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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>ney, Livingston County, Michigan, T h u r s d a y , May 14, 1914 No. 20&#13;
Fire Wipes Out&#13;
Three Buildings&#13;
Blacksmith S h o p Owned by B. L y n c h , Shoe S h o p Owned&#13;
by Wra. Darrow and t h e D u n n i n g Building Occupied&#13;
by Dr. W. T . W r i g h t Burned to t h e G r o u n d&#13;
46 Peg O' My Heart"&#13;
A Pour A c t Drama&#13;
Old Landmarks Destroyed&#13;
b a s t Thursday Night&#13;
No Insurance Was Carried on the Lynch and Darrow&#13;
P r o p e r t y . T h e D u n n i n g Building and W a r e House&#13;
of the Teeple Hardware Co. Fully Covered&#13;
' A&#13;
Thursday night about 8:30 the&#13;
citizens of Pluckney were startled&#13;
by an alarm of "Fire*'. Wooden&#13;
buildings owned by Will Donning,&#13;
Barney Lynch and William Darrow&#13;
were totally destroyed by fire,&#13;
although the contents were saved.&#13;
It took hard and persistent fighting&#13;
on the part of the men to save&#13;
the other buildings near there.&#13;
Had it not been for the recent&#13;
heavy rains and the low wind, the&#13;
whole street would have been&#13;
•wallowel up in flames.&#13;
Fire is always a devastating&#13;
menace to any town, but when the&#13;
demon strikes a village like Pinckney&#13;
which has ne fire protection&#13;
whatsoever, it should be a lesson&#13;
to its citizens to sit up ^and take&#13;
notice. While weather conditions&#13;
chanced to be favorable this time&#13;
at Some other season of the year&#13;
they might be quite the reverse.&#13;
Pinckney* boasts of absolutely&#13;
nothing, no bucket brigade, no&#13;
chemical engine, not one thing to&#13;
save the property which have taken&#13;
the best years of a number of&#13;
our citizens lives to build. The&#13;
consequences would have been as&#13;
bad had the fire started on Main&#13;
street. In, but a short spice of&#13;
time, Pinckney, like her sister&#13;
village, Perry, would have been&#13;
swept off the map.&#13;
It was only by valiant work that&#13;
the Pinckney Hotel and Teeple's&#13;
brick store-room wera saved. The&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co. had just&#13;
purchased a car-load of cement&#13;
*nd had the flames reached this&#13;
bnildiug in which the cement was&#13;
stored the loss would indeed have&#13;
been great. Dunning's large barn&#13;
just back of the site of the fire,&#13;
was kept from tho flames by saturating&#13;
the roof with* pail atfer&#13;
pail of water right in the face of&#13;
danger from "the flying sparks.&#13;
Men worked when their faces and&#13;
bands were fairly blistering from&#13;
the intensity of the heat from the&#13;
flames.&#13;
It is to be hoped that some&#13;
means will be taken by which adequate&#13;
firti protection may be had&#13;
in case of another conflagration&#13;
like the one Thursday eight We&#13;
do not know when soon a Are&#13;
might recur and H would be well&#13;
to be in readiness. It is up to our&#13;
citizens to get busy. Perry learned&#13;
her lesson from her fire end&#13;
now poetesses ample fire protection.&#13;
We sfeoujd learu tjjat lesson&#13;
too, for experience i* always and&#13;
ever wiU be a 4ear teeoaer.&#13;
Both Mr. Dunning and the&#13;
Teeple Hwd. Company earned&#13;
insurance., but Mr/ Darrow and&#13;
Mr. Lynch were withouUnsuranoe&#13;
to' make ipr. jfc£ ****,^ par* of&#13;
Greetings to the Old&#13;
Boys and Girls&#13;
T h e L i t t l e Country T o w n&#13;
The trees are all in blossom in the little&#13;
country town;&#13;
The petals, white and crimeon, are serenely&#13;
drifting down,&#13;
The people greet their neighbors in the&#13;
good old fashioned style,&#13;
And have time to let contentment fill their&#13;
breasts a little while;&#13;
There are no contending thousands, no&#13;
complaints of selfish wrongs,&#13;
There is no restraint of freedom and no&#13;
frightful clang of gongs.&#13;
There is absence of the turmoil and the&#13;
clash of claw with elifla&#13;
That disturb the roaring city where the&#13;
anxious millions mass;&#13;
Every garden is an Eden that growB fairer&#13;
day by day,&#13;
There are no mad monsters crushing those&#13;
who linger in the way;&#13;
Happy children play, untroubled by a&#13;
greedy master's frown,&#13;
And there still is faith and friendship in&#13;
the little country town.&#13;
(Selected by Leah H. Sigler)&#13;
Will Be Presented by the Seniors of the Howell high school&#13;
under auspices of t h e Sophomores of t h e Pincknev high&#13;
school at the&#13;
Pinckney Opera House&#13;
Friday Evening, May 22, 1914&#13;
Admission, 15 and 25 cents&#13;
Reserved seats on sale a t Meyer's D r u g Store&#13;
Dance Following t h e Play&#13;
Miss Lillian Given's Six-Piece Orchestra of A n n Arbor&#13;
will furnish music for both Play and Dance.&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
Pasture to Let for Cattle.&#13;
18t3* Bert Gardner, Pinckney.&#13;
Registered Holutein Bull for service.&#13;
18t3* V. G. Dinkel, Pinckney.&#13;
FOR SALE—Good team of 6 and 7 year&#13;
old Geldings. Either cash or time.&#13;
17t3 Claude Reason, Piuckaty&#13;
FOR RENT—Rooms over Monk's Store.&#13;
Inquire of Mrs. J. Wilcox, Pinckney.&#13;
2Gt3*&#13;
FOR SALE—Three brood sows withrpigs.&#13;
Louie Sherwin, 5 miles south and east of&#13;
Pincknev on the Huron River road. 23t3*&#13;
Obituary&#13;
Frank H. Mo ran A respected&#13;
citizen of this place passed away&#13;
suddenly at his home here Wednesday&#13;
night, May 6,1914.&#13;
The deceased was born February&#13;
10, 1856 at Syracuse, N. Y.,&#13;
and with the exception of a few&#13;
years, in his early childhood, his&#13;
entire life was spent in this place.&#13;
He is survived bjTsix children,&#13;
Charles F., of Cincinnati, Ohio,&#13;
Mrs. M. B. Brady of Howell, Mrs.&#13;
Claude Danforth of Flint, Doris&#13;
E,, of Grand Rapids and LaBne&#13;
of Howell, also one sister, Mrs.&#13;
Frank Tiplady, and a brother,&#13;
William T. Moran both of this&#13;
place.&#13;
Funeral services were held from&#13;
the St. Mary's church Saturday at&#13;
10:80 o'clock, Bev. Fr. Coyle&#13;
officiating.&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Will Caskey and wife visited at&#13;
the home of W. Brogan of Brighton&#13;
Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
Mary Scully of Detroit visited&#13;
friends herd the last of the week.&#13;
M. J. Roche spent part of last&#13;
week with Munith and Jackson&#13;
friends.&#13;
The Misses Clare and Gefmaine&#13;
Ledwidge and Mary Scully were&#13;
entertained at G. M. Greiuer's&#13;
Saturday,&#13;
Jas. Marble and wife entertained&#13;
Lansing relatives Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Greiner attended&#13;
the funeral of his sister,&#13;
Mrs. Michael Brennan, who was&#13;
buried in Mt. Clemens Thursday.&#13;
Mrs, Truman Wainwright of&#13;
Iosco is visiting her daughter,&#13;
Mrs. Will Casbig\&#13;
Cbas. Frost and family visited&#13;
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Schackleton&#13;
of Howell, Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. R. M. Ledwidge spent part&#13;
of last week with Jackson relatives&#13;
and attonde 1 the play, Ben&#13;
Hur.&#13;
Mrs. Florence Gardner o f&#13;
Stock bridge visited her parents,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Sprout the&#13;
j last of the week.&#13;
Loretta and Gertrude Clinton&#13;
of Pinckney were guests of Muriel&#13;
McClear Friday and Saturday.&#13;
The shadow social given at the&#13;
home of Wm. Ledwidge Friday&#13;
night was largely attended. A fine&#13;
program consisting of musical selections,&#13;
vocal numbers and recitations&#13;
were rendered before the&#13;
shadows were sold. Later, supper,&#13;
was served. Receipts, $20.&#13;
WANTED—Early and late seed potatoes.&#13;
17t3* Wm. Schrolzberger, Pinckney&#13;
FOR SALE—Horses ranging from 3 to 10&#13;
years. Inquire of C. E. Baughn, Portage&#13;
Lake. 19t3*&#13;
FOR SALE—Four brood sows, $20. each.&#13;
19t4* Will White, Howell&#13;
FOR SALE—White Cap Yellow Dent Seed&#13;
Corn. 19t3 J. C. Dinkel, Pinckney&#13;
i i i • • ii&#13;
FARM FOR SALE OR RENT—38 acres&#13;
on road just north of the Kice farm on&#13;
Section 7. James A. Gallagher, 2569&#13;
West Grand Blvd., Detroit, Mich. 19tf&#13;
B Y B R Y W O M A N&#13;
SHOULD&#13;
BARN re*&#13;
W B &amp; K&#13;
i i j r&#13;
8th Grade Examination&#13;
Toe county eighth grade examination&#13;
will be held May 14-15, at&#13;
the following places: Howell,&#13;
Brighton, Gregory, Pinckney, Oak&#13;
Grove, Fowlerville, Hamburg and&#13;
flartland. Work will begin at&#13;
8:30 standard time. Bring blue&#13;
books. Examinations to select a&#13;
boy to represent the county at the&#13;
State Fair will be held on the afternoon&#13;
of May 15.&#13;
Hugh G. Aldrich,&#13;
1 Com'r. of Schools.&#13;
If your not regular shape—read&#13;
Dancer's adv. this week. I t may&#13;
interest yon if you care about saving&#13;
a few dollars on each suit you&#13;
buy. adv.&#13;
Introducing our very complete Spring line&#13;
of beautiful wool suitings, wash fabrics,&#13;
fancy wa is tings, silks, hdkfs, petticoats, etc.&#13;
Up to date N. Y. City patterns. Finest&#13;
line on the market. Dealing direct with&#13;
the mills you will find our prices low. If&#13;
others can make $10.00 to $30.00 weekly&#13;
you can also. Samples, full instruction in&#13;
neat sample case, shipped express prepaid.&#13;
No money required, Exclusive territory.&#13;
Write for particulars. Be first to apply.&#13;
Standard Dress Goods Company, 200 4th&#13;
StrBingnaiukm, N. Y.&#13;
New supply of National cookies&#13;
in stock at Monks Bros. adv.&#13;
Dancer's huge stock of spring&#13;
and summer suits, makes choosing&#13;
easy. adv.&#13;
Reserved seats are on sale at&#13;
Meyer's drug store for the play,&#13;
"Peg O' My Heart", given by the&#13;
Seniors of the Howell High&#13;
School uuder the auspices of the&#13;
P. H. S. at the Pinckney opera&#13;
house Friday evening, May 22.&#13;
About thirty friends and neighbors&#13;
gathered at the home of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. F. H. Johnson at Portage&#13;
Lake last Saturday evening,&#13;
the occasion being a shower for&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cook. Ice&#13;
cream and cake were served and a&#13;
good time reported by all.&#13;
Card of Thanks&#13;
We wish to acknowledge our&#13;
thanks to all our friends for their&#13;
kindness during the death and&#13;
burial of onr fattrer^rank Moran.&#13;
The Children.&#13;
.&lt;:* **!&#13;
$100. Reward&#13;
One hundred dotters reward for&#13;
information leading to the arrest&#13;
sod codvitrtioo of the part* or&#13;
parties destroying tho rnnage^on&#13;
the new bridge sooth of Thomas&#13;
Clark's, *r for the damage or deetnraUoo&#13;
of any property belong,&#13;
in* to the Township&#13;
Jemes Smith,&#13;
of Pjghiain.&#13;
* k . .JiighwayOomi&#13;
MURPHY &amp; J A C K S O N&#13;
JUST RECEIVED&#13;
Latest patterns in Curtain Scrims&#13;
A complete line Mens, Ladles, Misses&#13;
and Childrens Summer Underwear&#13;
Sample line of Ladies Muslin Underwear,&#13;
Gowns, Slips, Skirts and Corset&#13;
Covers at Wholesale Prices for 1 week&#13;
only&#13;
Our Grocer}' Specials For Cash makes it exflgnsive for you to trade elsewhere&#13;
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/&#13;
CHAPTER I.&#13;
Daniel Slade eat reading the evening&#13;
newspaper in the handsomely appointed&#13;
library of his spacious home. To&#13;
all intents he was a man at peace with&#13;
the world. He had money and power.&#13;
He had advanced from a penniless&#13;
miner to a millionaire figure In the&#13;
business world. At fifty his were the&#13;
fruits of a well-spent, energetic life.&#13;
Handsome and Immaculate In his perfectly&#13;
tailored evening clothes, he fitted&#13;
Into the beautiful room with Its&#13;
rich tapestries and oriental rugs with&#13;
all the ease and naturalness of a man&#13;
born to culture and wealth.&#13;
Every now and then his eyes wandered&#13;
from his newspaper to the figure&#13;
of his wife sitting at the other side&#13;
of the richly carved table. The tiny,&#13;
unlmposing little woman In her badly&#13;
cut, dun-colored gown was the one Ineongruoua&#13;
detail in the room. She&#13;
was like a shabby little prairie flower&#13;
suddenly transplanted to a conservatory&#13;
where brilliant orchids and lovely&#13;
roses bloomed all about her, her faint&#13;
little fragrance overpowered by their&#13;
heavy sweetness—her delicate loveliness&#13;
completely submerged by very&#13;
contrast with the radiant beauty of&#13;
her surroundings.&#13;
To Blade's critical eyes, the dowdy&#13;
little figure, with the work basket In&#13;
her lap and her head bent over the&#13;
stocking she was contentedly darning,&#13;
was an actual eyesore. He had fitted&#13;
up a magnificent home that would&#13;
have made a perfect setting for a princess,&#13;
and his wife's appearance had&#13;
not changed a particle from the days&#13;
when they lived in a tumble-down cottage&#13;
and he worked In the mines in his&#13;
shirtsleeves. With the getting of vast&#13;
amounts of money he had acquired a&#13;
veneer of manners and tastes that at&#13;
times failed to conceal the rough and&#13;
brutal Instincts of the real man. His&#13;
social horizon was enlarging, but&#13;
within It his wife seemed to find no&#13;
as he had done? Why was she complacently&#13;
sitting there satisfied to remain&#13;
just as she had been twenty&#13;
years ago, hopelessly behind the&#13;
times?&#13;
And if she wouldn't advance—why&#13;
should he consent to be held back by&#13;
her? If she wouldn't go on with him&#13;
—he would leave her behind. The&#13;
thought and the resultant decision&#13;
had their birth suddenly but positively&#13;
In thfr man's mind. He would make&#13;
one more argument, one last appeal&#13;
If Mary wouldn't meet him half way,&#13;
Mary could stay behind with her everlasting&#13;
darning and her eternal knitting.&#13;
She could wash and cook and&#13;
etew and sew, if she liked, but she&#13;
couldn't do it In his mansion.&#13;
But Daniel Slade was no more uncomfortable&#13;
at having her there than&#13;
Mary Slade was at being obliged to&#13;
live in this great, elegant bouse, with&#13;
Its crowds of servants and its routine,&#13;
absolutely foreign and well-nigh hateful&#13;
to her. She knew she didn't fit&#13;
into her surroundings. She realized&#13;
her own inharmony. Her attempts to&#13;
look natural and feel comfortable&#13;
were pathetic. She felt lost without&#13;
the task of overseeing the Monday's&#13;
washing. She was heart-broken because&#13;
she couldn't personally superintend&#13;
the making of Dan's coffee. Her&#13;
life was Incomplete because a hired&#13;
cook made the bread that was served&#13;
on the table and because Dan never&#13;
seemed to miss the evenly brown&#13;
loaves that had been her especial&#13;
pride In the old days.&#13;
Mary Slade was as commonplace as&#13;
a cup of boiled tea. She was a plain,&#13;
ordinary, everyday woman, who loved&#13;
a simple, unpretentious life, with the&#13;
neighbors dropping in for a word or&#13;
two, exchanging recipes for muffins&#13;
and debating the proper way to season&#13;
a stew.&#13;
There was neither charm nor comfort&#13;
for her In the vista of rooms opening&#13;
out from the spacious library. The&#13;
from her hands, leaned forward eagerly&#13;
toward the light and frowned&#13;
as be read:&#13;
'•Should Daniel S. Blade, the exminer,&#13;
ex-town marshal, ex-sheriff, ex-&#13;
United States marshal, ex-land boomer&#13;
and multimillionaire, arrive, it will be&#13;
interesting to see the governor's lady&#13;
dusting the gubernatorial chair—probably&#13;
the only occupation congenial to&#13;
this kind-hearted and plain little&#13;
woman."&#13;
"Dusting the gubernatorial chair,"&#13;
Slade repeated mockingly, cut to the&#13;
quick by this public allusion to his&#13;
wife's plainness and lack of social&#13;
graces.&#13;
That simple little phrase, stinging&#13;
as it was brief, was as a match flame&#13;
to dry timber. It was all that was&#13;
necessary to bring the hot rage surging&#13;
through him to the boiling point&#13;
The sweetness of the little woman's&#13;
expression, the tenderness of her eyes&#13;
whenever they rested upon him, the&#13;
plaintive softness of her voice meant&#13;
nothing to him then. Through angry&#13;
eyes he saw only the lack of smartness&#13;
In her somber brown dress, only&#13;
the note of absurdity she struck amid&#13;
the exquUite surroundings of the&#13;
room he had furnished for her. He&#13;
thought of nothing but the sorry spectacle&#13;
she would make at a brilliant&#13;
dinner or smart function where beautiful&#13;
women in fashionable chiffons&#13;
chatted freely and easily of men and&#13;
things in the progress of the nation.&#13;
"This is some of Wesley Merrttt's&#13;
tin-horn tooting writing," growled&#13;
Slade. "D n his dirty work!"&#13;
As her husband muttered to himself,&#13;
Mary had calmly resumed her&#13;
endless mending of socks, long years&#13;
place. He wanted, beyond this and brocaded chairs were straight and&#13;
everything, to climb the political tree | a W t rock. They were high-posted&#13;
and pick the fruits thereof. His wife&#13;
seemed not to know that there was&#13;
such a thing as a political tree to&#13;
climb. With herself, her husband and&#13;
her work she was contented and&#13;
happy.&#13;
The wives of other men of his position&#13;
were social queens noted for&#13;
their beautiful gowns, their entertaining&#13;
and their clever wit He alone&#13;
^ r * * X , ••'".••&#13;
^ - . - / ^ - v ; • ; - ' • •&#13;
Was a Shabby Little Pralrfe&#13;
Ptewer Transplanted to a Conservator/.&#13;
shackled to a woman ha would&#13;
have b#sn ashamed to Introduce to&#13;
his friends. Only he was tied to a&#13;
wife he could not force either by&#13;
pleading, or argument to enter into&#13;
the Ufa which meant so much to him.&#13;
Tonight as he rehearsed in his&#13;
snind his many unsuccessful efforts to&#13;
EasJcaJfary^sdvaate and take an interest&#13;
to Ma life as H was now, rebellion&#13;
and stilted compared to her own low&#13;
seated little rocker in the cottage.&#13;
When she Bat back In them, stiffly&#13;
and awkwardly, her feet didn't even&#13;
reach the floor, but. dangled restlessly&#13;
above the priceless rug that was one&#13;
of her husband's newest purchases.&#13;
All big crises in life are the results&#13;
of trifles. It took the merest&#13;
incident to crystallize Slade's thought&#13;
into action. Mary had picked up a&#13;
portion of the paper after it had&#13;
dropped from her husband's hands.&#13;
She started to read the printed page&#13;
with all the serious importance of a&#13;
little child trying to do something&#13;
very big and grown-up.&#13;
Suddenly her eyes lighted with&#13;
pleasure and a tender smile of pride&#13;
and delight Illuminated her features.&#13;
In turning the pages she had suddenly&#13;
discovered a picture of her husband,&#13;
under which she read a simple&#13;
but significant line:&#13;
"Daniel S. Slade, a Possible Governor."&#13;
"Oh, Dan," she cried, happily. "Isn't&#13;
this a fine picture of you. I could&#13;
almost imagine it was going to speak&#13;
to me."&#13;
Then she paused a little wistfully&#13;
and doubtfully before she asked:&#13;
"But do you really want to be governor&#13;
V*&#13;
"Want to h e r&#13;
Slade caught his breath as he repeated&#13;
her question.&#13;
Want^to be—when every aim and&#13;
ambition the last few years had been&#13;
made in the one direction, toward&#13;
the one longed-for goal—political&#13;
power! Want to be—when years before&#13;
he had turned his eyes on the&#13;
governor's chair and had been battling&#13;
grimly, silently, persistently&#13;
toward that end ever since 1 Want to&#13;
be—when that was his one ambition,&#13;
the one thing he had yet to achieve!&#13;
He sighed wearily to himself. That&#13;
Mary could ask that question was the&#13;
beat proof of how irrevocably they&#13;
had drifted apart Living in the same&#13;
house with him, eating at the same&#13;
table, day after day at his side, the&#13;
little woman knew no mora of bis&#13;
real self or his ambitions than the&#13;
merest stranger.&#13;
"It's a nice story about yer, Dan."&#13;
Mary want oh, all unconscious of the&#13;
struggle going on just a few feat away&#13;
from her—the struggle between the&#13;
heart of a man that caHs out to the&#13;
companion of his yo*W, ih^-sharer dY&#13;
his Joys and struggles and the brain&#13;
husband to be happy and comfortable,&#13;
but she wanted to make him happy&#13;
and comfortable according to her own&#13;
ideas of what ought to make a man&#13;
satisfied. She had seen him rise gradually&#13;
at first and then by leaps and&#13;
bounds. Now that he had become&#13;
wealthy and successful she wanted to&#13;
decide for him that he ought to let&#13;
well enough alone. To her it seemed&#13;
foolish to bother about being governor,&#13;
absurd for him to fret about the&#13;
way she dressed and did things.&#13;
So, for awhile they sat In silence&#13;
and the fire dying down left the room&#13;
chilly, so chilly that Mary started up&#13;
to get a shawl. Halfway to the door,&#13;
she was peremptorily called back by&#13;
her husband, who, ringing for a maid,&#13;
dispatched her for the wrap, while&#13;
Mary, humiliated and with something&#13;
of the air of a martyr, went sighing&#13;
back to the big, uncomfortable chair&#13;
to resume the mending that was such&#13;
an Irritation to her husband.&#13;
"Why can't you learn to be waited&#13;
on, Mary?" her husband asked, not unkindly.&#13;
"Other women do."&#13;
"I'm slow—slow and old-fashioned/'&#13;
the woman answered, quietly, but with&#13;
an air which plainly showed that she&#13;
was perfectly satisfied with herself&#13;
and that she thought he ought to be.&#13;
"I've never been with women who&#13;
knew how to do these things. You&#13;
didn't know any euch people until&#13;
lately. I don't want to know them,"&#13;
she concluded with an engagingly confiding&#13;
smile.&#13;
"But I can't go everywhere always&#13;
alone," Slade expostulated. "A man's&#13;
wife ought to go with him and meet&#13;
the right kind of people—otherwise&#13;
he's an outsider. What do you think&#13;
I built this house for? I don't work&#13;
in the mines any longer with my&#13;
hands. I've got to use my head. I&#13;
don't drink. I don't smoke. I don't&#13;
dissipate—keep yachts and horses—or&#13;
women. A man's got to do something.&#13;
I'm going into public life, and I want&#13;
to entertain here. You'd have me sit&#13;
back and take it easy and—rust!"&#13;
"You deserve everything you've got,&#13;
Dan," answered Mrs. Slade, inconsequentially,&#13;
entirely losing the point&#13;
of his tirade. "You struggled like a&#13;
dog. Nobody knows, only you and&#13;
me. We've been through It together."&#13;
"Well," demanded Slade eagerly&#13;
and hopefully, "why don't you march&#13;
along with me then, Mary?"&#13;
His wife turned to him earnestly.&#13;
For a moment Dan Slade thought the&#13;
woman he loved was about to rise to&#13;
the occasion.&#13;
(TO BB CONTINUED.)&#13;
smrged 1a his heart Ht hadatnigglsd of m man thai demands the glory e&gt; of a slave and the reverence of A war*&#13;
F*.&#13;
yaar after year to attain Ms prescat&#13;
ataadlnj, bis present position to the&#13;
world,-aad Mary/the one loved thing&#13;
'*t hit ttf%iaUsted oh hanging Ilka*&#13;
ah*&#13;
power anoVthe fulfilment of ambition.&#13;
"But, Daa/' oaestioned Marys&#13;
gentle little voioa, " w h ^ 11»»$«pr»&#13;
nofi t a d y r ,. . .-,. &lt;*'"&gt;..&#13;
"His wife; of course/* snapped «s*d%&#13;
Wv^JW** Ho * ? . • * * h U tOOsT *JMJ' MHMf&#13;
"This Is Soma of Weelty Merrttt's&#13;
Tin-Horn Tooting Writing."&#13;
of thrift and saving making it impossible&#13;
for her to throw away even a&#13;
well-worn pair in spite of the fact&#13;
that the need for repairing had long&#13;
since passed.&#13;
Slade found himself looking at the&#13;
little woman who had been his wife&#13;
for twenty years, through lean years&#13;
and hard years, as faithful and patient&#13;
then as later, when success first&#13;
began to come his way, very much as&#13;
he might have scrutinized an entire&#13;
stranger. For a moment the tragedy&#13;
of their present state caught at his&#13;
soul, and he felt the infinite pathos&#13;
of the woman's predicament A softer&#13;
note came into his voice as he asked&#13;
slowly:&#13;
"Say, haven't you got any clothes,&#13;
Mary? Haven't you any of the things&#13;
other women wear at night—silk or&#13;
lace or ruffles or—whatever they&#13;
are?"&#13;
"Yes, I've got 'em," Mary replied,&#13;
indifferently, "but it's too cold to&#13;
wear 'em, and those silk stockings&#13;
you told me to buy—I can't wear&#13;
them, either—they tickle my toes.&#13;
Satin slippers made me uncomfortable,&#13;
and—" she finished with a bubbling&#13;
little laugh, "I guess I wasn't&#13;
made for those things, Dan, dear. I'm&#13;
too mcch of a home body."&#13;
He/ very self-satisfied complacency&#13;
nettled her questioner. The very&#13;
sight of the darning needle in her fingers&#13;
maddened him.&#13;
"Good God, Mary," he exclaimed,&#13;
"can't you ever stop this endless&#13;
mending? Havent I begged ydu, day&#13;
and night, not to mend my socks. 1&#13;
won't wear socks all over darns—&#13;
they're uncomfortable."&#13;
Just a suggestion of a smile played&#13;
around Mary Slade's sweet mouth as&#13;
she answered:&#13;
"They're yours, Dan. It's the only&#13;
thing left that I can do for you—now.&#13;
I can't bear to see strangers touch&#13;
your things—" and her voice trailed&#13;
off in a wistful sigh, a sigh which&#13;
might on any other occasion have&#13;
made its appeal to the earnest-faced&#13;
man now gating at her so grimly.&#13;
The lightness of her tone showed&#13;
how little she realised the seriousness&#13;
of the situation—how little she under-&#13;
Stood how inadequately aha was filling&#13;
her position as his wifa, She&#13;
loved her husband with the 4evotion&#13;
WORKERS AFFECTED BY WIND&#13;
shiper at a shrtne, bat, like many another&#13;
good jwomen, aha wanted to&#13;
show her affection in her own way&#13;
and not to his. Because she wanted&#13;
to do for htm with her hands, she&#13;
ta^Md a da«T ^eaY h) hlg i d ^ that&#13;
she t*» her head.;, 4fct&#13;
Bringing of Fresh Oxygen Into Cities&#13;
Has Been 8hown to Hsve Most&#13;
Beneftelsl Results.&#13;
Office and workshlp management&#13;
has, In some large businesses, been&#13;
brought practically to the point of a&#13;
science, London Answers remarks,&#13;
and lots of curious little facts have&#13;
been ascertained by those who have&#13;
studied It&#13;
Office staffs, for Instance, work best&#13;
in windy weather, as do all brain workers,&#13;
the reason being that In windy&#13;
weather the ordinary more or less&#13;
exhausted city atmosphere is driven&#13;
out by volumes of fresh oxygen.&#13;
There Is the same difference in the&#13;
quantity and quality of work done in&#13;
offices as there is between that done&#13;
In unventllated and well ventilated&#13;
workshops, and for the same reason.&#13;
No brain worker works as keenly in a&#13;
stuffy room.as in an airy one.&#13;
Damp, dull weather has little or no&#13;
effect on the output of work in offices,&#13;
but it has In workshops. Manual labor&#13;
is less efficient in damp than in&#13;
dry air, the reason is that the moist&#13;
air acts as a conductor of electricity&#13;
and drains away the natural electricity&#13;
of the body into the ground. This&#13;
does not affect the brain, but only the&#13;
muscles and the spirits.&#13;
Some Almost Small Enough.&#13;
There was a crowd of people In the&#13;
5 and 20-cent store, about quitting&#13;
time. Several customers were standing&#13;
around the table, which held the&#13;
mouse traps.&#13;
A man rushed in and not waiting for&#13;
his turn pushed his way through the&#13;
crowd and approached the sales girl.&#13;
"Please sell me a mouse trap right&#13;
away; I want to catch my car," ha&#13;
said, as he dived into his pocket for&#13;
the change.&#13;
Certain of It&#13;
Sandy was beittjr entertained at a&#13;
Soho restatL-ant l&gt;ndt&gt;n, and the dinner&#13;
consisted of rich and fanciful&#13;
dishes.&#13;
"Well," be was asked, "what will&#13;
you have nextf" t&#13;
"Ah!" replied Sandy, thoughtfully.&#13;
-I think 111 her fedigestkmP&#13;
AFTER SUFFERING&#13;
TWO LONG YEARS&#13;
Mrs. Asdm Was Restored to&#13;
Health by Lydia EL Pink,&#13;
ham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound.&#13;
Minneapolis, Mum—"After my litUa&#13;
one was born I was sick with pains hi&#13;
my sides which the)&#13;
doctors said were&#13;
ennsod by iniiamma*&#13;
tlon. I suffered a&#13;
Igreat deal every&#13;
I month and grew very&#13;
I thin. I was under the&#13;
doctor's care for two&#13;
long years without&#13;
any benefit Finally&#13;
after repeated suggestions&#13;
to try! two&#13;
got Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound. After taking&#13;
the third bottle of the Compound I&#13;
was able to do my housework and today&#13;
I am strong and healthy again. I will&#13;
answer letters if anyone wishes to know&#13;
about my case, "—Mrs. J08BPB ASBUN,&#13;
628 Monroe St,N.E., Minneapolis, Minn,&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound*&#13;
made from native roots and&#13;
herbs, contains no narcotics or harmful&#13;
drugs, and today holds the record of&#13;
being the most successful remedy wo&#13;
know for woman's ills. If you need such&#13;
a medicine why don't you try it T&#13;
If yon hare the slightest doubt&#13;
that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound will help yon,write&#13;
to Lydia EJPlnkham MedloiaeCo*&#13;
(confidential) Lynn, Mass,, for ad*&#13;
vice. Tour letter will be opened*&#13;
read and answered by a woman*&#13;
and held to strict confidence.&#13;
The Army of&#13;
Constipation&#13;
Is Growing Smaller Every Day,&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS are&#13;
responsible—they&#13;
not only give relief ^ ^ ^ ^ H P 1 DTFOfc&#13;
— they perma- .^s»«««WwlW\IL!Wl&#13;
nentlycureCe&gt;&gt;&#13;
sdsetha. Mil&#13;
lions u s e&#13;
tIhsseljm— rfotsrs, 8kk Htiinii. SdUw flam.&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRKX&#13;
Genuine moat bear Signature&#13;
m Selfishnsss In Worry.&#13;
Worry, when you come to analyse&#13;
it, is not a social vice. We worry&#13;
chiefly over those things which concern&#13;
the ME. Show me that what impends&#13;
with my bank-book Intact, my&#13;
health unimpaired, my friends and&#13;
family out, and any further tormenting&#13;
solicitude that I may feel U frankly&#13;
academic. I may still take thought&#13;
and dee preventive measure,, but I&#13;
cease, as if by magic, to worry over&#13;
the outcome. On the contrary, I can&#13;
now work for the accomplishment Of&#13;
my object better than ever before.&#13;
For most worry is not only-an arch&#13;
form of selfishness, but it is the great&#13;
Inhibitor of action. We say, "I am&#13;
worried;" we mean, "I fear for myself."—&#13;
E. P. Frost, in Atlantic. -__-&#13;
Not Quits Professional.&#13;
"Why* do they have 'tormentors' on&#13;
the stager&#13;
"I suppose one reason. Is because&#13;
they can't keep off of it the.people&#13;
who only think they can act"&#13;
Optimism is a good thing when, not&#13;
overworked. •. ,\"r:^--^- ,&#13;
v&#13;
Aseeetinf iettefe,&#13;
I adopt certain beliefs, say* H. &lt;*.&#13;
Wells, because I feel a s often quita&#13;
unanalysable rightness th'them. My&#13;
belief in them rests upon the fact that&#13;
they work tor me and satisfy a:&#13;
(of &lt; harmony and -beauty.': &lt;&#13;
HardLuslfc - •&#13;
Ouraotiofi ot.ba^Juofc ia~v*e a t&#13;
overworked 4&gt;h^a ewv4r|umstt. jofetf&#13;
• W ;&#13;
STOP THAT BACKACHE&#13;
There's nothing more ~d1scouragtng&#13;
than a constant backache. You ate lama&#13;
when you awake. Pains pierce yon When&#13;
you bead or lift It's hard to rest and&#13;
next day it's the same old story.&#13;
Pain in wa.back is nature's warning&#13;
of kidney ills NeglecT may paW^he&#13;
way to dropsy, gravel, or other s e r i w&#13;
kidaey sickness. •-.'••^rJSg&amp;l&#13;
Don't delay—begin using l W s KieV&#13;
aey Pills—the remedy that hat been&#13;
curing backache esd-ktdoey double for&#13;
over fifty years.&#13;
A^HCKO** CAM&#13;
eT - -t&#13;
•r*f&#13;
* ! * • ' , ? . .&#13;
•'•*\', &gt;V.J*"';&#13;
•Ui'l'hyifL'l&#13;
:-tf\&#13;
,'«*'&#13;
/rwr; * *&#13;
V'"7{!H • ( • • - .&#13;
» - « » 1 . . 1 - . 1 ^ &lt; - -&#13;
M aimn'M^M^hapw^i** Ml * II I »1 • • «»&#13;
»M'UJJ||-l&#13;
. /&#13;
^ - * - r&#13;
»v-.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
-1.¾&#13;
A7 MEMORrS KINDLY WILL&#13;
Brightly Burning Fire Aroeesst Sewtimental&#13;
Thoughts, Though Not of&#13;
*Leve'e Young Dream.*'&#13;
fie was sitting la frost of » brightlyburning&#13;
fire talking to her. After a&#13;
while be said thoughtful!/:&#13;
"This reminds me of a grate that I&#13;
used; to sit in |rqpt of yean ago/'&#13;
"I can well imagine how you enjoyed'those&#13;
evenings," she responded&#13;
/hopefully; "open fires give one such a&#13;
gense of home." But he went on talking&#13;
of drafts and heat and ashes and&#13;
the hygienic condition of a room ventilated&#13;
by a fireplace.&#13;
"I have never known a grate," he&#13;
continued, "like that one in the home&#13;
of the girl where I used to go so&#13;
often/'&#13;
A long silence followed, the crackling&#13;
of the fire being the only sound&#13;
in the room. It was broken at last&#13;
by him in a voice that had echoed of&#13;
a- dear memory in its tones:&#13;
"You cannot imagine how I loved&#13;
that—irate!**&#13;
Occasionally a man Is BO lacky that&#13;
he gets Just what he wants without&#13;
even wasting i t&#13;
Reactionary.&#13;
"Plerpont Morgan said that dissolving&#13;
a trust was like upecrambling an&#13;
egg. I'd say that It was more like&#13;
the young clubman in the taxicab."&#13;
The speaker was Thomas W. Lawton,&#13;
die. Boston financier. He went&#13;
on:&#13;
. MA young clubman, patting his hand&#13;
ont of a taxicab window, said to the&#13;
chauffeur:&#13;
" 'How much does she register?'&#13;
'"Eight dollars and a quarter, sir,'&#13;
the chauffeur replied.&#13;
" 'Well, back her up to a quarter,&#13;
please. That's all I've got'*'&#13;
To Restore&#13;
Good Health Theiirst thing to do is to correct&#13;
the minor ailments caused&#13;
by defective or irregular action&#13;
of the organs of digestion and&#13;
elimination. After these organs&#13;
have been put in good&#13;
working order by timely use of&#13;
BEECHAM'S&#13;
I&#13;
&gt; OtoUrptftalrtfi^lMMMtaftiWwM)&#13;
better digestion results, and then&#13;
the food really nourishes and&#13;
strengthens the body. The first&#13;
dose gives relief and sounder sleep,&#13;
quieter nerves, and improved action&#13;
of all the bodily organs are caused&#13;
by an occasional use of Beechain's&#13;
Pills. They give universal satisfaction&#13;
and in safety, sureness and&#13;
quickness of action Beecham'a Pills&#13;
/ a Have No&#13;
Known Equal&#13;
SsM evjmrwWa. h b t n i l O c ,&#13;
THa diraetiem with «r«ry&#13;
boa I N vac? vaJawale*&#13;
ABSORBINE&#13;
will reduce inflamed, swoUeo&#13;
Joints, Sprains, Bruises, Soft&#13;
Bunches; Heal* Boils, PoU&#13;
Evil, Qulttor, Fistula, or&#13;
any unhealthy sore&#13;
quickly ai it b a petUnt aadatpdc&#13;
aad icnaieMa. Pkaaaat tenet doat,&#13;
not Mister mitt baadage «r resjovc&#13;
tbe halt. *M TOO CM work&#13;
the borat. S2.00 per beftla. delbtrad.&#13;
B o o k 7 K free.&#13;
ABSORBINE, JR., ssilai iwfc Wmm for sttaUsaV&#13;
Aedscaa Paiafai, Iwalta Vda* .Gates, Was*, sasjaa,&#13;
Smlaei, 'ansa asts aaa* laasmsssttos. PrktSLOO per boots&#13;
u dealers ordeSvated. Will «11 yea awr* if rot wrlas.&#13;
i SSrTeSS*) SL, SSRSSjSSJSt SttsS&gt;&#13;
BLACK&#13;
- * -&#13;
PAISTFLTKHLOt ftg SPSS tt&#13;
j^BBBjpjppHaagaajaasjBBSjSSBBV SMS* SeatkOteaav ay •&#13;
Leaatav taat* all&#13;
teaaea. Sade et&#13;
*^&lt;»sftp«r«t&#13;
wum$tmum&#13;
ftajars aartatas&#13;
saM for tusfc&#13;
. latMaeA 4yi. s*e**lf*, ».»&#13;
Genealogy.&#13;
T o looting up my family tree."&#13;
"What are the monkeys doing?"—&#13;
Boston Transcript&#13;
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure constipation.&#13;
Constipation is the cause of&#13;
many diseases. Cure the cause and you&#13;
cure the disease. Easy to take. Adv.&#13;
The Smooth Persuader.&#13;
TMd you ever meet a real lobbyist?"&#13;
"Once," replied Senator Sorghsm.&#13;
"And dW he try to give you money?"&#13;
"No. He borrowed $20 from me."&#13;
Red Cross Ball Bfae, ranch better, goes&#13;
farther than, liquid bhte. Get from any&#13;
grocer. Adv.x&#13;
H*r Choice.&#13;
Wife—I believe the best place for a&#13;
regional bank is the stocking.&#13;
Husband—There is one thing sure;&#13;
the depositor will be well heeled.&#13;
ERUPTION ONJCHILD'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;
» p « ^ » ^ t » * * "&#13;
DR; J. D. KKLLOOaa&#13;
. * * • • • :&#13;
SBM^av^a^^k^aaaa ds^skaa sMsb^Bk. aaskdB^kJBatusfea% fa^aas^asael ^^M pBjtvtexrj for vnsj protnps rovtsar SJV&#13;
Attfim* and Hay Fs*er. As* Your&#13;
fOf H. Wrtai fat f W SAMPL*&#13;
* a tYssiJrOaV Ua» UtTJIsie.slY&#13;
IEE TO I L l SUFFERERS •sum soinr *aov flte msr.&#13;
• v ; ':':&#13;
i » . ' . r » » " . .&#13;
Putting Up a Profitable Front.&#13;
"What a pathetic face that young&#13;
fellow has! His eyes seem so reproachful."&#13;
"Yes. In the lunchroom where he&#13;
worked he pulled in more tips than&#13;
all the other waiters combined."—&#13;
Cleveland Plain Dealer.&#13;
Man With Elastic Stomach.&#13;
"Hello, old chap!" said Smithkins,&#13;
cordially. "I've been looking for you&#13;
all the afternoon, but I'm afraid I've&#13;
met you too late."&#13;
"How so?" demanded Gorjer.&#13;
"I was going to ask you out to dinner&#13;
this evening. But the last fellow&#13;
I saw was Brownson, and he told me&#13;
that you already had a date to dine&#13;
with him."&#13;
"Why—er—did he tell you that?&#13;
What time do you have dinner?"&#13;
"At seven."&#13;
"Well, then, that's all right. Brownson&#13;
doesn't dine till eight."&#13;
Sartorial Controversy.&#13;
An Atchison man said that 15 was&#13;
recently bet that Andy Ketcham possessed&#13;
more suits of clothes when he&#13;
left Atchison than Taft owned when&#13;
he left the White House. To decide&#13;
the bet Wilbur Hawk was written to&#13;
a\ the Federal Penitentiary. Mr.&#13;
Hawk wrote back that when Taft surrendered&#13;
his office to Wilson he had&#13;
35 suits of clothes. It is local his*&#13;
tory that Andy Ketcham owned 37&#13;
suits when he got the hot-foot and&#13;
deserted Atchison for more hospitable&#13;
climes.. Andy hasn't done much&#13;
since he left Atchison, and it is&#13;
said that the only clothes he now&#13;
possesses is a pair of overalls,—Atchison&#13;
Globe.&#13;
CAU8E AND EFFECT&#13;
Good Digestion Follows Right Food*&#13;
Indigestion and the attendant discomforts&#13;
of mind and body are certain&#13;
to follow continued use of improper&#13;
food.&#13;
Those who are still young and robust&#13;
are likely to overlook, the fact&#13;
that, as dropping water will wear a&#13;
stone away at last, so will the use of&#13;
heavy, greasy, rich food, finally cause&#13;
iota of appetite and indigestion.&#13;
Fortunately many are thoughtful&#13;
enough to study themselves and note&#13;
the principle of cause and effect in&#13;
their dally food. A N. 7. young woman&#13;
writes her experience thus:&#13;
"Sometime ago I had a lot of trouble&#13;
from indigestion, caused by too&#13;
rich food. I got so I waa unable to&#13;
digest scarcely anything, and medidnet&#13;
jseemed useleee.&#13;
"A friend advised me to try Grape-&#13;
Nuts food; praising it highly and ms&#13;
a last reaort, I tried i t I am thankful&#13;
to say that Grape Nata act only relieved&#13;
me of my trouble, ^hut befit me&#13;
up aofl strengthened my tfgtotire **&gt;&#13;
gans to that i; cam now eat asytbJagl&#13;
desire. But I stick so QrapeNata^&#13;
Na^o gttfa by Puatuia Oa» Battle&#13;
Creak, Mhm, Read -The Road to&#13;
WettrmV m Pk«* •^TsMte.'s a Rear&#13;
BODIES OF DEAD&#13;
BROUGHT HOME&#13;
SHIPS ARRIVE A T N EW YORK ON&#13;
SUNDAY W I T H VICTIMS OF&#13;
VERA CRUZ FIGHT.&#13;
SCENE IS VERY IMPRESSIVE&#13;
President's Private Yacht, the Mayflower,&#13;
Flying the Colors of the&#13;
Secretary of the Navy, la&#13;
In Proceasion.&#13;
New York—The nation's dead—the&#13;
17 bluejackets and marines killed at&#13;
the occupation of Vera Cruz, came&#13;
home Sunday.&#13;
No sun ever beamed brighter than&#13;
that which struck on the colors of the&#13;
funeral cruiser, the U. S. S. Montana,&#13;
as she appeared through the haze of&#13;
the Narrows, just before noon, at her&#13;
anchorage off Sandy Hook, where she&#13;
had arrived at 4:30 a. m. The first&#13;
glimpse of the Montana and her convoy&#13;
was most impressive.&#13;
At the prescribed clip of 12 knots,&#13;
the XJ. "S~. S. Wyoming led the way.&#13;
The Montana came along 10 ship&#13;
lengths away, at the same speed. The&#13;
regulation distance also separated the&#13;
president's private yacht, the Mayflower,&#13;
which was flying the flag of&#13;
the secretary of the navy.&#13;
Just as the Wyoming nosed out .of&#13;
the Narrows, the converted Portuguest&#13;
yacht, Ideal, flying the Portuguese&#13;
flags at half-mast, gave the&#13;
first salute by dipping colors. Instantly&#13;
the Wyoming responded, while&#13;
the Ideal crossed the bow to \star^&#13;
board.&#13;
Then the flag-saluting came from&#13;
ships at anchor on all sides. The caskets&#13;
were laid out in rows of four&#13;
on the deck, just abaft the bridge on&#13;
the port side. The blue-jacket guard&#13;
of honor stood at attention during&#13;
the passage through the lower bay.&#13;
The flags at the quarantine Btation&#13;
were the only flags that were not&#13;
half-masted and did not salute while&#13;
the funeral cruiser was passing.&#13;
Sunday afternoon, memorial services&#13;
for the dead were held by the&#13;
naval branch of the Y. M. C. A. Bands&#13;
from the Texas and Wyoming and a&#13;
quartette from the Clinton Avenue&#13;
Congregational church supplied the&#13;
music and a n address -wa# delivered&#13;
by Rev. J. F. Carson of the Central&#13;
Presbyterian church.&#13;
Huerta Wires a Protest.&#13;
Washington—President Wilson received&#13;
Sunday at the White House,&#13;
Ambassador Da Gama of Brazil, the&#13;
ranking member of the South American&#13;
mediators who are trying to compose&#13;
the Mexican trouble. Neither&#13;
the White House nt&gt;r the ambassador&#13;
would make any statement as to the&#13;
conference, but the. receipt later of&#13;
a dispatch from Mexico City stating&#13;
that Foreign Minister Ruiz had protested&#13;
to the mediators that several&#13;
United States torpedo boats wtih a&#13;
transport and tender had landed a&#13;
party on Lobos island, eight miles oc&#13;
the coast, and taken the lighthouse,&#13;
was believed to have been the purpose&#13;
of the ambassador's unusual visit&#13;
to the White House Sunday.&#13;
Refuse American Hospitality.&#13;
Vera Cruz—President Huerta's&#13;
three peace commissioners, Emilio&#13;
Rabasa, Augustin Rodriguez and Luis&#13;
Elguero stopped here Sunday on their&#13;
way to Niagara Falls, Ont, where the&#13;
conference between the mediators and&#13;
the representatives of the partis concerned&#13;
for a settlement of the difficulties&#13;
between the United States and&#13;
Mexico will be held. The commissioners&#13;
politely but firmly declined the offers&#13;
of hospitality made by Brig.Gen.&#13;
Funstpn, as well as Rear-Admiral&#13;
Badger's offer to give them passage&#13;
on the Monro Caatle and boarded the&#13;
steamship Kronprinzessin Cecille,&#13;
'which sailed Monday for the United&#13;
States by way of Havana, touching at&#13;
Key West&#13;
Mme. Nordics Is Dead.&#13;
Batavia, Java—Mme. Lillian Nordies,&#13;
the famous prima donna, died&#13;
Sunday. ''&#13;
Mme. Nordica had been ill since the&#13;
steamer Teaman, on which she was&#13;
a passenger, went ashore on Bramble&#13;
Bay, in the Gulf of Papua, December&#13;
28 last. Nervous prostration was followed&#13;
by~ pneumonia.&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS IN BRIEF&#13;
- '&#13;
Walton Milliman baa succeeded Elmer&#13;
Bagamaa as Y. U. C. A. secreei&#13;
Allege* county.&#13;
Normal college debaters defending&#13;
government ownership „of railways&#13;
lost at Tnaflami Frtday sight to the&#13;
Olivet college team, which had a&gt;&#13;
rt-&#13;
A Boon to the Farm Housewife&#13;
The kitchen loses Its terrors with the&#13;
NEW PERFECTION Wick Blue Flame&#13;
cook stove. Does exactly the work of&#13;
the coal range without the terrible exhausting&#13;
heat and the dirt and trouble.&#13;
Burns clean, convenient, economical&#13;
oil; almost saves its cost during the&#13;
season.&#13;
Makes the heavy 7 V C ! l V T l C&#13;
immer ^^ffsvfmSzSr&#13;
OH Cook-stove&#13;
summer cooking&#13;
easy, the kitchen&#13;
pleasant. None of&#13;
the dangers of gasoline;&#13;
no smoke, no odor.&#13;
Note, in the picture, the cabinet top,&#13;
the fine, big oven, the shelves and the&#13;
towel racks. Roasts, bakes, toasts and&#13;
broils to * 'perfection."&#13;
NEW PERFECTIONS come in 2,3,&#13;
and 4 burner sites, which your dealer&#13;
can show you. Ask him to explain the&#13;
special burner construction, how the&#13;
broiler broils oa both sides at* once;&#13;
and about the patented fuel reservoir,.&#13;
refilled without turning off your fire.&#13;
Be sure and see the&#13;
latest model with the&#13;
new THERMOS&#13;
oven, an invention&#13;
thatgivesyou a range&#13;
and fireless cooker&#13;
combined. Don't forget that fuel saving&#13;
soon makes up the price of the&#13;
stove. That a cool kitchen makes.&#13;
cooking easy, especially when striking&#13;
a match gives you your fire.&#13;
Tfeli iter* U » sMMurr pUe*&#13;
of tAMM MACIXHKXr, »»1m-&#13;
«rt*atM U«tferMa*r, M t t o ,&#13;
I M kftirov, crtftsi Hp«nt«r.&#13;
/ • * -&#13;
72-PogeCookBook&#13;
FREE, for S Cent*&#13;
Postage. Addrese&#13;
The Standard Oil&#13;
Company&#13;
Chicago. III.&#13;
u s orouxa oosfoaasxe*)&#13;
Burns Clean,Safe,&#13;
Convenient O i l -&#13;
Most Economical&#13;
of Fuel&#13;
W.L.DOUGLAS&#13;
SHOES&#13;
MMtKSUiraSV&#13;
Westi s &amp;£•¥ »&#13;
M Isses, Soys, Ohl Idran&#13;
SL60Sl.7SS2S2.SOSJ&#13;
Sto*n BMIM— In&#13;
i*rei MW WW&#13;
IftffMt IMMP *f&#13;
*S,«S. 60.S4,&#13;
aadS4. so •*•••'&#13;
bilMwrM.&#13;
$1,006,&#13;
LWsttffw.l _ D M « 1 M alma la Ulf^var l l t l .&#13;
This Js Uw raaaps w* giv« yog U M&#13;
I M B * values SrM.OO. M.50. »440&#13;
and M.40 noiwiibstaodttf U»&#13;
•oormoua iaeraass to U» coat of&#13;
IMUMT. Our ataaoards have&#13;
sot bean lowarad sod tba price&#13;
to you rssoaias loa asm*.&#13;
tost W.L.Doutlas abof* sra abso&gt;&#13;
IMabr as food asethar makss sowsi&#13;
wateprtess. Tbtoaljr dinataaps&#13;
^ T 4 W N O a U O O T t T U T S .&#13;
ataaafS ta ttll i"i».' if vpUDouEJ&#13;
•aoM ar* »ot tor mi* U 70«» vlatalty. cttw&#13;
UrMtffoatfMMry. Sbo«* fbr «*«ry MtaiUr&#13;
' tlM frilly at all &gt;*••*, pottt&#13;
GOTO&gt;&#13;
Wrltt for'lIfMtnu* eaialef- ihowlnj&#13;
to ordtr by mail. W "&#13;
MS Sjpart SWart,&#13;
•let* tbowmf k&lt;»w&#13;
M &amp; k K a a a .&#13;
• a a T a P a l T O w«t»«BE.roi«mi»BitWMb&#13;
8ilence Is Qoldern,&#13;
"A man must know a good deal to&#13;
be a diplomat"&#13;
"Yes, and be able not to tell it."&#13;
Smile on wash day. That's when you use&#13;
Red Cross Ball Blue. Clothes whiter than&#13;
snow. All grocers. Adv.&#13;
Waste of Energy.&#13;
Vesuvius—Fm going to erupt&#13;
Etna—Me too, but North America&#13;
won't pay any attention to us.&#13;
Putnam Fadeless Dyes make no&#13;
muss. Adv.&#13;
While They Burn.&#13;
"My wife is learning to cook by correspondence&#13;
course. She writes and&#13;
asks how to mix biscuits and they reply&#13;
by return post"&#13;
''What if the biscuits are in danger&#13;
of burning after she gets them in the&#13;
oven?"&#13;
"Then she telegraphs."—Saturday&#13;
Journal.&#13;
WESTERN CANADA NOW&#13;
The opportunity of securing&#13;
homesteads of 160 acres each, and'&#13;
the low priced lands of Manitoba.'&#13;
Saskatchewan and Alberta, will&#13;
soon have passed.&#13;
Canada offers a hearty welcome&#13;
to the Settler, to the man with a&#13;
family looking for a home; to the&#13;
farmer's son, to the renter, to all who&#13;
wish to live under better conditions.&#13;
Canada's grain yield In 1913 is&#13;
the talk of the world. Luxuriant&#13;
Grasses give cheap fodder for large&#13;
herds; cost of raising and fattening&#13;
for market is a trifle.&#13;
The sum realized for Beef. Butter,&#13;
Milk and Cheese will pay fifty |&#13;
cent OQ the investment.&#13;
Write for literature and particulars&#13;
as to reduced railway&#13;
rates to Superintendent&#13;
of Immigration, Ottawa,&#13;
Canada, or to&#13;
M. V. Molnnoa&#13;
170 J a f f a r a o n Ave*&#13;
Detroit, M i c h .&#13;
Canadian Government Aft&#13;
OWKSBS o r MAXWELL-BR1SC0E&#13;
2-Cyiimler Cats&#13;
May Now Psvehsse Repair Parts far&#13;
Taese Cars Direct from Us&#13;
ALL&#13;
TRU&#13;
FAVOaV&#13;
MP ANY g&#13;
OU1 FAVOt, AMD .&#13;
HAS OBTAWED AN&#13;
SUPPLY TBIgft PARTS&#13;
The MaxweU Ooi&#13;
larly aM »111 a&#13;
parts aeeomtel/ SBMS ware of asftatltata parts. ablylowpric ~&#13;
Owssrs write seest Jar Prfc* tin ef Gsavftetrsfti&#13;
Maxwell Motor Sales Corporatioa&#13;
Petiits KVP Salve SMAITIHe sou mm&#13;
ass* w. N. u., DiTRorr, NO. n-im4.&#13;
ADDRESSED TO WOMEN [i « . * • * .&#13;
In the Expectant Period&#13;
Before the ccaninc; of the Uttleo^e-^oroaiTieedtobeposV &lt;&#13;
sessed of all their BaturalatreiigtlL, Instead of being haraiaed&#13;
by forebodings and weakened by nausea, iliwpleisi&gt;sae% f/&#13;
or nervousness--if you will bring to your aid&#13;
Dr. Pierce's Favorite '~:[ M 411 ]«&#13;
* you win find tba t most of the&#13;
leg will not make Its appearance.&#13;
Dr. Pierce* Favorite Prescription is the result of a HIS study et&#13;
sjfcnente, dtsotrJors and irregularities peculiar to women, Its foiitinoast&#13;
supremacy in its particular field for more than forty yean la yeasr&#13;
assurance of the benefit to be derrved from its use.&#13;
Neitb^narcetksiMVslcc^olwiUbefooudrothis&#13;
tfcm, in Uqnjd or tablat form. Sold by clrugglaia or a fecial boa &lt;gSB&gt;&#13;
saotyoa by mail onreceipt of 60 one-ceat stamps.&#13;
ST"-* '-&#13;
• y * .&#13;
" DISTEMPER S @ „U**P *WrSTaa« Mamies OTwaaivrvavao sassaar BSw avsiaa* s i saw a&#13;
' • V&#13;
Peve*&#13;
Itel F e v e s . , - " '&#13;
a^raa#^awaMStfste*MtasV v- •&#13;
•' -- y.fr'* :-¾&#13;
',&gt;:V ;t-:'r; ^¾. •.*"&#13;
r-'-^&amp;M&#13;
'•' &gt;•:-. " . • • ' • . ' \ , » H ' V ' * J&#13;
- . ^ - : , &lt; . * • / • . ^ - . • •&lt;• •A. ' •' '&#13;
^*'*-&#13;
! v ' (••• •&gt;''•'')'•&#13;
--./'; '*Xr\&#13;
ii^'i&#13;
-.» ' &gt; * ;&#13;
Vt:&gt;9" -L-;&#13;
m*r&#13;
'V'WE'.Mfl' T&#13;
mfel l £ * *&#13;
* * • 4 iS^-tJ te /••- - - * t t X - » &lt;» i . • III • « ' 11» "I *&#13;
'^•*JM&#13;
*»&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
tf*';&#13;
t1&lt; • *&#13;
ft : ¢:&#13;
&amp; :&#13;
:J^&amp; T&#13;
# &amp;&#13;
«&amp;..&#13;
pinckney Qippatch&#13;
Entered at the Postoffice at Pinckney,&#13;
Mich., as Second Class Matter&#13;
R, W, OVERLY, EDITOR MP PUBLISHER&#13;
Subscript)**), (1. Per Year iu Advance&#13;
Advertising rates made known on&#13;
application.&#13;
Oarde of Thank*, fifty rents.&#13;
Resolutions 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;
free of charge.&#13;
Poetry; must be paid for at the rate of&#13;
five cents per line.&#13;
•&lt;•••&amp;,• # : ' •&#13;
Roy Moran of the U. of M. was&#13;
home over Sunday.&#13;
Fred Read of Detroit speut Sunday&#13;
with his parents here.&#13;
W. B. Hofr of ^Detroit was a&#13;
Pinckney visitor Sunday.&#13;
Miss Lulu Benham and Morrice&#13;
Darrow spent Sunday in Howell.&#13;
Mrs. Addie M. Burdick of Howell&#13;
spent tbe week end with relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
Elmer L. Smith of Howell, has&#13;
been elected president of the&#13;
Livingston connty fair association.&#13;
Governor Ferris has issued a&#13;
proclamation setting aside Friday&#13;
the 15th day of May, as "Clean-&#13;
Up Day."&#13;
Dan Wright of Gregory died at&#13;
his home Sunday morning, May&#13;
8, of appoplexy. Funeral services&#13;
were held Wednesday.&#13;
Bentley's circus and vaudeville&#13;
show under canvas at Pinckney,&#13;
Friday evening, May 15. Admission&#13;
15 and 25 cents. adv.&#13;
*&#13;
—Mr*. A. Brady and daughter&#13;
Hazel returned home the first of&#13;
week after spending the winter&#13;
with relatives in Howell and&#13;
Grosse Isle.&#13;
Floris Moran of Grand Rapids,&#13;
La Rue Moran and Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Mat Brady of Howell were here&#13;
Saturday to attend tbe funeral of&#13;
Frank Moran.&#13;
The ladies of the Cong'l, church&#13;
will serve supper at their hall,&#13;
Wednesday afternoon, May 20tb,&#13;
' from five o'clock until all are served.&#13;
Everyone welcome.&#13;
Geo. Barth of Chelsea recently&#13;
found a dead carrier pigeon bearing&#13;
a leg band marked J. P-16-24-&#13;
70. Mr. Barth is anxious to find&#13;
the owner of the little messenger.&#13;
Harry Ayers and family of Detroit&#13;
were over Sunday guests at&#13;
the home of Mrs. Sarah Nash.&#13;
Mrs. Nash accompanied them&#13;
home for an extended visit.&#13;
Will Darrow has moved his&#13;
shoe* shop into the rooms formely&#13;
occupied by Roger Carr's barber&#13;
•hop in the basement of the Rea-&#13;
1 BOD block on Main street and is&#13;
Ifcgtiii doing business.&#13;
•v&amp;ptow'a an object lesson for&#13;
g0od roads. The township of&#13;
/Beerfield will have to pay ajudgettentof&#13;
$300 for injuries sustained&#13;
by Edward Loose while dririag&#13;
oyer some bad roads^in that&#13;
township.&#13;
TJg^tUp hascome to be regard.&#13;
;agr}onltural necessity.&#13;
M&#13;
h-.i"&#13;
- *&#13;
&lt;raltmrt reoognfcej this and hat&#13;
gives o«i detattea directions for&#13;
the construction of one. Yon will&#13;
Bad this oh another page of the&#13;
Dispatch. U will pay yon to read&#13;
it. Even if ye* bare a silo you&#13;
will protabir 4*4 90m* we***&#13;
tioai 6* improtwatrt.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Gardner is visiting at&#13;
the borne of John Dmkeh&#13;
Mrs. Hattie Decker spent Sunday&#13;
at tbe home of E. W. Ken-&#13;
Dedy.&#13;
John VauHoru and sou Edward&#13;
Wern Pontiac visitors last Thursday.&#13;
Mrs. Ed. Hcisel of Howell was&#13;
an over Sunday guest of relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
Francis Carr and children of&#13;
Detroit spent the week end at the&#13;
home of W. A. Carr,&#13;
Dou't fail to see "Peg O' My&#13;
Heart" at the Pinckney Opera&#13;
House, Friday evening May 22.&#13;
Governor Ferris has issued a&#13;
proclamation setting aside Saturday,&#13;
May 30, as Memorial Day.&#13;
John Mclntyre and wife and&#13;
Geo. Green and wife of Howell&#13;
were Pinckney visitors last Thureday.&#13;
Mr, and Mrs. N. H. Caverly and&#13;
Geo. Smith'and family of Brighton&#13;
were Pinckney visitors Sunday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
Silas Swartbout baa purchased&#13;
the late Chas, Love residence on&#13;
Unadilla street and will move&#13;
thereto in a few weeks.&#13;
Rev. L. S. Brooke of Howell&#13;
exchanged pulpits with Rev. L.&#13;
Ostraoder of the Cong'l. church&#13;
here Sunday. Rev. Brooke's sermons&#13;
were much enjoyed by all&#13;
present at the services.&#13;
William Connors, cigar maker,&#13;
30 years old, who lost both legs in&#13;
an accident at this place several&#13;
years ago, died at his home in&#13;
Detroit last Tuesday, May 5.&#13;
William is a eon of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Jobn Connors of near Silver Lake&#13;
and the remains were brought&#13;
here for burial last Thursday.&#13;
Mr. J. Sfcanger, piano tuner of&#13;
Ann Arbor, will be in Pinckney&#13;
the first part of May. Parties in&#13;
the country wishing their pianos&#13;
tuned should get up clubs of not&#13;
less than four pianos in their&#13;
neighborhood aad ho will come&#13;
out with a rig. Orders should be&#13;
left at the Dispatch office. adv.&#13;
In refering to the recent Hotstein&#13;
consignment sale held in&#13;
Howell, seme of our exchanges remarked,&#13;
"It was a hummer" and&#13;
said no more, The Democrat&#13;
gave 2£ columns report of the&#13;
sale.—Livingston Democrat. Now&#13;
Johnnie don't get peevish, because&#13;
"It was a hummer," and no more.&#13;
Quit yelling and be thankful that&#13;
tbe exchanges noticed it at all.&#13;
Tbe Pinckney high school team&#13;
has certainly been playing real&#13;
ball tbe last two weeks. Last&#13;
Wednesday afternoon they beat&#13;
the stoug Stockbridge high by a&#13;
score of 8 to 4. Saturday, the&#13;
Dexter high, a husky buncb of&#13;
players, were sent back home with&#13;
a goose egg while Pinckney scored&#13;
15 runs. Ed. VanHorn has been&#13;
doing the twirling for the Pinckney&#13;
team and he is surely making&#13;
good.&#13;
Upon complaint of Deputy&#13;
Game Wardens, Otto Bonn and&#13;
0. K. Cobb, Bert Thomas of North&#13;
Lake was arrested last Wednesday&#13;
and taken to Ann Arbor where he&#13;
plead not guilty to the charge of&#13;
having fished unlawfully in North&#13;
Lake. Tbe trial is set for May&#13;
16th before Justice Doty of Ann&#13;
Arbor. The officers claim that&#13;
Mr. Thomas uses gill nets in&#13;
his fishing operations and as a&#13;
proof of their claim seized a number&#13;
of fish here Tuesday which&#13;
The federal department ofagri-lthey assert show marks of the&#13;
i WfW W Wfltf tffWf W WWf W Wf # Wf Tff 1W Wf WfWfWf ?Tf fffWf Wf W!&#13;
I t Never Rains But It&#13;
Si&#13;
0&#13;
&lt;D&#13;
P)&#13;
•p&#13;
o n&#13;
A&#13;
Pours &gt;&gt;&#13;
During the past few rainy days the people&#13;
have been unable to reach town and yet we&#13;
have been receiving new goods each day and&#13;
therefore are prepared to supply our many&#13;
customers with new goods in all our lines.&#13;
Fresh groceries with such specialties as&#13;
New Cabbage, Radishes and Lettuce Saturday.&#13;
New Oranges, Bananas, Lemons,, and Pineapples.&#13;
Potted House Plants and Cabbage and&#13;
Tomato Sets.&#13;
Garden Seeds&#13;
D. M. Ferry aud Northrup, King &amp; Co's.&#13;
Pkg. Seeds and Isbell'e Bulk Seeds.&#13;
Mens Furnishings&#13;
Including Hats and Caps, Straw Hats,&#13;
Dress Shirts and Work Shirts, Ideal Overalls,&#13;
TrouserH, Raincoats. The latest in Smart Set&#13;
Cravats, Madras Collars, etc.&#13;
We also have the famous King Pin line of&#13;
tailored-to-order samples and have already&#13;
made several fine suits. Remember a fit is&#13;
guaranteed by&#13;
Monks Bros.&#13;
P The Square Deal Grocery •&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
Spades&#13;
Rakes&#13;
Hoes&#13;
FOR THE&#13;
GARDEN&#13;
Weeders&#13;
Sprinklers&#13;
Seeds, Etc.&#13;
Garden time's HERE. See us for all kinds of tools. We carry a&#13;
BIO NEW STOCK of GABDEN IMPLEMENTS at LOWEST PHICES&#13;
in town. We also cany everything in TOOLS and HARDWABB.&#13;
Satisfaction or money back.&#13;
Jeepje Hardware Company&#13;
Watch&#13;
Space Fof»&#13;
Monarch Adv.&#13;
T H B H O Y T BROS.&#13;
nets on their bodies. Mr. Thomas&#13;
claims the fish were lawfully&#13;
caught and that the alleged marks&#13;
on the fish act the result* of their&#13;
having been confined for a time&#13;
in live pent constructed of netting&#13;
similar to a gill net,—Chelsea&#13;
Tribune.&#13;
Do You Want Ice ?&#13;
We are prepared to furnish everyone with ice the coming&#13;
season at right prices. Will deliver same to your ice box.&#13;
Stoves Stored . ¾&#13;
CaU on or phone No. 68rfl&#13;
S. H. CARR, Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
--—-~^i&#13;
The&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
. i&#13;
Does a Conservative Bank- [&#13;
ing Business. :: &gt;'&#13;
i&#13;
3 per cent&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits *&#13;
.&#13;
P i n c k n e y&#13;
G. W. T E E P L B&#13;
M i c h .&#13;
Prop&#13;
L „ „&#13;
Perbaps this picture may recall&#13;
some pleasant occasion—H party&#13;
and the becoming costume you&#13;
wore.&#13;
A.ny event worth remembering&#13;
suggests a picture.&#13;
Make an appointment today.&#13;
DaisieB. Chapell&#13;
Stockbridge, Michigan&#13;
To Head-Off&#13;
a Headache&#13;
Nolkinf |« B#tut tfr*a&#13;
Dr. MIW Anti-Pain pfflt&#13;
Tbjr Gto Rditf WithMt&#13;
fc4AfUr.Etf.cto.&#13;
*X can my that Dr. M12«' B*a-&#13;
« * f tawr«,JN«tt a sofeand/to a * .&#13;
n u b tttribi* fcjM4aoh«s I wwiiC^ nwst.temUM** toy* at a time&#13;
b a m tffnr JDr. Jftflw Aall--&#13;
aehM maytttsre. 1 can tp«afc „—&#13;
of Dr. Milts' Ntrvlne alto for&#13;
cured on« of my children of a&#13;
nervou* disorder. I cafi, _ „«__&#13;
•psalc a food -word for your' Stan*&#13;
•dies and have recommended t a t a&#13;
to a goad many of my Mma**Wo&#13;
have bean weU plaaaad w i C t t a S F&#13;
MRS. GEO. H, BRTAN--&#13;
t Janeavfll v I»wa&gt;&#13;
Par Ufa by All Drufaleta,&#13;
• • 85 Potat&gt; 88 Cents.&#13;
MfLKS MEDICAL CO., Kkhart Int.&#13;
H. rt S'OLER y. o. c. L, sici in w. o | T&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER&#13;
Phygieitnt and Strrgecna.&#13;
All salli promptly ttteided to&#13;
day er n^ht Ofies &lt;m Main&#13;
.: t,-&#13;
i&amp;wfm • • # * &lt; - 1 » •' w A. MICH&#13;
ui -*«J' 4c'.&#13;
U? m-^-m^;*^&#13;
!PP *• "PP&#13;
rifcr-^i^-n^&#13;
tl?:.&#13;
. — * . »,•&#13;
' • • &lt; *r&#13;
^&gt;&#13;
s»\/.&#13;
PINCKNE* DlgATCH&#13;
e 2s£T 5 0 0 Patterns&#13;
«^J&gt;' A'.'«'JP»&#13;
From Which To Select Your&#13;
W A L L P A P E R 1&#13;
-Ranging in Price From&#13;
10c to $ 3 . 0 0 per roll&#13;
Think what this means to you; your papering worries dispersed&#13;
in a short time, if yon will look at these samples. Besides&#13;
we give yon the paper selected, never substitute, and&#13;
take back single rolls. Ask for illustrated folder of room&#13;
decorations.&#13;
MEYER'S DRUG STORE&#13;
3&#13;
m&#13;
The TVyal Store&#13;
Drugs, Wall P»p*r, Crockery, Cigars, Candy, Magazines,&#13;
School Supplies, Books&#13;
g Plnckney, Mich.&#13;
Vaiiilta&#13;
*3&#13;
* • .&#13;
r,&#13;
to&#13;
Works All Day for One Meal&#13;
ARUMELY-OLDS Engine does a man's work on a farm&#13;
for the cost of the man's dinner. This is a fact established&#13;
by experts in engine work and farm work. It&#13;
doesn't mean that an engine can do this, but that the engines&#13;
now in use actually do it.&#13;
Just imagine what a fine thing it would be if you could keep a&#13;
hired hand by simply giving him his dinner!. And this shows&#13;
what big profits will come with an engine on your farm.&#13;
We have them in sizes from 1½ to 65 h. p.&#13;
Drop in soon and see our Rumely-Olda engine*. Or&#13;
let ui know and we'll send a catalog to you.&#13;
We*re \ere to serve you.&#13;
Give us a chance*&#13;
FLINTOFT,&#13;
Krma Pyjwr of Jackson spent&#13;
SttadUry iriA her parents here.&#13;
Mrs. Fred Marshall spent Saturday&#13;
with her parents.&#13;
Geo. Meabon and family visited&#13;
at the home of Win. Marshall's&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Chas. Bachelor and wife of&#13;
Hamilton, Ind., spent the last of&#13;
the week with his sister Mrs.&#13;
Ralph Gorton.&#13;
Vet Bullis and family are spending&#13;
a few days here.&#13;
Emmett Hadley and family&#13;
were Chelsea visitors Friday.&#13;
Rev. Berry a n d family of&#13;
Columbus, Ohiohavearrived here.&#13;
He will fill the appointment as&#13;
Pastor of the Preby. church the&#13;
coming year.&#13;
Geo. Marshall and family and&#13;
Jno. Webb and wife called at C.&#13;
D. Johnson's in Dexter on Sanday.&#13;
A class of nine pupils will take&#13;
the eight grade examination at&#13;
Stock bridge this week.&#13;
Mrs. Coates has been on the&#13;
sick list the past two weeks.&#13;
$100 Reward, $100&#13;
The readers of this paper will be pleased&#13;
to learn that there is at least one dreaded&#13;
disease that science hat&gt; been able to cure&#13;
in all its stages, and that Is Catarrh. Hall's&#13;
Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now&#13;
known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh&#13;
being a constitutional disease, requires a&#13;
constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh&#13;
Cure is token internally, acting directly&#13;
upon the blood and mucous surface! of the&#13;
system, thereby destroying the foundation&#13;
of the disease, and giving the patient&#13;
strength by building up the constitution&#13;
and assisting nature in doing its work.&#13;
The proprietors have so much faith in its&#13;
curative powers that they offer One Hundred&#13;
Dollars for any case that it faiis to&#13;
cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address:&#13;
F . K. Cheney &amp; Co., Toledo, 0 .&#13;
Sold by all druggists, 75c,&#13;
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.&#13;
If O H.&#13;
Saturday, May 16th, 1914&#13;
All Outings, per yard„&#13;
All Percales, per yard&#13;
5 pounds Granulated Sugar..&#13;
6 bars of any white soap&#13;
8 bars Lenox Soap&#13;
13c can Cocoa _&#13;
- %&#13;
lie&#13;
4J0&#13;
_26c&#13;
25c&#13;
9c&#13;
ALL SALES CASH&#13;
W. W. BARNARD&#13;
• » • • • • • « • • • • » . « . » . ! » . . &lt; • . &gt; » » . ^ H . • M » l * . . » • !&#13;
* w | a &lt; M&#13;
South Iosco&#13;
Mrs. John Grindhng and daughter&#13;
Edith of Webberville are&#13;
visiting at Joe Roberts at present.&#13;
Mrs. R. Chipman and daughter&#13;
called on Mrs. Martin Anderson&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
Mrs, George Mowers and daughter&#13;
Lucy spent Thursday at L. T.&#13;
Lamborne's.&#13;
Will Harrington cf Detroit spent&#13;
the past week at Joe Robert's.&#13;
Mrs. Joe Roberts and Mrs. John&#13;
Grindling and daughter called at&#13;
the home of L. T. Lamborne Sunday.&#13;
Lorna Roberts was au over&#13;
Sunday visitor at the home of&#13;
H. Miller.&#13;
John Roberts and wife called&#13;
at Albert Foster's Sunday.&#13;
Gladys Roberts returned home&#13;
Monday after spending sone time&#13;
with her grandparents in Webberville.&#13;
We Sell&#13;
The Kinds&#13;
That Last&#13;
RAKES&#13;
MOWERS&#13;
Hose&#13;
Grass Seed&#13;
Rollers, Etc.&#13;
!&#13;
FROM Poverty&#13;
to Riches—&#13;
From the life of a&#13;
poor miner t o&#13;
wealth, honor and&#13;
political power,&#13;
only to lose that&#13;
w h i c h m a k e s&#13;
everything: else&#13;
worth while, is admirably&#13;
told in&#13;
The&#13;
Governor's&#13;
wm^mmmmwmmmmmmmmmwmmmmmmmmmm% Lady&#13;
A charming story&#13;
in which the characters&#13;
are all real,&#13;
living people of&#13;
everyday life. A&#13;
theme that has created&#13;
widespread&#13;
comment&#13;
Our Afext Serial&#13;
First installment in an&#13;
early issue.&#13;
Be sure to read it!&#13;
RHEUMATIC SUFFERERS&#13;
SHOULD USE&#13;
5 DROPS&#13;
Tho Bo*t Romody&#13;
For all form* of&#13;
Rheumatism&#13;
LUMBAGO.&#13;
SCIATICA. GOUT. NEURALGIA,1&#13;
AND KIDNEY TROUBLES. DROPS STOP THE PAlHi&#13;
.Qiv«s Quick lUtlftf,&#13;
lOttMfl&#13;
It&#13;
4? ALL&#13;
M M H I "SH9IIOPS" r i l t t OM RSOimsr&#13;
Bwanson Rhaumatio Cure&#13;
1 M - 1 M W. UIW Sfc, CHICAGO&#13;
To Newspaper Publishers&#13;
and Printers&#13;
W e manufacture t h e&#13;
highest grade of&#13;
very&#13;
Brass Leads &amp; Slugs Type&#13;
Brass Galleys Brass Kule in Strips&#13;
Sfetal Bordere&#13;
L.*6. Metal Furniture&#13;
Leads and Slugs&#13;
Metal Leaders&#13;
Spaces and Quads&#13;
6 to 48 point&#13;
Brass Labor-Savins?&#13;
Rule&#13;
Metal Quoins, etc.&#13;
Brass Column Bales&#13;
Brass Circles&#13;
Brass Leaders&#13;
Brass Round Corners&#13;
The first installment of the above&#13;
story starts in this issue of the )*n(j .o t h e r&#13;
Dispatch. Be sure and read it*&#13;
Keep up the OIVIO PRIDE of onr town by seeing that your front&#13;
yard is ATTRACTIVE We have EVERYTHING for the LAWN.&#13;
•Yon certainly want to buy your mower from a RELIABLE hardwart&#13;
dealer. Onr REPUTATION UNQUESTIONED.&#13;
Dinkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
» . - . » . « • . * . - \*:\*::\*::\*£\*FS:\*:K*:\*:\*;\*:\*.&#13;
Sale Bills Printed at the&#13;
Dispatch Office at Right&#13;
Child Cross? Feverish? Sick?&#13;
A cross, peevish, listless child, with&#13;
coated tongue, pale, doeWt sleep; eats&#13;
sometimes very little, then again ravenously:&#13;
stomach "sour: breath fetid; pains in&#13;
stomach, with diarrhea; grinds teeth while&#13;
asleep, and starts up with terror— all suggest&#13;
« Worm killer—something that expels&#13;
worms, and almost every child has them&#13;
Kickapoo Worm Killer is needed. Get a&#13;
box today. Start at once. Yon won't&#13;
have oax ns Kickap&lt;K) Worm Killer is&#13;
a candy confection. Expels the worms,&#13;
the cause of yonr child's trouble. 25c.&#13;
Recommended by C. G. Meyer, the druggist.&#13;
, _ _ •&#13;
It is said that the Anti-Saloon&#13;
League is arranging a bill to snbmft&#13;
to the next legislature, providing&#13;
that no saloon, brewery or&#13;
wholesale liqaor house shall be&#13;
located within five miles of a state&#13;
institution. This would be aU&#13;
most as effectual as statewide&#13;
prohibition.&#13;
&gt;•»•»"• • v&#13;
Keep Bowel Movesieal Kfjralsr ^&#13;
Dr. King's New Life Pills keep stomach&#13;
liver and kidneys in healthy condition.&#13;
Rid the body of poisons and waste. 1st-&#13;
{&gt;rove your complexion by flushing tne&#13;
Ivor sod kidDera. "I got mors relief&#13;
from 00* bo* of Dr. King's New Lift Pills&#13;
than any medicine I ever tried,'' says C. JE.&#13;
Httfidd, of Chicago, 111. 26c. BooomgttQdfd&#13;
by, 0.0&gt; Utjen, u&gt;s druggist.&#13;
'. i' * . . ; B ; :* "* &gt; •'. f .-&#13;
Old Column Rules refaced and made&#13;
good as new at a small cost.&#13;
Please remember that we are not in any&#13;
Trust or Combination and are sure we can&#13;
make it greatly to your advantage to deaj&#13;
with us.&#13;
A copy of our catalogue will be cheerfully&#13;
furnished on application.&#13;
We frequently have good bargains in&#13;
second-hand^ job Presses, Paper Cutters&#13;
printing machinery aud&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN, tne probata conrt for&#13;
the county of Livingston At a session of&#13;
• aid court- held at the probate office in the village&#13;
of Howell in said county on the 4th dny of&#13;
May A. P. 1914. Present: Hon. Eugene A.&#13;
Stowe, judge of Probate. In the matter of&#13;
the estate of&#13;
.TAMEbSPEARB Deceased&#13;
John W. Spears baring filed in said court his&#13;
final arcoont as Admintttator of raid estate, and&#13;
Ui petition praying for the allowance thereof,&#13;
It la ordered that the 28tb day of H i ) , A.&#13;
D. )924, at tsn o'clock In the forenoon, at said&#13;
probate office, be and ia n»r»by appointed /or&#13;
esaxaftnlngand allowing said account&#13;
It is farther ordered that pub'ic notice thereof&#13;
be given by publication of a copy efthia order for&#13;
three anccftalve weeks previous to aaid day of&#13;
hearing in the Plnckney DI»PATC« K newspaper&#13;
printed and circulating in said county. If*t3&#13;
EUGENE A. STOWE,&#13;
Jada* ol Probata&#13;
Philadelphia Printers Supply Co.&#13;
Manufacturers of&#13;
Type and High Grade Printing Material&#13;
14 S. 5th St., Philadelphia, Pa.&#13;
Proprietors Penn Type Foundry 2tlf&#13;
GOING TO BUY A PIANO&#13;
OR SEWING MACHINE&#13;
YES?&#13;
SEE L. R. WILLIAMS.&#13;
GBEGORY&#13;
He saves yon money oar hi^b&#13;
grade piano*.&#13;
j Monuments&#13;
K If you are contemplating&#13;
B petting a monument, marker,&#13;
p or an thing for the cemetery,&#13;
d see or write&#13;
\ S. S. PLATT&#13;
1&#13;
HOWELL, MICH.&#13;
No Agents. Save Their Commiatkn&#13;
9 Bell Phone 190&#13;
* * • *&#13;
ft&#13;
Grand Trimk Tlmf Tabk&#13;
For th« oonvenftnee of oat readers&#13;
\ :-&#13;
i-&#13;
' ^ ' t i ^ M&#13;
-Vc&amp;&#13;
'•&gt;Y;/*tv&#13;
:.,m&#13;
ft.%T •: tW BS g;r,; Trains Bast&#13;
fro. 46*4 *»•, gav vKo, 4 ^ 1 0 ^ 1 ^ ^ ¾&#13;
No. 4«^-&lt;:« p. B».-v* No. 47-7«i2^.«, £*:&#13;
i^ittft'ilU^Mrf^Wfci^1' '•A../. ;*•; . : ^ ^ ¾ ¾ ) '.-4-.-¾¾iKX'Mv.Mig'*: .m&#13;
v * * - % "&#13;
ra.^W:^ - • &gt; : . iii*. v. ^V ,&#13;
•S&#13;
I:&#13;
&amp;&#13;
;&amp;?&#13;
,'ff"" '&#13;
r&#13;
£*&#13;
7 * •,&#13;
r*^!'" •«£!&#13;
*&#13;
"»«1&#13;
* * &amp; r .&#13;
"ffWS WL~. • - &gt; *&#13;
/ * • • ; &gt; '&#13;
# * •&#13;
•urniii i&#13;
\&#13;
^r*:r&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH m&#13;
SICH.Y VISITED&#13;
BY EARTHQUAKE&#13;
MANY VILLAGES NEAR MOUNT&#13;
ETNA ARE DESTROYED BY&#13;
SHOCKS.&#13;
SCORES KILLED AND MAIMED&#13;
Disaster Due to Subterranean Infiltration&#13;
of Sea Water Which&#13;
m.T-1^, Caused Internal Exl&#13;
J ^ ' plosions. ^ -&#13;
^ . - i j r * 1 ' -&#13;
Catania, Sicily—A great earthquake&#13;
Friday night brought death and destruction&#13;
to many villages near Mount&#13;
Etna. The number of dead and injured&#13;
runs up into the hundreds.&#13;
The effected zone extends from Zaffarana,&#13;
the highest village on Mount&#13;
Etna, to the sea between Acireale, on&#13;
the south, and Giarre on the north. It&#13;
includes Linera, the center of the dls-&#13;
" turbance, Pisano and Santa Venerina.&#13;
In Linera alone 110 persons were&#13;
killed and 300 injured. In the village&#13;
of Bongiardo 13 dead and 27 injured&#13;
have been taken from the ruins. At&#13;
Cosentinl 16 were killed and many&#13;
injured. At Passopomo, 12 persons&#13;
were killed; at Malati, 12; at Santa&#13;
Venerir, 6; Santa Tecla, 2; Santa&#13;
Maria Verglne, 8; Garbali, 4. These&#13;
villages and many smaller places were&#13;
practically leveled.&#13;
For centuries this region has suffered&#13;
from earthquakes, owing to the&#13;
activity of Mount Etna. Yet it is&#13;
relatively thickly populated, as the&#13;
land is moat fertile, vineyards growing&#13;
with little attention.&#13;
Where Linera stood is a mass of&#13;
ruins. These houses which did not&#13;
collapse entirely were so broken as&#13;
) to emphasize the completeness of the&#13;
disaster. The village consisted of&#13;
about 800 Inhabitants. A majority of&#13;
the people escaped because the shock&#13;
occurred when the men and some of&#13;
the women were still working in the&#13;
fields. From the vineyards they saw&#13;
their houses falling like a pack of&#13;
cards, and when they arrived, breathless,&#13;
at their homes, they found only&#13;
wreckage with some of their people&#13;
buried beneath It This accounts for&#13;
the fact that most of the victims at&#13;
Linera were women and children.&#13;
The men, wild with terror and grief,&#13;
attacked the debris with their bare&#13;
/ hands In an effort to save their wives&#13;
or children.&#13;
At Catania the strongest shock lasted&#13;
six seconds. Electric lights were&#13;
extinguished and the street railways&#13;
ware put out of service. The people&#13;
rushed from the houses, shops and&#13;
eafts. Many of them jumped into&#13;
•oats and others crowded into the&#13;
squares. At the hospitals patients&#13;
to the courtyards imploring help.&#13;
Professor Annibale Ricco, director&#13;
•-f: # the Etna observatory, believes the&#13;
^|||ia&gt;ster due to a subterranean infiltration&#13;
of sea water, which, on reach-&#13;
*• lng the ignited zone, caused internal&#13;
explosions. He says this is proved by&#13;
the jets of boiling vapor which burst&#13;
forth at several points where the&#13;
earthquake had caused deep crevices.&#13;
ILLINOIS MAN FOR EDITOR&#13;
W. of M. Beard of Control Chases&#13;
Newspaper Men for Next Year.&#13;
• C ' ' i&#13;
•&lt;%*,?&#13;
Ann Arbor, Mich.—H. Beaeh Carpenter,&#13;
of Rockford, 111., a senior lit&#13;
and freshman law in the University of&#13;
Michigan was elected managing editor&#13;
of the Michigan Dally for the ensuing&#13;
year at a meeting of the board in control&#13;
of student publications Thursday&#13;
night&#13;
W. Sherwood Field, of Grand Rap-&#13;
Ma, was elected business manager of&#13;
the sans publication, and W. B.&#13;
Thorn, of Buffalo, Wyo., was selected&#13;
as managing editor of the 1911 Mich-&#13;
^; . igaaaian, the senior year book, and&#13;
"^ x ^ "Pata Godehn, of Molina, 111., business&#13;
&gt; ' &amp; &amp; ' • ' ; . .&#13;
•4 '.-•&#13;
»«SiS&#13;
•%•;••&#13;
w&#13;
Winners In District Contest&#13;
Albion, Mich.—Winners in the district&#13;
high; school declamation and oratorical&#13;
contests held hero Friday&#13;
night wore Clara Butler, of Wayne,&#13;
an* Harry Petrey, of Adrian, first&#13;
end aecoad la declamation, and Verne&#13;
B a g * *? i t Johns, and Edith Havi-&#13;
I*ad/©f Adrian, in the oratorical*.&#13;
Tha^W© winners will take part in the&#13;
to ha hat* scorn.&#13;
.J*. IC FUSHES&#13;
&amp; '&#13;
'.V T-&#13;
•t&#13;
•*&amp;**?}*'&#13;
2U.&#13;
$*&amp;,*t&#13;
The Wff e r * k i l n «1 the East Jordan&#13;
Cooperage Oe. was totally destroyed&#13;
by ire lasw^,yiJijWliiy wn-niag,&#13;
****** T* **&amp;&lt;**» are is an-&#13;
• •; » ', '• ••• -it?-, j ^ &lt;&#13;
FORMER CHARGE IS&#13;
IN WASHINGTON&#13;
NELSON O'SHAUGHNESSY.&#13;
Washington—The genial Irishman&#13;
who remained at his post in Mexico&#13;
City until given his passports by&#13;
Huerta is in Washington conferring&#13;
with Secretary Bryan on Mexican affairs.&#13;
TO STUDY OTHER PRISONS&#13;
Chairman Travis Granted a Leave of&#13;
Absence to Take Special Tour&#13;
of States.&#13;
Jackson, Mich.—Maj. Dehull N.&#13;
Travis, chairman of the state board&#13;
of pardons and paroles, has been&#13;
granted a 10 weeks' leave of absence&#13;
from the board session, commencing&#13;
June 1, to take a special tour of inspection&#13;
of prisons outside the state&#13;
The work assigned to Mr. Tr&#13;
Petoskey.—August Smith was placed&#13;
in Emmet county jail awaiting&#13;
trial on an insanity charge. He&#13;
was found in the woods south of&#13;
Petoskey where he had lived in a wild&#13;
manner several days, terrorizing the&#13;
neighborhood.&#13;
Belding. — A Sons of Veterans&#13;
camp was organized with 50 members.&#13;
H. G. Currie 1B commander; Ray Ring,&#13;
vice-commander; Alexander Rellly, Jr.,&#13;
vice-commander secretary; J. M. Langston,&#13;
treasurer^ and A* M. Eaves, division&#13;
commander.&#13;
Ann Arbor.—K. A. EaBligk, a&#13;
freshman in the university, is suffering&#13;
from burns sustained when&#13;
sodium hydroxide was blown in his&#13;
eyes while he was at work in the&#13;
chemistry laboratory. His home is at&#13;
Ousted. M. M. C. Hedin, also a freshman,&#13;
was seriously burned about the&#13;
face and hands with sulphuric acid.&#13;
His home is at Ironwood.&#13;
Monroe. — While returning from&#13;
school in company with three companions,&#13;
Ida Stahl, nine-year-old&#13;
daughter of Frank Stahl, living two&#13;
miles south of here, failed to get across&#13;
the Michigan Central tracks in the&#13;
face of approaching north-bound passenger&#13;
train and was thrown 50 feet&#13;
and instantly killed.&#13;
Frankfort—A, C. Willard, for 24&#13;
years bookkeeper for the Empire&#13;
Lumber company, Empire, killed himself&#13;
at the Hotel Yeazel, Frankfort. In&#13;
the letter left by Willard the occurance&#13;
of quotation: "The way of the&#13;
transgressor is hard," has given rise&#13;
to the rumor of a shortage. Willard&#13;
also directed the undertaker to "go&#13;
light" and "use a plain coffin."&#13;
Bay City.—George Williams, alias&#13;
J. Adams, of Hope; C. L. Erway,&#13;
alias Will R. Jones, and W. H. Short,&#13;
alias J. Berry, of Edenville, were fined&#13;
$50 each for violation of the law&#13;
which prohibits shipping game birds&#13;
by interstate traffic. These are the&#13;
first prosecutions under this law. The&#13;
men were Indicted by the federal&#13;
grand jury for shipping partridges out&#13;
of the state. The Investigation was&#13;
carried on by C. E. Brewster.&#13;
Saginaw.—Until a wage scale agreement&#13;
is reached in the central&#13;
tate^Unining district the Michigan district&#13;
avts wl&#13;
PLAN FOR CONSTRUCTING A STAVE S H 0&#13;
is to gather data relative to the \advisability&#13;
of establishing a prison for&#13;
women in Michigan and also as to the&#13;
advisability of erecting a new penitentiary&#13;
in which first term prisoners&#13;
only shall be kept and to which all&#13;
first termers shall be sentenced.&#13;
Mr. Travis will also do lecture work&#13;
for a bureau, giving his lecture, "The&#13;
Man Without a Smile," in a number&#13;
of Chautauqua engagements In the&#13;
middle west.&#13;
WILL NAME ROAD BEE DAYS&#13;
Gov. Ferris Will Proclaim June 4 and&#13;
6 for Highway Work.&#13;
Alpena, Mich.—In a letter to Henry&#13;
K. Gustin, road commissioner of the&#13;
Huron Shore Highway association,&#13;
Gov. Ferris says he will issue a&#13;
proclamation making June 4 and 6&#13;
road bee days throughout Michigan,&#13;
for the repair and construction of&#13;
highways throughout the state. These&#13;
days had been previously selected as&#13;
bee days for the Huron Shore association&#13;
and the proclamation will bo&#13;
issued by the governor at the instance&#13;
of officers of the Huron association.&#13;
On June 4 and 5 bees will be held&#13;
over the entire length of the Huron&#13;
highway, from Bay City to the Straits&#13;
of Mackinac, following up the work of&#13;
last ysar, whan bees wore held on 260&#13;
miles of road.&#13;
ROBBERS LOOT FIVE STORES&#13;
•usJntss Houses In Vlcksburg Visit&#13;
sd By Burglars.&#13;
Kalamazoo, Mich.—Burglars Thursday&#13;
night looted five different business&#13;
places in Vicksburg, securing&#13;
nearly $106 in cash. In several of the&#13;
places safes were pried open with&#13;
heavy iron bars.&#13;
Not until the stores were opened&#13;
Friday morning wore the robberies&#13;
discovered. Entrance was gained- in&#13;
all of the places through rear doors.&#13;
The Rochester Clothing Co. lost $43,&#13;
the A. M. Palmar hardware store $36,&#13;
and the Vicksburg Lomber Co. about&#13;
$7. The H D. Jenkiason grain elevator&#13;
and the Qoodfelt food mill wars&#13;
broken into, bat nothing was taken.&#13;
It Is believed the man made -their&#13;
cape on a freight train, •n&#13;
ITEMS OF STATE INTEREST&#13;
Every taaohar in Flint will receive&#13;
from $116 ta tS#9 m roar iacreasa,&#13;
which trm boast taa, Gadget&#13;
Complete Silo With Chute.&#13;
will continue to work, according to C.&#13;
E. Linton, one of the operators who&#13;
was at a Joint conference of miners&#13;
and operators. The session adjourned&#13;
being unable actually to arrive at any&#13;
solution of the problem, and they will&#13;
not meet until some action is taken&#13;
in the central district, said Mr. Linton.&#13;
Bay City.—Mrs. Emma Cllne, fiftythree&#13;
years old, of Maple Ridge,&#13;
was sentenced to serve ten days in the&#13;
Bay county Jail. The charge against&#13;
her was sending obscene matter&#13;
through the mall. She was brought&#13;
to the city by Deputy United States&#13;
Marshal Tobias and Judge Tuttle convened&#13;
court to dispose of the case. She&#13;
pleaded guilty and could not pay a fine&#13;
of $50. She Is the mother of five children&#13;
and her husband is sickly. This&#13;
ends the criminal grist for this term of&#13;
the federal court&#13;
Ann Arbor. — Lightning played&#13;
strange pranks at the home of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence G. Cobb here&#13;
during a severe electrical storm, tearing&#13;
pictures from the walls and disarranging&#13;
furniture. It entered the&#13;
bedroom of Charles, seven-year-old son&#13;
of Mr. and Mrs. Cobb, and though it removed&#13;
every picture from the walls&#13;
and reduced the plaster on the walls&#13;
to dust, the boy slumbered peacefully&#13;
and awakened only when his anxious&#13;
parents rushed in to sea if he was still&#13;
alive.&#13;
Grand Ledge.—Seven high school&#13;
boys were notified of their expulsion&#13;
from the city schools and&#13;
about thirty have been suspended&#13;
pending apologies. This decision of&#13;
the school board follows the painting&#13;
of the school building in which members&#13;
of the various grades participated.&#13;
Three are seniors and four&#13;
juniors. All are among the best boys&#13;
of the city. The girls of the school&#13;
threaten a sympathy strike. The affair&#13;
occurred during- temporary absence&#13;
of the superintendent who it&#13;
popoular with&gt; both students and dtitens.&#13;
Lapeer.—A threatened Jail delivery&#13;
waa averted here when Deputy&#13;
Sheriff Loren Elliott Investigated,&#13;
following: a fight among the priaoners,&#13;
and discovered a number of&#13;
saws and files hidden near a bar that&#13;
had nearly been eat through. There&#13;
ware ten jfrisoners in the JaiL hot two,&#13;
Jim Mttray and- Barry Laweon, both&#13;
of Toronto, Ont, and both charged&#13;
with highway robbery, are held as&#13;
prime movers in the plot All tan&#13;
could have escaped had the bar been&#13;
esjt through. Tie deputy's sppiaiottt&#13;
warearoaaed by the surly remark ot a&#13;
Pftseoer, who had bean rearlaanila^&#13;
foe his part a ^ fLght '&#13;
In determining the size of a silo&#13;
the first thing to be considered is the&#13;
diameter, and this depends on the&#13;
number of cattle to be fed. When the&#13;
diameter of a silo is too great the&#13;
silage is not fed off rapidly enough to&#13;
keep it from spoiling. This is particularly&#13;
true when silage Is fed in&#13;
summer. Care should therefore be&#13;
taken that the diameter of the silo&#13;
be not too great for the number of&#13;
cowa to be fed from it, says the department&#13;
of agriculture.&#13;
From thirty to forty pounds of silage&#13;
per cow per day should be provided&#13;
for average dairy cows during&#13;
the time when no other green food is&#13;
available. The amount varies according&#13;
to the quantity and quality of&#13;
dry forage used. After the diameter&#13;
of the silo has been decided upon the&#13;
next consideration is the number of&#13;
tons of silage that will be needed, and&#13;
this depends on the length of the&#13;
silage-feeding season. A convenient&#13;
height for a silo above the foundation&#13;
is twice its diameter; but sometimes&#13;
it Is necessary for a silo of small diameter&#13;
to be higher than this. In such&#13;
a case It should be well braced.. The&#13;
silo should, If possible, be located so&#13;
as to open into the feed room. If&#13;
such an arrangement is impracticable,&#13;
it should be located near the barn at&#13;
some other point and connected with&#13;
the barn or with the feed room by a&#13;
covered passageway.&#13;
The Foundation.&#13;
To lay out the foundation, drive a&#13;
stake in the ground at the center of&#13;
the proposed silo. Saw off this stake&#13;
at the height desired for the foundation&#13;
wall, which should be at least&#13;
one foot above the ground on the high&#13;
side, if the ground is sloping.&#13;
The thickness of the wall should&#13;
vary from ten to eighteen inches, depending&#13;
upon the sise of the silo, the&#13;
material of the foundation, and the&#13;
ground on which it is located. The&#13;
Inside of the foundation wall should&#13;
be at leant six inches nearer to the&#13;
center of the silo than the inside of&#13;
the staves.&#13;
Materials and Construction.&#13;
The material of the foundation may&#13;
he of stone, brick or concrete. Concrete&#13;
is preferable under most conditions.&#13;
Where stone or brick is to be&#13;
used the earth in the bottom of the&#13;
silo, except where the center stake&#13;
stands, may be dug out before the&#13;
Roup Remedies. -&#13;
Roup is a.moat contagious disease&#13;
and any treatment should be «!••&amp; a t&#13;
the earliest appearance of the disease.&#13;
It does not pay to treat fowls seriously&#13;
sick- Kill them and burn the carcasses.&#13;
In the first stages of the disease,&#13;
any of the following treatments&#13;
are recommended: Inject the solution&#13;
Into the nostrils and on the&#13;
roof* of the mouth:&#13;
t Two per cent solution of creolin.&#13;
1. Two per cent solution of carbolic&#13;
add.&#13;
1 Peroxide of hydrogen and war&#13;
tar, ecjual parts.&#13;
4. One grain permanganate of pot*&#13;
ash to an oanoe of w a t e r . '&#13;
5. Kerosene, one drop in each nostril&#13;
of an infected fowl&#13;
wall is built thus giving additional&#13;
silage space and allowing greater convenience&#13;
in building the wall. The&#13;
earth should not be dug out deeper&#13;
than four inches above the bottom of&#13;
the wall. With a concrete foundation&#13;
this excavation must not be made until&#13;
the wall is finished and.the position&#13;
of the staves marked on the top*&#13;
of the wall.&#13;
8tone.&#13;
Stone may be conveniently UBed&#13;
when the foundation will not extend&#13;
more than one or two feet above the&#13;
surface of the ground. It should be&#13;
laid in cement mortar in such a manner&#13;
that the inner surface will be&#13;
Bmooth and the top level.&#13;
Brick.&#13;
Where bard-burned brick can be secured&#13;
cheaply, as is often the case&#13;
near brickyards, they can frequently be&#13;
used to advantage for a foundation.&#13;
They should.be laid In cement mortar.&#13;
with the inner surface of the wall&#13;
smooth and the top level. If the wait&#13;
extends more than one foot above the&#13;
surface, it should be reinforced by laying&#13;
a No, 9 wire, or Its equivalent on:&#13;
every second course of brick above&#13;
the surface of the ground.&#13;
Concrete.&#13;
For a concrete foundation, a ditch&#13;
must be dug before any of the earth&#13;
in the center is removed. The earth&#13;
between the two lines that mark the&#13;
inside and outside of the foundation&#13;
should be taken out until firm ground&#13;
below frost line is reached, care being&#13;
taken to cut the sides of the ditch&#13;
down straight and to leave the bottom&#13;
level.&#13;
Preparing the Concrete.&#13;
For mixing the concrete, a box&#13;
about four feet wide, eight feet long;&#13;
and one foot deep may be used, or a&#13;
simple floor or platform six by ten&#13;
feet will suffice. To measure the materials,&#13;
an empty barrel (preferably a&#13;
cement barrel) with both enda&#13;
knocked out will be most convenient&#13;
•..J-S&#13;
Feede far Qrowtno Wga,&#13;
Clover and atfatta are ton bulky to&#13;
suit the needs of the growing pigs, unless&#13;
they.are supplemented by nitrogenous&#13;
fiiriitfsiitrayres - Cow peaa, heaaa.&#13;
and nsfr aajaj are ail good feeds wawr*&#13;
ySjpy ..SejS*- 'S^j«giM»^S». „&lt;#Mf .^CjS^ISSS^^BHJr&#13;
is&#13;
Renovated Orchard.&#13;
Professor Hedrich of the New Tors:&#13;
station at Geneva, says he knows of&#13;
an apple orchard which had been in&#13;
sod for 24 years and was so badly run&#13;
down that it was sold as common&#13;
farm land. After several years of&#13;
tillage it is now paying the owner&#13;
tan per cent net on the valuation of&#13;
$1,000 per acre.&#13;
produce some kinds of feed that may&#13;
be used to advantage. OU-meal, wheat&#13;
middlings and tankage all hare their&#13;
place in economical feeding, a n t their&#13;
sue must be regulated by the kinds of&#13;
farm feeds at hand, and their market&#13;
value.&#13;
Unprofitable Caws,&#13;
Cows are not always to blame for&#13;
being unprofitable. We should neyer&#13;
sell a cow to a butcher unless w e can&#13;
look her squarely in the eye and say*&#13;
"Well, old girl, r v e done my part t o&#13;
make you profitable,*&#13;
Cleaning Dairy Utensils.&#13;
The dairy utsaatls must he&#13;
fully washed and fhflrirnghrr asaldad.&#13;
It is the csOy way to keen tkem, clean&#13;
cad if they are not clean they&#13;
produce a good quality of milfc.&#13;
I&#13;
%&#13;
s S -&#13;
t. ,&#13;
&lt;*&gt;S ;t/- j ,&#13;
#f&amp;*i?&#13;
••'•'' '* . &lt; ?&#13;
*...,!£&#13;
^t:&#13;
• ' • ' * # # !&#13;
r/-&gt;,-£*i&amp; •vuw •:.•;*? s,&#13;
Cam forWssdiaj.&#13;
It Is believed by manr that&#13;
which: will matare a good erop a€ ears&#13;
la better testa a&#13;
thanvatdatiea•&lt; whJosr&#13;
^ p p n^m&#13;
nm~&#13;
fe: 'v.&#13;
v*&#13;
( - .&#13;
?'" "&#13;
f-v..-&#13;
• • ' • " '&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
«HIMMIIMMMMIIIIIIIIIItMI&gt;MM&gt;MMMMM&lt;IM&lt;&#13;
Co-Operative Farm&#13;
Products Marketing&#13;
How It Is Done in Europe and May Be Done&#13;
in America to the Profit of Both&#13;
Farmer and Consumer&#13;
By MATTHEW «. DUDGEQN.&#13;
• #»»•»»&gt;• M M I MMM0«0»9»t»»OSM0tMM M M M M M M O *&#13;
t Copyright. 1814. Wwitera N«wap&amp;p«r Union. &gt;&#13;
WHY DENMARK PRODUCES BEST BUTTER, BACON AND EGGS&#13;
i Copenhagen, Denmark.—How has&#13;
Denmark, a little country with less&#13;
than fifteen thousand square miles of&#13;
•Area, established Itself as one of the&#13;
"best agricultural centers In the world?&#13;
Why is it that Denmark produces the&#13;
feast butter, the best bacon, the best&#13;
eggs, that have ever been placed upon&#13;
the markets of Europe? How can this&#13;
little country export each year fifty&#13;
•odd million dollars' worth of butter,&#13;
over four million dollars' worth of&#13;
cream and milk* thirty odd million dollars'&#13;
worth of the finest bacon and&#13;
-eight million dollars' worth of eggs? \ esses during this period. There is in&#13;
to attend school until he was fourteen.&#13;
His teachers were mature, well-trained&#13;
men of good intellectual ability, well&#13;
paid, and, in moat cases, community&#13;
leaders and organisers.&#13;
From fourteen to eighteen Is an age&#13;
when Danish boys and girls are growing&#13;
physically and working at practical&#13;
things, for the young Dane cannot&#13;
enter the folk high school until he&#13;
is eighteen.&#13;
Farm Apprenticeship.&#13;
The prospective farmer, however,&#13;
has not stopped his educative proc-&#13;
Denmark has no rich mines, no great&#13;
lorests, no water power. The soil,&#13;
the one resource, is not naturally fertile.&#13;
In fact, Denmark is a low-lying&#13;
•expanse of wind-swept sand dunes,&#13;
with here and there small stretches&#13;
•of richer soil Much of Its more productive&#13;
soil is the result of scientific erally he stays on one farm for one&#13;
Denmark a recognized system of farm&#13;
apprenticeship for the future farmer.&#13;
It Is a common practise here for the&#13;
father who wishes his son to become&#13;
a farmer to put him for a period of&#13;
three years upon some of the accredited&#13;
model farms of the country. Genm:.&#13;
: • ' • * . • • * • • • x - — ' • • ; - 6&#13;
f&amp;'.tft*/--- •••* ••"•' V '&#13;
f ^ S j r ^ a &gt; •*'•' ' • • ' ' • • •&#13;
* • ' • ' • • - ; - * ' " ^ " " • '&#13;
, . _ » ' ' , * • • . s . • - - - . • •&#13;
i . * r , - 4 : . •"•: • - &amp; ' • . . . .&#13;
•Z ^¾ i i - i -, w •••* ft&#13;
j &gt; &gt; ' • " *•'*—* • ¢^^-¾^ ::*^&#13;
drainage, fertilization and rotation of&#13;
crops. Chilling winds sweep over the&#13;
country the year around, and these,&#13;
with the prevailing fogs, render the&#13;
climate, an Inhospitable one. Copenhagen&#13;
has each year only fifty days of&#13;
-sunshine, and there are only three&#13;
months out of this twelve during which&#13;
Danish cattle can be pastured. That&#13;
l)enmark should be a leading agricultural&#13;
nation does not seem the plan&#13;
which nature originally had for these&#13;
Islands and this peninsula.&#13;
Man has been no kinder than nature&#13;
to this little country. In the eighteenth&#13;
century the nobility and the&#13;
crown owned all the valuable lands,&#13;
while the peasantry werVelther serfs&#13;
or tenants under impossible conditions.&#13;
Export duties made foreign&#13;
commerce unprofitable. Early In the&#13;
nineteenth century economic conditions&#13;
had only begun to Improve when&#13;
the Napoleonic wars again spread disaster&#13;
and poverty over the country.&#13;
Still a little later Denmark's Germanic&#13;
neighbors to the south took&#13;
from the already small nation the&#13;
province of Sohleswlg-Holsteln. Then&#13;
Oermany, In the early eighties, built&#13;
up a high tariff wall which excluded&#13;
Danish products. The commerce upon&#13;
which the people depended for their&#13;
revenues was gone, and the country&#13;
was still again grievously stricken.&#13;
Its Present Prosperity.&#13;
Yet today, In spite of all these handicaps,&#13;
Denmark is in proportion to its&#13;
population the wealthiest country in&#13;
Europe. Eighty-nine per cent of the&#13;
agriculturists own their own land. Her&#13;
farmers have been called the best&#13;
fanners and the most skilled rural&#13;
business men in the world. Rural&#13;
Denmark produces the best bacon, butter&#13;
and eggs ever produced; their pigs&#13;
turn feed into perk more scientifically&#13;
than the porkers of any other na*&#13;
tien; tfielr hens lay more eggs, and&#13;
their cows are more effective as milk&#13;
and butter producing machines. These&#13;
farmers have worked out a system of&#13;
co-operative marketing so effective&#13;
that it ts estimated that over ninety&#13;
per cent of what the consumer "pays&#13;
for Danish farm products actually&#13;
reaches the pocket-book of the man&#13;
who produces it—a rather significant&#13;
figure compared with the generally&#13;
accepted estimate that the American&#13;
farmer gets only from thirty-five to&#13;
forty-six par cent of what the city consumer&#13;
pays for his product&#13;
How has Denmark reached this poai&gt;&#13;
tlon agriculturally? Why it It that she&#13;
can produce the best bacon; butter and&#13;
irlaJM&#13;
fficient&#13;
tional system; second* because the&#13;
government is giving aid which, while&#13;
affective, is not unduly paternalistic;&#13;
third, because of co-operation.&#13;
Danish Farmer an Educated Man.&#13;
It takes brain* to raise the most&#13;
aristocratic sort of products that are&#13;
produced in Denmark, No ignorant&#13;
people could take the bleak, sandy&#13;
plains of Denmark and make great&#13;
gardens of them, gardens supporting a&#13;
splendid aggressive, progressive, prosperous&#13;
race. It requires native&#13;
shrewdness to do these things, but It&#13;
requires something more. H require*&#13;
to addition ecieetinc agricultural&#13;
tnowledgs. a Wg conception of the agricultural&#13;
pceetbwaee ofihe dOontry and&#13;
« generous loyalty to state and eonv&#13;
snunity—en aggregate of qaatttiea that&#13;
pose bat as edmoated man possesses.&#13;
JAnd the Dana Is indeed in Tary truth&#13;
in every eeneeof tna wordancducated&#13;
Be has been trained to make&#13;
year, moving on to a second and then&#13;
a third in order that he may get different&#13;
and broader points of view and&#13;
may see agriculture specialized along&#13;
different lines upon the different farms.&#13;
On these farms he is given an opportunity&#13;
to learn, but for the most part&#13;
his time is spent In hard labor. He&#13;
learns to farm by farming.&#13;
Folk Schools and Patriotism.&#13;
After his apprenticeship Is completed&#13;
he goes for at least a few months&#13;
to one of the folk high schools, which&#13;
are in the broadest sense schoolB of&#13;
patriotism. Inspiring lectures are&#13;
used for Instruction more widely than&#13;
are text books. The history and literature&#13;
of the country Is the theme of&#13;
many an hour. Every class is opened&#13;
with a song, either patriotic or religious,&#13;
and each day extensive readings&#13;
upon patriotic and religious topics&#13;
are given. Practical political economy&#13;
and sociology are Included In the daily&#13;
work*&#13;
These schools are privately owned&#13;
and not absolutely free. The cost of&#13;
five months' Instruction and board for&#13;
the men for the winter months is&#13;
about $65, while the women, who generally&#13;
attend these schools In summer,&#13;
pay only about $30 for three months'&#13;
instruction, including board and lodging.&#13;
Small as these fees seem to be,&#13;
the state has various ways of reducing&#13;
the fees, especially for the sons&#13;
and daughters of the small holders.&#13;
The total number of students In these&#13;
summer and winter schools the last&#13;
few years has never been less than&#13;
ten thousand.&#13;
University Extension*&#13;
These folk high schools have, too,&#13;
an extension form of education somewhat&#13;
similar to the university extension&#13;
courses given by some of our&#13;
American colleges. The high school&#13;
professors frequently go out to the&#13;
schoolhouses for popular lectures upon&#13;
history and literature, and upon sociological&#13;
subjects. Generally a little&#13;
association Is formed for the course of&#13;
from six to ten lectures. Possibly one&#13;
crona (twenty-seven cents) for the&#13;
year is charged, or- there may be a&#13;
charge of twenty ora (four cents) for&#13;
each lecture. Here at the high school&#13;
building they also hold in the fall a&#13;
special community meeting for three&#13;
or Jour days during which three lectures&#13;
per day on subjects similar to&#13;
those taught in the school are given,&#13;
and'in addition man of learning or renown&#13;
from the outside are brought in.&#13;
At this folk school the young farmeggs?&#13;
The answer seemrtssbe: First, fTT,n o **?&gt;*** ]J? ^ ^ 0 ° ^ 0 ° ° 1&#13;
because she has an efficient educa- fining, oecausa sne oas an emcienv «»«»» f e a U t i e s ^w itnhtB fa ll^ it s ^cohn0t ahcMt wii6tlht f ntehde&#13;
in three years' apprenticeship how to&#13;
farm, has an opportunity to learn how&#13;
to be a citizen and a patriot But he&#13;
has not yet completed his school work.&#13;
Upon the farm he has learned how to&#13;
do things. He has yet to learn why.&#13;
So he goes to an agricultural college&#13;
and learns the theoretical and scientific&#13;
why which is back of the practical&#13;
how. This is the story of Danmark's&#13;
farther in the making, through&#13;
common school, apprenticeship, folk&#13;
high school and agricultural college.&#13;
One has pat to travel through the rare!&#13;
sections of Denmark to satisfy&#13;
himself that the outcome^ of this&#13;
process of education Is a finished&#13;
product of extremely nigh amcieney.&#13;
The Danish government is not chary&#13;
l%the aid waden It extends to the farmer;&#13;
The aidV however, is always extended&#13;
open tne^fnne»mental theory&#13;
that the best way to-help the terseer&#13;
^ bast nee o l ^ i m s o q ^ mm to *ef» MntNttf * n *&#13;
^renmaat - - -&lt; T e W l*J* o*nt way e e s the govern.&#13;
ests of agriculture ss In assisting id&#13;
the acquisition by each farmer of the&#13;
soil which he tills. Thanks to the&#13;
Joint activities of the government and&#13;
the co-operative credit societies. It is&#13;
easy to buy a farm in Denmark.&#13;
If the would-be buyer has forty per&#13;
cent of the price to be paid for the&#13;
farm and all its equipment he may&#13;
apply to a credit society for a loan of&#13;
sixty per cent of the value, the loan&#13;
to run for from forty-five to seventynine&#13;
years. Each year the farmer pays&#13;
from four to six per cent of the principal&#13;
amount borrowed. This, however,&#13;
is not wholly Interest, but includes&#13;
a small installment of principal,&#13;
so that at the end of the period for&#13;
which the money was borrowed not&#13;
only has the interest been kept up, but&#13;
the principal has been automatically&#13;
discharged.&#13;
There are, however, other forms of&#13;
loans even more advantageous to the&#13;
borrower, particularly if he be one of&#13;
the poorer farm laborers. If such a&#13;
laborer is anxious to become a landowner&#13;
on a small scale he may under&#13;
certain conditions, procure a loan for&#13;
nine-tenths of the purchase price of&#13;
the farm and equipment. The conditions&#13;
which he must meet are; He&#13;
must have been a farm laborer for&#13;
five years (the law applies to women&#13;
on the farm as well as men); the&#13;
land must not exceed ten acres in extent,&#13;
nor $2,140 In value; he must&#13;
work the farm in a scientific manner,&#13;
and must agree to follow a proper rotation&#13;
of crops and, by the use of&#13;
manures and otherwise, insure the&#13;
continued productiveness of the land.&#13;
For the first five years the laborer&#13;
pays three per cent interest and nothing&#13;
upon the principal. After that he&#13;
begins to add a small percentage upon&#13;
the principal in order to discharge his&#13;
debt. At no time, however, does the&#13;
total annual payment for principal and&#13;
interest exceed four per cent of the&#13;
amount borrowed.&#13;
The government is back of these cooperative&#13;
credit societies. By benevolent&#13;
legislation It makes their organization&#13;
and operation possible; it assists&#13;
in supervision and inspection, and in&#13;
some cases it advances to the co-operative&#13;
society the funds out of which&#13;
the loans are made. There are In&#13;
Denmark about half a million families.&#13;
Including those in cities and villages.&#13;
Co-operative credit societies have a&#13;
membership of over two hundred thousand—&#13;
that is to say, two out of every&#13;
five families in the entire country&#13;
seem to be represented in these cooperative&#13;
credit organisations. In&#13;
fact, It is because it is so easy to buy&#13;
land in Denmark that the tenant is&#13;
disappearing and the small land owner&#13;
is taking his place.&#13;
Other Government Assistance.&#13;
The government has also enacted&#13;
much other legislation calculated to&#13;
serve the Interests of the farmer. It&#13;
has regulated carefully the manufacture&#13;
and sale of margarine, so that&#13;
it is impossible to Import or export&#13;
or sell it under any false representation&#13;
that it is butter. It has regulated&#13;
the quality ^of butter and has forbidden&#13;
the export of butter containing more&#13;
than sixteen per cent water, of butter&#13;
for the preservation of which anything&#13;
other than common salt is used, of&#13;
butter colored with any substance derived&#13;
from coal tar. All butter must&#13;
have been made from milk or cream&#13;
which has been pasteurised; it must&#13;
have been made in an Inspected dairy;&#13;
it must have upon it the Danish label&#13;
guaranteeing its quality.&#13;
The sanitary condition in the creameries,&#13;
the method of packing, snd the&#13;
process of the sale of butter, are thoroughly&#13;
controlled by government authority.&#13;
If any dairy which has been&#13;
authorised by the government to use&#13;
a Danish label for Its product violates&#13;
any regulation or law the minister of&#13;
agriculture has the right to take away,&#13;
either temporarily or permanently,&#13;
the authorisation to use the national&#13;
trade mark. Butter from foreign&#13;
lands must not be marked in any way&#13;
to imply that it has been made in&#13;
Denmark, and those wishing to import&#13;
butter must make-a declaration and&#13;
be properly registered.&#13;
Co-Operation Chief Factor.&#13;
Those familiar with, the conditions&#13;
in Denmark concede that the education&#13;
of the farmer has contributed&#13;
largely to the success of Danish agriculture.&#13;
Every loyal Dane -4s proud&#13;
of the government which has seen the&#13;
great importance of furthering the interests&#13;
of the farmer by every means&#13;
within its power. But no one who&#13;
knows, ever for a minute conceives&#13;
that Denmark could have taken her&#13;
present position as a produced of the&#13;
world*! best farm products, without cooperative&#13;
organisation. It is-because&#13;
of cooperation that it pays to farm&#13;
scientifically. The production of the&#13;
highest gradee of farm, products is&#13;
made Worth while because co-operation&#13;
enables the farmer to take these high;&#13;
grade products to the profitable, in exhanstible,&#13;
and discriminating markets&#13;
of the world. It is co-operation that&#13;
has resulted in better farming, better&#13;
buetnesa, better living. Cooperation&#13;
has kept the farmer'g sons and daugb*&#13;
ten upon the lend and has stopped the&#13;
reeh to the cttyc Cocg«tatlonV infect;&#13;
~.etogst|MAee&gt; &lt;he&gt; eeotMsnto life of the&#13;
• / • &gt; • . . .&#13;
j^^^jg^mt^k * --*?, p-&#13;
MARKET QUOTATIONS&#13;
Uve Stock, Grain and General Farm&#13;
Produce.&#13;
Live Stock.&#13;
DETROIT—Cattle: Receipts, 641;&#13;
bulls and heavy grades steady; others&#13;
10® 15c higher; best steers and heifers,&#13;
$8® 8.25; steers and heifers, 1,000&#13;
to 1,200 lbs, $7.50®7.75; steers and&#13;
heifers, 800 to 1,000 Ibi, $707.25;&#13;
steers and heifers that are fat, 500 to&#13;
700 lbs, $6.50@7.15; choice fat cows,&#13;
$6.25^6.75; good fat cows, $5.75@6;&#13;
common cows, $4.7505.25; oanners,&#13;
$3.25@4.50; choice heavy bulls, $6.75&#13;
@7; fair to good bologna bulls, $60&#13;
6.50; stock bulls, $505.75; choice feeding&#13;
steers, 800 to 1,000 lbs, $707.85;&#13;
fair feeding steers, 800 to 1,000 lbs,&#13;
$6.5O0€.75; choice stockers, 500 to&#13;
700 lbs, $6.5007; fair stockers, 600 to&#13;
700 lbs, $606.25; stock heifers, $506;&#13;
milkers, large, young, medium age,&#13;
$65080; common milkers, $40055.&#13;
Veal calves—Receipts, 361: market&#13;
strong to 50c higher; few choice, $10;&#13;
general market for good, $9.2509.50;&#13;
otherB, $708.50.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 1,651;&#13;
market steady; best lambs, $707.25;&#13;
fair lambs, $6.5006.75; light to common&#13;
lambs, $4.5005.50; fair to good&#13;
sheep, $506.25; culls and common,&#13;
$3.5004.50.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 2,916; all grades,&#13;
$8.60.&#13;
EAST BUFFALO—Cattle—Receipts&#13;
3,500; market 10015c higher; prime&#13;
steers, $8.7509.25; best shipping&#13;
steers, $8.5008.75; best 1,100 to 1,200-&#13;
R&gt; steers, $808.50; coarse and plain&#13;
weighty steers, $7.7507.90; fancy&#13;
yearlings, $8.2508.50; medium to&#13;
good, $7.7508; choice randy steers,&#13;
$7.8508.10; fair to good, $7.6007.75;&#13;
extra good cows, $6.7607.25; best&#13;
cows, $606.50; butcher oowa, $5.25^&#13;
5.75; cutters, $4.3504.50; trimmers, $4&#13;
04.25; best heifers. $7.6027.85; mid*&#13;
lura butcher heifers, $6.7507.25;&#13;
stock heifers, $6.2606.50; feeding&#13;
steers, $707.85; best stock steers,&#13;
$7.2507.50; common light stock steers&#13;
$6.5007; extra good bulls, $707.25;&#13;
bologna bulls, $6.2606.50; stock bulls,&#13;
$506. Milkers and springers, $400&#13;
90.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 19,000; market 6 0&#13;
10c higher; all grades, $8.7508.80.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 12,000;&#13;
market strong; top lambs, $7,660&#13;
7.75; yearlings, $6.5007; wethers,&#13;
$5.5005.75; ewes, $505.50.&#13;
Calves slow; tops, $9.2509.60; fair&#13;
to good, $809; heavy, $6.5007.&#13;
Grains Etc&#13;
DETROIT—Wheat—Cash No. 2 red&#13;
99 3-4c; May opened without change at&#13;
99 3-4c, declined to 99 l-2c and advanced&#13;
to 99 3-4c; July opened at 87c, declined&#13;
to 86 3-4c and advanced to 87c;&#13;
September opened at 86 l-2c, advanced&#13;
to 86 3-4c and closed at 86 l-2c; No. 1&#13;
white, 99 l-4c.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, 69c; No. 3 yellow&#13;
1 car at 70c, 10 at 70 l-2c; No. 4 yellow,&#13;
1 car at 69c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 1 car at 41 l-2c;&#13;
No. 3 white, 2 cars at 41c; No. 4 white&#13;
39 1-2C04OC&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 65c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate and prompt shipment,&#13;
$2.08; May, $2.13; July, $2.16.&#13;
Cloverseed—Prime spot, 10 bags at&#13;
$7.65; October, $7.80; prime alsike,&#13;
$10.&#13;
. Timothy—Prime spot, $2.30.&#13;
Alfalfa—Prime spot, $8.&#13;
Hay—Carlots, track Detroit: No. 1&#13;
timothy, $16.50017; standard, $15.50&#13;
016; No. 2 timothy, $14015; light&#13;
mixed, $15.50016; No. 1 mixed, $13.60&#13;
014; No. 1 clover, $13013.50; rye&#13;
straw, $808.50; wheat and oat straw,&#13;
$707.50 per ton. „•&#13;
'Flour—In one-eighth paper sacks,&#13;
per 196 lbs, jobbing lots: Best patent,&#13;
$6.30; second patent, $5; straight,&#13;
$4.76; spring patent, $5.10; rye, $4.40&#13;
per bbl.&#13;
Feed—In 100-lb sacks, jobbing lots:&#13;
Bran, $28; standard middlings, $30;&#13;
fine middlings, $32; cracked corn, $29;&#13;
coarse cornmeal, $30; corn and oat&#13;
chop, $26.60 per ton.&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
Apples—Steele Red, $606.50; Spy,&#13;
$5.5006; Baldwin, $506; Ben Davis,&#13;
$404.50 per bbl.&#13;
Dressed Hogs—Light, 9010c; heavy&#13;
808 l-2c per lb.&#13;
Cabbage—New, $202.25 per crate;&#13;
In bulk, 2 1-2 03c per lb.&#13;
Sweet Potatoes—Jersey kiln-dried,&#13;
$101.19 per hamper.&#13;
Dressed Calves—Fancy, 12 1*2 013c;&#13;
common, 10012c per lb.&#13;
Honey—Choice to fancy new white&#13;
comb, 15016c; amber, 10011c; ex*&#13;
tracted, 607c per lb.&#13;
New Potatoes—Plotlda, $6.7506 per&#13;
bbl and. $2.25 per bo; Bermuda, $160&#13;
per bu and $7 per bbl.&#13;
Nuts-rShelfcejfc'hioacry, 3e; large&#13;
hickpry, 101 &gt;*•; »&gt;an*sh abestnuts,&#13;
)0*a; wamnti and butternuts, 1 0&#13;
t l^o per lb-&#13;
If s ODD to see one&#13;
woman rub away for&#13;
dear life—working&#13;
hard—wasting time—&#13;
while another takes it&#13;
easy—makes dirt fall&#13;
away more rapidly&#13;
and "worklessly" with&#13;
RUB-NO-MORE.&#13;
RUB-NO-MORE&#13;
WASHING POWDER&#13;
is a sudiese dirt remover&#13;
for Horhee.&#13;
It deans your dtsses,&#13;
sinks, toilets sad&#13;
deans and sweetens&#13;
year milk crocks, ft&#13;
kills germs, ft doss&#13;
not need hot water.&#13;
RUB-NO-MORE RUB-NO-MORE&#13;
Wishing Powder Carbo Naptas Soap&#13;
Five Cents—AM Grocers&#13;
The Rub-No-More Co.. Ft Wayne, Iod.&#13;
Retort Diplomatic.&#13;
She—Have you any special reason&#13;
for wanting to know my age?&#13;
He—I merely wish to know at what&#13;
age woman Is really the most fascl*&#13;
natlng.—Philadelphia Record.&#13;
__ Important to Mothere&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle of&#13;
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for&#13;
infants and children, and see that it&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature •&#13;
In Use For Over M'Years.&#13;
Children Crj for F l e t e W i Oaaterlsl&#13;
~A0E£&#13;
The Human Body.&#13;
The boy entered the office as silently&#13;
as possible, conscious of having&#13;
taken a very long time to go a very&#13;
short distance. The cashier eyed him&#13;
sternly and demanded:&#13;
"Do you work here?"&#13;
"Yes," stammered the boy.&#13;
"Your name?"&#13;
"John Thompson."&#13;
The cashier gazed long and earnestly&#13;
at the mystified youngster, then re*&#13;
marked: "Ah! Thompson. Now I remember&#13;
your face. It's such a long&#13;
time since I saw you last."&#13;
Something to Be Thankful For.&#13;
Casey had been ill more than a&#13;
week when his wife met Mrs. Murphy&#13;
on the street and the following conversation&#13;
ensued:&#13;
"Mrs. Casey, and how is your husband&#13;
gettin' along?" asked Mrs. Murphy.&#13;
"Ah, indad'e, Pat is a very sick&#13;
man," said Mrs. Casey.&#13;
"Sure, and what is the matter with&#13;
him?" Inquired Mrs. Murphy.&#13;
" 'Tis the gangrene, the doctor tells&#13;
us, Mrs. Murphy."&#13;
"Ah, that's bad," sld Mrs. Murphy,&#13;
"but let's praise the Lord for the&#13;
color."&#13;
Clean Record.&#13;
The-artlllerlBt always spoke of his&#13;
gun in the feminine gender.&#13;
"You see, sir, Bhe was never yet silenced!"&#13;
he explained, with glistening&#13;
eyes.—Puck.&#13;
A cynic Is a person who laughs&#13;
while pretending to shed tears.&#13;
Simplified&#13;
Breakfasts&#13;
*&#13;
Make for good days&#13;
Prom a package&#13;
of freah, crisp&#13;
Post&#13;
Toasties&#13;
fill a bowl and add cream or&#13;
milk.&#13;
The*; with some fruit, a cap&#13;
of Instant Poetam, and a&#13;
poached egg or two if you&#13;
like, you have a simple break*&#13;
fast that is wholesome and&#13;
satisfying.&#13;
ToastJea are bits of corn&#13;
carefully cooked, delicately&#13;
seasoned, and toasted to an&#13;
appetising "brown* wtthoufr&#13;
being touched by hand* They&#13;
look good, taste good, and&#13;
Soldby Qtcfmf*&#13;
•' -A '&#13;
m. '*&#13;
'&gt;&gt;J&#13;
i •&#13;
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m&#13;
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H&#13;
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T-", .v^*&lt;&#13;
# * &gt; '&#13;
fr::;-;&#13;
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Er&#13;
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•SsitSC&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Announcement!&#13;
Powell's New Meat Market Opens&#13;
in Murphy Building Today, Thursday&#13;
We herewith wish to announce to the people of Pinckney and&#13;
vicinity that we have opened a first cla^s meat market in the Murphy&#13;
building on Main street and that we will carry the finest cuts of all&#13;
kinds of fresh and salt meats. Try our home-made sausages, strictly&#13;
fresh. We most respectfully solicit a Bhare of your patronage. Come&#13;
in and get acquainted.&#13;
L. E. POWELL&#13;
Resolutions&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 76, F. &amp;&#13;
A. M., tender throngh the undersigned&#13;
committee the following&#13;
resolutions;&#13;
Whereas: — The Great Ruling&#13;
Architect of the Uuiverse has called&#13;
from our circle our worthy&#13;
brother, Albro Q, Gates, thereby&#13;
severing all earthly ties which&#13;
bind us together, therefore,&#13;
Resolved:—That in this dispensation&#13;
of Devine Providence the&#13;
community has lost a faithful citizen,&#13;
his wife a devoted husband&#13;
and the Masonic Fraternity an&#13;
e v e r present and appreciated&#13;
brother.&#13;
Resolved:—That in the time of&#13;
their bereavement, we tender our&#13;
kindest sympathies and in the attendant&#13;
sorrow of the family, commend&#13;
them to Him who will fold&#13;
the. arms o£ his love and protection&#13;
around them who put their&#13;
trust in Him.&#13;
Resolved:—That as a testimony&#13;
of our esteem and regard for the&#13;
memory of our departed Albro G.&#13;
Gates, the hall of the Livingston&#13;
Lodge, No. 76, F. &amp; A. M., be&#13;
draped in mourning for thirty&#13;
days, and further, that these resolutions&#13;
be signed by the proper&#13;
officers of this Lodge and a copy&#13;
of these resolutions be forwarded&#13;
to the family of the deceased&#13;
brother.&#13;
Thomas Read&#13;
C. V, VanWinkle&#13;
E. E. Hoyt&#13;
Indigestion? Can's Eat? No Appetite?&#13;
A treatment of Electric Bitters increases&#13;
your appetite; stops indigestion; you can&#13;
eat anything. A real spring tonic tor liver,&#13;
kidney and stomach troubles, Cleanses&#13;
your whole system and you feel fine.&#13;
Electric Bitters did more for Mr. T. D.&#13;
Peeble's stomach troubles than any medicine&#13;
he ever tried. Get a bottle today. 50c&#13;
and $1.00. Recommended by C. G.&#13;
Meyers, the druggist.&#13;
" : * * &lt; . •&#13;
¾¢''''';&gt;j;•'^^.,&#13;
1 - ^ . . : : . - - / . ^ - . . -&#13;
- • . ; * » ; , • , . &gt; . ,&#13;
*&gt;$fcr-&#13;
'**•&#13;
North Hamburg&#13;
M. A. Davis was a Howell visitor&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Mr. Whitney of Heading was a&#13;
guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. Hinkle&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Mrs. Orville Nash and daughter&#13;
Ethel are visiting her parents,&#13;
Mr, and Mrs. Jay Davenport of&#13;
Toledo.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Alpheus Smith of&#13;
Hamburg, Mr. and Mrs. Silas&#13;
Swarthout a n d Mrs. Herman&#13;
S w t h o a t o f Pinckney attended. 0 a l l a t T h e Q^int for dry&#13;
Jtorth Hamburg church Sunday.' ^ . a n d n i M i l i e r y i ^ v .&#13;
Rev Brooke of Howell filled the; « 4l , . , . . . .&#13;
•Ci u. «^- t&gt;~~ r\ t A Bentley's circus and vaudeville&#13;
pulpit for llev. Ostrander. ; i h o # nJ9f Cftnvag a t P i n c k o e y (&#13;
Robert Schenklin and sister of Friday evening, May 15. Admit-&#13;
Ann Arbor wore over Sunday j^on 15 and 25 cents. adv.&#13;
gnee** of their grandparents, Mr.&#13;
Almost a Fire&#13;
Had it not been for the quick&#13;
work on the purt of bystanders,&#13;
the goods'in the Dolan store occupied&#13;
by Mrs. A. M. Utley would&#13;
have been destroyed by fire Wednesday&#13;
morning. The store had&#13;
but recently been papered, covering&#13;
a pipe-hole connecting with&#13;
the chimney between the Teeple&#13;
hardware building and the Dolau&#13;
store. A hot fire composed of&#13;
boxe?, etc., iu the Teeple Hardware&#13;
Co. stove caused the paper&#13;
iu Mrs Utley's Btore to catch fire.&#13;
As the fire was noticed*before it&#13;
had gained much headway, a damaged&#13;
box of goods in close proximity&#13;
to the chimney and some&#13;
badly burned wall paper were the&#13;
only results.&#13;
Potatoes on sale at The Central.&#13;
adv.&#13;
Mrs. F. H. Johnson and Grace&#13;
Campbell spent the week end with&#13;
Bessie Johnson.&#13;
L. E, Powell opens up bis new&#13;
meat market in the Murphy store,&#13;
today, Thursday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Dan forth&#13;
of Flint are spending a iew days&#13;
with her mother, Mrs. Emma&#13;
Moran.&#13;
Get your new summer suit of&#13;
Monks Bros- and be assured of&#13;
style, durability and best price&#13;
possible. adv.&#13;
What'll you bet, that Col,&#13;
Boosevelt doesn't turn up iu&#13;
Mexico before the end of the&#13;
month ?&#13;
Bentley's circus and vaudeville&#13;
show under canvas at Pinckney,&#13;
Friday evening, May 15. See&#13;
large bills for particulars. adv.&#13;
T he Old Southland Sextette at&#13;
the Pinckney opera house Tuesday&#13;
evening drew a fair sized&#13;
crowd considering rhe weather.&#13;
That they were good singers and&#13;
enter tinners was the report of all&#13;
present.&#13;
, • &gt; • - « -&#13;
Coughed For Tame Tears&#13;
"I am a lover of your godsend to humanity&#13;
and science. Your medicine, Dr.&#13;
King's New Discovers, cared my cough of&#13;
three years standing/' says Jennie Flemmiog,&#13;
of New Do?er, Ohio. Have yon an&#13;
annoying cough? It it stabbora and won't&#13;
vieid to treatment? Get a 50c. bottle of&#13;
I)r. King's New Discovery to-day. -Whit&#13;
it did for Jennie Flemming it will do for&#13;
yon, no matter how stubborn or chronic a&#13;
cough may be. It stops a cough and stops&#13;
throat ana lung trouble Relief or money&#13;
back. 50c. and $1.00. Recommended by&#13;
C. G. Meyers, the druggist.&#13;
u r n&#13;
•n Oha*. Sweitzer.&#13;
« • • » , » • -&#13;
5Kon will mlit a good time if&#13;
you fail to etay to the dance given&#13;
aftertke pUy, "P«g Or tty fieart."&#13;
Musio by Lillian Given'* Orchestra&#13;
o* Aaa Arbor,&#13;
- - ^ , . . / , ' • •&#13;
Keep Bowel Mevtaeat Bsfilar&#13;
Dr. Ki&#13;
lifer and&#13;
Bid the body of poiaons and 'waste. 1st.&#13;
ing's New Life Pills keep stomach&#13;
I kidneys in healthy condition.&#13;
8rove your cosnplexioa by flashing the&#13;
vtr and kidneys. "I got more relief&#13;
from one box of Dr. Kfnf/s New Ufe PUIa&#13;
than any medicine I ever tried," sayt O.&#13;
B. HetleUt, of Chieago, IU. ' ~&#13;
JUST A S&#13;
wc write this adv. there comes a tele-&#13;
/&#13;
phone call from Pinckney asking if w e&#13;
carry "Stout" Suits.&#13;
WE DO&#13;
also slim s u i t s in good assortment, besides&#13;
regulars.&#13;
there's no reason for paying tailors high&#13;
prices if you will but come here. W e&#13;
fit you right, whether tall, short, stout&#13;
or slim, and at right prices.&#13;
W. J. DANCER &amp; COMPANY, ST0CKBRIDGE&#13;
eURLBTT'S ...&#13;
SMOOTHING OIL&#13;
FOR MAN OR B E A S T&#13;
For the removal of strains, sprains, braises&#13;
puffs, swellings and bunches, except bony ones,&#13;
without blistering and for healing sores leaving&#13;
no scars and the hair that grows in is the natural&#13;
color and it is a hair grower, and for healing&#13;
sores under the collar on top of the neck&#13;
and under the saddle while working the horse&#13;
every day, except on swerver or hitcher on&#13;
which the sores will get no larger while working&#13;
if CUKLETT'S SMOOTHING OIL ia put&#13;
on night and morning, but lay the horse idle a&#13;
few days and they are healed. For removing&#13;
bunches tinder the collar, on top of the neck&#13;
and under the saddle while working the horse&#13;
every day, does not make any difference whether&#13;
they are on swerver or hitcher in these&#13;
eases. Will cure a cocked ankle and even over&#13;
on one side and use your horse every day by&#13;
rubbing around ankle. Will remove a bunch&#13;
"as hard as a stone" if you cau move it, (not&#13;
bony.) Cures sweeney in one or two weeks and&#13;
work the horse every day, and for the curing&#13;
of speed cracks in one or two days, scratches&#13;
three or four days to a week, grease heel from&#13;
one to three months, according to the person&#13;
who is taking care of the horse—care is one&#13;
half the cure—and all the care is to apply&#13;
CURLETT'S SMOOTHING OIL once a day&#13;
and avoid using soap and water as much as&#13;
possible, same as you would for speed cracks&#13;
arid scratches. You will be surprised how quick&#13;
it will cure itchiness of the skin and piles, exernal&#13;
oi internal; external rub on and internal&#13;
inject in at bedtime with a small syringe. Will&#13;
remove bunions and the pain or burniiTg of&#13;
feet, if uot encased in too tight or short a shoo,&#13;
and painful and rheumatic swellings. Use&#13;
CURLETT'S SMOOTHING OIL anywhere&#13;
you would use a linament or ointment.&#13;
GURbETTS&#13;
H Q A Y B R E M E D Y&#13;
A Relief, Benefit, Help and Cure for Coughs,&#13;
Colds, Distemper, Short or Thick Wind, Heaves&#13;
and Bellus Heaves in the Early Stages and&#13;
warranted to relieve in advanced stages, if not&#13;
producing a cure.&#13;
This is very strongly recommended for producing&#13;
a fine, smooth skin and freeing the&#13;
blood from gross humors. A horse is better&#13;
able to work by each dose and will increase in&#13;
flesh, muscle, life and vim.&#13;
It costs $2.00 to $6.00 to cure a case of&#13;
Heaves, and it may cost $8.00 to cure some old&#13;
Heaver.&#13;
You can cure a Heaver in winter cheaper&#13;
than in summer as the winter air acts aa a bracing&#13;
tonio and more easily when working as the&#13;
horse gets fresh air and exercise.&#13;
GURbSTT'S&#13;
Thrush Remedy&#13;
Grows out and thickens any part of Hoof or&#13;
Frog that you put it on, no good for corns.&#13;
Cures Thrush one to three applications,&#13;
grows ont a new frog one to three applications,&#13;
make the frog healthy, grows itself. Grows&#13;
together and put Sand Crack, Quarter Crack&#13;
Cracked Heels, thickens a Shell Hoof and&#13;
grows out the Shell of a hoof like the hoof on a&#13;
big heavy horse or flat foot horse; one application&#13;
generally cures Kail Pricks, Pusey Foot,&#13;
Corking above hoof sad Ringworm or Rinip&#13;
Around. Hoof Corking require* several applications.&#13;
Curlett's Ptnworat Remedy&#13;
A Compound, Three Doses Effectually Removes&#13;
these Troublesome Parasites from Man or Beast.&#13;
At&#13;
Manufactured Only "By&#13;
WILL CURLETT, »f ICHIGAN&#13;
Sold by all beading Dealers in Horse Remedies -&#13;
* •&#13;
* h&#13;
Pinckney Old Boys and Girls Home-Coming&#13;
oB^.^ao.i.wth.%&amp;,Wednes&#13;
• ^&#13;
• : * • * *~"&#13;
Mm-&#13;
!&#13;
/*;.&#13;
%i&#13;
:¾.&#13;
:A&#13;
'.*$•.&#13;
W^&#13;
. ^ ¾&#13;
tfidttftibfctfUJk</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch May 14, 1914</text>
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                <text>May 14, 1914 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1914-05-14</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="11415">
                <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="37388">
              <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, May 21, 1914 No. 21&#13;
Gommunication&#13;
. ' May 15, 1914&#13;
To the Township Board of the&#13;
Township of Putnam, Pinckney,&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
Gentlemen:&#13;
I was today asked by Dr. H. F.&#13;
Sigler to rea 1 the deed conveying&#13;
the land which is commonly known&#13;
as the public square in the village&#13;
of Pinckuay to its present ownership.&#13;
This I have just done, and&#13;
in as much as this deed was conveyed&#13;
into its present ownership&#13;
some years ago and at a time,&#13;
probabiy, before the present members&#13;
of to* Towntjrip Board bad&#13;
much to do witto tee Township affai&#13;
re, X tail* at tbift time to go&#13;
somewhat In derails.&#13;
TMe public square now belongs&#13;
to the Township of Putnam and&#13;
not to the Village of Pinckney. It&#13;
was deeded to the Township of&#13;
Putnam, October 11, 1884, by Dr.&#13;
Charles W. Hayes and others for&#13;
a consideration named in the deed&#13;
of $2047 which the Township voted&#13;
to pay and paid at that time,&#13;
that consideration being the costs&#13;
and expenses that the partitis of&#13;
the first part to the deed paid to&#13;
maintain the title against one,&#13;
James Pearson, who was then&#13;
claiming to own the property as a&#13;
private individual. :9G{iis deed is&#13;
recorded in the office of Register&#13;
of Deeds for this County, in Liber&#13;
77, page 348.&#13;
This deed is in the usual form,&#13;
and after describing the property&#13;
accurately and carefully, contains&#13;
this provision, to-wit:&#13;
"Provided always and these&#13;
presents are upon the absolute&#13;
condition that the said two and&#13;
one-half acres of laud above con*&#13;
veyecf shall be by the said party&#13;
of the second part forever hereafter&#13;
occupied and used and apthe&#13;
money and carried the burden I&#13;
of the litigation at the time that&#13;
thd property was attacked and&#13;
sought to be put to private use&#13;
did, ia my opinion, a worthy&#13;
public service, and the public&#13;
square Jjhat was at that time and&#13;
in tha^manuer purchased by the&#13;
Township has ever sine?, as before&#13;
been a source of pride, beauty and&#13;
I think profit, at lea*t in the way&#13;
of satisfaction, to the people of&#13;
the Township, and I think no use&#13;
of the grounds that are susceptible&#13;
of serious objection on the&#13;
part of the citizens of the Township&#13;
should be tolerated.&#13;
I s e t a it the foregoing letter to&#13;
yo* m the spirit of desiring to be&#13;
of assktfmas in the matter, if possible,&#13;
and for uo other purpose&#13;
whatever. I have not the slightest&#13;
doubt that each member of the&#13;
Township Board has as great,&#13;
or greater interest in the matter&#13;
than I have, and that each and&#13;
all of you will be only to glad to&#13;
do your duty after you shall finally&#13;
understand it.&#13;
All of which I most respectfully&#13;
submit&#13;
W. P. VANWINKLE.&#13;
THE SECRET IS OUT&#13;
The open letter of attorney Van-&#13;
Winkle to the Township Board of&#13;
Putnam is a very clear exposition&#13;
of the statute of the public park.&#13;
The deed of the "syndicate" to the&#13;
Township is an iron clad one and&#13;
fully sets forth the wishes of Jos.&#13;
Kirk land, the original donor.&#13;
This deed was made about thirty&#13;
years ago. All are now dead but&#13;
one. Who can say how soon some&#13;
of the heirs of these persons may&#13;
see a possible chance for procuring&#13;
gain and begin suit for ejectment&#13;
on the grcunds of a violation&#13;
of the terms of this deed? Tbe&#13;
notice to the Township Board is a&#13;
propri.a,te, u excl,us.ive,l y t, o pub, ,li.c ,m atter* ox&gt;f puib lic rec.o-rd. .n The vil*- „_.: __i„ _•__! __i. *__ __.•__A. i *a*?e °* Pinckney with the consent&#13;
uses only, and not for any private of the Township Board, can well&#13;
ends and purposes."&#13;
I am advised that my attention&#13;
was called to this subject matter&#13;
because the Village of Pinckney,&#13;
through some of its officers, claimed&#13;
the right and authority to allow&#13;
shows or tent performances, or&#13;
things of that kind, upon the public&#13;
ground, and because such UBO&#13;
of tbe ground was objected to by&#13;
citizens of that vicinity.&#13;
I desire to state that it appears&#13;
to me there is no question but&#13;
what the Township of Putnam has&#13;
the absolute control of this piece&#13;
of property and not the village of&#13;
Pinckney. Therefore the Township&#13;
Board of the Township represent&#13;
the Township and are the&#13;
officers in charge and control, and&#13;
no use of the public grounds could&#13;
be considered a lawful use except&#13;
it was such use as is approved for&#13;
public purposes by the said Township&#13;
Board.&#13;
afford to do a little every year to&#13;
beautify the park for the benefit&#13;
it is to the village.&#13;
H. F.&#13;
Miss Lulu Benham and Mr.&#13;
Morrice Darrow Quietly&#13;
Married&#13;
Wedding bells tolled the knell&#13;
of another maiden's name last&#13;
Friday evening, May 15, at Howell,&#13;
when at the home of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Myron Ely, her sister, Miss&#13;
Lulu Benham became the bride of&#13;
Mr. Morrice Darrow otthis place.&#13;
Rev. B. Atcheson, pastor of the&#13;
Howell Baptist church, officiated&#13;
at tbe ceremony which made the&#13;
happy young couple one.&#13;
Miss Benham is one of Pinckney's&#13;
popular school teachers, being&#13;
at present preceptress of the&#13;
Pinckney high school. Mr. Darrow&#13;
is a member of the Junior&#13;
class of tbe same school.&#13;
For some time past it has been&#13;
rumored that the young people&#13;
were to be married, but when the&#13;
time came they evidently decided&#13;
to fool everyone. It is too bad&#13;
tbat the "cat is- out of the bag",&#13;
but such news was too good to&#13;
keep any longer. Miss Benham&#13;
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Will Benham of North Hamburg,&#13;
while Mr. Darrow is the son of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Darrow of&#13;
this place.&#13;
This paper joins witm their,&#13;
many friends in wishing them&#13;
much happiness. What the bride's&#13;
wedding gown was, we don't know,&#13;
what her traveling gown was, we&#13;
don't Know. If she wore a hat, if&#13;
the house was tastefully decorated,&#13;
we don't know. We don't&#13;
know whether they sat down to a&#13;
sumptuous repast or not after the&#13;
ceremony. We don't know where&#13;
they went on their honeymoon&#13;
Fruit Jars Short Measure&#13;
Deputy Dairy and Food Commissioner,&#13;
Burr Lincoln, issued the&#13;
following bulletin today: "During&#13;
a recent trip to Cheboygan, A. J.&#13;
Finn, city sealer, called my attention&#13;
to the fact that the two quart&#13;
'Ball fruit jars,' Mason's patent,&#13;
were one-half pint short, holding&#13;
three and one-half-pints instead of&#13;
four. There is stamped on the&#13;
outside of the box that contains&#13;
the jars these words 'One-half&#13;
gallon, Complete.' When the average&#13;
housewife wants one-half gallon,&#13;
of vinegar, syrup, molasses,&#13;
etc., and sends one of these cans to&#13;
the grocer to be filled, she is short&#13;
measured at the rate of one pint to&#13;
a gallon. In many parts of Michigan&#13;
storekeepers fcjaj% these soealled&#13;
two quart jars filled with&#13;
fruit, maple syrup, etc. The unsuspecting&#13;
customers buy them&#13;
and imagine that they are getting&#13;
full measure when in reality they&#13;
are being short-measured ouehalf-&#13;
pint. The dairy and food department&#13;
is issuing circulars to&#13;
the sealers o f weights a n d&#13;
measures and to inspectors of the&#13;
department requesting them to&#13;
stamp on all such cans offered for&#13;
sale, the true contents, to-wit,&#13;
three and one-half pints. It is&#13;
suggested that housewives send&#13;
to the grocer something besides&#13;
a Ball two quart jar if they want&#13;
full measure. Yesterday I instructed&#13;
two of the girls in the&#13;
department to buy two quarts of&#13;
vinegar from two different Lansing&#13;
stores. One sample obtained&#13;
was full measure. The other was&#13;
2\ oz. short, both obtained in cane&#13;
that held over two quarts. WTe&#13;
then sent down a Ball fruit jar&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
FOR SALE—Tested Yellow Seed Corn&#13;
Ralph Benuett, Pinckney. 2U3*&#13;
FOR, RENT—Rooms over Monk's Store.&#13;
Inquire of Mrs. J . Wilcox, Pinckney.&#13;
20t3*&#13;
FOR SALE—Horses ranging from 3 to 10&#13;
yeHr6. Inquire of C. E. Baughn, Portage&#13;
Lake. 19t3*&#13;
FOR SALE—Four brood sows, $20. each.&#13;
19t4* Will White, Howell&#13;
FARM FOR SALE OB RBNT-38 acres&#13;
on road ju«t north of the Ktoa folM&#13;
Section7 * Jliies TL^TSaKSSfTlMP&#13;
-W*»t Cfraad Blvd., D e t r o M f k * . HW&#13;
BYBRY WOMAN&#13;
S H O U L D&#13;
E A R N W b B K&#13;
Introducing our very complete Spring line&#13;
of beautiful wool suitings, wash fabrics,&#13;
fancy waistinge, silks, hdkfs, petticoats, etc.&#13;
Up to date N. Y. City patterns. Finest&#13;
line on the market. Dealing direct with&#13;
the mills vou will find our prices low. If&#13;
others can make $10.00 to $30.00 weekly&#13;
you can also. Samples, full instruction in&#13;
neat sample case, shipped express prepaid.&#13;
No money required, Exclusive territory.&#13;
Write for particulars. Be first to apply.&#13;
Standard Dress Goods Company, 200 4th&#13;
St. Binghauiton, N. Y.&#13;
trip. All we know is that the short aj above stated and ou renuptial&#13;
knot was securely tied. quest for two quarts of vinegar,&#13;
this jar, although short 2.J oz,,&#13;
was not even rilled. Better measure&#13;
what you get in a fruit jar.—&#13;
State Journal.&#13;
SIGLER.&#13;
Reserved seats are on sale at&#13;
Meyer's drug store for the play,&#13;
"Peg O' My Heart", given by the&#13;
Seniors of the Howell High&#13;
| School under the auspices of the&#13;
White-Gehringer&#13;
Tuesday morning, May 12tb, at&#13;
eigH o'clock, Rev FT. Thorqton&#13;
of Howell joined in the hold bonds&#13;
of matrimony, John White of&#13;
Pinckney and Miss Elizabeth&#13;
G-ehringer of Marion, at St. Joseph's&#13;
church.&#13;
Tbe groom is well and favorably&#13;
known throughout this vicinity,&#13;
being a hustling young farmer of&#13;
this township. The bride ia the&#13;
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Adam&#13;
Gehringer, prosperous farmers of&#13;
Marion. Mr. Lucine McCloskey&#13;
and Miss Catherine Gehringer,&#13;
sister of the bride, acted a» best&#13;
man and brides maid respectively.&#13;
Hugs in all sizes at&#13;
P. H. S. at the Pinckney opera,StockbrHge&#13;
house Friday evening, May 22.&#13;
Paul Miller and Eugene Dinkel&#13;
who left about a month ago for&#13;
Alberta, Canada, to seek their&#13;
fortunes have returned home. They&#13;
report "nothing doing" in that&#13;
vicinity and that Pinckney looks&#13;
good to them.&#13;
Dancer's—&#13;
adv.&#13;
Mrs. H F. Sigler spent Tuesday&#13;
and Wednesday in Ypsilanti.&#13;
The Willing Workers and the&#13;
Loyal Juniors of the M. E. Sunday&#13;
school will serve ice cream,&#13;
Saturday afternoon and evening&#13;
in the rooms under the opera&#13;
house.&#13;
Advertise&#13;
am&#13;
. ^ IT TOO&#13;
Want* Cook&#13;
Want a Clerk&#13;
Want a Part oar&#13;
Want a Situation&#13;
Want a Servant Girl&#13;
Wast loSalJa Ptaaa&#13;
Want le Sell a Carriage&#13;
Want lo Sail TowaProperty&#13;
Waat te Sell Toar Groceries&#13;
Waal to Sell Tour Hardware&#13;
Waat Casto aero for Aaytaiaf&#13;
•dvertiae Weekly ia Thia Paper.&#13;
Adrertiaint U Ibe Way to Si&#13;
AdWtieial Bria£a Cnst&lt;&#13;
Advertising Keeps Caatoi&#13;
Advertlsia| Insure* Sncceei&#13;
Advertising Shows Energy&#13;
Advertising Shows Pluck&#13;
Advertising la "Bis"&#13;
Advertise or Baal&#13;
Advertiae Long&#13;
Advertise Well&#13;
ADVERTISE&#13;
At Ones&#13;
In This Paper&#13;
. , ... . , . , . A dainty wedding breakfast was&#13;
My nptpoN « rating u » let- 8 e m d a t F a w c e t t . ;&#13;
ter to you is to challenge your at restaurant aftention&#13;
to tbe foregoing facta and&#13;
especially txTthe fact tbat I believe&#13;
it to be your duty to assume control&#13;
of these grounds and see to it&#13;
that they are not occupied or used&#13;
in any manner that will conflict&#13;
with the letter and spirit of the&#13;
conveyance, and restriction in tbe&#13;
conveyance above quoted. I suggest&#13;
that it appears to me to be&#13;
contrary to tbe letter and spirit of&#13;
the restriction'as contained in the&#13;
oonveyaace^to'ient to* property&#13;
to private&#13;
of tbat ch&#13;
rivste&#13;
performances f or for soy ^ ^ 3 ^&#13;
nature, - - Jtodift,&#13;
ter tne ceremony. Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
White took a short wedding trip&#13;
to the western part of the state&#13;
and are now at home to their&#13;
many friends on their farm in&#13;
Putnam.&#13;
As John kept this matrimonial&#13;
venture under his bat we are a&#13;
little late in getting an account of&#13;
the wedding, baPlieartilj join&#13;
with his numerous friends in&#13;
wishing them • :very happy journey&#13;
through Hfev&#13;
km'J)ajr suiU at&#13;
WW*),&#13;
MURPHY 6r JACKSON&#13;
HEADQUARTERS FOR&#13;
•&#13;
Groceries - Dry Goods - Shoes tP Furnishings&#13;
barges* Stock Qjo Pfjjg m j £JJ Lowest Prices&#13;
Our Grocery Specials FOP Cash&#13;
Make i t Expensive For You to Trade Elsewhere&#13;
7 bars Flake White Soap for&#13;
Table Talk Coffee for&#13;
Nero Coffee for&#13;
25 lbs. H. St B. Granulated Sugar&#13;
New Dry Goods Arriving&#13;
adr.&#13;
• * * . ::&amp; &lt;?,&#13;
iV-ifi&#13;
'ifc&#13;
-•* « - • "tm* xB,.&#13;
•r+i-&#13;
L**ra&#13;
,w&lt; '&gt;••-'.&#13;
.•i&#13;
• \n&#13;
S 4}&#13;
• l - ' H&#13;
•of&#13;
f ' • • i, - -, -CM&#13;
m&gt;&#13;
% »&#13;
I -'••x.'i'i.&#13;
• • #&#13;
»&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
&amp; ; ; . • •&#13;
# % • • .&#13;
' V * * .A.:&#13;
* : •&#13;
^&#13;
AVERAGE COST OF RAISING DAIRY HEIFERS&#13;
Reliable 8ources of National Prosperity.&#13;
'(Prepared by the United States 'Department&#13;
of Agriculture.)&#13;
According to investigators In the&#13;
department of agriculture the average&#13;
Inet cost of raising a dairy heifer one&#13;
year old on a Wisconsin farm Is $39.62&#13;
ma4 of a two. year heifer $61.41. These&#13;
flfim at* aspUeaule to other dairy&#13;
# * ^ - S U t e J * p r t i aa* Heat where&#13;
[land and food Taluoi^tf* itailar to&#13;
jthose in Wiscoaeta. Thoy ore "based l\y og8e.£ by the value of the manar*.&#13;
on data obtained from raising 117&#13;
calves from birth to the time they&#13;
enter the dairy herd. The details,&#13;
with a complete summary of the in*&#13;
jvestigatlon, have recently been published&#13;
by the department of agriculture&#13;
In- Bulletin No. 49, under the&#13;
title of "The Cost of Raising a Dairy&#13;
Cow."&#13;
There are in the United StateB over&#13;
121,000,000 dairy cows. These figures&#13;
[give some Idea of the importance of&#13;
this economic problem to the country&#13;
as a whole, for these cows must&#13;
!be replaced every few years. The&#13;
toost of the production of these heifers&#13;
Is a large item In keeping down the&#13;
profits of the dairymen.&#13;
The new bulletin contains numerous&#13;
[table* and several illustrations of the&#13;
{Jersey calves from which the items&#13;
of cost were obtained.&#13;
The most Important item was the&#13;
icoBt of the food, which was estimated&#13;
at market value and amounted to&#13;
nearly two-tlArds of the total net cost&#13;
of the heifer, while labor formed 12½&#13;
Iper cent of the cost.&#13;
Figures for the average net cost&#13;
of the one-year-old heifer are as follows:&#13;
(Feed $24.67&#13;
Labor 4.45&#13;
[Other costs 6.36&#13;
ing dependent almost entirely upon&#13;
whole milk.&#13;
The man labor required In raising a&#13;
heifer is about 40 hours during the&#13;
first year and 23 hours the second&#13;
year. The total cost of man and horse&#13;
labor for the two years is close to $8.&#13;
The manure produced during the two&#13;
years has been valued at $8; consequently,&#13;
the cost of labor Is practical-&#13;
Total $35.48&#13;
To this should be added the initial&#13;
-value of the calf, which was estimated&#13;
to he $7.04, making a total cost at&#13;
the end of one year of $42.52. This&#13;
charge is justified In view of the fact&#13;
that dairy cows are credited with this&#13;
item In determining the cost of milk&#13;
production. By allowing $3 credit for&#13;
imanure, it leaves a net cost of $39.52&#13;
at the end of the first year.&#13;
Figures for the average net cost of&#13;
the two-year-old heifer are as follows:&#13;
Initial value $ 7.04&#13;
jFeed 40.83&#13;
Labor 7.811&#13;
Other costs .&gt; 13.73&#13;
The item "Other coats" consist* of&#13;
expenses usually overlooked Jfi e*&amp;&#13;
mating costs. These are interest,&#13;
charge for the use of buildings and&#13;
equipment, expense for bedding, miscellaneous&#13;
expenses, a share of the&#13;
general expenses for the entire farm&#13;
business, and a charge to cover losses&#13;
by death and discarding. The total&#13;
for these forms nearly one-fifth of&#13;
the total cost of the two-yearold&#13;
heifer. &gt;&#13;
The foregoing figures show that it&#13;
costs more to raise calves to maturity&#13;
than is commonly supposed, and they&#13;
support the advice which the department&#13;
Is continually trying to impress&#13;
upon dairy farmers, that it does not&#13;
pay to raise any but the best heifers.&#13;
Raising scrub heifers and selling them&#13;
at $25 to $40 apiece, as many do, Is&#13;
unprofitable except on cheap land or&#13;
under other very favorable conditions.&#13;
But it does pay to raise the best&#13;
heifers, for in good dairy sections wellbred&#13;
heifers are worth considerably&#13;
more than $60 when two years of age.&#13;
Furthermore, dairy farmers as a rule&#13;
r~e obliged to raise their own stock&#13;
as it is difficult to buy productive&#13;
cows at a reasonable price. In some&#13;
sections of the West where alfalfa is&#13;
worth only $4 or $5 a ton, or in the&#13;
Southwest where pastures furnish feed&#13;
the greater part of the year, this cost&#13;
may be greatly reduced. Even where&#13;
it costs $60 to raise a heifer, twothirds&#13;
of this amount is charged for&#13;
feeds at market prices, a large part of&#13;
vrhlch can be grown on the farm at a&#13;
profit. Thus by raising the heifers&#13;
the dairy farmer finds a home market&#13;
for feeds grown on the farm at remunerative&#13;
prices, and at the same&#13;
time aids In maintaining the fertility&#13;
of the farm.&#13;
$69.41&#13;
Credit for manure 8.00&#13;
$61.41&#13;
One-half of the feed cost the first&#13;
year and one-third for the full two&#13;
ye^rs id" for whole and skim milk.&#13;
By far the most expensive period&#13;
in the life of the calf U the first four&#13;
weeks, the cost being nearly double&#13;
that for any other four-week period.&#13;
This high cost is occasioned by its ber&#13;
W V S A / W S A ^ W \ » I&#13;
Two Sheep Pastures.&#13;
Sheep owners should realize that&#13;
having two or more feed lots is economy.&#13;
As soon as one pasture Is&#13;
picked bare a change should be made.&#13;
In this way the pasture 'becomes&#13;
freshened and the weeds will be kept&#13;
down better. Sheep do much better&#13;
on less ground when this system is&#13;
used and many more sheep can be&#13;
kept.&#13;
Isolate Setting Hens.&#13;
It Is never advisable to set hens in&#13;
the hen house where other hens are&#13;
around to disturb them.&#13;
Broken Eggs Expected.&#13;
Tou must expect broken eggs when&#13;
the nest is so constructed that the&#13;
hen must Jump down to get into it&#13;
GOOD PROFITS FROM STEERS&#13;
Most Remarkable Results Secured at&#13;
Iowa 8Ution With Five Different&#13;
Lota of Animals.&#13;
• • • ' • - &amp;&#13;
. ' • » &amp; " • •&#13;
.*'.&#13;
!&gt; V .*M,&#13;
* *&#13;
, At the Iowa station, during the last&#13;
season, most remarkable results were&#13;
secured with fire different lots of experimental&#13;
steers. The beet paying&#13;
lot made a profit of $23.46 per head.&#13;
•,.-. This lot received 14.6 pounds per&#13;
- head daily of shelled corn, three&#13;
/pounds cottonseed meal and 28.6&#13;
T pounds silage. Other lots were fed 4 rn comparison, receiving varying&#13;
amounts of the same feeds, and some&#13;
were fed clover hay in addition, hut&#13;
lot. which received a ration in&#13;
the bulky part was silage and&#13;
oncentratee consisted of shelled&#13;
nd cottonseed meal, was the Jot&#13;
turned off the most clean money.&#13;
He station has done at much exaseatal&#13;
feeding with sUage ratios&#13;
the Indiana station at Pard»e*&#13;
y yearn of ooottasou* reeord* aft*&#13;
reliable at this station, and ro&#13;
pare with those in which silage constitutes&#13;
an Important feature. Last&#13;
year 70 head were fed in lots of ten&#13;
each. The lot receiving silage, oats&#13;
^Al straw and cottonseed meal during the&#13;
^yirst 60 days, and corn, cottonseed&#13;
meal, silage and clover hay during the&#13;
remainder of the period, made the&#13;
cheapest gains, hut not the greatest&#13;
Disregarding the pork produced incidentally,&#13;
the lot fed on com, cottonseed&#13;
meal and silage made a profit&#13;
of $20.96 per head.&#13;
The Illinois station has several&#13;
years of experimental data which&#13;
correspond closely to that already given,&#13;
and it is generally entirely favorable&#13;
to the use of silage In the beef&#13;
ration. Illinois also found that for a&#13;
maintenance ration for breeding beet&#13;
cow*, silage is a most desirable and&#13;
economical feed. It cost 4.1 osim par&#13;
day per head to maintain 140,day* a&#13;
lot of cows fed on tttage, closer hay&#13;
sad oats straw; 4.1 oeaU jjsjr day&#13;
to ssautate a tot fad e*. shoo* oor*v&#13;
oaMPtr hay aa*V oat* straw essd ti&#13;
oe*t»a day so a*atatafa a tfMtd am&#13;
MARKET QUOTATIONS&#13;
Live Stock, Grain and General Farm&#13;
Produce.&#13;
Live Stock.&#13;
DETROIT—Cattle: Receipts, 925;&#13;
market steady; beat steers and heifers,&#13;
$8.0@8.75; steers and heifers,&#13;
1,000 to 1,200 lbs, $8©8.25; steers and&#13;
heifers, 800 to 1,000 lbs, $7.50@8;&#13;
steers and heifers that are fat, 500 to&#13;
700 lbs, $6.75©7.50; choice fat cows,&#13;
$7@7.25; good fat cows, $6.25®6.75;&#13;
common cows, $5.50 @5.75; canners,&#13;
$3.50@4.25; choice heavy bulls, $7®&#13;
7.25; fair to good bologna bulla, $6.50&#13;
@6.75; stock bulls, $6@6.50; choice&#13;
feeding steers, 800 to 1,000 lbs, $7.25&#13;
&lt;§)7.75; fair feeding Bteers, 800 to 1,000&#13;
lbs, $7@7.25; choice stockers, 500 to&#13;
700 lbs, $7&lt;g&gt;7.25; fair stockers, 500 to&#13;
700 lbs, $6.50 @6.75; -stock heifers, $6&#13;
&lt;g&gt;6.50;. milkers, large, young, medium&#13;
age, $65@85; common milkers, $45&#13;
®55.&#13;
Veal calves—Receipts, 373; market&#13;
50c higher; best, $10@10.50; others,&#13;
$8 ¢)9.50.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 919;&#13;
best lambs, $8.25@8.50; fair lambs,&#13;
$7.25®7.75; light to common lambs,&#13;
$5.50®6.50; yearlings, $7.25; fair to&#13;
good sheep, $5.50®6; culls and common,&#13;
$4®5.&#13;
Hoge—Receijta, 3,720; all grades,&#13;
EAST BUFFALO—Cattle—Receipts&#13;
4,000; market steady to strong; prime&#13;
steers, $8.75—9.36; best 1,200 to 1,-&#13;
300-lb steers, $8.50®8.85; best 1,100 to&#13;
1,200-lb strrets $8.25® 8.60;x coarse and&#13;
plain weighty steers, $7.75®8; fancy&#13;
yearlings, baby beef, $8.40® 8.75;&#13;
medium to good, $8®8.25; choice&#13;
handy steers, 900 to 1,000 lbs., $8®&#13;
8.25; fair to good, 1,000 to 1,100 lbs.,&#13;
$7.75®8; extra bood cows, $7.25®&#13;
7.50; best cows, $6.50®7; butcher&#13;
cows, $5.50®6; grassers, $5.25®5.75;&#13;
trimmers, $3.75®4.25; best heifers,&#13;
$7.75®8.25; medium butcher heifers,&#13;
$6.75@7.25; stock heifers, $6.25®6.50;&#13;
best feeding steers, $7.50®7.85; fair&#13;
to yood, $7®7.25; best stock steers,&#13;
$7.25®7.50; common light steels, $6.50&#13;
/3)7; extra good bulls, $7@7.15; bologna&#13;
bulls, $6.25®7.50; common to&#13;
good, $5®6; best milkers and springers,&#13;
$75®90; medium to good, $50®&#13;
60; common, $30®40.&#13;
Hogs: Receipts, 17,000; market 10&#13;
®15c lower; heavy mixed and yorkers,&#13;
$8.80®8.85; pigs, $8.85®9.&#13;
Sheep and lambs: Receipts, 12,000&#13;
market 10c higher; top lambs, $8:25®&#13;
8.35; yearlings, $6.50(3&gt;7.50; wethers,&#13;
$5.75®6; ewes, $5.25®5.50.&#13;
Calves strong; tops, $10.50; fair to&#13;
good, $8®9.50; grassers, $5.50®7.&#13;
Grains Etc.&#13;
DETROIT—Wheat—Cash, No. 2 red,&#13;
98 l-4c; May opened without change&#13;
at 99c, declined to 98c and advanced&#13;
to 98 l-4c; July opened at 87c, lost&#13;
l-4c and advanced to 87c; ^September&#13;
opened at 86 3-4c, declined to 86 l-2c&#13;
and advanced to 86 3-4c; No. 1 white,&#13;
97 3-4c.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, 70c; No. 3 yellow,&#13;
2 cars at 71c, 2 at 71 l-2c; No. 4&#13;
yellow, 70c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 1 car at 42 l-2c;&#13;
No. 3 white, 2 cars at 42c; No. 4&#13;
white, 41® 41 l-2c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 65c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate and prompt shipment,&#13;
$2.08; May, $2,10; June, $2.15.&#13;
Cloverseed—Prime spot, $7.65; October,&#13;
$7.80; prime alsike, $10.&#13;
Timothy—Prime spot, $2.30.&#13;
Alfalfa—Prime spot, 10 bags at&#13;
$8.35.&#13;
Hay—Carlots, track Detroit: No. 1&#13;
timothy, $16.50® 17; standard, $15.50&#13;
@16; No. 2 timothy, $14® 15; light&#13;
mixed, $15.50® 16; No. 1 mixed. $13.50&#13;
®15; No. 1 clover, $13@ 13.50; heavy&#13;
clover mixed, $13®13.50; rye straw,&#13;
$8®8.50; wheat and oat straw, $7®&#13;
7.50 per ton.&#13;
Flour—In one-eighth paper sacks,&#13;
per 196 pounds, jobbing lots; Bust&#13;
patent, $6.30; second patent, $5;&#13;
straight, $4.75; spring patent, $5.10;&#13;
rye, $4.40 per bbl.&#13;
Feed—In 100-lb sacks, jobbing lots;&#13;
Bran, $28; standard middlings, $30;&#13;
coarse corn meal, $30; com and oat&#13;
chop, $26.50 per ton.&#13;
• * -a&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
Strawberries—24-pt cases, $1.75®2;&#13;
24-qt cases, $8.50®3.75.&#13;
Apple—Steele Red, $6®6.50; .Spy,&#13;
$5.50®«; Baldwin, $5®i; Ben Davis,&#13;
$4® 4.50 per bbl&#13;
Cabbage—New, $1.75® 2 per crate,&#13;
in bulk, 2 l-2c per lb.&#13;
Dressed Hogs—Light, t®10c; heavy&#13;
80S 1-tc per lb:&#13;
Sweet Potatoes—Jersey kiln-dried,&#13;
$ia&gt;110 per hamper.&#13;
Dressed Celv**-«Fancy, U UOUc;&#13;
common, Ht&gt;Ue per lb.&#13;
Honey—Choice to fancy new white*&#13;
soub, MWleo; amber, 10#lie; ea&gt;&#13;
tracted, M|7e per lb.&#13;
New Petatoee Florida. **77tO*\*«r&#13;
btt sad n at*tot;&#13;
ft* aaeVff per A t&#13;
jr.*-&#13;
&lt;faacU%iM&#13;
Reliable evidence is abundant that women&#13;
are constantly being restored to health fry&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham 's Vegetable Compound&#13;
The many testimonial letters that we are continually pul&gt;&#13;
lishing in the newspapers—hundreds of them—are all genuine,&#13;
true and unsolicited expressions of heartfelt gratitude&#13;
for the freedom from suffering that has come to these&#13;
women solely through the use of Lydia E. Pinkham *9&#13;
Vegetable Compound.&#13;
Money could not buy nor any kind of influence obtain&#13;
such recommendations; you may depend upon it that any&#13;
testimonial we publish is honest and true—if you have any&#13;
doubt of this write to the women whose true narnes and&#13;
addresses are always given, asd learn for yourself.&#13;
Read this one from Mrs. Waters: -&#13;
CAMDEN, N.J.—"1 was sick for two years with nervous spells, and&#13;
my kidneys were affected. I had a doctor all the time and used a&#13;
galvanic battery, but nothing did me any good. I was not able to go&#13;
to bed, but spent my time on a couch or in a sleeping-chair, and soon&#13;
became almost a skeleton. Finally my doctor went away for his&#13;
health, and my husband heard of Lydia E. Pinkham's vegetable&#13;
Compound and got me some. In two months I $ot relief ana now I&#13;
am like a new woman and am at my usual weight. I recommend&#13;
your medicine to every one and so does my husband."—-Mrs. Tir.T.m&#13;
WATERS, 1136 Knight St., Camden, N.J.&#13;
And thiseone from Mrs. Haddock:&#13;
UTTOA, OKLA.—U I was weak and nervous, ndt able to do my work&#13;
and scarcely able to be on my feet. I had backache, headache, palpi*&#13;
tation of the heart, trouble with my bowels, and inflammation, since&#13;
taking the Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I am better&#13;
than 1 have been for twenty years. I think it is a wonderful medicine&#13;
and I have recommended it to others."—Mrs. MABY ANN HADDOCK,&#13;
TJtica, Oklahoma.&#13;
Now answer this question if you can. Why should a&#13;
woman continue to suffer without first giving Lydia E . I&#13;
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial ? You know that J&#13;
it has saved many others—why should it fail in your case? 7&#13;
For 8 0 vears Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound has been the standard remedy for female&#13;
ill*. No one sick with woman's ailments&#13;
does justice to herself If she does not try this famous&#13;
medicine made from roots and herbs, it&#13;
has restored so many suffering women to health.&#13;
ljB0fe»Write to LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE GO.&#13;
• W &lt; CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS., for advice.&#13;
Your letter will be opened, read and answered&#13;
by a woman and held in strict confidence*&#13;
Using Up Mistakes.&#13;
A mother was showing her small&#13;
daughter how to do something. Later&#13;
the child matle a mistake, but the&#13;
mother advised her not to worry about&#13;
it, but to remember never to make&#13;
that same error again, and explained&#13;
that if we profited by our mistakes&#13;
they were useful after all.&#13;
"Oh, I know why," answered the little&#13;
one. "Because if you keep on&#13;
making and making mistakes by and&#13;
by there won't be any more mistakes&#13;
left."&#13;
If only true, how ni(?e this would he!&#13;
Force of Habit&#13;
"What made you think Mr. Lovetwet&#13;
had been drinking?"&#13;
"Why, when the charlotte russe was&#13;
set before him he tried to blow off the&#13;
foam.'*—Philadelphia Ledger.&#13;
We Wish That Wert Enough.&#13;
"What Is the best thing anyone can&#13;
get for his dinner?"&#13;
"Hungry."—Indianapolis Star.&#13;
-**» Successful In all the numerous ailments causal. *&#13;
by defective or irregular action of&#13;
the organ* of digestion and elimination—&#13;
certain to prevent suffering&#13;
and to Improve the general health—&#13;
BEECHAM'S&#13;
DR. J. D. KELLOQQ'8 A S T H MA Remedy for the prompt relief of&#13;
Asthma and Hay Ww^r, Ask Your&#13;
drugglet for It. WrtU fw FREE SAMKsV&#13;
MRTHROP ft LYMAN CO. Lta, BUFFALO, M.Y.&#13;
Pettits Tvo Salve RELIEVES&#13;
SORE EYES&#13;
M&#13;
Wfcfr h Q l C T i O N l ' t " D U C l N « : ,&#13;
5,918,698 j i b s * sold last year&#13;
1,536^32 faBoatiaorttaan 1912&#13;
The constantly increasing use&#13;
of POLARINE by thousands of&#13;
motorist* is indisputable evidence&#13;
of its lubricating efficiency.&#13;
It affords perfect lubrication&#13;
to all makes and types of motor&#13;
cars, motor trucks, motorcycles&#13;
and motor boats.&#13;
POLARINE maintains the&#13;
cerrett lubricating: body at any&#13;
motor speed or temperature*&#13;
POLARINE remains liquid&#13;
at aero. POLARINE differs&#13;
from all other motor oils, in&#13;
thaHt lubricate* perfectly at&#13;
iSJStrasna*&gt; of tenjperature*&#13;
OlCoiapaqr&#13;
/&#13;
.*•&#13;
y -.i:-&amp;-&#13;
y**&#13;
.• • ' * —v . - - ^ :&#13;
.-5&#13;
. . ' . * * . * . • • . . , * • • '*.&lt;&#13;
".*T*&#13;
tM* i A L i * ^ ; ikAi :1kfliAi&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
-HZ&#13;
^/-¾¾¾&#13;
AC&#13;
WESTERN CANADA'S&#13;
PROSPECTS FOR 1914&#13;
i Excellent Spring for Work and&#13;
Wheat Seeding About&#13;
Finished.&#13;
.The writer has just returned from&#13;
an extensive trip through the Provinces&#13;
of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and&#13;
Alberta, in Western. Canada. The&#13;
• crop conditions are the very best, and&#13;
no one locality seems to have an advantage&#13;
over another in this respect.&#13;
The uniformity in growth is remarkable,&#13;
and in all parts of the three&#13;
provinces spring wheat at the time&#13;
of writing, May 10th, is well above&#13;
the ground from two to three inches.&#13;
Considerable fall plowing was done&#13;
last year, and this, with the summer&#13;
fallow, is already seeded, so that&#13;
practically wheat seeding is over by&#13;
this date. Everywhere the farmers&#13;
are* busy and the whole country presents&#13;
one great scene of activity—&#13;
three-horse, four-horse and five-horse&#13;
teams are busy preparing land for&#13;
barley, oats and flax. On some of&#13;
the larger farms batteries of steam&#13;
and gasoline outfits are at work, but&#13;
in a great many districts where these&#13;
haw* bee*, wex&amp;ted in the past they&#13;
act fcatet d»j1i«Bi fry to*** cwiag&#13;
a* 4o*a* partial* to m «»calty&#13;
* M m * * *«partaMt* • • • W-operate&#13;
them. Anyway, there Ja batag pot&#13;
into agriculture in Western Canada,&#13;
greater effort with more promise&#13;
than for some years past. The soil&#13;
Is in the best possible condition;&#13;
moisture has been sufficient, there&#13;
have been no winds to dry out the&#13;
soil, and if the farmers have had to&#13;
lay up for a.day or so now and again,&#13;
it was merely that the ground might&#13;
have the advantage of the rain and&#13;
an occasional snow, which promise so&#13;
much for the growing crop. With&#13;
some warm weather the grain will&#13;
come along in a manner that will&#13;
equal the best years Western Canada&#13;
has ever had.&#13;
It must not be thought from thiB&#13;
that the farmers are full bent on securing&#13;
a grain crop alone. In nearly&#13;
every district there Is more and more&#13;
the indication and inclination to go&#13;
Into mixed farming. Herds of cattle&#13;
now dot the plains that up to ^ttie&#13;
present had been fully given up to&#13;
grain growing, hogs and sheep are in&#13;
evidence.. New buildings are to be&#13;
seen on a great many places, these&#13;
being pig houses and cow stables, although&#13;
protection of cattle is not regularly&#13;
required, excepting , for calves&#13;
and such cows as it may be necessary&#13;
to house from time to time.&#13;
.The growing of alfalfa and other&#13;
. fodder grasses is an industry that is&#13;
being rapidly developed.&#13;
During this spring a splendid class&#13;
of new settlers have gone in, many of&#13;
them from the eastern stateB. These&#13;
have seen what success the western&#13;
and central states man has achieved&#13;
in- Western Canada, and are now going&#13;
in In hundreds. The movement&#13;
from Montana, Oregon and Washington&#13;
to Canada continues without any&#13;
abatement as to numbers and value of&#13;
effects, while the central and eastern&#13;
states are still sending an excellent&#13;
class of farmers with means sufficient&#13;
to begin farming on a scale that will&#13;
.pay irom the start&#13;
Those who contemplate visiting the&#13;
Panama Exposition next year will find&#13;
that one of the most interesting trips&#13;
they can make will be via the Canadian&#13;
West. There will be three lines&#13;
of railway they can use—the Canadian&#13;
Pacific, Canadian Northern and Grand&#13;
Trunk Pacific, all of which will have&#13;
through to coast lines completed. Thus&#13;
will be given a view of prairie, wood-&#13;
Sand and mountain scenery unexcelled&#13;
?ln America.—Advertisement&#13;
# %&#13;
* &amp; • :&#13;
Slfln of the Times.&#13;
When a man like A J. Drexel Biddie&#13;
of Philadelphia, society leader sad&#13;
millionaire, preaches in the city&#13;
streets from,a gospel wagon On the&#13;
"Inasmuch Mission," and when we see&#13;
other young millionaires in various&#13;
parts of the country joining the Sal-,&#13;
vation Army of uplift and human betent,&#13;
it Is calculated to make the&#13;
Id think a bit—to make it atop,&#13;
and listen. There is something&#13;
b cornea ^home to everybody in&#13;
a spectacle, and which is not to&#13;
be 4fajni#*ed a r an emotional crusading&#13;
outburst. In many ways the religious&#13;
impulse-of the age shares the&#13;
democratic spirit that is dominant in&#13;
political and economic spheres, and is&#13;
coming out from high places into the&#13;
highways and hedges in order to get&#13;
face te/.faee with the masses,&#13;
A La Francs. *&#13;
Jones^-Betto; here's another btoadtasi&#13;
duel and they fought tor over&#13;
eta fcttw**&gt;-'V •&#13;
3row*-*Wfth ptatola or swords. a ~&#13;
eJtfcer. Tkey nsed safety&#13;
Afltyracnosf Cantor&#13;
« 3 ^&#13;
Anftraciwae 5porw«/ &gt;&#13;
mucfi maqnified&gt;£) / #&#13;
Of&#13;
id Coat&#13;
Stmch Grains&#13;
The email figure to the loft above, shows a diagrammatic section of a bean pod&#13;
through an Airthracnose canker.&#13;
The large drawing Is a much enlarged view of the above figure, showing t^he&#13;
fungeus threads penetrating the pod and grawing into the seed. These threadspenetrating&#13;
the seed produce the brown or black spots. These threads remain&#13;
dormant from harvest time until the seeds are planted when they begin to grow,&#13;
producing cankers on the seed leaves. The spores in the canker are exposed&#13;
thus insuring their spread by rain, dew or mechanical agents to other plants.&#13;
The figure to the right above, shows spores of the Anthracnose fungus. One&#13;
has germinated. (H. H. Whets*!, Cornell Agr. Exp. Sta. Bui. No. 239.)&#13;
Cabbage an Rest Estate.&#13;
Wonders never cease in American&#13;
law. Here comes a judge in our own&#13;
state, trying tbe case of a man who&#13;
entered his neighbor's garden and&#13;
pinched a head of cabbage. The judge&#13;
decides that it was not larceny of personal&#13;
property at all, and hence not&#13;
a basis of criminal action; but the&#13;
cabbage heads are real estate,, and&#13;
that the neighbor's remedy is to bring&#13;
a civil action contesting title. We&#13;
have eaten garden truck—spinach and&#13;
lettuce for instance—which tasted like&#13;
real estate. But we never knew before&#13;
that to steal it-was not theft. And&#13;
after a cabbage head is eaten what&#13;
good is the title? Now, if it had been&#13;
a franchise or an election that was&#13;
stolen, it would have been less surprising&#13;
in the law to let the culprit go&#13;
free; but who would ever have thought&#13;
that the science of judicial hairsplitting&#13;
would finally be successfully invoked&#13;
to protect a plain, everyday cabbage&#13;
thief?—Pittsburgh Press.&#13;
»»»• •&#13;
KAN DISEASES I I MICHIGAN AND&#13;
IMPORTANCE OF SELECTION OF SEEDS&#13;
Contrary Times.&#13;
"How did the funeral of your cousin&#13;
go off, Bridget?"&#13;
"Oh, ma'am, that wake was a&#13;
drame!"&#13;
Are Your Kidneys Weak ?&#13;
You may have kidney trouble and not&#13;
know it. The only signs may be occasional&#13;
twinges in the small of the back,&#13;
constant lameness, dirzy spells or some&#13;
annoying irregularity of the kidney action.&#13;
But no sign of Sidney trouble can be&#13;
safely ignored. Kidney disease moves&#13;
rapidly. It leads to dropsy, gravel,&#13;
Bright's disease, rheumatism.&#13;
If you suspect that your kidneys are&#13;
sluggish, use Doan's Kidney Pills,&#13;
which have relieved thousands.&#13;
A Michigan Case&#13;
"Every&#13;
Piiturt&#13;
Ttiiia SUry"&#13;
Mrs. J. N. Smith,&#13;
Chicago St., Buchanan,&#13;
Mich., saya:&#13;
"While lifting-. iumethlng&#13;
teemed to give&#13;
out in ray back and&#13;
I dropped to the&#13;
floor. I couldn't get&#13;
up for an hour and&#13;
after that, waa in&#13;
poor health. Sharp&#13;
pains darted through&#13;
my back and any&#13;
exertion made me&#13;
worse. Doan's Kidney&#13;
Pills cured me."&#13;
Get Dean's at Any Star*. SOc • Box D O A N ' S "WAV&#13;
FOSTER40LBURN CO.. BUFFALO, N. Y.&#13;
Expert at State College Writes Article of Value to Producers of&#13;
Important Crop of State. Practical Suggestions are Given&#13;
J. H. Munsfe, Research Assistant in Plant Diseases, Michigan Agricultural&#13;
College.&#13;
Michigan ranks 41 rat among the&#13;
states in the production of beans. The&#13;
value of her bean crop for 1913 was&#13;
approximately $10,000,000.00. It Is estimated&#13;
by the bean dealers of the&#13;
state that the crop would have been&#13;
worth at least $2,000,000.00 more if it&#13;
had not been damaged by the two diseases&#13;
Onthracnose and Blight. When&#13;
the shortage in yield, discolored&#13;
beans, shrunken seed and cost of&#13;
picking are considered this seems to&#13;
be a conservative estimate. In many&#13;
sections the average "pick" of 1913&#13;
beans ran as high as eight pounds,&#13;
and in some cases twenty tcTthe bushel.&#13;
One examination of many samples&#13;
of cull beans from various sections&#13;
of the state it was found that&#13;
at least 50% of the pickings was made&#13;
up of diseased seed. A further loss is&#13;
due to the cost of "picking" and the&#13;
reduction of price paid to the farmer&#13;
on account of the discolored beans.&#13;
At the present season when great&#13;
areas are being prepared for the 1914&#13;
bean crop every effort should be made&#13;
to prevent, as far as possible, a repetition&#13;
of last year's loss. The only&#13;
thing which can he done at this time&#13;
of year is to secure seed free from&#13;
even a slight discoloration. Every affected&#13;
seed is a source of contamlna*&#13;
well known that in areas where continued&#13;
wet weather is prevalent, Anthracnose&#13;
is more noticeable, especially&#13;
upon the pods and seeds. Blight&#13;
also is widespread under such conditions,&#13;
and inflicts serious damage to&#13;
the crop by Us attack upon the leaves,&#13;
which causes a marked reduction of&#13;
the yield and uneven ripening of the&#13;
pods.&#13;
A workable control measure Is&#13;
known for Anthracnose but at present&#13;
the control of Blight remains unsolved.&#13;
Anthracnose can be absolutely avoided&#13;
by securing seed from clean pods.&#13;
The selected pods must have no diseased&#13;
spots whatever upon them, and&#13;
must be kept away from diseased pods.&#13;
These clean pods may be dipped for&#13;
ten minutes in corrosive sublimate solution&#13;
(one part to one thousand parts&#13;
of water), to make doubly sure of&#13;
avoiding contamination. Dry in the&#13;
sun away from the dust of the bean&#13;
field. Shell so that the dust from the&#13;
bean fields or from other beans will&#13;
not get to the shelled seed. Seal this&#13;
seed in air-tight fruit jars. This seed&#13;
should be used to plant a seed plot&#13;
which should be on clean ground. The&#13;
crop from this seed should be free&#13;
from Anthracnose and largely free&#13;
from Blight and if kept from contamination,&#13;
should give extramejirilaslrable&#13;
seed for next year. /On a small&#13;
plot of this kind, any diseased plants&#13;
may be easily detected and pulled out&#13;
tion to the fleids, and for this reason | a n d b u r n e d i T n i a l s a wholesome&#13;
hand picking should be done at least j s a a l t a r y measure. Such pod selection&#13;
twice to remove as much of the d i s - ^ g £ e e n p r a c t l C ed in Michigan by a&#13;
ease as possible. Dealers should be . f e w f r o w e r s a n ( j w l t h excellent sucable&#13;
to furnish information concern- j c e g 8 a n d i n t n e 0 M CftM c a r e fU iiy exlng&#13;
the history of the seed purchased,! a m i n e d , the seed from the general&#13;
where grown* .yielding qualities an* crop, while not absolutely disease free,&#13;
freedom from disease. contained not a single bean that&#13;
Seed should not be bought s i m p U ^ , ^ n a T e b e e n t a k e n o u t In o r d l n a r y because It i* "northern grown" a i ^ t t m e r c l a l hand picking,&#13;
"western" because bean diseases are&#13;
prevalent wherater beans are grown&#13;
commercially,. and' such seed Is no&#13;
better than examination for discoloration&#13;
would indicate. .&#13;
The Agricultural College will determine,&#13;
free of charge, this spring&#13;
the percentage of disease-colored seed&#13;
and send the grower a report upon&#13;
Although the method given is&#13;
known to eliminate Anthracnose, it&#13;
will not entirely control Bean Blight,&#13;
which la a bacterial disease. The disease&#13;
germs are carried over from one&#13;
season t o the next on and In the affected&#13;
seeds, and upon the contaminated&#13;
seeds; in all probability they althe&#13;
findings in each sample. The if0 »*• °™ «» ^ e M e d P°d» " J&#13;
sample sent should be at least a half £ ? • N o * » * * • «•"*! w " h e d&#13;
pint in dnantity, and stupid be mark- fT0* t n e a f f ? u d Ifves and pods to&#13;
ed with the name, andlidifcess of the •?• * * 2 * L * * *** dominated&#13;
sender. . An accompanying letter IDy " • wln&lt;L&#13;
Tough,&#13;
di* tin 3 « f f do to tftatf&#13;
•*e^B^B •»•%" "s^slaWsT'sY ,^^^&#13;
• * r ' * • , 4 * . v V &gt;&#13;
l&#13;
should be marked%with the name and&#13;
address of the sender. An accompanying&#13;
letter should :giv* the name of the&#13;
grower, locality where grown, and if&#13;
hand picked, tie pick per bushel.&#13;
In addition to clean**seed the practice&#13;
ef-crop rotation help* greatly to&#13;
avoid disease' epidemics*..- Aerioaa&#13;
lessee have bee* reported wr fields&#13;
fertilised irtth a a w e fiM * * • * fad&#13;
eft bean fodder. Mttrttc* Aotft&#13;
to take* tbtonghdflP tne state*&#13;
against" waltivatint ^ In or waJJclag&#13;
throogh tfc* beaa ftlds while th»&#13;
plants ai* w^wltfc feivofideiri To&#13;
4» *» It -tax spread tk*&gt;dft|a«a* turn&#13;
eas^laM^t* aMPlasr, ""t -&#13;
During tbe present season the College&#13;
will Investigate many phases of&#13;
the bean disease problem. Careful&#13;
experiments will be carried out along&#13;
the lines of seed disinfection, resistant&#13;
varieties and imported clean seed.&#13;
It is hoped that through painstaking&#13;
investigation aloof lines suggested by&#13;
knowledge of, the. organisms which&#13;
cause the diseases measures of control&#13;
may be perfected.&#13;
To stimulate' interest in this problem,&#13;
and to f o n t s * beam growers&#13;
with drat hand taowiedfo of the contdltftasa&#13;
»rspaciaj bulletin (No. M) has&#13;
betat iasned by the-^asjailuaamt 8ts&gt;&#13;
ftfoa, and mar bo aaenffl.by, applytng&#13;
to Dereetae a f i « s « w / l ^ t t Laaav&#13;
(9 oo DROPS j&#13;
m&#13;
) ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT&#13;
Avegf table Preparation for As -&#13;
similatino; foe Food and Regulating&#13;
rheStomachs and Bowels of&#13;
5 iNr V M S CHILDHI \&#13;
jj&#13;
I Ml,&#13;
V i&#13;
it&#13;
K\&#13;
Promotes Digeslion.Cheerfulness&#13;
and Rest Con tains neither&#13;
Opium.Morphine nor Mineral&#13;
N O T N A R C O T I C&#13;
Btopt efotdDrSAmmiMwrat&#13;
MxSntHm *&#13;
JfktAeUrSmHt •&#13;
Antt* SftJ *&#13;
fagHJ*int -&#13;
A perfect Remedy forConstipalion.&#13;
Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, j&#13;
Worms ,Convulaions .Fever is hness&#13;
and LOSS OF SLEEP&#13;
Facsimile Signature of&#13;
THE CENTAUR COMPANY,&#13;
N EW YORK&#13;
For Infants and Children.&#13;
The Kind You Have&#13;
Always Bought&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
of&#13;
A t f » r n o n t i i % o l d&#13;
35 Ilosi-** - J ^ C F N T S&#13;
f " ^ .&#13;
Guaranteed under the Food an*&#13;
Exact Copy of Wrapper.&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
GASTORIA • ITY.&#13;
Consider the Fly.&#13;
Thrifty housewives are now taking&#13;
measures to keep the housefly from&#13;
the domicile, so as to avoid the perplexing&#13;
problem of getting rid of them.&#13;
"Flies," remarked one woman recently,&#13;
"are a tremendous nuisance. When&#13;
one gets into a cup of coffee it makes&#13;
me fairly miserable to see it"&#13;
"Makes you miserable I" exclaimed&#13;
her listener. "Well, don't you thing it&#13;
makes the fly more so?"&#13;
Anybody can dye successfully with&#13;
Putnam Fadeless Dyes. Adv.&#13;
Women's Dilemma,&#13;
Patience—A mirror supported by a&#13;
bracket to be held in the mouth has&#13;
been invested by a Parisian to leave&#13;
a woman's hands free to arrange her&#13;
hair.&#13;
Patrice—Yes, but if the mirror ls In&#13;
her month, where in the world is she&#13;
to hold the hairpins?&#13;
Make* the laundress happy—that's Red&#13;
Cross BAII Blue. Makes beautiful, clear&#13;
white clothes. All good grocers. Adv.&#13;
It's easy enough to go to law.&#13;
trouble ls to get back.&#13;
The&#13;
Make the Liver&#13;
Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver it&#13;
right the stomach and bowels are right&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS&#13;
gently but firmly corn^&#13;
pel a lazy liver to,&#13;
do its duty.&#13;
Cures Con-,&#13;
stipation, la*^&#13;
digestion,&#13;
Sick&#13;
Headache,'&#13;
and Distress ArW Eating.&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRIC&amp;&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
DAISY FLY KILLER.trattt %%A inia ait&#13;
ania«mi. ra!t*a•l», !•,o nnarwmU, aoart-, cbMp. i»*t« ail&#13;
• •ftioa. Ifa4« at&#13;
meUl, etattpiUor tip&#13;
orer; will not toll ar&#13;
Injur* aajtatav.&#13;
QAoHardmenatMladra sofrfaSeMtlvBal, •spr«#a p«td for SUSS.&#13;
aaaou) soxns, ue &amp;•**» i « , snottya, a.».&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 21-1914.&#13;
I BOILS&#13;
• CARBUNCLES&#13;
ACHES •&#13;
CHILLS I&#13;
PAINS •&#13;
i ••••&#13;
r®&#13;
&amp;i&#13;
}?•?•••'. •&amp;.&#13;
.G~&#13;
r- .c&#13;
•';&gt;«*-&#13;
,i4'.&#13;
.'; ^ +&#13;
Ara 'Danger Signals"—the human system's method of giving w a n -&#13;
ing that the blood baa become impoverished and circulation poor.&#13;
In this condition the human body is almost powerless to resist tba&#13;
mora aariooa iUnsas. Don't delay. Younaea&#13;
DR. PIEBCE7S&#13;
CkildtM Medical Discovery ItlanlVoattatheatotewta*at*hlssA»adM. AH1eaintsel ytoa tdt»ig»essit» *tohfe yfowodt. wT^anss i ntpis tiWlsaataasiss—ehti.&#13;
arngs eaest norasar avMnaoaasi Vvoo i s prvavstw-aaHnsDiajasa a a a .. i&#13;
iatsdshi tad Meod. §fa.*Bm*mn&amp;im%&amp;*m'*m '-:&#13;
^1¾&#13;
H. Tn iW rrisllab,&#13;
! '• • ' J . ^ ( , r \ ' " , V . " ^ r v '.'^.Flf'.JifWIi1 l'"-'v ^J&#13;
* » * * &lt;m Hl&#13;
w&#13;
.•»•' , -*f •".'.'.*. ^&#13;
•*••?'.'.-*: , - W t- j v k v :&#13;
rJifesSQi&#13;
SO"&#13;
&gt;'r&#13;
W&#13;
% •&#13;
£ •&#13;
w?&#13;
.--^ **-&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Pinckney j)ippatch&#13;
Entered at the Poetoffice at Pinckney,&#13;
Mich., as Second Class Matter&#13;
W. CMERLV, EDITOR MO PUBLISHER&#13;
Subscription, $1. Per Tear ia Advance&#13;
Advertising rates made known on&#13;
application.&#13;
Cards of Thank?, fifty cents.&#13;
Resolutions of Condolence, one dollar.&#13;
Local Notices, in Local coluoodl tive&#13;
cent per line per each insertion.&#13;
All matter intended to benetit tbe 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;
anpftWLE&#13;
. ' * * / • •&#13;
Rev. Ostrander spent last week&#13;
in Flint.&#13;
Leo Lavey spent last Saturday&#13;
in Charlotte.&#13;
L. C. Gorham of Detroit spent&#13;
Sunday here.&#13;
A. H. Gilchrist and wife spent&#13;
Sunday in Stockbridge.&#13;
Mrs. Agnes Harris is visiting&#13;
relatives at Eaton Rapids.&#13;
Wallace Welsh of Dexter visited&#13;
relatives here Snnday.&#13;
Fred Aria of Detroit spent Sunday&#13;
at the heme of F.fReason.&#13;
M. Dclan, wife and daughter&#13;
Helen spent Sunday in Scio,&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Silas Swarthout transacted business&#13;
in Hamburg last Thursday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
Mrs. Nettie Vaughn and Mrs.&#13;
fT*Qt W U U U B Roy Merrill spent Monday in&#13;
^ V l l I I K N O W Jackson.&#13;
J UV | V { W f f ^ Mrs.lChas. Teeple and Mrs. H.&#13;
W. Crofoot were Howell visiters&#13;
last Thursday.&#13;
Miss Genevieve Alley of Dexter&#13;
spent the week end at the home&#13;
of Will Curlett.&#13;
Blanche Martin and Mrs. Geo.&#13;
Pearson attended the May Festival&#13;
at Ann Arbor last week.&#13;
Walter and Levi Miller of Iosco&#13;
purchased Ford touring cars of&#13;
Flintoft &amp; Read last week.&#13;
Mrs. R. Merrill of Hamburg&#13;
spent a few days the past week&#13;
with her mother, Mrs. N. Vaughn.&#13;
H. W. Crofoot transacted business&#13;
iu Toledo and other Ohio&#13;
cities the latter part of last week.&#13;
C. Gr. Meyer and wife and C. L.&#13;
Sigler and wife attended the May&#13;
Festival at Ann Arbor last Friday.&#13;
The little town of Milford is&#13;
soon to vote on the question of&#13;
bonding the town for water works.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Fra*k LaRue of&#13;
Howell were Sunday visitors at&#13;
the home of Mrs. Emma Moran.&#13;
Commencing Monday, June 1st,&#13;
, ., , .,, i A- u t n e . p e n * the day witn r e m i t * bere. Pinckney mill will be shut d o W Q for t w o w e e k „ for necessary&#13;
LaRue Moran of Howell' was&#13;
bopae over Sunday. r&#13;
rMa'y 17, a son.&#13;
A. II. Flintoft spent Sunday&#13;
Monday in Petersburg, Mich.&#13;
C. G. Meyer attended the funeral&#13;
of a relative in Adrian Tuesday.&#13;
Cas. Clinton of Detroit spent&#13;
the week end with his parents&#13;
here,&#13;
Enos Burden is sick at the&#13;
home of his son Geo. M. in Wbite&#13;
Oak.&#13;
Miss Ruth Potterton spent the&#13;
first of the week with Jackson&#13;
relatives.&#13;
The boy scouts have declared&#13;
war on the fly, and we hope nobody&#13;
will intervene.&#13;
Geo. Green a n i family of Howell&#13;
motored to Pinckney Sunday&#13;
in their new Ford auto.&#13;
Ernest Carr and wife of Detroit&#13;
motored to Pinckney Sunday to&#13;
Ross Read, E . E. Hoyt, Percy&#13;
Swarthout, Amos Clinton and&#13;
Walter Reason were Detroit visitors&#13;
last Friday.&#13;
A Mr. Bennett was recently&#13;
arrested in Howell and is now in&#13;
jail awaiting examination for selling&#13;
liquor in the coal sheds near&#13;
the Ann Arbor depot at that place.&#13;
The many friends here of Rev.&#13;
Fr. M. J. Commerford of Flint&#13;
will be interested to learn that he&#13;
left last week on a three months&#13;
vacation tiip through South&#13;
America.&#13;
"Peg 0 ' My Heart," a Comedy&#13;
of Youth in three acts, will be&#13;
given by the Seniors of the Howell&#13;
high school under the auspices&#13;
of tbe Sophomores of the Pinckney&#13;
high school, Friday evening,&#13;
May 22, at the Pinckney opera&#13;
house. Specialties between acts.&#13;
Danee following the play. Music&#13;
by Miss Lillian Given's Six-Piece&#13;
Orchestra of Ann Arbor. Come&#13;
one and all and en joy e a night&#13;
of pleasure.&#13;
The federal government is now&#13;
prepared to issue a new run of&#13;
stamps of different denominations&#13;
than heretofore pnt before the&#13;
public. These stamps are intendrepairs.&#13;
The Hoyt Bros.&#13;
The oounty fair at Howell is a&#13;
sure go. They are planning to&#13;
pull it off the early part of September.&#13;
Tou will miss a good time if&#13;
you fail to stay to the dance given&#13;
after the play, I'Peg 0 ' My Heart."&#13;
Music by Lillian Given's Orchestra&#13;
of Ann Arbor.&#13;
Miss Ruth Potterton is the new&#13;
"hello" girl at the exchange here.&#13;
So much business that a third&#13;
operator was needed to assist the&#13;
Misses Hoff in taking care of the&#13;
telephone service jn this vicinity.&#13;
The Senior class of the Dexter&#13;
High School will g w e a hometalent&#13;
play, ''Among the Breakers"&#13;
at the Dexter opera house, Friday&#13;
night, May 22. Ail are cordially&#13;
invited to come. Price 25 and 35&#13;
cents.&#13;
The state board of health has&#13;
notified health officers that the&#13;
law will be enforced against physicians&#13;
and householders who fail&#13;
to report dangerous and communicable&#13;
diseases to the boards of&#13;
health. The cases listed are: infantile&#13;
paralysis, chicken pox, diphtheria,&#13;
measles, pneumonia, scared&#13;
for use on parcels bnt will b e ,l.e t f.e. ver, , , smal.l po.x , , spi, nal. ,m. en-&#13;
•J J I«J 11 i t' ingotw, tuberculosis, typhoid fever&#13;
mcoanisl.i deTrehde vnaeliwd sotanm aplsl wclialls sbees ooff , , , Y&#13;
the following denominations and&#13;
and whooping cough.&#13;
When one remembers, says an&#13;
a*'&#13;
• . ' . • *&#13;
colors: Seven cast, black; nine exchange, in an ordinary colnmn&#13;
cent, pink; 12 cent, maroon; 20 there are 10,000 pieces of type,&#13;
cent, light blue; and 30 cent, ver- there are seven wrong positions&#13;
million. They will* be the same each letter m v b s pat in, and&#13;
Shape as the two cent stamp now&#13;
i * circulation.&#13;
gtftftlp Wf^^Shr0*«*thJd''profile of&#13;
W»*bififf£oX'*&amp;a^rw Hondon's&#13;
bast* Aiid4he""othsfi f i l l have en*&#13;
graved o a them the profile of&#13;
\ Franklin fawn the bait, made by&#13;
there are 70,000 chances to make&#13;
f t s f t W c p * oent-krrora besides million of chaooes&#13;
for transposition, he will not be&#13;
too critical I n the sentence, "To&#13;
be or not to b e , | by transposition&#13;
alone it is possible to make&#13;
2,759,022 errors. S o j o a see t h e&#13;
'perils that beset a printer.&#13;
v^&gt;r: d-&#13;
Eventually&#13;
Monks Bros.&#13;
Store&#13;
(9&#13;
n&#13;
o&#13;
A&#13;
Fresh groceries with such specialties as&#13;
New Cabbage, Radishes and Lettuce Saturday.&#13;
Nesr Oranges, Bananas, Lemons and Pineapples.&#13;
Potted House Plants and Cabbage and&#13;
Tomato Sets. t&#13;
Garden Seeds&#13;
D. M. Ferry aud Northrup, King &amp; Co's.&#13;
P^g. Seeds and IsbelTs Bulk Seeds.&#13;
Mens Furnishings&#13;
Including Hats and Caps, Straw Hsts,&#13;
Drees Shirts end Work Shirts, Ideal Overalls,&#13;
Troaserw, Eaiuticut-*. The latest in Smait Set&#13;
Cravat*, Madras Collars, e &amp;&#13;
We also have the famous King Pin line of&#13;
tailored-to-order samples and have already&#13;
made several fine suits. Remember a fit is&#13;
guaranteed by&#13;
• The Stplare Deal Groceru •&#13;
/&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
SW/ff THE FLY!&#13;
BETTER STILL&#13;
KEEP HIM OUT&#13;
Prepare&#13;
Now For&#13;
Fly Time&#13;
SCREENS&#13;
Wire and&#13;
Cloth Netting&#13;
And Frames&#13;
We carry a FULL LINE of WIBE NETTING for window and door&#13;
screens. Galvanized and copper wire for those who demand the kind&#13;
that lasts longest We CUT an; SIZE you want. You can PHONE.&#13;
Teep]© Ho^dware Company&#13;
"Our Prices&#13;
Help&#13;
Lower Cost&#13;
Of Living"&#13;
WrE solicit your butcher trade. Our&#13;
( ) main inducement ii LOW PRICES.&#13;
Low prices, however, mean nothing&#13;
without QUALITY. We combine both—&#13;
FIRST CLASS meats at BOCK BOTTOM&#13;
figures. Don't yon think you ought to&#13;
PLAY FAIR with yourself and TRY U S&#13;
OUT on this statement f&#13;
L. E. POWELL&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
i .&#13;
i&#13;
Does a Conservative Bank-?&#13;
ing Business. - :• : :&#13;
• «&#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. T E E P L E&#13;
M i c h .&#13;
Prop&#13;
L-._ J&#13;
Perhaps Ibis picture may recall&#13;
some pleasant occasiou—a party&#13;
and the becoming costume you&#13;
wore.&#13;
Any event worth remembering&#13;
suggests a picture.&#13;
Make an appointment today.&#13;
DaisieB. Chapell&#13;
S t o c l e b r l d g e , M i c h i g a n&#13;
Constipation, if Neglected,&#13;
Cautot Serious Illness&#13;
Constipation, if 'neglected, leads&#13;
to* almost innumerable complies*&#13;
tions affecting the general healtk.&#13;
Many cases ef&#13;
typhoid fever.&#13;
appendicitis a n d&#13;
other severe diseases&#13;
are trainable&#13;
to prolonged&#13;
clogging of the&#13;
bowels. Regardt&#13;
h e effects o f&#13;
constipation, C .&#13;
E. Aytri, 6 SaWa&#13;
S t . , Montpelier,&#13;
Vtj, says:&#13;
wi'tih wcoUn Battfpfaiitettotad yearn, and at tlaiMa nbdec abjlaH*o usnon Sbia dfa Ir wfoouunldi* bi«no omthaa tu nccoonadsiatikomn i. mXa hnyav eU btatoaan. Pdota yftaio*l.a «un dyi d« onoodt. teeIm wtoou lbd« Mabeloa ntiae w*ak and for dayi at a tirte oottaf d» n5 J?**^,?*01 ,on»• *»• I got a bttt oaff terD ru. aJMnylo tt*h anL*a xfaotuivned TI ahblaadta . *a*tf*K* * tmriUadd^ adnatty thasintsso tftvhaa tm aacntneedr . inX sbuael*i# ra• Ia uhitaav em* yat calasaa,t" f aund the remedy tamt&#13;
ThoJwands of people are sufferers&#13;
from habitu%&gt; Constipation and&#13;
while pottitty realizing something&#13;
of the dangtt^f thir condftion, y«t&#13;
neglect t*o long to employ props*&#13;
curative measures until serious illneas&#13;
often results. The advice of&#13;
all physician a la, "keep your bowtBF&#13;
clean, and it's good advice.&#13;
Dr. Mites' Laxative Tablets are&#13;
sold by all druggists, at as cents* s&#13;
box containing 2$ doses. If not&#13;
found satisfactory, your money l #&#13;
returned. t&#13;
MILKS MIDIOAL CO., glkhart, laeV&#13;
-^-^15¾&#13;
sm&#13;
sl&lt;al»MmtHtBtsfl&gt;atM&gt;aB»afl»y»a»&#13;
I H. n SIQLEN M. o. o. L. atoLia v. p&#13;
esasaSi&#13;
*-DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,**&#13;
Pbyiieians and Surgeons.&#13;
A|* o*Jl* ^rona^tJy att«BS^t«&#13;
day or night. 0 « o f on i a t B&#13;
atrsst^&#13;
FINCJ^EY, siicm&#13;
V '&#13;
&gt; ;*'&#13;
A •0&#13;
•. • if.&#13;
w&#13;
•ipa&#13;
1&#13;
,J&#13;
*s*&amp;H £fc&amp;jf&#13;
- - ' • &gt; • ' »'''" ''4 »&gt;"&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
OUR YEARLY SHIPMENT OF&#13;
Imporrted White Dinnerware&#13;
J U S T U N P A C K E D&#13;
Iu order to save the cost of iehandling„ will sell this ware at&#13;
1 0 p e r c e n t a b o v e c o s f for the next 10 days. Remember&#13;
this is not the cheap American ware bvt the celebrated&#13;
Johnson Bros. English Ware which you all are acquainted&#13;
with.&#13;
25 to 50 per cant reduction ou ail crockery now in stock.&#13;
This is your opportunity to replenish your supply of dishes&#13;
for the summer and threshing season.&#13;
MEYER'S DRUG STORE&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
The Ffynl Store 33&#13;
Drugs, Wall Paper, Crocker;, Cigars, Candy, Magazines,&#13;
School Supplies, Beolts 2&#13;
Pinckney, Mich. 3&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
»1&#13;
Works All Day for One Meal&#13;
ARUMELY-OLDS Engine docs a man's work on a farm&#13;
for the cost of the man's dinner. This is a fact estab-&#13;
. lished by experts in engine work and farm work. It&#13;
doesn't mean that an engine can do this, but that the engines&#13;
now in use actually do it.&#13;
Just imagine what a tine thing it would be if you could keep a&#13;
hired hand by simply giving him his dinner! And this shows&#13;
what big profits will come with an engine on your farm.&#13;
We have them in sizes 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 you.&#13;
We're here to serve you.&#13;
Give us a chance*&#13;
A. H. FLINTOFT,&#13;
South Marion&#13;
Guy Blair and wife visited relatives&#13;
at Walled Lake Sunday.&#13;
John Carr spent Sunday with&#13;
his Bister at Chubbs Corners.&#13;
Mrs. John Gardner and Mrs.&#13;
Verne, Demerest were Howell visitors&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Cbris. Brogan visited Mrs.&#13;
Max Ledwidge of Anderson a&#13;
couple of days last week.&#13;
Miss Eva Pocking of Ypsilauti&#13;
was home for the week end.&#13;
C)yne Galloway and wife spent&#13;
Sunday with herf mother at Anderson.&#13;
Mrs. Will Sbehan returned last&#13;
Thursday from a visit with relatives&#13;
in Chicago.&#13;
Miss A. Z. Docking spent the&#13;
first of the week in Ypsilauti.&#13;
Dr. and Mrs. Bernard Glenn of&#13;
Powlerville visited at the home of&#13;
R. M. Glenn Sunday.&#13;
Rube Docking and family were&#13;
guests at the home of Wm. Docking&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
$100 Reward, $100&#13;
The readers of this paper will be pleased&#13;
to learn that there is at least one dreaded&#13;
disease that science has been able to cure&#13;
in all iu stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's&#13;
Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now&#13;
known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh&#13;
being a constitutional disease, requires a&#13;
constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh&#13;
Cure is tflken internally, acting directly&#13;
upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the&#13;
system, thereby destroying the foundation&#13;
of the disease, and giving the patient&#13;
strength by building up the constitution&#13;
and assisting nature in doing its work.&#13;
The proprietors have so much faith in its&#13;
curative powers that they offer One Hundred&#13;
Dollars for any case that it fails to&#13;
cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address:&#13;
F. K. Cheney «&amp; Co., Toledo, 0.&#13;
Sold by all druggists, 75c.&#13;
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.&#13;
South Iosco&#13;
Martin Anderson, wife and son&#13;
Clayton spent Sunday at Fred&#13;
Anderson's.&#13;
Mrs. John Grindling and daughter&#13;
Edith of Webberville are visiting&#13;
at the home of Joe Koberis at&#13;
present.&#13;
Geo. Harford was aStockbridge&#13;
visitor Saturday.&#13;
Ed. Dingman and wife of Fowlerville&#13;
were Sunday visitors at&#13;
the home of Joe Roberts.&#13;
John Roberts and family and*&#13;
Mrs. David Roberts spent Sunday&#13;
with relatives in Pinckney.&#13;
JVill Watters and wife of Plainfield&#13;
and Mrs. C. Watters and v&#13;
children of Parkers Corners spent&#13;
Sunday at the home of WatterB&#13;
Bros.&#13;
mm • m mm&gt;&#13;
Conghea For Three Tears&#13;
"I am a lover of your godsend to humanity&#13;
and science. Your medicine, Dr.&#13;
King's New Discovery, cured my cough of&#13;
three years standing." says Jennie Flemming,&#13;
of New Dover, Ohio. Have you an&#13;
annoying cough? Is it stubborn and won't&#13;
vield to treatment? Get a 50c. botfle of&#13;
Dr. King's New Discovery to-day. Wh*u&#13;
it did for Jennie Fleruming it will do for&#13;
you, no matter how stubborn or chronic a&#13;
cough may be. It stops a cough and stops&#13;
throat and lung trouble. Relief or money&#13;
back. 5uc. and $1.00. Recommended by&#13;
C. G. Meyers, the druggiBt.&#13;
Everything&#13;
For Farm&#13;
And Garden&#13;
IMPLEMENTS Spring&#13;
Stock&#13;
Is Big&#13;
Hundreds of SATISFIED persona in this community have boughs&#13;
garden and farm implements, such as hoes, rakes, spades, scythes, eta,&#13;
from us, WHY NOT YOUf This is the time.&#13;
»&#13;
Dinkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
•;&lt;? •.&gt;:*&gt; .•.-&gt;:•&lt;#?.-&gt;:• ^ : ¾ ¾ ^ ^&#13;
squills&#13;
Printed at the&#13;
Dispatch Office at Rlght&#13;
Prices.&#13;
West Marion&#13;
Nina Wellman visited her parents over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
The Aid society met with Mrs. Charles&#13;
Hanson last' Thursday and was well attended,&#13;
A good program was rendered&#13;
and an excellent sapper was served.&#13;
John Chalker of West Putnam spent a&#13;
few days with Henry PJnmmer. the last&#13;
of the week.&#13;
Miss Warda Miller took the 8th grade&#13;
examination at Gregory.&#13;
Mildred Hath and Lemuel Wright attended&#13;
the 8th grade examination at&#13;
Howell last Thursday and Friday.&#13;
Will Brown and family visited at the&#13;
horns of Phil Smith last Soonsy.&#13;
— » • « -&#13;
&lt;J '.-•'.&#13;
Keep Bowel loreatBt Hefslar&#13;
Dr. King's New Life Pills keep stomach&#13;
liver and kidneys in healthy conditio*.&#13;
Rid the body of poisons and watt*. Improve&#13;
your complexion by flnshiaf tfeo&#13;
liver and kidneys. "I got more rofiof&#13;
from ont box of Dr. Kim's Now Life Pttls&#13;
than any medicine I ever tried," says C.&#13;
£. HaineW, of Chicago, IU. 26o. ~&#13;
ommended bfy,*,C « Oi lloysrsy the) &lt;tapfe&#13;
SPECIALS&#13;
urday, May 2 3 r d , 1914&#13;
AH Outings, per yard_&#13;
All Percales, per yard&#13;
5 pounds Granulated Sugar&#13;
6 bars of any white soap&#13;
8 bars Lenox Soap ,.&#13;
13c can Cocoa&#13;
ALL SALES CASH&#13;
W. W. BARNARD&#13;
'THE CENTRAL'&#13;
Ladies and children's hats, latest styles and cheap.&#13;
Something new in jewelry; solid gold rings at reasonable&#13;
prices and a strict guarantee. See them.&#13;
* Some new Madras cloth for curtains and lots of other&#13;
new goods. See our Hue of crochet buttons in all sizes.&#13;
Polks say our line of crepes and ratines are fine and we&#13;
know we are selling them as some bolts are already gone.&#13;
&gt;•&#13;
Ask to see our ladies' and children's shoes. We also&#13;
have men's Elk skin shoes.&#13;
We have a few pairs of men's trousers yet which we&#13;
are offering at cost. There are only six or eight pairs left&#13;
but if you can findv your size you will gel a bargain.&#13;
Always groceries and plenty of potatoes yet.&#13;
Give us a call,&#13;
The C E N T R A L S T O R E&#13;
M r » . JL, MT. U t l e y , P r o p .&#13;
^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
X£t£tt-w^^^&#13;
¥n1&#13;
Is Jilst What the Ladies of Pinckney&#13;
and Stfrroifnding Country&#13;
HAVE BEEN LOOKING FOR&#13;
D i m EMM ram&#13;
I S IT&#13;
Mide in Pinckney anl is a blen i between SPRING *&amp;&#13;
WINTER wheat flour. Here you get all the good bread&#13;
making qualities of the Spring wheat and also the excellent&#13;
flavor of the Winter wheat, miking a flour that will make&#13;
bread you can't eat enough of so but what you will want just&#13;
as much more the next meal.&#13;
We are using the strongest Spring wheat floor we can&#13;
boy and we have a machine for blending the two kinds of&#13;
flour so we can assure you of the evenness of thejblending.&#13;
Let MONARCH BREAD FLOUR be the prime /actor in&#13;
your bread making from now on.&#13;
P O P p a s t y o u r P U R I T Y F L O U R is the best and&#13;
the. cheapest you can buy. We intend to keep PURITY Up&#13;
to the same high grade strickly winter wheat flour it always&#13;
has been. We are now in a position to give our costomere a&#13;
choice and we know we can satisfy the most particular kind.&#13;
We would like to C. U. B. A. customer of ours. By&#13;
buying our flour you help us, yon help yourself and yew*&#13;
HELP PINCKNEY •£:&#13;
•&gt; . . ' • » &lt; .&#13;
iM&#13;
h&#13;
?.z&#13;
,*»Vi;^&#13;
'.:.'' *£."&#13;
•'•'. •AWJ.&#13;
' » ' • •&#13;
-t- I s&#13;
w 1 -&#13;
mm&#13;
^¾&#13;
•:M m&#13;
*i*.*4&#13;
•m&#13;
urvs&#13;
&amp;.&amp;* +&#13;
*"J. &lt; ,&#13;
. - • - . ' - •* • , ^ '&#13;
•.'•IVfcsf&lt;&#13;
». PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
v&#13;
j.r&#13;
1¾.&#13;
*'£&gt;*&#13;
IT-&#13;
..'/&amp;'.&#13;
*•*•&#13;
"foe-**&#13;
s»^&#13;
-J.'&#13;
' , • - ' ' : '&#13;
# « V &gt; . ; • . .&#13;
Co-Operative Farm&#13;
Products Marketing&#13;
How Jf Is Done in Europe and May Be Done&#13;
in America to the Profit of Both&#13;
Farmer and Consumer&#13;
By MATTHEW 8. DUDGEON.&#13;
&gt;»»d+»»0»»»&#13;
iCupyright, iaJ4, Wtmern Nuwipuper Union, J&#13;
A CO-OPERATIVE BACON FACTORY&#13;
!&#13;
&amp;j.m*&#13;
Frederickssund, Denmark.—We take&#13;
off our hats to the Danish packing&#13;
house and its product. Here a most&#13;
efficient packing house takes a high&#13;
grade pig and manufactures him into&#13;
the beet bacon on earth. If Armour&#13;
or Ocdaby or Morris were here he&#13;
•would be compelled* to Join us In our&#13;
salutation of the packing houses of&#13;
Denmark. Here is the last word as&#13;
Jto efficient scientific treatment of the&#13;
dead porker.&#13;
But in Denmark they demand something&#13;
more than scientific treatment&#13;
In the packing house. The Danish&#13;
theory Is that to produce good bacon&#13;
you must go back into the history of&#13;
the pig. They want to know of what&#13;
breed he was, that he was raised In&#13;
a sanitary pen, on pure, wholesome&#13;
food, that he was between five and&#13;
seven months old, and weighed from&#13;
180 to 200 pounds when butchered.&#13;
'He may not be a. scrub, picked up&#13;
by the buyers and rushed into the&#13;
yards to be killed and cured, as may&#13;
t&gt;e the case In America. The Danish&#13;
pig is an efficient scientific agency&#13;
for transforming pure milk and grain&#13;
And root crops and fodder into fine&#13;
pig meat. And so when the best&#13;
packing horse methods deal with the&#13;
"best pig thfe result is sure to be the&#13;
best bacon. And the farmers after&#13;
they ha*ve raised the pig and cured&#13;
the bacon In the bacon factory which&#13;
they themselves own, insist that they&#13;
get the profit from the sale. So these&#13;
Danish fanners keep possession of the&#13;
bacon until It is placed upon the&#13;
counters of the retail dealers in England.&#13;
In this way they get all the&#13;
profits there are In the entire process.&#13;
Organized Without Money.&#13;
This Is the way in which it is done.&#13;
The bacon factory here at Frederickssund&#13;
Is owned by 3,000 farmers. There&#13;
are big farmers and little farmers&#13;
among them. Some of them have&#13;
only five acres, and others have hundreds&#13;
of acres. Some contribute only&#13;
one or two hogs per year, while others&#13;
send theirs in by the hundred.&#13;
Strange to say, while the factory now&#13;
represents a very large investment&#13;
and while the farmers who own it&#13;
have In the aggregate great wealth,&#13;
the plant was established without the&#13;
direct investment of one dollar. Thera&#13;
was no capital paid in and there were&#13;
no bonds Issued. A large number of&#13;
farmers simply got together, organized,&#13;
elected officers and directed that&#13;
these officers should, in their behalf,&#13;
borrow sufficient capital at the near-&#13;
. by bank to erect the plant and start&#13;
the business. And the bank stood&#13;
foi? it, well knowing that the unlimited&#13;
liability of hundreds of farmers&#13;
who were interested in the bacon factory&#13;
was the best security in the&#13;
world; well knowing also that under&#13;
proper management a bacon factory&#13;
was Itself one of the most sound and&#13;
profitable business ventures Into&#13;
which these same farmers could go.&#13;
The loan was obtained with the understanding&#13;
that repayment should be&#13;
In annual installments running over&#13;
ten years and that these payments&#13;
should be made out of the net earn*&#13;
mgs of the concern. There is one&#13;
annual meeting of the members each&#13;
year, and although the financial Interests&#13;
which the different members&#13;
have In the concern vary largely, It&#13;
lav one man one vote no matter who&#13;
he may be, the owner of a small farm&#13;
or of a large farm. The man who&#13;
delivers one pig per year has the&#13;
tame voting power as he whose annual&#13;
product amounts to 1,000 pigs.&#13;
The annual meeting elects a board of&#13;
$1 directors. These directors hold&#13;
four meetings per year. The direct&#13;
o r employ the superintendent and&#13;
•manager. '&#13;
-. High Grade Manager.&#13;
This concern Is owned by 3,000&#13;
thrifty, close-fisted, money-making&#13;
farmers, but they do not run this&#13;
husiae|f on any narrow gauge plan.&#13;
1&amp;eTt j b l ^ T t n f t t incompetence^ .does&#13;
not pay. They want good results and&#13;
fao1 employ the best superintendent&#13;
^'•-'.^jiad, manager* that monetary consld-&#13;
.£&gt;;&gt;• ^^fjswtions' can secure. His-name is&#13;
» # "&#13;
•tf'.V&#13;
4*~;:g:frWjM-UM9cK Ht is an edu-&#13;
^ ^¾ qr^cMed/ widely rtad, much traveled.&#13;
^ ¾ - . . ; ^*, ^Untifically trained business man,&#13;
f &amp; C . ^ ^ v ' f S o findaretand* farming and hog&#13;
fe*»,.••* y „yfa to all its details. He knows&#13;
•%i afl afimt pigs from breeding *o e*t-&#13;
. ' ln#. He, ha# studied *s«ry i£&amp;jfrwn&#13;
s^wsessoltranafbnainiiitireivisto&#13;
- - ftoa i t * M a * . Ha&#13;
W-'&gt;&#13;
understands the problems of transportation.&#13;
He is familiar with the&#13;
markets of the world and with the&#13;
demands of each. Into his plant he&#13;
has introduced all the latest efficiency&#13;
devices. He is in tho broadest sense,&#13;
a competent, efficient, high priced&#13;
manager.&#13;
Although for some twenty or thirty&#13;
years co-operation has been in successful&#13;
operation in Denmark, no cooperative&#13;
society can count upon the&#13;
absence of rivalry and competition&#13;
from private dealers. Earlier in the&#13;
game more than one co-operative society&#13;
was sadly hindered in being outbid&#13;
in its efforts to purchase the&#13;
products of its members. It is hard&#13;
indeed for the farmer to realize that&#13;
he should accept $10 per hundred for&#13;
his pigs from a co-operative society&#13;
while the outside dealer is offering&#13;
him $11 per hundred. The private&#13;
dealers here played the game that they&#13;
are playing in America. Whenever&#13;
any co-operative concern started doing&#13;
business the private dealer at&#13;
once outbid It. Here as in America&#13;
the farmers sometimes abandoned&#13;
their co-operative society and sold to&#13;
the highest bidder. Occasionally the&#13;
co-operative concern was pushed to&#13;
the wall and went out of business.&#13;
Here as in America the private dealer&#13;
immediately dropped his price and&#13;
fljfhe farmer was where he was before&#13;
getting whatever price the dealers&#13;
agreed upon among themselves.&#13;
No Selling to Rival Dealers.&#13;
It did not take the organizers of&#13;
the co-operative movement long to&#13;
realize that this could not go on. Consequently,&#13;
when a new organization is&#13;
started now the matter is fully explained&#13;
to the prospective members.&#13;
They are told that unless they expect&#13;
to give unlimited loyalty to the concern,&#13;
unless they are willing to agree&#13;
to bring all of their output to the society&#13;
even when the society is outbid&#13;
by private dealers, there is no use in&#13;
starting a society at all. It is fully&#13;
explained to them that the high prices&#13;
which may be offered can only be&#13;
temporary and that the permanent&#13;
welfare of the community demands&#13;
that the co-operative concern be organized&#13;
and be loyally supported. The&#13;
matter thus fully before them the&#13;
Danish farmers do not hesitate to enter&#13;
into a contract to deliver all their&#13;
product to the local co-operative society.&#13;
The members of this bacon&#13;
factory here are under absolute agreement&#13;
to deliver pigs to no other dealer,&#13;
although any member may of&#13;
course use such hogs as he needs for&#13;
his own use. Here is the contract:,&#13;
'•We, the undersigned ^hereby pledge&#13;
ourselves to deliver to the&#13;
co-operative bacon factory, which It Is&#13;
proposed to establish, all the pigs of&#13;
weight between 150 and 200 pounds,&#13;
which we may produce for sale. Such&#13;
pigs will be delivered on conditions&#13;
decided by the shareholders of the&#13;
society, and that we shall receive&#13;
such amount In payment of such delivered&#13;
swine as may be realized for&#13;
them by the factory less preliminary&#13;
expenses incurred In the organization&#13;
of the society and the annual installments&#13;
on loan for building and plant&#13;
payable during a period of about ten&#13;
years, together with current working&#13;
expenses."&#13;
Sixty Thousand Pigs Ptr Year.&#13;
"We handle from sixty thousand to&#13;
seventy thousand pigs each year,"&#13;
said the manager. "During parts of&#13;
the year two thousand pigs per week&#13;
will come in. These all are nearly&#13;
of the same age and size, practically&#13;
all being between twenty-four and&#13;
twenty-eight weeks old and weighing&#13;
from 180 to 200 pounds. They have&#13;
been fed almost the same food and&#13;
have been raised upon conditions that&#13;
are absolutely uniform. Slight differences&#13;
occur Is the individuals, some&#13;
being a little fatter than their mates,&#13;
others differing in the quality of&#13;
meat, although it wduld take an&#13;
expert to detect these differences. Our&#13;
annual turn over of bacon amounts to&#13;
about a million and a half dollars. We&#13;
send out some fresh pork. Our leading&#13;
article Is cored side bacon with&#13;
ham and shoal der attacfied. We send&#13;
out also lard, sausage, boneless ham&#13;
and a number of by-products. Ton&#13;
will not* as you t o through the fao&gt;&#13;
tor*, that every product which we&#13;
sand out It marked with a government&#13;
stamp with the number Sfc&#13;
wnich i s the samba* of thia factory.&#13;
UtlllsJKt Aft laetpt tta: JaPttV&#13;
Ail tba waste from tfrt factory |» • " /&#13;
carefully cared for. We do not destroy&#13;
a particle of material that cornea&#13;
in. Some one has said that the only&#13;
thing we have not been able to make&#13;
money out of is the squeal. For example,&#13;
we manufacture bone meal for&#13;
chicken feed. We turn the blood into&#13;
a special quality of fertilizer, moBt&#13;
of which is shipped to Germany and&#13;
Holland and used largely upon their&#13;
famous tulip beds. We burn nothing.&#13;
Most of the offal goes back to&#13;
the farms of this region as manures.&#13;
There Is no more profitable use for&#13;
It The very water with which we&#13;
flush out our slaughter rooms is used&#13;
as a fertilizer.&#13;
"Bach Friday we send out quotations&#13;
of prices which will prevail during&#13;
the coming week. About one-half of&#13;
our output, however, Is sold in advance&#13;
on standing orders from England.&#13;
They direct us to send them&#13;
so many hundred pounds at the ruling&#13;
price. They understand, of coarse,&#13;
that we will fix a fair market price&#13;
upon what we send them. With these&#13;
who want good bacon, however, it is&#13;
not so much a question of price as a&#13;
question of quality, and it is because&#13;
of our, quality that we have these&#13;
standing order*."&#13;
Fixing Prices.&#13;
"Each of the factories has a local&#13;
price-fixing committee, consisting of&#13;
the president of the local society, a&#13;
well-known farmer who is not a director&#13;
of the society, and the manager&#13;
of the factory. The manager of course,&#13;
produces the latest market reports,&#13;
telegrams and all other Information&#13;
obtainable as to the results of previous&#13;
shipments, the state ot the market&#13;
and Its trend whether up or down.&#13;
After providing for a small profit&#13;
which goes to the sinking fund and&#13;
allowing a quarter of a ceni per pound&#13;
for working expense the sommlttee&#13;
decides upon the prices whteh should&#13;
be paid and which it will recommend&#13;
to the general district committee.&#13;
"We are now paying a little over&#13;
fifteen dollars per hundred weight.&#13;
Other private dealers pay the same&#13;
price, but with the private dealer the&#13;
first return Is all the farmer will ever&#13;
get for his pigs. Each year we lay&#13;
aside something for our reserve fund,&#13;
and something to pay off what we borrowed&#13;
at the bank. After we have&#13;
done this we declare an annual dividend,&#13;
which amounts to from $1.25&#13;
to $1.50 on each hog that has been&#13;
delivered to us. You see also that&#13;
at the end of the ten years' period&#13;
each farmer has a share in our establishment&#13;
here, which may be termed&#13;
an additional price for his pigs. '&#13;
Standing Together.&#13;
"There are 43 co-operative bacon&#13;
factories in Denmark. We have a central&#13;
organization, which Is rather a&#13;
voluntary association for the mutual&#13;
benefit of the various co-operative bacon&#13;
factories. The office is in Copenhagen.&#13;
Weekly reports come in&#13;
from each factory giving the amount&#13;
killed and sold, the expense of the&#13;
business and the market returns received.&#13;
The heads of the various factories&#13;
meet from time to time to talk&#13;
over the best business methods and&#13;
possible Improvements In our way of&#13;
handling bacon. We give each other&#13;
the benefit of our experience and&#13;
think of every way possible to help&#13;
each other. We do not feel that we&#13;
are, in any antagonistic sense, rivals.&#13;
We fully believe that every factory&#13;
is helped by the success of the other&#13;
factories. The success of each depends&#13;
upon the fact that all of the&#13;
factories are putting out a good&#13;
product and are dealing In an honest&#13;
business-like way with the foreign retailers&#13;
who take our products. What&#13;
hurts one of us hurts all of us. We&#13;
are anxious, therefore, to help each&#13;
other In every way, since In helping&#13;
others we are helping ourselves.&#13;
"You will find that there is the same&#13;
spirit among our members that there&#13;
Is between the heads of the factories.&#13;
The members do not feel that they&#13;
are competing with each other, but&#13;
feel that they should help each other&#13;
to Increase the quality of the pork&#13;
produced. You will find them a very&#13;
friendly lot of people.&#13;
"Our agricultural schools and our&#13;
government departments help us,&#13;
particularly upon all scientific problems.&#13;
They help us along*the technical&#13;
side of all our work. They make&#13;
experiments and give advice and cooperate&#13;
with us generally In a thou*&#13;
sand ways."&#13;
Possibly the most striking thing&#13;
about the factory is that a group of&#13;
farmers should run a concern that&#13;
rivals In efficiency and business&#13;
methods the largest and best privately&#13;
owned packing houses of the&#13;
world. We expect farmers to farm&#13;
well but we do hot expect them* to&#13;
do business well. In America they&#13;
take what is given them for the raw&#13;
product and go no further. Here they&#13;
go so far as to get all there is in I t&#13;
The farmer who raises the pit holds&#13;
to it and keeps it as^hts property until&#13;
it lands In the retail shops of England.&#13;
Ail intervening processes are&#13;
uader his ooatrol and afl Intervening&#13;
proits .art his own* Denmark Wseats&#13;
to the world tae^eaiemtlflc farm*&#13;
tr win i s an,&#13;
Wtt tap AaMftoa*&#13;
fain that timttfrm* -&#13;
:00000000= :OOOP&#13;
Monroe.—Carl&#13;
old, residing at&#13;
who ran away&#13;
Mary Slift, was&#13;
State&#13;
Happenings&#13;
00000&#13;
Monroe.—Edward Overmeyer, veteran&#13;
of the Civil war and pioneer of&#13;
this county, died.&#13;
Lansing.—The fortieth annual meeting&#13;
of the Michigan Pioneer and&#13;
Historical society will be held at the&#13;
capitol at Lansing June 9 and 10.&#13;
Holland.—Governor Ferris has invited&#13;
Prof. E. Kuizenga of Hope&#13;
college to deliver the annual&#13;
baccalaureate sermon to the class of&#13;
1914 at Ferris institute Sunday evening,&#13;
June 21.&#13;
Hillsdale.—Thomas Pollard of Allen&#13;
has been adjudged insane. He&#13;
is the young man who provoked so&#13;
much merriment in Jackson recently&#13;
when he sought the help of the police&#13;
in finding a Jackson girl, whom he&#13;
wanted to marry.&#13;
Kalamazoo.—Harry Dale Adams,&#13;
eighty-six years old, postmaster&#13;
of Galesburg under Grover Cleve*&#13;
land and the organizer of the first&#13;
fruit growers' society Michigan ever&#13;
had, died at his home In Galesburg. He&#13;
gained for himself the distinction of&#13;
being probably the first man to advocate&#13;
general fruit growing for Michigan.&#13;
Kalamazoo.—Mrs. Lizzie Young, formerly&#13;
Miss Lizzie Sliter of Vicksburg,&#13;
who attended school in this&#13;
city a number of years ago, has&#13;
brought suit for $15,000 at Kenton, O.,&#13;
against the wife of her divorced husband,&#13;
Benjamin S. Young, former&#13;
state chemist of Ohio, on the grounds&#13;
of alienation of his affections. Mr.&#13;
Young ta-eupreme vice-chancellor of&#13;
the Knights v of Pythias lodge.&#13;
Grand Rapids.—Lollie Zube of Mil*&#13;
waukee, of the crew of the sand*&#13;
barge Desmond, was drowned in White&#13;
lake, near Whitehall, when a small&#13;
boat In which he and Henry Fritz, another&#13;
of the Desmond's crew, was capsized&#13;
on the storm-tossed surface.&#13;
Zube, thirty-eight years old, and Fritz&#13;
were trying to reach the DeBmond&#13;
from Sylvan beach when the accident&#13;
occurred. Fritz was rescued by the&#13;
Desmond's crew.&#13;
Slift, eight years&#13;
South Bend, Ind.,&#13;
from his mother,&#13;
found by a farmer&#13;
in La Salle township, eight&#13;
miles south ef here, and turned over&#13;
to the police. The mother and three&#13;
children were on their way to Detroit.&#13;
The child was homesick and wanted&#13;
to walk back. The mother and children&#13;
came back frdm Detroit, and&#13;
with the lad returned to South Bend.&#13;
Lansing.—The faculty of Michigan&#13;
Agricultural college has approved&#13;
a list of 198 seniors who will&#13;
be presented with diplomas June 23 and&#13;
the graduating class may be Increased&#13;
to 201. This is the largest class In the&#13;
hietory of the institution. Of these&#13;
to graduate, 74 are enrolled in agriculture,&#13;
60 in_ engineering, 50 in home&#13;
economics, 12 in forestry and two In&#13;
veterinary science. There are 16 from&#13;
Detroit&#13;
Jackson.—George A. Matthews,&#13;
president and general, manager of&#13;
the Jackson Automobile company,&#13;
dropped dead while walking in the&#13;
yard at his home. The cause of Mr.&#13;
Matthews' death was heart failure. He&#13;
was a prominent Mason, Elk and&#13;
Shriner and had been identified with&#13;
Jackson's school affairs for the last 20&#13;
years, having served as president of&#13;
the board^of education. He was sixtyone&#13;
years old, having been born in&#13;
Gallon, 0., moving to this city in the&#13;
early '80s. He leaves a widow, two&#13;
sons and a daughter.&#13;
Grand Rapids.—Thirteen stores at&#13;
Sparta were burglarized. Soon after&#13;
the burglary Deputy Sheriff George'&#13;
Barrett of Kent City arrested&#13;
two young men giving the names of&#13;
Harry Grice and Frank McKay, who&#13;
are alleged to have had stolen goods&#13;
in their possession. The men b&gt;d&#13;
half a'dozen diamonds, several suits&#13;
of clothing and a variety or wearing&#13;
apparel McKay later is said to have&#13;
confessed to Prosecutor Earl Phelps&#13;
that he was the man who recently entered&#13;
several business places at Nashville.&#13;
He also is said to have admitted&#13;
the robberies at Sparta.&#13;
Jackson.—Two persons were killed&#13;
and a third badly injured as the*&#13;
result of accidents in this city.&#13;
Carrol Dzikowicz, three-year-old son&#13;
of Mr. and-Mrs. Joe Dsikowics, Johnson&#13;
street, ran in front of a fast westbound&#13;
passenger train on the East&#13;
avenue crossing; and. was instantly4&#13;
killed in front of his horrified mother.&#13;
A. C. Tibbetts, an electrician employed&#13;
with the Eastern Michigan Electric&#13;
company, was electrocuted watteworking&#13;
on a pole' at Park pfrce and&#13;
his dead body fell 60 feet HTIfc Jackson,&#13;
a coal, and wood dealer, became&#13;
dasad white waflrtai on North Blackatona&#13;
street and fill. Ws hand ttrisv&#13;
sJdvwaOt with such foroe that&#13;
His condition&#13;
IN HAPPY LAND OF MEXICO&#13;
Picture May Be Slightly Overdrawn,&#13;
Though There Is Much of the Real&#13;
Thing About It.&#13;
'Across the aromatic coffee fields&#13;
the tremulous note of the ruby-throated&#13;
hacienda came throbbing.&#13;
Far in the distance the snow-capped&#13;
peaks of the Sierra Madras rose&#13;
against the cerulean. None genuine&#13;
without the cerulean.&#13;
Lounging on the chaparrista in the&#13;
shade of a con came bush, the traveler&#13;
questioned his native guide.&#13;
"Jose, who is the man they are taking&#13;
out to shoot?"&#13;
"He is our president, senor."&#13;
"And who was the man they shot&#13;
just ahead of him?"&#13;
"He was our president yesterday.**&#13;
"Where are all those soldiers going,&#13;
scattered over the buenavista?"&#13;
"They are looking for Miguel Formalda,&#13;
senor. Miguel will be president&#13;
tomorrow, and he has gone into&#13;
hiding."&#13;
"A strange people you are," said&#13;
the traveler. "Tell me about the fellow&#13;
who is kicking a mule in the ribs&#13;
yonder by the corral."&#13;
"There is little to tell about him,&#13;
senor. He Is only Pedro Tornado, He&#13;
will be president day after tomorrow."&#13;
On the evening breeze came the&#13;
faint tinkle of the upas bell as the&#13;
mesquite herds wound slowly o'er the&#13;
pizarro.—Life.&#13;
Sure Enough, Why Not?&#13;
Sydney Buxton has some amusing&#13;
things to say In his recently published&#13;
"Book of Fishing Stories."&#13;
"Why," he asks, "is it that day after&#13;
day a single salmon, and one only, Is&#13;
caught? Is it that among so many&#13;
Hah covered by the fly there is each&#13;
day in one pool one fish more active,&#13;
more enterprising, more alert and&#13;
more Intelligent than the rest? Or is&#13;
this particular fish, so to speak, the&#13;
village idiot?"'&#13;
Mr. Buxton tells a story of. a fisherman&#13;
who, after a successful four-hour&#13;
tussle with a large salmon, came back&#13;
In triumph and related the story to&#13;
his aunt. Like all anglers he laid&#13;
wearisome emphasis on the time occupied&#13;
and the muscular expenditure.&#13;
"But, my dear Tom," the aunt remarked,&#13;
"why did you not cut the&#13;
string and get rid of the brute ?"&#13;
Isn't&#13;
Overburdened Traffic.&#13;
It wearisome to be told that&#13;
'the line is busy now,'" said Mrs.&#13;
Corntossel.&#13;
"I don't mind It so much with a&#13;
telephone," replied her husband.&#13;
"What I'm afraid of is that the railroad&#13;
is going to Bay it when I get&#13;
ready to send things to market."&#13;
Necessarily Large.&#13;
"They say he does business on&#13;
large scale."&#13;
"Yes, indeed; he weighs hay."&#13;
a&#13;
Probably.&#13;
"He plays a mouth organ."&#13;
"Has a taste for music, eh?'&#13;
A man may be regular In his habits,&#13;
even if they are bad.&#13;
bJa«oal&gt; was cut&#13;
6 eerfame. Tha r - t&#13;
LIVING ADVERTISEMENT&#13;
Glow of Health 8peaks for Postum.&#13;
It requires no scientific training to&#13;
discover whether coffee disagrees or&#13;
not&#13;
Simply stop it for a time and use&#13;
Postum in place of it, then note the&#13;
beneficial effects. The truth will appear.&#13;
• • •&#13;
"Six years ago I was in a very bad&#13;
condition," writes a Tenn. lady. "I&#13;
suffered from indigestion, nervousness&#13;
and insomnia.&#13;
"I was then an Inveterate coffee&#13;
drinker, but it was long before I could&#13;
be persuaded that it was coffee that&#13;
hurt me. Finally I decided to leave it&#13;
off a few days and find out the.truth.&#13;
"The first morning I left,oft coffee&#13;
I had a raging headache, BO I decided&#13;
I must have something to take the&#13;
place of coffee." (The headache was&#13;
caused by the reaction of the coffee&#13;
drug—caffeine.)&#13;
"Having heard of Postum through a&#13;
friend who used it, I bought a package&#13;
and tried i t I did not like it at first&#13;
but after X learned how to make It&#13;
right according to directions on pkg.,&#13;
I would not change back to coffee for&#13;
anything.&#13;
"When I began to use Postum I&#13;
weighed only 117 lbs. Now I weigh&#13;
170 and as I have not taken any tonic&#13;
in that time I can only attribute my&#13;
present good health to tha use of Postum&#13;
in place of coffee.'&#13;
"My husband says t am a living advertisement&#13;
for Postum."&#13;
Name given by the Postum Co., Battle&#13;
Creek, Mich.&#13;
Postum now oomeain two forms:&#13;
Regular Postum — must M well&#13;
boiled. 16c and *5e postages.&#13;
Instant Poatwn—is a soluble powder&#13;
; A teaspoonful dissolves quickly&#13;
in a cup of hot w%tat and, with&#13;
and sugar, makes a dettdoas&#13;
age lastawtfy too and Mo tin*.&#13;
't&#13;
" W'-v'*:,'- if:'&#13;
(*%'&amp;&amp;&amp;&#13;
(&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
• •„•'•••.. . v ' '¥&amp;•&#13;
_ ^ . . • _ - ~ ^ • •••*&#13;
• • ' • • • . , • . . ' ' • . , .• V . •'« I 1 , ' w *&#13;
,,»; T •&gt;• ,W ':" ;«•+' ~ ' -&#13;
•*• - • • * &lt; * " 1 *&#13;
r=r«i-&#13;
0.^-- ».y f .&#13;
! ** - V, ,..&#13;
- » • 1 S'&lt; --:^- * &amp; &gt; •&#13;
•*iv'-&#13;
• 'V'^i'" &amp;&amp;£• * • :•&gt;• ':**, • # '&#13;
•fi^r-&#13;
^ : ^ '&#13;
•y&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
• ~ . A&#13;
V -.&#13;
V&#13;
• k - ^ ! ~ - ' ' ' ' ' • •&#13;
J* T f v - -- •&#13;
£*.--.'.v • •&#13;
Gove mors&#13;
[ A N o v e l i z a t i o n of&#13;
^ / Alice Bradley's Play&#13;
&lt;By GERTRUDE STEVENSON *&#13;
Illustrations from Photographs of the Stage Production&#13;
Copyright, UU&amp; (Publication iiights Beeerred) by David fielaeoo.&#13;
SYNOPSIS.&#13;
Daniel Blade auddenly advances from a&#13;
penniless miner to a millionaire and becomes&#13;
a power in the political and bust"&#13;
ness world. He has his eye on the governor's&#13;
chair. His simple, home-loving wife&#13;
fails to rise to the new conditions.&#13;
CHAPTER I—Continued.&#13;
"Dan," she Bald, "I'll tell you something.&#13;
These expensive laundries ruin&#13;
your shirts right off, and when I&#13;
washed 'em they lasted a whole year.&#13;
They ain't Ironed right, either."&#13;
"Oh, my God!" groaned Slade, helplessly,&#13;
pitying her lack of understanding&#13;
rather than being angry with her.&#13;
_ "I wish you'd forget, Mary, that I&#13;
had to let you wash and scrub once.&#13;
We're up now. Let us kick the ladder&#13;
out from under us and stay up—&#13;
forget how we got here."&#13;
"But I don't want to forget," remonstrated&#13;
the little wisp of a woman opposite&#13;
him. "I was perfectly contented&#13;
those days. I ain't now. I hate&#13;
this house. I hate it. It's too big.&#13;
The help scare me, so many of 'ejn,&#13;
I'd like jest one hired girl and my old&#13;
sitting-room set" She stopped meditatively,&#13;
her thoughts wandering back&#13;
to the early days when her husband&#13;
took his pick and dinner pail and&#13;
tramped off to the mines, and she&#13;
sang as ehe bent over the washtub&#13;
and busied herself at the kitchen&#13;
stove.&#13;
Her husband sat with face averted,&#13;
his imagination carrying him far into&#13;
the future—a vision of honor as chief&#13;
executive of the state and power in&#13;
keeping with the untold riches he had&#13;
Accumulated.&#13;
"That's it," he finally exclaimed, "I&#13;
want to go ahead and you want to&#13;
'stick over your washtubs. I need the&#13;
support of big people—got to mix with&#13;
'em, and he one of 'em. And you&#13;
won't."&#13;
"No, I don't have to," replied Mary.&#13;
"I needn't."&#13;
"You don't see the necessity of joining&#13;
me?" he asked, testily.&#13;
"I don't know how." 1 "Do you want to know how?" he&#13;
persisted.&#13;
"No," came the provokingly Indifferent&#13;
answer.&#13;
"You're putting the bars up In the&#13;
middle of the road," he continued,&#13;
"and I'm making up my mind to&#13;
change things."&#13;
Suddenly Mary's lips quivered and&#13;
a hurt look showed in her eyes behind&#13;
the misty tears as she realized that&#13;
whatever she did irritated her husband&#13;
She started to speak, but was&#13;
interrupted by the entrance of a servant,&#13;
who announced that Senator&#13;
Strickland and his daughter had just&#13;
phoned to say that he and his daughter&#13;
would call on their way to the&#13;
opera.&#13;
Blade's face flushed and paled at the&#13;
thought—flushed at the pleasurable&#13;
surprise at this unlooked-for attention&#13;
from the senator, and paled as he&#13;
thought of the senator's stunningly&#13;
gowned daughter arriving to find his&#13;
wife in a cheap, ill-fitting dress that&#13;
would have looked badly even for&#13;
morning wear.&#13;
• "Mary, you look like a steerage pas-&#13;
,senger,H he exclaimed suddenly, turning&#13;
on the flustered little woman, who&#13;
was aghast at the very thought of a&#13;
caU from the senator and his daughter.&#13;
"Go upstairs and dress. Ill&#13;
make excuses and hold them till you&#13;
come down."&#13;
"1 can't," she gasped. "I ain't got&#13;
time, /anyway, and 1 havent anything&#13;
•to go to the open is."&#13;
Blade leaned forward and struck&#13;
the table with hit clenohed fist "Dont&#13;
you understand? You mutt see these&#13;
ipeople. Tonight's paper names me for&#13;
.governor. Strickland's influence to&#13;
more necessary to me than any other&#13;
i nun's in the whole state. He controls&#13;
[the party. He's bringing hit daughter&#13;
to my house. You're meeting them&#13;
socially. "Come on, sow, come on"—&#13;
foe became persuasive—"put on a.nlee&#13;
little gown and come along and show&#13;
them you can do something. Well&#13;
hold a reception here and ltll be a&#13;
'direct answer to Wesley Merritt'a slur&#13;
on you in tonight's paper."&#13;
Qo to the opera with Kathertne&#13;
Strickland—with a women who had&#13;
j*tt returned from Europe—the worn*&#13;
an who *had dined with a queen and&#13;
been feted all over the continent Hold&#13;
4 reception—hoeteat in this honse&#13;
'where a|» felt, save tor her Dan, o/&#13;
•tranger. Keel people woo spot* in&#13;
i^rhat to her was A strange an* aliogather&#13;
unmanageable ftthlon.&#13;
Mary caught her breath with a ton&#13;
of dismay. The tery tfedtght ptjae.&#13;
ilyied her,&#13;
Slade, ominously, and poor Mary, too&#13;
excited to Interpret the threat, picked&#13;
up her sewing and her newspapers&#13;
and made for the door.&#13;
"Tell them," she exclaimed breathlessly,&#13;
"tell them I had a headache—&#13;
that's a fashionable enough excuse,&#13;
anyway." And, terrified, she fled out&#13;
of the room as {Catherine Strickland&#13;
and her father were announced.&#13;
CHAPTER II.&#13;
As Slade turned from the frightened,&#13;
insignificant figure of his fleeing&#13;
wife, he saw a woman of perfect&#13;
poise and queenly carriage, a woman&#13;
a trifle haughty and Insolent in her&#13;
youth and beauty and assured command&#13;
of all the intricacies of social&#13;
grace and charm. Her wide, full eyes&#13;
met his with an engaging, frank curiosity&#13;
to see this new factor In the political&#13;
world. Her gown was a triumph&#13;
of soft, shimmering silk and&#13;
alluring chiffon—a gown that emphasised&#13;
the charm of her proud, statuesque&#13;
figure. She was the sort of&#13;
woman that makes a man glow with&#13;
pride to present as his wife or daughter.&#13;
She was all that Mary Slade was&#13;
not.&#13;
Slade stood looking at her, fascinated,&#13;
forgetting for the moment the&#13;
man she was with, remembering noth-&#13;
8he- Was All That Mary Slade Was&#13;
Not&#13;
ing but the magnetic personality of&#13;
the woman whose reputation for doing&#13;
big things in a big way was already&#13;
known to him—a woman whose&#13;
eyes meeting his gave back flash for&#13;
flash and understanding for understanding.&#13;
Almost mechanically Slade found&#13;
himself acknowledging Senator Strickland's&#13;
formal presentation of his&#13;
daughter. Hesitatingly he offered bis&#13;
hand, which the girl, perfectly at&#13;
ease! grasped with a cordial, sympathetic&#13;
pressure. Her eyes were looking&#13;
critically into his, much as if she&#13;
were trying to read him through and&#13;
through and take his measure for future&#13;
use.&#13;
Her easy, graceful acceptance of the&#13;
Situation, her thoughtful inquiry for&#13;
Mrs. Slave's health, prompted by wellbred&#13;
sympathy rather than any curious&#13;
interest and the cultured modulation&#13;
of her splendid voice, charmed&#13;
hiss; as no woman had ever done before.&#13;
'&#13;
There was nothing of the shy, retiring&#13;
ingenue i* Katharine Strickland's&#13;
makeup. She was a woman of splendid&#13;
physique and wonderful mental do*&#13;
velopment. Her appeal to a man was&#13;
that of a dominant intellect as much&#13;
1 oaat Don* ahe *nB» [as of &gt; lovely woman. She laUiedJlMPrsaasd^&#13;
Maflis&#13;
lug eyes and his unusually affable, attentive&#13;
manner.&#13;
Suddenly he found himself comparing&#13;
his own little old-fashioned wife&#13;
with this handsome, self-possessed&#13;
woman before him. What a wife Katherlne&#13;
Strickland would be for the governor&#13;
of a state! What a picture she&#13;
would make presiding at the head of&#13;
a millionaire's dinner tables! How&#13;
wonderfully such a woman would&#13;
adorn the richly furnished rooms of&#13;
his newly built mansion! Instead of&#13;
the work-worn fingers of his wife, continuously&#13;
fumbling with darning&#13;
threads, he saw, in a mental vision,&#13;
this woman's lovely hands constantly&#13;
engaged in unwinding the threads of&#13;
problematic political tangles. Here&#13;
was a woman who would be a man's&#13;
wife and comrade—the very antithesis&#13;
of the household drudge his own wife&#13;
was content to be, with no interest&#13;
outside of the four walls of her home&#13;
and no desire for anything bigger in&#13;
life than the daily routine of breakfast,&#13;
dinner and supper, washing on&#13;
Monday, ironing on Tuesday, and BO&#13;
on to the end of the week—week after&#13;
week in the same deadly rut. Here&#13;
was a woman who would "go along&#13;
with a man"—possibly a step ahead,&#13;
blazing the way for new and greater&#13;
glories and recognizing no limit.&#13;
Slade brought his reflections to a&#13;
sudden halt as he remembered the&#13;
girl's father.&#13;
"Why, what has happened to you,&#13;
senator? Your face looks different&#13;
than it did this afternoon."&#13;
'"Her fault" replied the senator,&#13;
with a smile of tolerant affection, indicating&#13;
his daughter. "She made me&#13;
cut my beard this way. It's French."&#13;
{Catherine laughed a delightful,&#13;
throaty little laugh.&#13;
"Nonsense, father," she protested.&#13;
"Of course, I like the West, but I&#13;
don't believe in being absolutely typical.&#13;
I was horrified when I got back&#13;
and found you so blatantly the typical,&#13;
much-cartooned Westerner."&#13;
"Mr. Slade," resumed Strickland, "a&#13;
few influential men from different&#13;
parts of our state are having a meeting&#13;
in town tomorrow, and I want you&#13;
to meet them. I'm arranging a little&#13;
impromptu dinner, and thought Katherine&#13;
might be able to persuade Mrs.&#13;
Slade and yourself to join us."&#13;
"Oh, father, tell the trulh," Katherine&#13;
interrupted. "These gentlemen&#13;
want to meet you, Mr. Slade. I hear&#13;
•"we're to expect great things of you.&#13;
You see, I've been mixed up in polltics&#13;
all my life, and I do love to have&#13;
a hand in them."&#13;
"She'd run for president If they'd&#13;
let her," teased her father.&#13;
"Indeed I would," the girl admitted,&#13;
brazenly. "I've got politics in my&#13;
blood, and home doesn't seem like&#13;
home unless politics are being brewed&#13;
in our dining-room. So you'll both&#13;
come, w6n't you—you and Mrs, Slade."&#13;
Slade was stammering his acceptance&#13;
when Strickland Interrupted abruptly.&#13;
*&#13;
"How'd you like to be governor,&#13;
Slade?"&#13;
Slade threw back his head. with a&#13;
laugh that was intended to denote&#13;
complete unconcern.&#13;
"Oh—that talk! Did the evening&#13;
papers put that into your head or—"&#13;
and he paused significantly, "did you&#13;
put It into the evening papers?".&#13;
Strickland's laugh was a practical&#13;
admission.&#13;
"It would mean a hard fight, Slade.&#13;
The water-front crowd's against you,&#13;
and you can't get on without their&#13;
influence."&#13;
^gjMNot in this town, at least," amendetTKatherine.&#13;
"You've got to have Wesley Merritt,&#13;
his paper, his hlghfaluting editorials&#13;
and his speechmaking—and his wife,"&#13;
Strickland explained. "He and hiscrowd&#13;
run the town."&#13;
"Oh, you mean my neighbors?"&#13;
asked Slade. "They'll come around,"&#13;
he finished, meaningly.&#13;
"But, man alive! Only today Merritt'a&#13;
attack on you was scurrilous. 1&#13;
remonstrated with him myself. He's&#13;
your out-and-out enemy. I've tried to&#13;
get him—to—to come over and shake&#13;
hands, but he swears hell never cross&#13;
your threshold—"&#13;
"1 guess they'll come when I want&#13;
'em to come," Slade Interrupted, with&#13;
an assurance his auditors could not&#13;
understand. "In fact, I'm looking for&#13;
'em any minute now," and he consulted&#13;
his watch.&#13;
"You're looking for them—hew—tonight?"&#13;
gasped Strickland, showing&#13;
plainly he thought Slade was making&#13;
a Joke of the matter.&#13;
"Yes, tonight," replied the would-be&#13;
governor, quietly, and turned to Katharine.&#13;
Strickland subsided, a question&#13;
growing in his mind as to whether he&#13;
had fully measured the man he expected&#13;
to use for his own political and&#13;
financial ends. There was In Blades&#13;
method of fighting a direct and open&#13;
quality that would make him hard to&#13;
handle in the crooked and indirect&#13;
ways of political life.&#13;
{Catherine Strickland's eyes narrowed&#13;
as she met Blade's gase. Her&#13;
quick, calculating mind saw in this&#13;
man the possibility of realising her&#13;
highest hopes and ambitions. With&#13;
tucn a man a woman could scale any&#13;
hojgfrta roeon any goat He was hard&#13;
Put A mast freed* to be bard&#13;
if hots ever&#13;
Ift"Wr fortile&#13;
brain smoldered ambitions be&#13;
great as his ambitions that uhe now&#13;
realized would never be attained unless&#13;
she made some great, radical&#13;
change in her life.&#13;
She had pushed her father as far&#13;
as the man would—could go. She&#13;
had outdistanced every girl in her&#13;
circle. She had reached high, but she&#13;
had triumphed. Now she was at the&#13;
end of her tether. It was a matter&#13;
of making some one huge stroke or&#13;
sinking back into stupid obscurity, a&#13;
situation all the more bitter because&#13;
of her previous successes. The&#13;
thought of settling down into the everyday&#13;
life of the western city where&#13;
she was born made her very soul&#13;
squirm. Surely there was something&#13;
more in life for her. Surely there&#13;
were bigger goals to be gained.&#13;
She had never realized how empty&#13;
the gld home life was until now, when&#13;
she suddenly found herself a part of&#13;
it again after the brilliant European&#13;
season and the stimulating, exciting&#13;
life in diplomatic circles at the capital.&#13;
The thought of remaining in the West&#13;
a big frog in a little puddle, had&#13;
grown positively hateful to her. Big&#13;
or little herself, she wanted a big&#13;
puddle. She was quite satisfied in her&#13;
own mind that no puddle would be so&#13;
big that she couldn't become a frog&#13;
of considerable size in it.&#13;
Now, as her restless brain and soul&#13;
clamored for higher goals and a wider&#13;
field, the thought of Slade's millions,&#13;
Blade's dominating, forceful personality,&#13;
Slade's reputation for sweeping&#13;
everything before him, Slade's probable&#13;
governorship, flashed through her&#13;
mind like a burning streak of electric&#13;
fire. With him, with his weapons,&#13;
what a career lay before a woman!&#13;
Just as suddenly she found herself&#13;
wondering what sort of a woman had&#13;
been a mate to this man for so many&#13;
years. She was conscious of a poignant&#13;
pang of envy—jealousy almost-^&#13;
against this woman who had the o p&#13;
portunity which was denied her.&#13;
"Well, what do you think of your&#13;
own country, now you're back?" she&#13;
heard Slade's voice saying. "Seem&#13;
big to you?"&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
FROM BODY OF CATERPILLAR&#13;
Australia Has Curious Plant Which&#13;
Develops From Action of Parasite&#13;
on Insect.&#13;
Nature is a curious force. There is&#13;
a caterpillar in Australia, It looks&#13;
for food under leaves and twigs in the&#13;
usual way. As It searches, a parasite,&#13;
specially equipped by nature for the&#13;
purpose, drops on its neck and fastens&#13;
itself there,&#13;
In a week or two thie little parasite&#13;
seed begins to germinate, drawing its&#13;
nourishment from the very life blood&#13;
of the insect. The latter, feeling sick,&#13;
buries itself about two IncheB into&#13;
the ground.&#13;
Eventually a pale green stalk, about&#13;
twelve Inches high, at the summit of&#13;
which is a most extraordinary flower,&#13;
somewhat resembling the top of a&#13;
bulrush when in seed, appears.&#13;
The poor caterpillar's refuge in the&#13;
ground is of no avail, for its whole interior&#13;
has to make room for a mass&#13;
of roots. Sucked as dry as a bone,&#13;
it is actually converted into a stick&#13;
of wood.&#13;
French Temperance Society.&#13;
An organization for the promotion&#13;
of temperance in France has been&#13;
founded by M. Schmidt, deputy for the&#13;
department of the Vosges. A feature&#13;
of the new body is its catholicity. It&#13;
Includes every shade of political and&#13;
religious belief, and all classes of society—&#13;
politicians, professional men&#13;
and workmen. A meeting, addressed&#13;
by doctors, lawyers and a deputy, has&#13;
just been held in Bordeaux. The&#13;
new association, which is called&#13;
"L'Alarme," justifies its name by calling&#13;
attention to the rising flood of&#13;
alcoholism in France.&#13;
Remsmbered Instructions.&#13;
She was a little girl and very polite.&#13;
It was the first time she had&#13;
been on a visit alone, and she had&#13;
been carefully instructed how to behave.&#13;
"If they ask you to dine with them."&#13;
papa had said, "you must say, 'No,&#13;
thank you; I have already dined.'"&#13;
It turned out just as papa bad anticipated.&#13;
"Come along, Marjorie," said her&#13;
little friend's father, "you must have&#13;
a bite with us."&#13;
"No, thank you," said the little girl,&#13;
with dignity; "I have already bitten."&#13;
Not Down to Standard.&#13;
Persistent Contributor — You are&#13;
quite sure you do not want this story,&#13;
then?&#13;
Candid Editor—Quite sure.&#13;
Persistent Contributor—And yet&#13;
you say it is not bad.&#13;
Candid Editor—Excuse me. You&#13;
misunderstood. The story is bad, but&#13;
not bad enough.—Judge,&#13;
.. . .&#13;
To Make Whitewash Stick.&#13;
To keep whitewash from rubbing off&#13;
easily make a thin cooked paste of&#13;
one ntnt of wfceai floor and add to&#13;
each pailful A little carboUc add&#13;
Added to tftejttttowaah win heia^afe-&#13;
K » A t * »•&gt;&#13;
Trial Order.&#13;
"Beg pardon, sir," said the steward,&#13;
"but may I bring you some dinner,&#13;
sir?"&#13;
"Oh, I guess ao," replied the passenger&#13;
wanly, as he gazed out across&#13;
the bounding deep. "1 guess you can&#13;
bring me one on approval."&#13;
"Beg pardon, Bir," repeated the&#13;
steward, "did you say 'on approval/&#13;
sir?"&#13;
"Yes," groaned the passenger weakly.&#13;
"You see, I may not want to&#13;
keep it."&#13;
FACE ITCHED AND BURNED&#13;
383 No. Union St., Aurora, 111.—"My&#13;
ailment started with a little pimple&#13;
and it alwayB itched and burned terribly.&#13;
I scratched it and in a few&#13;
days my face was all covered with&#13;
sores. It ran up to my eyes and the&#13;
day after I could not see out of my&#13;
right eye. I was unable to get any&#13;
rest. I couldn't go to bed, being&#13;
afraid of getting the clothing all&#13;
soiled, although I bad my face all&#13;
bandaged.&#13;
"I was given two jars of salve but&#13;
It kept getting worse. It was something&#13;
like a running sore because&#13;
every time I used some of the salve&#13;
I had to wrap bandages around my&#13;
neck to keep the water and pus from&#13;
running down my body. I wrote for a&#13;
sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment&#13;
and in a few days I received&#13;
these and washed my face with the&#13;
Cuticura Soap and put on some Cuticura&#13;
Ointment and the next morning&#13;
my face felt cool and somewhat relieved.&#13;
After using the sample I&#13;
bought some Cuticura Soap and Ointment&#13;
at the drug store. I followed&#13;
this treatment just twenty-six days&#13;
and after using one cake of Cuticura&#13;
Soap and two boxes of Cuticura Ointment&#13;
I was cured." (Signed) George&#13;
Miller, Jan. 1, 1913.&#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."—Adr.&#13;
Sounds Likely.&#13;
Teacher—Where is Chile?&#13;
Bertie (venturing a guess)—I—I—I&#13;
thing it is in the Arctic circle.—Tit-&#13;
Bits.&#13;
Constipation causes many serious diseases.&#13;
It is thoroughly cured by Doctor&#13;
Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. One a laxative,&#13;
three for cathartic. Adv.&#13;
Annual Aviation Stunt.&#13;
"Spring is in the air."&#13;
"Hope it's equipped with a good&#13;
stabilizer." — Boston Evening Transcript.&#13;
Don't be misled- Ask for Red Crow&#13;
Ball Blue. Makes beautiful white clothes.&#13;
At all good grocers. Adv.&#13;
Different.&#13;
"My boy is going to the front."&#13;
"Brave boy! In Mexico?"&#13;
"No; in a hotel."&#13;
New Modem Dancing-&#13;
The leading Hrport and Instructor in New Tor*&#13;
City, writes: "bear Sir:— I hare used ALLEN'S&#13;
FOOT-BASK, the antiseptic powder to be shaken Into&#13;
the shoes, for the past ten rears. It Is a blessing to&#13;
all who are oompellod to, be on tbelr feet. I dance&#13;
eight or ten hoars dally, and fled that ALLKN'S&#13;
7OOT«BA8I keeps my feet cool, takes the friction&#13;
from the shoe, prevents corns and Sore, Aching-feet.&#13;
1 recommend it to all my pap!Is."&#13;
(Signed) B. FLHTCHKR HALL A MORS.&#13;
SampleFUKI. Address AllenS.Olmsted.LeEoy.N.T.&#13;
A woman gives her heart to but&#13;
one; a man is more liberal.&#13;
4QQjQQj&#13;
Immigration figures show that the&#13;
population of Canada increased during&#13;
1915, by the addition of 400,000 j&#13;
new settlers from the United Statee&#13;
and Europe. Most of these have gone&#13;
on farms in provinces of Manttotoo,&#13;
Saskatchewan and Alberto.&#13;
Lord William Percy, an English Nobtenaa, :&#13;
seyt:&#13;
"The pMsfbflltiw and opportunities offered&#13;
by the Canadian West are to Infinity I&#13;
treettr than tk«M which esiet in England,&#13;
thai It teems absurd to think that pi '&#13;
should bt Impeded from coming to&#13;
country where tboy can most sssQr&#13;
certainly improve their posftoa.&#13;
Ktw districts a n bring opsnod up,&#13;
which wM make accosMbts a snot&#13;
number of homesteads in districts&#13;
•tpsdaQy adapted to raised taming&#13;
end grain raiting.&#13;
For IDttttrated literature asd&#13;
reduced railway ratee,&#13;
Sut*. of Immigration,&#13;
Oaneda, or to&#13;
M. V. Molnno*&#13;
170 Jetteroon Ave.&#13;
Detroit, Won.&#13;
•it i«'&#13;
tfV.&#13;
-VvV&#13;
\«r..&#13;
fitff * v&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
» • * * :&#13;
kr*&#13;
I ^ i V ' ' 1&#13;
&amp;4&#13;
&amp;* 'V/;&#13;
•.'&gt;•*&#13;
P£&#13;
' . &gt; • • • • ; * "&#13;
•••;- * - r . • • f&#13;
* V&#13;
mCUMATIO SUFFERERS&#13;
SHOULD USK&#13;
For mii form* of&#13;
Rheumatism ^ ¾&#13;
L U M B A G O . SCIATICA. GOUT. NEURALGIA/&#13;
AND KIDNEY TROUBLES. DROPS STOPTHK&#13;
kOfea^QatekReUefi&#13;
47" ALL&#13;
•AOtVUK "S*DltO#S" &gt; m&#13;
Swanson Rheumatic C u r * C o . .&#13;
To Newspaper Publishers&#13;
and Printers&#13;
W e m a n u f a c t u r e t h e&#13;
highest grade of&#13;
v e r y&#13;
Brass Leads &amp; Slugs Type&#13;
Brass Galleys Brass Rule in Strips&#13;
Metal Borders&#13;
L. S. Metal Furniture&#13;
Leads and Slugs&#13;
Metal Leaders&#13;
Spaces and Quads&#13;
6 to 48 point&#13;
Brass Labor-Saving&#13;
Rule&#13;
Metal Quoins, etc.&#13;
Brass Column Kales&#13;
Brass Circles&#13;
Brass Leaders&#13;
Brass Round Corners&#13;
Old Column Rules rofaced and made&#13;
good as new at a small cost.&#13;
Please Vfemember that we are not in an)&#13;
Trust or Combination and are sure we cat:&#13;
make it greatly to yonr advantage to dea&#13;
with us.&#13;
A copy of our catalogue will be cheerfully&#13;
furnished on application.&#13;
We frequently have good bargains in&#13;
second-hand job Presses, Paper Cutters&#13;
and other printing machinery and&#13;
material.&#13;
Philadelphia PriDters Supply Co.&#13;
Manufacturers of&#13;
Type and High Grade Printing Material&#13;
14 S. 5th St., Philadelphia, Pa.&#13;
Proprietors Pena Type Foundry 2tlf&#13;
Anderson&#13;
R. Clinton and family of Piuckney visited&#13;
at G. M. Greiner's Sunduy.&#13;
Mrs. Art LaRowe and daughter spent&#13;
last wtek at the home of her parents, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Thos. Coleman of Six Corners.&#13;
Jan. Stackable and daughter Mary of&#13;
Gregory were Sunday guests at the home&#13;
of E. T. McClear.&#13;
Will Caskey and wife emertained Robt.&#13;
Caskey and family of Iosco Sunday.&#13;
M. J . Rocbe purchased a fine young&#13;
team of John Gardner last week.&#13;
Emily, youngest daughter of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Frost, was quite side a few&#13;
days last week.&#13;
Margaret Driver of Pinckney spent Sunday&#13;
here,&#13;
Germaine Ledwidge accompanied by&#13;
her mother as far as Jackson, returned to&#13;
her school work at Adrian Friday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Spears and daughters&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of Wm. Doyle.&#13;
Gertrude Frost, Muriel McClear and&#13;
Julia Greiner wrote the eighth gVade examination&#13;
at Gregory last week.&#13;
John Dunn lost a good horse recently.&#13;
Ray Reason was home last week. He&#13;
was one of the many men in the Ford&#13;
factory, Detroit, who was driven from&#13;
work on account of the flood.&#13;
The Lavey boys of Pinckney have completed&#13;
an up-to-df te poultry house for Max&#13;
Ledwidge.&#13;
Mike Martin and Chas. Hoff of the&#13;
State Sanatorium were pleasant callers&#13;
here Sunday.&#13;
Miss Frankie Placeway of Ann Arbor&#13;
te visiting her mother here.&#13;
Will Moran of Pinckney is helping install&#13;
a new engine in the cheese factory.&#13;
It's a Good Week&#13;
and&#13;
This is a Good Place&#13;
to buy that&#13;
Decoration D a y&#13;
)&#13;
Child Cross? Feverish? Sick?&#13;
A cross, peevish, listless child, with&#13;
coated tongue, pale, doesn't sleep; eats&#13;
sometimes very little, then again ravenously:&#13;
stomach sour; breath fetid; pains in&#13;
stomach, with diarrhea; grinds teeth while&#13;
asleep, and starts up with (terror— all suggest&#13;
a Worm killer—something that expels&#13;
worms, and almost every child has them.&#13;
Kickapoo Worm Killer is needed. Get a&#13;
box today. Start at once. You won't&#13;
have to coax, as Kickapoo Worm Killer is&#13;
a caudy confection. Expels the worms,&#13;
the cause of your child's trouble. 25c.&#13;
Recommended bv C. Q. Meyer, the druggist.&#13;
Leftal A d v e r t i s i n g&#13;
QTATE Of MICHIGAN, tne probate court for&#13;
iy tbe county of Livingston At a sea-ion of&#13;
•aid court- held at tbe probate office in the village&#13;
of Howell In eald county oa the 4th day of&#13;
May A. D. 1914. Present: Hon. Eugene A.&#13;
Stowe, judge of Probate. In the matter of&#13;
the eetate of&#13;
JAMKtt SPEARS Doceatod&#13;
John W. Speare having filed In said court hie&#13;
final account as Adminstrator of -aid estate, and&#13;
his petition praying for the allowance thereof,&#13;
It Is ordered that the 29th day of Vaj, A,&#13;
D. 1914, at tan o'clock in the forenoon, at aaid&#13;
probate office, be and ie hereby appointed for&#13;
examining end allowing said account&#13;
It is further ordered that pubMc notice thereof&#13;
oe given by publication of a copy of this order for&#13;
tfcmw successive weeks previous to said day of&#13;
hearing in the Pinckney DISPATCH K newspaper&#13;
printed and circulating in said county. Ifit3&#13;
EUGENE A. 8TOWE,&#13;
M s * of Proa***&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN, tbe frobate Court ioi&#13;
the County of Livingston, '&#13;
At a session of said court held at the Probate&#13;
Office in the Village of Howell in said County, on&#13;
the 18th day of May, A. D. 1914&#13;
Present, Hon. Kugene A. Mowe, Judge o&#13;
Probate, In the matter of the estate ol&#13;
ELIZABETH SPEARS, Deceased&#13;
John 8pears having filed In said court his&#13;
final account as administrator of said estate and&#13;
his petition praying for the allowance thereof&#13;
It Is Ordered, That the 18th day oi June&#13;
A. D. 1914, at ten o'clock In the forenoon, at said&#13;
probate office, b« and is hereby appointed foi&#13;
examining and allowing said account.&#13;
It is further ordered that public notice thereo:&#13;
be given by publication of a copy of this order, for&#13;
three successive weeks previous to said day el&#13;
hearing in the Pinckney DISPATCH a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulated in said county. iltt&#13;
EUGENE A. STOWE&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
MMWltS •I If you are contemplating 4&#13;
petting a monument, marker, J&#13;
or an thing for tbe cemetery, S&#13;
see or write ™ S. S. PLATT i&#13;
HOWELL, MICH. f&#13;
No Agents. Save Their Commission K&#13;
Bell Phone IPO # j&#13;
North Hamburg&#13;
Will Benham who has been on the sick&#13;
list is improving.&#13;
Mrs Brown of Pettysville was called to&#13;
Detroit the first of the week by the death&#13;
of her father.&#13;
Chas. Travis and sister Vina of Chicago&#13;
iiave arrived at Camp Travis for the summer.&#13;
The Ladies Aid at Mrs. C. Carpenter's&#13;
was well attended.&#13;
Jag. Burroughs and wife were Brighton&#13;
visitors Saturday.&#13;
R. Webb and family of Putnam were&#13;
Sunday guests at the home of Bert Nash.&#13;
Distinction.&#13;
••Don't you believe women can keep&#13;
a secret?"&#13;
"Of course they can keep a secret"&#13;
"Well, I'm glad one man will admit&#13;
It"&#13;
"Women can keep a secret. The&#13;
trouble Is they won't"—San Francisco&#13;
Chronicle.&#13;
Quite Natural.&#13;
Bertha—And do you really believe&#13;
that a woman always turns to the last&#13;
page 8rst when she picks up a book?&#13;
Percy—Well, I have no reason to doubt&#13;
It 1 know It Is the nature of tbe fair&#13;
sex to want the last word!—London&#13;
Telegraph.&#13;
Willing to Help.&#13;
Father (to his old friend's pretty&#13;
daughter)—Goodby, my dear! I won't&#13;
kiss you—I have such a cold. His Son&#13;
(with alacrity)—Can 1 do anything for&#13;
you, father?&#13;
If you'll come up and look over our&#13;
seven large racks of over 400 new spring&#13;
suits at from $10. to $25. you'll agree&#13;
with us that this is the place to buy.&#13;
W. J. DANCER &amp; COMPANY&#13;
Stockbridge, Mich.&#13;
Grand Trunk TImt TabU&#13;
For the convenience of our readers&#13;
\ ,trainjBaar Trains West&#13;
; l t a 4 f c - 8 #9 a! m. No. 45—10:28 a. o -&#13;
» 0 , 43—4:40 p. m. No. 47-7:12 p . m.&#13;
A Man's Vote.&#13;
To request an honest man to vote&#13;
according to his conscience la superfluous;&#13;
to request him to vote, against&#13;
his conscience is an Insult—Gladstone.&#13;
T h a f s Different.&#13;
She—I bate big check patterns for&#13;
cloth dresses. He—That's the pattern&#13;
ef the Jast check I sent yonr dressmaker&#13;
for them.—Exchange,&#13;
Bean Growers Take Notice&#13;
Michigan is a great bean producing&#13;
state and to tbe returns&#13;
from this staple we must look for&#13;
a goodly percentage of our wealth.&#13;
It follows then that if we could&#13;
eliminate t h e enormous waste&#13;
caused by bean diseases we would&#13;
add materially to the wealth of&#13;
our state. On another page of&#13;
the Dispatch we publish this week&#13;
an illustrated article on this subject&#13;
prepared at the Michigan Agricultural&#13;
College. Don't miss&#13;
»&#13;
reading it.&#13;
— % »^»»*4*»«^t*ft&gt;——&#13;
Local News&#13;
Ross and Fred Read were Stockbridge&#13;
visitors Sunday.&#13;
Gladys, Fisk spent the past week&#13;
with fcer sister at Owoaso.&#13;
^ex Read of New York City is&#13;
visiting his parents here.&#13;
Miss Vera Isham of Chelsea&#13;
spent Sunday at Jeff Parker's.&#13;
^Arthur Vedder visited relatives&#13;
in Ypsilanti Tuesday and Wednesday.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Reason spent the&#13;
first of the week with relatives in&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Miss Kate and Mrs. Mabel&#13;
Brown are spending a few weeks&#13;
in Chicago.&#13;
Mrs. Fred Bowman and son are&#13;
spending the week at the home of&#13;
Hairy Isham.&#13;
Mrs, J. M. O'Connor and grandson&#13;
visited relatives in Ann Arbor&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Dr. H. F. Sigler and Mrs. C. L.&#13;
Sigler and two sons, fiollis and&#13;
Donald, spent Tuesday in Detroit.&#13;
Rev. J. W. Mitchell and wife&#13;
visited relatives iu Ypsilanti Tuee&#13;
day and Wednesday and/also at&#13;
tended the Sunday School Con&#13;
vention.&#13;
n&#13;
m&#13;
• • •&gt;'••'.,,: T V&#13;
In&#13;
Pony Express Riders. J ftHfriis4tffcs\tffcaaatAatt. A.&gt;ufc A. **.HII,AJM,A&#13;
the duys of tbe pony express « T r n « r a « a n a&#13;
many wonderful, long rides were made GOING TO BUY A PIANO&#13;
by those engaged In carrying the&#13;
mails through dangerous country. William&#13;
r. Cody (Buffalo Bill) made a&#13;
round trip of 384 miles without stops,&#13;
except to change horses and to partake&#13;
of one meal. It Is recorded that&#13;
Robert H. Ha si am (Pony Bob) rode&#13;
380 miles at one stretch. When the&#13;
pony express ceased to exist Haslam&#13;
became a Wells Fargo messenger, riding&#13;
100 miles every twenty-four hours,&#13;
being-, ten hours on tbe road. Jack&#13;
Keetley, a pony express rider, is credited&#13;
with 340 miles in thirty-one hours,&#13;
and Jim Moore, another rider, Is said&#13;
to ha-ve covered 280 miles In fourteen&#13;
hours and forty-six minutes. — New&#13;
York Sun.&#13;
OR SEWING MACHINE&#13;
YES?&#13;
SEE L. R. WILLIAMS.&#13;
GREGORY&#13;
t ^ H e saves you money on high&#13;
grade pianos.&#13;
Eaay to Identify.&#13;
"I was going down the street the&#13;
other day," the fellow said, "and I met&#13;
a little boy crying. He was a miserable&#13;
object and seemed to be suffering&#13;
keenly. So I stopped and spoke to&#13;
him.&#13;
"'What's tbe matter, son?' says I.&#13;
" 'A b-b-blg boy hit me/ he sobbed.&#13;
" 'Well, that's a shame. You tell me&#13;
who tbe big boy was and I'll give him&#13;
a talking to that he won't forget.'&#13;
" 'It was tb' Simp bins boy,' answered&#13;
the abused youngster, with a show of&#13;
interest. 'He's down there with all&#13;
those other kids.'&#13;
" 'Which one of jthat crowd is h e f *&#13;
" 'You kin tell easy enough. He's&#13;
th' one with th' black eye an' th* bloody&#13;
nose^ an' he's cryin' too!'"—Chicago&#13;
News.&#13;
Will End the Mystery.&#13;
"Have the police yet found any explanation&#13;
for the mysterious disappearance&#13;
of Mr. Jenkins?"&#13;
"No. They're going to get a pack of&#13;
bloodhounds on his trail tomorrow."&#13;
"Gracious! Won't there be danger&#13;
that if the bloodhounds find him they'll&#13;
eat him?"&#13;
. "What if they do? His dlsappear-&#13;
'ance will no longer be a mystery."—&#13;
Buffalo Express.&#13;
A Rich Man's Views.&#13;
"So you are opposed to grand opera&#13;
at popular prices?"&#13;
"Yes. Next they'll be having terrapin&#13;
at popular prices and orchids at&#13;
bargain rates, and then what Interest&#13;
will a rich man have In life?"—Kansas&#13;
City Journal.&#13;
Confused the Witness-&#13;
Counsel (to cautious witness)—Why&#13;
are you so slow in giving yonr an*&#13;
R e v . F r . W . P . Considine of lowers, madam? Are you afraid of&#13;
telling an untruth? Witness (prompt*&#13;
ly)-Oh, no, sir!&#13;
.'- ^&#13;
&gt;v*-*,- a ^JTO&amp;#ALR—Two faailv brick veaeer&#13;
w U latin * Ant aeUbfce-$#od jattoff of&#13;
\~ ^&gt; Wodetau* A***J*liQli-.;*{9i H&gt; t*r&#13;
Wj»,L:W&lt;^,P^&gt;.ftxNo.2,&#13;
-•i * u JBWkt 2W&#13;
ladirestioa? Cia'tEtf lfoA»petltc?&#13;
iocr&#13;
yon&#13;
A real aprfitf tonic for liver&#13;
A treatment of Electric Bitten increases&#13;
your appetite; stops indigestion;'you can&#13;
eat anything,&#13;
kidney and stomach" treobles, Oleanest Soar whole system and yoa feel toe.&#13;
tlectrie Bitters did more tor M r / T . D.&#13;
Peeble't stomach troubles than any stsdloiae&#13;
he ever tried, pet a bottle today, 50c&#13;
and ¢1.00. Reocs&amp;neoded fey C, O.&#13;
Meyers, the draggta&#13;
Chelsea, Jas. Hankard and family&#13;
of North Lake and Rev. Fr. JOB.&#13;
Oovle spent last Thursday after*&#13;
noon at the home of R. Clinton.&#13;
Mrs. A. B. Green, a life long&#13;
resident of this place, died at her&#13;
home on Howell street, Tuesday,&#13;
May 19, at the age of 82 years.&#13;
Funeral services will be held from&#13;
the house at two o'clock thts afternoon.&#13;
Fred Grieves and family of&#13;
Stookbridge and Mrs, EL D.&#13;
Grieve* of this place attended the&#13;
May Festival at Ann Arbor,. Sat*&#13;
urday and visited friends at&#13;
Ypsilanti and Chelsea on their&#13;
way back ta JPiockney.&#13;
What one has that one ought to use,&#13;
and whatever we take In hand w e&#13;
ought to do with all onr might—Cicero.&#13;
TftADC M A R K *&#13;
_ DcetONt&#13;
A.ijrene tending a -ketchC oanpdv dftttic&amp;rHl TaAe. IQntvtiecnkltyio nns rlao tptArolnb cobulrjr ,.. ' " •tl•onttw fHrerelo. tOlyledoeisjta daneieiitifcayl. to.„r&#13;
Patent- taken throturh Mann&#13;
eotpetnnaianad f draMe ewrlbptsktmht *to aatj PAtentabla. .OomnranIisn** u. u tpMUUnotici, withoutcb-jia!*lat£» ts*oa*t— ScknMic flmtffcm.&#13;
**c*phOr«* « l k . W t&#13;
m&#13;
; &amp; * •&#13;
Do You Want Ice ? a&#13;
y&#13;
We are prepared to furnish everyone with ice the conmig&#13;
season at right prioes. Will deliver same to your ice box.&#13;
Stored&#13;
0*11 on or phone No. 68r8&#13;
FOR THE&#13;
SUMMER&#13;
&lt;f # 1&#13;
riiitkrrey, Mich.&#13;
."*&#13;
, - /&#13;
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V</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch May 21, 1914</text>
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                <text>May 21, 1914 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1914-05-21</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, Michiganj Thursday, May 28, 1914 No. 22&#13;
FOR BETTER ROADS&#13;
Big Road Bee on for June&#13;
4-5&#13;
Business M e n A g r e e t o Close&#13;
S t o r e s a n d E v e r y b o d y G o .&#13;
F a r m e r s A s k e d t o F u r -&#13;
n i s h T e a m s&#13;
The business men of Pinckney&#13;
"have cajaght the good loads fever.&#13;
The attack seems to be quite acute&#13;
and is "taking" pretty generally&#13;
throughout t h e village a n d&#13;
towiuhip. Both days will of&#13;
course be observed, but Highway&#13;
Commissioner, James Smith, is&#13;
making great preparations for&#13;
Thursday," June 4th, and has already&#13;
secured a number of teams&#13;
and scren for that day.&#13;
Mr. Smith will Wfo charge of&#13;
the "Bee" and respectfully requests&#13;
all those who can to be on&#13;
hand with teams and shovels at&#13;
these certified places where Mr.&#13;
Smith has appointed the following&#13;
gentlemen to have charge of the&#13;
work in their vicinities: Wales&#13;
Leland, R. G. Webb, Frank Eisle,&#13;
Alfred Morgau, Geo. Gremer,&#13;
Wirt Hendee, Frank Tiplady, Patsey&#13;
Kennedy. Mr. Smith will&#13;
have charge of the work on the&#13;
Dexter road south of town.&#13;
Those who now reside ou good&#13;
rolf-ls, we know, will only be too&#13;
glad to assist those living on the&#13;
poor roads.&#13;
m:: ...Sti&gt;&#13;
W&#13;
State Highway Commissioner,&#13;
Frank B\ Rogers, issues the^lollowing&#13;
timely letter concerning&#13;
"Road Bee Days."&#13;
fWTS&#13;
Don't try to do too much.&#13;
Don't start more than you can&#13;
finish. You canuot'build a macadam&#13;
road, nor very long stretches&#13;
of gravel road in tWQ days.&#13;
Don't plow up long stretches of&#13;
road and leave them impassible.&#13;
Don't scrape sods unto the&#13;
traveled roadway and leave them&#13;
for passing vehicles to smooth&#13;
down.&#13;
• WHAT MAY BE DONE&#13;
You can remove logs, rocks,&#13;
•tumps and stones from the roadway;&#13;
fill holes, preferably with&#13;
good earth; cover stretches of&#13;
sand with clay or gravel; drain&#13;
wet places in the roadway; scrape&#13;
off and outwards sod margins&#13;
where they hold the water iu the&#13;
traveled track. When drained and&#13;
graded, clay may be covered with&#13;
eaad or gravel, but the gravel&#13;
should not contain any clay unless&#13;
it is to be placed on sand. Culttrts&#13;
may be repaired or new cul-&#13;
' "to put in.&#13;
making a grand total of $6,758,710&#13;
which was. raised by direct taxation&#13;
and expended on the ru*al&#13;
highways. Added to this, many&#13;
townships and counties raised money&#13;
by bonding and many public&#13;
spirited citizens gave freely in&#13;
money and labor, so th^tis a low&#13;
estimate to say that at les*t seven&#13;
millions of dollars were expended&#13;
on Michigan's roa,d during the&#13;
past year.&#13;
"While tbis has resulted in the&#13;
building of more miles of excellent&#13;
highways than were ever before&#13;
built in a single year, there is still&#13;
much to be desired. The people&#13;
want more good roads and want&#13;
all of the roads cared for better&#13;
than they have been in the past.&#13;
"Last year on June 9 the Huron&#13;
Shore Road association observed&#13;
the first 'Road Bee Day' ever held&#13;
in this state. I t was a success,&#13;
wet pieces of road were drained;&#13;
logs, roots, stumps and stones were&#13;
removed from the highways; bad&#13;
stretches of clay were sanded; bad&#13;
pieces of eand were clayed; gravel&#13;
was haulnd; road drags were set&#13;
to work and altogether so much enthusiasm&#13;
was aroused that many&#13;
farmers put in a full week instead&#13;
of one day, By this concerted effort&#13;
some 220 miles of highway in&#13;
eastern Michigan, which in some&#13;
places was very bad, was made into&#13;
a very passable road.&#13;
"At the request of the Michigan&#13;
Good Roarls asaociation, the Huron&#13;
Shore Roads association, and to&#13;
the euil that this good work may&#13;
extend over the state and all the&#13;
people, receive the benefit, I Woodbridge&#13;
N. Ferris, do ask that the&#13;
people of the state of Michigan set&#13;
apart Thursday and Friday, June&#13;
4 and 5, 1914, as 'Road Bee Day,'&#13;
and as far as possible turn out and&#13;
work under well planned and competent&#13;
supervision on the highways&#13;
of this state in such manner as&#13;
shall make them more fit, safe&#13;
and pleasant for public .travel."&#13;
v&#13;
2&amp;&#13;
i&amp;-.&#13;
"Governor Ferris has issued the&#13;
first "Road 3 e e Day" proclamation&#13;
ever penned by a Michigan&#13;
governor. Elated at the success&#13;
©f the land building day by the&#13;
Huron Shore Road association last&#13;
year, Gov. Ferris has determined&#13;
to make it a state-wide proposition&#13;
and in the following proclamation&#13;
issued today he designates June 4&#13;
andfiaa^BoadBee Dayg^ - .,&#13;
"In 1918 the townships of Michigan&#13;
raised $4,386,029 for the improvement&#13;
and repair of highways;&#13;
44 counties under the county&#13;
road system levied county road&#13;
texee a moaning to $l»ti&amp;l»6Sl and&#13;
the state appropriated $800,000&#13;
Stores Will Close -&#13;
The undersigned business places&#13;
of the village of Pinckney have&#13;
agreed to close their stores from&#13;
.eight o'clock a. m. until five o'clock&#13;
p. m. on Thursday, June 4th, for&#13;
the purpose of assisting, if possible,&#13;
in observing "Road Bee&#13;
Days" in Putnam township.&#13;
Signed:&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co.&#13;
Dinkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
Murphy &amp; Jackson&#13;
W. W. Barnard&#13;
C. G. Meyer&#13;
Mouks Bros.&#13;
R. J. Carr&#13;
L, E . Powell&#13;
Mrs. A. M. Utley '&#13;
D. D Q mith&#13;
1. J. Kennedy&#13;
A. H. Flintoft&#13;
G. W, Teeple&#13;
W. B. Darrow&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch .&#13;
T, Read&#13;
)ioyt Bros.&#13;
J. Church&#13;
Graduate Optometrist, of Howell,&#13;
Mich., will b* in Pinckney,&#13;
Ihrtsrday, June 4 at the Smitb&#13;
Eesjtanrant Mr. Church guarante**&#13;
% perfect .fit; Allheadaohe&#13;
cante4 by eye strain absolutely&#13;
corrected Consultation^.and ex.&#13;
amination free of charge.&#13;
Mrs. J. M* O'Connor spent&#13;
forrUpr payment ot Siate rewards, ttnesday in Ann A^bof. f ;&#13;
Pinckney Dope&#13;
Practice up ou that shovel and&#13;
in trim for Road Bee Day.&#13;
e automobile seems to have&#13;
taken the place of the parlor settee&#13;
between dances here in Pinckney.&#13;
The town hall as a place of&#13;
residence is a new stunt being&#13;
tried out in Pinckney for the first&#13;
time.&#13;
Meyers will undoubtedly sell&#13;
quantities of "cold" cream after&#13;
the Road Bee and not the eatable&#13;
variety either.&#13;
N&amp;w that Pinckney understands&#13;
she does not own the public&#13;
square, she feels down-hearted&#13;
that during the past years she&#13;
has spent so mucn money (?)&#13;
making it into a beautiful public&#13;
park.&#13;
A broken plate glass window&#13;
in the Dispatch office stopped&#13;
ball playing on the public square&#13;
because when the three boys who&#13;
broke the glass were asked to"pony&#13;
up", they politely informed us in&#13;
a gentlemanly way to go to h&#13;
South Iosco&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Roberts have&#13;
been entertaining company from&#13;
Detroit the past week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. George Mowers&#13;
and daughter Lucy spent Sunday&#13;
at L. T. Lamborne's.&#13;
F. Beatrice Lambotoie is spendher&#13;
summer vacation with her&#13;
parents here.&#13;
The Misses Clara Harrington&#13;
and Gladys Roberts spent Friday&#13;
at the home of F. Beatrice Lamborne,&#13;
Mrs. John Ruttman was called&#13;
to Fowlerville Saturday on ac-&#13;
Day of Tender Sentiments&#13;
As the stormy days of the early&#13;
sixties recede further into the&#13;
past and the ranks of survivors&#13;
become thiuner and more faltering&#13;
the tenderer Bhould be our&#13;
thoughts as we turn aside ou&#13;
Memorial day to pay a tribute of&#13;
of grateful memory to the heroes&#13;
of the great conflict, It should be&#13;
a day of solemn rededication to&#13;
all of the high national ideas that&#13;
they offered their lives to preserve.&#13;
count of the serious illness of her!On another page of the Dispatch&#13;
aunt. j we publish this week some gems&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Harrington of Web- °* poetry that breathe the spirit of&#13;
berville is visiting her daughter o u r m 0 8 t sacred holiday. Some of&#13;
Mrs. A. B. Green&#13;
Florilla G. Fargo was born at&#13;
Warsow, N. Y., October 6, 1831.&#13;
She was married at Warsow, August&#13;
29, 1850, to Albert B. Green.&#13;
They moved to Michigan in 18(56.&#13;
After residing in several places&#13;
they came to Pinckney in 1871&#13;
where they have ever since made&#13;
their home.&#13;
Mrs. Green died May 19, 1914.&#13;
She left surviving, her husband,&#13;
seven children, seven grand-childrenjind&#13;
three great grand-children.&#13;
She also has two sisters living,&#13;
Mrs. Lovina Snow of Warsow, N.&#13;
Y., and Mrs. W. Parsons of St.&#13;
Paul, Minn. Mrs. Green has been&#13;
many years a faithful member of&#13;
the M. E. church and until infirmity&#13;
came upon her was a very&#13;
regular attendant upon all the&#13;
services and interested in christian&#13;
activities. Her principal life&#13;
work was in her home aud her i&#13;
children and children's children&#13;
will rise up and call her blessed.&#13;
Funeral services were held from&#13;
the late home last Thursday afternoon,&#13;
Rev. E. H. Vail, of Homer,&#13;
a son-in-law of Mrs. Green, offiiciated,&#13;
assisted by Rev. J. W. Mitchell.&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
FOR SALE-T«sted Yellow Seed Corn&#13;
Ralph Bennett, Pinckney, 21t3*&#13;
FOR KENT—Rooms over Monk's Store.&#13;
Inquire of Mrs. J . Wilcox, Pinckney.&#13;
20t3*&#13;
FOR SALE—Horses ranging from 3 to 10&#13;
years. Inquire of C. E. Baughn, Portage&#13;
Lake. 19l3*&#13;
FOR SALE—Four brood sows, $20. each.&#13;
PJt4* Will White, Howell&#13;
FARM FOR SALE OR RENT—38 acres&#13;
on road just north of the Kice farm on&#13;
Section 7. .lames A. Gallagher, 1569&#13;
West Grand Blvd., Detroit, Mich. 19tf&#13;
FOR SALE—Two family brick veneer&#13;
fiat in a line neighborhood just off of&#13;
Wo'odware Ave., Detroit. Pays 10 per&#13;
cent. Win, L. Wood, P . O. box No. 2,&#13;
Ana Arbor, Mich. 21tl*&#13;
EYERY WOMAN&#13;
S H O U L D&#13;
B A R N&#13;
P B I t&#13;
W &amp; B K&#13;
Introducing our very complete Spring me&#13;
of beautiful wool suitings, wftBn fabrics,&#13;
fancy waistinge, silks, hdkfs, petticoats, etc.&#13;
Up to date N. Y. City patterns. Finest&#13;
line on the market, pealing direct witli&#13;
the mills vou will find our prices low. If&#13;
others can make $10.00 to $:)0.00 weekly&#13;
you can also. Samples, full instruction in&#13;
neat sample case, shipped express prepaid.&#13;
No money required, Exclusive territory.&#13;
Write for particulars. Be first to apply.&#13;
Standard Dress Goods Company, 200 4th&#13;
St. Binghamton, N. Y.&#13;
j Monuments 1 If you are contemplating&#13;
petting a monument, marker,&#13;
or anthing for the cemetery,&#13;
see or write&#13;
ISTS. PLATTg&#13;
4 HOWELL, MICH. f&#13;
Mrs. Joe .Roberts at present.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Miller&#13;
them you have read before, but it&#13;
will be well to read them again&#13;
were Fowlerville callers Saturday a n d r e n e w t h e 8 p i r i t ° f r e v e r e n c e&#13;
everting [with which we should celebrate&#13;
The L. A. 8. met w i t h M w B O r i ' 1 d a y -&#13;
Mrs. Elmer VanBeureu last Wednesday&#13;
for tea. A large crowd was&#13;
iu attendance.&#13;
B No Agents. Save Their Commission&#13;
8 Bell Phone 190 *&#13;
Nora Welsh of Dexter spent&#13;
the past week with her sister Mrs.&#13;
C. L. Mclntyre.&#13;
Grand Trunk Time Table&#13;
F'or the convenience of our readers&#13;
Trains East Trains Weet&#13;
No. 46—8:39 a. m. No. 45—1023 a. va.&#13;
No. 48—4:49 p. m. No. 47—7:12 p. m."&#13;
The Senior and two Junior&#13;
classes of the M. E. Sunday&#13;
school will serve ice cream and&#13;
baked goods Saturday, May 30,&#13;
both afternoon and evening in&#13;
their rooms under the opera house, last Friday.&#13;
Special Prices on all Ladies&#13;
summer coats at Dancer's. adv.&#13;
Clara Carpenter of ChilsoD was&#13;
the guest of Mrs. Maurice Darrow&#13;
MURPHY &amp; JACKSON&#13;
%&#13;
S= HEADQUARTERS FOR&#13;
i&#13;
Groceries - Dry Goods - Shoes ^ Furnishings&#13;
barflest S t o c k Qjjg py jjg J j £]} b o w e s t P r i c e s&#13;
Our Grocery Specials For Cash&#13;
Make it Expensive For You to Trade Elsewhere '&#13;
Ivory Soap, 7 bars for&#13;
Corn Flakes, 6 packages for&#13;
Nero Coffee for&#13;
2 5 lbs. H. &amp; &amp; . Granulated Sugar $144&#13;
8 pounds Rolled Oats for&#13;
; . - . &gt;&#13;
HT&#13;
E?&#13;
' V--• " • « i i * i&#13;
1., . *.^&#13;
1 On **&#13;
P1NCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
! . * ? * '&#13;
I&#13;
&gt; v&#13;
Sw»&#13;
BS&#13;
.'*^.... ,&#13;
• v . -&#13;
* it&#13;
E#&#13;
MARKET QUOTATIONS&#13;
Live Stock, Grain and General Farm&#13;
ProJuce.&#13;
Live Stock.&#13;
DETROIT—Cattle; Receipts, 858;&#13;
market for bulls steady; all other&#13;
grades 10(g) 20c lower; best heavy&#13;
steers, J8.50@8.70; beBt handy weight&#13;
butcher steers, $8.25@8.50; mixed&#13;
steers and heifers, |7.75@8.25; handly&#13;
light butchers, $7.5G@8; light butchera,&#13;
|7@7.50; best cows, $6.75(8)7;&#13;
butcher cows, $6@6.50; common cows&#13;
$5@5.60; canners, $3@4.25; best heavy&#13;
bulls. $7@7.25; bologna bulls, $6.50®&#13;
6.85; stock bulls, $6.50®6.75; feeders,&#13;
$7.26@7.50; stockers, $6.75@7.50;&#13;
milkers and springers, $46@75.&#13;
Veal calves—Receipts, 606; market&#13;
steady; best $10@10.50; others $7®&#13;
7.50.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts. 1,199&#13;
market steady; best lambs, $8.25; fair&#13;
iambs, $7&lt;@&gt;7.50; Jight to common&#13;
iambs, $5.50@6; yearlings, $6.50@7.25&#13;
fair to good sheep, $5.50@6; culls and&#13;
common, $3@4.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 3,688; heavy grades&#13;
$8.55; pigs and lights, $8.70; bulk of&#13;
sales, $8.60.&#13;
OVER them over with beautiful&#13;
flowers,&#13;
Oeck them with garlands, those&#13;
brothers of ours, --*&#13;
Lying BO silent, by night and by day,&#13;
Sleeping the yearo of their manhood&#13;
away.&#13;
Give them the meed they have won in&#13;
the past;&#13;
Give them the honors their future forecast;&#13;
I Give them the chaplets they won In&#13;
the strife;&#13;
(Give them the laurels they lost with&#13;
their life.&#13;
(Cover them over, yes, cover them over,&#13;
'Parent and husband, brother and&#13;
lover,&#13;
I Crown In your hearts those dead&#13;
heroes of ours,&#13;
I Cover them over with beautiful flowers.&#13;
I Cover the hearts that have beaten so&#13;
high,&#13;
[Beaten with hopes that were doomed&#13;
but to die;&#13;
{Hearts tbat have burned in tbe heat&#13;
of the fray,&#13;
[Hearts that have yearned for tbe borne&#13;
far away.&#13;
[Once they were glowing with friend*&#13;
. ship and love,&#13;
[Now their great souls have gone soaring&#13;
above;&#13;
(Bravely their blood to the Nation they&#13;
gave,&#13;
There in her bosom they found them&#13;
a grave.&#13;
•2H22&amp;ZX7M JM&amp;RC&amp; K? Jr8£&amp;&amp;^&#13;
Cover the thousands&#13;
away,&#13;
who sleep far&#13;
Sleep where their friends cannot find&#13;
them today,&#13;
They who in mountain and hillside and&#13;
dell,&#13;
Rest where they wearied and lie where&#13;
they fell.&#13;
Softly the grass blades creep round&#13;
their repose,&#13;
Softly above them the wild flow'ret&#13;
blows;&#13;
Zephyrs of freedom fly gently o'erhead,&#13;
Whispering prayer* for the patriot&#13;
dead.&#13;
When the long years have rolled&#13;
away,&#13;
E'en to the dawn of earth's funeral&#13;
day,&#13;
When at the Angel's loud trumpet and&#13;
tread,&#13;
Rise up the faces and forms of the&#13;
dead;&#13;
When the great world Its last judgment&#13;
awaits;&#13;
When the blue aky snail fling open Ha&#13;
gates;&#13;
When the great columns march, silently&#13;
through, *&#13;
Past the Great Captain far final review.&#13;
-were?:&#13;
C O M P A N Y "K M&#13;
•?»'• '* - y « •* a *&#13;
?*y-K K.t. V L ,&#13;
#&#13;
' • • * &amp; • •&#13;
There's a cap in the closet.&#13;
Old, tattered and gray,&#13;
Of very slight value-&#13;
Intrinsic, they say;&#13;
But a crown, jewel-studded,&#13;
Could not buy it today,&#13;
With it* letters of honor,&#13;
Brave "Co. K."&#13;
The head that it sheltered&#13;
Needs shelter no more;&#13;
Dead heroes make holy&#13;
The trinket* they wore.&#13;
flo, iike chaplets of honor,&#13;
&gt; Of laurel and bay,&#13;
Mmam the cap of the soldier&#13;
'alerted "Co. K."&#13;
Bright eye* have looked calmly.&#13;
!€• Ttoor beneath,&#13;
£****** work or the Reap**.&#13;
ta* harvester, Death!&#13;
fjettbs muater roH&#13;
le^sournfmBy say&#13;
in —&#13;
wa***o* n&#13;
Whose footsteps unbroken&#13;
Came up to the town,&#13;
Where rampart and bastion&#13;
Looked threat'ningly down?&#13;
Who, closing up the breaches*&#13;
Still kept on their way,&#13;
Till gunsTdownward pointed,&#13;
Faced "Co. K."&#13;
Who faltered or satvered?&#13;
Who shunned bjattl*'* stroke?&#13;
Whose fire was /Uncertain?&#13;
Whose battle line brokef .&#13;
Go ask it of history&#13;
Tears from today&#13;
And the record, will ten yon&#13;
Not "Go, &amp;V*&#13;
Though my darling is sleeping&#13;
Today with the dead.&#13;
And daisies and clover&#13;
Bloom over bis head.&#13;
I smile through my. tears,&#13;
As I lay U away, ~&#13;
Jsfcritsd X*. X."&#13;
Blessings for garland* shall cover&#13;
them over,&#13;
Parent and husband, brother and&#13;
lover;&#13;
God will reward those dead heroes of&#13;
our*,&#13;
Cover them over with beautiful flow*&#13;
era.&#13;
—Will Carleton,&#13;
OUR FALLEN HEROES.&#13;
The angel of the nation's peace&#13;
Has wreathed with flower* the battie&#13;
drum;&#13;
We see the fruiting field* Increase&#13;
Where sound of war no more shall&#13;
come.&#13;
The swallow skims the Tennessee,&#13;
Soft wind* play o'er the Rapidaa;&#13;
There only echo notes of glee,&#13;
Where gleamed a mighty army**&#13;
van!&#13;
Fair Chattanooga's wooded alone.&#13;
With summer, air* 1* lightly stirred.&#13;
And many a heart Is warm with hope&#13;
Where once the deep-mouthed gun&#13;
was heard.&#13;
The blue Potomac stainless rolls.&#13;
And Mission Bidge is gemmed with&#13;
fern;&#13;
On many a height sleep gaQant souls&#13;
And still the' blooming y&lt;&#13;
Thank God! nnseen to outward eye.&#13;
But felt in every freeman's breast,&#13;
From graves where fallen T T A *&#13;
he&#13;
Ascends at Nature's wise behest,&#13;
With springing and hfiBSBOBBsi&#13;
new,&#13;
A prayer to bless the nation's Hfa,&#13;
To freedoms flower give brighter hoe,&#13;
And hide the awful stains of strife.&#13;
O, boys in btee, we turn to yon,&#13;
Thar soured sad mangled who&#13;
BAST BUFFALO—Cattle—Receipts,&#13;
4,500; good grades 15@25c lower, others&#13;
10c lower; best 1,350 to 1,450-tb&#13;
steers, $8.75@9; best 1,200 to 1,300-lb&#13;
steers, $8.50@8.75; best 1,100 to 1,200-&#13;
1b steers, $2.85@8.40; coarse and plain&#13;
weighty steers, $7.90@&amp;.10; fat yearlings,&#13;
baby beef $8.50(g)9; medium to&#13;
good, $8@8.25; best Canada steers,&#13;
1,350 to 1,450 lbs., $8.25^8:50; choice&#13;
handy steers, 900 to 1,000 lbs., $8.25&#13;
@8.40; fair to good steers, 1,000 to 1,-&#13;
100 Tbs., $8@8.15; extra good cows,&#13;
$7@7:25; best cows, $6.50@6.75;&#13;
butcher cows, $5\50@6; cutters, $4.50&#13;
@5; trimmers, $3.50@4; best heifers,&#13;
$8@8.25; medium butcher heifers,&#13;
$7.60@7.85; stock heifers, $6.25@6.75;&#13;
best feeding steers, $7.75@8.10; fair&#13;
to good, $7.25@7.50; best stock steers,&#13;
$7.50@7.75; common light stock&#13;
steers, $6.75&lt;g&gt;7; extra good bulls, $7®&#13;
7.25; bologna bulls, $6.50(75)6.75; stock&#13;
bulls, common to good, $5@6; milkers&#13;
and springers, $40(g&gt;90.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 18,000; market&#13;
slow; heavy, $8.85; yorkera, $8.85@&#13;
8.90; pigs, $8.90@9.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 12,000;&#13;
market 25c lower; top lambs, $8.50®&#13;
8.60; yearlings, &gt;$7.*25@7.75; wethers,&#13;
$6.25(g)6.50; ewes, $5.50@6.&#13;
Calves steady; tops, $10.75; fair to&#13;
good, $8@10; grassers, $5.50(2)7.&#13;
Grains Etc.&#13;
DETROIT—Wheat—Cash Ne. 2 red&#13;
and May, 99 l-2c; July opened with an&#13;
advance of l-4c at 89 3-4c, touched 90c,&#13;
declined to 89 3-4c and closed at 90c;&#13;
September opened at 88 3«4c, advanced&#13;
to 89c, declined to 88 3-4c and closed&#13;
at 89 l-4c; No, 1 white 99c.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, 73c; No. 3 yellow,&#13;
1 car at 74 l-2c; No. 4 yellow, 73o&#13;
Oats—Standard, 1 car at 44c, 1 at&#13;
44 l-2c; No. 3 white, 1 cart at 43 lr2c,&#13;
1 at 44c; No. 4 white, 43 l-2c.&#13;
Rye—Cash' No. 2, 65c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate, prompt and May&#13;
shipment, $2.07; June, $2.12.&#13;
Cloverseed—Prime spot, $7.60&#13;
ber, $7.80"; prime alslke, $10.&#13;
Timothy—Prime Bpot, $2.30.&#13;
Alfalfa—Prime spot, $8.85.&#13;
Hay—Carlots,.track Detroit;&#13;
timothy, $16.50017; standard,&#13;
016; No. 2 timothy, IH@15;&#13;
mixed, $15.50016; No.l mixed, $13.50&#13;
©15; No. 1 clover, $13® 13.50; heavy&#13;
clover mixed, $13® 13.50; rye straw,&#13;
$8®8.50; wheat and oat-straw, $7®&#13;
7.50 per ton.&#13;
Flour—In one-eighth paper sacks,&#13;
per 196 pounds, jobbing lots; Best&#13;
patent, $6.30; second patent, $6;&#13;
straight, 14.75; spring patent, $5.10;&#13;
rye, $4.40 per bbl.&#13;
Feed—In 1001b sacks, jobbing lots;&#13;
Bran, $28; standard middlings, $28;&#13;
fine middlings, $33; coarse cornmeal,&#13;
$80; cracked corn, $31; corn and oat&#13;
chop, $27.50 per ton.&#13;
Octo*&#13;
No. 1&#13;
$15.50&#13;
light&#13;
Ho more we meet In grand rati&#13;
But a&amp; the art* of&#13;
glows &amp;» Jewel&#13;
the&#13;
• wreath for sTL the glory thine,&#13;
of heroie semlst&#13;
• * ' , ,'lj:&#13;
-AGeneral&#13;
Merksts.&#13;
Strawberries—24-pint cases, $1,500&#13;
£76; 24-a.t cases, $2.7103.&#13;
Apples—Steele Red, $«06.50; Bald*&#13;
win, $505.10; Ben Davis, $404.50 per&#13;
bbl.&#13;
Onions—Texas Bermudas, yellow,&#13;
$2.2502.40 per crate.&#13;
Dressed Hegs—Light, 9010c; heavy&#13;
8 0$ l-2c per lb.&#13;
Sweet Potatoes—Jersey Hm-dried,&#13;
$101.10 per hamper.&#13;
Dressed Calves — Fancy, 13 1-20&#13;
14o; eommon, 11012c per lb.&#13;
Tomatoes—Florida, fancy, $80125}&#13;
choice, $1 per crate, 74075c per bas»&#13;
ket , ,&#13;
Potatoes—In bulk, 62061c per bm&#13;
in sacks, s$07Oc per ha lot earlota.&#13;
Koaey--Cheice to fancy new white&#13;
eemh, 15016c; amber* 10011c; ex&gt;&#13;
traeted, «07ouer lb.&#13;
New POatses Ftortda, #5.7505 eer&#13;
Clothes are expensive&#13;
—rubbing wears them&#13;
out quickly—stop rubbing-&#13;
use RUB-NOMORE&#13;
C ARBO N APTHASOAP.&#13;
"Carbo"&#13;
kills germs. Prevents&#13;
sickness. "Naptha"&#13;
cleans instantly.&#13;
Saves clothes—saves&#13;
money—saves you.&#13;
RUB-NO-MORE&#13;
CARBO NAPTHA&#13;
SOAP should also&#13;
be used to wash&#13;
the finest fabric. It&#13;
purifies the linens.&#13;
Make* It sweet and&#13;
sanitary. Itdoesrta*&#13;
need hot water.&#13;
Carbo Disinfects Naptha C l e a n s&#13;
RUB-NO-MORE RUB-NO-MORE&#13;
Carbo Naptha Soap Washing Powder&#13;
Five Cents—Alt Grocers&#13;
The Rub-No-More Co., Ft. Wayne. Ind.&#13;
Not Just What Minister Meant.&#13;
An English minister, who guarded&#13;
his morning study hour very carefully,&#13;
told the new maid tbat under no&#13;
circumstances were callers to be admitted—&#13;
except, of co/iree, he added,&#13;
In case of life and death.&#13;
Half an hour later the maid&#13;
knocked at his door. "A gentleman to&#13;
see you, sir.* *•&#13;
41 Why, 1 thought I told you—"&#13;
"Yes, I told him," she replied, "but&#13;
he says It is a question of life and&#13;
death."&#13;
So he went downstairs and found an&#13;
Insurance agent.&#13;
Real Life.&#13;
It was on one of those humid, swelteringly&#13;
hot July days which at times&#13;
almost suffocate New York that a visitor&#13;
from Chicago was Induced to escort&#13;
two young women to the beach&#13;
for a plunge In the surf. The bridge&#13;
cars were jammed, but after a fierce&#13;
struggle he managed to get seat* for&#13;
hie charges, and as he stood swaying&#13;
beside them in the aisle, he mopped&#13;
the fast trickling perspiration from his&#13;
brow.&#13;
"Life would be tolerable," he quoted&#13;
grimly, "if it were not for its pleasures."&#13;
Alsatian Potaah 8aIts.&#13;
Kali, or potash salts, in natural deposits,&#13;
was discovered In Alsace in&#13;
1904, when deep borings were being&#13;
made in the hope of striking oil. In&#13;
1909 the first kail mining shaft was&#13;
completed in this district, and the&#13;
following year 37,000 tons of kali salts&#13;
were* extracted. Since then other&#13;
mines have been developed and the&#13;
work has grown rapidly. Twelve&#13;
mines are now in operation in this district.&#13;
Maw Knew a Few Things.&#13;
Willie—Maw, what 1* an abysmal&#13;
brute? ^&#13;
Maw—Any married man, my son.—*&#13;
Cincinnati Enquirer.&#13;
Good for Kindling.&#13;
"Did hi* speech set the audience on&#13;
Are?"&#13;
"No, it was too dry.M&#13;
Toastie&#13;
Flavour&#13;
A Winner&#13;
Every day many are finding&#13;
out that&#13;
Post&#13;
Toasties&#13;
are different from other "ready&#13;
to eat" foods. I f i in the*&#13;
Toasties are carefully&#13;
cooked bits of choicest&#13;
corn toasted to an&#13;
golden-brown cht^eaa* !«*-&#13;
Care and time hi toasting&#13;
and the delicate navorin§&#13;
make thai crisp corn-food d*&gt;&#13;
MghtfuL&#13;
Poet&#13;
^ n ^ ^ s ^ a e ^ ,&#13;
w r a cream and augar to taate.&#13;
^soU by Grocers,c l-&#13;
Y\ .•.•"^C » - • %&#13;
••-V 1 V ;&#13;
V •&gt; »&#13;
:-•••* i*r&#13;
,'**.&#13;
M l "&#13;
* i _&#13;
"?&gt;t, ' : * ^ lA.Tr--&#13;
,_X&#13;
»,.V -s-&#13;
.*"' &gt; :«,:y--;'^t •.";. i&amp;c^*m£&amp;\^:&amp;h ^*£&gt;&#13;
« \ . .&#13;
&gt;&#13;
,&#13;
"€•••&#13;
. • &lt; &amp; • ' * « • "1&#13;
...'r"r.**^^&#13;
•• * - - f r r * * • •&#13;
"*&#13;
- • i&#13;
f.!&#13;
"J&#13;
'J&#13;
/*T*.&#13;
*;a .^.•«SS«*%«*!r^tf&lt;syrtB^^ g^.i^^M.-^jy.^j •« v.iw\-y,«'**«***'*'*&gt;; &gt;'«\5&lt;ii -K»&gt;*««V»V..*A,&#13;
T 7 3 T 7&#13;
•fS&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
* $ REMARKABLE&#13;
CASE of Mis. HAM&#13;
Declares Lydia E.&#13;
Vegetable Compound&#13;
Saved Her Life&#13;
and Sanity.&#13;
Shamrock, Mo.— " I feel it my duty&#13;
to tell the public the condition of my&#13;
health before using&#13;
your medicine. I had&#13;
fallingi inflammation&#13;
and congestion,&#13;
f e m a l e weakness,&#13;
paint in both sides,&#13;
backaches and bearing&#13;
down pains, was&#13;
short o f memory,&#13;
nervous, impatient,&#13;
passed s l e e p l e s s&#13;
n i g h t s , a n d h a d&#13;
neither strength nor&#13;
energy. There waa always a fear and&#13;
dread in my mind, I had cold, nervous,&#13;
weak spells, hot flashes over my body.&#13;
I had a place in my right side that waa&#13;
to sore that I could hardly bear the&#13;
weight of my clothes. I tried medicines&#13;
and doctors, but they did me little good,&#13;
and I never expected to get out again.&#13;
I got Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound and Blood Purifier, and I certainly&#13;
would have been in grave or in an&#13;
asylum if your medicines had not saved&#13;
me. But now I can work all day, sleep&#13;
well at night, eat anything I want, have&#13;
. no hot flashes or weak, nervous spells.&#13;
All pains, aches, fears and dreads^are&#13;
gone, my house, children and husband&#13;
are no longer neglected, as I am almost&#13;
entirely free of the bad symptoms I had&#13;
before taking your remedies, and all Is&#13;
pleasure and happiness in my h o m e . " -&#13;
Mrs, Joans HAM, R. P. D. 1, Box 22,&#13;
Shamrock, Missouri.&#13;
I f y o n w a n t s p e c i a l a d v i c e w r i t e&#13;
L y d i a E . P i n k h a m M e d i c i n e Co.,&#13;
(confidential) L y n n , M a s * .&#13;
W.L.DOUGLAS I&#13;
MMSH'itOisiEHSra ga wwo«uira it MI»M»i*oys,ohUdren&#13;
$L«0 Sl.78ft2t2.COM&#13;
B«t*n SMsinass in&#13;
1 » 7 « | .M«l tIM&#13;
kuaMt ataktr «f&#13;
ts.ea.so.e*;&#13;
BNlM.SOslwW&#13;
$ 1 , 0 0 6 , 2 7 ©&#13;
wThuis tvoa tluhsesr lbart i1o3n.0 w0.a «tt.v6*0 y, oSu4 .t0o0* asnndc pSn4o.Aus0 t&amp;noertwaaisteh sItna ntbdei ncgo stt bols fneoattbheeern. lOowurer estda nadndar tdbse hnartvoee toA jrskou T reWm adinea*l etrh ejo M shMo.w yoa tttoM WseUnmdoaJ f orW $.L8..0 0D.ougJas shoes he UMTU.O&amp;VA SathSaoti Yforo aat awrlleU. otohmenfo trto ane doo sTetraveiecde tobtahye ra srtea kaebss sooluldte alyt haigsh egro podrt oaest. The only dUtereneo ii the arise,&#13;
TAKB NO * M B * J I T U T I&#13;
•aththtMeau ifW/tnoott** •ko«i ats not Aw Ml* la y»«r vtateltjr, *t*er&#13;
•stframAMtory. Show fer STMT a w e w&#13;
UM tmUr at all scfesa, portal* &amp;*••&#13;
Witts StttfastnatdeitalefafcowSubsw&#13;
toordtrby «aan. W. I*. B O V S U S ,&#13;
- t t t t o j j a -&#13;
&lt;MMva»»*»e»i&#13;
Magnificent CropsmJ&#13;
AlTparts of the Province* &lt;&#13;
Alvatta* M T I produced won*&#13;
dertal yields of Wheat, Otis,&#13;
aWtiaf sad Flax. Wheat traded&#13;
rota Contract to No. 1 Hard,&#13;
Weighed heavy and yielded free* 20&#13;
1» 41 baHaWk peratra; 22boeh*b was&#13;
about tha total average, Iffanel Farm,&#13;
to* flaay be considered rally ss profitsbk)&#13;
an taduetiyas grata raising. The,&#13;
eactOem gi'ianee fan of nutrition, are ,&#13;
the only food required either for beef'&#13;
w dairy purposes. In 1912, and agaJa hi&#13;
Wa,jat Chicago. laWtoha eatried off&#13;
echoed marketeomveniem.clnn^ ear..&#13;
eeOent For the homeeteader.the man'&#13;
who wishes to farm eatenehrehr. or the \&#13;
hweator, Canada offers tbe biggest op*&#13;
pettyntty of say Piece on the cootizsaot.&#13;
a%eaaaAea&gt; A * . — jt^^MaaAaaAlavafl* laftaafcdBaaaBMawA - *&#13;
APP*T IOT omenptm n m m i u s&#13;
reduced nOmv rites to&#13;
. BupanDBBnoeacoi&#13;
iSHntgratloB,.&#13;
Ottawa, Canada, or to&#13;
•w^.Vt awOlrthasj&#13;
4Ma*ff»roo«Av«,&#13;
Detroit, Mtolta&#13;
Canadian&#13;
Government Agent&#13;
Any Insurance is good s o long as It&#13;
Is not needed.&#13;
Putnam Fadeless Dyes color in cold&#13;
water. Adv.&#13;
No Longer Secrets.&#13;
""She says that she never has any •'&#13;
secrets."&#13;
"That's right. She tells them."&#13;
If you wish beautiful, clear,&#13;
clothee, use Red Cross Ball Blue,&#13;
good grocers. Adv.&#13;
white&#13;
At all&#13;
Flowing Theme.&#13;
MI thought the speaker fluent"&#13;
"Yes? What was his subject?"&#13;
"Water ways."—Baltimore Sun.&#13;
Dr. Pierce's Pellets, small, ragar-eoated,&#13;
easy to take aa candy, regulate and invigorate&#13;
stomach, liver and Dowels and cure&#13;
constipation. Adv.&#13;
Not Stolen.&#13;
Madge—Did he steal a kiss from&#13;
you?&#13;
Marjorie—He thought he did.—Puck.&#13;
If Often Happens,&#13;
"The star soon recovered her&#13;
health."&#13;
"Yes. Her understudy made a h i t&#13;
—Baltimore Sun.&#13;
Worse and Worse.&#13;
Bill—Tou know he has written a&#13;
new poem.&#13;
Jill—Is that so?&#13;
"Yes, and I understand it's going to&#13;
het set to music."&#13;
"Then the worst is yet to come?"&#13;
Different.&#13;
Patience—How did you like her new&#13;
hat?&#13;
Patrice—Can't say 1 think much o f&#13;
i t Where did she get it?&#13;
"In Paris."&#13;
"But I didn't know she had been on&#13;
the other side lately."&#13;
"Paris, Indiana, I mean." t&#13;
Proof Positive.&#13;
The young husband laid down his&#13;
piece of cake and looked across tbe&#13;
table at his wife.&#13;
"Do you know, dear," he said, "I&#13;
think something Is wrong with the&#13;
cake you made. It really doesn't taste&#13;
very good."&#13;
"Ah, that's your imagination," said&#13;
his wife, with a triumphant smile, "for&#13;
it says in the cookbook that it's delicious."—&#13;
Berliner Illustrirte Zeltung.&#13;
New Rainproof Fabric&#13;
A closely woven fabrio has been&#13;
Introduced to the market In the&#13;
United States by an English manufacturer's&#13;
agent that is designed for use&#13;
in the manufacturing of raincoats. No&#13;
rubber is used in tbe construction of&#13;
the fabric, and it is guaranteed rain*&#13;
proof, although smoke may be blown&#13;
through it at the very point on which&#13;
the water is falling. The fabric be*&#13;
cause of this feature, It is said, is selfventilating&#13;
and will not "cockle-up/*&#13;
Honest.&#13;
A story Is told on a young man who&#13;
was married recently to the daughter&#13;
of a wealthy merchant The bridegroom&#13;
did not have a cent, but he&#13;
made up for lack of wealth in honesty.&#13;
He was so very honest that he would&#13;
not even prevaricate in the marriage&#13;
ceremony.&#13;
He was repeating what the minister&#13;
read: "With all my worldly goods I,&#13;
thee endow."&#13;
"With all thy worldly goods I me&#13;
endow," repeated the young man. Maybe&#13;
it was a slip of the tongue, still it&#13;
would be hard for honesty to go much&#13;
further.—New York Times.&#13;
DID T H E WORK&#13;
Grew Strong on Right Food.&#13;
You c a n t grow strong by merely exercising.&#13;
You must have food—the&#13;
kind you can digest and assimilate.&#13;
Unless the food you eat is digested&#13;
it adds to the burden the digestive organs&#13;
have naturally to carry. This&#13;
often means a nervous breakdown.&#13;
"About a year ago," writes a Mass.&#13;
lady, "I had Quite a serious nervous&#13;
breakdown caused, as I believed, by&#13;
overwork and worry. X also suffered&#13;
untold misery from dyspepsia.&#13;
"first I gave up my position, then I&#13;
tried to find a remedy for my troubles,&#13;
something that would make me well&#13;
and strong, something to rest my tired&#13;
stomach and build up my worn-out&#13;
nerves and brain.&#13;
"1 tried one kind of medicine after&#13;
another, but nothing seemed to help&#13;
me.&#13;
"Finally a friend suggested change&#13;
of food and recommended Grape-Nuts.&#13;
With little or no faith in it, I tried a1&#13;
package. That was eight months ago&#13;
and I have never beta without It&#13;
sHoe.&#13;
^Grape-Nuts did the work. It helped&#13;
me grow/stronf and weH. Orape*Nuts&#13;
¥ * - new MP* Into tte, btdH i i p my&#13;
whole aystem « 9 4 made another worn*&#13;
^ a of atrtl^&#13;
CARRANZA WILL&#13;
CONSIDER PLAN&#13;
CHIEF OF CONSTITUTIONALISTS&#13;
NOT REPRESENTED A T&#13;
CONFERENCE.&#13;
NOTE PLEASING TO WILSON&#13;
&gt;&gt;&#13;
Rebels Willing to Hear and Consider&#13;
Peace Proposals Decided on at&#13;
Conference in Session at&#13;
Niagara Falls'.&#13;
Washington — President Wilson&#13;
learned from General Carranza Sunday&#13;
that the constitutionalists have&#13;
finally decided not to send any representative,&#13;
formal or informal, to the&#13;
Niagara Falls conferences, but will be&#13;
willing to consider any solution of the&#13;
Mexican problem that may be reached&#13;
there.&#13;
This message from Carranza was a&#13;
reply to what amounted to an ultimatum&#13;
sent to him after Saturday&#13;
night's conference of the mediators&#13;
and the American and Huerta_jdelegates&#13;
in Niagara Falls, urging him to&#13;
cease hostilities and to become a party&#13;
to the peace negotiations. The fact&#13;
that such a message was sent to Carranza&#13;
became known here early Sunday.&#13;
Although the full contents of Carranza's&#13;
message were not made public,&#13;
it is evident that he has agreed&#13;
to some change of attitude that is&#13;
most satisfactory to President Wilson.&#13;
STATE EMPLOYE IS KILLED&#13;
Auto Accident Near Lansing Costs&#13;
One Life and Injures Three.&#13;
Lansing, Mich.—Leslie Clark, head&#13;
of the corporation department in the&#13;
secretary of state's office here, is dead&#13;
and Miss Pearl Gilbert, a stenographer&#13;
in the same office, and Miss&#13;
Jessie Vandenberg, a stenographer in&#13;
the state tax commission department,&#13;
are injured, the result of an auto accident&#13;
near the Michigan Agricultural&#13;
college late Sunday night Sablus Seriardl,&#13;
the driver.of the,car, has slight&#13;
bruises. The women's hurts are not&#13;
regarded as serious.&#13;
The party was driving toward&#13;
Lansing, when they met a car, Sergardi&#13;
turned off the lights of the machine&#13;
when tbe glare of the cars'&#13;
headlight showed him the path. After&#13;
the car had passed, Sergardi turned&#13;
his lights on, but not before the machine&#13;
had been run to the edge of a&#13;
steep embankment, over which it toppled&#13;
before Sergardi could change his&#13;
course.&#13;
The auto turned over, pinning Clark&#13;
under and killing him instantly.&#13;
SENATOR BRADLEY IS DEAD&#13;
Was First Republican Governor&#13;
Kentucky and Brilliant Orator.&#13;
of&#13;
Washington—Senator William O.&#13;
Bradley, of Kentucky, a silver-tongued&#13;
orator of the old school and the first&#13;
republican governor the state ever&#13;
had, died here at 9:45 Saturday night,&#13;
as the result of an acute attack of&#13;
gall stones. He had been ill some&#13;
time, and no hope had been entertained&#13;
during the last day or two for&#13;
his recovery.&#13;
Senator Bradley was just completing&#13;
his first term in the senate. He&#13;
was elected to the senate six years&#13;
ago by means of four democratic votes&#13;
which switched to him, breaking a&#13;
deadlock in the legislature. He was&#13;
a soldier of the union army during&#13;
the civil war.&#13;
Michigan Man It Promoted.&#13;
Washington —Announcement has&#13;
been made that Dr. William A. Taylor,&#13;
of Allegan county, Mich., will be made&#13;
assistant secretary of the department&#13;
of agriculture on the retirement of&#13;
Dr. B. T. Galloway, Mr. Galloway will&#13;
become dean of tbe New York State&#13;
college of agriculture at Cornell university&#13;
August 1. Dr. Taylor has been&#13;
chief of the bureau of plant Industry&#13;
since March, 1913, when Dr. Galloway&#13;
waa drafted from that place tor the&#13;
assistant secretaryship.&#13;
Crwek, MWt Read «IU Boed&#13;
WeilrtUey* to pkgft. There's&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS IN BfflEF&#13;
The game warden's department baa&#13;
received reports of forest fires in Kaled&#13;
this year.&#13;
The) Lenox Business ttea'f association&#13;
baa appointed a eommtttee to arra*&#13;
g# for the kwadfeg o f a motor e a t&#13;
i^how here May tft Prises are to he&#13;
A Headline.&#13;
Squibbs—Old man Jones has Just&#13;
bought a whole hogshead of brains.&#13;
GibbB—He must be crazy. He can't&#13;
eat them all In six niontha.&#13;
Squibbs—Ob, there \v*;r&amp; 'not s o&#13;
many. He bought an entire hog and&#13;
tbe bruins came in its head.&#13;
ERUPTION SPREAD ON FACE&#13;
810 East Elm St., Streator, 111.—"A&#13;
running sore broke out above my&#13;
right eye, which spread over my entire&#13;
face. It started as a small pimple.&#13;
I scratched it open and the contents&#13;
of this small pimple ran down&#13;
my face. Wherever this ran a new&#13;
sore appeared. They itcbed and&#13;
burned terribly; I couldn't touch my&#13;
face it burned so. It disfigured my&#13;
face terribly and I couldn't be seen&#13;
for everyone waB afraid of it. It&#13;
looked like a disease of some kind; it&#13;
was all red and a heavy white crust&#13;
on it. Everybody kept out of my way,&#13;
afraid It would spread. I lost rest at&#13;
night and I couldn't bear to have anything&#13;
touch my face, not even the pillow.&#13;
I had to lie on the back of the&#13;
head. I was always glad when morning&#13;
came so I could get up. It was&#13;
extremely painful.&#13;
"At last I thought of Cutlcura Soap&#13;
and Ointment and I commenced using&#13;
them. It took three weeks to complete&#13;
the cure." (Signed) Miss Caroline&#13;
Miller, Apr. 30, 1913.&#13;
Cutlcura 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;
A Man of LetterC&#13;
Miss Sally—I suppose that *n your&#13;
many travels you have learned the&#13;
Arabic letters.&#13;
Traveler—No, but I am familiar with&#13;
the Caribbean C.&#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 it&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature of _&#13;
In Use For Over SoVears.&#13;
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria&#13;
Oil in 8omaliland.&#13;
Mineral oil has been discovered in&#13;
Somililand, and the British government&#13;
Is investigating the extent of the&#13;
discovery.&#13;
Red Cross Ball Blue makes the laundress&#13;
happy, makes clothes whiter than snow.&#13;
A}I good grocers. Adv.&#13;
Old Warship Found.&#13;
The Moskva, one of Peter the&#13;
Great's squadron, which foundered in&#13;
1768, has been found near Libeau.&#13;
Most men&#13;
of injustice.&#13;
also possess the sense&#13;
Don't Persecute&#13;
Your Bowels&#13;
brCuutatl ,o huatr csaht,h uanrnteiccse sasanrdy . pTurogyat ives. They are&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS&#13;
Purely vegetable. A c t&#13;
gently on the liver.&#13;
eliminate bile, and&#13;
soothe the delicate^&#13;
membrane of the^&#13;
bowel. C u r e ,&#13;
Constipation.&#13;
BilMuioeia.&#13;
Sick U«a*&#13;
ache and Iadifestion, as millions know.&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
SELDOM SEE&#13;
a big knee like this, but your horse&#13;
may have a bunch or bruise on his&#13;
Ankle, Hork, Stifle, Knee or Throat. ABSORBINE&#13;
* ^ TRAOf MARK ftiC-.J.S PAT OFF.&#13;
will clean it off without laying the&#13;
horse up. N o blister, n o hair&#13;
g o n e . Concentrated—-only a few&#13;
drops required at an application. $2 per&#13;
bottle delivered. Deacribe four one for •pcdaLlnMriKtioiu&#13;
•ad B o o k 8 K free. A B S O R B I N E , JR.. anUaeptio&#13;
liniment for mankind. Reduces Painful Swellings, En*&#13;
larged Glands, Goitre, Wen*, BruUes. Varkooc Vdna,&#13;
Varicosities. Old Sore*. AUayi Pain. Price »1 and S2 a&#13;
bottle at drugeiati or delivered. Manufactured only by&#13;
KV.F.YpUNQ, P. 0. F.. 310 Tea** SL. Sp Hatfield. Mass.&#13;
DR. J. D. KELLOGG 8 ASTHMA Remedy for t h e prompt relief of&#13;
A s t h m a and Hay Fever. Ask Y o u r&#13;
druggist for It. Writs tor FREE SAMPLE..&#13;
NORTHROP ft LYMAN CO. Ltd.. BUFFALO. N.Y.&#13;
DAISY FLY KILLER g £ ? E r S t attract*&#13;
and kills a l l&#13;
Ala*. Neat, elasD, or.&#13;
o*iB«nt*l, convaolant,,&#13;
cheap. Laata a l l ;&#13;
a a a s e a . Made o f&#13;
metal, ean'taplltortip&#13;
over; will not soli or&#13;
1njura a o y t b l o f .&#13;
OoaraatMd •ffeetlf*. Add valor* or «a*Bt&#13;
axpraaa paid for SI.SS,&#13;
lAaOLO SOMSRS. ISO X&gt;«Kal» Ave.. Brooklyn, K. 1%.&#13;
FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS If you feel 'OUT of soars' 'mvn DOWN' 'SOT t a a a x c a V&#13;
Cs cBrBOr iXnIO fWroSmA KNKBIDS4N, BBI,L CBSLRASH, OSXKRI,M NBEBROVPOTUISO KS, n U S i&#13;
writ* for F f t C I VLvtm BOUND MBIHCAL B O O B - o i l&#13;
tfaeeo dtsMuMB and wonniarcL CURBS, effected B T&#13;
f HERAPld'N ™ ^ tbe remedy for TOU* OWN ailment. Absolutely F I I B T S . ,&#13;
No'follow op'circulars. No obligation*. D B ' L E C L B B O 1&#13;
Man. Co., UAVB*STO&lt;?K RI&gt;.. HAMFSTKAO, LOUDON. Kaa.&#13;
wa WANT TO r a o v a TaaaartoN WILL otraa TOO.&#13;
Cut Worm and Grub Destroyer&#13;
Save your plants by using this inexpensive&#13;
remedy. Absolutely effective. One pound&#13;
costing 25 cents postpaid is sufficient&#13;
for 50 plants. Write for free booklet.&#13;
Carpenter-Udell Chemical Company&#13;
Department S Brand Raptdt, Mtofv&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 22-1914.&#13;
&amp; Nervous Women Are troubled with the "olucs"—anxlcty~ste€pleitn€«s--ajid warning* o l paJn&#13;
and distress are sent by the nerves like flying messengers throughout body and&#13;
limbs. Such feeling may or may not be accompanied by backache or&#13;
headache or bearing down. The local disorders and inflammation, if there&#13;
Is any, should be .treated with Dr. Pierce's Lotion Tablets. Then tbe&#13;
nervous system and tbe entire womanly znakenm feels the tonic effect of&#13;
DR. PIERCE'S&#13;
Favorite Prescription&#13;
Take this In liquid or tablet fforni and b« a troiV woman! Mrs. Eva Tylar of So. Geneva St. Ithaca, N. Y„ say*. "I have bean in ana-down eon.&#13;
clUonifor several yean. Sutftrad mwinarvousoauaiulagraatdaalox painatcartain&#13;
periods. Have taken several different medktnes but found&#13;
your Tavorite Prescription' has given the moat relief of anything&#13;
I have ever tried. Am very much belter than I nave&#13;
been to soma tlma* I gladly lecomnend this remedy to any&#13;
tin need of a tonic" «HliiB&gt;.ILV.nareala%flaai,BVT.&#13;
PeJIaffa)&#13;
roguimto mtom*oh0ttv0i&gt;, boweim&#13;
GO LT DISTEMPER&#13;
—by1a6sl.0ii?f tSaK rBsaJdT.B aUctQs ounf it^faaw nblSooBdr aonOd U•xMp.^ gOatwmas oofs t of distemper. Bast rsmady BTBT known for taaras tafoaL&#13;
I(w H.O_. ~do..o.am« ao*rBdrastaaa«idfttsoaeaadr *aoanrseBesassdBaa. taIrtso.oari iadstnlta obnoitatataspiSaltdaTaba&gt; I UBtaiifanHirwiB. Cat shows how to poatttos tbvoatv Oar ~~~ ~ ,{ BEoMrsUaMrsjSrlsvdsyaJaavaaiirsrsthsalagfa. LtwocaaiTl satyr—esiisa. waated. Li&#13;
• P O H N WgptCAU OOMttssa^aWa^ieililpj^^ nngtiaj&#13;
• |i 1111 11 in 11 •SMMHf.qMBap&#13;
aaaaaa BBjatamaettaaa • &gt; * « f ^ » " " " " "&#13;
•Us&#13;
' 1 " as*- ' " *. - * . Suffering Hummrky Finds&#13;
attest for Q»m4—t*f+wi.&#13;
thatreliefmustbefbund for the ills which may come any day.&#13;
—else suffering is prolonged and there is danger thatgraver&#13;
trouble will follow. Most serious sicknesses start in disorders&#13;
of the organs of digestion and elimination. The best corrective&#13;
and preventive,in such cases, is acknowledged to be&#13;
This standard home remedy tones the stomach, stimulates&#13;
the sluggish liver, regulates the inactive bowels.&#13;
Taken whenever there is .need, Beecham's Pills wiH&#13;
spare you hoars of suffering and so improve your&#13;
general health and strength that you can better&#13;
resist disease. Tested fay time, Beecham's Pills Jiave&#13;
proved safe, certain, prompt, convenient and that they&#13;
Always Lead to Better Health&#13;
*#*•*-.&gt;•• ,, aBBaraaaMtafcavaa. Ba\B^a*MiaW~,aaW . .''*••&#13;
Yt&gt;:• •T' :.-4-&#13;
t&#13;
V'.L&#13;
• • * , • • ! * &gt;&#13;
•5&gt;ji&#13;
" . , t " r ' , . W&#13;
• &gt; t ^ ; • ; ^ . &gt; - . ' . ,&#13;
. -..s • . . . ' • • . &lt; &lt;&#13;
.--¾&#13;
y N:&#13;
- r - f&#13;
^ W&#13;
r&#13;
1&#13;
£&amp;£:-'&gt; P'?:.'^'&#13;
fia^ra/il&#13;
fe&#13;
, • • • » * • • ' :&#13;
gV"™&#13;
W&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
..--',r-j?'-"'''&#13;
^ '.'••'•v&amp;' '; '•&#13;
Pinckney Qippatch&#13;
Entered at the Poatoffice at Piockpey,&#13;
Mich,, aa Second Class Matter&#13;
H W. CAVERiy, EDITOR MO PUBLISHER&#13;
JSahseriaUa*, f 1. Per Year la Advance&#13;
Advertising rates made known on&#13;
application.&#13;
Cards of Thank?, 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 per*&#13;
aonal or business interest of any individual&#13;
will be published at regular advertiseing&#13;
rates.&#13;
Anaouncemeo 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;
• /=TK&gt;,&#13;
&gt;"&#13;
&gt;:&gt;»•. V ' ' J •:V.''••''.' • .&#13;
..• '• ,V:. » / •&#13;
ft':'&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Morrice Darrow&#13;
spent Saturday and Sunday in&#13;
Ann Arbor.&#13;
Will Dunning transacted business&#13;
in Chesaning the firat of the&#13;
week.&#13;
Miss Neva Lasber of Howell&#13;
spent the week end with friends&#13;
in Fiockney.&#13;
Mrs. Elmer Book of near Gregory&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of&#13;
A. H. Gilchrist.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Swarthout&#13;
and daughter Sadie were Howell&#13;
visitors Friday.&#13;
Several eonple from Dexter and&#13;
Howell attended the dance here&#13;
last Friday evening.&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mrs. John&#13;
llinchey of North Lake, an 8¾ lb.&#13;
girl, Monday, May 18.&#13;
Mrs. Orla Smith of Detroit&#13;
•pent the latter part of last week&#13;
at the home of D. D. Smith.&#13;
If you need a graduation gift,&#13;
you'll save money at the auction&#13;
•ale at Rieckhoff s jewelry store,&#13;
Bo well. adv.&#13;
Mrs. G. A. Sigler who has been&#13;
•pending the past two months&#13;
with relatives in Lansing returned&#13;
home last Wednesday.&#13;
Women who enlist to fight the&#13;
Mexicans should be careful to&#13;
leave behind them peace in their&#13;
own households.&#13;
^ Fred and Bex Read, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Thos. Read, Miss Georgia&#13;
Martin and Miss Erma Read were&#13;
Ann Arbor visitors Sunday.&#13;
The Pinckney high school base&#13;
ball team was defeated by the&#13;
Gregory independents here last&#13;
Saturday afternoon by a score of&#13;
10 to 2.&#13;
George Winans of Hamburg&#13;
has been notified that he has been&#13;
appointed deputy internal revenue&#13;
collector and assigned to the&#13;
office at Bay City, Michigan.&#13;
The twenty-second annual conn&#13;
of the Livingston County&#13;
School Association will&#13;
at the Baptist church,&#13;
Howell, Thursday and Friday,&#13;
June 4-5.&#13;
A writer in the Michigan Farm-&#13;
•r claims that the crows do not&#13;
pull up corn for the grain, but for&#13;
the eat worm that is working at&#13;
the bill of corn. If this is true&#13;
the treatment of the seed before it&#13;
k planted will not only protect&#13;
the grain from the cut worm, but&#13;
Jbe crow aa well.&#13;
; Toe latter part of last week a&#13;
ileal was closed in Fenton whereby&#13;
£• 8. VaoSickle purchased the&#13;
fasts** of £. G. Laubertson in&#13;
l b * WiUiaas-Lambertsou Cold&#13;
Oomoany. Mr. Lamberwas&#13;
a forma? resident of this&#13;
and the best wishes of his&#13;
^0/with him to A»y,&#13;
|jprfcst» aa will nave an interest in «'£aaalNkL'aft0f*v&#13;
Pay your Mbscrrptloa this month.&#13;
Adrian Lavey spent last Thursday&#13;
in Stockbridfce.&#13;
Floyd Harris spent Friday and&#13;
Saturday at tht* home of Dr. H.&#13;
F. Sigler.&#13;
Mrs. H. B. Lynch of Jackson&#13;
was in town the latter part of last&#13;
week,&#13;
Thos. Moran of Detroit was a&#13;
guest of his parents here over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Francis Schnerr of Detroit was&#13;
an over Sunday guest at the home&#13;
of George Sigler.&#13;
Memorial services will be held&#13;
at the Cong'l. next Sunday. All&#13;
are cordially invited.&#13;
Mrs. Jennie Barton and daughter&#13;
Esther were Stockbridge&#13;
visitors last Thursday.&#13;
Rev. J. W. Mitchell and wife&#13;
are spending their vacation with&#13;
relatives in London, Canada.&#13;
If there is one thing the American&#13;
soldier dislikes it is the&#13;
"hesitation" danced to Huerta's&#13;
manana music.&#13;
Bora to Mr. and Mrs. Herman&#13;
Smith of Howell, May 17, a daughter.&#13;
Mrs. Smith was formerly&#13;
Mary McCluskey of this place.&#13;
An exchange remarks that there&#13;
is a citizen in that town who is&#13;
sure crazy. He's going to build&#13;
a home instead of baying an&#13;
automobile.&#13;
Auction sale of diamonds, jewelry,&#13;
watches, silverware, cut glass,&#13;
beginning Saturday night at&#13;
RieckhorFs jewelry store, Howell,&#13;
Mich. adv.&#13;
Martha Nichols spent last week&#13;
at the home of her parents near&#13;
Howell. "Margaret Macomber of&#13;
Brighton assisted at the Sanitarium&#13;
during her absence.&#13;
The president of a Chicago&#13;
mail order house has a yearly income&#13;
of more than $1,000,000, and&#13;
will pay the largest 4ucome tax&#13;
of any one in that city. Nuff-sed.&#13;
The Senior play, Peg O' My&#13;
Heart, from the Howell high&#13;
school, was very much enjoyed by&#13;
a large audience last Friday evening.&#13;
The play and the dance following,&#13;
were given under auspices&#13;
of the Sophomores of the P« H. S&#13;
The receipts totaled 1136.&#13;
Taylor Bros, of North Brighton&#13;
have a cow with a record. She&#13;
was purchased by them of W. T.&#13;
Fry when she was but a calf.&#13;
Since then she has given birth to&#13;
nine calves, all heifers, and all&#13;
have been raised to "cowhood" by&#13;
them.&#13;
Fruit trees should not be sprayed&#13;
while they are in blossom, as the&#13;
spray ing.fluid kills off the honey&#13;
bees. There is a state law prohibiting&#13;
spraying while the trees&#13;
are in bloom, and there is a severe&#13;
penalty if complaint is made and&#13;
tbo offender is found guilty.&#13;
Mr. J. Stanger, piano tuner of&#13;
Ann Arbor, was in town last&#13;
week and was unable to visit all&#13;
those wishing bis services* He&#13;
requests us to state that he will&#13;
again return to Pinckney next&#13;
week aud those wishing their&#13;
piaoV&gt;s tuned should leave their&#13;
orders at the Di spatch office.&#13;
People here are grumbline because&#13;
the state tax commissioner&#13;
was here laat week and raised the&#13;
valuation on all the property in&#13;
the village. The farmers report&#13;
the same proceedings in this locality&#13;
but it is not known whether&#13;
the raise is general all over the&#13;
county or not One man who&#13;
bought a house and lot a year ago&#13;
here in town for two thooaand had&#13;
the valuation raised to three&#13;
thousand. Ha offered to sail it to&#13;
the commissioner VIOT $2,600, ^the&#13;
latter told him be was not in 'the&#13;
market to buy property.—MiUord&#13;
Tunas.&#13;
I^^A^^AgjAA^^AAj^^a^a^Ka^a^aa^^^^^f^a^ans^siastfys. A s a j i ^ i a s i a a a a s a j | l i l ^sisialsiansMnsiSManslBnAl&#13;
Cvenfually&#13;
Monks Bros.&#13;
Store&#13;
Fresh groceries with such specialties as&#13;
New Cabbage, Radishes and Lettuce Saturday.&#13;
New Oranges, Banana?, Lemons and Pineapples.&#13;
Potted House Plants and Cabbage and&#13;
Tomato Sets.&#13;
Garden Seeds&#13;
D. M. Ferry aud Northrup, King &amp; Co'e.&#13;
Pkg. Seeds and IsbelVs Bulk Seeds.&#13;
Mens Furnishings&#13;
Including Hats and Caps, Straw Hats,&#13;
Dress Shirts and Work Shirts, Ideal Overalls,&#13;
TrouserH, Raincoats. The latest in Smart Set&#13;
Cravats, Madras Collars, etc.&#13;
We also have the famous King Pin line of&#13;
tailored-to-order samples and have already&#13;
made several fine suits. Remember a fit is&#13;
guaranteed by&#13;
• The Square Deal Grocery D&#13;
(Q&#13;
•JfrJi^Va^Pi^ ^r&#13;
FLY!&#13;
BETTER STILL&#13;
KEEP HIM OUT.&#13;
Prepare&#13;
Now For&#13;
Fly Time&#13;
SCREENS&#13;
Wire and&#13;
Goth Netting&#13;
And Frames&#13;
We CMI7 a FULL LINE of WISE NETTING for window and door&#13;
icreenj. QaWanixed and copper wire for those who demand the kind&#13;
that larta longest We CUT any SIZE you want You can PHONE.&#13;
Teepje H a r ( l w a r c C o r n P a n y&#13;
L&#13;
U Our&#13;
Meat&#13;
Goes&#13;
Furthest"&#13;
EVERY woman knows there Is a great&#13;
difference in the LASTING QUALITY&#13;
of meats. Poor roasts, steaks&#13;
or shops, fat and tough, for instance, very&#13;
rarely go into the refrigerator after the first&#13;
attack upon them is over. We sell the kind&#13;
that lasts—REAL MEAT, selected with&#13;
EXPERT KNOWLEME.&#13;
L. E.&#13;
..»..-&gt;..».» * - - • '&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative&#13;
ing Business. ::&#13;
Bank-&#13;
3 per cent&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits '&#13;
Pinckney&#13;
G. W . TEJBPLB&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Prop&#13;
a?&#13;
i 4&#13;
&lt;4 V&#13;
*l-&#13;
• *V»:V ~4&#13;
Perhaps this pic'ure may recall&#13;
some pleasant occasion—a party&#13;
and the becoming costume you&#13;
wore.&#13;
Any event worth remembering&#13;
suggests a picture.&#13;
Make an appointment today.&#13;
DaisieB. Chapell&#13;
Stockbridge. Michigan&#13;
Dr. Miles'&#13;
Anti-Pain Pill*&#13;
w i l l h e l p y a w , a s _&#13;
h a v e h e l p e d o t h e r * .&#13;
Good for all kinds of Jafa.&#13;
Used to relieve Neuralgia, HtaeV&#13;
ache, Nervousniss, phmimifiijsi&#13;
Sciatica, Kidney Psias, Lvatibtifa&#13;
Locomotor Ataxia, BackasJM,&#13;
Stomachache, Csrsielmess, IrrltabiHty&#13;
ffnd for pain in say aatt&#13;
of the body.&#13;
-JT haV« uftA Dr. !£&amp;•»•&#13;
PUU when troubled with&#13;
and find that one pUl&#13;
•ffeota relief in t&gt; v*r then&#13;
Z am conaidembly affected with&#13;
raliia In the head at times,&#13;
find the Antl-Paln IWhTof&#13;
benefit The Or. Xfiea* ft&#13;
are beyond oomparieon and I&#13;
mend them to *w •rrT'frftnia*"&#13;
QBOIK» coSwLtn.&#13;
m Oakland St, San Aatttg,*!**,&#13;
At all drusstits. IS Seee* Sfe, %&#13;
MILKS MEDICAL CO., •QdiarL la«,&#13;
-:.4/-,&#13;
f DRS. SIGLER &amp;. SIGLER&#13;
Fbysieisoi sod SurgKn*.&#13;
All sails promptly attended to i&#13;
uay or sight. Ofi«» oo liait *&#13;
Stmt , ' *&#13;
\&#13;
'}*&#13;
.&#13;
. - . &gt; . • • • ' •&#13;
r.'-:'-;^:i&#13;
-• •"• " » V&#13;
•-- , -•• s&#13;
•* • •' - ' 1&#13;
:-,^.:: if?&#13;
" • • * » " ".\"*; %&#13;
. -.-.,-^.-&#13;
• •;li'** • i'r-&#13;
,r?t'-» • *•&#13;
- • ' / . • • : % * • &lt;&#13;
. - v v # '&lt;&#13;
••• ' ? » » i&#13;
sr!t;i&#13;
. • - . , - • * . « * *&#13;
f j.&#13;
PQT0KHET,&#13;
-I&#13;
*•• *U:. V A&#13;
• • &gt; • .&#13;
-.. •* .«*^.i*wu*^a**c«M- *mm*.&#13;
ZJ7 &amp;£m mJ+ M M M • •&gt;: -i.iTTiihgiiii rlSfft&gt;«1|tifr *»'&amp;&amp;'&gt;' -• c «..*%%&#13;
y ISii •A&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
^wwffmwmmmwmiffwnwwwnwwmmwmitf!§&#13;
^ 33&#13;
I OUR YEARLY SHIPMENT OF&#13;
Imporrted White Dinnerware&#13;
4 U S T U N P A C K B D&#13;
In order to save the cost of lehandling, will sell this ware at&#13;
10 p e r c e n t a b o v e c o s t for the next 10 days. Hemember&#13;
this is not the cheap American ware but the celebrated&#13;
Johnson Bros. English Ware which you all are acquainted&#13;
with.&#13;
25 to 50 per cent reduction on all crockery now in stock.&#13;
This is your opportauity to replenish your supply of dishes&#13;
for the summer and threshing season.&#13;
MEYER'S DRUG STORE&#13;
T h e TVynl S t o r e&#13;
Drugs, Wall Paper, Crockery, Cl&amp;ars, Candy, Magazines,&#13;
School Supplies, Books&#13;
PInckney Mich.&#13;
»1&#13;
K&#13;
*.&#13;
What's Holding ^&gt;u Back ?&#13;
IF you're doing the hardest part of your work by hand, you&#13;
are wasting time that you might use for some other job or&#13;
in getting aciquainted with your family every day.&#13;
Get a Rumely-Olds Engine and hook it up to every power&#13;
requirement on the place.&#13;
Give your wife a rest, too; let a Rumely-Olds Engine run&#13;
the washing machine, the cream separator an4 the butter&#13;
machine. You have no idea what a lot of help and small expense&#13;
a Rumely-Olds Engine really is until you try it. You'll&#13;
live longer and happier if you're not "dead-tired" every night.&#13;
If you can't find time to come and aee us, let us know&#13;
and we will come and see you or send you a catalog&#13;
of Rumely-Olds Engines.&#13;
We're here to serve you;&#13;
give us a chance.&#13;
7ft6 A H. FLINTOFT,&#13;
Everything&#13;
For Fanh&#13;
And Garden&#13;
IMPLEMENTS&#13;
- N&#13;
Spring&#13;
Stock&#13;
Is Big&#13;
Gregory&#13;
All business places of Gregory&#13;
will be closed Memorial Day from&#13;
9:30 a. m. until 6:00 p. m.&#13;
Miss Ella Johnson of Detroit&#13;
is visiting friend* here this week.&#13;
Those who have new Ford autos&#13;
are, Fred Marshal), Cornelius Donohne,&#13;
E. Hadley and F. Bates.&#13;
Reo owners are, E. A. Kuhn, Geo,&#13;
Banckus and V. Topping.&#13;
Miss Eva Pickell of Lyndon is&#13;
clerking at S. A. Denton's for a&#13;
few weeks,&#13;
Haskei Worden aod family of&#13;
Jackson spent Sunday at the home&#13;
of F, A. Worden.&#13;
Mrs. C. Howlett is spending the&#13;
week in Howell with her son L,&#13;
E. Howlett and family.&#13;
Maccabee ladies from Gregory&#13;
Hive attended a meeting iu Hamburg&#13;
la6t Saturday. All report a&#13;
fine time.&#13;
Geo. Gone is very ill at this&#13;
writing.&#13;
Mrs. Cutler who has been visiU&#13;
ing in Ann Arbor the past week&#13;
returned home Monday.&#13;
Harlow Munsell was home over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Rev. J. J. Schnler of St. Johns&#13;
will fill the pulpit here next Sunday&#13;
morning.&#13;
$100 Reward, $100&#13;
The readers of this paper will be pleased&#13;
to learn that there is at least one dreaded&#13;
disease that science hat&gt; been able to cure&#13;
in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's&#13;
Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now&#13;
known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh&#13;
being a constitutional disease, requires a&#13;
constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh&#13;
Cure is taken internally, acting directly&#13;
upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the&#13;
system, thereby destroying the foundation&#13;
of the disease, and giving the patient&#13;
strength by building up the constitution&#13;
and assisting nature in doing its work.&#13;
The proprietors have so much faith in its&#13;
curative powers that they offer One Hundred&#13;
Dollars for any case that it fails to&#13;
cure. Wend for list of testimonials. Address:&#13;
F. K. Cheney &amp; Co., Toledo, O.&#13;
Sold by all druggists, 75c.&#13;
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.&#13;
Resolutions&#13;
SPECIALS!&#13;
IP 0«F8&#13;
Saturday, May 30th, 1914&#13;
A nice line of Ladies Muslin Underwear at Wholesale Prices&#13;
All Wool Dress Goods at (bet&#13;
All Ladies Oxfords at Co6t&#13;
6 bars of any white soap 2^c&#13;
8 bars Lenox Soap. 2 5 c&#13;
Best Can Peas .. • - 1 0 c&#13;
Best Can Corn _„9c&#13;
Will meet all prices on sugar&#13;
ALL S A L E S CASH i&#13;
W. W. BARNARD&#13;
Do You Want Ice ?&#13;
We are prepared to furnish everyone with ice the coming&#13;
season at right prices. Will deliver same to your ice box.&#13;
Stoves Stored SUMMER&#13;
..ji&#13;
Call on or phone No. 53r3&#13;
S . H . C A R K , Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
60 YEArt»&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
Pinckney Chapter No. 145 of the Order&#13;
of the Eastern Star, passed the following&#13;
resolutions: Whereas:—It has pleased the&#13;
Supreme Ruler of the Universe to call&#13;
from onr circle, our beloved sister, Florilla&#13;
Green, the fraternal chain whjch binds'us&#13;
together has been severed. Of our fraternal&#13;
dead we have only words of love and&#13;
1 tender remembrance, therefore be it&#13;
Resolved:—As a tribute to her memory,&#13;
we extend to the bereaved family, our&#13;
heartfelt sympathy in this their hour of&#13;
sorrow, and&#13;
Resolved:—That our Charter .be draped&#13;
in mourning for thirty daya, also that these&#13;
resolutions be spread on the records of&#13;
our Chapter; that a copy of these be published&#13;
in the Pinckney Dispatch.&#13;
TRADE MARKS&#13;
DESIGNS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A C&#13;
A.iyane *pn&lt;1!n« A nketrh and description OJKJ quickly .wortuin our ni&gt;ii&gt;inn free whether »i&#13;
Invention is prohr.biy pn ten table. Communion&#13;
tlons strictly confident ial. HANDBOOK on Patent*&#13;
sent free. Otdost u^micy !or securing patent*.&#13;
Patents taken throunh Muun * Co. recol"'&#13;
special notice, without charae, Intha Scientific American. &amp; handsomely illusfcat eA weekly.&#13;
julatUm of any ncentlflo Journal. ^ ...&#13;
rear; four uKmths, | L Sold by «n newsdealer*&#13;
I.RrffCtt cir&#13;
ima|, Terms, $3 l ^itertsfcW&#13;
GOING TO BUY A PIANO&#13;
OR SEWING MACHINE&#13;
YES?&#13;
SEE L R. WILLIAMS.&#13;
GREGORY&#13;
JWa^He saves you money on hi^h&#13;
grade pianos.&#13;
• ' .&#13;
f-'-V .&#13;
'A&#13;
^ V /&#13;
/ " - ' , K - -&#13;
&amp;.-„» , $1:, '&#13;
* * : - * • • • •&#13;
$ * • • • • • • • ' . • , »&#13;
"• &lt;*. '&#13;
r&#13;
V&#13;
-&#13;
/ • ' • '&#13;
•&#13;
• * •&#13;
f-&#13;
4 *&#13;
" ; . : • ' • ; . &gt; &gt;&#13;
• - * - * - * . - « i »&#13;
Hundred* of SATISFIED persons in this community have bought&#13;
gardes and farm implements, such as hoes, rakes, spades, scythes, etc*,&#13;
from os, WHY NOT YOU* This is the time.&#13;
» • - • • , • Dinkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
= =&#13;
«( We do not sigh when golden skies have&#13;
donned&#13;
The piirple shadows and the gray of night,&#13;
Because we know the morning lies beyond&#13;
And we must wait a little'while for light.&#13;
So when, grown weary with the care and&#13;
strife,&#13;
Our loved ones find in sleep the peace they&#13;
crave,&#13;
We should not weep but learn to count this&#13;
jife&#13;
A prelude to the one beyond the grave." {Arvilla Piaceway&#13;
Villa M. Richards&#13;
Leah H . Sigler&#13;
• * * &gt; • » •&#13;
North Hamburg&#13;
Miae Florence. Kioe was a guest&#13;
of her parents here the last of the&#13;
week.&#13;
Ohio parties are looking over&#13;
farms in this vicinity with a view&#13;
of purchasing.&#13;
Mr. aod Mrs. Cbas. Piaceway of&#13;
Brighton wereguests at the home&#13;
of Clyde Hinkle Thursday. V -&#13;
Orville Nash and family were&#13;
Whitmore Lake visitors Sunday,&#13;
Mr* and Mrs. E. W. Rounsifer&#13;
and C. M. Bennett were Saoday&#13;
visitors at the home of R. Bennett.&#13;
People were awakened by the&#13;
coming and going of an auto Friday&#13;
night thinking the doctor bad&#13;
s patient Qn inquiry fonnd it&#13;
was only a v*ung couple retaro^&#13;
ing from the dance at Pinckney.;&#13;
^WtO.^WWwt#?-Wv#^^ H&#13;
Is Jilst What the Ladies of Pinckney&#13;
and Surrounding GoUntry&#13;
HAVE BEEN LOOKING FOR&#13;
BBEaS FLOOR&#13;
IS IT&#13;
Mide in Pincknsy ani is a bleni between 8PRING . &amp;&#13;
WINTER wheat floor. Here you get all the^good bread&#13;
makiog qualities of the Spring wheat and also the excellent&#13;
flavor of the Winter wheat, making a flour that will make&#13;
bread you can't eat enough of so but what yon will want just&#13;
as much more the next meal.&#13;
We are using the strongest Spring wheat flourjwe can&#13;
buy and we have a machine for blending the two fkinds of&#13;
flour so we can assure you of the evenness of the blending.'&#13;
Let MONARCH BREAD FLOUR be the prime factor in&#13;
your bread making from now on. *\^ r&#13;
F o r p a s i y o u r P U R I T Y F L O U R is the b * t a o *&#13;
the cheapest yon can buy. We intend.to keep PURITY i p&#13;
to the same high grade strickly winter whf.at flour it always&#13;
has been. We are now in a position to give onr costometa SK]&#13;
choice and we know we can satisfy the most particular kind,&#13;
We would like to C. U. B. A. custom3r of ours/ By&#13;
buying our floor yon help us, yon help yourself *nd yoti&#13;
HEJLP PJTNCKNEY ^ ^&#13;
. X&#13;
\i' ••&gt; i *•"&#13;
:&gt;'4W'j&#13;
•"**"»«K;&#13;
V-:. .'•"&#13;
f # T * M4»» •*•&lt;• \&gt;m&gt;nwmmr y,igw.nii •!•«»••?*• """•» ' •**•• K*MVMM 4 » * , « ^ :&#13;
»v&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH ',3**&#13;
i&#13;
- :*i;&lt;afo*.&#13;
';**.&#13;
'ME*&#13;
* &amp;&#13;
ft*'&#13;
^ ¾&#13;
• « *&#13;
&gt; - •&#13;
M: :"J&#13;
T&#13;
r» :¾&#13;
"£••&#13;
&lt;&#13;
mm&#13;
SUBWAYS PLANNED&#13;
FOR METROPOLIS&#13;
GIGANTIC SCHEME FOR MUNICIPALLY&#13;
OWNED LINES IN&#13;
DETROIT.&#13;
TEN MILLIONS ARE NEEDED&#13;
Street Railway Commission Announce&#13;
Plant for System That Will&#13;
Serve Two-Thirds of Population.&#13;
Detroit—Three subways, one under&#13;
Woodward avenue from Jefferson to&#13;
Milwaukee avenue; one under Michigan&#13;
avenue west to Junction avenue&#13;
and the third under Gratiot avenue&#13;
east to Chene street, coupled with the&#13;
municipal operation of the Fort line,&#13;
the workingmen's belt line and the&#13;
Baker line on Chene street and Grandy&#13;
avenue, comprises the plan for a&#13;
•treet railway system owned and operated&#13;
by the city. The plan was adopted&#13;
Thursday by the street railway&#13;
commission and a resolution was passed&#13;
that plans for the subways be prepared&#13;
at once.&#13;
On completion of the Woodward&#13;
avenue subway to Milwaukee avenue,&#13;
the railway commissioners plan to&#13;
take over the surface lines mentioned,&#13;
By BO doing they would have a system&#13;
serving about two-thirds of Detroit.&#13;
Provision is also to be made for the&#13;
location and purchase of a power&#13;
house site. The commission plans to&#13;
generate municipal power for the use&#13;
of their tram system. The money fer&#13;
the subway systems proposed would&#13;
probably be raised by issue of bonds.&#13;
U is believed that 110,000,000 will be&#13;
necessary. It is said the Woodward&#13;
subway could be constructed at a cost&#13;
of about $1,000,006 per mile, or nractically&#13;
$8,000,000 for the entire distance&#13;
to be covered.&#13;
TARJEFT IS FOUND GUILTY&#13;
Jury Decides Cheboygan Man Polaorvned&#13;
His Father.&#13;
Cheboygan, Mlch.—"Guilty of murder&#13;
in the first degree," was the verdict&#13;
of the jury in the case of Joe&#13;
Tarjeft, who was charged with poisoning&#13;
his father, Julius Tarjeft, on&#13;
March 4. The jury was out but three-&#13;
Quarters of an hour.&#13;
Insanity was the plea of Tarjeft's&#13;
attorneys.&#13;
Tarjeft took strychnine from his&#13;
nephew's suit case, put it in three&#13;
capsules, and placed them In a mail&#13;
box at his father's home. The father&#13;
swallowed the capsules thinking them&#13;
a remedy for backache and died two&#13;
hours later.&#13;
Michigan People Petition Senate.&#13;
Washington—Upward of 5.000 Detroit,&#13;
Benton Harbor and St. Joseph&#13;
believes In the north pole claims of&#13;
Dr. Frederick A. Cook have joined in&#13;
•ending two petitions to Senate William&#13;
Alden Smith, urging htm to aid&#13;
in obtaining recognition by congress&#13;
of the achievements of Admiral&#13;
Peary's rival.&#13;
' Senator Smith presented the petitions&#13;
to the senate Saturday without&#13;
comment and they were referred to&#13;
the committee on library—also without&#13;
eomment.&#13;
Yegg men Blow Kaxoo Safe.&#13;
Kalamazoo, Mich.—Safe robbers&#13;
Thursday night looted a safe within&#13;
a block of the police station and got&#13;
$150 In oash. The robbers, say officers,&#13;
worked In the store for probably&#13;
two hours before the safe was opened.&#13;
They moved It from near a front&#13;
window to the rear of the cashier's&#13;
desk, covered it with flour and then&#13;
drilled It open. Experienced crooks&#13;
die! the job, say the police.&#13;
Young Man Pound Guilty.&#13;
Jackson, Mien.—Guilty ef murder In&#13;
the first degree was the verdict of the&#13;
jury in the case of Harold B. Wlnney,&#13;
charged with, the slaying of Mrs. Caroline&#13;
Sryock, a crippled old woman,&#13;
who lived alone in Spring Arbor town-&#13;
^ : ^ : |V&gt; ; fhip. Winney Is only 20 years old, a&#13;
'%'&amp;*l'fif-S:'\ crippled mute, and killed the woman&#13;
::*•.'••• I- fgp a g^^ij a u a o t B o n g ] r t n € ^ i n&#13;
w&#13;
&lt; 'V\"&#13;
*"-" J&amp;;:|#WfHIC FLASHES&#13;
':-'.-' A cnbleejreni from Paris state* that&#13;
w&amp;&#13;
.-...•?«v Jenfter 0«ret»pr Chaser Oebora and&#13;
alt wife are dWin New York on the&#13;
Kc sttenebe Maahinahi, seven years aid,&#13;
ef Man**** * dead fee* bum* she&#13;
***** v i c t o r #£•*•• oaaght ire&#13;
aw - 4p^w-'&gt;wwe '^W^BSWP'O* ••ew^*^~ a "^ww*&#13;
i n •••'' •&#13;
O.?&#13;
' -1 ,-&#13;
W"&#13;
ARREST OF MILITANT&#13;
LEADER CAUSES RIOT&#13;
MRS. EMMELINB PANKHURST.&#13;
London—Following, the arrest of&#13;
Mrs. Pankhurst Thursday during the&#13;
fiercest riot in the history of the militant&#13;
movement the city was kept in&#13;
constant excitement for several days.&#13;
Many valuable paintings in public galleries&#13;
were signed and the headquarters&#13;
of the Women's Social and Political&#13;
union were raided and all records&#13;
and documents seized.&#13;
PA6EANT IS GREAT SUCCESS&#13;
Seven Thousand Persons Witness&#13;
"Jean of Arc" Given By University&#13;
Students.&#13;
Ann Arbor—Seven thousand persons&#13;
witnessed the spectacular Joan of Arc&#13;
pageant, presented Thursday night on&#13;
Perry field by the Women's League&#13;
of the University, and so great was&#13;
the success of the production that&#13;
hereafter some sort of a pageant will&#13;
be an annual feature of Michigan activities.&#13;
It was a wonderful blending of riotous&#13;
color, quaint dances, quainter&#13;
music, court and war scenes and the&#13;
final trial and death at the stake of&#13;
Joan, the maid of Orleans. Every&#13;
scene was as nearly correct historically&#13;
as it were possible to make it, and&#13;
in the final scene Miss Marjory Nicolson&#13;
of Detroit, who wrote the scenario,&#13;
had taken from the records of&#13;
the trial the exact words of the trial&#13;
bishop and the seemingly inspired answers&#13;
of the maid of Orleans.&#13;
While all the characters were given&#13;
careful interpretation, the title&#13;
role, portrayed by Miriam Hubbard,&#13;
stood out greater in its perfection&#13;
than any other.&#13;
BECKER IS FOUND GUILTY&#13;
Second Trial ef Former Police Officer&#13;
Results In Conviction.&#13;
New York—Twelve men decided&#13;
Friday for the second time that Chas.&#13;
Becker was the arch conspirator responsible&#13;
for the Rosenthal slaying&#13;
which nearly two years ago awoke&#13;
New York to a realization of corruption&#13;
in the police department and&#13;
opened a new era of police reform.&#13;
Becker,, once a police lieutenant,&#13;
was found guilty of murder in the&#13;
first degree. Only a pardon or interference&#13;
again by the court of appeals&#13;
can save him from following to the&#13;
electric chair the four gunmen who&#13;
shot Herman Rosenthal, the gambler,&#13;
early on the morning of July 16, 1912.&#13;
The jury decided that the gunmen&#13;
were Becker's agents.&#13;
Organise For New Interurban.&#13;
Muskegon, Mioh.—Details of the&#13;
plan for the organization of a $1,000,-&#13;
000 Muskegon-to-Saginaw interurban&#13;
company were completed Friday at a&#13;
meeting of the committee of directors&#13;
held here. The eompany will be organized&#13;
at Casnovia by stockholders&#13;
of Musksgon-Casnovis Land ft Development&#13;
Co., the promoting concern.&#13;
Actual construction of the line from&#13;
Muskegon to ataaton will be started&#13;
this year, the promoter* assert&#13;
ITEMS OF STATE INTEREST&#13;
Tha areeecntlnf attorney of Baraga&#13;
county haaaeked the attorney-general&#13;
if a* tadtan eea hold * liquor license.&#13;
It te agates* the law to sell liqeerjfco aa&#13;
Irisantt, hot there i s aa lew w*lem any*&#13;
•asaesfW _ e^PfJ 'evsssy^ajp . twewe&gt; , ^ v ^ U • ^ r ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ -&#13;
Co-Operative Farm&#13;
Products Marketing&#13;
How It Is Done in Europe and May Be Done&#13;
in America to the Profit of Both&#13;
Farmer and Consumer&#13;
By MATTHEW 8. DUDGEON.&#13;
&gt;»»oe»0»OO4 »oo » » M » » » 0 » » 0 0 » 0 &gt;&#13;
(Copyright. 1914, Wealera Newspaper Union.;&#13;
WHY CO-OPERATION SOMETIMES FAILS&#13;
Copenhagen, Denmark. — Co-operation&#13;
la not foolproof, consequently it&#13;
does not always succeed. Inexperience,&#13;
incompetence, and dishonesty&#13;
will wreck any private business and&#13;
they will, of course, wreck any cooperative&#13;
business. It is necessary&#13;
therefore, for enthusiasts to remember&#13;
that there is no mystic virtue in&#13;
co-operation which enables it to triumph&#13;
at all times. Those of us who&#13;
are trying to record what we have&#13;
seen of co-operative business at home&#13;
and in Europe, would not be treating&#13;
the public fairly if we left the Impression&#13;
that there are no failures&#13;
among co-operative enterprises.&#13;
Both at home and abroad there have&#13;
been many failures. Certainly those&#13;
interested are entitled to know as&#13;
much about its failures as about its&#13;
successes. They are entitled to know&#13;
also what causes have led to co-operative&#13;
failure.&#13;
Failures In America.&#13;
Many co-operative stores organised&#13;
with much promise have failed. Generally&#13;
speaking gross Incompetence&#13;
has wrecked them. They are like&#13;
other mercantile establishments in&#13;
that they demand, aa a condition&#13;
precedent to success, skilled management,&#13;
good business methods, good accounting,&#13;
cautious extension of credit,&#13;
as well as some special knowledge of&#13;
the goods dealt in. If these qualities&#13;
are absent failure is inevitable. As&#13;
the average co-operative store in&#13;
America is organised its members are&#13;
seldom bound by any agreement to&#13;
do all their trading at the co-operative&#13;
concern. They patronize It when it is&#13;
to their interest so to do. If the goods&#13;
offered are poor, or if bad management&#13;
advances the price unduly, or if&#13;
frequent minor mistakes occur, the&#13;
members abandon the venture like a&#13;
sinking ship.&#13;
As I have said, co-operative stores&#13;
in order to succeed must have skilled&#13;
management, good business methods,&#13;
good accounting systems, and must extend&#13;
credit cautiously, all In addition&#13;
to the special knowledge essential in&#13;
every such enterprise. Bo far as I can&#13;
discover, however, the stores which&#13;
have failed have not only lacked one&#13;
or two of these essentials of success&#13;
but they seem often to have lacked all&#13;
of them. More than once it has happened&#13;
that a co-operative store company&#13;
is formed because some storekeeper&#13;
has lost all his money In an&#13;
unsuccessful mercantile venture and&#13;
can secure capital for a new venture&#13;
only in this way. Sometimes an ambitious&#13;
farmer has organised a company&#13;
in order that a son who has been&#13;
away to business college and feels&#13;
above farming may have a chance to&#13;
earn a living without working upon&#13;
the farm. It is characteristic also of&#13;
co-operative American stores—-and of&#13;
other co-operative concerns in America&#13;
also—that they have seldom been&#13;
willing to pay a salary sufficient to&#13;
secure men of experience and skill as&#13;
managers.&#13;
When a co-operative store managed&#13;
by a man who has a history of nothing&#13;
but business failures behind him,&#13;
or by a youthful and Inexperienced&#13;
business college graduate, or by any&#13;
other man of the low grade Implied in&#13;
the low salaries paid, comes into competition&#13;
with a competent, up-to-date,&#13;
American storekeeper of the aggressive&#13;
vigorous type often found in even&#13;
the smaller towns, the mere word "cooperative"&#13;
upon the sign in front of&#13;
the store is not going to avert failure.&#13;
It isn't fair to expect too much of cooperation.&#13;
Co-operative Fruit Failures,&#13;
Seldom, too, have so-called' American&#13;
co-operative companies been cooperative-&#13;
in the true Bense of the&#13;
word. I have In mind one co-operative&#13;
fruit marketing society which failed&#13;
largely because it was organised on&#13;
the joint stock basis and administered&#13;
aa are other non-oo-operative corporations.&#13;
A few of the larger shareholders&#13;
controlled it. The interests of the&#13;
minority were ignored. They became&#13;
Jealous and suspicious and accused&#13;
those in control of dishonesty. Finally&#13;
they demanded that the officers give&#13;
a fall report of all their flnaactaT&#13;
transactions and tiat an auditing con*&#13;
mittaa be appointed, Tha offioart fool*&#13;
tahly and axbttwOy rafaaed 6) aba*&#13;
cede even an andtt imWaa they thanv&#13;
selves aeleeted tha comaljktaa. Than&#13;
applied so that fof t*a fitara they&#13;
J -Uioto^sjvjt &gt; • • : *&#13;
This also was denied them. The only&#13;
course possible seemed to be a separation&#13;
and the smaller stockholders&#13;
withdrew, the larger stockholders&#13;
buying out those who did not care to&#13;
stay In the concern. While, this society&#13;
did not fail from a financial standpoint,&#13;
its record Is of course to be&#13;
cited as that of a co-operative concern&#13;
which did not succeed in the best&#13;
sense of the term.&#13;
The small shareholders of this society&#13;
later formed another co-operative&#13;
society, organizing and administering&#13;
it, you may be sure, upon a&#13;
purely co-operative basis, adopting the&#13;
one man vote plan, and providing that&#13;
no dividends be declared upon shares&#13;
but that all the profits go to those who&#13;
grew the fruit in proportion to the&#13;
amount furnished to thhe company by&#13;
each.&#13;
Greed Causes Another Failure.&#13;
The experience of a Minnesota cooperative&#13;
warehouse elevator was&#13;
sojaewhat different. As originally organized&#13;
and managed by the farmers&#13;
it was a success, all the profits were&#13;
distributed back to the producers as&#13;
an additional price upon the grain delivered&#13;
and the farmers loyally supported&#13;
it. Later, however, the shares&#13;
of stock became centered in a few&#13;
business men who were not grain&#13;
growers. These men held a majority&#13;
of the stock and were in full&#13;
control. They began squeesing down&#13;
the prices to the producer until they&#13;
were paying him no more than the&#13;
privately owned elevator companies&#13;
paid.&#13;
The trustful farmers continued to&#13;
deliver their grain for a time and the&#13;
business men in control received a&#13;
Jorty per cent dividend. At the end&#13;
of the year, however, the farmers realized&#13;
that they were being imposed&#13;
upon and the next year abandoned the&#13;
project, and hauled their grain elsewhere.&#13;
As a result this co-operative&#13;
effort which had been at first an exceedingly&#13;
profitable venture became&#13;
so absolute a failure that it was with&#13;
difficulty that the shareholders disposed&#13;
of their building and equipment&#13;
European Failures.&#13;
There have been failures In European&#13;
co-operation also. You cannot&#13;
talk co-operation in Germany long&#13;
with anyone familiar with the general&#13;
situation without having your attention&#13;
called to the fact that co-operation&#13;
has received one black eye. Tears&#13;
ago the government, anxious to aid in&#13;
the marketing of grain, devoted a&#13;
considerable amount of money to the&#13;
erection of elevators or "corn houses,"&#13;
loaning the money to local co-operative&#13;
concerns whose organization it&#13;
fostered and supervising the erection&#13;
in each, case of a rather imposing&#13;
structure. It would seem that the&#13;
government generously tempted the&#13;
promoters to unreasoning extravagance.&#13;
"How could.you expect our&#13;
people to calculate closely when they&#13;
had this heap of. unearned money&#13;
forced upon them?" one man remarked.&#13;
Everything was done on a&#13;
costly scale. The storehouses were&#13;
too big. They were not carefully located.&#13;
Into these concerns crept, also&#13;
a desire to speculate, to corner the&#13;
grain supply, to do in Germany what&#13;
Letter was reported to have done in&#13;
America,—to capture the grain market&#13;
Everyone persuaded himself, it is&#13;
said, that he was going to grow rich&#13;
by appropriating by degrees the&#13;
wealth thus to be gained. They had&#13;
heard that there were great corners&#13;
in the United States, and by buying&#13;
and storing grain men had made enormous&#13;
fortunes. There was fo he gold&#13;
for everyone who wanted it. A careful&#13;
study df the situation has revealed the&#13;
absurdity of the situation. Those who&#13;
controlled the warehouses could not&#13;
control to exceed one-twentieth of the&#13;
•npply of grain grown in Germany&#13;
alone.&#13;
The general concensus of German&#13;
opinion seems to hate been that two&#13;
causes contributed to the failure; first,&#13;
state aid, which seldom really helps&#13;
a co-operative society/ ruined these&#13;
projects by encouraging tba construction&#13;
c* warehousas;which were,either.&#13;
not naaded or which ware bigger thai&#13;
needed; aeoond, the members sonant&#13;
to make money ontof them instead of&#13;
aaing them ajmply to_*rara*&#13;
in aldpping.&#13;
Umk at Ntedar Mabau.&#13;
la UU at a Garaaa vtitaca of soma&#13;
fffrv tnhasjtanta&#13;
V&#13;
the very first they forgot that co-opt**&#13;
atlve credit banks are primarily&#13;
formed to lend money only to those looal&#13;
members who will use it for local&#13;
purposes. They were loo anxiou*&#13;
to get rich quick. By a promise of exceedingly&#13;
high rates of Interest they&#13;
attracted patrons from the most re*&#13;
mote points until there was on deposit&#13;
in this little village co-operative*&#13;
bank almost $1,000,000. Such an&#13;
amount of money was of course far in&#13;
excess of any needs which the members&#13;
themselves might have aa borrowers.&#13;
Consequently the bank began&#13;
to do bjtiiness with outsiders.&#13;
Funds were so plentiful and the demands&#13;
relatively so small thatlt granted&#13;
to its debtors extensive credits. It&#13;
became known that credit could easily&#13;
be obtained at that village bank and&#13;
speculators far and near flocked to it.&#13;
It risked its money in financial&#13;
schemes outside the limits of the vil- ~&#13;
lage.&#13;
The cashier, who had no particular&#13;
fitness for the position, also had charge&#13;
of church funds and other public,&#13;
funds. Besides this, he was conducting&#13;
a large business in a hotel. There&#13;
seems to have been no one on theboard&#13;
of managers of any particular&#13;
business judgment or ability. Even&#13;
integrity was not present, for the cashier&#13;
ended his year with forgery and&#13;
was sent to.prison. It was not surprising,&#13;
therefore, that in December,&#13;
1911, the Nieder Mabau Loans and&#13;
Savings bank was declared insolvent,&#13;
the natural results of undue greed, of&#13;
the spirit of speculation, of incompetence,&#13;
and of dishonesty.&#13;
Co-operative Bank at Darmsted.&#13;
More recently the co-operative agricultural&#13;
bank at Darmsted, formed!&#13;
in 1882, reached a point where it waa&#13;
unable to meet its obligations. Its&#13;
situation was almost the same aa&#13;
that of the Nieder Mabau bank, although&#13;
it operated upon a much larger&#13;
scale. In connection with this bank&#13;
there was also either gross incompetency&#13;
or dishonesty. In one case, for&#13;
example, over a million dollars waa&#13;
invested in a mine that could not beworked.&#13;
Other equally hazardous enterprises&#13;
were financed by this concern&#13;
contrary to all principles of cooperative&#13;
credit and equally contrary&#13;
to all ruleB of sound finance. "Cooperative&#13;
banks are not foolproof,*&#13;
and of course the co-operative bank&#13;
at Darmsted failed.&#13;
Co-operation .may fail even Jn Denmark,&#13;
the country in all Europe most&#13;
completely organized for rural business.&#13;
There a brilliant public man&#13;
got in the good graces of those Interested&#13;
in co-operation and promoted a&#13;
scheme for uniting many co-operative&#13;
societies in one big concern. Hero&#13;
there was not so much incompetence&#13;
aa dishonesty, and the venture ended&#13;
in financial failure for the members—&#13;
and in * Imprisonment for the dishonest&#13;
promoter.&#13;
Causes of Failures in America.&#13;
Co-operative failures so far as America&#13;
is concerned are traceable largely&#13;
to these causes:&#13;
In the first place it has always been,&#13;
difficult for the Amerioan to comprehend&#13;
the fact that co-operative concerns&#13;
are not money making, dividend&#13;
declaring, profit producing concerns.&#13;
They do not seem to realisa1&#13;
that the sole excuse for the existence*&#13;
of the co-operative organisation as a&#13;
middleman 1B in order that a middler&#13;
man's, function may be performed&#13;
without waste and without profit: ,&#13;
In the second place the spirit of&#13;
the American farmer is not sufficient*&#13;
ly unselfish. He has bean operating:&#13;
for so long on the competitive baals&gt;&#13;
that it Is difficult for him to acquire&#13;
a spirit of unselfish loyalty to tbw&#13;
spirit of the organization to which hebelongs.&#13;
If an opportunity presents itself&#13;
under which he can net a profit&#13;
by abandoning the cooperative society&#13;
and dealing with a private dealer,&#13;
he embraces ft at once, without realizing&#13;
that in the end this will ruin his.&#13;
co-operative concern and leave him&#13;
in the hands of the privately owned&#13;
dealer who has been for generations&#13;
working him for large profits.&#13;
In the third place, practically all&#13;
the American concerns which have*&#13;
failed have been organized on the joint&#13;
stock plan. With the voting power&#13;
distributed in proportion to the capital&#13;
Invested It has often occurred&#13;
that the interests of those who were&#13;
in control of the majority of the stock&#13;
were antagonistic to the interests of&#13;
the smaller stockholders, who contributed&#13;
to the success by bringing,&#13;
in a large part of the produce handled&#13;
by the concern. As a result the policy&#13;
of the co-operative concern has&#13;
often ignored the interests of the*&#13;
producer it the concern was a marketing&#13;
one, or tha interests' of the distributee&#13;
if the concern was a distributing&#13;
organiiatioh. . . "\ -&#13;
. In the fourth place, the AmericW&#13;
farmers b * ^ not yet-had a sttffidantly.&#13;
fageeclm tJakm %o realise that ft often&#13;
pajr%,to hneet A cc**idarabie aalary ; ^&#13;
gt * skilled maanger. T^hey hesitata&#13;
to pay a salary which would demand*&#13;
the attention of anyone who had saaU&#13;
etaat experlanoeand skill snoeaaafuQyj .&#13;
to manage tha basinesa. Aa a reauiV&#13;
oe.o*e»tfon hae sn*st»4 ttvm^mt%^&#13;
*&#13;
'&lt;•-., y ••&#13;
V &lt; , «&#13;
.a*-*&#13;
i ^ . " V * -&#13;
" &gt; ' ^ ^ * ^&#13;
^.¾%^&#13;
: • " \ — • • / •&#13;
S*P*tftdi£*&#13;
.•»* **&gt;.,,'»• /.»&lt;»**vji;.v.."rTr*y^|ii.^i' «F*fc* v?7 " ''"r" ^ ¾ ¾ ^ • - r ^ M&lt; • ' '&#13;
fTf?&#13;
/, ! \' v:&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
1&#13;
&lt;A&#13;
V&#13;
^v^v.....&#13;
i i &gt; -&#13;
^ ^ 1 ^ r":&#13;
Governor's&#13;
A Noveliz ation of&#13;
Alice Bradley's Play&#13;
GERTRUDE STEVENSON&#13;
IDustrations from Photographs of the Stage Production&#13;
/&#13;
Qpjytlgtt. IMS. (Publication Blgbta as—rwd) by DmriA Bsl—oo.&#13;
8YNOP8IS.&#13;
1p eDnneinlelssls Bmlaidnee rs utdod ean lmy ilalidovnaanircee s afnrodm b ae- c*»oems*e sw oar lpdo. wHere Ihna sth hei sp eoyliet icoanl tahned g obvuearl--&#13;
^&#13;
lri*ss tcoh ariisre. tHo itsh seim npelwe, choonmdeit-iloonvsi.n gB wlaidfee '[Smtreiectks laKnda,t haenrldn ese, esd ainug hheterr a llo tth aSt eMnaatoryr&#13;
U not&#13;
CHAPTER II—Continued.&#13;
"Oh, I like Washington," she said,&#13;
{bringing herself back to the conversation&#13;
with difficulty.&#13;
Her father, noticing her abstraction,&#13;
remarked indulgently: "She likes&#13;
"Washington, Blade. She likes the&#13;
iBaat, but she doesn't tell it to everybody&#13;
on account of father's votes.&#13;
Now, Slade and I love our western&#13;
.city, eh, Slade?"&#13;
"Well," with some reluctance, "it's&#13;
A good starting point," Slade admitted.&#13;
"Ah!" Katherlne exclaimed, now&#13;
thoroughly herself again. "There'B a&#13;
man for you! He'e not going to let&#13;
a town stand in his way. Mr. Slade,&#13;
'this is father's Waterloo. He's been&#13;
«i great disappointment to me. That's&#13;
the worst of parents. We children&#13;
never know how they're going to turn&#13;
out. If father had only listened to&#13;
me it would have been Washington&#13;
for him—Washington for me. But he&#13;
"wouldn't cross the Delaware. . He&#13;
wouldn't leave the West. If there'd&#13;
only been a drop of Napoleon in father,"&#13;
she concluded with a sudden&#13;
burst of vehemence.&#13;
"Napoleon!" repeated the senator.&#13;
"Yes, Napoleon. He got what be&#13;
'wanted, and nothing ever stood in his&#13;
path. I just love the way he rode&#13;
over poor old Josephine's heart, don't&#13;
iyou?"—and she turned to Slade.&#13;
"But he was right!" she continued,&#13;
earnestly, as if she were making a&#13;
tplea for something that lay very close&#13;
to her own heart. "Why should we&#13;
let anyone hold us back? I wouldn't.&#13;
But mother didn't want to leave the&#13;
West, so father stuck to his town and&#13;
his friends and his state. Now he&#13;
stands in the background and boosts&#13;
other men politically.&#13;
"He wants to boost you," she added,&#13;
suddenly.&#13;
"Letting out secrets," her father accused,&#13;
playfully.&#13;
But Katherlne was never more se-&#13;
Irious. "You're his dark horse," she&#13;
'persisted.&#13;
"You're a lucky man, senator,"&#13;
Blade broke In, aa he watched Katharine&#13;
admiringly. "You're a lucky&#13;
"Go Ahead With Your Paper, I'lt Take&#13;
My Chances."&#13;
man to have a charming young woman&#13;
behind you in the race,"&#13;
"That's all we women are tor," answered&#13;
Katherlne, bitterly, "standing&#13;
i behind soma man and watching him&#13;
do thinga."&#13;
"Why, child alive, yon do things&#13;
[yourself," the senator remonstrated. 4tSb* makes busts, Blade—heads. Done&#13;
some big gone in Europe."&#13;
, Katharine sighed and leaned back&#13;
wearily i n her chair. "Oh, in my&#13;
[feminine way, I model," the admitted.&#13;
"But if there'd been ona drop of Na*&#13;
jpoleon in father I shouldn't have bad&#13;
to fall back oh molding clay, I should&#13;
hav* btdfi molding,*' she hesitated,&#13;
and than finished dariae*Ir. "oolnioat&#13;
*ad people." -&#13;
• C H A r r t * lit.'&#13;
Just how much mora treaty Xathmight&#13;
m m revealed bat alma&#13;
taepftratfo&amp;e, Slade could not&#13;
for at that moment the butler&#13;
pearedend dogate* hhr attention.&#13;
dflooussrtrjr!&#13;
mmmkt^mmm o f (MM WStQI' fWMil&#13;
, crc^d. BITf ^ S SyWoVuB W fpS ^l ee^^™e e.^ ^^^^» M^wwrWW. ^FW^^^ eo^awa^ve^W* tether had a|r« hat Qrf choioe of&#13;
Iff •iiefI 1 | |&#13;
fcfc&#13;
&gt;&lt; •yp-%&#13;
He broke off with a loud, mirthless&#13;
laugh. As well as any man who ever&#13;
lived, he liked to feel the grip of his&#13;
own power. He bad come to the point&#13;
where it was genuine satisfaction to&#13;
humble men and conquer things.&#13;
"Wesley Merritt!" the senator was&#13;
almost too surprised for speech.&#13;
"After his abuse of you in the paper&#13;
today—. And Hunt I How did you&#13;
do it?"&#13;
"This is the sort of thing I like."&#13;
broke in Katherlne, eagerly. "Oh, it's&#13;
so exciting," she declared, her eyes&#13;
glowing with eagerness and animation.&#13;
"Oh, Mr. Slade, how did you make&#13;
them kow-tow?"&#13;
Blade's reply was prevented by the&#13;
brusque, excited entrance of Merritt&#13;
and Hunt. The pair, angry and belligerent,&#13;
strode into the room without&#13;
a word. Merritt, small, wiry, energetic,&#13;
was in the lead, followed closely&#13;
by his, Bhadow and echo, Hunt&#13;
"Is it true?" he demanded angrily,&#13;
before be realized that Slade was not&#13;
alone. "How do you do, senator—&#13;
Miss Strickland!" he exclaimed, in&#13;
surprise. "Lovely home you have, Mr.&#13;
Slade," he added, trying to adjust himself&#13;
to the ecene he had not expected.&#13;
"An astonishing rumor has reached&#13;
us, Mr. Slade," he finally declared, getting&#13;
down to the business of his invasion.&#13;
"It concerns you,, senator. It&#13;
concerns every public-spirited man in&#13;
the city. Is it true, Slade, that you&#13;
have bought up our entire water front&#13;
on which our residences—our old&#13;
homes—the mansions of the city face,&#13;
and that you intend building factories&#13;
there?"&#13;
"Why, yes," Slade admitted, with&#13;
maddening calmness.&#13;
"What?" Strickland almost shouted,&#13;
completely astounded.&#13;
"But—but it can't be done," Merritt&#13;
was BO excited now that he stuttered&#13;
hie words.&#13;
"It can't be done," echoed Hunt. He&#13;
was well paid for being an echo.&#13;
"Our best people live there," protested&#13;
Merritt,&#13;
"I live there," Hunt added, with accumulated&#13;
emphasis.&#13;
"All of us," Merritt continued, "take&#13;
pride in the view along the water&#13;
front. It's damnable. Why, out of&#13;
common decency, man— What do&#13;
you want olfactories, anyway?" he demanded,&#13;
completely angered and out&#13;
of patience.&#13;
Blade's voice was almost a drawl,&#13;
it was so low-pitched and so provoklngly&#13;
calm. "Why didn't you and your&#13;
associate* protect your holdings?" he&#13;
Inquired.&#13;
"How'd we loJow a man with millions&#13;
would come along and buy up&#13;
the whole beach?" Merrltt's wrath&#13;
was getting beyond the control that&#13;
Katharine's presence demanded.&#13;
"Slade, if you persist in this," he&#13;
thundered, 'Tm going to take off my&#13;
coat and hit back. My paper has an&#13;
enormous outside circulation, and I'll&#13;
baste you once every day. If you propose&#13;
running for governor, you won't&#13;
get one vote in your own town. And&#13;
in one month, or less, you'll find San&#13;
Francisco haa a gorgeous climate."&#13;
Slade was unperturbed by Merrltt's&#13;
threats or Merrltt's buUdosing. "All&#13;
right, Merritt," he advised, good-naturedly,&#13;
"go ahead with your paper,&#13;
I'll take my chances."&#13;
"You will, e h r Merrltt's tone was&#13;
ominoui. "What sort of factories are&#13;
you going to build?"&#13;
"Well," drawled Slade, coolly, "I was&#13;
thinking of putting up glue factories!"&#13;
"Glue!" The one word Jumped from&#13;
everyone's mouth at once. "Glue!"&#13;
they all repeated, and looked at each&#13;
other in consternation.&#13;
"The h—l you say," then remembering&#13;
himself. "I beg your pardon, Miss&#13;
Strickland."&#13;
"It can't be done," Merritt went on.&#13;
"Yon can't build glue factories hare,"&#13;
and be emphasised every word with&#13;
an angry shake of bis finger.&#13;
"By God, you—"&#13;
He broke off aa he saw Bob Hayes&#13;
stride into the room. Hayes, as Blade's&#13;
lawyer and almost a member of the&#13;
family, had the entree to thehouee at&#13;
ail times.&#13;
"Berwa my lawyer." remarked Blade,&#13;
dryly, -ask Mm," —&#13;
"Or course It can be done." Hayes&#13;
informed them, conrlantagiy. i r e per*&#13;
feetly leeltimate."&#13;
Then, &lt;aa if to dismiss a perfectly&#13;
obvfcua subject, he turned to the girl,&#13;
who had been enjoying over* point&#13;
that Slade had scored.&#13;
Katherme'i eyes lighted with warm&#13;
It waa the tret time, aba&#13;
him with cordial friendship, but with&#13;
none of the sweet tenderness he might&#13;
have expected from her. Ouce ehe&#13;
had looked up into his eyes and thought&#13;
him a god. Now. her eyes blinded by&#13;
the glare of ambition, she saw only a&#13;
good looking chap, &amp; struggling lawyer,&#13;
a man who hadn't made any particular&#13;
mark in the world. She returned&#13;
Hayes' burning, penetrating&#13;
gaze with cool, unruffled frankness. In&#13;
another moment she had turned from&#13;
him and was earnestly watching Slade,&#13;
listening to his every word with eager&#13;
intentness.&#13;
"You eee, I'm a very simple sort of&#13;
fellow," Slade was saying, "don't drink&#13;
—don't smoke—don't keep yachts or&#13;
horses, don't keep wo-—" he stopped in&#13;
his oft-repeated formula as he remembered&#13;
Katherlne's presence, "don't&#13;
keep horses, so I must do something,&#13;
ae I waa Baying to Mrs. Blade today.&#13;
I don't want to bother my neighbors,&#13;
so I'll build high chimneys, so the&#13;
smoke won't trouble you much. I'm&#13;
going Into the glue business. That is,&#13;
of course," and he paused and surveyed&#13;
the group about him with a complacent&#13;
elevation of his eyebrows,&#13;
"that is, unless you gentlemen can&#13;
keep me busy In some other way. I'm&#13;
a very active man."&#13;
^Katherlne leaned forward with tense&#13;
expression to see how the man's op-&#13;
? "When she was twenty-one and I&#13;
was twenty-four and six feet one inch&#13;
of a western lawyer, just out of the&#13;
woods. How does Mrs. Slade take to&#13;
this governorship business?" he finished,&#13;
abruptly.&#13;
"She dogen'i take to it." Blade's&#13;
voice was hard.&#13;
"I was afraid she wouldn't."&#13;
"Well, noboays going to stand in&#13;
my way." A malignant light showed&#13;
in his eyes.&#13;
"My boy, I'm out to win."&#13;
In spite of the fact that he was in&#13;
full evening attire, he thrust his hands&#13;
into his pockets and almost strutted&#13;
about the room, "I outgeneraled that&#13;
crowd here tonight. By God, I did!&#13;
Do you know—?" He paused in his&#13;
walk and looked down on Hayes' six&#13;
feet sprawled over one of the brocaded&#13;
chairs—"there's just a little drop of&#13;
that fellow—Napoleon Bonaparte—in&#13;
me!"&#13;
"Napoleon Bonaparte got on by&#13;
leaving a woman behind," Hayes returned,&#13;
seriously, refusing to enter into&#13;
Slade's epirlt of self-satisfied good&#13;
humor.&#13;
"You mind your own d—n business,&#13;
Bob," Slade turned on him, suddenly.&#13;
"All right—I'm off to the opera. I&#13;
only meant that Napoleon was a bad&#13;
boy for you to follow, because he&#13;
treated his first wife like a dirty dishrag.&#13;
That's why I'm glad that second&#13;
little Austrian hussy paid him back.&#13;
That's all. I love Mre. Slade. When&#13;
I was sick with fever In your mining&#13;
camp she was a mother to me."&#13;
"Don't forget that I made you,"&#13;
Slade reminded him. "I," and he&#13;
tapped hia chest. "I gave you your&#13;
chance."&#13;
"I don't. All the same I'd hate to&#13;
see you elected, because of Mrs. Slade.&#13;
It seems to be the regular thing, becoming&#13;
universal, for a very successful&#13;
man to leave home the minute he's&#13;
on his feet. Good night."&#13;
"One minute, Bob. You've given me&#13;
a lot of good advice. I'll give you&#13;
some. Are you in love with that girl?"&#13;
"Yes," Hayes grunted; "good night.&#13;
Is that all?"&#13;
"No;" Slade paused, watching Hayes&#13;
through narrowed eyelids. "That girl&#13;
needs a large pie with every one of&#13;
her fingers in it. Bob, I'm sorry for&#13;
you. Your pie isn't big enough."&#13;
"Well—it's my pie. Good night,"&#13;
and he was gone.&#13;
After Hayes had gone, Slade sat, his&#13;
arms resting on the table, staring into&#13;
space. Every now and then the corners&#13;
of his mouth came down and his&#13;
eyes narrowed. He was thinking of&#13;
Katherlne Strickland and Hayes. That&#13;
woman for Hayes! Hayes must be a&#13;
presumptuous pup to ever think of&#13;
winning that queen. Such women were&#13;
meant for the kings of the earth—not&#13;
for their hirelings.&#13;
(TO B E CONTINUED.)&#13;
CANADA'S PLACE&#13;
AS A PRODUCER&#13;
At the snaa withdrew, Bade iineed&#13;
wide hie *r««r and announced gmn-j hadaeen Hayes since she had returned:&#13;
He waa too man eke bad onee&#13;
wanted to marry, once More' her&#13;
&amp;**• •» * •&amp;&amp;*$ tetort $* film&#13;
sUfe*sVteltiret ata&lt;Mllig e*HVes*ste*f tt fo*ft***look lime a*kT&#13;
Daniel Slade.&#13;
ponents would take his game. The&#13;
senator was smiling, Merritt tapping&#13;
his foot restlessly.&#13;
"Well, boys* iLJooks as though _he_&#13;
had us—strong?" Strickland broke the&#13;
silence. "Glue! Whew!"&#13;
"Are we going to be had?" demanded&#13;
Merritt, testily, "are we going to stand&#13;
for this holdup?" and he turned disgustedly&#13;
toward the door.&#13;
"Don't you think we'd better keep&#13;
Mr. Slade busy in some other way,"&#13;
Strickland repeated.&#13;
"I don't," Merritt flung back over&#13;
his shoulder as he left the room, followed,&#13;
as usual, by Hunt.&#13;
Merrltt's hasty departure was the&#13;
signal for Katharine to adjust her&#13;
wraps and remark: "We must be late&#13;
for Tristan."&#13;
Hayes followed her. "I must see yon&#13;
alone, Katherlne. You're still free—&#13;
there's no foreigner on the scene, is&#13;
there, Katherlne?"&#13;
"Bob," Katherlne's voice was sweet&#13;
but firm. "I don't think I shall ever&#13;
marry now—"&#13;
"Oh, nonsense," he protested.&#13;
"No," even more positively. "The&#13;
more I see of men—hut what'e the&#13;
use? There never was but one man&#13;
I could have got on with, and I didn't&#13;
happen to live in his time."&#13;
"Who was the boy?" Hayes asked,&#13;
lightly.&#13;
"Strange," Katherlne replied, pensively,&#13;
"I've just been talking about&#13;
him—Napoleon Bonaparte."&#13;
"Oh, Lord—that fellow." Hayes was&#13;
much relieved. "Can I have tomorrow&#13;
evening?"&#13;
"Yea—If yon—yea—tomorrow evening,&#13;
Bob."&#13;
Her voice lingered a bit on the Bob,&#13;
and with quicks impulsiveness Hayea&#13;
caught her hand and kissed i t&#13;
In another minute she had turned&#13;
to Blade.&#13;
"Oh, Mr. Blade, won't you let me&#13;
make a head of you?"&#13;
"A head of m e r Blade repeated in&#13;
surprise.&#13;
"Thmk It over," Katherlne suggested,&#13;
aa the ond her father went out,&#13;
leaving Hayea and Slade watching her&#13;
proud, graceful figure until it disappeared&#13;
from view.&#13;
Blade looked critically at Hayes tor&#13;
a moment or two after the girl had&#13;
god*&#13;
"OlLnow I remember," be suddenly&#13;
es2Aalm*6\N "TOartw UM^chanahe oare&#13;
^"*SSS^BSSSMejBSJlB*WBB| ^ _ W ^ • W ^BBS^B/, ^B^BPBBgBB*,SB^BBfef. S^SBBTW;™&#13;
NEW DISCOVERY ABOUT ANTS&#13;
Scientist Asserts That the Insects&#13;
Have s Regular Form of Salutation&#13;
Among Themselves.&#13;
Ants have long been known for their&#13;
excessive industry, but from a curious&#13;
communication" which has just appeared&#13;
they seem to have surpassed&#13;
all other insects by organising an&#13;
elaborate system of signaling.&#13;
Professor Bugnion, who has recently&#13;
investigated the habits of the white&#13;
ant. reports that the "soldiers" of that&#13;
species give warnings or encouraging&#13;
signals by knocking with their Jaws&#13;
upon dry leaves, thereby emitting a&#13;
crackling sound. Placing some of&#13;
these ants on a big plate and covering&#13;
it with paper, he found that the "soldiers"&#13;
among the ants responded to&#13;
his taps with a rustling, crackling&#13;
sound.&#13;
Moreover, apart from this audible&#13;
signaling, there appears to be some&#13;
inaudible form of signal, for the professor&#13;
asserts that the "soldier" ants&#13;
salute the worker ants.&#13;
To do this, "the Insect stands firmly&#13;
on its legs with the head raised and&#13;
the body slightly oblique, and shakes&#13;
itself for an instant with a convulsive&#13;
shudder. This seems to mean some&#13;
thing."&#13;
On Record for Comfort.&#13;
Cecil Rhodes was -not much of a&#13;
dresser. When premier of Cape Colony,&#13;
he usually wore a flannel suit, which&#13;
badly wanted cleaning, and a dilapidated&#13;
slonch h a t His sucoessor In&#13;
office, Sir Gordon Sprigg, who wore&#13;
a black frock coat even in the hottest&#13;
weather, once made an effort to enforce&#13;
the wearing of "respectable"&#13;
dark clothes in the Cape parliament&#13;
But Rhodes would not have i t He&#13;
said i n parliament that if he could&#13;
not help to legislate in comfortable&#13;
clothes he would not help at all, and&#13;
he thought the members would agree&#13;
with him. They did.&#13;
Canada Is Getting a Great Many&#13;
Americans. ,&#13;
' * -4&#13;
"Three young provinces, Manitoba,&#13;
Saskatchewan, and Alberta," says a&#13;
New York financial journal, "have already&#13;
made Winnipeg one of the greatest&#13;
primary wheat markets of the&#13;
world. Iu 1904 they raised 58,000,000&#13;
bushels of wheat. Five years later&#13;
they produced 150,000,000 bu.sb.elB. In&#13;
1913 the crop approximated 200,000,-&#13;
000 bushels. At the present rate of&#13;
progress Canada must eoon pass&#13;
France and India, and stand third in&#13;
the line of wheat producers. Ultimately&#13;
It will dispute with Russia and&#13;
the United States for the first position.&#13;
Wheat has been the pioneer of our&#13;
development Undoubtedly it will&#13;
prove the same with Canada. In the&#13;
last calendar year our trade with Canada&#13;
amounted to 497 million dollars.&#13;
Only with two countries—the United&#13;
Kingdom and Germany—is our trade&#13;
greater. No vivid imagination is&#13;
needed to see what the future development&#13;
of Canada means to the&#13;
people of the United States.&#13;
The influx of American settlers to&#13;
the Canadian prairies is now in full&#13;
swing. Within the past few days&#13;
over 80 of those arrived at Bassano&#13;
carrying with them effectB and capital&#13;
to the value of $100,000. Fifty settlers&#13;
from Oregon arrived in Alberta a iew&#13;
days ago; while 15 families of settlers&#13;
from the state of Colorado arrived at&#13;
Calgary on their journey northwards.&#13;
The goods and personal effects of this&#13;
party filled 20 box cars. Of live stock&#13;
alone they had 175 horses, 15 cows&#13;
and 2,000 head of poultry. Another&#13;
class of settler has arrived at Peers,&#13;
110 miles west of Edmonton, where no&#13;
fewer than 200 German farmers have&#13;
taken up land. These are from good&#13;
farming families and brought with&#13;
them a large amount of capital.&#13;
Then in South Wee tern Saskatchewan,&#13;
there are large numbers settling,&#13;
these from the United States predominating,&#13;
while in the northern and central&#13;
portions of all these provinces,&#13;
the settlement of new people ie going&#13;
on steadily. Early in April, Peter&#13;
Goertz arrived in Cardiff after a sixday&#13;
journey from McPherson, Kansas.&#13;
Mr. Goertz. who had purchased land&#13;
here was in charge of a party of 38&#13;
people from the same part of Kansas&#13;
and they came through with a special&#13;
train which included all their stock&#13;
and implements. The equipment was&#13;
all Rock Island cars, and was the first&#13;
full immigrant train ever sent out by&#13;
that railroad. The farrne purchased&#13;
by the members of the party are&#13;
amongst the best in the district.&#13;
When the Panama exposition opens&#13;
next year any of the three transcontinental&#13;
lines in Canada will make&#13;
convenient means of transport for&#13;
those going to visit, and in doing&#13;
so agricultural districts of Western&#13;
Canada can be seen, and ocular demonstration&#13;
given thoee who have heard&#13;
but not before seen, of that which haa&#13;
attracted BO many hundreds of thousands&#13;
of American settlers.—Advertisement&#13;
*&#13;
Weight of Inch of Rainfall.&#13;
AA Inch of rainfall is the equivalent&#13;
of SOI barrels of 45 gallons each&#13;
to the acre. This amount of water&#13;
weighs over one hundred and thirteen&#13;
tone. Think of haulmg it to the&#13;
farms in wagons holding a ten each;&#13;
that seemingly light air and clouds&#13;
are capable of handling this eoormoup&#13;
amount of water Is on* of the marvels&#13;
of nieteoralogy.. One inch of ralu it&#13;
not such a heavy rainfall either.-*&#13;
ftsmas^JIreaHo .&gt;";'&lt; " * ;.V&#13;
The Inference.&#13;
"Are you a policeman?" asked one&#13;
paying guest of another at a charity&#13;
picnic dinner.&#13;
"No," said the other. "Why do you&#13;
ask?"&#13;
"Merely, that I noticed," said the&#13;
first speaker, glancing at the section&#13;
of fried chicken in the other's fingers,&#13;
"that you are pulling a tough&#13;
joint."&#13;
Wants to See Things.&#13;
"Poor old Jagbsby is off the water&#13;
wagon again."&#13;
"I can't help admiring his frankness,&#13;
though."&#13;
"He doesn't try to excuse himself?"&#13;
"No. He merely says he prefers a&#13;
scenic route."—Baltimore Sun.&#13;
The Button Doctor.&#13;
During the short seven years of her&#13;
life, little Florence Louise had become&#13;
duly Impressed with the prevalence&#13;
of specialists in the medical profession.&#13;
One day, after returning from a visit&#13;
to a small playmate, she calmly announced:&#13;
"Rena swallowed a button."&#13;
"Are you worried about her?" she&#13;
was asked.&#13;
"Oh, she will get along all r i g h t "&#13;
Florence Louise complacently replied.&#13;
"They sent for a regular button doctor."—&#13;
Judge.&#13;
support&#13;
Limited Intentions.&#13;
"How do you propose to&#13;
my daughter, sir?"&#13;
"I didnt propose to her to support&#13;
her at all. I only pTepbeea* to her to&#13;
marry me."—Rehoboth Sunday Her&gt;&#13;
aid.&#13;
I&#13;
Proving the Pwieli.&#13;
Skids—You think his story hat e&gt;?.&#13;
real punch to it? ^-&#13;
• Skittles Sure thing! You ought to ;&#13;
save see* the way It pnt n» tftsjsoj) ^&#13;
i. **&#13;
ml&#13;
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• ' • &lt; • * &gt; . ;&#13;
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'iO SVFFKRBRG&#13;
Swamson Rheumatic Cure Co..&#13;
iM.lMW.UIw»UCHICAaO ^&#13;
Indigestion Can's Eat? No Appetite?&#13;
A treatment of Electric Bitters increases&#13;
your appetite; stops indigestion; you can&#13;
eat anything. A real spring tonic tor liver&#13;
kidney and stomach troubles, Cleauess&#13;
your whole system and vou feel fine.&#13;
Electric Bitters'did more for Mr. T. D.&#13;
Peeble's stomach troubles than any medicine&#13;
he ever tried. Get a bottle today, 50c&#13;
and $1.00. Recommended by C. G.&#13;
Meyers, the druggist.&#13;
The Board of Review of tbe&#13;
Township of Putnam will meet at&#13;
Town Hall in the village of Pinckney,&#13;
on Tuesday and Wednesday,&#13;
June 8-9, 1914, for the purpose of&#13;
reviewing the assessment roll of&#13;
said township and to transact any&#13;
other business that may come before&#13;
the Board. Jas. M. Harris&#13;
Supervisor&#13;
Keep Bowel Movement Regular&#13;
Dr. King's New Life Pills keep stomach&#13;
liver and kidneys in healthy condition.&#13;
Rid the body of poisons and waste. Im-&#13;
(&gt;rove your complexion by flushing the&#13;
iver and kidneys. "I got more relief&#13;
from one box of Or. King's New Life Pills&#13;
than any medicine I ever tried," suvs C.&#13;
E. Hatfield, of Chicago, 111. 25c. " Rect&#13;
mmended by, C. G, Meyers,, the drug^is-&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Mrs. L. £ . Howlett of Howell&#13;
visited her parents Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
A. G. Wilson Thursday.&#13;
Roche McCIear closed a very&#13;
successful year of school in the&#13;
Green district Friday. The children&#13;
were treated to ice cream and&#13;
cake then followed a very interesting&#13;
ball game between the boys&#13;
of that school and a Gregory team.&#13;
Frankie Placeway returned to&#13;
her work, in Ann Arbor Thursday&#13;
after a few days visit with her&#13;
mother here.&#13;
J. Sider sold forty-five young&#13;
chicks to Jae. Stackable of Gregory&#13;
last week.&#13;
Dr. MacLaughlin of Detroit&#13;
was a guest at the Schrotzberger&#13;
home over Sunday.&#13;
Mra. Art LaRowe and daughter&#13;
returned Sunday from a two weeks&#13;
visit with her parents at Howell.&#13;
Eliza Hanes spent a part of last&#13;
week with Chilson friends.&#13;
E. T. McCIear *and family entertained&#13;
Jas, Stackable and wife&#13;
for dinner Sunday.&#13;
Margaret Greiner is visiting relatives&#13;
in Detroit.&#13;
R. M. Ledwidge and family&#13;
spent Sunday at C. Brogan'a of&#13;
S. Marion.&#13;
Chester W o o i is a guest of&#13;
Miss Lucia Hinchey.&#13;
Liam Ledwidge of Jackson&#13;
spent the week end with his&#13;
people here.&#13;
Catherine Driver was the recipient&#13;
of a pretty May basket&#13;
Monday evening.&#13;
i m&#13;
If you need a graduation gift,&#13;
you'll save money at the auction&#13;
eale at RieckhofFs jewelry store,&#13;
Howell. adv.&#13;
The Sum and&#13;
Substance&#13;
of being a subscriber to this&#13;
paper is that you and your&#13;
family become attached to&#13;
it The paper becomes a&#13;
member of the family and&#13;
its coming each week will&#13;
be as welcome as the arrival&#13;
of anyone that's dear.&#13;
It will keep you inJbctned on&#13;
the doings of the community and&#13;
the bargains of the merchants&#13;
regularly advertised will enable&#13;
you to save many times the cost&#13;
of the subscription.&#13;
Veronica Brogan spent Sunday,&#13;
at Chilson.&#13;
Alger Hall spent Wednesday in&#13;
Howell.&#13;
Mary Lynch spent the first of&#13;
the week with Mrs. R, Merrills of&#13;
Hamburg.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Seydam returned to&#13;
her home at Detroit after spending&#13;
the past few weeks with relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
A nice program has been arranged&#13;
for Decoration Day at&#13;
Stockbridge. Also two base ball&#13;
games.&#13;
The Knox-Harris Packing Co.&#13;
of Jackson began work on their&#13;
plant here yesterday morning and&#13;
will haye the some completed by&#13;
July 15. Over 100 acres have been&#13;
secured by them in this vicinity.&#13;
The prices this season are as follows:&#13;
$1.50 per 100 lbs. for No. 1;&#13;
50c per 100 lbs. for No. 2 and 30c&#13;
for culls. Anyone desiring cortracts&#13;
should consult N. P. Mortenson.&#13;
..^-*4#:,-&#13;
'W.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
,://,.&#13;
' • * • *&#13;
A t t ^ O - v O ^ ^&#13;
'THE CENTRAL'&#13;
We are suffering from a fractured rib or two, but that&#13;
don't cut much ice after all; the only thing that counts is to&#13;
keep moving, even if it does hurt.&#13;
For this week we are offering 42 in. embroidered flouncing&#13;
the regular $1. kind for 75 cts. per yard. We realize&#13;
that this is a bargain and we want you to realize it too, for&#13;
now i s the time you Leed nice cool dresses.&#13;
We also have An extra fine embroidery i n a narrower&#13;
width, price 85 cts., and it i s a beauty.&#13;
Did yon kuow we kept hair switches? Real hair, and&#13;
nearly a yard long, the kind they would ask $10. or $12. for&#13;
in the city; we ask $5. and they are dandy. ' v&#13;
Shoes for women and children and E l k akin shoes for&#13;
men. : a&#13;
A full supply of dress goods and trimmings.&#13;
Our stock of hats is good yet and the prices are lower.&#13;
tit«a*rer.&#13;
Ckoceriet, candies, tobacco. Plenty of potatoes.&#13;
:*, :M. Utiey, Prop*&#13;
• • » • &lt;,&#13;
v /&#13;
,'.^&amp;L-&#13;
• ? . • &gt; - , ' . '•••','&#13;
We Show Some Suits at&#13;
$15.00&#13;
that are positively inimitable. The&#13;
styles are the very best, and the weaves&#13;
and shades are those most favored this&#13;
season.&#13;
Get You&gt; Suit FOP&#13;
DECORATION DAY&#13;
From This Assortment&#13;
W. J. DANCER &amp; COMPANY&#13;
Stockbridge, Mich.&#13;
We close Saturday from one to five o'clock, but will be i&#13;
shape to- care for all your needs between the time the trai&#13;
comes and one o'clock.&#13;
c° rcPT-cP;&#13;
I&#13;
#&#13;
§&#13;
*&#13;
AUCTION SALE!&#13;
COMMENCING&#13;
Saturday Evening May 3 0&#13;
AT 7:00 O'CLOCK&#13;
I will hold an auction sale every afternoon and evening until ray stock has&#13;
been reduced. Afternoon sale commences at 2:30 o'clock. Evening sale commences&#13;
at 7:00 o'clock. My purpose for putting on this sale is to turn*a&#13;
part of the immense stock I carry into ready money so that I can pay spot&#13;
cash for holiday goods and re-arrange ray store.&#13;
Remember I have one of the most exclusive stores in Livingston County&#13;
Consisting of Watches, Diamonds,, Cut&#13;
Glass, Sterling Silver, Solid Gold Kings,&#13;
E t c , Etc.&#13;
Every article sold at auction will be guaranteed just the same as though&#13;
bought in the regular retail way. Kindly remember that I am not going out&#13;
of business, and will stand back of everything sold.&#13;
A grand opportunity to buy graduating gifts, and holiday presents at your&#13;
own price. Positively nothing sold at private sale. A beautiful present will&#13;
be given away at every sale.&#13;
This sale will be under t h e management of b . He Dodd&#13;
' and T. J . Faussett, of Chicago, lilt&#13;
Chairs will be furnished for the ladies.&#13;
r&#13;
o&#13;
m^&#13;
• T " &gt;&#13;
•*8'&#13;
L» R I B C K H O F F , Jeweler&#13;
Howell, Mich.&#13;
&lt;&lt;8.'.&lt;8±.&lt;8l&#13;
Child Crest? Fmriih? Sick?&#13;
A cross, peevish, listless child, with&#13;
coated tongue, pale, doesn't sleep; eats&#13;
sometimes very little, then again ravenously:&#13;
stomach soar: breath fetid; pains hi&#13;
stomach, with diarrhea; grinds teeth while&#13;
asleep, and starts up with terror— all sag*&#13;
gest a Worm killer—somethtng that expels&#13;
Worm*, and almost every child has them&#13;
Kiefcapoo Worm Killer is needed. Get a&#13;
hoi .today. Start at once. Yon won't&#13;
here to cot*» at Kickagw Worm Killer is&#13;
aoendy confection. Expels the worms,&#13;
the oaote of your child's trouble. 25e.&#13;
Recommended by C. Q. hfeyer, the droggiet,&#13;
.' x. ' - • • H&#13;
OTATE OF MICH1UA2I, tta» ifobate Court Joi&#13;
County of Llrlngttba,&#13;
«t • session of said conn tmo M tu&gt; probate&#13;
Ottee in-theVillafs of BowetHasaid Count, oa&#13;
tbs 18th day of May, A. D. ISM&#13;
Pressnt, Hon. Jcoffsn* A. *tewe, Judge o&#13;
Probsts. In toejnattsr of the estate ol&#13;
v ' ELIZABETH SFEAfttf, Dtesaesd&#13;
John Spears having Med la said oonrt hU&#13;
final eceoiM aeadaunfetrater of efcid &lt;«*to MKI&#13;
GMffhaa far Three Tetri&#13;
"l a m .* tey«" of your godsend to bom a p.&#13;
2-^1:51¾1^ "«r* mtdWii't. "Dr.&#13;
"f. ^ 1 ¾ ¾ ^r^HL fc* tb« •nowaaes&#13;
At .I tp . ls1_«C«W. aot rt#ead ,o "'cflohc*kt Itnh tsh el ifUrn ideaoye i&lt;&#13;
• &gt; , ( &gt; ' •&#13;
jieMjto treataeat? Get a 50c M e T e f&#13;
^ *_ -s. - *fe*ciook in the foiiaeoa, MellTlvr* Ktof'ejfeei DtaooTerr «to«dav. Whit&#13;
P tanlalnftnd allowiai&#13;
irewesks prevtoos to self day e l enoft&gt; asa^ be. It stops a eoogh aod etowa&#13;
m&#13;
'+-.,&#13;
• •H\ t-i w.7 'i'r': ' •*'&#13;
•''-if S * •;&#13;
•••*• :' '.:•£{'•&#13;
&gt;• m&#13;
i^:&#13;
' V . . • ' . ' •</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch May 28, 1914</text>
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                <text>May 28, 1914 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1914-05-28</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, June 4, 1914 No. 33&#13;
Local News&#13;
NSfii&#13;
. rv*"'&#13;
•mi&#13;
i+J&#13;
^W-*^W&#13;
Anna Brogan of Howell spent&#13;
Sunday here.&#13;
Pr. Coyle was in North field one&#13;
day last week,&#13;
Mtas Nellie Gardner spent Monday&#13;
in Detroft.&#13;
Special values now in ladies&#13;
coata at Dancer's. adv.&#13;
J as. Morgan "of Detroit spent&#13;
last Friday*here.&#13;
Miss ''Alice Roche is visiting&#13;
relatives in,Detroit.&#13;
Will Brogau of Howell called&#13;
on Pjackney friends Sunday.&#13;
Miss Mae Teeple is visiting&#13;
friends at Haverhill, Mass.&#13;
'Helen Monks spent last Saturdny&#13;
with friends in Stockbridge.&#13;
Pr. Haley of "Dexter was a&#13;
Pinckney visitor one day last&#13;
we&lt;?k.&#13;
M. J. Fitzsimmons and family&#13;
of Jackson visited relatives here&#13;
the past week.&#13;
Jas. Smith, I. J. Kepnedy, Paul&#13;
Miller attended the races in Ann&#13;
Arbor Saturday.&#13;
Beulah Morton of Bay City&#13;
•pent the past week at the home&#13;
of Mark Allison.&#13;
Geo. Leoffler and family of 4nn&#13;
Arbor were over Sunday guests at&#13;
the .home of J. Bowers.&#13;
Kathleen Hackett of Detroit&#13;
spent the first of the week at the&#13;
home of John Dinkel.&#13;
We might advocate war if we&#13;
ought some men we know would&#13;
Bfe'^lunteer and go to the front.&#13;
Kirk Van Winkle aud family of&#13;
Lansing spent Decoration Day at&#13;
the home of C. V. Van Winkle.&#13;
Mark Bergin of Howell and&#13;
nee Pay of Detroit were&#13;
ney visitors Sunday after-&#13;
. ¾ ; j&#13;
* t \ .&#13;
• . ^ ; vj&gt;&#13;
.* &lt; * &amp; • •4&#13;
.TV &lt;••• -J:&#13;
Walter and Helen Reason, Mary&#13;
Lynch and Grace Pierce spent&#13;
Sunday afternoon at Whitmore&#13;
Lake.&#13;
Adolph Neynaber, wife and&#13;
daughter of Detroit spent the&#13;
week end at the home of Will&#13;
Donning.&#13;
The regular meeting of the O.&#13;
E. S. occurs Friday evening June&#13;
5th at 7:30 sharp. A good attendance&#13;
is desired.&#13;
&gt; Ed. Osterhout and daughter and&#13;
Frank Montreg and son- of Deerfield&#13;
spent Sanday at the home of&#13;
Ed. BreningstaH.&#13;
George Green and wife and&#13;
Mrs. Howard Pratt of Howell&#13;
were Pinckney callers Thursday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
Fred Grieves and family of&#13;
Stockbridge and Clayton Placeway&#13;
and family of this place were&#13;
Ipsilanti visitors Sanday.&#13;
Edward V*/&gt;Horn, Harold&#13;
Swartliout and Ciande Kennedy&#13;
spent .Wednesday night and&#13;
Thursday morning in Howell.&#13;
Must be tint "Peg C My Heart"&#13;
is still « drawing card in that&#13;
,lgf*V J6ow about it, boys?&#13;
The editor of *b» Brighton Arigfaft&#13;
it bragging ~*boofc tjie tindertaker&#13;
of ikajt barg4iivinfr;sb much&#13;
wotkJ#4o, gstting three calls in-&#13;
Leo Coyle of Jackson spent&#13;
last Thursday hore.&#13;
Morrico Darrow and wife spent&#13;
Sunday with relatives in Howell.&#13;
Maggie Anderson of near Howell&#13;
visited friends here Monday.&#13;
Mrs. B. D. Grieves spent last&#13;
Saturday with relatives in Stockbridge.&#13;
Gov. Ferris has issued a proclamation&#13;
designating Sunday,&#13;
June 15th, as Flag Day.&#13;
A girl doesn't think any color&#13;
is pretty unless she bas to doctor&#13;
her complexion in order to make&#13;
it match.&#13;
Stephen Blades of Detroit spent&#13;
the first of the week at the home&#13;
of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Will&#13;
Blades. •&#13;
Mrs. S. H. Carr and dapghters&#13;
Aggie and Dorothy visited relatives&#13;
in Detroit, Farmington and&#13;
Redford the past week.&#13;
Mrs. Thos. Hewlett, Mrs. Howard&#13;
Marshall and Miss Mary Howlett&#13;
of Gregory visited at the&#13;
home of H. D. Grieves one day&#13;
last week.&#13;
The Board of Review of the&#13;
Township of Putnam will meet at&#13;
Town Hall in the village of Pinckney,&#13;
on Tuesday and Wednesday,&#13;
June 8-9, 1914, for the purpose of&#13;
reviewing the assessment roll of&#13;
said township and to transact any&#13;
other business that may come before&#13;
the Board. Jam M. Harris&#13;
fleym JBor&#13;
Albert B.&#13;
Albert B. Green was born in&#13;
Greece, Monroe county, N. Y.,&#13;
May 22,1828. Hs was married-at&#13;
Warsow, N. Y., in August, 1850,&#13;
to Miss Florilla G. Fargo. About&#13;
the year 1866 they moved to Michigan&#13;
and since 1871 have been residents&#13;
of Pinckney.&#13;
Mr, Green was unusually active&#13;
for a man of his years until the&#13;
autumn of 1912, since when he&#13;
has been in failing health. The&#13;
end came May 28, 1914, just one&#13;
week after the remains of his beloved&#13;
companion were laid to rest.&#13;
He left surviving him, one sister,&#13;
Mrs. Emily Patric of Newark,&#13;
Mich., seven children,eeven grandchildren&#13;
and three great grandchildren.&#13;
Mr. Green was a man&#13;
of integrity and held iu high esteem&#13;
by a large circle of friends.&#13;
He was for many years a member&#13;
of the M. E. church. He has lived&#13;
a long life of svrvice to others&#13;
and is now at rest.&#13;
The funeral services were held&#13;
at the late residence Saturday&#13;
afternoon, conducted by Mr.&#13;
Green's son-in-law, Rev. E. H.&#13;
Vail, of Homer, Rev. Ostrahder&#13;
assisting,&#13;
CARD OF THANKS&#13;
The family wish to express sincere&#13;
thanks to all friends who&#13;
rendered assistance and expressed&#13;
their sympathy in connection with&#13;
the sickness and death of their&#13;
parents.&#13;
S'lAhJU. hBt'&#13;
cubiyuX.-WAS/ a/yofL&#13;
aftfeasss 2JSS&#13;
You may LOOK for me every week right here in&#13;
this newspaper. You'll SEE me too.&#13;
I'm glad to work for my drug store. They give&#13;
you what you ASK for and fill prescriptions RIGHT.&#13;
Read what I have to say. Til tell you the news&#13;
every week about my drug store.&#13;
We give you what you ASK for.&#13;
C. G. M B Y B R - '&#13;
P i n c k n e y , Mich. P h o n e 5 5 r 3&#13;
Nyal S^orc of Q u k ] i $&#13;
v.&gt;&#13;
&lt;N&lt; Face Powder&#13;
Every lady wants to luiop.fthat.ani&#13;
face powder she uses is absolutely-ftee&#13;
from harmful ingredients. When yon&#13;
purchase NYLOTIS you are assar.ej of&#13;
all that the above implies. To introduce&#13;
it we are going to give ybu FREE&#13;
a face chamois with every box.&#13;
All Shades 25c&#13;
.ra&#13;
Toilet Waters -:*?&#13;
If I were to carry in stock all toilet&#13;
waters manufactured, I wouldn't ha^ve;&#13;
room for anything else. I have selected&#13;
the most popular of the American&#13;
and imported toilet waters and am sure&#13;
I can please you.&#13;
25c to $1,00&#13;
Face Cream Soap&#13;
If you rjeally want a pure soap, one&#13;
that is composed of the best vegetable&#13;
oils obtainable and has only sufficient&#13;
alkali to be freely soluble in hard water,&#13;
try a cake of Face Cream Soap. It&#13;
leaves the face as velvety and healthy&#13;
as a baby's.&#13;
25 the Cake&#13;
nth,' i'&#13;
If I do not have in stock what&#13;
you want I will be glad to get It&#13;
for YOU regardless of the cost to&#13;
me.&#13;
•'A•Vt*&#13;
. J * ~&#13;
"rim&#13;
and another oati the nex\ day 'for&#13;
his sewkses. ^h% preacher also&#13;
comes nn lor some extra work too*&#13;
What per eentio the doctors get&#13;
for their share? They should at&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Geo. Fitzsimmons of Jackson&#13;
was the guest of his mother over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Frank Hanes aud daughters&#13;
Margaret and Cynthia spent Friday&#13;
in Stockbridge.&#13;
Clare Ledwidge aud WilljRoche&#13;
visited friends in White Oak Saturday&#13;
and Sunday.&#13;
Jas. Eaman of Detroit was a&#13;
week end visitor at the home of&#13;
Jas. Marble.&#13;
Mrs. C. Brogan of S. Marion&#13;
visited at the home of R. M. Ledwidge&#13;
the latter part of last week.&#13;
Mrs. Hattie Hod of Lansing&#13;
and son Rob of Detroit were week&#13;
end visitors of Mrs. Alice Hoff.&#13;
Andrew Greiner of Jackson was&#13;
home over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs* Max Ledwidge and daughters&#13;
Justine and Raymonda were&#13;
entertained by Miss Ella Black at&#13;
her home in Piuckney Monday.&#13;
Veronica Brogan visited G. M,&#13;
Greiner's family Monday night.&#13;
Phillip Sprout aud Ethel Cantrell&#13;
of Stockbridge were usited&#13;
in marriage at Howell last Tuesday.&#13;
The happy couple have the&#13;
congratulations and best wishes&#13;
of a large circle of friends. They&#13;
will reside on the E. A. Sprout&#13;
farm here.&#13;
Clare Ledwidge and Veronica&#13;
Brogan each closed a successful&#13;
year of school here this week, the&#13;
former in the Eaman district on&#13;
Tuesday, the latter in the Sprout&#13;
on Wednesday.&#13;
Ferris Smith of Marion visited&#13;
Roche McClear the latter part of&#13;
last week.&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
FOR SALE-No. 1 Timothy H»y 0&#13;
2311* G. W. Clark, Pinckn.r&#13;
FARM FOR SALE OR RENT—38 acres&#13;
on road-just north of the Kice farm on&#13;
Section 7. James A. Gallagher, 1569&#13;
We»t Grand Blvd., Detroit, Mich. 19tf&#13;
Dancer's, Stockbridge, is the&#13;
place to buy young mens clothes*&#13;
adv.&#13;
FOR SALE—Two family brick veneer&#13;
flat in a nae neighborhood just off of&#13;
Woodware Ave., Detroit. Pays 10 per&#13;
cent. Wm. L. Wood, P. O. box No. 2,&#13;
Ann Arbor, Mich. 21tl*&#13;
i i . i i i • • • • " • • i • • —&#13;
The Board of Review are at&#13;
work on the Township Assessment&#13;
Roll placing all property at&#13;
what they consider cash value.&#13;
Anyone wishing to know at what&#13;
their property has b»ran placed&#13;
shonld call at the Town Hall Monday&#13;
or Tuesday, June 8 and 9 aud&#13;
talk it over with the Board.&#13;
%M«SftS»»%%»%%%»»»»»iA%S»tA»»»^%S* Q J - Q 1 ©&#13;
JACKSON&#13;
fl.&#13;
= = = = = = HEADQUARTERS FOR&#13;
Groceries - Dry Goods - Shoes V* Furnishings&#13;
l»ar&amp;e»t Stock fljg Pfjpp. fiHtlr Lowest Price*&#13;
••it-&#13;
*&#13;
*-&#13;
*' *.i&#13;
?&#13;
Attention Farmers 1&#13;
Anyone wishing to procure&#13;
Marl for, soil building purposes 3S3^;s&amp;&gt;r£r£ **+&gt;» - ¾ ^ ¾ ^ cubic yard. Why pay $2.50 for&#13;
Lime when Marl has ptovjsa equal&#13;
or^nperior* Chemical analysis on&#13;
request. adv.&#13;
:.* ;„• PBID T U P L E&#13;
Our Grocery Specials For Cash S*, »,'*/!&#13;
*':'':t.&#13;
3fl&#13;
Make it Expensive For You to Trade Elsewhere&#13;
Ivory Soap, 7 bap&#13;
Com P lakes, 6 pk^s.&#13;
Nero Goffec for&#13;
25 lbs. H. fit 5. Sugar ^1.14&#13;
8 pounds Rolled Oats for 25c&#13;
Bargain M&gt;--V;&#13;
:•;*:.*. inOddssHli&#13;
kXi,&#13;
* ;&#13;
^•T ' &gt; J&#13;
•* &lt;j&#13;
.••••/••fil&#13;
Ate: * i&#13;
.^te&#13;
Stosk&#13;
^-\„H»'»&#13;
. * * J V»'\.*.:';&#13;
Sri&#13;
/A;.&#13;
.3-''. %'--: n. . • • « t s -&#13;
• • ' * .&#13;
'-X '&lt;?&gt;+.•*&gt;. . . * , •&#13;
Mm*&#13;
m&#13;
^"^vmrtmm mm^trmmmmmm • • M npiw^pwwp*-*. &gt;&#13;
/&#13;
^&#13;
. .'.'V... -*-'• 1.- '.,.' .-.»»:' ,»i •-*" &lt; « 4 ^ ' &gt; -r „- ..,.&#13;
PINCKNEY [)ISPATCH&#13;
*#&#13;
fe '•'*&#13;
• . » . -&#13;
1 •*' *&#13;
&gt;•-• - , 5 , -&#13;
• 'V'" ;&#13;
m '&#13;
^-¾ • • • ; , - , , , r ' • /&#13;
•»v.^.&#13;
STORSTAD COMES&#13;
INTO THE HARBOR&#13;
COLLIER T H A T COLLIDES W I T H&#13;
EMPRESS OF IRELAND UNDER&#13;
ARREST.&#13;
CAPTAIN GIVES HIS STORY&#13;
Deniea Charges Made By Commander&#13;
of the Lost Ship—Tried to Locate&#13;
Empress After Shock&#13;
But Could Not Do So.&#13;
Montreal—With her bow crumpled&#13;
and twisted around at an ascute angle&#13;
to port, and a gap showing on the&#13;
port side only a foot or so above the&#13;
water line, in mute evidence of the&#13;
tragedy in which she figured, the Norwegian&#13;
collier Storstad limped into&#13;
the harbor early Sunday afternoon. A&#13;
few minutes later a warrant of arrest,&#13;
taken out by the Canadian Pacific&#13;
railway, was nailed to her main mast&#13;
by order of W. Simpson Walker, K.&#13;
C, registrar of the Quebec admiralty.&#13;
The officers and men bore traces&#13;
of their harrowing experiences. When&#13;
questioned on "the subject of the disaster,&#13;
they were averse to entering&#13;
into conversation.&#13;
Capt. Anderson declined at first to&#13;
discuss the disaster, declaring he&#13;
would make a statement later in the&#13;
evening. Subsequently, a statement&#13;
based on Capt. Anderson's report, as&#13;
•well as the reports of other officers,&#13;
to Messrs. Lange and Griffin, was given&#13;
out.&#13;
According to the captain and officers,&#13;
contrary to what has been stated&#13;
by the captain of the Empress of&#13;
Ireland, the Storstad did not back&#13;
away after the collision, but steamed&#13;
ahead in an effort to keep her bow&#13;
In the hole she had dug into the side&#13;
of the Empress.&#13;
The Empress, however, according to&#13;
the Storstad's officers, headed away&#13;
and bent the Storstad's bow over at&#13;
an acute angle to port. After that&#13;
the Empress was hidden from the&#13;
view of the Storstad and, despite the&#13;
fact that the Storstad kept her whistle&#13;
blowing, she could not locate the Empress&#13;
until the cries of some of the&#13;
victims in the water were heard.&#13;
Capt. Anderson absolutely denied he&#13;
moved a mile or so away from the&#13;
liner. The Storstad had not moved.&#13;
It was the Empress which had&#13;
changed position, he declared.&#13;
MEETING OF MAIL CARRIERS&#13;
Officers Elected at Convention at&#13;
. West Branch.&#13;
West Branch, Mich.—The tenth annual&#13;
convention of the Northeastern&#13;
Rural Carriers' association closed a&#13;
successful convention here Saturday.&#13;
There were carriers present from Bay&#13;
City north to the straits. Nearly&#13;
three times the number of delegates&#13;
present at any other convention in&#13;
its history attended. Otto Hazenbuhier,&#13;
of Detroit, ex-prosecutor; S.&#13;
E. Hayes, of Standish, and Judge&#13;
Sharpe, of West Branch, were speakers.&#13;
The following officers were elected&#13;
for the ensuing year: President, A.&#13;
D. Hammond, Turner; vice-president,&#13;
Prank Carroll, Omer; secretarytreasurer,&#13;
M. F. Parker, Standish.&#13;
Delegates elected to state convention&#13;
at Detroit: M. F. Parker, Standish;&#13;
Charles Jones, Sterling and A. W.&#13;
Colby, of Tawas City.&#13;
Famous Old Indian Dead.&#13;
Marshall, Mich.—With the death of&#13;
old Chief Phineas Pamptopee, the&#13;
remnant of the Pottawatomie Indians&#13;
on the reservation in Athens loses one&#13;
of its most picturesque figures. Tough&#13;
77 years old, to the last he retained&#13;
his proud^erect bearing and the long&#13;
hair and earrings of his earlier days.&#13;
An aristocrat among his people, he&#13;
had long acted as their chief counselor,&#13;
and while he was friendly with&#13;
his white neighbors he did not mingle&#13;
with them, preferring the companion*&#13;
ship of his own race.&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS IN BRIEF&#13;
-¾.&#13;
, • • ? •&#13;
A 14,000 addition is to be built to&#13;
the present M. E. church at Caro,&#13;
r which will also be remodeled and ex-&#13;
- tensively improved.&#13;
, " The city of Battle Creek hat select-&#13;
^ #d • week In which to learn to swim.&#13;
^ An- expert, Ctecrge H. Corsan, of To-&#13;
'"' -a^ttld^will be hired, from funds raited&#13;
4 W the school board, sanitarium,&#13;
£ ^ &lt;*h*jBb*r of Commerce, and ether sub&gt;&#13;
-*&amp;.:i#rlbir*v .to- teach "all comer*"—prob-&#13;
.- - aMy Wt the sanitarium peoisy ffttce the&#13;
--4¾; W on fcathlng at Lake Cognac ha*&#13;
^'•&amp;*&amp;4am' iwwnred.&#13;
. • « * $ C * * V ... • ; \&#13;
&gt; ' &gt; ; • • • * ' • ' - » . " ' . •&#13;
•Si'-V&#13;
• ' • . &gt;&#13;
EFFICIENCY OF A FIREFLY&#13;
Artificial Ulumlnant Very Poor Second&#13;
to That of the Natural&#13;
Organisms.&#13;
It is sometimes Baid that if we could&#13;
arrive at the secret of the firefly—or&#13;
of the other organisms which produce&#13;
physiologic light—we Bhould have&#13;
reached a great economic discovery,&#13;
because the light has such an extraordinary&#13;
high efflciencv^-in other words,&#13;
all the energy expended in producing&#13;
it goes to make\light, and not heat.&#13;
The efficiency has been estimated at&#13;
96 per cent by Ives and Coblentz, and&#13;
even higher by Langley and Very.&#13;
This is the more remarkable when it&#13;
is considered that the best artificial&#13;
llluminant has a luminous efficiency of&#13;
only 4 per cent, and most of them&#13;
reach only about l per cent, the remaining&#13;
99 per cent of the energy going&#13;
to produce heat or other subordinate&#13;
effects. But even if we should&#13;
discover the means by which the firefly&#13;
produces its light we should&#13;
scarcely care to use it in our homes.&#13;
Professor McDermott in a recent study&#13;
of the subject observes that while the&#13;
Insect has indeed reached the highest&#13;
possible radiant efficiency it has only&#13;
accomplished it at a sacrifice of color&#13;
that makes the light much worse than&#13;
the mercury vapor arc. Anything not&#13;
within a very limited range of yellow&#13;
and green tones would appear black.&#13;
Much-Needed Invention.&#13;
Mrs. Bacon — The old-fashioned&#13;
feather duster and the vacuum cleaner&#13;
have been combined by a Pennsylvania&#13;
inventor for removing dust from&#13;
small articles.&#13;
Mrs. Egbert—I hope now some one.&#13;
will get busy and invent something&#13;
that will pick up the pieces and glue&#13;
'em together.&#13;
Political Prudence.&#13;
"You'll have some explaining to do&#13;
when you get home, won't you?"&#13;
"No," replied the member of congresB.&#13;
"I'm not going to explain. I'm&#13;
going to let my constituents argue&#13;
matters out among themselves and&#13;
then take the side that seems to have&#13;
the most advocates."&#13;
Belgian King a Great Smoker.&#13;
King Albert of Belgium, who is an&#13;
ardent lover of tobacco, is an honorary&#13;
member of a Mozen different Belgian&#13;
pipe smokers' club.&#13;
Next month a great pipe-smoking&#13;
tournament will open simultaneously&#13;
in Brussels, at Antwerp, at Ghent and&#13;
at Liege. Prizes, including a magnificent&#13;
meerschaum pipe, offered by the&#13;
king, will be competed for, the winners&#13;
being those who smoke the greatest&#13;
number of pipeB in a given time.&#13;
Paticipation in the contest is subject&#13;
to one condition—that the tobacco&#13;
Bmoked shall be of purely Belgian origin.&#13;
It must have been grown either&#13;
in Belgium proper or in the Belgian&#13;
Congo.&#13;
Punishment Fit for the Crime.&#13;
Styles—You say they hazed your boy&#13;
at college?&#13;
Myles—I should Bay so! Why, thdy&#13;
got him in a poker game and skinned&#13;
him alive!&#13;
Tough on the Bears,&#13;
Some time ago Walter Shaw, known&#13;
as one of Gardiner's moBt persistent&#13;
wags, wrote a letter to the New York&#13;
Society for the Prevention of Cruelty&#13;
to Animals. It was deplorable, he said,&#13;
the way the government men in charge&#13;
of the Yellowstone park treated the&#13;
wild animals. Their cruelty was absolutely&#13;
barbaric. JUst to cite one instance,&#13;
he said, these scoundrels did&#13;
not give the poor bears anything to&#13;
eat during the entire winter, when the&#13;
whole park is blanketed with snow.&#13;
The society immediately started an&#13;
Investigation, beginning at the office&#13;
of the secretary of the interior. Such&#13;
cruelty must be stopped. It pressed its&#13;
investigation until some friendly naturalist&#13;
told them that bears hibernate&#13;
all winter.&#13;
Wrong Guess.&#13;
Bill—And so you proposed to her?&#13;
Jill—Yes.&#13;
"Was her answer in two or three&#13;
letters?"&#13;
"Three."&#13;
"Good. Then it was 'yes.'"&#13;
"You're wrong; it was 'nix.'"&#13;
And most of our tragedies look like&#13;
comedies to our neighbors.&#13;
OF COURSE HE GOT AWAY&#13;
Young Man Pulled Off Something&#13;
Really New, and His Reward&#13;
Was Adequate.&#13;
"Please, Mr. Jones, can I get off&#13;
Tuesday?" said the young male employe,&#13;
only more rapidly.&#13;
"Which of your relatives is dead?"&#13;
inquired the boss.&#13;
"Not any, sir," replied the lad with&#13;
a politeness which exists only in fiction.&#13;
"Which of your teeth are you going&#13;
to have pulled?"&#13;
"Not any, sir," replied the lad, etc.&#13;
"Which of your sisters is getting&#13;
married?"&#13;
"Not any, Bir," etc.&#13;
"The fact is," continued the youth,&#13;
"I would like to go to the ball game,&#13;
and, my desire being genuine, I would&#13;
not hazard any chances by trying to&#13;
pull a rotten old excuse on a foxy business&#13;
man. Thank you, Bir."&#13;
Earliest Arc Lights.&#13;
A recent historical exhibit of arc&#13;
lamps and electricity in Cleveland, 0.,&#13;
has brought out a bit of Interesting&#13;
history in connection with the pioneer&#13;
arc lamp system built by C. M. Brush.&#13;
The first demonstration of these lamps&#13;
was made in the public square&#13;
Cleveland during the summer of 1876,&#13;
and afterward in the fall of the same&#13;
year the aparatus was set up at the&#13;
centennial exposition at Philadelphia.&#13;
The exhibit at Cleveland was extensively&#13;
advertised in the newspapers,&#13;
and on the evening the demonstration&#13;
took place thousands of people assembled,&#13;
most of whom carried pieces of&#13;
smoked or colored glass to protect&#13;
their eyes from the arc lamp's rays,&#13;
which were expected to rival those of&#13;
the sun.—Electrical World.&#13;
Paying Him a Compliment.&#13;
T heard a woman flattering you&#13;
yesterday, dear."&#13;
"Is that so? What did she say?"&#13;
"She was telling another woman that&#13;
I married you for your money."&#13;
When a young man mixes rye with&#13;
his wild oats he gets a crop!&#13;
Terrible to Contemplate.&#13;
A distinguished member of the English&#13;
bar was once sojourning at a farm&#13;
in the West of Scotland. One morning&#13;
the farmer asked him to go out&#13;
and have a shot or two at the rabbits,&#13;
which were very plentiful. The&#13;
learned lawyer went, and he blazed&#13;
away for "a whole afternoon, but without&#13;
singeing the hair of a rabbit. The&#13;
farmer and the would-be sportsman&#13;
returned home, the former silent and&#13;
disappointed. At laBt an idea struck&#13;
him.&#13;
"54,. g 1" he exclaimed, clapping&#13;
his companion on the back, "supposing&#13;
ane o'thae rabbits had turned on ye,&#13;
what wud ye hae dune?"&#13;
*&#13;
Rather Personal.&#13;
One day two farm laborers were discussing&#13;
the wlseness of the present&#13;
generation. Said the first:&#13;
"We are wiser than our fathers was,&#13;
and they were wiser than their fathers&#13;
was."&#13;
The second one, after pondering a&#13;
while and gazing at hiB companion,&#13;
replied:&#13;
"Well, Garge, what a fule thy grandfather&#13;
must a' been."&#13;
Little Danger.&#13;
"Do you believe that money haa&#13;
germs on it?"&#13;
"It may have."&#13;
"What in the world shall we do?"&#13;
"Don't . worry; It would take a&#13;
mighty active germ to hop from the&#13;
money to you during the short time&#13;
you keep what you get."&#13;
Mistaken Raid.&#13;
"They fooled some cops the other&#13;
evening at a tango dance contest"&#13;
"How did they fool 'em?"&#13;
"Told 'em they had better raid the&#13;
hall as a lot of dips were getting In&#13;
their work."&#13;
Perhaps King David revlBed hit&#13;
statement that all men were liars&#13;
after discovering a man who never&#13;
went fishing.&#13;
There's some room at the top of&#13;
the greased pole.&#13;
An egg in the cup is worth half a&#13;
dozen in cold storage.&#13;
Some Of These&#13;
New Fancied foods&#13;
Are Mighty Good!&#13;
People are sometimes slow to change—even in summer&#13;
—from the old-time heavy breakfast of fried bacon or ham&#13;
and eggs.&#13;
But the Vorld moves," and in thousands of homes a&#13;
wise change has been made to the new-time breakfast—&#13;
Post Toasties —with&#13;
These sweet flayofiry flakes of corn, toasted ensp and ready to eatfHretffrom 1&#13;
are "mighty good" from every angle._ Labor-saving—iK»uishiag—dfeydoMr^—&#13;
Sold rfcy Grocm** nvwnmlckmv*. ^ •&#13;
V&#13;
. " y . - .&#13;
• * * ' *&#13;
1^: •&#13;
.iwr',.-.&#13;
• - * . • '&#13;
.JH.*v: -&gt;&#13;
^LLI^W:. mM 'Jka^.V tm^mmLmiL** '^L^&amp;ti&amp;Ai&#13;
• &gt;»»**&lt;^w,«#&amp;iia^ fwp;* Wffi ^'*w*W* Wj »fV^V &lt;5in*&#13;
' * ' " • * . ' •&#13;
* • &amp;&#13;
• • * ! .&#13;
•fr&#13;
It&#13;
- ^ : ,X 1&#13;
. ^ h j j g f *&#13;
, - * &lt; •**!&gt;*•- •••p&#13;
'•^flf/ .,V'.:.&gt;.-'.*„ • # -¾•A^¾V&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
/&#13;
- ^ ,&#13;
MRS. LYON'S&#13;
ACHES AND PAINS&#13;
Have AD Gone Since Taking&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable&#13;
Compound.&#13;
Terre Hill, Pa,—"Kindly penxiit me&#13;
to give you my testimonial in favor of&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
V e g e t a b l e Corapound.&#13;
When I first&#13;
began taking it I&#13;
was.(offering from&#13;
female troubles for&#13;
some time and had&#13;
almost all kinds of&#13;
aches—pains in lower&#13;
part of back and&#13;
in sides, and pressing&#13;
down pains. I&#13;
could not sleep and&#13;
Since I have taken&#13;
Vegetable Comrofflwn&#13;
r - * ' ? «&#13;
had no appetite.&#13;
l^ydia E. Pinkham'a&#13;
pound the aches and pains are all gone&#13;
and I feel like a new woman. I cannot&#13;
praise your medicine too highly.' '—Mrs.&#13;
AUGUSTUS LYON, Terre HfH, Pa.&#13;
It is true that nature and a woman's&#13;
work has produced the grandest remedy&#13;
for woman's ills that the world has&#13;
ever known. From the r o o t s and&#13;
herbs of the field, Lydia E. Pinkham,&#13;
forty years ago, gave to womankind&#13;
a remedy for their peculiar ills which&#13;
baa proved more efficacious than any&#13;
other combination of drugs ever compounded,&#13;
and today Lydia E. Pinkham'a&#13;
Vegetable Compound is r e c o g n i z e d&#13;
from coast to coast as the standard&#13;
remedy for woman's ills.&#13;
In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn,&#13;
Mass., are files containing hundreds of&#13;
thousands of letters from women seeking&#13;
health—many of them openly state&#13;
over their own signatures that they have&#13;
regained their health by taking Lydia&#13;
E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound;&#13;
and in some cases that it has saved them&#13;
from surgical operations.&#13;
Constipation&#13;
Vanishes Forever&#13;
Prompt Relief—Permanent Cure&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS never&#13;
fail. Purely vegeta&#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;
CARTERS&#13;
IITVTELRE PILLS.&#13;
'Tve&#13;
&gt;,"Bet&#13;
:r*Bet&#13;
Proved,&#13;
quit bettin' fer&#13;
you ain't!''&#13;
I have! Wot'll&#13;
good!"&#13;
you bet?"&#13;
Ten smiles for a nickel. Always buy Red&#13;
GTOM Ball Blue; have beautiful clear white&#13;
elothes. Adv.&#13;
Naturally.&#13;
Sonny—Pa, what i s a hasazsar?&#13;
Pa—It Is a man who has an impediment&#13;
of his Intellect.&#13;
Good Cause for Alarm Deaths from Udnej Alias sea have inoreased&#13;
79% in twenty years. People overdp&#13;
nowadays la so many wart that the constant&#13;
Altering of poisoned blood weaken*&#13;
the kidneys.&#13;
Beware of fatal Bright*• disease. When&#13;
baekaebe or urinary Ills loggest weak&#13;
kJOneyi, use Doan't Kidney Pills, drink&#13;
water freely and redoes the diet. Avoid&#13;
coffee, tea and JUraor.&#13;
Doan's Kidney Fills eomnaad coandeaeet&#13;
for s o other remedy is so widely&#13;
osed or so generally snooeasfol&#13;
A&#13;
"X a a mxw that&#13;
g e y Kidnap Wile&#13;
were fbe means of&#13;
eavtac mr life waea&#13;
X waa •frtoeely «i«&#13;
fliet«4 wlta kidney&#13;
treat!*/' aays Ambrose&#13;
Hatfield, of&#13;
Brook St. Bate*&#13;
Rapid*. Ktoa. "Sin©,&#13;
then I h*v* need&#13;
eDeoeaaaat'oan aXllljdr awer hPl Us aeveeedr Io hfa rseo mfeatiftc Ju afoery em aynf dea tehkey o rb akrtd*- s«etv emr ef.a ilXed h atove h reeaee-- emmeaded D O - A D ' I WUetoother^&#13;
Gat Dees/a D O A N * 8 % " b V&#13;
PoartTiugBtmn CCBOTTALO, W. Y.&#13;
DAISY FLY KILLER £ £ Mtla atau&#13;
arfta"*4&#13;
tea tea. Hade of&#13;
«aat*atttor«t».&#13;
\ will not toll or&#13;
ajara anytatav.&#13;
sstjpas, iss&#13;
AH ^&#13;
paM tortus,&#13;
Ave., statute, a. f.&#13;
&gt;*r*?&#13;
j-&#13;
DR. J. D. xcLLoaaa&#13;
IWA&#13;
fet* the pspntpt- relief of&#13;
AataL.MeMa-'KAi^uk.'-. a*i onijttift fee n wm •••nm.&#13;
MARKET QUOTATIONS&#13;
Live 8tock, Grain and General Farm&#13;
Produce.&#13;
Live Stock.&#13;
DETROIT—Cattle: Receipts, 524;&#13;
Blockers, feeders, handy butchers and&#13;
bulls steady; heavy grades slow;&#13;
butchers' cows 10@15c lower; best&#13;
heavy steers, $8.75@9; best handy&#13;
weight butcher .steers, $8.21@8.50;&#13;
mixed steers and heifers, $7.75@8.25;&#13;
handy light butchers, $7.50@8; light&#13;
butchers, $7@7.50; best cows, $6.60®&#13;
6.85; butcher cows, |6@6.25; common&#13;
cows, $5@5:30, canners, |3@4.25;&#13;
best heavy bulls, $7®7,26; bologna&#13;
bulls, 16.50(g6.85; stock bulls, 1 6 ^ 0 ^&#13;
6.75; feeders, $7.25 ©7.50; Blockers',&#13;
$6,757.50; milkers and springers, $45 &lt;g&gt;&#13;
80.&#13;
Veal calves—Receipts, 347; market&#13;
steady; best, |9@9.60; others, $7®&#13;
8.75.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 481;&#13;
market steady; best lambs, $7.50®8;&#13;
fair lambs, $7@7.25; light to common&#13;
lambs, $6@6.75; yearlings, $6.50(5)&#13;
6.75; fair to good sheep, $£@6.75;&#13;
culls and common, $3@4.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 2,612; all grades,&#13;
$8.25.&#13;
EAST BUFFALO—Cattle: receipts,&#13;
3,000; market 15@25c higher; prime&#13;
1,350 to 1,450-Ib steers, $8.75@9.25;&#13;
best 1,200 to 1,300-lb steers, $8.60®&#13;
8.90; best 1,100 to 1,200-lb jsteers,&#13;
$7.90@8.25; fancy yearlings, baby beef,&#13;
$8.50@9; medium to good, $8@8.25;&#13;
choice handy steers, 900 to 1,000 lbs.,&#13;
$8.40@8.75; fair to good, 1,000 to 1,-&#13;
100 fibs., $8.15@8.40; extra good cows,&#13;
$7@7.50; best cows, $6.75@7; butcher&#13;
cows, $5.60@6.25; cutters, $4.50(g&gt;5;&#13;
trimmers, $3.50@4; best heifers, $8.25&#13;
@8.50; medium butcher heifers, $7.90&#13;
&lt;g&gt;8.10; stock heifers, $6.25@6.75; best&#13;
feeding steers, $7.85@8.10; fair to&#13;
good, $7.25@7.50; best stock steers,&#13;
$7.50@7.75; common light Btock steers,&#13;
$6.75@7; extra good bulls, $7@7.50;&#13;
bologna bulls, $6.50(g)6.75; stock bulls,&#13;
$5@6; milkers and springers, $40®&#13;
90.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 18,000; market 10&#13;
@15c lower; heavy mixed and yorkers,&#13;
$8.60@8.65; pigs, $8.65@8.75.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 9,000;&#13;
market strong; top lambs, $8.25®&#13;
8.40; yearlings, $6.50@7.25; wethers,&#13;
$6@6.25; ewes, $5.25@6&#13;
Calves slow; tops, $10(g)10.25; fair&#13;
to good, $8@9.50; grassers, $5.50@7.&#13;
Let&#13;
Have a Porch&#13;
Party with&#13;
S\--^v/-.:&#13;
7 mi&#13;
WRIGLEYS.&#13;
SPEARMINT&#13;
Ifs the ideal offering to&#13;
guests or family, especially&#13;
after dinner.&#13;
It's the hospitality&#13;
gum —&#13;
so perfectly&#13;
packed that it&#13;
stays perfectly&#13;
fresh and clean.&#13;
^ %&#13;
••'j&#13;
* .&#13;
Grains, Etc.&#13;
DETROIT—Wheat—Cash and May&#13;
No. 2 red, 97c; July opened without&#13;
change at 87 l-2c, touched 88c and declined&#13;
to 87 l-2c; September opened&#13;
at 87 l-2c, advanced l-2c and declined&#13;
to 87 l-2c; No. 1 white, 96 l-2c.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, 73c; No. 3 yellow,&#13;
2 cars at 74 l-2c; No. 4 yellow, 2&#13;
cars at 72 l-2c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 1 car at 45c; No. 3&#13;
white, 44 l-2c; No. 4 white, 43 l-2c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 67c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate, prompt and May&#13;
shipment, $2.05; June, $2.07; July,&#13;
$2.10.&#13;
CI over seed—Prime spot, $7.75&#13;
tober, |8r26; prime alsike, $10.&#13;
Timothy—Prime spot, $2.35.&#13;
Alfalfa—Prime spot, $8.35.&#13;
Hay—Carlo's- track Detroit;&#13;
timothy, $16.50017; standard,&#13;
©16; No. 1 mixed, $13.50® 15;&#13;
clover, $18^18.60; heavy clover mixed&#13;
$13@13.50; rye straw, $808.50; wheat&#13;
and oat straw, $707.50 per ton.&#13;
. Flour—In one-eighth paper sack/,&#13;
par 196 pounds, jobbing lots: Best&#13;
patent, $6.30; second patent, $4.90;&#13;
straight, $4.60; spring patent, $510;&#13;
rye, $4.40 per bbl.&#13;
Feed—In 100-lb sacks, jobbing lots:.&#13;
Bran, $28; staidard middlings, $28;&#13;
fine middlings, $32; coarse cornmeal,&#13;
$31; cracked corn, $88; corn and oat&#13;
chop, $28.60 per ton.&#13;
Oo&#13;
No. 1&#13;
$15.50&#13;
No. 1&#13;
•••£' . * • ' • * •&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
Onions—Texas Bermudas, yellow&#13;
$2.4002.60 per crate.&#13;
Dressed Hogs—Light, 9010c; heavy&#13;
8 0 8 l-2c per lb.&#13;
Cabbage—New, $2.1502.25 per crata&#13;
in bulk, 2 l-2c per lb.&#13;
Sweet poratoes—Jersey kiln-dried,&#13;
$101.10 per hamper.&#13;
Tomatoes—Florida, fancy, $3,250&#13;
8.60; choice, $8 per crate, 70076c per&#13;
basket&#13;
Potatoes—In bulk, 68070c per bu&#13;
In sacks, 70073c per bu for carlots.&#13;
Honey—Choice to fancy new white&#13;
comb, 15016c; amber, 10011c; ex-&#13;
I tra^Ud, $6^?c per lb.&#13;
New Pot^oes—Florida, $5.6006.75&#13;
peJ^bbl aft* $2 per ink Bermuda, $2.50&#13;
per bu afid 17 pet bbl r&#13;
Live Poultry—Broilers, 80035c per&#13;
lb; spring chickens, 17 l-2c; heavy&#13;
hens, 17 l-2c; medium hens, 16017c;&#13;
No. 2 bens, 18c; old roosters, 11018c;&#13;
^dttckev 17013«; «*ese, 14015c; t u *&#13;
iy*, 19010c per lb.&#13;
Cheese Wholesale lots: Michigan&#13;
flats, 15 l-2014c; Now York Cats, 14&#13;
O U i-Jcr lsspbrted Swiss, H M t&#13;
24c; domestic Swiss, 19080c; long&#13;
150161-to; daisies, 150151-20&#13;
naf oosmd.&#13;
gT!*^ jSf^rlptas'wse ^,&#13;
• v&#13;
It costs almost&#13;
nothing:&#13;
but people&#13;
like it better&#13;
t h a n much&#13;
more costly&#13;
things.&#13;
EVERY&#13;
PACKAGE&#13;
TIGHTLY&#13;
SEALED!&#13;
Remember—the new seal is airtight&#13;
and dust-proof! It's the&#13;
best gum in the best package.&#13;
Be SURE ifs WRIGLEY'S.&#13;
Look for the spear.&#13;
It relieves all uovereaten"&#13;
feelings—refreshes&#13;
the mouth—&#13;
cleanses the teeth&#13;
beautifully.&#13;
Chew it after&#13;
every meal&#13;
A&amp;&#13;
Three Flights Up.&#13;
"Still living In that antiquated&#13;
you occupied ten years ago, eh?"&#13;
"Tea, it's the same old story."&#13;
fiat&#13;
LADIBS CAN WSAB SHOES&#13;
Or»fiMf8BftUer*ft.r vita* Attend Itoot-BteM, UM&#13;
Aatiwptlo povSer to b. ttekM) Into tb. tboM. It&#13;
nakM tirbt or new tboe. f e.) e*«y. Joat tb. tiling&#13;
for dMielns. JU/KM rtOttitvtu. 9ot TBMB trltl&#13;
pMk»C«,ftdarauAJlraB.OUBited,XjeBor.H.r. AST.&#13;
That's So.&#13;
"They say ages go in cycles."&#13;
"Then this age is a motorcycle."—&#13;
Baltimore American.&#13;
A1&#13;
Millionaires, as Charles Lamb re%&#13;
trained from saying, are' capital fellows.&#13;
STOP—LOOK— oPreaarlt fniafeek,b tgooMld 4SS&amp;U esAtajron linkngl TitMlre rT ie. fol.d SU«4p«iom Sfc. ivlrny&amp;oa osarljrr, st wu* mmt, unrxou o n&#13;
If you recommend a man (or a position&#13;
and he acts badly it is doughnuts&#13;
to fudge that you will be blamed for&#13;
it all the rest of your days.&#13;
Be happy. Use Red Cross Ball Blue;&#13;
much better than liquid blue. Delight*&#13;
the laundress. All grocers. Adv.&#13;
Consoling.&#13;
"Do you believe in long engagements?"&#13;
"Of course. The longer a&#13;
man is engaged, the less time he has&#13;
to be married."&#13;
Ajkotlot. .&#13;
^.lp» &lt;oyadteat.dM&gt;dro^.&#13;
iJ£aatToa&lt;Btdoilw«* atM Df«adggHtotaat o&#13;
Proof of Value &lt;rf tin tirne-taeted* world-triad, home&#13;
remedy—proof o f its power to relieve&#13;
quickly, safely, surely, the beadaches;&#13;
the soar taste, the poor&#13;
spWts and tbe fatigue of biliousness&#13;
•-will be found m every dose of&#13;
BEECHAM'S&#13;
B L A C K&#13;
FSTH. (BSO -DfTfPOlT&#13;
OPTICIAN&#13;
ISC WOODWAHD AVI&#13;
SPECIAL TO WOMEN&#13;
The most economical, cleansing and&#13;
germicidal of all antiseptics i t&#13;
K aoliiblft Antiseptic Powder to&#13;
hsj diiiolifjd in waiter BM ncodod.&#13;
As a medicinal antiseptic for douches&#13;
in treating catarrh, inflammation or&#13;
ulceration of nose, throat, and that&#13;
caused by feminine Ills it has no equal&#13;
Fof ten years the Lydia E. Pinkham&#13;
Medicine Co. has recommended Paxtlne&#13;
is their private correspondence with&#13;
woman, which proves lta superiority.&#13;
Women fho have bean sored say&#13;
It is "worth tts weight in gold." At&#13;
druggists. S^a. lame boisv or by mail.&#13;
The Paxton Toilet Co* boston* tfese,&#13;
Csasdisa Govenuaest Agent&#13;
T*&#13;
)&#13;
fH&#13;
r.-.&#13;
n&#13;
,r&#13;
&amp;1&#13;
if&#13;
M&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
WANTED 100 aettvaboi jtwoa hboai oaftale ixtvra,&#13;
oanal. r. Makfoo. i^eoSBebrOo^tMs&#13;
aae»aUvoaa aro«vioaoaW toa bBaOo«&gt;Ma aaBgofnj Hboonna ii&gt;e.aarataarla ft eerStax7« n«lr na,a pair. MakfOMirf*kY&#13;
&gt;ttta&#13;
&amp; •&#13;
p p M i H p n p « |&#13;
' ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ S ! ^ '&#13;
! i * ! r •] v * * " - ; * " • ' , " "&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
*&gt;&#13;
13,-,, •&#13;
, ; ' : ^01 •&#13;
• • " , : • * : :&#13;
s i * . » '".'..'•&#13;
pinckney Dispatch&#13;
Entered at the Poatoffice at Pinckney,&#13;
Mich., as Second Class Matter&#13;
R. W. CIVERLY, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER&#13;
Satyeriptloo, $1. Per Tear in Advance&#13;
Advertising rates made known on&#13;
apotficatinn.&#13;
Cards of Thaukiylifty cents.&#13;
Resolutions of Condolence, one dollar.&#13;
Local Notuea, in Local columns five&#13;
cent per Hue per each insertion.&#13;
All matter intended to benefit the personal&#13;
or business interest of any individual&#13;
will be published at regular advertiseingrates.&#13;
Announcement of entertainments, etc.,&#13;
mult 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;
m PEOPLE&#13;
^¾¾¾¾&#13;
Bernardino Lynch spent the&#13;
past week in Gregory.&#13;
"Colorado women op in arms,"&#13;
aaya a headline. Whose arms?&#13;
J. Shehan and wife of Jackson&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of T.&#13;
Shehan.&#13;
Miss Mae Smith of Detroit was&#13;
an over Sunday guest of her sister&#13;
Mrs. Roger Carr.&#13;
Why is that you alway3 have a&#13;
contempt for the fellow who&#13;
catches more fish than you do?&#13;
Mrs. Lawrence Clark of Detroit&#13;
w ^ a guest at the home of her&#13;
aunt, Mrs. C. V. VanWmkle, one&#13;
day last week.&#13;
The Misses Ella Clare Fitch&#13;
and Clella Fish were week guests&#13;
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. B. G.&#13;
Isham of Plainfield.&#13;
Mrs. )1. A. Fick was in Pittsburgh,&#13;
Pa., helping care for her&#13;
graudson, Ferris B. Jr., born May&#13;
26, 1914. Both mother and child&#13;
are doing well.&#13;
Walter and Clare Reason, Paul&#13;
Miller, Francis Harris, Ed. Van-&#13;
Horn, Claude Kennedy and Percy&#13;
Daley attended the dance in Dexter&#13;
last Friday evening.&#13;
C. G. Meyer has started a new&#13;
series of advs, which will appear&#13;
in each week's issue of the Dispatch.&#13;
The cartoonist who prepares&#13;
these adve. is the identical&#13;
$1000 a week man who has made&#13;
himself famous depicting "Buster&#13;
Brown" and his antics. It will be&#13;
interesting as well as profitable&#13;
for our subscribers to watch and&#13;
read this drug store adv. in each&#13;
issue.&#13;
The farmer's bulletin No. 513 is&#13;
quite largely devoted to "Fifty&#13;
common birds of farm and orchard"&#13;
and contains very interesting;&#13;
reading, in which it tells us.&#13;
that in just one year the despised&#13;
little sparrow saved the country&#13;
190,000,000 by eating the seed of&#13;
the weeds. They are certainly&#13;
little pests in many ways, bot if&#13;
they save that amount of hard&#13;
cash every year we ought to be&#13;
able to put up with them without&#13;
complaint.&#13;
Talk about the way Howell put&#13;
it over Pinckney last week Wednesday,&#13;
it was simply nothing to&#13;
tbs way the Gregory ball team&#13;
defeated the Howell boys at Howell,&#13;
Decoration Day, by a score&#13;
of ;30 to 4. Gay Kuhn, the twirler&#13;
for Gregory, had the Howell boys&#13;
completely at his mercy and their&#13;
feeble attempts in trying to get a&#13;
htl wot really amusing. Guy al-&#13;
•ojznade a borne run thus adding&#13;
aojrtber laurel to the wreath which&#13;
Gregory hero* wore. The mua*&#13;
tftjbe which Roche McClear is&#13;
' t o .grow upon his bandphysiogomy&#13;
in nowise inter-&#13;
With hit playing ball. Roma?&#13;
boast a good team bot&#13;
oota^ipet them all.&#13;
•;&amp;? :*&gt;;*?•&#13;
Geo. Roche of Fowlerville was&#13;
in town last Friday.&#13;
Norbert Lavey spent Saturday&#13;
and Sunday with hib parents here.&#13;
Florence Reason spent a few&#13;
days the past week at Whitmore&#13;
Lake.&#13;
1 Geo. Sykes of Detroit is spending&#13;
several days with relatives in&#13;
this vicinity.&#13;
This indeed is a sad world for&#13;
those who take life BO seriously in&#13;
May and June.&#13;
Mrs. J^lia Sigler of Detroit was&#13;
a guest at the homo of Dr. H. F.&#13;
Sigler Sunday.&#13;
A. K. Pierce and wife of South&#13;
Lyon called on Pinckney friends&#13;
Sunday afternoon.&#13;
Claude Monks of Detroit was&#13;
an over Sunday guest of his parents&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Monks.&#13;
LaRue Morao of Howell was a&#13;
guest at the home of his sister,&#13;
Mrs. Fred Teeple Friday and Saturday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Merrill of&#13;
Hamburg were guests at the home&#13;
of her mother, Mrs. Nettie&#13;
Vaughn Sunday.&#13;
Stephen Jeffreys of Detroit was&#13;
a week end guest at the home of&#13;
his parents Mr. and Mrs. John&#13;
Jeffreys.&#13;
Fred Swarthout, Miss Sadie&#13;
Harris at.d Miss Lila Chubb attended&#13;
the Decoration Day exercises&#13;
at Howell Saturday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Meyer of&#13;
Ann Arbor were Over Sunday&#13;
guests at the home of their&#13;
nephew, Carl Meyer and wife.&#13;
Will Burdick of'Flint and Miss&#13;
Florence Gardner of Howell spent&#13;
the first of the week with Pinckney&#13;
relatives and friends.&#13;
Hugh Hoyt of Clinton visited at&#13;
the home of his parents, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. G, G. Hoyt and his brother,&#13;
E. E. Hoyt the first of the week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Devereaux&#13;
are the proud parents of a&#13;
baby boy born Sunday, May 31.&#13;
No wonder "Bob" w^ars a broad&#13;
smile.&#13;
H. A. Fick received word that&#13;
his brother, D. W. Fick, after enduring&#13;
great suffering, passed&#13;
away at his home in Los Angeles,&#13;
CAL, May 24.&#13;
Andrew Roche a former Livingston&#13;
county boy, who has been&#13;
working on the traffic squad at&#13;
Detroit, has been promoted to the&#13;
position of city detective.-Fowlerville&#13;
Review.&#13;
Ross Read, W. E. Murphy, Rex&#13;
Read, Marion Reason and Frank&#13;
Atkinson, of Chicago, a guest of&#13;
Rex Read, report an excellent&#13;
automobile trip and fine time generally&#13;
at the auto races at Indianapolis.&#13;
The trip was over 500&#13;
miles long. The party left here&#13;
last Thursday morning and returned&#13;
Sunday afternoon.&#13;
Remember the chickens to keep&#13;
them wholly fenced in, lest they&#13;
get into thy neighbor's garden&#13;
and Bcratch out all his newly&#13;
planted seeds. If thou doest this&#13;
thou wilt be honored and respected&#13;
unto the end of thy time,&#13;
and, likewise, thy neighbor will&#13;
not kill any of thy fowls and have&#13;
chicken pie at thine expense.—Ex.&#13;
It has been called to the attention&#13;
of the state tax commission&#13;
that certain individuals representing&#13;
themselves aa employes of the&#13;
tax commission are going about the&#13;
state gathering information which'&#13;
the commissioners and certain&#13;
counties intend to use when the&#13;
state board of equalization meets&#13;
in Lansing in August. The tax&#13;
commissioners say their field men&#13;
are equipped with proper creden&gt;&#13;
tials and that people should ask&#13;
for the credentials before giving]&#13;
op information which private'&#13;
parties have no right to demand.&#13;
mmwtammmmimmmmmimrm&#13;
HELLO W M L !&#13;
GIVE ME NO. 38&#13;
This is the call used by the wiae customer who&#13;
wishes&#13;
Staple and Fancy Groceries&#13;
Connor's World Best Ice Cream&#13;
A Work Shirt A Pair of Overalls&#13;
A Nice Dress Hat or Cap&#13;
A New Suit of Clothes&#13;
A Pair of Gloves&#13;
Or Anything in the Gents&#13;
Furnishing Line&#13;
"And Don't You Forget," that we are ever&#13;
anxious and willing to fill your wants for anything&#13;
in oar line.&#13;
Leave Your Special Orders With&#13;
Monks Bros.&#13;
CZ1 The 8qifare Deal Broeerg •&#13;
33&#13;
SWAT THE FLY!&#13;
BETTER STILL&#13;
KEEP HIM O Y T ^&#13;
Prepare&#13;
Now For&#13;
-Hy Time&#13;
SCREENS&#13;
Wire and&#13;
Cloth Netting&#13;
And Frames&#13;
We carry a FULL LINE of WIRE NETTING for window and door&#13;
screens. Galvanized and copper wire for those who demand the kind&#13;
that lasts longest. We'CTTT any SIZE you want Yon can PHONE.&#13;
"Butcher,&#13;
Here's&#13;
A New&#13;
Customer"&#13;
"I BROUGHT Mrs. Jones with me today,"&#13;
said Mrs. Satisfied Customer. "She&#13;
wants to try your meat I've told her&#13;
wfeat fine cuts yon give me and how niea&#13;
the meat is." That has happened more&#13;
than once with ns. Well try to PLEASE&#13;
yon, too, if yon give ns the CHANCE.&#13;
(You'll find us SQUABS.&#13;
•&#13;
L. E. POWELL&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative Banking&#13;
Business. :: '•&gt;&#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. TEEPLE&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Prop&#13;
Perhaps this picture may recall&#13;
some pleasant occasion—a party&#13;
and the becoming costume you&#13;
wore.&#13;
Any event worth remembering&#13;
suggests a picture.&#13;
Make an appointment today.&#13;
DaisieB. Chapell&#13;
Stockbridde, Michigan&#13;
Finds Cure for Epilepsy&#13;
After Years of Suffering&#13;
"My daughter was afflicted with&#13;
epileptic fits for three years, the attaoki&#13;
coming every few weeks. We employed&#13;
several doctors but they did her no&#13;
rood. About a&#13;
year a g o w e&#13;
h e a r d o f Dr.&#13;
Miles' Nervine,&#13;
and It certainly&#13;
h a s proved a&#13;
blessing to oar&#13;
little girl. She It&#13;
n o w apparently&#13;
cured and is enjoying&#13;
the best&#13;
of health. It Is&#13;
over a*year sine*&#13;
she has had *&#13;
fit. We cannot&#13;
speak too highly&#13;
of Dr. Miles' Nervine."&#13;
MRS. FRANK ANDERSON,&#13;
Comfrey, Minn.&#13;
Thousands o! 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. MiW Nervine&#13;
is one of the best remedies knows&#13;
for this affliction, It has proven&#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;
tor nervous -diseases. You need&#13;
not hesitate to give it a trial.&#13;
b^o5tft.lwe fAai ls *"to 0 .rb«eMne,f«itt» »y ouWr m *ohnee yf lItsst returned. 9&#13;
MILES MEDICAL 00., Ilkhart, !n*&gt;&#13;
M. F..S»OLM M. D. 0 . L, StQltft M. O &amp;&#13;
$&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; "SIGLER,'&#13;
Physicians and Snrgscns.&#13;
i&#13;
All calls promptly attended to %&#13;
d*/ or sight. Office on thin&#13;
Stmt.&#13;
WNCtNEY, HttH&#13;
y&#13;
-','"." ' "• 1*'.':'.-;p.,-«;-:''"r"&#13;
- &gt; • • • • ' : - ^ $ \&#13;
/ :. '.^•fu-lJ': '&#13;
« . ' &gt; • ^ . -&#13;
^ • • • • • B » » » » 4 K » a 4 3 g 4 g ^ : T ^ » »&#13;
• ^ M l M A M - i f a * - ^ - - ,.. ../-kfr &amp;•*.!cl-A.-'.,:^:-.::-^. .&gt; .LJiad£i2*!&amp;Ll-±£:. *jjMttif&amp;d£M&#13;
P1NCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
* ! " . . » &lt; . . &gt; • * „ •:••&#13;
wwwwv(iw^yftww^vfiwwvfiwtiww£&#13;
S=&#13;
I&#13;
Don't Take It&#13;
For Granted&#13;
that just because y o u are in&#13;
business, everybody Is aware&#13;
of the fadt Your goods may&#13;
be the finest in torn market&#13;
but they will remain on your&#13;
shelves unless the people are&#13;
told about them.&#13;
ADVERTISE if you want to move your&#13;
merchandise. Roach the&#13;
buyers In their homea through&#13;
the columns of THIS PAPER&#13;
and on every dollar expended&#13;
you'll reap a handsome&#13;
dividend.&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
m&#13;
3m&#13;
3&#13;
^iuii4iii.44iUiiiiUiiiiiiiUiUiU^iMi44iUiUiUiUiUiUiUiUiUlUri&#13;
England's Great Little Rivsr.&#13;
One could hardly fancy an England&#13;
without the Thames. It is the source,&#13;
the Inspiration, the participant, in so&#13;
much that distinguishes England's sylvan&#13;
beauty. In the centuries that&#13;
have lived upon Its banks it has been&#13;
a potent factor in the civilization of&#13;
this island kingdom. It cuts In twain&#13;
and laves the burliest city in ail the&#13;
world, a dark mass of human structure&#13;
impenetrably profound. It rides&#13;
a vast commerce from London to the&#13;
sea, and along its jutting wharves&#13;
nights are often made darker with Its&#13;
tragedies. Years agone kings and&#13;
princes and the fairest women in the&#13;
land rode upon lta tide in functions of&#13;
state or in the idle pose of pleasure.&#13;
Those were the days of the garlanded&#13;
barge or the hooded galley foist,&#13;
which, gilding stealthily beneath the&#13;
Tower portcullis, lost another noble to&#13;
the world of politics and intrigue.—&#13;
From "In Thamesland."&#13;
What's Holding Ym Back ?&#13;
IF you're doing the hardest part of your wcsirk by hand, you&#13;
are wasting time that you might use for some other job or&#13;
in getting acquainted with your family every day.&#13;
Get a Rumely-OIds Engine and hook it up to every power&#13;
requirement on the place.&#13;
Give your wife a rest, too; let a Rumely-OIds Engine rtm&#13;
the washing machine, the cream separator and the butter&#13;
machine. You have no idea what a lot of help and small expense&#13;
^. Rumely-OIds Engine really i s until you try it. You'll&#13;
live longer and happier if you're not "dead-tired" every night.&#13;
If you can't find time to come and see us, let us know&#13;
and We will come and see you or send you a catalog&#13;
of Rumely-OIds Engines.&#13;
We*re here to serve you;&#13;
give us a chance.&#13;
7M&#13;
Clement Moore's Ons Potm. .&#13;
Just one poem was written by Clement&#13;
Clarke Moore, whose grave is in&#13;
Trinity churchyard, at One Hundred&#13;
and Fifty-fifth street Washington&#13;
heights. '"Twas the Night Before&#13;
Christmas" lives because it touches&#13;
now and has always touched human&#13;
hearts. It was put into an autograph&#13;
album in 1822 and published a couple&#13;
of years later without the consent of&#13;
the author, who was professor of&#13;
Greek and Hebrew at Columbia college&#13;
and did not think it comported&#13;
with his dignity to write children's&#13;
verse. Dr'. Moore died In 1803 at the&#13;
ripe age of eighty-four. His fame as&#13;
a scholar is lost. His fame as the author&#13;
of that one real poem will live&#13;
while the English language is spoken&#13;
and read anywhere on earth.—Brooklyn&#13;
Eagle.&#13;
SPECIALS&#13;
F- O.Pt&#13;
Saturday, June 6 t h , 1914&#13;
A nice Hoe of Ladies Muslin Underwear at Wholesale Prices&#13;
AH Wool Dress Goods at Cost&#13;
All Ladies Oxfords at Cost&#13;
6 bars of any white soap _25c&#13;
8 bare Lenox Soap 25c&#13;
Best Can Peaa __ 10c&#13;
Beat Can Corn 9c&#13;
Will meet all prices on sugar&#13;
ALL S A L E S CASH&#13;
W. W. BARNARD&#13;
Notwithstanding.&#13;
A teacher had been at great trouble&#13;
to explain to her class the meaning of&#13;
the word "notwithstanding" and, on&#13;
asking for a sentence in which the&#13;
word occurred, was somewhat nonplused&#13;
to receive the following effort&#13;
from a blushing maiden of some eight&#13;
summers and winters:&#13;
"Please, miss, ray little brother has a&#13;
bole in the seat of his trousers, and&#13;
It's notwithstanding."—London Mail.&#13;
A. H. FLINTOFT,&#13;
$100 Reward, $100&#13;
The readers of this paper will be pleased&#13;
to learn that there is at least one dreaded&#13;
disease that science ha&amp; been able to cure&#13;
in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hail's&#13;
Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now&#13;
known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh&#13;
being a constitutional disease, requires a&#13;
constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh&#13;
Cure is t^ken internally, acting directly&#13;
upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the&#13;
system, thereby destroying the foundation&#13;
of the disease, and giving the patient&#13;
strength by building up the constitution&#13;
and assisting nature in doing its work.&#13;
The proprietors have so much faith in its&#13;
curative powers that they offer One Hundred&#13;
Dollars for any case that it fails to&#13;
cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address:&#13;
F. K. Cheney &amp; Co., Toledo, O,&#13;
Sold by all druggists, 75c.&#13;
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.&#13;
o . m &lt; «» .&#13;
The Mullingers and trie Hapaburgs.&#13;
The Mullingers are one of those old&#13;
Swiss families concerning whom my&#13;
friend Dr. Curtl, distinguished Swiss&#13;
national historian and director of the&#13;
Frankfurter Zeitung, recently told me&#13;
the following amusing Incident, write*&#13;
a correspondent.&#13;
Years ago a Mullinger was one of&#13;
the staff of the Swiss legation at Vienna.&#13;
On being presented to the Emperor&#13;
Francis Joseph he bluntly expressed&#13;
his pleasure at making the acquaintance&#13;
of his majesty, which&#13;
pleasure, he added, was all the greater&#13;
since "in times prone by the Hapsburgs&#13;
were mere retainers of the Mul-&#13;
+Hngers/*&#13;
"In that case," the emperor is said&#13;
to have replied, "1 think you will admit&#13;
that my family has got on better&#13;
in the world (hat es welter gebracht)&#13;
than yonrs."-London Chronicle;&#13;
Do You Want Ice ?&#13;
We are prepared to furnish everyone with ice the coming&#13;
season at right prices. Will deliver same to your ice box.&#13;
S t o v e s S t o r e d SUMMER&#13;
Call on or phone No. 53r3&#13;
S. H.CARR, Pinckney, M i c h .&#13;
Everything&#13;
For Farm&#13;
And Garden&#13;
IMPLEMENTS Spring&#13;
Stock&#13;
Is Big&#13;
^ . .&#13;
Hundreds of SATISFIED peraoni in this community hare bought&#13;
garden and farm implements, inch at hoei, rakes, spades, scythes, eta,&#13;
front ns. WHY NOT TOTJf This'Is the time.&#13;
Dinkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
&amp;&lt;;-\t;-'\&gt;r- &gt;/-•&gt;;•"'.*' (.' j:\*:\*.&#13;
.--it-,- \:/-'-&#13;
? : • ' • • • " • ft., &gt;:.&#13;
•':''•. . A&#13;
Sale Bills Printed at the&#13;
Dispatch Office at Right&#13;
Prices.&#13;
Try It en the Dog.&#13;
The farmer looked at the stranger&#13;
and shook his head.&#13;
"What d'ye call yourself V he asked.&#13;
"The Orpheus* of the barnyard" replied&#13;
the caller. uWhat*n Toptaet is that?' demanded&#13;
the agriculturist&#13;
The stranger smiled.&#13;
"A college professor has declared&#13;
that hetts-trill not lay at certain seasons&#13;
unlets they are* amused. I'm the&#13;
man who sits on a barnyard fence and&#13;
amuses them. See. here is my mouth&#13;
organ, and here Is my tambourine, I&#13;
play and sing and crack Jokes until the&#13;
hens roll over in sheer delight—and&#13;
all for CO cents an hour."&#13;
The farmer eyed him moodily.&#13;
"I wonder," he said, "how your talents&#13;
would impress the dog? Here,&#13;
Boverr—Cleveland Plain Dealer.&#13;
Always Lead to Better Health&#13;
Serious sicknesses start io disorder of&#13;
the rtomecb, liver and kidneys. The best&#13;
corrective and preventive U Dr. King's&#13;
New Life Pills. They Pnrify the Blood—&#13;
Pcaxwat Constipation; keep Li?er, Kidneys&#13;
•rod Bowels in healthy condition Give j&#13;
you better health by ridding the system of&#13;
fermenting sod assay foods. Effective&#13;
and mild. 25c. Recommended by C. Q.&#13;
Meyer, the druggist.&#13;
Notice of Meeting&#13;
To whom it may concern:—&#13;
Be it known that on the 23rd day of&#13;
May, A. D. 1914, application was filed&#13;
with John McGivney, County Drain Commissioner&#13;
of the County of Livingston, for&#13;
the locating and establishing of a certain&#13;
Drain which said Drain was described as&#13;
follows: Commencing on e e i of s e i of&#13;
section number five about 30 rods north j&#13;
and 40 rods west of s e corner of eaid sec-'&#13;
tion thence in an easterly direction crossing&#13;
section four entering section ten at n ( w corner thence in a southeasterly direction&#13;
about 80 rods thence northeasterly onto&#13;
section three about 40 rods thence east I&#13;
about 100 rods or thereabouts thence south j&#13;
to Morgan Lake and there ending in said&#13;
lake on a e I of section ten.&#13;
The directions and distances above mentioned&#13;
are as near as can be determined at&#13;
this time without an actual survey,&#13;
The said Drain will traverse the said.&#13;
Township of Unadilla. |&#13;
Be it fnrther%own that on the 12th day&#13;
of Jnne, A. D. 1914, at the residence of&#13;
Elmer N. Braley in the Township of Unadilla&#13;
at one o'clock in the afternoon there&#13;
will be held a meeting of the Township&#13;
Board for the purpose of determining&#13;
whether or not the said drain is necessary&#13;
and conducive to the public health, convenience&#13;
and welfare; at which meeting all&#13;
persons owning lands liable to assessment&#13;
for Benefit or whose lands will be crossed&#13;
by said drain may appear for or against&#13;
ssid drain proceedings.&#13;
Given under my hand this 26th day of&#13;
May, A. D. 1914.&#13;
HOWARD E MARSHALL,&#13;
Township Clerk of the&#13;
adv. Township of Unadilla&#13;
To Newspaper Publishers&#13;
and Printers&#13;
W e manufacture the very&#13;
highest grade of&#13;
Brass Leads &amp; Slugs&#13;
Brass Galleys&#13;
Metal Borders&#13;
L. &amp;. Metal Furniture&#13;
Leads and Slugs&#13;
Metal Leaders&#13;
Spaces and Quads&#13;
6 to 48 point&#13;
Type&#13;
Brass Rule in Strips&#13;
Brass Labor-Saving&#13;
Rule&#13;
Metal Quoins, etc.&#13;
Brass Column Rules&#13;
Brass Circles&#13;
Brass Leaders&#13;
Brass Round Corners&#13;
Equal to the Occasion.&#13;
Testy Traveler—Say, you act as If&#13;
you own this car. Porter (blandly)—&#13;
Much 'bilged fo' de compliment, svih.&#13;
If I does say It mahself I tries to treat&#13;
de passengers as if dey wnz mab own&#13;
guests, sub.—Judge.&#13;
Very Close.&#13;
They were discussing certain acquaintances&#13;
when Flint inquired:&#13;
"Saunders and Harris are close&#13;
friends, aren't they?"&#13;
"Yes; neither can borrow a cent&#13;
from the other," came the reply.&#13;
Caret Stubborn, Itchy Skis Troubles&#13;
L 'I could scratch myself to pieces' is often&#13;
heard from sufferers of Eczema, Tetter,&#13;
Itch and similar Skin Eroptions. Don't&#13;
Scratch—Stop the Itching at once with&#13;
Dr. Hobson's Eczema Ointment, Its first&#13;
application starts healing; the Bed, Rough&#13;
Scaly, Itching Skin is soothed bv the Healing&#13;
and Cooling Medicines. Mrs. C. A.&#13;
Einfeldt, Rock Island, III., after using&#13;
Dr. Hobson's Eczema Ointment, writes:&#13;
"This is the first time in nine years I have&#13;
been free from the dreadful ailment."&#13;
Guaranteed. 50c. Recommended by C.&#13;
G. Meyer, the druggist.&#13;
Striking an Average.&#13;
"Row much money do you think he'»&#13;
worth V&#13;
"I don't know, bat It's probably some&#13;
what less than he claimi^and more&#13;
than his neighbors admit" — Detroit&#13;
p*ee Press.&#13;
Pay yoor wbacriptlom thfai atfllfc.&#13;
Old Column Rules refaced and made&#13;
good as new at a small cost.&#13;
Please remember that we are not in any&#13;
Trust or Combination and are sure we can&#13;
make it greatly to your advantage to den!&#13;
with us.&#13;
A copy of our catalogue will be cheer*&#13;
fully furnished on application.&#13;
We frequently have good bargains in&#13;
second-hand job Presses, Paper Cutters&#13;
and other printing machinery and&#13;
material. """&#13;
Philadelphia Printers Supply Co. V Manufactsrers of&#13;
Type and High Grade Printing Material&#13;
14 8. 5th St., Philadelphia, Pa.&#13;
Proprietors Penn Type Foundry 2tlt&#13;
sm&#13;
j Monuments \&#13;
K If you are contemplating w&#13;
S getting a monument, marker* 8&#13;
B or anthing for the cemetery, 5&#13;
4 see or write ef&#13;
\ S. S. PLATT\&#13;
4 HOWELL, MICH. f&#13;
B No Agents. Save Their Commission m&#13;
2 Bell Phone 190 8&#13;
¥&#13;
II&#13;
1&#13;
J|&#13;
) 2 i &amp; f l M i &amp; ! L ^ ^ * ^ ^ • .&#13;
•*--&gt;* W r *&#13;
\*:,i'*nU*ai»ite- mm**********&#13;
4 *&gt;-&#13;
\ '••*••?&amp;&#13;
' • . *&#13;
' * * • •&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
. » - ' . - » •&#13;
•*,..&#13;
"'#.&#13;
M&#13;
! ..&#13;
k.&#13;
• ^ - ^&#13;
''•re •&#13;
Hi'&#13;
I ' • ! • • * '&#13;
J, ix •_.&#13;
H o&#13;
L*{J««.&#13;
'.* • * - , , • . / - -&#13;
k.&gt;2-^:-.','&#13;
W&#13;
:•• i &gt; •&#13;
vr**r~ • . - . • &gt; '• •.&#13;
•• ' v ' * - ; ' ' . :. ;.,'•• • ,-&#13;
! &lt; &gt; &gt; . ' . . / " &gt; ; ' ; • : ' ; • ' ' • ' : . •&#13;
• • S . . "/v .. •«&#13;
/-,-. .-.v.'-"' v ' - v '•••&#13;
V * i k - ' • ' ' * • i.&#13;
••*'' '&gt;^ * ?r' *VJ '&gt; Y•&#13;
'M'&#13;
3«;.'J&#13;
• • - : * ?&#13;
• , ' &gt; .&#13;
Go Down With Steamship Empress of Ireland in the&#13;
St. Lawrence River.&#13;
Rimouski, Que., May 30.—Nine hundred&#13;
and thirty-four persons lost their&#13;
Uvea when the great Canadian Pacific&#13;
twin screw liner Empress of Ireland&#13;
was rammed amidships in a thick fog&#13;
Off Father Point In the St. Lawrence&#13;
and sunk by the Norwegian collier&#13;
Storatad.&#13;
Four hundred and three survivors&#13;
ware picked up from floating wreckage&#13;
and two lifeboats.&#13;
And only 18 of the saved are woman.&#13;
Gathered piecemeal from survivors&#13;
the horror of this wreck grows with&#13;
the telling.&#13;
The doomed ones had little time&#13;
even to pray. They were engulfed by&#13;
the onrushlng waters that swallowed&#13;
the big ship inside of 19 minutes from&#13;
the time she was struck.&#13;
The wirelesB operators on the Empress,&#13;
sticking to their posts to the&#13;
last, had time only to send a few "S.&#13;
O. 8." calls for help when the rising&#13;
waters silence their instruments.&#13;
That silence told the rescuers miles&#13;
away more potently than a bugle that&#13;
doom had overtaken the ship.&#13;
Only six* hours before this fateful&#13;
collision the passengers sang as a&#13;
goodnight hymn "God Be With You&#13;
Till We Meet Again," played by the&#13;
Salvation army band on board.&#13;
The members of that band and most&#13;
of the 165 Salvationists wore among&#13;
the loBt.&#13;
8urv!vora Tell of Fog.&#13;
It waB foggy, according to survivors,&#13;
when the Empress of Ireland, a steelhulled,&#13;
steel-bulkheaded ship of more&#13;
than 8,000 tons, left Montreal at 4:30&#13;
in the afternoon in command of H. G.&#13;
Kendall of the Royal Naval reserve,&#13;
one of the most skilled of transatlantic&#13;
navigators.&#13;
Forest fires also obscured the atmosphere&#13;
and the big ship in charge of&#13;
a pilot, proceeded slowly on her way&#13;
to sea. At midnight the pilot aid left&#13;
near Father Point, shouting a merry&#13;
"Bon Voyage" as he went down their&#13;
ladder to his waiting boat.&#13;
The darkness at this time was intense&#13;
and the ship under the slowest&#13;
speed possible with steerageway held&#13;
her course. Her decks were deserted.&#13;
The passengers had all sought their&#13;
berths with no thought of impending&#13;
death.&#13;
Out of the darkness, on the port&#13;
side, soon after 2:30 in the morning&#13;
there loomed the little Norwegian collier,&#13;
not half the size of the Empress,&#13;
but fated to be her destroyer.&#13;
Not until the collier was almost&#13;
abeam of the big liner was the danger&#13;
known on either ship. The fog had&#13;
blotted out the lights as well as the&#13;
port and starboard lights of both&#13;
ships.&#13;
Quick orders trumpeted on both vessels&#13;
were heard. But they came all&#13;
too late.&#13;
8tHkee 8hlp Amldthlp.&#13;
The steel-pointed prow of the Stor-&#13;
•tad struck the liner amidships and&#13;
then forged aft, ripping and tearing&#13;
Its way through the Empress of Ireland.&#13;
Clear to the stern of the Empress of&#13;
Ireland was this great steel shaving&#13;
cut from her side, from the top of the&#13;
hull far below the water line. Into that&#13;
rant the water poured with force of a&#13;
Niagara.&#13;
The bow of the Storatad smashed&#13;
Its way through berths on that side&#13;
of the ship, killing passengers sleeping&#13;
in their berths and grinding bodies to&#13;
pieces.&#13;
Reaching the stern of the big liner,&#13;
the Storatad staggered off In the darkness,&#13;
her bow crumpled by the Impact&#13;
Her commander was ready a few minutes&#13;
later, when he found his ship&#13;
would float, to aid the crippled and&#13;
sinking Empress, but he was too late&#13;
to save the majority of those on board.&#13;
Carried to Bottom.&#13;
The Empress of Ireland recoiled almost&#13;
on her starboard beam ends from&#13;
the blow, of the collier and passengers&#13;
were flung from their berths against&#13;
the wall! of their staterooms.&#13;
Many were stunned and before they&#13;
had time to recover were carried to&#13;
the bottom with the ship.&#13;
The rait torrents pouring into the&#13;
great gash on the port side, aft, filled&#13;
the corridors and flooded every stateroom&#13;
abaft the midship section Inside&#13;
©{four minutes.&#13;
There wat never a chance for the&#13;
helpless one* In the after cabins and&#13;
stateroom of *$k* ilner. With her port&#13;
..aide laid open far half Its length from&#13;
^sd'inldahto sejetton to the stern, a&#13;
set** had mere*•*•*&lt;*• to float than&#13;
t i e Hn^neai nr Ireland, and the&#13;
trapped passengers In that after seei&#13;
ttssi were doesned from the moment&#13;
tha storatad struck.&#13;
- Jftoeiing from the blow the ship began&#13;
to settle almoBt Immediately as&#13;
the water rushed into the big rent.&#13;
From the forward cabin, however,&#13;
men and women in night attire stumbled&#13;
along the corridors and up the&#13;
companion way to the promenade&#13;
deck—the deck below, the one on&#13;
which the boats rested.&#13;
S w i m to Deck.&#13;
Up they swarmed on deck in their&#13;
night clothing to find the ship heeling&#13;
away to port and the deck slanting at&#13;
a degree that made it almost impossible&#13;
to stand even clinging to railings.&#13;
Men and women, shrieking, praying,&#13;
crying for aid that was fated to arrive&#13;
too late, fell over one another in that&#13;
last struggle for life on board the&#13;
doomed Empress of Ireland.&#13;
Frenzied mothers leaped overboard&#13;
with their babies in their arms. Others&#13;
knelt on deck and tried to pray in&#13;
the few moments left to them. Some&#13;
were flung overboard by the heeling of&#13;
the sinking ship and some broke their&#13;
legs or arms In trying to reach the&#13;
lifeboats.&#13;
Above the din of the struggle on the&#13;
great promenade deck could be heard&#13;
Captain Kendal] shouttng commands&#13;
for the launching of the lifeboats. Several&#13;
were launched in the 19 minutes&#13;
that the ship floated.&#13;
There was no time to observe the&#13;
rule "Women first" in this disaster,&#13;
for those nearest the boats scrambled&#13;
to places in them.&#13;
But even as they were being&#13;
launched, while the wireless still was&#13;
calling "S. O. S." there came a terriflo&#13;
explosion that almost rent the ship In&#13;
twain.&#13;
Ship's Boilers Explode.&#13;
It was the explosion of the boilers&#13;
struck by the cold water. A geyser of&#13;
water shot upward from the midship&#13;
section, mingled with fragments of&#13;
wreckage, that showered down upon&#13;
the passengers still clinging to the&#13;
rails forward and upon those struggling&#13;
in the water.&#13;
The explosion destroyed the last&#13;
hope of tfle ship's floating until succor&#13;
could arrive, for the shock had&#13;
smashed the forward steel bulkhead&#13;
walls that had up to then shut out&#13;
the torrents invading the after part.&#13;
The water rushed forward and the&#13;
Empress of Ireland went swiftly to&#13;
her doom, carrying down with her hundreds&#13;
of passengers who stood on her&#13;
slanting deck, their arms Btretched upward&#13;
and their last cries choked In&#13;
the engulfing waters.&#13;
Intense darkness covered the waters&#13;
when the Empress of Ireland made&#13;
that final plunge, but the fog lifted a&#13;
few minutes later and then came the&#13;
first faint streaks of dawn.&#13;
It lighted waters strewed with&#13;
wreckage and struggling passengers,&#13;
who strove to keep afloat&#13;
The crippled Storstad, which had&#13;
wrought this tragedy of the waters,&#13;
had lifeboats out picking up as many&#13;
survivors as possible.&#13;
The gray dawn revealed the government&#13;
steamers Lady Evelyn and&#13;
Eureka near the scene of the disaster&#13;
and hastening to aid.&#13;
Some of those in the water trlde to&#13;
swim to the Eureka as she neared the&#13;
point where the Empress had gone&#13;
down. One woman, wearing only an&#13;
undervest, swam to the Lady Evelyn,&#13;
and was helped on board, but died of&#13;
exhaustion soon afterwards.&#13;
The Work of Rescue.&#13;
The work of rescue still was going&#13;
on when the sun arose in a cloudless&#13;
sky.&#13;
Men and women were clinging to&#13;
spars and bits of broken planks. Many&#13;
of the survivors were injured. Some&#13;
had broken legs, others fractured&#13;
arms, and still others had been injured&#13;
internally In that last mad rush to get&#13;
away from the sinking liner.&#13;
Women clinging with one hand to&#13;
little ones, while with the other they&#13;
tried to keep clutch* on pieces of&#13;
wreckage, were picked up by the lifeboats&#13;
and carried on board the rescuing&#13;
vessels.&#13;
Captain Kendall, dated and unable&#13;
to give any coherent account of the&#13;
loss of his ship, was found clinging to&#13;
a broken spar.&#13;
The Empress of Ireland was a twin&#13;
screw steamer of 8,208 tons burden.&#13;
She waa 458 fast long and equipp&#13;
with modern apparatus not only for&#13;
wireless work but for submarine signalling.&#13;
The liner was built in 1906&#13;
and three years later set a record on&#13;
a run from Quebec to Liverpool.&#13;
The steamer was one of the most&#13;
popular vessels in the servJoe of the&#13;
Canadian Pacific railway and always&#13;
carried a large number of passengers,&#13;
She has plied for several years between&#13;
S t John and Quebec and Liverpool.&#13;
WANTS POLICE TO HAVE&#13;
COMFORTABLE UNIFORMS&#13;
I&#13;
;r',;*v * • •&#13;
,_;'&gt;.K!. —&gt;•&#13;
DR. K A T H E R I N E D A V I 8 .&#13;
New York.—If New York's woman&#13;
official, Dr. Katherine Bement Davis,&#13;
commissioner of corrections, has her&#13;
way the police of New York will be&#13;
seen in white duck uniforms, with&#13;
very low cut collars. Miss' Davis&#13;
thinks it "a crying shame that the policemen&#13;
be compelled to wear standing&#13;
collars, and 'V necks would be&#13;
very much appreciated by the men."&#13;
AGRICULTURE TO BE TAUGHT&#13;
Forty Michigan High Schools W i l l&#13;
Have Courses by Specially Trained&#13;
Teachers in Farming.&#13;
f&gt;. $ /? ti f. ft /,«•&#13;
JllJlansVritti^&#13;
Everybodysj)mk&#13;
East Lansing, Mich.--When the&#13;
school year opens next September,&#13;
about 40 high schools in Michigan&#13;
will offer regular courses in agriculture,&#13;
taught by specially trained&#13;
teachers. This number includes 10&#13;
schools which will take up the new&#13;
work for the first time. According to&#13;
Prof. W. H. French, of M. A. C, progress&#13;
in the agricultural work among&#13;
the high schools has been most encouraging,&#13;
considering the fact that&#13;
it has been accomplished without&#13;
state aid or state bonus of any kind.&#13;
This extension, it is said, has been&#13;
brought about solely through the interest&#13;
of school superintendents, farmers&#13;
and others.&#13;
The introduction of agriculture as&#13;
a subject of study into high school&#13;
courses was begun in the fall of 1908,&#13;
with one high school experimenting&#13;
as to the development of the course&#13;
of study, its scope, arrangement as&#13;
related to other high school work and&#13;
probable aims for future development.&#13;
The result of the experiment was very&#13;
satisfactory, and the development of&#13;
agriculture In the public high schools&#13;
has become a part of the extension&#13;
service of the agricultural college.&#13;
\7igorousIy good— and keenly&#13;
delicious. Thirst-quenching&#13;
and refreshing.&#13;
The national beverage&#13;
—and yours.&#13;
"Mm*&#13;
Whenever&#13;
you tee an&#13;
Arrow thinjt&#13;
of Coca-Cols*&#13;
Demand the SJBUUIUQ by rail&#13;
Nickname*&#13;
THE COCA-COLA COMPANY&#13;
Atlanta, Ga.&#13;
l-F&#13;
Twenty-six Fatalities In May.&#13;
Lansing, Mich.—The state Industrial&#13;
accident board received reports of&#13;
1,620 accidents during May. Nine&#13;
hundred and forty-nine of these were&#13;
temporary disability, 45 permanent&#13;
disability, and 26 fatal. Of the fatal&#13;
accidents two occurred In the iron&#13;
mining industry; five in copper mines;&#13;
seven on railroads and three by lumbering&#13;
operations. The remalnding&#13;
fatalities were distributed among various&#13;
industries.&#13;
No Coal Strike in Michigan.&#13;
Saginaw, Mich.—There will be no&#13;
strike of 3,000 soft coal miners in&#13;
Michigan in the next two years. After&#13;
a month of deliberation the committees&#13;
representing miners and operators,&#13;
called together to bring about a&#13;
working scale for 1914-16, concluded&#13;
its work Friday afternoon. The scale&#13;
1912*14 is reaffirmed, with one exception,&#13;
that being an arbitration clause&#13;
which is made stronger.&#13;
Smooth-Facea Wisdom.&#13;
President WilBon is the first "barefaced"&#13;
occupant of the White House&#13;
since President McKinley. Indeed,&#13;
these have been the only smoothfaced&#13;
presidents since the Civil war.&#13;
The faces of the most conspicuous&#13;
members of the cabinet are whiskerlesB,&#13;
as is the mobile countenance of&#13;
the speaker of the house. The sensible&#13;
fashion Is especially noticeable&#13;
In the medical profession, owing to&#13;
the fact that formerly its members regarded&#13;
whiskers as an indispensable&#13;
part of their equipment, on a par with&#13;
the stethoscope and clinical thermometer&#13;
and odor of carbolic acid. The&#13;
idea then was, of course, to look old.&#13;
Now they try to appear young. Other&#13;
business and professional men are following&#13;
the example of the doctors,&#13;
much to the gratification of the barbers&#13;
and razor manufacturers. It is&#13;
not likely that we shall soon again see&#13;
the day when whiskers cover a multitude&#13;
of chins.&#13;
For Rust Stains.&#13;
For removing ink stains and Iron&#13;
rust from wash goods, cream of tartar&#13;
is excellent. Dampen with ablution&#13;
and put in the sun.&#13;
SUCCEEDS IN CANADA&#13;
To Build Ftae Building.&#13;
Saginaw, Mich.—Saginaw is to have&#13;
a fine home for its board of trade.&#13;
The building will be from, 10 to 15&#13;
stories high and bo located at the&#13;
corner of Washington avenue and&#13;
Genessee avenue, the best corner in&#13;
the eaat side business district Ths&#13;
campaign^ to secure funds has been&#13;
launched.&#13;
STATE INTEREST&#13;
, Invitations have been Issued for a&#13;
banquet to be given In honor of For*&#13;
ner Governor Chase 8. Osborn at the&#13;
Hotel Downey at Lansing, June ^ 0 .&#13;
•bout »00 witt be invited. ^&#13;
Authority has beta received from&#13;
Washington tor the establishment of *&#13;
branch local poetofflce at Huronie&#13;
Beach, near Port Huron for t h e accommodation&#13;
of summer reeorters.&#13;
SCALP ITCHED AND BURNED&#13;
833 South Scioto St, Clrcleville,&#13;
Ohio.—"My little girl's trouble first&#13;
started,on her head in a bunch of little&#13;
pimples full of yellow-looking mat*&#13;
ter and they would spread in large&#13;
'places. In a short time they would&#13;
open. Her scalp waa awfully red and&#13;
inflamed and the burning and itching&#13;
were so intense that she would scratch&#13;
and rub till it would leave ugly sores.&#13;
The sores also appeared on her body,&#13;
and her clothing Irritated- them so&#13;
that I had to put real toft cloth next&#13;
to her body. She would lie awake of&#13;
nights and was very worrisome. At&#13;
times she waa tortured with itching&#13;
and burning.&#13;
"I tried different remedies with no&#13;
benefit for months. I had given up all&#13;
hope of her ever getting rid of it, then&#13;
I concluded to try Cuticura Soap and&#13;
Ointment. The second application&#13;
gave relief. In a short time she was&#13;
entirely cured." (Signed) Mrs. Alice&#13;
Kirlin, NOT. 4,1912.&#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;
The New Cook.&#13;
Senator John Sharp Williams, arguing&#13;
against suffrage at a tea in Washington,&#13;
said, with a smile:&#13;
"These feminists know less about&#13;
the nature of woman than the new&#13;
cook knew about cooking.&#13;
" *Martha,' said the mistress to the&#13;
new cook? T thought I told yotrwe'd&#13;
have curried chicken for dinner.'&#13;
* 'YeVm/ the new cook answered,&#13;
'but the hostler was busy and 1 ain't&#13;
no hand with a currycomb.'"&#13;
An Interesting and successful American&#13;
farmer, Lew Palmer, of Staveley,&#13;
Alta., passed through the city today.&#13;
Mr. Palmer came from Quluth, Minn.,&#13;
just ten years ago, and brought with&#13;
him four cows and three horses—and&#13;
that was his all. He homesteaded in&#13;
the Staveley district, and today has&#13;
480 acres of land, $3,000 worth of implements,&#13;
34 Percheron horseB, made&#13;
$1,000 out of hogs last year, raised&#13;
7,000 bushels of wheat, 6,000 bushels&#13;
of oats, 12 acres of potatoes, and 18&#13;
tons of onions. His farm and stock is&#13;
worth $30,000, and he made It all In&#13;
ten years.—Exchange.—Advertisement&#13;
His Brand of Religion.&#13;
"Brother Philander," said I to our&#13;
head deacon the other day, "I have&#13;
been watching Brother Sly for a while&#13;
and I am free to confess that I can't&#13;
quite understand his brand of religion.&#13;
He seems different some days «t.*p&#13;
others." "Yes," replied Old PhHander&#13;
with one of his knowing smiles, "I&#13;
know what you mean. I will-tell you&#13;
about Sly and his religion.* Now, on&#13;
Junday he doesn't allow the neighbors&#13;
to interfere with his devotions. On&#13;
week days he doesn't allow his devotions&#13;
or his religion to interefere in&#13;
his dealings with his neighbors. I&#13;
might, put it a little plainer. The Lord&#13;
is safe all the time. The neighbors&#13;
are safe only on Sunday." Philanders&#13;
knowledge of church history is so fine&#13;
that it keeps down all dissension, and&#13;
we regularly re-elect him unanimously&#13;
as treasurer and boas deacon.—Kan*&#13;
sas City Star.&#13;
Couldn't Let It Pass.&#13;
First Scotr-What about some liquid&#13;
refreshments?&#13;
-Second Scot—No. Ah'm an abstain^&#13;
«r. But Ahll V the money err a&#13;
cig*rr!---4&amp;aatow HeraM-V&#13;
It is easier for the average nan to&#13;
stand adversity than prosperity, and&#13;
nnish mors common.&#13;
Of Course.&#13;
• The Lady Judge-rl'm getting tired&#13;
of these requests for postponements.&#13;
What's your latest excuse?&#13;
The Lady Lawyer---Why, yottrhonor,&#13;
we only aak you to give us another&#13;
week. The fact is, my client's dressmaker&#13;
is ill and can't get her goingto-&#13;
court gown finished until that date.&#13;
The Lady Judge—Granted. Next&#13;
case.—Stray Stories.&#13;
Cubist A r t&#13;
"What are you painting from a soap&#13;
bo*r&#13;
"1 am using a soap box as a model,"&#13;
answered the cubist with dignity, "but&#13;
-the subject of the painting is a young&#13;
girl standing by a brook."&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle of&#13;
CASTORlA.asaie and sure reined/ for&#13;
infants and children, and sea that It&#13;
Bears the&#13;
f tsjtatursHsti&#13;
In Use W&amp;t _ , . _ . _ „&#13;
Cbfidrea Cry for Retd** Otstefc&#13;
v «oi»^txee^tleae. ••&gt;•:.:*: MA fair exchange is a* robbery.*&#13;
"You rrtdenttj have not ^een fofu&#13;
tofalrg^i^sb^: ; -&gt;».'~75r&#13;
'?JU'*&#13;
• * , U - :&#13;
/&#13;
' ' . 1 * * * ,&#13;
&gt;^;V&#13;
. ' • • - • -' - ' - .*£'&#13;
' v &gt; , ••-.••;•-' . " ? # "*5i"&#13;
&gt; • • • • " - . • • &gt; • " • - - * «&#13;
•_4 -i •«•. ^ • ' • ^ •» %•.£."&#13;
.^ . »• .&#13;
• ' &amp; .&#13;
:tk,'&#13;
. J * * '&#13;
j""8r&#13;
t+t±i*m*.i*H4 ^fJml&amp;yrto-'.^K'OMlxJt*' **t*-'llm'(t*vf*jti',ll m (¾^&#13;
'&gt;^*-'«4-*S- ?W -.&#13;
y&#13;
!&amp;';&#13;
MM* ,v-..'..&#13;
MMH &gt; i nun «&lt;n&#13;
;.V' •^r* r g •—*•-——»-- » » ~ . .~^»»- i» * . . . .-*'. v-^-r^jr^*&#13;
: &amp; &gt; * » •&#13;
£i£?.:%:&#13;
'•«,s.- v.-,y / .&#13;
-a*--.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
I&#13;
Gove r nor s&#13;
A Novelization of&#13;
Alice Bradley's Play&#13;
GERTRUDE STEVENSON&#13;
Illustrations from Photographs of the Stage Production&#13;
Lady&#13;
®J&gt;&#13;
0op7*lgift,iai&amp; (publication Blebta BaMrr«d&gt; by David Belwoo.&#13;
8YNOP8I8.&#13;
Daniel Blade suddenly advances from a&#13;
Penniless miner to a millionaire and becomes&#13;
a power in the political and business&#13;
world. He has his eye on the fovernor's&#13;
chair. Hia simple, home-loving wife&#13;
falls to rise to the new conditions. Blade&#13;
meets Katherlne, daughter of Senator&#13;
Strickland, and seeB in her all that Mary&#13;
is not. Wesley Merrltt, editor of a local f*aper. threatens to light Blade through&#13;
he columns of his paper and Blade defies&#13;
him.&#13;
CHAPTER III—Continued.&#13;
Suddenly Blade's eyes lighted with&#13;
the fire of decision. His mouth became&#13;
a firm, straight line of determination.&#13;
There was something implacable&#13;
and grim in his very attitude&#13;
as the resolve to win Katherlne Strickland&#13;
became fixed in his mind. He&#13;
longed to hurry after her—to tell her&#13;
of his decision to fight, if not with,&#13;
then for her. He was eager to show&#13;
her Just how much they two together&#13;
could make out of life, a big, fine fight&#13;
for position and power.&#13;
Even the thought of being governor&#13;
was left in the distance as plan after&#13;
plan raced through his mind, of greater&#13;
conquests and bigger achievements,&#13;
possible only with a woman like Katherlne&#13;
Strickland for his wife. So abeorbed&#13;
and Intense were his thoughts&#13;
of the future with her for the moment&#13;
he forgot completely the woman who&#13;
for 30 years had kept her place as his&#13;
wife. In all his dealings he had never&#13;
considered obstacles, except to sweep&#13;
them from his path. Ae he remembered&#13;
the present and Mary, he never&#13;
hesitated or faltered from his newly&#13;
made resolution.&#13;
Mary could go it alone. He would&#13;
see that she had everything that&#13;
money could buy. He would make her&#13;
comfortable and take care of her. That&#13;
she should be further considered never&#13;
entered his mind. Always ruthless in&#13;
his methods, he was equally cruel even&#13;
when the obstacle to his advancement&#13;
was a fragile little woman who had&#13;
given him the best of her love and&#13;
years and who would gladly have laid&#13;
down her life to save his.&#13;
It was not as if a sudden flame of&#13;
Intensive, overwhelming love for Katherlne&#13;
Strickland had surged through&#13;
his heart. It was nothing ae decent&#13;
or as fine or as blameless as that His&#13;
whole attitude toward the girl was&#13;
one of cold-blooded acquisition. He&#13;
had determined to have her Just as he&#13;
had determined only last week to out- aevery other man at the rug auo-&#13;
. He wanted her to take a place&#13;
i s life because he knew what her&#13;
e would be to him. He wanted her&#13;
-fceiruty, her brain, her savoir falre, as&#13;
so many stepping stones by which to&#13;
mount higher and higher in the affairs&#13;
of the state and the nation.&#13;
In spite of the fact that he criticized&#13;
his wife's lack of social graces, he&#13;
was wise enough to know that he was&#13;
far from a finished product himself.&#13;
In spite of himself, traces of the parvenu&#13;
occasionally showed through the&#13;
veneer of bluff and arrogance. With&#13;
a wife like Katherlne he would soon&#13;
come to know all the fine points of the&#13;
social game. A wife like Katherlne&#13;
would cover up a multitude of his little&#13;
sins of commission and omission.&#13;
or his arms or any other very essential&#13;
part of his being.&#13;
It was at juet this point In Slade's&#13;
pitiless reasoning that Mary, peering&#13;
over the baluster and seeing him&#13;
alone, hurried down the stairs.&#13;
"Thank goodness, they've gone," she&#13;
declared as she came into the room.&#13;
Then seeing the numerous side lights&#13;
burning she hastened to turn one&#13;
after the other down to a glimmer.&#13;
"I'm so glad you're not going out," she&#13;
went on, cpmlng over to him and rubbing&#13;
her cheek against his sleeve. The&#13;
little movement was a pathetically&#13;
mute appeal for some caress. "What'd&#13;
they say?" she asked, suddenly, as&#13;
she realized that her tender)yearning&#13;
met with no response.&#13;
But her husband was In no communicative&#13;
frame of mind.&#13;
"You're not mad with me, are yer?"&#13;
she questioned, wistfully, very much&#13;
like an eager child who has been repressed.&#13;
"No," Slade replied, briefly and without&#13;
much interest&#13;
Mary breathed a quick sigh of relief.&#13;
"Ah, then, we'll have a nice, quiet,&#13;
pleasant evening," she declared, adding&#13;
coaxingly: "Let's go upBtalrsand&#13;
have a game of euchre. We haven't&#13;
played for ever so long."&#13;
Slade looked at her, his eyes drawn&#13;
into a deep frown. It was true he&#13;
wasn't angry with her, but he was&#13;
" » c .'•&#13;
CHAPTER IV.&#13;
- Blade wanted Katherlne Strickland&#13;
for his wife much the same as he&#13;
would have desired a wealthy, clever,&#13;
'Influential man for a partner. It was&#13;
to be a union of ambition. There was&#13;
no tenderness in his thoughts of her.&#13;
He was actuated purely and simply by&#13;
the lust for power and the greed of&#13;
glory. All the softer, better things in&#13;
the man's nature were swamped by&#13;
this torrent of craving for worldly success&#13;
that was sweeping him on to commit&#13;
the most dastardly act in his long&#13;
career of trampling over the heads&#13;
and hearts of adversaries and opponents.&#13;
Even when hs was a boy Dan Slade&#13;
had always set hia teeth at "You can't&#13;
do it," or I t can't be done." The very&#13;
difficulty of a thing strengthened his&#13;
determination to do. All his life long&#13;
his success had been punctuated by&#13;
the ruin of other men. He -had not&#13;
advanced so far without pushing other&#13;
men back. Now that a woman instead&#13;
of a man stood in the way, the result&#13;
was the same. His methods might ha&#13;
Quieter, mope merciful, hat the answer&#13;
would be t^e same. Marys sterling&#13;
worth, her long years of devotion and&#13;
•Wsjsi tenderness counted for nothing&#13;
onew be became convinced that Marys&#13;
d^dineswrhst standpet notfoy a s * her&#13;
arrested development were stop-gaps&#13;
tin bis own opportunity for progression.&#13;
He ignored the fact that the lit.&#13;
tie browu&lt;«yudr patient woman was as.&#13;
ajao* * part o{ bin a* ware bit eyes&#13;
"8uch Didoes; You Kiss Me."&#13;
angry at the thwarting circumstances&#13;
that were hemming him In. Her very&#13;
manner Irritated him now—her quiet&#13;
contentment her calm acceptance of&#13;
her failure to meet hie guests and fill&#13;
her place as mistress of his home maddened&#13;
him. He was all the more determined&#13;
to fight for something else—&#13;
to begin his campaign for a governorship&#13;
and another woman that moment.&#13;
"You can amuse yourself after I'm&#13;
gone," he answered over his shoulder.&#13;
"Then you are going out?" Mary's&#13;
voice echoed the disappointment she&#13;
felt.&#13;
"Yes." Slade continued to be monosyllabic.&#13;
"But I want to have a talk&#13;
with you. Mary—we've go^ to come&#13;
to some understanding."&#13;
"Why, what—T" Mary began, and&#13;
then.stopped. For the first time she&#13;
noticed, his changed manner and his&#13;
averted eyes. She started to fumble&#13;
with her workbasket&#13;
"I can't put it off any longer. I—*&#13;
er—" Slade stopped short He was&#13;
finding this attempt at an "understanding"&#13;
much more difficult than he&#13;
ban anticipated.&#13;
"What is it you're trying to say,'&#13;
Dan?" Mary's voice was firmer than&#13;
his. "What's In your mind? You keep&#13;
hinting at something lately and you&#13;
never finish i t What is it?"&#13;
"You're a rich woman in your own&#13;
name* Mary. Are you satisfied with&#13;
what I've settled on yon?"&#13;
"Why, yes," came the quick response,&#13;
aa Mary's puuled eyes&#13;
searched hia for a reason for the&#13;
strange Question. Then she added:&#13;
"You've been mighty good to me, Dan."&#13;
"How would you like to go and live&#13;
in the country* Mary?"&#13;
Glad surprise tiled the woman's&#13;
eyes. Her tain cheeks flushed aa aba&#13;
clasped her bands excitedly. M&#13;
"Oh, Dan, you know I'd like i t&#13;
You're awfully good, father. I knew&#13;
you'd back down and give In. This&#13;
Is no place for us."&#13;
"You leave me out of the Question.&#13;
And to bis credit*&#13;
shamefacad*&#13;
"I can't leave you out of the question,"&#13;
she protested quickly, not an&#13;
inkling or her husband's real meaning&#13;
having entered her head. In her perfect&#13;
love and loyalty she was impervious&#13;
to aay hint of neglect or disloyalty&#13;
from him. Had she known his&#13;
thoughts her first care would have&#13;
been to soothe him us one whose&#13;
brain, overtaxed with affairs beyond&#13;
her understanding, had suddenly&#13;
clouded.&#13;
For an Instant the man was silent.&#13;
His face was turned from here and he&#13;
was looking out the doorway through&#13;
which the stately figure of Katherlne&#13;
Strickland had just pasted and through&#13;
which he hoped to walk some day—&#13;
governor.&#13;
"I—I—wouldn't go with you, Mary,"&#13;
he finally turned and looked her&#13;
squarely in the eyes.&#13;
"Why—where would you be? Where&#13;
would you live? Where would you?"&#13;
She stopped and then finished. "Pshaw.&#13;
That's all foolishness, Dan."&#13;
"Mary.'' Slade was firmer now. His&#13;
voice hr.d a ring of finality, but Mary&#13;
didn't understand. "I can't go on apol&#13;
ogizing for you eternally! You can't&#13;
have a.headache every night! I must&#13;
either have a wife who can be the&#13;
head of my household or none."&#13;
Into the woman's heart there leaped&#13;
a sharp fear, followed by the childish&#13;
idea that perhaps, because she wouldn't&#13;
go to the opera, she was to be punished—&#13;
sent away alone—until she was&#13;
forgiven.&#13;
"You're tired of me," she suggested.&#13;
"If that were true and you filled the&#13;
bill, we could put up with each other,"&#13;
he returned brutally, "but it isn't so."&#13;
"Don't you love me?" she half&#13;
breathed the question timidly.&#13;
For a brief instant something caught&#13;
at Slade's heart and tugged and tugged.&#13;
He turned with a look of infinite tenderness&#13;
and said, simply: "Yes, Mary,&#13;
I do." His tone was genuine and sincere.&#13;
Mary laughed a little, happy laugh.&#13;
At the sound Slade's mood changed&#13;
like a flash. It grated on his already&#13;
overwrought nerves. It seemed to dismiss&#13;
the controversy, to end the argument,&#13;
to ring the death-knell of the&#13;
dream that had come to him. The&#13;
careless way In which she apparently&#13;
dropped the discussion of going away&#13;
nettled him. Prompted by a Budden&#13;
impulse, he snatched her workbasket&#13;
from her lap and flung it the full&#13;
length of the room. "D—n that basket!"&#13;
he exclaimed. "Can't I ever see&#13;
you without it?"&#13;
"Dan!" Mary's gasp of amazement&#13;
was the only sound in the room. It&#13;
was the first time heuhad ever been&#13;
harsh with her. She shrank back hurt&#13;
and frightened. "Why, good Lord,&#13;
Dan, you never did that before."&#13;
Then, with quiet dignity, she began&#13;
to pick up the basket, the hated darning&#13;
cotton, the needles and scissors,&#13;
and the little worn thimble. Slade,&#13;
watching her slight, stooping figure,&#13;
ought to have been ashamed, but hie&#13;
anger was flaming hot and he didn't&#13;
as much as offer to help.&#13;
Mary's mood changed, too.&#13;
"I believe you're doing it to get your&#13;
own way," she sputtered, "but you&#13;
ain't going to get it. I've got as much&#13;
right to my life as you've got to yours."&#13;
As she came up to him, he stood&#13;
grim and silent, suddenly determined&#13;
that If she wouldn't go he would. If&#13;
she refused his offer of a home in the&#13;
country, then she could have this great&#13;
house to herself and he would live at&#13;
the club.&#13;
"There ain't anything you could ask&#13;
of me I wouldn't do—except—" Mary's&#13;
troubled face was looking Into his.&#13;
"Except what I ask," he finished, sarcastically,&#13;
and hurried from the room,&#13;
curtly ordered his dressing bag packed&#13;
and then, hat in hand, hie overcoat on&#13;
his arm, came back into the room.&#13;
"Did it ever occur to you, Mary, that&#13;
you're a mule?" he asked. "You're&#13;
sweet and good tempered and amiable&#13;
but .you'd have given the mule that&#13;
came out of Noah's ark points on how&#13;
to be stubborn."&#13;
"How often have I failed you in&#13;
these years, Dan?"&#13;
"You're failing me now. You won't&#13;
look at things with my eyes."&#13;
"We're not one person, we're two,&#13;
Dan," she reminded him, quietly.&#13;
"Well, that's the trouble, we ought&#13;
to be one. That's Just what I'm getting&#13;
at. We ought to be of one mind."&#13;
"Whose? Yours?" and Mary's sweet&#13;
mouth puckered Into a very little&#13;
smile.&#13;
"I'm done," Slade decided, hopelessly.&#13;
"I can remember the time when you&#13;
would have thought that was cunning,"&#13;
she reproached him.&#13;
"I'm going to my club, Mary," he&#13;
announced, disregarding her playful&#13;
attempt to smooth things over.&#13;
Mary gased at him, bewildered by&#13;
his swift changes of mood, hurt by&#13;
his attitude, almost angry because he&#13;
was so unreasonable.&#13;
Then love came rushing up into her&#13;
heart After all be was her Dan. What&#13;
did this crossness or bis nervousness&#13;
matter? Me went up to h i a , pulled&#13;
bis scarf a bit closer round bis throat&#13;
and aa he turned _a way with a muttered&#13;
word, waited patiently. Thau,&#13;
laying bar hand on his arm—such a&#13;
thin little band, with his wedding ring&#13;
hanging loosely on it—asked: "flbaU&#13;
I wait up tor y o u r&#13;
sJtade's ~4nea worked convulsively.&#13;
She didn't understand, poor little soul.&#13;
lie was going away for good, for all&#13;
'Jme, and she was asking if she would&#13;
wait up for him. More than once before&#13;
she had asked that question of&#13;
him, the question that from a wife's&#13;
ilps, carrier with it unspoken, tender&#13;
pleading. For a space he was torn&#13;
with emotions he could not define, had&#13;
hardly expected himself to feel. Something&#13;
bade him turn back upon ambition&#13;
and pride and clasp into his arms&#13;
rhia little woman who had worked for&#13;
him, with him, who had had faith in&#13;
him when he was poor, and who had&#13;
struggled and cooked and Blaved for&#13;
him that he might rise to his present&#13;
position.&#13;
Cut he struggled against the feeling,&#13;
fought it back and conquered.&#13;
"No, don't wait up for me."&#13;
"All right," Mary agreed. "I won't.&#13;
If you don't want me to," and then,&#13;
with a roguish smile, "but I will wait&#13;
up for you all the same."&#13;
Slade was touched, but he stiffened&#13;
his shoulders. Wealth he had won,&#13;
honors he meant to have—and Katherlne&#13;
Stricklaud.&#13;
"Good-night, Mary," he called, coldly,&#13;
as he hurried out of the room.&#13;
Left alone, Mary stood watching&#13;
him, a forlorn little figure.&#13;
"Why, he didn't kiss me." She hurried&#13;
to the door. "Dan, you forgot&#13;
something, Dan!"&#13;
Slade, hastening to the door, halted,&#13;
hesitated, turned back.&#13;
"You come right back here and kiss&#13;
me," Mary demanded, affectionately.&#13;
"Such didoes; You kiss me." She&#13;
raised her face for the kiss she thought&#13;
was "good-night" and which he meant&#13;
as "good-by." Slade stooped and laid&#13;
his lips on hers, gently, reverently,&#13;
then hurried out, almost as if he were&#13;
afraid to stay a minute longer.&#13;
"Such didoes," Mary laughed to herself.&#13;
She looked around the great&#13;
empty room. It suddenly struck her&#13;
that she had never really been happy&#13;
In this room. Rlchee had proved a&#13;
burden rather than a pleasure. They&#13;
had robbed her of Dan's devotion, his&#13;
confidence, his gaiety. She hastened&#13;
to turn out the lights, shuddering as&#13;
she did so. She grabbed her workbasket&#13;
from the table and suddenly&#13;
overcome with fright in the great&#13;
silent shadowy room, fled to the lighted&#13;
hall, calling: "Susie, Susie—"&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
FROM DOCTRINE OF^GALEN&#13;
Use of Term "Man of 8plrlt," Etc.,&#13;
May Be Traced Back to the Second&#13;
Century.&#13;
"Few persons even stop to consider&#13;
when they speak of 'a man of spirit'&#13;
that they are unwittingly employing&#13;
the language of the days of Galen."&#13;
says the Journal of the American&#13;
Medical association. "Yet this is evidently&#13;
the survival of the old doctrine&#13;
of spirits. We may believe that Galen&#13;
had a conception of the nerve trunks&#13;
as conductors of something—he called&#13;
it spirits—to and from the brain and&#13;
spinal cord.&#13;
"The natural spirits were that undefined&#13;
property which gave to blood&#13;
the capacity of nourishing the tissues&#13;
of the body. The vital spirits were&#13;
acquired in the heart, and when at&#13;
last the blood with its vital spirits&#13;
went to the brain apd experienced a&#13;
sort of refinement for the last time,&#13;
the animal spirits were separated&#13;
from it and carried to tho body by&#13;
the nerve trunks."&#13;
Such was the idea of the vital functions&#13;
in the second century. Today,&#13;
after 1,800 years, we know that there&#13;
are no "spirits" in our blood or nerves,&#13;
but we still speak of being in "high&#13;
spirits" or "low spirits," of being full&#13;
of "animal spirits," of a "spirited answer"&#13;
or a "spirited horse."&#13;
Applied Advice.&#13;
Some time ago an Alabama lady&#13;
kindly undertook to advise one of her&#13;
negro maids as to certain rules of&#13;
propriety that always should be observed&#13;
by young women to whom attentions&#13;
are paid by gentlemen&#13;
friends. One evening the lady, wondering&#13;
whether her seeds of advice&#13;
had fallen upon rocky ground, stationed&#13;
herself In a rocker near the&#13;
kitchen door, where she was entertained&#13;
by the following dialogue:&#13;
"Look here, don't you try to git&#13;
fresh wif me! Mah name's Miss&#13;
Smith—not Mary. Ah don't 'low mah&#13;
best an' most pa'tie'lar friends to call&#13;
me Mary."&#13;
"Ah beg your pahdon, Miss Smith.&#13;
But say. Miss Smith, would yo' jes's&#13;
soon shift to de Oder knee? This&#13;
yere one's tired."&#13;
Trsde Secret&#13;
"Now the first thing to learn about&#13;
the shoe trade is this. As soon as a&#13;
customer comes in take off his shoes&#13;
and hide 'em."&#13;
"What's that for "&#13;
"Then you can wait on 'em at your&#13;
convenience, my boy. They can't walkout*—&#13;
Louisville Courier- Journal.&#13;
Man and Hie Age.&#13;
After ajnan reaches the age of fifty&#13;
be begins to see insults in the newspapers&#13;
to the effect that he is an old&#13;
man.—Tjopeka Capital.&#13;
The first use of asbestos was in the&#13;
manufacture of crematory robes far&#13;
the ancient Rojnina.&#13;
; • " •&#13;
PROBLEM FOR THE MAIDENS&#13;
in Hot Weather Will They Have to&#13;
Come to Costume Somewhat&#13;
Resembling Eve's?&#13;
Jerome S. McWade, the wealthy Duluth&#13;
connoisseur, said at a recent dinner:&#13;
"I Bpent the winter on the Riviera.&#13;
The winter fashions were really&#13;
Bhocking—shocking, that is to Cornstock&#13;
minds. Nothing shocks me.&#13;
"But in the evening at the Nice&#13;
Country club dances young girls&#13;
would wear sleeveless gowns that left&#13;
„the back quite bare from the waist&#13;
up. They could say truly—ha, ha, ha!&#13;
—that they hadn't a stitch on their&#13;
backs, eh? And in the afternoon at&#13;
the dansaatB young girls would wear&#13;
gowns that were either slashed to&#13;
the knee, or else that were—a still&#13;
subtler device—transparent to the&#13;
knees, permitting the slim and silken&#13;
limb to gleam through a panel of lace&#13;
or tulle.&#13;
"A western millionaire at the Negresco,&#13;
in Nice, on seeing his three&#13;
daughters in gowns of this radical&#13;
type, gave a loud laugh one day last&#13;
winter and said:&#13;
"By jingo, girls, what will you leave&#13;
off when the hot weather comes?"—&#13;
New York Tribune.&#13;
Against Advertising!&#13;
"Why don't you advertise?" asked&#13;
the editor of the home paper. "Don't&#13;
you believe In advertising?"&#13;
'Tm agin advertising," replied the&#13;
proprietor of the Bayvllle Racket&#13;
store.&#13;
"But why are you against it?" asked&#13;
the editor.&#13;
"It keeps a feller too durn busy,"&#13;
replied the proprietor. "I advertised&#13;
in a newspaper one time about ten&#13;
years ago, and I never even got time&#13;
to go fishing."&#13;
Blow to Romance.&#13;
"A prosaic age we live In."&#13;
"How now?"&#13;
"I see some king the other day,&#13;
having no sword handy, knighted a&#13;
man with an umbrella."—Kansas City&#13;
Journal.&#13;
A Surprise.&#13;
"Why are you so surprised to see&#13;
me? Did not the maid tell you who&#13;
it was that had called?"&#13;
"No, she only said: \A gentleman.'&#13;
"&#13;
Not Angels.&#13;
"Do you have any trouble keeping&#13;
a servant?"&#13;
"Of course. We're Just human beings."&#13;
To Be Expected.&#13;
"How Is your new polish business&#13;
progressing?"&#13;
"It is quite a shining success."&#13;
A girl will forgive you for thinking&#13;
she has no brains if you only think&#13;
she is pretty.&#13;
It's easy for women to get excited&#13;
over a thing they can't understand.&#13;
But a girl doesn't mind having red&#13;
hair unless nature so endowed her.&#13;
HER MOTHER-IN-LAW&#13;
Proved a Wise, Qood Friend.&#13;
A young woman out in la. found a&#13;
wise, good friend in her mother-in-law,&#13;
jokes notwithstanding. She writes:&#13;
"I was greatly troubled with my&#13;
stomach, complexion was blotchy and&#13;
yellow. After meals I often suffered&#13;
sharp pains and would have to He&#13;
down. My mother often told me it&#13;
was the coffee I drank at meals. But&#13;
when I'd Quit coffee I'd have a severe&#13;
headache.&#13;
"While visiting my mother-in-law I&#13;
remarked that she always made such&#13;
good coffee, and asked her to tell me&#13;
how. She laughed and told me It was&#13;
easy to make good 'coffee' when you&#13;
use Postum.&#13;
"I began to use Postum as soon as I&#13;
got home, and now we have the same&#13;
good 'coffee' (Postum) every day, and&#13;
I have no more trouble. Indigestion&#13;
is a thing of the past, and my complexion&#13;
has cleared up beautifully.&#13;
"My grandmother suffered a great&#13;
deal with her stomach. Her doctor&#13;
told her to leave off coffee. She then&#13;
took tea but that was just as bad.&#13;
"She-fmally was induced to try Postum&#13;
which she has used for over a&#13;
year. She traveled during the winter&#13;
over the greater part of Iowa, visiting,&#13;
something she had not been able to&#13;
do for years. She says she owes bar&#13;
present good health to Postum."&#13;
Name given by Postum Co., Battle&#13;
Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to ""vtalW&#13;
vllle," in pkgs.&#13;
Postum now comes in two forma:&#13;
Regular Poetum—must pa well&#13;
boiled. 15c and » c packages.&#13;
Instant Postum—is a soluble powder.&#13;
A teaspoonful dissolves ouickfy&#13;
in a cup of hot water and, with cream&#13;
and sugar, makes a delicious bevueaga&#13;
Instantly. lOo and 50c tins.&#13;
The coat per cup of both kln0s ia&#13;
"There's a Reason* fur PostujL&#13;
,-ao|d tar Oroeera.&#13;
'/»•:. . /• ••A' ,. '&#13;
r&#13;
.&#13;
* » - .&#13;
* ' : $ •&#13;
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SltoS&amp;kbs^::, ^. w * * ?rft fr^^firir^- -4?.V ^'• yft'ii&amp;^-^^^•••^^^^&#13;
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It&gt;' i' T •"•"••• '1 : - • y.7-r ', • ''/• v'&lt;&#13;
£&#13;
V O W about that printing&#13;
••*• job you're in need of?&#13;
Coane ia aad eea mm aboai&#13;
It at your first opportunity.&#13;
Don t wait natil too very&#13;
last moment bot five aa a&#13;
Uttla tiase aad wall show&#13;
yon what high grade work&#13;
wa can tarn oat&#13;
RHEUMATtO SUFFERERS&#13;
SHOULD USB&#13;
5 DROPS&#13;
ItefffOaW&#13;
Fof mil hum* or Rheumatism&#13;
_ LUMBAGO.&#13;
SCIATICA. COUT. NEURALGIA^&#13;
AND KIDNEY TROUBLES. DROPS STOP THK PAINi&#13;
ittlvaaQiSafcllattafi&#13;
*T ALL&#13;
Rhaumatic Cur* Com&#13;
6 0 YKAftt&gt;&#13;
EXPBRIEN01&#13;
TRADE MARKS&#13;
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CoavRiaHTS Ac&#13;
A.iyane nenrtlng B sketch and description an*; quickly InTenM ouna Icse rptruoinb ro.bulyr poaptienniotanb flree. eC womhemtuhnetrC Rai tsleonnts afrtretec. tOlylcfloeisitf ldnepnentlcurl .f oHrA sNeDcBnOrOinKg ponat Penattesn. t*&#13;
Patents taken ttirouirh Muim Jt Co. recel"&#13;
Uncial notice, without charge, in tha Scientific HmcricaH. A. handsomely illustvatea weekly. Jjinrcst cir&#13;
dotation of any scientific Journal. Terms, $3 i&#13;
year; four months, |L Sold by all newsdealers&#13;
Grand Trunk Time Table&#13;
For the conventeuce of our readers&#13;
Trains East Trains Wee&#13;
No. 46—8:39 a. m. No. 4ft—10:23 a. m.&#13;
No. 48—4:44) p. m. No. 47—7:12 p. m.&#13;
Advertise&#13;
.¾&#13;
•i ••-""• ' &gt; j f •**•••&gt;-'&#13;
I&#13;
Vl' ^..^,&#13;
ar&#13;
' . - I T T O D&#13;
Waal a Cook&#13;
Waat a Clark&#13;
Waat a Partaar&#13;
Waal • Sireatloa&#13;
Waat a Servant &lt;HH&#13;
Waat to 8aU a Maaa&#13;
Waat to 6 d l a Carriaga&#13;
Waal tm Sail Town Property&#13;
Waat ta l a U Yaar Gracarkw&#13;
Waat to Sail Year Hardware&#13;
Waal Caataawra for Aaytkiag.&#13;
AaVaruaa Waakly ia Thin Papar.&#13;
44»artlalag la tha Way te&#13;
AJ—rUalag BHaga Ci&#13;
Atfvartiaiag Kaapa Caati&#13;
•eVarlialai laaara*&#13;
Aa&gt;arHalag Showa Eaargy&#13;
AJrartlalag Shown Plack&#13;
A a W t U i n g la M B b M&#13;
Advartiaa or Bant&#13;
AdvartTaa Laag&#13;
I Adrartiaa Wall&#13;
jr v ADVERTISI&#13;
At Oa»a&#13;
In This Paper&#13;
aajp^aaaaanan&#13;
Dinkel-Allison&#13;
Wednesday afternoon, June 3rd,&#13;
ihehomeof Mr. and Mra. Mark&#13;
Allison was the scene of one of&#13;
the prettiest weddings of the sea-&#13;
SOD, when their daughter Kitsey&#13;
became the wife of Mr. Albert E,&#13;
Dinkel, Rev. W. G. Stephens of&#13;
Stockbridge, officiating.&#13;
The parlor of the residence was&#13;
tastefully decorated in green acd&#13;
white. Promptly at three o'clock&#13;
the bridal party took their appointed&#13;
places as Miss Fern Hendee&#13;
played a beautiful wedding&#13;
march. The impressive ring ceremony&#13;
was performed, Marjorie&#13;
Allison, sister of the bride, acting&#13;
as ring bearer. The bridal gown&#13;
was cf embrcidered voile and&#13;
shadow lace, the bouquet was of&#13;
white roees. Her attendant. Miss&#13;
Beulah Morton also wore a gown&#13;
of embroidered voile and shadow&#13;
lace and carried pink roses. The&#13;
groom and best man, Alger Hall,&#13;
were attired in black.&#13;
A dainty buffet luncheon was&#13;
served to about sixty guests immediately&#13;
following the ceremony&#13;
by six young lady friends of the&#13;
bride.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Dinkel have gone&#13;
to New York City on their wedding&#13;
trip. The bride's traveling&#13;
gown was a blue crepe demetor.&#13;
Miss Allison is a well known&#13;
and copular young lady who will&#13;
be a welcome member to the so*&#13;
ciety of this village where they&#13;
will make their future home, Mr.&#13;
Dinkel is a partner of Mr. Dunbar&#13;
in the hardware firm of Dinkel&#13;
&amp; Dunbar and is one of Pinckney's&#13;
progressive young business men.&#13;
The well wishes of their many&#13;
friends go with them along life's&#13;
journey.&#13;
Unadilla&#13;
Clarence Cranna was quite seriously&#13;
injured last Thursday when&#13;
he was kicked by a horse and as a&#13;
result received a broken hip. At&#13;
present he is doing nicely.&#13;
School closed last Friday with&#13;
a banner picnic at Joelyn Lake.&#13;
In the early evening the parents&#13;
and patrons of the school witnessed&#13;
the winding of the May pole&#13;
which proved a very pleasant feature&#13;
and reflected much credit upon&#13;
the teacher and pupils. Miss&#13;
Coates has been engaged for the&#13;
coming year at an increase in salary.&#13;
Arthur May and family entertained&#13;
a company of Jackson&#13;
friends Sunday.&#13;
Prank 'May and family of Jackson&#13;
spent the last of the week&#13;
here.&#13;
Francis Coates and wife of Detroit&#13;
are spending a few days with&#13;
his parents here.&#13;
Mrs. Otis Webb visited Miss&#13;
Adel Fulmer one day last week.&#13;
Noble Morrison and family who&#13;
have been spending several weeks&#13;
with his parents here returned to&#13;
their home in Chicago last week.&#13;
L. £ . Clark and S. G. Parlmer&#13;
and families spent Decoration day&#13;
in Stockbridge.&#13;
W. T. Barnum and son Clare&#13;
were in Chelsea Thursday.&#13;
Mesdames Jno. and Otis Webb&#13;
spent Thursday at C. Webb's.&#13;
L. K. Had ley and wife will entertain&#13;
the L. A. S. Wednesday&#13;
for supper.&#13;
Congh«an4 Colds Wsakea the Systsm&#13;
Continued Conght, Colds and Bronchial&#13;
troubles are depressing and weaken the&#13;
system. Lost of weight and appetite generally&#13;
follow. Get a 50c bottle of Dr.&#13;
King's New Piscovery to-day. It will stop&#13;
your congfa. The first dose helps. Tha&#13;
beat medicine for Stubborn Golds Coughs,&#13;
and all Throat and Long Troubles. Mr. 0 .&#13;
H Brown, Muscatine, Ala., writes: "My&#13;
wife was sick daring the hot summer&#13;
months and I honestly believe Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery saaed her life." Good for&#13;
children. 50c aooV $1.00 Raoomawnded&#13;
by C. O. Meyer, the druggist. adv.&#13;
Early Day Railroad Travel.&#13;
On Nov. 2«, 1833, A car made the&#13;
first trip over the Portage railroad.&#13;
Tbis was the most remarkable engineering&#13;
undertaking of the time. The&#13;
railroad was tbirty-nlx miles long, extending&#13;
across the Allegheny mountains&#13;
from Hollidaysburg to Johnstown.&#13;
There were ten inclined planes,&#13;
five on each side of the mountains.&#13;
Engines ut the top of each plane pulled&#13;
up four cars at a time. The ascent on&#13;
the east side measured 1398 feet.&#13;
Then there was a tunnel of 870 feet&#13;
und a descent of 1,172 feet on the&#13;
western side. Passengers on canal&#13;
boats entered the cars at Hollidays&#13;
burg and were carried over the mountains,&#13;
embarking in other boats on the&#13;
western side and thus continuing their&#13;
Journey to Pittsburgh. Later boats&#13;
were built so that they could be taken&#13;
apart into three or four sections and&#13;
placed on a car for the trip over the&#13;
mountains. The construction of the&#13;
Portage railroad cost $1,500,000.-Philadelphia&#13;
Record.&#13;
Sorting Bottles by Touch.&#13;
One of London's queer trades Is that&#13;
of empty bottle sorting at the London&#13;
bottle exchange, off Black friars road.&#13;
These bottles have been salvaged from&#13;
dust bins, cellars, the holds of ships&#13;
and wherever bottles go astray. Every&#13;
year at least 2,000.000 bottles, after&#13;
many wanderings, find their way to&#13;
the bottle exchange. They are sorted&#13;
and returned to their rightful owners,&#13;
who pay an annual subscription as&#13;
well as a few shillings a gross for returned&#13;
bottles. Reared on the bottle,&#13;
as It were, a sorter at the exchange&#13;
must be a man of keen eye and delicate&#13;
touch. AH that he has to guide&#13;
him in thousands of cases is the embossed&#13;
name on the glass* and swiftly.&#13;
Unerringly and with almost uncanny&#13;
deftness he picks out a bottle which&#13;
has wandered from Glasgow and puts&#13;
It in the case bound for the north.—&#13;
New York Sun.&#13;
;&#13;
Sixteenth Century Be if Pye.&#13;
A quaint publication is "The Booke&#13;
of Cokerye," printed In the sixteenth&#13;
century. The full title of the book is:&#13;
A proper newe Booke of Cokerye, declary&#13;
nge what maner of meates be&#13;
best In season, for al times in the&#13;
yere, and how they ought to be dressed,&#13;
and served at the table, bothe for&#13;
fleshe dayes and fyshe dayes. With&#13;
a newe addition, verye necessarye for&#13;
all them that delyghteth in Cokerye.&#13;
One of the recipes In the book is the&#13;
following:&#13;
Pyes of mutton or beif must be fyne&#13;
mynced and ceasoned wyth pepper and&#13;
salte, and a lyttle saffron to coloure&#13;
It, suet or marrow a good quantlte, a&#13;
lyttle vyneger, prumes, greate raysins&#13;
and dates, take the fattest of the&#13;
broathe1 Of powdred beyfe, and yf you&#13;
Wyll have paest royall, take butter and&#13;
yolkes of egges and so tern pre the&#13;
flowre to make the paeste.&#13;
English Greetings.&#13;
Erasmus, coming to England in Henry&#13;
Vila's time, was struck with the&#13;
deep heartiness of our wishes—good,&#13;
aye, and bad, too. but he most admired&#13;
the good ones. Other nations ask in&#13;
their greetings how a man carries hlnjself,&#13;
or how doth he stand with the&#13;
world, or bow doth he find himself.&#13;
But the English greet with a pious&#13;
wish that God may give one a good&#13;
morning or a good evening, good day&#13;
or "god'e'en," as the old writers have&#13;
it, and when we part we wish that&#13;
'•God may be with you," though we&#13;
now clip it Into "Goodby."—Friswell.&#13;
His Foolish Father.&#13;
"1 suppose you keep bard at work&#13;
these days?"&#13;
"No. I'm not doing anything just&#13;
now. »&gt;&#13;
"1 {nought your father had given&#13;
you a position in his bank?"&#13;
"He did. But he wanted me to earn&#13;
my salary."—Chicago Record-Herald.&#13;
Polish.-&#13;
"You have a bright look, my boy/'&#13;
•aid the visitor at the school&#13;
"Yes, sir," replied the candid youth.&#13;
"That's because I forgot to rinse the&#13;
soap off my face good."&#13;
Giving Her Away.&#13;
"Uncle, we want you to give the&#13;
bride away."&#13;
"Very well. Ill announce to the&#13;
gathered assembly that she's thirtytwo,"—&#13;
Boston Transcript&#13;
Two Way*.&#13;
There are two ways of learning the&#13;
value of anything we want One Is to&#13;
get it the other to lose it — R, W.&#13;
Kauffman.&#13;
If a man is square It Is easy to put&#13;
ap with hhi sharp corners.&#13;
• • 4 » -&#13;
Het Weather Toalc and Health Builder&#13;
Are you run down—Nervous—Tired? Is&#13;
everything you do an effort?- You are not&#13;
lasy—you are siok! Your Stom-tch, Liver&#13;
Kidneys, and whole system needs a Tonic.&#13;
A Tonic and Health Builder to drive out&#13;
the waste matter—build you up and renew&#13;
your strength. Nothing better than Electric&#13;
Bitters. Start to-day. Mrs. James&#13;
Dudcen, Hayitesvillev Me., writes: "Completely&#13;
cored me after several doctors jpve&#13;
me op." 50c. and $1.00. Recommended by&#13;
C. G. Meyer, the druggist.&#13;
'. i as S i nam&#13;
Per you sahecrtpttoe this amtfe.&#13;
• • &amp;&#13;
Y T R A G O O n&#13;
Let Us Tell You Why&#13;
these XTRAGOOp suits we sell are the best to be&#13;
i&#13;
obtained. This make has an unassailable reputation—&#13;
a reputation founded on quality. The best&#13;
materials go into X X S £ £ &amp; 9 D 9 the suits are most&#13;
carefully made, the prices are such as to make every&#13;
one an exceptional value.&#13;
Boys' X T R A G O O p Suits of Rare Value&#13;
at $5, $6.50, $7.50, $8.50&#13;
We have taken unusual care in our selection&#13;
this Spring and are showing a very large variety of&#13;
Norfolks in strictly all wool worsteds, cheviots and&#13;
tweeds for all ages 3 to 17. Splendid patterns in&#13;
blue, brown and gray mixtures; the most stylish&#13;
and durable suits you^ll find.&#13;
Verygood Suits at $3. to $4.50&#13;
•v^&#13;
W. J. DANCER &amp; COMPANY&#13;
S T O C K B R I D G E&#13;
••i&#13;
0&gt;\ J&#13;
LeAal A d v e r t i s i n g &lt;#v&#13;
STATE Of MICHIGAN, the iTobate Court iot&#13;
the County of Lirlngston,&#13;
At a session of said court held at the Pri^asat&#13;
Office ia the Village of Howell la said ConctyT*&#13;
tha 18th day of fcav, A. D. 1914 ^&#13;
Present, Hon. Eugene A. Ptowe, Judjfet.&lt;srr&gt;'&#13;
Probate, In the matter of the estate oi&#13;
ELIZABETH SPEARS, Deceased \ i : ;•&#13;
John Spears having filed in said court hii&#13;
final af count as administrator of said &lt; state and&#13;
his petition praying for tte allowance thereof&#13;
It ia Ordered. That the 13th day ot Ju o&#13;
A. D. 1014, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at said&#13;
probate office, be and is hereby appointed for&#13;
examining una allowing said acccont.&#13;
It is further ordered that public notice thereof&#13;
be t(iren by publication of a copy of this order, for&#13;
sthree euceessive weeks previous to said day el&#13;
nearlns; in the Pinokaey DISPATCH a newspaper&#13;
printed and oiroolated in said cownty, TltS&#13;
SUGENE A. STOWE&#13;
Jtadfjs of Probsts.&#13;
*S&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN, the rrobate Court icr&#13;
the county ef Livingston, Estateol&#13;
CAROLINE J. F08TEB, Deceased&#13;
The undersigned having been appointed, by toe&#13;
Jodge of Probate ot siidConatv, C*nmM*toner»&#13;
on Claims la tbe matter of said estate, sad four&#13;
months from tbe isth day of Hay, A, D.1914&#13;
navlat beta all' wed by said Jadgeot Probate te&#13;
all person hoWiae delate agaiasc said estate ia&#13;
which to present their claims to as for remlttstien&#13;
and adjustment:&#13;
' Notice is Hereby givea that we will meet oa the&#13;
80th day of July, A. D.1914, and ea the 19th day&#13;
of September, A. D. 1M4, at ten o'etook a. m. or&#13;
each day, at the boms af B. W. Caekey la Unadilla&#13;
in asld County, to receive sad examine Sack&#13;
claims.&#13;
Dated, Howell, May 16th, A. D. 1914.&#13;
.Edwin Chipmaa ) Commisaionvra&#13;
R. W, Caakry on Gains&#13;
Subscribe) for ths PlnekasrDlspsteS,&#13;
Monarch Flour&#13;
Is Monarch BeGaUse it is filonarcti&#13;
Try it sod see if yon don't tbiok it is Monarch of all bread&#13;
flonr yoo ever tried.&#13;
Wkw1"- •••f.T.j.&#13;
I&#13;
THE HOYT BROS.&#13;
-••AHm&#13;
• • - • * &gt; •&#13;
. . . • » , • •;P*U V&#13;
*&gt;',&lt;.&#13;
£. J.&amp;. K' * -&#13;
V&#13;
*'-.&#13;
'.j&amp;iif ^ J •-u.l-l'.n&amp;'.'j'fr':'?&#13;
ifem uuaVftf'&amp;i*</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>Piqckney, Livingston County, Michigan, Thursday, June 11, 1914 No. 24&#13;
Annual Commencement&#13;
Below we publish the program&#13;
for commencement week which&#13;
begins Sunday eyening, Jane 14,&#13;
with the baccalaureate address by&#13;
Rev. Fr. Coyle ai the St. Mary's&#13;
church at 7:30 o'clock.&#13;
PBOGBAM&#13;
Class Day—June 17&#13;
Opera House&#13;
Instrumental Duet, Laura Burgess&#13;
and Madeleine Moran&#13;
Invocation.. Be v. J. W. Mitchell&#13;
Salutatory Mary M. Kemedy&#13;
Oration—"Mexico as a Nation"&#13;
George E. Root&#13;
Class Prophecy.-Helen C. Monks&#13;
Oration—"The Rule of Gold"&#13;
J. Bernard McCluskey&#13;
Class Poem ..Mary Agnes Conner&#13;
Solo. . _ _ _ . L i l a E . Chubb&#13;
President's Address&#13;
Ona E. Campbell&#13;
Oration—"Progress of Science"&#13;
Puul B. Clark&#13;
Giftatory • _ Alta* Mae Bullis&#13;
Class Will Florence L. Cook&#13;
Valedictory Walter J. Reason&#13;
Musjc----- Male Quartette&#13;
Benediction..-Rev. L. Ostrander&#13;
•s PROGRAM&#13;
Commencement Exercises June 18&#13;
-Opera House&#13;
Instrumental Sadie .Harris&#13;
v Invocation Rev. Fr. Coyle&#13;
Vocal Salo Mrs. C. Dauforth&#13;
Address Prof. D. H Roberts&#13;
Instrumental Soto,Blanche Martin&#13;
Presentation of Diplomas&#13;
Prof. J. P. Doyle&#13;
Chorus P. H. 8. Glee Club&#13;
The class of 1914 is composed&#13;
of Mary M. Kennedy, Ona L.&#13;
Campbell, Paul B. Clark, Florence&#13;
, L. Cook, Helen C. Monks, J. Bernard&#13;
McCluskey, Aita Mae Bullis,&#13;
Walter J. Reason, Geo, E. Root&#13;
and Mary Agnes McCluekey.&#13;
"*•' Class motto — To-night W e&#13;
Launch, Where Shall We Anchor?&#13;
Class colors—Purple and Gold.&#13;
Class flowers—White Carnations&#13;
and Ferns.&#13;
"Origin of Yankee Doodle"&#13;
Intermediate Room&#13;
Presentation of Diplomas&#13;
Prof. J. P. Doyle&#13;
I -w&#13;
The annual promotion exercises&#13;
ef the Pinckney public schools&#13;
will be held at the high school&#13;
auditorium, Thursday, June 18 at&#13;
2:00 p. m.&#13;
PBOGBAM&#13;
Song—"June"_ Primary and&#13;
Intermediate Rooms&#13;
*A Welcome to AH"&#13;
Helen Carpenter&#13;
Flag P r i l l s __.Intermediate Boys&#13;
Recitation _ Boy Cam pbell&#13;
"Tom's Scbool Books"&#13;
Mildred Vedder&#13;
Recitation...........Lillian Glenn&#13;
"Timid Little Maidens of Japan"&#13;
Intermediate Girls&#13;
"The Honest Old Toad"&#13;
Harlaud Hoyt&#13;
Recitation _ Ambrose Fitzsim mons&#13;
: *Eetk Little Boys"1... .FirBt Grade&#13;
"The Bng-a-boo Man".. ..Gladys&#13;
Vedder and Edna Dawow&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Dave Wilson of South Lyon&#13;
was- a Sunday guest at the home&#13;
of Roy Placeway.&#13;
Frank Brennan of Detroit visited&#13;
at the home of G. M. Greiner&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Will Ledwidge and wife were&#13;
called to Fowlerville Monday on&#13;
account of the serious illness of&#13;
their uncle, J as. Baxter.&#13;
L. Hilderbrandt and family, Art&#13;
LaRowe and family and Frank&#13;
Hanes and family spent Sunday&#13;
at the home of Orlo Hanes.&#13;
Veronica Brogan and Justine&#13;
Ledwidge visited the formers&#13;
brother at Chilson Saturday.&#13;
Elizabeth Driver of Gregory&#13;
was a guest of her sister Catherine&#13;
one day last week.&#13;
The C. M. Wood estate has&#13;
been sold.&#13;
Mrs. Roy Placeway spent the&#13;
last of the week in Howell.&#13;
Mrs. Mervin Nile and son Maynard&#13;
of Jackson were over Sunday&#13;
visitors at the home of her parents,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. P. Lavey.&#13;
Sydney Sprout of Leslie is&#13;
spending the week at the home of&#13;
his parents here.&#13;
D. M, Monks and family of&#13;
Pinckney, Will Ledwidge and&#13;
family and M. J. Roche were entertained&#13;
at the home of E. T. Mc-&#13;
Clear Sunday.&#13;
Fred Wylie and family spent&#13;
Sunday at J. H. Conner's of West&#13;
Putnam.&#13;
Mrs. G. M. Greiner and daughter&#13;
Margaret and Mrs. R. M. Ledwidge&#13;
and daughter Justine visited&#13;
at C. Brogan's Friday.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Ledwidge and daughter&#13;
Clare were Howell visitors&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Roche McClear was in Howoll&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Will Caskey spent one day last&#13;
week in Stockbridge. .&#13;
We keep good cigars and also keep them in good&#13;
CONDITION. This is why OUR cigars "taste better."&#13;
Buy your cigars by the box, we give you a lower&#13;
price when you do.&#13;
When anyone asks you "Where can I get a good&#13;
cigar/' send him to us.&#13;
We give you what you ASK for.&#13;
&gt; C. G. M E Y E R&#13;
P i n c k n e y , M i c h . P h o n e 5 5 r 3&#13;
N y a l S t o r e of Quality&#13;
Week End Special&#13;
Until further notice we will sell every&#13;
Saturday and Sunday, a high class 5c&#13;
straight cigar, 8 for 25c, made of choice&#13;
tobacco, with a sprig,of Havana running&#13;
through it and Sumatra wrapper.&#13;
Ask for Portorico Panatellas Saturday&#13;
and Sunday&#13;
8 for 25c.&#13;
For Fine Cigars&#13;
Kept fine, bring your guests to our&#13;
store, where you may be sure to please&#13;
the most fastidious taste, as our line&#13;
embraces all the most popular brands&#13;
of today, from stogies to clear Havana.&#13;
3 for 5c to loc straight&#13;
A most complete line of cigarettes&#13;
and tobaccos will be found here.&#13;
Ask to See&#13;
The new anti-cicotine pipe, the&#13;
very latest aad best on the market, at a&#13;
price within reach of all. No 'clumsy&#13;
looking affair, but a neat appearing&#13;
genuine briar pipe with rubber bit.&#13;
Two sizes—35c and 50c.&#13;
EXTRA SPECIAL&#13;
Factory Smokers, a high grade 5c&#13;
cigar, etery Saturday and Sunday&#13;
8 for 25c. x fH&#13;
bocal News&#13;
Gregory&#13;
Main street in Gregory is being&#13;
paved with gravel and cement. I t&#13;
will be as good as any road anywhere&#13;
when completed.&#13;
Ladies Aid society meet at F.&#13;
A. Howletj-'s today.&#13;
W. S. May of Stockbridge was&#13;
in town. 4ast Friday.&#13;
Mrs. C. Hewlett returned from&#13;
Howell Sunday.&#13;
They still keep buying autos.&#13;
John Moore and O. B. Arnold&#13;
each have a ne* Ford.&#13;
*-,*-.• ,' s.. -. • •&#13;
•*''&gt;Jr •"'•«."M if' "&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Buhl and daughter-&#13;
Beading: ™ : f t a d e l e u V ^ w m a n X i l l U n w e r e i n J i c k 8 ° n ^ ^ -&#13;
^Por Workt. Jntetmediati Girls &gt; • / J o h n M o o r e i s o n t h e s i c k ^&#13;
%ooc Poily^ - - Bessie Swarthont ^ r « Wilson of Sonth Lyon filled&#13;
*%ree Hitl* Ikda at School" the pnlpit here Snnday* _&#13;
^ ¾ ^ \ Children^ Day at the Baptist&#13;
"The B i r 4 &gt; J ^ U l ^ , , X t t c ^ Gkntt; church, Jone 2UL ; ^&#13;
B e a d i n g . . : . . . . L w a M c C l n s k e t T. H. and F. A; Howlett were&#13;
M « ^ I P ^ r . , . ( ^ r a l d %atoniu C5oncord Monday on business.&#13;
"JSmbkm, Bright Emblem" ,. -&#13;
^ C ?rw»ary Girl* 111*^4^*1&#13;
*B«by^l«lWord, \L6r«ir»|^i«| W a n t e d&#13;
Re^hjy^....Pauline Swarthont A Hye^gaferiii B. O. H. cars&#13;
. -Ora Eeaaon at Pinckney^ A good proposition&#13;
•ft&#13;
Solo&#13;
rDrill,Grammar ftoom Girl* lor the right party.&#13;
^ i * &lt; i i « « 10 ^m + m m Beatrice&#13;
m — &lt; * ^ v . » «4|»;-&#13;
2*tl»&#13;
O i&#13;
^**^sw^^w^^paai#^P( OTMN#ij^gg^v, sjk&#13;
j*4mi**.-t t«&#13;
Mrs. A. M. Utley spent last&#13;
Thursday in Jackson.&#13;
Jeff. Parker and wife are visiting&#13;
at the home of their son Frank&#13;
at Arcada, Mich.&#13;
Send your mail orders to Dancer's,&#13;
Stockbridge. Prompt service&#13;
and goods sent on approval.&#13;
adv.&#13;
Dr. W. T. Wright of this place&#13;
was arrested by a deputy from&#13;
Fowlerville on a charge of unlawfully&#13;
supplying Pinckneyites&#13;
with liquor, He was taken before&#13;
Justice Roche of Howell Thursday&#13;
afternoon and was bound over&#13;
to the circuit court, bonds being&#13;
fixed at $300, which he furnished.&#13;
Monday the Dr. appeared in court&#13;
and plead guilty to violating the&#13;
local option law and his case will&#13;
be decided later.&#13;
Pay your subscription this month.&#13;
Mis. H. W. Crofoot spent hst&#13;
Friday in Stockbridge.&#13;
Mrs. Alex Mclntyre is visiting&#13;
relatives in Pontiac this week.&#13;
Mrs. S. G. Teeple, Mrs. Will&#13;
Dunning and son Myron and Miss&#13;
Ruth Potterton were Detroit visitors&#13;
Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
Friday afternoon and evening,&#13;
June 19, there will be a Sunday&#13;
school institute held at the M. E.&#13;
church, to which all are cordially&#13;
invited.&#13;
A*quiet spring wedding took&#13;
place in Howell March 28, when&#13;
Mr. Will Dixon and Miss Viola&#13;
Swarthout were united in the&#13;
bonds of matrimony. The young&#13;
couple are now taking a belated&#13;
trip visiting in Detroit and other&#13;
places. They have many friends&#13;
who will unite with us in wishing&#13;
them a happy life.&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
FOR 8ALE-«No. 1 Timothy Hay&#13;
2311* G. W. Clark, Pinckney&#13;
FOR SALE—150 bu. ear corn, Ouborn&#13;
side delivery rake and a good 3 in. tire&#13;
truck wagon. 24t2*&#13;
Claude Reason, Pinckney&#13;
FARM FOR SALE OR RENT—38 acres&#13;
en road just north of the Kice farm on&#13;
Section 7. James A. Gallagher, 1569&#13;
West Grand Blvd., Detroit, Mich. 19tf&#13;
flat in a fine neighborhoeo d just off of&#13;
FOR SALE—Two family brick veneer&#13;
neigh&#13;
Woodware Ave., Detroit. Pays 10 per&#13;
cent. Wm. L. Wood, P. O. box No. 2,&#13;
Ann Arbor, Mich. 21tl*&#13;
Pay your subscription this month.&#13;
Clayton Placeway, spent a couple&#13;
of days last week in Detroit&#13;
MURPHY &amp; JACKSON&#13;
HEADQUARTERS FOR&#13;
Groceries - Dry Goods - Shoes ^ Furnishings&#13;
barflest Stock One Price To All iaQwest Prtce»&#13;
F*'.&gt;&#13;
Our Special Prices on Groceries&#13;
Saturdays and Wednesdays&#13;
Make It expensive for you to trade&#13;
elsewhere&#13;
We alto have many specials to offer throughout our Shoe aad&#13;
Dry Goods Department ^ ,&#13;
FOR CASH&#13;
25 lbs. H. fit B. Su£ar - * U 7&#13;
t DeicerV&#13;
^ ¾ ^ v *•:;. ••&gt;, J ^ * '&#13;
*^&#13;
f++rm&#13;
$&amp;m&lt;V v fflf t**-?: :*«* 'i#&gt; «**LL=-*&#13;
»:&#13;
M ^ . * ^ - ^&#13;
* • &amp; iy^^Qwr^Tr*'- i-;'-#^'#&#13;
•.&lt;/v* :¾¾ ; ^ - -&#13;
•^•^40,&#13;
.••£•' A&#13;
1 . . 1 . " • ' - • • • &lt; * " *&#13;
L;r,438^7.&#13;
$&#13;
S,«S •.*&#13;
Si"*;-&#13;
^&#13;
: $ &amp; • . ; • •&#13;
. • ! • &lt; • &gt; ; , • • . ,&#13;
. ^ , , r ,&#13;
&gt; tf-v&gt; •&#13;
^ ) W : " . l&#13;
••:t«'*-T.'.-&#13;
* • ' •&#13;
tew** ":&#13;
iX:-&#13;
m-&#13;
YS.tr&#13;
'»! / V&#13;
£$•$:*&#13;
J A&#13;
w v - \ i , i T * i •'••• -.•&#13;
U &lt; * &lt; • ' • • &gt; : •-•&#13;
• - * * . : . ' J - :&#13;
I'SL-'tV:-:,&#13;
•-«• i.T?,*&#13;
* ' ' •&#13;
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&gt;&#13;
A'.- #&gt;*¥;•&#13;
&gt; ^ : ; ; ' ; ;&#13;
i j P ' t ' . i ••&#13;
.****&amp;,• n #:*&#13;
5*. -,',,•' : S;_^-.'Vf-iv.:&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
;'^\""''*•**•»V1!"---* -v^&#13;
f-*'7«^;. FABLES&#13;
SLANG&#13;
IN NEED OF ITS TEACHINGS&#13;
THE NEW FABLE OF THE LIFE OF&#13;
THE PARTY.&#13;
One Night a Complimentary Dinner&#13;
VTBLB given to a Captain of Industry&#13;
by some Friends looking for Orders.&#13;
The Chairman of the Arrangements&#13;
Committee was a popular Wine-Pusher,&#13;
consequently the volunteer Search&#13;
Parties were out for Three Days after,&#13;
gathering up the Dead.&#13;
Along about 10:30, when every Perfect&#13;
Gentleman was neatly Stewed and&#13;
each Chandelier was doing a sinuous&#13;
SaloLue in time with the Hungarian&#13;
Orchestra, a Man connected with the&#13;
Jobbing Trade got up to say a Few&#13;
Words.&#13;
He was fceyed to Concert Pitch and&#13;
the Audience was Piped and all the&#13;
old sure-fire Bokum of a Sentimental&#13;
Nature simply Killed them in their&#13;
Seats.&#13;
When he Concluded, the hilarious&#13;
Bun Brothers, with the mussed-up&#13;
Hair and the twisted Shirt Bosoms,&#13;
arose to their Feet and waved Napkins&#13;
and gave the Orator what he described&#13;
to his Wife at 2 A. M. as A&#13;
Novation.&#13;
Another Good man was spoiled.&#13;
After Herman made this goshawful&#13;
Hit with the Souses he became convinced&#13;
that he was an After-Dinner&#13;
Wit.&#13;
Gus Thomas and Simeon Ford had&#13;
nothing on him.&#13;
Whenever he found himself seated&#13;
at a Table with other People and Food&#13;
being served he began to suck Lozenges&#13;
and classify his Anecdotes and&#13;
try to appear Unconcerned.&#13;
All the time he was simply waiting&#13;
for the Main Fluff to come up from behind&#13;
the Chrysanthemums and say,&#13;
"We have with ua this evening."&#13;
Then for the quiet Introduction, leading&#13;
up to the sparkling Mot and the&#13;
Tremolo Stop pulled all the Way out&#13;
on the Pathos and a couple of Depews&#13;
to put them in a Good Humor, concluding&#13;
with a Hypodermic of Hot&#13;
Mush.&#13;
If the Bunch sat back and refused to&#13;
Fall for the War-Time Favorites he&#13;
would console himself by telling&#13;
around that he was up against the&#13;
Low-Brows.&#13;
He knew that he was a Dinger, because&#13;
he remembered how the Magnificent&#13;
Assemblage stood and cheered&#13;
him for five Minutes.&#13;
Therefore his Voice sounded to him&#13;
a good deal like the Boston Symphony&#13;
Orchestra playing Rubinstein's Melody&#13;
in F.&#13;
Whenever People sat down In front&#13;
of the decorative Canape Caviar and&#13;
got ready to endure ,the Horrors of&#13;
another Hotel Gorge, they would glance&#13;
across the Snowy Expanse of White,&#13;
dotted with plump California Olives&#13;
and cold, unfeeling Celery, and seeing&#13;
Herman seated opposite, would remark,&#13;
"Stung!"&#13;
He could not have been kept in his&#13;
Chair with a Ton of Coal in each Tail-&#13;
Pocket&#13;
And if The Ladies were present that&#13;
was where he worked in the Bird-&#13;
Calls and ordered out the Twinkling&#13;
Stars.&#13;
According to the Expectation Tables&#13;
of the Insurance Actuaries, probably&#13;
he will Stick Around for 32 years&#13;
more and never find out that he Is a&#13;
Pest&#13;
MORAL—Those who bemoan the&#13;
Decline of Oratory should remember&#13;
that Oratory never was known to Decline.&#13;
THE NEW FABLE OF THE HONEY.&#13;
MOON THAT TRIED TO COME&#13;
BACK.&#13;
'„jWt'. &gt;&#13;
Once there was an undivorced&#13;
Couple that would get up every G. M.&#13;
and put on the five-ounce Mitts and&#13;
watt Jo? the Sound of the Gong.&#13;
Bach was working for the Champion*&#13;
•hip of the Flat and proved to b e *&#13;
Glutton for Punishment&#13;
Every time he landed a oraahlni&#13;
Hay-Maker on her Family History she&#13;
fjBO&amp;Ured with a short-arm Jolt on his&#13;
Personal Appearance.&#13;
Both would" retire to the Corners&#13;
prearhjflg heavily, but still full of&#13;
Combat&#13;
He loved to start out the Day by&#13;
******* tfc*Pa*er what a Profeasor&#13;
connected with the University of Chicago&#13;
ha* raid about the Amerloaa&#13;
:Woman being a vain and shallow Par-&#13;
Igrite with a Cerebrum about the s a e&#13;
^aajaogHsh Walnut&#13;
She wo«ld retaliau by reading afcjod&#13;
a Special in «gf»*.ta * Hujsastf g*.&#13;
After which, for 15 or 20 minutes,&#13;
the Dining Room would be just as&#13;
peaceful and quiet as a Camorra Trial.&#13;
Sometimes he would get First Blood,&#13;
but just as often she would fiddle&#13;
around for an Opening and then&#13;
Zowie!—right on the Conk and him&#13;
Stalling to escape further punishment&#13;
When Nightfall came they would&#13;
stiU be edging around the Ring,&#13;
R a n g i n g away, for each was too&#13;
Game to be a Quitter.&#13;
Their Married Life, which started&#13;
out with American Beauty Roses in&#13;
every Vase and a long Piece in the Paper,&#13;
now settled down to a Thirty&#13;
Years War with all of the Attendant&#13;
Horrors.&#13;
The only time the Dove of Peace&#13;
really Lit was when - they had Company.&#13;
Then they would Dear each other&#13;
until the Premises became Sticky and&#13;
she would even c&lt;5ax up a Ripple of&#13;
Fake Laughter when he pulled some&#13;
Wheeze that uBed to go Great the Tear&#13;
they were engaged. But the Moment&#13;
the last Guest closed the Front Door&#13;
the Dove of Peace would beat it and&#13;
another domestic Gettysburg would&#13;
drive the Servants to Cover.&#13;
After this had been going on for several&#13;
Seasons he happened to get hold&#13;
of a Powerful Work written by a Pop-&#13;
Put on the Five-Ounce Mitts and Wait&#13;
for the Gong.&#13;
ular Novelist (Unmarried), who made&#13;
a psychological Dissection of a W O H F&#13;
an's Soul and then preached a Funeral&#13;
Sermon over the Dead Love that once&#13;
blossomed in the Heart of the Heroine.&#13;
After he read this Tragedy of flickered&#13;
Romance he felt like a Pup.&#13;
He perceived that he had been in&#13;
the Wrong.&#13;
The Novelist taught him that his&#13;
Cue was to bear with the Weaker Vessel&#13;
and to keep the Honeysuckle of&#13;
True Affection pruned and watered by&#13;
Devotion and Sacrifice.&#13;
Therefore, he made one large Vow&#13;
to cut out the Rough Stuff.&#13;
Next Morning when the Queen of&#13;
the Amazons put on her Paint and&#13;
Feathers and began to beat the big&#13;
W a r Drum there was Nothing Doing.&#13;
He refused to enter the bloodstained&#13;
Arena and when she came after&#13;
him he fell over and took the&#13;
Count before a Punch had been delivered.&#13;
Before starting for the Office he&#13;
Kisaed her a couple of times and gave&#13;
her some Massage Treatment around&#13;
the Shoulder Blades and called h e r&#13;
"Toots"—a Term of Endearment which&#13;
had been rusting on the Shelf ever&#13;
since they used it at Niagara Falls,&#13;
She was so dazed by this Reversal&#13;
of Form that she peeked from the&#13;
Front Window and watched him clear&#13;
to t8e Corner, convinced that he was&#13;
on his way to meet Another Woman.&#13;
H e came home that Evening with a&#13;
Jar of Candled Nuts and when Mrs.&#13;
Simon Legrea demanded the Name of&#13;
the. Hussy he simply pulled a Yearning&#13;
Smile and invited her to go ahead&#13;
and use him as a Punching Bag.&#13;
n e x t day she put a Newspaper&#13;
around the Bird Cage and tied tip the&#13;
Oenmium and took the trajtnlafcajt&#13;
Tatting and Blew. N&#13;
When she walked fa on her pwn&#13;
People, with tha XJeciaratton that all&#13;
Beta were Oay they wanted to know&#13;
how about i t and she said a fljttltjta*&#13;
Woman c o u t t n t keep&gt;otf rodntfa* wt**&#13;
3-tf:&#13;
o^B ^0 e^issB^sj|BT^^^ej^^sejBi w^s^BjjnsjFeA.&#13;
•Hty» ';V/ ^-, ^s^S;.; ;/4«*-&#13;
Able Geaman Had Not Read wLittle&#13;
Book," But Evidently It Mlunt&#13;
Have Done Him Good.&#13;
The chaplain of one of our cruisers&#13;
had a knack of presenting small&#13;
Bibles, neatly tied in a parcel, to men&#13;
on the upper deck. That it contained&#13;
a Bible he carefully refrained from&#13;
mentioning, merely saying, "Here is a&#13;
little book you'll like." He gave one&#13;
to'Able Seaman Spikes. One day, a&#13;
week 'later, he approached Spikes as&#13;
the latter was smoking on the upper&#13;
deck. "How do. you like the little&#13;
book, Spikes?" Spikes'-mind flew to&#13;
his ditty box, in which the little parcel,&#13;
still intact reposed. He slowly&#13;
removed his pipe. "Very interesting,&#13;
sir—very." "Glad to hear that you&#13;
have started reading it," said the parson.&#13;
"Started, sir? Why, I've finished&#13;
it (Spikes had no idea what the book&#13;
was); don't take me long to read a&#13;
book, sir, especially a good book. But&#13;
there, sir, it ended like all the others—&#13;
got married and lived happily ever&#13;
after."&#13;
Gave Him the Idea.&#13;
The sweet young thing sat in the&#13;
stern of the boat, unmindful of the&#13;
agonies of the inexperienced oarsman,&#13;
who tugged and blistered himself at&#13;
the paddles.&#13;
"What do you suppose we'll have&#13;
for supper in camp?" she mused&#13;
sweetly.&#13;
"Floating Island, I think," panted&#13;
the young man grimly. "That same&#13;
island has passed me, going up stream,&#13;
three times since I've been trying to&#13;
make It to the landing."&#13;
Much Healthier.&#13;
"Did that trust magnate take hot&#13;
baths for*his brain?"&#13;
"No; he took an Immunity bath."&#13;
The man who poses as a social lion&#13;
among women may stack up like a yellow&#13;
cur among real men.&#13;
You will discover that most men are&#13;
all right, if you only take the trouble&#13;
to ask them.&#13;
As a general rule when a man marries&#13;
his stenographer he ceases to dictate&#13;
to her.&#13;
Mexico.&#13;
"These Mexicans, for all their boasted&#13;
Spanish politeness^ are a laugh.&#13;
Why, a New York subway guard could&#13;
give a Mexican cards and spades in&#13;
the politeness game and beat him&#13;
hands down."&#13;
The speaker was Yngre Lungitrom,&#13;
the noted railway engineer ofDenver.&#13;
He continued: .&#13;
"In a block once in the traffic of the&#13;
City of Mexico my cabby shrieked at&#13;
the man ahead of us:&#13;
"'I had a beard like yours once,&#13;
but when I found what it made me&#13;
look like, Santa Maria, I cut it off/&#13;
" 'Yes,' answered . the other cabby,&#13;
'and I had a face like yours once, and&#13;
when I found I couldn't cut it off, by&#13;
the holy S t Christopher, I raised a&#13;
beard.'"&#13;
Sniffer*,*&#13;
Miss Elsie De Wolf said, en route&#13;
for a summer in Versailles and Venice:&#13;
"New York is the most democratic&#13;
city in the world. In New York talent,&#13;
real t a l e n t will admit JDne anywhere.&#13;
There is nothing snlny about&#13;
New York,&#13;
"No, we're not like the duchess,&#13;
whose little daughter, Lady Ann, said:&#13;
" "Mother, why do people have&#13;
noses?'&#13;
" 'Common people, dear Ann/ the&#13;
duchess answered, 'have noses to&#13;
smell with; but high-born people like&#13;
us have noseB wherewith to express&#13;
contempt for common people.'"&#13;
Appropriate.&#13;
First Shining Light (in the colored&#13;
church)—Ah don't believe in callln'&#13;
dis heah society de Ladies' Auxiliary.&#13;
Dat's imitatin' de white folks.&#13;
Second Shining Light—Den wot&#13;
will we call It?&#13;
First Shining Light—Well, w o f s de&#13;
mattah wid callln' It de "Colored Supplement?"&#13;
•yma - ^&#13;
Ominous.&#13;
He—Do youi think your father will&#13;
object to our being married?&#13;
She—I'm afraid he will kick.&#13;
Ever see a neighbor who waB particularly&#13;
well liked? Sure!&#13;
If you are looking for trouble, call&#13;
on the marrlageuclerk.&#13;
Anecdote of gergent. .&lt;-&#13;
Parisian disciples of an iUustrtott&#13;
and rather pompous French pain&#13;
are telling a neat story against&#13;
Last autumn he was, with most&#13;
European society, in Venice. He I&#13;
a painter sketching the view of&#13;
Grand canal. Some innocent amateur,&#13;
no doubt He went up, looked at the&#13;
sketch and liked i t "Not had, sinf&#13;
not bad at all," he said, and addedr&#13;
"You ought to exhibit in Paris. Send&#13;
something to the Artistes Francaiae.&#13;
and mention my name." Here is&#13;
card/*&#13;
The "amateur" took the car*&#13;
thanked his- patron, and said: "I m&#13;
also Introduce myself. I am an&#13;
can. My name is John Singer Sargent&#13;
I have exhibited in Paris one*,&#13;
or twice already."&#13;
«*»-&#13;
1&#13;
No Insult&#13;
Some time back* when Sir Herbert&#13;
Tree was taking the waters at Marlenbad&#13;
he was accosted by a perfect&#13;
stranger.&#13;
"Begging your pardon, sir/1&#13;
the latter, "but aren't you Beerl&#13;
Tree, the actor?"&#13;
"No, .certainly not," replied Sir Herbert&#13;
unblushingly.&#13;
"I'm very sorry/' said the other,&#13;
"but I thought you were. You look&#13;
so much like the pictures I have seen&#13;
of him."&#13;
"I can assure you that ydu are mistaken,"&#13;
persisted Sir Herbert&#13;
"Well, I didn't mean to insult you,&#13;
sir," observed the stranger, "but I&#13;
did think you looked like him,"&#13;
— ^&#13;
Fashion's Slaves.&#13;
Madge—It's a pity we couldn't sea&#13;
ourselves as others see us.&#13;
Marjorie—If we did, my dear, the&#13;
slit skirt wouldn't be so fashionable.—&#13;
Puck.&#13;
-"--c&#13;
Some men Imagine dignity means&#13;
maintaining a constant grouch, a n d&#13;
others think it means wearing impossible&#13;
whiskers.&#13;
This would be a grand old world if&#13;
people could purchase experience on&#13;
trial, with t h e privilege of returning&#13;
it if not satisfactory, *&#13;
It sometimes takes more than;&#13;
liQuid glances to make a fellow solid&#13;
-with a girl.&#13;
.-.,. . ..&#13;
• «'••••'. . . J&#13;
&lt;£&#13;
1&#13;
J:SW*f&lt;,&#13;
: '"/SET&#13;
* &amp; • ; • &gt; * -&#13;
^ - ¾ ' J * ' 1&#13;
1 * « * .&#13;
'Johnny&#13;
on the Spof&#13;
X?%&amp;-&#13;
%-^&#13;
--' T-,,.'&gt;C-&#13;
" / . • . « * :&#13;
When breakfast has to be prepared in a hurry—-&#13;
When something appropriate is wanted quick for afternoon lunch-^&#13;
When thoughts of a hot kitchen appall&#13;
Whenever the appetite calk for something deJidously good and oourfahfag--&#13;
•ri\ '^^0mi&#13;
These tweet flakes &lt;rf cort*---tasstdcr^^&#13;
est from&#13;
flavour* 4i«r.i* v •••*••• • ' • • • • ^ ^ r ^ ^ • • # '&#13;
z*&#13;
ii»AM ifc&#13;
*-***mrv^vxm*r%m*~mTizv&amp;jg*&amp;vL** ?.&#13;
,\t-:i.W&#13;
k*wp* ^ ? T&#13;
:^: •&lt;/? W f ^ / w T ^ ™ - ••:'••••• ^ ^ ^ - ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ p K i i l l M&#13;
'•-'•'•'• , - ^ - - - ^ ^ - ^ ^ ¾ ^ ^ ^ ¾&#13;
s 1 l « . i / : - ! ' - - -s"*- / • • &gt;&#13;
**'-v::' - P1NCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
f^m •3T «&gt;'...»» PI.&#13;
• -&#13;
' **v* -&#13;
J-/-&#13;
53T&#13;
^¾¾&#13;
CHURCH INVADED&#13;
BY SUFFRAGETTES&#13;
MILITANTS CAUSE DEMONSTRATIONS&#13;
IN CATHOLIC&#13;
8ERV1CES.&#13;
CHANT FOR MRS. PANKHURST&#13;
Worshippers In Cathedral Are Shocked&#13;
When Woman Shouts Protest&#13;
Against Forcible Feeding&#13;
From Putplt&#13;
•-*T.&#13;
'••T'-&#13;
•7"*--&#13;
•.-*-at-ft-:&#13;
» :/-&#13;
~v-&#13;
•-*•?&#13;
^ ¾ v.&#13;
London—Suffragettes for the first&#13;
time Sunday invaded Catholic&#13;
churches and created scenes by attempting&#13;
to harrangue the congregations.&#13;
Worship was disturbed in both&#13;
Westminster cathedral and the&#13;
Church of the Oratory, Brompton.&#13;
- Father Bernard Vaughan had Just&#13;
takep his place in the pulpit in Westminster&#13;
cathedral, during evening&#13;
service, when a woman rushed up&#13;
the steps into another pulpit and,&#13;
waving her arms to word the altar;&#13;
shrieked:&#13;
"In the presence of the Blessed Sacrament,&#13;
I protest against the forcible&#13;
feeding of women." " . ^&#13;
She was well dressed and apparently&#13;
a woman of refinement&#13;
The congregation, shocked by the&#13;
woman's action, rose from their seats.&#13;
Murmurs of protest at the sacrilege&#13;
ran through the edifice. One of the&#13;
women worshippers tried- to persuade&#13;
the suffragette to descend from the&#13;
-pulpit, but she remained there, waving&#13;
her arms and yelling incoherently&#13;
until the vergers forcibly pulled'her&#13;
down the stepg and led her to the&#13;
doors of the cathedral. There she&#13;
was turned over to the police. She&#13;
declined to give her name.&#13;
A band of militant suffragettes interrupted&#13;
the mid-day mass in the&#13;
Church of the Oratory by chanting:&#13;
"God saved Emmeline Pankhurst&#13;
and alt our noble prisoners; open the&#13;
eyes of this church and of the priests&#13;
to put an end to the torture; in the&#13;
name of the Blessed Joan of Arc,&#13;
hear them in their hour of need."&#13;
A Bcene of great disorder ensued.&#13;
FOURTEEN DROWN IN THAMES&#13;
y V:&#13;
Pleasure 8teamer at London&#13;
Down and Sunk by Liner.&#13;
Run&#13;
?£..-•&#13;
• &amp; • '&#13;
: &amp; • * • ,r&#13;
:#?&#13;
v-&#13;
« / mm !&amp;££&#13;
' » - •&#13;
Committee, Favors Government Ownership.&#13;
/ Washington.—Government owner-.&#13;
ship of all street railways in the capital&#13;
proposed in the Crosser hill which&#13;
a house committee Saturday favorably&#13;
reported 9 to Bi -&#13;
It was opposed by many of ttte leading&#13;
street railway and electric power&#13;
men in the east and by representatives&#13;
of the American Civic federation. It&#13;
is one result of the municipal ownershipmovement&#13;
in Cleveland. Rep.&#13;
Crosserwasone of the late Tom Johnson's&#13;
allies and came to congress on&#13;
a municipal ownership platform.&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS tN BRIEF&#13;
~ W, W, Schroeder of Kankakee, in.,&#13;
has-been ejected president of the Students'&#13;
Chjristlan association of the&#13;
^ state university by the oombined cabi%&#13;
st» of the Y. M. C. A* and T. W.&#13;
Michigan&#13;
Brevities&#13;
London.—Fourteen men were drowned&#13;
in the Thames Saturday night when&#13;
the pleasure steamer Oriole was run&#13;
down and sunk by the Corinthian of&#13;
the Allan line.&#13;
The collision occurred when the&#13;
Oriole was turning Into her berth at&#13;
the Angerstein wharf after tending&#13;
her passengers at London Bridge. The&#13;
only persons on hoard were 17 members&#13;
of the crew. Only three of these&#13;
were saved. The Oriole foundered&#13;
immediately after the crash and is&#13;
now lying across the fairway. The&#13;
Corinthian was not,badly damaged.&#13;
% . , :&#13;
&amp;#&#13;
. To celebrate the fiftieth anniversary&#13;
ot her tonnding, ^WteftaU has arranged&#13;
for a homecoming celebration&#13;
the weekof Ju&amp; W to SK. Over 3,000&#13;
v JnTitttlon^ have been sent out to fo^&#13;
L*ibrand, former proseeuting&#13;
attorney ^ of Gladwin eoo^ty,&#13;
JOttaJjjsaa appoinUd ehl«f derirof the&#13;
*„ ..,^. VoorporatioB departme**; in the secre* i ^V;'^?-is%f of stated o f t ^ the positJfcsr £j$^$^W '-. -"— '&#13;
^^1-.^::.5.,^^.^11-.1811^1^ of Miss Irese Aseneth&#13;
Bu^knunv daughter of Urs. Btel&#13;
Bucknum, ot Grand Rapids, and&gt; Ard&#13;
.-; , B. Rifhsrdssift^ mayor of Saginaw, waa&#13;
i ' celebrated at the homo of the bride's&#13;
:*«ncle» C K. BalsUd* Saturday even-&#13;
^^^-fcMk' Ret. Dr; s: a Bradley, of the v Fret C^ngregaWonal church, e*$4gk&#13;
3'- •-&gt;-'&#13;
c*i:&#13;
:.- &gt; -,. ,-i,&#13;
- .',,V V«r * - N&#13;
'•?&#13;
• # i # « # t # o 4 i 4 o ••e4e^e4s«e&lt;ao&#13;
J&#13;
Allegan.—Albert Eaton of Kalamatoo&#13;
was sentenced from five to fifteen&#13;
years in prison at Jackson for perjury.&#13;
Lansing.—Peter Johnson, who was&#13;
on his way from Tacoma, Wash., to his&#13;
old home at Norway, Sweden, jumped&#13;
to his death through a glass window of&#13;
a moving Grand Rapids* train near&#13;
Millets.&#13;
St Johns.—Fire destroyed two&#13;
bams and several adjacent buildings-&#13;
belonging to Steve Schniber and&#13;
A. T. Smith in the heart of the city.&#13;
The hose trucks ran over Samuel Weatherby,&#13;
breaking his leg and bruising&#13;
his head badly.&#13;
Albion.—George S. Biggs, seventy-&#13;
seven, died at the home of his&#13;
son, W. E. Biggs, here as the result&#13;
of being run over by an M. U. T. car&#13;
near Marshall, two weeks ago. The&#13;
accident took, off one of his feet and&#13;
injured him internally.&#13;
Holland.—Black lake and river&#13;
are strewn with dead fish as a&#13;
result of the operations of the carp&#13;
fishermen here last spring. Thousands&#13;
of game fish caught in the nets were&#13;
thrown roughly into the lake and are&#13;
being washed ashore dead.&#13;
Grand Rapids.—The largest graduation&#13;
' class in the history of the,&#13;
loCal schools will receive diplomas'&#13;
here June 19. Central high school&#13;
graduates 206 against 173 last year.&#13;
Union high will graduate 72 against 70&#13;
last year.&#13;
Pontiac—While the turnkeys were&#13;
transferring prisoners from the upper&#13;
to the lower cell block in&#13;
the county jail Charles Hart of Detroit,&#13;
held for forgery, escaped out the&#13;
back door. He has not been captured.&#13;
This Is the second escape from the jail&#13;
in the past few weeks. The last man&#13;
picked a lock during the night and&#13;
walked off. He was never captured.&#13;
Petoskey. — The Emmet county&#13;
probate court faces a problem in&#13;
the disposal bf James Ingold, aged&#13;
eleven, and Charles Adams, ten, who&#13;
were arrested and who confess to a&#13;
series of small robberies and assert&#13;
they had planned larger jobs. The&#13;
boys were taken on a charge of stealing&#13;
revolvers, cartridges and knives&#13;
valued at $100.&#13;
Newaygo.—Maurice Cattanach, Ray&#13;
Allison", Darl Barton and - Foster&#13;
Thompson, Newaygo boys ranging&#13;
In age from sixteen to twenty,&#13;
were sentenced to from one to fifteen&#13;
years in Ionia for breaking into Pere&#13;
Marquette freight care. Conviction&#13;
was due to Special, Detective P. V.&#13;
Hart of Detroit and means the breaking&#13;
up of a gang of seven who are&#13;
held responsible for a series of petty&#13;
burglaries here this spring.&#13;
Ann Arbor.—A class of ten nurses&#13;
was graduated from the University&#13;
Homeopathic Training School for&#13;
nurses. Those receiving diplomas&#13;
were the Misses Amelia Ditt, Bay&#13;
City; Sadie Thomas, Bay City;&#13;
Ida Scott North port; Eva Mcoatchle,&#13;
Mason; Ruth Dibble, Fenton; Laura&#13;
Fields, Rushton; Bertha Hlnderer,&#13;
Chelsea} Oreasa Mulliken, Peru, Ind,;&#13;
Hasel Rollins, Chicago; Ruby Loedleau,&#13;
Traverse City.&#13;
Battle Creek.—William T. Lane&#13;
tried to take his life leaping in&#13;
the Battle Creek river -and was rescued&#13;
by .rural mail carrier of Greensmith&#13;
who fished him out with a pole.&#13;
Lane Is the Englishman who came&#13;
he^e recently and lost his mind' because&#13;
his youngest child, suffering&#13;
with an eye disease^ could not pass&#13;
EaHe island. The oldest daughter had&#13;
to return to Europe with the baby.&#13;
Lane was sent to the asylum at Kalamaaoo,&#13;
but was released a few weeks&#13;
ago aa cured.&#13;
Lansing. — Two. brothers Albert&#13;
and Arthur Lletsau of Lansing,&#13;
wife drowned In the Cedar river when&#13;
an old, leaky flat bottom boat In which&#13;
they were fishing suddenly sank from&#13;
under them. The men went to fish after&#13;
finishing their day's work. They&#13;
did not notice the leaking until the&#13;
boat had partially filled. Although&#13;
they were not twenty feet from shore,&#13;
the mm want under before aid could&#13;
reach 4hem, neither being able to&#13;
swim; Both worked In local factories*&#13;
were twenty-one and twenty-five yean&#13;
of age, respectively, and single.&#13;
Sault Ste. Marie—Three persons&#13;
died by accident near hen, according,&#13;
to news /that reached "this . 'city.&#13;
Chjuclei Caeanfcprir twenty-five yean&#13;
oldi vf tbo Canadian ^ Soo, lost&#13;
his Mfe in the S t Maryl river when&#13;
hVws» -overcome while swimming.&#13;
Training German Soldiers.&#13;
Targets of various kinds mounted&#13;
on tracks and drawn over the field by&#13;
cables on electrically-driven drums&#13;
give German soldiers a very realistic&#13;
dummy enemy for gun practise. The&#13;
imitations of Infantry and cavalry are&#13;
olmple silhouettes, and these are made&#13;
to carry out various maneuvers, under&#13;
perfect electric control. The infantry,&#13;
Jor instance, march slowly at&#13;
first, break into a run at the first fire,&#13;
and drop' automatically into the first&#13;
trench, with only the heads visible.&#13;
.--SJ"*'-*/;&#13;
. * - • * * « : * * ,&#13;
.***:''£&#13;
James Attwill, thirty-five, of the Canadian&#13;
Soo, was killed by an Algoma&#13;
Oeataai trtifftf trmte dear Kite, s i *&#13;
tien. Join ltotly«ea»i,^weaty-seTtti,&#13;
• ' S i l ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ P S T ^ P M f ' ^S^SnB'VsY^BpmRT •BSl^pSWfct J s l H B s W ^&#13;
fttaday aofninf arte* fsjr help i m&#13;
heard and a hat was fond floating lathe&#13;
eaiatr Tba hit haa boast Irtsnrt&#13;
HP*: 4br *: reJatt*a* aid oAoialSL i n {&#13;
SCALY PSORIASIS ON LIMBS&#13;
Troop H, 6th U. S. Cavalry, Camp&#13;
McCoy, Sparta, Wis.—*4! was troubled&#13;
with psoriasis for nearly two years.&#13;
Portions of my arms and limbs were&#13;
affected mostly with i t It appeared&#13;
In scaly form, breaking out in very&#13;
small dots and gradually grew larger&#13;
ind white scales formed when about&#13;
the else of an ordinary match-head.&#13;
The looks of it was horrible, which&#13;
made it very unpleasant for me. It&#13;
itched a little at times.&#13;
"I tried several treatments which&#13;
cured me for a month, but It always&#13;
broke out again. One day a friend&#13;
saw the advertisement ot Cuticura&#13;
Soap and Ointment in the paper and&#13;
I sent for a sample. They helped me,&#13;
so I purchased two more boxes of&#13;
Cuticura Ointment and some Cuticura&#13;
Soap and they completely cured me.&#13;
It took three months for Cuticura&#13;
Soap and Ointment to complete my&#13;
cure." (Signed) Walter Mahony, Oct.&#13;
22, 1*12.&#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;
Certainly Not&#13;
"Are you an optimist?"&#13;
"Far from it—I'm a humorist."—&#13;
Judge.&#13;
Magicians Sit Down to Dinner.&#13;
The Magicians' club, which is composed&#13;
of all the most celebrated trickmakers&#13;
on the English stage, recently&#13;
held Its first annual dinner,&#13;
followed by an entertainment, at the&#13;
Hotel Cecil in London. It was a marvelous&#13;
evening. The dinner itself was&#13;
shrouded with magic effects difficult&#13;
of discernment, but one got an impression&#13;
of new potatoes that turned into&#13;
forks, and of waiters folding up the&#13;
thick soup and putting it neatly into&#13;
their breast pockets.&#13;
After dinner wonder grew. After&#13;
speeches real journalists conjured&#13;
with words, and then Mr. S. C. Maurice&#13;
dazzled one with kaleidoscopic&#13;
card-turns, a trio sang a quartette, the&#13;
Zomahs told the secrets^of all the&#13;
watches and other concealed articles&#13;
in the room, and then Mr. Houdinl—&#13;
Mr. Houdini took a bag and took an&#13;
egg, and smiled, and the world seemed&#13;
a simple understanable place. When&#13;
Mr. Houdini had finished with the bag&#13;
and the egg, the solid ground had&#13;
faded beneath one's feet.&#13;
It was her husband&#13;
who finally brought&#13;
home RUB-NO-MORE.&#13;
Now she's enthusiastic&#13;
about it. She had intended&#13;
to buy RUBConcerning&#13;
Clothes.&#13;
"These new fashions," said the severe&#13;
woman, "are positively burlesques."&#13;
"They do seem rather in the nature&#13;
of travesties on good form," replied&#13;
Miss Cayenne. "But wouldn't&#13;
you rather describe some of. them as&#13;
mere take-offs?"&#13;
NO-MORE&#13;
POWDER,&#13;
looked it.&#13;
WASHINQ&#13;
But over-&#13;
Don't you&#13;
overlook i t&#13;
RUB-NO-MORE&#13;
WASHING POWDER&#13;
is a sudlese dirt remover&#13;
for clothes.&#13;
It deans your dishes*&#13;
sinks, toilets sad&#13;
cleans sad sweeteas&#13;
yoor milk crocks. It&#13;
kills germs. It does&#13;
not need hot water.&#13;
RUB-NO-MORE&#13;
Carbo Nspths Soap&#13;
Mrs. Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt astonished&#13;
the people at Newport recently&#13;
by appearing with a parasol on&#13;
the panels of which were painted a&#13;
variety of cats.&#13;
Red Cross Ball Blue, much better, goes&#13;
farther than liquid blue. Get from any&#13;
grocer. Adv.&#13;
The man who gets the most of it&#13;
seldom gets the best of it.&#13;
RUB-NO-MORE&#13;
Washing Powder&#13;
Five Cents—All Grocers&#13;
The Rub-No-More Co., Ft Wayne, Ind.&#13;
DAISY FLY KILLER t££ ST&amp;i S&#13;
fiUi. Kwtt, eU*n, ornameatei,&#13;
oonTeal*nt,&#13;
cheap, l a s t s a l t&#13;
s . a i o B . Mad* o f&#13;
metal, cant spilt or tip&#13;
over; will not soil or&#13;
I n j u r e a n y t h i n g - .&#13;
Guaranteed effectlT..&#13;
All d e a l e r s orftMnt&#13;
express paid for 11.00.&#13;
HA&amp;0X.D BOMEBS, 1B0 Dt&amp;alb AT.., Brooklyn, &gt; . T.&#13;
DR. J. D. KELLOGG'3 ASTHMA Remedy for the prompt relief of&#13;
Asthma and Hay Fever. Aek Your&#13;
d r u g g i s t f o r i t . Write (or FREE SAMPUL&#13;
HRTHROP &amp; LYMAN CO. Ltd- BUFFALO. HX&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 24-1914.&#13;
What is Castoria.&#13;
/^ASTOEIA is' a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and&#13;
^ Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor&#13;
other Narco%substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays&#13;
Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief&#13;
of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It&#13;
regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and&#13;
natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend.&#13;
The Kind Tou Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over&#13;
30 years, has borne the signature of Chas. E' Fletcher, and has been made undfo&#13;
his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you \n this.&#13;
All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with&#13;
and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment.1&#13;
Letters from Prominent Physicians,&#13;
addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher*&#13;
9ooDROPS&#13;
J;uW&#13;
iiiiin,iiiii,inu,aiiiij||||||^fffffnSj^=&#13;
ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT.&#13;
tiagteSunteariB^*;&#13;
INFANTS-(HiLDRKN&#13;
ProraolesDtgp^ttaiJCkcfiancstandRratCautataiadaaT&#13;
ppluiaiton)hir«n(r&gt;tenl&#13;
N O T NARCOTIC&#13;
* * +&#13;
tA^pScrwfKtSOtfnoctdyt dfo^rOinifSlpafr i&#13;
maUosftOFSifn.&#13;
NEW YORK.&#13;
Dr. Albert W. Kahl, of Buffalo, N. Y., says: "I have used Castoria la&#13;
my practice for the past 26 years. I regard it as an excellent medicino&#13;
for children."&#13;
Dr. Guatave A. Elsengraeber, of St Paul, Minn., says: **I have usor]&#13;
your Castoria repeatedly in my practice with good results, and can recon&gt;&#13;
mend it as an excellent, mild and harmless remedy for children.**&#13;
Dr. E. J. Dennis, of St Louis, Mo., says: "I have used and prescribed&#13;
your Castoria in my sanitariumtmd outside practice for a number of yean&#13;
and find it to be an excellent remedy for children/'&#13;
Dr. S. A. Buchanan, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: "I have used your Castoria&#13;
in the case of my own baby and find it pleasant to take, and havo&#13;
obtained excellent results from Its use."&#13;
Dr. J. E, Simpson, of Chicago, 111., says: "I have used your Castoria la&#13;
cases of colic in children and have found it the best medicino of its feint!&#13;
on the market"&#13;
Dr. R. E. Eskildson, of Omaha, Neb., says: "I find your Castoria to bo «&#13;
standard family remedy. It is the best thing for infants and children 1&#13;
have ever known and I recommend it"&#13;
D n L R . Robinson, of Kansas City, Mo., says: 'Tour Castoria certainly;&#13;
has merit Is not its age, its continued use by mothers through all theso&#13;
years, and the many attempts to imitate i t sufficient recommendation^&#13;
;What can a physician add? Leave it to the mothers."&#13;
Dr. Edwin F. Pardee, of New York City, says: "For several years I hava&#13;
reeommended your Castoria and shall always continue to do so, as U has&#13;
Invariably produced beneficial results.1*&#13;
Dr. N. B. Sixer, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: "I object to what are called&#13;
patent medicines, where maker alone knows what ingredients are put fa&#13;
them, but I know the formula of your Castoria and advise its use."&#13;
QINUINB C A S T O R I A ALWAYS&#13;
Bean the Sipattu. of&#13;
»s f S ,&gt;6( l M S&#13;
irfM*. * - • &gt; • &gt; — « i ' ^ » " W P # ' * ^ * '&#13;
Copy OT vVfeeeefa&#13;
The Kind Ton In Use For Over 30 Year*.&#13;
* t M t O C M t A W K • • M M N V , N M TO MIC • ! * • ,&#13;
• ' • » * • . • * * •r. • &amp; &gt; •&#13;
Catarrhal Fever&#13;
»v«?» V ' .*tpS'**^v&#13;
• * • * ? &gt;&#13;
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f SEE TO ALL SHFFEREBS&#13;
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PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
pinckney j)ippaich&#13;
Entered at tbe Postoffice at Piockpey,&#13;
Mich,, as Second Class Matter&#13;
R. W. CMRLY, EDITOR AMD PUBLISHER&#13;
Sauscrlptieo, $ 1 . Per Year JH Advance&#13;
Advertising rates made known on&#13;
application.&#13;
Cards of Thankc, fifty cents.&#13;
Resolutions of Condolence, one dollar.&#13;
Local 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 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 pub-&#13;
'•t lished free of charge.&#13;
Poetry must be paid for at tbe rate of&#13;
' five cents per line.&#13;
&gt;*.;&#13;
Nina Wellman spent tbe past&#13;
few days with friends in Owosso.&#13;
George Reauou Jr. and family&#13;
of Detroit spent a few days the&#13;
past week with relatives and&#13;
friends here.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Henry of this place&#13;
was one of the fortunate people to&#13;
capture a $5.00 prize in the picture-&#13;
game contest recently carried&#13;
on by the Detroit Tribune.&#13;
The banns of marriage of M r.&#13;
Geo. Fitzeimmons of this place&#13;
and Miss Susie Reilly of Ann Arbor&#13;
were published for the first&#13;
time last Sunday at St. Thomas&#13;
church, Ann Arbor.&#13;
Mrs. D. Richards is visiting relatives&#13;
in Grand Rapids.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Sigler is visiting relatives&#13;
in Lansing this week,&#13;
lUiss Genevieve Alley of Dexter&#13;
visited fiiends here last Thursday.&#13;
Miss Esther Barton spent the&#13;
past week with relatives in Detroit.&#13;
Harry Gartrell of Howell has&#13;
an adv. in this issue. Be sure and&#13;
read it.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Blades and Mrs. Bert&#13;
Hooker were Pontiac visitors last&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Mrs. N. .Vaughn spent a few&#13;
days the past week with Hamburg&#13;
relatives.&#13;
Michael Dunn of Jackson spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday with relatives&#13;
here,&#13;
Miss Viola Peters of Jackson&#13;
was an over Sunday guest of&#13;
friends here.&#13;
Miss Helen Monks attended&#13;
the opening party at Pleasant&#13;
Lake last Friday evenibgi r&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Mclntyre&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of John&#13;
Welsh of Dexter.&#13;
Clarence Stackable, wife and&#13;
son Vincent of Chilson were Sunday&#13;
guests at tbe home of Ed.&#13;
Farnam.&#13;
Cleve VanBuren and wife 7&gt;f&#13;
Gregory spent, a feW^ days the&#13;
past week at the home of his&#13;
sister, Mrs. Levi Miller.&#13;
Big 4th of July celebration at&#13;
Howell. Watch for it, wait for it&#13;
and prepare to come. Full program&#13;
next week in this paper, adv&#13;
A correspondent wants to&#13;
££ ££&#13;
EfflJCOfM!&#13;
GIVE ME NO. 38&#13;
Howell Commandery No. 28,&#13;
Knights Templar, won the loving j kn&lt;&gt;w what animal can go longcup&#13;
offered as a trophy by R. E. e s t without food. , We don't know,&#13;
Olds of Lansing, for the Order \bufc a B u ] 1 Moose can go years&#13;
having the largest percentage of i without pie.&#13;
its membership in rbe grand par-[ The ladies of the Oong'l. Aid&#13;
ade at the conclave at Lansing society will serve supper at'their&#13;
last Wednesday. j hlx\\ Wednesday afternoon, June&#13;
Yourself and friends are cor- 17, from five until all are served,&#13;
dially invited to attend a dancing. Everyone welcome,&#13;
party to be held at the Pmckney; T h e b a n n 9 o f m a r r i o f M r .&#13;
opera houee th» Pndty evemng, y . ^ ^ y 0 ( m g g n d M U g M a u d e&#13;
Jane 12 .under auspices o^the K u h l l , both of Gregory, were pnb-&#13;
Jamon .o( the P. H. 8. L.H.ao ii s h e d f o r t he fir6t ( i m e ^ S n n .&#13;
Given a nx-piew orchestra of Ann ; ^ iD gt. Mary'a cl^uroh here.&#13;
Arbor will furmsh'tho music. |&#13;
mi _ tt , , ,, , ,, l Several have asked us when the&#13;
The first "road bee ever held 9 e a 8 0 n f o r h&amp;m _ The season&#13;
in Putnam township last Thurs- Q n blaok&gt; 8 l l y e r ^ . w h i t e o r&#13;
££ £&#13;
+»&#13;
0&#13;
P)&#13;
+»&#13;
(D&#13;
PI&#13;
0&#13;
This is the call used by the wise customer who&#13;
wishes&#13;
Staple and Fancy Groceries&#13;
Connor's World Best Ice Cream&#13;
A Work Shirt A Pair of Overalls&#13;
A Nice Dress Hat or Cap&#13;
A New Suit of Clothes&#13;
A Pair of Gloves&#13;
Or Anything in the Gents&#13;
Furnishing Line&#13;
"And Don't You Forget," that we are ever&#13;
anxious and willing to fill your wants for anything&#13;
in oar line.&#13;
Leave Your Special Orders With&#13;
Monks Bros*&#13;
• TOe Square Deal Brocerif CD&#13;
•***m&#13;
SMASH!&#13;
HIT THE&#13;
NAILO&#13;
N THE&#13;
HEAD&#13;
day and Friday, June 4 and 5 strawberry bass opens June 15, would bare been a&gt;mmer had it a n d ;t ., u n , a w f n l t o catcfa b ] a c k&#13;
not been for an almost iteady b ( | M n n d e r 1 0 i n e h M , t t h n e &lt;&#13;
downpour of rain Thursday. Not]&#13;
much work was done in the fore- \ B - Lynch is making cement&#13;
noon, but in spite of the weather blocks these days preparatory to&#13;
a few gathered on the Dexter road l building a new blacksmith shop&#13;
south of town and during the day j 0 D t o 9 site occupied by the buildbetween&#13;
showers, completed about i n 8 *hich recently burned. Wm.&#13;
60 rods of good'grav^l road under ' Darrow also imforms us that he&#13;
the supervision of highway com- aspects to build iu the near future,&#13;
miasioner Jas. Smith. On account Evidence of what appears to be&#13;
of tbe rain many who were pre- a well organized campaign to de.&#13;
pared to gor gave it up not think- lude farmers throughout the&#13;
ing that anyone would venture'country into buying an alleged&#13;
out. Friday, a goodly amount of'cure for hog cholera, under the&#13;
wori was done throughout tbe impression that this has been inttho+&#13;
wingnshenip w nhnod ehra dt hceh adrigree ctoifo nt hoef vestigated and approved by the&#13;
wori in their vicinities.&#13;
the State Fire Marshall is send-&#13;
United States Government, has&#13;
reached the Department of Agriculture.&#13;
Articles praising this&#13;
ingont circulars warning people,medicine, Beuetol.by name, are&#13;
of the dangers of Fourth of July being sent out widespread to&#13;
celebrations and urging that a&#13;
Mile Fourth be observed Safety&#13;
flr*$. Don't buy the dangerous&#13;
kind of fireworks. Under no cirnewspapers.&#13;
These articles are&#13;
BO worded that it appears aa if the*&#13;
Department of Agriculture had&#13;
received reports from the state of&#13;
euttwtancea allow small children Minnesota showing that the medito&#13;
ftandle fireworks. Don't allow oine bad proved most beneficial.&#13;
yotfr boy to have the gas pipe! Aa a matter of fact the one report&#13;
Oaoitoo. Toy pistols, blank cart- received by tbe Department was&#13;
ridges, large dynamite .firecrackers* an unofficial and unsolicited stateor&#13;
torpedo canes are dangerous J ment sent presumably from tbe&#13;
am! prohibited by law. Many promoters themselves. The De&#13;
-iill&#13;
We Hit High&#13;
Prices Right HARDWARE&#13;
On the Head&#13;
Try Us—&#13;
Best Goods&#13;
In Everything&#13;
When you want RIGHT ttwls* CHEAP household utensilsi GOOD&#13;
paints and varnishes, nails, kitchen ware, stoves, hinges, screws, bolts,&#13;
knives and. a hundred other things COME HERE. You'll SAVE&#13;
MONEY.&#13;
Jeep]e* Hardware Company&#13;
thooaand &lt;k*Har§ worth of property&#13;
i$ deetrofed each year beoaoas&#13;
of beilooiu, tbe type of&#13;
. balloon w^ich requires a fire beneath&#13;
to propel a * » it dangerooa.&#13;
ErkrjptnllkoMm* to it that&#13;
th^ir okfMrea are safe on that&#13;
oUy an^havs no-^smaeroua et&#13;
4 k&#13;
*g* .C/&#13;
partment attaches no importance&#13;
whatsoever to this statement It&#13;
has no reason to believe in the&#13;
efiloiency of any proprietary cure&#13;
for bog cholera and does not recommend&#13;
any. Under certain&#13;
oondrtions it wges farmers to protect&#13;
their stock with anti-hog&#13;
obolwa serum bat that is all.&#13;
T h e Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative Bank*&#13;
ing Business.&#13;
3 per cent&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
Pinckney&#13;
G. W. TEEPLB&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Prop&#13;
m*&#13;
Perhaps this picture may recall&#13;
some pleasant occasion—a party&#13;
and the becoming costume you&#13;
wore.&#13;
Any event worth remembering&#13;
suggests a picture.&#13;
Make an appointment today.&#13;
DaisieB. Chapel I&#13;
Stockbridge, Michigan&#13;
Business Man Praises&#13;
Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy&#13;
Successful Merchant After investigation&#13;
Found « Remedy That Restored&#13;
His Health.&#13;
"This is Thanksg-lvlng- day la tbt&#13;
itate of Pennsylvania, and I want t*&#13;
devote a part of&#13;
It In wrltin* a.&#13;
letter to you.&#13;
On the 26th day&#13;
of November,'IS,&#13;
I wasr stricke*&#13;
w i t h h e a r t&#13;
t r o u b l e . Hf&#13;
family physiela*&#13;
« H w t h AtiStSaV&#13;
Pectoris. I had&#13;
from one to fl*»&#13;
attack* in Si&#13;
hours, l a tb*-&#13;
/&#13;
latter p a r t of&#13;
Xfeoftmber, lftlfc&#13;
I wrote to the&#13;
MUM Medio*! Gov, for information ooa*&#13;
eorniaf my oaae, and in reply I received&#13;
a very kind and instructive letter,&#13;
which X handed to my famfly doctor,&#13;
and ho told mo to npe-yeur Romedlot&#13;
In connection with the medicine ha&#13;
gave mo, «o I did. Z uood ttre bottios&#13;
of. Dr. Kiloo* Hoart Remedy and sovoa&#13;
bottles of Dr. Miles' Norvino. I was&#13;
confined to the house for abort 4 M *&#13;
months. The action of my hoart fl|&#13;
now, and has been normal for tho last&#13;
tix months. I oaa truly reootnmeml&#13;
Dr. Miles* Nervine and Heart I&#13;
to do what they are Intended&#13;
mod accord^* to dfrootloas. t&#13;
you Wndly for your advloo 4n attf&#13;
a y monthly report*. 2 am notTanttr*&#13;
•even years of ace, have been in fa*&#13;
mercantile business for thirty-five yearn&#13;
and lived retired for the last thirteen&#13;
irears." A. B. HOXjiNCHtti&#13;
u Ah, Fine!&#13;
It's Done&#13;
Just&#13;
Right!"&#13;
OTJB meats -for roasting make FIBM&#13;
FRIENDS for nsv They cook jut&#13;
right. Their SAVOBT TialOTP&#13;
and TENDER QUALITY make them&#13;
SIMPLY DELICIOUS when they eons&#13;
hot from the even to, the table. Besf,&#13;
lamb, jpork, mutton, etc., all o| the&#13;
CHOICEST GUIS at LOWBB PBIOES&#13;
than anywhere else* Let ns PBOVE this.&#13;
Or. MHOS' Heart ftentesy Is ssnS amt&#13;
susrantsed ay nil Srusslfts. f&#13;
MILES MIDICAL CO, Mllditri tasV&#13;
J DRS. -SKLEK •• 4 SISLER,&#13;
Pbyiiataas aadiorgKiis.&#13;
L. *-\;&lt;&#13;
c. L Bioi r» w. a *:&#13;
AU calls promptly sttaaM to&#13;
rp^M, - «ic%&#13;
Tsi»a»si&gt;^si&lt;»ts»h&gt;^^^Ti&#13;
* # • • •&#13;
i*i-i*--&#13;
**«*f- • t . -'•'&amp;&amp;£''?;:\-*//*if .V ,-v.&#13;
J.&#13;
&lt;H V „ T 9&#13;
\&#13;
•if :-&#13;
* • ^ - ' ~ i, .'&#13;
r'r •:••-&amp; ^ : .&#13;
A . t&#13;
- s '.&lt;&#13;
. X&#13;
. • . ' • x. •*••-:&gt;."^-&#13;
:.:••• V,, ^1^- h&#13;
-'* . 1 - .: . ••'«•• ':••&gt;.•)• v * A&#13;
' '{••• w.'-'"-:''.; J,'V??..i&#13;
, • ; • • : • • * ;&#13;
^ • ' • ^ ^ ^ • ^ ^ • ^ ^ • • •&#13;
. . -» " .. 1.&#13;
• ^&#13;
i,':&#13;
-#;*.,&#13;
% • •&#13;
,*-v:':&#13;
\ PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
-ow-j«&lt;?&#13;
m&#13;
I OUR BIG&#13;
X* -&#13;
££&#13;
Millinery Clearance Sale&#13;
All Trimmed and Unfpim- j |&#13;
med Hats fo go at&#13;
1-2 PRICE&#13;
ft&#13;
For the Balance of the oeason&#13;
Nellie Gardner&#13;
Next Door to Postoffice Pinckney, Mich,&#13;
Ti^i^aUiMstiiMM^&#13;
afcd'&#13;
* * * •. f .&#13;
MMLYMcoucncaw&#13;
v.-.-.&#13;
* &amp; • • :&#13;
B P ^ ipi&#13;
SURPRISING&#13;
tlie way the boys will pitch in and work when they&#13;
see a Rumely-Olds Engine doing all the "turning."&#13;
It's surprising too how little i t costs to do all the different kinds&#13;
of jobs around the place with a Rumely-Olds.&#13;
We have them in all sizes from 1½ h. p. up to 65 h. p., and&#13;
you can get one to just suit your needs: get one to run your&#13;
feed mill, your cream separator, your hoist, to pull stumps,&#13;
pump water, and be your "hired-man" that always stays by you.&#13;
You'll be time and money ahead and a lot better satisfied with&#13;
the way the work is done. Come in and see us about it.&#13;
If ypu can't find time to come in and see us, let us know and we F wifl ro&#13;
H ^&#13;
come and see you or send you a catalog of Rumely-Olds Engine*&#13;
We're here to serve you;&#13;
give us a chance.&#13;
A. H. FLINTOFT,&#13;
* -••&#13;
&amp;&#13;
''?• yX-.\*" •&#13;
: : • • » % * ! &gt; . - •&#13;
M&gt;.v r .--&#13;
"-'. jixf -• -i'-'&#13;
* « # . ' . • •&#13;
^¾¾1 ;•- .&#13;
:-^¾¾ • ' . . . .&#13;
West Marion&#13;
Mies Myrtie Well man is spending&#13;
a few weeks with her parents,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. £. Wellman.&#13;
Children's Day will he observed&#13;
here next Sunday afternooa at&#13;
two o'clock.&#13;
The Ladies Aid will meet this&#13;
afternoon, June 11, with Mrs.&#13;
George Miller. Officers will be&#13;
elected.&#13;
Mrs. Will Bland visited her&#13;
mother last Sunday.&#13;
Wealejr Vines and wife spent&#13;
Sunday with Gregory friends,&#13;
Miss Elsie Korndorfer of New&#13;
Boston spent the past week with&#13;
friends in this vicinity.&#13;
^ Mrs. Henry Smith spent last&#13;
=¾ Wednesday with Mrs. Coleman.&#13;
3 Walter Collins has returned&#13;
_ from the West and visited at the&#13;
• 3 home of Henry Plummer the first&#13;
j 3 part of last week.&#13;
• • • • ^&#13;
Cures Stubborn, Itchy Stjn Troubles&#13;
'I could scratch myself to pieces' is often&#13;
heurd from sufferers of Eczema, Tetter,&#13;
Itch and similar Skin Eruptions. Don't&#13;
Scratch—Stop the Itching at once with&#13;
Dr. Hobson's Eczema Ointment, Its first&#13;
application starts healing; the Red, Rough&#13;
Scaly, Itching Skin is soothed bjp the Healing&#13;
and Cooling Medicines. Mrs. C. A.&#13;
Einfeldt, Rock Island, 111., after using&#13;
Dr. Hobson's Eczema Ointment, writes:&#13;
"This is the first time in nine years I have&#13;
been free from the dreadful ailment."&#13;
Guaranteed. -%c Recommended by C.&#13;
(t. Meyer, lh* druggist.&#13;
Tragedy of. Cleaning Our 8hoes.&#13;
In "America as I Saw It" Mrs. Alex;&#13;
fweedie, writing of our home life,&#13;
eays:&#13;
"But home life—where Is it? The&#13;
poor man who pays so heavily for&#13;
everything cannot even get his boots&#13;
blackened at home, and he,has to go&#13;
into the -streets to the nearest 'shine1&#13;
for the purpose. At the street corners&#13;
of every town are high, strange looking&#13;
efemirs under an awning, and there&#13;
the men—aye. and women, too—BK solemnly,&#13;
with a foot reposing on each&#13;
leg rest placed there for the purpose,&#13;
and while they read their morning pa&#13;
pers a darky browns boots for fivepence&#13;
or blacks tbem for twopence&#13;
halfpenny. Even in hotels it is difficult&#13;
to get boots cleaned, and tbey&#13;
have to be put on dirty and worn by&#13;
their owner down to the boot room,&#13;
where, in the larger hotels, they are&#13;
now kind enough to have a separate&#13;
department for ladies- 'Tie the land of&#13;
luxury, but not of comfort. Those little&#13;
comforts, which to us In England&#13;
are the necessities of life, are not to&#13;
be found in America. Why? Because&#13;
there are few people to render service."&#13;
The Limit.&#13;
Mary Jane's master is a slightly eccentric&#13;
bachelor. He has one most&#13;
irritating habit Instead of telling her&#13;
what he wants done by word of mouth&#13;
he leaves on his desk or on the kitchen&#13;
table or anywhere else where she&#13;
is likely to see it a note curtly directing&#13;
her to "Dust the dining room" or&#13;
"Turn out my cupboard," and so OIL&#13;
The other day he bought some notepaper,&#13;
with the usual die sunk address&#13;
imprinted upon it, from the stationer&#13;
and ordered it to be sent home.&#13;
Mary Jane took it In, and the first&#13;
thing that caught her eye was a note&#13;
attached to the package. She read it&#13;
open eyed.&#13;
"Well," she said, "he's asked me to&#13;
do a few things in bis blessed notes,&#13;
but this is the limit I won't stand it&#13;
no longer!"&#13;
For the note read, "Die inside this&#13;
package."—London Answers.&#13;
SPECIALS&#13;
1?" O Ft&#13;
Saturday, June 13th, 1914&#13;
Ladies Muslin Underwear at CoBt&#13;
All Best Percales, per yard... u ' * '"*****'*mm*?i&#13;
All Embroideries at Cost&#13;
All Val Lace Insertions at Cost&#13;
10c can Heinz Pork and Beans__&#13;
15c can " " "&#13;
Yeast&#13;
6 bars of any white soap..&#13;
10 bars Acme Soap., ,_&#13;
.7c&#13;
«&#13;
ALL SALES CASH&#13;
W. W. BARNARD&#13;
O N b Y O N E&#13;
Commencement&#13;
••?*&#13;
to Hardware&#13;
At This Store&#13;
Household&#13;
Novelties&#13;
For Women&#13;
I:&#13;
Unify a Jprfware store it a man's store. But • * etptoisll/ invito&#13;
the attejjtfpp pf ths HOUSEWIFE to oar stock. SnVll fad here what&#13;
lbs has liOKG WANTED in UTENSILS, etc. PERSONAL SERVICE&#13;
tad FBOMPT deliveries.&#13;
$100 Reward, $10e&#13;
The readers of tbhi paper trill be pleaaed&#13;
to learn that there i t at feast o » dnwded&#13;
disease that/cience ha» been-able to core&#13;
in all i u stages, and that U Catarrh*Hall'*&#13;
Catarrh Core is the only poaitivt core now&#13;
known to the medical frftterriily. Cafmh&#13;
being a constitutional disease,'rranlres a&#13;
constitutional treatment. H*J1'6 €*tsrrh&#13;
Core it t*ken internally, scting. directly&#13;
upon the blood and mocont surfaces of th*&#13;
sjatetn. thereby destroying the foundation&#13;
of the diseased and giving the patient&#13;
strength b? building up the constitution&#13;
and assisting nature in doing its work.&#13;
The proprietors have so much faith in i u&#13;
curative powers that they offer One Hundred&#13;
Dollars for any case that it fails to&#13;
cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address:&#13;
F . K. Cheney A Co.,. Toledo, a&#13;
Sold by all drnggists, 75c,&#13;
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.&#13;
Attention Farmers!&#13;
Aoyone wishing to procure&#13;
Marl for soil building purposes&#13;
can get the same of me at 00c per&#13;
cnbic^yard. Why pay $2.50 for&#13;
jLime wnefa Marl has proven equal&#13;
•I \&#13;
J \ \&#13;
There will be Mauy Birthday Auniversaries,&#13;
Many Xmas's—Many&#13;
other occasions for the giving of&#13;
presents but only one Graduation&#13;
Day in a lifetime.&#13;
Make i t a&#13;
Memorable&#13;
Occasion&#13;
Make the Gift a Valuable One&#13;
Come in and look over the beautiful Watches, Chains, Fobs,&#13;
Pins, Lockets and Chains, LaValHeres, Jewel Cases, Toilet Sets and&#13;
Bracelets. The short sleeves make the bracelets more popular than&#13;
ever and I have put in a large supply. In fact so large that for the&#13;
balance of this month, I will make you a special price on one.&#13;
If you do not want to take it at once, have it laid aside until you&#13;
do want it.&#13;
I have some diamond rings that I can make you a special price&#13;
on.&#13;
Fin$ Engraving Quickly Done Sat it faction Guaranteed&#13;
W. H. GARTRBLL&#13;
•'Watch Doctor"&#13;
rm Wateh Adjuring a Specialty HOWELL, MICHIGAN&#13;
y:-i* ^^^:^:^:^::^:^:^^:^ r.&#13;
Monarch Flour&#13;
Is Monarch Because it is JVonarcb&#13;
Try it and see if you don't think it is Monarch of all bread&#13;
flour yon ever tried.&#13;
THE HOYT BROS.&#13;
.';-\'A\,'/-v;&#13;
Covfh* and Coids Weakei the Syttm&#13;
Continued Coughs, Colds and Bronchial&#13;
troubles are depressing tiid wetken the&#13;
system. Lost of freight and appetite fener*]&#13;
ly follow. Oat a 50c bottle of Dr.&#13;
King's New Discovery tondny. It will atop&#13;
rourcoogb. T h e first dote helps. The&#13;
beat ntdioine for Stubborn Coldt Cong**,&#13;
and all Throat and Lang Tronblss. Mr. O.&#13;
H Brown, Mttieatsasv Al*», writes: "My&#13;
wife wassi ok during, the hot strati&#13;
JF*j^*^^ Good&#13;
r n 0 # ^ ' *dT' UfeiMfesv We and $1.00 Raeomstodad&#13;
— ~ " " * • ~adf.&#13;
»^T' leaiMfesk We and $1.00&#13;
FB1D TWFL1 by 0. 6. Meyer, ths drt&lt;giet&#13;
STATE OF HfCBlOAM, tss *ntm vmtt ita "&#13;
Thsn&amp;d^sn^tortpj£M*ip&amp;oiattd. bjtse ^¾^^¾½ moBthi from £ • ttth 4 M of Msf/ jFb.jni -&#13;
hnvtsff br a an wed h* u£r JoSnol F f o M ? !&#13;
ail p m i M boJdta# «laiaia ajntssi etH ««tata s*&gt;x •&#13;
itoch to prMnt thett elatinSloSa I f f pSBJef&#13;
ti&lt;muMlftdJuta«aii * r ^~~" •&#13;
BiiwNbjr Hr— tl&#13;
*"-• m&#13;
• &lt; * • " *&#13;
•A&#13;
1¾¾&#13;
%&#13;
a&#13;
• i&#13;
, • j&#13;
4&#13;
^t^^&#13;
/ • . ' •&#13;
^,:.'"'&#13;
Vottot hlrnqbyjUjme that • • will met oa tb«&#13;
ambstt A. F.1914, at&#13;
SOffedajofJiU&#13;
of" - • - - - and 0* tbt ink**?&#13;
*.w.c*mt&#13;
, ^ 4&#13;
•&gt;\Q*-'.:K%&amp;.,m&amp;i±:*LS&#13;
W*-'&#13;
: * # * .'X ./.ft; ' : * ; : / » " - • &gt;w •&lt;w-.sr* :V'&#13;
**;:&#13;
4-rrt*.&#13;
,_.."L£T-&#13;
^ V ^ 1 i*r ££ 'fr'S- * % .&#13;
• * * » • ^ . - . - f c j a ' ! » . — i&#13;
2 ¾ ¾&#13;
&amp;f»: •••»' . - V w ~&amp;r-: %&amp;*. .-&gt;&gt;•.%^?. - ¾ ^&#13;
' • „ - * ! * "&#13;
:&lt;V*\&#13;
W--5: ^ T ^ * ' ^&#13;
C^v *&gt;v s«r&#13;
l«r.&#13;
^ -&#13;
*£&#13;
{•£*•*&lt;:&#13;
^&#13;
r-^.an&#13;
; * &lt; ~ *&#13;
t &amp;&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
1IP1*¾ E PASSES&#13;
ANTI-TRUST BILLS&#13;
%&amp;"•'' ^THREEOF THE ADMINISTRATION&#13;
/&#13;
MEASURES ARE APPROVED.&#13;
m. URGE MAJORITIES ARE GIVEN&#13;
! T,\.&#13;
frt£v&gt;" ..&#13;
fS.-, i ' i tW-;&#13;
' &amp; * ^ - ¾ •• •-.••&#13;
One Democrat Votes Against Clayton&#13;
BUI and Forty-three Republicans&#13;
and 8ixteen Progressives&#13;
John Majority.&#13;
;::.- .:Wi^.?&lt;r .,:&#13;
vs-l&#13;
y5"&#13;
Washington—All three bills one t h e&#13;
jtfministration trust legislation prog&#13;
r a m passed the house late Friday&#13;
and were sent to the senate for action&#13;
|there. Opposition melted away when&#13;
t h e final test came and the voting went&#13;
through quickly and without incident.&#13;
The Covington interstate trade commission&#13;
bill was passed without a record&#13;
vote; the Clayton omnibus antitrust&#13;
measure received 2T5 votes to&#13;
64 against it, and the vote on the&#13;
Rayburn railroad capitalization bill&#13;
was 325 to 12.&#13;
Action on the trust bill in the house&#13;
came rather unexpectedly. The three&#13;
measures had been agreed to in "committee&#13;
of the whole," after three&#13;
weeks of speech-making, consideration&#13;
Of the Rayburn bill, a s amended by&#13;
the committee, being completed late&#13;
Friday afternoon. When the trade&#13;
commission bill came before t h e&#13;
house for a final vote, Progressive&#13;
Reader Murdock moved that it be sent&#13;
back to the interstate commerce committee&#13;
with instructions to report t h e&#13;
ilurdock bill as a substitute. This&#13;
w a s rejected, 151 to 19, and the pendi&#13;
n g bill was passed without a roll call.&#13;
[Then the vote on the other two measu&#13;
r e s was taken in rapid succession. 1 Rep. White, of Ohio, was the only&#13;
democrat to vote against the Clayton&#13;
bill, and all the progressives voted&#13;
lor it except Rep. Chandler, of N e w&#13;
.York. Forty-three republicans and 16&#13;
progressives Joined the majority in&#13;
supporting the measure.&#13;
MAYOR WILL SAIL&#13;
WITH DETROIT CRUISE&#13;
W. C.T. U. ELECT OFFICERS&#13;
Dlaputa In State Will Be Carried Be-&#13;
. fore National Convention.&#13;
i . { - -&#13;
vmv-r Si'&#13;
:5¾'&#13;
Flint, Mich—Mrs. E. L. Cauikins,&#13;
of Battle Creek, was re-elected for a&#13;
-ninth term as president of the state&#13;
W. C. T. U. and Grand Rapids chosen&#13;
as the place for next year's meeting.&#13;
las Clara Wheeleivof Grand Rapids,&#13;
and Mrs. Stella Hoben, of Big Rapids,&#13;
recording secretary and treasurer, respectively&#13;
declined re-election, and&#13;
Mrs. Myrta Lockwood, of Holly, and&#13;
Mrs. D. G. Jones, of Detroit, were&#13;
chosen to succeed them. Mrs. Julia&#13;
It Fairish, of* Bay City, was re-elected&#13;
corresponding secretary.&#13;
Dr. Carolyn Gelsel, of Battle Creek,&#13;
and Mrs. Leona T. Field, of Dayton,&#13;
0., who were defeated in their efforts&#13;
to present written affidavits before&#13;
the convention Wednesday, declared&#13;
they were deserted by prominent&#13;
/workers, who asked them to come&#13;
hen and present their charges. It is&#13;
stated the dispute will be taken before&#13;
the national convention this fall&#13;
WILL DO BUSINESS IN STATE&#13;
•**&amp;•*&#13;
•Ig Power Company Will Operate In&#13;
Houghton and Baraga Counties.&#13;
Lansing, Mich.—The Northern Mich*&#13;
igaa. Power Co., a foreign corporation&#13;
tiacorporated in Maine, with headquarter*&#13;
at Portland and New Tork city,&#13;
ftted articles of incorporation with the&#13;
^ ¾ secretary of state Friday. This will&#13;
^ - V / five the company permission to do&#13;
^ • ^ t w i l D « M in Michigan. The concern&#13;
' -tta capitalized at 16,000,000. Kfct-**&lt;•:&#13;
&amp;&amp;#£:?&#13;
•».i '-.&#13;
^: •$&gt;-. The' state railroad commission gave&#13;
^ the"company permission to incorporate&#13;
in .Michigan a year ago. At that&#13;
time the company planned^ to pur-&#13;
Chaac property along t h e Sturgeon&#13;
c^; ^ r i r w , . i n Houghton and Baraga conn-&#13;
JOHN PURROY MITCHELL.&#13;
Detroit.—The mayor of N e w York&#13;
will accompany the Board of Commerce&#13;
on its lake cruise to Duluth&#13;
which starts from herg June 18th. A&#13;
number of other celebrities will be&#13;
members of the party.&#13;
STATE PRESS WOMEN MEET&#13;
Twenty-Fifth Annual Conventions&#13;
Votes to Affiliate with Federation&#13;
of Printers and Publishers.&#13;
Hillsdale, Mich.—Friday afternoon&#13;
the Michigan Woman's Press association&#13;
closed a three days' convention,&#13;
the twenty-fifth annual, by voting to&#13;
affiliate with the Michigan fcress and&#13;
Printers' Federation, providing they&#13;
are allowed to retain their individual&#13;
name.&#13;
Officers were elected as follows:&#13;
President, Mrs. Irene Pomeroy&#13;
Shields, Bay City; first vice president,&#13;
Miss Edith M. Lenon, Hillsdale; second&#13;
vice president, Miss Jennie Baell,&#13;
Ann Arbor; recording secretary, Mrs.&#13;
Alexander Stock, Hillsdale; corresponding&#13;
secretary, Miss Mabel Orisson,&#13;
Grand Ledge; treasurer, Mrs.&#13;
Esther A. Reed, Richmond; historian,&#13;
Mrs. Lucy A. Leggett, Detroit.&#13;
Dr. Mary Thompson Stevens, of Detroit,&#13;
and Mrs. Jenny C. Law Hardy,&#13;
of Tecumseh, gave suffrage talks. The&#13;
association has been on record for&#13;
several years in favor of suffrage.&#13;
Mrs. Shields, of Bay City, had a&#13;
paper on "Fine Printing vs. Straight&#13;
Telling," "Poetry and Life" w a s the&#13;
subject of Prof. J. E. Mack, professor&#13;
of English at Hillsdale college, and&#13;
Miss M. Myrtllla Davis, of the same&#13;
institution, gave a reading. Editor D.&#13;
W. Grandon, of Hillsdale, spoke in&#13;
favor of the affiliation with the state&#13;
organizations.&#13;
Northwestern Bankers Hold Meeting.&#13;
Traverse City, Mich.—At the fifth&#13;
annual meeting of the Northwestern&#13;
Michigan Bankers' club Thursday&#13;
night, at the Park Place hotel, 100&#13;
bankers and bank officers were present&#13;
The following officers were elected:&#13;
President. L. F. Titos, Traverse&#13;
City; vice-president J. F. Hofstetter,&#13;
Frankfort; lecretary-treasorer, E. P.&#13;
Allen, Traverse City; executive committee,&#13;
-A. J. Maynard, Traverse City,&#13;
and W.' J. Gregory, Manistee.&#13;
Joseph E. Otis, vice-president of^the&#13;
Central Trust Co., of Illinois, Chicagodelivered&#13;
the address of the evening,&#13;
his subject being the new federal reserve&#13;
act&#13;
^ ties. The property has not been pur&gt;&#13;
t cfcaied, but plana are under way f%i&#13;
.,. \ nk immediate purchase.&#13;
?j ;^&amp;2sWtotiUBi JP. Belden, of Ishpeming, is&#13;
J 2 &gt; preaident of the company, and the&#13;
v ^ headquarters in this state are at Ish&#13;
•Vtir&#13;
•4&amp;'-, •flat&#13;
. • ' - * • TCLE6SAPHJC FLASHES&#13;
»1&#13;
'•*:-',*&#13;
\?vJ tL • ' » * '•&#13;
By the senate committee's approval&#13;
of the rivers and harbors bilL .Harbor&#13;
$aach and vicinity wifl pron&gt; Ito tbc&#13;
mUki of f t f t m * t o # wiUacipe*&#13;
JaY e%e4gfcg aa4 b4tfte« improveaiaata,&#13;
&gt;: •. " C. FTaaiisa. af na^LJisae ia a MeaatMr&#13;
- ^9 ^ps*ii^iw^^^»^ap .^iv -vt^^ajsa^^v^fV^^vw w ^m^^qp^mm&#13;
^ . X tiV staie boan5 or &gt;ea^atn#S:4p&#13;
•&gt;. K ^ r » , w S , v i - - ' - , . »„•• i , • • . • , • , • &gt; , . / • • / . A . y . ' •&#13;
tf*",&#13;
Grand Rapids Gets Next Meeting.&#13;
Allegan, Mich.—At t h e thirty-seventh&#13;
annual meeting of the State Eclectic&#13;
Medical and Surgical society of&#13;
Michigan in this city and following officers&#13;
were elected: A. L. Robertson,&#13;
of Allegan, president; B. L. Bell,&#13;
Grand Rapids, first vice-president; J.&#13;
J. Brownson, Kingsley, second vicepresident;&#13;
Z. L. Baldwin, Kalamaaoo.&#13;
third vice-president; Joseph Waddington,&#13;
Detroit, secretary; Frank D. Trowell,&#13;
Lawrence, treasurer. The next&#13;
annual meeting of the society will be&#13;
held in Grand Rapids June 4 and I,&#13;
1915.&#13;
ITEIM OF STATE INTEREST&#13;
Ira BeokTof Battle Creek,&#13;
Wednesday choaca graad iaarahal e#&#13;
the trand lodga, F. and A. at, of Michigan,&#13;
at tka aAanal aomaia^eitioa.&#13;
waM waa bald a4 fttajg^ Tbcrt ware.&#13;
• \ *&#13;
' • « * . &gt; .;•"','&#13;
MARKET QUOTATIONS&#13;
Live Stock, Grain and General Farm&#13;
Produce.&#13;
Live Stock.&#13;
DETROIT.—Cattle: Receipts 640;&#13;
xnarkeUteady to 10c lower; best heavy&#13;
steers, $8.25@8.40; best handy weight&#13;
butcher steers, S8@8.75; mixed steers&#13;
and heifers, 17.60&lt;g&gt;8.25; handy light&#13;
butchers, $7.60@8; light butchers,&#13;
$6.75®7.60; best cows, S6.2606.76;&#13;
butcher cows, $5.50® 6; common cows,&#13;
$4.50@5; canners, $3.50@4.26; best&#13;
heavy buls, $6.75; bologna bulls, $6.25&#13;
@&gt;6.60; stock bulls, $5.5006; feeders,&#13;
$7.50@8; stockers, $707.50; milkers&#13;
and springers, $6075. Veal calves:&#13;
Receipts 485; market strong; best&#13;
$10; others, $709.50. Sheep and&#13;
lambs: Receipts 863; market steady;&#13;
best lambs, $7.7507.85; fair lambs,&#13;
$6.7502.50; light to common lambs,&#13;
$5.5006.50; fair to good sheep, $50&#13;
6.60; culls and common, $2.5004.50,&#13;
Hogs: Receipts 2,975; all grades, $8.1$&#13;
08.20.&#13;
EAST BUFFALO—Cattle—Receipts,&#13;
3,000; heavy grades 15025c lower;&#13;
best 1,350 to 1,450-lb steers, $8.7509;&#13;
best 1,200 to 1,300-lb steers, $8,500&#13;
8.75; best 1,10^ to 1,200- lb steers.&#13;
$8.2508.45; coarse and plain weighty,&#13;
steers, $7.7508; fancy yearlings, baby&#13;
beef, $8.5009; medium to good, $80&#13;
8.25; choice handy steers, 900 to 1,000&#13;
lbs., $8.2508.50; fair to good 1,000 to&#13;
1,100 lbs., $808.25; extra good cows,&#13;
$7.2507.50; best cows, $6.5007; butcher&#13;
cows, $5.5006; cutters, $4.5005;&#13;
trimmers, $404.25; best heifers, $80&#13;
8.50; medium butcher heifers, $7.60&#13;
08; stock heifers, $6.2506.75; best&#13;
feeding steers, $7.9008; fair to good,&#13;
$7.5007.65; best stock steers, $7,500&#13;
7.75; common light stock steers, $6.75&#13;
07; extra good bulls, $7.5007.75;&#13;
bologna bulls, $6.5006.75; stock^mlls,&#13;
common to good, $506; milkers and&#13;
springers, $40090.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 15,000; market 100&#13;
15c lower; heavy and mixed, $8.40;&#13;
yorkers, $8.4008.50; pigB, $7.9008&gt;&#13;
Sheep and lambs: Receipt's, 6,000;&#13;
steady; top lambs, $7.8508; wethers,&#13;
$606.35; ewes, $4.5005.50.&#13;
Calves steady; tops, $10.50; fair to&#13;
good, $8.5009.50; grassers, $507.&#13;
1 Drinfcs&#13;
. , *• . :,-•;• - ; &lt; : ' • • £ • • : : ^ - J ^&#13;
~ : - • • •• - . - - " ' . , • • - r ' * , . ; • - &lt; : fay -V Vt'fe^v*&#13;
V&#13;
- • • r W ^-^-^. ' ^&#13;
f&#13;
sjuwcn every bcvciagB •&#13;
requirement" Vim, vigor, re*&#13;
freshment, wholcaomencsa.&#13;
It will satisfy you. * *--&#13;
.*.*«£&amp;-&lt;r ^&#13;
T H E COCA-COLA CO., ATUUTTA, G*.&#13;
No Heat, Dirt&#13;
or Trouble&#13;
Grains, Etc.&#13;
DETROIT—Wheat—Cash No. 2 red,&#13;
97 1-.c; July opened without change&#13;
at 88c and advanced to 88 l-2c; September&#13;
opened at 87 3-4c, declined to&#13;
87 l-2c and advanced to 88c; No. 1&#13;
white, 96 3-4c.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, 731-2c; No. 3 yellow,&#13;
two cars at 74 l-2c; two at 75c;&#13;
No. 4 yellow, 73c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 5 cars at 43c; closing&#13;
at 43 l-2c; No. 3 white, 4 cars at&#13;
42 l-2c, closing at 43c; No. 4 white,&#13;
42042 l-2c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 66c asked.&#13;
Beans—Immediate and prompt shipment,&#13;
$2.05; June $2.07; July. $2.10\&#13;
Cloverseed—Prime spot, $7.90; October&#13;
$8.30; prime alsike, $10.&#13;
Timothy—Prime spot, $2.35.&#13;
Hay—Car lots, Detroit: No. 1 timothy,&#13;
$14015; light mixed, $15.50016;&#13;
No. 1 mixed $14.50016; No. 1 clover,&#13;
$13013.60; heavy clover mixed, $130&#13;
13.50; rye straw, $808.50; wheat and&#13;
oat straw, $707.50 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, $4.50; spring patent, $5.10;&#13;
rye, $4.40 per bbl.&#13;
Feed—In WO-lb. sacks, jobbing&#13;
lots: Bran, $28; standard middlings,&#13;
$28jLfme middlings, $22; coarse middlings,&#13;
$21; cracked corn, $32; corn&#13;
and oat chop, $28.50 per ton.&#13;
.-N-&#13;
,.S&gt;-''&#13;
N o Smoke&#13;
No Odor&#13;
Clean&#13;
Convenient&#13;
Money-Saving&#13;
A NBW PERFECTION&#13;
!i an investment&#13;
that pays became of&#13;
the big savin? Is fuel&#13;
cost. Oil, the tnost&#13;
convenient of ail fuels,&#13;
the cleanest and one of&#13;
the safest, Is also by&#13;
far the most economical.&#13;
Soon saves the&#13;
price of the stove.&#13;
Btrfk* a match and&#13;
your fire Is ready, turn&#13;
ft off when yon are&#13;
throafl*. Fining the&#13;
patented supply reservoir&#13;
19 practically aU&#13;
the care required. No&#13;
smoke or smell, none&#13;
of the dangers of gasoline.&#13;
For B—tRitafti Use&#13;
OIL .»,&#13;
Don*t put up With your coal range another hot&#13;
summer whenV NEW PERFECTION Wick Blue&#13;
Flame Cook Stove wilt kgep the kitchen cool and make&#13;
thHe ahse aav cya bsiunmet mtoepr, wcoitohk winargm einagsy s.h elves, a splendid portable&#13;
oven, while thespecial odorless broiler broils on both siduat one*.&#13;
Does everything a cpal range can, without its suffocating heat&#13;
A hrtiaVtaaon WMMABgand ironing days. Ho coal or Mhes to carry.&#13;
! n ^ &lt; m l*EW*BRFBOTIO$8 • » now la nse, In comfortable&#13;
MiddfoWeet aitohefij. many all the year'roond. And the numbar la*&#13;
create* sa^seiKm. by aoores of thomnda.&#13;
Too?dealer can show yoo the different elsee-two. three and roer&#13;
bnrner and explala their exolnaiTe feat«rea. A«k abont toe aeweat&#13;
PlBFEOTipN with Thevmoa ovea. S«e him before the Siet warm&#13;
day, ao need to end ore an hour's diaeomfort.&#13;
7aW*age Cecil Book Fr— for 8 Cents to Cerar Msifcg J The Standard Oi! Co., Chicago. IIL&#13;
o x nnzAMA ooaroaAtioa&gt; tm&#13;
it+i&#13;
- J ^ : *-?&lt;:&gt;&#13;
Back Talk.&#13;
Howard Elliott, president of the&#13;
New Haven lines, said at a dinner in&#13;
New York:&#13;
"I don't encourage »ack talk among&#13;
our employes—far from it—but I must&#13;
eay my sympathies are rather with&#13;
one of our conductors who ventured,&#13;
under great provocation, on a little&#13;
back talk the other day.&#13;
"As the conductor waa punching&#13;
tickets, a man said to him, with a&#13;
nasty sneer: *&#13;
" Tou hare a lot of wrecks on this&#13;
road, don*t yout* 44 'Oh, no,' said the conductor.&#13;
You're the first I've seen for some&#13;
t i m e . ' " •&gt;&#13;
L&gt; •"&lt;&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
Apples—Steele Red, $6®6.60; Baldwin,&#13;
$5®5.60; Ben Davis, $404.50 per&#13;
bbl.&#13;
Cabbage—New, $2 per crate; % in&#13;
bulk 2 l-3c per lb.&#13;
Dressed Hogs—Light, 9010c; heavy&#13;
l-2c per lb.&#13;
Sweet Potatoes—Jersey kiln-dried*&#13;
$101.10 per hamper.&#13;
Dressed Calves—Fancy, 12®13c;&#13;
common, 10011c per lb.&#13;
Tomatoes—Florida fancy, $8,250&#13;
$3.60", choice, $3 per crate; 70076c&#13;
per basket&#13;
Potatoes—In bulk, 75076c, per bu&#13;
in sacks; 80088c per bu for' carlots.&#13;
Onions—Texas « Bermudas, yellow.&#13;
$24002.60 per crate; Mississippi, $2.76&#13;
per bu.&#13;
Honey—Choice to fancy new white&#13;
comb, 16016c; amber, 10011c; extracted,&#13;
607c per lb.&#13;
Nuta-*Shellbark hickory, 8c; large&#13;
hickory, 101 l-2c; Spanish chestnuta&#13;
809c; walnuts and&#13;
1 l*2c per lb.&#13;
New Potatoes—Florida, $5^005.7»&#13;
par bbl an4 $lper ba^ Bermuda, $*.M&#13;
par bm and $7 pes- bbl; ICiaaiasipp^&#13;
Triumph, $1.6001914^ ba. v ~&#13;
• H i t Ponltry—BfoiJara, SO0t*e pa?&#13;
lb? tptiag ebkkaas, We; M « r bans,&#13;
Ua; maaiaai beaa, 14a; Ho,:&gt; aWsav&#13;
lie; *M roaatara,1W; ^vw-elaoba, 17&#13;
0lae; gaaaa, l i # l l a tarkaya, l t a&#13;
8ee)no Is Believing.&#13;
Wright—But there Its such a sameness&#13;
about his writing.&#13;
Penman—Oh, no, there isn't Why,&#13;
le's ambidextrous—he writes with&#13;
both hands, yon know.&#13;
Progress has produced new styles&#13;
in both men and pianos. It has just&#13;
about gotten so that if a man is square&#13;
he is regarded as old-fashioned.&#13;
Iw.L.boUdLAs&#13;
SHOES&#13;
woaut aire H&#13;
•MI4lej^deief*.s7tosrt%itO2.h5ll0drsean&#13;
:**r&#13;
V0UCM8AVEWMIY'&#13;
gar w w t y *"'_J»J&#13;
&gt;SMBea«9a&amp;&amp;es.&#13;
•fEtyOOSffisra XUCBXAIS&#13;
gSL«3»^^7a: aassaaMsasaaaMaa tMaw^&#13;
.mAaimM a i i a a i&#13;
i f W W W t a ^ a v w&#13;
1&#13;
• ••"•."a2^.«-S&gt;»&#13;
'.'^IW- s&amp;&#13;
&amp;%?%•&#13;
They d&#13;
butternuts, lib ithdr&#13;
, ^V-TTM • &gt; , ^ &gt; «&#13;
Automobiles may be aa expensive as&#13;
wives, but one can trade &gt;is old auto&#13;
in on a new-one every two or^three&#13;
yean.&#13;
A woman seldom sate ber husband&#13;
unless he is that kind of a husband.&#13;
, " ' " '" •' " ' • •a«aa«aMawaMeaa»a&#13;
Your Liver&#13;
Is Clogged Up&#13;
That's W h y Yaa'g, T S N&#13;
•••rlava Via Appetite*&#13;
CARTER'S&#13;
UVER PILLS&#13;
wfll put you right&#13;
to a few d&#13;
-,. .*&#13;
- . * - - . . * • » •&#13;
J "V •&gt;sG OfO.&#13;
WESTERN&#13;
*b&amp; oppoftoanf of tacjsring a&#13;
bomeataade of w sCTfa&gt;aacf^ SiaT^*^B»WS»*»^aWfa1^paip»m^ajp ^aTal « « ^ F ^ *aW**Si ^s^s* ^s^aw^ravf&#13;
the low priced Unda ofMarttofca, 1&#13;
soon have patitfL&#13;
Canada oflara a hearty welcoma&#13;
to the Settler, to the man with •&#13;
family looking for a hows; to the&#13;
farmer's son, to the renter, to all who&#13;
wish to liva under better coaditionC&#13;
Canada's grata yfeld In H13 is&#13;
the talk of the world. Uaurtant&#13;
(Lrraataa give cheap fodtier for tetta&#13;
hsrda* cost of raisme; an* fatten^&#13;
for market is a trifle.&#13;
The sum realiaed for Beef, Butter,&#13;
MAk and Cheese wiH pay ^ t y par&#13;
..-cast esa taa fanreataeettt.- - •••*:&#13;
xvJWHUf&lt;&gt;rllteTatttre^a^pai^&#13;
ularsasto.&#13;
i^:&gt;-&#13;
- ai,- ' * '&#13;
-N' "* ¥• A&#13;
,'-/':'.'r u.&amp;rr*?!'. . * *&#13;
--.'It/'1**"&#13;
^ -&#13;
ndaoa^ssleiBr &gt;'*&amp;;&#13;
?! . ? * * •&#13;
S|M»daaOr to&#13;
. i t a i fajejwsjfsjejfi Avsw.&#13;
-'*• MlOha&#13;
ih^r&#13;
* ' • * . -&#13;
• &lt; . •&#13;
?V *t&#13;
.?*«&lt;'' .jr.-' X' »-t&#13;
'"•&gt;*.' ^•^- .&#13;
Sr&#13;
• . mm- ^*?.L% *r**.V&#13;
^¾¾ r y - ' j : ^&#13;
^ t : .S*^*- &lt;«-.*- *&amp;&gt;.&#13;
-'.'VV ..v*&#13;
• *t •&#13;
• J / ; .^;. M^Y-**.&#13;
3? • » • &gt; * . . ^ - ^ ^ , ' * - &lt;&#13;
•:?•' : ^ # •&#13;
'-***»« m&#13;
..s&gt;:; '-y«V&#13;
PINCKNEf'DISPATCH&#13;
w&#13;
tfyLtUritf*&#13;
Lady&#13;
Governor's&#13;
?$£^&#13;
, ^&#13;
v..&#13;
A Novelization of&#13;
Alice Bradley's Play&#13;
3y GERTRUDE STEVENSON „&#13;
Illustrations from Photographs of the Stage Prodtictloo I&#13;
Ooffyflil^iai.(PnW1i»tionTUghfcnwn«l)ftyPw*aartM&lt;Qi&#13;
8YNOPS18. when fighting for what he wants, and&#13;
neither knows nor cares that others&#13;
feel them. He had a heart, hut it was&#13;
unpleasantly like Pharaoh's.&#13;
But of {Catherine Strickland's statuesque&#13;
beauty and her cosmopolitan&#13;
manner he was delightfully aware.&#13;
During the weeks since he had left&#13;
home Slade had been calling regularly&#13;
at the Strickland home, partly to&#13;
consult with the senator and partly&#13;
for the purpose of posing for the bust&#13;
which Katherlne was modeling. As&#13;
they sat hour after hour, he posing&#13;
comfortably, she working deftly and&#13;
talking even more cleverly, Slade and&#13;
Katherlne had come to a mutual understanding.&#13;
The more they saw of&#13;
each other the more each became convinced&#13;
that their paths would inevitably&#13;
converge.&#13;
Katherlne talkTed animatedly and entertainingly&#13;
of social life abroad and&#13;
of the gay times in Washington, and&#13;
Slade's heart warmed and his eyes&#13;
flashed as he pictured himself a part&#13;
of that charmed circle. With keen&#13;
Daniel Slade suddenly advances from a&#13;
penniless miner to a millionaire. He ts&#13;
ambitious to become governor of the&#13;
state. His simple, home-loving wife fails&#13;
to rise to the new conditions. Slade meets&#13;
Katherlne, daughter of Senator Strickland,&#13;
and sees In her all that Mary Is not&#13;
Slade decides to separate from his wife&#13;
and takes rooms at his club.&#13;
CHAPTER V.&#13;
, . ^ . - •&#13;
' • \ r &gt;&#13;
• . / • ^ ;&#13;
f:f%v&#13;
%:&#13;
-s*.&#13;
"*£&gt;&#13;
Mary Slade sat down to the breakfast&#13;
table with a certain sense of bewilderment.&#13;
It was the same this&#13;
morning as It had been each successive&#13;
morning since Dan's departure.&#13;
She could not bring herself to the realization&#13;
of the fact that Dan had not&#13;
come home—apparently did not intend&#13;
to come home.&#13;
She had waited up the night he had&#13;
igane to the dub, just as she had&#13;
waited up every night of their married&#13;
aire, no matter where her husband&#13;
Was or how late he might be coming&#13;
home. As the night hours lengthened&#13;
Into day she was forced to the conclusion&#13;
that Dan meant to stay away&#13;
for the night. That he wouldn't be&#13;
borne at all through the day never occurred&#13;
to her. She reasoned that a&#13;
jnlght'8 sleep would clear his mind&#13;
and that he would have recovered&#13;
(from Tils "tantrum" the next day. But&#13;
Dan didn't "run In" that day nor the&#13;
jnext The days had become weeks,&#13;
yet neither by telephone nor letter had&#13;
jbe sent as much as a word. UFinally Mary had mustered up her&#13;
wage and telephoned his club. It&#13;
took courage for Mary to use the telephone&#13;
on any occasion^ She was afraid&#13;
of the sound of her own voice the moment&#13;
Bhe began to talk into the transmitter.&#13;
-This time she feared Dan's&#13;
displeasure and his possible harshness.&#13;
Mr. Slade was out, had left no&#13;
message, they did not know when he&#13;
would return, was the disappointing&#13;
Tesult as she hung the receiver on the&#13;
took.&#13;
This morning, as the maid served&#13;
her breakfast, she resolved to try&#13;
again. The situation was getting unbearable.&#13;
It was bad enough to live&#13;
Jn the great house and be surrounded&#13;
[by servants with Dan there. Without&#13;
him she felt like a prisoner of state&#13;
and looked on the servants as so many&#13;
jailers^&#13;
Leafing her breakfast practically&#13;
mntasted, Mary again ventured to the&#13;
telephone, with faltering voice she&#13;
^repeated the number. "One-three-ninelour;"&#13;
with beating heart she Inquired&#13;
lor "Mr. Slade;" with sinking courage&#13;
she received the answer that Mr. Slade&#13;
had gone out* leaving no message.&#13;
lAgain and again during the day she&#13;
(repeated- the call, only to receive a&#13;
similar reply. The possibility of her&#13;
Ihushand having left such a message&#13;
to bVdeliveTed to her, whether he was&#13;
jthere or not. never occurred to the&#13;
truthful, simple-minded little woman.&#13;
But Slade did not want to be reached&#13;
by her, And If an untruth; more or&#13;
less, were necessary, the telephone&#13;
boy was easily bribed.&#13;
Meanwhile Blade was eagerly looking&#13;
forward to his; new life: Never a&#13;
man to waver, he did not once look&#13;
fback to the wife he had so coolly deserted,&#13;
He was being dined and banqueted&#13;
and feted, being everywhere&#13;
hailed as- the candidate for governor.&#13;
pH* was sniffing the first breath of futme&#13;
glories with keenest delight. This&#13;
v a s the sort_of thing that made a. man&#13;
tfeel big! t h i s was the sort oHlfe to&#13;
|lea*-with men bowing and salaaming&#13;
sil around him. He walked with a firmer&#13;
$H0$P?%b$?0ti!mmr +w thrown&#13;
(hew* sViiitfflbf* arro«*ntly. His^hest&#13;
rwsj^t«or% no^loeable as he walked&#13;
Idownv the street,''&#13;
I The innate oonceit and self-esteem&#13;
of w e man made him overlook the fact&#13;
ithsu the^ar^ needed a rich man. Re&#13;
&gt;nsj| ^eite satisfied that be was being&#13;
Roosted by Strickland and the others&#13;
fjeoaosevef-his brains, bis unnsualabilttf,&#13;
his orattfrr and his power to lead&#13;
iinen, H t wma happier than he had m.timhf'Zfrm;day the new&#13;
looked swifjiter and the oH lens&#13;
iThe gave a Ukonghtto Mary ft WAS&#13;
'pasts* one. Mary was "comfort&#13;
4H*&gt;M 9h&gt; had everything that money&#13;
m*M buy. Tha servants would be ta*&gt;&#13;
good care of her, of course. Of&#13;
_ , _ . . . . . . lump In Marys threat as she sat&#13;
-:::-, ^ A ^ W 3 &amp; § lonely breakfast table and a*&#13;
~" ^ s i ^ w W t throng* the stffl more lo&amp;*&gt;&#13;
^SMSM'ordeal of the formal dinner, he&#13;
5rr.'A-&#13;
*••**,."'it '£•*•••&#13;
1^-&#13;
- 1 A . •I-***.&#13;
Je:&#13;
' $ ; •&#13;
IwewftithtU- Of the woman's aehin«&#13;
her eyes brtght with unshed&#13;
ea&gt; she tried to. heap up before&#13;
s^r?mata and make eaevaea for his&#13;
V" Bade was heartlessly ob-&#13;
-Olyarhapa It was setfastoam&#13;
that ssade him anahle ta&gt; faaL&#13;
a&lt; the&#13;
^ 5 . : ' " ^ •"•-• i * # ^&#13;
! » » &gt; » •&#13;
-ilDId You Ask the 8enator for the&#13;
$10,000 I Want?"&#13;
penetration he saw the longing of the&#13;
girl's nature, her iron will, her determination&#13;
to gain social honors at almost&#13;
any cost. He flattered himself&#13;
that when he said the word Katherlne&#13;
Strickland would be ready to cast her&#13;
lot with his.&#13;
From the smoking room of Senator&#13;
Strickland's big house came the strident&#13;
sound of men's voices, raised in&#13;
excitement, and, it would seem, acclaim.&#13;
Now and again the senator's&#13;
smooth, oratorical voice would sound&#13;
and then Slade'e slightly deprecatory,&#13;
yet firm and pleased. Then would&#13;
follow the patter of applause, laughter&#13;
and the sudden dropping of voices that&#13;
signified earnest converse.&#13;
To Katherlne Strickland, sitting In&#13;
the softly lighted. library adjoining,&#13;
every sound had its meaning. Her&#13;
eyes sparkled with keen Interest In&#13;
her cheeks glowed the deep rose of&#13;
excitement and exultation. In that other! In the end—"&#13;
room she knew they were making history.&#13;
In that other room they were&#13;
putting up a man for governor, a man&#13;
she admired and who had aroused,her&#13;
interest as no other man had ever&#13;
done.&#13;
Nothing could stand in that man's&#13;
way, she thought, with a catch &amp; her&#13;
breath, nothing could stop- him now&#13;
that he vwae fairly started How different&#13;
this domineering, forceful per*&#13;
sonality.from Bob Hayes, the man who&#13;
had first won her girl's" heart, and yet&#13;
for whom she had never been wining&#13;
to renounce bar interest in the polite&#13;
leal and social Ufa which obsessed her&#13;
with the same compelling force as it&#13;
did Slade.&#13;
With an effort she brought her mind&#13;
back to the present and to Mrs. Weeley&#13;
Merritt, who had dropped In on&#13;
her way from, a dance to pick up bar&#13;
husband.&#13;
"Tom simply weren't llstenta* to a&#13;
word-1 said,* Tjrev Merritt wrsplaroed&#13;
to h*r an^etee^ eflacttaate way. "X&#13;
waa aajjtaf If j ^ l m o w Mr. filads vary&#13;
w w f . J&amp;- ''v.: '***-'.:hf&lt;•-.:.&#13;
^ e s T Katharine re|MeA lightly,&#13;
«wa know him very waiT&#13;
hearth and home, domestic purity—&#13;
while Slade's! They tell me he hasn't&#13;
seen his wife for weeks, and it's town&#13;
talk that he's living at MB club. And&#13;
to think he's never mentioned her to&#13;
you!"&#13;
Katherlne had quietly rung for a&#13;
servant, and as Mrs. Merritt finished,&#13;
remarked casually: "Martin, see that&#13;
these letters are malle^ at once."&#13;
Unabashed, Mrs. Merritt was moving&#13;
eagerly about the artistic room, comfortable&#13;
in all its appointments, its&#13;
/richness enhanced and mellowed with&#13;
age, a blend of color that nothing but&#13;
years can give.&#13;
Fannie Merritt was a decided blonde.&#13;
Her decision had been made more&#13;
than ten years before. It was a decision&#13;
that, once made, must be&#13;
abided by, and the woman had been&#13;
living up to it ever since. Her gown&#13;
was the laet word of sartorial elegance&#13;
and style. Daringly decollette it clung&#13;
to her long, svelte figure with loving&#13;
emphasis, and trailed round her exquisitely&#13;
dressed feet. Her hair did&#13;
credit to the hairdresser's long and patient&#13;
efforts, and long, bizarre diamond&#13;
pendants flashed and sparkled from&#13;
her ears. If ever a woman had become&#13;
a slave to her own personal pleasure&#13;
and dress, that woman waa Fannie&#13;
Merritt. Too self-centered and selfish&#13;
ever to crave motherhood, she lavished&#13;
a kind of affection on a watery-eyed&#13;
little poodle, which repaid her with&#13;
lap-dog gratitude.&#13;
Topight she was restless and ill at&#13;
ease. Like Katherlne, her mind was&#13;
full of one thought—Slade, Slade, Slade&#13;
—but thoughts that took a different direction.&#13;
She was sick of his name,&#13;
sick of hearing of his money, sick Of&#13;
the talk of his power and of hearing&#13;
him named as "the man of the hour."&#13;
He was winning the very honors she&#13;
had coveted for her husband, and taking&#13;
them right out from beneath his&#13;
very eyes and nose. There didn't seem&#13;
to be a doubt of Slade becoming governor,&#13;
the very position for which her&#13;
husband had been striving for the past&#13;
six terms. Slade with his millions&#13;
needed the governorship no more than&#13;
a pampered child needs a new toy,&#13;
while to her husband success or failure&#13;
this time meant either the retrieving&#13;
of his fortunes or his utter ruin.&#13;
The abstraction of the two women&#13;
was broken by the sudden entrance&#13;
of Hayes.&#13;
"Whew!" he whistled. "They're having&#13;
a time of it In there. Good evening,&#13;
Mrs. Merritt, your husband Is&#13;
certainly making it warm for Mr.&#13;
Slade."&#13;
"Indeed," laughed Mrs. Merritt, gratified&#13;
for the moment.&#13;
"Dear, dear!" she exclaimed as she&#13;
watched Hayes gazing wistfully at&#13;
Katherlne and looking very handsome&#13;
and manly in his well-made evening&#13;
clothes. "It's quite like old times to&#13;
see you together." Unhappy herself,&#13;
it gave her a certain pleasure to make&#13;
other people unhappy. The jealousy&#13;
she had long^ felt for the yoTrnger and"&#13;
more beautiful woman found expression&#13;
now in her purring tones, as, with&#13;
amiable cruelty, she reminded them&#13;
of their earlier intimacy. She took&#13;
delight In making Bob writhe and&#13;
Katherlne whiten as she recalled their&#13;
passionate young love when only the&#13;
senator's stern interference had kept&#13;
them from wedding.&#13;
"Let me see," she recollected, "when&#13;
I was your confidante, you were&#13;
twenty-one, Katherlne, and you, Rob,&#13;
were twenty-four. I can feel Rob's&#13;
hands gripping mine yet: 'O, Fannie—&#13;
please see her for me—the senator&#13;
-doesn't approve of it.' And the tears&#13;
you shed on my shoulder, Katherlne&#13;
—why, it feels wet to think of it."&#13;
"O! Fannie!" Katherlne's voice was&#13;
not as firm as usual.&#13;
"I always said," the woman persisted,&#13;
"Rob, she'll come home to you&#13;
wtfartnMra,&#13;
faHna manner -j; * * •&#13;
wtthoat mm aavatiiMgit at an&#13;
"Ma,******&#13;
"I think 111 go back and listen to&#13;
the discussion," and Bob flung disgustedly&#13;
out of the room. At the door&#13;
he almost collided with Merritt Katherlne&#13;
had hurried out to see a reporter&#13;
who wanted the wherefores and the&#13;
whys of the dinner party to Slade.&#13;
"I can't possibly get away, dear,"&#13;
Merritt explained to his wife. "I've&#13;
been buttonholed by some men from&#13;
up the state. Shall you wait or go&#13;
home—first?"&#13;
Mrs. Merritt refused to be dismissed&#13;
in that peremptory fashion.&#13;
"Ill wait," she returned with acid&#13;
sweetness. Then if you are not ready&#13;
m run along.**&#13;
^Blade's had an oration tonight,"&#13;
Merritt Informed her, nodding toward&#13;
the smoking-room. T h e big out-oftown&#13;
man are all hare. Some of 'em&#13;
in there yet Ma's big, Fannie. He's&#13;
big. We cant deny that The brute&#13;
attacks his point with all the force of&#13;
a sledge hammer."&#13;
Tea, that's what yon lack—&#13;
,panah!" bis wife turned on him petulantly.&#13;
•*•&#13;
Ton'ra snowed andar,* aha complained,&#13;
bitterly. I f you'd taken my&#13;
And doea lia sjvar manOoav H a : adv1ca,yx&gt;n wouldn't have ooaa to this&#13;
made feed tonight -What* year pa*&#13;
par tot," she dsasawdsd, I f yea anal&#13;
attack yoajr rtral saaatdass m ita cot*&#13;
f Anyone wwMfthinkyon want.&#13;
oaxtp Baska ktssV 4v¥efaes&gt;»4Bstt8aaV of&#13;
?I cent Ida aahMntr " Her&#13;
phew! My position is very difficult&#13;
Of course, election's a long way ahead,&#13;
but I'm the only stick in his puddle." MYes, you're a big stick!" she&#13;
taunted. "Why don't you do something?"&#13;
"What can I do?" he groaned. "I've&#13;
been told tonight by no less than four&#13;
men that they won't support me again.&#13;
And Strickland's speech Introducing&#13;
Slade was a masterpiece!"&#13;
"Yes—Strickland's masterpieces are&#13;
concocted by his daughter, we all&#13;
know that. Just as I write your stuff,"&#13;
she finished with hateful emphasis on&#13;
the possessive.&#13;
"My dear, I wish you'd be more&#13;
careful!" warned Merritt, making&#13;
sure that the door leading into the&#13;
smoking-room was closed.&#13;
"Your 'Message to the Farmer'—that&#13;
made you famous! What did I ever&#13;
get for writing it?" and with self-satisfied&#13;
deliberateness ehe arranged herself&#13;
carefully in a low-seated chair&#13;
near the fireplace.&#13;
1 never denied that you had a&#13;
man's brain," placatingly, drawllngly,&#13;
mockingly, "darling."&#13;
"Yes—I'm the family mosquito that&#13;
buzzes behind your ears. God help&#13;
us if it wasn't for me. Did you ask&#13;
the senator for the $10,000 I want?"&#13;
Bhe demanded.&#13;
"He can't," Merritt was huddled In&#13;
the nearest chair. The subject had&#13;
been causing him appetlteless days&#13;
and sleepless nights. When a woman&#13;
of Fannie Merritt's persistency and&#13;
tenacity wants something a man can't&#13;
get then that man is very likely to be&#13;
nagged into desperation.&#13;
"You look out Wesley," she answered,&#13;
alarm breaking the careful&#13;
modulation of her voice. "That's the&#13;
first time he ever refused us."&#13;
"He's broke—dead broke. I don't&#13;
know how he can keep this up. The&#13;
senator's nearly out. That's why&#13;
he's sticking to Slade."&#13;
(TO B&amp; CONTINUED.)&#13;
EELS AND SNAILS AS FOOD&#13;
Three-Pronged Fork Regular Thing to&#13;
Use for "Horned Things" In&#13;
Proper Ceremony.&#13;
Laymen may hesitate to say how far&#13;
Leviticus has beeu adopted Into the&#13;
law of Scotland. But there are some&#13;
peculiarities which suggest that it has&#13;
probably been adopted Into Scottish&#13;
practise. Ttke the prejudice of the&#13;
Scot against eating eels, and also shellfish.&#13;
There Is no more obvious reason&#13;
why an eel should look more like that&#13;
abhorred snake to a Scotchman than&#13;
to anybody else, and, taking the objection&#13;
to shellfish into account, one cannot&#13;
help thinking of the rule in Leviticus&#13;
that '"Whatsoever hath fins and&#13;
scales In the waters, In the seas, and&#13;
in the riverB, them shall ye eat,"&#13;
while all that move in the waters without&#13;
fins and scales shall bo an abomination.&#13;
Col. Newnham Davis has-descrlbed&#13;
the Ideal conditions of snall-eatlug.&#13;
"At Price's," he writes, "the horned&#13;
thing is eaten with proper ceremony.&#13;
In a silver bowl, with a silver threepronged&#13;
fork as a means of conveying&#13;
the alleged dainty to the mouth, the&#13;
long, black gelatinous things are&#13;
brought to the table, very hot, and&#13;
swimming In a sauce in which lard&#13;
and onions and garlic seem to be the&#13;
principal components. Speared on the&#13;
fork, the snail goes into one's mouth—&#13;
and then comes one of the critical moments&#13;
of life!"&#13;
HIS NATIONALITY MADE PLAIN&#13;
Auditor's Shrewd Comment on Hearing&#13;
Peculiar Statement of Celebrated&#13;
Astronomer.&#13;
, Sir David Gill, the Scotch astronomer,&#13;
was no dry-as-dust scientist His&#13;
greatest contributions to science, perhaps,&#13;
were his measurements of stellar&#13;
space, and to bring home to his&#13;
audiences just what progress bad been&#13;
made in this branch he frequently told&#13;
a good story on himself.&#13;
He was speaking once on the accuracy&#13;
of mechanical operations as compared&#13;
with those of fifty years ago.&#13;
He pointed out that-half a century ago&#13;
an error of a second of arc was considered&#13;
a very email quantity in measuring&#13;
the distance of a star, "that&#13;
being equivalent to the measurement&#13;
of the diameter of a three-penny&#13;
piece situate a mile off; whereat we&#13;
could now measure within one-hundredth&#13;
of a second of arc* which waa&#13;
like measuring a three-penny piece at&#13;
a distance of one hundred miles."&#13;
Then, a voice was heard.from one&#13;
of Sir David's listeners.&#13;
"Ye'd know he's a Soot," said the&#13;
voice, "Na'an else'd bother his head&#13;
about a three-penny bit a hundred&#13;
miles oft."&#13;
But Sister Didn't Hear (t.&#13;
"He comes up to our house nearly&#13;
every night."&#13;
I "What is it that is so attractive up&#13;
there?"&#13;
| "Nothing attractive, he just comes&#13;
to see my sister."&#13;
Smile on wa«h day. That's when you uae&#13;
tied Cross Ball Blue. Clothes whiter than&#13;
anow. All grocers. Adv.&#13;
When it comes to falling In&#13;
a girl is equal to the occasion.&#13;
love&#13;
Wonderful,&#13;
Her soldier son in India had sent&#13;
a cahlefranv and Mrs. Blunderielfh'a&#13;
vpiee rant with pride whan speaking&#13;
of tt to bar impressed oetgtiaora&#13;
"Yea, they he wonderful things, they&#13;
t*Jagraa*a,M said aha. "Just faney*&#13;
it's c o m from lndy—an they tbaa&gt;&#13;
sends o' nalam.* "fed so qsfck, too,-&#13;
put ia her best friend, "fcnok ara*t1&#13;
"HaM eat a» ctae tsa&gt;} the wovdftMt;* pat in afra: mannerw&#13;
e ^ j o s i th#aava^a wa^aX * 7 T ^*\.&#13;
One boy in school beats a dozen in&#13;
[a poolroom. *&#13;
WOMAN GOULD&#13;
HARDLY STAND&#13;
Because of Terrible Back*&#13;
ache. Relieved by Lydia&#13;
E. Pinkham'ft Vegetable&#13;
Compound.&#13;
Philadelphia, P a . - " I suffered from&#13;
displacement and inflammation, and had&#13;
such pains in my&#13;
s i d e s , and terrible&#13;
backache so that I&#13;
could hardly stand.&#13;
1 took six bottles of&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
V e g e t a b l e Compound,&#13;
and now I can&#13;
do any amount of&#13;
work, sleep good, eat&#13;
good, and don't have&#13;
a bit of trouble. I&#13;
recommend Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to&#13;
every suffering womam.''—Mrs. HARRY&#13;
FISHER, 1642 Juniata Street, Philadelphia,&#13;
Pa.&#13;
Another Woman's Case*&#13;
i Providence, R?I.~~"I cannot speak&#13;
too highly of your Vegetable Compound&#13;
as it nas done wondtrs for me and I&#13;
would not be without it I had a displacement,&#13;
bearing down, and backache,&#13;
until I could hardly stand and was thoroughly&#13;
run down when I took Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It&#13;
helped me and I am in the best of health&#13;
at present I work in a factory all day&#13;
long besides doing my housework so you&#13;
can see what it has dohe for me. I give&#13;
you permission to publish my name and I&#13;
speak of your Vegetable Compound to&#13;
many of my friends. "—Mrs. ABRIL LAWSON,&#13;
126 Lippitt St, Providence, R. I.&#13;
Danger Signals to Women&#13;
are what one physician called backache,&#13;
headache, nervousness, and the blues.&#13;
In many cases they are symptoms of&#13;
. some female derangement or an inflammatoryrulcerative&#13;
condition, which may&#13;
be overcome by taking Lydia E. Pinkham'BVegetable&#13;
Compound. Thousands&#13;
of American women willingly testify to&#13;
Its virtue.&#13;
The True Source 8LofBeauty j&#13;
is, and must be, good health?!&#13;
Sallow skin and face blemishes&#13;
are usually caused by the&#13;
presence of impurities in the&#13;
blood—impurities which also&#13;
cause headache, backache, Ian*&#13;
guor, nervousness and depression&#13;
of spirits. If, at times,&#13;
when there is need you will use&#13;
you will find yourself better in&#13;
every way. With purified&#13;
blood, you will improve digestion,&#13;
sleep more re&amp;tfully and&#13;
your nerves will be quieter.&#13;
You will recover the charm of&#13;
sparkling eyes, a spotless com*&#13;
plexion, rosy lips and vivacious&#13;
spirits. Good for all the family,&#13;
Beecham's Pills especially,&#13;
Help Women&#13;
To Good Health&#13;
Sold la bos** IAi*3Sft&gt;&#13;
Tfc* toft* Mtoof «BT ««dWo«, Tkt dfewtfees&#13;
witfcvvwy bos total tb«w*r to SMdfcMh*, .&#13;
£ B S Q R 0 i N E STOPS&#13;
IAM£M£8*&#13;
from- a Bone Spavin, Ring Bone,&#13;
Splint. Curb, Side Bone, or timtl*r&#13;
trouble and (rets horss going sound.&#13;
Does not blister or resnov* the&#13;
hair and hone can be worked* Piff*&#13;
17 m psmehfet with each bottle tsus&#13;
how. $2.00 ft bottle (WrftrsbV&#13;
Horse Book v K. free.&#13;
ABSORBINE, A t , antiseptic lints** for&#13;
mankind. Redoeet fainrol Swelling!; Zn~&#13;
•••fi&#13;
r»'f&#13;
&gt;*v&#13;
j V - - " &gt;,&lt;&gt;vr-+:|&#13;
bvged Glands, Goitre, Went, Bruiiet, VanW&#13;
cots Vtiftt, Varicoehiei,heal*Old Sore*. Alkys&#13;
Fain. Will tell yots wore « yon write. $1 and&#13;
|2 s bottle at dealer* or detrvered. Book&#13;
w»-u-«^« fc— Msaoisctured only b? aek&#13;
• * • . ••-In:&#13;
'Evidence** free.&#13;
.•.YOUr*e, P. 0. ** S»*ss» St. lwtatStM.1 . : . - : . ' • ' • • ; » :&#13;
^v V?'."&#13;
:;*..&#13;
» &gt; • * • "&#13;
££rf!&#13;
" X ' V ' J S ' W L ? •'&#13;
• • ' ' * " ' . ' \&#13;
ESTI? #V&#13;
•.' '&#13;
•fl-fc&#13;
a* s.,,-&gt;t&lt;.'?,^ A .&#13;
hs—••• -*V • -V, • . - - " . . ••" . . . - ' . - ; • : , - • • - . - . . - . . . - - • - • , - ' . : - • : - - / , : . &gt; . \ . • , « • •••&lt;&amp;&amp;&amp;•••:;&lt;!:••. $&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
.You! 7&#13;
' * '&#13;
fcf&#13;
&gt;:•-&#13;
; : * : ?&#13;
': fc&amp;S B O W about that printing&#13;
• M job you're in need of?&#13;
-»!^i&#13;
U&#13;
C O M * i s mad aae aa&#13;
It at your first opportaaity.&#13;
t wait aatil taa vary&#13;
aaat bat f i r a aa a&#13;
Uttia tfsee aad wall alow&#13;
yoa what high grada work&#13;
tarn oat&#13;
-&gt;*.''&#13;
*$*';&#13;
SHOULD USS&#13;
'If*:&#13;
#•? South Marion&#13;
Ray Newcomb of Howell apent&#13;
Sunday at the heme of J. Gardner.&#13;
Mre. Newcomb and daughter&#13;
Harriet returned home with&#13;
him after several daya visit here&#13;
with her people.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Shehan entertained&#13;
at tea, Mrs. Wm. Ledwidge and&#13;
daughter Clare, Friday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Blair visited&#13;
the former's parents in Iosco Sanday.&#13;
Guy Abbott was a Lansing visitor&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. ti. Gardner of Iosco spent&#13;
one day Last week with her father&#13;
here.&#13;
Dr. Bernard Glenn of Fowlexville&#13;
visited his people here recently.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Allison of&#13;
Iosco and Mr. and Mrs. T. Snyder&#13;
of Fowierville spent a portion of&#13;
last week at the home of Laverne&#13;
Damerest. Lucille Demerest returned&#13;
with her grandparents for&#13;
a few weeks visit.&#13;
Mrs. L. G. Younglove of Detroit&#13;
U visiting at the heme of George&#13;
Younglove,&#13;
Mrs. Laverne Demerest and C.&#13;
(Brogan and daughter Kit were&#13;
Howell visitors one day last week.&#13;
The ice cream social held at the&#13;
home of Wesley Vines last Friday&#13;
evening was very well attended&#13;
and all report a goocj time.&#13;
Miss Alice Roche was a Snnday&#13;
visitor in this vicinity.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Glenn entertained&#13;
company at dinner Sunday.&#13;
Thofl, Richards spent Sunday in&#13;
Howell.&#13;
A number from this way attended&#13;
the Dinkel-Allison wedding at&#13;
the home of the brides parents,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Allison Wednesday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
ON aaquur&#13;
ftwcitaon Rhauntatie C u r e C c&#13;
tsa.isaw.Mii* at* ci»CA«o ^&#13;
ao YEAftf*&#13;
EXPERIBNCt&#13;
-*M&gt;.-&#13;
TftADC MAJtftS&#13;
D E S I G N S&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A C&#13;
Skuyeae tending a sketch and description tn»)&#13;
uclcly ascertain our opinion free whether at&#13;
•etitkm la probably patentable. .Com manic A&#13;
Mons strictly eoutidentlnl. HANDBOOK on Patenu&#13;
lent free. Oldest a*enejr for seen ring patent*.&#13;
Patents taken through Mann k Co. recei*"&#13;
tjtttot notice without charge, In the Scientific flwrkait A hsttdsom etr illustrated weekly. Jjurtrost«?&#13;
dotation of any selentlno Journal. Terms, S3 i&#13;
[ear; foar year; roar mmoonntthhss,, tsLi. Sold by all newsdealers&#13;
Always I^ad to Better Health&#13;
Serious sicknesses start in disorders of&#13;
the stomach, liver and kidneys. The best&#13;
corrective and preventive is Dr. King's&#13;
New Life Pills. They Purify the B l o o d -&#13;
Prevent Constipation; keep Liver, Kidneys&#13;
and Bowels in healthy- condition 43iv«&#13;
you better health by ridding the system of&#13;
fermenting and gassy foods. Effective&#13;
and mild. 25c. Recommended by C. 0 .&#13;
Meyer, the druggist.&#13;
The following is given out by&#13;
the department of agriculture at&#13;
Washington, D. C, Estimates are&#13;
given out by the department on&#13;
the bumper wheat crop show that&#13;
the total 1914 production, winter&#13;
and spring wheat combined may&#13;
read 880,000,000 bushels. This is&#13;
a result of a combination of the&#13;
largest acreage ever recorded with&#13;
the promise of the largest yield&#13;
per acre in years. There is not a&#13;
single state in which the winter&#13;
wheat prospect is unfavorable.&#13;
The department of agriculture is&#13;
figuring that the spring wheat&#13;
crop will be about 250,000,000&#13;
bushels. The amount of spring&#13;
plowing was above the average&#13;
this year, despite the tardiness of&#13;
spring.&#13;
Hot Weather Tonic And Health Builder&#13;
Are you ran down'—Nervous—Tired? Is&#13;
everything yon do aa effort? Yon are not&#13;
Issy—yon are sick! Your Stomach, Liver&#13;
Kidneys, and whole system needs a Tonic.&#13;
A. Tonic and Health Builder to drive out&#13;
the waste matter—boird you up sod renew&#13;
jour strength. Nothing better then Electric&#13;
Bitters. Start to-day. Mrs. Jaaies&#13;
Dndoan, Haynesvillt, Me., writes: "Completely&#13;
cured me titer several doctors jpve&#13;
me np." 60c. and $1.00. Beooflamended by&#13;
C. G. Meyer, the druggist.&#13;
•&#13;
,/^r. sad Mr* Jobs Beeves,&#13;
F ^ t &amp;»?«• of Detroit, Mr* ft&#13;
Fetgusdthof KdOsw* and Mr* W&#13;
:- ', •'••' s•%''• y'•.«.„-'&gt;t,;» J^VL; " .•:%.. , :'&#13;
• v .&gt;, '•', '• ''I- -*A-:• v&gt;'-*^v - v j , ^ ' * ^ -4 . - ,'- - . •-• » ,-• •• O -. &gt; ' - • •&#13;
: * * • * . ' • &gt; 1*£ ' • . . . . * * * , . • • • , - ^ «-. • - &gt; - ' - " V - - &gt; • • - . - . " ' * • • • • • ,. • " . , ' &lt;•&#13;
Cool summer suits at Danoer's,&#13;
$10. to $20. adv.&#13;
It it stated that the Anti-Sa.&#13;
loon League is to eatabkah an of*&#13;
fioe in Lanaingand plaee au attorney&#13;
in charga to keep oharge&#13;
of all legislative, ajfaire aad other&#13;
mattera ooming into thr atate&#13;
capital^: , r&#13;
* &gt; • '&#13;
V&#13;
I1IATJCH this space next&#13;
week for some money&#13;
making suggestions^ as, to&#13;
the purchase of your suit for&#13;
the 4th of July.&#13;
W. J. DANCER &amp; Co.&#13;
Stock bridge" - Michigan&#13;
*-{*&amp;#ra^^^^ THE CENTRAL'&#13;
Again we offer you something new in the line of dress&#13;
gooch; the prettiest organdies you ever saw; also new crepes&#13;
and embroidery. These are just in time for the cool dresses&#13;
that are absolutely necessary now. We also have a few nice&#13;
new waists and they are a bargain at $1. Call and see them.&#13;
We are offering anything we have left in the millinery&#13;
line now dirt cheap, as we would rather sell out what we&#13;
have on hand'for a very little money than carry it over.&#13;
We have not a fnll assortment of shoes, but what we&#13;
have is new and the latest style and if you can find your size&#13;
we can suit yon.&#13;
Groceries as cheap as the cheapest. For this week we&#13;
offers 5 pekgs. Premium Boiled Oats for 25c.&#13;
7 bars Lautz' Naptha Soap for 25c.&#13;
7 bars Lenox Soap for 25c.&#13;
2 large boxes Grandma's Borax Powdered Soap foi 25c.&#13;
With $200 worth of trade we are selling you a $250&#13;
Rug for 99c. They are very nice; come and look them over.&#13;
The CENTRAL, STORE&#13;
M r s . JL. JWT. T J t l e y , E r o p .&#13;
* &gt; ; * &gt; ^ &gt; ; : ^ ^&#13;
WAIT&#13;
I WILL. BE. A T&#13;
MONKS BROS. STORE&#13;
Tuesday. June 16&#13;
Willi a .Mil&#13;
Line o f . , ,&#13;
To Newspaper Publishers&#13;
and Printers&#13;
W e m a n u f a c t u r e t h e v e r y&#13;
highest grade, o f&#13;
. m-z&#13;
Brass Leads &amp; Slugs Type&#13;
Brass Galleys Brass Rule in Strips&#13;
Metal Borders Brass Labor-Saving&#13;
L. &amp;. Metal FurnU Rule&#13;
ture Metal Quoins, etc. .&#13;
Leads and Slugs Brass Column Rales&#13;
Metal Leaders Brass Circles&#13;
Spaces and Quads Bras* Leaders&#13;
6 to 48 point Brass Round Corners&#13;
Old Column Rules refaced and made&#13;
good as new at a small cost.&#13;
Please remember that we are not in an; ^&#13;
Trust or Combination and are sure we cao&#13;
make it greatly to your advantage to dea.&#13;
with us.&#13;
A copy of our catalogue will be cheerfully&#13;
furnished on Application.&#13;
We—frequently have~goud bargains in&#13;
second-hand job Presses, Paper Cutters&#13;
and other printing machinery aud&#13;
material.&#13;
Philadelphia Printers Soppl] Co.&#13;
Manufacturers of&#13;
Type and H i g h Grade*Printing Material&#13;
14 S. 5th S t . , Philadelphia, P a .&#13;
Proprietors Penn Type Fouadrjr 2tW&#13;
I Monuments j I lf yon are contemplating £&#13;
OAtfci&#13;
IS. S. PLATT&#13;
4 HOWELL, MICH.&#13;
B No Agents. Save Their Commission&#13;
» Bell Phone 190&#13;
getting a monument, marker, 8&#13;
or antbiag for the cemetery, 5&#13;
see or write —r&#13;
Watches&#13;
Chains of AU Kinds&#13;
Locketa&#13;
Caff Links&#13;
Scar! Pins&#13;
Broaches&#13;
LaVallisres&#13;
Bar Pins&#13;
Mesh Bags&#13;
Vanity Cases&#13;
Souvenir Spoons, Etc.&#13;
At Prices That are Right&#13;
for the quality of goods&#13;
E&gt;dw. Aa Clapfc&#13;
Dexter Jeweler&#13;
GOING TO BUY A PUW0&#13;
OR SEWING MJLCHIIE&#13;
YES*&#13;
• • V I . * »&#13;
V.-•;&gt;•#;.&#13;
•• &lt;'^,"'i&#13;
.-&gt;. %&lt;,&#13;
•• ' ' " - ^ ' i . ;•&#13;
• ; . . • ) » • : ' &lt; * ; :&#13;
&lt;v^^&#13;
, * ^&#13;
V&#13;
, &lt; • ' • • • * . » ; • * .&#13;
•; :'f\' •'.-&#13;
• -,. **»•&#13;
»&gt;.- - :r -- .&#13;
..V'&#13;
?•*&#13;
•&gt;?•&#13;
..•-&lt;*'; «t&#13;
')&#13;
•w-&#13;
£,&#13;
'» :'V'.&#13;
y&#13;
/&#13;
, - ^ - - V " * ^ '&#13;
• • • • ' , ' : « .&#13;
- &gt; • - : &gt; ' • $ . . •&#13;
,^-,&#13;
* • * -&#13;
,-,^¾&#13;
1&#13;
SEC L «.:im.uw»i'^piil|'* i&#13;
? : . - . - - ^ : :^:.^-•;?•&#13;
. . . •'*}*,-••. ;;. • • ; • " :.*Vt&#13;
saves 7&lt;*tf money -c.sm.' bJ-4i,!"• ' .. • •; *^*^$i»l,&#13;
grade pUnee. -^si-:,-,- .&gt;•.. &lt; -.,-*-.-0^-^,-&gt;flffMfW f^&#13;
• « • * 1 \ .'-^.&#13;
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch June 11, 1914</text>
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                <text>June 11, 1914 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1914-06-11</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; June 18, 1914 No. 25&#13;
INGLIN6 CIRCUS&#13;
IS ANNOUNCED&#13;
World's Greatest Shows and&#13;
Spectacle "Solomon and t h e&#13;
Queen of Sheba" Now on way*&#13;
Official ioformation-con6rms the&#13;
announcement that on Juue 29,&#13;
Singling Brothers circus will give&#13;
iwo performances in Jackson.&#13;
Many new features have been&#13;
added this year, the most notable&#13;
of which is the spectacle "Solomon&#13;
and the Queen of Sheba." This&#13;
colossal production is presented&#13;
with a cast of 1,250 people, a ballet&#13;
of 303 dancing girls, 735 horses&#13;
32 camels and a trainload of&#13;
scenery, costames and properties&#13;
on the biggest stage in the world.&#13;
Following the spectacle, a circus&#13;
program of unusual brilliancy will&#13;
he presented, including an array&#13;
of foreign and American acts new&#13;
to the circus world* The menagerie&#13;
contains 1,003 wild animals,&#13;
41 elephants, five, girafies and a&#13;
"baby zoo." ~Tne circus is transported&#13;
ou 89 double length cars.&#13;
Special arrangments have been&#13;
made by the railroad* to accommodate&#13;
the crowds tfrat^visit the&#13;
circus from thit* city and the surrounding&#13;
country.&#13;
Baccalaureate Address&#13;
The graduating class of the&#13;
Pinckney high school listened to&#13;
a most inspiring baccalaureate&#13;
address given by Rev. Fr. Joseph&#13;
Coyle in St. Mark's charcb, Sunday&#13;
evening. Besides the seniors,&#13;
who were attended by Prof. J. P,&#13;
Doyle and Miss Joie. Jieyereaux.&#13;
a large audience was present to&#13;
hear the splendid sermon.&#13;
Fr. Coyle took as his subject,&#13;
"The Necessity of Religion," using&#13;
the senior class motto, "Tonight&#13;
we lauucb, where shall we anchor,"&#13;
as the theme of his lecture.&#13;
Life was compared to a frail bark&#13;
launched into a stream, causing&#13;
perhaps at £ret a slight ripple of&#13;
waters, which soon closed in leaving&#13;
not a trace of its passage.&#13;
Religion, alone, can guide this ship&#13;
into its harbor. Which eternity,&#13;
Heaven or Hell, rests entirely with&#13;
the soul who pilots the boat down&#13;
the stream of life iuto the gates of&#13;
death. The address was one of&#13;
the finest literary efforts heard&#13;
in Pinckney in some time. Tfc*&#13;
speaker drove home his message&#13;
in a manner which should&#13;
leave a lasting impression in the&#13;
hearts and mtnds of all those: who&#13;
bad the pleasure of listening to&#13;
his enobling discourse.&#13;
TWO BIG DAYS&#13;
FOR PINCKNEY&#13;
Old Bays and Girls Home Coming&#13;
Dates 8rt For Wednesday and&#13;
TWrsian, JWfltfst 5-6&#13;
Various Committees to Meet&#13;
Monday Evening June 22&#13;
to Perfect Plans&#13;
The Reception Committee for&#13;
Olds Boys and Girls met at the&#13;
home of Dr. H. F, Sipler, Friday&#13;
evening, June 12. At this time it&#13;
was decided that an infor rn.nl reception&#13;
would be held at the&#13;
Opera House ou the first evening,&#13;
August 5. That light refreshments&#13;
would be served, taat 500&#13;
sheets of old - songs should be&#13;
printed.&#13;
J. C. Duun, C. V. VanWiukle&#13;
and G, W. Sykes were appointed&#13;
as a committee to meet all trains&#13;
and also to provide sleeping accommodations&#13;
iox all those not&#13;
otherwise provided for.&#13;
A meeting of all the committees&#13;
will be held Monday evening June&#13;
22 at the home of Dr. H. F. Sigler&#13;
at 7:30 o'clock. All members and&#13;
officers should be present at this&#13;
meeting, for if the Old-Boys and&#13;
Girls Reunion this year is to be&#13;
not only a success but the best&#13;
meeting ever hell, committeemen&#13;
must get to work. Following are&#13;
a list of the officers and persons&#13;
on the various committees:&#13;
-»i* - /&#13;
Special prices on ladies coats at&#13;
Dancer's. .._ adv.&#13;
Very latest in Mens Smart Set -&#13;
Neckwear, Dress Hate, Dress&#13;
Shirts, Etc. at Monks Bros. adv.&#13;
ii08r—Will parties who borr&#13;
rowed out stove tracks please return&#13;
them si once. ,&#13;
Din kel&lt;fc Dunbar&#13;
I*. W.. T. Wright 6* tbi* place&#13;
wb© wi*tewtiy arrested and reqnaatect&#13;
i&lt;&gt;appaa^ in Bowell for&#13;
v i o l a t ^ ^ i o c a l op^on law, was&#13;
\f$vin U«&gt; Wteace. Monday by&#13;
Judge Miner at Howell A Una&#13;
of 150,00 and costa wt^impoaad&#13;
J or *• default' ^f Ana ha waa to&#13;
§p«ri thirty daft fo th? obnniy&#13;
jail. He was "jt* p***** ** Ptt&gt;-&#13;
batton far a 4ann of two jaai*.&#13;
Tin Drjjsid tfefcjtot.&#13;
LEO A. MONKS, President&#13;
HARRY ALLEN, Vice Pres.&#13;
JL. W-CAYE&amp;LY, Secretary&#13;
&lt; * • • . . ' " * • • ' ,&#13;
G. W. TEEPLE, Treasurer&#13;
€x*cuftb» Commit***&#13;
THOS. READ WM. DJUNBAR&#13;
CAR! MBYER&#13;
W. E. MURPHY DR.- C. h. SIGNER&#13;
M. J. REASON&#13;
(dommitt***&#13;
PUBLICITY&#13;
ALBERT DINK EL&#13;
ED. FARNAM&#13;
DR. C. I. SIGLER&#13;
G. L. TEEPLE&#13;
W. W. BARNARD&#13;
INVITATION&#13;
R. W. CAVERLY&#13;
ROSS READ&#13;
PERCY SWARTHOUT&#13;
RECEPTION&#13;
MISS KATE BROWN&#13;
MISS KITTLE HOFF&#13;
MISS NELLIE GARDNER&#13;
MRS. H. W. CROFOOT&#13;
MRS. M. LAVEY&#13;
MRS. H. F. SIGLER&#13;
MRS. C. V. VAN WINKLE&#13;
MRS. NETTIE VAUGHN&#13;
G. W. TEEPLE&#13;
H. FY SIGLER&#13;
Ci V. VAN WINKLE&#13;
J . C DUNN&#13;
J . J . TEEPLE&#13;
P. G. JACKSON&#13;
REV. JOS. E. COYLE&#13;
REV. J . W. MITCHELL&#13;
REV. L. W. OSTRANDER&#13;
MUSIC&#13;
JOHN VAN HORN&#13;
H. W. CROFOOT&#13;
WM. KENNEDY, JR.&#13;
DECORATION&#13;
MRS. C. P. SYKES •&#13;
v MRS. W. S. SWARTHOUT&#13;
MRS. W. C DUNNING&#13;
AMOS CLINTON&#13;
J . C DINKEL&#13;
STREET SPORTS&#13;
- E. S. HOYT&#13;
PAUL MUXES&#13;
*. C. MONKS&#13;
PRIVILEGES&#13;
«. X. HOYT&#13;
MYRON DUNNING&#13;
BASE BALL&#13;
'CHARLES TEEPLE&#13;
-**OSS R«A&amp;.&#13;
&gt; D S M N LAVEY&#13;
~T&#13;
\mS-&lt;r&gt;*;z&#13;
Small boys will eat green apples— "big boys'*&#13;
too. The safe way is to have household remedies for&#13;
all ailments right in your HOME to take in TIME&#13;
until the doctor can come. A sickness caught in its&#13;
early stages is never so severe or dangerous. Come&#13;
in and let us fit you out with a supply of home&#13;
remedies.&#13;
We give $ou what you ASK for.&#13;
C. G. M BYBR&#13;
Pinckney, Mich. Phone 5 5 r 3&#13;
Nycxl Store orQuaHty&#13;
S P E C I A L&#13;
FOR THIS WEEK ONLY&#13;
A 25c tooth brush FREE with&#13;
every tube of NYDENTA Tooth&#13;
Paste.&#13;
Nydenta Tooth Paste contains only&#13;
the essentials for cleansing, preserving&#13;
and beautifying the teeth. *&#13;
Among the ingredients it contains&#13;
powdered cuttle fish bone, one of the&#13;
greatest polishing agents known and&#13;
not in the least harmful to the finest&#13;
enamel.&#13;
Nydenta Tooth Paste also contains&#13;
peroxide which has a tendency to&#13;
whiten ttfe teeth as well as to destroy&#13;
all germ life, which is bonnd to be&#13;
there from the various foods you eat.&#13;
Lastly, Nydenta Tooth Paste, contains&#13;
antiseptic and aromatic properties&#13;
which impart a refreshing and pleasant&#13;
taste to the mouth, and insures you a&#13;
pleasant breath at all times.&#13;
REMEMBER&#13;
The price is 25c and a 25c&#13;
Toothbrush FREE for this week&#13;
only.&#13;
South Marion&#13;
Paul Brogan of Cbilson spent&#13;
Sunday with, his parents here.&#13;
Mrs. Will Shehan was a Howell&#13;
visitor one day last week.&#13;
Sir. and Mrs. Hart Gauss entertained&#13;
company from Webbertives&#13;
at Bancroft.&#13;
Ed. Thompson and wife of&#13;
Pinckney spent last Friday at the&#13;
home of I. J. Abbott.&#13;
Wm. Chambers drives a new&#13;
Fordcar. _&#13;
Mrs. Emily Brnff of Cohoctah&#13;
visited at the home of W. Bland&#13;
ville a portion of this week. last Thursday, Her mother, Mrs.&#13;
L. Newman and wife of Fowler-1 Smith of W. Marion, returned&#13;
ville were week end guests at the with her for a visit,&#13;
home of I. J.Abbott. j M r . a n d M r g N , pA C e y e n t e r .&#13;
J. F. Ca rr was a Pinckney visit- j tained a company of friends and&#13;
or Sunday. relatives of Jackson a portion of&#13;
Percy Daley was a week end | last week,&#13;
guest of Ed. VaoHorn of Pinck- i J. B. Buckley and family and&#13;
ney» I Wm. Blair and wife of Iosco call-&#13;
Margaret Brogan visited Made-led on friends in this vicinity Sun-&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
tostrWairtedpiter&#13;
bine Moran of Pinckney Friday&#13;
and Saturday.&#13;
Roche McClear of Anderson&#13;
visited at the home of Wm. Shehan&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Claude White is visiting reladay.&#13;
MURPHY &amp; JACKSON&#13;
Groceries - Dry Goods - Shoes if Furnishings&#13;
baraeat Stock (fog PiiC8 TO All koweat Price*&#13;
• Tfeird QoartarlF Conference in&#13;
tfce HV % church Friday at 2:90,&#13;
Sunday sohool institute in the&#13;
•vaalBg. f '; -..A,.&#13;
Boys Xtragood suits at Dancer's&#13;
wear beet. $4. to $6.50. adv.&#13;
Full line of National Biscuit&#13;
Co's. goods at Monks Bros. adv.&#13;
FOR SALE— Ten acres of good clover&#13;
Hay on ground. Will Caskey 25tf&#13;
FOR SALE-^No. 1 Timothy Hay&#13;
23U* G. W. Clark, Piockney&#13;
FOR SALE—150 bu. ear com, Osborn&#13;
side delivery rake and a good 3 in, tire&#13;
truck wagon. 24t2*&#13;
Claude Reason, Pinckney&#13;
FARM FOR SALE OR RENT—38 acres&#13;
on road j nit north ofahe Kice farm on&#13;
Section 7. James A. Gallagher, 1569&#13;
Weit Grand Blvd., Detroit,.Mich. 10tf&#13;
•FOR SALE—Two famili brick veneer&#13;
Woodware Ave., Detroit. Pays 10 per&#13;
flat in a line neighbor7h ood just off of&#13;
cent. Wm. L. Wood, P. O. box Xo. 2,&#13;
Ann Arbor, Mich. 21tl*&#13;
M&#13;
HEADQUARTERS FOR&#13;
Our Special Prices on Groceries&#13;
Saturdays and Wednesdays&#13;
Make If expensive for you to trade&#13;
elsewhere&#13;
We also have many special* to o % throughout our Shoe and&#13;
Dry StPs Department '.&#13;
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2 5 lbs. H. &amp; B. Su^ar, Saturday Only&#13;
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PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
FABLES&#13;
SLANG T H E NEW FABLE OF T H E DIVINE&#13;
SPARK T H A T HAD A SHORT&#13;
CIRCUIT.&#13;
One Evening at « converted Rink&#13;
known, aa the Grand Opera House, a&#13;
flock of intrepid Amateurs put on a&#13;
War Drama,&#13;
141a, principal Child of the Egg and&#13;
Poultry King, played a Daughter of&#13;
tae Southland, and her Hair shaken&#13;
out'and Lamp Black on her Eye-Winkers,&#13;
so as to look like Maxine.&#13;
All of her Relations and the other&#13;
Members of the Pocahontas Bridge&#13;
Whist and Pleasure Club were In&#13;
Front, and they gave her a Hand every&#13;
time she stepped out from behind a&#13;
Tree.&#13;
At 11 p. M. she was up on a lonesome&#13;
Eminence, right between Sara&#13;
Bernhardt and Julia Marlowe, waiting&#13;
for a Telegram from C. F. to come on&#13;
and tackle the Role that was y)o&#13;
Heavy for Maude Adams.&#13;
The proud Parents awoke next&#13;
Morning to discover that i^ady Macbeth&#13;
was boarding with them.&#13;
A local Haberdasher, who had been&#13;
plotting to surround her with a new&#13;
Bungalow and a lot of Mission Furniture,&#13;
went, to-.cjUl as per Usual and&#13;
found her away Up Stage, trying to&#13;
look like Margaret Angelin in the Big&#13;
Scene.&#13;
She was too busy to Hold Hands,&#13;
caused by the Retirement of Ellen&#13;
Terry, while Papa went back to the&#13;
little Office in one comer of the Ware-&#13;
House and began to sign Checks.&#13;
At last she came home With a Diploma&#13;
showing that she was an Actress.&#13;
She took her Diploma and the Local&#13;
Press Notices up to New York to see&#13;
what she could get on them, and found&#13;
10,000 other incipient Modjeskas hitting&#13;
the worn Trail that led from one&#13;
Agency to another.&#13;
She had an offer at the Hippodrome&#13;
to walk in front of an Elephant waving&#13;
a prop Palm, but she spurned it,&#13;
because she was ready to do Desdemona&#13;
at a Moment's Notice,&#13;
• In order to get Bttperience, she&#13;
signed up with a No. 4 Company, playing&#13;
the Part of the deaf-and-dumb&#13;
Lady who crosses the Stage and removes&#13;
the Tea things early in the&#13;
Second Act.&#13;
When the Troupe went on the Rocks&#13;
at Mauch Chunk, Penna., the erstwhile&#13;
Favorite of the Pocahontas Club found&#13;
herself sitting on a Trunk marked&#13;
"Theater" standing off a Deputy Sheriff&#13;
and waiting for an Answer to her&#13;
Wire.&#13;
The First Old Woman, who remembered&#13;
Edwin Booth, came and sat beside&#13;
her.&#13;
"Do not be discouraged, Honey,"&#13;
said She. "Go right back and start all&#13;
Trying to Look Like Margaret Angelin In the Big Scene.&#13;
tot she was mapping out a Career&#13;
which terminated with an Electric&#13;
Bifn on Broadway and the Street&#13;
Jammed with up-town Limousines.&#13;
[ ^EJhT had the Bacillua Theatrleua&#13;
gk*wing away in every part of her&#13;
System.&#13;
She could aee the magnificent Play&#13;
House crowded from Pit to Dome, just&#13;
as the Producing Manager see* it&#13;
every August when the Pipe is drawing&#13;
freely.&#13;
She could hear the Leading Man in&#13;
the Drew Suit say, aa be pointed up&#13;
the Marble Stairway, "Ah, here comei&#13;
the Counteaa Zlka now." And then&#13;
She would eater trippingly, wearing&#13;
1900 worth of apangled Raiment,&#13;
whereupon the Vast Audience would&#13;
stand up and Cheer.&#13;
Whilst enjoying this Trance she&#13;
wore a Yellow Kimono and had her&#13;
Meals sent to the Room.&#13;
Father saw that he was Hooked, so&#13;
he loaded her into a Parlor Car and&#13;
took her up to a School ot Dramatic&#13;
Art to have her searched for Talent.&#13;
The Head Oim» of this refined&#13;
fj^ake-Down watched her do the Scene&#13;
IS which Ophelia goes Dotty and picks&#13;
tkw Imaginary HeHjhoofci, and wfcan&#13;
ftjaras att ote* *n4 SbesTSSpasrs ted&#13;
Tedoeed tsx*&amp;ulsY&#13;
on the Basft and&#13;
4BM *lm his Detujrstter was a Fteaosa.&#13;
With a couple of hundred Leeeona&#13;
In Correct Breathing, and the Vocal&#13;
Chords loosened «m with a Glove-&#13;
Stretcher, aada row of Scallops put on&#13;
shsy^r^sltt^ve^ ipssr Andersew- « M M&#13;
he right back in our artdet&#13;
So i+i Lilt got reae&gt; (• ftU the Vacancy&#13;
over, and possibly sometime Next&#13;
Year you will again have the blessed&#13;
Privilege of going up a neglected&#13;
Alley twice a Day and changing your&#13;
Clothes in a Barn. Any Girl with&#13;
your Looks and Family Connections&#13;
can curl up in* a Four-Poster at night&#13;
and then saunter to the Bath over a&#13;
soft Rug in the Morning, but only a&#13;
throbbing Genius can make these&#13;
Night Jumps in a Day Coach and atop&#13;
at a Hotel which is operated as an&#13;
Auxiliary to a first-class Saloon. It&#13;
will .be Hard Sledding for the first&#13;
15 or 20 years, but by the time you&#13;
are 45 you may reasonably count on&#13;
getting 20 weeks out of every 52, running&#13;
around In front of a Klnetoscope."&#13;
Lila pulled into the Scene of her&#13;
Early Triumphs with a mere suggestion&#13;
of No. 4 Grease Paint still lingering&#13;
behind her Ears.&#13;
An the Train rolled through the&#13;
Yards, the Foreman of the Section&#13;
Gang narrowly escaped being hit In&#13;
the Head with a tin Make-Up Box,&#13;
hurled from the rear of the Observation&#13;
Car.&#13;
Next day she had a strip of Red&#13;
Carpet spaced Tor the Haberdasher&#13;
ami was ltttrntag to Cook In Paper&#13;
Wvoswvcrshe hears otaijfeod show&#13;
coming to Town, she InsseanaJJ of her&#13;
Friends to/eosne oat to-4*» Bungalow&#13;
and Play mham on ts^ltjaeiott Furniture.&#13;
MORAL: The True Friend of Hus&#13;
» a a l t p ^ o s * w h * goof to the Home&#13;
Tsleet Benefit for Something and&#13;
Hisses alt Evening.&#13;
FOR FIRELESS COOKER&#13;
EXPERT AOVISE8 SOME NEW ANQ&#13;
DELICIOUS DISHES.&#13;
How Requisites for Any Meal May Be&#13;
Prepared Through the Agency of&#13;
the Latest Kitchen Laborsaving&#13;
Device.&#13;
Some new things which may be prepared&#13;
in the tireless cooker were presented&#13;
by Miss Fannie Merritt Farmer.&#13;
Following are the recipes:&#13;
Cracked Wheat.—Soak one cupful of&#13;
cracked wheat in five cupfuls of cold&#13;
water two hours. Put over flame and&#13;
bring to the boiling point; add salt and&#13;
let boil for three minutes, stirring constantly.&#13;
Set pan into a larger one&#13;
containing boiling water and cook in&#13;
a flreless cooker over night. Serve,&#13;
with sugar and cream.&#13;
Smothered Haddock.—Cut fish into&#13;
fllletB and season with salt, pepper/&#13;
and lemon juice. Arrange fish in kettle,&#13;
cover with prepared tomato soup;&#13;
over this put a second layer. Place&#13;
kettle in a larger one containing boiling&#13;
water and let water continue to&#13;
boil for three minutes. Cook with&#13;
or without radiator about 45 minutes.&#13;
Raly Poly.—Remove fat, skin and&#13;
bones from a loin of lamb. Remove&#13;
meat from eight veal chops, arrange&#13;
the eight pieces of veal, separated by&#13;
a thin piece of fat salt pork, close to&#13;
the lean meat of the loin. Season&#13;
with salt and pepper and sprinkle with&#13;
a rounding tablespoonful each of finely&#13;
chopped carrot, celery and parsley.&#13;
Roll as tight as possible, put over a&#13;
few strips of very thin fat salt pork&#13;
and fasten with a string to keep meat&#13;
in shape. Dredge, roll with flour and&#13;
brown in a pan placed over gas flame.&#13;
Cook between two radiators two and&#13;
one-half hours.&#13;
Scalloped Egg and Potato With&#13;
Cheese.—Arrange alternate layers of&#13;
cold sliced boiled potatoes and sliced&#13;
hard boiled eggs, and on each layer&#13;
of egg arrange one-half of thin sliced&#13;
onion which has been parboiled for&#13;
one minute. Pour over a thin sauce&#13;
flavored with cheese, salt and pepper&#13;
to taste. Cook over one radiator one&#13;
and one half to two hours.&#13;
String Beans With Cheese.—Remove&#13;
strings by cutting entire&#13;
length of each side, then cut beans&#13;
into two-inch lengths. Plunge into&#13;
cold water and allow them to remain&#13;
until all the beans drop oat, which&#13;
may afterwards be discarded. Cook&#13;
pods in boiling water, allowing onequarter&#13;
teaspoon of soda to two quarts&#13;
of beans, for five minutes; then cook&#13;
over one radiator two hours. Drain&#13;
thoroughly, put in- serving^di&amp;a,&#13;
Bon with salt and cayenne, add onehalf&#13;
cup of graded rarebit cheese and&#13;
one-quarter cup of heavy cream. Stir&#13;
until well mixed, sprinkle generously&#13;
over top grated Parmesan cheese and&#13;
dot over with one tablespoon of soft&#13;
butter. Reheat In hot oven or under&#13;
gas flame.&#13;
Nut Butter.—Mix and sift two cups&#13;
of bread flour, one cup of graham&#13;
flour, one cup of brown sugar, two&#13;
teaspoons of baking powder and one&#13;
teaspoon each of soda and salt; then&#13;
add two cups of sour milk and one cup&#13;
of chopped or coarsely cut English&#13;
walnut meat. Turn into bread pan&#13;
and bake~lh flreless gas range with,&#13;
the gas on for 16 minutes and about&#13;
an hour after gas is turned off.&#13;
Normandy 8alad.&#13;
Take one pint of peas. If canned&#13;
ones are used, wash, drain and dry.&#13;
If fresh, cook and chill. Blanch one&#13;
cupful walnut meats by pouring hot&#13;
water over them and removing the&#13;
skin. Cut them into bits the size of&#13;
the peas, mix peas and nuts, arrange&#13;
on lettuce leaves and pour over them&#13;
mayonnaise dressing. Garnish with&#13;
nasturtiums. This will serve ten people.&#13;
Chestnuts may be substituted for&#13;
walnuts.&#13;
Whenever&#13;
you see. an&#13;
Arrow think&#13;
of Coca-Cola&#13;
TEMPTATION WAS TOO GREAT&#13;
Little Edwin Resisted Long but Finally&#13;
Made Trade for Newly Arrived&#13;
Baby Sister.&#13;
Little Edwin, three-years-old son of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Crosby Prior of Bremen,&#13;
Long Island, has been rejoicing over&#13;
the advent of a baby sister in the&#13;
home, and as he proudly announced to&#13;
all, "she is all mine," A neighbor&#13;
desired to purchase the baby of Edwin,&#13;
but he would not trade. A ben&#13;
and chickens, toys, candy, many things&#13;
dear to the heart of a small boy, were&#13;
offered and stoutly refused. "I want&#13;
A Good Flavor.&#13;
Horseradish tauee adds a piquant&#13;
flavor to the boiled meat, as well as&#13;
to roasts ot beef. Grate a tablespoonful&#13;
of horseradish, mix It with a gill&#13;
of cream, a teaspoonful of vinegar,&#13;
one of sugsr, a saltspoonful of salt&#13;
and the same quantity ot mustard.&#13;
To Prevent Jam Burning,&#13;
To prevent*' Jam or marmalade or&#13;
anything of that kind from burning&#13;
butter the bottom of the preserving&#13;
pan before putting the contents Into It&#13;
This nlto prevents them boiling over.&#13;
RegewVc Punch;&#13;
Three lemons, 1 pound sugar, I&#13;
quarts pineapple Juice, 1 quart very&#13;
strong oolong tea and 1 quart oar*&#13;
bonated water. /Served in-ihe center&#13;
of a large block ot tea, hollowed nut&#13;
to make n bowL it Is very attractive.&#13;
Try this a mart: Take sponge&#13;
cut in slices, put preserved&#13;
strawberries between slices and pour&#13;
the Juice over ft, then cover with&#13;
whipped cream and dot over the top&#13;
with stnwberrUa.&#13;
you to think of this over night,~Edwin,"&#13;
said the man, "and tomorrow&#13;
I'll see you again." The following&#13;
morning Edwin was around. "I have&#13;
one last offer to make to you for that&#13;
baby sister," were the words that&#13;
greeted Edwin. "HI give you my&#13;
motor boat for the baby." The youngster&#13;
was almost staggered for a moment&#13;
and then said: "You may have&#13;
her, I was going lobstering this summer,&#13;
and the boat ii just what I need.&#13;
Think I'll go out by Mohegan. Will&#13;
went there and did pretty well," then&#13;
he added a little remorsefully: "Perhaps&#13;
you'd better take some of my&#13;
playthings when you take her, she&#13;
may get lonesome without me/'—&#13;
Kennebec Journal.&#13;
Something Had Happened.&#13;
Grace (age six)—Mamma, cud a&#13;
little girl as little as me be arrested&#13;
for playing suffragette and breaking&#13;
a window?&#13;
Her Mother—No, dear; certainly&#13;
not! Why do you ask?&#13;
Grace (relieved and gleeful)—Oh, I&#13;
shud worry!&#13;
The Limit.&#13;
"You take out your pocketbook. So&#13;
you will lend me money? At last, I&#13;
see a ray of hope!'*&#13;
"Well, don't flatter yourself this is&#13;
going to be any X ray."&#13;
Capitalizing a Weather Report&#13;
One day a fruit dealer in Iowa&#13;
roused the curiosity of the local weather&#13;
observer by a . telephone inquiry&#13;
about the weather prospects in the&#13;
grape belt of Western New York&#13;
which, at that season, supplied a large&#13;
part of the demand from the territory&#13;
lust west of the Mississippi river.&#13;
"Rain," was the answer. "It's going&#13;
to rain there tomorrow and probably&#13;
the day after.**&#13;
A week or two later the observer&#13;
met the merchant and asked what use&#13;
he made of the information.&#13;
"It was worth to me," replied the&#13;
fruit man, "about $200. You se*&#13;
grapes can't be picked in wet weather&#13;
so I knew if It was going to rain&#13;
out there grapes would be scarce here.&#13;
As soon as I got your answer I ordered&#13;
a double shipment—two ears Instead&#13;
of one. It rained in New York&#13;
for three "days running, and the price&#13;
of grapes here rose to a figure that&#13;
let me sell my shipment at a fine&#13;
profit The only mistake I made was&#13;
In not ordering four cars Instead of&#13;
two.*—World's Work.&#13;
si*easfM&#13;
SHAKIIXTO TOUB SHOZS&#13;
SW9UMU M t W M fee*. QtWm IWt M *&#13;
i l l N f c belay, M.T. Adv.&#13;
Doubtless Bre told the neighbors&#13;
that they moved troth Bden because&#13;
the landlord wouldn't paper the fiat&#13;
Don't bs misted. A*k tor Red 4nm&#13;
Ball Bhie. J4akes beautiful whits eleUe*.&#13;
At au good grocers. Adv.&#13;
Borne women hatere are floorwsJk-&#13;
-era in department store*.&#13;
_Query,&#13;
"The pen Is mightier than the&#13;
sword." "Then can the fellow with&#13;
the fountain pen be said to be carrying&#13;
concealed weapons?"&#13;
The Source of&#13;
Eating too nmcb Is a common habit that&#13;
does a lot of harm. Meat, especially, forms&#13;
uric sold and the constant filtering of addladen&#13;
blood weakens the kidneys. UricioU&#13;
causes rheumatic and nervous trouble,&#13;
weakens the e/es, forms gravel and leads&#13;
to dropsy and Bright'* disease. Kidney&#13;
weakness gives early warnings, however,&#13;
suoh as backache and urinary disorders&#13;
and can be stopped by prompt treatment&#13;
Use Doan's Kidney Pills, the best recommended&#13;
and most widely used kidney&#13;
remedy.&#13;
A MJcki*«a Case&#13;
wi"tXh wkiwdn eys o trboaud- Sbleet,"tl ere,a yoef WM.r sM. aOla. S•tth, atP awt hPea w, dMoicetno.r, phhaidn eto. fivTeh em e rmheour-- fmeeatt,i ob apcaki nasn di nU mmbye wtherreee amwofnutlh sa nId Wfoars cwohnofilnee db otdoy b•ewd.e lMleyd daensdp aIir . gaveo rtueap la whoausr *u aooTaaweolo ubs ofx&lt;e s Pofil ta Dboraoau'gah t Kmied nreeyli ef asi m six weeks oI wwo ams yu pli-faen dto aDroouantdfi, Uaw^en nwSom^a aVXl&#13;
OteDossrs D p AN'S VKIV&#13;
CO, BUFFALO, K * .&#13;
Women Who Take&#13;
this Universally popular home&#13;
remedy—at times, when there&#13;
is ne^i-areBpared many hours&#13;
of unnecessary suflerinr-&#13;
DABYmiaiiEi&amp;gar»ft&#13;
4t&#13;
• ••»&#13;
% U. Mi, DftftOtT,^4sV1tM.&#13;
SS53S55 • I « I H » M &lt; M » I ""•titf'fr&#13;
&lt; * * • * ! :&#13;
V,&#13;
iitjay •if •&#13;
'&amp;S-':4*&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
I MICHIGAN !&#13;
HAPPENINGS [&#13;
| BvartT—Wayne Gibha^n farmer Uving&#13;
near Evert, Ii~dead a* the result&#13;
of injuries suffered 4« a runaway.&#13;
Mount Morris.—Doctors worked all&#13;
nigHt on ten cases of ptomaine poisoning&#13;
caused by eating of pressed&#13;
meat. All parties are resting easier&#13;
and it is thought that all will recover.&#13;
Jackson.—John Bartig, aged seventy-&#13;
eight, a resident of Munith&#13;
for many years, ended his life by&#13;
hanging. His body, suspended by a&#13;
rope from the headboard of hie bed,&#13;
was found by his son. He had been ill&#13;
tor many months.&#13;
Jackson. — Dressed ' in a man's&#13;
clothing, Mis* Helen McGregor, aged&#13;
twenty, was arrested walking the&#13;
streets. The girl told the officers she&#13;
had donned the unusual garb with the&#13;
intention of starting on a hobo trip to&#13;
California. She was released.&#13;
Grand Rapid*.—Anthony Tajawas,&#13;
because of the excessive heat,&#13;
tied a gunny sack about a whirling&#13;
shaft to stir up a breeze. He&#13;
raised his arms with the first whiff of&#13;
air and his right arm caught in the&#13;
sack and was torn from his body.&#13;
Physicians said he would recover.&#13;
Hastings—Humane Officer Randolph&#13;
of Kent county has, made complaint&#13;
against Lee Reynolds, Rutland&#13;
township farmer, whom he accuses&#13;
of overworking and underfeeding&#13;
three horses. Reynolds, it is alleged,&#13;
pounded to death with stones&#13;
one of the animals after it'dropped&#13;
from exhaustion.&#13;
i St. Johns.—Elmer Evans of St.&#13;
Johns,, whose' conviction In 1912 on&#13;
ja charge of violating the local option&#13;
law was set aside by the supreme&#13;
court, changed his plea to one of guilty&#13;
and was fined 160. His sale of two&#13;
gallons of cider to Charles Lang of&#13;
Gratiot county constituted a technical&#13;
violation of the law. 1 Jackson.—-The fourth annual reunion&#13;
of the Odell family of the&#13;
United States was held at Hague park&#13;
with 150 persons in attendance. Officers&#13;
were elected as follows: President,&#13;
Dr. T. A. Odell, Indianapolis,&#13;
Ind.; vice-president, John Odell, Allegan&#13;
; secretary and treasurer, Frank B.&#13;
Odell, Lansing. The next reunion will&#13;
be held at Hague park, June 18, 1915.&#13;
'St. Joseph.-—H. T. Hulscher, state&#13;
deputy food inspector, raided the&#13;
office of the Berrien Springs Dispencer&#13;
company at Berrien Springs, and&#13;
seized a portion of the correspondence&#13;
and files. This action, it ie believed,&#13;
is the forerunner of prosecution&#13;
against officers of the concern for the&#13;
sale of an alleged fake cure for the&#13;
drug habit. The company Is said to&#13;
have been doing a thriving business.&#13;
Detroit.—Grand Trunk passenger&#13;
train No. 8, north-bound, crashed&#13;
into a Thompson Cartage company&#13;
truck driven by Earl Hess, thirtyseven&#13;
years old, 68 Richmond avenue,&#13;
Degulndre street and Trombly avetie.&#13;
The truck was demolished, but&#13;
ess escaped with a wrenched right&#13;
shoulder and numerous bruises. He&#13;
was taken to Grace hospital. The&#13;
horses attached to the truck were uninjured.&#13;
Harrison. — While in bathing in&#13;
Budd lake at Harrison, Clinton Bow*,&#13;
er, twenty-one years old, a cigarmaker&#13;
and a good swimmer, was taken&#13;
with cramps and sank in full sight of&#13;
a dozen people. Several went to his&#13;
rescue without success, as the drowning&#13;
man had sunk for the third time&#13;
and had been gone for five minutes.&#13;
A. ft. D. Collins dove from a boat and&#13;
brought,the body to the surface. Bow*&#13;
er was revived, but is very ill. Colline&#13;
is a nineteen-year-old boy and a&#13;
graduate of high school.&#13;
Grand Rapi4s.—8et*n-year-old Laura,&#13;
B. Delfssler was kidnaped by a&#13;
stranger from the porch of the home&#13;
of hex mother, a Mrs. Terry, thrown,&#13;
into a waiting automobile and whirled&#13;
away. No trace of her or the kidnap*&#13;
tors has been found. Mrs. Terry secured&#13;
a' divorce from Joseph Delesler,&#13;
December 3, 1913, in superior court-&#13;
Under the decree she was given the&#13;
custody of the child, Laura, January&#13;
13; 1911, she was married to Mr. Terry*'&#13;
Until recently Laura hnd resided with&#13;
an aunt in Philadelphia, having come&#13;
to her mother but a short time ago.,&#13;
Kalamasoo. — Forty-six years ago*&#13;
Joses Rewa, a young German soldier,&#13;
left his native land and came&#13;
to America, settling in Detroit.&#13;
He s e w e d all. connection with his&#13;
family, leaving behind Vfour-ycar-old&#13;
brother, Onipah. The brothers met on&#13;
the convention floor of the forty-sixth,&#13;
annual assembly of the Michigan-&#13;
United Arbeiterbund, now in session, &gt;&#13;
heVo. Both were delegates to the eon-'&#13;
•action, vOnfysjh too* in Byron, having&#13;
come i o thU c$«ntnr *0 »aers agdT&#13;
thtt country. ^They wUncavavfo? Detroit&#13;
where, after a ehort stay a| the&#13;
older: brother's home, they will leave&#13;
for on extended vis* jrt fbe*~M*ae m&#13;
4QQJ&#13;
Immigration figures show that the&#13;
population of Canada Increased during.&#13;
1915, by the addition of 400.000&#13;
new.settiers from the United States&#13;
and Europe. Most of these have gone&#13;
on farms in provinces of Manitoba,&#13;
Saskatchewan and Alberta.&#13;
Lord William Ptmr, an tngUih HoUnun,&#13;
Say?: *&#13;
"Tht pMs&amp;IMtiei and opportunity off or«l&#13;
by the Canadian WMt ars so infloitalr&#13;
flatter than OMM which nit* in England.&#13;
that it teams absurd to think that peopU&#13;
should p« Impeded from ooming to&#13;
country where they oan most etsUr&#13;
oartaiah; improve their position.&#13;
New districts are being opened up.&#13;
which will make aocoswMe a&#13;
number of homesteads in districts&#13;
especJsily adapted to mixed&#13;
m* and grain raising.&#13;
(be&#13;
great&#13;
farm-&#13;
For illustrated literature and.&#13;
reduced railway rates, apply to I&#13;
Sept. o( Immigration, Ottawa,!&#13;
Canada, or to.&#13;
M . V . M o l n n e *&#13;
170 Jefferson Ate*&#13;
OetroK, tfllori. .&#13;
•St*&#13;
THE TREE HELIOTROPE&#13;
By JOSEPHINE DE MARR.&#13;
Puzzled Wall is.&#13;
When WaHie went to a restaurant&#13;
with his father he was told they&#13;
would have something which mother&#13;
did not serve—pie a la mode, In fact&#13;
This quite common dessert was a&#13;
revelation to the youngster, who&#13;
talked about it for some time. A&#13;
couple of weeks later he and his father&#13;
went to a restaurant once more.&#13;
Father, needing something solid, ordered&#13;
beef a la mode.&#13;
"Say, pop," said Wallie before the&#13;
meat was served. "This is a funny&#13;
world, isn't it? One time we get ice&#13;
cream on pie, and now we're going to&#13;
have ice cream on beef."&#13;
But when the meat was brought on&#13;
he marveled greatly at the gastronomic&#13;
versatility of the language.&#13;
Patriotic.&#13;
"Do you know," asked the impertinent&#13;
boarder, when the landlady had&#13;
passed him a stingy dish of strawberries,&#13;
"why all this reminds me of old&#13;
glory?"&#13;
"I can't imagine," she replied.&#13;
"The berries are red, the dish in&#13;
which you serve them is reasonably&#13;
white and the milk is blue. I congratulate&#13;
you on your patriotism."-^Judge.&#13;
Broke.&#13;
"Did he remain in New York long?"&#13;
"I don't know about that, but I&#13;
know he came away short."&#13;
It is difficult for a man to ride on&#13;
*a railroad pass and not act chesty.&#13;
A novel, decorative plant, sweet and&#13;
beautiful, is the heliotrope, when&#13;
grown as a "standard." Early in the&#13;
spring secure a small heliotrope, a&#13;
seedling, if possible, and grow it rapidly&#13;
all summer by giving It sun, water&#13;
and repotting it when required, for it&#13;
Is essential that this plant never become&#13;
stunted from drought or potbound.&#13;
Let the main stem grow unchecked&#13;
until it is three or four feet high, but&#13;
pinch, or rather rub off all the side&#13;
shoots. When the stem is the desired&#13;
length, say four feet, pinch out its top,&#13;
and when the side shoots appear and&#13;
are Ave or six inches long they, too,&#13;
are topped. This pinching is given all&#13;
shoots until the head is the desired&#13;
s&amp;e.&#13;
All this time the shifting has been&#13;
kept up, and by the time the head of&#13;
our specimen is 2½ feet through it Is&#13;
growing in a 12-inch pot When they&#13;
have attained a 16-inch pot they are&#13;
considered full grown, and the shoots&#13;
allowed to grow and bloom as they&#13;
will, which is almost continually from&#13;
June to frosty&#13;
Keep the plants out of doors all&#13;
summer, and at the approach of frost&#13;
remove to a cool room, greenhouse or&#13;
light cellar. Bear in mind that any&#13;
plant grown as a standard must be&#13;
well staked at all times, often and&#13;
generously top-dressed, given liquid&#13;
manure and never allowed to become&#13;
pot-bound.&#13;
New to Her.&#13;
"Can your baby brother talk now,&#13;
Jamie r*&#13;
"Yessum. He can say lots of&#13;
words."&#13;
"What are they?"&#13;
"I don't know. They're words I've&#13;
never used before."&#13;
Abstruse Question.&#13;
"Is politics singular or plural V&#13;
asked the man who pays attention to&#13;
grammar.&#13;
"I don't know," replied Senator Sorghum,&#13;
"but in my recent personal experience&#13;
it seems distinctly singular,&#13;
owing to a conspicuous lack of plurality."&#13;
In England.&#13;
Grandmother-elect—Well, doctor?&#13;
Physician—A girl.&#13;
^.Grandmother-elect (to servant)—&#13;
Mary, hang a "Votes for Women" card&#13;
at the window.&#13;
Chile plans to spend more than&#13;
122,000,000 in the next four years reorganizing&#13;
its railways.&#13;
BELOVED BY GARDENERS&#13;
A Good Example of the Double Peony.&#13;
Easy to Grow and of Great Beauty.&#13;
Novel Lawn-Mower.&#13;
We have a smal llawn of Kentucky&#13;
bluegrass and Bweet clover, and every&#13;
member of the family being busy,&#13;
we could scarcely find time to keep it&#13;
mowed until we thought of the plan&#13;
of having our six white rabbits do the&#13;
work.&#13;
We made a movable pen for them&#13;
seven by ten feet, which we placed on&#13;
the lawn, moving it as fast as the rabbits&#13;
mow the grass, which they do to&#13;
the satisfaction of all concerned.—&#13;
Christian Endeavor World.&#13;
Fitting With Fame.&#13;
"Nell is Just crazy over Ibsen."&#13;
"So he's her latest, is he? Where'd&#13;
she meet him?"&#13;
_ •&#13;
When Short Jenkcs Raged.&#13;
Yesterday Short Jenks came to the&#13;
Globe office and spit fire about an item.&#13;
that stated his father was ill. He denounced&#13;
newspapers in general, said&#13;
reporters were boneheads and deliberately&#13;
malicious, and that freedom&#13;
of the press was folly. His father&#13;
died this morning.—Atchison Globe.&#13;
The Combination.&#13;
"My dear, I saw your husband this1&#13;
morning when he was putting the baby&#13;
-to sleep in the cradle, with a bottle&#13;
by his side."&#13;
"La, ma, that's only a case of rock*&#13;
and rye."&#13;
Not All.&#13;
"Matches are not made in heaven,***&#13;
observed the Bage.&#13;
"No," replied the fool. "Some of&#13;
them seem to have been framed up in&#13;
the other place."&#13;
Near-Greatness.&#13;
He—Will you have some pate de&#13;
fois gras? Have you ever had any?&#13;
She—No, but I've been where it&#13;
was.&#13;
And many a man who imagined himself&#13;
necessary to the world's progress&#13;
has been interred in a pine box without&#13;
trimmings.&#13;
The man who never kicks generally&#13;
needs kicking.&#13;
The bark of a scandal monger is&#13;
always worse than his bite.&#13;
Their First&#13;
Breakfast&#13;
If s a wise bride that doesn't attempt&#13;
too much for that breakfast&#13;
- She can escape cooking in a hot&#13;
kitchen, avoid rich, greasy foods, and have&#13;
a good breakfast just the same, by serving&#13;
Post&#13;
Toasties&#13;
Toasties are choicest bits of Indian&#13;
Corn perfectly cooked, delicately flavoured, *&#13;
rolled paper-thin and toasted to a crisp,&#13;
appetizing brown.&#13;
This food comes id tightly sealed packages, ready for instant serving with cream and&#13;
sugarr—also delicious with fresih Txajies. , -&#13;
L%ht, Wh»le for the "first b r e a k e r and the wunt;- a&#13;
s&#13;
less meals that wiU follow—&#13;
L.&#13;
't-J&#13;
&gt; K * • " r t •* .i V . . ' f * SoM by Grocers everywhere. • - V - W&#13;
• • • • &lt;v**%&#13;
•h&#13;
m&#13;
'•}••':•&#13;
'V-r'&lt;l&#13;
* • * * • * . ^&#13;
y- - \ v * / ^ , ^ ^ . / ^ -&#13;
) ••• ••.::••'•: l ;&#13;
(0tf&#13;
H&amp;*:J: titt * • •_ .'nJ.j dssHij . . v l f .•*.&#13;
m t m m t m a m&#13;
; f l M M — I I I I II MP&#13;
&amp;?-&#13;
m&amp; ; •&#13;
• # • » • . •&#13;
• B &amp;£*•&#13;
*.. *.-*.-«...+.&#13;
.2^-&#13;
r v **;&amp;'•&#13;
,1 • •S* £' *;&#13;
•paa • * * * * • *&#13;
pinckney j)ippatch&#13;
Entered at the Postoffice at Pifckney,&#13;
Miob., as Second Class Matter&#13;
Helen Dolan is visiting relative JJflfflftffffffffJffflfffffTfWff!f?^IffWW!Tf!ffWWffffffjfffffff|&#13;
R. W. CMEBIY, EDITOR M P PUBLISHER&#13;
Subscription, $ 1 . Per Year in Advance&#13;
. Advertising rates made knuwn on&#13;
a^olic&amp;tinn.&#13;
r Oardb of Thaukts fifty cents.&#13;
Resolutions of Condolence, one dollar.&#13;
Local Notices, in Local columns five&#13;
eent per line per each insertion.&#13;
All matter intended to beuetit 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;
r*v ;*:"•*.&#13;
IP £ V&#13;
v. - -&#13;
Special prices on ladies coats at&#13;
Dancer's. adv.&#13;
Fred Ariz of Detroit spent&#13;
Sunday at the home of F. Reason.&#13;
Roy Moran of the U. of M. is&#13;
now home for the summer vacation.&#13;
Geo. Green and family of Howell&#13;
were Pinckney callers Sanday.&#13;
Mrs. Arvjlla Placeway spent&#13;
the past week in Howell and&#13;
Chilean.&#13;
Fred Read spent the week at&#13;
the home of hia parents, Mr. aud&#13;
- Mrs. T Read.&#13;
Grace and Harold Grieves of&#13;
Stockbridge were Pinckney visitors&#13;
Monday afternoon.&#13;
Bjr.n to Mr. and Mrs. Clarence&#13;
SUckalle of near Giii!son, Monday,&#13;
June 15, a daughter.&#13;
Win. Bordick, LaRue Moran,&#13;
Miss Nida Lasher and Miss Florence&#13;
Gardner of Howell were&#13;
, Pinckney visitors Sunday afternoon.&#13;
Mrs, Mike Fitzsimmons and&#13;
two children who have been&#13;
spending some time here returned&#13;
to their home in Jackson last&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
The banns of marriage of Mr.&#13;
Emmett Harris and Miss Ella&#13;
Mae Farley were published for&#13;
the first time last Sunday in St.&#13;
Mary's church here.&#13;
The Dispatch erred labt week&#13;
in printing the names of the&#13;
graduates. The name which read&#13;
Mary Agnee McCluskey should&#13;
have been Mary Agnus Conner.&#13;
•&#13;
As a result of the ancient custom&#13;
in vogue at Howell, of allowing&#13;
bicyclists to ride on the sidewalks,&#13;
a four-year-old girl of that&#13;
place was run down and her leg&#13;
fractured.&#13;
The big plate glass window in&#13;
the Geo. Reason building occupied&#13;
by Dinkel &lt;fe Dunbar was accidently&#13;
broken Monday noon.&#13;
The glass was not insured. The&#13;
Bmashing of plate glass windows&#13;
in Pinckney seems to be a popular&#13;
pastime.&#13;
- John Kirk, owner of Kirk's&#13;
Landing at Long Lake, Howell,&#13;
if building a new summer hotel at&#13;
that popular resort which will be&#13;
80 x 50 and will include eighteen&#13;
sleeping rooms, besides a diningmom,&#13;
kitchen and large veranda&#13;
overlooking the water.&#13;
T»#^Nir on the deadly cigar-&#13;
. 4t!» fa 4&gt;eing renewed with vigor. trecent scientific analysis has&#13;
» given out in which it is&#13;
jj^med that H j s not fimpljr the&#13;
S r o i n g paper t or the tobacco&#13;
Oiat produo* sttch a deadly «6eot&#13;
ti|&gt;on the brmia and nerves, bat it&#13;
&amp;h**&gt;m€in*tio* o* « * &gt; * * • *&#13;
s ^ f i c ^ c c o thai prodooea a dope&#13;
that is irretUtable to the victim&#13;
'•¥*-&#13;
# . ^ .&#13;
at Akron, Ohio.&#13;
Wm. Monks of Howell spent&#13;
8pnday with bis mother Mrs. M.&#13;
Monks.&#13;
E. J. Briggs and family of&#13;
Howell spent Sunday at, the home&#13;
R. Webb.&#13;
Mrs. Claude Sigler and Mrs.&#13;
Floyd Jackson were Howell calleis&#13;
one day last week.&#13;
Mrs. M. E. EaRan spent Sun*&#13;
day at the home of Mrs. Elizabeth&#13;
Devereaux.&#13;
Dr. H. F. Sigler and grandson&#13;
Donald, made an auto trip to&#13;
Lansing Thursday.&#13;
Mrs. R. Merrills of Hamburg&#13;
spent a few days the past week |&#13;
with relatives here.&#13;
Ed. Riley of Toledo, Ohio, is&#13;
visiting at the home of his sister&#13;
Mrs. Henry Harris.&#13;
Mrs. Will Curlett spent Saturday&#13;
and Monday with friends and&#13;
relatives in Dexter.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Bowman of&#13;
Detroit are visiting at the home&#13;
of their BOD Fred.&#13;
Will Tiplady and family of near&#13;
Dexter were Suuday guests at the&#13;
home c'f Jae. Tiplady.&#13;
Mr. and Mis. F. Tucker of&#13;
Syracuse, N. Y&lt; spent the past&#13;
week at the home of 0. Lynch.&#13;
Wm. Clark, south of Pinckney,&#13;
is the owner of a new Ford touring&#13;
car purchased of Flintoft &amp;&#13;
Read.&#13;
Mrs. G. W. Teeple and daughter&#13;
Mae are in Detroit this week&#13;
to attend the Matheson-Pound&#13;
wedding.&#13;
Laura Lavey of Whiting, Ind.,&#13;
is spending her vacation at the&#13;
home of her parents Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
M. Lavey.&#13;
About forty couple were in attendance&#13;
at the dancing party&#13;
held here last Friday evening. All&#13;
report a fine time.&#13;
Mrs. W. Chapman ancl daughter&#13;
Evelyn of Pontaic spent a&#13;
few days the past week at the&#13;
home of M. Dolan.&#13;
Mrs. M._Haney~or"Durarid and&#13;
Mrs. John L. Williams and son&#13;
of Niagara Falls visited friends&#13;
here the past week,&#13;
Mies Buelah Morton returned&#13;
to her home in Bay City after&#13;
spend.ipg the past week at the&#13;
home of M. W,- Allison.&#13;
Claude Monks of Detroit was&#13;
a guest of his parents here Suuday.&#13;
Mr. Monks graduates this&#13;
month from the University of&#13;
Detroit, in Arts and Scieaces,&#13;
Mrs. Don Fiedler and daughter&#13;
of Toledo, Ohio and'Miss Gladys&#13;
Burchiel of rValkerville, Canada,&#13;
are visiting at the home of Boas&#13;
Read.&#13;
Miss Bern ice Bitten, the "angel"&#13;
of the Brighton Argus office, went&#13;
home May 29, donned her wedding&#13;
trousseau and was quielty&#13;
married to Frank Bobbins of&#13;
Lansing at 8:30 o'clock, so their&#13;
"angel", has flown. Better hire a&#13;
"devil" next time Seth.&#13;
Several changes in the courses&#13;
of the literary department have&#13;
been announced by Registrar A.&#13;
G. Hall, wbich will go into effect&#13;
at the beginning of the next college&#13;
year at the TJ. of M. A new&#13;
course, leading to the degree of&#13;
bachelor of chemistry, will be one&#13;
of the changes, while Spanish has&#13;
been added to the list of permiseable&#13;
elections foi first year men and&#13;
philosophy and education have&#13;
been added to group three of the&#13;
requirements for graduation,&#13;
which was extended to 60 hours,&#13;
instead of 40, a« heretofore. Two&#13;
new courses, physiography and&#13;
geography, wfll be started In the&#13;
fall tha department of geology,&#13;
and will be open to freshmen of&#13;
HELLO CENTRAL!&#13;
GIVE. ME NO. 3 8&#13;
. . . . .&#13;
This is the call used by the wise customer who&#13;
wishes&#13;
- 4&#13;
Staple and Fancy Groceries&#13;
Connor's World Best Ice Cream&#13;
A Work Shirt A Pair of Overalls&#13;
A Nice Dress Hat or Cap&#13;
A New Suit of Clothes&#13;
A Pair of Gloves&#13;
Or Anything in the Gents&#13;
• Furnishing Line&#13;
"And Don't You Forget," that we are ever&#13;
anxious and willing.to fill your wants for anything&#13;
in oar line.&#13;
Leave Your Special Orders With&#13;
Monks Bros. • - * . - . » - , • • . - . . . ... , - • • • • • ' - - ' - ' • " ' • " • " * , — — — — ' - T V •&#13;
. » ;&#13;
CZIThe Square DBalBroBerifCZI&#13;
« •&#13;
73iMWiUUiiMWAUWiMMAMM;iMmiuWil4R&#13;
SMASH!&#13;
HIT THE&#13;
ON THE&#13;
HEAD&#13;
We Hit High&#13;
Prices Right&#13;
On the Head&#13;
HARDWARE&#13;
T r y U s -&#13;
Best Goods&#13;
In Everything&#13;
When yon want BIGHT tola, CHEAP household utensils, GOOD&#13;
paints and varnishes, nails, kitchen ware, stoves, hinges, screws, bolts,&#13;
knives and a hundred other things COME HEBE. Yeu'll SATE&#13;
MONEY.&#13;
Tecpje Hardware G°rnpany&#13;
fu Jv^f^+'r »-r-**&gt;-&#13;
The Pinckne&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative Bant&#13;
ing 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;
Prop&#13;
.&#13;
« i&#13;
Perhaps this picture may recall&#13;
some pleasant occasion—a party&#13;
and the becoming costnme you&#13;
wore.&#13;
Any event worth remembering&#13;
suggests a picture.&#13;
Make an appointment today.&#13;
DaisieB. Chapell&#13;
Stockbridge, Michigan&#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;
Jioise and strain all tell on us and&#13;
tend to provoke nervousness an4&#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 suck&#13;
circumstances is to take something&#13;
like "~ -&#13;
Dr. Mfles' Anti-Pain Pflb&#13;
.to relieve the strain on the nerves.&#13;
Mrs. J. B. Hartsfidd, 82 Plum St*&#13;
Atlanta Ga., writesr&#13;
•!X have on several ooeaafoas&#13;
vastly relieved by the use of yo\tf metr&#13;
e s , especially the Aatt-Patn jgtito,&#13;
watch I keep constantly oa ham faT"&#13;
the use of asyseir, husband and&#13;
sons. Nothtn* in the w*rl« etreuOa \&#13;
as a hwuJacha femady. Oftto X&#13;
enabled by the «te ^ a » « r t f * M&#13;
* £ I 1 ? J® continue my hofW**gfk&#13;
when ftiherwlM x would be in bed. # y&#13;
husband joiner tee in toy ptaltfa'oi fee&#13;
iAti-Pain PUls and Ntrt&amp;^»: vy&#13;
Dr. MiW Anti-r»ain Pfll.&#13;
are relied upon to relieve, P*li»&#13;
nervousness and irritabilrty hi thooaattda&#13;
of household*. Of ^rovesT&#13;
merit after twenty years'use; ytk.&#13;
can have no reason for being longer&#13;
without them. • *" ^f*&#13;
At all Druggists, 2B doses 88 eents.&#13;
MILKS MIDICAU CO., KIKhart, lne&gt;&#13;
Ah, Fine!&#13;
It's Done&#13;
Just&#13;
Right!'*&#13;
0 TIB meats.for roasti&amp;g make HBM&#13;
FRIENDS !ot us; l ^ e r cook just&#13;
rig&amp;F 'Their SAYOBY ^ASTB&#13;
and TENDER QUAJUTY make t t a a&#13;
SIKPLY DELICIOtrS wksn they oon£i&#13;
hoi from thev oven^ to the tsUs. Beef,&#13;
lamb, pork, mutton, t t o , all of the&#13;
CHOICEST CUTS at LOWEB PBICBS&#13;
» * ' 1 .»• Itota^sritt^&#13;
S •••:•• • &gt;' V?."'&#13;
than savwtoi ejse&gt; 1M ui. RBOV^iidsi&#13;
E. POWELl/&#13;
X M.#i S'OLER M. D. C. L. SiGL^ft MJO&#13;
tt ...'•••-'' ?.DRS. SIGLER &amp; SlGLEft,&#13;
/-&#13;
Pbjsicitm and SnrjfeCn?,&#13;
fHlaatti arQBiptJj mfrjuy&#13;
*aj ^r fright. Office'^oii «ti»&#13;
Street.&#13;
:vS*«";&#13;
!S^&amp;&#13;
'v.&#13;
WlfcKNJBY, uica&#13;
;$,# X&#13;
:t*'&#13;
.¾ *r;*'»&#13;
' . * • &gt; , ,&#13;
'Vv&#13;
•:•.•':&#13;
1 * •&#13;
8%;- N&#13;
• - * f .&#13;
•+..J-&#13;
'^I\.' ~&lt;.'&#13;
"^&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
• * . ' « ' OUR BIG&#13;
^-.--.&#13;
« ' • • • - • &lt; . * &gt; . . • *&#13;
Millinery Clearance Sale&#13;
All Trimmed and U n i r i m -&#13;
med Hats to £o at&#13;
1-2 PRICE&#13;
For the Balance of the Season&#13;
Nellie G a r d n e r&#13;
Next Door to Postoffice Pinckney, Mich,&#13;
,iUWi^iUiUiUiiliUWiUiU^liilUiUiiiii*iUuiii*iiiiiiiiiK&#13;
.vmooumooLh*&#13;
»*;&#13;
-y&#13;
IT'S REALLY SURPRISING&#13;
the way the boys will pitch in and work when they&#13;
see a Rumely-Olds fingine doing all the "turning;"&#13;
It's surprising too how little it costs to do all the different kinds&#13;
of jobs around the place with a Rumely-Olds.&#13;
We have them in all sizes from 1 ½ h . p . up t o 65 h.p., and&#13;
you can get one to just suit your needs: g e t one t o run your&#13;
feed mill, your cream separator, your hoist, t o pull stumps,&#13;
pump water, and be your "hired-man" that always stays by you.&#13;
You'll be time and money ahead and a lot better satisfied with&#13;
the way the work is done. Come in and see us about i t.&#13;
If you can't find time to come in and see us, let us know and we&#13;
will come and see you or send you a catalog of Rumely-Olds Engines&#13;
•~WeJr9--her»~to~'s$rveymtigive&#13;
us a chance.&#13;
Unadilta&#13;
- Frank Mackinder and wife of&#13;
Hamburg spent Sunday at W. T.&#13;
Barn urn**.&#13;
Fred Bowdisb and family of&#13;
Waterloo spent Sunday at the&#13;
home of Ralph Gorton.&#13;
Eva and Emory Pickell spent&#13;
Sunday at the home of Allie&#13;
Holmes.&#13;
The M. E. society will hold aa&#13;
ice cream social at the home of A,&#13;
J. Holmes, Friday evening, June&#13;
19. Everyone come and enjoy a&#13;
social evening.&#13;
Etnmett Hadley and family&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of E.&#13;
Rowe of Stockbridge.&#13;
A. C. Watson was home over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Samuel Boyae and family of&#13;
Lyndon were Sunday guests at&#13;
the home of L. E. Hadley.&#13;
The Sewing Circle enjoyed a&#13;
pleasant meeting at Mrs. Pyper's&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
Belle Coats is spending a few&#13;
weeks with Detroit friends.&#13;
Children's Day exercises drew&#13;
a large attendance last Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Huddler is on the sick list.&#13;
r mm Gratitude&#13;
You should see the expression of gratitude on the faces of our&#13;
customers when we present them with the different items of&#13;
Raymond Mfg. Go's. Silverware&#13;
•Absolutely F r e e .&#13;
For their coupons. If you are not already getting these coupons&#13;
it is to your interest to do so, for it is an absolute case of&#13;
Something F O P Nothing&#13;
"IF FROM RAYMOND, IT IS GOOD"&#13;
Guaranteed for 25 years&#13;
W.W.BARNARD&#13;
Cures Stubborn, Itchy Skin Troubles&#13;
•I oould scratch myself to pieces' is of len&#13;
heard from sufferers of Eczema, Tetter,&#13;
Itch and similar Skin Eruptions. Don't&#13;
Scratch—Stop the Itching at once with&#13;
Dr. Hobson's Eczema Ointment, Its first&#13;
application starts healing; the Red, Rough&#13;
Scaly, Itching Skin is-soothed by the Healing&#13;
and Cooling Medicines. Mrs. € . A,&#13;
Einfeldt, Rock Island, 111., after using&#13;
Dr. Hobson's Eczema Ointment, writes:&#13;
"This is the first tim* in nine years I have&#13;
been free from the dreadful ailment."&#13;
Guaranteed. 00c. Recommended by C.&#13;
G. Meyer, the druggist.&#13;
South Iosco&#13;
A. H.FLINTOFT,&#13;
FROM&#13;
PINS TO&#13;
PANS&#13;
HAVE&#13;
TJIEFI&#13;
S t a r e SPECIALTIES&#13;
At This Store&#13;
Household&#13;
Novelties&#13;
For Women&#13;
Mrs. Isham and son Wm. of&#13;
Plainfield spent Sunday at the&#13;
home of the Walters Brothers.&#13;
Mrs. L. T. Lamborne and&#13;
daughter Beatrice called on relatives&#13;
in Gregory Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Munsell died at her&#13;
home here Sunday. Funeral&#13;
services from the family residence&#13;
Tuesdayat2^c4oek.&#13;
Mrs. George Meabon and son&#13;
Marshall of Plainfield visited at&#13;
the home of the Watters Bros.&#13;
last week.&#13;
John Roberts, wife and family,&#13;
David Roberts aud Joe Roberts&#13;
were over Sunday visitors with&#13;
relatives in Detroit. They made&#13;
the trip in John Roberts auto.&#13;
George Harford transacted&#13;
business in Fowlerville Saturday.&#13;
Miss Blaucbe Harford of Howell&#13;
visited friends here -the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Frank Watters was in&#13;
Stockbridge Saturday where she&#13;
underwent an operation on her&#13;
throat.&#13;
Ray Hicks of Stockbridge ipeut&#13;
Sunday with friends here.&#13;
Grand Celebration&#13;
4th of July&#13;
at HOWELL&#13;
ki Something Doing Every Minute"&#13;
Sunrise Salute&#13;
Balloon Ascension from Court House Square at 10:30 a. m.&#13;
?fptTekIIy Hon. Edmund C. Shields&#13;
. of Lansing nt'l :51() p. in.&#13;
Street Parade ending at Base Ball AtuI-tic Park at 2;M p. rn.&#13;
BIG BALL G A M E&#13;
Liberal Cash Prizes, Insuring a Speedy Game From Start to Finish,&#13;
at 3:00 p. m. 25c Admission&#13;
-Special-Team-and S&amp;hibitio&amp; Work by Sections 1 and 4, T-roop No. 1&#13;
Boy Scouts of Lansing&#13;
Balloon Ascension With Parachute Drop at 5:00 p. m.&#13;
Squad of Capital City Woodmen in Fancy Company Drills and Exhibition&#13;
Team Work, 7:00 p. m.&#13;
Ending With Magnifi- d • H&#13;
cent Evening Display I I P G ^ W O P K S&#13;
Day and Night Dance at Auditorium. Day Bill 75c. Evening Bill&#13;
75c, Good Music&#13;
2 Bands Program of the day interspered with&#13;
music by Curtis Band of Fowlerville&#13;
and the Howell City Band&#13;
Ufually a hardwart store if a man's store. But we especially invite&#13;
the attention of the HOUSEWIFE to our stock. Shell find here what&#13;
•he ha* LONG WANTED in UTENSILS, «t(X PERSONAL SERVICE&#13;
and PROMPT deliveries. .?•&#13;
Dinkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
•m "" ,"' g &lt;p ' ' " 7 s 5&#13;
. ., « *;JVlk.V:+!i'.&#13;
Sale Bills Printed a t the&#13;
Dispatch Office at . . . . . . . . . . * ^ - , • • *&#13;
$100 toward, $ 1 0 0&#13;
The readers of this paper will be pleased&#13;
to learn that there is at feast one dreaded&#13;
'disease that science hah been able ta&gt;are&#13;
in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's&#13;
Catarrh Cure is the oalt positive cure now&#13;
koown to fhe medical fraternity. Catarrh&#13;
being a .constitutional disease, requires a&#13;
constitutional treatments Hall's Catarrh&#13;
Care is tsken internally, acting directly&#13;
npon the blood and mucous surfaces of the&#13;
system, thereby destroying tbjs foundation&#13;
of the disease, and giving the patient&#13;
strength by bo tiding up the constitution&#13;
tod assisting nature in doing; its work.&#13;
The proprietors have so much faith in its&#13;
curative powers that they offer One Hun*&#13;
dred Dollars for any case- 1hat H^faiia to&#13;
cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address:&#13;
F. K. Cheney &lt;&amp; Co., Toledo, O.&#13;
Sold by all druggists, 76c.&#13;
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.&#13;
Attention Farmers!&#13;
Anyone wishing to procure&#13;
Marl for soil building pnrfjoeee&#13;
can get the same of me at 50c per&#13;
ctrbio yard. Why pay $2.50 for&#13;
Lime when Marl has proven equal&#13;
or superior. Chemical ^analysis on&#13;
reqneat. , ad?&#13;
Everybody com9 and enjoy this great day of fan and frolic. Tbe&#13;
keys of Howell will be turned over to you at tbe gates of the city.&#13;
Bring the cnildren and all have a ride on the M e r r y - G o - R o u n d&#13;
S p e c i a l S t r e e t A t t r a c t i o n s Galore. Howell Citizens&#13;
and Businessmen have combined to make this a Fourth of July long&#13;
to be remembered, and they unite in extending to you and your&#13;
friends a hearty W E L C O M E T O H O W E L L ,&#13;
N. B.—The Pere Marquette aud Ann Arbor Railway Companies will provide ample&#13;
extra coach accomodations on al! morning and evening trains.&#13;
p««i, TWL. Subscribe For The Dispatch&#13;
. • ; &gt; .&#13;
4 * It**&#13;
,."W*&#13;
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DISPATCH&#13;
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PRESIDENT WINS&#13;
FIGHT FOR TOLLS&#13;
HOU8E CONCURS WITH 8ENATE&#13;
IN AMENDMENT AND BILL&#13;
IS SIGNED. ~&#13;
» 1 I H ' l « ' l » W »&#13;
FINAL VOTE IS 216 TO 171&#13;
Measure Repealing Clause of Panama&#13;
Canal Act Exempting American&#13;
Coattwiae Trade From&#13;
Tolls Stand* Re pealed.&#13;
Washington—The long and bitter&#13;
fight in congress for the repeal of the&#13;
clause of the Panama Canal act exempting&#13;
American coastwise shipping&#13;
from tolls, came to an end Friday&#13;
when the house, after brief debate and&#13;
without the formality of a conference,&#13;
accepted, by a vote of 216 to 71, the&#13;
senate amendment specifically reserving&#13;
all rights the United States may&#13;
have under the Hay-Pauncefote treaty&#13;
or otherwise.&#13;
The president signed the measure&#13;
Monday. It was just a little more&#13;
than three months ago that he addressed&#13;
the house and senate in joint&#13;
.session, urgently asking for repeal of&#13;
the exemption clause that the nation&#13;
night keep its treaty obligations.&#13;
Before ending the contest by concurring&#13;
in the senate amendment, the&#13;
[bouse voted down, 174 to 108, a proposal&#13;
advanced by Rep. Moss, of&#13;
West Virginia, to attach to the repeal&#13;
a lat declaration of the right of the&#13;
United States to exempt its vessels&#13;
Croat tolls and of the sovereignty of&#13;
the United States over the canal zone.&#13;
Twenty democrats voted against the&#13;
motion to concur in the senate amendment&#13;
Thirty-seven republicans and three&#13;
progressives joined the democrats In&#13;
support of the motion.&#13;
LEO C0STL0W IS RELEASED&#13;
Man Held for Holding Up Train Near&#13;
Jackson Is Qlven Liberty.&#13;
Jackson, Mich.—Leo Costlow, who&#13;
was arrested at Zanesville, 0., and&#13;
held for trial in Jacksln on the charge&#13;
of holding up Pullman car passengers&#13;
,on a Michigan Central train just west&#13;
of here isveral months ago, was discharged&#13;
this morning on motion of&#13;
Prosecuting Attorney Rossman, who&#13;
has been to Ohio and personally investigated&#13;
Costlow's alibi. Mr. Rossman&#13;
is satisfle&lt;LCostlQW i i imL the&#13;
man who committed this robbery.&#13;
The jury that tried Costlow disagreed.&#13;
Qreat Orange Meeting at Charlotte.&#13;
Charlotte, Mich. — An immense&#13;
crowd attended the county grange&#13;
meeting of the Eaton, Calhoun and&#13;
Barry county granges Saturday. The&#13;
parade was the finest allegorical pageant&#13;
ever seen here and was two miles&#13;
long. John C. Ketch am, says the&#13;
meeting was the biggest grange affair&#13;
he ever attended in Michigan. C. M.&#13;
Gardner, of the national range, gave&#13;
the principal address. A picnic dinner&#13;
was held at noon.&#13;
Bronze Tablet Is Unveiled.&#13;
Lansing, Mich.—A bronze tablet,&#13;
marking the site of the first state&#13;
capltol building in Lansing, was unveiled&#13;
here Wednesday under the auspices&#13;
of the Daughters of the American&#13;
Revolution, Lansing, chapter,&#13;
which raised funds for the tablet&#13;
Ljawton T. Hemans, representing&#13;
Gov. Ferris, who was unable to be&#13;
here off account of his. wife's illness,&#13;
read an address prepared by the gov*&#13;
ernor/&#13;
• # •&#13;
.• *&#13;
Wfi ;&#13;
Verdict Against Grand Trunk.&#13;
Mt Clemens, Mich.—A jury in the&#13;
circuit* eonrt, returned a verdict of&#13;
$2,000-for Burton L. Dennison against&#13;
the Grand Trunk R. R. and the Mt&#13;
Clement Sugar Co.&#13;
Dennison asked $5*000 damages for&#13;
personal injuries received some time&#13;
ago, when a twitch engine on the sugar&#13;
company's spur of the Grand&#13;
Trunk frightened his horses. &gt;'.&#13;
TEiEGRAPHIC FLASHES&#13;
irraft^ttefitt lave teen -perfected&#13;
J|er tb**^ camp at&#13;
CryaUf lake;'three dalles east of&#13;
' #hitehaM. Several hundred Chicago&#13;
^oetttt'wttl^afettii their summer vace-&#13;
Mene'ai tbla&lt;&gt;c£ap and a large num-&#13;
\ ley: w 4 l b% jAgajg »t fro opening,&#13;
toe Vluiigvif Joan *femalt» * striker*&#13;
Jan. &gt;l^we^lMaty;-raeeaisa! from the&#13;
eouatjMe* as Heighten under $1,000&#13;
bail, beeaeee It wa# stjowa tb Judge&#13;
O'Brien thai 1» Is dying e* oonsump-&#13;
.¾&#13;
ttom.&#13;
$&amp;*&#13;
I * tke stonty&#13;
BANK OF BLONDE BOSS&#13;
CLOSED BY EXAMINER&#13;
WILLIAM LORIMER.&#13;
Chicago—The LaSalle Street Trust&#13;
&amp; Savings bank, popularly known as&#13;
the Wm. Lorlmer bank, and one of&#13;
the largest state banks in Chicago,&#13;
closed its doors Friday and was&#13;
placed in the hands of the state auditor.&#13;
Bank Examiner Harkin has been&#13;
placed in charge. The institution has&#13;
a paid up capital of $1,000,000. The&#13;
deposits total about $4,600;000. Mr.&#13;
Lorlmer, ex-senator, is president of&#13;
the bank.&#13;
PRESIDENT TO MAKE TRIP&#13;
Head ef Nation will be On Bridge of&#13;
Oregon When Fleet Steams&#13;
Through Panama Canal.&#13;
Washington. — President Wilson&#13;
next March personally will lead the&#13;
great International fleet of warships&#13;
from Hampton Roads to Colon to&#13;
participate in the formal opening of&#13;
the Panama canal by passing through&#13;
on the bridge of the world-famous old&#13;
battleship Oregon as leader of the&#13;
long line of fighting craft of all nations&#13;
and then after proceeding northward&#13;
enter the Golden Gate at the&#13;
head of this immense armada and at&#13;
tend the Panama-Pacifio exposition&#13;
at San Francisco.&#13;
This announcement was made Sat&#13;
urday by Secretary Daniels, who hat.&#13;
been working a long time to bring&#13;
this notable program about. Originally&#13;
the president was to go from Washington&#13;
to Hampton Roads to greet&#13;
the commanders of the international&#13;
leet as they arrived and to participate&#13;
in the ceremonies attendant on&#13;
the departure of the vessels on their&#13;
leng cruise around the North Ameri*&#13;
can continent Afterward he was to&#13;
make the trip by rail to San Franciseo&#13;
to visit the exposition at some&#13;
convenient later date.&#13;
Suit Against Company Started.&#13;
Saginaw, Mich.—An echo of the&#13;
street car accident here two months&#13;
ago, when five were killed and a&#13;
score injured, was heard Saturday&#13;
when Henry F. Rathbon, of Chicago,&#13;
started suit by summons against the&#13;
Saginaw-Bay City Railway Co., on behalf&#13;
of Grace Gllmore, of Saginaw.&#13;
She will ask for $60,000. Miss Gllmore&#13;
had one «arm amputated at the&#13;
elbow the night of the accident.&#13;
Village Disposing ef Refuse.&#13;
Iron River, Mich.—For a charge of&#13;
a cent a day a household, the village&#13;
of Iron River has begun a systematic&#13;
collection of garbage, ashes and other&#13;
refuse. This work heretofore has&#13;
devolved upon the householders themselves.&#13;
The new plan Is adopted to&#13;
promote the sanitation of the community.&#13;
Closed Wagons whl make&#13;
collections from each house twice a&#13;
week.&#13;
ITEMS OF STATE INTEREST&#13;
Robert T. Rashleigh, 27 years old,&#13;
drowned in an indoor pool Of the Calumet&#13;
4k Heela Co., at Calumet, while&#13;
bathing with a dozen companions.&#13;
Deputy State Fire Marshal Samuel&#13;
Robinson states that in Union City,&#13;
a village of 1,600 inhabitants, there&#13;
has been no fire ^ since 1892. Dr. W.&#13;
H. Rose, a dentist; i* cttfef of the Are&#13;
departmentj'"'' &lt;; ."'' * "^'''*'"'&#13;
What is •probably one. of theNlargest&#13;
and most valuable^ collection of&#13;
peonies in the state it owners? A.&#13;
C. Valentine, of 81 Johns. He has&#13;
been eight yean getting a collection&#13;
of is? different varieties that stale&#13;
from e&gt; dark maroon to - the peJeet&#13;
pink;&#13;
' » « " " , i . t ( • - * .-•• m. %. FLETCHER TO HAVE&#13;
HIGHEST HONOR&#13;
TO BE MADE COMMANDER OF&#13;
THE ATLANTIC FLEET IN REWARD-&#13;
IFOR BRAVERY.&#13;
AMBITION OF ALL NAVAL MEN&#13;
Other Heroes ef Vera Cruz Receive&#13;
Recognition In Form of Gratuities,&#13;
Medals and Commendatory&#13;
Letters.&#13;
Washington—Conmmand of the&#13;
great Atlantic fleet, goal of every American&#13;
naval officer's ambition, Is to&#13;
be the reward of Rear Admiral Frank&#13;
F. Fletcher for his work in Mexican&#13;
waters. Secretary Daniels announced&#13;
Sunday night- he will recommend&#13;
Admfral Fletcher for commander-inchief&#13;
of the fleet to succeed Rear Admiral&#13;
Badger, when the latter completes&#13;
his tour of service within the&#13;
next few weeks.&#13;
Several of the navy's higher officers&#13;
outrank him, but the secretary holds&#13;
that the conspicuously masterful conduct&#13;
of Admiral Fletcher at Vera Cruz&#13;
entitles him to special recognition.&#13;
Moreover, if congress passes the pending&#13;
bill creating the rank of vice admiral,&#13;
Fletcher will be among the&#13;
first to be advanced to that grade.&#13;
A general order has been•issued,&#13;
awarding a medal of honor and a&#13;
gratuity of $100 to 11 enlisted men&#13;
for extraordinary heroism.&#13;
To 42 officers and 55 enlisted men,&#13;
the secretary has written highly commendatory&#13;
letters. Each letter recites&#13;
the gallant acts for which Rear&#13;
Admiral Fletcher recommended that&#13;
they be rewarded and to this recital&#13;
the department added commendatory&#13;
paragraphs suited to the particular&#13;
cases.&#13;
ADLAI STEVENSON IS DEAD&#13;
After Long Career In Public Life&#13;
Former Vice President Passes&#13;
Away.&#13;
Chicago.—Adlai E. Stevenson, former&#13;
vice-president of the United States',&#13;
died in the Presbyterian hospital here&#13;
shortly after midnight Sunday morning.&#13;
He came to Chicago a month ago,&#13;
from his home at Bloomington, 111.,&#13;
for treatment&#13;
Mr. Stevenson, had a long and&#13;
honoraDle puhlic carrer. He was vicepresident&#13;
from 1893 to 1897 under&#13;
President Cleveland. In 1900 he was&#13;
again nominated by the Democratic&#13;
party for vice-president and ran with&#13;
William J. Bryan, the party's candidate&#13;
for president but was defeated.&#13;
He served as member of the Fortyfourth&#13;
and Forty-sixth congresses and&#13;
from 1885 to 1889 he was first assistant&#13;
postmaster-general under President&#13;
Cleveland.&#13;
His last appearance as a candidate&#13;
for public office was in 1908, when he&#13;
was nominated for governor e l Illinois&#13;
by the Democratic party, and&#13;
was defeated by Charles 8. Deneen,&#13;
Republican.&#13;
Mr. Stevenson was born in Christian&#13;
county, Kentucky, October 23,&#13;
1835.&#13;
Hilton wilt Furnish Celebration.&#13;
Houghton, Mich.—O. N. Hilton, of&#13;
Denver, senior counsel for the Western&#13;
Federation-of Miners, who is&#13;
spending the summer at L'Anse&#13;
Garaga county, in anticipation of the&#13;
trial there of President Charles H.&#13;
Moyer, of the federation, on a chargi&#13;
of conspiracy in connection with the&#13;
copper country strike, fifes arranged&#13;
a Fourth*of July celebration for the&#13;
village and is paying all expenses. He&#13;
has chartered a Steamboat to give&#13;
everybody in town a .trip and has&#13;
arranged for a ballon race among other&#13;
things.&#13;
Illinois Suffrage Act is Upheld.&#13;
Springfield, I1L—The Illinois woman's&#13;
suffrage act was declared constitutional&#13;
by the state supreme court&#13;
Saturday in deciding- the Scown suit&#13;
The act granted limited suffrage&#13;
to all .women cititens of Illinois by&#13;
permitting them to vote" for statutory&#13;
officers and upon propositions presented&#13;
to the Illinois electorate.&#13;
MARKET&#13;
Live Stock, Grain and General Farm&#13;
Produce.&#13;
- MICHIGAN NEWS IN BRIEF r j : * »•&#13;
John B/ Hayes, Kent 'county agent,&#13;
has petitioned the. supreme optfft lor&#13;
.a writ of ,maj4aane to &gt; compel Auditor-&#13;
General Fuller to pay his salary-&#13;
By a special act of |he legislature&#13;
Hayes* ealary waa raieeel from | | a&#13;
day to $1.800. a year, and the attorney-&#13;
general recently ruled that (he&#13;
act was mnconatitutlonaL&#13;
Live Stock.&#13;
DETROIT—Cattle: Receipts, 457;&#13;
bulls and cow stuff 15®20c lower;&#13;
filch cows $5 per head lower; another&#13;
grades steady; best heavy steers,&#13;
88.5008.75; best handy weight butcher&#13;
steers. $7.7508.60; mixed steers&#13;
and heifers. 17.50(9)8.26; handy light&#13;
butchers. $7®7.50; light butchers,&#13;
$8.5007; best -cows, $6.5006.75;&#13;
butcher cows, $5.5006; common cews,&#13;
8505.50; canners, $304.25; best&#13;
heavy bulls, $6.7506.90; bologna bulls&#13;
$606.50; stock bulls, $5.5006.25;&#13;
feeders, $7,5008; stockers, $6,600&#13;
7.50; milkers and springers, $40075.&#13;
Veal calves: Receipts, 404; market&#13;
steady; best, $10011; others, $70&#13;
9.50. Sheep and lambs: Receipts, 54$&#13;
market strong; best dry-fed lambs,&#13;
88.65; fair lambs, $607.60; light to&#13;
common lambs, $5.5605.75; spring&#13;
lambs, $909.50; fair to good sheep,&#13;
$4.6005.60; cull and common, $30&#13;
3.50; heavy sheep, $404.25. Hogs:&#13;
Pigs, 8808.10; others, 88.10.&#13;
EAST BUFFALO—Cattle—Receipts,&#13;
4,000; good grades 10c higher; others&#13;
steady; prime 1,350 to 1,450-lb steers,&#13;
$8.7509.20; best 1,200 to 1,300-10-&#13;
steers, $8.2508.75; best 1,100 to 1,200-&#13;
lb steers, $8.2508.50; coarse and plain&#13;
weighty steers, $7.7508; fancy pearlings,&#13;
$8.5009; medium to good, $80&#13;
8.25; choiee handy steers, 900 to 1,-&#13;
000 lbs. $8.2508.60; fair to good, 1,-&#13;
000 to 1,100 lbs. $808.26; extra good&#13;
cows, $7.2507.60; best cows, $6.5007;&#13;
butcher cows, $5.5006; cutters, $4.50&#13;
05; trimmers, $404.25; best heifers,&#13;
$808.35; medium butcher heifers,&#13;
$7.5007.85; stock heifers, $6.2506.75;&#13;
best feeding steers, $808.15; fair to&#13;
good, $7.5007.65; best stock steers,&#13;
$7.5007.75; common light stock&#13;
steers, $6.7507; extra good bulls,&#13;
$7.2607.50; bologna bulls, $6.4006.65;&#13;
stock bulls, $506; milkers and springers,&#13;
$40090.&#13;
Hogs: Receipts, 16,000; market lOe&#13;
lower; heavy and yorkers, $8.55;&#13;
pigs, $8.2508.50.&#13;
Sheep and lambs: Receipts, 2,000;&#13;
iambs 50c higher; spring lambs, $9.50&#13;
010; yearlings, $8.5008.76; wethers,&#13;
$606.25; ewes, $4.5005.50.&#13;
Calves steady; tops, $10.76; fair to&#13;
good, $8.5009.50; grassers. $507.&#13;
Grains Etc.&#13;
DETROIT—Wheat—Cash No. 2 red,&#13;
95c; July opened without change at&#13;
86 3-4c, declined to 86 l-2c and closed&#13;
at 86 3-4c; September opened at&#13;
S6 l-4c, declined to 8j6c and closed at&#13;
86 l-4c; No. 1 white, 94 l-2c.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, 74c; No. 3 yellow,&#13;
3 cars at 75 l-2e; No. 4 yellow,&#13;
73 l-2c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 2 cars at 43 l-2e;&#13;
No. 3 white, 3 cars at 43c; No. 4&#13;
white, 1 carat 42c, 1 at 42 l-2c, closing&#13;
at 42048 l-2c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 66c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate and prompt shipment&#13;
$2; June, $2.03; July, $2.05.&#13;
Cloverseed—Phi me spot $8; October,&#13;
$8.46; prime alsike, $10.&#13;
Timothy—.Phime spot $2.40.&#13;
Alfalfa—Phi me spot, $8.35.&#13;
Hay—Carlots, track Detroit: No. X&#13;
timothy, $18.60017; light mixed,&#13;
$16.50016; No. 1 mixed, $13.50015;&#13;
No. 1 clover, $13013.50; heavy clover&#13;
mixed, $18013.50; rye straw, $80&#13;
8.50; wheat and oat straw, $707.50&#13;
per ton.&#13;
Feed—In 100-lb sacks, jobbing lots;&#13;
Bran, $2$; standard middlings, $28;&#13;
fine cracked corn, $32; corn and oat&#13;
chop, $28.50; middlings, $32; coarse&#13;
middlings, $31; cracked, corn, $32;&#13;
corn and oat chop, $28.60 per ton.&#13;
Flour—In one-eighth paper sacks*&#13;
per 196 pounds, jobbing lots; Best&#13;
patent $4.90; straight, $4.60; Spring&#13;
patent, $5.10; rye, $4.40 per bbl.&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
,r. i ;.% •&gt; • &gt;~ 1 .&#13;
Apples—Steele Red, $608:50; Ben&#13;
Davis, $404.60; russet, $4.7505 per&#13;
bbl&#13;
Strawberries—24-qt cases, $3,250&#13;
3.50; Michigan, $1.2501.60 per 16-oJ&#13;
case.&#13;
Melons—Watermelons 75090c each;&#13;
pony Rotfky Fords, $3; standard Rocky&#13;
Fords, $8.50. "'&#13;
Green Corn—75c per dos.&#13;
Cabbage—New, $1.9002 per crate.'&#13;
Potatoes—In sacks, 88090c per bu&#13;
for carlots.&#13;
DressV Hogs — Light 9^10c;&#13;
heavy, $08 l-2c per lb. •; V .&#13;
Sweet PoUtoes—Jersey klih-dried,&#13;
Dressed Calves—Fancy, •. U Q2So|&#13;
common, 10 011o per lb, ^. !&#13;
- Onjfl^Tonaa* Ber»jM)avn, yeUow,&#13;
$160*2.75 per. cratfi MiMiaeippi,&#13;
$245,per fci., . ^&#13;
Honey-~Ch«ioe I©.fancy new white&#13;
comb, 16018c; amber, 10#ile; c*&gt;&#13;
tracted^Gtfojer lb. •*&gt; ,„••.,.. ,.w, ,&#13;
Nuts—Shellbark hickory, So;:tag*&#13;
Wckory* 101 1-lc; Optnislv chestnuta*&#13;
t08c; waiftote. and lmttecmttav 1 #&#13;
* Pit per lev-' - • -:i-. •''&#13;
Sometimes.&#13;
"Papa, what is love at first sight?"&#13;
"It is what a young woman feels&#13;
for an old man with a million."&#13;
Important to lsld*hors&gt;&#13;
Examine- carefully every bottle of&#13;
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy tor&#13;
Infants and children, and see that it&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature of&#13;
In Use For Over&#13;
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoris&#13;
Golf Crank. N*&#13;
"Devoted to golf, isn't he?"&#13;
"I should say so! Why, his walk in&#13;
life Is mainly around the golf course."&#13;
HOW TO TREAT PIMPLES AND&#13;
BLACKHEADS&#13;
For pimples and blackheads the following&#13;
is a most effective and economical&#13;
treatment: Gently smear the&#13;
affected parts with Cuticura Ointment,&#13;
on the end of the finger, but&#13;
do not rub. Wash off the Cuticura&#13;
Ointment in five minutes with Cuticura&#13;
Soap and hot water and continue&#13;
bathing for some minutes. This treatment&#13;
is best on rising and retiring.&#13;
At other times use Cuticura Soap&#13;
freely for the toilet and bath, to assist&#13;
in preventing inflammation, irritation&#13;
and clogging of the. pores, the&#13;
common cause of pimples, blackheads,&#13;
redness and roughness, yellow, oily,&#13;
mothy and other unwholesome conditions&#13;
of the skin.&#13;
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address postcard&#13;
"Cuticura-, Dept. L, Boston."—Adv.&#13;
A Promoter.&#13;
"You say that Selfridge is a pro*&#13;
moter. What does he promote?"&#13;
"His own1 interest, chiefly."&#13;
A Purist&#13;
"You called me a bone-headed jelly&#13;
fish!"&#13;
"Yes."&#13;
"Well, I don't care about your opinion,&#13;
but, for heaven's sake, don't mix&#13;
your metaphors."&#13;
boy,&#13;
Where His Thoughts Were.&#13;
You'd scarcely expect this of a&#13;
but here is what happened:&#13;
It was the last half of the ninth, and&#13;
the Indians were one run behind. With&#13;
that gameneBs that has characterized&#13;
their play this season they worked a&#13;
runner around and tied the score.&#13;
Then the battle for the winning run&#13;
began. An Indian walked and stole&#13;
Becond. One was out and a hit would&#13;
win the game. *&#13;
Up in the stand sat mother, father&#13;
and young son! Mother and father had&#13;
their eyes riveted on the man at bat,&#13;
casting an occasional glance at the&#13;
runner on second to be sure he wasn't&#13;
caught napping. The boy's mind&#13;
seemed suddenly to leave the game&#13;
and, just when the excitement was&#13;
tensest, he turned to his mother and&#13;
said:&#13;
"Mother, how much is thirteen times&#13;
a -dollar and a half?"—Indianapolis&#13;
News.&#13;
EYE STRAIN&#13;
Relieved by Quitting Coffee.&#13;
Many cases of defective vision are&#13;
caused by the habitual use of coffee.&#13;
It is said that in Arabia where coffee&#13;
is used in large quantities, many&#13;
lose their eyesight at about fifty. Tea&#13;
contains the same drug, caffeine, as&#13;
coffee. %&#13;
A N. J. woman writes to the point&#13;
concerning eye trouble and coffee.&#13;
She says:&#13;
"My son was for years troubled with&#13;
his eyes. Re tried several kinds of&#13;
glasses without relief. The optician&#13;
said there was a defect in his eyes&#13;
which was hard to reach.&#13;
"He used to drink coffee, as we all&#13;
did, and finally quit it and began to&#13;
use Postum. That was three years&#13;
ago and he has not had to wear&#13;
glasses and has had no trouble with&#13;
his eyes since.&#13;
'1 was always fond of tea and coffee&#13;
and finally became so nervous I could&#13;
hardly sit still long enough to eat a&#13;
meal. My heart waa in such a condition&#13;
I thought I might die at any&#13;
time. /&#13;
"Medicine did not give me relief&#13;
and I was almost desperate. It waa&#13;
about thin time we decided to quit coffee&#13;
and use Postum, and hare used it&#13;
ever since. 1 am in perfect health.&#13;
No' trouble now with my heart and&#13;
never felt better in my life. / '&#13;
"Postum baa been a great blessing,&#13;
to us aD, particularly to my soft and&#13;
ftame given by Postum Co., Battle&#13;
Mien. Read "The Road to Wf IV&#13;
jpe»? to pkga. Pogtum now comes in two forma:&#13;
, Regular Poetum—must be well&#13;
lotted., *5e end t*e packages,, ..&#13;
IfRjtant Poetam—is a aolpble powder.&#13;
A teeapeeaful dissolree qe&amp;ily&#13;
in a cup e&lt; hot water an&lt;t, with jcream.&#13;
•ad sugar, makes a deUeipns beverage&#13;
Inetaatry. 80c end 6et&gt; tin*.- ,.&#13;
ft^Ta* eoat per eup of both kind* It&#13;
about the same. .,'. .. '^^&#13;
•There* a Reaeca" for Poetum.&#13;
-J- •i&lt; -K's.'&#13;
!&#13;
j&#13;
V&#13;
j&#13;
•~ v . j .&#13;
5- .^ * • * « * ^ LrfuLi1' 1?*%} ^ - # i &gt; ^&#13;
MiStSf*1"&#13;
* i ~»4&#13;
•'ji**!i&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
K&#13;
,&lt;#.'*&gt;&#13;
/&#13;
_ • • The Governor's&#13;
A Novclization of&#13;
Alice Bradley's Play&#13;
% GERTR UDE STEVENSON&#13;
nUartratioM from Photographs of the Stage Production)&#13;
i "&#13;
Ooprris**. Mil. CPnhllcitWi Bightt Beiemfl) by Part* 3&#13;
•YNOP8IS,&#13;
Daniel 81ad« suddenly advances from a&#13;
penniless miner to a millionaire. He Is&#13;
ambitious to become governor of the&#13;
state. His simple, home-loving wife falls&#13;
to rise to the new conditions. Blade meets&#13;
I Katherine, daughter of Senator Strickland,&#13;
and sees in her all that Mary Is not&#13;
j Blade decides to separate from his wife&#13;
iand takes rooms at his club. His desertion&#13;
of his wife and his constant attendance&#13;
on Katharine Strickland causes&#13;
public comment.&#13;
CHAPTER V—Continued.&#13;
L "Well, I don't care how you get It—&#13;
I want It It's vital. I've got to have&#13;
ten thousand to go to Europe. Every-&#13;
Ibody'e going—Mrs. Webb, Mrs. O'Don-&#13;
Inell—" and her voice trailed off into&#13;
a pettish whine.&#13;
"Yes, I know all about that crowd,"&#13;
iMerrltt snarled. "Sunny places for&#13;
shady people." 1 "Wesley! I need clothes. I've told&#13;
everybody I'm going," and the peev-&#13;
&gt;lsh woman glared at hex husband.&#13;
Then she added suddenly: "Can't the&#13;
senator ask Slade?"&#13;
"Oh, my God, Fannie!" the hectored&#13;
man groaned. "Can I suggest that?&#13;
A rival candidate 1 I've mortgaged&#13;
my property up to the hilt now for&#13;
clothes—but sooner than—"&#13;
"I don't care—I need clothes," hia&#13;
wife interrupted, rising and walking&#13;
restlessly about the room. "I've got&#13;
to go to. Europe. The devil take your&#13;
excuses."&#13;
Then, with a .judden change of&#13;
thought, she cooed. "Wesley!"&#13;
Merritt stood with his elbow on the&#13;
mantel, looking moodily into the fire.&#13;
"Wesley," ehe cooed again. "Why&#13;
don't you—if you can't get in—why&#13;
don't you boom Slade? They say he's&#13;
buying everybody."&#13;
."Well, we've been bought" Her&#13;
husband's tone indicated Just how&#13;
little consideration Buch a plan would&#13;
have from him.&#13;
"No, but you've been defeated six&#13;
times," she objected, determined to&#13;
argue, this new possibility that had&#13;
just occurred to her. "Wes—If the&#13;
senator has gone back on you—look&#13;
out Sell out. I^must have clothes."&#13;
She stopped as" the senator himself&#13;
entered from the smoking room.&#13;
"They're asking for you, Wesley,"&#13;
and Merritt, glad of the interruption,&#13;
hurried out ~ ~~&#13;
"Ah—good evening, Fannie." Strickland&#13;
took her hand in his smooth,&#13;
affable way. "I'm sorry, Fannie, that&#13;
Wesley doesn't take more to Slade.&#13;
It's a great mistake. Why don't you&#13;
tell him so?"&#13;
"Oh, my gracious!" her manner&#13;
changing to suit the occasion. "What&#13;
influence could I possibly have with&#13;
my husband? He's a man of iron&#13;
wilt Why, I have to do everything&#13;
he tells me myself. I wouldn't dare&#13;
to meddle with his affairs."&#13;
"Well, Just coax him, Fannie* the&#13;
way a nice, sweet womanly woman&#13;
can," urged the senator, knowing full&#13;
well that the Merritts had one menage&#13;
for private use and quite another&#13;
for publication.&#13;
' "I want to go to Europe and my&#13;
husband says he can't afford it**&#13;
Bar voice dropped to a sugary whine.&#13;
"We can't all be millionaires Ilka&#13;
Mr. Slade, can we?" Just think. It&#13;
would cost $10,000, to amy nothing of&#13;
clothes."&#13;
: "Dont worry about that trip to Europe,&#13;
Fannie," the- senator advised,&#13;
meaningly. '1 think," and he panted&#13;
significantly, "I think you'll earn ft"&#13;
With that ha started toward the&#13;
•moking-room. "Wesley," ha called,&#13;
and a s Merritt appeared in the doorway,&#13;
remarked: "1 believe your wife&#13;
has something to say to you/*&#13;
j -Oh, yea, Wesley—I hare something&#13;
Wont important to say."&#13;
i "Well, if it's about that trip to En?&#13;
bone,* growled Merritt, aseertlnf himself&#13;
as he would never dare to do&#13;
•wham ho was alone with nor.&#13;
"Npwt Wesley, oome with me to the&#13;
•balcony," Penile coaxed in. what abe&#13;
laonjtdsTsd her prettiest manner.&#13;
r l W t t cxcuM us, senator?"&#13;
Aa l£aaiedraggtd nor husband out&#13;
jof too room Haras, retntniet from&#13;
jtna smoking-room, and Katharine, retro*&#13;
her talk with tan re»&#13;
iv« atone. Kaih-&#13;
01 at&#13;
la^sjnsBajajaaassVKsBBXT ssSBsl BSBBVSBBBBI eaft&#13;
ibsjf folding aafftse of&#13;
into osss**&#13;
I've been hunting for one sign of the&#13;
girl I knew. Your notes—the very letters&#13;
you wrote me from Europe sounded&#13;
as if some one else had written&#13;
them. Who Is it who's occupying&#13;
your mind, Katherine?"&#13;
"I don'* know what you mean," the&#13;
girl evaded.&#13;
"You used to care a lot for me,"&#13;
reflectively, his mind recalling the&#13;
warm, eager welcome of her arms the&#13;
day he had declared his love for her,&#13;
att years before.&#13;
"I only thought I Ad," she declared,&#13;
but her eyes dropped before hia steady&#13;
"You did carer positively. "You&#13;
did care. I could tell. When you went&#13;
away the first time you did. Why,&#13;
it was only a question of my luck&#13;
turning. You were going to wait for&#13;
me. I always knew that Then I&#13;
met Slade. Even the senator's got a&#13;
good word for me now. But you—"&#13;
his voice broke and he leaned forward&#13;
and laid his hand over hers as it&#13;
rested idly on the table.&#13;
"Heavens!" he exclaimed, as he&#13;
snatched his hand away. "What I&#13;
ought to have done was to have ridden&#13;
up here, taken you over my shoul-&#13;
«Wt»&gt;t» h w s a s i to y e a r no btp*»&#13;
sfsssieliUy. 1 onn*t fin* a&#13;
hsfesj Wit* B t w etaoe yon&#13;
"I Couldn't—Oh, Rob! I Couldn't"&#13;
der and galloped off with you on a&#13;
broncho."&#13;
"Oh, Rob," she breathed, really&#13;
pleased at his domineering tone.&#13;
"That's the sort of a man to gat&#13;
on with a woman like yon," he accused.&#13;
"A brute I A' man could do&#13;
anything with yon if he once conquered&#13;
you. There's nothing in these&#13;
long understandings," he broke .off,&#13;
disgustedly. "I've lost yon and I dont&#13;
know how, or why. I do know yon&#13;
liked me better than anyone else, and&#13;
I adore yon yet" he finiahed, impulsively&#13;
clasping her hand with both&#13;
of hia. Katherine patted hia strong&#13;
lingers with her free hand.&#13;
"Please, Rob, I know yon do," and&#13;
she left him to peas bank and forth&#13;
the length of the room. "I c a n t -&#13;
she sighed. Than hurriedly: "If I&#13;
only had the oonrnge. Qn, Rob!" and&#13;
aha turned on him with a hslploas&#13;
little gesture.&#13;
"What do yon moan by eomragar"&#13;
ho demanded.&#13;
"I mean I'd have to—to live hero&#13;
in this little hole la the West," ana&#13;
burst forth, vsboauouttf. "No no, I&#13;
oant faoe it—always!"&#13;
"Wen, suppone it dM mean to stay&#13;
barer Bob stood with folded anna.&#13;
"It's a noma. frrsryooa iseoUlaa&#13;
more or lean at scene, Katharine!"&#13;
hia Volte/ saoame mora tender, "do&#13;
7*t reaUjr mean t b a t r And ho pat&#13;
his anas around Kir tnoojeors and&#13;
looked long and&#13;
'Vat l ~ f oant *rirrnv*&#13;
anally&#13;
from his embrace. "We'd be poor&#13;
and then we'd be like the Merritts,"&#13;
with a tragic spread of her arms. "I'm&#13;
used to the world. I want to live—&#13;
everywhare—to see things. I'd die&#13;
here, vegetating!"&#13;
"Oh, no you wouldn't" Hayes started&#13;
to remonstrate, when the door of&#13;
the smoking room opened and Slade&#13;
appeared.&#13;
"I was just going to look you up,&#13;
Robert. I thought you wouldn't go&#13;
without seeing me, but—"&#13;
"No, of course not" Hayes did not&#13;
attempt to conceal his annoyance at&#13;
the interruption. Katherine moved&#13;
'slowly toward the door.&#13;
"I'm not driving you away, am I,&#13;
Miss Katherine?"&#13;
Before she could answer Fannie&#13;
Merritt came sweeping In. She was&#13;
radiant Her beaming face and Merritts&#13;
sullen one made the situation&#13;
plain to all In the room.&#13;
"My dear," ehe exclaimed, turning&#13;
to Katherine. "You were quite right!&#13;
Mr. Slade is a great man. I'm leaving&#13;
my Wesley here to work for him. I'm&#13;
off for Europe next week," she gushed&#13;
aa Hayes helped her Into her evening&#13;
wrap, "leaving my peer, dear boy all&#13;
alone,' You will bo good to him, won't&#13;
you? Good night Mr. Slade; thank&#13;
yon," and, closely followed by Katherine,&#13;
she hurried out to her waiting&#13;
motor.&#13;
Blade's face was a study In amused&#13;
complacency as he realized that he&#13;
need fear nothing more from Wesley&#13;
Merritt or his "tin-horn tooting sheet"&#13;
The self-esteem that was slowly but&#13;
completely obscuring clear vision,&#13;
prevented him from seeing that his&#13;
money, not himself, had brought about&#13;
the change. The money he had made&#13;
was his—was he—himself. He confused&#13;
its vast power to bend the Merritts&#13;
and their world with his own&#13;
strength.&#13;
L CHAPTER VI.&#13;
"Mrs. Slade won't sign over the cottage,"&#13;
Hayes began abruptly. "I can't&#13;
do anything more."&#13;
"She must"/ Slade uttered the&#13;
words through set teeth. "She can't&#13;
live there. Robert, you are the only&#13;
person who knows us both thoroughly.&#13;
I want you to bring this matter to a&#13;
finish ..quietly and kindly and—now."&#13;
"Why don't you see her and have&#13;
it out with her?" Hayes suggested.&#13;
"We had it out the night I left the&#13;
house and told her not to waft up for&#13;
me," Slade reminded him. "I never&#13;
quarrel with anyone more than once."&#13;
He eyed Hayes critically for a minute.&#13;
"You're with me, aren't you*?"&#13;
as If an idea had juet occurred to&#13;
him.&#13;
"I'm awfully sorry for Mrs. Slade,"&#13;
Hayes hegan, when Slade interrupted.&#13;
"Look here, Hayes—I want a divorce,"&#13;
and he seated himself squarely&#13;
In front of the astonished Hayes.&#13;
_ "A divorce?" _&#13;
•That's ^hat I want," and his lips&#13;
shut grimly.&#13;
"But, my God!" Hayes was amazed.&#13;
"You didn't want it In the first place.&#13;
All you wanted was to live your own&#13;
life. Do you expect me to help you&#13;
get rid of Mrs. Slader&#13;
"Don't go crazy," Slade advised, not&#13;
a suggestion of feeling evident In his&#13;
voice or manner.&#13;
"If you do you are due for a surprise.&#13;
I can't go sticking a knife into&#13;
that woman's heart I won't"&#13;
"You're ah—1 of a lawyer!" Blade's&#13;
anger was rising.&#13;
"I'm not that sort of a lawyer,"&#13;
Hayee rose as if to dismiss the subject&#13;
"Whatever sort of a lawyer you are&#13;
I made you, Hayes."&#13;
"I know yon did," returned Hayes,&#13;
bitterly. "You've told mo that before&#13;
and this is what comes of letting a&#13;
man make you!"&#13;
"Yon bet, rank Ingratitude," hotly.&#13;
Hayes leaned forward, his arms on&#13;
hit knees and looked Slade square In&#13;
the eyes.&#13;
"I honestly think you're drunk with&#13;
all this power and prosperity. That&#13;
little woman waa the apple of your&#13;
eye. I always said to myself: There's&#13;
one man who does stick to hit wife!*&#13;
X didnt believe wild horses could drag&#13;
yon away from homo—"&#13;
"One minute!" interrupted Blade.&#13;
"All that ha&gt; nothing to do with yon.&#13;
Neither yon' nor anyone living can&#13;
interfere with mo now. Hdve yon&#13;
•topped to figure out and I say it with&#13;
all kindness and with all respect what&#13;
sort of a governor* lady Mrs, Sladewould&#13;
make, feeling as-ebe does?"&#13;
"Wall* what sort of a governor&#13;
would yon make if yon wore divoroedr&#13;
Bayet onosttonod, mockingly.&#13;
Those man in there,* and ho&#13;
jerked hia thumb toward the amokteg-&#13;
room door; "win thoy stand for&#13;
t h a t r&#13;
"They've got to—I own thorn, boots&#13;
and all!"&#13;
"But yon dont own pubtte opinion,"&#13;
all tat&#13;
tha&#13;
of tno eenator*s s a w n to a l&#13;
clde where she's to live—but It iunat&#13;
be at some distance."&#13;
"You won't get your divorce&#13;
through desertion," Hayes scoffed. "I&#13;
know her. You can't do It."&#13;
"I can't do It, eh?" Blade's eyes&#13;
held a nasty expression. "That's&#13;
what they've been telling me all my&#13;
life. Ever since I was a barefooted&#13;
little brat running around the mines&#13;
they've said to me: 'You can't .do&#13;
this and you can't do that' But I&#13;
always did i t Let me tell you, young&#13;
man, after all I've conquered no woman&#13;
is going, to stop me!&#13;
"Can't do i t eh?" he repeated, pugnaciously.&#13;
"You watch me do it! You&#13;
young jackanapes! I'm as good aa&#13;
deserted^iow. The only question is:&#13;
Are you going to see Mrs. Slade—put&#13;
her aboard a train east or not?"&#13;
"Mrs. Slade has been my best&#13;
friend," Hayes answered quietly. "I&#13;
love her dearly—I—" his voice broke.&#13;
"All right That settles i t You&#13;
turn over every scrap of paper of mine&#13;
you have by"—he thought a moment—&#13;
"by tomorrow night. Then you can&#13;
walk the ties to the devil, young man,&#13;
and go back where I found you."&#13;
As Hayes turned to go, Strickland&#13;
hurried Into the room.&#13;
"Merritt has just introduced a very&#13;
unexpected subject in ..the smokingroom—&#13;
the question of—well, you've&#13;
got to know it, Slade—the question of&#13;
Mrs. Slade."&#13;
Hayes wheeled around and watched&#13;
to see what effect this announcement&#13;
would have on Slade.&#13;
(TO?) BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
INDOLENCE A NATIONAL TRAIT&#13;
What Are Known as "Leaners" Decidedly&#13;
In the Majority Among&#13;
the Natives of Mexico.&#13;
"Mexican indolence has always had&#13;
something to do with making Mexican&#13;
national history," said a traveler.&#13;
"Mexico has a class of natives called&#13;
'leaners' from their habit of leaning&#13;
against the Bide of a building to roll&#13;
a cigarette. Once in this position the&#13;
leaner adheres to it for hours.&#13;
"Tradition declares that a Mexican&#13;
leaner once sued an American railroad&#13;
builder for pulling down a building&#13;
against which the plaintiff had been&#13;
leaning. Damages were awarded for&#13;
severe shock and inconvenience, and&#13;
the court took occasion to recommend&#13;
a law lequiring one hour's notioe under&#13;
similar circumstances.&#13;
"Mexican military forces are to&#13;
some extent recruited from leaners.&#13;
Mexican history has record of an&#13;
insurgent force which was being&#13;
pushed forward victoriously when it&#13;
came to a stream which had swollen&#13;
over.night. The general was a leaner.&#13;
He bivouacked to wait till the stream&#13;
should subside, but it did not subside&#13;
and he-withdrew. He could easily have&#13;
bridged a narrow cascade less than a&#13;
mile-irom-his- ramp, but that woujd&#13;
have required a fresh initiative, which&#13;
has no place In the practical philosophy&#13;
of a leanef.&#13;
"But he succeeded, anyhow, because&#13;
his adversary was also a leaner.&#13;
When the river fell the insurgent&#13;
force came back, crossed wiUiout opposition,&#13;
and casually took possession&#13;
of the contested territory."&#13;
wna an arffoepnTasBsip.eaewsjwin^ nni&#13;
sooth. T i n going to befy naif of&#13;
Ma**** paper tonight I guana that&#13;
w * bo pobttroatnlon enoagn for BO.&#13;
Mere than that, r n stand at a men&#13;
aim nan assorted fetal Tears&#13;
• v OF^BBB» tj^ewneo ' eseosTVs. esremsasonP ^o ssnl Ve^sr&#13;
TOO QUICK WITH HIS ANSWER&#13;
Response of Court Witness Put Him&#13;
Unnecessarily In a 8o me what Unfavorable&#13;
Light&#13;
At a session of county court In aa&#13;
outlying country, a village merchant&#13;
was prosecuted for "arson." It developed&#13;
that the business men of&#13;
the town had retained a "special&#13;
prosecutor" to assist In the case. The&#13;
attorney for the defendant Invariably&#13;
asked each witness If he had ever con*&#13;
trtbuted anything toward the support&#13;
of the "special prosecutor." One old&#13;
man was very zealous in his efforts&#13;
to convict the defendant The attorney&#13;
started to ask him the regular&#13;
"contribution" question, but the wit*&#13;
noss interrupted him and gave his&#13;
answer in the middle of the question,&#13;
with the following result:&#13;
"Q. Have you ever contributed anything&#13;
toward the support—'&#13;
"A No, sir; I never did—not a&#13;
cent!!!"&#13;
"—of your family V&#13;
The witness was excused amid the&#13;
laughter of the court, jury and audience.&#13;
Ho left the room, mad as a&#13;
hornet and waa heard to mutter: "I&#13;
aint got no family."—Wast Publishing&#13;
company.&#13;
Average Stature.&#13;
Tno difference between the tallest&#13;
and shortest races la the world la&#13;
one foot eight andyone eighth inched,&#13;
and tha average height of the world's&#13;
peoples is five foot ftve and one-half&#13;
Needn't eVve Op Hope.&#13;
Occaskmafty an old bachelor&#13;
that no woman would have hiss,&#13;
thata are lotg of eseetteat&#13;
who are not no nwfnUy&#13;
All Right?&#13;
A North Alabama street father who&#13;
has a passing regard for accuracy la&#13;
speech and an honest dislike of slang,&#13;
made an effort the other day to bribe&#13;
his young hopeful to forego the misfit&#13;
phrase, "all right," which be has&#13;
long been working overtime.&#13;
"Johnny," said the father, "if you'll&#13;
break yourself of saying 'all right'&#13;
and refrain from using that slang for&#13;
two weeks I'll give you—well, I'll&#13;
give you—one dollar.'*&#13;
"When'll I begin?"&#13;
"Now, this very minute," said papa.&#13;
"All right!" Bald Johnny.—Indianapolis&#13;
News.&#13;
The Real Things.&#13;
Mrs. Uplift—My dear madam, what&#13;
do you think are the best methods for&#13;
instituting sweeping reforms?&#13;
Mrs. Downrite—Plenty of elbow&#13;
.grease with a broom.&#13;
• • —&#13;
nambot-nf&#13;
tnffftTrffWf anal - ss^atoag pnqpia^of/&#13;
Tnaataa^ Tnatr-vaoi^ad Udnyaasji&#13;
thoy had II m a t e ggesV _&#13;
Makes the laundress happy—that's Red&#13;
Cross Ball Blue. Makes beautiful, clear&#13;
white clothes. All good grocers. Adv.&#13;
It does not take a very large wad to&#13;
make some persons purse proud.&#13;
HOW WOMEN&#13;
AVOID&#13;
OPERATIONS&#13;
By Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable&#13;
Compound.&#13;
Cleveland, Ohio —"My l e f t s i d e&#13;
pained me so for several years that I&#13;
^^''iiHiJiiiiiii^iljjjIjI'ijjjS^jjjjjiJllJl expected to have to&#13;
undergo an operation,&#13;
but the first&#13;
b o t t l e I took of&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
!!j|||iVegetable Cora-&#13;
($$!j|l pound relieved me of&#13;
i!!ii:i.i.L:[ii t n e p a j n g Jn m y 8 J J a&#13;
and I continued its&#13;
use until I became&#13;
p r e g u l a r and free&#13;
^ y 'from pains. I had&#13;
I asked several doctors&#13;
if there was anything I could&#13;
take to help me and they said there&#13;
was nothing that they knew of. I'ara&#13;
thankful for such a good medicine and&#13;
will always give it the highest praise."&#13;
— Mrs. C. H. GRIFFITH, 7305 Madison&#13;
Ave., Cleveland, Ohio.&#13;
Hanover, Pa. —"I suffered from female&#13;
trouble and the pdins were so bad&#13;
at times that I could not sit down. The&#13;
doctor advised a severe operation but&#13;
my husband got me Lydia £. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound and I experienced&#13;
great relief in a short time. Now 1 feel&#13;
like a new person and «an do ^hardV&#13;
day's work and not mind i t What joy&#13;
and happiness it is to be well once more.&#13;
I am always ready and willing to speak&#13;
a good word for the Compound. "—Mrs.&#13;
ADA WILT, 196 Stock S t , Hanover, Pa,&#13;
If there are any complications yon&#13;
do not understand write to Lydia E.&#13;
Plnkham Medicine Co. (confidential)!&#13;
Lynn,Mass. Your letter will be opened,&#13;
read and answered by a woman and&#13;
held In strict confidence.&#13;
The Wretchedness&#13;
of Constipation&#13;
Can quickly bo overcoma by&#13;
GARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS.&#13;
Purely vegetable&#13;
—act surely and&#13;
gently on the&#13;
Ever. Cure&#13;
BUiousnesa,&#13;
Heada&#13;
c h e ,&#13;
Dizsiness,&#13;
and Indigestion. They do their duty;&#13;
WALL POL, SMALL DOSK, SMALL PRO,&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
DR. J . D. KELLOeQ'S ASTHMA •nnwaily fof tHa prompt wflfjf of&#13;
Antrim* a n d Hay Pavar. Aak Your&#13;
tfrusftiet for It. Writ* fsr na UMfLfc&#13;
« * * • pHHLBMAKIHQ&#13;
i&#13;
•A&#13;
\ '• A j&#13;
{*$**&#13;
&amp;Mfci±&#13;
• / . * • •&#13;
I&#13;
. ' • *&#13;
- **&#13;
&gt;V&#13;
• v&#13;
N&#13;
vrf.ityv. . •:•&amp;, ^ j t ± V . &gt; nlBBBBBBBBlnSBBBl SSS sssHi MM&#13;
tf; &lt;&#13;
\fc&#13;
fi&#13;
;t«-,&#13;
•Ti* .A.&#13;
"K&#13;
.M&#13;
• * * ' -&#13;
i.&gt;^y&#13;
r * * ' " !&#13;
I Notice!&#13;
psup^ •W *W ::^-. , ^ , 1 . - ^ . Wi'-'.VtJ'. - / • ^ v&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
- I We wish to state that after A&#13;
rA having been closed down for 9&#13;
9 th,e past two weeks for re- 4&#13;
A pairs, we are again ready for&#13;
A onsiness aud solicit a share&#13;
d of your patronage.&#13;
I The Hoyt Bros. \&#13;
s I&#13;
granted dithose&#13;
who in their&#13;
are sufficiently well&#13;
To Those Concerned i t the 8th&#13;
Grade Eiaiioatioo&#13;
The County Board of Exumioers&#13;
have taken a good deal of time,&#13;
have looked over th« papers of&#13;
applicants very carefully and impartially&#13;
aud have&#13;
plcmas to&#13;
judgement&#13;
prepared to entitle them to one.&#13;
If there should be anyone who&#13;
feels dissatisfied with their grades&#13;
received, the commissioner will&#13;
gladly go over his papers with&#13;
him if he will come to the office&#13;
auy Saturday.&#13;
The Board would be only too&#13;
glad to give a diploma to all who&#13;
apply, but we would be doing&#13;
many boys and girls an injustice&#13;
by giving them a diploma. One&#13;
should be WELL prepared for high&#13;
school before entering, then the&#13;
work will be of such a character&#13;
that it will be a credit to the&#13;
student as well as to the school&#13;
from which they come.&#13;
County Board"! Hugh G. Aidrich&#13;
of y Glenn Grieve&#13;
Examiners J Arthur Rice&#13;
Council Proceedings&#13;
Regular, June 1, 19H&#13;
Council convened and called (o order by&#13;
Prefl. Reason. Trustees present: Smith,&#13;
Read, 8warthonl, Lavey, Mclntyre, Absent:&#13;
Faruara. Minutes of lasl meeting&#13;
read and approved.&#13;
The following bills were read, approved&#13;
and orders drawn to pay same:&#13;
A. Carpenter (16 80&#13;
Frauds Harris 11 00&#13;
J. Keating 17 00&#13;
C. Henry 17 50&#13;
M, Lavey—..-...... v~i.... — . . . . . —6 00&#13;
E. Breningstall 10 00&#13;
A. Carpenter 2 00&#13;
Duane Lavey 6 00&#13;
Burt Reason 23 75&#13;
Dink*I &amp; Dunbar 77 88&#13;
Clinton Light and Power Co.&#13;
April and May 112 00&#13;
A. Carpenter 2 00&#13;
G. Carpenter 4 00&#13;
Preg. Reason appointed Alex Mclntyre&#13;
and W. A. Carr members of Board of&#13;
Review for village.&#13;
Upon motion coucil adjourned.&#13;
W. J. Dunbar. Village Clerk&#13;
Special, June 12, 1914&#13;
Council convened and called to order by&#13;
Pres. Reason. Trustee* present: Farnam,&#13;
Mclntyre, Smith and Swarthout. Absent:&#13;
Read and Lavey. Minutes of last meeting&#13;
rend and approved.&#13;
The following bills were read, approved&#13;
and orders drawn to pay the same.&#13;
W. A. Carr, Board of Review I 6 00&#13;
A. Mclntyre, " " . . . . 6 00&#13;
JVC. Dinket, Bd. Review, Assessor 26 00&#13;
Doubleday Bros., supplies 1 57&#13;
The following resolution was read and&#13;
adopted.&#13;
Be it resolved by the Common Council&#13;
of the Village of Pinckney that the amount&#13;
of money to be spread npon the tax roil of&#13;
the Village of Pinckney for the year 1914&#13;
•hall be the sum of $2,000.00. The same&#13;
to constitute a general fund.&#13;
Moved and supported that the street&#13;
committee instruct John Dinkel to paint&#13;
and letter five speed limit and one danger&#13;
•ign to be placed at points needed as per&#13;
^iaptractions of street committee.&#13;
^ + ^ p o n morion council adjourned.&#13;
W. J . Dunbar, Vi llage Clerk&#13;
TK OP mCBtf&amp;AW, tii* frooate xoortjor&#13;
CAROLINE J. POtf»B, Defeated&#13;
Estate*!&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Mrs. S. A. Collin? returned to&#13;
her home in Waterloo last weak&#13;
after a three weeks visit with her&#13;
daughter, Mrs. E. A. Sprout.&#13;
Clare Ledwidge spent the week&#13;
e«d in Howell,&#13;
Chas. Frost and wife spent Sunday&#13;
at the home of her parents&#13;
near Howell.&#13;
The Misses Mary and Margaret&#13;
Greiner, Clare Ledwidge and Rev.&#13;
Fr. Coyle of Pinckney were entertained&#13;
at the home of R, M. Ledwidge&#13;
Friday afternoon.&#13;
Art LaRowe and family visited&#13;
at the home of Thos. Coleman of&#13;
How9ll, Sunday. Mrs. LaRo*e&#13;
and daughter remained for a&#13;
couple of weeks.&#13;
Dede Hinchey returned home&#13;
Saturday from her school work in&#13;
Minneapolis, Minn.&#13;
Mrs. Dwight Wood of Caro is&#13;
visiting Mrs. Julia Pangborn.&#13;
Miss Mollie Wilson is the guest&#13;
of her sister, Mrs. L. E. Howlett,&#13;
of Howell.&#13;
Mary Fitzsimmons was an over&#13;
Sunday visitor in Jackson.&#13;
Mrs. Schackleton of Howell visited&#13;
her daughter, Mrs. C. Frost,&#13;
Friday. Saturday, accompanied&#13;
by her granddaughter Helen, she&#13;
went to Orchard Lake for a few&#13;
days visit. ,&#13;
Margaret Kuhn of Gregory was&#13;
the guest of Muriel McClear Sunday.&#13;
Arthur Bullis took the following&#13;
men to the matinee at Jackson&#13;
Friday: Will Roche, Cbas. Frost,&#13;
Wm. Ledwidge and Rob. Edwards.&#13;
Eilieen McClear of Cadillac is&#13;
home for the summer vacation.&#13;
She goes back again next year to&#13;
a higher position with an increase&#13;
in salary.&#13;
Catherine Driver spent Tuesday&#13;
in Stockbridge.&#13;
Glenn Gardner and family of&#13;
Stockbridge visited at E. A.&#13;
Sprout's Monday.&#13;
The Misses Eliza and Pearl&#13;
Hanes visited at the home of Orlo&#13;
Hanes Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Shivley&#13;
of Lansing and his mother, Mrs.&#13;
MacFarlan, visited at the home of&#13;
Mrs. Alice Hoff, Sunday.&#13;
%Wm. Ledwidge and family made&#13;
an auto trip to Adrian Wednesday&#13;
to attend the graduation exercises&#13;
at St. Joseph's Academy. Their&#13;
daughter Germaiue is a member&#13;
of this years class.&#13;
- • • • • • -&#13;
a&#13;
tS* couaty WLlTjMStonr&#13;
P08TI&#13;
1« und«r»igsed baring beta appointed, by tt»&#13;
iofFrobre of uidConntv,Ootaatit&gt;ioa«fa&#13;
t h« matter of said estate, sad tot&#13;
i the 16th. «if of 5 a f r A D.19M&#13;
seJi vra* brsaSowaagi&#13;
M6isnr*lilBteifeJMt&#13;
issnttMr.elslsjBtoas&#13;
' lent:&#13;
ij gtaw that we WUISMS* etstjs&#13;
tea e/oleok a. mTof&#13;
r.CMk^taVaaOllA&#13;
to restive sat ssaoiSne&#13;
Always Lead to Better Health&#13;
Serious sicknesses start in disorders of&#13;
the stomach, liver and kidneys. The best&#13;
corrective and preventive is Dr. Ring's&#13;
New Life Pills. They Purify the Blcocf—&#13;
Prevent Constipation; keep Liver, Kidneys&#13;
and Bowels in healthy condition. Give&#13;
you better health by ridding the system of&#13;
fermenting and gassy foods. Effective&#13;
and mild. 25c. Recommended by C. G.&#13;
Meyer, the druggist.&#13;
NorthT.aji.burg&#13;
Miss Clara Carpenter is visiting&#13;
her uncle in Dexter.&#13;
Rev. Qstrander of Pinckney visited&#13;
some of his friends here the&#13;
latter part of last week.&#13;
Mrs. Una Rounsifer took dinner&#13;
with her parents here Thursday.&#13;
The Ladies Aid was very pleasantly&#13;
entertained by Mrs. 6ert&#13;
Nath last Thursday afternoon. *&#13;
Ralph Bennett and wife and C.&#13;
M. Bennett were Sunday gnetti at&#13;
the home of Dave Bennett of Putnam&#13;
/.&#13;
A Heart To Heart&#13;
1 cllK&#13;
ODAY we want to talk to you e s -&#13;
pecially. We want to tell you—&#13;
right out from the shoulder, that if you&#13;
don't buy your 4th of July suit here&#13;
you are making a great mistake.&#13;
We know our stock is unexcelled, our values unequalled, our prices&#13;
lowest consistent with highest quality. We know this. We want&#13;
you to realize it too. We ask you to come tomorrow to investigate.&#13;
If you don't take advantage of this opportunity, you are&#13;
simply losing money.&#13;
$10., $12.50, $15., $16.50, $18., $20., $25.&#13;
J. DANCER &amp; COMPANY, Stockbridge&#13;
We Pay YOUP Fare on $15. Purchases This Week&#13;
:t*&#13;
»**£&amp;£* *&#13;
The " A r Killer&#13;
The man who stops his little "ad"&#13;
la not so very wise, bedadl&#13;
Because his advertisements tell'&#13;
The public what he has to sell,&#13;
And if his "ad""is not on deck&#13;
Tbe people pass him up, by heck!&#13;
And none of them will hesitate&#13;
To trade with merchants up to date.&#13;
To stop your *'ad" we would remark,&#13;
Is juttt like winking In the dark—&#13;
You may know what it means, but gee!&#13;
Nobody else can ever see.&#13;
So do not for a moment think&#13;
That when you cut out printer's ink&#13;
You're saving money on the side;&#13;
'Tia merely business suicide.&#13;
—Ex.&#13;
West Marion&#13;
at&#13;
Congha and Colds Weaken the System&#13;
Continued Coughs, Colds and Bronchial&#13;
troubles are depressing aud weaken the&#13;
system. Lost of weight and appetite generally&#13;
follow. Get a 50c bottle of Dr.&#13;
King's New Discovery to-day. It will stop&#13;
your cough. The first dose helps. The&#13;
best medicine for Stubborn Colds Coughs,&#13;
and all Throat and Lung Troubles. Mr. O.&#13;
H. Brown, Muscatine, Ala., writes; "My&#13;
wife was sick during the hot summer&#13;
months and I honestly believe Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery saved her life." Good for&#13;
children. 50c and $1.00 Recommended&#13;
by C. G. Meyer, the druggist. adv.&#13;
Pay your aabaorlptlon tail month.&#13;
You'll do better OQ 4th of July&#13;
Baits at Dancer's than in cities, ad.&#13;
Mrs. Le Barron of Ppntiac is&#13;
spending a few days at the home&#13;
of Dr. H. F. Sigler and wife.&#13;
The Children Day services&#13;
this place were well attended.&#13;
There will be an ice cream aud&#13;
strawberry social at the borne of&#13;
Henry Plummer Friday evening,&#13;
Jone 19. Everybody invited.&#13;
The proceeds will go for the West&#13;
Marion Sunday school.&#13;
The Ladies Aid which met with&#13;
Mrs. George Miller last Thursday&#13;
was well attended. »&#13;
Byron White spent Sunday&#13;
with his parents here.&#13;
George Wellman and family&#13;
visited at EL J. White's Sunday.&#13;
6 0 YBAfflt*-.&#13;
EXPBRIINOl&#13;
1&gt;ADE MAIIKt&#13;
DKSIQNt&#13;
COPYRIGHTS Ac&#13;
A.iyene sending a sketch and description oiaj&#13;
qntckly H*&lt;-eriuin our opinion fr«« whether at&#13;
invention &gt;a probr.bly pAtentaMa. Cotnmanica&#13;
Uons strictly coutldeiitml. HAttOSQOft on Patent*&#13;
•ant free. Oldest aaeiicy loraeeuriufipaianta.&#13;
Patents taken through Unas k Co. recel-'&#13;
fpetteU notice, without chaff, lata* Scientific nmtrkm, Ahandiomoly Jltiatvated weekly,&#13;
jnlatlon ni uny •&lt;&#13;
year; fobrwontn 3$NH &amp; CO&#13;
*&gt;aacn m « 1&#13;
ijatKMt etr&#13;
Juration of uhy aoiantldo Journal Terms 93-1&#13;
rear; four wontna,w «L' S*old^ by alll iusaw*a dfeoairent I AtMWMU&amp;itna.J&#13;
SE&#13;
Howell is on the Map&#13;
We are in Howell&#13;
To Newspaper Publishers&#13;
and Printers&#13;
W e manufacture t h e&#13;
highest grade of&#13;
very&#13;
Brass Leads &amp; Slugs Type&#13;
Brass Galleys Brass Rule in Strips&#13;
Metal Borders&#13;
L. S. Metal Furni&#13;
ture&#13;
Leads and Slugs&#13;
Metal Leaders&#13;
Spaces and Quads&#13;
6 to 48 point&#13;
Brass Labor-8aviog&#13;
Rule&#13;
Metal Quoins, etc.&#13;
Brass" Column Rules&#13;
Brass Circles&#13;
Bras« Leaders&#13;
Brass Round Corners&#13;
Old Column Rules refaced and made&#13;
good as new at a small cosU&#13;
Please remember that we are not in anj&#13;
Trust or Combination and are sure we can&#13;
make it greatly to your advantage to dea!&#13;
with us.&#13;
A copy of our catalogue will be cheer&#13;
fully furnished on application.&#13;
We frequently have good bargains in&#13;
second-hand job Presses, Paper Cutters&#13;
and other printing machinery and&#13;
material.&#13;
Philadelphia PriDters Sopply Ce.&#13;
Mannfactaren of&#13;
Type and High Grade Printing Material&#13;
14 8. 5th St., Philadelphia, Pa.&#13;
Proprietors Penn Type Fonndrjr 2tlf&#13;
{Monuments 1&#13;
..,,-••«,.-*&lt;c -•i**^'*\*rr •••r&#13;
Hat Weather Toak uA Itoattsl BalUUr&#13;
Are* yen ran dow»—Nerfo«f—-Tired? Is&#13;
ererytbiog jgn 4b aa afo&amp;f Yon mr§ not&#13;
kury—you tit aiofcl Twtf 6tomack, lAjn&#13;
Jfioosiraiaod whole sytisi smdi * tbala.&#13;
^ T * a » W B f a l &amp; BttiltetoiWTt pert&#13;
tat want amtter-^baild you tip tat-rlMw.&#13;
your str^ftJT. NoUiint bsHat- 0s»¥ JfiisM&#13;
trio Bitters. Start to-daf. J ICrtv lisMav&#13;
Dados*, HajattrUlsv Me., \rTlssa; 'Oom.&#13;
pUteiy cured me titer, sswsrsd sWatoft rirt. ?• hpJ* 50c* anj IJ.OD. Aeodtiua«Bdf4 by&#13;
. O. Ms^er, the drogfiss.&#13;
W H E N Y O U COME OVER TO T H E&#13;
BIG CELEBRATION JULY 4th&#13;
Stop in and see as. You doa't need feel under&#13;
obligation to bay. We welcome people to look&#13;
aroandt wapecially strangers. We are located&#13;
directly&#13;
Opposite the Courthouse&#13;
Bazaar&#13;
and&#13;
•tv hook Tor Tbe Red Prim*"&#13;
If yon are contemplating&#13;
5 getting a monument, marker,&#13;
S or anfching for tne cemetery,&#13;
I see or write „&#13;
|S. S. PLATT&#13;
A HOWELL, MICH.&#13;
E No Agents. Save Their Commission E L Bell Phone 190 I&#13;
GOING T Q B U T * H M O&#13;
OR SCWIRG&#13;
SEEtR. WILLI A«S.&#13;
OBJGOSY&#13;
saves yjott ttdoey "oft!,¾^&#13;
;grade pitaoe.&#13;
^ - • . . v * ^&#13;
-v»r»-&#13;
• ' &gt;&#13;
' ^ *&#13;
• y&#13;
•t: ^ . m ; • • « • « • • - **.&#13;
l^ortiMtoitf^t^taee^cWratJslt^&#13;
TraJBtBt* TraiibWeg&#13;
No.O-§J©t. g». -N6.1&#13;
• * ' *&#13;
yjfc&#13;
»*-v^&gt;&#13;
V ;&gt;&lt;--*-,&#13;
• t &gt; V&#13;
^ * T'l. . ¾&#13;
, &gt; • * - &gt; , , ~&lt;. ' -. ''A .&#13;
Z«S.:&#13;
ri -•.'.'•» • 1Lki .&#13;
:&gt;" r~&#13;
'*T. . . t . ^&#13;
sssUsMa^&#13;
'&lt;;.&lt;?£ &gt;-&#13;
'l&amp;i* *»'•"•* , . » " -&#13;
..-&lt;*&#13;
'••J&amp;*&amp;8% 1 ^ ¾ ¾ ^ ^ ^</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch June 18, 1914</text>
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                <text>June 18, 1914 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1914-06-18</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 2 County, Michigan, Thursday, June 25, ]914 No. 26&#13;
+&#13;
Commencement Week&#13;
s s w s ^&#13;
K 3 ,- ¾¾&#13;
&lt;+*«"-•"•^&#13;
i i&#13;
&gt;•"&#13;
• • of Ten Graduated front&#13;
the Ptnckney School&#13;
Last W e e k&#13;
The opera house was literally&#13;
packed to the doors, Wednesday&#13;
e?eniiig, Jane 14 when the class&#13;
day exercises of the graduating&#13;
elaes of 1914 of the Piockoey&#13;
^igh school, comprisiug 10 etudij$&#13;
pt*t were held.&#13;
/ V*AJ people entered the hall and&#13;
their eyes rested upon the stage&#13;
each and every person, none excepted,&#13;
exclaimed as to the artistic&#13;
manner in which the platform had&#13;
been decoiated uncier the supervision&#13;
of Mrs. Will Crofoot. A&#13;
distant triangular shaped vista, at&#13;
the back and sides of which were&#13;
many beautiful' ferns, had been&#13;
formed by festoons of draped&#13;
purple and gold bunting, the class&#13;
colors. A huge bouquet of white&#13;
carnations, the class flowers, was&#13;
placed in the near foreground at&#13;
the center. The graduates were&#13;
seated on both sides of the triangle&#13;
in mission rockers, an innovation&#13;
from the stiff uncomfortable&#13;
chairs which usually&#13;
fall to their lot Thek class motto,&#13;
"To-night we launch, where shall&#13;
we anchor," was emblazoned acrofis&#13;
. the front of the stage iu bold&#13;
white letters.&#13;
The program of the evening&#13;
opened with a well rendered instrumental&#13;
duet by the Misses'&#13;
Laura Burgess and Madeleine&#13;
Moran. Mary M Kennedy delivered&#13;
the salutatory, welcoming&#13;
the assembled guests in a very&#13;
j~ pleasing manner. At the close of&#13;
this address, George E. Root gave&#13;
an oration "Mexico as a Nation"&#13;
which showed a seriousness of&#13;
thought seldom accorded so young&#13;
a student. The class prophecy&#13;
by Helen C. Monks was excellently&#13;
rendered and kept the audience&#13;
in an uproar of laughter. Bernard&#13;
McCluskey was awarded bis&#13;
share of applause after prating on&#13;
"The Rule of Gold" in a very able&#13;
manner. The class poem was next&#13;
beautifully rendered by Mary&#13;
Conner and "was followed by a&#13;
vocal sob by Miss Lila Chubb.&#13;
Under the 'storm of applause she&#13;
was compelled to respond to an&#13;
eacore. Ona L. Campbell delivered&#13;
a fine address as the president of&#13;
the class. "The Progress of&#13;
Science, was the subject of wellwritten&#13;
oration, by Paul Clark.&#13;
Alia Mae Ballis revealed various&#13;
' fharacteristics of the class in the&#13;
^J-ldftatOry, a remarkably thought*&#13;
§pot literary effort. Each member&#13;
~ was presented with a gift to remember&#13;
the *&gt;ld school days in&#13;
y.g»rs, to come. The class will&#13;
waaably read by Florence Cook;&#13;
bequeathing ail possessions of the&#13;
class of 1914 to the Junior class&#13;
who will graduate in 1915. This&#13;
was foDowed by the valedictory&#13;
by Walter Reason who in a stirring&#13;
address bade farewell to his&#13;
clgss-mates, and art forth a few of&#13;
the things that are awaiting them&#13;
i&amp;the world outside of the school&#13;
life. The program closed with a&#13;
trio by the Misses Cordelia&#13;
Dinkel^orence Byers and Leora&#13;
McfCltikay, and was one of the&#13;
beat ia recearyearj, showing the&#13;
earnest combined effort* of both&#13;
pttpiWefldteaoheJi to sake the&#13;
ommifiation of twelre years of&#13;
avhool Ufe a success.&#13;
Commencement, Thursday «?enioc&#13;
June eighteen as the opera&#13;
the hi«h school c&#13;
gram opened with an instrumental'&#13;
solo, rendered in pleasing style by&#13;
Miss Sadie Harris. Following the&#13;
invocation by Rev. Fr. Coyle, Prof.&#13;
D. H. Roberts of Tpsilanti, the&#13;
speaker of the evening,, was introduced.&#13;
Mr. Roberts is an interesting&#13;
lecturer and able speaker.&#13;
His address was very much enjoyed&#13;
by all present;. At the close of&#13;
the lecture, Miss Blanche Martin&#13;
rendered an instrumental solo with&#13;
unusual merit and was credited&#13;
with a large round of applause.&#13;
Assentation of diplomas followed,&#13;
by Prof, J. P. Doyle. Thus closed&#13;
the commencement exercises of&#13;
the class of 1914.&#13;
The graduating class has been&#13;
showered with honors, now the&#13;
other departments of the Pinckney&#13;
school should not be overlooked.&#13;
Thursday afternoon an excellent&#13;
program was rendered at&#13;
the high school building, which&#13;
reflected great, credit on both&#13;
pupils and teachers, showing that&#13;
the Seniors are uot the "big guns"&#13;
after all.&#13;
It's No Such Thing&#13;
Que of the curreut and groundless&#13;
reports is tba* the Ford Company&#13;
will give one of their machines&#13;
to the person who secures&#13;
four dimes, on each of which was&#13;
to be found a mint initial which&#13;
would make the word "Ford."&#13;
John Bussey wrote the company&#13;
for information atd received reply&#13;
as follows:&#13;
"There is absolutely no foundation&#13;
to the rumor that the Ford&#13;
Motor Company will award a prize&#13;
to anyone securing a collection of&#13;
coins, the mint initials of which&#13;
make up a~particularcombi cration7&#13;
The report is simply one of .many&#13;
ridiculous rumors from which this&#13;
company has suffered, and we are&#13;
glad of the opportunity to refute&#13;
it."—Milford Times.&#13;
If after looking over all of your&#13;
dimes you found there is no such&#13;
mint marks as R, wouldn't yon&#13;
feel a gteat deal like 30 cents?&#13;
Getting Ready&#13;
The various committees and the&#13;
officers of the "Old Boys aod&#13;
Girls Home Association" met&#13;
Monday evening at the home of&#13;
Dr. H. F. Sigler. The committees&#13;
are sparing no pains to make this&#13;
the best meeting ever held by the&#13;
association. Of course it costs&#13;
considerable to get up these meetings&#13;
and the committee asks that&#13;
all members and all others who&#13;
care to join, to be prompt in remitting&#13;
their dues (50 cents) to&#13;
the secretary so they may know&#13;
what to depend upon. Badges&#13;
will be given to everyone who&#13;
pays his or her dues. Send in at&#13;
once and have one reserved for&#13;
yoo.&#13;
Emma Brown and Laura Sigler&#13;
were added to the Decoration&#13;
committee, with Emma Brown as&#13;
chairman. The Executive committee,&#13;
are to act also as Finance&#13;
oommfttee, with Carl Meyer as&#13;
chairman. S. £. Swarthoot was&#13;
added to tire Reception committee.&#13;
Another meeting of alt the&#13;
committees and officers is to be&#13;
held Hon lay evening, June 29 at&#13;
the home of Dr. H. F, Sigler at&#13;
7:90 o'clock. Everyone try to be&#13;
present&#13;
Ctttiuttui &amp;ltt%dtUni/&#13;
AtAatUU&#13;
Too many people are careless about dressing&#13;
even slight wounds. Use our antiseptics and dressings&#13;
and you'll be sure to have no fatal blood poisoning.&#13;
When we furnish your medicines and drug store&#13;
things know that you get the best.&#13;
We give you what you ^SK for.&#13;
C. G. M EYBR&#13;
Pinckney, Mich. Phone 5 5 r 3&#13;
NyaJ Store of Quality&#13;
, ——.,-.» . , — . — _ _ i - • — i i n . i ' — — ^&#13;
Ladies&#13;
Have you tried our Chocolate this&#13;
season, made after our new formula?&#13;
You wili like it and call for more.&#13;
M e n&#13;
Don't forge4! the week end special in&#13;
cigars.&#13;
Portorico Fanatellas&#13;
8 fop 25c&#13;
Factory Smokers&#13;
8 for*35c&#13;
" • ' ' • • • ' . . - . - - ' - . - • &gt;&lt; . M l ' • " • - - . - , , - | _ • . , , • ^ ,&#13;
Children&#13;
A full line of fireworks and fire&#13;
crackers to help you celebrate the 4th.&#13;
Pinckney Old Boys&#13;
and Girls Home&#13;
Coming&#13;
Wednesday A n n *&#13;
Thursday ^ * « &amp; •&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
5-6&#13;
FOR SALE— Ten acres of good clover&#13;
Hay on ground. Will Caskey 25tf&#13;
FOR SALE—Baby Chicks, Modeled Anconnan&#13;
and Barred Plymouth Rocks, 10c&#13;
each. White Leghorns 8c each. 26t2*&#13;
J. Sider, Pinckney, R. F. D.&#13;
Watch This Paper For Program&#13;
Hot Weather Tonic and Health Builder&#13;
Are you run down—Nervous—Tired? Is&#13;
everything you do an effort? Yon are not&#13;
lazy—you are sick! Your Stomach, Liver*&#13;
Kidneys, and whole system needs a Tonic,&#13;
A Tonic and Health Builder to drive out&#13;
the waste matter—build you up and renew&#13;
your strength. Nothing better than Electric&#13;
Bitters. Start to-day. Mrs. James&#13;
Dudcan, Haynesville, Me., writes: "Completely&#13;
cured me after several doctors give&#13;
me up." 50c. and $1.00. Recommended by&#13;
C O . Meyer, the druggist.&#13;
%»»»»»»%»»»»%%»»»%»%%%+»»»»»%%»»*» ^ 3 ~ O T ©&#13;
N. P. Mortototon ba* pnrohated&#13;
tfc«M:B, MortaMon fernt ioatb&#13;
tmn A tfe» C1M§ of 19J4. The pro-' of townT&#13;
MURPHY &lt;&amp; JACKSON&#13;
HEADQUARTERS FOR&#13;
Groceries - Dry Goods * Shoes iP Furnishings&#13;
L&gt;ar S t o c k One Price To All bowegt Prices&#13;
i&#13;
Our Special Prices on Groceries&#13;
Saturdays and Wednesdays&#13;
Make it expensive for you to trade&#13;
elsewhere&#13;
Saturday Only For Cash&#13;
3 Boxes Matches 10c Best Raisins 9 c&#13;
Spring Hill Coffee for&#13;
35 Ij&gt;s. H. &amp; E. Sugar -&#13;
23c&#13;
*M9 ••"- M&#13;
.yVi.'j&#13;
I&#13;
£&amp;'&#13;
&amp;;•.%&amp;•. xuiibik £.'!*•;• '••*• * : • " :&#13;
&amp; :&#13;
"^V •&#13;
X^'-'i&#13;
£•#*'&#13;
» *&gt;&#13;
5 ^ . ' :&#13;
•&gt;*?&#13;
7f..i- . . . »: •&#13;
'. • r •- •, ' .- • : , . • • ' • - - . - ' •'. l " - . - • " -;-yi;"^-v ^ v ^ ^ ^ j - _ . : &gt; •&#13;
,-J&#13;
PINCKNEY D I S P A T C H v&#13;
CARE OF THE DAIRY i&#13;
!&#13;
* PRODUCTS IN&#13;
SUMMER&#13;
THE WATCHWORD OF THE&#13;
CAREFUL DAIRYMAN&#13;
SHOULD BE&#13;
"CLEANLINESS —&#13;
| AND COOLNESS"&#13;
T f f T T T T T T T T W t W f f T T T T T T T f f&#13;
[By C. E. Newlander, Instructor in&#13;
Dairying, Michigan Agricultural College.]&#13;
The dairy interests of the state suffer&#13;
immense losses every year from&#13;
spoiling and deterioration ot-products&#13;
during the summer season. These&#13;
losses occur all the way from the&#13;
way from the dairy farm to the large&#13;
dealers in dairy products and are the;&#13;
result of improper methods of hand-&gt;&#13;
ling milk on the farm, on the road and&#13;
In the shipping stations. From the&#13;
point of view of greater, profit, as&#13;
well as that of public health, every&#13;
person who produces or handles milk&#13;
should give thoughtful attention to tthe&#13;
means by which milk may be kept&#13;
cold and free from contaminations.&#13;
The result will be greater satisfaction&#13;
to the consumer and greater profits to&#13;
the producer.&#13;
Importance of Cleanliness.&#13;
Milk is one of the most perishable&#13;
of foods. It will not remain in good&#13;
condition more than a few hours,&#13;
when produced and handled carelessly.&#13;
It quickly ferments or sours and&#13;
may undergo other changes. The&#13;
changes in milk are due to bacteria,&#13;
commonly called germs, some of&#13;
which may cause disease. The chief&#13;
source of bacteria in milk is the foreign&#13;
matter which finds its way into&#13;
milk, such as small particles of soil&#13;
or manure, hairs, dust, old milk, impure&#13;
water, etc., all of which are carriers&#13;
of bacteria.&#13;
The watchwords of the careful&#13;
dairyman should always be cleanliness&#13;
and low temperatures, but more&#13;
especially so during the warm season.&#13;
Since it is impossible to exclude all&#13;
bacteria from milk, the producer&#13;
should aim to exclude as many as possible&#13;
and then to check the growth&#13;
of those which have got into the milk.&#13;
The first may be done by practicing&#13;
cleanliness. The cows should be kept&#13;
clean by brushing and by wiping off&#13;
the flanks and udders. This does not&#13;
require much time and is necessary&#13;
where the cows have access to&#13;
marshes and dirty barnyards. The&#13;
milking should take place in a clean,&#13;
well lighted stable as free from dlst&#13;
as possible. The milker should wear&#13;
a clean suit used only when milking,&#13;
rather than his dusty working colthes.&#13;
Above all he should milk with clean,&#13;
„dry hands. But with all the care that&#13;
can be exercised some dirt and bacteria&#13;
will be constantly falling where&#13;
milking is in progress. The amount&#13;
falling into the milk pail can be&#13;
greatly reduced by the use of a pail&#13;
with a small top.&#13;
Necessity for Cooling Milk.&#13;
The second point, that of checking&#13;
the growth of bacteria, can be accomplished&#13;
by cooling the milk to ax low&#13;
temperature, 50' degrees F. or below,&#13;
because bacteria do not readily grow&#13;
at this temperature. The cooling can&#13;
be done by pouring the milk over a&#13;
cooler or by stirring it in cans set in&#13;
cold water. Use a thermometer to&#13;
note the temperature. It is not sufficient&#13;
to simply cool the milk, it must&#13;
be kept cold until delivered to the&#13;
•tatlon or factory. Milk hauled to&#13;
the station or factory in hot weather&#13;
must be covered to protect it from&#13;
beat. This can readily be done by&#13;
covering the cans with blankets which&#13;
have been thoroughly soaked in cold&#13;
water. In case of long trips on exceptionally&#13;
hot days it may be necessary&#13;
* to Kret the blankets more than&#13;
once.&#13;
la addition to the above it should&#13;
be stated that milk should not be&#13;
handled o r stored in the stable, It&#13;
if much "better to have a separate&#13;
milk room or milk bouse used for this&#13;
purpose only, which can more readily&#13;
be kept free from dust and odors.&#13;
Also the proper cleaning and sterilisation&#13;
of utensils is a matter of great&#13;
importance. The pails, can*, strainen,&#13;
etc, should first be rinsed in lukewernv^&#13;
weter, then -thoroughly scrubbed&#13;
with -a. brush in warm water to&#13;
which some alkali like sal soda has&#13;
been added, and then rinsed carefully&#13;
m ©lean warm water. If possible the&#13;
shonid then be sterilised 1 *&#13;
i i e l o t ^ e steam, but food re-&#13;
Aults^may W obtained by dipping in&#13;
boiling rater for a minute or two.&#13;
t s ^ w V W ^ t f t e t r own heat maklag&#13;
w^ta*,^»a*ce*sary. . . .&#13;
MARKET QUOTATIONS&#13;
Live Stock, Qraln and General Farm&#13;
Produce.&#13;
Uve Stock.&#13;
DETROIT—-Cattle: Receipts, 736;&#13;
market 25c lower; milch cows $3@5&#13;
lower; best heavy steers, 18.25(8)8.60;&#13;
best handy weight butcher steers,&#13;
$7.50@8.26; mixed steers and heifers,&#13;
97.50@8; handy light butchers, 97®&#13;
7.25; best cow», $6.25@6.50; butcher&#13;
cows, $5.60@5.75; common coWs, 95&#13;
@5.25; canners, 9304.25; beet heavy&#13;
bulls, 96.50@6.75; bologna bulls, 96®&#13;
6.25; stock bulls, 95.50®6; feeders,&#13;
$7.50@7.75; stockersr $6.5Q@7.2&amp;;&#13;
milkere and springers, 940® 65.&#13;
Veal calves—Receipts, 634; market&#13;
active; best, 910&lt;S 10.50; others, 96®&#13;
9.50.&#13;
s Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 408;&#13;
market active; run very light; best&#13;
spring lambs, 99® 10; fair lambs, 99&#13;
@9; light to common lambs, 96®8;&#13;
yearlings, 98.25@8.40; heavy sheep,&#13;
94® 4.25; fair to good sheep, 95®5.50;&#13;
culls and common, 92.50®3.50.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 2,862; all grades,&#13;
98.20@8.25.&#13;
EAST BUFFALO—Cattle—Receipts&#13;
4,000; dry-fed grades steady; others&#13;
10® 15c lower; choice to prime shipping&#13;
steer*, 1,250 to 1,500 lbs, 99®&#13;
9.30; fair to food, 98.50®8.85; plain&#13;
and coarse, $8.15@8.50; choice to&#13;
prime handy steers, 98.25®8.56; fair&#13;
to good, 98.15®8.25; light common,&#13;
97.50®7.75; fancy yearlings, $8.25®&#13;
8.90; prime fat heifers, 98.15®8.25;&#13;
good butcher heifers, 97.85®8.90; HgUt&#13;
butcher heifers, $7® 7.50; best heavy&#13;
fat cows, 97®7.25; good butcher cows&#13;
$6®6.75; canners and cutters, $3.90®&#13;
6; best feeders, $7.50®7.85; good&#13;
feeders, $7.25®7.50; best stockerB,&#13;
$7.50®7.75; common to good, $6.25®&#13;
7; best bulls, $7®7.50; good killing&#13;
bulls, $6.50®7; stock and medium&#13;
bulls, $5.50® 6.50; best milkers and&#13;
springers, $75®90; good milkers and&#13;
springers, $55® 65; common, $35®50.&#13;
Hogs: Receipts, 18,000; market lOo&#13;
lower; heavy and yorkers, $6.40®8.45;&#13;
pigs, $8.10. „&#13;
Sheep and lambs: Receipts, 8,000;&#13;
market steady; best spring lambs,&#13;
$9.50@10; yearlings, $8®8.70; wethers&#13;
$6.25®6.75; ewes. $4.50®5.50. *&#13;
• Calves steady; tops, $10.75&#13;
good, $8.50®9.50; grassers,&#13;
5.50.&#13;
•^mr^r^tT'mmmmpB-m*******'*'^******&#13;
GROUPING FLOWERS ACCORDING TO COLOR&#13;
Unity of Color Gives an Effect Which Is Most Charming—A Bed of Chinese&#13;
Peonies.&#13;
fair to&#13;
$4.50®&#13;
Grains Etc.&#13;
DETROIT—Wheat—Cash No. 2 red,&#13;
91 l-2c; July opened with a decline of&#13;
l-4c at 84 l-2c, declined to 84c and&#13;
advanced to 84 l-4c; September opened&#13;
at 84 l-4c, declined to 83 3-4c and&#13;
advanced to 84 l-4c; No. 1 white 91c.&#13;
Corn—Caah No. 3, 75c; No. 3 yellow,&#13;
1 car at 74 l-2c; No, .4 yellow,&#13;
72 l-2c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 1 car at 42 l-2c, 3&#13;
at 42 l-4c, 3 at 42c, 1 at 42 l-2c; No.&#13;
3 white,' 41 l-2c asked; No. 4 white,&#13;
2 cars at 30c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 66c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate and prompt shipment,&#13;
$1.95; June, $1.97; July, $2.&#13;
Cioverseed—Prime spot, $8.10;&#13;
October, $8.60; prime alslke, $10.&#13;
Timothy—Prime spot, $2.60.&#13;
Alfalfa—Prime spot, $8.35.&#13;
Hay—Carlots, track Detroit; No. 1&#13;
timothy, $17® 17,6¾; standard, $16®&#13;
16.50; No. 2 timothy, $15.60®16; light&#13;
mixed, $16® 16.50;.No. 1 mixed, $13.60&#13;
@14; No. 1 clover, $13® 13.60; heav/&#13;
clover mixed, $13® 13.50; rye straw,&#13;
$8®8.50; wheat and oat straw, $7®&#13;
7.50 per ton.&#13;
Flour—In one-eighth paper sacks,&#13;
per 196 pounds, jobbing lots; Beit&#13;
patent, $5.30; second patent, $4.90;&#13;
straight, $4.50; spring patent, $5.10;&#13;
rye, $4.40 per bbl&#13;
Feed—In 100-lb sacks, jobbing lots;&#13;
Bran, $28; standard middlings, $28;&#13;
fine middlings, $32; coarse middlings,&#13;
$31; cracked corn, $32; com and oat&#13;
chop, $28.60 per ton.&#13;
92®&#13;
lf-qt&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
Strawberries — 24-qt eases,&#13;
2,50; Michigan, $1® 1.25 per&#13;
case." '"&#13;
Melons—Watermelons, 50®75c each&#13;
pony Rocky Fords, $2.25; standard&#13;
Rocky Fords, $2.50.&#13;
'' &lt;freen Corn—•0®65o per do*.&#13;
Cabbage-New, $1.75® l.«5 per orate&#13;
Potatoes In sacks, 88®90c per bu&#13;
for oarlota.&#13;
Dressed Hogs—Light, I® 10c; heavy&#13;
t®9 l-2e per lb.&#13;
Onions*—Texas Bermuda, yellow&#13;
$2.60, white $2.78 per orate; Missis*&#13;
sftppi,*$8.S6 per. hnjlsal. • &gt;,&#13;
Honey—Chbfce to fahcy-'ifew white&#13;
oomb, 16®I«c; "emfcer, 10011c; extracted,&#13;
$ 07c per lb.&#13;
- Tomatoes Florida, fancy, $8.7508;&#13;
choice, $2.50 per crate, foe per basket&#13;
hothouse, U®tte per lb; Mississippi&#13;
fate, $fc«O0l,ie. -.,-,.-. Vr .,:,&#13;
Nsw Potatoes'' floras* 114001.71&#13;
per bbl and 12 per bu; Bemad* IS.SS&#13;
par be a*dVi«J**per&amp;|ft Mississippi&#13;
Triumph* per halt bbl, $125; hamper*^&#13;
^ ll.fv0JUS9i " * •"*""&#13;
By BE88IE L. PUTNAM.&#13;
A pretty fancy which is more than&#13;
of the hour consists in grouping flowers&#13;
according to color. We have&#13;
found that the best effect is obtained&#13;
by massing flowers of a certain kind.&#13;
Likewise the unity of color gives&#13;
an effect which is most pleasing, and&#13;
with care and selection one may have&#13;
a constant succession of any desired&#13;
color from early spring until late in&#13;
fall.&#13;
The scheme appeals with special&#13;
force to the suburban home, where&#13;
the flower garden is never cramped—&#13;
or at least should not be. Try and&#13;
arrange the flowers so that the screen&#13;
that divides the front yard from the&#13;
back be on one side pink and the&#13;
other white.&#13;
If the garden is bordered with flowers&#13;
a massing of blue or yellow in&#13;
one corner and redV in another will&#13;
completely change the appearance of&#13;
.things. While white is excellent to&#13;
break the colors, a more pleasing effect&#13;
is secured by shading rather&#13;
than ending any one abruptly.&#13;
For several reasons it is well to&#13;
have the white predominate. They&#13;
will show off by night ajTwell as by&#13;
day. They are suitable for all occasions.&#13;
Many of them are delightfully&#13;
fragrant They occur in great variety.&#13;
Among white flowers the lilies, peonies&#13;
and rose head the list. Then&#13;
there may be added the spirea, carnation,&#13;
aqullegia, hollyhock, phlox,&#13;
Christmas rose, lily of the .valley,&#13;
achillea, hydrangea, honeysuckle^ yucca,&#13;
beside a multitude of dahlias and&#13;
chrysanthemums.&#13;
Most of the plants are hardy and&#13;
easily grown. Add to them the rich&#13;
assortment of annuals like candytuft,&#13;
sweet alyesum, snap-dragon, aster,&#13;
verbena, petunia, lobelia and larkspur&#13;
and you-have a most worthy collection&#13;
and one which has beauty all&#13;
season.&#13;
Suppose that it shades to the most&#13;
delicate tinted sweetpeas, dahlias and&#13;
astern, thence to merge into rich&#13;
Pink?&#13;
There Is almost an endless variety&#13;
of the pink border, many of the varieties&#13;
mentioned above being equally&#13;
eligible in this come?. To these may&#13;
be added spirea, begonias and g4*6V&#13;
i o l U S r ^&lt;. • :.- '* - /^V&#13;
If a red border ia desired, tapre&#13;
caution must be exercised, being careful&#13;
that crimson an4 scarlet, both e»&#13;
cellent in themaelvas, do not oomjtfat*&#13;
in fact, it might be as weJLto assign&#13;
two different spots for these clashing&#13;
colors.&#13;
Among the scarlet, blossoms nothing&#13;
is more beautiful than the Silvia,&#13;
though there are geraniums, phlox&#13;
and gladiolus to keep it company,&#13;
after the procession of the tulipav&#13;
while a wealth of petunias, holly*&#13;
hocks and coleus may safely .smile&#13;
across at the cannas and popples from&#13;
the other side of the garden.&#13;
Among the blue flowers there Is st&#13;
rich treat, from the time of the first&#13;
•cilia and hyacinth until the last aster&#13;
has faded; for lavender and purple&#13;
are so closely akin to true blue that&#13;
it seems necessary to include them.&#13;
The platycodons, Canterbury bells,&#13;
some of the violets, houstania, lupine,&#13;
iris, aconite, hardy larkspur, aquilegia,&#13;
forget-me-nots and veronica are among&#13;
the perennials suggested, while in annuals&#13;
there are ageratum, Swan river&#13;
daisy, bachelor's button, pansy, linum&#13;
and nemophlla.&#13;
vNote the effect of the different species&#13;
used and gradually weed out the&#13;
undesirable forms, and improve upon&#13;
those found satisfactory. As a feature&#13;
of landscape gardening the plan&#13;
has rich possibilities. v&#13;
Misreading.&#13;
A detective said to a reporter apropos&#13;
of a celebrated case:&#13;
"Here bur friends misread the ev*&#13;
dence. It is'easy to misread evidence,&#13;
you know. For instance:&#13;
"A fanner the other day met a&#13;
tramp carrying a pitchfork.&#13;
•"Holy smoke, Weary/ the farmer&#13;
said, *I congratulate you! You're carrying&#13;
a pitchfork. That's sure er&gt;&#13;
dence that you're going to work' at&#13;
last.'&#13;
'"Me work7 Not on your life,' the&#13;
tramp replied, with A good-natured&#13;
laugh. 'I borried it to brile a slice o'&#13;
ham on."'&#13;
Must First Have Gratification,&#13;
The average man has to become&#13;
powerful enough to feel sure he has&#13;
the whiphand In order to be able to&#13;
forgive his enemies successfully.&#13;
• t&#13;
Post Toasties&#13;
For That&#13;
w&#13;
IP vv&#13;
Bedtime Snack&#13;
The kiddies need something that is'dainty&#13;
and appetizing, don t they? And you want&#13;
to be sine that they have a food that ts&#13;
easily digested—one that will not&#13;
their deep.&#13;
N&#13;
^ ^J&#13;
V^ \ ^&#13;
Post Toasties are surprisingly good at&#13;
any time.&#13;
They axe made of die hearts of the finest&#13;
[an corn, perfectly cooked, delicately sweetened&#13;
and salted, rolled into thin, ribbony&#13;
flakes and toasted to a crisp, golden brawn*&#13;
They bane, that indescribable flavour—&#13;
sweet and delicious, that so delights the taste.&#13;
Just pour from the package and add cream&#13;
and sugar, or sprinkle over fresh berries or&#13;
fruit -,-.&#13;
Easy to serve and mighty good. *&#13;
v ' ' • ' - ' . ' • • • " • . - • • • - . - • . - - - ' V J . ,&#13;
"The Memory Lingers"&#13;
V"?&#13;
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•J»./*&#13;
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PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
• *^;&#13;
&amp;SS*~&#13;
••tf" ••&lt;£&#13;
&gt;"'*?-,&#13;
NEW FABLE OP THE ROISTERING&#13;
BLADES WHO ABSORBED&#13;
THE MAGNETIC CURRENT Dl.fthev were riding in on a Curtis*&#13;
' • / • ' •&#13;
RECT FROM THE&#13;
STORAGE PLANT.&#13;
CENTRAL&#13;
* * f&#13;
Vv • :": ;.&#13;
' • ' ' " . • : - • • • • - " '&#13;
^h:&#13;
Oat In the Celery Belt of the Hinterland&#13;
there is a stunted Flag-Station.&#13;
Number Six, carrying one Day&#13;
Coach and a Combination Baggage&#13;
and Stock Car, would paoae long&#13;
jenough to' unload a Bucket of Oyiters&#13;
And take on a Crate of Eggs.&#13;
Two highly respected Money-Getters&#13;
of pure American Stock held forth in&#13;
this lonesome Kraal and did a General&#13;
Merchandising.&#13;
One was called Milt, in honor of the&#13;
Blind Poet, and the other claimed the&#13;
following brief Monnlker, to wit:&#13;
Henry.&#13;
Neither of them had to pay the Woman&#13;
who did the Housework.&#13;
Henry and Milt got what they could&#13;
during the Daytime and always stood&#13;
ready to trim up the Dark Lanterns&#13;
and operate at Night&#13;
These two Pillars of Society,had&#13;
marched at the head of the Women&#13;
and School Children during the Dry&#13;
Movement which banished King Alcohol&#13;
from their Fair City.&#13;
As a_ result of their Efforts Liquor&#13;
was not to be Obtained in this Town&#13;
except at the Drug Stores and Restaurants&#13;
or, in the Cellar underlying any&#13;
well-conducted Home/&#13;
For Eleven Months and Three&#13;
Weeks out of every Calendar year&#13;
these two played Right and Left&#13;
Tackle in the Stubborn Battle to Uplift&#13;
the Community and better the&#13;
Moral Tone.&#13;
They walked the Straight and Narrow,&#13;
wearing Blinders, Check-Reins,&#13;
Hobbles and Interference Pads.&#13;
But—every Autumn, about the time&#13;
the FroBt Is on the Stock Market and&#13;
Wall Street is In the Shock, Milt and&#13;
Henry would do a Skylark Ascension&#13;
from the Home Nest and Wing away&#13;
toward the Rising Sun.&#13;
They called, it Fall Buying, because&#13;
both of them Bought and both of them&#13;
Fell.&#13;
At Home neither of them would&#13;
Kick In for any Pastime more worldly&#13;
than a 10-cent M. P. Show depicting a&#13;
large number of Insane People falling&#13;
over Precipices.&#13;
The Blow-Off came on the Trip to&#13;
the City. That was the Big Show.&#13;
Every Nickel that could be held out&#13;
went into the little Tin Bank, for they&#13;
knew that when they got together 100&#13;
of these Washers, a man up in New&#13;
York would let them have some Tiffany&#13;
Water of Rare Vintage, with a&#13;
Napkin wrapped around it as an Evidence&#13;
of Good Faith.&#13;
On Winter Evenings, Milt would&#13;
don the Velvet Slipperf and grill his&#13;
Lower Extremities on the ornate Portico&#13;
such as surrounds^ every high*&#13;
price Base-Burner.&#13;
While thus crisping himself he loved&#13;
to read News Note* from Gotham,&#13;
signed Carolyn Stuyvesant, who&#13;
seemed to have the Entree into the&#13;
Beet Houses.&#13;
' He did not know that Carolyn had&#13;
tanked'Whisker* and jotted down his&#13;
Boudoir Secrets in a Weinstube, using&#13;
a borrowed Pencil.&#13;
So he believed what it said is the&#13;
r about a wett-known Heiress havthe&#13;
Teeth of her favorite Pomerntan&#13;
filed with Radium, at a^ost of&#13;
ijfo,ooo.\v&#13;
Whenever he got this kind of a&#13;
Private Peek Into the Gay Life of the&#13;
Modern Babylon, he began to breathe&#13;
through his Nose and tag at the&#13;
Leash.&#13;
... When the Day of Days arrived. Milt&#13;
^enoV Henry would be teen at the Depot&#13;
with congested BufrCascs and their&#13;
Neck* an newly shaven and powdered&#13;
the approaching Jubilee. Bridge by Moonlight&#13;
Bne&amp; mad finned Into his-college- Then, wit* a Clear Coneclenoe, he&#13;
Suit enough currency to lift the wen*, back and pit his Pool on the&#13;
* ^ • ••'fcjfc- - -. • - • -&#13;
The morninr on which their Bodies&#13;
were taken the Penneylvania Station&#13;
-J broke bright and cheery&#13;
Milt aaid somebody had fed him a&#13;
Steam Radiator and pat Kitten*&#13;
the] him and unscrewed ttw KaocOape,&#13;
Otherwise, be was 0. K.&#13;
Henry kept waving the&#13;
8perrowa ooj of the Way, and asking&#13;
Lfr*»4h*4wmy so many -* -.**, ^•^•••x&amp;i*^pm;-*^-vgm Revfval&#13;
Eetrtoevwhen eWv.^l^sfidagtaf;&#13;
gate oat that r * e e ^ eM eJteat-B?&#13;
wlrieik bagtss^^Tleld^llQi f0^i£ssipts&gt;&#13;
tfaeVV MQt and Hoary area* tress Ik*&#13;
raalflniisd frttg ltd gang Heir ftrif&#13;
Peed* o£ "&#13;
itfHUt*&#13;
When they approached the Metropolian&#13;
via the Tunnel, they thon&#13;
Plane.&#13;
The Clerk !\et on to remember them&#13;
and quoted a Bargain Rate of Six Dollars,&#13;
meaning by,the Day and pot by&#13;
the Month.&#13;
They wanted to know if that wai&#13;
the Best he had and he said it was. aa&#13;
the Sons of Onto were having a Dinner&#13;
in the Main Banquet HalL&#13;
So they ordered a lot of Supplies&#13;
sent up to each Room and wanted to&#13;
know if there was a Good Show in&#13;
Town—something that had been denounced&#13;
by the Press.&#13;
The Clerk told of one in when Asbestos&#13;
Scenery was used and Firemen&#13;
had to stand in the Wings, so they&#13;
tore over to the News Stand and&#13;
bought two on the Aisle for $8 from&#13;
a pale Goddess who kept looking at&#13;
the Ceiling all during the Negotiations,&#13;
for she seemed out of Sympathy&#13;
with her Sordid Surroundings.&#13;
Then to the Rooms with their guttering&#13;
Bedsteads and insulting prodigality&#13;
of Towels.&#13;
After calling up the Office to complain&#13;
of the 8ertlce» they shook the&#13;
v-&#13;
OOOOE :00000000: =0000 •8&#13;
on the Parsonage.&#13;
^Bready they were smoking Foreign&#13;
Cigars and these were a mere Hint of&#13;
what the TMiro hadin Store.&#13;
While waiting tor Number Sis they&#13;
wired for Two Roomwmnd Two Bithe&#13;
nisi to have „ 1»&#13;
at t h d ^motJon, whore they&#13;
L i m i t e d threw moved Into&#13;
» Steak ordered&#13;
&lt;^»h«s&gt;onr the e^&#13;
4pr^is7'' wsMasp • %^*BSw^spspe' **f&#13;
The Flag 8tatten 8eepied Far Away.&#13;
Moth Balls oat of their Henry Millers&#13;
and began to sort the Studs.&#13;
When fully" attired in Evening&#13;
Clothes, including the Sheet-Iron&#13;
Shoes, they' knew they looked like&#13;
New York Club Men and the Flag&#13;
Station seemed far away, as in another&#13;
World.&#13;
Instead of the usual 6:30 Repast of&#13;
Chipped Beef in Cream, Body Biscuits&#13;
and a% Stotfp of Gunpowder Tea, they&#13;
ordered up Cape Cods, Potato Let-it*&#13;
go-at-that Sweetbreads So-and-so, on&#13;
and on past the partially heated Duck&#13;
and Salad With Fringe along the Edges&#13;
and Cheese that had waited too long&#13;
and a Check for $17.40 and the Waiter&#13;
peeved at being slipped a paltry $LW.&#13;
Heigh-ho! |t is a Frolicking Lfie!&#13;
They remembered afterward being&#13;
in a gilded Play-House with the Activities&#13;
equally divided between a Trap-&#13;
Drummer and 700 restless Young Women.&#13;
Then, being assailed by the Pangs&#13;
of Hunger,, they west out and parchased&#13;
Crab Flakes at SO cents a&#13;
Flake, after which they peid to get&#13;
their Hats and next Morning they&#13;
were back in their rooms, entirely surrounded&#13;
by Towels.&#13;
On the third Afternoon, Milt suspended&#13;
Fan Buying long enough to&#13;
send his Family a Book of Views showing&#13;
the Statue of Peter Cooper, the&#13;
Aviary '•a) Sroax Park and Brooklyn&#13;
State&#13;
Happeilings&#13;
00000&#13;
Lansing.-c~The state will have to&#13;
pay $3,000 to owners of tubercular&#13;
cattle ordered Wed by the live&#13;
stock sanitary commission. The state&#13;
pays one-half of the appraised valuation.&#13;
HUtedale.—Sheriff Keas learned that&#13;
John Campbell and Floyd Lament, the&#13;
'latter seventeen years old, son of Captain&#13;
Lamont of the local Salvation&#13;
Army, were sentenced to serve from&#13;
six months to five years in Ionia for&#13;
robbing five houses in Paw Paw.&#13;
Charlotte.—Mrs. Willis Wheaton,&#13;
wife of the Chester supervisor, was&#13;
plcjced up unconscious at the road&#13;
side with two fractured ribs and a dislocated&#13;
shoulder. Her little son was&#13;
found wandering about in a dazed condition.&#13;
Their horse ran away.&#13;
Traverse City.—W. H. Edmonds,&#13;
eighty-two years old, died here.&#13;
He is believed to be the oldest blacksmith&#13;
in point of service in Michigan.&#13;
He worked at his trade for 56 years.&#13;
He was the oldest Odd Fellow In this&#13;
section of the state.&#13;
Marshall.—When Mrs. Angelina Petrie,&#13;
agen eighty, tried to cross the&#13;
Michigan Central tracks ahead of a&#13;
freight train she was thrown 40 feet,&#13;
landing directly on the track, and her&#13;
head and arms were severed. The accident&#13;
occurred at Marengo, eix miles&#13;
east of here.&#13;
Jackson.—The state board of education&#13;
has approved of the graduates&#13;
for the denominational colleges&#13;
and the Michigan Agricultural college.&#13;
Two hundred certificates were granted&#13;
to the four state normal schools.&#13;
C. K. Lyon of Worcester, Mass., was&#13;
named head of the education department&#13;
of the Ypsllanti State normal.&#13;
Lansing.—The fund for the building&#13;
of a Michigan building at the Panama&#13;
exposition received itB first big boost&#13;
when State Treasurer Haarer received&#13;
$1,000 in four contributions of&#13;
$250 each, from the Reo Motor company&#13;
of this city; the Paige-Detroit&#13;
Motor company, the Fisher Body company&#13;
and the Metal Products company&#13;
of Detroit&#13;
Grand Rapids.-—Alleging that the&#13;
recent decision of the state railroad&#13;
commission ordering the Michigan&#13;
State Telephone, company at&#13;
Traverse City to connect with the Citizens&#13;
Telephone company for long distance&#13;
business, Is illegal and In&#13;
restraint of trade, the order will be&#13;
appealed to the supreme court, according&#13;
to lawyers of the Michigan State.&#13;
Grand Rapids. — "I will swim&#13;
across that river and back or&#13;
drown," declared John Ladroot, sixty&#13;
years old, to two companions with&#13;
whom he was fishing in Grand, river.&#13;
In spite of the protest of his friends,&#13;
Ladroot plunged into the water. He&#13;
attempted to swim back, when he was&#13;
drowned.&#13;
Lansing.—On the recommendation&#13;
of the supreme court, Governor Ferris&#13;
has appointed Charles M. Wilson of&#13;
Grand Rapids as a member of the&#13;
state board of law examiners. Wilson&#13;
will succeed Wesley W. Hyde of Grand&#13;
Rapids, who tendered his resignation&#13;
a few weeks ago. Nicholas Hajjar of&#13;
Munising has been named by Governor&#13;
Ferris as county agent for Alger&#13;
county. *&#13;
Cadillac.—Bert Maxwell, chauffeur&#13;
for Mrs. D. F. Digging of this city, was&#13;
seriously injured and Mrs. Diggins* automobile&#13;
wae partially wrecked , Maxwell&#13;
was about to pass along the side&#13;
of a street, partially dug up, when a&#13;
woman and child ran out from a house,&#13;
and not seeing the car, ran directly in&#13;
Its path. Maxwell turned suddenly to&#13;
avoid hitting then and his car crashed&#13;
over the sewer embankment throwing&#13;
him injo the hole'and demolishing the&#13;
machine.&#13;
Kalamasocv—Whether Henry Clark&#13;
and Ray Drew, negroes, can be tried&#13;
here for highway robbery or whether&#13;
they will have to be freed, although&#13;
they have confessed, is a problem officers&#13;
are trying to solve, The negroes&#13;
admit beating and robbing Bolentaw&#13;
Poplanek while the three were&#13;
stealing a ride on a Michigan Central&#13;
freight Poplanek was Tendered on*&#13;
conscious by the "blow, end cannot tell&#13;
Jest what county the assault took place&#13;
in, although it was this aide of Jack-&#13;
WITH OLD TOUTK IN MERCY&#13;
Author's Opinion of Why Women Use&#13;
"Tact" Instead of Being Too&#13;
Plainly Outspoken.&#13;
"I call a woman sincere," Marlow began&#13;
after giving me a cigar and lighting&#13;
one himself. "I call a woman sincere&#13;
when she volunteers .a statement&#13;
resembling remotely In form what she&#13;
really thinks ought to be said if it&#13;
were not for the necessity to spare the&#13;
stupid sensitiveness of men. The&#13;
woman's rougher, simpler, more upright&#13;
judgment embraces the whole&#13;
truth, which their tact, their mistrust&#13;
of masculine idealism, ever prevents&#13;
them from Bpeaking in its entirety.&#13;
And their tact 1B unerring. We could&#13;
not stand women speaking the truth.&#13;
We could not bear i t It would cause&#13;
Infinite misery and bring about most&#13;
awful disturbances in thle rather mediocre&#13;
but still idealistic fool's paradise&#13;
In which each of us lives his own little&#13;
life—the unit in the great sum fit existence.&#13;
And they know it. They are&#13;
merciful."—From "Chance," by Joseph&#13;
Conrad.&#13;
C heap Deodorant&#13;
The virtues of bicarbonate of soda&#13;
as a deodorant are known and appreciated&#13;
by very few—most of them&#13;
nurses and physicians. What woman&#13;
will not he glad to learn, for instance,&#13;
that it is a perfect neutralizer of perspiration&#13;
odors? There are many expensive&#13;
powders put up for this purpose&#13;
and some of them are effective,&#13;
but plain sodium carbonate at five&#13;
cents a whole lot is quite as good as&#13;
the best of them. It may be rubbed&#13;
on the shields or through the armholes&#13;
of a white shirtwaist and be relied&#13;
upon to neutralize any odor. The&#13;
armpits may also be bathed with a&#13;
solution of it before dressing. The&#13;
most fastidious 61 women, who have&#13;
found constant bathing Ineffective for&#13;
this affliction, will find this simple precaution&#13;
a great boon.&#13;
If you wish beautiful, clear, white&#13;
clothes, use Bed Cross Ball Blue. At all&#13;
good grocers. Adv.&#13;
Help to Mothers.&#13;
Whenever riding upon the cars for&#13;
any distance with children, they are&#13;
sure to want a little luncheon, either&#13;
of cookies or sticky candy. Whenever&#13;
they get their hands and face terribly&#13;
soiled, all you have to clean them with&#13;
Is a clean handkerchief, which very&#13;
seldom takes off all the dirt&#13;
When starting out you should take&#13;
a two compartment rubber lined envelope&#13;
case, Just large' enough for&#13;
your coat pocket or handbag; on one&#13;
side have a dampened face cloth (not&#13;
too wet) and on the other a dry face&#13;
cloth. Then when little faces and&#13;
handB are soiled you w«ill have your&#13;
damp cloth to wash them with and a&#13;
dry one to dry them.&#13;
It will prove to be very useful whenever&#13;
with Btnall children.&#13;
FTrOy UMRu rOinWe NHy D« RRUemGeGdyI SfTor WReIdL,L wTeIaEkL, LWYaOterU* Myee and Granulated Eyelid*: No Smarting— t1a7r tm Salrle FCreoem. foMrt.a rinWe rKitey ef oRre mBeodoyk Coof ., tCheh icBagyoe.&#13;
Literary.&#13;
"Suppose I give you some camel's&#13;
hair underwear for your birthday?"&#13;
"I'd be tickled to death."&#13;
Its Kind.&#13;
"Her face is of a waxy pallor."&#13;
"Dear me! That's a cereous matter."&#13;
MRS. WINN'S&#13;
ADVICETO WOMEN&#13;
Take Lydia.EPinkham'i Vegetable&#13;
Compound and be&#13;
Restored to Health.&#13;
Kansas City, Mo.—" The doctors told&#13;
me I would never be a mother. Every&#13;
pijimouth the pains&#13;
[ill were so bad that I&#13;
could not bear my&#13;
] weight on one foot.&#13;
I began taking Ly«&#13;
dia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound&#13;
and had not&#13;
finished the first bottle&#13;
when I f e l t&#13;
greatly relieved and&#13;
I took it until it&#13;
made me sound and&#13;
well, and I now have two fine baby&#13;
girls. I cannot praise Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound too highly&#13;
for what it has done for me. I always&#13;
speak a word in favor of your medicine&#13;
to other women who suffer when I have&#13;
an opportunity." — Mrs. H. T. WINN,4&#13;
1225 Freemont Ave., Kansas City, Mo.&#13;
Head What Another Woman say*:,&#13;
dimming, Ga.—"I tell some suffertag&#13;
woman every day of Lydia E. Pinkbarn's&#13;
Vegetable Compound and what it&#13;
has done for me. I could not eat or&#13;
sleep, had a bad stomach and was in&#13;
misery all the time. I could not do my&#13;
housework or walk any distance without&#13;
suffering great pain. I tried doctors'&#13;
medicines and different patent medicines&#13;
but failed to get relief. My husband&#13;
brought home yourVegetable Compound&#13;
and in two weeks I could eat anything,&#13;
could Bleep like a healthy baby,&#13;
and walk a long distance without f eeHng&#13;
tired. I can highly recommend your&#13;
Vegetable. Compound to women who&#13;
suffer as I did, and you are at liberty to&#13;
use this letter."—Mrs. CHARLIE BAG*&#13;
LEY, R. 8, Cumming, Ga.&#13;
______ &lt;&#13;
The Army of&#13;
Constipation m&#13;
Is Growing Smaller Every Day. CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS are&#13;
responsible — they&#13;
not only give relief&#13;
— they perma&#13;
nentJycureCwttipitiML&#13;
Mil&#13;
lions u s e&#13;
them for&#13;
BilloetoMM,&#13;
U-fttfeo, Sick He*-tc_t, SaQW Ska.&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICK,&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
CARTERS&#13;
ITTLE&#13;
IVER&#13;
PILLS.&#13;
DR. J. D. KELLOOO'S ASTHMA Remedy for the prompt relief of&#13;
Aethma and Hay Fever. Aak Your&#13;
druggist for It. WHt« for FREE SAMPLE.&#13;
KORTHROP &amp; LYMAN CO.. U&lt;L BUFFALO. N.Y.&#13;
P A T E N T S ^ ^ ^ _ i » W i i h i frmHigb.&#13;
tWtfCE "fiSlVI bmigu fbotrU akded rceassrMe, oSf trdiicetilkyleBogn fnldeonn «tlbaoi. Send lUtto STAKE, 831 Woodward Arena*. Detroit&#13;
• - « • • • 1 1 ' • • • I • I N - - I • ' • - • • ' l l l | • • II • II • ! • • • ! I&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 26-1914.&#13;
Don't Poison, Baby.&#13;
FOBTY YEARS AGO almost every mother thought her child most have&#13;
PAREGORIC or laudanum to make it sleep. These drugs will produoe&#13;
sleep, a n d a F E W DROPS TOO MANY will produoe the SLEEP&#13;
FROM W H I C H THERE I S NO WAKING. Many are the children w h o&#13;
have been killed or whose health has been ruined for life by paregoric, laudan&#13;
u m and morphine, each of which is a narootio product of opium. Druggists&#13;
ere prohibited from setting either of the narcotka najned to children at au% or&#13;
to anybody without labelling them "poison.9 The definition of "narootio"&#13;
i n "Arrudktns which relievet pain arui produce* Mleep^ but which in poUonous&#13;
doses pr6duce$ ttupor, coma, convutkons and death." The taste and&#13;
smell of medicines containing opium arc Ji '"* —* —&#13;
of" Drops/ "CkttdUals,"" Soothing Syr .&#13;
medicine to be given *to your children without yon&#13;
of what it is composed/ CAOTORIA DOES NOT&#13;
CONTAIN NARCOTICS, If it bears the signature&#13;
of Ones. H. Fletcher.&#13;
Gemalme CastorU always hears the signatare o f&#13;
Port Huron.—-James McMillan* the&#13;
young man arrested when the steamer&#13;
hound touched at -this port, waa&#13;
taken back to Goderich, Ont, by Pro*&#13;
vtneial Detective Moore of that place.&#13;
MeMfflan was a happy youths despite&#13;
th* tact that he wag under arrest. Until&#13;
fee jtfttvmi of the oflteer yottg Me-&#13;
Mlflan bettered that he was watted on&#13;
a sssjrder eaarge as the result of a&#13;
(yessjsm^p^sp ^sj^psss'aei 'S^SJS^FSB&gt; f^vssj^nSf ss^w e^r^svesr^ssjs^PBS&gt; v^s&gt;a&#13;
anna le. Detective Moore iaforme*&#13;
Mcjfcfiaa that the ttctitt of the at&#13;
legisT "isseanlt was not dead bo| woeJ*&#13;
teatf jsvbahBStf recover. He bejd a&#13;
sailsal nlmsliii MoMllian wttav ae»&#13;
Do As Others Do, Take&#13;
thli time-t«gted—world prored—home remedy which suite&#13;
and benefits most people. Tried for three generations,&#13;
the best corrective and preventive of the numerous&#13;
ailments caused by defective or irregular action of the)&#13;
organs of digestion and elimination has been proved to be&#13;
BEECHAM'S PILLS&#13;
If yon nave net tried this matohlacs faaaiiy saedictee, you do net know&#13;
tfeet H mesas to hare better digMsiott,jsonndcr , 1 1 ¾ ¾ ^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ ¾&#13;
0 s * m m p t a * » M , w U e h e e n * ^ _ ^ ^&#13;
the eystem of securities, Try them now andfasoy. Arwanof the&#13;
tnwsTcsSlsnog sn aU &lt;a^aatea; insisrj seaagii H i i e W s f t a i a t e The TrUde Trusted Remedy&#13;
w*# mmmmmm&#13;
.*.&#13;
P&#13;
I&#13;
t-&#13;
:;•*!&#13;
"••OHi&#13;
3* -'*/ *&#13;
\&gt;M&#13;
V : , v • ' • ; • • • " •&lt;;#•.&#13;
&gt;r«i&#13;
i: i „l -; '&#13;
^WsWr: '^r^M^^^£k*KL *a^.* *";* * d tft^.a&#13;
¥,&#13;
.r&#13;
$ P • • • " • • '&#13;
MI*-.*-.-&#13;
5.:2^.&#13;
k-::rv:-,'--'&#13;
fe^"^&#13;
^ . ' i A ' ' " . " &lt;t -&lt;&#13;
^ ' &gt; r:.&#13;
B'-'? * ' &gt; y v £ ^ . : .-&#13;
fc£'.. '.'''•&#13;
Bfe'"••':•&#13;
\&#13;
*&#13;
A' • f&#13;
1*&#13;
P1NCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
pinckney Dispatch&#13;
Entered at the Po#o|fice at Pinckney,&#13;
Mich., as Second Clai» Matter&#13;
R. W. CAVERLY, EDITOR MO PUBLISHER&#13;
8n»seriptloD, ¢1. Per Tear la l4vanc«&#13;
Advertising known&#13;
application.&#13;
Cards of Thankp, fifty cents.&#13;
Resolutions of Condolence, one dollar.&#13;
Local Notices, in Local columns five&#13;
cent per line per each insertion.&#13;
idl 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;
Is Howell on the map? See 4th&#13;
of *Tuly adv. elsewhere. . adv.&#13;
Ed. Farnam spent the first of&#13;
the week in Detroit.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Swarthout&#13;
*peDt Sunday in Brighton.&#13;
Dave Beunett of. Howell spent&#13;
last week with friends here.&#13;
Lorenzo Farnam of Oklahoma&#13;
City spent Sunday at the home of&#13;
Ed. Farnam.&#13;
Mrs. Gay Teeple and daughters&#13;
spent last Friday with relatives&#13;
in Hamburg.&#13;
Miss Irene Crabb of Grand&#13;
Rapids is spending a few dayB at&#13;
the^hsane of T. Read.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Rane of&#13;
Whit more Lake spent a few days&#13;
the past week at the home of F.&#13;
Rftason.&#13;
Misa Stella Clinton of Detroit&#13;
is vising at the home of her&#13;
parents ' Mr. and Mrs. Richard&#13;
CKoton.&#13;
Miss Gail Treadway who has&#13;
been spending the past year with&#13;
her aunt in Rochester, Ohio, returned&#13;
home Friday.&#13;
Gale Johnaon and wife of Detroit&#13;
are the proud parents of a&#13;
baby girl. Gale is the son of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. F. D. Johnson of this&#13;
place.&#13;
Correspondents are again requested&#13;
to have their letters reach&#13;
us by Monday night. We have&#13;
not time to Bet correspondence on&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
There is no excuse for idleness&#13;
in the bi£ oities now. Kansas,&#13;
Nebraska, Missouri, Oklahoma&#13;
and other places are yelling loud&#13;
for harvest hands at good *ages.&#13;
Prof^T. J. Gaul, a former teacher&#13;
in*the Pinckney High School,&#13;
has been tendered his position as&#13;
the Alpeaajjchools&#13;
again this year at an advanced&#13;
salary.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs, Gee. Smith- of&#13;
Canton, Ohio., announce the&#13;
marriage of their daughter, Peail&#13;
M. Smith, to Mr. Joseph P. Doyle&#13;
Saturday, June 20, at Ann Arbor.&#13;
Thus reads the announcement received&#13;
by this office Monday&#13;
morning. Mr. Doyle haa bee»&#13;
superintendent of the Pfnckney&#13;
schools during the past year and&#13;
baa made many friends here&#13;
&lt;aiitend ; congratulations t o ^ f b e&#13;
happy couple.&#13;
Dr. LeBaron tiac attendthe&#13;
4th Miobifean&#13;
regiment during the G. A. R.&#13;
gftate Encampment at Jaokaon&#13;
a past week. The doctor was a&#13;
rgeoliin this regiment ami reoed&#13;
in renewing war stories&#13;
iUt the - b o y s of •SI." Dr. L c&#13;
Misa Norma Cnrlett of Mayvilie&#13;
is home for the summer vacation.&#13;
Mrs. A. H. FJintoft was a Jackapn&#13;
visitor Sunda^.s&#13;
;j&#13;
Mr! and Mrs. Bert rtoche and&#13;
Mrs. James Roche spent Sunday&#13;
at Fowlerville.&#13;
Miss Lila Chubb spent a few&#13;
days the past week at the home of&#13;
Silas Swarthout.&#13;
Fred Grieves and wife of Stockbridge&#13;
spent Sunday with relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
Mrs. Alex Mclntyre spent Sunday&#13;
with relatives and friends at&#13;
Howell.&#13;
Mrs. J as. Smith of Lansing is&#13;
visitiug at the home of W. A.&#13;
Carr.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Sm oyer and sons of&#13;
Arkon, Ohio, are spending the&#13;
week at the home of T. Read.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ruel Cadwell of&#13;
Detroit and Mrs. W. H.i Cadwell&#13;
of Chelsea are camping at Portage&#13;
Lake.&#13;
Miss Mary A. Eaman and Mrs.&#13;
James T. Eaman of Detroit visited&#13;
at the home of Mrs. E . Martin&#13;
the past week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Green and&#13;
daughter Gertrude, Miss Melba&#13;
Wimbles and Miss Gertrude&#13;
Snedicor of Howell were Pinckney&#13;
visitors last Thursday.&#13;
We are in receipt of a paper&#13;
from Crosswell, Mich., of which&#13;
Paul Curlettof tbiajplace i s local&#13;
editor and amines* manager. The&#13;
paper is a credit to the young man&#13;
and to Sanilac county.&#13;
E. A. Euhn of Gregory has&#13;
purchased the elevator, coal and&#13;
lumber yards of J. J. Watkins of&#13;
Hamburg and will take possession&#13;
in a few days. Mr. Kuhn is a&#13;
successful elevator man and has&#13;
two sons grown np who will assist&#13;
in running an up-to-date business&#13;
in Hamburg. Mr. Watkins has&#13;
managed t h e Hamburg elevator&#13;
for years and has made many&#13;
friends by his honorable way of&#13;
doing business.&#13;
The children's day exercises at&#13;
the M. E. and Cong'l. churches,&#13;
Sunday, were* very fine. At tbe&#13;
M. E. church E. M. B:ard, Supt.&#13;
of the Sunday schoolcf the' Marion&#13;
Lawrence church at Toledo,&#13;
Ohio gave a short but very&#13;
entertsting talk on his work&#13;
in that church whose Sunday&#13;
school membership reaches 1690.&#13;
When a man habitually complains&#13;
that his home town is dead,&#13;
it may,be taken for granted that&#13;
be- has done his worst to make it&#13;
dead, and that he is even deader&#13;
than his town. A preacher once&#13;
said at a funeral service: "The&#13;
late respective corpse was a me*mbtfr&#13;
of this church for forty years."&#13;
There are lots of towns like that&#13;
unfortunate church iu that tfcey&#13;
have "respected corpses" in the&#13;
puiation. It needs live men a * 4&#13;
dead men to build up a tofn.&#13;
pie of the State of Michigan&#13;
Are to. be given still wider opportunities&#13;
of educating themselves&#13;
at thle State's rapidly advancing&#13;
Agricultural Collage at East&#13;
Lansing. The authorities have&#13;
planned a summer course which&#13;
begin on June 23rd and coninue&#13;
six weeks* A large number&#13;
of the courses ottered in the t e g -&#13;
uls^tsrmsof the college will be&#13;
tadght during the summer session.&#13;
These are chosen with the hope of&#13;
meeting the needs, of teachers and&#13;
others who jpmld benefit by this&#13;
training. Although this is 'the&#13;
first attempt to hold such a school&#13;
at the oullsfe, letters «»iakrsadjr&#13;
being received b y B . H. Byder,&#13;
the member of the&#13;
iflfWfWWfttfflffffW^&#13;
4*&#13;
GIVE ME NO. 38&#13;
TbU is tbe call used by tbe wise customer who&#13;
wishes&#13;
Staple and Fancy Groceries&#13;
Connor's World Best Ice Cream&#13;
A Work Shirt A Pair of Overalls'&#13;
A NiceTDress Hat or Cap&#13;
A New Suit of Clothes&#13;
A Pair of Gloves&#13;
Or Anything in the Gents&#13;
Furnishing Line&#13;
"And Don't You Forget," that we are ever&#13;
anxious and "Willing to fill your wants for anything&#13;
in oar line.&#13;
Leave Your Special Orders With&#13;
Monks Bros.&#13;
.!&gt;:&#13;
• The Square DealBroBerif •&#13;
"Sv&#13;
S M A S H !&#13;
the retotnedto their Jiome&#13;
came to Pinckney fridtf; iPteg* indicating that a&#13;
l Mis. LsBarron who has number of students will&#13;
•pending tte week g| ^ ^ s * l ^&#13;
of Dr. H; F. Sfgler. SatrJr-* sheading ^ST teefal and pi&#13;
sujber on, tbsy beautiful&#13;
'in Jstatsiss^?V«£'"V&#13;
We Hit High&#13;
Prices Right&#13;
On the Head&#13;
HARDWARE Try lis—&#13;
Best Goods&#13;
In Everything&#13;
When you want BIGHT teals,, CHEAP household utemu&gt;, GOOD&#13;
paints and varnishes, nails, kitchen ware, stoves, hinges, screws, bolts,&#13;
knives and a hundred other things COstE HERE. You'll SAVS&#13;
MONEY.&#13;
Tecp]e Hardware Company&#13;
* • *&#13;
Hungry&#13;
H E N . t h e «^ns»i o-Tjhe i i e i s &lt; says^i&#13;
f this yon jBS&amp;:bi s m ^ J s i ^a^eets^&#13;
somstinng BTOOTA»TiAIrje»jiiS&gt;i&#13;
his way,.directly. W v e had lots of pur&#13;
women csssqsasis sail ns that -csi; #s#a&gt;.&#13;
steaks, chops or whatever it a y » he iust&#13;
4?**«|*^*?0TO&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative Banking^&#13;
Business.&#13;
mm&#13;
3 p*r ^.ent :¾&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
Pfnckney Mich.&#13;
0 . W. f B B r U B Prop I&#13;
«»?"»"'-»»• « n.jwi»iLjwiBm :&#13;
Perhaps this picture may recall&#13;
some pleasant occasion—a party&#13;
and the becoming costume you&#13;
wore.&#13;
Any event worth remembering&#13;
suggests a picture.&#13;
Make an appointment today.&#13;
Daisie B. Chapell&#13;
Stockbrlctye, Michigan&#13;
"Clean Up the Bowels a n }&#13;
Keep Them Clean"&#13;
There are" many remedies to be&#13;
hid for constipation, but the difficulty&#13;
is to procure one that ac|S&#13;
without violence. A rernedy that&#13;
does not perform&#13;
b y force w h a t&#13;
should be accomplished&#13;
by persuasion&#13;
is Dr. Miles'&#13;
Laxative Tablet*.&#13;
After using them,&#13;
Mr. N. A. Waddelt,&#13;
31 &amp; Washimrtoa&#13;
Ssaty/s : WacV'-fsk,-&#13;
"Almeit «11 my&#13;
life I hav« be«n&#13;
A_. » .......aaasapatlea, and have&#13;
|rl^ snany r1steadi«i» an of whtoa&#13;
teemed to eatyM pain without giving&#13;
much^ r*m. 1 Sully trl^ Dr. UU-'&#13;
J A ^ v e ^ W o a *nd found thorn ex-&#13;
^ J S * : 1 ^ «• S«»aa*«t an«&#13;
thatn oaay to talto. I am^AMro than&#13;
*M* to re^AaeaTthom.*' ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
'9 '•&#13;
• # ; •&#13;
'k^&#13;
It b ^ p^sif e«t^i^ ife^SV&#13;
iS past They^iste nice ^ffiCdy&#13;
tad work like t eh ajns« A trial&#13;
will coovince yoja: -r*'••-•'• ** - "T&#13;
^&gt;J*{"f l4Nr^'lWlett are&#13;
found satitfactety afKrtrial,'rt-&#13;
MILKS MIDIOAL - £ * , "Sfchart, IpA&#13;
X&#13;
.0U-,UUL.tSB? 5S&#13;
M. r. s»&lt;n.m M. D.&#13;
DRS.&#13;
mi&#13;
V W&lt;UyW jetrJJfireimeifc&#13;
\&#13;
^Mtmmmz •J&gt; . » • .&#13;
J i m&#13;
\&#13;
k' .&lt;;• y&#13;
M " f^^WP^.'"' ^" ^mm^m^mmmmm mmmmmmmmmmmm&#13;
~ ' r . ' * &gt; ' . 4 . - ' ' '&#13;
?N?:;UJ; *'-&#13;
^¾¾¾^^&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
^^^^^^^^^A^^^A^^^^^I^^J|^^^^AA^^Bj^^^jy^&amp;^^^ x^^MAelAe^e^ttftelele^ftAe^i^BjAAAtteiA^^MAAAe^eiAi&#13;
I OUR BIG&#13;
Millinery Clearance Sale.&#13;
All Trimmed and Unf rimmed&#13;
Hats to ^o at&#13;
••I&#13;
For the Balance of the Season&#13;
Nellie Gardner&#13;
Next Door to Postoffice Pinckney, Mich,&#13;
SMiUW^MiiMMi^WiUlUWiiiiMiUWiUWiMK&#13;
South Iosco&#13;
.vmooucncai&#13;
/ ITS REALLY SURPRISING&#13;
the way the boys will pitch in and work when they&#13;
see a Rumely-Olds Engine doing all the "turning."&#13;
It's surprising too how little i t costs to do all the different kinds&#13;
^ of jobs around the place with a Rumely-Olds.&#13;
We have them in all sizes from 1 ½ h. p. up t o 65 h . p . , and&#13;
you can get one to just suit your needs-: get one to ^run your&#13;
feed mill, your cream separator, your hoist, to pull stumps,&#13;
pump water, and be your "hired-man"^^hat always stays by you.&#13;
You'll be time and money ahead and a lot better satisfied with&#13;
the way the work is done#. Come in and see us about it.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Roberts and&#13;
the Misses Beatrice and Kstbryn&#13;
Lamborne and Gladys Roberts&#13;
were Fowlerville and Howell&#13;
callers last Tuesday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Anderson&#13;
are entertaining the formers&#13;
mother and sister of Go wen, Mich.&#13;
Mrs. Joe Roberts entertained&#13;
her sister from Webberrilte over&#13;
Sanday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Nate Watters, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Bert Roberts attended&#13;
the commencement at Webberville&#13;
Saturday evening.&#13;
John Roberts and wife, Mrs*&#13;
David Roberts, Mrs. Homer Wasson&#13;
and daughters and the Misses&#13;
Lorna and Gladys Roberts attended&#13;
the funeral of their cousin in&#13;
Detroit Saturday last&#13;
Mrs. L. T. Lam borne spent the&#13;
last of the week with her daughters&#13;
in Pinckney. Little Mies&#13;
Mowers returned home with her.&#13;
Miss Edna Ward and friend&#13;
called on the Misses Lambornes&#13;
Sanday evening.&#13;
Cures Stubborn, Itchy Skin Trouble*&#13;
* I could scratch myself to pieces' is often&#13;
heard from sufferers of Eczema, Tetter,&#13;
Itch and similar Skin Eruptions. Don't&#13;
Scratch—Stop the Itching at once with&#13;
Dr. Hobson's Eczema Ointment, Its first&#13;
application starts healing; the Red, Bough&#13;
Scaly, Itching Skin is soothed by the Healing&#13;
and Cooling Medicines. Mrs. C. A.&#13;
Einfeldt, Rock Island, III., after using&#13;
Dr. HobBon's Eczema Ointment, writes:&#13;
"Tim is the first time in nine years I have&#13;
been free from the dreadful ailment."&#13;
Guaranteed. 50c. Recommended by O.&#13;
ft. Meyer, the druggist.&#13;
*&#13;
;&#13;
'4&#13;
ir.&#13;
If you can't find time to come in and see us, let us know and we&#13;
will come and see you or send you a catalog of Rumely-Olds Engine*&#13;
We're here to serve you;&#13;
the us a chance.&#13;
A. H. FLINTOFT,&#13;
FROM&#13;
PANS&#13;
ID Hardware&#13;
At This Store&#13;
Household&#13;
Novelties&#13;
For Women&#13;
Usually a hardwars store Silt mjab store; But we especially invito&#13;
the attention ef thVHOUSjWIFB to our ttook. She'll find here what&#13;
»4* has LOjirO W^^!^^SSf^» «*4 PERSONAL SERVICE&#13;
ttd PBOKPT deUyeristu v&#13;
Dinkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
fc.*i&#13;
North Hamburg&#13;
Miss Florence B. Kice is home&#13;
for her summer vacation.&#13;
Mies Bel via E l y of Howell, is&#13;
a guest of her grandparents, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Will Benbam.&#13;
Miss Ruth Dunning, of Howell&#13;
was a Sunday guest at the home&#13;
of ber uncle, Clyde Dunning.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Ronnsifer&#13;
and C. M. Bennett were Sanday&#13;
guests at the home of It. Bennett*&#13;
Mrs. Carl Davenport was a&#13;
guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Orville Nash last week.&#13;
Charles Travis and Miss Lizzie&#13;
Travis of Camp Travis were Sunday&#13;
guests of their niece, Mrs.&#13;
Will Nash.&#13;
Miss L. M. Coe* Miss Lou Haze&#13;
and Mrs. Will Curlett of Pinckney&#13;
were gnosis of Mr. and Mrs. R.&#13;
Bennett last Wednesday.&#13;
Charles Burroughs and son&#13;
were Sanday visitors at the home&#13;
of his brother James Burroughs.&#13;
$100 Reward, 1100 ,&#13;
The readers of this paper will be pleased&#13;
to learn that there is at least one dreaded&#13;
disease that'science has been able to care&#13;
in all it* stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's&#13;
Catarrh Cure U the only positive cure now&#13;
known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh&#13;
betog a constitutional disease, requires a&#13;
coostitalio-aal treatment* Hairs Catarrh&#13;
Care is taken internally," acting directly&#13;
upon tfcsJbfod. and mnoooa agrftces of the&#13;
system, therety deitroynfcft* foundation&#13;
of the disease, and. gfvrog the patient&#13;
iff&#13;
iiai&#13;
strength by building op the consit tiittu tion&#13;
and assisting naturt in doin| its work.&#13;
&gt;ri&lt;&#13;
po'&#13;
dred Dollars for any case that it fails to&#13;
The proprietors have so mnehiaith In Its&#13;
curative powers that they offer One Huncure.&#13;
Send for list of testimonials. Address:&#13;
F. K. Cheney A Co., Toledo, O.&#13;
Sold by all druggists, 75c •"*?&#13;
Take Hall's family Pills for constipation.&#13;
&lt;m—i&#13;
*J &lt;&#13;
Graduate OttU^rlit, of How.&#13;
ell, Mich, % # : bsv In WDwAftr, nn^^;jjdftt-A-:iiMi, Hs»ito&#13;
Restaurant Mr. Church gtuurintees&#13;
a perfect fit. ^11 headache&#13;
caused by eye straw *bsolutely&#13;
corrected. Consultation apd examination&#13;
f roe of&#13;
Always VmA to Bettor HAJJU&#13;
Serious skknessss st»rt in dberders *44«&#13;
M*ttos«ofa, liftrftoikldMjri. The bast&#13;
and Bowels ^ • ^ ^ . ^ » &gt; d f ^ . ^ 2 i&#13;
ll^fT, the droiBTlsi -&#13;
• M M t M M v M M Gratitude&#13;
Toa should see tbe expression of gratitude on-the face* of our&#13;
customers when we present them with the different items of&#13;
Raymond Mfg. Go's. Silverware&#13;
Absokitely/Free.&#13;
For their coupons. If you aire not already getting these coupons&#13;
it is to your interest to do&gt;o, for it is an absolute'case of&#13;
Something TOP Nothing&#13;
"IF FROM RAYMOND, IT IS GOOD"&#13;
Guaranteed for 25 years&#13;
W. W. BARNARD&#13;
Howell is on the M a p&#13;
We are fn Howell&#13;
WHEN YOU COME OVER TO THE&#13;
BIG CELEBRATION JULY 4th&#13;
Stop in and see us. You don't need feel under&#13;
obligation to buy. We welcome people to look&#13;
around, especially strangers. We are located&#13;
directly&#13;
Opposite the Courthouse&#13;
and 5 and 10 Cent S t o r e&#13;
"Look POP The Red Front"&#13;
A * t f # &gt; A ' # ^&#13;
PROGRAM&#13;
4th of July&#13;
At Howell&#13;
Cannon Salute at sunrise&#13;
Ballon Ascension 10:30 a, m.&#13;
Mnsie and Speaking, HOD. E. S. Shields 1:30 p. m,&#13;
Street Parade 2:30 p. m.&#13;
Base Ball Game, 25c admission 3:Q0 p. m.&#13;
Boy Scouts from Lansing, special drill 5:00 p. m.&#13;
Ballon with Parachute Drop 5:30 p. m.&#13;
Capital City Woodman exhibition work 7:00 p. m.&#13;
Magnificent Fireworks Display 8 p. m.&#13;
Day and Night Dance at Auditorium&#13;
Merry-Go-Round Special Street Attractions&#13;
Two Bands Come and Celebrate at Howell&#13;
N. B—Extra cars on all trains&#13;
c#j£.&#13;
"#S.:&#13;
&gt;-• -v:. '" •&#13;
J . . - •*&#13;
^y;&#13;
?«M»&#13;
:¾ fe?&#13;
&amp;i?*&#13;
:&amp;**&#13;
i,i*.v&#13;
ft&#13;
PINdCNEY DISPATCH M M *&#13;
•' " •&gt;&gt;&#13;
^¾&#13;
TRIPLE MURDER&#13;
MYSTERY CLEARED&#13;
.CRIME THAT HA8 LONG BAFFLED&#13;
GRAND RAPIDS CONFE88ED&#13;
BY LAWRENCE.&#13;
REPORTER GETS STATEMENT&#13;
Man Arrested In Covington, Ky., Last&#13;
April Telia All About Diamond&#13;
Robbery When Three Men&#13;
Were Killed.&#13;
Grand Rapids, Mich.—The mystery&#13;
of the robbery of the Thomson jewelry&#13;
store, in this city, and the slaying&#13;
of J. N. Thomson and two of his&#13;
clerks last fall was cleared up Friday&#13;
night by the confeaaion of Walter&#13;
("Vopper") Lawrence, who names&#13;
Lawrence Robinson aa the man who&#13;
did the shooting.&#13;
Lawrence's confession was made&#13;
when he waa Informed that Robinson&#13;
had been shot in a fight with police&#13;
ofleers in Boston and fatally woundad,&#13;
and that he had told the police&#13;
there the story of the crime heer.&#13;
Lawrence then told the prosecutor&#13;
and Judge Stuart, who had been summoned,&#13;
the whole story of the robbery&#13;
and killing here. He was led&#13;
up to the confession by E. A. Nowack,&#13;
a newspaper man.&#13;
Last Sept 18, shortly before 6 p.&#13;
to., while hundreds of persons were&#13;
passing by, two men entered the&#13;
jewelry store of J. N. Thomson on&#13;
Monroe street, In the heart of the&#13;
business district, and help up Thomson&#13;
and his two clerks, Edward&#13;
Smith and Paul Townsend. One of&#13;
them ahowed fight and all three were&#13;
shot down, the first two being instantly&#13;
killed and Townsend dying a few&#13;
daya later. The two men escaped,&#13;
taking with them, f2,200 worth of&#13;
diamonds.&#13;
Within a week after the affair Roy&#13;
Blackburn was arrested in Chicago&#13;
and brought back here for trial, but&#13;
proved an alibi and was discharged.&#13;
Detective John Halloran kept on the&#13;
trail and finally, after a chase through&#13;
34 states, arrested Lawrence in Covington,&#13;
Ky., April 13. Lawrence returned&#13;
here without extradition and&#13;
pleaded not guilty, and his police&#13;
court examination is not yet completed.&#13;
Lawrence, in his confession declared&#13;
that he and Robinson came to&#13;
Grand RatUd*4crdo some "dip" work&#13;
and plannfe&amp;e robbery of the Thomson&#13;
store.Ni,&#13;
"We went in that night and stuck&#13;
up the three clerks," he confessed.&#13;
"I had them In a back room with a&#13;
gun and black jack while Robinson&#13;
rifled some jewel cases. Then the&#13;
big fellow (Smith) jumped on me and&#13;
knocked me down. In the scuffle my&#13;
gun was discharged. Robinson jumped&#13;
in about that time and commenced&#13;
firing.*I think he shot.five times.&#13;
All three of the clerks dropped in&#13;
a heap on the floor. One wiggled a&#13;
little and when I thought Robinson&#13;
waa going to shoot him again, I&#13;
grabbed him and we ran from the&#13;
•tore.&#13;
"We walked through the main&#13;
streets and tried to get a train out,&#13;
hut had to go back and catch an interurban&#13;
for Muskegon. There we&#13;
took a boat for Chicago. At Toledo,&#13;
we sold our diamonds for $700. NWe&#13;
got 33 stones in all. After that I laid&#13;
low until my arrest." w Lawrence's arrest waa the result of&#13;
a tip to Detective Halloran by a Toledo&#13;
man who will receive 16,000 of&#13;
the $7,000 reward offered for the&#13;
capture of the slayers.&#13;
BOSTON MAN NAMED FOR&#13;
FEDERAL BANK BOARD&#13;
I&#13;
CHARLES SUMNER HAMLIN.&#13;
Washington.—Mr. Hamlin, who la&#13;
now assistant secretary of the treasury,&#13;
has been nominated by President&#13;
Wilson to take the place declined by&#13;
E. C. Simmons, of St. Louis, aa a&#13;
member of the federal reserve bank&#13;
board, created by the new currency&#13;
law.&#13;
m i " • ' • ' i * 4&#13;
VILLAGE ISJTRE SWEPT&#13;
Oellarvllle Suffers Loaa of Majority&#13;
of Houaea When Motion Picture&#13;
Mashlne Explodea.&#13;
Newberry, Mich.—Fire that wiped&#13;
out a large portion of Dollarvi lie, two&#13;
miles from here, Friday, made practically&#13;
200 homeless.&#13;
When a motion-picture machine exploded,&#13;
the building occupied by a&#13;
theatre was set on fire. The flames&#13;
spread to Krempel's grocery store, the&#13;
hotel and 20 dwellings, all of which&#13;
were consumed within a few hours.&#13;
Assistance was rushed from here in&#13;
motor cars, and many of the household&#13;
goods were saved. A heavy&#13;
downpour of rain prevented the entire&#13;
town being wiped out.&#13;
Nearly all the food supply waa&#13;
burned, and the homeless were fed&#13;
by neighbors until supplies were shipped&#13;
from here.&#13;
The victims were packed into the&#13;
already crowded homes and work&#13;
commenced at once on temporary&#13;
shanties.&#13;
A sawmill, practically the town's&#13;
only means of livelihood, was unharmed,&#13;
and the village will lose&#13;
none of its inhabitants.&#13;
VETS ELECT RILEY L JONES&#13;
End State Encampment at&#13;
and Chose Kalamazoo&#13;
Next Year.&#13;
Jackeon&#13;
For&#13;
TWO DROWN IN SAGINAW BAY&#13;
Canoe Upaeta and Yeung Man and&#13;
Young Lady Meet Death.&#13;
Bay City, Mich.—Agnee O'Brien&#13;
waa rescued Thursday while clinging&#13;
to.an overturned canoe {n Saginaw&#13;
amy, but her two companions, Lloyd&#13;
ware, aged 20, and Gertrude Stoke*&#13;
sacyer, 19, were drowned. The adbideat&#13;
occurred la view of several hundred&#13;
persona at Wenona Beach, and&#13;
Sfer' wHhht a lew yarda of water to that&#13;
&gt; ^ t . f e f l l f w « M have waded to shorn&#13;
;*s:; :J0Bsm the canoe In Which they were&#13;
- : ^ - riding upset, several people put ant&#13;
•i'.-/ vDmo» shore in boate. While) David&#13;
^ : Wrifhi ere* jailing Miss O'Brien into&#13;
sVaoeaVHtere lost his hold on the&#13;
, _. .. eeaof- ami taasv Theyoeag people&#13;
y h^A s)si| to the beach to prepare tor&#13;
*#$*.a&gt; #*cnie- farty of young people. Both&#13;
--^ ^ %odkt|rofe reeorercd.&#13;
FLASHES&#13;
• t M&#13;
ITEII8 OF STATE INTEREST&#13;
department of the Weetem State Normal&#13;
eoUeea. at aTitieaasjeflev Jma'-'taw&#13;
PWB^PW w w w ^ ^ a s y ^ ^ ^*w •^^Msp^s^^amsws^a^ev. *,ea&gt;*ssaw "Bray*&#13;
signed tad Miat ttcroMt Ktrefcy,&#13;
teacher ec pagUte la the local high&#13;
****** a * * aaaaasad the '"&#13;
MANAGER OF SHOW&#13;
TORN TO PIECES&#13;
FIVE LI0N8 ATTACK MAN WHO&#13;
ENTER8 CAR TO WATER&#13;
ANIMALS.&#13;
VICTIM CORNELL GRADUATE&#13;
Formaldehyde Use&lt;, to Drive Beasts&#13;
From Body After They Have Killed&#13;
Emerson D. Dietrich, Fiancee&#13;
Their Trainer.&#13;
Chicago, 111.—Set upon by five&#13;
angry, half-famished lions, unarmed&#13;
and with an aged lioness at his only&#13;
protector, Emerson D. Dietrich, of&#13;
Brooklyn, N. Y., a Cornell graduate&#13;
and manager of a trained animal act,&#13;
fought; a thrilling but futile battle&#13;
for bit life in a box car in the yards&#13;
of the San)* Fe railroad at Clark and&#13;
Sixteenth streets Sunday afternoon.&#13;
Before aid could reach him Diedrich&#13;
had practically been torn to bits by&#13;
the Infuriated lions which crouched&#13;
over the body, refusing to permit it&#13;
to be dragged from the cage until&#13;
they had been forced away by the&#13;
fumes of formaldehyde. Nearly every&#13;
bone in Dietrich's body had been broken&#13;
and It had been gored beyond&#13;
recognition by the beasts.&#13;
While the lions were attacking Dietrich,-&#13;
Adgle Castillo, hit fiancee, the&#13;
real* animal trainer in charge of the&#13;
beasts, waa telling Cy Do Vry, head&#13;
animal keeper at Lincoln park, that&#13;
her lions were the tamest in captivity&#13;
and were not dangerous. A telephone&#13;
message informing her of the tragedy&#13;
interrupted her remarks to De Vry.&#13;
Dietrich was the manager of the&#13;
animal Act and was engaged to the&#13;
lion tamer. He had entered the car&#13;
to water the animals.. They were to&#13;
be married at Atiahtie City, where&#13;
they were to open for performances&#13;
next week.&#13;
AEROPLANE RAMS AN AIRSHIP&#13;
Collision 2,500 Feet In Air Co*te Llvea&#13;
of Nine Men*&#13;
Vienna,.—For the first time in history&#13;
an aeroplane rammed an airship&#13;
here Saturday, reaulting in nine&#13;
deaths and the destruction of both&#13;
aircraft.&#13;
The (great Austrian military dirigible,&#13;
the Parseval, 2,500 feet high, was&#13;
rammed amidships by a military aeroplane.&#13;
The dirigible caught fire and col'&#13;
lapsed with its seven doomed occu*&#13;
pants.&#13;
The aeroplane crashed to earth,&#13;
killing both pilot and observer.&#13;
The spectacular accident happened&#13;
aboVe the aviation field between Enzersdorf&#13;
and Fisohamend, just out'&#13;
side Vienna.&#13;
Jackson, Mich.—The last of the&#13;
civil war veterans, who have been&#13;
here in attendance at the annual state&#13;
encampment, returned to their homes&#13;
Friday night. The eld home town&#13;
of War Governor Austin Blair probably&#13;
never again will hare the privilege&#13;
of entertaining such a gathering&#13;
at this hat been.&#13;
Riley L. Jones, of Saginaw, was&#13;
elected department commander of the&#13;
O. A. R„ receiving 250 out of 388&#13;
votes an the first ballot The now&#13;
senior vke-commander it Frank Manning,&#13;
Jackaoa, aad the junior vicecemmander,&#13;
M. C. Barney, Flint&#13;
The committee on resolutions at&#13;
Friday forenoon's session of the O. A.&#13;
B. adopted a resolution protesting emphaiicalry&#13;
against a' movement on,&#13;
the part of the Deughtert of the Confederaey&#13;
aad ethers to put on the&#13;
field of the American flag the con*&#13;
federate cross, and the adjutant-gen*&#13;
oral wat directed to tend a copy at&#13;
thdt resolution to President Wilton&#13;
tad to the United States senators&#13;
from Michigan.&#13;
Kalaraaaoo wat chosen for the&#13;
place of next year's encampment of&#13;
the Miehigan G. A. R., and the&#13;
Spanish War Veterans will matt at&#13;
the&#13;
Editors Are Shown Fine Time.&#13;
Grand Haven, Mich.—A luncheon&#13;
at the Colonial cafe closed the three&#13;
days' session of the West Michigan&#13;
Press club in Grand Haven and&#13;
Spring Lake Saturday, Visitors spent&#13;
the morning In dancing and surf bathing&#13;
at Highland Park, on Lake Michigan.&#13;
*&#13;
Thrilling motor boat races on&#13;
Spring Lake yesterday afternoon and&#13;
a big banquet at the Gtldner hotel in&#13;
Grand Haven last night have kept the&#13;
newspaper men on the Jump since&#13;
their arrival here Thuraday night&#13;
Osborn to Run for Governor.&#13;
Sault Ste. Marie—Chase S. Osborn,&#13;
former governor of Michigan, who recently&#13;
returned after traveling abroad&#13;
for II months, Friday announced hinv&#13;
tall a candidate far the Republican&#13;
nomination far governor of Mtohigan.&#13;
The announcement contained a number&#13;
of reasons for the action.&#13;
MICHIGAN NNEEW:S IN BRIEF&#13;
BIG SUM FOR WORTHY CAUSE&#13;
8ales of Red Cross Chriatmaa. 8eala&#13;
Netted $440,000 for Fight Against&#13;
Tuberculosis.&#13;
More than 44,000,000 Red Cross&#13;
Christmas seals were sold last December,&#13;
according to a report issued by&#13;
the National Association for the Study&#13;
and Prevention of Tuberculosis, and&#13;
the American Red Cross. In this way&#13;
$440,000 is netted for anti-tuberculosis&#13;
work in various parts of the United&#13;
States.&#13;
The sale in 1918 is a gain of 4,000,-&#13;
000 seals over 1918, or ten per cent. It&#13;
to hoped that this year the 50,000,000&#13;
mark will be reached. The seal design&#13;
for 1914 has been selected and&#13;
orders for the printing of 100,000,000&#13;
seals have been placed. Plana for the&#13;
organisation of a larger sale thia year&#13;
than ever before have been perfected.&#13;
New York state led the country&#13;
last year with a sale of over 10,600,000&#13;
seals, or one for each man, woman and&#13;
child in the state. Of this number,&#13;
more than 6,825,000 were sold outside&#13;
of New York city. Ohio came next&#13;
with a sale of 2,800,000, Wisconsin&#13;
third with 2,700,000, and Illinois fourth&#13;
with 2,500,000. Hawaii sold the most&#13;
seals per capita, the total sale being&#13;
somewhat over two for each inhabitant.&#13;
Rhode Island came second with&#13;
a sale of two per person. v&#13;
Beginning with &gt;a sale of 18,500 in&#13;
1908, in six seasons the revenue which&#13;
these little holiday seals have brought&#13;
to the anti-tuberculosis campaign has&#13;
more than tripled, an aggregate for&#13;
the period of over $1,800,000 or 180,-&#13;
000,000 seals.&#13;
ERUPTION DISFIGURED FACE&#13;
BOUND TO REGISTER A KICK&#13;
traecible Senator Simply Changed Taotloa&#13;
When 8hown the Error.&#13;
Was His,&#13;
One of our western senators, who&#13;
possesses a rather irascible temper,&#13;
has a habit on days when everything&#13;
seems to go wrong of scolding the&#13;
clerks employed by his committee.&#13;
Not long ago, during a cession of&#13;
the senate, the western solon had expressed&#13;
a desire that one of the clerks&#13;
prepare a tabulated statement of certain&#13;
trade statistics of the United&#13;
States. The statement was accordingly&#13;
prepared and laid before tile testy&#13;
senator, who glanced at It with an air&#13;
that boded trouble. In a moment he&#13;
looked up and exclaimed:&#13;
"See here, Morton, this won't do.&#13;
Why didn't you prepare this statement&#13;
on the typewriter? These figures are&#13;
disgraceful. Any-twelve-year-old-school&#13;
boy could do better than that. Boa&#13;
that three? It looks for all the world&#13;
like a five! No one would take it for&#13;
anything else. Just look at it!"&#13;
"I beg your pardon, senator," replied&#13;
the clerk apologetically. "The fact it,&#13;
it is a five."&#13;
"A five!" roared the senator. "Yoa&#13;
idiot I It looks like a three 1"&#13;
Lock Box 35, Maurice, la.—"In the&#13;
spring of 1911 our little daughter, age&#13;
five years, had a breaking out on her&#13;
lip and part of her cheek that we&#13;
took for ringworm. It resembled a&#13;
largo ringworm, only it differed in&#13;
thaMt was covered with watery blisters&#13;
that itched and burned terribly,&#13;
made worse by her scratching it&#13;
Then the blisters would break through,&#13;
and let out a watery substance. She&#13;
was very cross and fretful while she&#13;
bad it and had very little rest at&#13;
night. When the eruption wat at Its&#13;
worst the teacher of the school tent&#13;
her home and would not allow har to&#13;
attend untH the disfigurement of her&#13;
face wat gone.&#13;
"I wrote and received a tample of&#13;
Cutlcura Soap and Ointment, which&#13;
we used according To directions, aad&#13;
they gave instant relief, to we bought&#13;
tome more. It gradually grew better.&#13;
We kept on using Cutlcura Soap and.&#13;
Ointment and in three or four monthf&#13;
the child wat entirely cured/'&#13;
(Signed) Mr. Henry Print, Oct, 82»&#13;
1912.&#13;
Cutlcura-Soap and Ointment told&#13;
throughout the world. Sample of each&#13;
free, with 82-p. Skin Book. Addrett pott,&#13;
oard "Ctttionra, Dept L, Boston.&#13;
, Not Dependent on Hired Help.&#13;
James Thompson, manager of the&#13;
"largest hotel in Cleveland, Ohio, was&#13;
born in a little vhlage in that stale.&#13;
Not long ago Thompson's father, who&#13;
still livee in the village where James&#13;
was born,'was approached by an old&#13;
woman, a lifelong friend of the family.&#13;
In the course of the conversation, she&#13;
asked:&#13;
"By the way, what's become of little&#13;
Jlmmie, your eon,"&#13;
"Oh," replied the father, "he's In&#13;
Cleveland, getting along nicely. He's&#13;
manager of the biggest hotel in that&#13;
city."&#13;
The old lady shook her head dubiously.&#13;
"Well," she said, "Ihopt Jimmie'a&#13;
strong enough to stand the work; but&#13;
I'm afraid hotel work is too hard for&#13;
him—lifting ao 'many trunks around.&#13;
Is Jlmmie married yet?"&#13;
"Yes," replied the father, "he's been&#13;
married for some time."&#13;
The old woman eighod happily.&#13;
"Well," she commented* "heisn't dependent&#13;
on hired help to do the cooking&#13;
thafc* •&#13;
Miohlgam Blkt, 4,994 strong, wiU, it&#13;
it expected, be in Petoskey for the&#13;
tenth annual coaventien, which: be&gt;&#13;
ftat la thit city June it, oentinatsf&#13;
three daya.&#13;
Attorney-General Pellows Hat ruled&#13;
that the Women*t dab house at Lansing&#13;
matt be placed on the tax rolls.&#13;
'Re also holds that a village Attorney&#13;
appointed by the village oonnoil hat&#13;
ao right to prosecute criminal cases.&#13;
Wit*,a boJMecflinin*; a^fonrth of&#13;
Jml* eeleeratiea aad the dedieatioa&#13;
of the no w harbor reoently oampleted&#13;
by vthe federal gwerntoent, Lodiagten&#13;
expectt a big time Friday dad&#13;
aboat the Mmaaat th4n« that ever&#13;
Lake sad 4 M N aeoeie are&#13;
Vacation Views.&#13;
. 1 always feel to sleepy when I get&#13;
back home! If I could only start oa&#13;
my holidays then!" '&#13;
"Last year I took a month, half&#13;
with pay and half without. The trouble&#13;
was thai I took the last two weeks&#13;
without pay when I ahotfd hate&#13;
taken the first two," MThere't a ttore in 5oop*t Corners&#13;
where they tell those Buropean hotel&#13;
labelt for your case**&#13;
I'd love to tpend my vacation in&#13;
the ooantry. but that'a where I Bra,&#13;
and of doarte ij would never do."&#13;
1 had a friend wbo^went aU the&#13;
way to SwHserland to climb the&#13;
Alps aad then they wouldn't let Mat&#13;
*•: '%• luet love to raagdt It*&#13;
fire is my idea of * good tttadV*&#13;
"We're gohu to make Undo Qaward&#13;
He't very Tteh t a d hit will&#13;
iwadrta A d f » pwbate.*&#13;
A dead letter may be one she gate&#13;
her husband'to mail.&#13;
T i i* i /tfi'-y mm MAKING M M Caa be made profitable if fee&#13;
^ s t 7 right kind of machinery la need.&#13;
ttad Ibr eataloffw. wt&#13;
gooiign ft BotcMiAT j N t e * Ccw&#13;
at wast wstsf ei,~tyMsses» a» T»&#13;
DAISY FLY KILLER ^ 5 T K 5 ffi&#13;
&lt; ^&#13;
owrj iritt mtmMt&#13;
OwnaSMa- •ffMttnk&#13;
«cpf«Ha»Mr«rti4a&#13;
Am» BrMktya&gt;«.»,&#13;
*:*&#13;
ABSORB1-NE&#13;
Removes BarseJ:&#13;
aesdfrrjtaamyBnrfse e t d m m t&#13;
gtoptSpayia jiaiaaiii, Alkyapaia;^&#13;
Dse»ttotBHi&gt;ar, f*«ove4s«haVes&#13;
lay ep the^wtaa. 42*9e a 4astasy&#13;
ABSORBINS, JR.. the aedetptk lmt&#13;
For S****W****+&#13;
***y^asBa»syw/ostta\-&#13;
Haa. W B tifl yoa&#13;
'.'~-.&#13;
• -wt;-.'-; ,-_, *', ^&#13;
., :r »" ,.;«",? '\ • &gt;,',-.: .-••• - &gt; ' . fS&#13;
• w . . . . • » • ' • •&#13;
X H&#13;
*-s&#13;
• • * : -&#13;
-&gt; "S;&#13;
• • • • ; &gt; : : • &amp; &lt;&#13;
•'''•"•£ 7 ¾ .&#13;
:r41&#13;
!'. ;v;,' "^%'t&#13;
• * - . - : • " . * • « ! •&#13;
- r '. 'f ».• "5^&#13;
/.-.- r- •,. . v v v -.•'Sra&#13;
... . •- --- iJ.«?*&gt;~t-&#13;
. • . - - : / ^ : - ¾&#13;
&lt; ' • • • ' • ¥ $&#13;
. '• . . ^ • " - * * .. -. "::f,ts£ ,&#13;
• '- - - " ,; ^--- +y' i&#13;
•:;-v,&gt; "•-'?*.J*.-?*.&#13;
:^4t,»**&gt;j;&#13;
^H^- * . , • » • •&#13;
• &lt; :&#13;
3*?£! •JU • • p p * IT " " I"&#13;
&gt;^i&#13;
Z£&#13;
»:.** •&#13;
ti -r&#13;
&lt; - • ^ .&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
•*&lt;-•&#13;
w *&#13;
m&amp;^:• \• . %- .&#13;
' • « * * , .&#13;
•i-««.;&#13;
Daniel Made-suddenly advances from ft&#13;
pennies* mint to a millionaire. He* is&#13;
ambraous to become governor of the&#13;
state. His simple, home-loving wife fails&#13;
to rise to the new conditions* Blade meets&#13;
Katharine, daughter of Senator Strickland,&#13;
and sees in her all that Mary la not.&#13;
Blade decides to separate from hla wife&#13;
and takea rooms at his club. His desertion&#13;
of h|s wife and his constant attendance&#13;
on Katharine Strickland, causes&#13;
public comment Editor Merritt is won&#13;
over to the.support of Slade because he&#13;
cannot otherwise supply the money for a&#13;
Daropean trip demanded by Mrs. Merritt*&#13;
CHAPTER VI—Continued.&#13;
There are strangers there who&#13;
learned of your—er—domestic difficulties&#13;
for the firet time tonight," Strickland&#13;
continued. "Merritt has thrown&#13;
the bombshell/'&#13;
"Why, I thought—" Slade began to&#13;
protest.&#13;
"He's «41 right," came the senator's&#13;
reassuring tones, "It had to come&#13;
out He's got his coat off In there&#13;
for you now. He maintains that the&#13;
opposition papers are bound to take&#13;
it up at any moment. Now, what do&#13;
you advteer&#13;
•"The truth," thundered Slade. "My&#13;
wife is preparing to desert me. It&#13;
will happen"—Hayes jumped up and&#13;
flung himself out of the room—"tomorrow—&#13;
the next day—any hour."&#13;
"I see," and the senator looked&#13;
grave. "Is this irrevocable, Slade?"&#13;
"Irrevocable," declared Slade, positively.&#13;
"As I have told you several&#13;
times, senator, it is irrevocable. I'll&#13;
stand by &amp;at." »&#13;
Convinced that Slade knew his own&#13;
mind in this matter as well as he had&#13;
the reputation for knowing It In all&#13;
other matters, Strickland returned to&#13;
the waiting politicians.&#13;
Slade had been alone but a few&#13;
minutes when Katherine returned.&#13;
"Well, Mr. Slade," the girl exclaimed,&#13;
"things seem to be coming&#13;
our way."&#13;
Slade was in no mood for mere conversation.&#13;
He was annoyed at Hayes'&#13;
attitude, and incensed because his&#13;
private affairs were being publicly&#13;
discussed in the next room. Mentally&#13;
he consigned Hayes to the devil, his&#13;
sa&#13;
*i Think I'd Like to Males a toreejn&#13;
WIthYbfc* r T -&#13;
wife to the far Bast of the country,&#13;
and regis^e** *ewwith^ilmaslf that&#13;
ha would hare that divorce and the&#13;
.woman ha wanted in spite of everyr^&#13;
To^t^ everything / ^ t&#13;
- He resohred^o $?**&amp;Katherine *vt&#13;
than and there,d?« tw^ujse*;. |»&#13;
.• hM mio4 tlia m^t ao^Ul PTdoOaq jfap&#13;
• eeStfen tnnt * js»n &gt;ew ma4* &amp; a&#13;
- ta many Aim, v M Ae t^osfloVbe&#13;
free, to&#13;
e&gt; fleeting memory of the slight, badly&#13;
dressed little woman, whose 'diffidence&#13;
is strange surroundings has} alwaya&#13;
fretted him. She a governor's wife?&#13;
Impossible! He rose and stood beside&#13;
the woman whom he proposed to&#13;
use as another living stepping stone.&#13;
"Miss Strickland," his mind fully&#13;
made up, "you've done a lot for me&#13;
in the last few weeks while you've&#13;
been making that bust I think I understand&#13;
you in a way. The more I&#13;
see of you the more I think I—I'd&#13;
like to make a—well, a bargain with&#13;
you. That doesn't seem to be quite&#13;
the word," he hesitated as the girl&#13;
averted her eyes. "Yet I think that's&#13;
what we call it"&#13;
"A bargain?" echoed Katherine.&#13;
"Yes, a bargain," he repeated. "I&#13;
never knew but one woman well—that&#13;
was Mrs. Slade. She's a good woman&#13;
—a mighty good woman, but we can't&#13;
—I never had a home—not a home&#13;
like Strickland's. When I have another&#13;
hhouse—that'll be what IT! want 111&#13;
want my friends, my acquaintances,&#13;
to come there. I want—well—headquarters.&#13;
And I want7 a woman at&#13;
the head of my house that I can be&#13;
proud of—like Strickland."&#13;
Katherine was not surprised. She&#13;
had anticipated some such move as&#13;
this on his part, but now that she&#13;
was face to face with the unvarnished&#13;
suggestion, she found herself more&#13;
shocked than she would have believed.&#13;
"In a couple of months 111 stand&#13;
free," he went on. "Perhaps sooner.&#13;
I don't expect any woman's going to&#13;
love me—she isn't Got to do that&#13;
when you're young. But I'd do all I&#13;
could for the woman. She'd have everything—&#13;
money and—the power that&#13;
goes with it I want to say right&#13;
here that I wouldn't speak if I thought&#13;
young Hayes bad a chance. I saw&#13;
he didn't"&#13;
At the mention of Hayes' name&#13;
Katherine had an instant's vision of&#13;
Bob's tender face—his eyes burning&#13;
with love looking into hers—of his&#13;
youth—Ms strength—Ma fine honor,&#13;
and her heart cried out desperately,&#13;
pitifully, for the shelter of his arms.&#13;
In another moment the old recurrent&#13;
vision of life in the old town,&#13;
dull, cheap, uninteresting, and the&#13;
lure of what Slade was offering, the&#13;
money, the clothes, the servants, the&#13;
power to reign supreme, swept her&#13;
off her feet The thought of divorce&#13;
did not terrify her. Mrs. Slade, whom&#13;
she had never Been, was only a name.&#13;
As Slade watched her standing&#13;
straight and white, he feared he had&#13;
been too brutally blunt&#13;
"You needn't think it over now,"&#13;
he hastened to add. "Perhaps *yon&#13;
will later, and perhapa you wont&#13;
That's for you to decide. I guess I've&#13;
said all I can say."&#13;
But Katherine was not a woman to&#13;
shrink from a situation because ot&#13;
its unpleasant features. She knew&#13;
that she couldn't have all the things&#13;
she wanted without some suffering,&#13;
some pain. Her father's world had&#13;
taught her that love was a thing of&#13;
small, consideration where marriage&#13;
was -concerned, unless It went with&#13;
the advancement of one's ambjttons.&#13;
Lore was not of the world. Place,&#13;
power, wealth—these were of the&#13;
world and this man offered them to&#13;
Iher,&#13;
"This isnt a matter of sentiment"&#13;
alia agreed with him calmly. Til be&#13;
perfectly fraak with you. I dont aay&#13;
I won't think it over. X know Just&#13;
what yon want of a woman. When&#13;
yon can go to my father fraa there&#13;
wont be any barrier in the way."&#13;
She offered her hand ee if to bind&#13;
the bargain. Ha held it for a brief&#13;
instant and with a hurried "thank&#13;
you" left the room.&#13;
*Q^W '^*j^^™~ • ^^^^5S^— • • •&#13;
l.v-v -1¾ • V* c&#13;
a-;&#13;
.;'&amp;':&#13;
time, *o&#13;
flfvbia Upsvfer: here, no ___&#13;
fhJa a m * fof bar M a l d ^ f W i I wife 'of the state's&#13;
M&gt;«.«f&gt;ii ** — —&#13;
jomtk^wothls* *t the fete of&#13;
eJ£***v, nothing. * the sptrjt&#13;
s 9 * t e ^ s M * r i a * a e s 4 r e n&#13;
than a thing ^convenience. -- --&gt;'&#13;
. At Katherine walked ae*oe*&gt;*he&#13;
raom, motfcag tawrt aim wttsV the&#13;
V&#13;
• • • &amp; .&#13;
t*nls^^,jaiIl«e»araettV'Wbstfan^&#13;
' /n&gt;]&#13;
ST-&#13;
" - A i a &gt; !&#13;
St&#13;
.&lt;i a;*&#13;
%.&#13;
self aa SladVs wife. She did not&#13;
hear Bob enter, and did not know he&#13;
waa in the room until be touched bar&#13;
shoulder with tender alarm, exclaiming,&#13;
"Why, Katherine, what's the&#13;
maita/l" }&#13;
Ha did not think ha ever remembered&#13;
Katherine, strong, firm-willed&#13;
Katherine, looking so pathetic and&#13;
helpless. She dropped her bands from&#13;
her face and be was surprised to see&#13;
the misery in her eyes and the drawn&#13;
lines about her mouth,&#13;
"I'm cold—I'm cold! I've had an&#13;
awful chill," she tried to say, her&#13;
teeth chattering with the sudden cold&#13;
that seemed to freese her lips. "Don't&#13;
touch me. Bob?" she choked. "I've&#13;
done it I've done it I always knew&#13;
I'd do something terrible—I've done&#13;
it" Her voice was hollow and her&#13;
eyes were blank and expressionless.&#13;
"Katherine, tell me what'e the matter?&#13;
Can't you tell me?" There was&#13;
a world of love and tender solicitude&#13;
CHAPTER VII*&#13;
Left alone, Katherine drew a long&#13;
breath. Her face was set and her eyes&#13;
ware harder than it Is good for a&#13;
woman's eyes to be. She pietnrad to&#13;
herself the future for which/she had&#13;
Just bei^aiaed. There would be&#13;
wealth—no mora/ pinching straggle&#13;
with masked poverty, bar father at , . jmr w» »mti «aw «fj paid.&#13;
Ida table, share his weYjtfc and the There would be no mora piwteftae thai&#13;
of t h e ' &lt; * * e f « t e i h i T e * t ^ h* vt ^ tot loft* HvaA not for&#13;
money she wonld biF traar i n follow&#13;
her deairaa in tnia na In *tj else.&#13;
Tbera would be honor and powaraa&#13;
"You Are Going to Rob a Poor Little&#13;
Woman 1"&#13;
ln*Bob's voice. His manner seemed&#13;
to rouse her, and she began to pace&#13;
the floor excitedly.&#13;
"My mind's made up. It's all over&#13;
between us now* I'm going to marry&#13;
Slade," the words were uttered&#13;
quickly, breathlessly.&#13;
"You're going to marry Blade," Bob&#13;
could scarcely believe his ears. "You&#13;
must be crazy 1"&#13;
"No." Her voice was firmer now.&#13;
"But I'm twenty-seven years old,&#13;
twenty-seven years old." She bit the&#13;
words off with a vengeance. "Soon&#13;
1*11 be thirty—thirty—do you hear 7&#13;
And you're the only man I've ever&#13;
cared a rap for. I've tried to marry&#13;
other men, rich men, men with Important&#13;
positions. Once I nearly did It&#13;
in Europe. Then I thought of you,&#13;
and I waited1, I waited. And it's too&#13;
late now. I can't wait any longer.&#13;
I've worried and wondered ever since&#13;
I got home what I could do. What I&#13;
could do! Blade's the answer, Bob,&#13;
Slade's the answer."&#13;
"My God, Katherine!" Hayes was&#13;
completely bewildered at this unexpected&#13;
outburst. "Slade's married."&#13;
"I don't care," she retorted, defiantly,&#13;
gaining courage as she talked.&#13;
"A woman more or less ie nothing&#13;
to that man! Hell move a mountain.&#13;
Hell soon sweep her out of his path."&#13;
The hot blood surged up Into Hayes'&#13;
face. He was aghast at this peep into&#13;
the soul of the woman ha had thought&#13;
waa tender and dear and sweet Her&#13;
complete disregard of Mrs. Blade enraged&#13;
him.&#13;
"So this la what Slade baa doner&#13;
His fists ware clinched. This la what&#13;
he's after. This la what you want&#13;
I'm not surprised," he went on, bitterly.&#13;
"It was alwaya in you."&#13;
"Yea," aha mat this accusation, an&#13;
angry light in her eyes. "It waa alwaya&#13;
In jr.e. I always .had to have&#13;
everything, be everything. -I can't&#13;
stay here and be a nobody. We're&#13;
getting horribly poor. If wa look prosperous,&#13;
it's because nothing is paid&#13;
for. When I waa a child I always&#13;
had to lead all the tittle games." She&#13;
waa talking rapidly! earnestly. "Then&#13;
when'I grew up there waa only one&#13;
lender hera—Katharine Strickland,&#13;
ann after there wai never&gt; but ana'&#13;
woman left this plaea and did the&#13;
thinga I've dons) and made the aae&gt;&#13;
eeeees rve made, and now-Mo coma&#13;
back hare and settle downl When&#13;
rm, Mrs. SUde 111 hera the life I'm&#13;
after—money and power an* Bnropothe&#13;
world,"&#13;
"Dont forget Blade," came aareaatteafty&#13;
from. Hayes. "Dont forget&#13;
Blade," and he came toward ' har.&#13;
T d m i hare Blade, too. You'll hare&#13;
Blade 'afci&#13;
—Aw^aae stoaartkma tae&gt;hottnr af what&#13;
ane And aa^reed to da awapt&#13;
ttto a ekaSTt&#13;
toefeatron*&#13;
*••'&#13;
Of&#13;
Katherine anawered quietly, mora to&#13;
herself than to him. Her voice&#13;
dropped wearily. "Bvery time he&#13;
kisses me—every time he comes into&#13;
the room. But 111 get used to him,&#13;
I suppose. Women get used to that&#13;
sort of thing."&#13;
"Yes, and then go to the devil I 111&#13;
tell you what I think of you," be&#13;
stormed. "You're a bad woman,&#13;
You're as rotten as they make them.&#13;
There's no type so low. You're bad&#13;
to the marrow. London and Washington&#13;
and Parie have done for you.&#13;
You've butterflied all over the world&#13;
till you're a heartless jade, Junketing&#13;
about from one embassy to another&#13;
with all your pretty little cheating&#13;
tricks and not; a decent thought in&#13;
your head."&#13;
"I won't listen," she gseped, amased&#13;
at his denunciation of her.&#13;
"You will listen 1"&#13;
"Don't oh, dont say such things,&#13;
Bob," she pleaded.&#13;
"Why not?" he demanded. "You&#13;
who plan to do such a devilish thing&#13;
in the eyes of God and of men, can&#13;
you be afraid to hear what it really is&#13;
you plan? You will listen!"&#13;
He took a step nearer. He caught&#13;
her roughly by the shoulders. He&#13;
buried his lips into the soft tendrils&#13;
of Hair around her ear as he almost&#13;
shouted; "You are going to rob a poor&#13;
little woman—step into her house and&#13;
enatch away her husband—and the&#13;
only excuse you can offer Is that you&#13;
want his money. Why don't you rob&#13;
somebody outright and get away with&#13;
it? It's more honest"&#13;
Katherine shrank from him with&#13;
a cry of protest.&#13;
"And all the while you love me,"&#13;
he went on, passionately, "you love—&#13;
me—"&#13;
"I don't," she sobbed.&#13;
"You lie!" he accused, hotly.&#13;
"Well, supposing I do—what can&#13;
you give me?" she asked coolly.&#13;
"What can I give you?" he repeated.&#13;
Then with a look of utter loathing in&#13;
his eyes: "You contemptible little—"&#13;
and he flung her from Mm.&#13;
"You're going to sell what's mine&#13;
to the highest bidder," he panted.&#13;
"But Slade's not divorced yet and&#13;
before you get out of this dirty mire&#13;
youll regret i t You'll find yourself&#13;
go deep in scandal—"&#13;
"I won't," Katherine protested, vehemently.&#13;
"I won't have a scandal."&#13;
"They'll say he's your lover," his&#13;
rage turning into fury.&#13;
Katherine looked at him as If she&#13;
had been turned to stone. Then the&#13;
real significance of what he had said&#13;
fanned to a flame the rage that waa&#13;
burning in her heart—rage at him—&#13;
at conditions—at everything! She&#13;
gripped her fingers around one of the&#13;
lovely roses at her belt and crushed&#13;
it to a pulp. Then she ripped them&#13;
from her gown—his roses—and threw&#13;
them among the blazing logs In the&#13;
fireplace.&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
Children's clothes&#13;
should be fresh and&#13;
sweet—this means a&#13;
big wash—never mind&#13;
—use RUB-NO-MORE&#13;
CARBO NAPTHA SOAP.&#13;
Washday then has no&#13;
terrors. No rubbing.&#13;
N o worry —clothes&#13;
clean—germs killed—&#13;
mother happy.&#13;
RUB-NO-MORE&#13;
CARBO NAPTHA&#13;
SOAP used on your&#13;
linens and cloth&#13;
means a clean,&#13;
healthy, happy,&#13;
germless home—It&#13;
does not need hot&#13;
water.&#13;
Carbo Disinfects Nsptha Cleans&#13;
RUB-NO-MORE&#13;
Carbo Niptha Soap&#13;
RUB-NO-MORE&#13;
Wssliing Powder&#13;
Five Cents—All Grocers&#13;
The Rub-No-More Co., FtWaync, lad.&#13;
^ ^ CrOpS in&#13;
Western Cstnai&#13;
'All parts of th« Province* of&#13;
Manitoba* 3aakatca*waa and&#13;
A l b w t a , have produced wonderful&#13;
yield* of Wheat, Oats,&#13;
B a r b * and Flax. Wheat graded&#13;
'from Contract t o N o . 1 Hard,&#13;
weighed heavy and yielded free* 2 0&#13;
to 4Bh«ehele per acre; 22 bushels waa&#13;
about the total average. Mixed Farm*&#13;
l a * may b e considered fully as profit-'&#13;
able an industry as grain raising. T h e&#13;
excellent grasses full of nutrition, am',&#13;
the only food required either for beef&#13;
or dairy purposes. In 1912. and again in&#13;
1918, at Chicago. Manitoba carried off&#13;
the CkairipiotMhtp for boef steer. Good&#13;
schools, markets convenient, climate ex*&#13;
eel lent. For t h e homesteader, the man ]&#13;
who wishes t o farm extensively, or the \&#13;
investor. Canada offers the biggest op*&#13;
portuniry of any place o n the continent.&#13;
Apply for descriptive literature a n d&#13;
I reduced railway rates t o&#13;
Superintendent of&#13;
Immigration,&#13;
Ottawa. Canada, or t o&#13;
M. V. Molnnev&#13;
470 Jefferson Ave*&#13;
Detroit, Mich.&#13;
Canadian&#13;
Government Agent a&#13;
ROLL-TOP DESK IS BARREO&#13;
In the Interest of Efficiency Eastern&#13;
Railroad Equips Its Offices With&#13;
Modern Furnishings.&#13;
This Is an age of efficiency, and In&#13;
the successful stores, offices, and corporations&#13;
one Bees many things that&#13;
make for more efficient work on the&#13;
part of every one from the big boss&#13;
down to the janitor.&#13;
Nowhere perhaps is efficiency more&#13;
rigidly demanded than on most of&#13;
the railroads. An order just imfued by&#13;
an Eastern railroad is illustrative of&#13;
the point This order forbids the use&#13;
of roll-top desks by any of the employes-—&#13;
all offices from the president's&#13;
down and all those along the system&#13;
have been equipped with flat-top&#13;
desks.&#13;
This Is so the men will not cram&#13;
pigeonholes toll of papers and pile&#13;
work and papers on their desks, dose&#13;
them up and go home. The man with&#13;
a flat-top desk will clear It off before&#13;
tearing. In fact it's mandatory&#13;
in this ease, and he steps up to his&#13;
desk the next morning, not having to&#13;
fuss and fume over a pile of unsorted&#13;
papers, but ready to dig right In on&#13;
the day's job. There's nothing left US'&#13;
done from yesterday.&#13;
end that was hot a step 4a futtfisr touts) mith Mnv a nms who hai ttved&#13;
the* J** 4retli atats?* it all hid life with aaothdr&#13;
T "Doatr&#13;
only&#13;
she totsisBiidwdV " B e to&#13;
sort of&#13;
:':&#13;
: • • * ! •&#13;
*Tetrtlvs* his wtf* Just the&#13;
wnsastlap.&#13;
Old Cal's Explanation.&#13;
"The late Shelby CullonV' said a&#13;
Springfield veteran, "was a bad man&#13;
to argue with. MI argued with him once on war. He&#13;
accused me of being weak-kneed In&#13;
mr principles*. He said X reminded htm&#13;
of old Cal Clay. &lt;&#13;
"He saw Cal rolling along home one&#13;
evening, Mi explained, foil of applejack,&#13;
and so be said t* him:&#13;
•"Why, Cal, you told me once that&#13;
yon were a teetotaler.'&#13;
" *So Ah is, Mart Shelby/ said old&#13;
Cal, 'so Ah Srr only, sah, Ah haint&#13;
bigoted/"&#13;
Lalei the Foundation.&#13;
In manual toil, in commerce, in education&#13;
andr In public eervice, at home.&#13;
at the council board, la the church,&#13;
there M not at bit of routine yon -oaty&#13;
past yout hand to*, but the saints and&#13;
heroes were at the beginning ot i t&#13;
"Prinees dug thie well, yen, the nobeas&#13;
of the peoele hollowed (ton*with t h e *&#13;
•Mttentg} and wttt their • e U r e a . ^&#13;
Big Ones for Little Ones.&#13;
Years ago. In north Missouri, there&#13;
lived a certain backwoods farmer who&#13;
had a singular faculty for overlooking&#13;
the most obvious things. Once he&#13;
swam his horse across a river and&#13;
stopped at a house near by to borrow&#13;
a bucket.&#13;
"I want to water ray hoss down here&#13;
at the river/' he explained.&#13;
On another occasion he approached&#13;
a neighbor and surprised him with the&#13;
offer of a trade.&#13;
"I'd like to swap my three big pigs,"&#13;
he said, "IQT three little pigs."&#13;
"What's that?" demanded the astonished&#13;
neighbor.&#13;
"Well, you see/' answered the other,&#13;
"my pigs have got too big for their&#13;
pen."—Youth's Companion.&#13;
Red Cross Ball Blue makes the laundret*-&#13;
happy, makes clothes whiter than snow*&#13;
All good grocers. Adv.&#13;
The Up-to-Date Way.&#13;
"It is affecting to see pretty Mrs.&#13;
Youngbride cry when she wants to&#13;
gain her point"&#13;
"Indeed, it is quite a moving pie*&#13;
ture show."&#13;
Going to Extremes.&#13;
When taken to police headquarters&#13;
Proud said that his home was In&#13;
heaven. He is believed to be from&#13;
Chicago.—Baltimore Sun.&#13;
The Plan of Opposite*.&#13;
"What is the best way He get tome&#13;
Jiard cash?"&#13;
"Get hold of some soft thing.**&#13;
•Mi&#13;
DeliciouM -, Nutritious&#13;
PPBSSP s*»J ssrt-fike .a* Haver, teeresgW&#13;
cooked with Aolcsfjetk Prepared the&#13;
jjbfsy weft wiHeJaj m fse mete appetising&#13;
ami nrfciflfcj, nil ef greater food&#13;
•alee, -: r ^ s » wftfr er «4 "&#13;
bet:ee eelcL &gt;r*.*" .&#13;
ew^s^K ^•"w ^s^s"*eee&gt; ' • • •" • S «•&#13;
Libby, Mtteji&#13;
alikesv&#13;
:\ --*-f&#13;
.fiv. •'t"' t&#13;
•- ' v - .. * i&#13;
f, , Xi'hfc&#13;
S : ^ ' \ : -&#13;
;*V'U X .*-'&#13;
_*?•• • M J • &lt;;&lt;v«-&#13;
-^&gt;r&#13;
&gt;•.&gt; 4&amp;&#13;
y; ,J&#13;
..&amp;&amp;&amp;*&amp;£$&amp;&#13;
'• », " . . v i &gt;• • • . . v . ' ... ;&#13;
. . • • • • ' ' • r i f / . . - ^ - ..••• '-• - . .&#13;
1 ¾ ¾ ¾ . ^ v&gt;vi^&#13;
^¾&#13;
•v:;-.";&#13;
•k&#13;
;.-?'&#13;
Y:&#13;
r v •&#13;
*,:::.*&#13;
5*';&#13;
•X'*r&#13;
EST-: •&#13;
'&gt;ii&#13;
KS&#13;
¢^¾¾¾^^¾&#13;
Jte^T^ -1¾¾1&#13;
:ljE .•$*'&#13;
:"Kt^^C*\^ * •&#13;
" • W ^ K V ' ' - ' ' , ' -&#13;
'B^PS^-V.&#13;
* &amp; &amp; - - : • • • /&#13;
^pffl^'t'"'&#13;
'fiUf^ '* 'mffi/tfrf MfiLi ''*" .S^s'v&#13;
K^^IV/&#13;
BE^'^J**'*;' '&#13;
K n i ^ v •"*.• •-••&#13;
^^¾ .•V"''-', ^ ^&#13;
^^SuJV'y ' ' HBir . ~^&#13;
»&#13;
''} -&#13;
^-&#13;
: ' • - "&#13;
• • • ' . -&#13;
•,\, . j *&#13;
RISK? ^^Hwgpy t&#13;
^LMEff'" Mrpf • ^^^^HJ^V&#13;
L^L^BKi •••'•• Lr^Lr^Lr^a^DrJ?'' ^^H?£-;';&#13;
^Hw;'',1 C'&#13;
• • - * • * . . *&#13;
* / - * • • ..¾ ": ••&#13;
&lt; * . &gt; ' &lt; •&#13;
•"f^\&#13;
^'jii'''.-* «,W. ' . -&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Local News . — - , Jv-_&#13;
Get Dancer's prices on stack&#13;
capvsasos adv.&#13;
Myron Dunning was a Howell&#13;
visitor Sunday.&#13;
Get your 4th of July euit at&#13;
Dancer's—you'll save. adv.&#13;
Madeline Moran spent the past&#13;
week in Dexter,&#13;
tk 8. Smith and sous were&#13;
Jackson visitors Monday.&#13;
Mrs. A. G. Gates of Rochester&#13;
is visiting friends W e this week.&#13;
Lu £. Richards has an adv. in&#13;
this issue. Be sure and read it. adv.&#13;
Cora Sweet of South Lyon&#13;
spent last Thursday with Mary&#13;
Lynch.&#13;
Mrs. Thomas Dolan of Detroit&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of M.&#13;
Dolan.&#13;
Vern Bell and wife of Detroit&#13;
are visiting at Jhe home of&#13;
L. E. Powell&#13;
Mrs. Floyd Jackson and son&#13;
Harry spent the week with relatives&#13;
in Detroit.&#13;
Miss Mildred Kuhn,of Gregory&#13;
spent Sunday at the" hom6 of Alfred&#13;
Monks*&#13;
Miss Helen Green of Stockbridge&#13;
spent a few days the past&#13;
week with Jessie Green.&#13;
Ella Mae Ryan of Detroit spent&#13;
the past week with her parents&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Win. Ryan.&#13;
J. S. and W. J. Nash purchased&#13;
a registered Holstein brllof Reed&#13;
&amp; Knowles of Howell last week.&#13;
Lucy Ca-lhane of Fostoria is&#13;
spending her vacation with her&#13;
parents Mr. and Mrs. R. Cnlhane.&#13;
Mrs. H. D. Grieves spent last&#13;
Thursday in Stockbridge and attended&#13;
the graduating exercises&#13;
there.&#13;
Mart and Cass Clinton of Detroit&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of&#13;
their parents Mr. and Mrs. R.&#13;
Clinton.&#13;
Mrs. Elmer Book and daughter&#13;
Gladys and Mr. and Mrs. Cleve&#13;
Poole spent Sunday at the home&#13;
of A. H. Gilchrist.&#13;
Miss Mae Stackable, graduate&#13;
nurse of Toledo, Ohio, is caring&#13;
for her niece born to Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. C. G. Stackable last week.&#13;
On page four of this issue- we&#13;
have an item concerning Mrs. W.&#13;
H. Cad well which should be Mrs.&#13;
J. A. Cadwell who is at home to&#13;
her many friends at Portage Lake&#13;
for the summer.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Willis Clark left&#13;
last Thursday morning for a two&#13;
weeks visit with relatives at&#13;
Simcoe, Ontario. Mr. Dingman&#13;
of New Haven has charge at the&#13;
depot here during Mr. ^Clark's&#13;
absence.&#13;
Some Good Dairy Advice&#13;
Prof. C. E. Newlander of the&#13;
Michigan Agricultural College has&#13;
written a brief article on *'Care of&#13;
Dairy Products in Summer. "We&#13;
are publishing this article on&#13;
another page of this issue of the&#13;
Dispatch. We do this because we&#13;
believe these practical suggestions&#13;
are of value to our farmer friends&#13;
and we hope none of t^em will&#13;
overlook it,&#13;
Boys suit* that wear at Dan.&#13;
cer'e. $3.50 up. adv.&#13;
Florence, Helen and Walter&#13;
Reason spent last Friday in Ann&#13;
Arbor.&#13;
Fleet Kuhn of Milford spent a&#13;
few days the past week at the&#13;
home of Willis Tupper.&#13;
John Mclntyre and son Raymond&#13;
of Howell were Pinckney&#13;
callerB Tuesday afternoon.&#13;
Mrs. G. L. 'Teeple and daughter&#13;
is visiting at the home of Roy&#13;
Mer;ilb of Hamburg.&#13;
Mrs. J. Condon and children of&#13;
Hancock, are visiting at the home&#13;
of her mother Mrs. J. O'Connor*&#13;
Miss Helen White .of West&#13;
Marion spent the latter part of&#13;
last week with her cousin, Florence&#13;
Tupper.&#13;
To the P. H. S. Class of 1914,]&#13;
I desire to express my appreciation&#13;
for the beautiful gift I received.&#13;
That heavens choice&#13;
blessings may ever come to each&#13;
of you is the wish of your friend.&#13;
Mrs. H. W. Crofoot&#13;
The Putnam and Hamburg&#13;
Farmers Clab will meet Saturday&#13;
June 27, at the home of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Cady for supper. Topic,&#13;
"Pertaining to the Farm Home."&#13;
Discussion by Mrs. Geo. Van&#13;
Horn and Mrs. Jas. Nash. Waiters,&#13;
Mesdames S. Swarthout, Bay&#13;
Baker and H. Kice. A good attendance&#13;
is requested.&#13;
Tuesday afternoou, June 23, a&#13;
granite shower was given at the&#13;
home of Miss Lila Chubb to about&#13;
fifteen gkls in honor of Miss Ella&#13;
Mae Farley. The afternoon was&#13;
delightfully, taken up with sewing,&#13;
music and social chat, after which&#13;
an excellent luncheon was served&#13;
by the hostess and her mother.&#13;
Congratulations were showered&#13;
upon the bride-to-be as the guests&#13;
departed all having spent a very&#13;
pleasant afternoon.&#13;
Cough* and Celds Weaken the System&#13;
.Continued Coughs, Colds and Bronchial&#13;
troubles are depressing aud weaken the&#13;
system. Lost of weight and appetite generally&#13;
follow. Get a 50c bottle of Dr.&#13;
King's New Discovery to-day. It will stop&#13;
your cough. The first dose helps. The&#13;
be*t medicine for Stubborn Colds Coughs,&#13;
and all Throat and Lang Troubles, Mr. O.&#13;
H. Brown, Mateatine, Ala., writer. "My&#13;
*ife was sick during the hot summer&#13;
montbi and I honestly believe Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery saved her life/' Good For&#13;
children. 60c and $1.00 Recommended&#13;
by C. G. Meyer, the droggiat. _ - adv.&#13;
Taking a Run in the&#13;
Country&#13;
3&amp;&#13;
It is plain to be seen that many of the farmers hereabouts&#13;
Could use some Lumber to good advantage. Some need a new&#13;
barn—others a corn crib or granary—while many other bnildingt&#13;
can stand some needed repairs.&#13;
How is it with you, Mr. Reader—anything lacking about&#13;
your place? If sd, better let u« fit you out with what Lumber&#13;
yoa need—AT ONCE. We have lota of good common lumber&#13;
ihat is just the thing for building sheds, bams or grauaries,&#13;
andilyou can use some, here's your ohauce to get it at right&#13;
£fiots«&#13;
Ot course we have the better grades of Lumber too, if you&#13;
w^DtHaay, as well ss everything else in the. Building Materiel.&#13;
&lt;!*..&#13;
v»V.,&lt;. Mich.&#13;
Two-Piece Suits&#13;
FOR THE&#13;
4th of July&#13;
Cool as a Cucumber&#13;
Light as an Ice Cream Soda&#13;
Pretty gray tropical suits $10., $12.50 and&#13;
$15. fine serges $10. to $25.&#13;
&gt; Light weight tans $12.50 to $18.&#13;
You'll find the assortments unusually large this&#13;
week and we'll pay your fare on all $15. purchases.&#13;
DANCER &amp; COMPANY,&#13;
V&#13;
' . * • •&#13;
• * " • ' -r&#13;
&gt;...&#13;
/ ./„-&#13;
• I ' . T J M - ; - : *&#13;
•V -A&#13;
~**&lt;\&#13;
FITFDRM&#13;
Y o u ' l l b u y af l e s s p r i c e * h e r e t h a n In c i t i e s . mt-&#13;
* • « « . -&#13;
"Ko&gt;» Is ttve *ivme Vo "SavxiV&#13;
Half the satisfaction after your house is painted is in having colors that SUIT&#13;
YOU and the other half ia in getting paint that don't crack or scale off. Yon&#13;
!"can obtain'Both Halves and also please your Better Half by getting me to&#13;
paint your house with&#13;
White Seal ] Guaranteed Paiut [ H f t ^ g i f t j&#13;
Upon Honor&#13;
Drop in my shop add see the different color schemes and get an idea how your&#13;
house will look painted different ways. If you use my paint yon will be satisfied.&#13;
Come and let me figure with you.&#13;
I HAVE PAINTED HOUSES FOR THE FOLLOWING:&#13;
To Newspaper Publishers&#13;
and Printers&#13;
W e manufecture the very&#13;
highest grade of&#13;
S. G. Teeple&#13;
Mrs. M. Bowers&#13;
S. Grimes&#13;
E. W. Kennedy&#13;
J. VanHorn&#13;
Wm. Fisk&#13;
High School Bldg.&#13;
Wm. Dunning&#13;
Miss Kate Brown&#13;
Mrs. E. Mo ran&#13;
F. G, Jackson&#13;
Irvin Kennedy&#13;
J. J. Mclntyre&#13;
- W. H. Harris&#13;
Wm. Blades&#13;
Mrt. E. W. Martin&#13;
Mrs. A. Potter ton&#13;
H. A. Fick&#13;
A. Vedder&#13;
Fred Teeple&#13;
Marion Reason&#13;
J. A, Tread way&#13;
B. Lavey Jas. Roche&#13;
AND MANY'OTHERS&#13;
J&amp;»Call and get my paint book&#13;
L. E. RICHARDS. The Painter&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN&#13;
Try a Liner Advertisement in the Dispatch&#13;
' - - - : ^ : - - : ^ . -• f&gt; '.-&gt; '.-&gt; *.-* ' . - *.-• • A-.rov 'THE CENTRAL*&#13;
Some More New Goods for Hot&#13;
Weather&#13;
Such a&amp; lipase dregftes for women and girta, boy's waists,&#13;
men's shifts and socks, ladies underwear, silk and lisle hose&#13;
and silk and lisle gloves, etc., etc.&#13;
NEW FLOWERED RIBBONS&#13;
^ $2.50 Ru£s for 99c&#13;
,€ali and get particulars and inspect rags&#13;
New Potatoes.&#13;
EVKBIigBING IN GROCERIES AT RIGHT PBICBS&#13;
The G&amp;NTRAL&#13;
9 Mkrm. JL£ At* TTtley^ P r o p .&#13;
Brass Leads &amp; Slugs Type&#13;
Brass Qalleys Brass Kule in Strips&#13;
Metal Borders Brass Labor-Savmg&#13;
L. S. Metal Furrii- Rule&#13;
ture Metal Quoiw, ate.&#13;
Leads and Slugs BraM Column Rules&#13;
Metal Leaders Brass Circles 4v Spaces and Quads Bras* Leaders&#13;
ft to 48 point Braes Round Corners £ ^&#13;
Old Column Rales refaced an^ nad&#13;
good as new at a small cost.&#13;
Please remember that we are not in&#13;
Trust or Combination aud are sure we&#13;
make it greatly to your advantage to&#13;
with us.&#13;
A copy of our catalogue will be c&#13;
fully furnished on application.&#13;
e frequently have good_ bargains in&#13;
~ "" iters&#13;
and&#13;
second-hand job Presses, Paper Cutters&#13;
and other printing machinery&#13;
material.&#13;
Phllafalpta Printers Sigy Ci.&#13;
Maaafactaran of&#13;
Type and High Grade Printing Material&#13;
l i s . 5th St., Philadelphia, Pa.&#13;
Proprietors Peno Type Fooadr? ; 2tia&#13;
• / • '&#13;
If yon are oj^tempj^bg&#13;
ge4tin« a moDUB^t, *&amp;**&gt;&#13;
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V&lt;K*-AI* ^av'^'^f&gt;^f.£</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch June 25, 1914</text>
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                <text>June 25, 1914 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1914-06-25</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, *||higan, Thursday, July 2, 1914 % No. 27&#13;
HURRICWIE DOES&#13;
GREAT DAMA6E&#13;
Wind Sweeps up Everything&#13;
• Withina Half-Mite Swath*&#13;
Last Saturday Evening&#13;
PINCKNEY WAS LUCKY&#13;
Hail, Seven and Eight Inches&#13;
in Circumference, Left a&#13;
Few Broken Windows&#13;
:-\v&#13;
MV.&#13;
r?-."'i ..:---.&#13;
^ • &lt; , : . * • • • • '&#13;
fe:v&#13;
^ M.&#13;
I T •"&lt;** ^. •&#13;
Tbe tornado, which swept over&#13;
this section of tbe county between&#13;
six and seven o'clock Saturday&#13;
afternoon) began its work of destruction-&#13;
in Eaton county near&#13;
Charlotte, then moved eastward&#13;
through Eaton township, part of&#13;
Ingham county and continued on&#13;
into Washtenaw and the southern&#13;
part ot Livingston county. Swooping&#13;
down on {Jnadilla, the town&#13;
was completely wiped out, the&#13;
following people suffering losses.&#13;
A. J. Gorton, mill.&#13;
Presbyterian and M.E. churches&#13;
Al. Pyper, bouse and barn.&#13;
Peter Wordeu, honse and barjfc&#13;
Mrs. Harris, house and barn, 1&#13;
Watson Lane, house and bdfft*&#13;
John Webb, house and ham.&#13;
Otis Webb, bar* destroyed and&#13;
- house wrecked.&#13;
Ralph Gorton, barn.&#13;
• Wirt Baranna, house and barn.&#13;
J. *fiarton,gar age.&#13;
Booneke Bros., banc&#13;
Ed. Joelyn, bam.&#13;
Fred Marshall, barn^&#13;
&gt;-' Will Marshall, bouse and barn.&#13;
Den Denton, house and barn.&#13;
*-~ Frank Hopkins, bam.&#13;
;;v^.%l'WW»Vbarn.&#13;
'^;;^^ife&gt;,l¢Bl&gt;•ha^l, '&#13;
;• lio«nflla school bouse.&#13;
/Pres^teriao Hall.&#13;
- Frank AseUiiSe, baro.&#13;
The cyclone continued along&#13;
. Silver Lake, three miles south of&#13;
.Pinckney, mowing giant trees&#13;
before its onslaught, like hay&#13;
; Wore the scyth*) of the reaper.&#13;
. -AH cottage* south of the lake were&#13;
^. torn in splinters and scattered far&#13;
^-and wide. Sweeping steadily on-&#13;
^ward, awful in its-fury, the wiifi&#13;
mains grim desolation and yawn-1&#13;
ing catacombs of cellars. Tbe&#13;
storm was the most disastrous&#13;
which ever swept across this section&#13;
of the country and but a few&#13;
carried any cyclone insurance.&#13;
Both autos and rigs from Pinck-*&#13;
ney, Gregory, Dexter and Chelsea&#13;
visited the scene of wreckage all&#13;
day Sunday.&#13;
Nearly Here&#13;
At a general meeting of com*&#13;
mittees.for entertainment at the&#13;
"Old Boys and Girls Reunion,"&#13;
Monday evening, at the home of&#13;
Dr. H. F. Sigler, a resolution was&#13;
passed requesting the chairmen&#13;
to consult with each member of&#13;
his committee and make a report&#13;
next Monday evening, July 6, at&#13;
another general meeting of committees,&#13;
of plans decided upon.&#13;
It is desirable that the program&#13;
of entertainment be published in&#13;
the Dispatch next week,&#13;
Five weeks will soon pass* and&#13;
our visitors will be with us.&#13;
That our town should present a&#13;
gala-day appearauce, and that we&#13;
Should receive and entertain our&#13;
_ gbeets in a cordial and delightful&#13;
manner, is tbe wish of all residents&#13;
of the town.&#13;
''Naturally some one mast take&#13;
the lead, and we look to the chairmen&#13;
of each committee to take&#13;
that responsibility. Will you be&#13;
enthusiastic in urging your people&#13;
and all friends to assist in helping&#13;
prepare something new and&#13;
interesting in the way of entertainment?&#13;
Do not delay. Stait about it as&#13;
soon as you read this uctice.&#13;
One Cent Sale&#13;
Thursday, Friday and Saturday&#13;
July 2, 3 and 4&#13;
Nyal's Yellow Liver PMa&#13;
25c Box. _.2 for 26c&#13;
Epsom Salts&#13;
10clb._. .2 lbs. for l i e&#13;
Nydenta Tooth Paste&#13;
25c Tube -.2 for 26c&#13;
Senna Leaves&#13;
5c oz. 2 oz. for 6c&#13;
50c Box&#13;
10c lb.&#13;
25c Jar.&#13;
Nylotis Face Powder&#13;
2 for 51c&#13;
Sulphur&#13;
2 for l i e&#13;
Nyal's Face Cream&#13;
Peroxide&#13;
2 for 26c&#13;
Once you taste our delicious sodas and cooling&#13;
drinks you will drain your glass to the last drop;&#13;
often say, "another, please," and always be sure to&#13;
come in again to "treat" your friends at our cooling&#13;
fount.&#13;
Why?&#13;
The syrup we use is pure; our cream Is Jersey&#13;
rich and fresh; and our flavorings pleasing to the taste.&#13;
We give you what you ASK for.&#13;
C . G . M B Y B R&#13;
P i n c k n e y , M i c h . P h o n e $ 5 r 3&#13;
5c lb.&#13;
Copperas&#13;
2 for 6c&#13;
Nylotis Talcum Powder&#13;
25c Can " 2 for 26c&#13;
lO^lb.&#13;
Hypo.&#13;
2 for l i e&#13;
Nyal'a Beef, Iron and Wine&#13;
50c Bottle 2 for 51c&#13;
Tooth Brushes&#13;
25c value 2 for 26c&#13;
REMEMBflER—These sales are good&#13;
only during dates mentioned.&#13;
Local News&#13;
^^^f^MvMM^^ '^i0^1^ o a &amp;* homes of&#13;
W$$%^;-:^Mtih*m RyaH and Albert Meyers,&#13;
' ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ i l d i n g s , throwing them into a&#13;
demolishing both homes and farm&#13;
promiscous heap of rubbish. The&#13;
?£"%Hjf on a house owned by Sid&#13;
^ ^ ^ arstoo^was lilted off and bis&#13;
ildings utterly destroyed.&#13;
^00^:^-m^i^Joi tj*e Ryan&#13;
.;;&amp;g|; i|tTkmn^tion and crashed like an&#13;
'^:'^%kmLA^ Swinging southeast&#13;
Dovorit strack the Wm.&#13;
and Dick Bell farms, desng&#13;
the former's bouse and&#13;
and the Utter'* barn. .&#13;
James Smith and . Kennedy,&#13;
spent Sunday iu Detroit&#13;
* M. J. Reason and sons spent&#13;
Monday in Jackson.&#13;
H. A. Ay era and family of Detroit&#13;
spent Sunday here. &lt;&#13;
* Jessie Green is attending&#13;
summer school in Ypsilanti,&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Mrs. M. Brady and children of&#13;
Howell spent Sunday with her&#13;
mother Mta. E. Moran.&#13;
Mrs. Susan Antoine attended&#13;
the funeral of her mother in Defiance,&#13;
Ohio, last week.&#13;
For CYCLONE INSURANCE&#13;
see H. $T. Crofoot. advv&#13;
Mrs. F. Condon, the guest of&#13;
Miss Marc, is visiting iu Ann Arbor&#13;
this week.&#13;
Frankie Ashley of Detroit is&#13;
visiting at tbe home of his grandparens*&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. M. Dolan.&#13;
Walter Reason left Monday for&#13;
Big Rapids where he will attend&#13;
summer school at tbe Ferris Institute.&#13;
Florence Harris is spending her&#13;
summer vacation at the home of&#13;
her parents Mr. and Mrs. Henry&#13;
Harris.&#13;
Miss Winnifred Peters of&#13;
Pettyaville passed away Saturday&#13;
evening. She was formerly a&#13;
teacher in the schools at Howell&#13;
but has been an invalid for nearly&#13;
two years and confined to her&#13;
home neaKLpettysvilie.&#13;
Mrs. A. Monks and daughter&#13;
belonging .to M&amp;BkmJ Helen spent Monday at the home&#13;
~ of C. Doody of Gregory.&#13;
Korence MuClear of Gregory&#13;
spent a few days the past week at&#13;
the home of M. Dolan.&#13;
Helen Reason and Mrs. M. J.&#13;
.Reason spent a few days the past&#13;
[week at Whttmore Lake.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Ratz of&#13;
Detroit were Pinckney visitors&#13;
the first of the week. They have&#13;
been at Portage Lake patting&#13;
their cottage in readiness for the&#13;
summer.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Carr are&#13;
the proud parents of a little SOD,&#13;
born Sunday June 28. With the&#13;
adveut of a "litter shaver" Roger&#13;
will be able to do a rushing business&#13;
at tbe barber shop.&#13;
Dr. Morley Vaughn, physician&#13;
at tbe Jackson State Prison, is&#13;
spending several days at the home&#13;
of his mother, Mrs. Nettie Vaughn.&#13;
When Dr. Vaughn returns to&#13;
Jackson he will open an outside&#13;
office in tbe Dwight Block. The&#13;
prison, authorities have given him&#13;
this privilege to work up an outside&#13;
practise, His salary as prison&#13;
physician remain) the same.&#13;
Elh Ma=&gt; Farhy was guest of&#13;
honor at a Bhower given at the&#13;
home of Mr. and Mr6. Thomas&#13;
Farley Thursday evening, June&#13;
25. £u tbe presence of about&#13;
fifty guests she was presented&#13;
with a beautiful fumed oak chair,&#13;
Melvin Hart making the presentation.&#13;
Ice cream and cake were&#13;
served and the evening spent in&#13;
playing cards and social chat.&#13;
Warning&#13;
A view of the wreckage left by&#13;
the cyclone of last Saturday is a&#13;
reminder that every property owner&#13;
should be insured, for whether&#13;
the property be located at the&#13;
peak or base of a hill, and appears&#13;
to be sheltered from ordinary&#13;
winds, it is liable to be mined&#13;
when a cyclone begins its work of&#13;
destruction. Take warffing and&#13;
get iusuraoce at ouce from Monks&#13;
Bros., agents for the Michigan&#13;
State Mutual of Lapeer. adv.&#13;
^ ;tThe Rlseie family had jasf* The "glonons fourth" is again&#13;
^ j ^ a b e d sapper. Mrs. Eiseie^ e*d *t baro, | t is entirely fitting&#13;
%'W$&amp;gf-g^M#:-- i**&gt; K|tt* children ware? t*^t o^rthongbts should revett to&#13;
£ - ¾ ^ ¾ that H Is fear. the«arty^ays of out national lifev&#13;
* ^ '•^S^PM-.Jm WU* not recover. Mis* It b fro* the heroism and marty&#13;
- ; - s|shm Wetso* was injured about rdotte of those days that we as&#13;
^ ; ' ' ; # k s f d bat i« out-4&gt;f danger, peoj^e shall always draw on&#13;
# i r t Bs*ft«m was «ut about the^resAesi iqepirtOou. To forget&#13;
h»ad« Seretal* others reosivsd ^he* woaid-eesotmally mean the&#13;
••t&gt;&#13;
^^aiijoclnrnrifth&#13;
were sevetely, hot not daagerposlyinjojedabont&#13;
the body. *&#13;
^W|MSW stood farm homes and&#13;
T S W B S J M S ^ I ' S&gt;^SJB^BJSJ^SM8Mp' • B&gt;V^^B^V ^ ^ f ^ B ^ ^ ^^"^ laid labor ia whiah thsf #ote&#13;
Watch Our For : . , . • . . . '•; • • Si Jackson's&#13;
Lli::»&#13;
IT WILL BE A HONEY SAVER FOR CASH&#13;
loss ^1 tmx heritage of&#13;
Ai Slver Lake Mrs. Jbba I Oft another page of this las«e of&#13;
lieysra aad eie^en year old cfaildj the DUpaloh lie paWish -a brief&#13;
wasted fro* tbe sojl, tonkTte&gt;lfhteply hssa&gt;l&#13;
akatoh of what it eost some of the&#13;
men who signed the SeeUtatioo&#13;
of Independeooa. to^onr&#13;
ehUAaei sottgst air* B»y lean&#13;
shs# their lateHtaisos vS*a&#13;
'%;&#13;
3 Boxes&#13;
offtCloiS.&#13;
POP. Cash • v • - July 4th and a t h ^&#13;
Best Ratslns &amp;c&#13;
' »&#13;
t&#13;
- ? M&#13;
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V-&#13;
/&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
SEES GREAT&#13;
PRESIDENT PREDICTS UNPRECEDENTED&#13;
BU8INES8 REVIVAL&#13;
IN UNITED 8TATE3.&#13;
MARKET QUOTATIONS&#13;
Live Stock, Grain and General Farm&#13;
Produce.&#13;
MUST DRAW THE ATTENTION&#13;
ANSWERS CALAMITY HOWLERS&#13;
Mr. Wilson Asserts Prosperity Is Certain&#13;
to Follow Completion of Administration&#13;
Program by Passage of&#13;
Anti-Trust Legislation.&#13;
life'- /'.*#:&gt;•"&#13;
fci*? i; •&gt; • &gt; » Jr&#13;
* • • • - '&#13;
• ' • ' ' • ' . * " - ' ' *&#13;
f k^-^4:&#13;
^i~ *'"*• '*»&#13;
*f - , - * ' . .&#13;
lAiSi/.''''1. °w&lt;.&#13;
Washington, June 26.—That the&#13;
United States is about to experience&#13;
the greatest revival of business in its&#13;
history is the prediction of President&#13;
Wilson, who says this big boom la&#13;
certain to follow the passage of the&#13;
anti-trust bills that will complete the&#13;
administration's program.&#13;
Though the president spoke to a&#13;
group of Virginia editors In the White&#13;
House, he really was addressing the&#13;
entire country, and was making his&#13;
flnal reply to the opponents of trust&#13;
legislation at this session of congress&#13;
and to prophets of evil times.&#13;
"We know what we are doing." Mr.&#13;
Wilson said. "We purpose to do it&#13;
under the advice—for we have been&#13;
fortunate enough to obtain the advice&#13;
—of men who understand the business&#13;
of the country; and we know that the&#13;
effect is going to be exactly what the&#13;
effect of the currency reform was, a&#13;
sense of relief and security.&#13;
Boom to Follow Program.&#13;
"Because, when the program is finished,&#13;
it is finished; the interrogation&#13;
points are rubbed off the slate; business&#13;
is given its constitution of freedom&#13;
and is bidden to go forward under&#13;
that constitution. And just so soon as&#13;
It gets that leave and freedom there&#13;
will be a boom of business In this&#13;
country such as we have never witnessed&#13;
in the United States.&#13;
"I, as a friend of business and a&#13;
servant of the country, would not dare&#13;
Btop In this program and bring on another&#13;
long period of agitation. Agitation&#13;
longer continued would be fatal&#13;
to the business of this country, and if&#13;
this program is delayed there will come&#13;
agitation, with every letter in the word&#13;
a capital letter. The choice is a sober&#13;
and sensible program now completed&#13;
or months upon months of additional&#13;
conjecture and danger.&#13;
Fever Lasted Long Time.&#13;
"I want to suggest this to you: Business&#13;
has been in a feverish and apprehensive&#13;
condition in this country&#13;
for more than ten years. I will not&#13;
stop.to point out the«time at which&#13;
it began to be apprehensive, but during&#13;
more than ten years business has&#13;
been the object of sharp criticism in&#13;
the United States.&#13;
"Business men have acted as some&#13;
men do who fear they will have to&#13;
undergo an operation, and who are not&#13;
sure that when they get on the table&#13;
the operation will not be a capital operation.&#13;
As a matter of fact, as the&#13;
diagnosis has progressed it has become&#13;
more and more evident that no&#13;
capital operation was necessary; that&#13;
at the most a minor operation was&#13;
necessary to remove admitted distemper&#13;
and evils.&#13;
Guessing Unfair to Business.&#13;
"There is nothing more fatal to&#13;
business than to be kept guessing&#13;
from month to month and from year&#13;
to year whether something serious&#13;
is going to happen to it or not, and&#13;
what in particular Is going to happen&#13;
to it if anything does.&#13;
"The guessing went on, the air was&#13;
full of interrogation points for ten&#13;
years and more. Then came an administration&#13;
which for the first time&#13;
had a definite program of constructive&#13;
correction; not of destructive correction,&#13;
but of a constructive correction&#13;
of admitted evil—a clear program, disclosed&#13;
so far as possible in a general&#13;
program, in its particulars as well&#13;
as in its general features. And the&#13;
administration proceeded to carry out&#13;
this program. ,&#13;
."First, there was the tariff and business&#13;
shivered. 'We don't like to go&#13;
1A; the water looks cold;' but when&#13;
the tariff had been passed it was found&#13;
that the readjustment was possible&#13;
without any serious disturbance what*&#13;
ever. So that men said with a sense&#13;
of relief, 'Wellrwe are glad to get that&#13;
behind us and it wasn't bad after all/&#13;
Benefits of Currency Reform.&#13;
"Then came the currency reform.&#13;
Ton remember with what resistance,&#13;
With what criticism, with what iyt&gt;&#13;
tematic holding back a large body of&#13;
leakers In this country met the pro-&#13;
.$D*a)t of that reform, and you know&#13;
jbow, immediately after its passage,&#13;
fney recognised its benefit and its bettefi^&#13;
eaoe, and how, ever since the passage'&#13;
of that reform, bankers through-&#13;
-* o u t t b a Vetted 8Utes have been congratulating&#13;
themselves,&#13;
• T h e n we advanced to the trait&#13;
program, and again the same dread.&#13;
tme same heeltaiion* the same urgency,&#13;
-that the thing should he postponed.&#13;
It wttt not be postponed, and It wti!&#13;
e ^ t* ^e^tp«^ &gt;»Qan«e we are the&#13;
Live Stock.&#13;
DETROIT—Cattle: Receipts, 570;&#13;
good gradas strong; others steady;&#13;
best heavy steers, |8@8.50; best handy&#13;
weight butchers steers, |7.50@8;&#13;
mixed steers and heifers, |7@7.50;&#13;
handy light butchers. *6.60@7.25;&#13;
light butchers, $6®6.75; best cows,&#13;
$6(3)6.40; butcher cows, $5.25@5.50;&#13;
common cows, $4.25@S; canners, $3&#13;
@4.25; best heavy bulls, $6.26@6.75;&#13;
bologna bulls, $6@6.25; stock bulls,&#13;
$5.5006.25; feeders, *7@&gt;7.75; stackers.&#13;
$6® 7; milkers and springers, $40&#13;
@70.&#13;
Veals—Receipts, 410; market steady&#13;
best, $!0@10.50; others, $8@9.50.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 780;&#13;
market steady; best lambs, $9.50; fair&#13;
lambs, $8.5l-@8.75; light to common&#13;
lams, $6@8; yearlings, $8; fair to good&#13;
sheep, $4.25@6; culls and common,&#13;
$2.50@3.50.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 2,819; market 5o&#13;
higher; all grades, $8.35.&#13;
In This Day of Expert Advertising&#13;
Only Extraordinary Effects Are&#13;
to Be Considered.&#13;
In order to make signs attractive&#13;
nowadays they must not-only be electrically&#13;
Illuminated, but must be spectacular&#13;
or novel in construction or action.&#13;
At an exhibition held recently&#13;
in Chicago one of the lumber associations&#13;
attracted attention to its booth&#13;
by displaying an Immense cypress log&#13;
having a legend out in rglief in its Bide&#13;
and illuminated from within. The&#13;
sign, which was suspended aloft, had&#13;
been quartered, hollowed out and fastened&#13;
together again so thatjt had the&#13;
appearance of a solid piece of timber.&#13;
Electric lamps fastened In the Interior&#13;
made the legend stand out in bold relief&#13;
and caused the spectators to wonder&#13;
at the ingenuity with which the&#13;
Ught sources were hidden.—Electrical&#13;
World.&#13;
EAST BUFFALO—Receipts of cattle,&#13;
4,000; good dry-fed grades 10®&#13;
15c higher; grassers 10c lower;&#13;
prime heavy shipping steers, $9@9.40&#13;
fair to good, $8.60@8.90; plain and&#13;
coarse, $8.25@8.40; choice to prime&#13;
handy steers, $8.40®8.60; fair to good&#13;
$8.10@8.25; light common, $7.60@7.75&#13;
yearlings, $8.25@9; prime fat heifers,&#13;
$7.85@8; light do, $6.85@7.50; best&#13;
fat cows, $7@7.25; good butchering&#13;
cows, $6@6.75; canners and cutters,&#13;
$3.90@5.25; best feeding steers, $7.75&#13;
@8; good do, $7.35@7.65; best stockers,&#13;
$7.40@7.60; common to good,&#13;
killing bulls, $6.25@7; stock and medium&#13;
bulls, $5.50@6.50; milkers and&#13;
springers, $35@90.&#13;
Hogs; Receipts, 16,000; market 5c&#13;
higher; heavy and yorkers, -$8.60;&#13;
pigs and lights, $8.40@8.50; Canadian&#13;
hogs, $8.30^8.40.&#13;
Calves steady; tops, $10.75; fair to&#13;
good, $8.50@9.50; grassers, $5@7.&#13;
Grains Etc.&#13;
DETROIT—Wheat—Cash No. 2 red,&#13;
88 l-2c; July opened with a drop of&#13;
l-4c at 81 3-4c and declined to 81c;&#13;
September opened at 81 l-2c and declined&#13;
to 81 l-4c; No. 1 white, 88c.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 2 1 car at 73c; No.&#13;
3, 72 l-2c; No..2 yellow, 1 car at 74 l-4c&#13;
No. 3 yellow, 74c; No. 4 yellow 72c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 1 cart at 42 l-2c, 2&#13;
at 42c; No. 3 white, 41 l-2c; No. 4&#13;
white, 39 l-2c.&#13;
Rye—Cash, No. 2, 66c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate and prompt shipment,&#13;
$1.85; June, $1.87; July, $.90;&#13;
October, $1.95.&#13;
Cloverseed—Prime spot, $8,20, October&#13;
and December, $8.60; prime alsike,&#13;
$10.&#13;
Timothy—Prime spot, $2.60.&#13;
Alfalfa—Prime spot, $8.35.&#13;
Hay—Carlots, track Detroit; No. 1&#13;
timothy, $16.50@17; standard, $15.50&#13;
@16; No. 2 timothy, $15@15.50; light&#13;
mixed, $15.50@16; No. 1 mixed, $13®&#13;
13.50; No. 1 clover, $13® 13.50; heavy&#13;
clover" mixed, $13@13.50; rye straw,&#13;
$8@8.60; wheat and oat straw, $7®&#13;
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, $4.50; spring patent, $5.10;&#13;
rye, $4.40 per bbl.&#13;
Feed—In 100-lb sacks, Jobbing lots:&#13;
Bran, $26; standard middlings, $28;&#13;
fine middlings, $30; coarse cornmeal,&#13;
$31; creacked corn, $32; corn and oat&#13;
chop, $28.50 per ton.&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
Cherries — Sour, $1@1.10; sweet,&#13;
$1.25 per 16-quart case.&#13;
Apples—Steele Red, $6®6.50; Ben&#13;
Davis, $2.50®3;" ruBset, $4® 4.50 per&#13;
bbl.&#13;
Strawherries—24-auart cases, $2®&#13;
2.50; Michigan, $1®1.25 per 16-quart&#13;
case.&#13;
Raspberries—Black, $2.25 per 24-&#13;
pint case; red, $4®4.25 per 24-pint&#13;
case.&#13;
Green'Corn—60® 65c per &lt;ioz.&#13;
Cabbagl—New, $1.75®2 per crate.&#13;
Dressed Hogs—Light, 9® 10c; heavy&#13;
8@8 l-2c per lb.&#13;
Dressed Calves—Fancy, 12® 18c;&#13;
common, 10® 1,1c per lb.&#13;
Onions—Texas Bermuda, yellow,&#13;
$2.60, white, $2.76 per crate; Mississippi,&#13;
$2.50®3 per bu.&#13;
Honey—Choice to fancy new white&#13;
comb, 15® 16c; amber, 10®lie; extracted,&#13;
6® 7c per lb.&#13;
Potatoes—North Carolina coolers,&#13;
$4.75®« per bbl; Virginia Red Star,&#13;
$S£60*,75 per bbl&#13;
Live Poultry—Broilers^Jf®10c per&#13;
lb; aprlng chickens, Uof heavy bene,&#13;
lie; medinm hens, Hot No, 1 hens,&#13;
lOOUc; old roosters, l i e ; ducks. It&#13;
©18c; geeee, 11© 12c; turkeys, 19©&#13;
20c per lb.&#13;
Cheese—Waoleeaie lota: Michigan&#13;
fiats, 14©14 Me; New York flats,&#13;
IS l-2©16c; brick. 18©18 M e ; liav&#13;
bnrger, 12©18 l-2cj imported Bwiaa,&#13;
l*©tSHo; doaestio 8w1atvlt01i%e)&#13;
long horns, l i e ; djf'e*. He ner Ik&#13;
\&#13;
N.&#13;
•f '&#13;
ECZEMA ITCHED AND BURNED&#13;
R. F. D. No. 2, Seymour, Mo.—"My&#13;
scalp broke out with fine pimples at&#13;
the start They itched and burned so&#13;
much that I was compelled to scratch&#13;
them and they would fester and come&#13;
to a head and break out again. The&#13;
trouble was attended by such burning&#13;
and itching I could not sleep, also&#13;
when I sweat it burned the same.&#13;
My hair fell out gradually and the&#13;
scalp kept rough and dry with itching&#13;
and burning. After' about two years&#13;
the pimples broke out between my&#13;
shoulders. My clothing irritated them.&#13;
I was troubled with that eczema five&#13;
or six years.&#13;
"I tried everything that was recommended&#13;
without any benefit until I&#13;
used the Cuticura Soap and Ointment&#13;
according to directions, and Cuticura&#13;
Soap and Ointment cured me sound&#13;
and well in two weeks." (Signed) S.&#13;
L. Klllian, Nov. 22, 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;
Fuel Oil Will Kill Vegetation.&#13;
Fuel oil. when it can be obtained&#13;
cheaply, is highly satisfactory and&#13;
economical for killing vegetation. It&#13;
should be applied at the rate of from&#13;
100 to 160 gallons per acre. On a tennis&#13;
court or. other small area kerosene,&#13;
although more expensive, may&#13;
be used satisfactorily, as the total&#13;
amount needed will be small. The&#13;
petroleum produces are particularly&#13;
effective on grass and other vegetation&#13;
possessing narrow leaves.&#13;
The most economical and effective&#13;
way to use the oil is to make a number&#13;
of comparatively light applications.&#13;
One heavy application may affect&#13;
the roots as well as the tops of&#13;
the plants, but the several light applications&#13;
kill the foliage each time&#13;
and eventually the roots die.&#13;
• spraying outfit may be used to&#13;
apply the oil. Petroleum products are&#13;
very hard on the rubber parts of&#13;
spraying outfits, but economy of application&#13;
demands their use. On a&#13;
small area like a tennis court, however,&#13;
Jtne oil or kerosene may be applied&#13;
through a sprinkling can.&#13;
Was Taking No Chances.&#13;
The proprietor of the gent's furnishing&#13;
emporium always ate in the quick&#13;
lunch establishment next door, but&#13;
the owner of the latter had a grievance.&#13;
y "I put out many signs," complained&#13;
he. ,rl advertise lamb stew, beef hash,&#13;
roast giblets. I watch you many times.&#13;
Always you take something else."&#13;
"I guess that's so."&#13;
"Why is this?"&#13;
- "Well, I figure It this way," explained&#13;
the haberdasher. "Whenever&#13;
I hang out a sign, it's for something I&#13;
want to get rid. of."—Lippincott's.&#13;
What Makes Flattery Welcome.&#13;
What makes a man susceptible to&#13;
flattery is the fact that he welcomes&#13;
anything that affords relief from the&#13;
indiscriminate knocking.&#13;
Not That Kind.&#13;
"Is this Institution"of an eleemosynary&#13;
nature?"&#13;
"No, it 'tain't; it's a orphan asylum."&#13;
Poverty is a crime only when it provides&#13;
one with prison fare.&#13;
Be happy. Use Red Crosa Ball Blue;&#13;
much better than liquid blue. Delights&#13;
tbe laundress. All grocers. Adv.&#13;
The end of a busy little bee is more&#13;
or less painful.&#13;
Willing to Make Himself Useful.&#13;
The pessimist was weeding in his&#13;
garden when a feminine neighbor&#13;
looked over the fence.&#13;
-^Oh, Mr. Gloom," she said,Ml am going&#13;
to run over to the grocery for a&#13;
minute and leave the baby asleep_in&#13;
his cradle on the porch. If he wakes&#13;
and cries, will you please rock him?"&#13;
"Certainly, Mrs. Babble!" replied J.&#13;
Fuller Gloom. "What sized rocks shall&#13;
I use?"&#13;
WOMEN CAN&#13;
HARDLY BELIEVE&#13;
How Mr*. Hurioy Was R»&#13;
stored to Health by L*¥^ia&#13;
E. Pnnkham't Vegetable&#13;
G&gt;mpouncL&#13;
Eldon, Mo. - " I was troubled with&#13;
displacement; inflanimatioo and female&#13;
For two&#13;
N e w Modern P a n c i n g&#13;
The leading Bzpert and Instructor In New lotX&#13;
City, writes: "Dear Sir:—I hare used ALLIN'B&#13;
FOOT*BASE, the antiseptic powder to be shaken Into&#13;
the sboea, for the past ten yean. It la a blessing to&#13;
all who are oompelted to be on their feet. I dance&#13;
eight or ten hours dally, and And that A E O N ' S&#13;
FUOT.HASE keeps mj feet cool, takes the friction&#13;
from the shoe, prerenta corns and Sore, Aching feet.&#13;
1 recommend It to all my pupils."&#13;
(Signed) E. FLBTCHHR HALLAMORB.&#13;
Sample F u n , Address Allen S.Olmsted.Le Roy ,"N-.V,&#13;
Effective Damper.&#13;
"When you get tired of entertaining&#13;
guests with your phonograph, how do&#13;
you contrive to end the concert?"&#13;
"That's simple enough. I merely&#13;
put on a classic selection, and they&#13;
don't want to hear any more."&#13;
y e a r s I could not&#13;
stand [on my f e e t&#13;
long at a time and I&#13;
could not walk two&#13;
blocks without enduring&#13;
cutting and&#13;
drawing pains down&#13;
my right side which&#13;
i n c r e a s e d every&#13;
month. I have been&#13;
at that time purple&#13;
in the face and would&#13;
walk the floor. I could not lie down or&#13;
sit still sometimes for a day and a night&#13;
at a time.' I was nervous, and had very&#13;
little appetite, no ambition! melancholy],&#13;
and often felt as though I had not a&#13;
friend in the world. After I had tried&#13;
most every female remedy without success,&#13;
my mother-in-law advised me to&#13;
take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound. I did so and gained in&#13;
Btrength every day. I have now no trouble&#13;
in any way and highly praise your&#13;
medicine. It advertises itself.' '—Mrs.&#13;
S. T. HURLEY, Eldon, Missouri&#13;
Remember, the remedy which did&#13;
..this was Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound. For sale everywhere.&#13;
It has helped thousands of women&#13;
who have been troubled with displacements,&#13;
inflammation, ulceration, tumors,&#13;
irregularities, periodic pains, backache,&#13;
that bearingdown feeling, indigestion,&#13;
and nervous prostration, after all other&#13;
means have failed. Why don't you try&#13;
It? Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co*&#13;
Lynn, Mass.&#13;
Make the liver&#13;
Do its Duty&#13;
Nine times in ten when the liver it&#13;
right the stomach and bowels are right&#13;
CARTER'S LITTLE&#13;
LIVER PILLS&#13;
gently but firmly com*&#13;
pel a lazy liver&#13;
do its duty.&#13;
Cures Con-,&#13;
•tipation, In-^&#13;
digestion,&#13;
Sick&#13;
Headache,'&#13;
and Distress After Eating.&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE,&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
Years of Experience&#13;
Makes Perfect&#13;
CASTORIA&#13;
Mothers may try new remedies on themselves but Baby's life&#13;
Is too delicate, too precious to try any experiments.&#13;
Genuine&#13;
Bears the Signature of&#13;
BECAUSE it has been made under his personal supervisioii&#13;
for more than 30 years to the satisfaction of millions upon millions&#13;
of Mothers. y&#13;
Sold only in one size bottle, never fn bulk, or otherwise;&#13;
to protect the babies.&#13;
Ttw Centaur Company^&#13;
*&#13;
S^^AJ^kA'^V^:'-^'"... •'&gt;• -&#13;
&gt; --&#13;
\&#13;
XI&#13;
Jk.&#13;
-0^ - ....^¾&#13;
I&#13;
r"&lt;~(%&#13;
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3iiiiii&gt;&gt;ii&gt;iiiiiiHiMiiiwi MNH * « l*^w»wlA.»&gt;^atrrr? e e r - ~ -ar.-v-aKiSS^rr.- «r&gt;?:..~£rr Mtt-afSfc! • i ' M l i ' ^ j i j f i i n i m i '^'v.,.&#13;
•"^je: iri?.;J- -v&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
f&#13;
p e o •&#13;
pie the Declaration&#13;
of Independence&#13;
meant&#13;
freedom! To the&#13;
E n g l i s h ' i r&#13;
m e a n t h i g n&#13;
treason!&#13;
W h e n , t h e&#13;
Xourth of July,&#13;
1776, the continental oongress finally&#13;
adopted the draft of the Declaration,&#13;
this country as a whole became a&#13;
traitor to the crown of England, but&#13;
the men who later subscribed their&#13;
names to that document—written&#13;
proof of their defiance of England's&#13;
king— became martyrs to the Declaration!&#13;
In order that this country&#13;
might lift from around her neck the&#13;
millstone of English oppression they&#13;
placed around their own necks the&#13;
hangman's rope.&#13;
Nor did those men who made up the&#13;
continental congress believe otherwise.&#13;
When, August 2, 1776, the engrossed&#13;
copy of the Declaration was&#13;
about to be signed by those present,&#13;
John Hancock, president of the congress,&#13;
said:&#13;
"We must be unanimous; there must&#13;
be no pulling different ways; we must&#13;
all hang together."&#13;
"Yes," Benjamin Franklin replied,&#13;
"we must, indeed, all hang together,&#13;
or most assuredly we shall all hang&#13;
separately!"&#13;
_ Hancock, as president, probably&#13;
signed first, and it is said that, asjie&#13;
put his name to the parchment, in a&#13;
large, strong hand, he rose, and exclaimed:&#13;
"There! John Bull can read my&#13;
name without spectacles, and may now&#13;
double his reward of £500 for my&#13;
head. That is my defiance!"&#13;
And "John Bull" did read bis name.&#13;
In fact, he was at great pains to read&#13;
aU the names inscribed upon that document&#13;
Then he sent out an order tor&#13;
the capture of the men who had so&#13;
dareoT defy their king.&#13;
During the hostilities which ensued&#13;
there were several of the signets of&#13;
the Declaration made prisoners; men&#13;
who tasted to the fnli England's&#13;
hatreds—Richard Stockton, Francis&#13;
Lewis, Arthur HiddJeton, Lyman Hall,&#13;
George Walton. Edward RuUedge,&#13;
Thomas Heyward and John Hart were&#13;
all among those who In the true sense&#13;
of the term became martyrs to the&#13;
Declaration of Independence.&#13;
Richard 8toekton, one of New Jersey's&#13;
signers; perhaps niof • than any&#13;
of the others, suffered as a result of&#13;
Ms convictions. 8o great, In fact, were&#13;
the abuses heaped upon him that congress,&#13;
hearing of them, sent word to&#13;
General Howe that If the treatment ao&#13;
corded him were not'mors humane he&#13;
might expect all British soldiers captured&#13;
in th* future to be treated in&#13;
like manner.&#13;
Nearly fifty years of age when he&#13;
algaed 1 ^ De&lt;mu»tk&gt;nV^UcJiard Stockton&#13;
was to addition a delicate man.&#13;
Toward the e*d*f 177« Mr. Stoektofi&#13;
/tujjtiU/*&#13;
''r***%Z*f&#13;
'»&gt;t-i.,»f . "'.• - V -•••'•&#13;
f*"^...i.A.-.&#13;
) . . * • • • i - : , " • . • • •&#13;
. . . ' ••••??•.&gt;-&#13;
. • » •&#13;
^&#13;
tion, but their families as well, bad&#13;
become the objects of vengeance by&#13;
the British, and also that the reduced&#13;
number of the American army made It&#13;
impossible to hope for protection from&#13;
that quarter. Thirty miles from his&#13;
home, in Monmouth county, he left&#13;
his family In safety. Refusing to imperil&#13;
them, however, with his presence^.&#13;
he went to reside with a Mr.&#13;
Covenhoven, a friend and patriot. But&#13;
fate was against him as, through the&#13;
treachery of some one, a party of British&#13;
refugees was informed of his temporary&#13;
residence.&#13;
. Surrounding the house at night,&#13;
both Stockton and Covenhoven were&#13;
surprised and captured by this party.&#13;
Dragged from their beds, stripped and&#13;
plundered of their possessions, they&#13;
were started to New York. Stockton,&#13;
however, was first taken to Amboy&#13;
and there thrown into the cbmmon&#13;
"goal." There, destitute and exposed,&#13;
he was allowed to suffer from the extreme&#13;
cold and want of sufficient protection.&#13;
Later, when taken to New&#13;
York he was again placed in a common&#13;
{ail and subjected to similar treatment&#13;
So great were his sufferings that he&#13;
contracted the disease which resulted&#13;
in his death not long afterward.&#13;
Not only the comforts, but the bare&#13;
necessities of life were refused Stockton&#13;
during his Imprisonment in New&#13;
York. At one time he was left with&#13;
absolutely no foo&amp;for more than 24&#13;
hours, and then given some which was&#13;
so coarse in quality, not to mention&#13;
scanty la amotmt, that he would have&#13;
been better off without i t&#13;
Fortunately, however, word of his&#13;
treatment reached congress. A message&#13;
was immediately sent General'&#13;
Howe, stating that he would either&#13;
have to treat-Stockton more humanely&#13;
or expect retaliation.&#13;
Such 111 treatment as Stockton endured&#13;
in prison, did not make up the&#13;
whole Of his sufferings at the hands&#13;
of the British. While be was thus&#13;
confined his property was plundered,&#13;
his personal papers burned, and his&#13;
fine library destroyed, as were also his&#13;
horses and cattle.&#13;
When peace finally prevailed, Stockton&#13;
returned home, to find all in ruins,&#13;
his property destroyed, his-finances&#13;
wiped pot. So great was his poverty&#13;
that he was forced tocaW upon Meads&#13;
to secure the aecessariesof We tor&#13;
ftjmxnsrt his ssmt In congress after J hfcnseh?-and family. TWs state of a*&#13;
\jtdn so depressed him him that his&#13;
already delicate condition was further&#13;
aggravated, and M February&gt; tftl, he&#13;
4 M when but flftjr-one years of age.&#13;
Thossas HaywsvC Jr.* was another&#13;
of the martyrs. In 17?Th*^ccepte« a&#13;
Mas on tba bench of thavsfiiai&amp;al and efvfl cocrts of Soo^ &lt;3s*otto* Tmder&#13;
havtnr*om*ttts4 * mission on whioh&#13;
that body had sent hinv Shortly after&#13;
hJsrstara, bosrsver, be found rt necessary&#13;
to lse*e for boae to nad a safer&#13;
Maes lor his fesjtty tban *is home&#13;
tfcea aborted, at * la/ 1» «bs nath «f&#13;
lbs easts* %bb : « • * * making/a tff&#13;
TrSSJW.,/S^^e^^SW5.»'^^^&#13;
•r*&#13;
:\&#13;
J -&#13;
' S u , . .&#13;
&lt;&gt;••»*&gt; *?;* +"\ ' . ^ j : •-*- - ^ :r~&#13;
British lay in the vicinity of Charleston,&#13;
and it was In that city that the&#13;
sessions were held. On one occasion&#13;
Hayward presided at the trial of some&#13;
persons charged with treason. They&#13;
were convicted of having held correspondence&#13;
with the enemy and executed&#13;
in full view of the British lines.&#13;
This act, especially, led to Heyward's&#13;
great disfavor in the eyes of&#13;
the British. At the same time he was a&#13;
judge he held a military commission&#13;
and was in active service. Commanding&#13;
a battalion of artillery, Heyward&#13;
and Rutledge were together during the&#13;
defense of Charleston. In one encounter&#13;
Heyward received a gunshot&#13;
wound, the scar of which he carried&#13;
the remainder of his life.&#13;
Although in that engagement victory&#13;
was with the Americans, Charleston&#13;
was destined to fall. Then Heyward,&#13;
like his two compatriots, was taken&#13;
prisoner and sent to St. Augustine,&#13;
where he remained a year. During his&#13;
imprisonment his plantation was raided&#13;
and his slaves sent to Jamaica.&#13;
Some were afterward reclaimed.&#13;
Although not intentional on the part&#13;
of the British, the trip from St. Augustine&#13;
to Philadelphia came near- being&#13;
the means of Heyward's death. While&#13;
on the boat he in some way lost his&#13;
balance and fell overboard. Straightway&#13;
vigorous efforts were made for his&#13;
recovery, but the time consumed was&#13;
so great that it was only by clinging&#13;
to the ship's rudder that he was saved&#13;
from drowning. Upon returning home&#13;
he was still further afflicted, this time&#13;
by the loss of his wife. So depressed&#13;
was he by All his misfortunes that it&#13;
was a considerable time before he regained&#13;
his normal condition and was&#13;
able to fully discharge his public duties.&#13;
'Although, never captured, John&#13;
Hart of New Jersey was nevertheless&#13;
made to feci the hatred England bore&#13;
toward all the signers of the Declaration.&#13;
"Honest John Hart," as he&#13;
was called, was another one of the&#13;
men who at the time they Indorsed&#13;
the. separation of the colonies from&#13;
England had nothing material to gain&#13;
and much to lose. His farm, in Hun1&#13;
terdon county, was large, and his&#13;
home was considerated as a-"seat of&#13;
hospitality," but so situated that, in&#13;
the event of hostilities, it would be&#13;
open to the ravages of the enemy.&#13;
This Mr. Hart realised when he took&#13;
his stand, and later even more fully&#13;
appreciated. When New Jersey was&#13;
invaded by the Bnglish he was one of&#13;
the men particularly sought His&#13;
family, by a timely and distant retreat&#13;
from their home, were saved&#13;
personal violence, but he was forced&#13;
to seek hiding. From one houeo to&#13;
another no-went, not daring to stay&#13;
more than a single night under the&#13;
same roof. While thus trying to keep&#13;
beyond the clstches of the British hfe&#13;
farm was destroyed, and bis stock,&#13;
which was nnmerotts and valemhlev&#13;
became the enemy's spoil. The personal&#13;
safety of himself and family was&#13;
assasad omir by Oenstal Wssbitfton's&#13;
saocessfnl march mpon Trenton, th*&#13;
^snsjtviw of taw ffssiisni posted tbsvs&gt; tbs ssJsrssI rstfsjai of tba foe."&#13;
•«sv#s;jF"i A * •. rr.&#13;
^MiMBM&#13;
•&#13;
'•^•WSH&#13;
Kr&#13;
^¾^&#13;
iT&#13;
&gt;&#13;
&gt;J&#13;
• . : « &lt; ' !&#13;
-'41&#13;
To Kill Dandelion Plsnt. *&#13;
The best way to kill individual&#13;
dandelidon plants is to cut off their&#13;
tops and put a pinch of salt (about a&#13;
thimbleful) on the surface of each exposed&#13;
root As salt if generally applied&#13;
ruins soil, the salt should be&#13;
used sparingly and applied only to&#13;
the root-tops of the dandelion. The&#13;
United States department of agriculture&#13;
has for some time been testing&#13;
various poisons to discover the most&#13;
efficient means of eradicating this&#13;
troublesome weed from lawns, but,&#13;
although others have been found satisfactory,&#13;
the common salt is best for&#13;
general use, as there is no danger accopanying&#13;
its application.&#13;
Era of Submarines.&#13;
The day is approaching when seagoing&#13;
submarines of high Surface&#13;
speed will accompany the main fleet&#13;
on the high seas. Large ^vessels of&#13;
this type, of 21 knots speed, have been&#13;
designed for the United States navy.&#13;
Great Britain is building, in the Nautilus,&#13;
the largest submarine in existence,&#13;
which Is intended to be as seaworthy&#13;
while on the surface as the&#13;
latest type of destroyer. Its surface&#13;
speed will not be less than 21 knots,&#13;
and It will have a submerged speed of&#13;
from 15 to 19 knots; it will carry six&#13;
torpedo tubes, and ihe surface displacement&#13;
will be about one thousand&#13;
live hundred tons.&#13;
%&#13;
"' h\&#13;
Vft&#13;
\111&#13;
'i? &gt; :&#13;
W ^J*^^ Tk* Pfcofc *• incomplete without Lobby's foes! thing*&#13;
^ r to eat* Ready to serve—no fuss sad bother. Tfcere ar*&#13;
a ntonber of Libby Luncheon specialties at yoar grocer's*&#13;
Got acquainted with them.&#13;
Picnic Specialties&#13;
Veal Loaf&#13;
/«»/•&lt; ON&#13;
Libby*•&#13;
Deviled Ham Olives&#13;
Ubby,M9Neil]oVLibby&#13;
Chicago&#13;
MX&#13;
Save Time! Time kfet because of headaches,&#13;
lassitude and depressions of biliousness,&#13;
is worse than wasted.&#13;
Biliousness yields quickly to the&#13;
safe, certain home remedy—&#13;
BEECHAM'S&#13;
PILLS&#13;
• ^ W PPW^P • W ^ W I W P&#13;
- ^ -&#13;
V&#13;
]j.&#13;
V&#13;
J'&#13;
*.•*"&#13;
i£$&#13;
.VW&#13;
.**"&#13;
i**-'&#13;
•••VVs.&#13;
&gt;.-#?&#13;
1 'L *\o* A./1&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
• . " * * &gt; .&#13;
•^6P!.:.A;: -'-: &gt;'&#13;
=s&#13;
Pinckney f)i^patch&#13;
Entered at the Poetoffioe at Pinckney,&#13;
Mich., as Second Class Matter&#13;
&amp; i f . CIVERLY. EDITOR MO PUBLISHER&#13;
« • — — » » • • • • • • — — — — i i • »• — — .&#13;
Sabseriptien, $1. Per Tear in Advance&#13;
&lt;*m*&#13;
Advertising rates made km&gt;wa on&#13;
application.&#13;
Cards of Thank*, fiftjr cents.&#13;
Resolutions of Condolence, one dollar.&#13;
•Local Notit.ee, in Local columns five&#13;
cent per line per fach insertion.&#13;
All matter intended to benefit the personal&#13;
or bueinesa interest of any iodivido&#13;
«l 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;
anpjGOn^&#13;
At last reports, oratory and water&#13;
were still flowing at Niagara.&#13;
Mrs. 0, P. Sykes is visiting relatives&#13;
and friends in Detroit.&#13;
Dr. H. F, Sigler and grands^&#13;
Donald were Detroit visitors last&#13;
wee a.&#13;
Mrs. Fred Teeple was the guest&#13;
of her mother, Mrs. Emma Mora*&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Several from here attended the&#13;
circus at Jackson Monday and all&#13;
reports^ a good time.&#13;
Mrs. H. W. Orofoot will spend&#13;
a part of tJyggHnmer at Bay View&#13;
as the guest of her aunt, Mrs.&#13;
Dora Davis.&#13;
Miss/ Elizabeth Harris was a&#13;
gnest at the home of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Louis Monks last Tuesday&#13;
and Wednesday.&#13;
Government report states that&#13;
crops are nearly seven per&#13;
cent better in Michigan than for&#13;
the past ten year average.&#13;
If you have a friend you would&#13;
like to send a Home Coming invitation&#13;
hand in the name at this&#13;
office. We will do the rest.&#13;
Ypsilautl will give a pageant&#13;
Fourth of July which will trace.&#13;
Lela Monks is visiting friends]&#13;
at Buffalo, N. Y. f&#13;
L. E. Pow? 11 was a Detroit&#13;
visitor Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. NWm; Curlett spent th*&#13;
past week in Lansing.&#13;
L. £. Gorham of Detroit spent&#13;
Sunday here. z&#13;
Ella Black Bpent.a few days the&#13;
past week at Jackson. -&#13;
Laura Burgees spent the week&#13;
end with Florence Burgess.&#13;
Bernard Lavey of Jackson&#13;
visited relatives here the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. E. Book and daughter&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of A.&#13;
H. Gilchrist.&#13;
O. J. Sawyer of Fowierville was&#13;
a guest of Pinckney friends a part&#13;
of last week.&#13;
Miss Grace Shaw of Howell entertained&#13;
her sister Miss Cynthia&#13;
Shaw of Pinckxey last week.&#13;
LaBue Moran of the Livingston&#13;
Republican was an over LSunday&#13;
guest of his mother, Mrs. Emma&#13;
Moran.&#13;
Mr*. E. X. McClear and children&#13;
of Detroit are visiting at the&#13;
home of her parents Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
J., Com is key,&#13;
Mrs. A. F. Brady, son and&#13;
daughter of Detroit, have returned&#13;
home, after a two weeks visit with&#13;
Mrs. Blunt.&#13;
Catherine McClusky of Pinckney&#13;
receives a B. Pd. Degree&#13;
from the state Norman college at&#13;
Ypsilanti this year.&#13;
George Barnes, editor of the&#13;
Livingston Republican at Howell&#13;
will be a candidate for the nomination&#13;
of state senator on the republican&#13;
ticket.&#13;
Miss Marian Bounsifer has&#13;
completed her work this year as&#13;
teacher in the schcol at Eaton&#13;
Bapuls and has been engaged for&#13;
another year.&#13;
Bernard Walker who has been&#13;
foreman of the Howell Livingston&#13;
Democrat for the past twenty-four&#13;
years died at bis home in Howell&#13;
Saturday morning.&#13;
An automobile from Howell&#13;
, ~ , i.&#13;
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ^ ^ ^ 1 ^ ^ 1 1 ^ 1 ^ ^ . ^ . ^ ^ A A A . ^ ^ m M i k i i m u i .AA AAA AAA AAA&#13;
! HELU)&#13;
GIVE ME NO. 38&#13;
TbU is the call used by the wise customer who&#13;
wishes&#13;
Staple and Fancy Groceries&#13;
Connor's World Best Ice Cream&#13;
A Work Shirt A Pair of Overalls&#13;
A Nice Dress Hat or Cap&#13;
A New Suit of Clothes&#13;
A Pair of Gloves&#13;
Or Anything, in the Gents&#13;
Furnishing Line&#13;
"And Don't Yon Forget," that we are ever&#13;
anxious and willing to till your wants for any-&#13;
. thing in oar line.&#13;
Leave Tour Special Orders With&#13;
Monks Bros.&#13;
«•&#13;
T T * • The Sqilare Deal Gro&amp;ern •&#13;
•i&#13;
* , l -&#13;
Pjnckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative&#13;
ing Business* *•&#13;
Bfk'&#13;
3 per cent w&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
Ptnckney - Mich.&#13;
G, W. TEfcPLB Prop&#13;
fc&amp;&#13;
I •&lt;•}:•&#13;
as&#13;
the pioneer history of that- city. I g a y l y d e c o r a t e d w i t h t h e 8 t a r s a n d&#13;
About four hundred characters'&#13;
; * ; " , v , '&#13;
Aw&#13;
*m Z4.&#13;
y.^?&#13;
••\,:lt&#13;
will take pait.&#13;
The Sunday School picnic at&#13;
the Glenobrook farm was post'&#13;
poned Saturday on account of&#13;
rain, rfie picnic was to have&#13;
been given by Mr. Glenn for his&#13;
class.&#13;
The plate glass windows in the&#13;
Dispatch office and in Dink el &lt;fe&#13;
Dunbar's store were set Friday by&#13;
^•n expert from Detroit, who&#13;
moat certainly understood his&#13;
ess.&#13;
Tfeomas Barkstt of near Dexter&#13;
is deeded to the Ann Arbor Y.&#13;
M. 0. A. 15 acres of land as a site&#13;
for a summer camp. It is on a&#13;
Moluded spot of Silver Lake, one&#13;
V the beauty spots of Michigan.&#13;
The United States Express Co.&#13;
will oease its existence after&#13;
Jane 30, the Adams Co. having&#13;
taken over its business. Parcel&#13;
post is the cause of the inability&#13;
of the U. S. company to pay out.&#13;
We especially invite our readers&#13;
to peruse the ads. in this paper&#13;
evaty week and patronize the&#13;
merchants who invite you through&#13;
ifce odumnsT of the local paper to&#13;
ibeir store to trade. That merehant&#13;
who keepe continually at&#13;
^b« advertising game is the trade&#13;
t*|ild*r, he is after your busioeat&#13;
9|i4Jk the booster of the whole&#13;
of&#13;
news-&#13;
^aper, ^ i h it* columns full of&#13;
|ood interesting adt and local&#13;
%&#13;
town in general yneUmee out&#13;
Itet' A&gt;wii Is koowtf by its ne^&#13;
;V';"^--'&gt;J|&#13;
thwt the town, is a good&#13;
• « • •&#13;
stripes, passed through Pinckney&#13;
Friday, posting bills and BO forth&#13;
advertising the Fourth of July&#13;
celebration at Howell Saturday.&#13;
Rev. Father Considine of&#13;
Chelsea entertained at St. Mary's&#13;
Rectory last Snnday, Rev. J. V.&#13;
Ooyle of Pinckney, Rev. Thomas&#13;
Hally, of Dexter, Rev. Thomas&#13;
Carey of Detroit and Rt. Rev. M.&#13;
DeBever of Dexter.'&#13;
The Ho well Livingston Re*&#13;
publican published a unique foil&#13;
page advertisment last week of a&#13;
house upon which are bills advertising&#13;
home products. Indeed in&#13;
every town the advertising merchant&#13;
is a "booster."&#13;
Date R. Cbappel and Hist&#13;
Margnrite Barley, daughter of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Edward 3urley,&#13;
were united in the holy bonds of&#13;
wedlock at S i Agnes church&#13;
Wednesday morning, Rev. Fr.&#13;
Sharpe performing the cermony&#13;
in the presence of about 60 invited&#13;
guests. Charlee Doherr acted aa&#13;
beet man and Miss Freede Doherr&#13;
performed a like service for the&#13;
bride. Alter a wedding breakfast&#13;
at the Hotel Lockwooi the happy&#13;
couple motored to Jackson and&#13;
from there to Niagara Falls for a&#13;
wedding tour. They have a large&#13;
circle of friends who will offer&#13;
their hearty congratulations and&#13;
they will be at horn* in Fowler*&#13;
villa after July ^rst'-Fowlerville-&#13;
Review. Mr. Chapel was employ*&#13;
ei by A. H. Flintoft in thegerage&#13;
here last stfaftner and has ma&amp;y&#13;
friends nere who ofer&gt;Qongratoiations.&#13;
':• * " ' •&#13;
HIT THE&#13;
NAILON&#13;
THE&#13;
HEAD&#13;
We Hit High Prices Right HARDWARE&#13;
On the Head&#13;
Try Us—&#13;
Best Goods&#13;
In Everything&#13;
I When yon want EIGHT twit, CHEAP household ntensili, GOOD&#13;
paints and varnishes, nails, kitchen ware, stoves, hinges, screws, holts,&#13;
knives and a hundred other things COME HERE. Yoa'U 8ATB&#13;
MONEY. , '&#13;
Teepje Hardware Company&#13;
Perhaps this picture may recall&#13;
some pleasant occasion—a party&#13;
and the becoming costume you&#13;
wore.&#13;
Any event worth remembering&#13;
suggests a picture.&#13;
Make an appointment today.&#13;
DaisieB. Chapell&#13;
Stockbrldge, Michigan&#13;
i HI&#13;
5&#13;
"Paras&#13;
Hungry&#13;
Asa&#13;
Bearr&#13;
WHEN the "man of the house" says&#13;
this you cap be sura he expects&#13;
something SUBSTANTIAL coming&#13;
his way directly. WsVe had lots of our&#13;
woman &lt;msiomeri tell us thai our nsstSs.-&#13;
•^••^ chops or whatsvsr ft miriit U tftt&#13;
PLEASED THB USX risit down to tSs&#13;
gravy. And th# PRI(aa WJtA,sram smf&#13;
TOOv ,«ow about jplesjiag YOOl Jans*&#13;
beFttoerr Nth^aunr alfia, Bathiag U&#13;
Dr. M i l e s '&#13;
A n t i - P a i n P i l l *&#13;
Uas4 by Ibauaanda&#13;
fer a s«a«r*tiof.&#13;
Those who have suffefed from&#13;
neuralgic pains need not be told&#13;
how necessary it is to secure relief.&#13;
The easiest way out of&#13;
neuralgia is to use Dr. Miles'&#13;
Anti-Pain Pills. Taey hafTrthevtd&#13;
sttgerers for&#13;
.yesrs^that they hav&lt;&#13;
nousehold necessity.&#13;
!onSls r &amp;th in**V 1tJh?a*t? d otaes #tf t«a eeya at wg etoaeV&gt;&#13;
ache, ptehteems Info trh ret bterueatsfte,t tioeemtt,ee eeaseeV. Jfamrabesh. s aIn dh apvaete s|e ltau it4h e abootwtoelnlsf Jaapdl •clWalaXae dth efmor athnedm th,-e y are an' U^W S&#13;
J. W, SSDOSt Blue Sj^ttege. lio.&#13;
At all drugoltts-» eeees SI eente.&#13;
Nevef asld In hulk. ( t&#13;
MILKS MIDIOAU CO., SikJiert, |f|d.&#13;
y L.&#13;
nr*-^&#13;
r-&#13;
A&#13;
TT gp-'H"'&#13;
•fc&#13;
k -Bisf n&#13;
4P PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
ASS' i H l l l l i i i i i t i i u M i a a i i t i a t M a t e i i i t l A r^&#13;
4&gt;&#13;
&lt;l&#13;
Don't Take It n&#13;
For Granted that ju«t because row are ia&#13;
business, everybody la aware&#13;
of the feci. Your goods may&#13;
be the fines? In the) market&#13;
but they will remain on your&#13;
shalnie unless *JM» people are)&#13;
told about them.&#13;
4&#13;
ADVERTISE If you want to move your&#13;
merchandise). Roach t h e&#13;
buyers In their homes through&#13;
the columns of THIS PAPER&#13;
and on every dollar expended&#13;
y o u ' l l r e a p a h a n d s o m e&#13;
dividend.&#13;
siiilaiaaaniiiiiiniiaia^&#13;
«w*&#13;
Work, Minus Drudgery&#13;
&gt;HAT'&amp; wl&#13;
\&#13;
TH A T ' S w i $ | the boys like; they don't mind&#13;
working where a Rumely-Olds Engine does the&#13;
hard part. You have machines that require&#13;
"elbow grease," why not get an engine that will run&#13;
«3l of them, anywhere on the farm. A Rumely-Olds&#13;
Engine will run a main shaft as shown here or can be&#13;
unmounted and taken where you need it. I t will run&#13;
tfie Electric Light Plant; wash the clothes; grind the&#13;
feed; saw the wood; separate the milk and a hundred&#13;
and one othe% things cheaper and easier than they&#13;
can be done in any other way.&#13;
If you can't find time to come in and see us, ask us to come&#13;
and see you or «end you a catalog of Rumely-Olds Engines.&#13;
(&#13;
„ *&#13;
We*re here to serve you;&#13;
give us a chance.&#13;
A. H. FLINTOFT, «=S&#13;
FROM&#13;
MRS TO&#13;
PANS&#13;
VTE,&#13;
THEM&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Cltae. Frost and family were&#13;
Sunday jgmata at- the bonje of&#13;
Kruie frost of Pinckney.&#13;
Laura Lavey of Pinckney vieit-&#13;
6d at Will Ledwidge'a the first of&#13;
the week,&#13;
Mrs. G, Greioer spent Saturday&#13;
with her son Andrew who is&#13;
sick in Jackson.&#13;
Mollje Wilson is visiting friends&#13;
and relatives in Lansing.&#13;
Mrs. das. Stack able and daughters&#13;
Mary and Elizabeth dined&#13;
at £ . T. McOlears Sunday.&#13;
Mary Fitzsimmong is the owner&#13;
of a fine new Schuman piano.&#13;
Mrs. John Sider is entertaining&#13;
her sister and children from Ohio.&#13;
Chae. Bailie and wife returned&#13;
Monday from a visit with Lansing&#13;
relatives.&#13;
The Misses Alice and Kathleen&#13;
Roche of Pinckney and Mary&#13;
Graham of Ypeilsnti visited&#13;
friends and relatives here Friday&#13;
and Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Orla Banes and son went&#13;
to Howell Thursday to visit her&#13;
parents Mr. and Mrs. L. Coleman&#13;
and she returned home Saturday&#13;
accompanied by her sister Mrs.&#13;
Art LaRowe and daughter who&#13;
have been spending a couple of&#13;
weeks here..&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Ledwidge&#13;
and daughters were guests of A.&#13;
M. Roche and family of Pinckney&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Bert Hoff of Lansing is making&#13;
an extended visit with his mother&#13;
here.&#13;
Walter Collins, Fred Evers and&#13;
Percy Dai ley attended the circus&#13;
at Jackson Monday.&#13;
Mrs.. Wm. Singleton or Aon&#13;
Arbor is the guest of her daughter&#13;
Mrs. A. Frost&#13;
A few of the young people from&#13;
here attended the novelty shower&#13;
given•%{the home -of L. Farley&#13;
for Mr. and Mrs. E. Harris last&#13;
Thursday evening.&#13;
Roche McClear is attending&#13;
the summer term of school at&#13;
Ypsilanti.&#13;
Claude Whipple of Toledo is&#13;
visiting at the home of Henry&#13;
Whipple.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Fitzsimmons&#13;
reached here Monday night from&#13;
the Falls for a few days visit with&#13;
his people.&#13;
Catherine Driver entertained&#13;
Julia Greiner Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. R. M. Ledwidge and&#13;
children visited at C. Brogan's&#13;
several days last week.&#13;
Gratitude&#13;
Ton should see the expression of gratitude on the faeea of onr&#13;
customers when we present them with the different items of&#13;
Raymond Mfg. Go's. Silverware&#13;
eAbsolutely Freee&#13;
For their coupons. If you are not already getting these coupons&#13;
it is to your interest to do so, for it is an absoluteJcase of&#13;
Something FOP Nothing&#13;
"IF FROM RAYMOND, IT IS GOOD"&#13;
Guarauteed for 25 years&#13;
In Hardware SPECIALTIES&#13;
At This Store&#13;
Household&#13;
Novelties&#13;
For Women&#13;
Usually a hardware store is a man's store. But we especially invite&#13;
the attention of fhe HOtTSEWI*§ t£ onr stock. She'll find here what&#13;
she has LONG WANTED in J ^ ^ I L S * at* PERSONAL SEB7IQB&#13;
gad PROMPT deliveries,-&#13;
Clear 8ee)ng Massenet.&#13;
Critics have not yet assigned the&#13;
late M. Massenet his permanent niche&#13;
in the temple of fame, but most of&#13;
them agree that he was a charming,&#13;
although not a great composer. He&#13;
had one quality of character, however,&#13;
which is not the invariable accompaniment&#13;
of genius, musical and&#13;
other—he could appreciate genius in&#13;
others. An anecdote taken from the&#13;
Paris Figaro attests it:&#13;
A critic was indulging in extravagant&#13;
praise of Massenet to his face&#13;
and wound up his flattery:&#13;
"Wagner! Whut was he? His talent&#13;
is most absurdly exaggerated. I&#13;
have to pick and choose among a lot&#13;
of rubbish in Wagner."&#13;
"Is that so?" commented Massenet&#13;
suavely. "I should be quite happy&#13;
with what you leave."&#13;
To Newspaper Publishers&#13;
inters&#13;
W&#13;
W e manufacture the&#13;
highest grade of&#13;
very&#13;
$100 Reward, f 100&#13;
The readers of this paper will be pleased&#13;
to learn tbat there is at least one dreaded&#13;
disease that science ha* been able to core&#13;
in ail its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's&#13;
Catajfh Cure is the onto positive enre now&#13;
known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh&#13;
befog A CQastittllie&amp;al disease, requires a&#13;
cooitttuli^aal treatment 'Hall's Catarrh&#13;
Core is taken iaterttaJfy, acting directly&#13;
upon the blocxf and mucous wirfaces of the&#13;
system, thereby destroying the foundation&#13;
of the disease, and giving the patient&#13;
strength by building up the constitution&#13;
and assisting nature ia doing lis work.&#13;
The proprietors have so much faith in its&#13;
curative powers tbat they offer One Hno-jv&#13;
dred Dollars fer any cate that it fails to&#13;
cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address:&#13;
F. K. Cheney &amp; Co., Toledo, O.&#13;
Sold by all druggists, 75c.&#13;
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.&#13;
Birds.&#13;
The first "birds" were not much like&#13;
those of the present time. The pterodactyl,&#13;
supposed to be the pioneer of&#13;
bird life, was a great feather winged&#13;
monsters with great spears on the&#13;
hinges of the wings and a moutb fall&#13;
of sharklike teeth. The pterodactyl&#13;
did not ling, and could we have seen&#13;
him we would not have felt like singing&#13;
ourselves. True birds, and especially&#13;
the warblers, are very late in geologic&#13;
time. There was no bird melody&#13;
in the carboniferous Jungles. 'The&#13;
singers, in all probability, did not&#13;
greatly antedate the human r a c e -&#13;
New York American.&#13;
Brass Leads &amp; Slugs Type&#13;
Brass Galleys ' Brass Rule in Strips&#13;
Metal Borders Brass Labor-Saving&#13;
L. &amp;. Metal Furni- Rule '&#13;
ture Metal Quoins, etc.&#13;
Leads and Slugs Brass Column Rules&#13;
Metal Leaders Brass Circles&#13;
Spaces and Quads Brass Leaders&#13;
6 to 48 point Brafts Round Corners&#13;
Old Column Rules refaced and made&#13;
good as new at a small cost.&#13;
Please remember that we are not in anj&#13;
Trust or Combination and are sure we can&#13;
make it greatly to your advantage to deal&#13;
with us.&#13;
A copy of onr catalogue will be cheerfully&#13;
furnished on application.&#13;
We frequently have good bargains in&#13;
second-hand job Presses, Paper Cutters&#13;
and other printing machinery . and&#13;
material.&#13;
ia Printers Supply Co.&#13;
Manufsctorerajof&#13;
Type and High Grade Printing Material&#13;
14 S. 5th St., Philadelphia, Pa.&#13;
Proprietors Fen a Type Foundry 2tli~&#13;
AMkAA&#13;
A White Hope.&#13;
"I have a mind to give yon a good&#13;
whipping?' exclaimed the impatient father.&#13;
"Weil/ replied the athletic yootb.&#13;
-.. , T , o x i t o ii*. "mayb Tl&gt;naTday, July 2 at the Smitfc e yon can. bat If yon soccesd Jt ^ ^ ^ ^ item f o r ^ i p o f t&#13;
Jieetan rant. Mr. Church gbaraa-, pat*"—Washington Star.&#13;
J. Church&#13;
Gradaate OptomeJriet. ot HoweH;&#13;
Mich; will be? in ftickney,&#13;
tees a perfect fit. All headache&#13;
caused by eye strait) absolutely&#13;
corrected. Consultation" and exasnoalion&#13;
free of charge.&#13;
Net Whisky.&#13;
Ma—You've been drinking! I smell&#13;
tt In yonr breath. Pa—Not a drop.&#13;
I've been eadng frogs'iega. Wbatyoa&#13;
smell is the bop.—Harvard Lampoon.&#13;
Where Sentiment Stops.&#13;
Mary Johnson in her book "Hagar" j 4 ^ 4 ^ 4 ^ 4 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ 4&#13;
has Mrs. Green, one of the characters. 3 A A I U A V A n i t a g « M . U A&#13;
reply to the heroine's wish tbat she 1 GOING T O BUT A PIANO&#13;
could make money by saying: MIt ain't '-•••* ~&#13;
so easy for women to make money.&#13;
There's more ways they can't than&#13;
they can. It's what tbey call 'sentiment'&#13;
fights them. Sentiment don't&#13;
mind their being industrious, but it&#13;
draws the line at their getting money&#13;
for it"&#13;
OR SEWING MACHINE&#13;
TEST&#13;
SEE L. R. WILLIAMS.&#13;
GREGORY&#13;
Js?"He saves yon money on high&#13;
grade pianos,&#13;
isajeanpsatsffg&#13;
•J&#13;
*—•- Am!#*M4f«4Cf«&gt;fM£s.iteriJf When Money Teefc Wiagev&#13;
lea's Armieawve tec t a ^ o ™ C o m t d I a i l _D M ^ gu^t ^ ^&#13;
''dfrl'ltM'X™^-*;***!™ . 8onbr*tte~No; it waa an aviation&#13;
"I Have im&amp;l2"4*E* 7 ¾ ½ • * • * • • •»« the ghost new after the&#13;
W ^ ^ ' P ^ ^ P ^ B ^ V r t ^ ^ « faoetbatf^ tW&#13;
^awaaM by C 0. aieyet the ernggist. sajpiag of tae soa.&#13;
TesyreBlllleasaaslCeatlTar&#13;
.Siek Hnadache, Bad Breath.SourStomach;&#13;
Purred Tongae aod Indigestion.&#13;
Mean Liver aad Bowels c4ogged/Clea»&#13;
op to-nigiu. Get a 25c settle of Dt.&#13;
tfiegs New Life PiMs teniay md empty&#13;
the stoasaeh and bows* *\ jssbsatisa.&#13;
gassy foods sad waste. A foil towjpmoSk.&#13;
meat fires a Wiaa^d, ^aokfai reejnif&#13;
aMass you feel flae. EiMaive. vet ai^d, -&#13;
0 . lUyW, tswtfrngfiat. -.^-7^¾¾ *•, • ^ .&#13;
r):«J&#13;
' ^&#13;
•y-\&#13;
v.*&#13;
\&#13;
'X,&#13;
- / • ; » • :&#13;
:^*»&gt;-&#13;
M:'(&#13;
i*'i.,'', r.&#13;
v,ri..;&#13;
4&gt;^p|&#13;
' fH&amp;f, •'*?"'•'&#13;
""•^•i^J&#13;
^ mi&#13;
(&gt;':,&#13;
fe&#13;
m&#13;
'••"JC 1&#13;
'••If.-&#13;
, , \ ».&#13;
• * • * w.&#13;
;H$&#13;
¢1:1¾&#13;
^ •.&gt;.». "Is . . , * * ?&#13;
•&gt;*s •ses £1¾^ ;#?•:&amp;£$ %*#?* f^i&#13;
rip&#13;
uy&#13;
#s.&#13;
' * \%W*-&gt; . ' '&#13;
*rffc&#13;
s«&#13;
%&#13;
' . • • &amp; • W-&#13;
^&#13;
*•*•? -&#13;
' • # • • » .&#13;
V .&#13;
i -A-..."&#13;
Riy&#13;
i ' * . . « • &lt; • -&#13;
&gt;$£&#13;
/&#13;
&gt;;&gt;•&#13;
i!.V&#13;
- / * ' •&#13;
' * Ai'&gt;:&#13;
-..&lt;&amp;&#13;
' • &gt; # - , » . •^&#13;
(.-&#13;
- • - * '&#13;
f i , ' * .&#13;
•:: * :&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
fABLES&#13;
SLXNG&#13;
DESPERATE YOUTH&#13;
SHOOTS OFFICERS&#13;
DETROIT DETECTIVES O'GRADY&#13;
AND DONAVAN BADLY&#13;
- WOUNDED.&#13;
ATTEMPTTO ARREST ABBATOY&#13;
the Ntw Fable of Everybody's Friend&#13;
and the Llne-Bucker.&#13;
In a sequestered Dump lived two&#13;
"Urchins, Edgar and Rufus, who went&#13;
to the Poat with about an equal handl-&#13;
They got away together down the&#13;
jbroad Avenue of Hope which leads one&#13;
Lad over the hills and far away to the&#13;
fJnlted States Senate Chamber and&#13;
another unerringly to the Fed-&#13;
Pen near Leavenworth, Kansas.&#13;
When Edgar was a Tootsey he received&#13;
a frequent dusting with Extreme&#13;
Violet Talcum Powder and waa&#13;
allowed to play with a flaxen-haired&#13;
Doll named Celesta.&#13;
•bout the same time, Rufus began&#13;
to take Cold Baths and was propped&#13;
jap to look at Pictures of Napoleon and&#13;
pohn'L. Sullivan and Sitting Bull.&#13;
At School each waa a trifle Dumb.&#13;
If Edgar fell down on an Exam, his&#13;
Relatives would call a Mass Meeting&#13;
to express Regrets and bang Crape all&#13;
over the Place.&#13;
If Rufus got balled up in his Answers,&#13;
his immediate Kin would pat&#13;
him on the Back and tell him he was&#13;
right and the Text-Book was wrong.&#13;
Edgar would emerge from the&#13;
Feathers every morning to find his&#13;
Parent* all lined up to wish him a new&#13;
Set of Police Regulations.&#13;
They held up the Rigid Forefinger&#13;
and warned him that he waa merely a&#13;
Grain of Dust and a Weakling and a&#13;
poor juvenile Mutt whose Mission in&#13;
Life was to Lie Down and Behave.&#13;
Rufus would be aroused each Sunrise&#13;
by a full Military Band of «0&#13;
iPieces playing "Hall to the Chief who&#13;
In Triumph Advances."&#13;
Between the Buckwheats and the&#13;
Borghum, the two Family Boosters&#13;
avould slip him the pleasing Information&#13;
that never since the Morning Stars&#13;
bulled their first Harmonies had there&#13;
bounded into the Arena another such&#13;
Prodigy of Intellectual Brilliancy and&#13;
Physical Valor.&#13;
Consequently when Rufus hit the&#13;
IFresh Air, with the McGuffey under&#13;
Smeared and Diearranged.&#13;
the Arm, he wore his Cheat about a&#13;
foot in front of him.&#13;
He acknowledged with a Slight Nod&#13;
the Salutation from some.Member of&#13;
the Town Board.&#13;
Edgar, staggering under a Ton of&#13;
Restrictive Advice, would spot Rufus&#13;
at a Distance and sneak into an Alley,&#13;
because he didn't wish to get Blood all&#13;
over bis Clean Waist&#13;
Whenever Edgar was forced Into a&#13;
Battle and came home smeared and&#13;
disarranged, his Mother would go to&#13;
her Room and Cry softly and Father&#13;
would Pain* a vivid Word-Picture of&#13;
a Wretch standing on the Gallows&#13;
with a Black Cap over his Head.&#13;
Then Edgar would crawl to the Hay-&#13;
Vow and brood over his Moral Infirmltlee&#13;
and try In a groping way to&#13;
figure cot his Relation to Things In&#13;
j-f*-." -' -t..''Qeseral*-&#13;
• x ^ ^ : ' But; when Rnfus appeared an drip-&#13;
£3p yfftf with Gore, hie Seconds would cool&#13;
/ ¾ A m &lt;mt and rub him with Witch&#13;
} teasel and pin Medals on him and Indicate&#13;
to him on a Chart the exact&#13;
latitude a s * longitude of the Solar&#13;
• • &gt; ,&#13;
£•-*&lt;/&#13;
ftreryeae disliked him intensely but&#13;
Jos* the aame they eteppea off into the&#13;
V Mad and fare Ala the outtre double&#13;
width of Cememt Sidewalk&#13;
JMgj^.emtlsa^therhand.waccfieol&#13;
DootvMata that ever&#13;
metked n a n *&#13;
• , : . &lt; • • • • • • . ¾&#13;
All those who scratched Matches on&#13;
him and used him as a Combination&#13;
Hall-Tree and Hitching Post used to&#13;
remark that he didn't have an Enemy&#13;
in the World.&#13;
It had been dinged into him that&#13;
True Politeness means to wait until&#13;
everyone else has been Served and&#13;
then murmur a few Thanks for the&#13;
Leavings.&#13;
Besides, his Parents had convinced&#13;
him that if he went Fishing be&#13;
wouldn't get a Nibble, and If he&#13;
climbed a Tree he would fall and&#13;
break his Leg, and if he tried to manipulate&#13;
more than Two Dollars at one&#13;
time, he would go Blink.&#13;
Therefore, when both were in College,&#13;
Rufus acted as plunging Half-&#13;
Back, with Blue Smoke coming from&#13;
his Nostrils, and achieved the undying&#13;
Distinction of being singled out by&#13;
Walter Camp.&#13;
Edgar sat up on the Bleachers with&#13;
2,800 other Mere Students and lent a&#13;
quavering Tenor to a Song about Alma&#13;
Mater.&#13;
Even the Undergrads could not take&#13;
the Tuck out of Rufus.&#13;
He left College thoroughly convinced&#13;
that the World waa his Oyster and&#13;
that he had an Opener in every&#13;
Pocket&#13;
He began grabbing Public Service&#13;
Utilities by Strong-Arm methods,&#13;
whereupon a lot of Uplifters became&#13;
excited and wanted some one else to&#13;
head him off.&#13;
He put things Across because when&#13;
he tucked the Ball under his Arm and&#13;
began to dig for th* Goal of his Immediate&#13;
Ambition, all the Friends of&#13;
Public Weal were scared Blue and retired&#13;
behind the Ropes.&#13;
Edgar took his Degree out into the&#13;
Cold World and began to make apologetic&#13;
Inquiries regarding Humble Employment&#13;
which would involve no Responsibilities.&#13;
He became an Office Lawyer of the&#13;
dull gray Variety with a special Aptitude&#13;
for drawing up Leases and examining&#13;
Abstracts.&#13;
He could not face a Jury or fight a&#13;
Case because the fond Parents had put&#13;
the Sign on him and robbed him of all&#13;
his Gimp.&#13;
But a Nice Fellow?&#13;
You know it.&#13;
Anyone who had a Book to sell, or&#13;
a Petition to be signed, or a Note that&#13;
needed endorsing came dashing right&#13;
into Edgar's Office and Hailed him as&#13;
the Champion Patsy of the Universe.&#13;
Not one of these ever ventured into&#13;
the Lair of the Street Railway Czar,&#13;
for he knew that Rufus might jump&#13;
over the Mahogany Table and bite&#13;
him In the Arm.&#13;
Even Edgar, when he made a Business&#13;
Call on Boyhood Friend and loving&#13;
Classmate, was. permitted to wait&#13;
in the Outer Room, resting his Hat on&#13;
his knees, and mingling on terms of&#13;
Equality with the modish Typist and&#13;
the scornful Secretary.&#13;
And when they went away to look at&#13;
some Properties, Rufus took the Stateroom&#13;
while Edgar drew an Upper.&#13;
Any great big Brute of a Man with&#13;
a Tigerish Instinct for pouncing on&#13;
each Good Thing and then hanging on&#13;
to it like Grim Death, never can win&#13;
the Esteem of the envious but anaemic&#13;
Gallery.&#13;
Everyone at the. Club referred to&#13;
Edgar as a Good Old Scout, but when&#13;
all the Push gathered at the Round&#13;
Table and some one let fall the Name&#13;
of the High-Binder, they would open&#13;
up on Rufus and Pan him to a Whisper.&#13;
Then Rufus would enter in his Fur&#13;
Coat, upsetting Furniture and Servants&#13;
as he swept through the Lounging&#13;
Room.&#13;
Immediately there would.be an Epidemic&#13;
of Goose Pimples and a Rush&#13;
to shake Hands with him.&#13;
Rufus waa sinfully Rich, but never&#13;
theless Detestable, because his Family&#13;
had drilled into him the low-down&#13;
Habit of getting the Jump on the Other&#13;
Fellow.&#13;
Edgar may live fn a Rented House,&#13;
but he will always have the inward&#13;
Satisfaction of knowing that he is a&#13;
sweet and courteous Gentleman with&#13;
Pink Underwear, and a Masonic&#13;
Charm on his Watch Chain.&#13;
When Edgar answers the Can, the&#13;
Preacher will speak briefly from the&#13;
Text, "Blessed are the Meek."&#13;
If the Death Angel snceeedavln pulling&#13;
down Rufus, the same Minister&#13;
win find a Suggestion for his Remarks&#13;
in those Inspiring Words, 1 have&#13;
fooght the Ooqd tight"&#13;
MOJUL:&#13;
The Scrapper is seldom beloved kcjt&#13;
ho ejete* Bam for his&#13;
K&gt;-&#13;
Young Man Accused of Burglary Puts&#13;
Murderous Fight With Revolver&#13;
When Officers Come After&#13;
Him.&#13;
IN CHARGE OF RELIEF&#13;
WORK AFTER SALEM FIRE&#13;
Detroit—Detective Lieutenant John&#13;
Donovan and Detective Sergeant Patrick&#13;
O'Grady were shot down by a&#13;
suspected store robber they were trying&#13;
to arrest at 11 o'clock Friday&#13;
night.&#13;
Donovan was shot twice in the right&#13;
breast and O'Grady once in the right&#13;
breast and again in the abdomen. It&#13;
is believed one bullet passed through&#13;
his liver.&#13;
The man who did the shooting is&#13;
Lloyd Abbatoy, 19 years old, 514 Fort&#13;
street west. He admits it, and declares&#13;
it waa "the dnly thing I could&#13;
do."&#13;
The officers were shot during a&#13;
desperate gun battle in the dark in a&#13;
boarding house at Fort street west&#13;
and Vermont avenue. They had trapped&#13;
Abbatoy, who is wanted as an&#13;
alleged member of a gang of downtown&#13;
store thieves, three of whom&#13;
were arrested Friday, when over II,-&#13;
000 worth of loot was recovered. After&#13;
the shooting, six suit cases full of&#13;
supposed store plunder were taken&#13;
from the basement of the house and&#13;
11 persons arrested. '&#13;
Detectives Donovan, O'Grady and&#13;
Coats went to the house to arrest Abbatoy.&#13;
Coats remained on,the outside&#13;
while Donovan and O'Grady entered.&#13;
Abbatoy and his wife occupy&#13;
light housekeeping rooms at the rear&#13;
of the house.&#13;
Mrs. Abbatoy, a frail little woman,&#13;
declared her husband was not in the&#13;
house, as did his father, and the detectives&#13;
began a search.&#13;
The house was dark, and they made&#13;
their way about with a searchlight,&#13;
Mrs. Abbatoy following them, nervous&#13;
and shaking and declaring constantly&#13;
her young husband was not at home.&#13;
Near the rear of the house the detective;&#13;
ran across a clothes closet,&#13;
and Donovan opened the door.&#13;
O'Grady had the flashlight, and as&#13;
he threw its uncertain rays into the&#13;
narrow closet, the crouching figure of&#13;
young Abbatoy was revealed.&#13;
He opened fire on the two detectives&#13;
and a desperate struggle ensued&#13;
in which the officers each received&#13;
two bullet wounds. Coats, hearing the&#13;
shots, rushed in and found his wounded&#13;
comrades holding their prisoner*&#13;
to the floor. He disarmed the boy&#13;
and summoned the ambulance.&#13;
ERNE3T P. BICKNELL.&#13;
Salem, Mass.—Ernest P. Bicknell,&#13;
national director of the Red Cross,&#13;
came here Friday to take charge of&#13;
the relief work following the disastrous&#13;
fire of Thursday night which&#13;
resulted In a property loss of ten millions&#13;
and the unhouslng of ten thousand&#13;
people. -?&#13;
SEVEN PERSONS CARRIED&#13;
Transatlantic Flying Boat Stands&#13;
Severe Test and Establishes&#13;
Weight Carrying Record.&#13;
Elks Close Meeting at Petoskey.&#13;
Petoskey, Mich.—Shirley Stewart,&#13;
of Port Huron, vice-president of the&#13;
Michigan Elks' association, was unanimously&#13;
elected president Thursday&#13;
morning to succeed E. L. Rose, of&#13;
Petoskey. George D. Bestock, of&#13;
Grand Rapids, was unanimously reelected&#13;
secretary and Charles A. Mayworm,&#13;
of Ann Arbor, treasurer. The&#13;
number of visitors has passed the&#13;
5,000 mark.&#13;
The convention Thursday with a&#13;
night parade and carnival of fun and&#13;
a grand ball at the Cushman house.&#13;
Hammondsport, N. T.—Seven men&#13;
flew over Lake Keuka Saturday afternoon&#13;
in Rodman Wanamaker's transatlantic&#13;
flying boat America.&#13;
Their weight, together with sand&#13;
ballast and gasoline, totalled 1,500&#13;
pounds. The number of passengers&#13;
is more than was ever carried In a&#13;
flying machine in the country before&#13;
and is said to be a world's record for&#13;
flying boats. The weight carried was&#13;
three times the weight carrying record&#13;
in the United States for any kind&#13;
of a flying machine.&#13;
Lieutenant John Cyril Porte, who&#13;
is to pilot the machine frou New&#13;
Foundland to Ireland by way of the&#13;
Azores, was at the wheel.&#13;
The load carried today was within&#13;
600 pounds of what the America will&#13;
be required to carry in her transatlantic&#13;
flight. Glenn H. Curtiss, the builder,&#13;
and Lieutenant Porte were delighted&#13;
^with the test.&#13;
ALPENA GETS 1915 MEETING&#13;
J. H. Johnson, of Pontlac, Elected&#13;
President of League of Municipalities.&#13;
Man Is Crushed to Death.'&#13;
Alpena, Mich.—Frank Glennie, aged&#13;
SO, was crushed to death in a grinding&#13;
mill at the plant of the Huron&#13;
Portland Cement company. He leaves&#13;
a widow and two small children.&#13;
Glennie had entered the grinder to&#13;
oil it. A fellow employe, unaware of&#13;
his presence, threw in the clutch to&#13;
the machine, and a second later he&#13;
was ground to pieces.&#13;
TELEGRAPHIC FLASHES&#13;
Copper country military organisations^&#13;
paid tribute to the memory of&#13;
Oscar F. Hendrickaon, private in Co.&#13;
B, Twenty-eighth United 8tates infantry*&#13;
wno died in Vera Cruz June 3,&#13;
after a brief illness. The body was&#13;
first taken to the homo of his parents&#13;
at Calumet and then to the armory,&#13;
whore it lay In state.&#13;
After serving the Michigan United&#13;
Traction company seven years as Its&#13;
superintendent in Kalemasoo, Charles&#13;
H. Smith has been notified that ho&#13;
had been named to assume the management&#13;
of the properties pf the-company&#13;
in Saglaaw and Bay City and&#13;
thejbjtarttrba* connecting those two&#13;
piaoos. Year* «** ho was emsjoyotf&#13;
Hit&#13;
* - • • &amp; . -&#13;
To Tost Governor's Decision.&#13;
Saginaw, Mich.—The Saginaw&#13;
board of supervisors at a special session,&#13;
Friday morning, passed a resolution&#13;
placing the sheriff of this county&#13;
on a salary. Last year the supervisors&#13;
passed a similar resolution and&#13;
asked Governor Ferris to make it a&#13;
law. On the advice of Attorney General&#13;
Fellows the governor vetoed the&#13;
measure. Now the matter will probably&#13;
reach the courts to test its validity.&#13;
ITEMS Of STATE INTEREST&#13;
, t&#13;
• * • y e^ej^emsBS) ,&#13;
The town of Detord, with a population&#13;
of 150, near Cass City, wag&#13;
struck by a cyclone early Wednesday&#13;
and all buildings more or less damaged,&#13;
The loss is estimated at fid;.&#13;
Ooo. No one was hart (&#13;
The grist mm of George Sheeler&#13;
and Frank GaUupK in Ousted, buvneeV&#13;
caoalsg a loss of |4,W. Firo aaar-^&#13;
atss frost Adrtaii was seat, * ' '&#13;
1*U ft* sfcve the Vfopertx. '&#13;
started in the engine room.&#13;
'••» * . • • « . . • - * . . ^ e i - .&#13;
5g-&#13;
HBR TO AUSTRIAN&#13;
THRONE AND WIFE&#13;
ARE SHOT DEAD&#13;
Archduke Francis Ferdinand&#13;
Victim of Assassins at&#13;
Sarayevo&#13;
STUDENT AND PRINTER ARE&#13;
CAPTURED BY THE POLICE&#13;
Royal Couple Escape First Attempt&#13;
On Their Lives With Bomb But&#13;
Die From Revolver Wounds&#13;
Shortly After.&#13;
Sarayevo, Bpsaia—Archduke Francis&#13;
Ferdinand, heir to the Austria-&#13;
Hungarian throne and the Duchess of&#13;
Hohenberg, his morganatic wife, were&#13;
shot dead Sunday by a young Servian&#13;
student In the main street of the Bosnian&#13;
capital, a short time after they&#13;
had escaped death from a bomb hurled&#13;
at the Royal automobile. They&#13;
were slain while passing through the&#13;
city on their annual visit to the annexed&#13;
provinces of-Bosnia and Her-&#13;
-zegovina.&#13;
The archduke was struck full in&#13;
the face and the duchess was shot&#13;
through the abdomen and throat.&#13;
They died a few minutes after reaching&#13;
the palace, to which they were,&#13;
hurried wit&amp; all speed.&#13;
Those responsible for the assassination&#13;
took care that it should prove&#13;
effective, as there were two assaults,&#13;
the first with a bomb and the second&#13;
with a revolver. The bomb was&#13;
thrown at the royal automobile as&#13;
it was proceeding to the town hall,&#13;
where a reception was to be held,&#13;
The archduke saw the deadly missile&#13;
hurling through the air and warded it&#13;
off with his arm. It fell outside the&#13;
car and exploded, slightly wounding&#13;
two aide-de-camps in a second car and&#13;
half a dozen spectators.&#13;
It was on the return of the procession&#13;
that the tragedy was added to&#13;
the long list of those that have darkened&#13;
the pages of the recent history&#13;
of the Hapsburgs. As the royal automobile&#13;
reached a prominent point In&#13;
the route to the .palace, an eighth&#13;
grade student, Gavrio Pjrtnsip, sprang&#13;
out -of the crowd and poured a deadly&#13;
fusillade of bullets from an automatic&#13;
pistol at the archduke and duchess.&#13;
Prinzip, and his fellow conspirator,&#13;
a compositor from Trebinje named&#13;
Gabrinovics, barely escaped lynching&#13;
by the infuriated spectators. They&#13;
finally were seized by the police who&#13;
afforded them protection.&#13;
EXCURSION BOAT IS BURNED&#13;
Big Excursion Steamer Manistee&#13;
Burns—Crew Narrowly Escape&#13;
Death.&#13;
Bay City, Mich.—A banquet and&#13;
theatre party closed the convention&#13;
of the League of Michigan Municipalities&#13;
in this city Thursday night Mayor&#13;
J. H, Johnson, of Pontlac, was&#13;
chosen president of the league, and&#13;
the other officers are as follows: Vicepresident,&#13;
W. P. Collins, Alpena; secretary&#13;
and treasurer, George H. Curtis,&#13;
Jackson; directors, J. H. Whitney,&#13;
St. Louis; c. A. Sink, Ann Arbor; L,&#13;
A. Goodrich^ Hillsdale: W". XJahnkee,&#13;
Saginaw; Charles Retails, Marquette.&#13;
Alpena was chosen for the 1915&#13;
convention city. A&#13;
Grand Haven, Mich.—The big excar-"&#13;
sion steamer Manistee, formerly the&#13;
Petoskey, caught fire at the Johnson&#13;
repair dock, early Sunday morning,&#13;
and her full crew of sailors escaped&#13;
death by fighting their way through&#13;
smoke and flames and leaping overboard.&#13;
Two men were seriously burned&#13;
and others sustained minor injuries.&#13;
The steamer was destroyed, with a&#13;
loss estimated at between 1250,000&#13;
and $800,000, Part of this was covered)&#13;
by insurance. She was owned by the&#13;
Michigan Transportation Co. The&#13;
Manistee was built in 1892 and christened&#13;
the Petoskey. She was 848 &lt;&#13;
gross tons, 202 feet long and 82-foot&#13;
beam.&#13;
BIG NEGRO STILL CHAMPION&#13;
Jack Johnson Defeats Pittsburgh&#13;
Fighter in Paris Saturday. . &gt;&#13;
Paris.—"Jack" Johnson still holds1&#13;
the heavyweight cham9io*sh&amp; of the *•&#13;
world.&#13;
In a hard fought battle at thei&#13;
Velodrome D*Hivcr hero Saturday*&#13;
bight he easily defeated'Frank Moran,&#13;
of Pittsburg, on points la a 20-round&#13;
contest. Moran Was game and stubborn..&#13;
He did most of the leading, and&#13;
made many friend*,&#13;
Johnson's superior skiB and hig&#13;
effective upper-cutting wore downhie&#13;
opponent**** woa the fight which&#13;
was a rather tame affair at all staged,^&#13;
. Frank Wotjkowiak, of Gayiord, a&#13;
section hand on the Michigan Central&#13;
was drowned u &lt;kmm^i&amp;'o&amp;&#13;
bee* from which he ^ j p ^ w l a a i s ^ ^&#13;
were n*hm« oaptised as4hf oXMnaaato&#13;
.•J * ' ~ • ' - / ; ' * ^ i ¥ • f t *&#13;
— « ^&#13;
.T **'&#13;
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, t : : : . - • $ • :&#13;
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peDnannilieesl sS .mlaidnte rs utdod ean lym aildliovnanaicrees. frHome Ias satmatbei.t ioHusi s tsoim bpelceo, mheo meg-olvoevrinngor w ifoef fathiles tKoa rthisaer itnoe ,t hed anuegwh tceorn doift ioSne*n. aBtolard eS mtriecekts- Blalnadd,e adnedc isdeeess tino hseerp aarlal tteh aftr oMma rbyi sI s wniofet tainodn toafk ehsi sr owoimfes aantd h ihsi sc lcuobn. stHanits datetseenr-- dpuanbcliec coonm mKeantht erlEndei toSrt rMickelrarnitdt Icsa uwsoens coavnenr otto otthheer wsuipsep osrutp pofly Btlhaed em boenceayu sfeo rh ae rEiuttr opeKaant hterrilpn e deamgraenedse dt ob ym aMrrrys . BMlaedre- wHhaeyne s, thIen llaotvtee r wgiteht s Kaa thdeivrlonrec.e . haBs oya cstoonrdmuyct steoswsiaornd wSiltahd et. he latter over her&#13;
CHAPTER VII—Continued.&#13;
She turned to him with a bitter&#13;
laugh. "I'm through with you—and&#13;
your insults," and ehe fled from the&#13;
room.&#13;
Katherlne did not go a moment too&#13;
soon, for scarcely had the folding&#13;
doors closed behind her when the&#13;
door from the smoking-room swung&#13;
open* and with noisy talk the few remaining&#13;
members of the dinner party&#13;
straggled In.&#13;
In her agitated condition, even Katherlne&#13;
would have found It difficult to&#13;
regain her composure sufficiently to&#13;
meet these men.&#13;
Ex-Governor Hibbard was in a particularly&#13;
happy frame of mind. The&#13;
senator's excellent viands and the senator's&#13;
choice wines and the senator's&#13;
Havana* had succeeded In making him&#13;
feel well satisfied with the world in&#13;
general and with Stede in particular.&#13;
His round face was flushed and his&#13;
string tie a trifle awry.&#13;
"Had a good time, senator," he said,&#13;
removing his cigar, "but there were&#13;
too many swallowtails here for me tonight.&#13;
When 1 was governor of the&#13;
state 1 never wore one. No, nor a plug&#13;
hat, either."&#13;
"I never wore one, and I never&#13;
will," seconded Colonel Smith, a typical&#13;
long, lean, lanky westerner, with&#13;
the Inevitable western cut beard and&#13;
hair a bit too long.&#13;
"Governor, you're right," and Strickland&#13;
gave each man a resounding slap&#13;
on the shoulder. "Colonel, stick to&#13;
your guns. They're a nuisance. Now,&#13;
boys, forget your homes and your&#13;
trains. The others, are all gone. Let&#13;
us, the ringleaders, adjourn to, the&#13;
dining-room and over one of my&#13;
punches—"&#13;
The governor patted his stomach&#13;
tenderly. The mention of the senator's&#13;
punch was all that was necessary&#13;
to weaken his desire to catch a train.&#13;
"Ah !&gt; Strickland's punch! I'm with&#13;
you."/&#13;
"Now, gentlemen," interrupted Merritt&#13;
in a business-like manner, "before&#13;
we split up tonight It's understood&#13;
we're all Slade men?"&#13;
"All Slade men!1' was the unanimous&#13;
*bbut from the colonel, the 'ex-&#13;
Governor Hunt, pious Ofd Pop Hart&#13;
and Ingram/ *&#13;
"And we're preparing to cope with&#13;
Slide's domestic trouble should it&#13;
come up, and It will," went on Merritt&#13;
"The devil, Strick!" broke la the&#13;
colonel. "Can't it be patched up until&#13;
after election r&#13;
- "No, gentlemen,** The senator w i t&#13;
unctuous but firm. "We must take&#13;
vSlade i s we find him. or—drop him.&#13;
We're in the hands of i peculiar and&#13;
dominant personality. We can't make&#13;
these big fellows to order."&#13;
"What I can't understand," complained&#13;
Hibbard, throwing the^etab&#13;
of his cigar into the fireplace, "is why&#13;
they cant ^get on together."&#13;
Take, it from me, gentlemen, it's&#13;
-her fault," exclaimed Merritt, as much&#13;
in favor of Blade as he had previously&#13;
been opposed to him, now that Fannie&#13;
was appeased with the money for her&#13;
trip to Europe,&#13;
- "She's preparing to desert him&#13;
now,^ Strickland assured them. "It's&#13;
irrevocable." ~ \&#13;
"Wen, we cant blame him for bt&gt;&#13;
lng deserted," agreed Hrbhard.&#13;
"You bet we cant! My wife deaa&#13;
attempt at tacettonaneatv "and she&#13;
djdfcf do It a day too toon, either,&#13;
r w t o t f i right*haad ever ssgoe,* ""&#13;
*Now. then," went on the Irtaatrl-&#13;
..,Ma fcerriti, "ferae ot us own papers.,&#13;
Tbeaetf* our potets: Mr*'Jade ».&#13;
' at " e j « » w a a a w h o has no eympe&gt;&#13;
thy wi$h bar pnabaai- etnas pahao&#13;
m » ~ i i ;*&gt;a*ar eeaa &gt; iffaJod wirea t*&#13;
swe mev Ant w**r*9*bf tat him&#13;
d M t forget t i a t * ^ - S ' &gt;' -" -&#13;
^ &gt; T t » l J n e t ; * * m y wifV grahtad&#13;
f^hf ooloBetv • v ~ - "*'*•&#13;
^ &lt; V *&#13;
• ! &amp; " -&#13;
"Why, she's a semi-invalid," amended&#13;
Strickland.&#13;
"My wife hasn't seen her out since&#13;
she drove him out of the house Ave&#13;
weeks ago," declared Hart,&#13;
"Good! Well use that," exclaimed&#13;
Merritt, eagerly. "A semi-invalid—&#13;
when she's ready to be moved she&#13;
will be taken away at her own request&#13;
I'll publish it myself. Ill start the bail&#13;
a-rolling. Why, gentlemen, the world&#13;
ought to pity that man."&#13;
Hayes had stood the conversation&#13;
as long as he could.&#13;
"Do you realise that you're attacking&#13;
this woman unjustly?" he broke&#13;
in, walking into the middle of the&#13;
group.&#13;
"This is not at all true." ..&#13;
"You keep out of this game," warned&#13;
Strickland.&#13;
"Well, boys, we're ail agreed," declared&#13;
Merritt. "It's one for all,&#13;
then—"&#13;
"And all for one,"- added Hibbard,&#13;
excitedly*&#13;
"Hip! Hip!" began Merritt, when&#13;
the door opened and the butler announced:&#13;
"Mrs. Slade."&#13;
The hurrah that had been on each&#13;
man's lips died a sudden death. They&#13;
looked at each other in consternation.&#13;
"Mrs. Slade!" gasped Merritt&#13;
"Whew!"&#13;
The eyes turned toward the door&#13;
saw a tiny, gray-garbed woman, with&#13;
great, questioning brown eyes, hesitating&#13;
in bewildered fashion as she&#13;
found herself confronted by a roomful&#13;
of men. Her gown with- its tight&#13;
basque and full skirt was dowdy and&#13;
badly cut, in marked contrast to the&#13;
fashionable, clinging gowns of the&#13;
women who had graced the room a&#13;
short time previous. Her white gloves&#13;
were a fraction too short to meet her&#13;
short eleeves, and left exposed thin&#13;
arms and pointed elbows. But the tender&#13;
face, with its sweetly expressive&#13;
mouth, was unchanged. The lovely&#13;
eyes were more appealing, as filled&#13;
with wistful shyness, they gazed about&#13;
the room.&#13;
"I'm afraid It's a little late for me&#13;
to come," she managed" to say, as the&#13;
senator came up to her with outstretched&#13;
hand.&#13;
"This is an unexpected pleasure,"&#13;
the senator assured her with an urbane&#13;
smile. "Gentlemen, Mrs. Slade."&#13;
"Why, my dear madame," and Merritt&#13;
greeted her effusively, "I'm glad&#13;
She Hesitated In Bewildered FssWon.&#13;
to know that the reports to the senator&#13;
have been exaggerated. Your&#13;
health Is now—er—"&#13;
"Oh, I never felt better In my life,&#13;
sir/' Mary declared, puxxled that he&#13;
shovld ask such * question.&#13;
Hayes hastened to the little womisVt&#13;
aide.&#13;
."Oh, Rob," aha exclaimed, relieved&#13;
««rt«l s * » dwlared the colonel with * » » * ^^iMar face. As aha turned&#13;
to Hayes, Slade appeared at the smoking-&#13;
room door, and as ha recognised&#13;
the dowdy Uttie flgnre his eyes darkea+&#13;
4 and an angry soowl appeared on&#13;
hiafaoa. Btricklaad urn. the expression&#13;
aid bajteaa* tourge tk* mea to&#13;
teUow^him Into t»* dteing-room&#13;
oHArrmn VIIK&#13;
v As tfee matt ttad oat, Mary turned&#13;
ta meet her hds*sx*ris angry eyes. '-&#13;
-Wat*, Ota/ m -JMbt '•*&amp;"&amp;*&#13;
• &gt;l/4asn aeo &gt;a# taa rslrtll smV Tisntiiit meeaiaUr Tf'-irtr *flft «^t- y w r&gt;eta&#13;
^acgxaa JaW^attlitet llliiini ^ J t f M i i lada;" ^^:-.^-^^- ^:F^-,. IsVa awe*e**V?v&#13;
been a struggle, but I'm here. Why,&#13;
I've been thinking all this evening,&#13;
while 1 was gettin' dressed, I'd give&#13;
a dollar to see the look on your face&#13;
when you saw me here, Dan, and&#13;
know that you got your own way.&#13;
Dan—I've—well—I've given In, father."&#13;
And, turning to Rob with an&#13;
expectant little smile, "Do I look all&#13;
right, Robf&#13;
"I think you do," Hayes replied,&#13;
gravely.&#13;
"Will you take Mrs. Slade home,&#13;
Robert?" Slade broke in.&#13;
"It's very late," Hayes pleaded as&#13;
he put hi* hand lovingly on the little&#13;
woman's shoulder.&#13;
"Yes, I know it is," Mary agreed,&#13;
still not realising what a fiasco her&#13;
first attempt.to enter into social life&#13;
was. "I've been outside for half an&#13;
hour—just tryin' to make up my mind,&#13;
but as long as you're here yet—why—"&#13;
"There aren't any other ladies present,"&#13;
Hayes tried to explain, "and I&#13;
think perhaps—"&#13;
"You'd better go," Slade finished&#13;
for him, but not in his conciliatory&#13;
tone.&#13;
"But you don't understand," Mary&#13;
objected. "He doesnt Understand,"&#13;
she turned to Hayes in a perplexed&#13;
way. "My being here tonight means&#13;
I've given in," and ehe looked up&#13;
searchingly into her husband's forbidding&#13;
face. "I'm going out with you&#13;
every night, all the time, whenever&#13;
you want me, balls, parties, dinners,&#13;
everything."&#13;
"Will you see Mrs. Slade to her carriage?"&#13;
Slade turned to Bob, ignoring&#13;
his wife's detaining hand..&#13;
"Yes, but," Mary began to object&#13;
"It's necessary that I join these gentlemen,"&#13;
Slade informed her coldly.&#13;
"Take her at once," he commanded&#13;
Hayes.&#13;
Hayee started toward the door.&#13;
"Call me when you're ready, Mrs.&#13;
Slade. I'U wait in the hall." and he&#13;
disappeared.&#13;
Slade thrust his hands deep into his&#13;
pockets and looked at his wife in a&#13;
puzzled way. She was nervously&#13;
pulling off her gloves and beginning&#13;
to realise that her visit was, for some&#13;
unexplained reason, scarcely the success&#13;
she had planned It to be.&#13;
"In God's name, what did you come&#13;
here for, Mary?" Slade finally demanded.&#13;
"What did I come here for?" she&#13;
repeated blankly. "What did I come&#13;
here fer? Why, to please you. I&#13;
thought you'd be glad. I just can't&#13;
stand It with you living out of the&#13;
house, Dan. Lord, I haven't slept a&#13;
wink since you left. Aren't you missing&#13;
me?" and her voice trembled just&#13;
the least bit.&#13;
"Oh, Dan. It's all over now, ein't&#13;
it, our tiff?" she began eagerly, catching&#13;
his arm impulsively and pressing&#13;
her face against his coatsleeve, kissing&#13;
the unresponsive broadcloth again&#13;
and again. "We're making up; we'll&#13;
gp home together. It'll all be different&#13;
after this, and 111 see you at the breakfast'table&#13;
mornings now," she finished&#13;
joyfully.&#13;
"Dan," she began again, "1 don't believe&#13;
you've had a decent cup of coffee&#13;
since you left home. I'd like to&#13;
make you a cup now, myself," and&#13;
she looked reflectively around the senator's&#13;
library as if she thought there&#13;
might possibly be some opportunity&#13;
to brew a cup of coffee right then and&#13;
there.&#13;
"Come on home, father," she urged,&#13;
calling him by the name of the old,&#13;
old days, when they had both dreamed&#13;
of little ones i n their home, and patting&#13;
his arm lovingly, tenderly. "Mad&#13;
at me yet?" ehe questioned.&#13;
Slade winced under the gentle touch&#13;
of her hand on his arm, and found it*&#13;
necessary to turn away from the face&#13;
that was so sweet and penitent&#13;
"No," he stammered, "I'm not mad&#13;
at yon, only this is no place to talk&#13;
about our troubles."&#13;
"Well, well -go along home," she&#13;
suggested.&#13;
"No, I can't come now. You'd better&#13;
let Rob take yon home," and he&#13;
started for the door.&#13;
Marf started after him, clutching at&#13;
his arm.&#13;
"I've got to know what the matter&#13;
is now—I must—I must," she declared&#13;
vehemently.&#13;
"Very well, Mary, as far as my&#13;
plans go, I've arranged my life differently."&#13;
"Differently? Differently? Haven't&#13;
I given in?"&#13;
"It's too late now. I'm sorry to&#13;
say this, but you force me."&#13;
"Walt a minute, Dan." She drew a&#13;
long breath; as If nerving herself for&#13;
an ordeaL^TToti're going to say semething&#13;
dreadful. Before you begin I&#13;
want to say thai 111 do anything &lt;o&#13;
gat things back just the same as they&#13;
were before—anything. There's nothing&#13;
you could ask ma X won't d o -&#13;
nothing I There! Now-I Now go on,"&#13;
and she sank weakly Into a chair.&#13;
"Look hero," Slade waa cruelly abrupt&#13;
"This separation is permanent&#13;
NotWng'e jomgi© change It"&#13;
**eparatkmrv She gate him a&#13;
blank; amaaed stare. "Why, Dan,&#13;
who's talking about separation? We&#13;
can* be separated,"&#13;
"We can be—we are. When I left&#13;
yo* that idgfet It waa for goad and&#13;
all. Maty/ w«r emVt** aloog togatfcaad&#13;
t&gt;e «*p&gt; op my miad to if. .&#13;
to say you OATCHI&#13;
missed yer home? You haven't wanted&#13;
me to give in? You mean what's&#13;
happened is for the best?"&#13;
"Yea," he answered idly.&#13;
Mary gased at him in bewilderment.&#13;
"You're not the man I talked to five&#13;
weeks ago. I don't know you. It&#13;
must be the people about you—or&#13;
«t's— "&#13;
Like a flash the possibility of another&#13;
woman came into her mind.&#13;
But she dismissed it as quickly as it&#13;
had come. She would not Insult him&#13;
-—or herself—or their love by such s&#13;
suggestion.&#13;
"I am another man from the one&#13;
you married," Slade agreed, "but you&#13;
wouldn't see it."&#13;
"la it my fault that I married a man&#13;
who's turned Into somebody else?**&#13;
Slade't Eyes Darkened and an Ugly&#13;
8cowl Appeared on His Face.&#13;
Mary argued, fighting, fighting for her&#13;
life, her happiness—for him. "I married&#13;
you, Dan. I married a poor young&#13;
fellow who was hard worked and I&#13;
helped him. along. We started fair,&#13;
Dan, but this ain't fair," lapsing more&#13;
and more Into poor grammar and dialect&#13;
as her excitement rose. "You got&#13;
beyond me, but it was because I&#13;
worked and saved the pennies for you,&#13;
while you went out and got helped and&#13;
learned. Cooking didn't learn me. I&#13;
didn't even know I was behind the&#13;
times or unsatisfactory until one day&#13;
you—"&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
KINDLY WORD MEANS MUCH&#13;
World Would Be Happier and Better&#13;
if Approbation Were More Freely&#13;
Expressed.&#13;
It is often told that Engene Field&#13;
one day wandered into a basement&#13;
restaurant, sat down at a table, put&#13;
his chin in his hands and gazed moodily&#13;
into space, relates the Youth's Companion.&#13;
A waiter came up to him, and&#13;
after the manner of his kind enumerated&#13;
the long list of dishes that were&#13;
ready to be served.&#13;
"No, no," said Field, dejectedly, "I&#13;
require none of those things. All 1&#13;
want is some sliced oranges and a few&#13;
kind words."&#13;
Whether or not the incident be true,&#13;
it is suggestive. Unquestionably, deeds&#13;
weigh far more than words, and yet it&#13;
is almost tragic to think how much&#13;
happier and better this struggling&#13;
world would become If kind words&#13;
were more often heard. We all, every&#13;
day, come in contact with those who&#13;
are in Eugene Field's state of mind.&#13;
They are in our own homes; mothers&#13;
and fathers and children. They are&#13;
behind counters of stores; they are&#13;
employes on trains; they are servants&#13;
in kitchens; they are everywhere, and&#13;
their name is legion. A word of appreciation&#13;
would brighten the whole&#13;
day and would make it easier for them&#13;
to keep on trying.&#13;
American Caviar Popular.&#13;
The use of the roe salmon and other&#13;
American fish for the making of caviar&#13;
is growing rapidly, and as a result&#13;
what at one time was a serious&#13;
waste has been turned into an excellent&#13;
and valuable food. The principal&#13;
difference between this caviar and the&#13;
Russian caviar is that the Russian article&#13;
is made principally out of sturgeon&#13;
roe, while American caviar is&#13;
made from salmon roe, white fish roe,&#13;
and the roe of other fish that are handled&#13;
on a large commercial scale as&#13;
well as from sturgeon roe.&#13;
This'caviar is made in the same&#13;
manner as the Russian caviar. The&#13;
roe is pressed through screens, which&#13;
allow the eggs to pass, but hold back&#13;
all the membrane ami tha egg sacks.&#13;
These eggs are than packed in a large&#13;
quantity of salt, which dfawe some of&#13;
the water and other substances from*&#13;
them.&#13;
He DMnt Knowlt&#13;
Counsel for. the Defense (to client&#13;
who baa bean doslag durlag the verdict)—&#13;
Wake up and g e e out You're&#13;
I&#13;
The Acerjssi Lee* mrnrnat&#13;
NotgatttyT pfatraay Battetm,&#13;
weti&#13;
HOW TO COMBAT DISEASE&#13;
Teaching of Sanitary Ideas Among&#13;
Indians Is a Problem for Government&#13;
Agents.&#13;
Dr. John N. Alley, superintendent of&#13;
the United States sanitarium for Indians&#13;
at Fort Lapwai, Idaho, says he is&#13;
convinced, after a study of the causes&#13;
of death among the Nez Perces Indians&#13;
for the last ten years, that 90 per cent&#13;
of all the deaths are due directly or&#13;
indirectly to tuberculosis. In the hundred&#13;
years that have elapsed since the&#13;
historic expedition of Lewis and&#13;
Clarke to the Northwest, the Nez&#13;
Perces tribe has diminished from 8,-&#13;
000 to 1,300. The present tuberculosis&#13;
death rate is about 40 per thousand living&#13;
or two and one-half times the rate&#13;
in the United States as a whole. Doctor&#13;
Alley traces the cause of the decimation&#13;
to the change in the mode of&#13;
living of the IndianB from the open air&#13;
life of the plains to fefae sedentary, settled&#13;
life of the reservation. The latter&#13;
has brought with it the danger of&#13;
house infection which was automatic;&#13;
ally eliminated in the earlier days.&#13;
"Ventilation," says Doctor Alley, "is&#13;
completely foreign to an Indian's nature.&#13;
It is with great dinlculty that&#13;
you can get them to pay any heed to&#13;
this important part of sanitation. I&#13;
have known twenty or thirty to gather&#13;
in a small room where an advanced&#13;
case of tuberculosis has been housed&#13;
for months, and to close all the doors&#13;
and windows, even plugging up the&#13;
keyholes."&#13;
In a recent report of the office of Indian&#13;
affairs, Commissioner Sells points&#13;
out that there are approximately 25,000&#13;
Indians in the United States suffering&#13;
from tuberculosis, and that the available&#13;
government facilities for their&#13;
care will not exceed 300 beds.&#13;
A Constant Fear.&#13;
"Didn't you say Tewkesbury enjoyed&#13;
a large income?"&#13;
"No. I said he had a large income."&#13;
"What's the difference?"&#13;
"In Tewkesbury's case there i s a&#13;
great deal of difference. He has germlphobia&#13;
and is incapable of enjoying&#13;
anything."&#13;
The Unpopular Sort.&#13;
"What kind of a fellow is Ponson*&#13;
by?"&#13;
"Very disappointing."&#13;
"What do you mean?"&#13;
"He approaches like the bearer of&#13;
glad tidings and ends by trying to&#13;
borrow money."&#13;
Shepherd Dog Led Coyote Pack.&#13;
W7hen the leader of a coyote pack&#13;
was killed recently in Sligo, Colo., it&#13;
was found to be a shepherd collie dog&#13;
with a brass collar about Its neck.&#13;
This explained partly the boldness of&#13;
the pack, which had often come up&#13;
into the very yards of the settlers.&#13;
Suitable to the Occasion.&#13;
"What's the matter with your grammar&#13;
teacher?"&#13;
"Why do you ask?"&#13;
"She seems to be in such a tense&#13;
mood."&#13;
Don't avoid the man with a sunny&#13;
disposition just because you hate to&#13;
be cast in the shade.&#13;
TTrOyU MRa rOinWe tNty DeR HUemGeGdrI SfTor W RIeLd,L W. Te»EkL. WL »TtO«rUr lBayste s Harned C oGmrfaonrut.l ateWd ritBey ofHorO nB;o oNko oSf mtabreti nBg—ye oy mall Free. Marine Eye Remedy Co,, CMeago,&#13;
It's when the weather is too close&#13;
that we feel like getting away from&#13;
It.&#13;
Ten smiles for a nickel. Always buy Red&#13;
Cross Ball-Blue; have beautiful clear white&#13;
clothes. Adv.&#13;
Many a soldier's first engagement&#13;
has ended in a wedding.&#13;
P1ID ER MAKING&#13;
m j Can be made profitable if the&#13;
^ y right kind of machinery is used.&#13;
W l s U U T H I B i a i T B I l B \&#13;
Scad for catalogue. EiaW&gt;hwl l*fzT~&#13;
B o o m * A Boaon«»T Rwaaa Con&#13;
DR. MlJ we. st wDst.s ft tK*tE• rfsLeeLseOi aQ. y«Q 'S ASTHMA Remedy for tha prompt toHof of&#13;
Aathma and) Hay Favar. Aak Your&#13;
drugglat for H. Write lea m i MttPiX&#13;
rKmTHROP«LYaU«CatUl,B«rTAlO,P&lt;.Y.&#13;
DAISY FLY KILLER aula all Meat, leant, or.&#13;
eea. laM• iatd e aeltl&#13;
.eaaleptltotttp&#13;
i WH! net eoll or&#13;
t a j a r e enytfatngv&#13;
avemateea effeottv* «AtH*edaeie ple«Mre fo»fM seujsa , Am, Stately. M. t»&#13;
r&#13;
i&#13;
:' -if&#13;
^&#13;
'•'-•' t A.&#13;
• " &amp;&#13;
: f T-v-.;- ^ y&#13;
aevaouBtiM turn TOsno-.&#13;
&lt;•&gt; v&#13;
: • • • ' « _ *&#13;
&gt; • *&#13;
c \ ,&#13;
, ? • '&#13;
^&#13;
. ^ ^ j &gt; . *«r*fc..&#13;
•\\v-&#13;
- # • • * • " , ^ ^&#13;
-••v. ^-.4-^ • V ' . • • - . ' j : • • • • * ( - - / : , . J » V ?&#13;
"I*" ,.„.* l****"*&#13;
*rff&#13;
&amp; • #&#13;
8 " $ ? ^&#13;
fip*:''&#13;
6?Tj&#13;
r ' "&#13;
* SY.- *'&#13;
fe*&gt;**; - p^.T.;&#13;
&amp;$£'&#13;
fcrfur fe:--&#13;
$ ' ;&#13;
PS*-'1'&#13;
gfeiv.*- SI**. &gt; /&#13;
PS'-^ •&#13;
Bv'-'&#13;
B-'-",;*&#13;
Ss' ••&#13;
•K-'-v*&#13;
*',i'4&#13;
Ik, •'•"J {|vM**&#13;
L-&amp;*! ii&#13;
«,...;' -,&#13;
^ -&#13;
i&#13;
22^-&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
*** COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, found&#13;
Lost; Wanted, Etc.&#13;
Ixi :&#13;
FO&amp;^ALE—- Ten acres of 'good clover&#13;
Hay on ground. Will Caskey 25tf&#13;
FOB SALE—Baby Chicks, Modeled A *&#13;
con nan and Barred Plymouth Rocks, HSc&#13;
each. White Leghorns 8c each. 96t2*&#13;
J. Sider, Piockney, R. F. D.&#13;
North Hamburg&#13;
The severe storm 8atarday did&#13;
much damage to fruit and growing&#13;
crops in this locality.&#13;
Miss Leah Burgess of KendaJiville,&#13;
Ind., is visiting her sister,&#13;
Mrs. Clyde Hinkle.&#13;
Mrs. Clyde Hinkle, Mrs. Orville&#13;
Nash and daughter Ethel, took&#13;
tea with Mr. and Mrs. Edwin&#13;
tfounsifer, Wednesday.&#13;
Most&#13;
Has Tour Child Worms?&#13;
children do. A coated, Furred&#13;
Tongue; Strong Breath; Stomach Pains,&#13;
Circles under Eye's; Pale, Sallow Complexion;&#13;
Nervous, Fretful; Grinding of Teeth;&#13;
Tossing in Sleep; Peculiar Dreams—any&#13;
one of these indicate Child has Worms.&#13;
Get a box of Kiokapoo Worm at once. It&#13;
kills the Worms —the cause of your childs&#13;
condition. Is LaXative and aids Nature&#13;
to expels the Worms. Supplied in candy&#13;
form. Easy for children to take. 26c.&#13;
Recommended dy C. G. Meyer.&#13;
South Marion&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. LaVerne Demerest&#13;
were week end guests of lelatives&#13;
at Fowlerville.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Blair and daughter&#13;
Kebab of Iosco visited Guy Blair&#13;
and wife a couple of days last&#13;
week.&#13;
Bernard McClusky and wife uud&#13;
Bryon McClusky of Hamburg&#13;
spent Sunday at the home of&#13;
Chris Brogau.&#13;
Norbert Lavey of Pinckney&#13;
spent a part of last week with&#13;
Will Shehan and family.&#13;
H. G. Gauss and family spent&#13;
Sunday at Unadilla.&#13;
Otto Dinkel visited relatives&#13;
Pinckney Sunday.&#13;
Farley-Harris&#13;
Tuesday morning, Jane 30 at&#13;
eight o'clock, Miss Ella Mae Farley,,&#13;
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Thomas Farley of Howell and Mr.&#13;
Emmet Harris, SOB of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs, James P. Harris of Howell,&#13;
were united in the holy bonds of&#13;
matrimony at St. Mary's church,&#13;
Bowelt by Rev. Fr. Thornton.&#13;
Tha brtcfo was gowned in white&#13;
silk poplin with a white pansma&#13;
hat tiimmed with plumes. Her&#13;
brides-maid, Miss Elizabeth&#13;
Harris, siste/ of the groom wore&#13;
a dress of white voile and a white&#13;
hat. Leo Farley, brother of the&#13;
bride, acted *s best man. Of*&#13;
coarse the groom and best man&#13;
wore conventional black.&#13;
A pretty wedding breakfast was&#13;
served to the wedding parly Bnd&#13;
the immediate relatives at the&#13;
home of Mrs. Ella Crawford of&#13;
Howell, grandmother of the bride.&#13;
Carlton Barnard, as chauffeur,&#13;
Cirried the bride and groom,&#13;
saftly out of rice throwing and&#13;
saw them on the traiu enroute for&#13;
Chicago, where after a frhort&#13;
honey-moon they will be at home&#13;
to their many friends near Howell.&#13;
Watch This Spaae&#13;
Next Week&#13;
For Program of&#13;
Old Boys and Girls&#13;
Home-Coming&#13;
August 5-6,1914&#13;
f%c il&#13;
at&#13;
- • • • » * -&#13;
Stops Neuralgia—Kill Pain&#13;
Sloan's Liuimttnt gives instant relief&#13;
from Neuralgia or Schtica. It goes straight&#13;
to the painful part—Smoothes the Nerves&#13;
and Stops the Pain. It is also good for&#13;
Rheumatism, Sore Throat, Chest Pains&#13;
and Sprains. You don't need to rub—it&#13;
Senetrate. Mr. J. R. Swinger, Louisville,&#13;
&gt;., writes:"I suffered with quite a severe&#13;
Neuralgic Headache four months without&#13;
any relief. I used Sloan's Liniment for&#13;
two or three nights and I haven't suffered&#13;
with my head since." Get a bottle to-day&#13;
Keep in the bouse all the time for pains&#13;
and all hurts. 25c., 50c. and $1.00. Recommended&#13;
by C. G. Meyer, the druggist.&#13;
Gregory&#13;
Mr. aud Mrs. W. Marsh left&#13;
Saturday for an auto trip to Chicago-&#13;
where they will visit their&#13;
son.&#13;
Dr. and Mrs. Wright were Ypsilanti&#13;
visitors Tuesday where&#13;
they attended the wedding of&#13;
her brother, Mr. Chapman.&#13;
Rev. Scbular of St. Johns has&#13;
accepted the call as pastor of the&#13;
Gregory Baptist church.,&#13;
W. J. Dancer, B: Ostrander aud&#13;
Mr. Austin of Stock bridge were&#13;
Gregory visitors Tuesday and examined&#13;
our street in view of building&#13;
likewise for Stock bridge.&#13;
The bride and groom, Mr. and&#13;
Mis. V. Toung are still away enjoying&#13;
their honeymoon at this&#13;
writing.&#13;
Mrs. Maude Eckman of Sellingham,&#13;
Wash., is visiting her sister,&#13;
Mrs. F. Rose.&#13;
Miss Lawerance of Fitchburg&#13;
has a nice class here in instrumental&#13;
music and is a very efficient&#13;
teacher. *&#13;
Wilmer Crosman and wife attended&#13;
the wedding at Walter&#13;
Gorton's Tuesday.&#13;
Harlow Munsell is spendiug his&#13;
summer vacation clerking at S.&#13;
A. Denton's store.&#13;
i i Monuments I&#13;
R If you are contemplating 4&#13;
8 getting a monument, marker, j&#13;
5 or an thing for the cemetery, 8&#13;
S see or write A&#13;
J , Bell Phone 190 J&#13;
Musical Program .&#13;
The following special musical&#13;
service has been arranged for the&#13;
South Hamburg church next Sunday:&#13;
Chorus .Choir&#13;
Solo Mies Martin&#13;
Solo Miss Florence Kice&#13;
/Voineni «.......&lt; v&gt;ootr&#13;
Ladies Quartette—Mrs. Harry Brown, Mrs.&#13;
Benry Kice, Miss Florence Kice and Mias&#13;
Clara Carpenter.&#13;
Solo Mrs. Mande Newton&#13;
Duet... .Miss F. Kice and Mrs. H. Brown&#13;
Solo Miss Louise. Newton&#13;
Mixed Quartette&#13;
v/liorus •»*••• •••••• ••••••*••!#••»• viioir&#13;
T&#13;
For Cyclone Insurance see Fred&#13;
How let t, Gregory, agent for the&#13;
Michigan State Mutual of Lapeer.&#13;
adv.&#13;
The Ladies of the Cong'l.&#13;
society will have a bake day sale&#13;
Friday afternoon of this week, at&#13;
the Powell meat* market. Cjme&#13;
early and avoid the rush. arlv.&#13;
Anyone desiring to taker a&#13;
journey on this division of t h e&#13;
Grand Trunk would do well to&#13;
consult the time table in this&#13;
paper, as the trains have changed&#13;
time.&#13;
Half the satisfaction after your house is painted is in having colors that SUIT&#13;
YOU and the other half is in getting paint that don't crack or scale off. You&#13;
can obtain Both Halves and also plense your Better Half by getting me to&#13;
paint your house with&#13;
White Seal JGua^nteedPaint]|J:^P«gj}j«&#13;
Upon Honor&#13;
Drop in my shop and (tee the different color schemes and get an idea how your&#13;
house will look painted different ways. If you use my paint you will be satisfied.&#13;
Come and let me figure with you.&#13;
* * • *&#13;
:&lt;•&lt;•••*•'&#13;
'-' t^ii-V. :•&#13;
All Roads Lead to|&#13;
Howell Next •&#13;
i July&#13;
last week's paper for program&#13;
Trapping a Coyote.&#13;
The coyote is one of the sliest and&#13;
hardest of all fur bearing animals to&#13;
trap. He delights in digging up traps,&#13;
springing them, eating the bait and&#13;
otherwise disturbing the set without&#13;
getting caught. His sense of smell is&#13;
very acute. The best way to trap him&#13;
is to build a bonfire over the set after&#13;
the traps have been properly placed.&#13;
Throw into the embers some bacon&#13;
rinds, chicken bones or, better yet.&#13;
bones of sage hen or grouse. The coyote'&#13;
habitually searches about campflree&#13;
for stray bits of meat and is therefore&#13;
less wary. The fire obliterates the&#13;
traces of the set, eliminates the tracks&#13;
and smell of a human being, and the&#13;
odor of the burned meat will attract&#13;
htm from a long distance. He is more&#13;
likely to walk into the trap thus disguised&#13;
With the remnants of a carrfpfire&#13;
than any other unless you have a&#13;
carcass literally surrounded with traps&#13;
with a severe winter on and s o other&#13;
carcasses within miles—W. F. Wilcox&#13;
in Farm and Fireside.&#13;
Meeting AJlrt, 8pid«r.&#13;
In "Insect Biographies With Pen&#13;
and Camera" the nuthor pictures the&#13;
plight of the unlucky fly who has entered&#13;
Mrs. Spider's parlor;&#13;
It is struggling to escape from the&#13;
unexpected net which in some mysterious&#13;
manner has suddenly enveloped&#13;
it when a creature of terrible as-'&#13;
pect hastily rushes out upon i t Eight&#13;
bead-like eyes glare wildly upon the&#13;
terrified fly. A large, hairy and bristly&#13;
finger-like palpus on each side of this&#13;
appalling face waves and flourishes&#13;
with angry menace in the air, apparently&#13;
quivering with malignant gtee.&#13;
Then one of those combed and claw* tfeet is stretched toward the bapprisoner,&#13;
and the threads that&#13;
hold the fly are suddenly tightened up&#13;
as the monster pulls them together.&#13;
Then the spinnerets eject a shower of&#13;
silken strands over the fly, and it Is&#13;
Spun. round and sound on the threads&#13;
that hold it until at last it Is securely&#13;
enveloped, still alive, in silken bonds.&#13;
Grand Trunk Time Tftblt&#13;
For th* convenience of our readers&#13;
HAVE PAINTED HOUSES FOR THE FOLLOWING:&#13;
S. G. Tee pie&#13;
Mrs. M. Bowers&#13;
8. Grimes&#13;
E. W. Kennedy&#13;
J. VanHorn&#13;
Wm. Fisk&#13;
High School Bldg.&#13;
Wm. Dunning&#13;
Miss Kate Brown&#13;
Mrs. E. Moran&#13;
F. G, Jackson&#13;
Irvin Kennedy&#13;
J. J. Mclntyre&#13;
W. H. Harris&#13;
Vim. Blades&#13;
Mrs. E. W. Marti*&#13;
Mrs. A. Potterlon&#13;
H. A. Pick £:&#13;
A. Vedder r&#13;
Fred Teeple&#13;
Marion Reason&#13;
J. A. Treadway&#13;
J as. Roche&#13;
V . J&#13;
B. Lavey&#13;
AND MANY OTHERS&#13;
J&amp;a^Cal! and get my paint book&#13;
L. E. RICHARDS, The Painter&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN&#13;
Try a Liner Advertisement in the Dispatch&#13;
Dry Goods, Notions, Men's Furnishings&#13;
'4*&amp;r&#13;
M': " * « • ' .&#13;
Train* East&#13;
No. 46—&lt;t :32 a. a. .&#13;
No. 4$wto9 p. v .&#13;
TAiBa West&#13;
No. 45—10:33 a. a*&#13;
No. 47---7:20 p. m.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
On All Summer Underwear&#13;
Our Millinery stock is pretty low, bat the ttook it no&#13;
lower* than the price, for we prefer to sell them for lew than&#13;
they are worth, rather than carry them over.&#13;
Shoes for ladies and children, also Elk shin shoes for&#13;
two* " ' -r&#13;
We are offering a 35c coffee for 25c; something new;&#13;
try it; ask tor Tipperary.&#13;
. J . * • •&#13;
5 packages Corn Flakes for 25c.&#13;
3 packages Faffed Wheat for JSc.&#13;
6 bars best Toilet Soep for 25c,&#13;
3 oans Corn for 25c.&#13;
-. *... —j The A N T R A L STORE&#13;
. # • • - '&#13;
- * . . • • - " •&#13;
*&#13;
••i^: t&#13;
-*''</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch July 02, 1914</text>
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                <text>July 02, 1914 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1914-07-02</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, July 9, 1914 No. 28&#13;
*&gt;&#13;
S-v'.V'V&#13;
**&lt;*8&gt;,&#13;
{&#13;
r&#13;
I&#13;
H&#13;
Home-Coming News&#13;
^; :¾¾ At a general meeting of all&#13;
•committees for "Old Boys aud&#13;
Girls11 entertainment last Monday&#13;
evening, plans for reception df&#13;
friends, decoration of the town,&#13;
muftic to be furnished, etc., were&#13;
discussed. A great deal of enthusiasm&#13;
is being manifested,&#13;
coupled with a determination to&#13;
make these two days delightful&#13;
and memorable ones*-&#13;
Mr. Meyer resigned as chairman&#13;
of the executive committee&#13;
and M. J. Reason was appointed&#13;
in his place.&#13;
A resolution was adopted making&#13;
Leo Monks, a committee of&#13;
one to secure music for the dance&#13;
Thursday evening.&#13;
A motion to reduce the membership&#13;
fee lb twenty-five cents&#13;
was also, carried.&#13;
\ &lt;% , • • * • •&#13;
mm&#13;
Anderson&#13;
Mrs. Frank Birnie speLt the&#13;
first of last week with Howell relatives.&#13;
Mrs. J. Sider visited relatives&#13;
iu Detroit last week.&#13;
Roche McClear of Ypsilantr^ was&#13;
home over Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Sprout visited&#13;
in Chelsea a few days lust&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. P. Lavey spent Sunday&#13;
afternoon at G. M. Greiner's.&#13;
The Misses Eliza and Pearl&#13;
Hanes visited at Lorenzo Hildebrandt's&#13;
near Howell the last of&#13;
ihe week aud attended the celebration&#13;
at Howell.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs, F. E. Brogan aud&#13;
little son William made several&#13;
calls through here on their way&#13;
out from Detroit last week Tuesday.&#13;
Elva Hoff and Master Claude&#13;
Whipple were in Howell Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Phillip Sprout spent the&#13;
first of the week-witu her parents&#13;
in Stock bridge.&#13;
Clare Ledwidge visited her&#13;
brother Liam of Jackson Thursday&#13;
aud Friday.&#13;
Catherine Driver accompanied&#13;
by her sister Margaret of Piuckney&#13;
spent the Fourth* at James&#13;
Sfcackable's of Gregory.&#13;
Mr. andTVIrs, Chas. Bullis and&#13;
son Arthur and family enjoyed a&#13;
of the following departments: | picnic dinner with a party of rel-&#13;
Voioe* Violin, Piano and Elooji- ativee at the home of Hal Erwin&#13;
tioD« . Ijrf Howell Saturday.&#13;
Xbm scholarships are ^ 3 - Mary G r e i n e r enfc l a 8 t w e e k&#13;
ed upon competition which is op- i o J a c k e o n c a r i n g f o r ber brother&#13;
en .. to anyo, ne de. siring a musical or AAu-uAre^w-.&#13;
literary education.&#13;
A n y o n e *i»hin g to M f « the' Alfred Morgan went to Detroit&#13;
petition or deeirinc; informnijjbn&#13;
should write to Mr. Geo. C.&#13;
illiams, General Manager of the&#13;
aca Conservatory of Music,&#13;
"thaca, N. Y., before September&#13;
3, 1914. •&#13;
BSBSBBSSWBWSSSSSSSSBBJBSSMBBSSSSSSBi&#13;
We Should Worry&#13;
It is always the one who cannot&#13;
write a four line local and spell&#13;
1&#13;
A Free Scholarship&#13;
Any young man or woman who&#13;
is a bona fide patron of this paper&#13;
may secure free instruction in&#13;
Music or Elocution.&#13;
The Ithaca Conservatory of&#13;
Music, with the desire to stimulate&#13;
the study of these arts, offer&#13;
two ^scholarships to applicants&#13;
ffOm tne State of Michigan, valued&#13;
at $100 each an i good for the&#13;
term olseventeen weeks beginning&#13;
with the opening of the school&#13;
year, September 17, 19H, in any&#13;
LALIES: Do not NEGLECT your complexion. It&#13;
is so much easier to keep it clear and rosy than to&#13;
restore it when it has once grown wrinkled and sallow.&#13;
We have many SPECIAL complexion preparations&#13;
which will not only preserve the rosy looks,&#13;
but RESTORE a faded face. Our lotions and creams&#13;
will give you a BETTER complexion.&#13;
We give you what you ASK for.&#13;
C . G . M B Y B R&#13;
P i n c k n e y , M i c h . P h o n e 5 5 r 3&#13;
HAVE YOU THOUGHT OF&#13;
YOUR VACATION&#13;
acd the things necessary for your comfort&#13;
and enjoyment&#13;
Here is a list which will add to the&#13;
pleasures of your trip.&#13;
Nyal's Peroxide Cream&#13;
For freckles and sunburn&#13;
25c the Jar 25c th* J&amp;r&#13;
Meutholatum&#13;
For mosquito bites aud insect atings 25c&#13;
• ^ 1 • I • • I ! • • • • • H • &gt; ' • I » - I • ! • • . 1 — 1 1 I • - • • • • • • • ^ ^ T — — I - 1 1 . 1 ^&#13;
Peroxide&#13;
As an antiseptic and germicide in case&#13;
of an accident. 10, 15 and 25c bottles&#13;
Toilet Waters, Lotions, Face Powders&#13;
and Talcums to cool and refresh the&#13;
body after a trip or busy day of jollification.&#13;
25c, 50c aud $1.0()&#13;
Water Wings&#13;
For those learning to swim. 25c the pair&#13;
Kodaks and Cameras&#13;
To give you an everlasting souvenir of&#13;
the good times that have passed. .&#13;
$1.25 to $25.&#13;
Stationery&#13;
To write to the folks at home about the&#13;
good time you are having. 25c to $1.00&#13;
, , — . — ^&#13;
Books and Magazines&#13;
To read while traveling or resting.&#13;
ALSO&#13;
Lunch sets 10c, paper plates 10c., paper&#13;
napkins, drinking cups, canJy, cigars,&#13;
tobaccos, cigarettes and pipes.&#13;
^ ^ — — — — — — — y&#13;
* Barteno Circus&#13;
Pinckney, Saturday, July .11,&#13;
comes the Barteno Circus, one of&#13;
America's greatest wagon shows&#13;
preseniiag-all-Vhe latest novel ties&#13;
^ % ± t . , , in one ring. The only one iu exhatnrday&#13;
to see hie mother who i g t e D C e o f U g 6 i z e t b a t p r o d u c e 8&#13;
has been operated on for a cancer&#13;
at St. Mary's Hospital.&#13;
B. M. Ledwidge and family&#13;
spent the Fourth at the home of&#13;
Wm. Ledwidge.&#13;
Mrs. Glenn Gardner and childsuch&#13;
great d*re devil acts which&#13;
is beyond believing and almost deceives&#13;
the eyes of the people as&#13;
they gaze in wonder_upon some of&#13;
the greatest acts the world has&#13;
ever produced. None better can&#13;
along in the field and different&#13;
from all others. The proof is witness&#13;
by the show going public that&#13;
visits its wonderful performances&#13;
daily with *?yes gazing at daring&#13;
feats and graceful acts of the&#13;
wonderland. Two performances&#13;
daily. Afternoou and night. Admission&#13;
25 c.&#13;
Advertisement&#13;
A:&#13;
m&#13;
every word correctly, who rnakes ! Sunday visitor in Jackson,&#13;
fun of the eirors in the newspapers;. Mi9S Lucia Hinohey entertained&#13;
it is usually the fellow who could- her neice and family of Lansing&#13;
n't run a store two weeks without. thtriatter jpait of the week,&#13;
going into bankrupted who feels | # r ; a n d Mrs. Andrew Shiveley&#13;
and Mrs. MacHarlan of Lansing&#13;
were Sunday guesta cf Mrs Alice&#13;
Hoff.&#13;
Orie Hanes and wife of Marion,&#13;
visited Frank Hanes- and family&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Will Roche is spending a few&#13;
weeks at the borne of his brother&#13;
Marachy of Fowlervilte.&#13;
Mrs. Julia Pangborn returned&#13;
last week from a visit with her&#13;
sister in Caro.&#13;
Mr. ami Mrs Jaa Marble celebrated&#13;
a&gt; Ho wefr Sato rday.&#13;
ren visited^her parents Saturday! be seen with the larger shows.&#13;
and Sunday. j Madam Marie and Madam La-&#13;
Richard Greiner was an over j Plazee, Englands greatest mid-air&#13;
aerial artist*, Ute features of the&#13;
Barnum &amp; Bailey circus, will be&#13;
|^||||petent to give the merchant&#13;
teia on how to conduct his&#13;
nets, and it is th* folks who&#13;
oanW nob make a public address&#13;
even if ^ e i r liver depended upon&#13;
it, who find fault with the miniss&#13;
sermon. The reason is not&#13;
rd to find. No man knows how&#13;
nob brains it takes to do these&#13;
things until he tries it himself.&#13;
Editing a newspaper is an easy&#13;
task. If we publish original matter&#13;
ey say we don't give ihem aelec-&#13;
*. If we give Viem selections&#13;
they say * e are too lazy to write.&#13;
seen with the Barteno Show, also&#13;
many other high salaried acts selected&#13;
from the circus world. Each&#13;
and every act a feature. Mr. Barteno&#13;
proudly offers the highest&#13;
class one ring circus in America&#13;
Noxious Weed Notice&#13;
To owners, possessors or occupiers&#13;
of land, or any person or&#13;
persons, firm or corporation having&#13;
charge of auy lands in this&#13;
state:&#13;
Notice is hereby given, that all&#13;
noxious weeds growing ou any land! °Pen®&#13;
in the township of Putnam, Livingston&#13;
county or within the limits&#13;
of any highway passing by or&#13;
through such lands, must be cut&#13;
down and destroyed on or before&#13;
the first of August, A. D. 1914.&#13;
Failure to comply with tuis notice&#13;
on or before the date mentioned,&#13;
or within ten days thereafter,&#13;
shall make the parties so failing&#13;
liable for the cost of cutting same&#13;
and an additional levy of ten per&#13;
cent of such cost to be levied aJlS&#13;
collected against the properdin&#13;
the same manner as other taxes&#13;
are levied and collected, *&#13;
Dated this 9th day of July, 1914&#13;
J as. Smith, Commissioner of the&#13;
Highways of the Township of&#13;
Putnam, Livingston County. 28t2&#13;
Hotel Re-opened&#13;
The Pinckney Hotel was reto&#13;
the traveling public&#13;
Monday.morning by H. Pfiermann&#13;
of Toledo.&#13;
For Cyclone Insurance see Fred&#13;
Howlett, Gregory, agent for the&#13;
Michigan State Mutual of Lapeer.&#13;
adv.&#13;
Bay Reason and 3 company of&#13;
H***&lt;Wtgo to cbtttcfc we are^yoang people from Detroit visited&#13;
haatheos; itire.dov we ate hypo-"ujapareiits the Fouith.&#13;
Ofitas. H we reu^ia at the office wefe^&#13;
igv.&#13;
dttgat tdbe-pnfrlookiag for news;&#13;
^:w*K° out we arse not attending&#13;
f*£ iasineas. - jtf*^we weaf -1 oM&#13;
ic&amp;rtiie*ihsi\'}**ffi&amp;. us; i ^ w e&#13;
elothes tbey sajf \e&#13;
m&#13;
fife'-&#13;
&lt;^na?e a pulL How what ate we to&#13;
dD?^lns| as likely W i o f ,aom«&#13;
'wilt aajr K» stole tnis^rooi* a i&#13;
obagg»/ And we did « • • ! . . . ;&#13;
.-:•??&#13;
* • '&#13;
-/. West Marion&#13;
TLe Ladies Aid will meet with&#13;
ilrs. George : White; this weet&#13;
Thursday, leecrvatn and cake&#13;
wig be seTved. J»v eryone invited&#13;
4rs^ D. J, Hatir is entertaining&#13;
ani^»e|roni Jackson this/week.&#13;
^ StaveJJakei', wife and daughter&#13;
Helen visilad at Philip Smith's&#13;
l*efifstotth#wee»,' ?: I&#13;
f b e quarterlra^tinu has been&#13;
postpaned o«tii &gt;he flrtV&#13;
day amlSundsy i » Angus^&#13;
or Cytl«ne^ln»ar«ice&#13;
Insure m the oil reliable--The&#13;
Michigan Mutual Tornado; Qy- " • • *&#13;
*rf.i&gt;!?»'. .-&#13;
Watch Out For Bills of&#13;
Murphy &amp; Jackson's&#13;
SALE&#13;
IT WILL BE A MONEY SAVER FOR CASH&#13;
' ^ ' ' " ' " " ^ " " " " ' ' ' ^ • • • • " • • • • • ^ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ^ ^&#13;
Our Saturday and Wednesday Specials&#13;
POP Cash&#13;
July 11th and 15th&#13;
Rice, per lb. - 6c 6 pkg«. Corn Flakes&#13;
Va-Co. Coffee, 3 5 c value&#13;
2SIbs. H. &amp; BSu^ar . -,¾½ -.,• ^r&#13;
~%&#13;
:-:.4&#13;
I&#13;
C&gt;&#13;
:~t. ?.,.« ^' v*'&#13;
'•K&#13;
^•tsr^-ir '•ft-V&#13;
"rWk'-'&#13;
* * • :&#13;
•*r -.!*•• • ^&#13;
*'&#13;
J' •XX; ifi&#13;
Ttf^'wwyii'rft.'wi • WjAJj*?/.-OF'T V &gt; ? • — •«• n\'T*r? ^ rvyr f• y,' • v * • ^ ^r~: rr - » 1 » -•-• *?•-_ ^ •**«:«-«»• * * - - ••««r MWIi»*ir&gt; i m m * ^~~~ — trr; •rTS-v x . j i ^ i&#13;
. •- ,' • \ «v ; " TV,,-.-- , - . , , At. s-'.-fc .--: :---^,&#13;
&lt; - • ' • • - . . . . V • ~ . _ , . - . " ,&#13;
s:\ •&#13;
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PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
i &amp; .&#13;
£$•*'&#13;
'*;-&#13;
r*',i&#13;
fc*&#13;
s&#13;
If&#13;
&amp; - ;&#13;
r*&lt;&#13;
•JVV,&#13;
:&gt;"&#13;
• \ - .&#13;
: &amp;&#13;
• - v ^ &lt;&#13;
# •&#13;
'KThe&#13;
Governor's&#13;
L i A Novclization of&#13;
d U y Alice Bradley's Play&#13;
&lt;By GERTRUDE STEVENSON&#13;
Illustrations from Photographs of the Stage Production&#13;
Copyright, Ult ^Publication Bigots Baseirea) by Derta Belaeoo.&#13;
8YN0P3IS.&#13;
Daniel Blade, suddenly advances from a&#13;
penniless miner to a millionaire. He la&#13;
umbitious to become governor of the&#13;
jJtate. Hia simple, home-loving wife falls&#13;
to rise to the new conditions. Slade meets&#13;
Katherine, daughter of Senator Strickland,&#13;
and sees in her all that Mary is&#13;
not. He separates from hia wife and takeg&#13;
rooms at his club. Editor Merritt, who&#13;
has been attacking Slade, is won over to&#13;
the latter's support because he cannot&#13;
otherwise supply the money demanded for&#13;
a European trip for Mrs. Merritt. Katherine&#13;
agrees to marry Slade when he is&#13;
free. Bob Hayes, in love with Katherine,&#13;
has a stormy session with her over her&#13;
affair with .Siade. Mary, anxious to make&#13;
it up with Slade, appears at Strickland's&#13;
house during a political conference.&#13;
Slade informs her that separation is final.&#13;
CHAPTER VHI—Continued.&#13;
Slade nervously assured himself&#13;
that all the doors were tightly closed.&#13;
He suppressed the twinge of shame&#13;
for hie stealthy action by assuring&#13;
himself that it was not fear—simply&#13;
business caution. To his cowardly&#13;
wrenching of his wife's heart he gave&#13;
no thought at all. It was a move in&#13;
the game. He made it as dispassionately&#13;
as one moves a? chessman on&#13;
•the board. Mary was looking at him&#13;
'with a new light in her brown eyes&#13;
as he turned to her again. She spoke&#13;
again.&#13;
"It was all right until you made&#13;
that lucky deal. Dan, with the money&#13;
I helped you to make and you pulled&#13;
me out from behind my stove and&#13;
tried to make me a parlor ornament.&#13;
I'd hate to think where you'd a been&#13;
;today, if yer had. # Five years ago you&#13;
I took all the work I loved to do out of&#13;
my hands and now you're punishing&#13;
line because I did work."&#13;
"No, I'm not," Slade remonstrated,&#13;
moved in spite of himself by her&#13;
simple, eloquent argument.&#13;
"Yes, yuh are, Dan, you're Just as&#13;
good as whipping me for lay in' up&#13;
the foundation of every dollar you've&#13;
got and here I am at my age, sitting&#13;
in idleness in a great big barn of a&#13;
house with my job gone," she finished&#13;
{pathetically.&#13;
"Well, that's life," declared Slade&#13;
unfeelingly.&#13;
; "Then it's a pretty poor thing," and&#13;
J she shook her head sadly. No, It ain't&#13;
life. It shouldn't be. There's something&#13;
wrong in a man's getting so&#13;
far up he can't live with the wife he&#13;
married because she cooked and&#13;
worked instead of playing. It ain't&#13;
Just!"&#13;
"Oh, what's the use, Mary?" Slade&#13;
sighed wearily, as though he, and&#13;
not she, were the injured one.&#13;
"Dan," Mary lowered her voice and&#13;
looked at him earnestly. "If I brought&#13;
up a girl today and we were poor,&#13;
would you advise me to say, 'Take&#13;
piano lessons, learn languages, keep&#13;
up to the times, never- mind doing&#13;
{your share or being economical?'"&#13;
I'm not going to argue," Slade reshoulders&#13;
drooped pitifully, yet she&#13;
felt a certain sad joy in acceding to&#13;
his wishes. There was a kind of happiness&#13;
in sacrificing herself to please&#13;
him.&#13;
She began to pull her gloves, jerkily,&#13;
clumsily, finding some relief in&#13;
having something to do. She was&#13;
struggling hard not to break down—&#13;
not to cling ^wildly to him and beg&#13;
him not to give her up.&#13;
She steadied herself finally.&#13;
"Well, Dan, there's one thing&#13;
you've got to be careful of—now that&#13;
I won't be round to hold you back—&#13;
now that I won't be with you any&#13;
more," her voice quavering. "I'm the&#13;
only one who tells you all the truth.&#13;
Everyone else is afraid of you.&#13;
"Don't let them flatter you," she&#13;
said, with more maternal than wifely&#13;
solicitude. "They can. I found that&#13;
out. Father! You're an awful fool&#13;
' • • * '&#13;
&gt; V * '&#13;
.•&gt;&#13;
| piled loftily.&#13;
"Yuh can't, Dan," declared Mary&#13;
with conviction. "There ain't no argument&#13;
It's one-sided. Suppose I'd&#13;
changed and you'd stayed the same,&#13;
what would all your friends say?&#13;
'Poor Slade, his wife's, crazy—or bad—&#13;
probably bad.' No, yer can't get me&#13;
to see It!"&#13;
"Well, whether you see It or not,&#13;
that's just where we stand. You'd&#13;
better let me call Robert to take you&#13;
home."&#13;
| "Walt, Dan," she pleaded. "Will&#13;
you see me again at home, It I go&#13;
now?"&#13;
There was a tense pause. Slade did&#13;
not reply.&#13;
"I see, I see." She dropped wearily&#13;
into a chair and suddenly the tears&#13;
started in her eyes.&#13;
* "Please, Mary, remember where you&#13;
are." Slade was a trifle less cold.&#13;
"I*)I let you know my plans. All you&#13;
have to do is to abide by them. You&#13;
say you'll do anything tor me, that's&#13;
all I ask you to do, abide by. my plans.&#13;
I wish you much happiness, the best&#13;
ot everything, a lite beyond anything&#13;
you ever had," and he was rapidly&#13;
being carried away by his own mag-&#13;
(Banlmity. "I shall always think ot&#13;
you, with the greatest affection," he&#13;
[concluded, taking on a patronising air&#13;
and trying to make himself believe&#13;
[his own empty sentiments. His self*&#13;
esteem had been severely torn in the&#13;
jlast tew moments ot his wife's talk.&#13;
'He had almost caught a glimpse ot&#13;
'himself as he realty was, but He w a s .&#13;
Regaining what he was pleased to con- ,&#13;
uoatroi of himself.&#13;
'Wen, » W v e conquered." Mary&#13;
tabbed Bar tree and noar and tried&#13;
t o muster' u&gt; sumcient courage to&#13;
Saeet the attaatlon. «1 give in. Ill&#13;
attdc fcr;i»tY plans. Whatever you&#13;
WJurf m* to do," her voice broke into&#13;
)a sob, -ten B e W r t - h l do i t " The&#13;
' t e a n oontanued to tall in spite of&#13;
W . Her heart was breaking. Her&#13;
in, but leave my name. I'm givin'&#13;
up everything else."&#13;
"You might as well stop!" he warned&#13;
her threateningly. "You're going&#13;
now, tonight, the first train East tomorrow.&#13;
Go where you like, see what&#13;
you like, do what you like, spend what&#13;
you like. To what you have I'll add&#13;
a million more, but I'm going to have&#13;
this done in my own way."&#13;
"Oh, Dan!" she shrank from his&#13;
wrath. "I'm going home."&#13;
"No, you're not, until this thing is&#13;
settled. My mind's made up. I don't&#13;
want to quarrel with you, and I should&#13;
if you fought me."&#13;
"I won't let you. You can't do it."&#13;
"I can't do it, eh?" The word can't&#13;
was like a red rag to a bull. He stood&#13;
over her with darkening face and&#13;
shaking fist. "Don't you know better&#13;
than to stand there and tell me that?&#13;
Have I got to hear it from you?&#13;
Haven't you seen what happened to&#13;
man, woman and child, all of 'em, who&#13;
ever told me that to my face? I'll&#13;
do it! I'll do it now, by God!" and he&#13;
strode angrily up and down the room.&#13;
The angrier her husband became,&#13;
the calmer and more determined was&#13;
Mary-Siade.&#13;
"Dan," she began very gently, but&#13;
firmly, "you're stubborn, but you ain't&#13;
a bit more stubborn than I am when&#13;
I'm right, and now I am.&#13;
"You can go ahead. Do all you like,&#13;
but this time you won't conquer, because&#13;
I'm going to fight you, father.&#13;
I'm going to fight you, Dan."&#13;
Then with head proudly erect she&#13;
walked to the door, threw it open and&#13;
cried, just a bit hysterically in Bpite&#13;
of her effort to keep her voice steady:&#13;
"Robert! You can take me home&#13;
now, please!" She turned back just&#13;
once to the man gazing moodily into&#13;
the fire.&#13;
"I'm goin' to fight yer, Dan!"&#13;
"I Will Have I V Stormed Slade.&#13;
with your money. You never had but&#13;
one real friend. That's me. You'll&#13;
find it out."&#13;
"I'll look out," Slade promised, and&#13;
there was a note of relief in his tone&#13;
at her change of attitude.&#13;
"Do you want me to go away from&#13;
our house right off?" Mary asked, as&#13;
if the idea of actual leaving had just&#13;
occurred to her.&#13;
"Oh!" Slade hesitated. The details&#13;
did seem rather cold-blooded. "But&#13;
it'll be better when It's all settled—"&#13;
"All right." Mary's voice was patient&#13;
and colorless. "I'd like to feel&#13;
I was goin' where you wanted me to&#13;
go—wherever 'UB—and—doin' what&#13;
yer wanted me to—"&#13;
"Thank you, Mary," and the surface&#13;
politeness seemed strangely out of&#13;
place from this man who was turning&#13;
the wife ot his youth adrift "Of&#13;
course It'll be arranged that you get&#13;
the best of the divorce. I'll attend to&#13;
that You simply leave it to me—"&#13;
"A divorce," interrupted Mary. Her&#13;
eyes widened with amazement and&#13;
•he came up to him, her mouth open&#13;
with surprise. "A" divorce?"&#13;
"A divorce—why, yes—a separation&#13;
—what's the difference?*' Slade was&#13;
stooping now to deceive the little&#13;
woman, who was herself the soul ot&#13;
truth and honor.&#13;
"What?" the woman gasped.&#13;
. "A separation is the same thing as&#13;
a divorce," and he lied shamefully.&#13;
"Is i t r&#13;
"It will be done quietly,** he went&#13;
on. j&#13;
"Why, Can Slade!" She could not&#13;
believe her ears. "Give up your name?&#13;
Why, you might as well ash me to&#13;
give up my eyes. I've got it now—&#13;
you're looking for a younger. Ton&#13;
can't have a divorce, l&gt;an!N All her&#13;
tears were dry now and a new fiber&#13;
In her voice.&#13;
1 will have it* stormed Blade, enrated&#13;
because her mood had changed&#13;
at 4h* word "divoroeV* just when he&#13;
bad been amgratuJatlng himself that&#13;
too difficulty waa aU nipeJr adjusted,&#13;
*4$ttf» all tare is te ft.4tiD havt&#13;
-Anything eJse,T3eA Anything else&#13;
—tjet* dfroxe. You siiitOi'. ash me&#13;
to take the name I*ve carried all these&#13;
years and throw it away. Vm gtvtag&#13;
CHAPTER IX.&#13;
Thirty years of one way of living&#13;
becomes a habit—so much so that it&#13;
is almost a human impossibility to&#13;
adjust oneself to any other mode of&#13;
life. Mary Slade, living year after&#13;
year with Dan Slade, interested in hie&#13;
work, watching him rise and succeed,&#13;
had come to think of the man as only&#13;
another part of herself. With him&#13;
out of her life Bhe felt as if a part&#13;
of her own body had vanished without&#13;
which she was restless and ill at&#13;
ease.&#13;
As ehe sat in the little old cottage&#13;
where with Dan she started out on&#13;
married life, she experienced a feeling&#13;
of detachment as if either this&#13;
were not the right place, but some&#13;
sort of inferior substitute, or as though&#13;
the real and vital part ot herself were&#13;
absent.&#13;
The room was just the eame as it&#13;
was the day she and Dan had walked&#13;
out of it to take up their new life .in&#13;
the handBome mansion in town. Not&#13;
a thing had been changed or disturbed.&#13;
The same crooked hatrack, with her&#13;
old knitted shawl dangling on one&#13;
hook, hung behind the door. The same&#13;
well-worn tidies were carefully pinned&#13;
on the plush-upholstered chairs. The&#13;
same cheap little ornaments that so&#13;
delighted Mary's simple heart in the/&#13;
old days still cluttered the mantel.&#13;
The Bame near-crystal crowded the&#13;
sideboard. The tablecloth remained&#13;
laid from meal to meal after the timesaving&#13;
custom of middle-class families.&#13;
Everything was the same bat the&#13;
atmosphere of contentment that once&#13;
filled the room; everything the Bame&#13;
but Mary's happiness in her husband's&#13;
love. Outside the window the rose&#13;
buBh Dan had helped her to plant still&#13;
nodded and blossomed in the sunshine&#13;
that poured in a flood of golden joy&#13;
through the windows ot the shabby&#13;
room and emphasized all the worn&#13;
places in the comfortable old chair&#13;
where evening after evening Dan&#13;
Slade had sat reading his newspaper&#13;
and dreaming of the great future he&#13;
was confident the fates held in store&#13;
for him.&#13;
In spite of herself Mary's thoughts&#13;
were of her husband—the first bitter&#13;
thoughts she had ever harbored&#13;
against the man. She turned sick at&#13;
heart at the thought of i t Dan and&#13;
herself estranged, hopelessly at odds,&#13;
fighting each other in the divorce&#13;
court, fighting even over the possession&#13;
of the little cottage that had&#13;
shared in the first happy flush of their&#13;
youthful love and happiness. Thie, the&#13;
only place where she could find peace&#13;
In her loneliness, Dan was trying to&#13;
wrest from her. It was too near to&#13;
town, too near to the scene of his&#13;
new activities, he had sent word to&#13;
her. She must vacate. She must go&#13;
so far away that his charge of "desertion"&#13;
would stand fire in a court&#13;
of law.&#13;
Face to face with the fact that Dan&#13;
was trying to drive her even from this&#13;
shelter, trying to drive her out into&#13;
a strange) and alien world, of which&#13;
she kney nothing and which knew&#13;
nothlnsr of her, Mary could scarcely&#13;
beliey-e that Dan was so changed—&#13;
even now he would be willing to&#13;
snatch away from her the place which&#13;
held the memory of happier days.&#13;
She had not seen her husband since&#13;
the night in Senator Strickland's&#13;
library, when the awful knowledge had&#13;
been forced home to her that he not&#13;
only wanted a permanent separation,&#13;
but insisted on having an absolute divorce.&#13;
Over and over again a thought&#13;
came into the woman's mind. It was&#13;
intuitive, instinctive. Try as she&#13;
might to silence it, she could not put&#13;
it out of her thoughts. It was that&#13;
ever-recurrent feeling that another&#13;
woman had entered Dan's mind and&#13;
heart. Again and again she pushed&#13;
it from her, but always and ever the&#13;
obsession clung to her like a black&#13;
shadow that haunted her during the&#13;
day and persisted even in her dreamB&#13;
at night.&#13;
From the kitchen came the vo^ce of&#13;
her maid-of-all-work Binglng an oldfashioned&#13;
tune.&#13;
It was one that In her young days&#13;
Dan had loved to hear her sing—one&#13;
whose sweet melody and melancholy&#13;
sentiment he had loved In the days&#13;
before his heart had become hard and&#13;
hie mind intense on the cold, hard&#13;
problems of finances and political advancement&#13;
It was the song in which&#13;
all lovers from the beginning to the&#13;
end of time find a responsive note:&#13;
"Nlta, Juanlta, be my own fair bride."&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
A Stitch in Time fcolda, fevert, oongeetlon and^germ diseases&#13;
are pretty eure to overwork the kidneys&#13;
and leave them weak. In oonvmlesoence,&#13;
in faot at any time when suspiolon&#13;
la aroused by a lame, aohing back, rheumatic&#13;
palna, headache, dizziness or&#13;
disordered urine, the use of Doan's&#13;
Kidney Pills is a ttltoh in time that&#13;
may avoid serious kidney disease.&#13;
Doan'sKld&amp;ey Fillsoommandoonfldenoe,&#13;
for no other remedy la so widely used,&#13;
so freely recommended or so generally&#13;
luooessful.&#13;
*StM9 Refer*&#13;
TtUl*S»rj&#13;
A Michigan Case&#13;
A l « Peppier,&#13;
blaokamith. Weloh&#13;
St, BMd Citar.&#13;
MJotu, »aye« I&#13;
waa a phy»e*«&#13;
wreck from ale*&#13;
ordered kidserSi&#13;
for four months X&#13;
couldn't w a l k&#13;
without help. My&#13;
limbs and baek&#13;
f*lt as if they&#13;
ware crushed, toe&#13;
£aln was so bad.&#13;
ty head aohed&#13;
and I waa so dlsay,&#13;
I could hardly&#13;
eee. After doctors&#13;
and medicine&#13;
had failed, X used Doan's Kidney Pills.&#13;
Eight boxes cured me and X have never&#13;
•uttered since."&#13;
Get Doan's at Any Stove, 50« a Bern D O A N ' S "p'fAV&#13;
FOSTBUULBURN CO. BUFFALO, N. Y.&#13;
/k^,^e*&gt;"y&#13;
v&#13;
Don't Persecute&#13;
Your Bowels&#13;
L Cut out cathartics and purgatives. They Sfi&#13;
brutal, harsh, unnecessary. *Tm&#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- Cure.,&#13;
Conitipttion,&#13;
BiUoaintM,&#13;
Sick Head. . _&#13;
ache and Indifntloa, ti rtillleni know.&#13;
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
%&gt; -&#13;
EFFECT OF LONG ASSOCIATION |&#13;
Marked Facial and Other Resemblances&#13;
Noticed Among Those Who&#13;
Have Been Together Years.&#13;
That persons who live together for&#13;
a very long period not only acquire the,&#13;
same mannerisms, hut grow a Btroi^g&#13;
facial resemblance is an established&#13;
faot But it is little known that the&#13;
same condition often exists among&#13;
mistress and servant being associated&#13;
together for a long period of years.&#13;
There is usually a strong desire on the&#13;
part .of most servants to ape their&#13;
mistresses, and this, added to the fact&#13;
of • constant nearness, often extends&#13;
to facial resemblances.&#13;
There are in a small town In New&#13;
York state two unusual instances of&#13;
this kind. Two widows live there, each&#13;
of whom has been attended by a woman&#13;
servant for more than 40 years.&#13;
In both eases the servants have bo*&#13;
come so like their mistresses that&#13;
they are often mistaken for them, andtheir&#13;
cases have attracted attention&#13;
tar and near. Their voices over the&#13;
telephone are so alike that friends&#13;
of the women have given up this&#13;
method of communication.&#13;
HAD A SPIRIT OF KINSHIP&#13;
Chance Meeting About Decided Hew&#13;
Yorker That Alt Women Really&#13;
Are Bisters.&#13;
The Recessional*&#13;
It may be recalled that Rudyard&#13;
KipUafs poem, "The Recessional"&#13;
("Lest We Forget") was never copy*&#13;
righted, but was a gift to Britain, the^&#13;
empire sad the world. It was pub*&#13;
lished in the London Times at th» dim*&#13;
mond jubilee and a check for $600&#13;
was sent in. payment This check he&#13;
Caught downtown umbrellaless on a&#13;
rainy afternoon, I waited in one of&#13;
the Broadway hotels for two hours,&#13;
then, deciding to risk my best bonnet&#13;
In the slightly slackened shower, I&#13;
started across to a Sixth avenue shop&#13;
to purchase an umbrella. As I stood&#13;
under the elevated getting what protection&#13;
I could and waiting for a holdup&#13;
in the traffic, a young girl stepped&#13;
up beside me. With her skirt slit to&#13;
the knee* her hair forming "ear flops"&#13;
down over her too pink cheeks, and&#13;
blue, blue eyes peering through' a&#13;
fringe of flaxen yellow, above which&#13;
was a bow three times as big as the&#13;
hat It adorned, she was in every detail&#13;
the latest cry of her type. _&#13;
One glance and the seised me by&#13;
the arm to draw me beneath her umbrella;&#13;
"Come in out of the rain*, girlie," she&#13;
said.&#13;
Even if my mind had not been on&#13;
my very extravagant hat, I should&#13;
-have met half way her spirit of friend*&#13;
lines*. After thirty "girlie" has a rare&#13;
and^soothing sound, anyway. '&#13;
Chatting as to an eld comrade, she&#13;
•hsilred me to my shop door and,&#13;
wtt^ a nright nod, pass^i on&#13;
i ^ had oomw-4iito th*&#13;
rtew T e j * * f * ^ fast ... v .,r&#13;
nothing for his poem, wMeh-he ded&gt;&#13;
tor aU fee world to arhitand to ***&#13;
Put snap and vigor into four work.&#13;
Why He Hi&#13;
"I don't Believe any maarcmambers&#13;
rojarned, aaytef h&gt; . would aooept I *»•;lnt dollar h*evef earawd^, thongha&#13;
giss^i&amp;any claisfr that ther,«W "I&#13;
catod to the sutton, 49 that tt.it p***' «*•"&lt; "Now, what w u there sjsout tt&#13;
that Axed it sotrasty U yoax&#13;
oryr "Because tU I tot&#13;
niehai"—Houston Pott vat t&#13;
Will reduce Inflamed, Strained,&#13;
Swollen Tendons, Ligaments,&#13;
Muscles or Bruises. Stops the&#13;
lameness and pain from a Splint,&#13;
Side Bone or Bone Spavin. No&#13;
blister, no hair gone. Horse can be&#13;
used. $2 a bottle delivered. Describe&#13;
your case for special instructions&#13;
and Book 2 K Free.&#13;
ABSORBING JR., the antiseptic liniment for&#13;
mankind. Reduces Strained, Torn Llgn-&#13;
Bents, Enlarged Glands, Veins or Maecfee,&#13;
eala Cuts, Sores, Ulcere. Allays pain. Prkt&#13;
11.00 • bottle it dealen or delivered. Book "Evidence" fret.&#13;
W, F.YOUNQ.P.D.F, 310 TMDpM Stmt, SprlRie^ MW.&#13;
FREE TO ILL SUFFERERS nlx ryomu fMfrlo m'OUT ot soats' 'fttw &amp;owx* 'GOT the atuaa* caaomo waA EKirIaCwIT, IYO,L BoLaAai&amp;, DXB, Kiaroci Maaktas, SKIM n t m i o u , KLM, wthr«iMt* d(olMr MFMR IaEn d CwLOoMTSD BiaOrCuWLD cBuIDaI»C AeLff eBcOteOdK Obafr . m t HIW tfilJCH « M I O Y N0.1 Ne.2Ns.i&gt;-&#13;
I n L n A r l U n roamafirtilep&#13;
; £{To• 'rfoelmloewdy urpo'r TciOrcCuBlaOr*W. HHaoi lombelingta. tiAonb*s.o lDuat.e Llyg_CFiaRm||ij kAC Mapw. aCo.. HAvaastooa R».. UAtmmuo, Lomox, » S r WAX* to raoYS raaautoa WILL ovaa rev. - .'&#13;
DR. J. D. KELLOQQ't ASTHMA Remedy for the prompt •ellef of&#13;
Aethma and Hay rover. Aek Your&#13;
druggist for It. Write for FREE SAMPLE.&#13;
NORTHROP ft LYMAN CO., Ltd, BUFFALO, N. Y.&#13;
•• • " - ^ Every Woman&#13;
Knows That&#13;
Instead of sallow skin and face&#13;
blemishes sh$ ought to possess&#13;
the clear complexion and the&#13;
beauty of nature and good&#13;
health. Any woman afflicted&#13;
or Buffering at times from&#13;
headache, backache, nervousness,&#13;
languor and depression&#13;
of spirits—ought to try •&#13;
BEECHAM'S&#13;
PILLS the safest, surest, most convenient&#13;
and most economical&#13;
. remedy known. Beecham's&#13;
sPills remove impurities, insure&#13;
better digestion, refreshing&#13;
sleep, ana have an excellent&#13;
general tonic effect upon the&#13;
- whole bodilysystem. Theyhave&#13;
a wonderful power to improve&#13;
ral health, while by&#13;
nsrthe blood, Beecham's&#13;
the skin - «M&#13;
Improve&#13;
The Comptejdon&#13;
UU «»«»»meif&gt; l e Wsst, ISa^ase*&#13;
sss ^eeMa). asawjs Sw as fses&#13;
DAISY FIT KHIEI&#13;
• #&#13;
w .. • &gt; •&#13;
•, teitUsBaa .eeell. , ssritrrrtif •eases.. Steele Sf^&#13;
S,ea«&lt;isfiUe#1&#13;
(vmaetsetl&#13;
Isjare a art* lag]&#13;
.'•*&#13;
*/-* -^?;&#13;
• • &amp; . :&#13;
~"-\«*' '&gt;&#13;
'4 t&#13;
*n \t £-.:•&#13;
&gt; w&#13;
&amp;#:*m*&amp;Kte-t *m&amp;k&#13;
^ :&#13;
t , . n 1 » , * W «U*. &amp;£&amp;&#13;
«•&gt;„&#13;
^»-#jifcfli»rti»-aA*'i«-&#13;
# T* ^ v / ^.^^:^¾^ • - ^ . ^&#13;
/ * ' l&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
I •v-&#13;
* &gt;&#13;
V .&#13;
WORK AT BELTSVILLE GOVERNMENT FARM&#13;
Horse Barn Erected in 1912.&#13;
In t£e summer of 1910 the department&#13;
of agriculture purchased a farm&#13;
Of 475 acre? at Beltsville, Maryland,&#13;
which is about twelve miles from the&#13;
city of Washington, to be used for&#13;
experimental work in animal breeding&#13;
and feeding, and related subjects.&#13;
About 190 acres of this are devoted&#13;
to dairy interests, and the remainder&#13;
(of which about 95 acres are timber&#13;
land) to other branches of animal husbandry.&#13;
„. On this, farm many problems of&#13;
economic Importance to the public,&#13;
and particularly to the agricultural&#13;
public, are given much attention. The&#13;
farm work Is done largely by mares,&#13;
some of which are purebred Percherons,&#13;
and the other grades. These&#13;
mares are bred to a Percheron stallion,&#13;
and therefore not' only earn their&#13;
living by the farm work they do, but&#13;
in addition produce foals. In the summer&#13;
of 1913 the imported Percheron&#13;
stallion Isolant 65096 (78859) was purchased&#13;
by the department. He is a&#13;
large, blac&lt; stallion, compact and well&#13;
muscled, standing 17 hands in height&#13;
and weighing more than a ton.&#13;
During the fall of 1912, 20 weanling&#13;
horse foals and 20 weanling mule foals&#13;
were purchased for the purpose of determining&#13;
the comparative costs of&#13;
raising these under farm conditions&#13;
from the time of weaning until they&#13;
are old enough for work purposes. A&#13;
careful record is being kept of all&#13;
costs, including that of Wreaking, and&#13;
full credit will be given to the animals&#13;
for the amount of work done by them.&#13;
It is expected that the test will be&#13;
closed in 1916, when all of the animals&#13;
will be old enough for work purposes.&#13;
*&#13;
There hi on the farm a flock of the&#13;
Barbados woolleas sheep. These sheep&#13;
are very prolific, commonly having&#13;
three and occasionally four lambs at&#13;
birth. They will also conceive at any&#13;
time of the year. Barbados ewes are&#13;
being graded up by the use of purebred&#13;
Southdown rams and selections&#13;
are determined mainly by the prolificacy&#13;
and frequency of lambing, with a&#13;
view to producing good mutton conformation&#13;
with ability to breed early for&#13;
winter lambs. The Barbados have&#13;
also been crossed with Merinos. The&#13;
great difference In the- fleeces and&#13;
breeding habiti of the Barbados and&#13;
the Southdown and Merino yields very&#13;
Valuable material in the crossbreds&#13;
Jmd their offspring for' studying the&#13;
manner of Inheritance of wool and&#13;
breeding characteristics.&#13;
Another Industry attracting considerable&#13;
attention is that of the production&#13;
of Persian lamb skins, which are&#13;
the product of the young of the Kara-&#13;
Jrale or Arbl sheep which are native&#13;
Russian Turkestan* The Industry&#13;
in this country is In Its infancy' and&#13;
-**' there is great need of more information&#13;
regarding i t The department in&#13;
its work at the farm is crossing a&#13;
Karakul* ram on Cotswold, Leicester,&#13;
Cheviot and Lincoln ewes, and has&#13;
also made crosses on Barbados ewes.&#13;
This work has not been carried far&#13;
enough to determine just how valuable&#13;
the skins from such crosses will&#13;
be in this country.&#13;
In connection with the two experiments&#13;
mentioned, about 100 head of&#13;
ewes are kept. A roomy and conveniently&#13;
arranged barn for housing&#13;
sheep and goats has just been completed&#13;
and will render it possible to&#13;
test methods of winter feeding of "hothouse"&#13;
lambs and breeding ewes. During&#13;
summer months the sheep are carried&#13;
upon a succession of forage crops&#13;
with a view to determining the best&#13;
plans of planting and ^grazing forage&#13;
crops In eastern states..&#13;
For the past few years there has&#13;
been great interest in the milch goat,&#13;
which has often been hailed as the&#13;
poor man's cow. Today, however,&#13;
goats in this country which are good&#13;
milkers sell for as much as the average&#13;
dairy cow. On the continent of&#13;
Europe, particularly Switzerland,&#13;
breeds of goats which are heavy milkers&#13;
have been developed, but on account&#13;
of the prevalence of animal dl-&#13;
Common Doe *nd Her Kid, Sired by&#13;
Toggenberg Buck.&#13;
seases in continental Europe their Importation&#13;
is prohibited. In order to determine&#13;
the value of the milch goat&#13;
blood in crossing on our native stock,&#13;
a flook of common does was obtained,&#13;
and these were bred to Saanen and&#13;
Toggenburg bucks. Milk records were&#13;
kept of the native does, and such records&#13;
will be kept of the half-bred does,&#13;
In order to obtain a comparison.&#13;
A herd of hogs Is maintained for&#13;
the purpose of studying breeding and&#13;
feeding problems. A modern, sanitary&#13;
house has been built, and equipped&#13;
for conducting this work. There are&#13;
also a number of small portable houses&#13;
with sufficient space for a sow and litter&#13;
or two or three mature pigs.&#13;
At the farm house there is also a&#13;
laboratory for the study of breeding&#13;
questions. There are usually about&#13;
1,000 guinea pigs on hand, represent*&#13;
lng 30 families. The effects of inbreeding&#13;
are being studied as the results&#13;
from such investigations with&#13;
guinea pigs throw light upon principles&#13;
that operate in larger animals.&#13;
Results that suggest the existence&#13;
of laws of inheritance in4 these small&#13;
animals can be tested out on larger&#13;
animals. By using guinea pigs a great&#13;
saving in time is effected. It is possible&#13;
to secure three generations in a&#13;
year, thus showing the effects of any&#13;
special method of breeding In a fraction&#13;
of the time needed with sheep OP&#13;
cattle and at much smaller expense.&#13;
STRAWBERRY AT ITS BEST&#13;
• » - &gt;&#13;
m:&#13;
y~-&#13;
' * £ &gt; * : • - r'.f&#13;
tunshlne Method of Preserving is&#13;
Declared to Be Superior to&#13;
Any Other Form.&#13;
Unlike many fruits, the strawberry&#13;
changes its character completely&#13;
when it is cooked. It neither gains&#13;
nor loses; it simply becomes something&#13;
else almost the moment heat&#13;
touches it. Long cooking 1B, however,&#13;
detrimental to the flavor. It destroys&#13;
that peculiar flavor which is imparted&#13;
to the berry by heat. This flavor,&#13;
which in a way is just as delicious as&#13;
that of the raw fruit, should be preserved.&#13;
Strawberries, too, will not&#13;
only lose all flavor with long cooking,&#13;
but they will lose their shape as well.&#13;
Three or five minutes of a boiling&#13;
temperature will drive the heat into&#13;
the berries thoroughly and yet preserve&#13;
their -shape and that flavor imparted&#13;
to them by the heat.&#13;
To preserve the flavor of the raw&#13;
strawberry, which is entirely different&#13;
from that of the cooked fruit, the&#13;
sunshine method of preserving must&#13;
be followed. The origin of this delightful&#13;
method is ascribed by some to&#13;
Southern housekeepers, declaring it&#13;
originated in Virginia, where it 1B a&#13;
favorite process, and others tracing&#13;
the first use of the method to Europe.&#13;
The sun-cooked preserves are,&#13;
however, difficult to prepare, and in&#13;
many cases out of question, especially&#13;
in city apartments, where sunshine is&#13;
not a free gift.&#13;
Berries of the finest quality are&#13;
placed on heated platters dredged&#13;
with heated sugar and covered with&#13;
heated sheets of glass. The platters&#13;
are placed in strong sunshine to stand&#13;
all day long. By evening the Juice&#13;
which surrounds the fruit is placed in&#13;
an enameled pan on the fire and&#13;
brought to the bubbling stage, then&#13;
immediately poured over the fruit&#13;
again. The fruit is then put Into&#13;
heated, sterilized Jars or Jelly glasses.&#13;
Usually the sirup, if the familiar rule&#13;
of "pound per pound" is followed, will,&#13;
when cold, be sufficiently jellylike to&#13;
permit the fruit to keep perfectly in&#13;
Jelly glasses, with only a paraffin covering.&#13;
Care should be taken not to&#13;
cook the Juice too long nor beyond&#13;
the boiling point, or it will be sirupy.&#13;
DON'T FORGET&#13;
A little minced ham added to the&#13;
omelet makes a savory change.&#13;
Small sweet peppers are excellent&#13;
mixed with celery In a potato salad.&#13;
Vegetables which grow under the&#13;
ground should be cooked with the&#13;
lid on.&#13;
Breaded veal served with tomato&#13;
sauce and spaghetti makes a delicious&#13;
dish.&#13;
Clean nickel and silver pieces with&#13;
ammonia applied with a flannel cloth.&#13;
Black stockings should be rinsed in&#13;
blue water to give them a good color.&#13;
JHscoIored gilt frames can be brightened&#13;
if rubbed with a sponge dipped in&#13;
turpentine.&#13;
Try adding a little chopped parsley&#13;
to the mashed potatoes; it gives them&#13;
a delicious flavor.&#13;
Crept fwHHatfiiW&#13;
unit-tor that the/rich »o»&#13;
^afc crop* are ntob the greats sott-.**-&#13;
pfofsjfsvtt bohooroa ui 4o make&#13;
uoas effort to get ooe orssore of these&#13;
Aluminum Ware.&#13;
The attractive appearance, light&#13;
weight and the durability of a good&#13;
quality of aluminum have brought this&#13;
ware into public favor. It Is claimed,&#13;
too, that food does not burn as easily&#13;
in an aluminum utensil as in those of&#13;
other ware. Aluminum, however,&#13;
stains easily, thus its first good&#13;
appearance is somewhat hard to keep&#13;
up. Even water containing an alkali&#13;
or iron will tarnish it. This comes&#13;
off with whiting or any cleansing&#13;
powder that is free from alkali. 8trong&#13;
lye .cleansers must not be used upon&#13;
It, and when it Is necessary to scrape&#13;
it the scraping should be done with&#13;
a wooden spoon. A mild acid will also&#13;
remove stains from it, such as tart&#13;
apples or sour milk boiled In the dish.&#13;
Aluminum's one great fault is that it&#13;
will not stand excessive heat, especially&#13;
the poorer grades.&#13;
English Pudding.&#13;
One-half cup chopped salt pork. Fill&#13;
cup with boiling water, let stand a few&#13;
minutes to dissolve, two-thirds cup&#13;
molasses, finish filling cup with sour&#13;
milk, one teaspoon each of soda, cinnamon,&#13;
cloves and nutmeg, one cup&#13;
chopped .• raisins, 8¼ or 4 cups flour.&#13;
Steam two hours.&#13;
Sauce for Pudding—one cup sugar,&#13;
two cups boiling water, one-half teaspoon&#13;
each of salt and nutmeg. Thicken&#13;
with two teaspoons flour. Remove&#13;
from stove, add a tablespoon of good&#13;
sharp vinegar and piece of butter.&#13;
V — —&#13;
Mistreat Blgelow's Green Currant Pie.&#13;
To make a delicious pie take the&#13;
currants when half rtpo and make a&#13;
pie the same as a berry pie, using,&#13;
however, twice as much sugar. Some&#13;
families like it very sweet-Hwo ensfall&#13;
of sugar to one of the currants&#13;
Is the demand.&#13;
«9BB*ttN^Bl^BBBSSHMeM^^HHgBflM*SBSS*&#13;
Apple Cream,&#13;
Btew four apples and pulp them&#13;
through a sieve. Dissolve a hall boxful&#13;
of gelatin in a little water, add to&#13;
the apple*- and oream and pan? Into&#13;
i s i n with Jam save*.&#13;
Why Have Coroners?&#13;
What good is a coroner? This frequently&#13;
recurring question is again&#13;
Justified by the news that a wound has&#13;
been found in the skull of Ella Winter,&#13;
the Baltimore girl whose body&#13;
was found in Curtis bay a week ago&#13;
last Thursday. The coroner's inquest&#13;
had dismissed the case with a verdict&#13;
of death by drowning. Whether the&#13;
girl--was murdered or not the circumstances&#13;
of her death were such as to&#13;
call for careful investigation. The&#13;
coroner's nption of such an investigation&#13;
seems to have been characteristic&#13;
of his tribe. Was she found in the&#13;
water? Yes. Very well, then she was&#13;
drowned. At some time, perhaps, we&#13;
shall become sensible enough to abolish&#13;
an office which once served a useful&#13;
purpose, but has become an anachronism.—&#13;
New York -States.&#13;
ITCHED AND BURNED&#13;
Silverwood, Mich.—"My baby was&#13;
about six months old when he first began&#13;
to break out with little pimples&#13;
on his head and face. Then they would&#13;
run water and keep getting worse until&#13;
'his head was a regular sore eruption&#13;
and water would run and stream&#13;
from it and his face also. His whole&#13;
body was affected. They were little&#13;
white pimples which itched and&#13;
burned something terrible. His clothing&#13;
seemed to irritate him and it was&#13;
almost impossible for him to sleep at&#13;
night. They also disfigured him as&#13;
they were on his face.&#13;
"We tried medicine but without success.&#13;
The trouble must have lasted&#13;
three or four weeks when I thought&#13;
I would try the Cuticura Soap and Ointment.&#13;
I would bathe him with warm&#13;
water, as warm as he could etand and&#13;
Cuticura Soap, then apply the Cuticura&#13;
Ointment. The very first time&#13;
that I did this it seemed to relieve&#13;
him as he slept well and inside of two&#13;
weeks he was completely healed."&#13;
(Signed) Mrs. L. White, Jan. 29, 1914.&#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;
Impossible.&#13;
He—My dear, our neighbor, Mr.&#13;
Smith, the paper says this morning,&#13;
is a bachelor of arts.&#13;
She—Then the paper doesn't know&#13;
what it's talking about. You know as&#13;
well as I do that Smith is a married&#13;
man.&#13;
Not So Feeble.&#13;
"I told Uncle Simon that he was getting&#13;
too old and feeble to attend to&#13;
business."&#13;
"Did he take it kindly ?M&#13;
"He threw me out of the office."&#13;
Red Cross Ball Blue, much better, sjoes&#13;
farther than liquid blue. Get from any&#13;
grocer. Adv.&#13;
And some women are as contrary as&#13;
regular men.&#13;
Every ooe {rem Seville, long ranted&#13;
as the beena el Inn world's beet oHrea&#13;
Oss&gt; the pick of the crop Is offered to&#13;
the U n l a b e l .&#13;
Sweet, Sour and Dill PkUei&#13;
flelais'e finest, pen ns&gt; Bee the&#13;
medo hind and all year sranhle&#13;
This extra ejnaUhy Is trae ef&#13;
afllJbby'sPkfcJesaod&#13;
Is reel&#13;
I&#13;
Marital Reciprocity.&#13;
He—My dear, I have invited my!&#13;
mother to spend the week with us.&#13;
She—Oh, James, I'm not prepared1&#13;
for company. Why did you ask herl&#13;
now?&#13;
He—Because I am determined you'&#13;
shall not have this mother-in-law joke&#13;
all to yourself.&#13;
Important to Mother*^, j&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle oft&#13;
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for,&#13;
Infants and children, and see that i t&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature of&#13;
In Use For Over 30 Years. (&#13;
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castori*&#13;
Alarming. ,&#13;
"Your son's case, my d-aar Mrsw&#13;
Comeup, is one of eclectic occultism. ,&#13;
"Law me, professor, is it catching."*&#13;
Picture Yourself in&#13;
Colorado&#13;
y O U feel the thrill of new&#13;
life the minute you get&#13;
there. There's a bracing tonic&#13;
in the very air.&#13;
—matchless mountain*&#13;
—dashing, sparkling stream*&#13;
—deep canyons and gorges&#13;
—-diuy heights, cragged peaks&#13;
—aaure blue skies&#13;
Some new enchantment greets&#13;
you with every turn.&#13;
You have dreamed Colorado—&#13;
real tie your dream this Summer.&#13;
Low round trip fart&#13;
via thm&#13;
Missouri Pacific&#13;
Write for onr Colorado&#13;
Book—hand*&#13;
aomeljr Illustrated.&#13;
J.CBOUDWCI&#13;
MISSOURI^&#13;
PACIFIC&#13;
IRON&#13;
MOUNTAIN,&#13;
IT. LOUIS&#13;
361-1&#13;
LOPING&#13;
^ WlllO*&#13;
shACKS'S"&#13;
Can be made profitable if the&#13;
right kind of machinery is used.:&#13;
W l HAJLB9 T U B RIOBT K I S D . '&#13;
Send for catalogue. Establlibed 1S71&#13;
BOOSJM A BOSOHIAT P R I M CO*&#13;
Jft West Watt* St. Irra—a, ft, Y. m i l l C &amp;*$*• *****ln ML B WelHmpTwed ^Waegxofoordd* JGoo*d *Meleeetv.&#13;
Will Mil at a bsmlB JtPSfJ^S^^V **SBJ»- ffif&#13;
SPECIAL TO WOMEN&#13;
The most economical, cleansing sad&#13;
^ germicidal of all antiseptics is ,&#13;
A tiJnhst Antaaoptic Pdwdssr to&#13;
As a medicinal antiseptic tor donah—&#13;
in treating catarrh. Inflammation or&#13;
ulceration of nose, throat, and that&#13;
caused by femjnis* ttfeltbasnaeQaaL&#13;
For ten years tha Lydia EL Plnkhaaa&#13;
Hedidne Cahas Mootfimended Yastfatf&#13;
to their prirato oon^pondaiios with&#13;
women, whtoh proven Its atipsrtoffiljr*&#13;
Women who hate bean owed • • ! £ &lt;&#13;
It to "worth its weight to fo§s.t AiK&#13;
druggists. SOo. larpe box or b j meiV&#13;
Tho Pastott Toflat Oo» Itosdssj. Itoag, '.&#13;
W. N. U, wrrfwrf, ltd&#13;
, • • . . . , • : v ; •&#13;
ft&#13;
I '•&#13;
'4&#13;
:i&#13;
* • ' : '&#13;
," 1-/&#13;
**4.!J-M&#13;
Y&gt;*V&gt;.&#13;
'•«.-.*- -.;• ..-V/CI&#13;
.•••fc'-rjer-v-- ,&#13;
^V::£&#13;
•v-*r*&#13;
ri&#13;
.•''V&#13;
A^i^^MiWk^ii-1'Jv-^f, *&amp;&amp;h ,-^^:. A .,*,». \:. -S'SttfLi^fct&amp;iu '4-A*&gt;* j/S, .. \uS*iA^b4 «&gt;. * j . . i u^&amp;4»i*uua^'A/i*i.dr^:.'. • „iitoi&amp;a&#13;
l±M-i&amp;%&amp;WVti*&#13;
i.m^&#13;
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m *« ; * . « * * * •&#13;
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vu • rH,il'w,^i\i»i.wjpsfr^|r^r - -'^r ,grt|. ( I l f l ^ ^ ^ ^ 1 ' 1 ^ ^ ' : , j ^ y * * E&#13;
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*Cc-i rA-.'-v „ #j&#13;
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ft' • •*&#13;
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PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
&lt; ' •&#13;
4. '•*&#13;
•.tfv"&#13;
; . : « • • - ; .&#13;
' ^ '&#13;
f^" ••**&#13;
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Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
Entered at the Postoffice at Pinckney,&#13;
Mich., a* Second Class Matter&#13;
8. W. CAVERLY, EDITOB MO PUBLISHER&#13;
Subscription, $1. Per Year in Advancd&#13;
OQ&#13;
*&#13;
Advertising rates made known&#13;
application.&#13;
Cards of Tbank», tifly cents.&#13;
Resolutions of Condolence, one dollar.&#13;
Local Notices, in Local columns, five&#13;
cent per line per «&gt;ach insertion.&#13;
All matter mtenikd to benefit tbe personal&#13;
or business interest of any individual&#13;
will be published a\ regular advertiae-&#13;
• ing 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;
b've cenis per line.&#13;
EOPLE&#13;
1¾¾&#13;
' For C t C L O N E INSURANCE&#13;
see H. W. Crofoot. adv.&#13;
Clayton Placeway was a Detroit&#13;
visitor the first of the week.&#13;
E. E. Hoyt made- a business&#13;
trip to Btockbridge last Thursday.&#13;
Mr*. Arvilla Placeway ia visiting&#13;
relatives at Perry this week.&#13;
Morrice Darrow and wife of&#13;
Howell are spending the week&#13;
here.&#13;
A. fl. Flintoft and family were&#13;
over Sunday guests of relatives in&#13;
Deerfield.&#13;
Dr. K. G, Sigler and family of&#13;
Lansing were Pinckney visitors&#13;
last Friday.&#13;
Miss Mary Curlett of Roseville,&#13;
Mich., is visiting at the home of&#13;
Will Curlett&#13;
Mrs. Harry Rose of Ann Arbor&#13;
spbiit the Fourth at the borne of&#13;
E. G. Carpenter.&#13;
Paul Curlett of Croswell spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday with his&#13;
parents here.&#13;
Chaa. Ashley^and family of Detroit&#13;
are guests at^the home of M.&#13;
Dolan this week.&#13;
G. G. Hoyt and wife spent the&#13;
Fourth at the home of their son&#13;
Hugh in Clinton.&#13;
Chas. VanKeuren and wife o£&#13;
Lansing*spent the Fourth at the&#13;
home of G. W. Teeple.&#13;
Mrs. E. Bennett of Ddtroit is&#13;
spending the week at the home of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Guy.Teeple.&#13;
Fred Grieves and family of&#13;
Stockbridge spent Saturday and&#13;
Sunday withjrelatives here.&#13;
Mrs. M. H. Collins, Chas. Tiney&#13;
and Miss Hazel Gilday of Toledo,&#13;
Ohio, speut the Fourth at the&#13;
home ofJMr. and Mrs. E. E. Hoyt.&#13;
Farmers will find it to their advantage&#13;
to use the. Dispatch business&#13;
colamos when having anything&#13;
for sale. The Dispatch will&#13;
carry your meB&amp;age, into hundreds&#13;
of homes in this locality and the&#13;
cost is but-little. &gt;&#13;
InJstatG or church, it is rule or&#13;
be ruled; in courtship or marriage,&#13;
it is fool or be fooled; in&#13;
logic or law, it is lick or be licked;&#13;
in gambling or trade, it is trick or&#13;
be trickerf; in peace or in jrar, it&#13;
is beat or be beaten;- in tbe&#13;
gftagflft^for life, it is eat or be&#13;
e#t*uv*53r polities, it is cro * or&#13;
• i t crdfj- in newspaper life, it is&#13;
hoe yoof ^ n row.—Ex.&#13;
A view of the wreckage left by&#13;
tbe cyclone of last Saturday is a&#13;
^ ^ Reminder that every property own-&#13;
W&amp;• i t ^ - - - '• • «$f;*bottld bfr' insured, for Whether&#13;
-'/•/• * "i?, - - . k : • '&#13;
"•V :,,^7^m,^y'\ •„,, ,&#13;
py -^\., /£ ,: jr-:, .-. .... ,&#13;
^ : ' - ' ^ : ^ - r : T ; . ..• •• v&#13;
••17, tfL';: **::• '•,&#13;
property be located at the&#13;
peak or base of a hill, and appears&#13;
t£r be sheltered from ordinary&#13;
tindsy it J s liable to be rained&#13;
When a cyclone begins its work of&#13;
OesfottCtten, Take warning and&#13;
Ida Mhrkham is visiting relatives&#13;
in Detioit.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Menills&#13;
spent Sundsy here.&#13;
A. H. Gilchrist and family&#13;
spent Sunday in Howell.&#13;
Rex Reason of Detroit spent a&#13;
few days the past week here.&#13;
M. J. Reason and wife speut&#13;
Sunday at Whitinore Lake.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Clarkspenji&#13;
Sunday at the home of E. W.&#13;
Kennedy.&#13;
Wm. Jeffreys and Percy Mortenson&#13;
spent Saturday and Sunday&#13;
in Detroit.&#13;
Florence Doyle of Jackeon&#13;
spent the past week at the home&#13;
of Jas. Doyle.&#13;
Dr. Will Monka of Howell was&#13;
an over Sunday guest of his&#13;
mother here.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Cavanaugh&#13;
of Jackson visited relatives here&#13;
over Sunday&#13;
Arthur Vedder and family&#13;
spent Saturday and Snnday with&#13;
relatives in Ypsilanti.&#13;
No matter whether a town is&#13;
Democratic or Republican, it&#13;
wants a progressive ball team.&#13;
Dr. Harry Haze and family of&#13;
Lansing were over Sunday guests&#13;
at the home of Dr. C. L. Sigler.&#13;
Thos. Moran of Detroit spent&#13;
Sunday at the home cf his parents,"&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Moran.&#13;
Miss Mame Fish attended the&#13;
International Epworth League&#13;
Convention held in Buffalo last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Vollmer of&#13;
Toledo, Ohio spent Saturday and&#13;
Suuday at the hon^e of Casper&#13;
Vollmer.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. S. O'Connor of&#13;
Detroit spent ths week end at the&#13;
home of his mother Mrs. J.&#13;
O'Conner.&#13;
Florence Harris of Boyne City&#13;
is spending her vacation at the&#13;
home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
H . W. Harris.&#13;
John D. Rockefeller's automobile&#13;
recently sustained damages to&#13;
the extent of $5, but no notice of&#13;
aa advance in the price of oil has&#13;
yet been posted.&#13;
Attorney General Fellows holds&#13;
that supervisors are authorized to&#13;
transfer county roads money from&#13;
one road fund to another road&#13;
fund where circumstances require&#13;
the transfer.&#13;
The annual school meeting of&#13;
District No. 2, Putnam township,&#13;
will be held at the Pinckney&#13;
school house next Monday evening,&#13;
July 13, to elect officers a n i&#13;
transact any other business that&#13;
may come before the meeting.&#13;
To satisfy cur curiosity, we asked&#13;
a well known citizen who he&#13;
cousidereA | b e "fewft'^people in&#13;
town." He jSjti^jSEboee who believe&#13;
in the" tSBBIwork for improvements,&#13;
spiffs a good word&#13;
for the place, and spend their&#13;
money at home.'* Are you one of&#13;
our best citizens?—Ex.&#13;
A bulletin dealing with "Shipping&#13;
eggs by Parcel Post" and&#13;
which deals thoroughly with that&#13;
subject is of tremendous importance&#13;
to the hundreds of egg producers&#13;
of Livingston county. The&#13;
booklet is from the pen of Lewis&#13;
B. F b h r and presents conclusions&#13;
from recent investigations made&#13;
in co-operation with tbe post&#13;
office department. No egg producer&#13;
in Livingston county should&#13;
fail to send for a copy, which can&#13;
be obtained free of charge, by -addressing&#13;
the Division of Publications,&#13;
Department of Agriculture,&#13;
Washington, D . C and_ asking&#13;
for farmer's bulteiin 694. I n -&#13;
quiries regarding proper contain. '&#13;
HELLO&#13;
GIVE ME NO. 38&#13;
This is the call used by the wise customer who&#13;
wishes&#13;
Staple and Fancy Groceries&#13;
Connor's World Best Ice Cream&#13;
A Work Shirt A Pair of Overalls&#13;
A Nice Dress Hat or Cap&#13;
A New Suit of Clothes&#13;
A Pair of Gloves&#13;
Or Anything in the Gents&#13;
Furnishing Line&#13;
"And Don't You Forget," that we are ever&#13;
anxious and williug to fill your wants for anything&#13;
in oar line,&#13;
L&lt;ave Your Special Orders With&#13;
Monks Bros.&#13;
• The Square Deal Broeerij D&#13;
^UiUiU^iMkiUiUiUUliiiiU^iUiUiUiUikiUiUiUiUiUiUiUl&#13;
The Pii&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
Does a Conservative&#13;
ing Business. ::&#13;
Bank-&#13;
3 per cent&#13;
paid ou all Time Deposits&#13;
P i n c k n e y&#13;
G. W . . T B E P L B&#13;
M i c h .&#13;
Prop&#13;
^ a^eaU fo/;. the Michigan&#13;
Mutual of Lapeer. adv.&#13;
SMASH!&#13;
HIT THE&#13;
ON THE&#13;
HEAD&#13;
We Hit High&#13;
Prices Right&#13;
On the Head&#13;
HARDWARE&#13;
T r y U s -&#13;
Best Goods&#13;
in Everything&#13;
When you want EIGHT t » l a , CHEAP hotttehold otsnMlt, GOOD&#13;
paints and Tarnishes, nails, kitchen ware, stoves, hinges, screws, bolts,&#13;
knives and a hundred other things COME HERE. You'll 8AVB&#13;
MONEY.&#13;
Teep]e Hardware Company&#13;
" s .&#13;
Tg^ZZjuSXEi r^^r"*""1 *^- iahedhf tfc* agfiouHurel experiment&#13;
elation at Laneing.&#13;
"That&#13;
L&amp;st&#13;
Steak&#13;
4 U B &amp; SATISnmrGtTSTOlCBB |S&amp;«K&#13;
I t ally layi. thii when the eojaaf fe &lt;mr&#13;
butcher shop. We appreciate i t&#13;
She knowi that shell oontinue^o get the&#13;
BEST OUTS we can give her. whether&#13;
porterhouse, airioin, round o* fienk. We&#13;
sake it a btnineai principle to aaE fit*&#13;
BBST QUALITY of meirti and 1o give aa**&#13;
isfactieiiJo ALL at'AL^'HMBS. W * i *&#13;
vite TOTJB tude. &lt; -*\&#13;
Perhaps this picture may recall&#13;
some pleasant occasion—a party&#13;
and tbe becoming costume you&#13;
wore.&#13;
Any event worth remembering&#13;
suggests a picture.&#13;
Make an appointment today.&#13;
Daisie B. Chapell&#13;
Stockbridge, Michigan&#13;
A Nervous Woman Find*&#13;
Relief From Suffering.&#13;
Women who suffer from extrenw&#13;
nervousness, often endure much'&#13;
suffering before finding any relief.&#13;
Mrs. Joseph Snyder, of Tiffin, O*&#13;
had such an experience, regarding&#13;
which she says:&#13;
"Six months I&#13;
was bedfast with&#13;
nervous prostn**&#13;
tlon. I bad riakv&#13;
inf spell*, a ooti,&#13;
ctitmmr foettnc,-^&#13;
oould not fta&amp;C&#13;
t h e •ilfhUf*&#13;
s&#13;
&gt;-?&#13;
• -•"'"is---&#13;
'fr&#13;
••' V-^t&lt;v&#13;
* ~&#13;
i.'-rs''-&#13;
noise. At •&gt;\fc&#13;
I would&#13;
fly to pieeee;&#13;
iBtomAoh : r i f r&#13;
wealc. Mr huaband&#13;
lnsiatei on&#13;
_ tay taking Bft;&#13;
Milea' Nervine, and I began to Im&#13;
before I bad United the first&#13;
until I w*s entjrety cujsd."&#13;
262 Hudson St, TUJIn, 6¾¼&#13;
Many remedies are recommended&#13;
for diseases.of the nervous system&#13;
that fakta'pr^duce results beea«s*|M||&#13;
they do not reach the seat of "thsfep";&#13;
trouble. Dr. Miias' Nervine&#13;
proven its value in such caste s #&#13;
many times that it is unnecessary&#13;
to make claims for i t You can&#13;
prove, its merits for yourself by&#13;
gettfcr* &amp; tfottle of scour drajgii^&#13;
who wSl return the price if JrfV&#13;
receive no benefit :-'.-.::-:^ V'^~&#13;
MiLSS MUDiOAi, 0O,t Blkhertt *4.&#13;
•••• - , ¾ ^ ¾ ^&#13;
? * ^ %&#13;
ri'.'l"-:-&#13;
^..:&#13;
r.* '^••'V&#13;
K£Lz*m *k&#13;
. * , *'&amp;*?.; : * ^ a « i s * ^ ^ *!*£*ac«riiw*iu.&#13;
7 • ^ • i ^ M f&amp;SS^sSg A**V&gt;-^"&#13;
1 ¾ 1 ¾ ^ ^ ^&#13;
•^vjSjWi*--&#13;
* * * &gt; * • .&#13;
»-r&lt;"&#13;
*£.*¾££^*,&#13;
'f'l-LfJr •"!?&amp;.£•' '»*?^&gt; *.r... '?**? y&lt;_*- %' ..IKJ£" ^ * . ¢¢^ f F *TV 5^5^¾S *&#13;
^ - ; ' . &lt; ? . a&#13;
0 ^ ,&#13;
• * &gt; -&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
'•*:&#13;
Irregular, painful bladder weaknesses disappear&#13;
when the kidneys are strong and healthfully active.&#13;
Take FOLEY KIDNEY PILLS %£?%£*&#13;
sensation—irregular, painful action—heavy sore feeling ana&#13;
bladder distress. You will like their tonic xe .torative action&#13;
—ready effect-—quick, good results. Contain no harmful&#13;
drugs. Try them. I&#13;
North Hamburg&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Will Brfjfcon of&#13;
Ann Arbor were ^Sunday guests *&#13;
of Mr. and Mrs. Gartrell.&#13;
JVtis* Lorena Black of Chicago&#13;
is visiting her sister, Mrs. W»!l|&#13;
Jfrefc&#13;
BLADDER&#13;
\ • • ~ - .&#13;
v^&#13;
tv.&#13;
Work, Minus Drudgery&#13;
THAT'S what the boys like; they don't mind&#13;
working where a Rumery-Olds Engine does the&#13;
hard part. You have machines that require&#13;
"elbos? grease," why not get an engine that will run&#13;
ail of them, anywhere on the farm. A Rumely-Olds&#13;
Engine will ran a main shaft as shown here or can be&#13;
unmounted and taken where you need^t.' It will run&#13;
the Electric Light Plant; washtte clothes; grind the&#13;
feed; saw the wood; separate the milk and a hundred&#13;
and one other things cheaper and easier than they&#13;
can be done in any other way.&#13;
If you can'4 find time to come in and see us, ask us to come -&#13;
and see you or send you a catalog of Rumely-Olds Engines.&#13;
W^rehers to serve you;&#13;
give us a chance.&#13;
FLINTOFT,&#13;
C'&#13;
i»u&#13;
•i«# •&#13;
*&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;tt^&#13;
Sale Bills 'Printed at the&#13;
eh Office at Right&#13;
-.•*r:y,«*«a"&#13;
y&#13;
V&#13;
* # : • ^ z ; :^#:-**&gt;^-cfc^&#13;
— T&#13;
POP Sale by Ge G . M e y e r&#13;
:.,¾¾½;* *&#13;
Household&#13;
Novelties .&#13;
For Women&#13;
afeajrdwixa ftortkatnaa^t ttort. Bat we efpec$% teftte&#13;
•^mtion of tba HOUSKWira to w ate** ShdU iad h«ft f M&#13;
h^IX&gt;NO WANTON iJr*tJCTKffi* tto. P22B0NAL &amp;BBVI01&#13;
«ld PBOllTr deiiwitt. «SU.'&#13;
Naeh,&#13;
Miss QueeuieQuigiey of Owoseo&#13;
was a Sunday guest of Miss Clara&#13;
Carpenter.&#13;
Jauiee Nash visited bis sistor&#13;
Mrs. John Hodgman of South&#13;
Lyon Sunday,&#13;
J. D. Appleton, our mail carrier&#13;
who has been sick, is so far recovered&#13;
that he thinks he will&#13;
soon be able to resum6 bis work.&#13;
Clyde Hinkle and family and&#13;
Miss Leah Burgess were entertained&#13;
at the home of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Switzer Wednesday&#13;
evening.&#13;
Mr. Hawks of Detroit and Miss&#13;
Gracia Martin of Ann Arbor were&#13;
Sunday guests of Miss Hazel&#13;
Switzer.&#13;
Mrs. Charles Switzer visited&#13;
friends in Grand Rapids lust&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Nash of Pinckuey&#13;
was a week end visitor of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Bert Nash.&#13;
a&#13;
Mies Burgess and Mrs. Clyde&#13;
Hinkle and sou Martiu visited&#13;
their a,unt Mrs. Chas. PJaceway of&#13;
Brighton Thursday.&#13;
$100 Reward, $100&#13;
The readers of this paper will be pleased&#13;
to learn that there is at least one dreaded&#13;
disease trmt science has been able to cure&#13;
in all its stages, and that.is Catarrh. Hall's&#13;
Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now&#13;
known to the medical fraternily. Catarrh&#13;
being a constitutional disease, requires a&#13;
constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh&#13;
Care is t^ken intermrrfy, acting directly&#13;
upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the&#13;
system, thereby destroying the foundation&#13;
of the disease, and givjftg the patient&#13;
strength by building up. the constitution&#13;
and asbisting nature iu doing its work;&#13;
The proprietors have so much faith in its&#13;
curative powers that thejroffer One Hundred&#13;
Dollars fef any eiue that it failB-to&#13;
cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address:&#13;
F. K. Cheney &amp; Co., Toledo, O.&#13;
Sold by all.4ruggisu, ^5cr Take Hall'a Family I'll Is for constipation.&#13;
South Marion&#13;
Mr. and Mrs, Walter Glover of&#13;
Fowlervillle visited at N. Pacey's&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Leam Newman of Fowlerville&#13;
spent the past weefr with her&#13;
parents Mr. and Mrs. I.J. Abbott.&#13;
Mr. aud Mrs. John Gardner entertained&#13;
company from Howell&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. F. £ . Brogan and son of&#13;
Detroit are guests of Chris.&#13;
Brogan,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Bland enter-&#13;
•tained relatives from Detroit and&#13;
Jackson Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
Verne De me rest and family&#13;
spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
M. Hoisel of Cbnbb* Corners.&#13;
Mae Brogan of Howell and&#13;
Aggee Brogau of Lansing 3pent&#13;
the week end wit far the formers&#13;
parents.&#13;
Melvin Hart of E. Marion ie&#13;
helping John Carr with bis work&#13;
this week.&#13;
ifSPECIALS '11 I&#13;
Iff V-^*—-^--__ ' 1 ^ O !Ff ' **— _^s—^v •&#13;
»'! Saturday. Julv 11th.- !©I4 I&#13;
i&#13;
Saturday, July 11th,&#13;
Stott's Best Flour, 24½ lbs. - 69c&#13;
2 Cans Red Salmon - 25c&#13;
1 Can Medium Pink - 10c&#13;
8 lbs Rolled Oats - 25c&#13;
Will meet all prices on Sugar&#13;
ALL SALES CASH II j W. W. BARNARD&#13;
Half the satisfaction after your house is painted i« iu having colors that SUIT&#13;
YOU and the other half is in getting paint that don't crack or scale off. You&#13;
can obtain Both Halves and alao please your Better Half by getting me to&#13;
paint your house with&#13;
White S e a l&#13;
Upon Honor Guaranteed Paiut $1.18 per gallon&#13;
$1.50 pep gallon&#13;
Drop in my shop and aee the different color schemes and get an idea how your&#13;
bouse will look painted different ways. If you use my paint you will be satisfied.&#13;
Come aud let me figure with you. ^&#13;
1 HAVE PAINTED HOUSES FOR THE FOLLOWING:&#13;
Miss Kate Brown&#13;
Mrs. E. Moran&#13;
F. (T. Jackson&#13;
Irvin Kennedy&#13;
,J. J. Mclntyre&#13;
W. H. Harris&#13;
\\ m. Blad»e&#13;
IS. Lavey&#13;
AND MANY OTHERS&#13;
J6fc3?*Cftll and get ray paint book&#13;
L. E. RICHARDS, The Painter&#13;
j PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN #&#13;
J . M / J . M / A ^ / A M - J . v t ' . « . M ' . i . M / J . W J . M / J . ' l / - « - M / A M / j . \ l / A V&#13;
W/KWA\WAWA\WshW'(^A^/TWA*WA\WA'W/&gt;frW/r&lt;W"&#13;
S. G. Teeple&#13;
Mrs.M. Bowers&#13;
S. Grimes&#13;
E. VV. Kennedy&#13;
J. VanHorn&#13;
Wm. Fisk&#13;
High School Bldg.&#13;
Wm. Dunning&#13;
Mrs. E. W. Martin&#13;
Mrs. A. Potter Ion&#13;
H. A. Fick&#13;
A. Vedder&#13;
Fred Teeple&#13;
Marion Keason&#13;
J . A. Tread way&#13;
J as. Roche ,&#13;
figekJerti Arnica Salre for Cats, Burns&#13;
Mr, E. S.Loper, Marilla, N. Y., writes:&#13;
I }^?*jMt?«f bed a Cat. Burn, Woand or&#13;
H&gt;f^#%»akt not heal." Get a box of&#13;
BucWeh'i Afaio* Salve to.day Keep&#13;
handy at iH'timea for Barns, Sorea, Cuts,&#13;
Wound*. Prevent! Lockjaw 25&lt;£ Reconjmended.&#13;
by C. Q. Jdeyfr the draggisu&#13;
, SafiaSwarthotns^ent the past&#13;
wetkiu Howell&#13;
F. Reason sod lamily left last&#13;
Thursday for Wbitmore Lake&#13;
where they will spend the WHnmer&#13;
Hat Tear tblld Hor»i!&#13;
Moat cbikiwn do. A coated, Furred&#13;
Tonga*; Strong Breath; Stonaifa Paine,&#13;
Cirrtea tmdeVEyesj Pale, Sallow Complexion:&#13;
Narrooe, Fretful; Grinding oi Tfjeth;&#13;
fo^iogin Weep; P«otfa* Df*»Mnf&#13;
(joTftf U^eae indicaie Child haa Worolt.&#13;
condition. ^ .. ^ .&#13;
to tipfli tbe Worm*. Sonphed in candy&#13;
'ionfl. "Keiy for children «o take. 2oo%&#13;
Keooj»«end#44y Cj.0. Meyer&#13;
Bartendo S H O W S&#13;
Pinckney. Saturday, July 11&#13;
America's Highest Class one Ring Wagon Circus.&#13;
Not a minute behind the times but up to the present&#13;
moment. Direct from the South.&#13;
e r g : Madam Marie, the Flying Lady in Dare Devil Mid-Sir&#13;
^ t s - The Singing, Dancing and Talking DOG&#13;
The Barteno Show, the one you have waited for will&#13;
soon be here with real circus performers. All the best and&#13;
highest salaried featured acts and the only one producing&#13;
Greater Graceful Daring Acts.&#13;
SEE Rhodes and Rhodes and the Milburn Sisters,&#13;
England's greatest Mid-Air Aerial Artists&#13;
A 50c show at reduced prices&#13;
ADCLTS 25c CHILDREN 15c&#13;
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PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
MEN TEACHERS ARE&#13;
GIVEN BETTER PAY&#13;
8TATE SUPT. KEELER GIVES OUT&#13;
INTERESTING FIGURES ON&#13;
8TATE SCHOOLS.&#13;
MORE WOMEN ARE EMPLOYED&#13;
Statistics Show That 815,847 Children&#13;
Attend Public Schools With Boys&#13;
and Girls in Nearly Equal&#13;
Numbers.&#13;
Lansing, Mich.—According to figures&#13;
given out by State Superintendent&#13;
of Public Instruction Fred L.&#13;
Ke&amp;er, teachers in Michigan for the&#13;
pa8t\Vear were paid wages amounting&#13;
to $l}i539,963.16, of which amount&#13;
18,433,351.07 was paid to women teachers&#13;
and $2,106,612.09 to men teachers.&#13;
Women teachers still outnumber&#13;
the men teachers, despite the fact&#13;
that there is an effort being put forth&#13;
to supplant the women with men.&#13;
During 1913 there were but 2,857 men&#13;
teachers employed in the state, as&#13;
compared to 16,643. women teachers.&#13;
The average monthly wage paid the&#13;
men was $83.37, while women teach*&#13;
ere received only an average monthly&#13;
wage of $56.61. This applied to city&#13;
and district schools. In the graded&#13;
schools the men teachers received&#13;
average monthly wages of $113.81 and&#13;
the women teachers $63.90.&#13;
In 1913 7,236 districts maintained&#13;
schools, as compared to 7,278-in 1912,&#13;
showing a small falling pff, occasioned&#13;
by-several districts closing small&#13;
schools to allow the children to attend&#13;
larger schools.&#13;
Supt Keeler haB figured out that the&#13;
total number of school children in&#13;
the state is 815,847, of which number&#13;
412,081 are boys and 403,076 girls,&#13;
nearly evenly divided . Of these children&#13;
107,303 are between the ages of&#13;
14 and 18. The average daily attendance&#13;
for school children during the&#13;
year was 486,01, at 8,718 school houses.&#13;
The total valuation of school property&#13;
in the state is given at $44,389,-&#13;
110. The bonded debt of school districts&#13;
In Michigan on July 14, 1913&#13;
amounted to $7,343,171.33, with a total&#13;
indebtedness of $9,153,185.42.&#13;
TROLLEY CRASH KILLS ONE&#13;
Overlapping Orders Causes Head-on&#13;
Collision near Jackson.&#13;
Jackson, Mich.—Overlapping orders&#13;
catted the head-on collision of a&#13;
limited and a local car on the Detroit,&#13;
Jackson &amp; Chicago electric road Just&#13;
east of this city Wednesday shortly&#13;
before noon. One man C. O. Burnham,&#13;
,of Kalamazoo was killed and 13 othvers&#13;
seriously enough hurt so that they&#13;
are in a local hospital,&#13;
The eastbound car, a local, had orders&#13;
to meet the westbound limited&#13;
at Michigan Center, while the limited&#13;
had orders to meet the local at a&#13;
switch in this city. Each car was&#13;
speeding to make its meeting place&#13;
on time when, coming over the top of&#13;
a rise of ground, the motorman of the&#13;
local sighted the limited. He put on&#13;
his-brakes and had slowed his car&#13;
considerably when the impact came.&#13;
The cars were telescoped the length&#13;
of the smoking compartment. Nearly&#13;
all of those who were injured were&#13;
on the limited, the passengers on the&#13;
local suffering only from bruises and&#13;
scratches from broken glass and splintered&#13;
wood.&#13;
Peat Is Good Fertiliser.&#13;
East Lansing, Mich,—A use for the&#13;
thousands of acres of heretofore useless&#13;
peat and bog lands in almost&#13;
every county of Michigan has been&#13;
found by C. S. Robinson, M. A. C. experiment&#13;
station chemist, as a result&#13;
of experiments and investigations&#13;
conducted at the college by him during&#13;
the past year.&#13;
Results have indicated that with&#13;
proper and inexpensive preparation&#13;
the peat can be used as a fertiliser&#13;
to enrich womout lands and to increase&#13;
crops on other soils.&#13;
GREAT BRITIAN MOURNS&#13;
DEATH OF STATESMAN&#13;
1 ^ ' M&gt;.&#13;
'V'&#13;
*f.&#13;
\* ~&#13;
Moysr May Not Be Tried.&#13;
Calumet, Mich.—The cases against&#13;
Charles H. Moyer, president of the&#13;
Weetern Federation of Miners, and&#13;
It-other oficers and members of the&#13;
union, charged with conspiracy, in&#13;
connection with the strike in the coppar&#13;
country, already postponed several&#13;
time*, may never coma to trial&#13;
The trial was sot for July 8, but at&#13;
a cooferonoo^of counsel for both sides&#13;
at L'Amse Tuosdsy it was agreed to&#13;
ask tor aaotaor continuance, and resorts&#13;
fres* a reliable source are that&#13;
tb* state is ooastdortng the advlsa-&#13;
Wttty of dropping ? » ease.&#13;
JOSEPH CHAMBERLAIN.&#13;
London, July 3.—Joseph Chamberlain,&#13;
the famous British statesman,&#13;
died at his London residence at 10:31&#13;
p. m. Thursday after an illness of&#13;
several years. He was 78 years old&#13;
and for nearly half a century he was&#13;
a conspicuous figure in British public&#13;
life.&#13;
'PHONE MERGER AGREED ON&#13;
Residents of St. Joseph and Branch&#13;
Counties Win Fight For One&#13;
Company.&#13;
Lansing, Mich.—The Michigan State&#13;
Telephone Co. and the Southern Michigan&#13;
Telephone Co., an independent&#13;
company operating in St. Joseph and&#13;
Branch counties, Friday filed an application&#13;
for a merger before the railroad&#13;
commission. The two companies&#13;
agree to trade business and lines, the&#13;
Bell system practically eliminating&#13;
all of its business in the two counties&#13;
named, except over the independent&#13;
lines. On the other hand, the independent&#13;
company turns over its lines&#13;
into contiguous territory to the Bell&#13;
people.&#13;
The merger of these two companies&#13;
has been brought about by the people&#13;
of the district affected, through petitions&#13;
and requests to the railroad&#13;
commission. Last winter over 5,000&#13;
people in the district, mostly business&#13;
people, petitioned that their service&#13;
be reduced to one system; they did&#13;
not care which one. In addition resolutions&#13;
were passed by every town&#13;
council in the two counties. The commission&#13;
was at first afraid to order&#13;
the elimination of either one of the&#13;
companies for the reason that such&#13;
procedure would be contrary to the&#13;
federal government's ideas of competition&#13;
in public utilities. Chairman&#13;
Hemans made a visit to Washington&#13;
to consult the department of justice&#13;
and was informed that the government&#13;
did not care, inasmuch as the&#13;
two companies' business was all within&#13;
the state.&#13;
UNI0NVILLE MAN IS KILLED&#13;
Druggist Attempts to Throw Barrel&#13;
of Alcohol from Burning Basement&#13;
Unionvllle, Mich.—William M. Lowthian&#13;
died early Saturday morning&#13;
from burns received in the explosion&#13;
of a barrel of alcohol Friday night.&#13;
He was a druggist, and while he was&#13;
filling a bottle with wood alcohol a&#13;
spark from the cigar he held in his&#13;
month dropped in to it, causing an&#13;
explosion. The biasing alcohol was&#13;
thrown about the room, where a small&#13;
barrel of alcohol stood.&#13;
Lowtbian picked' this up to throw&#13;
it outside, and it exploded in his&#13;
,arms. Ablase from head to foot, he&#13;
ran half a block before he fell, and&#13;
though all his clothing was burned&#13;
off, he remained conscious nearly-all&#13;
night till death came.&#13;
•tfhe fire in the drag store was extinguished&#13;
with slight damage.&#13;
HUERTfr ELECTED&#13;
TO PRESIDENCY&#13;
DICTATOR RECEIVES NEARLY&#13;
ALL OF THE FEW VOTE8&#13;
CAST.&#13;
LIGHTEST POLL IN YEARS&#13;
Sunday Was Election Day in That&#13;
Portion of Mexico Still Under&#13;
Control of Followers&#13;
of Huerta.&#13;
« - . / • •&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS IN BRIEF.&#13;
. Rev. A. F. Waechter, formerly of&#13;
Burr Oak, has been Installed as&#13;
pastor of the First Presbyterian&#13;
church at Plainwell, succeeding. Rev.&#13;
J. "W. Will, who resigned to go to&#13;
Hillsdale.&#13;
Mexico City.—Elections for president,&#13;
vice-president, deputies and&#13;
senators were held Sunday in that&#13;
portion of the republic controlled by&#13;
the Huerta government. In Mexico&#13;
City, there was an almost complete&#13;
abstention from voting and indifference&#13;
was manifested everywhere.&#13;
Gen. Huerta appeared to be the favorite&#13;
candidate for the presidency,&#13;
and Gen. Blanquet, the present war&#13;
minister, for the vice-presidency.&#13;
Huerta, it is reported, received a&#13;
virtually unanimous vote of confidence.&#13;
The returns indicate the reelection&#13;
of all present members of&#13;
the chamber of deputies and the senate.&#13;
The lightest vote in many years&#13;
was cast both in the capital and&#13;
nearby towns.&#13;
TWO DROWN AT BOYNE CITY&#13;
Canoe is Upset by Wave and Boys&#13;
Go to Watery Grave.&#13;
Boyne City, Mich.—The first drowning&#13;
accident which has occurred here&#13;
in some time happened Sunday afternoon&#13;
and resulted in the death of&#13;
Bryan Nulph, aged 20, and Raymond&#13;
Holley, aged 12. The accident occurred&#13;
just a few feet from the tannery&#13;
dock.&#13;
A third young man named Joseph&#13;
Willis accompanied the two in a&#13;
canoe, but he got out at the dock&#13;
and the two other boys proceeded&#13;
a short distance from the dock when&#13;
a wave struck the frail craft sideways&#13;
and rolled it over. Nulph never came&#13;
to the surface, Holley came up but&#13;
once. Apparently the boys had hold&#13;
of each other, as they were found&#13;
together about an hour later. Both&#13;
were good swimmers and the excitement&#13;
apparently paralyzed them as&#13;
they made no attempt to save themselves.&#13;
Minister Asked to Resign.&#13;
Washington. — George Fred Williams,&#13;
United States minister to&#13;
Greece and Montenegro, was Saturday&#13;
asked to resign as a result of his public&#13;
statements regarding the situation&#13;
In Albania. The demand was&#13;
made in a cablegram signed by President&#13;
Wilson.&#13;
Mr. Williams' own report of his&#13;
statements were taken up at the cabinet&#13;
meeting Friday and afterward the&#13;
president decided their effect was&#13;
such that it would be improper for&#13;
him to longer represent the United&#13;
States in the Balkans.&#13;
Delegates to Negro Celebration.&#13;
Lansing, Mich.—The following have&#13;
been appointed by Gov. Ferris as delegates&#13;
to the National Half Century&#13;
anniversary of Negro Freedom to be&#13;
held at Chicago in August:&#13;
Thomas Jefferson, Mrs. Adela Pendleton,&#13;
Mrs. Grace Sims, Rev. S. Henri&#13;
Browns, Grand Rapids; Rev. Lewis&#13;
Pettlford, Mrs. Henry William Kalamazoo;&#13;
Francis H. Warren, Detroit;&#13;
Wilmot A. Johnson, W. R. Roberts,&#13;
Lansing; Oscar W. Baker, Bay City;&#13;
C. A. Warren, Cassopolls.&#13;
MARKET QUOTATIONS&#13;
Lfve Stock, Grain and General Farm&#13;
Produce. *&#13;
Live Stock.&#13;
DETROIT—Cattle: Receipts, 898;&#13;
market steady; best dry-fed steers,&#13;
18.50&lt;g)8.75; best handy weight butcher&#13;
steers, $8@8.50; mixed steers and&#13;
heifers, $7.50 @8; handy light butchers,&#13;
$6.75® 7.50; light butchers, $6.50-&#13;
@6.75; best cows, $6@6.50; butchers&#13;
cows,$5.25@5.75; common cows, $4.50&#13;
@5; best heavy bulls, $6.75@7;&#13;
bologna bulls, $6®6.26; stock bulls,&#13;
$5®5.50; feeders, $6.75@7.60; stockers,&#13;
$6.25 @7; milkers and springers,&#13;
$40®75.&#13;
Veal calves—Receipts, 583; market&#13;
steady; few choice, $10.60@ 11; bulk&#13;
good, $10.50; others, $8® 10.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 966;&#13;
market steady; best lambs, $9@9.25;&#13;
fair lambs, $7.50@8.50; light to common&#13;
lambs, $6@7; yearlings, $7.50;&#13;
fair to good sheep, $4.75 (g 5.25; heavy&#13;
sheep, $4; culls and common, $2.50&#13;
@3.60.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 2,785; market 10c&#13;
lower; all grades, $8.40.&#13;
GOOD SUMMER SAUCES&#13;
EXCELLENT TO 8ERVE WITH&#13;
COLD DISHES.&#13;
EAST BUFFALO—Cattle: Receipts,&#13;
3,000; good dry-fed grades steady to&#13;
strong; others slow to 10c lower;&#13;
Ho prime shipping steers, $9.10@9.40;&#13;
fair to good do, $8.60 @9; plain and&#13;
coarse do, $8.25 @ 8.40; choice to prime&#13;
handy do, $8.60®8.75; fair to good,&#13;
$8.15®8.25; light to common, $7.50®&#13;
yearlings, $8.25 @9; prime fat heifers,&#13;
$8®8.25; good butcher heifers, $7.75&#13;
®8; light do, $7.25@7.75; best fat&#13;
cows, $6.75®7.25; good butcher cows,&#13;
$6.50®6.50Scanners and cutters, $3.90&#13;
®5.25; best feeding steers, $7.25®&#13;
7.50; good do, $7®7.60; best stockers,&#13;
$7.25®7.50; common to good, $6.25®&#13;
7; best bulls, $6.76®7.60; good killing&#13;
bulls, $6-.50 @7; stock and medium&#13;
bulls, $5.50®6.25; milkers and springers,*&#13;
$85® 90.&#13;
0 Hogs—Receipts, 13,000; market 25c&#13;
higher; heavy and yorkers, $9; pigs,&#13;
$8.90®9.&#13;
Sheep and lambs—Receipts, 3,000;&#13;
steady ;top lambs, $9®9.60; yearlings&#13;
$7.50®8.50; wethers, $6.25®6.75;&#13;
ewes, $4.25®5.75.&#13;
Calves strong; tops, $11; fair to&#13;
good, $8.50@9.50; grassers, $5.50®7.&#13;
Grains Etc.&#13;
Wheat—Cash No. 2 red, 86 l-2c;&#13;
July opened without change at 79 l-2c,&#13;
gained l-4c, declined to 79 l-2o and&#13;
closed at 79 3-4c; September opened&#13;
at 79 l-2c, advanced to 79 3-4c, declined&#13;
to 79 l-2c and closed at 80c; No. 1&#13;
white, 86c.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3, 70 l-2cf No. 3&#13;
yellow, 2 cars at 72 l-2c, closing at&#13;
72c asked; No. 4 yellow, 70c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 1 car at 39 l-2c,.l&#13;
at 39c; No. 3 white, 38 l-2c asked;&#13;
No. 4 white, 36 l-2c asked.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 63c asked; July,&#13;
56o bid.&#13;
Beans—Immediate and prompt shipment,&#13;
$1.85; July, $1.90; October,&#13;
$1.95.&#13;
Cloverseed — Prime spot,&#13;
October and December, $8.60;&#13;
alslke, $10.&#13;
Timothy—Prime spot, $2.65.&#13;
Alfalfa—Prime spot, $8.35.&#13;
Hay—Carlots, track Detroit;&#13;
timothy, $16® 16.50; standard,&#13;
15.50; No. 2 timothy, $13® 14&#13;
mixed, $15® 15.50; No. 1&#13;
® 13.50; No. 1 clover,&#13;
$8.2»;&#13;
prime&#13;
Saves Garage at Owoaso.&#13;
Owosso, Mich.—Despite the fact&#13;
that he was enveloped in flames&#13;
Claude Smith, employed In a local&#13;
garage, seized a rope and threw it&#13;
around the tank of a large blow torch&#13;
which had exploded and dragged out&#13;
of doors, saving the big building Bun*&#13;
day afternoon. Smith was terribly&#13;
burned about Che arms and face.&#13;
—i ,&#13;
ITEMS OF STATE INTEREST&#13;
Thirty-three fatal accidents occurred&#13;
among the working men of Michigan,&#13;
last month, according to figures&#13;
compiled by t^e Industrial accident&#13;
board.&#13;
Samples of water from the vartoua&#13;
lakes and rivers of the stabs are be-&#13;
4ng rushed to the state analyst at&#13;
Lansing in an effort to determine the.&#13;
causa of the fish dying by the thousands.&#13;
An effort waa msale to determine&#13;
the canse by an examination&#13;
of the fish, bit was iminoeanfal&#13;
No. 1&#13;
$15®&#13;
light&#13;
mixed, $13&#13;
UI.50®13;&#13;
heavy clover mixed, $12.50® 13; rye&#13;
straw, $8®8.50; 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, $4.50; spring patent, $5.10;&#13;
rye, $4.40 per bbl. . • - ' »&#13;
Feed—-Jn 100-lb sacks, Jobbing lota;&#13;
Bran, $25; standard middlings, $28;&#13;
fine middlings, $30; coarse cornmeal,&#13;
$31,' cracked corn, $32; corn and oat&#13;
chop, $28.50 per ton.&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
Blackberries—$4®4.25 per 24-quart&#13;
case.&#13;
Huckleberries—$4®4.25 per 24-quart&#13;
case.&#13;
Gooseberries—$1®1.10 per 16-qnart&#13;
case. ^&#13;
Currants—Small $2; cKerry, $3 per&#13;
bushel.&#13;
New Apples—Southern, $2®2.26 per&#13;
hamper.&#13;
Apples—Ben Davis, $3®8.60; russet,&#13;
$4®4.50 per bbL .&#13;
Raspberries—Black, $4®4.25 per 24-&#13;
quart case; red, 88.76 ®7 per 24-quart&#13;
Cherries—Sour, f&amp;S; tweet, $150&#13;
per 18-quart case; black Tartarian,&#13;
$2.25 par 16-quart case.&#13;
Groan Cbrn^-70®75c pm dos.&#13;
Cabbage—N*w, $102.15 pe* crata.&#13;
Potatoes—Virginia Rod 8tar, 34.86&#13;
e4.76pefbbl.&#13;
Dressed Hogs—Light, 9® 10c; heavy&#13;
8®11-lc per lb.&#13;
Dreeeed Calvee—Ffcncy, l|#18e;&#13;
common, 10®llc par lb. *&#13;
Recipes of French Chef That 8hould&#13;
Be Useful—Tartar - Sauce for&#13;
Broiled 8ardlnj»s Is Something&#13;
of a Novelty.&#13;
A good sauce adds zest to what otherwise&#13;
might be insipid and unattractive&#13;
in the way of food. The season is&#13;
at hand when cold dishes are often the&#13;
most appetizing and the most convenient&#13;
to serve. Very often a cunningly&#13;
prepared sauce will lift such a dish&#13;
from the uninteresting monotony of a&#13;
"leftover" to«a tempting morsel with&#13;
the stamp of a French chef. In the&#13;
large hotels where the secrets of sauceconcocting&#13;
are known, large profits accrue&#13;
from the serving of dinner leftovers&#13;
in a new incarnation of luncheon&#13;
entrees. These recipes for appetising&#13;
sauces, from the notebook of a French&#13;
chef, may prove helpful to the summer&#13;
housewife:&#13;
Verve Sauce for Cold Fish.—Mix by&#13;
beating thoroughly four tablespoonfuls&#13;
of grated horseradish, a tablespoonful&#13;
of finely ground bread crumbs, pinch of&#13;
salt, pepper to taste and half a cupful&#13;
of sour cream or milk. Add a teaspoonful&#13;
of lemon Juice and pour over&#13;
two-inch cubes of the cold boiled halibut&#13;
or cod.&#13;
Sauce for Cold Boiled Salmon.—&#13;
Make a rich drawn butter, season with&#13;
salt and paprika. Just before serving:&#13;
add a tablespoonful of Madeira wine in&#13;
which a clove and a bit of ginger have&#13;
)een marinating for an hour or two.&#13;
Oarnish the cold fish with lemon and&#13;
parsley and serve the sauce separately.!&#13;
Sauce for Cold Lamb.—Melt a glass-&#13;
,ul of currant Jelly. Add a glassful of&#13;
port wine. Bring to scalding, but not&#13;
boiling point Serve in a small tureen&#13;
with cold lamb or fowl.&#13;
Tartar Sauce for Broiled Sardines.—&#13;
Mix one tablespoonful of tarragon,&#13;
one teaspoonful of lemon Juice, a pinch&#13;
of salt and a tablespoonful of worces*&#13;
'.ershlre and heat over hot water.&#13;
Brown half a cupful of butter and&#13;
itrain over the mixture.&#13;
Mint Sauce.—Break up the leaves of&#13;
Tresh mint until you have a cuptuL&#13;
Mix a third of a cup of vinegar and a&#13;
fourth of a cup of sugar. Heat and&#13;
pour over the mint. Let stand at least&#13;
an hour before serving.&#13;
y&#13;
* • »&#13;
J&#13;
Chlffonade Dressing.&#13;
Mix together the following ingredk&#13;
ents: One-half cupful of olive oil,&#13;
two tablespoonfuls of elder vinegar,&#13;
one tablespoonful of tarragon vinegar,&#13;
one-half teaspoonful salt, one-quarter&#13;
teaspoonful of paprika, one-eighth tea-1&#13;
spoonful of black pepper, one table-&#13;
•poonful each of finely cut onion, parsley,&#13;
green, pepper, red'pepper, and&#13;
one hard-cooked egg, finely cut Thoroughly&#13;
mix and serve on lettuce or&#13;
any green&#13;
Russian SHosd Cake.&#13;
With one-fourth of a pound of sugar&#13;
mix the yolks of fire eggs, then gradually&#13;
three ounces of .flour, in a teaspoonful&#13;
of anise seed, two ounces of&#13;
chopped blanched almonds and last tha&#13;
whites of five eggs whisked quite-stiff.&#13;
Bake In long, narrow cake tins (paperlined&#13;
and well buttered), and whan&#13;
done turn out, cool, slice and dry the&#13;
siloes in the oven, until quite crisp.&#13;
They are then ready to serve. *&#13;
Half a Yeast Cake.&#13;
"Pennies make dollars," says tha&#13;
wise saw. And although a yeast cake&#13;
costs only a couple of cents and a half ?f *'•'•*,;&#13;
a yeast cake seems hardly worth sav- ^&#13;
tag, it Is quite possible to save them.&#13;
Often it is inconvenient to get a yeast&#13;
cake at a moment's notice,. so one&#13;
kept on hand would prove convenient&#13;
This is the way to keep one, in wholo&#13;
or In part—simply immerse it in flour&#13;
or salt until needed-&#13;
Poached Eggs With Cheese.&#13;
For five servings prepare five some-'&#13;
what thick slices of toasted bread,&#13;
round v If convenient Make a sauce&#13;
of one level tablespoonful butter, two&#13;
of flour, a title salt; stir these together&#13;
and add gradually three-quarters cupful&#13;
of strained tomato to which a&#13;
pinch of soda has bean added, and&#13;
half a cup of rich milk. Dip the edges',&#13;
of tha toast in tha sauce, then pour'&#13;
the sauce over tha slices. Placo on&#13;
each slice a nicely poached egg,&#13;
sprinkle it with grated cheese and set&#13;
in tha oven to melt the chejese^&#13;
To Clean Laoee.&#13;
PaHcata tocos which have become'&#13;
•oiled may be cleaned beaatlfolly *by 1&#13;
squseeing them through skim milk to&#13;
which a little bluing hae oeen added.!&#13;
They oosM out of their bath tookfagi&#13;
ttki BOW and art Just tha right atMt-i&#13;
BOSS whan starched and dried, or dried •&#13;
an* ironed Bttirot* olotha otar a tur*&#13;
ish towel no*. ,_&#13;
v.&#13;
&gt; ' 'x"&#13;
sauoh setta*&#13;
aMUghtaylSftiejfcthjsitfs^toajJtt&#13;
fa'SjoeoV —v&#13;
'.'•yaV&#13;
,.T*&#13;
/ l&#13;
j&#13;
i^,.M .•is».iifttei-kAi&#13;
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d&amp;^i¾'.^¾S¾sS¾- fi*&#13;
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3- &lt;"• -.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
FABLES&#13;
SLANG The New Fable of the Galloping&#13;
grim Who Tried to 8lt Down&#13;
by the Wayside.&#13;
Plli&#13;
A certain affluent Bachelor happened&#13;
to be the only Grandson of a&#13;
rugged Early Settler who wore a Coon-&#13;
Skin Cap and drank Corn Juice out of&#13;
a Jug. Away back in the Days when&#13;
every Poor Han had Bacon in the&#13;
Smoke House, this Pioneer bad been&#13;
soaked in a Trade and found himielf&#13;
loaded up with a Swamp Subdivision&#13;
in the Edge of Town.&#13;
Fifty years later the City had&#13;
spread two miles beyond the Swamp&#13;
and Grandson was submerged beneath&#13;
so much Unearned Increment that he&#13;
began to speak with what sounded to&#13;
him like an English Accent and his&#13;
Shirts were ordered from Paris. *&#13;
On the 1st of every Month the&#13;
Agents would crawl into the Presence&#13;
of the Grandson of the mighty Muskrat&#13;
Hunter and dump before him *&#13;
Wagonload of Paper Money which had&#13;
been snatched away from the struggling&#13;
Shop-Keepers, who in turn, had&#13;
^wheedled it from the People who paid&#13;
« Nickel apldce for Sunday Papers so&#13;
as to look at the Pictures of the Decorations&#13;
In the Supper Room at the Assembly&#13;
Ball graced by tne Presence of&#13;
the aforesaid Bachelor whose Grandfather&#13;
had lifted the original Catfish&#13;
but of the Chicago River.&#13;
Then the Representative of the Old&#13;
Family would take a Garden Rake and&#13;
pattern all this hateful Currency into&#13;
a neat mound, after which a milk-fed&#13;
Secretary would iron it out and disinfect&#13;
It and sprinkle it with Lilac Water&#13;
and tie it into artistic Packets,&#13;
iiBlng Old Gold Ribbon.&#13;
After that, it was Hard LineB for the&#13;
Bachelor, because he had to sit by a&#13;
tytndow at the Club and dope out&#13;
some new Way of getting all that&#13;
Coin back into Circulation.&#13;
As a result of these Herculean Efforts&#13;
to vaporize his Income, he found&#13;
himself at the age of 40 afflicted with&#13;
Chemical&#13;
its Sharp&#13;
Had to Dope Out Some Way of Qetttog&#13;
tRo Coin Baok Into Circulation.&#13;
Social Gastritis. He had gorged him*&#13;
•elf with the Pleasures of this World&#13;
until the light of a Menu Card gave&#13;
him the Willies and the mere mention&#13;
of Musical Comedy would cause him&#13;
to break down and Cry like a Child.&#13;
Ho had crossed the Atlantic so often&#13;
that he no longer wished to sit at the&#13;
Captain's Table. He had rolled them&#13;
high at Monte Carlo and watched the&#13;
Durbar at Delhi and takes-Tea on the&#13;
Terrace at Shipboard's in Cairo and&#13;
rlekshawed through Japan and ridden&#13;
the surf In Honolulu, while hia.Name&#13;
wit a Household Word among too&#13;
Barmaids of the lea Palace in London,&#13;
otherwise known as the Savoy.&#13;
Occasionally ho would return to bis&#13;
provincial Home to raise the Rents on&#13;
the Shop-Keepers and give out as Interview&#13;
criticising the Mew School of&#13;
ipolltidsna for trUUnf with_Vested Intercets&#13;
and seeking to disturb Ibdstlng&#13;
conditions* ^&#13;
Any time bis Rake-Oft was reduced&#13;
from 410 a Minuta to I t * he would&#13;
layout a Hvwl like a Prairie Wolf ana)&#13;
oall upon Mortimer, his Man, for Sympathy.&#13;
• After Twenty Years of getting ?p at&#13;
Twilight to throw aside the Pyjamas (&#13;
and take a Tubfrd-oaesMmaetf into&#13;
„ S W W \#"a^B?SiSBJ*B^S» ^.SBBBBBBBBSBFW SBBBSBBBS^e9* ' "^*%W *' &lt;sfUSSSSSJ|. - ? 5 ^ ^ . ^ ^ ^ , ^&#13;
zoate of Soda and other&#13;
Mysteries, began to lose&#13;
Zest.&#13;
In other Words, he was All In.&#13;
He was Track-Sore and Blase and&#13;
sore as a Crab and full of Ongway. He&#13;
had played the whole String and found&#13;
there was nothing to it and now he&#13;
was ready to retire to a Monastery and&#13;
wear a Gunny-Sack Smoking Jacket&#13;
and live on Spinach.&#13;
The Vanities of the Night-World had&#13;
got on his nerves at last. Instead of&#13;
sitting 8 Feet away from an Imported&#13;
Orchestra at % A. M. and taunting his&#13;
poor old Alimentary System with Sea&#13;
Food, he began to prefer to take a 10-&#13;
Grain Sleeping Powder and fall back&#13;
In the Alfalfa.&#13;
iffbout Noon the next Day he would&#13;
come up for Air, and in order to kill&#13;
the rest of the Day he would have to&#13;
hunt UP • a Came of Auction Bridge&#13;
with three or four other gouty old&#13;
Mavericks.&#13;
When the Carbons begin to burn low&#13;
in the sputtering Arc Lights along the&#13;
Boulevard of Pleasure and the Night&#13;
Wind cuts like a Chisel and the&#13;
Reveler finds his bright crimson Brannlgan&#13;
slowly dissolving itself into a&#13;
Helva Headache, there is but -ene&#13;
thing for a Wise Ike to do and that is&#13;
to Chop on the Festivities and beat it&#13;
to a Rest Cure.&#13;
That Is-* just what the well-fixed&#13;
Bachelor decided to do.&#13;
He resolved to Marry and get away&#13;
from the Bright Lights and He down&#13;
somewhere in a quilted Dressing Gown&#13;
and a pair of Soft Slippers and devote&#13;
the remainder of his Life to a grand&#13;
clean-up of the Works of Arnold Bennett&#13;
He selected a well-seasoned Senorita&#13;
who was still young enough to show&#13;
to your Men Friends but old enough to&#13;
cut out all the prevalent Mushgush&#13;
about the Irish Drama and Norwegian&#13;
Art and Buddhtsm and true Symbolism&#13;
of Russian Dancing.&#13;
Best of all, she had a spotless Reputation,&#13;
holding herself down to one&#13;
Bronx at a Time and always going behind&#13;
a Screen to do her Inhaling.&#13;
They were Married according to the&#13;
new Ceremonies devised by the Ringling&#13;
Brothers. As they rode away to&#13;
their Future Home, the .old Stager&#13;
leaned back in the Limousine and&#13;
said; "At last the Bird has Lit I am&#13;
going to put on the Simple Life for&#13;
an Indefinite Run. I have played the&#13;
Hoop-La Game to a Standstill, so it is&#13;
me for a Haven of Rest"&#13;
As soon as they were safely In their&#13;
own Apartments, $he beautiful Bride&#13;
began to do Flip Flops and screech for&#13;
Joy.&#13;
"At last I have a License to cut&#13;
loose!" she exclaimed. "For years I&#13;
have hankered and honed to be Dead&#13;
Game and back Excitement right off&#13;
the Boarda, but every time I pulled a&#13;
Caper the stern-faced Mater would be&#13;
at Elbow, saying: 'Nix on the Acrobatics&#13;
or you'll lose your Number.'&#13;
Now I'm a regular honest-to-goodneaa&#13;
Married Woman and I don't recognise&#13;
any Limit except the Sky-Line. I&#13;
grabbed you because I knew you had&#13;
been to ail the Places that Keep Open&#13;
and could frame up a new Jamboree&#13;
every day k*&gt;«k* Tear. I'm going to&#13;
plow an eieJsHeet fejiiww sjcrps#,fi^&#13;
rope and Bs^iJeeesfloiejRsre' a t&#13;
Joints whes^lfeBSjisiaeltar w&#13;
so closa to y o W M i o sn^t&#13;
almost reach out and Touch&#13;
I'm going to Travel twelve months or*&#13;
ery Tear and do all the Stunts known&#13;
to the moat Imbecile Globe-TrottersV*&#13;
A few Weeks after that a Haggard&#13;
Man with tattered Coat-Tails was seen&#13;
going over the old familiar Jumps,&#13;
MORAL: Those who Marry to Escape&#13;
something usually find Something&#13;
DAINTY LITTLE DRESS&#13;
PARTICULARLY DE8IGNED FOR&#13;
WOMEN OP SLENDER FIGURE.&#13;
Nothing Better In Summer Evening&#13;
Frocks Has Been Offered Than&#13;
This Typically French Confection&#13;
Described.&#13;
If you are slender and rather tall&#13;
you can wear the dress of the sketch&#13;
and know that It was designed for&#13;
your particular type, but if you are—&#13;
well, if you are not, it will certainly&#13;
never do. It was worn by a young&#13;
woman to whom it was not at all&#13;
suited at a recent private dance, but&#13;
the dress itself was so altogether&#13;
dainty and youthful that I am sending&#13;
home a sketch in case any one wishes&#13;
to copy it for a lovely summer evening&#13;
frock, writes Lillian E. Toung in&#13;
a letter from Paris to the Washington&#13;
Star.&#13;
These many ruffled skirts are extremely&#13;
modish just now, and are&#13;
most becoming to the type that suit,&#13;
for, naturally, the design lends fullness&#13;
to a slight figure and cuts the&#13;
height as well.&#13;
: In this instance dawn-pink chiffon&#13;
was used throughout, though if something&#13;
a little more substantial is preferred&#13;
the skirt may be of taffeta, and&#13;
the bodice of chiffon to match. The&#13;
little bow knots set at the top of each&#13;
flounce down the left side of the skirt&#13;
were in azure-blue velvet ribbon, and&#13;
lent a delightfully quaint touch to the&#13;
costume. The sleeves were similarly&#13;
trimmed.&#13;
Don't get the idea that such a skirt&#13;
is hard to make. It isn't—but it will&#13;
require some time and care to arrange&#13;
the flounces evenly. They are simply&#13;
straight strips of the material&#13;
(doubled if of chiffon, but single in&#13;
taffeta) about six to seven Inches&#13;
deep and evenly gathered at the top&#13;
and attached to a plain foundation&#13;
skirt underneath. This may be of&#13;
Path of the Kakapo,&#13;
Several birds make regular paths to&#13;
and from their resorts. Those of the&#13;
Antarctic penguins are noted by all&#13;
explorers in their ration. Vary noticeable&#13;
are those In the haunts of the&#13;
kakapo, the large, rock-dwelling, burrow-&#13;
nesting owl-like parrot of the&#13;
mountains of New Zealand. They&#13;
beat down regular paths along the&#13;
spurs and ridgel where they abound,&#13;
jw4||ttfKJBorsftft might be excused for&#13;
sapfestnrthey were meant for human&#13;
feefc tt 14 along the* avenaes that&#13;
the birds go to and fro cm their nooturns&gt;&#13;
ramblesv^aad sa tfecr march&#13;
they snip off and perhaps eat amy&#13;
protruding spear at grass or weed.&#13;
i*«»»^&#13;
• . . * ' • '&#13;
strong not or of china till or mous*&#13;
seHne.&#13;
The bodice will need a net inner&#13;
waist The chiffon over-part was out&#13;
wits short kimono sleeves finished&#13;
with a frill of chiffon, and the open&#13;
neok, too, had a finishing frill.&#13;
The girdla was rather broad and&#13;
topped by an upstanding ruffle of the&#13;
skirt material. It tied at one aide&#13;
with a long; end and loop caught Under&#13;
a naturaWooking rose.&#13;
The same dress would be delightful&#13;
in taffeta and chiffon of that lovely&#13;
cream shade that suggests it might&#13;
bars lam for yearsvin some old attio&#13;
chest, and the girdle could be of&#13;
turnsole* Musi velvet caught with a&#13;
surer gauss root, while the small&#13;
bowksots is the skirt could' be made&#13;
of fury narrow silver gsase ribbon,&#13;
taffeta, » one of the&#13;
stterns, will maka as-&#13;
Ye* win pYftsabiy be ablrta guess&#13;
fross e^stga* itib n this that fatttr.&#13;
skirts are raally on the way.&#13;
OF PARISIAN DESIGN&#13;
Hat made&#13;
trimmed with&#13;
of whits straw and&#13;
email white wings.&#13;
WAIST SHOULD BE NORMAL&#13;
Only a chance to rest&#13;
your hands and back&#13;
is worth five cents.&#13;
BUT there's no chance&#13;
about RUB-NO-MORE&#13;
WASHING POWDER. It&#13;
wouldn't increase in&#13;
sales every week unless&#13;
it made housework&#13;
much easier. •&#13;
RUB-NO-MO&#13;
WASHING POWDER&#13;
is a sudleaa dirt remover&#13;
for clothes.&#13;
It cleans jour dishes,&#13;
sinks, toilets and&#13;
cleans and sweetens&#13;
your milk crocks. B&#13;
kills germs. It doei&#13;
not seed hot water.&#13;
RUB-NO-MORE RUB-NO-MORE&#13;
Washing Powder Carbo Naptha Soap&#13;
Five Cents—All Grocers&#13;
•The Rub-No-More Co., Ft.Wayne, lod&#13;
A man who never&#13;
woman has the germs&#13;
argues with&#13;
of wisdom.&#13;
Smile on wash day. That's when you use&#13;
Red Cross Ball Blue. Clothes whiter than&#13;
•now. All grocere. Adv.&#13;
Correct Cdrseting Always Ono of the&#13;
Most Important Aids to Health&#13;
and Beauty,&#13;
v At the root of the ills to which&#13;
feminine flesh Is heir is Incorrect cor*&#13;
seting and tight lading. These are&#13;
by no means synonymous terms. One&#13;
may be incorrectly yet loosely corseted.&#13;
Today it is the exceptional&#13;
woman who laces her corset so tightly&#13;
that her figure assumes an unnatural&#13;
contour. Ten years ago many women&#13;
did. Thlsfimprovement is to some&#13;
degree to the \sr§dit of the wearers&#13;
of corsets, but to astlil greater degree&#13;
it is to the credit of corset manufacturers&#13;
and the mandates of fashion.&#13;
Women who have Just regard for their&#13;
health and beauty realize that tho&#13;
normal waist measurement is an lm-. i&#13;
portant adjunct thereto. This 1» I&#13;
proved by the fact that all ready-made&#13;
garments are two Inches larger around&#13;
the waist than they were two years&#13;
ago, which means that most women&#13;
who used to wear a 22 corset now&#13;
wear a 24, and so on through the different&#13;
sizes.&#13;
Leading physicians all admit that&#13;
women require support for the abdomen.&#13;
Support is entirely different&#13;
from suppression. If the abdomen is&#13;
suppressed, a lot of trouble Is brought&#13;
on, the first sign of which is constipation.&#13;
The colon cannoVfunctlon properly.&#13;
More depends upon the colon&#13;
than most people are aware of, even&#13;
some" physicians. The direct results&#13;
of restricting the action of the colon&#13;
are weakness, insomnia and dyspepsia;&#13;
the Indirect results are too numerous&#13;
to mention and would be superfluous,&#13;
because the prevailing&#13;
styles In corsets conform in a great&#13;
degree to nature's demands.&#13;
The wise physician raises his voice&#13;
not against the use but the abuse of&#13;
the corset A corset which supports&#13;
the abdomen will never be condemned&#13;
by those who are conversant with the&#13;
structure of the human body, masculine&#13;
or feminine. More men wear&#13;
abdominal beltB than is dreamed of by&#13;
the public. Some of the most advanced&#13;
scientists state that women&#13;
can wear corsets now which conform&#13;
to the latest fashion without sacrificing&#13;
their health.—Harriet Edward!&#13;
Payee, in Woman's World.&#13;
Some men attract no more attention&#13;
than a thermometer on a pleasant day.&#13;
YOUR OWN DRUGGIST W I L L T E L L YOU&#13;
Try Murine Hye Remedy for Bed, Weak, Watery&#13;
Byes and Granulated Kyellds; No Smarting—&#13;
Inst Kye Comfort. Write for Book of the Mye&#13;
by mall Free. Marine Kye Remedy Co., Cbloifo.&#13;
Color Consolation.&#13;
"I am feeling very blue just now."&#13;
"Can't I do something for you? Let&#13;
me get you a pink lemonade."&#13;
Have Something Better.&#13;
"Don't you suffer extremely from&#13;
lassitude here?" asked the city visitor&#13;
of a villager back in the swamp country.&#13;
"Never heerd o' nobody havin' sioh&#13;
a disease. Th' wust we haa here is&#13;
fever an' agy."—Livingston Lance.&#13;
, Saving the Innocents.&#13;
"Just as the twig is bent the tree's&#13;
Inclined," wrote Pope, and as he was&#13;
discussing "man" and not arboriculture,&#13;
he undoubtedly had the babies&#13;
and their welfare in mind. The season&#13;
is near at hand in our larger cities, if&#13;
not already here, when the health of&#13;
our infant population should be a matter&#13;
of philanthropic and public concern,&#13;
as we know to a considerable extent&#13;
it will be. The floating hospital&#13;
will put to sea with its precious freight&#13;
in quest of air that is purest and&#13;
breezes that are most reviving. The&#13;
milk stations will do their best with&#13;
the resources at command, though the.&#13;
city Bhould have a larger part in this&#13;
beneflclent work. We have been making&#13;
progress along this line. We have&#13;
arrived at a larger perception of both&#13;
public and private responsibility for&#13;
the conservation of infant life and&#13;
health, but the field is such a comprehensive&#13;
one that much more remains&#13;
to be done.—Boston Transcript.&#13;
On Dainty Aprons.&#13;
On dainty aprons it is well to sew&#13;
beading instead of the regulation bind*&#13;
ing and strings. This beading should&#13;
hi ahsm mm inch in width, and wash&#13;
%* Is** through It. This&#13;
apron. The&#13;
when the apron is soil&#13;
be pressed out, freshened up andTnM&#13;
placed when the*apron haa returned&#13;
snow white from a visit to the tub.&#13;
•klrt Without a Seam,&#13;
Charming and altogether practical&#13;
are the gowns whose shirts are formed&#13;
of hut one piece. Clever is the dressmaker&#13;
who Insists on. making the&#13;
gown, especially the skirts, oft her&#13;
customers. Really this does not take&#13;
nearly as long as it used'to take to&#13;
turn up one of the very full skirts.&#13;
and we all manage to get through&#13;
that some way. The skirt known as&#13;
the wraporer usually has a silk or&#13;
underskirt&#13;
Pitfalls of KarHnga.&#13;
Barrings, particularly of the bar*&#13;
baric order, are becoming eztraordi*&#13;
aarllr popular. For some months past&#13;
they have been worn by the ultra&#13;
fashionable, but it Is only during this&#13;
spring that they showed any sign of&#13;
becoming general favorites. They&#13;
are dlfteult things to wear, aa they&#13;
harev a distressing knack of asking&#13;
look&#13;
1&#13;
i or worse.&#13;
HIT THE 8P0T.&#13;
Postum Knooked Out Coffee Alia*&#13;
• #&#13;
There's a good deal of satisfaction&#13;
And comfort in hitting upon the right&#13;
thing to rid one of the varied and&#13;
constant ailments caused by coffee&#13;
drinking.&#13;
"Ever since I can remember/'&#13;
writes an Ind. woman, "my father&#13;
has been,a lover of his coffee, but the&#13;
continued use of it so affected his&#13;
stomach that he could scarcely eat at&#13;
times. „# &lt;&#13;
"Mother had coffee-headache and&#13;
dizziness,' and if I drank coffee for&#13;
breakfast I would taste it all day an£&#13;
usually go to bed with a tsMstoafceY&#13;
"One day father. Brought *Ss* IT&#13;
pkg. of Foot** remmeej** br « 4&#13;
safiaVit Sj|sjp||heT-t*&#13;
mm**-M&lt;A m dark, seal-brow*&#13;
fits*} stslfi|iii| to golden brown whed&#13;
cream" It added, and a snappy taste&#13;
similar to mild, high-grade coffee, and&#13;
we found that its.contlnued use speed*&#13;
tir put an end to all our coffee ills.&#13;
rThat was at least ton rears ago&#13;
and Postum has, from that day to&#13;
thi, been a standing order of father's&#13;
grocery bill.&#13;
"When I married, my husband was&#13;
a great coffee drinker, although he&#13;
admitted that It hurt him. When X&#13;
mentioned Postum he said he did not&#13;
like the-taste of it. I toM him t&#13;
could make It taste all right. Be&#13;
smiled and said, try it The result&#13;
was a success, he won't hare ear*&#13;
thing but PoetunV*&#13;
Name given by Postum Co*, Battle&#13;
Creek, Mien. Bead "The Road. * .&#13;
WeUville," inpkgs.&#13;
Postum BOW comes in two forme:&#13;
Regular Peetwm—must be *eB&#13;
boiled—lie and tie package*.&#13;
Instant Postum to a soluble jowi&#13;
der.' Made In the cup wlth^ hot we&gt;&#13;
ter—no botUs*~S0*tt* e*e tine.&#13;
eV e«flP ^ ^ H M s ^ P " ^ ^ wfj^pt •••e^fc.J as^^WsBr emHsTCHs/^ ,^^ev .&#13;
about the Bjsist...*'&#13;
"Therysev Beeeom'&#13;
xs.&#13;
H&#13;
"51&#13;
i&#13;
•{:•&#13;
c-&#13;
"&amp;s&#13;
' t . •'••i ] •&#13;
.#&amp;&#13;
0&amp;&#13;
&gt;v -ffr :&lt;J&#13;
i M &amp; . ' * u tr-i.^M!', 7*a:-i_- to«iJ_^.-.'ii]y'ftiiffsv ItJ.. •4*-&gt;.ii».'«*;.k.il!*i .tu»ii4v&#13;
5 * ••*?»•••,&#13;
f&#13;
Vl&#13;
# .&#13;
'!**-&gt;&gt;,&#13;
* - ' *&#13;
""?V:&#13;
*e&#13;
**-• - : ^&#13;
* * •&#13;
6*r&#13;
$ &amp; .&#13;
^&#13;
* l i&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
HTitAYEI) AWAY — Black and white&#13;
Hlioat, three months old. Wt. about 50&#13;
1U. Reward, 28U*&#13;
K. Burlisoo, Piuckney&#13;
• — l * W W &lt; W I — ^ ^ I h . l • • • • • • • I » . ^ . &gt; H • I. M&#13;
FOK SALE—Baby Chicks, Modeled Att/&#13;
conunu ao&lt;l Barred Plymouth Rocks, 10c&#13;
Whife L.e«horns 8c each. 26t2*&#13;
each. J . Sider, Pinckney, R. F. D.&#13;
To Newspaper Publishers&#13;
and Printers&#13;
We manufacture, t h e&#13;
highest grade of&#13;
very&#13;
Brajs Leads &amp; Slugs Type&#13;
BrlQ Galleys&#13;
Metal Borders&#13;
L. S. Meiai Furniture&#13;
Leads and Slu^s&#13;
Metal Leaders&#13;
iSpaceb aud Quads&#13;
6 to 48 point&#13;
Brass Rule in Strips&#13;
Brass Lahur-Saviug&#13;
Rule&#13;
Metal Quoins, etc.&#13;
Brass Column Rales&#13;
Brass Circles&#13;
Brass Leaders&#13;
Brass Round Corneis&#13;
Old Column Rules refaced and made&#13;
t^ood as new at a small cost.&#13;
Please remember that we are not iu anj&#13;
Trust or Combinatiou and are sure we cir&#13;
make it greatly to your advantage to den!&#13;
with us.&#13;
A copy of our catalogue will be cheerfully&#13;
furnished on application.&#13;
We frequeutKy have good bargains iu&#13;
second-hand job Presses, Paper Cutter.,&#13;
and other priutiug machinery and&#13;
material.&#13;
PMadelplia Praters Supply Co.&#13;
Manufactorers of&#13;
Type and High Grade Printing Material&#13;
* 14 S. 5th St., Philadelphia, Pa.&#13;
Proprietors Peon Type Foundry 2tlf&#13;
Miss Katbryo Lain borne jw&#13;
spending a few weeks with her&#13;
sisters iu Piuckney.&#13;
MM. Mary Pattorsou and grand&#13;
daughter visited relatives here&#13;
the last of the week,&#13;
Mrs, Amy VRiikeuren spent&#13;
Sjatiday at the home of the Wate&#13;
r s Brothers&#13;
Eddie Walters of Jackson spent&#13;
Saturday aud Sunday with the&#13;
Watters Brothers.&#13;
The infant son of Mr. and MTP.&#13;
Martin Anderson has been quite&#13;
ill but is better at present.&#13;
A number from here were in&#13;
Howell Saturday.&#13;
Joe Boberts has his new barn&#13;
completed. Neil McClear did the&#13;
work.&#13;
Alta Bullis is visiting at the&#13;
home of John Boberts at present.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Barber and&#13;
daughter visited at the home of&#13;
Joe Roberts one day last week.&#13;
Stops Neuralgia—Kill Pain&#13;
Sloan's Liuiment gives instant relief&#13;
from Neuralgia or Sciatica- It goes straight&#13;
t:&gt; the jainful part—Smoothes the Nerves&#13;
h."d Stops the Pain. It is also good for&#13;
/heumatism, Sore Throat, Chest Pains&#13;
and Sprains. You don't need to rub—it&#13;
penetrate. Mr. J . R. Swinger, Louisville,&#13;
. . writes:''1 suffered with quite a severe&#13;
Neuralgic Headache four mouths without&#13;
any relief. I used Sloan's1 Liuiment for&#13;
two or three nights and I haveu't suffered&#13;
./illi my head since." Get a bottle to-day&#13;
Keep in the house all the time for pains&#13;
and all hurts. 2 5 c , 50c. and $1.00. Recommended&#13;
by C. G. Meyer, the druggist&#13;
f Monuments&#13;
If you are contemplating&#13;
getting a monument, marker,&#13;
or anthing for the cemetery,&#13;
see or write&#13;
t&#13;
i S. S. PLATT I&#13;
HOYVKLL, MICH.&#13;
No Agents. Save Their Commission&#13;
Z Bbeelll Phone 190 ^&#13;
-GOING TO BUY A PIANO&#13;
OR SEWING MACHINE&#13;
YES?&#13;
SEE L. R. WILLIAMS.&#13;
GREGORY&#13;
JJeT'He saves you money on hi^h&#13;
grade pianos.&#13;
tmwmvmvwwmwmvmimimimw&#13;
Grand Trunk Time Table&#13;
For the convenience of our readers&#13;
Trains East Trains Wes;&#13;
No. 46—8 :32 a/m. No. lo—10:93 a. m&#13;
No. 4§—4:39 p. m. No. 47—7:20 p. m.&#13;
"?-':W ••»&#13;
*&amp;.•*• j ; -*C&#13;
3¾¾&#13;
W x&amp;m&#13;
"''•'»L*~:,.J&#13;
**&gt; 'y&#13;
' • &lt; &lt; - • „&#13;
x tbitguay't Whitewash.&#13;
travelers through Urutfcine&#13;
fine white cou&#13;
ot'ot'^^p/i^p^ingB even during&#13;
the wet-seassfc, JBie jeffect is obtained&#13;
t&gt;y a whitewash iS whtefi the juice of&#13;
the common cactus plays the prominent&#13;
part. The sliced leaves are macerated&#13;
in water for twenty-four hours,&#13;
and to this creamy liquid lime is add-&#13;
»4. The wash applied to any substance&#13;
produces a beautiful pearly&#13;
white appearance which lasts for&#13;
years.&#13;
You're BlUkmt an* Cert! re!&#13;
Sick Headache, Pad Breath, Sour Stomach;&#13;
Furred Tongue and Indigestion,&#13;
Mean Liver and bowel* dogged. Clean&#13;
up to-night. Get a 25c bottle of Dr.&#13;
Kings New Life Pills to-day and empty&#13;
the stomach and bowels of fermenting,&#13;
gassy foods snd waste. A fall bowel movemeat&#13;
g t m a satisfied, thankful feeling—&#13;
Bailees you fee! fine.. Effective, jet mud.&#13;
Don't gripe. 25c. Recommended by C.&#13;
O, Mayer, the druggist. '&#13;
HOME&#13;
P I N C K N E Y&#13;
AUGUST 5 ^*****&gt;*3&#13;
Not a Dull Moment From Wednesday Morning Greeting&#13;
Until You Leave the Grand Ball Thursday Night&#13;
General Program and Announcement&#13;
S&#13;
•'•#2&#13;
Village Tax Notice&#13;
The village tax roll for the year&#13;
1914 is now iu my bands for collection.&#13;
Fred Swarthout,&#13;
adv, Village Treasurer&#13;
It Did.&#13;
In "Bohemian Days In Fleet Street"&#13;
the following story of Charlie Williams,&#13;
the war correspondent, appears:&#13;
"Charlie Williams could have given&#13;
Baron Munchausen a stone and a beating.&#13;
He spoke whh a rasping North&#13;
of Ireland accent, and his campaign&#13;
anecdotes gained greatly by the stolid,&#13;
matter of fact manner in which they&#13;
were narrated. I recall now one of bis&#13;
campaign reminiscences. It is a quaint&#13;
experience of a correspondent under&#13;
are. * •&#13;
" 'I had got under coyer of a big&#13;
bowlder and had tethered my horse&#13;
beside me. I was just mflnchin' a&#13;
lx«skit, when n shell burst on the rock&#13;
on* shot the nosebag right off my&#13;
charger. He had shoved his ould head&#13;
out of cover.1&#13;
" 'And you?' asked Pearse.&#13;
" 'I just went on munchin' my beskit.'&#13;
'• 'But,' suggested Dunning, Mf the&#13;
shell took away the nosebag it ought&#13;
to have carried away the beast's head&#13;
as well.'&#13;
" 'It did/ replied Williams, with the&#13;
utmost sang frold."&#13;
and Mrs. Eugene Berry&#13;
sad Bay Howard of Defroit and&#13;
Anna and Emmett Berry of 8tool&gt;&#13;
&gt;tidg* were Sunday' Tttitort af&#13;
tb# bome of Alfred Monka.&#13;
Watch the Clock.&#13;
If the passion for efficiency accomplishes&#13;
nothing more It will—indeed, it&#13;
has already—upset one of the most sacred&#13;
tenets that altruistic employers&#13;
ever put into the constitution and bylaws&#13;
for the observance of employees.&#13;
That tenet is, Don't watch the clock.&#13;
It was hoped, of course, that if employees&#13;
could be made to ^oqjet.thA&#13;
clock they might also format t i § *&#13;
home at the expiration of ttet Ha* ft?&#13;
which they were paid. ^''"•'i^*--'&#13;
Efficiency now makes the Sffmjjukkm*&#13;
ary demand 4Uat you should never take&#13;
ypw*1 ^res from the clock. To be a&#13;
topnotcher in efficiency you must go&#13;
even further. You must get a stop&#13;
Watch, with split second hands and&#13;
make sure that each minutest division&#13;
of time has assigned to it a precise&#13;
and particular action, being or&#13;
state. Watch the clock, my boywatch&#13;
the clock If you want to make&#13;
a success in this work!.—Ellis O. Jones&#13;
in Lipplncotfs.&#13;
The ladies of the M. £. church&#13;
will hold a bake sale in their&#13;
rooms below the opera house, this&#13;
Saturday, July 11.&#13;
The Dispatch erred last week in&#13;
stating that Catherine McCloskey&#13;
received a B. Pd. Degree from the&#13;
State Normal at Ypsilanti this&#13;
year. We areinformed that there&#13;
is oo person by that name in this&#13;
seotion, altta Katharine £noill«&#13;
MtCHoikey of near Pinckney, rereived&#13;
that degree last year.&#13;
W E D N E S D A Y&#13;
General reception of guests, renewing old friendships and forming&#13;
new ones—a genuine good time. Wednesday Evening. Meeting&#13;
and reception at the opera house to which all are invited.&#13;
Songs, music, speeches and stories by old boys and girls from far&#13;
and near—a veritable love feast.&#13;
T H U R S D A Y&#13;
The regular triennial basket picnic will be held on the Public&#13;
Park. Come and enjoy one day at least among old friends and&#13;
associates, it will add years to life. Thursday Evening. BIG&#13;
DANCE AT THE OPERA HOUSE with first class music.&#13;
The Dexter Band of 2 4 Pieces&#13;
Will Furnish the Music for Both Days&#13;
Vr.-*'&#13;
r &gt;&#13;
3 Big Ball Games 3&#13;
Wednesday Afternoon, Thursday Morning and Thursday Afternoon&#13;
V&#13;
Athletic Sports of All&#13;
Wednesday Afternoon, one o'clock&#13;
m&#13;
M-&#13;
.,-:.*-,&#13;
^ * » ( -&#13;
» * • :&#13;
Bicycle Race&#13;
100 ft. One Ue^ed Race&#13;
Running Backward Race&#13;
Potato Race, Estc.&#13;
Good Substancial Prizes Will Be Awarded&#13;
100 yd. Dash&#13;
Throwing Weight&#13;
Hurdel Race&#13;
Thursdla^Mfc on, one o&#13;
Street Attract ions Galore&#13;
rf\ -S*'&lt;9&#13;
This will be a H0ME-C0MIH6 to meet and greet your friends, Th« key to&#13;
the old town is yours. Bring the "Wds" and aH enjoy a rid* on&#13;
.¾¾&#13;
» Vy&#13;
The committees and officers are sparing no pains to make ihis the best;&#13;
meeting aver held by the association antf they&#13;
your friends i</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch July 09, 1914</text>
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                <text>July 09, 1914 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1914-07-09</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, July 16, 1914 No. 29&#13;
(i. 1'&#13;
t'&#13;
I k&#13;
t&#13;
I&#13;
*"&#13;
^ ¾ ^&#13;
,&lt;»J a •V*»*&#13;
if \&#13;
Library Money&#13;
Oii Jnly 15 of tbie year the&#13;
Superintendent of Public Instruction&#13;
will sand to the county clerks&#13;
ol the state a statement showing&#13;
the districts that are entitled to&#13;
share in the dietrubution of the&#13;
penal fines or library money in&#13;
their respective counties. The&#13;
apportionment of this money&#13;
should be made by the county&#13;
treasurer before the first day of&#13;
August to the several townships&#13;
in his county. The township&#13;
treasurers are required by law to&#13;
make a report to each director in&#13;
their township of the library&#13;
money due his district on or before&#13;
August 15.&#13;
It the township treasurer has&#13;
not received bis statement from&#13;
the county treasurer within a&#13;
reasonable time after August 1 he&#13;
should apply for same, and directors&#13;
of school districts should see&#13;
that their to #nsbip treasurer has&#13;
made a report to them on or before&#13;
August 15 of the primary and&#13;
library funds due their respective&#13;
dtstriots.&#13;
Keeping Up-to-date&#13;
The Pinckney Dispatch is keeping&#13;
abreatt with the times and is&#13;
now installing a new Hoe press&#13;
which will print four pages where&#13;
we have only printed one at a&#13;
rnn heretofore. The press was&#13;
purchased through.the Milwaukee&#13;
.Printers Boiler Company of&#13;
WjBConejnrOBe of the best concerns&#13;
in the couutry dealing in&#13;
printing machinery. Mr. Oscar&#13;
Koebler^of Milwaukee^ one of&#13;
their expert t machinists is here&#13;
this week to set up the press. He&#13;
is a ooaeter macbanic, understanding&#13;
every phase of his trade. He&#13;
not wily set up the press, but run&#13;
•oftthe papers this week, proving&#13;
bis work and the press satisfactory&#13;
in every respect. The installation&#13;
ofLftbis press certainly causes the&#13;
editor much rejoicing,&#13;
We will be pleased to welcome&#13;
any and all of our friends in to&#13;
see this. new press, which is a&#13;
credit not only to the village but&#13;
the rich farming section which it&#13;
.represents. Come in some Wednesday&#13;
afternoon and- enjoy it&#13;
with us.&#13;
/&gt;&#13;
Look Before You Buy&#13;
Get the habit of looking before&#13;
you by.&#13;
Get the habit of knowing, when&#13;
to look and where to look.&#13;
It is a habit that will save you&#13;
many dollars in the; run of a year.&#13;
As a habit, it h one of the&#13;
principal aids to success in life.&#13;
Study the advertising pages of&#13;
the Dispatch each week.&#13;
Study them with a two-fold purwere&#13;
aj^6^ to fork o^er an addi-'pose--the determining of what&#13;
goods to buy, and where to find&#13;
Sot*,« part of line^rtora^H^^them. v&#13;
If a local jnercbao t -spends m on*&#13;
ojf uir advertising his -wares,, it is&#13;
safe to assume that he is able to"&#13;
Show Failed to Appear&#13;
A 'one riiig circus was billed lo&#13;
hit Pinckney Satorday&gt; July 11,&#13;
but owing to difficulties eoconnt-&#13;
^ ered near JPlainfield, it failed. to&#13;
"arrive, Several stories areafloat&#13;
~$£gpi$!j#|.. Barteno's non-apear&#13;
^AW^ - 0 » stated that hotel bilk&#13;
* feni not lb*th-cbming," and anr&#13;
other, that although it was advertised&#13;
that the whole show ooaJd be&#13;
. witnessed for 25c, that people&#13;
The Michigan State Fair&#13;
The Premium List for the&#13;
Michigan State fair, the 65th&#13;
annual exhibition of the Michigan&#13;
State Agricultural Society, which&#13;
will be held Sept. 7-18; is being&#13;
distributed by Secretary-Manager&#13;
G. W. Dickinson, The volume&#13;
details $150,000 in premiums and&#13;
purses which will be awarded this&#13;
year, several notable additions&#13;
having been made. China and&#13;
Fine Arte have been added and&#13;
liberal premiums are offered for&#13;
amateur and professional china&#13;
painting and for original paintings&#13;
in water and oil. Premiums&#13;
in the Livestock Department having&#13;
been increased more than 25&#13;
per cent over 1913 and the Evening&#13;
Horse Show will become an&#13;
international contest, as a number&#13;
of Canadian Btables will enter&#13;
their prize winning horses.&#13;
A Clara Barton Hospital is now&#13;
under course of erection on the&#13;
grounds and during the two weeks&#13;
of the Fair, will be equipped with&#13;
a full hospital staff. The hospital&#13;
will provide 12 beds, an operating&#13;
room, nurses' quarters, and all the&#13;
other appurtenances of a modern&#13;
hospital. Upon the upper floor&#13;
of this bnilding will be held the&#13;
Babies' Health. Contest, another&#13;
new and very important feature of&#13;
this year's Fair,&#13;
The horae races throughout the&#13;
fortnight will be up to the State&#13;
Fair standard, which places them&#13;
on a high plane; and in* addition&#13;
there will be automobile raceawith&#13;
"Wild Bob" Burman, the Speed&#13;
King; Disb.row, llearne, Rainey,&#13;
Heinemann and a dozen other&#13;
noted diivers. The shows on the&#13;
Midway will be high class and the&#13;
world-famous Kilties Band will&#13;
furnish mueic throughout the Fair.&#13;
The Boys' State Fair School&#13;
will be on the same comprehensive&#13;
basis as last year and nearly a&#13;
hundred youths will have the privilege&#13;
of attending the exhibition as&#13;
guests of the management.&#13;
The premium list is an attractive&#13;
volume and handily arranged&#13;
with indexes) Copies of it should&#13;
be in the hands of every Michigan&#13;
citizen and may be had for the&#13;
asking at the office of this newspaper.&#13;
s&#13;
.•'r&lt;k. t . ^.-4&#13;
V fc-'&gt; .f •'&#13;
••tinthi^'&#13;
BittS«ioft&#13;
JA&amp;ni Aiatut,&#13;
HAVE XOD THOUGHT OF&#13;
YOUR&#13;
and the things necessary for yonr^OOli^&#13;
fort and enjoyment '• '&#13;
To fill a prescription right a drug store must&#13;
first have the^ RIGHT KIND of preparations. Ours&#13;
are pure and tested. Then knowledge and care must be&#13;
used. Strychnine and Quinine LOOK alike, but don't&#13;
ACT alike. Our Registered pharmacists KNOW HOW&#13;
to fill prescriptions and we VERIFY everyone before&#13;
we send it out.*&#13;
This is why we DESERVE your drug business.&#13;
We give you what you ASK for&#13;
C. G. M E Y E R&#13;
P i n c k n e y , M i c h . P h o n e 5 5 r 3&#13;
Here is a list which will add to the&#13;
—— pleasures of your trip.&#13;
Nyal's Peroxide Cream&#13;
For freckles and sunburn&#13;
25c the Jar ~ - 26c the Jar&#13;
i 1....1 • . i i i i 11 _ • MSntholatum&#13;
For mosquito bites and insect stings 25c&#13;
• «»• I • ! • • • I l l MP I . M ^ M , .1 ! • • .1 - ^ 1 ^ ^ - 1 ^ , ^ , ^ ^ ^ ^ 1 | , — . • - W X ^ M ^ M P&#13;
Peroxide&#13;
AJ an antiseptic and germicide in case&#13;
of an accident. 10,15 and 25c bottles&#13;
Toilet Waters, Lotions, Face Powders&#13;
and Talcums to cool and refresh the&#13;
body after a trip or busy day of jo)liftcation.&#13;
Water Wings&#13;
For those learning to swim. 25c the pair&#13;
Kodaks and Cameras&#13;
To give you an everlasting souvenir of&#13;
the good times that have passed.&#13;
$1.25 to $25.&#13;
Stationery&#13;
To write-to the folks at home about the&#13;
good time you are having. 25c to $100&#13;
Books arid Magazines&#13;
To read while traveling or resting.&#13;
ALSO&#13;
Lunch sets 10c., paper plate's 10., paper&#13;
napkins, drinking cups, candy, cigars,&#13;
tobaccos, cigarettes and pipes.&#13;
V&#13;
r SHa sraft game ^reiol tetf i&amp; t | e&#13;
firi^ol^ftorteno v,w^.'Lki:Tsi?toWT&#13;
&gt;4^^-ps^-iiijg theii;S»«. th«y made&#13;
lieif way o«t $ ^^aection of Unake ^ goo\l on every statement&#13;
iwr^z&amp;j*: * ^^'J^ Z'*'\l .,^^---:/^.-/ l * # « l ^ f e t o a s s | i m e t h a t t h e&#13;
\-.*^^^r:':--¾¾ •'•-":."-r-r-y-^^^L^...-&gt;.. - ,, .bome.man will do.,more. good for&#13;
+%J^:j&amp;&amp; W.'i&amp;&amp;^r«y? which{&#13;
Xktti*&amp;o&amp;*i^y&amp;W you.&#13;
U$$ $**&amp; $*&amp;: ^r^-yo»^fseif "a&gt; 'r- &gt;Q*k. ? ^he^lahit. j j ( . ^ t t e , jUoe&#13;
^ ¾ ^ ¾ ^ ¾ ^ &amp;** »«n.the first-/rtuia^&lt;&#13;
*#erj»e#^«ii^ It J»#^W* ^ w h ^ g a i ^ j ^&#13;
A Square Deal ?&#13;
,The privilege of printing the&#13;
report ef the Board of Supervisors&#13;
proceedings has always been given&#13;
to the newspaper who . made the&#13;
lowest bid*in this county. At the&#13;
recent meeting of the Board,&#13;
County Clerk Miner informs us&#13;
that a tie resulted between the&#13;
Livingston Democrat sod the&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch, Without&#13;
giving any chance to re-bid, the&#13;
printing was given to the Dem-i&#13;
ocrat by the printing committee.&#13;
Is that a square deal?&#13;
For CYCLONJB INSURANCE&#13;
see H. W. Crofoot. ^ajjv.&#13;
Ross Read and family ^and T.&#13;
Read and family spent Sunday in&#13;
Ann Arbor.&#13;
Glenn Burgess of Chesanuing&#13;
spent the paet week at the home&#13;
of W. C. fionning.&#13;
THE CENTRAL'&#13;
A btore fall of bargains and the greatest bargain o( all&#13;
is the fact that with 50 eta. worth of trade in anything except&#13;
sngar we will give away absolntely free one box of, corn&#13;
flakes; with one dollar's worth of trade two boxes. No&#13;
more than two boxes to any one family. Above oh*er good&#13;
until next paper comes out, if our Bupply laats that long.&#13;
jn addition to the above bargains we again offer small&#13;
boy's troaserB fp^ 19 cte. while they last; men's $2.00&#13;
trousers for $1.60 and three pairs of men's 15 cts. socks for&#13;
25 cts.&#13;
The CENTRAL STORB&#13;
Mre*. A.. JM*. Utley, Prop.&#13;
Watch Out For Bills of&#13;
Murphy &amp; Jackson's&#13;
Big Sale&#13;
July 22nd to August 1st&#13;
IT WILL BE A MONEY SAVER FOR CASH&#13;
%&#13;
*4»\, \ 4&#13;
• 4 *&#13;
THIS WBBK SPECIALS&#13;
" . . . ; . . . • • • ' ' ' ' ' . Sample-Line Misses and Childrens Dresses at&#13;
M&#13;
£.,&#13;
•J*&#13;
:• -'in&#13;
rfvr.&#13;
-¾&#13;
Wholesale Prices 4ges 4, 6, 8, 10, 12 and 15 yrs.&#13;
4-&#13;
•f&gt;Tpm -*.&#13;
^.-Jm-tZ*!.&#13;
l i '*•'•"&#13;
mv-. '•&#13;
1' "" *&#13;
K I&#13;
t f -&#13;
b-\..&#13;
W" i&#13;
&amp;&#13;
*?/«-.&#13;
ip'7 ;&#13;
, # •&#13;
tV":&#13;
- . '• r&#13;
* • • • - * • "'•&#13;
&gt;-...&gt;,'&#13;
&amp;.;&#13;
^ . : : - , } &gt; / ! : • - : ; • : • . / ' ' • '&#13;
V PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
THREE LOSE OVES&#13;
WHEN HOUSE BURNS&#13;
PETER WUICIK LOSES LIFE IN&#13;
ATTEMPTING TO SAVE&#13;
NIECE.&#13;
CANDLE DROPS INTO STRAW&#13;
Shanty In Foreign Quarters of Flint&#13;
Goes Up In Flames and Two of&#13;
Four Occupants Are Cremated.&#13;
Flint, Mich.—Two persons were&#13;
burned to death and a third so seriously&#13;
injured that he died a few hours&#13;
later in a fire which destroyed&#13;
a shanty owned by Peter Wuicik, a&#13;
peddler, in the foreign quarter of the&#13;
city, about 1 o'clock Friday morning,&#13;
The dead are:&#13;
Peter Wuicik aged 43, and Carrie&#13;
Copacz, aged 7, his niece.&#13;
John Capacz, aged 43, father of the&#13;
dead girl, badly burned about head,&#13;
face and feet died a few hours after&#13;
the fire.&#13;
A candle which was left burning&#13;
on the floor of the room occupied by&#13;
Wuicik and his niece is thought to&#13;
have ignited straw which littered the&#13;
place.&#13;
Mrs. Copacz, who was sleeping with&#13;
her husband in the only other room&#13;
of the shanty, was awakened as she&#13;
choked with smoke. She screamed to&#13;
her husband, who groped his way&#13;
to the next room, which was then filled&#13;
with flames. He sought the bed&#13;
of his daughter, but it was empty&#13;
and he staggered into the yard, where&#13;
he dropped, writhing in agony.&#13;
The place was in ruins.within five&#13;
minutes, and the bodies of Wuicik and&#13;
Carrie Copacz were found together In&#13;
ft corner behind the cook stove. Both&#13;
were burned to a crisp. Wuicik's&#13;
arms encircled the girl's body, Apparently&#13;
he had tried to save her but&#13;
became confused and went in the opposite&#13;
direction from the only door&#13;
leading from the shanty, falling overcome&#13;
by the flames.&#13;
MAN KILLED IN MOTOR WRECK&#13;
Party of Five in Machine Which Goes&#13;
Into Ditch near Grand Rapids.&#13;
*»&#13;
Grand Rapids, Mich.—One man was&#13;
killed and two girls and two other&#13;
men were severely injured at 1:30&#13;
Thursday morning, when an automobile&#13;
carrying the party of five went&#13;
Into the ditch at Dead Man'B curve on&#13;
the Plainfleld road, two miles north&#13;
ef the city.&#13;
The dead:'&#13;
- Gerald W. Doan, 24 years old* son&#13;
of Aid. J. G. Doan, of this city, neck&#13;
broken, died Instantly.&#13;
The Injured:&#13;
Katharine Lee, 19 years old, 422&#13;
Warden street, bruised and Injured.&#13;
Elma Lafferty, 19 years old, 742&#13;
Worden street, bruised and injured.&#13;
F. W. McGraw, 25 years old, 1153&#13;
Jefferson avenue, saleman, head Cut,&#13;
many bruises, rendered unconscious.&#13;
He was buried under the machine.&#13;
Frank Watts, 26 years old, Howard&#13;
City, agent for a Chicago trust corporation,&#13;
owner of the car, head and&#13;
legs badly hurt and rendered unconscious.&#13;
Perched oa the rear fenders were&#13;
Doan and McGraw. It was the only&#13;
aaat for them, as the two girls were&#13;
In the driver's seat with Watts, who&#13;
was at the wheel. The car pinned&#13;
Doan beneath it.&#13;
&gt; .''L .•'"V &gt; Kli-A .,&#13;
Another Holdup at Escanaba.&#13;
Escanaba, Mich.—Two bandits Saturday&#13;
held up two Danforth farmers&#13;
at they were going home. The robbery&#13;
was committed within 80 rods&#13;
of. the North Escanaba Soo line station,&#13;
which has been held up five&#13;
times in six months, the last time being&#13;
two weeks ago when the agent&#13;
was shot.&#13;
Highwaymen got nothing from the&#13;
farmers and disappeared in the&#13;
swamps.&#13;
TELE6RAPHIC FLASHES&#13;
, five of the seven Saginaw Chinese&#13;
arretted on the charge of smuggling&#13;
aliens Into this country bare .been&#13;
released from the Bay City prison: on&#13;
bait"&#13;
Tha third drowning Benton Harbor&#13;
^ ¾ ¾ to fomr days occurred Wednesday&#13;
. k night whan Oeo. Ball, 15, went to his&#13;
&gt; ^4»«* while swimming In 81 Joseph&#13;
. x-'- Tha annual camp meeting of the&#13;
i .* Horth Ohio Camp Meeting association&#13;
^ cf the United Brethren church will&#13;
be held atJUUMss Aeeembly park, a -it,*-&#13;
/ •&#13;
• •e^eeje^s' ^a^semmj^ V s asvsleiBmpmjBmmm^p d^B&gt;s£S&amp;tjSjew% A A £4B)&#13;
&gt;**s5 ' •"* * r&#13;
RETIREMENT CLOSES&#13;
UNUSUAL NAVAL CAREER&#13;
REAR ADMIRAL WILLIAM H. M.&#13;
SOUTHERLAND.&#13;
Washington—One of the very few&#13;
meu who rose to the highest rank in&#13;
the navy from his position as an enlisted&#13;
man, Rear Admiral William H.&#13;
H. Southerland, was placed, on the&#13;
retired list Friday by reason of having&#13;
reached the statutory age of 62 years.&#13;
He was born in New York and appointed&#13;
as a naval apprentice in 1868&#13;
and because of peculiar aptitude and&#13;
excellent service was transferred to&#13;
the naval academy, from which he&#13;
graduated with honors. During Theodore&#13;
Roosevelt's incumbency as assistant&#13;
secretary of the navy, Southehland&#13;
was his naval aide.&#13;
ACCIDENT BOARD REPORT&#13;
First Six Months of Year Show Nearly&#13;
Eight Thousand Cases Completed&#13;
and Payments Made.&#13;
Lansing, Mich.—According to figures&#13;
prepared by the industrial accident&#13;
board, 6,787 cases have been&#13;
closed and payments for compensation&#13;
completed from January 1 to June&#13;
30. Of this number 3,936 workmen&#13;
were Incapacitated for a period of&#13;
less than eight weeks: 1,365 were disabled&#13;
for eight weeks or longer; 440&#13;
received injuries which necessitated&#13;
the amputation or loss of some member,&#13;
such as finger, toe, eye, etc. Of&#13;
the completed cases on which payments&#13;
have been reported, 46 were&#13;
fatal.&#13;
These cases involve the payment of&#13;
$427,233.73. The cost of medical attention&#13;
has been reported in only&#13;
2,688 of these cases. This number&#13;
shows a cost of $75,974.86. These figures&#13;
do not include deferred payments&#13;
la total disability cases, nor fatal&#13;
cases other than the 46 reported. Payments&#13;
of compensation in the latter&#13;
classes will extend over a period of&#13;
from six to 10 years, and as fatal&#13;
oases to the number of 179 have been&#13;
reported to the board there is a deferred&#13;
liability of no Inconsiderable&#13;
amount.&#13;
TWO BIG FIRES IN&#13;
DETROIT SUNDAY&#13;
ONE THOUSAND ANIMAL8 LOSE&#13;
LIVES WHEN STOCK SHEDS&#13;
BURN.&#13;
MANY BUILDINGS IN DANGER&#13;
Paper Company's Building Is Destroyed&#13;
By Fire Caused By Bolt of&#13;
Lightning in Fierce&#13;
Storm.&#13;
Detroit—Trapped in their pens,&#13;
more than a thousand dumb animals&#13;
went to their death Sunday evening&#13;
in a fierce fire that totally destroyed&#13;
the stock sheds of the Sullivan Packing&#13;
company, Michigan and Beecher&#13;
avenues.&#13;
The blaze spread to a row of houses&#13;
on Bee£her street, burning- back&#13;
fences and sheds, and threatened to&#13;
ignite the main plant of the Sullivan&#13;
company; the Parker, Webb Packing&#13;
company; the Edison Illuminating&#13;
company's branch, and the Calvary&#13;
Presbyterian church,&#13;
Three alarms" were sent in before&#13;
enough fire apparatus reached the&#13;
scene to stem the flames, which, fanned&#13;
by a brisk breeze, swept through&#13;
the board sheds and carried blazing&#13;
shingles and splinters into the surrounding&#13;
neighborhood.&#13;
Paper Company Burned Out.&#13;
Several tremendous bolts of lightning,&#13;
in a storm that swept ove&gt; Detroit&#13;
about 2 o'clock Monday morning,&#13;
started a fire that completely destroyed&#13;
the Chope-Stevens Paper company's&#13;
building at 12-18 East #Woodbridge&#13;
street, burned out police and fire signal&#13;
boxes, and seriously interfered&#13;
with the D. U. R., Edison and telephone&#13;
company's wires.&#13;
MARKET QUOTATIONS&#13;
Live Stock, Grain and General Farm&#13;
Produce. .&#13;
Live Stock.&#13;
DETROIT—Cattle: Receipts 582,&#13;
Market steady on common others active&#13;
and 10c higher. Best dry fed&#13;
steers, $8.50@8.75; best handy weight&#13;
butcher steers, $8® 8.50; mixed steers&#13;
and heifers, $7.50®8; handy light&#13;
butchers, $6.75® 7.60; light butchers,&#13;
$6.50® 6.75; best cows, $6@6.50; butcher&#13;
cows, $5.25@5.75; common cows,&#13;
$4.50®5.60; canners, $2©4,25; best&#13;
heavy bulls, $6,75@7; bologna bulls,&#13;
$6®6.25; stock bulls, $5®5.50; feeders,&#13;
$6.75@7.75; stockers, $6.25 @V,&#13;
milkers and springers, $40®75. Veal&#13;
calves; Receipts, 285; market strong.&#13;
Best, $10.50 @11, others, $8@9.50.&#13;
Sheep and lambs; Receipts, 1,289;&#13;
market steady. Best lambs, $9; fair&#13;
lambs, $8 (§8.50; light to common&#13;
lambs, $6®7.50; yearlings, $7.50; fair&#13;
to good sheep, $4.50@5.50; culls and&#13;
common, $2.50®3.50. Hogs: Receipts,&#13;
1,840; market 5c higher; all gradeB,&#13;
$8.70@8.75; bulk at $8.70.&#13;
BLAME PLACED ON ST0RSTAD&#13;
Commission of Inquiry Reports On&#13;
Empress of Ireland Disaster.&#13;
ALL READY FOfLENCAMPMENT&#13;
National Guard will Go Into Camp for&#13;
First Time In Two Years.&#13;
Lansing, Mich.—Plans are practical*&#13;
ly complete for the annual encampment&#13;
of the Michigan National Guard,&#13;
which opens at the new Grayling site&#13;
Aug. S.&#13;
This will be the first encampment&#13;
of the state military In two years.&#13;
Just as the guards were about to&#13;
start for camp last year they were&#13;
sent to the copper mines strike and&#13;
the idea of an encampment was abandoned.&#13;
Instead of mobilizing the entire&#13;
guard at Grayling at one time, the&#13;
men will assemble in three detachments.&#13;
The Second infantry, C. A&#13;
of the signal corps and Co. A of the&#13;
engineers will reach camp Aug. 3.&#13;
The two batteries of artillery will&#13;
leave Lansing Aug. 21.&#13;
MICHIGAN NEWS IN BRIEF&#13;
Cadillac's city water has been declared&#13;
unsafe by the state board of&#13;
health, and all users have been notified&#13;
to boil " their water. Recently&#13;
thousands of fish died in the lakes&#13;
from which the city water is procured.&#13;
The claim of Mrs. Mary Fox, of&#13;
Arcadia, against the defunct Fox 6&#13;
Mason Furniture Co., of Corunna, was&#13;
disallowed in bankruptcy court at Bay&#13;
City; Friday afternoon. She asked&#13;
$20,000, claiming It was due her on&#13;
uotes issued by the company.&#13;
H&#13;
Quebec—The commission of inquiry&#13;
that investigated the sinking of the&#13;
Empress of Ireland in the St. Lawrence&#13;
May 29 with a loss of more than&#13;
1,000 lives, announced its decision&#13;
Saturday, holding that the collier&#13;
Storstad, which rarrimed the Empress,&#13;
was responsible for the disaster.&#13;
The principal point which the court&#13;
was called upon to decide was whether&#13;
the responsibility for the tragedy&#13;
was divided or whether it rested solely&#13;
on the officers of one of the ships.&#13;
Lord Mersey said that the members&#13;
of the court had taken pains to get&#13;
all the enlightenment possible on this&#13;
phase, and that*after deliberation&#13;
over the evidence, they had come to&#13;
the conclusion that the Storstad was&#13;
in fault because she had changed her&#13;
course after fog had settled down upon&#13;
the river. Up to the time the fog&#13;
appeared no fault could be found with&#13;
the seamanship of either set of officers,&#13;
Working For New Road.&#13;
Battle Creek, Mich.-—Lansing and&#13;
Battle Creek are working together on&#13;
a plan for a good road to connect the&#13;
two cities and to cut off 15 miles of&#13;
the present route. A good road has&#13;
been begun from Battle Creek to&#13;
Bellevue, which will cue part of the&#13;
distance. The Chambers of Commerce&#13;
of the two cities will ask the state&#13;
legislature for appropriation for the&#13;
road as a state truck line. If the&#13;
state won't give enough to cover the&#13;
total costs, Calhoun, Ingham and Eston&#13;
counties will chip in for the balance.&#13;
Shippers Win Liability Point&#13;
Lansing, Mich.—Several weeks ago&#13;
Grand Rapids shippers appealed to&#13;
the state railroad commission for an&#13;
order requiring the Pere Marquette,&#13;
Grand Rapids and Indiana, Michigan&#13;
Central and Detroit, Grand Haven ft&#13;
Milwaukee railroads to eliminate from&#13;
the shipping contracts the clause&#13;
which removed the liability of the&#13;
carriers when fruit andother perishable&#13;
products was not consigned in&#13;
refrigerator cars. An order to this&#13;
effect was issued by the commission&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Supreme Justice Lurton It Dead.&#13;
Atlanta City, N. J.—Associate Justice&#13;
Horace Harmon Lurton, of the&#13;
United States supreme court, died&#13;
suddenly at a hotel here Sunday from&#13;
heart failure, superinduced by cardiac&#13;
asthma. He was 70 years old.&#13;
ITEMS OF STATE INTEREST&#13;
The new-Methodist church at Crofwell,&#13;
is expectedto be ready for oe&gt;&#13;
cupency within the no*two weeks&#13;
EAST BUFFALO—Cattle—Receipts&#13;
1,600; best dry-fed grades l$@15c&#13;
higher; others steady; choice to prime&#13;
shipping steers, $9.20@9.60; fair to&#13;
good, $8.75 (g&gt;9; plain and coarse, $8.35&#13;
@8.50; choice to prime handy steers,&#13;
$8.50&lt;g&gt;8.75; fair to good, $8.15@8.25;&#13;
light common, $7.50 ®7.75; yearlings,&#13;
$8.25@9; prime fat heifers, $8@8.20;&#13;
good butcher heifers, $7.75@9; light&#13;
butcher heifers, $7@7.75; best fat&#13;
cows, $7 @7.25; good butcher cows,&#13;
$6@6.75; canners and cutters, $3.90®&#13;
6; best feeders, $7.25@7.50; good feed*&#13;
ers, $6.-75@7; best stockers, $6.25®&#13;
6.75; common to good, $5.50@6; best&#13;
bulls, $6.75 @7.50; good killing bulls,&#13;
$6.25® 6.75; stock and medium bulls,&#13;
$5&lt;§&gt;6; milkers and springers, $35®&#13;
90.&#13;
Hogs—Receipts, 16,000; market 10&#13;
@15c higher; heavy and yorkers, $8.90&#13;
pigs, $8.75(3)8.84.&#13;
Sheep and lambs; Receipts, 3,000;&#13;
market steady; top lambs, $99.25;&#13;
yearlings, $7@8; wethers, $6,256.76;&#13;
ewes, $4.23@5.60.&#13;
Calves: Receipts, 600; strong;&#13;
tops, $11.50; fair to good, $8.50&lt;g&gt;9.50;&#13;
grassers, $5@7.&#13;
Grains Etc.&#13;
DETROIT—Wheat—Cash No. 2 red,&#13;
87 l-2c; July opened without change&#13;
at 81 l-2c and declined to 81 l-4c;&#13;
September opened at 81 3-4c and declined&#13;
to 81 l-2c; December opened&#13;
at 85 l-2c and declinde to 85c; No. 1&#13;
white, 87c.&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 8, 70c; No. 3 yellow,&#13;
2 cars at 71 l-2c; No. 4 yellow,&#13;
69 l-2c.&#13;
Oats—Standard, 2 cars at 39c;' No.&#13;
8 white, 2 cars at 38 l-2c; No. 4 white,&#13;
2 cars at 36 l-2c; sample, 1 car at&#13;
86 l-2c.&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 63c; July, 56c.&#13;
Beans—Immediate and prompt shipment,&#13;
$1.92; July, fl.95; October, $2.&#13;
Cloverseed — Prime spot, $8.30;&#13;
October and December, $8.75; prime&#13;
alslke, $10.&#13;
Timothy—Prime spot, $2.70.&#13;
Alfalfa—Prime spot, $8.35.&#13;
Hay—Carlots, track Detroit; No. 1&#13;
timothy, $16® 16.50; standard, $15®&#13;
15.60; No. 2 timothy, $13® 14; light&#13;
mixed, $15® 16.50; No. 1 mixed $13®&#13;
13.50; No. clover, $12.60® 13; heavy&#13;
clover mixed, $12.60® 13; rye straw,&#13;
$8®8.50; wheat and oat straw, $7®&#13;
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, $4.60; spring patent, $5.10;&#13;
rye, $4.40 per bbl. '&#13;
Feed—In 100 lb sacks, jobbing lots:&#13;
Bran, $23; standard middlings, $28;&#13;
fine middlings, $30; coarse cornmeal,&#13;
$31; cracked corn, $32; corn and oat&#13;
chop, $28.50 per ton.&#13;
General Markets.&#13;
Huckleberries—$3.50®4 per bu.&#13;
Blackberries—$1.25® 1.60 per 16«&#13;
quart case. -&#13;
New Apples—Transparent, $1.75;&#13;
Duchess $2 per crate, boxes $1.75®2.&#13;
Raspberries—Black, $1.60® 1.75 per&#13;
16-quart case; red, $4.50®5 per bu.&#13;
Cherries—Sour, $1.25; sweet, $1.50&#13;
per 16-quart case; black Tartarian,&#13;
$1.76 per 16-quart case.&#13;
Green Corn—65® 60c per doz.&#13;
Cabbage—-Home-frown, $1.76® 2 per&#13;
bbl.&#13;
Potatoes—Virginia Red Star, $4.76&#13;
®6 per bbl.&#13;
Dressed Hogs—Lifht, 9® 10c; heavy&#13;
8®8 l-2c per lb.&#13;
Dressed Calves—Fancy, 12® 13c;&#13;
common, 10®lie per lb. N&#13;
Tomatoes—Texas flats, $1.26® 1.35;&#13;
Mississippi flats, $1,26® 1.35; hothouse&#13;
I2®16cperlb.&#13;
Honey—Choice to fancy new white&#13;
comb, U®16c; amber, 16®lld; extracted,&#13;
«®7c per lb.&#13;
, Onions—California, tftJ0#t per cwt&#13;
LortsJaha, *6.*0®6 per cwt: Mexico,&#13;
f i l l per crate; Spanish, $8 pet crate.&#13;
BEST METHOD FOR CABBAGE&#13;
Culinary Expsrt Tells How the Vegetable&#13;
May. Be Served Up In Appetizing&#13;
Way.&#13;
Cabbage, and ether vegetables that&#13;
form into* heads, should be soaked in&#13;
cold water, heads down, to which&#13;
salt or a little vinegar has been added.&#13;
This will drive out worms or insects if&#13;
any are in hiding among the leave*.&#13;
Half an hour is long enough to allow&#13;
the vegetables to remain in the water.&#13;
Take one-half or one-quarter of the&#13;
head of cabbage, according to quantity&#13;
required, and shave it down fine, as tor&#13;
slaw; put it in very cold water, enough&#13;
to Just cover it, and let it stand until&#13;
crisp; pour off this water and add&#13;
fresh cold water to barely cover it and&#13;
place over the Are; cover and bring&#13;
quickly to boiling; then remove cover&#13;
and boil rapidly until it begins to look&#13;
clear; pour off the water, season to&#13;
taste with salt and pepper, add butter&#13;
generously, a tablespoonful to two cupfuls&#13;
of cabbage, and turn into a heated&#13;
dish and serve. Hot cream, cream&#13;
sauce, sour cream sauce or cheese&#13;
sauce may be served with It, but it is&#13;
very delicate and pleasing to the taste&#13;
served plain with butter and seasoning.&#13;
If any is left over chill thoroughly&#13;
and serve as a salad with green&#13;
peppers or leftover string beans or&#13;
peas or fresh tomatoes, using French&#13;
dressing.—Lida Ames Willis.&#13;
ALL AROUND&#13;
M M If you have difficulty in- making your&#13;
pancakes or griddle cakes brown to a&#13;
turn add a spoonful of sugar or half a&#13;
spoonful of molasses to the batter and&#13;
note how easily and prettily they&#13;
brown. The bit of sugar or molasses&#13;
does not change the taste or proportions&#13;
of other Ingredients.&#13;
Waxed paper is a good thing to&#13;
wrap about the articles of food before&#13;
placing them in the refrigerator. It&#13;
should also be wrapped about cheese&#13;
and like edibles that must be kept in&#13;
a dry place.&#13;
Fly specks and dirt on mirror surfaces&#13;
may be rubbed off with a cream&#13;
made of whiting and alcohol.&#13;
When the strainer on the kitchen&#13;
faucet refuses to work well try a vinegar&#13;
bath. The deposit from the water&#13;
has clogged the tiny openings, and no&#13;
amount of brushing will clear them so&#13;
well as an overnight soaking in a cupful&#13;
of vinegar.&#13;
Canadian Pudding.&#13;
Make sauce of one quart sliced ap*&#13;
pies, one-third cup sugar, one-third cup&#13;
water, a little nutmeg; stew gently,&#13;
then pour into buttered pudding dish&#13;
and pour over it the following batter:&#13;
One pint flour, one egg, salt, one cup&#13;
milk, two level teaspoons sugar, onehalf&#13;
tablespoon melted butter, one&#13;
teaspoon cream of tartar, one-half teaspoon&#13;
soda; bake in a moderate oven;&#13;
serve with the following sauce: Onehalf&#13;
pint boiling water, one-half teaspoon&#13;
salt, one tablespoon cornstarch,&#13;
teaspoon of butter; soak this till it&#13;
thickens, then cool before adding one&#13;
cup sugar beaten with yolks of two&#13;
eggs. Lastly, whip in stiffly, beaten&#13;
whites of eggs.&#13;
Chocolate Potato Candy.&#13;
Bake one medium sized potato,&#13;
when well done scoop our the inside&#13;
and put in a basin. Work in confectioner's&#13;
sugar until creamy, then flat*&#13;
ten and cut into squares and dip&#13;
into unsweetened chocolate which has&#13;
been melted in a saucepan. Garnish&#13;
each square with halt an English walnut,&#13;
place on wax paper and allow to&#13;
cool. This dainty sweet is inexpensive&#13;
to make and is very relishable.&#13;
Braised Liver With Bacon.&#13;
For a three-pound piece of liver have&#13;
ready one onion cut in thin slices, onehalf&#13;
cupful of carrot dice, one-half cupful&#13;
of bacon cubes, one-half cupful of&#13;
tomato, a bit of bay leaf, sprig of pars-.&#13;
ley, one-halt teaspoonful of whole peppers&#13;
and pinch of thyme. Place the&#13;
liver on a bed of vegetables, lay thin&#13;
slices of bacon over the top, cover and&#13;
cook slowly one hour, basting with&#13;
bacon fat and water. Strain the liquor&#13;
remaining in pan and serve with the&#13;
liver. It the liquid is too thin, thicken&#13;
with flour.&#13;
Raspberry Whip*&#13;
Simplest of all raspberry desserts is&#13;
raspberry whip. This calls for the&#13;
whites of egg beaten very light, flavored&#13;
to taste with powdered sugar&#13;
and flavored with the fresh Juice of&#13;
crushed raspberries, it should be&#13;
mixed Just Before serving.&#13;
Te Remove Qloee.&#13;
Gloss can he removed from black&#13;
ttik bysponalnf ft with coal oolee&#13;
and ammonia, A teaspooafej of amaoBle&#13;
ID a cupful of ooftee Is the rttkt&#13;
IBBSttty*&#13;
' &lt;&#13;
1 * v - &gt; '&#13;
y&#13;
vfr •&#13;
ItffiiS* ''""'.N- "*W&#13;
.v; V.&lt; f&#13;
#«&amp;am3ir 'tww^'ai .•&gt;-&#13;
;.*&amp;&#13;
.rr^T^r^rtNnB^i-*'' limn mil HI i r t » mi ill •HHM»MiiLtilAJll|'i l i l f l i O —&#13;
y y . i l , , . , , ,,,.:. , . . . , , , , , . 1 , 4, L,i , , , I , . &gt; I „ « - ~ , . .,;,,».: ,.,fai - .. , , - 4 W ^ - ^ - T * ' I 1 ' " . I I » . W » ' «&#13;
&gt; v ; V , - : , " . " - - - : ^ ^ - . - . ' • ' ' - - . &gt; O v • -; -•• '' • ' - •' • • ' • " . • - ••' •- \/ . / ' •&#13;
;\ ,•»&#13;
• 7 &gt;&#13;
, • - * ' J&#13;
&gt;K. ".f&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
The Governor's&#13;
L^ J A Novclization of&#13;
a d / Alice Bradley's Play&#13;
Bj&gt; GERTR UDE STEVENSON&#13;
Illustrations from Photographs of the Stage Production&#13;
0op7rt«ht,«l, jPapUcstlon ]&#13;
8YNOP8I8.&#13;
Daniel Blade, suddenly advances from a&#13;
penniless miner (0 a millionaire. He Is&#13;
ambitious to become governor of the&#13;
State. His simple, home-loving wife falls&#13;
to rise to the new conditions. Blade meets&#13;
Katherlne, daughter of Senator Strickland,&#13;
and sees in her all that Mary ts&#13;
not He separates from, his wife and takes&#13;
rooms at his club. Editor Merrltt, who&#13;
has been attacking Blade, is won over to&#13;
the tetter's support because he cannot&#13;
otherwise supply the money demanded for&#13;
a European trip for Mrs. Merrltt. Katherlne&#13;
agrees to marry Slade when he la&#13;
free. Bob Hayes, in love with Katherlne,&#13;
has a stormy session with her over her&#13;
affair with Slade. Mary, anxious to make&#13;
it up with Slade, appears at Strickland's&#13;
house during a .political conference.&#13;
Slade Informs her that separation is final.&#13;
Mary declares that she will fight a divorce.&#13;
She returns to the little cottage&#13;
where they started out In married life.&#13;
CHAPTER IX—Continued,&#13;
Conscious of the song, Mary remembered&#13;
the lamb stew that she had left&#13;
cooking, on the kitchen fire. Dan had&#13;
always loved lamb stew; that Is, her&#13;
lamb stew. She remembered how&#13;
heartily he always ate of it, how he&#13;
never failed to pass his plate for a&#13;
second "helpinlg," and how he used&#13;
to look up at her and say:&#13;
"This Is lapping good, Mary. I&#13;
think I will have a bit more."&#13;
Just as If he needed any urging I&#13;
Mary found her thoughts growing&#13;
very tender when she suddenly remembered&#13;
that tonight she must sit&#13;
down alone at the table, that instead&#13;
of two she would only serve one plateful&#13;
of that stew. Her heart contracted&#13;
with a pathetic, futile longing for&#13;
things as "they used to be," and grew&#13;
bitter as jshe remembered conditions&#13;
as they were, fine sat with her face&#13;
pillowed on her arms, so absorbed In&#13;
her unhappy reflections that she didn't&#13;
hear the door open, didn't hear a etep&#13;
until someone leaned over and kissed&#13;
her tenderly on the faded cheek that&#13;
Dan used to pat so lovingly and declare&#13;
was lovelier than their garden roses.&#13;
"Oh, Rob!" Mary exclaimed, starting&#13;
up In glad surprise. "I didn't hear&#13;
you drive up."&#13;
"I didn't," Sob laughe*d, goodnaturedly.&#13;
"My car is stranded two&#13;
blocks back/' and he threw his linen&#13;
duster on the sofa as Mary hastened&#13;
In her fond little way to take his hand&#13;
and hover about him.&#13;
"It's strange how near town this&#13;
place seems to be," Bob rattled on.&#13;
"When we lived here before it was&#13;
Bob Hayes.&#13;
clear out In the country, but with&#13;
a motor car it's right next door to&#13;
town."&#13;
"Well, aunty," and he stretched&#13;
himself out in an easy chair, "I suppose&#13;
it's like heaven to you to get&#13;
back here to the old'home you lived&#13;
in so many years r&#13;
"Yes," Mary agreed, rather Indifferently/&#13;
., • v,&#13;
"Any of the old ne|ghboa left, I'd&#13;
like to see them—some of 'em/*&#13;
"I never noticed before how many&#13;
Questions old neighbors could ask,&#13;
Rob/' Mary sigheeVas she recounted&#13;
the carious Tlsfts of her old friends,&#13;
.who had inquired anxiously and repeatedly&#13;
for Mr. Blade, how he was&#13;
getting on, and when he would be&#13;
down, and a dosoa*ther Questions in&#13;
the phraseology Of people who, as old&#13;
Meads, take the liberty et oomtag as&#13;
aee# as sensible tar aaoiaadias? that&#13;
i sv^snas* ^ss*,, e? * " ^ ^ ^ T ^ ^^. '."'•^Hps^'^^^'JP^ss''* ^ - * * * T , •&#13;
Jby DavIS&#13;
you unburden your soul to them on&#13;
the spot "You'll kind of have to&#13;
dodge 'em. Bob. I don't know when&#13;
I've lied so. What do you think of&#13;
a man who forces a woman to lie?"&#13;
"Well," Hayes hated the old subject,&#13;
hated the thought of Mary dwelling&#13;
continually on her unhapplness.&#13;
"Didn't they know about Slade V and&#13;
he began to toy with the spools of&#13;
thread that Mary had been using for&#13;
the Inevitable sewing that had so annoyed&#13;
her husband.&#13;
"Either they don't know or they&#13;
want to find out more than they already&#13;
know," Mary answered, wearily.&#13;
"So I sit here lying and lying."&#13;
"You Intend to stick it out and stay&#13;
here?"&#13;
"Yes," Mary answered with a quiet&#13;
determination^&#13;
"Well, he can't call thie desertion,"&#13;
Hayes went on. "You own this house&#13;
together. It's your home as well as&#13;
his."&#13;
"Yes," agreed Mary, "but it's awful&#13;
fighting my husband. What's the matter&#13;
with you, Bob? You used to tell&#13;
me a lot about Miss Strickland, and&#13;
lately you—have you had any trouble?"&#13;
she asked, kindly, forgetting her own&#13;
sorrow at the thought of the possible&#13;
unhapplness of this young man whom&#13;
she loved as tenderly as if he had been&#13;
her own son.&#13;
"Don't let us talk about her," Bob&#13;
objected.&#13;
"All right, Robert." Mary attempted&#13;
to be cheery as she saw how abstracted&#13;
and dejected Bob was. "Dinner&#13;
will be ready In a 'minute and you&#13;
can sit right down."&#13;
"I won't give in to him I" she declared&#13;
as ehe put on an extra plate&#13;
and knife and fork. '.Til never give&#13;
him that divorce,"&#13;
"Don't you ever think of anything&#13;
else?" Hayes questioned, soberly.&#13;
"No; it's no use, Robert; I get hot&#13;
and cold hating my husband when I&#13;
think how he is treating me. I know&#13;
it's wrong, but I do I Sometimes when&#13;
I wake up suddenly in the night and&#13;
see the-old room and remember that&#13;
he's living at his club and enjoying&#13;
life and me here miserable, I just&#13;
get sick hating him."&#13;
"Now, auntie"—Hayes was anxious&#13;
to divert her attention—"I wouldn't&#13;
think of that You have the best of&#13;
him. You've got him beaten. I have&#13;
a good lawyer for you, and he'll be out&#13;
to see you today. You know I'd take&#13;
the case myself, but it wouldn't be pro*&#13;
fesBlonal. You've positively made up&#13;
your mind to fight the divorce to a&#13;
finish?"&#13;
"Tooth and nail!" Mary's answer&#13;
came through eet teeth. /&#13;
"Then you've got him. He can't&#13;
fight a woman in the courts in his&#13;
position, with his nomination before&#13;
him."&#13;
"I've got him, have I?' Mary was&#13;
all eagerness now.&#13;
"You're sure of it? Was he very&#13;
mad about my coming here ? Has my&#13;
lawyer seen his lawyer?"&#13;
Hayes answered the last of her many&#13;
questions first "They met today."&#13;
"Did you get me $wo lawyers, R o b r&#13;
"Yes, I got twoT .-.1. got a whole&#13;
firm."&#13;
"Do you think X need another—so's&#13;
to be sure?" »&#13;
Hayes laughed*&#13;
"You have all yon need, auntie."&#13;
"Thank God, I got the telephone in&#13;
so they can call me up." Mary was&#13;
almost feverish in her excitement "I&#13;
couldn't go on the witness stand. He&#13;
doesn't know thai, though. Any signs&#13;
of Dan going back to the house, now&#13;
I'm out of it?"&#13;
The bell that never hesitates to interrupt&#13;
at any moment rang insist*&#13;
ently. Mary jumped about in her excitement&#13;
and finally took down the&#13;
receiver. She dropped it as hastily&#13;
and backed away.&#13;
"You'd better answer it, Rob."&#13;
'It's Slade," Bob declared, holding&#13;
his hand over the transmitter. "He&#13;
wants to talk to you." *&#13;
"No, siree!" Mary was vehement&#13;
"Cut him off! I ain't going to talk to&#13;
him. I've got two lawyers. Tell him&#13;
to have his lawyer talk to mine. My&#13;
heart's so hard against him—I couldn't&#13;
listen to the sound of my own voice,"&#13;
and she sank weakly into a chair as&#13;
Hayes continued to converse with&#13;
Slade.. "No, she says n o t " he was&#13;
saying. "No, I am not out here wind*&#13;
ing her up or advising her/' and" he&#13;
banged up the receiver. &gt;&#13;
?What'd he say T * Mary was wringlag&#13;
her hands' la her uncontrollable ex-&#13;
GllSlttOtft&#13;
"Oh, he just called me a skunk sad&#13;
cut off," answered Hayes, as he sonohalantly&#13;
lighted a cigarette. B* paced&#13;
no and down tke room for a moment&#13;
and them turned on her:&#13;
-God! I'd like to haul him throng*&#13;
every court in the country. The scoundrel!"&#13;
"I dont like to hear you talk like&#13;
that about him, Rob," Mary remonstrated.&#13;
"He's been a pretty good&#13;
friend to you."&#13;
"Well, perhaps." Hayes tried to&#13;
calm herself for her sake. "He's all&#13;
right, I suppose."&#13;
"I dunno that he is." Mary's mood&#13;
was variable. "When I think of that&#13;
divorce—"&#13;
"Blade's coming down here today,&#13;
aunty. He declares you're here under&#13;
his very eyes, and he's determined&#13;
that you shall go away, and desert&#13;
him and give him the opportunity to&#13;
divorce you. He says the whole country&#13;
will know of the trouble unless&#13;
you go away. That'B what he said&#13;
over the phone."&#13;
"Well, I'll stay right here. I can't&#13;
get over It, Rob," and her voice quivered&#13;
in spite of herself. "1 can't get&#13;
over the suddenness of it; his wanting&#13;
that divorce happened just like&#13;
that," and she snapped her fingers to&#13;
illustrate her meaning. "Before that&#13;
he never thought of It. It's curious,"&#13;
she paused, thoughtfully; "do you&#13;
know that sometimes when I get to&#13;
thinking about it—I—something comes&#13;
over me, an idea that—shut that outside&#13;
door, Rob," she commanded before&#13;
she would continue. "I wonder&#13;
if there isn't—I declare I'm ashamed&#13;
to say it—but I wonder if It could be&#13;
possible that there's—some woman,"&#13;
she finally managed to get the word&#13;
out.&#13;
"Auntie!" It was not necessary for&#13;
Hayes to feign surprise, for, although&#13;
he knew the situation, he had been&#13;
confident that such a thought had&#13;
never entered Mary Blade's pure-minded&#13;
thoughts.&#13;
The pent-up emotion of days broke,&#13;
and Mary sank sobbing into a chair,&#13;
burying her face in her hands. With&#13;
the expression of the thought that&#13;
heretofore she had never admitted&#13;
even to herself, her self-control vanished&#13;
and she cried out desperately:&#13;
"Well, what do you think he wanted&#13;
that divorce for so suddenly?"&#13;
"People usually do get divorced&#13;
when they can't get on,-don't they?"&#13;
Hayes was willing to lie to shield her&#13;
from the knowledge that he knew&#13;
would be the bitterest part of all the&#13;
wormwood that she had already tasted.&#13;
"Sometimes I wonder," Mary continued,&#13;
reflectively, "sometimes I'm&#13;
almost positive that—No! Slade isn't&#13;
that sort of a man. My husband isn't&#13;
that sort of a man, Rob."&#13;
"No, of course he isn't."&#13;
"You didn't know what I was going&#13;
to say," she objected.&#13;
"Yes, I dW. About women."&#13;
"He never noticed any other woman,"&#13;
she told herself positively.&#13;
"No/' Hayes agreed.&#13;
"You haven't heard of anything like&#13;
that, have you?" she questioned.&#13;
"No, no, I haven't." Hayes was finding&#13;
the cross-examination extremely&#13;
trying, convinced as he was that Mary&#13;
must be saved from the knowledge of&#13;
Katherlne at any c o s t "If there were&#13;
anything, you'd hear i t Don't worry."&#13;
"Robert," and she looked at him intently.&#13;
"Would you tell me If—"&#13;
"No. I would not!" asserted Hayes&#13;
vigorously. "Haven't you got enough&#13;
trouble now?"&#13;
"But, Robert, you are my friend,&#13;
aren't you? You ought to—"&#13;
He was saved from any further&#13;
questions along that unwelcome line&#13;
by the sound of the doorbell and a&#13;
moment later Merrltt opened the door&#13;
without ceremony.&#13;
"Well!" Hayes was far from cordial.&#13;
"I beg your pardon for entering so&#13;
abruptly." Merritt was the earn* old&#13;
talkative, suave, good-fellow, I'm-yourfriend-&#13;
Merritt, "but I was bound to see&#13;
Mrs. Slade. I'm for the Slade family—&#13;
but I'm for all the Slade family, so I&#13;
hope you won't make a stranger of&#13;
me."&#13;
Mary was politely indifferent and&#13;
Hayes, with back turned, was tapping&#13;
his foot uneasily on the floor. Altogether&#13;
not the warmest welcome a&#13;
man ever received.&#13;
"This man is likely to publish anything&#13;
you may eay, auntie," Hayes&#13;
warned over his shoulder.&#13;
"Oh, come now, Hayes," objected&#13;
Merritt, "I'm here on a perfectly&#13;
friendly visit I well remember this&#13;
little place," and he Jooked about. "I&#13;
stopped here some years ago and Mr.&#13;
Slade brought us a drink of water.&#13;
Slade was in his shirtsleeves, I remember.&#13;
Big man, Slade!" and hs&#13;
eyed Mrs. Slade" inquiringly. "Big&#13;
man!" he exclaimed again as Mary&#13;
remained silent, her features giving&#13;
no clew to her feelings.&#13;
"Well, my wife has gone off to Europe&#13;
on a long-extended tour." Merritt&#13;
was determined to make conversation&#13;
If he had to do it alone. "I'm&#13;
quite alone. In fact, we're in the same&#13;
boat—alone."&#13;
"I'm not" Hayes burst forth,&#13;
"Thank God, I've got my troubles, but&#13;
"You Are Going to Oppose the Dl-&#13;
" vorce?'i&#13;
I'm ilot married, so I'm not quite&#13;
alone."&#13;
Merritt laughed good-naturedly, glad&#13;
at any kind of response.&#13;
"Pardon me, HayeB," he cleared his&#13;
throat nervously. "I'd like to talk with&#13;
Mrs. Slade."&#13;
k "Oh, all right," and with his hands&#13;
thrust into his pockets, Hayes strolled&#13;
leisurely into the kitchen.&#13;
"My dear little woman," Merritt began&#13;
in his most engaging manner, aa&#13;
soon as Hayes had left the room. "You&#13;
have my deepest sympathy and most&#13;
profound respect Your position is&#13;
touching, if you'll excuse me for saying&#13;
i t I can see your side of It, too.&#13;
Now the point Is this: A week ago&#13;
when you called at the senator's house,&#13;
Slade had just said you were going&#13;
East to live permanently. I must say&#13;
very few women—very few—would do&#13;
as much for a man. For Instance, Mrs.&#13;
Merrltt, I know, wouldn't I needn't&#13;
tell you that the whole community will&#13;
admire you for your reserved dignity—&#13;
If you* go, Mrs. Slade."&#13;
•Tin. not going," Mary's voice was&#13;
ominously quiet&#13;
"You're going to oppose the dl&lt;&#13;
vorce?" 4&#13;
"Yes," came the soft answer.&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
IN THE FUMES OF THE PYRE&#13;
Disposal of, Brahmin Dead a Matter of&#13;
Infinite Pathos to the Relatives&#13;
Who Watch Rites.&#13;
Even as we came opposite, the bearers&#13;
lifted one of them; all cool and&#13;
dripping, from ' the river, and laid&#13;
i t the slim, small, figure, so quietly,&#13;
to contest, on a half-built pyre.&#13;
Brushwood and fagots were built over&#13;
i t and at head and foot and sides&#13;
the fire was applied. A Brahman directed&#13;
vthe rites, and once, as the&#13;
flames mounted and aspired, the&#13;
brother, who was watching, clutched&#13;
at his heart as there appeared for s&#13;
moment, at the top of the pyre, a&#13;
girl's face, with closed eyes, and&#13;
mouth that seemed to smile; thea the&#13;
radiant veil of flame shrouded it again.&#13;
The smoke rose in gray whorls and&#13;
streamers against the stainless and&#13;
tender blue of the sky, and still the&#13;
brother watched, quiet again and composed;&#13;
he had given only that one&#13;
sign to show that he loved her whose&#13;
ashes now lay among the charred&#13;
and smouldering logs. Or rather it&#13;
was only for'the moment that* think*&#13;
ing of days o r dfctf&amp;nood and dawns&#13;
by the riverside, he forgot that it was&#13;
tke t i m e s of t*e pyre. Them he r*&gt;&#13;
membered again, and looking up from&#13;
the pyre to the dazzling river, he saw&#13;
there on our boat his friend, the Brahman,&#13;
and smiled to him.—From "The&#13;
Heart of India," by C. F. Benson, in&#13;
the Century.&#13;
Our National Capitals.&#13;
The capital of the United States&#13;
has been located at different times&#13;
at the following places: At Philadelphia,&#13;
from September 5, 1774, to&#13;
December, 1776; at Baltimore, Decern*&#13;
ber 20, 1776, to March, 1777; Philadelphia,&#13;
March 4, 1777, to September,&#13;
1777; Lancaster, Pa., September 27,&#13;
1777, to September 30,1777; York P a ,&#13;
September 30, 1777, to July, 1778;&#13;
Philadelphia, July 2, 1778, to June 30,&#13;
1783; Princeton, N. J., June 30, 1783,&#13;
to November 20,1782; Annapolis, Md.,&#13;
November 26, 1783, to November 30,&#13;
1784; Trenton, N. J., from November&#13;
23, 1784, to January, 1785; New York,&#13;
January 11, 1785, to 1790.^ ,&#13;
Then the seat of government was&#13;
removed to Philadelphia, where It remained&#13;
until 1800, lines which time&#13;
it has been in Washington.&#13;
Function of Judges.&#13;
Judges ought to remember that their&#13;
omoe It to interpret law, and not lo&#13;
atchless helps to women's comfort, physical&#13;
well-being, and beauty—sure to promote&#13;
healthy, natural action of the&#13;
organs of digestion and elimination&#13;
—the tonic, safe and ever reliable&#13;
BEECHAM'S&#13;
PILLS 91« ZorvMK Sals of Any IMieim &lt;n efts WwU&#13;
Sold srarywfcar*. 1» bas««, 10«* Itfs*&#13;
GOING IN SAME DIRECTION&#13;
One Fact Doctor Was Willing to Admit&#13;
to Hypochondriac Patient&#13;
Who Had Become a Bore.&#13;
Once there was a hypochondriao&#13;
Who used to think that he was dying&#13;
about three times a week. One day he&#13;
was driving out in his automobile,&#13;
and one of these spells came over him.&#13;
On the road ahead of him he happened&#13;
to see his family doctor speeding&#13;
along in his roadster. He felt so sick&#13;
that he applied all his power in order&#13;
to catch up with the doctor as soon as&#13;
possible.&#13;
But the doctor saw him coming and&#13;
he used all the gas he had to get&#13;
away from him. For about three miles&#13;
they had a close race. Finally, however,&#13;
the doctor had some tire trouble,&#13;
and the hypochondriac drew up alongside.&#13;
"Doctor," he shouted, "stop a minute!&#13;
I am djing. Darn It all! I'm&#13;
dying!"&#13;
"You must be," grunted the physician.&#13;
"I never saw anybody going so&#13;
fast as you are!"&#13;
Hard Task In Railroad Building.&#13;
Russia is within measurable distance&#13;
of executing well within the projected&#13;
time the Amur railroad, which&#13;
Is to connect, by means of a line entirely&#13;
within Russian territory, the Siberian&#13;
railway system with Khabarovsk,&#13;
and thence by the already exist*&#13;
ing Ussuri railway with Vladivostok.&#13;
The formidableness of the undertaking,&#13;
covering a distance of 1,248 miles,&#13;
is realized when it is understood that&#13;
the line passes through country much&#13;
of which was previously untrodden,&#13;
and nearly all was uninhabited. Natural&#13;
obstacles in the form of swamps&#13;
and mountain ranges are met with all&#13;
along the line except in the Zey-Bureya&#13;
district; the climate is extremely&#13;
rigorous, and large tracts lie within&#13;
the zone of perpetually frozen ground;&#13;
moreover, it has been necessary to&#13;
bring the whole working staff from&#13;
great distances, mostly from European&#13;
Russia. The difficulties to "be overcome&#13;
were underestimated at the beginning,&#13;
and the expenditure has exceeded&#13;
the original appropriations by&#13;
20 per cent, or about $21,110,000.&#13;
Some Country.&#13;
"What part of Europe pleased you&#13;
most?" asked the American.&#13;
"Germany," replied the returned&#13;
tourist.&#13;
"Why Germany?" asked the American.&#13;
"Why, In Germany a man is still&#13;
considered as being as good as a woman,"&#13;
replied the returned t o u r i s t -&#13;
Cincinnati Enquirer,&#13;
Keep Cool&#13;
and&#13;
Comfortable&#13;
Don't spend s o m u c h of&#13;
your time cooking during hot&#13;
weather; and your family will&#13;
be healthier without the heavy&#13;
cooked foods.&#13;
Give them&#13;
Post&#13;
Toasties&#13;
They're light and eaafty&#13;
digested and yet oouriahtag&#13;
and satisfying. No bother to&#13;
preparation Just pout flroca&#13;
the package and add cream&#13;
and sugar—or they're auigfcta|&#13;
good with ftosfti. baggies) ctP • &gt;•&#13;
fruit *,.&#13;
•The Mfnptx U&amp;e**».&#13;
&lt; .&#13;
• V ' ..'V •&#13;
' • * - .&#13;
* f&#13;
' r •&#13;
; V:; • f&#13;
:':%&#13;
' v : - : ^&#13;
' . ' ' ' • ' * , &lt;&#13;
'•••'^8 4j&#13;
!ft.S»»&amp;fe|..''i&#13;
'**£; * V * $&#13;
i*&gt;"V--'- ••'••'&#13;
£&#13;
s i;&#13;
3 ^&#13;
ft&#13;
^ ' i - i i&#13;
• ^ ¾ ••'• •&#13;
-TV'.'.&#13;
*fc.&#13;
• /&#13;
%.&#13;
fr'T^-"&#13;
V -&#13;
, * • • • ' * : ~&#13;
: • * » • . • tf-&#13;
, v # " -&#13;
^ « &lt; . ' . . - ' • . • - ; • ; - .&#13;
,¾ • •&#13;
&gt;A1&#13;
- j * V&#13;
.i^JCX•'••&#13;
pinckney Dispatch Dr. H. F. sigier J ** " trip to Readmg Mo&#13;
Entered at the Postoffice at Pinckney,&#13;
Mioh-, as Second Class Matter&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
R. W. WEHLY, EDITOR AHD PUBLISHER&#13;
Babseriptiei^ $1. Per Year ia Advance&#13;
Advertising rates made known on&#13;
application.&#13;
Cards of Thank*, 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 advertiseixig&#13;
rates.&#13;
Announcement of entertainments, etc.,&#13;
jnust be paid for at regular Local Notice&#13;
ratet&gt;.&#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;
Mrs. M, Dolan spent the first of&#13;
the week in Pontiao.&#13;
Mrs. R. Kisby visited relatives&#13;
here the first of the week.&#13;
C. G. Staokable and wife of&#13;
Chiton ??*»* H*pdv h%T9,&#13;
W. C. Sendee and family spent&#13;
Sunday at 8. £ . Swarthout's.&#13;
Yern Cook of Toledo spent last&#13;
week at the home of Ed. Cook.&#13;
Oscar Heisig of New York city,&#13;
is visiting relatives here this week.&#13;
Miaa Irene Olemo of Ann Arbor&#13;
is visiting friends and relatives&#13;
here. 4:&#13;
Mrs. Emma Burgess spent the&#13;
pest week with relatives at Jackson.&#13;
Mrs. Clyde Cooke of Fowlerville&#13;
spent the past week with her&#13;
parents here.&#13;
A lot of meanness is excused in&#13;
this world on the ground that&#13;
"it. ia bnaineM."&#13;
There are two aides to every&#13;
case, unless it is a divorce case&#13;
and then, there are three sides.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Boucher&#13;
and family of Grosse Isle are visiting&#13;
at the home of Mrs. Boucher's&#13;
mother Mrs. Ann Brady.&#13;
Ice cream will be served in the&#13;
rooms below the Opera House&#13;
Saturday evening, July 18, for&#13;
benefit of the M. E. Sunday&#13;
school.&#13;
It is reported that a herd of&#13;
hogs at Holly are affected with&#13;
cholera. Two farmers there have&#13;
lost 21 porkers. A quarantine&#13;
has beta e s t a b l i s h&#13;
About 125 farmers from Saginaw&#13;
will bo Kueata^pf the. Howell&#13;
Comaericel club i i the near future&#13;
and will bo taken in aatos to&#13;
lpjok over the live stock industry&#13;
of Livingston county.&#13;
Barry Moon of Hasibarg township&#13;
aonoahcea hit candidacy for&#13;
tha office of county treasurer. He.&#13;
iathe ilnt to announce bis name&#13;
for county office at the primary&#13;
olection to be hekl ia Augnet.&#13;
Acoording to Dr. Claxton the&#13;
scnool of the future, both in summer&#13;
and''Winter, will give less tims&#13;
to on tensive school study of the&#13;
ordinary typo—probably about&#13;
three nottrs; and foir or five hours&#13;
tojMroductive work supervised tyy&#13;
t h i school, done in shops, ocrfcdoor&#13;
gardens or in the home.&#13;
Jphe funeral of Dennis Sheban,&#13;
aged 65 yean*, was held from the&#13;
SlrMary^ Catholic church in this&#13;
village last Saturday at lOo'olook,&#13;
Bar, ft* 3&lt;mph Ooyle reading&#13;
l ^ i n s a u - M r . Shehan had boon&#13;
a riaidsoiof Gomoa township Cor&#13;
•ojkrly feir^ years. He wee tha&#13;
riotSm A-boart tron Wa and m&#13;
eorvivwl by a wifa awl two child,&#13;
teo^wbo bato too .deaffaat syrn^&#13;
patby of too oommoajty in tha&#13;
*•»•» s^.iaaTjjaMjansi ^ am^sjr^&#13;
• * * • • • • • T * &gt; &lt;"•/'&gt; i r * ' " - • » ; « * &gt; . » . '• -. •, • - * - . . •&#13;
— •"• A. . . • •• '. . . si&#13;
made an auto&#13;
uda y.&#13;
Bora to Mr. and Mrs Jess&#13;
Henry Monday July 13, a sou.&#13;
Mrs. Emma Morau is visicing&#13;
frieuda and relatives in Howell.&#13;
Dr. Harry Haze of Lapsing&#13;
was a Pinckney visitor the first&#13;
of the week.&#13;
Miss Gladys BarcheH of&#13;
Walkerville is visiticig relatives&#13;
and friends here.&#13;
Mrs. H. W. Crofoot left Monday&#13;
for Bay View where she will&#13;
spend some time.&#13;
Mrs. Wirt Smith of Detroit&#13;
spent a few days the past week&#13;
with relatives here.&#13;
All the thin dreas goods now&#13;
sold at slashed prices at Dancer's.&#13;
Send for samples. adv.&#13;
Msss Clare Dunn of Caicago&#13;
is spending her summer vacation&#13;
with'her parents here.&#13;
Clarence Cameron and wife of&#13;
Detroit spent the first of the week&#13;
at the home of Sarah Naah.&#13;
Mrs. &lt;^eo. Sigler returted home&#13;
Saturday after spending a few&#13;
week with relatives in Lausing.&#13;
Nellie and Lei ia Ewin of Carriqortoy&#13;
S, D»koit4 anant the past&#13;
week at the home of their grandmother&#13;
Mrs. D. P. Ewin.&#13;
Miss Norma Culver and Kichv&#13;
ard Roche of Howell were Sunday&#13;
guests at the home of the latere&#13;
sister Mrs. M. Lavey.&#13;
The premium list of the Michigan&#13;
state fair is an attractive r volume&#13;
and handily arranged with&#13;
indexes. Copies of it should be in&#13;
the hands of every Michigan citizen&#13;
and may be had for the asking&#13;
at the office of this newspaper.&#13;
LaEue Moran of the Hower&#13;
Republican spent his vacation&#13;
with his mother Mrs. Emma&#13;
Moran, making also a trip to&#13;
Grand Rapids Friday and Saturday&#13;
to visit his brother, Fiona*&#13;
Moran,&#13;
In the death of George Monroe&#13;
Saturday July 4, Howell lost one&#13;
of its best known and most faithful&#13;
citizens. , Mr^ Monroe was a&#13;
member of the shoe firm of "Monroe&#13;
Bros/' at Howell. He was a&#13;
brother of Mrs. Wells Bennett,&#13;
who is well known in t'jis community.&#13;
School districts in Michigan&#13;
may secure.the use of fifty well&#13;
selected books from the state&#13;
library by paying freight and cartage&#13;
from Lanaiog and return. Tha&#13;
books may be kept from three to&#13;
six months, then returned and a&#13;
new sot secured. Laos than three&#13;
hundred schools i o t n e state avail*&#13;
ed themselves of toe privilege&#13;
daring the past year/&#13;
When you hear a man sneering&#13;
at the local paper because it is not&#13;
as big as the crfcy^perj, says-an&#13;
exchange, yon can bet that he ia&#13;
not doing anything to make it&#13;
better,tand genera1 ly is not even a&#13;
subscriber bat is constantly annoying&#13;
his neighbors by borrowing it&#13;
from him. The man who cannot&#13;
see the benefit* arising from a&#13;
local newspaper is about as much&#13;
value t a a town a* a delinquent&#13;
tax list.&#13;
The U. S. civil service commits*&#13;
ion will hold exammafciona for the&#13;
position of postmaster at a great&#13;
many of the fourth-slaes offices in&#13;
Michigan during August. On August&#13;
22 examinations will be held&#13;
at Pontiao, Howell and Fenton&#13;
Pinckney is numbered among&#13;
those poet-offices which will tako&#13;
tha examination at HowelL&#13;
Applicants must reside within t t £&#13;
territory supplied by the postoffice&#13;
at which appointment i#&#13;
desired. Application forms may&#13;
pa proonredftoss *ho poatmsarar&#13;
at the-office at any place where a*&#13;
\ HLOCQimi!&#13;
i&#13;
If1&#13;
I 0&#13;
0&#13;
GIVE ME NO. 38&#13;
This is the call used by the wise customer who&#13;
wishes&#13;
Staple and Fancy Groceries&#13;
Connor's World Best Ice Cream&#13;
A Work Shirt A Pair of Overalls&#13;
A Nice Dress Hat or Cap&#13;
A New Suit of Clothes&#13;
A Pair of Gloves&#13;
Or Anything in the Gents&#13;
Furnishing Line&#13;
"And Don't You Forget," that we are ever&#13;
anxious and willing to fill-your wants for anything&#13;
in oar line.&#13;
Leave Your Special Orders With&#13;
f&#13;
rm&#13;
1I^k AI OI iiIv a i~»r v*9*&#13;
H&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
(9 3&#13;
«1&#13;
3&#13;
The Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank&#13;
M&#13;
Does a Conservative Bank&#13;
ing Business. • « « i&#13;
3 per cent&#13;
paid on all Time Deposits&#13;
| P i n c k n e y&#13;
G. W. TBEPfcE&#13;
Mich.&#13;
Ifrop&#13;
D The Square Deal grocery •&#13;
^w ^^w^PaT^^^as^^^Bj^s^B^^^^B^B^BP^sw^F^ssj^B^pw/^s^B^s^B'^rw^p^s^ar^^w^a'x w^FWW^paf^pw^Bw#w^BrwBB^a&#13;
SMASH!&#13;
HIT THE&#13;
NAIL ~&#13;
ON T H E&#13;
We Hit High&#13;
Prices Right HARDWARE&#13;
On the Head&#13;
Try Us—&#13;
Best Goods&#13;
In Everything&#13;
' Whea j&lt;n t«at RIGHT twli, CHEAP h«n*eboM ateaiila, QOOD&#13;
ftinit tnd T«rniih&lt;ji, asili, ldtehen t t n , ttorea, hinges, iciewi, brfta,&#13;
blTM tad a haidNd other thing* COMB HBRB. Tou'U S A Y !&#13;
MONKf. ' &lt;• - "V&#13;
Jzepfe Hardware Ifiompany&#13;
Perhaps this picture may recall&#13;
some pleasant occasion—a party&#13;
and the becoming costume you&#13;
wore.&#13;
, Any event worth remembering&#13;
suggests a picture.&#13;
Make an appointment today. ^&#13;
B.&#13;
U&#13;
StocfcbFld^e. Mto&#13;
Gusurd Your ChiUrwai \&#13;
Against Bowel Trouble*&#13;
Many* children at ah early a t t&#13;
become constiptted, and freqtteotty;&#13;
serious consequences result Not&#13;
being able to realise his own condition,&#13;
a child's bowels should W&#13;
constantly watched, and a geatltf:;&#13;
laxative given when necessariv '&#13;
Dr. Miles' Laxative Tablet* art*-&#13;
especially well adapted to wosmcaV&#13;
and children. The. Sitters o t&#13;
Chriptian Charity, SJi CHarUa 8 C&#13;
Lurerne, Pa.; who ^attend 'masf;&#13;
cases of sickness say of *&#13;
'That&#13;
Last&#13;
Steak&#13;
ras&#13;
M a s . SATISFIED CUSTOHEK geft«h&#13;
allv aaya tikis when sb* emm to o«r | «&#13;
bnlcher ahsn. We a*pwc4at4 i i K&#13;
8hs knows thjaj^a% oentans to^a?«ia ^&#13;
BB8T CTTW wa « givs a*r, wbstbe*&#13;
fertarnonsa, sirioia, roaasi ot lasm' We&#13;
aaaka it ajwtaisas priaeiah W aatHftr&#13;
isV^^Oiifr&lt;&#13;
•tiW^W!W^NBia».;-; .&#13;
*'*»»•. tisaa sws-ws hepui ustat W«»&#13;
uamf Lasxttvs ywisis *#t sSPthaT:&#13;
Qtoss. We havs hs4 g « # estr&#13;
•verr&#13;
:^'/-- '*\-&#13;
tte Corm and 4»vor&#13;
dne is verjr imporUnV *&lt;*°&#13;
who is to take i t She tasftani&#13;
appearance are eaaaossitr tcaportaal&#13;
when ctoldren act cooce«aaa&gt; All&#13;
•areata taw how bird it is ttkfh*&#13;
the average chila&gt; "&amp;#&amp;**"; Stm&#13;
ssMStti. ^ fn • 4iaw&#13;
ative; faMeW^I. ,... _&#13;
cufty h ovartont*. Tfe rfape ai&#13;
' the tablets* tfcek appaatanee seat .&#13;
candy-nke 'taste at ones' apseat toairy&#13;
T^ld, with the feattltih&amp;t they&#13;
are ta*ea wilhoot objection. ;&#13;
The rich ebocotste -ffivor ana ;&#13;
absence of other tastev wake Or.&#13;
Miles' Laxative tablets the idea*&#13;
remedy for children, ,. m&#13;
If the first box fails to beueht,&#13;
4he price is returned, ^slt ysonr* v&#13;
druggist A box of 2$ doses costs ;&#13;
only 2S .cents. Never sold in Htilh&#13;
MtLBa MlptCAU C a , ItKhart hssV .'&#13;
-r-~x-&#13;
M»Mta*«ta»»j^g+^tt»aHs»MH»j».&#13;
1&#13;
A H. F. 8'OtER M. D- 0. t , 8IOL£ff M. D&#13;
%&#13;
•t-&#13;
- ^ ' ^fct'.'^f « &gt; M&#13;
•iHW&#13;
. ^ . , ^&#13;
••*-'.V.' ' * • « • ; j&#13;
' , ' ^ -&#13;
X^.-~l: AiVa •"**;••&#13;
^&#13;
- 1 :&#13;
. , ^ "\&#13;
(¾.¾ 'A tub at.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
•MLdBT&#13;
&gt; « * • . • • * . •&#13;
•" vc t* \ I&#13;
•:~»JSf.:±i H fr^ t.v. ^LiMMemit&#13;
p. - . . i,'.; - ^ £_£„ :.•.-•&#13;
• * • , : &gt;&#13;
t V--v.&#13;
r. x -&#13;
•• * * *&#13;
i€&#13;
^&gt;J;&#13;
iV"&#13;
;-4?rViF,&#13;
&amp;&#13;
.&lt;i-&gt;&#13;
$ • $ $ : ' • . . . • •&#13;
,1 ^ r¾" ^&#13;
This is a Good Time to&#13;
Buy That&#13;
Home&#13;
Coming&#13;
Suit &gt;&#13;
New stylish cool summer&#13;
suits in grays, tans and blues&#13;
$10.&#13;
and up&#13;
N^.&#13;
• We give you big values now&#13;
and pay your fare on $15.00&#13;
purchases.&#13;
J. DANCER &amp; COMPANY&#13;
Stockbrid$e, Mich.&#13;
*&#13;
Gregory&#13;
Stanley Marsh aud family of&#13;
Chicago are visiting his parents,&#13;
Mr- and Mca. Wm. Marsh.&#13;
Mrs. Maggie May from Bellaire&#13;
ia spending a few weeks with&#13;
frieuds and relatives iu this vicinity.&#13;
Blanche Dill of Portland is a&#13;
*&#13;
gaest at the home of Eugene&#13;
Gallop.&#13;
Vincent Young aad wife are&#13;
settled nicely ia theu new home,&#13;
Mr. J. Moore and Mrs. Anna&#13;
Moore made an auto trip to visit&#13;
the latere daughter, Mrs Ball near&#13;
Rolland last week; they returned&#13;
home-Hatarday bringing Mr, and&#13;
Mrs. Ball with them,&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Williama of Lansing&#13;
is visiting her won a ad grandson&#13;
at WilliamsvilU'.&#13;
Mrs. Jenny VoegU and daughter&#13;
of Eigin are visiting her father,&#13;
Rob Krearley.&#13;
Fred Marshall has a contract&#13;
for rebuilding the rural telephones.&#13;
Van Mapes of Detroit is visiting&#13;
his aunt, Mrs. J. Jacobs,/&#13;
Preaching services at Gregory&#13;
oaptidc charch, onouay at 10 a. m.&#13;
$100 Reward, $100&#13;
The readers of this paper will be pleased&#13;
to learn that there is at least one dreaded&#13;
disease that science hat been able to cure&#13;
in all its stages, and that is Cafcarrb. Hall's&#13;
Catarrh Cure is the only jpoaitive cure now&#13;
known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh&#13;
being a constitutional disease, requires a&#13;
constitutional treatment. Hairs Catarrh&#13;
Cure ia taken internally, acting directly&#13;
upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the&#13;
system, thereby destroying the foundation&#13;
of the disease, and giving the oatient&#13;
strength by^ building un the constitution&#13;
and assisting nature in- doing its work;.&#13;
The proprietors have so much faith in its&#13;
curptise powers that they offer One Hundred&#13;
Dollars tw any ca*6 that it fails to&#13;
cure. Send for Hat, oHtesttmonials. Address;&#13;
F. K. Cheney &lt;fc. Co., Toledo, 0,&#13;
Sold by all druggists, 75&amp;&#13;
Take Hall's Family £{£g. for constipation.&#13;
SPECIALS&#13;
F OR&#13;
Saturday, July 18th, 1914&#13;
Stott'jj Best Flour, 24¾ lbs,&#13;
2 Cans Red Salmon&#13;
*1 Can Medium Pink&#13;
I 8 lbs Roiled Oats&#13;
Will meet all prices on Sugar&#13;
i&#13;
69c&#13;
25c&#13;
10c&#13;
25c&#13;
i ALL SALES CASH | W. W. BARNARD I[&#13;
FROM&#13;
THAT'S what the boys like; they don't mind&#13;
working where a Rumely-Oids Engine does the&#13;
hard part. You have machines that require&#13;
•'elbow grease," why not get an engine that will run&#13;
all of them, anywhere on the farm. A Rumely-Olcb&#13;
**4 Engine will run a main shaft as shown here or can be&#13;
,'2t unmounted and taken where you need it. It will run&#13;
the Electric light Plant; wash the clothes; grind the&#13;
feed; saw the wood; separate the milk and a hundred&#13;
and tme other things cheaper and easier^ than _thejr__&#13;
can be done in any other way. *&#13;
# i&#13;
\- If youcsw'Miad time to come in and see ua, atk us to come&#13;
• a i t j e e jrdu or send you a catalog of Butnety^OMs £s§bea.&#13;
. r „,&#13;
Half th« satbfaction after your house is painted ts in having colors thai SUIT'&#13;
YOU and the o*b«r half ia in getting p«iut that don't c«ck or scale off, tow&#13;
ca* obtain Both Halvw'iuKl also please your Better Half by getting me to&#13;
prnlot your honae. with'•'" , '&#13;
WfcTte S e a l ( A , , . ^ ^ ^ P«f,&gt;f! * » - « 8 par g a l l o n&#13;
Upon Honor. \ a™'*"***} P a l u t | $1.30 per lallon&#13;
Drop in my a'jop anii HW th* different color schemes and get an idea bow your&#13;
ferniad Will look puawJ diflf^rent «f*yfl, it yoa n«e my paiot you will be satisn&#13;
«d. Cbaseaad* lei »e %nre with you.&#13;
1. HA-V&amp; PA1KTED HOUSE* FO% t H B POLLOWf.VO:&#13;
1 ---4.-;l&gt;^.-v&gt;-'.a.v,';&#13;
S. G. Teeple&#13;
%i aria**—&#13;
K.W, Kennedy&#13;
^.Va*Hor#&#13;
:w±$it'•'';.:'•'•&#13;
i fia|&gt;MiLfTli1gj&#13;
W * . Dli«»hiK&#13;
• , . ; ' : ' : - : - . - ' • ' ' • ' - • v • • • •&#13;
Mi« Kato^Brpwa&#13;
Mrs. E. Moran&#13;
F. U. Jackson&#13;
Jrrm Kennedy&#13;
Wia.Bta4tet .-&gt;:,&#13;
&amp;»L*r*r _ '• ;';/ r&#13;
AN1&gt; MAHY OTaXttfc&#13;
—r • &gt; . Mn. E. W. XUrtrn&#13;
Hrs. A. Pott en on&#13;
Hf;A.Fick&#13;
A . V ^ i « . ;&#13;
' Ifartoii BttJQii&#13;
•J*i&#13;
t*4 get *f paiat boo^&#13;
4M ^ wL*&#13;
. ^ 4&gt;,- « * - - -&#13;
' * i I *&#13;
..:•*•» -r-&#13;
&amp;J&gt;&#13;
• ffc:s&#13;
The Pahrter ' A B , - v&#13;
South Iosco&#13;
. VBI^ -i ftd * Mr»l flbite. JrVat)te»&#13;
vitt^f^Af the* hom* ^ Albert&#13;
Foster Sriaiiay? ^ - 1 ^&#13;
PANSi;&#13;
HAVE ;&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Roberta aad&#13;
Mrs. Truman Wsmrigbt spent&#13;
Suaday at the home of George&#13;
Baker. ,&#13;
Mrs. Eliza Koho returned&#13;
home ihelast ol tha week after attending&#13;
the ftmeraiof her sister.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Robert% Mrs.&#13;
John Grindling and dasghter&#13;
Edith called at L. f. Lamborne'a&#13;
Sunday,&#13;
MissLoraa Robfcta spent .the&#13;
last oC the week with Eebah Blair.&#13;
She and Rose Montague accompaaied&#13;
her tome Sattday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Tim laham visited&#13;
the Wattera Brothsra 8nndaf. ^&#13;
m&#13;
Has ^eart%U# Werawt&#13;
Moat oUMrea&gt;«&gt;. A coated, Furred&#13;
'out««; Stoosa Jfagatk; Stomach Paiaa,&#13;
^rclea-soder ^rwinUr, Stlknf Complex-&#13;
%Mgirarfoaa, Fretfn4; 0-riadiag of Teeth; oelinf In Steep; .mtKar Dreame—any&#13;
_poe of these indtoale yCWd haa Worms.&#13;
Get a box of KlakApe^imrtt at once. It&#13;
kilts tke Woms ^4« cioae of yo«r child*&#13;
coadltion. la ijx*d»e aad aidf Nature&#13;
4o esgele tbe Wjprtn*^ ^oppWed in candy&#13;
form. £aay for children to tate. 25c.&#13;
Recommended if CO. Meyer.&#13;
For Cydone Jnsurance&#13;
Inaure iMber$H pliable—The&#13;
Mtchigatf IffAosL-^iDorQado, Cycione&#13;
and Wuidatorm Insurance&#13;
Co. of Hastiiigei Mich. adv.&#13;
G. V. VanWiokle, Agent&#13;
0aesieaV Arnica ^»l?e ft* Cato, Barna&#13;
Mr. E. S. Loper, MariiJs, N. Y., writes:&#13;
I have never bad a Cou Bora, Wooad or kore it wottld not heeL" Get i box. of&#13;
Bnckreo's A r m Sette to.day Keeex&#13;
handr at all times foe Born*, Soree, Ctfta,&#13;
Woimde. PMI#»4&gt; Loekiat S5e, BSd*&#13;
ofliaMedcd bx C- O. lUyet the dniggiat.&#13;
Everything r n r / n . f « i r c , Household&#13;
In Hardware SPECIALTIES Novelties&#13;
At This Store For Women&#13;
Usually s hardware store ia s man's store. But we especially iartte&#13;
tne attention of the HOUSEWIFE to oar stock. Shell aad here what&#13;
she has LONG WANTED ia UTBNSIIfl, etc PERSONAL SEEYICM&#13;
and PROMPT deliveries.&#13;
Dinkel &amp; Dunbar&#13;
JACKSON COUNTY FAIR&#13;
Jackson, Mich.&#13;
s . *&#13;
Stptember 14th to 19th. 1914&#13;
KdHMAV ijf&#13;
asssssr^r^BS^^^ajj^Baj w aaywja^&#13;
vVe solicit eatries in our hprse, cattle, swioc, sheep,&#13;
poultry and produce' exhibts. For premium bdoks&#13;
and entry blanks write&#13;
W* B/Burris&#13;
Secretary&#13;
59B&#13;
' 7. AesiUa Piaowwsy +pm* &gt; isst&#13;
week with reialiws ia Perry.&#13;
^.flias&#13;
Bats now on *aW st&#13;
$S«nd cp. A gO#d thaa to twy&#13;
t&gt;r^Lahe&gt;y Ma^ikta oe axj^assl,&#13;
adsv''&#13;
r&#13;
';*'&lt;&#13;
V T O * ' &lt; .**&gt;',' : . ^ : - ^ ' , " " . • - * « » , - .&lt;&gt;&#13;
"iv^r-&#13;
.K:&#13;
/•&#13;
^ketia^Eli&#13;
-,»•&#13;
« ^ v&#13;
A- -~&#13;
t&lt;2^^J^i' :-^L'.&#13;
•'S'.r;"''^&#13;
• ••. ' . ; ' ! ( *&#13;
- ^ ¾ ^&#13;
; • . - • « * . . ,&#13;
iiv-^n-r&#13;
Wiuidk'-'.'-JiftfcJv^'.taK."«',''«' **r :«(* i&#13;
ffj^ ^.-^:-. .. . ••. . ..&#13;
&gt;'i&lt;&#13;
f . f V -J* -'&#13;
ft*&#13;
fez'&#13;
»- '.&#13;
h,. -&#13;
!•©&#13;
[v,&#13;
* / ' , . • &gt; . - .&#13;
i A&#13;
r-&#13;
\^H\&#13;
W*1 '"•&lt;&#13;
•ft***-&#13;
\; ,.-•&gt;-;&#13;
mezwmMm kfrwi*^-&#13;
T was In the sixteenth con*&#13;
tury that the Spaniards first&#13;
invaded what is now the&#13;
states of Arizona and New&#13;
Mexico. Fabulous tales of&#13;
the wealth and treasure of&#13;
great cities in the unknown&#13;
North found eager listeners&#13;
among the adventurous&#13;
Spaniards in the. central&#13;
valley of Mexico. Report&#13;
followed report, each more lurid than&#13;
the last, until the viceroy of New&#13;
Spain, inflamed by the tales of Plzarro's&#13;
brilliant conquest of Peru, organized&#13;
a great expedition and sent&#13;
it out to discover and conquer the faraway&#13;
Eldorado and bring back the&#13;
treasure they so fondly hoped to find&#13;
there. The great Coronado waB chosen&#13;
commander-in-chief, and on Easter&#13;
morning of the year 1540 began&#13;
the most remarkable journey of discovery&#13;
in America. For months they&#13;
traveled over the deserts, mountains,&#13;
land plains, meeting with all the vicissitudes&#13;
and dangers of an unknown&#13;
country, until at last they reached the&#13;
'land of standing rocks," the home of&#13;
the cliff-dwelling Indians in the present&#13;
states of Arizona and New Mexico.&#13;
Here they found not only wild and&#13;
warlike Indians but a gentler race of&#13;
aborigines much further advanced In&#13;
culture than any other Indians they&#13;
had met since leaving central Mexico.&#13;
They were an agricultural people,&#13;
dwelling in many-storied stone or mud&#13;
houses, and their descendants to this&#13;
day live, in many Instances, on the&#13;
same sites and in a few cases in the&#13;
identical buildings that their ancestors&#13;
occupied when the Spaniards first&#13;
•aw them over three and a half centuries&#13;
ago.&#13;
The old buildings, called pueblos by&#13;
the Spaniards, are the oldest continuously-&#13;
Inhabited structures on the&#13;
American continent, and their inhabitants&#13;
are more nearly in their original&#13;
condition than any other American&#13;
Indians today,&#13;
As an example of the canyons one&#13;
may he mentioned, known to the Indians&#13;
as Iseye, the walls of which rise&#13;
sheer from the sands of Its river-bed&#13;
over 1,000 feet, and where erosion has&#13;
sculptured the most stupendous natural&#13;
monuments in stratified sandstone&#13;
in the world. Alternating with&#13;
the canyons are mesas, flat-topped&#13;
mountains, nfcny of which are&#13;
crowned with living Indian towns,&#13;
snch as the pueblos of the Hopi Indians&#13;
in Arizona and the superbly situated&#13;
Acoma In New Mexico, while&#13;
others reveal the broken-down walls&#13;
of ancient cities of the Stone Age people.&#13;
Among the living Indian tribes that&#13;
call this wondrous fend home are the&#13;
Hop! and Navajo, the most interesting&#13;
of all the remaining Indian tribes in&#13;
the United States. The Hopi people&#13;
«re town-builders and live on the top&#13;
jot the cliffs in the midst of a great&#13;
desert, sustaining themselves by agri-.&#13;
culture and small bands of sheep.&#13;
Slight little rock-built villages are the&#13;
homes of this tribe; they number 2,-&#13;
000 souls, and they have probably&#13;
lived In their fortress-like cities for&#13;
1,000 years. They have no chiefs in&#13;
the strict sense of the word but are&#13;
governed by men who have shown by&#13;
their llyes and characters that they&#13;
lire good leaders. They are a splendid&#13;
mnd fearless people who represent today&#13;
but a remnant of the once-power&#13;
ft! Indian nation, a phase of humanity&#13;
rapidly passing away before the&#13;
aggressive march of Western civilization.&#13;
The Hopi Indians are experts in the&#13;
, fert of basketry sad pottery, as well&#13;
I * In the wearing of cotton. Their&#13;
v &lt; ; . . Trollgkras Hfe is marked by elaborate&#13;
I V &lt;v •JerexttonlaU, of which the best known&#13;
-'••-. 4j the snake dance. They look upon&#13;
jttttlssitsJke* as messengers to the&#13;
Jfbdt, mud to the snake dance formally&#13;
*m«*ge thorn with requests and pray-&#13;
***. The oartmosy begins In an unknown&#13;
as an&#13;
'*'.&#13;
fc^K:- *.*&#13;
' V ' ''• V* •&#13;
emerge carrying the serpents In their&#13;
mouths.&#13;
The Navajos are a progressive tribe&#13;
of Indians of Athapascan linguistic&#13;
stock. The name of Spanish derivation,&#13;
is said to signify "the people&#13;
with large fields." In features the&#13;
Navajos resemble the Pueblos rather&#13;
than the Northern tribes with which&#13;
they are affiliated in language. They&#13;
are hardy, proud and independent, but&#13;
shun no form of industry which offers&#13;
remuneration, and show much agricultural&#13;
skill. They thrive without&#13;
subsidy from the government, which&#13;
provides them school houses. The general&#13;
culture of the Navajos is similar&#13;
to that of the Pueblos, but there are&#13;
some striking differences, particularly&#13;
as to dwellings. Instead of 4he peculiar&#13;
storied structure of the^ueblo,&#13;
the Navajo house, or "hogan," is a&#13;
conical construction of poles stood on&#13;
end and covered with earth, with a&#13;
low, projecting entrance porch at one&#13;
side and a smoke hole at the apex,&#13;
The Navajos are highly religious,&#13;
with many divinities, and a vast lore&#13;
of myths, legends, songs and prayers.&#13;
They have also hundreds of musical&#13;
compositions and a series of complex&#13;
ceremonial dances known only to the&#13;
medicine men. Socially the Navajos&#13;
are characterized by a well-developed&#13;
clan system, with descent in the female&#13;
line. Many of their women are&#13;
possessors in their own right of large&#13;
agricultural and personal wealth. In&#13;
government they are controlled by the&#13;
older influential men who meet In informal&#13;
council for the transaction of&#13;
tribal business.&#13;
The tribe is best known for its&#13;
blankets, ponchos, rugs, belts, garters&#13;
and saddle girths, which are woven by&#13;
hand from the wool of their flocks,&#13;
and. which no power loom has.been&#13;
able to imitate. They have also acquired&#13;
from the Spaniards the art of&#13;
working silver and turn out many&#13;
creditable ornaments.&#13;
The Navajos first appear in history&#13;
under the present name in 1629, and&#13;
Christian missionaries worked among&#13;
them in the middle of the eighteenth&#13;
century.^ They were decidedly warlike&#13;
at the time, fighting constantly&#13;
with the Pueblos on the one hand&#13;
and with the white settlers of New&#13;
Mexico on the other. In 1849 a United&#13;
the tribe captive to Fort Sumner,&#13;
where they were kept until 1867 when&#13;
they were allowed to return to their&#13;
original country. In 1868 a treaty&#13;
was made with them whereby, in return&#13;
for the cession of their land to&#13;
the government, they were established&#13;
on their present reservation. The Navajos&#13;
are remarkable in being the only&#13;
Indian tribe which has increased in&#13;
numbers. In 1869 there were less than&#13;
9,000. According to the United StateB&#13;
census for 1910 there were 22,455&#13;
members comprised in nearly fifty&#13;
clans.&#13;
TAFFETAS ALL LOVELY&#13;
DESIGNERS WOULD 8BKM TO&#13;
HAVE WROUGHT WONDCRS,&#13;
MAY CROSS THE ATLANTIC&#13;
Dutch Aviator Seems to Have&#13;
Right idea in Project He&#13;
Has in Mind.&#13;
the&#13;
States expedition entered their Coun- reason to maintain an attitude of&#13;
try and forced a treaty of peace. This&#13;
treaty having been frequently brakes,&#13;
Col. Kit Carson was sent against them&#13;
Jm lit* tad toot the great* nan of&#13;
Between Brazil and Guinea the Atlantic&#13;
ocean is only about 1,800 miles&#13;
wide. From Newfoundland to Ireland,&#13;
the narrowest breadth north of the&#13;
equator, is nearly twice as far. From&#13;
New York to the nearest point of&#13;
France is nearly three times as far.&#13;
Hitherto most schemes of aerial flight&#13;
across the Atlantic have contemplated&#13;
some northern route. That suggested&#13;
by the authorities of the San Francisco&#13;
exposition is • by way of Labrador,&#13;
Greenland and Iceland. It has remained&#13;
for the Dutch aviator, Van der&#13;
Born, to make the first preparation to&#13;
cross the ocean from continent to continent&#13;
without stop, and he proposes&#13;
to take the southern route, where the&#13;
Atlantic is narrowest.&#13;
Van der Born Is now supervising the&#13;
construction of a new type of hydroaeroplane.&#13;
When it is complete he will&#13;
go to the port of Konakey, in French&#13;
Guinea, whence he promises to fly to&#13;
Pernambuco, Brazil.&#13;
The scheme is more plausible than&#13;
any of the other discussed - transoceanic&#13;
flights. It is natural and sensible&#13;
that the first crossing should be&#13;
attempted at the narrowest place, even&#13;
though the flight must be longer than&#13;
any one of the stages of the Greenland&#13;
route. There is, of course, the&#13;
danger of tropical air currents, but&#13;
these are not much more to be fearedthan&#13;
the storms of sob-Arctic regions&#13;
which are suggested for the northern&#13;
route.&#13;
•No one who has observed the progress&#13;
of aviation doubts that before&#13;
long the Atlantic will be crossed by&#13;
some venturesome flyer. There is no&#13;
scepticism toward the aviators of our&#13;
own day, who have done so much in&#13;
so brief a ime. and who may do as&#13;
aneh more within the next fer yetrs.&#13;
&gt;'.% '-/*':&#13;
ffir.&#13;
Easily the FavoWt* Materia! for Calling&#13;
Gowns and D^§mnt— All the&#13;
Popularity Which Hae Been&#13;
Accorded I t&#13;
Some of the most effective summer&#13;
calling costumes show, a combination&#13;
of taffeta with chiffon and odd touches&#13;
of embroidery, writes Lillian Young in&#13;
a letter from Paris tothe Washington&#13;
Star. As the embroideries come mostly&#13;
In strange, even garish, colors, they&#13;
have, of course, to be used with discretion&#13;
even in this season when delicate,&#13;
harmonious colorings have given&#13;
place to bolder treatments.&#13;
And as for the taffetas—all that the&#13;
designers promised of them has been&#13;
fulfilled, and more. They have never&#13;
been so lovely. Delightful things that&#13;
were never thought of in the old days&#13;
of this material are accomplished, and&#13;
Its popularity is increasing every day.&#13;
The silks themselves are so beautiful&#13;
that even a moderate amount of ingenuity&#13;
Is sufficient to transform them&#13;
into ravishing frocks, suits, or hats, or&#13;
coats, for they are put to many purposes.&#13;
No other fabric lends itself with&#13;
such grace to unique trimming effects&#13;
Taffeta Is the Favorite Material for&#13;
Calling Gowns.&#13;
or unusual designs. With no other material&#13;
has originality such free play.&#13;
Each individual maker works out her&#13;
own schemes, as she would not feel inclined&#13;
to take the liberty of doing with&#13;
satins or worsteds.&#13;
A charming Idea was developed In&#13;
the model sketched, which reproduces&#13;
a calling costume of hydrangea blue&#13;
taffeta and chiffon to match. The latter&#13;
made Its appearance only in the&#13;
second flounce of the tunic, which,&#13;
with the skirt proper, was mounted to&#13;
a hip-length foundation of china silk,&#13;
this, in turn, being covered by the interesting&#13;
upper tunic flounce of taffeta.&#13;
It was laid in box folds under the belt,&#13;
with the spaces between slightly gathered&#13;
and the end of each box fold was&#13;
oddly scalloped and effectively, though&#13;
simply embroidered in blue and rose&#13;
colorings.&#13;
The blouse was cut with elbow&#13;
sleeves and in front and back the material&#13;
was gathered a little on the lice&#13;
of the shoulders, then covered with a&#13;
scalloped and embroidered medallion&#13;
of the taffeta, repeating the design of&#13;
the tunic border. The V-neck was filled&#13;
in with white chiffon ruffling, and a&#13;
crushed girdle of black satin drew the&#13;
fullness of the blouse In at the waist&#13;
line and was caught up under the bust&#13;
in front and tied in a flat bow, the&#13;
space just below being filled in with a&#13;
section of embroidered taffeta.&#13;
Silver and Gold Laces.&#13;
Silver and gold laces, woven with&#13;
an extremely open mesh and showing&#13;
large flower designs, are favored for&#13;
trimming the evening frocks of the&#13;
more expensive class.&#13;
Tassels of silk or beads of unusually&#13;
large proportions appear on suits, afternoon&#13;
frocks and evening costumes.&#13;
The latter are adorned with handsome&#13;
white silk tassels.&#13;
Buckles play an important part in&#13;
trimming the,pretty frocks. They are&#13;
Jeweled with brilliants or colored&#13;
stones and enameled in designs which&#13;
suggest the dathty dresden china pat.&#13;
tans. Other buckles are embroidered&#13;
with heary silk or braid,or fashioned&#13;
of silk lm odd design,&#13;
BABY'S NEEDS IN SUMMER&#13;
Lightness of Clothing Is One of the&#13;
First Requisites During the Hot&#13;
Westher.&#13;
Warm weather Is a dangerous pel&#13;
rlod for children, and all mothers*&#13;
dread the summer for their little onesj*&#13;
As the weather grows warmer and) ^&#13;
warmer, fewer and lighter clothed&#13;
should be worn by the baby. Sa&#13;
many mothers have a mistaken ideai&#13;
that flannel bands must be kepi $&#13;
around baby's abdomen, next to th«&#13;
skin, no matter what the weather^&#13;
The treatment Is not only w^ong, buf&#13;
actually cruel.&#13;
To keep flannel next to the young&#13;
sensitive skin when the weather la 10(&#13;
hot that every turn of the little bodyi&#13;
against the flannel causes severe irritation&#13;
is almost barbarous. Yet how&#13;
many mothers believe In it! There*&#13;
are fewer each year, for which wei&#13;
should be grateful, but still there are*&#13;
left a large enough number of such'&#13;
deluded mothers to keep a great many&#13;
babies in comparative torture during;&#13;
the summer time.&#13;
The little body should feel nothing]&#13;
but the sheerest, softest materials&#13;
next to it When It Is very hot the&#13;
young baby may be totally undressed,&#13;
except for his little shirt During the&#13;
hottest hours of the day the little one&#13;
should be placed on a wide bed'&#13;
dressed In this garb, or rather lacto&#13;
of garb, and allowed to play or sleep]&#13;
until the sun is setting.&#13;
&lt;&#13;
; *&#13;
•••*: *&lt;-, K&#13;
»*• * -&#13;
TO DECORAfE DINING ROOM"&#13;
Pottery and China ware Should Be Se«&#13;
lected With a Good Deal of Taste&#13;
and Discretion.&#13;
If you have a blue dining room and&#13;
have some really good Japanese or&#13;
Chinese porcelain, or china in blue&#13;
and white, use it, and use nothing)&#13;
else, unless It be some interesting lit-'&#13;
tie Japanese or Chinese knlcknacks lnl&#13;
brass—a gong or a tiny idol perhaps.&#13;
Wedgwood is a beautiful plate-raill&#13;
decoration if It is used alone; but un^&#13;
fortunately, there are few who pos-t&#13;
sees enough of it to furnish a whole*&#13;
plate rail.&#13;
If modern pottery is used, it is well!&#13;
to choose the whole furnishing of the&#13;
plate rail at once. There is a certain&#13;
brown and cream colored ware In thai&#13;
market now that could be used effectively&#13;
in the room where yellow!&#13;
or brown predominates. The ware is&#13;
decorated with peasant scenes.&#13;
There are many good designs in&#13;
royal doulton of various sorts that&#13;
can be chosen. Only they should be*&#13;
selected with a definite idea in mind'&#13;
of the other pieces with which they&#13;
are to rank and of the room they are'&#13;
to decorate.&#13;
I&#13;
7 i&#13;
Sjnartenlng Black Frock.&#13;
To brighten and smarten a black&#13;
frock in satin or crepe de chine, there&#13;
is nothing equal to golden-colored material&#13;
on the collar, the cuffs and the*&#13;
sash end. Depending entirely upon&#13;
the age of a woman and the occasion&#13;
for which she needs the frock, these&#13;
golden touches must be applied. The&#13;
Collar, the cuffs and the sash end may&#13;
be wholly of gold lace veiling cloth of&#13;
gold; the satin or crepe may have gold&#13;
motif and medallion Incrustations, applique,&#13;
or there may, be merely bands&#13;
of gold cloth.&#13;
• • - 1 1&#13;
/ * •&#13;
/L.&#13;
On Summer Days.&#13;
A sweater coat and' cap that are&#13;
lovely, and seem exactly planned for&#13;
the outdoor girl or woman: m the summer&#13;
are knitted of silk in mauve and&#13;
silver-gray. The coat is gray with a&#13;
belt at the back, and cuffs, neck and&#13;
front border in the mauve. The gray&#13;
cap has a deep round band of mauve&#13;
with the points of the square crown,&#13;
caught down on the band by mauve&#13;
silk buttons. The colors reversed&#13;
would be good, too.&#13;
\,&#13;
'. * • v&#13;
.'•£f * - j ? - * . ffY ns srniaf%ts1irr -list ^ i S f c ^ ^ ^ * * ^&#13;
*-1W"&#13;
5 i.••&gt;&lt;*£.*'• ' * *? •::&#13;
. • • ^ U &lt;&#13;
• - » &gt; — i * * &lt; ». -« ^r^^^^^ v."' r . r •• &gt;s I .'&#13;
" - - - 1 1 - . . '&#13;
••\&#13;
"^Sn?&#13;
v +f•t* •&#13;
' " * •&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
! &lt; • " '&#13;
-f.&#13;
\&#13;
&gt;V&#13;
. ; - • : * • &gt; .&#13;
• " ' i. •&#13;
^w..v&#13;
'•• .**•-!&#13;
T .&#13;
«B&#13;
Marriage sometimes opens the eyes&#13;
of blind people. *&#13;
The more dignified a man is when&#13;
sober the bigger fool when full.&#13;
It may be to a man's credit to forge/&#13;
a lot that' he knows.&#13;
Never judge a physician by the&#13;
praise undertakers bestow, upon him.&#13;
It takes a brave man to fight a battle&#13;
that he is almost sure of losing.&#13;
Occasionally a woman weighs her&#13;
words—then throws in a lot for good&#13;
measure.&#13;
Something Queer.&#13;
Knlcker—Something queer about&#13;
Jones.&#13;
Bocker—Yes; he is the only man&#13;
who can't explain the high cost of living.—&#13;
Judge.&#13;
COULD NOT&#13;
STAND ON FEET&#13;
Mrs. Baker So Weak—Could&#13;
Not Do Her Work—Found&#13;
Relief In Novel Way.&#13;
Adrian, Mich. — " I suffered terribly&#13;
With female weakness and backache and&#13;
got so weak that I&#13;
iiMiiiiji! could hardly do my&#13;
111 work/ When I&#13;
washed my dishes I&#13;
had to sit down and&#13;
when I would sweep&#13;
the floor I would get&#13;
so weak that I would&#13;
have to get a drink&#13;
every few minutes,&#13;
and before I did my&#13;
dusting I would have&#13;
to lie down. I got&#13;
fo poorly that my folks thought I was&#13;
going into consumption. One day I&#13;
found a piece of paper blowing around&#13;
the yard and I picked it up and read it&#13;
It said 'Saved from the Grave/ and&#13;
told what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound has done for women. I&#13;
showed it to my husband and he said,&#13;
•Why don't you try it?' So I did, and&#13;
after I had taken two bottles I felt&#13;
better and I said to my husband, 'I don't&#13;
need any more,' and he said ' You had&#13;
better take it a little lodger anyway.'&#13;
601 took it for three months and got&#13;
well and strong." — Mrs. ALONZO E.&#13;
BAKER, 9 Teeumseh S t , Adrian, Mich.&#13;
Not Well Enough to WoYk.&#13;
In these words is hidden the tragedy&#13;
of many a woman, housekeeper or wage&#13;
earner who supports herself and is often&#13;
helping to support a family, on meagre&#13;
wages. Whether in house, office, factory,&#13;
shop, store or kitchen, woman&#13;
should remember that there Is one tried&#13;
and true remedy for the ills to which all&#13;
women are prone, and that 1* Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham's vegetable Compound. It&#13;
promotes that vigor which makes work&#13;
easy. The Lydia EL Pinkham Medicine&#13;
Co., Lynn, Mass.&#13;
&gt; Constipation&#13;
Vanishes Forever&#13;
Prompt Relief—Permanent Core&#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 POL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICfc,&#13;
Genuine must bear Signature&#13;
DR. J . D. KELLOGQ'S ASTHMA Remedy for the prompt relief of&#13;
Aathma and Hay Wwer. Aak Your&#13;
druggist for It. Write for FRE1 SAMPLE&#13;
•JOftTHROP * LYMAN CO. Lid. BUFFALO. HX&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 29-1914.&#13;
If you have a skeleton in your closet&#13;
that's the place for It.&#13;
Make* the laundress happy—that's Red&#13;
Cross Ball Blue. Makes beautiful, clear&#13;
white dothefl. All good grocers. Adv.&#13;
The shortest mile In Europe Is the&#13;
Russian verst, which Is only 1,165&#13;
yards.&#13;
A woman likes to see something&#13;
nice about her husband in the papers&#13;
so that she can ask him for a new&#13;
dress} and get it.&#13;
» 7 0 0 mwv a m u u i a t m i a ; o u v i » , « w D i u a r u u r - lust Hye Comfort. Write for Book of the Mye&#13;
by mail Free. Marine Uye Remedy Co., Chieifo.&#13;
Coincidence of Movement.&#13;
"Do you think your new part will&#13;
get over?''&#13;
"If it doesn't I will go under."&#13;
Not Alone.&#13;
Optimist—The sun ie getting higher&#13;
every day.&#13;
Pessimist—So ie everything else.&#13;
0 Inhuman.&#13;
"Dabbs is the meanest husband I&#13;
know."&#13;
"You don't say so?"&#13;
"Yes; he won't give his wife a&#13;
chance to find fault with him."&#13;
LADIES CAN WEAR SHOES&#13;
One stae smaller after UBlng Allen's Foot-Base, the&#13;
Antlseptlo powder to be shaken Into the shoes. It&#13;
makes tight or new shoes feel easy. Just the thing&#13;
for danclBg. Refuse $ub$titule$. For FREE trial&#13;
package, address Allen 8. Olmsted, LeBor, N. T.&#13;
It 8ometlmes Happen*.&#13;
"A short college graduate came in&#13;
here the other day and told me how&#13;
to run my business."&#13;
"Of course you threw him out?"&#13;
' "No, I didn't. He was right, so I&#13;
gave him a Job."&#13;
Reading, We Suppose?&#13;
Patience—And you say there were a&#13;
lot of women hanging on to the straps&#13;
in the car?&#13;
Patrice—Yes; and a lot of men hanging&#13;
on to the seats.&#13;
Couldn't Be Stars.&#13;
"Ever see spots on the sun, Sam?"&#13;
" "Oh, yes, sah."&#13;
"When, Sam?"&#13;
"Other day when dat ornery mule&#13;
kicked me at high noon, sah!"&#13;
What He Feared.&#13;
He was watching his neighbor's&#13;
troublesome boy climb a tree, and he&#13;
had a look of painful anxiety on his&#13;
countenance.&#13;
"Are you afraid the lad will fall?"&#13;
he was asked.&#13;
"No," he replied: "I'm afraid he&#13;
won't"&#13;
ECZEMA ON HANDS AND ARMS&#13;
1321 Douglas St., Omaha, Neb.—"My&#13;
trouble began from a bad form of eczema&#13;
all over my- hands, neck and&#13;
arms. I could get no sleep for the&#13;
Itching and burning. The small pimples&#13;
looked red and watery and my&#13;
skin and scalp became dry and itching.&#13;
The pimples Irritated me so that&#13;
I would scratch until they bled. I&#13;
could not put my hands in water and&#13;
if I once tried it they burned so that&#13;
I could not stand it. I had to have&#13;
my hands tied up and gloves on all the&#13;
time for nearly two months. Some*&#13;
times I would scratch the skin off it&#13;
irritated so and I could do s o work&#13;
at all.&#13;
"I tried all kinds of remedies but&#13;
nothing did any good. Then I saw in&#13;
the newspaper about Cuticura Soap&#13;
and Ointment and got some. I was&#13;
completely healed in five or six&#13;
weeks. They have not troubled me&#13;
since." (Signed) Joe Uhl, Jan. 31,'14.&#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;
What Did He Mean?&#13;
Dr. Stanley Coulter says the shortest&#13;
and Bweetest introduction he ever&#13;
had to an audience was by a student&#13;
at Cornell university. Said this young&#13;
man concisely: "I do not have to&#13;
speak? many words to introduce Doctor&#13;
Coulter, for he is too well known&#13;
already."&#13;
"I never could make but just what&#13;
that student meant," said Doctor Coulter.—&#13;
Indianapolis News.&#13;
A Save. the Babies. INFANT MORTALITY is something frightful We can hardly realise that&#13;
of all the children been in emBaed countries, twenty-two per cent,&#13;
or nearly one-quarter, die before the/ reach one year; th3rty&gt;«eve&amp;&#13;
poroent** or more than&#13;
they are-fifteen t&#13;
. We d* not hesitate&#13;
majority of thee*&#13;
oftheee infantile&#13;
one-third, before they are five, and one4»aif before&#13;
eitate to amy that a timely use of Castorla would save a&#13;
precious Uvea. Neither do we hesitate to my that many&#13;
death* are oooarioood by the tut of narootie prefaratkais.&#13;
yoomuit see that it bean the signs Inn ec O m H&gt; ftetofaer, Oa*orJ»&#13;
I the blood to ctooJeso properly, opens the&#13;
of the fkla tad alieya mar.&#13;
e^wtifn Cw*iU «iwayi * m tlja atgmrtw • *&#13;
siV&#13;
WAYS TO MAKE BROOM LAST&#13;
Care of the Article WIIJ Reeult In&#13;
Prolonging Its Usefulness a Considerable&#13;
Time.&#13;
' Buy a good one.&#13;
Before using, bring water to a boiling&#13;
point, add salt, pour over broom&#13;
to toughen and make stronger. Do&#13;
this at least once a week afterward.&#13;
Cut top of old stocking and run&#13;
down over broom beyond the lines of&#13;
stitching, to hold parts together, and&#13;
prolong usefulness.&#13;
Cut groove around top of handle;&#13;
tie twine in same and always hang&#13;
up. Do not stand it up, as that&#13;
spreads it, loosening parts and wearing&#13;
it out more quickly.&#13;
A screw eye Inserted into top of&#13;
handle is even a better convenience&#13;
for.hanging it up.,&#13;
' When worn short, cut last row and&#13;
second row of stitching. Pull; out&#13;
twine loops. This will make it last a&#13;
couple of months longer. Then cut&#13;
third last row and prolong usefulness&#13;
another few weeks.&#13;
Ah old sweater or piece of flannel&#13;
made in shape of bag with drawstring&#13;
at top, dipped in kerosene,&#13;
wrung out and then slipped over an&#13;
old broom and drawn up will make&#13;
an excellent nap and dust gatherer&#13;
on painted floors, under beds, etc.&#13;
A clean cotton bag made and used&#13;
In the same way will dust down side&#13;
walls and remove cobwebs without&#13;
Boiling paper or paint.&#13;
COVERING FOR SMALL TABLE&#13;
Case Where Scrap of Otherwise Unserviceable&#13;
Material May Be Employed&#13;
With Good Effect.&#13;
Have you a favorite small table&#13;
whose top is hopelessly marred? If&#13;
so, dgn't relegate it to the attic, hut&#13;
try to cover its fop neatly with some&#13;
sort of substantial material that is&#13;
in the house. Look about and see if&#13;
there isn't something which will&#13;
answer perfectly. Nearly always precisely&#13;
such a scrap can be found. Figured&#13;
damask fitted smoothly over the&#13;
top of a table and secured to it with&#13;
short, slender tacks concealed under&#13;
a narrow tinsel gimp makes a pretty&#13;
cover and so do any of the printed&#13;
cretonnes edged with cotton gimp.&#13;
Some people use the attractive square&#13;
pillow tops if the table's surface is&#13;
not too large for them to cover, and&#13;
others use hand-embroidered canvases.&#13;
If one does not mind the expense of&#13;
having a sheet of glass cut to the required&#13;
dimensions, a really choice&#13;
piece of handwork or an old print may&#13;
be used under the protecting transparency.&#13;
A ,wide strip of gimp pasted&#13;
partly over the edges of the glass and&#13;
partly over.the edges of the table will&#13;
firmly hold the double covering in position.&#13;
Sliced Rhubarb.&#13;
A way to prepare rhubarb for using&#13;
with meat is asked by a reader. Rhubarb&#13;
pickled according to the following&#13;
directions would be suitable:&#13;
Wipe, skin and cut up two and a half&#13;
pounds of rhubarb.. Put this in a preserving&#13;
kettle with two pounds of&#13;
sugar, seven-eighths cup vinegar, one&#13;
teaspoon cinnamon a n d ^ a l f a teaspoon&#13;
ground cloves. Bring to boiling&#13;
point and let simmer until as thick as&#13;
marmalade. Fill jelly glasses with&#13;
mixture, cool and seal.&#13;
Combination Salad.&#13;
Pare and slice potatoes that have&#13;
been cooked with their jackets on.&#13;
Wash and remove the seeds from one&#13;
green pepper, then cut in narrow&#13;
ihreds with a pair of scissors. Toss&#13;
the potatoes and pepper lightly together,&#13;
season with salt and pepper&#13;
ind dress with French dressing. Pile&#13;
lightly in the center of a salad bowl&#13;
and surround with a circle of thinly&#13;
sliced tomatoes, also marinated. If&#13;
preferred this salad may be arranged&#13;
an individual plates.&#13;
Cinnamon Cake.&#13;
Two cups of brown sugar, half cup&#13;
of butter, three eggs, reserve one white&#13;
for frosting; one cup of water, two&#13;
teaspoons of cinnamon, half teaspoon&#13;
of ginger, three cups of flour, two teaspoons&#13;
of baking powder.&#13;
Icing—Make a simp of one cup of&#13;
brown sugar and one-quarter cup of&#13;
water. Add two teaspoons of cinnamon.&#13;
When the sirup strings pour It over&#13;
the beaten white of one, egg and beat&#13;
until thoroughly blended. Level measurement*.&#13;
•&#13;
Quick Corn Bread.&#13;
One cupful Indian meal, sifted; onehalf&#13;
cupful dour, three tablespoonfnla&#13;
of sugar, one teaspoonfu! cream of&#13;
tartar, one-half teaspoon soda, onenaif&#13;
fteaepoonfal salt, one teaapoonfol&#13;
melted butter and one egg; pjnt all together&#13;
with sweet milk* make medium&#13;
batter, bake In greased pie pan in hot&#13;
oven and serve wi$h butter.&#13;
Sanitary Hint&#13;
When baking oak* use a toothpick&#13;
a. teat Instead ^of a straw from the&#13;
QayUf&#13;
Jjrinks&#13;
—it answers every beverage&#13;
requirement—vim, vigor, refreshment,&#13;
wholesomeneaa.&#13;
It will satisfy you.&#13;
Demand tfw remain*&#13;
by full name—&#13;
Nklcnane* encourage&#13;
mbaituUon.&#13;
THE C O C A - C O L A C O . , ATLANTA, G A .&#13;
Abuse is doubly painful when its&#13;
point is barbed with wit.&#13;
Don't be misled. Ask for Red Cross&#13;
Ball Blue. Makes beautiful white clothes.&#13;
At all good grocers. Adv.'&#13;
Rare.&#13;
"I heard yesterday of a married&#13;
man who took his handkerchief and&#13;
wiped the paint off his wife's cheeks."&#13;
"Is she going to get a divorce?"&#13;
"No. She actually smiled while he&#13;
was doing It."&#13;
"I didn't think anything like that&#13;
ever happened."&#13;
"It doesn't happen more than once&#13;
in a thousand years."—Baltimore Sun.&#13;
Where He Had Seen It.&#13;
Traveling in Donegal not long ago,&#13;
a clergyman engaged a loquacious&#13;
boatman to row him on one of the&#13;
lakes and show him the sights. They&#13;
inspected a ruined castle with the&#13;
legend of a banshee. The clergyman,&#13;
thinking he would put a poser to the&#13;
loquacious Irishman, who knew everything,&#13;
inquired:&#13;
"Have you ever seen a banshee,&#13;
Pat?"&#13;
"Aye, bedad, that I have, your reverence."&#13;
"Indeed!" said the clergyman, with&#13;
an incredulous smile. "And pray,&#13;
where did you see one?"&#13;
"Stouffed, in a museum," replied the&#13;
unabashed Celt, without any hesitation.&#13;
Training in Shooting.&#13;
"Live targets," an English invention&#13;
by which one may shoot at kinematograph&#13;
reproductions of human beings&#13;
and animals, are to be, introduced into&#13;
the German army and navy in consequence&#13;
of experience just carried&#13;
out at Doboritz camp by the kaiser.&#13;
The newspapers state that the apparatus&#13;
is to be installed at the military&#13;
schools and naval training ships&#13;
for the purpose of improving the&#13;
marksmanship of cadets. The kaiser,&#13;
fascinated by the "sport," spent half&#13;
an hour at the "range" fitted up at&#13;
Doboritz. His majesty particularly&#13;
enjoyed "shooting" deer, seals, and&#13;
men and women on the tops of omnibuses&#13;
and elsewhere. He said that&#13;
the scheme was undoubtedly valuable&#13;
for military purposes.&#13;
WRONG BREAKFA8T.&#13;
Change Gave Rugged Health.&#13;
Many ^persons think that for&#13;
strength, they must begin the day&#13;
with a breakfast of meat and other&#13;
heavy foods. This is a mistake as&#13;
anyone can easily discover for himself.&#13;
A W. Va. carpenter's experience&#13;
may benefit others. He writes:&#13;
"I used to be a very heavy breakfast&#13;
eater but finally indigestion&#13;
caused me such distress, I became&#13;
afraid to eat anything.&#13;
"My wife suggested a trial of Grape-&#13;
Nuts and aa I had to eat something&#13;
or starve, I concluded to take her&#13;
advice. She fixed me up a dish and&#13;
I remarked at the time that the quality&#13;
was all right, but the quantity waa&#13;
too small—I wanted a saucerful.&#13;
"But she said a small amount of&#13;
Grape-Nuts went a long way and that&#13;
I must eat it according to directions.&#13;
So I started In with Grape-Nuls and&#13;
cream, two toft boiled eggs and some&#13;
crisp toast for breakfast&#13;
"I cut out meats and a lot of other&#13;
stuff I had been used to eating all&#13;
my life and was gratified to see that&#13;
I was getting better right along. I&#13;
concluded I had struck the right thing&#13;
and stuck to it. I had not only been&#13;
eating Improper food; but too much.&#13;
"I waa working at the carpenter's&#13;
trade at that time ands thought that&#13;
unless I had a hearty breakfast with&#13;
plenty of meat, I would play oat before&#13;
dinner. Bat after a few days of&#13;
my "new breakfast" I found X could&#13;
do more work, felt better in every&#13;
way, and now I am not bothered with&#13;
Indigestion.*&#13;
Name given by Poetum Co* Battle&#13;
Creak, Mieh. Read'The Road to WellvffiV&#13;
in pkge. There's a Reason^&#13;
•&#13;
More things come to those who do&#13;
not- wait for them.&#13;
It takes a better half to see the&#13;
worst side of a man.&#13;
The color of a pearl can sometimes&#13;
be restored by taking off its outer&#13;
layer.&#13;
Not even an ingenious woman can&#13;
make a really good husband out of&#13;
poor material.&#13;
It is customary for a man with more&#13;
dollars than sense to accumulate popularity.&#13;
Sugar exists not only in the cane,&#13;
beetroot and maple, but in the sap of&#13;
187 other plants and trees.&#13;
It costs New York five times aa&#13;
much as it does London to maintain&#13;
parks and recreation grounds.&#13;
Charming Hostess.&#13;
"Did she make you feel at home?"&#13;
"No, but she made me wish I waa."&#13;
—Brooklyn Life.&#13;
One Name for It&#13;
"That fellow from the backwoods IS&#13;
as bashful as can be, isn't he?"&#13;
"Yes. Sort of forest reserve, eh?"&#13;
The Last Word.&#13;
Mame—How do you like me new&#13;
dress?&#13;
Her Fiance (who has worked at&#13;
fashionable funcltons)—Some stuff,&#13;
kid! You couldn't be more immodest&#13;
if you was well bred.—Puck.&#13;
Picture Yourself in&#13;
Colorado&#13;
Y O U feel the thrill of new&#13;
life the minute you get&#13;
there. There's a bracing tonic&#13;
in the very air.&#13;
ktCftI«M&#13;
r, •parfclfna&#13;
myoat sad t«rg«*&#13;
&lt;—dlssrWiafcts.'&#13;
Some new enchantment gleets&#13;
you with every turn,&#13;
You have dreamed Coloradorealize&#13;
your dream thii Summer*&#13;
Low round trip farm&#13;
via th»&#13;
Missouri Pacific&#13;
Write for oor Cob&gt;&#13;
rado Book—h*ad-&#13;
M&gt;iQ«lr Ulaatntod*&#13;
J.G.&#13;
MISSOURI^&#13;
PACIFIC&#13;
IRON&#13;
MOUNTAIN.&#13;
IT.LOm&#13;
S 0 M&#13;
B L A C K&#13;
f ST R. //?/&gt; 0 - Or 1ROI",&#13;
OPTICIAN&#13;
/S r&gt; WOOD VYA HU A Vt&#13;
DAISY FLY KILLER t£m**m-*k&#13;
SIM. Ho**, *mmft+&gt;&#13;
• • » • • • . SUSO&#13;
• • f 1. maltiini m •t&#13;
ov«r* wUl Mt tail «t&#13;
I ajar* ••.ytfelae*&#13;
V&#13;
w3&#13;
\&#13;
•'II . • 1 i&#13;
. &gt; ,&#13;
&lt;*&#13;
aaa&gt;pnw eaieas ifsceTcae i w* "&#13;
amrtSMStfa, S. Mi M" ' • # [ • ;&#13;
•h**':&gt;*\"*S'.&#13;
isoflisete If tfca&#13;
tight kind of inachUery fcaoesV K • - -&#13;
-;'vi : • • ' • , •'•&gt;•£!&#13;
y&#13;
.-• s,&#13;
V }.'K:^jh:'-.i-&#13;
•V- .- . &gt;&#13;
v . , '• r, •* ~i&amp;^M*£&amp;)ttk11,M. ',.&#13;
e*##.:w:- :&gt;*'•&#13;
• * f&#13;
t:&#13;
&amp; • =&#13;
$fH&#13;
:-w.«&#13;
P - j a d&#13;
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Kw-&#13;
, «&#13;
• • * * - .&#13;
••v.'&#13;
* } * » .&#13;
1 ' „*,&lt;••&#13;
/&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
North Hamburg&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Myron Bargees&#13;
oi KendalviiJe, led., are visit log&#13;
afthe borne of bis eibter, Mrs.&#13;
Clyde Hhikle.&#13;
Mr. arid Mrs. J. HiukJe of Mason&#13;
are gueete of their eon Clyde-&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. 0. M. Nash and&#13;
Ethel attended lbs Wild West&#13;
rtbow at Howell Frid*j££tght.&#13;
Mies Clara OarpWter was a&#13;
guest of Ferae T^e^lee Saturday.&#13;
Mfi «p(j|;Mr8. J. S. Nash were&#13;
SuodaygueBte of Wirt Hendee'e.&#13;
Mrs. E. W. KouDaifer vieited&#13;
her pareDte Sunday.|&#13;
R. C. Haddock transacted babineae&#13;
in Ho well, Saturday. |&#13;
Myron Heodrick and [family&#13;
were Sunday gaeste at the home&#13;
of Clyde Binkle.&#13;
• « • • • • « • -&#13;
Rev. L. Ostrander is spending&#13;
the week at his home in Flint&#13;
Mrs. N. Vaughn spent Saturday&#13;
and Sunday with her daughter&#13;
Mrs. R. Merrill of Hamburg.&#13;
WANT COLUMN&#13;
Rents, Real Estate, Found&#13;
Lost, Wanted, Etc.&#13;
STRAYED AWAY —Black aod white&#13;
Hhoat, three months old. Wt. about 60&#13;
It*. Rewtod, 2811*&#13;
£. Borlieon, PinckDey&#13;
FOB 8ALB—Baby Chicks, Modeled ADCOAXUUD&#13;
and Barred Plymouth Rocks, 10c&#13;
each. White Leghorns 8c each. 2&amp;2*&#13;
J. Sider, Pinokney, R. F. D.&#13;
•••J' • ' * - . „ . ; ,&#13;
TOLE&#13;
[KIDNEY]&#13;
PILLS&#13;
Ouceettfal&#13;
EVERYWHERE&#13;
E w y w f c a f peoyle are taJkta*&#13;
abort Foley KMa* KUa,* telttng&#13;
j how quickly jtnd tborouf biy they&#13;
work. Y&lt;m can not take them&#13;
into your ajatota without good&#13;
rotntta. toMowingT"&#13;
That la^bocanao Foley Kidney&#13;
Filla fhro to tho kidaeya and hUuU&#13;
| der jtwft what nature call* lor to&#13;
heal thoao woalMnad and inactrro&#13;
Try tnanji for nonnd Hojutk.&#13;
For Sate by C. G. Meyer&#13;
| Monuments i&#13;
U If yon are contemplating J&#13;
petting a monnment, marker, 8&#13;
or an thing for the cemetery, 5&#13;
d see or write&#13;
f S. S. PL ATT 2&#13;
rf* HOWELL, MICH. ^&#13;
S No Agents. Save Their Commission B&#13;
B Bell Phone 190 S&#13;
H i&#13;
GOING TO BUY A PIANO&#13;
OR SEWING MACHINE&#13;
YES4?&#13;
SEE L R. WILLIAMS.&#13;
OREGORY&#13;
*Ke eaves you money on hi^h&#13;
grade pianos.&#13;
'v^ $fe &gt;£!**&#13;
-. .:. --^&#13;
^ :&#13;
*:.- * '&#13;
firand Trunk Tfmt Table&#13;
^JColKib^Consentence of our readers&#13;
Trains Wetl&#13;
o* 4&lt;&gt;-* - ^ ¢. ta. No. 45—10:33 a. jp&#13;
Ko. 4S^[^d.,p. w. . No. 47—7^0 p. m.&#13;
I^of O^crloDi^Iiiiiirraiiie tea Fiecf&#13;
^wl«|^M&amp;a&amp;ji«*g*$* ft^the&#13;
: ' • " • ^ ^ ^ : ^ - - - ^ / ' ^ . , , ,&#13;
" • . • • . ' • * f r . ^ i * ^ v ^ ' i f - . ' ' » . • •&#13;
Anderson ,&#13;
h. E. Wilson of New York&#13;
spent part of last week with bie&#13;
parents Mr. und Mr«. A. G. Wilson.&#13;
Elizabeth Driver of Gregory&#13;
was a guest of the Misses McClear&#13;
Sunday and Moud&amp;y.&#13;
Mre. Will Brogan and son of&#13;
Brighton visited friends and relatives&#13;
here several days last week.&#13;
Mre. Tom Nolan of Flint and&#13;
Mrs. Carl Ruel of Durand are&#13;
visiting the Hinchey Bros.&#13;
Mrs. G. M. Griener went .to&#13;
Ann Arbor Saturday to visit&#13;
her BOB Andrew who is at the:&#13;
hospital there.&#13;
Mr. and Mra Chae. Bullis and&#13;
Arthur and Mr. and Mrs. A. G.&#13;
Wilson and son Lucius we're&#13;
Howell visitors Saturday.&#13;
Mrs, P. E. Brogan and son of&#13;
Detroit spent last week at the&#13;
home of R. M. Ledwidge.&#13;
Mra, C Hinchey and daughter&#13;
Dede were in Stookbridge Saturday.&#13;
) Li am Ledwidge of Jackson was&#13;
home the first of the week.&#13;
_Mra Prank Hanee and grandma&#13;
Hanee visited Orlo Hanes and&#13;
family Sun day-&#13;
Stops Neuralgia-Kill Pain&#13;
Sloan's Lioimeot give* instant relief&#13;
from Neuralgia or Schtica. It goes straight&#13;
to the p&amp;iafoJ part—Smoothes the Nerves&#13;
and Stops the Pain, ft is alao good for&#13;
RbeumatiBDQ, Sore Throat, Chest Pains&#13;
and Sprains. You don*t need to rub—it&#13;
penetrate. Mr. J; R. Swinger, Louisville,&#13;
Ky., writes: " I suffered with quite a severe&#13;
Neuralgic Headache four months without&#13;
any relief. I used Sloan's Liniment for&#13;
two or three nights and I haven't suffered&#13;
with my head since." Get a bottle to-day&#13;
Keep in the house all the time for pains&#13;
and all harta. 25c., 50c. and $1.00. Recommended&#13;
by•€&gt;;©, Meyer, the druggist.&#13;
Noxious Weed Notice&#13;
To owners; possessors or occupiers&#13;
of land, or any person or&#13;
persons, firm or corporation having&#13;
charge of any lands in this&#13;
state:&#13;
Notice is hereby given, that all&#13;
| noxious weeds growing on any land&#13;
I in the township of Putnam, Livj&#13;
ingston county or within thelirajits&#13;
of any highway passing by or&#13;
{through such lands, must be cut&#13;
down and destroyed on or before&#13;
the first of August, A. D. 1914.&#13;
Failure to comply with this notice&#13;
on or before the date mentioned,&#13;
or within ten days thereafter,&#13;
shall make the parties so failing&#13;
liable for the cost of cutting same&#13;
and an additional levy of ten per&#13;
cent of such cost to be levied and&#13;
collected against the property in&#13;
the same manner as other taxes&#13;
are levied and collected,&#13;
Dated,this 9th day of Joly, 1914&#13;
J as. Smith, Commissioner of the&#13;
Highways of the Township &lt;*f&#13;
Putnam, Livingston County 28t3&#13;
You're Mlltons and Costl ve!&#13;
Sick Hnattache, Bad Breath, Sour Stomach;&#13;
Furred Tongue and IndigeBtion,&#13;
Mean Liver and Bowele clogged. Clean&#13;
up to-night. Get a 26c bottle, of Dr.&#13;
Kings New Life Pills to-day and empty&#13;
the stomach and bowels oL fermenting,&#13;
gassy foods and waste. A full bowel movement&#13;
gives a satisfied, thankful feeBog—&#13;
makes you feel 6ne. Effective, yet mild.&#13;
Don't gripe. 25c» Recommended by C.&#13;
G. Meyer, the druggist. '&#13;
A Heavy Rain&#13;
Monday afternoon July 13, this&#13;
village suffered a veritable* cloudburst,&#13;
which did much damage.&#13;
Merchants were forced to remove&#13;
goods from the show windows and&#13;
it would have been easier to' row&#13;
about town than "to have walked&#13;
through the minatore riven' aird&#13;
lakes. Pinckney seems to be&#13;
getting more than h«r share of&#13;
severe sto&amp;mathia srjmmer.&#13;
HOME-CO&#13;
P I N C K N&#13;
AUGUST 5&#13;
.in&#13;
Not a Dull Moment From Wednesday Morning Greeting&#13;
Until You Leave the Grand Ball Thursday Night&#13;
. • i i • i. n i ' i i i i -ii ' ' i -i in y}&#13;
General Pregram and Announcement&#13;
WBDNBSDAY&#13;
General reception of guests, renewing old friendships and forming&#13;
new onea—a genuine good time. Wednesday Evening/ Meet-&gt;&#13;
ing and reception at the opera house to which all are invited.&#13;
Songs, music, speeches and stories by old boys and girls from far&#13;
and near—a veritable love feast&#13;
. - THURSDAY&#13;
The regular triennial basket picnic will be held oil the Public&#13;
Park. Gome and enjoy one day at least among old friends and&#13;
associates, it will add years t o life. Thursday Evening: I&#13;
D A N C E A T T H E OHERA H O U S E with first olass music.&#13;
ir*#S*&#13;
A-:&#13;
; . ; * i ' ?&#13;
:•&amp;*•?••&#13;
v:'-&gt;5E&gt;.&#13;
The Dexter Band of 2 4 Pieces&#13;
Will Furnish the Music for Both Days •r*v -;&#13;
/ /**»'*• ? .. '&#13;
3 Bi^ Ball Games&#13;
Wednesday Afternoon, Thursday Morning and Thursday Afternoon&#13;
3&#13;
-.*'..&#13;
Athletic Sports of All&#13;
Wednesday Afternoon, one o'clock^&#13;
Bicycle Race lOOyd. Dash&#13;
100 ft. One Le^ed Race Throwing Weight&#13;
Running Back ward R ace _ Hurdle R ape&#13;
Potato Race, Btc.&#13;
Good Substanclal Prizes Will Be Awarded&#13;
. . . • ' * * ,&#13;
'• •»• M7"-&#13;
• - . v - • • ; • • "&#13;
: • • • • : ^&#13;
i . &gt;••/*&#13;
Village Tax Notice&#13;
The village tax roll fpr tbe ye^r&#13;
1914 iftttow ia my h»od« fotWlteifijii.&#13;
^ r e a S i r « r % a b ^ .&#13;
Grand Automobile Paraded&#13;
.Thursday Aftepnoonv6ijc o'clock&#13;
Street Atfractioits&#13;
This will be a HOME-COMING to meet and greet your friends. The key to&#13;
the old town is yours. Brinj the ukidsif and all ^njoy a rWe 0¾ the&#13;
• * - , ., '-V&#13;
"",»' . • i i * - * ' '&#13;
+*m • A M I&#13;
•sr..~&#13;
The committee* and &lt;#&gt;e*s a r ^ # ^ ^&#13;
meeting ev^iMd hy the^assoctation and tbey .unite&#13;
• • ' » " . , • . ^ • - i j j * . . .7. •"'•si**. «; ; • • - • ' .&#13;
z--*r.r&#13;
&lt;••*•. K '&#13;
,-i'V" ^ A:&#13;
•^r&#13;
• ; - &gt; • •&#13;
w V *.. - AI&#13;
i&#13;
;&#13;
!&#13;
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                <text>July 16, 1914 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>Roy W. Caverly</text>
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