale-aod Retail.&#13;
Established in present Hair Store 1879.&#13;
Wm. A . Haines, 7 6 Grand River Av^West&#13;
Near Bagley A v. Detroit, Mfeh.&#13;
ALCOHOL-3 P t R CENT&#13;
AWfelabk Preparation for As -&#13;
simrtajing It* Foot) and Regulator&#13;
rtv?Stoiwa**Sa*dBov*lstf&#13;
% i M - A V l b i H1LUHKN&#13;
4&#13;
Pro molts DigeiKon,Checrfulness&#13;
and Rest Con tains neither&#13;
Opium.Morphine nor Mineral&#13;
N O T N A H C O T I C&#13;
•"BSSBSBBS|S&gt;SJ •FOeS'tV&#13;
AAwa •&#13;
13»U .&#13;
Jk,d -&#13;
1&gt; rmvw&#13;
A perfect Remedy forConsttpa-&#13;
(ton, Sour Stom«^, Diarrhoea&#13;
Worn is .Convulsions .Fever ishnets&#13;
and LOSS OF SLIBP&#13;
N M M H i e H M S M * f esjBSBSSSwBSBeiwaBWMM&#13;
r*c Simile Signature o/&#13;
Twc CENTAUR COMPANY,&#13;
NEW YORK.&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 46--1913.&#13;
CftSTOl&#13;
For Infanta and Children.&#13;
• B M S B S l ^ H M M M i H S ^ I ^ ^ H ^ H H S B a H a a i The Kind You Have&#13;
Always Bought&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
of&#13;
/ \ &lt; &lt;&gt; Ml O i l t i t -» &lt;&gt;l (J&#13;
&gt;sj D o s i . s JjC i&#13;
[guaranteed under the Pood;&#13;
Exact Copy of Wrapper.&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CASTORIA T N I t i M T t u a eo«»«NV. new VOHK OITT.&#13;
The Best light for Any Home aSBJBJBJBBBBsl waSBBs«B«B«BBBI S^BSSSSSSsfisSSBBS BVSSSwBBSl SsVBBBVBVBsJSk SSSSSBSB*BSSMBBWB*SB1&#13;
Any authority on "eye-matters"&#13;
will tell you that kerosene&#13;
lamps are best for reading and&#13;
studying. And the RayoU tbo&#13;
best of all Oil Lamps.&#13;
^^ Lamps&#13;
now light three million American&#13;
homes—the best evidence&#13;
of their superiority.&#13;
Let your dealer demonstrate&#13;
and explain. Illustrated booklet&#13;
free on request.&#13;
Standard Oil Company, Chicago&#13;
(aa nroiAjrA oomroa-artos)&#13;
W*»ef»s«Otf&#13;
:• H&#13;
••*.&#13;
&gt; • . $ '&#13;
I&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
Entered at the Postoffice at Piuekney,&#13;
Mich., as Second Class Matter&#13;
New winter suits&#13;
giving, at Dancer's/&#13;
for Thauksadv.&#13;
of Jackson&#13;
R. W. CAVERLY, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER&#13;
Subscription, $ 1 . Per Year in Advuuca&#13;
Advertising rates made known on&#13;
application.&#13;
Cards of Thanks, tifty centh.&#13;
Ke8olutions of Condolence, one dollar.&#13;
Local Notices,» in Local columns, live&#13;
cent per Hue per each insertion.&#13;
All mutter intended to benefit the personal&#13;
or business interest of any individual&#13;
will be published at regular advertising&#13;
rates.&#13;
Announcement of entertainments, etc.,&#13;
must be paid for at regular Local Notice&#13;
rates.&#13;
Obituary and marriage notices are published&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
Poetry must be paid for at the rate of&#13;
live cents per line.&#13;
Local N e w s&#13;
Fred Read of Detroit was home&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mike Lavey transacted business&#13;
iu Howell last Friday.&#13;
Mrs, Claude Danforth spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday at Flint.&#13;
Mrs. Florence Ratz of Detroit&#13;
visited friends in this village last&#13;
Friday and Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. S. Denton of Gregory was&#13;
a ^uest at the home of Dr. and&#13;
Mrs. H. F, Sigler Friday,&#13;
Mis. H. G. Briggs of Howell is&#13;
a guest at the home of Mrs.&#13;
Henry Mowers this week.&#13;
Mrs, Mat Brady of Howell is&#13;
spending a few dayB at the home&#13;
of her mother, Mrs.Emma Moran.&#13;
Here is an example for the class&#13;
in mathematics. If Mr. Rockefeller's&#13;
income is $10.20 a minute&#13;
how much income tax will he&#13;
have to pay?&#13;
Never think of burning your&#13;
leaves, take them up in a heap and&#13;
let them rot. They make the best&#13;
fertilizer in the world. This is the&#13;
economy message that a prominent&#13;
florist o' battle Creek is preaching&#13;
to his home city.&#13;
Those from out of town who attended&#13;
the funeral of Joseph Kennedy&#13;
here Monday are as follows:&#13;
Hugh Kennedy of Inwooi, Ontario,&#13;
Mrs. B. Cole of Racine,&#13;
Wis., Mrs. Ed. Mansfield of Niagara&#13;
Falls, Chas. Kennedy of Chilson,&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Daugherty, Mark,&#13;
Edward, Ray and Thos. Kennedy&#13;
of Detroit.&#13;
The International Live Stock&#13;
Exposition, which takes place at&#13;
Chicago, 111., November 29 t o&#13;
December 6, is the biggest show&#13;
of live stock that^ is held in the&#13;
world and all farmers who can&#13;
should avail themselves of the opportunity&#13;
to attend as many&#13;
things of interest to them can be&#13;
learned, in fact it is a school of&#13;
instruction to everyone.&#13;
The Pinckney Literary Clnb&#13;
met at the home of Miss Kate&#13;
Brown Tuesday afternoon, November&#13;
11. A fine program was&#13;
carried out as follows: Roll call;&#13;
"Quotations on Autumn", Mrs.&#13;
LaVerne Richards; "The Journey&#13;
to the Isthmus"* Mrs. Griffith;&#13;
South America, Mrs. E. E. Hoyt;&#13;
Panama Canal, Mrs. F, G. Jackson;&#13;
Panama to-day, Mrs. R. W.&#13;
Caverly; Reading, "Autumn" Mrs.&#13;
H. F. Sigler.&#13;
A teacher in a rural school district&#13;
near here is convinced there&#13;
is at least one mother in that&#13;
Miss Viola Peters&#13;
spent Sunday here.&#13;
Ida Markham was a Jackson visitor&#13;
last Wednesday.&#13;
C. Lynch and family spent last&#13;
Wednesday iu Jackson.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Meyers of Munith&#13;
was a Sunday visitor here.&#13;
Ross Read and family spent&#13;
Sunday at Whitmore Lake.&#13;
Walter Dinkel of Detroit visited&#13;
his parents here last week.&#13;
Mrs. E. W. Martin is visiting&#13;
her 8on,Geo. N. Martin of Howell.&#13;
Young men—See Dancer's Norfolk&#13;
suits at $13., 115., $16.50. adv.&#13;
Do you suppose Mrs. Emmaline&#13;
Pankhurst was ever called Emmie?&#13;
Airs. H. H. Swarthout was an&#13;
Ann Arbor visitor one day last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. C. F. Morse and daughter&#13;
visited relatives in Jackson last&#13;
week.&#13;
Genevieve Alley of Dexter visited&#13;
friends here Saturday and&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
•Mrs. Mary Eagan attended the&#13;
funeral of her brother at Chelsea&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Chas. Morse has leased a hotel&#13;
at Litchfield, Mich., and expects to&#13;
move thereto next week.&#13;
Mrs. Clayton Placeway and sou&#13;
were Stockbridge visitors last&#13;
Thursday and Friday.&#13;
Mrs. P. H. Swarthout and son&#13;
Don spent a few days the past&#13;
week with relatives in Dexter.&#13;
It must be that the American&#13;
college girl has been slandered.&#13;
A Vassar student who received a&#13;
proposal of marriage by mail accepted&#13;
it by telegraph.&#13;
The pastor's class of the Cong'l.&#13;
Sunday school will serve an oyster&#13;
supper at their hall in the Cadwell&#13;
block, Saturday, November&#13;
15, from 4:30 o'clock until all are&#13;
served. Everyone invited.&#13;
Mrs. Agnes Harris had the misfortune&#13;
of falling and spraining&#13;
her wrist Monday morning while&#13;
visiting at the home of her son&#13;
James, south of town. Her many&#13;
friends hope for a speedy recovery.&#13;
Mrs. Heneretta Bullis of Unadilla&#13;
died at the home of daughter,&#13;
Mrs. Jas. Livermore of Gregory,&#13;
Sunday, November 9. Funeral&#13;
services were held at Gregory&#13;
Wednesday and interment was&#13;
made in the Pinckney cemetery.&#13;
Mrs. Bullis was well and favorably&#13;
known here, having been a res-&#13;
| Highest Qilalitj fleniliaiifa&#13;
f- This cool weather reminds everyone of&#13;
^ winter wear and we wish to call your&#13;
^ attention t o the fact that we have a fine&#13;
line of&#13;
Mens Furnishings&#13;
I n d u d i n g H a t s and Caps, Gloves and&#13;
Mittens, Trousers, Wool Shirts and&#13;
Sweaters, Underwear and Hosiery, E t c .&#13;
in readiness for your inspection.&#13;
Everything Fresh&#13;
in Groceries, Candies and Cigars,&#13;
Sealshipt Oysters, B u t t e r Krust Bread,&#13;
Addison Cheese and a large assortment&#13;
of National Biscuit Co's. Goods alwavs&#13;
on hand.&#13;
Will duplicate competition prices for&#13;
Saturday&#13;
MONKS BROTHERS&#13;
Xz Prompt Delivery Phone N o . 38&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative Banking&#13;
Business. t «&#13;
3 p e r c e n t&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
P i n c k n e y&#13;
G. W. T E E P L E&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Prop&#13;
There is no other paint,&#13;
either prepared or hand&#13;
made from lead and oil,&#13;
that will spread as well&#13;
under the brush and cover&#13;
as much surface to the&#13;
gallon as&#13;
THE&#13;
SHERWIN-WILLIAMS&#13;
PAINT.&#13;
Figure 300 square feet,&#13;
two coats, to the gallon&#13;
and you'll probably have&#13;
some paint left over.&#13;
There are many other&#13;
good points in its f ivor.&#13;
Ask us about them.&#13;
ARE YOU AWAKE&#13;
to the fact that your boy is growing&#13;
Yesterday—Just a li trie fellow.&#13;
Today—A big boy.&#13;
Tomorrow—A man.&#13;
Today you are sorry you haven't a&#13;
photograph of him as he looked&#13;
yesterday. — Tomorrow you will&#13;
value the one you have today.&#13;
Don't put it off.&#13;
DaisieB. Chapell&#13;
S t o c k b r i d g e , M i c h i g a n&#13;
Legql Advertising&#13;
STATB OF MICHIGAN . ,&#13;
Thirty-fifth Judical Circuit in.Chanoery&#13;
Suit pending iu&#13;
the Circuit Court&#13;
Tecplc Hardware Company&#13;
ident of this place some years&#13;
ago.&#13;
Requests for endorsement and&#13;
approval of National Tuberculosis&#13;
Day, December 7th, have been&#13;
sent to President Wilson, to almost&#13;
every governor, to hundreds&#13;
of mayors, to the leading church&#13;
dignitaries and toother prominent&#13;
men. Last year Ex-President'&#13;
Taft, Col. Roosevelt, Cardinal&#13;
Farley, about a dozen governors,&#13;
and a large number of mayors and&#13;
others endorsed this movement.&#13;
"Plant your trees in the fall," is&#13;
advice which the forestry department&#13;
at M. A. C. is giving out today.&#13;
According to the college&#13;
foresters the sapling can be obtained&#13;
at lower prices in the . autumn&#13;
than during the spring and in addition&#13;
will p;et the benefit of an&#13;
vicinity who appreciates the value j early growth immediately warm&#13;
of an education, for she has re-j weather returnB. T h e college,&#13;
ceived a note from her, reading as : which raises treelings for Bale to&#13;
follows: "dear Miss—You writ me j citizens of Michigan, is disposing&#13;
about whippin' Sammy. I give&#13;
yon permission to beat him up&#13;
any time he wont learn his ieason.&#13;
He is just like his father and yori&#13;
will-have to beet him with a club&#13;
to learn him anything. Pound&#13;
nolege into him. Don't pay no&#13;
of the "baby trees" at low prices&#13;
in an effort to interest growers in&#13;
putting new trees into the ground&#13;
in the fall. The reduction in&#13;
cost, they assert, is more ihan&#13;
enough to compensate for the loss&#13;
to saplings caused by the frost,&#13;
WBLL, W E L L , W B b U&#13;
Wiio Said ¥»writy Flour?&#13;
Why it was the talk of the town last Saturday evening when people&#13;
saw what nice bread their neighbors made out of it. Ten of as fine loaves&#13;
of bread were onexhibithin at the Ladie's Fair as any anybody ever saw.&#13;
In fact the loaves were all so nice that it was hard to tell any difference in&#13;
them. You can obtain just as good flour as any of them had, at any grocer.&#13;
If they won't get it for you or don't have it, let us know and we will see&#13;
that you get it some way.&#13;
We now have Buckwheat Flour 01¾ sale; it is TURK Buckwheat flour&#13;
too. Those who wish to have Buckwheat ground wiil be asked to leave it&#13;
here for a few days as we are not going to have a special day for grinding this&#13;
year, but wili grind Buckwheat nights.&#13;
T H B HOYT BROS.&#13;
IWANTEDII&#13;
\POULTRY, EGGS AND VEAL?&#13;
I l i l i l l — Ak-. L L L . u _L~i —: x II .- 9&#13;
vs.&#13;
Edward A. Westby,&#13;
Defendant.&#13;
}&#13;
for the County of&#13;
1ohan-&#13;
I.ncile I. Westby,&#13;
Complainant,&#13;
Livingston^m&#13;
ery at Howell on&#13;
the eighteenth day&#13;
. of September, A. D.&#13;
J 1918.*&#13;
In this cause, It appearing from affidavit on&#13;
file that the deiendant, Edward A, WeBtby, Is not&#13;
a resident of this state but Is a resident of the&#13;
city of Missoula, *tate of Montana and that his&#13;
postofttre address is Missoula, Montana,&#13;
On motion of Arthur K. Cole, solicitor for complainant,&#13;
it is ordered that the appearance of said&#13;
non-resident, defendant, Edwarcf A. Westby, be&#13;
entered therein within four months froiat^e date&#13;
of this order and in case of his appearance he&#13;
cause hte anawer tojhe bill of complaint to be&#13;
filed and a copy thereofTobe Berv€frv^Ttt.nTteen~&#13;
days after service on him or his BolioltoJr of a&#13;
copy of said bill, and In defau't thereof tnat said&#13;
bill be taken as confessed by the said defendant.&#13;
Edward A. Westby. ):J&#13;
And it 1B further ordered that the said complainant&#13;
ca'se thi» order to be published in the&#13;
Pinckney pispatch, a newspaper printed, published&#13;
and circulating In said county and {hat inch&#13;
publication be commenced within twenty days&#13;
from the date of this order and that BttcJb publication&#13;
be continued therein once in eacbrWtjek for&#13;
BIZ weeks in succession or that the said oqjnplainant&#13;
cause a copy of this order lo be petsonally&#13;
served on the said defendant, Edward A &gt;WeBtby,&#13;
at least twenty dayB before the time above prescribed&#13;
for his appearance. iiV-i&#13;
Belden 8. Miner, Cirouft Judge&#13;
Examined, countersigned, and entered by me,&#13;
Clark H. MinerfclleftiBter&#13;
Arthur B. Cole, Complainant's Solicltof^&#13;
40t6 Bosiaets Address,. FowlerviUe.jgJchtgaii&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGL|R,&#13;
Physicians and SurgeoiSsr&#13;
All calls promptly attended to&#13;
day or_«igbt. Office on Main&#13;
dtreet.&#13;
PINCKNEY,&#13;
/ "&#13;
#&#13;
/&#13;
attention to what his father says, which sometimes forces the young&#13;
I will handle him.* trees out of th« ground.&#13;
Will pay the highest market price at all times.&#13;
Call us up Wore you sell. Bell phone No. 74&#13;
'N&#13;
Nervous and Sick Headaoftet&#13;
Torpid H?ar,csnsti4&gt;it«r|boJse!»ana&#13;
disordered stomach are the causes ot&#13;
J&amp;*.¥*&amp;"*"&lt; Tike 4)r;fKuiBV kNsw Lit*Pills. you f m be jftfrMJjed&#13;
how auicklv you will get rslisf. ^Bjey&#13;
stimutotsths different organs ro'Tdo&#13;
tbeir work properly. XtHHtor^ngnlator&#13;
for liver and bowels. Trtftjjfo.&#13;
and uwst in a box. to-day. M%Smmended&#13;
by CO. tt^er, JK&lt;*h£gtst.&#13;
7? * • ' &lt; • * • » « • « • » , • * . % • « .&#13;
? j&#13;
PINCKNEY DI8PATCH&#13;
imWWWWWmWWWWWW^fW^r^rWWWWmW^I We Have Noticed It&#13;
IPREPARE&#13;
I YOURSELF1&#13;
vlrSs-r'&#13;
k&gt;.J' ' * * T .&#13;
: r, -• s&#13;
3&#13;
^&#13;
^&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
Against Colds and Lagrippe&#13;
Buy a hot water bottle, it will save you dollars in&#13;
medicine bills. If you feel chilly at night take it to&#13;
bed with you, it will keep you cozy. We have the&#13;
5 : dependable kind at from&#13;
£ ¢ 1 . 0 0 t o $ 2 . 5 0&#13;
^ Guaranteed from one to two years&#13;
| MEYER'S DRUG STORE ]&#13;
S= T l i e N y a l S t o r e ^&#13;
^ P!nck«eyf Mich. 3&#13;
fc: Drugs, Wall Paper, Crockery, Clears, Caucly, Magazlues, ^&#13;
«h» School Supplies, Bjoks ^&#13;
Line's Bazaar&#13;
HOWELL, MICH.&#13;
"The Popular Store"&#13;
i&#13;
Our stock for the fall trade was&#13;
never larger or variety more complete.&#13;
Manv new lines added and&#13;
our usual assortment of&#13;
5 and 10 Cent Goods&#13;
is always kept up to city standards.&#13;
We always welcome people from&#13;
every part of the county to drop in&#13;
aud look over our goods even chough&#13;
they may not wish to buy. It costs&#13;
us nothing and advertises our store.&#13;
Come in, when you are in Howell.&#13;
C. S. LINE&#13;
Howell, Mich. Opp. Courthouse&#13;
Nearly Every Child lias Worms&#13;
J - faleness, at times a flushed face, un-&#13;
! natural hunger, picking" tue nose,&#13;
I gr at thirst, e t c , are indications of&#13;
I worms. Kickapoo Worm Kilicr is a&#13;
; reliable, thorough medicine for the&#13;
j removal of all kinds of worms from&#13;
I children and adults. Kickapoo Worm&#13;
| Kil'er in pleasant candy form, aids&#13;
j digestion, tones system, overcoming&#13;
j constipation and increasing the action&#13;
of the liver. Is perfectly safe for even&#13;
{-the most delicate children happy and&#13;
healthy. 25s. Guaranteed. Try it.&#13;
l &gt; u g stores or by mail. Kickapoo&#13;
Indian Medicine Co., Philadelphia&#13;
and St. Louis. Also at Meyer's Druy:&#13;
store.&#13;
Card of Thanks&#13;
Mr. Geo. Hassenchal and children&#13;
by former marriage wish to&#13;
thank the kind friends and neighbore&#13;
for their kindness and sympathy&#13;
in onr deep/ sorrow in t h e&#13;
loss of our dear wife and mother.&#13;
We also extend o u r thanks t o&#13;
Rev. Mitchell for his words so&#13;
comforting, also t h e choir of the&#13;
Cong'l church.&#13;
Mr. George Haspenchal.&#13;
Mrs. McGuire, Mrs. K r u m b r e i n&#13;
and J a m e s A. Stewart of Chicago.&#13;
J o h n McDonald of Detroit.&#13;
We have noticed recently a number&#13;
of squibs in our exchanges regarding&#13;
mistakes. These items&#13;
lead us"k) believe that other duffers&#13;
besides editors are not infallible,&#13;
b u t the editor's mistakes s t a n d o u t&#13;
more conspicuously than most&#13;
other people's because every issue&#13;
of his paper is an open letter to&#13;
the public.&#13;
Everybody makes mistakes. The&#13;
only oues who never make them&#13;
are slumbering in t h e cemeteries&#13;
—and it is not unlikely that some&#13;
are there because the doctors also&#13;
make mistakes. A man often&#13;
makes a mistake by marrying when&#13;
he should have t a k e n a post-graduate&#13;
course in how to s u p p o r t himself.&#13;
A fine women often is in&#13;
error when she wautonly throws&#13;
herself away on some fool who&#13;
can sing coon songs like Caruso,&#13;
but couldn't make a noise like a&#13;
I leaf of bread to save his life. A&#13;
boy makes a mistake when h e&#13;
thinks he knows more thau the entire&#13;
staff of teachers, including&#13;
the principal of schools.&#13;
T h e world is plumb full of mistakes&#13;
and mistake makers. If the&#13;
newspaper man should take the&#13;
pains to record them all he'd make&#13;
the mistake of his life and die on&#13;
the bed of the press with his shirt&#13;
sleeves rolled u p aud his boots on.&#13;
— E x .&#13;
Saved His toot&#13;
H, U. Ely, of Bantbn, 0., suffered&#13;
from a horrible ulcer on his loot for&#13;
four years, Doctors advised amputation,&#13;
but he refused and reluctantly&#13;
tried Buck leu's Arnica Salve A- a last&#13;
resort, fie 1 hen wrote. ''I used your&#13;
salv.1 and my foot was soon completely&#13;
cuivd," Best remedy for burns, cute,&#13;
brui.-es and eczema, (let a box to-day.&#13;
Recommenced bv U. G. Meyer, the&#13;
druetfist. Only 25c.&#13;
ECI&#13;
l-T" O.J*&#13;
Saturday, November 15,'13&#13;
i&#13;
I&#13;
i&#13;
15c Corn, the best, !i canH for__ ...._ 25c&#13;
1 c i n of good Salmon _ _ _ 10c&#13;
1 can of M e d i u m Red Salmon __ _. _15c, 2 for 25c&#13;
7 pounds of Rolled Oats__ __ 25c&#13;
Ladies 25c Hosiery, the Black Cat kind, per pair 10c&#13;
Childrens 15c Stockiugs, Black Cat kind, per pair 10c&#13;
Best Outing Flannel _ •. _ 9c&#13;
3=grWill Meet All Prices on S u g a r&#13;
ALL SALES CASH&#13;
i&#13;
W. W. BARNARD&#13;
!&#13;
Produce Wanted J&#13;
Corn Husker Bargain&#13;
hueker,&#13;
buskel.&#13;
guaranteed&#13;
A Deeriag 2 roll corn&#13;
has husked only 900&#13;
Shows n o wear aud&#13;
like a new one. a d v .&#13;
R. E . Barron, Howell&#13;
A Consumptive Cough&#13;
A couwh that bothers you continually&#13;
is one of the danger signals&#13;
which warns of consumption. Dr&#13;
King's New Discovery stops the cough&#13;
loose:; the chest, banish fever and let&#13;
you sleep peacefully. The first dose&#13;
ckeeks the spmptons and giyes prompt&#13;
relief. Mrs. A. F. Mertz, of Glen. Ellyc,&#13;
Iowa, writes: "Dr. King's New Dis&#13;
covery cured a stubbcrn cough after&#13;
six weeks doctoring failed." Try it,&#13;
as it will do the same for \ou. Best&#13;
medicine for coughs,'colds, thtoat and&#13;
luntf troubles. Money fnck if it fails&#13;
Price J^Oc. and $1. Recommended ay&#13;
C. G. Meyer, the druggist.&#13;
How's This?&#13;
We oiler $100. Reward for any case&#13;
of Catarrh that cannot be cured by&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Cure.'&#13;
F J CHENEY &amp; CO, Toledo O.&#13;
We, the undersigned, hiv) known&#13;
F J Cheney for the last 15 years, and&#13;
believe him perfectly honorable in all&#13;
business transactions and financially&#13;
aule to carry out any obligations made&#13;
by Ins firm.&#13;
Waldiug, Kinnan &amp; Marvin,&#13;
Wholes.Id Druggists, Toledo, Ohio&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,&#13;
acting directly upon the blood&#13;
and mucous surfaces of the system.&#13;
Testimonials sent free, f rice, 75c per&#13;
bottle Sold by all druggists.&#13;
Take Hall's family pills for constipation.&#13;
Pay your subscription this month.&#13;
A Berlin scientist claims that&#13;
«&#13;
coal causes cancer. Better q u i t e&#13;
eating coal.&#13;
I U.e&#13;
Baking&#13;
pufnesren&#13;
Wholesome, Nourishing ^Jread—largeloaves too—&#13;
just as easily obtained from Columbus Flour as the most&#13;
delicious cake and pastry.&#13;
D a i n t y , L i g h t Cake— t h e kind that simply melts in your&#13;
mouth—can be made with Columbus Flour. David Stott&#13;
guarantees it.&#13;
R i c h , F l a k y P i e Crust—temptingly delicious—you're sure&#13;
of it every time you use Columbus Flour. Begin today.&#13;
Add Columbus Flour to your order today.&#13;
DAVID STOTT&#13;
Miller&#13;
Detroit, - Michigan&#13;
/ Monks Brothers, Pinckney&#13;
* Ayraulf 6« Bollinger, Gregory&#13;
Sale Bills Printed at the&#13;
Dispatch Office at Right&#13;
Prices.&#13;
, :&gt; i -&#13;
»:-'&lt; * '-"• *.&#13;
Is $10 to $20 Saved on Fuel&#13;
Bills Worthwhile to You?&#13;
If it is, we want you to come and see us, and we will show you a base burner&#13;
that will not only save you dollars in fuel bills, but will also give you&#13;
continuous heat day and night—upstairs and down—all winter long.&#13;
There are many reasons&#13;
why the FAVORITE&#13;
BASE BURNER is the best&#13;
and most economical heating&#13;
^tovein existence,— J-n i4s~&#13;
wonderful system of warmair&#13;
flues you will find one&#13;
reason why it maintains an&#13;
even temperature throughout&#13;
the entire house on the coldest&#13;
days of winter, regardless&#13;
of whistling winds and driving&#13;
blizzards outside.&#13;
In its "paper-tight" construction—&#13;
for the Favorite is&#13;
accurately and tightly fitted by&#13;
special patented machinery—&#13;
is found the explanation why&#13;
it will hold fire unattended for&#13;
five successive days and nights without going out, always pouring forth an unvarying&#13;
amount of pure, warm air from a steady fire. Flowers and delicate plants thrive in the&#13;
fresh, healthful atmospheresuppUed by a FAVORITE BASE BURNER; it is the best&#13;
method of heating for fragile women and children.&#13;
j If. you want your family to be warm, healthy and happy during the cold months you&#13;
lannot afford to buy any heating stove but a Favorite. It will keep Florida atmos- ^5553¾^&#13;
phere in your house all winter long. It will give your wife a cozy and comfortable ^§55Jjfi§y&#13;
home in which to live. It will furnish your children with warm bedrooms in which&#13;
to undress and go to bed. m&#13;
Buying a Favorite Base Burner Is like putting money in the bank, because It saves&#13;
Its own cost in a few years use, and brings such luxury nncVhappmpas into the home*&#13;
1&#13;
IDinkel &amp; Dunbar, Pinckney&#13;
•* /&#13;
£t&gt;&#13;
..jru- * * . « . - . . _ « , I k . ~&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
FIGHT IN STATE&#13;
ANTI-SALOON LEAGUE ABANDONS&#13;
PLANS FOR DRY&#13;
ELECTION.&#13;
W I L L WORK FOR FRIENDLY LEGISLATURE.&#13;
Hope to Ratify The Amendment to&#13;
National Constitution Providing&#13;
for Prohibition Now Before&#13;
Congress.&#13;
Detroit—Michigan is not going to&#13;
have an opportunity to vote as a whole&#13;
on the question of state-wide constitutional&#13;
prohibition In 1914, as has been&#13;
repeatedly announced since the initiative&#13;
and referendum clause was added&#13;
to the Michigan state constitution, If&#13;
the anti-saloon league has its way&#13;
about it.&#13;
Acting under instructions from National&#13;
Superintendent Purley A. Baker,&#13;
of the Anti-Saloon league, the&#13;
board of trustees of the Michigan&#13;
State Anti-Saloon league at its meeting&#13;
in the local Y. M. C. A., passed&#13;
a resolution shelving the statewide&#13;
initiative and referendum fight for&#13;
prohibition and announcing that it intends&#13;
to go "gunning" for a "dry"&#13;
legislature next fall that will enable&#13;
Michigan to ratify the proposal for&#13;
national prohibition when it is submitted&#13;
to the states. Rep. Richard&#13;
Pearson Hobson, of Alabama, now has&#13;
a bill before congress providing that&#13;
a prohibition amendment shall be added&#13;
to the federal constitution when&#13;
36 state legislatures shall have ratified&#13;
it.&#13;
John E. Carr, of Adrian, displaced&#13;
J. E. Hammond, of Lansing, as a&#13;
member of the headquarters committee&#13;
of the league.&#13;
McCOMBS IS MARRIED&#13;
Chairman of the Democratic National&#13;
committee, and probably next ambassador&#13;
to France, was united in&#13;
marriage to Miss Dorothy Williams&#13;
in London, on November 7th.&#13;
MRS. CLARK CHOSEN PRESIDENT&#13;
Michigan Equal Suffrage Association&#13;
Meets at Jackson and Elects&#13;
Officers.&#13;
Crop Reports for State.&#13;
Lansing, Mich.—The month]v crop&#13;
report issued by Secretary of State&#13;
Martindale shows a total of 12,121,491&#13;
bushels of wheat raised in Michigan&#13;
this year. Other crops were as follows:&#13;
Corn, 63,513,088; oats, 44,384,-&#13;
119; barley, 2,045,360; rye, 5,133,182;&#13;
buckwheat, 853,060; potatoes, 82,848,-&#13;
D40; beans, 4,932,621; peas, 1,194,445;&#13;
clover seed, 234,898; apples, 19,356,-&#13;
039; peaches, 2,438,315; pears, 760,-&#13;
578; plums, 335,462; cherries, 953,61«;&#13;
strawberries, 406,460; raspberries and&#13;
blackberries, 616,541.&#13;
Seven hundred and fifty-seven thousand&#13;
five hundred and eleven tons of&#13;
Bugar beets were raised and 2,183,817&#13;
tons of hay and forage. The report&#13;
says it is difficult to get estimates on&#13;
the amount of grapes raised, but it is&#13;
estimated at 78,000,000 pounds, of&#13;
which more than half were produced&#13;
In Van Buren county.&#13;
Governor Appoints Delegates.&#13;
Lansing, Mich—Governor Ferris has&#13;
appointed the following delegates from&#13;
Michigan to represent the state at the&#13;
tenth annual convention of the National&#13;
Riverj_flnd Harbor*-Congress^&#13;
in Washington, Dec. 3, 4, 5; James&#13;
J. Lynn and Capt. Frank H. Danger,&#13;
Port Huron; Capt. W. C. Brown, St.&#13;
Clair; F. W. Fletcher, W. P. Harris,&#13;
Ralph E. Gilchrist, F. A. Kimball. F.&#13;
L. Richardson and Robert B. Rayburn,&#13;
Alpena; Capt. Murray Mcintosh,&#13;
William B. Thompson, Geo. E. Greening,&#13;
John J. Barium, John Pridgeon,&#13;
Jr., and Strathearn Hendrie, Detroit;&#13;
W. T. Murphy, Newberry; H. Von&#13;
Schon, Detroit; C. W. Williams, H. T.&#13;
Cook, W. W. Holmes, C. J. Monroe&#13;
and G. N. Hale, South Haven; William&#13;
H. Hull, S t Joseph.&#13;
Church Safe Robbed.&#13;
Detroit—The, safe of the Central&#13;
Methodist Episcopal church here waB&#13;
blown open by yeggmen and robbed&#13;
of more than ¢200. The money was&#13;
mostly cash, which had been taken&#13;
up in the Sunday collections. Being&#13;
the first Sunday of the month the collection&#13;
was heavler^than usual, most&#13;
of the contributions being paid in&#13;
monthly installments.&#13;
To Raise Fur Bearing Animals.&#13;
Newberry, Mich.—L. D. Carrier, a&#13;
Detroit man, is engaging in an industry&#13;
unique to upper Michigan. He&#13;
proposes to raise fur-bearing animals&#13;
for their pelts. Mr. Carrier has purchased&#13;
an eighty-acre tract a few&#13;
miles from Laketon, Luce county, and&#13;
has fenced the land with finely woven&#13;
and substantial wire. He will stock&#13;
the area with beaver, fox, muskrat&#13;
and skunk. The tract contains a&#13;
good sized lake and is regarded as&#13;
ideal for the purpose.&#13;
Secretary of Interior for Islands.&#13;
Washington.—Winfred T. Denison,&#13;
an assistant attorney-general in the&#13;
department of justice, has been selected&#13;
for secretary of the interior of the&#13;
Philippine islands.&#13;
Hit nomination is expected to go to&#13;
the senate Boon. Mr. Denison if 40&#13;
years old, was graduated from Harvard,&#13;
and was prominent in the government's&#13;
prosecution of the sugar&#13;
frauds.&#13;
Cornelias Holksema, of Muskegon,&#13;
ex-alderman and pioneer of the coun-&#13;
*f, is .lead at the age of 82.&#13;
Jackson, Mich.—Mrs. O. H. Clark,&#13;
of Kalamazoo, was elected president&#13;
of the Michigan Equal Suffrage association,&#13;
defeating Mrs. Jennie Law&#13;
Hardy, Tecumseh, 72 to 17, at the&#13;
convention here.&#13;
Mrs. Huntley Russell, Grand Rapids,&#13;
was elected first vice president,&#13;
and Mrs. Jennie Law Hardy, Tecumseh,&#13;
second vice president.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Blake of Grand Rapids,&#13;
Mrs. Edna Blair of Hillsdale and Mrs.&#13;
F. H. Holt of Detroit, auditors; member&#13;
board of the national organization,&#13;
Mrs. Clara B. Arthur of Detroit.&#13;
Mrs. Clara B. Arthur declined to allow&#13;
the convention to make her honorary&#13;
president, wishing to retire from&#13;
active service. Later she was presented&#13;
with a beautiful bouquet of flowers&#13;
from the Detroit club, as the only&#13;
surviving charter member of the organization.&#13;
Invitations were received from Detroit&#13;
and Grand Rapids for the next&#13;
convention and were referred to the&#13;
incoming board. Convention indorsed&#13;
the Woman's TaxpayeraL league of&#13;
Michigan. 4 w&#13;
Mrs. R. H. Perrin, Lansing, was&#13;
elected third vice-president; Dr. R.&#13;
Grace Hendricks, Jackson, recording&#13;
secretary.&#13;
STATE BRIEFS.&#13;
The state banking commission has&#13;
approved the Incorporation articles of&#13;
the state bank of Clarkston.&#13;
Rev. B. H. Einink, pastor of the&#13;
First Christian Reformed church, of&#13;
Muskegon, has received a call from&#13;
the Sixteenth Street church of that&#13;
denomination, at Holland.&#13;
The report of the Grand Rapids welware&#13;
commission says that low woges&#13;
do not form a direct cause of vice,&#13;
but that indirectly low wages and poverty&#13;
have a great influence.&#13;
' The state accident board has ruled&#13;
that an agreement between injured&#13;
employes and their employers cannot&#13;
be terminated except by approval of&#13;
the board. It also denied the employer&#13;
the right to change the rate of com*&#13;
pensation unless the board gives approval.&#13;
~&#13;
The Michigan Central railroad has&#13;
announced that it intends to construct&#13;
new car shops and build a new freight&#13;
depot at Bay City and that ground will&#13;
be broken in a few weeks. The work&#13;
will cost more than $500,000. The road&#13;
has just spent about three-quarters&#13;
of a million fair new round houses and&#13;
yards at this point&#13;
President W. S. Linton, Saginaw&#13;
board of trade, has appointed a committee&#13;
of 16 to promote a campaign&#13;
for pure water. The common council&#13;
committee has started a movement to&#13;
obtain a filtration plant, and both bus*&#13;
lness and municipal bodies promise&#13;
to unite so the Saginaw public shal&#13;
not depend on corner pumps for drink&#13;
,lng water.&#13;
FELKER HONORS&#13;
N. Y. REQUISITION&#13;
NEW HAMPSHIRE'8 GOVERNOR&#13;
DECIOE8 AGAINST HARRY&#13;
T H A W .&#13;
CASE IS N O W IN THE FEDERAL&#13;
COURTS.&#13;
It May be Several Years Before Noted&#13;
Inmate of Mattewan, Who Escaped,&#13;
Can Be Returned to&#13;
Institution.&#13;
Concord, N. H.—Governor Felker&#13;
honored the requisition of the state of&#13;
New York for the extradition of Harry&#13;
K. Thaw. The case is no wtransferred&#13;
automatically to the federal courts&#13;
where a writ of habeas corpus on behalf&#13;
of Thaw is pending.&#13;
The governor based his decision on&#13;
the indictment returned against Thaw&#13;
in New York county, which charged&#13;
him with conspiracy to escape from&#13;
the insane asylum at Matteawan, N.&#13;
Y., to which he was committed after&#13;
his second trial for the killing of&#13;
Stanford White. Thaw made tiis&#13;
sensational flight on August 17, and&#13;
a few days later was arrested near&#13;
Coaticook, Canada,&#13;
Thaw will make no comment on the&#13;
decision but his mother has issued a&#13;
statement expressing her disappointment.&#13;
It may be several years before the&#13;
matter is finally carried through the&#13;
United State Supreme court.&#13;
MARKETS&#13;
Committee Favors Wilson Plans.&#13;
Washington—An entirely new lineup&#13;
in the senate banking committee&#13;
with a majority behind the administration&#13;
appeared when, by a vote of&#13;
seven to five, the committee reconsidered&#13;
its action reducing the number&#13;
of regional banks to four.&#13;
Senators Reed and O'Gorman, the&#13;
democrats who had been voting&#13;
against the administration proposals,&#13;
cast their votes with the other demacrats.&#13;
Senator Hitchcock, democrat,&#13;
held out, but Senator Crawford,&#13;
republican, joined the administration&#13;
forces and the question was reopened.&#13;
The administration won another&#13;
point when the committee voted to&#13;
retain on the federal reserve board&#13;
as ex-officio member the secretary of&#13;
the treasury.&#13;
Live Stock, Grain and General Farm&#13;
Produce.&#13;
Live Stock.&#13;
Detroit — .Cattle: Receipts, 917;&#13;
stockers and feeders steady; all&#13;
others 10® 15c lower; best steers and&#13;
heifers, ?7.50@8; steers and hellers,&#13;
1,000 to 1,200» lbs., $7.25@7.35; steers&#13;
and heifers, 800 to 1,000 lbs., $6.75@&#13;
17; steers and heifers that are fat, 500&#13;
to 700 lbs., $5®6; choice fat cows, $5&#13;
@&lt;5.75; good fat cows, $5@5.25; common&#13;
cows, $4.25@4.75; oanners, $3@4;&#13;
choice heavy bulls, ¢6.25; fair to good&#13;
bologna bulls, $5.50@6;- stock bulls, ¢5&#13;
@6.25; choice feeding steers, suu to&#13;
1,000 lbs., $6@6.50; choice stockers,&#13;
500 to 700 lbs., $6.50® 6.75; fair&#13;
stockers, 500 to 700 lbs., $5.75@6;&#13;
stock heifers, $5@6; milkers, large,&#13;
young, medium age, $70®80; common&#13;
milkers, $40@60.&#13;
Veal calves—Receipts, 243; steady;&#13;
best, $11; others, $7@10.50.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 5,839;&#13;
steady; best lambs, $6.75@6.85; fair&#13;
o good lambs, $6@ 6.-50; light to common&#13;
Iambs, $5@6; fair to good sheep,&#13;
$3.75@4.40; culls and common, $2.50@&#13;
3.50.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 4,145; 30@40c lower;&#13;
light to good butchers, $7.50; pigs,&#13;
$7@7.50; mixed, $7.50@7.60; heavy,&#13;
$7.60.&#13;
Examinations in Michigan Cities.&#13;
Washington.—The last examination&#13;
before appointments are made for the&#13;
Philippine service is announced by&#13;
the United States civil service commission,&#13;
Dec. 30-31, in various cities&#13;
throughout the United States. In&#13;
Michigan the examinations will be&#13;
held in Ann Arbor, Detroit, Grand&#13;
Rapids, Lansing, Manistee, Marquette,&#13;
Saginaw, Sault Ste. Marie and Traverse&#13;
City. From the eligible list thus&#13;
secured, appointments will be made&#13;
during the coming spring for service&#13;
in the Philippine Islands beginning&#13;
~w4th the opeTrtny~of^tlie~TexTir(aioot&#13;
year. Positions open through these&#13;
examinations are those in the teaching&#13;
of home economics, manual training,&#13;
high school science, mathematics,&#13;
English, history and also supervisors&#13;
of school districts.&#13;
Alimony Puzzles Tax Experts.&#13;
Washington—How to tax alimony is&#13;
the most puzzling question to be&#13;
dealt with under the new income tax&#13;
law. Authorities cannot decide whether&#13;
it is to be deducted from the income&#13;
of the alimonee or the alimoner.&#13;
The first question seems to be, should&#13;
alimony be considered a legitimate&#13;
part of a man's expense or just a luxury&#13;
the divorce habit has led him&#13;
into?&#13;
Treasurer officials refused to make&#13;
any official statement on the matter&#13;
as yet It waa suggested that such&#13;
alimony expert* as De Wolf Hopper&#13;
and Nat Goodwin might offer a solution.&#13;
Four Killed by Train.&#13;
Syracuse, N. Y.—Four persons were&#13;
killed and six injured when a carryall&#13;
with twenty persons waa struck by a&#13;
Lackawanna train at Jamesville, six&#13;
miles south of here. The occupants&#13;
evidently did not see the train, and&#13;
the vehicle waa squarely on the&#13;
tracks.&#13;
East Buffalo Markets.&#13;
BUFFALO—Cattle: Receipts, 320&#13;
cars; best handy weight butcher&#13;
steers and heifers sold full strong&#13;
and in some instances 10c higher;&#13;
other giades sold steady; choice to&#13;
prime heavy native cattle, $8.50@8.75;&#13;
anything strictly prime and corn-fed&#13;
would bring more; best shipping&#13;
steers, Canada, $8.25@8.50; fair togood&#13;
weight steers, $7.50@7.75; fair&#13;
to good shipping steers, $7.50@7.65;&#13;
plain weighty steers, $7@7.50; choice&#13;
to fancy yearlings, $8.50@9; good&#13;
yearlings, $7.75@8.25; best handy&#13;
fancy fat cows, $6®6.50; choice to&#13;
prime fat cows, $5.50@5.75; good&#13;
butcher cows, $5.25@5.50; common to&#13;
good cutters, $4@4.25; canners, $3.50&#13;
3.90; prime to fancy heifers, $7.50®&#13;
8; best heifers, $6.75(5)7:1 medium to&#13;
good heifers, $6®6.50; best feeders,&#13;
$6.65@7; fair to good feeders, $6@&#13;
6.25; best stockers, $6.25@6.75; good&#13;
stockers, $5.75@6.25; common stockers,&#13;
$4.75@5; best butcher bulls, $6.25&#13;
@6.75; bologna bulls, $5.75@6.25;&#13;
stock bulls, $5@5.75; best milkers&#13;
and springers, $75@100; medium to&#13;
good, $45@60.&#13;
Hogs: Receipts, 175 cars; market&#13;
15c lower; heavy, $8,30@8.40; mixed,&#13;
$8.25@8.30; yorkers, $8.15@8.25;&#13;
roughs, $7.50.&#13;
Sheep and lambs: Receipts, 125&#13;
cars; market 15@25c lower; top&#13;
lambs, $7@7.10; culls to fair, $5.50@&#13;
6.90; yearlings, $5.25@5.75; ewes, $4&#13;
@4.50.&#13;
Calves steady, J5.50@ll.50.&#13;
Grains, etc.&#13;
Detroit—Wheat: Cash No. 2 red,&#13;
94c; December opened with a decine&#13;
of 1-4 at 94 3-4c and declined to&#13;
94 l-2c; May opened at 99c and declined&#13;
to 98 3-4c; No. 1 white, 94c.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 2, 74 l-2c; No. 2 yellow,&#13;
1 car at 75 l-2c; No. 3 yellow,&#13;
75c. _&#13;
Oats—Standard, 42 l-2c bid; No. 3&#13;
white, 43c; No. 4 white, 41c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 67c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate, prompt and November&#13;
shipment, $1.80; January $1.85&#13;
Cloverseed—Prime spot and December,&#13;
$8; March, $8.10; sample red, 75&#13;
bags at $7.50, 16 at $7, 10 at $6.75;&#13;
prime alsike, $10.50; sample alsike, 8&#13;
bags at $9.75.&#13;
Timothy—Prime spot, $2.50.&#13;
Alfalfa—Prime spot, $7.25.&#13;
Hay—Car lots, track, Detroit: No.&#13;
1-timothy, $16.50@17; standard, $15.50&#13;
@16; No. 2, $14.50@15; light mixed,&#13;
$15.50® 16; No. 1 mixed, $13.50® 14;&#13;
rye straw, $8®9; wheat and oat straw,&#13;
$7@7.50 per ton.&#13;
Flour—In one-eighth paper sacks,&#13;
per 196 pounds, jobbing lots: Best&#13;
patent, $5.30; second "nent, $4.90;&#13;
straight, $4.50;' spring patent, $3.30;&#13;
rye, $4.60 per bbl.&#13;
Feed—In 100-lb sacks, jobbing lots:&#13;
Bran, $25; coarse middlings, $27; fine&#13;
middlings, $27; cracked corn, $21;&#13;
coarse cornmeal,, $30; corn and oat&#13;
chop, $28.50 per ton.&#13;
Arrangements were made at a meeting&#13;
of more than 300 Pare Marquette&#13;
strikers in Saginaw to continue th«&#13;
strike against the railroad and foi&#13;
the purchase of fuel for the use o&#13;
strikers during the winter. A vote&#13;
*fes taken aa to whether the strik.&#13;
should continue, and more than 9'&#13;
, per cent voted to stay out&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
Grapes—Concord, 33c per 8-rb basket;&#13;
Malaga, $5®6.50 per bbl.&#13;
Apples—Snow, $4®4.5Q; Spy, $3.50&#13;
@3.75;_ Greening, $3.50@3.75; King,&#13;
$3.50®4; Twenty-ounce, $3.50®3.75&#13;
per bbl.;.No. 2, $1.75®2.25 per bbl.;&#13;
bulk, 5-.25 @ 1.50 per cwL&#13;
Cabbage—$2®2.25 per bu.&#13;
Hickory Nuts—$2.50 per bu.&#13;
Tomatoes—Hothouse, 20®25c per&#13;
pound.&#13;
Onions—$1.25 per bu.; Spanish H-40&#13;
?er crate.&#13;
Potatoes—In bulk, 60®70c per bu.;&#13;
a sacks, 65® 75c per feu. for car lots.&#13;
Nuts—Chestnuts, 15c per lb.; shell&#13;
lark hickory, $1.5001.75 per bu.;large&#13;
hickory, J$2.50®1.7» per bu.&#13;
Dr. Navaun's Kidney Tablets&#13;
Relieves quickly all Kidney complaint* such&#13;
as Backache, Rheumatism, Nervousness,&#13;
Dtiziuess, etc. Thousand** of sufferers hart .&#13;
been cured by this remedy and If you or any&#13;
member of your family are-Bufferinir from --&#13;
Klduey ailment a#nd your name and ad*&#13;
dress on a pobtal for FREE sample and our&#13;
booklet of testimonials and be conTineed.&#13;
BOTANIC DRUG CO.. Detroit, Mick&#13;
VIOLINS AN° SUPPLIES I manufacture and deal In Violins, Bows.Ci&#13;
String»,etc. and do Repairing'. Established 1887.&#13;
J. Adolph Krug, lGChamplafnSt..Detroit,Mica.&#13;
It takes a lot of luck to push a man&#13;
up hill.&#13;
Mrs.Winslow'a Soothing Syrup for ChUdrea&#13;
teething, softens the gums, reduces infiamma*&#13;
Uon.allays painjcureslrind colic^ttc a bottlsj*&#13;
Unkind criticisms are apt to come&#13;
home to roost.&#13;
Liquid blue is a weak solution. Avoid it.&#13;
Buy Red Cross Ball Blue, the blue that's&#13;
all blue. Ask your grocer. Adv.&#13;
Natural Qi/estlon.&#13;
"He seems to have a special talent&#13;
for argument."&#13;
"Lawyer or pugilist?"—Judge.&#13;
The most effective, yet simplest remedy&#13;
for coughs ia Dean's Mentholated Cough&#13;
Drops—5c at Drug Stores.&#13;
Without Prejudice,&#13;
"How are you on the income tax?&#13;
Against it or for U?"&#13;
"For it. I should worry."&#13;
Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children&#13;
Relieve Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teething&#13;
Disorders, move and regulate the Bowels and&#13;
are a pleasant remedy for Worms. Used by&#13;
Mothers for 24 years. They are so pleasant to&#13;
take, children like them. Thty ntver fail. At&#13;
all Druggists, 25c. Sample FREE. Address,&#13;
A- 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Adv.&#13;
Making Up TOP Lost Time.&#13;
Cissle—Why in the name of good*&#13;
ness do you keep taking out your&#13;
watch. Have you a train to catch?&#13;
Tom—Eh? Oh, no. The fact is I&#13;
haven't seen it for a long time.-—Illustrated&#13;
Bits.&#13;
Bad Calculation.&#13;
John, who was going to bed one&#13;
night and having no light was groping&#13;
his way (the bed being one of the oldfashioned,&#13;
with high bed posts). John&#13;
in feeling for the bed post, missed It&#13;
with his hand and struck it with his&#13;
nose.&#13;
"Ach!" he yelled, "that is the first&#13;
time I knew my nose was longer than&#13;
my arm."—National Monthly.&#13;
'Twas on Bllfle's Bill.&#13;
"Have you heard about Julia's hard&#13;
luck?"&#13;
"No. What is it?"&#13;
"She took Billie's engagement ring&#13;
back to the jeweler's to be valued. Oh,"&#13;
poor Julia!"&#13;
"Well, that's nothing. I always do&#13;
that."&#13;
"Yes; but the Jeweler refused to&#13;
give it back to her. He said Billie&#13;
hadn't paid for it!"&#13;
Charge of the Light Brigade.&#13;
Mr. Stevens noticed that the little&#13;
daughter of the family ate her cereal&#13;
in a far from enthusiastic manner.&#13;
"Don't you like that, my dear?" he&#13;
inquired.&#13;
"Not pertie'ly," replied the child.&#13;
"Why do you eat it, then?" asked&#13;
the visitor.&#13;
The little girl paused with her spoon&#13;
on the edge of the bowl, and looked&#13;
at the guest with serious eyes.&#13;
"Why, it's got to be eaten^" she answered^&#13;
gravely. ~ " T h e grocery man&#13;
gives mother a rag doll for every two&#13;
packages she buys, and it's got to be&#13;
eaten every morning." — New York&#13;
Evening Post&#13;
W 0 R K 8 A L L DAY&#13;
And Studies at Night on Grape-Nute&#13;
Food.&#13;
Some of the world's great men have&#13;
worked during the day and studied&#13;
evenings to fit themselves for greater*-&#13;
things. But it requires a good constitution&#13;
generally to do this.&#13;
A Ga. man was able to keep it up&#13;
with ease after he bad learned the&#13;
sustaining power of Grape-Nuts,' al-j&#13;
though he had failed in health before&#13;
he changed his food supply. He says:&#13;
"Three years ago I had a severe attack&#13;
of stomach trouble which left me&#13;
unable to eat anything but bread and&#13;
water.&#13;
"The nervous strain at my office&#13;
from 6 A, M. to 6 P. M. and improper&#13;
foods caused my health to fail rapidly.&#13;
Cereal and so-called "Foods'* were&#13;
tried without benefit nnttl I saw Grape-&#13;
Nuts mentioned in the paper.&#13;
"In hopeless desperation I tried this&#13;
food and at once gained strength, flesh&#13;
and appetite. I am sow able to work&#13;
all day at the office and study at night,&#13;
without the nervous exhaustion that&#13;
was usual before I tried Grape-Nuts.&#13;
"It leaves me strengthened, refreshed,&#13;
satisfied; nerves quieted aad&#13;
toned up, body and brain waste restored.&#13;
I would have been a living&#13;
skeleton, or more likely a dead onT by&#13;
this time, if it had not been for Grape*&#13;
Nuts."&#13;
Name given by Postum Co., Battle)&#13;
Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to&#13;
WelMlIe," in pkgs, T h e r e ' s a Benson."&#13;
I m m l th« afcovk la*t«*t&#13;
appears trmm Hate f tfasM&#13;
fan eff&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
OOCXXXXXXXXXXXXXXDOOOOOOOOC&#13;
HER FAD-AND HIS&#13;
By CLYDE PARSONS.&#13;
If every man, old or young, has a&#13;
fad—and we know he has; If every&#13;
woman, old or young, has "a fad—&#13;
and we; know she has—why blame&#13;
Miss Nora Lee for having one, too? It&#13;
wasn't a great big fad, and one to&#13;
keep the police busy and the babies&#13;
on the block awake o' nights, but a&#13;
reasonable fad, and was not seriously&#13;
objected to even by people with a&#13;
grouch.&#13;
Miss Nora was not a moving picture&#13;
fiend; she did not go to ball games&#13;
more than twice In a season; she&#13;
did not attend the races at all. Her&#13;
fad was—cats—dogs, rabbits? Not at&#13;
all! She lavished her affections on a&#13;
goat, and he wasn't anything of a&#13;
beauty at that In fact, he was a&#13;
scrub goat. He was built on the lines&#13;
of a saw-buck. He was homely from&#13;
the tip of his nose to the tip of his&#13;
tail. He remained gaunt despite the&#13;
food set before him. He evinced no&#13;
gratitude for her love and care, and he&#13;
wasn't a bit proud when he was led&#13;
along the street with yards of blue&#13;
ribbon streaming in the breeze and&#13;
a sliver bell around his neck.&#13;
Mistress and goat were bound to attract&#13;
attention when they walked out.&#13;
Adults stared, small boys indulged in&#13;
levity, and dogs seemed to have a&#13;
longing l o try "conclusions with&#13;
"Billy.'*&#13;
However, a fad wouldn't be much&#13;
of a fad unless it attracted attention,&#13;
and while Miss Nora tried to look&#13;
calm and unconscious, there is no&#13;
doubt that she felt glows of pride as&#13;
she caught such remarkB as:&#13;
"Did you ever!^&#13;
"Can you beat it!"&#13;
"Why don't she love a hippo!"&#13;
"Hasn't she a father or a mother?"&#13;
"A hobble skirt and a pet goat—&#13;
thunder!"&#13;
Miss Nora's father was dead, and&#13;
her mother's objections to her fad carried&#13;
no weight&#13;
"Does Billie bite any one?" the&#13;
daughter would ask.&#13;
"Of courso not"&#13;
"Does he bark and disturb us?"&#13;
"No."&#13;
"Does he cost any more to keep&#13;
than a dog?"&#13;
"I guess not."&#13;
"He isn't handsome, but isn't he better&#13;
looking than a bull dog?"&#13;
"Y-e-s."&#13;
"Then what's the matter with my&#13;
keeping a goat?"&#13;
"It's so unusual."&#13;
"Wasn't the split skirt unusual two&#13;
years ago?"&#13;
Living half a mile away was Mr.&#13;
Burt Wiltshire. He had a fad. Instead&#13;
of leading a goat about the&#13;
streets, he led a pig. It was a black&#13;
pig with a red ribbon for a collar. It&#13;
had been trained so It could be led&#13;
like a dog. That pig was also&#13;
an innovation as well as a fad. The&#13;
police had tried to suppress it, but&#13;
the courts had held that it had the&#13;
same rights as a dog and was not&#13;
half as dangerous.&#13;
Like the goat, the pig attracted&#13;
much attention when out for an airing,&#13;
and like Miss Nora the young&#13;
man at the other end of the lead received&#13;
such expressions from the public&#13;
as:&#13;
"Is he an escaped idiot?"&#13;
"Does-h-e belong 4o-a-s4de*show V'&#13;
"Can the pig tell fortunes with&#13;
cards?"&#13;
It might have ben figured out by a&#13;
nv^hematiclan that there was just&#13;
one chance In ten thousand that the&#13;
girl and her goat and the young man&#13;
and his pig would ever meet on the&#13;
street In a head-on collision. That&#13;
one chance came to them. It was so&#13;
willed by the Destiny that shapes our&#13;
ends. At nine o'clock one morning&#13;
Miss Nora and her goat were taking&#13;
a promenade for their health and other&#13;
reasons. There was an abandon&#13;
about them that was charming. That&#13;
is, they occupied most of the sidewalk,&#13;
and their motto was, the public be&#13;
hanged.&#13;
At the same hour Mr. Burt Wiltshire&#13;
and his educated black pig set&#13;
out for their stroll. They had heretofore&#13;
taken one particular direction..&#13;
This morning they took a new route.&#13;
Destiny would have it so.&#13;
"Get on to the goat!"&#13;
"Where'd he get the pig!"&#13;
"That's the latest thing at Newport!"&#13;
- "Oh, Lord, what things we do see&#13;
in a town!**&#13;
As the public exclaimed the human&#13;
and animal objects gradually approached&#13;
each other.&#13;
They finally met. There was no&#13;
record !n sacred or profane history to&#13;
go by—no society rule laid down In&#13;
the bine or rod book. Therefore the&#13;
jlm dandy goat .and the educated pig&#13;
Jmmped against oach other.&#13;
"Sir!" demanded the girl.&#13;
"Miss!" replied the man.&#13;
"You have got a nasty pig there?"&#13;
„. "And you have a villain of a goat!"&#13;
"Don't you dare let your pig— !*&#13;
, ."And your g o * t - ~ r&#13;
»tt was too late. No work on natural&#13;
Mstory—no write* on heart throbs&#13;
la the yellow Journals, has told us&#13;
that when a pig and a goat meet there&#13;
mubt be a deadly conflict, but a record&#13;
has been made with this story.&#13;
The goat was the attacker but the pig&#13;
stood to his guns. The goat used'his&#13;
horns and hoofs; the pig used his&#13;
snout and teeth.&#13;
"Call your pig off!"&#13;
"Call your goat off!"&#13;
"Your pig began the fuss!"&#13;
"Your goat began it!"&#13;
"You are no gentleman!"&#13;
"You are a nice young lady!"&#13;
A crowd gathered. That crowd&#13;
made remarks. It made remarks to&#13;
the girl and to the young man. It&#13;
gave advice to the goat and to the&#13;
pig. It advised the goat to pin the pig&#13;
to the fence with his horns and hold&#13;
him there until life was extinct. It&#13;
advised the pig to remember Bunker&#13;
Hill and go in and make a whirlwind&#13;
finish of it.&#13;
Not until the police came did each&#13;
owner gather up the remains of his&#13;
animal and quit the scene of the combat.&#13;
Their glances expressed nothing&#13;
but supreme indignation as they&#13;
turned away. It was so plain that they&#13;
wished each other destruction In some&#13;
awful form that a chauffeur who had&#13;
stoped to witness the affair while thu&#13;
meter went right on recording, felt&#13;
called upon to express himself:&#13;
"Gee! but 'sposen he should fall in&#13;
love with that girl some day! How&#13;
she would turn him down!"&#13;
And It happened. It was bound to&#13;
happen. Destiny wouldn't have missed&#13;
such a golden opportunity for all the&#13;
old second hand hats in Boston. A&#13;
fad is acquired as easily, as a cold in&#13;
the head. Some run about the same&#13;
length of time—some a little longer,&#13;
but they are bound to be abandoned&#13;
for something else.&#13;
Miss Nora Lee got home from the&#13;
scene of that tragedy disgusted with&#13;
her goat and herself. It wasn't the&#13;
same' goat with which she so blithely&#13;
set out an hour before, and she&#13;
wasn't the same girl. She found her&#13;
self hoping that the goat would jump&#13;
the fence and take himself off to be&#13;
seen by her no more. Then she would&#13;
buy a parrot or a tame crow, or a&#13;
squirrel with a wheel in his cage.&#13;
She might even turn to a French bulldog&#13;
or an alligator frgm Florida.&#13;
And Mr. Bilrt Wiltshire reached&#13;
home to telephone to the nearest&#13;
butcher:&#13;
"Say, now, do you want to buy 8&#13;
pig?"&#13;
"Yep. Got one for sale?"&#13;
"I have."&#13;
"How much?"&#13;
"If you take him away at once you&#13;
can have him for two dollars."&#13;
"All right—he's mine."&#13;
Mr. Wiltshire also determined to&#13;
drop his pig-fad for another. It might&#13;
be for a donkey or a camel—he would&#13;
think it over.&#13;
And one day two weeks later the&#13;
girl without the goat and the young&#13;
man without a pig met face to farte&#13;
on the street. Each wavered. Each&#13;
halted. Each blushed and was confused.&#13;
"—I want to beg your pardon!" he&#13;
finally managed to say.&#13;
"And I want to beg yours," was the&#13;
reply. A&#13;
"It was all my pig's fault."&#13;
"I believe my goat began the row."&#13;
"It was so sudden that—that—"&#13;
"The same with me."&#13;
"I have sold the pig."&#13;
"And my goat has got away, and I&#13;
don't want him back."&#13;
And then and there came a new fad&#13;
for eacb one. It was interest in a&#13;
human .being_of the opposite sex.&#13;
(Copyright, 1913, by the McClure Newspaper&#13;
Syndicate.)&#13;
Songs of Today.&#13;
Where Is the present-day "popular&#13;
song" that may be compared with&#13;
"Annie Laurie," or "My Old Kentucky&#13;
Home," or "Sally in Our Alley?" Nay,&#13;
where is the present-day popular song&#13;
that has more than an off chance of&#13;
being remembered or sung a single&#13;
year hence, let alone remaining a favorite&#13;
for a generation? Nowhere.&#13;
In songs, as in so many other matters,&#13;
the one desire just at present is&#13;
to get the applause—and dollars—of&#13;
the moment. If a "bearcat" dance or&#13;
a sloppily sentimental ballad attracts&#13;
attention to itself and income to its&#13;
inventor, nothing more is asked or&#13;
expected. So of "cubist art," which is&#13;
merely lunacy on canvas; so of tenderloin&#13;
plays. The one thing required&#13;
&lt;s not that they shall be true, or beau&#13;
tiful, or thoughtful, or enduring; "but&#13;
that they shall make money. It 1?&#13;
strange that an age like the present&#13;
which has so many superb achievements&#13;
to its credit, and which is more&#13;
deeply Imbued with the sense of human&#13;
brotherhood than any preceding&#13;
time in history, should have come to&#13;
this sorry pass in matters of art and&#13;
recreation.&#13;
The Oldest Separator.&#13;
"I see you keep a cow?"&#13;
"Yep."&#13;
"Got a separator?"&#13;
. "Yep."&#13;
"What make?"&#13;
"I'm it. I separate the cow from&#13;
her milk twice a day."&#13;
Mind the Viddert, 8ammy.&#13;
Old Sage—Look out for the widows,&#13;
my boy.&#13;
Young Snip—I shall certainly try ta&#13;
avoid having, one of my own, air.&#13;
LITTLE THINGS COUNT&#13;
English Farmer Profits by Keeping&#13;
Detailed Records.&#13;
Ram Is Kept 8eparate Until Ewes Are&#13;
Gathered for Inspection, Thereby&#13;
Avoiding Ail Over-Exertion In&#13;
Running Around.&#13;
(By E. Tt. JAYNES.)&#13;
Nothing is more discouraging than&#13;
a lot of lambs of various ageB, uneven&#13;
in size, running with a flock of ewes&#13;
that would, had they been given the&#13;
opportunity, have lambed at the same&#13;
period. For the past month or two&#13;
the ram should have been In a lot by&#13;
himself and eating all the nice juicy&#13;
grass he desired.&#13;
The value of such a grass plot can&#13;
hardly be over-estimated. It gives&#13;
the ram a tender bit of picking, causing&#13;
him to take sufficient exercise to&#13;
keep him in the best of trim.&#13;
Supplement this with ah abundance&#13;
of fresh water, a little salt and a trifle&#13;
of oats, and we haVe a combination&#13;
guaranteed to give results in the line&#13;
of a big, strong, vigorous sire.&#13;
A practice that is common with&#13;
English breeders and which our&#13;
farmers must eventually follow is t&gt;e&#13;
hard coupling of ram and ewes.&#13;
The American farmer turns his ram&#13;
with the ewes and trusts to luck 1)&#13;
bring him a good crop. He does not&#13;
know whether the ram is safely settling&#13;
the ewes or not&#13;
To*o often the ram abuses himself,&#13;
to the detriment of the latter part of&#13;
the crop. Then, too, the exertion from&#13;
running around, as a ram in a bunch&#13;
of ewes usually does, undermines his&#13;
vigor.&#13;
Compare this with your English&#13;
farmer . The ram Is kept to himself&#13;
all the time except when he is led&#13;
out to the ewes. He gets his allowance&#13;
of grain and his bite of grass, no matter&#13;
how hard pressed the farmer is&#13;
for feed, for he knows too well that a&#13;
handful of grain given to the ram is&#13;
as good as one given to each of the&#13;
ewes.&#13;
When evening comes, the farmer&#13;
leads his ram out to where the ewes&#13;
are gathered for the inspection of the&#13;
ram. The lead is loosened from his&#13;
halter and he quietly proceeds to inspect&#13;
the flock. One is found in heat,&#13;
she is served and the shepherd quietly&#13;
removes her while the ram continues&#13;
his inspection.&#13;
When all has been served the ram&#13;
is removed and a record is made of&#13;
the ewes bred, the date and anything&#13;
else that may be needful.&#13;
The pure bred owner takes the ear&#13;
tag number of his ewe and her date&#13;
of breeding is put down on his flock&#13;
A Prize Winner.&#13;
record. The- grade sheep owner&#13;
marks his ewes in some conspicuous&#13;
manner.&#13;
For instance, the first week he uses&#13;
red paint placed on the hip, the second&#13;
week on the back, the third on the&#13;
shoulder, etc. Different colors of paints&#13;
being used, if possible to know by the&#13;
mark on her back just when she will&#13;
lamb.&#13;
When lambing time approaches&#13;
there is no question about when a&#13;
ewe should lamb. He has the records.&#13;
A glance and he has the whole story&#13;
before him. A sharp contrast to the&#13;
AUTUMN CARE OF THE COLTS&#13;
Voung Animals Should Be Given Some&#13;
Grain and Hay Just Before Pastures&#13;
Begin to Dry Up.&#13;
Young colts should not be left oat&#13;
In the pasture until they begin to get&#13;
low in flesh. It Is much more profitable&#13;
to begin feeding them a little&#13;
grain and hay along before pastures&#13;
begin to dry up to have them in readiness&#13;
to go on dry feed later without&#13;
any serious trouble.&#13;
This is too often neglected; and,&#13;
when young colts are brought in thin&#13;
in flesh, and they cannot be taken&#13;
through the winter in the condition&#13;
that they could have been, this neglect&#13;
is inexcusable.&#13;
In weaning the colt from the mare,&#13;
It should have the very best of care,&#13;
as the change of conditions li liable&#13;
to cause some trouble. While on the&#13;
good summer pasture the mare gave&#13;
milk that was easily digested and in&#13;
taking colts from milk to dry food,&#13;
it is necessary that they should receive&#13;
the very beat of attention. They&#13;
should be properly fed in order to&#13;
former who has to "tell by guess"&#13;
about when a ewe in to lamb, and who&#13;
consequently looseB a high per cent,&#13;
of his crop.&#13;
Is it too much trouble to do this?&#13;
Is it too much trouble to get your corn&#13;
planted or to harvest your oats when&#13;
ripe?&#13;
Your lambing season is your harvest.&#13;
It awaits you, but the time of&#13;
harvesting (giving birth to lambs) is&#13;
uncertain, unless you know by your&#13;
records when to expect it.&#13;
Brother farmer, it is these little&#13;
things that count. They mark the&#13;
difference between the progressive&#13;
farmer and the shiftless or indifferent,&#13;
between the business farmer and the&#13;
work horse kind, between the money&#13;
maker and the loser, between success&#13;
and failure. We are all of us either&#13;
one or the other.&#13;
HOW ONION SMUT JS SPREAD&#13;
Disease Is Conveyed From Field to&#13;
Field on Farm Implements—One&#13;
Remedy Used by Growers.&#13;
During the last five years this disease&#13;
has spread rapidly, the smut probably&#13;
being conveyed from field to field&#13;
Smutted Onion.&#13;
upon farm implements and with manure&#13;
containing smutted onion refuse,&#13;
as discarded onions are usually deposited&#13;
upon manure piles. In some&#13;
sections the losses resulting from this&#13;
fungus have been so great that the&#13;
growers, in some cases, no longer find&#13;
the crop profitable.&#13;
The severity of the disease in different&#13;
localities is variable. It appears&#13;
at first in isolated spots here&#13;
and there In a field, and from these&#13;
spreads in all directions until the&#13;
whole piece becomes affected, and the&#13;
cultivation of onions upon it has to&#13;
be discontinued. Short rotations do&#13;
not materially diminish the amount of&#13;
smut; in a particular field badly&#13;
smutted the order of planting had&#13;
been clover for two years, corn one&#13;
year. A five-year rotation will not,&#13;
from the experience of growers, eliminate&#13;
the disease.&#13;
It appears reasonably certain that&#13;
the disease is not generally spread by&#13;
the seed. It may, however, occasionally&#13;
be introduced with seed from an&#13;
Infected locality. It is also certain&#13;
that the smut is spread with plows,&#13;
weeders, harrows, rakes and hoes, by&#13;
spores* clinging with infected earth to&#13;
the Implements.&#13;
When eoil is known to be affected&#13;
one pound of 40 per cent, formaldehyde&#13;
to 26-33 gallons of water should&#13;
be applied with a drip attachment on&#13;
a seed drill at the rate of 500 to 700&#13;
gallons of solution per acre. This&#13;
has been used with success by several&#13;
large growers. In one instance&#13;
the treated part of a field yielded over&#13;
500 bushels per acre, while the untreated&#13;
plot yielded only about 100&#13;
bushels of inferior onione to the acre.&#13;
Small—Fruit Matters.&#13;
During the fall and winter is a good&#13;
time to begin preparation for the setting&#13;
of the strawberry bed next&#13;
spring, or those bush fruits that&#13;
should be found in every garden-&#13;
Late fall plowing is advantageous. It&#13;
tends to the destruction of insect life.&#13;
Fall plowed land is, as a rule, in a&#13;
workable condition in the spring&#13;
ahead of unplowed land.&#13;
The action of the elements will&#13;
make the soil more friable. Because&#13;
of these two points gained, the moisture,&#13;
contents and conserving power&#13;
of the soil will be increased.&#13;
prevent any bowel troubles. This rule&#13;
will hold good in taking young calves&#13;
through this period and in fact will apply&#13;
to all kinds of live stock, but&#13;
more especially to the young of the&#13;
farm which are expected to turn in a&#13;
profit for the farmer the next year.&#13;
Rot of Tomatoes.&#13;
This disease often attacks plants&#13;
that are not sprayed. It is first noticeable&#13;
as small, black or brown spots&#13;
on the leaves or stems of the plants,&#13;
occurring first on the lower and older&#13;
leaves; but with favorable weather it&#13;
spreads rapidly until the plant Is defoliated,&#13;
and the spots on the stems&#13;
have coalesced Into irregular, blackish&#13;
patches. If a piece of bark with these&#13;
spots be examined under a high power&#13;
microscope, innumerable small, crescent-&#13;
shaped bodies may be seen.&#13;
These are the fruiting spores of the&#13;
fungus. Spray with Bordeaux mixture.&#13;
Pain In Back and Rheumatism&#13;
are the daily torment of thousands. To effectually&#13;
cure these troubles you must remove&#13;
the cause. Foley Kidney Pills begin&#13;
to work for you from the first dose, and exert&#13;
so direct and beneficial an action in the&#13;
kidneys and bladder that the pain and torment&#13;
of kidney trouble soon disappears.&#13;
Your Liver&#13;
Is Clogged Up&#13;
That's Why You'r* Tired—Out of Sorts&#13;
—HaY« No Appetite.&#13;
CARTER'S UTTL£&#13;
LIVER PILLS&#13;
will put you right&#13;
in a few days.&#13;
T h e y d o i their duty.&#13;
Cure Constipation,&#13;
Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headache&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE,&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
THICK, SWOLLEN GLANDS&#13;
that make a horse Wheeze,&#13;
Roar, have Thick Wind&#13;
or Choke-down, can be&#13;
reduced with&#13;
A B S O R B I N E&#13;
also any Bunch or Swelling. N o blister, no&#13;
hair gone, and horse kept at work. Concentrated—&#13;
only a few drops required at an&#13;
application. $2 per bottle delivered.&#13;
Book 3 K free.&#13;
ABSORBINE, JR.,antiseptic liniment for mankind,&#13;
reduces Cysts, Wens, Painful, Knotted&#13;
Varicose Veins, Ulcers. $1 and $2 a bottle at&#13;
dealers or delivered. Book "Evidence" free.&#13;
W.F.YOUNG. P. D. F.. 310TempliSt .Springfield, Mast.&#13;
Pettits Eve Salve TONIC&#13;
FOR EYES&#13;
I&gt; A «4/ lyfTDCl I pay hlehnr prices than any&#13;
M\J\ JJ r t l l J other dealer In HutTulo. Writa&#13;
J, I . GJLEED, DEFT. 3, K. ALKOIIA, N. Y,&#13;
Higher Praise.&#13;
"Mabel, you are simply perfect."&#13;
"That isn't much of a compliment,&#13;
Henry. George tells me I'm pluperfect."—&#13;
Kansas City Journal.&#13;
Confession.&#13;
Husband (sarcastically)—Oh, I suppose&#13;
you never did a foolish thing in&#13;
your life.&#13;
Wife (bitterly)—Oh, yes I did. 1&#13;
married you.&#13;
Gallantry.&#13;
Two miners were returning from a&#13;
lecture at the village institute when&#13;
one of them after a thoughtful pause,&#13;
remarked: "Say, Bill, 1 don't see the&#13;
necessity o' bringing chaps frae London&#13;
to teach us about manners in the&#13;
'ome. We ain't so bad as that feller&#13;
made out!" "O* course, we ain't!"&#13;
replied Bill. "Not by a long way,"&#13;
went on the flrBt. "I never swears before&#13;
my wife—" "No more don't I!"&#13;
put in Bill. "I alius sez — ladies&#13;
fust! That's me."—Cardiff Western&#13;
Mail.&#13;
Keep the Garden Working.&#13;
Allow no ground In the garden to He&#13;
Idle. At soon aa one crop haa been&#13;
picked, clear up the ground and plant&#13;
another.&#13;
Back-Fired.&#13;
A sharp-tongued married woman&#13;
who had been openly commiserating&#13;
an elderly spinster on her loveless&#13;
state went on to talk volubly about&#13;
her husband's health.&#13;
"Poor man, he has been a great sufferer&#13;
for fifteen years," she remarked.&#13;
"I can quite believe that, dear," said&#13;
the spinster, still smarting under the&#13;
married woman's sarcastic "sympathy."&#13;
"Let me see, it is Just fifteen&#13;
years since you married him, is it&#13;
not?"&#13;
Toasted to a&#13;
Golden Brown!&#13;
Sounds "smacking good,'*&#13;
doesn't it?&#13;
That's&#13;
Post&#13;
Toasties&#13;
Tender thin bits of the best&#13;
parts of Indian Corn, perfectly&#13;
c o o k e d at the factory, and&#13;
ready to eat direct from the&#13;
p a c k a g e — fresh, crisp and&#13;
clean.&#13;
T h e r e ' s a d e l i c a t e sweetness&#13;
a b o u t "Toasties*' that&#13;
make them the favorite flaked&#13;
cereal at thousands of breakfast&#13;
tables daily.&#13;
Post T o a s t i e s with cream&#13;
and a sprinkling of sugar—&#13;
Delicious&#13;
Wholesome&#13;
Easy to serve&#13;
Sold by Grocers everywhew&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
If You Have a&#13;
Printing Want&#13;
WE WANT TO KNOW&#13;
WHAT IT IS&#13;
Putting; out good printing&#13;
U oar business, and when&#13;
wo My good printing we&#13;
don't mean fair, but the&#13;
best obtainable. If yon&#13;
are&#13;
at&#13;
"from Missouri" give&#13;
a 'trial and we will&#13;
Show You&#13;
St a t e o f M i c h i g a n , the probate court for&#13;
thecounty of Livingston,- At a session of said&#13;
(Jourt, held lit the I'robate Office in the Villas* of&#13;
Howell in said county on the 10th day of November&#13;
A. D. 1918. Present, Hon- Eugene A. Stowe&#13;
Judge of Probate. In the matter of the estate of&#13;
ALBERT A. 8EYMOURE, Deceased&#13;
Willis L. Lyons having filed in snid court bis&#13;
final account »s administrator of said estate, and&#13;
his petition praying for the allowance thereof.&#13;
It is ordered that tbe 6th day of December, A&#13;
D. 1913 at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at said probate&#13;
office, be and is hereby appointed lor&#13;
examining and allowing said account.&#13;
it la further ordered that public notice thereol&#13;
be yiven by publication of a copy of tnia order&#13;
for three Bucceaaive weeks previous to said day of&#13;
hearing, in the PIKCKNKY DISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated in said county. 48t3&#13;
EUGENE A. STOWE&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
Local News&#13;
The Huuual meeting of tbe&#13;
Coag'l. church will occur Saturday&#13;
November 15th, beginning at two&#13;
o'clock.&#13;
Owiuy to the impassible condition&#13;
of the roads, the mail carriers&#13;
took a forced vacation Monday,&#13;
KO our correspondence failed&#13;
to reach us in time for publica-j&#13;
tion in this week's issue.&#13;
A social will be held at the&#13;
home of Fred Hemmiugway, Friday&#13;
November 21, under the&#13;
auspices of the '-Eate Fideles":&#13;
class of the M. E . Sunday School.&#13;
Program and full particulars will&#13;
be published later.&#13;
TELLS PRESENCE OF POISON&#13;
Pharmacologist of Southern University&#13;
Reports Invention of Valuable&#13;
Appliance.&#13;
if&#13;
GOING TOiBUY A PIANO&#13;
OR SEWING MACHINE&#13;
YES?&#13;
SEE L. R. WILLIAMS.&#13;
GKKGORY&#13;
ffca^He saves you money on high&#13;
grade piano*.&#13;
Trick May Earn Monument.&#13;
Pioneer residents have inaugurated&#13;
a movement to have a tablet placed&#13;
in the new state capitol of Minnesota&#13;
in memory of Joseph Rolette, who, in&#13;
the early days saved the prestige of&#13;
St. Paul. By act of legislature the&#13;
capital of Minnesota was Temoved&#13;
from St. Paul to the rival town of S t&#13;
Peter, but the bill never was signed&#13;
by the governor, for, during the last&#13;
ten dayB of the session the bill was&#13;
in custody of a committee of which&#13;
"Joe" Rolette was a member, and he&#13;
disappeared with the bill In his pocket&#13;
His disappearance with the bill rendered&#13;
the act t-' the fegtelatur* void.&#13;
Don't Forget the Waiter. j&#13;
"Well, our vacation is over. We&#13;
leave for home today."&#13;
"I see the waiter has decorated our j&#13;
table with rosemary."&#13;
"Rosemary, eh? Ah, yes; that's for&#13;
remembrance." !&#13;
By means of an appliance devised&#13;
by Prof. W. W. Abel, head of the department&#13;
of pharmacology of the&#13;
Johns Hopkins university, it has been&#13;
made possible, it is declared, to determine&#13;
whether persons thought to be&#13;
suffering from the effects of poisons&#13;
are really under the influence of drugs,&#13;
and to be able to discover almost immediately&#13;
the poison they have taken.&#13;
The contrivance consists of a series&#13;
of coils and tubes which are submerged&#13;
in saline solution and Its action&#13;
is said to be the eame as that of&#13;
the kidney.&#13;
In making the test for poison it is&#13;
necessary to have the blood stream&#13;
flow through the tubes. This is done&#13;
by connecting the tubes with the Jugular&#13;
vein and the carotid artery.&#13;
The- blood passes through the tubes,&#13;
which are then immersed in a pan containing&#13;
a warm solution. By meanB of&#13;
a porous substance connecting the&#13;
glass tubes the foreign and poisonous&#13;
substances in the blood filter through&#13;
into the saline solution.&#13;
The solution being of the same temperature&#13;
aad consistency as the lymph |&#13;
in the blood, the natural ingredients&#13;
which make up the blood are not taken&#13;
up by the solution of salt.&#13;
After allowing the blood to flow&#13;
through the tubes for a given time a&#13;
specimen of the saline solution is taken,&#13;
and then it is but a simple matter&#13;
of chemical analysis to find what poison&#13;
or foreign substance is present in&#13;
the system of the patient&#13;
Measurement.&#13;
"Your wife thinks a lot of yOU,&#13;
doesn't she?"&#13;
"I suppose I might say so," replied&#13;
Mr. Meekton. "When she starts in to&#13;
tell me what she thinks of rn^e it takes&#13;
a long time."&#13;
Tha Veil of the F u ; jro.&#13;
Ir. the Chicago sclumis u lx&gt;y r*&#13;
hi set! to SH\V, thinking it below tl;&lt;.&#13;
dignity of a lu^n of ten years.&#13;
"Why." said the teacher, "Geoivt&#13;
Washington did Ids own sewing in tlu!&#13;
wars, and do you think you are bettet&#13;
than Geocge Washington?"&#13;
"I don't know." replied the boy st-ii&#13;
ously. "Only time can tell tuut."-Lu&#13;
dies' Home Journal.&#13;
You Have Neighbors&#13;
Who Use&#13;
Home-made/Acetylene&#13;
Lighting and Cooking&#13;
'For the asking you can have the name and the address of&#13;
the nearest one. Then you can. if you wish, make an evening&#13;
call and get the facts first hand.&#13;
All told v,c have sold jno less than six thousand Pilot&#13;
Acetylene Plants to the people in your state.&#13;
These people are our friends. Anyone of them will be&#13;
proud to show you just how these Pilot plants work—how they&#13;
automatically mix the gas producing stone. Union Carbide, *&#13;
with plain water. Hov/ they make just enough Acety- •"&#13;
lene to keep the lights and the range going—no snore,'&#13;
no less.&#13;
They will show you also how&#13;
the Pilot starts making this gas&#13;
when the lights are turned on&#13;
—and stops when the lights are&#13;
turned off. How this gas is piped&#13;
to hendsome light fixtures in&#13;
every room in the house—as&#13;
well as to b g, round safety&#13;
lights in all barns and outl&#13;
e t * . J _ I&#13;
it women folks ^ ¾ ½ homes will faeTglad to show you&#13;
what a bOOfl UOAcetyleAe range it—how it furnishes&#13;
on tap that can be regulated with a little valve - how&#13;
away with handling wood, coal and ashes and makes&#13;
yiritebcn work easy. ( ' * ' * *&#13;
Won eannot' judge 'the PilcV^cetyJene* Light Plant by&#13;
•jtigt you have seen and heard of other Acetylene plants.&#13;
- AYSU must see a Pilot plant and talk to the people k works&#13;
jar.,,Then you wilt have a clearer undemandfaf as to why&#13;
HOME MADE&#13;
7*&gt;r LIGHTING- jl*&#13;
over two hundred^thousand country familic6 no.v&#13;
made Acetylene* indispensable.&#13;
* - • • ^ . - . . _ 5, The Pilot makes Acetylene the right way—makes it so well&#13;
. that it provides country homes with even a better light and&#13;
' fuel than the gas which twenty million city people are enjoying-&#13;
*" __&#13;
" After you have inspected a Pilot plant we will leave it to&#13;
you to say whether it doesn't make the whitest, the most&#13;
brilliant, and most beautiful light you have ever seen.&#13;
We will leave it to you also to say whether or not stationary&#13;
Acetylene fixtures are not much safer than oil lamps, which&#13;
can be tipped over.&#13;
As a matter of fact—only twcTacciderits have beencharged&#13;
to the missuse and abuse of Pilot Acetylene, while ten thousand&#13;
accidents have been charged to jail illuminanta_jn a&#13;
single year. * '"" • '"*"&#13;
j[ That is why the Oxweld Company .'makers "of Pilot Light&#13;
machines, has grown tojbe the largest concern of its kind in&#13;
. the world.&#13;
j CorapletePHot LightPlantTmay be purer wed fronTdealers&#13;
in Oxweld Acetylene Company products. . These&#13;
dealers are permanently located in some three thou*&#13;
sand different towns. '&#13;
t In this district the undersign-'1&#13;
ed distributors of Pilot Plants&#13;
will be glad to mail you t \c&#13;
Oxweld Company's free adver-v&#13;
tising books, telling the whole&#13;
Acetylene story—with full details&#13;
about the installation &gt;f&#13;
the Pilot, its cost, economies,&#13;
etc Just address a postal to—&gt;J&#13;
ACETYLENE&#13;
COOKIHOR.&#13;
B. WRIGHT&#13;
15* Regular Street, DETROIT, MICH.&#13;
Saleesua&#13;
OTWELD ACETYLENE GO.&#13;
CHICAGO&#13;
fFfhSw^kl&#13;
T;O GET&#13;
j Thanksgiving&#13;
Sits and&#13;
1Overc oats 5 and Dancer's is the&#13;
} Popular Place, Now-&#13;
4 adays i A If you would see our loug&#13;
£ line of Overcoats aud our&#13;
j rack after rack of WiDter&#13;
2 Suits you would feel that&#13;
i truly this was the place to&#13;
choose from.&#13;
Copyright. 191».&#13;
\ $10,12.50,15,16.50&#13;
\ $18., 2 0 .&#13;
| Jfr. &lt;/. DANCER &amp; COMPANY]&#13;
A Stockbridge, Mich. |&#13;
J IST'Car Fare Paid on $15. Purchases or More. J&#13;
WHY NOT WEDLOCK'S BOND?&#13;
8oclal 8ervlce Expert Laments the&#13;
Faot That 80 Many of the People&#13;
Remain Unmarried.&#13;
Why are 89 out of every v100 men&#13;
without wives? A social service expert&#13;
puts the question. It Is calculated&#13;
to provoke debate at this season.&#13;
It seems there are 17,000,000 unmarried&#13;
persons in the United States, a&#13;
greater number than the entire population&#13;
of some nations; more than&#13;
twice that of the Dominion of Canada.&#13;
Eight millions of the unmarried are&#13;
men, about 9,000,000 women "pver fifteen&#13;
years of age." Seven and onequarter&#13;
million of the bachelors are&#13;
between twenty and forty-four years&#13;
of age. If all these women and all&#13;
these men could be brought together&#13;
by some kind of matrimonial agency&#13;
there would be only a small number&#13;
of women left outside of the bounds of&#13;
wedlock.&#13;
The unattached are warned that&#13;
married persons of both sexes have&#13;
the greater life expectancy, according&#13;
to insurance statistics and other mortality&#13;
records. It is too much to expect&#13;
that alarm over this will provoke&#13;
a matrimonial stampede. Like most&#13;
-statistics, these^ should notrfte awaF&#13;
lowed whole. Is It not probable that&#13;
many persons are single because they&#13;
are sickly? One difficulty about Joining&#13;
all these maids, bachelors, widows&#13;
and widowers, of course, Is that the&#13;
excess, respectively, is not In the&#13;
same place. The woman suffrage debate&#13;
reminds us that in some states&#13;
the men outnumber the women, while&#13;
in some the women are in equal or&#13;
even greater numbers. The women&#13;
obtain the vote easier where they are&#13;
in the minority.—Providence Journal&#13;
Herb Farming.&#13;
The growing of medicinal herbs la&#13;
a very considerables-Industry in Eng«&#13;
land. Throughout the counties of&#13;
Surrey, Suffolk, Hertfordshire, and&#13;
Norfolk there are many large herb&#13;
farms. Among the herbB chiefly&#13;
grown are rue, wormwood, comfrey,&#13;
horehound, peppermint, rosemary, and&#13;
lavender. The English oils of lavender&#13;
and peppermint are particularly&#13;
famous, bringing from two to five&#13;
times as much as the same oils pro-!&#13;
duced in other countries. Of late yean j&#13;
I the street sale of little bunches of j&#13;
I fresh lavender, particularly in Lon- j&#13;
{ don, has consumed a considerable part I&#13;
i of the annual supply. But the lncreaa- '&#13;
Ing demand has led to larger production,&#13;
and It is reported that this year&#13;
there will be an ample crop and tbe&#13;
distillers' hearts will be made glaA—&#13;
New York Evening Post&#13;
Whole Family Benefited&#13;
By Wonderful Remedy&#13;
There are many little things to&#13;
annoy us, under present conditions&#13;
of life. The hurry, hard work,&#13;
noise and strain all tell on us and&#13;
tend to provoke nervousness and&#13;
irritability.. We are frequently so&#13;
worn out we can neither eat, sleep&#13;
nor work with any comfort. We&#13;
are out of line with ourselves and&#13;
others as well.&#13;
A good thing to do under such&#13;
circumstances is to take something&#13;
like -&#13;
Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills&#13;
to relieve the strain on the nerves.&#13;
Mrs. J. B. Hartsfield, 82 Plum St,&#13;
Atlanta Ga., writes:&#13;
"I have on several ocoasions been&#13;
vastly relieved by the use ef your medicines,&#13;
especially the Anti-Pain Pills,&#13;
which £ keep constantly on hand for&#13;
the use of myself, husband and two&#13;
sons. Nothing in the world equals them&#13;
as a headache remedy. Often X am&#13;
enabled by the use of one or two of&#13;
the Pills to continue my housework&#13;
when otherwise I would be In bed. My&#13;
feisb&amp;Rd Joins me in my praise of the&#13;
Anti-Pain Pills and Nervine."&#13;
Dr. Mile.* Pilb&#13;
are relied upon to relieve paint&#13;
nervousness and irritability in thousands&#13;
of households. Of proven&#13;
merit after twenty years' use, you&#13;
can have no reason for being longer&#13;
-without them. %%&#13;
At all Druggists, 29 doses 25 cents.&#13;
MILES MEDICAL 0 0 . , Elkhart, In*&#13;
60 Y E A R *&#13;
BXPRRIENCK&#13;
TRADC MARKS&#13;
OcglONS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS &amp;e&#13;
QnAt.ciykwl?n eii*seoTnir&lt;Mimhfif onu srk eotpcihn iaonnd f dreesec wrihpetitohne ra nvs&gt;i mvciition 13 probably piuei&#13;
tton* strictly couddflntl&amp;t. 1..&#13;
tent free Otdost agency for&#13;
rpPm&amp;oiU nnotit ictaeU, ov. ui tftiboruotu ' "&#13;
IBSOOKOI&#13;
Young men—See Dancer's Norfolk&#13;
Btiits at 113., 115., 116.50. adv.&#13;
« •&#13;
Wor relief from rheumatic pains tsf5&#13;
Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills, Do s e t&#13;
needlessly. fAdvertlsement.1&#13;
onRtotatmencau&#13;
ncngha nMre.a imra th£e Co. meet" Scientific Jfitterkm sAo lhuntniodns oomf d4lUri ?-' vec.- &lt;;r«ttri»tit&lt;twwi hwteoenkultyf., TLunrripnc*s,t renr; four mor:'..).*, | i £k&gt;l4by*u uewadei Alters*!&#13;
- - ^ . . . *&#13;
$8.&#13;
Cf&#13;
ft*'.'&#13;
- T T&#13;
Grand Trunk TImt Table&#13;
For the conreniepce of our readers&#13;
Trains East Trains West.&#13;
Ho. 28—A :39 a. m. No. 27—10:23 a. m,&#13;
No. 80—4:49 p . m. N o . 29—7:12 p. m.&#13;
"i-J /Mttifi&#13;
t &amp; 3</text>
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